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"

'YOU'RE NEW AROUND
HERE1 AREN'T 'YOU~

by ·Dick Cavalli
'IOLJR FAMIL:i uL.l6T
MOVE INTO TOWN~

WH-HUH ... WHAT KIND
CFA TOWN 15 THI6'2.

~1111

I MEAN, WHE:Re:5 "THE: ACT10N ~
WHAT D::i'IOW DORA&lt; FUN-:f

WEL'-teATUROA-Y.MORNIN$ WE= ALL
60 r:.;oNN AND WA10-\ THE#. c.HAN&lt;5-E
THE !MRQUEE ON 1H5 NOVIS HOLJ5E.

YOUR
SNOW HOUSE, PR'ISCI U.A .'

qe:T HOME

e:.E~E TH&amp;Y'
UN~D 11-i~ lv\0/INe VAN.

Vol .2t, No. 209
Copvrlghted Ull

.
OOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Two a year to set up the reserve fund.
GoP senators have introduced One percent of the ~.8 billion, tw&lt;r
Jegl.slatl011 in an attempt to find
year budget proposed last week by
ll!stlng solutions to Ohio's budget
Gov. James A, Rhodes would total
8nd I!Chool funding problems.
about $200 million, so the fund would
"The state government needs to get $100 milllon at the start of the
take steps to avoid future fiscal fiscal year on July I and another
inlshaps ... stumbling !roll) fiscal $100 million a yeariater. ·
crisis to fiscal crisis has been a bad
According to Van Meter, reducbabit of the state goverrunent recen- tions and interest earned by the
tly," said Thomas A. Van Meter,
reserve fund would continue until it
Senate president · pro tern. "t\n reached $500 million. Under his
(Ohio) Reserve Fund is one way to proposal, money could not be spent
break this habit."
from the fund unless a fiscal
Van Meter's bill seeks to avoid emergency was declaroo by the
fature budget crises by establishing governor and the move was apan Ohio Reserve Fund. The Ashland proved by a three-fifths majority of
lawmaker is nearing completion of both legislative chambers.
the school funding· proposal,
Van Meter is expected to andescribed as a radical departure
from the way the state currently fun- nounce in about a week the school
funding plan, which he said resulted
ds its schools.
Sen. Paul E. P!eifer, R-Bucyrus, from consultations with school of·.
also is sponsoring legislation that ficials across the state. He's been
would revamp school funding , working on the project for several
primarily by taking tax revenues months.
The pian would include' relief for
away from wealthy school systems
within the counties and evening tax property taxpayers and possibly
hikes in certain other taxes for a
revenues out among all districts.
Van Meter's bill would earmark 1 major increase in the state funding
percent of the general revenue fund of local schools.

enttne

at y

'I

'

'

"

'&gt;., •••

'

.

NO INJURIES - The driver of this pickup trucl&lt; and a paBSeuger
escaped Injury Sunday aftemoon wben the vehicle went out ol control aad
plunged over the river baok on E. Main SL, Pom~roy. Pomeroy Pollee
said the pickup truck, drtven by James Webster, 19, Pomeroy, was head-

IT HA'S EVERYTHING .

I

50 people watch guard's stabbing
MIAMI - Fifty to 100 people watched as a shoplifting suspect
repeatedly knifed a security guard outside a department store here.
Five came forward afterward, says a homicide detective on the case.
• ; The guard, 26-year-oid Gary Townsel', was ba~ly alive when he was
ru!hed to Parkway General Hospital. He did not live long enough for
surgery,
,
Officers said the suspect escaped on foot with an item probably worth less than $10. The manhunt widened Sunday as police issued a plea
for information from witnesses.

AND IT 'SHUTS OUT THE
INTRUSIONS. 01= THE WORL17.

.HOW'EVER. I THINK C,.OU

LOSE A FEW FOINT9 ON
THE LOCATION.'

Arsonist sought in fire deaths
An arsonist using a flanunabie liquid set a fire in a Brooklyn, N.Y.,
apartment house, kiliing two mothers and three of their children, and
children playing with matches may have sparked a fire that killed two
children in Pontiac, Mich., officials said.
The Brooklyn fire quickly engulfed the four-story apartment house
Sunday l)lght and trapped the two women and three children on the top
floor, official said.
Maria Melendez, 28, and her &amp;-year-old son, Anthony, were pronounced dead at the scene, fire officials said. She was being visited in her
apartment by the other victims, Olga Rodriguez, 29, and her
daughters, Olga, ll, and Estella, 9, when the fire erupted.

Teachers will live with record
RAVENNA, Ohio - Doris Wymer says holding a tie for the record of
the longest teachers' strike in Ohio is no honor, but something instructors In this northeastern Ohio city must live with.
After a fruitful day of court-ordered negotiations Saturday, the
strike appeared almost over. But .with wages as the last unresolved
issue, the job action continued today for the 47th school day and
pickets were expected up at the 3,700-pupll system's nine school
buildings.
The school board and the Ravenna Education Association agree on a
hase salary figure ol $12,000, but are at odds over how to achieve it.
The board said passage of a 5.9 mill school levy is neceSsary, while the
REA called a levy unnecessary.

Washington County deputy slain

"ANOTHER THINQ I'VE NOTICED, DOCTOR. I'M
TIRED AND IRRITABLE AFTER WAITING TWO
. HOURS IN YOUR REOiPTION ROOM!"

"WHEN ARE YOU GOING TO GET IN LI~E WITH THE ~0·
MOBILE DEALERS AND GIVE REBATES ON STEAKS?"

MARIETIA, Ohio - Washington County Sheriff Richard Ellis is
reviewing cases that may have led to the fatal shooting' of one ol his
deputies.
Deputy Raymond Clark, 49, was killed by a shotgun blast Saturday
night while sitting in the kitchen of his Marietta home, Ellis said.
Clark's wife apparently' did not hear the gunshot and thought her
husband had fallen on the kitchen floor, Ellis said. She telephoned an
emergency sqyad, reporting that her husband was hurt in the fail.
Clark, a department employee since 1970, was dead on arrival at
Marietta Memorial HospitaL An autopsy by county Coronor Kenneth
Owen on Sunday showed the deputy had been shot in the head by a ·
shotgun.

New Yorker dies in plane crash
WHITESBURG, Ky. - Thomas Donald Grindle, 30, of New City,
N.Y. died when the light plane he was piloting crashed In flames at the
Whitesburg Airport, authorities said.
Letcher County Deputy Coroner Durward Banks said Grindle was
the lone occupant of the Cessna 182.

Weather
Cloudy tonight with snow or rain likely by morning. Lows in the low
30s. Rain and windy Tuesday. Highs in the low 40s. Chance 'of
precipitation 60 percent tonight and near 100 percent Tuesday. Winds
variable 10 mph or less tonight.

MY SON TO SHARE IN TH£ BUSINESS, BUT THE
AND FEDERAL TAX PEOPLE SEAT HIM TO ITI"

1 Section, 12 pages 15 Ctnts
A Multim.ctia Inc. Newse=per

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, February 9, 1981

Ed Sullivan

Priscilla's Pop
r JUST LOVE

IF J: HURRY,. MAYBE I 0\N

e
Funding
hill set

•

•

"HER SAUERBRATEN WAS AWFUL. I SAY
RETALIATE WITH YOUR LAMB STEWI"
•

Extended Obio Forec••l- Wednesday through Friday:A chance of
flurries Wednesday. Mostly fair Thursday and Friday. Highs from the
· upper 2011 to mid-30s Wednesday and mostly in the 20s Thursday and
Friday. Lows mostly in the teens.

ed east when it passed another eastbound car driren by Tamara Ross, 19,
Gallipolis. The truck bit the left front ol the Ross vehicle and then went
out of control plunging over the baok coming to rest near the river.
Passenger in the truck was Larry Byer, Middleport. There were no clta·
lions, pollee said. The accident IH:CUred al2: U p.m.

·Four. people hurt in weekend wrecks.·
Four people were injured in li
nwnber of weekend accidents investigated by the Gaiiia-Meigs Post
of the Ohio Highway Patrol.
The patrol said a car driven by
Michael A. Sanders, 2S, Reedsville,
was westbound on SR 881 in Meigs
County at 9:15a .m. Sunday when it
lOst control on a snowy road, went
left of center and collided with an
eastbound vehicle driven by
Gregory E, Scarborough, 18,
Coolville.
Severe damage was done to Sanders' car and moderate to the Scarborough vehicle. A passenger in
each car-Rhonda F. Sanders, 24,
Reedsville , and Ruth Am Sc,arborough, 39, Coolville-were injured,
but not treated. Michael Sanders
was cited by the patrol for excessive
speed.

'

Troopers said Vincent E.
Mossman, 19, Pomeroy, was northbound on SR 7 in Gailia County at
1:55 a.m. Sunday when he lost con-

trol on a right-hand curve and went
off the right side of the road.
Mossman's car then coUided with
a ditch, shrubbery and a guard rail,
demolishing the auto. He ·was injured, but not treated and cited for
speeding.
According to the report, 1\enneth
E. Miller, 29, Huntington, W.Va.,
was northbound on SR 775 at 12:30
a.m. Sunday when a southbound
vehicle went left of center and
collided with Miller's car.

Saturday when the car failed to
negotiate a curve a'nd collided with a
parked car owned by Jane W.
Eggers, 22, Vinton, causing slight
damage to Niqay's car.
Michael D. Huddleston, 20,
Racine, was westbound on SR 124 in
Meigs County at 6:30p.m. saturday
when a deer collided with his car,
causing slight damage.
Troopers said Elman F. Maddy,
83, Gallipolis, was westbound on the
ramp coming off SR 160 in Gallia
County at 8:05a.m. Sunday when he
The auto then went off the right lost control of his car on an icy road,
side of the road and collided with the went off the left side of the road and
Gailia-Lawrence counties boundary collided with a signpost. His car was
sign, causing moderate &lt;jamage. slightly damaged.
Gregory A. Huffman, 20, Racine,
Miller was injured, but not treated.
The patrol was also kept busy in- · was westbound on SR 124 in Meigs
vestigating nwnerous minor ac- County at 9:55 a.m. when his car
went off the right side of the road
cidents throughout the weekend.
Troopers said Lasco A. Niday, 73, and collided with a fence, slightly
Gallipolis, was coming out of a damaging his auto.
TrooperS said Mary E. Barbour,
private driveway on Green TWp. Rd.
1069 in Gallia County at 1:35 p.m 71 , Uniontown, was northbound on

SR 7 in Gallia County at 1:30 p.m.
Sunday and attempted to pass.
another northbound auto driven by
Roger L. Montgomery, 33, Crown
City.

"

According to the report, Montgomery then attempted to turn left
and collided with Barbour's auto,
causing moderate damage to both
autos. Montgomery was cited for
c!Janging lanes without caution.
Vicky L. Sheets, 18, Gallipolis, was
southbound on SR 7 in Gallla County
at 2: 55 p.m. Sunday when she slowed
for traffic and slid off the road into a
ditch, causing slight damage to her
vehicle.
Nora E. McMillin, 51, Bidwell, was
northbound on SR 7 in Gallia County
at 10:21 p.m. Sunday when another
northbound vehicle passed while she
attempted to make a left turn.
The cars collided, causing
moderate damage to McMillin's
auto, the report said.

Experts say·inflation will worsen
.
hefor~ Reagan policies take control
&lt;&gt;

WASHJNGTON (AP) - Gasoline
prices are rising. Mortgage rates
are at an all-time high. Air fares and
home healing oil costs are going up.
The Reagan administration and
the Federal Reserve Board say inflation, which was 12.4 percent in
19110, will get worse before it gets
better. But they Insist price increases will level off as their policies
take hold.
How long that will take - or
whether it will happen at all - is
subject to debate.
It might be two years or longer,
·says Robert Gough, vice president of
Data Resources Inc., the nation's
lar·gest private economic
forecasting firm . And many
economists say even that outlook
depends on deep cuts in the federal
budget and no further oil price
shocks or unexpected summer ·
droughts.
President Reagan's budget director, David Stockman , told
, congressmen last week inflation
could be cut to 6percent ·or 7 percent
by the end of 19112 under the administration's economic program.
For the immediate future,
however, the ConSumer Price Index
Is expected to increase.
Stockman predicted Reagan's
decision to lift remaining government controls on domestic crude oil
would Increase gasoline prices at the
pump 8 cents to 13 cents a gallon this
year. But less than two weeks after
. the move , many refiners already
have pushed prices up as J.DUCh u 8

cents a gallon.
Sen. James A. McClure, R·ldaho,
chairman of the Senate Energy and
Natural Resources Committee, said
Sunday on NBC's "Meet the Press"
that under nonnal circUJJl8tances
there is no reason for gasoline prices
to go any more than another 5 cents
higher by June.
Many economists predict home
healing oil could reach $1.40 a gallon
by winter's end, compared with 95
cents a galion late . last fall , due
largely to price decontroL
The Civil Aeronautics Board last
week said It will pennit airlines to
raise domestic fares another 3.8 percent because of skyrocketing jet fuel
costs.
'
Overall, Datil Resources says, oil
price decontrol probably will add 0.5
percent to the Conswner Price Index
this year. Reagan's proposed tax cut
and the Federal Reserve's tight
money policies could add another 0.6
percent through 1983, Data Resources estimates.
Such increases would carry over
to wages of Americans who have

Traffic accidents
take nine lives
Six of Ohio's nine weekend traffic
victims were men who lost control of
their ~ars, the Hi~hway Patrol says.
The patrol counts weekend traffic
deaths from 6 p.m. Friday until midnight Sunday.
No fatal accidents were reported
Sunday.

cost-of-living contracts, further
feeding the inflationary spiral,
economists say.
Federal Reserve Chainnan Paul
Voicker told Congress last week the
central bank would lower its money
growth targets in 1981 and

acknowledged this could mean
higher interest rates for a prolonged
period.
Higher rates translate into higher
prices for houses, autos and other
big-ticket items that must be financed.

Deputies probe
equipment theft
Meigs County sheriff's deputies vehicle slid off the roadway on the
are investigating a breaking and en- left and knocked down a mailbox
tering and grand theft that occurred owned by Richard Eblin, Rutland.
over the weekend at Forked Run The Sams' vehicle then slid into a
State Park, Rc"edsville.
creek. There were no perDoyle (Skip) , Smales, park sonaiinjuries and moderate proper1nanager, notified the sheriff's ty damage.
department Sunday building had
Sunday Raymond Smith, Hysell
been entered sometime after 5 p.m. Run Road, reported his mailbox had
Friday and 11:30 a.m. Sunday. The been damaged sometime between 2
incident was discovered when an · and 6p.m. Saturday.
employe went to the building to get
According to deputies, a number
equipment for snow removaL
of inailboxes in the Hysell RWl Road
area have been vandalized in rece~
The building was entered by for- weeks. Anyone having any incing open the office door. An assort- formation are asked to contact the
ment of tools, case of oil, battery and sheriff's department.
The sheriff's department has a set
two chain saws were reported taken.
The department investigated an of keys foWld near the Pomeroy Post
accident S';\nday morning caused by Office, a pocket knife on the
sidewalk near Powell's and a writsnowy road,conditions.
Frederick Sams, Coiwnbus, was watch near Sugar Run. Items may
traveling south on SR 143 at 9 a.m . be picked up if the owner can Idenwhen he lost control of car. The tify. .
•l

••

�Commentary

Wdliam F. Buckley.Jr.

"

coherenct1_~-----------

The search for
Mr. James Reston, surveying
what he calls the "Reagan Show's
·Dress Rehearsal," complains that
"the new administration · has no
coherent policy at hoem or abroad."
By the time these words are
published Mr. Reagan is expected to
have ouUined his economic policies,
and that. will be the occasion to
evaluate their coherence. But meanwhile let us consider the implications of the startling staements,
first by Mr. Reagan then by Mr.
flaig concerning Soviet behavior.
· The President said of the governors fo the Soviet Uni011 that htey
"lie and cheat" because they preach
peace and coexistence while subsidizing subversion and guerrilla
war. Mr. Haig, at his conference,
spoke of the conununists' backing It
••international terrorism.''
So- what do we do about ft? Well,
the secretary of state began wit)! a
grand gesture, and I doubt that since
the U-2 crisis has there been such
consternation in Moscow. What Mr.
Haig did was instruct the attendant
who presides over the private
automobile entrance to the Stale
Department building to detain the
limousine containing Soviet ambasador Dobryniri - who for uncounted years has enjoyed the
diplomatic distinction of using the
secretary's private garage - and
direct Mr. Dobrynin's chauifeur

over to the general entrance area;
where such subordinate characters
in the international scene as the ambassadors from Great Britain, France, West Gennany and Japan suffer
the indignity to debouch from their
carriages. A mere gesture?
Gestures are extremely im·
portant. There is in the heart of
Moscow an institute headed by
Georgi Arbatov, who has in res! den- ·
ce 100 or so specialists on America.
Their job is to advise the Kremlin
what American policy is likely to be,
so that the Kremlin can fine tune its
aggressions. You may safely depend
on it that Mr. Arbatov was burn' in
the midnight oil on the night that Mr.
Dobrynin was denied access to the
privfile garage of the secretary of
state. Thallittie act, conjoined with
a revitalization of so apprpriate
langauge to describe the characteristics of Soviet policy, argues - a
change of policy.
A coherent change of policyh? We
shall see.
Denying the ambassador the
special garage facilities will not, as
Mr. Reston acutely observes, cause
the Kremlin's legions to draw back
from Afghanistan. But the revival rl
realism at whatever level rhetorical or diplomatic - is the first step towards coherence. Many
yeari ago the late Walter Lippman
pronounced
"anti-communist

..

The Daily Sentinel

.S outhern defeats Hucke

Page-2-The Dailv sentinel
Pomerov-Middleport, Ohio
Mondav, Februarv 9, 1981

rhetoric" atavistic. As arbiter
elegantiarum of national diplomatic
matters, Mr. Li'ppmann's ruling
prevailed. "The trouble with bad
taste," wrote Stendhal, "is that it
can lead to murder." The trouble
with thetorical evasions of the truth
is that they can lead to speeches by
Jimmy Carter about the lnOI'dlllate
test of conununism, delivered contemporaneously with the slaughter
of a couple of million Cambodians
'because they were deceived into lnsifficiently fearing communism.
Denying the ambassador the
special garage facilities will not, as
Mr. Reston acutely observes, cause
the Krmelin's legions to draw back
from Afghanistan. But the revival rl
realism at whatever level rhetorical or diplomatic - is the fir·
st step towards coherence. Many
years ago the late Walter Lippmann
pronounced
" anti-communist
rhetoric" atavistic. As arbiter
elegantiarum of national diplomatic
matters, Mr.- Lippman's ruling
prevailed. "The trouble with bad
taste," wrote Stendhal, "is that it
can lead to ·murder." The trouble
with rhetorical evasions of the truth
is thai they can lead to speeches by
Jimmy Carter about the inordinate
lest of conununism, delivered contemporaneously with the slaughter
of a couple of million Cambodians
because they were deceived into insuificiently fearing communism.
The same day the president and
the secretary of state spoke, Mr.
Carter's own ambassador to the
Eureopean Economic Community

addressed the Woodrow Wilson Center in Washingtondn contested that
the policies followed by Europe and
the u. S. during the past decade
have left us with economic and
military disadvantages which are
potentially critical. Ambassador
Thomas 0. Enders, a professional
diplomat of great brilliance with a
solid background in economic
analysis, would appear to be sayin~

the past policies have been in- doubts thai Pericles, RlcheUeu,
coherent, if coherence is defined as 'Disraeli, and Church!ll could jointly
policies that lie athwart national ob- compose a better initial statement of
jectives. These objectives are to the dilficulties we face. Yup. We are
preseve the . independence of dealing with a superpower that lies
America, and to make a modest con· and cheats and trains people 1D kill
tribution to the security and fredom other people, even as its ennisaaries
oi those nations .and peoples of the sashay about in the glittering
world whose objectives are ,similar · private garages of their vi~.
Take it from there, Ron, AI. You re
or congruent.
Too early to say, granted. But one off to a coherent start.

~~~

)

I)

I

BY SCOT!' WOLFE
RACINE - Kent Wolfe and Dale
Teaford combined foJI 03 points
· Saturday evening to lead the
Soulhern Purple :rornadoes to a 71&gt;64 win over the Nelsonville-York
Buckeyes of the Tri-Valley Conference . By winning Southern
boosted Its record to 14-3, while N-Y
drops to 1H overall.
Ke111 Wolfe, Southern's southpaw,
poured in a game-high 29 points,
while Teaford ripped the nets for 24.
The duo, which accounts for much of
Southern's offense, teamed up with
Richard Wolfe, Robert Brown, Jay
Rees, Terry McNickle, and Tom
Roseberry for an outstending defen~ slve effort.
; Tom Taggart led Nelsonville-York
~ with Tl points, big Chris McDonald
; added 15.

perind markers.
Southern took advantage 0! every
opportunity in the next round and
rolled to a 14 point advantage at the
Intermission, the score 43-29.
Teaford hit the boards very well in
the first half and netted 12 markers,
while Wolfe zipped 19. ·
Southern stormed Into the third
period like a bolt of lightning and
caught the talented· Buckeyes by
surprise. Utilizing a full--court press
that proved to be successful in the
first half. Southern opened up a convincing 51-32 lead. At that point, · .
Southern's hot streak ended as the
club ran head-on into a third period
cold front.
By the time the buzzer hed sounded Coach Dale Grandy's Buckeyes
'had trimmed the lead to 10, 55-45.
· In a very delennined comeback
bid N·Y erased the 19 point deficit,
and was right back in the game. The
lead was cut to lour at 62-68 and N·Y
had the bal\.
The hosts again took control of the
game and maintained a 10 point
margin until the final horn, clainning
the 75-65 win.
SHS hit 44 percent (2ll of 59) from
the field and connected a sizzling 23
of 45 from the line for 85 percent,
which is certainly an underlying factor In the game's outcome. N-Y hit 29
of 61 for 48 percent, actually out·
scoring the winners from the Ooor,
and hitting seven of 14 for 50 percent.
Southern hed only eight turnovers,
171eam fouls, eight assists, 12 steals,
and fell short on the battle of the
boards 35-28. McDonald had 13 for
the visitors and Brown had eight,
Teaford six for the hosts. Kent Wolfe
and Robert Brown had five steals
each, while Wolfe had four assists.
Before the varsity contest
Southern observed parents' night
and recognized the graduating
seniors that led last year's squad to
the state tournament. The quintet
consisting of Johnny Davis,
Jonathen Rees, Steve Filch, Jack
Duffy, and Dave Foreman received
a standing ovation.
Coach Howie Caldwell's reserves ·
claiml!d an exciting 41--40 thriller
over the young Buckeyes, led by
Scott Frederick's game high 19 points. Steve Carter led N-Y with 18.
Southern travels to Kyger Creek
Friday and Wahama on Saturday.
Box score:
N-Y (65} - Howe 0-0·0; Maiden 2
O· A; McDonald 7·1·15; Oiler 0·0·0;
Mays 3·0·6; Pills 2·3·1 ; Schentz 3·0·6,
and Taggard 12·3-27. Totals 29-7-65.
Southern (751- Teaford 6·12·1A ;

Early ·in the game an awesome
shooting exhibition by NelsonvilleYork quieted the loud roaring
Southern crowd.
'
N-Y controlled the tip and Chris
McDonald powered his way to the
bucket for the game's first score.
Seconds later, between missed shots
by Southern, quick-footed John
Schentz swished a 20 foot junnper
and Tom Taggart hit successive
baskets to give the visitors a IHI
lead.
After a SHS time-out, Wolfe went
to work for Coach Carl Wolfe's Tornadoes. Wolfe · connected for two
straight junnpers· as the scoreboard
lit up to the tune of 8-4. N·Y's Pitt
then hit on a drive before Southern
unreeled nine UD811.!1Wered points to
take a 13-10 lead. When the dlll!t had
settled in the round Southern owned
a l!t-16 lead, led by Wolfe's II first

lllCourtStreet
Pomeroy, ObJe
ll~ltUIII

DEVOTED TO mE INTEREST OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

Unveil job development legislation
'

ROBERT L. WINGETI
PubUiber

PAT WHITEHEAD

BOBHOEFUCH

A11iltu.t PUbllllter/CootroUtr

Gelteral MauJer

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
Ne'll'l Editor

A MEMIIER of Tbe Aoloclaled Pnta, lolud Dolly P,... AaiiG&lt;Iolloa ..J tile

--

AmerkuNewtptlper PuWiden A.HOC .. dta.

leN-.. _.._

u:m!liS OF OPINION 1n , . . - . Tbty olaoold be
lUI
Jeam an .. ~jed to edl1lq ..J mut be llped wflll ..,., ...._ uol ...,._
....-r. Nouolped loa&lt;nwlll be pgWjobe4.
bolaiiOOdtute.......,...

-. ...

Lell&lt;n...,...

.

A walking start
There was a great deal of post-election and pre-inauguration talk about
the new administration's intent to hit Washington running. What it came
down to appears. at this very early date to have been a transition
operation so massively unwieldy that its participants kept running into
each other.
President Reagan's first executive gesture. was to freeze federal hiring,
which was only to echo his predessor. Jimmy Carter's freeze, which
reduced the government's civilian employe total by some 45,000 in four
years, was still in effect when he left.
·
In fact, in other respects as well the new President Reagan has more in
common with the new President Carter than might make him comfortable if he were inclined to give it much thought.
·Reagan, like Carter, arrives in Washington short on programs ready to
implement but long on intentions, some of them very similar to Carter'scontrolling federal spending, shaping up the tax system, pruning the
departmental jungle, liberating public and business from the regulators,
reversing the Oow of power and responsibilities from the states to
Washington.
But that is not ne&amp;ssarily a bad thing. Let it be remembered that Jim·
my Carter's trouble was not in how he started out but what carne after,
how he did or did not meet the challenges that he either had not initially
fully understood or could not have anticipated . .
There has also been some talk about the Reagan election being an event
of similar but mirror importance to that' of Franklin Roosevelt, epochal in
its political implications.
That will require some proving, for which we'll just have to wail. But
here, too, let it be remembered that the New Deal did not burst fully
developed upon Washington and the nation on Inauguration'Day in 1933.
The famous first 100 days were a period of furious Improvisation with
many changes of approach but never of purpose: to devise the programs
to which the problems of the nation would respond.
Under the circwnstances, i~ is just as well that the Reagan adrniniatration is not off to a running start. Problems always become more
, complicated when they are in your lap rather than someone else's back. A
quick fix all too often is only buying more trouble for the future.
The administration and the nat(on are likely to be better served in the
long run by a walk at a steady pace, with a sure sense of direction and a
clearly comprehended purposes.

Today in history.

• •

Today is Monday, Feb. 9, the 40th day of 1981. There are 32:i days left in
the year.
Today's highlight in hisiory :
On Feb. 9, 1825, the House of Representatives elected John Quincy
Adams president because the national election hed failed to give any can-.
didate an electoral majority.
· Onthisdate:
In 1718, French colonists arrived in Louisiana.
In 1942, the former French liner Nonnandie burned and capsized at a
New York pier as it was being outfitted as a troop transport during World
Warll.
In 1943, the World War II Pacific hattie of Guadalcanal ended with an
·
·
American victory.
And in 1962, Jamaica became an independent nation within the British
Commonwealth.
Ten years ago: An earthquake in the Los Angeles area killed at least 64
people.
, Five years ago: Patricia Hearst testified that she took part in a bank
robbery only because she was threatened with death.
One year ago: Iranian President BaoiSadr warnold militants occupying
the U.S. Embassy that they must obey the will of the government, but the
militants insisted they would heed only the Avatollah Khomeini .
'

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Gov.
James A. Rhodes and legislative
leaders are moving quickly to
muster support for a bill opening
new mult1-billi011 dollar investment
viStas for Ohio's public employee
pension systems.
They have taken the wraps off
legislation which, if approved, would
implement one of the dozen job
development goals ouUined by
Rhodes in his Stste of the State address to the General Assembly.
Meanwhile, the governor's top
fiscal experts fielded questions from
skeptical members of the Ohio
House Finance Conunittee. It is considering the administration's
proposed $20.8 billion state budget
for the next two fiscal years starting
July 1.
Pension system officials said they
had been working for months on the
legislation to expand ways in which
their $12 billion in assets could be invested. For example, the proposed
bill would allow up to 25 percent, or
$3 billion, to be placed in real estete
in Ohio or elsewhere.
It would also permit the
retirement systems to invest in bonds and notes issued by private financial institutions. The securities
would have to be bscked by liens on
one-tlf-four family residential struc-. ·
tures in Ohio.
Under more restricted conditions,
the systems also could invest in bonds backed by liens on commercial
property.
The measure would not only per·

mit the systems to invest in and
manage real estate, but in the assets
of Ohio corporations as well. The
systems Would be limited to putting
5 percent of their funds into corporatlons.
The five pension groups are the
State Teachers Retirement System,
School . Employees Retirement
System, the Public Employees
Retirement System, the Police and
Firemen's Disability and Pension
Fund, and the Ohio Highway Patrol
Retirement system. ·
Earlier Thursday, William D.
Kelp, director of the office of budget
and management, faced questions
from the finance panel about
Rhodes' budget proposal for spending $3.6 billion oo primary and
secondary education.
It represents an increase It $300
million, or 9 percent, over the last
biennium. Franklin B. Walter, state
superintendent of public instruction,
is calling for a $1 billion increase.
Rep. Robert J. Boggs, DJefferson, was sharply critical of the
Ithodes budget plan for schools.
"It's an unmitigated disaster for at
least elementary and secondary
education," he said.
School districts now receive abouJ
45 percent of their revenues from the
state, 47 percent from local property
taxes and 8 percent from the federal
government. Under Rhodes' budget,
the state's share will drop slightly in
fiscal year 1982 and return to the
current level in fiscal year 198.'1. ·
Boggs said tbe administration's

request for a major expansion of a
loan fund from which financially·
troubled school districts borrow to
remain open signaled its belief that
districts would face hard financial
limes.
Rhodes' budget allows for possible

expenditures of $30 mlllion from the
loan fund in fiscal 19112 and t20
million in fiscal 1983. The fund
loaned $3.1 million in fiscall980 and
an estimated $1.2 million in fiscal
1981.

New state sales tax
cause&amp; confusion
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The I
percent additional sales tax which
took effect Jan. 1 is causing confusion for persons who contracted
for goods or services before the new
year for delivery after the new year.
A spokesman in the state attorney_
general's office deferred on the
question, noting the attorney
general is charged only with rendering legal opinions on questions
raised by officials of government
sub-divisions.
Officials of the sales and excise
tax division in the state tax department are not very helpful in clearing
up the question. In fact, they raised
other questions.
Given two examples of when the
tax was and was not collected on
contracts lha I spanned the enforcement date, Administrator Leon
Deming of the sales-excise division
cited the state's legal definition of a
sale. It boils down to one part_v of·
fering to sell and another party of-

fering to buy. But he raised several
theories on when such an agreement
is and is not binding.
"But you may or may not have a
sale conswrunatecj at that · point,
depending on the obligaU01111 of one
party to tender something ~ bind a
contract," Demiing said.
• In one case cited to Deming, a
man agreed Dec. 30, 1980 to buy a
saw from a company which aglled·
to write the contract that day and
deliver the saw Jan. 3, 1981. Beca\lae
the contract was dated in 1980, the
company collected only the 4 percent sales tax when the saw was
delivered after the new year.
The same man contracted Dec. 22
for lodging at a state park for midJanuary. Payment was made in advance and receipted Dec. 26, 1980.
The individual was told upon
checking in Jan. 23 that he was paid
for the night yet upon checking 0\t
the following day he was charged the
extra I perc2nt oi new sales tax.

To offset a deficita.-------In_W._a_sh___.ingto...__n
ByRobertJ. Wagmaa
.
WASHINGTON (NEA) - Sail;,
Booth of Cambridge, Ohio, recent!)
lodged the following compl~int with
the American Automobile
Association:
"Two months ago. while visiting
Washington, I had the unfortunate
experience of having my car towed.
"After two hours of searching including eight futile calls to police,
a taxi drive across town and a threeblock walk - I found six persons In
line whose cars had also been towed.
All of us were from out of town.
"Tbe (district's) Department of
Transportation collected $300 in less
than 10 minutes from six persons all from outside D.C."
Welcone to Washington, Sally
Booth.

The District of Colunnbia has a
problem : Its budget has remained
several hundred million dollars out
of balance despite massive infusions
of federal aid.
About two years ago, the city's
fathers began looking for new sour·
ces of income to reduce this deficit
They found a real beaut: drivers on
district streets.
Most conununities enforce traffic
and parking regulations for safety
reasons. But the district no\v a~
pears to be doing so for one reason
and one reason only: revenue. And it
is doling a bang-up job.
Responsibility for enforcing those
regulations were transferred from
the Police Department to the new
Transportation Depar.tment .
Despite this creation of what amoun-

70 K£tP MYSW' /3NWTAII'EP, I
VM.WS 015f.45ts
AANG lHt Mt!JICAI- O«J&lt;·UPS
IJ5EJ) 7rJ ff/611

ts to a mini-police force - including
the purchase of a lot of expensive
equipment- the department turned
a$22miullion profit last year. That's
a lot of tickets.
Ms. Booth fell victim to one of the
department's biggest money makers : the impoundment of
violators' cars.
In most cities, towing is reserved
for chronic violators and for cars
parked so as to create a hazard. In
Washington, however, ears are
towed for overtime . parking at
meters and other relatively minor
offense:..
Recovering an impounded car
requires payment of the fine ($10 for
an overtime meter) and a $50 towing
fee.
·
You say It's a driver's own fault if

his or her illegally parked car is
towed? That's a sure sign that you
have not spent - much time in
Washington.
One of the most conundn reasons
for towing is parking within 40 feet of
an Intersection or a crosswalk.
Similar laws are in effect in many
other cities, where curbside signs
warn "no parking here to corner."
But there has been no money for
such signs in the district's tight
budget. Sll, a driver may have to
sperid half a day and $80 retrieving
his or her car
So, park carefully if you visit
Washington this spring. employees
of the Transportation Department
1\'111 be lurking around every comer
to help you eontribute to the
district's fiscal recovery.

The Dally

Pomeroy-Mtdclluort, Ohio

Monday, Februarv 9, 1981

FIRES AWAY - Chri• McDonald 1441 who netted 15 polnll for
Nelsonville-York fires over the leaping body of Robert Brown (44) during
Saturday's non conference game at Racine. Southern posted illl41h vic. tory, 75-55.

Sentinei-Pag_~

for 14th win

HIGH JUMPERS- In a battle of 42's, NelsonvilleYork's Brtaa Mays and Southern's Dale Teaford, Scott
Wolfe's action shot from Saturday's no&amp;league e&amp;
eounten catches bolh playen going high off the Ooor
for a jump ball. Teaford netted 14 points to help

Southern roll to Its Ulh win In 17 games. Playen
awaiting a possible lip are Southern's Jay Rees (4t)
aad Kent Wolfe (14) and the Buckeyes' Tim Maldea
(30) and Tom Taggart (20}.

OU tops Western Michigan
By Associated Press
Western Michigan Coach Les
Woethke hopes to avoid overconfidence within his team as the
Broncos ride alone in first place to
the six remaining Mid-American·
Conference college basketball contests.
"lt's a six~game season now ,"
Woethke said after the Broncos' 111179 victory over Bowling Green on
Saturday. "The fact we're 7-and-3
(in the league) doesn't mean a
thing,

II

Miami evened its record at 10.10
overall and 5-5 in the conference,
and Eastern Michigan fell to 11-9
and 6-4 following the 69-63 match.
The 10 victories assured Miami of
its liest finish in three years. The
Redskins were !t-18 the past two
seasons.
Miami · Coach Darrell Hedric
called Saturday's game "the first
time we've had some defensive intensity and some rebounding in·
tensity ."
"Our bench helped us a lot," he
said.
Forward Jeff Zatkoff paced
Eastern Michigan with a game-high
23 points. Senior· guard Tim Bracey
added 17 points.
In Muncie, Ind., Ray McCallunn
scored 18 of his game-high 27 points
in the second half to lead Ball State
91~2 over Toledo - the first Ball
State victory over the Rockets since
the 1938 season. The Cardinals are
13-7 overall and 6-4 in the con·
ference . Toledo is 6-4and 14o6.
Ohio University, led by forward

Tim Woodson's 31 points, claimed a
7~ victory In double overtime over
Central Michigan. Both teams
traded the lead during regulation
play, which ended with a 48--point tie.
The Bobcats led by three in the first
overtime, but Central's Mike Robin·
son, who led with 28 points, evened
that with a three-point play.
Woodson's perfonnance awed
Ohio Coach Danny Nee. "He
literally carried us on his back,"
Nee said.
Ohio held Central Michigan's
leading scorer Melvin McLaughlin,
a guard who averages 22 points on
the season, to eight.
·
The Bobcats are now 4o6 in the
league and 5-15 overall. Central
Michigan fell to 3-7 and 1().10.

In other action Saturday, Ball
State defeated Toledo 9Hl2, Miami
edged Eastern Michigan 69-63, Ohio
University took Central Michigan 7().
68 and Kent State brightened its
dismal season with a 67o62 victory
over Northern Illinois.
Bowling Green and the Broncos
stayed close through the first half,
which ended with Western Michigan
ahead 4().36. The Broncos, 12-18
overall, extended tbe lead in . the
Richard Wolfe 2· 0·4; Cardone 0·2·2;
second
half as junior guard Jasper
Rees 2·6-A ; Kent Wolfe 13·3·29 ;
McElroy
connected for 20 of his 29
Roseberry O+A; McNickle 2 2·6;
Pape 0·0·0. Hemsley 0·0·0. Total• 26· points. Walker D. Russell ; a
23-75.
sophomore guard and high school
Saturday'• SparU Tranuctloll8
By quarters:
RASEBAIJ...
N·Y
16 13 16 2G-65 All-American from Pontiac, Mich.,
Amf!rican League
S
19 2A 12 2G-75 added 20 points for Western
CHICAGO WHITE SOX- Signed Brill
Burns. pilrhl!r, ~tnd M,arvis Foley, catchMichigan.
contra ct.s
The Broncos' victory dissolved a er, to one-year
National Leagt~e
fQur-way first place conference tie
SAN Jt~ RANCISCO
Si gned con.ler- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~, uutfielder. GIANTSto a five-year
into a four-way tie for second among ry Ma rtintract
BASKETBALL
Toledo, Eastern Michigan, Northern
NatloBa\ Bui.etbiiU Auoclatlon
before Haas hit one of two free Illinois and Ball Stale. All have 6-4
CLEVELAND
CAVALIERS- Traded
throws. Bissell again hit a bucket af· conference records .
Chad Kinch, KUIIrd , and a 1985 first-round
draft choict' to the Dallas Mavericks for
ter a missed FF bucket, then Coach
Kent, last place in the league with Geoff
HU!llon, guard, and a 1985 thirdEichinger called time.
round draft choice.
·
a 2~· record and 4-16 overall, won
FOOTBALL
Following the time-out with 36 with a strategy to block Northern
NaUoul Foothill! League
seconds left, Eastern applied a Illinois's Allen Rayhorn. The center
HOU81'0N OILERS-Named
Dick N ~
lan defensive coordinator.
pressure defense that forced a costly . entered the game with a !!&gt;-point
COLLEGE
turnover. Eastern knotted the score average, but scored 14 in the game.
OKLAHOMA- Announced the
resigna ti on of Rex · NtJrris, defensive coordtnator.
with six seconds showing on the
"We had a sound game plan and
HJCE - Siglll&gt;d Ray Alborn , head foot·
clock, 57-li7, but a series of quick the kids carried it out," said Kent ball coach, to 11 four-year contract.
WESTERN WASHINGTON- Announced
passes ended in Flowers' hands . State Coach Ed Douma.
the rcsl!jnat iorl of Chuck Randall, head
Flowers released the long shot in
Northern Illinois is now 11-9 basketbull cooch, effectiv e · at the end of
the SCllS\1/l ,
desperation which went in.
overall.
BUSINEBS POLICY
Eastern hit23 of 55 for 42 percent .---------------------------1
from the field and hit 11 of 15 from
the line. Fort Frye hit 21 of 56 from
the Ooor for 38 percent, and canned
17 of 20 from the line for a hot 85 percent.
Insurance Package
Eastern won the battle of the boar·
ds 29-24 led by Dill's 10 while Polk
For You
had nine. Eastern had seven turDo
•
ou
own or operate a
novers and 17 fouls, while the winsmall or medium-size
ners had 4T.O. and 12 fouls. Eastern
retail store, office, aparthad 19 assists and Bissell had five.
Jr church?
ment
Eastern dropped the reserve tilt
-you may qualify
Then
4().20 as Terry Ayers sank II for the
for
~tate
Auto Mutual's
winners and Johnny Riebel led
,
SERIES
ONE
Business
Eastern with six.
Pol icv ... a modern-as·
Box .Core:
.tomorrow package plan
Eastern (571- Ritchie 0·0·0; Cole
5·0·10; Long 0·0·0:' Malthews 2·0·A;
that combines an array of
Wigal 1-0·2; Greg Cole 1·0·2; Bissell
broad
property and liabili·
9·2·20; Sprague 2·0·A; Dill 3-9·15.
Totals 2l· l t-57 .
tv coverages required to
FF (59} - Flowers 6·0·12 ; Polk 8·
safeguard your opera·
6·22 ; Anderson 0-0-0; Tornes 0·0-0;
tlons. All for a ver.y attracColey 2-..S; Haas5·7·17 . Totals21-17S9 .
tive, affordable premium.
, By quarters :
Let us explain · the
17 17 10 13- 57
E
16 12 8--59
superior features
of
FF
SERIES ONE ... the short
time we spend together
could prove interesting
. and rewarding to you.
SuuO~em U. 71 , JackstJn St. 68
Just give us a call or
Tenne~ 87, Kentucky 71
mail
the handv coupon.
Tn.:-ChltLinoogll 99, Ol\lidllon 8S
Wake FtJreat M, Georgia Tech 56
DALE C. WARNER
W.C.Oroll,. tl, VMI 75
Don't let the se cold wint e r da ys
W.Kentucky 72, Tenneasee Tech S9
INSURANCE
and ni g hts kee p you from g ellin g
unl~·
102
w.
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th~ good tim es goin '. Wo rm up wi th o delic ious G in o 's
Br•dley 93. CreiMhlon 80
STATE
O.ytoo 94, Alcorn St. 611
Pur e Be ef Ste a k San dw ich. You get o b ig cut of pure
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De~ul 77, Ala.·Bim\Jfl8harn 66
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right now , a FREE o rde r of gold en brow n fr ench fri e s.
Iowa 72, Jlllnul! 66

Eagles lose on last second goal
BY SCOTI WOLFE
BEVERLY - Scott Flowers
'blossomed as a hero Saturday night
·as his 17 foot desperation jump shot
;swished through the net at the buz·
:zer, to give host Fort Frye a 59--57
·victory over the Eastern Eagles.
Eastern drops to 13-4 overall , while
Fort Frye is now 9-&lt;l.
· Mike Polk dwnped in 22 points for
the winning Fort Frye club, Lee
·Haas sank 17 points, Flowers 12, and
Coley eight to round out a balanced,
and efficient scoring attack .
Mike Bissell led a trio of Eagles in
double fi~ures' as he punnped in 20
' points, Tim Dill added 15, and Gene
Cole netted 10.
The first period developed into a
see-saw battle. Eastern got on the
board first and climbed aboard the
scoring merry-go-round that
resulted in three ties and five lead
changes in the first eight minutes.
Gene Cole, Tim Dill, and Mike
Bissell led the first quarter surge
. that gave the Eagles a hard-fought

.
'

!

The Daily Sentinel
!USPS I - I
AOh 11\oa Gf MuUtmedia,ID~ .

Publilhed every aftemoon exctllt SWldly,
Monday lhrOIIilh Frlday,lll Cow!Stnot, by
tho Ohio Volley Pub~ Company Mllltirnedla, Inc., Pomeroy, Ohio 4671t,
tn-11111. St&lt;oncl cllol poollp pokt at
Ptmeroy, Ohio.

Mombo" The l\lfOCiated Prwt,'lnlancl Da~
ond tho American
N._por PubUihon AaloclaUon, NaUonal
Advertlelnl Repreaentltlvt, Landin&amp;
Aalo&lt;lolll, 1101 Euclid Avt., Cl,..land,
Ohlo,4111&amp;.
1y " - AaaoclaUon

17-l6lead.
In the second round; a Fort Frye
variation between a ·sticky !nan-toman defense and box-in-one on hot
handed Cole restricted the talented
forward's chances of a high of·
fensive output. This gave Bissell
some freedom. The jlinior sha~
shooter took advantage of the o~
portunity to spark his club to a 34-28
second period lead.
Bissell paced his club with 14 points the lirst hall 11 of which came in
the second quarter to give his club
another offensive boost. Bissell hit
nine of II from the field with an out·
standing effori. Dill also played a·
big role, picking up the slack when
called upon, and grabbing many important rebounds.
In the third period Eastern bult up
a 10 point lead on two different occasions. Once at the 5:38 mark,
Eastern led 38-28, then again at the
1:17 mark, 44-34. Dill had six points
in the canto to lead the Eagles to a
44-361hird period lead.
In the final round, Eastern went
cold as Fort Frye outscored the
Eagles in .one streak 17-1. The cold
spell, coupled with a torrid Fort
Frye rejuvenation , proved
devastating to the Eagles.
Following two Haas free throws ,
and a Coley Field goal Eastern
trailed by nine at the I :56 mark. The
Cole brothers hit two free throws
each to pull within five at~!. After
a turnover Bissell hit a long jwnper,

College results

·POSTMASTER: Stnd oddreN to'The Dally ·
8onllnol, Ill Cow181.. Pomeroy, Ohlo41111.

SOUTH

IUIICRIPTION IIA-

~I , MWlsaippl 49
Appalachi•n St. 41, 'l"he Citadel 41

AJ11bllnw

IJ Can1tr Df MM IIMIW .
On•- ..... ...... .. ..... . ....... 11.00
OneM,..Ih ..... .. ... .. . .. .. .. ... . .. IUO
One YNr ......... .. .. . ........... 111.11
IJNOLBCOPY
.-ICEll
Dolly ............ .... .... ......

11Conll

AW!tln . Peay 82, MtJreMad St. 69
Clnclm\Mll 65, Memphis St. 62
Ouke S6, Maryl11nd 5-I
enncsate

Olllo IH W"l Viq\111

m

I Month .. .. · .. •...... .. .. · .. .. · " 0·10
811 month .. .. .. .. .. . .. .. .. .. .. .. . 11.10
I YNr ........ · .... ........ · .. ...
Ill.. Ootlldo Olllo
... Wilt Vlq\lll

.OQ

I M•lh .... ... .............. · .... 111.01!
l,Monlh .... .... ...... .. .. .. . .. ... 110.00
IYNr ...... .. ...... .. ... .. ...... 131.01!

St .

76,

Marshall

75

f'lorldl S6, Auburn 50
Gfltr~e Mason 96, st.Mary's, Md. fi
Gtorl!llll 80, VandtrbUl 72
Jamea Madlaon 72, William • Mary 60
l""blana Sl. 94, Mlllisaippl St. It
IAJutslana Tech 54, Arkanau St. 41

111111011 on 1 I, I or II monlh bula. Cl'ld[l
will bllfvtnCorrflrNCh m&lt;&gt;lllh.

MAIL IUIICIIIPfiONI

T

E

S.bl&lt;rlben not ~ 10 poy tho aarrlllr
mar romlt In odvanoe dl..ct to , . llalll'

Nollllfllcrii&gt;IION by mall permitted In lo..,.
wllort homo carrier III'YICI IIIYIIIablo.

Winter
"Warm-up"
SPECIAL

t.oulsvll
ll

B2 , Jo'l uridll St. 13, OT
MerL'tr 10$. Ga. Southern 70
Murray St. 6Z. E.Kentuuky 60 ,
Nl!w Orl~a(Uj 49, Geor8itl. :Jt. 1:
North CarollnK 79, Furman 64

N . C . -WIInUn~ton

16,

N.C.-Cha.rloUe

82,

73

NE !.ouiailna 79, NW IJluhdllllll 87

or

KIJ\11!1 98, OklahunUI 67
Kana&amp;ll St. 82, Culorado 62
K
e
n

67 , N.llllnotl 82
Marquette 65, Detroit 42

(Jd Dumlnlon 12, Rlchmund M, OT
S.MiaalUippl 71 , Tullnt R1
Sh: (,iJUIMlMI\9 Y'l, Cenl enMr)' 82,

$1.89

~.

N.C.,ollna AS.T 64, S.Carollr11 Sl
20T
N.Carul1111 St. 47, St.Joseph'11 U

FREE french fries with
a large steak sandwich

Mtarnl, Ohio sg, E. Mtclllg11n $3
Michigan 71, W\IC(Inaln 84
\tlnnteota II, Nurthwestern 62
Miaaour1 70, Iowa St. 56
Nebraska 62, OklahUnw St. ft4 •
N.Colur11do II, S,Dak!X.tl Sl. Ql
N.luwa $1, Valpirftbill 54
Ohlu St. 73, Michit~an ~t. 61

3 DAYS ONLY

Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday
February 9 - 10 - 11
Gino's gets good limes goin'.
Glno '!o F•mily 8iug.ain Night Feb,.uary lJttl

Please tell me more about the
SEAlES ONE &amp;u•ine" Polley.
NA.ME •

A[)DRFS·

-~=:.iiiiiiiCihior~lo~s~toiniCilvilc~Co~nilo~rli"iloinigiH~o~rn~Roiiid~eoi"i.-.:.:==--~1~:PHO:E- ._ _ ~· ~.- ~-= ~ ~--

�Mondill , Februar 9, 1981

Monday, February 9, 1911

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

NOTRE DAME GUARD - John Paxson drives past UCLA guard Rod Foster during basketball acllon
Sunday afternoon. UCLA topped the Irish 51·50.

Bruins upset Notre Dame

HONOR 1965 SQUAD
Members of llle 1965 Easte111
Hlgb School cage team which
compBed a 20-2 record aod lllelr
coach AI Bowen will be honored
TUesday Dight between lbe reserve and vanity tnls between
Eastern and Miller. All alumni
and fans are urged to be present
for the special recogDillon of that
team.

Oak Hill winner against the KCSymmes .Valley-Southweatem winner. Both winners advance to
district competition at Chillicothe.
Alexander was top seeded in the
boys' Class AA Sectional at Athens
High School.
Actions begins Feb. .211 with
Sheridan, !~, against Warren
Local, 6-7. At 7 p.m. Friday, Feb. 'n,
Meigs 3-13, will play New Lexington,
7·9 . .
The final game that evening linda
Nelsonville-York, 1~. against
Belpre, 8-8.
On March 3, the winner of the
Nelsonville-York game plays topseeded Alexander at 7 p.m. while the
Meigs-New Lexington winner batUes the Sherida~rWarren winner.
Finals will be held at 7:30 p.m.
Mar~h 7. Winner advances to the
district at Ohio University again!ll
the Portsmouth Sectional winner.
In Class AAA girls' competition
which will also be played at Athens
High School, Sheridan, f&gt;-12, plays
Warren Local at 5 p.m., Feb. 16. At 7
p.m. Nelsonvllle-York 11-6, plays
Belpre, 14-3. Meigs, 8-10, batUes
Alexander, 8-7, at 9 p.m.
Two games slated Saturtl!iy, Feb.
21 finds the Sheridan-Warren winner .
playing toP"seeded New Lexington,
!3-5. At 3 p.m. Feb. 21, the lower
bracket winner vs. the MeigsAlexander winner. Tournament
championship will be decided Saturday, Feb. 28.
The class AAA drawings will be
held this weekend at OU in Athens.
Hannan Trace will take part in the
Ironton Sectional this year. That
drawing is next weekend.

!
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USDA CHOICE

Psst. save some energy tonight.
sa•

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L~.'!~J!~sa.!~:...~.!a.:...J

we give It our best

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1
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Announce area
cage drawings

· of them in the second half, to lead Illinois; Danny Ainge scored 18 poinBy Associated Press
Notre Dame's intimidating Oregon State over Stanford. The ts and tied an NCAA record with his
Athletic and Convocation Center has Beavers ran into Wlexpected trouble JOist consecutive game in double
been the scene of a lot of disaP" from the Cardinals, currently last in figures as BYU stopped Air Force;
Purdue beat Indiana · on Kevin
pointments for the UCLA basketball the Pac-10.
Stallings'
two free throws with five
"I
really
wonder
why
they
play
so
team.
·seconds
remaining
and Wichita
good
against
us,"
said
Radford.
"
If
In 1974, Notre Dame ended the
State
turned
back
Drake
as Cliff
Bruins' spectacular SS.game win- they were that intense against
Livingstone
came
up
with
23
points.
ALL GAMES
win
a
few
everybody
else,
they'd
ning streak there . The Bruins were
W L P OP
more
games."
TEAM
also upset by the Fighting Irish in
Chillicothe
16 0 895 721
Mark Aguirre scored 30 points to
Athens
!975 and 1976 on that floor .
15 2 1112 942
15 2 114.0 936
AUTORACING
Wheelersburg
So they had to be thinking about lead DePaul past Alabama·
13 3 1185 1018
KYALAMI, South Africa (AP) _
Portsmouth
the place when they came into South Birmingham and become the first
12 5 966 831
in
Blue
Demon
history
to
Gallipolis
layer
Bend over the weekend for their big P
Carlos Reutemann of Argentina, Wa•erly
10 7 1001 975
9 9 1127 1130
reach the career 2,IJOO.point level. driving a Saudia·Leyland Williams, Wellston
game Sunday. They were.
8 8 880 848
Ironton
"We heard that Digger (Notre He also pulled down 19 rebounds in a scored a 26-see&lt;&gt;nd victory over Logan
7 11 1043 1075
Dame Coach Dig~er Phelps) said powerhouse pe rf ormance.
polesitter Nelson Piquet of Brazil in Jackson
5 12 1019 1140
5 11 778 962
they were going to beat us by 12 poi~r
"It ,was an All-American per· winning the South African Grand washington CH
3 13 830 926
Me igs
ts," said UCLA forward Mike San- formance against a very fine and Prix.
2 12 735 903
ders. "Coach (Larry) Brown read physical team," said DePaul Coach
Elio de Angelis of Italy, in a Lotus, PIS.";~":::;.~ results :
•
finishedthird.
Portsmouth 67 Gallipolis
everything that was in the paper to RayMeyer.
Alabama-Birmingham Coach
Reutemann, who took the lead
Wheelersburg 95 Rock Hill69
fire us up.''
Chillicothe 53 Lancaster 36
That was Sjlllday morning. Sun- Gene Bartow said, " Maybe Mark's from Piquet midway throug h the
Tuesday 's games:
day afternoon, the Bruins showed a game tonight was even better race, had an avera~ speed of 112.33
MinfOf"d at wa.erly
h
'
·
Ashland at Portsmouth
basketful of poise and held on to a because of his offensive reboWlding.
Hurricane at Pt. Pleasant
tingling 5!·50 victory that Sanders We felt if we could clean the boards mp ·
Chill icothe at Gananna
called "a very big one for us."
with our line of6-!0, 6-llandiHI, we'd .--------~--------------------------------------­
It WAS big, all right. Not only did win. But when Mark plays at that in·
the 12th-ranked Bruins upset the nin· tensity level, there's no stopping
th-ranked Irish on their home court, him. "
but they beat them for the second · Durand Macklin scored 29 points
time this season. That hasn't haP" and Howard Carter had 26 to lead
LSU past Mississippi State. Byron
pened since the !972-73 season.
Scott's
22 points paced Arizona State
"It wasn't the whole season for
over
Washington
State.
us," said UCLA's Rod Foster, " but
Dale
Ellis,
benched
for showing up
it's still a tremendous thrill any time
late
at
a
practice,
scored
21 poinis·in
you can beat a team like Notre
a
reserve
role
to
help
Tennessee
Dame twice.''
beat
Kentucky.
Ellis
scored
only six
In another game Sunday involving
a ranked team, No. 20 South points through nine minutes of play
Alabama defeated Jacksonville 8&amp;- in the first half, which Tennessee
completed with a 43-39 edge. But the
fi:i.
In Saturday's action, second· Volunteers' margin quickly widened
ranked Oregon Slate beat Stanford in the second half as Ellis put in
62-57; No .3 DePaul trimmed another !6 points.
" I would have to say that this is
Alabama-Birmingham 77-&amp;l; No.4
!Jluisiana State whipped Mississippi our worst game of the year," said
State 94-89; No.5 Arizona routed Kentucky Coach Joe Hall, who
Washington State· 7Hi3; sixth- would have celebrated a victory
ranked Kentucky was upset by No.!O with a cake complete with a "200"
Tennessee 87-71; No.7 Utah iced on the frosting. " We just didn't
outlasted Nevada-Las Vegas 95-83 do anything right."
Karl Bankowski led a second-half
and eighth-ranked Wake Forest triP"
rally as Utah came back from an 11Perl Georgia Tech 116-56.
Also, 11th-ranked North Carolina point deficit to beat Nevada-Las
beat Furman 7~; Duke upset Vegas ; Frank Johnson keyed a m
No.l3 Maryland 5"-54; 14th-ranked spurt in the second half to lead Wake
Michigan clipped Wisconsin 71-64; Forest over Georgia Tech; James
!5th-ranked Iowa defeated No. !8 Worthy's 18 points paced North
Illinois; No. 16 Brigham Young Carolina past Furman ; Duke
whipped Air Force 62-51; Purdue UP" defeated Maryland on Tom Emma's
set No.I? Indiana 68.jj6 and 19th- two foul shots with three seconds left
rated Wichita State beat Drake 79- and Michigan beat Wisconsin behind
Mike McGee's 24 points.
67.
Also,.,Steve Krafcisin 's 14 points in
• UCLA used three foul shots in the
final 15 seconds to beat the Irish. the second half led Iowa over
Michael Holton sank the second of
two shots to break a 48-48 tie and
then Foster hit two free throws 10 .------------~
,._....__._.._.._,_..
._..}
see&lt;&gt;nds later for the winning points.
"After missing the first one, I felt
confident the second would go in, "
said Holton, who hit the shot despite j
the jeering and ann-waving of 11,345 ~pecializing In Pediatrics
Notre Dame fans. "I think I was
And Internal Medicine.
kind of stiff when I shot the first one,
Like all Americans, you·re for saving energy.
When the sun sets, close the draperies to
but I was more relaxed for the
Chances are, you may have already added Insula·
hold
in
heat.
NOW ACCEPTING
sec9nd shot."
tloil to your home. caulked windows. weather·
When the fireplace is not In use, close the
"It seems like we didn't make the
stripped your doors.
NEW PATIENTS
damper tight. An open damper allows warm air
key play when it counted," said
Still more can be done. Little things that
to be pulled out of a room.
·
Office Hours Are:
Notre Dame forward Kelly
don't cost vou a cent. Things that change old
Set your water heaters temperature at a
• Tripucka, who missed three of five ~
habits which waste energy.
12 noon io ' 6, ~on ., Tues.,
moderate 140•F or as tow as possible to allow for
.
· Evening Ent1111Y savers
• free throw opportunities in the final · I Thur ., Fri.
· enough hot water.
1 p.m. to 1 p.m. W~dnesday I
Stal'ttng tonight, tower your thermostat as
: !l!ven minutes of play. "I can't
Use fluorescent lamps wherever possible.
9a .m . to 12noon Saturday.
tow as comfort permits. Each degree over
: , believe I missed those free throws,
They
produce four times the ugnt per watt as do
I
can add 3% to the energy used for heating.
Incandescent
bUlbs.
' but that's the way itis." ·
1
Call 675-5511
I
If
you're
entertaining,
lower
the
thermostat
Rory White hit aU nine of his shots
Turn off au unneeded Inside and outstae ·
·
for Appointments
a degree or two before your guests arrive.
lights before ootng to bed.
from the field lor 18 points and Ed
People generate heat.
.
one final tiP.
,1
Rains scored 21 points to lead South I
DR. CHHIIIER'S
Close
off
unused
rooms.
Turn
off
llQhts
as
well.
For
dozens
of
additional
energy.savtng
Alabama past Jacksonville. The
OFFICE
When removing foOd from the refrigerator, ideas, visit or call our office ana ask for our free
game was close only for the first 10 ·
islocatedal
ptan your total needs ana open the door no more SAVE· booklets. They'll get you In the habit of
minutes before the Jaguars began
tnan necessary. Repeated opentn11&gt; waste energy. savtno energy morntno, noon and night.
2513 Jackson Ave.
building a lead. They led 3f&gt;.23 at
1
In tt"lr;:,·ofess iont~l I
halftlJJ1e and went up by as much as
·save Amerlc.n Va luao~e 1nergy
Buil~onq
31 points midway througli the second
half.
•
Mark Radford scored 21 points. all

Cage standings

'BLADE CUr

Box score:
had 62 rebounds. McDonald snagged
VERNON NAZARENE (It)
20. Jutze picked off nine after _ MT.
Ledyard 6·0·12 ; Cornelly 4-8·16;
C&lt;lming off the bench for Rio.
Gwinn S·3·13; Noggle 9·5·23; Tl&gt;orne
The Redmen had 20 assists, nine 0.0.0, .McBride .2·5·9; Howes 3·0·6;
by Vince Phelps. The winners had 21 Steyens 3·0·6; Honkle 1·2·4. tOTALS
turnovers. Rio was four of 14 at the 33·23-89.
RIO GRANOE 1116)- Phelps 4·1)- .
,
foul line, Mt. Vernon was.23 of 31.
8 DorseY 8·1·17; McDonald 7·3·17;
14·0·28; Wollenberg 2·0·4;
TUesday, Rio will host Ohio Castleman
Maisch 1-0·2; Hairston 2·1l-4; Felske
Dominican. It will be Ohio Valley H -l ; Acord 6·0·12; Jutze S·G-10;
Penrod 3·0·6: Quisenberry D-0·0;
Foodland Night.
Saturday, the Redmen will play at Banks3·0·6. TOTALSSH·116.
Halftime score: Rio 49 MVN 41.
Malone.

Southern, the defending Class A
Meigs Sectional champ, was top
seeded 'Sunday for the boys sectional
tournament beginning Feb. 23 at
Meigs High School. Two games
scheduled that evening pits Southwestern, 6-9, against North Gallia, 412, and Kyger Creek, f&gt;.!O, against
Southern, !4-3, in the 8:30 p.m. contest. ·
Eastern 13-4 drew a first round
bye. ·
On Wednesday, Feb. 25, the winner of the Southwestern-North
Gallia game plays Eastern. The winner of that contest meets the KC.
Southern winner in the championship tilt Feb. 'n. The winner
goes to district competition at
Chillicothe against the winner of the
Lucasville sectional.
In Class A girls' tournament action, play begins Thursday, Feb. 19'
at Gallia Academy High School in
Gallipolis.
Symmes Valley, 3-16, plays Southwestern, 6-9, at 7:30p.m.
The following evening at 6 p.m.,
second seeded Eastern, 12-31 will
battle North Gallia, 3-9. At 8 p.m.
that evening Hannan Trace, 2·11,
plays Federal Hocking, 1().5.
On Saturday, Feb. 21, at I p.m. ,
top seeded Southern, 1W, plays Oak
Hill, 13-4, and al 3 p.m., Kyger
Creek, 2-7, plays the winner of the
Southwestern.Symmes Valley contest.
On Friday, Feb. 'n, the upper
bracket championship game
features the winners of the Easter~r
NG game and Federal Hocking-HT
e&lt;&gt;ntest.
'At 8 p.m. the championship of the
lower bracket features the Southern-

Pa~e--5

The Dail Sentinel

USDA CHOICE

Redmen humble Cougars,
•
remazn in second place
Rio Grande College established a
new Lyne Center field goal mark
(56) in Saturday night's 11&amp;-89 MidOhio Conference victory over
visiting Mt. Vernon NaZ&amp;rene.
Previous nwnber of field goals
· ~TU~de by a Rio squad in the 11 year·
old structure was 55, against Urbana
in 1970.
Saturday's victory, 15th of the
year against 10 setbacks for Coach
John Lawhorn's crew, left the Redmen one game behind leagueleading Cedarville with a ~2 mark.
The Yellow Jackets edged Walsh, 7372, in overtime Saturday night.
In other conference games,
Malone bounced Urbana, 8S-76 and
Tiffin crushed Ohio Dominican, 9966.
Rio's front line of Watson M~ ·
Donald, Kev Castleman and Tom
Dorsey combined for 62 points and 39
rebounds in Saturday's triuinph
over the Cougars.
Castleman led all scorers with 28
points. McDonald and Dorsey each
had 17. Rick Ae&lt;&gt;rd had 12 and Tom
Jutze 10 for the Redmen.
Rio Grande led 49-41 during the
halftinne intermission.
The Redmen were 56 of 97 from the
field for 57.7 percent. Rio Grande

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

9 Yt ·oz ..
Pkg .

ICE CREAM
SANDWICH ... ~-~~:
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UNGRY JACK BISCUITS .... 49'

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Margarine

PIZZAS ................ ,..........~~ ¥~~;·••$1"

BATHROOM TISSUE
WHITE OR ASSORTED COLORS

CL

1-Lb.

Ortrs.

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flEIICHMANNS

MARGARINE ................ ',;~: 994

Pkg .

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CHEF·BQY·AR · DEE
CHEESE.' SAUSAGE OR PEPPERONI

BLEACH ..... !.~~~..
•

99

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•••

�I

Page-6

The Daily sentinel

•

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Monday, February 9,1981

The Daily Sentinei-Pa

Helen Help Us

ASTRO
GRAPH

I~P-ortant news for ultra low tar smokers.

Febnalllry 18, 1181
Chances are everything will go so well for
you this coming year that you may find your·

selr coasting a llttle ..Jt's to your advantage,
how.:ver, to make hay while lhe J~unljhlnes .
AQlJARIVS f J1o. ZO.Feb. lt1 Be extra
careful today . You could unintentionally do
!Dinetblng tactless and O(fend one who
thinks rather htghly of you. Be ~rteou:s at

. '·

.

'

.' .

...

-

.

\.

'

'

all times. Find out mDre of what hes atlead
for you in the year foiJDwi ng your birtt.day
by s.ending (or your copy of ~tro-Graph .
MHil $1 for each to A.!itro-Grapb, Box m
Radio City Station, N. Y. 10019. Be sure tO
specify birth date.
rlSCES (Feb. zt.Marcb 281 YO'\l have 1t
tendency to wear yoor heart un your sleeve
ttday. This might cause you to needlessly be
hurt. Let your logic prevail ever your
emotJons.
ARIES (March 21-April 19 ) A "showy"
pen~on may try to lord it over you by nuun. ting his opulence in your face. Thf only person he ts really lmpreu inl! 19 hinwelf, so •
don 't reel badly.
TAURUS (April zt.May zer You may fee l
lhllt everything you reaUy want iS bein"
. denied you today. Give in to liUcll negatife
thinking and you'll be defeated. Keep tryin~.
GEMINI !May U·JUIIt ZO) Your sp lendid
imajll!lnation is apt to get a l!tUe out of lland
today and have you believing all kind:! or hn·
prHdical raUom:iliuttioll.'l. &amp; wHry.
CANCER (June tl·J~ tl ) There't a
poe•lblllfY a m!Julldentalldlog could arise
today ~tweea yDU aDd a frlnd U you
betome so emotional tbt your lotlc deurb

,.....

LEO (July !3-Au&amp;. 21) Someone with

. ..

.

TO PERFORM - Au losplratlooal program of
sacred music wiD be presented at 7: 3jl p.m. on Tuesday
at Calvary Bible Church. The program, wblcb feaiUres
the Bob Jones University Brass Quartet, will Include
sacred brass selections, all of which have been
arranged especially lor this ellliemble. The musical

tea"' also wiD present vocalseleclloos. MeQibers of the
ensemble are Kyle Neds, Bruce Cox, and Dale
.Crawford of Ohio, Steve Schroeder of Wlnols, Brad
Griese of VIrginia, and Jon Spivey of VIctoria, British
Columbia, Canada.

Heart disease-prime killer
.'.
·'

...'

.. .

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·'

..

.....
......
..
'

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..
....
•• •

james McDaniel

.

'' '
' '
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..' .. .....
........

''

~

Adam McDaniel

.
...
.... . Brothers observe birthdays ·
''

' .. ,f'

James and Adam McDaniel, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Luke McDaniel, Long
Bottom, recently celebrated their
birthdays with parties. James was
seven on Jan. 18 and Adam was two
on Feb. 2.
Star War character cakes were
served with ice cream and punch.
James also had a separate birthday
celebration at the home of his grand·

! : ~.

•••
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'

,'

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"

Now the MERIT idea has been introduced at only 4·mg tar:·.
...·.... New MERIT Ultra Lights. A milder MERITfor those who prefer
.... an ultra low tar cigarette.
..
New
MERIT
Ultra
Lights.
It's
going
to
set
a
whole
·
n
ew
taste
.....
......
........ standardfor ultra low tar smoking.
·
.
......
,, t

••

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.....
-' .

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•

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.

'

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parents in Point Pleasant. Cards and
~ills were presented both boys.
.
Aitending were Leo, Helen and
Richard Hill, the Rev. and Mrs.
James Cundiff, Sr .. and David. Gar·
cia, Christi ana Willy Adams, mark ,
Sharon and John Matson, Carl,
Gloria and Matt McDaniel, Lana,
Tracy, Angela and Lissa Mohr, Sean
Miller and Zilpha Roush and Mr. and
Mrs. McDaniel.

:' .. ...'
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'

•

'
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' '

Social calendar

. .
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.....

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:

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Only ,.i
mg tar~
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:r;
.r,
...
~ ,.

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4 mg "ta( 0.4 mg mco11ne av. per cigarene by FT,CMer hod

r .

· Warning: The Surgeoo General Has Deter11rinad
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.

Lo.--------------..,..--------..J

C l'hUip

•

Mandy Smith, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Danny Smith, South Point, observed her third birthday recently
with a party at her home.
A decorated clown cake, gift of
Julia Pack, was served with Ice
cream and punch. Attending were
her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Arnold, Mr. and Mrs. Albert
Smith, Pomeroy; Mrs. Karl Russell.
Melissa and Kenny, Scotts Depot,
and Chuckie, Jeff and Kelli Ar·
rnstrong. Sending gifts were Phyllis
Parks, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Ferris,
and Mr. and Mrs. Roy Smith and
Mike.

Holds retirement party

•r·

'

Ultra Lights

•

;

r,.
1',•
"

MERIT

Ultra·Lights

~

:.. ~

Richard Wamsley

Two celebrate birthdays

Regular&amp; ~
Menthol !

...,...'
.,..

Mandy Smitb

MERIT

Mnrrl~ ln.:. 19M!

"The prime time of life means dif·
ferent things to different people,"
according to Marion C. Crawford,
'Publicity Chairperson of the Meigs
Cotinty Heart Branch.
·
" For some people, it is when they
have completed school. Others see it
as their 30s and 40s when they are
raisil)g a family and pursuing a
career. Still others see it as the time
when they are free to travel and 'en·
joy' life - after they have retired
from their jobs and their families
are grown.''
"Whatever your definition of the
prime time of life," Crawford said,
"heart disease and stroke are in the
picture right there with you because
they kill people of all ages. In fact,
nearly one million ' deaths in '
America each year result from
heart disease, stroke and related
diseases; and more than 200,000
deaths occur before age 6S,"
Crawford said.
Reducing this early death and
disability is the mission of the
American Heart Association. The
voluntary health agency is fighting
this "Prime Time Killer" with
research, professional and public
education and community service
prograrm. For infonnation on heart
disease and community service
programs, contact the Meigs County
Heart Branch at P.O. Box 100,
Pomeroy, 45769.

A surpriS'i! retlrerJ]e~i party
honoring Mrs. Agnes DiKon was held
Friday at the Pomeroy Library
4
where she has worked for the past 16
years.
Mrs. Dixon was presented a locket
from the emplqyes and refresh• · , • ments of food specialities prepared
by Madhu Malhotra, cake by Robert
.,.'
Bell, and mints by Mrs. Ruth
•
Powers were served. Others at·
tending the party were Mrs. Ellen
Bell, Patty Dugan, and Jennie Sch·
midi.

A party honoring Richard Lee

MONDAY
1WIN CITY SHRINE CLUB
Tuesday at Club House in Racine
with oyster supper at 7 p.m. foilowed
by the regular meeting. All area
shrlners invited to attend .
MEIGS COUNTIANS FOR ART
will meet at 7 p.m. Monday night at
the Meigs High School. Art projects
will be discussed ; those attending
are to take sketching supplies. Open
to anyone interested in art.
MEIGS COUNTY Refunders Club
meeting, 6:30p.m. Monday at Riverboat Room, DiamOnd Savings and
Loan Co., W. Main St., ~orneroy.
MEIGS JAYCEE meeting, 7:30
p.m. Monday at the new headquar·
ters over Elberfelds.
CHESTER TOWNSIUP Trustees
regular meeting, changed to 7:30
p.m. Monday at Chester Town Hall.

Wamsley II, son of Dick and Chariot·
te Wamsley, Racine, on his third birthday was held recently at the
Racine firehouse .
TIJESDAY
A clown theme was carried out in
SYRACUSE PTO Tuesday at 7:30
the party with the cakes being baked p.m. Program by Syracuse Cub
by his mother aJ1!1 Mrs~ Eva Scouts.
Teaford. Cake, Kool-Aid and ice
OHJO ETA PHl CHAPTER, Beta
cream were served and party favors Sigma Phi Sorority,. 7:30 Tuesday
were given to the guests.
night at the Meigs Inn, Pomeroy .
Attending besides his parents
were his grandparents, Wilma and
Meigs Countians for
Virgil Wamsley, Carroll and Eva
art to meet Monday
'Teaford, Nancy and Cindy Preston,
Shirley, Adam and Arron Salsbury,
The Meigs Countains for Art will
Betty Louden , Melissa and Mat, Linmeet
Monday at 1 p.m . in the art
da and Julie Wamsley, Sharon,
department
at Meigs High School.
Sonia, B. W. and Amber Kearns,
Projects
for
the group will be
Melinda and MOnica Hill, Christa
·
discussed
and
a
lesson in sketchillll
and Collen Maidens, Delores and
will
be
given.
Each
one attending Is
Larion Wolfe, Arnie Dugan, Jason
Shain, Nick and Ryan Adams. Sen· to take a sketch pad, charcoal or
ding gifts
and cards were Ida Mur· sltetching pencil and 8 kneadable
'
erasure. Jack Slavin, Meigs art
phy, Carol, Bob, llrctt and Teresa teacher, will be there to assist the
Wines, Ucrt Tcuford, Cut:1y, l3ill and
group.
Angie Carleton.
Anyone In the area interested in
CONFINF.U TO HOSPITAL
art ill invited to attend the meeting.
' Mrs. Iva Stewart of Rutland is Throu~h March 9 the meeting• wiU
confined to the Holzer Medical Cen- be held every Monday night in the
ter. Cards may be sent to her at
art room .
Room523.

.

wOOm you may have been quite impreliSed
could 11how a different slde to his or her personality today. Remember, we are all
human.
VIRGO lAue. U-Sept. tt l If faced with an
unpleasant task today, look at the big pielure, not jW!It thi! one .chore, and the job
won't be all that distaSteful.
1
LmRA l~t. U.OCL Ul Keep In mind the
frailti~:s of others ~md chances are you won't
be hurt over something a friend does lodaf.
·
U~ln)1hillg occurs, flrglve and forget.
SCORPfO 10&lt;:1. %4-Nov. HI You may llave
to yield to a loved one's wishes ill order to
keep peace al home today. Do it. It'll be
more than made up for a later date.
SAGmARJUS (Nov. ZS.Dei!. U) Reacting
to an unkind coworker with1the same tre atr~t solves nothing. $how this person what
daJi.'t is bj turning the other cheek.
CAPRICORN (Dec. tt.JaD. II) It's ex·
tremely uncharacteristic of you, yet' tOday
· you may spend foolishly to satisfy tin extravagant whim. Be on guard :ro this does not
h.a!ppen.

Lamaze classes offered
ATHENS - A Lamaze Childbirth
Review Series, sponsored by
O'Bieness Memorial Hospital, will
begin the week of Feb. 22.
This three-class series is for
couples who have had Lamaze
preparation during a .previous
pregnancy, and whose expected date
of delivery is prior to April 21. The
fee is $25. To pre-register, or to
request a schedule of future classes,
contact Pamela Collier, 20 Woodside
Drive, Athens, Ohio 45701, or call
593-5049.

Another woman hater
up on his soap box
nail biting, hair-pulling is one of our
BY HELEN BOTI'EL
most common habits. And yes, it can
Special correopoodent
create
pennanent SPllrse spots if
DEAR HELEN:
·
you
yank
in the same area, killing
According to a survey you did
.
several years ago, and other more the roots.
To break a habit, you must make
recent studies, it seems that some 60
percent of married women aren 'I too yourself totally aware of it, and
thrilled about sex : they take it, but know wh~n you're most susceptible.
would rather leave it, and do a lot of Then try 8 substitute. For example,
.cross your fingers each time your
pretending.
Which indicates that 60 percent of hand moves toward your head. Or
women are prostitut~s! My dic- exercise those nerves away; learn to
tionary reference: "One who uses knit while you're reading; use sellher body in a base way. One who ac- hypnosis, repeating over and over
cepts money for sexual in· again, "I no longer pull my hair.''
Other suggestions: wear a wig
tercourse.u (In this case, house,
when
you're tempted, or get a flat·
clothes, and innwnerable material
tering
hair style. Develop healthy
things.)- MORTON
pride
it's a great habit-breaker.
DEAR MORTON :
Employ
relaxation techniques for
Aren't you implying thai sex Is the
worry.
_only reason for marriage?
And discuss the problem with
He who labels a wife "prostitute"
others
: you'D find lots of COmPllny.
because she can't enjoy intercourse
In
fact,
you might even organize a
with her husband may be the type
"Habits
Anonymous" club after you
who contributes to women's sexual
discover
how many people have
disappointment.
mannerisms
they yearn 'to shed. Note I said "may." Sweeping
H.
generalizations aren 't my style. H.

•

DEAR HELEN :
I've got the world's craziest habit: .
when I'm worried or nervous or
maybe just reading, I pull my hair
right out by the roots, making little
bald spots.
I'm really ashamed as no one else
would be this silly, and try to refrain
when anyone's watching.
WiD my hair eventually stop
growing back in, and how can I
break this habit? - HAI}UED IN
NEW HAMPSHIRE
DEARHAIRIED:
No one else would be this silly?
Not so!
,
Next to "dreaming " and fin~er·

DEAR HELEN:
How about this for a blue Monday
upper: I saw a recycled hearse
today with a sign in its window :
"Business is dead. Looking ·for a
good body.'' It belongs, no doubt, to
a college student. -OBSERVANT
DEAROBSERVANT: .
I'm kinda partial to the sign in a
massage parlor window : "It's a
business doing pleasure With you."
-H.

Got a problem? An adult subject
for discussion? You can talk it over
in her column if you write to Helen
Bolte!, care of this newspaper.

EMS shows films-------The ·eight' members attending
discussed the observance of
FHA/HERO Week, a bowling party,
an April Fools dance, a studentfaculty basketball game, and a rocka·thon. Refreshments were served.

Two fi~ns on cardiac pulmonary
resuscitation were shown· by Bob
Bailey of the Meigs Emergency
Medical Service at a recent meeting
of the Eastern Future Homemakers
of America held at Eastern High
School.

oz.

SLICED
BACON
CENTER CUT

.PORK CHOPS
FRESH

PORK LIVER
N~w _ ltemf
CAMPBELL'S
12 OL
CHICKEN NOODLE SWIFT
·LUNCHEON
SOUP
MEAT

4/$100

99e

32

DELTA 1 RoW

oz. PREGO

SPAGHml
SAUCE

TOWELS
64 OUNCE

TROPICANA
ORANGE
JUICE

3 POUND CAN

FOLGER15
COFFEE

99

$139

PHILADELPHIA
CREAM CHEESE
8

9~

oz.
IDAHO

POTATOES,

4 LBS.

fROZEN

10 LBS.

8 0%

Morton Pot Pies
JOHNSON'S 14

H.B.A.

oz.

Powder

In and Take Advantage 'cf Our Other Weekly Specla

�--,--

f

··~----

~P~a~g!e~s::T~h~e~o~a~illy~S~e~n~ti~n~e~I------------------------------------_!P~o~m~e~r~o~v~M~id~d~l~e~p~o~rt~,!o~,h~i~o~~---------------------------------------!M~o~n~d~a~y~,~F;e~b~ru~a~r~v~~·~'~~' ~
9

98

Television
•

We're prOud to Salute the Boy Scouts

VIewmg

.

'

FEB. !1, 1881

' '

EVENING
6 :00 Cll . ffi . (JJ®HDl . NEWS
I]) RAINBOW FACTORY
(!) MOVIE •(CARTOON) ' ' ' " A
Boy

of Anlerica on their 71st Anniversary.

HAND OVER THI'IT

FIND THAT
S TOLEN OiL
o\\AP t

MAP•• 8UT 'IOIJ'R!
Htll TYPE OF IML!t
... DO t MAKE- MYSELF Cl&amp;AIU

A PRESENTATION BY THE FOLLOWING COMMUNITY MERCHANTS:
•

Hcm;IJIW. I I

MIDDLEPORT OHIO

992-5627

'{01.&gt; TWI~ f..,

Dale C. Warner

Agen~y
992·2143

POMEROY, OHIO

992-2121

tROSIALj
J I [ .

IHTERNATI&lt;)IAL

RELATIONS, THERE MUST &amp;E 6CJtUPULOU$

HAVf T'60 SP'T'IH' OH AN'
THREATEHIH' EACH OT11ER
Alf'IIIAV.' IF THERE ¥/ERE
MORE LOVE .•

FAIR PEALING ••ASENSE THAT EACH
PARTY 15 SINCERELY DEVOTEOTO THE
~E LFARE OF THE OTHER ••
ONLY THEH
......
15 THERE

IT'S

OHLY FROM RESPECT THAT

CAN 61!0W. RE6ARDIH6 LOVE
50ME THIHIS YOU CAH TURN OH
OFF LIKE A WATER TAP, IGTO
~~=~~~.~' TH E N08LEST OF HUMAN

Saturday's

I

Jumble Book No. 15; contllnlng 110 pu.Ditl, la 1'411ilblt tor S1.75 ~tplkt
trom Jumble, clo INa n&amp;Wapll*, IOI ~. Norwood, N.J. 07648. 1ndudt your
n11M, Mid,.., zip code •nd rMke checkl parabfe lo New1paperbooh.

BRIDGE

Spencer's Fast/ Chek

~.·

MUTUAL

RESPECT-··

NORTH
2·9-81
• 10 9 S
• K Q 10 9 3

+72
... J 10 I
WEST
EAST
Bl .
QJ 7 6 2

+
'J

+

, 765

8 •• 2

t K4

• 7

SOUTH
•

AK 4:
A

•

K 6 52

•

+AQJ83

Vulnerable: East· West
Dealer: West
··
w~t

Boxi ng great Muhammad Ali'a
guest appearance championing
the c ause of a 'one-armed boxer '

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

m THAT'S INCREDIBLE

flO 9 6 5

+A Q9.8 3

Moon Ia Biue" 1853

(j) W

North
Pass
1•
3•
Pass

East
Pass
Pass

I

RACINE, OHIO

992-2039

Pass

Kingsbury Homes
Sales &amp;Service

Dale Hill Ford Tractor
.a

POMEROY, OHIO

992·2668

Downing-Childs Ins.
MIDDLEPORT, oHio Agency
992-2342
Diamond Savings &amp; Loan

Here cometh'

r'fresh ...

Powell's Super Value

992-3542

Racine .Home Nat'I Bank
RACINE, OHIO

992-7031

Ohio Valley Plumbing
PoMERoY oHio &amp; Heating 992-2036
Rail's Ben Franklin Store
992·3481

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

The

Central Trust
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO Company

992-3007

K&amp;C Jewel£:rs ·
POMEROY, OHIO

992-3785

Sugar Run Mills
'
.POMEROY,
OHIO

992-2115

Smith-Nelson Motors.
992-2174

POMEROY, OHIO

•

·'

949-2210

.,
' WINNIE
BILLY 'S RIGfil; DEAR. WE CA N' T
LIVE WITH THI5 CLOUD OVER
OUR HEADS.

/£T'5' &lt;&amp;AVE
8ETWEEN HER SQV AN/J tiS FA THf'R.

W£~ ~

EN'otiGH
AiON'E.I

W!NNtElHOW
LONG HAVE &gt;1:W
13EEN STANDING
THERE?

992·2156

AMERICA
*
•
NEEDS SCOUTING.
SCOUTING
.
NEEDS AMERICA

POMEROY, OHIO

992-2556

New York Clothing House ·
POMEROY, OHIO

• •

992-2049

BARNEY

PORE
PAW··

HE BUSTED.
HIS LEG ··

· · AN' NOT ONE OF
. HIS OC CRONIES
CAME TO CHEER
HIM ·UP · · ·

HE EVEN HAD TO
SIGN

HISOWN

CAST

'

(}]
REFLECTIONS: WILL
BROTHERTON
ill) NEWS
10:58 llJ CBN UPDATE NEWS
·
11:oo
®JIH&gt; •
NEWS
l1) FESTIVAL OF PRAISI!
I}) NIGHT QALLEII'I
(f) MORECAMBEANDWISE
!1!l OUTER LIMITS
11:28 m ~BNUPDATEN!WI
11:30 (1)G ([)IIJ THETONIGHTSHOW
' The Beat o t Carson ' Stara: Ro-y

I MADE FOR LINUS 1

ON THE INSIDE I
WROTE, ''TO MV
SWEET 6ABBOO"

HE 5A'(5 HE'S NOT
'(OUR "SWEET 6A6e00"

Toronto has been one of the
best in the world for ma ny

cleared the clubs when in at · •
trick two and merely led a red ,.

ye ars. Here we see him in
acjion at the 1966 Olympiad ."

card , this end play could not :
have been developed."
•

(i,, ..

~.s(

I Hawaiian

41 More

feather

10 Arab

rational
4% Hammer
part

country DOWN
I Estate home
Z Idolize
3 Monel
4 " - small

(the Shadow)
IZ Ob8erve
.13 He portrayed
Stephen
Foster
14 "A feast
- famine"
15 Synagogue
olflcial
11 Tell aU
It Adorn,
old style
Suffix with

step for

5 Nursery

Z7 Bad tum

30&lt;lut of
the way
land
31 Edge
Fish
one's way
Canadian :Ill Gennan city:
province
:U Mah Jongg :
Make more
piece ·
.
alert,
:J5 Give heed ·
with
:Ill Underessed :
"up"
hide
'

De Valera's

zs Malamud' s b--+--+--1t-H'Jbe - "

H Poll-taker

Roper
!7 Pulpit talk
(abbr. l
Zll Att.'s group

Z9 Area arnound
a goalle
33 Weapon
named for
Frau Krupp
:Jil Alastair of
the cinema

hr+-+-

31 More
bohemian

38Famous
privateer
39 Stone
pillars

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work It::
lo

AX\'DLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter simply •Ianda for another . In thio sample A lo
· used for the three L 's, X for the two O's, etc. Sln1le letten,
apoatrophes, the lenath and formation of the words are
hlnls. Each day the code letters are dlfl'erent.
,

·•II

Ca\'PTOqUOTBS,

u

C:ll ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
(5) MOVIE -(ADVENTURE) " l'o

MVKB

1158

Jooephine

a man"

•

•
zs Iron (Fr.) •

18 Author,

zo

JYD

llt(J) CBSLATEMOVIE 'OUINCY

Yesterday' s Answer

word
%1
I Foreshadow
7 Bogart In
ZZ
"The Return 23
of - "
8 Dislodge
24
9 More strict
book or ring 11 Shoe Uer
17 Ultewlse
21 Gaellc
ZZ Impudent

Clark . Charles Nelson Reiii 'J .
(Repeat ; 60 mlna.)
" The Hunter•"

Mark V
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Q:30 Q ([)®J HOUSECALLSWhonMr.
Peckler , the hospital admlnlatra·
tor. tries to interfere with operating
roo m procedures . Or . Michael s
decides to take an operation .
10:00 00 TBS EVENING NEWS
D ([) ®J LOU GRANT Tho akiil II
tak es to tra ck down a new1 story
gets al ough teat when Ro aait rle ato
help a Tribune statler s earching for
her re al mother and goaeip colum·
nisi Corinne sets out to learn a se·

m• mm• m

PF.ANlJTS

992-2259

Alan: "Note tha t Saminy •

got help . If Wes t had not :

"Stunte" 1177

SEE TilE VALENTINE

POMEROY, OHIO

Q ([) ®J M. A.S.H. The 40771h
get s a newperapectiveon thenewa
when Klinger starts his own base

10:28 (f) CBN UPOAT! NEWS
10:30 m RISE AND BE HEALED
(l) MOVIE ·(THRILLER) '

992·5141 ·

·cleland Realty

wife had unaucc eaalullytrled aborti on , is happy at tha prospect of
bec oming a lather . Cathy b . . ra
Adam twin sons and days later !ella
him she i s lea'oling . Adam tries lo
s top her but she sho ots him and
goes back to work in a bordello.(Pt .
II of a three-part s eries ; 2 hra.)

cre t lou wants to keep. (60 mlna.)

'

Rawlings-Coats-Blower
Funeral Home
MIDDLEPORT OHIO

MOVIE · (SUSPENSE) " '

new_!Paper.
(f) (11) HALL OF FAME 'Mialer Lin ·
coin ' The courage, wiadom . wit and ·
awe some c omple xity of our na tion's 16th preeldentarebrougtltto
life by actor Roy Dotri c eln •ne
man performan c e taped live at
Fo rd 's Theatr e In Washington,
D.C .. (90 mine.)

Adolph's Dairy .Valley
team spirit and civic action ...
sharing interests and fun!

est took two clubs . :

but had to give dummy the •
last two tricks to give Sammy :
his contract."

Oswald: "Sammy Kehel a of

11 - Cranston

9 :00 CVG !IJ MONDAYNIGHTATTHE
MOVIES 'Midnight Laca'
(V 700CLUB
([) G2J m ABC NOVEL FOR
TELEVISION 'John Stoinbeok'o
e-ast Of Eden ' 198 t Stara : Timothy
Bott oms. Jane Seymour . Adam
Tresk, ignorant ot the fact that hla

The Daily Sentinel
POMEROY, OHIO

!

clubs.

se rv e thei r c ountry . The program

"Bloodline" 1077
8:58 I]) CBN UPOATE NEWS

WINNIE OVERHEARS A COVVERSAT!ON

POMEROY, OHIO

+

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Soatag

inte rweaves 19-40' s newsreels and
Air Force film with re cent footage

C!J

Royal Crown Bottling Co.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

1 d

cloak
5 - vivendi

trom Congressional hearings, a
lona·delayed rec ognition cer·
emony and a nostalgic WASP rHn ·
10n. (60 min a.)
8 :30 I]) N£W BIBLE BAFFLE SHOW

992-5130

POMEROY, OHIO

992-6635

: POMEROY, OHIO

World'(Varlliellsotthe1 ,000young
women who braved not only
phy sical dangers and herdahipa
but a Iso formidable prejudice to

GASOUNE ~_!MY _

992·7034

Reuter-Bragan Ins.

·

pemng ea : 8

success possible at trick one 4
when he dropped the five Of :
clubs a f ter his partner's ten •
held lhe trick. Retaining the :
deuce was important."
Oswald: " AI trick lwQ he :
led a diamond and finessed his •
queen. West look his king and •
decided to clear t he clubs by
j
·
d
S
P aymg ace an queen. am- '
my was care ful to drop the six :
under the ace and hang on to •
that tinh deuce . Then he •
h
f •
cas ed t e ace and jack o •
diamonds while West got rid •
ofaspade."
•
Alan ·. " It looked ll' ke the bad ,• 1
diamond break had doomed •
Sammy to de!eat since he ~
could not get to dumm y's •
heartst but he found a way to :
get there . He cashed the ace •
of hearts · and ace-king of, 1• •
spades.''
:
Oswa ld : " West had chucked ..
a s~ade on the third diamond :
an dropped a heart on the •
second s pade. Now Sammy '
threw him in with that care- ~
fully ~eserv ed detice of •

dramatization of Frank O' Connor's
Alan: "He got a little help (N EWSPAPER i!:NTERPRISt-.: ASSN .) .:
short story stars Frank Converse 1 ----~--------;::;::;:::;;:;;::;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;:;:;;;::;;;r.;;:;-- :
and Estelle Parson a. Sal in lrelund r
in t92 1,thestroyrevolveaarounda·
pair otlrish insurgenta 8nd thltwo
captured British soldlera they are
holding as hostage a. (60 mlna .)
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ill) SILVER WINGS AND SAN•
TIAGO BLUE The atory of the
ACROSS
40 On the dole
Women Air Force Service Pilots of

992-7711

POMEROY, OHIO

992~2438

POMEROY, OHIO

oul when he tries to get oul oiJury
duty and one of hia~:~ta-rera lacea a
'shotgun· wedding . (60mina.)
CJJ GREAT PERFORMANCES:
GUESTS OF THE NATION This

Meigs Auto Parts

· Erwin's Gulf
'

0

bigtroubleaaCoachReevealinda

992·2644

POMEROY, OHIO

992-2284

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

hiker. an amazing me dleal di •·
co vary that allows dlagnoals by
phone. and three daring roller
s katers who attempt unbelievable
leota on wheels. (60 mine.)
·
G CIJIBJ THE WHITE SHADOW A
big lie or a small one can get you In

Francis Florist

The Fabric Shop
POMEROY, OHIO

st ories , includingtheutllorgeuable
tale of a beautiful ghoStly hitch-

949-2626

South
1+
3+

Pass · 3 NT

highlightsaprogramofaatoundtng

POMEROY, OHIO

••

from the defen se, but he mad~;

two ·part episodo; 60
(Cioaed·Caplioned;

mins.)
U.S.A.)
CD AMERICAN CATHOLIC
(}) MOVIE -(COMEDY)" "The

.'

Defense cannily cornered

year -old girl , unaware that she is
living in a world offear and humllla·
tionfollowinganattackbyaraplat .
(Pt. 1 01 8

I I I)

Jumbles: AGI LE BOWER POMADE UNSOLD
Answer: A c ity I hal's In the hea rt of CZECHO SLOVAKIA. oddly enough - OSLO

throughout the world . Hie lite Ia

AG l'fU AS PERSOIW.

rI

(Answers tomorrow)

film hero .
(}) SANFORD AND SON
(j) Q CIJ JOKER'S WILD
riJ ®J HOLLYWOOD SQUARES
CJJ@ DICK CAVETT SHOW
lUJ O) FACE THE MUSIC
7:58 I]) CBN UPDATE NEWS
8 :00 CIJG !IJ LITTLEHOUSEONTHE,
PRAIRIE Young Aiberl Ingalls
beg ins to fall in 10" 8 with 1 14.

-I DOrM' IUil)l WtiY

Now arrange the ci rcled letters to
form the surprise answer, as sug·
gested by the above cartoon.

Print answer here.·

prol iledfromchildhoodthroughhla
long career a s our moat beloved

,

Pomeroy Flower Shop

6:30 ill D ffi NBC NEWS .
CD THE DOOR
([) BOB N£WHART SHOW
(j) FACE THE MUSIC
8ffi®J CBS NEWS
(J) WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
ill) HISTORY OF SPACE FLIGHT
W e ABC NEWS
6:58 I]) CBN UPOATE NEWS
7:00 (]) D PM MAGAZINE
CD NORMAN VINCENT PEALE
(J] ALL IN THE FAMILY
CIJ W81 FAMILYFEUO
1IJ NABHVIUE ON THE ROAD
Q ([) TIC TAC DOUGH'
(JJ ill)
MACNEIL·LEHRER
REPORT
®J NEWS
7:30 ffi G BULLSEYE
I]) WOROS OF HOPE
C!J LEGENDS:JOHNWAYNE:THE

ma king him a revered American ·

, ANNIE

Ewing Funeral Home

NEED' KNOCKIJoJe;
OJoJ IHE HEAD
&amp;ElFOf':E IHEY'L.L DO
THE'IFili: JOB!
.

wasalwaysfightlngforhlabeliela,

MOt.m~.

949-2525

ie t and composer Dave Brubeck
and his son, bass player Chrla.
Hp eta: HughOown aand Frank Blair.
(Closed -Captioned; U.S.A.)

DUKELIVESONAslnthefiimrolea ·
he plaved, John Wayne , the man ,

POMEROY · RUTlAND · TUPPERS PLAINS
992-2133

992·5432

POMEROY, OHIO

;..FFCf&lt;D 10 Pf...'(

Bank .One of Pomeroy, NA

Crow's Family Restaurant
POMEROY, OHIO

CN.l O:Y..-'1

Star Supply
RACINE, OHIO

IAN NOVE'!

(llJ OVER EASY Guest a: Jazz plan·

I COULD NEV ER.
FOICCf MAAY .TO

T'H~l P

OF SHOES

I KJ

N1med Ch•r•• Bro'lfn"

196!1
(J]
CAROL BUIINETT AND
FRIENDS
(j) ABC NEWS .
Cil 3-2·1 CONTACT
TO MI!AR WHY
'IOU PI CKE D ME ,

heritage house

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M.E.: Peasing ' S tlfl: Jack Klug-

man, Garry Walberg. Quincy aeeka
to confirm that the akull of a"applr·

992-3480

ent homic ide doealn fact bttong to
a la bor leader wh o diaaPDAtUIIIUf
two yea rs betore unde r auapi&lt;lloua
c trc um stance . (Repeat)

NYKOOQUB

-Yeekrday's Cryptaqaote: I'M OPPOSED TO MIWONAIREli.
BUT IT WOULD BE PANGEROUS TO OFFER ME nit
POSITION.-MARK 1'91AIN

�Page-10-;The Dally Sentinel

..

Monday, February 9, 1981

Health Review

'

Carpenter Personals---------

Most skin cancers highly ·curable
By Robert G. Stockmal,
D.O., Ph.D
Aulslant Profeuor
of Family MedldDe
Ohio Uolvenlty Cell~ge
of OsleoJ)IIIblc Medlcloe
QUESTION: My father was tol4
:that he has skin cancer. When I
·asked him what kind, he said he
thought there was only one kind.
.Could you clarify this for us?
. ANSWER: There are several
:types of skin cancer. These are
named after the type of ceU in·
'volved. The three major types of
malignant skin growths are :
squamous cell carcinoma, basal cell
·carcinoma and cutaneous malignant
melanoma. Squamous cells are
:plate-like structures which normally
:rtJake up the bulk of the outer layer
of skin (epidennis) . Basal cells,
:w hich are primitive cells found in
:the deepest layer of the epidermis,
usually develop into such things as
hair follicles and skin glands.
,· :Melanocytes, also in the deepest
)ayer of epidermis, produce the nor·

mal skin pigment called melanin.

Mr. and Mrs. Harold Gillogly bave
returned to their home after spending some time in Florida. The
Gilloglys accompanied their
•brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and
Mrs. Clinton Gilkey of Albany, to
their home at Inverness, Fla. , where
the Gilkey~ will stay until Spring.
The Gilloglys and Gilkeys visited
Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Boring
(Harold Gillogly's uncle and aunt)
at Naples, Fla., and Mr. and Mrs .
Emenon Bigony, Estero, Fla., on a
side trip. They also visited Harold's
aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs. Jim
Bethel at Lakeland and viewed the
sights in that area .

cell type, gteaUy increases the chance of treabnent success. It also
allows for the besl cosmetic effect
when this Is a consideration.
QUESTION : How can a penon
recognize skin cancer?
ANSWER: Watch for a recenUy
developed skin growth that continues to enlarge, an ulcer-like sore
that won't heal, a mole that bas
changed color or that itches or
bleeds, a birthmark that is getting
larger or is inflamed.

QUESTION : Is there any value to
identifying the cell type?
ANSWER: Very definitely yes.
Some people believe that if you have
cancer, that it is all over. This is far
from the truth and is a dangerous at·
titude. Particularly since skin can·
cers include some of the most successfully treated 'forms of cancer.
Rascal cell carcinoma had the best
chance lor lOll percent cure since it
does not tend to spread. Squamous
cell carcinams is next - depending
Mostsquarnousandbasalcellcan·
upon location, ·maturity .of twnor
cers
develop in sWH!xposed areas of
cells and the probability of spread. • the skin while about one-third of
Melanoma is the most form to be
malignant melanomas arise from
aggressive and does tend to spread.
pigmented mo~.
Cure rates depend on the degree of
Don'tjust watch and worry. U you
localization at time of di,scovery and
are in doubl or are concerned about
the aggressiveness of that particular
the possibility of having skin cancer
individual's .cancer. A highly
See your physician. Don't wait until
malignant tumor can spread rapidly
you have a disfiguring mass. Don't
and be fatal within months, while
put off a visit, a biopsy or a surgical
other fomis can have a cure rate apremoval because it's inconvenient,
or because you're afraid to know the
proaching 1011 percent.
.
Early detection and diagnosis by
truth. Time is of the essence.

PUbliC Notic:e

PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
NOTJCE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY

ap(Xunted to administer the

following
decedents'
estates pending in the
Meigs County Probate

Rust stains on towels

aJ.

Court .

"I work in wood because I have

periences

in

the

design

and

~ound no other media so demanding, . fabrication of the sculptural piece
yet so versatile and expressive," which could be functional or fanciful
:says John McNaughton of Evan· in character.
roale 1 IN.
"I am a sculptor who for the last
: McNaughton will be al the Cedar six years has been obsessed with the
Lakes Craft Center to teach a five- table as sculplure," be says. The
;ctay workshop in Woodworking, Mar· possibilities seem unlimited when
-ch 2~. The class will concentrate on you blend the function of a table with
:the construction of a single scull" ils form to achieve that unique
'tural form in order to learn the quality."
techniques used in wood bending,
The fall series of five-day
lamination, lurning and carving. workshops at the Crafts Center runs
Each student will gain first hand ex- from February 23 through March 6.

Fiduciarv' s Name. Ad·
dress and "title, Date of Ap·
pointment,
Decedents
Name and Address. and
Case Number are listed :

the braids together, but lace then
with the big knot in my carpel warp
hidd_en under the braids
A friend made me a ''iacer'' to use
for this. It is a piece of metal about
three inches long and a hall-inch
wide, has an eyelet in one end - to
thread - and a rounded tip at the
other end. 1f they rip, I patch them
by lacing the threads together. If I
do not have carpet warp, I use
fishing line or strong twine. While
lacing two braids logether, be sure
they just meet and are ncit too tight,
as they will curl and not 1ay nat. I
use damp newspapers and sweep
. them with a broom into a regular
duslpan.- ROSE
DEAR POLLY- I wash and save
the plastic cups that sundaes are
served in at fast food restaurants. I
use them to make little molds for
gelatin that is poured in after it
cools. I also fill them with hard can, dies, put the lids back on and fasten
with plastic tape and find they sell
well at our church bazaar. - MRS.
C.G.W.
Polly will send you one of her
signed thank-you newspaper coupon
clipperS if she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Pr.oblem in her
colwnn. Write POLLY'S POIN·
TERS in care of this newspaper.

_Workshop. in woodworking takes
place in Cedar LakesCenter in March

Harry c . Wa!Son, 310
weugall st. , Pomeroy.

Ohio, Administrlltor, Dec.
30, 1980, Marie H. Watson,

310 Wetzgall St .• Pomeroy,
Ohio 23298.
Ronald E . Hart, Racine,
Ohio, Executor, January 6,
1981, Earl Hart, Racine,
Oh io, 23303.
Norman W . Johnson, Rt.
3, Pomeroy, Oh io, Ad·
ministrator, January 8.
1981. Noami F . Johnson,
Rt. 3, Pomeroy, Oh io,
23308 .
Pamelia McEldowney
Kelly , 301 S. Sixth, Mid·
dleport, Ohioi .e xecutrix,
January 16. 981, Donald
Edwin Kelly, Jel S. Sheth,
Middleport, Ohio, 23319.
Leonard R amsburo. 4.130
A Malin . St., Columbus,
Ohio, Executrix, Januarv
23, 1981, Earl Ramsburg,
R. D.• Rutland. Ohio, 23326 .
Loretta Allen, Albany,
Ohio, Executrix, Jan . 23,
1981 , Grover B. Stout. R. D.
3, Pomeroy, Ohio, 23297.

Public Notice
IN THE
COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS,
PROBATE DIVISION, '
MEIGS COUNTY,
·
OHIO, 55:
In the Matter of the EState
of Earle A. Price,
Deceased .
Cue No. 23213
LEGAL NOTICE TO
CREDITORS OF ESTATE
OF
NON·RESIDENT
DECEDENT TO FILE

Members of the Eastern
,FHA/HERO chapter are observing
, National FHA/HERO Week as a
part of National Vocational
. Education Week.
1 Theme of lhe observance is
: "Know How for the 80s" with the
; F:uture Homemakers of America
• being one . of, eight vocational
; education youth organizations
joining in the celebration.
A part of high school economics
: the FHA Provides meaning and
: motivation for youths , working
: toward educational goals related to

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Sherri Myers, Margery Myers,
Tammi Sayre, Debbie Bailey, Karen
Jacks, Kathy Pierce, Tina Spencer,
Laurie Lance, Sheri Putnam, Mary
~bbs, Pam Davis, Teresa Wilson,
Twnmy Taylor, Robyn Pitzer, and
Jenny Burke.
HOSPITALIZATION
Leslie Price of Pomeroy is coDfined to MI. Carmel Ea.St, Room 205,
Columbus, 43213. His wife is staying
at the home of her daughter, Mrs.
Virginia Crew, 1148 Mocturne Road
East, Reynoldsburg, 430611.

tconsumer home economics
~ducation. It reaches beyond
classroom instruction into the home
and community.
, During the week, according to
;J(athy Pooler, chapler president, the
Eastern FHA bas planned .several
,activities. Sunday has been designed
:BB family unity day, Monday as
•publicity day, Tuesday as scllool
;day, Wednesday as teacher day,
,Thursday as fun day, and Friday as
,Oiapterday.
: The Future Homemakers of
;America has 12,000 chapters with a
•national membership of 400,0011.
Founded in 1945, the organization is
celebrating ita 35th anniversary
~~wing the 191).81 year. Members
putidplltlng ID the week's activities
are Kathy Pooler, Helen Myers,

exercises.

NEW 1981

Swimming Pools
Above Ground and In Ground
Great)J Reduced lor

QUICK SALE!
Tbel981
pool• are

arriving
daily.

Muet havewarehouae ·~ace.

CALL TOLL FREE:

Public Notice
Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
TO : BIDDERS
SUBJECT : Purchase of
School Bus
FOR : The Board of the
Souther, Local School
DiStrict, Box 176, Racine,
Ohio, 45771
Sealed proposals will be
received b~ the Board of
Education of the Southern
Local School District of
Racine , Oh io at th~~:

1 Curb Inflation. . ~
!I Pay. Cash for II
1
1 Classlfleds and
!1 Savelll
Write your own ad and order by mail with this
coupon. Cancel your act bV phone when you get
results. Money not refundable.
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Print one word in each
space below. Each in·
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itial or group of figures
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counts as a word. Count
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name and address or
1
phone number if used .
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6
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You' ll get be tter results words
...... s days days I~
if you describe fully, -+d=a"-'v't'-=.:r=+=;;
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give price . The Sentinel
·
reserves the right to to 16 S1.00 S2.GO 54.00 S1.00
classify, edit or reiect.
I
any ad, Your ad will be 1025$1.~0 $3.75 5.50 19.00 1
1
put In the proper '
clasification if you'll to35 $1.50 54.50 7.50 10.
check the proper box
below
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These cash rates
Include discoUnt
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Wanted
For Sale
Announcement
For Rent

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Mail This Coupon with Remittance
The Daily .Sentinel
Box 729

tANNOUNCEMENTS
l-AniiM~ftOI'IIIfttJ

._OI'WIIWI'f
J - HIH'fA41
t-l.ost lncl IIOUI'Icl

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Announcements

SHOOTING
MATCH :
Rutland American Legion
every Sunday at 1:00. Big
prizes &amp; games. Factorv
choke guns only .

USED FURNITURE . GOld

watches. chains. diamonds
&amp; so on. Copper brass and
batteries, antique items,
also do appraisals, complete auctioneer service.
Over JO years experience in
business. Will buy com·
plete estates. Osby Martin
General Store. Middleport.
Oh . 992·6370 .

ATTENTION : I need ten
homemakers to train as
fashion stylists . No e~­
per ience nece-ssar~ . For
personal Interview: 992·
3941 or 669·4535.
SALE : Boys' hOOded sweat
shirts, S4.88 each ; men' s
eng ineer boots, $26.95 pair ;
men's used work pants,
S1 ,99eachpair ; men's used
work jackets, $6 .88 each.
Bailey's Bargain Store,
Middleport, Ohio.

·:• .:.NTED : Large or small
building to tear down for
the lumber. 949·2692

l1
Help Wonted
GET VALUABLE training
as a young business person
and earn gOOd money plus
some great gifts as a Sen·
t!hel route carrier. Phone
us rivht away and get on
the eligibility list at 992·
2156 or 992-2157 .
WANTED : People to sell
Avon . 7~ · 23.5~ or 742·2755.

II'
I

L____ :~:::.r~~~~~~-~----1'

A LADY or girl for light
housework and to live in.
992·370•.

ler • ..,,

eMEACHANDISE

eEMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

s1 - Ho.~MMMIOOOII•

IMPORTANT :
Ladles
' fashion company ex ·
. pandlng . 10 people needed
· to wor~ 10 hours per week ;
$10.00 per hour . For per·
sonal interview phone : 992·
3941 or669·4535 .

n - c1. rw , t1ac11o 111u._m.,t

··-""' ••"'"

U- Atltt~UH

12-llhlt._. Wtllltcl
1)-lfi.UrlftC:I

S4- Miac. Metd111nllhe

....... ,...

ss--a.. t~lniiiiP,-111

,....

14- lvtlntn Tr•lnlnl
IJ-Icllllelt lnltTIKIIH
1._
ttecno, TV

e P'ARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVI!STDCIC

ICIII~ttlr

lt-WtntMToO.

1111 - Pir'" l . . l,.,.lfll
U - Wtnt.4 to luy
n - TrtKIIt lor liM

tFINANCIAL
21- IUtitl"t
O,.,t\lnlly
11-MOtlt' faLun
U-LI'roi"IIOnlll

NEW HAVEN United
Methodist
Church
Is
, seeking part·· tlme Director
· of Music . Contact On
James Lockhart 13041 882·
3136 or Reverend John
· camPbell at IJ0.41 882·2624.

U - l.IVti'-CII

64--Hay I Grain
U - SHCI&amp; Porlllllor

hrvkn

tTAANSPOATATION
,._
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eAEAL ESTATE

P...._V1111 I 4 W. D.
Pt-Mttwcvc•
PIAwte Plrh

Jl-H""" fer left .
l2-M&amp;Ittt4tMII
tor1t1t 1•
U - Ptrml htrltie

UNIQUE opportunity for
sates oriented person. No
travel. Must be resident of
Meigs County . Prefer per·
' son with 'financial In·
stltutlon background. No
hard selling. Must be personable, outgoing and
lmeve conscious. s.alary
open . Send resume and
salary history to Box 729M.
, c·o the Dally Sentlnel,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

&amp; ACCIIIOf'ltl
H - Autatt-lr

.M-auiiMII IUIICIIftta
liJ-Ltts I Ac:rtttt

._tiHIIttDteWantN

:n- ...,. .

e5EAVICI!S
11 - HOMtiMprfYII'I'Itl'lti

· Wlnt' Ad Advertlslnt
DMdllnes
l i JCIII .M. Deily

12 NOOft l1tv'*"
fDrMINMIIY

l

H-fl'hmt..q&amp; IMCIVItl"'

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

D-l,c••etttte

11-lltcfriCie

IJ ••w:atl Ht•ll"'

......M.M. tllfNir

17- U,.,_.t..r 1

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eRENTALS

--·~ .. ,,..,..,,

1-WantedloBOQ'

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WANTED for televiSion :
assistant to magic ian.
Wrlle Dr . Bloch, the
Magic ian. 920 ·East 6th
Street . New York, NY
10009.

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J 111'(1

II wn. or Under

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Cllh

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C1Nr11
1.21

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Ul

l1c:h wlf'!lovor lltt mlnlm"m 11•.,.••• 111 &lt;Hifl ,.r wtrf ' " ,._, , ·
A41t rVMI... ..._, ftNit1 ceft1HIIft¥1 . . YI wiN M cNreH 111M IN'

,.....

Furnace repairs. electrical
work, plumbing, mobile
home or residence. 992"·
5851.
Will do paneling, ceiling,
floor tile, plumbing , Free
esl,lmates. Fred Mllltr at
992·6338.

no money down
Federal HouSing 3% on $25,000
5% on balanCe.
Conventionalloans5%
down
Call for lnforma1ion
992-7544

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WILL CARE _for elderly
, men or woman in my
private home. Responsible.
' Reesonable rates. Good ex·
perlence . Call 667-3«12,
Tuppen Plains.
WANTED : lig/11 carpentry
work,
paneling,
remodeling, painting, etc.
Also custOdian work . 992·
63.1 .
---~-·--

All Models
Available
LEO MORRIS
Rt. I Side Hill Rd .
Rutland, Oh.
H ·ffc

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tI~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

31
Homos for Salt
Trailer tol for sate, 55,000.
Modular home lot on Route
7, three bedroom farm·
house located on Route 7.
992-2571 .

Cali Ken Young

for Sale

Sleepi.ng rooms for rent on
1973 Crown Haven, lA x 6S, Ma in Street in Mason .
three bedjooms, new car- Cocking facil ities, table.
pet. 1971 Cameron, 14 x 64, SoOO.oo per week. Phone l ·
two bedrooms. new carpet . 304-773-5651.
1972 Champion, 12 x 60. two
bedrooms, new carpet. 1976 46
Space for Rent
Cameron, 12 )( 60, two
bedrooms, all electric. 1971 COUNTRY MOBILE ·Home
Skyline, 12sx 61. two Park, Route 33, North of
bedrooms, bath &amp; '13, new Pomeroy. Large lots. Call
carpet . 1970 PMC, 992-7479 .
12 x 60. two bedrooms. new
carpet. B x S Sales, Inc., TRAILER spaces for rent.
2nd x Viand Street, Point Southern Valley Mobile
Pleasant, wv Phone 675- Home Park, Cheshire, Oh.
4424.
992·3954 .

one half
between
&amp; state
on In·

3S
Lot• &amp; Acreage
TRAILER LOT for sale,
$4,000.00. 992-2571 '

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=;;;;:;;;;:::::;:=:::::::;=
.
Rnl Eslate General

Mobile Homes
for Sale

1970 PARKWOOD t ustom
Mobile Home . 12x60 unfurnished . 2 bedroom, 1
bath. fuel oil heat. 992·3823.

Misc. Merchanise
Firewood for sale , Mixed
types of wood. $35 .00 per
plck·up load. Delivered,
wil l stac k for Senior
Citizens. 843-4951 or 8432815 .
54

1969 PMC 3 bedroom
trailer . l2x60. 992 3954.
FOR SALE : 8K50 trailer .
Sam Arnold, Svracuse.
Phone992 -2360.
FOR SALE : Mobile Home.
Setup In Country Mobile
Home Park, Darwin .
Priced on Inspection. Burl·
D. Walker. Rt. l, Shade,
Ohlo45776.
Gener~l

HOBSTmER REALTY
GeorgeS. Hobstetter Jr .
Broker
Office 742·2003
NEW LISTING - E~tra
nice ~ bedroom ranch
home . living room ,
Iaroe eat-In kitchen,
utility room , single car
garage. $36,500.00 .
MIDDLEPORT
Large 2 story home
located on Gravel HilL
features living room
with fireplace, famil)'
room • .t bedrooms, kit·
chen, 2 baths, full base·
ment , Jar~e lot .
BUILDING SITE - Or
nice trailer lot, approx .
l t" acre with water tap.
$2,800.00.
BARGAIN BUY
Beautiful 2 story br ick
home, has l bedrooms,
J111 bath, living room ac ·
cented by ant ique
chandelier, large kit·
chen and family room
comb. with fireplace .
$26,500.00.
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc .
742-3171
Velma Nicinsky, Assoc.
742·3092

POMEROY,O.
992-2259
NEW LISTING
EASTERN DISTRICT
- A reallv nice 9 room
house, all on one floor ,
wllh a fuil basement,
family room, TV room ,
dining room. and .t
bedrooms. All on one
acre with a garage and
workshop . $49,900 .
SET liP FOR A WOOD
BURNER - Neat and
nice is the wav 10
describe this· 2 bedroom
home with new carpet,
neW siding, and new
bath . Part of the l 1/ 8
acre is fenced for an
animal and the kitchen
is equipped . ONLY
$26,900 .
NICE
STARTER
HOME - A cute and
cozv one bedroom home
with an enclosed sun
porch, part basement
and a good big storage
building. Reduced to
$14.000 .
A WRAP·AROUND
PORCH - Makes this
l lf2 story frame home
attractive , and the 4
bedrooms makes i1 just
right for a tamllv . Builtin oven and nice
cabinets in kitchen, pav ed parking for A cars,
and
many other
features . ONLY $35,000.
APPROXIMATELY 13
ACRES - Some tillable,
some pasture, sOme
timber and a 7 roorr
house set up for a wood
burner, and a large
storage building and
mineral rights . $44.500 .
REALTOR
Henry E . Cleland, Jr.
992-6191

ASSOCIATES
Jean Trussall949-2660
Ootfie &amp; Roger Turner
992· 5692
OFFICE 992·2259

-·---

Atll Estate- Genero.!_ .

1-fo us i11 g

SPECIAL 01 SCOUNT
prices on furniture .
Reupholstering . Jan. &amp;
Feb. , 1981. Mowrey's
Upholstery, Pt. P leasant,
W.Va . 1·304-675·4154 .
NEED ilems for yoyr
Mobile Home? Visit our
parts store &amp; pick up a tree
catalog . At Kingsbury
Home Sales Park &amp; Ac·
cessories. Rt. 124 Miner·
sville, Oh . 992-5587 .
Firewood. $35.00 a tru~k
loacj, S60 .oo a cord . All har ·
dwood, spm, &amp; del ivered .
843-4831 or 843-473•.
FIREWOOD lor sale.
$30.00 pickup load. Aoy
lengths . Call 667-3402
anytime.

t~~~~.~~.l3

•

"'"

e HOI Wlltr TlnkJ

Free estimates
Reasonable Prices
Call Howard
949·2862
949-2160
H ·t.lc

fillpllrl"l Sl~ct lUI
" S~WCIII

... ca1n

R•ltsl'or "

L. 111ntr i~'

,.. filt~!ll P r ~pol!rl ltl

.- A pl. HDY" Ool.n•n
.- MOJIIU• IotDm• Pl rh
111"C

PUWNS
EXCAVATING
It's lhe very EASIEST chem1se
- just 2 ma1n patl i~ You w1lllove
the new cap sleeves. flow1ng
lines vou can bell 01 not Send
now! Make sewerall

Pnnied, Patte10 4861. MISses
S1zes 8, 10. 11, 14. 16 18. 10
S11e 11 lbusl 34) takes 1 3/ 8

.-Dozers
• Backhoes
Hourly Contract
, Large or
small jobs.
Ph. 992-2478
11-20·3 mo. pd.

42

Mobile Homes
for Rent
2 bedroom trailer. Adults
onlv . Brown ' s Trailer
Park . 992·3324.

lor each poltlm lor finl-&lt;iass
1ir111il •n4 hllllliil&amp;. Stnd to:

Anne Aurws
Patttln Depl
The Dally

·1 'I I

S~ntin~l

' York. IT
24J West 17 Sl, Mew
10011. Print IUM£ AOOIESS,

liP. SIZE, 114 SnLE NUM8£R.
We sl~eamlined the sew1n1 to
save you t1me so you can sawe
money' Send now t01 NEW 1981
SPRING·SUMMER PATTERN CAT·
~LOG . I00 stvles flee pattern

coupon . ($2 Value). Catalog, $1 .
136-14 Qoic~ Quilts . . ... $1.75
ll].Faslll• Homo Qulltina $1.75
UO.Swutors·Sizos ll-56 .$1.75
129-QIIIcl/ Easy Transftts .$1.75

KAUFPS .

AUTOMATIC
TRANSMISSIONS
REPAIR &amp; SERVICf.

PWMBING·
AND
HEAnNG

ON MOST CARS
Reg . Price S325. 00

Carousel
Cqnfec,tionery
317 N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport
o'rder your d'ecorated
cakes lor all occasions:
Birthdays, Anniwersaries,
Weddings,
Showers, etc.
"Beginner
Cake
Decorating Classes"
starting soon. Please
note, we wil be closed on
Mondays during the
month of January .
1-lH mo.

Spec . Price $225.00
Plu s Tax &amp; Fluid
109 Spring Ave.
Pomeroy,
Oh .
Ph. 992-5543
l -22·1 mo.

I 2 Park St.
Middleport, Oh.
Ph. 992-6263
Anytime
2-1·1 mo.

ROGER HYSELl'S
GARAGE

CARPENTER
·sERVICES"

n
wanted to Buy
CHIP WOOD'. Poles ma~.
diameter 10" on largest
end . S12 p·er ton . Bundled
slab. $10 per ton. Delivered
to Ohio Pallet co .• Rt . 2.
Pomeroy 992·2689 .

74

TranspaptatlaR
71

Motorcycles

1978 KAWASAKI KZ 650
motorcycle, color blue.
Call 949· 2649 .

V.C. YOUNG II

Phone
1-( 614)-992 · 3325

H&amp;R BODY
Body Repair - Insurance
Work· Collision Repair.
Expert painting, body
work, pinstriping. &amp;
vinyl tops.
Free Estimates
catl992·34ll
Kingsburv Rd., 2 mi.
west Co. Rd.18.
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769
Domestic, Japanese &amp;
European cars &amp;
Trucks.

Utility Buildings
trom 4x6 to 12Jc40

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt. 3, Box 54
Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614-143-2591
6-15·11c

TRI..COUNTY

BOOKKEEPING SERVICE
•BUSINESSES
•FARMS .
•PARTNERSHIPS
•CORPORATIONS
Payrolls, profit and loss statements, all
federal and state forms.

H&amp;R BLOCK OFFICE LOCATION

COUNTRY HOME - 3
nice bedrooms. large
equipped eaHn 'klfchen,
full basement, some
storm doors and win·
dows, with large lot for
the children and a
garden.
REASONABLE 5
room one floor plan .
Chimney for wood ·
burner, bath, and all ci ·
ty utilities. Only $12 ,000.
COUNTRY - Real nice
renovated home of she
rooms. Just right tor a
large family. Furnace
he'at, modern kitchen
with slove and reirlgerotor . 2 full baths
and large enclosed
yard. A gOOd buy at
531,000.
NEW LISTING - Nice
older home of 3 bed·
rooms, bath, furnace
heat, lots of good
carpeting, storm win·
dOw!i and door$ out of
flood, and wol~ to
stores.
1/ILLAGE ABODE - 5
room frame home. Cen·
tral heat, basement,
bath, 2 porches, and ex·
tra lot for a large
garden. Has store near·
by, playground. swim·
Ina pool and everytlna
desirable lor children.
YOUR MONI!Y WILL
RliTURN TO YOU BY
DI!ALINO LOCAL.
CALL US FDA BEST
RESULTS.

Now At
Pomeroy
L andmarl&lt;

Mobile homes for rent, fur·
nlshed , very nice. Call 992·
7479 .

44

Apartment
for Rent
3' AND 4 RM furnished apts. PhOne 992 -543• .

Unfurnl.shed one bedroom
apartment for rent. Ren·
ters asslstanc~ available
tor senior citizens. Contact
VIllage Manor Apartments
81992 ·7787 .
HALF of a double. 2
bedroom completely fur ·
nlshed . Available lst of
month. 992·2749.

Repossesst~d

Items
1- 11 Mont Power Rkllnt
Mower
1- Goocl lr.aner Approlo'ld Wood
B11rner Stov• wi!h blower
1- GoodGI\R.anp
•- GoOd HCIIpolnt W.ll tltr
1- U " GE TV
...
1- 14 cu. U. HotPOinl
RelrlgtriiOr
All al
above Items in (!• ctllent tonlfillon . All .art prind
10 !Ill

Ht&gt;IJ .\1/ICf

_ flt _•,uhttJ.ItJU "

-

"

camping
Equipment
16 foot tag a long camper,
self contained. sleeps 6.
992-5556.

excavation, water·gassewer lines, certified
septic systems, dump
truck, stone-coal, etc . .
General home repair &amp; •
carpenter work. Springs
developed &amp; ponds
cleared.
JIM CLIFFORD
Rt. 2 Pomeroy
Ph.99H?OI
1·25· 1 mo

.*1/

REESE
TRENOfiNG
SERVICE

water-Sewer-Electric
Gas Line-Ditches
Water Lint Hook-ups
Septic Tanks
county certified
Roush Lane
Cheshire, Oh.
Ph. 361-7560
H ·lfc

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION .
• New Homes · ex·
tensive remodeling
• E Iectrical work
• Roofing work
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992·7583
1-22-1 mo.

SERVICE
For all of your wlr·
ing needs.
Let George Miller check
your present electrical
system .
ReSidential
&amp; Commercial

Call742-3195
or 992·7680
2-8·ffc

l ~mltCUitely .

511 !Jl 10·

Cl.ay.

C\7,_

POMEROY

~LANDMARK

l)f I

992 ·2181

;:

:.: .. :-:·:: :::..:..
--·
..... .
-.............
,.

FOR RENT : two bedroom
unfurnished apartment
with stove and r~frlgerator
In Pomeroy. $165.00 per
month you pay utilities.
992·2288after 6 p.m.

71

J&amp;F
ENTERPRISES
Backhoe, snow plowing,

tt••

Three bedroom furnished
house. Phone 992·3129 or PUT A cold nose In your
992-5914 or 1·304-882·2566 .
Juture. Contact the Meigs
County Humane Society at
For rent : two bedroom 992 ·6260. American 'fox
apartment with utilities hound, female; collie.
pa id. No pets or drunks. male; golden lab .. male;
John Sheels, lhree and one Spitz type, female ; INith
half miles south of Mid· two puppies, ready logo, 2
Amerlcln domestics.
dleport on Route 7 .
Four room apartment lor
rent. 992-5908.

BNtslnd
Motors for S•le
1977 STARCRAFT lllleen
foot boat with full c1nvas.
80 h.p. Mercury motor.
S3200.oo. PhOne 7•2-2932.
75

992-6215 or 992·7314
Pomeroy, Oh.

l0 -7·1fc

Sizes
"From 30xl0"
SMALL
~i~~~

-Addonsalid
remodeling
-~oofing and gutter
work
- concrete work
-Plumbing and
electrical work
1Free Estimates!

992-5682

Farm Buildings

Autos for Sale

1977 CHEVY four wheel
drive truck . 29,000 miles .
Good condition. $3600.00 .
Call anytime, Gory Lewis.
Route 1, Letart, W. \Ia .
Phone l -304-882-2736.

-Auto and Truck
Repair
-Transmission
Repair
Hrs.: Mon. -Fri.
9A.M.·5:30 P.M.

ALLSTEELJ

!----------1

World Bock Encyclopedias
- Limited number, 1980
edlilon sets. Save SlOO.oo .
$15.00 per month . Elizabeth
Coffman, 949·2592.

ONE HORSE trailer and
two horses ; one paint mare
and one registered Appaloosa , 992-5449,

Aluminum Siding
elnsulation ·
• Storm·ooors
• Storm Wi.n dows
• Replacement
Windows
free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph; '992-2772
1·28·1 roo.

J&amp;D

1881115 '

_ 216 E. Second Street

·INSULAnON
Vinyl &amp;

j!ldS 45-l nCh labliC.

$2.110 lor NCh palttm. Acl4 50C

1975 Olds Della 88 Royale,
air conditioning , am·fm'
tllpe
player,
power
steering, power brakes,
new paint job. 992-2528 af ter 5.

(B

• D \lpDUII
D l •nw•s~n

1 O ry tn

l GUN CABINET that
holds six guns ; one curio
cabinet, 6 foot high, glass
sides and shelves, mirror
back ; one copy pen water
bench ; one copy dark p'ine
secretar';' desk ; one Grand ·
father clock, one oak hall
tree chair ; one ice box bar;
two baby cradles; one
e&amp;sel. one bread bmc ,
several wOOd doh cradles;
one cedar tot chest ; two set
solid walnut domino .with
walnot box; toys ; cars and
trucks . All can be seen at
the Wood Shed. on Broadwav Street, Racine, Ohio.

SUBURBAN WOOD and
coal furnace adi!lpter in
original cartons. $475.00.
Save $2oOO .oo. Only three
0
II:~~~~--:"~·~"~~·Jitef1
. Outdoor Equipment
Sales, Junct . Rts. 7 and 35.
Gallipolis. F'hone «6·3670 .

HeadqtMrft?rs

...

and downspouts, gutter
cleaning and painting .
All work guaranteed.

au MAKIS

•W••ntn

.._ . . . . . . . . .

53
Antiques
. ATTENTION :
liM PORT ANT TO YOU) Will
pay cash or certified check
for antiques and collec·
tlbles or entire estates.
Nothing too large . Also.
guns, pocket watches and
coin collections. Call 614·
767·3167 or 557·3411 .

new or repair gutters

PAm AND SIIYICI

......... ,,.,, ...... .
•••

H. L WHITESEL
.ROOFING
All tvpes of roof work,

APPUANCE SERVICE

32

Beauilful three bedroom
ranch brick home in Baum
Addlllon, Pomeroy, Ohio
Gas heat, central air. Cali
992·2571 or l-687·6429.

Real Estate

50"-20-30 H.P.
HA 60"-25·60 H.P.
E 60"-45-80 H. P.

992-7544
VA loans -

,

Situations W1ntld

· H'ave room. board, laundry
for
elderly
only .
Re01onable. 992·6022.

Rates and Other I nformatlon

CUNNtNGHAM
&amp; ASSOC.
Mortgage Bankers

"---.....!:=~-~~~--

1

12

8.20

-;--"7.===-=-Want~ to Do

J2

Business Services

4861

II

FOR SALE : seven room
double insulated ranch
style home. total electric,
reasonably priced on three
level acres one mile from
Racine . Phone 949-2706.

&amp; silver, class rings, po(:ket

u-s,acttw lhnt
tP- Want.. tott-1

7- l'lrCIIIII
1---II" ...IC: Stlt
I AvcHort

Printed Pauern
SIZES

wanted ro Buy
'
IRON AND BRASS BEDS,
old furniture, desks, aold
r ings, jewelry, spverdollars. sterling. etc., wood
ice boxe5,jars antiques,
etc. Complete households .
Write M, D. Miller, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, OH l or call 992·
7760 .

Wanted to Buy : class rings,
wedding bands, anything
stamped. I~K. l4K. or l8K
gold . Sliver coins, pocket
watches . Call Joe Clark at
992·2054 at Clark's Jewelry
Store, Pomeroy, Ohio-4.5769

t1 - Hov••• rw • .,,
U - MM!ItHDMOI
lorll"t
tt- Ap.utm•t lor •••u
lilt-,lltooma

2- ln Mtmtrltm

2 Main Parts!

AUTOMOBILE
I.N ·
SURANCE been can·
celled?
Lost
yo ,u r
operator's license? Phone
992·2143 .

Nice house on 2 &amp;
acres on SR 7
Memory Gardens
garage. Priced
spection. 992·7741 .

OL[) COl NS, ..)locket wat·
ches, class rings, wedding
bands, diamonds. Gold or
silver . Call J . A. ~amsley,
742·2331 . Treasure Chest
Coin Shop, Athens, OH . 592·

PHONE 992-2156

1- Carct tP TMn••

13

Put a cold nose In your life
Call the Meigs County
Humane Society at 992·
6260 . '

WANTED TO BUY :
GOLD ..
SILVER,
PLATINUM, $TERLINGCOINS, RINGS,JEWELR·
Y. MISC. ITEMS. ABSOLUTE
MARKET
PRICE GUARANTED . ED
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP, MIDOLEPORT,
OH 10 992·3476 ,

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX
I
1:

appointment . see Wando
Eblin, 41000 Laurel Cliff
Road, Pomerov, Ohio
' 45769. 992· 2272.
MEIGS MUSEUM open by
appointment January-Mar·
ch . 992·2264, 992-2802, 992·
2360 or 992·2639. Histories
hlr sale
Pomeroy ·
Middleport Libraries.

WANT AD INFORMATION

Addreu _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Phone

,I

6462 .

,

The Daily

Ta• service, federal, state,
&amp; quarterly ta~es done by

Reserv1ng to the State of
Ohio, however, all oil , g&amp;s,
coal and other minerals.
The prayer of said
Petit ion is as follows :
" Wherefore Petitioners
demand an order of the
court authorizing them to
sell , convey and transfer
the real estate described in
this petition to Don R. Hill
and ' Mary E. Hill , or the
survivor of them, whose
address is 495115 State
Route 338, Racine, Ohio
45771;.}2r the consideration
of SYw.OO and for such
other relief as may be
proper ."
Said Petition will come
on for hearing at 9 :00A .M .
On the 27th day of
February, 1981, or as soon
thereafter as may be.
Pearl Norris
Marshall Adams
Herschel Norris
Clarence T. Norris
Florence Adanis
Trustees of the
·
U . B. CHurch
(l) 26 , 12). 2, 9, 16, 41C

3

LEGAL NOTICE
Notice is hereby given
that Pearl Norris, Marshall
Adams, Herschel Norris
Clarence T. Norris and
Florence Adams as the
duly appointed, qualified
and acting Trust~s of the
U. B. Church, have flied
their Petition in the Common Pleas Court of Meigs
County, Ohio, being Case
No. 17731, praying for
authority to ~II. convey
and transfer to Don R. Hill
and Mary E. Hill, for the
consideration of $900.00 the
following described real
estate :
The following described
real estate situate In the
Township of Letart ln . the
County of Meigs and State
of Ohio bounded and
described as follows : Belnq

PIANO .
Too
to neglect, expert
and repair. Lane
742·2951 or 992·

Racine Volunteer Fire
Department SponiOI'S a
shot oun &amp; rifle match
every S1t. nigh! 6 :30 p.m.
at their building In B11han.
Factory chOke 12 auage
shot guns only . Open sights
22 rifle.

or Write Dally Sentinel Cllsslfied Dept.
I I I Court St., Pomeroy, 0., 45769

Name _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

wv 25271 (304) 37U263.

Sandy Hysell was honored as the
weekly queen at last week's meeting
ofTOPSOH 14M of Rutland.
Runner&amp;-up were Gloria Oiler,
·who was queen the week before, and
Barbara Alkire. Nellie Haggy was
.the monthly queen with Shorty
Wright as runner-up. A charm
bracelet was presented to Mn. OOer
for having 108110 pounds.
MrS. Wright presided at the
meeting and explained a new incentive program. She noled that
anyone losing 25 pounds or reaching
their KIW (Kops In Waiting) before
convention will have their expenses
to the convention paid.
Brenda Taylor and Connie Black
were welcomed 8B new members.
Mrs. Oiler led the group in a series ri

YOUR
valuable
tuning &amp;
Daniels,
2082 .

beginnin~ .

~

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

Nine workshops in all will be taking
place during the two weeks: jewelry
casting, stained glass, traditional
furniture making, woven wearables,
blacksmithing, multi-layered applique, Norwegian rosemaling and
white oak ribbed basketry.
The Crafts Center program is
sponsored by the Vocational Bureau
within the West Virginia Department of Education.
For a free brochrue contact the
Crafts Center, Cedar lakes, Ripley,

RACINE GUN SHOOT,
Racine Gun Club._overy
Friday night sterling at
7:30 p.m. Factory choice
gunsonly.

Public Notice
in Section 16, Town 1~
Range 12, beginning at the
Northeast corner of Cassie
Sayre lot, running East 30
feet ; thence south 45 feet ;
thence West 30 feet ; thence
North 45 feet to the place of

Ill 26, 121 2, 9, Jtc

11126, 1212, 9, Jtc

TOPS news reported

FHA -HERO week has theme-:'Know How for the '80's'

u-

Public Notice
Public Notice
CLAIMS WITHIN SIX (6) ireosu'rer's office until
MONTHS
1.2:00 o' clock noon on
NotiCe is hereby given, February 12. 1981 and at
pursuant lo Orders of the that opened by the
Probate Court of Meigs
Countv, dated December 9 , treasurer of ·Said board as
1980, that John E. wren, provided by law for one Ill
Esq., .u. Bedford Rd., in 6.5 passenger school bus.
the Village of ·Pleasant· according to specifications 1
ville, County of West· Qf said Board of Education.
chester,StateotNewYorkl
Separate and In ·
Executor of the Estate o · dependent bids will be
Earle A. Price, who died received with respact to the
testate on June l9t 1980, a
'
resident of the own of chassis and body type and
Mount Pleasant, in the Will state that the bus when
County of Westchester,
bl
d
·
t
State of New York, ·filed In assem ed an pr iOr o
Said Probate court of delivery comply wl1h all 1
Meigs County, on Decem· school
district
ber 9, 1980, an authen· specifications, all ~afety
ticated copy of his Letters regulations and current
Testementary iuued to Ohio Minimum Standards
him bv the Surrogate' s f
s h 00 1 B
c
Court of ..said Countv of or
c
us · on ·
Westchester, state of New struction of the DepartYork ; and that all creditors ment of Education adopted
of said decedent shall bv and with the consent of
present their claims to said the Director of Highwav
Probate Court of Meigs Safety pursuant to Section
County, within siN 161 mon· 4511 .76 of the Revised Code
ths after the date of filing , and all other pertinent
to-wit : by June 9, 1981, or provisions of
law .
be forever barred as a
oossible lienholder upon Specif ications and in ·
the real estate of Sllid structions to bidders are on
decedent situate in the file in the off ice of the
State of Ohio1 pursuant to Treasurer, Racine, Ohio.
Ohio
Rev.sed
Code ByOrderoflhe
12, 129.02 and related Board of Education
statutes.
Nanc';' Carnahan, ,
John E . Wren Treasurer
·
~ecutor of the southern Local
Estate of
Earl A. PrlceJ School District
Deceasea Box 176
Racine, Ohio 45771
DATED : January22, 1.981
(l I 23. 29; 121 3, 9

A11"""ncements

1 PAY hlallesr prices
possible for gold lnd lllv.r
coiM, r1na1. lew.lry, etc.
Cont~et l!d Burkett Berber
Shop, Mlddlaport.

Mrs. Kathy Jordan and friends, wiU be hostess for the February
Mr. and Mrs. Norman Shane, Athens meeting ather home. Miracles of the
Bible are being studied by the group
Route, were. among
who par·
and discussed.
ticlpated in the 16th annual Hocking
Many friends and relatives were
Hills Winter Hike from Old Man's
in this area because of the death of
Cave to Ash Cave.
Mrs. Henry (Grace) Turner. Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Crabtree and
Madge Dye were in Pa~kersburg, W. · Turner was born in this area and had
spent most of herlife here. They had
Va. Sunday where they visited an
moved from Dyesville to Middleport
uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Emzie
this past year.
Davis. Mr. Davis had suffered a
broken hip some time ago and both
Larry Stansbury, Pickerington,
are in poor physical condition. ·
and
Clair
Dale
Stansbury,
The Janll!lry meeting of Temple
Groveport,
·
were
guests
of their
Church U.M.W. was held al the
mother,
Golden
Stansbury,
Wedhome of Freda Smith. Kathy Jordan
nesday.
gave devotions. Westina Crabtree

Small investment,, large
returns, Sentinel Want Ads'
The following persons
were! on the dates shown,

By Polly Cramer
Special correspoodeot
DEAR POLLY - i do hope
someone can tell me how to remove
MISt stains from
white towels. MRS. R.S.
DEAR MRS. R.
S. - There rare
good
rust
removerS available in stores, but if
you prefer a home
remedy, , rub
Cramer
lemon juice on the spots, CO'j;er with
salt and put out in the sunliglft. Wash
as usual. Another suggestion is to
put about eight teaspoons of cream
of tartar in a quart of water, bring to
a boil and 'then put on the spotted
areas. When spols are removed, rinsewell in clear water. - POLLY
DEAR POLLY - I bought a
coconut, put it in the freezer for a
day and then used a hanuner to
crack il. This did • 2reat iob. The
!coconut came out whole. Then I took
a paring knife, so it did not cut in too
deep, and peeled off the brown that
was next to the shell. - RUTH
DEAR POLLY-I am answering
the reader whose braided rugs curl
and will not stay flat. I abve worked
with many such rugs. I never sew

3

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

Polly's Pointers

NAMED TO CLUB- The Ohio
Institute of Technology bas BP'
poiDted Raodall L. Tackett, Jr. of
32387 Red Hill Rd., Langsville,
Salem Cenler area lo Us
• Presldenl's Club, according 1o
O.I.T. Presideot Richard A. Czerniak. Those siUdenls who have
!aiDed a 3.5 or belter ac, cumulallve grade poiDI average
: are ellglble for membenblp ID
· this blgb·bonor organlzaon.
Tackett graduated 1r&lt;m Meigs
' Hlgb School in June of 1979 and Is
eorolled ID the fourlh trimester
· term of Tecbnlcian's Progr&amp;IJ! at
Ohio Tecb. President CzerniaJr;
ntended
his
personal
congratulations lo Mr. and Mrs.
: Randall Tackett, Sr.

~onday, Februar_)l9,1981

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

6 l__! orm_!~ment

_
Sl~ ton farm hay wagon .
Callofler ~. 992-7501.

n

Cash 'n' Carry

J &amp; F BACKHOE SER ·
VICE liscensed e. bonded,
seplic tan~ Installation,
water S. gas lines. Ex·
cavatlng work &amp; transit
layout . 992-7201 .

KllQIEN
CARPET

Dozer-work . Small jobs •
specialty . 743·2753.

$499

14

EIKirlcll
&amp; Relrlttrltlon

ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR &gt;.veopers.
toasters, irons, all smell
appliances. Lawn mower .
Next 1o Stare Highway
Garage on Route 7, 985·
3125.

THE

Februaly Inventory Sale

E~covlittnv

CARPET Ru~b~~~~5ack
With Padding
SHAG ,
5

Reg.,, sg95 y~·.
&amp;

u

&amp; Up
1nstalled

Re,~; $15.95

$/99

~~.

casn-n -carr

Buv Now &amp; Save U -$6 Per Yard.
25 rolls carpet in stock to pick from.
Regular backed carpel installed free,
with pad .
Drive A Little- Save A Lot

RUTlAND FURNITURE

Ma

St.

. KOUNTRY
KLUB

742-2211

15

Generol Houllng

J&amp;C Sanitation Service'.
Trash pickup available In
VIllage of Mlddlepgrt..
Phone 992·5016, or 992·759]
anytime.

•''

�\

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

·Page---12-The Dally Sentinel

.

Ruth Louise Montgomery, 78, 430
First Avenue, died at 5:30a.m. SWl, dayatHMC.
She was born June 4, 1902 in Chambersburg, Oh. She was one of six
children born to the late James Lanthrone and Sarah Hazlett Lanthorne.
She attended school in . Chambersburg· and most recently worked
at Holzer Medical Center, from
where she retired in 1972 after over
20 years' service.
·she was married to Don Burcham,
Gallipolis, who preceded her · in
death. They had one son, Lee,
Eureka; she then married Louie
Montgomery, who also preceded her
iri death. They 'had two children R!lbert, Letart, and Mrs. Raymond
(Mary) Walburn, ~ddleport. Ten
grandchildren and six great·
grandchildren survive.
She was a former member of the D
of A Lodge in Eureka and of the
Eureka Methodist Church. both of
which are disbanded. •
Funeral will be 2 p.m. Tuesday at
Miller's Home for Funerals with
Rev. Ralph Workman officiating.
Interment will be in Clay. Chapel
Cemetery, Eureka.
Calling hours are 2-4 and 7·9 p.m.
today.
.

Helen Wolfe Simpson
Mrs. Helen Wolfe Simpson, 72,
well known Racine resident, died
unexpectly Sunday morning at her
home in Racine:
Mrs. Simpson was born Dec. !5,
!9111 in Racine, a daughter of the late
Kelly and Alma Sayre Wolfe. She
was also preceded in death by two
sisters, Winifred and Johanna; a
brother, Kenneth, and a grandson,
Kevin Kelly.
Mrs. Simpson had been a member
of the Racine Baptist Church since
1922 and was president of the Booster
Sunday School Class. She was the
newly elected president of the
United Church Women of Meigs
County.
Mrs.Simpson was owner and
operator of a restaurant in Racine
for several years and was also a
retired cook from the Letart Falls
Elementary School.
Surviving are a son and daughter·
in-law, Brian K. and Bonnie J . Sim·
pson; a grandson, Darin, and a gran·
ddaughter, Lisa, all of Baltimore,
Ohio; three brothers, Roger Wolfe
and Chester (Sonny) Wolfe, both of
Ashtabula, and Guy (Max) Wolfe of
Sandusky; two sisters-in-law, Mrs.
Gretta Simpson ani! Mrs. Lavinia
Simpson, both of Racine, and
several nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be held at I
p.m. Wednesday at the Racine Baptist Church with the Rev. Don
Walker officiating. Burial will be in
Plants Cemetery. Friends may call
at the Rawlings-Coats-Blower
Funeral Home in Middleport
anytime after 2 p.m. Tuesday until
11 a.m. Wednesday when the body
will be taken to the church where it
will tie in state. The family will
receive friends from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9
p.m. Tuesday.

Minor a~cident
There were moderate damages to
two cars in an accident at the corner
of Spring Ave. and E. Main St. at
4: IS p.m. Sunday. ·
Pomeroy Police said a car driven
, by Susan Zirkle, 17, Pomeroy, was
making a left tum onto Spring Ave.,
when it struck a . car driven by
Charles Tyree, Jr., 49, Route 1, Middleport, which was stopped at a stop
sign on Spring Ave. There were no
injuries and no citations.

First steps taken to obtain money

Dwyer
departure
delayed
.

&amp;,BOBHOEFLial
The Melp Local Scbool Dl.ltrlct Board ol Education
Monday night toolllnllillatepe to II!CUn! one miiUon
dollara fOI' the di.Rrlct with 110 tu increaae to reaidenta.
The board hu dbc:uued the poulblllty olsuch action
for II8VWal rnontba. Wbile I'DMtlng in recuJar -ron
Jut night, the ~ approVed lnlllal resoluti0111 which
will start the chain olldion fOI' getting the money.
Melp County Auditor Howard Frank ouWned the
processes Involved. He lAid dlatrlct voten approved a
rout mill bond laue to I'Wl for 23 years for the construction ol the bleb acbool. AI the present time, the entire tow: milia II being sent to the state when actually
about two and OIIIHJalf milia of the money, with the apprwal of the State Department of Education could be
kept locally. Tills !OOuld amount to about one miiUon
dollan pl111 enouih money to pay off interest on bonds
which would be J.aued by the dtstrlct. The bond perind
would be for nine yean, the tlrne left on the 23 original

By Tbe Assoclaled Pret111
Cynthia B. Dwyer, the American
writer convicted of spying on Iran

Thomas C. Edwards
. Thomas C. Edwards, 70, Miner·
sville, died Saturday at Holzer
Medical Center.
Mr.Edwards was the son of the
late Thomas and Edith A. Johnson
Edwards. He was also preceded in
death by one brother, Ernest and
one sister, Edith Edwards.
Mr .Edwards was a veteran of
World War II and a retired employe
of the U. S. Corps of Engineers, locks
and dams. He was a member o! the
Asbury Methodist Church,
Syracuse; American Legion and
DAV : past master Pomeroy Lodge
164 F&amp;AM; present worthy patron of
Pomeroy OES 186; White Shrine of
Jerusalem; past high priest
Pomeroy Chapter 80; past
illustrious master of Bosworth Coun·
cil40: past commander Ohio Valley
Commandery 24; member of the
Knight o! tbe York Cross of Honor,
Ohio Priory !8; member of Ancient
and Accepted Scottish Rite, Valley
of Columbus 32nd degree mason ;
Alladin Temple of Columbus, Shir·
ne; past associate guardian of Internalional Order of Jobs
Daughters.
· He is survived by two sisters, Ed·
na Edwards, Minersville, and Mrs.
Ella E. Williams, August, Maine ;
three nephews and two nieces.
· Funeral services will be held Wed·
nesday at 2 p.m. at 'Ewing Chapel
with the Rev. Stanley Merrifield of·
ficiating. Burial will .be in Beech
Grove Cemetery. Friends may call
at the funeral home this evening
from 7 to 9 and Tuesday from 2 to 4
and 7 lj) 9. In lieu of flowers,
donations may be made to the
Asbury Church. Eastern Star ser·
vices will be held Tu'esday at 7 p.m.
and Masonic Services at 7:30p.m.
MONEY SOUGHT
Two suits for money have been
filed in Meigs County Common Pleas
Court.
Capital Financial Services, Inc.,
Columbus filed suit in the amount of
$9,ii4.:10 agafnstBillie A. Davis, dha
llill Davis Body Shop, Rt. 2,
Pomeroy.
LeslieCahill,dbaU.S.Sidingllnsulati'on Co., Delaware filed suit in
the amount of $4,854.55 against Dan
Pau!Smith,Rt.l, Raince, andDon·
na Jean Smith, Rt. I, Racine.

Fire destroys
Robie home

FORMER PLAYERS . RECOGNIZED - Sealor
memben of last year's Southern basketball team
.which went to the semi fiDals at St Jolm Areoa In
Columbus were recognled for their contributiooa
Saturday Dlgbt duriug Parents' Night_Activities at

Southern Hlgb Sc,bool. ReeelviDI a ot.ndlng evatlon
were left to right, Jaci Duffy, Jolm Davis, J-lban
Reet Steve Fltcb aDd Dave Foreman. AI rigllt II TOI'
nado' Dale Teaford, one of lhlll year's team's leedinc
point maken. ·

HOSPITAL 'EWS

Meigs emergency runs

Local emergenclf unils answered
VETERANS MEMORIAL
pson, Tommy Troubnan, Davis
Loss was estimated at. $45,000 as
five
calls over tile weekend, the
Sunday Admissions--Raymond Wears, Vicky Weaver, Raymond
thP result of a fire which destroyed
Meigs
Emergency Medical Services
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Grady, Racine; Annie Cundiff, Mid- Weiher, Sylvia Whitely, Brady Whitreports.
Robie, Rose Hill, near Poineroy Sun· dleport; Anna Wolle, Rutland; son, Jean Whobrey, Densil Yost.
At 3:21 p.m. Saturday, the
Larry Grimes, Minersville ; Julian
Bffi111S
day afternoon.
Pomeroy
Unit took Lula Zlfii!IJI8,
.
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Boyles, son,
Pomeroy firemen were hampered Huffman, Pomeroy.
State
St..
to Veterans Memorial
by high winds and the lack of water. • Sunday Discharges-Ella Jane Pt. Pleasant; Mr. and Mrs. Micahel
Finnicum,
son,
Mason;
Mr.
and
Hospital,
and
at 6:49 p.m., the MidFire Chief Charles Legar said the Roush , Ca r1 Gheen, Sr., Car I
dleport
Unit
took Blanche Gilkey
Manley.
'
Mrs
.
Guy
Montgomery,
son,
blaze apparently started from a
from
Headley
St. to Holzer Medical
Saturday Admissions-Dorothy Jackson; Mr. and Mrs. Isler Mallory
small electric space heater. There
·Center.
was no one at home at the time of the Hysell, Pomeroy; Janet Kom, Jr., son,~; Mr. and MRs. randall
On Sunday, the Pomeroy Unit at
fire which was reported by· neigh- Pomeroy; Tomie Shaffer, Pomeroy. ·' Reeves, daughter, Pomeroy.
7:25
p.m. took Julian Huffman,
FEB. 7
Saturday Discharges.. Charles
bors.
Eastman
Ridge, to Veterans
Donald Bell, Linda Burris, Charlie
Few household items and personal . Price, Oretha Snider, Benny Good·
Memorial
Hospital;
Rutland Unit at
belongings of the family were saved. man, Timothy Klein, Wilma Rizer, Cockcroft, Ada Cox, Chester Dicker6:02
p.m.
took
Garnet
Williamaon,
Three of the rooms of the two story Jack Neff, David Shane, Judith Mar- son, Darrell Dotson, Jean Ewing,
Salem
St.,
Rutland,
to Holzer
George Fisher, Ruth Givens, Berframe home escaped fire but were tin, Hilda White.
nard
Harper,
Douglas
Harris,
Medical
Center,
and
at
4:23p.m.,
the
heavily damaged by water and
.
IDLZER
ME01CAL
CENTER
Pamela
Heskett,
Thomas
Johnson
Tuppers
Plains
Unit
took
Eunice
smoke.
Bffi111S, FEB. 5
III, Mrs. Anthony Kight and son,
Nutter, Owl Hollow Road, to
Since the Pomeroy tanker's water
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Tharon
Camp,
·
David
Lewis,
Patricia
Mark,
FlorenVeterans
Memorial Hospital.
supply was exhausted, the Middaughter,
West
Columbia;
Mr.
and
ce
McGinniss,
Mark
Merola,
Mrs.
dleport and Syracuse Departments
'
MEETS nJESDAY
responded with additional tanks of Mrs. Charles Eakins, daughter, Mid- Roger Null and son, tdrs. Julius
dleport; Mr. and Mrs. Randy Mer· Preston Jr. and daughter, Barbara · Harrisonville Chapter 255 OES
water.
cer, son, Wellston; Mr. and Mrs. Ross, Stephen Shulaw, Alice will meet Tuesday, Feb. 10, at the
ASK TOWED
Paul McWilliams, · daughter, Sprague, Doris Stanley, Phyllis Masonic Temple. A bake sale will be
A marriage liceJlSil was issued to Wellston.
Sullivan, Mrs. Brynn Setphin and held following the meeting with the
Clifford Eugene Whittington, Jr., 25,
OlSCHARGESFEB. 6
daughter, Henry Varney, Pearl proceeds to go the heart fund.
Rt. 4, Pomeroy, and Bonnie
Eimer Belue, Janis Bowersox, Warman, Mrs. David Watkins and
CHINESE LAW
Charlene Hamilton, 28, Rt. 4, Amber Brumfield, Monie Cottrill, daughter, Patty Weaver. Maurice
Pomeroy.
Chinese law in 300 B.C. forbade
Patricia Delaney, Nathan DeWeese, Wolfe, MAry Young.
speaking to the emperor without a
Uoyd Finley.. Lawrence Fowler,
,
Bffi111S
FREE TESTING SET
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Atkins, son, clove in one's mouth.
I Free blood pressure day will be Carol Hamon, Mrs. Greg James-and
son,
Michael
Jofmson,
Marvin
Crown
City; Mr. and Mrs. Gary
observed from 10 a.m. to 12 noon
Tere!l3
Jones,
Virgil
Lan·
Braden,
daughter, Crown City; Mr. · Mrs. Charles Eakins and daughter,
Jones,
Tuesday at the Harrisonville Senior
drum,
Michael
Maines,
Freda
and
Mrs
. Mark Irwin, son, Carla Gibbs, Frank Johnson, Carrie
Citizens Club.
Newell, Lewis Ours, Jack Owens, Gallipolis: Mr. and Mrs. John Justus, Elaine Klskls, Mn. Randy
Mercer and son, Donelj Miller,
Joseph Paugh, Richard Phillips, Taylor,·daughter, Gallipolis.
SEEKS DIVORCE
Carlos Stanley, Susan Tackett.
Shawn
Raymer,
Angie
Roush,
BranFEB.
8
Norma Ann Tores was granted a
BIR111
Mrs. Ken Baker and daughter,
divorce from Ramon Torres and da Russell, Don Russell, Raymond
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Kent Yonker, son,
Diana Lynn Jenkins from stephen 0. Shaton, Georgia Smith, Joann Mrs. Tharon Camp and daughter,
MAson.
Stewart, AliCe Thacker, Anna Thorn· Rodney Campbell, Marilyn Cisco,
Jenkins.
------------------------------------------------

Th e Farmers 8 an k haS
•
convenien'·t b an k Ing
a

~.-

,. BA .ERY
VALENTINE CAKES
Baked Fresh Daily

Monday thru Thursday 9-3
Friday 9-3 and S- 7 (Drive In 9- 7)
Saturday 9-12

FORGET
VALENTINE'S DAY!/
Halhnark CardS -·Boxed Valentine Candy
Children's Valentines ·Valentine Napkins
Plates &amp; Cups
Stuffed AnimalS -Gift Wrap.
ELBERFELDS IN

Vol.29, No. 210

Farmers
Bank

Familr ~e~ to suicide pact
TERRELL, 1\wa - A fonner Southern Baptist minister, possibly
fearful of financial ruin and imprisonment, apparently signed a
suicide pact with hla crippled wife and two daughters, then shot them
and torched his boule before killing himlelf, authorities say.
The bodies of Ralph A. Simpson, 57, his partially jlaralyzed wife,
. Mildred, 50, and their daughters, Pattie, 12, and Rebecca, 17, were
found slde-by-elde on the Southern Baptist minister's bed Monday
when flnflghters arrived at the one-story frame house, investigators
.
said.

Representative Hinson will resign
JACKSON, Mila.- RepubUcan Party officials say Rep. Jon Hinson,
who Will IIITe8led last week on attempted sodO!Il)' charges and who
reportedly hiU1 decided to resign, should leave office as quickly as
possible so hla IIUctellaor can be selected.
Hinson, 311, cbeckl!d Into a Washington-area hospital Thursday after
entering an innot'ent plea to a charge of attempted sodomy. He was
arrested by Capitol pollee Wednesday after being found In a restroom
of a ~anal offll!e building with Harold Moore, 28, of axon Hill,
Md.

Cool weather hurts orange crop ·
LOS GATOS, Calif.- Weather that W8811'1 too hot produced an enormous crop of onqes In California this year, but about 40 percent ol
them are hudly bigger than golf balls, a state official says.
In normal yean, a hot spell caUBeS nearly half the oranges to fall
from the trees when they are still small, leaving the rest grow to
marketable alze'.
But thla aeuon there was no such hot spell. The fruit can't be left on
the trees becaule it will sap the trees' strength for the coming growing
season. So the grower has to pay to have the oranges picked, even If he
can't market them, Baker said.
'I

Your Community Owned Bank

..

Whming Ohio lottery number
CLEVELAND - The winning number chosen Monday in the Ohio
lottery's dall11arne "The Number" wf11718.
The lottery reported earnlngl of Pf8,3'16.50 from the money
W8fleM. Lottery offtclalll&amp;id sales were f92f,063.110. Holders of winning ticteta are entiUed to share f(l71,fl'l.

FDIC

Rain chancing to snow, windy and colder tonlght. Lows in the upper
:108. Snow Dlll'rlel, windy and c:older Wednelday with temperatW'I!I
falling to 15-:10 by evening. Chance ol precipitation near 100 percent
tonig~t and 80 percent Wednelday. Winds W!!sterly :»-30 mph loni&amp;ht.
El:l lrdOidoJI'vi-t- TbUI'Idaythrough8a~ : Mostlyfalr
through the period. Cold 'I'hurlclay with hlcha In the teens and I~ S
belowto10above. Wanner Friday and Saturday. Hl&amp;hiZ-35. Lowi 1&amp;20.

·~

Auditor Frank said, "It is gratifying
to finally receive confinnation of my
actions in thia important matter. It
remains extremely · important to
maintain the authority of the county
budget commission in this area, as
the various townships and villages
are the large fund-providers for this
health board; and unless firm control is maintained over ~ expenditures, our local government
bodies will be completely drained
financially.
"As long as I am on the county
budget commission, I shall continue
to help the townships and villages
keep a tight rein on expenditures
which deny their own ability to
maintain needed services."

'

An ordinance changing sewer tap · Pomeroy, the pwnping capacity
fees was adopted by Middleport would be 4,250 gallons per minute,
Village Council Monday night.
and with Mason, the capacity would
Given a third reading the· or· be 6,000 gallons per !IDnute.
dinance provides for ffell of $125 for
He said the village has enough
four inch taps, $400 for six Inch taps, equipment available to fight a major
and$1100 for elgbt Inch tap8.
fire providing the ~ater sqpply is
Mayor Fred Hoffman reported he available. It was Mayor Hoffman's
has made application for Rural suggestion that the proposal along
Conununlty Fire Protection funds. with cost involved be considered by
Tbe amount, he said, with matching council.
funds from the funds, would be
Milton Hood and Carroll Cleland
$5,400. It would be used for hose met with council to discuss water
and valves. He reported he has ap- drainage problems on Mill St. Hood
pUed for the past several years, but said he has been in contact with the
the village has never been given a Meigs County Conunissioners and
grant.
had a tentative appopent with the
A letter was read from Middleport Meigs County engineer Tuesday. At
Fire Chief Jeff Darst regarding im- least two council members will join
provements to the water system in Hood, Cleland and the engineer.
the business section. Darst noted the
Council approved the purchase of
current pumping capacity is 2,250 two new tires at $237.78 each for the
gallons per minute, an insufficient viUage grader. It was voted to ad·
amount to contain a major fire. He ·vertlse an old village truck for sale.
said by activating mutual aid with

The mayor's report showed
receipts of $3,575 for January. Clerk
Jon Buck read a letter from Ashland
Oil advising of a two cent a gallon increase on all grades of gasoline.

problems. It was also decided that
Second Ave. at Mill Street will be
double yellow lined when the
weather pennits. Attending were
Mayor Hoffman, Clerk Buck, and
Councihnen Marvin Kelly, Carl
The condition of the levee and the Horky. ,William Walters, JaCk Saterosion beneath were discussed. . terfield, A. L. King, and Dewey HorCouncil will reconsider both ton.

Prime lending rate goes down·
NEW YORK (AP) - Morgan
Guaranty Trust Co., the nation's fif·
th-largest bank, Monday lowered its
prime lending rate one-half percentage point to 19 percent, the
rate's lowest level In two months.
other major banks continued to
keep the interest charged their most
creditworthy corporate customers
at 19.S percent, a level that spread
throughout the industry a week ago.
Some smaller, regional banks are

quoting rates below 19 percent.
Since peaking at 2J.S percent in
late December, the prime rate has
not fallen as quickly as some other
short~term interest rates, although
dellialld for bank loans has dropped· .
sharply, and the cost of borrowing:
fqr the banking industry has fallen.
Tbe last time the prime rate was
at 19 percent at a major U.S. bank ·
was Dec. 10.

Doctor charges
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - An
Ohio doctor says his due process
rights were violated when he was
dismissed from Veterans Memori~l
Hospital in Pomeroy last week
without a chance to defend himlelf.
Dr. Nonnan J . Ehlinger of
Pomeroy requested a temporary
restraining order from U.S. District
Judge John D. Holschuh in Colwnbu.s on Monday.
Ehlinger is seeking the order
against the hospital; Lewis D. Telle,
the hospital's chief of staff; and
Walter Scott Lucas, the hospital's
administrator.
In his suit, Ehlinger said he and
'!lille were the only two surgeons at
the hospital. Ehlinger charged tllat
Telle wanted a monopoly on the
hospital's surgical practice.
Hospital officials said Ehlinger's
dismissal stemmed from alleged improper treatment of patienta, court
recorda showed.
Ehlinger is seeking $IS inlllion in
damages.

Early rock 'n' roll singer dies

Brown's opinion issued last Qco.
Iober 30, supports Auditor Frank's
position in that the Attorney General
states "... it ill the county budget
commission, and not the board of
health, that fixes the aggregate appropriation for the .general health
district. There is no statute which
gives the board of health an absolute
entitlement to all funds appropriated by the county budget
commission. Rather, the statutes
grant to the county budget commission cOntinued authority over the

funds ... The budget commission,
however, has no duty to approve any
such transfers."
The attorney general further
states that the fees generated by the
health department are to be .used
only in accordance with purposes set
forth when the authority to collect
the fees was given. The health
department is not free to transfer
these funds to any area they choose.
The opinion states, "Money derived
from these fees (food services) may
not be reappropriated to ' pay
salaries of any board of health employees unless such employees were
involved in the inspection or licensing of food service operations.••
After reviewing the opinion,

.Coun'Cil adopts sewer tap fee changes

Coli and Ravenna Pollee U. Jerry Dietrich swore out affidavits Identifying individual pickets aa violators of Portage County Con:unOn
Pleas Judge Joeeph Kainrad's picketing orders.

last swnmer.

According to reports, health
department had threatened legal ac·
lion to support its claim.

.

rights vio18ted

WASHINGTON- Gen. David C. Jones has survived a campaign by
some Republican conservatives to oust him as chainnan of the Joint
Ollefs of Staff.
Defenae S«retary Caspar Weinberger told Tbe AaBociated Press on
Monday that President Reagan bas accepted hia recommendation that
Jones complete hla tenn, due to end In a Uttle more than 18 months.
Some conservative· RepubUcans who backed Reagan for the party's
presidential nomination sought to make Jones an ilaue aalong ago as

of the County Budget Commission.

Ohio Attorney General, William J.
Brown, recently ilaued a formal
opinion upholding and ratifying actions of Meigs County Auditor,
Howard E. Fraiilt, relating to
charges that Auditor Frank had im·
properly withheld transfers of funds
in a 1978 dispute with the Meigs
County Health Department.
In July ol1978, board member, Dr.
Lewis Telle, had alleged that the
requested increases in salaries for
the then assistant administrator,
Jean Lyons, and tben sanitarian,
Gary Aspin, were properly payable
by transfers from income accounts
generated by the health department.
Auditor Frank maintained transfers
of that nature required the approval

Monday at a mus picket Une at Ravenna High School by about 100

Weather
\t~!mber

15 Cents

A Mul1imecU• Inc. Newspaper

Brown backs Auditor Frank

HARLINGEN, Texu - Bill Haley, who skyrocketed to fame with
what wu CCIII8idered the first big rock 'n' roU hit and faded Into obICW'ity u {1118 crowned Elvl.!l Presley king ol the new era, baa died,
appanntly olalieart attack.
Haley'a "Rock Around the Clock" blared from jukeboxes In the
19501 aa teal~ dl.!lcovered a new beaJ and a new, defiant Identity.
Frlendll and pollee In thll Rio Grande VaUey town where Haley lived
In aeml-.ecJUIIon for the p8ll several years said the man credited with
Inspiring the term "rock 'n' roU" died a private man, perhapt1lonely
and cqnfUBed.
.

We will .not be open for
business on Mon., Feb. 16th
in observance of
President's Day.

1 section, 10 pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, FeSruary 10, 1981

copyrlthiiCI ""

992-2971

FoGG 'Stamps Welcome

plan to keep funds locally and the State Department ol
Education has approved these actlo118.
Preceding the passing of the resolutioll8 by the board
last night, Supt. David L. Gleason who originaily ·
proposed the plan for keeping the monies locally
showed slides of the Salem Center, Rutland, Bradbury
and junior high school pofuting up ihe need for more
local funds to make needed repairs. Following the ae- .
lion by the board, a supportive letter from the Meigs
Local Teachen Association, signed by David Bowen,
was presented.
APPROVE REQUEST
The board approved a request by Treasurer Jane
Wagner that she be pennitted to secure an advance
draw from the county auditor: Jeffrey Holter, Susan
Kohn and Kathleen Manlcke were added to the substitute teachers· liSt and Bonnie Fisher and Charles
Holliday were given professional leave to attend a
meeting at Ohio University on Feb. 23.
. (Continued on page 10)

en tine

at

Jones survives conservative tide

POMEROY PASTRY SHOP

lit FLOOR - NOTIONS DEPT.

•

strikinl! teachen. The arrests came after school Superintendent Jim

RbER YOUR

mlllage witllln the diatrict.
Tbe State Department of Education will have to approve the measure allowing the district to keep part of
the millage within the dlatrlct.
The time schedule for the board in processin_g the
plan to secure the !IDlllon dollars as outlined last night
states that the board must notify the county auditor of
its intentions 120 days before electi.on, the board of
elections 90 days prior to the election and the State
Department of Education 60 days prlor to the election.
The State Department of Education does not approve
or disapprove requests for securing funds in this manner until the first steps have been taken involving the
county·auditor and board of elections.
It was reported that a bonding flrrn which has been
working with the district will receive a flat rate of $100
if the issue ill turned down by voters or $1.75 for each
$I,OOO involved in the ilaue if it is passed.
H. C. Niehoff of the bonding company recently told
the board that some 25 school districts have. used the

of

taldng action towards keeping the money in the
dtstrict, but were concerned that the time period be
llmiled to the nine yean remaining on the bond issue
now existing and not extended over any longer period.
Auditor Frank said be would only certify the lunda
for the nine year period and his comment was incorporated Into the reaolutiona passed so that there
would be no mimp in the time perind.
Last night was the final meeting that the board'could
take action towards paaaing the resolutions and getting
them to the county auditor for processing so that the
laaue will be on the ballot in the June primary elections. Even though there Ia no tax increase, dlatrlct
voters will have to approve the measure. It was
brought out that the voters are going to be paying fowmllla for the next nine years whether or not they approve the measure and as a result voters should cast
ballots in favor of keeping a large portion of the

RAVENNA, Ohio - As their strike becomes the longest in Ohio
history today, some teachers in Ravenna found themselves under
IIJ're8t and in trouble with the law .
Four lltrftlng teachers and one non-striking teacher were arrested

IJELIGHTS

216 E. Main

All board memben indicated they are In favor

Teacher strike longest.in history

hours.

.... -.·. .·. .'

.,

and ordered deported, was detained
in Iran today after a problem with
her exit papers delayed her departure, the U.S. State Department said
today.
Western reporters in Tehran
reported that Mrs. Dwyer had boarded an Iranair flight for Vienna.
Austria. But in Washington, State
Department spokeswoman Sue Pittman said "We have been informed
by the swiss that she has n~ left, she
is apparently still at the airport."

yean of the bond ilaue.

Homeward bound
American writer Cynthia B.
Dwyer left Iran Tuesday aboard an
Iranian airliner bound for the Peralan Gulf oil sbeikdom of Dubal and
was to go on from there to Switzerland.
I
A Swiss Embasay official in
Tehran, Flavlo Meronl, and the
Swiss Fo~lgn Office in Bern confinned that the American woman
whose departure Monday was
delayed by Iranian officials finally
got away nearly 24 houn later.
Western reporters in Tehran
reported that the plane left Tehran
2~ houri behind schedule for the
two-hour filght to ·Dubai, one of the
United Arab Emirates 700 miles to
the south.

SEEKING VALENTINES- cu.temen were buay
Mallday looltlng over the many vale•Unes being of·

.,

'\

•

feted for purcbue. Tbey were maldng
they cbuee wujlUII the "rl&amp;bt" one.

IDil'e

the -

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