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                  <text>r-------------------------1

D-12- The Sunday Times-Seollpel, Sunday. Feb. 10. 1980
The Soviet Union sent its third
Lt. Col. P. Posovick, followed
astronaut, Maj. A. G. Nikolayev, mNikolayev tntu orbit and radio conto orbit&gt;on Aug. I, 1962. The next day
tact was established between the
the fourth Russian space explorer.
two s ~ac enaft

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~al •••
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Today
••
••
By
.
••
Realtor
•••
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••
TI-IINK TWICE BEFORE RENTING OUT
•
••
we
••
e
two
••
a
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a
•

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CEstate
Willi~

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•4!.

•e
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(..t'ltt'r' uf upiniun an· .,.,.,, ou ~H' d . Tht·y shou ld be less
than 300 words Ion~ 1ur su il J•·•·l to n·&lt;luf'lion hy tht• editor I
and must he signed with thl' si~m·•··s addrt'" · Nam&lt;'s may
ht• withht•ld upon publication . llowt·nr, on n•qut·st,
names will bt• disdos!'d. 1..-th'rs should ht• in good tastt·,
addressing issues, not pt•r sona litit·s. '

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Portland, Ohio 45770
F~bruary 8, 1980

T. Leadingham

The bomb has dropp{&gt; d. You are raid to transfer out of stale posthaste . Your first quest ion is - " Sha II
sell our home or rent if out?"
On the plu s side, you count the money in from rent which will help
pay off the mortgage plus a litt le extra on the side for prof i t. Sounds
good. but every coin has
sides
To Keep the house rented , you'll have to pay advertising costs, or
tees and commissions to broker . Maintenance cost s take a bi te out of
th e rental income. Each tim e there is a turnover it wi l l have to be
clea ned out and redec orated . A vacan c y can result in
loss that will
take years to recover . A big apartment house can absorb some u noc ·
cupied units, but when your house stand s idle, the costs co ntinue with
nothing coming i n . And, if you are gi fted with a non · paying rena nf. it
may tak e six months to evict him .
Dollar WISe, you are better off se l ling a single family home and us·
ing the money to move IJP to a bigger and better home for your family .

If th er e is anything we can do to help you in th e field of real es tate
please phone or drop in at LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE, Sl2 Second
Ave ., Gallipolis. Phon e 446-7699 . We ' re here to h el p.

Dear Editor :
I like the way the Sentinel
publishes the doings of the Meigs
County commissioners.
•
Constant reference is made in
•
•
these proceedings and at other
places m the Sentinel about Federal
•
State program;; in Meigs Counand
•
•
ty. On Jan. 29 mention was made of
the land and housing development
•
plan being funded by $12,000 federal
•
funds
and $4,000 our money. I
e ·
e thought we have had several of these
•
development plans in the last few
•
years. On Feb. 6 the commissioners
•
talked about WlN and EPSDT .
What's that• I have heard about the
648 Board. From tiine to lime I see
where some specialist has been
hired for some agency. I see ad-

•••
•

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••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

Smith Buick-Pontiac Presents

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Lrn

1979
GRAND PRIXS
• 7,000 to 12,000 low miles
• Bu cket seats
a AM·F M Rad io

SAVE$$$

1979
Cadillac Sedan DeVil

[!J 1979
CUTLASS SUPREMES
ee,ooo to 12.000 miles
• Good color se lection

SAVE$$$

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vertisements for personnel to fill
jobs in agencies I never heard of. I
have heard about programs I can't
remember the name of.
What I would like to see is a complete list of all the things that the
Federal and State Government is
doing for people in Meigs County and
for whom they do it. They ought to
list all the personnel working on the
projects.
Maybe all the things going on are
useful. If they are and are well
managed there's no reason for not
putting it together for all to see. The
reason I want to know is because
every three months and every April
5 I am expected to pay aimost confiscatory taxes to support these
programs. You don't have tabe rich
to pay taxes and just because you
pay your bills is no reason to be considered rich. I am wondering where
President Carter is going to gel
those billions he soothingly rolls off
his tongue for increased defense
spending, to placate Israel and
Egypt, for his school program for
low achievers, to give Pakistan, etc.,
etc.
I think we ought to quit playing
politics with our billions and make
the money buy something. If
someone likes all these programs
and likes to pay for them then stand
up for them and give the details. I
don't see how I get much benefit out
of some of them. -Gayle Price.

Finished in Ebony bla ck with
matching top &amp; interior . Gen
lea ther int . with mo st
Cadillac 's
opt io nal
eq uip .
America's fin est auto .

Economical V-6 e ngine, auto.,
P .S., P.B., bea utiful Georgian
silver with contrasting c laret int.
Local owner . Only 583 miles . This
car same as new.

1980
Chev. Monza H.B.
Auto., P.S., radio , beautif ul

1977
·ford LTD 4 Dr.

metal lic hrown ex t . with con·
trasting came l tan ~t. 376 act ual
mil es. Local owner, new Buick

Blk . with blk . vinyl top, burg. int.,
well equipped with very low
miles. One owner .

1972
Cadillac Cpe. DeVille

1978
Dodge Monaco 4 Dr.

Ne w Bu ick Limited trade in .
Almost new Mi che lon tires , 53,000.
You mu st see, loca lly owned car
to believe it. Like new.

Silve r with matching int. A well
eq uipped automobile with only
18,000 mil es.

1979 Chev.
Malibu Sta. Wgn.
White . This wagon is load ed with
opt ions . Has 9,000 miles &amp; looks
like new .

GALUPOUS - Zinn's Landing
announced Saturday the addition of
William F. (Bill) Simonis to its staff
as general manager.
Mr. Simonis is a current resident
of Dayton, but is looking forward to
moving to Gallipolis in the near
future. Upon graduation from Carey
High School, Carey, Ohio, Mr.
Simonis entered the U. S. Navy as a
Motorman Third Class . After
discharge from the Navy, Mr.
Simonis formed his own used car
business in Carey, Ohio.
He also owned and operated Bill
Simonis Chevrolet in Sycamore,
Ohio and Bill Simonis Chevrolet-

1980
Buick Regal 2 Dr.

at y

• •

1

Simonis named
to linn's post

IN PRE-OWNED AUTOMOBILES

Peeps.

(USPS 145-960)

A Gallipolis Diary
ed .
BY J.SAMUELPEEPS
"The (Ohio) Peepses are from a
GALLIPOUS-The Old French Ci- newspaper family. It was logical
ty, the Midwest, the Far West, and that Sam Peeps went into newspaper
two Peeps colwnns make up the en- work after graduating from college
tire output of "Peeps Diary in the in Kentucky. After knocking around
Arlington (Va.) News for Jan. 31.
· a bit, he got a chance to return to his
Thomas de Baggio, editor, called native Gallipolis, according to his
it "incredible-i!ven for a coin- sister. He lnauguiated his ~ps colcidence" that there should be two UIIUt in 1942 . ... For many Of the most
Peeps colwnns published 400 miles recent years he's been a professor at
apart. De Baggio refers to himself Rio Grande Cullege near Gallipolis.
as 01' Peeps, tells of the clipping After be retired a few years ago, he
from last December's Times- wrote a history of the college.
Sentinel, and describes the Ohio
"Eastern culture is not unknown
Peeps logo as "another Peeps, bare- in Gallipolis, Mary Peeps points out.
ly visible, stared out from the page. 'The town has a McDonald's and a •
This one had no cockeyed look. Two movie . house and a department
eyes, only half visible, peeped over store,' she said.''
the edge of... was it the earth?"
Can't you imagine those readers
"There is another Peeps," de Bag- visualizing Gallipolis with three
gio continues. "He is no relation . . .
buildings towering above the
"Now the question is this: How Midwest plains?
does a 71-year-old reporter. . .In
DeBaggio says the Virginia Peeps
Gallipolis, Ohio, find out about an ol'
was born in 1972 in the Delaware
Curmudgeon in Arlington, Va.? The Spectator, but was transplanted to
answer is : Mary D. Peeps, sister of Arlington "as something more than
the Ohio Peeps, who lives In Arl- a buffoon but less than a Jack Anderington.
son."
"Well, 01' Peeps"-that's the
"The remarkable coincidence,"
Virginian-"wanted to find out
he says, "that brought two men to
something about this old French Ciconceive the same name for a colty that has been around sin~ 1790."
UIIUt of personal bivia is probably as
There follows a description of the simple as a respect for Samuel
Midwest and West all the way to
Pepys, the English diarist whose
Hawaii.
book made the list of classic best"So where is Gallipolis, Mary sellers. The diary was gossipy and
Peeps? The nearest big city is Hun- refl~ted the times in the way both
tington, W. Va., she said. Although
01' Peeps and his Ohio counterpart
she has lived in Arlington the last
found useful. A play on words with
few years, she was born In
the famous writer's name and conGallipolis. She knows the place. She
cept of peepingll into an intimate
says the natives pronounce the name
world completed the modern crea'Galla Police'.
tion of the character Peeps."
"The name is French, but it is not
just one of those French Ohio River
GRANDMA GWOOD1sdiary: May
towns. ·The French who settled there
9, 1909-Lock and Dam 26 is being
were refugees from the French
constructed at Chambersburg (Did
Revolution. 'They were the cooks,
not last long). May 31, 1909-Col.
the candlemakers,and the
Vance made an address to Illembers
wigmakers to the King,' she explainof the Grand Army of the Republic in
the M. E. Church this Decoration
day. The Army marched up to the
cemetery for the ceremony. Sept. 12,
Buick, in Loudonville, Ohio.
From 1970 to 1975 Mr. Simonis was 1909-Will and I delayed our planned
trip to Louisville due to low water.
associated with Medick-Krieger The river rose· one foot today, not .
Ford of Columbus as a sales
manager, and Lyle Chevrolet of enough for boats to nm.
Sept. 21, 1909-We took the
Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio as a used car·
Greenland
at Gallipolis on the 19th
manager. Before coming to Zion's
and
arrived
at Cincinnati this mornLanding, Mr. Simonis was employed
ing
at
10
in
time
to board the Lizzie
by Boathouse On the River in
Bay
for
Louisville.
The water was so
Carrollton, Ohio as l)larina
low,
the
Greenland
had to float part
manager.
of the way.

CLEARANCE SALE

WOMEN~S

DRESSES
lj2PRICE
Our entire stock of
women's fall and winter
dresses reduced for
quick clearance. A good
selection of solid colors
and patterns. One and
two piece styles. Hurry
in for best selection.

21 political

figures may .
get jury call

Fire kills· four
WAVERLY, Ohio (AP ) - An
overheated stove apparently
touched off a blaze at a house
trailer near Beaver in which four
members of a Pike County family
died, officials said.
The victims were identified as
Bill Anderson, 25; his wife, Trilla,
25; and their children, Bill Jr., 6;
and Angie, 3.
. ;nae blaze broke.out shortly af&gt;ter l a.m. Sunday'. The home-wii$
engulfed in flames when fire
units arrived at the scene, officials said.

· Fatal snow ride

CHICAGO (AP) - Members of
the striking Chicago Teachers
Union voted SWKiay to approve a
compromise agreement that
would save teacher jobs and
cleared the way for classes to
resume in the nation's thirdlargest schoOl dlsbict.
Officials said schools would be
open Monday. Earlier, union
leaders voted to accept the
agreement with the city school
district.

Public school teachers have
been off the job for two weeks, af.
feeling classes for 473,000 studen-

ts.

REGUlAR PRICES

All well known makes such

as Kay Windsor · Forever
Young · Toni Todd · Ftvt·
rerby e · Happenings · Vick i
VauQhn
Teena Paioe
l ucy Jr. · Lady laura ·
Lady Windsor.

'

(Continued on page 8)
BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
At least 21 political figures and
union officials from Louisiana and
Texas are going before federal
grand juries this week to discuss the
FBI's S&lt;H!Blled Brilab investigation
- a "scam" involving alleged kickbacks to influence insurance purAt least 20 persons were killed in
chases by government agencies in
weekend traffic accidents on Ohio
four states.
Among those called to testify are roads by SWlday evening, the stale
Louisiana Gov. Edwin Edwards and Highway Patrol said.
The victims included three New
Texas House Speaker Bill Clayton.
Jersey
residents killed in a tw&amp;-ear
Not all the public officials are
accident
on the Ohio Turnpike near
believed to be targets of the inin
Fulton County, troopers
Berea
vestigation.
said.
Brilab is the FBI code name for an
The patrol counts weekend traffic
undercover investigation, or scam,
from 6 p.m. Friday to midfatalities
in which agents used the services of
a. twice-convicted · California : in- -nightSWKiay, .
The dead:
surance consultant to make bribe
SUNDAY
money available to labor and goverSPRINGFIELD TOWNSHIP
nment officials responsible for inMary E. Pinkelton, 57, of Sprillgfleld
surance contracts, sources said.
Clayton has acknowledged ToWilllhip, in a three-ear accident on
receiving "a stack of $100 bills," but a Hamilton County road.
CLEVELAND- Leah Murray, 17,
he denied it was a bribe. An
of
Lynchburg, Va., in a one-car acOklahoma state Senate leader also
cident
on the Ohio Turnpike in
was given $5,000 from agents posing
Cuyahoga
County.
as insurance company represenBEREA
- William Gear, 41 ; Sue
tatives.
Astor,
28;
Stanley Astor, 9, all of
The investigation also involves an
Burlington,
N.J., in a two-ear acattempt to obtain more favorable
immigration treatment for reputed cident on the Ohio Turnpike in
New Orleans crime syndicate boss Fulton Cuunty.
AKRON - JolmA. Woloch,l7,and
Carlos Marcello, the New York
James Gay, 15, both of Akron, in a
Times said today.
Brilab is the s~ond major Wl- one-car accident on a rural road in
dercover FBI investigation to sur- Swrunit CoWJty.
WARREN- Lori A. Lutseck, 23,
face within two weeks. Both have
of
Youngstown, in a two-car acbeen reported before any charges
cident
on Ohio 304 in Trwn bull
were leveled by the government +
CuWJty.
drawing sharp criticism. ·
SA11JRDAY
"We're kind of In the first stages' of
ORRVILLE - Christopher Sam- ·
McCarlhyil!m," said Senate Ethics
Committee member David Pryor, sa, 17, Laura Tinney, 14, and Debbie
D-Ark., whose home. state is among Bowen, 15, all of Orrville, and Karen
King, 17, of Rural Route, in a carthose involved in Brilab.
train collision in Wayne County.
The other probe, called Abscam
WDI - Herbert R. Enell, 18, an
for Arab scam, allegedly involves exchange student from Sweden
eight members of Congress as well living inLodl, In a one-car accident
as businessmen and politicians in on a Medina County road.
several states who took money from
MEDINA- Bernard Baker, 38, of
undercover FBI agents purporting Homerville, in a one-car crash on a
to buy influence - for special im- Medina street.
migration treatment and inTOLEDO - Kenneth Keating and
vestments - on behalf of Arab in- Michael Rodregus, 19, both of
vestors.
Toledo, in in a one-car accident on a
Sen. Howard Baker of Tennessee, city street.
a Republican presid\!lltlal canWARREN - Howard E. Burnett,
didate, said SWJday on the ABC 53, of Southington, in a one-car crash
News program "Issues and An- on0hio534 in Trwnbull CoWlty.
swers"that the Abscam disclosures
FINDLAY - Robin E. Arare a "searing sword In my side," , debaugh, 21, of Findlay, in a one-car
raising questions from voters about accident on Ohio '¥1 in Harding Counthe integrity of all members of ty.
Congress. Baker has not been imCLEVELAND - Antonio Redd, 5,
plicated.
of Cleveland, a pedestrian hit by a
car on a city street.
OS(WOD- Thomas B. Kunk, 21,
of Yorkshire, in an accident on Ohio
705 in Darke Coun~y.

Meg cAmberger, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Paul Amberger, Syracuse,
was crowned the Southern High
School bas\letball sweetheart in
ceremonies held Frl&lt;lllY night during
half·tjme of the reserve gap~e.
Carl WoUe croWned Miss Amberger and presented her with a
bouquet of yellow roses and a heart·
· shaped box: of candy_ She was escor·
ted by John Davia.
Six senior gli-18 competed for .the
honor With the selection being made
throUgh a ·combination of studept
vote and money ,collected tbrpugh ' ' ·
the penny-a-vote system. The other.
contestants 'l'ere Julle Gibbi!, cArrie
Guinther, Beth Huffmaq, LOrna
Giindley, and Melissa Ihie.

Junior sizes 3 through 15
Misses sizes 6 through 20
Half sizes 12 112 through 24'12

All SALES FINAL
•NO EXCHANGES
•NO REFUNDS
•NO lAYAWAYS

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

MONDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1980

LBERFELDS lN
.,'

MEROY
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couldn't do in the season's first contest in Iowa, on Jan. 21. Carter won
there two-to-one.
"For us, in a way, it was a fight for
survival," said Peter Meade, Kennedy's Maine campaign coordinator.
And Kennedy did achieve that
goal, surviving to challenge Carter
again in New Hampshire.
"So we will head to New Hampshire and all the other states, confident of what the outcome will be,"
Kennedy said.
Carter, at Camp David, Md.,
thanked his supporters and workers
for the victory, and said he was
sorry he hadn't been able to campaign. "I regret that international
circwnstances made it impossible
for me to travel to Maine during this
campaign,'' he said.
White House press secretary Jody
Powell said &lt;;arter almost certainly
will remain in Washington
throughout the New Hampshire
campaign.
Kennedy issues almost daily
demands that Carter join the cam-

20 killed in
Ohio traffic

SUS cage sweetheart chosen

15.00 lllROUGH '60.00

1

SEE HARLAND l'WOODY" WOOD, BOB BRICKLES.
GENE JOHNSON OR GREG SMIDi

AUGUSTA, Maine (AP) Democratic town caucuses still to be
President Carter has beaten Sen.
tallied.
Edward M. Kennedy in their first
California Gov. Edmund G. Brown
New England contest, but the Jr. ran third, with 14 percent of the
challenger claimed satisfaction in
vote, and said that represented a
second place as the campaign for the
takeoff for his campaign.
Democratic presidential nomination
Kennedy sought to minimize his
moved next door to New Hampshire.
loss, describing the outcome as a
The president's men said it will be
standoff and saying Carter had been
difficult to duplicate their Maine vic- expected to win handily.
tory in New Hampshire, site of the
Handily is in the eye of the
first presidential primary election
beholder. The margin was handy
two weeks from Tuesday.
enough for Carter's spokesmen, who
But the victory Carter scored Sun- . emphasized the fact that it was
day is sure to be an asset in that
gained in the home region of the
campaign. There is no momentum in
senator from Massachusetts.
defeat, for all Kennedy's claims that
Still, Kennedy avoided disaster by
the president did not match exkeeping it close + something he
pectations in Maine's Democratic
town meetings.
Carter gained 45 percent of the
Maine vote to Kennedy's 39 percent,
with results from about 50

OK compromise

1979
LeMans 4 Dr.

P .S., P. B., air cond., rally wheels, auto. trans.
Low mileage on this little beauty. You better hurry!

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Carter beats Kennedy
in Maine caucus vote

BOTKINS, Ohio (AP) - A
Botkins man was killed Sunday
afternoon when a snowmobile he
was driving overturned in a lGfoot drainage ditch in a hayfield
in this Shelby County community,
officials said;
Donald C. Brown, 49, was
pronounced dead by the Shelby
County coroner after the 1:50
p.m. accident. Apassenger on his
snowmobile, Andrea Gore, 21, of
South Amherst, was reported in
stable condition at Wilson
Memorial Hospital in Sidney.
A sheriff's . department
spokesman said Brown apparently failed to see the 30-feetwide ditch Wltil he was too close
to turn away.

/

1979 Pontiac Firebird Esprit

VOL. XXVIII NO. 210

enttne

Scores second big victory

ELBERFELD$

Two-tone burgundy paint. Has
auto., P.S., P . B., air cond . This
car is immaculate with very low
mil es.

•

•

EXTENDED FORECAST
lhrottgb Friday: A
clumce of snow nurrtes·ln tile nul'
tbeast Wednesday, otbet:'wlle fair
'111111 ooollhroaglltlle period. 111gb
In tile upper !01 111111 low 308.
Overnlgllt loWI 10 to 15.
W~day

:::;::::::~:~:::::::::;::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::~::::;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;.

Weather
Variable cloudiness with a chance
of snow flurries ~ght. Low in the
teens. Partly cloudy Tuesday_ High
in the low 30s. The chance of sn~w Is ·
30 percent tonight and 20 percent
Tuesday.

a mere $34.50. Almost overwhelmed by the size of the
novelty box is four-year-old Ann Riffle, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Charles (Chuck) Riffle. Ann only got to hold
the valentine for this photo and then it was returned to
the shelves of her dad's store .

VALENTINE DAY - Thursday is the day to
"remember" with some show of affection -and we've
come a long way from the penny valentine of
yesteryear. In today's inflationary times , you can purchase this five poWld valentine, filled with goodies, for

Dr. John Strauss to head
new orthodontic departmentClinic Administrator Robert E.
Daniel announced today the opening
of a Holzer Clinic Department of Orthodontics.
The- orthodontic Department is
located at Holzer's new Sycamore
Branch in the old Gallipolis Clinic
building at the corner of Fourth Ave.
and Sycamore St. in Gallipolis. The
new department Is headed by Dr. E.
John StraUS!j, a dentist specializing
in orthodontics, who joined the staff
of Holzer Clinic Ltd. last fall.
A native of Pomeroy, Dr. Strauss
joined the clinic after compleling his
orthodontic residency training and
receiving his Masters Degree at
Ohio State University College of
Dentistry in June, 1979.
After gradualing fnm Pomeroy
Higli School in 1964, he served in the
United States Army and received his
dental degree from Ohio State
University College of Dentistry in
1974. Dr: Strauss tlien completed two
years in the private practice of dentistry in Beverly, Ohio from 1975 to
I 'In, prior to entering his Orthodontic training. While in Beverly,
he was involved iri community activities as a member of the Lions

.Club, Volunteer Fire Department,
and was elected to a four year term
on the City Council.
A member of the American Dental
Society and American Association of
Orthodontics, Dr. Strauss resides in
the Cheshire, Ohio area.
Orthodontics is a branch of denllstry concerned with correcting and
preventing irregularities of the teeth
and poor bite. Most important,
corr~tly related teeth and proper
bite increaseS dental health by
making it easier to brush and floss,
and by reducing gum clisease.
Other benefits can be an improvement of digestion by being able
to chew food properly, an improvement in some speech dlfficulties due to poorly aligned teeth,
and sometimes the most rewarding
is the improvement in appearance,
and with it, self-eonfidence.
Joining Dr. Strauss in the clinic's

MEET WEDNESDAY
The Pomeroy-Middleport Lions
Club will meet Wednesday at noon at
the Meigs lrm.

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new Department of Orthodontics are
dental assistants, Jayne. Wolfe and
Sandy Needs, and secretaryreceptionist, J o Wigglesworth. Appointments can be scheduled by
calling 446-5406.
Daniel indicated that Holzer
Clinic's new Outpatient Laboratory
will be the next major department
added to the branch. The new
laboratory is expected to begin
providing services by March 1.
Daniel said that the clinic was
pleased to be establishing the new
branch operation in the city proper
and suggested that additional
physician services will be opened in
the new facility in the future as
remodeling progresses.

~

Deputies
checking
vandalism
Meigs County sheriff's deputies
over the weekend investigated at
least two separate acts of vandalism.
According to the report, Joe Dale
Lawrence. Rt. 1, Cheshire, said
someone knocked out the windshield
of his .truck which was parked at a
local ta.vern.
Hilton Wolfe, Jr. Racine, reported
someone threw a brick Friday night
or early Saturday morning shattering windows at his body shop.
Deputies 1in_vestigated a hit--skip
that occUlTed Friday evening in
TUppe~ Plains.
According to the sheriff's department a vehicle owned by Margaret
Grossnickle, RD, Reedsville, was
parked at the Edwards residence in
trn! Arbaugh additon and was struck
by a vehicle driven by Timothy
Chaff~. 20, Rt. I, Reedsville. Chaffee failed' to stop and aslo failed to
notify the owner.
Chaffee was cited to Meigs County
Court on hit-skip rt.. in~es .

DENTAL Assistant, Sandy Needs, posltiolll! Lisa Sheets for an x-ray .to
be usfl&lt;l·in her orthodontic evaluation.
_

�..
2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Feb. II , 1980

74-48

Fort Frye bombards Eastern

JUMP SHOT - Derek Davis (11) lets fly with a
jump shot over the outstretched arms of Brett Mat-

GLUED BALL- As Eastern's Brian Bissell (12) fires from the corner .over Derek Davis (11) it appears his hand has run into some foreign
object. Due to a reflection in the flash of this action photo, it appears
Bissell is playing with a ball acnhored by a saucer or something of that
nature.

thews (20) during Eastern's 74-48 loss to Fort Frye
Saturday night. The Eagles' Joe Bowles (30) blocks out
Fort Frye's Brad Cannan (25).

Gallipolis drops 57-52 thriller at Portsmouth
Despite the loss of 6-6 senior center Jeff Cameron early in the first
quarter (with an apparently severe
ankle sprain), the Gallipolis Blue
Devlls battled the Portsmouth
Trojans on even terms for nearly
four quarters before losing a hardfought 5Hi2 decision Saturday night
in the PHS Field house.
After Cameron went out with 5: 07
remaillinl( in the first quarter,
GAHS was down 11-V. The Trojans
then raced to a 16-10 lead at the end
of the period. PHS extended its lead
to 34-22 on a W.footer by Marcus
Bendolf before the Devils narrowed
the gap to 34-25 at halftime. The
Devils controlled the battle of the
boarda 23-20 (including 15 offensive
rebounds), but hit only 9 of 34 field
goal attempts for a 26 percent in the
first half.
The Portsmouth margin was 10
TilE DAILY SENTINEL
(USPS 14S.MOI

~,~-~·~""·DEVOTED TO TilE

lN'I'ERESf OF

MEIGS-MASON AREA
ROBERT HOEFUtll
CltyEdllor
Pubtlmed dady u~pt Saturday by Tbe Ohlt
VaUey Publbblq Company. Mlllttmedlll, Inc.,

UJ Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio &amp;S?U. Bual.D81
Office Pbooe 9ft.. 2151. Ed11ortal Pbooe
ttz.USI.
Secood cluJ pottlge paJd at Pomeroy, Ohio.
N•tioDlll adv~rtblag ~prueotaUve, t.odoa
AuoelaWI, 3101 EucUd Av~ .• C\r.veland, Olllt
,_ Mll5.
·. ,
SablcrtpUOI ra&amp;e1 : Oellvtred by tarrier
· ~ where •vailable to «:ott per week. By Motor
•~ RGute wbere carrier aervite •t •taU..blt, Ooe

mo•dt. $3.10.

The Daily StoUDel, by maD in OIUo allll We~t
VlrJbdl, ODt year tute; Sl:r: moatbJ U7.5G;
tkree lllOilb '11.50. Elaewbere J'J8.011 ; Jlt

,..
• ~'
-r r'

"~,..

aaoa~ ttt.to;

:&lt;
... "

three moath.J ,11.08.

Tbe Auoclalal Prall II extluatv~ly codt.led
t.lbe UH for pu.bUC.Uoa of .U oew1 dispatcbce
r •' r eredl1*1 1o the aewl.-per and alto the local
I' ' r · DeWS aablilbed bereln.

points (36-26) when Bendolf went to
the bench with his fourth foul at the
6:09 mark in the third stanza.
From that point, the Devils outscored the Trojans 12-5. The Trojans
aided. their opponents by shooting 3
for !5 (20 percent) as the Devlls
slowly crept back into the contest.
The Blue Devils took the lead at
6:14 of the fourth periOd when Kent
Price ripped off a rebound of a
missed Bill Armstrong shot and put
it through the cords for a 42-41
Gallipolis advantage. The Devils led
by three pints twice (44-41 and 46-43)
as Armstrong led the offensive
surge.
However, the momentum of the
game changed following a Portsmouth timeout at 3:58. The Blue
Devils had outscored the Trojans 21!3 through the first 12 minutes of the
second half. The tide turned as the
Dick Hopkins-&lt;:oached team scored
the next six points.
Portsmouth took the lead for good
at 3:30 when Bendolf's 2()-footer
from the corner made the score 4746. A steal and layup by Doug Martin
(who came off tbe bench tO score
five fourth quarter points) made it
49-46. Boo Weaver, Greg Harrington,
and Armstrong each scored in the
tast three minutes.
Actually, the turning point came
with 2:18 left. PHS led 49-46. Martin
missed the first end of one-and-one,
but reserve center John Mitchell
banked in a rebound for a three&lt;
point lead. It was 52-50 with 48 seconds left. PHS then hit 5 of 7 free
throws in the final seconds.
Neither team shot particularly
well. The Trojans were 21 for 51
from the field for 41 percent. The
Devils were !8 of 56 for an ice-&lt;:old 3!

percent. In most other areas the
Devils outdid the opposition, as they
outrebounded the Trojans 41-36 and
GALLIPOLIS (52)
Player
Fg Fl PI Rb Tp
Niberl
3·7 1·3 2 12 7
Weaver
4·8 1·2 3 8 9
' Cameron
0·0 0·0 1 0 0
Armstrong
7·24 8·12 4 6 22
Ha r ringto n

3-10

2-2

4

3

8

Price
1·7 4·7 3 8 6
0·1 0·0 0 0 0
Roberts
Sk idmore
0·1 0·0 0 2 0
TOTALS
18·58 16·26 17 41 52
PORTSMOUTH (57)
Player
Fg Fl PI Rb Tp
McMahon
3·14 2·4 2 10 8
7·14 4·4 4 4 18
Bendolph
Wright
0·2 3·4 1 5 3
Kt. Wilburn
5-B
1·2 4 1 11
Kv . Wi lburn 1·4 0·0 4 7 4
Jackson
0·0 0·0 1 0 0
Mitchel l
3~ 5
0~0
1 7 6
Ma rc um

Martin
Johnson
TOTALS

0-0

0-0

1 ~1

3 ~6

1

1

0

1 0 5
0·3 2·2 2 · 1 2
21 ·51 15·22 21 36 37

Score by quarters :
Ga ll ipoli s
10 15 13 14

~ 52

16 18 7 16 .. 57

Portsmouth

Sunday's College

Basketball Scores
By The Associated Press

EAST
Duquesne 67, Pittsburgh 66
68

Northeastern 69 , New Hampshire

SOUTH

Va . Commonwealth
Birmingham 75
·

901

Ala .·

MIDWEST
Marquetle 80, Duke 77
Wayne, Neb. 76, Emporia St. 73
Far West

Gonzaga 73, St. Mary 's Calif. 12
W. New Mexico 82, W. Colorado 64
Weekend Sports Transactions
BY The Associated Press

BASKETBALL

National
Basketball Association

PHILADELPHIA

76ERS

··&gt;· ......___________
Waived Ai Skinner, guard.
.·:,·;.
,·,--------------------,-------------------- r--------------------.-------------------•'··
Wa1er
187,731.25 ringencies can only be ex·
. ,. ..
DEPARTMENT
ORDINANCE
SEWER
;&gt;ended upon appeal of two·
I' •• .:-'

f, • •

&lt;'
:.-:· ~

'r

·'' r

NO. 510
ANNUAL
APPROPRIATION
ORDINANCE
A RESOLUTION to

~~ mak e appropriations for
.: # current Expenses a nr1
~~ other Expenditures of the
r

Yillage of Pomeroy, State
j)f Ohio. during the fiscal
year ending December 31.

~980.

·. Section 1. BE IT
"RESOLVED by the Council
for the Village of Pomeroy ,
~tate of Oh io, That,
to
provide for the current ex·

penses and other ex penditures of the sai d
Village of Pomeroy duri ng
the fiscal year ending

December 31. 1980, the
following sums be and they
1re hereby se t aside and
appropriated as fo l lows,

YIZ :

, · Section 2. That there be
. appropriated fr om the
·GENERAL FUND
GENERAL
GOVERNMENTAL
SERVICES
MAYOR
personal
.,. Services
2,400 00
• otal For
Mayor · .
2,400.00
CLERK -C LERK·
TREASURER
Personal
Services
3,600 .00
total tor Clerk·
Clerk·Treasurer 3,600.00
SOLICITOR·
· LEGALADVISOR
personal
services
~.ooo . oo
t otal For
1 . Solicitor-Legal
· Advisor
3,000.00
•
I!!LECTIONS
Personal
1,000.00
services
Total For
1,000.00
• Elections
•
COUNCIL
Personal
· services
1..uo.oo
Total For
·, Council
·1,.wl .OO
. GENERAL DEPT.
Personal
6,000.00
· services
Supplies and
Materials
1,300.00
Other
18,000.00
Total For General
. Dept.
25,300.00
Total For General
.
, Governmental
' Services
36,7 40.00
'
SECURITY OF.
PERSONSANO
PROPERTY
POLICE

Per sonal
Ser v ices
Su pplies and
M ater ial s
Capital

MAINTENANCE
65,000.00
Per sonal
Servi ces
12.500.00
29,200.00
Supplies and
Materia ls
20.000.00
Outlay
7.000.00
Tot al For Sewer
Total f or Police
Mai ntenance
n soo.oo
Departmenl 101,200.00
ADMINISTRATI 0 N
PARKING METERS
- SEWAGE
Other
10,000.00
Personal
Tota l For Parking
Services
700.00
Meters
10.000 .00
Debt Serv ice
28,055.00
TRANSP.
Other
28,755.04
FACILITIES
Total For Sewer
STREET PAVING
(Revenue)
Personal
Fund
61 ,255.00
SerVices
33,000.00
Secti on 13. Tha t there be
Supplies and
Material s
15,000.00 appropriated from the
GENERAL
BOND
Capital
FUND
Outlay
1,500. 00 RETIREMENT
Other
12,000.00 Payment of
Principal
7,000 .00
Total For Street
Paving
61,500.00 Payment of
Interest
2,362.50
..
STREET
Total For General
REPAIRING
Bond Retirement
Total For Street
Fund
9.362.50
Repairing
61 ,500.00
ADDITIONAL
STATE HIGHWAY
FUNDS
DEPT.
Section 15. That there be
Personal
tram t he
2,000.00 appropriated
Services
FEDERAL REVENUE
3,000.00 SHARING
Other
FUND
Total for State
Highway Dept. 5,000.00 Capital
15,000.00
Outlay
To tal For State
14,500.00
Other
Highway Imp .
For Federal
Fund
5,000.00 Total
Revenue Sharing
PUBLIC HEALTH
Fund
29,500.00
SERVICES
FIRE DEPT.
CEMETERY
Personal
OPERATION AND
4,000.00
Services
MAINTENANCE
Supplies and
Personal
Materials
7.500.00
13,000.00
Servi ces
3,720.00
Other
Suppl ies and
For Fi re
Materia ls
2.000.00 Total
Dept.
14,720.00
Total For Cemetery
TOTAL ALL
Operation and
APPROPRIAT ION S
Maintenance
15,000.00
555,008.75
UTILITY
Other
23,000.00
'section 17 . And th e
Total For
Village Clerk is hereby
Distri bution
23,000.00 authorized to draw his
WATER
warrants on the Village
DISTRIBUTION
Treasurer for payments
Persona l
from any of the foregoing
38,000.00 app~ O prlation s
Ser vices
upon
Suppli es and
rece1v1ng
proper cer·
· Materials
35,000.00 tificat es and vouchers
Capital
therefor, appr&lt;lved by the
Outlay
7,000.00 board
or
offic ers
Other
22,.500.00 authorized by law to ap·
Tota l For Water
prove the same, or an or·
Dislribution 102....500.00 dlnante or resolution of
ADMINISTRATiuN
council to make the e)(·
- WATER
penditures; provided !hal
Personal
no warrants shall be drawn
Services
700.00 or paid for salaries or
Debt Servi ce
'84,531.25 wages except to persons
Total For
employed bY authority of
AQm lnistrationend in accordance with law
Water
6&gt;. &lt;~ 1 . 25
or ordinance. Provided fur ·
T&gt;tal For
ther lnat lhe ap ·
Adm i n i~tr~' : ......
p r o pri ation~

for

r on

thi rds vote of Council for
items of expense con ·
st itut ing a legal obligation
against the village, and for
purposes other than those
cove red by t he other
speci fic appropriations
her ei n made.
Sec ti o n
lB .
Thi s
resolution shall take effect
a t 1he ear l iest period

all owed by law .
Passed January 2J. 1980

H. D. Brown
President of
Council

Attest : Jane Wa lton
' Clerk of COUr:lCil
CERTIFICATE
Section 5705.39, R.C. -

" No
app,ropriation
measure sha II become ef·
fective until there is filed

with the appropriating
authority by the county

auditor a certificate that
the total appropriations
from each fund, taKen
together with all other outstanding appropriations,

do not exceed such official

esti mate or amended of ·
f icia l estimate . When the
appropriation does not e&gt;&lt;·
ceed such official estimate,

the county auditor shall

give certificate fort hwith
upon receiving from the ap·
propr iating authority a cer ·

llf ied copy of the ap ·
propriation measure .''

The State of Ohio Meigs
County, ss .

I, Jane Walton, Clerk of
the Village of Pomeroy in

said County, and in whose
custody the Files, Journals
and .Records are required
by the Laws ot the Stale 'Of
Ohio to be kept, do hereby

certify that the foregoing
Annual
Appropriation
Resolution is taken and
copied from the original

Resolution new on file with
.said Village, th"at the
foregoing R esolutlon has

been compared by me with
the said original and that

the same is a true and

correct copy thereof.

Witness my signature,
this 7th cfay of January

1980 . .

Jane Walton .
Clerk oflhe
.village of

Pomeroy
Meigs County ,

Ohoo

(2)4 , 11.11c

had fewer turnovers (11-9) . Nevertheless the Trojans' last minute
surge was enough to dump the
Devils to 11-9.
Portsmouth is now 12-li on the
year.

Armstrong led the Devils with 22
points while Bendolf netted 18 for
Portsmouth.
The Devil~' next outing will be
Friday night when they bast
Waverly.

r-------------------------1
1
1

I

I
I
I
I
I
I

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

I f)~ . ·
II ••• ?J4-.~:
Expusion points
Dear Sir:
Mr. Gleason's column of February
8 defends his self-imposed expulsion
program. The following points need
to be stated:
The reinstatement by Mr. Gleason
of four students after just foilr days
expulSion for drinking alcohol while
participating in a school function is
absolutely not board of education
policy,
The existing policy states that expulsion shall last for the remainder
of a semester.
Mr. Gleason reinstated these
students in violation of established
board policy. The present policy was
not adopted lightly. Dri'lldng and
drugs cannot be tolerated. You can
imagine the effect this can have on a
school system that does not deal harshly with these actions.
Mr. Gleason is misguided about
the purpose of expulsion when he infers that it won't help Johnny get his
education. The main value of expulsion is that it removes · Johnny
from the classroom so that the rest
of the students can get their
education mthout his disruptive in·
fluence.
Frankly, Mr. Gleason should be
more concerned about what happens
to the students who conduct themselves in a proper manner.
What do you suppose are the
valuable lessons these boys can
really learn from this el!)lerience?
They can learn that drinking at a
school event must not be a very
NOT(CE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY

The following

persons

were on the dates shown,

I

1
1
1
I
I
I

I
II

serious action because it resulted in
such a minor punishment. The boys
can also learn that they no not have
to be responsible for their actions.
The rules apparently do not apply to ·
them.
After !9 years of secondary
teaching el!)lerlence, I have found
outseveralthingsaboutdealingw1th
teenagers. You must insist upon
proper behavior before students
behave properly.
You must be consistent and fair in
discipline policies. Students must be
made aware of the rules ahead of
time and what the consequences will
be for disobedience.
With the exception that the boys
were fully aware of the rules, none of
the above applied in the four day expulsion of the foUr students involved
in a drinking episode at a Meigs
High School event.
Sincerely, Rita Slavin, Meigs High
Teacher.

Must judge wisely
Dear Editor,
News reports of this past week
proved we must judge wisely whom
we elect, or we'll have leaders who
smile and give us a placebo.
We have great problems here at
home, yet right now our leaders are
trying to "buy" a friend, Pakistan's
Zia said $400 mtllion for a start waa
"peanuts." This in the name of
mutual security.
A country that has lost three wars
since 1947, would we not be wiser to
beef up our own country first? The

The visiting Fort Frye offense exploded in the second half Saturday
night for oll points to break open an
otherwise close game enroute to a
Cadets' 74-48 victory over bast
Eastern.
The Cadets held slim advantages
the first and second periods, leading
19-14 at the first quarter buzzer and
33-29 at intenniss.lon.
The Eagles couldn't seem to stop a
talented guard named Dave
Ferguson aa be and his teanunates
tallied 20 points in the third period
while they were holding the Eagles
to just eight markers. That spuri
made the third quarter read 53-3'1 to
nearly put the game on Ice.
Every man on the Cadet roster
netted at least one point, Ferguson
leading all scorers w1th his 24 points.
The only other winner to hit double
figures waa Lee Haas who netted ten
markers.
The Fort Frye lads sank 14 cl 24
free throws and outrebounded the
smaller Eagles. The Cadets shot a
good 49 percent from the floor,
sinking 30 of 63 shota.
· Gene Cole led all Eastern scorers
aa he ripped the nets for 20 points on
nine field goals and two free thrOWil.
Brtan Bissell started fast and ended
the evening with 13 points.
The Eagles as a team just couldn't
find the range from the field as they
sank just 'l/ percent of their shotll, 18
of 66 attempts. They did better at the
free throw circle, canning 12 of 22 attempts.
Tall Paul Sprague again led the
Eagles under the boarda as he
hauled in 12 of his team's 33 rebounds. The center also netted seven
points.
The Reserve tilt was a thriller, but
the visitors again came out the viC:
tors with a 38-36 win. The score waa
knotted at 36-all w1th just :12
remaining, but a flashy young Cadet
stole the ball aod drove for the winning score.
Charlie Ritchie and P. G. Riffe led
the Eagles with 12 points apiece
while Lang led the winners with 18
markers. The next Eagle game is
this Friday when Eastern entertains
Southwestern.
Eastern (48) · • Brian Bissell 4·5·
13; Gene Cole ~-2-20; Brett Mathews
2·0·4; Tim Dill 0·0·0; Greg Wigal 0-0·
0; Rick Long 2-0·4; Joe BowersO·O·O;
Mike Bissell 0·0·0; Pau l Sprague 1·5·
1; Steve Chrisman 0·0·0. Totals11·12·
41.
Fort Frye (74) ·· Dave Ferguson
10·4·24; Lee Haas 3·4·10; Mike Polk
2·1·5; Terry Reller 4· H; Ml ke
Slavin 1·0·2; Derek Davis 4·0·8; Ed·
dy Huck 1·2·4; Rick Coley 2·1·5;
Derris Arnold 0·1·1; Steve Brooker 1·
0·2i Brad Carman 2·0·4. Totals 30·147( .
.
By quarters:

Iranians' banners say "The Soviets
ha.ve wounded you, Iran will bury
you," meaning America. Yet our
leaders "Beg" them, and say we will
give them money and aid.
Here we have draft dodgers, etc.,
pardoned, which waa a slap In the
face to those who fought and died,
and encouragement to those assortments of Tinker Bells who burn old
draft cards, soil our flag and yell

''Hell, no, we won't go."
When I see this I cannot see clear
for the tears In my eyes and, God
forgive me, I feel hate and the urge
to hurt, and yes, maim.
I remember friends no longer
here, in bad dreams of Korea over 20
years pall!. Yet the dreams are clear
as yesterday.
There Is a WJe for all who yell
"Hell, no, we won't go," dlgglrigand
cleaning latrines. But don't ever
them have body bag detail; they are
unworthY to touch a dead comrade

1.

of mine.
Card burners, I say, only. in
America could you do as you do,
becaWJe there wW always be men,
boys and women who will fight and
die. They'll be scared, unsure, but
they have pride. That's what
.separates them from you.
Respectfully, Bill Foster, BoJ: t75,
Racine, Ohio 45771.

Tuador, Fob. 12

making that whtctl you wish for a

As'Ro •GRAPH

ARIES (Morch 21·April11) Your
greatest luck loday will be wllh

reality.

19 33 53 74
14 29 37 411

FF
E

your knack for making everyone

leoo very lrY1portanl.

8AQinARIU8(-.D-IIoc.21)
Whither U II turning a &amp;mall
profit or a large-one today, you

your larger and more Important
appOinted to administer the
following decedents'
. · B d 0 I projects. Give top priority to Should bt equally adept . W"-r•
B
ermce e e so accomplishments lhat really money lo ..,_ned you have
estates pending In the
Meigs County Probate
mean something.
the Mldoa touch .
Court:
TAURUS (Aprii20-MoJ 20) Thla
CAPIIICOIIIC ( - . 22-.lon. 11)
Fiduciary's Name, Ad·
is a good day to stop and take
You are • gOOd salelman u wen
dress and Title, Date of AP.·
stock ol' youraelf and your plana.
as a capaNe teacher today. Othpintment,
Decedents
.Be1ter concepti can be devised
ers will benefit from .your ldeaa
Name and Address, and
to get you where you want to go.
and wisdom , so don't bll relucCase Number are listed:
GEMINI (MaJ 21-.luno 20) 1hla
tant to tay what needs saying.
Ruby Croush, Ad ·
should be a profitable day for
!NEWSPAPER ~NTEAPAISE ASSN.)
minlstratrlx, 680 S. Second
you, owing 10. your lma~naUon
St., Middleport, Ohio, 2·5·
and clflverneu In bu!Nneu and
A «4).,foot tree may abeorb ·
Fobruory 12, 1810
80, Forresf C. Summers,
financial mauera. Put all your
680 s. Second St., Mid· Several things for which you smarts to work.
19
gall01111 ol water a day Iii
dleport, Ohio 2296A.
have pl,noed aeeco In the paso, • CAIICER (~uno 21-.lufr 22) You
the
height· cl the growing
Florence
McDaniel ,
but which failed to produce a have the ability today to t•ke the
Executrix, 554 Fourth harvest. are likely to bear fruit Ideas or others ind turn them
Ave. , GallipOlis, o., 2·5-BO, this cqmlng year. Lady Luck will Into something much greater In
Lorena Mae Rice, ' 609
an Important role In making scope. Litten lharply for Inter·
Maple St. , Midd lepOrt, play
things haprn.
·
eating tidbits otlnform•UOO
Ohio, 2294A.
(olin. »Fob. •1 LEO (July U.Aua. D) PonobiiiLOIS
Ann
Burt, A(!UARIU
Huoches and perceptions you tiel fOr gains toCfey could come
E
. xeculrlx, 315 Wetzgall St., get
regarding waya to han- from two sources: One 11 your
Pomeroy, o., 2·5·80, Ben- die today
bu.slneaa mettere lhOUid be own efforta tM other Is someJamin Neutzllng, 105 Maple heeded
. Your lntu111on Is tuned In thing somebody el•lnltlated.
Place, 'Pornero~. 0 .• 22966.
on what your logic may overlook. VIRQO (AUI. 23-hpt. 22,
Carolyn Sue Young Ad· Romance
, 'traVII,
luck t You're more tb*n 1 good leader
ministratrlxl 929 Hysell St.,
MiddlepOrt, 0., 1·24-80 resources, poul~ pitfalls ana today - you~re aleo a splindld
Minnie Hazel Board, 71~ career for the oomlng mont he man.-. Ute your org.nb:atlon·
Sycamore St., Middleport, are 'all dlsc:_u~ In your Astro· at ablfltlet In group end..vora.
o . L22~s9..
.
, Graph loOter which bOg!"" with i.•IIA ( ...... 11-()el. 211 ThiiiO
ols A. Buft, Executrix, your b~thda~. Mall 11 to Astro- a gOOd day to complete Jmp()r315 W.etzgall St., Pomeroy, Graph ~ Box 489,· Radio City tant m•ttera. You have the add·
0 ., 2·6·891 Mar~ ~jggs, for· St~tlon , N.Y. t()()KJ• .Be. sure to eel Ingredient of luCk to help you
Sl)e(iify birth date. ·
make endings turn out u you'd
merly Mary Tracy , Star
Route, Chester Rd ., PIICU (Fob. · - 201 llko lhem to,
, Dare to be hoplfullor big things 8COI11'10 (OCt, 24--.· 22) Ono 1'."ljii...,:.L.::..,.==.::..::=,..:=-_J
Pomeroy, Ohio, 22834.
tOday. Your optimism could pro- of the things that will make you
(2) 11, 18, 25, 3tc
duce some ple~sant surprises by so pOpular with a! hers today 11
t..-

--

3-Tire Daily Sentinel, ~iddleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Feb. 11 . 1980

MEIGS WINNERS - Charlie Stone, left, and Dave
Davis, right, are flanked by Coach Jim Sheets
following Saturday's Meigs Invitational Wrestling

T~ament won by Point Pleasant. Stone and Davis
were ·both trophy winners for the Marauder wrestling
squad.

GOES FOR WIN - Jim Henderson, Point Pleasant
wrestler, and Charlie Stone, a member of the Meigs

Wrestling Team, were paired In one of the big matches
of Saturday's Meigs Invitational Wrestling Meet.
lllecking the action is referee John Lehew.

Big Blacks capture Meigs wrestling ~vents
By Bill Brady
Point Pleasant High School made
a impressive show of strength,

dominating the Meigs Invitational
Wrestling Tournament Saturday,
February 9. The matmen had no

Wahama defeats
Marauders, 71-51
BY GARY CLARK
The unenviable task of facing two
triple AAA basketball teams on
succesive nights didn't seem to
bother Coach Lewis Hall's Wahama
White Falcons as they came through
the test in flying colors by defeating
visiting Meigs Saturday night by a
71~1 score.
The victory coupled with Friday
nights 82-64 win over Point Pleasant,
strimgthened the White Falcons hold
on their sixth place ranking and
gavethem a solid chance of moving
into the top five rated teams in the
state.
Wahama extended their season
slate to 13-2 on the year with the
triumph and kept their victory
string alive at 11 consecutive games
without a loss.
Rick Bamitz, Rainbow Gibbs and
Vince Weaver all had their second
straight game in the limelight for
the bend area team with Barnitz
leadin_g all scorers with 24 points
while Gibbs added !6 and Weaver 14.
The White Falcons raced into a 148 first period lead before increasing
their advantage to 34-16 at
termission with a 20 point second
quarter.
Bamitz sank 14 of his total points
in the half while Gibbs added 10 .
Steve Ohlinger and Kevin Smith
were the top Maurader point getters
in hall.
Meigs outscored the hosts in the
third stanza, 18-15, but failed to
make a serious comeback threai in
the final eight minutes as Vince
Weaver rammed home ten points to
help the M,ason Countlans outscore
their visitors from across the Ohio
River by a 22,!7 margin to insure
their 71-51 win .
Meigs also placed three men in
double figures for the game in 'Kevin
Smith with 12 and Bob Ashley and
Jeff Wayland with 10 each.
Wahama held a decided
rebounding edge over the
Marauders with the red and white
hauling in 45 total caroms to Meigs'
22. Tim Roush , led the local
rebounders with 10 while Vince
Weaver notched 9 and Larry Gibbs
and Rick Barnitz grabbed 8 each.
KeVIn Smith led Meigs with 7.
The Marauders shot an even 50
percent from the floor (22 of~) but
managed just 7 of 14 free throws.
They committed 16 turnovers: .
Wahama shot 44 percent from the
field (30 of 67) and continued the
mastery at the charity stripe with 11
of 16 conversions for 69 percent.
They turned the ball over on just 11 ·
occasions.
The Little Falcops got back on the ,
winning trail in the preJiminary
affair when they avenged an earlier
season loss to the Little Marauders
by claiming a 62-41 decision.
Travis Gray and Estil Lavender
paced the winners with 18 and 14

m-

points respectively while Murray
and Judge scored 10 points each for
Meigs.
Coach Keith Sayre's junior varsity
slate now stands at 11-4 on the year.
This week Wahama hits the trail
for two away engagements. Tuesday
night a visit to Southwestern is on
the agenda followed by a journey to
Spencer, scheduled for Friday. The
White Falcons lone home date
remaining will be on February 22
when they host once beaten
Southern.
MEIGS (51)
FG .. FTM·ATT .. TP
Kevin Smith
Bob Ashley
J effWByland
Steve Ohlinger
Todd Snowden
Mike Miller
Dave Kennedy
Chuck Kennedy
Chris Swann
Totals

5 2-3 12
4 2-2 10
5 ~ !0
3 2-2 8
3 0-1 6
I 0-1 2
l ~ 2
0 1-2
0 0-3 0
22.. 7-H .. 51

wrestler placed lower than third;
four wrestlers placed first, five
placed second and three placed
third.
At 98 po.u nds, Dave Powers
decisioned Blake of Meigs "B", 15 to
0, decisioned Plantz of South Point, 5
to4, then decisioned King of Meigs, 3
to 2, to win tliird place.
Wrestling in the 112 pound class in
place of the injured Mike Calandros,
Harold Dorsey made an exciting
wrestling display. He pinHed Ramey
of Fairland, and Woodruff of Meigs
"B", each in the first period. He then
decisioned a Warren local opponent,
4 to 0, to win the championship.
At 119 pounds, .Jim Henderson
defeated Butcher of South Point, 8 to
7, then was decisioned by Stone of
Meigs, 16 to 8, to receive second
place.
Mike Howard, at 126 pounds,
pinned Mitchell of Vinton County,
decisioned Lowe of Wllrren Local11
to 4, then lost to Richard of South ·
Point 4 to , 2 in a finely wrestled
match to receive second place.
For the "B" team, Chuck Henson
was pinned by Strakler of Warren
"B", decisioned Galloway of

Fairland 4 to 0, then was pinned by
Lowe of Warren A".
At !32 pounds, Dean Rhea pinned
!Wgers of Point Pleasant "B", lost
to Ruggles of south Point, 4 to 2,
pinned Hathaway of Warren "B",
then pinned Collens"of Warren " A"
to win third place.
From the "B" team, Paul Rogers
was pinned by Rhea of Point
Pleasant "A", pinned Swann of
Vinton County then was defeated in
overtime by Callens of Warren Local
2 to 0.
At !38 pounds, Greg Gibson was
decisioned by Born of Fairland, 10 to
7, pinned Menefee of Warren Local,
then pinned King of Meigs to win
third place.
At 145 pounds, Tim Jackson
pinned Martin of Vinton County in
the Semi finals. Then in the finals,
Jackson appeared to ha~e pinned
Stevens of South Point, but a controversial call forced it into overtime. Stevens won the match, I to 0,
on a penalty point and Jackson came
away with second palce.
For the "B" team, Wes Worley
was pinned by Stevens of South
Point, then was pinned by Martin of
11

Vinton County.
At 155 pounds Todd Pridemore
declsioned Pickham of Meigs, 21 to
2, defeated Damron of South Point, 4
to 0, then pinned Lett of Fairland to
win the championship.
For the " B" team, Lee thompson
was pinned by Wallace of Warren
Local, and decisioned by Griffith of
Warren "B" 7 to 1.

Gilbert !Wgers at 167 pounds,
pinned Gaughan of Warren Local
and Hall of South Point, then on the
finals, he wrestled brilliantly
defeating Napier of Fairland 14 to 8
to win first place.
At 175 pounds, Dave Darst pinned
Smith of Warren Local then was
pinned by Rickard of South Point in
the finals to come away with second
place.
Gary Newsome won his second
championship of the year in the !85
pound class, pinning Harges of South
Point, then decisioning Smith of
Warren Local, 2 to 0, in the finals .
The Unlimited, Eric Lanier pinned
Burel of Warren Local and McGhee
of South Point, then was decisioned
by Davis of Meigs in the finals, 8 to 1,
to receive second ·place.

The team showed much strength
and balance on tnefr- way to their .
third championship of the year. The
public is urged to support the team
as they travel to Hubert Hoover for
the Region IV championships Feb.
15 and 16.
·
TEAM STANDINGS
205
Point Pleasant
177 1&gt;
South Point
125
Fairland
87 .
Warren Local
69
Meigs
11
Vinton Co.
9
Warren " B"
3
Point Pleasant "B"

ANNOUNCING THE REVISED
OFFICE SCHEOULE OF
OR. MATEO P. DAYO, JR .
l06 N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio
Effective January 1980
Monday-10: DO-l : 00
2:00· 5: 00 P.M.
Tuesday, No Office
Wednesda y- t: D0-11 : 30
2:00·7:30 P.M.
Thursday 9:0D-11 :30, 2·7 :30 P.M.
Friday 10 :0D-1 :00, 2:00·5:00
Saturday 9:00·5:00
E•cept the last Saturday of the
month.

· WAHAMA \71)
Rick Bamitz
11 2-2 24
Larry Gibbs
7 2-2 16
Vince Weaver
5 4~ 14
Tim Roush
3 2-2 8
Gary Richards
2 0-1
Jeff Arnold
I 1·2
Scott Barnitz
I ~
Joey !Wush
0 0-2 0
Totals
30 .. 11-16 .. 71
Scor~

by Quarters :

Meigs
Wahama

I 2 3 4 Tot
8 8 18 17 51
14 20 15 22 71

Searching for the clever way to say "I Love
You?" Our Happy Valentine Ads will be
published on February' 14, and oHer you a. truly
unusual way to proclaim your love and IMtst
wishes.

Total Fouls - Meigs 17 Wahama 14
Officials - Virgil Wilkens and Gary
Kendall
RESERVE GAME
MEIGS (41)- Jewel 0-2-2 ; Edwards
1-1-3; Murray 4-:i-10; Judge 4-2-10;
Kovalchik 2-0-4; Adkins 1-0-2 ;
Wamsley 1-0-2; Scott 2-0-4 ; Wayland
~; Whaley ~ ; · Totals 17-7-41.
WAHAMA (62) - Gray 8-2-18 :
Lavender 5-4-14; Kitchen l · l-3 ;
Ingels 3-1-7; K. Weaver 1-5-7; Paugh
2-3·7: Sisk 0-4-4; J . Roush 0-2·2;
Powell 0-0-0; Totals 20-22-62.
Score by Quarters:
!234Tot
Meigs
7 13 10 11 41
Wahama
12 12 18 20 62
OFFICIAl.$ · Raymond Cundiff and
Sam !Wmeo.

SAY "I LOVE YOU" WITH A
$1.00 SENTINEL ·VALENTINE AD.
(Linil ·I t Words-Sizes llusbaJid BaiDW)

To My Wife, Ann ...
After. U
~era

wonderful

of marrl-ae. I'm

ootlll hNcklver-lottls In
lovoi w1111 you I
.

Woltor Z.

To Mom and Ded .••
Wo couldn't have pld&lt;od
1 nicer pair Of porents In
the worldl Hevli •
Happy Vaftllflno'i Day I

'MiklandSue

WRITE YOUR MESSAGE BEUM AND

The Baltimore Orioles swept the
Los :Angeles Dodgers in four games
in the 1966 World Series and three of
them were shutouts.

Babe Ruth, as a pitcher for the
Boston Red Sox in 1918, still led the
American League in home runs w1th
11.

.LT
OR MAIL IT WllH '1.00 BY QUARY 121H 10 lHE
DAILY SE((ONQ,
. P.
. 0. li)X 729, POMEROY, 0.

16 DDS 'l.oo-tASII WllH ORDER
1. ----,-- 2, _ __
5. _ _ __ 6,, _ _ __
9,, _ _:---_ 10. _ _ __
13,,________ 14. --,......--...,...

3.---,---:..- 4. _ _.;..___
7. _ _ __ l___:..._ __
11•. _ _ __ 12..·,_- · -15•------'-- 1&amp;.,_

. PHON. 992-2156

THE
.

'

.

DAI~Y ,SENTINEL
I

�..
2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Feb. II , 1980

74-48

Fort Frye bombards Eastern

JUMP SHOT - Derek Davis (11) lets fly with a
jump shot over the outstretched arms of Brett Mat-

GLUED BALL- As Eastern's Brian Bissell (12) fires from the corner .over Derek Davis (11) it appears his hand has run into some foreign
object. Due to a reflection in the flash of this action photo, it appears
Bissell is playing with a ball acnhored by a saucer or something of that
nature.

thews (20) during Eastern's 74-48 loss to Fort Frye
Saturday night. The Eagles' Joe Bowles (30) blocks out
Fort Frye's Brad Cannan (25).

Gallipolis drops 57-52 thriller at Portsmouth
Despite the loss of 6-6 senior center Jeff Cameron early in the first
quarter (with an apparently severe
ankle sprain), the Gallipolis Blue
Devlls battled the Portsmouth
Trojans on even terms for nearly
four quarters before losing a hardfought 5Hi2 decision Saturday night
in the PHS Field house.
After Cameron went out with 5: 07
remaillinl( in the first quarter,
GAHS was down 11-V. The Trojans
then raced to a 16-10 lead at the end
of the period. PHS extended its lead
to 34-22 on a W.footer by Marcus
Bendolf before the Devils narrowed
the gap to 34-25 at halftime. The
Devils controlled the battle of the
boarda 23-20 (including 15 offensive
rebounds), but hit only 9 of 34 field
goal attempts for a 26 percent in the
first half.
The Portsmouth margin was 10
TilE DAILY SENTINEL
(USPS 14S.MOI

~,~-~·~""·DEVOTED TO TilE

lN'I'ERESf OF

MEIGS-MASON AREA
ROBERT HOEFUtll
CltyEdllor
Pubtlmed dady u~pt Saturday by Tbe Ohlt
VaUey Publbblq Company. Mlllttmedlll, Inc.,

UJ Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio &amp;S?U. Bual.D81
Office Pbooe 9ft.. 2151. Ed11ortal Pbooe
ttz.USI.
Secood cluJ pottlge paJd at Pomeroy, Ohio.
N•tioDlll adv~rtblag ~prueotaUve, t.odoa
AuoelaWI, 3101 EucUd Av~ .• C\r.veland, Olllt
,_ Mll5.
·. ,
SablcrtpUOI ra&amp;e1 : Oellvtred by tarrier
· ~ where •vailable to «:ott per week. By Motor
•~ RGute wbere carrier aervite •t •taU..blt, Ooe

mo•dt. $3.10.

The Daily StoUDel, by maD in OIUo allll We~t
VlrJbdl, ODt year tute; Sl:r: moatbJ U7.5G;
tkree lllOilb '11.50. Elaewbere J'J8.011 ; Jlt

,..
• ~'
-r r'

"~,..

aaoa~ ttt.to;

:&lt;
... "

three moath.J ,11.08.

Tbe Auoclalal Prall II extluatv~ly codt.led
t.lbe UH for pu.bUC.Uoa of .U oew1 dispatcbce
r •' r eredl1*1 1o the aewl.-per and alto the local
I' ' r · DeWS aablilbed bereln.

points (36-26) when Bendolf went to
the bench with his fourth foul at the
6:09 mark in the third stanza.
From that point, the Devils outscored the Trojans 12-5. The Trojans
aided. their opponents by shooting 3
for !5 (20 percent) as the Devlls
slowly crept back into the contest.
The Blue Devils took the lead at
6:14 of the fourth periOd when Kent
Price ripped off a rebound of a
missed Bill Armstrong shot and put
it through the cords for a 42-41
Gallipolis advantage. The Devils led
by three pints twice (44-41 and 46-43)
as Armstrong led the offensive
surge.
However, the momentum of the
game changed following a Portsmouth timeout at 3:58. The Blue
Devils had outscored the Trojans 21!3 through the first 12 minutes of the
second half. The tide turned as the
Dick Hopkins-&lt;:oached team scored
the next six points.
Portsmouth took the lead for good
at 3:30 when Bendolf's 2()-footer
from the corner made the score 4746. A steal and layup by Doug Martin
(who came off tbe bench tO score
five fourth quarter points) made it
49-46. Boo Weaver, Greg Harrington,
and Armstrong each scored in the
tast three minutes.
Actually, the turning point came
with 2:18 left. PHS led 49-46. Martin
missed the first end of one-and-one,
but reserve center John Mitchell
banked in a rebound for a three&lt;
point lead. It was 52-50 with 48 seconds left. PHS then hit 5 of 7 free
throws in the final seconds.
Neither team shot particularly
well. The Trojans were 21 for 51
from the field for 41 percent. The
Devils were !8 of 56 for an ice-&lt;:old 3!

percent. In most other areas the
Devils outdid the opposition, as they
outrebounded the Trojans 41-36 and
GALLIPOLIS (52)
Player
Fg Fl PI Rb Tp
Niberl
3·7 1·3 2 12 7
Weaver
4·8 1·2 3 8 9
' Cameron
0·0 0·0 1 0 0
Armstrong
7·24 8·12 4 6 22
Ha r ringto n

3-10

2-2

4

3

8

Price
1·7 4·7 3 8 6
0·1 0·0 0 0 0
Roberts
Sk idmore
0·1 0·0 0 2 0
TOTALS
18·58 16·26 17 41 52
PORTSMOUTH (57)
Player
Fg Fl PI Rb Tp
McMahon
3·14 2·4 2 10 8
7·14 4·4 4 4 18
Bendolph
Wright
0·2 3·4 1 5 3
Kt. Wilburn
5-B
1·2 4 1 11
Kv . Wi lburn 1·4 0·0 4 7 4
Jackson
0·0 0·0 1 0 0
Mitchel l
3~ 5
0~0
1 7 6
Ma rc um

Martin
Johnson
TOTALS

0-0

0-0

1 ~1

3 ~6

1

1

0

1 0 5
0·3 2·2 2 · 1 2
21 ·51 15·22 21 36 37

Score by quarters :
Ga ll ipoli s
10 15 13 14

~ 52

16 18 7 16 .. 57

Portsmouth

Sunday's College

Basketball Scores
By The Associated Press

EAST
Duquesne 67, Pittsburgh 66
68

Northeastern 69 , New Hampshire

SOUTH

Va . Commonwealth
Birmingham 75
·

901

Ala .·

MIDWEST
Marquetle 80, Duke 77
Wayne, Neb. 76, Emporia St. 73
Far West

Gonzaga 73, St. Mary 's Calif. 12
W. New Mexico 82, W. Colorado 64
Weekend Sports Transactions
BY The Associated Press

BASKETBALL

National
Basketball Association

PHILADELPHIA

76ERS

··&gt;· ......___________
Waived Ai Skinner, guard.
.·:,·;.
,·,--------------------,-------------------- r--------------------.-------------------•'··
Wa1er
187,731.25 ringencies can only be ex·
. ,. ..
DEPARTMENT
ORDINANCE
SEWER
;&gt;ended upon appeal of two·
I' •• .:-'

f, • •

&lt;'
:.-:· ~

'r

·'' r

NO. 510
ANNUAL
APPROPRIATION
ORDINANCE
A RESOLUTION to

~~ mak e appropriations for
.: # current Expenses a nr1
~~ other Expenditures of the
r

Yillage of Pomeroy, State
j)f Ohio. during the fiscal
year ending December 31.

~980.

·. Section 1. BE IT
"RESOLVED by the Council
for the Village of Pomeroy ,
~tate of Oh io, That,
to
provide for the current ex·

penses and other ex penditures of the sai d
Village of Pomeroy duri ng
the fiscal year ending

December 31. 1980, the
following sums be and they
1re hereby se t aside and
appropriated as fo l lows,

YIZ :

, · Section 2. That there be
. appropriated fr om the
·GENERAL FUND
GENERAL
GOVERNMENTAL
SERVICES
MAYOR
personal
.,. Services
2,400 00
• otal For
Mayor · .
2,400.00
CLERK -C LERK·
TREASURER
Personal
Services
3,600 .00
total tor Clerk·
Clerk·Treasurer 3,600.00
SOLICITOR·
· LEGALADVISOR
personal
services
~.ooo . oo
t otal For
1 . Solicitor-Legal
· Advisor
3,000.00
•
I!!LECTIONS
Personal
1,000.00
services
Total For
1,000.00
• Elections
•
COUNCIL
Personal
· services
1..uo.oo
Total For
·, Council
·1,.wl .OO
. GENERAL DEPT.
Personal
6,000.00
· services
Supplies and
Materials
1,300.00
Other
18,000.00
Total For General
. Dept.
25,300.00
Total For General
.
, Governmental
' Services
36,7 40.00
'
SECURITY OF.
PERSONSANO
PROPERTY
POLICE

Per sonal
Ser v ices
Su pplies and
M ater ial s
Capital

MAINTENANCE
65,000.00
Per sonal
Servi ces
12.500.00
29,200.00
Supplies and
Materia ls
20.000.00
Outlay
7.000.00
Tot al For Sewer
Total f or Police
Mai ntenance
n soo.oo
Departmenl 101,200.00
ADMINISTRATI 0 N
PARKING METERS
- SEWAGE
Other
10,000.00
Personal
Tota l For Parking
Services
700.00
Meters
10.000 .00
Debt Serv ice
28,055.00
TRANSP.
Other
28,755.04
FACILITIES
Total For Sewer
STREET PAVING
(Revenue)
Personal
Fund
61 ,255.00
SerVices
33,000.00
Secti on 13. Tha t there be
Supplies and
Material s
15,000.00 appropriated from the
GENERAL
BOND
Capital
FUND
Outlay
1,500. 00 RETIREMENT
Other
12,000.00 Payment of
Principal
7,000 .00
Total For Street
Paving
61,500.00 Payment of
Interest
2,362.50
..
STREET
Total For General
REPAIRING
Bond Retirement
Total For Street
Fund
9.362.50
Repairing
61 ,500.00
ADDITIONAL
STATE HIGHWAY
FUNDS
DEPT.
Section 15. That there be
Personal
tram t he
2,000.00 appropriated
Services
FEDERAL REVENUE
3,000.00 SHARING
Other
FUND
Total for State
Highway Dept. 5,000.00 Capital
15,000.00
Outlay
To tal For State
14,500.00
Other
Highway Imp .
For Federal
Fund
5,000.00 Total
Revenue Sharing
PUBLIC HEALTH
Fund
29,500.00
SERVICES
FIRE DEPT.
CEMETERY
Personal
OPERATION AND
4,000.00
Services
MAINTENANCE
Supplies and
Personal
Materials
7.500.00
13,000.00
Servi ces
3,720.00
Other
Suppl ies and
For Fi re
Materia ls
2.000.00 Total
Dept.
14,720.00
Total For Cemetery
TOTAL ALL
Operation and
APPROPRIAT ION S
Maintenance
15,000.00
555,008.75
UTILITY
Other
23,000.00
'section 17 . And th e
Total For
Village Clerk is hereby
Distri bution
23,000.00 authorized to draw his
WATER
warrants on the Village
DISTRIBUTION
Treasurer for payments
Persona l
from any of the foregoing
38,000.00 app~ O prlation s
Ser vices
upon
Suppli es and
rece1v1ng
proper cer·
· Materials
35,000.00 tificat es and vouchers
Capital
therefor, appr&lt;lved by the
Outlay
7,000.00 board
or
offic ers
Other
22,.500.00 authorized by law to ap·
Tota l For Water
prove the same, or an or·
Dislribution 102....500.00 dlnante or resolution of
ADMINISTRATiuN
council to make the e)(·
- WATER
penditures; provided !hal
Personal
no warrants shall be drawn
Services
700.00 or paid for salaries or
Debt Servi ce
'84,531.25 wages except to persons
Total For
employed bY authority of
AQm lnistrationend in accordance with law
Water
6&gt;. &lt;~ 1 . 25
or ordinance. Provided fur ·
T&gt;tal For
ther lnat lhe ap ·
Adm i n i~tr~' : ......
p r o pri ation~

for

r on

thi rds vote of Council for
items of expense con ·
st itut ing a legal obligation
against the village, and for
purposes other than those
cove red by t he other
speci fic appropriations
her ei n made.
Sec ti o n
lB .
Thi s
resolution shall take effect
a t 1he ear l iest period

all owed by law .
Passed January 2J. 1980

H. D. Brown
President of
Council

Attest : Jane Wa lton
' Clerk of COUr:lCil
CERTIFICATE
Section 5705.39, R.C. -

" No
app,ropriation
measure sha II become ef·
fective until there is filed

with the appropriating
authority by the county

auditor a certificate that
the total appropriations
from each fund, taKen
together with all other outstanding appropriations,

do not exceed such official

esti mate or amended of ·
f icia l estimate . When the
appropriation does not e&gt;&lt;·
ceed such official estimate,

the county auditor shall

give certificate fort hwith
upon receiving from the ap·
propr iating authority a cer ·

llf ied copy of the ap ·
propriation measure .''

The State of Ohio Meigs
County, ss .

I, Jane Walton, Clerk of
the Village of Pomeroy in

said County, and in whose
custody the Files, Journals
and .Records are required
by the Laws ot the Stale 'Of
Ohio to be kept, do hereby

certify that the foregoing
Annual
Appropriation
Resolution is taken and
copied from the original

Resolution new on file with
.said Village, th"at the
foregoing R esolutlon has

been compared by me with
the said original and that

the same is a true and

correct copy thereof.

Witness my signature,
this 7th cfay of January

1980 . .

Jane Walton .
Clerk oflhe
.village of

Pomeroy
Meigs County ,

Ohoo

(2)4 , 11.11c

had fewer turnovers (11-9) . Nevertheless the Trojans' last minute
surge was enough to dump the
Devils to 11-9.
Portsmouth is now 12-li on the
year.

Armstrong led the Devils with 22
points while Bendolf netted 18 for
Portsmouth.
The Devil~' next outing will be
Friday night when they bast
Waverly.

r-------------------------1
1
1

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

I f)~ . ·
II ••• ?J4-.~:
Expusion points
Dear Sir:
Mr. Gleason's column of February
8 defends his self-imposed expulsion
program. The following points need
to be stated:
The reinstatement by Mr. Gleason
of four students after just foilr days
expulSion for drinking alcohol while
participating in a school function is
absolutely not board of education
policy,
The existing policy states that expulsion shall last for the remainder
of a semester.
Mr. Gleason reinstated these
students in violation of established
board policy. The present policy was
not adopted lightly. Dri'lldng and
drugs cannot be tolerated. You can
imagine the effect this can have on a
school system that does not deal harshly with these actions.
Mr. Gleason is misguided about
the purpose of expulsion when he infers that it won't help Johnny get his
education. The main value of expulsion is that it removes · Johnny
from the classroom so that the rest
of the students can get their
education mthout his disruptive in·
fluence.
Frankly, Mr. Gleason should be
more concerned about what happens
to the students who conduct themselves in a proper manner.
What do you suppose are the
valuable lessons these boys can
really learn from this el!)lerience?
They can learn that drinking at a
school event must not be a very
NOT(CE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY

The following

persons

were on the dates shown,

I

1
1
1
I
I
I

I
II

serious action because it resulted in
such a minor punishment. The boys
can also learn that they no not have
to be responsible for their actions.
The rules apparently do not apply to ·
them.
After !9 years of secondary
teaching el!)lerlence, I have found
outseveralthingsaboutdealingw1th
teenagers. You must insist upon
proper behavior before students
behave properly.
You must be consistent and fair in
discipline policies. Students must be
made aware of the rules ahead of
time and what the consequences will
be for disobedience.
With the exception that the boys
were fully aware of the rules, none of
the above applied in the four day expulsion of the foUr students involved
in a drinking episode at a Meigs
High School event.
Sincerely, Rita Slavin, Meigs High
Teacher.

Must judge wisely
Dear Editor,
News reports of this past week
proved we must judge wisely whom
we elect, or we'll have leaders who
smile and give us a placebo.
We have great problems here at
home, yet right now our leaders are
trying to "buy" a friend, Pakistan's
Zia said $400 mtllion for a start waa
"peanuts." This in the name of
mutual security.
A country that has lost three wars
since 1947, would we not be wiser to
beef up our own country first? The

The visiting Fort Frye offense exploded in the second half Saturday
night for oll points to break open an
otherwise close game enroute to a
Cadets' 74-48 victory over bast
Eastern.
The Cadets held slim advantages
the first and second periods, leading
19-14 at the first quarter buzzer and
33-29 at intenniss.lon.
The Eagles couldn't seem to stop a
talented guard named Dave
Ferguson aa be and his teanunates
tallied 20 points in the third period
while they were holding the Eagles
to just eight markers. That spuri
made the third quarter read 53-3'1 to
nearly put the game on Ice.
Every man on the Cadet roster
netted at least one point, Ferguson
leading all scorers w1th his 24 points.
The only other winner to hit double
figures waa Lee Haas who netted ten
markers.
The Fort Frye lads sank 14 cl 24
free throws and outrebounded the
smaller Eagles. The Cadets shot a
good 49 percent from the floor,
sinking 30 of 63 shota.
· Gene Cole led all Eastern scorers
aa he ripped the nets for 20 points on
nine field goals and two free thrOWil.
Brtan Bissell started fast and ended
the evening with 13 points.
The Eagles as a team just couldn't
find the range from the field as they
sank just 'l/ percent of their shotll, 18
of 66 attempts. They did better at the
free throw circle, canning 12 of 22 attempts.
Tall Paul Sprague again led the
Eagles under the boarda as he
hauled in 12 of his team's 33 rebounds. The center also netted seven
points.
The Reserve tilt was a thriller, but
the visitors again came out the viC:
tors with a 38-36 win. The score waa
knotted at 36-all w1th just :12
remaining, but a flashy young Cadet
stole the ball aod drove for the winning score.
Charlie Ritchie and P. G. Riffe led
the Eagles with 12 points apiece
while Lang led the winners with 18
markers. The next Eagle game is
this Friday when Eastern entertains
Southwestern.
Eastern (48) · • Brian Bissell 4·5·
13; Gene Cole ~-2-20; Brett Mathews
2·0·4; Tim Dill 0·0·0; Greg Wigal 0-0·
0; Rick Long 2-0·4; Joe BowersO·O·O;
Mike Bissell 0·0·0; Pau l Sprague 1·5·
1; Steve Chrisman 0·0·0. Totals11·12·
41.
Fort Frye (74) ·· Dave Ferguson
10·4·24; Lee Haas 3·4·10; Mike Polk
2·1·5; Terry Reller 4· H; Ml ke
Slavin 1·0·2; Derek Davis 4·0·8; Ed·
dy Huck 1·2·4; Rick Coley 2·1·5;
Derris Arnold 0·1·1; Steve Brooker 1·
0·2i Brad Carman 2·0·4. Totals 30·147( .
.
By quarters:

Iranians' banners say "The Soviets
ha.ve wounded you, Iran will bury
you," meaning America. Yet our
leaders "Beg" them, and say we will
give them money and aid.
Here we have draft dodgers, etc.,
pardoned, which waa a slap In the
face to those who fought and died,
and encouragement to those assortments of Tinker Bells who burn old
draft cards, soil our flag and yell

''Hell, no, we won't go."
When I see this I cannot see clear
for the tears In my eyes and, God
forgive me, I feel hate and the urge
to hurt, and yes, maim.
I remember friends no longer
here, in bad dreams of Korea over 20
years pall!. Yet the dreams are clear
as yesterday.
There Is a WJe for all who yell
"Hell, no, we won't go," dlgglrigand
cleaning latrines. But don't ever
them have body bag detail; they are
unworthY to touch a dead comrade

1.

of mine.
Card burners, I say, only. in
America could you do as you do,
becaWJe there wW always be men,
boys and women who will fight and
die. They'll be scared, unsure, but
they have pride. That's what
.separates them from you.
Respectfully, Bill Foster, BoJ: t75,
Racine, Ohio 45771.

Tuador, Fob. 12

making that whtctl you wish for a

As'Ro •GRAPH

ARIES (Morch 21·April11) Your
greatest luck loday will be wllh

reality.

19 33 53 74
14 29 37 411

FF
E

your knack for making everyone

leoo very lrY1portanl.

8AQinARIU8(-.D-IIoc.21)
Whither U II turning a &amp;mall
profit or a large-one today, you

your larger and more Important
appOinted to administer the
following decedents'
. · B d 0 I projects. Give top priority to Should bt equally adept . W"-r•
B
ermce e e so accomplishments lhat really money lo ..,_ned you have
estates pending In the
Meigs County Probate
mean something.
the Mldoa touch .
Court:
TAURUS (Aprii20-MoJ 20) Thla
CAPIIICOIIIC ( - . 22-.lon. 11)
Fiduciary's Name, Ad·
is a good day to stop and take
You are • gOOd salelman u wen
dress and Title, Date of AP.·
stock ol' youraelf and your plana.
as a capaNe teacher today. Othpintment,
Decedents
.Be1ter concepti can be devised
ers will benefit from .your ldeaa
Name and Address, and
to get you where you want to go.
and wisdom , so don't bll relucCase Number are listed:
GEMINI (MaJ 21-.luno 20) 1hla
tant to tay what needs saying.
Ruby Croush, Ad ·
should be a profitable day for
!NEWSPAPER ~NTEAPAISE ASSN.)
minlstratrlx, 680 S. Second
you, owing 10. your lma~naUon
St., Middleport, Ohio, 2·5·
and clflverneu In bu!Nneu and
A «4).,foot tree may abeorb ·
Fobruory 12, 1810
80, Forresf C. Summers,
financial mauera. Put all your
680 s. Second St., Mid· Several things for which you smarts to work.
19
gall01111 ol water a day Iii
dleport, Ohio 2296A.
have pl,noed aeeco In the paso, • CAIICER (~uno 21-.lufr 22) You
the
height· cl the growing
Florence
McDaniel ,
but which failed to produce a have the ability today to t•ke the
Executrix, 554 Fourth harvest. are likely to bear fruit Ideas or others ind turn them
Ave. , GallipOlis, o., 2·5-BO, this cqmlng year. Lady Luck will Into something much greater In
Lorena Mae Rice, ' 609
an Important role In making scope. Litten lharply for Inter·
Maple St. , Midd lepOrt, play
things haprn.
·
eating tidbits otlnform•UOO
Ohio, 2294A.
(olin. »Fob. •1 LEO (July U.Aua. D) PonobiiiLOIS
Ann
Burt, A(!UARIU
Huoches and perceptions you tiel fOr gains toCfey could come
E
. xeculrlx, 315 Wetzgall St., get
regarding waya to han- from two sources: One 11 your
Pomeroy, o., 2·5·80, Ben- die today
bu.slneaa mettere lhOUid be own efforta tM other Is someJamin Neutzllng, 105 Maple heeded
. Your lntu111on Is tuned In thing somebody el•lnltlated.
Place, 'Pornero~. 0 .• 22966.
on what your logic may overlook. VIRQO (AUI. 23-hpt. 22,
Carolyn Sue Young Ad· Romance
, 'traVII,
luck t You're more tb*n 1 good leader
ministratrlxl 929 Hysell St.,
MiddlepOrt, 0., 1·24-80 resources, poul~ pitfalls ana today - you~re aleo a splindld
Minnie Hazel Board, 71~ career for the oomlng mont he man.-. Ute your org.nb:atlon·
Sycamore St., Middleport, are 'all dlsc:_u~ In your Astro· at ablfltlet In group end..vora.
o . L22~s9..
.
, Graph loOter which bOg!"" with i.•IIA ( ...... 11-()el. 211 ThiiiO
ols A. Buft, Executrix, your b~thda~. Mall 11 to Astro- a gOOd day to complete Jmp()r315 W.etzgall St., Pomeroy, Graph ~ Box 489,· Radio City tant m•ttera. You have the add·
0 ., 2·6·891 Mar~ ~jggs, for· St~tlon , N.Y. t()()KJ• .Be. sure to eel Ingredient of luCk to help you
Sl)e(iify birth date. ·
make endings turn out u you'd
merly Mary Tracy , Star
Route, Chester Rd ., PIICU (Fob. · - 201 llko lhem to,
, Dare to be hoplfullor big things 8COI11'10 (OCt, 24--.· 22) Ono 1'."ljii...,:.L.::..,.==.::..::=,..:=-_J
Pomeroy, Ohio, 22834.
tOday. Your optimism could pro- of the things that will make you
(2) 11, 18, 25, 3tc
duce some ple~sant surprises by so pOpular with a! hers today 11
t..-

--

3-Tire Daily Sentinel, ~iddleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Feb. 11 . 1980

MEIGS WINNERS - Charlie Stone, left, and Dave
Davis, right, are flanked by Coach Jim Sheets
following Saturday's Meigs Invitational Wrestling

T~ament won by Point Pleasant. Stone and Davis
were ·both trophy winners for the Marauder wrestling
squad.

GOES FOR WIN - Jim Henderson, Point Pleasant
wrestler, and Charlie Stone, a member of the Meigs

Wrestling Team, were paired In one of the big matches
of Saturday's Meigs Invitational Wrestling Meet.
lllecking the action is referee John Lehew.

Big Blacks capture Meigs wrestling ~vents
By Bill Brady
Point Pleasant High School made
a impressive show of strength,

dominating the Meigs Invitational
Wrestling Tournament Saturday,
February 9. The matmen had no

Wahama defeats
Marauders, 71-51
BY GARY CLARK
The unenviable task of facing two
triple AAA basketball teams on
succesive nights didn't seem to
bother Coach Lewis Hall's Wahama
White Falcons as they came through
the test in flying colors by defeating
visiting Meigs Saturday night by a
71~1 score.
The victory coupled with Friday
nights 82-64 win over Point Pleasant,
strimgthened the White Falcons hold
on their sixth place ranking and
gavethem a solid chance of moving
into the top five rated teams in the
state.
Wahama extended their season
slate to 13-2 on the year with the
triumph and kept their victory
string alive at 11 consecutive games
without a loss.
Rick Bamitz, Rainbow Gibbs and
Vince Weaver all had their second
straight game in the limelight for
the bend area team with Barnitz
leadin_g all scorers with 24 points
while Gibbs added !6 and Weaver 14.
The White Falcons raced into a 148 first period lead before increasing
their advantage to 34-16 at
termission with a 20 point second
quarter.
Bamitz sank 14 of his total points
in the half while Gibbs added 10 .
Steve Ohlinger and Kevin Smith
were the top Maurader point getters
in hall.
Meigs outscored the hosts in the
third stanza, 18-15, but failed to
make a serious comeback threai in
the final eight minutes as Vince
Weaver rammed home ten points to
help the M,ason Countlans outscore
their visitors from across the Ohio
River by a 22,!7 margin to insure
their 71-51 win .
Meigs also placed three men in
double figures for the game in 'Kevin
Smith with 12 and Bob Ashley and
Jeff Wayland with 10 each.
Wahama held a decided
rebounding edge over the
Marauders with the red and white
hauling in 45 total caroms to Meigs'
22. Tim Roush , led the local
rebounders with 10 while Vince
Weaver notched 9 and Larry Gibbs
and Rick Barnitz grabbed 8 each.
KeVIn Smith led Meigs with 7.
The Marauders shot an even 50
percent from the floor (22 of~) but
managed just 7 of 14 free throws.
They committed 16 turnovers: .
Wahama shot 44 percent from the
field (30 of 67) and continued the
mastery at the charity stripe with 11
of 16 conversions for 69 percent.
They turned the ball over on just 11 ·
occasions.
The Little Falcops got back on the ,
winning trail in the preJiminary
affair when they avenged an earlier
season loss to the Little Marauders
by claiming a 62-41 decision.
Travis Gray and Estil Lavender
paced the winners with 18 and 14

m-

points respectively while Murray
and Judge scored 10 points each for
Meigs.
Coach Keith Sayre's junior varsity
slate now stands at 11-4 on the year.
This week Wahama hits the trail
for two away engagements. Tuesday
night a visit to Southwestern is on
the agenda followed by a journey to
Spencer, scheduled for Friday. The
White Falcons lone home date
remaining will be on February 22
when they host once beaten
Southern.
MEIGS (51)
FG .. FTM·ATT .. TP
Kevin Smith
Bob Ashley
J effWByland
Steve Ohlinger
Todd Snowden
Mike Miller
Dave Kennedy
Chuck Kennedy
Chris Swann
Totals

5 2-3 12
4 2-2 10
5 ~ !0
3 2-2 8
3 0-1 6
I 0-1 2
l ~ 2
0 1-2
0 0-3 0
22.. 7-H .. 51

wrestler placed lower than third;
four wrestlers placed first, five
placed second and three placed
third.
At 98 po.u nds, Dave Powers
decisioned Blake of Meigs "B", 15 to
0, decisioned Plantz of South Point, 5
to4, then decisioned King of Meigs, 3
to 2, to win tliird place.
Wrestling in the 112 pound class in
place of the injured Mike Calandros,
Harold Dorsey made an exciting
wrestling display. He pinHed Ramey
of Fairland, and Woodruff of Meigs
"B", each in the first period. He then
decisioned a Warren local opponent,
4 to 0, to win the championship.
At 119 pounds, .Jim Henderson
defeated Butcher of South Point, 8 to
7, then was decisioned by Stone of
Meigs, 16 to 8, to receive second
place.
Mike Howard, at 126 pounds,
pinned Mitchell of Vinton County,
decisioned Lowe of Wllrren Local11
to 4, then lost to Richard of South ·
Point 4 to , 2 in a finely wrestled
match to receive second place.
For the "B" team, Chuck Henson
was pinned by Strakler of Warren
"B", decisioned Galloway of

Fairland 4 to 0, then was pinned by
Lowe of Warren A".
At !32 pounds, Dean Rhea pinned
!Wgers of Point Pleasant "B", lost
to Ruggles of south Point, 4 to 2,
pinned Hathaway of Warren "B",
then pinned Collens"of Warren " A"
to win third place.
From the "B" team, Paul Rogers
was pinned by Rhea of Point
Pleasant "A", pinned Swann of
Vinton County then was defeated in
overtime by Callens of Warren Local
2 to 0.
At !38 pounds, Greg Gibson was
decisioned by Born of Fairland, 10 to
7, pinned Menefee of Warren Local,
then pinned King of Meigs to win
third place.
At 145 pounds, Tim Jackson
pinned Martin of Vinton County in
the Semi finals. Then in the finals,
Jackson appeared to ha~e pinned
Stevens of South Point, but a controversial call forced it into overtime. Stevens won the match, I to 0,
on a penalty point and Jackson came
away with second palce.
For the "B" team, Wes Worley
was pinned by Stevens of South
Point, then was pinned by Martin of
11

Vinton County.
At 155 pounds Todd Pridemore
declsioned Pickham of Meigs, 21 to
2, defeated Damron of South Point, 4
to 0, then pinned Lett of Fairland to
win the championship.
For the " B" team, Lee thompson
was pinned by Wallace of Warren
Local, and decisioned by Griffith of
Warren "B" 7 to 1.

Gilbert !Wgers at 167 pounds,
pinned Gaughan of Warren Local
and Hall of South Point, then on the
finals, he wrestled brilliantly
defeating Napier of Fairland 14 to 8
to win first place.
At 175 pounds, Dave Darst pinned
Smith of Warren Local then was
pinned by Rickard of South Point in
the finals to come away with second
place.
Gary Newsome won his second
championship of the year in the !85
pound class, pinning Harges of South
Point, then decisioning Smith of
Warren Local, 2 to 0, in the finals .
The Unlimited, Eric Lanier pinned
Burel of Warren Local and McGhee
of South Point, then was decisioned
by Davis of Meigs in the finals, 8 to 1,
to receive second ·place.

The team showed much strength
and balance on tnefr- way to their .
third championship of the year. The
public is urged to support the team
as they travel to Hubert Hoover for
the Region IV championships Feb.
15 and 16.
·
TEAM STANDINGS
205
Point Pleasant
177 1&gt;
South Point
125
Fairland
87 .
Warren Local
69
Meigs
11
Vinton Co.
9
Warren " B"
3
Point Pleasant "B"

ANNOUNCING THE REVISED
OFFICE SCHEOULE OF
OR. MATEO P. DAYO, JR .
l06 N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio
Effective January 1980
Monday-10: DO-l : 00
2:00· 5: 00 P.M.
Tuesday, No Office
Wednesda y- t: D0-11 : 30
2:00·7:30 P.M.
Thursday 9:0D-11 :30, 2·7 :30 P.M.
Friday 10 :0D-1 :00, 2:00·5:00
Saturday 9:00·5:00
E•cept the last Saturday of the
month.

· WAHAMA \71)
Rick Bamitz
11 2-2 24
Larry Gibbs
7 2-2 16
Vince Weaver
5 4~ 14
Tim Roush
3 2-2 8
Gary Richards
2 0-1
Jeff Arnold
I 1·2
Scott Barnitz
I ~
Joey !Wush
0 0-2 0
Totals
30 .. 11-16 .. 71
Scor~

by Quarters :

Meigs
Wahama

I 2 3 4 Tot
8 8 18 17 51
14 20 15 22 71

Searching for the clever way to say "I Love
You?" Our Happy Valentine Ads will be
published on February' 14, and oHer you a. truly
unusual way to proclaim your love and IMtst
wishes.

Total Fouls - Meigs 17 Wahama 14
Officials - Virgil Wilkens and Gary
Kendall
RESERVE GAME
MEIGS (41)- Jewel 0-2-2 ; Edwards
1-1-3; Murray 4-:i-10; Judge 4-2-10;
Kovalchik 2-0-4; Adkins 1-0-2 ;
Wamsley 1-0-2; Scott 2-0-4 ; Wayland
~; Whaley ~ ; · Totals 17-7-41.
WAHAMA (62) - Gray 8-2-18 :
Lavender 5-4-14; Kitchen l · l-3 ;
Ingels 3-1-7; K. Weaver 1-5-7; Paugh
2-3·7: Sisk 0-4-4; J . Roush 0-2·2;
Powell 0-0-0; Totals 20-22-62.
Score by Quarters:
!234Tot
Meigs
7 13 10 11 41
Wahama
12 12 18 20 62
OFFICIAl.$ · Raymond Cundiff and
Sam !Wmeo.

SAY "I LOVE YOU" WITH A
$1.00 SENTINEL ·VALENTINE AD.
(Linil ·I t Words-Sizes llusbaJid BaiDW)

To My Wife, Ann ...
After. U
~era

wonderful

of marrl-ae. I'm

ootlll hNcklver-lottls In
lovoi w1111 you I
.

Woltor Z.

To Mom and Ded .••
Wo couldn't have pld&lt;od
1 nicer pair Of porents In
the worldl Hevli •
Happy Vaftllflno'i Day I

'MiklandSue

WRITE YOUR MESSAGE BEUM AND

The Baltimore Orioles swept the
Los :Angeles Dodgers in four games
in the 1966 World Series and three of
them were shutouts.

Babe Ruth, as a pitcher for the
Boston Red Sox in 1918, still led the
American League in home runs w1th
11.

.LT
OR MAIL IT WllH '1.00 BY QUARY 121H 10 lHE
DAILY SE((ONQ,
. P.
. 0. li)X 729, POMEROY, 0.

16 DDS 'l.oo-tASII WllH ORDER
1. ----,-- 2, _ __
5. _ _ __ 6,, _ _ __
9,, _ _:---_ 10. _ _ __
13,,________ 14. --,......--...,...

3.---,---:..- 4. _ _.;..___
7. _ _ __ l___:..._ __
11•. _ _ __ 12..·,_- · -15•------'-- 1&amp;.,_

. PHON. 992-2156

THE
.

'

.

DAI~Y ,SENTINEL
I

�f--- Social Calendar

Birthdays

I

5-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Feb. 11.1980

'ruESDAY
SHADE RIVER Jaycees meeting,
8 p.m. Tuesday at the home of Vic
Gaul. Board of directors asks aU
members to attend to lake part in
organizational planning; all young
men between 17 and 35 are invited.
FREE BLOOD pressure clinic, 10
a.m. to 12 noon at town hall in Harrisonville Tuesday by Harrisonville
Senior Citizens Club; Mrs. Ferndora
Siore, R.N., will take the blood

WHOLE OR MIXED

Life Style

FRYE.R
PARTS

Community ••.
.&gt;

Clubs •••

·j , '

McDaniel brothers
Susan Lanning

Named Valentine
girl for local sorority
Susan Lanning has been named
"Valentine Girl" for the Ohio Eta
Phi Chapter of Beta .Sigma Phi
Sorority.
Selected by popular vote of the
membership of the chapter, Susan
competed in the sorority's International "Valentine Girl" contest.
S~n and her husband, Jerry,
res1de on State Route 681 near Darwin. For the past eight years she has

been employed at the Gavin Plant as
a secretary, and prior to that worked
at Ohio Univeristy. She graduated
from Meigs High School in 1969. Her
husband Is personnel representative
at River Transportation, Lakin.
Mrs. Lanning has been a member
of Beta Sigma Phi for five year~~.
This year she Is program chairman
and has previously served as
treasurer and social co-chairman.

POMEROY - James and Adam
McDaniel celebrated their birthdays
recently at their home In Bashan.
James was six on Jan. 18 and Adam
was one on Feb. 2.
A train engine cake was presented
to James and a "tweetie bird" cake
to Adam. Gifts and cards were
presented to both children. Cake and
ice cream were senred to Jim and
Thelma Cundiff, Helen Hill, Gloria
McDaniel, Zilpha Roush, Mark
McDaniel, Matthew McDaniel,
David Cundlff, and the parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Luke McDaniel.

suses.
It was noted that the required

number of members for becoming a
chapter of the Ohio Genealogical
Society has been reached. Anyone
still wishing to be listed as a charter
member will have to contact June
Ashley, Route 2, Racine by March
15. There has been a great success in
obtaining new .members, and
several members are from out of
state. The society reminds area
residents that you do not have to
reside in Meigs County or have prior
experience In family history to join.
Discussion was held on m~
berhsip In First Families of Ohio
(F.F.O.) which requires m~
bership in the Ohio Genealogical
Society and proof of an ancestor
residing In Ohio before 1820. It was
noted that many Meigs County
residents would qualify for this
honor. It was also discussed about
revivtng the pioneer society in the
fonn of First Families of Meigs
County. This was tabled for future
discussion.
The society expressed its appreciation to the county commissioners in their wise use of
C.E.T.A. funds fordoing the tax map
project. These are a great help In
family research through deeds.

of the
Eastern Band Boosters has been
postponed until Tuesdsy, Feb. 19,

7:30 p.m. In the high school band

room.
CHESTER TOWNSIUP Trustees

meet 7:30 p.m. Tuesdsy in the town
hall at Chester.
REGULAR ~TING, Racine
Lodge 461, Free and Accepted
Masons Tuesday, 7::.1 p.m. Work in
entered apprentice degree.
WEDNESDAY
SOUP SUPPER, 4 to 7 p.m. Wednesday at the Racine Wesleyan

Methodist Church; bean and
ftle(able soup, corn bread. Those
wishing take out orders should bring
container.
REGULAR meeting Pomeroy
Chapter80, Royal Arch Masons, 7:30
p.m. Wednesday; at 8:30 ll.m.
meeting of Bosworih Council 46,
Royal and Select Masters.
'niURSDAY

Genealogical Society meets
The Meigs Genealogical Society
recently met at the Meigs Museum,
opening with a discussion of a
genealogical request on the John F.
and Mary E. Baker family. Anyone
having information on this family is
asked to contact the society.
The secretary of the society recently obtained forms to copy census
records from Miss Frances lhle, formerly of Meigs County. These fonns
will be copied for use In the upcoming project of the society in
copying various Meigs County cen-

-tilE FEB. 12 meeting

The society instructed the
secretary to contact the Ohio
Genealogical Society in obtaining
the tapes from Everton Publishers
entitled, "How to Climb the
Genealogy Tree." These tapes· will
be used to instruct new members
and insterested individuals in the
beginning phases of family research. These classes wlll be announced
to the public at a future date.
The next meeting -of the society
will be held February 17 at 2 p.m. at
the Meigs Museum, weather permitting. Prospective members are
invited to attend.

Receives 60-year pin
Mrs. Mary Diehl was presented
her ~year pin from the Order of the
Eastern Star by Janice DeBord,
worthy matron of Harrisonville
Chapter 255, recently.
Mrs. Diehl, who will observe her
103rd birthday, Feb. 25, Is one of the
oldest members of the organization
in the State of Ohio.
Attending the presentation were
Mrs. Bessie King, deputy grand
matron of District 25, Lois Pauley,
past district deputy, Mr. and Mrs.·
Nonnan Will, Mrs. Frances Young,
Mr. and Mrs. Charles King, Chester
King, Pauline Atkins, and Olevla
Cotterill.
Refreshments were served by the
hostesses, Stella Atkins, and Ruby
Diehl, daughters of Mrs. Mary
Diehl.
TOMEET'niURSDAY

The past officers of Racine
Chapter, Order of the EAstern Star,
will meet Thursday at the Masonic
Temple, 7:30p.m. A potluck supper
will be served. The program will be
on a valentine and patriotic theme

- PAST Officers .Club, Racine
Chapter, 7:30 Thursday at the
Masonic Temple. A potluck supper
will be served. Program by Mrs.
Wilson Carpenter and Mrs. Bert
Grimm.
ENERGY AUDIT

Shawn King
POMEROY - The first birthday
of Shawn Ray King, son of Danny
and Cindy King, Route 2, Pomeroy,
was held Feb. 4at his home.
A Big Bird cake was served with
ice cream and Kool-Aid.
Presenting gifts to Shawn were his
grandparents, David and Ruth
Campbell, and Jack and Ruby King.
.Others attending,were Connie, Kim
and Ricky Patterson, Kathy Jacks,
Debbie Campbell, Gwen Savage,
Buddy, Debra, Otls, Deanna and
Angela Norris, Gary and Tony King,
Mlsti Dawn King, Greg, Dick, ~
my, Carla and Darla King, Jackie
and Brian Justice. He also received
a gift from his great-grandmother,
Cecile Campbell, Pomeroy.

Birth
Mr. ~d Mrs. Thomas A. Gaspers,
Reedsville, are announcing the birth
of their son, John Thomas, Feb. 6.
They have two other children, Christy, three, and Amanda, two. Paternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas J. Gaspers, Reedsville, and
maternal grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Delbert Hall, Uttle Hocking.
with Mrs- WUson Carpenter and
Mrs. Bert Grimm presenting it.

DETROIT (AP) - A free home
energy audit is being offered to
residents of alngle family homes and
duplexes In this city to help save
energy.
Detroiters are .urged to reply to
questionnaires that ask about such
things as hbw many windows on
each side of the ~louse. which direction the house front faces, atb.c
exhauat fans, basements, shrubbery
or trees shading the house and
others. The lnfonnation is fed Into a
computer and, within 3to 4 weeks, a
homeowner report is returned to. the
resident suggesting energy-aavtng
steps to take.

POLLY.$ POINTERS
end and colored slips on the other
end. They do not get wrinkled and do
not take up space in a dresser
drawer. - B.C.B.
DEAR POLLY - My Pet Peeve is
with those people who leave shopping carts In the pakirig lot. Other
drivers caMot see the carts at night
or when it is raJning and many a car
is severely scratched or dented. BECKY ·
DE;AR POLLY - I think I have a
cure for Hazel's chewing dog. Our
vet told me to sprinkle red pepper on
the things my puppy chewed on and
this really did the trick. Please do
not put a muzzle on her ali that would
not solve the problem. - RUTH
Polly will send you one of her signed thank,you newspaper - counon
clippers if she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in her
column . Write POLLY'S
POINTERS in care of this
newspaper.

PREVENnON

WHOLE

lEGS ................ ~~~ 89$

SALE DATES
FEBRUARY

QUANTITY RIGHTS
RESERVED

THANK YOU CHERRY

'
PIE FILLI G

BATHROOM TISSUE

CLOUD

should our clients. We encourage

and

safety

...

preventive measures which can

keep that car accident from hap·
pening, that building fire from
starting, that home burglary
Prevention saves lite, limb and

ct.
Pkg.

property ... and helps control insurance costs and premiums.
When losses do at cur, our

I

J.'1175

I

~

Plus Tax

policyholders can count on pro-

IFREJ Lube With 011 Change
1
, \

•A 111 AMC &amp; Jeep Modell

I

1

992-2143

KRAFT

7-oz.
Pkgs.

when they want it. It means being courteous
at all times and maintaining attractive, easy-todo·business-with offices.
"It means doing everything we can to
keep complaints from arising,.and it means
prompt and fair handling of those that do.
"We are a citizen of each community we .
serve and take an active part in its affairs. Like
any other citizen, we want our neighbors to
think well of us. Besides, it makes good business
sense. We prosper only as the community
prospers; so we help it thrive in every way
we can.
"Such is our job as we see-it. We are trying
to do it well and to do it better all the time:'

'

RIVERSIDE AMC • .JEEP
195 Upper Rive! Road

446-9800

Gallipolis, Ohic

~~el\

FOLGER'S FLAKED

COFFEE·
130Z-

FRESHLIKE 121h oz_ CUT SPINACH OR 14 OZ-

MAC I CHEESE

,

MAXWELL HOUSE

IIISTAIT $ 59
COFFEE 3~~z.
1

'259

SLICED cARROTs .................. 3 CANS s1 oo
4 DINNER NAPKINS

FRESHLIKE

GREEN LIMA BEANS .......~ .. .t.~P?;.~.~ .. 49~
SWISS MISS

COCOA MIX ..............................~~.~-... 99~

$1
VALUABLE COUPON WORTH s1.00

KAL KAN

MEALTIME DOG FOOD

25

TOWA~D

25 LB. BAG $655

THE PURCHASE DF THIS WEEK'S FEATU~ED ITEM

4 DINNER NAPKINS
Our Reg ..i)iscount Price . . .
$4 .99
Coupo·n Savings .
· · · 1.00

TAB, SPRITE OR

Your Price (with

COKE
KRAR .MARGARINE

PAR KAY.·.::~~·.~!~~ 59$

PKG.
16 Ol. BTLS

coupo n)

$3.99

Coupon Good Thru 2·16·80

...

. 'I:.*U'NDRV'"D
E'I'E R'G E.NT
,..

9

. ,....,

15' OFF LABEL

49-oz.
Box

FARM FRESH PRODUCE·--.;..._.-------..,.,...~­

IDAHO BAKERS

POTATOES ...........................!P....~~~~~~.. SJ19
NEW YELLOW
.
.
.
.
3 L~:.~~~..... 29~
ON IONS ................................~ ......

.J

---Work
- - -Is-Done
- - By Factory
#
- - - -Mechanics
---All
App~oved

GET

Cans

~

SLICED ~ BEATS ............................ 3 CANS SJ 00

102 W. Main

Pomeroy

• 13·oz. Cut or French Style
Green Beans
• 14Y2-0Z. Cream Style Corn
• 12-oz . Whole Kernel Corn
• 14'/,. oz . Sweet Peas

FRESHLIKE 16 OZ- VEG ALL MIXEO VEGETABLES OR 12 OZ- WHOLE OR

DALE C. WARNER
INS. ·

I

I '57

FRESH LIKE

PEAS &amp; CARROTS ........... ;~ ......... }~.~~..~~39~

tion is the best policy .

AIR FILTER. F.UEL FlLTER,
II
I AND PCV VALVE .
I
95
Plus Tax SIX CYLINDER
95
'Plus Tax
V-8
.1
\...,All AMC &amp; Jeep Models

1'47

09

21-oz.

FRESHLIKE

tecting and serving in time and
need. But we still say - preven-

1

09
32-oz.
Jar

terest in loss prevention, as

~-~-------~-~
-~--..;·----·-01l Change '• · I - TUNE UP SPECIAL \1·
1
•
I
We Replace:
Spec1al
I 1 POINTs, PLUGs, coNDENSER I
1
11 I

KRAFT - "AMERICA'S FAVORITE"

FRIENDLIEST SERVICE IN TOWN
BIGGEST BARGAINS IN TOWN

••••••••••••••••• Can

But, we also have a vital in·

caution

09

THIGHS.............L~;. 89~

As an independent insurance

care,

BREASTS .......... ~••~ 1

Middleport, Ohio

11-15, 1980

agency, our primary function is
to pro,ide policies wh ich afford
financial protection in case of
loss .

FEBRUARY SERVICE SPECIALS
GOOD NOW THRU FEBRUARY 29, J9BO

CHANGE ENGINE OIL
REPLACE OIL FILTER

'149

CHICKEN PARTS

VAUGHAN'S

RIVERSIDE AMC-JEEP

I

POUND

BA CON ........................l~~. 99¢

BEST POLICY

In 1978, only 2.2 percent of those in
the labor force living on farms were
unemployed, compared with a 6.5
percent jobless rate among the nonfarm population.

The Ohio Power Company's philosophy
of service was first formally stated in 1934.
This understanding of our job has not changed
through the intervening years. It is still our
pledge to the public and the creed of every
employee.
"Our job is generating electricity and
getting it to where it's used. We're in this
business because il is concerned with the supply
of a fundamental requirement of modem living,
because it's an honorable one, because we like
it, and because we want to earn a living at it
"We aim to give one kind of serVice to
everyone ... the best that's possible. That means
supplying our customers with what they want

19

CARDINAL

from being committed.

Suggestions include such items as
weather-stripping and caulking,
estimates of what will be saved in
both dollars and energy, and
estimates Of what the energy-savtng
steps will cost if the homeowner does
his or her own work or if a licensed
contractor does it.

BEEF

GRANDPA'S HOMEMADE

Polly Cramer

POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - Instead of
throwing away leftover coffee,
freeze it in an ice cube tray and then
put crumbs in the freezer in a plastic
bag. When you serve iced coffee use
these coffee cubes instead of ice
cubes and the beverage will not
become weak when the cubes melt.
Does anyone know how to restore
a wool blanket to its original size
after it has shrunk from washing? MYRTLE
DEAR MYRTLE - All I can suggest iii a way to make the blanket
look more presentable, even though
it is smaller. Doubtless the shrinking
was caused by washing in water that
was too hot. Rewash in cooler water
and then try to stretch to as nesr Its
original size as possible. When
almost dry stretch again.
Never use clothespins if drying on
a line. Put it over two lines. Never
let the blanket get completely dry
before removing from a dryer.
Brush up the nap. Press the bindings. If anyone has curtain stretchers I think putting such a blanket
on them while damp would be a
great help. How about this readers?
-POLLY
DEAR POLLY - When more than
half a large jar of mayonnaise is used it is easier to spread in on bread
with a knife if the jar is laid on its
side.
When pouring the water off of
anything in a pan keep turning the
pan aroundgently.
I bend up the ends of a wire coat
hanger and hang white slips on one

SLICED

POUND

SEA STAR
BAnER DIP

MAKE CUBES FROM COFFEE
·
By Polly Cramer

CUBE STEAKS.........~~ ...l

PORK BUIT. ............~~-..~ 1
45e
9
FISH .•.•............ ....L;;.99e .SAUSAGE ................~~-.. ~1 °

Features ••• •

presswe.
CHARLES PYLES, member of
Southern Local Board of Education,
will be a guest when the Syracuse
PTO meets at 7:30p.m. Tuesday; all
parents are asked to attend.
WINDING TRAIL GARDEN
CLUB, 7:30 Tuesday at the Meigs
Museum with Margaret Parker as
hostess. Members are to take seed
catalogs for roll call response. The
program will be by Peggy Crane on
annual flowers to grow for drying.
Arrangement for the month will be
"Love Me, Love Me Not", a valentine theme. Mrs. Cora Beegle will
judge the arrangements.

GROUND

$ 89

PORK

VALUABLE COUPON

•

.

GOLDEN RIPE

We give it our best~
Ohip PowEJ Company

1

.

BAN
A"
AS
....................................
4
..
:~~~ .... $1
40%{)~ JUICY DELICIOUS FLORIDA
.
.. 5
~:.~~ •• 99.~":
- ORANGES ....•.......•......••............•.•••.
,,
'

00

HUNTS MANWICH
limit on• wltt1 c:Dupori

on• 'getupen Plr 'flmlly

27 ,/t· O:r.

$1· .19
, ·

Cen .

'•

bltlrH ~2 !1 1 /10
OGOd •t Ceullnl l
"D~II l liJI 110111

00-U-01

�f--- Social Calendar

Birthdays

I

5-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Feb. 11.1980

'ruESDAY
SHADE RIVER Jaycees meeting,
8 p.m. Tuesday at the home of Vic
Gaul. Board of directors asks aU
members to attend to lake part in
organizational planning; all young
men between 17 and 35 are invited.
FREE BLOOD pressure clinic, 10
a.m. to 12 noon at town hall in Harrisonville Tuesday by Harrisonville
Senior Citizens Club; Mrs. Ferndora
Siore, R.N., will take the blood

WHOLE OR MIXED

Life Style

FRYE.R
PARTS

Community ••.
.&gt;

Clubs •••

·j , '

McDaniel brothers
Susan Lanning

Named Valentine
girl for local sorority
Susan Lanning has been named
"Valentine Girl" for the Ohio Eta
Phi Chapter of Beta .Sigma Phi
Sorority.
Selected by popular vote of the
membership of the chapter, Susan
competed in the sorority's International "Valentine Girl" contest.
S~n and her husband, Jerry,
res1de on State Route 681 near Darwin. For the past eight years she has

been employed at the Gavin Plant as
a secretary, and prior to that worked
at Ohio Univeristy. She graduated
from Meigs High School in 1969. Her
husband Is personnel representative
at River Transportation, Lakin.
Mrs. Lanning has been a member
of Beta Sigma Phi for five year~~.
This year she Is program chairman
and has previously served as
treasurer and social co-chairman.

POMEROY - James and Adam
McDaniel celebrated their birthdays
recently at their home In Bashan.
James was six on Jan. 18 and Adam
was one on Feb. 2.
A train engine cake was presented
to James and a "tweetie bird" cake
to Adam. Gifts and cards were
presented to both children. Cake and
ice cream were senred to Jim and
Thelma Cundiff, Helen Hill, Gloria
McDaniel, Zilpha Roush, Mark
McDaniel, Matthew McDaniel,
David Cundlff, and the parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Luke McDaniel.

suses.
It was noted that the required

number of members for becoming a
chapter of the Ohio Genealogical
Society has been reached. Anyone
still wishing to be listed as a charter
member will have to contact June
Ashley, Route 2, Racine by March
15. There has been a great success in
obtaining new .members, and
several members are from out of
state. The society reminds area
residents that you do not have to
reside in Meigs County or have prior
experience In family history to join.
Discussion was held on m~
berhsip In First Families of Ohio
(F.F.O.) which requires m~
bership in the Ohio Genealogical
Society and proof of an ancestor
residing In Ohio before 1820. It was
noted that many Meigs County
residents would qualify for this
honor. It was also discussed about
revivtng the pioneer society in the
fonn of First Families of Meigs
County. This was tabled for future
discussion.
The society expressed its appreciation to the county commissioners in their wise use of
C.E.T.A. funds fordoing the tax map
project. These are a great help In
family research through deeds.

of the
Eastern Band Boosters has been
postponed until Tuesdsy, Feb. 19,

7:30 p.m. In the high school band

room.
CHESTER TOWNSIUP Trustees

meet 7:30 p.m. Tuesdsy in the town
hall at Chester.
REGULAR ~TING, Racine
Lodge 461, Free and Accepted
Masons Tuesday, 7::.1 p.m. Work in
entered apprentice degree.
WEDNESDAY
SOUP SUPPER, 4 to 7 p.m. Wednesday at the Racine Wesleyan

Methodist Church; bean and
ftle(able soup, corn bread. Those
wishing take out orders should bring
container.
REGULAR meeting Pomeroy
Chapter80, Royal Arch Masons, 7:30
p.m. Wednesday; at 8:30 ll.m.
meeting of Bosworih Council 46,
Royal and Select Masters.
'niURSDAY

Genealogical Society meets
The Meigs Genealogical Society
recently met at the Meigs Museum,
opening with a discussion of a
genealogical request on the John F.
and Mary E. Baker family. Anyone
having information on this family is
asked to contact the society.
The secretary of the society recently obtained forms to copy census
records from Miss Frances lhle, formerly of Meigs County. These fonns
will be copied for use In the upcoming project of the society in
copying various Meigs County cen-

-tilE FEB. 12 meeting

The society instructed the
secretary to contact the Ohio
Genealogical Society in obtaining
the tapes from Everton Publishers
entitled, "How to Climb the
Genealogy Tree." These tapes· will
be used to instruct new members
and insterested individuals in the
beginning phases of family research. These classes wlll be announced
to the public at a future date.
The next meeting -of the society
will be held February 17 at 2 p.m. at
the Meigs Museum, weather permitting. Prospective members are
invited to attend.

Receives 60-year pin
Mrs. Mary Diehl was presented
her ~year pin from the Order of the
Eastern Star by Janice DeBord,
worthy matron of Harrisonville
Chapter 255, recently.
Mrs. Diehl, who will observe her
103rd birthday, Feb. 25, Is one of the
oldest members of the organization
in the State of Ohio.
Attending the presentation were
Mrs. Bessie King, deputy grand
matron of District 25, Lois Pauley,
past district deputy, Mr. and Mrs.·
Nonnan Will, Mrs. Frances Young,
Mr. and Mrs. Charles King, Chester
King, Pauline Atkins, and Olevla
Cotterill.
Refreshments were served by the
hostesses, Stella Atkins, and Ruby
Diehl, daughters of Mrs. Mary
Diehl.
TOMEET'niURSDAY

The past officers of Racine
Chapter, Order of the EAstern Star,
will meet Thursday at the Masonic
Temple, 7:30p.m. A potluck supper
will be served. The program will be
on a valentine and patriotic theme

- PAST Officers .Club, Racine
Chapter, 7:30 Thursday at the
Masonic Temple. A potluck supper
will be served. Program by Mrs.
Wilson Carpenter and Mrs. Bert
Grimm.
ENERGY AUDIT

Shawn King
POMEROY - The first birthday
of Shawn Ray King, son of Danny
and Cindy King, Route 2, Pomeroy,
was held Feb. 4at his home.
A Big Bird cake was served with
ice cream and Kool-Aid.
Presenting gifts to Shawn were his
grandparents, David and Ruth
Campbell, and Jack and Ruby King.
.Others attending,were Connie, Kim
and Ricky Patterson, Kathy Jacks,
Debbie Campbell, Gwen Savage,
Buddy, Debra, Otls, Deanna and
Angela Norris, Gary and Tony King,
Mlsti Dawn King, Greg, Dick, ~
my, Carla and Darla King, Jackie
and Brian Justice. He also received
a gift from his great-grandmother,
Cecile Campbell, Pomeroy.

Birth
Mr. ~d Mrs. Thomas A. Gaspers,
Reedsville, are announcing the birth
of their son, John Thomas, Feb. 6.
They have two other children, Christy, three, and Amanda, two. Paternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas J. Gaspers, Reedsville, and
maternal grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Delbert Hall, Uttle Hocking.
with Mrs- WUson Carpenter and
Mrs. Bert Grimm presenting it.

DETROIT (AP) - A free home
energy audit is being offered to
residents of alngle family homes and
duplexes In this city to help save
energy.
Detroiters are .urged to reply to
questionnaires that ask about such
things as hbw many windows on
each side of the ~louse. which direction the house front faces, atb.c
exhauat fans, basements, shrubbery
or trees shading the house and
others. The lnfonnation is fed Into a
computer and, within 3to 4 weeks, a
homeowner report is returned to. the
resident suggesting energy-aavtng
steps to take.

POLLY.$ POINTERS
end and colored slips on the other
end. They do not get wrinkled and do
not take up space in a dresser
drawer. - B.C.B.
DEAR POLLY - My Pet Peeve is
with those people who leave shopping carts In the pakirig lot. Other
drivers caMot see the carts at night
or when it is raJning and many a car
is severely scratched or dented. BECKY ·
DE;AR POLLY - I think I have a
cure for Hazel's chewing dog. Our
vet told me to sprinkle red pepper on
the things my puppy chewed on and
this really did the trick. Please do
not put a muzzle on her ali that would
not solve the problem. - RUTH
Polly will send you one of her signed thank,you newspaper - counon
clippers if she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in her
column . Write POLLY'S
POINTERS in care of this
newspaper.

PREVENnON

WHOLE

lEGS ................ ~~~ 89$

SALE DATES
FEBRUARY

QUANTITY RIGHTS
RESERVED

THANK YOU CHERRY

'
PIE FILLI G

BATHROOM TISSUE

CLOUD

should our clients. We encourage

and

safety

...

preventive measures which can

keep that car accident from hap·
pening, that building fire from
starting, that home burglary
Prevention saves lite, limb and

ct.
Pkg.

property ... and helps control insurance costs and premiums.
When losses do at cur, our

I

J.'1175

I

~

Plus Tax

policyholders can count on pro-

IFREJ Lube With 011 Change
1
, \

•A 111 AMC &amp; Jeep Modell

I

1

992-2143

KRAFT

7-oz.
Pkgs.

when they want it. It means being courteous
at all times and maintaining attractive, easy-todo·business-with offices.
"It means doing everything we can to
keep complaints from arising,.and it means
prompt and fair handling of those that do.
"We are a citizen of each community we .
serve and take an active part in its affairs. Like
any other citizen, we want our neighbors to
think well of us. Besides, it makes good business
sense. We prosper only as the community
prospers; so we help it thrive in every way
we can.
"Such is our job as we see-it. We are trying
to do it well and to do it better all the time:'

'

RIVERSIDE AMC • .JEEP
195 Upper Rive! Road

446-9800

Gallipolis, Ohic

~~el\

FOLGER'S FLAKED

COFFEE·
130Z-

FRESHLIKE 121h oz_ CUT SPINACH OR 14 OZ-

MAC I CHEESE

,

MAXWELL HOUSE

IIISTAIT $ 59
COFFEE 3~~z.
1

'259

SLICED cARROTs .................. 3 CANS s1 oo
4 DINNER NAPKINS

FRESHLIKE

GREEN LIMA BEANS .......~ .. .t.~P?;.~.~ .. 49~
SWISS MISS

COCOA MIX ..............................~~.~-... 99~

$1
VALUABLE COUPON WORTH s1.00

KAL KAN

MEALTIME DOG FOOD

25

TOWA~D

25 LB. BAG $655

THE PURCHASE DF THIS WEEK'S FEATU~ED ITEM

4 DINNER NAPKINS
Our Reg ..i)iscount Price . . .
$4 .99
Coupo·n Savings .
· · · 1.00

TAB, SPRITE OR

Your Price (with

COKE
KRAR .MARGARINE

PAR KAY.·.::~~·.~!~~ 59$

PKG.
16 Ol. BTLS

coupo n)

$3.99

Coupon Good Thru 2·16·80

...

. 'I:.*U'NDRV'"D
E'I'E R'G E.NT
,..

9

. ,....,

15' OFF LABEL

49-oz.
Box

FARM FRESH PRODUCE·--.;..._.-------..,.,...~­

IDAHO BAKERS

POTATOES ...........................!P....~~~~~~.. SJ19
NEW YELLOW
.
.
.
.
3 L~:.~~~..... 29~
ON IONS ................................~ ......

.J

---Work
- - -Is-Done
- - By Factory
#
- - - -Mechanics
---All
App~oved

GET

Cans

~

SLICED ~ BEATS ............................ 3 CANS SJ 00

102 W. Main

Pomeroy

• 13·oz. Cut or French Style
Green Beans
• 14Y2-0Z. Cream Style Corn
• 12-oz . Whole Kernel Corn
• 14'/,. oz . Sweet Peas

FRESHLIKE 16 OZ- VEG ALL MIXEO VEGETABLES OR 12 OZ- WHOLE OR

DALE C. WARNER
INS. ·

I

I '57

FRESH LIKE

PEAS &amp; CARROTS ........... ;~ ......... }~.~~..~~39~

tion is the best policy .

AIR FILTER. F.UEL FlLTER,
II
I AND PCV VALVE .
I
95
Plus Tax SIX CYLINDER
95
'Plus Tax
V-8
.1
\...,All AMC &amp; Jeep Models

1'47

09

21-oz.

FRESHLIKE

tecting and serving in time and
need. But we still say - preven-

1

09
32-oz.
Jar

terest in loss prevention, as

~-~-------~-~
-~--..;·----·-01l Change '• · I - TUNE UP SPECIAL \1·
1
•
I
We Replace:
Spec1al
I 1 POINTs, PLUGs, coNDENSER I
1
11 I

KRAFT - "AMERICA'S FAVORITE"

FRIENDLIEST SERVICE IN TOWN
BIGGEST BARGAINS IN TOWN

••••••••••••••••• Can

But, we also have a vital in·

caution

09

THIGHS.............L~;. 89~

As an independent insurance

care,

BREASTS .......... ~••~ 1

Middleport, Ohio

11-15, 1980

agency, our primary function is
to pro,ide policies wh ich afford
financial protection in case of
loss .

FEBRUARY SERVICE SPECIALS
GOOD NOW THRU FEBRUARY 29, J9BO

CHANGE ENGINE OIL
REPLACE OIL FILTER

'149

CHICKEN PARTS

VAUGHAN'S

RIVERSIDE AMC-JEEP

I

POUND

BA CON ........................l~~. 99¢

BEST POLICY

In 1978, only 2.2 percent of those in
the labor force living on farms were
unemployed, compared with a 6.5
percent jobless rate among the nonfarm population.

The Ohio Power Company's philosophy
of service was first formally stated in 1934.
This understanding of our job has not changed
through the intervening years. It is still our
pledge to the public and the creed of every
employee.
"Our job is generating electricity and
getting it to where it's used. We're in this
business because il is concerned with the supply
of a fundamental requirement of modem living,
because it's an honorable one, because we like
it, and because we want to earn a living at it
"We aim to give one kind of serVice to
everyone ... the best that's possible. That means
supplying our customers with what they want

19

CARDINAL

from being committed.

Suggestions include such items as
weather-stripping and caulking,
estimates of what will be saved in
both dollars and energy, and
estimates Of what the energy-savtng
steps will cost if the homeowner does
his or her own work or if a licensed
contractor does it.

BEEF

GRANDPA'S HOMEMADE

Polly Cramer

POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - Instead of
throwing away leftover coffee,
freeze it in an ice cube tray and then
put crumbs in the freezer in a plastic
bag. When you serve iced coffee use
these coffee cubes instead of ice
cubes and the beverage will not
become weak when the cubes melt.
Does anyone know how to restore
a wool blanket to its original size
after it has shrunk from washing? MYRTLE
DEAR MYRTLE - All I can suggest iii a way to make the blanket
look more presentable, even though
it is smaller. Doubtless the shrinking
was caused by washing in water that
was too hot. Rewash in cooler water
and then try to stretch to as nesr Its
original size as possible. When
almost dry stretch again.
Never use clothespins if drying on
a line. Put it over two lines. Never
let the blanket get completely dry
before removing from a dryer.
Brush up the nap. Press the bindings. If anyone has curtain stretchers I think putting such a blanket
on them while damp would be a
great help. How about this readers?
-POLLY
DEAR POLLY - When more than
half a large jar of mayonnaise is used it is easier to spread in on bread
with a knife if the jar is laid on its
side.
When pouring the water off of
anything in a pan keep turning the
pan aroundgently.
I bend up the ends of a wire coat
hanger and hang white slips on one

SLICED

POUND

SEA STAR
BAnER DIP

MAKE CUBES FROM COFFEE
·
By Polly Cramer

CUBE STEAKS.........~~ ...l

PORK BUIT. ............~~-..~ 1
45e
9
FISH .•.•............ ....L;;.99e .SAUSAGE ................~~-.. ~1 °

Features ••• •

presswe.
CHARLES PYLES, member of
Southern Local Board of Education,
will be a guest when the Syracuse
PTO meets at 7:30p.m. Tuesday; all
parents are asked to attend.
WINDING TRAIL GARDEN
CLUB, 7:30 Tuesday at the Meigs
Museum with Margaret Parker as
hostess. Members are to take seed
catalogs for roll call response. The
program will be by Peggy Crane on
annual flowers to grow for drying.
Arrangement for the month will be
"Love Me, Love Me Not", a valentine theme. Mrs. Cora Beegle will
judge the arrangements.

GROUND

$ 89

PORK

VALUABLE COUPON

•

.

GOLDEN RIPE

We give it our best~
Ohip PowEJ Company

1

.

BAN
A"
AS
....................................
4
..
:~~~ .... $1
40%{)~ JUICY DELICIOUS FLORIDA
.
.. 5
~:.~~ •• 99.~":
- ORANGES ....•.......•......••............•.•••.
,,
'

00

HUNTS MANWICH
limit on• wltt1 c:Dupori

on• 'getupen Plr 'flmlly

27 ,/t· O:r.

$1· .19
, ·

Cen .

'•

bltlrH ~2 !1 1 /10
OGOd •t Ceullnl l
"D~II l liJI 110111

00-U-01

�ftj'}l)f.\.0 ID1t

I&gt;-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., M onday, Feb. 11, 1980

Your Best Buys· Are Found in the Sentinel Classifieds
WANT AD
CHARGES
15 Word&amp; or Under
Cash
Charse

1 day

1.00

U$

1.80
3.00

2.2$
3.7S

uo

2days

3days
6days

uo

Each word over the minim~n~
1~ words is 4 cents per word per
day , Ada runn1nl otberthan consecutive days wfll be charged at
the l day rate.

'

In memory, Can! of Thanb
and Obituary : e cents per word,
$3.00 minimwn. Cuh ln ad-

Notices

Services Offered

Wanted to Rent

For Sale

GUN SHOOT EVERY
SUNDAY 1 PM . FACTORY
CHOKE ONLY . RAC IN E
GU N CL UB .

ROOM, board andlaundry .
Elderly handicapped or
working men . 992 ·6022.

4 or 5 room house or apart·

COAL ,
LIMESTONE ,
sa nd , gra ve l, calcium
chloride, fert ilizer, dog
food, and all types of salt.
E)(celsior Salt Works, Inc. ,
E . Main St., Pomeroy, 992389 1.

G UN SHOOT . Ra cine
Volunteer· F i re
Dept .
Every Saturday . 6:30p.m .
At their buildingin Bashan .
Factory choke guns only .
GUN SHOOT every Sunday
12 :00. Factory choke only .
Corn Hollow Gun Club,
Rutland . Proceeds donated
to Boy Scout Troop 249.

WIL L DO babys itting .
Prefer preschool aged,
children. Daytime in my
home . 992·5378.
WANTED
TO
DO :
Housework or clea ning 1
and care for elder ly in your
home. Ref erence. 985-3521.
WILL DO baby si 1ti ng
evenings. 992·6372 .

vance.

Mobile Horne sales and Yard
sales are accep(ed ooly with

cash with order. 2:5 cent charge

for ads caiTY"inl! Box Nwnbt!r In
Caire of The Sentinel.
The Publlaher reserves the
to edit Clr l'flject any ads
deemed objectional. The
Publisher will not be respoMible
for more than one incorrect insertion .
Phone 992-2156

right

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADlJNES
M&lt;lnday

ATTENTION :
I IM ·
PORTANT TO YOU) Will
pay cash or certified check
tor antiQues and collec tibles or entire estates.
Noth ing too large . Also,
guns, pocket watches and
coin collections. Call 61.4·
767·3167 or 557 ·3411 .
BUYING U.S. SILVER
COINS DATED 1964 OR
EARLIER
&lt;ANY
AMOUNT) . DON'T LOSE
MONEY , SIMPLY PICK
UP THE PHONE AND
DIAL
614 · 99 2· 5113 ,
BROWN 'S.

Giveaway

thru Friday

I P.M.
the day before publication
Sunday

.

I P.M.
Friday altemoon

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbus, Ohio
February 1, 1980

Contract Sales

Legal Copy
No. 80·26
UNIT PRICE
CONTRACT
PMS·OOOS (173J
Sealed proposals will be
rece ived at the office of the
Director of The Ohio Depar -

tment of Transportation,

Columbus, Ohio, untillO :OO
A.M., Ohio Standard Time,
Tuesday, March 4, 1980, tor
improvements in :
Athens, Gallia, Hocking,
Meigs and Washin~ton
Counties, Ohio, on vanous
locations, by applying
retroflectorlzed polyester
compound tor center I ines,
lane lines and channelizing
lines.
The Ohio Department of
Transportation
hereby
notifies all bidders that it
will affirmatively insure
that In any contract en·
tered into pursuant to this
advertisement, minority
business enterprises will be
afforded full opportunity to
submit bids in response t o
this invitation and wil l not
be discriminated .against
on the grounds of race,
color, or national origin in
consideration
for
an
award;
"Minimum wace rates
for this project have been
predetermined as required
by law and are set forth in
the bid proposal."
"The aate set for cum ·
pletion of this work shall be
set forth in the bidding
proposal."
Each bidder shall be
required to file with his bid
a certified check or
cashier's check for an
amount equal to five per·
cent of his bid, but in no
event more than fifty
thousands dollars, or a
bond for ten percent of his
bid, payable to the Direc·
tor.
Bidders must apply, on
the proper forms, for
Qualification at least ten
days prior to the date set
for openin~ bids in ac·
cordance wtth Chapter 5525
Ohio Revised Code .
Plans and specifications
are on fi ie in the Depart·
ment of Transportation and
the office of the District
Deputy Director .
The Director reserves
the right to reject any and
al l bids.
DAVIDL . WEIR
DIRECTOR
Rev. 8· 11· 73

1917 GMC 1 ton dump,
24,000 miles, rad io, P.S.,
P.B, $4950. 7 p.m . until
midnight or before 10 a.m.
-,42 ·2395.

HALF
DOUBLE
2
bedroom, semi-furnished .
Adults only. No children or
pegs. Deposit. 992·2749.

1975 Bronco 4x4, V-8, AT ,
P.S., posi -traction front
and rear. 5 new tires. 4 new
shocks . 992 ·2679.

HEARING A!D USERS :
save used batteries, mer·
cury and silver ox ide,
redeem for cash . Diles
Hearing
Aid
Center ,
Athens. Tel. 614·594·3571 .

1977
THUNDERBIRD ,
P.S., P. B., A.C , radia l
tires, reclining seats. AM FM. $3100. 247 ·3594.

12) 11, 18, 2tc
IN'rHE
COMMON PLEAS
COURT,
PROBATE
DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
IN THE MATTER OF THE
SETTLEMENT OF AC COUNTS,
PROBATE
COURT, MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
Accounts and vouchers of
the
following
named
fiduciaries have been filed
in lhe Probate Court, Meigs
County, Ohio, for approval
and settlement :
CASE NO. 22759 Final
and Distributive Account of
Jessie M. Might, Executrix
of the Estate of Rose E.
George Deceased
CASE NO. 22613 Final
and Distribullve Account of
Robert M. Chambers
Executor of the Estate 01
Elsie M . Chambers,
Deceased.
CASE NO. 21732, Third
and Current Account of
Mary A. Martin, Guardian
of Adam Charles Martin,
formerly Adam Charles
Edgar a minor
CASE NO. 19105 Fourth
Annual Accounl of Louis B.
Vaughan, Guardian of the
Estate Of William Reeves,
an Incompetent person.
Unless exceptions are
filed thereto, said accounts
will be for nearing before
said Court on the 11th day
of March, 1980, at which
time said accounts will be
considered and continued
fm day to day until finally
diSPOSed of.'
llnvy 'person Interested
may lie wrmen exceptions
to said accounts or to mal·
ters pertaining to the
execullon Of lhe !rust, not
less than. five days prior to
the date selfor hearing. .ROBERT E . IIUC"
JUDGE
Common Pleas Court,
Probate D ivision,
Meigs County , Ohio
12) 11' 11~
&lt;
I

1972 LYNN HAVEN 14x65 3
bedroom
1970 Vindalel2 x63 wilh ex ·
·pando, 2 bedr .
1970 New Moon 12x60 3 bdr.
1973 Skyline 12x55 2
bedroom
1972 Bonanza 12x 52, 2 bedr.
B 8. S MOBILE HOME
SALES, PT . PLEASANT ,
wv . 304-675·4424.

1971 Freedom mobile home
14x64. J bedroom including
full length awning, cen tral
air, located on spacious lot
which can be rented . $7900.
Contact Kingsbury Mobile
Home Sales at 992·7034 .

For Sale,
Rent or Trade
PAIR OF blue bucket seats
out of 1978 Ford Bronco or
will trade for blue bench ·
seat to Iii same . Phone 992 ~
7051 .

NOTICE TO
BIDDERS
REPAIR VOID
BETWEEN WALLS
AND FLOOR INSIDE
MEIGS HIGH
SCHOOL IN
MEIGS LOCAL
SCHOOL DISTRICT
Sealed proposals will be
received by the Board of
Education of the Meigs
Local School District of
Middleport, Ohio al the
Treasurer's Office until
12 :00 Noon on February 18,
1980, and at that time
opened and read by the
Treasurer immediate ly
thereafter, tabulated, and
a report there made by the
Treasurer to said Board at
its next meeting .
Description
of
im ·
provement is located at
Meigs High School, 42091
Pomeroy Pike, Pomeroy,
Ohio. The conlraclor shall
include
all
labor ,
materials, ~uipment, and
services reQuired to com ·
plete the repairs of the void
between the walls and floor.
inside the Meigs High
School .
Detailed specifications
and instructions to bidders
may be oblained at the Of·
lice of the Treasurer, South
Third Avenue, Middleport,
Ohio.
A certified check parable
to the Treasurer o the
above board of education
or a satisfactory bid bond
execuled by the bidder and
the surety company, in c1n
amount equa l to frve per·
cent of the bid shall be sub·
milled with each bid .
Said board of education
reserves the right to waive
informalities, to accept or
reject any and all, or parts
ol any and all bids.
No bids may be with·
drawn for at least thirty
130)
days after
the
scheduled closing ti me for
receipts of bids.
Board of Education of
Meigs Local School District
Jane wa~ner, Treasurer
South Thtrd Avenue
M;dd leporl, Ohio 45760

1973 GMC
van ,
low
mi leage, 6 cyl ., std . 992·
5057 .
1973 Ford Maverick. Very
good condition . 53,000 ac·
tua l miles. Small V-8, auto.
wi th air . Good t ires. $1000.
985·4346 .
1975 CHEVY BLAZER 4X4,
350. Auto. lrans., PS, P. B .•
AM S-track radio. Reese
hitch, trailer brakes, new
t ires. $1600. 992 ·2467 after
5:30p.m.

Help wanted
GET VALUABLE training
as a young business person
and earn good money plus
some great gifts as a Sen·
tinel route carrier. Phone
us right away and get on
the el igibility li st at 992·
2156 or 992·2157 .
RN OR LPN, full time. 3·
11 :30 and 11 to 1:30 . Pari
lime RN or LPN, 1110 7:30.
Call Mr . Zid ian at Pomeroy
Health Care Center, Mon ·
day through Friday, 9·5.

first dynasty of
China, the Hsia, reigned
from approximately 2000
il.C. to 1500 B.C.

RENT, partly
house. 992·7706 .

SALES TRAINEE . Salary
plus commissions. No ex ·
perience necessary . Phone
992·2480.

APPLES - ROME beauly
apples at S4 per bu . Best for
apple butter . Call 669·3785,
Fitzpatrick Orchard, SR
689.

CHIP WOOD. Poles max.
diameter 10" on largest
end. $12 per ton. Bundled
slab . $10 per ton . Delivered
to Ohio Pallet Co., Rt. 2,
Pomeroy 992·2689 .
OLD FURNITURE, ice
boxes, brass beds, iron
beds, desks, etc ., complete
households. Write M.D.
Miller. Rt. 4, Pomeroy or
call992·7760 .
ANTIQUES ,
FUR ~
NITURE, glass, china,
anything . See or call Ruth
Gosney, antiques, 26 N .
2nd, Middleport, OH. 992·
3161.
OLD COINS, pocket wat·
ches, class rings, wedding
bands, diamonds. Gold or
si lver. Cal l J. A. Wamsley,
742·2331. Treasure Chest
Coin Shop, Ath ens, OH . 592
6462 .
Wanted to Buy: Four foot
5-curve rolltop desk . Call
742·2316, evenings.
GOLD , SILVER
OR
FOREIGN COINS, OR
ANY OTHER GOLD OR
SILVER ITEMS. ALSO,
ANTIQUE FURNITURE
OR OTHER ANTIQUE
ITEMS. WILL PAY TOP
DOLLAR. CHECK WITH
OSBY lOSS I EJ MARTIN
BEFORE
SELLING
PHONE 992·6370. ALSO DO
APPRAISING .

Real Estate for Sale

POMEROY
LANDMARK
EMERGENCY
power
alternators - .own the best
-· buy Winpower . Call 513·
788·2589.
DECORATED CAKES f~
all occ asions. Charac ter
cakes and sheet cakes. Call
992-6342 or 992·2583.
1976 PICKUP truck in good
shape. Contact Joe Young,
992·2133 .
GOOD · CONDITIONED
hay, clover and orchard
grass. Delivery available.
Phone 992·1201 or 992-3309.
LARGE utility tool chest
tor pickup. Also set of
metill rac:'ks . See at .400
Lasl~y St., Pomeroy, OH.
1970 Mark Twain V·hull. 16
foot with 1978 175 hp Mere .
Call after 5 p.m., 992·2528 .
Fl REWOOD . Phone 992 ·
5240.
1/ 2

PRICE
SALE .
WOMEN ' S
AND
CHILDREN'S
DRESS
SHOES. NO EXCHANGES
OR
REFUNDS .
ALL
SALES FINAL . SHOES
WILL BE DIS'PLAYED ON
METAL SELF ·SERVICE
RACKS .
BAILEY ' S
SHOES, Ml DDLEPORT.
FOR THE month of
February,
Or"ehel's
Ceramics - greenware 30
Pet. off . Glazes 20 Pet. off .
59 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport,
OH . 992·2751.
COAL and wood healer
with blower, $400 . Buy a
heater and get 20 Pel .
discount on all purpose
safety pipe. 10 Pet.
discount on other pipe,
mats and fixtures.

JOHN DEERE Skidder
400 .
John
Deere
Knuckleboom
loader,
mounted on GMC Army 6x6
truck. 992·6319.

MIDDLEPORT - Cement block home on large cor·
ner lot . 7 rooms, 3 or 4 bedrooms, 1'12 bath, garage.
$27,000.
ROCKSPRINGS - 2 bedroom and ba,th, fully equipped kitchen, near Meigs High School, fully furnished. $25,000.
POMEROY - Lincoln His. 2 bedroom, bath, large
living room, full basement, new furnace. $17,500.
MIDDLEP~RT -

RISING STAR Kennel.
Board ing . Call367·0292.

HILLCREST KENNELS .
Boarding, all breeds. Clean
lndoor·ouldoor fac i lities.
Also
AKC
registered
Dober mans . 614·446·7795.
HUMANE
SOCIETY .
Adopt a homeless pet.
Heallhy, shots, wormed.
Donations required . 992 6260, noon· I p.m .

P KC Regi stered St. Ber ·
nard pups, 6 weeks old . 985 ·
3867.

f __ ..

Two bedroom brick only 1 block
from center of town . Low utilities. A bargain af
$12,500.
RUTLAND - One bedroom down, two upstairs, on
large corner lot. Just needs a little paint &amp; paper.
$9,900.
SYRACUSE - 6 room house on nice lot. $11,600.
5 ACRES OF LAND on Hysell Run, beautiful
building lot . $7,000.
Ml DOLE PORT - Build ing lot on S. Second, 63' x53' .
$~.500 .

CALL 992-2342

Bill Childs, Branch Mgr., Home 992-2449
Rodney Downing, Broker, Home 992;3731
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

~~~BOOKKEEPING
-

SERVICE

VOLKSWAGEN PARTS

Remodeling
Additions
Siding
Brick Work
Block Work
concrete Finishing

FOREIGN CAR
REPAIR
8til SMon, thru Fri.
Rt. 3, Radne, SR. 124
949·2422
1·30·pd ,

ROUSH

CONSTRUCTION

•New homes extensive remodeling
E lectrica I work
•Masonry work
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583

*

WILL HAUL limestone and
gravel. Also, lime hauling
and spreading. Leo Morris
Trucking . Phone 742·2455.

SEWING
MACHINE
Repairs,
service,
all
makes. 992 · 2284 . The
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
Authorized Singer Sales
and Service. We sharpen
Scissors.
IN ~
AUTOMOBILE
SURANCE
been can ·
cel led?
Lost
your
operator's license? Phone

m -2143.

Wed. &amp; Thurs.
Call tor Appt.

L...Q.IiiCI.U..I

. POMEROY, 0.
992-2259

NEW LISTING 3
bedroom ranch, approx.
4 yrs. old, large modern
kitchen, large garage
with workshop area, .
separae utility, wood·
burner, one acre. Good
condition. Should sell
fast. $34,900.00.
NEW LISTING
Letart - 12x60 mobile
home on a large lot. 3
bedrooms, 1112 baths,
also an 8Xl0 utility
building _Near river lan·
jing, Hydro plant &amp; the
new bridge. Priced at
$16,000.00.
NEW LISTING - This 6
room house has had ex·
tensive remodeling done
and Is In very gOOd con·
dillon.
It
has 3
bedrooms, equipped kit·
chen, family room, liv ing room, front &amp; back
P9rch, and 2 utility
buildings. Must be seen
to appreciate . Just
$20,900.00.
EASTERN DISTRICT
- 3 bedroom collage on
1'12 acres. Equipped kit·
chen, dining room with
w .b.f.p., washer, drver,
full basement, enclosed
rear porch. Fruit trees,
garden space. Country
living
for
only
$30,000.00.
PRICE REDUCED New home, · about llh
yeors old . l}uilt·ln kit·
chen with bar, dining
room, 3 bedrooms, 2
baths, living room with
w.b,f .p. and heatllator.
All carpeted and many
more features. Now
$39,900.00.
VACANT LAND - Ap·
prox. 72'12 acres near
Rutland on
Happy
Hollow
Rd.
All
minerals. $25,375.00.
RENTAL
INVEST·
MEtiT ..__ 3 bec!rooms,
bath, . kltcpen, living
room • . owrer. wants

56.500.()0.

.

.

BUYING OR SELLING
- CALL US - THEN
START PACKING,
REALTOR
Henry ·E : Cleland, Jr.
2

As:~ c~l:~Es ·

Roger &amp; ~tile Turner .
742-2474
Je:~~;~~~~~~~~ 949-2660

&amp;UNCHA &amp;UY.!i'
FlfOM THI:' PI.AIIT
ANP I'OII:M A
!JfAII:CH PARTY I

I!XCI!LLeNT ID!A l WITH
LUC.I&lt;, MY NEii!IHISORS.
NiiD'-J'T llVIliJ LEARII!
I!ILIT U:T Mli
ABOUT THI:' T16EIL
CALL CHRIS'S
I'SCAPING!
MOTHER FIR~n THEPOOR WOMAN MUST
!1:' WORRIE:D

Me T ' CALL A

~HC.Kl

~

l

(AnaweiiiOITIOriOW)

Jumbles: JEWEL PROXY MYRIAD ANGINA
-.Answer: How people who are prone to carelessness
sometimes end up- PRONE

•·

Monday, Feb. II

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Cunning defense illusion
NORTH
• J7

REAL ESTATE
FINANCING

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.

• 10 9 8 43

WEST
+9Z
.10971
tKJ2
¥AQ96

... Dt'IDDV HAS
RI!CEIIJED
HELl) IN HIS

. GEARCH

~OR

.~ ~eRE WE RIGM'f
TO GIVE ACI- ~H
THE LOCATION

ALr-liAH WARBUCKS
~UST 00 WHAT HE
MUST DO,.• AND HOW
OF BAHD- Slloi!!CSI I WILL TEI..L YOU

CAMP, MASTER'?

WHAT ~ MUST

At•H•UE FROM

CALL 992-7544

992 ~ 5724 .

HIS OL.D
FR:IEHO. SHSIH
ABU KAF-TAN·

ADD ONS &amp;

West

Nortb

East

South

REMODELING

Pass
Pass
Pass

1 NT
4•

Pass

3•
Pass

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

RACINE, 0.
949·2748 or
992·7314
l2 ·28·pd.

Alan: "If our readers look
at all the cards they will won·
der how any declarer and par·
ticulary an ~xperl declarer
could manage to get himself
set in four hearts."
Oswald: " The answer is that
really good defense can give
him a tough problem and the

S 8. G Carpet Cleaning .
Steam cleaned.
Free
estimate .
Reasonable
rales. Scotchguard. 992·
6309or742 ·221l .
WALL PAPERING
painting. 742·2328 .

and

PIANO TUNING. Lane
o·aniels. New phone num·
ber, 742·2951 . Service to
schOOls and home since
1965.

216 E. Second Street
FAMILY PLACE - 4 or
5 bedrooms, 1'/, baths,
formal dining, equipped
kitchen, basement, 2
business rooms or hob·
by shop, and 2 car
garage. only $35,000.
ROOMY- Large frame
home near school and
stores. Has 5 bedrooms,
1V2 baths, gas furnace,
nice carpeting, 2 car
garage, and utility
building. $17,500.
I story
STORAGE qulonset hut building
out of all flOOd water,
electric, natural gas,
concrete floor, loading
dock, and parking .
80 ACRES- All cleared
and nice laying land .
GOOd 10 room house and
many
outbuildings.
About 112 fenced . $811,000.
BRICK RANCH 3
lovely bedrooms, 2 full
balhs, large living, for·
mal dining, glass doors
to cover pallo. 2 car
garage and 4 lots. River
setting . Just $.45,000.
1 ACRE PLUS A
family home with 11
rooms and 2 baths, has
central heating and city
water. 3 car garage with
nice rental apt, over.
also small business
building on 3 state
roules. All this going for
$30,000.
RETIREE HOME - A
nice 1 bedroom home
with like new wOOdwork
Inside. Utility room,
natural gas central
heal, city water and
over 2 acres of privacy.
Only $20,000.
BUY NOW BEFORE
SPRING INFLATION.
WE HAVE 95% FINANCING. CALL 992-3325 or
992-3176.

dance

U Actor,
John -

DOWN
1 Impudent talk
Z Change
3 Rwmlng into
Yesterday's Awiwer
ll Sousa
4 Seed coat
27 Floor
composition 5 Was corrosive 18 Oz's creator
19 Neighbor
covering
15 Adjust
6 liST's
of Eng.
!II Museum:
16 Barbarian
birthplace
22S. Am.
Fr.
17 Black grape 7- Esau's

native
11 Gather
13 Metric
measure

PHONE 742-2003

ZO Prefix

grandson
8 Separated
9 Prisoner
on the run
12 Sacred spot

30 Consumed

• wildcat

32 SoUcitude
for cycle
34 Clip
or center
USmall
off
21 Fragrant
31Sunder
ointment
space
31 Spanish
22 Abode,
16 Prepare
Zi IsraeU
in Genesis
ensilage
airport
queen
23 The -,
r.--r.:--r.--r."""TI',..-rr-r."""r.Netberlands

WINNIE

23 Section
of N.Y.C.

ZiFrench
school .

Z&amp;Uly
21 r..te Italian

$45,600.00.

..

(For a copy of JACOBY
MODERN. send $Ito: "Win at
Brtdge, " care of this newspaper. P. 0. Box 489, Radio City
Station, New York, N. Y.
100 19.) .

pronoun

6 Rlin
10 Alaskan

REALTY

Housing
Headquatlets

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
39 Spiritual
1 Brazlllan
40 Quaker

GASOLINE ALLEY

HOBSTETTER

NEW LISTING - Want
to Invest In a bu ~ lneu
building? We hve unell
M~st show genuine In·
lerest before we will·
give location and price.
&lt;WALITY 1\NO VALUE
- 5 bedroom home, 2
full baths, living room,
dining room, family
room, modern kitchen,
utility and full base·
merit. GOOif location In
Miqd,eport.
,We are ~elllng our
hOmes. May we help you
sell yours?
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.
Phone 742·2003
Velma Niclnsky, Assoc..
Phone742-3092
GeorgeS. Hobstetter Jr,
~ker H2-S..:.;73;.:t_ _...

Oswald: " We keep getting
questions about whether a
player is legally entitled to
pass his partner's forcing
bid."
Alan: " Of course, he is! He
does so at the ri sk of losing a
partner, but he is not violating
any law."

~

Real Estate for Sale

INVEST - 2 homes on
Beech Grove Road.
Both In excellent condl·
lion. Live In one and
rent the other. Situated
on 10 acres !cross from
Legion Hall.
RUTLAND Extra
nice 4 bedroom home.
All carpet and drapes
Included. This home has
peen well·kept and see·
1ng It is believing in It!!
Selling price $35,000.
TUPPERS PLAINS Cozy 2 bedroom starter
home . Only 523,000.00.
NEW HOME - Total
electric, 3 bedrooms.
Quality
throughout .
Situated on a little over
one acre. Sells for

Pass

I+

Opening lead:+ A

V. C. YOUNG Ill

E L WOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR sweepers,
toasters, irons, all small
appliances. Lawn mower.
Next to Stale Highway
Garage on Route 7, 985·
3825.

EAST
+106 53
.6
tA75
+J10i73
SOUTH
+AKQ84
.AQ832
tQ6
+4

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South

Gutter work, down
spouts, some concrete
work,
walks
and
drivewavs.
(FREE ESTIMATES)
Reduced Winter Rates

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

2· 11 ·80

+K~2

ANNIE

Hours 9-1 M., W., F . .
Other limes by appointment.
107 Sycamore (Rear
Pomeroy, 0.

better player South is. the
more likely he is to fall for the
illusion that West can se t up."
Alan : " West starts with the
ace of clubs and receives the
discouraging three from his
partner . It should be apparent
to West that a diamond shift is
indicated. South surely has
only thr~e minor suit cards."
Oswald : Most West's lead
the diamond deuce. The illusionist leads the king and continues with the deuce. East is
in with the ace and leads his
diamond five. What should
South do' "
Alan : "South must play
West lor a doubleton diamond
and ruff high. This play can
only cost him .if trumps break
4-1, but that is the way they
break and expert South bites
the bullet. "

•Kn

Federaf Housing &amp;
Veterans Admin. loans.

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

statesman
Z8 Cravat fabric
!II Titie
forBovary

31 Uke mlb1dy's

BARNEY

HOW WOULD
'iE; UK!: TO GO
FLOAT-FISH IN'
WITH ME,

I

NOW I

BE~!
BELIEVE
MY EARPANS

GLORY

BELIEVE

MY EAR PANS 1!

CAN'T

~~
br4-4-~gown
33 Soft diet
·. 35 Dilney's
middle name

3e Vaquero's
rope
3e Metric
measure :

MAW

8~~·

1...-+-1-+-lr

sp.

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXll
Ia

. Rutland Furniture's

LONGFELLOW

CARPET SHOP

, PEANUI'S I

"Drive-A LiHie Save A Lot"
SHOPISFULLYSTOCKED

IT'S AVALENTINE'S r:JA'Y
.DISCO r:JANCE, CHUCK ,,

. BEDRQQM&amp;
LIVING ROOM

. AND VOU WANT ME
TO FIX I{OU UP
WITH A DATE?

CARPET

95And UP

ntAT'S RIGHT, CHUCK ••
I'D ASK ~OU, 6UT I
KNOW ~OU CAN'T DANCE ...
AND BY
WA~. DON'T
5ENO
CRAZ'i DOG!

CRYPTOQUOTES
IPFLF

I P TU

zw

HFTLUZUQ

CJLF

zu

VUJ.NHFSQF

I P F

NJLHS. - MFHQZTU
OLJEFLM
Yesterday's Cryploquote: IF FIFTY MIWON PEOPLE SAy

Padding &amp; Carpet Installed Free
with Put:chase

FOOIJSH nDNG,
ANATOLE PRANCE

A

RUTLAND FURNITURE

.742~2211
l

\I

(I

•

\

IT

IS STILL

A

.

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 12,1980
5:45-Farm Report 13; 5:50--PTL
Club 13.
6:()0--700 Club 6.8; PTL Club 15;
Heallh Field 10; 6:25-World at
Large 17 .
6:31&gt;-Concerns &amp; Comments 10;
News 17; 6:45-Mornlng Report
3; A .M . Weather 33 ; 6:50--Good
Morning, Wesl Virginia 13;
6:55-News 13.
7:oo-Today 3,15; Good Morning
America 6, 13; Tuesday Morning
8; Batman 10; WTBS Funhouse
17.
7:31&gt;-Famlly Affair 10; 7:55-Chuck
While Reports 10.
8: oo-Capt. Kangareo 8, 10; Leave It
To Beaver 17; Sesame St. 33.
8:30-Romper Room 17; 9:()0--Bob .
Braun 3; Big Valley 6; 'Beverly
Hillbillies 8; Jeffersons 10; Phil
Donahue 13, 15; Lucy Show 17.
9: 31&gt;-Bob Newhart 8; One Day At A
Time 10; Green Acres 17.
10:()0.-(:ard Sharks 3,15; Joker's
Wild 10; Morning Magazine 13; Movie "The Bad Seed" 17.
·
10 : 30- Hollywood Squares 3,15; ·
$20,000 Pyramid 13; Whew 8, 10;
Andy Griffith 6 ; 10 :55-CBS
News 8; House Call 10.
11 :oo-High Rollers 3,15; Laverne &amp;
Shirley 6,13; Price Is Righi 8.10.
11 : 30-Wheel of Fortune 3, 15;
Family Feud6,13; Sesame St. 20. _
12:01&gt;-Newscenter
3;
News ·
,
6.8.10,13; Health Field 15.
12 :30-Ryan's Hope 6, 13; Search tor ·
Tomorrow 8, 10; Password Plus
15; Movie "The Flame &amp; the
Arrow&lt;' 17; Elec . Co. 20,33.
1:oo-Daysof Our Lives 3, 15; All My
Children 6, 13; Young &amp; the .
Restless 8, 10.
2:oo-Doctors 3,15; One Lite to Live :
6, 13; As The World Turns 8, 10.
2:25-News 17; ~:311-Another World
3,15; Glgglesnort Hotel 17.
3 :00- General
Hospital
6, 13;
Guiding Light 8, 10; I l.ove Lucy
17; American Short Story 20 .
3:31&gt;-FIIntslones 111 Over Easy 33 . :
4: 00- Mister Cartoon 3; Merv Griffin 6; Pelllcoat Junclion 8;
Sesome St. 20,33; Real McCoys
13; Little Rascals 15; Spectreman 17.
4:3i)-Lone Ranger 3; Gomer Pyle 8;
Brady Bunch ljll Tom 8. Jerry
13; Merv Griffin 15; Gilligan's Is.
17.
s:oo-Carol Burnett 3; Sanford &amp; :
Son 8;; Mary Tyler Moore 10; ·
My Three Sons 17; Mister Rogers
20,33 .
5: 30-Mash 3; News 6; Play the
Percentages 8; Elec. Co. 20;
Mash 10; Happy Days Again 13; I
Dream of Jeann le II; Doclor
Who 33.
6:oo-News 3,8, 10, 13, 15; ABC News
6; Carol Burnett 17; 3·2· 1 Contact ·
20,33.
.
•
6:30-NBC News 3,1$; ABC News 13;
CBS News 8, lOt·'Carol Burnell 6;
Bob Newhart 17; VIlla Alegre 20;
Wild Wild World of Animals 33.
7:oo-Cross-Wits 3; Tic Tac Dough
8; Torch of Champions 6;
MacNeil-Lehrer . Report 331 •
News 10; Newlywed Game 13; •
Love, American Slyle ,15; San- ·
ford 8. Son 111 Dick Cavett 20. ·
7:30-Hollywood Squares 3; Baxters
6; Joker's Wild 8; Dick Cavett
33; Hollywood Squares 10; Sha
Na Ne 13; Abboll &amp; Costello 15;
,4.11 In The Family 17; MacNeil- ·
Lehrer Report 20.
B:oo-Movle 'T'he Swarm" 3, 15;
Happy Days 6, 13; Pilot "Getting
There·: 8, 10; Nova 20,33; Movie
"Heaven Knows, Mr. Allison" 17.
8:30-Goodtlme Girls 6,13; Movie
"The Exorcist" 8, 10.
9 : 00-Three's
Company
6, 13 ;,
Mysleryl 20,33.
9:31&gt;-XIII Winter Olympic Games •
6, 13; 10 :01&gt;-News 20; Clly :
· .Noiebook 33; 10: 15-Rat Patrol •
17.
10 :»---ver Easy 20; Camera Three
33; 10:45-Love, American Style

17.

'

One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A Ia
used for the three L's,· X for the two O's, etc-.· Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are djfterent.
.

.

Main St.

(X I]"( I XI I I I)"

7:()0.-(:ro&amp;s-Wits 3; Tic Tac Dougn
8; Newlywed Gtme 6, 13; News
10; Love Amerl.,_n Style 15;
Sanford 8. Son 17; Dick Cavell 20 .
7: 30- That Nashville Music 3;
Muppet Show 6; Joker's Wild 8;
Family Feud 10,13; Nashville On
the Road 15; All In The Fam ily
17 ; MacNei l -Lehrer Report .20;
College Baskelball 33.
8:()0--Little House on the Prairie
3,15; Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13 ;
WKRP In Cincinnati 8, 10; Buddy
Holly : Reminiscing 20 ; B ig
Battles 11 .
8:30-Angie 6,13; Last Resort 8,10.
9:oo-Amerlcan Movie Awards 3,1 5;
Movie " The Deep" 6, 13; Mash
8,10: American Short Story 20:
College Basketball 17.
9:31&gt;-House Calls 8, 10; Skiing to
Gold 33 .
IO :oo-Lou Grant 8, 10; News 20. .
10 : 30- 0ver Easy 20.; Divine
Madness 33 .
11 :()0--News 3,6,8,10,13,15; College
Basketball 17; Dick Cavett 20;
Ripping Yarns 33.
11 : 30- Tonlght 3,15; ABC News
Special 6.13 ; ABC captioned
News 33: Movie "Marnle" 10.
11 :45-Barney M i l)er 6,13; 12 : 20- .
Pollee Story 6, 13.
12 :41&gt;-McCioud 8; 1:oo-Tomorrow
3; News 15,17.
1: 05-Movle "Charlie Chan on
Broadway" 17; 1:31&gt;-News 13.
2: 25- Movle "Revenge of the
Conquered" 17; 4:2s.-Qpen Up
17.

4·30·tfc

1 ~ 22 · tfc

Sq. ':1.

Now arrange the dn:lod lelhn to
form lho autpriae - · as auggealod bylho atoow .,._,,

BORN LOSER

Auto &amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992-5682

Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices
Call Howard
949·2862

$895

JOI&lt;E5
A"T THIS.
..

niiM, eddre•a. tip cocll tnd rnake cMdll Plr•tM to Newap~

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

All types roof work, new
or repair .gutters and
downspouts,
gutter
cleaning and painting.
All work guaranteed.

Rubber
Backed

EVE~Y TIME 'THE
POJnLY 5ENTl.EMAN
PAS6EP, THEY MADE

JunMIIook No. 1S.cont•lnlng 110 puzzlu.l11'41111ble tar$1.7S$kl
lnlmJu-,elolhlonowspopor,Bo&gt;34, NOf'IIOOCI.N..I.07W.Inc
"""

1 -t

H. L WRITESEL
ROOFING

kiTCHEN cARPET

Mw:
.
Sa1u rdaya

Roger H}!ell
Garage

Guaranteed Work
Free Estimates
1\fter S P.M . 992·5547
12 13 ~ 2 mo. pd .

tJ

\RETHOX!

2· 11 mo .

Real Estate for Sale

608 E .

f'A~Y WANT~

Racine, o.

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

MAIN .

we F-CUII!o
Tli!IEIZ'S PAW
PRit.ITS-- WHERESHE: ANP CHRIS
WEioJT II.ITO TH!WOOP,_l

949· 2320

Quality construction at
reasonable rates.

1·17·1 mo.

l LeFT HIM
l!lllHINP--iN LAKE
FORI!.ST PARI&lt; l

B. A. BEAUTY
SALON

Partnerships &amp;
CorPOrations
Payrolls, profit &amp; loss
statements, all federal
and state forms.
H&amp;R Block
Office Localion
618 E . Main
Pomeroy
.
992-3795
1·30·1 mo .

Television
Viewing
MONDAY,FEBRUARY 11 ,1910

IYOSSIF
j
rxx

Men or Women
by Diann Jewell
at

Business-Farms

w_.__ _r)

01

HAIR STYUNG

TRI.aJUNTY

N.fL CONSTRUCTION

WHITE
BABY
bed ,
springs, mattress and 3
sheets. $25. 992·2457.
FIREWOOD, dry hard ·
wood, $30 load. Tire chains,
15 in.• top condition, $25.
Mh&lt;ed hay, square bales,
75c . 742·2359 .

,-, ,

·BIU.'S AUTO
REPAIR

Jack W, Carsey,
Mgr.
Phone 992-2181

REAL ESTATE

HOOF HOLLOW, • English
and western. Saddles and
harness .
Horses
and
ponies. Ruth Reeves . 614·
698·3290. Barding and
Riding Lessons and Horse
care products . western
boots. Ch ildren's $15 .50.
Adults $29 .00.

Middleport, o.
Automotive Repair
Open 9·6 Mon. thru Sat.
Additional Hours
By ApP9Intment

Reasonable Rates
" Don' t cuss-Call us"
1· 18· (pd.)

NEW HOME on 2 lots in
Chester. 1700 sq. ft. living
space. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
large family room with
fireplace,
large equipped
APPLICATIONS
being
Real Estate for Sale
taken for two law en- -kitchen. Fully carpeted .
forcement officers in Garage. Gas heat·central
7 room house, Racine, J
heat and air . 985-43.49.
Pomeroy. Must have high
11/:l baths, with
bedrooms,
school diploma . Should
full basement. Large lot,
have basic law school ing . COUNTRY HOME with
utlllly building. 992·3738.
Send resume to City Hall,
stocked pond for swimming
Pomeroy , OH .
or fish ing, 9 rooms, bath,
HOUSE tor sale or trade:
carpeted. 3 to 17 acr.es
ranch style home with 2
ava
i
lable.
Located
approx
.
BLUE TARTAN, Mid ·
level acres, 3 bedrooms,
dleport taking ap- 7 miles from Pomeroy off
1112 baths, extra large kit·
Rl . 1 or 33. 446·2359 after 6.
plications for waitresses,
chen
with
oven,
no experience necessary .
refrigerator, large dining
Apply in person .
FARM FOR SALE . Barn
room, extra large family
and buildln~. GOOd land .
room with fireplace. 1 car
CAROLYN
EMMON ·s , M ineral rights. 36 acres.
garage, .lots of carpel. Will
Pomeroy
area
.
Phone
992fashion accessory com ·
consider mobile home as
7559.
pany, now hiring in this
trade· ln. Call/42·3119.
area. Full and part time
positions open . Car and
telephone necessary . In·
terviews Thurs., Feb. 14,
10:30 a.m . 3:00p.m. at Pt .
3'12 YR . OLD RANCH HOME - Just 4 miles trom
Pleasant Dept of Em·
Pomeroy. Quiet country living in this beautiful 3
ployment Security, 225 6th
bedroom, two bath with central heat and air condl·
St., Pt. Pleasant, WV . 675·
tlon. over 3 acres of flat land with a split rail fence,
2770.
garage and workshop . Just 544,900.00.

Pets for Sale

RAILROAD
STREET
GARAGE

~&gt;yHonrtAmoklandBoblM

Unocramble lhNe lour Jumbfea.
one tetter to each square, to torm
four onlinary warda.

INYPP

Business Services

Phone 992-2390

Hotpoint and
General Electric
Apppliance
Sales &amp; Service

WHY DO I '"AVE T'"E FEELING
THIS IS LEADING UP TO
SOMETHI
ME?

~===================================·

AP PLE S
CIDER
HONEY. Fitzpatrick Or·
chard, Sta te Route 689 .
Phone Wilkesville, 669·
3785.

furnished

MOTORIST INSURANCE
AND
51 LVER
Companies have an op· GOLD
portunity waiting tor yhou COINS OF THE WORLD,
JEWELRY ,
in the insurance market, a RINGS ,
STERLING SILVER AND
chance to bu ild and OWN
your business. Establish MISC. ITEMS. PAYING
your agency on a part· time RECORD HIGH . HONEST,
UP ~ TO · DATE
PRICES .
or full time basis. No prior
experience required. We CONTACT ED BURKETT
BARBER SHOP, MID·
p r ovide tra i ning , you
DLEPORT , OH . OR CALL
provide ambition . Call, or
write,
Don
Weidner , 992·3476.
District
Marketing
Manager, PO Box 416, ' WANTED TO BUY: 50,000
Athens, OH 45701. Phone to 100,000 BTU ceiling
592·5748 .
..
mount, gas · space heater
with ther mostat. Call 614·
BABYSITTER needed. 992 · 949·2601 after 5:30 .
6233 after 6.

POODLE GROOMING .
Judy Taylor. 614·367·7220.

The

12x60 2 · bedroom mobile
home . Racine area . Phone
992·5858.

Wanted to Buy

ll 28 (2) 4, 11. 18, 41c

The canyon walls of the
Yellowstone River in
Wyoming consist of 15
fossU forests, one buried
atop the other.

3 AND 4 RM fu rni shed ap·
Is. Phone 992-5434.

THREE BEDROOM house
with bath in Rutland . 992 ·
5858.

l NCOME TAX se rvic e,
Federal and State . Wallace
Russell , Bradbury . 9927228 .

Mobile Homes - Sale

COU NTR Y MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, north of
Pomeroy . La rge lots .Call
992 ·7479.

Auto Sales

I PAY highest prices
possible for gold and silver
coins, rings, j ewel ry, etc.
contact Ed Burkel! Barber
Shop, Middleport .

GOLD,
SILVER
OR
FOREIGN COINS , OR
ANY OTHER GOLD OR
SILVER ITEMS . AL SO,
ANTIQUE FURNITURE
OR OTHER ANTIQUE
ITEMS. WILL PAY TOP
DOLLAR. CHECK WITH
OSBY IOSSIE J MARTIN
BEFOR E
SELLING.
PHONE 992·6370 . ALSO DO
APPRAISING .

For Rent

RENTER'S assistance for
Sen ior Citizens In Village
Manor apts. Ca l l992·1787.

Noon on Saturday

Tuesday

ment . Wquld consider a
larger house in the country
it reasonable rent , we will
ma intain. Will rent with option to buy on land con·
tract . Midd le aged couple.
Give reference and deposit.
Phone Ga II ipol is 446· 1021 .

FIVE
half
English
Shephard and half t ollie
pups. Ready lo go. Paul
Buck ley, 614·667·6361 .

1953 Pontiac, 2 Farmall
tractors. 1972 F ·600 Ford
truck. 38071oader . 974440· B
John Deere skidder. To-20
Ferguson's . 3 block
sawmill . 1953 GMC 1112 ton
tru ck . 19.49 Chevy 1 ton
truck . 985·3590.

~ TliATICIWIIILEDWOIIOCWIE

~ \!;!} ~~·

FOOlJSH 11UNG.-

'

11 : OG-News 3,6,8, 10, 13, 15; N BA
Basketball 17; Dick Cavett 20;
Corry on Laughln.ll 33.
11 : 30-Tonight 3, 15; ABC News
Special .!, 1.31 Bamaby Jones 8;
ABC Captioned News 33; Movie
"Shadow of a OOUI!t" 10.
11 : 45-Movle "Young Joe, the
Forgolten Kennedy" 6, 13;
12 :44)-Movle "Ash · Wednesday"
8; 1:oo-Tomorrow 3; News 15.
1: 15-NeWS 17; 1:20-Movle "The
West Point Slol'y" 17; 2:()()News 13; 3: 35-Movle "The Boy
from Oklahoma" 17; 5:25-Love,
Amert'can ~lyle 17.

·
•
,

·:

�ftj'}l)f.\.0 ID1t

I&gt;-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., M onday, Feb. 11, 1980

Your Best Buys· Are Found in the Sentinel Classifieds
WANT AD
CHARGES
15 Word&amp; or Under
Cash
Charse

1 day

1.00

U$

1.80
3.00

2.2$
3.7S

uo

2days

3days
6days

uo

Each word over the minim~n~
1~ words is 4 cents per word per
day , Ada runn1nl otberthan consecutive days wfll be charged at
the l day rate.

'

In memory, Can! of Thanb
and Obituary : e cents per word,
$3.00 minimwn. Cuh ln ad-

Notices

Services Offered

Wanted to Rent

For Sale

GUN SHOOT EVERY
SUNDAY 1 PM . FACTORY
CHOKE ONLY . RAC IN E
GU N CL UB .

ROOM, board andlaundry .
Elderly handicapped or
working men . 992 ·6022.

4 or 5 room house or apart·

COAL ,
LIMESTONE ,
sa nd , gra ve l, calcium
chloride, fert ilizer, dog
food, and all types of salt.
E)(celsior Salt Works, Inc. ,
E . Main St., Pomeroy, 992389 1.

G UN SHOOT . Ra cine
Volunteer· F i re
Dept .
Every Saturday . 6:30p.m .
At their buildingin Bashan .
Factory choke guns only .
GUN SHOOT every Sunday
12 :00. Factory choke only .
Corn Hollow Gun Club,
Rutland . Proceeds donated
to Boy Scout Troop 249.

WIL L DO babys itting .
Prefer preschool aged,
children. Daytime in my
home . 992·5378.
WANTED
TO
DO :
Housework or clea ning 1
and care for elder ly in your
home. Ref erence. 985-3521.
WILL DO baby si 1ti ng
evenings. 992·6372 .

vance.

Mobile Horne sales and Yard
sales are accep(ed ooly with

cash with order. 2:5 cent charge

for ads caiTY"inl! Box Nwnbt!r In
Caire of The Sentinel.
The Publlaher reserves the
to edit Clr l'flject any ads
deemed objectional. The
Publisher will not be respoMible
for more than one incorrect insertion .
Phone 992-2156

right

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADlJNES
M&lt;lnday

ATTENTION :
I IM ·
PORTANT TO YOU) Will
pay cash or certified check
tor antiQues and collec tibles or entire estates.
Noth ing too large . Also,
guns, pocket watches and
coin collections. Call 61.4·
767·3167 or 557 ·3411 .
BUYING U.S. SILVER
COINS DATED 1964 OR
EARLIER
&lt;ANY
AMOUNT) . DON'T LOSE
MONEY , SIMPLY PICK
UP THE PHONE AND
DIAL
614 · 99 2· 5113 ,
BROWN 'S.

Giveaway

thru Friday

I P.M.
the day before publication
Sunday

.

I P.M.
Friday altemoon

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbus, Ohio
February 1, 1980

Contract Sales

Legal Copy
No. 80·26
UNIT PRICE
CONTRACT
PMS·OOOS (173J
Sealed proposals will be
rece ived at the office of the
Director of The Ohio Depar -

tment of Transportation,

Columbus, Ohio, untillO :OO
A.M., Ohio Standard Time,
Tuesday, March 4, 1980, tor
improvements in :
Athens, Gallia, Hocking,
Meigs and Washin~ton
Counties, Ohio, on vanous
locations, by applying
retroflectorlzed polyester
compound tor center I ines,
lane lines and channelizing
lines.
The Ohio Department of
Transportation
hereby
notifies all bidders that it
will affirmatively insure
that In any contract en·
tered into pursuant to this
advertisement, minority
business enterprises will be
afforded full opportunity to
submit bids in response t o
this invitation and wil l not
be discriminated .against
on the grounds of race,
color, or national origin in
consideration
for
an
award;
"Minimum wace rates
for this project have been
predetermined as required
by law and are set forth in
the bid proposal."
"The aate set for cum ·
pletion of this work shall be
set forth in the bidding
proposal."
Each bidder shall be
required to file with his bid
a certified check or
cashier's check for an
amount equal to five per·
cent of his bid, but in no
event more than fifty
thousands dollars, or a
bond for ten percent of his
bid, payable to the Direc·
tor.
Bidders must apply, on
the proper forms, for
Qualification at least ten
days prior to the date set
for openin~ bids in ac·
cordance wtth Chapter 5525
Ohio Revised Code .
Plans and specifications
are on fi ie in the Depart·
ment of Transportation and
the office of the District
Deputy Director .
The Director reserves
the right to reject any and
al l bids.
DAVIDL . WEIR
DIRECTOR
Rev. 8· 11· 73

1917 GMC 1 ton dump,
24,000 miles, rad io, P.S.,
P.B, $4950. 7 p.m . until
midnight or before 10 a.m.
-,42 ·2395.

HALF
DOUBLE
2
bedroom, semi-furnished .
Adults only. No children or
pegs. Deposit. 992·2749.

1975 Bronco 4x4, V-8, AT ,
P.S., posi -traction front
and rear. 5 new tires. 4 new
shocks . 992 ·2679.

HEARING A!D USERS :
save used batteries, mer·
cury and silver ox ide,
redeem for cash . Diles
Hearing
Aid
Center ,
Athens. Tel. 614·594·3571 .

1977
THUNDERBIRD ,
P.S., P. B., A.C , radia l
tires, reclining seats. AM FM. $3100. 247 ·3594.

12) 11, 18, 2tc
IN'rHE
COMMON PLEAS
COURT,
PROBATE
DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
IN THE MATTER OF THE
SETTLEMENT OF AC COUNTS,
PROBATE
COURT, MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
Accounts and vouchers of
the
following
named
fiduciaries have been filed
in lhe Probate Court, Meigs
County, Ohio, for approval
and settlement :
CASE NO. 22759 Final
and Distributive Account of
Jessie M. Might, Executrix
of the Estate of Rose E.
George Deceased
CASE NO. 22613 Final
and Distribullve Account of
Robert M. Chambers
Executor of the Estate 01
Elsie M . Chambers,
Deceased.
CASE NO. 21732, Third
and Current Account of
Mary A. Martin, Guardian
of Adam Charles Martin,
formerly Adam Charles
Edgar a minor
CASE NO. 19105 Fourth
Annual Accounl of Louis B.
Vaughan, Guardian of the
Estate Of William Reeves,
an Incompetent person.
Unless exceptions are
filed thereto, said accounts
will be for nearing before
said Court on the 11th day
of March, 1980, at which
time said accounts will be
considered and continued
fm day to day until finally
diSPOSed of.'
llnvy 'person Interested
may lie wrmen exceptions
to said accounts or to mal·
ters pertaining to the
execullon Of lhe !rust, not
less than. five days prior to
the date selfor hearing. .ROBERT E . IIUC"
JUDGE
Common Pleas Court,
Probate D ivision,
Meigs County , Ohio
12) 11' 11~
&lt;
I

1972 LYNN HAVEN 14x65 3
bedroom
1970 Vindalel2 x63 wilh ex ·
·pando, 2 bedr .
1970 New Moon 12x60 3 bdr.
1973 Skyline 12x55 2
bedroom
1972 Bonanza 12x 52, 2 bedr.
B 8. S MOBILE HOME
SALES, PT . PLEASANT ,
wv . 304-675·4424.

1971 Freedom mobile home
14x64. J bedroom including
full length awning, cen tral
air, located on spacious lot
which can be rented . $7900.
Contact Kingsbury Mobile
Home Sales at 992·7034 .

For Sale,
Rent or Trade
PAIR OF blue bucket seats
out of 1978 Ford Bronco or
will trade for blue bench ·
seat to Iii same . Phone 992 ~
7051 .

NOTICE TO
BIDDERS
REPAIR VOID
BETWEEN WALLS
AND FLOOR INSIDE
MEIGS HIGH
SCHOOL IN
MEIGS LOCAL
SCHOOL DISTRICT
Sealed proposals will be
received by the Board of
Education of the Meigs
Local School District of
Middleport, Ohio al the
Treasurer's Office until
12 :00 Noon on February 18,
1980, and at that time
opened and read by the
Treasurer immediate ly
thereafter, tabulated, and
a report there made by the
Treasurer to said Board at
its next meeting .
Description
of
im ·
provement is located at
Meigs High School, 42091
Pomeroy Pike, Pomeroy,
Ohio. The conlraclor shall
include
all
labor ,
materials, ~uipment, and
services reQuired to com ·
plete the repairs of the void
between the walls and floor.
inside the Meigs High
School .
Detailed specifications
and instructions to bidders
may be oblained at the Of·
lice of the Treasurer, South
Third Avenue, Middleport,
Ohio.
A certified check parable
to the Treasurer o the
above board of education
or a satisfactory bid bond
execuled by the bidder and
the surety company, in c1n
amount equa l to frve per·
cent of the bid shall be sub·
milled with each bid .
Said board of education
reserves the right to waive
informalities, to accept or
reject any and all, or parts
ol any and all bids.
No bids may be with·
drawn for at least thirty
130)
days after
the
scheduled closing ti me for
receipts of bids.
Board of Education of
Meigs Local School District
Jane wa~ner, Treasurer
South Thtrd Avenue
M;dd leporl, Ohio 45760

1973 GMC
van ,
low
mi leage, 6 cyl ., std . 992·
5057 .
1973 Ford Maverick. Very
good condition . 53,000 ac·
tua l miles. Small V-8, auto.
wi th air . Good t ires. $1000.
985·4346 .
1975 CHEVY BLAZER 4X4,
350. Auto. lrans., PS, P. B .•
AM S-track radio. Reese
hitch, trailer brakes, new
t ires. $1600. 992 ·2467 after
5:30p.m.

Help wanted
GET VALUABLE training
as a young business person
and earn good money plus
some great gifts as a Sen·
tinel route carrier. Phone
us right away and get on
the el igibility li st at 992·
2156 or 992·2157 .
RN OR LPN, full time. 3·
11 :30 and 11 to 1:30 . Pari
lime RN or LPN, 1110 7:30.
Call Mr . Zid ian at Pomeroy
Health Care Center, Mon ·
day through Friday, 9·5.

first dynasty of
China, the Hsia, reigned
from approximately 2000
il.C. to 1500 B.C.

RENT, partly
house. 992·7706 .

SALES TRAINEE . Salary
plus commissions. No ex ·
perience necessary . Phone
992·2480.

APPLES - ROME beauly
apples at S4 per bu . Best for
apple butter . Call 669·3785,
Fitzpatrick Orchard, SR
689.

CHIP WOOD. Poles max.
diameter 10" on largest
end. $12 per ton. Bundled
slab . $10 per ton . Delivered
to Ohio Pallet Co., Rt. 2,
Pomeroy 992·2689 .
OLD FURNITURE, ice
boxes, brass beds, iron
beds, desks, etc ., complete
households. Write M.D.
Miller. Rt. 4, Pomeroy or
call992·7760 .
ANTIQUES ,
FUR ~
NITURE, glass, china,
anything . See or call Ruth
Gosney, antiques, 26 N .
2nd, Middleport, OH. 992·
3161.
OLD COINS, pocket wat·
ches, class rings, wedding
bands, diamonds. Gold or
si lver. Cal l J. A. Wamsley,
742·2331. Treasure Chest
Coin Shop, Ath ens, OH . 592
6462 .
Wanted to Buy: Four foot
5-curve rolltop desk . Call
742·2316, evenings.
GOLD , SILVER
OR
FOREIGN COINS, OR
ANY OTHER GOLD OR
SILVER ITEMS. ALSO,
ANTIQUE FURNITURE
OR OTHER ANTIQUE
ITEMS. WILL PAY TOP
DOLLAR. CHECK WITH
OSBY lOSS I EJ MARTIN
BEFORE
SELLING
PHONE 992·6370. ALSO DO
APPRAISING .

Real Estate for Sale

POMEROY
LANDMARK
EMERGENCY
power
alternators - .own the best
-· buy Winpower . Call 513·
788·2589.
DECORATED CAKES f~
all occ asions. Charac ter
cakes and sheet cakes. Call
992-6342 or 992·2583.
1976 PICKUP truck in good
shape. Contact Joe Young,
992·2133 .
GOOD · CONDITIONED
hay, clover and orchard
grass. Delivery available.
Phone 992·1201 or 992-3309.
LARGE utility tool chest
tor pickup. Also set of
metill rac:'ks . See at .400
Lasl~y St., Pomeroy, OH.
1970 Mark Twain V·hull. 16
foot with 1978 175 hp Mere .
Call after 5 p.m., 992·2528 .
Fl REWOOD . Phone 992 ·
5240.
1/ 2

PRICE
SALE .
WOMEN ' S
AND
CHILDREN'S
DRESS
SHOES. NO EXCHANGES
OR
REFUNDS .
ALL
SALES FINAL . SHOES
WILL BE DIS'PLAYED ON
METAL SELF ·SERVICE
RACKS .
BAILEY ' S
SHOES, Ml DDLEPORT.
FOR THE month of
February,
Or"ehel's
Ceramics - greenware 30
Pet. off . Glazes 20 Pet. off .
59 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport,
OH . 992·2751.
COAL and wood healer
with blower, $400 . Buy a
heater and get 20 Pel .
discount on all purpose
safety pipe. 10 Pet.
discount on other pipe,
mats and fixtures.

JOHN DEERE Skidder
400 .
John
Deere
Knuckleboom
loader,
mounted on GMC Army 6x6
truck. 992·6319.

MIDDLEPORT - Cement block home on large cor·
ner lot . 7 rooms, 3 or 4 bedrooms, 1'12 bath, garage.
$27,000.
ROCKSPRINGS - 2 bedroom and ba,th, fully equipped kitchen, near Meigs High School, fully furnished. $25,000.
POMEROY - Lincoln His. 2 bedroom, bath, large
living room, full basement, new furnace. $17,500.
MIDDLEP~RT -

RISING STAR Kennel.
Board ing . Call367·0292.

HILLCREST KENNELS .
Boarding, all breeds. Clean
lndoor·ouldoor fac i lities.
Also
AKC
registered
Dober mans . 614·446·7795.
HUMANE
SOCIETY .
Adopt a homeless pet.
Heallhy, shots, wormed.
Donations required . 992 6260, noon· I p.m .

P KC Regi stered St. Ber ·
nard pups, 6 weeks old . 985 ·
3867.

f __ ..

Two bedroom brick only 1 block
from center of town . Low utilities. A bargain af
$12,500.
RUTLAND - One bedroom down, two upstairs, on
large corner lot. Just needs a little paint &amp; paper.
$9,900.
SYRACUSE - 6 room house on nice lot. $11,600.
5 ACRES OF LAND on Hysell Run, beautiful
building lot . $7,000.
Ml DOLE PORT - Build ing lot on S. Second, 63' x53' .
$~.500 .

CALL 992-2342

Bill Childs, Branch Mgr., Home 992-2449
Rodney Downing, Broker, Home 992;3731
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

~~~BOOKKEEPING
-

SERVICE

VOLKSWAGEN PARTS

Remodeling
Additions
Siding
Brick Work
Block Work
concrete Finishing

FOREIGN CAR
REPAIR
8til SMon, thru Fri.
Rt. 3, Radne, SR. 124
949·2422
1·30·pd ,

ROUSH

CONSTRUCTION

•New homes extensive remodeling
E lectrica I work
•Masonry work
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583

*

WILL HAUL limestone and
gravel. Also, lime hauling
and spreading. Leo Morris
Trucking . Phone 742·2455.

SEWING
MACHINE
Repairs,
service,
all
makes. 992 · 2284 . The
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
Authorized Singer Sales
and Service. We sharpen
Scissors.
IN ~
AUTOMOBILE
SURANCE
been can ·
cel led?
Lost
your
operator's license? Phone

m -2143.

Wed. &amp; Thurs.
Call tor Appt.

L...Q.IiiCI.U..I

. POMEROY, 0.
992-2259

NEW LISTING 3
bedroom ranch, approx.
4 yrs. old, large modern
kitchen, large garage
with workshop area, .
separae utility, wood·
burner, one acre. Good
condition. Should sell
fast. $34,900.00.
NEW LISTING
Letart - 12x60 mobile
home on a large lot. 3
bedrooms, 1112 baths,
also an 8Xl0 utility
building _Near river lan·
jing, Hydro plant &amp; the
new bridge. Priced at
$16,000.00.
NEW LISTING - This 6
room house has had ex·
tensive remodeling done
and Is In very gOOd con·
dillon.
It
has 3
bedrooms, equipped kit·
chen, family room, liv ing room, front &amp; back
P9rch, and 2 utility
buildings. Must be seen
to appreciate . Just
$20,900.00.
EASTERN DISTRICT
- 3 bedroom collage on
1'12 acres. Equipped kit·
chen, dining room with
w .b.f.p., washer, drver,
full basement, enclosed
rear porch. Fruit trees,
garden space. Country
living
for
only
$30,000.00.
PRICE REDUCED New home, · about llh
yeors old . l}uilt·ln kit·
chen with bar, dining
room, 3 bedrooms, 2
baths, living room with
w.b,f .p. and heatllator.
All carpeted and many
more features. Now
$39,900.00.
VACANT LAND - Ap·
prox. 72'12 acres near
Rutland on
Happy
Hollow
Rd.
All
minerals. $25,375.00.
RENTAL
INVEST·
MEtiT ..__ 3 bec!rooms,
bath, . kltcpen, living
room • . owrer. wants

56.500.()0.

.

.

BUYING OR SELLING
- CALL US - THEN
START PACKING,
REALTOR
Henry ·E : Cleland, Jr.
2

As:~ c~l:~Es ·

Roger &amp; ~tile Turner .
742-2474
Je:~~;~~~~~~~~ 949-2660

&amp;UNCHA &amp;UY.!i'
FlfOM THI:' PI.AIIT
ANP I'OII:M A
!JfAII:CH PARTY I

I!XCI!LLeNT ID!A l WITH
LUC.I&lt;, MY NEii!IHISORS.
NiiD'-J'T llVIliJ LEARII!
I!ILIT U:T Mli
ABOUT THI:' T16EIL
CALL CHRIS'S
I'SCAPING!
MOTHER FIR~n THEPOOR WOMAN MUST
!1:' WORRIE:D

Me T ' CALL A

~HC.Kl

~

l

(AnaweiiiOITIOriOW)

Jumbles: JEWEL PROXY MYRIAD ANGINA
-.Answer: How people who are prone to carelessness
sometimes end up- PRONE

•·

Monday, Feb. II

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Cunning defense illusion
NORTH
• J7

REAL ESTATE
FINANCING

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.

• 10 9 8 43

WEST
+9Z
.10971
tKJ2
¥AQ96

... Dt'IDDV HAS
RI!CEIIJED
HELl) IN HIS

. GEARCH

~OR

.~ ~eRE WE RIGM'f
TO GIVE ACI- ~H
THE LOCATION

ALr-liAH WARBUCKS
~UST 00 WHAT HE
MUST DO,.• AND HOW
OF BAHD- Slloi!!CSI I WILL TEI..L YOU

CAMP, MASTER'?

WHAT ~ MUST

At•H•UE FROM

CALL 992-7544

992 ~ 5724 .

HIS OL.D
FR:IEHO. SHSIH
ABU KAF-TAN·

ADD ONS &amp;

West

Nortb

East

South

REMODELING

Pass
Pass
Pass

1 NT
4•

Pass

3•
Pass

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

RACINE, 0.
949·2748 or
992·7314
l2 ·28·pd.

Alan: "If our readers look
at all the cards they will won·
der how any declarer and par·
ticulary an ~xperl declarer
could manage to get himself
set in four hearts."
Oswald: " The answer is that
really good defense can give
him a tough problem and the

S 8. G Carpet Cleaning .
Steam cleaned.
Free
estimate .
Reasonable
rales. Scotchguard. 992·
6309or742 ·221l .
WALL PAPERING
painting. 742·2328 .

and

PIANO TUNING. Lane
o·aniels. New phone num·
ber, 742·2951 . Service to
schOOls and home since
1965.

216 E. Second Street
FAMILY PLACE - 4 or
5 bedrooms, 1'/, baths,
formal dining, equipped
kitchen, basement, 2
business rooms or hob·
by shop, and 2 car
garage. only $35,000.
ROOMY- Large frame
home near school and
stores. Has 5 bedrooms,
1V2 baths, gas furnace,
nice carpeting, 2 car
garage, and utility
building. $17,500.
I story
STORAGE qulonset hut building
out of all flOOd water,
electric, natural gas,
concrete floor, loading
dock, and parking .
80 ACRES- All cleared
and nice laying land .
GOOd 10 room house and
many
outbuildings.
About 112 fenced . $811,000.
BRICK RANCH 3
lovely bedrooms, 2 full
balhs, large living, for·
mal dining, glass doors
to cover pallo. 2 car
garage and 4 lots. River
setting . Just $.45,000.
1 ACRE PLUS A
family home with 11
rooms and 2 baths, has
central heating and city
water. 3 car garage with
nice rental apt, over.
also small business
building on 3 state
roules. All this going for
$30,000.
RETIREE HOME - A
nice 1 bedroom home
with like new wOOdwork
Inside. Utility room,
natural gas central
heal, city water and
over 2 acres of privacy.
Only $20,000.
BUY NOW BEFORE
SPRING INFLATION.
WE HAVE 95% FINANCING. CALL 992-3325 or
992-3176.

dance

U Actor,
John -

DOWN
1 Impudent talk
Z Change
3 Rwmlng into
Yesterday's Awiwer
ll Sousa
4 Seed coat
27 Floor
composition 5 Was corrosive 18 Oz's creator
19 Neighbor
covering
15 Adjust
6 liST's
of Eng.
!II Museum:
16 Barbarian
birthplace
22S. Am.
Fr.
17 Black grape 7- Esau's

native
11 Gather
13 Metric
measure

PHONE 742-2003

ZO Prefix

grandson
8 Separated
9 Prisoner
on the run
12 Sacred spot

30 Consumed

• wildcat

32 SoUcitude
for cycle
34 Clip
or center
USmall
off
21 Fragrant
31Sunder
ointment
space
31 Spanish
22 Abode,
16 Prepare
Zi IsraeU
in Genesis
ensilage
airport
queen
23 The -,
r.--r.:--r.--r."""TI',..-rr-r."""r.Netberlands

WINNIE

23 Section
of N.Y.C.

ZiFrench
school .

Z&amp;Uly
21 r..te Italian

$45,600.00.

..

(For a copy of JACOBY
MODERN. send $Ito: "Win at
Brtdge, " care of this newspaper. P. 0. Box 489, Radio City
Station, New York, N. Y.
100 19.) .

pronoun

6 Rlin
10 Alaskan

REALTY

Housing
Headquatlets

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
39 Spiritual
1 Brazlllan
40 Quaker

GASOLINE ALLEY

HOBSTETTER

NEW LISTING - Want
to Invest In a bu ~ lneu
building? We hve unell
M~st show genuine In·
lerest before we will·
give location and price.
&lt;WALITY 1\NO VALUE
- 5 bedroom home, 2
full baths, living room,
dining room, family
room, modern kitchen,
utility and full base·
merit. GOOif location In
Miqd,eport.
,We are ~elllng our
hOmes. May we help you
sell yours?
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.
Phone 742·2003
Velma Niclnsky, Assoc..
Phone742-3092
GeorgeS. Hobstetter Jr,
~ker H2-S..:.;73;.:t_ _...

Oswald: " We keep getting
questions about whether a
player is legally entitled to
pass his partner's forcing
bid."
Alan: " Of course, he is! He
does so at the ri sk of losing a
partner, but he is not violating
any law."

~

Real Estate for Sale

INVEST - 2 homes on
Beech Grove Road.
Both In excellent condl·
lion. Live In one and
rent the other. Situated
on 10 acres !cross from
Legion Hall.
RUTLAND Extra
nice 4 bedroom home.
All carpet and drapes
Included. This home has
peen well·kept and see·
1ng It is believing in It!!
Selling price $35,000.
TUPPERS PLAINS Cozy 2 bedroom starter
home . Only 523,000.00.
NEW HOME - Total
electric, 3 bedrooms.
Quality
throughout .
Situated on a little over
one acre. Sells for

Pass

I+

Opening lead:+ A

V. C. YOUNG Ill

E L WOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR sweepers,
toasters, irons, all small
appliances. Lawn mower.
Next to Stale Highway
Garage on Route 7, 985·
3825.

EAST
+106 53
.6
tA75
+J10i73
SOUTH
+AKQ84
.AQ832
tQ6
+4

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South

Gutter work, down
spouts, some concrete
work,
walks
and
drivewavs.
(FREE ESTIMATES)
Reduced Winter Rates

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

2· 11 ·80

+K~2

ANNIE

Hours 9-1 M., W., F . .
Other limes by appointment.
107 Sycamore (Rear
Pomeroy, 0.

better player South is. the
more likely he is to fall for the
illusion that West can se t up."
Alan : " West starts with the
ace of clubs and receives the
discouraging three from his
partner . It should be apparent
to West that a diamond shift is
indicated. South surely has
only thr~e minor suit cards."
Oswald : Most West's lead
the diamond deuce. The illusionist leads the king and continues with the deuce. East is
in with the ace and leads his
diamond five. What should
South do' "
Alan : "South must play
West lor a doubleton diamond
and ruff high. This play can
only cost him .if trumps break
4-1, but that is the way they
break and expert South bites
the bullet. "

•Kn

Federaf Housing &amp;
Veterans Admin. loans.

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

statesman
Z8 Cravat fabric
!II Titie
forBovary

31 Uke mlb1dy's

BARNEY

HOW WOULD
'iE; UK!: TO GO
FLOAT-FISH IN'
WITH ME,

I

NOW I

BE~!
BELIEVE
MY EARPANS

GLORY

BELIEVE

MY EAR PANS 1!

CAN'T

~~
br4-4-~gown
33 Soft diet
·. 35 Dilney's
middle name

3e Vaquero's
rope
3e Metric
measure :

MAW

8~~·

1...-+-1-+-lr

sp.

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXll
Ia

. Rutland Furniture's

LONGFELLOW

CARPET SHOP

, PEANUI'S I

"Drive-A LiHie Save A Lot"
SHOPISFULLYSTOCKED

IT'S AVALENTINE'S r:JA'Y
.DISCO r:JANCE, CHUCK ,,

. BEDRQQM&amp;
LIVING ROOM

. AND VOU WANT ME
TO FIX I{OU UP
WITH A DATE?

CARPET

95And UP

ntAT'S RIGHT, CHUCK ••
I'D ASK ~OU, 6UT I
KNOW ~OU CAN'T DANCE ...
AND BY
WA~. DON'T
5ENO
CRAZ'i DOG!

CRYPTOQUOTES
IPFLF

I P TU

zw

HFTLUZUQ

CJLF

zu

VUJ.NHFSQF

I P F

NJLHS. - MFHQZTU
OLJEFLM
Yesterday's Cryploquote: IF FIFTY MIWON PEOPLE SAy

Padding &amp; Carpet Installed Free
with Put:chase

FOOIJSH nDNG,
ANATOLE PRANCE

A

RUTLAND FURNITURE

.742~2211
l

\I

(I

•

\

IT

IS STILL

A

.

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 12,1980
5:45-Farm Report 13; 5:50--PTL
Club 13.
6:()0--700 Club 6.8; PTL Club 15;
Heallh Field 10; 6:25-World at
Large 17 .
6:31&gt;-Concerns &amp; Comments 10;
News 17; 6:45-Mornlng Report
3; A .M . Weather 33 ; 6:50--Good
Morning, Wesl Virginia 13;
6:55-News 13.
7:oo-Today 3,15; Good Morning
America 6, 13; Tuesday Morning
8; Batman 10; WTBS Funhouse
17.
7:31&gt;-Famlly Affair 10; 7:55-Chuck
While Reports 10.
8: oo-Capt. Kangareo 8, 10; Leave It
To Beaver 17; Sesame St. 33.
8:30-Romper Room 17; 9:()0--Bob .
Braun 3; Big Valley 6; 'Beverly
Hillbillies 8; Jeffersons 10; Phil
Donahue 13, 15; Lucy Show 17.
9: 31&gt;-Bob Newhart 8; One Day At A
Time 10; Green Acres 17.
10:()0.-(:ard Sharks 3,15; Joker's
Wild 10; Morning Magazine 13; Movie "The Bad Seed" 17.
·
10 : 30- Hollywood Squares 3,15; ·
$20,000 Pyramid 13; Whew 8, 10;
Andy Griffith 6 ; 10 :55-CBS
News 8; House Call 10.
11 :oo-High Rollers 3,15; Laverne &amp;
Shirley 6,13; Price Is Righi 8.10.
11 : 30-Wheel of Fortune 3, 15;
Family Feud6,13; Sesame St. 20. _
12:01&gt;-Newscenter
3;
News ·
,
6.8.10,13; Health Field 15.
12 :30-Ryan's Hope 6, 13; Search tor ·
Tomorrow 8, 10; Password Plus
15; Movie "The Flame &amp; the
Arrow&lt;' 17; Elec . Co. 20,33.
1:oo-Daysof Our Lives 3, 15; All My
Children 6, 13; Young &amp; the .
Restless 8, 10.
2:oo-Doctors 3,15; One Lite to Live :
6, 13; As The World Turns 8, 10.
2:25-News 17; ~:311-Another World
3,15; Glgglesnort Hotel 17.
3 :00- General
Hospital
6, 13;
Guiding Light 8, 10; I l.ove Lucy
17; American Short Story 20 .
3:31&gt;-FIIntslones 111 Over Easy 33 . :
4: 00- Mister Cartoon 3; Merv Griffin 6; Pelllcoat Junclion 8;
Sesome St. 20,33; Real McCoys
13; Little Rascals 15; Spectreman 17.
4:3i)-Lone Ranger 3; Gomer Pyle 8;
Brady Bunch ljll Tom 8. Jerry
13; Merv Griffin 15; Gilligan's Is.
17.
s:oo-Carol Burnett 3; Sanford &amp; :
Son 8;; Mary Tyler Moore 10; ·
My Three Sons 17; Mister Rogers
20,33 .
5: 30-Mash 3; News 6; Play the
Percentages 8; Elec. Co. 20;
Mash 10; Happy Days Again 13; I
Dream of Jeann le II; Doclor
Who 33.
6:oo-News 3,8, 10, 13, 15; ABC News
6; Carol Burnett 17; 3·2· 1 Contact ·
20,33.
.
•
6:30-NBC News 3,1$; ABC News 13;
CBS News 8, lOt·'Carol Burnell 6;
Bob Newhart 17; VIlla Alegre 20;
Wild Wild World of Animals 33.
7:oo-Cross-Wits 3; Tic Tac Dough
8; Torch of Champions 6;
MacNeil-Lehrer . Report 331 •
News 10; Newlywed Game 13; •
Love, American Slyle ,15; San- ·
ford 8. Son 111 Dick Cavett 20. ·
7:30-Hollywood Squares 3; Baxters
6; Joker's Wild 8; Dick Cavett
33; Hollywood Squares 10; Sha
Na Ne 13; Abboll &amp; Costello 15;
,4.11 In The Family 17; MacNeil- ·
Lehrer Report 20.
B:oo-Movle 'T'he Swarm" 3, 15;
Happy Days 6, 13; Pilot "Getting
There·: 8, 10; Nova 20,33; Movie
"Heaven Knows, Mr. Allison" 17.
8:30-Goodtlme Girls 6,13; Movie
"The Exorcist" 8, 10.
9 : 00-Three's
Company
6, 13 ;,
Mysleryl 20,33.
9:31&gt;-XIII Winter Olympic Games •
6, 13; 10 :01&gt;-News 20; Clly :
· .Noiebook 33; 10: 15-Rat Patrol •
17.
10 :»---ver Easy 20; Camera Three
33; 10:45-Love, American Style

17.

'

One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A Ia
used for the three L's,· X for the two O's, etc-.· Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are djfterent.
.

.

Main St.

(X I]"( I XI I I I)"

7:()0.-(:ro&amp;s-Wits 3; Tic Tac Dougn
8; Newlywed Gtme 6, 13; News
10; Love Amerl.,_n Style 15;
Sanford 8. Son 17; Dick Cavell 20 .
7: 30- That Nashville Music 3;
Muppet Show 6; Joker's Wild 8;
Family Feud 10,13; Nashville On
the Road 15; All In The Fam ily
17 ; MacNei l -Lehrer Report .20;
College Baskelball 33.
8:()0--Little House on the Prairie
3,15; Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13 ;
WKRP In Cincinnati 8, 10; Buddy
Holly : Reminiscing 20 ; B ig
Battles 11 .
8:30-Angie 6,13; Last Resort 8,10.
9:oo-Amerlcan Movie Awards 3,1 5;
Movie " The Deep" 6, 13; Mash
8,10: American Short Story 20:
College Basketball 17.
9:31&gt;-House Calls 8, 10; Skiing to
Gold 33 .
IO :oo-Lou Grant 8, 10; News 20. .
10 : 30- 0ver Easy 20.; Divine
Madness 33 .
11 :()0--News 3,6,8,10,13,15; College
Basketball 17; Dick Cavett 20;
Ripping Yarns 33.
11 : 30- Tonlght 3,15; ABC News
Special 6.13 ; ABC captioned
News 33: Movie "Marnle" 10.
11 :45-Barney M i l)er 6,13; 12 : 20- .
Pollee Story 6, 13.
12 :41&gt;-McCioud 8; 1:oo-Tomorrow
3; News 15,17.
1: 05-Movle "Charlie Chan on
Broadway" 17; 1:31&gt;-News 13.
2: 25- Movle "Revenge of the
Conquered" 17; 4:2s.-Qpen Up
17.

4·30·tfc

1 ~ 22 · tfc

Sq. ':1.

Now arrange the dn:lod lelhn to
form lho autpriae - · as auggealod bylho atoow .,._,,

BORN LOSER

Auto &amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992-5682

Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices
Call Howard
949·2862

$895

JOI&lt;E5
A"T THIS.
..

niiM, eddre•a. tip cocll tnd rnake cMdll Plr•tM to Newap~

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

All types roof work, new
or repair .gutters and
downspouts,
gutter
cleaning and painting.
All work guaranteed.

Rubber
Backed

EVE~Y TIME 'THE
POJnLY 5ENTl.EMAN
PAS6EP, THEY MADE

JunMIIook No. 1S.cont•lnlng 110 puzzlu.l11'41111ble tar$1.7S$kl
lnlmJu-,elolhlonowspopor,Bo&gt;34, NOf'IIOOCI.N..I.07W.Inc
"""

1 -t

H. L WRITESEL
ROOFING

kiTCHEN cARPET

Mw:
.
Sa1u rdaya

Roger H}!ell
Garage

Guaranteed Work
Free Estimates
1\fter S P.M . 992·5547
12 13 ~ 2 mo. pd .

tJ

\RETHOX!

2· 11 mo .

Real Estate for Sale

608 E .

f'A~Y WANT~

Racine, o.

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

MAIN .

we F-CUII!o
Tli!IEIZ'S PAW
PRit.ITS-- WHERESHE: ANP CHRIS
WEioJT II.ITO TH!WOOP,_l

949· 2320

Quality construction at
reasonable rates.

1·17·1 mo.

l LeFT HIM
l!lllHINP--iN LAKE
FORI!.ST PARI&lt; l

B. A. BEAUTY
SALON

Partnerships &amp;
CorPOrations
Payrolls, profit &amp; loss
statements, all federal
and state forms.
H&amp;R Block
Office Localion
618 E . Main
Pomeroy
.
992-3795
1·30·1 mo .

Television
Viewing
MONDAY,FEBRUARY 11 ,1910

IYOSSIF
j
rxx

Men or Women
by Diann Jewell
at

Business-Farms

w_.__ _r)

01

HAIR STYUNG

TRI.aJUNTY

N.fL CONSTRUCTION

WHITE
BABY
bed ,
springs, mattress and 3
sheets. $25. 992·2457.
FIREWOOD, dry hard ·
wood, $30 load. Tire chains,
15 in.• top condition, $25.
Mh&lt;ed hay, square bales,
75c . 742·2359 .

,-, ,

·BIU.'S AUTO
REPAIR

Jack W, Carsey,
Mgr.
Phone 992-2181

REAL ESTATE

HOOF HOLLOW, • English
and western. Saddles and
harness .
Horses
and
ponies. Ruth Reeves . 614·
698·3290. Barding and
Riding Lessons and Horse
care products . western
boots. Ch ildren's $15 .50.
Adults $29 .00.

Middleport, o.
Automotive Repair
Open 9·6 Mon. thru Sat.
Additional Hours
By ApP9Intment

Reasonable Rates
" Don' t cuss-Call us"
1· 18· (pd.)

NEW HOME on 2 lots in
Chester. 1700 sq. ft. living
space. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
large family room with
fireplace,
large equipped
APPLICATIONS
being
Real Estate for Sale
taken for two law en- -kitchen. Fully carpeted .
forcement officers in Garage. Gas heat·central
7 room house, Racine, J
heat and air . 985-43.49.
Pomeroy. Must have high
11/:l baths, with
bedrooms,
school diploma . Should
full basement. Large lot,
have basic law school ing . COUNTRY HOME with
utlllly building. 992·3738.
Send resume to City Hall,
stocked pond for swimming
Pomeroy , OH .
or fish ing, 9 rooms, bath,
HOUSE tor sale or trade:
carpeted. 3 to 17 acr.es
ranch style home with 2
ava
i
lable.
Located
approx
.
BLUE TARTAN, Mid ·
level acres, 3 bedrooms,
dleport taking ap- 7 miles from Pomeroy off
1112 baths, extra large kit·
Rl . 1 or 33. 446·2359 after 6.
plications for waitresses,
chen
with
oven,
no experience necessary .
refrigerator, large dining
Apply in person .
FARM FOR SALE . Barn
room, extra large family
and buildln~. GOOd land .
room with fireplace. 1 car
CAROLYN
EMMON ·s , M ineral rights. 36 acres.
garage, .lots of carpel. Will
Pomeroy
area
.
Phone
992fashion accessory com ·
consider mobile home as
7559.
pany, now hiring in this
trade· ln. Call/42·3119.
area. Full and part time
positions open . Car and
telephone necessary . In·
terviews Thurs., Feb. 14,
10:30 a.m . 3:00p.m. at Pt .
3'12 YR . OLD RANCH HOME - Just 4 miles trom
Pleasant Dept of Em·
Pomeroy. Quiet country living in this beautiful 3
ployment Security, 225 6th
bedroom, two bath with central heat and air condl·
St., Pt. Pleasant, WV . 675·
tlon. over 3 acres of flat land with a split rail fence,
2770.
garage and workshop . Just 544,900.00.

Pets for Sale

RAILROAD
STREET
GARAGE

~&gt;yHonrtAmoklandBoblM

Unocramble lhNe lour Jumbfea.
one tetter to each square, to torm
four onlinary warda.

INYPP

Business Services

Phone 992-2390

Hotpoint and
General Electric
Apppliance
Sales &amp; Service

WHY DO I '"AVE T'"E FEELING
THIS IS LEADING UP TO
SOMETHI
ME?

~===================================·

AP PLE S
CIDER
HONEY. Fitzpatrick Or·
chard, Sta te Route 689 .
Phone Wilkesville, 669·
3785.

furnished

MOTORIST INSURANCE
AND
51 LVER
Companies have an op· GOLD
portunity waiting tor yhou COINS OF THE WORLD,
JEWELRY ,
in the insurance market, a RINGS ,
STERLING SILVER AND
chance to bu ild and OWN
your business. Establish MISC. ITEMS. PAYING
your agency on a part· time RECORD HIGH . HONEST,
UP ~ TO · DATE
PRICES .
or full time basis. No prior
experience required. We CONTACT ED BURKETT
BARBER SHOP, MID·
p r ovide tra i ning , you
DLEPORT , OH . OR CALL
provide ambition . Call, or
write,
Don
Weidner , 992·3476.
District
Marketing
Manager, PO Box 416, ' WANTED TO BUY: 50,000
Athens, OH 45701. Phone to 100,000 BTU ceiling
592·5748 .
..
mount, gas · space heater
with ther mostat. Call 614·
BABYSITTER needed. 992 · 949·2601 after 5:30 .
6233 after 6.

POODLE GROOMING .
Judy Taylor. 614·367·7220.

The

12x60 2 · bedroom mobile
home . Racine area . Phone
992·5858.

Wanted to Buy

ll 28 (2) 4, 11. 18, 41c

The canyon walls of the
Yellowstone River in
Wyoming consist of 15
fossU forests, one buried
atop the other.

3 AND 4 RM fu rni shed ap·
Is. Phone 992-5434.

THREE BEDROOM house
with bath in Rutland . 992 ·
5858.

l NCOME TAX se rvic e,
Federal and State . Wallace
Russell , Bradbury . 9927228 .

Mobile Homes - Sale

COU NTR Y MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, north of
Pomeroy . La rge lots .Call
992 ·7479.

Auto Sales

I PAY highest prices
possible for gold and silver
coins, rings, j ewel ry, etc.
contact Ed Burkel! Barber
Shop, Middleport .

GOLD,
SILVER
OR
FOREIGN COINS , OR
ANY OTHER GOLD OR
SILVER ITEMS . AL SO,
ANTIQUE FURNITURE
OR OTHER ANTIQUE
ITEMS. WILL PAY TOP
DOLLAR. CHECK WITH
OSBY IOSSIE J MARTIN
BEFOR E
SELLING.
PHONE 992·6370 . ALSO DO
APPRAISING .

For Rent

RENTER'S assistance for
Sen ior Citizens In Village
Manor apts. Ca l l992·1787.

Noon on Saturday

Tuesday

ment . Wquld consider a
larger house in the country
it reasonable rent , we will
ma intain. Will rent with option to buy on land con·
tract . Midd le aged couple.
Give reference and deposit.
Phone Ga II ipol is 446· 1021 .

FIVE
half
English
Shephard and half t ollie
pups. Ready lo go. Paul
Buck ley, 614·667·6361 .

1953 Pontiac, 2 Farmall
tractors. 1972 F ·600 Ford
truck. 38071oader . 974440· B
John Deere skidder. To-20
Ferguson's . 3 block
sawmill . 1953 GMC 1112 ton
tru ck . 19.49 Chevy 1 ton
truck . 985·3590.

~ TliATICIWIIILEDWOIIOCWIE

~ \!;!} ~~·

FOOlJSH 11UNG.-

'

11 : OG-News 3,6,8, 10, 13, 15; N BA
Basketball 17; Dick Cavett 20;
Corry on Laughln.ll 33.
11 : 30-Tonight 3, 15; ABC News
Special .!, 1.31 Bamaby Jones 8;
ABC Captioned News 33; Movie
"Shadow of a OOUI!t" 10.
11 : 45-Movle "Young Joe, the
Forgolten Kennedy" 6, 13;
12 :44)-Movle "Ash · Wednesday"
8; 1:oo-Tomorrow 3; News 15.
1: 15-NeWS 17; 1:20-Movle "The
West Point Slol'y" 17; 2:()()News 13; 3: 35-Movle "The Boy
from Oklahoma" 17; 5:25-Love,
Amert'can ~lyle 17.

·
•
,

·:

�S-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Monday, Feb.ll, 1980

Federal funds allocated
for wildlife restoration

'

'

JAYNE Wolfe, dental assistant, assist.s Dr. Strauss
in photographing the patient's geeth. This is part of the

infonnation used by Dr. Strauss in planning the course
of treatment.

Court _will have final word
on woman draft registrants
WASHING TON ( AP) - The courts likely will have the final word in
draft registration for women, and
legal scholars say that probably
means women will be signing up for

registering women, a concept supported by President Carter and his
advisers.
But Thomas Emerson, a professor
of constitutional law at Yale University, says, "Whichever way it goes
(in Congress), there will be a suit

service.

Congress seems cool to the idea of

Carter
(Continued from pa~e I)
paign and debate him, but Powell
said the president's absence is an
asset to the challenger.
"He's sort of got the field to himself with the president locked up in
the White House," Powell said.
He said the loss was a major lilow
to the Kennedy campaign because it
came in the senator's home region.
"We've all known all along that a
win by Carter in Kennedy's home
court would be a major setback for
the loser," Powell said. He said the
same rule would apply were Kennedy to defeat Carter in a southern
primary.
"He went into the back yard of
Sen. Kennedy and he won big," said
RobertS. Strauss, Carter's national
campaign manager.
And Powell added that if Kennedy
"can't win here, when he has
everything going for him... then
where do you win?''

He stopped short of suggesting
that the challenger quit the race,
saying he wouldn't presume to tell
KennedY what to do.
With 434 of the . 486 Maine town
caucuses tallied, the Democratic
State Committee reported this outcome :
Carter, 13,660 votes, or 45 percen~
and 870 local delegates, or 46 percent
of the delegates selected solar.

COLUMBUS - The Division of
Wildlife of the Ohio Department of
Natural Resources (ODNR) will
receive $2,737,189.66 in federal funds
for fish and wildlife restoration in
Ohio and the state's HWlter Safety
and Trapper Education program.
The funds will be allocated in two
instalhnent.s from excise taxes
collected during the last fiscal year.
Funds for fish restoration
programs come from a 10 percent
excise tax on fishing rods, reels and
lures. Money for wildlife restoration
and hunter safety and trapper
education is derived from an 11 percent excise tax on sporting arms and
ammunition, a 10 percent tax on
pistols and revolvers, and an 11 percent tax on certain archery equip-

Kennedy : 12,041, or 39 percent,
and 752 delegates, or 40 percent.
Brown: 4,404, or 14 percent, for 252
delegates, or 13 percent.
Undecided : 502, or 2 percent, for
'!/delegates, or I percent.
The delegates elected by the local
caucuses will go to the state convention May 16 and Maine's 22
delegates to the Democratic
National Convention will be chosen
there. The candidates will share in
those 22 nominating votes roughly in
proportion to their delegate strength
at the town conventions.
Maine Gov. Joseph Brennan, Kennedy's campaign chairman, insisted
that Kennedy had scored a "great
victory" and claimed that Carter actually lost because he didn't get 50
percent of the vote.
It was the first time Maine
Democrats had held their caucuses
all on the same day. The Republican
caucuses still are staged over a
period of weeks and won't be completed until next month.
On March 4, one week after New
Hampshire votes, Vermont and
Massachusetts will hold their
presidential primaries. A Boston
Globe poll published Monday
showed Kennedy well ahead in his
home state.
Then the competition moves
south, with primaries in Florida,
Alabama and Carter's Georgia on
March II.
Carter's opening victory in Iowa
translated into 29 delegate votes for

~

\

r.f

r1\ ~0

filed. There's no way that the courts
can avoid it."
David Landau, a staff attorney at
the American Civil Liberties Union
office here, vowed, "The day that
the president signs (male-anly
regwstration), we will be in court."
Carter anno1111ced Friday be wants to register men and women 18 and
19 years of age, saying, '"There is no
distinction possible, on the basis of
ability or perfonnance." White
House officials said a major factor
in his decision waa the prospect of
court challenges if women were excluded. The Supreme Court has yet
to hear a draft case, but lower court
decisions since 1974 have tended to
open new avenues for women in the
military.
Phyllis Schlafly, a leading opponent of the Equal Rights Amendment, said, "There's no way
Congress will register women."
She plans to focus on Congress in
her battle against registration for
women, although she does not rule
out court action if she Is unsuccessful.
"The doctrine of military
necessity clearly requires the exclusion of women from the draft and
combat," said Mrs. Schlafly' a
lawyer. \
But Martha Field, a constitutional
law specialist at Harvard, said that
would apply only if women were
unable to perform in the military
and added, "I can't think of any constitutional principle that someone
the presidential nomination. Ken-

nedy got 15 there.
Sunday's returns apparently will
mean another 10 delegates for Carter and nine more for Kennedy.
It will lake 1,666 to choose a
Democratic presidential nominee.

PERLEYATER
Perley (June) Ater, 57, Route 2,
Coolville, died Monday morning at
St. Joseph Hospital, Parkersburg,
following an extended illness.
He was born at Little Hocking, Feb.
19, 1922, a son of the late Perley and
Grace Stephens Ater and spent his
early life at Little Hocking. He moved to Hockingport in 1978.
He retired in 1969 from the U. S.
Corpa ri . Engineers after approximately 30 years of service. He
was a member of the St. Ambrose
Catholic Church at Belpre. He was a
veteran of World War II, having served in the European Theater and he
also served during the Korean Conflict.
Surviving are his wife, Genevieve
Little Ater; a son, ijerbert, Little
Hocking; . three daughters, Mrs.
Shirley Foreman, Little Hocking,
and Georgia and Jeanine Ater, both
at home; nine grandchildren; his
stepmother, Mrs. Evelyn Ater,
Washington Bottom, W . Va.; a
brother, Shirley Ater, Piedmont;
two sisters, Elizabeth Ater, Vienna,
W. Va., and Mrs. Mary Martin, Martinsburg, and several nieces and
nephews.
The mass of Christian burial will
be conducted at 10 a:m. Thursday at
the St. Ambrose Catholic Church in
Belpre with the Rev. Father Joseph
O'Reilly and the Rev. Father
Thomas Rafferty officiating. Burial
will be in the St. Mary's Cemetery at
Little Hocking. Friends may call at
the Spencer Funeral Home in Belpre
after 7 .p.m. Tuesday. Rosary services will be conducted at 8 p.m.
Wednesday at the funeral home.

funds Is based on the number of hunting ueenses sold in a state and that
state's land area. The funds can be
used for habitat acquisition and
management and wildlife research. ·
Hunter safety funds are distributed
according to the population of the
state and are used to support hunter
and trapper education prOgrams.
Fish restoration funds are shared
based on a fonnula considering the
number of fishing license holders
and the area of the state including .
coastal and Great lakes waters. :
These monies are used to purchase ·
new water areas, fisherman access
sites and to fund fish research .
projects.

HOSPITAL NEWS
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Saturday Admissions-Lucille
Cundiff, Minersville; Richard Dean,
Jr., Middleport; Fanny Hale, Dexter; Elsie Price, Albany; Gerald
Keeton, Radnor; Charles Blakes,
Racine; Karen Gilkey, Middleport;
Wilson Wolfe, Racine; Shelly Sin·
clair, Tuppers Plains; Everett Huff·
man, Mason; Becky Mosner,
Coolville; Michael Belivaeu,
Pomeroy.
Saturday Discharges-Richard
Winebrenner, William Hoschar,
Cecil Moore, Linda Gibnore, Gilbert
Smith, Ruth Mulford, Lillian Gress,
Marlene He.&lt;s, WiJJiam Blythe.
SWidaY Admissions-Ryan O'Neal,
Pomeroy; Marie Roy, Racine; Mary
Qualls, Pomeroy; Robert Smith,
Racine; George Hackett, Jr., Middleport; Sarah Henderson, Long
Bottom.
Sunday Discharges-Cindy Petit,
Marvin Reed, Thomas Yotlllll. Randy Parsons, Winona Overturf, Brenda Elliott, Margaret Nwmn, Becky
Misner.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGES FEB. 7
Debbie Bays, Fred Bishop, Mrs.
Rex D. Black and son, Linda Boggs,
Mrs. George C. Brown and
daughter, Gary Clarke, O.D.; Mrs.
John R. Cline and daughter, 1\IElvin
Crabtree, Kenneth Dickerson, '
Robert lee Donnet Sr., Josephione
Elliott, Shannon Gillenwater, John
Houck, Melissa Johnson, Raymond
Kerns, Willlam Mannering, Mrs.
William El McGhee and daughter,
Robert D. McKinnis, Carrie Miller,
Donald H. Miller, Elizabeth Nibert,
Haley Persin, Flossie Price, Lydia
Rhodes, Carrie Rife, David Simpkina, Suzanne Taborn, Pahner
Tremble, Marshall Wolfe, Dixie
Wright.
BmTIIS Feb.7
Mr. and Mrs. Evan Davis, son,
Oak Hill; Mr. and Mrs. Roy Miller,
son, Waterloo; Mr. and Mrs. Billy S.
Petrie, son, Vinton; Mr. and Mrs.
Fred D. Queen, son, Crown City; Mr.
and Mrs Carl Yates, daughter,
Jackson.

would come up with so that the inclusion· of women (in registration)
would be wrong."
A ·number of experts on constititutionallaw said when the maleonly draft was in effect, various
court challenges were rebuffed on
grounds that military necessity and
national defense outweighed the
issue of s_exual equality.
But "the whole court position on
diffentiation of men ,and women has
changed... the court now is looking
much more c·arefully at
discrimination," said Emerson.

SQUAD CAlLED
Middleport
Emergency,.
Squad was called to the Villllge ·
Apartments at II :02 p.m. Sunday foc
Katie Felter, a medical patient, who .
was taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
.
At 8:37 p.m. Saturday, the unif
went to 916 Locust St. for Ella Roush .
who had a possible leg fracture as
the result of a fall. She was taken to
Holzer Medical Center.
The

"'

answered four calls over the
weekend. Three subjects were
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital and one to the Holzer
Medical Center. Names of the subjects were not recorded on villa_ge
hall records.
MEETS TIIURSDAY
The Meigs County Humane
Soc;lety will meet Thursday at 7:30
p.m. at the Thrift Shop in Middleport.

COMMUNITY SHOWER
A community shower for the
Larry Fields family will be observed
with an open house Thursday, Feb.
14, at the Syracuse Asbury Church
froml0 :30a.m. to6p.m. ·
The event will be held in the church b&amp;Bement. The family lost their
home and possessions in an early
Sunday morning fire. Refreshments
will be served. Persons are invited
to come as they are and stay as long
as they like.
SEEK UCENSES

Marriage licenses were issued to
Daniel WUIIam YoWig, 29, Cheshire,
and Linda Kay· Pullins; 32,
Pomeroy; Pearlie F. Jewell, Jr., 37,
Rt. 1, RuUand, and Crystal Sue McCourt, 28, Rt. 1, Rutland; Steven
Craig Dougan, 20, Rt. I, Shade, and
Kathleen Sue Hayman, 17, Rt. 2,
Racine; Donald Lee Gardner, 27..,
Galllpolis, and Ruth Ann Athey, 25,
Rt. I, Cheshire; Jeffrey Clayton
Kimes, 18, Reedsville, and Diana
Carol Durst, 16, Reedsville.
SEEKING SUPPORT
A suit for support l!llder the
Reciprocal Agreement Act was illed
by Tami L. Rinehart, against
Michael Eugene Rinehart, In Meigs
County Common Pleas Court.

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a

TWIN SIZE

Reg, $149.95 ea.

now only

"~ I

'14995

Great To

Sleep On
Serta Spine Saver

Bank by mail
at the Farmers Bank.

LIMITED WARRANTY
FOR 10YEAR
f()l tht lint y. .r after IHIIMU• Adam W•at. InC; ,
will. 11 ill 0911oi'1 r•CM'' or repltc. 1_,. ma.ttr••• or
toundl!ion 11111thot.lt (;Mr;t. ••clutM or lflfiii90Mll101'1 ,
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wiM ba mtdt at a ChlfOI lor Nctl ~apMd 1•1 ol I
I 10 of thtl PIIIChl . . ptfcl , pl\11 tfli'IJPOMltioll COlii.Thia wamaoty cto.a not apply II btddlllt il tubteef
to m11~11. lncludl119 ••coallva tolding or bendlnt.
0\IHII lilt HddlftQ Wllflitlf onty tpplloa wMn 1M
ma11r111 end loundatil~n Ia 111M on 1 ll'le.-1 blld
, . , , . Of bed ra lta thai prOvide 1 r~ld cent11 tlll)pOrt \
. Thla wwrom1 • o l&lt;wen by lhli'Mmlftctw.,, tnd 11
valid a~ywfterl whftlft 1111 United Stall&amp; To obta!fl

we will not be open
Monday,_February
18 to observe
Presidents Day.

Farmers
Bank·
~;&gt;omeroy ,

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M,• t n l ~o · r

WlfflfllY ltn'iel ContiCI trll Slnl dtilllf
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Adtm Wueal, !tic.
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"SPINE
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lrom wtlonl

repeated Ius otter lo free the
hostages within a few days if
America would admit its."crimes"
in Iran since it helped the deposed
monarch regain his throne in 1953.
''If America agrees to our view this
may be possible," it quoted him as
saying in an interview with French
radio and television.
When his offer was first made
public in an interview published
Monday in the French newspaper Le
Monde, the State Department said
there will be no profession of guilt
from the U.S. government.
Iran's revolutionary patriarch,
the Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini,
leveled a strong warning to the
Soviet Union to refrain from
aggression against Islamic countries , the radio reported in a broad·
cast monitored in London. It said the

•

warning came in a message sent to

Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev and
quoted him ln part as saying:
"Any aggression against Third
World countries and Islamic countries, particularly in this region, is
against the norms which should constitute a proper basis and foundation
between nations."
The portion of Khomeini 's '
message broadcast by the radio,
monitored in London, did not mention by name the Soviet armed intervention in Mghanistan, an overwhelmingly Moslem nation to the
east of Iran and, like Iran, to the
south of the Soviet Union.
In the Le Monde interview, BaniSadr said the revolutionary govern·
ment no longer demands the return
of the shah before the Americans are
released.

at y
VOL. XXVIII

(USPS 145·960)

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

NO. 211

The president said the hostages
would be released if the U.S. govern-

ment :
I. Acknowledged U.S. "crimes"
against the Iranian people since the
CIA helped overthrow leftist Prime
Minister Mohammed Mossadegh
and restored the shah to power.
2. Recognized the right of the
revolutionary regime "to obtain the
extradition of the shah and the
restitution of his fortune; ''
3. Pledged to "no longer interfere
in our affairs."
Bani.S.dr told correspondent Eric
Rouleau of Le Monde that his
proposals were the result of a consensus of the Revolutionary Council,
which he now beads, and was submitted to Ayatollah Ruhollah
Khomeini, the 7S.year-old leader of
the revolutionary regime.

··If he accepts them, it would be up
to President Carter to respond in
tum, " said Bani.S.dr.
He said he had made a separate
proposal to the council and
Khomeini that control of the
hostages be transferred in the next
few days from the yoWig militants
who seized the embassy on Nov. 4 to
a .third party. He said force would
not be used.
The president also said he favored
combining a tribunal to study the
U.S. government's role in Iran and
Waldheim's proposed international
commission to probe allegationa
against the shah. But he said the
hostages could be freed before the
inquiries are completed.
The toll had risen to 50 killed and
100 wounded in five days of fighting
(Continued on page 8)

en tine
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1980

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

95
SET!

PRICE
SETS ONLY
.'

·-, ELBERFELDS
IN POMEROY
·-· _.....;._
....................
,

_....~

Deputies probe .
shooting death

Council receives
investment plans
Investor Harry Evans meeting
with Middleport Village Council
Monday night outlined investments
of inactive funds for the village
during February.
Evans recommended that council
invest $50,000 in a si:x month money
market certificate this week and
$110,000 in treasury notes later when
a note for the purchase of a new fire
truck is sold. He recommended that
$7,000 in cemetery funds be invested
in super "T" notes for a two and onehalf year period. Clerk Jon Buck
was authorized to proceed with the
recommendations.
Council discussed with Evans the
distribution of interest which will be
collected from the various in-vestments.
It waa generally
agreed that the interest will go into
the general fund for allocation to
various funds later.Interest from

~.

.

'

'
•

.'

..... .

4~

Decision coming
ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) Theodore R. Bundy, already sentenced to the electric chair for
murdering two college women,
learned today whether he would
be condemned to death a third
time for killing a 12-year-old girl.
Circuit Judge Wallace Jopling
was to announce whether be
would impose the death sentence
recommended by the 12-member
jury that convicted Bundy laat
week of kidnapping and murdering Kimberly Diane Leach of
Lake City, Fla.

Evidence found

Can't get to the bank?

against the deposed shah.
The radio said Ghotbzadeh
declined to give a timetable for the
Americans' release. But in what
could be a related development, the
radio quoted Ghotbzadeh as telling
ABC News that an international
commission being set up to investigate deposed Shah Mohammad
Reza Pahlavi will "probably" meet
in Tehran within a week.
Ghotbzadeh said he was leaving
for Athens tonight to begin a fiveday European tour, the radio said. A
broadcast monitored in London said
Ghotbzadeh will also visit Italy and
France. It was not known if his trip
waa connected to the arrival in
Tehran of an international commission.
The radio reported that President
Abothassan Bani.S.dr, meanwhile,

SQUAD RUNS

l~Yw~~

if

BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
Iran's Foreign Minister Sadegh
Ghotbzadeh said today he hoped the
hostage crisis will end soon, adding
·that Iran will cooperate with U.N.
Secretary-General Kurt Waldheim,
Tehran radio reported.
There was no elaboration on Ghotbzadeh's statement. A U.N.
spokesman in New York said Monday that negotiations over the
hostages' release are at a "very sensitive stage" and that Waldheim is
in constant touch with U.S. and
Iranian officials.
Waldheim has attempted to
arrange freedom for the 50
Americans since they were seized at
the U.S. Embassy in Tehran 101
days ago. He has also proposed an
international commission be set up
lo investigate Iranian char~es

The Pomeroy Emergency Squad

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

...u

Til~

•\l

ment.
"Hunters have historically supported wildlife programs through
huntitfg and fishing license fees,"
said Carl Mosley, Chief of the
Division of Wildllie. "The excise tax
is another way sportsmen have contributed to wildllie management.''
Of the total $2,737,189.65 to be
allocated to Ohio, $646,320.14 .will be
used for fish restoration. This is the
loth highest share apportioned in the
United States, according to Mosley.
The Division of Wildlife will
receive $1,752,229.51 for wildlife
restoration, 12th highest of the states
and territories.
"The allotment. for hunter safety
and trapper education of $338,640 is
the rnaxhnum amount given to any
state," said Mosley. "Sixteen states
received the maximum allotment
for hunter-trapper education."
Distribution of wildlife restoration

Hostage negotiations at 'sensitive' stage

WASlllNGTON (AP) - The
FBI has evidence crime syndicate bosses were planning as
recently as last week to call a
summit conference and carve
new boundaries in underworld
fiefdoms spanning the nation,
knowledgeable sources say.
But FBI officials now believe
the session was canceled after
public disclosure of bureau investigations, including Brilab,
the sources said.
The secret summit, involving
crime bosses from an undetennined number of cities, was
said to equal in scope the
notorious 1957 conclave of more
\han 60 mob leaders in Apalachin,
N.Y.

Businesses failed
WASHINGTON (AP) - Nearly
20 percent of the nation's surfa&lt;!e
coal mining companies went out
of business last year because of
poor market eondltions, says a
mining official.
AJld at least 15 percent of the
reJI18ining industry will go out of
busliless during 1980, predicted
Ben E . Lusk, president of the
Mining and Reclamation Council
d.Amerla.
Lusk blamed· the unfavorable
iiiarket conditions on stringent
•requirements initiated by the
Clean Air Act, "which makes the
burning of coal economically impossible."

.'

cemetery funds will go into the
cemetery operating funds.
Council employed Evans to assist
Clerk Buck with the preparation of
the annual report.
Mayor Fred Hoffman announced
that bids for hose and equipment for
the new fire truck will be advertised tliis month. The price of
limestone for Middleport residents
was raised to $6 a ton.
The previous price was $5 and the
price was increased due to the increased costs of labor, gasoline and
an hike by the supplier.
Council decided to continue
parking on North Fourth St. as it is
now and· Councilman Allen King expressed appreciation for the repair
of the traffic light in lower Middleport at the Pearl St. intersection.
He also reported that there apparently is not any help fortbcoming
from an energy conservation
program for winterizing village
structures because the expense involved in hiring a required person to
make recommendations would not
provide any great amount of money
for the program.
King said it would be better to
spend the money on such an employe
on winterizing the buildings.
Attending the meeting were
Mayor Hoffman, Clerk Jon Buck,
and councibnen, King, Carl Horky,
William Walters, Marvin Kelly ,
Charles Mullen and Dewey Horton.

HOME DESTROYED

Tbe home of Harry Yarbrough,
Salem Center, was destroyed by
fire early SUDday mondllg. Tbe
Salem Center VoiUDteer Fire
Dept. received a caD at 1:30 a.m.
Wben firemen arrived, the
home was engulfed In ·names.
Tbe cause of the blaze Is undetermined. Damages were
estimated at $40,000.

Minor accident probed
The Meigs County SMriff's Department received a report Monday a
three vechile accident Monday that
occurred on private property.
According to the report Ralph E.
Parker, 25, Rt. 3, Pomeroy, pulled
into the Parker driveway and slide
on ice. His truck struck the rear of a
vehicle owned by Carl E. Parker, 21,
Rt. I, Reedsville, which in turn
struck the rear of a vehicle owned by
Jack Parker, Rt. 3, Pomeroy.
·
There was moderate to severe
pro)ierty damage.

The Meigs County Sheriff's Deparlrnent is investigating the sbooting
death of Mrs. Bonnie Pickens, Route
4, Pomeroy, early this morning.
The Middleport Emergency Squad
was called to the Pickens home on
Route 124 at 7:18a .m. Tuesday.
Mrs. Pickens was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital and
then was being transferred to St.
Joseph Hospital in Parkersburg, W.
Va., when she died. The squad
notified Its base station that it was

returning at 8:50a.m. and waa in the
Coolville area at the time.
Dr. R. R. Pickens was with the
squad when the attempt to lake Mrs .
Pickens on to St. Joseph Hospital
was made.
Officers of the sheriff's department were still at the Pickens
residence late this morning and according to a spokesman the sheriff's
department "could not advise at this
time how the wound was inflicted' '.

15 INS employes now
under investigation
asserts on secretly recorded FBI
tapes.
The undercover recordings were
made last year during a continuing
federal investigation tluit, sources
said, has spread to INS offices in
Newark, N.J., Miami and 12 countries.
The Associated Press has learned
that about 15 INS employees bere
cons~der are under investigation and that
several others are the subject of
MISS BELVA Groce, Long Bottom, is pictured with her special birsealed indictments. While the FBI's
thday cake in honor of her looth birthday prececling a celebration at the
Abscam investigation of bribery has
resulted in the indictment of an INS .
Arcadia Nursing Home, Coolville, on Monday. The looth birthday of Miss
Groce was on Sunday, Feb. 10.
employee here, officials say the two :
WASHINGTON (AP) - Carter ad- investigations are not connected.
INS officials here and In
ministration officials are being
asked what actions they plan to Washington, D.C., declined comcounter rapidly rising heating oil ment.
The existence of 52 hours pf tapes
prices in the midst of an overa bun·
to light this month in the trial
came
dant supply of the fuel.
of
Isidore
Markowitz, an analyst in
Recent studies have shown that
New
York
City's Community
heating oil prices - especially those
Development Agency. Markowitz
charged by refiners - have been
was convicted of giving INS clerk
rising far more rapidly than can be
Miss Belva Groce, long-time Long Bottom resident, celebrated her
Juan Espinal $2,800 in return for
explained by increases in imported
1ooth birthday anniversary Monday at the Arcadia Nursing Home in
forged or blank documents.
crude oil prices.
Coolville.
Espinal, who had access to a
A General Accounting Office
Miss Groce, who was employed for years with Dils in Parkersburg,
range of INS files, went to the FBI in
report to be aired at a House energy
W.Va., retired about 25 years ago to Long Bottom where she purchased a
April after fellow employees asked
subcommittee hearing today says,
home next door to her brother-in-law and sister, the late Grin Groce, and
his
aid in illegal activities. He was
"It
appears
the
Department
of
Nellie Groce, who, at 96, is still a resident of the Long Bottom community.
wired
by the FBI to record meetings
Energy
is
not
on
top
of
this
situation
For several yeara after the death of her brother, Miss Groce and her
and
telephone
calls Markowitz had
and is not in a position to say what
sister-in-law, Nellie, lived together during the winter months sharing exwith
him
and
a
INS
investigator over
current heating oil prices are
penses before moving back to their separate homes in the spring.
equitable."
However, Miss Groce entered the nursing home last May and has sin3tmonths.
\
According to the tapes, Markowitz
"We believe that the Department
ce resided there. She feels well, moves along with a walker, enjoys acsaid he made $16,000 a year at his
of Energy's inattention to the
tivities of the nursing facility including bingo, crafts, movies and
city job. He told Espinal, "I make an
escalating heating oil prices... bortelevision and looks far younger than her 100 years.
extra 20, 20 grand a year. It's good
ders on indifference and inAlthough her !ooth birthday was Sunday, the anniversary was ofenough for me."
competence," the GAO said.
ficially observed Monday with a party at the nursing home. There was a
The transcripts of 20 hours of
Hazel Rollins, who heads the
special cake served along with ice cream to aU residents of the facility.
tapes
- 32 hours remain sealed Energy
Regulatory
Administration,
Her close friends, Mr. and Mrs. Dorsel Larkins of Long Bottom, were
examined
by the AP and evidence
was
called
to
testify
today
before
the
present for the celebration.
at Markowitz's trial
produced
by
Rep.
Toby
·
subcommittee
chaired
Longevity runs in the family of Miss Groce. She has a sister, Dagmar
allege:
Moffett,
[).Conn.,
a
consistent
critic
Burnmager, living in Jackson who is 102 and there Is a brother, Steve
- Payoffs to some 20 INS emof Carter administration energy
Groce, Little Hocking, who iB a "youngster." He's in his 80s.
ployees
here and othel'!l in Miami,
policies.
Incidentally, at 100, Miss Groce still has her own teeth.
Newark and to U.S. consular emIn some areas of New England,
ployees overseas, as well aa em-.
heating oil prices have hit $1 a
ployees of 12 foreign countries.
gallon, at least double the price of a
- Payoffs to "immigration conyear ago.
(Continued-on page 8)
One study done by a House ·consumer subcommittee said conand legitimate cosls to be added to sumers may have been overcharged
bill if nothing drastic happens ... If
Patrol cites driver
by as much as $3 billion over the laBt
the utility's rate base.
there are no startling amendSome utilities in the past have year.
ments," James said.
after Monday wreck
Heating oil prices have been
illegally
charged their customers for
Lawmakers returned to the
such things aa rail lines and oil decontrolled since 1976. Liberals like
Statehouse today following a
One driver was cited following a
Moffett have urgeil that controls be
storage, James charged.
weekend break. Both the House and
two-vehicle accident investigated
But the bill would prevent such ac- reimposed as a means of preventing
Senate scheduled floor sessions.
Monday in Meigs County on CR 'II,.
tion in the future because utilities "price gouging" by some refiners
The fuel adjushnent clause is part
at the junction of TR 227.
could assess customere only foc and retailers.
of the rate schedule of a power comCalled to the scene at 4:06 p.m.,
Opponents of decontrol say prices
those costs approved by the PUCO
pany .
the Gallia-Melgs Post, Highway
should be pennltted to seek their
'' before the fact," he sald.
It authorizes the utility to adjust
Patrol, reports an auto, traveling
In other business, the Senate natural levels to insure a steady supits rateS, oc pass through to
west on CR 'II, driven by Douglas .
customere, nuctuations·in the price · scheduled floor votes oo two ply.
Cundiff, 18, Minersville, slid through
MOffett said Monday, "DOE's
measures.
It must pay to a~:~~ulre the fuel bur·
the intersection and struck the rear·
One blU authorizes Ohio to join !allure to assure equitable heating
ned to generate electricity. ·
of a south bound Meigs Local school.
other
Midwestern states in a com- oil prices Is inexcusable, IrresponApproval of the pass·through by
bus operated by Enna N. Floyd, 47,
pact to establish coordinated college . sible and simply unconscionable.' '
the Publle Ullllies Commission of
Pomeroy.
The consumer subcommittee
and vocational education programs.
Ohio Is not ~ed .
There were no Injuries. Both
The other requires that restrooms at study found that from September
James' bill would require the
vehicles
Incurred moderate ,
roadside rest areas along Ohio high- 1978 to September 1979, domestic oil
PUCO to review the fuel costs of
damage.
Cundiff
wu cited on a.
ways be upgraded and kept in refiners' profits rose by more than
each electric utlllty every si:x moncharge
of
failure
to
yield.
800 per cent.
sanit.~ry condition.
ths. n would then penni! tt.e actual
,
,
\}
I
NEW YORK (AP) -

Work per·
mils, travel villas, even coveted
"green cards" are available to
foreigners seeking to smooth their
way into the United States through
unscrupulous Immigration and
Naturalization Service agents - if
the price is right, a convicted briber

Officials
actions to curoe
rising fuel costs

Long Bottom resident
now 100 years young

James backs cost regulation hill
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
House-approved propo$al to
eliminate the automatic pass·
through of fuel costs to utility
customere is expected to emerge
from a Senate committee Wednesday .
Althoug;l the measure would not
necessarily mean lower utility bills,
supporters said future bills would be
more predictable.
.,· Rep. Rona~ H. James, .DProctorville, the blll's chief sponsor,
said the legislation also would help
l'l!lltore consumer confidence in the
utility regulatory process. · '
The measure is before the Energy
and Public Utilities Committee,
headed by Sen. Xenneth .,.....,._.
R. Cox, DBarberton.
"I know that Senator Cox has said
he is !&gt;lallnlng on taking a vot.: on the

•

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