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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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bOC I(&lt;;
. p~~JJ W6l Jol}

~;~: nwa pte

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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

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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
·

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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,. ,.

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OVERALLS

.

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

'\.' I • '

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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

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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)

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/.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.

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

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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

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:1 =
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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~.

�2-The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, March 4, 1980

••
•
•

The Daily Sentinel

NO~ODY'Ll

VOTE!!

Win sectional tournament

SWHS girls advance
with 53-37 victory

Opinions and comments

· IT'LL DRCIG
0~ AN' B(,l
ELEC110~ TIME

3-The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday. March 4, l!JIIC

T~EtJ TI-l'

STRAWS!

648 criticism justified
The operation of Community Mental Health and Mental Retardation
648 Boards locally and In Franklin County have drawn heavy criticl.9m
from county and state officials in recent weeks.
In our opinion, that criticism is justified.
Whether by acts of omission or conunission the Gallia·
Jackson-Meigs 648 Board bas not been fully responsible to the public it
was appointed to represent.
When a member of the community accepts an appointment to serve on
a public board, they accwt a responsibility to act as a public tnJstee-and
as such they are answerable to the people who have entrusted them.
Such appointmenlll should not be accepted because it furthers the appointee's standing in the community, will look good on future resumes or
will add a line to one's obituary.
At a recent meeting with the Gallia CommiBsion, some 648 Board members argued that in the deluge of recent publicity, the positive workings of
the board and the dedication of its members, administators and staff had
been overlooked.
We would answer that the fact 648 Board employes may do their jobs is
not newsworthy. They are paid, and paid well, to do so.
Neither do we find unique the fact that public appointees have devoted
loog hours of service, without compensation, to mental bealth while sitting on the 648 Board.
Dozens of publicly appointed boards meet each month in service to the
community. None of the members of those boards receive compensation.
Most are dedicated to the furtherance of the conununity good.
The only thing that does seem exceptional about the members of the 648
Board is that they do receive some tangible benefits, In the fonn of
catered board meetings and occasioryli trips paid for at taxpayers expense, for their service.
Some members of the 648 board have objected to press coverage of
their activities and expenditures-have said that adverse publicity is en·
dangering the future of needed mental bealth services in the area.
II that should be the cas~if the future of mental health services (which
we agree are needed) have been jeopardized-the tesponslbllity lies
squarely with the board, Its administration and staff for allowing
questionable spending and accounting practices to develop and continue.
II those conditions had not existed, there would have been no adverse
·
publicity.
A first step toward reestablishing public trust would be for the 648
Board to adopt the suggestions offered by Gallia Commissioners Paul D.
Niday and Lonnie Burger.
It does not seem unreasonable to expect the board to use accounting
practices, hiring and salary guidelines used by other publicly supported
agencies within the county. As long as they refuse to do so a stigma of impropriety will remain with the board.
The same must be said of the boards' primary contracting agency, the
Community Mental Health Center Inc. Despite that boards corporate
status, since It spends millions of public dollars annually, its financial
records should be open to public scrutiny.
We do not question the need or legitimacy of keeping the Center's
patient records confidential; however, we do maintain the public should
be allowed to review the board's expenditures, such as the cost of a trip
made late last month by several Center Board members and employes to
San Francisco.

Today's political roundup

Rep. John B. Anderson of Illinois.
Fonner Texas Gov. John B. Connally Is putting his efforts into South
Carolina.
It appears Kennedy, still expected
to easily top President Carter, and
Bush, In a vii"tual dead-heat with
Reagan, have the most at stake In
Massachusetlll.
·A Boston Globe poU published Sunday showed potential voters in the
Democratic pfimary still preferred
Kennedy over Carter. But that portion of the polling done two days after Kennedy's 1065 in the New HamJ18hire primary last week showed
substantially lower support for the
senator. The poll also showed undecided voters seemed more llkeiy
to vote for Carter.
Failure to win handilY in

,

CONCORD, N.H. (AP)- Revising
about issues, it was about who would
a joke Ronald Reagan wisbea he'd "get to debate about issues - on
never told: How do you pick out the
which 90 percent of the Republican
former governor of California at a
presidential contenders agree.
tw&amp;-man campaign debate?
The fact is debates In primary
He's the one who brings four other
election campaigns tend to be abort
guys.
on drama and disagreement. 'nle
How do you tell which ones are the
candidates are cautious and besides,
extras?
since they all are trying to lead the
They bet that Reagan can get
same party, their differences tend to
them seated as debaters.
be In detail and degree, not on funAnd how do you know if George
damentals.
Bush Ia involved?
Indeed, after Reagan's fuWe ef·
Reagan's added starters go away, · fort to make room for four additional
leaving hlni to debate Bush alone candidates at his Saturday night
and pay the bills for the whole show.
debate with Bush, the fanner goverThat's about what happened In the . nor and the fanner United Natlona
only Republican debate that really
ambassador spent the better part of
produced an argument among the
two hours a~ing With each other.
presidential candidates. It wasn't

WASHINGTON (AP) -"The JUDent didn't compete so -heavily
federal government today is the against private companies.
largest eleCtric power producer, tile
"At a time wben small business
largest Insurer, the largest lender, faces unprecedented problems with
the largest landlord, the largest inflation, high Interest rates,
warehouse operator, the largest regulation and capital formation, it
shipowner and the largest truckfleet comes as a shock to fmd that one of
operator.
the gravest threats to small business
"For a country which Ia the citadel comes from Its own government,"
and the world'' principal ezponent says Dale Nelson, a Des Moines,
of private enterprise and Individual Iowa businessman who chaired the
initiative, this is rather an amazing
lilt. n
That statement was made In 1964 Task Force on l:lovenunent Comby Rowland R. Hughes, President petition.
Eisenhower's chief budget adviser.
Currently, the federal govenunent
The list has grown ·considerably •engages in more than 21,000 comsince then, with bewildering Im- mercial and Industrial activities at a
plications for this country's small cost of $10 b1111on a year, the report
businesses, says a just-released says.
study prepared for the Carter adThese ventures range from travel
ministration.
agencies to laboratory' testing serThat study concludes that small vices, and from retalling to day-care
business could gain more than $2 centers.
bllllon and taxpayers could save
The task force was particularly
nearly $3 b1111on If the federal govercritical of the U.S. Postal Service,

Business mirror

Berry's World

IToday in history. I
• •

Today Is Tuesday, March 4, the
64th day of 19110. There are 302 days
left In the year.
I Today's highlight in history:
On March 4, 1t33, President
Franklin D. ~ launched the
"New Deal" In IU,I ftnlt inauguration
speech..
On this date:
' '
In 1681, England'&amp; ICing Charles
granted W1111am Penn a charter for

.

'

a

-

Ford said he would b&amp;ve to maD
up his mind by a~t April 1 If 1l'i
were to have a real shot at gatheriJII
convention delegates.
California Gov. Ed!ilundG. Bro~
Jr. dropped his Democratic caJBopaign In Massachusetts and said'&amp;
would concentrate on the ApriQ
primary In Wisconsin.
:
The Massachusetts primary \tiD
apportion national conventa
delegates In line with candl!lg
showings In each of the state's -ill
congressional districts. Til
Democratic ' primary Ia for
delegates •.. At stake on tli'i
Republican side are 42 delegates.
Vennont's primary election 'I(ID

=
Top twenty
TbeAPTopT'o..ly

ay'llleAioodatedl'ral

· The Top Twenty team. In !he final Aasoclatal
Press college bukethaU poD, with flnt1&gt;1aee
votes In porenthesea, recordl and total patnts.
Polntabuod on:I0-19-11 · 17 · 16 · 1~ - 1&lt; - 13-12-

ll - 10· 1 · 1· 7 -6-S -4-3·2 · 1:
I. DePaul

2. Loui.oville
3. Loolilana St.

m

=

detei:mlne" tbe loYaJtiel '

&lt;.Kentuclty

5. 0ngonSt.
B. Syraaase
7. Indiana

a. Maryland

of :1t

9. Notre Dame

12.-Y-

Republican • aind , 11 Dernocra!!;
delegates.

10. OllioSt.
11. 9ecqetown, D.C.

(14 )(1&amp;-1) 1,123
(2) (?M) 1,030
II) 1244) IPII
(2) 21-6) 1151
(:11&amp;-3) 812
i?M) 185
(211-7) 7&lt;8
(:!U) 722
(!!U) IIIII
(211-7) 118
(24-4) Ill
(24-4)
(24-4)
(2U)

·u .st.Jobn'II,N.Y.
· 11. NcdhCarollna
IS. Mluour!
17. Weber St.
IS. Arizona St.

Federal govemltlent still bi.g .brOther

Did you hear the one
about the N.H. debate?

develop and refine Ubyan oil, a
move seen as a ~resaure tactic
against western oU companies.
Ten years ago, a French submarine with 57 aboard waalost after
an underwater np!Oiion, In the
Medlterrean Sea off the Riviera.
Five years ago, Weet German
polltical leader Peter Lorenz wu
released by kidnappers, one day af· ·
ter Bonn freed five iqlrlloned
radicals and. flew ,them to South
what is nOIJ PelllliJ}vania,
Yemen.
J
,,
In 17111, the fltlt U.S. Congress
Last year, . the ~VleUiam '
CGJWened In New Yart's federal .
conflict entered its third week, with
bill, but It bid to adjourn for lack of
reports from,Pelljng l!ldlcatin8 that ,
li 111101'11111. .·
' •
'
C!llna
WllS preparing 19 puu baCk .
In 1817, Montana's a..bllean
over
the
border.
repnNntatift, Jeannette '.Rankin,
Thought
for today: To ~ conbecanw the flrst wOilllll to .erve in .
scious that you are lgnwant Ia a·
great step to lm01rledge. - Ben· In lrll, ~ 89viet Unlal lli8Jied an
jamin DlsraeU (1804-1881)
liP eelt*llt with Ubfa to J!llntly

Massachusetts could spell further
complications for Kennedy's
troubled campaign.
On the GOP side, the newspaper's
poll Indicated Bush, once a · 3-1
favorite over Reagan, was virtually
tied with the former California
governor.
After Tuesday's votes, the
primary action shifts to the South,
where Carter'
native Georgian,
and Reagan show strength.
Waiting In the wings, meanwhile,
former President ~d R. Ford
said Reagan cannot win the
presidency because be is too conservative. In an interview publlshed
Sunday in the New York Times,
Ford said he. would-become a- caD- ·
didate if offered a "broad-baSed" Invitation from the Republican Party.

II. Duke

Opinion

c:oncr-

soliTHERN 111)-:. w....-H..a, Smith u--1;
Jotmaon 1~ : Bolio 1-4-2; Gruesaer 1).4).0; Evans
' u--1: Salser~: E. Smillll-6-2. TOTALS 11-S17.
SOU11IWI!'BI'ERN (II) • Jeffers 6-t-13;
HalleyiHHl; L. Edwards 9-3-21; B. Edwanb 5-i12: Jordan 3-1-7. TOTAUIZS.7.U.
llconobyq-n :
SOO!hem
' 8 • 14 7-Sl
SOO!hwestem
11 10 13 19-SI

Kennedy,Bush campaigns seek new lif~
BOSTON (AP) - Democrat Edward" M. Kennedy and Republican
George Bush, both sons of
Massachusetts, are looking to the
state's primary today to pump new
life Into their presidential bids. But
recent polls show some erosion In
the support each can expect from
'voters.
While Kennedy and most of the
Republlcan candidates campaigned
hard In Massachusetts, another
GOP hopeful, Sen. Howard Baker
Jr., shifted his attention to Vermont.
That state also holds Its primary
Tuesday and Baker felt he had a bet·
ter chance there of making a good
showing to keep his campaign allve.
That left the Massachusetlll
Republican field to Bush, fonner
California Gov. Ronald Reagan and

which is initiating its own express
mail service. "This move would
compete with smaU couriers nationwide and would cost $1 million in advertlsiilg alone, but only produce
$250,000 In revenues during the first
year," the study said.
It also blasted the u.s. military
exchange systems, which conduct
about f9 b1111on a year In buslneas.
These exchanges were created to
provide necessities to isolated posts
for low-paid military personnel. But
now, the eJ:changes are frequently
patronized by retired officers and
dependents and many others who
might not need such subsidized
benefits, the report says.

Witnesses ~ at task force
bearings said virtually no conawner
product i8 exempt from sale at these
exchanges, which are situated ill
many areas that-- are 8JI)'thing buC
Isolated.
'
:
'1bii task force c:QIIcluded
private local businesses ,. are undercut by these l'frbi!IKM which,
under exeQIPtlons from antltnist
laws, can purchase merchandl8e
directly from manufacturers '!IS
lower coslll.
. The study also noted that rniUtan'
exchanges are exempt from
charging sales tax and can establlih
deferred payment plans at little :ii

tha•

no Interest.

· ~I-~---:-. ~----:---.....--,------~

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-ifl:"'~uofWS«&lt;are :

ArablanoUill: Parlal'lual261.

=~Salea

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~-~--"Sia
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161G6-

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Tlm'a..._.·~Kareu01otlln (oab)I7...TI.

.....,
Smltb
aad
r'• • Nollie Jacboll IJS,
COiene Rece 371; Blue Tar)u- Kay WWiamoon
(IIII&gt;)IIHIII.

Congress lackirig business

•

Jodt'o A~ Jon llowoD 171, Dellble

H-., _,.

Feb. IJII,...

Tooaa
Pr-.lfiU'iGro.
SlltSuooiY
l.an-r'i (lli&gt;.

·

VicideJ...tperlll-44.'1.

W. L
II :11

~ ~

~~-~~\~~High =·~-

tba

WASHINGTON (AP) -With the
Bradernas, wbo.rankstbird ill
SALT D treaty off the Senate calen- House Democratic leadership, bu
dar and the attention of leaders Notre Dame In his' dlatrlct and 01101!
riveted on presidential prlinarles, taught pollticahclence there.
congressional business has lieen ten"Will the gentleman yield?'! lao
ding towarp the slack side.
·
terrupted Rep. D11D RAIItenkowskl;·a
In fact, several times In recent Demorat from Cllcaao.
,_.
days the Senate has literally run out
"I want to coogratula~ NciU'e
of things to do. _
Dame on their oulllanclllli P!f'
There have been loog pauses on formance and I want to eOI!Cr&amp;~
the Door, numerous quorum calla,
~ whip and good colleape, li_i!
days with nathlng accomp11ahed and
gentleman from lndlalla, r!"'
"profonna"sessionalitvcilvlbgllttle iecgnlalag DePaal u the No.1
morethanquickbaopolthegavel.
collegiate team ln. tbe ~."
The House has gone· tbrol!8h the
~ lild. ·
motions of l!tleast appear:lrig busy ,... · 1D fact,' Rolteakowr1li coatllluC
but so far this year .fe'!r inajor billa
be and tbe DePaul~ l\ay' ~
have been·debatad. One day .--htly
bildpJamW!evm)-ln~ ;
a bill 1mtitled "tariff tteatment ol
"We~tbefacttbatma~
feathers and down" Will the Dlain
weougbtto'-eoqebefcriweget~
eveJit.
to the tciurnlnwat nat week~,.. The usually serious Democratic
W8llli!d to mike san Notre ~
Whip John Brademaa ollndlaiul, wugqtobeilltbetounwoentso_
whO Ls In charge ol Jlllttlnll Oilt tbe . we Pl-.ded to Jay don jlllt alit'
dally ICbedule, baa even taken a · tle."
·
·
·
whimsical lurJL
·&amp;p_ u-1 VIlli~ I)Ca11f.,
Bradmna• took to the ftoor Mvera1
tben stood up, pra11ec1 Bnwm• fclr
day• ago to pi'oclalm: "Mr.
''the ~ ~ wbiC:h be
, . s,euer, 1a1&amp; nlg\lt wu another perfcirmibllclllt*,"batlldded: , -~
proud illibt for the Unlveralty ol . • "I wilider If ~ bad .,._ .ali
Notre Dune · ·
. ·
811poup ill, the p Um•'• · ~
"Uvlng uP to tbe flnelt
ooverqe ill tb11 C,qi-. I do •
of the Flghllng trllh, Notte'Dame'•
reiJV!IIIbir tlie pidlru
·, bfisketball tealn ~landed No. ,1: a report on Notre 'n.mt'l ~
ranked DePaul Univeraity ·of · seuoa."."'
Chlcag" Its firBt defeat ol the yW:,
Brademai At.doWD.
.:" !'

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1'-----The Saving Place - - - - 1

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$4U,Z83 BET MONDAY
FLORENCE, Ky. (AP) -Latonia
Race Course, · despite picketing,
drew 2,914 patronS who bet $411,263,
the highest totals for a Monday night
In the winter meeting at the northern
KentuckY track. :' .
lnfOI'Illlltional pickets from the Intematlonal· BroU!erhood of Electrical Workers, wbO are on strike· at
seven otlier'tracks, were presebt at .
five gates on Mcinday night.
However, Latonila's mutuel clerks
have contract different than that of
:the strikerS, according ,to track
General Mariliger David Vance. He ·
said the local union C!lntract bars
work · stoppages for informational
\ '
pickets. .
. · The ~EW is strlkll18 ·against .
~can '.Totall8atQt: Co., which
operates Lat.onla's mutuel

Charms .~t included In
packases of sro~p photo•

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longer now.
"It's kind of tight, not the way It
should be when you're young. It
takes a little time before I can get it
to where it can t.dte the stress of
bearing down In a game.
" I wouldn't want to go into a game
with the stuff I have now.''
.Bonham's major league records of
73-32 and · lifetime earned run
average of 3.99 isn't oqe of baseball's
overwhelming success stories.
Still, Bonham said the fact that
he's lasted eight years in the big
leagues ought to count for
something.
"I've always had good stuff and
I've always worlted hard,"-he said.
"Those two things together ought to
be a formula for a big year. But I've
never had a big year and I don't
know why.
"The last couple of years I've pit·
ched as well as I felt I should have.
I'm satisfied with my career and
myself. I don't know what my personality would be llke if I had had a
·
careerllkeTomSeaver."

Boys tournament scores

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. TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - Bill needed wins, I got them for us and
finished with a ~7 record.
Bonham is convinced that the way to
improve his won-lost record is pitch
"I've never won more than 13
weU enough to stick around unW the
games in a season. But I'm satisified
that I've always had good stuff."
later Innings when the Cincinnati
Reds win many oftheirballgames.
Bonham said he used to take
'1 haven't had many losses; I've criticism personally, especially in
Chicago. "We (Cubs) were bad and
kept the team close," Bonham said,
the writers tended to reflect that
as the Reds entered their second day
of spring training with their full · negativism. When I had my
troubles, I felt that they were just
. squad at the Redsland complex.
"II I can keep my earned run
writing what appeared to be the
problem on the surface. I was
11verage in the low threes and go into
questioning myself along with the
the eighth Inning of more ball games
I'm going to get a lot of wins."
other people.
"Now, I don't question myself
Bonham's trouble the last two
anymore. Once you become happy
seasons, while coming back from
ann surgery, is thlit he hasn't made with yourself you can take
criticism.''
it into the later innings of many
It's not that Bonham is sticking his
games.
head In the sand. He knows he still ·
In 1974 and 1975 with the Chicago
has to find some way to get batters
Cuba, he pitched a total of 472 inout,
but he said his arm really isn't a
nings. The last two years' total is
just 316 innings.
factor any more.
''I'm happy with the way I pitched
"I know I'll get to a certain point
where I can get the hitters out,"
last year, though," Bonham said. "I
WBB 4-Q at one point but when we
Bonham said. "The arm will be fine
if I get It into shape; It just takes

•

(213-1)
(111-9 )

Goebel; back, Susan Thompson, coach, Uta Young,
Teresa Hannum, Kaleen Mlllhone, Patty Edwards, and
Alberta Schultz.

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(21-4)

lured are, front row, 1-r, Tammy Hudson, Laura
Eichinger, Jeannie McClure, Cassie Sheets and Sarah

Bonham hoping to contribute more

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SEcriONAL BASKETBALL CHAMPS - The
girls' varsity squad at Eastern High School won the
sectional tournament at Nelsonville and will now com. pete in district competition at Ch1111cothe. They will ~o
against Portsmouth Clay March 6. Team members p1c-

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:10. Purdue

DETEilbiOO:OLOOK - Southwestern'sDanil Jeffers (40, withbaliJ
and Southern's Della Johnson (15) both have that determined look In this
actJon shot;takeri'durlng Monday's Claslo A Sectional Girls championship
~-· gam~ at"Galli!J(ills. The Highlander gaiB won, 53-37., and advanced to
·~· districtptayinOhllllcotbe. On left!BSouthem'sCindyEvans (14) .

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tradHl0111 ···

..,., the Chfthn C.t. No. It'., Ml.~hB .;.... don ·r
~. fo!t.h.,,aon'tllldel"

'

Coach Mel Carter's Southwestern
Highlander girls captured the Class
A Sectional Basketball Tournament
Monday night by turning bl!ck
Southern, 53-37, In a makeup cOntest
on the Galllpolls High School har• dwood.
The Lady Highlanders will not
have much tbne to enjoy the victory.
fiinight, they tackle Green's Bobcats of Scioto County in first round
action of the Class A District Tournament at Chilllcothe.
Tipoff time for tonight's contest is
6:30 p.m. Green won the Rock Hill
Sectional.
Monday, the Edwards girls, Unda
and Barb, combined for 33 points to
eliminate the regular season
Southern Valley Athletic Conference
. champions.
Unda tossed In 21 and Barb added
12. Dana Jeffers was also in double
figures with 13 points.
Mel Weese paced the Lady Tor·
nadoes with 18 points.
Southwestern led lHI, 21·16 and 3430 at the quartennarks. The Gallia
County quintet outscored the Meigs
Countians, 1~7. in the final period to
win going away.
Box score:

TUlO TOP
Gtll,)5 OP.AUl

\

•

THURS. &amp; FRI. 10.1,.2·5:00, "

'

~-

�2-The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, March 4, 1980

••
•
•

The Daily Sentinel

NO~ODY'Ll

VOTE!!

Win sectional tournament

SWHS girls advance
with 53-37 victory

Opinions and comments

· IT'LL DRCIG
0~ AN' B(,l
ELEC110~ TIME

3-The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday. March 4, l!JIIC

T~EtJ TI-l'

STRAWS!

648 criticism justified
The operation of Community Mental Health and Mental Retardation
648 Boards locally and In Franklin County have drawn heavy criticl.9m
from county and state officials in recent weeks.
In our opinion, that criticism is justified.
Whether by acts of omission or conunission the Gallia·
Jackson-Meigs 648 Board bas not been fully responsible to the public it
was appointed to represent.
When a member of the community accepts an appointment to serve on
a public board, they accwt a responsibility to act as a public tnJstee-and
as such they are answerable to the people who have entrusted them.
Such appointmenlll should not be accepted because it furthers the appointee's standing in the community, will look good on future resumes or
will add a line to one's obituary.
At a recent meeting with the Gallia CommiBsion, some 648 Board members argued that in the deluge of recent publicity, the positive workings of
the board and the dedication of its members, administators and staff had
been overlooked.
We would answer that the fact 648 Board employes may do their jobs is
not newsworthy. They are paid, and paid well, to do so.
Neither do we find unique the fact that public appointees have devoted
loog hours of service, without compensation, to mental bealth while sitting on the 648 Board.
Dozens of publicly appointed boards meet each month in service to the
community. None of the members of those boards receive compensation.
Most are dedicated to the furtherance of the conununity good.
The only thing that does seem exceptional about the members of the 648
Board is that they do receive some tangible benefits, In the fonn of
catered board meetings and occasioryli trips paid for at taxpayers expense, for their service.
Some members of the 648 board have objected to press coverage of
their activities and expenditures-have said that adverse publicity is en·
dangering the future of needed mental bealth services in the area.
II that should be the cas~if the future of mental health services (which
we agree are needed) have been jeopardized-the tesponslbllity lies
squarely with the board, Its administration and staff for allowing
questionable spending and accounting practices to develop and continue.
II those conditions had not existed, there would have been no adverse
·
publicity.
A first step toward reestablishing public trust would be for the 648
Board to adopt the suggestions offered by Gallia Commissioners Paul D.
Niday and Lonnie Burger.
It does not seem unreasonable to expect the board to use accounting
practices, hiring and salary guidelines used by other publicly supported
agencies within the county. As long as they refuse to do so a stigma of impropriety will remain with the board.
The same must be said of the boards' primary contracting agency, the
Community Mental Health Center Inc. Despite that boards corporate
status, since It spends millions of public dollars annually, its financial
records should be open to public scrutiny.
We do not question the need or legitimacy of keeping the Center's
patient records confidential; however, we do maintain the public should
be allowed to review the board's expenditures, such as the cost of a trip
made late last month by several Center Board members and employes to
San Francisco.

Today's political roundup

Rep. John B. Anderson of Illinois.
Fonner Texas Gov. John B. Connally Is putting his efforts into South
Carolina.
It appears Kennedy, still expected
to easily top President Carter, and
Bush, In a vii"tual dead-heat with
Reagan, have the most at stake In
Massachusetlll.
·A Boston Globe poU published Sunday showed potential voters in the
Democratic pfimary still preferred
Kennedy over Carter. But that portion of the polling done two days after Kennedy's 1065 in the New HamJ18hire primary last week showed
substantially lower support for the
senator. The poll also showed undecided voters seemed more llkeiy
to vote for Carter.
Failure to win handilY in

,

CONCORD, N.H. (AP)- Revising
about issues, it was about who would
a joke Ronald Reagan wisbea he'd "get to debate about issues - on
never told: How do you pick out the
which 90 percent of the Republican
former governor of California at a
presidential contenders agree.
tw&amp;-man campaign debate?
The fact is debates In primary
He's the one who brings four other
election campaigns tend to be abort
guys.
on drama and disagreement. 'nle
How do you tell which ones are the
candidates are cautious and besides,
extras?
since they all are trying to lead the
They bet that Reagan can get
same party, their differences tend to
them seated as debaters.
be In detail and degree, not on funAnd how do you know if George
damentals.
Bush Ia involved?
Indeed, after Reagan's fuWe ef·
Reagan's added starters go away, · fort to make room for four additional
leaving hlni to debate Bush alone candidates at his Saturday night
and pay the bills for the whole show.
debate with Bush, the fanner goverThat's about what happened In the . nor and the fanner United Natlona
only Republican debate that really
ambassador spent the better part of
produced an argument among the
two hours a~ing With each other.
presidential candidates. It wasn't

WASHINGTON (AP) -"The JUDent didn't compete so -heavily
federal government today is the against private companies.
largest eleCtric power producer, tile
"At a time wben small business
largest Insurer, the largest lender, faces unprecedented problems with
the largest landlord, the largest inflation, high Interest rates,
warehouse operator, the largest regulation and capital formation, it
shipowner and the largest truckfleet comes as a shock to fmd that one of
operator.
the gravest threats to small business
"For a country which Ia the citadel comes from Its own government,"
and the world'' principal ezponent says Dale Nelson, a Des Moines,
of private enterprise and Individual Iowa businessman who chaired the
initiative, this is rather an amazing
lilt. n
That statement was made In 1964 Task Force on l:lovenunent Comby Rowland R. Hughes, President petition.
Eisenhower's chief budget adviser.
Currently, the federal govenunent
The list has grown ·considerably •engages in more than 21,000 comsince then, with bewildering Im- mercial and Industrial activities at a
plications for this country's small cost of $10 b1111on a year, the report
businesses, says a just-released says.
study prepared for the Carter adThese ventures range from travel
ministration.
agencies to laboratory' testing serThat study concludes that small vices, and from retalling to day-care
business could gain more than $2 centers.
bllllon and taxpayers could save
The task force was particularly
nearly $3 b1111on If the federal govercritical of the U.S. Postal Service,

Business mirror

Berry's World

IToday in history. I
• •

Today Is Tuesday, March 4, the
64th day of 19110. There are 302 days
left In the year.
I Today's highlight in history:
On March 4, 1t33, President
Franklin D. ~ launched the
"New Deal" In IU,I ftnlt inauguration
speech..
On this date:
' '
In 1681, England'&amp; ICing Charles
granted W1111am Penn a charter for

.

'

a

-

Ford said he would b&amp;ve to maD
up his mind by a~t April 1 If 1l'i
were to have a real shot at gatheriJII
convention delegates.
California Gov. Ed!ilundG. Bro~
Jr. dropped his Democratic caJBopaign In Massachusetts and said'&amp;
would concentrate on the ApriQ
primary In Wisconsin.
:
The Massachusetts primary \tiD
apportion national conventa
delegates In line with candl!lg
showings In each of the state's -ill
congressional districts. Til
Democratic ' primary Ia for
delegates •.. At stake on tli'i
Republican side are 42 delegates.
Vennont's primary election 'I(ID

=
Top twenty
TbeAPTopT'o..ly

ay'llleAioodatedl'ral

· The Top Twenty team. In !he final Aasoclatal
Press college bukethaU poD, with flnt1&gt;1aee
votes In porenthesea, recordl and total patnts.
Polntabuod on:I0-19-11 · 17 · 16 · 1~ - 1&lt; - 13-12-

ll - 10· 1 · 1· 7 -6-S -4-3·2 · 1:
I. DePaul

2. Loui.oville
3. Loolilana St.

m

=

detei:mlne" tbe loYaJtiel '

&lt;.Kentuclty

5. 0ngonSt.
B. Syraaase
7. Indiana

a. Maryland

of :1t

9. Notre Dame

12.-Y-

Republican • aind , 11 Dernocra!!;
delegates.

10. OllioSt.
11. 9ecqetown, D.C.

(14 )(1&amp;-1) 1,123
(2) (?M) 1,030
II) 1244) IPII
(2) 21-6) 1151
(:11&amp;-3) 812
i?M) 185
(211-7) 7&lt;8
(:!U) 722
(!!U) IIIII
(211-7) 118
(24-4) Ill
(24-4)
(24-4)
(2U)

·u .st.Jobn'II,N.Y.
· 11. NcdhCarollna
IS. Mluour!
17. Weber St.
IS. Arizona St.

Federal govemltlent still bi.g .brOther

Did you hear the one
about the N.H. debate?

develop and refine Ubyan oil, a
move seen as a ~resaure tactic
against western oU companies.
Ten years ago, a French submarine with 57 aboard waalost after
an underwater np!Oiion, In the
Medlterrean Sea off the Riviera.
Five years ago, Weet German
polltical leader Peter Lorenz wu
released by kidnappers, one day af· ·
ter Bonn freed five iqlrlloned
radicals and. flew ,them to South
what is nOIJ PelllliJ}vania,
Yemen.
J
,,
In 17111, the fltlt U.S. Congress
Last year, . the ~VleUiam '
CGJWened In New Yart's federal .
conflict entered its third week, with
bill, but It bid to adjourn for lack of
reports from,Pelljng l!ldlcatin8 that ,
li 111101'11111. .·
' •
'
C!llna
WllS preparing 19 puu baCk .
In 1817, Montana's a..bllean
over
the
border.
repnNntatift, Jeannette '.Rankin,
Thought
for today: To ~ conbecanw the flrst wOilllll to .erve in .
scious that you are lgnwant Ia a·
great step to lm01rledge. - Ben· In lrll, ~ 89viet Unlal lli8Jied an
jamin DlsraeU (1804-1881)
liP eelt*llt with Ubfa to J!llntly

Massachusetts could spell further
complications for Kennedy's
troubled campaign.
On the GOP side, the newspaper's
poll Indicated Bush, once a · 3-1
favorite over Reagan, was virtually
tied with the former California
governor.
After Tuesday's votes, the
primary action shifts to the South,
where Carter'
native Georgian,
and Reagan show strength.
Waiting In the wings, meanwhile,
former President ~d R. Ford
said Reagan cannot win the
presidency because be is too conservative. In an interview publlshed
Sunday in the New York Times,
Ford said he. would-become a- caD- ·
didate if offered a "broad-baSed" Invitation from the Republican Party.

II. Duke

Opinion

c:oncr-

soliTHERN 111)-:. w....-H..a, Smith u--1;
Jotmaon 1~ : Bolio 1-4-2; Gruesaer 1).4).0; Evans
' u--1: Salser~: E. Smillll-6-2. TOTALS 11-S17.
SOU11IWI!'BI'ERN (II) • Jeffers 6-t-13;
HalleyiHHl; L. Edwards 9-3-21; B. Edwanb 5-i12: Jordan 3-1-7. TOTAUIZS.7.U.
llconobyq-n :
SOO!hem
' 8 • 14 7-Sl
SOO!hwestem
11 10 13 19-SI

Kennedy,Bush campaigns seek new lif~
BOSTON (AP) - Democrat Edward" M. Kennedy and Republican
George Bush, both sons of
Massachusetts, are looking to the
state's primary today to pump new
life Into their presidential bids. But
recent polls show some erosion In
the support each can expect from
'voters.
While Kennedy and most of the
Republlcan candidates campaigned
hard In Massachusetts, another
GOP hopeful, Sen. Howard Baker
Jr., shifted his attention to Vermont.
That state also holds Its primary
Tuesday and Baker felt he had a bet·
ter chance there of making a good
showing to keep his campaign allve.
That left the Massachusetlll
Republican field to Bush, fonner
California Gov. Ronald Reagan and

which is initiating its own express
mail service. "This move would
compete with smaU couriers nationwide and would cost $1 million in advertlsiilg alone, but only produce
$250,000 In revenues during the first
year," the study said.
It also blasted the u.s. military
exchange systems, which conduct
about f9 b1111on a year In buslneas.
These exchanges were created to
provide necessities to isolated posts
for low-paid military personnel. But
now, the eJ:changes are frequently
patronized by retired officers and
dependents and many others who
might not need such subsidized
benefits, the report says.

Witnesses ~ at task force
bearings said virtually no conawner
product i8 exempt from sale at these
exchanges, which are situated ill
many areas that-- are 8JI)'thing buC
Isolated.
'
:
'1bii task force c:QIIcluded
private local businesses ,. are undercut by these l'frbi!IKM which,
under exeQIPtlons from antltnist
laws, can purchase merchandl8e
directly from manufacturers '!IS
lower coslll.
. The study also noted that rniUtan'
exchanges are exempt from
charging sales tax and can establlih
deferred payment plans at little :ii

tha•

no Interest.

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WASHINGTON (AP) -With the
Bradernas, wbo.rankstbird ill
SALT D treaty off the Senate calen- House Democratic leadership, bu
dar and the attention of leaders Notre Dame In his' dlatrlct and 01101!
riveted on presidential prlinarles, taught pollticahclence there.
congressional business has lieen ten"Will the gentleman yield?'! lao
ding towarp the slack side.
·
terrupted Rep. D11D RAIItenkowskl;·a
In fact, several times In recent Demorat from Cllcaao.
,_.
days the Senate has literally run out
"I want to coogratula~ NciU'e
of things to do. _
Dame on their oulllanclllli P!f'
There have been loog pauses on formance and I want to eOI!Cr&amp;~
the Door, numerous quorum calla,
~ whip and good colleape, li_i!
days with nathlng accomp11ahed and
gentleman from lndlalla, r!"'
"profonna"sessionalitvcilvlbgllttle iecgnlalag DePaal u the No.1
morethanquickbaopolthegavel.
collegiate team ln. tbe ~."
The House has gone· tbrol!8h the
~ lild. ·
motions of l!tleast appear:lrig busy ,... · 1D fact,' Rolteakowr1li coatllluC
but so far this year .fe'!r inajor billa
be and tbe DePaul~ l\ay' ~
have been·debatad. One day .--htly
bildpJamW!evm)-ln~ ;
a bill 1mtitled "tariff tteatment ol
"We~tbefacttbatma~
feathers and down" Will the Dlain
weougbtto'-eoqebefcriweget~
eveJit.
to the tciurnlnwat nat week~,.. The usually serious Democratic
W8llli!d to mike san Notre ~
Whip John Brademaa ollndlaiul, wugqtobeilltbetounwoentso_
whO Ls In charge ol Jlllttlnll Oilt tbe . we Pl-.ded to Jay don jlllt alit'
dally ICbedule, baa even taken a · tle."
·
·
·
whimsical lurJL
·&amp;p_ u-1 VIlli~ I)Ca11f.,
Bradmna• took to the ftoor Mvera1
tben stood up, pra11ec1 Bnwm• fclr
day• ago to pi'oclalm: "Mr.
''the ~ ~ wbiC:h be
, . s,euer, 1a1&amp; nlg\lt wu another perfcirmibllclllt*,"batlldded: , -~
proud illibt for the Unlveralty ol . • "I wilider If ~ bad .,._ .ali
Notre Dune · ·
. ·
811poup ill, the p Um•'• · ~
"Uvlng uP to tbe flnelt
ooverqe ill tb11 C,qi-. I do •
of the Flghllng trllh, Notte'Dame'•
reiJV!IIIbir tlie pidlru
·, bfisketball tealn ~landed No. ,1: a report on Notre 'n.mt'l ~
ranked DePaul Univeraity ·of · seuoa."."'
Chlcag" Its firBt defeat ol the yW:,
Brademai At.doWD.
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MARCH 5 • MARCH 9

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$4U,Z83 BET MONDAY
FLORENCE, Ky. (AP) -Latonia
Race Course, · despite picketing,
drew 2,914 patronS who bet $411,263,
the highest totals for a Monday night
In the winter meeting at the northern
KentuckY track. :' .
lnfOI'Illlltional pickets from the Intematlonal· BroU!erhood of Electrical Workers, wbO are on strike· at
seven otlier'tracks, were presebt at .
five gates on Mcinday night.
However, Latonila's mutuel clerks
have contract different than that of
:the strikerS, according ,to track
General Mariliger David Vance. He ·
said the local union C!lntract bars
work · stoppages for informational
\ '
pickets. .
. · The ~EW is strlkll18 ·against .
~can '.Totall8atQt: Co., which
operates Lat.onla's mutuel

Charms .~t included In
packases of sro~p photo•

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Deposit95$ .
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Due: $12.00
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longer now.
"It's kind of tight, not the way It
should be when you're young. It
takes a little time before I can get it
to where it can t.dte the stress of
bearing down In a game.
" I wouldn't want to go into a game
with the stuff I have now.''
.Bonham's major league records of
73-32 and · lifetime earned run
average of 3.99 isn't oqe of baseball's
overwhelming success stories.
Still, Bonham said the fact that
he's lasted eight years in the big
leagues ought to count for
something.
"I've always had good stuff and
I've always worlted hard,"-he said.
"Those two things together ought to
be a formula for a big year. But I've
never had a big year and I don't
know why.
"The last couple of years I've pit·
ched as well as I felt I should have.
I'm satisfied with my career and
myself. I don't know what my personality would be llke if I had had a
·
careerllkeTomSeaver."

Boys tournament scores

:IZ2

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. TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - Bill needed wins, I got them for us and
finished with a ~7 record.
Bonham is convinced that the way to
improve his won-lost record is pitch
"I've never won more than 13
weU enough to stick around unW the
games in a season. But I'm satisified
that I've always had good stuff."
later Innings when the Cincinnati
Reds win many oftheirballgames.
Bonham said he used to take
'1 haven't had many losses; I've criticism personally, especially in
Chicago. "We (Cubs) were bad and
kept the team close," Bonham said,
the writers tended to reflect that
as the Reds entered their second day
of spring training with their full · negativism. When I had my
troubles, I felt that they were just
. squad at the Redsland complex.
"II I can keep my earned run
writing what appeared to be the
problem on the surface. I was
11verage in the low threes and go into
questioning myself along with the
the eighth Inning of more ball games
I'm going to get a lot of wins."
other people.
"Now, I don't question myself
Bonham's trouble the last two
anymore. Once you become happy
seasons, while coming back from
ann surgery, is thlit he hasn't made with yourself you can take
criticism.''
it into the later innings of many
It's not that Bonham is sticking his
games.
head In the sand. He knows he still ·
In 1974 and 1975 with the Chicago
has to find some way to get batters
Cuba, he pitched a total of 472 inout,
but he said his arm really isn't a
nings. The last two years' total is
just 316 innings.
factor any more.
''I'm happy with the way I pitched
"I know I'll get to a certain point
where I can get the hitters out,"
last year, though," Bonham said. "I
WBB 4-Q at one point but when we
Bonham said. "The arm will be fine
if I get It into shape; It just takes

•

(213-1)
(111-9 )

Goebel; back, Susan Thompson, coach, Uta Young,
Teresa Hannum, Kaleen Mlllhone, Patty Edwards, and
Alberta Schultz.

'

(It

(21-4)

lured are, front row, 1-r, Tammy Hudson, Laura
Eichinger, Jeannie McClure, Cassie Sheets and Sarah

Bonham hoping to contribute more

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SEcriONAL BASKETBALL CHAMPS - The
girls' varsity squad at Eastern High School won the
sectional tournament at Nelsonville and will now com. pete in district competition at Ch1111cothe. They will ~o
against Portsmouth Clay March 6. Team members p1c-

sw_Bo_oham
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(23-6)

II. Iona
:10. Purdue

DETEilbiOO:OLOOK - Southwestern'sDanil Jeffers (40, withbaliJ
and Southern's Della Johnson (15) both have that determined look In this
actJon shot;takeri'durlng Monday's Claslo A Sectional Girls championship
~-· gam~ at"Galli!J(ills. The Highlander gaiB won, 53-37., and advanced to
·~· districtptayinOhllllcotbe. On left!BSouthem'sCindyEvans (14) .

. SmlthandHalle•'o

tradHl0111 ···

..,., the Chfthn C.t. No. It'., Ml.~hB .;.... don ·r
~. fo!t.h.,,aon'tllldel"

'

Coach Mel Carter's Southwestern
Highlander girls captured the Class
A Sectional Basketball Tournament
Monday night by turning bl!ck
Southern, 53-37, In a makeup cOntest
on the Galllpolls High School har• dwood.
The Lady Highlanders will not
have much tbne to enjoy the victory.
fiinight, they tackle Green's Bobcats of Scioto County in first round
action of the Class A District Tournament at Chilllcothe.
Tipoff time for tonight's contest is
6:30 p.m. Green won the Rock Hill
Sectional.
Monday, the Edwards girls, Unda
and Barb, combined for 33 points to
eliminate the regular season
Southern Valley Athletic Conference
. champions.
Unda tossed In 21 and Barb added
12. Dana Jeffers was also in double
figures with 13 points.
Mel Weese paced the Lady Tor·
nadoes with 18 points.
Southwestern led lHI, 21·16 and 3430 at the quartennarks. The Gallia
County quintet outscored the Meigs
Countians, 1~7. in the final period to
win going away.
Box score:

TUlO TOP
Gtll,)5 OP.AUl

\

•

THURS. &amp; FRI. 10.1,.2·5:00, "

'

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Church celebrates 25 .years

Celebrate birthdays
with skating party
Aaron Card, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Card, Racine, and Eric Heck,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Mike Heck,
celebrated their birthdays recently
with a skating party.
The door prize was won by Josh
Heck and Viv Jones won the corner
skate.
Attending were Aaron aixl Eric's
grandpar£.tts, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Card, Middletown, and Ruth Card,
Lebanon, their aunt. Others at the
party were Jeremy and Josh Heck,
Stacey Shank, Ira Van Cooney,
Patrick Grysza, Chris Smith, An~i~

Van Cooney, Teresa Van Cooney,
and Cassie Hubbahl, Pomeroy; Mr.
and Mrs. Roger Holter and Janiey,
Mrs. Ron Holter, Tammy and Ryan,
Mrs. Craig Harrison, Amy and
Todd, Martha Clonch, Mr. and Mrs_
Curtis Jones, Dion, Billy, Jamey,
and Wendy, Mrs. Terry Reiber,
Vince and Jessy, Mrs. Jim Werry,
Randy and Ricky, John Paul and
Tracy Card, also children of Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Card, all of Racine; and
Danny Weddle and Charlie Weddle,
Stiversvllie.

1-Tbe ~Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., 'l'uelldlly, March4, l!lllO

. ..

--•
.
--••
~

CONFINEDTOBOIJPIT.U. :'
A-aale·Mae Brown of Malon;..!':
Va. remains a patient at the Holier
Medical Center. She bas lleeD ccdied therefottbl! puttwODIOIItbl~
would. appreciate cards. 'lbe)' 'idlY
be sent to her at Room 403. .
;..:
;

,•

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CORRECTION -

FRUTH PHARMACY CIRCULAR
. .
.
IN TODAY'S PAPER
'

Bible study begins tonight
A Bible study will begin tonight at
St. Paul United Methodist Church of
Tuppers Plains with the Rev. David
Harris of the Southern Cluster and
the Rev. Richard Thomas, pastor,
doing team teaching.
·
. -----·.

Kennedy recipient of
DAR Citizenship award
School _will be guests or Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter, Daughters
of the American Revolution, at the
annual Charter Day luncheon to be
held at 1 p.m. on March 14 at Trinity
Church. At that time the three Meigs
County recipients will be presented
Good Citizen pins.

RETURNS HOME
Mrs. Ernia Roush has returned to
her home in Forest Run after spending several weeks at Lake Park
·and Key Largo, Fla.

"Prostatic cancer next to lung
cancer, has the highest incidence of
any fonn of male cancer," says S.
Michael, public infonnation chairman of the Meigs Unit of the A.C.S.
The estimated cancer deaths in
Ohio for 1979 are 1,000 people and the
estimated new cancer cases in Ohio
for 1979 are 3,000 people. The risk of
developing cancer of the prostate increases with age. In the age group 55
to 74 prostatic cancer iB the third
highest cause of male cancer deaths,
and after the age of 75 It is the
second greatest cause, pointed out
Michael.
Signs and symptoms if present or
occur, should be reported to the doctor, are as follows: weak or interrupted flow of urine; inability to
urinate or difficulty in starting
urination; need to urinate frequenUy, especially at night; blood in
urine; urine flow that iB not easily
stopped; painful or burning

POP

Should Have Read

2 LB. BAG

Cancer symptoms reviewed by localt society

Clifford Kennedy

Clifford J. Kennedy or Pomeroy is
the Meigs High School's recipient of
the Daughters of the American
Revolution Good Citizens Award.
Asenior at Meigs, he iB the son of
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford S. Kennedy .
Kennedy iB president of the
National Honor Society and was
selected to receive the Danforth
Award in his junior year. He plays
both varsity baseball and basketball
and ·is in the Varsity M. Club. Clifford also had a role in the junior
class play.
Kennedy along with Teresa Lynn
Spencer of Eastern High School and
Carman Manuel of Southern High

JOLLY TIME YELLOW

On March 12, Ule UMW of the
church will meet at 1:30 p.m. Communlnh was observed Sunday with
the Rev. Mr. Thomas using scripture from Luke 15 and the topic, "A
Shepherd's Care." His wife sang a
selection ror the service.

Instead Of 2 2 lb; Bags

urination; continuing pain In lower
back, pelvis or thighs. These signs 1 !!!!!!
and symptoms are more likelY to in- 1dicate prostatic enlargement which .
is a benign tumor, or other con.
ditions rather than cancer- but such
NOW ONE INSURAftlCVLAN CAN COVER
signs and symptoms should never be
YOU, YOUR HOME/ .t&lt;!D YOUR AU10• ..
ignored, says Michael.
Ways to help protect yourself
against cancer of the prostate are as
follows: every man over forty
should have a rectal exam aa part of
his regular pliysical checkup, !Iince
a doctor can feel an Irregular or
unusually firm area that may indicate a tumor; report the signs and
symptoms tbat are mentioned above
if present or occur to the doctor.
"The key to saving lives from cancer of the prostate is early detection
and treatment," stated Michael.
For further Information on
prostatic cancer . call 992r7531 or
come to the office which is located
on second floor of the Senior Qtizens
Building.

,."-

-..

-.-.
..----

.....

.J.':;

.

~

.,.._

r--------------------SHOP

MASON FURNITURE
FOR THE BEST D&amp;ALS IN THE
TRl STATE AREA

MASON FURNITURE
Mon., Tues., Wed., Friday &amp; Sat.
8:30 to 5: Oil Thursday till12 Noon

OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT ONLY
Herman Grate

-'.

•'
.

LOADED

Reg. $1.58

ALKA SELTZER
PLUS
COLD MEDICINE

Bob Shepherd was guest spaker at ·
recent breakfa.st _meeting of the
Men's Fellowship of the Middleport
First Ba~ Churc!l. Shepherd _
talked to the 8rouP Gil hl8 w!ll'k with
the IndiaM in Arizona,
Meetings l;l the Fellowshlp are
held on the SI!Cillld SWiday of each
month In the chW'Ch ba8ement and
aU men r:J. the church an! Invited to
join the group at 7:30p.m.
the

GARDENERS MEET

A meeting c#. the Middleport
Garden Club ICbeduled for tooJgbt
· (Monday) at the bome of Mrs.
Loulle 'l'hoi!!poc)n bas been CBIICelled due to the llll!l'lf.

CHICKEN

0

20's

~NINDIANS

''

Mason, W. Va.

773-5592

SAYINGS

SHEPHERD SPEAKS

LEGS

Kenny Roush and Jason spent the
weekend in Columbus, and also
visited Mr. and Mrs. Larry Flowers,
Pickerington.

sw

Myrtle Clark and Mn. Annie Moon,
nutrition aides, go to the home of
those enrolled and show . the
bomemakera bow to prepare meals,
to keep tbelr lrltcbens clean, to store
and preserve foods .
At the March 18 meeting of the ·
Coundl, a representative of the
Southeast Ohio Legal Services will
be present to discuss the services
they will be providing to low-Income
residents.
Twelve memben of the Council
were present for the meeting. Nancy
Van Meter, R. N., director of nur.tlng at the Pomeroy Health Care
Center, was a guest.

I

--·....
---....

VISIT IN COLUMBUS

Mrs. Albert Roush, Mr. and Mn.

with the bornemahra being enrolled
for a maximUDI of two years. Mrs.

.-•"

Mr. aoo Mrs. Ernie SWoll,
Syracuse, are announcing the birth
of a son, Clifton Thomas, born on
Feb. 11 at the Holzer Medical
Center. The baby weighed eight
pounds, four ounces.
Mr. and Mrs. Slason bave two
daughters, Sherr! Dawn, 12, and
Samantha Diane, :!1 months. Mr.
and Mrs. Edison Brace, Racine, and
Mrs. Ernest Sisson, Syracuse, are
the grandparents.

WI111SWIIT

Council hears Eberts

..,

New arrival

or Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority will stage a
public chili supper rrqn 4 to 8 p.m.
Friday at the Pomeroy United
Methodist Church. Those wtshing
chiU to take out should take their
own containers.
Ohio Eta- Phi PJapter

when present !rom infancy, may
severity of the electrical dlsch8;rg~.
cause the child to withdraw from full
the region where the disturbances
comes from and the nature of the interaction with, and participation
in, his-her environment. As a result ,
sUmulation to the brain. Heredity
the personality may become
appears to be a factor in some types
autistic, that is, it may avoid responof epilepsies; whe~ It can be traced,
ding to stimulaUon. This resulting
. some may be triggered by many
chemical conditions; some are · Inhibition in mjmtal functioning may
caused by Injuries incurred at birth; .closely resemble the condition of
some from severe injury after birth; true mental retardation. There are
several underlying !actors (severe
some by Infectious diseases; some
by metabolic· or nutritional dJsor.. ' rejection, loss or grief, and
chlldhood schizophrenia). However,
ders.
.
to date, the exact causes of autism
CEREBRAL PAUIY is "brainremain In question.
centered paralysis" lnvolvinll the
The above constitutes develop~ center affecting muscle conmental disabilities. The broader
trol. It Is characterized generally by
definition _includes children with the
Involuntary jerking mov~ts,
conditions, but incorporates
above
poor sense of balai!C", !lpasUc
associated with disor-lmpalnnents
muscles and sometimes imliairment
ders
as
spina
biflda, musular
of Intelligence. The causes of
dystrophy;
multiple
handicaps such
cerebral palsy have not been clearly
establlslled. In general, the dlaease . aa blindness-deafness; and learning
disabilities. These represent the
refleclll some Interference during
major types of additional conditions.
clevelopment of the brain, perhape
For more lnfonnation regarding
due to an Infection suffered by the
developmental disabilities, please
mother, toxicity In the fetus because
contact Buckeye Community Ser-of Rb factor Incompatibility, lack of
vices, 139 Pearl St., Jackson, OH
oxygen during birth, or brain Injury
(614) 286-5039.
during birth. Cerebral palsy may oc~ In Infancy or early childhood as
_a result of Infectious diseases, or after a severe Injury.
AUTISM is a type of condition In
which severe anxiety, especially

te

reservaUo.ns are ~I'Y for
reception at the church.
- -.

CHILl SUPPER FRIDAY

- Bcs~ describes developmental ~disability

made witll either Franll: IW!l!Dl
G'71!-31M or !.,eon Putz, ~1444~
of the banquet iB$5,~ per ~9

The congregation of St. Peter
Lutheran Church will celebrate the
25th aiUliversary of the founding fo
the church on Thursday, March 6,
with a banquet at the Kin Folks
Restaurant at 6 p.m. FollQlted by a
recepUonat the church at8p.m.
The Rev, Robert E. Casseij,,who
represented the West Virginia 'Synod
when St, Peter Lutheran Church was
organized, March 6, 1955, will be the
speaker at the banquet.
- Members of the church invite theit
friends to share In the observance,
Reservations for the banquet can be

-

• -·
••
.......
.....

Reg. $1.40

Reg. $1.77

COLGATE
TOOTH·
PASTE

CURAD

PLASTIC
BANDAGES
BONUSBOX •

9C

large

5-oz .

80's

Reg.90'

Reg. 98'

GOOD

GALA

JUMBO.
TOWELS

Weltom• tO Meip Tire Center Inc.
where
offer )1KI quality, ·price,
. we
senb and ·friendliness at
nO extra cost!

NIWS
3BLADES

20

single

roll

0
Reg. $3.09

NOVAHISTINE
DMX

. . . . . .E

SAUSAGE
ALPO

DOG FOOD
25LB.

'4'9

--PEN

LUBE.

MOTOR OIL
QT.

CLIANAR

HYGRADE'S PORK
LB.

69C

cliNT SID

. ~TI:DE .

VALLEY BELL

COnAGE CHEESE,.......................... ~~-~•••• '1 19
BROUGHTON

49 oz.

liz GAL

ICE MILK

·············································· ~

BROUGHTON

I

.

•J59

I

8free

,,..
,_
._

~

aunERMILK••.•••••••••..••••••••••••••••••••.•••~.~~.

ALL STAR DA_
IRY

2% MILK.••.•.•.•• ~ •••••••••••••••••••••

- ·--':'~-- :_; @

......... ~!:.. '17'.

'

. Plus F; e:T; $1.61 Hell

7-UP

•

,ALL Will(

8 PAK.·'99'
~

J

-

~

· -· ··-·

Reg. 79'

Reg. 59'

·- siONAL

.

PKG. 16 OZ.

8

.. - . .. ·- .
...

11-oz.

sUJ. Mort-Each- Mounting Included

-n K

MOuTH•
1.94
1.92
. 2.12 .

1-KG.
16

oz.

-

sr:~a9~

,

Whitewalls

29
'.

. DR. PEPPER

·our: Rev. S29.~ • A71x13
--·

....,.. ALL WEEKI '"":"" I

THURS. ONLY

·~·•I"

40's
with

•.•.'

·-

'

WASH

o~

MEDIUM

OR HARD
. 811Ch

8-o:r.

2.23
2.38

. SOFT, .. '

\·

LA.DIES OR

WATCH
.
BANDS
SPIClAL .LOT _·

,ROM

'3~ .

%1

�•

Church celebrates 25 .years

Celebrate birthdays
with skating party
Aaron Card, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Card, Racine, and Eric Heck,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Mike Heck,
celebrated their birthdays recently
with a skating party.
The door prize was won by Josh
Heck and Viv Jones won the corner
skate.
Attending were Aaron aixl Eric's
grandpar£.tts, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Card, Middletown, and Ruth Card,
Lebanon, their aunt. Others at the
party were Jeremy and Josh Heck,
Stacey Shank, Ira Van Cooney,
Patrick Grysza, Chris Smith, An~i~

Van Cooney, Teresa Van Cooney,
and Cassie Hubbahl, Pomeroy; Mr.
and Mrs. Roger Holter and Janiey,
Mrs. Ron Holter, Tammy and Ryan,
Mrs. Craig Harrison, Amy and
Todd, Martha Clonch, Mr. and Mrs_
Curtis Jones, Dion, Billy, Jamey,
and Wendy, Mrs. Terry Reiber,
Vince and Jessy, Mrs. Jim Werry,
Randy and Ricky, John Paul and
Tracy Card, also children of Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Card, all of Racine; and
Danny Weddle and Charlie Weddle,
Stiversvllie.

1-Tbe ~Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., 'l'uelldlly, March4, l!lllO

. ..

--•
.
--••
~

CONFINEDTOBOIJPIT.U. :'
A-aale·Mae Brown of Malon;..!':
Va. remains a patient at the Holier
Medical Center. She bas lleeD ccdied therefottbl! puttwODIOIItbl~
would. appreciate cards. 'lbe)' 'idlY
be sent to her at Room 403. .
;..:
;

,•

I

•

,

t

]_

,

CORRECTION -

FRUTH PHARMACY CIRCULAR
. .
.
IN TODAY'S PAPER
'

Bible study begins tonight
A Bible study will begin tonight at
St. Paul United Methodist Church of
Tuppers Plains with the Rev. David
Harris of the Southern Cluster and
the Rev. Richard Thomas, pastor,
doing team teaching.
·
. -----·.

Kennedy recipient of
DAR Citizenship award
School _will be guests or Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter, Daughters
of the American Revolution, at the
annual Charter Day luncheon to be
held at 1 p.m. on March 14 at Trinity
Church. At that time the three Meigs
County recipients will be presented
Good Citizen pins.

RETURNS HOME
Mrs. Ernia Roush has returned to
her home in Forest Run after spending several weeks at Lake Park
·and Key Largo, Fla.

"Prostatic cancer next to lung
cancer, has the highest incidence of
any fonn of male cancer," says S.
Michael, public infonnation chairman of the Meigs Unit of the A.C.S.
The estimated cancer deaths in
Ohio for 1979 are 1,000 people and the
estimated new cancer cases in Ohio
for 1979 are 3,000 people. The risk of
developing cancer of the prostate increases with age. In the age group 55
to 74 prostatic cancer iB the third
highest cause of male cancer deaths,
and after the age of 75 It is the
second greatest cause, pointed out
Michael.
Signs and symptoms if present or
occur, should be reported to the doctor, are as follows: weak or interrupted flow of urine; inability to
urinate or difficulty in starting
urination; need to urinate frequenUy, especially at night; blood in
urine; urine flow that iB not easily
stopped; painful or burning

POP

Should Have Read

2 LB. BAG

Cancer symptoms reviewed by localt society

Clifford Kennedy

Clifford J. Kennedy or Pomeroy is
the Meigs High School's recipient of
the Daughters of the American
Revolution Good Citizens Award.
Asenior at Meigs, he iB the son of
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford S. Kennedy .
Kennedy iB president of the
National Honor Society and was
selected to receive the Danforth
Award in his junior year. He plays
both varsity baseball and basketball
and ·is in the Varsity M. Club. Clifford also had a role in the junior
class play.
Kennedy along with Teresa Lynn
Spencer of Eastern High School and
Carman Manuel of Southern High

JOLLY TIME YELLOW

On March 12, Ule UMW of the
church will meet at 1:30 p.m. Communlnh was observed Sunday with
the Rev. Mr. Thomas using scripture from Luke 15 and the topic, "A
Shepherd's Care." His wife sang a
selection ror the service.

Instead Of 2 2 lb; Bags

urination; continuing pain In lower
back, pelvis or thighs. These signs 1 !!!!!!
and symptoms are more likelY to in- 1dicate prostatic enlargement which .
is a benign tumor, or other con.
ditions rather than cancer- but such
NOW ONE INSURAftlCVLAN CAN COVER
signs and symptoms should never be
YOU, YOUR HOME/ .t&lt;!D YOUR AU10• ..
ignored, says Michael.
Ways to help protect yourself
against cancer of the prostate are as
follows: every man over forty
should have a rectal exam aa part of
his regular pliysical checkup, !Iince
a doctor can feel an Irregular or
unusually firm area that may indicate a tumor; report the signs and
symptoms tbat are mentioned above
if present or occur to the doctor.
"The key to saving lives from cancer of the prostate is early detection
and treatment," stated Michael.
For further Information on
prostatic cancer . call 992r7531 or
come to the office which is located
on second floor of the Senior Qtizens
Building.

,."-

-..

-.-.
..----

.....

.J.':;

.

~

.,.._

r--------------------SHOP

MASON FURNITURE
FOR THE BEST D&amp;ALS IN THE
TRl STATE AREA

MASON FURNITURE
Mon., Tues., Wed., Friday &amp; Sat.
8:30 to 5: Oil Thursday till12 Noon

OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT ONLY
Herman Grate

-'.

•'
.

LOADED

Reg. $1.58

ALKA SELTZER
PLUS
COLD MEDICINE

Bob Shepherd was guest spaker at ·
recent breakfa.st _meeting of the
Men's Fellowship of the Middleport
First Ba~ Churc!l. Shepherd _
talked to the 8rouP Gil hl8 w!ll'k with
the IndiaM in Arizona,
Meetings l;l the Fellowshlp are
held on the SI!Cillld SWiday of each
month In the chW'Ch ba8ement and
aU men r:J. the church an! Invited to
join the group at 7:30p.m.
the

GARDENERS MEET

A meeting c#. the Middleport
Garden Club ICbeduled for tooJgbt
· (Monday) at the bome of Mrs.
Loulle 'l'hoi!!poc)n bas been CBIICelled due to the llll!l'lf.

CHICKEN

0

20's

~NINDIANS

''

Mason, W. Va.

773-5592

SAYINGS

SHEPHERD SPEAKS

LEGS

Kenny Roush and Jason spent the
weekend in Columbus, and also
visited Mr. and Mrs. Larry Flowers,
Pickerington.

sw

Myrtle Clark and Mn. Annie Moon,
nutrition aides, go to the home of
those enrolled and show . the
bomemakera bow to prepare meals,
to keep tbelr lrltcbens clean, to store
and preserve foods .
At the March 18 meeting of the ·
Coundl, a representative of the
Southeast Ohio Legal Services will
be present to discuss the services
they will be providing to low-Income
residents.
Twelve memben of the Council
were present for the meeting. Nancy
Van Meter, R. N., director of nur.tlng at the Pomeroy Health Care
Center, was a guest.

I

--·....
---....

VISIT IN COLUMBUS

Mrs. Albert Roush, Mr. and Mn.

with the bornemahra being enrolled
for a maximUDI of two years. Mrs.

.-•"

Mr. aoo Mrs. Ernie SWoll,
Syracuse, are announcing the birth
of a son, Clifton Thomas, born on
Feb. 11 at the Holzer Medical
Center. The baby weighed eight
pounds, four ounces.
Mr. and Mrs. Slason bave two
daughters, Sherr! Dawn, 12, and
Samantha Diane, :!1 months. Mr.
and Mrs. Edison Brace, Racine, and
Mrs. Ernest Sisson, Syracuse, are
the grandparents.

WI111SWIIT

Council hears Eberts

..,

New arrival

or Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority will stage a
public chili supper rrqn 4 to 8 p.m.
Friday at the Pomeroy United
Methodist Church. Those wtshing
chiU to take out should take their
own containers.
Ohio Eta- Phi PJapter

when present !rom infancy, may
severity of the electrical dlsch8;rg~.
cause the child to withdraw from full
the region where the disturbances
comes from and the nature of the interaction with, and participation
in, his-her environment. As a result ,
sUmulation to the brain. Heredity
the personality may become
appears to be a factor in some types
autistic, that is, it may avoid responof epilepsies; whe~ It can be traced,
ding to stimulaUon. This resulting
. some may be triggered by many
chemical conditions; some are · Inhibition in mjmtal functioning may
caused by Injuries incurred at birth; .closely resemble the condition of
some from severe injury after birth; true mental retardation. There are
several underlying !actors (severe
some by Infectious diseases; some
by metabolic· or nutritional dJsor.. ' rejection, loss or grief, and
chlldhood schizophrenia). However,
ders.
.
to date, the exact causes of autism
CEREBRAL PAUIY is "brainremain In question.
centered paralysis" lnvolvinll the
The above constitutes develop~ center affecting muscle conmental disabilities. The broader
trol. It Is characterized generally by
definition _includes children with the
Involuntary jerking mov~ts,
conditions, but incorporates
above
poor sense of balai!C", !lpasUc
associated with disor-lmpalnnents
muscles and sometimes imliairment
ders
as
spina
biflda, musular
of Intelligence. The causes of
dystrophy;
multiple
handicaps such
cerebral palsy have not been clearly
establlslled. In general, the dlaease . aa blindness-deafness; and learning
disabilities. These represent the
refleclll some Interference during
major types of additional conditions.
clevelopment of the brain, perhape
For more lnfonnation regarding
due to an Infection suffered by the
developmental disabilities, please
mother, toxicity In the fetus because
contact Buckeye Community Ser-of Rb factor Incompatibility, lack of
vices, 139 Pearl St., Jackson, OH
oxygen during birth, or brain Injury
(614) 286-5039.
during birth. Cerebral palsy may oc~ In Infancy or early childhood as
_a result of Infectious diseases, or after a severe Injury.
AUTISM is a type of condition In
which severe anxiety, especially

te

reservaUo.ns are ~I'Y for
reception at the church.
- -.

CHILl SUPPER FRIDAY

- Bcs~ describes developmental ~disability

made witll either Franll: IW!l!Dl
G'71!-31M or !.,eon Putz, ~1444~
of the banquet iB$5,~ per ~9

The congregation of St. Peter
Lutheran Church will celebrate the
25th aiUliversary of the founding fo
the church on Thursday, March 6,
with a banquet at the Kin Folks
Restaurant at 6 p.m. FollQlted by a
recepUonat the church at8p.m.
The Rev, Robert E. Casseij,,who
represented the West Virginia 'Synod
when St, Peter Lutheran Church was
organized, March 6, 1955, will be the
speaker at the banquet.
- Members of the church invite theit
friends to share In the observance,
Reservations for the banquet can be

-

• -·
••
.......
.....

Reg. $1.40

Reg. $1.77

COLGATE
TOOTH·
PASTE

CURAD

PLASTIC
BANDAGES
BONUSBOX •

9C

large

5-oz .

80's

Reg.90'

Reg. 98'

GOOD

GALA

JUMBO.
TOWELS

Weltom• tO Meip Tire Center Inc.
where
offer )1KI quality, ·price,
. we
senb and ·friendliness at
nO extra cost!

NIWS
3BLADES

20

single

roll

0
Reg. $3.09

NOVAHISTINE
DMX

. . . . . .E

SAUSAGE
ALPO

DOG FOOD
25LB.

'4'9

--PEN

LUBE.

MOTOR OIL
QT.

CLIANAR

HYGRADE'S PORK
LB.

69C

cliNT SID

. ~TI:DE .

VALLEY BELL

COnAGE CHEESE,.......................... ~~-~•••• '1 19
BROUGHTON

49 oz.

liz GAL

ICE MILK

·············································· ~

BROUGHTON

I

.

•J59

I

8free

,,..
,_
._

~

aunERMILK••.•••••••••..••••••••••••••••••••.•••~.~~.

ALL STAR DA_
IRY

2% MILK.••.•.•.•• ~ •••••••••••••••••••••

- ·--':'~-- :_; @

......... ~!:.. '17'.

'

. Plus F; e:T; $1.61 Hell

7-UP

•

,ALL Will(

8 PAK.·'99'
~

J

-

~

· -· ··-·

Reg. 79'

Reg. 59'

·- siONAL

.

PKG. 16 OZ.

8

.. - . .. ·- .
...

11-oz.

sUJ. Mort-Each- Mounting Included

-n K

MOuTH•
1.94
1.92
. 2.12 .

1-KG.
16

oz.

-

sr:~a9~

,

Whitewalls

29
'.

. DR. PEPPER

·our: Rev. S29.~ • A71x13
--·

....,.. ALL WEEKI '"":"" I

THURS. ONLY

·~·•I"

40's
with

•.•.'

·-

'

WASH

o~

MEDIUM

OR HARD
. 811Ch

8-o:r.

2.23
2.38

. SOFT, .. '

\·

LA.DIES OR

WATCH
.
BANDS
SPIClAL .LOT _·

,ROM

'3~ .

%1

�6-Tht Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Tuesday, March 4, l!oi!O

7-'lbe Daily llentinel, Middleport· Pomeroy, o .;Thesday, March 4, 1980

,

Your Best Buys Are Found in the Sentinel Classifieds
32

WANT AD INFORMAnON

1971 12)(65 Trl}iter, com pletely furnished , A.C .
very good condition . On a
lot that ca n be rented .
Ready to move Into. S6500

PHONE 992-2156
or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St., Pomeroy, 0 ., 45769

..

tor Rettt

36 acres far"} with 9 room

ts-FRooms

t-HI!»PY AilS
6-Lostand Found
1- YardS.It

· l lf2 story house , full
basement, buildings, barn,
some timber, al l mineral

ror R.nt
47- W•nted to Rent
41--Equlprntnt lor Rent
~s,.ce

t-Publlc Sale
&amp; Aucflon

u-Antlques
54-MIIC . MerdllrtCIIH

1:1-Situltld W11ntftl
11-lnsurance
14--lusinns Tralnhtt
1s--Sch0olt Instruction

6! - Farm Equipm..,t
62-WinfH to luy
72- Trucks lor Slit

•FINANCIAL
21-

IIUslntu
Opporf\lrllty
22-Money to Lou

Pomeroy. Large lots.Ca ll
9'12·747'1.

DISCOUNT

Two bedroom trailer .
AdultS Only 992-3324

Hotpoint and
Genera I E leetric
Appliance
Sales &amp; Service

Apartment
for Rent
3 AND 4 RM furnished ap·
IS. Phone 992·5434.

quick trailer setup or ideal

45 Furnished Rooms
2 Sleeping rooms, private
entrance. Off the slreet

building site. Phone 698·
6306.

television . Call after 4 week
•days, 9'12· 7791.

M-Hiy&amp;Graln
u - seect &amp; Fert1U1tr

parking, refrigerator and

Merchandise

rl.....A.UtOs tor Sale
,,_V•n•&amp;•w. o .
,._Motorcycles
rs-Auto P1rt1
&amp; Accenorln
, - Auto RtNir

31-NomtsfurSele
ll- Mobllt Homes

tor Salt
JJ-FermsforSalt
14-luslnns II.IUdlnp
I J-Lott &amp; Acrntt

53

molds for can y making

-Full line of Kratt supplies
-Special rates lor
organizations
.

~LU«4

POMEROY
LANDMARK
w. Carsey,

-

608 E .

. MA~~Mi!ROY.,O. . ....

•SERVICES

Want-Ad Advertising
Deildlines

11- Homttmprovtmtnll
12-Piumltlnt &amp; Excavating

1)-I!IICIYIIIng
114-EieetriUI
a lltfrlttrlflon

4 P .M. O.ily
4 P.M. saturday
tor Sunday
12 Noon Sunday
tor Monday

ls--Gentrll HIUiint
16--M.H. RePIIr
17- Uphobttry

Rates and Other Information
1SWonts er Under

Cllh

CMrge

1 dl'(
ldan

UCI

1.:U

I..SG

l .fO

ldl'fl
ldl'fS

1.10
UCI

2.21
US

E1d1 word over the minimum IS words is 4 cenh 5Mr word per clly.
Ads rt~nnlng ether tt11n consecutive diW'S will be chlrpd 1tthe 1 day

rate.

In memory, Cartt 01 Thinks 1nc1 Obituary : 'ctnh ,., word, 13.00
minimum . C1th k11dvance.

Mobile Hornell lei lnd Yard Hltllrt'ICc:ept.cl only wlthCIIh Wllh
dtlrvt lor 1d1 c1rrytng lox NumMr In Care of The

order-. 25 cent
s.nrtnel.

Employment
Services

Announcemetfts
2'----'l..:..:n..:.M:..:.e:::m=or""ia"'m"-'-·Gone but nolforgoflen
Nor ever shall you be

As long as life does last
We'll still remember thee
1n memory Of c. A. Swick
who died March 3, 1963.
·$adly missed by children
.lind grandchildren.

i '--A-=-nn-o::-:u"'n"'c-emC"""Cen"'t:-sGUN SHOOT EVERY
SUNDAY 1 PM. FACTORY
CHOKE ONLY. RACINE
GUN CLUB.
GUN SHOOT . -IlAclne
Volunteer Fire Dept.
Every Saturday. 6:30p.m .
At their bulldlngln Bashan.
Factory choke guns only .

11

Help Wanted
GET VALUABLE training
·as a young business person
and earn good money plus
some great gifts as a Sen·
tlnel route carrier. Phone

us right away and get on
the eligibility list at 992·
2156 or 9'12·2157 .
RN OR LPN , full time. 3·
11 :30 and 11 to 7:30. Part
time RN or LPN, 111o 7: 30. ·
Call Mr. Zldlan el Pomeroy
Health Care Center, Monday through Friday, 9-5.
Hourly RN, parfllme for
lamlly planning clinics.
Must be registered In Ohio,
have reliable Iran·
sportatlon. Orientation will
be provided. Equal op·
portunlty employer. For
further information, please

GUN SHOOT every Sunday
12 :00. Factory choke only .
Cbrn Hollow Gun Club,
Rutland. Proceeds donated
I~ Boy ScoufTroop249.
BUYING U.S. SILVER
COINS DATED 1964 OR
EARLIER
(ANY
AMOUNT). DON'T LOSE
MONEY, SIMPLY PICK
UP THE PHONE AND
DIAL
614 -992 · 5113, .
~.ROWN'S .

I PAY highest prices
possible for gold and sliver
. coins, rings, lewelry, etc .
Contact Ed Burkett Barber
-Shop, Middleport.
S I LV E R 0 R ·
FOREIGN COINS, OR
ANY OTHER GOLD OR
SILVER ITEMS. ALSO,
ANTIQUE FURNITURE
OR OTHER ANTIQUE
tTEMS. WILL PAY TOP
Q'OLLAR . CHECK WITH .
OSBY (OSSIE) MARTIN
SELLING.
B·EFOR E
PHONE 992 .. 6370. ALSO
DO APPRAISING .

call Planned Parenthood Of
Southeast Ohio, 992·5912,
8:30·3:30 weekdays. If no
answer, call main office
593'·3375, collect.
Remodeling, paneling and
cell ing tile. Additions buill
on. No job too small. Call
949·2379.
Wanted : Live In housekeeper to care for small
girl 6 years old. All the
privilege of home. Car fur·
nlshed. Must be SOber. Man
wlirks.away . 992·3519.

992-2259
NEW LISTING - Love·
ly 2 story home on good
street with carp&lt;!llng
and
complimentary
paneling, H bdrms .•
spacious living room,
built-in kitchen and
separate dining room,
1112 baths, full base·
ment, paved drive and
parking, · storage bldg.
Priced to sell $35,000.00.
NEW LISTING - 2
story, handyman's
delight,

s

.. ..cr~fts ~re fun I

' - - - - - - 2 · 1 8·1 mo.

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

wa1er

c!rpetlng

767·3167 or 557·3411.

3c.:.
l ___,H.:..:O:.:.m:.::e,$,_,fc=O!...r-"'Sa"'l"'eHouse for sale, Pomeroy: 6
rooms, 1'12 baths, paneled,
carpeted, lots of con·
venlences, Reasonable. See
to appreclte. Phone 9'12·
5566.
Modern 3 bedroom home,
, basement with fireplace,
'central al.r, fully carpeted,
located on 6112 acres near
Racine on Raclne-Bashan
Rd. 949·2836 after 5 and
·weekends. Larry Wolfe.

4

Giveaway
12x60 Hillcrest, 2 bedroom.
Free to good home 2 FurniShed or unfurnished.
obedient pups, one black, 992·61-10.
()(le blonde. 3 months old.
Cell742-2692.
·
3 Bedroom, 1 story house
'
on Long St., Rutland. ·
Free to llood home 2 · large lot out of high water, .
obidteot pups, one black, close to school . Call 742one blonde. 3 months old. 2975.
Call742-2692.
Well built 3 bedroom hom
situated on 3 acres
overlooking the Ohio River.
After 3:30 p.m. call 247·2032.
Mobile Homes
for Sale

IN STOCK 'for immediate
delivery: various sizes of
POOl kits. Do· lt·yourself or
let us Install for you. D.
Bumgardner Sales, Inc.
Apples, Rome Beauty at
~.00 per bushel . Exc. lor
pies, sauce and buller. Fit·
zpatrlck Orchard, state
Roule
689 .
Phone
Wilkesville 669·3785.

TEEN DISCO '
DANCE
At The Orchid Room
E. Main St. Pomeroy, 0.
EVERY
SATURDAY NIGHT
8:00TII11:30
"D.Isco Lighting"
Admission,sz.oo Single
u:oo Couple
Sponsored by Mulc
Unlimited. Chaperones
will be present. No
alcoholic beverages per·
mined. For iurther in·
to., call 992-6058 . .
2·28·1 mo. pd .

GEORGE'S
ROOFING
Roofing, siding,
gutter,
.built-up
roof · and home
repair.
Free Estimates
388-9759

~~~
~~

.TBroio·kCkoeuenptyl~n· g

Blllir~~

and

etc.

ly· room, r'ec. room, cen ·

tral heat &amp; air. MAKE
OFFER $59,800.00.
THE FARM - you have
been waiting for, 11-4
beautiful laying acres,
good large barn, 2
ponds, old house to
remodel, good large
garage PLUS a
beautiful 3 bdrm. ranch
with F.P., full base·
ma"ny

other

features In excellent
condition. STEAL AT
$76,325.00.
THERE ARE 41 WAYS
TO FINANCE YOUR
NEW HOME, WE CAN
HELP YOU. LOCALLY
OWNED AND FULL
TIME.
REALTOR
Henry E. Cltl•nd, Jr.
992-6191
ASSOCIATES
Dottle &amp; Roter Turner
742-2474
Je•n Trussell91.5-2660
FULL TIME
OFFICE PHONE
992·2259

level lot.
11 ROOMS - 1'12 boths,
nat. gas furnace, 5 or 6
bedrooms, basement. 2
poches, oulbulldlng and
dbl. garage. $17,500.
80 ACRES - Nice lay·
lng farm land or for sub·
dlvlson. About 112 fenc·
ed, good 10 room farm
house with bath and lots
of farm bldgs. Minerals.
3
NICE HOME bedrooms, · bath, por·
ches, basement, birch
kitchen, nat. gas fur·
nace and copper plumb· .
lng.
BUILDING LOT Near Rock Springs In
Restricted
area,
utilities &amp; trees.
3 IN 1 -Home has 11
rooms, furnace, 2 ren·
tals, 4th available, 2 car

garage and over 1 acre

of sandy land. Good buy
at $25,000.00.
6 RENTALS All
under one roof. Brick
construction. Only
$35,000.
BUILDING LOT - Cor·
ner lot In Pomeroy In
good residential area .
out of flood.
RESTFUL - Quiet sel·
tlng with a lot Of Ires on
2'12 acres. Like new In·
side, bath, utility, nal.
gas furnace &amp; city
water.

.FREE 80CALENDARS.
FOR SELLING YOUR
PROPERTY CALL
992-33.25 or 99N876

Housing

Head_qu_aTters

REAL ESTATE
WE HAVE FINANCING AVAILABLE
AS LOW AS 5% DOWN AND 30 YEARS
TO PAY, ON MOST HOMES.
Ml DDLE PORT - Three bedroom, 1'12 bath, nice lot '
just one block from heart Of town. $25,000.
POMEROY - on Lincoln Hts. - Two bedroom and
bat~, full basement, gas furnace, storm windows &amp;
doors. Owner will help finance If you need II. S17,500.
Ml DOLE PORT - Large double corner lot on
Locust St .• three bedroom. 2 both, garage &amp;
workshop. $25,000.
RUTLAND - Older home needs some repairs on
Salem Street. Nice corner lol. $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
this one If yov choose~ south Second Ave.

CALL 992-2342 .
RODNEY DOWNING, BROKE R-HO. H2-3731
BILL CHIJ.DS, BRANCH MGR.-HO. 992-2449

1'·-------------------·----·-·
D«MNINGatllDS AGENCY INC.

INSURANCE
SERVING SOUlliWTERN OHIO S!NCE
ARE YOU PAYING TOO MUCH?
YOU HAVE THE CQVERf.GE?

FOR ~ YOUR

INSU~ NEEDS·
.
'

CM1. U$.

. 992-2342
·,DCMNIN&amp;OILDS MENCY; INC.

WHER'E YOU Mli&amp;HT

THAT &amp;I.ANt&lt;iTY·&amp;LANK
I&lt;AIOC!&lt;eD Me INTO THe DRINK 1 ILIT'
liii!VI!It MIND THAT'I'IMAT A&amp;OLIT THE:
. /ltiLIC/1 '• AitcHl

Tfe~R

w., F,

FOR

\ABBOMOI

I I I

0

I Jumbles: HOBBY

Pets for Sale
56
HOOF HOLLOW, English
and Western. Saddles ond
harness . Horses and
ponies. Ruth Reeves. 614698-3290. Bordlng and
Riding Lessons and Horse .
Care products. Western
boots. Children's S15.50.
Adults $29.00.
RISING STAR Kennel.
Boarding. Call 367-0292.

3'4

on St. Rt. 124 toward
Rutland .
Auto &amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992-5682
o4·30·tfc

POODLE GROOMING.
Judy Taylor. 614·367·7220.
HILLCREST . KENNELS.
Boarding, all breeds. Clean
Indoor-outdoor faci lilies.
Also AKC registered
Dobermans. 61Nol6·7795.

Prey"

Educational losing plays

HUMANE
SOCIETY .
Adopt a homeless pet.
Healthy, shots, wormed.
Donallons required . 992·
6260, noon·7 p.m.
AKC Male Pekingese pups.
11 weeks old . 949·26.16.

.

~~n~rSl!~e~G

V. C. YOUNG Ill

WEST
0

SA(ON

Wed. &amp; Thurs.
Call for Appf.
949·2320
Racine, 0.
2-nmo.

... e,ur

TOO OOG

6AHD-SIMEL t:v.;T
HAVE 5eT AN

QUICKL"(! I'ITO
THE FRAY/••
&amp;EFORe IT IS

SOUTH

t

lOO LATE!!

AMBUSH FOR
HIM!

Been in Business
For s &lt;'r ea.rs

Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices
Call Howard
949-2162
1·22·tfc

CALL 992·3238
ASK FOR DAVE

Vulnerable: East-West
West

. . ..

&lt;.) /

'

:»

1

0

CJ-5 Jeep,
Phon~ 94?-2.$-45.

76

12200 .

· Auto Parts

Ti'l.nsport,tlon '

=';':"==- ·

FINDIN&amp; A WOMAt-¥5 NAME
AND PHONE NUMBER IN
DADS POCKET DOE&amp;N'T
NECESSARILY MEAN
HE'&amp; "FOOLING

~~iiiiroo~DUOONrrKNOWi'Wifi'Aii;"1

authOr

11 Dll!l"t
11 Shrew
ll Sbow bone
II Guf'i dale
Z1 American
liurled In

5 Boasted
I Leu

!I Wrest

lllmitlted

Z7Poem
Zl Retial

ZB "Arcble"
character

Z8 Earth:· Lat.
U Shine
SO Office ol a
Z4 - Clllfornla
mandarin
follower

~ Entrance-

way

II Fruitless

15 Spanish
article
31 Fuel

WALL · PAPERING
painting. 742·2328.

33 Pod llenl

ll!'lftdear

31 Wheel part

UDIDiih
~

and

H'lblmble ·

CARPENTER WORK
·. complete remodeling by AI
Tromm, 7&lt;12-3328. References.

.'

Will dO odds and encfs,.
paneling,. floor file, · and
calling .tile. . Call Fred
Miller, 992·6338. '

·

GOOBI.E
600BL'E

GOO

'

.OADBURN
BACK-SEAT

l SEE

TH'DAOBURN
STUMP.

TATER

I SEE

. · DRIVER!!

TH'DADBURN
ROCKS,

w:·F:::

1-.

prOduCt

n Cl/alented
MbrMilport
MMI"'mlre

.. "Streetcar"

chll'leter.
DAILY .CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's

TATER

· .. ,

how

to '!\'Otk lt:

-AXYDL~A.AXB

.

. fi LONG. I'BLLOW
•'
One letter almply atanda for an(lther. In thla. sampJe A Ia
used for the three L's, X for the two Q's, ete 1 Sin1le letters.
apcjltrophea, the length and formation of the words are all
hlnta. &amp;.ch day the 'code letten are dltrerent.

· "White Mam8" 8, 10.

9::10--Hello, Larry 3,15.
· lO :DO-Best of Saturday Night Live
3, 15; Vegas 6, 13; Upstairs:·
'
CllYPTOQUOTBS
Dowtlltalrs. 17.
l
. )l:DO-Neois 3,6,1,10,13,15,20&gt; NHC
'
Hockey 17; Goodl.. 33.
·:
VSFPT
LZ I M R, MRX CYT
OYT
11 : 30-Tonight 3, 15; ABC N~wS:.
· Spe&lt;:lal 6, 13; Mary Hartman&lt;· .
MOD
YWP
LZ RTMFDG
V MSPT
Mary Hartman 8; Movl• "I.,..
vestlgatlon of a Citizen Abo'1' ,
Q L T,
WP
Suspicion" 10; AI~ fli!tloi*l .
News 33; 11 :40--Fiatn Gorclon·
)·_
f ..
VMAltfV\fCG . ZLf OTDWT.!&lt;-WRJ CYT .. ~ .·
· 11 :o4S.:,::Love BO.U, 13; 12 :~18
"Ruby" B: i2 :ss-saretta 6, 13;
WRV~TXWO.DT.- Y .
D.
ITRVNTR
Newa ·u.
"
.
;
Y•lerday'a Cryploquole: THE REWI,.RD OF. GREAT MEN IS'
1:30-News11;
1
:35--Movle
'ITre«,:
THAT LONG AFTER THEY HAVE DIED ONE IS NOT Q~
Softly Strano&lt;!r" 11; 2:05 News
SURE THAT THEY HAVE DIED.-JULES
'·
. RENARD '
13J 3:3S-Movle "llltanbul" 17~
·5:30-Love, American Style 17.

.

MARCIE, t CAME OVER
8ECAV5.E I AAD TO
'(OU-l'J.IE CIJTE fi.IIN6
PI6-I?EN SAID. TO ME '

I'M NOT INTERESTED
IN ·LI'OUR ROMANCE,
SIR, AN!i' I'M VEF.V 61.'5V
PR/IC'
TilE OR6AN
,r TICIN6
,.

MA'-f ALL lf'OOR

f.IEMIDE~15EAIIQOAVER5
.

.

6E FLAT'"
.,,, ·

=:1.

' ~-----

~

MWbeat

,.,so,

r

1t Goad

Improvements
S &amp; G Carpet Ol~lming.
Sf. . m cleaned·: · Free ·
estimate. . . Reasonable
rates. St:otcllOuard. ~.992·
6309 or 741·2211 .
·

r:''

-.;'"'"--c--t

Zl DlJt.aff gob

U Olin&amp;

IIGupout
II Silent
111m star

81

&gt;

frequent .

YrJierda)''a Aalwer

u Bouteci up

"Chain

61

ZIWord
with thread

AkOUND~

c ::-----..,H
c:o-m_e_ __

All South had to do to insure
his contract was to play
dummy's jack of diamonds
and let East hold the trick
East would play a second
diamond. South would take his
ace, ruff a diamond, draw
trumps and lead a club to
dummy's 10. East would be in
with the queen and the second
defensive trick, but there
would be no way for him to
get two more. A spade lead
would cost the spade trick a club lead would set up the
king for a spade discard and a
diamond lead would allow a
ruff and discard.
We keep getting letters asking if you may pass your
partner's Blackwood four
notr0 mp.
The answer is that the laws
allow it but common sense
dictates that you may lose a
partner if you do.

4 "Artie"

ol an Ism

7 Entwbile
Mrs. Sinatra
8 Sour look
the Kremlin llnclle

Services

for finesses.u

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
1·Poll.sh cake 1 Justlfl5 Cowardly
cation
11 Eager
z"Hold it,
1! Gorge
swab!"
U Surfeit
3 HaUields,
11 Ulater color
to the McCoys

His own.
son- '1n ·law?

Movie

WEDNESDAY . MARCH5,1980 '
5:45--Farm Report 13; 5:50-PTL
Club 13.
·
!
6:0Q-7oo Club 6,8; PTL Club 15 :
6: 10-World at large 17.
'
6::10--Chrlslopher Closeup 10; New'
17; 6:-45-Mornlng Report 31
A.M. Weather 33; 6:50-Gooll
Morning, · West Virginia 131·
·
:
6:55-News 13.
7:QO-Today 3,15; Good Mornln'
America 6, 13; Wednesday
Morning 8; Bafman 10; WTBS
F unhouse 17.
'
7:30--Famlly Affair 10: 7:55-Chuck
White Reports 10.
:·
8:0Q-Capl. Kangaroo 8, 10; Lucy
Show 17 ; Sesame St . 33.
;
'
8:30--Romper Room 17.
9:0Q-Bob Braun 3; Big Valley
Beverly Hillbillies 8; Jefferson'
10; Phil Donahue 13,15; Family
Affair 11.
:
9: 30- Bob Newhart 8 ; Hogan's
Heroes 10; Green Acres 17 .
i
10:00-&lt;:ard Sharks 3,15; Edge ot
Night 6; Jelfersoils 8; Joker' •
Wild 10; Morning Magazine 131
Movie "Marines, Let's Go" 17.
10:30- Hollywood Squares 3, 15;
$20,000 Pyram ld 13 ; Andy
Grlffllh 6.
•
10:55--CBS News 8; House Call \0.
11 :OQ-High Rollers 3,15; Laverne &amp;
Shirley 6, 13; Price Is Right 8, 10:
II :30-Wheel of Forlune 3, 15)
Family Feud 6,13; Sesame ST.
20,33; 11 :55-News 17.
·
12:00-Newscenter
3;
News
6,8, 10,13; Health Field 15; Love,
American STyle 17.
12 :30-Ryan' s Hope 6, 13; Search far.
Tomorrow 8, 10; Pass wore;! Plus
15; Movie "Strange Affection':
17; Elec. Co. 20,33.
1:oo-Days of 0\(r Lives 3, 15; All M¥
Children 6, 13; Young &amp; the
Restless 8, 10.
.
2:0Q-Ooclors 3,15; One Life fo ll~
6, 13; As The World Turns 8, 19;
2:25-News 17.
2 : 30- Another
World
3, 15;
,I
Gigglesnort Hotel 17.
3 :00-General
Hospital
6, 13!,
Guiding light 8, 10; I love lucy
17; Austin City Limits 20.
·
3:30-FIIntstones i7; Over Easy 33:
4 :0Q-Mister Cartoon 3; 'i!ewltcheq
6; Petticoat Junction 8; Sesam~
St. 20,33; Gomer Pyle 10; Real
McCoys 13; Little Rascals 15;
Spectreman 17.
.:
4:30-lone Ranger 3; Atterschool
Special 6,13; Gomer Pyle It'
Brady Bunch 10; Merv Griffin
15; Gilligan's Is. 17.
·'
5:oo-Carol Burnett 3; Sanford ai
Son 8; Mary Tyler Moore 10; MY,
Three .Sons 17; Mister Rogers
20,33.
.
5: JO-Mash 3; News 6; Play th&lt;
Percentages 8; E lee. Co. 20;:
Mash 10; Happy Days Again 13; {
Dream of jeannie 17; Doctai'
Who 33.
.
6:0Q-News 3,8,10,13,1'5; ABC New~
6; Carol Burnett 17; 3-2-1 Contact;
20,33.
',i
6 :JO-NBCNews3,15; aBC l)lew~ 13~
CBS News 8, 10; Carol Burnett 6;'
Bob Newhart 17; Villa Alegre 201:
Wild Wild World of Animals 3~.
7 :00-Cross-Wits 3; Newlywe~ ·
Game 6, 13; MacNeil-Lehrer'
Reporl 33; News 10; Lovv.i
American . Style 15; Sanford ..,
Son 17; Flash GordOn 20.
. .
7: 30-Country Roads 3; Match
Game PM 6; Joker's Wild 8;
Dick Cavell 33; The Judge 10; ·
Family Feud 13; Wild Kingdom
lS; All lr The Family 17..:
MacNeil-Lehrer Report 20.
8 :00-Real People 3; Eight II
Enough 6; Beyo"d Westworld
1, 10; Billy Grehem Cruaad9
13, lS ; Great Performances
,. · 20,33; Movie ''Run .of the Arraw':~
17.
"
Strokes . 3,'151'
9 :DO-Diff'rent
Chllrile's Angeis 6,13; Movie

a~'-"*'"

GASOLINE AIJ..EY

• Five 1975 camaro INheels
and hub caps. N.ew con·
dillon. Call 992-5663.

" I guess this isn't a good
day for finesses." remarked
the student.
" No it isn't," replied the
Professor. "but once that ten
of diamonds was led you were
safe at home without the need

The · student won the first
trick with the ace of (NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)
diamonds, drew trumps and
led a club to dummy's king.
(For a copy of JACOBY
East took his ace and queen
and led a third club which the MODERN, send $1 to: " Win at
stu'dent ruffed. Later on, the Bridge. " care of this newspastudent lost the spade finesse, per, P,O. Box 489, Radio City ·
, New York, N. Y.
a diamond and his game .Station
100 19.)
contract.

&amp; Accessories

I

Pass

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

vans &amp; 4.W.D.

1974

Pass

.,..
/'

1S Follower
73

East

Opening lead :+ 10

3-2-1 mo.

~ ~;s,
r~;,o- _;~~ ' 84
Electrical
,· tlberolau topper and .
&amp; Refrldgeration '
~·'-·"+.
· +.'
slllllno wlnd9WI. Reese hit· ·· 1
•
,71
Autos for Sale ,
ch &amp;lgtlrn Ru~tprOofed .• $E~I~G • MACHINE
,
:z.s:ooomlln.:,c •nbe-nai • · Repairs, .ae:rvlce, 111
'19n Dodge. Aspen, AM·FM Ashland Bulk. P'ant . at makes. 992·2284. The
·rad!o, A.C.. 1211110. 1974 MI!Mir1Yille. 742 2225 742 1 FabriG Shqp, , Pomeroy,
· Ctt.vrohrl Mon1w carlo, 2125 ·or- 992 .5111 • '
" Author!zed Sll'lilel' Soles
1, and Service. We Sharpen
rAM·FM recflo, l ·frllek tape.
-.,-'-'----t·' -:----+ c;:a11 att.r ~p.m, ,, 247·2813. ,•. 73 Vans&amp; 4 ,W.D.
Scissors.
_ ___:,~..:._._,__ _..,
GOLD AND S'ILVER
COINS OF THE WORLD: 19ncaprl, o4cyi.,A .C.,AM· •1978 Ford . F·150 , C\IStom ; ELWOOD · BOWERS '
R I.N G S, JEW I!! L R Y•, ' FM Hpetd. EKcellent COII-I 4x~, excellilnt condition, RE P~l R .S-pera,
STE.RLING SiLVER AND dltlan. 992·6069, $3500 firm . ., l.lft klls, AIY\-F,.,. 8·1rack, • ·toasters, Irons, all' small •
MIS~. ITEMS. PAYING
--------lots of extra, 2l,OOO mlln. · appll•nces. Lawn mow.r.
~~~~~:.f ·UP-Tcr.~~fri · 196-1 Pontiac Tempest, 4 Take ~r l!avments s.. ! Next to State Hlgh';N
, PRJCES.- ,CO!'ITACT ED . Qr.,, V·6, autq., lhlft. Run·
~over ~ ~~~~· 992· •~age: ~ Route 7,
BURKETT
8AR81!R nlnii'IIOOd !::III•MS-3366. Or
· •
1
'
,
•
SHOP • MI~DLE,PORT, a,~at376olli'txas Road.
,
1
OHIO, OR CALL 992·:W6.
-lfTI ' Ford BI'Onco, A.c) 8$ General Haullril l:
' 197~ Pontiac Ctellna, 992- AM-PM s1wreoj P.S.; .P.If., I [WII..L HAULIImHton.and
4 nlwtlres.cal 992'&lt;1130.
OLG ' lluij'NITUfte,·· 'ice : 2201 ·
·.
'
, llr8_V!tl,
lime hauling '
bol(b, lirau btdS, Iron · ,
~
and iprfiadlng. Leo IY\orrlf
btda, dnki, etc., complete ! 1974 MGII GT Hprdtop, . 1971 Ford 4x4 : F· Uo. · TI'\ICklng. Ph0nlt742-2~. 1
houstllOids. , Write M.D. ' · mint cond ;, a'. c., low
c;vstom lllade, AM-FM a- · ·
.
'
'Miller. Rt. 4, ~omeroy or I ·mlleege, gOOd gas mileage.
track, C&amp;. 19,000 mlln. m- . ,
HAUL WATER. 992·
2656..5
call 992p60.
Call 99H25f,
.
. •
,
.
1

our:

, Now ecceplng •tov$ at
log yaHrd·h7 . ~'30. "'..~ :
d eys. 1II pr1ces or ,..,.,...
qilal,ity logs with a limited ,
amount, Of low gr~. l
Patment upan delivery
and se•llng. Bla~y Har·.
.clwoods, Box 66, 'illncen).
OH 457a..:614·671·2960.

Nortb

Pass
Pass

·12 Situations Wanted

~J=L~1:~E~~E~~~~1~~ ·

A6 3

.. 63

THERE 'YOU ARE,
'lOUR HIGHNESS! NO
SOONER SAID THAN
DONEl . I .-.~.

"FREE ESTIMATES"

t K 7 52
..AQ95

Dealer: South

. 3rd St. in
Syrcuse, Oh.
Ph. 992-3752
or992•3U3

~emodeilne

.7

· tKs2
• A K 10 3 2

''FREE
ESTIMATES"

cleaning and painting .
All work guaranteed.

22
Money ~o Loan
Farm Supplies
FINANCING-VA-FHA LO&amp; Livestock
ANS. lOW OR NO DOWN
WANTED : hausecleenlng
PAYIY\ENT.· PURCHASE
position, 1 or 2 days per
. REFINANCE .
. OR
week,
re'll
eblf;her
·.
62 wanted to Buy
IRELAND MORTGAGE,
dworktng, clean
and
77 E. · STATE, ATHENS.
CHIP WOOD. Poles max. ·honest, can supply· r~eren·
diameter 10" on largest ces to character. Please 614·592·3051. .
end. Sl2 p·er ton. Bundled call 8&lt;(3·4951 anytime. Have
slab. SlO per ton. Delivered ·dependable transportation.
Mortgage
nloney
to Ohio Pallet Co:, Rt. 2,
available. New homes,' old .
Pomeroy 992-2689. ·
homes and refinancing
Will care for elderly In our
your present home. CON·
home, trained and ex·
VENTIONAL : 5 Pet. down.
ANTIQUES,
FUR · perlented. 992-731-4.
VA · no down payment.
NITURE, glass, China,
FHA · low down payment.
an¥fhlng. See or call Ruth
Insurance
FHA ·· . 24S graduoted
Gainey, antiques• 26 N. 13
payment program. FHA ,
. 2nd, Middleport, OH . 992·' AUT&lt;()MOBILE
IN·
3161 .
. SURANCE been can· 265 subsidy program .' Call .
details. , IRELAND
your for
celled?
Lo.s t
MORTGAGE
CO ., 77 E..
. OLD COII':fS, · pocket wat· operator's license? Phone State St., Athens.
592-3051 .
ches, class rings, Wedding . 992·21~.
bonds, diamonds.- Gold or
;:::::::;~:::::;::;;:;:=:;­
. silver. Call J. A. Wamaley, :.. .~
7.__,1_.:;A:::U:.:t.:::OS"-'.'=fo:::.r..!S:.!a~le!O.·_ i
6
2
742·3331. Ti'easur.e Chest :' =--=-W:..;a;::n:..:t.::ed::::...!.to:...::B:.:u
..y:....
'
Coin Shop, Aftlens, OH . 592·
Bronco,
~.
. ' wanticl to buy : a newer 1978 Ford
car, to take over payments. customized, . p.b., p.s.,
:crullll!control . 99'2··3310.
742·3080.
GOLD, SILV!i:R OR
'
FOREIGN CO(NS, OR
ANY OTHER . GO~D OR · OLD FURNITURE, Ice 72 Trucks for Sale
SI~VER
ITEMS. ALSO,
boxes, brass beds, Iron 1976 Ford F:ioo pickup with
ANtiQUS ' FURNITURE
beds, desks, etc., complete rriatcblng .1
l:yllnhouseholds. Write M.D. ·
opper. 6
Miller. Rt. 4, Pomeroy or der standard. :e,ooo miles,
, _ flrH, e)!cellent con· call992· 7760
·
, ,dltlon. · S2500 firm. Phone
.
OSBY COSSIE) MARTIN,
99H21.5 aft~ 4 p.m.
BEFORE
s·EI.;~ING .
Livestock
PHONE 992·6310. ALSO DO 63
1978 Chevy' Pickup, o4X4, 354)
APPRAISING . ..
Nice Pigs. 949-21.57.
erlill\lf• automatic, P.S.,

AElU ~AF-TAN! 'liE
AU·I/AH WARBUCKS
STAYED OUT OF ALI'11? COME UN_Do:::E::;::-"'-...:IA
R
:.::H
.:_:'G:.::S:;'GHT, AS YOU
ATTAC~ ?! r ~
ORDERED ··
·

'A&amp;H
UPHOLSTERING

We Do Roofing,
GutterS and

POMEROY,O.
992-621501'
992-7314
1·28·1 mo.

tt7 3

"'-·Oil

.86
• Q 10 9 8
• ·J871

""'U ALLO.1'/EO IT I'IAS UNAVOIDABLE,

' ""'"~ •v

H. L WHITESEL
gutter

1111"" ~- N .. Ut. - .. U. &amp;

ANNIE

2"18·1 mo.

downspouts·,

tH
K 102
EAST
• Q 10 8 4

t

2·17:1 mo.

All types roof.work, new
or repair guners and

.

.QJ9&gt;4

by Diann .Jewell .

•

3-4-8(}

10 ;

Llghlnlng" 17; ABC Captioned
News 33.
11 :45--Dick Cavell 20; Movie "The
Initiation of Sarah" 6,13: Bar!
naby Jones 8.
,
1 : 10-Movle "Snow Job" 8; 1:30-Tomorrow 3; News 15,17.
.
1:35--Movle "Soulh Sea Woman "
17; 2:10-News 13.
·
3:40-Movle "Targef Zero" 17;
5:40-love, American Style 17;

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

. 2·28·1 mo.

992-3795
2-25-lmo .

ROOFING

(Answero tomorrow)

STOIC BECOME _ LIQUID

No sunday Calls

PH. 992-2772

Gu.uer: work, down
spOuts, some concrete
work, walks
and
drlvewoys.
•
. (FREE &amp;STIMATEn

"~[I
·] '.'
L.J,....J _ _ I__

BRIDGE

PH. 949-2801

JAMES KEESEE

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING

gested by the above cartoon.

Tuesday, March 4

SILVER DOllARS

Aluminum Siding
• Insulation
•S*WmOoors
• Storm Windows
• Replacement
Windows
Free Estimate

mile off Rt: 7 by-pass ,

Now arrange the circled lenors lo
form the surprise answer, as sug-

Answir: What O~acula's were-BLC

BORN LOSER

B A. aBEAUTY

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULAnON
Vinyl &amp;

Roger Hysell
Garage

YOU

DON'"T 6TICI&lt; TO
YOU II!: DIET.

Print answer here:

PAYING
s20.00 AND UP

~EN

GO

MARC~ 4, 1910

7:30-Hollywood Squares 3; Baxlers
6; Joker's . Wild 8 ; Hollywood
Squares 10; Sha Na Na 13; TV
Honor Soclely 15; All In The
Family 17 ; MacNeii . Lehrer
Report 20; Dick Cavell 33.
8:0Q-Misadvenlures of Sheriff Lobo ·
3; Happy Days 6; White ShadOw
8,10 ; Billy Grabam Crusadj!
13, 15; Nova 20,33 ; Movie " The
Black Rose" 17.
8:30--Laverne &amp; Shirley 6; 9:ooBig Show 3, 15; Three's Company
6 , 13; Movie " Bogie" 8.10;
Sysfery 20,33.
9:30--Taxl6;13; 10:oo-Hart to Hart
6,13; 19 : 10-C IIy Notebook 33.
10:30--Fight Agalnsf Slavery 17;
News 20 ; 10 : 40-Dave Allen 'If
Large 33.
II :QO-News 3,6,8, 10, 1~, 15; 11 :05Monty Pylhon 's Flying Circus
33; 11 : 10-Fiash Gordon 20.
11 : 30 - Prlmary Coverage
3,6,8, 13, 15; Movie " The Naked

•·+

I I

CAPI'AINEASY

CALL992-7544

H&amp;R BLOCK OFFICE LOCATION

S&amp;E Gift Shop (Syracuse&gt;
10 Percent Off on all items
d·u rlng March.

1·

TRA=-:-:-::LFB:-1E.

Pomeroy, o.

Service

Pomeroy, Oh.

TUESDAY,

r - = : 1

Other limes by appointment.
107 Sycamore (Rear

Business-Farms-Partnerships
and Corporations
Payrolls, prof!t and loss statements, all
federal and state forms .
·-618 E. Main

business rooms on large

Hou.rs 9-1 M.,

tJ

NORTH
t AJti

992-512-4.

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

READY TO MOVE IN·
TO UO,OOO.OO.
GREAT Location, .
style and condition.
rooms to spare, up to 4
bdrms., 1'12 baths, faml ·

ment,

61~- .

Phqne
1-(614)-992-3325

elec .
available .
EASTERN DISTRICT
$27,500.00.
BEAUTIFUL - 2 story,
river view, 11h baths,
central air, full base·
ment, excellent condl ·
·tion,

coin collet::tions. Call

1~1

REAL ESTATE
FiNANCING
Federal Housing &amp;
Veter•ns Admin. L011ns.

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.

0

.
Vesterday a

Mgr.
Phone 992-2181
COAL, LIMESTONE,
sand, gravel, calcium
chloride, fertilizer, dog
food, and all ty~ Of salt.
Excelsior Salt Works, Inc.,
E. Main St., Pomeroy, 992·
3891.

ROUSH

rooms, Jlh

baths, lots of storage,
WHIP INFLATION
WITH YOUR OWN
RENTAL
UNIT .
S.lO,OOO.OO.
RACINE Recently
remodeled
story
frame, 7 rooms, full
basem~nt,
walk to
everything, $25,000.00.
WOODLAND
HOMESITE$ - Appx.
25 acres, some lots
surveyed,

ATTENTION :
( IM ·
PORTANT TO YOU) Will
pay cash or certified check
for antiques and collec ·
tibles or entire estates.
Nothing too large. Also,
guns, pocket watches and

Real Estate

32

?futlittr«/l
"I M1delt Myself"

689.

Antiques

c11rrylng

chocolale wr1,pers and

PRICES

Jack

NOW HOLDING
TOLE &amp; DECORATIVE
PAINTING CLASSES
-we will be hnlng
macrame classes.

2·1Hfc

H-Reel Estate Wentl'd
J7-Realton

'

-Now

APPLES- ROME beauty
apples at$4 per bu. Bestfor
apple bulter. Call 669-3785,
Fitzpatrick Orchard, SR

Realtors

•TRANSPORTATION

• REAL ESTATE

G~ L D,

Park., Route 33, north of

6)- Livestock

2J- ProfHIIonel
Sen lets

..

Mobile Homes
for Rent
COUNTRY MOBILE Home

II

Business Services

Nothing too large.- Also,

Monor opts. Call992·7787.
Lots &amp; Acreage
Approximtely 4 acres near
Meigs Mines. Ready for

'
•FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

11-WantldTO 00

42

guns. pocket watches and
coin collections. Call 614·
767·3167 dr 557·3411.

Senior Citizens In Vi II age

35

S,J --1\IIIdlng Supplies
u--Pet11or S.lt

RNio, TV
&amp;CB RtPtir

ATTENTION :
li M ·
PORTANT TO YQU) Will
pay cash or certifi~d check
for antiques and collet·
tibles or entire estates.

RENTER 'S assistance for

Sl-HovNftold Goods
Sl-cl, TV. R1dlo Equipment

,, _ Htlpw1 ntH

Antique$

41 Houses for Rent
2 Bedroom house tor rent,
unfurnis.hed, deposit req .
992-3090.

rights. $77,000. 9'12·7559.

•MERCHANDISE

•EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

53

44

M-AjYrtment lOt" Rent

4-0IVHWIY

16-

ca rpeted . 3 to 17 acres

available. Located approx.
7 miles from Pomeroy oft
Rt. 7 or 33. ~ · 2359 after 6.

•RENTALS
41- HOVIII for Rent
42- MObllt Home•

1-C.rcl of Thanks
2- ln Memoriam
J-Announcements

firm . 9'12·5304.

33 Fa1:111s for Sale
COUNTRY HOME with
stocked pond for swimming
or fishing, 9 rooms, bath,

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX
•ANNOUNCEMENTS

Rentals

Mobile Homes
for Sale

Television
Viewing

DICK TRACY

.

.

..,,

.

~

I

�6-Tht Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Tuesday, March 4, l!oi!O

7-'lbe Daily llentinel, Middleport· Pomeroy, o .;Thesday, March 4, 1980

,

Your Best Buys Are Found in the Sentinel Classifieds
32

WANT AD INFORMAnON

1971 12)(65 Trl}iter, com pletely furnished , A.C .
very good condition . On a
lot that ca n be rented .
Ready to move Into. S6500

PHONE 992-2156
or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St., Pomeroy, 0 ., 45769

..

tor Rettt

36 acres far"} with 9 room

ts-FRooms

t-HI!»PY AilS
6-Lostand Found
1- YardS.It

· l lf2 story house , full
basement, buildings, barn,
some timber, al l mineral

ror R.nt
47- W•nted to Rent
41--Equlprntnt lor Rent
~s,.ce

t-Publlc Sale
&amp; Aucflon

u-Antlques
54-MIIC . MerdllrtCIIH

1:1-Situltld W11ntftl
11-lnsurance
14--lusinns Tralnhtt
1s--Sch0olt Instruction

6! - Farm Equipm..,t
62-WinfH to luy
72- Trucks lor Slit

•FINANCIAL
21-

IIUslntu
Opporf\lrllty
22-Money to Lou

Pomeroy. Large lots.Ca ll
9'12·747'1.

DISCOUNT

Two bedroom trailer .
AdultS Only 992-3324

Hotpoint and
Genera I E leetric
Appliance
Sales &amp; Service

Apartment
for Rent
3 AND 4 RM furnished ap·
IS. Phone 992·5434.

quick trailer setup or ideal

45 Furnished Rooms
2 Sleeping rooms, private
entrance. Off the slreet

building site. Phone 698·
6306.

television . Call after 4 week
•days, 9'12· 7791.

M-Hiy&amp;Graln
u - seect &amp; Fert1U1tr

parking, refrigerator and

Merchandise

rl.....A.UtOs tor Sale
,,_V•n•&amp;•w. o .
,._Motorcycles
rs-Auto P1rt1
&amp; Accenorln
, - Auto RtNir

31-NomtsfurSele
ll- Mobllt Homes

tor Salt
JJ-FermsforSalt
14-luslnns II.IUdlnp
I J-Lott &amp; Acrntt

53

molds for can y making

-Full line of Kratt supplies
-Special rates lor
organizations
.

~LU«4

POMEROY
LANDMARK
w. Carsey,

-

608 E .

. MA~~Mi!ROY.,O. . ....

•SERVICES

Want-Ad Advertising
Deildlines

11- Homttmprovtmtnll
12-Piumltlnt &amp; Excavating

1)-I!IICIYIIIng
114-EieetriUI
a lltfrlttrlflon

4 P .M. O.ily
4 P.M. saturday
tor Sunday
12 Noon Sunday
tor Monday

ls--Gentrll HIUiint
16--M.H. RePIIr
17- Uphobttry

Rates and Other Information
1SWonts er Under

Cllh

CMrge

1 dl'(
ldan

UCI

1.:U

I..SG

l .fO

ldl'fl
ldl'fS

1.10
UCI

2.21
US

E1d1 word over the minimum IS words is 4 cenh 5Mr word per clly.
Ads rt~nnlng ether tt11n consecutive diW'S will be chlrpd 1tthe 1 day

rate.

In memory, Cartt 01 Thinks 1nc1 Obituary : 'ctnh ,., word, 13.00
minimum . C1th k11dvance.

Mobile Hornell lei lnd Yard Hltllrt'ICc:ept.cl only wlthCIIh Wllh
dtlrvt lor 1d1 c1rrytng lox NumMr In Care of The

order-. 25 cent
s.nrtnel.

Employment
Services

Announcemetfts
2'----'l..:..:n..:.M:..:.e:::m=or""ia"'m"-'-·Gone but nolforgoflen
Nor ever shall you be

As long as life does last
We'll still remember thee
1n memory Of c. A. Swick
who died March 3, 1963.
·$adly missed by children
.lind grandchildren.

i '--A-=-nn-o::-:u"'n"'c-emC"""Cen"'t:-sGUN SHOOT EVERY
SUNDAY 1 PM. FACTORY
CHOKE ONLY. RACINE
GUN CLUB.
GUN SHOOT . -IlAclne
Volunteer Fire Dept.
Every Saturday. 6:30p.m .
At their bulldlngln Bashan.
Factory choke guns only .

11

Help Wanted
GET VALUABLE training
·as a young business person
and earn good money plus
some great gifts as a Sen·
tlnel route carrier. Phone

us right away and get on
the eligibility list at 992·
2156 or 9'12·2157 .
RN OR LPN , full time. 3·
11 :30 and 11 to 7:30. Part
time RN or LPN, 111o 7: 30. ·
Call Mr. Zldlan el Pomeroy
Health Care Center, Monday through Friday, 9-5.
Hourly RN, parfllme for
lamlly planning clinics.
Must be registered In Ohio,
have reliable Iran·
sportatlon. Orientation will
be provided. Equal op·
portunlty employer. For
further information, please

GUN SHOOT every Sunday
12 :00. Factory choke only .
Cbrn Hollow Gun Club,
Rutland. Proceeds donated
I~ Boy ScoufTroop249.
BUYING U.S. SILVER
COINS DATED 1964 OR
EARLIER
(ANY
AMOUNT). DON'T LOSE
MONEY, SIMPLY PICK
UP THE PHONE AND
DIAL
614 -992 · 5113, .
~.ROWN'S .

I PAY highest prices
possible for gold and sliver
. coins, rings, lewelry, etc .
Contact Ed Burkett Barber
-Shop, Middleport.
S I LV E R 0 R ·
FOREIGN COINS, OR
ANY OTHER GOLD OR
SILVER ITEMS. ALSO,
ANTIQUE FURNITURE
OR OTHER ANTIQUE
tTEMS. WILL PAY TOP
Q'OLLAR . CHECK WITH .
OSBY (OSSIE) MARTIN
SELLING.
B·EFOR E
PHONE 992 .. 6370. ALSO
DO APPRAISING .

call Planned Parenthood Of
Southeast Ohio, 992·5912,
8:30·3:30 weekdays. If no
answer, call main office
593'·3375, collect.
Remodeling, paneling and
cell ing tile. Additions buill
on. No job too small. Call
949·2379.
Wanted : Live In housekeeper to care for small
girl 6 years old. All the
privilege of home. Car fur·
nlshed. Must be SOber. Man
wlirks.away . 992·3519.

992-2259
NEW LISTING - Love·
ly 2 story home on good
street with carp&lt;!llng
and
complimentary
paneling, H bdrms .•
spacious living room,
built-in kitchen and
separate dining room,
1112 baths, full base·
ment, paved drive and
parking, · storage bldg.
Priced to sell $35,000.00.
NEW LISTING - 2
story, handyman's
delight,

s

.. ..cr~fts ~re fun I

' - - - - - - 2 · 1 8·1 mo.

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

wa1er

c!rpetlng

767·3167 or 557·3411.

3c.:.
l ___,H.:..:O:.:.m:.::e,$,_,fc=O!...r-"'Sa"'l"'eHouse for sale, Pomeroy: 6
rooms, 1'12 baths, paneled,
carpeted, lots of con·
venlences, Reasonable. See
to appreclte. Phone 9'12·
5566.
Modern 3 bedroom home,
, basement with fireplace,
'central al.r, fully carpeted,
located on 6112 acres near
Racine on Raclne-Bashan
Rd. 949·2836 after 5 and
·weekends. Larry Wolfe.

4

Giveaway
12x60 Hillcrest, 2 bedroom.
Free to good home 2 FurniShed or unfurnished.
obedient pups, one black, 992·61-10.
()(le blonde. 3 months old.
Cell742-2692.
·
3 Bedroom, 1 story house
'
on Long St., Rutland. ·
Free to llood home 2 · large lot out of high water, .
obidteot pups, one black, close to school . Call 742one blonde. 3 months old. 2975.
Call742-2692.
Well built 3 bedroom hom
situated on 3 acres
overlooking the Ohio River.
After 3:30 p.m. call 247·2032.
Mobile Homes
for Sale

IN STOCK 'for immediate
delivery: various sizes of
POOl kits. Do· lt·yourself or
let us Install for you. D.
Bumgardner Sales, Inc.
Apples, Rome Beauty at
~.00 per bushel . Exc. lor
pies, sauce and buller. Fit·
zpatrlck Orchard, state
Roule
689 .
Phone
Wilkesville 669·3785.

TEEN DISCO '
DANCE
At The Orchid Room
E. Main St. Pomeroy, 0.
EVERY
SATURDAY NIGHT
8:00TII11:30
"D.Isco Lighting"
Admission,sz.oo Single
u:oo Couple
Sponsored by Mulc
Unlimited. Chaperones
will be present. No
alcoholic beverages per·
mined. For iurther in·
to., call 992-6058 . .
2·28·1 mo. pd .

GEORGE'S
ROOFING
Roofing, siding,
gutter,
.built-up
roof · and home
repair.
Free Estimates
388-9759

~~~
~~

.TBroio·kCkoeuenptyl~n· g

Blllir~~

and

etc.

ly· room, r'ec. room, cen ·

tral heat &amp; air. MAKE
OFFER $59,800.00.
THE FARM - you have
been waiting for, 11-4
beautiful laying acres,
good large barn, 2
ponds, old house to
remodel, good large
garage PLUS a
beautiful 3 bdrm. ranch
with F.P., full base·
ma"ny

other

features In excellent
condition. STEAL AT
$76,325.00.
THERE ARE 41 WAYS
TO FINANCE YOUR
NEW HOME, WE CAN
HELP YOU. LOCALLY
OWNED AND FULL
TIME.
REALTOR
Henry E. Cltl•nd, Jr.
992-6191
ASSOCIATES
Dottle &amp; Roter Turner
742-2474
Je•n Trussell91.5-2660
FULL TIME
OFFICE PHONE
992·2259

level lot.
11 ROOMS - 1'12 boths,
nat. gas furnace, 5 or 6
bedrooms, basement. 2
poches, oulbulldlng and
dbl. garage. $17,500.
80 ACRES - Nice lay·
lng farm land or for sub·
dlvlson. About 112 fenc·
ed, good 10 room farm
house with bath and lots
of farm bldgs. Minerals.
3
NICE HOME bedrooms, · bath, por·
ches, basement, birch
kitchen, nat. gas fur·
nace and copper plumb· .
lng.
BUILDING LOT Near Rock Springs In
Restricted
area,
utilities &amp; trees.
3 IN 1 -Home has 11
rooms, furnace, 2 ren·
tals, 4th available, 2 car

garage and over 1 acre

of sandy land. Good buy
at $25,000.00.
6 RENTALS All
under one roof. Brick
construction. Only
$35,000.
BUILDING LOT - Cor·
ner lot In Pomeroy In
good residential area .
out of flood.
RESTFUL - Quiet sel·
tlng with a lot Of Ires on
2'12 acres. Like new In·
side, bath, utility, nal.
gas furnace &amp; city
water.

.FREE 80CALENDARS.
FOR SELLING YOUR
PROPERTY CALL
992-33.25 or 99N876

Housing

Head_qu_aTters

REAL ESTATE
WE HAVE FINANCING AVAILABLE
AS LOW AS 5% DOWN AND 30 YEARS
TO PAY, ON MOST HOMES.
Ml DDLE PORT - Three bedroom, 1'12 bath, nice lot '
just one block from heart Of town. $25,000.
POMEROY - on Lincoln Hts. - Two bedroom and
bat~, full basement, gas furnace, storm windows &amp;
doors. Owner will help finance If you need II. S17,500.
Ml DOLE PORT - Large double corner lot on
Locust St .• three bedroom. 2 both, garage &amp;
workshop. $25,000.
RUTLAND - Older home needs some repairs on
Salem Street. Nice corner lol. $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
this one If yov choose~ south Second Ave.

CALL 992-2342 .
RODNEY DOWNING, BROKE R-HO. H2-3731
BILL CHIJ.DS, BRANCH MGR.-HO. 992-2449

1'·-------------------·----·-·
D«MNINGatllDS AGENCY INC.

INSURANCE
SERVING SOUlliWTERN OHIO S!NCE
ARE YOU PAYING TOO MUCH?
YOU HAVE THE CQVERf.GE?

FOR ~ YOUR

INSU~ NEEDS·
.
'

CM1. U$.

. 992-2342
·,DCMNIN&amp;OILDS MENCY; INC.

WHER'E YOU Mli&amp;HT

THAT &amp;I.ANt&lt;iTY·&amp;LANK
I&lt;AIOC!&lt;eD Me INTO THe DRINK 1 ILIT'
liii!VI!It MIND THAT'I'IMAT A&amp;OLIT THE:
. /ltiLIC/1 '• AitcHl

Tfe~R

w., F,

FOR

\ABBOMOI

I I I

0

I Jumbles: HOBBY

Pets for Sale
56
HOOF HOLLOW, English
and Western. Saddles ond
harness . Horses and
ponies. Ruth Reeves. 614698-3290. Bordlng and
Riding Lessons and Horse .
Care products. Western
boots. Children's S15.50.
Adults $29.00.
RISING STAR Kennel.
Boarding. Call 367-0292.

3'4

on St. Rt. 124 toward
Rutland .
Auto &amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992-5682
o4·30·tfc

POODLE GROOMING.
Judy Taylor. 614·367·7220.
HILLCREST . KENNELS.
Boarding, all breeds. Clean
Indoor-outdoor faci lilies.
Also AKC registered
Dobermans. 61Nol6·7795.

Prey"

Educational losing plays

HUMANE
SOCIETY .
Adopt a homeless pet.
Healthy, shots, wormed.
Donallons required . 992·
6260, noon·7 p.m.
AKC Male Pekingese pups.
11 weeks old . 949·26.16.

.

~~n~rSl!~e~G

V. C. YOUNG Ill

WEST
0

SA(ON

Wed. &amp; Thurs.
Call for Appf.
949·2320
Racine, 0.
2-nmo.

... e,ur

TOO OOG

6AHD-SIMEL t:v.;T
HAVE 5eT AN

QUICKL"(! I'ITO
THE FRAY/••
&amp;EFORe IT IS

SOUTH

t

lOO LATE!!

AMBUSH FOR
HIM!

Been in Business
For s &lt;'r ea.rs

Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices
Call Howard
949-2162
1·22·tfc

CALL 992·3238
ASK FOR DAVE

Vulnerable: East-West
West

. . ..

&lt;.) /

'

:»

1

0

CJ-5 Jeep,
Phon~ 94?-2.$-45.

76

12200 .

· Auto Parts

Ti'l.nsport,tlon '

=';':"==- ·

FINDIN&amp; A WOMAt-¥5 NAME
AND PHONE NUMBER IN
DADS POCKET DOE&amp;N'T
NECESSARILY MEAN
HE'&amp; "FOOLING

~~iiiiroo~DUOONrrKNOWi'Wifi'Aii;"1

authOr

11 Dll!l"t
11 Shrew
ll Sbow bone
II Guf'i dale
Z1 American
liurled In

5 Boasted
I Leu

!I Wrest

lllmitlted

Z7Poem
Zl Retial

ZB "Arcble"
character

Z8 Earth:· Lat.
U Shine
SO Office ol a
Z4 - Clllfornla
mandarin
follower

~ Entrance-

way

II Fruitless

15 Spanish
article
31 Fuel

WALL · PAPERING
painting. 742·2328.

33 Pod llenl

ll!'lftdear

31 Wheel part

UDIDiih
~

and

H'lblmble ·

CARPENTER WORK
·. complete remodeling by AI
Tromm, 7&lt;12-3328. References.

.'

Will dO odds and encfs,.
paneling,. floor file, · and
calling .tile. . Call Fred
Miller, 992·6338. '

·

GOOBI.E
600BL'E

GOO

'

.OADBURN
BACK-SEAT

l SEE

TH'DAOBURN
STUMP.

TATER

I SEE

. · DRIVER!!

TH'DADBURN
ROCKS,

w:·F:::

1-.

prOduCt

n Cl/alented
MbrMilport
MMI"'mlre

.. "Streetcar"

chll'leter.
DAILY .CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's

TATER

· .. ,

how

to '!\'Otk lt:

-AXYDL~A.AXB

.

. fi LONG. I'BLLOW
•'
One letter almply atanda for an(lther. In thla. sampJe A Ia
used for the three L's, X for the two Q's, ete 1 Sin1le letters.
apcjltrophea, the length and formation of the words are all
hlnta. &amp;.ch day the 'code letten are dltrerent.

· "White Mam8" 8, 10.

9::10--Hello, Larry 3,15.
· lO :DO-Best of Saturday Night Live
3, 15; Vegas 6, 13; Upstairs:·
'
CllYPTOQUOTBS
Dowtlltalrs. 17.
l
. )l:DO-Neois 3,6,1,10,13,15,20&gt; NHC
'
Hockey 17; Goodl.. 33.
·:
VSFPT
LZ I M R, MRX CYT
OYT
11 : 30-Tonight 3, 15; ABC N~wS:.
· Spe&lt;:lal 6, 13; Mary Hartman&lt;· .
MOD
YWP
LZ RTMFDG
V MSPT
Mary Hartman 8; Movl• "I.,..
vestlgatlon of a Citizen Abo'1' ,
Q L T,
WP
Suspicion" 10; AI~ fli!tloi*l .
News 33; 11 :40--Fiatn Gorclon·
)·_
f ..
VMAltfV\fCG . ZLf OTDWT.!&lt;-WRJ CYT .. ~ .·
· 11 :o4S.:,::Love BO.U, 13; 12 :~18
"Ruby" B: i2 :ss-saretta 6, 13;
WRV~TXWO.DT.- Y .
D.
ITRVNTR
Newa ·u.
"
.
;
Y•lerday'a Cryploquole: THE REWI,.RD OF. GREAT MEN IS'
1:30-News11;
1
:35--Movle
'ITre«,:
THAT LONG AFTER THEY HAVE DIED ONE IS NOT Q~
Softly Strano&lt;!r" 11; 2:05 News
SURE THAT THEY HAVE DIED.-JULES
'·
. RENARD '
13J 3:3S-Movle "llltanbul" 17~
·5:30-Love, American Style 17.

.

MARCIE, t CAME OVER
8ECAV5.E I AAD TO
'(OU-l'J.IE CIJTE fi.IIN6
PI6-I?EN SAID. TO ME '

I'M NOT INTERESTED
IN ·LI'OUR ROMANCE,
SIR, AN!i' I'M VEF.V 61.'5V
PR/IC'
TilE OR6AN
,r TICIN6
,.

MA'-f ALL lf'OOR

f.IEMIDE~15EAIIQOAVER5
.

.

6E FLAT'"
.,,, ·

=:1.

' ~-----

~

MWbeat

,.,so,

r

1t Goad

Improvements
S &amp; G Carpet Ol~lming.
Sf. . m cleaned·: · Free ·
estimate. . . Reasonable
rates. St:otcllOuard. ~.992·
6309 or 741·2211 .
·

r:''

-.;'"'"--c--t

Zl DlJt.aff gob

U Olin&amp;

IIGupout
II Silent
111m star

81

&gt;

frequent .

YrJierda)''a Aalwer

u Bouteci up

"Chain

61

ZIWord
with thread

AkOUND~

c ::-----..,H
c:o-m_e_ __

All South had to do to insure
his contract was to play
dummy's jack of diamonds
and let East hold the trick
East would play a second
diamond. South would take his
ace, ruff a diamond, draw
trumps and lead a club to
dummy's 10. East would be in
with the queen and the second
defensive trick, but there
would be no way for him to
get two more. A spade lead
would cost the spade trick a club lead would set up the
king for a spade discard and a
diamond lead would allow a
ruff and discard.
We keep getting letters asking if you may pass your
partner's Blackwood four
notr0 mp.
The answer is that the laws
allow it but common sense
dictates that you may lose a
partner if you do.

4 "Artie"

ol an Ism

7 Entwbile
Mrs. Sinatra
8 Sour look
the Kremlin llnclle

Services

for finesses.u

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
1·Poll.sh cake 1 Justlfl5 Cowardly
cation
11 Eager
z"Hold it,
1! Gorge
swab!"
U Surfeit
3 HaUields,
11 Ulater color
to the McCoys

His own.
son- '1n ·law?

Movie

WEDNESDAY . MARCH5,1980 '
5:45--Farm Report 13; 5:50-PTL
Club 13.
·
!
6:0Q-7oo Club 6,8; PTL Club 15 :
6: 10-World at large 17.
'
6::10--Chrlslopher Closeup 10; New'
17; 6:-45-Mornlng Report 31
A.M. Weather 33; 6:50-Gooll
Morning, · West Virginia 131·
·
:
6:55-News 13.
7:QO-Today 3,15; Good Mornln'
America 6, 13; Wednesday
Morning 8; Bafman 10; WTBS
F unhouse 17.
'
7:30--Famlly Affair 10: 7:55-Chuck
White Reports 10.
:·
8:0Q-Capl. Kangaroo 8, 10; Lucy
Show 17 ; Sesame St . 33.
;
'
8:30--Romper Room 17.
9:0Q-Bob Braun 3; Big Valley
Beverly Hillbillies 8; Jefferson'
10; Phil Donahue 13,15; Family
Affair 11.
:
9: 30- Bob Newhart 8 ; Hogan's
Heroes 10; Green Acres 17 .
i
10:00-&lt;:ard Sharks 3,15; Edge ot
Night 6; Jelfersoils 8; Joker' •
Wild 10; Morning Magazine 131
Movie "Marines, Let's Go" 17.
10:30- Hollywood Squares 3, 15;
$20,000 Pyram ld 13 ; Andy
Grlffllh 6.
•
10:55--CBS News 8; House Call \0.
11 :OQ-High Rollers 3,15; Laverne &amp;
Shirley 6, 13; Price Is Right 8, 10:
II :30-Wheel of Forlune 3, 15)
Family Feud 6,13; Sesame ST.
20,33; 11 :55-News 17.
·
12:00-Newscenter
3;
News
6,8, 10,13; Health Field 15; Love,
American STyle 17.
12 :30-Ryan' s Hope 6, 13; Search far.
Tomorrow 8, 10; Pass wore;! Plus
15; Movie "Strange Affection':
17; Elec. Co. 20,33.
1:oo-Days of 0\(r Lives 3, 15; All M¥
Children 6, 13; Young &amp; the
Restless 8, 10.
.
2:0Q-Ooclors 3,15; One Life fo ll~
6, 13; As The World Turns 8, 19;
2:25-News 17.
2 : 30- Another
World
3, 15;
,I
Gigglesnort Hotel 17.
3 :00-General
Hospital
6, 13!,
Guiding light 8, 10; I love lucy
17; Austin City Limits 20.
·
3:30-FIIntstones i7; Over Easy 33:
4 :0Q-Mister Cartoon 3; 'i!ewltcheq
6; Petticoat Junction 8; Sesam~
St. 20,33; Gomer Pyle 10; Real
McCoys 13; Little Rascals 15;
Spectreman 17.
.:
4:30-lone Ranger 3; Atterschool
Special 6,13; Gomer Pyle It'
Brady Bunch 10; Merv Griffin
15; Gilligan's Is. 17.
·'
5:oo-Carol Burnett 3; Sanford ai
Son 8; Mary Tyler Moore 10; MY,
Three .Sons 17; Mister Rogers
20,33.
.
5: JO-Mash 3; News 6; Play th&lt;
Percentages 8; E lee. Co. 20;:
Mash 10; Happy Days Again 13; {
Dream of jeannie 17; Doctai'
Who 33.
.
6:0Q-News 3,8,10,13,1'5; ABC New~
6; Carol Burnett 17; 3-2-1 Contact;
20,33.
',i
6 :JO-NBCNews3,15; aBC l)lew~ 13~
CBS News 8, 10; Carol Burnett 6;'
Bob Newhart 17; Villa Alegre 201:
Wild Wild World of Animals 3~.
7 :00-Cross-Wits 3; Newlywe~ ·
Game 6, 13; MacNeil-Lehrer'
Reporl 33; News 10; Lovv.i
American . Style 15; Sanford ..,
Son 17; Flash GordOn 20.
. .
7: 30-Country Roads 3; Match
Game PM 6; Joker's Wild 8;
Dick Cavell 33; The Judge 10; ·
Family Feud 13; Wild Kingdom
lS; All lr The Family 17..:
MacNeil-Lehrer Report 20.
8 :00-Real People 3; Eight II
Enough 6; Beyo"d Westworld
1, 10; Billy Grehem Cruaad9
13, lS ; Great Performances
,. · 20,33; Movie ''Run .of the Arraw':~
17.
"
Strokes . 3,'151'
9 :DO-Diff'rent
Chllrile's Angeis 6,13; Movie

a~'-"*'"

GASOLINE AIJ..EY

• Five 1975 camaro INheels
and hub caps. N.ew con·
dillon. Call 992-5663.

" I guess this isn't a good
day for finesses." remarked
the student.
" No it isn't," replied the
Professor. "but once that ten
of diamonds was led you were
safe at home without the need

The · student won the first
trick with the ace of (NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)
diamonds, drew trumps and
led a club to dummy's king.
(For a copy of JACOBY
East took his ace and queen
and led a third club which the MODERN, send $1 to: " Win at
stu'dent ruffed. Later on, the Bridge. " care of this newspastudent lost the spade finesse, per, P,O. Box 489, Radio City ·
, New York, N. Y.
a diamond and his game .Station
100 19.)
contract.

&amp; Accessories

I

Pass

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

vans &amp; 4.W.D.

1974

Pass

.,..
/'

1S Follower
73

East

Opening lead :+ 10

3-2-1 mo.

~ ~;s,
r~;,o- _;~~ ' 84
Electrical
,· tlberolau topper and .
&amp; Refrldgeration '
~·'-·"+.
· +.'
slllllno wlnd9WI. Reese hit· ·· 1
•
,71
Autos for Sale ,
ch &amp;lgtlrn Ru~tprOofed .• $E~I~G • MACHINE
,
:z.s:ooomlln.:,c •nbe-nai • · Repairs, .ae:rvlce, 111
'19n Dodge. Aspen, AM·FM Ashland Bulk. P'ant . at makes. 992·2284. The
·rad!o, A.C.. 1211110. 1974 MI!Mir1Yille. 742 2225 742 1 FabriG Shqp, , Pomeroy,
· Ctt.vrohrl Mon1w carlo, 2125 ·or- 992 .5111 • '
" Author!zed Sll'lilel' Soles
1, and Service. We Sharpen
rAM·FM recflo, l ·frllek tape.
-.,-'-'----t·' -:----+ c;:a11 att.r ~p.m, ,, 247·2813. ,•. 73 Vans&amp; 4 ,W.D.
Scissors.
_ ___:,~..:._._,__ _..,
GOLD AND S'ILVER
COINS OF THE WORLD: 19ncaprl, o4cyi.,A .C.,AM· •1978 Ford . F·150 , C\IStom ; ELWOOD · BOWERS '
R I.N G S, JEW I!! L R Y•, ' FM Hpetd. EKcellent COII-I 4x~, excellilnt condition, RE P~l R .S-pera,
STE.RLING SiLVER AND dltlan. 992·6069, $3500 firm . ., l.lft klls, AIY\-F,.,. 8·1rack, • ·toasters, Irons, all' small •
MIS~. ITEMS. PAYING
--------lots of extra, 2l,OOO mlln. · appll•nces. Lawn mow.r.
~~~~~:.f ·UP-Tcr.~~fri · 196-1 Pontiac Tempest, 4 Take ~r l!avments s.. ! Next to State Hlgh';N
, PRJCES.- ,CO!'ITACT ED . Qr.,, V·6, autq., lhlft. Run·
~over ~ ~~~~· 992· •~age: ~ Route 7,
BURKETT
8AR81!R nlnii'IIOOd !::III•MS-3366. Or
· •
1
'
,
•
SHOP • MI~DLE,PORT, a,~at376olli'txas Road.
,
1
OHIO, OR CALL 992·:W6.
-lfTI ' Ford BI'Onco, A.c) 8$ General Haullril l:
' 197~ Pontiac Ctellna, 992- AM-PM s1wreoj P.S.; .P.If., I [WII..L HAULIImHton.and
4 nlwtlres.cal 992'&lt;1130.
OLG ' lluij'NITUfte,·· 'ice : 2201 ·
·.
'
, llr8_V!tl,
lime hauling '
bol(b, lirau btdS, Iron · ,
~
and iprfiadlng. Leo IY\orrlf
btda, dnki, etc., complete ! 1974 MGII GT Hprdtop, . 1971 Ford 4x4 : F· Uo. · TI'\ICklng. Ph0nlt742-2~. 1
houstllOids. , Write M.D. ' · mint cond ;, a'. c., low
c;vstom lllade, AM-FM a- · ·
.
'
'Miller. Rt. 4, ~omeroy or I ·mlleege, gOOd gas mileage.
track, C&amp;. 19,000 mlln. m- . ,
HAUL WATER. 992·
2656..5
call 992p60.
Call 99H25f,
.
. •
,
.
1

our:

, Now ecceplng •tov$ at
log yaHrd·h7 . ~'30. "'..~ :
d eys. 1II pr1ces or ,..,.,...
qilal,ity logs with a limited ,
amount, Of low gr~. l
Patment upan delivery
and se•llng. Bla~y Har·.
.clwoods, Box 66, 'illncen).
OH 457a..:614·671·2960.

Nortb

Pass
Pass

·12 Situations Wanted

~J=L~1:~E~~E~~~~1~~ ·

A6 3

.. 63

THERE 'YOU ARE,
'lOUR HIGHNESS! NO
SOONER SAID THAN
DONEl . I .-.~.

"FREE ESTIMATES"

t K 7 52
..AQ95

Dealer: South

. 3rd St. in
Syrcuse, Oh.
Ph. 992-3752
or992•3U3

~emodeilne

.7

· tKs2
• A K 10 3 2

''FREE
ESTIMATES"

cleaning and painting .
All work guaranteed.

22
Money ~o Loan
Farm Supplies
FINANCING-VA-FHA LO&amp; Livestock
ANS. lOW OR NO DOWN
WANTED : hausecleenlng
PAYIY\ENT.· PURCHASE
position, 1 or 2 days per
. REFINANCE .
. OR
week,
re'll
eblf;her
·.
62 wanted to Buy
IRELAND MORTGAGE,
dworktng, clean
and
77 E. · STATE, ATHENS.
CHIP WOOD. Poles max. ·honest, can supply· r~eren·
diameter 10" on largest ces to character. Please 614·592·3051. .
end. Sl2 p·er ton. Bundled call 8&lt;(3·4951 anytime. Have
slab. SlO per ton. Delivered ·dependable transportation.
Mortgage
nloney
to Ohio Pallet Co:, Rt. 2,
available. New homes,' old .
Pomeroy 992-2689. ·
homes and refinancing
Will care for elderly In our
your present home. CON·
home, trained and ex·
VENTIONAL : 5 Pet. down.
ANTIQUES,
FUR · perlented. 992-731-4.
VA · no down payment.
NITURE, glass, China,
FHA · low down payment.
an¥fhlng. See or call Ruth
Insurance
FHA ·· . 24S graduoted
Gainey, antiques• 26 N. 13
payment program. FHA ,
. 2nd, Middleport, OH . 992·' AUT&lt;()MOBILE
IN·
3161 .
. SURANCE been can· 265 subsidy program .' Call .
details. , IRELAND
your for
celled?
Lo.s t
MORTGAGE
CO ., 77 E..
. OLD COII':fS, · pocket wat· operator's license? Phone State St., Athens.
592-3051 .
ches, class rings, Wedding . 992·21~.
bonds, diamonds.- Gold or
;:::::::;~:::::;::;;:;:=:;­
. silver. Call J. A. Wamaley, :.. .~
7.__,1_.:;A:::U:.:t.:::OS"-'.'=fo:::.r..!S:.!a~le!O.·_ i
6
2
742·3331. Ti'easur.e Chest :' =--=-W:..;a;::n:..:t.::ed::::...!.to:...::B:.:u
..y:....
'
Coin Shop, Aftlens, OH . 592·
Bronco,
~.
. ' wanticl to buy : a newer 1978 Ford
car, to take over payments. customized, . p.b., p.s.,
:crullll!control . 99'2··3310.
742·3080.
GOLD, SILV!i:R OR
'
FOREIGN CO(NS, OR
ANY OTHER . GO~D OR · OLD FURNITURE, Ice 72 Trucks for Sale
SI~VER
ITEMS. ALSO,
boxes, brass beds, Iron 1976 Ford F:ioo pickup with
ANtiQUS ' FURNITURE
beds, desks, etc., complete rriatcblng .1
l:yllnhouseholds. Write M.D. ·
opper. 6
Miller. Rt. 4, Pomeroy or der standard. :e,ooo miles,
, _ flrH, e)!cellent con· call992· 7760
·
, ,dltlon. · S2500 firm. Phone
.
OSBY COSSIE) MARTIN,
99H21.5 aft~ 4 p.m.
BEFORE
s·EI.;~ING .
Livestock
PHONE 992·6310. ALSO DO 63
1978 Chevy' Pickup, o4X4, 354)
APPRAISING . ..
Nice Pigs. 949-21.57.
erlill\lf• automatic, P.S.,

AElU ~AF-TAN! 'liE
AU·I/AH WARBUCKS
STAYED OUT OF ALI'11? COME UN_Do:::E::;::-"'-...:IA
R
:.::H
.:_:'G:.::S:;'GHT, AS YOU
ATTAC~ ?! r ~
ORDERED ··
·

'A&amp;H
UPHOLSTERING

We Do Roofing,
GutterS and

POMEROY,O.
992-621501'
992-7314
1·28·1 mo.

tt7 3

"'-·Oil

.86
• Q 10 9 8
• ·J871

""'U ALLO.1'/EO IT I'IAS UNAVOIDABLE,

' ""'"~ •v

H. L WHITESEL
gutter

1111"" ~- N .. Ut. - .. U. &amp;

ANNIE

2"18·1 mo.

downspouts·,

tH
K 102
EAST
• Q 10 8 4

t

2·17:1 mo.

All types roof.work, new
or repair guners and

.

.QJ9&gt;4

by Diann .Jewell .

•

3-4-8(}

10 ;

Llghlnlng" 17; ABC Captioned
News 33.
11 :45--Dick Cavell 20; Movie "The
Initiation of Sarah" 6,13: Bar!
naby Jones 8.
,
1 : 10-Movle "Snow Job" 8; 1:30-Tomorrow 3; News 15,17.
.
1:35--Movle "Soulh Sea Woman "
17; 2:10-News 13.
·
3:40-Movle "Targef Zero" 17;
5:40-love, American Style 17;

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

. 2·28·1 mo.

992-3795
2-25-lmo .

ROOFING

(Answero tomorrow)

STOIC BECOME _ LIQUID

No sunday Calls

PH. 992-2772

Gu.uer: work, down
spOuts, some concrete
work, walks
and
drlvewoys.
•
. (FREE &amp;STIMATEn

"~[I
·] '.'
L.J,....J _ _ I__

BRIDGE

PH. 949-2801

JAMES KEESEE

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING

gested by the above cartoon.

Tuesday, March 4

SILVER DOllARS

Aluminum Siding
• Insulation
•S*WmOoors
• Storm Windows
• Replacement
Windows
Free Estimate

mile off Rt: 7 by-pass ,

Now arrange the circled lenors lo
form the surprise answer, as sug-

Answir: What O~acula's were-BLC

BORN LOSER

B A. aBEAUTY

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULAnON
Vinyl &amp;

Roger Hysell
Garage

YOU

DON'"T 6TICI&lt; TO
YOU II!: DIET.

Print answer here:

PAYING
s20.00 AND UP

~EN

GO

MARC~ 4, 1910

7:30-Hollywood Squares 3; Baxlers
6; Joker's . Wild 8 ; Hollywood
Squares 10; Sha Na Na 13; TV
Honor Soclely 15; All In The
Family 17 ; MacNeii . Lehrer
Report 20; Dick Cavell 33.
8:0Q-Misadvenlures of Sheriff Lobo ·
3; Happy Days 6; White ShadOw
8,10 ; Billy Grabam Crusadj!
13, 15; Nova 20,33 ; Movie " The
Black Rose" 17.
8:30--Laverne &amp; Shirley 6; 9:ooBig Show 3, 15; Three's Company
6 , 13; Movie " Bogie" 8.10;
Sysfery 20,33.
9:30--Taxl6;13; 10:oo-Hart to Hart
6,13; 19 : 10-C IIy Notebook 33.
10:30--Fight Agalnsf Slavery 17;
News 20 ; 10 : 40-Dave Allen 'If
Large 33.
II :QO-News 3,6,8, 10, 1~, 15; 11 :05Monty Pylhon 's Flying Circus
33; 11 : 10-Fiash Gordon 20.
11 : 30 - Prlmary Coverage
3,6,8, 13, 15; Movie " The Naked

•·+

I I

CAPI'AINEASY

CALL992-7544

H&amp;R BLOCK OFFICE LOCATION

S&amp;E Gift Shop (Syracuse&gt;
10 Percent Off on all items
d·u rlng March.

1·

TRA=-:-:-::LFB:-1E.

Pomeroy, o.

Service

Pomeroy, Oh.

TUESDAY,

r - = : 1

Other limes by appointment.
107 Sycamore (Rear

Business-Farms-Partnerships
and Corporations
Payrolls, prof!t and loss statements, all
federal and state forms .
·-618 E. Main

business rooms on large

Hou.rs 9-1 M.,

tJ

NORTH
t AJti

992-512-4.

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

READY TO MOVE IN·
TO UO,OOO.OO.
GREAT Location, .
style and condition.
rooms to spare, up to 4
bdrms., 1'12 baths, faml ·

ment,

61~- .

Phqne
1-(614)-992-3325

elec .
available .
EASTERN DISTRICT
$27,500.00.
BEAUTIFUL - 2 story,
river view, 11h baths,
central air, full base·
ment, excellent condl ·
·tion,

coin collet::tions. Call

1~1

REAL ESTATE
FiNANCING
Federal Housing &amp;
Veter•ns Admin. L011ns.

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.

0

.
Vesterday a

Mgr.
Phone 992-2181
COAL, LIMESTONE,
sand, gravel, calcium
chloride, fertilizer, dog
food, and all ty~ Of salt.
Excelsior Salt Works, Inc.,
E. Main St., Pomeroy, 992·
3891.

ROUSH

rooms, Jlh

baths, lots of storage,
WHIP INFLATION
WITH YOUR OWN
RENTAL
UNIT .
S.lO,OOO.OO.
RACINE Recently
remodeled
story
frame, 7 rooms, full
basem~nt,
walk to
everything, $25,000.00.
WOODLAND
HOMESITE$ - Appx.
25 acres, some lots
surveyed,

ATTENTION :
( IM ·
PORTANT TO YOU) Will
pay cash or certified check
for antiques and collec ·
tibles or entire estates.
Nothing too large. Also,
guns, pocket watches and

Real Estate

32

?futlittr«/l
"I M1delt Myself"

689.

Antiques

c11rrylng

chocolale wr1,pers and

PRICES

Jack

NOW HOLDING
TOLE &amp; DECORATIVE
PAINTING CLASSES
-we will be hnlng
macrame classes.

2·1Hfc

H-Reel Estate Wentl'd
J7-Realton

'

-Now

APPLES- ROME beauty
apples at$4 per bu. Bestfor
apple bulter. Call 669-3785,
Fitzpatrick Orchard, SR

Realtors

•TRANSPORTATION

• REAL ESTATE

G~ L D,

Park., Route 33, north of

6)- Livestock

2J- ProfHIIonel
Sen lets

..

Mobile Homes
for Rent
COUNTRY MOBILE Home

II

Business Services

Nothing too large.- Also,

Monor opts. Call992·7787.
Lots &amp; Acreage
Approximtely 4 acres near
Meigs Mines. Ready for

'
•FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

11-WantldTO 00

42

guns. pocket watches and
coin collections. Call 614·
767·3167 dr 557·3411.

Senior Citizens In Vi II age

35

S,J --1\IIIdlng Supplies
u--Pet11or S.lt

RNio, TV
&amp;CB RtPtir

ATTENTION :
li M ·
PORTANT TO YQU) Will
pay cash or certifi~d check
for antiques and collet·
tibles or entire estates.

RENTER 'S assistance for

Sl-HovNftold Goods
Sl-cl, TV. R1dlo Equipment

,, _ Htlpw1 ntH

Antique$

41 Houses for Rent
2 Bedroom house tor rent,
unfurnis.hed, deposit req .
992-3090.

rights. $77,000. 9'12·7559.

•MERCHANDISE

•EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

53

44

M-AjYrtment lOt" Rent

4-0IVHWIY

16-

ca rpeted . 3 to 17 acres

available. Located approx.
7 miles from Pomeroy oft
Rt. 7 or 33. ~ · 2359 after 6.

•RENTALS
41- HOVIII for Rent
42- MObllt Home•

1-C.rcl of Thanks
2- ln Memoriam
J-Announcements

firm . 9'12·5304.

33 Fa1:111s for Sale
COUNTRY HOME with
stocked pond for swimming
or fishing, 9 rooms, bath,

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX
•ANNOUNCEMENTS

Rentals

Mobile Homes
for Sale

Television
Viewing

DICK TRACY

.

.

..,,

.

~

I

�---------

Conservation measures will
be discussed at meetings

a-'lbe Daily Senbnel, Muldleport-Pomeroy, u .. l'uesday, March 4, 1980

Ohio vacation
urged by h_o ard
.COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP )
Ohioans can expect to be bombarded
by a $350,000 media blitz this spring
urging them to vacation within the
state to conserve gasoline.
The Marschalk Co. of Cleveland
will develop the advertising campaign under a contract with the
Department of Economic ~nd Community Development.
Approval of the pact Monday by
tile state Cantrolllng Board cleared
tile way' for the creation of adverti8ing to retain, attract and expand travel and tourism activities in
. Ohio.
April, May and June are target
mootha for the campaign, said
Ronald Lenhart, deputy director of
tile Economic and Community
Development Department.
It is an attempt to reverse the
state's role as an exporter of tourism
· "through creation of an image of
Ohio, primarilY among Ohioans, as a
preferred location" for travel,
tourism and vacations, the department explained.
Board members approved the
agreement after Sen. William F.
Bowen, 0-Cincinnati, won approval
of an amendment spending $250,000
on media placement of the ad·
vertisements once they are

The

case

is pending before the

Public Utilities CommissiOII of Ohio.
Technical assistance on rate of
return rate design and operating income issues will be provided by the
consultants.
The board released $3,010,478 in
state matching funds to attract an
equal amount of federal money· for
the Ohio Instructional Grants
Program. ·
It assists low-and middle-income
families in paying tuition charges at
· public and private institutions.
The amount of the grants offered
to students is determined by family
gross income and the number of
dependent children.
Some federal funds will be used to
enlarge the scope of the program by
aiding students from bordering
states who attend schools in Ohio.
In other action, the board:
- Approved a $284,000 contract under which International Business
·Machines Corp. will design a special
computer program for the Ad·
ministratlve Services Department.
Agency officials said it could save
$1.2 mllllon aMuaily by speeding up
various clerical operations.
-Increased by $452,954 in federal
funds the Welfare Department's
spending authority under the Vietnam and Cambodian Refugee
produced.
Bowen, noting an increase in the Assistance program.
-Approved a Racing Commission
number of similat projects for which
contract
with Ohio State Univer·
outside agencies are hired, raised
College for the
sity's
Veterinary
•questions about why the state could
tesllng
of
race
horses
at tracks
not do the work itself.
"The amount of effort ... and ex· around the state. The cOilt is $334,000
pertise ... that has to go into this kind per fiscal year.
-Released $201,000 for electrical
of presentation is just beyond our
system renovation at the Western
capabilities,'' Lenhart said.
A companion $44,900 request with Reserve Psychistric Rehabilitation
•ICOM Inc. for the production of an Center .
-Approved $250,766 for the state's
elaborate audio-visual presentation
oo ·industrial development in the share of the cost of a mental health
unit at Jewish Hospital of Cinstate al.!o won board endorsement.
cinnati.
"I think it's a worthwhile
-Agreed to spend $165,000 for arproject," Bowen said. "(But) we
chitectural
fees for a child and
should be planning on being able to
adolescent
psychiatric
unit at tile
do it in-house."
Medical
College
of
Ohio
in
Toledo.
In other action, the board released
-Spent
$96,819
for
a new
$17,240 for an investigation into
allegations of patient abuse, drug telephone system at the Mental
and weapons traffic at Lima State Health and Mental Retardation
Department's Columbus DevelopHospital.
Gov. James A. Rhodes ordered a mental Center.
-Granted the Rehabilitation and
lligbway Patrol probe of tile matter
Correction Department's request for
last Friday.
He said he was told of the personal service contracts with
allegations against some hospital various physician;; at a total cost of
employees by Dr. Timothy B. $255,300. The doctors will treat
Moritz, director of the Department prisoners at institutions around the
of Mental Health and Mental Retar· state.
-Approved an Energy Depart·
datioo.
ment
contract with tile Mid-Ohio
Controllers also approved an Ohio
Regional
Planning Commission for a
· Consumers' Counsel request to
community
ride-sharing program. It
spend $128,000 on expert help for its
Intervention in Ohio Bell Telephone is designed to reduce gasoline consumption in the Columbus
Co.'s $99 milllon rate hike request.
metropolitan area.

SQUAD CAlLED
The Pomeroy Emergency Squad
.. was called to 300 Cherry St., at 11:36
p.m. Monday for Lora Simpson who
was taken to Holzer Medical Center.

Jack Duffy
6-G, Sr. G
Southem'sleadiDg scorer.
'

P ep rally
announced
JimAdams,principalatSouthern
High School, has announced a "pep
rally" held at the Southern High
School gym on Thursday, March 6,
at 7 p.m. to pay tribute to the champion Southern Tornado basketball
team as they prepare for the district
tournament.
All Southern fa)IS, student and
adult alike, are urged to their SUI&gt;'
port for the team. As a part of the
rally, the audience will be taught
chants and cheers that will be used
at the district tournament.
This year's Southern squad has
compiled a record: of 20 wins to just
one loss (2().1). They have put
together an offensive powerhouse
that has scored 70 ·or more points on
15 different occasions.
They clinched the SVAC championship outright with a perfect I~
record in the league and recently
captured the sectional cham·
pionshipforthefourthyearina row.
These are just a few of the outstanding accomplishments Coach
Carl Wolfe's team has achieved.
Tickets for next Tuesday's game
March 11, are on sale at the high
school. The athletic boosters are
planning to purchase T-shirts with
slogans that were selected by
Southern students to help boost the
school spirit. The shirts are SUI&gt;'
posed to be in before tile first district
game at Chllllcothe.
Southern will play either Portsmouth Clay or Portsmouth Notre
Dame who play Tuesday, March 4,
in Lucasville Valley sectional finals.
The game has beiln postponed twice
due to bad weather.

MEET WEDNESDAY

Meigs Athletic Boosters will meet
WednesdaY, March 5, at the high
school.

Daughter's wedding
gown for mother???

duty.)
So how did we fare?

On September 16, this year, we'll
celebrate our sUver anniversary. We
· ' have two lovely married daughters,
' a litr&amp;psRni 17-year-old son, and four
preci(ll!l grandcblldren. We've had
• our anxious moments, but love for
• each other and plain perseverance
carried ua tllrollgh. We're even more1
In lcm, and glad we took the chance
•piOII odds.
·
OUr cbi1dren want to give us the
• · ,~ and boneymoon we never
· ~ It will be a garden ceremony,
: • : ~ourgirllumy.~ts; our
:·; ;. all!i(thelrDad'tllelltJQalefriend)as
be1Jt man; .ow' oldest grandlon, ring
~; a ~ u Dower Fl; all
our rrt~ present.
I ~en't fully agreed yet because
tbe children want me· to wear one
clauchl«'•loveiY weddlnl drel8, the .
oGler'• 'lJeddlng veil.,(The only two
t1me1 I~."outside"
durin!! our ·
'
.

marriage was so that we could
provide beautiful weddings for them
without straining tile budget. ) My
husband and parents Jove the Idea,
but - a 40-yeaN&gt;Id grandma in a
white wedding gown? I'm slender
~ people say I look young, but is
this appropriate?
I must admit just about tile only
big regret in my life was not having
a memorable wedding. What do you
say? - 25 YEAR AND WIWNG IN
MERLIN
Dear25:
What a perfectly lovely Idea! I
think you 'II be tile mOilt beautiful
bride in Merlin when you enter the
garden in your daughters' white
gown and veU •.
May the nezt 25 years be all the
first 25 foretold and more! - H.
Dear Helen:
' Nothing saddens we more when I
look back on my childhood than to
reaUze we can no longer setl tile
billions of stars we ooce tqok for
granted. Nowadays, even If you live
in smaller cities, you're lucky,if two
or three stars are vilible. l)ld they
disappear grlidually, Cit all at once?
For me, suddenly they were gooe I
If we can perfect the electric car
or "clean" fuel 8nd regulate industry, I wonder how I~ It would
take for our stars .to return? ~ing
them twmkUng • above us could
restore our faith in God and man. ....:
DAN, FRESNO
DearDan:
·
. ·
It's a sad 10118 ~ and sadder still
because man)' of us, haVtng read
your letter, willoaiynowreallletbat
111011t ot the stm are IIC!D'· SoJnehow
we don't look to the *Y .U often aa
we did when we were lddi. " Helen

•

1

Should agricultural producers be Imperial House, Route 12 and I-751n
required to apf)Iy soil and water con- Findlay; March 18, Ohio
Servation measures on privately- Agricultural Research and DeveiQI)"
owned land that would benefit tile ment Center in Wooster; March 19,
entire nation? Or, should the use of Ohio Agricult\lral Resesrch and
conservation measures continue to Development Center in Wooster;
March 19, Area Extension Center,
be voluntary?
Who should pay for expensive con- Belle Valley; March 20, Area Ex·
servation measures that provide few tension Center, Jackson; and the
irrunediate benefits to the p~oducer last on March 25 a1 the Montgomery
but have great benefits to the public, County Fairgrounds in Dayton. All
such as innproved water quality, meetings will start at I p.m.
Some counties in the state will also
cleaner air, or reduced sedimenhold
local meetings. Tile intent of all tation of streams and reservoirs?
the
meetings
is to get interested per·
These are some issues that will be
disc ~~&amp;led during ·a series Ill six sons to submit coinments on seven
public meetings across Ohio called alternative conservation strategies
by the U. S. Department ·of being considered by tile USDA.
The Department has set national
Agriculture to give the public a
1lbjectives
for reducing erosioo and
chance to help shape tile future of
preserving
prime fanulands; ImUSDA conservation programs.
proving
water
quaUty; conserving
The six substate meetings will be
water;
improving
fish and wildlife
beld in ·March. The first will be on
habitat,
including
tile preservation
the 12th at tJW Ohio Historical Center
of
wetlands
destruction
by
in Columbus. The , following
agriculture and other means;
meetings will be on March 13 at tile

- ,

D

•

•

Kennedy receives lift

reducing upstream flood damages;
conserving energy; and solving
related resource problems.
The alternative strategies
prepared as a result of the Resources Conservation A~ (RCA) are
designed to provide a selection of tile .
beSt and mOilt accepl.able methods of
achieving national conservation objectives.
Anyone Interested In reviewing
tile material before, or after, the
meetings should contact local USDA .
Soli Conservation Service . or
Agricultural Stablllutlon and Conservation Service offices.
·
Written or oral comments will be
accepted at all meetings.
The public is also encouraged to·
send written comments· about tile
RCA appraisal or the alternative
strategies to the USDA R.espoJise
AnaJysis center, P. 0. Box 888, .
Athens, Georgia 30603. The 60-day
review period will continue . untll
March28.
.
.

Bob Evans Farms, Inc. reports 19
percent gain in consolidated sales
COLUMBUS_ Bob Evans Farms
Inc., the sausage and restaurani
company headquartered here,
reports consolidated sales of
$92,922,000 for the nine months ending January 25, 1980. This is a 19
percent increase over consolidated
sales of $77 775 000 a year ago.
Daniel E: E~ans, chairman of the
board, reports that net income for
the nine months was $8 659 000
equal to $1.54 per share, ~s ~om:
pared with ~.043,000, or 94 cents per
share in 1979. Net income per share
is based on the weighted average
numberofsharesoutstandlng.
Evans attributes increased sales
to a greater number of restaurants
In operation and a higher volume of

The annual Meigs Elementary
Basketball Tournament sponsored
by the Meigs Junior High Athletic
Department, opened (or first round
action Monday night with games on
tile fourth and fifth grade !eve.
In the first ganie Bradbury Drenner defeated Rutland Team 2,.1+8,
with high scorers for Bradbury
being Tim Cassell with 4, J~ Nelson
with 4 and Don Stein with 4. High for
Rutland was Kent Eads with 4.
In Ule second game, tile Pomeroy
Blue defeated Sallabury 20-18. High
scorers for Blue were Holtz with 8
and Fields with 8. High scorer for
SalisburY was Phil King with 12.
In the final game, the Pomeroy
Green Machine was dwnped by
Rutland Team 1, 31).16. IDgh scorer
for Pomeroy was Rex ,Haggy with
10, and high. scorers for Rutland
were Mike Bartrum, 12; David
Petry, 6, and Joey Snyder, 6.
First round action will continue
tonight with Salisbury meeting
Harrisonville, in· fourth-fifth game
level, and in the sixth grade competition Harrisonvllle versus
· Salisbury and the Pomet"OY cyclones
against Rutland. The first game
starts at 6 p.m. .

Highways •••
(Continued from page 1)
planning needs. ; .:...
Sen. John K. Mahoney, DSprill8fleld, !aid that the two types
of boaldll now have overlapping
responsibllltles and that the
leglslatioo is needed to make each, ,
more eHPCtlve.
The Senate returned from
weekend recess a day ahead of the'
House, which reCc/fivened today with
mostly routine measures ready for
floor conside~ation.
·

Kevin Hoffman, at home; Tech.
SGT. Jack Hoffman, Rickenbacker
AFB, Columbus.
Eight grandchildren survive along
with two brothers and one sister:
Perry Hoffman, Middleport; Mrs.
vernon· (Bertha) Bing, Pomeroy;
and Fred Hoffman, also of Mid·

dl~rteouple

resided in Gallipolis
for 33 years, moving here from Pt.

Pleasant.

.

He was a member of the First
Baptist Church.
.
Funeral services will be 1 p.m.
Thursday at the First Baptist
Church, with tile Rev. Joseph Godwin offictating.
Burial will be in . Mound Hll1

·Ml'B. Daniel Abbott aiid son, Sllella
CremeBIIS, Ella Eads, Randall
Fisher, Mrs. Kirk Ff!!Zee and son,
Ellzabeth ·· Fuller, · Mrs. thooUlS
Greene and son, John Leighty,
Robin Manuel, Amanda Mercer,
Cora Oxborne, Ruth RobbinS, Mrs.
Mldlael Sbeeter and 11011, Harry
Swan, ChriBtopber Weaver.

Wilma Sldera, 70, Wlleellnc, W.
Va., formerlY ol RaCine, died MCI!l:day at the BarriiCln Community
Holpltl!ltitCadlz.
Mn. Slden wu born OCt. 2, 1toe,
a daugiur ol the later Andy. and

.

om

. -

-

,.

BOOK FAIR - A "Book Fair" is being held at
Pomeroy Elementary school sponsored by tile PTA.
Carolyn Smith, cbalnnan of the event, reported that
, tile ~..f!I.!I' is for students, parents and Uie general
_puDI!c With proceeds to be used to purchase boob for

enttne

at

the library at tile school. The event is being beld on the
stage now through Friday. Students and other interested persons are urged to support the worthwhile
program. A wide variety of books are available. Shown
are some of the students who atlendw tbe Fair.
VINTON FAMILY INJURED
The Middleport Emergency Squad
was called lo the Laugsvllle area at
4:45 p.m. Tuesday as was the
Rutland Emerency Squad where
lbere was a school bus-truck· accident on county road 1.
The Rutland lllllt took Jolm, BreDds, aDd Jason Spauldlug, Route I,
ViDto.; 1o lbe Holzer Medical CeDter.
No students were on the bus at the
time
of
tbe
accident.

Leona

"

MEE'i lNG NIGHT CIJ4NGED

'· t2" wide dHpoauctlon
CI'P*I nozzle ,
•Convenient tool p•k"'cor•
tier lncludea: . ·
ftoor end wall bruah,
Upllolltery nozzle,
duiU!IQ bruah,
crwlce toot'
• Lqng, .Ume-uvlng
ttl'l II: power Cord.

fi'ome Puml,hlnlir
.

tst FIO!)r

In Vermont, virtually complete

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 5, 1980

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Final design plans signed

Karr, Ketchel_H&amp;\tleld.:.'.

.

conunitted.

returns stood:
Carter 28,622 or 74 percent.
Kennedy 9,896 or 26 percent.
It was Carter's third victory in
New England, to go with Maine and
New Hampshire.
The Republican results in
Massachusetts, with 97 percent of
the precincts tallied:
Bush 119,699 or 31 percent.
Anderson 118,821 or 31 percent.
Reagan 110,665 or 29 percent.
Sen. Howard Baker of TeMessee
19,199 or 5 percent.
Former Gov. John Connally of
Texas 4,601 or I percent.
Rep. Philip Crane of llllnois 4,449
or I percent.
Ford picked up one percent of tile
(Continued on page 14)

•

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO,

Admitted-Laura Scott, · Mid·
dleport; Pilar!·- Adams; Racine; .
Brenda Ballard, lAng Bottcxn; Nina
. Rupe( atesllire; ·~ 1;lole, Middleport; Jlhoda Hager, Middleport.
Dlscharged-f~'~lds.

Carter almost surely will reverse
that advantage in the South next
Tuesday, and the White House said
he already is assured of 55 Minnesota delegates who have yet to be
iormaily selected.
The Vermont victory won Carter
no delegates, since that primary was
purely advisory.
This was the Democratic verdict
in Massachusetts with 97 percent of
the precincts reporting :
Kennedy 'iR/,290 or 65 percent
Carter251,231 or 29 percent.
California Gov. Edmund Brown
Jr., who had folded his campaign in
the state, 30,0119 or 4 percent.
The balance of the vote was un-

.

VOL. 28, NO. 127

VE'i'ERAN8 MEMORIAL

. He was a linotype and computer
operator for tlie Galllpolls Dally
Tribune for 33 years. He retired in
December, 19'78:
He was born July 31, 1919, In Mid- · Bertha \Vlnten rt.e. Sbe W¥ also
dleport, to tile late WWiam Henry ~ In death ~ ber husband,
Hoffman, Sr., and hlf mother, who
SUrvl"'•• are - . era1 nieces ....
811fvi~. Pearl Putiley Hoffman.
·-·
- ...
1
' MldcnepOrl .
.
.
~wSia.ders
ber J the
He·wu married to Allee lfenry Ill·
......,
wu a JJ_IIIJJI ...
. 1943 in (;alllpolia, who lllrvivea, S,ptist &lt;llurdl. ·
, .
along ·with siX ebll": Mrs. s- , Grave81de ilervices will be beld at
jlimin (Karen) Smith, ' Swickley, 2 p.m. ThtU,day 11t the lAtart Falla . ·
ASK,TO~
Pa.; Mrl. Dale (Linda) Lauener, Cemetery with the ReV.
Wlk
A marrlafle license waa issued to
Cuyabop
Falla,
Oh.;
Mrs.
Bernard
offiCiating.
Frleodl
may
call
at lbe
Charles E. WllltamS, 46, Rt. 1,
(JOyce)
Murphy,
Rio
Grailde;
EwlnC
_
Funeral
HGme
9
a.m:
to 1 ·
Shade, add K01'811M K. Hoyt, 36, MidWiltl&gt;1
m
L
Hoffman
ill,
The
Plains;
..
p,m.
Tli1JI'I(Iay.
dleport.

f ·.

•

·, '

WJIMASJDEJUI

·

~

March 18 primary in his Illinois
home.
With Reagan and Bush unable to
take clear cut leadership of the GOP
campaign, Gerald Ford loomed as
an imponderable factor. He wasn't
saying much.
KeMedy gained almost two-thirds
of the Democratic vote in
Massachusetts, and said that was an
important lift for ''the campaign and
the issues we're concerned about,"
inflation chief among them.
The Massachusetts victory gained
Kennedy 77 votes for the Democratic
nolllilkltion, while Carter got 34.
That put Kennedy ahead
nationally, for the moment, with 113
votes to Carter's 89. It will take 1,666
to win the nomination.

FAIR FUNDS RECEIVED

EUREKA

·

e

news agencies and networks.
Tuesday's big surprise was the
tandem challenges by Anderson, the
white-thatched liberal congressman
from llllnois. Anderson said that by
coming so close, he had established
himself as a major competitor for
the GOP nomination.
Both Bush and Reagan said Anderson was a one-day wonder who
couldn't last. The competition shifts
on Saturday to the conservative
South, with a Republican primary in
South Carollns, and contests to
follow on Tuesday in Florida,
Georgia and Alabama.
While Anderson said he had
proven his national campaign
credentials, he is bypassing those
states to concentrate next on the

A record state appropriation for
support of the 87 county a~ eight independent agriculturaL fB)rs' youth
programs total~Jjg $f37\500 was
released. accoJdlng !o tyohn M.
Stackhouse, dlrecLir of cthe Ohio
Department of AgriCijlture. As a
result of the approPriation, the
Meigs County ,F,air , ~ will
receive $2,500. ·
i

ELBERFELDS
.

three yean. ·

lead Carter built up earlier. Carter
took Vermont by 3-to-1 .
As the final votes were tallied
early today, Anderson trailed by
margins so tiny that they represented virtual dead heats.
Bush led by little more than 600
votes out of more than 373,000 cast in
the Republican primary in
Massachusetts with 96 percent of the
precincts reporting . Reagan's
margin was 616 votes with 99 percent
counted in a Vermont primary that
drew more than 62,000 GOP ballots.
Reagan ran third in Massachusetts, close behind Bush and Anderson.
The results were so close that
unofficial morning-after recounts
were scheduled by News Election
Service, which tallies the ballots for

tile company's first restaurant in
Illinois - Bolingbrook, a Chicago
suburb. Otbers to .~n are Kanawha
City, West Virguua. (Charleston),
and Terre Haute, Indiana.

rather

beeli in failing health for

BOSTON (AP) - Republicans
George Bush and John B. Anderson
were locked in a dramatic
Massachusetts standoff today after
Ronald Reagan inched to victory in
Vermont. The two ti~ New
England contests point to the kind or
stalemate that might entice former
. President Gerald Ford into the GOP
presidential race.
Sen. Edward Kennedy got a lift for
his Democratic challenge with a landslide victory over President Carter
in home-state Massachusetts. Carter buried Kennedy by an even more
lopsided margin in Vermont.
Kennedy won by better than 2-to-1
in the campaign year's first bigstate primary, winning enough
nominating delegates to offset the

to open later this month, including

KIMBERLY J. CALAWAY
~::~·may call at the WaughThe next regu1ir meeting of tile
Kimberly Jeanann Calaway, 14f
z.4
Southem
Local ·School District
month old daughter of Ransom L.
Halley-Wood funeral home rom
Board of Educatioo will be held on ·
and Bernice Boggs Calaway, Route
and 7~ p.m. on Wednesday. The . March 12
thari' March 11 at
2, Coolville, died Saturday morning
body will lie In state at tile church
·
p
.m.
The~
liigbt was
:
7 30
one hour prior to services.
at Children's Hospital in Columbus.
In lieu of Dowers, contributions changed due .to tile basketball
Kimberly had recently underwent
surgery for the removal of a tumor · may be sent to the Gallla Co. chapter ...-sched-_ul_e.. . ; _ - : - - - - - - - rl. the American Cilncer Soeletv. in
at the base rl. ber brain and a public
fund driv1' had been started on care of Pat Boyer, Rt. 3, GalllpollS.
behalf of tile family.
Pallbearer&amp;. will be duio Mattox,
Kimberly was born In Athens.
.
Tom Sk!Mer, Manning Wetberbolt,
Besides ber parents, she is surLarry Boyer, Hobart Wilson, Jr.,
vived by her paternal graridmother,
Emerson Corbin.
Mrs. Evelyn Calaway, CoOlville; the
maternal grandparents,· Mr. and
Mrs. Berl Boggs, Coolville; materNANN1E RODGERS
nal great-grandparents, Mr. and ·
MASON- Mrs. Herman (Nannie)
Mrs. Rexel Boggs, Coolville; materRodgers, 79, formerly of Mason ,
nal great-grandmother, Mrs. Edna
County, died in a Columbus bollpl~ ·
Life, Reedsville. Sbe was preceded
Saturday morning CJl pneumonia. .
in death by her paternal grandShe was born on May 11, 1901 in
father, Vere Calaway; her paternal
Mason County. daughter of tbe late
great-grandparents, Presley. and
&lt;;. 4- and Lavena Ellen Simpkins
Anna Buchanan, and her maternal
McDermitt.
great-grandfather, Edmond Ufe.
Survivors include ftve 80118, Lewis,
' Funeral services will be held at 2 Harold, Howard, Wllltam, ROnald, .
p.m. WedneSday at the ()range
and four dalJihter!s, Phyllis Ann,
Chriatian Church .with tile Rev. Guy
Eilzabeth, Patricia Dawn and BarWhite and the-Rev. George Pickenl liBra. One son, Earl; prec:el!ed her in
officiating. Burial will be In the
death and her huaiN!nd, Herman.
church cemetery. Friends may can,
Other aurviVOI'B are Mrs. MaWda
at tile White Funeral Home after 3 Noble, Mason, and a half-bruther;
p.m. today. The bodY will be taken Eugene McDerinltt.
to tile church to lie in state one hour
Funeral services were held'
prior to the services.
·
Tuesday at 1 p.m. at Woodyard
Funera,J Harne, South High Street,
Columbus. Burial was in Fernwood
WDJJAMBOFFMAN
Ceme~, Lockbourne, Ohio.
Wllllanl H. H(lffman, 60, 136 State
St., . died at 1:45 p.m. M9fiday at

HMC. .
He has

.Bush, Anderson in Massachusetts standoff

'
RO=~~

-Area deaths

'l

Tournament
first round

sausage sold in all marketing areas.
The company'~ wholly owned
restaurant subsuliary, Bob Evans.
Farm Foods, Inc., reports sales of
$42,822,000 f~r tile first nine months,
compared With $2,692,000 or 50 cents
.
.
per share last year. .
Bob Evans Farms·mtroduces 1ts
sausage into the Buffalo and
Rochester, New York, mark~
today. This expands the company s
marketing area to .all or part ~ 13
states and the District of Columb111.
Bob E~ans Farm Foods_operates
55. family n;staurants m Ohio,
Michigan, Indiana, KentuckY, West
Virginia and Pennsylvania. Four
units . are currently under construction, with three of those Rlated

'1

I

action held

Helen Help Us:

FOR MOM'S 'SECOND'
WEDDING?
BY JJEI .EN B01"l'EL
KiDC Featares Syodlcate
Dear Helen:
According to statistics, surveys,
and even our horoscope birth signs,
we shouldn't even be attracted to
ooe another,let alone compatible.
I was barely 15, my husband 22, on
' leave from tile U. S. Navy, when we
met. Our religions weren't the same,
and we were raised completely dlf.
ferent, even to soctai and financial
• backgrounds. He was from tile Deep
• South; I, from the West Coast; he a
4-year, wild, Independent sailor; I, a
strictly protected girl. One month to
tile day after our first meeting, we
were married in a quickie, fiveminute, no trimmings ceremony.
(My. Navyman had to report back on

-,

ete,rJh(me negotiations conducted
BOGOTA, Colombia - Guerrillas occupying the Dominican Embassy negotiated by telephone Tuesday with the government of this
-South American nation as the takeover ended its first week with no
sign of a breakthrough.
As the embassy stalemate continued, the Vatican dispatched a
veteran diplomat, Monsignor Angelo Pio, to Bogota on an unexplained
mission.
On the northern outskirts of the city, another guerrilla gang staged a
bloodless raid on a political party headquarters, fleeing before pollee
arrived.
A govenunent official, who requested anonymity, said face-to-face
negotiations with tile embassy guerrillas were likely to resume Wednesday. A meetjflg scheduled for Tuesday Wall canceled without explanatioo.

·Draft registration hits snag
WASHINGTON - President Carter's draft registration plan
Tuesday ran into an unexpected obstacle in Congress that could temporarily block any vote on money for the program.
The problem occurred with the discovery that iwerall federal spending has breached tile $647.6 billlon budget ceiling for the current
fiscal year- putting a freeze on new outlays.
Carter's plan to register young men and women depends on
Congress approving a supplemental 1980 appropriation to pay for
cranking up the Selective Service System.
The House Appropriations Committee had been expected to consider
the administration's request Wednesday or Thursday.

Cincy police approve new contract
CINCINNATI - Oncinnati pollee approved a wage pact with the
city Tuesday but less than 40 percent of the membership of the Fraternal Order of Police voted.
FOP Pre!ident Elmer J&gt;unaway recommended passage of the threeyear pace because the city agreed to seek repeal of a charter amend·
ment that binds pollee and firemen to the salne salaries.
Dunaway said 85 percent of those voting cast ballots in favor of the
contract. However, only 381 of 923 FOP members voted.
Pollee bad ·been working without a contract for 16 months. For
nearly a year, pollee refused to write traffic tickets.
Pollee, who had a base salary of $19,t00, won 7 percent increases in
the first ~o years, same as the firemen. However, a 10.1 percent increasewu lncluded,in tile third year.
.

Two of three levies defeated
MANSFIELD, Ohio- /1. three-year, 9.1&gt;-mill emergency school levy
.for ~eld city schools was turned down by voters 3,820-3,tOO in a
spect•l electioo oo Tuesday.
'
.
•
'lbe propoea1 would have increased property taxes in Mansfield by
lllCiri thfin II percent whil.e generating mote than te milllon for tile
district. ~ prevenfing further financtal problems for the system
Wbicb already is '1 millloo dollars in debt.
M81111wblle, voters In the eight north cen4'aJ Oliio counties sei'Vell by.
the Pklneer Joint vocatiooalschool dlatricts approved a rie)¥ one-mill. .
oper&amp;tine levy br a vote of 6,146-5,B. Voters; had rejected the .
JII"'OlCC88d I~ oo two previous occasions.
·
lnAahland, a &amp;-mill addltirnalschoo! levy was approved 2,447:2,146.

Three hurt in
head.;.on wreck
Three persons were injured during
a two-vehicle accident investigated
Tuesday by the Giilli.a-Meigs Post,
Highway Patrol.
CaUed to the scene in Meigs County on CR 1, just north of SR 325, at
4:35 p.m., officers report an unoccupied south bound Meigs Local
school bus operated by Harold D.
· White, 211, Middleport, and a north
bound pickup truck driven by John
Spaulding, 26, Vinton, collided head·
on in a curve.
Spaulding and two passengers,
Brent~&amp; S. Spaulding, 22, and Jason
C. Spaulding, age I, both of Vinton,
clainned injury and were transported to Holzer Medical Center for
lreatment.
There was severe damage to the
bus. The pickup was demolished.
White was cited on a charge d
failure to yield one-half the road·
way.
Also at the scene were members of
the Meigs County sheriff's department and two Offictals from the
Meigs Local Schools, Supt. David L.
Gleason and Dwight Goins, administrative assi$nt.

Another cold front
heading across state
By The Asloclated Press
A cold front is expected to move
across the state this afternoon and
tonight, and the National Weather
Service says a strong northwesterly
flow of colder air will foUow the
front. This will cause temperatures
to fall into the upper .20s throughout
the state by this e11ening.
Scattered snow flurries
develop in the colder air this af·
. ternoon imd continue in northeast
Ohio early tonight. Temperature•
again will drop to well below
freezing, f~lling mainly inti) tlie
teens tOtdght and i-e!:overtng to only 1
around 30 by Thursday.

will

i

Final design plans for the access
road to the new Veterans Memorial
Hospital were signed Tuesday when
the Meigs County Commissioners
met in regular session.
A representative of Fleming, Page
and Stolte, engineering firm cl
Marysville, met with the board to
discuss the access road plans.
The estimated cost of the highway,
which will be paid from FHA and
HUD grants, is $380,000. Next step
will be the advertising of bids for the
project.
BID AWARDED
Also meeting with commissioners
was Malcolm Orebaugh, director of
operations of the Gallia..JacksonMeigs Community Mental Health
Center.
Orebaugh discussed the bids for
furniture and clinic equipment for
the Mental Health Center which will
be located in the new Multi-Purpose
building.
Bids were submitted from Ramsey Businees and Interior and Continental Office SUpply in the amount
of $42,388.35. The bids were read and
awarded.
Cost of maintenance and utillties
at the Multi-Purpose building will be
absorbed by the Mental Health Center, Senior Citizens, Health Depart·
ment and TB department.
Richard Jones, president, noted

'that upon completion, maintenance
and utilities will not be the concern
of the Meigs County Commissioners.
Jones also suggested an
agreement should _be worked out
with the four departments. He also
said, the building when completed,
would be the property of the county
and suggested the possibility of
leasing it.
Funding agencies for the new
Multi Purpose building are HEW,
ARC, HUD, State Mental Health 643
Board, Senior Citizens Title Five
grant and the county.
A bid from Dravo Marks Corp.,
Colwnbus, to repair the county
gradall was read by Mary Holr
stetter, clerk.
The bid, for repair, labor and
brush cutter, totaled $33,237.50. A
new gradall would cost in the neighborhood of $100,000. The bid was
tabled for study by Wesley Buehl,
county engineer.
RESOLUTION SUBMl'ITED

A resolution was submitted by the
Ohio Department of Transportation
regarding improvements to a
railroad crossing oo county road 10
in Rutland Township.
The resolution calls for in·
stallation of flashing lights, railroad
gates and advance warning signs.
This issue was also tabled for ad·
ditional study.

Michael Swisher, director of the
Meigs County Welfare Department,
met with the board regarding
renewing the lease on the Welfare
Building.
The lease is with Middleport
Development Co. The rent iS presently $650 a month but under the new
lease for one year it will be $850.
It was agreed to lease the building
for a one year period for $850 a month effective Feb.!.
The positions of Roger Michael
and Pat Thoma who be leaving the
CETA program in the near furture
were discussed at great length. The
matter will be discussed with
Wesley Buehl.
Henry Wells moved to advertise
the old D-7 bulldozer and tile packer .
truck, formerly used at the county
landfill, for sale to the highesst bidder. Chester ·wells seconded the
motion: All voted yea.
Henry Wells also made a motion to
approve the action of Probate Judge
Robert Buck, in applying for a
Foster Care Subsidy Grant through
the Qhio Youth Commission. All
commissioners approved the
motion.
Attending were Jones, Henry
Wells and Chester Wells, commissioners and Mrs. Hobstetter,
cleric

Jaycee projects outlined
Events to be spoilsored by the
Meigs County Jaycees at the Big
Bend Regatta were ouWned by Dave
Jenkins at tile monthly meeting of
the Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce
held Tuesday at ·noon at the Meigs
Inn.

Jenkiris reported Jaycees are
planning to involve local people in
the four day event slated the last
week in June.
The Jayeees also plan to have an
auto show in tile parade and sponsor
the frog jump and the sixth annual
National Frog Derby.
A parade will kick-()(f the event to .
be held Friday, June '!1, at 2 p.m.

They will also sponsor a bluegrass
show oo Friday night. They also plan
a super star show not only during
Regatta but sometime during the
summer.
The club has the dilly dunker rented and anyone wishing to use the
equipment must contact Mike
Williams, president.
It was announced that Bill Quickel
and Paul Gerard will attend the Ohio
Festival of Events Association
meeting in Columbus on March 16.
In charge of tile programs this
year will be John Anderson and Barbara Chapman.

Paul Simon, president, introduced
Richard Turner, executive vice
president of the Pomeroy National
Bank as a guest.
Wesley Buehl, county engineer,
agreed to fill the railroad tracks
with dirt from Kerrs Run to
Sycamore Street. It was also
suggested that filling the tracks with
cement would be advantageous. No
action was taken, however.
Attending were Simon, Phil Kelly,
Quickel, Bruce Teaford, Joe Young,
Jenkins, Anderson, Kyle All~n.
Robert Graves, Richard Turner, t-at
O'Brien, Thereon Johnson, Buehl,
HD'lk neiand and Bob Miller.

Bond issue faces 12 p.m. deadline
Sen. Michael Schwarzwalder, DCOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Cilia's
terest.
Current estimates are that an ex·
Columbus, who opposed tile plan,
lawmakers worked today against a
midnight deadline to place a con- said the Legislature was "morcess of about $37 milllon .in tile highway bond retirement account could
troversial highway Improvement tgaging tile future" wben it should
allow sale of $441 milllon in bonds
bond issue on tile state's June 3 be approving a modest hike in tile
gasoline tax to put tile critically
over the next three years. At the end
ballot.
needed road and bridge im·
The Senate added its approval to
of that time, another $69 milllon
provements oo a' pay-as-you-go
could be 'issued, bringing the total in
the House-originated propoeal 31·2
basis.
1984 to $510 mllllon, state fiscal planTuesday, but it had to be returned to
Lawmakers
shelved
a
two-to-three
tile lower chamber today for conners said.
cent boost in tile gas tax late last
sideratioo of Senate amendments.
It was expected that the House year, with some admitting fear of
In addition, they said Ohio can obwould go along, completing ' political repercussions in the 1980
tain about $1.4 billlon in federal highelection year.
way matching funds if It puts.up $370
legislative action on tile proposal,
Rhodes, who refused to endorse a
expected to generate more than $500
milllon OVf!r the next four years as
tax hike, promoted the bond
mllllon by 1984. But there were rumIts traditional 10 percent to 30 perproposal at a private meettngilast . cent share of jointly financed projecblings of discontent In some quarters
month with legislative leaders.
over the Senate changes.
ts.
Senate Finance Chairman Harry
The naming of an 11th-hour joint
Meshel and others warned that
Mesbel,
D-Youngstown,
presenting
despite
the ·estimates, which may
conference commiUee, to try to
it
to
~
Senate
on
Tuesday,
said
the
work out Senat&amp;-House differences,
seem astronomical to tile average
possibility of a gas tax hike "within
loOmed as a possibility.
Ohioan, they pale wben ~ompared to
a few years" remains. "1bis action
By law, a proposed constitutional
the state's total transportation needs
today, in fact, is a stopgap
amendment, such as this one, must
-$7 billion to$8 billlon.
measure," he said.
be filed in the office of the secretary
But he said that since the tax hike
of state no late!" than 90 days before
Other senators noted that tile .
It appears before voters on a Is politically impo81Jlble to achieVe
estimates assume banda with 2&amp;statewide ballot.
at this time, tile bond issue is tile
year maturity dates, and a 7 percent
Despite wide bi-partisan backing,
~ hope d moving ahead with at
interest rate. The state recently 110ld
least some priority road-building
which includes endorsements from
some ollts generally favored banda,
projects which for months-have been
Gov. James A. .Rhodes and top
pledging 1'the faith and credit rl. ,
leaders of both parties in the $enate
"gathering dust on the shelves."
Ohio," at 7.3 percent.
and House, many lawnlllkers said ,/ Basically, tile bill provides that' .
The bond plan further anticipates
the Legislature could authorize the
they were concerned ab.lut deficit
a continuation ill CUiTe!lt level gu
financing and the c'lll'rent rocket
sale of bonds, tied to the amount of
tax revenues, although they are
ride of interest rates in the bond
existing tax revenues which will be . down about 5 percent so far lhll
market.
available to pay the principal and Jn.
year.

"

(

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