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'

D-12- The Sunday Times-Sentmel. Swul;l\ . ~•rch ~ .

I 'll\(;

New Haven area homeowners
VOL ?~ . NO. 225

·g et reduced insurance rate
NEW HAVEN - Homeowners
within a six mile radius of New
.Haven are in for SOJlle good news as
the result of the institution, effective
as of midnight Friday night, of the
New Haven Rural Fire Protection
District.
This means a significant drop in
fire insurance rates for many one
and two family dwellings located
within the district.
According to Bill James, chief of
the New Haven Volunteer Fire
Department, " Dwellings within
• 1,000 feet of an acceptable fire
hydrant will enjoy an equivalent of
eig ht class premiums. If the
property is in excess of 1,0000 feet to
an acceptable fire hydrant. then it
. will be granted an equivalent of
: ninth dass. Previously, all property
; in this area was loth dass."
A straight fire insurance contract

fo r a $25,000 wood. frame single
famil y dwt'lling is $169 for lOth
l'lass. $137 for ninth class and $48 for
eighth class. Thus, there would be a
sav ings of $121 for a dwelling going
from loth class to eighth class and a
sav ings of $32 for a dwelling going
from lOth class to ninth dass.
Ja mes was recently notified by the
Insuran ce Services Office of West
Virgin ia that it had completed an
extensive evaluation of the public
fir e protection facilities of the area
outs ide of New Haven and, based on
its findings . wa s officially
recognizing the rural fi re protection
district effective March I.
Insurance agents will be advised
of the credits that are applicable.
Rates for mercantiles, industrial
and institutional type property will
depend upon construction, occupancy, hazards. exposures, etc.

James said he was proud of the fire
department's accomplishment and
noted, " I want to deeply thank the
Mason County Conunissioners for
all the help they have given us.
Without them, this would not have
been possible''

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

North Carolina tops list

36 people killed by
latest winter blast

..,

CONG RATULATING the New Haven Volunteer Fire Department for its successful inception of the New
Haven Rural Fire Protection District are,' from left, Mason County Commissioners Bob Powers and Charles Fowler.
New Haven Fire Chief Bill James, right, last ni~ht ~ave the two men conies of a letter from the Insurance Services
Office of West Virginia, granting its recognition of the new district. Also pictured in the rear are Asst. Fire Chief Pat •
Fields and Fire Dept. Lt Chuck Zerkle. Powers said of the accomplishment, "This is where the taxpayers are getting

By Associated Press
Snow was ~ deep aci'OSll much
ol the Soutli today with fiWTies
falling deep into Florida where
oranges were freezing on the trees in
record cold. At least 38 persons have
died In the storm that roared out of
the Midwest into the Atlantic Coallt

a return on their money."

states.

..

Production resumes after
illness hits battery plant
LANCASTER, Ohio (APJ Production has resumed at Ray-0Vac Co.'s battery assembly division,
where a mysterious illness was
responsible for sending 100 workers
home.
But that doesn't mean the investigation into the causes of the
illness is over, said Peter Schmitt,
acting director of the Occupational
Safety and Health Admjpistration in
Columbus. And OSHA still has not
approved the situation there, he added.
"We haven't put a stamp of approval on anything," Schmitt said
Friday.
.
His announcement conflicted with
an earlier report by plant manager
Paschal A. King, who said OSHA
had given the plant a "clean bill of
health."
The incident began Feb. 22 when
four employees in the plant's battery
assembly division were treated at a
hospital after they experienced

headaches, nausea and eye
irritation. On Monday, another
seven were hospitalized.
As a result, the transistor battery
assembly line was shut down, with
its 100 employees indefinitely sent
home. But on Friday, production
was "back to normal," according to
a plant supervisor who refused to be
identified.
·
That hasn't prevented the investigation's legal process from continuing, however, Schmitt said.
"These investigations have connotations that could possibly result
in citations," he said. "We have yet
to make our final determination as
to what type of citation we're going
to consider, if any."
Schmitt has declined to reveal
results of the probe until a final
decision is made. He also has
refused to discuss King's comments
that the plant's problems were
corrected.
According to King - who refused
to comment on the issue Friday -

&gt;·-~

propane gas leaking from a forklift
truck parked near the battery
assembly section was responsible
for the illness. A compressor supplying air to the assembly line
carried the propane gas through air
hooes used by the workers, he said.
But Tim Griffing, OSHA's compliance officer who is conducting the
inspection, later said the truck isn't
all that's being considered.
"There are a number of things
we're looking at (as causing the
illness) Including the forklift truck,''
Griffing said. "I can't say that is the
problem. Potentially, it could have
caused those types of symptoms."
Meanwhile, tests also were being
made of the plant's ventilation
system, Schmitt said. An industrial
hygienist with the state's On Site
Consultation Service, contracted by
the federal agency, sent air samples
to Madison, Wis., earlier this week
for analysis.
Schmitt has refused to discuss the

BOGOTA, Colombia (AP) - A
high-ranking official said Satur.lay
that the government was prepared
to give leftist guerrillas a plane and
safe conduct passes enabling them
to leave Colombia with the
estimated 40 hostages they are
holding at the Dominican Republic's
Embassy. The official asked not to
be identified.
The hostages include U.S. Ambassador Diego C. Asencio and at
least 15 other. foreign envoys. The
guerrillas, who took over the em·
bassy during a diplomatic reception

COUNT DOWN

Wednesday, are demanding
payment of $50 mill!on in cash, the
release of 311 leftist prisoners,
worldwide publication of a
manifesto and safe conduct out of
Colombia.
One of the guerrillas said earlier
in a telephone interview with a local
radio station that the hostages
"must necessarily accompany us to
our ultimate destination." He did not
saywhatcountrytheguerrillaswanted to go to but hinted they hoped to
go to Venezuela.
Panama has offered to grant the

ALL SCHOOLS OPEN
Despite temperatures lD &amp;be zero
area Moadly mol'lliDg, all schools of
Meigs Couuty were opeD.
A 18-laeb BilOW feU over the
weelleDd bat roads were relatively
clear Moada;y mOI'IIIDg 10 ltlat buses
could run over a great part of lbelr
I'QUiel. ID &amp;be Melp Local Sebool
Dllltrlel, the

s,.P,.;;;iftCOUri pii,Mdl"fi:Friif:itprr .,
WASHING'OON - The Supreme Court today thwarted eftOrt8 by
' news reporters and hiatorlana to obtain transcripts of telephone convenatlona Henry A. Kissinger had while he was secretary of state and
White House national security adviser.
By a ~2 vote, the justices ruled that the Freedom of Infonnation Act
does not authorize federal courts to order transfer of the notes from
die Library of Congress, where they are stored, to the State Depart·
mentfor release.
The ruling, however, leaves the State Department free to seek
return .of the documents. It Is likely the department will come under
some pressure to do so.

guerrillas politi&lt;;&amp;J asylum man effort to end the crisis.
.
.
The go~ernment Fnday rught
reversed Its .longstanding ~licy
against bargaining With terronsts,
but negotiations still were not under
way by mid-afternoon Saturday· A
Cabmet ~r, ':'ho ~ed not to
· be Identified. sa1d senous talks
probably would not start until S~mda~. ti d C 1 J 11 Lo d
sec!:~~nd uatothe F~~no,
Ministry a ared briefly Saturlf
'
li
8 a po ce post near
mo~
em....,..,y,

Government presents alternate plan
BOGOTA, CQiombla - The Colombian govenunent proposed that
the guerrillas holding the Dominican Republic's embassy keep as
hostages only the 20 foreign diplomats and two Colombian officials
they captured and let the rest of their captives go.
There was no lmmedlata response from the anned band of leftists
who Invaded the embassy during a diplomatic reception five days ago.
The 29 guerrillas freed a doctor and four walters Sunday after a go.
Jnlnute negotiating session held In a Ford panel truck parked outside
the embaSsy. They released 19 other hostages last· Thursday and
Friday, Including all15 women, and are believed stlil holding 38.

u!

Motion pending in Flynt verdict

ELBERFELDS

COLUMBUS, Oblo- A motion will be flied to set iiSicte a jury's verdict flncllng Hustler magazine and Its publisher, Larry Flynt, guilty of
libel and lnvasloo of privacy, says Flynt's attorney.
Lawyer Laurence sturtz tenned Saturday's verdict in the suit
brought by Penthouse magazine publisher Robert Guccione "Wegal
.and Improper."
Gucclooe, who claimed Flynt and Hustler had conducted a campaign of malice against him and his 111180Clates, was awarded $39.3
miWunln damages by a Franklin County Common Pleas Court jury of
five women and three men. The figure Includes more than $27 million
from Flynt plirsonany and more than •12 million from the magazine,
and is belie\reillo be l record amount for a libel suit.

The Hide-A-Bed·Sofa

"We've made a special purchase of

Mode on y by SIMMONS ~·

ten 1979 model Grand Prixs. All
cars are weD equipped with factory
air, AM-FM radio, bucket seats,
Rallye wheels and only 7,000 to 12,000
. miles. For only '5799.00, they're the

Sick Jeave abuse crackdown coming

.

\

COWMftl,l_8, Oblo- Qlio's budget chief, Wllllam D. Kelp, propl,eect
- leglalaUon today to crack down on the abuae of sick leave by state em-

best on today's market!

ployee~.

But his legi.slliUoo also would provide lncenUves Ia make them want
to come .to~· st1eh 811 paying worken In Cash at Cbrialu)aa ttme for
sick leave not jlled during the year, he told a news conference.
Citing O)'e-openlng statlltics, he !IBid the costa have II08red as

*GOOD
SELECTION

·.

*BALANCE OF
FACTORY
WARRANTY

..

salarieS have·~. and I'Day balloon to $&amp;5 miUlon in 1llll0.
.Kelp iild1bat every two weeks, 30 percent of the state's employees

•

111M! at least ilne clay of sicli leave.

'

·'

ON SOME

In 1t'l9; l!e said, the costa of sick leave were equivalent to the state
paylnf3,000 penons a year's pay for staying at home all year.
_J

SimmQns new lower profile makes a Hide·A·Bed Sofa that looks u'ke a sofa and
tits Into today's home decor - also sits more co-mfortably and has mQre seating
room.
·
Ma!&lt;es a bed far more easily and quicker and has box spring type support
Queen ~tnd twin sizes length and width. ·
·
•
Stop in, see all the styles an~ ,sizes. sa've.now.

I

$ENSIBLE' CREDIT· ·SERVICE _._ FREE DELIV.RY

ELBERFELD$ ~

•

rewai.ted with Pamntlf

SACRAMENTO, Calif. - Steven Stayner, the 14-yeaNlld teunlted

FURNITURE DEPT. - 3RD FLOOR

AS LOW AS

•

.Long lost son

SPECIAL SALE PRICES NOW

Grand Pr ix

~ ~

POMEROY

'

•

..'
''

•'

·~--~~~~~~~~~--~ ~

.',

'
•..

~

'
''

aelledullDI

WBII ODe

boar later thaD aormal.
Altbaulb &amp;be temperatare wulow
011 Moaday, It wu to moderate to
about 3li dep-ees today 8lld ta go IDio
lbe 50'1 on Tuaday,

By Tbe AooclatedPrell

tests.

ipe

. -1;

remove the drifted white stufi. Besides the snow,
motorists had to contend with slippery hillsides, and in
some cases, because of the cold temperatures, some
people's vehicles' engines just would not turnover. For
the most part, tri~ounty residents who dill make It,
drove carefully, since just five traffic accidents were
investigated by the Ohio Highway Patrol.

COUNTRY TRAVEIJNG ROUGH - Tri-(Ounty
residents living in rural areasJiave had some rough
traveling the past two days since Saturday's unex·
peeled snow stonn which dumped as much as 12 inches
of snow. This photo was taken late Saturday evening
before township trustees used their road grader to

Says government would fly
guerrillas from Columbia .

RAND PRIX

MONDAY, MARCH 3, 1980

.,

To qualify for the reduced fire
credit , the Ni!w Haven Volunteer
Fire Department had to meet cer'.ain criteria. James said. Among
these, the fire department had to
show that its pumpers could pump a
rN!lain nun1her of water a minute
and that It had facilities to carry 700
gallons of water out of town. In
addition, the department hao to
have all standard fire fighting
equipment and had to draw up a plan
to show that it could handle a second
alarm fire 1a second fire while one is
already in progress) .

Bankers, bureaucrats provid·e big
:obstacle for ailing Chrysler Corp.

* 1979 MODELS

POMEROY -MIDDLfPnRT 01-ll(l

with his pare11t1 ~en yean after he .,.. abducted on bi.s way home
~ IICiiocil, ~ tm1lalf Dennis and "811 .irdroducecl by Keruieth
Eve~ ~&amp;!,JdiiiOII, their nel&amp;bboniay. ·
· ·
.'1'1• Mt~ · aililed In telephone ll1tervleWa ~y that they
ranl1 ciU&amp;lit'. 8Unilie fl.·Tllnopiy 1M White, &amp;, of Ukiah, wl!o hid
·Jolneil tbO ·~ aild bOy at the oniH'oom ranch ca.bln after be Was
,' reportedllllll!lnlfrcmblah&lt;meFeb.~4.
, ,ParneJI, 41, bu been booked fOI" i1!vestlptlon .of kldnapplllg lit the
cae Gl the Wblte boy. No charges have been fUed In connec!tlon with
1

•

'

Stllyner'a.U.ppiarance frvm Merced In o-mber 1972.

•'·: 1,...,...;..;__..;.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _....,._ _ _ _ _ _

Weekend
toll hits 12
By Tbe Alloclated Pn!a
Accidents on Ohio roads over the
weekend killed at least 12 persons,
Including five in one crash, according to the Highway Patrol.
The patrol said the head-on
coWslon which killed five persons on
Ohio 73 in Clinton County on Satw-

By LOUISE COOK
Allaoelated Prell Writer
Sugar prices added a sour note to
family grocery bills last month;
helping boost supennarket prices by
an average of just over I percent, according to an Associated Press
marketbasltet survey.
. The price of a five-pound sack of
sugar went up at the stores checked
in 12 of the 13. cities on the survey list
and was unchanged in the 13th city.

~~=~
in the price' at·pork chops and eggs.
The AP d!Ttv up a random list of 15
conunonJy purchased food and nonfood Items, checked the price at one
supennarket in each of 13 cities on
. March 1, 1973 and has rechecked on
or about the start of each succeeding
month. One' Item, chocolate chip
cookies, was dropped from the list at
the end of November 1977 beca1111e
the manufacturer discontinued the
package size used in the survey.
The latest aurvey showed that the
marketbaskel bill increased at the
chec:kllst store In eight cities during

dsy~wheaa~~

driven by John Bartram, 24, of
Wilmington, went out of controron
the partially snow..:overed road and
slammed Into a southbound
automobUe driven by Jerry L. Griffith; 35, of New Vienna. Both men
were killed.
Also killed in the accident were
Gary N. Sabin, 24, also of
Wilmington, and Griffith's 36-yearold wife, Ruth, and ll·yeaNlld son,
Jerry Jr.
The patrol counts weekend
fatalities from 8 p.m. Friday to midnight Sunday.
The dead:

Weather
~

(!-

Increasing i;loudiness and not as
cold tonight. Lows near 26. Mostly
cloudy and W8f1ller Tuesday. Highs
in the upper 408. The chance of
precipitation Is near zero tonight
and 26percent Tuesday.

February, rising an average of 2.6
percent. Tile bill declined in five
cities, down an. average of 1.2 percent. On an overall basis, the
marketbasltet bill at the checklist
store was 1.1 percent higher at the
start of March than it was a month
earlier. The increase compared with
a seven-tenths of a percent boost
during January and a 1 percent
decline during February 1979.
Coo1paring today's prices with
tboae ,seven J~"' ago, tl\e AP found
that tlie maltetllUket bill at the
cliecldi.st stores Is an average of lrl
percent higher today than It was on
March1, 1973.
The Increase in sugar costs reflects higher prices being paid on world
markets which, In turn, reflect a
smaller sugar crop. According to the
U.S. Department of Agriculture, the
world price averaged about 8 cents a
pound during the first half of 1979,
but had risen to 21 cents a pound by
the first week in February lliiiO.
There was some encouraging
news at the meat counter. The price
of a center-&lt;:~~t pork chops declined
during February at the checklist
store In seven clUes, reflecting the
steady Increase in hog production.
The USDA says federally inspected
hog slaughter during the first slx

weeks of 1980 was up 26 percent from

a year earlier.
Egg prices also dropped, according to the AP survey. The price
of a dozen eggs declined at the
checklist store in 11 cities. On the
average, the price of eggs in the AP
survey dropped by about 7 percent
during February, following an 11
percent decline in January.
No attempt was made to weight
the AP survey results l)ccording to
population density or In terms of
what percent of a familY's actual
grocery outlay ea~h Item represents. The AP did not try to compare actual prices from city to city. The
only comparisons were made In ter. ms of percentages of increase or
decrease . .
The items on the AP checklist
were: chopped chuck, center cut
pork chops, frozen orange juice concentrate, coffee, paper ·towels, but·
ter, Grade-A medium white eggs,
~ peanut butter, laundry
detergent, fabric softener, tomato
sauce, milk, frankfurters and
granulated sugar. The cities
checked were : Albuquerque, N.M.,
Atlanta, Boston, Chicago, Dallaa,
Detroit, Los Angeles, Miami, New
York, Philadelphia, Providence,
R.I., Salt Lake City and Seattle.

Vanda1ism checked
Meigs County sberiff's depuUes
are Investigating the breaking of a
plate glass window at the Rutland
Hardware Store.
Deputies ~ the broken
window Sunday at 10 a.m.
Joe Moore, Rutland, owner, said
he heard a car stop In front ol the
store and leave at approximately 5
a.m. Apopcan was used to brea1t the

SVNDAY
NORWALK- Doug1a.s S. Baco'it,
21, of Greenwich, In a one-car accident on a Huron County road.

FINDLAY - Grecory A. Wood-

window.
One accldent report WBII received
over the weekend.

ward, 17, of Jenera, In a one-ear accident on a Hancock County road.

8.\'11JRDAY
WILMINGTON - John P. Bartram, 24, the driver of one car, and
Gary N, . Sa~ln, 24, both of
Wilmington; and Jerry L. Griffith;
35, the driver of a secood car, Ruth
E. Griffith; 33,1111d Jerry L. Griffith
Jr., 11, all of New VIenna, Ill a tWocar accldent on Ohio 73 in Clinton
County.
COLUMBUS- Michael A. Swint,
fl, of Columbus, ·,in a three car accident on Qhlo 3151n Columbwi.
LIMA - Deanna Webb, no ace
given, of Wapakcmela, a ~er,
· In a coe-cat accident on Oblo 117 int
Allen County.
.
CLEVELAND . - Lo)ll'ell B.,
Burleuoo, 48, of Cleveland, In a onecar accident on a CJeveland city
street.
'

in Orlando, 26 in Daytona Beach,
and 32 in Miami.
Meanwhile, California residents
were digging out from under a fresh
series of rain-spawned mudslides,
and "twister" winds caused a smaU
plane to crash in snow in the San
Gabriel Mountains.
Virginia Gov. John Dalton
declared a state of emergency as of·
ficials in Norfolk, a port city of
286,000, ordered everyone off the
streets and the National Weather
Service predicted more snow. Some
looting was reported as wincklriven
snow brought the city to a standstill.
Some 2,300 persons attending a
late-afternoon circus performance
in Norfolk on Sunday were ordered
to remain in the Scope coliseum
overnight as a blizzard raged and
the curlew began.
"I spent $28 on tickets and I'm
going to see the circus." said Billy
Bank ol Chesapeake. "Besides, I
haven't missed a circus in 10 years
(Continued on page 10)

Grocery bills higher, sugar blamed

'

FRIDAY
CAN'l'ON - ·Gecirge A. KUlnger, 18,
rl Minerva, lit a two-Car actident on
Ohio 183jn Stan: dounty.
• PARMI- HEIGHTS - Jeffrey A.
·
,...--- Murphy, 18, ol Panna, In a one-car
accident on It Parma Heights city ·
lln!et.
.

..;..__..;..~

In addition to the 13 dealba·ln North Carolina, the stonns have been
blamed for slx deaths in Ohio, five in
Missouri, three in South Carolina,
three in Tennessee, two in Pepnsylvanla and one each In Kentucky,
Virginia, Florida and Maryland.
The National Guard wu called out
to assist stranded motorists in North
Carolina where .two feet of snow
driven by 60 mj&gt;h winds hammered
some conununltles and 13 people
died. Five-foot drifts paralyzed
Wilmington, a coastal city of 50,000
people.
''A dsy the Tar Heels will remember," was the way ooe North
Carolina forecaster described the

tw&lt;Hiay storm. He said it was "as
close as a Midwestern blizzard will
ever come to North Carolina.''
Residents were ordered off the
streets of Norfolk, Va., after the
stonn dumped heavy snow along the
East Coast from Florida to southern
New Jersey.
In Florida, where temperatures
broke records for the date set in 1947
from Pensacola to Miami, it was 32
degrees this morning. Earl Wells of
the Florida Citrus Mutual said there
had been considerable damage to
the citrus crop, with about half the
season's oranges still on the trees.
"We know we've lost some juice,
but the severity of the damage will
depend on what happens tonight and
during the next week.
"U It stays cold, we get the fruit
off the trees and still get some juice.
But if It turns wann, it deteriorates
and thefrultstarts to drop off."
With snow fiWTies reported as far
South as Tampa, · record temperatures In Florida included the 25

J11111e11 L. .J\!denoor, Otester, was
traveling aouUI on SR 881 delivering
bottled gas, wben Ilia truck lild Clll
the I1IOW oovered highway and
struck an embankment. There WBII
moderate damage and. the driver
complained ol a bruised shoulder.

OSP cites motorist
1·

One driver wu cited follo. a
two-vehicle ,aeddent lnvestiCated
SundaY· by the Gallla-Meip POIIt,
Highway Patrol.
Called to tbe scene on U.S. 311,
elgbt-tentbil of a mile tl'est of SR lSI,
at 5:80p.m., officers report a . bOUnd auto operated by Marpret
Lane,». Bidwell, tutned lert Into the '
~th II. a 'lftltbouDd velilcle driven '·
by Jlickrlc Mongkollnglonl, 34, Addison. '
'
LaJie was cited.oo a charge of lm·
proper left tum. Both vehlclea Incurred modetate damage.
The , Gallla·Melga Post Investigated five other weekend accidents dllflnl wblch the tbere w~
no Injuries and no ci\atlonl issued.

YOUNGER SET - A Ill-Inch snowfall In MeigS County Saturda;y
prl!VIded plenty of cold weather activity for the younger set and altboli8b
temperatures wa'rmed a bit Sunday and roads were relaUvdf clear,
there wu atill a lot ol snow for, fun tline. Anna Cblapman and Heather
Woods of Pomeroy are pictured "relulng" In the white stuff alter a
iltrenUOUSIIfternOOII ol play,

�3-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, March 3, 1980

2- The Deily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, March 3, 19110

Rio Redwomen claim District III crown

The Daily Sentinel

Denise Ra4cliff's charity toss with
17 seconds left and a blocked shot
substitute Jackie Moore gave Coach
Diane LewiB' Rio Grande Coliege
Redwomen ·a, 78-76 trimnph over
Malone and the 1980 Ohio -AIAW
District m basketball championship
at Cedarville Saturday afternoon.
The state ~wn, first in Rio's
history, advanced the Redwomen to

Opinions and comments
TEOOI,I

~E~tJE[)l.l

Jl)Sf
CA~'i SMOI-&lt;E- 01..'
JIMr.'\4 OUTIA TI-l'
WHITE HOUSE •••

MISSION, Kan. (AP) - 'lbe Big
10, Pac-10 and Atlantic Coast Conference compfis1! zilore than 26 percent of the 48-team field and got
seven 11.16 first~d byes In the ex:parlded NCAA Basketball Tour- .
nament announced Sunday.
The nine-man Division I Baskethall Committee, for the first time in
tournament history, exercised
almost total freedom in selecting
teams and han~ out seedings. .
Previously, no .con!~ · ,could
have more tha!\tlyQ ent,rles. 1•,
The ejght-nlember · Ace placed
five teams In the tournament while
the !Jig 10 8nd Pac-10 got four each.
Four ACC teams, North Carolina,
North cafollna State, Maryland and
Duke, received first-round byes. The
top four seeds ' in each of four
reglonals are relieved of playing first-round games, which begin Thursday and Friday at different
locations.
Under Its expanded format, the
tournament includes 25 at-large entries along with 23 teams which got
autom&amp;tic invitations by winning
conference championships or postseason tournaments. The team
payoffs are expected ·to jump
dramaUcally over last year, with
teams getting about $00,000 for first
and second-round games, $200,000
for advancing to regional competition and ~.ooo for making it to
the final four: This is up from
$40,000, ,117,000 and $275,000 last
year.
Top-ranked DePaul, whose 26-1
record ls the tournament's best, was

e

Today's commentary

The facts of labor life
a

rent numerous neighborhood of 100
million, organized labor has been
essentially stagnant in total
membership. And proportionately,
union membership has actually
declined -from about a quarter to
under a fifth of all workers in the last
10 years alone.
There could be a COIUlection with
the long disinclination of Big Labor's
leadership to change with the changing work force, a COIUlection that
Kirkland has recognized and, in contrast to his predecessor, is prepared
to do something about.
Kirkland, Meany's longtime aid
and personally designated successor, has said he is "no iover of
novelty." U so, he must have considerably more in mind. Two seats
out of 35, considering the composition of the labor movement as a
whole, would be exactly that - a
novelty.
Give him credit for first tricks, but
it will take quite a few more to accommodate the institutional
dinosaur he has inherited to the
times.

Fly now, search later

Leave it to the Soviets.
Just when the West is concentrating on Afghanistan, they roll
out a challenge on another front air travel.
This June they will be putting into
service on domestic routes a new
airbus, the ~. with a J50.
passenger capacity - 70 more than
its Western equivalent, the A.JOO
developed by a French-German consortium.
More, it represents a
breakthrough in j)IISSellger convenience with a time-saving baggage
arrangement. Passengers first enter
a lower compartment where they
place their own luggage in bins
numbered according to seat
assignments, proceed to upper-deck
seating compartments for the
journey and at the end of trip
reverse the process to retrieve their
own gear. Self-service loading and
unloading can be accompllshed in as
little as 20 minutes, Soviet
authorities claim.
It has all the signs of a mass-travel
innovation Western airlines will be
hard pressed to catch up with -ilo-ityourself baggage loss.
But don't think they can't do it.
(Newspaper Enterprise Assn.)

Berry's World

In Washington

The better to keep it quiet
By Robert Wallers
WASHINGTON INEA)- After sof·
fering through a decade of embarrassing disclosures of its illegal and
unethical activities, the Central Intelligence Agency is moving to stifle
future revelations of its unlawful
conduct.
The CIA isn't necessarily going to
clean up its act. Instead, it has convinced sympathetic members of
Congress to introduce legislation
that would shield the agency from
having to publicly release information about its transgressions.
The legislation takes the form of
amendments to the Freedom of Infonnation Act that would restrict the
right to requeat data under the FOIA
to U.S. citizens seeking only infonnation about t.hen\selves maintained in CIA files.
Thus, .individuals would retain
limited access to their personal files,
required under provisions of both
the fOIA and the Privacy Act, but
the agency would be protected from
ever again having to reveal
humiliating information about conduct such as:
- Project CHAOS, a massive
domestic spying operation during
the late 1!160s and early 1970s that involved infiltration, espionage and
surveillance of critics of the Vietnam War, civil-rights activists and
other purported dissidents.

- Dlegal "bugging" and wiretapping, lml;awful break-ins, interception
of personal mail and maintenance of
dossiers on individuals whose only
suspected "crime" was expression

of \heir ·disagreement with various
governtnentpolicies.
- Extens(ve domestic operations
in which the targets were U.S.
citizens- in direct violation of a congressional mandate that forbade the
CIA from exercising any "police,
subpoena or law enforcement
powers or internal security functions...
- A wide range of extra-legal p~
jects - operated under code names
such as MKULTRA, MKDELTA,
MKNAOMI, ARTICHOKE and
BLUEBIRD - in which American
citizens were used, often without
their knowledge, for drug experimentationorresearcbin "brainwashing" and other forms of
behavior modification.
, The CIA claims the proposed
restrictive legislation is necessary
to prevent foreign nations, especially the Soviet Union and Its aWes,
from using the FOIA to extract sensitive infonnation from the agency.
But the law already contains a
provision, repeatedly relied upon by
the CIA In past years, that ex:emplll
from FOIA disclosure requirements
any material that must "be kept
secret in the interest of national

defense or foreign policy."
Other exemptions preclude the
disclosure of information relating to
internal agency practices, personnel
matters, lilternal · agency memos
and investigative files.
As recenUy as last year, CIA
Deputy Director Frank C. Carlucci
told a HoUSe committee: "It Is
undeniable that, under the current
FOIA, national security exemptions
exist to protect our most vital information."
·
Two years earlier, another CIA official told a Senate subcommittee
that compliance with the law initially was a traumatic experience for
'· the agency, then ~: "We have
been able to make the IH!"P888ry adjustments. I am pleased to report
that, In fact, I think the agency Is
better off for it."
Because the CIA never has casually released any infonnation, even
when complying with FOIA requests, there Is · no persuasive
evidence that the law ever has been
successfully used to the detriment of
thllJ country's national-9ecurlty interests.
.
Indeed, the CIA can cite no
specific examples of such FOIA
abuse. Instead, It relies upon the
vague claim that cooperative intelligence agendes in various nations and other sources oflnfonnation are uneasy about possible future

disclOBures of sensitive Information.
In fact, the seCurity~ous CIA
never has been reconciled to the
democratic concept rJ. promoting
government accountability and encouraging an enlightened electorate
through public dlaclosure and
discussion of federal activities.
Now that the 19708 criticism of the
CIA is fading, the agency is anxious
to Insure that It never again wW
have to admit to Ita misjudgments,
Its excesses and its failures.
(Newspaper Enterprise Assn.)

Proposed bill provides less taxes
it would seem obvious that Ohio's
tax structUre should be adjusted,"
Stano sa itt
Ohio's income tu law permit&amp;
each taxpayer to deduct from his adjusted gross income $650 each for
himself and his spouse. The exemption also applies to each dependent
claimed on the taxpayer's federal

return.
The Increased exemption
proposed by Stano would take effect
with the taxable year which began
.
Jan.1, 1980.
Afamily of four, wlthanlncome rJ.
•10,000, now receives $2,800 in exemptions.
With 8 taxable lncooie rJ. $7,400,
the family pays $t9 ~ually in state
Income tax. The figure would be
reduced to f4ll under Stano's bilL
"The amount rJ. relief Increases,
however, as.the familY's lnc&lt;me JD.
creases, .. Stano said.

For example, a familY rJ. four with
an income of $711,000 currently pays .
$235 In income tax. The tax bill
would be SIO less under stano's
proposal.
.
Altl1oogh tbe Individual tax reduction&amp; seem relatively small, the
statewide tota1a are more Jm.
preulve.
The Ohio Department of Taution
estimates tbe blgber exemption
level woUld reduce revenue by $23
million annually, after · an Initial
starting cost during flac8J. year 1981
rJ. t33.6 miUion.
:
.
In addition, an amendment Stano
plans to offer would 1ncreue the
loet-revenue)l9UJ to f'3 million annually.

The amendment would 1'llllle fnm '
the CUI'I'l!llt f4,100 to $7,400 tbe
amount lA. IIIOIIeY pe!IOIII ·II 8Jid

"/ took the money because 1 thought I could
connect the bills with D.B. Coopsr. "

'

T'• ...,A, Fla. (AP) _ The Cin,..,...Reds itche and tchers
cinnati
are
to :ring
slimmeddownandreadyforaction.
N~ ~ tbe 26 ........_ and cat-- "'
,.._.....
chers who reported to Spring
training this past week was overwelgbt. In fact, a few rJ. the players
ahattered welgbt limits prescribed
by the lub
c Pa.ul·M-'-uhasbeenthe
Pltcber
talk of the camp'"""'
since he reported
with his weight down from 220 to 196.
To keep weight down, he rWI8 two
miles each way to und from the
Jll'8ctlce field every day.

~

Today Is Monday, March 3, the
63rd day of 1980. There are 303 days
left in the year.
Today's highlight in history:
On March 3, 1847, the inventor of
the telephone, Alexander Graham
Bell, was born in Edinburgh,
Scotland.
On this date:
In 1849, Congress created the
Department of the Interior to look
after the nation's resources.
In 1187, 21-year-old Annie Sullivan
arrived at the Keller home to teach
their deaf and blind daughter,
Helen.
In 1945, the American and
Canadian annles linked up as the
German anny went into full retreat
along the Rhine River In World War

press fi!IIOI1e that SOme buaineasea
are ralaing their prices .in IIJ)o
tldpatlon rJ. mandatory wage and
price cootroJs," aaid the telearam,
the text ul which ... releued by the

·White HOUle. ·
'
"The prealdent Ia determined that
he will not impolle such controll. He
does not have the leplauthority to
do ao, and be doea not intend to aeek
it.
•.
.
.
·"However, the praldiat'e voJun.,
tal')' price lllanciUda remain In ef"
feet alld we expect tun comptlance.
The ~ on Wage llld Price

1

IAST.CRVJSER
I
SAN PIEGO, Callf,,'(AP) - 'lbe ~
(ldlbrma City, tile' Jut rJ. tbe l
_Navy's World War ·n "bii1IUII"
cruiMI, tile Jut to bave a teak lllllD
elect and the Jut with a TALOS
mJeeJJe l7lllm, baa l!een cleccmStabllitywiii~ita~
ttdalonild at the Sari Diego NaQl
actlvltl• to lll8ke Cl!l1alD 'that bolb
StltiCII.
, .
·
. ·
. tile price'and ,... studardl CCIO. Tbe- wW be towed to Br-- .
Iinue to bnffetUve."
tAift, Wub., 'IIbera It will l!lopJAced
Miller and Kalil all!o called on tile . fclr llftlleepq until If Ia dedded
~· chief ueeutlve aftbn
I wiJetblrtomotbb.U Gl'fCI'IIIlt.
to ..~ yallr leadenblp to .
avoid actioalthat~ lurtJier • tt!IPiM..S
Tbe - 1n 't-...,ti,allabt
C!l'lllnlll1cru~~.to Inflationary
JX
II
UCC
.
Gl'
U·
and took part 1ft the Qldnawa cam .
.
pectatlona. ..
.
, .
-a..... ""'
The clflc:lala ~ that tbe lld'
mlnistratlOJI Ll revteq ltl . .:..
'· ----:--,:.;...;.'- -"'"-"..;...econc:mic polld• "to be lUre &amp;bit
the ,federal' 80V81lwwat fultllla .Jla.
l'eiJI(IIIIlbWtl• in tbe ftlbt .......
inflition; "

l

.

. .

"We had our fat content measured
last year and mine ·was 26 percent.
That's obese;" Moskau said. "Now
myfatcontentisl1.5percent.Heck,
Mike LaCoss' is something like 9.3
percent."
·
f
pitching
Bill Dawley, a 6-- oot.-6
prospect, welghed230poundsduring
the Instructional League last
November. TheRedswantedhimto
losel0poWJds.Dewleydropped23.
"I got a job 88 a milkman,"
Dawley said. •'That meant I had to
get up at 5 o' clock every morning ;
then come home a nd work out for an
hour or two in the afternoon."

lndiana victory

(~87f.1885)
-

~

h

In 197f, a Turkish airUner crashed
in a fonst near Paris, killing all :w6
people on board.
.
Ten years ago, a mob of·white men
attacked a bus carrying 15 black
students to a newly intelrated high
school in South · Carolina. Fifteen
people were arrested.
Five years ago, West Gennany
freed five imprisoned radicals and
flew them to South Yemen, 88 '
demanded by kld!ulppers holding
Peter Lorenz, leader rJ. West .
Berlin's ChriBtlan Democrats. But
be was still held bolltage.
Last year, President Carter met
privately with Israell Prime
MiniBter Menachem Begin in an ef·
fort lli reiJiiine.stalled negotiatiOIIII 1
toward a l!Udeut peace treaty.
. Toda.Y's birthday: Lee RadziwW,
sister .of Jacquelltle Kennedy .
Ona8lle, ill t7.
Tbougbt for today: People ask you
for crlticiiJm, but they only .want
pralae. - W. Somerllet Maugham

over could earn before paJinl taxes.
Stano's bill Ia J11111C11n1 lief'ore the
Senate Wa)'ll and Mulle.CoDmtttee.

seeded No.I .in the West Regional
while Kentucky, ranked No.2 in the
Associated Press Top Twenty, .is the
top seed ln . the Mldeaat. No.5
Louisiana State is seeded tops in the
Midwest and No.3 Syracuse is the
top seed in the east.
Committee Chairman Wayne
Duke conceded that committee
members "recognize there may lie
discussion" Cll a few conferences
getting so many invitations.
"Our No.I objective was to take
the best 25 teams after the 23
automatic qualifiers," Duke said.
"Our No.2 objective was to balance
Uie brackets as best we could. Our
No.3 objective was to take into conSideration as beat we could any
geographical boultdarles."
. The tournament will conclude with
the nationally televised semifinals
and finals March 22 and 24 in Indianapolis.
Duke also defended the enlarged
bracket and said it came "in response to the great caliber of college
basketball which we are seeing
aC1"0118 the .country today. I don't
believe lt dilutes in any way the tournament field, or the interest in
college basketball which is not its
zenith," Duke said.
"In selecting the field, the cream
of the crop emerges very easily," be
a4ded. "But I'm sure we'll have
foliowers of the 49th team who think
their team should be ln."
'the Southeast Conference and
Metro Conference each placed three
members in the tournament.
Others receiving first-round byes

10. The winners had 13 assists, five · shot 67 percent from the field and 78
percent from the foul line. She
by Poweli. Rio had 28 turnovers.
Four Redwomen were named to averaged 10.3 rebounds a game.
Box score :
the All-Tournanient Team - Kim
Martin, Jackie Moore, Karen Powell
and Denise Radcliff. The latter was
named the tournament's Most
Valuable player.
Radcliff averaged 16.7 points in
the three-game tournament. She

Ethel Blanks paced the losers with
3D points.

Rio connected on 26 of 60 field goal
attempts for t7 percent. The Red
women were 20 of 31 at the foul line
for 65 percent.
Rio had 40 rebounds. Radcliff had

included Georgetown in the East will meet Western Kentucky.
Regional; Notre Dame and
The semifinals und finals of the
Louisville in the Midwest; St. John's Midwest and East Regionals will be
and Indiana in the Mideast, and Ohio in Houston and Philadelphia, respecState, Brigham Young and Oregon tively, Marcb 1f and 16. The
State in the West.
semifinals and finals of the Mideast
The Midwest Regional will launch will be in Lexington, Ky. March 13
first-round action Thursday in Lin- and 15, the same dates the West will
. coin, Neb., with Missouri meeting conclude in TUcson, Ariz .
San Jose and Kansas State playing
Syracuse will .play the VillanovaArkansas. Friday night in Denton, Marquette winher, North Carolina
Tex., first-round games in the Mid- State will face the Iowa-VIrginia
weal will be completed with Alcorn · Commonwealth winner. Georgetown
playing South Alabama and Texas meets the Iona-Holy Cross winner
AxMmeetlng Bradley.
and Maryland plays the TennesseeAt Greensboro, N.C. on Thursday,
Furman winner in the second round
the East Regional begins first-round
of the East Regional.
play with Iowa playing Virginia
In the MidWest, Louisiana State
Commonwealth and Tennessee
meets the Alcorn-South Alabama
meeting Furman. On Friday night at
winner; Notre Dame plays the
Providence, R.I., Villanov11 plays Missouri-San Jose winner; North
Marquette and Iona goes against
Carolina faces the winner of Bradley
Holy Cross in the other East firstand Texas Ax M, and Louisville opround game.
poses the Kansas State-Arkansas
Opening-round games in the West
winner.
Regional at Ogden, Utah Thursday
The second round in the Mideast
night match·.Clemson against Utah
has Kentucky vs. the Florida StateState and Weber State against Toledo winner; Duke vs. the
Lamar. The other first-round games Washington State-Ivy League winIn the West begin Friday night at · ner; St. John's vs. the Purdue-La
Tempe, Ariz. with UCLA meeting
Salle winner, and Incllima vs. the
Old Dominion and Arizona State
Virginia Tech-Western Kentucky
going against Loyola of California.
winner.
First-round action in the Mideast
DePaul will play the UCLA-Old
Regional begins Thursday night at
Dominion winner to begin the second
West Lafayette, Ind., matching
round of the West Regional. Ohio
Washington State against the winner
State will play the Loyola-Arizona
rJ. Tuesday night's game between State winner; Brigham Young the
Penn and Princeton and Purdue
Utah State-Clemson winner, and
against La Salle. Friday night at
Oregon State the Weber StateBowling Green, Ky., Florida State
Lamar winner.
will meet Toledo and VIrginia Tech

·

Today in history

Administration. expects compliancL
WASHINGTON (AP) - Two of
President Carter's top economic advisers sent telegnuqs Sund,ly to the
nation's 500 largest hnslntlllles
. telling tlieui that the admlnl.sti-ation
expects COIIlPllance with Its voluntary anti-inflation program.
Treasury Secretary G. WIWam
Miller and Alfred Kahn, who heada
the Council on Wage and Price
Stability, reiterated J?resldent Carter's po~ltion that wage and prjce
controls would not be jmpo!led in ar.
effort to bring Inflation under CGDtrol.
,.
"We are ueeply eoncerned by

If the Redwomen win three at
Taylor University, they wW advance
to the national finals, to be held in

Hammond's 1D points. Karen Powell
chipped In with 16. Denise Radcliff
and Kim Clingmlln added 10 apiece.

Weight conscience Reds begm·

n.

Ohio perspective

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Ohioans would pay slighUy less · in
state income tales each year if a
pending bill raising personal exemptions by $100 becomes law.
The measure, sponsored by Sen.
Jerome Stano, D-Parma, would increase the exemptions taxpayers
may claim from the current $650 to
$750.
"Wbat this bill does is to try to update the tax structure in thllJ state ...
to give Ohio citizens some relief
when It comes time to pay their income taxes," Stano said.
Such an adjustment is needed to
offer tupayers S&lt;B11e help in coping
with the effects of Inflation, he added.
The amount of the exemption has
,not been changed since \975.
"In light rJ. the fact that our inflation rate has grown, .since that
time, at an annual rate rJ. 8 percent,

19-3 season record.

Spokane, Washington later this month.
Saturday, the Redwomen, now 204, avengesJ an earlier season 88-73
loss at the hands of Malone by dropping the Lady Pioneers in the
District m finals.
Rio led 41-33 during the halftime
intermission.
The winners were led by Margie

Big 10 lands four in tourney

-~

By Don Graff
It may not be feasible teaching an
: . old dog new tricks, but how about
' · dinosaur?
Lane Kirkland, for one, is inclined
to try. The new president of the AFI.r
CIO has decided to introduce Big
Labor, at its very respectable age, to
a couple of facts of American life.
Sex and race.
Such is the most interesting
development out of the recent
gathering in Florida of the AFI.rCIO
executive council, a session that
would have been noteworthy enough
if only for being the first in a quarter
of a century not under the firm - not
to say rigid- grip of the late George
Meany.
Kirkland has designated two seats
on the 35-member council to be
reserved for, respectively, a woman
and a minority-group representative.
Not exactly earthshaking news,
you say: It may be somewhat more
so when you consider the existing
composition of that power center of
the 19-million-member labor federation. Under a longstanding rule
restricting council participation to
heads of member unions, it includes
at present only one black. And there
has never been a woman member.
So?
So women today account for more
than 40 percent of the total national
work force. Further, one in every
five union members is a woman.
Blacks and Hispanics also have
sizable representation in the labor
force and union ranks, and would
have even more were they not so
over-represented in the unemployed
statistics.
Not only is It about time that Big
Labor took note of the actual situation, it is long past time for its own
health.
.
While women are increasingly
numerous in unions, only 16 percent
of all those millions of working
women are as yet organized. Much
the same figures apply to minority
workers. Many of both are in service
occupations, a booming employment
category where more than 5 million
jobs have opened up in recent years.
Yet only some 15 percent are
unionized.
Meanwhile, as the total national
work force has been expanding
rapidly in recent years to the cur-

the regional tournament, to be held
at Taylor University in Upland, Ind.
later this week.
Rio Grande will battle Spring Arbor, Mich., in a first round game at 3
p.m. Thursday. Spring Arbor owns a

Bruce Berenyi, who won his
second earned run average t!Ue in
three years with a 2.11;1 season at Indianapolis in 1979, weighed 220 at
spring training a year ago. Now he

training~~~UG:~::::~:: ~=i~~fr:m;

in favor of a tournament," Toledo
wei""• .....
coacb Bobby Nichols said. "If you
...-....
in
d to
th
•
Frank Pastore also working at
come ha secon
seven
'
you
that the • ha · re ·
keeping fit. He drinks a
Yre vmg a
multivitamin concoction religiously
Harry Paidas, MAC information
and stays after team drilts to foliow
h
tha
a personal OO.mlnute program of
director, conceded, owever,
t
welghUlftingandropejump
.
conference officials were dispapEv Bill Fischer the i hing
pointed with the crowds + 6,220 for
en
'
P tc
Saturday's semifinals and 6,900 ancoach, has lost a couple of sizes off
nounced for Sunday's final + at
hiswaistline.
Dave Van Gorder, who is con-Are
Michigan's 13,609-seat Crisler
na ·
sidered a posslble candldate to even"We're
little disappointed,"
tually succeed Johruly Bench as the
P 'da
ida "W
h tlng f
bas
also
lost
.
weight.
at
s
sa
.
e were s ed
oo 6 700 orI
Reds catcher.
10 000 b t ' n!y
's
dropped
pounds
since
he
,
u
we
o
averag
He
20
think
•
· · , .
reported last year at 210 to the
we re ex:penencmg some
growing pains
National League's training camp.
"There ~ was the problem of

were

Girki"to-,rnament scores
f

!

f

... _,

'

'

•

..

:~'!r. Knuckles~

scored 22 points while Joe Faine ad:- ·
ded 12 as the Falcons finished the
season 26-9.
"I'm just happy we don't !lave to
Mill
S
(T' ) Selg
see
er, waney, 1111
o,
and (Ken) Montague again,"
Weinert said of the Toledo seniors,
"because they've really had great
careers.
team." I'm very proud of my
In the
lati
Nortbe
conso on game,
rn
Dlinois defeated Ball State, 71-68.
The Huskies finished the· season 16--

~:;:urnarr;;,::;:es
a..A.U. T -

AP Correspondent

withhiiliillttie. clrciunstancesthat
SWTounded bJs setto with S marshmallow salesman last October
whichcosthlmthe Yankee job.
"Billy wouldn't lie to me," Mickey
Insisted. "! believe his story completely. He jltlt his money on the bar
and tried to go to his room. He was
~:a:::-~~ tharulningt
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rr

another guy's life."
ManUe recalled that throughout
his career Martin was regarded as a
troublemaker and blamed for lnddenta in which he had no part such as the notorious Copacabana
Caper MayUi,1957.
"A bunch of us decided to
celebrateBilly'sblrthday,"hesaid.
"So we went to the Copa to hear
Sammy Devta, Jr. There were haifa
dOEen of .us _ Yogi, Whitey, Hank
~Could see he was burting In- Bauer, Jo!JMY Kucks, ·Billy and
aide. Tbls is the place be wanted to
we 'Were watching the
~~~only place he ever show; two bowling teams came In
ManUe and Ford CGIIII out rJ. . and ast Iii front of as. 'lbey had had a
hibema~ every llpring to belp in · few beers. They lltarted yelling loud
Yaraees' spring · training, jolnlnj! and making racl!t remarks about
Yogi, a regular coa~ wilo lritb =~·~We kept telling them .
Martin formed tbe oft.diacJpllned,
The bowlers got nasty, Mickey
fun-loving Rover Boys 1/. tbe
said, !IJid moved back to ~enge
Yara-•.great champJOIIIblp teams tile Yanks. .
.
.
of the 191i(Je.
"I'm glad Billy ill stliying in·
"One rJ. the guys who got It in the
baseball," ManUe said, referring ·to IW sued Bauer for $1 miUion," be
·Martin's recent .employment as
related. "~f ·Hank , was !!OWilel'll ·
' • manager · of Charles Finley's . near,hlm. ,I waS tbe ~oeest. A boon.
'
··
cer banged the guy aCI'OIIII·the 11011e
Oa)dand A's. "It irill keep him fro.;n
with a blackJack:" .
,
brood~~~&amp; too much. Besides, he's a
Mantle recalled that Martin W88 :
helluvalDIDag••."
·
.,..
Upset over tbe incil\el\t, although be
ManUe said Billy had l:Onfided
had no pari tp tile brawl.

"We

••

·•-n

~~:...

IS.

Man
· tle g }a d Martin•
b ball
ta
.
.
s ymg m ase

~for.twomonths";J!:

conference."
Bowling Green's Colon Irish, who
also was named by repo"'-rs to the
t team ""
with
Northem Dlinois' Allen· Rayborn +

mg· •

year's NCAA Mideast regional tourney.
By Will Grimsley
"Woodson carried me for 3 years,
and It was the least I could do to
ca!Ty him for 2 months," said Carter, who improved last year's 8.~
point average . to nearly 1'• during
Woodson's absence.
·
Carter's two free throws knotted
thescoreat65-65.Then,atthestart
"''""ery.ItwasCarterwhogavethe
of the overtime, a basket by Ray
e
young
and sometimes shaky
Tolbert and a fast-break layup by
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (AP)
0
- - ' - a steady hand of aw,
Thomaaputlndlanaaheadtostay.
. t• . L
""""'~··
-For the casual oooerver, there !sa
perience.
Woodson, a U senior, and
yawning void in the lockerroom rJ.
And It was Carter who sank two
Thomas, 6--1 freshman, led the
the new-look New York Yankees_
free thrilw with 7 second&amp; left · ln
Hoosiers wlth21 pointaapiece.
·
the electric current, the exdtement,
. regulation that tied the score and
"Back in December; · I was
the expectancy generated . b)'
' enable(! Indiana to rally in overtime
worried about ever playing again,"
maverick Billy Martin long gone.
to beat0hlo:!tate7&amp;-'13Sunday. ·
said Woodson, who injured his back
For a trio of the Yankees' greatest
. "I just~ W.~
.· .!A~~!!J!, early in the season; then llnderwent heroes - Mickey Mantle,. Whitey
the bard
,.81ltlie swea~-~
surgery on a disc. "I just thank God . Ford and Yogi Berra, all Hall of
tears," said tl(e.~li!lliot:f~..' ' I '~ for •everything and for being able to
Famers _ . It is "The Three
was thlok!ng 'a!i9iif'Obt 1t'iheaio0
come back and help us win the Big
Musketeers"withoutD'Artagnan.
(In 1977, hear ll:fter Indiana' NCAA
Ten. I feel great for Butch; he's
"Billy &amp;Jlellt the holidays with
l'luomplonsblp team,) and tbe Sunreally
.
beenpJa"'nnwellall. year."
"said ManU the best friend_.
daY~ear ago we waited io get a
Carter f~ with 12 points,
::· fiery ~ llllllllger.
National InvltiltioliToumment bid."
playing aU but aminutes rJ. the first · played golf and fished but didn't do
The vic.101'Y .!mr.,Oblo'siate gave
half after picking up his tbird foul.
mucb bunting. 1can't walk with this
Indiana Ita firSt Big Ten ti"a ince
Ironically, his replacement, Landon
bad knee
· em..
1976 and a first.rouDd bye"'1'~ this ·Tumer,hadslxpointsinthatstretch
any more. .._ was fine
for a '\lfblle, as long as he COII)d get it
allouttA.hismlnd.Buti'dseehimgo
1..
•J
Into lapses. He would be sull,en and
. '

ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) - They
Michigan teams in it also making It
billed it as the first Mid-American
hard to draw."
Conference basketball tournament,
Nobody was disappointed in
but it all boiled down to an lnte~te
Toledo, however, including Bowling
75 shoot out.
Green coach AI Weinert who felt the
At times, however, It might even
Rockets would represent the MAC
have been confused with "Slaughter
well in t.he chase for the national
on Fifth Avenue" as Toledo's Jim championship.
Swaney scored 31 points Sunday to
"Swaney was too tough," Weinert
lead the Rockets to an 85-70 rout of said. "We turned the ball over. It's
Bowling Green in the title game.
tough to play Toledo when you're 11
The victory confirmed what many
or 12 down. They have too much
had suspected all along - that
poise."
Toledo, 23-6, was head and shoulders
In addition to the hot shooting rJ.
above the rest of the MAC and deserSwaney, who was named the tourved the right to represent the con- · nament's outstanding player, the
Rockets also got a ~int perterence Iii the NCAA mldeast
regionals later this week against
formance from Harvey Knuckles
Florida State.
while Dick Miller hauled down a
Wbat wasn't so clear is whether
game-high 20 rebounds - 17 in the
first half alone.
the tournament ought to be played at
all.
"The ball players were very deterToledo won the league cham- mined," ·Nichols said. "They just
pionship with a 14-2 record while
weren't going to let it get away

Sports .World

BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (AP) Mike Woodson and lslah Thomas
the big IICOrera, but the UllliWlg
hero' behind Indiana's drive to ·the
Big Ten basketball championship
wasseniorpardButchCarterf"!JII
Mlddleto Obi
,n, o;
It was. ~ who picked up the
o.......IM .slack wben W"""·-

j

Toledo captures
MAC championship

mr.:Ue

.

A1TENTION

CARRIER NEEDED
IN POMEROY
'

MONKEY RUN· WEST MAIN AREA

CALL THE. DAILY SENTINEL
.

-

BETWEEN .8:30 and· 5:00·
'

'

'

":,1
'

I
I

PH. 992-2156
',,

-

.

.,

�3-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, March 3, 1980

2- The Deily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, March 3, 19110

Rio Redwomen claim District III crown

The Daily Sentinel

Denise Ra4cliff's charity toss with
17 seconds left and a blocked shot
substitute Jackie Moore gave Coach
Diane LewiB' Rio Grande Coliege
Redwomen ·a, 78-76 trimnph over
Malone and the 1980 Ohio -AIAW
District m basketball championship
at Cedarville Saturday afternoon.
The state ~wn, first in Rio's
history, advanced the Redwomen to

Opinions and comments
TEOOI,I

~E~tJE[)l.l

Jl)Sf
CA~'i SMOI-&lt;E- 01..'
JIMr.'\4 OUTIA TI-l'
WHITE HOUSE •••

MISSION, Kan. (AP) - 'lbe Big
10, Pac-10 and Atlantic Coast Conference compfis1! zilore than 26 percent of the 48-team field and got
seven 11.16 first~d byes In the ex:parlded NCAA Basketball Tour- .
nament announced Sunday.
The nine-man Division I Baskethall Committee, for the first time in
tournament history, exercised
almost total freedom in selecting
teams and han~ out seedings. .
Previously, no .con!~ · ,could
have more tha!\tlyQ ent,rles. 1•,
The ejght-nlember · Ace placed
five teams In the tournament while
the !Jig 10 8nd Pac-10 got four each.
Four ACC teams, North Carolina,
North cafollna State, Maryland and
Duke, received first-round byes. The
top four seeds ' in each of four
reglonals are relieved of playing first-round games, which begin Thursday and Friday at different
locations.
Under Its expanded format, the
tournament includes 25 at-large entries along with 23 teams which got
autom&amp;tic invitations by winning
conference championships or postseason tournaments. The team
payoffs are expected ·to jump
dramaUcally over last year, with
teams getting about $00,000 for first
and second-round games, $200,000
for advancing to regional competition and ~.ooo for making it to
the final four: This is up from
$40,000, ,117,000 and $275,000 last
year.
Top-ranked DePaul, whose 26-1
record ls the tournament's best, was

e

Today's commentary

The facts of labor life
a

rent numerous neighborhood of 100
million, organized labor has been
essentially stagnant in total
membership. And proportionately,
union membership has actually
declined -from about a quarter to
under a fifth of all workers in the last
10 years alone.
There could be a COIUlection with
the long disinclination of Big Labor's
leadership to change with the changing work force, a COIUlection that
Kirkland has recognized and, in contrast to his predecessor, is prepared
to do something about.
Kirkland, Meany's longtime aid
and personally designated successor, has said he is "no iover of
novelty." U so, he must have considerably more in mind. Two seats
out of 35, considering the composition of the labor movement as a
whole, would be exactly that - a
novelty.
Give him credit for first tricks, but
it will take quite a few more to accommodate the institutional
dinosaur he has inherited to the
times.

Fly now, search later

Leave it to the Soviets.
Just when the West is concentrating on Afghanistan, they roll
out a challenge on another front air travel.
This June they will be putting into
service on domestic routes a new
airbus, the ~. with a J50.
passenger capacity - 70 more than
its Western equivalent, the A.JOO
developed by a French-German consortium.
More, it represents a
breakthrough in j)IISSellger convenience with a time-saving baggage
arrangement. Passengers first enter
a lower compartment where they
place their own luggage in bins
numbered according to seat
assignments, proceed to upper-deck
seating compartments for the
journey and at the end of trip
reverse the process to retrieve their
own gear. Self-service loading and
unloading can be accompllshed in as
little as 20 minutes, Soviet
authorities claim.
It has all the signs of a mass-travel
innovation Western airlines will be
hard pressed to catch up with -ilo-ityourself baggage loss.
But don't think they can't do it.
(Newspaper Enterprise Assn.)

Berry's World

In Washington

The better to keep it quiet
By Robert Wallers
WASHINGTON INEA)- After sof·
fering through a decade of embarrassing disclosures of its illegal and
unethical activities, the Central Intelligence Agency is moving to stifle
future revelations of its unlawful
conduct.
The CIA isn't necessarily going to
clean up its act. Instead, it has convinced sympathetic members of
Congress to introduce legislation
that would shield the agency from
having to publicly release information about its transgressions.
The legislation takes the form of
amendments to the Freedom of Infonnation Act that would restrict the
right to requeat data under the FOIA
to U.S. citizens seeking only infonnation about t.hen\selves maintained in CIA files.
Thus, .individuals would retain
limited access to their personal files,
required under provisions of both
the fOIA and the Privacy Act, but
the agency would be protected from
ever again having to reveal
humiliating information about conduct such as:
- Project CHAOS, a massive
domestic spying operation during
the late 1!160s and early 1970s that involved infiltration, espionage and
surveillance of critics of the Vietnam War, civil-rights activists and
other purported dissidents.

- Dlegal "bugging" and wiretapping, lml;awful break-ins, interception
of personal mail and maintenance of
dossiers on individuals whose only
suspected "crime" was expression

of \heir ·disagreement with various
governtnentpolicies.
- Extens(ve domestic operations
in which the targets were U.S.
citizens- in direct violation of a congressional mandate that forbade the
CIA from exercising any "police,
subpoena or law enforcement
powers or internal security functions...
- A wide range of extra-legal p~
jects - operated under code names
such as MKULTRA, MKDELTA,
MKNAOMI, ARTICHOKE and
BLUEBIRD - in which American
citizens were used, often without
their knowledge, for drug experimentationorresearcbin "brainwashing" and other forms of
behavior modification.
, The CIA claims the proposed
restrictive legislation is necessary
to prevent foreign nations, especially the Soviet Union and Its aWes,
from using the FOIA to extract sensitive infonnation from the agency.
But the law already contains a
provision, repeatedly relied upon by
the CIA In past years, that ex:emplll
from FOIA disclosure requirements
any material that must "be kept
secret in the interest of national

defense or foreign policy."
Other exemptions preclude the
disclosure of information relating to
internal agency practices, personnel
matters, lilternal · agency memos
and investigative files.
As recenUy as last year, CIA
Deputy Director Frank C. Carlucci
told a HoUSe committee: "It Is
undeniable that, under the current
FOIA, national security exemptions
exist to protect our most vital information."
·
Two years earlier, another CIA official told a Senate subcommittee
that compliance with the law initially was a traumatic experience for
'· the agency, then ~: "We have
been able to make the IH!"P888ry adjustments. I am pleased to report
that, In fact, I think the agency Is
better off for it."
Because the CIA never has casually released any infonnation, even
when complying with FOIA requests, there Is · no persuasive
evidence that the law ever has been
successfully used to the detriment of
thllJ country's national-9ecurlty interests.
.
Indeed, the CIA can cite no
specific examples of such FOIA
abuse. Instead, It relies upon the
vague claim that cooperative intelligence agendes in various nations and other sources oflnfonnation are uneasy about possible future

disclOBures of sensitive Information.
In fact, the seCurity~ous CIA
never has been reconciled to the
democratic concept rJ. promoting
government accountability and encouraging an enlightened electorate
through public dlaclosure and
discussion of federal activities.
Now that the 19708 criticism of the
CIA is fading, the agency is anxious
to Insure that It never again wW
have to admit to Ita misjudgments,
Its excesses and its failures.
(Newspaper Enterprise Assn.)

Proposed bill provides less taxes
it would seem obvious that Ohio's
tax structUre should be adjusted,"
Stano sa itt
Ohio's income tu law permit&amp;
each taxpayer to deduct from his adjusted gross income $650 each for
himself and his spouse. The exemption also applies to each dependent
claimed on the taxpayer's federal

return.
The Increased exemption
proposed by Stano would take effect
with the taxable year which began
.
Jan.1, 1980.
Afamily of four, wlthanlncome rJ.
•10,000, now receives $2,800 in exemptions.
With 8 taxable lncooie rJ. $7,400,
the family pays $t9 ~ually in state
Income tax. The figure would be
reduced to f4ll under Stano's bilL
"The amount rJ. relief Increases,
however, as.the familY's lnc&lt;me JD.
creases, .. Stano said.

For example, a familY rJ. four with
an income of $711,000 currently pays .
$235 In income tax. The tax bill
would be SIO less under stano's
proposal.
.
Altl1oogh tbe Individual tax reduction&amp; seem relatively small, the
statewide tota1a are more Jm.
preulve.
The Ohio Department of Taution
estimates tbe blgber exemption
level woUld reduce revenue by $23
million annually, after · an Initial
starting cost during flac8J. year 1981
rJ. t33.6 miUion.
:
.
In addition, an amendment Stano
plans to offer would 1ncreue the
loet-revenue)l9UJ to f'3 million annually.

The amendment would 1'llllle fnm '
the CUI'I'l!llt f4,100 to $7,400 tbe
amount lA. IIIOIIeY pe!IOIII ·II 8Jid

"/ took the money because 1 thought I could
connect the bills with D.B. Coopsr. "

'

T'• ...,A, Fla. (AP) _ The Cin,..,...Reds itche and tchers
cinnati
are
to :ring
slimmeddownandreadyforaction.
N~ ~ tbe 26 ........_ and cat-- "'
,.._.....
chers who reported to Spring
training this past week was overwelgbt. In fact, a few rJ. the players
ahattered welgbt limits prescribed
by the lub
c Pa.ul·M-'-uhasbeenthe
Pltcber
talk of the camp'"""'
since he reported
with his weight down from 220 to 196.
To keep weight down, he rWI8 two
miles each way to und from the
Jll'8ctlce field every day.

~

Today Is Monday, March 3, the
63rd day of 1980. There are 303 days
left in the year.
Today's highlight in history:
On March 3, 1847, the inventor of
the telephone, Alexander Graham
Bell, was born in Edinburgh,
Scotland.
On this date:
In 1849, Congress created the
Department of the Interior to look
after the nation's resources.
In 1187, 21-year-old Annie Sullivan
arrived at the Keller home to teach
their deaf and blind daughter,
Helen.
In 1945, the American and
Canadian annles linked up as the
German anny went into full retreat
along the Rhine River In World War

press fi!IIOI1e that SOme buaineasea
are ralaing their prices .in IIJ)o
tldpatlon rJ. mandatory wage and
price cootroJs," aaid the telearam,
the text ul which ... releued by the

·White HOUle. ·
'
"The prealdent Ia determined that
he will not impolle such controll. He
does not have the leplauthority to
do ao, and be doea not intend to aeek
it.
•.
.
.
·"However, the praldiat'e voJun.,
tal')' price lllanciUda remain In ef"
feet alld we expect tun comptlance.
The ~ on Wage llld Price

1

IAST.CRVJSER
I
SAN PIEGO, Callf,,'(AP) - 'lbe ~
(ldlbrma City, tile' Jut rJ. tbe l
_Navy's World War ·n "bii1IUII"
cruiMI, tile Jut to bave a teak lllllD
elect and the Jut with a TALOS
mJeeJJe l7lllm, baa l!een cleccmStabllitywiii~ita~
ttdalonild at the Sari Diego NaQl
actlvltl• to lll8ke Cl!l1alD 'that bolb
StltiCII.
, .
·
. ·
. tile price'and ,... studardl CCIO. Tbe- wW be towed to Br-- .
Iinue to bnffetUve."
tAift, Wub., 'IIbera It will l!lopJAced
Miller and Kalil all!o called on tile . fclr llftlleepq until If Ia dedded
~· chief ueeutlve aftbn
I wiJetblrtomotbb.U Gl'fCI'IIIlt.
to ..~ yallr leadenblp to .
avoid actioalthat~ lurtJier • tt!IPiM..S
Tbe - 1n 't-...,ti,allabt
C!l'lllnlll1cru~~.to Inflationary
JX
II
UCC
.
Gl'
U·
and took part 1ft the Qldnawa cam .
.
pectatlona. ..
.
, .
-a..... ""'
The clflc:lala ~ that tbe lld'
mlnistratlOJI Ll revteq ltl . .:..
'· ----:--,:.;...;.'- -"'"-"..;...econc:mic polld• "to be lUre &amp;bit
the ,federal' 80V81lwwat fultllla .Jla.
l'eiJI(IIIIlbWtl• in tbe ftlbt .......
inflition; "

l

.

. .

"We had our fat content measured
last year and mine ·was 26 percent.
That's obese;" Moskau said. "Now
myfatcontentisl1.5percent.Heck,
Mike LaCoss' is something like 9.3
percent."
·
f
pitching
Bill Dawley, a 6-- oot.-6
prospect, welghed230poundsduring
the Instructional League last
November. TheRedswantedhimto
losel0poWJds.Dewleydropped23.
"I got a job 88 a milkman,"
Dawley said. •'That meant I had to
get up at 5 o' clock every morning ;
then come home a nd work out for an
hour or two in the afternoon."

lndiana victory

(~87f.1885)
-

~

h

In 197f, a Turkish airUner crashed
in a fonst near Paris, killing all :w6
people on board.
.
Ten years ago, a mob of·white men
attacked a bus carrying 15 black
students to a newly intelrated high
school in South · Carolina. Fifteen
people were arrested.
Five years ago, West Gennany
freed five imprisoned radicals and
flew them to South Yemen, 88 '
demanded by kld!ulppers holding
Peter Lorenz, leader rJ. West .
Berlin's ChriBtlan Democrats. But
be was still held bolltage.
Last year, President Carter met
privately with Israell Prime
MiniBter Menachem Begin in an ef·
fort lli reiJiiine.stalled negotiatiOIIII 1
toward a l!Udeut peace treaty.
. Toda.Y's birthday: Lee RadziwW,
sister .of Jacquelltle Kennedy .
Ona8lle, ill t7.
Tbougbt for today: People ask you
for crlticiiJm, but they only .want
pralae. - W. Somerllet Maugham

over could earn before paJinl taxes.
Stano's bill Ia J11111C11n1 lief'ore the
Senate Wa)'ll and Mulle.CoDmtttee.

seeded No.I .in the West Regional
while Kentucky, ranked No.2 in the
Associated Press Top Twenty, .is the
top seed ln . the Mldeaat. No.5
Louisiana State is seeded tops in the
Midwest and No.3 Syracuse is the
top seed in the east.
Committee Chairman Wayne
Duke conceded that committee
members "recognize there may lie
discussion" Cll a few conferences
getting so many invitations.
"Our No.I objective was to take
the best 25 teams after the 23
automatic qualifiers," Duke said.
"Our No.2 objective was to balance
Uie brackets as best we could. Our
No.3 objective was to take into conSideration as beat we could any
geographical boultdarles."
. The tournament will conclude with
the nationally televised semifinals
and finals March 22 and 24 in Indianapolis.
Duke also defended the enlarged
bracket and said it came "in response to the great caliber of college
basketball which we are seeing
aC1"0118 the .country today. I don't
believe lt dilutes in any way the tournament field, or the interest in
college basketball which is not its
zenith," Duke said.
"In selecting the field, the cream
of the crop emerges very easily," be
a4ded. "But I'm sure we'll have
foliowers of the 49th team who think
their team should be ln."
'the Southeast Conference and
Metro Conference each placed three
members in the tournament.
Others receiving first-round byes

10. The winners had 13 assists, five · shot 67 percent from the field and 78
percent from the foul line. She
by Poweli. Rio had 28 turnovers.
Four Redwomen were named to averaged 10.3 rebounds a game.
Box score :
the All-Tournanient Team - Kim
Martin, Jackie Moore, Karen Powell
and Denise Radcliff. The latter was
named the tournament's Most
Valuable player.
Radcliff averaged 16.7 points in
the three-game tournament. She

Ethel Blanks paced the losers with
3D points.

Rio connected on 26 of 60 field goal
attempts for t7 percent. The Red
women were 20 of 31 at the foul line
for 65 percent.
Rio had 40 rebounds. Radcliff had

included Georgetown in the East will meet Western Kentucky.
Regional; Notre Dame and
The semifinals und finals of the
Louisville in the Midwest; St. John's Midwest and East Regionals will be
and Indiana in the Mideast, and Ohio in Houston and Philadelphia, respecState, Brigham Young and Oregon tively, Marcb 1f and 16. The
State in the West.
semifinals and finals of the Mideast
The Midwest Regional will launch will be in Lexington, Ky. March 13
first-round action Thursday in Lin- and 15, the same dates the West will
. coin, Neb., with Missouri meeting conclude in TUcson, Ariz .
San Jose and Kansas State playing
Syracuse will .play the VillanovaArkansas. Friday night in Denton, Marquette winher, North Carolina
Tex., first-round games in the Mid- State will face the Iowa-VIrginia
weal will be completed with Alcorn · Commonwealth winner. Georgetown
playing South Alabama and Texas meets the Iona-Holy Cross winner
AxMmeetlng Bradley.
and Maryland plays the TennesseeAt Greensboro, N.C. on Thursday,
Furman winner in the second round
the East Regional begins first-round
of the East Regional.
play with Iowa playing Virginia
In the MidWest, Louisiana State
Commonwealth and Tennessee
meets the Alcorn-South Alabama
meeting Furman. On Friday night at
winner; Notre Dame plays the
Providence, R.I., Villanov11 plays Missouri-San Jose winner; North
Marquette and Iona goes against
Carolina faces the winner of Bradley
Holy Cross in the other East firstand Texas Ax M, and Louisville opround game.
poses the Kansas State-Arkansas
Opening-round games in the West
winner.
Regional at Ogden, Utah Thursday
The second round in the Mideast
night match·.Clemson against Utah
has Kentucky vs. the Florida StateState and Weber State against Toledo winner; Duke vs. the
Lamar. The other first-round games Washington State-Ivy League winIn the West begin Friday night at · ner; St. John's vs. the Purdue-La
Tempe, Ariz. with UCLA meeting
Salle winner, and Incllima vs. the
Old Dominion and Arizona State
Virginia Tech-Western Kentucky
going against Loyola of California.
winner.
First-round action in the Mideast
DePaul will play the UCLA-Old
Regional begins Thursday night at
Dominion winner to begin the second
West Lafayette, Ind., matching
round of the West Regional. Ohio
Washington State against the winner
State will play the Loyola-Arizona
rJ. Tuesday night's game between State winner; Brigham Young the
Penn and Princeton and Purdue
Utah State-Clemson winner, and
against La Salle. Friday night at
Oregon State the Weber StateBowling Green, Ky., Florida State
Lamar winner.
will meet Toledo and VIrginia Tech

·

Today in history

Administration. expects compliancL
WASHINGTON (AP) - Two of
President Carter's top economic advisers sent telegnuqs Sund,ly to the
nation's 500 largest hnslntlllles
. telling tlieui that the admlnl.sti-ation
expects COIIlPllance with Its voluntary anti-inflation program.
Treasury Secretary G. WIWam
Miller and Alfred Kahn, who heada
the Council on Wage and Price
Stability, reiterated J?resldent Carter's po~ltion that wage and prjce
controls would not be jmpo!led in ar.
effort to bring Inflation under CGDtrol.
,.
"We are ueeply eoncerned by

If the Redwomen win three at
Taylor University, they wW advance
to the national finals, to be held in

Hammond's 1D points. Karen Powell
chipped In with 16. Denise Radcliff
and Kim Clingmlln added 10 apiece.

Weight conscience Reds begm·

n.

Ohio perspective

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Ohioans would pay slighUy less · in
state income tales each year if a
pending bill raising personal exemptions by $100 becomes law.
The measure, sponsored by Sen.
Jerome Stano, D-Parma, would increase the exemptions taxpayers
may claim from the current $650 to
$750.
"Wbat this bill does is to try to update the tax structure in thllJ state ...
to give Ohio citizens some relief
when It comes time to pay their income taxes," Stano said.
Such an adjustment is needed to
offer tupayers S&lt;B11e help in coping
with the effects of Inflation, he added.
The amount of the exemption has
,not been changed since \975.
"In light rJ. the fact that our inflation rate has grown, .since that
time, at an annual rate rJ. 8 percent,

19-3 season record.

Spokane, Washington later this month.
Saturday, the Redwomen, now 204, avengesJ an earlier season 88-73
loss at the hands of Malone by dropping the Lady Pioneers in the
District m finals.
Rio led 41-33 during the halftime
intermission.
The winners were led by Margie

Big 10 lands four in tourney

-~

By Don Graff
It may not be feasible teaching an
: . old dog new tricks, but how about
' · dinosaur?
Lane Kirkland, for one, is inclined
to try. The new president of the AFI.r
CIO has decided to introduce Big
Labor, at its very respectable age, to
a couple of facts of American life.
Sex and race.
Such is the most interesting
development out of the recent
gathering in Florida of the AFI.rCIO
executive council, a session that
would have been noteworthy enough
if only for being the first in a quarter
of a century not under the firm - not
to say rigid- grip of the late George
Meany.
Kirkland has designated two seats
on the 35-member council to be
reserved for, respectively, a woman
and a minority-group representative.
Not exactly earthshaking news,
you say: It may be somewhat more
so when you consider the existing
composition of that power center of
the 19-million-member labor federation. Under a longstanding rule
restricting council participation to
heads of member unions, it includes
at present only one black. And there
has never been a woman member.
So?
So women today account for more
than 40 percent of the total national
work force. Further, one in every
five union members is a woman.
Blacks and Hispanics also have
sizable representation in the labor
force and union ranks, and would
have even more were they not so
over-represented in the unemployed
statistics.
Not only is It about time that Big
Labor took note of the actual situation, it is long past time for its own
health.
.
While women are increasingly
numerous in unions, only 16 percent
of all those millions of working
women are as yet organized. Much
the same figures apply to minority
workers. Many of both are in service
occupations, a booming employment
category where more than 5 million
jobs have opened up in recent years.
Yet only some 15 percent are
unionized.
Meanwhile, as the total national
work force has been expanding
rapidly in recent years to the cur-

the regional tournament, to be held
at Taylor University in Upland, Ind.
later this week.
Rio Grande will battle Spring Arbor, Mich., in a first round game at 3
p.m. Thursday. Spring Arbor owns a

Bruce Berenyi, who won his
second earned run average t!Ue in
three years with a 2.11;1 season at Indianapolis in 1979, weighed 220 at
spring training a year ago. Now he

training~~~UG:~::::~:: ~=i~~fr:m;

in favor of a tournament," Toledo
wei""• .....
coacb Bobby Nichols said. "If you
...-....
in
d to
th
•
Frank Pastore also working at
come ha secon
seven
'
you
that the • ha · re ·
keeping fit. He drinks a
Yre vmg a
multivitamin concoction religiously
Harry Paidas, MAC information
and stays after team drilts to foliow
h
tha
a personal OO.mlnute program of
director, conceded, owever,
t
welghUlftingandropejump
.
conference officials were dispapEv Bill Fischer the i hing
pointed with the crowds + 6,220 for
en
'
P tc
Saturday's semifinals and 6,900 ancoach, has lost a couple of sizes off
nounced for Sunday's final + at
hiswaistline.
Dave Van Gorder, who is con-Are
Michigan's 13,609-seat Crisler
na ·
sidered a posslble candldate to even"We're
little disappointed,"
tually succeed Johruly Bench as the
P 'da
ida "W
h tlng f
bas
also
lost
.
weight.
at
s
sa
.
e were s ed
oo 6 700 orI
Reds catcher.
10 000 b t ' n!y
's
dropped
pounds
since
he
,
u
we
o
averag
He
20
think
•
· · , .
reported last year at 210 to the
we re ex:penencmg some
growing pains
National League's training camp.
"There ~ was the problem of

were

Girki"to-,rnament scores
f

!

f

... _,

'

'

•

..

:~'!r. Knuckles~

scored 22 points while Joe Faine ad:- ·
ded 12 as the Falcons finished the
season 26-9.
"I'm just happy we don't !lave to
Mill
S
(T' ) Selg
see
er, waney, 1111
o,
and (Ken) Montague again,"
Weinert said of the Toledo seniors,
"because they've really had great
careers.
team." I'm very proud of my
In the
lati
Nortbe
conso on game,
rn
Dlinois defeated Ball State, 71-68.
The Huskies finished the· season 16--

~:;:urnarr;;,::;:es
a..A.U. T -

AP Correspondent

withhiiliillttie. clrciunstancesthat
SWTounded bJs setto with S marshmallow salesman last October
whichcosthlmthe Yankee job.
"Billy wouldn't lie to me," Mickey
Insisted. "! believe his story completely. He jltlt his money on the bar
and tried to go to his room. He was
~:a:::-~~ tharulningt
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another guy's life."
ManUe recalled that throughout
his career Martin was regarded as a
troublemaker and blamed for lnddenta in which he had no part such as the notorious Copacabana
Caper MayUi,1957.
"A bunch of us decided to
celebrateBilly'sblrthday,"hesaid.
"So we went to the Copa to hear
Sammy Devta, Jr. There were haifa
dOEen of .us _ Yogi, Whitey, Hank
~Could see he was burting In- Bauer, Jo!JMY Kucks, ·Billy and
aide. Tbls is the place be wanted to
we 'Were watching the
~~~only place he ever show; two bowling teams came In
ManUe and Ford CGIIII out rJ. . and ast Iii front of as. 'lbey had had a
hibema~ every llpring to belp in · few beers. They lltarted yelling loud
Yaraees' spring · training, jolnlnj! and making racl!t remarks about
Yogi, a regular coa~ wilo lritb =~·~We kept telling them .
Martin formed tbe oft.diacJpllned,
The bowlers got nasty, Mickey
fun-loving Rover Boys 1/. tbe
said, !IJid moved back to ~enge
Yara-•.great champJOIIIblp teams tile Yanks. .
.
.
of the 191i(Je.
"I'm glad Billy ill stliying in·
"One rJ. the guys who got It in the
baseball," ManUe said, referring ·to IW sued Bauer for $1 miUion," be
·Martin's recent .employment as
related. "~f ·Hank , was !!OWilel'll ·
' • manager · of Charles Finley's . near,hlm. ,I waS tbe ~oeest. A boon.
'
··
cer banged the guy aCI'OIIII·the 11011e
Oa)dand A's. "It irill keep him fro.;n
with a blackJack:" .
,
brood~~~&amp; too much. Besides, he's a
Mantle recalled that Martin W88 :
helluvalDIDag••."
·
.,..
Upset over tbe incil\el\t, although be
ManUe said Billy had l:Onfided
had no pari tp tile brawl.

"We

••

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~~:...

IS.

Man
· tle g }a d Martin•
b ball
ta
.
.
s ymg m ase

~for.twomonths";J!:

conference."
Bowling Green's Colon Irish, who
also was named by repo"'-rs to the
t team ""
with
Northem Dlinois' Allen· Rayborn +

mg· •

year's NCAA Mideast regional tourney.
By Will Grimsley
"Woodson carried me for 3 years,
and It was the least I could do to
ca!Ty him for 2 months," said Carter, who improved last year's 8.~
point average . to nearly 1'• during
Woodson's absence.
·
Carter's two free throws knotted
thescoreat65-65.Then,atthestart
"''""ery.ItwasCarterwhogavethe
of the overtime, a basket by Ray
e
young
and sometimes shaky
Tolbert and a fast-break layup by
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (AP)
0
- - ' - a steady hand of aw,
Thomaaputlndlanaaheadtostay.
. t• . L
""""'~··
-For the casual oooerver, there !sa
perience.
Woodson, a U senior, and
yawning void in the lockerroom rJ.
And It was Carter who sank two
Thomas, 6--1 freshman, led the
the new-look New York Yankees_
free thrilw with 7 second&amp; left · ln
Hoosiers wlth21 pointaapiece.
·
the electric current, the exdtement,
. regulation that tied the score and
"Back in December; · I was
the expectancy generated . b)'
' enable(! Indiana to rally in overtime
worried about ever playing again,"
maverick Billy Martin long gone.
to beat0hlo:!tate7&amp;-'13Sunday. ·
said Woodson, who injured his back
For a trio of the Yankees' greatest
. "I just~ W.~
.· .!A~~!!J!, early in the season; then llnderwent heroes - Mickey Mantle,. Whitey
the bard
,.81ltlie swea~-~
surgery on a disc. "I just thank God . Ford and Yogi Berra, all Hall of
tears," said tl(e.~li!lliot:f~..' ' I '~ for •everything and for being able to
Famers _ . It is "The Three
was thlok!ng 'a!i9iif'Obt 1t'iheaio0
come back and help us win the Big
Musketeers"withoutD'Artagnan.
(In 1977, hear ll:fter Indiana' NCAA
Ten. I feel great for Butch; he's
"Billy &amp;Jlellt the holidays with
l'luomplonsblp team,) and tbe Sunreally
.
beenpJa"'nnwellall. year."
"said ManU the best friend_.
daY~ear ago we waited io get a
Carter f~ with 12 points,
::· fiery ~ llllllllger.
National InvltiltioliToumment bid."
playing aU but aminutes rJ. the first · played golf and fished but didn't do
The vic.101'Y .!mr.,Oblo'siate gave
half after picking up his tbird foul.
mucb bunting. 1can't walk with this
Indiana Ita firSt Big Ten ti"a ince
Ironically, his replacement, Landon
bad knee
· em..
1976 and a first.rouDd bye"'1'~ this ·Tumer,hadslxpointsinthatstretch
any more. .._ was fine
for a '\lfblle, as long as he COII)d get it
allouttA.hismlnd.Buti'dseehimgo
1..
•J
Into lapses. He would be sull,en and
. '

ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) - They
Michigan teams in it also making It
billed it as the first Mid-American
hard to draw."
Conference basketball tournament,
Nobody was disappointed in
but it all boiled down to an lnte~te
Toledo, however, including Bowling
75 shoot out.
Green coach AI Weinert who felt the
At times, however, It might even
Rockets would represent the MAC
have been confused with "Slaughter
well in t.he chase for the national
on Fifth Avenue" as Toledo's Jim championship.
Swaney scored 31 points Sunday to
"Swaney was too tough," Weinert
lead the Rockets to an 85-70 rout of said. "We turned the ball over. It's
Bowling Green in the title game.
tough to play Toledo when you're 11
The victory confirmed what many
or 12 down. They have too much
had suspected all along - that
poise."
Toledo, 23-6, was head and shoulders
In addition to the hot shooting rJ.
above the rest of the MAC and deserSwaney, who was named the tourved the right to represent the con- · nament's outstanding player, the
Rockets also got a ~int perterence Iii the NCAA mldeast
regionals later this week against
formance from Harvey Knuckles
Florida State.
while Dick Miller hauled down a
Wbat wasn't so clear is whether
game-high 20 rebounds - 17 in the
first half alone.
the tournament ought to be played at
all.
"The ball players were very deterToledo won the league cham- mined," ·Nichols said. "They just
pionship with a 14-2 record while
weren't going to let it get away

Sports .World

BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (AP) Mike Woodson and lslah Thomas
the big IICOrera, but the UllliWlg
hero' behind Indiana's drive to ·the
Big Ten basketball championship
wasseniorpardButchCarterf"!JII
Mlddleto Obi
,n, o;
It was. ~ who picked up the
o.......IM .slack wben W"""·-

j

Toledo captures
MAC championship

mr.:Ue

.

A1TENTION

CARRIER NEEDED
IN POMEROY
'

MONKEY RUN· WEST MAIN AREA

CALL THE. DAILY SENTINEL
.

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BETWEEN .8:30 and· 5:00·
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PH. 992-2156
',,

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�..
4- The' Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, March 3, 1980

Reading tips offered
to help child learn '

Polly's Pointers

Crickets give her grief
By Polly Cramer
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - Can you leU me
how we can keep crickets out of our
mobile home. We ca!UlOt find where
they come in, but some are inside
the furnace ducts where a spray will
not reach. They come in every year
at the end of summer and the singing
drives me crazy. - L.K.B.
DEAR L. K. B.
- I discussed
your problem
with a professional exter·
minator and he
says nothing is
quaranteed for it.
The crickets are doubUess coming
into your furnace ducts to get warm.
Pyrethrum powder might be
sprayed into these hard to get to
places where they ' lurk. A meat
baster with a bulb on the end would
be the nearest home product to what
the professionals use.
This is a poison and must be kept
away from pets, children, food stuffs
and even off one 's hands. 'The
powder lasts and lasts but the same
thing in liquid form does no good
after it dries. Such powder can be
bought at some nurseries, hardware
stores or at a chemical house. Good
luck! - POLLY
DEAR POLLY - It is often hard
to light wax candles as well as those
that float in oil and water and have a
wick stick: in a plastic disc. So I put a

dab of nail poliah on the wick before
lighting. It does not have to dry and
makes the candle very easy to light.
This also works well on church
candles.- FYDEUS
DEAR POLLY - During the mit·
ten season I keep a skirt hanger,
with the clothespin type hangers, on
the inside of our back door because
that Is where the family comes and
goes. Mittens are hung by the pair to
the clips and everyone knows where
to find them when they go out. This
saves a lot of looking and also means
there is no pile of mittens on the
closet shelf. H the mittens are wet
they dry quickly when hung up. MlNN
DEAR POLLY - I just love those
hints and I bave 6ne for using extra
table mats. I put a pretty plastic
place mat on each shelf in my
refrigterator so the shelves are protected from spills. -JO
DEAR POLLY- Soak your dentures in white vinegar overnight and
then give them a good brushing in
the morning. They will look like new.
I know as I bave done this for over
two years. - MRS. M. F.
Polly will send you one of her signed thank-you newspapeN:oupon
clippers if she uaes your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in her
column. .Write POLLY'S
POINTERS in care of this
newspaper.
( New~ per Enterprise Assn.)

Teresa Spencer, senior at Eastern

youth department treasurer and the
Sunday School secretary. Her bobDaughters of the American Revolu· bies include reading, crafts, listention Good Citizens Award. Daughter ing to music and playing classical
of the Rev. and Mrs. Gilbert Spencer guitar.
of Chester, Miss Spencer is majoring
The DAR Good Citizens conteSt is
in buainess office education. She is a sponsored by Return Jonathan
three year member of the National Meigs Chapter of the Daughters of
Honor Society presently serving ail the American Revolution. Mrs.
secretary, and was the Meigs Coun- Wilma Sargent Is chainnan for the
ty winner in the Ohio HistorY C contest. A senior Is named from
ontest sponsored by Ohio University. each of the county's high schoob to
Teresa has served on student receive the award. The other two
council for a year, and is the presi- recipients are Clifford J. Kennedy,
dent of the Business Office Educa· Meigs High School, and Cannan
lion Club. She has had a year in FHA Manuel, Southem High School.
and works as an office aide.
All three will be guests at the
Miss Spencer attends Trinity Chapter's Charter Day luncbeon to
Christian Assembly Church at be held on March 14 at 1 p.m. at
Coolville where she is the church · Trinity Church, Pomeroy.
High School, Is the recipient of the

Helen Help Us:

Aide on rape crisis
hotline gives facts .
By Helen and Sue Bottel
King Features Syndicate
DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
This answers those men and
women who appear to think females
invite rape by their looks or aclions.
I belong to a women's club whose
members also operate the County .
Rape Crisis Hotline. We're required
to study facts as well as myths concerning rape. I'm further qualified
to speak on this subject, as I have
twice been the viclim of rape and at·
tempted rape. From our Fact Sheet:
I. Rape is uauaUy not provoked by
the viclim. About 60 percent of sexual assaults are planned beforehand
by the perpetrator. Only four percent of reported attacks involve
precipitative behavior on the part of
theviclim.
2. Rapists choose their viclims
without regard to physical appearance.
The first time I was raped, I was
wearing loose slacks, a long-sleeved
blouse with a high neck, topped by a
bulky blazer and my hair was pulled
back in a bun.
'The second attempt found me in
loose slacks, and an average-style
top. Though I'm not unattraclive, I
do not think I was provocatively
dressed on either occasion.
3. Some 80 percent of aU rape victims are threatened by a weapon, or
death, or beating. Violence Is commonplace. Studies show the major
motive for rape is aggression, not
sex. Most rapists are married or
have available sexual partners.
The first rape I. experienced, it
took three men to hold me down; and
the other would-be rapist beat me
and threatened me with death if I did

feet.

Spencer recipient of
Good Citizenship award

not cooperate.
So aU you people who insist we
women provoke or "ask for" rape,
take these facts, put them in your
pipe and smoke them. - ONE WHO
REALLY KNOW
RAP:

I have a great idea for relieving
our overcrowded prisons; put
prisoners in the Army. Give them
less pay than regular volunteers and
no privileges.
This would also solve the problem
of not filling Army quotas. - JAY
JAY:
But what would it do for the Army?-HELEN

Mrs. Dean entertains
Chester Garden Club

Mrs. Betty Dean of the Chester
Garden Club was guest
demonstrator at the Wednesday
JAY:
night meeting of the Wildwood
Officers who do double duty as
Garden Club held in the Riverboat
prison quards? Convicted criminals
Room of the Athens County Savings
defending ua in Urnes of trouble?
and Loan Co., Meigs Branch.
lJh.uh! Too man problems involved.
Mrs. Dean made nine 8r·
- SUE
rangements uaing live and dried
materials in 8 Vjlriety of designs. UsDEAR HELEN AND SUE :
ing a wooden base, she showed a still
Here's an answer. Now you pro- ' life of apples, bananas and grapes
vide the question:
with philodendron and green
Tact is telling a woman that every
candles. Another arrangements
time you look at her, time stands
featured scotch broom, philodenstill. Lack of tact Is telling her she
dron, with two red apples as the
has face that would stop a clock. focal point on a pedestsled cake
A.G.
plate. Amarble base was used for an
DEAR A.:
arrangement of begonia, dogwood
Question: Where do you get your
and carnations with coral, and 8
material? We'd like more of it. mass arrangement of dried flowers
HELEN AND SUE
in a basket was displayed by Mrs.
Dean. Another of her arrangements '
(GOT A PROBLEM? or a subject
for discussion, two-generation style?
Direct your questions to either Sue
or Helen BOttel - or both, If you
want a combination . mother •
daughter answer - in care of this
newspaper.)
·

"Today."
CooununiiY projects were diacUSII-

ed during the meeting with work to .
be done at the Gilmore Cemetery.
'The Region 11 meeting of the Ohio
Association of Garden Clubs to be
held at Morton Hall .on the Ohio
University campus with a luncheon
at Baker Center was BMounced for
Aprll19.
Asilent auction was beld following
the meeting. The hostesses served
refreshments. ·

'

1'0 SPEAK - ·The Rev. Nelaon Perdue, evangelist, trill be the pest
speaker at revival services at tile Middleport Church of the Nazanine, 580
Beech Street, Middleport, March 4 through March 9 at 7 p.m. nlghtlf and.
on Sunday morning at 10:30 a.m. The Rev. Perdue entered the field of a:

.
..

full-time evangeu.t after ihree yean as pallor of the Pllll*l', Ohio,
Church of ·the Nazarene. Hil empbasls as an evangelist II "HoliJal,
Without Which No Man SbaD See The Lord." The putor, Jim Broome, lit- .
vlte8 the public to attend.
f

•

$ l9

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VAUGHAN'S

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APPtiCATIONS.
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FOR
· -MOTOR ROUTE .
·DRIVE-RS

should our clients. We encourage
care, caution ao:ld safety .. :
preventive measures Which can
kt@p that car accident from happening, that building fire from .
starting, that home burglary
from being committed.
Prevention saves life, limb and '
prOperty ... and helps control In- ·
sur once costs and premiums.
When losses do occur, our
policyholders can count on pro-'
tecllng and serving In time and
nHd. But 'II• still say - preven·
lion Ia the best pol lev . . ..\.

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FRIEZIR

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2 LITER BOnLE

Middleport, Ohio

.

As an independent Insurance·

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~ .............. :~;. 89~

lAUNDRY'. DETERGENT

agency, our primary function Is
to provl!le policies which afford
financial protection I~ case 01 .
loss. .
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But; we also have a vital In -

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MEIGs CHAPTER 17, OAFS~!:, ·
7:30 p.m. Tladay in cafeteria of
MeJill Junior High Scmol.

$169

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'

TUESDAY ·
MEIGS BAND Boolten ~ •. '
7:30 p.m. Tueaday in band room .of
Melgjs High School: au parents' or
· band members asked to4ttend.

.

~

•

Fn. and ~at., 4:UU -1:UU
~unday 4:UU -11 :00

Writer Stephen Leacock w81 bam
in England in 1869.

69

LOIN
CHOPS ••...••...~:...

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PREVENTION

muter and pUt Dwterdfsree.

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Chapter I), Royal Arch Masons, 7:30
· p.m. Monday with work in mark

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$ &amp;9

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Tues., Wed., Thurs ., 4:00 11:00

Daisy Grueser to Danny Dwain
Brown, Int. in Parcels, Sutton.
Freda Grueser, Maud Grueser to
Danny Dwain Brown, Lot L, Miner·

'

IWi·

•

ton.

sv!Ue -Sutton.
Freda Grueser, Maud Gnaeser to
Jeanne E. Hines, Lot M, Sutton •
Mineraville.

. . . . . . . .~~.~ 119 .~:~~.........~;. 39~
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LOI·N END ROAST.
4
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39
KAHN'S BACON •••••••••••••••••••••~~~!

:

Pomeroy, Ohio
OPEN:

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MONDAY.
EASTERN ATHLE'l1C Booltei'S,,
7:30p.m. Monday~~ the blgb lchool

1-

SMOKED

I

achleveltlents: ' ' · ' '
Attending were Mrs. Roger
Grindley and Chris, Mr. and Mrs:
Larry Taylor, Chad and Mark, Mr.
and Mrs. Eber Ji'lckens and Eber;
David Stout, Chris and Robin, Mr.
and Mrs. John Usle, Todd and Scott,
Mrs. Jerry Aleshire and Jerr)', Mr.
and Mrs. Greg Balley, Chris and Andy, ·Mrs. Rush Philson, Amy and
Brian Weaver, Kevin Grueser, and
Mr. and Mrs. Hugh McPbali, Corey,
ScottandHeatller.

PIZZA SHACI&lt;

;

School are reach, teach, win, Dill"
ture, train and bold. Everyorie II Invited to attend. There will be a
special Sunday for everyone.

Social Calendar

'

of

Elizabeth Ann Krauss, Leroy E.
Krauss aka Lee Krauss to D&amp;My
Dwain Brown, Int. in Parcels, Sut·

PORK LOIN _
SALE

CENTER CUT

·FRAN.KS••••••• !~.~~.. 1

Scott McPbali, and Kevin Grueser:
beads; and Todd Lisle, the wolf

au

Chester Ross, 20 acres, 38 acres, 19o/.o
' acres, Pomeroy.
Alice Euler, d~. to Daniel Euler,
James D. Euler, Mary Hill, Robert
K. Euler, Cert. of trans., Meigs.
Thomas H. Dean, Joan Dean to
Danny Dwain Brown, Int. in Par·
eels, Sutton.

PORK$ CHOP$...................~9

SAUSAGE.••••••• ~~ •• 1

-r·. .~....MEitt~·irur.......~
~

Darrell Ross, Glenda Roes, Roger
Roes, Maxine Roes, Sue Ann Byrd,

ECI&lt; RICH

bottle of medicine, or on a bip.
•
P. Talk with your child - understand his feelings.
Q. AccePt your child for his own •
unique indiVidual self.
R. Give the )lind of love which will
help him in developing a goof self
concept and in growing toward Independence.

badge . f~ completi,ng

Paul Byrd, Jackie Ross, Chester
James Ross, Sharon GaD Stickler,
Robert Stickler, Dannie Ross, Brenda Ross, John, Ross, Helen Roes to

trans., Sciplo.

Hangman, etc. ·
0. Let your child read dlreclions
on a box (example~cakemlx), ora .

The annual blue
gold banquet
of the Cub Scout Pack 242, Syracuse,
waa held recently at the Syracuse
Elementary School. Yellow and blue
carnations uaed on the tables for the
dinner were presented to den
mothers, · Donna Aleshire, Mae
Grueser; and Martha McPhail.
The meeting opened with the
pledge and flag ceremony and the
Lord's Prayer being led by Kevin
Grueser and Eber Pickens. Awards
were presented to Eber Pickens,
bobcat and denner cord; Gary
Aleshire, Cliff Grindley, Brian
Weaver, Todd Usle, Chris Baer,

!

Dannie Roes, John Ross, Aff. for

FAMILY PKG.

sense

aoo

Rutland Church of God plans
Bicentennial Sunday schoo~
celebration for all month

.

B. Keep him in school regularly.
Every time he's absent be loses
ground, particularly in the first and
second grades wben the foundations
for reading are laid.
c. Refrain from cOJiiparing him
·unfavorably with some other child
wbo Is quickly picking up reading
skills. Your child Is himself, with his
own personal, private timetable lor
learningtowalk,jotalk, to read, and
to do everything else which involves
a maturing process.
D. Make your home a baven of
thought, books, ideas. H the adults in
your family are bookwo~ who enjoy reading everything from cook·
books to catalogues, be's very likely
to catch the delightful bug.
E. Start a family reading hour
which everybody can joyfully anticipate. If yQUrs Is a large family,
choose a "reading-out-loud" book
aimed at the middle children ~ the
older ones wiU reach down a little,
the younger ones will reach up to undefll(and.
,.
F . Let him have 8 place to keep his
books, even if It's only one shelf.
Whether or not he lends them out is
his business. To some children,
books are as personal as their
clothes, and even more precious.
Other children like to share
favorites with their friends.
· G. As soon as be Is able to sign his
name, introduce him to the delights
of the public library. Let him browse

Nellie Rose Roes, dec. to Chester
Hoss, Darrell RoSa, Hilger Roes, Sue
Ann Byrd, Jackie Roes, Chester
James Ross, Sharon Gall Stickler,

·Scouts ·hold blue-gold banquet

was in a blue, ~ and featured
blue sUk daisies with pussy willow
and Boston Ivy.
Mrs. Dorothy Smith and Mrs.
Doris Grueser were hostesses for the
meeting with Mrs. Virginla Fisher
giving devotions. She ~d from
"Solltude", the poems, "Uft Up
Your Heart", "Safe Keeping", and

The RuUand Church of God will
hold a Bicentennial Sunday School
celebraticin campaign from March 2
(yesterday) through April G.
The theme "I believe in Sunday
School'' wiD be carried out each Sunday for the six Week period.
This Sunday wiD be senior adult
day with a gift being presented to .the
oldest senior adult attending.
Sunday School Is celebrating Its
200 years of service to the Kingdom
of God. It was started In 1780 by
Robert Raikes with 8 class of eight
students and by 1811, the year ol
Ralke's death, · the enrollmellt bad
grown to half a million students in ·
SWiday Schools around the world. · .
The biiBic principles of Sunday

Meigs Property Transfers

there while you 'sjiOp at the soper·
market. Subscribe for a children's
magazine for him. He'll baunt the
maUbox when lie knows It's the
second of the month and "his"
magazine Is on-Its way.
H. A book in his hand should be
respected:Don't caUhimaway from
his reading juat · because you've
thought up a job for bln!J. Show the dubious child wbo
doesn't like to read that books bave
some .use for a 1'11111 heoman. Not
everyone wants to read about horses, or undersea! diving, or girls in
boarding schOol; but how about a
book of magic bias that any hoy or
girl can perform; or books on puppetry, soap carving, or weatbercraft
that teach you how to forecast rain
or shine? There are books on every
thing If you look bard enough. Lead
him into them by way II. the other Interests close to his heart.
J.Encouragehimtomakehisown
bookplates. Perhaps be'd also enjoy
keeping track in a diary, notebook,
or card file of aU the books be reads
in a year.
K. Before you select books for blr- ·
thdays and Christmas, ask his
teacher's advice. She will. recommend flclion, fact, and biography
that are tailored for his age group
and his.own skill in reading, and that
dovetail with topics and times being
studied in class.
L. Don't be misled into thinking
that ali good books have to be ex·
pensive. There are 10-cent and 26cent books that are worth owning.
You may have to do some deteclive
work to lOcate them, but It's worthwhlle If it helps start him on a
library of his own.
M. ,Don't make a big issue out of
comic bopks. have a
of hwnor
- lilare the'hwnor in a comic sbip.
N. Play word games with your
child - such as - Scrabble,

Mrs. Greta SuWe, a Meigs County
school supervisor and a member of
the Ohio Basic skuis Commission, Is
offering a number of suggestions
which parents might follow in
belping · their children improve in
reading.
The suggestions are being
stressed as a part of the annual
Right to Read Week to be observed
ln Meigs County schools and Ohio,
March 2-8.
WHAT CAN PARENTS DO TO
HELP the child not only to learn to
read, but to appreciate the treasures
.
lockedingoodbooks?
A. Be sure be's up to par
physically. Learning to read deman- ·
ds the best that Is in him of effort,
concentration, clear thinking. Have
him examined regularly, and be
sure his bearing and vision are per·

Teresa Spencer

5-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport·Pomeroy, 0., Monday, March3, 1980

WINESAP: ROME BEAUTY OR Y~U.Or(DEUCIOUS.

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4- The' Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, March 3, 1980

Reading tips offered
to help child learn '

Polly's Pointers

Crickets give her grief
By Polly Cramer
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - Can you leU me
how we can keep crickets out of our
mobile home. We ca!UlOt find where
they come in, but some are inside
the furnace ducts where a spray will
not reach. They come in every year
at the end of summer and the singing
drives me crazy. - L.K.B.
DEAR L. K. B.
- I discussed
your problem
with a professional exter·
minator and he
says nothing is
quaranteed for it.
The crickets are doubUess coming
into your furnace ducts to get warm.
Pyrethrum powder might be
sprayed into these hard to get to
places where they ' lurk. A meat
baster with a bulb on the end would
be the nearest home product to what
the professionals use.
This is a poison and must be kept
away from pets, children, food stuffs
and even off one 's hands. 'The
powder lasts and lasts but the same
thing in liquid form does no good
after it dries. Such powder can be
bought at some nurseries, hardware
stores or at a chemical house. Good
luck! - POLLY
DEAR POLLY - It is often hard
to light wax candles as well as those
that float in oil and water and have a
wick stick: in a plastic disc. So I put a

dab of nail poliah on the wick before
lighting. It does not have to dry and
makes the candle very easy to light.
This also works well on church
candles.- FYDEUS
DEAR POLLY - During the mit·
ten season I keep a skirt hanger,
with the clothespin type hangers, on
the inside of our back door because
that Is where the family comes and
goes. Mittens are hung by the pair to
the clips and everyone knows where
to find them when they go out. This
saves a lot of looking and also means
there is no pile of mittens on the
closet shelf. H the mittens are wet
they dry quickly when hung up. MlNN
DEAR POLLY - I just love those
hints and I bave 6ne for using extra
table mats. I put a pretty plastic
place mat on each shelf in my
refrigterator so the shelves are protected from spills. -JO
DEAR POLLY- Soak your dentures in white vinegar overnight and
then give them a good brushing in
the morning. They will look like new.
I know as I bave done this for over
two years. - MRS. M. F.
Polly will send you one of her signed thank-you newspapeN:oupon
clippers if she uaes your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in her
column. .Write POLLY'S
POINTERS in care of this
newspaper.
( New~ per Enterprise Assn.)

Teresa Spencer, senior at Eastern

youth department treasurer and the
Sunday School secretary. Her bobDaughters of the American Revolu· bies include reading, crafts, listention Good Citizens Award. Daughter ing to music and playing classical
of the Rev. and Mrs. Gilbert Spencer guitar.
of Chester, Miss Spencer is majoring
The DAR Good Citizens conteSt is
in buainess office education. She is a sponsored by Return Jonathan
three year member of the National Meigs Chapter of the Daughters of
Honor Society presently serving ail the American Revolution. Mrs.
secretary, and was the Meigs Coun- Wilma Sargent Is chainnan for the
ty winner in the Ohio HistorY C contest. A senior Is named from
ontest sponsored by Ohio University. each of the county's high schoob to
Teresa has served on student receive the award. The other two
council for a year, and is the presi- recipients are Clifford J. Kennedy,
dent of the Business Office Educa· Meigs High School, and Cannan
lion Club. She has had a year in FHA Manuel, Southem High School.
and works as an office aide.
All three will be guests at the
Miss Spencer attends Trinity Chapter's Charter Day luncbeon to
Christian Assembly Church at be held on March 14 at 1 p.m. at
Coolville where she is the church · Trinity Church, Pomeroy.
High School, Is the recipient of the

Helen Help Us:

Aide on rape crisis
hotline gives facts .
By Helen and Sue Bottel
King Features Syndicate
DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
This answers those men and
women who appear to think females
invite rape by their looks or aclions.
I belong to a women's club whose
members also operate the County .
Rape Crisis Hotline. We're required
to study facts as well as myths concerning rape. I'm further qualified
to speak on this subject, as I have
twice been the viclim of rape and at·
tempted rape. From our Fact Sheet:
I. Rape is uauaUy not provoked by
the viclim. About 60 percent of sexual assaults are planned beforehand
by the perpetrator. Only four percent of reported attacks involve
precipitative behavior on the part of
theviclim.
2. Rapists choose their viclims
without regard to physical appearance.
The first time I was raped, I was
wearing loose slacks, a long-sleeved
blouse with a high neck, topped by a
bulky blazer and my hair was pulled
back in a bun.
'The second attempt found me in
loose slacks, and an average-style
top. Though I'm not unattraclive, I
do not think I was provocatively
dressed on either occasion.
3. Some 80 percent of aU rape victims are threatened by a weapon, or
death, or beating. Violence Is commonplace. Studies show the major
motive for rape is aggression, not
sex. Most rapists are married or
have available sexual partners.
The first rape I. experienced, it
took three men to hold me down; and
the other would-be rapist beat me
and threatened me with death if I did

feet.

Spencer recipient of
Good Citizenship award

not cooperate.
So aU you people who insist we
women provoke or "ask for" rape,
take these facts, put them in your
pipe and smoke them. - ONE WHO
REALLY KNOW
RAP:

I have a great idea for relieving
our overcrowded prisons; put
prisoners in the Army. Give them
less pay than regular volunteers and
no privileges.
This would also solve the problem
of not filling Army quotas. - JAY
JAY:
But what would it do for the Army?-HELEN

Mrs. Dean entertains
Chester Garden Club

Mrs. Betty Dean of the Chester
Garden Club was guest
demonstrator at the Wednesday
JAY:
night meeting of the Wildwood
Officers who do double duty as
Garden Club held in the Riverboat
prison quards? Convicted criminals
Room of the Athens County Savings
defending ua in Urnes of trouble?
and Loan Co., Meigs Branch.
lJh.uh! Too man problems involved.
Mrs. Dean made nine 8r·
- SUE
rangements uaing live and dried
materials in 8 Vjlriety of designs. UsDEAR HELEN AND SUE :
ing a wooden base, she showed a still
Here's an answer. Now you pro- ' life of apples, bananas and grapes
vide the question:
with philodendron and green
Tact is telling a woman that every
candles. Another arrangements
time you look at her, time stands
featured scotch broom, philodenstill. Lack of tact Is telling her she
dron, with two red apples as the
has face that would stop a clock. focal point on a pedestsled cake
A.G.
plate. Amarble base was used for an
DEAR A.:
arrangement of begonia, dogwood
Question: Where do you get your
and carnations with coral, and 8
material? We'd like more of it. mass arrangement of dried flowers
HELEN AND SUE
in a basket was displayed by Mrs.
Dean. Another of her arrangements '
(GOT A PROBLEM? or a subject
for discussion, two-generation style?
Direct your questions to either Sue
or Helen BOttel - or both, If you
want a combination . mother •
daughter answer - in care of this
newspaper.)
·

"Today."
CooununiiY projects were diacUSII-

ed during the meeting with work to .
be done at the Gilmore Cemetery.
'The Region 11 meeting of the Ohio
Association of Garden Clubs to be
held at Morton Hall .on the Ohio
University campus with a luncheon
at Baker Center was BMounced for
Aprll19.
Asilent auction was beld following
the meeting. The hostesses served
refreshments. ·

'

1'0 SPEAK - ·The Rev. Nelaon Perdue, evangelist, trill be the pest
speaker at revival services at tile Middleport Church of the Nazanine, 580
Beech Street, Middleport, March 4 through March 9 at 7 p.m. nlghtlf and.
on Sunday morning at 10:30 a.m. The Rev. Perdue entered the field of a:

.
..

full-time evangeu.t after ihree yean as pallor of the Pllll*l', Ohio,
Church of ·the Nazarene. Hil empbasls as an evangelist II "HoliJal,
Without Which No Man SbaD See The Lord." The putor, Jim Broome, lit- .
vlte8 the public to attend.
f

•

$ l9

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NOW ACCEPTING
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APPtiCATIONS.
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FOR
· -MOTOR ROUTE .
·DRIVE-RS

should our clients. We encourage
care, caution ao:ld safety .. :
preventive measures Which can
kt@p that car accident from happening, that building fire from .
starting, that home burglary
from being committed.
Prevention saves life, limb and '
prOperty ... and helps control In- ·
sur once costs and premiums.
When losses do occur, our
policyholders can count on pro-'
tecllng and serving In time and
nHd. But 'II• still say - preven·
lion Ia the best pol lev . . ..\.

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Femlly Size

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·THE DAILY
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DALE C..WARN£R·&gt;

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'IANOUET .-'

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FRIEZIR

~

. • •.•••••v• •.....
HB. 29$
ONIONS, .••.•••
..
'
.
2 PKGS. , 49$
CARROTS ·················~~
.
.li

.

·

•

,

'

VALUE$ ~---.;..
· ....;;..

'

[~ . • VET OLD MIUS :

~ II;

YEUOW

~'r

.

.

·

.

StG
CREAM .........,~.~~.......~ .
'

"

.

!'&gt;·Oj.,.... l..,........,..•~,t,~.~.,..,.,.

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Our Reg. Discount Price
Coupon Selltnga . . .
Your Price (with coupon)

$6.99
~

$5.99

In tile pallern of your cllo/ce
· COUPON GOOD THRU

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:; FRIED CHICKEN:.:..:·.......~..:.! ~ ~ -'1"
:~ ··- ICE

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CH~LIT~.~ ........;..~.~.l~.-~

;, ; GM ASMMJ. ~ •
•.
..

I

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BLUE IOIIR MAIGAIIIE .. ~ ..:...:.... ~- ,..

.

I

'POtATOES ......••....•.•.
LB. BAG ll 19
10

VEiiEETA :. . :. .:.~. . :. ... : . ~2 ·. ~~' '229

1

.

'

FARM FRESH PRODUCE
JMHO . .

'

SENTI'N~EL

INS.'.

Set of 4 CoasterI Ash Trays

.,
''

1;.

TOWARD THE I'URCHAJE DF THIS WEEI('I FIATUIIED ITEII

Cans

.

·l w

.

PUFFS ....................:..................... 2C::,;t·69c

'
' 21-oz.
·

'.

171-oz.
Box

·

FACIAL TISSUE

,(: ,1.) .,. J

•

I

THIGHS •••••••••••• ';.~·.}'

2 LITER BOnLE

Middleport, Ohio

.

As an independent Insurance·

.r·....,nr

~~............~~~.!t!J~
~ .............. :~;. 89~

lAUNDRY'. DETERGENT

agency, our primary function Is
to provl!le policies which afford
financial protection I~ case 01 .
loss. .
. · l
But; we also have a vital In -

992-21 •
l''l'l 'llrl . Main

FRESH CUT

RC COLA

~
~YYTTT~T~TTTTTT~~YTTTTTYY~

BEST POLICY

MEIGs CHAPTER 17, OAFS~!:, ·
7:30 p.m. Tladay in cafeteria of
MeJill Junior High Scmol.

$169

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TUESDAY ·
MEIGS BAND Boolten ~ •. '
7:30 p.m. Tueaday in band room .of
Melgjs High School: au parents' or
· band members asked to4ttend.

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Fn. and ~at., 4:UU -1:UU
~unday 4:UU -11 :00

Writer Stephen Leacock w81 bam
in England in 1869.

69

LOIN
CHOPS ••...••...~:...

LB.

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PREVENTION

muter and pUt Dwterdfsree.

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ECKRIQi

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SPECIAL MEETING, PoOieroy
Chapter I), Royal Arch Masons, 7:30
· p.m. Monday with work in mark

.

$ &amp;9

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Tues., Wed., Thurs ., 4:00 11:00

Daisy Grueser to Danny Dwain
Brown, Int. in Parcels, Sutton.
Freda Grueser, Maud Grueser to
Danny Dwain Brown, Lot L, Miner·

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IWi·

•

ton.

sv!Ue -Sutton.
Freda Grueser, Maud Gnaeser to
Jeanne E. Hines, Lot M, Sutton •
Mineraville.

. . . . . . . .~~.~ 119 .~:~~.........~;. 39~
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LOI·N END ROAST.
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39
KAHN'S BACON •••••••••••••••••••••~~~!

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Pomeroy, Ohio
OPEN:

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MONDAY.
EASTERN ATHLE'l1C Booltei'S,,
7:30p.m. Monday~~ the blgb lchool

1-

SMOKED

I

achleveltlents: ' ' · ' '
Attending were Mrs. Roger
Grindley and Chris, Mr. and Mrs:
Larry Taylor, Chad and Mark, Mr.
and Mrs. Eber Ji'lckens and Eber;
David Stout, Chris and Robin, Mr.
and Mrs. John Usle, Todd and Scott,
Mrs. Jerry Aleshire and Jerr)', Mr.
and Mrs. Greg Balley, Chris and Andy, ·Mrs. Rush Philson, Amy and
Brian Weaver, Kevin Grueser, and
Mr. and Mrs. Hugh McPbali, Corey,
ScottandHeatller.

PIZZA SHACI&lt;

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School are reach, teach, win, Dill"
ture, train and bold. Everyorie II Invited to attend. There will be a
special Sunday for everyone.

Social Calendar

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of

Elizabeth Ann Krauss, Leroy E.
Krauss aka Lee Krauss to D&amp;My
Dwain Brown, Int. in Parcels, Sut·

PORK LOIN _
SALE

CENTER CUT

·FRAN.KS••••••• !~.~~.. 1

Scott McPbali, and Kevin Grueser:
beads; and Todd Lisle, the wolf

au

Chester Ross, 20 acres, 38 acres, 19o/.o
' acres, Pomeroy.
Alice Euler, d~. to Daniel Euler,
James D. Euler, Mary Hill, Robert
K. Euler, Cert. of trans., Meigs.
Thomas H. Dean, Joan Dean to
Danny Dwain Brown, Int. in Par·
eels, Sutton.

PORK$ CHOP$...................~9

SAUSAGE.••••••• ~~ •• 1

-r·. .~....MEitt~·irur.......~
~

Darrell Ross, Glenda Roes, Roger
Roes, Maxine Roes, Sue Ann Byrd,

ECI&lt; RICH

bottle of medicine, or on a bip.
•
P. Talk with your child - understand his feelings.
Q. AccePt your child for his own •
unique indiVidual self.
R. Give the )lind of love which will
help him in developing a goof self
concept and in growing toward Independence.

badge . f~ completi,ng

Paul Byrd, Jackie Ross, Chester
James Ross, Sharon GaD Stickler,
Robert Stickler, Dannie Ross, Brenda Ross, John, Ross, Helen Roes to

trans., Sciplo.

Hangman, etc. ·
0. Let your child read dlreclions
on a box (example~cakemlx), ora .

The annual blue
gold banquet
of the Cub Scout Pack 242, Syracuse,
waa held recently at the Syracuse
Elementary School. Yellow and blue
carnations uaed on the tables for the
dinner were presented to den
mothers, · Donna Aleshire, Mae
Grueser; and Martha McPhail.
The meeting opened with the
pledge and flag ceremony and the
Lord's Prayer being led by Kevin
Grueser and Eber Pickens. Awards
were presented to Eber Pickens,
bobcat and denner cord; Gary
Aleshire, Cliff Grindley, Brian
Weaver, Todd Usle, Chris Baer,

!

Dannie Roes, John Ross, Aff. for

FAMILY PKG.

sense

aoo

Rutland Church of God plans
Bicentennial Sunday schoo~
celebration for all month

.

B. Keep him in school regularly.
Every time he's absent be loses
ground, particularly in the first and
second grades wben the foundations
for reading are laid.
c. Refrain from cOJiiparing him
·unfavorably with some other child
wbo Is quickly picking up reading
skills. Your child Is himself, with his
own personal, private timetable lor
learningtowalk,jotalk, to read, and
to do everything else which involves
a maturing process.
D. Make your home a baven of
thought, books, ideas. H the adults in
your family are bookwo~ who enjoy reading everything from cook·
books to catalogues, be's very likely
to catch the delightful bug.
E. Start a family reading hour
which everybody can joyfully anticipate. If yQUrs Is a large family,
choose a "reading-out-loud" book
aimed at the middle children ~ the
older ones wiU reach down a little,
the younger ones will reach up to undefll(and.
,.
F . Let him have 8 place to keep his
books, even if It's only one shelf.
Whether or not he lends them out is
his business. To some children,
books are as personal as their
clothes, and even more precious.
Other children like to share
favorites with their friends.
· G. As soon as be Is able to sign his
name, introduce him to the delights
of the public library. Let him browse

Nellie Rose Roes, dec. to Chester
Hoss, Darrell RoSa, Hilger Roes, Sue
Ann Byrd, Jackie Roes, Chester
James Ross, Sharon Gall Stickler,

·Scouts ·hold blue-gold banquet

was in a blue, ~ and featured
blue sUk daisies with pussy willow
and Boston Ivy.
Mrs. Dorothy Smith and Mrs.
Doris Grueser were hostesses for the
meeting with Mrs. Virginla Fisher
giving devotions. She ~d from
"Solltude", the poems, "Uft Up
Your Heart", "Safe Keeping", and

The RuUand Church of God will
hold a Bicentennial Sunday School
celebraticin campaign from March 2
(yesterday) through April G.
The theme "I believe in Sunday
School'' wiD be carried out each Sunday for the six Week period.
This Sunday wiD be senior adult
day with a gift being presented to .the
oldest senior adult attending.
Sunday School Is celebrating Its
200 years of service to the Kingdom
of God. It was started In 1780 by
Robert Raikes with 8 class of eight
students and by 1811, the year ol
Ralke's death, · the enrollmellt bad
grown to half a million students in ·
SWiday Schools around the world. · .
The biiBic principles of Sunday

Meigs Property Transfers

there while you 'sjiOp at the soper·
market. Subscribe for a children's
magazine for him. He'll baunt the
maUbox when lie knows It's the
second of the month and "his"
magazine Is on-Its way.
H. A book in his hand should be
respected:Don't caUhimaway from
his reading juat · because you've
thought up a job for bln!J. Show the dubious child wbo
doesn't like to read that books bave
some .use for a 1'11111 heoman. Not
everyone wants to read about horses, or undersea! diving, or girls in
boarding schOol; but how about a
book of magic bias that any hoy or
girl can perform; or books on puppetry, soap carving, or weatbercraft
that teach you how to forecast rain
or shine? There are books on every
thing If you look bard enough. Lead
him into them by way II. the other Interests close to his heart.
J.Encouragehimtomakehisown
bookplates. Perhaps be'd also enjoy
keeping track in a diary, notebook,
or card file of aU the books be reads
in a year.
K. Before you select books for blr- ·
thdays and Christmas, ask his
teacher's advice. She will. recommend flclion, fact, and biography
that are tailored for his age group
and his.own skill in reading, and that
dovetail with topics and times being
studied in class.
L. Don't be misled into thinking
that ali good books have to be ex·
pensive. There are 10-cent and 26cent books that are worth owning.
You may have to do some deteclive
work to lOcate them, but It's worthwhlle If it helps start him on a
library of his own.
M. ,Don't make a big issue out of
comic bopks. have a
of hwnor
- lilare the'hwnor in a comic sbip.
N. Play word games with your
child - such as - Scrabble,

Mrs. Greta SuWe, a Meigs County
school supervisor and a member of
the Ohio Basic skuis Commission, Is
offering a number of suggestions
which parents might follow in
belping · their children improve in
reading.
The suggestions are being
stressed as a part of the annual
Right to Read Week to be observed
ln Meigs County schools and Ohio,
March 2-8.
WHAT CAN PARENTS DO TO
HELP the child not only to learn to
read, but to appreciate the treasures
.
lockedingoodbooks?
A. Be sure be's up to par
physically. Learning to read deman- ·
ds the best that Is in him of effort,
concentration, clear thinking. Have
him examined regularly, and be
sure his bearing and vision are per·

Teresa Spencer

5-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport·Pomeroy, 0., Monday, March3, 1980

WINESAP: ROME BEAUTY OR Y~U.Or(DEUCIOUS.

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3LB.BAG
' ' 89'
APPLES ~······•'••·•· •••••••• .·
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3/8/80
ALSO AVAILABLE
IN FOREVER SPRING PATTERN

�6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, March 3, IIIIKI

7-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, March 3, 1980

Meigs County Health Departme·n t releases annual report
Heart diseases leading cause of death in '79
Heart related diseases were the
leading cause of death in Meigs
County during 1979 according to the
annual report released today by the
Meigs County Health Department.
Acute myo-cardial infarction was
' '" second leading cause (also heart
related ) while carcinoma (cancer)
"'"" third. In all, 152 death certificates were issued by the department last year. In addition, eight
birth certificates were issued. In all,
1,400 birth, death and burial transit
llt'nnits were written.
The public may think that only
someone else uses the services of the
Health Department. But if you ever
ate in a restaurant, sent a child to
school or drank water from one of
tile public water systems in the
county, you were' being affected by
the Health Department.
'
It you ever had a sewage system
ill'stalled, bought property or
requested a birth or death certiltcate or swam on one of the county's public swimming pools, you
'"' ve been affected by the Health
T:X:partment.
All too often, people seem to have
negative thoughts about the Health
D~pa rtment and the services that
we ctfer. This is unfortunate
because everything that your Health
Department does is intended to iJn.
prove the quality of life that we lead.

IN THE' COMMON
PLEAS COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY ,
OHIO
RE )(CHEADLE, JR .,
and
SA RAJOCHEAOLE,
Plaintiffs,
VS·

MAXINE LEEDS
and
SC OTT LEEDS
and
GE ORGE COLLINS,
Defendants.
LEGAL NOT7~el7, l 76
.Pursuant to an order of
sa le issued by the Court of
common Pleas of Meigs
County, Ohio, I will offer
for sa le at public auction on
the 12th daY. ot April, 1980(

?~. 1p,~~t ~.,!;~0~1k 1 ~/~ei~s

County Courthouse in the
Vi llage of Pomeroy, Ohio,
thr fall""~·inn descrl'bed
..,.., •
real esta te, to·wit :
TR ACT 1: The following
desc r ibed r eal estate
situated in the County of
Mei gs, State of Ohio, and In
i he Township of Columbia,
:;ounded and described as
fo llBeing
ows: in Section Si:deen
16),
Townsh ip Nine (9) of
1
Range Fifteen &lt; 15), of the
Ohi o Company's Purchase,
beg inni ng 120 rod s north of
the southeast corner of said
Secti on Sixteen 1161 ; then·
ce w est 160 rods; thence
south 120 rods to the south
nne ot said section; thence
east 941/, rods to-· the west
line of G. M. Wilcox's land ;
thence north 47 rods; then·
ce east 65 1h rods or to the
east line of sai d Section No.
Sixteen (16); t hence north
a lonp the east line of said
sec t ton to the place of
beginning, containing One
Hu ndred Acres ( 100 A.),
sa ve and except two (2)
acres in the north part Of
sai d tract deeded to the
To wnship Trustees of
Co lumbia 1 Township for
graveyard purpoSes, by
deed recorded 10 Volume
- -,Page 384·5.
Al so, except four and
one· half (4'12 1 acres in tract
off the north end~ sold to
Mrs. Nettie Howery .
A lso, except ing out of the
f irst described tract of land
the following described
real estate: Beginning a1
the northw. est corner of v.
C.
McComas'
seventy·fiv£
acre
tract ; thence
south S6
Jll' easl1075 feet along v. c.
Mccomas• north line to the
west line of the lands of J .
E. McComas; thence north
75o west 800 feet along the
J. E . McComas west line to
the Carpenter and Mt.
Bl anco Road; thence nortt
7JO degrees west 1005 tee
along lhe said Carpente 1
and M I . Blanco Road to thr
road running to Dyesvllle,
thence sout~ n• west 1D3•
feet along said Dyesvllle
Ro ad to the place of begin·
ning, contai ning twenty·
one and one·tenlh (21.1)
acres, more or less.
· Reference Deed : Volume
145,~. Page 230, Meigs Coun·
IY veed Records.
.
TRACT II : The following
described real estate
situ ated in the Township of
Columbia•,
County of
Meigs, and State of Ohio,
bounded and described as
tollcrws : Beginning at the
southwest corner Of Frac·
t ion Twelve (12) , Town
Nine (9); Range Fifteeo

The Meigs County Health Department's entire staff works very hard
to try to serve the needs of COWlty
residents. Sometimes it may seem
that we are not responding to your
particular problem; but please
remember this small staff is serving
the needs of an entire county. There
are occasions when we cannot
respond because of lack of time ;
other times it is the lack of funds and
on many occasions there are legal
reasons as to why we cannot act.
However, through cooperation and
understanding most of our COWlty
health problems can be solved.
Here is a breakdown of services:

Cats, animal bites reported, 8; investigated 8; Wild Animalll, animal
bites reported, 2; Investigated, 2.

Laboratory Specimens, submitted, dogs 2, positive 0, negative
2; submitted, cats 3, positive 0,
negative3; submitted, Wild Animals
2, positive 0, negative 2.
Sewage Permits Issued - 96.
Nuisance Complaints Received 128; Inspections Made - 104; Consultations- ~.
NURSING STATIS'I'Ial

Diagnostic
Opthalmoligica l
Pediatric Clinic (D.O.P.) Held. ~ ;

Pediatric otological Diagnostic
Clinic (P.O.D.) Held, · 4; Plastic
Clinic Held, 2; Well Child Clinic, 24;
Orthopedla Cllnlc, 4; Cardiac Cllnlc,
I; lnnmunization Clinic, 56; Total
Children Examined at special
Clinics, 633'

Sereeologs
Hearing, 1,742; Vision, 1,668;
Anemia, 519; Developmental, 66;
Hypertension, 957; Curvature of the
spine, 800; Other individualized
tests, 343; and Immunization aU
ages, ~.81$.

ENVIRONMENTAL
HEALTil STATISTial

Water Samples, Publlc, 60 taken,
safe 60, unsafe 0.
Private, 95 taken, 76 safe, 69 unsafe.
Food Service, 93 number licensed,
200 number inspected.
Trailer Parks, 7 number licensed,
14 number inspected; Camps, 8
number licensed; 10 number inspected; Schools, :JI number licensed; 29 number inspected; Swimming Pools, 2 number licensed; 4

number inspected; Other Bathing
Places, 2 number licensed; 2 number inspected.
Rabies Control, animal bites
reoorted, dog, 42; investigated 42:

half (21f2) acres, mhre or
l~ss, conveyed by Charles
F . Steward and wife ~ to
Alva w. Rupe by deed
recorded in Deed Book. 145,
Page 2A3, Meigs County
Recorder's Office.
Being the same real
estate conveyed by V . C.
McComas and Myrta A.
Mccomas to Charles F.
Steward by deed recorded
in Deed Book 117, Page 191,
of the Meigs County Deed
Records.
The following described
real estate situated in the
Township of Columbia,
county of Meigs, and state
of Ohio, and bounded and
described as follows: Being
in Fraction No. Six (6),
Town Nine (9) , Range Fif·
teen &lt;lSL of the Ohio com
pany's Purchase. Be~in·
ninp, Sixty·flve and one· all
(65 12 ) rods west of the nor·
theast corner of Fraction
· (6) the
t f'fl
SIX
;
nee wes I Y·
five and one·hatf {55V:zl
rods ; thence south 41 rods
and 21 links; thence east
fifly ·f i ve and one-half
(5Slh ) rods; thence to the
place of beginning, cant;amlng
· ·
f our 1een and one·
half (U'i&gt; ) ocres.
ee.ng the same real
estate as conveyed by Lan·
don Marcum and Anne
Marcum to Charles F.
steward by deed recorded
in Deed Book 124, Page w
f th M · c
1 D d
~eca~ds.elgS oun Y ee
Subject to a certain right
of way or easement for
transmission of gas and
other substance as shown
b lh
• d · th M 1
V e recur s In e e gs

Co~~l:r~~~~'jg.\':~~ ~~~~'ine

169, Page s, Meigs County
Deed Records.
E)(cepting
1 acre
previously conveyed to
Je,-ry and Loretta Stan·
sbury by deed recorded in
volume 233, Pa~e 349 of the
Me'1gs Count
d R
·
Y ee
ecor·
d'i-RACT
Ill :
The
following desc ribed l'"eal
estate situate In the Town·
sh·p
bl c
t of
1 of Col
oun V
Me1gs ond um
Stalea,of Ohio:
commencing at the northwest corner land for·
1 kn
th p h
meny own as e os na
Wood Estate in said Town·
ship of Columbia;· thence
north fifteen (15) chain!
and seventv (70) link• tc
the center · of the' publl.c
road; thence south 59'1••
east eleven (11) chains and
slxty·one (61) links; thence
south 61,_. 0 east sixteen
(16) cholns ond fifty·one
(51 l~nks; thence south
33'12° east two (2) chains
and slxty·four (6.4) links;
thence west along the north
line of said Postma Wood
Estate twenty· six f26)
chains and forty (-40) I nks
to the place of beginning,
containing twenty·one (21)
and sixty one hundredths
(60-100) acres.
Reference De&lt;l&lt;l : Volume
166,~. _Page 523, Meigs coun·
ty ueed Records.
Excepting from all of the
eat estate hereinabove
lescrlbed, the coal known
!S the No. ~. 4·A, Clarion or
.imestone Coa1, together
Nllh certain mining rights
Nhlch were sold ond con·
;eyed to Ohio Power Com·
Jany, which are shown ~Y
the records In the Meigs
:ounty Recorder' s Office .
D~ Reference : Volume
1
:ro::fl~:lgrd~.. lgs Coun·
Terms of sale: Cash In
nandondayofsalefornol
·ess th an "'·
•wo-thlrds of the
1ppral~ value to be sold.
JUblect to the lien lor real
estate taxes for 1980.
The right Is reserved to
·etect any or all bids.
Properly Is appraised at
$50,000.00.
··

President's message
Health is a way of life. It is the quality of living that is expressed in the clean home, the clean fann, the clean business
and industry, the clean neighborhood and the clean corrummity.
Being a way of life it must come from within the people; It is
nourished by knowledge and grows as an obligation and an
ideal in human relations.

Marlene Pooler[ are jointly
and severally I able to the
Plaintiff in the sum of
$1,000.00 olus Interest at the
rate of
percent per an·
num from May 18, 1979, on
a note; that they are jo! ntJ ~
and severally liable to the
Plaintiff on a second note In
the amount of $15,215.43
plus Interest at the rate of 9

w,

percent

~r

annum from

March 30, 1979, and further
alleging that the Plaintiff
has a first mortgage on
real estate described In
Volume 141, Page 167,
Meigs county Mortgag~
Records,
securing
payment of the note in thE

r.,rr.::.~~: w,a,~~~lt1 ~~f~~;

Ludgmenl against the
Defendants In the amount
of $1,000.00 plus interest at
the rate of 9V:.~ percent per
annum from May 18, 1979,
on the first note ana
$15,215.43 plus interest at
the rate of 9 percent per annum trom March JO, 1979,
on the second note~ costs
for suit and further
demand the foreclosure of
the real estate mortgage
described In Volume 141,
Page 167, . Meigs• Countv
Mortgage Records, and for
such other and further
relief as may be proper.
Each of the Defendants
named above Is required to
answer an or before the ex·
pi ration of 28 days after the
last publication of this
notice which date will be
Apri I 21, 1980.
Citizens National Bank,
MiddlePOrt, Ohio
Now Central Trust Com·
pany , N·A
(2) .

~5

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(3) 3, 10, 17, 24, 6tc

NOTICE TO
BIDDERS
PURCHASE OF
TH.REE SCHOOL
BUSES FOR
EASTERN LOCAL
BOARD OF
EDUCATION
Sealed propasals will be
received by the Board of
Education of the Eastern
Local School District of
Reedsville, Ohio, at the
. Treasurer's Office unlit
12:00 noon March 20, 1980
and at that time ~ned by
tne Treasurer of said
Board as provided by law
for three (3) 65 passenger
school buses, according to
specifications of said
Board of Education .
Specifications and Instructions to bidders mav
be obtained at the office of
the Treasurer, Eastern
High School .
A certified check palable
to the Treasurer o the
above Board of Education
or a satisfactory bid bond
executed by the bidder and
the surety company in an
amount equal to five per·
cent of the bid shall be sub·
mltted with each bid. ·
Said Board of Educollon
reserve$""the right to waive
lnformalflles to accept or
rei eel any and all bids.
No bids may be with·
drawn for at least thirty
!3D) days after the
scheduled closing time lor
receipt of bids.
BOARD OF EDUCATION
OF EASTERN LOCAL
SCHOOL DISTRICT
ELOISE BOSTON ,
TREASURER
OF
EASTERN
LOCAL
SCHOOL DISTRICT
38900 SR 7
REEDSVILLE , OHIO
45772

POMEROY
NATIONAL BANK
(2) !8, 25 (3) 3, 10, 4tc
SHAREHOLDERS'
MEETING
Notice is hereby given ·
that, pursuant to call of Its ·
Announcements
Directors,
a
special
meeting
of
the
BUYING U.S . ••LVER
shareholders of Pomeroy
COINS DATED 196.4 OR .
National Bank will be held
at Its banking office at
EARLIER
(ANY
Court and Second Streets,
AMOUNT) . DON'T LOSE
Pomeroy, Ohio, on April a,
SIMPLY PICK
1980, at 3 p.m ., for the pur· ·MONEY,
UP THE PHONE AND
pose of considering and
DIAL
61~ · 992 · 5113,
determining
by
vote
BROWN'S.
whether an agreement to
merge the sald bank and
Bank One of Pomeroy
N .A., Located In the City 01 ' I PAY highest prices
Pomeroy, State of Ohio, un· •pOSSible for gold and silver
coins, rings, jewelry, etc.
der the provisions of the
laws of the United States,
Contact Ed Burkett Barber
shall be ratified and con· .Shop, Middleport.
firmed, subject to the ap·
proval of the Comptroller
1
GOLD,
SILVER OR
of
the
Currency,
Washington, D. c . and for · •FOREIGN COINS, OR:
the purPOSe of vot 1ng upon
;ANY OTHER GOLD OR :
any other matters In··
·SILVER ITEMS. ALSO,o
cldental to the proposed
FURNITURE.
IANTIQUE
merger of the two banks. A
lOR OTHER ANTIQUE
copy of the aforesaid

~:Fc:'r'/1~~ t~"6~~ego~X J

Dr. SeUm Blazewlcz
Heallb Calllllllul011er

The spirit of Marlboro in alow tar cigarette.

·SAVIN' OF.~
THE GREEN
"Save With the Folks You Know"
I

VICKS NYQUIL
Cold MedD!t

8 Ol .
Mig. list $3.08

'1.77
FINAL NET

Reolllar or
8 oz.

Un~ctnttd

IMg. Lot 13.36

'1.67

VASEUNE INTENSIVE

97

CARE BATH BEADS
Rtgular or Herbal

15 oz.

'

$

IAfQ. list IUS

•.

VASEUNE
PETROLEUM JELLY
lMla.
.SOllist$1
.
.&amp;4

s• 89'

! g;,EL~~R~~~e~~ v wW~

each of the two banks,
providing for the merger,
1s on file at the bank l!nd
may be Inspected during
bus1 ness hours.

IOSBY (OSSIE) MARTIN'
,BEFORE
SELLING .
'PHONE 992·-6370. ALSO
DO APPRAISING .

Edison Hobstetter
President
!2) 25 (3) 3, 1D, 17, 4tc

Jones Moat Processing
Slaughter facilities now
open. Washington county .
Rood, 2&lt;18, Little Hocking, !
:OH. 667-6133

OXY
·10
Extra. Strength
Actle Metkltion
1 oz.

.
BANK ONE OF
POMEROY, N.A.
SHARHOLDERS'
REDU&lt;.o: safe and fast
NollceM~E~J:'::Y given
with GoBese Tablets and
~~~d ~~~n~~~[~~en~j
!hal, pursuant to call of lb
E ·Vap "water pills" .
r ods; thence west sixty·
Directors,
a special
Nelson Drug.
meetln~
of
the
.
d o h If (651" )
· · frods,
IVe an
ne·
•
"
sharehOI
ers
of
Bank
One
or fa,r enough to In·
elude fifth (50) acres; then·
of Pomeroy, N .A . will be
ce south one hundred and
held In the Office of Bane
twenty· two n221 rOds;
One Corporation at 100
FOR 1BE BIRDS
t.hence ·east to the plato of
East Broad Street Colum·
bus, Ohio, on Aprl 18, 1980,
l&gt;eginnlng, containing fifty
NEW
YORK (AP) - To
(50) acres. being the
at 11 a.m., lor the pUrpC)se
honor the N'a tiooal
southeast one·fourlh of Sec·
.o f considering end deter.
and
mining by vote whether an
non Sixteen &lt;16)
Audubon Society's . 'IMII
'rlylnal Section No. ~'lfteen
James J . ProffiiiOI agreement to merge the
said
bank
and
Pomeroy
·year
of protecting and
Sheriff
ld T ownshi P of
15 of
M elgs county, Ohio National Bank, located In
.
Columbiasa
enhancing
the bird We ol
Also another parcel of
the City of Pomeroy, Stele
America, the British PlJtlt
of
Ohio, under the
real estate situated In (2) 25, (3) 3, 10, 3tc
Columbia Township, Meigs
provisions of the laws of the
Office has presented
United States, shall be
county, Ohio, bounded as
•.,.,.1...,.. IIY
ratlfl~ and confirm~ . Rlllaell ,W. Petenlckl, the
fOllOWS:
'"'' "'"'
"" to the approval
. commencing at a stake
PUBLICATION
suble&lt;:l
one hundred and fifty two i James R. Pooler and : the Comptroller of ·the · IOclety's president, with a .
set ol new alamJje feiturlng
(·1521 rOds and fifteen (1SJ : Beverly Marlene Pooler ; currenct· Washington, D.
Jinks north of the southeast whose.J~st known addr~s , ~J~u,:, ~~ey ~~~~1 ·
four . ol Britain'• Dialt
corner of Fraction Six (6); : wMeldsdl
,Hookehrl Str~li · ters Incidental to the
pnpnl.or water birdfl.
epor , 0 o 457ov
thence · north twenty-one
(21) rods and ten (1DJ otherwise the Place of . proposed merger of the two
The ~ ,c!eo!pecl
Jinks; thence west fortv· residence of each of said .~nks. A copy of the •
and painted bf Sri~ birdfive and one·half !45'hl Defendants
being afore~ald
agreernencl/ ·
rods; thence north thlrtv· unknown, ·will lake notice r~eco'lr~rJ!h~ r::JrJ:~he .
like artist Michael Wamn,
two (321 rods; thence ~fh ~1f,' on September 19, 1979, two .,_nks, providing for . lncluch! lbe Kblgfilber, .
~'JO east twentv·seven (27) .
zecns ,National Bank,' --.
. - ~··r·ner, Is on file all....
rOds and ·eight (I) . Jinks; now
en raJ Trust COO'!· ,,~ !',. ,.
"·.." ' Dlp~r·, Moorhen and .
tfienceeastelghly (80) rodt . ~nv, J:l ·A, filed a Com· banK ana ma.v be lns))llcted
Yellow Walllll, SGme uf.
and eighteen (18) llnkt to · lalm 1n Common Pleat dlirlng 'buslness hours.
•
0\lrf of l'llelgs County,
Roman J. Gerber
the place of begimlng,
the prot«1ed lnhaiXtaota of
estimated ot twenty·flve ODh1o, allegong that the
Presldeilt'
the
lllreamll and IIIU'UI
&lt;25) acres, more or Jet~,
efendants, James R. !21 25, (3) 3,10, 17, 41c
Excepting two a04 One- Pcofer and
Beverl\1
d. the English ~de..

Mfg . Ult $3.80

.S2j7

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

Mot. -

•·l'oll•

""· l.lot$ .18

21~88

?

1

I
LOWEREOTAR &amp;NICOTINE

MIDDLEPORT, (1110
'.

Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined .
That Cigarette Srnok_ing Is Oanperous to Your Health.
~

&gt;

...

I

12 mg"tar:' O. ~mg nicotine av. per cigarette, FTC Repon Dec:79
'

7' '

..

. I

I

,'

I'

•

.

'I•

'.

�6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, March 3, IIIIKI

7-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, March 3, 1980

Meigs County Health Departme·n t releases annual report
Heart diseases leading cause of death in '79
Heart related diseases were the
leading cause of death in Meigs
County during 1979 according to the
annual report released today by the
Meigs County Health Department.
Acute myo-cardial infarction was
' '" second leading cause (also heart
related ) while carcinoma (cancer)
"'"" third. In all, 152 death certificates were issued by the department last year. In addition, eight
birth certificates were issued. In all,
1,400 birth, death and burial transit
llt'nnits were written.
The public may think that only
someone else uses the services of the
Health Department. But if you ever
ate in a restaurant, sent a child to
school or drank water from one of
tile public water systems in the
county, you were' being affected by
the Health Department.
'
It you ever had a sewage system
ill'stalled, bought property or
requested a birth or death certiltcate or swam on one of the county's public swimming pools, you
'"' ve been affected by the Health
T:X:partment.
All too often, people seem to have
negative thoughts about the Health
D~pa rtment and the services that
we ctfer. This is unfortunate
because everything that your Health
Department does is intended to iJn.
prove the quality of life that we lead.

IN THE' COMMON
PLEAS COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY ,
OHIO
RE )(CHEADLE, JR .,
and
SA RAJOCHEAOLE,
Plaintiffs,
VS·

MAXINE LEEDS
and
SC OTT LEEDS
and
GE ORGE COLLINS,
Defendants.
LEGAL NOT7~el7, l 76
.Pursuant to an order of
sa le issued by the Court of
common Pleas of Meigs
County, Ohio, I will offer
for sa le at public auction on
the 12th daY. ot April, 1980(

?~. 1p,~~t ~.,!;~0~1k 1 ~/~ei~s

County Courthouse in the
Vi llage of Pomeroy, Ohio,
thr fall""~·inn descrl'bed
..,.., •
real esta te, to·wit :
TR ACT 1: The following
desc r ibed r eal estate
situated in the County of
Mei gs, State of Ohio, and In
i he Township of Columbia,
:;ounded and described as
fo llBeing
ows: in Section Si:deen
16),
Townsh ip Nine (9) of
1
Range Fifteen &lt; 15), of the
Ohi o Company's Purchase,
beg inni ng 120 rod s north of
the southeast corner of said
Secti on Sixteen 1161 ; then·
ce w est 160 rods; thence
south 120 rods to the south
nne ot said section; thence
east 941/, rods to-· the west
line of G. M. Wilcox's land ;
thence north 47 rods; then·
ce east 65 1h rods or to the
east line of sai d Section No.
Sixteen (16); t hence north
a lonp the east line of said
sec t ton to the place of
beginning, containing One
Hu ndred Acres ( 100 A.),
sa ve and except two (2)
acres in the north part Of
sai d tract deeded to the
To wnship Trustees of
Co lumbia 1 Township for
graveyard purpoSes, by
deed recorded 10 Volume
- -,Page 384·5.
Al so, except four and
one· half (4'12 1 acres in tract
off the north end~ sold to
Mrs. Nettie Howery .
A lso, except ing out of the
f irst described tract of land
the following described
real estate: Beginning a1
the northw. est corner of v.
C.
McComas'
seventy·fiv£
acre
tract ; thence
south S6
Jll' easl1075 feet along v. c.
Mccomas• north line to the
west line of the lands of J .
E. McComas; thence north
75o west 800 feet along the
J. E . McComas west line to
the Carpenter and Mt.
Bl anco Road; thence nortt
7JO degrees west 1005 tee
along lhe said Carpente 1
and M I . Blanco Road to thr
road running to Dyesvllle,
thence sout~ n• west 1D3•
feet along said Dyesvllle
Ro ad to the place of begin·
ning, contai ning twenty·
one and one·tenlh (21.1)
acres, more or less.
· Reference Deed : Volume
145,~. Page 230, Meigs Coun·
IY veed Records.
.
TRACT II : The following
described real estate
situ ated in the Township of
Columbia•,
County of
Meigs, and State of Ohio,
bounded and described as
tollcrws : Beginning at the
southwest corner Of Frac·
t ion Twelve (12) , Town
Nine (9); Range Fifteeo

The Meigs County Health Department's entire staff works very hard
to try to serve the needs of COWlty
residents. Sometimes it may seem
that we are not responding to your
particular problem; but please
remember this small staff is serving
the needs of an entire county. There
are occasions when we cannot
respond because of lack of time ;
other times it is the lack of funds and
on many occasions there are legal
reasons as to why we cannot act.
However, through cooperation and
understanding most of our COWlty
health problems can be solved.
Here is a breakdown of services:

Cats, animal bites reported, 8; investigated 8; Wild Animalll, animal
bites reported, 2; Investigated, 2.

Laboratory Specimens, submitted, dogs 2, positive 0, negative
2; submitted, cats 3, positive 0,
negative3; submitted, Wild Animals
2, positive 0, negative 2.
Sewage Permits Issued - 96.
Nuisance Complaints Received 128; Inspections Made - 104; Consultations- ~.
NURSING STATIS'I'Ial

Diagnostic
Opthalmoligica l
Pediatric Clinic (D.O.P.) Held. ~ ;

Pediatric otological Diagnostic
Clinic (P.O.D.) Held, · 4; Plastic
Clinic Held, 2; Well Child Clinic, 24;
Orthopedla Cllnlc, 4; Cardiac Cllnlc,
I; lnnmunization Clinic, 56; Total
Children Examined at special
Clinics, 633'

Sereeologs
Hearing, 1,742; Vision, 1,668;
Anemia, 519; Developmental, 66;
Hypertension, 957; Curvature of the
spine, 800; Other individualized
tests, 343; and Immunization aU
ages, ~.81$.

ENVIRONMENTAL
HEALTil STATISTial

Water Samples, Publlc, 60 taken,
safe 60, unsafe 0.
Private, 95 taken, 76 safe, 69 unsafe.
Food Service, 93 number licensed,
200 number inspected.
Trailer Parks, 7 number licensed,
14 number inspected; Camps, 8
number licensed; 10 number inspected; Schools, :JI number licensed; 29 number inspected; Swimming Pools, 2 number licensed; 4

number inspected; Other Bathing
Places, 2 number licensed; 2 number inspected.
Rabies Control, animal bites
reoorted, dog, 42; investigated 42:

half (21f2) acres, mhre or
l~ss, conveyed by Charles
F . Steward and wife ~ to
Alva w. Rupe by deed
recorded in Deed Book. 145,
Page 2A3, Meigs County
Recorder's Office.
Being the same real
estate conveyed by V . C.
McComas and Myrta A.
Mccomas to Charles F.
Steward by deed recorded
in Deed Book 117, Page 191,
of the Meigs County Deed
Records.
The following described
real estate situated in the
Township of Columbia,
county of Meigs, and state
of Ohio, and bounded and
described as follows: Being
in Fraction No. Six (6),
Town Nine (9) , Range Fif·
teen &lt;lSL of the Ohio com
pany's Purchase. Be~in·
ninp, Sixty·flve and one· all
(65 12 ) rods west of the nor·
theast corner of Fraction
· (6) the
t f'fl
SIX
;
nee wes I Y·
five and one·hatf {55V:zl
rods ; thence south 41 rods
and 21 links; thence east
fifly ·f i ve and one-half
(5Slh ) rods; thence to the
place of beginning, cant;amlng
· ·
f our 1een and one·
half (U'i&gt; ) ocres.
ee.ng the same real
estate as conveyed by Lan·
don Marcum and Anne
Marcum to Charles F.
steward by deed recorded
in Deed Book 124, Page w
f th M · c
1 D d
~eca~ds.elgS oun Y ee
Subject to a certain right
of way or easement for
transmission of gas and
other substance as shown
b lh
• d · th M 1
V e recur s In e e gs

Co~~l:r~~~~'jg.\':~~ ~~~~'ine

169, Page s, Meigs County
Deed Records.
E)(cepting
1 acre
previously conveyed to
Je,-ry and Loretta Stan·
sbury by deed recorded in
volume 233, Pa~e 349 of the
Me'1gs Count
d R
·
Y ee
ecor·
d'i-RACT
Ill :
The
following desc ribed l'"eal
estate situate In the Town·
sh·p
bl c
t of
1 of Col
oun V
Me1gs ond um
Stalea,of Ohio:
commencing at the northwest corner land for·
1 kn
th p h
meny own as e os na
Wood Estate in said Town·
ship of Columbia;· thence
north fifteen (15) chain!
and seventv (70) link• tc
the center · of the' publl.c
road; thence south 59'1••
east eleven (11) chains and
slxty·one (61) links; thence
south 61,_. 0 east sixteen
(16) cholns ond fifty·one
(51 l~nks; thence south
33'12° east two (2) chains
and slxty·four (6.4) links;
thence west along the north
line of said Postma Wood
Estate twenty· six f26)
chains and forty (-40) I nks
to the place of beginning,
containing twenty·one (21)
and sixty one hundredths
(60-100) acres.
Reference De&lt;l&lt;l : Volume
166,~. _Page 523, Meigs coun·
ty ueed Records.
Excepting from all of the
eat estate hereinabove
lescrlbed, the coal known
!S the No. ~. 4·A, Clarion or
.imestone Coa1, together
Nllh certain mining rights
Nhlch were sold ond con·
;eyed to Ohio Power Com·
Jany, which are shown ~Y
the records In the Meigs
:ounty Recorder' s Office .
D~ Reference : Volume
1
:ro::fl~:lgrd~.. lgs Coun·
Terms of sale: Cash In
nandondayofsalefornol
·ess th an "'·
•wo-thlrds of the
1ppral~ value to be sold.
JUblect to the lien lor real
estate taxes for 1980.
The right Is reserved to
·etect any or all bids.
Properly Is appraised at
$50,000.00.
··

President's message
Health is a way of life. It is the quality of living that is expressed in the clean home, the clean fann, the clean business
and industry, the clean neighborhood and the clean corrummity.
Being a way of life it must come from within the people; It is
nourished by knowledge and grows as an obligation and an
ideal in human relations.

Marlene Pooler[ are jointly
and severally I able to the
Plaintiff in the sum of
$1,000.00 olus Interest at the
rate of
percent per an·
num from May 18, 1979, on
a note; that they are jo! ntJ ~
and severally liable to the
Plaintiff on a second note In
the amount of $15,215.43
plus Interest at the rate of 9

w,

percent

~r

annum from

March 30, 1979, and further
alleging that the Plaintiff
has a first mortgage on
real estate described In
Volume 141, Page 167,
Meigs county Mortgag~
Records,
securing
payment of the note in thE

r.,rr.::.~~: w,a,~~~lt1 ~~f~~;

Ludgmenl against the
Defendants In the amount
of $1,000.00 plus interest at
the rate of 9V:.~ percent per
annum from May 18, 1979,
on the first note ana
$15,215.43 plus interest at
the rate of 9 percent per annum trom March JO, 1979,
on the second note~ costs
for suit and further
demand the foreclosure of
the real estate mortgage
described In Volume 141,
Page 167, . Meigs• Countv
Mortgage Records, and for
such other and further
relief as may be proper.
Each of the Defendants
named above Is required to
answer an or before the ex·
pi ration of 28 days after the
last publication of this
notice which date will be
Apri I 21, 1980.
Citizens National Bank,
MiddlePOrt, Ohio
Now Central Trust Com·
pany , N·A
(2) .

~5

•

(3) 3, 10, 17, 24, 6tc

NOTICE TO
BIDDERS
PURCHASE OF
TH.REE SCHOOL
BUSES FOR
EASTERN LOCAL
BOARD OF
EDUCATION
Sealed propasals will be
received by the Board of
Education of the Eastern
Local School District of
Reedsville, Ohio, at the
. Treasurer's Office unlit
12:00 noon March 20, 1980
and at that time ~ned by
tne Treasurer of said
Board as provided by law
for three (3) 65 passenger
school buses, according to
specifications of said
Board of Education .
Specifications and Instructions to bidders mav
be obtained at the office of
the Treasurer, Eastern
High School .
A certified check palable
to the Treasurer o the
above Board of Education
or a satisfactory bid bond
executed by the bidder and
the surety company in an
amount equal to five per·
cent of the bid shall be sub·
mltted with each bid. ·
Said Board of Educollon
reserve$""the right to waive
lnformalflles to accept or
rei eel any and all bids.
No bids may be with·
drawn for at least thirty
!3D) days after the
scheduled closing time lor
receipt of bids.
BOARD OF EDUCATION
OF EASTERN LOCAL
SCHOOL DISTRICT
ELOISE BOSTON ,
TREASURER
OF
EASTERN
LOCAL
SCHOOL DISTRICT
38900 SR 7
REEDSVILLE , OHIO
45772

POMEROY
NATIONAL BANK
(2) !8, 25 (3) 3, 10, 4tc
SHAREHOLDERS'
MEETING
Notice is hereby given ·
that, pursuant to call of Its ·
Announcements
Directors,
a
special
meeting
of
the
BUYING U.S . ••LVER
shareholders of Pomeroy
COINS DATED 196.4 OR .
National Bank will be held
at Its banking office at
EARLIER
(ANY
Court and Second Streets,
AMOUNT) . DON'T LOSE
Pomeroy, Ohio, on April a,
SIMPLY PICK
1980, at 3 p.m ., for the pur· ·MONEY,
UP THE PHONE AND
pose of considering and
DIAL
61~ · 992 · 5113,
determining
by
vote
BROWN'S.
whether an agreement to
merge the sald bank and
Bank One of Pomeroy
N .A., Located In the City 01 ' I PAY highest prices
Pomeroy, State of Ohio, un· •pOSSible for gold and silver
coins, rings, jewelry, etc.
der the provisions of the
laws of the United States,
Contact Ed Burkett Barber
shall be ratified and con· .Shop, Middleport.
firmed, subject to the ap·
proval of the Comptroller
1
GOLD,
SILVER OR
of
the
Currency,
Washington, D. c . and for · •FOREIGN COINS, OR:
the purPOSe of vot 1ng upon
;ANY OTHER GOLD OR :
any other matters In··
·SILVER ITEMS. ALSO,o
cldental to the proposed
FURNITURE.
IANTIQUE
merger of the two banks. A
lOR OTHER ANTIQUE
copy of the aforesaid

~:Fc:'r'/1~~ t~"6~~ego~X J

Dr. SeUm Blazewlcz
Heallb Calllllllul011er

The spirit of Marlboro in alow tar cigarette.

·SAVIN' OF.~
THE GREEN
"Save With the Folks You Know"
I

VICKS NYQUIL
Cold MedD!t

8 Ol .
Mig. list $3.08

'1.77
FINAL NET

Reolllar or
8 oz.

Un~ctnttd

IMg. Lot 13.36

'1.67

VASEUNE INTENSIVE

97

CARE BATH BEADS
Rtgular or Herbal

15 oz.

'

$

IAfQ. list IUS

•.

VASEUNE
PETROLEUM JELLY
lMla.
.SOllist$1
.
.&amp;4

s• 89'

! g;,EL~~R~~~e~~ v wW~

each of the two banks,
providing for the merger,
1s on file at the bank l!nd
may be Inspected during
bus1 ness hours.

IOSBY (OSSIE) MARTIN'
,BEFORE
SELLING .
'PHONE 992·-6370. ALSO
DO APPRAISING .

Edison Hobstetter
President
!2) 25 (3) 3, 1D, 17, 4tc

Jones Moat Processing
Slaughter facilities now
open. Washington county .
Rood, 2&lt;18, Little Hocking, !
:OH. 667-6133

OXY
·10
Extra. Strength
Actle Metkltion
1 oz.

.
BANK ONE OF
POMEROY, N.A.
SHARHOLDERS'
REDU&lt;.o: safe and fast
NollceM~E~J:'::Y given
with GoBese Tablets and
~~~d ~~~n~~~[~~en~j
!hal, pursuant to call of lb
E ·Vap "water pills" .
r ods; thence west sixty·
Directors,
a special
Nelson Drug.
meetln~
of
the
.
d o h If (651" )
· · frods,
IVe an
ne·
•
"
sharehOI
ers
of
Bank
One
or fa,r enough to In·
elude fifth (50) acres; then·
of Pomeroy, N .A . will be
ce south one hundred and
held In the Office of Bane
twenty· two n221 rOds;
One Corporation at 100
FOR 1BE BIRDS
t.hence ·east to the plato of
East Broad Street Colum·
bus, Ohio, on Aprl 18, 1980,
l&gt;eginnlng, containing fifty
NEW
YORK (AP) - To
(50) acres. being the
at 11 a.m., lor the pUrpC)se
honor the N'a tiooal
southeast one·fourlh of Sec·
.o f considering end deter.
and
mining by vote whether an
non Sixteen &lt;16)
Audubon Society's . 'IMII
'rlylnal Section No. ~'lfteen
James J . ProffiiiOI agreement to merge the
said
bank
and
Pomeroy
·year
of protecting and
Sheriff
ld T ownshi P of
15 of
M elgs county, Ohio National Bank, located In
.
Columbiasa
enhancing
the bird We ol
Also another parcel of
the City of Pomeroy, Stele
America, the British PlJtlt
of
Ohio, under the
real estate situated In (2) 25, (3) 3, 10, 3tc
Columbia Township, Meigs
provisions of the laws of the
Office has presented
United States, shall be
county, Ohio, bounded as
•.,.,.1...,.. IIY
ratlfl~ and confirm~ . Rlllaell ,W. Petenlckl, the
fOllOWS:
'"'' "'"'
"" to the approval
. commencing at a stake
PUBLICATION
suble&lt;:l
one hundred and fifty two i James R. Pooler and : the Comptroller of ·the · IOclety's president, with a .
set ol new alamJje feiturlng
(·1521 rOds and fifteen (1SJ : Beverly Marlene Pooler ; currenct· Washington, D.
Jinks north of the southeast whose.J~st known addr~s , ~J~u,:, ~~ey ~~~~1 ·
four . ol Britain'• Dialt
corner of Fraction Six (6); : wMeldsdl
,Hookehrl Str~li · ters Incidental to the
pnpnl.or water birdfl.
epor , 0 o 457ov
thence · north twenty-one
(21) rods and ten (1DJ otherwise the Place of . proposed merger of the two
The ~ ,c!eo!pecl
Jinks; thence west fortv· residence of each of said .~nks. A copy of the •
and painted bf Sri~ birdfive and one·half !45'hl Defendants
being afore~ald
agreernencl/ ·
rods; thence north thlrtv· unknown, ·will lake notice r~eco'lr~rJ!h~ r::JrJ:~he .
like artist Michael Wamn,
two (321 rods; thence ~fh ~1f,' on September 19, 1979, two .,_nks, providing for . lncluch! lbe Kblgfilber, .
~'JO east twentv·seven (27) .
zecns ,National Bank,' --.
. - ~··r·ner, Is on file all....
rOds and ·eight (I) . Jinks; now
en raJ Trust COO'!· ,,~ !',. ,.
"·.." ' Dlp~r·, Moorhen and .
tfienceeastelghly (80) rodt . ~nv, J:l ·A, filed a Com· banK ana ma.v be lns))llcted
Yellow Walllll, SGme uf.
and eighteen (18) llnkt to · lalm 1n Common Pleat dlirlng 'buslness hours.
•
0\lrf of l'llelgs County,
Roman J. Gerber
the place of begimlng,
the prot«1ed lnhaiXtaota of
estimated ot twenty·flve ODh1o, allegong that the
Presldeilt'
the
lllreamll and IIIU'UI
&lt;25) acres, more or Jet~,
efendants, James R. !21 25, (3) 3,10, 17, 41c
Excepting two a04 One- Pcofer and
Beverl\1
d. the English ~de..

Mfg . Ult $3.80

.S2j7

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

Mot. -

•·l'oll•

""· l.lot$ .18

21~88

?

1

I
LOWEREOTAR &amp;NICOTINE

MIDDLEPORT, (1110
'.

Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined .
That Cigarette Srnok_ing Is Oanperous to Your Health.
~

&gt;

...

I

12 mg"tar:' O. ~mg nicotine av. per cigarette, FTC Repon Dec:79
'

7' '

..

. I

I

,'

I'

•

.

'I•

'.

�.

.&amp;-The Daily Sentinel, M,lddleport-POineroy, 0 ., Monday, March3,1~

8-The Daily Sentinel, 1\Jiddleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, March 3, 1980

Your Best Buys Are Found in the Sentinel Classifieds
More classifieds
on Page Six
3 Announcements
GUN SHOOT EVERY
SUNDAY 1 PM . FACTORY
CHOKE ONLY . RACINE
GUN CLUB.
SHOOT .

GUN

Racine

Volunteer Fire
Dept. ·
Every Saturday. 6:30p.m.
At their building i n Bashan.
Factory choke guns only .

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

Corn

Hollow Gun

Club,

II
Help Wanted
GET VALUABLE training
as a young business person
and earn good money plus
some great gifts as a Sen ·
tinel route carr ier . Phone
us right away and get on
the eligibility list at 992·

2i56 or 992 ~ 2i57 .
RN OR LPN, full time. J ·
11 :30 and 11 to 7:30. Part
time RN or LPN, 11 to 7:30.

Free

to

good

home

2

obedient pups, one black,
742 ~ 2692 .

Call/42 ~ 2692.

6

Lost and Found

Bar Help Needed. Call 992 ~
3860 between B:30 and iO : 30
mornings.

$$$Substan1ial part 1ime in·
come taking short phone
messages at home. Call

1615 ) 779 ~ 3235 Ext. 453 .

WANTED : housecleaning
position, 1 or 2 days per
week,
reliable,
har dworking,
clean
and
honest , can supply referen ces to charader. Please
call 8.43·4951 anytime. Have
dependable transportation .

LOST, 2 manila folders
with papers in plain brown
sack in Pom e roy on
January 17. Reward , Ca l l
992 ~ 6343 .

Found : Male beagle dog.

Call949 ~ 2225 .

8

Will care for elderly in our
home, trained and e)( ·

perienced . 992· 7314.
Wi ll care tor children in my
home in Tuppers Plains

area . 614 ~ 667 ~ 3723.
13
Insurance
AUTOMOBILE
SURANCE been

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

BRADFORD, Aucti()neer,
Complete Service. Phone
9~9 · 2487 or 949·2000. racine,
Ohio, Crill Bradford .
Employment
Services
Help Wanted
Hourly RN, parttime for
family planning clinics.
Must be registered in Ohio,
have
reliable
tran ·
sportation. Orientation will

be provided. Equal op~
portunity employer. For

IN ~
can~

celled?
Lost
your
operator's license? Phone
992 ~ 2143 .

REALTY
NEW

3

living room, dining
room, famlly room, extra nice kitchen with
micro-wave oven. Call
for
more deta l is .

$58,000.00 .
MIDDLEPORT -

Ex ~

ecutive sytle home .
Must see inside to ap-

preciate. Almost totally
remodeled within the
past2 yrs. 5 bedrooms, 2
baths and much, much
more. Call today!
E)(TRA NICE J

street

and ,

with carpeting
complimentary

paneling, 3-4

bdrms.,

spacious living

room,

built· ln kitchen and
separate dining room,
l'h baths, full base~
menf, paved drive and

parking, storage bldg .
Priced to sell SJS,OOO.oo.
NEW LISTING 2
story, handyman ' s
delight, 5 rooms, 1112
baths, lots of storage,
WHIP INFLATION
WITH YOUR OWN
RENTAL
UNIT .
$10,000.00.
ftACINE Recently
remodeled

walk

to

·everything, $25,000.00.
WOODLAND
HOMESITE$ - Appx.
25 acres, some lots
surveyed, water and
elec .
available.

EASTERN DISTRICT
$27,500.00.
BEAUTIFUL - 2 story,
river view, l'h baths,
central air, full base ~
ment, excellent condi -

tion, carpeting · etc .
READY TO MOVE IN ~
T0$.40,000.00.
GREAT Location,
style and condition,
rooms to spare, up to ~
bdrms, l'h baths, faml ~

tv

12x60 Hillcrest, 2 bedroom .
Furnished or unfurnished.
992 · 6140 ~

DISCOUNT
PRICES
Hotpoint and
General Electrif.
Appliance
Sales &amp; Service

POMEROY
LANDMARK
Jack w. Carsey,
Mgr.
Phone 992· 2181

room, rec. room, cen·

tral heat &amp; olr. MAKE
OFFER 159,800.00.
THE FARM- you hove
been walling for, 8~
beautiful laying acres,
' good large barn, 2
ponds, old house to
remodel, goad large
garage PLUS a
beautiful 3 bdrm. ranch
with F.P., full base·
m•nt, many other
features In excellent
condition. STEAL AT
$76,:125.00.
THI!RE ARE 41 WAYS
TO ~INANCE YOUR
NI!W HOME, WE CAN
H.LP YOU. LOCALLY
OWNI!D AND FULL ·\
TIMIL. ,
' REALTOR
Henry I!. Chland, Jr.
m-6191
ASSOCIAtES
Dottle &amp; 110181' Turner
742-2414
J•n TrutHII NS-2660
~ULI,. TIME
OP'~ICE PHONE

m-mt

Bumgardner

St.,

742 ~

2975 ~

32
1973

Mobile Homes
for Sale
Fairpoint,

14x65

dbl . garage. $17,.500.
80 ACRES - Nice lay·
ing farm land or for sub·
divison. AbOUt 112 fenc·

ed, good 10 room farm
house with bath and lots
of farm bldos. Minerals.
NICE HOME 3
bedrooms, bath, por ~
ches, basement, birch
fur ~

nace and copper plumb·
ing.

BUILDING

LOT

area,

utilities &amp; trees.

home . Kitchen, dining
burner and workshop.

rooms, furnace, 2 rentals, 4th available, 2 car
garage and over 1 acre
of sandy land . Good buy

Close to Meigs High.
Good price $.12,000.00.
INCOME PROPERTY

at S25,000.oo.
6 RENTALS All
under one roof. Brick

-

with

wood

2 homes, both extra

nice.

Situated on

acres

across

10

Broker, golf and
g uns, used silver 1964 or

Teaford,

from

Legion In Rutland .
POMEROY Lovely "'.!
bedroom home with
panoramic

'Wiew

of

river. Only $40,000.00.
LIST WITH US. We
have buyers and !Inane·
ii&gt;g available.
' Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.
Phone 742·2003
Velma
Ninclnsky,
Assoc.
Phone 742·3092
Georges. HobsteHer Jr.
Broker 992-5739

construction.

Only

gas furnace &amp; city
water.
FREE 80 CALENDARS.

FOR SELLING YOUR
PROPERTY CALL
992·3325 or 992·3876

Housing
Headquarters

REAL ESTATE

1971 Shakespear. 14x65 2
bedroom
1965 Yanor 12x52. 2 bedr .
1968 Fleetwood 12x63, 2
Bdr.
B &amp; S MOBILE HOME
SALES. PT. PLEASANT,
wv. 304 ~ 675 · 4424 .

s&amp;E

1971 12x65 Trailer, com-

furnished,

A.C .,

very good condition. On a

lot that can be rented.
Ready to move into. $6500

firm . 992·5304 .
33 Farms for Sale
COUNTRY HOME with I
stocked pond for swimming
or fishing , 9 rooms, bath,
carpeted.· 3 to 17 ' acre~

INSURANCE
SERVING SOU'niEAsTERN.OHIO SINCE 1868
ARE YOU PAYING tOO MUCH? DO
YOU HAVE THE COVERAGE?

FOR ALL YOUR INSURANCE NEEDS
CAll US.

992-2342 .
·DaNNIN&amp;CHiuls AGENcY; INC.
· MIDDL£PORT, OHIO'

.

Hours9·1 M, w., F.
Other times by appoint-

and Western . Saddles and
harness .
Horses
and
ponies. Ruth Reeves. 614Barding and
6 9B ·3290.
Riding Lessons and Horse
Care products . Western

107 Sycamore CRear

requir,d.

6260.

p.m .

noon ~ /

poodle,

618 E. Main

Saint

HAIR" STYUNG
Menor Women
by Diann Jewell
at

41 Houses for Rent
2 Bedroom house for rent,
unfurnished, deposit req.

61 Farm Equipment
Several Used chain saws

o.

992·3090.

992·20'14.

42

62
wanted to Buy
CHIP WOOD. Poles max
diameter 10" on largest
end. $12 p ~ er ton. Bundled
slab. S10 per ton. Delivered
to Ohio Pallet Co., Rt. 2,
Pomeroy 992·2689.

trailer .

44

Apartment
for Rent
3 AND 4 RM furnished ap·
Is. Phone 992 ~ ~ .

bedroom
all

apt.,

un ~

electric .

One bedroom apt., un·
furnished, all electric.
Pomeroy Home and Auto.
992 · 209~ .

45 Furnished Rooms.
2 Sleeping rooms, private
entrance. Off the street
parking, refrigerator and
television . Call alter 4week
days, 992· 7791.

Merchandise
51 Househgld Goods
16 cu.
fl .
Phllco
Refrigerator, 2 dr. com
blnation, will gofost at $12!
at Pomeroy Landmark . ~
Antiques

ATTENTION:
PORTANT TO YOU) Wit I
pay cash or certified check
for il/'lllques and collec.
tibias or entire estates
Nothing too large, Also
guns, pocket watches and•
coin collections. Call 614
767·3167 or 557·:UII.
ATTENl;ION !
CIM .
PORTANT TO YOU) w·ll I
pay cosh or cfrttfled check
for antiques and colttc.
tlbles or , entire estotes
Nothing too large. Also
g.uns, pocket watc~ and'
coin collections. Call 614 I
761-3167 or 551-3411.

.

sand,

gravel;.

'

Calcium

chloride, fertilizer, d"ii
foocl, and all fypes of Jllll
Excelsior Soil worka, Inc.
E .' Mnln St., Pomeroy, 992
Je91. .

'

I

OLD FURNITURE, Ice
boxes, brass beds, Iron
beds,. desks, etc ., complete
hoUseholds. · Write M.D.
Miller: At: 4, Ppmeroy or
call 992·7160.
, ."'ransport,tlon •
Autos for Sale
.711977 Dodge
Aspen, AM·FM ,

3rd St. in
Syrcuse, Oh.
Ph. 992·3752
or 992-3743
~ · 1B ~ 1

mo.

•• 1

2-11~1

rrn
tMOECEBj
J r

1973 Pontiac Ctallna. 992·
2201.

mo.

1974 MGB GT Hardtop,
mint cond., a.c., low
mileage, good gas mileage.
Call992·6259.

3-2·1 mo.

RACINE,O.
992·6125 or
992·7314
1 ~ 2e ~

1978 Ford
Bronco,
customized, p.b., p.s,,
cruise control. 992··3310.

GASOUNE ALLEY

helpinq me
dean up

I have lots
of time!

'· .

44 Rigorous

1 Civil War

45 D.C. Army

vets org.

hospital

4 Style
of furniture
BPlot
11 Mulcan

41 Greek letter
DOWN

1 Fathom
2 Reviae
3 Distribute
again,
· 1111 cards

money

Joel's

,u Laminated
13 One kind
of spirit

1 mo.

AND AFTER HE WENT 10
SLEEP, I I=OUND A
WOMAN'&amp; NAME
AND PHONE
NUMBER IN
Hl5 POCKET !

18 Like a fuBsy

4 Copy
5 Insouciant
1 Stage

14 Hockey
luminary
15 After tues
17 Mrs. WW!am
McKinley
18 Gennan
conjunction

81

outward

3% "The 20 Pub
Chue"
game Item
33 SprighUy
Z! Girl's name
31 Convened
Z5 Peace symbol
anew

remark
7 Tooth
8 Tonto's
bol"le
9 Instrument
for lUx

1t Lagganl
Z1 Head: Fr.

Z7 Pater NOller,
for

one

Belderbeclle Zl Dream up

a PlaywrighJ

31 Growing

customer
11 Taunt

40 Nowiahed
U An ex
Rooney

r--t~lr"'1n

O'Fiaberty
Z4Related

ZISnare
!8Walk
heavlly
30 Pboer;Uclan
port

3! Idle chatter

r.+-+-

35Have

power to
31Census
question
37Nlght bef~n

38HlDdu tiUe

BARNEY

WHAT.'5 FER
SI,IPPER,
MAW?
. '

311Frencb

St&lt;INNYO~

SPAGHETTI

chanteuse

Ulnnln
Ankara
~"What

,,"

.J,..

Ia new"!~•
DAiLY I"'DVD•'I'I'\,(\JT(\T'r;f, - ·Here's bow to rork It:

'

AXYDLBAAXR

11 LONGFELLOW
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A 11
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Slnllt !etten, .
apostrophes, the lenfllh and formaUon of the wordo are all
hints. E-.ch day the code letters are dlll'erent.

caYnOQUOT£8

'I
I

$2200. ·

radio, A. C., $2600,. 1974 ~- --==:-;;::::::::-Chevrolet MOnte cartct, i 76
•'Auto Parts
AM· FM radio, &amp;·track tope.
,Cell alter 5 p.m., ~47·2813.
&amp; Accessories
Five 1975 camaro whNis
1973 vea.l station ~ogon
and hub . c~&lt;..!'!.ew . con·. ·
dltion.,cau ...~.
$300. 992·2503.
·

(Answers tomorrow)
INKED HI:RI:BY GI:NTAY
Answer: What the Art student drew when a classmate
got fresh-THI: LINE

Jumbles: FILMY

ACROSS

1

1971 'Ford .Bronco, A.c.,
AM·FM stereo, P.S., P.B ,;
4 MW tires. Call 992·6130,
'
CJ·S Jeep,
Phone 949-2545.

I

t I I I I I I I XJ

by THOMAS JOSEPH

Custom made, AM·I'M a·:
track,' CB." 19,000 milts, 992·
2656.5 '
\ :·.
i

197~

Now arrange the circled letters to

61NtTM'6td'

-----........,..1978 Ford 4x4 i" l50.'

~

WERE.

Jumble 11oo11. No. 13,.contalnlng 110puzzte-.lta¥tii11He rorl1.75poetpald
tram Jumble, o1o thll newsp1per, BaJC M, NcH w ~ ad, N.J. 07141.1noructe your
ume, lddr..., zip code end makt checllt Plrtblt to Newtplplrbooka.

V. C. YOUNG Ill

CALL 992-3238
ASK FOR DAVE

WHA'T D~UL.A' S

form the surprise answer, as suogoaled by tho above cartoon.

Print answer here:

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

Been in Business
For 5 Years

IJ

ALLEYOOP

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING

.~emodeling
"FREE ESnMATES"

1964 Pontiac Tempest, 4
or., V·6, auto., shift. Run·
nlng good . Call 985·3366. Or
stpat37641 Texas Road.

1

QUIDIL

Fraa Estimates
Reasonable Prices
Call Howard
949·2862
1·22-lfc

Gutters and

~THAT SCRAMIILED WORD GAME
by Henri Arnold and Bob Lee

I

SITOC

tJ I I I

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

We Do Roofing.

(For a copy of JACOBY
MODERN, send $1 to: "Win at
Bridge, " care of this newspaper, P.O. Box 489, Radio City
Station. New York, N~ Y.
10019.)

Q:J_,__j
1

Thank~ for

1977 Capri , ~ cyl., A.C., AM·
FM 4 speed, Excellent con·
dillon. 992·6069, $3500 firm .

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)

ID1l

1l'llll~

H. L WHITESEL
ROOFING

Auto Sales

Pass

~ ~ ~~~

1'/HAT 6 HAPPENING?!
'IOU 1'1~ SUPPOSeD
10 GEe THAT ALI"IA1
vt:IR6UCKS CA Ml: TO
...___.,_., I() HARM!

SEEING ONE
flAHD-SIMI:I.'S
MeN AIM AT
ANNie, "DAot7Y"
THROW!i HIM·
SeLF IN FRQNT
OF HER, AND··

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992·2772

8 Ill 5 Mon. tllru Fri.
Rt.l, Racine, SR 124
949·2422
1·30·pd.

-'~

Paddin,ll &amp; Carpet . l
~witti Purcnas•

fret
•• •

;
•

0!·_,_..!!'_;·~·"•. 11 ~
"
a oi ott I;
-~="6.
L;,..~""!!1t•!.,!
. ~!!..:;::~;.!
· ~ .~ ··-· Jl :
I

~~~~-:TL:&amp;

,,
&gt; '

EGHO
6LEtJ

Aluminum Siding
elnsulatiotl
eSIWm Doors
• Storm Windows
•Replacement
Windows
Free Estimate

PARTS
FDREIGN CAR
REPAIR

Pass

4•

.'

84
Electrical
Home
&amp;
Refridgeration
Improvements
Now acceplng logs ot our
SEWING
MACHINE
S
&amp;
G Carpet Cleaning.
log yard 7:30·3:30 week· ,
Repairs,
service, all
Steam
cleaned
.
Free
days. High prices tor Vood 7~2__T~r~u~c&lt;!:k~s~f_,o,_r"'S"'a,le~
992 · 22B~.
The
estimate.
Renonable • makes.
quality logs with a limited
Fabric
Shop,
Pomeroy.
rates.
Scotchguard.
992·
amount of low grade
1976 Ford F-100 pickup with
Authorized Singer Sales
Payment upon delivery matching ·topper. 6 cylln· 6309 or 742-2211.
and Service. w .e sharpen ,
and sealing. Blaney Hor- der stondard. 48,000 miles,
Scissors.
dwoods, Box 66, VIncent, new tires, excellent con· WALL PAPERING and
OH 4578~. 614·678·2960,
dillon. S2.500 firm. Phone painting. 7~2 ~ 2328 .
ELWOOD
BOWERS
992·7285 after 4 p.m .
I
REPAIR . Sweepers,
GOLD AND SILVER
PIANO TUNING. Lone
toaste•,
Irons,
all small
19i&amp; Chevy Pickup, 4x4, 350 Daniels. New phone numCOINS OF THE WORLD
appliances. Lawn mower. ,
engine,
automatic,
P.S.,
RINGS,
JEWELRY,
ber, 7~2-2951. Servtcl! to
Next to State Highway ,
P,B., AM· FM radio, caf&gt; schools ond home sln~e
STERLING SILVER AND
Garaoe
on Route 1, 91.5· ·
tights, ~ 6 , ft.
bed with , 1965.
MISC. ITEMS. •PAYING
3825.
fiberglass
topper
and
RECORD
HIGH,
HIGHEST UP·TO·DATE sliding windOWS. Reese hit·
CARPENTER WORK PRICES. CONTACT EO ch, Big II res. Rust proofed. · complete
remodeling by AI
25,000
miles,
can
be
seen
at
BURKETT
BARBER
85 General Hauling
Tromm, 742·2328. Releren·
SHOP, MIDOLEPORT, Ashlanil Bulk Plant' at ces.
·
Minersville, 742·2225, 742· .
, WILL HAUL limestone and .
OHIO, OR CALL 992·3476.
2125or992·5111 .
• gravel. AIIO, lime hauling
Will do oddS and endl, - anclspreadlng, Leo Morris '
Wanted to buy : a newer
paneling, . floor tile, and
Trucking. Phone 742·2.CSS. ·
'. ----:,.
car, to take over payments.
cetnna
'llle.
can
Fred
,
742-3080.
73
Vans &amp; 4 W.O.
i Miller, 992·6338.
I WILl HAUL WATER. 992·
1978
Ford
F-150
Custom
·
5858 •
OLD FURNITURE, Ice 4x4, excellent condition.
boxes, brass beds, Iron l.lft kits, AM·FM &amp;·track,
beds, desks, etc., complete · tots of extras, 21,000 miles ..
households. Write M.D. Take
·over payments. See •
Miller. Rt. 4, Pomeroy or Greg Grover or coli 992·
call 992·7760.
,
5620.

wanted to Rent
Trailer space, smoll house
cir apartment. Preferably
In Sugar Run area. 992
3530.

54 Misc. Merchanlse
COAL,
.L I'MESTONE

lvn1

"FREE
ESTIMATES"

trick and be down one."
Oswald: "II South refuses
the trump finesse, nothing can
hurt him as long as spades
break 4-3. He goes to dummy
with a club. discards a club on
the good spade and loses the
diamond finesse ~ But there is
no way now lor the defense to
keep him from ruffing the six
of diamonds with one of
dummy's trumps."

Oswald: "It doesn't take
long- to learn about finessing .
It takes years to learn about
not finessing ."
Alan: "South wins the club
lead in dummy and promptly

ANNIE

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSUlATION
Vinyl &amp;

REPAIR

+

I

have to lose an extra diamond

lour ordinary words.

2-2B·1 mo.

BIU!S &gt;AUTO

UPHOLSTERING

GOLD, SILVER OR
FOREIGN COINS, OR
ANY OTHER GOLD OR
SILVER ITEMS. ALSO,
ANTIQUE FURNITURE
OR DTtlER ANTIQUE
ITEMS. WILL PAY TOP
DOLLAR. CHECK WITH
OSBY (OSSIE) MARTIN
BEFORE
SELLING
PHONE 992·6370. AlSO DO
APPAAISING.

Pomeroy Home and Auto.
992·2094.

53

A&amp;H . -

OLD COl NS, pocket wat·
ches, class rings, wedding
bands, dlomonds. Gold or
silver. Call J. A; Wamsley,
7~2 · 2331 .
Treasure Chest
Coin Shop, Athens, OH. 592
6.462.

REN-TER'S assistance for
Senior Citizens jn Village
Manor apts. Call992 ~ 7787.

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South
West
Nortb East

Saturday's

ANTIQUES ,
FUR
NITURE, glass, china,
anything ~ See or call Ruth
Gosney, antiques, 26 N
2nd, Middleport, OH. 992
3161.

Adults Only 992·3324

mo.

+

AQ6
+8 4 2

Unscramble these four Jumbles,

No sunday Calls

Auto &amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992-5682
4-JO·tfc

+H

• A K J 10 B

one Iotter to each square, to form

PH. 949-2801

''mile off Rt. 7 by·pass ,
on St. Rt. 124 toward
Rulland.

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

Pomeroy Home and Auto

Pomeroy . Large lots.Call

'

SILVER DOllARS

Garage

'B. A. BEAUTY
SALON

Bernard

2 ~ 11

992-7479.

'

FOR

Roger Hysell

SOUTH

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

PAYING
~.00 AND UP

992·3795

• ·10953 •

.'
BORN LOSER ·.

992·

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

Mobile Homes
for Rent
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route J3, north of

Pomeroy, Oh.

+Q 963

Opening lead:+ J

i

2·25·lmo.

Shepherd type. Adult
Shepherd type. Humane
Society, 992·6260.

Rentals

One

· tH&amp; &amp;OTTOM
OF THI!
cRstt&lt;l

G

H&amp;R BLOCK OFFICE LOCATION.

2 straight leg Beagles, 1

building site. Phone 698-

furnished,

'OOL OFF,PODNIR! V'!!ROU~HT IT ON VOUR~ELF!
.•. :~
&amp;UT HOW
DO I TRAIL
'EM FROM HERE
OfoJ •• WITH MY
.~t&lt;"'9HL1GHT AT

1·18· (pd .)

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

Retriever, giant schnouser,

6306.

bedroom

C'MON, CLAUPIAl
NOw'&amp; OIJII: CHANCE
T'i51VE Hill\ THE': SLIP
FOR GOO!ll

"Don't cuss-Call us"

Tri-County
Bookkeeping
Service

fllcilities.

Donations

Phone 992·2390
Reasonable Rates

~----------~~'

+JJo

+A 10 3
4

Pass

Free Estimates
388-9759
2 ~ 1Hfc

•s

Pass
Pass

Mlcldl-rt, 0 .
Automotive Rep.~lr
Open 9-41 Mon. lhru Set.
Additional Hours
By Appointment

CALL 992-7544

EAST

+9874
'QI 3

+KJ 7 2

RAILROAD
STREET
GARAGE

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

Pomeroy,O,

Puppies, puppies, puppies,

quick trailer setup or Ideal

Two

+AK75

WEST

mo.

2-2~·1

GEORGE'S
ROOFING
'

ment.

all sizes, all shapes, also
Chesapeake
Bay

(IM .

·---------------------DaNNINGOIII.DS AGENCY INC.

S6
Pets for Sale
HOOF HOLLOW, EngliSh

HUMANE
SOCIETY
Adopt a homeleSs pet
Healthy, shots. wormed

Lots &amp; Acreage

this one If you choose- South Second Ave.

RODNEY DOWNING, BROKER- H0,992·3131
BILL CHIJ-DS, BRANCH MGR.-HO. 992·2449

,,PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.

Also AKC
registered
Dobermans. 614 · «6~ 7795.

full

Approximtely 4 acres near
Meigs Mines. Ready for

POMEROY - On Lincoln HIS. - Two bedroom and

CALL 992-2342

10 Percent Off on all items
d urlng March .

I ndoor ·outdoor

iust one block from heart of town . S25,000.

MIDDLEPORT - Large double corner lot on
Locust St., three bedroom , 2 bath, garage &amp;
workshop. $25,000.
RUTLAND - Older home needs some repairs on
Salem Street. Nice corner lot. $9900.00.
BUILDING OR TRAILER LOT - Hysell Run Road
- 5 acres. S7 ,000,
SYRACUSE - Old house on a nice lot, $11,600.
LOT IN MIDDLEPORT - We will build a house on

Veterans

Gift Shop !Syracuse)

HILLCREST KENNELS.
Boarding, all breeds. Clean

Rt. 7 or 33. «6~ 2359 after 6.
house,

"I Made it Myself"
.... Crafts arefunl
L------2·1B·1 mo.

Housing &amp;
Admin. Loans.

POODLE GROOMING.
Judy Taylor . 6U·367·7220 .

available. Located approx .
7 miles from Pomeroy off

story

.L&lt;t41.u

~~t/«&lt;e46f

pd .

RISING STAR Kennel.
Boarding. Cali367-0292.

MIDDLEPORT - Three bedroom, ! 1/2 bath, nice lot
beth, full ba'sement, gas furnace, storm windows &amp;
doors. Owner will help finance if you need it. 517,.500.

Federal

boots. Children's $15.50.
Adults $29.00.

47

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

614 ·985 ~ 3961.

bdr .• bath 112

pletely

~

REAL ESTATE
FINANCING

e arller for purchases. John

Home has 11

$35,000.
BUILDING LOT- Cor ~
ner lot in Pomeroy In
good residential area .
Out of flood.
RESTFUL- Quiet set·
tlng with a lot of tres on
2112 acres. Like new In·
side, bath, utility, nat.

2 · 2B ~ 1 mo ~

' Pawn

-

,.Near Rock Springs in

Restricted

Inc.

t84 .

2

bedroom
1971 Cameron, i4x65, 2
bedr.
1971 Fleetwood, 14x65 3

35

GOOD BUY - - 4 to 5
bedrooms, formal din ~
lng, equipped kit ., base·
ment, 2 car garage, 2

kitchen. nat. gas

Sa les,

3·J.BO

• 972

•New homes extensive remodeling
*Electrical work
*Masonry work
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992·7583

-Now
urrylng
chocolate wrappers and
molds for candy making
-Full line of Kraft supplies
-Special ·rates tor
organi1ations

MONDAY , MARCH 3, 191.

leads a spade toward his jack
East ducks and South leads a
second spade to dummy 's
queen and East's ace . Eas1
returns a low trump ."
Oswald " At first glance it
looks as if South can alford to
finesse his hearts jack ~ If 1t
works he can try a diamond
finesse and wind up making
all the tricks if that works
also."
Alan : "U nfortunate ly , the
heart finesse loses. And if
West leads a second trump;
the hand will collapse because
West will get in with the dtamond ki~g and lead a third
trump, '·whereupon South will

+KQ 62

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

macr•me classes.

EVERY
SATURDAY NIGHT
I :OOTII11 :30
"Disco Lighting''
Admission $2.00 Single
S3.00 Couple
Sponsored by Music
Unlimited. Chaperones
will be present. No
alcoholic beverages parmitred. For further Info ., cal.l992-6058.

Apples, Rome Beauty at
$4.00 per bushel . Exc. for
p ies, sauce and butter. Fit·
zpatrick Orchard, State
Route
6B9 .
Phone
Wilkesville 669 ~ 3785 .

Dennis Auit,' 1639 Lincoln
Hts., Pomeroy, Oh. 45769.

l IN 1 -

basement

E. M11in St. Pomeroy, 0 .

992·5724.

Rutland .

34 Business Buildings

story

frame, 7 rooms, full
basement,

Estate, 212 5th St ., Pt .
Pleasant, WV . Phone 675 ~
3030, 675·3431 or 675·4232.

bedroom, total electric
room, 2 baths and lh

608E . ~~~......
IY\AIN
POMEJlOV,O . .
992·1159
NEW LISTING - Love·
ly 2 story home on good

2 acres {le vel) land, all
brick 3 bedroom , 2 baThs,
family , dining and living
room, large kitchen with
fireplace, 2 car garage .
Beautiful property . Chain
link fence . Lyons Addition ,
Mason, WV . Priced under
the appraised value. Will
consider trade . Call or see:
Jake Somerville, Real

poehes, outbuilding and

Beautiful

bedroom home. 2 baths,

~

Long

1'/2 baths,
nat. gas furnace, 5 or 6
bedrooms, basement, 2

on. No job too small. Call
949·2379 .

privilege of home . Car fur nished . Must be sober. Man
works away . 992-3519.

949·2B36 after 5 and
weekends . Larry Wolfe.

NOW HOLDING
TOLE I DECORATIVE
PAl NTI NG CLASSES
-we will be hovlng

DANCE
At The Orchid Room

I N STOCI&lt;. for immediate
deli'Very : various sizes of
pool kits. Oo· it·yourself Or

Rd ~

level lot.

ceiling tile. Additions built

girl 6 years old. All the

central air, fully carpeted,

11 ROOMS -

LISTING

Chester.

r ~ TEEN DISCO

own the best

Winpower . Ca ll513 ~
788·2589.

- ~ buy

located on 61J:~ acres near
Racine on Racine-Bashan

close to school. Call

business rooms on large

PHONE 742-2003'

NORTH

power

Large lot out of high wafer,

t'hone
I · ( 614 )·992·3325

collect.

Wanted : Live in house
keeper to care for small

alternators -

Modern 3 bedroom home,
basement with fireplace,

on

Real Estate

FINANC ING VA ~ FHA LO~
ANS. LOW OR NO DOWN
PAYMENT . PURCHASE
OR
REFINANCE ~
IRELAND MORTGAGE,
77 E . STATE, ATHENS .

answer, call main office

paneling and

EMERGENCY

Television
·Viewine:

•

Foolish finessing fiasco

689 .

992~

basement, buildings, barn,
some timber, all mineral
rights. $77,000. 992 ~ 7559 .

HOBSTETTER

SR

Iet us Install for you. D.

Financial

614 ~ 592 ~ 3051.

Orchard,

•

5566 .

Ph

call Planned Parenthood of
Southeast Ohio, 992·5912,
B : 30 ~ 3:30 weekdays. If no

Remod~llng,

to apprecite . Phone

Fitzpatrick

BRIDGE

"

Business Services

APPLES - ROME beauty
apples at S.. per bu . Best for
apple butter . Call 669 ~ 37B5,

House for sale, Pomeroy : 6
rooms, l'h baths, paneled,
carpeted, lots of conveniences . Reasonable. See

•

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

For Sale

Homes for Sale

36 acres farm with 9 room

further Information, please·

593~~ 3375,

31

3 Bedroom, 1 story house

12 Situations Wanted

Free to gOOd home 2
obedient pups, one black ,
one blonde . 3 months old .

for details . I RELANO
MORTGAGE CO ~, 77 E .
State St., Athens . 592 ~ 3051 .

day through Frid8y, 9 ~ 5.

one blonde . 3 months old.

Call

VENTIONAL ~ 5 Pet . down .
VA
no down payment .
FHA ~ low down payment.
245 graduated
FHA
payment program. FHA

Call Mr . Zidian at Pomeroy
Health Care Center, Mon -

Rutland . Proceeds donated

Giveaway

avai table. New homes, old
homes and refinancing
your present home . CON ·

265 subsidy program . Call

to Boy Scout Troop 249 .
4

22
Money to Loan
Mortgage ·
money

DICKTRACY

:\lunda:. , Marc·h 3

'

PURN~RI u . ·i
I

'

'

....""!.,:"'!

QVW

I WONDER IF I
COULl:' CHANGE HIM .•.

TJ

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QVFQ

VFHW
S0 T Q W

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QV W,I

VFHW

QV F Q

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EO)\WJ

AT W· A

LWP

FYQWB
GPW

ATWA

J Q.B W

MBWFQ

B W P F B A'

"'".eraar• ..,,~1"P-i""'"''

WI!; 'A LL UVI!: · wrm THE oa.
BEING HAPPY;OUR UVES' ARE ALL DIFFERENT AND' YET THE SAME.-ANNE FRANK
.

JECTIVE

pF

'

7:w-Cross.Wits 3; Tic Tac Dough
B; Newlywed Game 6, 13;
MacNelt . Lehrer Report 33;
News 10; Love, American Style
iS ; Sanford &amp; Son 17; Flash

Gordon 20 .
7:30- That Nash vil le Mus ic 3;
Muppet Show 6; Joker's Wild 8;
Family Feud iO, 13; Nashville on
the Road 15; All In The Family
17; MacNeii ~ Lehrer Report 20;
Di ck Cavett 33~
B:llO-Little House on the Prairie
3, 15; That's Incredible! 6; ·
WKRP In Cincinnati B,10; Billy
Graham Crusade 13,15: National · ~ .
Geographic 33; Movie "The
Desert Fox" 17; Dick Cavett 20.
9:00-Movle "Let's Do It Again"
3, 15; Family 6, 13; Mash 8, 10;
American Short Story 20;
Wllerness Alive 33; 9:30-House •
Calls B, 10.
10:1l0-Stone 6, 13; Lou Grant 8, 10;
Big Battles 17.
10:05-AmerlcM Short STory 33;
10 :30- News 20.
ll :llO-News 3,6,B.10,i3, 15; Last of
the Wild 17; Flash Gordon 20.
11 :05-Four Freshmen In Concert
33.
11 : 30-Tonight 3, 15 ; ABC News
Special 6, 13; Harry 0 8; Movie
"Usa &amp; the Devil" 10: Movie
"Across the Pacific" 17; Dick
Cavett 20.
11 :45-Barney Miller 6,13; 12 :20Pollce Story 13; 12 :40-McCioud
B; News 15; 1: 30-News 13,17.
1 :35-Movle " Fort Massacre" 17;
3:15-Untouchables i7; 4:15Energy : Wha: Matters Most?
Special 17. ~
TUESDAY,MARCH4, 1980
5:45-Farm Report i3; 5:50-PTL
Club 13.
6:1l0-700 Club 6,B; PTL Club 15;
6: 15-World at Large 17.
6: 30-Concerns &amp; Comments 10;
News 17: 6:45-Mornlng Report
3; A.M. Weather 33; 6:50-Good
Morning West Virginia 13; 6 : 55-· :·
News 13.
7:1l0-Today 3, 15; Good Morning
America 6, 13; Tuesday Morning
B; Batman 10; WTBS Funhouse
i7.
7:30-Famlly Aflair tO; 7:55---Chuck
White Reports 10.
B:OO-Capf. Kangaroo 8,10: Lucy
Show 17; Sesame Sf. 33.
B:JO-Romper Room 17; 9 : ~Bob
Braun J; Big Valley 6; Beverly
Hillbillies 8; Jeffersons 10; Phil
Donahue 13, 15; Family Affair 17.
9:30-Bob Newhart 8; One Day At A
Time 10; Green Acres 17.
10:00-Card Sharks 3,15; Edge of
Night 6; Jeffersons B; Joker's ' :
Wild 10; Morning Mogazlne 13;
Movie "Bird of Paradise" 17.
10 :30-Hollywood Squares 3, 15;
$20,000 Pyramid 13; Whew B, 10;
Andy Griffith 6; 10:55-CBS
News 8: House Call 10.
.
11 :llO-High Rollers J, 15; Laverne&amp; . ·
Shirley 6,13; Price Is Right 8,10 ~ " ·
it :30.- Wh'eel of Fortune 3, 15;
Sesame Sf. 20; 11 :55-News 11.
12 :00-Newscenter
3;
News
6,8, 10, 13; Health Field 15; Love,
American Sfyle 17.
12:30-Ryan's Hope 6,13; Search for
Tomorrow B, 10; Password Plus
15; Movie "Tea for Two" 17;
E lee. Co. 20,33.
1:1l0-Daysof0ur Uves3,15; All My
Children 6, 13; Young &amp; the
Restless 8, 10.
2:1l0-Doctors 3, 15; One Life to Live
6, 13; As The World Turns 8, 10;
2:25-News 17.
•
2:30- Another
World
3, 15;
Glggtesnort Hotel 11.
3:00-General
Hospital
6, 13;
Guiding Light B, 10; I Love Lucy
17: American Short Story 20.
3:30-FIIntstones 17; Over Easy 33.
4:00-Speclal Treat 3, 15; CBS
Library 8, 10; Merv Gr1ffln 6;
Sesame St. 20,33; Real McCoys
13; Spectreman 17.
4:30-Tom &amp; Jerry 13; Gilligan's Is. · :
17.
5:1l0-Carol Burnett 3; Sanford &amp; '
Son 8; Mary Tyler Moore 10;
Merv Griffin 15; My Three Sons
17; Mister Rogers 20,33.
5:30-Mash 3; News 6; Play the
Percentages B; Elec. Co. 20; ·
Mash 10; Happy Days Again 13; I ·
Dream of Jeannie 11; Doctor
Who 33.
:
6:1l0-News 3,8, 10, 13, 15; ABC New!
6; Carol Burnett 17; 3·2·1 Contact
20,33.
6:30-NBC News 3, 15; CBS News
8, 10; Carol Burnett 6; Bob
Newhart 17; Over Easy 20; Wild .
Wild World of Animals 33.
7:00-Cross-Wtts 3; Tic Toe Dough : :
B; Newlywed Game 6, 13;
MacNett . Lehrer Report 33;
News 10; Love, American Style '
i5; S.nford &amp; Son 17; Flash
Gordon 20.
7:30-Hollywood Squares 3; Baxters
6; Joker's Wild 8; Hollywood · ·
Squores 10: Sha Na Na 13: TV · '
Honor Society 1!; All In The : .
Family ]7; MacNeil · Lehrer .
Report 20; Dick Cavett 33.
B: 00-Misadventures of Sheriff Lobo
3: Happy Days 6; White Shadow
8, 10; Billy Groham Crusade
13, 15; Nova 20,33; Movie "The
Black 'Rose" 17,
8:30-Layerne &amp; Shirley 6; 9 :1l0- ..
Big Show 3,15; Three's Company •
6,13; 1 Movl.e "Bogie" 8,10; : ·
~ystery 20,33. '
·.
. .
9:~Taxl 6, 13; 10 :1l0-Hart to Hart .
6, 13; 10 : l~lty Nolebook 33.
10:30-Fighl Against Slavery 17;
News 20; 10: 40-Dove Allen at
Large 33.
~
: ;
11 :llO-News 3,6,8, 10, 13, 15; 11 :CISMonty Python's Flying Circus .
33; u : 10-F lash Gordon 2o.
11 : 30-Prlmary Coverege
3,6,1,13, lSI Mov1e "TI\e Nakld
Prey" 10: p.ovle "Chain
Lightning" 17; ABC Captioned
New' 33.
11 :45-0ick Cavett 20; Movie "Tht
lnltlat.lon of Saroh" 6,13; Bar.
noby Jonil ·a.
.
1:1o-Movle "Snow Job" a; ! :»Tomorrow 3; News 15,17.
1:3S-Movle "South S... Woman:•
17; 2: 10-NeWS·13.
3 : ~0-Movle "Target Zero" 11:
5:40-Love, ·Amerlcon Style 17. l

.

)

I

�.

.&amp;-The Daily Sentinel, M,lddleport-POineroy, 0 ., Monday, March3,1~

8-The Daily Sentinel, 1\Jiddleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, March 3, 1980

Your Best Buys Are Found in the Sentinel Classifieds
More classifieds
on Page Six
3 Announcements
GUN SHOOT EVERY
SUNDAY 1 PM . FACTORY
CHOKE ONLY . RACINE
GUN CLUB.
SHOOT .

GUN

Racine

Volunteer Fire
Dept. ·
Every Saturday. 6:30p.m.
At their building i n Bashan.
Factory choke guns only .

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

Corn

Hollow Gun

Club,

II
Help Wanted
GET VALUABLE training
as a young business person
and earn good money plus
some great gifts as a Sen ·
tinel route carr ier . Phone
us right away and get on
the eligibility list at 992·

2i56 or 992 ~ 2i57 .
RN OR LPN, full time. J ·
11 :30 and 11 to 7:30. Part
time RN or LPN, 11 to 7:30.

Free

to

good

home

2

obedient pups, one black,
742 ~ 2692 .

Call/42 ~ 2692.

6

Lost and Found

Bar Help Needed. Call 992 ~
3860 between B:30 and iO : 30
mornings.

$$$Substan1ial part 1ime in·
come taking short phone
messages at home. Call

1615 ) 779 ~ 3235 Ext. 453 .

WANTED : housecleaning
position, 1 or 2 days per
week,
reliable,
har dworking,
clean
and
honest , can supply referen ces to charader. Please
call 8.43·4951 anytime. Have
dependable transportation .

LOST, 2 manila folders
with papers in plain brown
sack in Pom e roy on
January 17. Reward , Ca l l
992 ~ 6343 .

Found : Male beagle dog.

Call949 ~ 2225 .

8

Will care for elderly in our
home, trained and e)( ·

perienced . 992· 7314.
Wi ll care tor children in my
home in Tuppers Plains

area . 614 ~ 667 ~ 3723.
13
Insurance
AUTOMOBILE
SURANCE been

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

BRADFORD, Aucti()neer,
Complete Service. Phone
9~9 · 2487 or 949·2000. racine,
Ohio, Crill Bradford .
Employment
Services
Help Wanted
Hourly RN, parttime for
family planning clinics.
Must be registered in Ohio,
have
reliable
tran ·
sportation. Orientation will

be provided. Equal op~
portunity employer. For

IN ~
can~

celled?
Lost
your
operator's license? Phone
992 ~ 2143 .

REALTY
NEW

3

living room, dining
room, famlly room, extra nice kitchen with
micro-wave oven. Call
for
more deta l is .

$58,000.00 .
MIDDLEPORT -

Ex ~

ecutive sytle home .
Must see inside to ap-

preciate. Almost totally
remodeled within the
past2 yrs. 5 bedrooms, 2
baths and much, much
more. Call today!
E)(TRA NICE J

street

and ,

with carpeting
complimentary

paneling, 3-4

bdrms.,

spacious living

room,

built· ln kitchen and
separate dining room,
l'h baths, full base~
menf, paved drive and

parking, storage bldg .
Priced to sell SJS,OOO.oo.
NEW LISTING 2
story, handyman ' s
delight, 5 rooms, 1112
baths, lots of storage,
WHIP INFLATION
WITH YOUR OWN
RENTAL
UNIT .
$10,000.00.
ftACINE Recently
remodeled

walk

to

·everything, $25,000.00.
WOODLAND
HOMESITE$ - Appx.
25 acres, some lots
surveyed, water and
elec .
available.

EASTERN DISTRICT
$27,500.00.
BEAUTIFUL - 2 story,
river view, l'h baths,
central air, full base ~
ment, excellent condi -

tion, carpeting · etc .
READY TO MOVE IN ~
T0$.40,000.00.
GREAT Location,
style and condition,
rooms to spare, up to ~
bdrms, l'h baths, faml ~

tv

12x60 Hillcrest, 2 bedroom .
Furnished or unfurnished.
992 · 6140 ~

DISCOUNT
PRICES
Hotpoint and
General Electrif.
Appliance
Sales &amp; Service

POMEROY
LANDMARK
Jack w. Carsey,
Mgr.
Phone 992· 2181

room, rec. room, cen·

tral heat &amp; olr. MAKE
OFFER 159,800.00.
THE FARM- you hove
been walling for, 8~
beautiful laying acres,
' good large barn, 2
ponds, old house to
remodel, goad large
garage PLUS a
beautiful 3 bdrm. ranch
with F.P., full base·
m•nt, many other
features In excellent
condition. STEAL AT
$76,:125.00.
THI!RE ARE 41 WAYS
TO ~INANCE YOUR
NI!W HOME, WE CAN
H.LP YOU. LOCALLY
OWNI!D AND FULL ·\
TIMIL. ,
' REALTOR
Henry I!. Chland, Jr.
m-6191
ASSOCIAtES
Dottle &amp; 110181' Turner
742-2414
J•n TrutHII NS-2660
~ULI,. TIME
OP'~ICE PHONE

m-mt

Bumgardner

St.,

742 ~

2975 ~

32
1973

Mobile Homes
for Sale
Fairpoint,

14x65

dbl . garage. $17,.500.
80 ACRES - Nice lay·
ing farm land or for sub·
divison. AbOUt 112 fenc·

ed, good 10 room farm
house with bath and lots
of farm bldos. Minerals.
NICE HOME 3
bedrooms, bath, por ~
ches, basement, birch
fur ~

nace and copper plumb·
ing.

BUILDING

LOT

area,

utilities &amp; trees.

home . Kitchen, dining
burner and workshop.

rooms, furnace, 2 rentals, 4th available, 2 car
garage and over 1 acre
of sandy land . Good buy

Close to Meigs High.
Good price $.12,000.00.
INCOME PROPERTY

at S25,000.oo.
6 RENTALS All
under one roof. Brick

-

with

wood

2 homes, both extra

nice.

Situated on

acres

across

10

Broker, golf and
g uns, used silver 1964 or

Teaford,

from

Legion In Rutland .
POMEROY Lovely "'.!
bedroom home with
panoramic

'Wiew

of

river. Only $40,000.00.
LIST WITH US. We
have buyers and !Inane·
ii&gt;g available.
' Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.
Phone 742·2003
Velma
Ninclnsky,
Assoc.
Phone 742·3092
Georges. HobsteHer Jr.
Broker 992-5739

construction.

Only

gas furnace &amp; city
water.
FREE 80 CALENDARS.

FOR SELLING YOUR
PROPERTY CALL
992·3325 or 992·3876

Housing
Headquarters

REAL ESTATE

1971 Shakespear. 14x65 2
bedroom
1965 Yanor 12x52. 2 bedr .
1968 Fleetwood 12x63, 2
Bdr.
B &amp; S MOBILE HOME
SALES. PT. PLEASANT,
wv. 304 ~ 675 · 4424 .

s&amp;E

1971 12x65 Trailer, com-

furnished,

A.C .,

very good condition. On a

lot that can be rented.
Ready to move into. $6500

firm . 992·5304 .
33 Farms for Sale
COUNTRY HOME with I
stocked pond for swimming
or fishing , 9 rooms, bath,
carpeted.· 3 to 17 ' acre~

INSURANCE
SERVING SOU'niEAsTERN.OHIO SINCE 1868
ARE YOU PAYING tOO MUCH? DO
YOU HAVE THE COVERAGE?

FOR ALL YOUR INSURANCE NEEDS
CAll US.

992-2342 .
·DaNNIN&amp;CHiuls AGENcY; INC.
· MIDDL£PORT, OHIO'

.

Hours9·1 M, w., F.
Other times by appoint-

and Western . Saddles and
harness .
Horses
and
ponies. Ruth Reeves. 614Barding and
6 9B ·3290.
Riding Lessons and Horse
Care products . Western

107 Sycamore CRear

requir,d.

6260.

p.m .

noon ~ /

poodle,

618 E. Main

Saint

HAIR" STYUNG
Menor Women
by Diann Jewell
at

41 Houses for Rent
2 Bedroom house for rent,
unfurnished, deposit req.

61 Farm Equipment
Several Used chain saws

o.

992·3090.

992·20'14.

42

62
wanted to Buy
CHIP WOOD. Poles max
diameter 10" on largest
end. $12 p ~ er ton. Bundled
slab. S10 per ton. Delivered
to Ohio Pallet Co., Rt. 2,
Pomeroy 992·2689.

trailer .

44

Apartment
for Rent
3 AND 4 RM furnished ap·
Is. Phone 992 ~ ~ .

bedroom
all

apt.,

un ~

electric .

One bedroom apt., un·
furnished, all electric.
Pomeroy Home and Auto.
992 · 209~ .

45 Furnished Rooms.
2 Sleeping rooms, private
entrance. Off the street
parking, refrigerator and
television . Call alter 4week
days, 992· 7791.

Merchandise
51 Househgld Goods
16 cu.
fl .
Phllco
Refrigerator, 2 dr. com
blnation, will gofost at $12!
at Pomeroy Landmark . ~
Antiques

ATTENTION:
PORTANT TO YOU) Wit I
pay cash or certified check
for il/'lllques and collec.
tibias or entire estates
Nothing too large, Also
guns, pocket watches and•
coin collections. Call 614
767·3167 or 557·:UII.
ATTENl;ION !
CIM .
PORTANT TO YOU) w·ll I
pay cosh or cfrttfled check
for antiques and colttc.
tlbles or , entire estotes
Nothing too large. Also
g.uns, pocket watc~ and'
coin collections. Call 614 I
761-3167 or 551-3411.

.

sand,

gravel;.

'

Calcium

chloride, fertilizer, d"ii
foocl, and all fypes of Jllll
Excelsior Soil worka, Inc.
E .' Mnln St., Pomeroy, 992
Je91. .

'

I

OLD FURNITURE, Ice
boxes, brass beds, Iron
beds,. desks, etc ., complete
hoUseholds. · Write M.D.
Miller: At: 4, Ppmeroy or
call 992·7160.
, ."'ransport,tlon •
Autos for Sale
.711977 Dodge
Aspen, AM·FM ,

3rd St. in
Syrcuse, Oh.
Ph. 992·3752
or 992-3743
~ · 1B ~ 1

mo.

•• 1

2-11~1

rrn
tMOECEBj
J r

1973 Pontiac Ctallna. 992·
2201.

mo.

1974 MGB GT Hardtop,
mint cond., a.c., low
mileage, good gas mileage.
Call992·6259.

3-2·1 mo.

RACINE,O.
992·6125 or
992·7314
1 ~ 2e ~

1978 Ford
Bronco,
customized, p.b., p.s,,
cruise control. 992··3310.

GASOUNE ALLEY

helpinq me
dean up

I have lots
of time!

'· .

44 Rigorous

1 Civil War

45 D.C. Army

vets org.

hospital

4 Style
of furniture
BPlot
11 Mulcan

41 Greek letter
DOWN

1 Fathom
2 Reviae
3 Distribute
again,
· 1111 cards

money

Joel's

,u Laminated
13 One kind
of spirit

1 mo.

AND AFTER HE WENT 10
SLEEP, I I=OUND A
WOMAN'&amp; NAME
AND PHONE
NUMBER IN
Hl5 POCKET !

18 Like a fuBsy

4 Copy
5 Insouciant
1 Stage

14 Hockey
luminary
15 After tues
17 Mrs. WW!am
McKinley
18 Gennan
conjunction

81

outward

3% "The 20 Pub
Chue"
game Item
33 SprighUy
Z! Girl's name
31 Convened
Z5 Peace symbol
anew

remark
7 Tooth
8 Tonto's
bol"le
9 Instrument
for lUx

1t Lagganl
Z1 Head: Fr.

Z7 Pater NOller,
for

one

Belderbeclle Zl Dream up

a PlaywrighJ

31 Growing

customer
11 Taunt

40 Nowiahed
U An ex
Rooney

r--t~lr"'1n

O'Fiaberty
Z4Related

ZISnare
!8Walk
heavlly
30 Pboer;Uclan
port

3! Idle chatter

r.+-+-

35Have

power to
31Census
question
37Nlght bef~n

38HlDdu tiUe

BARNEY

WHAT.'5 FER
SI,IPPER,
MAW?
. '

311Frencb

St&lt;INNYO~

SPAGHETTI

chanteuse

Ulnnln
Ankara
~"What

,,"

.J,..

Ia new"!~•
DAiLY I"'DVD•'I'I'\,(\JT(\T'r;f, - ·Here's bow to rork It:

'

AXYDLBAAXR

11 LONGFELLOW
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A 11
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Slnllt !etten, .
apostrophes, the lenfllh and formaUon of the wordo are all
hints. E-.ch day the code letters are dlll'erent.

caYnOQUOT£8

'I
I

$2200. ·

radio, A. C., $2600,. 1974 ~- --==:-;;::::::::-Chevrolet MOnte cartct, i 76
•'Auto Parts
AM· FM radio, &amp;·track tope.
,Cell alter 5 p.m., ~47·2813.
&amp; Accessories
Five 1975 camaro whNis
1973 vea.l station ~ogon
and hub . c~&lt;..!'!.ew . con·. ·
dltion.,cau ...~.
$300. 992·2503.
·

(Answers tomorrow)
INKED HI:RI:BY GI:NTAY
Answer: What the Art student drew when a classmate
got fresh-THI: LINE

Jumbles: FILMY

ACROSS

1

1971 'Ford .Bronco, A.c.,
AM·FM stereo, P.S., P.B ,;
4 MW tires. Call 992·6130,
'
CJ·S Jeep,
Phone 949-2545.

I

t I I I I I I I XJ

by THOMAS JOSEPH

Custom made, AM·I'M a·:
track,' CB." 19,000 milts, 992·
2656.5 '
\ :·.
i

197~

Now arrange the circled letters to

61NtTM'6td'

-----........,..1978 Ford 4x4 i" l50.'

~

WERE.

Jumble 11oo11. No. 13,.contalnlng 110puzzte-.lta¥tii11He rorl1.75poetpald
tram Jumble, o1o thll newsp1per, BaJC M, NcH w ~ ad, N.J. 07141.1noructe your
ume, lddr..., zip code end makt checllt Plrtblt to Newtplplrbooka.

V. C. YOUNG Ill

CALL 992-3238
ASK FOR DAVE

WHA'T D~UL.A' S

form the surprise answer, as suogoaled by tho above cartoon.

Print answer here:

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

Been in Business
For 5 Years

IJ

ALLEYOOP

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING

.~emodeling
"FREE ESnMATES"

1964 Pontiac Tempest, 4
or., V·6, auto., shift. Run·
nlng good . Call 985·3366. Or
stpat37641 Texas Road.

1

QUIDIL

Fraa Estimates
Reasonable Prices
Call Howard
949·2862
1·22-lfc

Gutters and

~THAT SCRAMIILED WORD GAME
by Henri Arnold and Bob Lee

I

SITOC

tJ I I I

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

We Do Roofing.

(For a copy of JACOBY
MODERN, send $1 to: "Win at
Bridge, " care of this newspaper, P.O. Box 489, Radio City
Station. New York, N~ Y.
10019.)

Q:J_,__j
1

Thank~ for

1977 Capri , ~ cyl., A.C., AM·
FM 4 speed, Excellent con·
dillon. 992·6069, $3500 firm .

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)

ID1l

1l'llll~

H. L WHITESEL
ROOFING

Auto Sales

Pass

~ ~ ~~~

1'/HAT 6 HAPPENING?!
'IOU 1'1~ SUPPOSeD
10 GEe THAT ALI"IA1
vt:IR6UCKS CA Ml: TO
...___.,_., I() HARM!

SEEING ONE
flAHD-SIMI:I.'S
MeN AIM AT
ANNie, "DAot7Y"
THROW!i HIM·
SeLF IN FRQNT
OF HER, AND··

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992·2772

8 Ill 5 Mon. tllru Fri.
Rt.l, Racine, SR 124
949·2422
1·30·pd.

-'~

Paddin,ll &amp; Carpet . l
~witti Purcnas•

fret
•• •

;
•

0!·_,_..!!'_;·~·"•. 11 ~
"
a oi ott I;
-~="6.
L;,..~""!!1t•!.,!
. ~!!..:;::~;.!
· ~ .~ ··-· Jl :
I

~~~~-:TL:&amp;

,,
&gt; '

EGHO
6LEtJ

Aluminum Siding
elnsulatiotl
eSIWm Doors
• Storm Windows
•Replacement
Windows
Free Estimate

PARTS
FDREIGN CAR
REPAIR

Pass

4•

.'

84
Electrical
Home
&amp;
Refridgeration
Improvements
Now acceplng logs ot our
SEWING
MACHINE
S
&amp;
G Carpet Cleaning.
log yard 7:30·3:30 week· ,
Repairs,
service, all
Steam
cleaned
.
Free
days. High prices tor Vood 7~2__T~r~u~c&lt;!:k~s~f_,o,_r"'S"'a,le~
992 · 22B~.
The
estimate.
Renonable • makes.
quality logs with a limited
Fabric
Shop,
Pomeroy.
rates.
Scotchguard.
992·
amount of low grade
1976 Ford F-100 pickup with
Authorized Singer Sales
Payment upon delivery matching ·topper. 6 cylln· 6309 or 742-2211.
and Service. w .e sharpen ,
and sealing. Blaney Hor- der stondard. 48,000 miles,
Scissors.
dwoods, Box 66, VIncent, new tires, excellent con· WALL PAPERING and
OH 4578~. 614·678·2960,
dillon. S2.500 firm. Phone painting. 7~2 ~ 2328 .
ELWOOD
BOWERS
992·7285 after 4 p.m .
I
REPAIR . Sweepers,
GOLD AND SILVER
PIANO TUNING. Lone
toaste•,
Irons,
all small
19i&amp; Chevy Pickup, 4x4, 350 Daniels. New phone numCOINS OF THE WORLD
appliances. Lawn mower. ,
engine,
automatic,
P.S.,
RINGS,
JEWELRY,
ber, 7~2-2951. Servtcl! to
Next to State Highway ,
P,B., AM· FM radio, caf&gt; schools ond home sln~e
STERLING SILVER AND
Garaoe
on Route 1, 91.5· ·
tights, ~ 6 , ft.
bed with , 1965.
MISC. ITEMS. •PAYING
3825.
fiberglass
topper
and
RECORD
HIGH,
HIGHEST UP·TO·DATE sliding windOWS. Reese hit·
CARPENTER WORK PRICES. CONTACT EO ch, Big II res. Rust proofed. · complete
remodeling by AI
25,000
miles,
can
be
seen
at
BURKETT
BARBER
85 General Hauling
Tromm, 742·2328. Releren·
SHOP, MIDOLEPORT, Ashlanil Bulk Plant' at ces.
·
Minersville, 742·2225, 742· .
, WILL HAUL limestone and .
OHIO, OR CALL 992·3476.
2125or992·5111 .
• gravel. AIIO, lime hauling
Will do oddS and endl, - anclspreadlng, Leo Morris '
Wanted to buy : a newer
paneling, . floor tile, and
Trucking. Phone 742·2.CSS. ·
'. ----:,.
car, to take over payments.
cetnna
'llle.
can
Fred
,
742-3080.
73
Vans &amp; 4 W.O.
i Miller, 992·6338.
I WILl HAUL WATER. 992·
1978
Ford
F-150
Custom
·
5858 •
OLD FURNITURE, Ice 4x4, excellent condition.
boxes, brass beds, Iron l.lft kits, AM·FM &amp;·track,
beds, desks, etc., complete · tots of extras, 21,000 miles ..
households. Write M.D. Take
·over payments. See •
Miller. Rt. 4, Pomeroy or Greg Grover or coli 992·
call 992·7760.
,
5620.

wanted to Rent
Trailer space, smoll house
cir apartment. Preferably
In Sugar Run area. 992
3530.

54 Misc. Merchanlse
COAL,
.L I'MESTONE

lvn1

"FREE
ESTIMATES"

trick and be down one."
Oswald: "II South refuses
the trump finesse, nothing can
hurt him as long as spades
break 4-3. He goes to dummy
with a club. discards a club on
the good spade and loses the
diamond finesse ~ But there is
no way now lor the defense to
keep him from ruffing the six
of diamonds with one of
dummy's trumps."

Oswald: "It doesn't take
long- to learn about finessing .
It takes years to learn about
not finessing ."
Alan: "South wins the club
lead in dummy and promptly

ANNIE

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSUlATION
Vinyl &amp;

REPAIR

+

I

have to lose an extra diamond

lour ordinary words.

2-2B·1 mo.

BIU!S &gt;AUTO

UPHOLSTERING

GOLD, SILVER OR
FOREIGN COINS, OR
ANY OTHER GOLD OR
SILVER ITEMS. ALSO,
ANTIQUE FURNITURE
OR DTtlER ANTIQUE
ITEMS. WILL PAY TOP
DOLLAR. CHECK WITH
OSBY (OSSIE) MARTIN
BEFORE
SELLING
PHONE 992·6370. AlSO DO
APPAAISING.

Pomeroy Home and Auto.
992·2094.

53

A&amp;H . -

OLD COl NS, pocket wat·
ches, class rings, wedding
bands, dlomonds. Gold or
silver. Call J. A; Wamsley,
7~2 · 2331 .
Treasure Chest
Coin Shop, Athens, OH. 592
6.462.

REN-TER'S assistance for
Senior Citizens jn Village
Manor apts. Call992 ~ 7787.

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South
West
Nortb East

Saturday's

ANTIQUES ,
FUR
NITURE, glass, china,
anything ~ See or call Ruth
Gosney, antiques, 26 N
2nd, Middleport, OH. 992
3161.

Adults Only 992·3324

mo.

+

AQ6
+8 4 2

Unscramble these four Jumbles,

No sunday Calls

Auto &amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992-5682
4-JO·tfc

+H

• A K J 10 B

one Iotter to each square, to form

PH. 949-2801

''mile off Rt. 7 by·pass ,
on St. Rt. 124 toward
Rulland.

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

Pomeroy Home and Auto

Pomeroy . Large lots.Call

'

SILVER DOllARS

Garage

'B. A. BEAUTY
SALON

Bernard

2 ~ 11

992-7479.

'

FOR

Roger Hysell

SOUTH

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

PAYING
~.00 AND UP

992·3795

• ·10953 •

.'
BORN LOSER ·.

992·

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

Mobile Homes
for Rent
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route J3, north of

Pomeroy, Oh.

+Q 963

Opening lead:+ J

i

2·25·lmo.

Shepherd type. Adult
Shepherd type. Humane
Society, 992·6260.

Rentals

One

· tH&amp; &amp;OTTOM
OF THI!
cRstt&lt;l

G

H&amp;R BLOCK OFFICE LOCATION.

2 straight leg Beagles, 1

building site. Phone 698-

furnished,

'OOL OFF,PODNIR! V'!!ROU~HT IT ON VOUR~ELF!
.•. :~
&amp;UT HOW
DO I TRAIL
'EM FROM HERE
OfoJ •• WITH MY
.~t&lt;"'9HL1GHT AT

1·18· (pd .)

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

Retriever, giant schnouser,

6306.

bedroom

C'MON, CLAUPIAl
NOw'&amp; OIJII: CHANCE
T'i51VE Hill\ THE': SLIP
FOR GOO!ll

"Don't cuss-Call us"

Tri-County
Bookkeeping
Service

fllcilities.

Donations

Phone 992·2390
Reasonable Rates

~----------~~'

+JJo

+A 10 3
4

Pass

Free Estimates
388-9759
2 ~ 1Hfc

•s

Pass
Pass

Mlcldl-rt, 0 .
Automotive Rep.~lr
Open 9-41 Mon. lhru Set.
Additional Hours
By Appointment

CALL 992-7544

EAST

+9874
'QI 3

+KJ 7 2

RAILROAD
STREET
GARAGE

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

Pomeroy,O,

Puppies, puppies, puppies,

quick trailer setup or Ideal

Two

+AK75

WEST

mo.

2-2~·1

GEORGE'S
ROOFING
'

ment.

all sizes, all shapes, also
Chesapeake
Bay

(IM .

·---------------------DaNNINGOIII.DS AGENCY INC.

S6
Pets for Sale
HOOF HOLLOW, EngliSh

HUMANE
SOCIETY
Adopt a homeleSs pet
Healthy, shots. wormed

Lots &amp; Acreage

this one If you choose- South Second Ave.

RODNEY DOWNING, BROKER- H0,992·3131
BILL CHIJ-DS, BRANCH MGR.-HO. 992·2449

,,PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.

Also AKC
registered
Dobermans. 614 · «6~ 7795.

full

Approximtely 4 acres near
Meigs Mines. Ready for

POMEROY - On Lincoln HIS. - Two bedroom and

CALL 992-2342

10 Percent Off on all items
d urlng March .

I ndoor ·outdoor

iust one block from heart of town . S25,000.

MIDDLEPORT - Large double corner lot on
Locust St., three bedroom , 2 bath, garage &amp;
workshop. $25,000.
RUTLAND - Older home needs some repairs on
Salem Street. Nice corner lot. $9900.00.
BUILDING OR TRAILER LOT - Hysell Run Road
- 5 acres. S7 ,000,
SYRACUSE - Old house on a nice lot, $11,600.
LOT IN MIDDLEPORT - We will build a house on

Veterans

Gift Shop !Syracuse)

HILLCREST KENNELS.
Boarding, all breeds. Clean

Rt. 7 or 33. «6~ 2359 after 6.
house,

"I Made it Myself"
.... Crafts arefunl
L------2·1B·1 mo.

Housing &amp;
Admin. Loans.

POODLE GROOMING.
Judy Taylor . 6U·367·7220 .

available. Located approx .
7 miles from Pomeroy off

story

.L&lt;t41.u

~~t/«&lt;e46f

pd .

RISING STAR Kennel.
Boarding. Cali367-0292.

MIDDLEPORT - Three bedroom, ! 1/2 bath, nice lot
beth, full ba'sement, gas furnace, storm windows &amp;
doors. Owner will help finance if you need it. 517,.500.

Federal

boots. Children's $15.50.
Adults $29.00.

47

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

614 ·985 ~ 3961.

bdr .• bath 112

pletely

~

REAL ESTATE
FINANCING

e arller for purchases. John

Home has 11

$35,000.
BUILDING LOT- Cor ~
ner lot in Pomeroy In
good residential area .
Out of flood.
RESTFUL- Quiet set·
tlng with a lot of tres on
2112 acres. Like new In·
side, bath, utility, nat.

2 · 2B ~ 1 mo ~

' Pawn

-

,.Near Rock Springs in

Restricted

Inc.

t84 .

2

bedroom
1971 Cameron, i4x65, 2
bedr.
1971 Fleetwood, 14x65 3

35

GOOD BUY - - 4 to 5
bedrooms, formal din ~
lng, equipped kit ., base·
ment, 2 car garage, 2

kitchen. nat. gas

Sa les,

3·J.BO

• 972

•New homes extensive remodeling
*Electrical work
*Masonry work
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992·7583

-Now
urrylng
chocolate wrappers and
molds for candy making
-Full line of Kraft supplies
-Special ·rates tor
organi1ations

MONDAY , MARCH 3, 191.

leads a spade toward his jack
East ducks and South leads a
second spade to dummy 's
queen and East's ace . Eas1
returns a low trump ."
Oswald " At first glance it
looks as if South can alford to
finesse his hearts jack ~ If 1t
works he can try a diamond
finesse and wind up making
all the tricks if that works
also."
Alan : "U nfortunate ly , the
heart finesse loses. And if
West leads a second trump;
the hand will collapse because
West will get in with the dtamond ki~g and lead a third
trump, '·whereupon South will

+KQ 62

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

macr•me classes.

EVERY
SATURDAY NIGHT
I :OOTII11 :30
"Disco Lighting''
Admission $2.00 Single
S3.00 Couple
Sponsored by Music
Unlimited. Chaperones
will be present. No
alcoholic beverages parmitred. For further Info ., cal.l992-6058.

Apples, Rome Beauty at
$4.00 per bushel . Exc. for
p ies, sauce and butter. Fit·
zpatrick Orchard, State
Route
6B9 .
Phone
Wilkesville 669 ~ 3785 .

Dennis Auit,' 1639 Lincoln
Hts., Pomeroy, Oh. 45769.

l IN 1 -

basement

E. M11in St. Pomeroy, 0 .

992·5724.

Rutland .

34 Business Buildings

story

frame, 7 rooms, full
basement,

Estate, 212 5th St ., Pt .
Pleasant, WV . Phone 675 ~
3030, 675·3431 or 675·4232.

bedroom, total electric
room, 2 baths and lh

608E . ~~~......
IY\AIN
POMEJlOV,O . .
992·1159
NEW LISTING - Love·
ly 2 story home on good

2 acres {le vel) land, all
brick 3 bedroom , 2 baThs,
family , dining and living
room, large kitchen with
fireplace, 2 car garage .
Beautiful property . Chain
link fence . Lyons Addition ,
Mason, WV . Priced under
the appraised value. Will
consider trade . Call or see:
Jake Somerville, Real

poehes, outbuilding and

Beautiful

bedroom home. 2 baths,

~

Long

1'/2 baths,
nat. gas furnace, 5 or 6
bedrooms, basement, 2

on. No job too small. Call
949·2379 .

privilege of home . Car fur nished . Must be sober. Man
works away . 992-3519.

949·2B36 after 5 and
weekends . Larry Wolfe.

NOW HOLDING
TOLE I DECORATIVE
PAl NTI NG CLASSES
-we will be hovlng

DANCE
At The Orchid Room

I N STOCI&lt;. for immediate
deli'Very : various sizes of
pool kits. Oo· it·yourself Or

Rd ~

level lot.

ceiling tile. Additions built

girl 6 years old. All the

central air, fully carpeted,

11 ROOMS -

LISTING

Chester.

r ~ TEEN DISCO

own the best

Winpower . Ca ll513 ~
788·2589.

- ~ buy

located on 61J:~ acres near
Racine on Racine-Bashan

close to school. Call

business rooms on large

PHONE 742-2003'

NORTH

power

Large lot out of high wafer,

t'hone
I · ( 614 )·992·3325

collect.

Wanted : Live in house
keeper to care for small

alternators -

Modern 3 bedroom home,
basement with fireplace,

on

Real Estate

FINANC ING VA ~ FHA LO~
ANS. LOW OR NO DOWN
PAYMENT . PURCHASE
OR
REFINANCE ~
IRELAND MORTGAGE,
77 E . STATE, ATHENS .

answer, call main office

paneling and

EMERGENCY

Television
·Viewine:

•

Foolish finessing fiasco

689 .

992~

basement, buildings, barn,
some timber, all mineral
rights. $77,000. 992 ~ 7559 .

HOBSTETTER

SR

Iet us Install for you. D.

Financial

614 ~ 592 ~ 3051.

Orchard,

•

5566 .

Ph

call Planned Parenthood of
Southeast Ohio, 992·5912,
B : 30 ~ 3:30 weekdays. If no

Remod~llng,

to apprecite . Phone

Fitzpatrick

BRIDGE

"

Business Services

APPLES - ROME beauty
apples at S.. per bu . Best for
apple butter . Call 669 ~ 37B5,

House for sale, Pomeroy : 6
rooms, l'h baths, paneled,
carpeted, lots of conveniences . Reasonable. See

•

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

For Sale

Homes for Sale

36 acres farm with 9 room

further Information, please·

593~~ 3375,

31

3 Bedroom, 1 story house

12 Situations Wanted

Free to gOOd home 2
obedient pups, one black ,
one blonde . 3 months old .

for details . I RELANO
MORTGAGE CO ~, 77 E .
State St., Athens . 592 ~ 3051 .

day through Frid8y, 9 ~ 5.

one blonde . 3 months old.

Call

VENTIONAL ~ 5 Pet . down .
VA
no down payment .
FHA ~ low down payment.
245 graduated
FHA
payment program. FHA

Call Mr . Zidian at Pomeroy
Health Care Center, Mon -

Rutland . Proceeds donated

Giveaway

avai table. New homes, old
homes and refinancing
your present home . CON ·

265 subsidy program . Call

to Boy Scout Troop 249 .
4

22
Money to Loan
Mortgage ·
money

DICKTRACY

:\lunda:. , Marc·h 3

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PURN~RI u . ·i
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I WONDER IF I
COULl:' CHANGE HIM .•.

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WI!; 'A LL UVI!: · wrm THE oa.
BEING HAPPY;OUR UVES' ARE ALL DIFFERENT AND' YET THE SAME.-ANNE FRANK
.

JECTIVE

pF

'

7:w-Cross.Wits 3; Tic Tac Dough
B; Newlywed Game 6, 13;
MacNelt . Lehrer Report 33;
News 10; Love, American Style
iS ; Sanford &amp; Son 17; Flash

Gordon 20 .
7:30- That Nash vil le Mus ic 3;
Muppet Show 6; Joker's Wild 8;
Family Feud iO, 13; Nashville on
the Road 15; All In The Family
17; MacNeii ~ Lehrer Report 20;
Di ck Cavett 33~
B:llO-Little House on the Prairie
3, 15; That's Incredible! 6; ·
WKRP In Cincinnati B,10; Billy
Graham Crusade 13,15: National · ~ .
Geographic 33; Movie "The
Desert Fox" 17; Dick Cavett 20.
9:00-Movle "Let's Do It Again"
3, 15; Family 6, 13; Mash 8, 10;
American Short Story 20;
Wllerness Alive 33; 9:30-House •
Calls B, 10.
10:1l0-Stone 6, 13; Lou Grant 8, 10;
Big Battles 17.
10:05-AmerlcM Short STory 33;
10 :30- News 20.
ll :llO-News 3,6,B.10,i3, 15; Last of
the Wild 17; Flash Gordon 20.
11 :05-Four Freshmen In Concert
33.
11 : 30-Tonight 3, 15 ; ABC News
Special 6, 13; Harry 0 8; Movie
"Usa &amp; the Devil" 10: Movie
"Across the Pacific" 17; Dick
Cavett 20.
11 :45-Barney Miller 6,13; 12 :20Pollce Story 13; 12 :40-McCioud
B; News 15; 1: 30-News 13,17.
1 :35-Movle " Fort Massacre" 17;
3:15-Untouchables i7; 4:15Energy : Wha: Matters Most?
Special 17. ~
TUESDAY,MARCH4, 1980
5:45-Farm Report i3; 5:50-PTL
Club 13.
6:1l0-700 Club 6,B; PTL Club 15;
6: 15-World at Large 17.
6: 30-Concerns &amp; Comments 10;
News 17: 6:45-Mornlng Report
3; A.M. Weather 33; 6:50-Good
Morning West Virginia 13; 6 : 55-· :·
News 13.
7:1l0-Today 3, 15; Good Morning
America 6, 13; Tuesday Morning
B; Batman 10; WTBS Funhouse
i7.
7:30-Famlly Aflair tO; 7:55---Chuck
White Reports 10.
B:OO-Capf. Kangaroo 8,10: Lucy
Show 17; Sesame Sf. 33.
B:JO-Romper Room 17; 9 : ~Bob
Braun J; Big Valley 6; Beverly
Hillbillies 8; Jeffersons 10; Phil
Donahue 13, 15; Family Affair 17.
9:30-Bob Newhart 8; One Day At A
Time 10; Green Acres 17.
10:00-Card Sharks 3,15; Edge of
Night 6; Jeffersons B; Joker's ' :
Wild 10; Morning Mogazlne 13;
Movie "Bird of Paradise" 17.
10 :30-Hollywood Squares 3, 15;
$20,000 Pyramid 13; Whew B, 10;
Andy Griffith 6; 10:55-CBS
News 8: House Call 10.
.
11 :llO-High Rollers J, 15; Laverne&amp; . ·
Shirley 6,13; Price Is Right 8,10 ~ " ·
it :30.- Wh'eel of Fortune 3, 15;
Sesame Sf. 20; 11 :55-News 11.
12 :00-Newscenter
3;
News
6,8, 10, 13; Health Field 15; Love,
American Sfyle 17.
12:30-Ryan's Hope 6,13; Search for
Tomorrow B, 10; Password Plus
15; Movie "Tea for Two" 17;
E lee. Co. 20,33.
1:1l0-Daysof0ur Uves3,15; All My
Children 6, 13; Young &amp; the
Restless 8, 10.
2:1l0-Doctors 3, 15; One Life to Live
6, 13; As The World Turns 8, 10;
2:25-News 17.
•
2:30- Another
World
3, 15;
Glggtesnort Hotel 11.
3:00-General
Hospital
6, 13;
Guiding Light B, 10; I Love Lucy
17: American Short Story 20.
3:30-FIIntstones 17; Over Easy 33.
4:00-Speclal Treat 3, 15; CBS
Library 8, 10; Merv Gr1ffln 6;
Sesame St. 20,33; Real McCoys
13; Spectreman 17.
4:30-Tom &amp; Jerry 13; Gilligan's Is. · :
17.
5:1l0-Carol Burnett 3; Sanford &amp; '
Son 8; Mary Tyler Moore 10;
Merv Griffin 15; My Three Sons
17; Mister Rogers 20,33.
5:30-Mash 3; News 6; Play the
Percentages B; Elec. Co. 20; ·
Mash 10; Happy Days Again 13; I ·
Dream of Jeannie 11; Doctor
Who 33.
:
6:1l0-News 3,8, 10, 13, 15; ABC New!
6; Carol Burnett 17; 3·2·1 Contact
20,33.
6:30-NBC News 3, 15; CBS News
8, 10; Carol Burnett 6; Bob
Newhart 17; Over Easy 20; Wild .
Wild World of Animals 33.
7:00-Cross-Wtts 3; Tic Toe Dough : :
B; Newlywed Game 6, 13;
MacNett . Lehrer Report 33;
News 10; Love, American Style '
i5; S.nford &amp; Son 17; Flash
Gordon 20.
7:30-Hollywood Squares 3; Baxters
6; Joker's Wild 8; Hollywood · ·
Squores 10: Sha Na Na 13: TV · '
Honor Society 1!; All In The : .
Family ]7; MacNeil · Lehrer .
Report 20; Dick Cavett 33.
B: 00-Misadventures of Sheriff Lobo
3: Happy Days 6; White Shadow
8, 10; Billy Groham Crusade
13, 15; Nova 20,33; Movie "The
Black 'Rose" 17,
8:30-Layerne &amp; Shirley 6; 9 :1l0- ..
Big Show 3,15; Three's Company •
6,13; 1 Movl.e "Bogie" 8,10; : ·
~ystery 20,33. '
·.
. .
9:~Taxl 6, 13; 10 :1l0-Hart to Hart .
6, 13; 10 : l~lty Nolebook 33.
10:30-Fighl Against Slavery 17;
News 20; 10: 40-Dove Allen at
Large 33.
~
: ;
11 :llO-News 3,6,8, 10, 13, 15; 11 :CISMonty Python's Flying Circus .
33; u : 10-F lash Gordon 2o.
11 : 30-Prlmary Coverege
3,6,1,13, lSI Mov1e "TI\e Nakld
Prey" 10: p.ovle "Chain
Lightning" 17; ABC Captioned
New' 33.
11 :45-0ick Cavett 20; Movie "Tht
lnltlat.lon of Saroh" 6,13; Bar.
noby Jonil ·a.
.
1:1o-Movle "Snow Job" a; ! :»Tomorrow 3; News 15,17.
1:3S-Movle "South S... Woman:•
17; 2: 10-NeWS·13.
3 : ~0-Movle "Target Zero" 11:
5:40-Love, ·Amerlcon Style 17. l

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1._'l1le Daily SenUnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, March 3.1!81

:;: Highway construction projects hinge on bond approval

U. N. commission to meet hostages
Tile Auodated Press
Iran's Ruling Revolutionary Council decided unanimously that the

five-man U.N. conunission in
Tehran will meet with the American
Embassy hostages, a U.N.
apoke~~~~a~~ said today. But there
wu llti1l no indication of when the
meetiJ111 would take place.
An Iranian firing squad executed
seven members of the Forghan
terrorist group early today less than
24 hours after the nation 's
proeecutor general charged a
leading U.S. Embassy official with
links to their secret organization and
asked that he he turned over to the
revolutionary courts.
U.N. spokesman Samlr Sambar
said the II8SIII'IIJICe ri. a meeting with
the boetages was delivered this morning during a ooe-hour meeting between the CCllllllllaslon and Iranian
Foreign Minister Sadegh Ghotbzadeh Ghotbzadeh had already
prol1li8ed wch a meeting last week.
It was not Immediately clear
whether the COWICil had won a!}'
proval for the meeting from ihe embassy militants holding the
boetages. A spokesman for the
militants Insisted earlier today that
no dedalon had been taken on
whether to approve a visit.
Sambar refilled to answer any
questlona on details of the meeting,
· saying FOreign Ministry officials
had pledged to advise the commission later of developments concerning the timing.

He also said the council had
promised to turn over to the commission all documents relevant to its
mandate by Tuesday evening.
He also was quoted by Tehran
Radio as saying the hos~&amp;ges would
not be freed quickly, and the U.S.
government was delaying the
process.
" Sufficient time must pass before
their release," the radio quoted
Bani.SOdr as saying in an interview
with the Saudi Arabian newspaper

Squads kept busy
The Middleport Emergency Squad
was called to 1294 Mill St., at 8:32
p.m. Sunday for Mae Lightfoot who
was ill. She was taken 1o Veterans
Memorial Hospital where she was
admitted.
At 2:27 p.m. Saturday, the Middleport unit went to!I&amp;IS. Thitd Ave.
for Gina Peligrano who had fallen
from a porch. She was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital where
she was treated for a knee injury.
The Rutland Emergency !iquad
was caUed at 12:43 a.m. Sunday for
Grace Turner, Route 4, Pomeroy.
She was taken to O'Bleness Hospital
in Athens. At 6:43 Sunday, the
Rutland unit took Russell tittle from
his home near Rutland to Veterans
Memorial Hospital and then to the
Holzer Medical Center.

A Message fr,om the

POMEROY HEALTH CARl CENTER
I am happy to announce that we will be opening
Wing B of our facility on March 10. This is only happenIng because the nurses we have are cooperating with me
to work shifts that we still need nurses to staff. Nurses
from 11 to 7:30 are needed badly for full time and part
time.
I appeal to any nurses working out of the county or
are "in retirement" to consider working at our new,
beautiful facility In Meigs county .
We have residents who love to be 1oved and cared
for; and we have a staff that Y,OU would be proud to work
with.
·
We need you. Please respond.
Ronald E. Zidian, Administrator
Please call me from 9 to s,
Monday through Friday, at 992-6606.

AI-Medina. "The United States could
speed up the release by refraining

from any unilateral action."
Bani.SOdr said the problem "could
be solved very quickly! ' If
Washington cooperated, but did not
elaborate on his remarks about
cooperation or unilateral action.
Tehran Radio did not say when tbe
interview took place.
In another development,
revolutionary leader Ayatollah
Ruhollah Khomeini was released
Sunday night fl'OOl the Tehran
hospital where he was admitted in
late January after suffering a mild
heart attack. Before he departed, he
spoke to the hospital staff and
patients, but made no mention of tbe
hostages or the five-member U.N.
commission.
One of the COIIIIIli&amp;&lt;llon members,
Adib Daoudi of Syrla, said in an interview with the Greek television
network that the coounlssion members have been assured they will
meet the hostages "very soon." He
said he could not be more specific
than that. The broadcast was
monitored in London.

ckn-

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VOL. 28, NO. 226

•

TRUCK OVER IDLL - Slippery drivlnl CIJIIo
dltions still prevail throu8houl tbe Melp-Gallll area
today as a result fi Saturday's llrle -'all and

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Saturday AdmlsBiorut-Naoml Bentley, Rutland; Mickey Foster,
Minersville; Vicky Balo, Portland;
Allison Tromm, Rutland; Robert
Rhodes, Racine; David Grimm,
Pomeroy.
Saturday Di.scharg-Ann Johnson, Boyd King, Tamara Staats,
Dorothy Roller, Eva Barrett.
Sunday AdmlsBiorut-Mae Lightfoot, Middleport; Mary Laudermllt,
Middleport; Beatrice White,
Auburn, W. Va.; Mlrla Herdman,
Evans, W. .Va., James Young,
Racine.
Sunday Dlscharg..-Naoml Bentley, Donna Willlams, Tbomas
Basin, Stella O'Bryan, Laura Coon,
Helen Gibbs.

amms

BIR'I'II

Mr. wQ Mrs. Mldulel Dr
1011, GaWpolil.
DIIICIIARGES MARCH I

I

RALPH RADCLIFFE

RVMIL\GE SAU:IIIAftD
Tbere will be • filhdi • • llle .
1'laday and WedJielday, Marcll11

Have your check
deposited directly
into your account.

fr1m the Midwest over the weekeM,
....__. more tlilm• ''foOt of 8!iow In
v::r.,:and''"=~J'~·l
·North
V
Sl'
m
c8rolina. It.~ _' "
at ~

,-,.u_

1nFlorlda, ill~oihextyear's

rajltdly mii!U.M&amp;-V~~~

MEEISWEDMI'.IIDAY
PcmwUJ LDd!Je JN.JiilrAII, will
meet Ill replar
'lr at 7:• p.m.
W... w1ey at a. ....... AI
=n '¢Rlllaionl an lrMtled.

~;r.w,~~..,.... ~ ···

~~lobe~ fer friJ!*I cooCl!lltrllted ~e juice, !role 011 tbe
treealn 2lklegree temperatures Sun«!a...YandMCiiday.
:
.
· "We are in aerloq,s trouble," Jald
~erb R!J~ I# ~ nci'ldli Fruit InSpectlon Semce as growers and in~9'1 teams cbeckej!IJlilllon!l fi
~ cl gnwllll '(IUD ~ Gulf of
~ez!co . to 'the ·-At!anfic . aild fl'OOl
!'aim Beach l,loUnty )!I ~ lrouth to
~lntbe~
· •
: " Right 11011' we're.eaaeme!Y·CIIfto
lerlledaboirtnextyear'scrop,"Jald
DOiJ lJnil, eJ:t;Ciitiye vice president
x$eald Sweet Gl'V!fers IQc. ~ 'l'am- ·
;Mli a ~ · ~ for 4,500

RBQV1AR MI!ZTINOift
A wpedel mer''• ol tilt ••6H'D
IAc:al kboDl Dllald .... Ill
Edacatlon wtll be held at • p.m.
w.......,. at tbe bilb ldleaL ..,.
am npJar me lhc at • ..._.
wllkll - lcbeduled tar lillrc:ll 12
.bu belli cMnced to Man;b Dat 7:•
p.m.

~erl·

!;!·JIEJ-11
CII'DI:R
. 'f.·.l,,:LOS
,. .
I

.Me(llber f.~IC .

Burial' 11111

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About 90 percent of Florida's
orange crop ill processed into juice,
with the' rest sold as fresh fruit. The
affected oranges can be processed
lntojulcelfharvestedquickly.
In North Carolina, stranded
motiJrillta, buses and planes began
moving through Slush as the anow
started melting. National Guard
troops were on duty In 16 communltles paralyzed by up to 30 inches ol snow.
. 1D&amp;h wil!dS and the chlll'ning
~· ~Jbe.~~ a,rept away
tWO ·~ W\~! tbe ..d tatty
Hawk Qt....,. $taikla,lild one at
South Nap Head: Jlaildelll&amp; along
the Pll!quOtailll River In Elilabeth
City, where 25 Inches ri. &amp;nOW fell,
reported Meing the river bottcm as
high winds JI\IIIIIDf)ed the water.
In DUblin County, 40 poultry ·
houses collapeecl under the l'leight rL
snow and Ice, kllling thouaands of
chickens 8lld ~ys.
In VIrginia, sections of moet
major highways, blocked by drifts
up ta 12 feet blgb, reopened late
Monday, 8lld curfews were lifted in
Norfolk, Portsmouth and
a-peste. Many secondary roada
l'elll8iried impassable, and a traffic
ban 1n Virginia Beach continued.

'"

President says' U.S. veto ·a mistake
•

himmw loop end
f'lile ., poc~et. Very

·wellmllde. -

. Al1.1claW Prell

'

liltunk ~-!le denim,
•· . eclluateble· ltreps.

PARTIALLY ICE COVERED- Although this pond near Chester offers a scenic view ri. the beauty of winter, It was not frozen hard enough

Monday for ice flailing or skating activities. It Is one of many such ponds
and lakes In Meigs County partially Ice covered as a result of recent
snowfall and arctic tempera~.

By Pomeroy Council

Burglitr monitoring system is offered
·

.,

BY KATIE CROW
Pmneroy Vtllage CounclJ Is of.
ferlng local buslnesa firms . and
residents . C0!18tant monitoring
tbrougb a burglary alarm system at
a cost of $100 a year.
Duiing Monday's regular council
aessim,lt was noted that lllch a
system, If IISed by a firm or individual, could poll8ibly reduce Insurance rates. 'lbe village has room
for expaJIIIIon · .on Ita present
monitoring, system. Therefore of.

ferlng it to the public.
GRANT MOTION DEFEATED
A motion to proceed with the
Bureau ri. Outdoor Recreation grant
fiir the mini park by setting aside
for
survey and planning
program wa.a defeated due to a lack
ri. a majority vote.
A motion .to promote Randy Carpenter to Captain on the pollee force
waa also defeated due to a lack of
majority vote.
Harry Evans, who Ia serving as in-

a

.

W~GTON (AP)- Preliclent Carter says tbe United States

,)Dlstakii!IY yoted for a U.N. f!IIOlution aga1nat Israeli ~ In ·

" ~ed Arilb ~ beca111e ri. a mlalmderatandln about a:ao!IY
the reeo~~~~~on llld.
.
· ·
Specifically, ·Carter ·l ljd the U.S. action ••u•.t·from a faulty
··l!allef lbat ref!llew .to Jerusalem bad been cleleted frCJm the
;·.te.oJution bet\ft the flDal VGte. .
, ,
:::. .'l1le Wlun.l c:lariflcaUon atatement, l.uued ori behalf Of the
• Jl!'8lkle!lt late Monday illcht. came amid Israeli oomp1a1nta that the
JI.S. vote amounted loalilnlflcant policy ahlft.
·

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what

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Meigs County sherlfl's clepuUes
4:46 p.m. the back glass r1. bls
today beian ~three perpickup truck was allot out with a
· 110118 to tile Ohio Penal Recepti011
Medical «enter, Colwnbus, lo begin
serving their llelltences recently lmpoaed in Melp County Common
Pleas Court.
Beine tranaported are 21·year old
Ricky Deeter, Rt. 1, Portland who
wa.a seDtencecl LliJ: months to five
years on charges' ri. trafficking In
'l1le Meigs Golden Regi.De Color
drucs; 21·year old Richard Cooper, Guard went on the -Indoor com.Stewart. two ClCIIISectutlve six IJIOIIo petjUon lrlll1 over the nekpd and
ths to five year sentences on charges
came horne with two tlVd Place
ri. brealdng and entering; Z.year
trophies.
.
old James · Patrick McCloud, MidTbe
1J111i1.
consisting
fi 14 flap,
dleport, two~ terms ri.llll
months to five )'8111'1 for un,or
authorized - ri. a motor_vehicle · Middleburg Heigbta, • and trespuslng.
Saturday evening, tak:blg part in
DepuUea, are lnvestlgatlae I!
Indoor
guard ClGIIJII!!titkl far tile fil'report flied by Jobn Rankin, Tup- •
et
time,
the 'l4eill Golilen Regime
pens Plalna. Rankin niP'J(ted that
took
tlllrd
place, defeaUng U·
Monday afternoon betw- 4:80 and
perlenced
guards,
IJllllY com\
tancl ;xt.b time .
Warm~~ temperatures · petltlae for 'tbe fifth
.
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vestment adviBOr tor the village, advised .council to invest $30,000 of
inactive funda ill money market certificates and .SO,OOO of inactive lunda
In treasury billa.
Evans will advlae the COWICII on
investments each DIClllth. With the
above investments COWICil will have
a total ri. Pl)5,000 invested by tbe end
fi the IIICIIIth.
ORDINANCE APPROVED
CounclJ approved tbe first reading

:mr:'inandflvecol~~ ~

big welcome relief

··

B1 -'•• ~law PresteMil'. . tile.
state are a wlk •• relief to the aro-

tempera..

Uc blllll 0Mt!JII 111ft bei!J U•
· perlenCinsfar.tbe.-,.,....dayl.
So:altwed lbaaa wllliDIIVe lDio
Ohio by late tmllll't, a.~- ola
- - III09inll Allll ol tbe Great
Plalnl. Tbele lcdllled lbowaa are
likely -tilt . . . . . . u . .
pentunerlleblloa.tll~.

-J'be

lllonn 1111 .... cmi'
Ohloto.~NW with rain~ to
~ Iii the eutarn plit ri. tile atate

;

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pellet gun while parked In
driveway at his home.

the

Meigs marching ·unit
cIaims .two trophi·es

W81'DII!' .

. , . ::r.::~t;.... ~'~~ .·",~==~=:==

~- ·l_..;....__.-;-----,-.. -----:------,--=.(---''-=-------~..;:;.,-..:--:--_'":~ f

J-1

Slz" 'lf welst to 42
wellt, ler.Olhl 29 tO
.u. Senforlz•d

' 'Jam-.

be In
#wy
.... CoolVIlle......, ll'lveilde
. . . wll1 be cGDducted by Nellcz;.

·r· ,•••. ',.,1,. ,.

~··

OVERALLS

.

,.,.,t!,.:
llulla' Osr

'\.' I • '

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•

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Deln Pa..-., Nelacv~Ue; tint
ll'lad.l-, ~t ~
c:hlldnD; ....... llill1l Ma"'',
Columbul· one ··llllf....._. ' lin.'
NellJe JUrrlek, · ~.....,.;
tint bnlf~ Bvwtlt ·.af
Btewut; Vtr11 af ') 1 lill 1111
~ot('Abunlw ',
'
1
. Funeral . ...... 1111 'be . ....
'tu.dal at 1 p.m. at t11t
, , _ ., Hame In Cool.mt wlllltlll

. ReV.

"We're in supply trouble again
with lin Inventory on1y about two .
million, gal!ona (r1. ~Irate)
more•"•naftbeiiiUiletlmelastyear
+ if~ we had no 'Weather
problems," said Wilson McGee of

·,

Green rar-, one - . OcraM

...

Concentrate.

Prisoner transfer scheduled today

•

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fPr

~e Cf(jp" ·tuineCJ ' ~lack lp ·ttie
l'i!bJnl.low ~turii diatbit the
nllrth 8nd C'iltril '~Onll Qf the ;14c(J!Intycltruilbel~. ''"'!« ".,., "' '
:Jce coated ~ ~iaUicl early
and mld-wlntiiurange crop;1111101111~ to 16lo ~ iDillltin boxes. Aitd

He wua veteran ol WGI'Id Will' I, a
life nwnberaftheOAV IIIII • .._.
ber ol Velerli!a II. FCII'Ii&amp;ll Wan,
Albenl,. and Ir.dlpeo"'--t Order af
Odd Fellowa, Stnlrt.
He llllln'lvtd by Ilia wit, 1'llllllla

.

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36deathslnl01"ftas "· '" '··

Mr. Plnlonl wu born at Stewart
1011 r:l tbe late Ner ancl lwtaDa
Beebe Pal'liOill. He wu a11o
. ...-led In deltll by - llladlw,

If you get a Social Security, Railroad
Retirement, Military Retirement, or other
government check, you can have · it
deposited directly into your Farmers
Bank account. You 'II feel a lot safer
about your check not getting lost or
stolen. Sign up for Direct Deposit
at the Farmers Bank now.

•~

The freeJ:e prompted speculation
about lncreaaed conaumer prices
and larger returns for growers
because ri. a shorter supply. Grower
Ed Mackenzie sidd he expected less
juice from Valenclas and ~ible increases in retail prices of orange

· ~~~;.~~ ·in :~~~Growers

r.-

tendecl~.

Glen,onFeb. :15.

: • li·1 )1~

Iiiii Uln tile bun:•• at a.
RIIII Ml!tbdodlat Cllrcb, ~
I'CMid 311, from t a.m. loS p.m. dallJ.

Middleport.
FWieral aervlces wtll be held at 1
p.m. Wed'MW)' at tbe EwiDI
FWieral Home with a. R.v. Robld
E. &amp;binlcla oftlclatinl- Burial wll1
be In Greenwood Cemetery. Friendl
may call at the ~ ' anytime lfter 7 thla eveainJI.
KOY B. PAIUJONI
Roy B. Pinons, rT, NeiiGnvllll,
fonnei'ly • Stewart, died Saturclq
afternoon at tbe Arcadia Nunq
Home, Coolville, fallowing IIIII a-

Farmers
Bank

,
By Alloclated Prell
· Florida citrus growers, their· ~
bllllon-a-year industry already In
''1!8l'ions trouble" after a· night of
ffeezing weather left oranges Iced
oil ~. s11ivered and worried
through another night of cold tbil•·
could mean hl8hef prlces for oraruze
jaicedrinkers.
..::·'; ·•· :-:r,,
· -;ELtewhen!'iil the S6uti),'tesldebt!J'
dug out fram uilder reCOi'd Silow.and
hoped1for~, ~ther: Mean- ·
While eaut~lii;iiir'aei!d: fOt more '
r8in ~ cOlorado
gOt... eight 1inchesI of•
show
A

Meigs county happenings

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGES FEB. zt
Deborah Aldridge, Olga Beckley,
Juanita Beller, Paul Burns, TIIDIDIY
Coburn, Zeffie Conley, Amanda
Cohn, Mrs. CUrtis Arthur and
daughter, Ellen DeMy, Enna
Eagle, Jessie Eldridge, Unda
Fields, Leah Fry, Alfred Gana,
Dianna Han1aon, Mary Kennedy,
Brady Mallory, Gerald Mateney,
Sherry McCoy, Melissa Man\1, Mrs.

PRICE FlFTEEN CENTS

.

'

Northup and daughter, Deborah
Pullins, Stephen Pelfrey, Tammy
PeUrey, Charell Petrie, Valedrie
Pierce, Samuel Rankin, Shannon
w.&amp;CANcELU!:D
Richmond, ChrtBtina Rouse, Ethel
The I'UIIII1IIge lale to lie lllld
Sayre, Clarence Sbafer, IAIOta
today by Apple ~ . U.alled
Sheets, Joseph Stewart, Mu Tudor, ' Metbodllt Wamen 1- ._. . .
Craig Yeager, Patricia Young, Ryan
~. It will be beld at I lat.lr date
Young.
wblcb wtll be announced.

Mr. wQ Mn. Randy Fisher,
daug!Rr, Jackson; Mr. and Mn.
HolliB Myers, soo, GaWpolil; Mr.
wQ Mn. Joseph Gladden, daughter,
Ravenswood.
DISCHARGES MARCHI
Nancy Altizer, Gladys Barlow,
Sherry Baas, Greg Baneeutter,
Raymond Boothe, Gary Brag,
Samuel Dexter, Ernie Flllher, Mary
Grueser, Michelle Hldlman, April
Hudloh, Evaggella Jenkins, Mn.
Richard Jolmson and 11011, RAlunne
Keeams, Ottie LineberTy, William
Merrick, Mrs. Ricky Mehenbey and
daughter, stephanie Miner, T8J1111'1
Pope, Anthony Rilny. Katherine
Roland, Mable SaWiders, Tenaa
'lbompaon, Jobn Wlcldlne, Opal
Verkle.

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO, TUESOAY, MARCH 4, 1980

Florida's citrus
crops in danger

HOSPITAL NEWS

You'll feel a lot safer.

ted, "we can kiss this thing (the
bond Issue) goodbye. The people
won't buy it."
111 other business, the full Senate
approv!ld by a 3U mirgln and seJJt
to the House 11 major bill restructuring the makeup and functions ri.
county mental health and mental
retardation boards.
Its major J)llrpOIIe Is to divide tbe
lines fi authority so that county
boards ri. mental retardation would
have sole authority over mental
retardation programs, while boa!'da
ri. mental health wQ retardation
would be confined to mental health
(Continued on page 8)

e

•

/.19 !21' IGU.3 W · ··,,

Ralph Raclcllff'l, 81, Syracuae, died
Monday morning at Veteran~
Memorial HOipital.
He was a 1011 ol tbe late Gecqe
and Sylvia Byers Radcliffe. He WM
. . preceedecfl!l death by hla wife,
Mary,
.
.
SUrviving an tliree brGtben, Orville, New Brighton, Pa.; RuueU,
Syracuse; and Rs1JDI)Ild ol Ill&amp;
cheater, and aevera1 nieces and
nephews.
Mr. RadciiHe wu a nwpber fi
Heath United Methodlat Qmch In

POMEROY, 0.

'·: • •·

\'C n Uj(

r---A;_:~al);;i;ihs

J'

' ~~

PfO&gt;, :.· .
2'3-UV ' t '

federal funds under existing federalas l;uy•lloga, Mahoning, Stark, and
Van Meter offered amendments to
state matching fonnulas.
I lamllton CO\!IIties.
prohibit use of bond proceeds to pay
But he reiteral.l:d that the bond
state ~mployees who work on the
They would be funded with $38
Issue proceeds, which supposedly
projects, and to set a llmlt of $500
million in state funds and Sl74
will be paid back with existing highmillion on the amount of bonds that
million in federal funds , he said.
way user taxes, would fall far short
could be outstanding at any one
There are about $650 million worth
of Ohio's transportation needs,
time.
of projects in the final stage8 of planwhich he estimated now total nearly'
Senate Finance Conunittee Chairning and $450 million more in the
rr billion.
man Harry Meshel, D-Youngstown,
design and lights-of-way stage, he
"It (tbe Iiond Issue) would let us
added.
and others said that they favored the
build some things with 1!81 dollars
concept of tbe amendments, but that
Weir
said
aU
of
the
projects
are
·
and take care of some projects we
the proposals 8\lould be Included In
needed
and
stressed
that
he
was
not
had to put on the shelf for lack of funsubsequent legislation rather than
saying
which
should
get
top
priority.
ds," he said.
making them a part of the Ohio ConBut many require environmental
Weir said that there are 24 projecstitution.
lmpal;l
and
other
federal
·studies
ts ready for construction, including
However, without the amendwhlc:h have forced them down on the
several In metropolitan areas such
menta, the veteran lawmaker asser- ·
"timetable," he said.

Sen. Thomas A. Van Meter, RAl!hl8hd, cast the only' dissenting
v~ on the bond Ls!lue proposal alter
~ conunittee rejected hi.S ~lies of
amendments 1o restrict use. of bond
)ll'OCe!!ds and put an absolute llmlt
on their total. ·
He aaid that those kinds of restrictions will be needed ·10 seQ \'oters on
what now would be an ~nded
Pf08I'IlJll tO allow the state to Issue
$1.2 billion in bonds by 189$, including $500 miUIO!) by 1985.
State Tralulportation Department
Director DaVid L. WelrtoldtheCommi~ thllt '1.2 billion In state funds
could attract another au billion in

.•

:1 =
;:

'· (•

Jobn Andenon, Kimberly Baird,
Mn. Harry Cutie and 11011, Jam
Deering, MEttle Downey, R-n
Durbin, Kathy Jam-, Blanche
Lemmon, Tim Masters, Vergie
Milhoan, Mary Murris, Margo
Prater, Jerry Smith, Pearl Ward

-·

'•""'••

'"·il,H uJ9qe -

: ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~·;N~~~wQ~da~qhl«~
.. ~.~~~gr~~~

...
..•

-. COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) = More
"than $212 milliOn in stalled Jiishway
conatruction projects could' gel un~er way promptly unller a proposed
liood l.uue which now seems assured
6f a spOt on Ohio's June '3 prlmary
liallot.
.
· 'lbe state Senate Finance
ll)ittee recammended approval of
tile meuure by an Il-l vote juat
before midnight Monday after more
than three hours of deliberations,
Leaders said the ~
Constitutional IIJDelld.ment wquld be
v~ on by the full Senate before the
Wednesday deadline b- placement
~!&amp;sues on the June ballot.

' ... .to ICittered flurrlea In . tbe

W'IRirD 1ll1f fi Ohio. 1'allperaturw
will be taw,tc into the . . tomoiinw
afternoon .

tbls Jeiu'.
The Meigs Golclen Retllme IICOl'ed
a 53.0 behind St. ' Mary's 'lind New
Phllsdelpbla.
On Sunday, the Golden Regime
repeated Ita perfCJniiiiiiCe by taldng

SL~_!!&amp;Ce.
andwlthF·-L!7·•ri.
·-•
.._

anotberll!!hlnd
·

Marion. Meigs wu only .9 ri. a point
out ri. first place'. 'l1le color 8lllrd
wll1 c:unpete again on March 16 and
18 at'SancluU)' and Flemaut. 'lbe
Melp · Golden Regime Guard II
lpon80red by tbe Meigs Bimc!
Booetera.

Four
,~.epPblicans
seek. post
·'
...
.
•
•

.•

&gt;

!/'

• FCJIII' Republicans bave filed
nomlnat!a~! peUU41DI tr1Jb tbUieip
~ Baird a( ~ fur tile
OIM!G~"'\11 term CWI-llild by
Dw•• er~t
WeilL ·'l'lle four7111'twm .pjna Jan. I, ••• .

TOWIIIblp, and MaJinbw RoualJ,
Route 1, Mlneravi1Je. '
.
'lbua far, nci one bU flled fGr:'tbe
second (W)!mlniWJer"a )IOit to be
filled this .relr, a term flllllring Jan.

ri. an ordinance from the state hlgbway department grantiJI8 tbe director ri. highways authority to maintain state highways inside the

vlllage.
.
A request was read from Carl
Hyaeii asking the village to take
over tbe monthly )Jilyment ri. the
electric bill at the tenniHlasketball
court on East Main street. 'Ibe bill
run between f4 and $8 per month.
Hyaeii bu been ]lllying the hlll for
the past four years.
Hyaeii also lltated In his letter that
tbe grounds would be inalntalned by
him and L. B. Vaughan. CounclJ
agreed to tate over the monthly
Jll)'lDIJDia. It wu llliltestecl to investlpte tile poalhllty • JIIIUing In
PIIY meten fer the ligbta.

c.:.=e~=~=

chief Reiley Lyona determine
whether parking tickets sbould be

=-.e-===~::=

::,.~ys when It

111 raining or
CounclJ also dlscusaed tbe danger

at the Intersection • o( Mulberry
Height~ and Higbland Church Road.
It wa.a 111811ested lbat a sign "stop
sign abead" be placed 0n Mulberry
Helpta. · ·
, In other buNnell, COUI1Cil agreed
to )IUI'cbue a . blad4( imd two part.t
far the, village fnlck. It. was al8o
der:'-ded that Jack Krautter write up
·speclftcatl- fer a-·~ truck
fer tile villaCe and pr mt them at
the I!Ul meetltc fi C*!IICII .
CouocU abo · dlacu111ed the
~ ri. ltreeta..It wu tbe COD-

:-.:s::.:n-:=:::
month.

Coanc11 a&amp;necl to .meet in apeclal
I . Ion reprdlnc llpll'lldlng tile

11a1ariea af till polleedllpariment
J'OLICi: IIII'OftT
'!be rsport fi the &lt;lief fi PGilce
3, lllll. Tbat PQit Ill C11mi1tJ1 ~by far the lllllltb llf Fellruary ftl ned
. Both Dem0cra11 and RepubUCIIII RichudJ-, R.
. lllld lfii*Otid. Tile ~
wiD nominate .• "'Ddldate to nat in
Mcrday, tbe Melp CeuDly BOard ' IIIUid 181 khCI, -Weed 118
a. tall In tile J. . )ll'lmutea.
. • Elect~- beld ltl Ofl •haUafta~
................ •IITelta, eGIIec8o fir, welil -. Dot flied tor 11111c1n wtt11 E. A. wt,..u. Raelae , 1ec1 . , . . . hiD •
Jllrtiftl
nomlnatiaD af IIIIJ*V. Horn,.er, '*Ill reaJeet.ed clQ'maa af b / Mill llll!ldroftt,llldea.
tilt fllllrc deadlhw 4 't!le Melp board, III!I .Mia. Dttbtliy .J•..,
Tba m rlltw .., "'~ bJ
C!lallt711oudf#" n•lilllltun- ~ Nelectid, dlrectGr fi tbe Pfi1W' by Mayer Alldl:ewi. ~
'W4p.IILG11Mardll0.'
·
board. Fnboea 'I'bamu !J • .,
••••"""~Mdrewa,Jane
Tbe four GOP Rlpubllcan caD- • dlreetOr.
., :
Waltlli, clwt, 0.U, 8atGIIlck; BW
dld!ltei ars, EJdeli q. Waltiurn, iiJd- '
A motion to lllil)i!
'1'llc!mu .V
Harold · Brou, Lirry
diePm; Gu7· a-, .Raale 1, Lone director W. . cWe,lled S-1 111U1 Webrulil, cmacll DMmben, 0air1e

a.war

Mrs:

Bottom; J)lllld .,_..,

Salilbury

~cutlllitlled'nn illltevote.

ounc..

Ward,lnidlerlllldQilef~.

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