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I

a-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, April 7, 1980

•

In Pomeroy Village

Buckeye Girls' State

·

·L ack o support irks councilman
BY ItATIE CROW
" It see1ns like there is a personal
vendetta between council mernbe!"S" Larry Wehrung, council mem·
her, told members of Pomeroy
Council Monday night after council
turned down a motion to hire Harry
Lyons who has been a:ding poUce
chief several months.
Wehrung further said council was
acting like a bunch of juveniles and
that whatever be and Mrs. Betty

, BE111 PERRIN

1Continued trom page II
for Retarded Citizens, and the
American Legion Junior Auxiliary
by whom she is being sponsored to
Buckeye Girls' State.
Kim Roush is enrolled in the twoyear course in business clerical office education at Meigs High School
and is a member of the IOECC
Clerical Club. She is an active
member of the American Legion
Junior Auxiliary of Feeney-Bennett
Post 128 and now serves a8
secretary. She is also a past junior
president of the Auxiliary.
Lori Rupe is the junior class president at Meigs. She was also presi·
dent of the sophomore and treasurer

ANGELA PAYNE
of the freshman class. In her
freshman and sophomore years she
was a cheerleader, and last year
was on the school's gymnastic team.
For the past three years shehas been
on the track teamand this year also
plays volleyball.
Lori has been on the yearbook
staff for two years, is a member of
the Student Council, the Booster
Club, the Girl's Athletic Club, and a
member of the Pomeroy United
Methodist Church.
Beth Perrin is in both the mar·
ching and concert ·bands at Meigs, is
on the yearbook staff and the softball team, and last year was a
cheerleader. She is enrolled in a col·
lege preparatory course and is an

with the power steering on his car.
There was light to heavy property
damage.
The bicycle recovered by the
sheriff's department has been

honor student. A member of Trinity
Church, Beth teaches Sunday school
and plays piano there.
Angela K. Payne Is president of
the Meigs Future Homemakers of
America Club and served as vice
president last year and parlimentarian the year before. She belongs
to the Steno Club and last year sang
in the school choir. Angela is a
member of the Mt. Cannel Baptist
Church at Bidwell and a member of
its junior choir.
Jena Welker is active in both the
marching and concert bands at
Meigs High school and is an office
assistant there. She is also a
member of the Arts and Crafts Club.

Mrs. Ruth Larkins, 83, Long Bottom, died Saturday afternoon at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
following an extended illness.
Mrs. Larkins was born in Tuppers
Plains, a daughter of the late John
and Ida Shoemaker Branch. She atteoded the Hazel Comrmmity Chur·
cti and has been a lifelong resident of
Meigs County. She was an active
member of the Meigs Senior Citizens
in Pomeroy.
Surviving are her husband, Fred
E.; two sons, Raymond W., Tuppers
Plains, and Howard D. Portland;
two daughters, Mrs. Norman (Vera)
Weber, Tuppers Plains, and Mrs.
John (Donna ) Bogl\rd, Lo.og Bottom ; a brother, Orland Branch of
Belpre, 12 grandchildren and nine
great-grandchildren. Preceding
her in death were a son, Freddie
Wilford; a daughter, Mae Kathryn
Newlun, four sisters and four
brothers.
. Funeral services will be held at 2
p.m. Tuesday at the White Funeral
Home, Coolville, with the Rev.
Richard Thomas officiating. Burial
will be in Sand Hill Cemetery at
Long Bottom. Friends may call at
the funeral home anytime after I
p.m. today.

Word has been received here of
the recent death of Homer A. Coe in
Suffern, N. Y. Coe was a native of
the Racine area in Meigs County. He
is survived by one son, Stanley, and
three grandchildren, all of New
York and two sisters, Mrs. Dorothy
McK~ie and Mrs. Chlorus Grinun,
Racine.

claimed by the owner.
David Brickles, SR 681, informed
the sheriff's department that the
bicycle was taken from his residence sometime Thursdsy evening.

Meigs County happenings •••
MEETS TIRJRSDAY
The Meigs County Humane
Society will meet Thursday at 7: :ro

Area deaths. • •
Ruth Larkins

three great grandchildren.
Memorial services have been tentatively set for Wednesday at 10 a.m.
at the Frank E. Smith Funeral
Horne, Lancaster. There will be no
call.i.ng hours.

Court actions filed
A suit for support under the
Reciprocal Agreement Ad was filed
in Meigs County Conunon Pleas
Court by Ina M. VanMeter against
Gary E. VanMeter.
Katherine T.Weaver was granted
a divorce from Donald H. Weaver on
charges of gross neglect of duty and
extremecruelty. .
The marriage of Ruby Karen
Young and and Elmer Gerald
Young, Sr., was dissolved.
RUMMAGE SALE
There will be a rummage sale at
the Apple Grove United Methodist
Church Tuesday and Wednesday
from 9 a.m. tO 4 p.m.

p.m. at the Thrift Shop, Middleport.
WATERTOBEOFF
Water on Lincoln Heights will be
off Tuesday for two hours beginning
at 9 a.m. in order that necessary
repair can be made.
SQUAD CALLED

The Tuppers Plains Emergency
Squad was called Saturday at 4: :ro
a.m. to Chester for Edna Sum!f!erfield who was taken to Holzer
Medical Center.
This morning at 5:19 a.m. they
were called for B. L. (Tobe) Bennett
who was taken to Camden Clark
Hospital.
SQUAD RUN

The Middleport Emergency Squad
was called to Vine St. at 5:24 p.m.
Sunday for Debbie Whitlatch, a
medical patient, who was taken to.
Holzer Medical Center.
BAKE SALE SA'IURDAY
The Rutland YouthAssociaton will
hold a bake sale Saturday at the
Kroger Store beginning at 9:30a.m.
Proceeds from the sale will go into
the youth center fund. Residents are
encourage to donate baked goods
for the sale and for pickup of items
either Patty Dugan, 742-2403 or Cindy Weaver, 992-3312 can be called.

VOL. 28, NO. 251
BIG BASKET - This replica of an Easter basket
was created on a lot across from the Middleport Pen·
tecostal Church Sunday morning when an egg hunt was
held for the large crowd attending Sunday services at
the church. Eggs containing slips for prizes were inside
the eggs during the hunt with church members super·

God's acc~ptance urged by Pontiff
By Associated Press
Pope John Paul II, extending
Easter greetings to the Christian
faithful in 33 languages and
apologizing to those whose tongue
was not included, urged the builde!"S
of society to accept God and warned
that to proclaim God's death is to
proclaim the death of man as well.
Speaking to a festive crowd of
350,000 in St. Peter's Square in Rome
on Sunday, the Polish pontiff wished
a "happy, blessed and peaceful
Easter" in 16 eastern European
languages, Chinese, Japanese,
Swahili, Arabic and, for the first
time, Hebrew.
He said his holy day greetings
were intended for "all the other
languages which even if they are not
on my lips are in my heart."
The need for Christian love alao
marked the Easter message of the
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Saturday Admissions--Audrey
Theobald, Middleport; Sadie Bright,
Gallipolis; Charles Snider, Racine;
Gregory Knapp, Middleport.
Saturday Discharges-Hillary
Turley, Mary Derenberger, Joseph
White, Harold Clark, Joyce Frye,
Murl Ours, Martha Anderson.
Supday
Admissions--Beman
Thompson, Vienna, W.Va.; Mildred
Laudermilt. Rutland; Ida Snedley,
Middleport; Charles Barrett,
Rutland ; James .White, Pomeroy;
Cora Will, Pomeroy; Allee Dawson,
Clay, W. Va. ; Jackie Icenhower,
Racine.
Sunday Discharges·-Patricia
Cleland, George Welch, Glendon
Faulk, KeMeth Imboden.

newly installed Archbishop of Canleader of the world's 65 million
terbury.
· Anglicans - said Christians must
Pointing to problems in El
take their "reverence and worship
Salvador, Cambodia and Ireland,
and celebration ... out into the world
the Most Rev. Robert Runcie
where it is in short supply."

ELBERFELD$
JUST RECEIVED

SHIPMENT

JACKSON PERKINS

ROSE BUSHES
Field grown packaged plants
including Tropicana and
Blaze Rambler .
Fertile Potted Redi Plant
packages include Love,
American Pride,
Color ·
Magic, Cynthia, Honor,
Medallion,
New
Day,
Oregold, Prestine,
Red
Masterpiece, Sea Shell,
Cherish Sunsprite, Dazzle
Dazzle.
Select Yours on The 1st Floor

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

,n.
L.argetf l nsldr end outside flee

market In s .E. Ohio. Free
customer p 11 r~tlng and adm is-

Complete
banking
service.

.

TO LAST.

"4. DOOR
SEDANS AND 4 DOOR WAGONS ALSO
I
.
AVAILABLE" ·
ZIE6ART" FACTORY RUST PROTECTION0
the exclusive AMC Buyer Protection Pl a~M

tr

Gallipolis, 0.

446 ·9800

sion.

'

From
checking
accounts
to
high interest

Farmers
Bank

"IAMC

Riverside AMC-Jeep

'

savings plans. .

TO
MOVE FAST.

Upper River Rd.

•

e • a '

Membe1 FDIC

Thl' Comnnmit' O"nt:d Bank

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Councilman Harold Brown said be
didn't feel the village needed
another truck to which Wehrung
conunented " we sat her and agreed
to advertise for a truck."
Wehrung thought the bid was
reasonable and felt council would be
all sununer without a truck which Is
badly needed. He pointed out that
parts are needed for the present
truck.
• 1Continued on oaae 121

•

enttne

TUESDAY, APRIL 8, 1980

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

100 homes destroyed
by killer _tornadoes
By ABSOClated Press
Tornadoes, high winds and 4-inch
hail slashed the nation from Round
Rock, Texas, to Beaver Dam, Wis.,
lifting one house trailer 75 feet into
the air and destroying more than 100
homes. Two persons were known
dead and ai least 75 others injured.
Businesses were damaged and a
post office, library and drive-in
theater were destroyed as the stor·
· ms hit suburban St. Louis .and
several small towns in Arkansas,
Oklahoma, Texas and Wisconsin.
The National Weather Service said
there were 34 tornadoes in nine
states.
A 1f&gt;.month-old baby in Beaver
Dam was found face-down but
unhurt in a pile of broken glass after
a tornado struck a trailer park. A

woman living in the area was pulled rnov.e," said Janet Eisele. Her house
from a pile of rubble- what was left was damaged, but the family was
of her horne - as a tank of liquefied not hurt.
petroleum gas leaked nearby.
The tornado . flattened some .
In Arkansas, a man said his $500 houses, leaving only piles of rubble
nest egg was scattered by the wind.
and empty shells. Most houses in
The tornadoes were spawned in. a northwest Florissant sustained roof
atmospheric battle between tern- damage.
peratures of 101 in Texas and the low
In central Texas, one man was
30s in North Dakota, where as much • killed, another was injured, 15
as6inchesofsnowfellMonday.
houses were destroyed and 12 were
In the St. Louis suburb of damaged as totnadoes struck Round
Florissant, 12 persons were Rock , Lund and Elgin. The man died
hospitalized, one in serious con- in his home. "The building collapsed
clition, after a tornado struck shortly down on him," said Police Lt.
after 10 p.m., extensively damaging Wesley Wolff.
60 homes.
In Oklahoma, a !&gt;-year-old boy
"We heard the noise. My husband drowned when a boat on Foss Lake
and I each reached for a kid to head
in the west central part of the state
for the basement, but the pressure
capsized in high winds.
was so strong we just couldn't
Bernice and Ketchum, both northeast of Tulsa with populations of
about 300 each, had property
damage estimated at $2 milnon with
four injured and as many as 40
homes demoliShed.
Damage estimates ranged up to $1
million in the eastern Oklahoma city
of Potesu where six persons were in·
jured when a drive-in theater was
flattened and a shopping center
damaged by high winds and
baseball-size hail.
Across the state line in Arkansas,
22 persons were injured as tornadoes
hit near· Mayflower south of Fort
By The Asi!O&lt;Ialed Press
Smith, and nearby Witcherville,
Mansfield and Midland.
Reginald Strunk, his daughter
-Michelle
and his niece, Ann, were
TEL AVJV, Israel - Israeli raids on Palestinian camps in southern
hospitalized
after their mobile home
Lebanon are expected in retaliation for the terrorist attack on a·kibnear
Witcherville
was lifted 75 feet
butz nursery in which three Israelis and the five terrorists died.
into
.
the
air
and
dumped onto a
Defense Mini5ter Ezer Weizman said the Israeli army would "weigh
pickup
truck,
said
Cleo Strunk,
measures and actions" but gave no hint of plans for retaliation.
Reginald's
father,
whose
home near
However, all such previous Palestinian attacks on Israel have been
the
trailer
was
also
damaged.
followed quickly by larg~H~CSle Israeli attacks by land; sea or air on
Palestinian camps which the Israelis claimed were operational or
training bases for the terrorists.

Retaliation raids expected

Peruvian government seeks assistruice

..

and lull flve.year No- Auet-Thru Warranty . ·
FnJnc tt 500 Flea Market. Gellla
co Fr. Gels ., US 160 &amp; lS,
Ga.lllpolls, ~pr.
1 ~. 13 ·

vising hunts held for the Various age groups. Playing
Snoopy in the basket was Tommy Kelly and clowns
were Craig Dougan and Jeff Nottingham. A new public
address system was used at the church on South Third
Ave., by the pastor, the Rev. WUliam Knittel, for the
Easter services.

CORD

All the 1900 AM C vehicles include

police.
· Wehrung voted to accept the bid in
Following Wehrung's statements, the amount of $12,765 but the motion
Chief Lyons handed Mayor Clarence died for the lack of a second.
Andrews his resignation effective
A motion to readvertise for bids
April 15. Lyons, will remain, for a truck was passed on a 4 to 2
however, as a patrolman for the vote.
village.
Council members would like to
BID NOT ACCEPTED
have had a local dealer submit a bid.
Council also failed to accept the It was pointed out that local dealers
only bid on a dump truck for the bad the same opportunity to submit
village.
a ·bid as did John Gibson Motor
On the bid for a dump truck Larry City, Athens.

at y

Florence Neal
Florence A. Neal, 70, 15-1 Uttle
Brook Estates, ·Lancaster, formerly
of Middleport, died at her home
Saturday.
Mrs. Neal who was born May 25,
1909 was the daughter of the late
Raymond and Letha Russell. She
was also preceded in death by her
husband, Charles W. Neal and one
son, Charles Robert Neal.
.She was a member of the Women
rl the Moose.
She is survived by one daughter,
Charlene Foster, Lancaster; me
son, George Ray Neal, Melbourne,
Fla.; three sisters, Mrs. Lola
Harrison, Rutland, Mrs. Louise
Lewlll and Mrs. Eileen Woods, both
of The Plains; 12 grandchildren and

yes.
The reason given for the no vote
was the fact that Lyons lives in the
village of Racine and not ·a resident
of Pomeroy. However, the resolution
stated that Lyons had six months to
move his residence from Racine to
Pomeroy.
It was alao pointed out that a
resolution could be drawn up which
would allow Lyons to reside outside
the village and still be chief of

JENAWELKER

Sheriffs deputies check accident
The Meigs County Sheriff's Department investigated a two car accident over the weekend. No injuries
or citations were reported.
According to the report Gregory
M. Eben, ~. Rt. 2, Racine, was
traveling south on SR 338 went his
car went off the highway and struck
a parked vehicle owned by Virgilo
Walker, Rt. 2, Racine. ·
Eben reported he had problems

Baronick voted for other members
voted against.
"I was elected to this post and I
am not going to resign" Wehrung
stated. "We have got to sit down like
adults and work things out. We were
elected to do a job and I am working
toward that goal," Wehrung said.
On the resolution to hire Lyons,
Harold Brown, Lou Osborne, Bill
Young and Rod Karr all voted no
and Wehrung and Baronick voted

I.JMA, Peru - The Peruvian govenunent turned to its LatinAmerican allies in the Andean Pact for help in finding asylum for the
estimated 10,000 Cubans januning its embassy iri Havana in a
desperate attempt to escape communist rule.
The United States said it would take some of them if the Peruvian
government would let the refugees come to Lima. But so far the
Peruvians were admitting none of them because th~y had no definite
assurances from other countries that they would take them.

Counterfeit suspect nab~ ·
ALEXANDRIA, Va. - An Ohio man was indicted here Monday f'11"
allegedly scheming to seU a Secret Service agent more than $50,000 in
counterfeit money.
According to the indictment, Gary Allen Bush of Mansfield, Ohio,
delivered the phoney money . Jan. 30 to another man, identified as
Charles Edward Coulter.
Govenunent offrclals said Coulter was arrested after trying to sell
the bUlB to a Secret "Service agent in Fairfax County, Va. He has
already been sentenced to a year in prison on charges related to counterfeiting, offlclalB said.

Grange Master main speaker
James Ross, Master rl the Ohio tickets for the annual banquet from
State Grange and the representative
the subordinate grange maste!"S lnfrom the 94th District to the Ohio . eluding Stanford stockton, Earl .
Legislature, will be·speaker at the
Cross, Robert Reed, Ray Midkiff,
annual Meigs County Grange
John Montgomery, Early Roush,
Banquet at 7 p.m. Friday at the
Fred Goeglein, Norman Will.
Salisbury Elementary School.
A veteran of World War D, Ross
served in the U. S. ArmY, South
Pacific, for two and one-half yea!"S.
He has managed fanna in several
sections of Ohio for the Fann ,
Management, Inc., of Irwin and for
over 30 years has been in the Insurance business as well as
operating fnm 1964 to 1964 an appliance and hardware store in
Coshocton.
Ross, at the age rl 45, was one of
the youngest to ever serve BB State
Grange Mster. He was first elected
ln 1968 and is now servirig his sixth
tWo-year tenn ln that )lo8ltlon.
He has been active in Masonic Orders, the Elks, American Legion and
is a member rl the Madison
Presbyterian Church.
JAMES ROSS
· Meigs Countlans may purchase

BLOCK IDGHWAY- Members of the New Haven
Fire Department and Rescue Unit were on duty for
many hours on Route 33 above New Haven Monday

when the highway had to be closed due to the
derailment of a Chessie System train about 4:30a.m.
Monday.

Derailment cause unknown
NEW HAVEN, W.Va. (AP)- The
Chessie System says it doesn't know
what caused the derailment of a
train carrying dangerous . substances near here, but said it would
conduct an investigation into the accident.
'Three chemical tank cars were
among 12 that derailed near New
Haven, W_Va. Monday. Authorities
said none of the cars ruptured, and
there were no injuries.
Two of the derailed cars were
carrying ethylene oxide, a clear
volatile liquid, and the third was
carrying vinyl chloride, a colorless
gas that is fairly easy to ignite, said

Uoyd Lewis, a Chessie System
spokesman at the company's
Cleveland headquarters.
The n-car train was en route from
Parkersburg to Point Pleasant when
the cars jumped the tracks about 4
a.m., Lewis said. The derailment
was the second in three days for the
Chessie System; six cars of a coal
train derailed Saturday near
Hurricane, spilling about J,OOO
gallons of diesel oil from a ruptured
locomotive.
After Monday's derailinent, state
police and Mason County sheriff's
deputies asked five families to leave
their homes. According to Lewis, of-

ficials also halted construction work
at Appalachian Power Co.'s Mountaineer Power Plant.
Traffic on U.S. 33 was stopped and
detoured, deputies said.
Both of the cars carrying the
ethylene oxide overturned in the accident, Lewlll said. Lewis said
cleanup operations began Monday.
Workers would either right the cars
and put them back on the-tracks, be
said, or turn theni over and siphon
the chemical into tanker trucks.
The car carrying the vinyl
chloride was upright after the accident and would be placed back on
the tracks, he said.

FBI agents ·watching Iranian diplomats
WASHINGTON (AP )- FBI agents are shadowing Iranian diplomats
to make sure they leave the United
States, while President Carter's
toughened stance agaifl!lt Iran
draws cautious reaction from the
families of the American hostages
and some surprisingly strong support from Congress.
" It's about time we tried to get
their attention some way,'' said

Robert Hohman, father of Sgt.
Donald R. Hohman of West
Sacramento, Calif. "The president is
right .... He has to do it."
And in Congress, Sen. George
McGovern, the anti-war Democratic
presidential candidate of 1972 and 'a
frequent critic of the Carter ad·
ministration, said Carter should be
planning for a naval blockade or
even . selective air strikes if the
hostages arelj'l released.
lt'was a grim-faced president who

Land use
plan now
available
-

.

.. .

went on live national television Moo·
day afternooon to say he was com·
mitted both to the release of the
hostages and to "the preservation of
American honor. "
" Other

actions

may

become

necessary if IJhese steps do not
produce the prompt release of the
hostages," Carter said.
Neither the president nor his aides
would define " prompt," but officials
said Carter does not feel obliged to
await the convening of Iran's new
legislature, the group Ayatollah
Ruhollah Khomeini has said should
decide what to do with the hostages.
The decision to break diplomatic
relations and embargo trade was
made Monday morning after
Khomeini refused to allow the transfer of the 50 Americans from their
student captors to government con·
trol.
White House officials said Carter's
action will send a clear message to
Iran and the rest of the world that
American patience is exhausted.
Briefing reporters under ground
rules that barred their identification
by name , ·the officials carefully
refused to rule out military force
when asked about the "other ac-

lions" the president warned "may
become necessary ."

The four steps Carter outlined :
- A formal end to diplomatic
relations. The Iranian diplomatic
staff in the United States, reduced to
35 in December, was ordered to
leave the country by midnight
tonight. To insure that none evaded
the order, Carter ordered the FBI to
seal off Iran's embassy in
Washington and its consulates in
Chicago, San Francisco, Houston
and New York. '" Agents were
assigned to tail the 35 registered
diplomats until they left the country.
- A complete trade embargo, except for food and medicine.
However, Carter noted that as a
practical matter even food and
medical shipments would be skimpy
at best. Trade between the two countries, once measured in billions of
dollars annually, has diminished to a
relative trickle because of the
president's previous freeze on
Iranian assets and prohibition on oil
imports.
- The beginning of a process that
could allow the hostages, their
families and American businesses w '
claim some of the$8 billion in frozen

Ir:~nie n assets

in the United States.
·Invalidation of all visas held by
lrama ns for future travel to the
United States. The order will not immediately affect Iranians now in the
United States on valid visas, officials said. They did not explain
what would happen to those Iranians
as their permits to be in the United
States expire.
While a large majority of the
hostage families contacted expressed support for Carter's action,
there was no unanimity.
"Jimmy Carter's out of his mind if
he thinks that's going to improve
anything," said Alan Gfaves, son of
John E. Graves, 52, the embassy's
public affairs officer. "The way be's
going right now, the next step is
war."

A more typical. response came
from Louisa Kennedy, whose
husband, Moorhead, is the embassy's economic and conunercial ·
. officer.
'
"The president is doing the right
thing and it's good for starters," she
said. · ~We're not sure how strong
these measures are. A lot of this is
still undefined. It's going to shake
down in the next few days.''

The village of Middleport Plan-

bas placed a
review copy of the draft certification
report ln the village Mayor's office.
This report updates the land use
portion of the Middleport Comprel\ensive Plan Update. This report
also expands the housing plan por·
tlon of this 1976 comprehensive pian
·and the Village Housing Assistance
ning Commission

Plan(HAP).

Any resident of Middleport Ia Invited to review this report and comment in writing to the Mayor's office
no later than 5 p.m., April 19, 1980.
This report wsa prepared for the
village Planning Commission by the
Buckeye Hills-Hocking Valley
Regional Development District.

Pomeroy woman enters guilty plea
Frances J . Whittington, 35,
Pomeroy, appeared in the Meigs
County Common Pleas Court Mon·
day afternoon to enter a voluntary
pleas of guilty to a charge of grand
theft.
The charge stemmed from the
alleged failure of Mrs. Whittington
to report child support she had
received from her ex-husband while
also receiving aid for dependent
children money through the welfare
department.
The amount of
unreported payments was $3,000.

Mrs. Whittington admitted her
guilt and has made repayment wthe
welfare department in the amount of
$3,000, Crow reports.
The charge carries a possible
penalty of six monihs to five years in
a penal institute of the state as well
as a fine up to $2500.
The welfare department and the
prosecutor's O!fices worked jointly
in the investigation of the fraud and
the repayment of the $3,000 Is con·
sidered an important result of a successful prosecution, officials stated.

Representing the State of Ohio
were Prosecuting Attorney Fred W.
Crow III and Assistant Prosecutor
Carson Crow.
_
Much of the credit for the success
of this prosecution , according to
Crow, goes to Keith · Uttle, investigator for the welfare department.
Upon receiving Mrs. Whittington's
plea of guilty, Judge Buck ordered a
pre-sentence investigation and
report: sentencing .w ill be at a later
date.

�3·-The Daily Sentinel• Middl eport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, April8, 1980
1

AA UW college women work together I~~~RT~:;i~f~rs_l

2- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, April8, 1980

The Daily Sentinel

Artlcle4 Uaatofserlea)
By Mn. Dorothy Woodard
Local AAUW Prealdeut
POME~OY - The AAUW is
Unlvers1ty women working
together.
We're bu.siness wo~en, artists,
homemakers, professional women.
We share ~ ~ommonality of a
degree; we re mterested m _the
. needs of our comrnuruty, the nation,
and the world.
Ourprimarygoalisimprovingthe
status ~ all women through
monitormg and influencing

Opinions and comments
1HEDA.R.YS~

fUSPSIU..-1
DEVOTED TO TilE

INTEIIEnOF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
LcUen ol oplaloa are we~. 'l"bey UouJd be leu
wonb IGDJ (or subtect \o ~
UG111 by tile ed.l&amp;orl aad mut be 1J&amp;R4 wtt.b U.C 1~ ' 1 addreH. Nama IUY bt wttbiM:W ....
PJblkadoa.. However, 011 requat. IIIJDf.S w1U be dt.cloted. Letcen aboPI .be la ,_. tuCe, ..._
dn!A.tq luun, oot penmualldea.
Pabllllted dally u~t S.tant.y by 1'he Oldo vau~,. Publil.blq Compuy· MWtimedia. lllt.,
111Cow1 SL, Pomeroy, ObJo45711. Bubleu Office Pbooe ~UM. Edl:toria1Pbnett!-!1J7.
Secoad clau po~tace pUd at Pomeroy, OMo.
Nadoul advs rtblq repreHaC.tive, LIDdoa A.Noelates, Jill EacUd Ave., Clenlud, Oblo
64115.
.
S11b.crlptioa r1&amp;el : OtUvered by aurltr wben: ava.U.ble SUO per week. By Moler Roale where
t'lll11er tervltt DOt .vallllble, One mooth, loi.M.
Tbe DaUy SeatiDel, by mad lD Obtoaad Wttt Vlratala, oae JMr $SUI; Sh moatbl$17.10; three
moathl tlUI. Elaewbe~ $31.DI ; Iii moatbJ t!t.OO; tine moadll $1U8.
Tbc A11o.:Wted Prell II el:dllllvely eaHtlf4t to tbe lite for pubUcaUoo Gf aU HWI cHipa&amp;ebH
credJWd &amp;o the unrt.,.per aDd alto tile local De WI pu.bU.bed herein.

&amp;baa*

N..., Edlror
Adv. Mallllger

By Mrs. Heleue Zldlao

Robert HGeftiela
Da1~ Rotbleb, Jr.
C.riGIH!ea

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With Easter, we welcome the
Spring Sunshine. At Pomeroy Health
Care Center, the Easter bunnies and
symb_g.la replaced the Irish
decorations. The Senior Friends
helped eur residents make up
besutiful vases for every table in the
dining room, which were made out
of egg cartons, and attractive trees
made of cereal and mounted on
colorful construction · papers for
every resident room. Easter music
has been playing on the PA system
throughout the building, creating a
cheerful atmosphere, and making
one happy to be a part of the most
joyful feast of Christianity, the
Resurrection of Christ!
The Holy Week was opened with
the Senior Citizens' Chorus headed
by Mrs. Alice Wamsley, who came
to the Center on Tuesday afternoon
and excelled in singing to the bar·
monious piano music played by Ml'li.
Hazel Thomson.
On Wednesday, the Easter Bunny
came early and surprised our
residents with lovely Easter baskets
made by the Senior Friends headed
by Mrs. Pam Riffle. An Easter card
was maUed to each resident by a
faithful volunteer, Mrs. Helen Wolfe
of Carroll, Ohio.
Thursday, April 3, we .enjoyed
listening to the Gospel singing group
from the Church of God in Chester.
Our residents appreciate also the
Easter favors made by the group.
Mrs. Robert Waldnig from Racilie
surprised us Thursday morning with
Easter decorated cupcakes for
everyone, in favor of her mother
who is actually residing in our
facility. I accidentally overheard
one resident asking another, "Did
you ever imagine you would be hapPY and receive all this attention in a
Rest Home?" The reply was "We're
fortunate to be near home in every

r:s:m~ ' r"'T"'\.oo...L--r"l~=~~

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An editorial comment

Saturday elimination
of postal service
Those of you who thought that Postal Service couldn't
get any worse may soon be proven wrong. The Postal Service, choosing to hit customers at the mailbox instead of
the pocketbook, now is considering elimination of Satur·
day deliveries as the only practical way to meet proposed
budget cuts.
.
Postmaster General William F. Bolger said last week he
has ordered a task force to study the effects of reducing
mail deliveries from six to five days a week and the impact
of that on labor relations.
Ending Saturday mail deliveries would probably affect
Americans, especially those living in rural areas, more
directly than any other budget cut proposal.
Projected savings from such a move is probably a myth.
Labor contracts in the posal service forbid layoffs. Thus
there won't be any large cutbacks in this area.
And it is probable that the elimination of Saturday
deliveries would actually cost the agency. A reduction of
service will undoubtedly mean further diversion of mail
volume away from the Postal Service to other methods of
delivery-thus reducing postal income even further.
The same volume of mail now handled in six days would
have to be processed in five days, which would mean even
further delays and deterioration of service when the i;IC·
cumulation of mail from Friday, Saturday and Sunday
would have to be handled on Monday or Tuesday.
In addition to all this, regardless of the budget cut, the
Postal Service already plans to raise rates next year to
cover higher operating costs. Those increases -designed
to make up for reduced federal subsidies-will further
defeat the purpose of the administration's budgetbalancing program.

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Ohio perspective

Filing timetable may be revised
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
timetable which mu.st be met in
securing a spot for candidates and
issues on Ohio's election baUots may
be revised soon.
Separate filing deadlines now in
effectfornomlnating,initiativeand
referendum petitions, ranging from
60 to 90 days, would be changed to a
common date under a bill pending in
the Legislature.
It would establish a standard filing
deadline of 75 days before the election at which the issue or candidacy
in question would appear on the
ballot,
The measure, which would amend
106 sections of Ohio Jaw to achieve
the standard deadlines, is pending
before the House Elections Com·
mittee.

ReVising the flUng deadlines is
part of an omnibus bill which makes
variilus changes in the election laws.
Among other things, it changes the
role of the secretary of state in selecting directors and deputy directors
for county boards of election.
CWTently, If three board members
are unable to agree on a person to
serve as director, the secretary of
state chooses both a director and
deputy director from a list of
nominees submitted by the board .
The bill would require instead that
the secretary of slate select only a
director at that point and not a
deputy.
In addition, the measure expands
the powers and duties of the
secretary of state.
It would, among other things,

require him to approve ballot
language for any local question or
issue.
In the event of judicial
proceedings in which he is involved,
the bUI would permit the secretary
to request a change of venue and
have the case removed to the common pleas court of an adjoining
county or of Franklin County.
Current law allows transfer of the
case only to an adjoining county.
Such moves have been uied in the
past to a void potential political conflicts in the county where the case
originated.
.
Write it off as a slip of the tongue,
but Sen. Stanley J. Aronoff's characterization of Sen. Anthony 0.
Calabrese, D-Cleveland, touched off
a wave of laughter in the upper

chamber recently.
The Cincinnati Republican had
been trading comments with
Calabrese about the need to
establish a procedure for filling the
vacancy left by the resignation of
Cleveland mayor George V.
Voinovich as lieutenant governor.
Aronoff at one point responded to
Calabrese, a member of the Senate
for a quarter-century, by saying :
" I agree with the distinguished
senior citizen ... uh, senator ... from
Cuyahoga County .... "
But the sentence was never
finished as he and the rest of the
Senate erupted in laughter.
When things settled down, Aronoff
added : "I don't think I'll take that
back."

Today is Tuesday, April 8, the 99th
day of 1980. There are 'li'/1 days left in
the year.
Today' s Highlight in History :
On April 8, 1513, Spanish explorer
Ponce de Leon landed in Florida,
searching for the fabled fountain d
youth.
On this date:
In 1826, Secretary of State Henry
Clay fought a duel with Sen. John
Randolph of Virginia. Neither man
was injured.
in 190'1, Britain and France signed
a statement confirming the independence of Siam, which is now
Thailand.
In 1904, India released Sheik Abdullah, former premier of Kashmir.
In 1970, an Israeli air attack on
Bahr , El-Bakr in Egypt killed 30

• •

school children.
Also in 1970 the Senate rejected
President Nixon's nomination of G.
Hilrold CarsweU to the Supreme
Court.
Five years ago, North Vietnam
launched coordinated ground and
shelling attacks in the upper Mekong
Delta in an effort to cut off Saigon's
.
supply of rice.
And last year, 5,1100 people near
Crestview, Fla., were evacuated
following the derailment and ex·
plosion of several railroad tank cars.
Today's birthday: Former
Rhodesian Prime Minister Ian
Smith is61.
•
Tho.ught for today : An honest man
is the noblest work of God.
Alexander Pope (168&amp;-1744)

way ... "

LOS ANGELES (AP) -And now,
the electronic wastebasket.
It's for real, part of a machine
billed as "The Office of the Future,"
which sends and receives mail and
memos, processes words, creates its
own charts and fonns, answers the
phone, files files electronically,
calculates return on investment and
talks to its computer in English instead of gobbledygook.
,
The Axxa System 90 Electronic Of.
lice, which looks like a cross bel·
ween a typewriter and a television
set, was designed to fit easily into
elristing work routines, says Axxa
Corp. President David Willoughby.
"Since its purpose is to improve
efficiency, it makes no sense to
disrupt people's established work
patterns merely for the sake of per-

petuating a mystique which says
that life with computers must be
cornPilcated," says Willoughby .
Irr addition to a button marked
"wstblkt" that discards documents,
the System 90 also has a button
marked "Oops" that nullifies the
last thing the user did and another
one marked "Help,. th8t tells you
what you're doing wrong.
The machine, originally developed
for ~ew York's Citicorp to improve
that bank's back offiee' procedures,
is now being marketed nationwide
by Aua, which is based in the Los
Angeles suburb of Woodland Hills.
Willoughby says two of the nation's
largest insurance companies, two
giant oil companies and the three
biggest domestic aircraft manufac-

©'"''' " · ·'"

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·~ ~

· Airway trust fund

na.r.?

"Now this baby ~as owned by a li 'l or teenager
who couldn't hack the_ price of gasoline. ' ·

•

"The only way for office productivity to make really significant
gains is for everybody in the system
to be part of the system," he said.
''That's why our equipment is directed toward the manager as well as
his secretarial and clerical support."

Willoughby, a :JS.year-old Ten·
nessee native who worked for
Citicorp before becoming president
of Axxa, sees the System 90 as the
logical e&lt;tension of earlier office
machines.
"They started out Wllh word
processors," he said in an interview.
"Then someone else developed electronic mail. Someone eise developed
a sexy calculator and someone else
produced a desktop computer. What
we did was put it aU together."
The office of the future doesn't
come cheap, with an average
System 90 installation going for
$-12,1100. Bui Willoughby sees a great
future for Axxa's products and he's
happy about something else-his of·
lice has no wastebasket.

On Good Friday, Mrs. Candace
Brothers, an employee at the Ceo-

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Pre-wedding
shower held

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turers have already signed up.
American bu.sinesses will spend
more than $800 billion this year on
office operations, according to the
management consullanling firm of
Booz, Allen, and Hamilton Inc., and
twice that in 1986. These huge costs
make the office a prime large\ of ef.
forts to improve productivity, says
Willoughby, adding that managers
and secretaries alike will have to
adapt to machines like Axxa's.

In Washington

By Robert Wallen
costs, the already wealthy trust fund
WASHINGTON (NEA) • The
continues to grow every year.
Last Oct. 1, the beginning of the
federal gover'nment's system of
financing critical programs to pr~' . currentfiscal year;!he fWld balance
mote aviation safety is "completely
was more than $2.7 bll1ion. It is e•·
messed up."
pected to grow to more than $3.5
That astonishing a~on comes
billicn by the end of .the fiscal year,
from a man who ought to know with similar increases projected for
Langhorne M. Bond, bead of the
future years.
·
Federal Aviation Administration,
'I'here is virtual unanimity within
the govenunent agency prlncipaUy
the aviation coi111Il11ility that much
responsible for the integrity and
of the money .could be wisely spent
safety of air transportaticn.
on airport "navagational aids" When Bond was pressed at a re- - devices to enhance the safety of
cent congressional bearing to ex·
takeeffg and JandiggJ, the most
plain and justify the controversial
crl~al and a~cldent·prone
method used to fund air-safety 1m- segments of any ~
provements, he candidly
Wlltn Bond tes~ at the recent
acknowledged that "thi3 whole;, . hea. ~. he ~~-tl.!e n~·by·the­
system is a mess"'
:
- se8fi0l-your-pants :Conditioos that
The most scandalou.s upE'cl Df the~·; exi.lit Ieday at appl'lll!imateiy 3110 air·
situation involves the Airport and',. ~ throughout !hi countty served
Airways TrUll! Fund, established by ·.~· exclullvely tiy comniuter airlines :
law in 1970 spec:ifically to collect the i!
''!IXty-seven percent do not have
money necessary to finance safety'' viBwll approach slope indicators in·
advances and other improvements
staned, lrl percent do not have an ilf·
in 'the nation's complex civil- . stnunent landing system, 92 percent
aviation system.
. are
served by a tower, 67.5 perApproxlrriately 85 percent of the
cent :tlo not have radar approach
trust fund's annual incoole comes_ contrOl provided. _ ~.from the proceedS of 8il8 ·percent .·. "Ninety-nine pe~t do not have
federal tax imposed on aU aiijlne · a~ surveillantr, 88 per·
passenger tickets, wl,th . ~e r_~-·!.. c~;ot ~ve a . _ clllljlbls and
mainder of the reciqlb· don1Ved·~ • 73
nt dil not ~ runway and
from slmllar taxes on •trcraft th'VI·~;;: i~cation'ligh~t.,
and tubes, air cargo ~Ybllls ~ ~-. ~though all cif:tbat equipment
fuel used by "general ~1111"
is rilllltily avaUablf for installation
corrunerc1al planes. .
.
&lt; a~ safety value is undisputed,
W1th the entire field o1 aVIation ·• lllllll than half ·of t!le .commuter air·
booming and passenger ticket prices ~ r ~· /lllve none 1!-· the precision
;.
soaring because of escalatini! fuel · ai~.

Berry's World

..

Business milror

Computers will dominate office of the future

Today in history.

ces for Tomorrow and Families
Facing Change.
If you are a graduate of a
reglonaUy accredited four year
coUege or university, you are
eligible to join AAUW. The local
branch will be . most ha_ppy to
welcome new members m Septem~r. 1980.
.
Off1ce~ are: president, Dorothy
Woodard, program cball'lll8n, Fay
Sauer; membership chairman,
Rosali~ Story; secretary, Rachael
Do~ me; Tr~asurer,_ Kathryn
Knight; parliamentanan, Helen
S!Dlth.

Health Care Center News ...

a.bert WlaldC

Pllblhber
Genera) Mer. lr City F.d.ltor

legislation, promoting global un·
derslanding through our association
with International Federation of
University Women, and we're the
largest private provider of financial
support to women through our
feUowships and research and projects, grants ~nd programs.
,
The Middleport·Pomero~ . Area
Branch was granted recogrution by
the Board of Directo~ of Annencan
Assocllltion of Umvers1ty Women, at
Washington,D. C.onApril3,1973:
.Our study programs for the b1enmal197~1981 are Managing Resour·

labeled "a mess"
Why have,rthree consecutive administrations
headed by
Presidents Richard M. Nixon,
Gerald R. Ford and Jinuny Carter refused to release tru.st·fund money
to finance installation of basic safety
equipment that could prevent fatal
accidents?
Because the trust fund technically
is part of the govenunent's "unified
budget," and consolidating its
surplus and revenues with other
federal funds helps to artificially

.,

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enhance the appearance of a very .. J
shaky federal budget.
Although Congress clearly intend- .. ,
ed that the money be used for airline "
safety, the White Hou.se and its Of.
lice of Management and Budget . .
don't have to segregate the revenues
for that purpose because the ap- ·,,
plicable legislation doesn't require .;.
such eannarking.
·The phrase "trust fund" has )• '
become little more than a misnamed
bookkeeping device.
'"

.

(

Reserve Board seeks
•
account restra1nt
•

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Federal Reserve Board has moved
to protect customers from "unfair
surprises" by requiring len(!ers to
give 30 days' written notice of any
change in credit-account tenns.
The board's decision Wednesday
COIIers a wide variety of changes in
credit liccoWlt terms, including incrC1!8CS in finance chargeS, im·
position ot additional credit fees, a
rise lit minirimm monthly payments,
a lowering of borrowing limits on
credit cards and revisions in the way
monthly bills are calculated.
If customers .stop using an account, they may pay off their outs\ancling debt on the original terms,

'

the board decided. However, a
borrower who continues to charge on
an account mu.st pay the entire
balance in accordance with the new
tenns, the board said.
The board's action is retroactive
to March 14, meaning that any len·
der who has changed credit terms
since then. will have to renotlfy
customers.
The reserve board said ·it believes
the 3(klay notice period will
"'prevent unfair surprise to consumers," help creditors pjan better
and "contribute to the ·goal of
restraining the 11rowth of consumer
credit," now at record levels.

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Due to the illness of·Mrs. Rita Hill,
a pre-wedding shower honoring
Diane Miller and Paul Cross was
held at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Don Bell, Racine Rt. 2 Saturday
evening. Paul and Diane will be
married May 3 at Marlette Park.
Hostesses were Mrs. Lois Bell,
Mrs. Lorna Hart, Mrs. Nancy Cross,
and Mrs. Rita Hill.
The house was decorated in
keeping with the .occasion with blue,
pink and white streamers hanging
from the light fixture and streamers
and wedding bells over the table,
covered with a blue cloth overlaid
with white lace, centered with a
large cake decorated with white
Icing, trirruned with pink and blue
roses, inscribed with "Best Wishes,
Diane and Paul."
Games were played with prizes
going to Judy Eichinger and Barbara MiUer. Mrs. Eileen Buck won
the door prize.
Gifts were placed on a table
covered by a white cloth with pink
and blue streamers.
Refreshments of cake, coffee, punch, nuts and mints were served.
Guests attending were the brideto-be's mother, Mrs. Barbara Miller
rJ Akron, 0.; the groom's mother,
Mrs. Cora Cross of Racine Rt. 2; the
brid~'s grandmother, Mrs.
Deborah Shawver rJ Belpre; Mrs.
Pearl Whitman of Athens; Mrs.
SaUy Ross of Mason; Mrs. Naomi
Yeager, Sharon Gibbs, Stephanie
and Annette, Beverly Jordan of
Letart, W.Va.; Mrs. Mildred Fry of
·New Haven; Judy Eichinger, Becky
Eichinger of Pomeroy; Tressa Hill,
Mandy Hill, Mrs. PhyUis O'Brien,
daughter Carol, Mrs. Herbert
Roush, Mrs. Florence Adams, Mr..
and Mrs. Harold Roush, Edwin
Cross, Mrs. Erma Hill, Mrs. Eileen
Buck, Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Hart of
Columbus, Mrs. Nancy Cross, Paul
Crolla, Diane Mill~ of Calumbus.
Sending gifts were Robert and Linda Bumem, Unda Turley, Chlorus
Grimm, Elmer and Mary Pickens,
Pauline Hill, Beverly Wickline and
Kathryn Hunt.

TO MEET THURSDAY
The Eleanor Circle of the Heath
United Methodist Church will meet
at 7,30 ThursdaY night at the home
rA Mrs: Pauline Horton.

ter, came with her children who
colored an Easter egg and presented
it to every resident.
The week was climaxed with the
religiou.s service on Easter Sunday
at 2 p.m. by Rev. Dale Bass of the
Church of the Nazarene in Syracuse.
Following the service, his church
group gave out Easter favors to all
the residents at the Center.

Past Matrons Meet

~( -~ilson (Ver::ndain~~~s~- ~
of ·~:vt ~a~ aMo ~chael Al:

on Mli.lr h '/iio at ~·Be ge Hos -'i::i
there ~e ~b
. he':t s~ ~
~c
s
Y
welg
po
•
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~te::n;.l and rents are Mr
and Mrs. F~ Gl::bs, Middleport:
and the paternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Wilson,
Washington Court House. Maternal'
great-grandparents are lloyd Barris Middleport and the late Mrs
S~ie Harris,
and Mrs. Jame~
Preston (Gertrude Gibbs ) Clifton,
w, va. and the late Fred Gibbs, Sr.
Mrs. John Wilson of Clarksburg,
Ohio, is a paternal greatgrandmother.
Mr. and Mrs. Wilson have another
son, Joshua Adam, age 14 months.

SPRING OUTING-Chester Cub Scout Pack 235 toured the Royal
Crown Bottling Plant, WMPO Radio, and Quality Print Shop, and then
had lunch at Burger Chef Tuesday. In the group were left to right,
front row, Mony Wood, Rod Newsome, Greg Carpenter, and Brian
BaUey; second row, Del Laudermilt, Willie Hill, Roger Carpenter,
Alban Curtis, Floyd Ridenour, and Chris LaDeaux; third row, Tinuny
Lawson, Matt Harris, Terry Newsome, Brian Beeler, Elizabeth
Lawson, and Andy Hawk, and fourth row, Cheryl Laudermilt, Marilyn
Harris, Eleanor Lawson and Jo Ann Newsome, adults accompanying
the group. Jo Hill was also on the outing.

Mr.

On April 1, at 7:30 p;.m. , Past .-riiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~!!!liiiii~iiiiiii;;;--;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
Matrons ~ Vinton Chapter No. 375 I
met at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
John Payne.
....
The meeting was brought to order ·
"..
by president, Barbara Denney.
The hostess, Opal Payne, read
from the Uving Bible about "Palm
Sunday" and the "Crucifixion of
Christ." Elizabeth Cloud read,
We wish to thank all the mentioned
"Jesus Rises from the Dead."
groups and the kind community of
Everyone joined in singing
Meigs County for contributing
"Chri8t Arose" accompanied by
toward a Happy Easter at Pomeroy
Vennie Casto on the piano.
Health Care Center.
Margaret Simms gave the prayer.
In all these festivities, our
Opal read "The Legend of the
thoughts and prayers are with the
Raindrop."
Reg . Retail $1.65
following residents at Veterans
Members paying penalties for not
Memorial Hospital: Blanche Gibbs,
wearing Past Matron's pins were
Ruth Larkins, and Eva Bibbee. We
Ruth Evans, Mary Kay Stambaugh
are looking forward to having them
and Opal Payne.
~
back soon.
There was no old business and the
Meigs Junior High in MiddlepOrt
new business was the dlscu.ssion of
will sponsor a student book fair from
what we were going to serve at the
April 9 to Apri\11. Students will be
Alllinni banquet. Margaret Simms
able to browse and purchase books.
showed us new Eastern Star slick
The book fair will be open during the
pins which are available by conhours of 8:45 a.m.-3:10p.m. Books
tacting her. Mary Kay announced
will be on display in the library.
there would be a speaker on Cancer
The book fair committee iilvites
Research at our regular Eastern
Reg . Retail $3.40
JIF
all students, parents and visitors to
Slar meeting Thursday night.
attend the fair. The fair will enGet well cards were sent to Jane
courage student interest in reading
Poling and Mrs. Oshell Dabney.
and in building home libraries, and
The hostess had a game called
will also contribute to a worthwhile
Blind Man's Stocking which was en60-75-1110 WArn· PIG. OF 4
project. All profits will be u.sed for
joyed by all. Mary Walker won the
new reading materials.
. prize of a potted plant.
The book fair display will include
Each one attending received a
attractive new books from many
cream filled egg from the hostess.'
$1.00 REBATE FROM
publishers in all popular price
Refreslunents of sandwiches,
WITH COUPON
MFG.
ranges: -wonderful books to read or cheese ball, crackers, cookies and
to give as gifts. All reading interests homemade ice cream, nuts and
Reg. Retail $1.54
Reg . Retail 57' Mnlo
wlll be represented, including drinks were served by Opal assisted
classics, fiction, biographies, adby Elizabeth and Mary Kay.
venture stories, science, nature,
Present were Ruth Evans,
crafts, mystery and reference Margaret Simms, Verna Gleason,
&amp;
books. The conunittee is working Opal Payne, Elizabeth Cloud, Mary
with Educational Reading Service, a Walker, Toria Comer, Mildred
professional book fair company, to Donahue, Barbara Denney, Vickie
furnish an individual selection of Powell, Mary K. Stambaugh, Vennie
books for the fair.
TRIGGER,,.
Casto.
BonLE
The next meeting will be a family
picnic June 3 at 6:30p.m. at the Vin17-o:z.
ton park.
Reg . Retail $3.56
Reg . Retail . $9.95

LO

D ~:l~,

--

-

WITH SWEET

SAYINGS

DESITII
DABAWAYS

,. . 99°

SOFT

PEANUT
BUnER
15

G.E. BULBS

2~.5340

1k~1

LYSOL

PLAYING
CARDS

BASIN, TUB
TILE CLEANER

3h~1

¥

Sentinel
social calendar

TUESDAY
SHADE RIVER Jaycees meeting,
8 p.m. Tuesday at Jaycee~
Headquarters in Chester; all young
men between 17 and:J:i invited.
EASTERN BAND Boosters, 7:30
p.m. Tuesday in band room ct
Eastern High School.
·
SYRACUSE PTO Tuesday, 7:30
p.m. with the Syracuse Brownie
Troop to present the program.
WINDING TRAIL GARDEN
CLUB, 7:30 Tuesday at the home of
Mrs. Ruth Moore. ,
REGULAR MEETING, Racine
Lodge 461, F and AM, 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY · MIDDLEPORT
Lions Club meeting, noon Wednesday at Meigs Inn.
REGULAR MEETING, Pomeroy
Chapter 80, RAM and Bosworth
CouncU, R and SM, 7:30. p.m. Wednesday. Work in Royal Arch Degree.
MIDDLEPORT AMATEUR
GARDENERS, 8 p.m. at the home of
Miss Erma Smith, Pomeroy. Mrs.
Grace Pratt to. have devotions, and ·
Mrs. Alice Thompson to give a
demonstration on dried arrangements.
MIDDLEPORT LITERARY
CLUB, 2 p.m. Wednesday at the
home of Mrs. Arthur strauss. Mrs.
Ben Philson' will review "Survival"
by Dr. Bnmo Buttlheim. ROll call
response, your key to survival.

ROLL-0-MATIC

MAXI PADS

MOP

FREEDOM

MONA JOHNSON
UNDERGOES SURGERY

Miss Mona Jolmson, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Jacob J olmson, underwent surgery Monday morning at
the Charleston Area Medical Center
Hospital, 1210 Eimwood Ave., Box
1547, Charleston, W. Va. 25326. Her
room number is 504.

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•

�3·-The Daily Sentinel• Middl eport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, April8, 1980
1

AA UW college women work together I~~~RT~:;i~f~rs_l

2- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, April8, 1980

The Daily Sentinel

Artlcle4 Uaatofserlea)
By Mn. Dorothy Woodard
Local AAUW Prealdeut
POME~OY - The AAUW is
Unlvers1ty women working
together.
We're bu.siness wo~en, artists,
homemakers, professional women.
We share ~ ~ommonality of a
degree; we re mterested m _the
. needs of our comrnuruty, the nation,
and the world.
Ourprimarygoalisimprovingthe
status ~ all women through
monitormg and influencing

Opinions and comments
1HEDA.R.YS~

fUSPSIU..-1
DEVOTED TO TilE

INTEIIEnOF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
LcUen ol oplaloa are we~. 'l"bey UouJd be leu
wonb IGDJ (or subtect \o ~
UG111 by tile ed.l&amp;orl aad mut be 1J&amp;R4 wtt.b U.C 1~ ' 1 addreH. Nama IUY bt wttbiM:W ....
PJblkadoa.. However, 011 requat. IIIJDf.S w1U be dt.cloted. Letcen aboPI .be la ,_. tuCe, ..._
dn!A.tq luun, oot penmualldea.
Pabllllted dally u~t S.tant.y by 1'he Oldo vau~,. Publil.blq Compuy· MWtimedia. lllt.,
111Cow1 SL, Pomeroy, ObJo45711. Bubleu Office Pbooe ~UM. Edl:toria1Pbnett!-!1J7.
Secoad clau po~tace pUd at Pomeroy, OMo.
Nadoul advs rtblq repreHaC.tive, LIDdoa A.Noelates, Jill EacUd Ave., Clenlud, Oblo
64115.
.
S11b.crlptioa r1&amp;el : OtUvered by aurltr wben: ava.U.ble SUO per week. By Moler Roale where
t'lll11er tervltt DOt .vallllble, One mooth, loi.M.
Tbe DaUy SeatiDel, by mad lD Obtoaad Wttt Vlratala, oae JMr $SUI; Sh moatbl$17.10; three
moathl tlUI. Elaewbe~ $31.DI ; Iii moatbJ t!t.OO; tine moadll $1U8.
Tbc A11o.:Wted Prell II el:dllllvely eaHtlf4t to tbe lite for pubUcaUoo Gf aU HWI cHipa&amp;ebH
credJWd &amp;o the unrt.,.per aDd alto tile local De WI pu.bU.bed herein.

&amp;baa*

N..., Edlror
Adv. Mallllger

By Mrs. Heleue Zldlao

Robert HGeftiela
Da1~ Rotbleb, Jr.
C.riGIH!ea

,.,

~~

With Easter, we welcome the
Spring Sunshine. At Pomeroy Health
Care Center, the Easter bunnies and
symb_g.la replaced the Irish
decorations. The Senior Friends
helped eur residents make up
besutiful vases for every table in the
dining room, which were made out
of egg cartons, and attractive trees
made of cereal and mounted on
colorful construction · papers for
every resident room. Easter music
has been playing on the PA system
throughout the building, creating a
cheerful atmosphere, and making
one happy to be a part of the most
joyful feast of Christianity, the
Resurrection of Christ!
The Holy Week was opened with
the Senior Citizens' Chorus headed
by Mrs. Alice Wamsley, who came
to the Center on Tuesday afternoon
and excelled in singing to the bar·
monious piano music played by Ml'li.
Hazel Thomson.
On Wednesday, the Easter Bunny
came early and surprised our
residents with lovely Easter baskets
made by the Senior Friends headed
by Mrs. Pam Riffle. An Easter card
was maUed to each resident by a
faithful volunteer, Mrs. Helen Wolfe
of Carroll, Ohio.
Thursday, April 3, we .enjoyed
listening to the Gospel singing group
from the Church of God in Chester.
Our residents appreciate also the
Easter favors made by the group.
Mrs. Robert Waldnig from Racilie
surprised us Thursday morning with
Easter decorated cupcakes for
everyone, in favor of her mother
who is actually residing in our
facility. I accidentally overheard
one resident asking another, "Did
you ever imagine you would be hapPY and receive all this attention in a
Rest Home?" The reply was "We're
fortunate to be near home in every

r:s:m~ ' r"'T"'\.oo...L--r"l~=~~

- ~v

An editorial comment

Saturday elimination
of postal service
Those of you who thought that Postal Service couldn't
get any worse may soon be proven wrong. The Postal Service, choosing to hit customers at the mailbox instead of
the pocketbook, now is considering elimination of Satur·
day deliveries as the only practical way to meet proposed
budget cuts.
.
Postmaster General William F. Bolger said last week he
has ordered a task force to study the effects of reducing
mail deliveries from six to five days a week and the impact
of that on labor relations.
Ending Saturday mail deliveries would probably affect
Americans, especially those living in rural areas, more
directly than any other budget cut proposal.
Projected savings from such a move is probably a myth.
Labor contracts in the posal service forbid layoffs. Thus
there won't be any large cutbacks in this area.
And it is probable that the elimination of Saturday
deliveries would actually cost the agency. A reduction of
service will undoubtedly mean further diversion of mail
volume away from the Postal Service to other methods of
delivery-thus reducing postal income even further.
The same volume of mail now handled in six days would
have to be processed in five days, which would mean even
further delays and deterioration of service when the i;IC·
cumulation of mail from Friday, Saturday and Sunday
would have to be handled on Monday or Tuesday.
In addition to all this, regardless of the budget cut, the
Postal Service already plans to raise rates next year to
cover higher operating costs. Those increases -designed
to make up for reduced federal subsidies-will further
defeat the purpose of the administration's budgetbalancing program.

,,

Ohio perspective

Filing timetable may be revised
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
timetable which mu.st be met in
securing a spot for candidates and
issues on Ohio's election baUots may
be revised soon.
Separate filing deadlines now in
effectfornomlnating,initiativeand
referendum petitions, ranging from
60 to 90 days, would be changed to a
common date under a bill pending in
the Legislature.
It would establish a standard filing
deadline of 75 days before the election at which the issue or candidacy
in question would appear on the
ballot,
The measure, which would amend
106 sections of Ohio Jaw to achieve
the standard deadlines, is pending
before the House Elections Com·
mittee.

ReVising the flUng deadlines is
part of an omnibus bill which makes
variilus changes in the election laws.
Among other things, it changes the
role of the secretary of state in selecting directors and deputy directors
for county boards of election.
CWTently, If three board members
are unable to agree on a person to
serve as director, the secretary of
state chooses both a director and
deputy director from a list of
nominees submitted by the board .
The bill would require instead that
the secretary of slate select only a
director at that point and not a
deputy.
In addition, the measure expands
the powers and duties of the
secretary of state.
It would, among other things,

require him to approve ballot
language for any local question or
issue.
In the event of judicial
proceedings in which he is involved,
the bUI would permit the secretary
to request a change of venue and
have the case removed to the common pleas court of an adjoining
county or of Franklin County.
Current law allows transfer of the
case only to an adjoining county.
Such moves have been uied in the
past to a void potential political conflicts in the county where the case
originated.
.
Write it off as a slip of the tongue,
but Sen. Stanley J. Aronoff's characterization of Sen. Anthony 0.
Calabrese, D-Cleveland, touched off
a wave of laughter in the upper

chamber recently.
The Cincinnati Republican had
been trading comments with
Calabrese about the need to
establish a procedure for filling the
vacancy left by the resignation of
Cleveland mayor George V.
Voinovich as lieutenant governor.
Aronoff at one point responded to
Calabrese, a member of the Senate
for a quarter-century, by saying :
" I agree with the distinguished
senior citizen ... uh, senator ... from
Cuyahoga County .... "
But the sentence was never
finished as he and the rest of the
Senate erupted in laughter.
When things settled down, Aronoff
added : "I don't think I'll take that
back."

Today is Tuesday, April 8, the 99th
day of 1980. There are 'li'/1 days left in
the year.
Today' s Highlight in History :
On April 8, 1513, Spanish explorer
Ponce de Leon landed in Florida,
searching for the fabled fountain d
youth.
On this date:
In 1826, Secretary of State Henry
Clay fought a duel with Sen. John
Randolph of Virginia. Neither man
was injured.
in 190'1, Britain and France signed
a statement confirming the independence of Siam, which is now
Thailand.
In 1904, India released Sheik Abdullah, former premier of Kashmir.
In 1970, an Israeli air attack on
Bahr , El-Bakr in Egypt killed 30

• •

school children.
Also in 1970 the Senate rejected
President Nixon's nomination of G.
Hilrold CarsweU to the Supreme
Court.
Five years ago, North Vietnam
launched coordinated ground and
shelling attacks in the upper Mekong
Delta in an effort to cut off Saigon's
.
supply of rice.
And last year, 5,1100 people near
Crestview, Fla., were evacuated
following the derailment and ex·
plosion of several railroad tank cars.
Today's birthday: Former
Rhodesian Prime Minister Ian
Smith is61.
•
Tho.ught for today : An honest man
is the noblest work of God.
Alexander Pope (168&amp;-1744)

way ... "

LOS ANGELES (AP) -And now,
the electronic wastebasket.
It's for real, part of a machine
billed as "The Office of the Future,"
which sends and receives mail and
memos, processes words, creates its
own charts and fonns, answers the
phone, files files electronically,
calculates return on investment and
talks to its computer in English instead of gobbledygook.
,
The Axxa System 90 Electronic Of.
lice, which looks like a cross bel·
ween a typewriter and a television
set, was designed to fit easily into
elristing work routines, says Axxa
Corp. President David Willoughby.
"Since its purpose is to improve
efficiency, it makes no sense to
disrupt people's established work
patterns merely for the sake of per-

petuating a mystique which says
that life with computers must be
cornPilcated," says Willoughby .
Irr addition to a button marked
"wstblkt" that discards documents,
the System 90 also has a button
marked "Oops" that nullifies the
last thing the user did and another
one marked "Help,. th8t tells you
what you're doing wrong.
The machine, originally developed
for ~ew York's Citicorp to improve
that bank's back offiee' procedures,
is now being marketed nationwide
by Aua, which is based in the Los
Angeles suburb of Woodland Hills.
Willoughby says two of the nation's
largest insurance companies, two
giant oil companies and the three
biggest domestic aircraft manufac-

©'"''' " · ·'"

.

·~ ~

· Airway trust fund

na.r.?

"Now this baby ~as owned by a li 'l or teenager
who couldn't hack the_ price of gasoline. ' ·

•

"The only way for office productivity to make really significant
gains is for everybody in the system
to be part of the system," he said.
''That's why our equipment is directed toward the manager as well as
his secretarial and clerical support."

Willoughby, a :JS.year-old Ten·
nessee native who worked for
Citicorp before becoming president
of Axxa, sees the System 90 as the
logical e&lt;tension of earlier office
machines.
"They started out Wllh word
processors," he said in an interview.
"Then someone else developed electronic mail. Someone eise developed
a sexy calculator and someone else
produced a desktop computer. What
we did was put it aU together."
The office of the future doesn't
come cheap, with an average
System 90 installation going for
$-12,1100. Bui Willoughby sees a great
future for Axxa's products and he's
happy about something else-his of·
lice has no wastebasket.

On Good Friday, Mrs. Candace
Brothers, an employee at the Ceo-

.'

Pre-wedding
shower held

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turers have already signed up.
American bu.sinesses will spend
more than $800 billion this year on
office operations, according to the
management consullanling firm of
Booz, Allen, and Hamilton Inc., and
twice that in 1986. These huge costs
make the office a prime large\ of ef.
forts to improve productivity, says
Willoughby, adding that managers
and secretaries alike will have to
adapt to machines like Axxa's.

In Washington

By Robert Wallen
costs, the already wealthy trust fund
WASHINGTON (NEA) • The
continues to grow every year.
Last Oct. 1, the beginning of the
federal gover'nment's system of
financing critical programs to pr~' . currentfiscal year;!he fWld balance
mote aviation safety is "completely
was more than $2.7 bll1ion. It is e•·
messed up."
pected to grow to more than $3.5
That astonishing a~on comes
billicn by the end of .the fiscal year,
from a man who ought to know with similar increases projected for
Langhorne M. Bond, bead of the
future years.
·
Federal Aviation Administration,
'I'here is virtual unanimity within
the govenunent agency prlncipaUy
the aviation coi111Il11ility that much
responsible for the integrity and
of the money .could be wisely spent
safety of air transportaticn.
on airport "navagational aids" When Bond was pressed at a re- - devices to enhance the safety of
cent congressional bearing to ex·
takeeffg and JandiggJ, the most
plain and justify the controversial
crl~al and a~cldent·prone
method used to fund air-safety 1m- segments of any ~
provements, he candidly
Wlltn Bond tes~ at the recent
acknowledged that "thi3 whole;, . hea. ~. he ~~-tl.!e n~·by·the­
system is a mess"'
:
- se8fi0l-your-pants :Conditioos that
The most scandalou.s upE'cl Df the~·; exi.lit Ieday at appl'lll!imateiy 3110 air·
situation involves the Airport and',. ~ throughout !hi countty served
Airways TrUll! Fund, established by ·.~· exclullvely tiy comniuter airlines :
law in 1970 spec:ifically to collect the i!
''!IXty-seven percent do not have
money necessary to finance safety'' viBwll approach slope indicators in·
advances and other improvements
staned, lrl percent do not have an ilf·
in 'the nation's complex civil- . stnunent landing system, 92 percent
aviation system.
. are
served by a tower, 67.5 perApproxlrriately 85 percent of the
cent :tlo not have radar approach
trust fund's annual incoole comes_ contrOl provided. _ ~.from the proceedS of 8il8 ·percent .·. "Ninety-nine pe~t do not have
federal tax imposed on aU aiijlne · a~ surveillantr, 88 per·
passenger tickets, wl,th . ~e r_~-·!.. c~;ot ~ve a . _ clllljlbls and
mainder of the reciqlb· don1Ved·~ • 73
nt dil not ~ runway and
from slmllar taxes on •trcraft th'VI·~;;: i~cation'ligh~t.,
and tubes, air cargo ~Ybllls ~ ~-. ~though all cif:tbat equipment
fuel used by "general ~1111"
is rilllltily avaUablf for installation
corrunerc1al planes. .
.
&lt; a~ safety value is undisputed,
W1th the entire field o1 aVIation ·• lllllll than half ·of t!le .commuter air·
booming and passenger ticket prices ~ r ~· /lllve none 1!-· the precision
;.
soaring because of escalatini! fuel · ai~.

Berry's World

..

Business milror

Computers will dominate office of the future

Today in history.

ces for Tomorrow and Families
Facing Change.
If you are a graduate of a
reglonaUy accredited four year
coUege or university, you are
eligible to join AAUW. The local
branch will be . most ha_ppy to
welcome new members m Septem~r. 1980.
.
Off1ce~ are: president, Dorothy
Woodard, program cball'lll8n, Fay
Sauer; membership chairman,
Rosali~ Story; secretary, Rachael
Do~ me; Tr~asurer,_ Kathryn
Knight; parliamentanan, Helen
S!Dlth.

Health Care Center News ...

a.bert WlaldC

Pllblhber
Genera) Mer. lr City F.d.ltor

legislation, promoting global un·
derslanding through our association
with International Federation of
University Women, and we're the
largest private provider of financial
support to women through our
feUowships and research and projects, grants ~nd programs.
,
The Middleport·Pomero~ . Area
Branch was granted recogrution by
the Board of Directo~ of Annencan
Assocllltion of Umvers1ty Women, at
Washington,D. C.onApril3,1973:
.Our study programs for the b1enmal197~1981 are Managing Resour·

labeled "a mess"
Why have,rthree consecutive administrations
headed by
Presidents Richard M. Nixon,
Gerald R. Ford and Jinuny Carter refused to release tru.st·fund money
to finance installation of basic safety
equipment that could prevent fatal
accidents?
Because the trust fund technically
is part of the govenunent's "unified
budget," and consolidating its
surplus and revenues with other
federal funds helps to artificially

.,

.'

enhance the appearance of a very .. J
shaky federal budget.
Although Congress clearly intend- .. ,
ed that the money be used for airline "
safety, the White Hou.se and its Of.
lice of Management and Budget . .
don't have to segregate the revenues
for that purpose because the ap- ·,,
plicable legislation doesn't require .;.
such eannarking.
·The phrase "trust fund" has )• '
become little more than a misnamed
bookkeeping device.
'"

.

(

Reserve Board seeks
•
account restra1nt
•

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Federal Reserve Board has moved
to protect customers from "unfair
surprises" by requiring len(!ers to
give 30 days' written notice of any
change in credit-account tenns.
The board's decision Wednesday
COIIers a wide variety of changes in
credit liccoWlt terms, including incrC1!8CS in finance chargeS, im·
position ot additional credit fees, a
rise lit minirimm monthly payments,
a lowering of borrowing limits on
credit cards and revisions in the way
monthly bills are calculated.
If customers .stop using an account, they may pay off their outs\ancling debt on the original terms,

'

the board decided. However, a
borrower who continues to charge on
an account mu.st pay the entire
balance in accordance with the new
tenns, the board said.
The board's action is retroactive
to March 14, meaning that any len·
der who has changed credit terms
since then. will have to renotlfy
customers.
The reserve board said ·it believes
the 3(klay notice period will
"'prevent unfair surprise to consumers," help creditors pjan better
and "contribute to the ·goal of
restraining the 11rowth of consumer
credit," now at record levels.

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lo

Due to the illness of·Mrs. Rita Hill,
a pre-wedding shower honoring
Diane Miller and Paul Cross was
held at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Don Bell, Racine Rt. 2 Saturday
evening. Paul and Diane will be
married May 3 at Marlette Park.
Hostesses were Mrs. Lois Bell,
Mrs. Lorna Hart, Mrs. Nancy Cross,
and Mrs. Rita Hill.
The house was decorated in
keeping with the .occasion with blue,
pink and white streamers hanging
from the light fixture and streamers
and wedding bells over the table,
covered with a blue cloth overlaid
with white lace, centered with a
large cake decorated with white
Icing, trirruned with pink and blue
roses, inscribed with "Best Wishes,
Diane and Paul."
Games were played with prizes
going to Judy Eichinger and Barbara MiUer. Mrs. Eileen Buck won
the door prize.
Gifts were placed on a table
covered by a white cloth with pink
and blue streamers.
Refreshments of cake, coffee, punch, nuts and mints were served.
Guests attending were the brideto-be's mother, Mrs. Barbara Miller
rJ Akron, 0.; the groom's mother,
Mrs. Cora Cross of Racine Rt. 2; the
brid~'s grandmother, Mrs.
Deborah Shawver rJ Belpre; Mrs.
Pearl Whitman of Athens; Mrs.
SaUy Ross of Mason; Mrs. Naomi
Yeager, Sharon Gibbs, Stephanie
and Annette, Beverly Jordan of
Letart, W.Va.; Mrs. Mildred Fry of
·New Haven; Judy Eichinger, Becky
Eichinger of Pomeroy; Tressa Hill,
Mandy Hill, Mrs. PhyUis O'Brien,
daughter Carol, Mrs. Herbert
Roush, Mrs. Florence Adams, Mr..
and Mrs. Harold Roush, Edwin
Cross, Mrs. Erma Hill, Mrs. Eileen
Buck, Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Hart of
Columbus, Mrs. Nancy Cross, Paul
Crolla, Diane Mill~ of Calumbus.
Sending gifts were Robert and Linda Bumem, Unda Turley, Chlorus
Grimm, Elmer and Mary Pickens,
Pauline Hill, Beverly Wickline and
Kathryn Hunt.

TO MEET THURSDAY
The Eleanor Circle of the Heath
United Methodist Church will meet
at 7,30 ThursdaY night at the home
rA Mrs: Pauline Horton.

ter, came with her children who
colored an Easter egg and presented
it to every resident.
The week was climaxed with the
religiou.s service on Easter Sunday
at 2 p.m. by Rev. Dale Bass of the
Church of the Nazarene in Syracuse.
Following the service, his church
group gave out Easter favors to all
the residents at the Center.

Past Matrons Meet

~( -~ilson (Ver::ndain~~~s~- ~
of ·~:vt ~a~ aMo ~chael Al:

on Mli.lr h '/iio at ~·Be ge Hos -'i::i
there ~e ~b
. he':t s~ ~
~c
s
Y
welg
po
•
11
~te::n;.l and rents are Mr
and Mrs. F~ Gl::bs, Middleport:
and the paternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Wilson,
Washington Court House. Maternal'
great-grandparents are lloyd Barris Middleport and the late Mrs
S~ie Harris,
and Mrs. Jame~
Preston (Gertrude Gibbs ) Clifton,
w, va. and the late Fred Gibbs, Sr.
Mrs. John Wilson of Clarksburg,
Ohio, is a paternal greatgrandmother.
Mr. and Mrs. Wilson have another
son, Joshua Adam, age 14 months.

SPRING OUTING-Chester Cub Scout Pack 235 toured the Royal
Crown Bottling Plant, WMPO Radio, and Quality Print Shop, and then
had lunch at Burger Chef Tuesday. In the group were left to right,
front row, Mony Wood, Rod Newsome, Greg Carpenter, and Brian
BaUey; second row, Del Laudermilt, Willie Hill, Roger Carpenter,
Alban Curtis, Floyd Ridenour, and Chris LaDeaux; third row, Tinuny
Lawson, Matt Harris, Terry Newsome, Brian Beeler, Elizabeth
Lawson, and Andy Hawk, and fourth row, Cheryl Laudermilt, Marilyn
Harris, Eleanor Lawson and Jo Ann Newsome, adults accompanying
the group. Jo Hill was also on the outing.

Mr.

On April 1, at 7:30 p;.m. , Past .-riiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~!!!liiiii~iiiiiii;;;--;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
Matrons ~ Vinton Chapter No. 375 I
met at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
John Payne.
....
The meeting was brought to order ·
"..
by president, Barbara Denney.
The hostess, Opal Payne, read
from the Uving Bible about "Palm
Sunday" and the "Crucifixion of
Christ." Elizabeth Cloud read,
We wish to thank all the mentioned
"Jesus Rises from the Dead."
groups and the kind community of
Everyone joined in singing
Meigs County for contributing
"Chri8t Arose" accompanied by
toward a Happy Easter at Pomeroy
Vennie Casto on the piano.
Health Care Center.
Margaret Simms gave the prayer.
In all these festivities, our
Opal read "The Legend of the
thoughts and prayers are with the
Raindrop."
Reg . Retail $1.65
following residents at Veterans
Members paying penalties for not
Memorial Hospital: Blanche Gibbs,
wearing Past Matron's pins were
Ruth Larkins, and Eva Bibbee. We
Ruth Evans, Mary Kay Stambaugh
are looking forward to having them
and Opal Payne.
~
back soon.
There was no old business and the
Meigs Junior High in MiddlepOrt
new business was the dlscu.ssion of
will sponsor a student book fair from
what we were going to serve at the
April 9 to Apri\11. Students will be
Alllinni banquet. Margaret Simms
able to browse and purchase books.
showed us new Eastern Star slick
The book fair will be open during the
pins which are available by conhours of 8:45 a.m.-3:10p.m. Books
tacting her. Mary Kay announced
will be on display in the library.
there would be a speaker on Cancer
The book fair committee iilvites
Research at our regular Eastern
Reg . Retail $3.40
JIF
all students, parents and visitors to
Slar meeting Thursday night.
attend the fair. The fair will enGet well cards were sent to Jane
courage student interest in reading
Poling and Mrs. Oshell Dabney.
and in building home libraries, and
The hostess had a game called
will also contribute to a worthwhile
Blind Man's Stocking which was en60-75-1110 WArn· PIG. OF 4
project. All profits will be u.sed for
joyed by all. Mary Walker won the
new reading materials.
. prize of a potted plant.
The book fair display will include
Each one attending received a
attractive new books from many
cream filled egg from the hostess.'
$1.00 REBATE FROM
publishers in all popular price
Refreslunents of sandwiches,
WITH COUPON
MFG.
ranges: -wonderful books to read or cheese ball, crackers, cookies and
to give as gifts. All reading interests homemade ice cream, nuts and
Reg. Retail $1.54
Reg . Retail 57' Mnlo
wlll be represented, including drinks were served by Opal assisted
classics, fiction, biographies, adby Elizabeth and Mary Kay.
venture stories, science, nature,
Present were Ruth Evans,
crafts, mystery and reference Margaret Simms, Verna Gleason,
&amp;
books. The conunittee is working Opal Payne, Elizabeth Cloud, Mary
with Educational Reading Service, a Walker, Toria Comer, Mildred
professional book fair company, to Donahue, Barbara Denney, Vickie
furnish an individual selection of Powell, Mary K. Stambaugh, Vennie
books for the fair.
TRIGGER,,.
Casto.
BonLE
The next meeting will be a family
picnic June 3 at 6:30p.m. at the Vin17-o:z.
ton park.
Reg . Retail $3.56
Reg . Retail . $9.95

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Sentinel
social calendar

TUESDAY
SHADE RIVER Jaycees meeting,
8 p.m. Tuesday at Jaycee~
Headquarters in Chester; all young
men between 17 and:J:i invited.
EASTERN BAND Boosters, 7:30
p.m. Tuesday in band room ct
Eastern High School.
·
SYRACUSE PTO Tuesday, 7:30
p.m. with the Syracuse Brownie
Troop to present the program.
WINDING TRAIL GARDEN
CLUB, 7:30 Tuesday at the home of
Mrs. Ruth Moore. ,
REGULAR MEETING, Racine
Lodge 461, F and AM, 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY · MIDDLEPORT
Lions Club meeting, noon Wednesday at Meigs Inn.
REGULAR MEETING, Pomeroy
Chapter 80, RAM and Bosworth
CouncU, R and SM, 7:30. p.m. Wednesday. Work in Royal Arch Degree.
MIDDLEPORT AMATEUR
GARDENERS, 8 p.m. at the home of
Miss Erma Smith, Pomeroy. Mrs.
Grace Pratt to. have devotions, and ·
Mrs. Alice Thompson to give a
demonstration on dried arrangements.
MIDDLEPORT LITERARY
CLUB, 2 p.m. Wednesday at the
home of Mrs. Arthur strauss. Mrs.
Ben Philson' will review "Survival"
by Dr. Bnmo Buttlheim. ROll call
response, your key to survival.

ROLL-0-MATIC

MAXI PADS

MOP

FREEDOM

MONA JOHNSON
UNDERGOES SURGERY

Miss Mona Jolmson, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Jacob J olmson, underwent surgery Monday morning at
the Charleston Area Medical Center
Hospital, 1210 Eimwood Ave., Box
1547, Charleston, W. Va. 25326. Her
room number is 504.

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•

�•- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, April 8, I •

..

112thMajor
league
season
opens
Wednesday
.
.
'
By Alsoelaled Press
who won the division with a 9().71
right-handers will do the pitching The baseball sellliOn opens Wedrecord. •
Dave Lemanczyk, 8-10, for Toronto
nesday as traditioo dictates, in CinRight-hander Tom Seaver, who
and Mike Parrott, 14-12, for Seattle
cinnati, as more than the usual onwound up with a 1"' record last
- before an estimated opening-night
the-field concems intrudes on major
crowd of 20,000.
season after recovering from a
league baseball'• U2th YeJr.
lower back ~ln. Will pitch for the .
Most of the other teams begin the
Hanging over tile heads of the 26
Reds against Allanta ·Braves
season Thursday. In the National
major league teams is the worry of a
knuckleballer Phil Niekro, 21-20.
League, Chicago is at New Yo•k,
general players' strike called for
Starting time is 2:30p.m. EST, and a
Pittsburgh plays In St. Louis, Los
May 23, a month and a haU into the
capacity crowd of 52,392 is expected
Angeles is at Houston and San Franseason, unless owners and players
at Riverfront Stadium.
cisco is at San Diego. The American
can agree to a new basic agreement.
League has Baltimore at Chicago,
The other W~y opener bas
The first game of the season pits
the Toronto Blue Jays, bueball's
Boston at Milwaukee, New York at
Atlanta, which finished last in the
worst team last 'season with 109 Texas, Detroit at Kansas City and
National League West with a 66-94 . losses, at Seattle under the Minnesota at Oakland.
record last season, against the Reds, Kingdome at 10:35 p.m. A pair of
Friday, the remalnln~ four teams

open their seasons. in the AL,
Cleveland is at Calif &gt;rnia, _ and
Philadelphia hosts Montreal In the
NL
I

Alexander outlasts Eastern
ByScoUWoUe
ALBANY - The Alexander Spartans came from behind, then
outlasted the young Eastern Eagles,
1~14, Monday night in a non-league
contest that WBll shortened to six innings due to darkness. Alexander is
now 1~ overall while Eastern drops
to 0-3.
In the top of the first, Coach Ralph
Wigal's Eastern Eagles rallied for
seven runs, before winning pitcher
Steve Samms cooled off the Eagle
bats. Eastern collected five of their
nine hits during that opening round
including two key doubles by Mike
Bissell and Greg Wigal.
During the bottom half of the inning the Spartans hinted that the
game was going to be a high scoririg
affair by racking up four runs of
their own. After the Eagles scored
two in the top of the second, the
Spartans came back to pound out
four hits and plated seven runs to
knock starting pitcher Brian Bissell
out of the box and take the lead, 11-9,
a lead they didn't relinquish.
Coach Joe Fargo's Spartans consistently scored the final innings to
add to their lead, but the Eagles
gallantly tried to come back in the
fifth. The visitors produced a serious
threat that Inning to score three runs
and knock Satnm, out of the box.

Luckett was called upon to cool off
the Eagles' bats. He came in to kill
the Eagle rally In the fifth, then held
Qlem to just one in.the sixth to ice the
victory.
Inexperience on the mound WBll a
key factor at five different Eagle
hurlers saw action. They combined
for 10 walkll and three strike outs.
Alexander's Samms and Luckett
combined for five KO's while giving
up seven walks.
Eastern conunlUed eight miscues
.while the Spartans had six errors.
Eastern's potent offensive attack
was led by sophomore mike Bissell
who had two doubles and two
singles, Gary Griggs two singles,
Greg Wigal a double, and Roger
GaUl and steve Chrisman each a
single.
The Spartans were led by Jordon
with a double and three singles,
Lemaster a double, Lucken two
doubles, Burton a double, and Samand Crossen each a single. •
Alexander hosts Trimble Wednesday, while Eastern hosts Southwestern Wednesday, then travels to
Warren Thursday.

Miller Mooday nigtt wu ~ to a )4ter
date due to the fact Miller 1 but got 1o1t on the
way to the game and Uley didn't arrive unUI one
hour put game time.

Miller remains pessimistic
'

NEW YORK (AP) - Marvin

Miller hasn't been optimistic so
far over the baseball contract
talkll.
"We haven't discussed
anything substantive since I don't
know when," says the executive
director of the 'Major League
Players Association.
Miller hoped things would he
better today when he met with
club owners negotiators and a
federal mediator In the talks over
a new basic agreement.
They hope to avert a general
players' strike setfor May 23.
" The mediator is still.in the picture," said Miller about Kermeth
MoffeU, who joined the talks two
sessions ago in Palm Springs,
·Calif. "These meetings are under
the auspices of the Federal
Mediation Service. Last week,
both parties (owners and
players) agreed to more
meetings - and that's where we

ms

l!ol- u...c.r.,
Eulem

7 2 0 I 3 1-lf 9 8
Alei:ander
4· 7 f 2 2 x-19 10 6
B. Bissell (lp), Chrisman (2), RUehle 131,

Wells !fl. Smltb !IJ and Olri.sman. w..eu.
Sanun; ( wp), Luckett (l),and J..-.
RAcrNE - The game between Soathem and

stand.''

Talks were recessed last Thursday when negotiators agreed to
a timetable for seven more
meetings over the next three
weeks. The first two of the
meetings were scheduled for
today and Thursday.
The players and owners still
present hard-line positions on

DePaul assistant
feels he's burnt
COVINGTON, Ky. (AP)- DePaul
recruiters thought Dicky Beal,
Holmes High School's sensational
point guard, waa finnly in their
camp, all set to sign a national tender today.
Beal gave them a verbal commilment in January, but last week
decided on Kentucky instead.
DePaul assistant coach Joe Molinari
fee\1; he's been burned.
"It really disappoints me and
makes me queasy to think about it,"
Molinari said. "I think Kentucky
recruited the dad. I feel his dad was
unfair in this situation. He completely closed us down.
" This whole thing really opened
my eyes to big-time recruiting."
Beal averaged about 25 points a
game for Holmes, and Molinari said
the DePaul staff considered Beal the
best high school point guard in the
country.
But DePaul never was able to win
over Dicky's dad, Richard Beal, and
Molinari discovered too late how ifn.
portant that would be.
"Dicky told me aU the time his dad
liked Kentucky," Molinari said.
"From the moment Dickey committed to us in January , I knew Mr.
Beal would never be in our corner.
"There was a story in the Chicago
Tribune a couple t:t weeks later that
said Mr. Beal was very upset. It said
he thought we recruited around him.
"When I saw him the next time, I
apologized to him. But he told me it

was too late. I know right then we
would never win him over to
DePaul."
Molinari spent a lot of time with
Beal this season. He saw about 20 of
Holmes' games and so many practices that. "I feel I know everybody
in Covington," he said.
.
"I had to be there, because there
were other recruiters still around,"
Molinari said. He learned of the
change to Kentucky only Friday.
"Joey (assistant coach Joey
Meyer, son .ol DePaul CQIIch Ray
Meyer) talked to Dicky last
Tuesday, and he said his decision
was the same, that he would still attend DePaul," Molinari said. "Then,
I rode the plane with him and
(Holmes) C4lllch (Reynolds) Flynn"
on Friday to that aU-star game in
Atlanta. Dicky sai4 his decision was
the same, but he said his dad likes
Kentucky.
"When we got to Atlanta, some
re&lt;;ruiters told me Kentucky had
stopped recruiting (guards) Dennis
Johnson and Ricky Norton. They
said, 'You better .watCh out. Kentucky's dropped off Johnson and
Norton, and tbey're hot on Beal.'
"Then.Dicky told me he was going
to Kentucky. After I picked myself
up, I said, 'Dicky, why don't you do
thia; why don't you let us Villi! you
and your father like we had planned
to do.
"Dicky said, 'No, I'm not going to
change my mind."'

Natioul Hodey Laine

Pilyolfo
AtAGtabce
By 'lbe Auodoled Preq
P,.llmlDaryftoud

BnttfFive
NOTE : The dates and times o( the third and
fourth games of the Bostoo-Pittaburgh sertes will
be announced.
Tactday'• Gama
Pitt.burgh at Boston
Edmontm at Philildelph.l.a
Vancouveral Buffalo
Hartford at Montreal

l..ai Ans:~les at New Yort Islanders
Toronto at Minnesota
·
St. Louis at Chicago
Atlanta at NewYori Rangers
WednrsdaJ 'I Gamet

AUanta at New Yort Rangers
Edmonton at Philadelphia
Vancouver at Buffalo

Hartfonlst Montreal
lAs Angeles at New York lslanders

TGrooto at Minnesota
St. Louis at Chicago

nanday'l Game
Pitt.burgh atlloitoo
Fricl.ly's Gamca
Montreal at Hartford
Minnesota at Toronto
New York Rangers at AUanla

Chlcago at St. LouU

Philadelphia al.Edmonlor)
Buffalo at Vancouver
New York lalandersatLoe Angeles
Saturday'• G.mes

Bostoo at Pittsburgh

UNet'elauy

Montreal at Hartford

Minnesota at Toronto
New York RangersatAUanta
Chicago at St. Louis
Philadelphia atEdmootoo
Buffalo at Vancouver
New Ylrl: Islander.~ at Los Angeles
Swoday,AprllU

Boeton at Pitt.burgh

Molllbly, Apr11ll
Pitt. burgh at Boston
Edmonton at Philadelphia

Vancouver at Buffalo
Hartford at Montreal
Uls Angele.s at New York Islanders
T[)l'"()flto at Minnesota
St. Louis at Chicago
Atlanta at New V•rk Ranger!

.
they are.
On the field, the main concern
could he whether cancellation of 92
··exhibition games has allowed
players to get fat and lazy.
" If guys can take three or four
days off and still perform, that's up
to them, " said Boston Red Sox
Manager Don Zimmer. Zinuner will
start right-hander Dennis Eckersley, 17-10 last · season, against'
Milwaukee on opening day. Because
of the strike, Eckersley threw Only
18 innings In four appearances In
spring training.
"My legs are in good shape, my
arm is OK, but my mind is not on top
of the game," Eckersley said. "One
game, though, can take care of the
mind."
•

New look Braves
ready for opener
CINCINNATI (AP) - Atlanta
Braves Manager Bob Cox is rarin' to
unveil his new baUclub Wednesday
in the traditional major league
baseball season opener in Cinci!Ulati
against the Reds.
The Braves, a hopeless last-place
team a year ago, may be the dark
horse of the National League West,
according to Cox.
"Our ballcluo is 100 percent
ready, " Cox said. The Braves
arrived in Cincinnati Monday night
and planned a workout today in
Riverfront Stadium. "We were in
(spring training) camp Feb. 19;
that's real early. We were down
there a long time, and we're ready lo
go.''

· Cox said cancelling the last week
of exhibition games because of a
strike by the Players Association
"may have.hurt us some.''

"But it's given some guys like
Gary Matthews, who was injured, a
chance to hit a lot. He must have had
40 at bats in a game-type situation
the last few days.
The Braves hear little resemblance to last year's Atlanta team.
. Two frontline players - first
baseman Chris Chamblis and shortstop Luis Gomez - were acquired
in a trade with Toronto, and relief
pitcher AI Hrabosky was signed as a ·
free agent.
The club also obtained catcher'Bil
Nahorodny, pitcher Doyle Alexander and infielder Larvell Blanks.
"We're almost a completely dif-

Pro standings

Blue Devil rally tops W M:aina
LAKIN, W. Va. - Wildness, an
outfield error and a sacrafice fiy off
the bat of Kenny llrDwn with one out
opened the floodglies for a four-run
seventh inning ~ch enabled the
Academy Blue Devils to post a
come-from-behind, 4-2 victory over
the Wahaina Falcons at Lakin State
Hll!lpital Field Monday. _
Mter spotting Wahama a pair of
unearned runs through the first two
innings, the Blue Devils chased
Wahama starting pitcher Weaver by
drawing four walks and putting six
straight runners on base.
Tony Weiher started the rally by
beating out an i!6ld hit. Weiher
came home after~ Saxton drew a.
bases-loa"ded walk. Crai¥ MUon,
who drew the ftrst ol Weaver's four
seventh-inning walks, tallied the
second run after Ken caudill goc
aboard on a free pass.
Paul Duncan, who reached base
on an outfield error to load the
bases, came home after Phil King
walked while Saxton scored on

several issues, Including the
highly controversial area of free
agent compensation.
Management, represented by
the · Major League Player
Relations CommiUee, wants a
player rather than a draft choice
as . compensation for a team
which loses a player as a free
agent. Players have resisted the
proposal, saying it would restrict
their movement from one learn to
another and reduce the value of
the free agent marketplace.
After weeks of bitter
disagreements, the players
association on April 1 struck the
remaining 92 exhibition games.
The association decided that the
players would begin the season
on schedule Wednesday, but set a
midnight deadline on May 22 to
negotiate a new agreement. If
that agreement is not reached,
then a strike would begin with
games of May 23, the players
association said.
Miller and attorney Don Fehr
bave been representing the
players, while the management
side bas includf:d Ray Grebey of
the Player Relations Committee
and league presidents Lee Mac-.
Phail of the American League
and Chub Feeney of the N~;~tional.

Parties to the negotiations
resumed.talks today with the help of
a federal mediator. The Major
League Players Association has set
midnight, May 22 as a deadlin~ for
reaching agreement. If there IS no
new contract, the players will walk
·out the next day.
"We don't want to strike, and we
don't feel there wiU be one," said
Reds. third baseman Ray Knight, the
team's player representative.
"They set a series of negotiations
meetings, and we feel they're going
to getlogether."
.
.
Off the field, the hottest ISSue IS
compensation for free agents.
Owners want a player instead of a
draft choice in return for a free
agent. Players like things the way

DONKEY BASKETBALL
A donkey basketbaU game will be
held at Eastern High School Friday,
Aprilll, at 7:30p.m. Tickets at the
door are J2. Children will be admitted free. The event is being sponsored by the B.O.E. class.

..

'

•
'"
,.

~·

.'

,,

..,.,.

'ri
,.

," ·
...
•

ferent baUclub; aU the front office
people feel we're much better," CoJt
said. "We have a 1;ood chance of
winning; to a man, our entire
baUclub thinks so."
Cox notes that the Reds won the
Western Division championship last
se8Son by winning only 90 games. He
sees even more balance in the
division this year, and he predicts
the Braves will he a factor in the
race.
.
"I just have to think it's wide
open," Cox said. ''I won't pick

anybody right now. I still .think it's
up for grabs.
"If you had to pick a dark horse,
though, I think you'd have to pick
our ballclub. We're that much bet-

ter."
Atlanta's starting pitcher Wednesday will be Phil Niekro. He'll
face Cincinnati's Tom Seaver.
The Reds, in contrast to the deals
made by Atlanta, have acquired
nobody who wasn't with the club by
the end of last season. Charlie
Liebrandt, a young lefthanded pitcher, and Sam Mejias, a defensive
specialist in the ouUield, spent most
of last season with the Reds' top
farm club but were promoted late In
the season.
Cincinnati Manager John McNamara, a soft-spoken man who
Isn't prone to reveal too much about
his ballclub, nevertheless expects
the Reds to prove wrong those who
predict a third-place finish for his
club. •
"We showed they were wrong a
year ago when they expected us to
finish third, " McNamara said. "I
don't see any reason why we can't do
the same this year.
"On paper, it would appear as if
the Los Angeles Dodgers and the
Houston Astros have helped themselves. But games are won on the
field, not on paper."

cw

....Wa:
_

will start his 13th full season behind

the plate for the Reds.
He fully intends this season to
equal Bill Dickey's major league
record of 13 seasons of catching 100
games or more,
.Something former 'ouUielder Lenny Green of the Detroit Tigers told
Bench 15 years ago has stuck with
him.
"Remember there are three
things you are going to have to do
and all of them in moderation:
women, drinking and rest," Green
told Bench.
"I always got my sleep," Bench
said. "He (Green) WBll right. I may
have gone longer than I should have
a few times and I probably enjoyed
the female gender my share or
more.' '
In the beginning of his career,
Bench became the sort of "Joe
Namath of Basebatr,' the ideal
baseball bachelor.

Brown's sacrafice to right field off
frames - via errors against Bob
Wahama reliever Dujan.
Foster and Weiher with two outs.
Greg Eutsler, in bil fln&amp;t..startlng
The Blue Devils hll!lt Wellston
rol~ allowed ooly twQ wllllliDa hits · today and Minford Wednesday
aild a pair ol walla! In five ittnings
before traveling to Waverly Friday.
ol ltork befC!"! Brown relieved for
Wellston is also 1~ in the
the decision.
Southeastern Ohio Athletic League
Brown fanned five and walked one
after downing Athens 6-21ast week.
in his two-inning stint in raising his
record to~.
1
In taking the Joss, Wahama's first ~~~·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~·~~
of the season after three wins,
SHOP
Weaver struck out seven and gave
up three safeties in 6 213 innings of
work.
King again reached base on all
FOR THE BEST DIIALS IN THE
three trips to the pWe, on a Falcon
TRISTATE AREA
~•.• walk and a ~~Qg~e to center.
ti.liler and Breiipl alloWted just
one Waharna'ljasel'llllller~ the
last five innings to preaer.ie the Blue
Mon., Tues., Well., Friday &amp; Sat.
Devils' second straight pitching per8:30 to 5:00 Thursilav till12 Noon
fonnance without allowing an earOPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT ONL
ned run. GAHS blanked Logan :Hl
)
Herman Gra re
- ·Jut ThursdaY in the season opener.
Wahama plated both its runs Mason, W . Va.
773-5592 .
one each during the first and second

(/)

uP-w

Future doesn't worry Bench
TAMPA, Fla . (AP) - He doesn't
worry about it, but Cinci!Ulati Reds
catcher Johnny Bench keeps reminding himseU that there is life after
baseball which he may have to consider in the near future.
At 32, the perennial all-star can
cite the toll he has taken from
playing about 16,000 innings in the
major leagues, most behind home
plate with about six pounds of equipment strapped to his body.
He's had shoulder surgery, a
broken right thumb, split right
thumb, broken left-hand pinkie, six
different breaks in his left foot and
countless fractured toenails.
Since 1969, he bas also had back
spasms so severe that as many as
four cortisone shots have been
necessary at times to quiet the pain.
"As the , years passed," Bench
said. "I think catching bas naturally
taken the days out of me and the
days of my career away from me.
But I'll never be sorry for it unless I
hurtmyseU."
Only time will tell how much catching will have hurt Bench.
"It's like taking drugs," Bench
said. "You won't know the effect of it
untillO years from now."
Bench has always been conscious
of the punishment to his body. He
takes care of it as much as he can,
which explains how Wednesday he

....
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...1
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&lt;C
s:=

Injuries, surgery, a highly
publicized marriage and then an
equally publicized divorce have
changed Bench.
'
"These are the things that have
caused me~robably to mellow out
somewhat and to find out exactly
what I need," he said.
"I never anticipated making tbe
kind of money I'm making in my
wildest dreams. Now I know I can
live happily-&lt;iver-after.
"In the beginning, I was just en:.,
joy!ng, feasting - it felt like a
Roman orgy. It was day after day after day of food, travel, women,
whatever.
"Now I don't have to worry about
life after baseball. There are a lot of
things l can accomplish. Exactly
what, I don't know right now. Do I
want to take a business ca.reer• A
communications career? What line
of work do I want to get into that will
make me happiest?"

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15x 7. .. .. .. .... ... .. .. ... 526.95
15x8 ..................... '28.95
15x10 ................... !31.95
16.5x9% ..... ;...........'41.00

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�•- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, April 8, I •

..

112thMajor
league
season
opens
Wednesday
.
.
'
By Alsoelaled Press
who won the division with a 9().71
right-handers will do the pitching The baseball sellliOn opens Wedrecord. •
Dave Lemanczyk, 8-10, for Toronto
nesday as traditioo dictates, in CinRight-hander Tom Seaver, who
and Mike Parrott, 14-12, for Seattle
cinnati, as more than the usual onwound up with a 1"' record last
- before an estimated opening-night
the-field concems intrudes on major
crowd of 20,000.
season after recovering from a
league baseball'• U2th YeJr.
lower back ~ln. Will pitch for the .
Most of the other teams begin the
Hanging over tile heads of the 26
Reds against Allanta ·Braves
season Thursday. In the National
major league teams is the worry of a
knuckleballer Phil Niekro, 21-20.
League, Chicago is at New Yo•k,
general players' strike called for
Starting time is 2:30p.m. EST, and a
Pittsburgh plays In St. Louis, Los
May 23, a month and a haU into the
capacity crowd of 52,392 is expected
Angeles is at Houston and San Franseason, unless owners and players
at Riverfront Stadium.
cisco is at San Diego. The American
can agree to a new basic agreement.
League has Baltimore at Chicago,
The other W~y opener bas
The first game of the season pits
the Toronto Blue Jays, bueball's
Boston at Milwaukee, New York at
Atlanta, which finished last in the
worst team last 'season with 109 Texas, Detroit at Kansas City and
National League West with a 66-94 . losses, at Seattle under the Minnesota at Oakland.
record last season, against the Reds, Kingdome at 10:35 p.m. A pair of
Friday, the remalnln~ four teams

open their seasons. in the AL,
Cleveland is at Calif &gt;rnia, _ and
Philadelphia hosts Montreal In the
NL
I

Alexander outlasts Eastern
ByScoUWoUe
ALBANY - The Alexander Spartans came from behind, then
outlasted the young Eastern Eagles,
1~14, Monday night in a non-league
contest that WBll shortened to six innings due to darkness. Alexander is
now 1~ overall while Eastern drops
to 0-3.
In the top of the first, Coach Ralph
Wigal's Eastern Eagles rallied for
seven runs, before winning pitcher
Steve Samms cooled off the Eagle
bats. Eastern collected five of their
nine hits during that opening round
including two key doubles by Mike
Bissell and Greg Wigal.
During the bottom half of the inning the Spartans hinted that the
game was going to be a high scoririg
affair by racking up four runs of
their own. After the Eagles scored
two in the top of the second, the
Spartans came back to pound out
four hits and plated seven runs to
knock starting pitcher Brian Bissell
out of the box and take the lead, 11-9,
a lead they didn't relinquish.
Coach Joe Fargo's Spartans consistently scored the final innings to
add to their lead, but the Eagles
gallantly tried to come back in the
fifth. The visitors produced a serious
threat that Inning to score three runs
and knock Satnm, out of the box.

Luckett was called upon to cool off
the Eagles' bats. He came in to kill
the Eagle rally In the fifth, then held
Qlem to just one in.the sixth to ice the
victory.
Inexperience on the mound WBll a
key factor at five different Eagle
hurlers saw action. They combined
for 10 walkll and three strike outs.
Alexander's Samms and Luckett
combined for five KO's while giving
up seven walks.
Eastern conunlUed eight miscues
.while the Spartans had six errors.
Eastern's potent offensive attack
was led by sophomore mike Bissell
who had two doubles and two
singles, Gary Griggs two singles,
Greg Wigal a double, and Roger
GaUl and steve Chrisman each a
single.
The Spartans were led by Jordon
with a double and three singles,
Lemaster a double, Lucken two
doubles, Burton a double, and Samand Crossen each a single. •
Alexander hosts Trimble Wednesday, while Eastern hosts Southwestern Wednesday, then travels to
Warren Thursday.

Miller Mooday nigtt wu ~ to a )4ter
date due to the fact Miller 1 but got 1o1t on the
way to the game and Uley didn't arrive unUI one
hour put game time.

Miller remains pessimistic
'

NEW YORK (AP) - Marvin

Miller hasn't been optimistic so
far over the baseball contract
talkll.
"We haven't discussed
anything substantive since I don't
know when," says the executive
director of the 'Major League
Players Association.
Miller hoped things would he
better today when he met with
club owners negotiators and a
federal mediator In the talks over
a new basic agreement.
They hope to avert a general
players' strike setfor May 23.
" The mediator is still.in the picture," said Miller about Kermeth
MoffeU, who joined the talks two
sessions ago in Palm Springs,
·Calif. "These meetings are under
the auspices of the Federal
Mediation Service. Last week,
both parties (owners and
players) agreed to more
meetings - and that's where we

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7 2 0 I 3 1-lf 9 8
Alei:ander
4· 7 f 2 2 x-19 10 6
B. Bissell (lp), Chrisman (2), RUehle 131,

Wells !fl. Smltb !IJ and Olri.sman. w..eu.
Sanun; ( wp), Luckett (l),and J..-.
RAcrNE - The game between Soathem and

stand.''

Talks were recessed last Thursday when negotiators agreed to
a timetable for seven more
meetings over the next three
weeks. The first two of the
meetings were scheduled for
today and Thursday.
The players and owners still
present hard-line positions on

DePaul assistant
feels he's burnt
COVINGTON, Ky. (AP)- DePaul
recruiters thought Dicky Beal,
Holmes High School's sensational
point guard, waa finnly in their
camp, all set to sign a national tender today.
Beal gave them a verbal commilment in January, but last week
decided on Kentucky instead.
DePaul assistant coach Joe Molinari
fee\1; he's been burned.
"It really disappoints me and
makes me queasy to think about it,"
Molinari said. "I think Kentucky
recruited the dad. I feel his dad was
unfair in this situation. He completely closed us down.
" This whole thing really opened
my eyes to big-time recruiting."
Beal averaged about 25 points a
game for Holmes, and Molinari said
the DePaul staff considered Beal the
best high school point guard in the
country.
But DePaul never was able to win
over Dicky's dad, Richard Beal, and
Molinari discovered too late how ifn.
portant that would be.
"Dicky told me aU the time his dad
liked Kentucky," Molinari said.
"From the moment Dickey committed to us in January , I knew Mr.
Beal would never be in our corner.
"There was a story in the Chicago
Tribune a couple t:t weeks later that
said Mr. Beal was very upset. It said
he thought we recruited around him.
"When I saw him the next time, I
apologized to him. But he told me it

was too late. I know right then we
would never win him over to
DePaul."
Molinari spent a lot of time with
Beal this season. He saw about 20 of
Holmes' games and so many practices that. "I feel I know everybody
in Covington," he said.
.
"I had to be there, because there
were other recruiters still around,"
Molinari said. He learned of the
change to Kentucky only Friday.
"Joey (assistant coach Joey
Meyer, son .ol DePaul CQIIch Ray
Meyer) talked to Dicky last
Tuesday, and he said his decision
was the same, that he would still attend DePaul," Molinari said. "Then,
I rode the plane with him and
(Holmes) C4lllch (Reynolds) Flynn"
on Friday to that aU-star game in
Atlanta. Dicky sai4 his decision was
the same, but he said his dad likes
Kentucky.
"When we got to Atlanta, some
re&lt;;ruiters told me Kentucky had
stopped recruiting (guards) Dennis
Johnson and Ricky Norton. They
said, 'You better .watCh out. Kentucky's dropped off Johnson and
Norton, and tbey're hot on Beal.'
"Then.Dicky told me he was going
to Kentucky. After I picked myself
up, I said, 'Dicky, why don't you do
thia; why don't you let us Villi! you
and your father like we had planned
to do.
"Dicky said, 'No, I'm not going to
change my mind."'

Natioul Hodey Laine

Pilyolfo
AtAGtabce
By 'lbe Auodoled Preq
P,.llmlDaryftoud

BnttfFive
NOTE : The dates and times o( the third and
fourth games of the Bostoo-Pittaburgh sertes will
be announced.
Tactday'• Gama
Pitt.burgh at Boston
Edmontm at Philildelph.l.a
Vancouveral Buffalo
Hartford at Montreal

l..ai Ans:~les at New Yort Islanders
Toronto at Minnesota
·
St. Louis at Chicago
Atlanta at NewYori Rangers
WednrsdaJ 'I Gamet

AUanta at New Yort Rangers
Edmonton at Philadelphia
Vancouver at Buffalo

Hartfonlst Montreal
lAs Angeles at New York lslanders

TGrooto at Minnesota
St. Louis at Chicago

nanday'l Game
Pitt.burgh atlloitoo
Fricl.ly's Gamca
Montreal at Hartford
Minnesota at Toronto
New York Rangers at AUanla

Chlcago at St. LouU

Philadelphia al.Edmonlor)
Buffalo at Vancouver
New York lalandersatLoe Angeles
Saturday'• G.mes

Bostoo at Pittsburgh

UNet'elauy

Montreal at Hartford

Minnesota at Toronto
New York RangersatAUanta
Chicago at St. Louis
Philadelphia atEdmootoo
Buffalo at Vancouver
New Ylrl: Islander.~ at Los Angeles
Swoday,AprllU

Boeton at Pitt.burgh

Molllbly, Apr11ll
Pitt. burgh at Boston
Edmonton at Philadelphia

Vancouver at Buffalo
Hartford at Montreal
Uls Angele.s at New York Islanders
T[)l'"()flto at Minnesota
St. Louis at Chicago
Atlanta at New V•rk Ranger!

.
they are.
On the field, the main concern
could he whether cancellation of 92
··exhibition games has allowed
players to get fat and lazy.
" If guys can take three or four
days off and still perform, that's up
to them, " said Boston Red Sox
Manager Don Zimmer. Zinuner will
start right-hander Dennis Eckersley, 17-10 last · season, against'
Milwaukee on opening day. Because
of the strike, Eckersley threw Only
18 innings In four appearances In
spring training.
"My legs are in good shape, my
arm is OK, but my mind is not on top
of the game," Eckersley said. "One
game, though, can take care of the
mind."
•

New look Braves
ready for opener
CINCINNATI (AP) - Atlanta
Braves Manager Bob Cox is rarin' to
unveil his new baUclub Wednesday
in the traditional major league
baseball season opener in Cinci!Ulati
against the Reds.
The Braves, a hopeless last-place
team a year ago, may be the dark
horse of the National League West,
according to Cox.
"Our ballcluo is 100 percent
ready, " Cox said. The Braves
arrived in Cincinnati Monday night
and planned a workout today in
Riverfront Stadium. "We were in
(spring training) camp Feb. 19;
that's real early. We were down
there a long time, and we're ready lo
go.''

· Cox said cancelling the last week
of exhibition games because of a
strike by the Players Association
"may have.hurt us some.''

"But it's given some guys like
Gary Matthews, who was injured, a
chance to hit a lot. He must have had
40 at bats in a game-type situation
the last few days.
The Braves hear little resemblance to last year's Atlanta team.
. Two frontline players - first
baseman Chris Chamblis and shortstop Luis Gomez - were acquired
in a trade with Toronto, and relief
pitcher AI Hrabosky was signed as a ·
free agent.
The club also obtained catcher'Bil
Nahorodny, pitcher Doyle Alexander and infielder Larvell Blanks.
"We're almost a completely dif-

Pro standings

Blue Devil rally tops W M:aina
LAKIN, W. Va. - Wildness, an
outfield error and a sacrafice fiy off
the bat of Kenny llrDwn with one out
opened the floodglies for a four-run
seventh inning ~ch enabled the
Academy Blue Devils to post a
come-from-behind, 4-2 victory over
the Wahaina Falcons at Lakin State
Hll!lpital Field Monday. _
Mter spotting Wahama a pair of
unearned runs through the first two
innings, the Blue Devils chased
Wahama starting pitcher Weaver by
drawing four walks and putting six
straight runners on base.
Tony Weiher started the rally by
beating out an i!6ld hit. Weiher
came home after~ Saxton drew a.
bases-loa"ded walk. Crai¥ MUon,
who drew the ftrst ol Weaver's four
seventh-inning walks, tallied the
second run after Ken caudill goc
aboard on a free pass.
Paul Duncan, who reached base
on an outfield error to load the
bases, came home after Phil King
walked while Saxton scored on

several issues, Including the
highly controversial area of free
agent compensation.
Management, represented by
the · Major League Player
Relations CommiUee, wants a
player rather than a draft choice
as . compensation for a team
which loses a player as a free
agent. Players have resisted the
proposal, saying it would restrict
their movement from one learn to
another and reduce the value of
the free agent marketplace.
After weeks of bitter
disagreements, the players
association on April 1 struck the
remaining 92 exhibition games.
The association decided that the
players would begin the season
on schedule Wednesday, but set a
midnight deadline on May 22 to
negotiate a new agreement. If
that agreement is not reached,
then a strike would begin with
games of May 23, the players
association said.
Miller and attorney Don Fehr
bave been representing the
players, while the management
side bas includf:d Ray Grebey of
the Player Relations Committee
and league presidents Lee Mac-.
Phail of the American League
and Chub Feeney of the N~;~tional.

Parties to the negotiations
resumed.talks today with the help of
a federal mediator. The Major
League Players Association has set
midnight, May 22 as a deadlin~ for
reaching agreement. If there IS no
new contract, the players will walk
·out the next day.
"We don't want to strike, and we
don't feel there wiU be one," said
Reds. third baseman Ray Knight, the
team's player representative.
"They set a series of negotiations
meetings, and we feel they're going
to getlogether."
.
.
Off the field, the hottest ISSue IS
compensation for free agents.
Owners want a player instead of a
draft choice in return for a free
agent. Players like things the way

DONKEY BASKETBALL
A donkey basketbaU game will be
held at Eastern High School Friday,
Aprilll, at 7:30p.m. Tickets at the
door are J2. Children will be admitted free. The event is being sponsored by the B.O.E. class.

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ferent baUclub; aU the front office
people feel we're much better," CoJt
said. "We have a 1;ood chance of
winning; to a man, our entire
baUclub thinks so."
Cox notes that the Reds won the
Western Division championship last
se8Son by winning only 90 games. He
sees even more balance in the
division this year, and he predicts
the Braves will he a factor in the
race.
.
"I just have to think it's wide
open," Cox said. ''I won't pick

anybody right now. I still .think it's
up for grabs.
"If you had to pick a dark horse,
though, I think you'd have to pick
our ballclub. We're that much bet-

ter."
Atlanta's starting pitcher Wednesday will be Phil Niekro. He'll
face Cincinnati's Tom Seaver.
The Reds, in contrast to the deals
made by Atlanta, have acquired
nobody who wasn't with the club by
the end of last season. Charlie
Liebrandt, a young lefthanded pitcher, and Sam Mejias, a defensive
specialist in the ouUield, spent most
of last season with the Reds' top
farm club but were promoted late In
the season.
Cincinnati Manager John McNamara, a soft-spoken man who
Isn't prone to reveal too much about
his ballclub, nevertheless expects
the Reds to prove wrong those who
predict a third-place finish for his
club. •
"We showed they were wrong a
year ago when they expected us to
finish third, " McNamara said. "I
don't see any reason why we can't do
the same this year.
"On paper, it would appear as if
the Los Angeles Dodgers and the
Houston Astros have helped themselves. But games are won on the
field, not on paper."

cw

....Wa:
_

will start his 13th full season behind

the plate for the Reds.
He fully intends this season to
equal Bill Dickey's major league
record of 13 seasons of catching 100
games or more,
.Something former 'ouUielder Lenny Green of the Detroit Tigers told
Bench 15 years ago has stuck with
him.
"Remember there are three
things you are going to have to do
and all of them in moderation:
women, drinking and rest," Green
told Bench.
"I always got my sleep," Bench
said. "He (Green) WBll right. I may
have gone longer than I should have
a few times and I probably enjoyed
the female gender my share or
more.' '
In the beginning of his career,
Bench became the sort of "Joe
Namath of Basebatr,' the ideal
baseball bachelor.

Brown's sacrafice to right field off
frames - via errors against Bob
Wahama reliever Dujan.
Foster and Weiher with two outs.
Greg Eutsler, in bil fln&amp;t..startlng
The Blue Devils hll!lt Wellston
rol~ allowed ooly twQ wllllliDa hits · today and Minford Wednesday
aild a pair ol walla! In five ittnings
before traveling to Waverly Friday.
ol ltork befC!"! Brown relieved for
Wellston is also 1~ in the
the decision.
Southeastern Ohio Athletic League
Brown fanned five and walked one
after downing Athens 6-21ast week.
in his two-inning stint in raising his
record to~.
1
In taking the Joss, Wahama's first ~~~·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~·~~
of the season after three wins,
SHOP
Weaver struck out seven and gave
up three safeties in 6 213 innings of
work.
King again reached base on all
FOR THE BEST DIIALS IN THE
three trips to the pWe, on a Falcon
TRISTATE AREA
~•.• walk and a ~~Qg~e to center.
ti.liler and Breiipl alloWted just
one Waharna'ljasel'llllller~ the
last five innings to preaer.ie the Blue
Mon., Tues., Well., Friday &amp; Sat.
Devils' second straight pitching per8:30 to 5:00 Thursilav till12 Noon
fonnance without allowing an earOPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT ONL
ned run. GAHS blanked Logan :Hl
)
Herman Gra re
- ·Jut ThursdaY in the season opener.
Wahama plated both its runs Mason, W . Va.
773-5592 .
one each during the first and second

(/)

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Future doesn't worry Bench
TAMPA, Fla . (AP) - He doesn't
worry about it, but Cinci!Ulati Reds
catcher Johnny Bench keeps reminding himseU that there is life after
baseball which he may have to consider in the near future.
At 32, the perennial all-star can
cite the toll he has taken from
playing about 16,000 innings in the
major leagues, most behind home
plate with about six pounds of equipment strapped to his body.
He's had shoulder surgery, a
broken right thumb, split right
thumb, broken left-hand pinkie, six
different breaks in his left foot and
countless fractured toenails.
Since 1969, he bas also had back
spasms so severe that as many as
four cortisone shots have been
necessary at times to quiet the pain.
"As the , years passed," Bench
said. "I think catching bas naturally
taken the days out of me and the
days of my career away from me.
But I'll never be sorry for it unless I
hurtmyseU."
Only time will tell how much catching will have hurt Bench.
"It's like taking drugs," Bench
said. "You won't know the effect of it
untillO years from now."
Bench has always been conscious
of the punishment to his body. He
takes care of it as much as he can,
which explains how Wednesday he

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publicized marriage and then an
equally publicized divorce have
changed Bench.
'
"These are the things that have
caused me~robably to mellow out
somewhat and to find out exactly
what I need," he said.
"I never anticipated making tbe
kind of money I'm making in my
wildest dreams. Now I know I can
live happily-&lt;iver-after.
"In the beginning, I was just en:.,
joy!ng, feasting - it felt like a
Roman orgy. It was day after day after day of food, travel, women,
whatever.
"Now I don't have to worry about
life after baseball. There are a lot of
things l can accomplish. Exactly
what, I don't know right now. Do I
want to take a business ca.reer• A
communications career? What line
of work do I want to get into that will
make me happiest?"

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15x 7. .. .. .. .... ... .. .. ... 526.95
15x8 ..................... '28.95
15x10 ................... !31.95
16.5x9% ..... ;...........'41.00

MASON FURNITURE
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• Our Reg .
8.97

J3!~7.88

Men's Trim-Looking
Twill Work Shirts

"&lt;;hips" Super

Neat navy work shirt with collar stays,
flap pockets. stress tacks. Easy·care
Celanese '" Fortrel'" " polyester/cotton
with Visa '" '" soil release finish .
Our Reg. 9.97 Olivewood Shirt, $6.48

Motortycle

All Bikes are
Partialllf Assembled
In Carton

Sturdy, polythene, pedal drive,
pol ice cycle detail includes
s i mulated windshield
and
emergency flashers.

16!~8.88

$5•0urReg.
6.97

17!~2.88

Sidewalk Trike
ForToddlels

Men's Chambray
Work Shirts

Men's Denim
Work Jeans

Polyester/cotton . 2
button pocke t s .
Blue. No ironing .

Polyester/cotton/
nylon . Need no
ironing. Save now.

)

Navy pants bar-tacked at stress points ,
durable brass zipper. In Celanese •
Fortrel '" " polyester/cotton with M illiken 's Visa "'" soil release finish.
Our Reg. 8.97 Olivewood Pants, $7
"" f'ortfwl t. •

streamers, decals.

Gallon
Our 9.66

\,lariable-speed , reversing drill with the
versatility ot w· drill.

General-purpose circular saw with 1 ' /3HP motor. combination blade. Save _

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Wall Paint

24~~s0nly
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A-o- Till

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.5 96
15~~ys0nly
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3fa" Drill

Our
Reg .
9.97

In Heavy-Duty Twill

With
brakes,
sturdy
outstanding polytehene
three wheeler with 16"
front wheel. Hand brakes ,

Our 21.97 13" Trike ......... .. ... : ....... ........ 19.97

$

Matching Work Pants

Men 's
Sizes

''Oiips'' Super
Hottyde

10" tr i ke with chromeplated fenders. Shiny red;
whitetr i m .
·

Our REg .
10.68

12~~97
12~~97
Western Style
Shirt Style

Beauty tor walls and
woodwork . One coat
covers s imilar colors. In
white and c o lors . 5vear durabilitv.
• Our Reg. 10.66 Satin ,
Sheen Interior Latex
Enamel . ... Gal. 6.96

Denim Jackets

Western Jackets

Cotton den i m .
snap poc k ets ,
stitching_ Save .

Cotton den i m .
snap c l osu r es .
stitching. Save.

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Our Reg. 4.27
5-Pc. Screwdriver Set, 2.97

88
Fi• lllck &amp; Decker®Sander

5~u~Reg.
Hip-roof Metal Tool Box

Lightweight, easy-to-'usEffinishing sander delivers 10,000-QPM output. Save.

Roomy 19x7't.x7" box features
tray and comfort-grip handle.

1 4 4 Days Only

5!a~Flat late• Ceiling Paint

Sturdy Wooden Toilet Seat

Non-glare finish. minimal splattering. While and colors.

W ith baked-enamel fin ish and
convenient top-mount hinge .

Our Reg . 9.66

8.33

~ft-out

13~~.48
Work Coveralls

4

47
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.• 10.68

With Zip Front

Cotton Drill
Painter Pants

Polyesierlcotton .
Ollvewoocl 13.88
Blue Denim 14.48

Sturdy pockets .
tool loops, zipper .
' Natural color.

' ... . ... ~ - . - . --

11~~.78
Men's Jump-suit

Cork-wedge Sandals
Women 's leather-look tan sa n. dais are intricately woven for interest . Natural-color crepe sole ,
padded insole, gilt buckle. Save.

With Pockets
Front closure . polyester/cotton. Color
choice. No iron.

-.... - .. . ·- - .. --·. -- -- ----..-- . - -- . ---. -- -. .•'·

SAVE 4.06
Our Reg . 9.97
Pair

..... ~,;

E!
Our Reg . 3.97
Pair

Casual Slingbacks
Snappy sandals of polyurethane
with padded vinyl insole and vinyl
wrap on wedge . ~ o mpo sition
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59!~9,97
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Bike ..

(\
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Boys '
touring
handlebars and saddle.
Reflect ive pedals.

• Our Reg .
8.97

J3!~7.88

Men's Trim-Looking
Twill Work Shirts

"&lt;;hips" Super

Neat navy work shirt with collar stays,
flap pockets. stress tacks. Easy·care
Celanese '" Fortrel'" " polyester/cotton
with Visa '" '" soil release finish .
Our Reg. 9.97 Olivewood Shirt, $6.48

Motortycle

All Bikes are
Partialllf Assembled
In Carton

Sturdy, polythene, pedal drive,
pol ice cycle detail includes
s i mulated windshield
and
emergency flashers.

16!~8.88

$5•0urReg.
6.97

17!~2.88

Sidewalk Trike
ForToddlels

Men's Chambray
Work Shirts

Men's Denim
Work Jeans

Polyester/cotton . 2
button pocke t s .
Blue. No ironing .

Polyester/cotton/
nylon . Need no
ironing. Save now.

)

Navy pants bar-tacked at stress points ,
durable brass zipper. In Celanese •
Fortrel '" " polyester/cotton with M illiken 's Visa "'" soil release finish.
Our Reg. 8.97 Olivewood Pants, $7
"" f'ortfwl t. •

streamers, decals.

Gallon
Our 9.66

\,lariable-speed , reversing drill with the
versatility ot w· drill.

General-purpose circular saw with 1 ' /3HP motor. combination blade. Save _

Decker~

~

Fho"

~lriH. s~lw)'

el'

.

Flat Latex
Wall Paint

24~~s0nly
Black &amp; Deckeroo 7Y•" Saw

A-o- Till

""'-·
•'' Aitt· Tli -MIIIIIcen • ltd Co.

.5 96
15~~ys0nly
Black &amp;
3fa" Drill

Our
Reg .
9.97

In Heavy-Duty Twill

With
brakes,
sturdy
outstanding polytehene
three wheeler with 16"
front wheel. Hand brakes ,

Our 21.97 13" Trike ......... .. ... : ....... ........ 19.97

$

Matching Work Pants

Men 's
Sizes

''Oiips'' Super
Hottyde

10" tr i ke with chromeplated fenders. Shiny red;
whitetr i m .
·

Our REg .
10.68

12~~97
12~~97
Western Style
Shirt Style

Beauty tor walls and
woodwork . One coat
covers s imilar colors. In
white and c o lors . 5vear durabilitv.
• Our Reg. 10.66 Satin ,
Sheen Interior Latex
Enamel . ... Gal. 6.96

Denim Jackets

Western Jackets

Cotton den i m .
snap poc k ets ,
stitching_ Save .

Cotton den i m .
snap c l osu r es .
stitching. Save.

\)
f

\

\\

\

91

Our Reg. 4.27
5-Pc. Screwdriver Set, 2.97

88
Fi• lllck &amp; Decker®Sander

5~u~Reg.
Hip-roof Metal Tool Box

Lightweight, easy-to-'usEffinishing sander delivers 10,000-QPM output. Save.

Roomy 19x7't.x7" box features
tray and comfort-grip handle.

1 4 4 Days Only

5!a~Flat late• Ceiling Paint

Sturdy Wooden Toilet Seat

Non-glare finish. minimal splattering. While and colors.

W ith baked-enamel fin ish and
convenient top-mount hinge .

Our Reg . 9.66

8.33

~ft-out

13~~.48
Work Coveralls

4

47
4 Days Only

._ ""'"' • • • " • ~ t • • • • • "' • • • • • • • "" ~ • '• • • " • • • •

" C. L i. I. •• ._ •-

o .t. ..

-...:-a • ..t

L.t. .._..,.

•

$7ourREg .
.• 10.68

With Zip Front

Cotton Drill
Painter Pants

Polyesierlcotton .
Ollvewoocl 13.88
Blue Denim 14.48

Sturdy pockets .
tool loops, zipper .
' Natural color.

' ... . ... ~ - . - . --

11~~.78
Men's Jump-suit

Cork-wedge Sandals
Women 's leather-look tan sa n. dais are intricately woven for interest . Natural-color crepe sole ,
padded insole, gilt buckle. Save.

With Pockets
Front closure . polyester/cotton. Color
choice. No iron.

-.... - .. . ·- - .. --·. -- -- ----..-- . - -- . ---. -- -. .•'·

SAVE 4.06
Our Reg . 9.97
Pair

..... ~,;

E!
Our Reg . 3.97
Pair

Casual Slingbacks
Snappy sandals of polyurethane
with padded vinyl insole and vinyl
wrap on wedge . ~ o mpo sition
outsole. Women's sizes. Save .

. I

�9- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport·Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, April 8, 1980.
FINANCIAL

......

G

For Fiscal Year
EndJn3g December
. 11, 1979 .
Oh"W.e townshtp
Me~gs County .
long Bottom, Ohto
March 29, 1980

r:J·

Ada Btssetl
No.
614
SUMMARY OF ' 3544
,
CASH BALANCES
' ...
RECEIPTSAND '
':: ;
EXPENDITURES
... ~
Balance
· •..,
Jan. 1, 1979
' "' General Fund
s n 67 50

:: •Motor Vehicle

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Receipts

't~:;;,

5,817 .00
Total Receipts
5,81 7.00
Total Beginning
Balance Plu s
Rece_ipts
6,3.48.95
Expenditurts
Main!. and

Operation
STupplies

B~lal6 xp .31

6,889 .38
6,889.38

19·7•9 ec. • .
- 5..0.43
Open ea?perattan
E x penseS
1.32
Balance
163 .00
- 161.28
.f) 8, ltc
. llepdoErl of Receipts
an
xpenditures
Villa9e of Racine
Meogs County
For Fiscal Year
Ending -December
, llst, lt79
526 51h st.,
Racine, Ohio
45771
March 30,1980
Mae Cleland
VIllage Clerk·
•. •
Treasurer
949-2121
Population 583
1970 Federal Census
Cash
Reconciliation
ToBial Fund
a 1ances, Dec. 31.
1979
$23,668.86

D"f.'i'~~~e~;

Total Depository
23,67.36
·Balances
23,668.30
Investments :
Certificates of
Deposit
J,OOO.OO
Other Investments
·
(Including
Savings)
2,003 .83
Total
Investments
5,003.83
T 0 t 1c h o
H~ndas
n
Total Treasury
28,671 63
Balance
28 ,672 _13
Outstanding Checks
Dec. 31,1979
Mo~or Veh~cle
T~t~t~~~~nce. Dec . 30.00
LFocense ax
0
31. 1979
28,&amp;11 13
'
un.d
1 ,064.28
n'I .
•"' Gasolme Tax
ut::post ones
~ Fund
.
14,133.23 Racine Home National
.-, Road and Brodge
Bank, Racine, Oh io
·~ • Fund
3,528.52
SUMMARY
• ) Cemetery Fund
3,248.42
DF FUND
~ Federa_l Revenue
TRANSACTIONS
Sh
F d
6 889 38
Balance
•
. arong ~n
• ·
Jan. 1, 1979
Anto ·Recessoon
163.00 General Fund
3,082 . 12
Totals
55, 130.~ Water works
Balance
Fund
13 ,338 .04
•
Dec. 31,1979
Street Cons!. M
k~~7~~t.fnY~~~
4,960.23
and R Fund
OD 283.57
•'
License Tax
State Highway Imp.
F d
I 375 13
Fund
2,761.73
' un
'
.
Cemetery Fund . 618.01
Gasoline Tax
F d
R
• Fund'
. - 1,41"1.28 .
e era 1 evenue
1•128 ·00
. , Road and Bridge
Sharing
• •• Fund
-436.07 · AnFtui Rndecession
13 ·65
• , •Cemetery Fund
- 545.07 Fire
5·209· 29
• Federal Revenue
-540 . ~
Receipts• • Sharing Fund
Anti · Recession
- 161 .68 General FRu~':lenue 27 ,394 09
Totals
3,152.83 Water Works
CASH BALANCE,
Fund
;:
ERXEPCEENIPDTITSUARNEDS
StreetConst. M
21,877.36
and R Fund
7,825.59
By FUND
Slate Highway 1mp.
General Fund
Fund
715 _95
Balance., Jan . 1,
Cemetery Fund
983.00
: 1979
7,767 .50 Federal Grant
~
Receipts
Funds
· ~ General Property
,n, 700 ·00
•" ~ Tax- Real Estate
Federal Revenue
: .- and Trailer
Sharing
2,229.00
3•215 ·29
• &lt;Gross)
~.325.05 Fire
• Tangible Personal
Non·Revenue
· : •; Property Tax
· . &gt;,.I Gross)
50.37 Cemetery Fund
28i.so
· ....&lt;t:atate Tax
Total Receipts
&lt;Gross)
948 .17 General Fund
30,476.21
·
Water Works
Local Government
and State Income
• Fund
35,215 . ..0
' Tax
4,..01 .00 Street Cons! . M
Cigarette License
. and R Fund
7,S.C2.02
Fees and Fines
Stale Highway Imp.
56 .25
Fund
3,205.48
( Gross&gt;
Adjustments and
Cemetery Fund
1,882.51
, · Refunds
-484 ..50 Federal Grant
14.296.33
Funds
29,700.00
• · Total Receipts
· Tota l Beginning
Federal Revenue
· • · . Balance Plus
Sharing
3,3.57.00
•
Receipts
22,063 .83 Anti Recession
: . ·
Expenditures
Fund
13.65
. ;rota I Exp. - .
Fire
8,424.58
, I ,• Adminoslrative
Grand Total
119,816.91
.'• '
14,532.59
Total
' • ' Town Halls, Memorial
Disbursement$
Bui!dings and
General Fund
27.075.00
Grounds
673.79 Water Works
, · Fire Protection
302 .63
Fund
21,085.45
Lighting
2.195.59 Street Const. M
Grand Total Exp.and R. Fund
8,910,93
General Fund
17,703.60 cemetery Fund
1,481.60
Motor Vehicle Feder~ I Grant
.
License Tax
Funds
29,700 00
·
Fund
Federal Revenue
Sharing
2,219.00
· llal .• Jan. I,
. ·• ' 1979
71"1 .06 Fire
5,677.07
Receipts
Grand Total
96,149.05
. • •'
' Motor Vehicle License
Personal Service
Tax
9,972 .26 General Fund
4,676.00
other
668.09 Water Works
Total Receipts
10,6-40 .35
Fund
4,246.00
;Total Beginning
cemetery Fund
1.073.05
, ,Balance Plus
Operation and
• .Receipts
11 ,439.41
Maintenance
Expenditures
General Fund
22,31"1.00
,•
Total Exp. Water Works
Miscellaneous
Fund
14,327.10
10,227.28 Street cons!. M
rand Total Exp.
and R Fund
3,971.09
- Motor Vehicle
Cemetery Fund
116.67
~ ' .License Tax
Federal Revenue
, .Fund
10,227.28
Sharing
31"1 .00
i'~ • Gasoline Ta• Fund
Fire
5,677.07
Bal. , Jan . 1,
Capilat
- 1,766.05
. ,.. 1979
Improvements
Receipts
Water Works
• Gasoline Tax
14.400.00
Fund
2,512.35
Total Receipts
14,400.00 Street Cons!. M
Total Beginning Bal.
and R Fund
4,939.84
; , Plus Receipts
12,633.95 Cemetery Fund
291 .88
' "-r"
Expenditures
Federal Grant
't~al Exp . Funds
29,700.00
Misc.
2.653.02 Federal Re\lenue
_ Main!.
11,480.21
Sharing
1,400.00
.qrand Total Exp. Interest
' ~ Gasoline Tax
Federal Revenue
· Fund
u, 133.23 · · Sharing
420.00
..Bal., Dec . 31,
Balance
• 1979
1,41'9.28
Dec. 31, 1979
,
Road and Bridge
General Fund
3,..01.21
Fund
Water Works
, ai .LJan. 1,
Fund
14,129.95
• 1919
- 163 .59 Street Const. M
,
Receipts
and R Fund OD 1,368.41
G~heral Property
Slate Highway 1mp .
Tax- Real Estate
Fund
3,205.48
• and Trailer
400.91
Cemetery Fund
·~&lt;Gross&gt;
3,220.77 Federal Revenue
,_,_
1'11!1!lible Personal
Sharing
1, 138.w
Property Tax
.
Anti Rece!sion
35 27
(Gross)
Fund
13.65
Total Receipts
3,256.04 Fire ·.
2,747 .~1
Total Beginning Bal.
Grand Total
23,667.86
Plus Receipts
3,092.45
MUNICIPAL
Expenditures
RECEIPTS
Tot~l Exp. BY SOURCE
3,52 8.52
MISC.
Revenue
Grand Total Exp .
Properly Ta•es
·
- Road and Bridge
RE and PU Property
Fund
3,528.52
Tax
9,263 .00
Personal
B%79Dec. 31'
- 436.07 Tangible
Property Tax
837.37
Cemetery Fund
Intangible (Classified)
Bai.L Jan. 1,
Tax
2,386.45
19!9
- 1,337.25 Total Property T'axes
Receipts
(Gross)
12,487.52
General Property Tax
Slate-Levied LocallY
- Real Estate and
Shared Taxes
Trailer
Local Govt. Fund,
(Gross)
·
3,.570.23
Sales Tax
2,605 .56
Tangible Personal
Estate and Inheritance
Property Tax
Tax
1,226.06
50.37 Clgarelte
&lt;Gross&gt;
220.00
Sale of Lots
Licenses
131 .24
4.040.60 Intergovernmental Aid,
Total Receipts
Grants and Contracts
Total Beginning
Federal Revenue
Balance Plus
receipts
2,703.35
Sharing
2,229.00
1
Expenditures
Fire Contracts
1,360.00
Salaries
2,548.00 Charges For Public
Supplies
16.«&gt; Services
Other Expenses
138.95 General Govt.
Total Exp.
2,703.35
1,103.12
Fees
Waterworks .and
Bai .L Dec. 31,
1919
2,703.35
21,877.36
supply
1,26-4.00
Cemetery
Total Exp. Plus
29,700.00
Other
M~· Dec. 31'
- 545.07 Olhel'"
2,010.45
Flnes Costs and
Feder11 Revenue
Forfe1tun~s
Sharing Fund
Co~rt Fines and
Bal ., Jan. 1,

;

..
..

·

;G Fund
71"1.06
• asollne Tax
, Fund
- 1 766 5
&lt;Road and Bridge
'
• Fund
- 163 59
'&lt;emelery Fund - 1 337' 25
Federal Revenue
'
·
Sharing Fund
531 95
Anti -Recession
1·32
5 832 9
Totals
Total Receipts
·
General Fund
1~ 296 33
Motor Vehicle
'
·
License Tax
Fund
10,6-40.35
Gasoline Tax
•'a
Fund
14,400.00
· '"-' Roaa ano ~r.oge
· ::
Fund
3 2S6 05
... Cemetery Fund
4;o..o:60
: . Feder~l Revenue
, ..
Sharong Fund
5.817 .00
... Totals
. 52,450.32
·::
Toi;~Receopls
:• Genera,1:un~lance22s 063 83
' •
·
'
·
: : Mo~or Vehicle
L1cense Tax
· '""
, .. G Funl.d T
11,439.41.
· . ... aso •ne ax
F nd
12 633 95
::.. Rca~ and Bridge
'
·
•e l;emeterkFund
Fund
3.092 .45
2 703 35
·'
'
·
, ,. Federal evenue
•, • S~arlng F~nd
6,348.95
. Anlo ·Recessoon
1.32
Totals
.
58,283.26
'
Expendolures
General Fudn
17,103.60

k

...

531.95

1979

M~~~J 1?fs

Forfei tur es
4,371.00
SourceTotals Sum marl :
~{a~~['/vle~lf.~ au1;' 7' 00
Shared Taxes
3,962.86
Revenue Sharing 2,229.00
Charges For Public ..,
Ser\llces
21 ,977.36
Fines, Costs and
Forfeitures
4,371.00
Sewage
29,700.00
Non -Revenue
Char_ges For Publ ic
Ser_,ces
GarbageandRefu se
C9llection and
D•sposal
2,910.25
Other Re'Venue
Sale of AsseiS
300.00

Other Non -Revenue.

I rust and Agency

SoFuurcnedsTotals Summ3a, 1rl
78.10
:
Cemetery
1,2 4.00
Fire .
3,215.29
M and R
7,825.59
St . Hoghway
775 95
General
6,.572 .63
"
Tot•l Receipts
Property Taxes
RE and PU Property
Ta~
9,263 .70
Tangoble Personal
Prop.e rty Tax . . 837.37
Intangible (Ciass1f1ed)
ToTtax Pr
T 2,386 45
a 1 oper 1Y axes
Sla&lt;GterosLesvlled Local l1y2 . ~87 . 52
Shared Taxes
L~.:~~~~~tx Fund, 2,605 _56
Estate and Inheritance
Tax
1,22 6.06
Cigarette Licenses 131 .24
Total Shared
InTI ax~eos n
tal A3,,9d62.86
er ver men
1 ,
Gran sand Contrllcts
Federal Revenue
Sharing
2,229.00
Fire Contracts
1 360 00
• ·
T~~~ l,ntergovernm~~ttJ 00
1
Cha rg-es For Public '
·
.
Servoces
General Govt.
Tax
1,103.12
Garbage and Refuse
Collection and
Disposal
2,910 .25
waterworks and
Supply
21,877.36
Cemetery
1,264.00
Other
29,700.00
Other
2,010 .45
Total Public Service
Charges
58,865 .18
Fines, Costs and
Forfeitures
Court Fines and
Forfeitures
4,371.00
Total Fines, Costs
and Forfeitures 4,371 oo
Other Revenue
Sale of Assets
300.00
Total Other
O!Rhee~~no"neRevenue 300 .00
Trust and Agency
Funds
3,178.10
Total Other
Non· Revenue
3,178.10
Source Totals Summary :
Property Taxes
12,487.00
Stale-Levied Locallv
Shared Taxes
3,962.86
Revenue Sharing 2,229.00
Cemetery
1,264.00
Charges For Public
Services
21.877.36
Fines. Costs and
4,371 .00
Forfeitures
Sewage
29,700.00
Fire
3,215.29
M and R
7,825.59
st. Highway
775.95
General
6,572.63
Grand Total
Municipal
Receipts
94,281.28
MUNICIPAL
DISBURSEMENTS
BY PROGRAM
Personal Services
Security of Persons
and Property
Police Law
Enforcement
2,100.00
Public Health and
Welfare services
CemeterY.
1,073.05
Basic Ulolity
Services
Electroc
Utility
3.983.59
Gas Works
1,630.38
Water Works and
Supply
3,600.00
Totals
9,213.97
General Government
Mayor' s Office
150.00
Finance Adm.
350.00
Legislative
576.00
Program· Totals Sum mary:
Public Health and
Welfare Services 1,073.05
Basic Utility
Services
9,213 .97
General Govt.
4,526.00
Other Operatton
and Main!.
Security of Persons
and Property
Police Law
Enforcement
90 .00
Public Health and
Welfare Services
CemeterY.
116.67
Basic Utility Services
Water Wor:ks and
Supply
I, 138.72
P.E.R .S.
1682.65)
Transportation
Off-Street
Parking
1,927.92
Program Totals Sum mary :
Public Health
and Welfare
Services
.116.67
Leisure Time
Activities
7.256.55
Basic Utility
Services
17,484.35
Transportation
1,927.92
General Govl .
22.S.C9.00
Capital
Improvements
Public Health and
Welfare Services
CemeterY.
291.88
Basic Ut1lity Services
Water Works and
Supply
3,512.35
Program Totals Sum mary :
Public Health and
Welfare Services 291 88
'.!'
Total
Disbursements
security of Persons
and Property
Police Law
Enforcement
2,190.00
Street Lighting
3,983.59
Totals
6,173.59
Public Health and
Welfare Services
Cemetery
1.481.60
Totals
1,481.60
Basic Utlllfy &gt;ervoces
Water Works and
Supply
21 ,084.35
Totals
26,698.32
Transportation
Off· Street
Par~lng
),927.92
General Government
Main.
3,600.00
Program Totals Sum ·
mary :
Security of Persons
and Property
6,173.59
Public Health and
Welfare
services
1,481 .60
Lelsute Time
Activities
7,256.55
Basic Utility
Services
26,698 .32
Transportation
1,927.92
General Govt.
27,075.00
Totals For All
j'
Programs
70,612 .98
BASIC UJTILITY
!
SCHEDULES
Water Fund
Bai .Jan . 1,
19/Y
13,338.04 ,
Receipts--From
Service
20,612 .75
Misc . Sales
1,014 .61
Taps, Permits and
Connections
2~ . 00
Total Receipts · 21,871 .36

I

E)CpenOifures
Per sona I Serv .
4,338.00
Operation and
M amt.
13,235.10
c arita ll mp .
3,512.35
Tofa Ex p.
21.085.45
Bal. , Dec. 31,
1979
14,129.95
Memoranda Data
Assessed Va luat iOn,
1979
1,228,345
Tax Lev y
43 M
Ra cine, Ohi o March 30,
1980
1 her eby cert if y the
f or egoing to be correc t.
Ma e Cleland
Vi ll age Cler k·
Treasurer
Date M arc h 30, 1980
&lt;~l8,1tc

ASTRO·GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

~Cfour

~'Blrt~
Aptlll, , ...
Tl'lll coming y11r you m1y form
IIVIrll new frlend1hlpa with
people wtth whom you'll anar1
niW lnttlruta. One In particular
could blouom Into 1 ~ry lovely
r~a11onelil~.

ARIII (Moroh 11•Aprtl II) Thll
Ia one of thote d1ya when you
could fetllolt In 1 crowd. 11'1 not
thlt I)IOple aren't plelllnt, lt'a
that you 're wr11t11ng with aome ~
thing thet needa to be chlngld .
Find out more or what Ilea ahead
for you In the year following your
birthday by nndlng for your
copy of Aatro-Greph Letter. Mall
$1 for each to Aatro-Graph, 80)1
48V, Radio City Station, N.Y.
10019. Be aura to epeclfy birth
date.
TAURUI

(April

20-May 20)

Heavy obligations not ot your
making could put a damper on
what otherwise should be a sue·
cesatul day. Try to get the culprit
to pitch In and help.
GEMINI (Mioy ZI·Juno 20) Oon'l
allow yourself to get caught up In
the •bickering of friends. If you
do, distress will quickly take the

place of your pleaaant mood
CANCER (Juno 11·July 22)
Make any excuse to beet a hasty
retreat If you find yourself face to
face with anyone who Is too
dictatorial . This person could
leave you thinking everything Is
your lault.

LEO (Ju11 23-Aug. 22) you could
easily get sidetracked today by
secondary Issues that would
thoroughly confuse you When in
doubt follow your heart. not
someone alae's logic.
VIRGO (Aut. D-Sopt. 22) Stand
up for your JUSt dues today II you
find

out

someone

has been

r8f'oullng things earmarked lor
you . Let the chlpa tall where they
may.
LIIRA (Sop1. D-Oct. 23) Keep
your aoctal encounters l lgnt and
frothy today Instead of delving
IntO heavy matters. A fun dlscuaslon could boll over Into a

Long Bottom Community Assn. meets
The Long Bottom Community
Association meeting was well attendedfor March. Mrs. Olive Weber,
Mrs. Hilda White , and Eber Riebel
were welcomed as new members by
Mrs. Leona Hensley.
Mrs. Hensley opened the meeting
with The Lord's Prayer, pledge to
the flag and Mrs. Mae McPeek gave
a reading from the 16th chapter of
St. Mark.
No progress was made on the
"Variety Show" project. Jenny
Newlun told the group that Riverview PTO had asked if the group
could use the curtains from the
school as new ones must be purchased. The group agreed that some
use in the future may be found for
them.
Mrs. Mae McPeek read the
minutes and gave her secretary's
report. Mrs. Ernestine Hayman,
treasurer, was absent, so her report
was di!Jpensed :with, although it was
noted that Mr. and Mrs. Paul An·
drews gave a donation. Thanks was
given.
Francis Andrew reported on
several issues of importance. Andrew reported that poll workers'
salaries had been increased from $35
to $45, and that he and several
people had placed on ·the Primary
Election Ballot a one-half mill levy
toward the Fire Department at
Reedsville taking the responsibllity
of covering the Long Bottom
District, therefore reducing home
owners' fire insurance premiums.
The one-half mill levy is greaUy
needed to improve conditions and
cover necessary expenditures for
utilities and maintenance, etc. Mrs.
Leona Hensley and Mrs. Mae McPeek brought with them and passed
out the "Vials of We," plastic containers placed in the refrigerator
and two stickers, one is placed on the
refrigerator door and one on your
front window or door stating that
· you have the "Vial of Life" in your
home. On the infonnation sheet inside the vial are names and numbers
of people in the household, doctors
and hospitals preferred, diseases,
medication being taken, allergies
and so forth . The "vial" is free to
anyone, so call Mrs. Leona Hensley
at 98S--331Xl, or the Pomeroy Senior
Citizens, or the Meigs County Health

serious debate.

ICORPIO (Oct. 114-Nov. 22)
Schedule your agenda to take
care of Important matters first
today. U they're left until laat,
dlarupttons could occur that
might prove very frustrating .

IAGmARIUI (Nav. D-Doc.l1)
Political ploys by pal• today
could place you In an awttward
position II you permit yourself to
be manipulated . St6&amp;1' cleer ot
their petty antk:a.
CAHICORN (-.12...,... It) A
lltuation you're InVOlved In could
work out to be materially fortunate today, but you must be
careful not to bout of your good
luck In front ot one no1 so
favored.
AQUARIUS ("-n. :10-Fob. It)
Vou're a very pleasant person to
be around today as long as others are In accord wtth your ldeaa.
However, when your vlewa are
challenged the opposite might
be true.
PISCES (Fob.IO-Morcll 20) This
could be a critical day where
your finances are concerned.
Budget your resources as aklllfully as a prudent banker would.
(NEWSPAPEA ENTEAPAISE ASSN I

· · - · · · · •oo ... _.. .. . ..... ~.
- ' o 0 0 o • o • o o o 0 - . of l ... I . r

2 ----,~n~M~e~m~o~r~ia
~m
=----

In Memory of our Parents,
George and Faye Logan.
Mom left us April 8, 1970,
Dad April26, 1979.
Sadly missed by your
Children,, Bernice, Dwight,
Helen, Avery, Avice and
Families .
3

Announcements

GUN SHOOT . Racine
Volunteer
Fire Dept .
Every Saturday. 6:30 p m
At their buildingin Bashan.
Factory choke guns only.
GUN SHOOT every Sunday
12 :00 Factory choke only .
Corn Hol low Gun Club.
Rutland. Proceeds donated
to Boy Scout Troop 249 .
1 PAY highest prices
possible for gold and silver
coins, r 1ngs, j.ewelry, etc .
Contact Ed Burkett Berber
Shop, Middleport .
GOLD , SILVER OR
FOREIGN COINS , OR '
ANY OTHER - GOLD OR
Sl LVER ITEMS. ALSO.
ANTIQUE
FURNITURE
OR OTHER ANTIQUE
ITEMS . WILL PAY TOP
DOLLAR . CHECK WITH
QSBY (OSSIE) MARTIN
BEFORE
SELL I NG .
PHONE 9'12 --6370 .• ALSO
DO APPRA ISING .
Picking up an Easy play
organ in your area .
Looking for a responsible
party to take over paymen ·
ts. Call credit manager
collect . 614-- 592 -5122 .

TOPS MEET
TOPS Pals exchanged gifts at the
recent meeting of the Rutland Mom·
ing TOPS (take off pounds sensibly)
OH1466. Members who had reached
their goal bid were given gifts and
"funny money" was handed out to
be used for an auction in May. Queen
for the week was Lynda Atkins with
Dodie Winebrenner as runner-up.
Officers' reports were given and
songs and poems were handed out to
be read by the gainers and the
turtles.

Department on how or where you
may pick up your vial. It just may
save your life.
Hostesses for the meeting were
Pearl Powell, Sue Hayman and
Nellie Andrew. Hostesses for the
next meeting will be Jenny NewlWl,
Oli ve Weber, Ml!rY Andrews.
Meeting time has also been changed
due to the Spring time changes
coming. The next meeting will be at
8 p.m. on April 3() at the Community
Building.
Francis Andrew and Pearl Powell
entertamed the group. A cake walk
was held and Jenny Newlun was the

Ohio Historical Societies and
Museums-to meet April19
Annual spring meeting of Region 8
of the Ohio Association of Historical
Societies and Museums will be held
Aprill9 in Gallipolis.
Election of a regional chainnan
for a three-year tenn is on the agen·
da for I :3() p.m. to succeed Charles
E. Blakeslee of Meigs County. The
business meeting will start at 1: 10
p.m. with co--chainnen presiding:
Biakeslee and Catherine Remleyshe a past president from Marietta.
The meeting will be held in St.
Peter's Episcopal Church, 541 S..
cond Ave., Gallipolis.
Registration and coffee will be at
9:3() a .m., and then there'll be a
walking tour of the historic water·
front from 10 to 12; included will be
Our House musewn, the Public
Square and fioodmarks; time capsule stone; sesquicentennial homes;
and walk past the 0. 0. Mcintyre
home.
After lunch, which will be served
by the Episcopal women, Maj.-Cen.
George E. Bush, president of the

host Gallia County Historical Society, will welcome the delegates to
Gallia County.
An item in the business meeting
will be two-minute report from each
organization (there are 16 organiza·
tlons in the 12 counties).
Reservations to the ~ luncheon
will be made on or before next Men·
day with Mary Allison, curator, Our
House, 434 First Ave., Gallipolis
45631.
The afternoon session will feature
Dan Davies on the Downtown
Historical Restoration of Galllpolis,
and Errunett Conway on Indian
Trails of Gallia County and the
Reg1on .
Adjoununent is scheduled for 2:50
p.m. Those who wish may go on a
guided driving tour to Fortification
Hill, the G .D.C. water towers, and
Bob Evans !ann and !ann museum.
The 12 counties are Athens, Hocking, Gallia, Jackson, Lawrence,
Meigs, Pike, Pickaway, Ross,
Scioto, Vinton, and Washington.

Attorney-at-law has program ·
"Justice for All" was the program
topic of Barbara Knight, attorney at
law, who pres&lt;!nted the program at
the recent meeting of the
Middleport-Pomeroy Branch of the
American Association of University
Women held in the Riverboat Room
of the Athens County Savings and
Loan Co., Meigs Branch.
Mrs. Knight showed a film on the
topic which des'cribed the means of
choosing a jury of men and women,
the instructions given to the jurors
and the privileges of serving on a
jury. Also explained was the process
of reaching the conclusion. A disc~
sion was held on petit and grand jury
differences.
Asilent auction was held under the
direction of Maurita Miller and Bet·
sy Horky with benefits going to the
education fund.
Nominations for new officers in·

eluded Lee Lee for secretary and
Dorothy Woodard to continue a!!
president until a successor is deter·
mined in observance of the by·laws
of the Ohio Division a,nd Branch concerning a president. Installation will
be held at the April 22 dinner
meeting at the Meigs Inn.
It was announced that Rita
Hubler, Portsmouth, rJ. Division
Board will be the guest speaker at
the April meeting with husbands and
friends to be invited. Fay Sauer will
handle the reservations which are to
be in by Aprill5.
The 57th annual meeting and conference of the Ohio Division will be
held at Kent State University on
April26. Mrs. Dorothy Oliver agreed
to attend as an alternate. Rosalie
Story and Roberta Wilson served
refreslunents following the meeting.

YARD AND BAKE SALE
The ladies auxiliary of the RuUand
Church of God will sponsor a yard
and bake sale at the residence of Bob
Eads, Salem Street, RuUand, on
Aprilll and 12 beginning at9 a.m.
A wide variety of clothing, games,
books, flowers and records will be
available. New items will also be
available such as pillowcases, lap
robes, rugs, and pot holders.

TO SPEAK TONIGHT
Coach Carl Wolfe, members of the
chAmpionship Southern High Var·
sity basketball team and the varsity
cheerleaders will be speakers when _
the Portland PTO meets at 7:3() p.m.
this evening at the school. The public
is welcome.

"If you Block people make an
error, you pay the interest
and penalty? I shoulda
come here last
."

COFFEEHOURSUNDAY
The Meigs County Heart
Association will hold a coffee hour
for all volunteer workers at the
Meigs Inn Sunday, Aprill3, at 2 p.m.
There will be a drawing for free
gifts and refreslunents will be served.

TRUSTEES TO MEET
The board of trustees of Colwnbia
Townsliip will meet at the township
building Saturday, Aprill2, at 7 p.m.
Gloria Hutton, clerk, reported.

RETURNS HOME
Avery Goeglein, Rock Springs
Road, has been returned home after
being confined to Holzer Medical
Center for nearly the past three
w-.eks following major surgery.

BAND CONCERT APRn. 10
A band concert will be held April
10. at 8 p.m. at Southern High
School. The public is invited to attend.

If we should make an error that costs you additional tax,
you pay only the tax . Blocltpays any penalty and interest.
We stand behind our work.

H&amp;R BLOCit
THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE
618 E. MAIN ST.
POMEROY , D.
OPEN 9 A.M. TO
6 P.M. WEEKDAYS
9·5SATURDAY
PHONE 992-3795

ONLY

2nd&amp; .BROWNST .
- .. MASON, W. VA.
OPEN TUES.
THURS&amp; SAT.
9 A.M.·S P.M.
PHONE 773-9128

7 DAYS U:FT
' ..

TO FILE

Appointment Available

.,
•'

lucky winner . Pearl Powell donated
the decorated Easter cake for the
walk. Then a gift walk of a photo
album was donated by Mrs. Leona
Hensley and Mrs. Mae McPeek.
Attending were Mrs. Mae McPeek, Mrs. Leona Hensley, Mrs.
Virginia Newlun, Mts. Ruby
Brewer, Mrs. Jarue Fitch, . Mrs.
Olive Weber, Mrs. Hilda White,
Eber Riebel, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph
Bissell, Mr. and Mrs. Francis Andrew, Mr. and Mrs. Tom Hayman
and .daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Hauber, Mrs. Paul Andrews, Pearl
Powell and Melody Roberts.

B~l

Nol Necessary

�9- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport·Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, April 8, 1980.
FINANCIAL

......

G

For Fiscal Year
EndJn3g December
. 11, 1979 .
Oh"W.e townshtp
Me~gs County .
long Bottom, Ohto
March 29, 1980

r:J·

Ada Btssetl
No.
614
SUMMARY OF ' 3544
,
CASH BALANCES
' ...
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... ~
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· •..,
Jan. 1, 1979
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s n 67 50

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Receipts

't~:;;,

5,817 .00
Total Receipts
5,81 7.00
Total Beginning
Balance Plu s
Rece_ipts
6,3.48.95
Expenditurts
Main!. and

Operation
STupplies

B~lal6 xp .31

6,889 .38
6,889.38

19·7•9 ec. • .
- 5..0.43
Open ea?perattan
E x penseS
1.32
Balance
163 .00
- 161.28
.f) 8, ltc
. llepdoErl of Receipts
an
xpenditures
Villa9e of Racine
Meogs County
For Fiscal Year
Ending -December
, llst, lt79
526 51h st.,
Racine, Ohio
45771
March 30,1980
Mae Cleland
VIllage Clerk·
•. •
Treasurer
949-2121
Population 583
1970 Federal Census
Cash
Reconciliation
ToBial Fund
a 1ances, Dec. 31.
1979
$23,668.86

D"f.'i'~~~e~;

Total Depository
23,67.36
·Balances
23,668.30
Investments :
Certificates of
Deposit
J,OOO.OO
Other Investments
·
(Including
Savings)
2,003 .83
Total
Investments
5,003.83
T 0 t 1c h o
H~ndas
n
Total Treasury
28,671 63
Balance
28 ,672 _13
Outstanding Checks
Dec. 31,1979
Mo~or Veh~cle
T~t~t~~~~nce. Dec . 30.00
LFocense ax
0
31. 1979
28,&amp;11 13
'
un.d
1 ,064.28
n'I .
•"' Gasolme Tax
ut::post ones
~ Fund
.
14,133.23 Racine Home National
.-, Road and Brodge
Bank, Racine, Oh io
·~ • Fund
3,528.52
SUMMARY
• ) Cemetery Fund
3,248.42
DF FUND
~ Federa_l Revenue
TRANSACTIONS
Sh
F d
6 889 38
Balance
•
. arong ~n
• ·
Jan. 1, 1979
Anto ·Recessoon
163.00 General Fund
3,082 . 12
Totals
55, 130.~ Water works
Balance
Fund
13 ,338 .04
•
Dec. 31,1979
Street Cons!. M
k~~7~~t.fnY~~~
4,960.23
and R Fund
OD 283.57
•'
License Tax
State Highway Imp.
F d
I 375 13
Fund
2,761.73
' un
'
.
Cemetery Fund . 618.01
Gasoline Tax
F d
R
• Fund'
. - 1,41"1.28 .
e era 1 evenue
1•128 ·00
. , Road and Bridge
Sharing
• •• Fund
-436.07 · AnFtui Rndecession
13 ·65
• , •Cemetery Fund
- 545.07 Fire
5·209· 29
• Federal Revenue
-540 . ~
Receipts• • Sharing Fund
Anti · Recession
- 161 .68 General FRu~':lenue 27 ,394 09
Totals
3,152.83 Water Works
CASH BALANCE,
Fund
;:
ERXEPCEENIPDTITSUARNEDS
StreetConst. M
21,877.36
and R Fund
7,825.59
By FUND
Slate Highway 1mp.
General Fund
Fund
715 _95
Balance., Jan . 1,
Cemetery Fund
983.00
: 1979
7,767 .50 Federal Grant
~
Receipts
Funds
· ~ General Property
,n, 700 ·00
•" ~ Tax- Real Estate
Federal Revenue
: .- and Trailer
Sharing
2,229.00
3•215 ·29
• &lt;Gross)
~.325.05 Fire
• Tangible Personal
Non·Revenue
· : •; Property Tax
· . &gt;,.I Gross)
50.37 Cemetery Fund
28i.so
· ....&lt;t:atate Tax
Total Receipts
&lt;Gross)
948 .17 General Fund
30,476.21
·
Water Works
Local Government
and State Income
• Fund
35,215 . ..0
' Tax
4,..01 .00 Street Cons! . M
Cigarette License
. and R Fund
7,S.C2.02
Fees and Fines
Stale Highway Imp.
56 .25
Fund
3,205.48
( Gross&gt;
Adjustments and
Cemetery Fund
1,882.51
, · Refunds
-484 ..50 Federal Grant
14.296.33
Funds
29,700.00
• · Total Receipts
· Tota l Beginning
Federal Revenue
· • · . Balance Plus
Sharing
3,3.57.00
•
Receipts
22,063 .83 Anti Recession
: . ·
Expenditures
Fund
13.65
. ;rota I Exp. - .
Fire
8,424.58
, I ,• Adminoslrative
Grand Total
119,816.91
.'• '
14,532.59
Total
' • ' Town Halls, Memorial
Disbursement$
Bui!dings and
General Fund
27.075.00
Grounds
673.79 Water Works
, · Fire Protection
302 .63
Fund
21,085.45
Lighting
2.195.59 Street Const. M
Grand Total Exp.and R. Fund
8,910,93
General Fund
17,703.60 cemetery Fund
1,481.60
Motor Vehicle Feder~ I Grant
.
License Tax
Funds
29,700 00
·
Fund
Federal Revenue
Sharing
2,219.00
· llal .• Jan. I,
. ·• ' 1979
71"1 .06 Fire
5,677.07
Receipts
Grand Total
96,149.05
. • •'
' Motor Vehicle License
Personal Service
Tax
9,972 .26 General Fund
4,676.00
other
668.09 Water Works
Total Receipts
10,6-40 .35
Fund
4,246.00
;Total Beginning
cemetery Fund
1.073.05
, ,Balance Plus
Operation and
• .Receipts
11 ,439.41
Maintenance
Expenditures
General Fund
22,31"1.00
,•
Total Exp. Water Works
Miscellaneous
Fund
14,327.10
10,227.28 Street cons!. M
rand Total Exp.
and R Fund
3,971.09
- Motor Vehicle
Cemetery Fund
116.67
~ ' .License Tax
Federal Revenue
, .Fund
10,227.28
Sharing
31"1 .00
i'~ • Gasoline Ta• Fund
Fire
5,677.07
Bal. , Jan . 1,
Capilat
- 1,766.05
. ,.. 1979
Improvements
Receipts
Water Works
• Gasoline Tax
14.400.00
Fund
2,512.35
Total Receipts
14,400.00 Street Cons!. M
Total Beginning Bal.
and R Fund
4,939.84
; , Plus Receipts
12,633.95 Cemetery Fund
291 .88
' "-r"
Expenditures
Federal Grant
't~al Exp . Funds
29,700.00
Misc.
2.653.02 Federal Re\lenue
_ Main!.
11,480.21
Sharing
1,400.00
.qrand Total Exp. Interest
' ~ Gasoline Tax
Federal Revenue
· Fund
u, 133.23 · · Sharing
420.00
..Bal., Dec . 31,
Balance
• 1979
1,41'9.28
Dec. 31, 1979
,
Road and Bridge
General Fund
3,..01.21
Fund
Water Works
, ai .LJan. 1,
Fund
14,129.95
• 1919
- 163 .59 Street Const. M
,
Receipts
and R Fund OD 1,368.41
G~heral Property
Slate Highway 1mp .
Tax- Real Estate
Fund
3,205.48
• and Trailer
400.91
Cemetery Fund
·~&lt;Gross&gt;
3,220.77 Federal Revenue
,_,_
1'11!1!lible Personal
Sharing
1, 138.w
Property Tax
.
Anti Rece!sion
35 27
(Gross)
Fund
13.65
Total Receipts
3,256.04 Fire ·.
2,747 .~1
Total Beginning Bal.
Grand Total
23,667.86
Plus Receipts
3,092.45
MUNICIPAL
Expenditures
RECEIPTS
Tot~l Exp. BY SOURCE
3,52 8.52
MISC.
Revenue
Grand Total Exp .
Properly Ta•es
·
- Road and Bridge
RE and PU Property
Fund
3,528.52
Tax
9,263 .00
Personal
B%79Dec. 31'
- 436.07 Tangible
Property Tax
837.37
Cemetery Fund
Intangible (Classified)
Bai.L Jan. 1,
Tax
2,386.45
19!9
- 1,337.25 Total Property T'axes
Receipts
(Gross)
12,487.52
General Property Tax
Slate-Levied LocallY
- Real Estate and
Shared Taxes
Trailer
Local Govt. Fund,
(Gross)
·
3,.570.23
Sales Tax
2,605 .56
Tangible Personal
Estate and Inheritance
Property Tax
Tax
1,226.06
50.37 Clgarelte
&lt;Gross&gt;
220.00
Sale of Lots
Licenses
131 .24
4.040.60 Intergovernmental Aid,
Total Receipts
Grants and Contracts
Total Beginning
Federal Revenue
Balance Plus
receipts
2,703.35
Sharing
2,229.00
1
Expenditures
Fire Contracts
1,360.00
Salaries
2,548.00 Charges For Public
Supplies
16.«&gt; Services
Other Expenses
138.95 General Govt.
Total Exp.
2,703.35
1,103.12
Fees
Waterworks .and
Bai .L Dec. 31,
1919
2,703.35
21,877.36
supply
1,26-4.00
Cemetery
Total Exp. Plus
29,700.00
Other
M~· Dec. 31'
- 545.07 Olhel'"
2,010.45
Flnes Costs and
Feder11 Revenue
Forfe1tun~s
Sharing Fund
Co~rt Fines and
Bal ., Jan. 1,

;

..
..

·

;G Fund
71"1.06
• asollne Tax
, Fund
- 1 766 5
&lt;Road and Bridge
'
• Fund
- 163 59
'&lt;emelery Fund - 1 337' 25
Federal Revenue
'
·
Sharing Fund
531 95
Anti -Recession
1·32
5 832 9
Totals
Total Receipts
·
General Fund
1~ 296 33
Motor Vehicle
'
·
License Tax
Fund
10,6-40.35
Gasoline Tax
•'a
Fund
14,400.00
· '"-' Roaa ano ~r.oge
· ::
Fund
3 2S6 05
... Cemetery Fund
4;o..o:60
: . Feder~l Revenue
, ..
Sharong Fund
5.817 .00
... Totals
. 52,450.32
·::
Toi;~Receopls
:• Genera,1:un~lance22s 063 83
' •
·
'
·
: : Mo~or Vehicle
L1cense Tax
· '""
, .. G Funl.d T
11,439.41.
· . ... aso •ne ax
F nd
12 633 95
::.. Rca~ and Bridge
'
·
•e l;emeterkFund
Fund
3.092 .45
2 703 35
·'
'
·
, ,. Federal evenue
•, • S~arlng F~nd
6,348.95
. Anlo ·Recessoon
1.32
Totals
.
58,283.26
'
Expendolures
General Fudn
17,103.60

k

...

531.95

1979

M~~~J 1?fs

Forfei tur es
4,371.00
SourceTotals Sum marl :
~{a~~['/vle~lf.~ au1;' 7' 00
Shared Taxes
3,962.86
Revenue Sharing 2,229.00
Charges For Public ..,
Ser\llces
21 ,977.36
Fines, Costs and
Forfeitures
4,371.00
Sewage
29,700.00
Non -Revenue
Char_ges For Publ ic
Ser_,ces
GarbageandRefu se
C9llection and
D•sposal
2,910.25
Other Re'Venue
Sale of AsseiS
300.00

Other Non -Revenue.

I rust and Agency

SoFuurcnedsTotals Summ3a, 1rl
78.10
:
Cemetery
1,2 4.00
Fire .
3,215.29
M and R
7,825.59
St . Hoghway
775 95
General
6,.572 .63
"
Tot•l Receipts
Property Taxes
RE and PU Property
Ta~
9,263 .70
Tangoble Personal
Prop.e rty Tax . . 837.37
Intangible (Ciass1f1ed)
ToTtax Pr
T 2,386 45
a 1 oper 1Y axes
Sla&lt;GterosLesvlled Local l1y2 . ~87 . 52
Shared Taxes
L~.:~~~~~tx Fund, 2,605 _56
Estate and Inheritance
Tax
1,22 6.06
Cigarette Licenses 131 .24
Total Shared
InTI ax~eos n
tal A3,,9d62.86
er ver men
1 ,
Gran sand Contrllcts
Federal Revenue
Sharing
2,229.00
Fire Contracts
1 360 00
• ·
T~~~ l,ntergovernm~~ttJ 00
1
Cha rg-es For Public '
·
.
Servoces
General Govt.
Tax
1,103.12
Garbage and Refuse
Collection and
Disposal
2,910 .25
waterworks and
Supply
21,877.36
Cemetery
1,264.00
Other
29,700.00
Other
2,010 .45
Total Public Service
Charges
58,865 .18
Fines, Costs and
Forfeitures
Court Fines and
Forfeitures
4,371.00
Total Fines, Costs
and Forfeitures 4,371 oo
Other Revenue
Sale of Assets
300.00
Total Other
O!Rhee~~no"neRevenue 300 .00
Trust and Agency
Funds
3,178.10
Total Other
Non· Revenue
3,178.10
Source Totals Summary :
Property Taxes
12,487.00
Stale-Levied Locallv
Shared Taxes
3,962.86
Revenue Sharing 2,229.00
Cemetery
1,264.00
Charges For Public
Services
21.877.36
Fines. Costs and
4,371 .00
Forfeitures
Sewage
29,700.00
Fire
3,215.29
M and R
7,825.59
st. Highway
775.95
General
6,572.63
Grand Total
Municipal
Receipts
94,281.28
MUNICIPAL
DISBURSEMENTS
BY PROGRAM
Personal Services
Security of Persons
and Property
Police Law
Enforcement
2,100.00
Public Health and
Welfare services
CemeterY.
1,073.05
Basic Ulolity
Services
Electroc
Utility
3.983.59
Gas Works
1,630.38
Water Works and
Supply
3,600.00
Totals
9,213.97
General Government
Mayor' s Office
150.00
Finance Adm.
350.00
Legislative
576.00
Program· Totals Sum mary:
Public Health and
Welfare Services 1,073.05
Basic Utility
Services
9,213 .97
General Govt.
4,526.00
Other Operatton
and Main!.
Security of Persons
and Property
Police Law
Enforcement
90 .00
Public Health and
Welfare Services
CemeterY.
116.67
Basic Utility Services
Water Wor:ks and
Supply
I, 138.72
P.E.R .S.
1682.65)
Transportation
Off-Street
Parking
1,927.92
Program Totals Sum mary :
Public Health
and Welfare
Services
.116.67
Leisure Time
Activities
7.256.55
Basic Utility
Services
17,484.35
Transportation
1,927.92
General Govl .
22.S.C9.00
Capital
Improvements
Public Health and
Welfare Services
CemeterY.
291.88
Basic Ut1lity Services
Water Works and
Supply
3,512.35
Program Totals Sum mary :
Public Health and
Welfare Services 291 88
'.!'
Total
Disbursements
security of Persons
and Property
Police Law
Enforcement
2,190.00
Street Lighting
3,983.59
Totals
6,173.59
Public Health and
Welfare Services
Cemetery
1.481.60
Totals
1,481.60
Basic Utlllfy &gt;ervoces
Water Works and
Supply
21 ,084.35
Totals
26,698.32
Transportation
Off· Street
Par~lng
),927.92
General Government
Main.
3,600.00
Program Totals Sum ·
mary :
Security of Persons
and Property
6,173.59
Public Health and
Welfare
services
1,481 .60
Lelsute Time
Activities
7,256.55
Basic Utility
Services
26,698 .32
Transportation
1,927.92
General Govt.
27,075.00
Totals For All
j'
Programs
70,612 .98
BASIC UJTILITY
!
SCHEDULES
Water Fund
Bai .Jan . 1,
19/Y
13,338.04 ,
Receipts--From
Service
20,612 .75
Misc . Sales
1,014 .61
Taps, Permits and
Connections
2~ . 00
Total Receipts · 21,871 .36

I

E)CpenOifures
Per sona I Serv .
4,338.00
Operation and
M amt.
13,235.10
c arita ll mp .
3,512.35
Tofa Ex p.
21.085.45
Bal. , Dec. 31,
1979
14,129.95
Memoranda Data
Assessed Va luat iOn,
1979
1,228,345
Tax Lev y
43 M
Ra cine, Ohi o March 30,
1980
1 her eby cert if y the
f or egoing to be correc t.
Ma e Cleland
Vi ll age Cler k·
Treasurer
Date M arc h 30, 1980
&lt;~l8,1tc

ASTRO·GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

~Cfour

~'Blrt~
Aptlll, , ...
Tl'lll coming y11r you m1y form
IIVIrll new frlend1hlpa with
people wtth whom you'll anar1
niW lnttlruta. One In particular
could blouom Into 1 ~ry lovely
r~a11onelil~.

ARIII (Moroh 11•Aprtl II) Thll
Ia one of thote d1ya when you
could fetllolt In 1 crowd. 11'1 not
thlt I)IOple aren't plelllnt, lt'a
that you 're wr11t11ng with aome ~
thing thet needa to be chlngld .
Find out more or what Ilea ahead
for you In the year following your
birthday by nndlng for your
copy of Aatro-Greph Letter. Mall
$1 for each to Aatro-Graph, 80)1
48V, Radio City Station, N.Y.
10019. Be aura to epeclfy birth
date.
TAURUI

(April

20-May 20)

Heavy obligations not ot your
making could put a damper on
what otherwise should be a sue·
cesatul day. Try to get the culprit
to pitch In and help.
GEMINI (Mioy ZI·Juno 20) Oon'l
allow yourself to get caught up In
the •bickering of friends. If you
do, distress will quickly take the

place of your pleaaant mood
CANCER (Juno 11·July 22)
Make any excuse to beet a hasty
retreat If you find yourself face to
face with anyone who Is too
dictatorial . This person could
leave you thinking everything Is
your lault.

LEO (Ju11 23-Aug. 22) you could
easily get sidetracked today by
secondary Issues that would
thoroughly confuse you When in
doubt follow your heart. not
someone alae's logic.
VIRGO (Aut. D-Sopt. 22) Stand
up for your JUSt dues today II you
find

out

someone

has been

r8f'oullng things earmarked lor
you . Let the chlpa tall where they
may.
LIIRA (Sop1. D-Oct. 23) Keep
your aoctal encounters l lgnt and
frothy today Instead of delving
IntO heavy matters. A fun dlscuaslon could boll over Into a

Long Bottom Community Assn. meets
The Long Bottom Community
Association meeting was well attendedfor March. Mrs. Olive Weber,
Mrs. Hilda White , and Eber Riebel
were welcomed as new members by
Mrs. Leona Hensley.
Mrs. Hensley opened the meeting
with The Lord's Prayer, pledge to
the flag and Mrs. Mae McPeek gave
a reading from the 16th chapter of
St. Mark.
No progress was made on the
"Variety Show" project. Jenny
Newlun told the group that Riverview PTO had asked if the group
could use the curtains from the
school as new ones must be purchased. The group agreed that some
use in the future may be found for
them.
Mrs. Mae McPeek read the
minutes and gave her secretary's
report. Mrs. Ernestine Hayman,
treasurer, was absent, so her report
was di!Jpensed :with, although it was
noted that Mr. and Mrs. Paul An·
drews gave a donation. Thanks was
given.
Francis Andrew reported on
several issues of importance. Andrew reported that poll workers'
salaries had been increased from $35
to $45, and that he and several
people had placed on ·the Primary
Election Ballot a one-half mill levy
toward the Fire Department at
Reedsville taking the responsibllity
of covering the Long Bottom
District, therefore reducing home
owners' fire insurance premiums.
The one-half mill levy is greaUy
needed to improve conditions and
cover necessary expenditures for
utilities and maintenance, etc. Mrs.
Leona Hensley and Mrs. Mae McPeek brought with them and passed
out the "Vials of We," plastic containers placed in the refrigerator
and two stickers, one is placed on the
refrigerator door and one on your
front window or door stating that
· you have the "Vial of Life" in your
home. On the infonnation sheet inside the vial are names and numbers
of people in the household, doctors
and hospitals preferred, diseases,
medication being taken, allergies
and so forth . The "vial" is free to
anyone, so call Mrs. Leona Hensley
at 98S--331Xl, or the Pomeroy Senior
Citizens, or the Meigs County Health

serious debate.

ICORPIO (Oct. 114-Nov. 22)
Schedule your agenda to take
care of Important matters first
today. U they're left until laat,
dlarupttons could occur that
might prove very frustrating .

IAGmARIUI (Nav. D-Doc.l1)
Political ploys by pal• today
could place you In an awttward
position II you permit yourself to
be manipulated . St6&amp;1' cleer ot
their petty antk:a.
CAHICORN (-.12...,... It) A
lltuation you're InVOlved In could
work out to be materially fortunate today, but you must be
careful not to bout of your good
luck In front ot one no1 so
favored.
AQUARIUS ("-n. :10-Fob. It)
Vou're a very pleasant person to
be around today as long as others are In accord wtth your ldeaa.
However, when your vlewa are
challenged the opposite might
be true.
PISCES (Fob.IO-Morcll 20) This
could be a critical day where
your finances are concerned.
Budget your resources as aklllfully as a prudent banker would.
(NEWSPAPEA ENTEAPAISE ASSN I

· · - · · · · •oo ... _.. .. . ..... ~.
- ' o 0 0 o • o • o o o 0 - . of l ... I . r

2 ----,~n~M~e~m~o~r~ia
~m
=----

In Memory of our Parents,
George and Faye Logan.
Mom left us April 8, 1970,
Dad April26, 1979.
Sadly missed by your
Children,, Bernice, Dwight,
Helen, Avery, Avice and
Families .
3

Announcements

GUN SHOOT . Racine
Volunteer
Fire Dept .
Every Saturday. 6:30 p m
At their buildingin Bashan.
Factory choke guns only.
GUN SHOOT every Sunday
12 :00 Factory choke only .
Corn Hol low Gun Club.
Rutland. Proceeds donated
to Boy Scout Troop 249 .
1 PAY highest prices
possible for gold and silver
coins, r 1ngs, j.ewelry, etc .
Contact Ed Burkett Berber
Shop, Middleport .
GOLD , SILVER OR
FOREIGN COINS , OR '
ANY OTHER - GOLD OR
Sl LVER ITEMS. ALSO.
ANTIQUE
FURNITURE
OR OTHER ANTIQUE
ITEMS . WILL PAY TOP
DOLLAR . CHECK WITH
QSBY (OSSIE) MARTIN
BEFORE
SELL I NG .
PHONE 9'12 --6370 .• ALSO
DO APPRA ISING .
Picking up an Easy play
organ in your area .
Looking for a responsible
party to take over paymen ·
ts. Call credit manager
collect . 614-- 592 -5122 .

TOPS MEET
TOPS Pals exchanged gifts at the
recent meeting of the Rutland Mom·
ing TOPS (take off pounds sensibly)
OH1466. Members who had reached
their goal bid were given gifts and
"funny money" was handed out to
be used for an auction in May. Queen
for the week was Lynda Atkins with
Dodie Winebrenner as runner-up.
Officers' reports were given and
songs and poems were handed out to
be read by the gainers and the
turtles.

Department on how or where you
may pick up your vial. It just may
save your life.
Hostesses for the meeting were
Pearl Powell, Sue Hayman and
Nellie Andrew. Hostesses for the
next meeting will be Jenny NewlWl,
Oli ve Weber, Ml!rY Andrews.
Meeting time has also been changed
due to the Spring time changes
coming. The next meeting will be at
8 p.m. on April 3() at the Community
Building.
Francis Andrew and Pearl Powell
entertamed the group. A cake walk
was held and Jenny Newlun was the

Ohio Historical Societies and
Museums-to meet April19
Annual spring meeting of Region 8
of the Ohio Association of Historical
Societies and Museums will be held
Aprill9 in Gallipolis.
Election of a regional chainnan
for a three-year tenn is on the agen·
da for I :3() p.m. to succeed Charles
E. Blakeslee of Meigs County. The
business meeting will start at 1: 10
p.m. with co--chainnen presiding:
Biakeslee and Catherine Remleyshe a past president from Marietta.
The meeting will be held in St.
Peter's Episcopal Church, 541 S..
cond Ave., Gallipolis.
Registration and coffee will be at
9:3() a .m., and then there'll be a
walking tour of the historic water·
front from 10 to 12; included will be
Our House musewn, the Public
Square and fioodmarks; time capsule stone; sesquicentennial homes;
and walk past the 0. 0. Mcintyre
home.
After lunch, which will be served
by the Episcopal women, Maj.-Cen.
George E. Bush, president of the

host Gallia County Historical Society, will welcome the delegates to
Gallia County.
An item in the business meeting
will be two-minute report from each
organization (there are 16 organiza·
tlons in the 12 counties).
Reservations to the ~ luncheon
will be made on or before next Men·
day with Mary Allison, curator, Our
House, 434 First Ave., Gallipolis
45631.
The afternoon session will feature
Dan Davies on the Downtown
Historical Restoration of Galllpolis,
and Errunett Conway on Indian
Trails of Gallia County and the
Reg1on .
Adjoununent is scheduled for 2:50
p.m. Those who wish may go on a
guided driving tour to Fortification
Hill, the G .D.C. water towers, and
Bob Evans !ann and !ann museum.
The 12 counties are Athens, Hocking, Gallia, Jackson, Lawrence,
Meigs, Pike, Pickaway, Ross,
Scioto, Vinton, and Washington.

Attorney-at-law has program ·
"Justice for All" was the program
topic of Barbara Knight, attorney at
law, who pres&lt;!nted the program at
the recent meeting of the
Middleport-Pomeroy Branch of the
American Association of University
Women held in the Riverboat Room
of the Athens County Savings and
Loan Co., Meigs Branch.
Mrs. Knight showed a film on the
topic which des'cribed the means of
choosing a jury of men and women,
the instructions given to the jurors
and the privileges of serving on a
jury. Also explained was the process
of reaching the conclusion. A disc~
sion was held on petit and grand jury
differences.
Asilent auction was held under the
direction of Maurita Miller and Bet·
sy Horky with benefits going to the
education fund.
Nominations for new officers in·

eluded Lee Lee for secretary and
Dorothy Woodard to continue a!!
president until a successor is deter·
mined in observance of the by·laws
of the Ohio Division a,nd Branch concerning a president. Installation will
be held at the April 22 dinner
meeting at the Meigs Inn.
It was announced that Rita
Hubler, Portsmouth, rJ. Division
Board will be the guest speaker at
the April meeting with husbands and
friends to be invited. Fay Sauer will
handle the reservations which are to
be in by Aprill5.
The 57th annual meeting and conference of the Ohio Division will be
held at Kent State University on
April26. Mrs. Dorothy Oliver agreed
to attend as an alternate. Rosalie
Story and Roberta Wilson served
refreslunents following the meeting.

YARD AND BAKE SALE
The ladies auxiliary of the RuUand
Church of God will sponsor a yard
and bake sale at the residence of Bob
Eads, Salem Street, RuUand, on
Aprilll and 12 beginning at9 a.m.
A wide variety of clothing, games,
books, flowers and records will be
available. New items will also be
available such as pillowcases, lap
robes, rugs, and pot holders.

TO SPEAK TONIGHT
Coach Carl Wolfe, members of the
chAmpionship Southern High Var·
sity basketball team and the varsity
cheerleaders will be speakers when _
the Portland PTO meets at 7:3() p.m.
this evening at the school. The public
is welcome.

"If you Block people make an
error, you pay the interest
and penalty? I shoulda
come here last
."

COFFEEHOURSUNDAY
The Meigs County Heart
Association will hold a coffee hour
for all volunteer workers at the
Meigs Inn Sunday, Aprill3, at 2 p.m.
There will be a drawing for free
gifts and refreslunents will be served.

TRUSTEES TO MEET
The board of trustees of Colwnbia
Townsliip will meet at the township
building Saturday, Aprill2, at 7 p.m.
Gloria Hutton, clerk, reported.

RETURNS HOME
Avery Goeglein, Rock Springs
Road, has been returned home after
being confined to Holzer Medical
Center for nearly the past three
w-.eks following major surgery.

BAND CONCERT APRn. 10
A band concert will be held April
10. at 8 p.m. at Southern High
School. The public is invited to attend.

If we should make an error that costs you additional tax,
you pay only the tax . Blocltpays any penalty and interest.
We stand behind our work.

H&amp;R BLOCit
THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE
618 E. MAIN ST.
POMEROY , D.
OPEN 9 A.M. TO
6 P.M. WEEKDAYS
9·5SATURDAY
PHONE 992-3795

ONLY

2nd&amp; .BROWNST .
- .. MASON, W. VA.
OPEN TUES.
THURS&amp; SAT.
9 A.M.·S P.M.
PHONE 773-9128

7 DAYS U:FT
' ..

TO FILE

Appointment Available

.,
•'

lucky winner . Pearl Powell donated
the decorated Easter cake for the
walk. Then a gift walk of a photo
album was donated by Mrs. Leona
Hensley and Mrs. Mae McPeek.
Attending were Mrs. Mae McPeek, Mrs. Leona Hensley, Mrs.
Virginia Newlun, Mts. Ruby
Brewer, Mrs. Jarue Fitch, . Mrs.
Olive Weber, Mrs. Hilda White,
Eber Riebel, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph
Bissell, Mr. and Mrs. Francis Andrew, Mr. and Mrs. Tom Hayman
and .daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Hauber, Mrs. Paul Andrews, Pearl
Powell and Melody Roberts.

B~l

Nol Necessary

�10- 'nle Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, April 8, 19«1

Your Best Buys Are Found in the Sentinel Classifieds
42
11

WANT AD INFORMATION

Help wanted

GET VALUABLE 1raining

as a young busi ness person

PHONE 992-2156
or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St., Pomerov. o., 45769

and · earn good money plus
some great gifts as a Sen·
tinel route carrier. Phone
us right awav and get on
the eligibil ity list a t. 992·
2156 or 992·2157 .

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX
eANNOUNCEMENTS

eRENTALS

t-CarG of Ttlanlts

41-Houstl for Rent

1- tn Me,oriam
J-Anntcmctmtnh
+-GiVtiWty

42- Mobllt Homes
fo r Rtnt

6--Lostand Found

46--SPI!cefor Ren t

7- Yud Sale
I - Public Salt

47-Wtntftl to Rent

Need Ql!lrden plow and
disc? Racine Area only .
949-2448 .

608 E .

eMERCHANDISE

e EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

n - Anlique•
S4-Misc . Mtrchandlst
ss-&amp;u i ldint Supplies
56-Pets tor S.te

IJ-Insurlnce
14-lusinus Tr alnint
lt-Sctaoolslnttrucli&lt;~n

16-

Radio, TV

e FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

I Cl Repa ir
It-Wanted To Do

•1- Farm Equipment
n - wanted to 8U'tl
72-Trucks for S•l•
U - Lho'IIIOCk
" - Hav" Grain
u - Seed &amp; Fertilizer

e FINANCIAL
ausin tn

21 -

Opportunity
22- Money to Loan
23- Proftnlomllt
S.rvlcts

eTRANSPORTATION
71-Autos ,., S.le

.fREAL ESTATE

13- Vens&amp;4W .O.
74-Motorqclll

31 - Home• for Sale
32- Mobile.tiomes
for Sale

a-

Auto P•rts
&amp;'Acceuorin
71- Auto Aepeir

n-F•rms tor S•lt
Jl- luslnen Blllldlngs

J5-Loh &amp; Acre•v•
~Rul Elf•te W•nted
l1- Re81fOU

eSERVICES

Want·Ad Advertising
Deadlines
4 P .M. Oally
12 Noon Saturdlly
lor Mond•v

I.

11-Homelmprovemenfl
12-Piumblna &amp; EliUYIIting
ll-Eif,CIIVafing
14-Eie&lt;trlcal
I. R.tr igerelion
U- Gener111 Hau ling
N-M.H. AI INii r

11- Upholstery

Rates and Other Information
Cuh

I d11y

1.00

2:days

1.50

....

3dfiYI

1.10

6dii'(S

Cher1e
1.25
1.90
2.15

us

Each word over the minimum 15 words 15 4 cen li l)l'rword per dlly .
Adi running oUter then consKutiYII d11ys will tM!! ChllrQed a t the I day
r•te.

In memory, Car d of Th•nk, •nd Oboituuy : • cents per word. U .oo
minimum . Cash In edvence.

Mobile HomeSflll l llnd Y&gt;1rd Sllletllre •ccepted only with cash with
order . 2S cent chute for ads cerrying lo• NumHr In C11re of The
Sentinel.

Announcements

1

GUN SHOOT EVERY
FRIDAY NIGHT 7:30P.M .
FACTORY CHOKE ONLY .
RACINE GUN CLUB .

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

8

BRADFORD. Auctioneer,
Complete Servi ce. Phone
949·2.187 or 949·2000. racine,
Ohio, Critt Bradford .

Giveaway

4

St. Bernard . 2 years old . 1
family,
good watch
dog.992·2092 or 992-7803 .
6

Lost and Found

Found:
Small,
light ·
colored. long ~ haired dog .
Near Veteran' s Memoria l
Hospital. Call 992·6601 or
11'12· 7624.

9

Wanted to Buy

I ron and brass beds, old
furniture, desks, gold
rings, lewelry, silver
dOII!IIrS, sterling, etc ., wood
Ice boxes, antiques, etc .
Complete
liouseholds .
Write M. D. Miller. Rt. 4.
Pomeroy, OH . or call 992·
7760.

11

Help Wanted

Full time and parttime R N
or LPN . 11 ·7. Contact Mr.
Zidian at Pomeroy Health
Care Center Monday thru
Friday 9·5.
Bar Maid or Bar Tender,
part tim , work into possible
full time. Call 992·5509 bet·
ween9·5.

Babysitter Needed in the
Ra cine area to care for a 9
month old girl. Hours 8 · ~
Mon. thru Fri. Please call
949·2406 after 5 p.m .
Real Estate - General

10 karat, 14 karat, 18 karat ,
gold. Dental gold and gold
ear pins. 675·3010.
Gold, silver or foreign
coins or any gold or silver
items. Antique furniture,
glass or china, will pay top
dollar, or complete estates.
No Item too large or too
small . Check prices before
selling. Also do appraising .
Osby &lt;Osslel Martin. 992·
6370.

Real Estate- General

M&lt;l&gt;IN
'"'"'" •
POMa:O&lt;uT,
992· 2259
PRICE REDUCED
This charm ing 2 story
home has 3 bedrooms,
dining room , kitchen,
family room, &amp; living
room . Some of the
special features of this
home are ori gina l wood ·
work, firepla ce, centrl
air, bu il t·in kitchen, full
basement and many
more .
Reduced
to
$29 ,500.00.
RURAL FLAVOR - 44
acres all fenced with a 2
yr . old modular home .
Has a beautiful floor
plan, with 4 bedrooms
and 2 baths. Also has a
barn
and
other
build ings, and an extra
trailer hook·up . Yours
for only S42,00Q.OO .
TIRED OF PAYING
RENT? - With a small
down payment you can
own th is 5 room home
for less than what
you ' re paying for rent .
Stop by today and take a
took . just $11,000 .00.
HEAD
TURNING
HOME - Th iS d islinc·
t lve brick &amp; frame
house has 9 rooms, 1112
. baths and shows all the
· work &amp; care that has
gone into this stately
home. Every rOom is artisti c ally decorated .
Located on a quiet
street in 8
good
neighborhood .
$59,500.00.
IN TOWN Nice 2
story wllh full base·
men!. Has up to 4
bedrooms,
se wing
room , fireplace in fami ·
ty room . Lots of closets.
VA or FHA approved.
$28,900.00.
DISTINCTIVE &amp; DIF·
FERENT
Unbelievably clean and
well kept 1112 story
frame
home .
Just
perfect for a tamlly with
4 bedrooms, spacious
living room , formal dining room, and beautiful
cabinets with built·in
oven &amp; range in the kit·
chen .. Has a full base·
ment and is carpeted
throughout .
Only
$35.000.00.
ECONOMY PRICED 5 rooms and a bath all
on one floor , and is
located on a level 3/"
acre lot. Has an extra
water tap. Could be a
lovely home with just a
Iittle work . $16,500.00 .
OUR SALES STAFF IS
READY TO ASSIST
YOU, SALES DO NOT
JUST HAPPEN
THEY ARE MADE .
• REALTOR
Henry Cleland, Jr.
992·619)
ASSOCIATES
Jean Trussell 949·2660
Roger &amp; Dottie Turner
742· 2474
Office Phone 992· 22S9

REAL ESTATE
WE HAVE FINANCING AVAILABLE
AS LOW AS 5% DOWN AND 30 YEARS
TO PAY, ON MOST HOMES .
WHETHER YOU RENT OR BUY
YOU PAY
FOR THE PLACE YOU OCCUPY .
MIDDLEPORT - Commercial off ice building, on
busy corner in c.enter of town . Fully rented . A good
investment.
POMEROY - Two be
D'ath frame home
on Hill St. Now rent15-() • )() per mo. Only
$10,000.
· RACINE - Peace and quiet in the country. Just a
few m iles from Racine. Remodeled home on 2 acres
of ground . $39,000.

-1

"-1 D"l2

Pomeroy,O.

MIDDLEPORT - Thn.,
bath, nice tot
just one block from hea ~ ~ ._5,000.
POt.tEROY - On Lincoln His.- Two bedroom and
bath, full basement, gas furna ce, storm windows &amp;
doors. Owner will help finance it you need it. $17,500.
RUTLAND - Older home needs some repairs on
Salem Street. Nice corner lot. $9900.00.
BUILDING OR TRAILER LOT - Hysell Run Road
- 5 a cres. S7 .000 .
SYRACUSE - Old house on a nice tot, $11.600.
loOT IN MIDDLEPORT - We will bu ild a house on
fhis one if you choose - South Second Ave.

New

Llstln11 - NR·Sf,
Oul1tandlng home. Spring

We Are Selling - We Need Listings

Ave.. Pomero'(. 0 .. t ully
carpetrd. fireplace , 3
bedroom.

CALL 992-2342

bUIIt·l n klfchf!n,

PlntllnQ . Fenced In '(lrd

w;th

driveway . Ca ll for
more info.
Comfortalllt Home NR- sa, ciON ln. 6 rms .• lui·
IY fu rnished, ni ce porch,
y•rd and garage . This won' t
last long .

ltlght- Nit-53, New
split leve l home , 1V. ~ths, 3
bedrooms, basebOard elec·
trlc ttflt, thermoP&amp;ne win·
Just

dOW\, plus a 2 car gara~ .
Approx . Ill~ a cre, Tuppers
Plains, onto. Only w .ooo.

'""'••tment

NR ·U',

Propertv-

Rea ldtnce

plus

bualnns opportunity, 2
bedroom house. business
building w ith garave on
taroe lOts. Reecttvllle, on.
Catt us, S25.000.
Ctl•~rfesM . Havtl, Rllrtor
NHdl E .
lr. Mtr.
Ph. tn· llflo' !~~;:':,,.,

We

hilve

~·

~

RODNEY DOWNING, BROKE R- HO. 992:1711
BILL CHILDS, BRANCH MGR.- HO. 992· 2449

-DiMNiN~iwsAi;ENcv-iNt:"
'INSURANCE
SERVING SOUTHEASTERN OHIO SINCE
· ARE YOU PAYING TOO MUCH? DO
YOU HAVE THE COVERAGE?

FOR ALL YOUR INSURANCE NEEDS .
CALL US.

992-2342
DOWNING-OIIIDS ~ENCY, INC.
MIDDLEPORT OHIO

•

IN ·
AUTOMOBILE
SURANCE
been can ·
you r
ce lled?
Lost
operator's license? Phone
992· 2143.

18

Wanted to Do

Give plano lessons to begin·
ners and advanced student
in my home. Also tea ch
chording and transpasing if
interested . Call992·5401.

Flnanelal
22

Money to Loan

M or tgage
Money
Available. New homes, old
homes, and refinancing
your present home. CON ·
VENTIONAL 5 Pel. down,
SECOND MORTGAGES.
VA· No down payment,
FHA· Low down payment,
FHA· 245·Graduated paym·
enl program, FHA ·265·
Subsidy program . Call 592 ~
3051, Ireland Mortgage Co.,
77 E . Stale St., Athens, OH .

Mobile Homes
for Rent

Homes for Sale

9 Room House, 1'/z baths,
basement and garage .
College Rd ., Syracuse, OH .
111&gt;2·5133 or 992·3981 .
House for Sale. Large tot,
completely remodeled, 3
bedrooms. living room, kit chen and bath. Wood bur·
ner heat. $21,500 . 100 per·
cent financing at n percent
int. If interested call 698 7331. In Pagetown .
House for Sale. Large lot,
completely remodeled, 3
bedroom, kitchen, 2 baths,
living room, full basement.
$25,000. 100 percent flnan·
cing at 11 percent interest.
If fnterested call698·7331 in
Pagetown .
3 Bedroom, 1 story house
on Long St. in Rutland, OH .
Also 1, 29,000 BTU air con·
dltioner. Phone 742·2975.
6 Rooms. 1112 baths, car·
peted, paneled, finished
basement with bar, garbage disposal, good win·
dow air conditioner, storm
w i ndows . See to appreciate, reasonable. 992·
5566.
32

Mobile Homes
tor Sate

1973 Fairpoint, 14x65 2
bedroom
1971 Cameron, 14K65, 2
bedr.
1971 Fleetwood, 14x65 3
bdr .. bath 'h
1971 Shakespear, 14K65 2
bedroom
1965 Yanor 12K52, 2 bedr.
1968 Fleetwood 12x63, 2
Bdr.
B &amp; S MOBILE HOME
SALES. PT. PLEASANT,
wv. 304·675·4424 .

Apartment
tor Rent

ALL STEEL

3 AND 4 RM furnished ap·
ts. Phone 992 ·5~4 .

Farm Buildings
Sizes
" From lOxlO"

RENTER' S assistance for
senior Citi zens tn Village
Manor apts. Call992·7787.

SMALL

3 rooms and bath upper
apt. 992 5621 .

~

ATTENTION :
liM ·
PORTANT TO YOU) Will
pay cash or certified check
for antiques and collec ·
tibles or entire estates .
Nothing too large. Also,
guns, pocket watches and
coin collections. Call 614·
767·3167 or 557·3411 .

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt. I, BOK 54
Racine, Dh.
Ph. 614·1143·2591
3-30· 1 mo.

New

COUNTRY HOME with
stocked pond for swimming
or fishing , 9 rooms, ~th,
carpeted . 3 to 17 acres
available. Loceted approx.
7 miles from Pomeroy off
R t . 7 or 33 . 446·2359 alter 6.
36 Acre Farm ,
story
house. Full basement,
barn , build ings, mineral
r ights. good land. $77,000.
992·7559.
1112

35

Lots &amp; Acreage

Property For Sale. Over 3
acres of land in Pomeroy .
Only $7,000 . 992·3886 .

5 Acres for sale . 1 mile
from old 33 and 6 miles
trom Rt. 7. Possibility ol
Land Contract. 992·3900.

Rentals
41

Houses tor Rent

House for rent. Piano fpr
sale. Call 992 ·3489 or 992·
2594.

I.

.

.

,_

..

-·---.

THOSe GReAT WILP
ANIMAL Ac T51

we·D Lll&lt;f' T'ADD

t.IICI&lt; OF YOU
T'5AY 50, CHRIS I
MATTE-R OF FACT,
THAT'S WHY

'(O&amp;Jil.
ACT TO OUFI: SHOW!

rJ

\

__

1

·-~

Guaranteed work
Frl!&lt;! Estimates
After 5 P .M. 992·.5547
3·26·1 mo.

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

3 a•le trailer frame . 60 ft .
long. Never burned. 992·
5992.
Used
Free standing
fireplace, also several used
chain saws . Pomeroy
Home and Auto. 992·2094.

Slihl 015 power saw for
sate. $75 . 992·5501 . 1684 Lin·
coin Heights, Pomeroy.

DISCOUN
PRICES
Hotpoint and
General Electric
Appliance
Sales &amp; Service

POMEROY .
LANDMARK
Jacic ~w. carsev-.
Mgr.
Phone 992-2181
Pels for Sale

- -----

618 E. Main

Pomeroy, Oh.

gested by the above cartoon.

A(IIIXIIJ

AUlD REPAIR

H. L WHITESEL

WE BRING THE
GARAGE TO YOU!!!

ROOFING
All types of roof work,
new or repair guHers
and downspouts, gutter
cleaning and painting.
All work gu1ranteed.

61

62

~

J~T~T

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

TO Dil.lt-lei2-

72

1972 Ford F ·10 1fi ton 302
automatic trans., p.s.,
custom cab, e•c. cond . for
a1972. 6U·667 ·3593.

OLD COINS, pocket wat·
ches, class rings, wedding
bands, diamonds . Gold or . ~ --------­
sllyer. Call J . A. wamstey, 1974 Ford Pickup. 1979
742·2331. Treasure Chest
Coin Shop. Athens, OH . 592 ~ Ford Pickup. 992·5304.
6462.

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

1970 Pontiac GTO. Good
cond . Ca!lafter 5. 992·5.187.
71

vans&amp;4W.D.

1979 Ford 1.50 4•4, auto .•
p.s ., p .b., topper. Positive
traction front and rear. 9854339.
1979 JEEP CJ ··7, power
steering, Levi Interior, 3
speed, till steering wheel.
10,000 mites. S5600. Call99'l·
31.49 or 992·2705.

HUMANE
SOCIETY .
Adopt a homeless pet .
Healthy, shots, wormed.
Donations required. 992·
626o, noon· 7 p. m .

1979 Camara
Z · 28 .
• Automatic, 5.500 miles, e•·
cellent condition . Loaded.
cost over $9,000. Priced for
quick sale. 742 · 21~ .

AKC Registered Coll ie pup·
pis. Trl ·colored, 6 weeks
old . $60. 985·3567.

1971 Nova, 6 cyt. , auto.,
godl! work car. 992·3886.

1973 Olds .
Cutlass
Supreme. 63,000 mlles, p .s.,
p .b., a.c ., am-fm radio,
good ties. recent tune up,
drives good. May be seen at
361 Grant St., Middleport,
OH or call 992· 7567 or 992·
3544.

3 Bike Motorcycle Troller .
$100. 992-5523.
75

Boalsand
Motors for Sale

1977 Quachlla bass boat .
FUllY equipped. May be
able to help with financing.
992 ·3900.
Must S~ll. 77 Starcraft
boar, 16' open boW, 85 hP
Merc .-JS.S . prOp·canves
top·sterllng trailer. $2,800.
Call alterS p.m . 992·2791.

NAI'i- YOU KNOW HOI'i NO
~\AN 15 A HERO TO HIS

... 'IJE KNOW WHO I'{ORKG AND WHO
DOESN'T- WHICH MISS THE MOST
ROLL CALLS •.• WHO HAS THAT THIRD
MARTINI AT LUHCH ...

V4L ET" ... S~ME THINIS

l'iiTH CON6RE55MEN

i.

AND P.AGE BOYS ...

LISTEN• IF YOU HAVE
SUCH A SOUR VIEW
OF CONGRESSMEN,

'lilf1''D YOU BECOME

BECAUSE~

WHAT l WANT

T08E-·A
POLITICIAN!

.K Q J 75
• 10 2
+AQB 7 2
WEST
EAST
+J42
• Q 10 8 6
.10986 2
.13

SOUTH

.A

+AK 975

A PAGE BOY?

.J

West

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

North

East

I'

Pass
Obi.
Pass
Pass
Pass

3.

3 NT

5t

Pass

Soutb

z+
3+
4+
6+

ALLEYOOP
Opening lead :+ 5

3·26·1 mo.

WAIT FORME,
SERGEANT!
I'LL GO WITH
YOU!

.

YES, [DID! [

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sootag

Silr diamonds is a poor
contract. but al the Colorado
Springs regionals most South
players who got there were
lucky enough to make it.
At all tables East doubled
three clubs when North bid it.
West opened a club. South had
to go right up with dummy's
ace. Then South cashed the
ace of hearts and spades a nd

-ROOFING
-PAINTING
-REMODEUNCi
-CONCRETE
Free Estimates
Ph.: (3041 773·5731
or (304) 882-2276

GASOUNE ALLEY

H · (pd . )

Good

to

Ser*ilees

Hack,

Ljou're lookinq at

Alert!

back,
Slim!

CARPENTER WORK complete remOdeling by AI
Tromm. 742·2328. Referen·
ces.
MI5TER: TIPPE 5A ID

BUT YOU DON'T
KNOW ANYrH I N6
A130UT HIM. FOR
ALL YOU KNOW HE

WANT

AL L H15 " RIEND5

YOU DAllNG

CALL HIM 11TIPPY/

HIM Jll5TTO

All/D WE PO
HAVE A DATE

MAY BE: MARRIEP!

CUIZ ZY
FAVOl&lt; .. .

TONIGHT.
Limestone for driveways. :
Pomeroy~- Mason area. 367· •
7101.

..

40 Colorado
resort
"I Don't - " 41 Unkind look
5 Excellence
DOWN
10 English
1 Neighbor
river
of Nev.
· II Newman film %Spanish city
13 Cadence
3 Rock group
14 Garb
4 Suffix
15 Neighbor
for consist
oflnd.
5 - longue
16 Driving
6 Door
penni! :
device
abbr.
7 Buchwald
17 Bini 's nest
8 Party
18 Somewhat
game
impartial
9 No joke
20 "Ode 12 Insect at a
Nightingale "
Politburo
21 Church part
22Eschew

Yesterday's AIIBwer
16 Roolan
historian
19 Frenetic
state
22 Spanish
painter
23 Street

25 Vetch

seed
27 Had to do

with
29 Grant;
oWnership

30 Snare

31 Not obvious
38 Lofty spot
37 Fish

29 Italian •

ice cream

MY TIME'S UP.
SHERIFF!!

'~ET ME OUT OF
·":f"Hi5 DADBURN
HOOSEGOW !.'

32 Dove sound
33 Wrath
34 Fashion

SOON AS I
GIT DONE WITH

MV DADBURN
PAPER WORK,

35 Richly
'wrought
37 Jacket
or collar
38 Metallic

SNUFF'A

alloy
39 Additionally

Reynolds Electric, 651
Beech St. , Middleport, OH .
Rewind and Repair.tle&lt;trlc
motors. 992·2356.

18 ft. Starcrafl open bow
Tri· V hull boat with 228
Mercrulser. 1·0 complete
Miller Electrical Service .
1974 Vega Hatchbac k. $500 . w·traller. Full canvas and · Resident and Busl}leq •• ·
all
accessories.
compile
Reliable and Experienced .
992-6259.
ouHit has less than 24 hours
742-3195 .
use. once In a time buy as
1972 Chevy 4 Dr . sedan. will take loss to sell . 992 ·
85
General Hauling
1973 Dodge, 4 dr. sedan. 352'1.
1972 Chevy 1h ton pickup.
WILL HAUL limestone and
All run good . 992·7675.
Boat motor 1974 12 h.p . ; gravel. Also, lim~ haull"'l
and 5preadlng, Leo Morrl5
$175. 742-2315.
1977 · Dodge Aspen, Good
Trucking . Phone 742·2-ISS.
cond. 949-2227.
camping
"78
Ecjulpment
87
Upholstery
1974 Pinto Wagon, 4 cyl ,,
Popup camper . Sleeps 8, 3
A&amp;H Upholstering, across
auto., good cond. New
burner stove. furnace, fee
from the Teuco Station In
fires, new ba ttery, new
box, sink, two booth type
Sy,racuse. Ph. 992·3752 or '
e)(haust. new points and
992 · 37~ .
tables. $600. 742·2420.
plugs. st ,400. 742 ·2844. 1

10019.)

as trousers
25 Small anvil
26 To be: Lat .
27 Harpoon
point
28 Lawyer : abbr.

Electrical
&amp; R efrlgerallon

ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR sweepers,
toasters, Irons, all small
appliances. Lawn mower.
Next to Slate Highway
Garage on Route 7, 985· :
3525.

Bridge, " care of this newspaper. P.0 . Box 489, Racilo City
Station, New York , N.Y.

..23 Loose ,

Excavating

SEWING
MACHINE
Repairs , servi ce,
all
makes.
992· 2284 . The
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
AUthOriZed Singer 5016
and Service . We sharpenScissors.

(For a copy of JACOBY
MODERN, senci $1 1o: " Win at

bv THOMAS JOSEPH

and

Wil l do Odds and ends,
paneling, floor tile, and
cei ling tile. Call · Fred
Miller, 992·6338 .

INEWSPAPER llNTE:RPRISE ASSN.)

ACROSS
I Tanguay's

L)OU

Home
Improvements

entered dummy by ruffing a
low spade. Next cam e the
king of hearts for a spade dis·
card followed by the queen of
hearts .
Some East players ruffed
with the three of trumps.
Whereupon South overruffed,
ruffed another spade with the
10 of trumps. came to his
hand wi th a club ruff. laid
down his ace of diamonds and.
after East's king dropped, the
jack of diamonds forced
West"s queen. The nine of diamonds was to pick up the
eight and give South his slam. ·
Other East players refused
lo ruff . South continued with
tbe jack of hearts to discard
his last low spade . Then a lead
of the 10 of diamonds gave
East the choice of playing the
king or a low diamond. Either
way would let South get away
with just one trump loser.
The one 1 South who went
down found James Chew of
Tulsa in the East seat.
Jim ruffed the queen of
hearts with his king of
diamonds. South had to overruff. Then he had to ruff a
spade with the 10 of trumps.
Now West was sure of two
diamond tricks and a top
score.

~J'Wd'

Dedicated!

a new and

see

S &amp;. G Carpet Cleaning.
Steam
cleaned.
Free
estimate .
Reasonable
ra tes. Scotchguard. 992·
6309or742· 2211 .

83

+K109 64

Vulnerable : Neither
Dealer~ Norlh

Ph. 992·2772

WALL PAPERING
painting . 742·2328 .

+K 3

• Q8 6
.5 3

Free Estimate

81

4-8-80

tAJ9 75 4

Ja m·eSKeesee

114

Autos for Sale

Poor contract makes slam

ANNIE

nsul1tion
• Storm Doors
• Storm Wind-s
• Ropl•cement
Windows

Trucks for Sale

1979 Jeep Wagoneer, 4 dr .•
fully equipped, exc. cond.
$7,500. 742·3117 after 5 p .m .

G\1-;

!'tJI...Ar:?-(7 6

Vinvt&amp;
Aluminum Siding

*

wanted to Buy

ANTIQUES,
FUR ·
NITURE, g lass, china,
anything. See or cell Ruth
Gosney, antiques, 26 N.
2nd, Middleport, OH . 992 ·
3161.

71

BRIDGE

'&lt;Ot.JR 1.,4.\IJI.l

- .J&amp;L BUMN
INSUlATION

•New homes extensive remodeling
*Electric Ia workS
Mas11nrv work
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583

CHIP WOOD . Poles maK .
diameter 10" on largest
end . $12 p·er ton. Bundled
stab. $10 per ton . Delivered
to Ohio Pallet Co .• Rt. 2,
PomeroY·992·2689.

61

&lt;;PRUJ~

·.. ' .

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

1 Farmall H Tractor, 1967
GMC Truck . Long bed,
could be used fo r logging .
304-773-5873.

Tuesday , April 8

NORTH

2· U ·Hc

3·12· 1 mo.

Farm Equipment

O~TET INDUCT LOUNGE
Answer . Wha t she said to the rud e delicatessen

Jumbles: MOUTH

DID 'tttJ KOOW

Free Estimates
38a·9759

"Lowest Rates
In Town"
"Ten Years
Experience"
"Work
Guaranteed"
Ph. 992-6186
After Five

Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices
Call H-ard
949· 2862
949· 2160
1· 22-ltc

(Answers tomorrow)

I

+3

Roofing, siding,
gutter,
ltu ilt · u p
roof and home
repair.

..

1978 Kawa5akl 6.50. Exc.
cond. 985·4133.

Pi cking up a plano In vour
area . Looking for a respon ·
si ble party to take over
payments. Call credit
manager collect. 614··592 ·

Now arrange the circled letters to
form the surprise answer, as sug·

IT U:RI~IIJL.Y Wf.G
f.ll~ OF 11-4e CW
IN-JJ 1D I ~VITE­

,._i 1181&lt; MOIHE:.R"?

GEORGE'S
ROOFING

4~ HI C

HILLCREST KENNELS .
Boarding, all breeds. Clean
indoor·outdoor facilities .
AlSo AKC
registered
Dobermans. 614·446·7795 .

Mus lui
Instruments

r J

Jumble Book No. 13, cont•lnlng 110 puulet,ll '"alllble torS1 .7! pottpald
from Jumba., c/otl'•l• n•••P•Pfi, 8ox3-4, Norwood, N.J. 07648.1nclucleyour
n~me, 1ddr~~as , dp coda and make chtckl payable to New•paperbook t .

BORN LOSER

Call for a Free Siding ·
Estimate, 949·2101 or
949·2860. No Sunday
calls.
1·21-1 mo .

992·3795

'lz blood Beefato bull . 742· :==:=:::o:=:==:;===
2630.
· 7'-'4' - - - 'M
= ol;:oo::.rc" y' "c"'lee.::sc....__

HOOF HOLLOW : Horses
and ponies and riding
lessons .
Everything
imaginable in horse equip·
ment. Blankets, belts,
boots, etc . t:ngllsh and
Western . Ruth Reeves
(614) 698··3290.

I

man - HO LD YOUR TONGUE I

H&amp;R BLOCK OFFICE LOCAJIQH,

POODLE
GROOMING .
·Judy Taylor. 61067 ·7220.

Purebred Husky, male. 5
mo.old . Black and while.
Has all shots. SSO. John
vroman, 187112 2nd Ave ..
Middleport. 992 ·2741 .

Siding

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

·Tri-County
3ookkeeping
Service

- .
-~·
.[Sf
rr.-:·'
- ~ e- ""'"'

'E\:''··~
·
· · ....
..:.~·

16mm color and sound
movie projector in very
good condition. S200. Old
small cas1 iron wood cook
stove In very good con·
dition . $120. 247·2624.

Early Americl!n sofa and
large chair. $75 . 985·4217.

I

I I

Yesle&lt;day·s

~HII..e
_ !,
~

IN STOCK for Immediate
delivery : various sizes of
pool kits. Do· it·yourself or
let us install for you . D.
Bumgardner Sales, Inc.
992·5724 .

85 Bus hel baskets, 25 lids.
992 ~ 3019 . Can be seen at200
Lasley St. after 5 Friday on
weekends.

6

ITANDLE±

I'M HERE!

Vinyl and Aluminum ·

Remodeling
Additions
Siding
Brick Work
Block Work
Concrete Finishing

POMEROY, O.
992·6215 or
992-73i4
1·28· 1 mo.

EMERGENCY power
alternators - own the best
- buy Winpower . c;all513·
788·2589 .

5122.

OH 605HI THAT'5 THE
CII'1C U5 THAT HA5 AI..L

CALL 992-7544

Quality construction at
reasonable rates.

V. C. YQUNG Ill

APPLES - ROME beauty
apples at $4 per bu . Best for
apple butter . Call 669·3785,
Fitzpatrick Orchard, SR

·-

THI5 15 o\.l R . t.II CI&lt; TENAFLY··
MAt.IA6ER OF THE VA IUJUM &amp;
.--~, 61N6LEY CIFtCU!&gt;!

Hours 9 ~1 M., W., F .
Oilier limes by appoint·
ment.
107 S'ycamore &lt;Rear
Pomeroy, O.

N. L CONSTRUCTION

Gutter work , down
spouts, some concrete
wOrtt,
walks
and
drivewavs.
. (FREE ESTIMATES)

COAL,
LIMESTONE,
sand, gravel, calcium
chloride, fertilizer, dog
food, and all types of salt.
E•ceiSior Salt Works, Inc .,
E . Main St ., Pomeroy, 992·
3591 .

37

. PARK FINANCIAL
. SERVICES, INC.

5111 51.
H•ven, W. VI.
3· 17-1 mo.

..

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING

Misc . Merchanise

1971 Zimmer trailer 12x60.
1972 Buddy Trailer 12x60.

Farms for Sale

I KJ

Print answer here:

ATTENTION:
liM·
PORTANT TO YOUl Will
pav cash or certified check
for antiques and collec ·
tibles or entire estates.
Nothing too large. Also,
guns, pocket watches and
coin collect ions. Call 61~ ·
767 ·3167 or 557·3411 .
54

Federal Hou si ng &amp; 1,
veterans Admin . La.ns . . t

WATERMELON
PATCH

Antiques

53

See Us First for All .
of Your Maternity
Needs. ·

Utility Buildings

5 :31f--Mash 3; P la y lhe Percentages
8; E lee . Co. 20; Happy Days
Again 13; Doctor Who 33 ; I
Dream of Jeannie 17.

BATOB

_

RISING STAR Kennel.
Boarding . Call367·0292 .

33

t

GYAOP

REALEST ATE
FINANCtNG

Sizes From 4x61o 12x40

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

56

l2x60 Kirkwood with large
living room extension; 3
bedrooms, central air con·
dit loning . Good c6nd ., must
sell . 304·773 ·5173.

Television
Viewing

byHenriArnotdand-Bob Lee

Uf1scramble these lour Jumbles.
one lerter to each square. to fOrm
four ordinary words .

PREGNANn
Tops· Piints
Jumpers-Dresses

45
Furnished Rooms
Sleep ing Room f or working
man . Call992·6022.

1971 12X65 Tra iler, com·
pletely furnished , A.C.,
very good condition . On a
lot that can be rented.
Ready to move Into. $6500
firm. 992·5304.

992 ·53~4.

j"jl THAT SCA,MBLEO WORD GAME

TUESDAY, APRIL8,1980
44

689 .

11

1ffl1#1.\hf fil'il

~ ~ ~~ !\-

Business Services

1 bedroom mobile heme.
Adults only . 992· 2598.

Insurance

13
·o

Sl - Hcxnehold Goods
S2- CI. TV , lttdio Equipment

tt - Htlp w1 nted
12- Situtftl Wanf.ci

Situations wanted

Wi ll clean house . Call 667·
3423 or 667·6373 .
·

ti-Equlpmtnt tor Rent

&amp; Auction

9--WantedtoBuy

wanted : Woman to sit with
older lady . $2.&gt;10 per hr. 992·
7255 .

General

•4-Apartmtnt l or A:tnt
415-FRooms

s-Ma ppy Adl

Off ice, Clerical Help .
Typing ,
pr ~ficien~y
reQuired. send complete
rf;tsume c·o The Deily Sen·
tinel , Box 729-C. Pomeroy,
Oh iO&lt;I.S769.

12
Real Est•te

Help Wanted

11

11 -The Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, AprilS, 19110

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-

Here's how

to work it:

AXYDLBAAXR
Ia LONGFELLOW

PEANUTS

ALL Rl61-rr: EVER~BODY,
'LET'S TRI{ TO
CONCENTRATE OUT Tl-lERE!

ie

•

I Tl-lOU6HT I
TOLD l(()U TO
CONCENTRATE

One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A iJ
115ed for the lhree L's, X for the two O' s, etc. Slnsle letters,
apostrophea, the length and formation of 1he words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are dltre~ent.

CltYPT()qUOTES
ERM
QSE

C KMDEMPE
ES

IM

LWPMKO

0 IT M

ES

WP
IMDK

LWPMKO . - CMKLDQ
GKSUMKI
Yesterday'• Cryptoqaote : I NEVER KNEW A MAN WHO
LIVED ON HOPE BUT WHAT SPENT JUS OLD AGE AT
SOI&gt;{EBODY ELSE'S EXPENSE .-JOSH BIWNGS
f) ttl!)

KIAI Ftafl.lrH

bndl~ .

Inc .

~News

3,8,10, 13,15; ABC News
6; Carol Burnell 17; 3-2-1 Contact
20 .
6 :31f--N BC News3,15; ABC News 13;
CBS News 8,10 ; Bob Newhart 17;
Wi ld Wild World ot Animals 33.
7 · Oif-Cross-Wits 3: Tic Tac Dough
8; Newlywed Game 6; News 10;
Face lhe Musi c ' 13 ; Love
American Style IS; Sanford &amp;
Son 17; Dick Cavett 20.
7 : 31f--Hollywood Squares 3; Joker's
Wild 8; Hollywood Squares 10;
Sha N~ Na 13; TV Honor Society
15; All in the Family 17; Mac ~
Neii .Lehrer Report 20.
8 : ~Misadventures of Sheriff Lobo
3.1 5; Happy Days 6,13; White
Shadow 8,10; Nova 20.33 .
8 :11f--Laverne &amp; Shi rley 6,13 .
9 :00- Big Show 3,15; Three' s
Company 6,1 3; Movie " Kenny
Rogers as the Gamb ler" 8,10·
Mystery 20,33; 9 :31f--Taxl 6,11_
10 :IJO--Harl to Hart 6,13; Maverick
17; News 20; City Notebook 33.
10 :31f--U nited Slates 3.15;; Over
Easy 20; Camera Three 33 .
11 :IJO--News 3.8, 10,13, 15; Last of the
Wild 17; Di ck Cavett 20; Dave
A.llen al Large 13.
11 :3G-Tonighl3,15; AIK News6,13;
Barnaby Jones 8; ABC Cap.
tioned
New s
33;
Mov ie
" Waterme lon Man " 10; Movie
" The Westerne r" 17.
11 :50-Movie " Hit! " 6,13; 12 :4().....
Movie " Destiny of a Woman " 8;
1 :OQ-Tomorrow 3; News 15;
I :41f--News 17 .
1 :45-Movie " Konga " 17 ; 2 :36News
13;
3 :45- Movle
" Challenge of the Gladiator" 17.

WEDNESDAY , APRIL 9,1980
5:4&gt;-Farm Report 13; World at
Large 17 ; 5 :50-PTL Club 13.
6:IJ0--700 Cl ub 6,8; PTL Club 15 ;
Health
Field
10 ;
6 : 30Chrlslopher Closeup 10; News 17.
6 :45-Morning Report 3; A.M .
Weather 33 ; 6 :5&gt;- News 13.
7 : ~ TOday 3. 15 ; Good Morning
America 13; Batman 10; Wed·
nesday Morning 8; Three
Stooges-Lillie Rascals 17.
/ : ~Family Affair 10; 7:5&gt;-Chuck
While Rep or ts 10.
B : ~Capt . Kangaroo 8,10; Lucy
Show 17; Sesame 51. 33; 8:3().....
Romper Room 17.
9:IJO--Bob Braun 3; Big Valley 6 ;
Beverly Hillbillies 8; Jeffersons
10; Phil Donahue 13, 15; Fam ily
Affair 17.
9: 3G-Bob Newhar t 8; Aflernoon
P layhouse 10; Green Acres 17.
IO :IJO--Card Sharks 3,1 5; Jeffersons
8; Joker' s Wild 10; Morning
Magazine 13; Movie " Tile Two
Mrs . Carrolls" 17 .
I 0 : 30- Hollywood Squares 3.15 ;
$20,000 Pyramid 13 ; 10 :5&gt;-CBS
News 8; House Call l 0.
11 :IJO--High Rollers 3,1 5; Laverne&amp;.
Shi r ley 6,13 ; Price is Right 8,10.
11 : 30-Wheel of Fortune 3, 15 ;
Family Feud 6,13; Sesame ST.
20.33; 11 :55-News 17 .
12:IJO--Newscenter 3; News 8.10.13;
Health
Fie ld
15;
Movie
" Rhubarb" 17.
12 :30-Ryan ' s Hope 6,13; Search for
Tomorrow 8, 10; Password Plus
15; Elec . CO . 20, 33 .
I : IJO--Days of Our Lives 3,15; All My
Ch ildren 13 ; Young &amp; the
Restless 8, 10.
I :4&gt;-Baseball 3; 2:0G-0ne Life to
Live 6,13; As The World Turns
8,1 0; Doctors 15; Baseball 17.
2 : 30- Anolher World 15 ; 3: 00General Hosp ital 13; Austin City
Limits 20.
3:30-0ver Easy 33.
4: 00- Afternoon Playhouse 8 ;
Sesa me St . 20,33; Real McCoys
13 ; Gomer Py le 10 ; Lillie
Rascals 15.
4:30-Lone Ranger J;; Gomer Pyle
8; Brady Bunch 10; Tom&amp;. Jerry
13 ; Merv Griffin 15; Gilligan 's Is .
17.
5:1J0--Carol Burnell 3; Sanford &amp;
Son B; Mary Tyl er Moore 10; My
Three Sons 17; Mister Rogers
Neig hborhood 20.33 .
5: 30-Mash 3; News 6; Elec . Co. 20;
Mash 10; Happy Days Again 13; I
Dream of Jea nnie 17; Doctor
Who 33.
6 :IJO--News 3.8, 10. 13.15; ABC News
6; 3-2-1 Contacl 20,33.
6 :31f--NBC News3, 15; ABC News 13;
Bob Newha r t 17 ; Carol Burnett
6; Villa Alegre 20; Wild Wild
' ' World of Animals 33 .
/ : ~C ross- Wits 3; Tic lac Dough
8; Newlywed Game 6; News 10;
Fa ce the Music 13 ; Love ,
American Style 15; Sanford &amp;
Son 17; Dick Cavett 20 .
7: 31f--Counjry Roads 3; Joker ' s Wild
8; Dick Cavett 33 ; 1979 Me morial
Go.!l Tournam ent 10; Family
Feud 13 ; Wild Kingdom 15; All In
The Family 17; MacN e il -Lehrer
Report 20.
8 :IJO--Real People 1, 15; Eight Is
Enough 6, 13; Movie " A Boy
Named Charl ie Brown " 8, 10;
Shakespeare Plays 20 ,:i3; Movie
" The Prince &amp; the Showglrl" 17.
v:w-l.nartle ' S Angels 13; Movie
" Nvrse" 8,10.
lO : ~From Here to Eternity 3,1 5;
Vegas 13.
10 : 30- Upstalrs , Downsta irs 17 ;
10:3&gt;-Muslc In the Age of
Shakespeare 20,33.
11 : OG-News 3,6,8,10, 13 , 15 ; Dave
Allen at Large 33 .
11 :Oif-Tonlght3,15; ABC News 6, 13;
Your Turn : Leiters to CBS News
8; ABC Captioned News 33;
Movie " The Valley of decision"
tO; Movie " Apache Uprising"
17; Dick Cavell 20.
.
11:50-Love Boal6,13 ; 12 : ~Biack
Sheep Squadron 8.
I: 00- Tomorrow 3; Barella 13;
News 15; l: 1G-Movle "Most
Wanted " 8.
· 1:3G- · News 17; 1 :35-Baseball 17.
2 : 1G-N•ws 13; 4 :05-Untouchables
17; 5:0&gt;-Maverlck 17 .

�10- 'nle Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, April 8, 19«1

Your Best Buys Are Found in the Sentinel Classifieds
42
11

WANT AD INFORMATION

Help wanted

GET VALUABLE 1raining

as a young busi ness person

PHONE 992-2156
or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St., Pomerov. o., 45769

and · earn good money plus
some great gifts as a Sen·
tinel route carrier. Phone
us right awav and get on
the eligibil ity list a t. 992·
2156 or 992·2157 .

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX
eANNOUNCEMENTS

eRENTALS

t-CarG of Ttlanlts

41-Houstl for Rent

1- tn Me,oriam
J-Anntcmctmtnh
+-GiVtiWty

42- Mobllt Homes
fo r Rtnt

6--Lostand Found

46--SPI!cefor Ren t

7- Yud Sale
I - Public Salt

47-Wtntftl to Rent

Need Ql!lrden plow and
disc? Racine Area only .
949-2448 .

608 E .

eMERCHANDISE

e EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

n - Anlique•
S4-Misc . Mtrchandlst
ss-&amp;u i ldint Supplies
56-Pets tor S.te

IJ-Insurlnce
14-lusinus Tr alnint
lt-Sctaoolslnttrucli&lt;~n

16-

Radio, TV

e FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

I Cl Repa ir
It-Wanted To Do

•1- Farm Equipment
n - wanted to 8U'tl
72-Trucks for S•l•
U - Lho'IIIOCk
" - Hav" Grain
u - Seed &amp; Fertilizer

e FINANCIAL
ausin tn

21 -

Opportunity
22- Money to Loan
23- Proftnlomllt
S.rvlcts

eTRANSPORTATION
71-Autos ,., S.le

.fREAL ESTATE

13- Vens&amp;4W .O.
74-Motorqclll

31 - Home• for Sale
32- Mobile.tiomes
for Sale

a-

Auto P•rts
&amp;'Acceuorin
71- Auto Aepeir

n-F•rms tor S•lt
Jl- luslnen Blllldlngs

J5-Loh &amp; Acre•v•
~Rul Elf•te W•nted
l1- Re81fOU

eSERVICES

Want·Ad Advertising
Deadlines
4 P .M. Oally
12 Noon Saturdlly
lor Mond•v

I.

11-Homelmprovemenfl
12-Piumblna &amp; EliUYIIting
ll-Eif,CIIVafing
14-Eie&lt;trlcal
I. R.tr igerelion
U- Gener111 Hau ling
N-M.H. AI INii r

11- Upholstery

Rates and Other Information
Cuh

I d11y

1.00

2:days

1.50

....

3dfiYI

1.10

6dii'(S

Cher1e
1.25
1.90
2.15

us

Each word over the minimum 15 words 15 4 cen li l)l'rword per dlly .
Adi running oUter then consKutiYII d11ys will tM!! ChllrQed a t the I day
r•te.

In memory, Car d of Th•nk, •nd Oboituuy : • cents per word. U .oo
minimum . Cash In edvence.

Mobile HomeSflll l llnd Y&gt;1rd Sllletllre •ccepted only with cash with
order . 2S cent chute for ads cerrying lo• NumHr In C11re of The
Sentinel.

Announcements

1

GUN SHOOT EVERY
FRIDAY NIGHT 7:30P.M .
FACTORY CHOKE ONLY .
RACINE GUN CLUB .

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

8

BRADFORD. Auctioneer,
Complete Servi ce. Phone
949·2.187 or 949·2000. racine,
Ohio, Critt Bradford .

Giveaway

4

St. Bernard . 2 years old . 1
family,
good watch
dog.992·2092 or 992-7803 .
6

Lost and Found

Found:
Small,
light ·
colored. long ~ haired dog .
Near Veteran' s Memoria l
Hospital. Call 992·6601 or
11'12· 7624.

9

Wanted to Buy

I ron and brass beds, old
furniture, desks, gold
rings, lewelry, silver
dOII!IIrS, sterling, etc ., wood
Ice boxes, antiques, etc .
Complete
liouseholds .
Write M. D. Miller. Rt. 4.
Pomeroy, OH . or call 992·
7760.

11

Help Wanted

Full time and parttime R N
or LPN . 11 ·7. Contact Mr.
Zidian at Pomeroy Health
Care Center Monday thru
Friday 9·5.
Bar Maid or Bar Tender,
part tim , work into possible
full time. Call 992·5509 bet·
ween9·5.

Babysitter Needed in the
Ra cine area to care for a 9
month old girl. Hours 8 · ~
Mon. thru Fri. Please call
949·2406 after 5 p.m .
Real Estate - General

10 karat, 14 karat, 18 karat ,
gold. Dental gold and gold
ear pins. 675·3010.
Gold, silver or foreign
coins or any gold or silver
items. Antique furniture,
glass or china, will pay top
dollar, or complete estates.
No Item too large or too
small . Check prices before
selling. Also do appraising .
Osby &lt;Osslel Martin. 992·
6370.

Real Estate- General

M&lt;l&gt;IN
'"'"'" •
POMa:O&lt;uT,
992· 2259
PRICE REDUCED
This charm ing 2 story
home has 3 bedrooms,
dining room , kitchen,
family room, &amp; living
room . Some of the
special features of this
home are ori gina l wood ·
work, firepla ce, centrl
air, bu il t·in kitchen, full
basement and many
more .
Reduced
to
$29 ,500.00.
RURAL FLAVOR - 44
acres all fenced with a 2
yr . old modular home .
Has a beautiful floor
plan, with 4 bedrooms
and 2 baths. Also has a
barn
and
other
build ings, and an extra
trailer hook·up . Yours
for only S42,00Q.OO .
TIRED OF PAYING
RENT? - With a small
down payment you can
own th is 5 room home
for less than what
you ' re paying for rent .
Stop by today and take a
took . just $11,000 .00.
HEAD
TURNING
HOME - Th iS d islinc·
t lve brick &amp; frame
house has 9 rooms, 1112
. baths and shows all the
· work &amp; care that has
gone into this stately
home. Every rOom is artisti c ally decorated .
Located on a quiet
street in 8
good
neighborhood .
$59,500.00.
IN TOWN Nice 2
story wllh full base·
men!. Has up to 4
bedrooms,
se wing
room , fireplace in fami ·
ty room . Lots of closets.
VA or FHA approved.
$28,900.00.
DISTINCTIVE &amp; DIF·
FERENT
Unbelievably clean and
well kept 1112 story
frame
home .
Just
perfect for a tamlly with
4 bedrooms, spacious
living room , formal dining room, and beautiful
cabinets with built·in
oven &amp; range in the kit·
chen .. Has a full base·
ment and is carpeted
throughout .
Only
$35.000.00.
ECONOMY PRICED 5 rooms and a bath all
on one floor , and is
located on a level 3/"
acre lot. Has an extra
water tap. Could be a
lovely home with just a
Iittle work . $16,500.00 .
OUR SALES STAFF IS
READY TO ASSIST
YOU, SALES DO NOT
JUST HAPPEN
THEY ARE MADE .
• REALTOR
Henry Cleland, Jr.
992·619)
ASSOCIATES
Jean Trussell 949·2660
Roger &amp; Dottie Turner
742· 2474
Office Phone 992· 22S9

REAL ESTATE
WE HAVE FINANCING AVAILABLE
AS LOW AS 5% DOWN AND 30 YEARS
TO PAY, ON MOST HOMES .
WHETHER YOU RENT OR BUY
YOU PAY
FOR THE PLACE YOU OCCUPY .
MIDDLEPORT - Commercial off ice building, on
busy corner in c.enter of town . Fully rented . A good
investment.
POMEROY - Two be
D'ath frame home
on Hill St. Now rent15-() • )() per mo. Only
$10,000.
· RACINE - Peace and quiet in the country. Just a
few m iles from Racine. Remodeled home on 2 acres
of ground . $39,000.

-1

"-1 D"l2

Pomeroy,O.

MIDDLEPORT - Thn.,
bath, nice tot
just one block from hea ~ ~ ._5,000.
POt.tEROY - On Lincoln His.- Two bedroom and
bath, full basement, gas furna ce, storm windows &amp;
doors. Owner will help finance it you need it. $17,500.
RUTLAND - Older home needs some repairs on
Salem Street. Nice corner lot. $9900.00.
BUILDING OR TRAILER LOT - Hysell Run Road
- 5 a cres. S7 .000 .
SYRACUSE - Old house on a nice tot, $11.600.
loOT IN MIDDLEPORT - We will bu ild a house on
fhis one if you choose - South Second Ave.

New

Llstln11 - NR·Sf,
Oul1tandlng home. Spring

We Are Selling - We Need Listings

Ave.. Pomero'(. 0 .. t ully
carpetrd. fireplace , 3
bedroom.

CALL 992-2342

bUIIt·l n klfchf!n,

PlntllnQ . Fenced In '(lrd

w;th

driveway . Ca ll for
more info.
Comfortalllt Home NR- sa, ciON ln. 6 rms .• lui·
IY fu rnished, ni ce porch,
y•rd and garage . This won' t
last long .

ltlght- Nit-53, New
split leve l home , 1V. ~ths, 3
bedrooms, basebOard elec·
trlc ttflt, thermoP&amp;ne win·
Just

dOW\, plus a 2 car gara~ .
Approx . Ill~ a cre, Tuppers
Plains, onto. Only w .ooo.

'""'••tment

NR ·U',

Propertv-

Rea ldtnce

plus

bualnns opportunity, 2
bedroom house. business
building w ith garave on
taroe lOts. Reecttvllle, on.
Catt us, S25.000.
Ctl•~rfesM . Havtl, Rllrtor
NHdl E .
lr. Mtr.
Ph. tn· llflo' !~~;:':,,.,

We

hilve

~·

~

RODNEY DOWNING, BROKE R- HO. 992:1711
BILL CHILDS, BRANCH MGR.- HO. 992· 2449

-DiMNiN~iwsAi;ENcv-iNt:"
'INSURANCE
SERVING SOUTHEASTERN OHIO SINCE
· ARE YOU PAYING TOO MUCH? DO
YOU HAVE THE COVERAGE?

FOR ALL YOUR INSURANCE NEEDS .
CALL US.

992-2342
DOWNING-OIIIDS ~ENCY, INC.
MIDDLEPORT OHIO

•

IN ·
AUTOMOBILE
SURANCE
been can ·
you r
ce lled?
Lost
operator's license? Phone
992· 2143.

18

Wanted to Do

Give plano lessons to begin·
ners and advanced student
in my home. Also tea ch
chording and transpasing if
interested . Call992·5401.

Flnanelal
22

Money to Loan

M or tgage
Money
Available. New homes, old
homes, and refinancing
your present home. CON ·
VENTIONAL 5 Pel. down,
SECOND MORTGAGES.
VA· No down payment,
FHA· Low down payment,
FHA· 245·Graduated paym·
enl program, FHA ·265·
Subsidy program . Call 592 ~
3051, Ireland Mortgage Co.,
77 E . Stale St., Athens, OH .

Mobile Homes
for Rent

Homes for Sale

9 Room House, 1'/z baths,
basement and garage .
College Rd ., Syracuse, OH .
111&gt;2·5133 or 992·3981 .
House for Sale. Large tot,
completely remodeled, 3
bedrooms. living room, kit chen and bath. Wood bur·
ner heat. $21,500 . 100 per·
cent financing at n percent
int. If interested call 698 7331. In Pagetown .
House for Sale. Large lot,
completely remodeled, 3
bedroom, kitchen, 2 baths,
living room, full basement.
$25,000. 100 percent flnan·
cing at 11 percent interest.
If fnterested call698·7331 in
Pagetown .
3 Bedroom, 1 story house
on Long St. in Rutland, OH .
Also 1, 29,000 BTU air con·
dltioner. Phone 742·2975.
6 Rooms. 1112 baths, car·
peted, paneled, finished
basement with bar, garbage disposal, good win·
dow air conditioner, storm
w i ndows . See to appreciate, reasonable. 992·
5566.
32

Mobile Homes
tor Sate

1973 Fairpoint, 14x65 2
bedroom
1971 Cameron, 14K65, 2
bedr.
1971 Fleetwood, 14x65 3
bdr .. bath 'h
1971 Shakespear, 14K65 2
bedroom
1965 Yanor 12K52, 2 bedr.
1968 Fleetwood 12x63, 2
Bdr.
B &amp; S MOBILE HOME
SALES. PT. PLEASANT,
wv. 304·675·4424 .

Apartment
tor Rent

ALL STEEL

3 AND 4 RM furnished ap·
ts. Phone 992 ·5~4 .

Farm Buildings
Sizes
" From lOxlO"

RENTER' S assistance for
senior Citi zens tn Village
Manor apts. Call992·7787.

SMALL

3 rooms and bath upper
apt. 992 5621 .

~

ATTENTION :
liM ·
PORTANT TO YOU) Will
pay cash or certified check
for antiques and collec ·
tibles or entire estates .
Nothing too large. Also,
guns, pocket watches and
coin collections. Call 614·
767·3167 or 557·3411 .

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt. I, BOK 54
Racine, Dh.
Ph. 614·1143·2591
3-30· 1 mo.

New

COUNTRY HOME with
stocked pond for swimming
or fishing , 9 rooms, ~th,
carpeted . 3 to 17 acres
available. Loceted approx.
7 miles from Pomeroy off
R t . 7 or 33 . 446·2359 alter 6.
36 Acre Farm ,
story
house. Full basement,
barn , build ings, mineral
r ights. good land. $77,000.
992·7559.
1112

35

Lots &amp; Acreage

Property For Sale. Over 3
acres of land in Pomeroy .
Only $7,000 . 992·3886 .

5 Acres for sale . 1 mile
from old 33 and 6 miles
trom Rt. 7. Possibility ol
Land Contract. 992·3900.

Rentals
41

Houses tor Rent

House for rent. Piano fpr
sale. Call 992 ·3489 or 992·
2594.

I.

.

.

,_

..

-·---.

THOSe GReAT WILP
ANIMAL Ac T51

we·D Lll&lt;f' T'ADD

t.IICI&lt; OF YOU
T'5AY 50, CHRIS I
MATTE-R OF FACT,
THAT'S WHY

'(O&amp;Jil.
ACT TO OUFI: SHOW!

rJ

\

__

1

·-~

Guaranteed work
Frl!&lt;! Estimates
After 5 P .M. 992·.5547
3·26·1 mo.

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

3 a•le trailer frame . 60 ft .
long. Never burned. 992·
5992.
Used
Free standing
fireplace, also several used
chain saws . Pomeroy
Home and Auto. 992·2094.

Slihl 015 power saw for
sate. $75 . 992·5501 . 1684 Lin·
coin Heights, Pomeroy.

DISCOUN
PRICES
Hotpoint and
General Electric
Appliance
Sales &amp; Service

POMEROY .
LANDMARK
Jacic ~w. carsev-.
Mgr.
Phone 992-2181
Pels for Sale

- -----

618 E. Main

Pomeroy, Oh.

gested by the above cartoon.

A(IIIXIIJ

AUlD REPAIR

H. L WHITESEL

WE BRING THE
GARAGE TO YOU!!!

ROOFING
All types of roof work,
new or repair guHers
and downspouts, gutter
cleaning and painting.
All work gu1ranteed.

61

62

~

J~T~T

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

TO Dil.lt-lei2-

72

1972 Ford F ·10 1fi ton 302
automatic trans., p.s.,
custom cab, e•c. cond . for
a1972. 6U·667 ·3593.

OLD COINS, pocket wat·
ches, class rings, wedding
bands, diamonds . Gold or . ~ --------­
sllyer. Call J . A. wamstey, 1974 Ford Pickup. 1979
742·2331. Treasure Chest
Coin Shop. Athens, OH . 592 ~ Ford Pickup. 992·5304.
6462.

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

1970 Pontiac GTO. Good
cond . Ca!lafter 5. 992·5.187.
71

vans&amp;4W.D.

1979 Ford 1.50 4•4, auto .•
p.s ., p .b., topper. Positive
traction front and rear. 9854339.
1979 JEEP CJ ··7, power
steering, Levi Interior, 3
speed, till steering wheel.
10,000 mites. S5600. Call99'l·
31.49 or 992·2705.

HUMANE
SOCIETY .
Adopt a homeless pet .
Healthy, shots, wormed.
Donations required. 992·
626o, noon· 7 p. m .

1979 Camara
Z · 28 .
• Automatic, 5.500 miles, e•·
cellent condition . Loaded.
cost over $9,000. Priced for
quick sale. 742 · 21~ .

AKC Registered Coll ie pup·
pis. Trl ·colored, 6 weeks
old . $60. 985·3567.

1971 Nova, 6 cyt. , auto.,
godl! work car. 992·3886.

1973 Olds .
Cutlass
Supreme. 63,000 mlles, p .s.,
p .b., a.c ., am-fm radio,
good ties. recent tune up,
drives good. May be seen at
361 Grant St., Middleport,
OH or call 992· 7567 or 992·
3544.

3 Bike Motorcycle Troller .
$100. 992-5523.
75

Boalsand
Motors for Sale

1977 Quachlla bass boat .
FUllY equipped. May be
able to help with financing.
992 ·3900.
Must S~ll. 77 Starcraft
boar, 16' open boW, 85 hP
Merc .-JS.S . prOp·canves
top·sterllng trailer. $2,800.
Call alterS p.m . 992·2791.

NAI'i- YOU KNOW HOI'i NO
~\AN 15 A HERO TO HIS

... 'IJE KNOW WHO I'{ORKG AND WHO
DOESN'T- WHICH MISS THE MOST
ROLL CALLS •.• WHO HAS THAT THIRD
MARTINI AT LUHCH ...

V4L ET" ... S~ME THINIS

l'iiTH CON6RE55MEN

i.

AND P.AGE BOYS ...

LISTEN• IF YOU HAVE
SUCH A SOUR VIEW
OF CONGRESSMEN,

'lilf1''D YOU BECOME

BECAUSE~

WHAT l WANT

T08E-·A
POLITICIAN!

.K Q J 75
• 10 2
+AQB 7 2
WEST
EAST
+J42
• Q 10 8 6
.10986 2
.13

SOUTH

.A

+AK 975

A PAGE BOY?

.J

West

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

North

East

I'

Pass
Obi.
Pass
Pass
Pass

3.

3 NT

5t

Pass

Soutb

z+
3+
4+
6+

ALLEYOOP
Opening lead :+ 5

3·26·1 mo.

WAIT FORME,
SERGEANT!
I'LL GO WITH
YOU!

.

YES, [DID! [

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sootag

Silr diamonds is a poor
contract. but al the Colorado
Springs regionals most South
players who got there were
lucky enough to make it.
At all tables East doubled
three clubs when North bid it.
West opened a club. South had
to go right up with dummy's
ace. Then South cashed the
ace of hearts and spades a nd

-ROOFING
-PAINTING
-REMODEUNCi
-CONCRETE
Free Estimates
Ph.: (3041 773·5731
or (304) 882-2276

GASOUNE ALLEY

H · (pd . )

Good

to

Ser*ilees

Hack,

Ljou're lookinq at

Alert!

back,
Slim!

CARPENTER WORK complete remOdeling by AI
Tromm. 742·2328. Referen·
ces.
MI5TER: TIPPE 5A ID

BUT YOU DON'T
KNOW ANYrH I N6
A130UT HIM. FOR
ALL YOU KNOW HE

WANT

AL L H15 " RIEND5

YOU DAllNG

CALL HIM 11TIPPY/

HIM Jll5TTO

All/D WE PO
HAVE A DATE

MAY BE: MARRIEP!

CUIZ ZY
FAVOl&lt; .. .

TONIGHT.
Limestone for driveways. :
Pomeroy~- Mason area. 367· •
7101.

..

40 Colorado
resort
"I Don't - " 41 Unkind look
5 Excellence
DOWN
10 English
1 Neighbor
river
of Nev.
· II Newman film %Spanish city
13 Cadence
3 Rock group
14 Garb
4 Suffix
15 Neighbor
for consist
oflnd.
5 - longue
16 Driving
6 Door
penni! :
device
abbr.
7 Buchwald
17 Bini 's nest
8 Party
18 Somewhat
game
impartial
9 No joke
20 "Ode 12 Insect at a
Nightingale "
Politburo
21 Church part
22Eschew

Yesterday's AIIBwer
16 Roolan
historian
19 Frenetic
state
22 Spanish
painter
23 Street

25 Vetch

seed
27 Had to do

with
29 Grant;
oWnership

30 Snare

31 Not obvious
38 Lofty spot
37 Fish

29 Italian •

ice cream

MY TIME'S UP.
SHERIFF!!

'~ET ME OUT OF
·":f"Hi5 DADBURN
HOOSEGOW !.'

32 Dove sound
33 Wrath
34 Fashion

SOON AS I
GIT DONE WITH

MV DADBURN
PAPER WORK,

35 Richly
'wrought
37 Jacket
or collar
38 Metallic

SNUFF'A

alloy
39 Additionally

Reynolds Electric, 651
Beech St. , Middleport, OH .
Rewind and Repair.tle&lt;trlc
motors. 992·2356.

18 ft. Starcrafl open bow
Tri· V hull boat with 228
Mercrulser. 1·0 complete
Miller Electrical Service .
1974 Vega Hatchbac k. $500 . w·traller. Full canvas and · Resident and Busl}leq •• ·
all
accessories.
compile
Reliable and Experienced .
992-6259.
ouHit has less than 24 hours
742-3195 .
use. once In a time buy as
1972 Chevy 4 Dr . sedan. will take loss to sell . 992 ·
85
General Hauling
1973 Dodge, 4 dr. sedan. 352'1.
1972 Chevy 1h ton pickup.
WILL HAUL limestone and
All run good . 992·7675.
Boat motor 1974 12 h.p . ; gravel. Also, lim~ haull"'l
and 5preadlng, Leo Morrl5
$175. 742-2315.
1977 · Dodge Aspen, Good
Trucking . Phone 742·2-ISS.
cond. 949-2227.
camping
"78
Ecjulpment
87
Upholstery
1974 Pinto Wagon, 4 cyl ,,
Popup camper . Sleeps 8, 3
A&amp;H Upholstering, across
auto., good cond. New
burner stove. furnace, fee
from the Teuco Station In
fires, new ba ttery, new
box, sink, two booth type
Sy,racuse. Ph. 992·3752 or '
e)(haust. new points and
992 · 37~ .
tables. $600. 742·2420.
plugs. st ,400. 742 ·2844. 1

10019.)

as trousers
25 Small anvil
26 To be: Lat .
27 Harpoon
point
28 Lawyer : abbr.

Electrical
&amp; R efrlgerallon

ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR sweepers,
toasters, Irons, all small
appliances. Lawn mower.
Next to Slate Highway
Garage on Route 7, 985· :
3525.

Bridge, " care of this newspaper. P.0 . Box 489, Racilo City
Station, New York , N.Y.

..23 Loose ,

Excavating

SEWING
MACHINE
Repairs , servi ce,
all
makes.
992· 2284 . The
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
AUthOriZed Singer 5016
and Service . We sharpenScissors.

(For a copy of JACOBY
MODERN, senci $1 1o: " Win at

bv THOMAS JOSEPH

and

Wil l do Odds and ends,
paneling, floor tile, and
cei ling tile. Call · Fred
Miller, 992·6338 .

INEWSPAPER llNTE:RPRISE ASSN.)

ACROSS
I Tanguay's

L)OU

Home
Improvements

entered dummy by ruffing a
low spade. Next cam e the
king of hearts for a spade dis·
card followed by the queen of
hearts .
Some East players ruffed
with the three of trumps.
Whereupon South overruffed,
ruffed another spade with the
10 of trumps. came to his
hand wi th a club ruff. laid
down his ace of diamonds and.
after East's king dropped, the
jack of diamonds forced
West"s queen. The nine of diamonds was to pick up the
eight and give South his slam. ·
Other East players refused
lo ruff . South continued with
tbe jack of hearts to discard
his last low spade . Then a lead
of the 10 of diamonds gave
East the choice of playing the
king or a low diamond. Either
way would let South get away
with just one trump loser.
The one 1 South who went
down found James Chew of
Tulsa in the East seat.
Jim ruffed the queen of
hearts with his king of
diamonds. South had to overruff. Then he had to ruff a
spade with the 10 of trumps.
Now West was sure of two
diamond tricks and a top
score.

~J'Wd'

Dedicated!

a new and

see

S &amp;. G Carpet Cleaning.
Steam
cleaned.
Free
estimate .
Reasonable
ra tes. Scotchguard. 992·
6309or742· 2211 .

83

+K109 64

Vulnerable : Neither
Dealer~ Norlh

Ph. 992·2772

WALL PAPERING
painting . 742·2328 .

+K 3

• Q8 6
.5 3

Free Estimate

81

4-8-80

tAJ9 75 4

Ja m·eSKeesee

114

Autos for Sale

Poor contract makes slam

ANNIE

nsul1tion
• Storm Doors
• Storm Wind-s
• Ropl•cement
Windows

Trucks for Sale

1979 Jeep Wagoneer, 4 dr .•
fully equipped, exc. cond.
$7,500. 742·3117 after 5 p .m .

G\1-;

!'tJI...Ar:?-(7 6

Vinvt&amp;
Aluminum Siding

*

wanted to Buy

ANTIQUES,
FUR ·
NITURE, g lass, china,
anything. See or cell Ruth
Gosney, antiques, 26 N.
2nd, Middleport, OH . 992 ·
3161.

71

BRIDGE

'&lt;Ot.JR 1.,4.\IJI.l

- .J&amp;L BUMN
INSUlATION

•New homes extensive remodeling
*Electric Ia workS
Mas11nrv work
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583

CHIP WOOD . Poles maK .
diameter 10" on largest
end . $12 p·er ton. Bundled
stab. $10 per ton . Delivered
to Ohio Pallet Co .• Rt. 2,
PomeroY·992·2689.

61

&lt;;PRUJ~

·.. ' .

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

1 Farmall H Tractor, 1967
GMC Truck . Long bed,
could be used fo r logging .
304-773-5873.

Tuesday , April 8

NORTH

2· U ·Hc

3·12· 1 mo.

Farm Equipment

O~TET INDUCT LOUNGE
Answer . Wha t she said to the rud e delicatessen

Jumbles: MOUTH

DID 'tttJ KOOW

Free Estimates
38a·9759

"Lowest Rates
In Town"
"Ten Years
Experience"
"Work
Guaranteed"
Ph. 992-6186
After Five

Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices
Call H-ard
949· 2862
949· 2160
1· 22-ltc

(Answers tomorrow)

I

+3

Roofing, siding,
gutter,
ltu ilt · u p
roof and home
repair.

..

1978 Kawa5akl 6.50. Exc.
cond. 985·4133.

Pi cking up a plano In vour
area . Looking for a respon ·
si ble party to take over
payments. Call credit
manager collect. 614··592 ·

Now arrange the circled letters to
form the surprise answer, as sug·

IT U:RI~IIJL.Y Wf.G
f.ll~ OF 11-4e CW
IN-JJ 1D I ~VITE­

,._i 1181&lt; MOIHE:.R"?

GEORGE'S
ROOFING

4~ HI C

HILLCREST KENNELS .
Boarding, all breeds. Clean
indoor·outdoor facilities .
AlSo AKC
registered
Dobermans. 614·446·7795 .

Mus lui
Instruments

r J

Jumble Book No. 13, cont•lnlng 110 puulet,ll '"alllble torS1 .7! pottpald
from Jumba., c/otl'•l• n•••P•Pfi, 8ox3-4, Norwood, N.J. 07648.1nclucleyour
n~me, 1ddr~~as , dp coda and make chtckl payable to New•paperbook t .

BORN LOSER

Call for a Free Siding ·
Estimate, 949·2101 or
949·2860. No Sunday
calls.
1·21-1 mo .

992·3795

'lz blood Beefato bull . 742· :==:=:::o:=:==:;===
2630.
· 7'-'4' - - - 'M
= ol;:oo::.rc" y' "c"'lee.::sc....__

HOOF HOLLOW : Horses
and ponies and riding
lessons .
Everything
imaginable in horse equip·
ment. Blankets, belts,
boots, etc . t:ngllsh and
Western . Ruth Reeves
(614) 698··3290.

I

man - HO LD YOUR TONGUE I

H&amp;R BLOCK OFFICE LOCAJIQH,

POODLE
GROOMING .
·Judy Taylor. 61067 ·7220.

Purebred Husky, male. 5
mo.old . Black and while.
Has all shots. SSO. John
vroman, 187112 2nd Ave ..
Middleport. 992 ·2741 .

Siding

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

·Tri-County
3ookkeeping
Service

- .
-~·
.[Sf
rr.-:·'
- ~ e- ""'"'

'E\:''··~
·
· · ....
..:.~·

16mm color and sound
movie projector in very
good condition. S200. Old
small cas1 iron wood cook
stove In very good con·
dition . $120. 247·2624.

Early Americl!n sofa and
large chair. $75 . 985·4217.

I

I I

Yesle&lt;day·s

~HII..e
_ !,
~

IN STOCK for Immediate
delivery : various sizes of
pool kits. Do· it·yourself or
let us install for you . D.
Bumgardner Sales, Inc.
992·5724 .

85 Bus hel baskets, 25 lids.
992 ~ 3019 . Can be seen at200
Lasley St. after 5 Friday on
weekends.

6

ITANDLE±

I'M HERE!

Vinyl and Aluminum ·

Remodeling
Additions
Siding
Brick Work
Block Work
Concrete Finishing

POMEROY, O.
992·6215 or
992-73i4
1·28· 1 mo.

EMERGENCY power
alternators - own the best
- buy Winpower . c;all513·
788·2589 .

5122.

OH 605HI THAT'5 THE
CII'1C U5 THAT HA5 AI..L

CALL 992-7544

Quality construction at
reasonable rates.

V. C. YQUNG Ill

APPLES - ROME beauty
apples at $4 per bu . Best for
apple butter . Call 669·3785,
Fitzpatrick Orchard, SR

·-

THI5 15 o\.l R . t.II CI&lt; TENAFLY··
MAt.IA6ER OF THE VA IUJUM &amp;
.--~, 61N6LEY CIFtCU!&gt;!

Hours 9 ~1 M., W., F .
Oilier limes by appoint·
ment.
107 S'ycamore &lt;Rear
Pomeroy, O.

N. L CONSTRUCTION

Gutter work , down
spouts, some concrete
wOrtt,
walks
and
drivewavs.
. (FREE ESTIMATES)

COAL,
LIMESTONE,
sand, gravel, calcium
chloride, fertilizer, dog
food, and all types of salt.
E•ceiSior Salt Works, Inc .,
E . Main St ., Pomeroy, 992·
3591 .

37

. PARK FINANCIAL
. SERVICES, INC.

5111 51.
H•ven, W. VI.
3· 17-1 mo.

..

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING

Misc . Merchanise

1971 Zimmer trailer 12x60.
1972 Buddy Trailer 12x60.

Farms for Sale

I KJ

Print answer here:

ATTENTION:
liM·
PORTANT TO YOUl Will
pav cash or certified check
for antiques and collec ·
tibles or entire estates.
Nothing too large. Also,
guns, pocket watches and
coin collect ions. Call 61~ ·
767 ·3167 or 557·3411 .
54

Federal Hou si ng &amp; 1,
veterans Admin . La.ns . . t

WATERMELON
PATCH

Antiques

53

See Us First for All .
of Your Maternity
Needs. ·

Utility Buildings

5 :31f--Mash 3; P la y lhe Percentages
8; E lee . Co. 20; Happy Days
Again 13; Doctor Who 33 ; I
Dream of Jeannie 17.

BATOB

_

RISING STAR Kennel.
Boarding . Call367·0292 .

33

t

GYAOP

REALEST ATE
FINANCtNG

Sizes From 4x61o 12x40

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

56

l2x60 Kirkwood with large
living room extension; 3
bedrooms, central air con·
dit loning . Good c6nd ., must
sell . 304·773 ·5173.

Television
Viewing

byHenriArnotdand-Bob Lee

Uf1scramble these lour Jumbles.
one lerter to each square. to fOrm
four ordinary words .

PREGNANn
Tops· Piints
Jumpers-Dresses

45
Furnished Rooms
Sleep ing Room f or working
man . Call992·6022.

1971 12X65 Tra iler, com·
pletely furnished , A.C.,
very good condition . On a
lot that can be rented.
Ready to move Into. $6500
firm. 992·5304.

992 ·53~4.

j"jl THAT SCA,MBLEO WORD GAME

TUESDAY, APRIL8,1980
44

689 .

11

1ffl1#1.\hf fil'il

~ ~ ~~ !\-

Business Services

1 bedroom mobile heme.
Adults only . 992· 2598.

Insurance

13
·o

Sl - Hcxnehold Goods
S2- CI. TV , lttdio Equipment

tt - Htlp w1 nted
12- Situtftl Wanf.ci

Situations wanted

Wi ll clean house . Call 667·
3423 or 667·6373 .
·

ti-Equlpmtnt tor Rent

&amp; Auction

9--WantedtoBuy

wanted : Woman to sit with
older lady . $2.&gt;10 per hr. 992·
7255 .

General

•4-Apartmtnt l or A:tnt
415-FRooms

s-Ma ppy Adl

Off ice, Clerical Help .
Typing ,
pr ~ficien~y
reQuired. send complete
rf;tsume c·o The Deily Sen·
tinel , Box 729-C. Pomeroy,
Oh iO&lt;I.S769.

12
Real Est•te

Help Wanted

11

11 -The Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, AprilS, 19110

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-

Here's how

to work it:

AXYDLBAAXR
Ia LONGFELLOW

PEANUTS

ALL Rl61-rr: EVER~BODY,
'LET'S TRI{ TO
CONCENTRATE OUT Tl-lERE!

ie

•

I Tl-lOU6HT I
TOLD l(()U TO
CONCENTRATE

One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A iJ
115ed for the lhree L's, X for the two O' s, etc. Slnsle letters,
apostrophea, the length and formation of 1he words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are dltre~ent.

CltYPT()qUOTES
ERM
QSE

C KMDEMPE
ES

IM

LWPMKO

0 IT M

ES

WP
IMDK

LWPMKO . - CMKLDQ
GKSUMKI
Yesterday'• Cryptoqaote : I NEVER KNEW A MAN WHO
LIVED ON HOPE BUT WHAT SPENT JUS OLD AGE AT
SOI&gt;{EBODY ELSE'S EXPENSE .-JOSH BIWNGS
f) ttl!)

KIAI Ftafl.lrH

bndl~ .

Inc .

~News

3,8,10, 13,15; ABC News
6; Carol Burnell 17; 3-2-1 Contact
20 .
6 :31f--N BC News3,15; ABC News 13;
CBS News 8,10 ; Bob Newhart 17;
Wi ld Wild World ot Animals 33.
7 · Oif-Cross-Wits 3: Tic Tac Dough
8; Newlywed Game 6; News 10;
Face lhe Musi c ' 13 ; Love
American Style IS; Sanford &amp;
Son 17; Dick Cavett 20.
7 : 31f--Hollywood Squares 3; Joker's
Wild 8; Hollywood Squares 10;
Sha N~ Na 13; TV Honor Society
15; All in the Family 17; Mac ~
Neii .Lehrer Report 20.
8 : ~Misadventures of Sheriff Lobo
3.1 5; Happy Days 6,13; White
Shadow 8,10; Nova 20.33 .
8 :11f--Laverne &amp; Shi rley 6,13 .
9 :00- Big Show 3,15; Three' s
Company 6,1 3; Movie " Kenny
Rogers as the Gamb ler" 8,10·
Mystery 20,33; 9 :31f--Taxl 6,11_
10 :IJO--Harl to Hart 6,13; Maverick
17; News 20; City Notebook 33.
10 :31f--U nited Slates 3.15;; Over
Easy 20; Camera Three 33 .
11 :IJO--News 3.8, 10,13, 15; Last of the
Wild 17; Di ck Cavett 20; Dave
A.llen al Large 13.
11 :3G-Tonighl3,15; AIK News6,13;
Barnaby Jones 8; ABC Cap.
tioned
New s
33;
Mov ie
" Waterme lon Man " 10; Movie
" The Westerne r" 17.
11 :50-Movie " Hit! " 6,13; 12 :4().....
Movie " Destiny of a Woman " 8;
1 :OQ-Tomorrow 3; News 15;
I :41f--News 17 .
1 :45-Movie " Konga " 17 ; 2 :36News
13;
3 :45- Movle
" Challenge of the Gladiator" 17.

WEDNESDAY , APRIL 9,1980
5:4&gt;-Farm Report 13; World at
Large 17 ; 5 :50-PTL Club 13.
6:IJ0--700 Cl ub 6,8; PTL Club 15 ;
Health
Field
10 ;
6 : 30Chrlslopher Closeup 10; News 17.
6 :45-Morning Report 3; A.M .
Weather 33 ; 6 :5&gt;- News 13.
7 : ~ TOday 3. 15 ; Good Morning
America 13; Batman 10; Wed·
nesday Morning 8; Three
Stooges-Lillie Rascals 17.
/ : ~Family Affair 10; 7:5&gt;-Chuck
While Rep or ts 10.
B : ~Capt . Kangaroo 8,10; Lucy
Show 17; Sesame 51. 33; 8:3().....
Romper Room 17.
9:IJO--Bob Braun 3; Big Valley 6 ;
Beverly Hillbillies 8; Jeffersons
10; Phil Donahue 13, 15; Fam ily
Affair 17.
9: 3G-Bob Newhar t 8; Aflernoon
P layhouse 10; Green Acres 17.
IO :IJO--Card Sharks 3,1 5; Jeffersons
8; Joker' s Wild 10; Morning
Magazine 13; Movie " Tile Two
Mrs . Carrolls" 17 .
I 0 : 30- Hollywood Squares 3.15 ;
$20,000 Pyramid 13 ; 10 :5&gt;-CBS
News 8; House Call l 0.
11 :IJO--High Rollers 3,1 5; Laverne&amp;.
Shi r ley 6,13 ; Price is Right 8,10.
11 : 30-Wheel of Fortune 3, 15 ;
Family Feud 6,13; Sesame ST.
20.33; 11 :55-News 17 .
12:IJO--Newscenter 3; News 8.10.13;
Health
Fie ld
15;
Movie
" Rhubarb" 17.
12 :30-Ryan ' s Hope 6,13; Search for
Tomorrow 8, 10; Password Plus
15; Elec . CO . 20, 33 .
I : IJO--Days of Our Lives 3,15; All My
Ch ildren 13 ; Young &amp; the
Restless 8, 10.
I :4&gt;-Baseball 3; 2:0G-0ne Life to
Live 6,13; As The World Turns
8,1 0; Doctors 15; Baseball 17.
2 : 30- Anolher World 15 ; 3: 00General Hosp ital 13; Austin City
Limits 20.
3:30-0ver Easy 33.
4: 00- Afternoon Playhouse 8 ;
Sesa me St . 20,33; Real McCoys
13 ; Gomer Py le 10 ; Lillie
Rascals 15.
4:30-Lone Ranger J;; Gomer Pyle
8; Brady Bunch 10; Tom&amp;. Jerry
13 ; Merv Griffin 15; Gilligan 's Is .
17.
5:1J0--Carol Burnell 3; Sanford &amp;
Son B; Mary Tyl er Moore 10; My
Three Sons 17; Mister Rogers
Neig hborhood 20.33 .
5: 30-Mash 3; News 6; Elec . Co. 20;
Mash 10; Happy Days Again 13; I
Dream of Jea nnie 17; Doctor
Who 33.
6 :IJO--News 3.8, 10. 13.15; ABC News
6; 3-2-1 Contacl 20,33.
6 :31f--NBC News3, 15; ABC News 13;
Bob Newha r t 17 ; Carol Burnett
6; Villa Alegre 20; Wild Wild
' ' World of Animals 33 .
/ : ~C ross- Wits 3; Tic lac Dough
8; Newlywed Game 6; News 10;
Fa ce the Music 13 ; Love ,
American Style 15; Sanford &amp;
Son 17; Dick Cavett 20 .
7: 31f--Counjry Roads 3; Joker ' s Wild
8; Dick Cavett 33 ; 1979 Me morial
Go.!l Tournam ent 10; Family
Feud 13 ; Wild Kingdom 15; All In
The Family 17; MacN e il -Lehrer
Report 20.
8 :IJO--Real People 1, 15; Eight Is
Enough 6, 13; Movie " A Boy
Named Charl ie Brown " 8, 10;
Shakespeare Plays 20 ,:i3; Movie
" The Prince &amp; the Showglrl" 17.
v:w-l.nartle ' S Angels 13; Movie
" Nvrse" 8,10.
lO : ~From Here to Eternity 3,1 5;
Vegas 13.
10 : 30- Upstalrs , Downsta irs 17 ;
10:3&gt;-Muslc In the Age of
Shakespeare 20,33.
11 : OG-News 3,6,8,10, 13 , 15 ; Dave
Allen at Large 33 .
11 :Oif-Tonlght3,15; ABC News 6, 13;
Your Turn : Leiters to CBS News
8; ABC Captioned News 33;
Movie " The Valley of decision"
tO; Movie " Apache Uprising"
17; Dick Cavell 20.
.
11:50-Love Boal6,13 ; 12 : ~Biack
Sheep Squadron 8.
I: 00- Tomorrow 3; Barella 13;
News 15; l: 1G-Movle "Most
Wanted " 8.
· 1:3G- · News 17; 1 :35-Baseball 17.
2 : 1G-N•ws 13; 4 :05-Untouchables
17; 5:0&gt;-Maverlck 17 .

�12 - The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, April8, 1980

Prepaid legal services
near reality in Ohio

Nun's death scares workers
TOLEOO, Ohio (AP ) - Employees of Mercy Hospital say the
stabbing death of a 71-year-old
Catholic nun in the hospital chapel
has left them frightened and more
cautious at work.
"I can't walk down that hall by
myseH," said a woman from the
hospital's housekeeping staff. "I'm
going to have my eyes open."
The body of Sister Margaret Ann
Pahl was fowxl in the sacristy of St.
Joseph Chapel on the hospital's first
floor on Saturday morning. Lucas
County Coroner Harry Mignerey
said she had been stabbed between
Tl and 32 times, strangled, and
sexually molested.
Detectives say they have few clues
or leads and have been unble to
establish a motive.
Sister Pahl was in charge of the
chapel and was believed to be
preparing it for Holy Saturday services when she was attacked.
The killing hit cafeteria worker
Todd Unk, 19, hard. He looked on
Sister Pahl as a friend. "I'm not
scared, " he said . " I'm just

petrified."
''She will be missed by everyone."
said Beatrice Ignasiak, a dietitian in
the hospital's visitors and employees cafeteria. She says employees are frightened. " In a way,
we are. We don't know if it was an

TODAY'SWEA1HER
Occasional showers or thunderstorms and windy tonight with
scattered severe thunderstorms.
High today in the low 70s. Low
tonight in the low 50s. Mostly cloudy
and cooler Wednesday with a chance
of light rain or drizzle. Highs in the
upper 50s to low 60s. Chance of rain:
90 percent tonight, 30 percent on
Wednesday.

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Thursday through Saturday

Clearing Thursday. Fair Friday, lucreasl.ug cloudiness Saturday. Highs
maluly In lbe 58s and lows near 40.

employee or who (coounitted the
murder) ."
Other employees, though they are
upset about Sister Pahl's death, say
they don't believe others are in
danger.
Carol Faneuff, a licensed practical nurse at the hospital for the
past !I years, knew Sister Pahl.
They used to see each other in the
halls frequently, she said. Although
she was shocked when she heard the
news, she said she is not anxious
about her own safety.
A member of the housekeeping
staff said, "It's just one of those
things. Nobody is lying in wall. II
was nobody 's fault."
However, other employees think
security should be 'beefed up, Mrs.
Faneuff said.
The hospital added an extra
security guard tollowing the stabbing. Normally, there are three persons on duty at aU times and an extra person during the evening hours. ·
It's not known if administrators
will decide to make the extra
security guard permanent.

Rhodes has first report
on 'acid rain' problems
They also suggest additional
Rhodes' office released on Monresearch prior to fonnulation of
day a copy of a letter lie sent to
public policy, identification of ways . Weidensaul to thank the task force
to counteract the potentially harm- for the initial report.
ful effects if aCidity in rainfall does
The governor said he "will look
increase, and cooperation with the
forward to Its laler reports confederal government and the scien- taining detalled scientific analyses
tific community to fully evaluate the and support for the conclusions
phenomenon.
reached therein."

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Gov.
James A. Rhodes has been given the
first report from a newly named
task force investigating possible
problems of ''acid rain.''
The document submitted Monday
by the task force chairman . is
basically a battle plan reiterating
that much remains to be learned
about potential environmental and
other problems which acid rain may
cause.
T. Craig Weidensaul, director of
the laboratory for environmental
studies of the Ohio Agriculture
Research and Development Center
at Wooster, outlined the group's
plans in an accompanying letter
which said a work agenda will he
ready by May 15.
Rhodes named the panel on March
24 after charges that the use of
Ohio's high-sulfur coal adds to the
acidity of rain and is creating new
environmental problems, mostly in
the northeast United States.
The report mostly recapped observations made by task force members at a March 25 news conference.
The report said lbe task force
regards its duty as being a thorough
study of available scientific evidence, to be assessed and included in
quarterly reports to the governor.
Weidensaul said questions the
panel hopes to answer include
whether Ohio is a major contributor
of acid rain to other areas, whether
the acidity of rainfall is increasing,
and whether lakes and fish are being
killed by acid rain.
Weidensaul wrote the governor
that the initial report "does not constitute a detailed scientific analysis.
Our future reports will contain the
technical support and data
necessary to fully document our

Lack .of support
(Continued from page 1)

THIRD READING APPROVED
Council did approve the third
reading of an ordinance to authorize
the director of the State Highway
Department to maintain state highways within the village. They also
gave three necessary readings to an
ordinance, under emergency
measures, to invest surplus funds.
Bill Young told council that they
will lose their credability on the 00.00
grant for the mini-park if they did
not show some progress.
Young suggested that councU
authorize R. C. Glasgow to survey
the area between Seventh Street,
Mechanic Street, Mulberry Ave.,
Lasley Street, Brick Street and Butternut Ave., at a cost of $800 to the
village, half of which would be paid
from the 50 .00 grant.
It was indicated that private
property may be donated to the
village for the extension of a pari&lt;
area. There was a tie vote therefore
the issue did not pass. Wehrung
stated that council haC outstanding
bills in the amount of $16,547 some
four months past due and felt the
bills should be paid first.
It was agreed to send Kim Shields
of Hocking Valley a statement that
council intends to develop the park
area.
The continued loitering and lit·
tering on the parking lots was again
discussed. It was pointed out that
council had designated extra
policemen to police the area.
Lyons said he was short manpower due to the resignations of Jed
Webster and Henry Werry.
WARNING fSSUED
Mayor Andrews warned that pel'
sons found loitering, Uttering or
drinking alcoholic beverages on the
parking lots, day or night, would be
arrested. The law will be enforced
the mayor added.
It was pointed out that residents
from out of town were involved in

positions."

Rhodes said in naming the eightmember task force that there is not
yet .evidence to justify charges that
Ohio coal is a major contributor to
the acid rain problem. But " if acid
rain is a serious threat, then it
should be dealt with," he said.
Five members of the task force
are researchers at state universities
while three others represent the
coal, utility, and water testing industries.
Weidensaul's report, which he
called "a layman's explanation" of
the problem, included preliminary
task force recommendations.
Among other things, they call for
"reasonable, cost-effective efforts
... to minimize any further increases
in acid producing air emissions."

Bro~ sign kicker
CLEVELAND (AP) - The
Cleveland Browns today announced
the signing of placekicker Berj
Yepremian, the younger brother of
Garo Yepremian, the former Miami
Dolphins' placekicker currently on
the roster of the New Orleans Saints.
Berj Yepremian is a graduate of
the University of Florida where he
won three letters. as the team's
placekicker and set Southeastern
Conference records. for most consecutive field goals, 11, and most
field goals in one season, 16.
.
His 80 percent field goal accuracy
is another conference record.
He is a native of LamaCII, Cyprus.
He will compete against veteran
Don Cockroft for the Browns'
placekicking job.
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted-Lillie Johnson, Racine;
Gurnnie White, Middleport; Flora
McCoy, Shade; Lelah Quivey, Middleport; Ida Burns, Syracuse;
Freda Russell, Pomeroy; Lillie
D)'ke, Middleport; J.leatrice Bush,
Vinton.
Discharged-Salem Yates.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Prepaid legal . services would be
available at state-assisted colleges
and 1111\versities under a bill nearing
passage in the Legislature.
lAwmakers say they believe
many students could benefit from
lawyers' services in dealing with the
complexities of campus life.
The Senate added its approval by
a Zl-3 vote Monday night to a House
bill letting college and university
trustees establish voluntary
programs which students could join
for a fee such as that which they
ELECTED TREASURER usually pay for student activities.
Kalby Parker, daagbter of Mr.
Senators opened this week's
and Mrs. Leland Parker,
legislative
deliberations. ilfter the
Pomeroy, was elected dlatrlct
General
Assembly's
ll-day Easter
Future Fanners of America
•
recess
With
an
otherwise
routine
·treasurer at lbe recent dlatrlct
floor
session
which
Included
meeting beld at Buckeye Hills
Commlllllty College at Rio Gnm- . favorable action on two minor
housekeeping measures.
de. DuriDg ber oae year term,
In other action, a House subMiss Pat:ker will keep a balaoced
committee
recommended approval
dlatrlct budget a!JC1 rue reports
Monday
night
of a revamped Senate
wllb lbe Oblo FFA Assn. She Is
measure
which
calls for major Imlbe first member of the Meigs
provements
in
the operation and
FFA to be elected to an office
policing
of
Ohio's
nursing homes. It
above lbe chapter level. Gallla,
now goes before . the full House
Jaeboo, Lawrence, VInton and
Human
Resources Conunittee.
Meigs "counties make up the
Sen.
Charles L. Iiutts, 0.
dlatrlct.
Cleveland, the Senate sponsor of the
legal services bill, told his
colleagues. that today's students
DOGS MUST BE CONFINED
most often are beset wilb landlordA Rutland Village Ordinance tenant problems, since many live off
provides that dogs must be confined, campus, especially in urban areas.
fenced or leasbed at all Urnes,
But he said they are also "miniMayor John Miller said today. Dogs consumers, at least," aod often need
are runolng loose in the commlllllty, advice in regard to their right to
the mayor stated and warned that protection from unscrupulous
owners will be prosecuted under the tradesmen.
village ordinance.
"A lot of students are married
- - - - - - - - - - - . lbese days, too, and they run into the
same kinds of problems as other

President Carter has signed into
law an omnibus fmancial statute,
lbe curfew 'on the lots is for
the Depository Institutions
juveniles, not adults.
Deregulation and Monetary Control
The report of the police depart·
Act of 1980, one provision of which
ment for the month of March showed
immediately increases the Federal
the department made 47 arrests, andeposit insurance basic limit to
swered 205 complaints and calls,
$100,000 from $40,000 in each insured
issued 914 tickets, collected $1,296.50
bank.
from the parking meters and drove
Chairman Irvine H. Sprague of the
5,057 miles.
Federal Deposit Insurance CorCoucilrnan Brown was dissatisfied
poration said that the new $100,000
with the amount of money collected
insurance limit will apply to df!H1Sits
from the meters. He felt the amount
in 14,364 insured national and Statewas much too low and stated he
chartered commercial banks and
could not accept the report.
324 insured mutual savings banks.
Steve Hartenbach, metennan,
About 97 percent of all U. S. banks
told council that on Thursday of last
are FDIC-insured,
week he replaced eight parking
In-State time and savings deposits
meters on the parking lot and on
Keogh Plan retirement accounts
Saturday the meters were
and Individual Retirement Accounts
destroyed.
will continue to be insured
Council suggested that Har- • separately to $100,WI as under
tenbach make continuous rounds
previously existing law.
and perhaps change his pattern.
Sprague said the new insurance
Council asked for another report on
coverage should substantially incollections at the next meeting of
cre'lse public confidence in the
council.
nation's banking system.
Harry Evans, investment advisor,
· When Federal deposit insurance
informed council that the village this
first became effective on January 1,
month would receive $40,000 from an
1934, covering was limited by law to
inheritance tax and suggested that
$2,500 per depositor. Coverage was
$3l,WI he invested in money
raised by law to $5,000 on July 1 of
markets. He also suggested that sur·
that year, and to $10,WJ by the
plus of debt service funds be inFederal Deposit Insurance Act of
vested and the interest directed to
1950. Subsequent laws ·increased ,
the general fund. He also added that
coverage to $15,000 in i966, to $20,000 '
on the 29th of this month treasury
in 1969, and to $40,000 in 1974.
,bills would be due and suggested
they also be put in money markets
. Betty Baronick again touched . Meigs miner injured
upon the cleaning of village streets.
The Rutland Emergency Squad
Mayor Andrews agreed, but stated
was called to Mcigs Mine No. 2 of the
that village workers had been bll3y
Southern Ohio Coal Co. at 8:30p.m.
cleaning sewers.
Monday for Mark L. Richman, Mid-.
The meeting was opened by a
dleport, who had a back injury. He
prayer by Lou Osborne. Attending
was taken to Holzer Medical Center.
were Mayor Andrews, Jane Walton,
Monday morning, the Rutland
clerk, Baronick, Wehrung, Brown,
Squad took Clarence Might,
Osborne, Young, and Karr, council
Rutland, to the office of Dr. James
members, Lyons, Hartenbach, Pam
Conde in Middleport. He was returGaner, Jack Krautter and Donnie ned to his home following treatment.
Ward .
The Tuppers Plains Emergency
Squad answered a ca~ to Route I,
' Long Bottom, at 1:31 a.m. Tuesday
for Ruth Stethem who was taken to
St. Joseph Hospital, Parkersburg.
the loitering and littering and that

m

soulb bound auto operated by
Richard Thomas, 28, Chesapeake.
Both vehicles incurred moderate·
damage. Daniels was cited on a
charge of !allure to.yield.
Officers were called to the scene of
a two-vehicle accident on Georges
Creek Rd., one mile west of SR 7, at
7:10p.m.
The patrol reports autoa operated
by David Sands, 16, Gallipolis, and
Sandra Wllbum, 16, Gallipolis,
collided at a hillcrest.
Wilburn was .cited on a charge of
left of center.
·
Officers investigated a twovehicle mishap on U.S. 35, jll3t east
of Mitchell Rd., at 11 :22p.m.
The patrol reports a west bound
auto operated by Charles L. Poynter, 52, Chesapeake, had slowed in
traffic. A veldcle ' driven by Robert
Ackley, 21, Frankfurt, was unable to
stop and struck the Poynter auto In
the rear.
Both vehicles incurred moderate
damage. Ackler was cited on a
charge of assured clear distance.

VOL. 28, NO. 252

POINTERS AVAILABLE
MARION, Ohio (AP)
Homeowners who want to know how
to make their homes more energy efficient could get some pointers from
the Ohio Jaycees.
Allen Kraps, energy and envlrorunent program manager for the
state Jaycees, said 38 Ohio chapters
of the organization have received
energy audit kits.
The kits train local Jaycees in
pointing out areas in the home where
consumers can save fuel. Chapter
members wilb such training visit
homes in their communities on
request to discuss the fuel-saving
methods.
··

MEETS THURSDAY
The Past Officers Club of Racine
Chapter, Order of Eastern Star, will
meet at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the
home of Mrs. Gretta Simpson.
Refreslunents will be potluck.

DAYTON, Ohio (AP) - Keeping
astronauts physically fit in a
weightless envirorunent is the aim d.
an experiment being designed for
the 1983 space shuttle by three
Wright State University professors.
The study by Jerrold Petrofsky
and two other biomedical engineers
will involve the use of isometrics, a
form of exercise in which one set of
muscles is tensed against another
set of muscles or an immovable object for a period of time.
"An experiment in isometrics in
space has never been done before,"
Petrofsky said, "which is kind of
unusual because even turriing a
wrench in space involves
isometrics.''
Petrofsky said isometrics exert
tremendo\13 stress on the cardiovascUlar system and can prove
valuable in space, because without
gravity, a person's cardiovascular

system becomes deconditioned.
Petrofsky, Chandler Phillips and
William McCormick submitted their
study proposal last year to the
National Aeronautics and Space Ad- '
ministration. It was one of 41 ideas ·
aCcepted by the federal space agency out of more than 400 proposals
submi(!ed by universities and NASA:
scientists.
Petrofsky is now in the first phase
of the project, the documentation.
He said he didn't count on the
amount of paperwork involved. ;,At
first I !bought NASA was dragging
Its feet," he said. "Now I can see It's
all very Important. Even seemingly
minute details could pose a "problem
in space."

ELBERFELD$

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Spring is here and it's the time of
the year when boys and girls might
want to earn some money for swnmer activities.
They may do this through
becoming in-town carriers for The
Daily Sentinel. • Routes are opening
in both Pomeroy and Middleport and
youngsters wishing to apply may
contact the Sentinel Office, 992-2156.
Boys and girls can earn from $9 up
on relatively small routes. Besides
the money, they can earn points
each week for the prompt payment
of their paper bills and these points
can be traded for some great prizes.

Auto

Insurance
Let's talk value.
Multiple car and other
available discounts can save
you as much as 15% on your
auto insurance.
As an independent
insurance agency, we can
help you find the best ·value
for your insurance dollars.

$1 00 Off any 3 of Hanes
men 's all cotton . white
kn itted underwear or Hanes
boxers.
Sale inc ludes Hanes white
all-cotton b riefs. T-sh irts,
V- necks, ath letic shirts and
Hanes regular and gripper
boxe rs. Save $100 on
every 3_

Offer Expires
April 12

· DAVIS-QUICKEL
INSURANCE AGENCY
Bill Quickel
"Across from the
Courthouse in Pomeroy"
992·6617

FEDERAL
KEMPER
INSURANCE
COMPANY

By Bob Hoeflich
An agreement with the Meigs
·County Board of Mental Retardalion
on the use of the former Pomeroy
.Junior high school was reached when
the Meigs Local Board of Education
met in special 1ession Tuesday
.night.
The board of mental retardation
had requested earlier the use of the
junior high building when the Meigs
County Senior Citizens Center Is
moved from the junior high structure to its new quarters on Mulberry
Heights. The bnilding will be used as
a school location for the mentally
retarded of the county until the new
school to be constructed in Syracuse
is completed.
Meeting with the school board on

the matter last night from the board
of mental retardation were Manning
Webster, chairman, and Cliris Layh,
administrator of the retarded
school.
According, to al) agreement
reached the board of mental .retardation "will will have use of the junior
high building for one year.
The retardation board will not pay
rent but it will pay one-half of the
utilities used at the location. The
retardation board will pay all of the
utilities if the building should be
abandoned as a school site. It is now
used for a mining class.
It was also verbally agreed last
night to enter into an agreement
with Rutland Village Council for the
use of lbe Rutland gymnasium. The

I

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 9, 1980

village had asked for lbe gymnasium and will use the structure for
several purposes. The village has
agreed to put the building into good
repair.
According to the agreement last
night, Rutland Council will be given
two years to refurbish the structure-.'
If it does so, then the building will he
signed over to the village indefinitely.
The board employed Wendy
Hallar as a Title I reading teacher.
Dan Morris, director of
curriculum, . reported his brother,
Robert Morris, principal of the
Pomeroy Elementary School, has
undergone surgery at Holzer
Medical Center and has been retur(Conti nued on page 14 1

·'

......

FIVE IN'JURED, DRIVER CITED - The GalliaMeigs Post, Highway Patrol, was called to the scene of
a two-vehicle accident on SR 7, just north of CR 1, in
Gallia County at 7:05p.m. The patrol reports a north
bound auto operated by Maureen Stacy, 21, Cheshire,
went off the right side of the roadway, struck a guardrail, traveled back onto the pavement, went left of
center and struck a south bound vehicle driven bv Jav

Roe, 24, Middleport, head-{)n.
a p;ISSenger,
Rick Stacy, 28, Sciotoville, displayed visible s\gna of injury and were transported to Holzer Medical Center for
treatment. Roe and two passengers, Cindy Roe, 23,
Middleport, and Cindy Hartenbach, 22, Pomeroy, were
also transported to HMC for treatment of injuries.
Stacy was cited on a charge of DWI.

Quick action could result in
$50,000 grant approval

OOUBLE RAINBOW- Residents in the tri-eounty
area were treated to a rare treat Tuesday evening, a
double rainbow. This sky shot taken by Publisher
Robert Wingett on SR 7 near the dairy bar nerth of

. Updating county plat maps was a
major topic discussed by Wesley
Buehl, county engineer, at
Tuesday's meeting of the Meigs
County Commissioners.
It was recommended by Rick
Crow, prosecuting attorney, and
Howard Frank, county auditor that
the commissioners direct the c~unty
engineer to approve all deeds that
are transferred.
Buehl objected saying it would
create additional field and office
work.
A bid on a bulldozer from Goeglein
Coal Co., in the amount of $63,000
was opened and accepted.
Scott Porterfield, representative
of Area 6 Health Systems, discussed
upcoming plans for health services
in Meigs County.
The board observed that it would
be most helpful to the county to have
a program for controlling alcohol
imd drug abuse in the county's
schools.
Kim Shields . of Buckeye HillsHocking Valley Regional Develop-

Cheshire. The colorful sight followed Tuesday's heavy
rains and possible tornado warnings. Luckily, the
Gallia-Meigs area was not affected by tornado-like
winds which struck other parts of Ohio.

ment District and Victor Ga uJ,
president of Shade River Jaycees,
discussed procedures of processing
the grant application for the Chester
Community Park. Shields agreed to
assist the ~aycees with the application.
BIDS TABLED
Bids for bituminous and aggregate
materials for the county highway
department were opened. Bids for
aggregate materials were received
from Diamond Stone Quarries and
Richards and Son.
Bids for bituminous materials
were received from Ashland
Petroleum Co., Asphalt Materials
Co., and Shelly and Sands Co. All
bids were tabled for additional
study.
Bill Quickel discussed the
possibility of creating a county-wide
park commission (or the purpose of
developing new faciiites for
recreation in the county and improving existing faciliti,es.
Quickel was asked if Forest Acres
Park was included in the prqposel

Ambassdors called by
By DARRElL CHRISTIAN
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) _:_ With
Iran's diplomats ushered out of the
Unit@d States amid cries they were
treated like hostages themselves,
•· the Carter administration is warDing U.S. allies that it, too, can shut
off the Iranian oil tap.
Secretary of State Cyrus R. Vance
asked about two~ozen ambassadors
to come to the state Department Ibis
afternoon to hear what Ibis nation
wants their governments to do in
support of U.S. economic sanctions
.against Iran.
The administration reportedly is
considering a naval blockade of
.Iran's sea routes or the mining !J( its
oil ports, which would block Iranian
exports and cut off the oil revenues
·that ~ustain the Persian Gulf coun·

.try.

ELBERFELD$

enttne

BOards agree on
building usage

Engineer obj.ects to deed approval

Paper carrier needed

•

at

FDIC ·rate NASA research scheduled
increased for Wright State University

Accidents leave two injured

Two persons were injured and four
drivers cited as the result of four accidents investigated Monday by the
Gallia-Meigs Post, Highway Patrol.
Officers were called to the scene of
a two-vehicle accident on U.S. 35,
just west ofSR588, at 10:35 a.m.
The patrol reports a west bound
auto operated by Claude Hale, 37,
Wilksville, had slowed in traffic. A
vehicle driven by John Davis, 78,
Oak Hill, failed to stop and struck
the Hale auto in the rear.
Davis displayed visible signs of injury, and was transported to Holzer
Medical Center for treatment.
Hale displayed visible signs of Injury, but was not inunediately
treated.
Both vehicles incurred severe
damage. Davis was cited on a
charge of assured clear distance.
. . Officers investigated a twovehicle mishap on SR 7 in Eureka at
9:12a.m.
The patrol reports a vehicle driven
by Dana Daniels, 34, Crown City,
.Pulled onto SR 7 into the path of a

married couples;•' Butts added.
He said most other states already
have legal service programs for
college studenta, and that Ohio has
been slow to deal with the problem.
The bill went back to the House for
consideration of Senate amendments, but sponsors there said they
will concur in the ·changes and expect Gov. James A. Rhodes to sign
the bill into law.
.
Butts noted that Rhodes vetoed a
similar bill three years ago because
it would have provided counseling to
students desiring to·sue the state or
the scliools they attend.
However, the current proposal
prohibits any plan from offering •srvices for thoo:e P""!"'''CS· !' . ' ... • ""' IS
that st!!der.~&amp; may not be ~'01111Se1ed
in actions which they may want to
take against off-&lt;:ampus police or
sheriffs' departments.
Rep. John A. Begala, O.Kent, said
subconunittee changes in the nursing home bill clarify and make
more operable some of the Senate
provisions dealing with enforcement
of nursing home rules and
regulations.
One major subcommittee amendment clarifies a new procedure under which nursing homes which fall
to comply with standards can have
their licenses revoked or their
operations placed under receivership.
Other parts of the bill spell out
staffing requirements, such as the
number of registered nurses which
must he on duty at vario\13 times,
and create the office of chief inspector of nursing homes to administer and enforce the bill's
P.rovisions.

e

•

: The Moslem militants occupying
the U.S .. Embassy in Tehran
ihreatened today ·to ·((ill all their
American hostages if the United
~tales takes any military action

V~ce

plan. He inlomed the board that it
was definitely included. The board
agreeed that the proposal be pursued.
Alengthy discussion was held concerning the condition of county road
38, the flood road between Pomeroy
and Middleport. ·
Complaints have been received
concerning the road's condition and
trash dumping along the road . The
board agreed to contact the
engineer.
Syracuse M~yor Eber Pickens
met with the board and requested
CETA workers for Syracuse Village.
The request was granted.
The board voted to terminate the
present interim deposit contract and
authorized the county treasurer to
invest interim money at his
discretion:
The board agreed to advertise for
drapes for the new Multi-Purpose
Health Center to be opened at 2 p.m. on Apri!29.
Attending were Richard Jones,
president, Henry Wells and Chester
Wells, commissioners, and Mary
Hobstetter, clerk.

By Katie Crow
Pomeroy's Village Council and
chamber members were advised
Tuesday to proceed immediately
with the winterization project of the
senior high building in order to oJ&gt;.
tain a $50,000 grant.
Offering the suggestion was Kim
Shields of Buckeye Hills-Hocking
Valley Regional ·Development
District who addressed chamber
members during their monthly luncheon at the Meigs Inn.
The building was given to the
village of Pomeroy with the
provision that it would remodel and
use the building. The ownership of
the building will revert back to the
Meigs Local School District if the
building is not put into use by May of

circUlating a petition regarding the
renovation of the old senior high
building.
The petition lists options that are
available to the village regarding a
new city building.
Options listed were:
- To renovate the present city
hall building on East Second Street
which would cost approximately
$150,000 to $200,000. Main problems
are lack of parking and space for
Maintenance
Department
operations, storage, and also the
deteriorating conditions d lbe
building.

1981.
It is believed that the $50,000 could

available Saturday

be used for window replacement and
a heating system.
It was suggested that the first
floor could be made available for a
city building. It was also suggested
that proceeds from the sale of the
present city building could be used
toward the rehabilitation of the old
senior high building.
"We are living on borrowed time
as far as the grant is concerned,"
Shields stated.
Shields said he would be willing to
file a pre-application with the FHA,
if Pomeroy Council so desires.
Shields offered to do everything he
could to get the project off the
ground, since it has been four years
since Meigs Local turned the
building over to the city for the sum
of $1. However, council must approve steps that are taken. Shields
added that an architect would have
to be engaged and suggested that
David Rieser of Athens do the work.
Shields added that Mayor Clarence
Andrews had been most
cooperative. He aiso commented
that the Mayor and the people of
Pomeroy had been terrific, in
working with him.
Options Listed
Dave Jenkins, member of the
Jaycees, reported the Jaycees are

Wildlife packets
"Wildlife Packets" of tree
seedlings and ground cover plants
ordered from the Meigs Soil and
Water Conservation District will be
available to pick up at the District
office in the Farmers Bank Building
in Pomeroy on Saturday, April 12
from 8 a.m. to 4p.m.
If there is no rain that day, plants
will be distributed from outside the
bank in the adjoining parking lot by
Reid Young, S.C.S. technician.
Early planting is essential for successful growing of these plants.
However, if the plants cannot be
picked up that day, they will be kept
at the of(ice and can be picked up
any time the following week from 8
a.m. to5p.m .

Owners responsible
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews announced today that
sidewalks covered under ordiance
915.09 are the responsiblity of
property owners.
·
The ordinance makes the property
owner liable and responsible for any
~ges that might occur. The
Mayor suggested that necessary
repairs be made.

. Smith jojn.s electric firm

against Iran.
"We warn the U.S. government,
with all frankness, that if America ·
launched any military aggression
Glenn A. Smith · has been apagainst Iran, we will kiU all the
pointed assistant manager of
hostages immediately," said the
Buck eye Rural Electric
militants' statement, carried by
Cooperative, Inc. effective April7.
Tehran radio.
A native of ' Pikeville, Ky., Smith
White House spokesman Mark
graduated from Pikeville High
Henderson refused to comment ImSchool and Pikeville Junior College.
mediately on the militants' threat.
He also graduated from the UniverHe sa.id he did not know which opsity of Kentucky in 1962 with a B.S.
tions Carter might be considering
in Civil Engineering.
for what he called a " show offorce. "
Mr. Smith comes to lfuckeye from
Iranian diplomats in the United
the Ohio Department of TranStates hurriediy packed their ·bags
sportation where he served as
and left the country Tuesday night
District Deputy Director of District
on flights from Was)jington, New
10 at Marietta. He served nine years
York and Los Angeles. FBI
with ODOT, five of which were as
spokesman Roger Young said only
deputy director. Mr. Smith served
one of the 35 diplomats affected by
six years as Gallia County Engineer
the expulsion order. was known to
and three years with the U.S. Corps
have stayed behind, and he was exof Engineers.
pected to leave after being released
~e and his wife, Gail, are the
from a suburban Washington · parents of three children, David,
hospital where he was admitted af·
who is 22 and married to the former
ter complaining of chest pains.
Lynn Wagner; Lisa , 16. and
Michael. 10. Mr. Smith and his

family live at 37 Evans Heights,

GLENN A. SMITH

Gallipolis. They attend the Grace
United Methodist Church. He is a
member M the Gallipolis Lioruj Club,
Masonic Lodge and Aladdin Shrine.
He is also a registered engineer and
surveyor, and is a member of the
Ohio Society of Professional
Engineers and the National Society
of Professional Engineers.
A spokesman also announced
William A. Callicoat was recently
appointed assistant line superintendent. Mr. Callicoat was hired as a
lineman in 1953 moving up to
crewleader in 1974. He and his wife,
Alice, reside on Route 35 west of
Gallipolis.
Another recent ·appointment was
Jean Runyon .to office manager.
Mrs. Runyan was hired in 1955 and
has worked in the billing department
becoming billing supervisor in 1971.
,lean and her husband, Douglas,
res1de on Ports!)1outh Rd .,
GaUi)&gt;(llis.

- Tear down the present city bsll
building on East Second Stteet and
build a new structure (at •an approximate cost of $125,000). A structure to house the Maintenance
Department would have to be bnilt
elsewhere at an additional cost.
- Purchase an alternate structure
(old Meigs General Hospital
Building) - building only not to include the vacant lot next to the
building at a cost of approximately
$125,000 plus an additional $125,000 to
renovate the existing structure.
)\1ain problems are lack of parking
space for Main.tenance Departmert
operations and storage. Advantage
would be extra space in building for
private office rental.
_
-l'fot mentioned by council - To
remodel lbe old Pomeroy Senior
High Building (still under option by
Pomeroy Village Council) - This
building cost lbe village ONE
DOLLAR. The buildjng could be
remodeled at an approximate cost of
$100,000 to $150,000 with the
possibility of leasing out unneeded
space for private dfices. The
building has adequate 1'0001 and
provisions for the MaintPnance
Department at that location.
The Meigs County Jaycees would
like to give the residents of the
Village of Pomeroy a chance to
voice their opinion as to which option
they would prefer to have done by
the Village of Pomeroy.
The mini-park project was also
discussed since a ro.:;o grant had
been obtained to Improve and expand the park area.
It was noted that the village's
problem at the moment is how much
ground it owns where the mini-park
is located.
C. E. Blakeslee said the Meigs
County Museum has ~ffered additional ground for the pari&lt; area.
Fred Crow suggested that since a
new access road is going to be built
from Union Ave., to the new Multi·
purpose building enough ground was
available to have a city park near
the access road.
Blakeslee said the question now
asked is will a park site develop
where the mini-park is located or
will It be an eyesore as in the past?.
He also added that the village does
not know what and bow much land it ·
owns.
Joe Clark, new owner of GoeSIIIer
Jewelry Store, was introduced.
, Paul Simon, president, announced
that sidewalk sales will be held In
(Continued on page 14)

Weather
Mostly Cloudy wilb possible thundershowers tonight and Thursday.
Low tonight near 40 and highs Thursday 55 to 60. Chance of rain is 40
percent tonight and Thursday .
Oblo Extended Oatlooll
Friday and the weekend- Pat11y
cloudy Friday iod Saturday.
Another cbaace of 1'11111' ~Y·'
Hlgbs In the sea aortb land • -lh
Friday and Satunlay, ceo11aJ to the
5GB statewide. SUday. LoWI Ia tbe
31111 Friday Qd Ia the mid . . to mid
408 over the weekead.

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