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i.:.:.'l'be Pailj' Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 . Wednesday. Mard1 o. 1!180

Ffrst -round tourney action completed
First round action in the annua I
Meigs Elementary Basketball Tour·
nament was completed Tuesday
night for the fourth and fifth grade
levels at the Meigs Junior High
SchooL
Harrisonville defeated Salisbury,
1H2 in the fourth-fifth grade level
with Jason Rupe with 8 and Scott
Williams with 4, high scorers for
Harrisonville. For Salisbury, top
scorers were Billy Caruthers, Art

Hunnel and Tim Jeffers with four
each.
In sixth grade action, Salisbury
blasted Harrisonville 23-10 with high
scorers for Salisbury being Rod
Harrison with 8 and Phil King with 8.
Leading the way for Harrisonville
was James Johnson with 4.
In the final game, the Pomeroy
Cyclones rolled over Rutland, 31-10.
High scorers for the Cyclones were
Brad Robinson with 10; Chris Ken-

Mayor's court .
Two defendants were fined and
nine others forfeited bonds in the
court of Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman Tuesday night.
Fined were Dick Herman, Middleport, $50 and costs, disorderly
manner charge; $roll and costs,
resisting arrest; $100 and costs,
destruction of property, and$100 and
costa, issuing menacing threats, and
Ardith R Warner, Van, W. Va., $225
and costs and three days in jail on a
charge of driving while intoxicated
and $50 and costs on ·a disorderly
manner charge.
Forfeiting bonds were Rrian

Taylor, Middleport, $50, posted on a
disorderly manner charge; Terry
Brewer, Long Bottom, $27 ,
speeding; Michael D. Williams,
Lucasville, $29, speeding; Charles
W. Pugh, Gallipolis, $25, foUowing
too closely; George Gum, Pomeroy,
$25, failure to maintain control;
Timothy Fry, Route 1, Middleport,
$27, speeding; Linda L. Freeman,
Cheshire, $32, speeding; Andy K.
McKenzie, Lucasville, $150, failure
to stop after an accident, and
William T. Jackson, Gallipolis
Ferry, $27, speeding.

Fried Cbicken

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EARLL. CLARK
Earl L. Clark, 73, 40297 Success
Road , PageviUe, died Tuesday night
at Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Mr. Clark was the son of the late
George and Angie Bratton Clark. He
was also preceded in death by one
son, Gene.
He was
member of Pomeroy
American Legion, DAV, National
and Ohio Rural Letter Carriers
Association and served as a trustee
on the building committee at
Veterans Memorial 'Hospital for 15
years.
He is survived by his wife, Clara
K. Murphy Clark ; son and daughterin-law, Jack and Lillian Clark,
Athens; three daughters, Jo Ann
Tuttle and Mrs. Paul (Jeanette)
Lawrence, both of Racine, and Mrs.
Rodney (Priscilla) Bowen, Albany;
seven grandchildren and four great
grandchildren; two step-daughters,
Mrs. Robert (Helen) Butts, Gahanna and Mrs. James (Elizabeth)
Meehan, Dayton; 13 stepgrandchildrenand four step-great
grandchildren; one sister, Mrs.
Harry Fontell Plummer, Carroll.
Friends may call at Ewing
Funeral Home this evening from 7 to
9 p.m. The body will be taken to the
Morgaraham Funeral Home,
Gahanna, where friends may caU
from I to 3 p.m. Thursday.
Graveside rites will be held at Mif·
flin Township Cemetery Thursday at
3p.m.
In lieu of Dowers the family asks
that donations be made to the
Racine Emergency Squad building
fund and the Tuppers Plains
Emergency Squad building fund.

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VOL. 28, NO. 228

enttne

POMFROY-MIODlFPnRr n1-11n
.... ' . ' THURSDAY, MARCH 6, 1980
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Council may
get hostages

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PASSBOOK
SAVINGS

5Y.J%

CERTIFICATE
$500 Min.

Baker 7,936 or 13 percent.
Crane 1,218 or 2 percent.
Connally 879 or 1 percent.
Constant candidate Harold
Sta5S!!n got 100 votes.
\
Under Vermont rules, it took 40
percent of the vote to win any
delegates, so none were convention.

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OW MINE SHAFTS BEING FILLED - Two old mine shafts in the
Village of Syracuse, Cundiff sh8ft and Teaford shaft, are being filled by
the abandoned mines program under the Ohio Division of Reclamation
according to Boyd Ruth, district conservationist of the Soil Conservation
Service. Low bidder on the projects was Rubel and Wilson, Lewisville,

ByROBERTE.MIIJ,ER
Associated~ Writer
.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Ohio
lawmakers approved 8 major highway hond issue_for the June 3 ballot,
~n turned their a~ntion!? a state
~?systemdescnbedas a_tinder
box.
.
Representatives went along 7~22
WednesdaywithSellS!echaligesma

proposal_ allowing issuance of about
~ m highway bonds over the next
five years. Their concurrence sent
the measure to the secretary of state
a few hour_sahead of a midnight
ballot deadline.
Asserl;edJY. the_ bonds could be
repaid With eXisting tax revenues, ·
and. if approved by voters, the
Legislature ~auld have stringent

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$1 o.ooo Min.

11.75%

14.792%

Effective thru
Ma-rch 31, 1980

Rate Effective
March 6·12, 1980

Other Savings Plans
To Meet Your Needsl
By The Associated Press
Substantial interest rfl&lt;lulrod for early withdrawal,

Pakistan rejects American offer

Open M~w, 9 til3, Thurs. &amp; S•t.' tlllZ,

Frid•y 91113 &amp; s tll7

"The Friendly 8anlr"

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ISLAMABAD, Pakistan- Pakistan rejected an offer of $400 million
in U.S. aid to strengthen its defenses against the Russians in neighboring Afghanistan. It said it would depend on Its own "unity and
strength" and the "time-tested friendship" of China.
Agha Shah!, President Mohammed Zta ul-Haq's foreign 'affairs adviser, told a meeting d municipal leaders Wednesday "Pakistan has
specifically dissociated itseH from any U.S. initiative to introduce the
relevant (aid) legislation in the American Congress."
He said President Carter's offer of $200 mllllon in military aid and
$200 milllon in economic aid over a two-year period was too smaU to
improve Pakistan's defense capabilily. Zta caUed the offer "peanuts"
when Carter first made it in January.

~

THE CENTRAL TRUST COMPANY, NA
MIDDI.£PORT, OHIO

r-Mi-d_dl_e~po-rt_._ _-:-_ _ _ _j~~~~~~~~~=~M~E~M~B~ER~FD~IC=====~~=~

SQUAD CALLED
Tbe Pomeroy Emergency Squad
went to380 E. Secoqd St. at2:27 p.m.
Tuesday for the infant of Almina
Hardwick. Tbe infant, who had apparently swaUowed some rat polson,
was taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital and was released following
treatment.

VEI'ERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted--Flora
Fridley,
Pomeroy; Ruth Larkins Vera
McKibben, Pomeroy; T~ Pierce, Long Bottom; Erica Hubbard,
Syracuse.
Discharged-Patty Hornsby, Wan- ·
da Jacks, Kathryn Evans.
Holler Medleal Center
Discharges, March t
Jeremy Bailey, Wylodine Barker,
Stephanie Brady, Rollen. Dennis,
David Fields, Terry Fisher, Annie
Folden, Wesley FOlden, Delole Hartsook, Anna Hertlma!l. Connie Holtz,
Mlle8 House, Ireland Hunt, Mildred
Jenkins, Venlda Kerns, Lois Marin, ·
Beverly Mateney, Jimmie McQuire,
Neva Metz, Ange~ Neal, Barbara
Roush, Chlist8 ~rgent, Unda Saun,
·ders, Clare~ Shriver, Pamela
Stout. ·
·
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·BirtU
Mr. and Mrs. charles Hutt, son,
McArthur; f,fr. and Mrs. Martin
Dem. son, Middleport.
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ELBERFELDS

Howard Baker first to withdraw
Howard H. Baker Jr., an also-ran in every Republican primary and
at least $700,000 in debt, has settled for his job Bll Senate minority
leader while former p~dent Gerald R. Ford feels an ever-greater itch to try the perils of the White House course once a1111in.
· After finishing fourth in both the Vermont and Massachusetts
primaries, Baker, of Tennessee, pulled out of the GOP race Wednesday, saying in Washington, "lt'.s pretty clear the campaign isn't
goln3anywhere.
·
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.
Another Republican, Rep. Philip Crane of Illinois, aU but folded up
his tent the same day, canceUng television a~vertlsing in three key
states and trimming his paid sta(f. "We~re more or less winding things
down," said Crane's campaign manager, Jerry Harkins,

SEE OUR FINE SELECTION

·CREST
I.
UN,FORMS
Style pictured is # 643
Pantsuit. Pleated tucking
accents bodice, open shirt
collar, front zipper. Sold
as a set with stitched
crease pants. Textured
warp knit 100% ' Dacron
Polyester. White, sizes ..
4·20.

Another hostage given freedom
BOGOTA, Colombia - The leftist guerrillas holding the Dominican
Embassy freed one of their two dozen hostages today, Awrtrlan Ambassador ~ar Selzer.
'lbe 47-year-old Selzer, one of about 15 ambassadors hel4 by the M-19
guerrillas, Willi freed because his wife Is in very poor health and her
h118band's 'captivity WBB caiiSing her excessive stress. U.S. Ambassador l)iego Aaenclo remained among the captives.
'lbe Austrian ambassador was freed at 7:30a.m. and taken by the
Red Cross to an undisclosed location. Sources here said Selzer will
leave Colombia today for Europe with his wife.

,You'll Witnt to see all the
other
styles . Crest
Uniforms now on display.
Ready for your selection.

Israeli farmers stQrm Pariiament
_,

, JERUSALEM .._ llraell fanners, perhaps the hardeet hit by thia
'Middle Eutem country'' triple-digit iJiflition, tried to stonn
Parliament on Wednellday to press demands f!ll' higher food prices.
Pollee in riot helmet&amp; and anned With truncheons -~ plastic shields
- ~water eannon.s on a crowd of d~aUlrs which . pollee
eatllnated at 10,000 pei'IJC!III, but which Israelltadlo put at more tluin

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WOMEN'S,READY·TO·WEAR
ON 2ND FLOOR

. 1»,000.
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ELBERFELDS IN ·POMEROY
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The commission had been
preparing to leave Tehran, but with
the news from the embassy they
decided to stay on at least until
Friday.
Tehran Radio quoted the militants' spokesman as saying:
"We ask the Revolutionary Council to take over the hostages, that is,.
American spies, from us and deal
with them in any way it seems appropriate.... Our responsibility is
over for the hostages and we are
sure that the Iranian nation will rectify whatever deviation that might
arise in the pursuance d (the
AyatoUah RuhoUah Khomeinl 's)
line. ..
Khomeini's role in the decision of
the militants was not immediately
clear. But the 7~year~ld religious
leader met this morning with
President Ahothassan Bani-&amp;ldr,
who has been trying to assert control
over the militants.
The militants' turnabout was con-.
firmed in a telephol)e interview with
The Associated Press in Bonn, West
Germany, in which a spokesman foithe captors said they had agreed to
give up responsibility for the
Continued on Page 9

Bond issue approved for Ohio ballot June 3

6 MONTH
MONEY MARKET
CERnFICATE

2'h YEAR

COUPLES END MARRIAGF8
In Meigs County Coounon Pleas
Court three suits for divorce were
filed.
Filing were Laura J. Self, Rt. 1,
Racine, against J. B. Self, Cumberland Furnace, Tenn.; Connie S.
Goble, Dexter, against Ralph L.
Goble, Radcliff_; Martha FHe,
Pomeroy, against Clarence FHe,

By Tbe Associated Press
Tbe Moslem militants who have
held some 50 Americans hostage at
the U.S. Embassy in Tehran for 124
days today asked the ruling
Revolutionary Council to take over
responsibility for the captives.
The dramatic development
seemed to signal a major
breakthrough toward ending the
crisis. But Iranian authorities, who
have said a final decision on the
hostages will not be made until April
or May, had no inunediate comment
to indicate whether they now might
· • be freed sooner.
Just when and how the Americans
will be handed over to the
authorities "will be decided tonight
or toinorrow," said an embassy
militant reached by telephone by
The Associated Press from Bonn,
West Germany.
.,
A Revolutionary Council meeting
was
scheduled for tonight to discuss
.
the situation.
The militants' decision to surrenOhio. The bid was for $25,720. A one and one-half foot concrete top will be
der the hostages, first reported by
placed on top after the shafts are filled and then on top of the concrete will
Tehran Radio, appeared to clear the
be placed four and one-half foot of soil. The Cundiff shaft is located on the
way for a U.N. investigating comformer Louks baU field and the Teaford shaft is on the right hand side of
mission to meet with them as planthe highway on SR 124 in upper Syracuse.
ned.

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WITH A SAVINGS PLAN
FROM THE
CENTRAL TRUST COMPANY

FIFTEEN CENTS

Unexpected brel!;kthrough

Home Baked:
-Rolls
- Bread
- Pies
-Cakes
·-cookies
-Donuts I
Baked Fresh Daily
I
~9'!_2·2971:_ _ _ 216 E.~!!.!

BUILD
FINANC.IAL SECURITY

PRIC~

\_

PASTRY SHOP

1

~-

Dana D. StClair
Dana D. StClair, 81, former Meigs
County resident, died Tuesday
evening at Windsor Nursing Home,
Lisbon, following an extended
illness.
Mr. StClair was born in Mason, W.
Va., the son of the late Andrew and
Sarah Gilkey StClair. He was also
preceded in death by his wife, Mary
StClair, two sisters, Opal Graham
and Freda Hawk.
·
Mr. StClair was a retired fanner
from the Pomeroy and Chester
areas.
He is survive&lt;j by one brother, T.
R. StClair of Athens.
Funeral services will be . held
Friday at 10 a.m. at the Hughes
Funeral Home in Athens with the
Rev. John Elswick officiating.

(Continued from page 1)
vote on write-in baUots. Un·
committed Republicans and three
other candidates shared the rest.
Those returns gave Bush H
nominating delegates, while Reagan
and Anderson claimed 13 each and
Baker won 3. Bush and Reagan
gained 22 apiece in earlier contests.
It will take 998 to make a Republican
nominee.
In Vermont, the GOP numbers
read:
Reagan 19,441 or 31 percent.
Anderson 18,825 or 30 percent.
Bush 14,006 or 23 percent.

New Haven,
W.Va.,
received
his
first
promotion
in thehasU.S.
Air Force.
PoweU, promoted to airman is
~igned to Clark Air Base, Philippmes, as a quality control specialist.
Airman PoweU is a 1979 graduate
of Wahama High School, Mason, W.
Va. His father, Willlam R. PoweU,
also resides in New Haven.

r--roiiliOv--

Surviving besides his wife are two
daughters, Mrs. James (Eleanor)
'I'honuts, Pomeroy, and Mrs. Helen
Atkeson, Mansfield; seven grand·
children, Mrs. Dale (Karen ) Saunders, Gallipolis; James Thomas,
Jr., Syracuse; John Thomas,
Pomeroy; Michael Atkeson, Mansfield; Mark Atkeson, Gallipblis;
Mrs. John (Denise) Hicks, Mansfield and Miss Dana Atkeson, Mansfield; three great-grandchildren,
Lisa and Ashley Saunders,
Gallipolis, and Amber Thomas,
Syracuse, and a sister, Mrs. Berdice
Tracy, Escondido~ Calif.
Besides his parents, he was
preceded in death by a sister.
Funeral services will be held at 1
p.m. Friday at the Walker Funeral
Home in Rutland with Mr. Brad
Henderson officiating. Burial will
be in Miles Cemetery. Friends may
caU at the funeral home anytime after 2 p.m. Thursday. The family will
receive friends at the funeral home
from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Thursday.

a

POWELLPROMOTED
NEW HAVEN _ William M.
Powell, son of Nancy L. Powell of

SEEKS LICENSE
A marriage license Willi issued to
Darmy Lynn Robson, 25, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy, and Cynthia Joan Richards, 19, Rt. 3, Pomeroy.

F XAM.

Bush, Anderson

h's.nice to feel so good about a meal.

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Area deaths

MEET TONIGfff
The Middleport Fire Department
I.Ladies Auxiliary will meet at 7:30
Army during World War I. He was a
this evening at the fire station with
member of the Rutland Church of Kathryn Metzger and Kitty Darst as
Christ where he served as a deacorL
hostesses. There will be a silent aucHe belonged to the Eli Denison Post tion bake sale.
467, American Legion, Rutland, and
Harrisonville Masonic Lodge 411,

F. CLAIR TAYLOR
F. Clair Taylor, 83, Salem St.,
Rutland, died Tuesday evening ·at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
following a short illness.
Mr.Taylor was horn in Rutland
Oct. 26, 1896, a son of the late Burton
and Dora Church Taylor.
On Sept. 6, 1903, he married the
former Ethel Winn, who survives.
Mr. Taylor was a retired rural
mail carrier and served in the U. S.

II yo u re loo kmg l or a real meal and a grca1 va lue. K entucky
Fned Ch1cken "s lh e answ er Th e Coloners ·· 1mger l1ckm " good""
chic ken and alii he f1xm"s A 1ea 1 meal 1he whole lam1 ly will
enJOY
and what a v&lt;llu c Come 1n and see lor you rse lf

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Pomero.v Bombers meeting Bradbury Drellfler; Harrisonville No. 2
versus Rutland No. I at 7 p.m. and
Harrisonville No. I against Bradbury Kitchen at 8.

nedy with 8 and Bri•n Buffington
with 7. Eric Mitchel was high
forRutland with 7.
Second round action will get underway at 6 p.m. Thursday with the

CAR HEAVILY DAMAGED
The Middleport Fire Department
at 8: 18 p.m. went to 1003 S. Second
Ave., where 8 car owned by Rick
HyseU, Middleport, was extensively
damaged by fire and at 3:08p.m. the
emergen~y unit went to the
Pomeroy Health Care Center for
Vera McKibben who was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

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The farmel'!l retreated into the trtmliled garden of the courtyard of

the Kneaet, or Parliament bull.!llllg, throWing ~ead chickens,
I tomiltoenncl egp at police 98 th!IY fied.
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controls over the sale of bonds and
the use of the proceeds.
The highlight of the legislative
day, though, came in the House ·on a
bill appropriating $2.1 million for
plans and site acquisitions for two
new prisons accommodating 2,150
additional inmates.
Ohio has been under sharp
criticism and federal court orders

because of Its overcrowded prison
system, and some House members
predicted if action is not taken soon,
the state could have uprisings such
as the recent debacle in New
Mexico, or the Attica, N.Y., riots of
1968.
"Ohioprobablyhashadmoretlme
and more luck than it deserves,"
~d
Waldo &amp;,nnett Rose, R·

Lima, urging appr,oval of the appropriations bill.
He said the state has more than
12,000 prisoners in a system
designed to accommodate 7,500,
"and that's asking for trouble."
The bill, requested by Gov. James
A. Rhodes after federal courts put
three institutions under orders to
relieve overcrowding, ':'ent to the

Senate73-22.
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But ~e. vote didn t come until sfter a spmted Door fight over where
the new mstitutions _should be
located and pnson philosophy in
generaL
The bill caUs for advance w?rk for
a new,~ n;formatory m nor·
them Ohio, at a site yet to be selecContinuedonpage9

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Ohioans will vote on four statewide
issues in the June 3 primary election.
The Legislatur~, added two Wed- ·
nesday, prior to a midnight
deadline, to a pair which lt had approved earlier.
Last to be added were those which
would permit a major highway improvement bond issue and clarify
procedures for voter notification of
municipal cl)arter amendments.
FoUowing are descriptions of the
proposed :unendments in their expected ballot order:
- To aUow municipal electric
power systems to organize
cooperatives for building and
operating generating facilities. For-

matlon of such cooperatives is
prohibited by existing provisions of
the constitution.
Approval by votel'!l would belp
lead to American Electric Power
Co.'s acquisition of Columbus
&amp;Southern Ohio Electric Co.
Backers said the federal government would approve the merger
only if the competition of municipal
electric companies is protected by a
statewide cooperative.
-To stimulate the slumping
housing industry by using the state's
borrowing power to make loans
avaUable to low and moderate income Ohioans at interest rates
below the current market average of
13-to-14 percent.
Details of the system would · be

spelled out In enabUng legislation to
be adopted if the amendment Is approved.
But the thrust of the proposal is to
aUow the state and its political subdivisions to raise money through
bond issues and then lend the cash at
low interest rates to financial institutions and residential mortgage
brokers.
They would, in turn, pass the
savings on to qualifying consumers.
- To authorize the General
Assembly to issue up to $roll million
a year in bonds to finance highway
and bridge improvements.
But the amount of bonds which
could be sold would be limited by the
revenue generated through existing
taxes to pay off the principle and in·

teres!.
It iB estimated that current taxes

Ref·

-tJJ1i{;aD8 vote JUlie-3 on fo~r suite issues

would support the issuance of about
$500 million in bonds during an
initial five-year period.
That amount could be used to at-'
tract up to $2 billion in federal ~t­
ching funds.
-To streamline the voter
notification requirements in the constitution for cities or counties facing
charter elections.
Copies of proposed charters mi!St
now be sent to each registered voter,
regardless of whether two or more
voters lived at the same address.
Approval of the amendment would
aUow cities to send a single copy to
each household .

Racine man
hospitalized
William Lewis, Racine, was admitted to Veterans Memorial
Hospital Wednesday afternoon for
treatment of injuries aUegedly
received during an altercation on
West Main St.
Pomeroy Pollee Chief Harry
Lyons said his office received a CliU
at 2:19p.m. Wednesday that a man
had fallen doWn some stepa on W.
Main St.
Pomeroy's Emergency Squad was
called and transported William
Lewis and his brother, Larry, to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Later, Chief Lyons said he learned
the pair had been injured in a fight.
A third Jllll!l involved in the fight left
the scenel in a car with a West
Virginia lieense plate, Chief Lyons
reports .. Larry Lewis was treated
and released.
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Architect's contract

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approved I,Jy .board
An arChitect contract for the ·
proposed new building for themen~lly retarded was dLscuBsed and approved when the • Meigs County
Board of Mental Retardation met
Monday night ·
The board, m ot11er •buslne1111,
signed a contract with the Center for
Human Development and voted to
increase insurance on each of Its
buses..Ref4I,ITII!s for.the school were .
d.lscwr.sed a! length.
, AttenaJjlg were Manning Webste~
~lnnan, .Cl,lrllitojJher Lay,h .
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~,_,.._ ~ ':'"~" ~'•~•t .Lt'~Jl~ ,~

IIWILit\.I.8MJI,

Q_oeglein, l..WU.U. ,I PBJ:ker, "Grace .•
Weber and Nora Rice. · · _

00~ WJNNl!:R. -' Wlaaer t( a ..- u. lj. SaWigs
taught by Mn. Eleaaor Biaellaar at Ute PomerO)
Bolld atvea u fll'll prize Ia ·a lllf~ty eODtelt staged by
Elementary Scboll, ~ Alia II plcl!tred ncelwllc . ,
Ute FCM!te foi!Deral C.,.i GralutQI StaUoa, W. Va., for : Ute •wlnl frmD lUtllard R. (Dift) 1\llpe, PomerO), i .
prGd1lettoq JIIUIIIer'of Ute plot. UDder Ute ruJea of Ute
cldldrea ha$( ~~ve. Wonlq
Ute ~·
ptaat was ~~.ADD COiemaa, :laagllter of Mr, aud . eoolelt, atudetlll.,..._ .....,_- tbrGugb ab, wrole It
Mn. Lors Ccrlemu, Pomtro)·. A lleCOIId grader,
''do'a" aad "cloa't's"lur .._ebold lllfety.

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2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, March6. 1980
3--The Dally Sentinel, ' liddleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, March 6, 1980

THESE ACHIEVEMENT TESTS FOR
COLLEGE AVMt~SION ARE. IHE PITS.'

THE'/ DEft NITELY
PI~CRIMINATE

)

THEY'RE

ELITIST

c

(

YEAH, FOR

n\E.'{ \'RESUME AN
ASILIT'I TO REAP

ONE THING ...

)

(

'Round Meigs
Local
By David L. Gleasoa, Supt.
WANTED - Parents who care!
REASON - To confer with
teachers who rare!
LOCATIO~ Meigs Local
Schools
WHEN - March 8, 1980 - 8:30
a.m. to 3 p.m.
That's right. A parent-teacher
conference day has been scheduled
for Saturday. Yes, things are
changing! Times, teaching, and the
understanding of pupil progress
have changed in the Meigs Local
Schools. Parents want and need
more than report cards and teachers
want and need more than the parents' signature on a report card.
We define a parent-teacher conference as a tw&lt;&gt;:,way exchange minformation about a child. In some
communities it is the sole means of
reporting to parents. In the Meigs
Local Schools, we hope to use it as a
supplement to the report card. We
believe it can do so much more than
the use of report cards alone. In
school districts where the technique
is used and used well, it has been

well received. We are hopingforsu()o

cess here.
However, eHecUve parent-teacher
conferences are not easy. They take
much planning, patience, and pra()o
tice on the teachers' part. They also
take much concern and understanding from the parents. If the
conference is carried ri.f poorly, it
can mutilate whatever understanding does exist between the
parents and the teacher.
A poor conference will only infuriate the parents, frustrate the
teacher, and confuse the child. So, it
is very important that we have wellplanned productive conferences enhanced by both the parent and the
teacher. The parent brings to the
conference his-her own very special
understanding of what the chlld is
like at home. The teacher brings an
insight of what the child is like at
school. With these two perspectives
in focus, everybody gains ...
especially the child.
We are looking forward to seeing
you on Saturday.

Anckrson profile

The Daily Sentinel

: A nderson now in GOP political picture
: WAS!llNG TON (AP) - Thanks to
· the voters of Vermont and
Massachusetts, John Anderson finds
:himself elevated from February's
.Jad to March's miracle man and a
··legitimate contender, at last, for the
. GOP presidential nomination.
Until his stunning showings in
New England Tuesday night, Anderson was best known as the
favorite candidate of the popular
· comic strip "Doonesbury" and a
·plain-talking man whose lonely,
liberal philosphy left him swimming
against the conservative Republican
tide.
. Anderson, long popular with the
·press and college students even
·though he was tagged with a "can't
win" label because of his views, has
thus validated his contention that
ijle GOP race is not simply a tw(}. man fight between Ronald Reagan
· and George Bush.
: Though he likely will exit the
: political spotlight in the coming
round of primaries in the conservative South, Anderson was
euphoric over his first
,. l!reakthroughs of the campaign.
. : Anderson told cheering supporters
in Boston Tuesday, "We have tried
to make this first and foremost a
campaign of ideas" and then quoted
. Ralph Waldo Emerson that "nothing
· astonishes man so much as common
· sense and plain dealing."
. "We've been given tremendous

Opinions and comments

impetus for the ·rest of our camvince people ... ! think you have to
caucuses when he drew only 4.3 perpaign."
speak out in tenns that people are cent. In New Hampshire last week,
The white-haired, 1().tenn Illinois · at least initially- going to find a lithe ran fourth with slightly less than
Till! DAn.Y SENTINEL
congressmen calls himself a
tle jarring and perhaps even unIUSPSIG-. .) '
10 percent, but promised to keep
DI!VOTEDTOTIII!
moderate, but he appears liberal
pleasant. "
going "as long as I have clean launINTEREST OF
dry,,
when measured against the other six
Anderson began modestly,
MEIGS-MASON AREA
l'1lblllbed dally mepl .. Otnlay by 1loe Oblo Valley Pabllllllq Com.....y. MaJ-., IDe.,
contenders for the GOP nomination.
finishing sixth among seven canHis next major target is the March
111 CoartSt, Pomeroy,~ U'ltl. BuiDeu Offke PboDetiZ-ZlH. Editorial Pboae ltWU7.
didates
in
the
Iowa
precinct
Anderson cuts against the grain
Secoad 4!lul po1tqe J*d al Pomerey, Olllo.
18 primary in his home state.
Natloaal adverUJIDg repraeataUve, LaD!Ioa AuGell&amp;el, Sltl Euclid Ave., CleveJa.ad. Olio
whenever he can, opposing sharp inIIIII.
creases in defense spending,
S.t.ertptloa r11kl!: DelJvered bJ Cllrrler wbere anOable tt eeatl per week. By ......, Rolle
wbere canter sen1ce IOC avatlaltle, o.e m.oa~~a. ,..,,,
·
backing handgun registration,
Tbe Dall!&gt; SeDIIIIe~ by llllllllo ~ ood " " ' Vlrglalo,- y&lt;orlll••; Sis Dlftlbo IIT.II; favoring ratification of the Strategic
IIKIDtbl $11.51. Eltewbere • . M; lkiiiOiltbltZII.It; three maaiU fll ....
Tbe .uaoegiftl Pnsll II ncl.tvely eaUtled to the ue lor pablkst&amp;oa ot1 aU aews d1apa~tlet
Arms Limitation Treaty, supporting
mdlledtolbe DOWipaperiUICI 11M llteloeol..,.. pabiiQed......._
•
"free choice" for women who want
PabUaber
Roba1 Wtuert
Gea&lt;nol M(ll'. a City Editor '
Robert Hoolllch
abortions, and proposing a 50-centNewt EdJtor
Dale Ro1lll;eb, Jr.
per-gallon gas tax increase to help
A&lt;h. Mana~~:er
ClriGbeea
conserve oil.
1'1~
~m~ ~._-.-.~c;;~.~
The 58-year-old Anderson has long
~v
been swimming upstream. On May
11, 19'14, he became the first
WAS!llNGTON (AP)- Billy Car"I don't know yet," the president
Republican on Capitol Hill to call for
ter, a White House visitor more often replied.
President Nixon's resignation.
than many suspect, was back here
"Do you know anything yet?" he
The son of ~ Swedish inunigrant,
this week with a chara~ristically was asked.
Anderson and his wife, Keke, have
pointed observation about the
"Yes:' he said without
five chlldren. Anderson is a native of
political scene.
elaborating.
Rockford, Ill., with degrees from the
The president's kid brother, he of
University of Illinois and Harvard
the unfettered tongue, confided to a
Between this week's Democratic
Law School.
reporter that if Sen. Edward M. Ken- primaries in Massachusetts and
Until the votes were counted
nedy wins the Democratic presiden- · Vennont and last week's New flam.
Tuesday, Anderson was best known
best at having long strikes?
tial nomination, "I believe I'd vote pshire balloting, White House press
as the candidate supported by
We possibly could have hired
Republican."
secretary Jody Powell turned up in
bear Editor:
Michael Doonesbury, the star of the
Henry Ki&amp;&lt;!inger at $2,000 per hour
Springfield, IU., as featured speaker
Most everyone would appreciate a
popular comic strip by . Garry
and settled sooner and cheaper.
Like some other presidents befor
at a Democratic fWld-raiser.
calmness in Meigs Local but things
Trudeau.
They may have been invaluable to
him, Jimmy Carter sometimes has
Invitations soliciting contributions
keep getting stirred up.
Anderson admits his underdog
the
Board, but they sure have cost
seemed uncertain about how he from prospective diners had held out
Mr:
Gleason
in
his article, Feb. 22,
status, but claims "If I can just get
the
taxpayers - and most imshould respond to blunt questions the promise of an evening with Jimmentioned that the McDowell and
my story out, I think we can conportantly
the students - rl. this
reporters often shout at him on the my Carter, who hasn't left the
Whalen Law Firm was given a con- district in lost education, in textny.
Washington area in more than four
tract by the Meigs Local Board. Mr.
books that could have been purPerhaps the president has sought months + since U.S. hostages were
Gleason failed to mention this was chaaed, buildings not ·repaired and
outside advice on the matter. Or taken in Tehran on Nov. 4.
by a 3to2 vote.
in salaries that could have prevenmaybe he decided on his own to try a
But Democratic money-raisers
He also said: "It has been quite ted a strike in the first place.
different approach. Whatever the
repeatedly have held out possible
evident in this district durtng the
The more that is said aboUt "outreason, Carter is earning a new presidential awearances as bait foc
past three years, expert arbitrators
side
experts'' the more some people
reputation as a pixie or tease in han- contributors, then announced suband negotiation experience is make room tn their mouth for more
dling out-of-the-blue inquiries.
stitute speakers a few days before
needed.'~ I could not agree more!
shoe.
.
On Friday, for example, a broad- the events.
However,
he
failed
to
mention
in
Our
local
prosecuting
attorney
caster shouted as the president was
With the president observing a
those years the teachers have been could surely do no worse for free.
leaving an East Room ceremony, moratorium on personal cammost successful in most of their Even, I believe he would also have
"Anything new on Iran?"
paigning
until
the
hostages
are
demands.
Brown campaign distributed
access to the Attorney General, and
"Yes," Carter replied as he marreleased, his frequent stand-ins have
~ 80-CJiUed "experts," 8()thousands of copies of an elaborate
other elected ri.ficials and their starched out without missing a step.
been wife Rosalynn and Vice
cording
to
figures
mentioned
by
Mr.
,
fs.
four-color poster carrying a "Stop
"Well, what is it?" the broad- President Walter F. Mondale.
Snowden at the recent board
Seabrook" headline and portraying
·Why not as some board members
caster demanded.
But Powell?
meeting, cost over $35,000 just this suggest - give locals a try' and keep
the governor speaking in front of a
"Not much," the vanishing
Asked why he had gone to
year, and who knows how much over our money at home and not tn
massive "No Nukes" banner.
president responded over his Springfield instead of Mrs. Carter or
the
past three years. We still had one
"Seabrook" refers to the tw&lt;runil,
Cuyahoga Falli. - Sincerely, Doris
shoulder.
Mondale, Powell said, "In my case,
m the longest strikes in Ohio's McDonald, 226 Union Ave.,
2,388-megawatt generating station
aU I need is a plane ticket and a
history. Could we say they are the · Pomeroy, Ohio.
under construction near the coastal
On Monday, as Carter retwned
motel room."
town of Seabrook, less than five
from a weekend at Camp David,
The first lady and the vice
miles south of here. Demonstrations
Md .• a reporter called to him, "Are
president
lead sizable entourages of
mounted there by opponents of
you going to cut $20 billion from the
aides
and
associates - aU of whom
nuclear power have attracted nafederal budget?"
have
to
be
paid for at the expense of
tional attention to the facility.
the
c;ampaign.
Prominently displayed in Brown's
basic campaign leaflet here was a
statement of strong support for
those protesters: "If I'm elected the
next president, I guarantee you I'm
not going to license Seabrook - but
you're going to get safe, efficient,
economical alternatives. That's my
pledge."
In a day-long campaign tour along
We oppose recently introduced 'legislation which would allow school
New Hampshire's seacoast, the
boards to make major purchases, up to $15 000 without going to comgovernor repeatedly criticized
~titive bidding. School boards are currently ~~pled from competitive
bidding for purchases up to$4,000.
.
nuclear power. At a rally here, for
example, he charged that "Seabrook
We have no particular distrust of local school boards, it is simply felt
and nuclear power are very basic
that such a move would be an Wldesireable action.
symbols. m the excesses and ir·
The r':Qulremen~ that govenunent bodies go to bid for major purchases
responsibility in our COWitry."
and proJects IS designed to insure that public tax dollars are spent for the
best service at the lowest cost.
,
Brown's strategists plan to press
the issue as the primaries move into
Recent reports from the Office of Management and Budget are amble
the Midwest and West - a strategy
ev1dence that often, even with ·a competitive bidding structure, public
shared by the Campaign for Safe
~~ ma1te unnecessary purchases. One Such report . from that
rEnergy, whose leaders have eschewWashington agency sho\vs that the govenunent has $8 million in unused ·
.
oflioe turnitut•· , (Qred away in warehj)Wles aCI'OIIS Ill!! countrv.
ed the confrontation politics and
radical tactics that have produced
The nature of some purchases made by school boards requires they
only limited success • during
have greater leeway in their exemption from strict lin!ltations in bidding
demonstratr0111 at Sealx;ook and
than other local government bodies. Competitive bidding, for example,
would not necessarily guarantee the purchase of the safest playground
other nuclear facilities.
equipment, or the best classroom text bov,.,
•
·
:
Instead,. that orgalljzatlon has
dispatc()ed articulate young
An upward Umit of $15,000 seef"J to us, hOwever, to be a bit ex~ve.
representatives to politely but firmSchool boards may currently
· the requirement to competitively bid
"Whece do yau get that .'WE're In trouble' ~tuff?
projects in emergency situatwn , .;uch as the repair or replacement of a
ly question-the· various candidates
I Just stopfJ!Hi by to tell you I've IWiiJn«1 from
furnace during the winter months. Tha~ emergency clause seems, to us,
about nuclear power during their
/ _ your campaign staff."
·
sufficient.
·
.
scheduled campaign apjle&amp;rances.
.,.... ....

Jimmy's Whitehouse .

Billy Carter returns
to visit President

.In Washington:
Opposition, for openers
By Robert Walters
HAMPI'ONFALU, N.H. (NEAlThe future of commercial nuclear
power, an unexpected but significant issue in New England's early
political contests, could become the
:object of a nationwide debate during
this year's presidential campaign.
Plans to carry the issue into other
states throughout the country
already are being made by the two
organizations that have met with
surprising success in their efforts to
focus attention on the subject in
Maine, New Hampshire and
Massachusetts.
Those groups are the campaign
organization of California Gov. Edmund G. (Jerry) Brown Jr., a contender for the Democratic presidential nomination, and the Campaign
for Safe Energy, a Boston-based
citizens' organization.
.. One of the country's best ~own
·ilnd most outspoken critics of
'nuclear-powered · generating sta.:tiOils to produce electricity, Brown
::has made the issue a cornerstone of
his early campaign in the Nor.jheast.
.- Although he finished third in the
~ew Hampshire primary and in
Maine's precinct caucuses, well
~hind President Carter and Sen.
,Edward M. Kennedy, ().Mass',
Brown displayed considerable
8trength along the seacoast, where
appoaltion to nuclear power is con~trated.
.
' In a !'llVersal of his performance
i;tsewhere in Maine, Brown was the
lnost popular candidate in Lincoln
9ounty, heme m the state's only
l)uclear generating station, the
Maine Yankee plant near the coastal
Community of WlacaMet.
,
:· Here in New Hampshire, the

Berry's World

Minnesota, Illinois advance in NIT play
By KEN RAPPOPORT
AP Sporta Wrtter
The National Invitation Tournament?
How about the "Big Ten Invitational" instead?
Last year, Big Ten teams clearly
dominated the NIT when three of Its
teams advanced to the Final Four
and IndUma won the title in New
York's Madison Square Garden by
beating Purdue.
Wednesday Dtght, Big Ten teams
again made their presence known
with victories in fii'St-round NIT
games, as Minnesota stopped
BcJrUng Green 64-50 and Illinois
routed Loyola of Chicago 105-87.
"They did wbat they had to do,"
said Bowling Green Coach John
Weinert of Minnesota. "So did we,
but they did it from a little higher

By Steve Ebert
The Southwestern Highlanders
displayed good patience on offense,
and unleashed a maddening zone
defense that at one point allowed
Green Township only four points in
the entire third quarter and first 5:56
of the fourth quarter as they broke
away from a 16-16 halftime tie
ellroute to a ~26 victory in the
opening game of the Class ADistrict
Tournament Tuesday evening in
Chillicothe.
'
The win pits the Higliliinders (119) against South Webster of Scioto
County (19-4) Saturday evening at
6:30 for the district championship
and the right to move on to regional
competition the following week in
Dayton.
The word to describe the Highlanders offensive play in the first half
would be "inconslstent.''They raced
to a 7-2 lead' in the first 5:52 of pla)'j

'

Weinert's Mid-American team
was dwarfed by a pro-size Minnesota front Une with players such
as Moot-11 Kevin McHale, 6-10 Gary
Holmes, 7-2 Randy Breuer and 6-6
Andy Thompson.
Darryl Mitchell scored 19 points
for the Gophers, a team that finished
in a fourth-place tie in the rugged
Big Ten this season.
!Uinois, which finished tied for fifth in the league, won even more
overwhelmingly over Loyola, the
regular-season champions of the
Midwestern City Conference, as
Mark Smith scored 24 points and
Derek Holcomb dominated the boar-

State~.

In tonight's games, it'll be Boston
University at Boston College;
Texas-EI Paso at Wichita State;
Alabama-Binningham at Soutlr
western Louisiana ; Nebraska at
Michigan; Grambling at Mississippi
and Duquesne vs. Pittsburgh at the
Pittsburgh Civic Center.
First-round action in the 32-team

ds.
"The crowd got us excited," said
Holcomb after the game at Cham-

paign. "We played really well but
they're an explosive team. We'd be

NATIONAL BASU:'I'IIALLA880CIATION

m

-

~r

Wll8hlnii&lt;M&gt;
New Jersey
Au.ont.

Houoton
San AniCIIIo
lndlana
Cleveland

Delroll
K.wuCily

MUnukee

Denver

Cllicqo

Utah
Los Angeles

Seallle

Euten CGiderellte

Portlan&lt;l
Golden stale

AUUII&lt;Divllto
W. I. Pel.

51 15
50 17
13 35
II 35
19 30
C..lnolllivllloo
II 71
1135
1335
!I 38
'l/43
II 52
WetWra c.lert~~Ce
ll 211
10 31
II 43
21 45
21 49
Pocllk:Divlllal
li 20

GB

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...
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1910
2010
24

.603
.493 7\1
... 8
.449 10\1
.3811 15

.235 25
.1100

WedDeldly'1 Gamel
Pbllodolpb1a 120, Indiana 11S
Detroit 120, New Yort 113
Loo ologeleall7, KAnou City 101

Bootonl03,lloulton99,0T

Denver 112, MUwaukee 109
Phoenlxl%7, SeaWelll
Chica110 101, Golden State lOii
~~'1 Gllllel
New Jersey at Waahlngton

Portland aiUiah
Friday'• GUiell
Ph11adelphi&amp; &amp;I Booton
Wuhlnctoo at Delroll

.348 17\1
.300 21
.710

Chl.cago at I.Alll!l Angelea

J.l~;

Kim Da""'U

~;

Green Towmhlp

1980 AMC CONCORD
2 DOOR SEDAN
22 gallon fuel tank com-

pared to Fairmont's 15
gallons. Think about that
this weekend .

RIVERSIDE AMC-JEEP
Gallipolis, Ohio

The Long

Form could
save you
money on
your taxes

THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

MODULAR
HOMES

618 E . MAIN ST.
POMEROY , O.
OPEN 9 A.M . TO
6 P.M. WEEKDAYS
9-SSATURDAY
PHONE 992-3795

2nd &amp; BROWN ST .
MASON, W.VA .
OPEN TUES .
THURS. &amp; SAT.
9 A.M. · 5 P .M.
PHONE 77HI28

Appointment Available But Not Necessary

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

KINGSBURY
HOME
SALES
1100 E. Main

Green ++II;

Karen Il&amp;rneU 4.(1..8. rorw u.z.a.
Seen by q1111rten:
Southwestern
12 4 JJ 13--40

Denver at Portland

the ECC with the help of 19 points
apiece from Ralph Sampson and
Jeff Lamp. Ron Jones scored 22
points to lead independent Illinois
State past West Texas State of the
Missouri Valley Conference.

H&amp;R BLOCK

GREEN TOWNSHIP IN) - Barrett 142;

Adamo

combined for 37 points to lead independent St. Peter's past Connecticut of the Big East. Rogers
scored 13 points and Brandon 12 in
the second half as the nation's
leading defensive team came from
behind to lead by as many as 19 points in the closing minutes.
"Our game is to take our tum and
set up each other's shots," said St.
Peter's Bill Brown, who scored eight
points in the Peacocks' second'half
rally. "We just take our time. We
play basic, fundamental basketball."
Glen Green scored 15 points and
Jerry Smith added 10 as Murray
State of the Ohio Valley Conference
defeated Jacksonville of the Sunbelt.
Virginia, an Atlantic Coast Conference team, whipped Lafayette of

This year. make sure you are usi ng th e proper
tax form Even 1f you file d the Short Form last
year. YOur circumstances th i&gt; year could he lp
you save money by fi li ng the Long Form . At
H&amp;R Block. we II review your tax situ ation to
dec1d.e which form allows yo u to ·pay the lowest
teg JtJma te tax .

SO!/I1IWESTERN (Ill - Jeffen :1-W; S.
HaUey ~1·1 ; L. Edward.&lt;! 8-G-UI; 8. Edwants 1-1·
3; Jonlani+JO; Coxl.().1.'r or..u 1~.

Atlantaatlndiana

Howton at New Jersey
aeveland at Kanau City
New York at San AniCIIJo
Ulaha1Phoenb&lt;

.le:J 210
.3TI 1510

the stanza, and high scoring Julie
Barrett followed shortly thereafter,
and from that point any hopes of a
comeback the Bobcats might have
entertained vanished. The 27-20
Highlander lead ballooned to 33-20
with 2:08 remaining in the contest,
and Coach Mel Carter cleared his
bench.
Linda Edwards once again led the
Highlanders in scoring as she netted
16 points. Meca Jordan also hit for
'double figures with 10, followed by
Dana Jeffers with 8. Jamie Green
and Karen Darnell paced the Bobcats with 9 and 8 respectively. Julie
Barrett, Green's high scoring forward who averaged 18 plus points
per game during the regular season
was held to 2 points before fouling
out.
For the game Southwestern was 16
of 48 from the field for 33.3 percent,
and 8-25 from the foul Une for 32 percent. Green hit on only 12 of 42 from
the field for 211.6 percent and 2~ from
the charity stripe for"40 percent. The
Highlanders held a ~28 edge on the
boards, and also committed more
turnovers, 21-20. ·
Saturday's district championship
game against .South Webster will
begin at6:10 p.m. at Ellis B. Hatton
Memorial gymnasium in
Chillicothe. Fans going to the game
should take US 35 to Chillicothe, exit
at the fourth exit (High St.), tum left
onto High St., go to the second traffic
light and tum left again into the high
school.
Box score :

I
19 21 .7110 \1
45 21 .lll!2 I
32 38 .457 17~
31 'II .456 17\1
21 49 .300 211\1

. l'lloenll&lt;
San Diego

' ATAOLANCE
II)'Tbe_led_

field will conclude Friday night with
Washington visiting Nevada-Las
Vegas. Eight second-round games
will be played at sites to be determined on March 10 and four thirdround games will be held March 13
before the semifinals and finals at
the Garden on March 17 and March
19.
John Danks, held to a single field
goal in the first half, broke loose for
17 points in the second to lead Texas
of the Southwest Conference past St.
Joseph's of the East Coast Conference.
"It's been a terrible week (in pra()o
lice), and it started that way
tonight," said Texas Coach Abe
Lemons, whose team was losing 2().
18 at the start. "We wete just
listless, standing around out there.
· But we got straightened out."
Eddie Phillips scored 17 points and
Alabama outscored Penn State from
the free •throw Une 21.;! as the
Southeastern Conference team beat
the Nittany Lions, an independent.
"They got the loose balls when we
should have been getting them,"
said Penn State Coach Dick Harter.
''Alabama played the game the way
it ought to lie played.''
Kevin Rogers and Jim Brandon

via the foul route midway through

and then suffered a breakdown on
the boards and a rash turnovers
as Green, on the strength of three
Jamie Green baskets, pulled to
within two of the Highlanders at 1210 by quarter's end. During the
second stanza it appeared as if there
was a lid on Southwestern's basket.
It was not until :55 remained in the
half that Dana Jeffers scored on a
layup to break a scoreless drought of
over seven minutes. Seconds later
Linda.Edwards hit a short jwnper,
and the half ended knotted up at 16
all.
The third quarter proved decisive
in two ways. Southwestern's offense
began to catch fire; Unda Edwards
hit three short jumpers to propel the
Highlanders into a 24-18 lead. But
. perhaps more important was the
foul trouble the Bobcats foWld themselves in. Steady playmaker Usa
Adams was forced to the sidelines

Pro standings

Pomeroy, Ohio
992-7034

10 I I 6-211

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•2995

Oppose legislation

·~)

up by eight and then I'd look up and
we'd be up by two. We had a lot of
good, inside play, though, We were
really working the ball good inside."
In other NIT action Wednesday
night, Texas defeated St. Joseph's
(Pa.) 7~1 ; Alabama trinuned Penn
State 53-49; St.·Peter's (N.J.) whipped Connecticut 71-56; Murray State
turned back Jacksonville 53-49;
Virginia bf:at Lafayette 67-56 and
Illinois State stopped West Texas

SWHS girls advance to
finals in district play

An editorial

: . .

up.'•

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•

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2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, March6. 1980
3--The Dally Sentinel, ' liddleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, March 6, 1980

THESE ACHIEVEMENT TESTS FOR
COLLEGE AVMt~SION ARE. IHE PITS.'

THE'/ DEft NITELY
PI~CRIMINATE

)

THEY'RE

ELITIST

c

(

YEAH, FOR

n\E.'{ \'RESUME AN
ASILIT'I TO REAP

ONE THING ...

)

(

'Round Meigs
Local
By David L. Gleasoa, Supt.
WANTED - Parents who care!
REASON - To confer with
teachers who rare!
LOCATIO~ Meigs Local
Schools
WHEN - March 8, 1980 - 8:30
a.m. to 3 p.m.
That's right. A parent-teacher
conference day has been scheduled
for Saturday. Yes, things are
changing! Times, teaching, and the
understanding of pupil progress
have changed in the Meigs Local
Schools. Parents want and need
more than report cards and teachers
want and need more than the parents' signature on a report card.
We define a parent-teacher conference as a tw&lt;&gt;:,way exchange minformation about a child. In some
communities it is the sole means of
reporting to parents. In the Meigs
Local Schools, we hope to use it as a
supplement to the report card. We
believe it can do so much more than
the use of report cards alone. In
school districts where the technique
is used and used well, it has been

well received. We are hopingforsu()o

cess here.
However, eHecUve parent-teacher
conferences are not easy. They take
much planning, patience, and pra()o
tice on the teachers' part. They also
take much concern and understanding from the parents. If the
conference is carried ri.f poorly, it
can mutilate whatever understanding does exist between the
parents and the teacher.
A poor conference will only infuriate the parents, frustrate the
teacher, and confuse the child. So, it
is very important that we have wellplanned productive conferences enhanced by both the parent and the
teacher. The parent brings to the
conference his-her own very special
understanding of what the chlld is
like at home. The teacher brings an
insight of what the child is like at
school. With these two perspectives
in focus, everybody gains ...
especially the child.
We are looking forward to seeing
you on Saturday.

Anckrson profile

The Daily Sentinel

: A nderson now in GOP political picture
: WAS!llNG TON (AP) - Thanks to
· the voters of Vermont and
Massachusetts, John Anderson finds
:himself elevated from February's
.Jad to March's miracle man and a
··legitimate contender, at last, for the
. GOP presidential nomination.
Until his stunning showings in
New England Tuesday night, Anderson was best known as the
favorite candidate of the popular
· comic strip "Doonesbury" and a
·plain-talking man whose lonely,
liberal philosphy left him swimming
against the conservative Republican
tide.
. Anderson, long popular with the
·press and college students even
·though he was tagged with a "can't
win" label because of his views, has
thus validated his contention that
ijle GOP race is not simply a tw(}. man fight between Ronald Reagan
· and George Bush.
: Though he likely will exit the
: political spotlight in the coming
round of primaries in the conservative South, Anderson was
euphoric over his first
,. l!reakthroughs of the campaign.
. : Anderson told cheering supporters
in Boston Tuesday, "We have tried
to make this first and foremost a
campaign of ideas" and then quoted
. Ralph Waldo Emerson that "nothing
· astonishes man so much as common
· sense and plain dealing."
. "We've been given tremendous

Opinions and comments

impetus for the ·rest of our camvince people ... ! think you have to
caucuses when he drew only 4.3 perpaign."
speak out in tenns that people are cent. In New Hampshire last week,
The white-haired, 1().tenn Illinois · at least initially- going to find a lithe ran fourth with slightly less than
Till! DAn.Y SENTINEL
congressmen calls himself a
tle jarring and perhaps even unIUSPSIG-. .) '
10 percent, but promised to keep
DI!VOTEDTOTIII!
moderate, but he appears liberal
pleasant. "
going "as long as I have clean launINTEREST OF
dry,,
when measured against the other six
Anderson began modestly,
MEIGS-MASON AREA
l'1lblllbed dally mepl .. Otnlay by 1loe Oblo Valley Pabllllllq Com.....y. MaJ-., IDe.,
contenders for the GOP nomination.
finishing sixth among seven canHis next major target is the March
111 CoartSt, Pomeroy,~ U'ltl. BuiDeu Offke PboDetiZ-ZlH. Editorial Pboae ltWU7.
didates
in
the
Iowa
precinct
Anderson cuts against the grain
Secoad 4!lul po1tqe J*d al Pomerey, Olllo.
18 primary in his home state.
Natloaal adverUJIDg repraeataUve, LaD!Ioa AuGell&amp;el, Sltl Euclid Ave., CleveJa.ad. Olio
whenever he can, opposing sharp inIIIII.
creases in defense spending,
S.t.ertptloa r11kl!: DelJvered bJ Cllrrler wbere anOable tt eeatl per week. By ......, Rolle
wbere canter sen1ce IOC avatlaltle, o.e m.oa~~a. ,..,,,
·
backing handgun registration,
Tbe Dall!&gt; SeDIIIIe~ by llllllllo ~ ood " " ' Vlrglalo,- y&lt;orlll••; Sis Dlftlbo IIT.II; favoring ratification of the Strategic
IIKIDtbl $11.51. Eltewbere • . M; lkiiiOiltbltZII.It; three maaiU fll ....
Tbe .uaoegiftl Pnsll II ncl.tvely eaUtled to the ue lor pablkst&amp;oa ot1 aU aews d1apa~tlet
Arms Limitation Treaty, supporting
mdlledtolbe DOWipaperiUICI 11M llteloeol..,.. pabiiQed......._
•
"free choice" for women who want
PabUaber
Roba1 Wtuert
Gea&lt;nol M(ll'. a City Editor '
Robert Hoolllch
abortions, and proposing a 50-centNewt EdJtor
Dale Ro1lll;eb, Jr.
per-gallon gas tax increase to help
A&lt;h. Mana~~:er
ClriGbeea
conserve oil.
1'1~
~m~ ~._-.-.~c;;~.~
The 58-year-old Anderson has long
~v
been swimming upstream. On May
11, 19'14, he became the first
WAS!llNGTON (AP)- Billy Car"I don't know yet," the president
Republican on Capitol Hill to call for
ter, a White House visitor more often replied.
President Nixon's resignation.
than many suspect, was back here
"Do you know anything yet?" he
The son of ~ Swedish inunigrant,
this week with a chara~ristically was asked.
Anderson and his wife, Keke, have
pointed observation about the
"Yes:' he said without
five chlldren. Anderson is a native of
political scene.
elaborating.
Rockford, Ill., with degrees from the
The president's kid brother, he of
University of Illinois and Harvard
the unfettered tongue, confided to a
Between this week's Democratic
Law School.
reporter that if Sen. Edward M. Ken- primaries in Massachusetts and
Until the votes were counted
nedy wins the Democratic presiden- · Vennont and last week's New flam.
Tuesday, Anderson was best known
best at having long strikes?
tial nomination, "I believe I'd vote pshire balloting, White House press
as the candidate supported by
We possibly could have hired
Republican."
secretary Jody Powell turned up in
bear Editor:
Michael Doonesbury, the star of the
Henry Ki&amp;&lt;!inger at $2,000 per hour
Springfield, IU., as featured speaker
Most everyone would appreciate a
popular comic strip by . Garry
and settled sooner and cheaper.
Like some other presidents befor
at a Democratic fWld-raiser.
calmness in Meigs Local but things
Trudeau.
They may have been invaluable to
him, Jimmy Carter sometimes has
Invitations soliciting contributions
keep getting stirred up.
Anderson admits his underdog
the
Board, but they sure have cost
seemed uncertain about how he from prospective diners had held out
Mr:
Gleason
in
his article, Feb. 22,
status, but claims "If I can just get
the
taxpayers - and most imshould respond to blunt questions the promise of an evening with Jimmentioned that the McDowell and
my story out, I think we can conportantly
the students - rl. this
reporters often shout at him on the my Carter, who hasn't left the
Whalen Law Firm was given a con- district in lost education, in textny.
Washington area in more than four
tract by the Meigs Local Board. Mr.
books that could have been purPerhaps the president has sought months + since U.S. hostages were
Gleason failed to mention this was chaaed, buildings not ·repaired and
outside advice on the matter. Or taken in Tehran on Nov. 4.
by a 3to2 vote.
in salaries that could have prevenmaybe he decided on his own to try a
But Democratic money-raisers
He also said: "It has been quite ted a strike in the first place.
different approach. Whatever the
repeatedly have held out possible
evident in this district durtng the
The more that is said aboUt "outreason, Carter is earning a new presidential awearances as bait foc
past three years, expert arbitrators
side
experts'' the more some people
reputation as a pixie or tease in han- contributors, then announced suband negotiation experience is make room tn their mouth for more
dling out-of-the-blue inquiries.
stitute speakers a few days before
needed.'~ I could not agree more!
shoe.
.
On Friday, for example, a broad- the events.
However,
he
failed
to
mention
in
Our
local
prosecuting
attorney
caster shouted as the president was
With the president observing a
those years the teachers have been could surely do no worse for free.
leaving an East Room ceremony, moratorium on personal cammost successful in most of their Even, I believe he would also have
"Anything new on Iran?"
paigning
until
the
hostages
are
demands.
Brown campaign distributed
access to the Attorney General, and
"Yes," Carter replied as he marreleased, his frequent stand-ins have
~ 80-CJiUed "experts," 8()thousands of copies of an elaborate
other elected ri.ficials and their starched out without missing a step.
been wife Rosalynn and Vice
cording
to
figures
mentioned
by
Mr.
,
fs.
four-color poster carrying a "Stop
"Well, what is it?" the broad- President Walter F. Mondale.
Snowden at the recent board
Seabrook" headline and portraying
·Why not as some board members
caster demanded.
But Powell?
meeting, cost over $35,000 just this suggest - give locals a try' and keep
the governor speaking in front of a
"Not much," the vanishing
Asked why he had gone to
year, and who knows how much over our money at home and not tn
massive "No Nukes" banner.
president responded over his Springfield instead of Mrs. Carter or
the
past three years. We still had one
"Seabrook" refers to the tw&lt;runil,
Cuyahoga Falli. - Sincerely, Doris
shoulder.
Mondale, Powell said, "In my case,
m the longest strikes in Ohio's McDonald, 226 Union Ave.,
2,388-megawatt generating station
aU I need is a plane ticket and a
history. Could we say they are the · Pomeroy, Ohio.
under construction near the coastal
On Monday, as Carter retwned
motel room."
town of Seabrook, less than five
from a weekend at Camp David,
The first lady and the vice
miles south of here. Demonstrations
Md .• a reporter called to him, "Are
president
lead sizable entourages of
mounted there by opponents of
you going to cut $20 billion from the
aides
and
associates - aU of whom
nuclear power have attracted nafederal budget?"
have
to
be
paid for at the expense of
tional attention to the facility.
the
c;ampaign.
Prominently displayed in Brown's
basic campaign leaflet here was a
statement of strong support for
those protesters: "If I'm elected the
next president, I guarantee you I'm
not going to license Seabrook - but
you're going to get safe, efficient,
economical alternatives. That's my
pledge."
In a day-long campaign tour along
We oppose recently introduced 'legislation which would allow school
New Hampshire's seacoast, the
boards to make major purchases, up to $15 000 without going to comgovernor repeatedly criticized
~titive bidding. School boards are currently ~~pled from competitive
bidding for purchases up to$4,000.
.
nuclear power. At a rally here, for
example, he charged that "Seabrook
We have no particular distrust of local school boards, it is simply felt
and nuclear power are very basic
that such a move would be an Wldesireable action.
symbols. m the excesses and ir·
The r':Qulremen~ that govenunent bodies go to bid for major purchases
responsibility in our COWitry."
and proJects IS designed to insure that public tax dollars are spent for the
best service at the lowest cost.
,
Brown's strategists plan to press
the issue as the primaries move into
Recent reports from the Office of Management and Budget are amble
the Midwest and West - a strategy
ev1dence that often, even with ·a competitive bidding structure, public
shared by the Campaign for Safe
~~ ma1te unnecessary purchases. One Such report . from that
rEnergy, whose leaders have eschewWashington agency sho\vs that the govenunent has $8 million in unused ·
.
oflioe turnitut•· , (Qred away in warehj)Wles aCI'OIIS Ill!! countrv.
ed the confrontation politics and
radical tactics that have produced
The nature of some purchases made by school boards requires they
only limited success • during
have greater leeway in their exemption from strict lin!ltations in bidding
demonstratr0111 at Sealx;ook and
than other local government bodies. Competitive bidding, for example,
would not necessarily guarantee the purchase of the safest playground
other nuclear facilities.
equipment, or the best classroom text bov,.,
•
·
:
Instead,. that orgalljzatlon has
dispatc()ed articulate young
An upward Umit of $15,000 seef"J to us, hOwever, to be a bit ex~ve.
representatives to politely but firmSchool boards may currently
· the requirement to competitively bid
"Whece do yau get that .'WE're In trouble' ~tuff?
projects in emergency situatwn , .;uch as the repair or replacement of a
ly question-the· various candidates
I Just stopfJ!Hi by to tell you I've IWiiJn«1 from
furnace during the winter months. Tha~ emergency clause seems, to us,
about nuclear power during their
/ _ your campaign staff."
·
sufficient.
·
.
scheduled campaign apjle&amp;rances.
.,.... ....

Jimmy's Whitehouse .

Billy Carter returns
to visit President

.In Washington:
Opposition, for openers
By Robert Walters
HAMPI'ONFALU, N.H. (NEAlThe future of commercial nuclear
power, an unexpected but significant issue in New England's early
political contests, could become the
:object of a nationwide debate during
this year's presidential campaign.
Plans to carry the issue into other
states throughout the country
already are being made by the two
organizations that have met with
surprising success in their efforts to
focus attention on the subject in
Maine, New Hampshire and
Massachusetts.
Those groups are the campaign
organization of California Gov. Edmund G. (Jerry) Brown Jr., a contender for the Democratic presidential nomination, and the Campaign
for Safe Energy, a Boston-based
citizens' organization.
.. One of the country's best ~own
·ilnd most outspoken critics of
'nuclear-powered · generating sta.:tiOils to produce electricity, Brown
::has made the issue a cornerstone of
his early campaign in the Nor.jheast.
.- Although he finished third in the
~ew Hampshire primary and in
Maine's precinct caucuses, well
~hind President Carter and Sen.
,Edward M. Kennedy, ().Mass',
Brown displayed considerable
8trength along the seacoast, where
appoaltion to nuclear power is con~trated.
.
' In a !'llVersal of his performance
i;tsewhere in Maine, Brown was the
lnost popular candidate in Lincoln
9ounty, heme m the state's only
l)uclear generating station, the
Maine Yankee plant near the coastal
Community of WlacaMet.
,
:· Here in New Hampshire, the

Berry's World

Minnesota, Illinois advance in NIT play
By KEN RAPPOPORT
AP Sporta Wrtter
The National Invitation Tournament?
How about the "Big Ten Invitational" instead?
Last year, Big Ten teams clearly
dominated the NIT when three of Its
teams advanced to the Final Four
and IndUma won the title in New
York's Madison Square Garden by
beating Purdue.
Wednesday Dtght, Big Ten teams
again made their presence known
with victories in fii'St-round NIT
games, as Minnesota stopped
BcJrUng Green 64-50 and Illinois
routed Loyola of Chicago 105-87.
"They did wbat they had to do,"
said Bowling Green Coach John
Weinert of Minnesota. "So did we,
but they did it from a little higher

By Steve Ebert
The Southwestern Highlanders
displayed good patience on offense,
and unleashed a maddening zone
defense that at one point allowed
Green Township only four points in
the entire third quarter and first 5:56
of the fourth quarter as they broke
away from a 16-16 halftime tie
ellroute to a ~26 victory in the
opening game of the Class ADistrict
Tournament Tuesday evening in
Chillicothe.
'
The win pits the Higliliinders (119) against South Webster of Scioto
County (19-4) Saturday evening at
6:30 for the district championship
and the right to move on to regional
competition the following week in
Dayton.
The word to describe the Highlanders offensive play in the first half
would be "inconslstent.''They raced
to a 7-2 lead' in the first 5:52 of pla)'j

'

Weinert's Mid-American team
was dwarfed by a pro-size Minnesota front Une with players such
as Moot-11 Kevin McHale, 6-10 Gary
Holmes, 7-2 Randy Breuer and 6-6
Andy Thompson.
Darryl Mitchell scored 19 points
for the Gophers, a team that finished
in a fourth-place tie in the rugged
Big Ten this season.
!Uinois, which finished tied for fifth in the league, won even more
overwhelmingly over Loyola, the
regular-season champions of the
Midwestern City Conference, as
Mark Smith scored 24 points and
Derek Holcomb dominated the boar-

State~.

In tonight's games, it'll be Boston
University at Boston College;
Texas-EI Paso at Wichita State;
Alabama-Binningham at Soutlr
western Louisiana ; Nebraska at
Michigan; Grambling at Mississippi
and Duquesne vs. Pittsburgh at the
Pittsburgh Civic Center.
First-round action in the 32-team

ds.
"The crowd got us excited," said
Holcomb after the game at Cham-

paign. "We played really well but
they're an explosive team. We'd be

NATIONAL BASU:'I'IIALLA880CIATION

m

-

~r

Wll8hlnii&lt;M&gt;
New Jersey
Au.ont.

Houoton
San AniCIIIo
lndlana
Cleveland

Delroll
K.wuCily

MUnukee

Denver

Cllicqo

Utah
Los Angeles

Seallle

Euten CGiderellte

Portlan&lt;l
Golden stale

AUUII&lt;Divllto
W. I. Pel.

51 15
50 17
13 35
II 35
19 30
C..lnolllivllloo
II 71
1135
1335
!I 38
'l/43
II 52
WetWra c.lert~~Ce
ll 211
10 31
II 43
21 45
21 49
Pocllk:Divlllal
li 20

GB

.774
.745
...
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1910
2010
24

.603
.493 7\1
... 8
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.3811 15

.235 25
.1100

WedDeldly'1 Gamel
Pbllodolpb1a 120, Indiana 11S
Detroit 120, New Yort 113
Loo ologeleall7, KAnou City 101

Bootonl03,lloulton99,0T

Denver 112, MUwaukee 109
Phoenlxl%7, SeaWelll
Chica110 101, Golden State lOii
~~'1 Gllllel
New Jersey at Waahlngton

Portland aiUiah
Friday'• GUiell
Ph11adelphi&amp; &amp;I Booton
Wuhlnctoo at Delroll

.348 17\1
.300 21
.710

Chl.cago at I.Alll!l Angelea

J.l~;

Kim Da""'U

~;

Green Towmhlp

1980 AMC CONCORD
2 DOOR SEDAN
22 gallon fuel tank com-

pared to Fairmont's 15
gallons. Think about that
this weekend .

RIVERSIDE AMC-JEEP
Gallipolis, Ohio

The Long

Form could
save you
money on
your taxes

THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

MODULAR
HOMES

618 E . MAIN ST.
POMEROY , O.
OPEN 9 A.M . TO
6 P.M. WEEKDAYS
9-SSATURDAY
PHONE 992-3795

2nd &amp; BROWN ST .
MASON, W.VA .
OPEN TUES .
THURS. &amp; SAT.
9 A.M. · 5 P .M.
PHONE 77HI28

Appointment Available But Not Necessary

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

KINGSBURY
HOME
SALES
1100 E. Main

Green ++II;

Karen Il&amp;rneU 4.(1..8. rorw u.z.a.
Seen by q1111rten:
Southwestern
12 4 JJ 13--40

Denver at Portland

the ECC with the help of 19 points
apiece from Ralph Sampson and
Jeff Lamp. Ron Jones scored 22
points to lead independent Illinois
State past West Texas State of the
Missouri Valley Conference.

H&amp;R BLOCK

GREEN TOWNSHIP IN) - Barrett 142;

Adamo

combined for 37 points to lead independent St. Peter's past Connecticut of the Big East. Rogers
scored 13 points and Brandon 12 in
the second half as the nation's
leading defensive team came from
behind to lead by as many as 19 points in the closing minutes.
"Our game is to take our tum and
set up each other's shots," said St.
Peter's Bill Brown, who scored eight
points in the Peacocks' second'half
rally. "We just take our time. We
play basic, fundamental basketball."
Glen Green scored 15 points and
Jerry Smith added 10 as Murray
State of the Ohio Valley Conference
defeated Jacksonville of the Sunbelt.
Virginia, an Atlantic Coast Conference team, whipped Lafayette of

This year. make sure you are usi ng th e proper
tax form Even 1f you file d the Short Form last
year. YOur circumstances th i&gt; year could he lp
you save money by fi li ng the Long Form . At
H&amp;R Block. we II review your tax situ ation to
dec1d.e which form allows yo u to ·pay the lowest
teg JtJma te tax .

SO!/I1IWESTERN (Ill - Jeffen :1-W; S.
HaUey ~1·1 ; L. Edward.&lt;! 8-G-UI; 8. Edwants 1-1·
3; Jonlani+JO; Coxl.().1.'r or..u 1~.

Atlantaatlndiana

Howton at New Jersey
aeveland at Kanau City
New York at San AniCIIJo
Ulaha1Phoenb&lt;

.le:J 210
.3TI 1510

the stanza, and high scoring Julie
Barrett followed shortly thereafter,
and from that point any hopes of a
comeback the Bobcats might have
entertained vanished. The 27-20
Highlander lead ballooned to 33-20
with 2:08 remaining in the contest,
and Coach Mel Carter cleared his
bench.
Linda Edwards once again led the
Highlanders in scoring as she netted
16 points. Meca Jordan also hit for
'double figures with 10, followed by
Dana Jeffers with 8. Jamie Green
and Karen Darnell paced the Bobcats with 9 and 8 respectively. Julie
Barrett, Green's high scoring forward who averaged 18 plus points
per game during the regular season
was held to 2 points before fouling
out.
For the game Southwestern was 16
of 48 from the field for 33.3 percent,
and 8-25 from the foul Une for 32 percent. Green hit on only 12 of 42 from
the field for 211.6 percent and 2~ from
the charity stripe for"40 percent. The
Highlanders held a ~28 edge on the
boards, and also committed more
turnovers, 21-20. ·
Saturday's district championship
game against .South Webster will
begin at6:10 p.m. at Ellis B. Hatton
Memorial gymnasium in
Chillicothe. Fans going to the game
should take US 35 to Chillicothe, exit
at the fourth exit (High St.), tum left
onto High St., go to the second traffic
light and tum left again into the high
school.
Box score :

I
19 21 .7110 \1
45 21 .lll!2 I
32 38 .457 17~
31 'II .456 17\1
21 49 .300 211\1

. l'lloenll&lt;
San Diego

' ATAOLANCE
II)'Tbe_led_

field will conclude Friday night with
Washington visiting Nevada-Las
Vegas. Eight second-round games
will be played at sites to be determined on March 10 and four thirdround games will be held March 13
before the semifinals and finals at
the Garden on March 17 and March
19.
John Danks, held to a single field
goal in the first half, broke loose for
17 points in the second to lead Texas
of the Southwest Conference past St.
Joseph's of the East Coast Conference.
"It's been a terrible week (in pra()o
lice), and it started that way
tonight," said Texas Coach Abe
Lemons, whose team was losing 2().
18 at the start. "We wete just
listless, standing around out there.
· But we got straightened out."
Eddie Phillips scored 17 points and
Alabama outscored Penn State from
the free •throw Une 21.;! as the
Southeastern Conference team beat
the Nittany Lions, an independent.
"They got the loose balls when we
should have been getting them,"
said Penn State Coach Dick Harter.
''Alabama played the game the way
it ought to lie played.''
Kevin Rogers and Jim Brandon

via the foul route midway through

and then suffered a breakdown on
the boards and a rash turnovers
as Green, on the strength of three
Jamie Green baskets, pulled to
within two of the Highlanders at 1210 by quarter's end. During the
second stanza it appeared as if there
was a lid on Southwestern's basket.
It was not until :55 remained in the
half that Dana Jeffers scored on a
layup to break a scoreless drought of
over seven minutes. Seconds later
Linda.Edwards hit a short jwnper,
and the half ended knotted up at 16
all.
The third quarter proved decisive
in two ways. Southwestern's offense
began to catch fire; Unda Edwards
hit three short jumpers to propel the
Highlanders into a 24-18 lead. But
. perhaps more important was the
foul trouble the Bobcats foWld themselves in. Steady playmaker Usa
Adams was forced to the sidelines

Pro standings

Pomeroy, Ohio
992-7034

10 I I 6-211

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up by eight and then I'd look up and
we'd be up by two. We had a lot of
good, inside play, though, We were
really working the ball good inside."
In other NIT action Wednesday
night, Texas defeated St. Joseph's
(Pa.) 7~1 ; Alabama trinuned Penn
State 53-49; St.·Peter's (N.J.) whipped Connecticut 71-56; Murray State
turned back Jacksonville 53-49;
Virginia bf:at Lafayette 67-56 and
Illinois State stopped West Texas

SWHS girls advance to
finals in district play

An editorial

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Sports World

. . battle Ironton Saturday for title

By WUI Grllllllley
AP Correspondent

MIAMI (AP) -~" Oh, those bases
on balls."
That's been the traditional lament
of baseball managers since the days
of mutton-chops and stovetop hats,
but Baltimore's Earl Weaver, the
most successful of the modern crop,
has rewritten the sad refrain.
"Oh, the travel and the
lonesomeness," moans the only
skipper the Orioles have known for
12 years. "The airports, the queues,
the hotel lobbies ... missing the wife
and kids. "
It's a lifestyle Earl has followed on
aP~ off for 32 years ~ in both the
I" ·lors and majors and not without
·•-ne relish at times, he admits ~
but three more years should be the
limit of his endurance.
" I am still targeting my
retirement for the end of the 1982
season,'' he said. ''Only continuation
of the present ,inflation spiral or a
new and Wlusual challenge on the
field could make me change my
mind."
Rival manager should heave a
sign of relief.
Since taking over the Orioles in
mid-1968, Weaver has won six
divisional titles, four American
League pennants and one World
Series. He's finished first or second
10 times in 12 seasons, was third in
1972 and fourth in 1978.
His teams have won 100 or more
games four times, a mark exceeded
only by the legendary Joe McCarthy, who had six, and Corutie
Mack, five. His won-lost percentage
of .597 is bettered only by McCarthy
and Famous Frank Selee among

managers who lasted more than five
years.
He is rated No.I by his peers and
Ius critics.
"Don't get me wrong," Weaver
protested as he prepared to push his
American League champions
through another articulately
choreographed but highly relaxed
workout.
" I haven't lost my enthusiasm. M·
ter four months . of winter, I get
eager again when March rolls
around and I'm ready to go. But I
have to reasses my priorities.
"I honestly don't want to go on
when my present contract ends in
three years. I will be 53 then. I will
have been in this game 35 years.
"Remember there are 80 days a
year I am away from my family 80 days I wake up early, eat break·
fast alone, read every line in the
newspaper and then go to the ball
park at 2 p.m. for a night game.
·'This is an unending routine seven
days a week, eight months of the
year. Sometimes I get a hollow
feeling in my stomach. I want a
chl\nce to play golf and visit my
kids."

Weaver has a son, Michael, a successful businessman in Atlanta; a
daughter, Rhonda Lee, in Houston,
and another daughter, Teresa Ann,
in St.Louis, Earl's birthplace. A·
step-daughter, Kim, attends college
and lives at home in Baltimore.
The Weavers also have a winter
place in Miami, where Earl plays
golf almost daily with a group of
cronies. He plays to a seven han·
dicap.

Griffey may be
traded by Reds
TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - The bucks
stop here, Cincinnati Reds President
Dick Wagner said in effect, when he
declared negotiaions at an impasse
and renewed Ken Griffey's contract
on Wednesday.
The Reds outfield&lt; ·, who has a
lifetime batting average of .310 in six
years in the major leagues, had wanted a multiyear big-ilollar contract.
Wagner said he would have agreed
to the multiyear provision, but he
balked at the amount of money the
Reds would have had to shell out
over the next five or six years.
"There are four increments in the
contract and they all offered some
problems," Wagner said. "There
was just no place to go. We agreed
(Tuesday night) we were probably
at an impasse. There's a lot of bucks
involved and a lot of other parts (of
the contract) become difficult."
Contract renewal is a routine matter Wider baseball rules, Wagner
said. It means that negotiations may
conlinue, but if an agreement is not
reached, the Reds may have Griffey's services for what they paid him
last year and then probably lose him
in the free agent draft next year.
The Reds could have cut Griffey's
pay by 20 percent.
· "We have three options," Wagner
said. "Get him signed, which seems
to be the least likely of the
possibilities; play him one year and
run the risk of losing him; or trade
him, which is a strong possibility."
Wagner said the Reds dido 't make
an arbitrary decision to tighten the
purse strings, since they have the
fourth highest payroll in basel/all.
He also said that Griffey's left knee
wasn't a factor in the move.
Griffey batted .316 in 95 games last
season before placing himself on the
disabled 1tst to undergo surgery.
· "Griffey said Wednesday that he
lelt 86-90 percent recovered from the
&amp;urgery and that the knee possibly
was " still a problem with
negotiations."
. Ironically, Griffey felt he had
· ·"better than a 50 percent chance to
win" a dispute with the club last fall
that would have allowed him to
become a free agent at the time.
; But Griffey stopped short of arbitration, possibly taking the Reds
Off the hook.
: "With the knee problem, and if I
had a bad year, I knew I wouldn't be
worth anything,'' Griffey said.
: "Besides, I figured we'd probably
tesolve the whole thing. I felt this
(Cincinnati) was the place I liked to
be.' '
Both Griffey and Wagner said the
possibility of a trade ,has been

discus8ed.
: "The amount of money Involved ...
It boggles your mind,'' Wagner said.
"We don't want to trade Kenny Grif·
fey. I'd like to see Griffey with us,
but it just doesn't look probable.' '
The Reds also aJIIIOUII(led their
final three signlngs on Wedr)esday.
Wagner salt! thilt pitchers Mike

'

~

Gallipolis rallied from a 27-25
deficit in the final period to edge
Greenfield, 43-39, in Wednesday
night's girls' Class M District Tournament at Athens High School in The
Plains.
The semifinal victory advanced
Coach Jackie Knight's Blue Angels
to the district cage finals against
Ironton's defending champion Lady
Tigers. Ironton eliminated New Lex·
ington, 75-47, in Wednesday's other
semifinal contest.

Wednesday's victory left GAHS
with a 2()-2 season record, Greenfield
bowed out with a 19-4 mark.
It appeared for awhile the
Gallians' !:&gt;-game winning streak
was in jeopardy, but clutch free
throw shooting by the Stoney girls Shirl and Jane - along with
Margaret and Nancy Evans in the
final period proved to be the big dif·
ference in the game's final outcome.
Greenfield and GAHS each had 17

Baseball talks hit impasse
TAMPA, Fla. (AP ) - Major
league baseball and its players still
were poles apart today in their
negotiations for a new labor contract
as the owners went to bat under the
ieadership of Ray Grebey, their
chief negotiator.
·
Grebey met with the owners'
Player Relations Committee and
American League President Lee
McPhail Wednesday to answer
Tuesday's strike threat by the
Executive Board of the Players
Association.
Before a 21'.hour negotiating
session in Clearwater, Fla., Wed·
nesday, Grebey said he would com·
ment today on the players' strike
threat.
"We're evaluating that,'' Grebey
said. "We'll have some conunent after my meeting with the owners."
Grebey said he first would meet
with club general managers, and
then with the owners. He said his
statement probably would be late
this afternoon.
Earlier Wednesday, Marvin
Miller, the executive director of the

Playern Association, made his first
stop on a tour to obtain players'
ralification of the executive board's
strike threat. He obtained a 46-0 approval from the Philadelphia
Phillies.
The executive board bas
threatened to strike on or after April
1 if a collective barganing
agreement with the owners has not
been concluded.
Shortstop Larry Bowa, Phillles'
player
representative,
acknowledged that there was a
definate possibility of a strike that
would delay the Aprll 9 opening of
the baseball season.
Bowa, however, said he couldn't
believe the owners would be "foolish
enough to let us go through spring
training and then strike. It would be
like biting off their nose to spite their
face.
"We would have to have spring
training all over again while playing
league games. We have to support
the board or everything we've
gained goes out the window. We

Girls tournament scores
By Tbe A11ocilkd Pme

Weduaday'aRetulll
Cla11 AAA TOW'D&amp;ID.ea.ta
AI ColllDI.blll Rlgp
Col. East63, Col. Northland SO
Newark 49, Reynoldsburg 44
IAI Hubbonl)
Salem 50, Austinto..,.Fitcll .a
Yowtgs. Mooney 38, Youngs. Chaney 35
(.t1 Middletown)
Cin . Oak Hills 53, W. Chester LakOta Sl

Middletown f»l, Lebanm 31
IAII'ormoValleyFol'(e)
Nortoo ~7. Cleve. Lincoln-West49
Valley Forge 52, Medina HighlaOO 51
(At Unlv. o1Da)1oa)

Alter 63, Day. White 50

GAlLIPOLIS lUI - S. stoney, »V; J .
Stoney, 3-3-9; S. Evan.s, 5-0-10; M. Evans, 2--1-6;
N, Evarus, 2-2-6; Jenning!, 142; Howard, 142.
TOTALB11·f.G.
GREENFIELDIJti - Flynn, 3-0&lt;1; RannaiJ,
»7; AdamsJ. ~ ; Dunson, 2-(1..4 ; Stover, 4-1~ ;
sterto, 4-1-9; i&gt;ll11lh, H-,4, 1mAL817-5-Jt.
Score by qurten :
GallipoU..
9 10 6 18--13
Greenfield
8 9 10 12- 39

askY.our
neignbor
aBout.
~0~
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Warren Champion 51, &lt;bardon 36
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Windham 42, o.,lloo 311
Garaway 51, Sadytl.de40

IAIWrtpiSLUDl•.l
Greenon 60, Spring. South~

SU..bw'g61, BeaUsvtlle43

Clau.U ...........
(At AlbeDI)

GallipoliB 43, Greenfield McClain 39

LaCoss and Manny Sarmiento each
signed one-year contracts and
backup catcher Vic Correll signed ll
three-year contract after all three
had been told that they faced
renewal action taken in the Griffey
case if they did not sign.

might as well forget the union.''
Pete Rose, one of baseball's
highest paid superstars, described ·
the meeting with Miller as good and
bad. Rose said it was good in the
respect that the player found out
what negotiations were all about,
and bad .because the · situation was
more serious than people think.
"We have to put our faith in what
Marvin Miller has done in the last 14
years," Rose said. '(There is no
question that what the owners are
negotiating for will help the younger
players and hurt guys making a lot
of money. But we have to stick
together."
Rose noted that the players banded together in the baseball player
disputes of 1972 arxj 1976, one
producing an eight-game strike and
the other a spring camp lockout. He
said the players stuck together and·
won.
"This is the reason I have the contract I do, " said Rose, who earns a
reported $800,000 a year playing first
base in Philadephia.
In the negotiating session Wed·
nesday afternoon, Grebey said
progress was being made, but Miller
. indicated it was meaningless.
Grebey . said the owners' benefit
program was excellent, but refused
to elaborate, saying he would not
bargain through the media.

Sarah Evans was the olily Blue
Angel in double figures with 10
points. The Stoney girls had nine
apiece. Nancy Evans had six and
Margaret Evans five.
GAHS hit 18 of 42 field goal attempts for 43 percent. The Gallians
had 3! rebounds, 20 by Sarah Evans.
Jane Stoney had two assists and five
steals for the winners. Gallipolis had
29 turnovers.
Becky Stover and Judy Sterts each
had nine-points for the Lady Tigers.
Gallipolis, seeking its first diStrict
crown ever in girls basketball, will
battle Ironton at 1:30 p.m. Saturday
at The Plains. The winner will advance to the Dayton Regional Tournament March 14.
Box Score:

IAINewCoamn!G.... i '

Day. stiv-Pat ~.Beavercreek 50

KEN GRIFFEY

goals from the field. The Blue
Angels converted nine of IS foul
shots while Greenfield sank only five
of 14 at the charity line.
Gallipolis led 9-8 after one period.
The Blue Angels were still on top at
halftime, 19-:7 Greenfield outscored
GAHS !o-6 in the third canto to take
a 27-25 advantage into the last
period. ·The Gallians outscored
Greenfield 13-12 in the fourth
quarter.

LEBANON RESULTS
LEBANON, Ohio (AP) -Lebanon
Raceway reported an all-tlme
record low daily double payoff of
$3.80 Wednesday night on the 3-1
combination of Honey Date and Inde.
1lle previous low of $4.20 was
recorded in 1970, a track spokesman
said.
Alvin York captured the $1,200
featured mile pace in a photo finish
and paid$8.60, $4 and $2.80.
Pikadon was second, returning
$4.80 and $3.80 and Showem Joe
finished third, payiilg $3.80.
The mutuel pool totaled $122,026
and the •ttendance was 1,095.

IAI Whlteilall)

Canal Wincllatet' .a, Nor11lmor40
Fbh&lt;• C.lh. 60, Ca,nlingtoo t9

Weekend At ·Meigs Inn
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When you need any kind of
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Vitamins and toiletries .

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ENTERTAINMENT
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY
NIGHT

VELVET

9\\\\
ALL LEGAL
BEVERAGES SOlD

.

· Black speaks to BCS

. Barnitz retires

.

''

In 1796, Admiral Nelson captured
the Mediterranean island of Elba for
' Britain.

e

By Lamar C. Miller, D.O.
Cllalcal As-late Prof011sor
Ill Family Medlcllle
Oblo Ualvenlty College
Ill Oateopalblc Medlcllle
OSTEOPA111IC MANIPULATIVE
111ERAPY (OMT)
QUESTION: Why do osteopathic
physicians use manipulative
therapy?
.
ANSWER: Doctors of Osteopaihy
(D.O.s) perform manipulative
therapy to examine patients and
treat physical ailments. It is most of: Mason County
I
I

ten used to relieve pain by
manipulating p8rts of the body. An
integral part of osteopathic
medicine, manipulative therapy
(OMT) is based on the osteopathic
philosophy that emphasis should be
placed on the relationship between
the musculoskeletal system and
disease.
Following this belief, D.O.s use
OMT to change the physiological
state of internal organs. OMT is particularly helpful to fa mily
physicians who deal with a wide
variety of health problems, and can
be performed in the physician's office. For example, manipulation can
be used to contribute to the control of
hypertension and relieve and con·
tribute to the elimination of the symptoms of asUuna. It is also useful in
conditioning the mother's response
during pregnancy and is extremely
helpful in evaluating the growth and
development of the newborn.
Another common use of OMT is for
relief of pain in the neck and back
caused by a whiplash suffered in a

---

,-

News Notes

By Aim• Ma,..h•ll

t-H'ERSMEET
MASON - The Busy Bees 4-H
Club at their meeting on Monday at
Mason United Methodist Church,
discussed the forthcoming Mason
CoWlty RoUnd-Up. On March 30, at 2
p.m. the County Talent Contest will
be held at Pl. Pleasant Junior High
School, and Aprl110, Visual Presentations and Public Speaking will be
held at Courthouse Annex at 7:30
p.m. Tliese functions are all a part of
County Round-Up.
The group recently participated in
the Heart Fund Drive after school.
The group voted to go swimming
on March 16, at Rio Grande College
Indoor Pool. Those going are ex·
peeled to meet at 12 noon at Mason
United Methodist Church.
Those attending the meeting on
Monday included Junior Beasley,
John, Michelle and Robin Bond,
Tommy Bumgardner, Tammy Dancy, Robin Foreman, Tommy Hoff·
man, Tammy Hupp, Angie Johnson,
Annette Johru!on, Tina Johnson,
Melanie Mossman, Patty Ohlinger,
Greta Ph!Wps, Kelly Reynolds, Mar·
cia and Mary Alice Sisson, Judy and
Patty Stadola, Matt VanMeter . .
On February 27 the Busy Bees 4-H
Club visited the Four Corners 4-H
Club at the New Haven Library and
demonstrated some of the acts that
could be used for CoWlty Round-Up.
The Porn Porn Cheerleaders, Terri
Wolfe, Tonya Wolfe, Greta Phillips,
Linds Robey, Tina Johnson, Mary
Alice SisBon, Becky Hoffman and
Kelly Reynolds, demonstrated their
talent, Judy Stodola and Tammy
Hupp demonstrated a modem dance
accompanied by Matt VanMeter,
pianist.
Present were leaders Mrs. Martha
Hart, Mrs. Jackie Sisson and Mrs.
Pat Mossman in addition to many 4H'ers.

car accident. Using their hands and
fingers in a diagnostic fashion,
osteopathic physicians can also per·
form palpatory diagnosis. Under
this procedure, physicians can
determine the condition of WI·
derlying tissues·and locate possible
tumors.
QUESTION: What causes the poi&gt;'
ping and cracking often heard with
manipulation?
ANSWER: The noises often heard
when a physician performs OMT are
caused by the freeing up of restricted motion in a joint, similar to the
" popping of knuckles." When the
back is manipulated, the physician
is attempting to restore the normal
range of motion in the small joints of
the vertebrae. If this cannot be completed due to scar tissue or muscle
spasms in the area, then the
physicians may prescribe muscle
relaxants and physiotherapy in the
form of diathermy (using a high
electric· current to produce hear in
the tissues just Wider the surface).
QUESTION: When I receive OMT

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RUMMAGE SALE SA'ItJRDAY
A rununage sale will be held Friday and Saturday Middl~port
Masonic Temple basement by
Bethel 62, International Order of
Job's Daughters. In conjunction
with the rummage sale a bake sale
will be held on Saturday.

OPiN EVENINGS

ANSWER: Althou gh some
osteopathic specialists don't use
OMT, many do use it in conjunction
with their training in a specific area
to help alleviate the patient's
problem or to assist in diagnosing a
physical ailment. Some M.D.s also
use manipulative therapy as one of
their tools for treating patients.

Complete

• 2 Mini-Disk Drives

SOUP SALE Saturday beginning
at 11:30 a.m. In annex at SyraC\lll4l
Presbyterian Church sponsored by
Sunshine Makers Class.
MEIGS RETIRED Teachers
Association, 12 noon Saturday at the
Meigs Inn. ReservatiOII!I to be made
by Thursday with Mrs. Nan Moore,'
992-«i34 or Miss M. E. Chapman,
!J!I2.MI7. Mildred Chapman Gibbs tol
speak on riverboats.

· &amp;:3~

QUESTION : Do osteopathi c
physicians who specialize in areas
such as surgery, pediatrics or otr
stetrics use OMT frequently?

In 4 Weeks You Can "Turn On" This Total Package!

Social Calendar

.

ANSWER: As long as an improved
range of motion was accomplished,;
the therapy has some degree of sue-:
cess. Noise need not accompany the·
treaiment for it to alleviate the ..
patient's problem. A new technique :
being used by osteopathic .
physicians called muscle energy
causes absol utely no noise. Muscle·
energy involves directing the patient .
to move some parts of his anatomy
against the resistance offered by the
physician. This causes the patient's
own muscles to put the joint through
the normal range of m otion.

FAST DELIVERY
COMPLETE TRS-80
COMPUTER SYSTE Sl

•

POMONA GRANGE, Friday night
at 8 p.m. at the Rock Springs Grange
hall. Ohio Valley Grange to be host.
SAUSBURY Township Trustees
Friday 7 p. m., horne of Wanda
Eblin, clerk.
MEIGS COUNTY REACI' Friday
7:30 p.m. at Pomeroy Senior
Citizens Center. Members to bring
bylaws. New officers will be
nominated. Anyone Interested in
. joining may attend.

I don't always hear a noise with
manipulation. Does this mean it was
unsuccessful?

The biggest
name in
little computer s

MASON - The Mason United
Methodist Church will have Lenten
Study every Wednesday evening at .
7:30p.m. at Mason United Methodist'
Church with Dr. John E. Wildman in
charge.
Muon 8lld area penonals
Mrs. James W. (Dottie) Noble of
New Orleans, La. is visiting her
daughter and son-in-law, Mr .and
Mrs. Roy Elmer and three children.
Mrs. Wilma Blake has returned
home from Pleasant Valley Hospitsl
where she was hospitalized with the
flu.

FRIDAY

with the Meigs· County Welfare.
Department in the Food Stamp
Department for the past 12 yean,
bas resigned effective Friday.
Prior to her employment with the
Welfare Department, Mrs. Bamltz
worked several years In the ~
County Court House, at Meigs
General Hospital, Veterans
Memorial Hoapl~l, and In the office
ofOr. J,J.Davis.

LANCAsTER, 0:

THE MEIGS ·INN

I

I

Manipulative therapy discussed

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

Dean Bamltz, whO has worked

you must be 21·or accompal!ied by parents or legal·guardlan.

Phont: 992·3629

BY HELEN AND SUE BO'ITEL
that's when he's the worst. The other
KIDg Featurea Syndicate
· day he fell on the floor, hitting his
DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
head on the TV and was out for a
I go to a high school where the
while.
"news" about certsin Individuals is
He had a heart attack about a year
great to discuss. Several friends
and a half ago, but after a while the
have the same hobby : talking a bout
doctor said he could have a few
others.
beers. 1bat led to more and more
Until today I never realized how
drinking.
much damage gossip can cause.
He still has skim milk and all those
Recently I told the kids about
cholesterol-free foods. I can't
something I thought I saw. I didn't
understand why he's careful of
know this student and it seemed
himself one way and killing himself
"safe" to speak my mind. From
the other.
here, one person told another, spicWhen he's sober, he's quiet and
Ing up the story as it spread
moody, but when drunk, he scares
throughout the school.
me.
Later, the victim approached me
I'm a very shy, quiet person and I
and I learned the hurt I'd caused.
went to the doctor because my
That greaUy enlarged item had
nerves are bad. Mom told him about
become vicious gossip, and she may
Dad's drinking. The doctor said I
never live it down.
can't change him, and try not to let it
Well, here's one reformed taleget to me, but I worry because I love
teller! From now on I'm putting
him. Sometimes I worry because I
myself in the other fellow's shoes: if
might start hating him. I constantly
I did something personal and maybe
think of leaving, or even worse, but
stupid, would I want it publicized,
I'm only 15. Help! -ANONYMOUS
Please tell your readers:
P.S. Please ask others in my posi!. Once started, rumors are
tion what they've done to make life
almost impossible to stop..
liveable when there's a drunk in the
2. You can have fun without .talk·
family.
log about others.
ANONYMOUS :
' 3. Give people the benefit of the
Many young people will write,
· doubt.
we're sure, and if you'll send us a
' 4. Gossip can be habit-forming.
large, stamped, self-addressed
Also a confimled gossip loses
envelope, we'll mail their letters on
. friends: they stop ~ ber. toyQII.
.
· LESSON LEARNED
Meanwhil.e, here's help from a girl
L.L.:
who has been there:
Thanks for your good words.
' We can only add: gossips are
DEAR HELEl';l AND SUE:
either looking for attention - or
I thought I couldn't stand another
." reass11f!111Ce that they're "the good
day of my mother's drinking. Then a
' guys." When they talk about others,
friend introduced me to Alateen and
they riglJieously Imply that they
Dad started going to Al·Arion. These
· wouldn't stoop so low, or at least get
two organizations help families of
caught at it ... which soon turns them
alcoholics understand the problem
stuffy and dull.- HELEN AND SUE
and live with it: Just bearing your
troubles is such a relief. Best of all,
RAP:
Mom is now going to Alcoholics
My father drinks an awful lot. He
Anonymous! -HOPEFUL
works four days and is off four and

•

4 PC. GROUP FROM

and Mark Davis, Middleport; Robin
Dewhurst, Rutland ; Sandy Garnes,
Dexter; Maxine Ha,rt, Mary Mora,
Rita lWusey and Robin Snowden,
Pomeroy; Kimberly Grueser and
Vicky Hysell, Minersville; James
Patterson, Racine ; Lowell
Ridenour, Chester.
Those named to the merit roll include: Gene Blankenship, Vicki
Blankenship and Jennifer Wise,
Middleport; Shelia Taylor and Shari
Mitch, Pomeroy; Scott Wolfe,
Racine; Cheryl Larkins, Portland ;
and Jean Ritchhart, Syracuse.

Helen Help Us:
When discussing others
becomes hurtful gossip I

seling aJ\d genetic &lt;liseases. Staff
from Buckeye Community Services'
·group homes and sponsoring private
family h&lt;mes were in attendance.
1lle SIICOlld half of in-service was
taken by ~,.Chris Lobnnan, B.C.S.'
Executive Director. Mr. Lohnnan
~ plans for staff and board
of B.C.$. to attend a two-day retreat
on March 21·22. The retreat will be
for formalizing plans for the direction of the agency over the next five
yearn.
Each Buckeye Community Services' home is licensed by the State
of Ohio and all staff receive required
pre:-servlce and on-going, in-service
training.
Persons attending this month's inservice fi-om Gallla-Meigs Counties
include: Marte Hobbs, Wllma
Mount, Walter Henry, '1'llla Keaims,
Lori Barron, Lee Roberts and Irene
Bowen.

Plus Tax

I
I

RIO GRANDE - Twenty-one
Meigs Countians are among 195
students from !Uo Grande, College
and Conununity College to be
honored for outatanding academic
achievement by being named to the
Dean's Honor Roll and Dean's Merit
Roll for the winter quarter.
The honor roll recognizes full-time
students who earned averages of
3.75 or higher and the merit roll
recognizes full-time students who
earned averaged between 3.40 and
3.75.
Those named to the honor roll include : Carin Bailey, Michael Childs,

Training meeting.
Ms. Black discussed genetic coun-

Coffee or Milk

I

Meigs Countians named
to Dean 's List here

Ms. Betty Black, Family Practitioner, R.N., with the Center for
: Hwnan Development, Ohio Uniyjr. sity, Athens, was the guest speaker
for the staff of Buckeye Community
Services at its February In-Service

·MENU

-

5-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, March 6, 1~

..

SILVER BRI'DGE PLAZA

Denim~
lO I) l

IOf I tHS

'&gt; •qn 1n yuur
tl •'l lf' •III.J fllO(Jfl

. . ._ _ _ __

�GAHS Blue AngeJs edge Greenfield,
•

;,.Th-eDa];-il:S-;:y-el;;e
·ddle-port-- Pom-er
oy_.O., Th_ursd-ay,_Marc- h6.1_98U "-'"

Sports World

. . battle Ironton Saturday for title

By WUI Grllllllley
AP Correspondent

MIAMI (AP) -~" Oh, those bases
on balls."
That's been the traditional lament
of baseball managers since the days
of mutton-chops and stovetop hats,
but Baltimore's Earl Weaver, the
most successful of the modern crop,
has rewritten the sad refrain.
"Oh, the travel and the
lonesomeness," moans the only
skipper the Orioles have known for
12 years. "The airports, the queues,
the hotel lobbies ... missing the wife
and kids. "
It's a lifestyle Earl has followed on
aP~ off for 32 years ~ in both the
I" ·lors and majors and not without
·•-ne relish at times, he admits ~
but three more years should be the
limit of his endurance.
" I am still targeting my
retirement for the end of the 1982
season,'' he said. ''Only continuation
of the present ,inflation spiral or a
new and Wlusual challenge on the
field could make me change my
mind."
Rival manager should heave a
sign of relief.
Since taking over the Orioles in
mid-1968, Weaver has won six
divisional titles, four American
League pennants and one World
Series. He's finished first or second
10 times in 12 seasons, was third in
1972 and fourth in 1978.
His teams have won 100 or more
games four times, a mark exceeded
only by the legendary Joe McCarthy, who had six, and Corutie
Mack, five. His won-lost percentage
of .597 is bettered only by McCarthy
and Famous Frank Selee among

managers who lasted more than five
years.
He is rated No.I by his peers and
Ius critics.
"Don't get me wrong," Weaver
protested as he prepared to push his
American League champions
through another articulately
choreographed but highly relaxed
workout.
" I haven't lost my enthusiasm. M·
ter four months . of winter, I get
eager again when March rolls
around and I'm ready to go. But I
have to reasses my priorities.
"I honestly don't want to go on
when my present contract ends in
three years. I will be 53 then. I will
have been in this game 35 years.
"Remember there are 80 days a
year I am away from my family 80 days I wake up early, eat break·
fast alone, read every line in the
newspaper and then go to the ball
park at 2 p.m. for a night game.
·'This is an unending routine seven
days a week, eight months of the
year. Sometimes I get a hollow
feeling in my stomach. I want a
chl\nce to play golf and visit my
kids."

Weaver has a son, Michael, a successful businessman in Atlanta; a
daughter, Rhonda Lee, in Houston,
and another daughter, Teresa Ann,
in St.Louis, Earl's birthplace. A·
step-daughter, Kim, attends college
and lives at home in Baltimore.
The Weavers also have a winter
place in Miami, where Earl plays
golf almost daily with a group of
cronies. He plays to a seven han·
dicap.

Griffey may be
traded by Reds
TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - The bucks
stop here, Cincinnati Reds President
Dick Wagner said in effect, when he
declared negotiaions at an impasse
and renewed Ken Griffey's contract
on Wednesday.
The Reds outfield&lt; ·, who has a
lifetime batting average of .310 in six
years in the major leagues, had wanted a multiyear big-ilollar contract.
Wagner said he would have agreed
to the multiyear provision, but he
balked at the amount of money the
Reds would have had to shell out
over the next five or six years.
"There are four increments in the
contract and they all offered some
problems," Wagner said. "There
was just no place to go. We agreed
(Tuesday night) we were probably
at an impasse. There's a lot of bucks
involved and a lot of other parts (of
the contract) become difficult."
Contract renewal is a routine matter Wider baseball rules, Wagner
said. It means that negotiations may
conlinue, but if an agreement is not
reached, the Reds may have Griffey's services for what they paid him
last year and then probably lose him
in the free agent draft next year.
The Reds could have cut Griffey's
pay by 20 percent.
· "We have three options," Wagner
said. "Get him signed, which seems
to be the least likely of the
possibilities; play him one year and
run the risk of losing him; or trade
him, which is a strong possibility."
Wagner said the Reds dido 't make
an arbitrary decision to tighten the
purse strings, since they have the
fourth highest payroll in basel/all.
He also said that Griffey's left knee
wasn't a factor in the move.
Griffey batted .316 in 95 games last
season before placing himself on the
disabled 1tst to undergo surgery.
· "Griffey said Wednesday that he
lelt 86-90 percent recovered from the
&amp;urgery and that the knee possibly
was " still a problem with
negotiations."
. Ironically, Griffey felt he had
· ·"better than a 50 percent chance to
win" a dispute with the club last fall
that would have allowed him to
become a free agent at the time.
; But Griffey stopped short of arbitration, possibly taking the Reds
Off the hook.
: "With the knee problem, and if I
had a bad year, I knew I wouldn't be
worth anything,'' Griffey said.
: "Besides, I figured we'd probably
tesolve the whole thing. I felt this
(Cincinnati) was the place I liked to
be.' '
Both Griffey and Wagner said the
possibility of a trade ,has been

discus8ed.
: "The amount of money Involved ...
It boggles your mind,'' Wagner said.
"We don't want to trade Kenny Grif·
fey. I'd like to see Griffey with us,
but it just doesn't look probable.' '
The Reds also aJIIIOUII(led their
final three signlngs on Wedr)esday.
Wagner salt! thilt pitchers Mike

'

~

Gallipolis rallied from a 27-25
deficit in the final period to edge
Greenfield, 43-39, in Wednesday
night's girls' Class M District Tournament at Athens High School in The
Plains.
The semifinal victory advanced
Coach Jackie Knight's Blue Angels
to the district cage finals against
Ironton's defending champion Lady
Tigers. Ironton eliminated New Lex·
ington, 75-47, in Wednesday's other
semifinal contest.

Wednesday's victory left GAHS
with a 2()-2 season record, Greenfield
bowed out with a 19-4 mark.
It appeared for awhile the
Gallians' !:&gt;-game winning streak
was in jeopardy, but clutch free
throw shooting by the Stoney girls Shirl and Jane - along with
Margaret and Nancy Evans in the
final period proved to be the big dif·
ference in the game's final outcome.
Greenfield and GAHS each had 17

Baseball talks hit impasse
TAMPA, Fla. (AP ) - Major
league baseball and its players still
were poles apart today in their
negotiations for a new labor contract
as the owners went to bat under the
ieadership of Ray Grebey, their
chief negotiator.
·
Grebey met with the owners'
Player Relations Committee and
American League President Lee
McPhail Wednesday to answer
Tuesday's strike threat by the
Executive Board of the Players
Association.
Before a 21'.hour negotiating
session in Clearwater, Fla., Wed·
nesday, Grebey said he would com·
ment today on the players' strike
threat.
"We're evaluating that,'' Grebey
said. "We'll have some conunent after my meeting with the owners."
Grebey said he first would meet
with club general managers, and
then with the owners. He said his
statement probably would be late
this afternoon.
Earlier Wednesday, Marvin
Miller, the executive director of the

Playern Association, made his first
stop on a tour to obtain players'
ralification of the executive board's
strike threat. He obtained a 46-0 approval from the Philadelphia
Phillies.
The executive board bas
threatened to strike on or after April
1 if a collective barganing
agreement with the owners has not
been concluded.
Shortstop Larry Bowa, Phillles'
player
representative,
acknowledged that there was a
definate possibility of a strike that
would delay the Aprll 9 opening of
the baseball season.
Bowa, however, said he couldn't
believe the owners would be "foolish
enough to let us go through spring
training and then strike. It would be
like biting off their nose to spite their
face.
"We would have to have spring
training all over again while playing
league games. We have to support
the board or everything we've
gained goes out the window. We

Girls tournament scores
By Tbe A11ocilkd Pme

Weduaday'aRetulll
Cla11 AAA TOW'D&amp;ID.ea.ta
AI ColllDI.blll Rlgp
Col. East63, Col. Northland SO
Newark 49, Reynoldsburg 44
IAI Hubbonl)
Salem 50, Austinto..,.Fitcll .a
Yowtgs. Mooney 38, Youngs. Chaney 35
(.t1 Middletown)
Cin . Oak Hills 53, W. Chester LakOta Sl

Middletown f»l, Lebanm 31
IAII'ormoValleyFol'(e)
Nortoo ~7. Cleve. Lincoln-West49
Valley Forge 52, Medina HighlaOO 51
(At Unlv. o1Da)1oa)

Alter 63, Day. White 50

GAlLIPOLIS lUI - S. stoney, »V; J .
Stoney, 3-3-9; S. Evan.s, 5-0-10; M. Evans, 2--1-6;
N, Evarus, 2-2-6; Jenning!, 142; Howard, 142.
TOTALB11·f.G.
GREENFIELDIJti - Flynn, 3-0&lt;1; RannaiJ,
»7; AdamsJ. ~ ; Dunson, 2-(1..4 ; Stover, 4-1~ ;
sterto, 4-1-9; i&gt;ll11lh, H-,4, 1mAL817-5-Jt.
Score by qurten :
GallipoU..
9 10 6 18--13
Greenfield
8 9 10 12- 39

askY.our
neignbor
aBout.
~0~
SHOES FOA WOMEY

Marguerite Shoes

I

ItootOn 75., New Lex1naton 47
IAICu!teid)

ComobeD·Memorlal $1, Pelenburl Spring. $3
Sllutbera 33, E. Paleatine II
(AIC!odauUAodonoo)

an. Talt65,Greonllllls63

IAIGalluu)

Col. Hamiltoo Twp. 62, W..UaU 47

Gl'8ll\'llle$1, Pleuont57

IAIWamol
LaBrae 41, Cortland Lail:evtew 32

Warren Champion 51, &lt;bardon 36
Clau A ToaJ'MIIleatl
IAIKeal)

United Local40, Lordolown Ill
Windham 42, o.,lloo 311
Garaway 51, Sadytl.de40

IAIWrtpiSLUDl•.l
Greenon 60, Spring. South~

SU..bw'g61, BeaUsvtlle43

Clau.U ...........
(At AlbeDI)

GallipoliB 43, Greenfield McClain 39

LaCoss and Manny Sarmiento each
signed one-year contracts and
backup catcher Vic Correll signed ll
three-year contract after all three
had been told that they faced
renewal action taken in the Griffey
case if they did not sign.

might as well forget the union.''
Pete Rose, one of baseball's
highest paid superstars, described ·
the meeting with Miller as good and
bad. Rose said it was good in the
respect that the player found out
what negotiations were all about,
and bad .because the · situation was
more serious than people think.
"We have to put our faith in what
Marvin Miller has done in the last 14
years," Rose said. '(There is no
question that what the owners are
negotiating for will help the younger
players and hurt guys making a lot
of money. But we have to stick
together."
Rose noted that the players banded together in the baseball player
disputes of 1972 arxj 1976, one
producing an eight-game strike and
the other a spring camp lockout. He
said the players stuck together and·
won.
"This is the reason I have the contract I do, " said Rose, who earns a
reported $800,000 a year playing first
base in Philadephia.
In the negotiating session Wed·
nesday afternoon, Grebey said
progress was being made, but Miller
. indicated it was meaningless.
Grebey . said the owners' benefit
program was excellent, but refused
to elaborate, saying he would not
bargain through the media.

Sarah Evans was the olily Blue
Angel in double figures with 10
points. The Stoney girls had nine
apiece. Nancy Evans had six and
Margaret Evans five.
GAHS hit 18 of 42 field goal attempts for 43 percent. The Gallians
had 3! rebounds, 20 by Sarah Evans.
Jane Stoney had two assists and five
steals for the winners. Gallipolis had
29 turnovers.
Becky Stover and Judy Sterts each
had nine-points for the Lady Tigers.
Gallipolis, seeking its first diStrict
crown ever in girls basketball, will
battle Ironton at 1:30 p.m. Saturday
at The Plains. The winner will advance to the Dayton Regional Tournament March 14.
Box Score:

IAINewCoamn!G.... i '

Day. stiv-Pat ~.Beavercreek 50

KEN GRIFFEY

goals from the field. The Blue
Angels converted nine of IS foul
shots while Greenfield sank only five
of 14 at the charity line.
Gallipolis led 9-8 after one period.
The Blue Angels were still on top at
halftime, 19-:7 Greenfield outscored
GAHS !o-6 in the third canto to take
a 27-25 advantage into the last
period. ·The Gallians outscored
Greenfield 13-12 in the fourth
quarter.

LEBANON RESULTS
LEBANON, Ohio (AP) -Lebanon
Raceway reported an all-tlme
record low daily double payoff of
$3.80 Wednesday night on the 3-1
combination of Honey Date and Inde.
1lle previous low of $4.20 was
recorded in 1970, a track spokesman
said.
Alvin York captured the $1,200
featured mile pace in a photo finish
and paid$8.60, $4 and $2.80.
Pikadon was second, returning
$4.80 and $3.80 and Showem Joe
finished third, payiilg $3.80.
The mutuel pool totaled $122,026
and the •ttendance was 1,095.

IAI Whlteilall)

Canal Wincllatet' .a, Nor11lmor40
Fbh&lt;• C.lh. 60, Ca,nlingtoo t9

Weekend At ·Meigs Inn
FRIDAY NIGHT SPECIAL 5 TIL 10
•

Tossed Salad
PrimeRih
Mashed Potatoes
and Gravy
Vegetable
Roll,
Tea,
.

:

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We're Concerned

:

About Your Health

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When you need any kind of
medicabon, we make .sure
that you have it promptly.
Vitamins and toiletries .

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•:::..... ..
.......,_
.._ ......"' •······ .,.."" '

-'---~~~===------J

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._...,,o.

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ENTERTAINMENT
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY
NIGHT

VELVET

9\\\\
ALL LEGAL
BEVERAGES SOlD

.

· Black speaks to BCS

. Barnitz retires

.

''

In 1796, Admiral Nelson captured
the Mediterranean island of Elba for
' Britain.

e

By Lamar C. Miller, D.O.
Cllalcal As-late Prof011sor
Ill Family Medlcllle
Oblo Ualvenlty College
Ill Oateopalblc Medlcllle
OSTEOPA111IC MANIPULATIVE
111ERAPY (OMT)
QUESTION: Why do osteopathic
physicians use manipulative
therapy?
.
ANSWER: Doctors of Osteopaihy
(D.O.s) perform manipulative
therapy to examine patients and
treat physical ailments. It is most of: Mason County
I
I

ten used to relieve pain by
manipulating p8rts of the body. An
integral part of osteopathic
medicine, manipulative therapy
(OMT) is based on the osteopathic
philosophy that emphasis should be
placed on the relationship between
the musculoskeletal system and
disease.
Following this belief, D.O.s use
OMT to change the physiological
state of internal organs. OMT is particularly helpful to fa mily
physicians who deal with a wide
variety of health problems, and can
be performed in the physician's office. For example, manipulation can
be used to contribute to the control of
hypertension and relieve and con·
tribute to the elimination of the symptoms of asUuna. It is also useful in
conditioning the mother's response
during pregnancy and is extremely
helpful in evaluating the growth and
development of the newborn.
Another common use of OMT is for
relief of pain in the neck and back
caused by a whiplash suffered in a

---

,-

News Notes

By Aim• Ma,..h•ll

t-H'ERSMEET
MASON - The Busy Bees 4-H
Club at their meeting on Monday at
Mason United Methodist Church,
discussed the forthcoming Mason
CoWlty RoUnd-Up. On March 30, at 2
p.m. the County Talent Contest will
be held at Pl. Pleasant Junior High
School, and Aprl110, Visual Presentations and Public Speaking will be
held at Courthouse Annex at 7:30
p.m. Tliese functions are all a part of
County Round-Up.
The group recently participated in
the Heart Fund Drive after school.
The group voted to go swimming
on March 16, at Rio Grande College
Indoor Pool. Those going are ex·
peeled to meet at 12 noon at Mason
United Methodist Church.
Those attending the meeting on
Monday included Junior Beasley,
John, Michelle and Robin Bond,
Tommy Bumgardner, Tammy Dancy, Robin Foreman, Tommy Hoff·
man, Tammy Hupp, Angie Johnson,
Annette Johru!on, Tina Johnson,
Melanie Mossman, Patty Ohlinger,
Greta Ph!Wps, Kelly Reynolds, Mar·
cia and Mary Alice Sisson, Judy and
Patty Stadola, Matt VanMeter . .
On February 27 the Busy Bees 4-H
Club visited the Four Corners 4-H
Club at the New Haven Library and
demonstrated some of the acts that
could be used for CoWlty Round-Up.
The Porn Porn Cheerleaders, Terri
Wolfe, Tonya Wolfe, Greta Phillips,
Linds Robey, Tina Johnson, Mary
Alice SisBon, Becky Hoffman and
Kelly Reynolds, demonstrated their
talent, Judy Stodola and Tammy
Hupp demonstrated a modem dance
accompanied by Matt VanMeter,
pianist.
Present were leaders Mrs. Martha
Hart, Mrs. Jackie Sisson and Mrs.
Pat Mossman in addition to many 4H'ers.

car accident. Using their hands and
fingers in a diagnostic fashion,
osteopathic physicians can also per·
form palpatory diagnosis. Under
this procedure, physicians can
determine the condition of WI·
derlying tissues·and locate possible
tumors.
QUESTION: What causes the poi&gt;'
ping and cracking often heard with
manipulation?
ANSWER: The noises often heard
when a physician performs OMT are
caused by the freeing up of restricted motion in a joint, similar to the
" popping of knuckles." When the
back is manipulated, the physician
is attempting to restore the normal
range of motion in the small joints of
the vertebrae. If this cannot be completed due to scar tissue or muscle
spasms in the area, then the
physicians may prescribe muscle
relaxants and physiotherapy in the
form of diathermy (using a high
electric· current to produce hear in
the tissues just Wider the surface).
QUESTION: When I receive OMT

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RUMMAGE SALE SA'ItJRDAY
A rununage sale will be held Friday and Saturday Middl~port
Masonic Temple basement by
Bethel 62, International Order of
Job's Daughters. In conjunction
with the rummage sale a bake sale
will be held on Saturday.

OPiN EVENINGS

ANSWER: Althou gh some
osteopathic specialists don't use
OMT, many do use it in conjunction
with their training in a specific area
to help alleviate the patient's
problem or to assist in diagnosing a
physical ailment. Some M.D.s also
use manipulative therapy as one of
their tools for treating patients.

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SOUP SALE Saturday beginning
at 11:30 a.m. In annex at SyraC\lll4l
Presbyterian Church sponsored by
Sunshine Makers Class.
MEIGS RETIRED Teachers
Association, 12 noon Saturday at the
Meigs Inn. ReservatiOII!I to be made
by Thursday with Mrs. Nan Moore,'
992-«i34 or Miss M. E. Chapman,
!J!I2.MI7. Mildred Chapman Gibbs tol
speak on riverboats.

· &amp;:3~

QUESTION : Do osteopathi c
physicians who specialize in areas
such as surgery, pediatrics or otr
stetrics use OMT frequently?

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ANSWER: As long as an improved
range of motion was accomplished,;
the therapy has some degree of sue-:
cess. Noise need not accompany the·
treaiment for it to alleviate the ..
patient's problem. A new technique :
being used by osteopathic .
physicians called muscle energy
causes absol utely no noise. Muscle·
energy involves directing the patient .
to move some parts of his anatomy
against the resistance offered by the
physician. This causes the patient's
own muscles to put the joint through
the normal range of m otion.

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POMONA GRANGE, Friday night
at 8 p.m. at the Rock Springs Grange
hall. Ohio Valley Grange to be host.
SAUSBURY Township Trustees
Friday 7 p. m., horne of Wanda
Eblin, clerk.
MEIGS COUNTY REACI' Friday
7:30 p.m. at Pomeroy Senior
Citizens Center. Members to bring
bylaws. New officers will be
nominated. Anyone Interested in
. joining may attend.

I don't always hear a noise with
manipulation. Does this mean it was
unsuccessful?

The biggest
name in
little computer s

MASON - The Mason United
Methodist Church will have Lenten
Study every Wednesday evening at .
7:30p.m. at Mason United Methodist'
Church with Dr. John E. Wildman in
charge.
Muon 8lld area penonals
Mrs. James W. (Dottie) Noble of
New Orleans, La. is visiting her
daughter and son-in-law, Mr .and
Mrs. Roy Elmer and three children.
Mrs. Wilma Blake has returned
home from Pleasant Valley Hospitsl
where she was hospitalized with the
flu.

FRIDAY

with the Meigs· County Welfare.
Department in the Food Stamp
Department for the past 12 yean,
bas resigned effective Friday.
Prior to her employment with the
Welfare Department, Mrs. Bamltz
worked several years In the ~
County Court House, at Meigs
General Hospital, Veterans
Memorial Hoapl~l, and In the office
ofOr. J,J.Davis.

LANCAsTER, 0:

THE MEIGS ·INN

I

I

Manipulative therapy discussed

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

Dean Bamltz, whO has worked

you must be 21·or accompal!ied by parents or legal·guardlan.

Phont: 992·3629

BY HELEN AND SUE BO'ITEL
that's when he's the worst. The other
KIDg Featurea Syndicate
· day he fell on the floor, hitting his
DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
head on the TV and was out for a
I go to a high school where the
while.
"news" about certsin Individuals is
He had a heart attack about a year
great to discuss. Several friends
and a half ago, but after a while the
have the same hobby : talking a bout
doctor said he could have a few
others.
beers. 1bat led to more and more
Until today I never realized how
drinking.
much damage gossip can cause.
He still has skim milk and all those
Recently I told the kids about
cholesterol-free foods. I can't
something I thought I saw. I didn't
understand why he's careful of
know this student and it seemed
himself one way and killing himself
"safe" to speak my mind. From
the other.
here, one person told another, spicWhen he's sober, he's quiet and
Ing up the story as it spread
moody, but when drunk, he scares
throughout the school.
me.
Later, the victim approached me
I'm a very shy, quiet person and I
and I learned the hurt I'd caused.
went to the doctor because my
That greaUy enlarged item had
nerves are bad. Mom told him about
become vicious gossip, and she may
Dad's drinking. The doctor said I
never live it down.
can't change him, and try not to let it
Well, here's one reformed taleget to me, but I worry because I love
teller! From now on I'm putting
him. Sometimes I worry because I
myself in the other fellow's shoes: if
might start hating him. I constantly
I did something personal and maybe
think of leaving, or even worse, but
stupid, would I want it publicized,
I'm only 15. Help! -ANONYMOUS
Please tell your readers:
P.S. Please ask others in my posi!. Once started, rumors are
tion what they've done to make life
almost impossible to stop..
liveable when there's a drunk in the
2. You can have fun without .talk·
family.
log about others.
ANONYMOUS :
' 3. Give people the benefit of the
Many young people will write,
· doubt.
we're sure, and if you'll send us a
' 4. Gossip can be habit-forming.
large, stamped, self-addressed
Also a confimled gossip loses
envelope, we'll mail their letters on
. friends: they stop ~ ber. toyQII.
.
· LESSON LEARNED
Meanwhil.e, here's help from a girl
L.L.:
who has been there:
Thanks for your good words.
' We can only add: gossips are
DEAR HELEl';l AND SUE:
either looking for attention - or
I thought I couldn't stand another
." reass11f!111Ce that they're "the good
day of my mother's drinking. Then a
' guys." When they talk about others,
friend introduced me to Alateen and
they riglJieously Imply that they
Dad started going to Al·Arion. These
· wouldn't stoop so low, or at least get
two organizations help families of
caught at it ... which soon turns them
alcoholics understand the problem
stuffy and dull.- HELEN AND SUE
and live with it: Just bearing your
troubles is such a relief. Best of all,
RAP:
Mom is now going to Alcoholics
My father drinks an awful lot. He
Anonymous! -HOPEFUL
works four days and is off four and

•

4 PC. GROUP FROM

and Mark Davis, Middleport; Robin
Dewhurst, Rutland ; Sandy Garnes,
Dexter; Maxine Ha,rt, Mary Mora,
Rita lWusey and Robin Snowden,
Pomeroy; Kimberly Grueser and
Vicky Hysell, Minersville; James
Patterson, Racine ; Lowell
Ridenour, Chester.
Those named to the merit roll include: Gene Blankenship, Vicki
Blankenship and Jennifer Wise,
Middleport; Shelia Taylor and Shari
Mitch, Pomeroy; Scott Wolfe,
Racine; Cheryl Larkins, Portland ;
and Jean Ritchhart, Syracuse.

Helen Help Us:
When discussing others
becomes hurtful gossip I

seling aJ\d genetic &lt;liseases. Staff
from Buckeye Community Services'
·group homes and sponsoring private
family h&lt;mes were in attendance.
1lle SIICOlld half of in-service was
taken by ~,.Chris Lobnnan, B.C.S.'
Executive Director. Mr. Lohnnan
~ plans for staff and board
of B.C.$. to attend a two-day retreat
on March 21·22. The retreat will be
for formalizing plans for the direction of the agency over the next five
yearn.
Each Buckeye Community Services' home is licensed by the State
of Ohio and all staff receive required
pre:-servlce and on-going, in-service
training.
Persons attending this month's inservice fi-om Gallla-Meigs Counties
include: Marte Hobbs, Wllma
Mount, Walter Henry, '1'llla Keaims,
Lori Barron, Lee Roberts and Irene
Bowen.

Plus Tax

I
I

RIO GRANDE - Twenty-one
Meigs Countians are among 195
students from !Uo Grande, College
and Conununity College to be
honored for outatanding academic
achievement by being named to the
Dean's Honor Roll and Dean's Merit
Roll for the winter quarter.
The honor roll recognizes full-time
students who earned averages of
3.75 or higher and the merit roll
recognizes full-time students who
earned averaged between 3.40 and
3.75.
Those named to the honor roll include : Carin Bailey, Michael Childs,

Training meeting.
Ms. Black discussed genetic coun-

Coffee or Milk

I

Meigs Countians named
to Dean 's List here

Ms. Betty Black, Family Practitioner, R.N., with the Center for
: Hwnan Development, Ohio Uniyjr. sity, Athens, was the guest speaker
for the staff of Buckeye Community
Services at its February In-Service

·MENU

-

5-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, March 6, 1~

..

SILVER BRI'DGE PLAZA

Denim~
lO I) l

IOf I tHS

'&gt; •qn 1n yuur
tl •'l lf' •III.J fllO(Jfl

. . ._ _ _ __

�6- The Daily Sentinel, lo'Jiddleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, March 6, l!llkl

Dinner plans made by Auxiliary here
Athens parties.
Plans for serving a dinner at the
Poppy Days were set for May 16
Eighth District American Legion
and
17 and the unit ordered several
Conference to be held in Middleport
hundred
for sale. Mayor Fred Hoffon March 23 were made when the
man
will
he contacted a bout signing
American Legion Auxiliary of
the
proclamation.
Feeney,Bennett Post 128, met WedBuckey~ Girls State represennesday night at the hall.
tatives
were selected during the
During the meeting several
meeting and will be announeed onee
donations were made including one
the unit has received official confor $10 for the Eighth District party
finnation from the Department of
to be held for the veterans at the
Ohio on their acceptance. Again this
Athens Mental Health Care Center
on April4. A donation was alsp made year, the Preceptor Beta Beta Chapby Mrs. Alma Newton for help with · ter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority will
co-sponsor a Meigs High School
the veter~ns· parties.
junior.
The unit made contributions to the
The charter was draped in
Salvation Anny, March of Dimes,
memory d Lorena Rice and
Heart Fund, Cancer Fund, and the
Beatrice Robson. Reported ill were

f---

---------------1

Erna Cornelius and Clifford Christy.
Sympathy cards were sent to
Wallace Russell and Mrs. Bill Lewis.
The Chillicothe birthday party
was discussed and it was noted that
the unit was not acknowledged as a
contributor by the district president.
A contact will be made to clarify the
matter.
Peggy Caton opened the meeting
with prayer, and the members
repeated the pledge and preamble.
Officers' reports were given and
correspondence from district officers was read.
A dinner of the Legionnaires and
Auxiliary members preceded the
meeting.

• · reported
rund razszng

I Girl Scout Diary l D
~~~ (1...,1, .. ll ..·,lkh

1

1

•parations are underway in
rnosl Meigs County Girl Scout troops
for the observance of Gir: ~&lt;:0ut
Week, March 9-15.
This weekend Girl Scout Sunday
'.. will be observed with scouts to at·
, tend the church of their choice in
; unifonn. Leaflets on scouting for in: sertions into church bulletins have
been distributed.
Posters are being made by many
of the troops and will be displayed in
local business places, and a window
display will be featured on Main St.,
Pomeroy, Elberfeld's Department
Store.
Girls of some troops will be
remembering elderly persons and
shu tins with visits and small gilts.
SALISBURY TROOP 1220
A poster to be displayed during
Girl Scout Week was made during
the Tuesday afternoon meeting of
the Salisbury.Brownies.
; · The meeting opened with the
: pledge to the flag and the girl scout
• promise. Roll call and dues were
taken and activities to be canied out
in celebration of Girl Scout Week
were discussed. Each of the girls
will have some special individual
project of doing something special
for someone during the week.
The skating party for all
registered scouts to be held Aprlll3,
2 to 4:30 p.m. was announced.
Registered scout leaders and other
adults are also invited to attend the
skilting party.
Refreshments were served by
Heidi Caruthers and Tracy Eblin.
CHESTER TROOP 1049
New officers were elected at the
Tuesday night meeting of Chester
Troop 1049 held at the scout hall.
Elected were MicheUe Capehart,
secretary; Janet Werry, treasurer,
and Donna Grueser, recreation
leader. The scouts worked m
posters to be displayed during Girl
Scout Week along with a group project to be entered in the Meigs County Fair in August.
Gina Gibbs took attendance and
collecled dues. Michelle Capehart
led in the pledge to the flag, and
Jody Schaekel, the girl scout pro-

A report on fund raising activities
was given at the recent meeting of
tbe Long Bottom Community
Associatione held at the hall. ,
Mrs. Ernestine Hayman reported
on the financial situation of the
group and the bills which had been
paid, and also noted that $30 was
made on the afghan which was won
by Mrs. Mary Grace Cowdry. Pat
Neutzling was the winner of a quilt
and pillow in another fund raising
activity.
Mrs. Leona Hensley attended the
meeting during which time it was
noted that several members were ill.
The Lord's Prayer, pledge to the
flag, and a reading of scripture from

St. Matthew opened the meeting.
Mrs. Mae McPeek read the
secretary's report.
Cookies, pink lemonade, koolaid
and coffee were served by Mrs .
Ruby Brewer, Janie Fitch, Pearl
Powell, and Melody Roberts, the
hostesses.
Mrs. Sue Hayman, Nellie Andrew,
Pearl Powell will' be hostesses for
the March meeting. Attending were
Ruby Brewer, Mr. and Mrs. Tom
Hayman, Beth and Ginger Hayman,
Ernestine Hayman, Francis Andrew. Sadie Larkins, Pearl Powell,
Janie Fitch, Joe and Ada Bissell, •
Leona Hensley, Mae 'McPeek, Dorsal Larkins, and Melody Roberts.

Book fair
planned
The Riverview Elementary School

in Reedsvllle will sponsor a student
book fair from March 6-10. Students
will be able to browse and purchase
books. The book fair will be open
during the hours of school and Monday, March 10, at the PTO meeting
at 7:30p.m. in the school cafeteria.

PWP CALENDAR
Weekly schedule of the GalliaMeigs-Mason Parents Without Partners:
March 6 - 7 p.m., amigos covered
dish dinner at Gallipolis Mental
Health Center. This is to welcome all
new members. Meat will be
provided; take own table service.
White elephant sale following dinner. At 8 p.m. adult family planning
session at the same location.
March 9 - 6: 30 p.m., bowling for
family at·Skyline Lanes, Gallipolis;
Tottie Ellcessor and Fran Thomas
will be instructors.
March 11 · 7:30 p.m., adult
meeting at Ohio Valley Bank
Building, Gallipolis. A demon-

The book fair committee invites
all students, parents and visitors to
attend the fair. The fair will encourage student interest in reading
and in building home libraries, and
will also contribute to a worthwhile
project. All profits will be used for
purchase of school library' books. •
Melody Eggleston, elementary
librarian, is serving as book fair
chairperson. The conunittee includes Margaret Cauthorn, Jenny
Berkhimer, Marlene Putnam,
Sharon Riggs and Jenny Newlun.

-

7-11\f Dtlly Sentinel, Miekllepori-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, March6, 1980

ARRIVES FUR DutY
:,
MILDENHALL, England Sergeant Edward L Mitchell, IIlii (j
Mr. and Mrs. Delbert F . MitcbeU cl
Langsville, has anived for duty bell
at RAF Mlldenball.
;;
Sergeant Mitchell, an air'borrftl
elec&amp;ronlc tecl!nician, wl\~
previously llliSigned at Hellenllt(\11
Air Base, Greece.
N

~..Seven-year-old's
By JOHNHbWARD.
nell's life that investigators are
~Press Writer
trying to piece together.
He
the West In a nightBut the records show Kenneth
mare odyssey, bllteriy lonely and Eugene Pamell - abandoned by his
- • ~ by a past « imprtsonment,
father at the age of 5 in Amarillo,
~ and llcmosenal rape.
Teus - lived a twilight existence
When K~tll Parnell sojJght the
for much « his 48 years, an existenlove cl. children to warm his home,
ce that saw a journey through men• authorities say, be kidnapped them.
tal instltutlOilS and prisons.
. ~has ,been accused in two
"He has shown a peculiar te.,..
abductla,~~~ ~en years apart - the
dency to search for trouble and
' kidnapping of 5-year-old Timmy
punishment," reported Dr. Richard
White on Feb. 14 in Ukiah, Calif.,
D. Lowenberg, a psychiatrist who
and _the 1972 Merced, Calif., abeumlned Parnell in 1951 at the
; ductlon , of then-7~year-old steven · behest of the Kern County Superior
Court.
, Stayner.
:
The balding., i!lfoot-7 Parnell
Lowenberg, now deceased, was
: pleaded innocent 'TueSday · to lddappointed to paint a pyscbulogical
• napping White and was held on
profUe of the then-19-year-old Par: $12,000 bond. Authorities said they
nell, who was sent to San Quentin
·! would fUe charges against Parnell in Priaon for three years for the one: Stayner'sabductlon.
day abduction and sexual
A second suspect, Ervin Edward
molestation of an 8-yeaN!ld Baker: Mlll1lb)!, was arrested late Tuesday
sfleld boy.
: oo susPtdon of kidnapping in cooThe attack on the youngster oo: nectlon iwith the Stayner abduction,
curred only four days after the birth
• pollee said Authorities said Murphy
of Parnell's only daughter by a teen: told them' be bad once worked with
age girl he had manied two years
' Parnell at 'a Yosemite National Park
earlier. The marriage ended In
lodge.
divorce four years later, said his
; Sandwiched between official
mother, Mary Parnell, because his
: records - medical reporl.il, court
wife "found someone else'."
: reports and hospital docwnents Parnell's life was a litany of
· are the still-mysterious gaps in Partragedy and seU-hatred, extending

-~

Q

~

stratlon of arts and ~ wl11 be
given by the Gazebo Arts and Crafts
Shop d Gallipolis.
March 13 - 7 p.m., orientation for
new members at Mental Health Center, Gallipolis. All meinbers and
prospective
well:ome.

members

BEST SUITED

''

EXCEUENT SELECTION
OF TltE LATEST STYLES.
2, 3 and 4 PIECE
SUITS IN SIZES
36 THRU 50.

'

The book fair display will include

attractive new books from many
publishers in all popular price
ranges.
All reading interests will be
represented, including classics, fiction, biographies, adventure stories,
science, nature, crafts, mystery and
reference books. The conunittee is
working with Educational Reading
Service, a professional book fair
company, to furnish an individual
selection of books for the fair.

MEN'S FORMAL
WEAR BY
OUCCIW
AVAILABLE FOR RENT
N. 2ND

BAHR CLOTHIERS

r---------------------------------__j_____________..::.__________.:._

TOLI!!DO, Ohio (AP) - A former
Georgia teacher appears to b.! the
latest victim of a hoax 'involving a
mythical woman in the Toledo love

scarncase.

THIS IS A
'

ADVERTISEMENT?

WOODLAND HIJ...l.'l, Calif. (AP)
- Jay Silverheels, the full-blooded
Mohawk 'Jmowq, ' to mllliOilS d
television viewers as the Lone
Ranger's faithful Indian companion
Tonto, has died at the age of 82.
A Canadian-born athlete and actor, Silvemeel.s died Wednesday at
the Motion Picture and Television
Country House of compliC!IUOilS
from a boyt with pneumonia. He bad
been hospitalized there since Jan.
25, suffering from the effecta cl. a
stroke he suffered 5t years ago.
"I am ' deeply saddened," said
Clayton Moore, who starred as the
multed Lone Ranger in the long·
rlllllllnll television series.
"He was a great man. He was a
perfect gentleman and a true flgbte~
for the IJ!dian cause. I'm going tO
mllll biul very much. Jay had a
great &amp;ellae « humor and. believe
me, I know all the world Wl11 ml8s
Jay Silverbeel.s 81 Tonto," Moore
said
j
Born ~rold J. Smith on the Six
Nati0111 1ndlan Reservation in Ontario, c4nada, he was given the
name Sl,lverbeels by a Mohawk
tribal elder. He .u ad It u his stage
name, lePnY changing his name to
Sllverbeell nlile yean &amp;IJO.
Arriving In Hollywooctln ~933 as a
prolealonal lacroelle player and
seml~eoilonal hockey , player,
suverbeell 11y 1938 bad· turned to
fllmt u ,lan em-a at the urging of
~adorJoeE. ~.
· A t!J11ea IIIIIJIICifler .II( Indian
cam1111, ~)lnt ·big screen
role wq 81 an Indian prince in '''lbe
C.ptab~CutuJe .": He ~
as tbe /
cblef Geronimo Jn·
tbne
es: ''Broken ,.., ArrOW,''
"Bittle1at Apache Pass" and "Watt

REACf TO MEET

.
·
:
·

SOUP SUPPER SET
There will be a soup supper Saturday beginning at 11 :30 a.m. in the
annex of the Syracuse Presbyterian
Church sponsored by the Sunshine
Makers Class.

WE STILL
HAVE SOME
1979 MODELS

IN STOCK
THAT QUALIFIES
YOU FOR A

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DISCOUNTS ON

4x4 PICKUPS

CITATIONS·
&amp; CHEVETIES
IN STOCK
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THERE'S NOTHING THERE!
.

No, It's not invisible ink. But this Is what a radio commercial
could look like to customers UNLESS ... the radio is turned on
... UNLESS it's tuned to one of the many channels available
and 1F someone is in the room ... and IF your customer Is
listening at a precise time of day and tuned to a specific pro·
gram ... and IF the commercial Is sufficiently Interesting,
entertaining, and informative to hold your customer's atten·
tion Instead of taking a radio break tor conversation, snacks.
drink of water. etc.
When 'you put all the facts together, radio advertising Is quite
"iffy", when you want today's advertising dollars to produce
definite results.
Newspapers don't use invisible · ink. Your ad Is always
available to be read at leisure. and at any time, by the entire
household. You can use all the description of prices
necessa'ry to presell your customers. Your ad c;an be tornJ)Ut,
saved and redeemed If there Is a coupon. Can you Imagine
trying to sell ten items on radio with prices and detailed
descriptions and store locations within a selling period Of 10,
20, or 30 seconds! All this can be acc;ompllsl1ed with the Dally
Tribune, and most Important of all, your ad will reach your
customers for less cost.

.,.••
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if you· want a cost comparison or a complete and detailed
analysis of "your" specific market area•call The Dally Sentinel - 992· 215~•
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Th·e Qaily . Sentinel ~:·. . '-·

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Cfi"'f Dltle('

o,.ro (~M~~Ifl' ' " ' P~.
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II was at a sheep ranch 11 miles
easl of Manchester that Parnell

tived with Steven Stayner and 'l'llnmy White when the abductions were
discovered.
Authorities said Patl'!en did not
mistreat or molest the boys. Scme
people who knew Steven as "Dennis" said the boy who called Parnell
"Dad" never gave a hint r#. being
heldfgainst his will or wanting to
leav .
"I thought it was a father and 11011
all the time," said Leslie Slometla,
who owns the sheep ranch. "They
came in here as father and 1011 and·
got along well."
"It seemed be (Parnell) wanted to
build a family fot himself without
going to the trouble cl. getting
manied," said Mendocino County
District Attorney Joe Allen.
And Timmy's mother, Angela
White, said she believed that Parnell
had no malicious intent, that be just
"wanted a little boy."

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He played Tonto in an 221
televised episodes of the "Lone
Ranger" and two Lone R8nger
movies, riding tlnugb hunclreda c1.
destlHiefying adventures with his
"keJ110 sabe'' - Iroquois for faithful
friend.
The ABC-TV series, a spin-off
from Fran Striker's 19308 radio
program. ran from 1949 to 1957.
Rerun on CBS and NBC through
19111; It is still widely syndicated.
Among his other movie credits
were "Key Largo," "True Grit,"
"The Man Wbo Loved Cat Dancing,''
and ''The Will Rogers Story. ••
Lui August, Silverbeela became
the first American Indian to have his
star set in Hollywood's Walk of
Fame.
He founded the Indian Actors
Workshop in Hollywood In the late
1960a. Lois Red Elk, wbo lltudled
with Silverheela and acted with him
in two movies; said he created the
workshop "as a vehicle to get Indian
people on the screen, also to try and
change the Image cl. Indian people.
''He created the almcJclpbere for us
to get Into the Industry. Before that.
Indian people had to play props, extras, background. There just
weren't any Indian people with
opeaklng parts, .. she said.
An avid sportsman until his
strolle, Silvetbeela obtained a harness racing license in 1974 and competed as a trainer and driver at
tracb acrou tl!e country.
"He had a genuine loire of~. ••
said fami))'.-esman TcmSbeUey. ·
Sllverbeela Ia survived by his wife,
Marl Di&amp;ma, and four children:
Marilyn, Pamela, Karen and Jay

FuDeral a1T81111ements
were pending.

Antbony.

EASTERN STAR roMEI!:T ,

oe

• Han:llonvt1le Chapter. Ordlr
the Easter:n ~. WUl meet It 7:•
'l'uell!laY nlgbt It the Harrlllonvllle
· Muonlc Temple. Inltlatclry wlll'll
will be held A c:aad)' and bUe sale
wl11 be conducted,with aD rnemben~
being asked to take.baked goods•

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Meig!l ~CT will meet
f'ridaY'~.l11m:ao P~m. • the ,
Sentor..._umerinPomeroy.
Memben jte a&amp;' brlni byJan. ,
ctfklers w111 be ncmtnaled
n- ~ In jGUiiJIIJ are
vtled 1o attend. Tbe group meets the
· flntr&lt;!daY «each DICIIth.

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POMEROY MOTOR CO.
~1otH

mates who come from outside Utah.
Sjnce the Merced abduction , Parnell ana Stayner lived in various
parts of Northern California, according to authorities.
Their whereabouts from 1972 to
1975 are unclear, but on Sept. 2, 19'15,
Stayner- renamed Dennis Pamell
- was registered in. a Fort Bragg
elementary school where he attended the fourth grade.
Authorities said the YOIIth's parents were listed as Kenneth Pamell
and Barbara Parnell. The latter
name was apparently fictitious, investigators said.
Later, the two moved on to Comptche, Calif., where stayner took the
bus to a middle school in nearby
Mendocino to attend the fifth and
sixth grades.
In 19'18 and 1979, the boy went to
upper level school in Mendocino,
then transferred to high school in
Point Arena. From there, the pair
moved to Manchester near Ukiah.

8 Colors
&amp; White

Tonto dies Wednesday at 62

Relreslullents were served following the meeting to nine girls, the two
leaders, and two guests.

-

mystery. Parnell was the victim of a
homosexual rape. Two years later
he was accused in an arson fire'
allegedly torching some grass on th;
outskirts «town.
Parnell, a registered sex offender
who lived in various parts of Northem and Southem California
escaped twice from a state mentai
hospital.
Lowenberg said Parnell had
developed "an attachment to a
younger boy with whom he had no
affair, but for whom he felt a real
liking." Following one of his
escapes, that attachment drove Parnell to seek out the boy and enabled
authorities to apprehend him.
Durir.g the mid-1960s, Parnell served sill years in Utah State Prison on
robbery and grand larceny convictiOilS. When be was released from
the Utah penitentiary on March 21,
19117, he was given 24 hours to leave
the state in what authorities there
said is routine procedure for in-

comment on the case.
"It was like my friend had died ...
I hadn't questioned ber existence,"
the Georgia woman said A former
school teacher, she is now is

The 29-year-old woman, who lives bpsiness.
in Savanah, Ga., and wished to
The woman said the supposed
remain anonymous, called Toledo friendship carne out of a June 1972
police after she read a. newspaper · telephone call from a woman who
account « at least .six Toledo-area told a sad story of Miss stratton conmen being victimized.
fined in a Toledo hospital foUowing
The case broke two weeks ago an auto accldblt.
when Toledo police told Ron Reed,
Sbe told police she was told she
34, that he. had been bilked out «
looked like Miss Stratton and
more than $34,(01) for the care and suggested the two might want to
comfort of a woman known as Kyle correspond. The caller, the Georgia
stratton. .
woman and Miss Stratton supo
For seven years, ending in mid- posedly belonged to the same
February, Reed sent cash anci giftS sorority.
to a beautiful invalid woman in a
The correspondence dwindled
Toledo hospital. He said be talked to over the last year. The woman says
the woman on the tell!pbone and she sent gilts such as books to Miss
received occaslonal letters, but / Stratton and at one point told ber
never me\ her. E&gt;(~. ~ . clas!l of Jlf!ldicC8JlPf\ll ,,~deats of
said be fell in love with Miss strat- Miss Straton's plight. She said the
ton.
ehildren drew pictures for Miss
Police ~port at least six Toledo . Stratton to "brighten ber day."
area men !lave been victimized in a
She said she also received gilts
hoax involving the mythical Miss from Miss Stratton such as flowers
Stratton. .
and a $100 cash gift one Christmas.
Police have arrested Carolyn L.
"Emotionally, it's been an exMatuszak, 38, and her husband,
perience for me. I guess I could have
Robert, 35, in coonection with been taken for more money," she
Reed's case. The two have declined said.

mise.

Meigs County REACI' will meet
Friday, March 7, at 7:30p.m. at the
Pomeroy Senior Citizens Center.
' Members are to bring bylaws. New
officers will be nominated. Anyone
interested in joining may attend the
meeting. The club meets the first
: Friday of each month.

from his years as a Texas waif
"ihrough his adolescent bouts with
the law and beyond, according to
Lowenberg.
At the age of four, Parnell tried to
yank out four of his own teeth with
his ·fmgers although they were not
loose, Lowenberg said. At 8, after he
came to California and three yearil
after his father, a cook, deserted
him and his mother, the youth
shined a bright light into his eyes for
so long he required treatment. At 9,
Lowenberg reported, the boy was
"considering suicide monthly, ••
Once, the buy shot himseU in the
abdomen in an apparent suicide attempt, Lowenberg reported, while in
another incident be jumped fif the
roof of a barn onto a large plank with
nail8 jutting up.
"The end is only a step away," the
report says Parnell yelled before
jumping. He escaped, however, with
only a single nail wound.
At 13, in an incident still clouded in

More victims turning·up
in :now fame¢ love scam

0.

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kidnapper said tortured

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�6- The Daily Sentinel, lo'Jiddleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, March 6, l!llkl

Dinner plans made by Auxiliary here
Athens parties.
Plans for serving a dinner at the
Poppy Days were set for May 16
Eighth District American Legion
and
17 and the unit ordered several
Conference to be held in Middleport
hundred
for sale. Mayor Fred Hoffon March 23 were made when the
man
will
he contacted a bout signing
American Legion Auxiliary of
the
proclamation.
Feeney,Bennett Post 128, met WedBuckey~ Girls State represennesday night at the hall.
tatives
were selected during the
During the meeting several
meeting and will be announeed onee
donations were made including one
the unit has received official confor $10 for the Eighth District party
finnation from the Department of
to be held for the veterans at the
Ohio on their acceptance. Again this
Athens Mental Health Care Center
on April4. A donation was alsp made year, the Preceptor Beta Beta Chapby Mrs. Alma Newton for help with · ter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority will
co-sponsor a Meigs High School
the veter~ns· parties.
junior.
The unit made contributions to the
The charter was draped in
Salvation Anny, March of Dimes,
memory d Lorena Rice and
Heart Fund, Cancer Fund, and the
Beatrice Robson. Reported ill were

f---

---------------1

Erna Cornelius and Clifford Christy.
Sympathy cards were sent to
Wallace Russell and Mrs. Bill Lewis.
The Chillicothe birthday party
was discussed and it was noted that
the unit was not acknowledged as a
contributor by the district president.
A contact will be made to clarify the
matter.
Peggy Caton opened the meeting
with prayer, and the members
repeated the pledge and preamble.
Officers' reports were given and
correspondence from district officers was read.
A dinner of the Legionnaires and
Auxiliary members preceded the
meeting.

• · reported
rund razszng

I Girl Scout Diary l D
~~~ (1...,1, .. ll ..·,lkh

1

1

•parations are underway in
rnosl Meigs County Girl Scout troops
for the observance of Gir: ~&lt;:0ut
Week, March 9-15.
This weekend Girl Scout Sunday
'.. will be observed with scouts to at·
, tend the church of their choice in
; unifonn. Leaflets on scouting for in: sertions into church bulletins have
been distributed.
Posters are being made by many
of the troops and will be displayed in
local business places, and a window
display will be featured on Main St.,
Pomeroy, Elberfeld's Department
Store.
Girls of some troops will be
remembering elderly persons and
shu tins with visits and small gilts.
SALISBURY TROOP 1220
A poster to be displayed during
Girl Scout Week was made during
the Tuesday afternoon meeting of
the Salisbury.Brownies.
; · The meeting opened with the
: pledge to the flag and the girl scout
• promise. Roll call and dues were
taken and activities to be canied out
in celebration of Girl Scout Week
were discussed. Each of the girls
will have some special individual
project of doing something special
for someone during the week.
The skating party for all
registered scouts to be held Aprlll3,
2 to 4:30 p.m. was announced.
Registered scout leaders and other
adults are also invited to attend the
skilting party.
Refreshments were served by
Heidi Caruthers and Tracy Eblin.
CHESTER TROOP 1049
New officers were elected at the
Tuesday night meeting of Chester
Troop 1049 held at the scout hall.
Elected were MicheUe Capehart,
secretary; Janet Werry, treasurer,
and Donna Grueser, recreation
leader. The scouts worked m
posters to be displayed during Girl
Scout Week along with a group project to be entered in the Meigs County Fair in August.
Gina Gibbs took attendance and
collecled dues. Michelle Capehart
led in the pledge to the flag, and
Jody Schaekel, the girl scout pro-

A report on fund raising activities
was given at the recent meeting of
tbe Long Bottom Community
Associatione held at the hall. ,
Mrs. Ernestine Hayman reported
on the financial situation of the
group and the bills which had been
paid, and also noted that $30 was
made on the afghan which was won
by Mrs. Mary Grace Cowdry. Pat
Neutzling was the winner of a quilt
and pillow in another fund raising
activity.
Mrs. Leona Hensley attended the
meeting during which time it was
noted that several members were ill.
The Lord's Prayer, pledge to the
flag, and a reading of scripture from

St. Matthew opened the meeting.
Mrs. Mae McPeek read the
secretary's report.
Cookies, pink lemonade, koolaid
and coffee were served by Mrs .
Ruby Brewer, Janie Fitch, Pearl
Powell, and Melody Roberts, the
hostesses.
Mrs. Sue Hayman, Nellie Andrew,
Pearl Powell will' be hostesses for
the March meeting. Attending were
Ruby Brewer, Mr. and Mrs. Tom
Hayman, Beth and Ginger Hayman,
Ernestine Hayman, Francis Andrew. Sadie Larkins, Pearl Powell,
Janie Fitch, Joe and Ada Bissell, •
Leona Hensley, Mae 'McPeek, Dorsal Larkins, and Melody Roberts.

Book fair
planned
The Riverview Elementary School

in Reedsvllle will sponsor a student
book fair from March 6-10. Students
will be able to browse and purchase
books. The book fair will be open
during the hours of school and Monday, March 10, at the PTO meeting
at 7:30p.m. in the school cafeteria.

PWP CALENDAR
Weekly schedule of the GalliaMeigs-Mason Parents Without Partners:
March 6 - 7 p.m., amigos covered
dish dinner at Gallipolis Mental
Health Center. This is to welcome all
new members. Meat will be
provided; take own table service.
White elephant sale following dinner. At 8 p.m. adult family planning
session at the same location.
March 9 - 6: 30 p.m., bowling for
family at·Skyline Lanes, Gallipolis;
Tottie Ellcessor and Fran Thomas
will be instructors.
March 11 · 7:30 p.m., adult
meeting at Ohio Valley Bank
Building, Gallipolis. A demon-

The book fair committee invites
all students, parents and visitors to
attend the fair. The fair will encourage student interest in reading
and in building home libraries, and
will also contribute to a worthwhile
project. All profits will be used for
purchase of school library' books. •
Melody Eggleston, elementary
librarian, is serving as book fair
chairperson. The conunittee includes Margaret Cauthorn, Jenny
Berkhimer, Marlene Putnam,
Sharon Riggs and Jenny Newlun.

-

7-11\f Dtlly Sentinel, Miekllepori-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, March6, 1980

ARRIVES FUR DutY
:,
MILDENHALL, England Sergeant Edward L Mitchell, IIlii (j
Mr. and Mrs. Delbert F . MitcbeU cl
Langsville, has anived for duty bell
at RAF Mlldenball.
;;
Sergeant Mitchell, an air'borrftl
elec&amp;ronlc tecl!nician, wl\~
previously llliSigned at Hellenllt(\11
Air Base, Greece.
N

~..Seven-year-old's
By JOHNHbWARD.
nell's life that investigators are
~Press Writer
trying to piece together.
He
the West In a nightBut the records show Kenneth
mare odyssey, bllteriy lonely and Eugene Pamell - abandoned by his
- • ~ by a past « imprtsonment,
father at the age of 5 in Amarillo,
~ and llcmosenal rape.
Teus - lived a twilight existence
When K~tll Parnell sojJght the
for much « his 48 years, an existenlove cl. children to warm his home,
ce that saw a journey through men• authorities say, be kidnapped them.
tal instltutlOilS and prisons.
. ~has ,been accused in two
"He has shown a peculiar te.,..
abductla,~~~ ~en years apart - the
dency to search for trouble and
' kidnapping of 5-year-old Timmy
punishment," reported Dr. Richard
White on Feb. 14 in Ukiah, Calif.,
D. Lowenberg, a psychiatrist who
and _the 1972 Merced, Calif., abeumlned Parnell in 1951 at the
; ductlon , of then-7~year-old steven · behest of the Kern County Superior
Court.
, Stayner.
:
The balding., i!lfoot-7 Parnell
Lowenberg, now deceased, was
: pleaded innocent 'TueSday · to lddappointed to paint a pyscbulogical
• napping White and was held on
profUe of the then-19-year-old Par: $12,000 bond. Authorities said they
nell, who was sent to San Quentin
·! would fUe charges against Parnell in Priaon for three years for the one: Stayner'sabductlon.
day abduction and sexual
A second suspect, Ervin Edward
molestation of an 8-yeaN!ld Baker: Mlll1lb)!, was arrested late Tuesday
sfleld boy.
: oo susPtdon of kidnapping in cooThe attack on the youngster oo: nectlon iwith the Stayner abduction,
curred only four days after the birth
• pollee said Authorities said Murphy
of Parnell's only daughter by a teen: told them' be bad once worked with
age girl he had manied two years
' Parnell at 'a Yosemite National Park
earlier. The marriage ended In
lodge.
divorce four years later, said his
; Sandwiched between official
mother, Mary Parnell, because his
: records - medical reporl.il, court
wife "found someone else'."
: reports and hospital docwnents Parnell's life was a litany of
· are the still-mysterious gaps in Partragedy and seU-hatred, extending

-~

Q

~

stratlon of arts and ~ wl11 be
given by the Gazebo Arts and Crafts
Shop d Gallipolis.
March 13 - 7 p.m., orientation for
new members at Mental Health Center, Gallipolis. All meinbers and
prospective
well:ome.

members

BEST SUITED

''

EXCEUENT SELECTION
OF TltE LATEST STYLES.
2, 3 and 4 PIECE
SUITS IN SIZES
36 THRU 50.

'

The book fair display will include

attractive new books from many
publishers in all popular price
ranges.
All reading interests will be
represented, including classics, fiction, biographies, adventure stories,
science, nature, crafts, mystery and
reference books. The conunittee is
working with Educational Reading
Service, a professional book fair
company, to furnish an individual
selection of books for the fair.

MEN'S FORMAL
WEAR BY
OUCCIW
AVAILABLE FOR RENT
N. 2ND

BAHR CLOTHIERS

r---------------------------------__j_____________..::.__________.:._

TOLI!!DO, Ohio (AP) - A former
Georgia teacher appears to b.! the
latest victim of a hoax 'involving a
mythical woman in the Toledo love

scarncase.

THIS IS A
'

ADVERTISEMENT?

WOODLAND HIJ...l.'l, Calif. (AP)
- Jay Silverheels, the full-blooded
Mohawk 'Jmowq, ' to mllliOilS d
television viewers as the Lone
Ranger's faithful Indian companion
Tonto, has died at the age of 82.
A Canadian-born athlete and actor, Silvemeel.s died Wednesday at
the Motion Picture and Television
Country House of compliC!IUOilS
from a boyt with pneumonia. He bad
been hospitalized there since Jan.
25, suffering from the effecta cl. a
stroke he suffered 5t years ago.
"I am ' deeply saddened," said
Clayton Moore, who starred as the
multed Lone Ranger in the long·
rlllllllnll television series.
"He was a great man. He was a
perfect gentleman and a true flgbte~
for the IJ!dian cause. I'm going tO
mllll biul very much. Jay had a
great &amp;ellae « humor and. believe
me, I know all the world Wl11 ml8s
Jay Silverbeel.s 81 Tonto," Moore
said
j
Born ~rold J. Smith on the Six
Nati0111 1ndlan Reservation in Ontario, c4nada, he was given the
name Sl,lverbeels by a Mohawk
tribal elder. He .u ad It u his stage
name, lePnY changing his name to
Sllverbeell nlile yean &amp;IJO.
Arriving In Hollywooctln ~933 as a
prolealonal lacroelle player and
seml~eoilonal hockey , player,
suverbeell 11y 1938 bad· turned to
fllmt u ,lan em-a at the urging of
~adorJoeE. ~.
· A t!J11ea IIIIIJIICifler .II( Indian
cam1111, ~)lnt ·big screen
role wq 81 an Indian prince in '''lbe
C.ptab~CutuJe .": He ~
as tbe /
cblef Geronimo Jn·
tbne
es: ''Broken ,.., ArrOW,''
"Bittle1at Apache Pass" and "Watt

REACf TO MEET

.
·
:
·

SOUP SUPPER SET
There will be a soup supper Saturday beginning at 11 :30 a.m. in the
annex of the Syracuse Presbyterian
Church sponsored by the Sunshine
Makers Class.

WE STILL
HAVE SOME
1979 MODELS

IN STOCK
THAT QUALIFIES
YOU FOR A

'500 REBATE.
DISCOUNTS ON

4x4 PICKUPS

CITATIONS·
&amp; CHEVETIES
IN STOCK
•

'

WHAT ADVERTISEMENT.?
THERE'S NOTHING THERE!
.

No, It's not invisible ink. But this Is what a radio commercial
could look like to customers UNLESS ... the radio is turned on
... UNLESS it's tuned to one of the many channels available
and 1F someone is in the room ... and IF your customer Is
listening at a precise time of day and tuned to a specific pro·
gram ... and IF the commercial Is sufficiently Interesting,
entertaining, and informative to hold your customer's atten·
tion Instead of taking a radio break tor conversation, snacks.
drink of water. etc.
When 'you put all the facts together, radio advertising Is quite
"iffy", when you want today's advertising dollars to produce
definite results.
Newspapers don't use invisible · ink. Your ad Is always
available to be read at leisure. and at any time, by the entire
household. You can use all the description of prices
necessa'ry to presell your customers. Your ad c;an be tornJ)Ut,
saved and redeemed If there Is a coupon. Can you Imagine
trying to sell ten items on radio with prices and detailed
descriptions and store locations within a selling period Of 10,
20, or 30 seconds! All this can be acc;ompllsl1ed with the Dally
Tribune, and most Important of all, your ad will reach your
customers for less cost.

.,.••
"'

if you· want a cost comparison or a complete and detailed
analysis of "your" specific market area•call The Dally Sentinel - 992· 215~•
'

.

'"
••
~·
I

•

Th·e Qaily . Sentinel ~:·. . '-·

....

I

'

,..

•••

.... PruUdLIIid." ~
,
.......

.....

-·"

"'

~

.c.

Nn

Cfi"'f Dltle('

o,.ro (~M~~Ifl' ' " ' P~.
.i

' ""

II was at a sheep ranch 11 miles
easl of Manchester that Parnell

tived with Steven Stayner and 'l'llnmy White when the abductions were
discovered.
Authorities said Patl'!en did not
mistreat or molest the boys. Scme
people who knew Steven as "Dennis" said the boy who called Parnell
"Dad" never gave a hint r#. being
heldfgainst his will or wanting to
leav .
"I thought it was a father and 11011
all the time," said Leslie Slometla,
who owns the sheep ranch. "They
came in here as father and 1011 and·
got along well."
"It seemed be (Parnell) wanted to
build a family fot himself without
going to the trouble cl. getting
manied," said Mendocino County
District Attorney Joe Allen.
And Timmy's mother, Angela
White, said she believed that Parnell
had no malicious intent, that be just
"wanted a little boy."

TRU-TEX® LATEX
TEXTURE PAINT

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He played Tonto in an 221
televised episodes of the "Lone
Ranger" and two Lone R8nger
movies, riding tlnugb hunclreda c1.
destlHiefying adventures with his
"keJ110 sabe'' - Iroquois for faithful
friend.
The ABC-TV series, a spin-off
from Fran Striker's 19308 radio
program. ran from 1949 to 1957.
Rerun on CBS and NBC through
19111; It is still widely syndicated.
Among his other movie credits
were "Key Largo," "True Grit,"
"The Man Wbo Loved Cat Dancing,''
and ''The Will Rogers Story. ••
Lui August, Silverbeela became
the first American Indian to have his
star set in Hollywood's Walk of
Fame.
He founded the Indian Actors
Workshop in Hollywood In the late
1960a. Lois Red Elk, wbo lltudled
with Silverheela and acted with him
in two movies; said he created the
workshop "as a vehicle to get Indian
people on the screen, also to try and
change the Image cl. Indian people.
''He created the almcJclpbere for us
to get Into the Industry. Before that.
Indian people had to play props, extras, background. There just
weren't any Indian people with
opeaklng parts, .. she said.
An avid sportsman until his
strolle, Silvetbeela obtained a harness racing license in 1974 and competed as a trainer and driver at
tracb acrou tl!e country.
"He had a genuine loire of~. ••
said fami))'.-esman TcmSbeUey. ·
Sllverbeela Ia survived by his wife,
Marl Di&amp;ma, and four children:
Marilyn, Pamela, Karen and Jay

FuDeral a1T81111ements
were pending.

Antbony.

EASTERN STAR roMEI!:T ,

oe

• Han:llonvt1le Chapter. Ordlr
the Easter:n ~. WUl meet It 7:•
'l'uell!laY nlgbt It the Harrlllonvllle
· Muonlc Temple. Inltlatclry wlll'll
will be held A c:aad)' and bUe sale
wl11 be conducted,with aD rnemben~
being asked to take.baked goods•

u; _

e

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bedroom, woodwork. Resists steam and moisture
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Cove rs most surfaces in
one coaL Colors match
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GALLON Soapy water cleanup. E

SEMI-GLOSS

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Create tex tu re effects .
" Resurface " old and new
walls , cei l ings . Cover
hairline crack s &amp; t ape
joints. Soap &amp;
water clean up. TP

" Hammer-hard", water-

res istant finish for woodwork, furniture , paneling.
Use gloss finish for floors

Masking Tape
Moisture

and

resistant,

and exteriors, satin or
flat finish for interior
surfaces.
012/0391055

solvent

proof tape. For any

3.97 ~UART

holding iob.
. size .. ..... $159

size ..... $1.09

. size

2" 1611 rds. '

.. .19

size ......... 59

Pad Painter Set-

'

...... FRIDAY
.
Meig!l ~CT will meet
f'ridaY'~.l11m:ao P~m. • the ,
Sentor..._umerinPomeroy.
Memben jte a&amp;' brlni byJan. ,
ctfklers w111 be ncmtnaled
n- ~ In jGUiiJIIJ are
vtled 1o attend. Tbe group meets the
· flntr&lt;!daY «each DICIIth.

"'

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
~1otH

mates who come from outside Utah.
Sjnce the Merced abduction , Parnell ana Stayner lived in various
parts of Northern California, according to authorities.
Their whereabouts from 1972 to
1975 are unclear, but on Sept. 2, 19'15,
Stayner- renamed Dennis Pamell
- was registered in. a Fort Bragg
elementary school where he attended the fourth grade.
Authorities said the YOIIth's parents were listed as Kenneth Pamell
and Barbara Parnell. The latter
name was apparently fictitious, investigators said.
Later, the two moved on to Comptche, Calif., where stayner took the
bus to a middle school in nearby
Mendocino to attend the fifth and
sixth grades.
In 19'18 and 1979, the boy went to
upper level school in Mendocino,
then transferred to high school in
Point Arena. From there, the pair
moved to Manchester near Ukiah.

8 Colors
&amp; White

Tonto dies Wednesday at 62

Relreslullents were served following the meeting to nine girls, the two
leaders, and two guests.

-

mystery. Parnell was the victim of a
homosexual rape. Two years later
he was accused in an arson fire'
allegedly torching some grass on th;
outskirts «town.
Parnell, a registered sex offender
who lived in various parts of Northem and Southem California
escaped twice from a state mentai
hospital.
Lowenberg said Parnell had
developed "an attachment to a
younger boy with whom he had no
affair, but for whom he felt a real
liking." Following one of his
escapes, that attachment drove Parnell to seek out the boy and enabled
authorities to apprehend him.
Durir.g the mid-1960s, Parnell served sill years in Utah State Prison on
robbery and grand larceny convictiOilS. When be was released from
the Utah penitentiary on March 21,
19117, he was given 24 hours to leave
the state in what authorities there
said is routine procedure for in-

comment on the case.
"It was like my friend had died ...
I hadn't questioned ber existence,"
the Georgia woman said A former
school teacher, she is now is

The 29-year-old woman, who lives bpsiness.
in Savanah, Ga., and wished to
The woman said the supposed
remain anonymous, called Toledo friendship carne out of a June 1972
police after she read a. newspaper · telephone call from a woman who
account « at least .six Toledo-area told a sad story of Miss stratton conmen being victimized.
fined in a Toledo hospital foUowing
The case broke two weeks ago an auto accldblt.
when Toledo police told Ron Reed,
Sbe told police she was told she
34, that he. had been bilked out «
looked like Miss Stratton and
more than $34,(01) for the care and suggested the two might want to
comfort of a woman known as Kyle correspond. The caller, the Georgia
stratton. .
woman and Miss Stratton supo
For seven years, ending in mid- posedly belonged to the same
February, Reed sent cash anci giftS sorority.
to a beautiful invalid woman in a
The correspondence dwindled
Toledo hospital. He said be talked to over the last year. The woman says
the woman on the tell!pbone and she sent gilts such as books to Miss
received occaslonal letters, but / Stratton and at one point told ber
never me\ her. E&gt;(~. ~ . clas!l of Jlf!ldicC8JlPf\ll ,,~deats of
said be fell in love with Miss strat- Miss Straton's plight. She said the
ton.
ehildren drew pictures for Miss
Police ~port at least six Toledo . Stratton to "brighten ber day."
area men !lave been victimized in a
She said she also received gilts
hoax involving the mythical Miss from Miss Stratton such as flowers
Stratton. .
and a $100 cash gift one Christmas.
Police have arrested Carolyn L.
"Emotionally, it's been an exMatuszak, 38, and her husband,
perience for me. I guess I could have
Robert, 35, in coonection with been taken for more money," she
Reed's case. The two have declined said.

mise.

Meigs County REACI' will meet
Friday, March 7, at 7:30p.m. at the
Pomeroy Senior Citizens Center.
' Members are to bring bylaws. New
officers will be nominated. Anyone
interested in joining may attend the
meeting. The club meets the first
: Friday of each month.

from his years as a Texas waif
"ihrough his adolescent bouts with
the law and beyond, according to
Lowenberg.
At the age of four, Parnell tried to
yank out four of his own teeth with
his ·fmgers although they were not
loose, Lowenberg said. At 8, after he
came to California and three yearil
after his father, a cook, deserted
him and his mother, the youth
shined a bright light into his eyes for
so long he required treatment. At 9,
Lowenberg reported, the boy was
"considering suicide monthly, ••
Once, the buy shot himseU in the
abdomen in an apparent suicide attempt, Lowenberg reported, while in
another incident be jumped fif the
roof of a barn onto a large plank with
nail8 jutting up.
"The end is only a step away," the
report says Parnell yelled before
jumping. He escaped, however, with
only a single nail wound.
At 13, in an incident still clouded in

More victims turning·up
in :now fame¢ love scam

0.

GOOD

kidnapper said tortured

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97

�8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, March6,!91!0

..

I&gt; '

~Tbe Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, March6,1980
Sewag e Ois p. Fd
PUBLIC NOTICE
Announcements
(water Poll.
Public water supplies are
cont.&gt;

reQuired
by
State
Regulations Rule 3745-81 -

Card of Thanks

21.

Ohio Administrat ive
Code, to routinely monitor
the m icrobiolog ical qua1itv
of the drinklno water in
their di strib ution sys tem in
order to insure that safe
water is being supplies to
the consumer.
The Pomeroy Water
Department is required to

We wuld like to thank our
friends and neighbors tor
•the kindness extended to us
,during the Illness and death
of our beloved husband and
father, Bill Lewis. Special
) hanks .to Rev. Mark Me·
,Clung, Rawlings Coates
Funeral Home and the

collect

Pallbe~rers .

The William
Famllyd

3

E.

Lewis

Announcements

GUN Sf'100T · EVERY
SUNDAY 1 PM. FACTORY
CHOKE ONLY. RACINE
GUN CLUB .
:c;;uN SHOOT every Sunday
12 :00. Factory choke only.
··corn Hollow Gun Club,
Rutland. Proceeds donated
to Boy Scout Troop 249 .

TAKE ADVANTAGE - Students at Pomeroy
Elementary are shown taking advantage of the many

books available at the library at Pomeroy Elementary.

ONE OF

MANY reading sessions at the library at

Pomeroy Elementary has renovated library
The Pomeroy Elementary School

yellow and lively scenes of butterflies, mushrooms and clowns as
well as the all-important-alphabet,
numbers and shapes were painted
on the walls by artistic students of
the high school. A row of high windows let in plenty of light and the
results were colorful and cheerful.

Ubrary, originally a shower room,
located behind the gymnasium at
the rear of the building, was converted to an overflow-kindergarten
classroom for UBe during the 1977-78
school year.
The walls were painted a bright

Kindergarten enrollment fell back
to nonnal the following term and the
"butterfly room" as it had come to
be known was avallable for UBe. The
P. T.A. purchased candy-striped
indOON)utdoor carpet for the room,
bQoksbelves were constructed along
one wall, by school maintenance

Debate underway regarding
roll back price increases
WASIDNGTON (AP) - Carter administration officials are debating
whether to ask Cvngress for the
authority to order companies to roll
back price increases that exceed the
voluntary anti-inflation guidelines,
govenunent sources aay.
Another proposal would require
U.S. companies to give advance
notice of price increases, thus putting the govenunent in a position to
block, at least temporarily, those
that are excessive.
It could not ilrunediately be learned if similar options were being
considered to strengthen enforcement of wage guidelines.
Adoption of either price proposal
would strengthen the Cvuncil on
Wage and Price Stability, which
ovel'8ee8 the program. The council
now learns of price increases after
they have occurred and relies on ad-

verse publicity to penalize
violators.''
Although government contracts
can be denied to offenders, the Carter administration has never UBed
this penalty.
One congressional offlcial warned
that the changes "might be unpopular up · here .... Pre-notification
(of price increases) woul'!n 't be so
bad. But rollbacks sound like price
controls."
President Carter has opposed
mandatory wage and price controls.
However, a number of economists,
including Barry Bosworth, who formerly headed the wage-price council, have urged controls as part of a
comprehensive strategy to break the
inflation cycle. So has Sen. Edward
M. Kennedy, Carter's chief
challenger for the Democratic
presidential nomination.
Administration officials, au of
4

'

Farm Bureau President
•
attending Washington session
Meigs Cvunty's Farm Bureau
Federation President, Maidie Mora
will be with the delegation of 75 other
Farm Bureau Presidents from Ohio
who will be in Washington from
March 10 through 12, to talk with
President Carter, government offlcials and congressional lesders
about the grain embargo and its effects.
The Whtie House has tentatively
confinned a meeting with the Ohio
delegation on March 12, and the
leaders will \lfge President Carter
and his advisors to take immediate

FREE CLINIC
A free blood preaaure clinic will be
held from 10 a.m. to 12 noon Tuesday
by teh Harrisonville Senior Citizens
Club at the Harrisonville Town Hall,
weather permitting. Mrs. Ferndora
Story, R.N., will be present for the
clinic.

steps to correct the situation for
farmers.

The OFBF leaders will take a four-

point energy policy to the government officials. The policy will call
for support of; the proposed 40 cent
per gallon credit on alcohol made
from crops used for fuels; support
for increased investment credit and
other incentives for alcohol production; the development of resources
of federal lands; and for the
establishment of reasonable environmental control on coal burning.

BASEBALL MEETING SLATED
A meeting of the Ractne Baseball
Aaaociation will be held at 7 p.m.
Monday at the Pomeroy Elementary
School. .AU interested persons are Invited as well as any person who
would be interested In managing a

team.

men, and a school library to contain
TIUe n and IVB books was started.
Ubrary aides, Margaret Johnson
and Darla Hawley, spent bours collecting books from the classrooms,
clasSifying, cataloging, making up
file cards and getting the library in
APRIZE PACKAGE
TUL'!A, Okla. (AP) - Sue McDannold, a freshman majoring in
communications at Tulsa University
who also works as an assistant spor·
ts information director at the school,
was recenliy selected Miss Teen
USA. She won $25,000 in prizes, including a car, a trip to HawaU, and a
full scholarship to Tulsa.

whom asked not to be identified,
cautioned that the study of the
TOOL SALE PLANNED
proposals was in the very early
Plans
for a tool sale and for the anstages. "This is stlll very, very tentative," one offictal said. "But it is nual awards banquet will he made
being talked about."
when the Eastern Band Boosters
The review of the wage and price meet at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in the
guidelines Is part of the ad- band room of the high school.
ministration's crash effort to draft a
new anti-inflation game plan in the
SPECIAL MEETING
wake of the recent announcement
A
special
meeting of the Eastern
that consumer prices rose in
Ulcai Board of Education has been
January at an annual rate In excess set for 7 p.m. Friday at the high
of 18 percent.
school to discuaa personnel.
Prices last year went up 13.3 percent, the largest jump In more than
three decades.
The January inflation surge has
been blamed, In part, on corporate
price increases in anticipation of
mandatory wage-price controls.
Alfred E. Kahn, the council's
chairman, and Treasury Secretary
G. William Miller sent telegrams to
the nation's 500 largest corporations
last weekend urging compliance ·
with · the · voluntary anti-inflation
standards and stating that "the
president is determined that he will
not impose controls"
Other opu~ being-considered by
the administration in the all-out inflation battle are spending cuts of
$20 billion this year and next to
decrease the federal budget deficit;
some form of ,credit controls, though
not on home and auto loans; and
limits on Social Security increases.
PresidentCarterisexpectedtoanWMPO :
nounce his anti-inflation propoaals in
$_A r,URDA YS ~
a speech sometime next week, according to published reports.

til Noon
-----~

helpful in getting books for special
days and special subjects covered in
the classroom. Teachers can check
out as many books as they want an
dkeep them as long as they are needed.
Typical day flnds approximately
100 students visiting the library and .
.an average of 300 books are out of
the library and in the hands of
teachers and students •
' New furniture was added this
winter consisting of two round
reading tables, two rectangular
tables and twen~ turquoise colord
student chairs. Also a cassette tape
layer, a set of eight headphones, and
two new movie screens (one a tabletop model) were purchased with Title money.

shape.
In the spring of 1979 the library
was opened for UBe by the students
and proved to be extremely popular
and was busy constanUy.
At the beginning of the current
year '79-'80, schedules were set up
for library UBe by the classroOm
teachers, and students began
visiting the library ciBss.
.Story-telling and sometimes
filmstrips are UBed by library personnel when first and second
graders and Special Education
classes visit the library. All students
check out books, one at a time,
which can be kept for one week or
returned sooner for another one.
The teachers find the card
catalogue and the library workers

MARCH
7
&amp;
lj:'rilll:aw 9:00 a.m. To 4:30 p.m

protSII~m

ted.

1. Check Electrical System

V .. lloi

7

2. Check-Motor &amp; Bearings

Auditor-F inance
•

3. Check All Moving Parts
4. Check Belt &amp; Brushes
s. Check Beg for Defects

SAVE

31, 1979

PARTS

1. Check &amp; Clean Agitator
B. Clean, GreiM &amp; Lubricate

ALL WORK DONE WHILE YOU SHOP

~--f

'Clean
Convertible
Upright
Canister Suction
plus Upright
Cleaning Efficiency

BET YOU'RE
ACOMFORT
LOVER,

it All-steel agitator
• Big disposable beg
• 4 -on-the-floor carpet shift

SAVE •36
.
-

6&amp;••

RIGHT!

Fund
182,940.78
Sewage Disp. Fd .
(Water PolL
Cont .)
65,232 .73
Street Cons I. M and
R Fund
32,308.17
State Highway Imp.
Fund
Cemetery Fund
Debt Service

Funds
Federal Revenue
Sharing
F_
i re
Utility
Grand Total

1,915.88
17,846.00
12,866.00
27,780.23
504,-457.83

Interest
Genera I Fund

147.566.93

Governmental

Debt Service
Funds
Fire

San. Sewer
Const.

TAURUS iAp&lt;ll 20-Moy 20) The

San. lewer

Const.
Building Fd .

Trust and Agency

Funds
·19:~~ml
Grand
Total
•·
Total

Funds

10,945 .19
18,l!o9.32
11.822 .27
17,733.97

Sharing
Anti -Recession
Fund

Be alert tor situations this com : lng year In which you can act as
1 a middleman on a commission

You're In the thoughts of others
today, so don't be surprised if
you hear from persons you
hav~n ' t been In touch with lately.

' .Oasis. You st19u1d be able to tina
1 several deals that would prove
1
very worthwhile.
• PISCES (F•. 20-Mareh 20) In
= partnership situations yoo have
an Innate um;terstandlng or what
'; is beSt tor b01t1 of you. Follow
J your Instincts and do what you
' believe is right. Find out more ot
: what lies ~hfad lor you in the

You'll like what they have to say.

LI!O (Jutr 23-Aug. 22)

u... you•

amans and you should be able to

figure out ways to gel things
you 've been wanting tor your
home and family.

VIRGO (AU. 23·8opl. Zl) One
of the reasons friends wilt find
you an amicable companion is
that you'll try to understand their
point ot view and adjust your
actlollJ accordinQIV

• year following your birthday by
t sending for your copy of Astra: Graph Letter. Mail S11or each to

'

136.15
6,427 .33
33,582 .88

Utili!
San. ~ewer
Cons!.
12.794.18
Building Fd.
2.105.00
Trust and Agency
Funds
20,813.16
Grand Total
30~034 . 8'1
SCHEDULE OF
TOTAL
INDEBTEDNESS
AND DEBT
RETIREMENT
FUNDS

great-grandchlld;
two
sisters,Duhn,
Mrs . 1•
Jeraldine
Pride, and
Hortense
both of Cvlumbus.
He at one time resided in the
Cheshire COIIUJlunity.
Funeral services will be held at I
p. m. Satur!lily at the Eisnaugle
Funeral Home in Jackson with Rev.
Kenneth Kephart officiating. Burial
will be In Gravel Hill Cemetery,
Cheshire.
·
Visitation will be held at the
funeral home after 2 p.m. Friday.

Prin. Only
Sewer Syst. MR
Bonds
400,000.00
Sewer Syst. GO
Notes
70,000.00
Waterworks MR
90.500.00
Bonds
Redeemed
-During Yr.
Prin. Only
Sewer Syste. MR
Bonds
10.000.00
Sewer Syst. GO
Notes
7,000.00
Waterworks MR
Bonds
30.000.00

Helen R. Cook
Mrs. Helen'R. Cook, 74, of Route I,
Guysville, and Stuart, Fla., died
Wednesday at ~ Mercy Medical
Center in Springfield.
Mrs. Cook was born in Hocking
County, a f\laughter of the late
William and Huldah Gray.
She was a member of the Stewart
United Methodist Church, Minear
Chapter 274,,0rder of Eastern Star
of which she was a past matron;
Rome Grange, a past deputy matron
of Athens County Grange, and was a
member of the Mended Heart Assn.

Dec . 31 1979
Prin. 6nly
Sewer Svst. MR
Bonds
390,000.00
Sewer Syst. GO
Notes
63,000.00
Waterworks MR
Bonds
875,000 .00
Debt.Rellrement
Funds 12·31-79
Cash and
lnvstmts.

Sewer
Syst.
M R
Bonds
54,956 .13
Sewer Syst . GO
Notes
.tll,t5.69
WaterworksMR
Bonds
89, 9.88
Memoranda Data
Assessed Valuation"
1979
1u,988,233
Ta• Levy
Inside 10 Mill
Limitation
1.70
Outside 10 Mill
4.10
Limitation
Pomeroy, Ohio March,
1980
r hereby certify the

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Your
luck Is likely to run slroogest In
tinanciat or material areas .
Things could come to you juSt
because you 're in the right spot
at the right time.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-NoY. ' 22)
There Is something very magnet-

tc about your personality loday

BAOITTARIUS (NoY. 23-Dee. 211

a

""~-ly

Treasurer

CAPRICORN (Dee. ZI..Jon. 1t)

(3)

yoo'recoming tram.
AOUAR1118 (.len. 20-feb. II)
You have a bit ot an edge today
in business situations where
something ot value Is at stake.
However, It would be unwise to
trust to luck alone.
!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ...SS N.t

(Cvn,tlnued from page 1)
(Continued from page I)
Amertcahs because the governmert
ted,
and an imnate reCeption center,
was "pUBhing" them IAI do so.
with
1,200 beds, to be located adTehran Radio also quoted · the
. jacent to the Chillicothe Correcspoketiman for the milltants as tional Institute.
.
aaylog the decision was made
House Finance Chairman Myrl H.
because cJ 1he dispute with govern·
Shoemaker,
D-Bourneville, drew
ment authorities over whether the
criticism
from
some members
U.N. lnvestig!ltlng coriimlaaion
because
his
committee
inserted
should be allowed to meet with all of
language
requiring
the
reception
the hcistages, seized Nov. 4.
· center IAI be located In his House
.. The 1milltants said they disagreed
:: with the. government stand ap- district.
But the veteran lawmaker
: ~ proving tlie visit but that they did not
: : want 1A1 be accused of weakening the
: : revol~lll18ry regime.
'' •' "As -we have announced In our
: •! earlier statelilenta, we believe that
: our dealing with America should be
: :fnlm a.~tlon of,strength. ,\nd sin' •ce the ·priipoeal'for a meeting bel~ween the tr.N. 1.'01111nia111ori arid the
~1)1 had come fi'CJIIl America,
• ~ grind satan, and not
the
: ~ people, we rejected It," the
: ~tantasald.
.
: "But lliDce the officials IUid thole
ANTlQUE
• ovmee~ the matters regard our
posit!~'u 1!11 lnfr!ngment on..tbi
BRAZiliAN
i auth9ri · of the government, · we
TAN LEATHER
• there!
Invite the Revolutllinary
; CouDc!i to take over the bolltages
AU. SI1ES _
1\1, betaule_ we do not want to
: lJie ~ III• cau,e which Ia In
11t11e tnterelt of our enemy arid which
!ill
to 110 benefl~ fot our
r ~" r

r;;;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;;;;;;:;;1

6, lie

NOOalgia is recalling

MAY OBTAIN PICI1JRES

All Meigs County residents who

Cloudy with a chance of rain or
snow tonight. Lows in the mid 30s.
Occasional rain Friday. llighs in the
upper 40s. The chance of precipitation is 30 percent tonight and 90 percent Friday .

contributed photographs for the
Meigs Cvunty History Book can now
pick up their pictures. The photos
will be available from 10 a.m. to 2
p.m. Friday and from 2 to 4 p.m.
Sunday at the Meigs Museum, Butternut Ave., Pomeroy .

ROSE FILES
Kenneth Guy Rose, Route I, Long
Bottom, has filed for the Meigs
Cvunty Commlaaioner post which
expires on Jan. 2, 1985. He is a
Republican candidate. An earlier
announcement listed him as Guy
Rose.

EASTERN WON IT
In a report in Monday's Daily Sentinel it was implied that the Southern
lligh School girls basketball team
was the Southern V~lley Athletic
Cvnference chan.pions this season.
This year the conference champions
were members of the Eastern lligh
team coached by Suaan Thompson.

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

Summer
Comfort
by WRANGLER

NEW SHIPMENT OF
JUNIORS TERRY WRANGLER
TOPS, SHORTS, ROMPERS
LAYAWAY FOR SPRING
WE'RE WRANGLER
HEADQUARTERS
FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY

Notice 1S hereby given th:Jt the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio
will conduct further hearings regarding lhe measured business telephone service charges of the Ohio Bell Telephone Company. approved
by order oi the Commission in Case No .-74 - 761-TP-AIR.
The Ohio Bell Telephone Company has rates and regulations in
effect in its E•change Rale Tariff. P.U .C .O . No. 3. which provide for
nonopt1onal measured local telephone service to its business customers . These tariff provisions establish a bas1c rate for -each trunk
or line used by a business customer. and provide for an allowance
of 80 calls per month on each lrunk or line; each addit1onal call beyond
the 80-c all allowance is charged fqr at the rate of 9 cents per call .
In the case of Centre~ service . there is no monthly call allowance
and each call is charged for at the rate of 9 cents per call . A copy of
the tariff schedules contain;ng the rates and regulations applicable
to measured business telephone service is available at the offices
of lhe Commission . 180 E:.ast Broad Street. Columbus. Ohio .
Public hearing on this matter will be convened on May' 28. 1980 at
9 :30a .m . at the offices of lhe Commission. 180 East Broad Street.
Columbus . Ohio
All parties desiling to 1nte rv ene in this matter must file a written
pet1tion for leave to inte rvene w1th the Commission by April 4. 1980.
Further information may be obtained by addresc,ng a n inquiry to the
Commiss1on . attention Mr. Dav1d M Polk . Secretary. T he Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio . 180 East Broad Street . Co lumb ~s O h 1o 43215.

Date- March 3, 1980

Don't hide yourself at a social
gathering tOday. Persons who
don't know you too well will like
you better once they know where

Weather

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted- Mary Derenberger,
Pomeroy; William Owens, Athens ;
William Lewis, Racine; Charles
Knapp, Pomeroy; ottis Boston,
Racine.
Disc harged--Oscar Imboden,
Mary Laudermilt, Clara Clark,
Pearl Adams, Beulah Ransom, Joe
McCloud, Juanita Chapman, Oswell
Durham, Erica Hubbard.

LEGAL NOTICE

Jane Walton
Village Clerk-

lelt

Mrs. Cook and her late husband,
Gaylord, operated the Stewart
Green Houses at Stewart, Ohio, for a
number of years.
Mrs. Cook is survived by a sister,
Ina Knight, Athens ; two nephews,
John W. Barrows, Lewiston, N. C.,
and Robert C. Barrows, Dayton, and
a niece, Mrs. Karl (Wanda ) Rose,
Athens. She was preceded in death
by her parent er husband, a sister
and a brother.
Funeral services will be held at 11
a.m. Saturday at the White Funeral
Home with the Rev. John Larsen of·
ficiating. Burial will be in the
Stewart Cemetery. Friends may call
at the funeral home from 2 to 4 and 7
to9p.m. Friday.
In lieu of flowers friends may contribute to the Heart Fund of Kettering Medical Center, Kettering,
Ohio45429.

The Middleport Emergency Squad
answered a caU to 240 Mill St. . at
8:36 a.m. Thursday for Ted Riley
who was ill. He was taken to Holzer
Medical Center.
At 10:37 a.m. Wednesday, Eugia
Jolmsoo , 332 Grant St., a medical
patient, was taken to Holzer Medical
Center.
At 12:35 p.m., the squad went to
206 Butternut Ave., Pomeroy, for
Wanda Adams who was dead upon
the unit's arrival.

r---- - - - - - - - - --'-------------------- - - - - - - -

foregoing to be correct.

powerful tnfluence

over others today In an Indirect
manner. Even If you stay in the
background, your presence will

Bond issue.

Council
•••
I

17,507.55

Fire

35,164.78

You have

22)

73,339.54

Federal Revenue

Outstanding

al important goals c:an be real(Juno 21·JUiy

Merle Cullins, 'n , Jackson, died
Wednesday morning in the Oak Hill
Hospital. He was born in Meigs
County, March 2, 1903, son of the late
Frank and Bessie Collins. He was a
retired employee of DT&amp;I Railroad
Company. He was preceded in death
by his wife, Hazel, in 1954.
Survivors Include one daughter,
Mrs. Leland (Donna) Green of
Jackso~; two grandchildren, one

Jan. 1, 197f

that will literally draw people to
you, especially members ot the
opposite sex.

ized

Merle Collins

Outstanding

day romantically .
GEMINI (May 21-.lune 20) Ttlis
can be a day of major achtevements II you set your mind to
them. With determlnallon, sever-

CANCER

12.905.82

Debt service

489. Radio

one you love .will be paramount
in your thoughts to&lt;'ay, just as
you will be foremost In his or her
mind. This should be an exciting

Merch 7,1010

10,000.00
3,000.00

Trust and Agency

General
Water works
Fund
222,127.97
Sewage Dlsp. Fl. (Water
Poll . Const .l
117,646.54
Street Const.
M&amp;R Fund
41.812 .99
State Highway Imp.
Fund
9.221.05
Cemetery Fund
12,322.34
Debt Service
Funds
84,284.73
Federal Revenue
Sharing
36,316 .87
Anti Recession
Fund
Fire
Uti lit

39,187.19

should be a 'Very fortunate da)'
for you In involvements with
others, especially II you are managing their resources or &amp;Hairs.

Osol

9-45.19
1,620.19

General Fund
25,000.00
WaterWorks
Fund
86 ,U 1. 25
Sewage Disp. Fd .
(Water Poll .
Cont.&gt;
14,590.65

City Station, N.Y. ~ 0019 . Be sure
to specify birth date.
ARIES (Morell 21-Aprtt Ill) TM

:ASTRO•GRAPH

675.00

Debt Service
Funds
Grand Total
Non-

WaterWorks

Wi!!terWorks

Bo~

Improvements

~'"ft"

Hands of Trustee(s)
Mortgage Revenue
Debt Service and
Debt Service
Reserve)
8'1,349.88
SUMMARY
OF FUND
TRANSACTIONS
Balance
Jan. 1, 1979
General Fund
.tll,988.69

•
! Friday, March 7

ON MAJOR REPAiR WORK

WaterWorks

Investments In

FREE ESTIMATES

..-

State Highway Imp.
Fund
/ 8,360.76
Federal Revenue
Sharing
8,142.42
Grand Total
16.503.18

Dec . 31, 1979
(Deduct)
1,032.04
Total -Balance Dec .
31. 1979
307,034.&amp;9
Funds (Cash and

Regular ONLY GENUINE
PLUS '12'5 HOOVER PARTS USED

6. Check filter System

Funds
20,128.52
Grand Total
317,.t82 .72
ReceiptsRevenue
General Fund
156.082.95

Trust i!nd Agency

Wanda Josephine Adanis, 44, died
Wednesday at her borne at 206 Brick
St., Pomeroy.
She was a daughter of the late
Henry and Evelyn Imboden Landers
and was also preceded in death by a
sister, Janie, and two brothers,
Robert and Orville Landers.
Surviving are a son-in-law and
daughter, Mr. arid Mrs. Kenneth
(PeMy Sue) Smith and a granddaughter, Kimberly Smith, aU of
Middleport; a son, John Thomas Imboden, Minersville; two brothers,
Jack and WUliam, Cvlumbus; two
sisters, Shirley, Minersville, and
Mrs. Renry (Delores) Summei'Sj
Charleston, and several nieces and
nephews.
Funeral services will be held at I
p.m. Saturday at the Ewing Funeral
Home with the Rev. O'Dell Manley
officiating. Burial will be in Gilmore
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
funeral home anytime after '7 this
evening.

976 ..46

25,700.00
2,105.00

Outstanding Checks

Board cst
Public Affelrs
(2) 28, 6, 13, 3tc

CemEtery Fund
Federal Revenue

Director

Pomeroy National
Bank
122,389.88
Farmers Bank
20,442.79
Pomeroy National
Bank
4,734.26
Total Depasltory
Balances
147,566.93
Investments:
Certificates of
Depasit
130,000.00
Other Investments
(Including
Savings)
30,500.00
Total
Investments
160,500.00
Total Treasury
Balance
308,066.93

Fund

Con!.)
19,564.19
Street Canst. M and
R Fund
14,717.08

. Sharing
10,666.90
Fire
6.883 .05
Utility
17,733.97
Grand Total
190,697 .24
Capital

San. Sewer
Const.
Bu ilding Fd .

Wanda J, Adams

Fund
51,733.55
sewage Disp . Fd .
(Water Poll .
Cont.)
72.627.7~
Street Canst. M and
R Fund
13,~.79)
State Highway Imp.
Fund
860.29
Cemetery
Fund
(1,054.31)

DePOsitory Balances :

con·

71 ,367 .20

3151, 1919

Total Fund

Balances, Dec .

136.15
5,383 .60
23,536.62

Area deaths

Mliintent~nce

Funds
2,015.36
11,UO.OJ .UUj
Grand Total
153,953.08
1-jlghWiiY imp.
Balance
Dec. 31,1979
General Fund
19,626.62

Reconciliation

,

•s

Fund

Fire
Util it

D

992·224f
Population
2672
1970 Federal Census
Cash

has been correc-

Bernice Bede

Anti Recession

l\1iddleport squad busy

Fund
48,788 .39
Sewage Ob..p . Fd .
(Water Poll.

Receipts- .

110 Second Ave.,
Pomeroy, Ohio
45769
March 3, 1980
I certify the rollowing
repartto be correct.
Jane Walton
Village Clerk·
Treasurer-City

Astr!&gt;-Graph,

PUT NEW LIFE IN YOUR
LIST
HOOVER
95
$

Fund
4,109.36
Cemetery Fund (3,551.06)
Debt Service
82.368 .85
Funds
Federal Revenue
18,470 .87
Sharing

·

l1.o400 . 19
1.939 .27
179,331 .97
Operation and ,

General Fund
Water Work s

Non-Rev·enue
Const. Mand

Expenditures
Pomero~ Village
Meigs County
For Fiscal Year
Ending December

9:00 a.m. To 1:00 p.m.---..J
IB-POIINT FACTORY

'

Report of

tamlnant level specified In
the "Ohio Admmlstratlve
Code" was exceeded In 2
out of 11 ~mples collected
In Julr. 1979.
Coliform bacteria are
IJsed as an indicator of the
microbiolbgical quality of
drinking water. While the
coliform bacteria them·
selves may past no threat
to health. their presence
does Indicate that a source
of contamination exists
somewhere in the water
system. Such an indication
is adequate justification for
an Investigation to determine the nature and scope
of the possible health
hazard.
A subsequent In vestlgatlon and additional
sampling Indicate that any

YS
ONLY

a

State Highway I m p.

Receipts and

PUBLIC NOTICE
Public water supplies are
required
by
State
Regulation, Chapter 3745·
81, OhiO' Administrative
Code, to routinely monitor
the microbiological quality
of the drinking . water In
their distribution system.
The !;ampling conducted
for the Pomeroy water
system indicated that the
ma•lmum
permissible

microblologlcal

examine

13) 5, 5, 7, 3tc

GOLD,
SILVER
OR
FOREIGN COINS, OR
ANY OTHER GOLD OR
SILVER ITEMS. ALSO,
... ANTIQUE FURNITURE
' OR OTHER ANTIQUE
' 1TEMS. WILL PAY TOP
DOLLAR. CHECK WITH
OSBY (OSSIEl MARTIN
BEFORE
SELLING .
PHONE 992--6370. ALSO
00 APPRAISING .

2

CaayKasam

~~~

BUYING U.S. SILVER
COINS DATED 1964 OR
EARLIER
(ANY
AMOUNT). DON'T LOSE
MONEY,, SIMPLY PICK
UP THE PHONE AND
DIAL
614 - 992 -5 113,
BROWN'S .

Pomeroy Elementary where children have their choice
of fine reading material.

and

minimum
of
-4
microbiological samples
each month. 3 samples
were
collected
and
analyzed for the months of
August, October, Decem ber, 1979 and January 1980.
All of the samples that
were
collected
and
analyzed
during
that
per iod showed that water
of aood microbiological
quality was being provided
to the public.
The water department
has taken steps to insure
that adequate monitoring
will be performed in the
future .
Helen Heaton,
Clerk
Board of
Public Affairs

52,414. 11
Street Cons!. M and
(1,495 .18)
R Fund

Cemefery Fund
F i re
Gr.md Total

7~

I

cent haircuts, and failing to
re~ber that yoo very
often didn't have the sillbits needed to pay the s1ru11
,gardener.

• •

shrugged It off. He aald the choice
was made because the land is owned
by the federal govenunent, and that
talks are under way for an
agreement under which it would be
donated to the state or sold "at a
bargain basement" price.

THIS IS THE

THIS IS THE

~--SUN EAGLE---.

r - - SNOW EAGLE_....,.

.

,-.
~.;

·..

.

FREE
Complttt with Atttchmtntl

..

•9995
Regular
......1119.11
, Then you' ll certainly be a Connie shoes lover, too!
Because this handsome, soft leather topped sandal
with cushlony, bOUncy, flexy soles promise you
fashionable co.mfort.
.

FOR MORE INFORMATION
241-1113 EIT. HI

heritage house

•20
3 Only

1 Only S3083 .CAN

:ltrGID

With Power Nozzle - Reg.

4 Only Hoover Convertible. •ocn••
'

Middleport, 0.

rrom

f

''

l

1ea;

. ·

'I

~

OF SHOES

N. znd Ave.

SAVE

l

..•

Main Street

'Snzs UCI!lN8E
A lllll'rlage nei- wu luued to

,
·ul\Otle~~" Ket~

McO.nlel,

:~~~ •

Pomer\1)', and Diana Lynn Nea!., 17,

Letart, w. v.
ll

THE.
SHOE
BOX
MIDDlEPORT OHIO .

The Eagle Does Not Live By Snow Alone
FOR EXCELLENT STABILITY AND HANDLING
IN ALL WEATHU CONDITIONS, SEE TME ALL NEw

.

1980 AMC EAGLE 4 WHEEL DRIVE

RIVERSIDE AMC-JEEP-RENAULT
' I

195 Upper .River

:\1

.f

44~980'0

t~allipolis, - Ohio

�8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, March6,!91!0

..

I&gt; '

~Tbe Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, March6,1980
Sewag e Ois p. Fd
PUBLIC NOTICE
Announcements
(water Poll.
Public water supplies are
cont.&gt;

reQuired
by
State
Regulations Rule 3745-81 -

Card of Thanks

21.

Ohio Administrat ive
Code, to routinely monitor
the m icrobiolog ical qua1itv
of the drinklno water in
their di strib ution sys tem in
order to insure that safe
water is being supplies to
the consumer.
The Pomeroy Water
Department is required to

We wuld like to thank our
friends and neighbors tor
•the kindness extended to us
,during the Illness and death
of our beloved husband and
father, Bill Lewis. Special
) hanks .to Rev. Mark Me·
,Clung, Rawlings Coates
Funeral Home and the

collect

Pallbe~rers .

The William
Famllyd

3

E.

Lewis

Announcements

GUN Sf'100T · EVERY
SUNDAY 1 PM. FACTORY
CHOKE ONLY. RACINE
GUN CLUB .
:c;;uN SHOOT every Sunday
12 :00. Factory choke only.
··corn Hollow Gun Club,
Rutland. Proceeds donated
to Boy Scout Troop 249 .

TAKE ADVANTAGE - Students at Pomeroy
Elementary are shown taking advantage of the many

books available at the library at Pomeroy Elementary.

ONE OF

MANY reading sessions at the library at

Pomeroy Elementary has renovated library
The Pomeroy Elementary School

yellow and lively scenes of butterflies, mushrooms and clowns as
well as the all-important-alphabet,
numbers and shapes were painted
on the walls by artistic students of
the high school. A row of high windows let in plenty of light and the
results were colorful and cheerful.

Ubrary, originally a shower room,
located behind the gymnasium at
the rear of the building, was converted to an overflow-kindergarten
classroom for UBe during the 1977-78
school year.
The walls were painted a bright

Kindergarten enrollment fell back
to nonnal the following term and the
"butterfly room" as it had come to
be known was avallable for UBe. The
P. T.A. purchased candy-striped
indOON)utdoor carpet for the room,
bQoksbelves were constructed along
one wall, by school maintenance

Debate underway regarding
roll back price increases
WASIDNGTON (AP) - Carter administration officials are debating
whether to ask Cvngress for the
authority to order companies to roll
back price increases that exceed the
voluntary anti-inflation guidelines,
govenunent sources aay.
Another proposal would require
U.S. companies to give advance
notice of price increases, thus putting the govenunent in a position to
block, at least temporarily, those
that are excessive.
It could not ilrunediately be learned if similar options were being
considered to strengthen enforcement of wage guidelines.
Adoption of either price proposal
would strengthen the Cvuncil on
Wage and Price Stability, which
ovel'8ee8 the program. The council
now learns of price increases after
they have occurred and relies on ad-

verse publicity to penalize
violators.''
Although government contracts
can be denied to offenders, the Carter administration has never UBed
this penalty.
One congressional offlcial warned
that the changes "might be unpopular up · here .... Pre-notification
(of price increases) woul'!n 't be so
bad. But rollbacks sound like price
controls."
President Carter has opposed
mandatory wage and price controls.
However, a number of economists,
including Barry Bosworth, who formerly headed the wage-price council, have urged controls as part of a
comprehensive strategy to break the
inflation cycle. So has Sen. Edward
M. Kennedy, Carter's chief
challenger for the Democratic
presidential nomination.
Administration officials, au of
4

'

Farm Bureau President
•
attending Washington session
Meigs Cvunty's Farm Bureau
Federation President, Maidie Mora
will be with the delegation of 75 other
Farm Bureau Presidents from Ohio
who will be in Washington from
March 10 through 12, to talk with
President Carter, government offlcials and congressional lesders
about the grain embargo and its effects.
The Whtie House has tentatively
confinned a meeting with the Ohio
delegation on March 12, and the
leaders will \lfge President Carter
and his advisors to take immediate

FREE CLINIC
A free blood preaaure clinic will be
held from 10 a.m. to 12 noon Tuesday
by teh Harrisonville Senior Citizens
Club at the Harrisonville Town Hall,
weather permitting. Mrs. Ferndora
Story, R.N., will be present for the
clinic.

steps to correct the situation for
farmers.

The OFBF leaders will take a four-

point energy policy to the government officials. The policy will call
for support of; the proposed 40 cent
per gallon credit on alcohol made
from crops used for fuels; support
for increased investment credit and
other incentives for alcohol production; the development of resources
of federal lands; and for the
establishment of reasonable environmental control on coal burning.

BASEBALL MEETING SLATED
A meeting of the Ractne Baseball
Aaaociation will be held at 7 p.m.
Monday at the Pomeroy Elementary
School. .AU interested persons are Invited as well as any person who
would be interested In managing a

team.

men, and a school library to contain
TIUe n and IVB books was started.
Ubrary aides, Margaret Johnson
and Darla Hawley, spent bours collecting books from the classrooms,
clasSifying, cataloging, making up
file cards and getting the library in
APRIZE PACKAGE
TUL'!A, Okla. (AP) - Sue McDannold, a freshman majoring in
communications at Tulsa University
who also works as an assistant spor·
ts information director at the school,
was recenliy selected Miss Teen
USA. She won $25,000 in prizes, including a car, a trip to HawaU, and a
full scholarship to Tulsa.

whom asked not to be identified,
cautioned that the study of the
TOOL SALE PLANNED
proposals was in the very early
Plans
for a tool sale and for the anstages. "This is stlll very, very tentative," one offictal said. "But it is nual awards banquet will he made
being talked about."
when the Eastern Band Boosters
The review of the wage and price meet at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in the
guidelines Is part of the ad- band room of the high school.
ministration's crash effort to draft a
new anti-inflation game plan in the
SPECIAL MEETING
wake of the recent announcement
A
special
meeting of the Eastern
that consumer prices rose in
Ulcai Board of Education has been
January at an annual rate In excess set for 7 p.m. Friday at the high
of 18 percent.
school to discuaa personnel.
Prices last year went up 13.3 percent, the largest jump In more than
three decades.
The January inflation surge has
been blamed, In part, on corporate
price increases in anticipation of
mandatory wage-price controls.
Alfred E. Kahn, the council's
chairman, and Treasury Secretary
G. William Miller sent telegrams to
the nation's 500 largest corporations
last weekend urging compliance ·
with · the · voluntary anti-inflation
standards and stating that "the
president is determined that he will
not impose controls"
Other opu~ being-considered by
the administration in the all-out inflation battle are spending cuts of
$20 billion this year and next to
decrease the federal budget deficit;
some form of ,credit controls, though
not on home and auto loans; and
limits on Social Security increases.
PresidentCarterisexpectedtoanWMPO :
nounce his anti-inflation propoaals in
$_A r,URDA YS ~
a speech sometime next week, according to published reports.

til Noon
-----~

helpful in getting books for special
days and special subjects covered in
the classroom. Teachers can check
out as many books as they want an
dkeep them as long as they are needed.
Typical day flnds approximately
100 students visiting the library and .
.an average of 300 books are out of
the library and in the hands of
teachers and students •
' New furniture was added this
winter consisting of two round
reading tables, two rectangular
tables and twen~ turquoise colord
student chairs. Also a cassette tape
layer, a set of eight headphones, and
two new movie screens (one a tabletop model) were purchased with Title money.

shape.
In the spring of 1979 the library
was opened for UBe by the students
and proved to be extremely popular
and was busy constanUy.
At the beginning of the current
year '79-'80, schedules were set up
for library UBe by the classroOm
teachers, and students began
visiting the library ciBss.
.Story-telling and sometimes
filmstrips are UBed by library personnel when first and second
graders and Special Education
classes visit the library. All students
check out books, one at a time,
which can be kept for one week or
returned sooner for another one.
The teachers find the card
catalogue and the library workers

MARCH
7
&amp;
lj:'rilll:aw 9:00 a.m. To 4:30 p.m

protSII~m

ted.

1. Check Electrical System

V .. lloi

7

2. Check-Motor &amp; Bearings

Auditor-F inance
•

3. Check All Moving Parts
4. Check Belt &amp; Brushes
s. Check Beg for Defects

SAVE

31, 1979

PARTS

1. Check &amp; Clean Agitator
B. Clean, GreiM &amp; Lubricate

ALL WORK DONE WHILE YOU SHOP

~--f

'Clean
Convertible
Upright
Canister Suction
plus Upright
Cleaning Efficiency

BET YOU'RE
ACOMFORT
LOVER,

it All-steel agitator
• Big disposable beg
• 4 -on-the-floor carpet shift

SAVE •36
.
-

6&amp;••

RIGHT!

Fund
182,940.78
Sewage Disp. Fd .
(Water PolL
Cont .)
65,232 .73
Street Cons I. M and
R Fund
32,308.17
State Highway Imp.
Fund
Cemetery Fund
Debt Service

Funds
Federal Revenue
Sharing
F_
i re
Utility
Grand Total

1,915.88
17,846.00
12,866.00
27,780.23
504,-457.83

Interest
Genera I Fund

147.566.93

Governmental

Debt Service
Funds
Fire

San. Sewer
Const.

TAURUS iAp&lt;ll 20-Moy 20) The

San. lewer

Const.
Building Fd .

Trust and Agency

Funds
·19:~~ml
Grand
Total
•·
Total

Funds

10,945 .19
18,l!o9.32
11.822 .27
17,733.97

Sharing
Anti -Recession
Fund

Be alert tor situations this com : lng year In which you can act as
1 a middleman on a commission

You're In the thoughts of others
today, so don't be surprised if
you hear from persons you
hav~n ' t been In touch with lately.

' .Oasis. You st19u1d be able to tina
1 several deals that would prove
1
very worthwhile.
• PISCES (F•. 20-Mareh 20) In
= partnership situations yoo have
an Innate um;terstandlng or what
'; is beSt tor b01t1 of you. Follow
J your Instincts and do what you
' believe is right. Find out more ot
: what lies ~hfad lor you in the

You'll like what they have to say.

LI!O (Jutr 23-Aug. 22)

u... you•

amans and you should be able to

figure out ways to gel things
you 've been wanting tor your
home and family.

VIRGO (AU. 23·8opl. Zl) One
of the reasons friends wilt find
you an amicable companion is
that you'll try to understand their
point ot view and adjust your
actlollJ accordinQIV

• year following your birthday by
t sending for your copy of Astra: Graph Letter. Mail S11or each to

'

136.15
6,427 .33
33,582 .88

Utili!
San. ~ewer
Cons!.
12.794.18
Building Fd.
2.105.00
Trust and Agency
Funds
20,813.16
Grand Total
30~034 . 8'1
SCHEDULE OF
TOTAL
INDEBTEDNESS
AND DEBT
RETIREMENT
FUNDS

great-grandchlld;
two
sisters,Duhn,
Mrs . 1•
Jeraldine
Pride, and
Hortense
both of Cvlumbus.
He at one time resided in the
Cheshire COIIUJlunity.
Funeral services will be held at I
p. m. Satur!lily at the Eisnaugle
Funeral Home in Jackson with Rev.
Kenneth Kephart officiating. Burial
will be In Gravel Hill Cemetery,
Cheshire.
·
Visitation will be held at the
funeral home after 2 p.m. Friday.

Prin. Only
Sewer Syst. MR
Bonds
400,000.00
Sewer Syst. GO
Notes
70,000.00
Waterworks MR
90.500.00
Bonds
Redeemed
-During Yr.
Prin. Only
Sewer Syste. MR
Bonds
10.000.00
Sewer Syst. GO
Notes
7,000.00
Waterworks MR
Bonds
30.000.00

Helen R. Cook
Mrs. Helen'R. Cook, 74, of Route I,
Guysville, and Stuart, Fla., died
Wednesday at ~ Mercy Medical
Center in Springfield.
Mrs. Cook was born in Hocking
County, a f\laughter of the late
William and Huldah Gray.
She was a member of the Stewart
United Methodist Church, Minear
Chapter 274,,0rder of Eastern Star
of which she was a past matron;
Rome Grange, a past deputy matron
of Athens County Grange, and was a
member of the Mended Heart Assn.

Dec . 31 1979
Prin. 6nly
Sewer Svst. MR
Bonds
390,000.00
Sewer Syst. GO
Notes
63,000.00
Waterworks MR
Bonds
875,000 .00
Debt.Rellrement
Funds 12·31-79
Cash and
lnvstmts.

Sewer
Syst.
M R
Bonds
54,956 .13
Sewer Syst . GO
Notes
.tll,t5.69
WaterworksMR
Bonds
89, 9.88
Memoranda Data
Assessed Valuation"
1979
1u,988,233
Ta• Levy
Inside 10 Mill
Limitation
1.70
Outside 10 Mill
4.10
Limitation
Pomeroy, Ohio March,
1980
r hereby certify the

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Your
luck Is likely to run slroogest In
tinanciat or material areas .
Things could come to you juSt
because you 're in the right spot
at the right time.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-NoY. ' 22)
There Is something very magnet-

tc about your personality loday

BAOITTARIUS (NoY. 23-Dee. 211

a

""~-ly

Treasurer

CAPRICORN (Dee. ZI..Jon. 1t)

(3)

yoo'recoming tram.
AOUAR1118 (.len. 20-feb. II)
You have a bit ot an edge today
in business situations where
something ot value Is at stake.
However, It would be unwise to
trust to luck alone.
!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ...SS N.t

(Cvn,tlnued from page 1)
(Continued from page I)
Amertcahs because the governmert
ted,
and an imnate reCeption center,
was "pUBhing" them IAI do so.
with
1,200 beds, to be located adTehran Radio also quoted · the
. jacent to the Chillicothe Correcspoketiman for the milltants as tional Institute.
.
aaylog the decision was made
House Finance Chairman Myrl H.
because cJ 1he dispute with govern·
Shoemaker,
D-Bourneville, drew
ment authorities over whether the
criticism
from
some members
U.N. lnvestig!ltlng coriimlaaion
because
his
committee
inserted
should be allowed to meet with all of
language
requiring
the
reception
the hcistages, seized Nov. 4.
· center IAI be located In his House
.. The 1milltants said they disagreed
:: with the. government stand ap- district.
But the veteran lawmaker
: ~ proving tlie visit but that they did not
: : want 1A1 be accused of weakening the
: : revol~lll18ry regime.
'' •' "As -we have announced In our
: •! earlier statelilenta, we believe that
: our dealing with America should be
: :fnlm a.~tlon of,strength. ,\nd sin' •ce the ·priipoeal'for a meeting bel~ween the tr.N. 1.'01111nia111ori arid the
~1)1 had come fi'CJIIl America,
• ~ grind satan, and not
the
: ~ people, we rejected It," the
: ~tantasald.
.
: "But lliDce the officials IUid thole
ANTlQUE
• ovmee~ the matters regard our
posit!~'u 1!11 lnfr!ngment on..tbi
BRAZiliAN
i auth9ri · of the government, · we
TAN LEATHER
• there!
Invite the Revolutllinary
; CouDc!i to take over the bolltages
AU. SI1ES _
1\1, betaule_ we do not want to
: lJie ~ III• cau,e which Ia In
11t11e tnterelt of our enemy arid which
!ill
to 110 benefl~ fot our
r ~" r

r;;;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;;;;;;:;;1

6, lie

NOOalgia is recalling

MAY OBTAIN PICI1JRES

All Meigs County residents who

Cloudy with a chance of rain or
snow tonight. Lows in the mid 30s.
Occasional rain Friday. llighs in the
upper 40s. The chance of precipitation is 30 percent tonight and 90 percent Friday .

contributed photographs for the
Meigs Cvunty History Book can now
pick up their pictures. The photos
will be available from 10 a.m. to 2
p.m. Friday and from 2 to 4 p.m.
Sunday at the Meigs Museum, Butternut Ave., Pomeroy .

ROSE FILES
Kenneth Guy Rose, Route I, Long
Bottom, has filed for the Meigs
Cvunty Commlaaioner post which
expires on Jan. 2, 1985. He is a
Republican candidate. An earlier
announcement listed him as Guy
Rose.

EASTERN WON IT
In a report in Monday's Daily Sentinel it was implied that the Southern
lligh School girls basketball team
was the Southern V~lley Athletic
Cvnference chan.pions this season.
This year the conference champions
were members of the Eastern lligh
team coached by Suaan Thompson.

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

Summer
Comfort
by WRANGLER

NEW SHIPMENT OF
JUNIORS TERRY WRANGLER
TOPS, SHORTS, ROMPERS
LAYAWAY FOR SPRING
WE'RE WRANGLER
HEADQUARTERS
FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY

Notice 1S hereby given th:Jt the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio
will conduct further hearings regarding lhe measured business telephone service charges of the Ohio Bell Telephone Company. approved
by order oi the Commission in Case No .-74 - 761-TP-AIR.
The Ohio Bell Telephone Company has rates and regulations in
effect in its E•change Rale Tariff. P.U .C .O . No. 3. which provide for
nonopt1onal measured local telephone service to its business customers . These tariff provisions establish a bas1c rate for -each trunk
or line used by a business customer. and provide for an allowance
of 80 calls per month on each lrunk or line; each addit1onal call beyond
the 80-c all allowance is charged fqr at the rate of 9 cents per call .
In the case of Centre~ service . there is no monthly call allowance
and each call is charged for at the rate of 9 cents per call . A copy of
the tariff schedules contain;ng the rates and regulations applicable
to measured business telephone service is available at the offices
of lhe Commission . 180 E:.ast Broad Street. Columbus. Ohio .
Public hearing on this matter will be convened on May' 28. 1980 at
9 :30a .m . at the offices of lhe Commission. 180 East Broad Street.
Columbus . Ohio
All parties desiling to 1nte rv ene in this matter must file a written
pet1tion for leave to inte rvene w1th the Commission by April 4. 1980.
Further information may be obtained by addresc,ng a n inquiry to the
Commiss1on . attention Mr. Dav1d M Polk . Secretary. T he Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio . 180 East Broad Street . Co lumb ~s O h 1o 43215.

Date- March 3, 1980

Don't hide yourself at a social
gathering tOday. Persons who
don't know you too well will like
you better once they know where

Weather

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted- Mary Derenberger,
Pomeroy; William Owens, Athens ;
William Lewis, Racine; Charles
Knapp, Pomeroy; ottis Boston,
Racine.
Disc harged--Oscar Imboden,
Mary Laudermilt, Clara Clark,
Pearl Adams, Beulah Ransom, Joe
McCloud, Juanita Chapman, Oswell
Durham, Erica Hubbard.

LEGAL NOTICE

Jane Walton
Village Clerk-

lelt

Mrs. Cook and her late husband,
Gaylord, operated the Stewart
Green Houses at Stewart, Ohio, for a
number of years.
Mrs. Cook is survived by a sister,
Ina Knight, Athens ; two nephews,
John W. Barrows, Lewiston, N. C.,
and Robert C. Barrows, Dayton, and
a niece, Mrs. Karl (Wanda ) Rose,
Athens. She was preceded in death
by her parent er husband, a sister
and a brother.
Funeral services will be held at 11
a.m. Saturday at the White Funeral
Home with the Rev. John Larsen of·
ficiating. Burial will be in the
Stewart Cemetery. Friends may call
at the funeral home from 2 to 4 and 7
to9p.m. Friday.
In lieu of flowers friends may contribute to the Heart Fund of Kettering Medical Center, Kettering,
Ohio45429.

The Middleport Emergency Squad
answered a caU to 240 Mill St. . at
8:36 a.m. Thursday for Ted Riley
who was ill. He was taken to Holzer
Medical Center.
At 10:37 a.m. Wednesday, Eugia
Jolmsoo , 332 Grant St., a medical
patient, was taken to Holzer Medical
Center.
At 12:35 p.m., the squad went to
206 Butternut Ave., Pomeroy, for
Wanda Adams who was dead upon
the unit's arrival.

r---- - - - - - - - - --'-------------------- - - - - - - -

foregoing to be correct.

powerful tnfluence

over others today In an Indirect
manner. Even If you stay in the
background, your presence will

Bond issue.

Council
•••
I

17,507.55

Fire

35,164.78

You have

22)

73,339.54

Federal Revenue

Outstanding

al important goals c:an be real(Juno 21·JUiy

Merle Cullins, 'n , Jackson, died
Wednesday morning in the Oak Hill
Hospital. He was born in Meigs
County, March 2, 1903, son of the late
Frank and Bessie Collins. He was a
retired employee of DT&amp;I Railroad
Company. He was preceded in death
by his wife, Hazel, in 1954.
Survivors Include one daughter,
Mrs. Leland (Donna) Green of
Jackso~; two grandchildren, one

Jan. 1, 197f

that will literally draw people to
you, especially members ot the
opposite sex.

ized

Merle Collins

Outstanding

day romantically .
GEMINI (May 21-.lune 20) Ttlis
can be a day of major achtevements II you set your mind to
them. With determlnallon, sever-

CANCER

12.905.82

Debt service

489. Radio

one you love .will be paramount
in your thoughts to&lt;'ay, just as
you will be foremost In his or her
mind. This should be an exciting

Merch 7,1010

10,000.00
3,000.00

Trust and Agency

General
Water works
Fund
222,127.97
Sewage Dlsp. Fl. (Water
Poll . Const .l
117,646.54
Street Const.
M&amp;R Fund
41.812 .99
State Highway Imp.
Fund
9.221.05
Cemetery Fund
12,322.34
Debt Service
Funds
84,284.73
Federal Revenue
Sharing
36,316 .87
Anti Recession
Fund
Fire
Uti lit

39,187.19

should be a 'Very fortunate da)'
for you In involvements with
others, especially II you are managing their resources or &amp;Hairs.

Osol

9-45.19
1,620.19

General Fund
25,000.00
WaterWorks
Fund
86 ,U 1. 25
Sewage Disp. Fd .
(Water Poll .
Cont.&gt;
14,590.65

City Station, N.Y. ~ 0019 . Be sure
to specify birth date.
ARIES (Morell 21-Aprtt Ill) TM

:ASTRO•GRAPH

675.00

Debt Service
Funds
Grand Total
Non-

WaterWorks

Wi!!terWorks

Bo~

Improvements

~'"ft"

Hands of Trustee(s)
Mortgage Revenue
Debt Service and
Debt Service
Reserve)
8'1,349.88
SUMMARY
OF FUND
TRANSACTIONS
Balance
Jan. 1, 1979
General Fund
.tll,988.69

•
! Friday, March 7

ON MAJOR REPAiR WORK

WaterWorks

Investments In

FREE ESTIMATES

..-

State Highway Imp.
Fund
/ 8,360.76
Federal Revenue
Sharing
8,142.42
Grand Total
16.503.18

Dec . 31, 1979
(Deduct)
1,032.04
Total -Balance Dec .
31. 1979
307,034.&amp;9
Funds (Cash and

Regular ONLY GENUINE
PLUS '12'5 HOOVER PARTS USED

6. Check filter System

Funds
20,128.52
Grand Total
317,.t82 .72
ReceiptsRevenue
General Fund
156.082.95

Trust i!nd Agency

Wanda Josephine Adanis, 44, died
Wednesday at her borne at 206 Brick
St., Pomeroy.
She was a daughter of the late
Henry and Evelyn Imboden Landers
and was also preceded in death by a
sister, Janie, and two brothers,
Robert and Orville Landers.
Surviving are a son-in-law and
daughter, Mr. arid Mrs. Kenneth
(PeMy Sue) Smith and a granddaughter, Kimberly Smith, aU of
Middleport; a son, John Thomas Imboden, Minersville; two brothers,
Jack and WUliam, Cvlumbus; two
sisters, Shirley, Minersville, and
Mrs. Renry (Delores) Summei'Sj
Charleston, and several nieces and
nephews.
Funeral services will be held at I
p.m. Saturday at the Ewing Funeral
Home with the Rev. O'Dell Manley
officiating. Burial will be in Gilmore
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
funeral home anytime after '7 this
evening.

976 ..46

25,700.00
2,105.00

Outstanding Checks

Board cst
Public Affelrs
(2) 28, 6, 13, 3tc

CemEtery Fund
Federal Revenue

Director

Pomeroy National
Bank
122,389.88
Farmers Bank
20,442.79
Pomeroy National
Bank
4,734.26
Total Depasltory
Balances
147,566.93
Investments:
Certificates of
Depasit
130,000.00
Other Investments
(Including
Savings)
30,500.00
Total
Investments
160,500.00
Total Treasury
Balance
308,066.93

Fund

Con!.)
19,564.19
Street Canst. M and
R Fund
14,717.08

. Sharing
10,666.90
Fire
6.883 .05
Utility
17,733.97
Grand Total
190,697 .24
Capital

San. Sewer
Const.
Bu ilding Fd .

Wanda J, Adams

Fund
51,733.55
sewage Disp . Fd .
(Water Poll .
Cont.)
72.627.7~
Street Canst. M and
R Fund
13,~.79)
State Highway Imp.
Fund
860.29
Cemetery
Fund
(1,054.31)

DePOsitory Balances :

con·

71 ,367 .20

3151, 1919

Total Fund

Balances, Dec .

136.15
5,383 .60
23,536.62

Area deaths

Mliintent~nce

Funds
2,015.36
11,UO.OJ .UUj
Grand Total
153,953.08
1-jlghWiiY imp.
Balance
Dec. 31,1979
General Fund
19,626.62

Reconciliation

,

•s

Fund

Fire
Util it

D

992·224f
Population
2672
1970 Federal Census
Cash

has been correc-

Bernice Bede

Anti Recession

l\1iddleport squad busy

Fund
48,788 .39
Sewage Ob..p . Fd .
(Water Poll.

Receipts- .

110 Second Ave.,
Pomeroy, Ohio
45769
March 3, 1980
I certify the rollowing
repartto be correct.
Jane Walton
Village Clerk·
Treasurer-City

Astr!&gt;-Graph,

PUT NEW LIFE IN YOUR
LIST
HOOVER
95
$

Fund
4,109.36
Cemetery Fund (3,551.06)
Debt Service
82.368 .85
Funds
Federal Revenue
18,470 .87
Sharing

·

l1.o400 . 19
1.939 .27
179,331 .97
Operation and ,

General Fund
Water Work s

Non-Rev·enue
Const. Mand

Expenditures
Pomero~ Village
Meigs County
For Fiscal Year
Ending December

9:00 a.m. To 1:00 p.m.---..J
IB-POIINT FACTORY

'

Report of

tamlnant level specified In
the "Ohio Admmlstratlve
Code" was exceeded In 2
out of 11 ~mples collected
In Julr. 1979.
Coliform bacteria are
IJsed as an indicator of the
microbiolbgical quality of
drinking water. While the
coliform bacteria them·
selves may past no threat
to health. their presence
does Indicate that a source
of contamination exists
somewhere in the water
system. Such an indication
is adequate justification for
an Investigation to determine the nature and scope
of the possible health
hazard.
A subsequent In vestlgatlon and additional
sampling Indicate that any

YS
ONLY

a

State Highway I m p.

Receipts and

PUBLIC NOTICE
Public water supplies are
required
by
State
Regulation, Chapter 3745·
81, OhiO' Administrative
Code, to routinely monitor
the microbiological quality
of the drinking . water In
their distribution system.
The !;ampling conducted
for the Pomeroy water
system indicated that the
ma•lmum
permissible

microblologlcal

examine

13) 5, 5, 7, 3tc

GOLD,
SILVER
OR
FOREIGN COINS, OR
ANY OTHER GOLD OR
SILVER ITEMS. ALSO,
... ANTIQUE FURNITURE
' OR OTHER ANTIQUE
' 1TEMS. WILL PAY TOP
DOLLAR. CHECK WITH
OSBY (OSSIEl MARTIN
BEFORE
SELLING .
PHONE 992--6370. ALSO
00 APPRAISING .

2

CaayKasam

~~~

BUYING U.S. SILVER
COINS DATED 1964 OR
EARLIER
(ANY
AMOUNT). DON'T LOSE
MONEY,, SIMPLY PICK
UP THE PHONE AND
DIAL
614 - 992 -5 113,
BROWN'S .

Pomeroy Elementary where children have their choice
of fine reading material.

and

minimum
of
-4
microbiological samples
each month. 3 samples
were
collected
and
analyzed for the months of
August, October, Decem ber, 1979 and January 1980.
All of the samples that
were
collected
and
analyzed
during
that
per iod showed that water
of aood microbiological
quality was being provided
to the public.
The water department
has taken steps to insure
that adequate monitoring
will be performed in the
future .
Helen Heaton,
Clerk
Board of
Public Affairs

52,414. 11
Street Cons!. M and
(1,495 .18)
R Fund

Cemefery Fund
F i re
Gr.md Total

7~

I

cent haircuts, and failing to
re~ber that yoo very
often didn't have the sillbits needed to pay the s1ru11
,gardener.

• •

shrugged It off. He aald the choice
was made because the land is owned
by the federal govenunent, and that
talks are under way for an
agreement under which it would be
donated to the state or sold "at a
bargain basement" price.

THIS IS THE

THIS IS THE

~--SUN EAGLE---.

r - - SNOW EAGLE_....,.

.

,-.
~.;

·..

.

FREE
Complttt with Atttchmtntl

..

•9995
Regular
......1119.11
, Then you' ll certainly be a Connie shoes lover, too!
Because this handsome, soft leather topped sandal
with cushlony, bOUncy, flexy soles promise you
fashionable co.mfort.
.

FOR MORE INFORMATION
241-1113 EIT. HI

heritage house

•20
3 Only

1 Only S3083 .CAN

:ltrGID

With Power Nozzle - Reg.

4 Only Hoover Convertible. •ocn••
'

Middleport, 0.

rrom

f

''

l

1ea;

. ·

'I

~

OF SHOES

N. znd Ave.

SAVE

l

..•

Main Street

'Snzs UCI!lN8E
A lllll'rlage nei- wu luued to

,
·ul\Otle~~" Ket~

McO.nlel,

:~~~ •

Pomer\1)', and Diana Lynn Nea!., 17,

Letart, w. v.
ll

THE.
SHOE
BOX
MIDDlEPORT OHIO .

The Eagle Does Not Live By Snow Alone
FOR EXCELLENT STABILITY AND HANDLING
IN ALL WEATHU CONDITIONS, SEE TME ALL NEw

.

1980 AMC EAGLE 4 WHEEL DRIVE

RIVERSIDE AMC-JEEP-RENAULT
' I

195 Upper .River

:\1

.f

44~980'0

t~allipolis, - Ohio

�WANT AD INFORMATION

BR A DFO RD,

Ohio, Critt Bradford.

or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Dept .
111 Court St. , Pomeroy , 0 ., 45769

eRENTALS
41 - Housn l or 'l:efll
41 - Mobile H omn

l - Announce menh

lor Rent

~ - G iveaway

}611-

4s- FRoom'
41 - Wanted to Rent

41- Eqvipment lor Rent

&amp; AUCIIOn

e MERCHANDISE

eEMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
,_H el p

si - Houset\old Goods
52 - C B, TV , R1dio Equ i pment

w1 nted

Sl - An tiqu e1

2- Sotuate-d Wanted

e FINANC IAL
eu~inn~

11 -

Opl)orrunity
n - Mont&gt;y to Loan

Hourl y RN, parttime for
family pla nning c linics.
Must be r egist ered in Ohio,
have
re liabl e
tran ·
sportation . Qii ent at ion will
be provided . Equa l op·
portun ity em ployer. For
furthe r information , please
ca ll Planned ParenThoOd of
So utheast Ohio, 992-59 12,

593 .. 3375, coli eel .
Need babysi tter in Raci ne
area . Must have very
fl ex ible hours. 949·2347 or

Farm Equipment
wan ll!d to Buy
Trucks tor S.1 1e
Livu lock

949 2014 .

64 - Hay &amp; Grain
6S- Seed &amp; F erl ili£er

13- Prolessioul
Service~

Realtors

71 - Autos tor Sa le
7l - \lans&amp;4W . D.
74 - MOIOrcyc les
1SAuto Puis
&amp; Accesson u
17 - Auto Re tM ir

JJ - Homestor Sa le
32- Mobile Home~
lor Sail'
JJ- Farms tor Salt&gt;
l 4- 6usiness 8u i ldiiiQI
ls-L.oh &amp; Ac ruge
36-Rut Estate Will led
J7- Rei ltors

POMEROY , O.

Improvements
&amp; Exuvifing
83 - E)luv.flnv

Ch.rge
1.25
1. 90
1.:15
J .7S

E.1ch word over the min i mum 1swords is 4 cents per word per d~y .
Ads runnmg other than co nsecu tive di'fiS wil l be char~ed a t the 1 d iy
ra te.
01.:
lr1 memory , Card of Th ilnk~ and Ol) l tU~r y : 4 cents per word . SJ .OO
mm1mum . Cas J11n advanc e .
M obi le Hom e sa les and Y ~ rd s• tes are iC Cep ted lJilly withu s h with
ord er . ~5 cen t &lt;harge lor a d ~ urrvi n~;~ Bolt Number tn cue ol The
Sen tin el.

Announcements

1 PAY highest prices
possible for gold and si lver
coi ns, rings, jewelry, etc .
Contac t Ed Burkett Barber

Shop, Middleport.

Racine
4.____~G
~
iv~e~a~w~a~y~-Gille a hom eless animal a
home. Your M eigs County

Humane Society has puppi es, pupies, puppi es. A lso

adult

dogs.

Beagles,

Poodles, G iant Schnauzer ,
Saint Bernard types, Ger ·
man
Sheph erd
typ es,
Dalmation types, Lo11able
America n domest ic types,

Hotpoint and
General Electric
Appliance
Sales &amp;~rto~ice

Husky types, Elk Hound
type. Had shots. been wor·
med. H umane Society , 992·

6260 .

POMEROY

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

Lost and Found

Lost between Farmers
Bank and Spring Ave . area ,
money in a brown envelope . Please call 992·
3672 . Reward!

Phone
1- ( 614 ) -992-3325
GOOD BUY

-~

Realtors

II ROOMS - 1'1&gt; baths,
nat . gas furnace, 5 or 6
bedrooms, basement, 2
poches, outbui lding and

dbl . garage . $17,500 .
80 ACRES - Ni ce lay ·
ing farm l and or for subdivison . Abou t lf2 fenc -

ed, good 10 room farm
house with bath and lots
of fa rm bldgs, M inerals .

HOME

-

3

bedrooms, oaTh, por ·
ches, basement, birch
ki tchen, nat. gas fur nace and copper plumbing .

BUILDING LOT
Near Rock Springs in
Restrict e d

area,

utilities &amp; trees.
l IN 1 - Home has 11
rooms, furnace, 2 ren tals, 4th available, 2 ca r
garage and over 1 acre
of sandy land . Good buy

al$25,000.00.
6 RENTALS

-

All

under one roof. Bri ck
construction . Onl y

535.000 .
BUILDING LOT - Cor·
ner lot in Pomeroy in
good residential

sto ry , handyman 's
del i ghT, 5 rooms, 1'h
baths, lots of st orage,

WHIP INFLATION
W I TH YOUR OWN
REN TAL
UNIT .
$10,000.0().
Recently
RACINE r e mod eled
sto ry
frame , 7 rooms, full
base ment,
wa lk to
everything, S2S,OOO.oo.
WOODLAND
HOMESITES - Appx.
25 acres, some lots
surveyed, water and
elec .
available .

EASTERN DI STR ICT
$27,500.00.
BEAUTIFUL - 2 story,

ar-ea.

Out offlood.
RESTFUL - Quiet set·
l ing with a lot of tres on
21h acres. Like new In·
side, bath, utility, nat.
gas furnace 8. city
water.

FREE 80 CAlENDARS.
FOR SELLING YOUR
PROPERTY CALL
992· 3325. or 992-38'16

Housing
Head uarters

'
CALL 992 -7544

-- -

GREAT Location,
style and condit ion,
rooms to spare, up to 4
bdrms .• Ph baths, fam i ly room, rec. room, cen -

tral heal B. air . MAKE
OFFER $59,800 .00.
THE FARM - you have
been waiting for, 84
beautiful lay ing acres,
good la rge barn , 2

ponds,

old

re model ,

house

good

-

to

large

PLUS

w ith

F.P.,

ment ,
many
other
fea tures in excel lent
conditi on . STEAL AT

$76,325 .00.
THERE ARE 41 WAYS
TO FINANCE YOUR
NEW HOME, WE CAN
HELP YOU. LOCALLY
OWNED AND FULL
TIME .
REALTOR
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
992-6191
ASSOCIATES
Dottie &amp; Roger Turner
742·2474
Jean Trusseii91S·2660

FULL TIME
OFFICE PHONE
992·2259

Ml DOLE PORT - Three bedroom, 1'12 bath, ni ce lot
1ust one block from heart of town . $25,000.

POMEROY - o,n L incoln His. -

Two bedroom and

bath, full basement, gas furnace, storm windows &amp;
doors. Owner wi ll help fin ance if you need it . $17,500.
MIDDLEPORT Large double corner lot on

three bedroom, 2 balh , garage B.

work shop. $25,000 .
RUTLAND - Older home needs some repairs on
Sa lem Street . Ni ce corner lot . $9900.00.

BUILDING OR TRAILER LOT -

Hysell Run Road

- 5 acres. $7,000.

SYRACUSE - Old house on a ni ce lot, $1 1,600 .
LOT IN MIDDLEPORT - We w ill build a house on
this one if you choose- South Second Ave.

CALL 992-2342
RODNEY DOWNING, BROKE R- HO. 992·37l1
BILL CHI,LDS, BRANCH MGR .-'-HO. 992-2449

·---------------------DOWNING-CHILDS AGENCY INC.
INSURANCE

12x60 Hillc rest, fbedroom
Furnished or unfurnished

IN STOCK for immediate

992-2342
DOWNING-CHILDS·AGENCY; INC.

~c; , ,

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

~~-,
4· !:C~

~··"'r-~f~
·~

.iEml:Qi __ ...:.

~

1 11-111-.ll&lt;.

I DI,6.,L.W W

W'(t~lD

11

PI&lt;A~~ ...

NORTH
+to ;
• A 10

~11.)0,.

PUti.JAB! BEHIND 'IOU! DOI'fT
lET HIM &lt;=lET 10 "r;:Jil.WY"!!

Free Estimate

·PH. 992·2772

2-25·1mo.

Apples, Rome Beauty at
$4 .00 per bushel. Exc . for

.rw

~-''-'~c'-~

992 _3795

Pomeroy, Oh.

. ... IIV.. -

WEST
t J76
+Q94 2
. J86
.K 9743
• QJ 87
t9
+ Q5 3
+ K72
SOUTH
+A K 8 3
.Q 52
• 10 4
+AJ8 6

Orchard, State
689 .
Phone
Wilkesville 669·3785.

zpatrick

carpeting and drapes .
6135.

992 ~

1973

Fa irpoint.

14x65

2

Cameron,

14x65,

2

bedr.

1971

Fleetwood,

14x65 l

1971 Shakespear, 14x65 2

1965 Yanor 12x52, 2 bed r .
1968 Fleetwood 12x63, 2
8dr .
B &amp; S MOBILE HOM E
SA~ES, PT. PLEASANT
'
WV. 304·675·4424.

during March .

Wanted : Responsible party
to take over low monthly
payments on spinet piano .
Can be seen locally . Write
credit manager : P.O. Box

green and goip brocade
traditional sofa 96 inches
long. Love seat, cut velve1 ,
oyster white with olive
green trim. 4 piece set of
Italian provincial, white

firm . 992·5304.

56

Freedom

Mobil e

Home 14x64, 3 bedroom, in

eludes ful l length awning
ce ntral air, located on'
spacious lot wh ich can be
rented . $7,900 . Contac I
Ki ngsbur y Home Sa les aI

9'12·7034.

33

CO UNTRY

HOME

Pets for Sale

HOOF HOLLOW, English

CAU 992-3238

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

ASK FOR DAVE

698· 3290 .

'

ca rpeted. 3 to 17 acre s

Bard ing

b edroom

trailer

Adults Onl y 992·33·24

44

Apartment
for Rent

3 AND 4 RM furnished ap·
ts. Phone 992·5434.
RENTER'S assistance for
Senior C itizens In Village

Manor apts. Call992-7787 .
45 Furnished Rooms
Sleeping roon\ for working
man S27 .50 per .week.- Call
992·6022 .

_
53

f'l! &lt;&gt;rchandise
Antiques

ATTENTION :
{IM ·
PORTANT TO YOU) Will
pay cash or certified check
for antiq~es and coller·
tibles or entire estt .,...

Nothing too ' large.

..

guns, pocket watches ca.~·. ~.~ .
coin .;ollectlons . Call 6 14-

767 ·3167 or 557·3411.

Pass

3 NT

OONSTRUCTION

~,Lu.tu

~4C~
-, I Made i1 Myself"
.... Crafts are lunl
2·18-1 mo.

7 : 3~ Family

!NEWSPAPER EN TER PRI SE ASSN I

(For a copy of JACOBY
MODERN. send $1 to: " Wtn at

Bridge, ·· care of this newspaper. P. 0. Box 489. Radio City
St a lion .

New

York .

N .Y.

tOO t9)

by THOMAS JOSEPH
39 John, in

ACROSS
1 French

GASOLINE ALLEY

He can't spend It was come on!
the rest of his for his The truth!
life nr ~rnnir'n

Omsk
40 Chrisbnas

priest
5 Flagellate
9 Enter
10 Have in
prospect_

Q

to Christmas

n

Champagne
bo&amp;!l

12 American
DOWN

1 Maturing

17 Pronowt
18DoiRg a
teacher's Job

concerning
the unlverse sheller
tChemlstry 14 Vogue
16 Coil
suffix

30 Ultimate

19 - Irae
5 Layer
I Filling With 22 Lubricants

31 Merriwell
3&amp; Born: Fr.

POODLE GROOMING.
Judy Tay lor . 614-367·7220.

ANTIQUES,
FUR NITURE, glass, china,
any:r,ing. See or call Ruth
Gos ey, antiques, 26 N.
2nd, Middleport, OH . 992·
3161 .
OLD COINS, pocket wat·
c hes, class rings, wedding
bands, diamonds. Gold or
silver. Call J. A. Wamsley ,
742-2331 . Treasure Chest
oln Shop, Athens, OH . 592·
6462. -

c

G OLD , SILVER OR
F OREIGN COINS, OR
A NY OTHER GOLD OR
s ILVER ITEMS, ALSO,
A NTIQUE FURNITURE
0 R OTHER ANTIQUE
I TEMS . WILL PAY TOP
DOLLAR . CHECK WITH
0 SBY (OSSIE) MARTIN
B EFORE
SELL I N'Y.
p HONE 992-6370. ALSO DO
A PPRAISING .
Now ~cceplng logs at our
I 09 , vnrd 7 :30·3:30 week d ay s ,1-flgh prices for good
quallty logs with a lim ited
mount of low grade.
p ayment upvn delivery
an d sea ling . Blaney Hard woods, Box. 66, Vincent.
0 H 45784. 614·678·2960.

•

---- -----·----

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

Ice

OLD

FURNITURE, ice
brass beds, Iron
beds, desks, etc., complete
households . Write M .D.
Miller. Rt. 4, Pomeroy or
call 992· 7760.

&amp; Grain

$2,800.0(). 992·3169.

S &amp; G Carpet Cleaning.
Steam
cleaned .
Free

1977 Thunderbird. P.S.,
P. B., AM-FM, radials.
$2,800. 247·3594 .

estimate.
Reasonable
rates . Scotchguard . 992·
6309 or 742-2211.

1967 Che~y Short bed truck.
Auto., 6 cyl. 992·7768 or 992·
5671.

WALL PAPERING
painting . H2·2328.

Mlxec;l Hay. 60 cents a bale .
992 ..5866 or 992·3981 after 6 ·
p.m.

71

Autos for Sale

1977 Capri, 4 cyl ., A.C., AM FM 4 speed. Excellent condillon . 992-6069,$3500 firm .
1964 Pontiac Tempest, ~
Dr., V·6, auto., shift. Runnlng good. Call 98H366. Or
stp.at 37641 rexas
.. R~d. ·

-

1973

2201 .

P~nt lac

Ctallna . 992·

'

G~NDMA

lHINKS

6,MNDPA IS IN TERESTED IN
&amp;OMEONE

~ E WAS LATE FOR

WHY, lHAT OLD SCALA-

DINNER LAST
NIGHT... ANDSHE
FOUNDA NAME

W/'6 ! AND JUST LAST

A CRISIS

NI6HT

HE AND BR-\NDM-'1

and

1974 CH · Jeep,
Phone 949·2545.

12200.
'

'

.

%7 Thyroidism
%9 Greek letter

Conspirator's 37 Norse

rr.--w-rsky god

3ZSen.

Ribicoff

BRLtS 0' FIRE!!

LOOK AT THEM
50UARE·FOOTED

__

TRACKS,
LUKEY ·

~~-;9..)~

33 Success
:It Gawain's
title

GLORY6E!!

35CUb
fiTumer

THEM MARTIAN
:/' CRITTERS HAVE
LANDED lfll HOOTII\I'

of note
. 38Greek

HOLLER!!

....:;

ialand

DAIL"\' CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how

'

3825.
'

.

CRYPJ'OQUOTES-

•

.

work It :

One letter oimply standi for another. In this sample A is
used for the three L 's, X for the 1wo O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are dilterent.

TDE
~~

FLUDTS

CEU

ex

E U J ll I; A M R K
'

EDRMC.EO

--

WILL HAUL WATER. 992· ·

.

to

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

Ia

. 85 General Haullnt
1974 International Pickup ·
Truck, 19,000 mi . 992·58456 ' WILL HAULI!mestone and
gravel. Also, lime 'hauilng
or 992-3.981 after~ p.m.
and spreading. Leo Morris
Trucking. Ph~ 742-2455.
13
vansS.4W ;Q , .

. -

nwnerals

!5 Beyond

of disgust
29 Drink at
one draft

ELWOOD
BOW~RS
REPAIR Sweepers,
toaster., Irons, all small
appliances. Lawn mower.
Next to State Highway
Garage on Route 7, 985·

5151, . .

e.g.
11 Papoose

whiatle
ZISome
are martial
21 Effrontery
28 Word

ces.

1978 'F'ord Bronco, . A , C.,
:N\·FM stereo, P.S.; P.B.,
new tires. Call
'

u Our

8 Dynamite,

boatswain's

-

P. B.~ AM·FM rtdlo, cab
light , 6 ft. bed with
fiberglass topper 1md
sliding windows. RHM hitch. Big tires. R~SI prOOfed.
25,000 miles. Can be seen at
AShland Bulk Plant • at
Minersville. 742·2225, 742·
2125 or 992-5111 . ·

ZGaffe
3 Hypothesis

%5 Used a

ENW!Nt5 THE KIND
OF RELATIONSHIP

CARPENTER WORK
complete remodel ing by AI
Tromm, 742-2328 . Referen·

automatic, P .S.,

m-.130.

2% Beasts
23Confined

I WAS

Yeslenlay'a Alulwer

23
reverence
7 Regrettable

Simone

HAVE!

Trucks for Sale
84 .
Electrical
1976 Ford F·100 PICkUP With
&amp; Refridgeration
matching topper. 6 cylln- .
SEWING
MACJ11NE
der standard . 4 ,000 miles,
ser~ice,
new tires, excellent con· . Repairs,
all
makes.
992-2284 . The
dltlor. ~500 firm. Phone
: Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
992-72B5after 4 p.m.
· AuthOrized Singer Sales
and Service. We sha~pen
W7B Chevy Pickup, 4x4, 350
Scissors.
engine,

Transportation

RIGHT. 6R-\NDMA
AND GRANDPA ARE
601N6 'THROUGH

Home
Improvements

72

'

'

81

'

Livestock

Ha):

YOU HEARD ME

Will do odds and ends,
1972 Cornaro 350 V·B eng. panel ing, floor tile, and
New battery, new exhaust, . ceiling tile. Call Fred
Miller, 992-6338.
runs good . $300. 985-35H.

boxes,

64

WINNIE

.1976 Che~y Malibu, 4 door,
6 cyl., p.s., p.b ., good cond.
Anxious to sell S1600. Ralph
Trussell, 949·2660.

beds, desks, etc, complete
households. Write M .D.
Miller. Rt. 4, Pomeroy or
call 992· 7760 .

21 Singer

Services

crager mags, air shocks.

boxes, brass beds, Iron

Nice Pigs. 949·2857.

commune

1976 Cornaro, 305 engine,

742·3080.

63

ZODulch

1978
Ford
Bron co,
customized, p.b., p .s.,
cruise control. 992 .. 3310 .

Wanted to buy : a newer

c

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

Five 1975 Camaro wheels
and hub caps. New cor ·
dillon. Caii992-SM3.

GT Hardtop,
mint cond. , a.c., low
mileage, good gas mileage.
Call992·6259.

car, to take over payments.

FURNITURE,

76

1974 MGB

GOLD
AND
SILVER
COINS OF THE WORLD.
R ING S,
JEWELRY ,
STERLING SILVER AND
MISC. ITEMS. PAYING
RECORD
HIGH,
HIGHEST UP· TO-DATE
PRICES. CONTACT ED
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP, . Ml DDLEPORT ,
OHIO, OR CALL 992-3476.

OLD

Autos for Sa Ie

'

DEW

VCCW·NMAA

II -

w c "L c

R

s

DEW

LDTUO

DWQ CTDRU

R

DHLCDW

DAA

.

.

K

sczu

DR

RCNDLWO

.

ZUE?

(

s c 'Z

F

0c

E

Crnlteqaote: ONE UNGRATEFUL MAN DOES
, :--f==.,.!-•j.~ Yesterday'•
AN JNJURYTOAI..L'"'tiOSTANDINNEEDOF AID.-8YRUS
~

•c••

Ll!fta'- for driveways,
Pomerov·Mason
367_
7101.
.
.

.,.

••

·,

-

10 ; Morning Magazine 13; Mov ie

" The Trap" 17.
10:30- Hollywood Squares 3. 15 ;
S20,000 Pyramid 13: Whew 8,10 :
Andy Griff ith 6 .
10: 55- CBS News 8; House Call 10.
11:GO-High Rollers 3.15 ; Laverne B.
Shirley 6,13; Price is Right 8,10:
E lee. Co. 20 .
11 : 3 ~ Whee l of Fortune 3.1S;
Family Feud 6, 13; Sesame 51 .
20,33 ; II : 55-News 17.
12 :00- Newscenter
3;
News
6, 8, 10,13 ; Health Field I S; Love,
Amer ican Style 17.
12 : 3~Ryan ' s Hope 6,13; Password
Plus

15;

Mov ie

" You

Came

Along " 11: Ele&lt;: . Co . 33 .
I :GO-DaysofOur Lives3,15; AII.My
Children 6,13; Young 8. the
Rest less 8,10.
··
2:()(}-Doctors 3,15 ; One Life to Live
6, 13; As The World Turns 8, 10:
2:2S- News 17.
2: 30- Another
World
3, 1S;
Gigglesnort Hotel 17 .
3: 00- General
Hospi ta l
6 , 13 :
Guid ing Ligh t 8, 10; I Love Lucy
17; Upstairs, Downstairs 20;
Over Easy 33 .
4:00- Mi ster Cartoon 3; M erv
Griffin 6; Petticoat Jucntlon 8;
Sesame Sf. 20,33 ; Gomer Pyle
10; Real M cCoys 13; Little
Rascals 15; Spectreman 17.
4 : 3~ Lone Ranger3 : Gomer PyleS;
Brady Bunch 10; Tom &amp; Jerry
13; Merv Griffin 1S; Gilligan's Is.

playwright
71

Time 10; Green A cres 17.

10 : oo-Card Sharks 3, 15; Jeffersons
8: Edge of Night 6 : Joker' s Wild

Personal Tim e Management 33 .

13 Michu is one
15 Beat
16 Gain the day

Wanted to Buy

Affair 10; 7:55-Chuck
White Reports I 0.
S:oo-Capl . Kangl&gt;roo 8.10; Lucy
Show 17; Sesam e St. 33.
8:30- Romper Room 11 .
9:()(}-Bob Braun· 3; Big Vall ey 6;
Beverly Hillbillies 8: Hogan 's
Heroes 10; Phil Donahue 13.1S:
Family Atlair 17 .
9.3()- Bob Newhart 8; One Oay At a

3 : 3~Fiintsfones 17;

Lady's

Care products. Western
boots . Children's $15.50 .
AdultsS29.oo.

62

Good Morning

America 6,13; Friday Morning 8;
Batman 10; WTBS Funhouse 17 .

~~

-

organizations

Pass

thing falls mto place and
these pla ys become sorl of
" automatic".
When the diagrammed hand
was played at a r egional tournament i n Phoenix, only four

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

molds for candy making
-Full line of Kraft supplies
-Special ra1es for

3·2·1 mo.

1+

Pass
Pass

South

Howe ver. eventually ever y-

ROUSH

macrame cl•sses.
carrying
-Now
chocolate wrappers and

•

and

available . Located approx
7 miles from Pomeroy of f . HILLCREST KENNELS .
Boar ding, all breeds. Clean
Rt. 7 or 33. 446·2359 after 6.
i ndoor·outdoor fac ilit ies.
Also AKC
registered
36 acres farm with 9 room
Dobermans. 614·446·779S .
1
1h
story hou se, fu l I
basement, buildings, barn
HUMANE
SOCIETY.
some timber, al l minera 'I
Adopt a hOmeless pet .
rights . $77,000. 992·7559 .
Heal thy , shots, wormed.
Donations required . 9926260, noon· 7 p .m.
Rentals
AKC Male Pekingese pups .
11 weeks old . 949·2646.
42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
Farm Supplies
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
&amp; Livestock
Park, Route 33. north of
Pomeroy . Large l ots .Ca l I
99n479.
62 Wanted to Buy
Two

Call Howard
949·2862
HHfc

Virginia 13; 6 :55-News 13.

7:GO-Today 3,15;

Riding Lessons and Horse

with

stocked pond for swimming
or fishing , 9 rooms, bath

Reason•ble Prices

NOW HOLDING
TOLE &amp; DECORATIVE
P.~INTING CLASSES
-We will be having

"FREE ESTIMATES"

Pass

When beginners learn to
play bridge they are taught
innumerable things. Counting
hands , finesses. end plays.
duckin g play and much more.

YOU DIDN'T FAll OUT
OF A TREE , OR HIT
YOUR HEP.D ON ANY11-liNG RECENTLY,
" DIDYOU?

Free Estimates

POMEROY,O.
992-6215or
992 -7314
1~ 2s ~ 1 mo.

Been in Business
For5 Years

RISING STAR Kenne l .
Boarding. Call367 ·9292.

Farms for Sale

.ALLEYOOP

All work guaranteed.

V. C. YOUNG Ill

We Do Roofing,
Gutters and
.
Rem00eling

Living room furniture, 1

marble top end tables. A ll
exc . cond . 985· 3595.

1971

~

cleaning and painting.

S37, Shelbyville, Ind. 45676.

1971 12x65 Trailer, com
pletely furnished, A.C.,
very good condition . On a
lot that can be rented
Ready to move into. S6500

or repair gutters and
downspouts,
gutter

(FREE ESTIMATES)

2·181 mo.

East

It
2t
Pass

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

''

All types roof work, new

FRIDAY, MARCH 7,1 980
S:45-Farm Report 13 ; Worl d at
Large 11 : 5:50-PTc Club 13 .
6:G0-700 Club 6; PTL Club 15;
Hea llh Field 10 .
6 : 3~Kidswor ld 10; News 17; 6 : 45Morning Report 3 : A.M . Weather
33 ; 6 :50-Good Morning , West

These " unlucky " declarer s
later bemoaned their bad luck
when diamonds didn 't break
and a heart return killed
dumm y. However, these play·
ers should have bemoaned
their bad tech nique.
All of the successful declarers also realized the diamond
suit should be developed. But
what if diamonds failed to
break'
The club su1t offered excellent chances If one or both
honors were in the East hand .
If diamonds break. 10 tricks
are available: if the club suit
lies favorably there are only
nine tricks.

Opening lead :• 4

ROOFING -

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

Gutter

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

Nortll

JH. L WRITESa

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING

"FREE
ESTIMATES"

SS.E Gift Shop (Syracuse)
10 Perce nt Off on all items

bedroom

1971

Pawn Broker, golf and
guns, used silver 1964 orear li er for purchases. John

Teaford, 614·985·3961 .

Mobile Homes
for Sale

32

I

A&amp;H
UPHOlSTERING

West

2·17·1 mo.

I : 00-

Biac k Sheep Squadron 8; 1:35New s 17 .

overtrick.

Vulnerable : Neither
Dealer: North

6, 13 ;

Tomorrow 3; News 15 : 1 :2()-

section) made three notrump.
The bidding wa s simple and
straightforward. It occurred
at almost every table The
event was a Masters Pairs.
The opening heart lead was
covered by the 10 and jack
and declarer won in hand with
the queen. All of the unsuccessf ul declarers made the
automatic pl ay at trick two of
leadmg a small diamond and
pla ying low from dummy If
diamonds divide 3·2. almost a
68 per cent possibility. the
contract will succeed with an

3-6·80

+10 9 4
EAST

• Replacement
Windows

JAMES KEESEE

ABC

17;

Cavett 20; 11 :45-Pollce

12 : 55- Baretla

declarers out of 13 (in one

'TeU.M&amp;

DIAL--A-

Aluminum Siding ·
elnsulation
eS*"m Doors
• Storm Windows

H&amp;R BLOCK OFFICE LOCATION
618 E. Main

11 . 4~Dick

Dangerous automatic play

~''7

~TH~RN-JD
((.;Of

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION .
Vinyl &amp;

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

Roaring Twent ies"
Capt ioned News 33 .
Woman 6, 13.

.

Tri-County
Bookkeeping
Service

~-

- -

t AK6 53!

pool kits. Do·il·yourself or
let us install for vou. D.
Bumgar dner Sales, Inc .
992·S724 .

Route

20 .

II : 30- Tonight 3, 15 : ABC N ews
Special 6,13: Columbo 8; Movie
" Viva , Villa" 10; Movie " The

BRIDGE

Auto &amp; Truck
.
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992-5682
4-30-lfc

2 ~ 11mo .

PYLON VESTRY TANKER
They o ften age most during the teens-

Answer

mile off R1. 1 by -pass ,

Ru11and.

Wed . &amp; Thurs •
Call for Appt.
949· 2320
Racine, 0 .

Jumbles BERYL

....."

on St. Rl. 124 toward

SALON

2·28·1mo.

delivery : various sizes of

1972 14x70 Beautiful Vin·
dale M obile Home. 2
bedroom, expando living
room, 2 bay windows, por·
ch .
Electric
stove,
refrigerator, dishwasher,

I

FOR AU YOUR -INSURANCE NEEDS
CAU US.

J &lt;'l

-

Garage

(Answers tomorrow)

'lbursday, March 6

pies, sauce aod butter . Fit -

SERVING SOUntEASTERN OHIO SINCE 18681
ARE YOU PAYING TOO MUCH? DO
YOU ~lAVE THE COVERAGE?

.

B. A. _BEAUTY

No Sunday Calls

power
own the best

weekends. Larry Wolfe.

a

full base ·

alternators -

After 3:30 p.m. ca ll 247·
2032 .

• Men or Women
by Diann Jewell
at

)l"

PARENTS

Roger Hysell ...

HAIR STYLING

PH. 949-2801

I

vesterday ·s

'

r-.

PAYING
$20.00 AND UP
FOR
SILVE~ OOUARS

EMERGENCY

Well built 3 bedr oom hom
o n 3 acres
situated
overlooking t he Ohio River .

..

Mov ie " The

Spiral Road" 17 ; Mov ie " The
SEcret Agent" 20 ; TV : The
Fabulous ' 50s 33 .
8: 30- Benson 6, 13; 9 : 00-Qulncy
3,15; Barney M il le r 6,13; Barnaby Jones 8, 10 .
9 : 3~Soap 6, 13.
IO :oo-Roc ktord Files 3,1S: 20-2!
6, 13; Knots Landing 8,10 : Sneak
Previews 20 ; Austin City Limits
33 ; 10 : 4~ New s 20.
11 :GO-News 3.8, 10, 13,15 : Last of the
Wild 17 : FallS. Rise ol Reginald
Perrin 33; II : I ~Fiash Gordon

Now arrange the circled letters to
lorm the surprise answer. as sug. gesled by lhe above cartoon

"l II X1t rI I I

s, 10;

A nniversary

i&amp;OL..F C.A R:T.

Answer here :

'

apple butter. Cal l 609·3785,
Fitzpatrick Orchard, SR
689 .

992·6140 .

&lt;!' IRL. ! &amp;UT
OOW'T HURT HIM I

MacNeil -Lehrer

8 GO- Buck Rogers 3, 15; Mork B.
Mindy 6,1 3, Disneyland' s 25fh

MADE ~YA
GA~- P~OPEL.LED

I YEKTUR
til l

~OOD

Admission S2.00 Single
$3.00 couple
sponsored by Musl
Unlimited. Chaperon_
will be present. No
alcoholic beverages per·
milled . For further In'
to., call 992-6058.
:;
2·28·1 mo. Pd o

2·14-lfc

Fam il y 17 :
Report 20

J I I

' 'Disco Lighting"

Free Estimates
388-9759

Squares 3;; In
Sear ch 0 16; Joker ' s Wild 8; Di ck
Cavell 33 : SIOO,OOO Name That
Tune 10: Nashville On The Road
13; Country Roads IS; All In The

A FUNNY NO ie&gt;E

ROME beauty

- buy Winpower. Call 513788·2S89 .

bedroom

MIDDL£PORT OHIO

•

107 Sycamore (Rear
Pomeroy, 0 .

apples at $4 per bu . Best for

after 5 and

949 ~ 2836

READY TO MOVE IN·
TO $40,000.00.

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

~.

Hours 9-1 M., W., F .
01her 1imes by appointment.

7 ·JO-Hollywood

KJ I

.

sidi ng ,
Roofing,
built-up
gutter,
home
and
roof
repair.

THURSDAY, MARCH 6.1980

STYRT

TEEN DISCO
DANCE
AI The Orchid Room
E. Main St. Pomeroy, 0 .
EVERY
SATURDAY NIGHT
B:OOTII11 :30

GEORGE'S
ROOFING

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.

E. Main St .. Pomeroy, 992·
3891.
APPLES -

bdr., bath 'h

REAL ESTATE

Loc ust

54 Misc. Merchanise

FHA

Homes for Sale

river view, Ph baths,
central air , full basement, excellent cond l·
ti on, carpeting etc .

4 to"

bed r oom s, formal din ·
ing, equipped ki t., base·
menT, 2 ca r garage , 2
business r ooms on large
leve l Jo t .

NICE

Lost : Brown clu1 ch purse
between Jones Boys in
Pomeroy
or
Racine .

Reward off ered. 992 ·2598 .

2.16 E. Second S1reet

park ing , storage bldg .
Pri ced to sell $35,000.00.
NEW LISTING 2

garage

Fem ale AKC r egist er ed
Bea r Airedale dog . Ca ll

6

!

3·4 bdrms ..

beautiful 3 bdrm . ranch

992·5M9 alter 4 p.m .

,. ! A I

Love·

spacious living room,
built-in kitchen and
separa te dining room ,
1'12 baths, full basement , paved drive and

3.00

DISCOUNT
PRICES

program.

Rd.

Cash
1.00
l.SO
1.111

Volu nt ee r
F i re
Dept .
Every Saturday. 6:30 p.m .
At the ir buitdingin Bashan.
Factor y choke guns onl y.

payment

panel ing ,

1SWords or Under

SH OOT .

24S

16- M. H. Rep•ir

~aulln1

Rates and Other Information

GU N

graduated

FHA

- ..

b

i

:;

REAL ESTATE
FI.NANCING

C B, TV, Radio
Eguipment

992-2276.

VA
no down payment
F HA · low down paymen t.

87- U pholstery

84- Eit&gt;ctrlcal

Announcements

VENTIONA L · 5 Pel . down

I PUDMY
I KJ

'

Federal Housing a.'
Veterans Admin. Loar ~

Mor tg age
mane y
ava ilable . New homes, ol ~
homes and refinancin g
you r present home . CO N . bury Rd ., Middleport. OH .

ly 2 storv home on good
str eet with carpeting
and
co mpl i mentarv

NEW LISTING -

&amp; lhfrig eratlon

3

557 ~ 3411 .

All populr sizes in ni ckel
Cad m i um
batteries,
r ec hargable for 1,000 or
more times. We have bat·
tery chargers, CB's base
and . Mobile, antennas,
masTtng , all size co-axiel
wire and hardware for in·
stallation. Ster eo system s
with or without matching
tables, portable co l or
televisions and scanners
programmable with lac ·
tory rebate up lo $25.
Crystal type with four free
crystals. France TV and
Electron ics, 39260 Brad·

Money to Loan
22
FINANCING VA-FHA LO
ANS . LOW OR NO DOV/N
PAYMENT . PURCHASE
OR
REFINANCE
IRELAND MORTGAGE
77 E. STATE . ATHENS '
614·592·3051.

Modern 3 bedroom home
basement w ith f irepla ce ''
cen tral air, fully carpeted
located on 6'h acres near'
Ra ci ne on Racine· Bashan

I d&lt;ty
2 days
3 days
6 da ys

52

992 ·2143.

31

992 · 21)Y

8~ - Plumbl ne

Bi-Gtnenl

767 ·3167 or

1.:
__.~.J:~.:...I

M A IN

il - ~ome

MORE CLASSIFI EDS
ON PAGE 9

IN

SURANCE
been c an·
ce ll ed?
Los f
you r
operator ' s lice nse? Phone

Real Estate

eSERVICES

4 P .M . Da il y
12 Noon h l\Jrday
for Monday

AUTOMOB ILE

pay cash or certified check
for antiques and col lecl ibles or entire estates.
Nothi ng too large . Also,
guns, pocket watches and
coin collections. Call 614·

' E xcelsior Sa lt Works, Inc. ,

608 E .

Wan1-Ad Adver1ising
Deadlines

Insurance

13

,..'

Business Services

ATTENTION :
( IM ·
PORTANT TO YOU I Will

Television
Viewing

by Henri Arnold and Bob Lee

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter 10 each square. to lcrm
four ordtnary WOfdS .

~==========••••====================m•

Antigues

265 subsi dy program . ca II
LIMESTON E,
lor detai ls
IR ELA ND . COAL ,
MORTGAGE CO., 77 E : sand , gravel , calcium
State St ., Athens. 592·3051. 1 chl orid e, fer 1il izer, dog
t food, and all types of salt .

eTRANSPORTATION

eREAL ESTATE

J

weekdays. If no

answer, call main offi ce

e FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK
6t n n 63 -

Help Wanted
11
GE T VALUABLE !raining

8 : 30 ~ 3 : 30

54 - Misc . Merctumuu
5i-6Ut ldtng Su pplies
S._Pe t1 lor hie

13- ln suranu
r~ - Bu so n eH Traming
15- Schools lnstr uc t• on
16Rad oo, TV
&amp; CO R epair
11- Wanted Te~Do

Want someone to stay w it h
invalid husband and so n
wh ile wife is in hospita I.

Financial

46- Spoue lor R ent

9- Wanted to Buy

53

2156 or 9n2157

44 - A.partm entlor Rent

H.appy Ads
Loslal1d Fountt
Yud Sale
PUbl iC Sate

Help Wanted

992·3254.

as a young business person
and ea rn goOd m oney plus
some great gifts as a Sen·
tinel route carrier. Phone
us right away and get on
th e eli gibi liTY list aT 992 -

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX
• ANNOUNCEMENTS

A uc tioneer ,

Complete Serv ice . Phone
949· 2487 or 949· 2000. racine,

PHONE 992-2156

I - Card o l T nar1~~
1- ln Memorfillm

11

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~ ~ ~~ ·

DICK TRACY

Your Best Buys Are Found in the Sentinel Classifieds
B

'ftlt\l'iMt ffi'\l

11-The DailY Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thu~;rlay . March6 , 1980

10-The Dally Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday , Mar ch 6. 1980

® 1M Klftl FNtvrn Syndkatt, Ilk.

,_

'

17 .

s :GO-Carol

Burnett 3: Sanford B.
Son 8: Mary Tyler Moore 10; My
Three Sons 17 ; Mister Rogers
20,33.
5: 30-Mash 3; News 6; Play the
Percentages 8; Elec . Co. 20 :
Mash 10; Happy Days AGain 13;
I Dream of Jeannie 17; Doclor
Who 33 .
6 oo- News 3,8,10,13,1S; ABC News
6 : Carol Burnett 17; 3·2·1 Contact
20,33.
6: 30-NB C News 3, 15; ABC News 13;
CBS News 8, 10; Carol Burnett 6;
Bob Newhart 17; Vi l la Alegre 20;
Wild Wild Wor ld of Animals 33.
7: oo-Cross-Wits 3; Tic Tac Dough
8:
Newlywed Game 6, 13 ;
Ma cNeil -Lehrer Report 33 ;
News 10; Love, American Style
15; Sanford &amp; Son 11:' Flash
Gordon 20.
7: 30-Price is Righi 3; 3's A Crowd
6: Fam i ly Feud 10; Joker 's Wild
8: Dick Cavett 33; Pop Goes The
Country 13, 15; Allin The Family
17: MacNeil-Lehrer Report 20.
S:GO-Movle " Brave New World"
· 3, 1S; Mov ie " On Her Matesty's
Secret Service " 6,13; Movie
" The Wi zarj:l of Oz" 8, 10;
Washington · Week In Review
20,33 ; NBA Basketball 17 .
8:30-Wall Street Week 20,33; 9:0&lt;1Capltol Beat 33; Free to Choose
20.
.
9:30-Songs of a Lusty Land 33 .
10 : 00- Dukes of Hazzard 8, 10;
10 : 10- News 20 : 10: 15- Rat
Patrol 17.
10 :40-0n Being Human 20 ; 10 :A5L!We AmerlcBn Style 17.
11 :00- News 3,6,8 , 10,13 ,15; NHL
Hockey 17.
11 : 3~ Tonight 3, 15; ABC New's
Speclar 6,13; Movie ·"Terror
from Within" 8; Movie " VBm ·
pi re Men of lhe Lost Planet" 10;
Murders Most English 33.
11 : 45-Charlle's Angels 6; Movie " It
Happened One NighI " 13; 11 :50Dick Cavell 20 .
12 : 30-David . Susskind 33; 12 : 55FBI 6.
1:GO-Midnight Special 3,15; Movie
" Po,nt of Terror" 10;

1:30-

News 17; 1:45-News 13.
1:55-NBA Basketball 17; 2:30News 3; 4: 1~Movie " Brushf ire" 17.

•

�WANT AD INFORMATION

BR A DFO RD,

Ohio, Critt Bradford.

or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Dept .
111 Court St. , Pomeroy , 0 ., 45769

eRENTALS
41 - Housn l or 'l:efll
41 - Mobile H omn

l - Announce menh

lor Rent

~ - G iveaway

}611-

4s- FRoom'
41 - Wanted to Rent

41- Eqvipment lor Rent

&amp; AUCIIOn

e MERCHANDISE

eEMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
,_H el p

si - Houset\old Goods
52 - C B, TV , R1dio Equ i pment

w1 nted

Sl - An tiqu e1

2- Sotuate-d Wanted

e FINANC IAL
eu~inn~

11 -

Opl)orrunity
n - Mont&gt;y to Loan

Hourl y RN, parttime for
family pla nning c linics.
Must be r egist ered in Ohio,
have
re liabl e
tran ·
sportation . Qii ent at ion will
be provided . Equa l op·
portun ity em ployer. For
furthe r information , please
ca ll Planned ParenThoOd of
So utheast Ohio, 992-59 12,

593 .. 3375, coli eel .
Need babysi tter in Raci ne
area . Must have very
fl ex ible hours. 949·2347 or

Farm Equipment
wan ll!d to Buy
Trucks tor S.1 1e
Livu lock

949 2014 .

64 - Hay &amp; Grain
6S- Seed &amp; F erl ili£er

13- Prolessioul
Service~

Realtors

71 - Autos tor Sa le
7l - \lans&amp;4W . D.
74 - MOIOrcyc les
1SAuto Puis
&amp; Accesson u
17 - Auto Re tM ir

JJ - Homestor Sa le
32- Mobile Home~
lor Sail'
JJ- Farms tor Salt&gt;
l 4- 6usiness 8u i ldiiiQI
ls-L.oh &amp; Ac ruge
36-Rut Estate Will led
J7- Rei ltors

POMEROY , O.

Improvements
&amp; Exuvifing
83 - E)luv.flnv

Ch.rge
1.25
1. 90
1.:15
J .7S

E.1ch word over the min i mum 1swords is 4 cents per word per d~y .
Ads runnmg other than co nsecu tive di'fiS wil l be char~ed a t the 1 d iy
ra te.
01.:
lr1 memory , Card of Th ilnk~ and Ol) l tU~r y : 4 cents per word . SJ .OO
mm1mum . Cas J11n advanc e .
M obi le Hom e sa les and Y ~ rd s• tes are iC Cep ted lJilly withu s h with
ord er . ~5 cen t &lt;harge lor a d ~ urrvi n~;~ Bolt Number tn cue ol The
Sen tin el.

Announcements

1 PAY highest prices
possible for gold and si lver
coi ns, rings, jewelry, etc .
Contac t Ed Burkett Barber

Shop, Middleport.

Racine
4.____~G
~
iv~e~a~w~a~y~-Gille a hom eless animal a
home. Your M eigs County

Humane Society has puppi es, pupies, puppi es. A lso

adult

dogs.

Beagles,

Poodles, G iant Schnauzer ,
Saint Bernard types, Ger ·
man
Sheph erd
typ es,
Dalmation types, Lo11able
America n domest ic types,

Hotpoint and
General Electric
Appliance
Sales &amp;~rto~ice

Husky types, Elk Hound
type. Had shots. been wor·
med. H umane Society , 992·

6260 .

POMEROY

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

Lost and Found

Lost between Farmers
Bank and Spring Ave . area ,
money in a brown envelope . Please call 992·
3672 . Reward!

Phone
1- ( 614 ) -992-3325
GOOD BUY

-~

Realtors

II ROOMS - 1'1&gt; baths,
nat . gas furnace, 5 or 6
bedrooms, basement, 2
poches, outbui lding and

dbl . garage . $17,500 .
80 ACRES - Ni ce lay ·
ing farm l and or for subdivison . Abou t lf2 fenc -

ed, good 10 room farm
house with bath and lots
of fa rm bldgs, M inerals .

HOME

-

3

bedrooms, oaTh, por ·
ches, basement, birch
ki tchen, nat. gas fur nace and copper plumbing .

BUILDING LOT
Near Rock Springs in
Restrict e d

area,

utilities &amp; trees.
l IN 1 - Home has 11
rooms, furnace, 2 ren tals, 4th available, 2 ca r
garage and over 1 acre
of sandy land . Good buy

al$25,000.00.
6 RENTALS

-

All

under one roof. Bri ck
construction . Onl y

535.000 .
BUILDING LOT - Cor·
ner lot in Pomeroy in
good residential

sto ry , handyman 's
del i ghT, 5 rooms, 1'h
baths, lots of st orage,

WHIP INFLATION
W I TH YOUR OWN
REN TAL
UNIT .
$10,000.0().
Recently
RACINE r e mod eled
sto ry
frame , 7 rooms, full
base ment,
wa lk to
everything, S2S,OOO.oo.
WOODLAND
HOMESITES - Appx.
25 acres, some lots
surveyed, water and
elec .
available .

EASTERN DI STR ICT
$27,500.00.
BEAUTIFUL - 2 story,

ar-ea.

Out offlood.
RESTFUL - Quiet set·
l ing with a lot of tres on
21h acres. Like new In·
side, bath, utility, nat.
gas furnace 8. city
water.

FREE 80 CAlENDARS.
FOR SELLING YOUR
PROPERTY CALL
992· 3325. or 992-38'16

Housing
Head uarters

'
CALL 992 -7544

-- -

GREAT Location,
style and condit ion,
rooms to spare, up to 4
bdrms .• Ph baths, fam i ly room, rec. room, cen -

tral heal B. air . MAKE
OFFER $59,800 .00.
THE FARM - you have
been waiting for, 84
beautiful lay ing acres,
good la rge barn , 2

ponds,

old

re model ,

house

good

-

to

large

PLUS

w ith

F.P.,

ment ,
many
other
fea tures in excel lent
conditi on . STEAL AT

$76,325 .00.
THERE ARE 41 WAYS
TO FINANCE YOUR
NEW HOME, WE CAN
HELP YOU. LOCALLY
OWNED AND FULL
TIME .
REALTOR
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
992-6191
ASSOCIATES
Dottie &amp; Roger Turner
742·2474
Jean Trusseii91S·2660

FULL TIME
OFFICE PHONE
992·2259

Ml DOLE PORT - Three bedroom, 1'12 bath, ni ce lot
1ust one block from heart of town . $25,000.

POMEROY - o,n L incoln His. -

Two bedroom and

bath, full basement, gas furnace, storm windows &amp;
doors. Owner wi ll help fin ance if you need it . $17,500.
MIDDLEPORT Large double corner lot on

three bedroom, 2 balh , garage B.

work shop. $25,000 .
RUTLAND - Older home needs some repairs on
Sa lem Street . Ni ce corner lot . $9900.00.

BUILDING OR TRAILER LOT -

Hysell Run Road

- 5 acres. $7,000.

SYRACUSE - Old house on a ni ce lot, $1 1,600 .
LOT IN MIDDLEPORT - We w ill build a house on
this one if you choose- South Second Ave.

CALL 992-2342
RODNEY DOWNING, BROKE R- HO. 992·37l1
BILL CHI,LDS, BRANCH MGR .-'-HO. 992-2449

·---------------------DOWNING-CHILDS AGENCY INC.
INSURANCE

12x60 Hillc rest, fbedroom
Furnished or unfurnished

IN STOCK for immediate

992-2342
DOWNING-CHILDS·AGENCY; INC.

~c; , ,

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

~~-,
4· !:C~

~··"'r-~f~
·~

.iEml:Qi __ ...:.

~

1 11-111-.ll&lt;.

I DI,6.,L.W W

W'(t~lD

11

PI&lt;A~~ ...

NORTH
+to ;
• A 10

~11.)0,.

PUti.JAB! BEHIND 'IOU! DOI'fT
lET HIM &lt;=lET 10 "r;:Jil.WY"!!

Free Estimate

·PH. 992·2772

2-25·1mo.

Apples, Rome Beauty at
$4 .00 per bushel. Exc . for

.rw

~-''-'~c'-~

992 _3795

Pomeroy, Oh.

. ... IIV.. -

WEST
t J76
+Q94 2
. J86
.K 9743
• QJ 87
t9
+ Q5 3
+ K72
SOUTH
+A K 8 3
.Q 52
• 10 4
+AJ8 6

Orchard, State
689 .
Phone
Wilkesville 669·3785.

zpatrick

carpeting and drapes .
6135.

992 ~

1973

Fa irpoint.

14x65

2

Cameron,

14x65,

2

bedr.

1971

Fleetwood,

14x65 l

1971 Shakespear, 14x65 2

1965 Yanor 12x52, 2 bed r .
1968 Fleetwood 12x63, 2
8dr .
B &amp; S MOBILE HOM E
SA~ES, PT. PLEASANT
'
WV. 304·675·4424.

during March .

Wanted : Responsible party
to take over low monthly
payments on spinet piano .
Can be seen locally . Write
credit manager : P.O. Box

green and goip brocade
traditional sofa 96 inches
long. Love seat, cut velve1 ,
oyster white with olive
green trim. 4 piece set of
Italian provincial, white

firm . 992·5304.

56

Freedom

Mobil e

Home 14x64, 3 bedroom, in

eludes ful l length awning
ce ntral air, located on'
spacious lot wh ich can be
rented . $7,900 . Contac I
Ki ngsbur y Home Sa les aI

9'12·7034.

33

CO UNTRY

HOME

Pets for Sale

HOOF HOLLOW, English

CAU 992-3238

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

ASK FOR DAVE

698· 3290 .

'

ca rpeted. 3 to 17 acre s

Bard ing

b edroom

trailer

Adults Onl y 992·33·24

44

Apartment
for Rent

3 AND 4 RM furnished ap·
ts. Phone 992·5434.
RENTER'S assistance for
Senior C itizens In Village

Manor apts. Call992-7787 .
45 Furnished Rooms
Sleeping roon\ for working
man S27 .50 per .week.- Call
992·6022 .

_
53

f'l! &lt;&gt;rchandise
Antiques

ATTENTION :
{IM ·
PORTANT TO YOU) Will
pay cash or certified check
for antiq~es and coller·
tibles or entire estt .,...

Nothing too ' large.

..

guns, pocket watches ca.~·. ~.~ .
coin .;ollectlons . Call 6 14-

767 ·3167 or 557·3411.

Pass

3 NT

OONSTRUCTION

~,Lu.tu

~4C~
-, I Made i1 Myself"
.... Crafts are lunl
2·18-1 mo.

7 : 3~ Family

!NEWSPAPER EN TER PRI SE ASSN I

(For a copy of JACOBY
MODERN. send $1 to: " Wtn at

Bridge, ·· care of this newspaper. P. 0. Box 489. Radio City
St a lion .

New

York .

N .Y.

tOO t9)

by THOMAS JOSEPH
39 John, in

ACROSS
1 French

GASOLINE ALLEY

He can't spend It was come on!
the rest of his for his The truth!
life nr ~rnnir'n

Omsk
40 Chrisbnas

priest
5 Flagellate
9 Enter
10 Have in
prospect_

Q

to Christmas

n

Champagne
bo&amp;!l

12 American
DOWN

1 Maturing

17 Pronowt
18DoiRg a
teacher's Job

concerning
the unlverse sheller
tChemlstry 14 Vogue
16 Coil
suffix

30 Ultimate

19 - Irae
5 Layer
I Filling With 22 Lubricants

31 Merriwell
3&amp; Born: Fr.

POODLE GROOMING.
Judy Tay lor . 614-367·7220.

ANTIQUES,
FUR NITURE, glass, china,
any:r,ing. See or call Ruth
Gos ey, antiques, 26 N.
2nd, Middleport, OH . 992·
3161 .
OLD COINS, pocket wat·
c hes, class rings, wedding
bands, diamonds. Gold or
silver. Call J. A. Wamsley ,
742-2331 . Treasure Chest
oln Shop, Athens, OH . 592·
6462. -

c

G OLD , SILVER OR
F OREIGN COINS, OR
A NY OTHER GOLD OR
s ILVER ITEMS, ALSO,
A NTIQUE FURNITURE
0 R OTHER ANTIQUE
I TEMS . WILL PAY TOP
DOLLAR . CHECK WITH
0 SBY (OSSIE) MARTIN
B EFORE
SELL I N'Y.
p HONE 992-6370. ALSO DO
A PPRAISING .
Now ~cceplng logs at our
I 09 , vnrd 7 :30·3:30 week d ay s ,1-flgh prices for good
quallty logs with a lim ited
mount of low grade.
p ayment upvn delivery
an d sea ling . Blaney Hard woods, Box. 66, Vincent.
0 H 45784. 614·678·2960.

•

---- -----·----

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

Ice

OLD

FURNITURE, ice
brass beds, Iron
beds, desks, etc., complete
households . Write M .D.
Miller. Rt. 4, Pomeroy or
call 992· 7760.

&amp; Grain

$2,800.0(). 992·3169.

S &amp; G Carpet Cleaning.
Steam
cleaned .
Free

1977 Thunderbird. P.S.,
P. B., AM-FM, radials.
$2,800. 247·3594 .

estimate.
Reasonable
rates . Scotchguard . 992·
6309 or 742-2211.

1967 Che~y Short bed truck.
Auto., 6 cyl. 992·7768 or 992·
5671.

WALL PAPERING
painting . H2·2328.

Mlxec;l Hay. 60 cents a bale .
992 ..5866 or 992·3981 after 6 ·
p.m.

71

Autos for Sale

1977 Capri, 4 cyl ., A.C., AM FM 4 speed. Excellent condillon . 992-6069,$3500 firm .
1964 Pontiac Tempest, ~
Dr., V·6, auto., shift. Runnlng good. Call 98H366. Or
stp.at 37641 rexas
.. R~d. ·

-

1973

2201 .

P~nt lac

Ctallna . 992·

'

G~NDMA

lHINKS

6,MNDPA IS IN TERESTED IN
&amp;OMEONE

~ E WAS LATE FOR

WHY, lHAT OLD SCALA-

DINNER LAST
NIGHT... ANDSHE
FOUNDA NAME

W/'6 ! AND JUST LAST

A CRISIS

NI6HT

HE AND BR-\NDM-'1

and

1974 CH · Jeep,
Phone 949·2545.

12200.
'

'

.

%7 Thyroidism
%9 Greek letter

Conspirator's 37 Norse

rr.--w-rsky god

3ZSen.

Ribicoff

BRLtS 0' FIRE!!

LOOK AT THEM
50UARE·FOOTED

__

TRACKS,
LUKEY ·

~~-;9..)~

33 Success
:It Gawain's
title

GLORY6E!!

35CUb
fiTumer

THEM MARTIAN
:/' CRITTERS HAVE
LANDED lfll HOOTII\I'

of note
. 38Greek

HOLLER!!

....:;

ialand

DAIL"\' CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how

'

3825.
'

.

CRYPJ'OQUOTES-

•

.

work It :

One letter oimply standi for another. In this sample A is
used for the three L 's, X for the 1wo O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are dilterent.

TDE
~~

FLUDTS

CEU

ex

E U J ll I; A M R K
'

EDRMC.EO

--

WILL HAUL WATER. 992· ·

.

to

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

Ia

. 85 General Haullnt
1974 International Pickup ·
Truck, 19,000 mi . 992·58456 ' WILL HAULI!mestone and
gravel. Also, lime 'hauilng
or 992-3.981 after~ p.m.
and spreading. Leo Morris
Trucking. Ph~ 742-2455.
13
vansS.4W ;Q , .

. -

nwnerals

!5 Beyond

of disgust
29 Drink at
one draft

ELWOOD
BOW~RS
REPAIR Sweepers,
toaster., Irons, all small
appliances. Lawn mower.
Next to State Highway
Garage on Route 7, 985·

5151, . .

e.g.
11 Papoose

whiatle
ZISome
are martial
21 Effrontery
28 Word

ces.

1978 'F'ord Bronco, . A , C.,
:N\·FM stereo, P.S.; P.B.,
new tires. Call
'

u Our

8 Dynamite,

boatswain's

-

P. B.~ AM·FM rtdlo, cab
light , 6 ft. bed with
fiberglass topper 1md
sliding windows. RHM hitch. Big tires. R~SI prOOfed.
25,000 miles. Can be seen at
AShland Bulk Plant • at
Minersville. 742·2225, 742·
2125 or 992-5111 . ·

ZGaffe
3 Hypothesis

%5 Used a

ENW!Nt5 THE KIND
OF RELATIONSHIP

CARPENTER WORK
complete remodel ing by AI
Tromm, 742-2328 . Referen·

automatic, P .S.,

m-.130.

2% Beasts
23Confined

I WAS

Yeslenlay'a Alulwer

23
reverence
7 Regrettable

Simone

HAVE!

Trucks for Sale
84 .
Electrical
1976 Ford F·100 PICkUP With
&amp; Refridgeration
matching topper. 6 cylln- .
SEWING
MACJ11NE
der standard . 4 ,000 miles,
ser~ice,
new tires, excellent con· . Repairs,
all
makes.
992-2284 . The
dltlor. ~500 firm. Phone
: Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
992-72B5after 4 p.m.
· AuthOrized Singer Sales
and Service. We sha~pen
W7B Chevy Pickup, 4x4, 350
Scissors.
engine,

Transportation

RIGHT. 6R-\NDMA
AND GRANDPA ARE
601N6 'THROUGH

Home
Improvements

72

'

'

81

'

Livestock

Ha):

YOU HEARD ME

Will do odds and ends,
1972 Cornaro 350 V·B eng. panel ing, floor tile, and
New battery, new exhaust, . ceiling tile. Call Fred
Miller, 992-6338.
runs good . $300. 985-35H.

boxes,

64

WINNIE

.1976 Che~y Malibu, 4 door,
6 cyl., p.s., p.b ., good cond.
Anxious to sell S1600. Ralph
Trussell, 949·2660.

beds, desks, etc, complete
households. Write M .D.
Miller. Rt. 4, Pomeroy or
call 992· 7760 .

21 Singer

Services

crager mags, air shocks.

boxes, brass beds, Iron

Nice Pigs. 949·2857.

commune

1976 Cornaro, 305 engine,

742·3080.

63

ZODulch

1978
Ford
Bron co,
customized, p.b., p .s.,
cruise control. 992 .. 3310 .

Wanted to buy : a newer

c

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

Five 1975 Camaro wheels
and hub caps. New cor ·
dillon. Caii992-SM3.

GT Hardtop,
mint cond. , a.c., low
mileage, good gas mileage.
Call992·6259.

car, to take over payments.

FURNITURE,

76

1974 MGB

GOLD
AND
SILVER
COINS OF THE WORLD.
R ING S,
JEWELRY ,
STERLING SILVER AND
MISC. ITEMS. PAYING
RECORD
HIGH,
HIGHEST UP· TO-DATE
PRICES. CONTACT ED
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP, . Ml DDLEPORT ,
OHIO, OR CALL 992-3476.

OLD

Autos for Sa Ie

'

DEW

VCCW·NMAA

II -

w c "L c

R

s

DEW

LDTUO

DWQ CTDRU

R

DHLCDW

DAA

.

.

K

sczu

DR

RCNDLWO

.

ZUE?

(

s c 'Z

F

0c

E

Crnlteqaote: ONE UNGRATEFUL MAN DOES
, :--f==.,.!-•j.~ Yesterday'•
AN JNJURYTOAI..L'"'tiOSTANDINNEEDOF AID.-8YRUS
~

•c••

Ll!fta'- for driveways,
Pomerov·Mason
367_
7101.
.
.

.,.

••

·,

-

10 ; Morning Magazine 13; Mov ie

" The Trap" 17.
10:30- Hollywood Squares 3. 15 ;
S20,000 Pyramid 13: Whew 8,10 :
Andy Griff ith 6 .
10: 55- CBS News 8; House Call 10.
11:GO-High Rollers 3.15 ; Laverne B.
Shirley 6,13; Price is Right 8,10:
E lee. Co. 20 .
11 : 3 ~ Whee l of Fortune 3.1S;
Family Feud 6, 13; Sesame 51 .
20,33 ; II : 55-News 17.
12 :00- Newscenter
3;
News
6, 8, 10,13 ; Health Field I S; Love,
Amer ican Style 17.
12 : 3~Ryan ' s Hope 6,13; Password
Plus

15;

Mov ie

" You

Came

Along " 11: Ele&lt;: . Co . 33 .
I :GO-DaysofOur Lives3,15; AII.My
Children 6,13; Young 8. the
Rest less 8,10.
··
2:()(}-Doctors 3,15 ; One Life to Live
6, 13; As The World Turns 8, 10:
2:2S- News 17.
2: 30- Another
World
3, 1S;
Gigglesnort Hotel 17 .
3: 00- General
Hospi ta l
6 , 13 :
Guid ing Ligh t 8, 10; I Love Lucy
17; Upstairs, Downstairs 20;
Over Easy 33 .
4:00- Mi ster Cartoon 3; M erv
Griffin 6; Petticoat Jucntlon 8;
Sesame Sf. 20,33 ; Gomer Pyle
10; Real M cCoys 13; Little
Rascals 15; Spectreman 17.
4 : 3~ Lone Ranger3 : Gomer PyleS;
Brady Bunch 10; Tom &amp; Jerry
13; Merv Griffin 1S; Gilligan's Is.

playwright
71

Time 10; Green A cres 17.

10 : oo-Card Sharks 3, 15; Jeffersons
8: Edge of Night 6 : Joker' s Wild

Personal Tim e Management 33 .

13 Michu is one
15 Beat
16 Gain the day

Wanted to Buy

Affair 10; 7:55-Chuck
White Reports I 0.
S:oo-Capl . Kangl&gt;roo 8.10; Lucy
Show 17; Sesam e St. 33.
8:30- Romper Room 11 .
9:()(}-Bob Braun· 3; Big Vall ey 6;
Beverly Hillbillies 8: Hogan 's
Heroes 10; Phil Donahue 13.1S:
Family Atlair 17 .
9.3()- Bob Newhart 8; One Oay At a

3 : 3~Fiintsfones 17;

Lady's

Care products. Western
boots . Children's $15.50 .
AdultsS29.oo.

62

Good Morning

America 6,13; Friday Morning 8;
Batman 10; WTBS Funhouse 17 .

~~

-

organizations

Pass

thing falls mto place and
these pla ys become sorl of
" automatic".
When the diagrammed hand
was played at a r egional tournament i n Phoenix, only four

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

molds for candy making
-Full line of Kraft supplies
-Special ra1es for

3·2·1 mo.

1+

Pass
Pass

South

Howe ver. eventually ever y-

ROUSH

macrame cl•sses.
carrying
-Now
chocolate wrappers and

•

and

available . Located approx
7 miles from Pomeroy of f . HILLCREST KENNELS .
Boar ding, all breeds. Clean
Rt. 7 or 33. 446·2359 after 6.
i ndoor·outdoor fac ilit ies.
Also AKC
registered
36 acres farm with 9 room
Dobermans. 614·446·779S .
1
1h
story hou se, fu l I
basement, buildings, barn
HUMANE
SOCIETY.
some timber, al l minera 'I
Adopt a hOmeless pet .
rights . $77,000. 992·7559 .
Heal thy , shots, wormed.
Donations required . 9926260, noon· 7 p .m.
Rentals
AKC Male Pekingese pups .
11 weeks old . 949·2646.
42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
Farm Supplies
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
&amp; Livestock
Park, Route 33. north of
Pomeroy . Large l ots .Ca l I
99n479.
62 Wanted to Buy
Two

Call Howard
949·2862
HHfc

Virginia 13; 6 :55-News 13.

7:GO-Today 3,15;

Riding Lessons and Horse

with

stocked pond for swimming
or fishing , 9 rooms, bath

Reason•ble Prices

NOW HOLDING
TOLE &amp; DECORATIVE
P.~INTING CLASSES
-We will be having

"FREE ESTIMATES"

Pass

When beginners learn to
play bridge they are taught
innumerable things. Counting
hands , finesses. end plays.
duckin g play and much more.

YOU DIDN'T FAll OUT
OF A TREE , OR HIT
YOUR HEP.D ON ANY11-liNG RECENTLY,
" DIDYOU?

Free Estimates

POMEROY,O.
992-6215or
992 -7314
1~ 2s ~ 1 mo.

Been in Business
For5 Years

RISING STAR Kenne l .
Boarding. Call367 ·9292.

Farms for Sale

.ALLEYOOP

All work guaranteed.

V. C. YOUNG Ill

We Do Roofing,
Gutters and
.
Rem00eling

Living room furniture, 1

marble top end tables. A ll
exc . cond . 985· 3595.

1971

~

cleaning and painting.

S37, Shelbyville, Ind. 45676.

1971 12x65 Trailer, com
pletely furnished, A.C.,
very good condition . On a
lot that can be rented
Ready to move into. S6500

or repair gutters and
downspouts,
gutter

(FREE ESTIMATES)

2·181 mo.

East

It
2t
Pass

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

''

All types roof work, new

FRIDAY, MARCH 7,1 980
S:45-Farm Report 13 ; Worl d at
Large 11 : 5:50-PTc Club 13 .
6:G0-700 Club 6; PTL Club 15;
Hea llh Field 10 .
6 : 3~Kidswor ld 10; News 17; 6 : 45Morning Report 3 : A.M . Weather
33 ; 6 :50-Good Morning , West

These " unlucky " declarer s
later bemoaned their bad luck
when diamonds didn 't break
and a heart return killed
dumm y. However, these play·
ers should have bemoaned
their bad tech nique.
All of the successful declarers also realized the diamond
suit should be developed. But
what if diamonds failed to
break'
The club su1t offered excellent chances If one or both
honors were in the East hand .
If diamonds break. 10 tricks
are available: if the club suit
lies favorably there are only
nine tricks.

Opening lead :• 4

ROOFING -

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

Gutter

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

Nortll

JH. L WRITESa

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING

"FREE
ESTIMATES"

SS.E Gift Shop (Syracuse)
10 Perce nt Off on all items

bedroom

1971

Pawn Broker, golf and
guns, used silver 1964 orear li er for purchases. John

Teaford, 614·985·3961 .

Mobile Homes
for Sale

32

I

A&amp;H
UPHOlSTERING

West

2·17·1 mo.

I : 00-

Biac k Sheep Squadron 8; 1:35New s 17 .

overtrick.

Vulnerable : Neither
Dealer: North

6, 13 ;

Tomorrow 3; News 15 : 1 :2()-

section) made three notrump.
The bidding wa s simple and
straightforward. It occurred
at almost every table The
event was a Masters Pairs.
The opening heart lead was
covered by the 10 and jack
and declarer won in hand with
the queen. All of the unsuccessf ul declarers made the
automatic pl ay at trick two of
leadmg a small diamond and
pla ying low from dummy If
diamonds divide 3·2. almost a
68 per cent possibility. the
contract will succeed with an

3-6·80

+10 9 4
EAST

• Replacement
Windows

JAMES KEESEE

ABC

17;

Cavett 20; 11 :45-Pollce

12 : 55- Baretla

declarers out of 13 (in one

'TeU.M&amp;

DIAL--A-

Aluminum Siding ·
elnsulation
eS*"m Doors
• Storm Windows

H&amp;R BLOCK OFFICE LOCATION
618 E. Main

11 . 4~Dick

Dangerous automatic play

~''7

~TH~RN-JD
((.;Of

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION .
Vinyl &amp;

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

Roaring Twent ies"
Capt ioned News 33 .
Woman 6, 13.

.

Tri-County
Bookkeeping
Service

~-

- -

t AK6 53!

pool kits. Do·il·yourself or
let us install for vou. D.
Bumgar dner Sales, Inc .
992·S724 .

Route

20 .

II : 30- Tonight 3, 15 : ABC N ews
Special 6,13: Columbo 8; Movie
" Viva , Villa" 10; Movie " The

BRIDGE

Auto &amp; Truck
.
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992-5682
4-30-lfc

2 ~ 11mo .

PYLON VESTRY TANKER
They o ften age most during the teens-

Answer

mile off R1. 1 by -pass ,

Ru11and.

Wed . &amp; Thurs •
Call for Appt.
949· 2320
Racine, 0 .

Jumbles BERYL

....."

on St. Rl. 124 toward

SALON

2·28·1mo.

delivery : various sizes of

1972 14x70 Beautiful Vin·
dale M obile Home. 2
bedroom, expando living
room, 2 bay windows, por·
ch .
Electric
stove,
refrigerator, dishwasher,

I

FOR AU YOUR -INSURANCE NEEDS
CAU US.

J &lt;'l

-

Garage

(Answers tomorrow)

'lbursday, March 6

pies, sauce aod butter . Fit -

SERVING SOUntEASTERN OHIO SINCE 18681
ARE YOU PAYING TOO MUCH? DO
YOU ~lAVE THE COVERAGE?

.

B. A. _BEAUTY

No Sunday Calls

power
own the best

weekends. Larry Wolfe.

a

full base ·

alternators -

After 3:30 p.m. ca ll 247·
2032 .

• Men or Women
by Diann Jewell
at

)l"

PARENTS

Roger Hysell ...

HAIR STYLING

PH. 949-2801

I

vesterday ·s

'

r-.

PAYING
$20.00 AND UP
FOR
SILVE~ OOUARS

EMERGENCY

Well built 3 bedr oom hom
o n 3 acres
situated
overlooking t he Ohio River .

..

Mov ie " The

Spiral Road" 17 ; Mov ie " The
SEcret Agent" 20 ; TV : The
Fabulous ' 50s 33 .
8: 30- Benson 6, 13; 9 : 00-Qulncy
3,15; Barney M il le r 6,13; Barnaby Jones 8, 10 .
9 : 3~Soap 6, 13.
IO :oo-Roc ktord Files 3,1S: 20-2!
6, 13; Knots Landing 8,10 : Sneak
Previews 20 ; Austin City Limits
33 ; 10 : 4~ New s 20.
11 :GO-News 3.8, 10, 13,15 : Last of the
Wild 17 : FallS. Rise ol Reginald
Perrin 33; II : I ~Fiash Gordon

Now arrange the circled letters to
lorm the surprise answer. as sug. gesled by lhe above cartoon

"l II X1t rI I I

s, 10;

A nniversary

i&amp;OL..F C.A R:T.

Answer here :

'

apple butter. Cal l 609·3785,
Fitzpatrick Orchard, SR
689 .

992·6140 .

&lt;!' IRL. ! &amp;UT
OOW'T HURT HIM I

MacNeil -Lehrer

8 GO- Buck Rogers 3, 15; Mork B.
Mindy 6,1 3, Disneyland' s 25fh

MADE ~YA
GA~- P~OPEL.LED

I YEKTUR
til l

~OOD

Admission S2.00 Single
$3.00 couple
sponsored by Musl
Unlimited. Chaperon_
will be present. No
alcoholic beverages per·
milled . For further In'
to., call 992-6058.
:;
2·28·1 mo. Pd o

2·14-lfc

Fam il y 17 :
Report 20

J I I

' 'Disco Lighting"

Free Estimates
388-9759

Squares 3;; In
Sear ch 0 16; Joker ' s Wild 8; Di ck
Cavell 33 : SIOO,OOO Name That
Tune 10: Nashville On The Road
13; Country Roads IS; All In The

A FUNNY NO ie&gt;E

ROME beauty

- buy Winpower. Call 513788·2S89 .

bedroom

MIDDL£PORT OHIO

•

107 Sycamore (Rear
Pomeroy, 0 .

apples at $4 per bu . Best for

after 5 and

949 ~ 2836

READY TO MOVE IN·
TO $40,000.00.

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

~.

Hours 9-1 M., W., F .
01her 1imes by appointment.

7 ·JO-Hollywood

KJ I

.

sidi ng ,
Roofing,
built-up
gutter,
home
and
roof
repair.

THURSDAY, MARCH 6.1980

STYRT

TEEN DISCO
DANCE
AI The Orchid Room
E. Main St. Pomeroy, 0 .
EVERY
SATURDAY NIGHT
B:OOTII11 :30

GEORGE'S
ROOFING

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.

E. Main St .. Pomeroy, 992·
3891.
APPLES -

bdr., bath 'h

REAL ESTATE

Loc ust

54 Misc. Merchanise

FHA

Homes for Sale

river view, Ph baths,
central air , full basement, excellent cond l·
ti on, carpeting etc .

4 to"

bed r oom s, formal din ·
ing, equipped ki t., base·
menT, 2 ca r garage , 2
business r ooms on large
leve l Jo t .

NICE

Lost : Brown clu1 ch purse
between Jones Boys in
Pomeroy
or
Racine .

Reward off ered. 992 ·2598 .

2.16 E. Second S1reet

park ing , storage bldg .
Pri ced to sell $35,000.00.
NEW LISTING 2

garage

Fem ale AKC r egist er ed
Bea r Airedale dog . Ca ll

6

!

3·4 bdrms ..

beautiful 3 bdrm . ranch

992·5M9 alter 4 p.m .

,. ! A I

Love·

spacious living room,
built-in kitchen and
separa te dining room ,
1'12 baths, full basement , paved drive and

3.00

DISCOUNT
PRICES

program.

Rd.

Cash
1.00
l.SO
1.111

Volu nt ee r
F i re
Dept .
Every Saturday. 6:30 p.m .
At the ir buitdingin Bashan.
Factor y choke guns onl y.

payment

panel ing ,

1SWords or Under

SH OOT .

24S

16- M. H. Rep•ir

~aulln1

Rates and Other Information

GU N

graduated

FHA

- ..

b

i

:;

REAL ESTATE
FI.NANCING

C B, TV, Radio
Eguipment

992-2276.

VA
no down payment
F HA · low down paymen t.

87- U pholstery

84- Eit&gt;ctrlcal

Announcements

VENTIONA L · 5 Pel . down

I PUDMY
I KJ

'

Federal Housing a.'
Veterans Admin. Loar ~

Mor tg age
mane y
ava ilable . New homes, ol ~
homes and refinancin g
you r present home . CO N . bury Rd ., Middleport. OH .

ly 2 storv home on good
str eet with carpeting
and
co mpl i mentarv

NEW LISTING -

&amp; lhfrig eratlon

3

557 ~ 3411 .

All populr sizes in ni ckel
Cad m i um
batteries,
r ec hargable for 1,000 or
more times. We have bat·
tery chargers, CB's base
and . Mobile, antennas,
masTtng , all size co-axiel
wire and hardware for in·
stallation. Ster eo system s
with or without matching
tables, portable co l or
televisions and scanners
programmable with lac ·
tory rebate up lo $25.
Crystal type with four free
crystals. France TV and
Electron ics, 39260 Brad·

Money to Loan
22
FINANCING VA-FHA LO
ANS . LOW OR NO DOV/N
PAYMENT . PURCHASE
OR
REFINANCE
IRELAND MORTGAGE
77 E. STATE . ATHENS '
614·592·3051.

Modern 3 bedroom home
basement w ith f irepla ce ''
cen tral air, fully carpeted
located on 6'h acres near'
Ra ci ne on Racine· Bashan

I d&lt;ty
2 days
3 days
6 da ys

52

992 ·2143.

31

992 · 21)Y

8~ - Plumbl ne

Bi-Gtnenl

767 ·3167 or

1.:
__.~.J:~.:...I

M A IN

il - ~ome

MORE CLASSIFI EDS
ON PAGE 9

IN

SURANCE
been c an·
ce ll ed?
Los f
you r
operator ' s lice nse? Phone

Real Estate

eSERVICES

4 P .M . Da il y
12 Noon h l\Jrday
for Monday

AUTOMOB ILE

pay cash or certified check
for antiques and col lecl ibles or entire estates.
Nothi ng too large . Also,
guns, pocket watches and
coin collections. Call 614·

' E xcelsior Sa lt Works, Inc. ,

608 E .

Wan1-Ad Adver1ising
Deadlines

Insurance

13

,..'

Business Services

ATTENTION :
( IM ·
PORTANT TO YOU I Will

Television
Viewing

by Henri Arnold and Bob Lee

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter 10 each square. to lcrm
four ordtnary WOfdS .

~==========••••====================m•

Antigues

265 subsi dy program . ca II
LIMESTON E,
lor detai ls
IR ELA ND . COAL ,
MORTGAGE CO., 77 E : sand , gravel , calcium
State St ., Athens. 592·3051. 1 chl orid e, fer 1il izer, dog
t food, and all types of salt .

eTRANSPORTATION

eREAL ESTATE

J

weekdays. If no

answer, call main offi ce

e FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK
6t n n 63 -

Help Wanted
11
GE T VALUABLE !raining

8 : 30 ~ 3 : 30

54 - Misc . Merctumuu
5i-6Ut ldtng Su pplies
S._Pe t1 lor hie

13- ln suranu
r~ - Bu so n eH Traming
15- Schools lnstr uc t• on
16Rad oo, TV
&amp; CO R epair
11- Wanted Te~Do

Want someone to stay w it h
invalid husband and so n
wh ile wife is in hospita I.

Financial

46- Spoue lor R ent

9- Wanted to Buy

53

2156 or 9n2157

44 - A.partm entlor Rent

H.appy Ads
Loslal1d Fountt
Yud Sale
PUbl iC Sate

Help Wanted

992·3254.

as a young business person
and ea rn goOd m oney plus
some great gifts as a Sen·
tinel route carrier. Phone
us right away and get on
th e eli gibi liTY list aT 992 -

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX
• ANNOUNCEMENTS

A uc tioneer ,

Complete Serv ice . Phone
949· 2487 or 949· 2000. racine,

PHONE 992-2156

I - Card o l T nar1~~
1- ln Memorfillm

11

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~ ~ ~~ ·

DICK TRACY

Your Best Buys Are Found in the Sentinel Classifieds
B

'ftlt\l'iMt ffi'\l

11-The DailY Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thu~;rlay . March6 , 1980

10-The Dally Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday , Mar ch 6. 1980

® 1M Klftl FNtvrn Syndkatt, Ilk.

,_

'

17 .

s :GO-Carol

Burnett 3: Sanford B.
Son 8: Mary Tyler Moore 10; My
Three Sons 17 ; Mister Rogers
20,33.
5: 30-Mash 3; News 6; Play the
Percentages 8; Elec . Co. 20 :
Mash 10; Happy Days AGain 13;
I Dream of Jeannie 17; Doclor
Who 33 .
6 oo- News 3,8,10,13,1S; ABC News
6 : Carol Burnett 17; 3·2·1 Contact
20,33.
6: 30-NB C News 3, 15; ABC News 13;
CBS News 8, 10; Carol Burnett 6;
Bob Newhart 17; Vi l la Alegre 20;
Wild Wild Wor ld of Animals 33.
7: oo-Cross-Wits 3; Tic Tac Dough
8:
Newlywed Game 6, 13 ;
Ma cNeil -Lehrer Report 33 ;
News 10; Love, American Style
15; Sanford &amp; Son 11:' Flash
Gordon 20.
7: 30-Price is Righi 3; 3's A Crowd
6: Fam i ly Feud 10; Joker 's Wild
8: Dick Cavett 33; Pop Goes The
Country 13, 15; Allin The Family
17: MacNeil-Lehrer Report 20.
S:GO-Movle " Brave New World"
· 3, 1S; Mov ie " On Her Matesty's
Secret Service " 6,13; Movie
" The Wi zarj:l of Oz" 8, 10;
Washington · Week In Review
20,33 ; NBA Basketball 17 .
8:30-Wall Street Week 20,33; 9:0&lt;1Capltol Beat 33; Free to Choose
20.
.
9:30-Songs of a Lusty Land 33 .
10 : 00- Dukes of Hazzard 8, 10;
10 : 10- News 20 : 10: 15- Rat
Patrol 17.
10 :40-0n Being Human 20 ; 10 :A5L!We AmerlcBn Style 17.
11 :00- News 3,6,8 , 10,13 ,15; NHL
Hockey 17.
11 : 3~ Tonight 3, 15; ABC New's
Speclar 6,13; Movie ·"Terror
from Within" 8; Movie " VBm ·
pi re Men of lhe Lost Planet" 10;
Murders Most English 33.
11 : 45-Charlle's Angels 6; Movie " It
Happened One NighI " 13; 11 :50Dick Cavell 20 .
12 : 30-David . Susskind 33; 12 : 55FBI 6.
1:GO-Midnight Special 3,15; Movie
" Po,nt of Terror" 10;

1:30-

News 17; 1:45-News 13.
1:55-NBA Basketball 17; 2:30News 3; 4: 1~Movie " Brushf ire" 17.

•

�12- T"lle Daily Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 .. Thursday. March 6, I !lBO

All-SEOAL cage s.q uad will

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

battle OVC stars March 25
Ironton will host the first annual
Southeastem Ohio League All-Stars
vs. Ohio Valley Conference All-Stars
boys and girls post-season basketball games on Tuesday, March 25.
This was approved Wednesday
night by SEOAL officials during
their aruiUal winter meeting at
Jackson.
Proceeds from the two games will
be split by the two leagues . The
SEOAL will use the money to help
finance a league commissioner or

executive secretary.
Only seniors will be permitted to
play in the post-season events.
The games will be played' in ·Iron·
ton 's new Sports Center. The girls
contest will begin at 6:3() p. m. and
the boys contest at 6:15 p. m. Ad·
mission will be $2 for adults and $1
for students.
Phil Rice, coach of the SEOAL
champion Ironton Tigers, will guide
the SEOAL all-stal'!l. Dan D'antoni,
Chesapeake, will coach the OVC All·

Stars.
In other matters, league officials
changed the date for the annual boys
and girls track and field meets. They
will be held Saturday, May 10, at
Athens.
Officials also approved winter
championships won by Ironton in
girls and boys basketball.
Loop leaders adopted 1980-81
volleyball schedules and 1961
baseball schedules along with 1981
tennis and softball schedules.

FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY
FRIDAY, MARCH 7th - SATURDAY, MARCH 8th

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8

Coolville man waives extradition
Tweny-year old Marvin Paul
Cremeans, RD, Coolville, wanted for
the Dec. 27th vandalism of a house
trailer rented by his ex-wife
Daphanie Cremeans, Reedsville,
has been returned to Meigs County
to face felony vandalism charges.
Meigs County Sheriff James J .
Proffitt said Cremeans was arrested
early Wednesday morning while
sleeping in the lobby of a Morehead,
Kentucky motel.
Following an investigation Ken·
lucky officials learned Cremeans
was wanted in Meigs County.

Cremeans advised Kentucky of·
ficials he would waive extradition
proceedings and would willingly
return to Meigs County to face the
charges.
Cremeans was picked up early
Wedr:esday afternoon at the Rowan
County jail.
Cremeans indicated he would
waive his rights and appear in Common Pleas Court on a Bill of Infonnation. He is presently confined
in Meigs County jail.
The department investigated two
accidents that occurred Wednesday.

33 cases terminated
Twenty-one defendants were fined
and 12 others forfeited bonds in
Meigs County Court Monday.
Fined by Judge Charles Knight
were harold Clark, Reedsville,
Stephen Smith, Pomeroy, Robert
Richmond, Middleport, James E.
Counts, Pomeroy, Verna Snowden,
Gallipolis, Robert J. Brown, Marie!·
ta , Robert E. Meredith, Belpre, John
W, Casto, Pt. Pleasant, Chillicothe,
and Steven Tippett, Patriot, $15 and
costs each, speeding; Edward
Young, Pomeroy, $10 and costs, stop
sign violation; George G. Hart,
Shade, $10 and costs, failure to yield
right of way; Earl D. Lee, Athens,
$200 and costs, overload; Robert L.
Lee, Athens, $175, overload;
Timothy Adams, Pomeroy, $100 and
costs, reckless operation ; Dianna
Barber, Middleport, $15 and costs,
failure to display registration;
Patricia A. Fitch, Middleport, $50
and costs, speeding; James Pierce,

According to the report Randall R.
Reeves, 20, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, was
traveling east on SR 143because of a
heavy rain was unable to see. His
car struck a concrete bridge abutment and went off the highway into a
field owned by Bessie Graham, Rt.
4, Pomeroy.
Reeves was cited to county court
for failing to report the accident.
The car was demolished.
At 9 p.m. on SR 143 Beth Amoriya,
Myers Road, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, was
traveling north when she lost control
of her car. The vehicle went off the
highway on the left and over a 20 foot
embankment. The driver was not in·
jured and no citation was issued.

WEAR WILL BE SEEN EVERYWHERE!
STOCK UP NOW ON THE VERY

TRUSTEES MEETING
Salisbury Township Trustees will
meet Friday, March 7, at 7 p. m. at
the home of Wanda Eblin, clerk,
Laurel Cliff Road.

REG. s16.00 ••••••••••••• SALE sl2.99
REG. $19.00 ••••••••••• SALE $15.39
REG. $22.00 ••••••••• SALE Sl7.89

1

REG. S24.00 •••••••SALE $19.49

I

I
I
I

REG. s26.00 •••• SALE '21.09

I

t\

FLORIST

PH. 992-2644

I

352 E. Main, Pomeroy
I
tJ...._ }our EJE.t!~=.!,_...;..,J

WASIUNGTON (AP)- Wholesale
prices soared 1.5 percent In
February, nearly matching
January's surge, but unemployment
declined slightly to 6 percent, the
govenunent reported today.
February's increase in the Labor
Department's Producer Price Index
showed 'little Improvement from
January's 1.6 percent rise, mainly
because of near-record increases in
guollne and home heating oil
prices.
If prices at the producer level me step short of retail - continue to
rise for the next 10 months. at the
same rate as in the first two, inflation at wholesale will exceed 20

percent.
Wholesale prices last year went up
12.5 percent, the largest increase
l!ince the Middle East oil embargo
sent prices soaring more than 18 percent in 1974.
The Labor Department's report on
unemployment showed joblessness
down from 8.2 percent in January to
6 percent in February. In both months, about 6.3 million persons were
out of work.
As in 1974, price increases on
crude oil Imported from members of
the Organization of Petrolewn Ex·
porttng Countries again are the
mailt cause of the nation's Inflation
problem, said John Layng, a Labor

steadyto$1.50 higher. Veal calves steady.
Total Head 74

Feeder Steers: Good and C'ho i~ 250 to JOO lbs.
85-91' 300 to 400 lbs . ~.:;().92; 400 to 500 lbs. 78.5087 ; !'100 to 600 IDs. 72-83: 600 to 700 lbs. 811-75.50 ; 700
to800 lbs. 6S-73.50; 800and over ::.8.~.50 .

MEN'S $13.95 JEANS
MEN'S S15.95 JEANS
MEN'S $17.95 JEANS
MEN'S $18.95 JEANS
MEN'S$19.95JEANS

Feeder Heifers : Good and Choice 250to 300 lbs.

88-79; lOO to fOO IbM. &amp;S-n.50 ; 400 to 500 Ills. 62.5075; :SOO to 500 lbs . 62-75; 600 to 700 Jbs. SB-71 .50; 700
to800 lbs. 57.50-611.75 ; 800 and over S6--64.50.
Feeder Bulls: Good and Clloice 250 (.() 300 lbs.
82-9'1; 3001o ;oo ln.. 1~.50; 400 to 500 ln. . 11-M ;
500 to 600 lbs. 69. ~79 : 600 to 700 lbs. 6S .S0..76,75;
700 to liOO lbs. 61.50-72.75; 800 and over 57.50-65.75.

BOYS' JEANS

Holstein steersMd bulls (3(WOO lbo.) ~ . 50.
Buls (1,000 lbs. andover ) ~ . S&lt;Wi! . 5()
Slaughter Cow! i utilities ) -49.51'J.56 ; ! canners
and cutters r tO-oUI.75.
Sortnaer Cows (by the hend 1320-630.
Cows&lt;B.lves (by the head 1 4 7~10
Veal calves 92-114.
Bilby calve!l46-!IO

Wrangler denim jeans -

and regular styles, 8 to 20 and student sizes 26 to
30 wa ist . Regular prices $7 .95 to $14.95.

BOYS $9.95 JEANS .. . ... . SALE $8.53
BOYS $11 .95 JEANS , ..•. SALE $10.23
BOYS$12.95JEANS ..... SALE$11.13
BOYS $13.95 JEANS ..... SALE $11.96
BOYS $14.95 JEANS ..... SALE $12.86

HOGS

g

Pigs (by the head\17.50-21.50.
Sows (450 lbs . andover l 28.50-JUO.

Children's Jeans

-

,,

If you •re HH-employed - •111&lt; •bout
our KEOUGH PLAN. You Nve money for
retirement end you can Nve on ttoxee.
Corne in for dettolle.

HOG PRICES '

Curre'n t 6 month money marker certilicate 14.792%
effective March 6-12, 1980,$10,000 minimum, substan·
tial penalty for early withdrawal.

OOLVMBUS, Ohlo !AP) - Direct hogs FedStale; Barrows and gUts fuUy 25 higher , demand
mc:Qerate. U.S. 1-2, 1110-230 lbs_cOWltry points
38.1J0.315.25, few at 35.!1Cl, plants, 36.50-37.00, few ai

1;5110.
CaUle from Columbus Producers Livestock
Cooperative AuodaUGn. Cattle - Market .50 to

REG. su.oo ••..•••••••• SALE SS.39

3.00 flilhtr. Slaughter Steers ; choke 66.00-73.10,
IOOd 60.01).17 .00. Slaughter Heifers : choice
11.10.11.001_ Jood 11.7~.50. C.w• - Market

Meigs County

3.uu lower to 2.00 higher. AU cows 5&amp;.50
and down. Bulla - Market sleody to 1.50 hi8her.
IIDI'Vtll

All bulii71.Zi and down. Veal C!lives - Market
UO Lower. Choice prtme l15.00 and dGwn. Sheep
IDd La.mbl - Market Wleven .75lower to 2.00
!qber. Old oheep 49.00 and down.

l·l lllf.:IIO Jb :fi.IWI.75; couple lots l.J 230 lb
• • IIIIOiot:IIOiboii.OO; W2901bo34.00.
aoft~J8ktatelyocllve, wxl&lt;r4001b sleady to
l.GOJowerthan ru-11)' 1&amp; very limited test, over
110 lb 10 lo 15 ctnt&amp; hloher in a llmlt.d componiiM. l-3 32H)I)Ib 32.~.00, l e w - lb
11.»3110 few~lb:fi.D0-37.71.
' 121; TndlntJ IIIOOOaltly lctive,

HOME NATIONAL
.
'

'

BANK

cawe
I l l - -.o oody, olhe&lt; cla..., not weU

failed, Sla- - · lcod cllol&lt;&gt;! m&lt;JII!ly !s
tolD lb .,.,_
lot $-4 910 lb 11.00 ;
.lauPt« ..,.,.., .,..u lot ibotce H 1150 lb
A.Gf;
co,.., fewut11lty 113.00.

Racine, Ohio

-u

"

REG. '15.00 •••••••••••SALE '12.79

RACINE

INDIANAPOLIS &lt;AP) - Hogs 1,300 , Barrows

.

REG. S13.00•••• ~ •••••• SALE '11.09

.People

and&amp;UII raocSenteb' actin, 2$ t.o S(l cents higher,

.

REG. '1.00 ••••••••••••• SAl£ .SS.99
REG. SS.OO ••••••••••••• SAl£ '7.69

37.11. U.S. l.J, 230-250 lbo. country poinls
311.2WII.OOplanta, 35.71&gt;-3G.75.
•
lleceiJIII - Tu..W.y 8,500; today'• est!ma1es

lila......,.
Sboop.lf-

Rugged denim jeans that are fun to
wear and easy to care for.
Little Boys' sizes 1 thru 7.
Girts' sizes 2 to..4, 4 to 6x, 7 to 14.

,.

'

By Tbe Associated Press

Refugee camp inspection permiUed
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan - Pakistan's president 'said Thursday be
would allow Inspection of border refugee camps to show that Afghan
rebel!l are not being trained and anned there, and he suggested
posting an international peacekeeping force in Afghanistan to help end
the crisis there.
·
In Washington, U.S. analysts said Soviet troo'ps have moved In force
to clear Afghan rebels out of the Konar Valley in eastern Afghanistan, .
perhaps Indicating the start of a Soviet spring offensive.
Ana]ysts in several government agencies, who asked not to be Identified, said the Soviet thrust has reached as far as Barlkowt, a vllla~e
on the Afghan-Pakistani border. Along the way, the Soviets Used
rockets and gas to clear out villages which had been rebel strongholds,
they said.

GENOA, Ohio- Most townspeople here still can't believe that Illyear-old Debra VIne has been missing for 12 days.
.
Miss VIne, the daughter of a banking executive in the Ottawa County
town o1. about 2,300, dl!lappeared about 8 p.m. on Feb. 24. She was last
seen getting Into a car two bllicks from her home, police sal d. Her coat
and jeans were later found along a nearby rural road.
Since then, her family has received two telephone calls .,- on Feb. 26
and 26 - regarding her dl!lappearance, said FBI agent John Dunn of
Cleveland. Although pollee would not conunent on details of the calls,
they reportedly were ransom demands for~,OOO and later ~.ooo.

Pope John Paul II has bad cold
VATICAN CITY - Pope John Paul D Is suffering from the flu and
he canceled his private audiences today on advice from his doctors,
tbe V•ttcanannounced.
The brief announcement did not say whether the robUBt 511-year-old
Pollab-bom pontiff waa bedridden but cancellatloo of his audiences led
obtlerven to believe he was compelled to rest.
,
The announced added that a villt by the pope to a parish church tn.
Rome SUnday aJao waa canceled.
It waa the flrllt time since his election to the pontificate In October
1978, that the pope waa reported Ill.
Vattqan110urcea said tbat the pontiff bas been suffering from a cold
llince late last month.

.

,

Rapist given 5-25 yeAr term

OPEN 'SATURDAY 9:30AM. TO 5 P.M.

ELBERFELDS IN .POM ERO¥

.
•

Department analyst.
Prices of gasoline and home
heating oil rose 7.5 percent at
wholesale in February, considerably
higher than January's 4.4 percent
rise and the largest since an 8.8 percent surge in March 1974.
Gasoline prices went up 8.3 percent for the month, compared with
5.7 percent in January. Home
heating oU advanced 6.7 percent in
price, cOmpared with 2 percent in
the first month of 1980.
The sharp rise in gasoline prices
at wholesale already has shown up
at ~ce stations, where prices
rose 18st. month by 7.4 percent, the
.largest one-month increase on

A mother and daughter lost their
lives in a fire early Friday morning
which destroyed their home near
Flatrock.
Dead are Charlene Lynn Herdman
Castle, 25, and Cynthia Lynn Castle,
age4.
Two other older chlldren, Brett

Townfolk joining seArch for girl

If you do not lulve • penlio't plan look Into our
INDIVIDUAL RETIREMENT ACCOUNTS.

BabyCalves : (8y theheadl~ll5 .
Hogs : (No. l, Barrows and Gilt.'! I 200-230 lbB .
34.1&amp;l6.
Fetder ptga; (By the head! ~22 .

straight leg and boot

flares . Corduroys - cotton polyester blends . Slim

Top Hogs (210.230) J&gt;-36.50.

A1HENS UVESTOCK SALES
Marttt Report
Marcb 1. 1980
CAITLE PRICES '
Feeder Steers: \Good and Choice) 300-600 lbB .
7H5; 100-700 Jbo. ~ Feeder Heifers: (Good and Ch&lt;Jice \ 300-{i()() lbs.
:14.56«1; 500-700ln. . 61.~ . 2S .
Feeder Bulb (Good and Choice) 300{lJO lbs. 70.
94; 5(1().700 !bel. 61-68.
Sla\llhler Bulls IOm 1,000 ln..I 51~7 .
Slaughter Cows : Utilities !i0.7$-6S.!i0: Canner3
and CUtten 42-45.75.
Springer Cows : (By the head ) 46.60-48.75.
Veals: (Choice and Prime ) 81-110.50.

.... SALE $11.26
.... SALE $12.96
.... SALE $14.56
.•. , SALE $15.36
.... SALE$16.16

'.

across the highway and plunged over the bank into the
river. Morris said the emergency brake had been set.
Shown is the truck in the river with members of Middleport Fire Department in a boat assisting pulling the
truck from the river. PHotos by Katie Crow.

enttne
· PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

FRIDAY, MARCH 7, 1980

the report said.
record.
In what Layng called "the only
Few analysts were expecting
bright thing tn the picture," food
much Improvement in wholesale or
'Prices fell 0.5 percent in February
conswner prices in the next several
after dropping 0.8 percent in
months.
January.
The Producer Price Index, which
The advance in the overall
measures wholesale price changes,
Producer Price Index thus came "shows signs of acceleration," said
from non-food items, up 2 percent in
R. Robert Russell, director of the
February. The index in February President's Council on Wage and
stood at 235.4, meaning that goods Price Stability.
that cost $100 in 1967 cost $235.40 last
Russell also told members of the
month. The figure was 13.3 percent National Economists Club on Thur·
ahead of February 1979.
, sday that he expected conswner
Between February 1979 and last prices to rise about 13 percent again
month, energy items rose by 75.8 this · year despite Carter ad·
percent, foods by 2.9 percent and ministration efforts to dampen in·
other conswner goods 11.8 percent, flation.

Inflation "won't be quite as high
as 1979, but very close," Russell
said.
Russeil declined to give a specific
figure, but his prediction was the
gloomist made public to date by
govenunent officials.
And it came as President Carter's
advisers were working to reevaluate economic forecasts and
govenunent spending for an all-out
attack on inflation, which accelerated at the retail level in
January to an 18 percent annual
rate.
Conswner prices last year rose
13.3 percent, the largest surge in
(Continuedonpage10)

Mother, child die in Mason County fire

Right now an excelent selection ·- Including
Wrangl er basic den i m jeans In straight leg or
boot flare · fashion denim 1eans · fuller cut jeans
tor men - corduroy jeans - cotton polyester
bl~nds - blue denim work dungarees. Regular
pmes $9. 95to $19.95.

March 1. Trends : Feeder cattle steady . Cows

'

February wholesale prices up 1.5 percent

MEN'S JEANS
OHIO VAu.EY UVESTOCK CO.
Sale evecy Saturday at I p.m.
MARKET REPORT
All priC!!.'J taken from the auction of Sa turday,

, i

. . •I f ,

•

at

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO,

VOL 28, NO. 229

Men's and Boys'
Jeans

Boars S-30.

•

e

JUNIORS, MISSES, EXTRA SIZES

1

a
IT_~

PLUNGES INTO RJVER - A dwnp truck owned
by Rutland Township Trustees took a dip in the mighty
Ohio around noon Thursday. The driver, Steve Morris,
had parked the truck alongside Meigs Tire Center with
the back of the truck headed toward Pomeroy's East
Main Street. The truck drifted from its parking space

USED TO RECOVER TRUCK - This piece of heavy equipment o\vned by Ben Tom was ·used In
recovering the truck from the river.

NEWEST STYLES.

REG. s14.00 •••••••••••••• SALE sn.39

.

~
\ 1.
. .' ' ,rJ'l t

THIS SPRING YOUR FAVORITES IN JEAN

Middleport, 30 days confinement,
confinement suspended, one year
COURT ACTIONS Fn.ED
probation, no traffic offenses unless
A
suit
for money in the amount of
becomes licensed to drive, no
$6,500
was
file&lt;j, in Meigs County
operator's license; Edward McFall,
Common
Pleas
Court by Karl and
Pt. Pleasant, $10 and costs, stop sign
Joan
Culp,
Rt.
3,
'Pomeroy against
violation.
John
Burns,
Logan,
Ohio.
Forfeiting bonds were Tim A.
The
suit
is
for
failure
to fulfill
Taylor, Elyria, Andrew Chonko,
Glouster, Jesse D. King, Huntington, obligations as per contract such as
Edward Curtis, IV, Proctorville, provide drainage, install water·
Kevin L. Aldridge, Bridgeport, IJJ., breaks, pay $750 and cut all cull
Susan J. Robinson, Syracuse, Gerar· trees.
Sheila Ann Walker ,Rt. 1, Rutland
do Caballero, Columbus, LaDora M.
and
Terry Dwaine Walker, Rutland,
Ousley, Hamden, WiWa R. Whitney,
filed
for dissolution of marriage.
Ironton, Gene A. Moore, Pt.
Pleasant, $35.50 each, speeding; r - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1
.-f
James L. Allen, Rt. 1, Portland,
Your "Extra Touch"
1
$31!0.50, DWl; Ernest Jackson, Jr.,
Crwnpler, W.Va., $35.50, left of cen·
Florist Since 1957
ter.

.
_
_.
.
_
_.
.
_
.
_
__.
,
_
____
r

/

AkRoN, Ohio

- AkJ'm tee1111ger Eric T•te lw been sentenced to
yean lmprlaonmenf for the Jan. 7 rape and robbery of an
elementary lchool tel!cber 1n her cla11ro0111.
'
'l'iMi :n.yai-old teaCher was lllleaediY attacked and robbed at ·
knlfepolnt at Akroll'a Crouse Elementary 8ehool as abe prepared for
.the ftnt day ol. clf!!es (ollowlni the Cbrlatmu holidays. No atuden.ta
were In the room at the time ol. the -idt.
.
T•ta, 18, entered a plea of guilty to ebarget of rape and aggravated
(Coittinu~ on page 10)
1~

Two children
treated for
mmor ffiJ'un"es

Allen Castle and Clint Allen Castle
survived the blaze . .
According to a member of the
Point Pleasant Fire Department,
Mrs. Castle apparently led the two
boys to safety through an upstairs
bathroom window and, leaving them
on the roof, went back inside for the
little girl.
Both victims were apparently
overcome by smoke before they
could leave the burning structure.

o

bathroom floor.
The fire was reported at 1:15 a.m.
with firemen arriving 10 minutes
later.
At that time, the two boys had
been taken to the home of a neighbor.
West Virginia State Fire Marshal
Walter Smittle, who was at the
scene, reported the fire apparently
started in the living room of the two

story frame house as a result of a
direct electrical short In the wiring
leading to a light stand.
Loss was estimated at $60,000.
Five Point Pleasant fire fighters
were treated at the scene by the
Point Pleasant Rescue Squad for
smoke inhalation or for cuts and
bruises:
The bodies were removed to the
Wilcoxen Funeral Home in Point
Pleasant.

Mining operations will save money

Ohio Power Company customers
will be saved at least $1 billion over
the next 30 years because the comMichelle Dawn Lee, slx-year-i&gt;ld pany mines some of its own coal.
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
That fact will be among many
Lee, Pomeroy, was to be discharged which Obi·o p ower will point out in a
fnm Veterans Memorial Hospital
brief to the Public Utilities Comtoday after being struck by a car on
mission of Ohio Monday as evidence
West Main St. at ll:l8 a.m. Thurthat the company's fuel
sday.
' procurement procedures have been
Pomeroy Police said that Michelle
reasonable
wascrosslngWestMainSt., to get on
Both Ohio Power. and Ohio Cona school bus wl\fn he was struck by a
swners' Counsel William Spratley
westbound car driven by Royal
are to file post-hearing briefs MonJerome Cook, 74,Pomeroy.
day In the 18test fuel adjustment
She received a leg injury and was
clause testimony on Ohio Power's
taken to Veterans Memorial by
f 1
ue costs.
' private transportation.
Ironically' the '1 billion promise of
The school bus which was stopped
customer sa·~~ft" because Ohio
waiting for Michelle to board was . Power mines jl;:"wn coal was made
not by the company but by the Com- ,
driven by Teresa Cremeans, Middleport.
swners' Counsel's consultant. The
Cook was charged with ialllng to study was commissioned by
stop for a loadlllg school bus. ·
Spratley at a cost of , 183,000 •
Meanwhlle, the RuUandEmergenSpratley has alleged that . Ohio
cy Squad was called to Long St.
Thursday morning for William Harmon, 14, Rutland. Squad members
reported that Harinon was struck by
a truck and received a possible fractured leg. ·He was taken to Holzer
Medical Center by the squad. No
official report on the incident .
available this morning.
At 10:50 a.m., Thursday, the
Rutland Squad took Russell Uttle of
Rutland to Holzer Medical Center.
If all goes as anticipated several
'
highway construction projects ln the
Gallla-Meip' County area may
· receive the needed financial support
to get moving once again.
GleM Smlth, deputy director,
Division 10, Ohio Department, said
Thursday that although no e:uct list
of projects have·been designated for
funding, If Ohitia!IB approve a June
bond isiue for highway purposes,
several projectS have been placed in 1
the "possibility category."
Gallla County projects listed as
posslbllltles were us 35 presently in .
the design and right-of-way
o

The bodies were found on the

I

Power'sinvestmentincoalminesin
Southeastern Ohio cost the company's customers $200 million more
between 1976 and 1979 than if the
company could have bought Its coal
from independent suppliers.
Spratley has doubted that the mines
ever will pay off.
But in recent fuel clause
testimony, Spratley's experts .
questioned all the fuss about the
mining investment, and calcula
ted that the mines would pay for
themselves in the years ahead at
leastflvetimesover.
., 1 don't understand why there Is
so much heat being put on this $200
million,'' said mining consultant
Leo rd J Tinuns "beca the bi
partnaof th~ $200 nrlruon
in
development costs of those new
mines, which are a legitimate cost,
and wouldn't have been
questioned...
According to the consultant's

!: tJ!

calculatlons,OhioPower'saffWated
coal will cost Jess than coal which
could be bought from Independent
operat~rs every Y~ after 1981, with
the dijferentlal mcreasing each
year·
The, consultant called ~hlo
P?we~.s mining operations ~
Oight, and said of _the ~s
coa,l contract neg~tors: There
am t nobody tougher ·
Ohio Power President Charles A;
Heller said he hopes the conswners
counsel's study "lays to rest any
doubts about Olll' mining operations
being worth what we have Invested
m them on behalf of our custome,.,.
• •·
The study clearly showll that these
mines are helping to hold down the
cost of electricity."
"Moreover'" said Heller' "they
obviously have been the kind ol. P~
nlng that has kept Ohio Powers
rates among the lowest in the state
and will keep them low In the
future."

GalliJJ-Meigs highway projects may
get boost if voters approve issue
acquisition stage and SR 554, west of
Cheshire, which has the d~gn com-

Appalachian Highway between
Albany and Athens Is listed as
pleted and Is ready for bid-letting.
posslblllty along with reconstruction
Meigs County projects Usted in the projects on Rts. 33 and 13, all'currensame ca~ory Include SR 7 from tly In design and right-of-way
Rock Springs to Five Points, SR 338 acquisltloo stages.
to the new bridge connecting RavenThe iu11e, If approved by Ohio
swood, W. ya. and the Big Bend i voters, would provide up to ~
Area. Smith said SR 338 would be
million thus anowJng Ohio to obtain .
widened and ~~nProved for drainage.
an addltlonal .1.4 billion In federal
Other possible projects are
matching funds for sta~ highway
Bowman's RWI, SR 124 from
constructloo allQ repal;.
Rutl8nd to Wllkesvllle and the
A portion ol the alate and federal •
Rutland by-pa111 project.
funds II!Bde available by pawlte ol.
In . Athe.ns County, new con- the bond luue wO!IId go to needed
structlonl,f,n US 50, the last leg of.the
repair ttork on the state system, ,i,:

a

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