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~

M-G-M Scout ·show Saturday
Girl Scouts, Boy Scouts, Cubs and
Browmes are busy thts week selling
tickets to the M-G-M Scout.Q.Rama
scheduled for Saturday, March 15, at
the Point Pleasant National Guard
Armory.

/

~~

PRESIDENT SPEAKS - Leo MacCourtney, council president ex·
plains the importance of reaching the financial goal in keeping the tri·
state scouting movement going. He is flanked by Dave Diles, Racine, the
guest speaker, left, and Vitus Hartley, Point Pleasant, M.Q..Menrolhnent
chairman.

Tourney finals set tonight
Sixth grade action .was completed
Monday night in the Meigs Elemen·
tary '3asketball Tournament being
played at the Meigs Junior High
SchooL
Bradbury defeated Salisbury 32-24
with high scorers for Bradbury
being Ricky Wise with 16 and Shawn
~er with 12.
High scorer for
Salisbury was Rodney Harrison with
12.
'
In the second game, the Pomeroy
Red Devils defeated the Pomeroy
Cyclones, 22-18, with C. Shank and
Lee Powell scoring eight each and
Brian Houdasheit, six, for the Devils
while Brian Buffington, Parker
Long and Brad Robinson scored six
THEFT REPORTED
The Meigs County Sheriff's Department is investigating the theft of a
rifle · from the residence of Hollie
Starcher, Stiversville. The gun was
discovered missing Monday
evening.
A tree that was blown over onto
power lines just off SR 684, north of
Harrisonville, Monday evening
caused li power outage from SR 7
and 143 to Harrisonville the sheriff's
department reported.
111URSDAY SESSION
Sbade River Lodge 453, F&amp;AM,
will meet Thursday at 7:30p.m. at
the lodge hall. All master masons
are invited.

As many as 20 scout units from
Mason, Gaili a and Meigs counties
have planned activities,in which the
public will participate in as well as
observe.
Scouts will demonstrate candle
making, knot tying, first aide,
Indian lore and macrame. In ad·
dition, visitors to the scout show
may participate in games and finger
painting or enter a turtle race.
Charles Henson, scout show
chainnan, feels that no matter who
you are you will be able to find many
things of interest at the show.
Besides the many 'indoor booths,
and activities, Henson says one Boy
Scout troop will have an outdoor
campsite exhibit.
Don Swisher, assisted by William
Spears, has arranged an interesting
schedule of special events to be

presented from the main stage.
Doors to the public will be opened
with opening ceremonies alii a.m.
Noon will bring a lively show
presented by the Order of the Arrow
Indian Dancers, followed by a
perfonnance by the Wahama High
School pep band and registration for
the Pinewood Derby race which gets
underway at 2 p.m.
The Point Pleasant Rescue Squad
will give a CPR demonstration at 3
p.m. and at 4 p.m. visitors to the
scout show will be amazed with a
special magic show by John Gloss
and Kevin Hollingshead.
Point Pleasan t Hi gh School's
annex band will perform at 5 p.m.,
followed by th e presentation of booth
award s, headed up by Walter
Walkers, at 5: 30.
Food from the concession stand
will be available th roughout the day.
Boy Scout Troop 205, lead by Frank
·DeClemente of Gallipolis, will man
the food booth.
J anet Car r, di str ict ticket
chainnan for the event, suggests
that tickets be . purchased from .

Area deaths •••
Ethelyn Coughenour

Ethelyn Earleen Coughenour, 61,
a resident of Rt. 1, Cheshire, died
Monday around 2:30 p.m. at her
home. She had been in failing health
since January. She had been an area
Avon representative for 30 years.
She was born Dec. 23, 1918, in
Cheshire Twp., Gallia County,
daughter of the late Deffie B. and
Lenora James Swisher.
She married Jolm W. Coughenour
on March 11, 1944, in Gallia County.
He survives, along with one
Syracuse Village Council last daughter, Mrs. Dennis (Reva) Han·
Thursday night set swimming poql, cock, Corydon, Ind. ; one sister and
ball field and tight rates for the ball one brother: Mrs. Marjorie French,
field.
Gallipolis and Marvin Swisher, Bid·
Ughts on the ball field will be in· · well. Three brothers, Theron,
creased from $10 an hour to $15 and Harold and Kenneth preceded her in
rental of the ball field for the day death. Two grandsons survive.
was increased from $50 to $75 a day.
She was a member ol Cheshire
The rates for the pool•will be an· Methodist Church and Cheshire
nounced later.
Chapter 450, Order of Eastern Star.
It was decided that repair will be
Funeral services will be 2 p.m.
made in several culverts as soon as Thursday at the Willis Funeral
Home with Rev. Alfred Holley of·
weather permits.
Herman London, pool manager, ficiating . Burial will follow in Gravel
was authorized to hire employes and Hill Cemetery.
purchase necessary supplies.
Friends may call at the funeral
Attending were Mayor Eber home on Wednesday from 2-4 and 7·9
Pickens, Janice Lawson, clerk, Troy p.m.
Zwilling, Jack Williams, Mick Ash,
Pallbearers will be Wayne
Willie Guinther and Mike Struble, Palmer, Clarence Tucker, Oliver
councihnen, Chief of Police Milton
Kail, Ernie Null, Paul Shoemaker,
Varian, London and George
and James French.
Holman, treasurer.

each for the Cyclones.
Tonight fin al action for the fourth
and fifth grade teams will take place
with the Pomeroy Bombers meeting
Pomeroy Blue and Rutland No. I
meeting Bradbury Kitchen. The first
game is at 6:30p.m.
Thursday will be the finals for
both the fourth-fifth level and the
sixth grade leveL

Lighting rates set

Hoofs and Paws

I

one time by the former Chase
Funeral Home in RuUand for
several years.
Funeral services will be held at 2
p.m. Thursday at the Walker
Funeral Home in Rutland with the
Rev. Wilbur Hilt officiating. Burial
will be in Miles Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home
anytime after 2 p.m. Wednesday until time of the services. The family
will receive frienda at the funeral
home from 2 to 4 and 7to 9 p.m. Wed·
nesday.

neighborhood scouts.
Judges for the exhibit booths will
be Bill Wise, Bill Peck, Barry Casto
and Judy Owen.

Turner wins

e

Clinton Turner was winner of the
annual Meigs Junior High Spelling
Bee and will represent the junior
high at the county event on March 17
at Eastern High School.
Clinton is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Turner, Langsville. Rwmer·
up in the junior high bee was Tam·
my Landers, daughter of Mrs. Judy
Stewart.
Jearute Bowen, faculty member,
pronounced the words and judges
were Roger Birch,. Emalene Pratt
and Carla Saelens, faculty members
also.
Finalists were selected through a
written spelling test. They included
Turner, Miss Landers, Jeff Kauff,
Allison Trom, Rhoda Haddox, Sean
Doidge, Rodney Rowh, David
Follrod, Cindy Hazelton, Teresa
Pratt, Chris Smith, Karen Spencer, .
Kenna Thomas, P. J. Harris, John
Bacon and RoQy1t Venoy.

•
D~barges, March 10
Granville Blanton, Paullne Buck,
Aimee
Caud ill ,
Michael
Coughenour, Floyd Cr~meens ,
Lorena Erwin, Martha Fortner,
Mary Fowler, Sybil Knight, ,Alberta
4 wis, Donie McFarland, Locie
Mtillins, Maudie Persinger, Jessica
Saunders, Lee Sayre, Mrs. Bill
'fhomall and daughter, Carl Weese,
Mrs. Fred Wray and son.
Blrtba
Mr. and Mrs. John Greshan,
daughter, New Haven.

1980 AMC
SPIRIT LIFTBACK

Larger wheels for greater
road stability . Larger than
Chevette, Pinto, Horizon,
Mustang, Omni, Citation,
Fiesta.
·

RIVERSIDE ·AMC.JEEP
Gallipolis, Ohio

ELBERFELD$
ZIP.fRONT

NYLON
WINDBREAKER
For Summer

Mamie Miller
Thl"

l;tcket. has

ad·

at y
.POMEROY-MIODI

VOL. 28, NO 232

JibLZER MEDICAL CENTER

spelling bee

Mamie Miller, 81, a fomier
resident of Racine, died at St.
Joseph's Hospital in Warren, Ohio
on Monday.
She is survived by three
daughters, Cora Mae Byers,
Warren; Opal Diddle, Racine and
Jean Fisher, Gallipolis; three sons,
Bill, Gallipolis; Bob, Beckley, W.
Va., and Fred, of Pomeroy.
Two step-daughters, Irene
Hayman, We'sterville ·and Lydia
StUltz, Greenville, Ohio; one stepson, Lewis, Tuppers Plains.
Funeral arrangements will be announced by Ewing Funeral Home.

•

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted-Mildred Scarberry,
Racine; Marvin Darst, Pomeroy ;
Ruth Larkins, Pomeroy; Alberti
Laudennllt, Pomeroy. •
Discharged-Denise Roush, Delcie
Four, Adam Riffle , Patrick
Lochary, Margaret Justice.

~PfliH

(IHIIJ

•

.e nttne
PRICE FIFTEENCENTS;'

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 12, 1980

~arter,

Reagan brace
for Illinois showdow
By Allo$1ed 1'-.

Solid in the South, President Carter and Ronald Reagan are girding
for showdown contests In Dllnols,
-seeking victories that could point
· their way to rival nominations for
: the White House.
For llemocraUc Sen. Eclward
Kennedy and for Reagan's
Republican challengers, the•Dlinols
, presidential primary elec:tlon next
:, Tuesday bas become a must. Unless
Kennedy can stop Carter there, it
. ~wfii be hard for the Massa$laetts
~ senator to stop him at · all.
.· Republicans George Bush and John
· B. Andel'l!4lll face the same situation
; against Reagan.
Both Carter and Reagan enter
: Illinois bouReagan won big in
, Florida, Alabama and Georgia on
: Tuesday, trouncing Bu8b. Anderson,
:-who didn't campaign, ran a distant
: third.
In the Southern primaries, Carter
· won bigger over Kennedy, who ali
· but wrote oft the competition ill the
: president's home territory.
: . And Carter swept past Kennedy in
; Oklaboma's Deu)ocratic caucuses,
winning by a 3*1 margin. carter
and Reagan,were the early. leaders
· as both·...n&amp;rtles cauclised In
· Wasltlngtort'itilte.
·.

bis:~~~,~~~:Ca:r·

iustable side tabs plus
elastic cuffs. :J6· 4o.
Come see !

-terIngot

ballot.

tory

There are many other
styles in men's summer
jackets. Good selection
of styles, colors and
sizes.
Men's &amp; Boys Dept.
1st Floor

" it's not feasible to be elected unless ·
you're a national candidate."
Lest anyone miss the message,
White House Press Secretary Jody
Powell said the Southern bye meant
a Kemedy ticket would be doomed
to failure because, "History shows
u&amp; that no Deu!ocrat can wfn the
presidency if he wri!ell off a whole
section of the country."
Carter won with 88 percent of the
vote in Georgia, 82 percent in
Alabama and 61 percent in Florida.
One surprise there: .Nine percent of
the voters marked No Preference.
Kennedy came closest in Florida,
and he ooly got 23 percent there,
boosted by the support of Jewish
voters angry with the Carter administration's admittedly mistaken
vote for a U.N. resolution critical of
Israel.
Patrick Lucey, deputy chairman
of tbe Kennedy campaign, said the
challenger got "abOut wbat we ex·
peeled" ill the Soutll.
IAicey predicted that the cam-

paign "tide would turn when Carter is
held accountable for. the dation's
economic woes. Kennedy bas been
saying that regularly. He n~ to
prove It ill IllinoiB.
Reagan's GOP landaUdes were
almost as hefty as Carter's margins.
He beat Bush 73 percent to 13 percent In Georgia, 69 percent to 26 percent in Alabama, and S7 percent to
30 pert:ent In Florida.
Reagan captured 100 votes for the
Republican (iresidential nomination
to 9 for Bush. That gave Reagan a
national total of 167 to 45 for Bush. It
will · take 998 to wfn the GOP
nomination._
Carter picked up 181 delegates in ·
the three primaries, and was
assured of at least 30 more from ·
Oklaboma's Democratic precinct
caucuses. Kennedy managed to take
26 out of the South, and one uncommitted delegate was chosen in
Florida.
·Nationally, Carter has 268
(Continued on i&gt;aiie 14)

Darst leads fire department
Une and administrative officers vices officers are Kenneth Imboden,
bave been named for 1980-81 by the · assistant chief; Bob Byer, captain,
Middleport Fire Department, Chief and John Metzger, IieutellBnt.
Meanwhile, the Middleport Fire
Jeff Darst reports.
Department answered a total of 34 ·
Une officers include Jeff Darst,
calls - · seven fire and rescue calls
chief; Donald Stivers, ·assistant
and 27 emergency medical calls. Of
chief; Kevin Dailey, captain ; James
Daniels, first lleutenant; Dave the 27 emergency medical calls _!8
Wilcox, second lieutenant, and were in town and nine were out of
tOwn. One call . involved a motor
!;l.obert Fisher, third lieutenant.
vehicle accident. All vehicles of the
Administrative officers are Bob
department
were driven 1,0:11 miles
Byer, president; Jeff Darst, vice
during
the
month,
Fire Chief Jeff
president; Kenneth Imboden,
Darst
reports.
treasurer, and Donald SUvers,
seCretary. Emergency medical ser-

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

- -- -

HIKERS - Tim Glaze, Pomeroy, right, and ~ve Clarendon, will be hiking 3,000 miles from Melll.co to
Canada beginning ,Saturday.

;Pomeroy hiker will begin
3,000. mile walk Saturday
By Bob Hoefllcb
Pomeroy's Tim Glaze won't have to worry about
the high cost of gasoline - at least for the next seven
months.
Tim wilLbe spending the next months on foot,
hiking from Mexico over the continental divide into
Caruida.
Hiking has been Tim's "thing" since 1973 when be
walked 1,000 miles to Florida on the Appalachian Trail.
It was during that trip that he met Dave Clarendon of
Banner. WyOilling,
Dave was also walking the trail. The two struck up
a friendship and completed the walk together. Dave
was in town with Tim last Friday aitd the two of them
left together for Mexico to begin the long 3,000 mlle
walk which they wfii make over the next seven months.

Tim visited with his mother, Mrs. Belva Glaze, in
Pomeroy before starling bis trip to Melll.co by car.
Supplies for the trip were collected in Columbus
and kept at the borne of Mr. and Mrs. John Lohae.
John, of course, Ill formerly from Meigs County. Then,
the supplies were moved to the borne of Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Gibnore in Athens.
Boxes of supplies were numbered and Mr. and
Mrs. Gilmore, both fonnerly of Meigs, will mall out the
boxes in nwnerical order so they can be picked up by
Tim and Dave at various points over the loog walk.
Tim was working as general manager for the
Hlgbland Bakery Co. in Rockford, m., and resigned in
order to make the trip from Melll.co to Canada. Tim
and Dave are expected to leave Mexico on tile long
jaunt this Saturday.

Russell M. Little
Russell M. Little, 74, Route 1, Middleport, died Monday at his residen·
ce following a lengthy illness.
Mr. Little was born in Cheshire on
Oct. 26, 1905, a son of the late James
and Addie Hysell Utile. On May 28,
1932, he married the former Pearl
Wyatt who survives.
Other survivors are a son, Russell
(Rusty) Little of Millersport; two
daughters, Mrs. Howard (Marie)
Birchfield, Route 1, Middleport, and ,
Mrs. Carl (SandJ:a) Harris, Fort
Lauderdale, Fla. , eight grandchildren, three step-grandchildren,
and two great-grandchildren; a
brother, Terry Little, Athens, and
several nieces, nephews and
cousins.
Besides his parents, Mr. Little was
preceded in death by two brothers
and seven sisters.
Mr. Utile was a charter member
of the RuUand Volunteer Fire
Department,and a member of the
Rutland United Methodist Church.
He was an employe of RuUand F\JI'o
niture for 21 years and was in the
restaurant business in RuUand for
some 12 years. He owned and
operated Little's Cookhouse at county fairs throughout the area for 'EI
years.
.
Mr. Little had been employed at

Gradall repair bid granted

their homes, some people help out
By Marlon C. Crawford
the stray by taking care of them and
Meigs County
then seeking to find homes without
Humane Society
POMEROY - On a recent trip asking anyone for help. The Hwnane
that involved over 600 miles - going Society then steps in and tries to
south -' I kept count on the stray take care of the remainder which
problem as! drove and it was really usually averages about 12 to 15 dogs
and puppies per week and several
devastating.
Twenty-two dead dogs and pup- kittens and cats. This total nwnber
pies (just on my side of the road ) of animals totals a pretty high figure
five live ones but in danger because and makes a pretty large portion of
they were walking along a major the population fall into the " black
highway, frightened, alone, in sear· hat" category.
It sure would be interesting to
ch of a home, food, etc. The count on
really
know the exact count on the
cal'! was two dead and almost a third
percentage
of the people of Meigs
as one ran right in front of my motor
County
who
take
in a puppy or kitten
home and scared me tc death (I
and
keep
it
for
its
lifetime and have
missed it, thank God).
it
die
of
old
age.
Then
compare that
The pet population explosion
with
those
who get puppercentage
caused by the many irresponsible
pies
.
and
kittens
"
and
then the
• pet owners is a problem that hits aU
folloWing
year
get
another
puppy or
of us in the eye and heart as we take
to the American highways. I will kitten (the older animals disappear
certainly be happy when our nation somehow) and the cycle goes on and
catches up with the more on.
In the one category (the white hat
progressive European nations in the
wearers)
there are some happy,
one area in which they have out·
healthy
animals,
let me tell you.
smarted us - animal controL We
They
are
licensed;
they are taken to
lead everyone throughout the world
a
vet
when
sick
or
injnred;
they get
in all else but not in the area of sen·
all
their
innoculations
on
schedule;
sible pet ownership and breeding.
their meals are on a regular basis
We all know what needs to he done,
some do it, most.don't and the laws the same as the owners'; they have
are not enforced, so the situation great little areas entirely their own
The Rutland Emergency Squad
goes on and on with more and more where they can go for security, and
are as much a part of the family as
was called to Mine 2 of the Southern
animals suffering because of the
Ohio Coal Co. at 8:59 p.m. Monday
mass indifference. "I don't license everyone else.
When they paSs away they are
for Gary Basham who had an hand
my dogs, I've got too many. " " I
injury. He was taken to O'Bleness
don't neuter my male, it ain't given special burials and in some
cases
even
have
head
stones
and
the
Memorial Hospital in At.'tens.
natural," "so the dog (cat) is
owners
mourn
for
weeks,
months,
. pregnant, we can take them to the
pound or di)IJlp then on some country etc. I visited a pet cemetery on my
The Middleport Emergency Squad
road" or the most dumb statement, last trip to a military reset;Vation
was called to Route I, Cheshire, at
"homes are easy to find for puppies and even though I didn't know but
12:29 p.m. Monday for Ethelyn
just two of the pel'! th8t were buried
and kittens, everyone loves them."
Coughenour who was dead upon the
There just are not enough homes there - I had a real lump ·in my
unit's arrival.
to go aroilnd and with each puppy throat when I left that place.
Tnere were many pets of Army
and kitten born it means from just
The Pomeroy Emergency Squad
that one anlmal if he or she is for- people in there - some with simple· · went to the Young residence, Locust
tunate enough to live long - dozens fences around the site, some with
St. at 4:43 p.m. Monday for Marvin
and dazens more animals and no stones around the area, a few with
Darst who was taken to Veterans
hand painted wooden markers, and
homes for most. Our local pound
Memorial Hospital. At 7:33 p.m.,
alone pul'! about 30 to40 (sometimes some had really elaborate headthe unit went to the Hiland Church
more, sometimes less) dogs out of stones. One said simply "Our baby
Road for Dana Covert who was also
ctrcu!ation " forever" in each week sleeps" and had a colonel and his
taken to Veterans Memorial
of tbe year. Cars, other animals, wife's name below · tliat short
Hospital.
.
cruel pepple, trappers, and disease statement that says so much. How
about
you~ Do you wear a black hat
·take their toll too so you can Imagine
bow many animals that started out or a white? I most definitely wear a
.,..IIOIJI!lOfle's "good Intentions" end . white and wish we could convert aU
,
sQUADRVN
liP living a .very short, miserable those "cotton pickin' " black hat·
The Syracuse Emergency Sqi!B.:
ters, don 'tyhou?
Ufe.
.
was called Sunday at a p,m. for ·
Aitimals are avaUable for adopo
There are JD811¥, many humane InFreda Duffy who was taken to
dividuals who help out by taking tion· thi~ w~k and you may see them
Veteran£ MemoriaiH~ital.
strays ill and making them part of by c(jJil1g ~.,J.:..;i260. ·

By Tbe Assoclli~ Press

No .lt~~ge' pro~u~ss expected
W~GTO~ ~Secretary of Stat.e.Cyrus Vance said Tuesday he

' ez:pi!cta n0 p~ In efforta to free some 50 Americans held hostage
in Iran until electlonli for the Iranian parliament are concluded.
VllliCI!' said' be.
bi!llev.es no breakthrough is likely until ·the
Ir8nlan par~ elec:tlons, which begin Friday, are completed
and an"elected ·govenunent takes over the country. He said the admlniBtratlon wooders about the ability of the revolutionary regime in

now:

.

Fl\ClVl JEEP CC!PCl\!TlCN
WHEN YCU CCLLECT YCUl\
. NEW JEEP. CHEltCKEE

...

warm torso found in.~hopping cart

• Bad weather driving
• An off-road fun tp011a
ut!Uty ftblcle b.ullt
with all thj~ rugged
durabWty the Jeep
nameltcmdllor.
• Fuel Economy!

.
• PurabUlty cmd dependabWty you ccm count
onl
• Value! An lnYHtm.ent
ID a Jeep o&amp;-whMl drift
ey.tem pay11 lor lt•lf.

l2o g-cMPG @g~MPGI

old-

U. .-... tlgune lor COII.II H

YO\II
lllplooltd&gt;oad
_
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· . . . , dlllor
.......
opood.
- - . . . _ wUJllo-

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446-9100

. '

~--=-__.;.~----~--~
'

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. ·',

NEW YORK - After a stl!l-warm, headleas hwrian torso was found
In a shopping .cart near a busy interaectloll, pollee followed a trail of
blood three blocks through midtown ManluittaD to a {iearby apartment
building;
'
.
Police said the torso was.discovered Tuesday at the inter!tectlon or
48th !!treet.and Ninth Avenue. They followed the bloody trail througb
. ~1beaterDI.Itrlct to~ Radio City Apartujerits olf~enth Avenue,
'lbe remaininll bedy parts, the bead, 8111111 and legs, were found
aboUt six hourl!llater, stuffed in two l)lastlc garbage bags in trash containers in the neighborhood, saia detective Sgt ..Patrick Bli!IIIJ!s.

Arson sus~ was injtlred too ·

coDfldencel
.1\ec:elYe c:t chec:lt for fSOO
direct &amp;om )Mp Corpo-

CAMBRIDGE, Ohio - 1be man accused of Betting a motel fire
wbiell ~ed 10 pensons lalt swnmer was 11'\tpped ill hts room when the
blue was dllcovered and '!'IS Injured escaping tlu'ougb a window. ·
Newspaper a«ounts or the tragedy show that Gerald Willet, :IAJ, of
Rlndol!l1!. ~ cut on a land, face and shOulder$ while ~reaklng bis
1'90111 WindiiW IJid jtunplnc 12 feet 'to safetY. Ahand cut ~ulred eiglt

ratloD. or ~ply the IGDie
ainouat to your down '
payment when YoU buy .
yo~ new '7? or '80 J"P ·
Cherok...

ltildle8.

'

.

.,

'

n ·JeeR

. tram the 10 l(eatba and Injuries to 79 otber periona Ia tbe July 31, 19'19,

We wrote the book

Ohio motdr vehicle receipts down

fb,L

C1J!. ~-wbeel driYe.

'

. GaiHpcilis,,O•.

.'

.

'

'

COLOMBU&amp;;Ohicl- While overall sales tax collections are up so far

••

@Jt'"o.

I

•

•

.
•

for tbe lrTNO flleal year, tax revenuee received from motor vehicle
. . . ba~ deci!Md coiJipated to the l8llle period a year ago,
~tothl~a~indllltry. ·
· ·
·
Tile itate treaunr's alflce reportl that statewlck) sales tax coli~
tlaltl r.- 8.2i percent fOt the jlol'tton or the filleal year beg1nn1ng July
1, lt19, throu8b ~anuary, eompared to the comparable ~riod a year

__

ago. They fole U6 percent for J anuMry 1~, co~red'to the same.

-· .

montliA)'MUgO,
,

.~---

'

II

'

Willey 111 cbarged witb 8Q1'8vated 11'11011 pending consideration by
ihe Guet'llleY County Grand Jill')' of poulble olber cbqes stemqdng

. . . .· RIVERSIDE· JE~._, ~ ".. , ~~ · liJ. .
Upper River' R.d.

AEP director

IRONTON, Ohio - Three m~n pleaded guilty in Lawrence Cowtty ·
Cwn~aon Pleas Court on Tuesday to arson-for-hire charges tracing to
a mobile home fire tbat resulted in one death.
Earlier, a fourth J)erson pleaded innocent to charges stemming from
the blaze and is scheduled for a hearing March :IAJ.
Lawrence CountY Prollecutor Richard Meyer said the fire - which
occurred near ProCtorillle on Feb. 23 - ld.lled Jeffery A. Ferris, :IAJ, of
Proctorville. The mobile borne, belonging to Edward Miller, 53, was
destroyed. '
Miller, David Danford, ~. and Jerry F. Corns, 36, both of Procton;ne, were indicted on charges of involuntary manslau~ter and arson, but allowed to plead to charges of al'SQII for hire. 1bey are
scheduled to be sentenced March :IAJ. .
,

.

Miner hurt Monday

---•

Gloss named

to control the situation and deal with the militants holding the
.,. Tehrin
bostages.
.
., . Three arson suspects plead guilty

...

More Rnrarillll

E. H. GLOSS

'

Following a long discussion
Tuesday ,Meigs County Com·
missioners · upon the recommendation of Wesley Buehl, county
engineer, accepted the bid of Marks
Tractor and Equipment Co., division
of Dravo Corp., to repair the county
gradall in ·the amount of $24,737.50
but failed to approved the purchase
a heavy duty cutting head in the
amount of $8,500.
Buehl also included in the recommendation that money for the repair
and 'the new clitting head be taken
from unapproplated funds.
Henry Wells, commissioner, said
he was ill favor of the repair '
providing the gradall would be used.
Richard Jones, president, said he
would be like to see the equipment
given 50 percent usage. Buehl pointed out that he could not give the
gradall 100 percent useage due to
manpower.
REMINJ)ER ISSUED
Jones reminded Buehl that since
19'17 the gradall bas not bOOn worked
to Its full capacity. Jones also stated
tha~ ~uehi fl!ported ori Feb. 23, 1979,
that he, .Buelil, was going to gei tfte
gradall out and work.It constantly.
Jones further felt that it was the

Eugene H. GLoss, manager of
Central Operating COmpany's Philip
~rn Plant, New Haven, W. Va.,
bas been elected to a one-year term
on the board of directors of the
American Electric Power Service
Corporation. · The Service Corporation ill an AEP subsidiary whiell
provides services to both the parent
and ojleratlng companies · of the
American Electric Power System.
Gloss, a 113t1ve of Maspeth, New
York, holda a BS degree ill
mechanical engineering {rom
Lehlgb University. He bas also attended public utility executive
training courses at Ute University of
Michigan and management practices seminars at Ohio Un,iverslty.
· Gloss began bis utility career with
Ohio Public Service Comjlany of
Cleveland ill 1948 and two years later
went to the Ohio Edison Company at
SPringfield. He ~ operations
supervisor at Ohio Valley Electric
Corporation's Kyger Q:eek Plant,
The balance In all expendable
Galllpolla, in 1954. He was nilined funds of Middleport VIllage Council
aSs!stant manager of the PhiliP . as of F'eb. 29, totaled $81,181.39, Mid·
SpOrn Pian.t In 1957 and manager in dleporl Clerk·'J'n!asurer Jon Buck
1970.
.
.
reports.
Gloss .Ill a ~mber of the
Receipta, expenditures during the
American Society of Mechanical month and the balance in each fund
Englneen; past chaln'Ban, _ Mid· maklngupthetotai,~vely, as
Ohio Valley Engineers~; peat .of the end of .last month include:
president, Gallipolis Uons Club; and general, $5,912.86, $6,495. 73,
a registered professional engineer In $12,189.10; street ligbts, no receipts,
thesta!ellofOhioandWestVIrginla. $1,001.72, $9,017.97; ' cemetery,
$701.08, $1,241.51, $790.69; fire equip. ment, $1,2!ifl, $1,544.57, $2,242.26;
swimming pool, no receipts, $11.03,
COMMIS819N CANDIDATE
$3,463,26; fire truclt, $10,000, $19~04, '
Oscar Weber, .Long Bott&lt;\ni, $22,886.31;· pia~ commission, no
,
receipts, $5, $157.50; street main-.
Tuesda
·
y afternoon flied hla peti!lon t enaqce, ..
"'2 .•"3 , .,.,1
._. 90.·93,
.., ;~•
f or the De_mocratlc nomination· .J •$2,G27 .2ft ~ streei len·, rio recelpta, no
run for Meigs County Com&amp;nlsalon, , disbursements, $5,861.22; federal
term expiring Jan. 2, 1985. Chellter revenue . s~aring, no r~ceipts,
Wells n~w holdS the seat for thai · 11:111.8l, $1?,21~.34; HUD, no receip.
term.
'

Buehl
also
presented
engineer's repsonslbility to the
specifications
for
a
conveyor :
ciizens of the county to keep up on
ill
the
amount
of
of
$30,000.
screener
the ditching ."If we are going to
No
action
was
tken
oo
the
spend this kind of money Meigs
suggestion.
The
conunissioners
felt
·
County taxpayers need to have
that the cost was muell too high.
satisfaction"Jones commented.
BID UNDERSTUDY
Jones further questioned Buehl's
Meeting with the board waa
request to use unappropiated money
Robert Bailey, administrator of .
for the repair of the gradall when
Meigs County Emergency Medical :
money had been appropiated for
Services, regarding bids received :
equipment.
.
" We are getting right back to the for a new emergency vehicle.
One bid was from Wren Sales, ·
old idea of purchasing equipment instead of new road construction and Mansfield in tilE amount of S23,438 :
road repair for county residents. · and the other from Horton Co., :
The unappropriated funds is for road Colwnbus in the amount of $28,000. :
Bailey is to study the bids and make ;
construction and road repair. I
bis recommendation at the next :
recommend something to benefit the
.
people instead of equipment" Jones meeting of the commissioners.
Aletter W!IS read from Dan Uoyd, ;
said .
Ohio Valley Health services, regar- :
It was agreed to use money that
has been appropiated for equipment ding ownership of equipment that ·
was used · when SEOEMS was in :
and not use unappropiated fwtda.
.
On tlie issue of the purchase of a operation in the county.
Jones asked Bailey to get in touch ;
cutting head, no motion was made
for ~hase, therefore the issue with the Ohio Department of Health :
.
for clarification or ownership.
was dropped.
Attending
were
Jones,
Henry
·
Buehl also requested that the
Wells
and
Chester
Wells,
·
com:
speed limit on countY road 5, near
WMPO Radio, be reduced from 40 missioners, and Mary Hobstetter, :
·
mph to 25 mph to which the com· clerk.
missioners agreed.

Middleport's funds total' $81,181
ts, '19.04, $9,829.96. Receipts for the
month totaled $24,408.87 while
disbursements totaled $16,1159.36.
VIllage council's obligated funds
as of Feb. 29, remained at $18,160.39
with no receipts or expenditures
·
·
during the month.
Total ofthe obligated lunda Of the
Middleport Board of Public Affairs
as of Feb. 29 amowtted to
$Z19,31Uil.
.
Receipts and disbursements for
the month and the balance, respec·
lively,, as of Feb. 29, follow: sanitary
se we r , $51070.39, $4 ,7 26.02,
$11,213,09; sanitary sewer escrow,
$1110, nil,disbursements, $188,2116.09;
water, $8,6n.77, $7,~70.27, ·
$28,0114.62; water meter trustS, $1211,
$qUS; $7 ,750.21!.
Receipts for the month ·totaled
$13 ,961.16 while disbursements
amQunted lo n2.514.64.

Meanwhile,, Middleport Pollee ;
Department made 4e arrests «&lt;uring : .
February, 14 ~ speeding cbargee :
and 12 on cllsorderly ·IIIIUIIIel':
charges, accoi-ding to the report of ·
Pollee Chief J. J, Cl'emeans.
.;
There were four arrests on ·
cbarges of drlvlni wWe intalll.cated, :
,two, for expired vehicle reglstratioo :
and 8818ult, and one eaell for no !
· exhalllt; wrong f!'aY on a one way
street·
no-operator's license·f Jm.. ·'
.
,
proper bllctlng; running red light; ·
qestruction of prope&lt;ty; resisting :
arrest·, falling to maintaln'control· ''
reckless c!peration; open fluk; ,
·failure to yield the right of WIJ, and !
, petty thtlft. Qlarges "'!~"~In :
•
three CaBell.
Parking ll)eter recelpla Wiled I
· ~.50 and 4'Z1 tickets ~ ~ \
by the police. The pollee ci'uillii .,.
, I'
driven3,38:imlles duringtbeDDtlt.
•
.

.

'

.

'

j

.

• , 41)

&gt;!!:

�3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, March 12,1980

r-SQuthern dumps Titans, advance to finals

2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, March 12, 1980

~----------------~ ,M

The Daily Sentinel

ou~;:oucs
5 AilP,SCJrA , &gt;LA .

Opiniom and comments

_'Player of the Year" Duffy
paces team's 62-53 victory

K HI~ EVY

At-10 BUSH At.lD
JOI-U.J ANOERSO~
11-l
MASSACI-l05ET15 ...

wow

t-1\l,l,
WI-\AT
A

SU~l&gt;lUSE !

BY SCOTl' WOLFE
Cllll.J.JCOTHE - The Southern

••

~

Editorial opinion

Support for fuel

·

Washington todJJy

We support pending legislation which would bar Ohio's
electric utilities from automatically passing on to consumers. increases in the cost of fuel which is used to
generate electricity.
Ohio's eight electric companies reported a record $2
billion in such.charges under the fuel adjustment clause
during 1979.
The measure, which bars such automatic increases1
would instead require the Public Utilities Commission ot
Ohio to conduct hearings and adjust a utility's rates each
six months to reflect increases or decreases in fuel
acquisition and delivery costs.
We further support another key Senate amendment to
. the fuel adjustment bill which would prevent utilities
which own or control coal mines frotn claiming higher
costs for the!r own coal than for coal sold by similar independent mmes.

· ennedy
Voter attention must ch ange •••K
WASHINGTON (AP) - Slogging
futilely through Iowa last December, Sen. Edward M. Kennedy said
voter attention would have to swing
from international crises to pocket·
book issues by early spring for his
White House candidacy to have a
chance.
Spring begins next week, and
predictably, Kennedy and his aides
are claiming the massive public
shift they need is arriving right on
schedule, although the evidence is
scanty, at best.
No sooner had Kennedy racked up
his first campaign victory over
President Carter last week than he
and his advisers began claiming it
was more than just a landslide in
Massachusetts, his home state and
the nation 's most liberal.
" I don't think Massachusetts is a
whole lot different from the rest of
the country," the state's lieutenant

governor, Thomas P. O'Neill III,
told reporters several hours after
Kennedy's 65 percent to 29 percent
victory.
"People don't go out and show that
kind of dissatisfaction (with an in·
cumbent president) unless it is.
genuine," said O'Neill, Kennedy's
New England campaign coor
dinator.
He and other aides insisted that it
was the " end -of-the-month
payment" issue - not Kennedy's
status as a hometown favorite that overrode the problems that
were insurmountable in other states.
These ' 'problems" included Carter's
widespread support on international
problems in Iran and Afghanistan
and questions about Kennedy's per·
sonal character and his stands on
abortion and gun control.
Kennedy himself, in a sharply
worded attack on Carter's economic

policies the night of his victory, said
Massachusetts.
Kennedy is counting almost ex·
the outcome in Massachusetts shows
the American public "will nlit
elusively on his economic proposals
tolerate an inflation rate of 20 per- · to carry him to victory in the illinois
cent and Interest rates of 17 perprimary and in the March 25 New
cent.''
York contest. Both primaries are
Kennedy's aides also insist there
crucial.
Even If Kennedy is right, and the
is plenty of time for their candidate
to tum around what is now widely
pocketbook issues are taking hold, it
perceived as a floundering cam·
is not certain he can translate that
paign. Even after the illinois
into victory.
primary next Tuesday, with 179
In lliinois, for example, Kennedy
delegats at stake, Democrats will
successfully wooed Chicago 'Mayor
have selected only 29 percent of their
Jane Byrne away from the president
last year, winning her endorsement
delegates to next swnmer's national
convention.
in what was viewed as a major coup.
Despite their claims, however,
But yesterday's coup has turned
neither Kennedy nor his aides have
into today' s albatross, with the
been able to explain how the
mayor now an unpopular figure in
economic issues that swept him to
her home city. Kennedy's national
his big Massachusetts victory failed
campaign has dispatched top-level
to produce in Vennont. Carter won
political aides to Chicago to bolster
that New England state by an even
their sagging effort there.
bigger margin than Kennedy won in

Ohio perspective

648 board getting Washington
increased attention
By Clarence
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) - Ohio's
"648 boards" are gettihg an increasing amount of attention in the
!13th Ohio General Assembly.
What's a 648 board?
It's the short name used around
U1c state for county and multicounty boards of mental health and
mental retardation. There are 53 of
them in all.
The boards were provided for by
the II Jth General Assembly for the
purpose of planning and overseeing
local mental health and mental
retardation programs. The bill that
created the boards was House Bill
No. 648 - thus, the nickname.
Recently, the Franklin County 648
Board and some others received
publicity revealing that certain
financia l records had been kept
from public scrutiny.
In addition, reports of high
sa laries being paid employees,
luxury automobile purchases, and
other activities raised questions in
the l.Algislature.
House Speaker Vernal G.. Riffe
Jr., D-New Boston, ordered a finance committee probe of the 53 agencies.
Finance Chairman Myrl H.
Shoemaker, D-Bourneville, sent
questionnaires to the boards calling
for information about fi scal
mana gement, services provided,
management salaries, and a wide
range of other subjects.
In all, there were 32 questions on
the list, and Shoenulker requested
that they be answered and returned
no later than this week.
He plans to start hearings March
18.

Shoemaker said he took the
questionnaire approach because his
committee needs to know what the
current practices are before it can
detennine how the boards should be
operating.
As a result of the publicity about
the Franklin County board, Rep.
Michael Stinziano, D-Columbus, introduced a bill requiring 648 boards
to make full financial disclosure. It
is being studied in Shoemaker's
committee.
Dr. Timothy Moritz, director of
the state Department of Mental
Health and Mental Retardation, endorsed Stinziano's bill but called for
expanding it to cover every agency
which handles public funds.
At the same time, Sen. John K.
Mahoney, 0-Springfield, won Senate
approval March 3 of a bill restru!lting the management of 648 boards
and relieving them of responsibility
for mental retardation.
His comprehensive bill, now pending in the House, grew out ·of
problems reported by the boards
themselves, however.
Among other things, Mahoney's
bill places programs for the mentally retarded into the county boards
of mental retardation.
A3 oppose4 to the planning duties
of the 648 boards, they were set up to
operate the local retardabon
programs, similar to the way boards.
of education operate schools,
Mahoney said.
However, he said these agencies
currently have some functions that
overlap with those of the 648 boards,
a situation ·he hopes to correct.

Today in history.
Today is Wednesday, March 12,
the 72nd day of 1980. There are 294
days left in the year.
Today's highlight in history:
In 1938, Adolf Hitler's Geonany in·
vaded Austria.

• •

On this date :
In 1799, Austria declared war on
France.
In 1912, at Jefferson Barracks,
Mo., Army Capt. Albert Berry made
th~ fir,t parachute jwnp from an
airpillne.

Report

Miller

r-----·--------------------1.
I Jka.t.~
I
II ••• ?Jtt.
:~:
II
Dear Editor :
This letter is in answer to Mrs. Pat
Johnson's letter that appeared in
Sunday, March 2, paper concemlng
justice being done for the alleged
stealing of her daughter's tape deck.
Well, Mrs. Johnson, you forgot to
state all the facts.
I'm also sure your daughter must
have insurance on her car, so that

shouldn't be too much of a problem.
I don't think anyone should throw
stones. No one is perfect n I'm sure
you should know, Mrs. Johnson. Why
not leave justice in the bands ol the
law, and when stating facts, be sure
you state all the facts. Not just ones
that suit your needs. - Bill McKlnney, Condor Street, Pomeroy, Oblo
45769.

"Tornadoes eliminated the Portsmouth Notre Dame Titans, 62-53,
~"'Tuesday night in the District Tour. nament at Chillicothe High School.
~ In doing so, Southern earned a berth·
in the District finals Thursday ngiht
at 7 p.m. at the same location.
,., The · powerful Purple Tornadoes
·.:put together another well-balanced
··scoring attack, led by " southpaw"
Jack Duffy, who earlier was named
' '· Class A Player of the Year.
His Tornado teammates took tur- ns in the limelight, putting it alltogether for a team victory.
Southern, 21·1, will play Lucasville
Valley who downed Green, 62-64
Monday night.
The Tornadoes not only put it
together on the court, but they did so
in the stands as Southern rooters
packing the gym, cheered their
team to victory.
The excitement started to build 30
minutes before the game, then came
to a climax for the game's opening
tipoff.
The tip was taken by the highjwnping TitallB who raced down the
court, but C9uldn 't find the basket.
The Tornadoes then took their turn
at breaking the scoring ice, but
failed, due to the tense situation.
With seven minutes showing on
the clock, Titan Rob Pierron slipped
through Southern's 1-3-1 zone to
score a Jay-up In front of a roaring
crowd.
Then the Southern scoring parade
began with Dale Teaford leading the
, way, tying the score at 2-2.
After Sf\\eral missed Titan shots,
•
; Dave " j!jg Red" Foreman swished a
i short Jwnlll!r inside the lane
1 followed·b): a long jumper by Kent
' Wolfe 'm-'ii tlie loJl;of the key. The
score
&amp;-2 wjth ·~:40 showing on
the clocK:"-"~.- ··~'FJ·~ ... ""
Rob Pi~P.n pullf!l his club hack
.•to within 'tw6 'at' lA, but from that
'•utime orl 1th~''tomadol!s racked up
~·.:seven uni(IIS'W'I!teil jldints to increase ·
·c.~ 'their leadto'riifie:'
·
••• After 'a Notre Dame time out with
-·2:22 left in 'the
the Titan of·
...'tense revived, ·but 'Southern led as
~" the .canto e\'fd~if'' 111'12! In that
'" '

wii

eantd

opening round 6-4 All District player
"Big Red" Foreman paced the Tornadoes with a six-point effort.
A3 in the previous period, Notre
Dame again controlled the tip and
quickly chipped away at the Tornado lead. A3 the high-scoring Tom
Bowman sank his first of four second
period Jay-ups the Tornadoes got
caught in a precarious cold front
tjlat allowed them to score only six
points during the whole quarter
stretch.
Meanwhile Bownian's heroics
looked very convincing and after
several fast breakl! he led his team
to a 28-24 halftime iead by scoring
eight of his game high 20 markers.
The mighty Southern quintet
couldn't work the ball inside like
they wanted and were forced to
shoot from the outside where the
cold front was stationed, but still
they weren't about to give up.
· Second Half
Coach Carl Wolfe's halftime pep
talk, along with the Southern crowd
proved to be effective as the "Big
Purple Machine" rolled into the
second half in high gear. All week
long "Southern Soothsayers" were
forecasting a Tornado to hit Por·
tamouth, and after hovering In the
air for an entire half the . stormy
March winds came and touched
down in the third period to blow the
Titans away,
Dale "Star" Teaford lived up to
his name by producing a sparkling
13-point offensive perfonnance as
well as getting things underway the
second half by out-jwnping another
star by the.name of Tom Bowman.
Jack Duffy then climbed on the offensive Merry-go-round and quickly
pulled Southern within two at 28-26.
After Bill King added to the Titan
score, Teaford picked up his third
foul. Southern fell into a full court
press in hopes of getting another
scoring opportunity and it came
when sophomore Kent Wolfe launched and swished three straight
jwnpers under pressure to give the
Tornadoes a 32-30 lead which the
rampaging Tornadoes never gave
up.
Then the curtain opened for the
Duffy and Bowman show. The two

Commentary

"The executive power shall be centrate on improving his working
vested in a President of the United relationship with Congress and the
States of America. He shall hold hiB bureaucracy. He could devote more
office during the term fl four time and greater resources to
years." Article II, Section I of the pressing non-political issues. In adConstitution
dition, better relationships with the
An ongoing controversy continues media would surface and comin the 96th Congress over a proposed munication in general would benefit.
Constitutional amendment to limit Most importantly, the President
the length of Presidential tenns. The would have the opportunity to obsubject is timely and the issues jectively analyze federal programs
surrounding It are complex,
and could act in a non-politically
Originally the Constitution set no · motivated environment. Tile
limits on the number of four-year President 's decision making
terms a President could serva. flexibility would be greatly imhanHowever, the Twenty-second Amen- ced.
.
dment to the Constitution ratified on
Opponents of the six-year term
March 1, 1951, contains this limitation contend that the
American people are the best judges
limitation:
"No ilerson shall be elected to the of whether or not a person is fit for
office of the President more than the Presidency. They contend that
twice, and no person who has held six years is too long for a President
the office ·of President, or acted as to serve without meuurable acPresident, for more than two years countabillty to the ,people. The
of a term to which some other person public should be allowed to pass
was elected President shall be elec- ballot box judgment on the
ted to the office of President mare Pre$1dent and remove him from ofthan once."
· flee or return him for a second term.
The two-term limitation remains Furthermore, opponents argue that
in effect ~Y. midst an.advocacy of there is no guarantee that the
imposing a single Presidential term relationship with any particular inofsix years.
.teres! group or segment of our
A single six-year term has both society would improve because the
positive and negative aspects, The President is limited to one term.
key quest111n invlves Presidential
The question ·remains whether
flexibility versus PresldenUal acPresidential accliuntabllity . or
countabllity.
Presidential flexibility is most irnProponents of an absolute temi portant.
There-llfC several bills pending in
limitation for Presidents argue that
relationships between the Presldeftt the.House and Senate relating to one
and IJ8rtiCular groups will [¥! bettet
fashion or anoiher to the limitation
served by a single slx·yl!ar lerm. Six
or extenaton .of Presidential tel'lll!l ol
):'ears is con.sidered ·adequate time .offlce:'Ail are under COMideratlon,at .. ·
for a President to achieve II!·.· · · the Committee level, With It unlikely ·
legislative, domestic, and ' inthat any legislation· ·Will be for·
tcrnational goals. During this time, ·~ng in the 96th COngress to
a President· would be free from
dnistieally change the present ierm
re~ie ct !on prP~sures and could ··nn·
status.

11/RNING POINT

Then if there was ever a crucial
turning point in the game it came
Dame. Duffy dwnped in 18 points to lead the Tornadoes
DEADLY SOUTIIPAW - Jack Duffy, 6-0 senior,
with five minutes still left to play
to a 62-51 victory in the Class A District at Chillicothe.
named just Tuesday morning as " Player of the Year"
and Southern up by two.
Duffy
is guqrded by the Titans' Joe Miller (24).
in
Southeastern
Ohio
by
the
Associated
Press
scores
The heroics were provided by
one of his clutch baskets against Portsmouth Notre
Jonathan Rees, who turned a
twisting drive into a three-point play
that seemed to break the Titans'
backs. The enthusiasttc Rees played
a flawless floor game and was the
man who passed the bali to Jlnuny
O'Brien for the miracle shot that
won the District Championship
exactly one year ago.
Duffy, Foreman, Wolfe, and
Teaford then picked up the victory
knife and spread the icing on the
cake as they sank two important foul
By GEORGE STRODE
Jett2r of intent one month from now.
rrummum of five scholarships
shots apiece.
AP Sports Writer
"The rule of thwnb for building a
available, but concedes the late anDuffy led the winners with 18 poin·
- COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) - Danny
program is three years," said
nouncement may hinder the Bo'r
ts, Kent Wolfe came through with an
Nee and his new boss, Harold
McElhane)'. " But it may take Danny
cats' efforts for 1900 recruits.
important 15, "Big Red" Foreman
McElhaney, concede the Ohio
longer
because of his late start this
Athletes can sign a binding national
netted 12, and high-jumping Dale
University basketball coach's first
season.''
Teaford poured in 13 points in the
task .will be seiling.
Nee began searching for two
clutch. Johnny Davis the defensive
"We have a tremendous selling
assistant coaches t008y, including
franchise, sank one and Jonathan
job to do -:- with the high school
interviews with current Ohio aides
Rees added three.
recruits, the students and the alumMike Backus and Larry Epperly.
Bowman led N. D. with a gameni. We felt Danny was the guy to do
McElhaney says the decision to
high 20, Bill King sank 12, and Rob
it," said McElhaney, the school's
select Nee over Florida Southern
Pierron had 11. The Titans shot !!.HO
athletic director who introduced Nee
Coach Hal Wissel and Jene Davis, an
from the field for 38 percent and 7•
at news conferences Tuesday.
assistant at Indiana, was a very dif.
for-15 from the charity stripe for 56
"I don't think I will have any
ficult one.
percent. Sclunidt led his team with
trouble. If you're sincere and you
There will be a double elimination,
six assists and King had four. The
sell yourself and your program, I
men's independent basketball tourteam ha:d a total of 13 assists.
think high school coaches will iden- nament held at Meigs High School
The Titans claimed the battle of
tify with you," said the 34-year-old
March 17·23.
the boards 44-27. Bowman hit the · Notre Dame assistant coach.
The event is sponsored by the
boards for 19 carOIIlB while Pierron
The need for salesmanship is ob"Meigs Athletic Boosters." The enhauled down 10: Southern's reboun·
vious. The Bobcats finished last in
DRAFT
LADIES
try fee will be $50 per team.
ding ace Foreman came through in
the Mid-American Conference last
No player with more than one year
NilE
NITE
the clutch to grab 11 caroms while
season with a 5-11 record and won
of college basketball experience or
Teaford had six.
TUESDAYS THURSDAYS
only 8 of 26 overall games under
player who participated in college
lt
9P.M. to
:
The winners shot 111-36 from the
Dale Bandy, who resigned.
basketball this past season will be
lt9 P .M. tol A.M.
12Midnight llfield for a hot 50 percent and canned
' However, J::{ee is promising no imeligible to play unless that player is
7 for 35 from the foul line for 50 permediate miracles in his first assignnow 30 years of age or older.
cent. One key in the outcome of the
ment as a head coach at the major
For further information call Gene
game was that Duffy hit eight for 12
college level.
Wise, m-622~ or Jerry Davenport,
from the :oulline and Wolfe hit 5-7
"I have a vote of confidence from
lt748 N. 2nd St.
Middleport, 0 . ~
992-7323.
doring the later stages of the game.
the administration to give me time.
Teaford also hit seven important
We're not goiljg to over commit ourfree throws under pressure.
selves. You luiye to find the players
Southern conunitted 12 turnovers,
that suit your program," said Nee,
//f./:·~
claimed nine steals, and had eight
once"the captain of AI McGuire's
r; .
assists as a team.
freshman team at Marquette.
Southern will play this Thursday
McElhaney said Nee will have a
night at 7 p.m. at Chillicothe High
School against Lucasville Valley in
the District Finals. The w!Jmer will
SOFl'BALL MEETING
advance to the Regional Tourney
A
meeting
will be held for the fornext Thursday at Ohio University in
mation of the new M-G-M (men's
Athens. Tickets for this Thursday's
slow-pitch) softball league Sunday,
game are on sale at the high school.
March 16, at 1 p.m.
SOV1IIERN (1%1 - Davis 0-1·1: Duffy 5-8-Ill ;
The meeting will be held at the R.
Rees 1·1-.3 ; K. Wolfe $-$-J5; Foreman 4+12 ;
Tworol-7·13. , • ..., ~MNZ.
C. garage on · North Second Ave.,
POJU-111 N. D. lUI - Sctunidt U-4 : Klnt! &amp;Middleport. All teams are asked to
IH2; MWer 2--U ; Schaefer 5-1-lland Pierron&amp;+
20. TolaltZS.7.U.
have at least one representative
Score by qu.rten:
present.
League officers will be elellSouthern
18 6 17 16--62
ted
and
rules
Ifill be foimed .
Portsmouth
12 16 11 14-53

Danny Nee named
new OU cage coach
Meigs boosters
to sponsor
tournament

******************

**
*

Wage guidelines to be hiked
..
WAs!UNGTON (AP) -President
Carter is preparing to raise his administration's . voluntary wage
guidelines to allow pay increases of
up to 9~percent this year, but labor
leaders say their support for worker
wage restralnt won't last much
longer if inflation escalates further.
Government and labor sources
said Monday Carter has decided to
accept a union-backed proposal to
loosen the wage guidelines from last
year's 7 percent ceiling to a range of
7~to 9~percent - and even higher
for some workers who receive cost·
of-living raises.
The sources, who declined to be
named, said Carter will announce
the revised guidelines as part of a
major speech he is expected to
deliver within a week on his new inflation-fighting efforts, including a
renewed drive to balance the 1981
budget.
A Pay Advisory Conunittee of
represenatives from business, labor
and the public propOsed nearly two
months ago that Carter adopt the
higher guideline figures. But final
action by the president was delayed
because of an unsuceBI!ful behindthe-scenes struggle by some govern-

skilled marksmen exchanged bucket
after bucket, with Duffy showing
· why he was chosen Southeastern
Ohio's Player of the Year.
Duffy went on a torrid streak in
which he canned 7 straight points,
followed by a bucket by Dave "Big
Red" Foreman to end the quarter at
41-39. .
The fourth stanza started out as a
thriller with Bowman and Company
reeling off sill unanswered points,
tying the score at 41-41.
The outlook started to look gloomy
for the Tornadoes as Teaford picked
up his fourth personal foul with 7
minutes left to go in the game.
But then, all of a sudden, the
devastating Tornado winds got
stronger.
Johnny Davis, who played a
superb defensive game and an ex·
cellent floor game for the Tor·
nadoes, hit Teaford who swished a
long jwnper from the corner to take
the lead 43-41.

**
*

!

ment officials to tlgbten the CQIJlmlttee's proposed guidelines - a
position strongly opposed by la6or
leaders.
;
At a meeting of the pay cumnltfee
Monday, several business and latior
officials complained that the ildministration wu talting so tonrto
approve the guidelines that they
soon would become outdated ~Y
cbanging economic conditions. :
Carter's chief inflation advlaW,
Alfred E. Kahn, refused to tell the
conunittee whether the presld&amp;i
bad decided finally to accept Ole
panel~s guideline propot!ll]a, BlliJO!II"
ces have confinned.
"
Saying he did not want to preeu'ipt
Carter's own aMouncement, Kli&amp;n
promised a formal responae fr&amp;n
the president would come "wlthl4 a
matter of days, though I can not ~
you how many days."
•
Meanwhile, in the seven weeks
since the panel proposed the blgber
guidelines, inflation has
of accelerating fnm last year's 13.3
percent rate, and labor leaders warned that even a ~ percent wage
ceiling wW be unscceptallle If Inflation continues to surge.

!
!

!

!

i

CITY LIMITS
DRIVE THRU

3C

JUST IN TIME
FOR ASPRING PROJECT

Berry's World
F6REMAN SH()WS FORM - Big ·Dave Foreman, 6-4 senior center
for the Southern Tornadoes, enjoyed a fine night Tuesday in the Class A
Dlstrli!t game against Portsmouth Notre Dame. In addition to scoring 12
points! he led the Tm:nado rebounders with 11. Foreman was named
second team all Southeastern Ohio District Tuesday by the Associated

Press,•

GARDEN SEED,
ONION SETS,
AND

FERTILIZER

- ..
.--..""......
""
-·
....
_,

~ 1.

"Two-bits Ronald Rf'Bgan · doesn't have lut
week's Time magazine cover tram«J."

!.

******************

sbown.

·-·

!

A SHEET

AVAILABLE FOR

SPRING PLANTING
.

-Pickens Hardware
'

&lt;, l

W.VA.
,I

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
MATERIALS CO.
PH. 773·5554 .

�3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, March 12,1980

r-SQuthern dumps Titans, advance to finals

2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, March 12, 1980

~----------------~ ,M

The Daily Sentinel

ou~;:oucs
5 AilP,SCJrA , &gt;LA .

Opiniom and comments

_'Player of the Year" Duffy
paces team's 62-53 victory

K HI~ EVY

At-10 BUSH At.lD
JOI-U.J ANOERSO~
11-l
MASSACI-l05ET15 ...

wow

t-1\l,l,
WI-\AT
A

SU~l&gt;lUSE !

BY SCOTl' WOLFE
Cllll.J.JCOTHE - The Southern

••

~

Editorial opinion

Support for fuel

·

Washington todJJy

We support pending legislation which would bar Ohio's
electric utilities from automatically passing on to consumers. increases in the cost of fuel which is used to
generate electricity.
Ohio's eight electric companies reported a record $2
billion in such.charges under the fuel adjustment clause
during 1979.
The measure, which bars such automatic increases1
would instead require the Public Utilities Commission ot
Ohio to conduct hearings and adjust a utility's rates each
six months to reflect increases or decreases in fuel
acquisition and delivery costs.
We further support another key Senate amendment to
. the fuel adjustment bill which would prevent utilities
which own or control coal mines frotn claiming higher
costs for the!r own coal than for coal sold by similar independent mmes.

· ennedy
Voter attention must ch ange •••K
WASHINGTON (AP) - Slogging
futilely through Iowa last December, Sen. Edward M. Kennedy said
voter attention would have to swing
from international crises to pocket·
book issues by early spring for his
White House candidacy to have a
chance.
Spring begins next week, and
predictably, Kennedy and his aides
are claiming the massive public
shift they need is arriving right on
schedule, although the evidence is
scanty, at best.
No sooner had Kennedy racked up
his first campaign victory over
President Carter last week than he
and his advisers began claiming it
was more than just a landslide in
Massachusetts, his home state and
the nation 's most liberal.
" I don't think Massachusetts is a
whole lot different from the rest of
the country," the state's lieutenant

governor, Thomas P. O'Neill III,
told reporters several hours after
Kennedy's 65 percent to 29 percent
victory.
"People don't go out and show that
kind of dissatisfaction (with an in·
cumbent president) unless it is.
genuine," said O'Neill, Kennedy's
New England campaign coor
dinator.
He and other aides insisted that it
was the " end -of-the-month
payment" issue - not Kennedy's
status as a hometown favorite that overrode the problems that
were insurmountable in other states.
These ' 'problems" included Carter's
widespread support on international
problems in Iran and Afghanistan
and questions about Kennedy's per·
sonal character and his stands on
abortion and gun control.
Kennedy himself, in a sharply
worded attack on Carter's economic

policies the night of his victory, said
Massachusetts.
Kennedy is counting almost ex·
the outcome in Massachusetts shows
the American public "will nlit
elusively on his economic proposals
tolerate an inflation rate of 20 per- · to carry him to victory in the illinois
cent and Interest rates of 17 perprimary and in the March 25 New
cent.''
York contest. Both primaries are
Kennedy's aides also insist there
crucial.
Even If Kennedy is right, and the
is plenty of time for their candidate
to tum around what is now widely
pocketbook issues are taking hold, it
perceived as a floundering cam·
is not certain he can translate that
paign. Even after the illinois
into victory.
primary next Tuesday, with 179
In lliinois, for example, Kennedy
delegats at stake, Democrats will
successfully wooed Chicago 'Mayor
have selected only 29 percent of their
Jane Byrne away from the president
last year, winning her endorsement
delegates to next swnmer's national
convention.
in what was viewed as a major coup.
Despite their claims, however,
But yesterday's coup has turned
neither Kennedy nor his aides have
into today' s albatross, with the
been able to explain how the
mayor now an unpopular figure in
economic issues that swept him to
her home city. Kennedy's national
his big Massachusetts victory failed
campaign has dispatched top-level
to produce in Vennont. Carter won
political aides to Chicago to bolster
that New England state by an even
their sagging effort there.
bigger margin than Kennedy won in

Ohio perspective

648 board getting Washington
increased attention
By Clarence
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) - Ohio's
"648 boards" are gettihg an increasing amount of attention in the
!13th Ohio General Assembly.
What's a 648 board?
It's the short name used around
U1c state for county and multicounty boards of mental health and
mental retardation. There are 53 of
them in all.
The boards were provided for by
the II Jth General Assembly for the
purpose of planning and overseeing
local mental health and mental
retardation programs. The bill that
created the boards was House Bill
No. 648 - thus, the nickname.
Recently, the Franklin County 648
Board and some others received
publicity revealing that certain
financia l records had been kept
from public scrutiny.
In addition, reports of high
sa laries being paid employees,
luxury automobile purchases, and
other activities raised questions in
the l.Algislature.
House Speaker Vernal G.. Riffe
Jr., D-New Boston, ordered a finance committee probe of the 53 agencies.
Finance Chairman Myrl H.
Shoemaker, D-Bourneville, sent
questionnaires to the boards calling
for information about fi scal
mana gement, services provided,
management salaries, and a wide
range of other subjects.
In all, there were 32 questions on
the list, and Shoenulker requested
that they be answered and returned
no later than this week.
He plans to start hearings March
18.

Shoemaker said he took the
questionnaire approach because his
committee needs to know what the
current practices are before it can
detennine how the boards should be
operating.
As a result of the publicity about
the Franklin County board, Rep.
Michael Stinziano, D-Columbus, introduced a bill requiring 648 boards
to make full financial disclosure. It
is being studied in Shoemaker's
committee.
Dr. Timothy Moritz, director of
the state Department of Mental
Health and Mental Retardation, endorsed Stinziano's bill but called for
expanding it to cover every agency
which handles public funds.
At the same time, Sen. John K.
Mahoney, 0-Springfield, won Senate
approval March 3 of a bill restru!lting the management of 648 boards
and relieving them of responsibility
for mental retardation.
His comprehensive bill, now pending in the House, grew out ·of
problems reported by the boards
themselves, however.
Among other things, Mahoney's
bill places programs for the mentally retarded into the county boards
of mental retardation.
A3 oppose4 to the planning duties
of the 648 boards, they were set up to
operate the local retardabon
programs, similar to the way boards.
of education operate schools,
Mahoney said.
However, he said these agencies
currently have some functions that
overlap with those of the 648 boards,
a situation ·he hopes to correct.

Today in history.
Today is Wednesday, March 12,
the 72nd day of 1980. There are 294
days left in the year.
Today's highlight in history:
In 1938, Adolf Hitler's Geonany in·
vaded Austria.

• •

On this date :
In 1799, Austria declared war on
France.
In 1912, at Jefferson Barracks,
Mo., Army Capt. Albert Berry made
th~ fir,t parachute jwnp from an
airpillne.

Report

Miller

r-----·--------------------1.
I Jka.t.~
I
II ••• ?Jtt.
:~:
II
Dear Editor :
This letter is in answer to Mrs. Pat
Johnson's letter that appeared in
Sunday, March 2, paper concemlng
justice being done for the alleged
stealing of her daughter's tape deck.
Well, Mrs. Johnson, you forgot to
state all the facts.
I'm also sure your daughter must
have insurance on her car, so that

shouldn't be too much of a problem.
I don't think anyone should throw
stones. No one is perfect n I'm sure
you should know, Mrs. Johnson. Why
not leave justice in the bands ol the
law, and when stating facts, be sure
you state all the facts. Not just ones
that suit your needs. - Bill McKlnney, Condor Street, Pomeroy, Oblo
45769.

"Tornadoes eliminated the Portsmouth Notre Dame Titans, 62-53,
~"'Tuesday night in the District Tour. nament at Chillicothe High School.
~ In doing so, Southern earned a berth·
in the District finals Thursday ngiht
at 7 p.m. at the same location.
,., The · powerful Purple Tornadoes
·.:put together another well-balanced
··scoring attack, led by " southpaw"
Jack Duffy, who earlier was named
' '· Class A Player of the Year.
His Tornado teammates took tur- ns in the limelight, putting it alltogether for a team victory.
Southern, 21·1, will play Lucasville
Valley who downed Green, 62-64
Monday night.
The Tornadoes not only put it
together on the court, but they did so
in the stands as Southern rooters
packing the gym, cheered their
team to victory.
The excitement started to build 30
minutes before the game, then came
to a climax for the game's opening
tipoff.
The tip was taken by the highjwnping TitallB who raced down the
court, but C9uldn 't find the basket.
The Tornadoes then took their turn
at breaking the scoring ice, but
failed, due to the tense situation.
With seven minutes showing on
the clock, Titan Rob Pierron slipped
through Southern's 1-3-1 zone to
score a Jay-up In front of a roaring
crowd.
Then the Southern scoring parade
began with Dale Teaford leading the
, way, tying the score at 2-2.
After Sf\\eral missed Titan shots,
•
; Dave " j!jg Red" Foreman swished a
i short Jwnlll!r inside the lane
1 followed·b): a long jumper by Kent
' Wolfe 'm-'ii tlie loJl;of the key. The
score
&amp;-2 wjth ·~:40 showing on
the clocK:"-"~.- ··~'FJ·~ ... ""
Rob Pi~P.n pullf!l his club hack
.•to within 'tw6 'at' lA, but from that
'•utime orl 1th~''tomadol!s racked up
~·.:seven uni(IIS'W'I!teil jldints to increase ·
·c.~ 'their leadto'riifie:'
·
••• After 'a Notre Dame time out with
-·2:22 left in 'the
the Titan of·
...'tense revived, ·but 'Southern led as
~" the .canto e\'fd~if'' 111'12! In that
'" '

wii

eantd

opening round 6-4 All District player
"Big Red" Foreman paced the Tornadoes with a six-point effort.
A3 in the previous period, Notre
Dame again controlled the tip and
quickly chipped away at the Tornado lead. A3 the high-scoring Tom
Bowman sank his first of four second
period Jay-ups the Tornadoes got
caught in a precarious cold front
tjlat allowed them to score only six
points during the whole quarter
stretch.
Meanwhile Bownian's heroics
looked very convincing and after
several fast breakl! he led his team
to a 28-24 halftime iead by scoring
eight of his game high 20 markers.
The mighty Southern quintet
couldn't work the ball inside like
they wanted and were forced to
shoot from the outside where the
cold front was stationed, but still
they weren't about to give up.
· Second Half
Coach Carl Wolfe's halftime pep
talk, along with the Southern crowd
proved to be effective as the "Big
Purple Machine" rolled into the
second half in high gear. All week
long "Southern Soothsayers" were
forecasting a Tornado to hit Por·
tamouth, and after hovering In the
air for an entire half the . stormy
March winds came and touched
down in the third period to blow the
Titans away,
Dale "Star" Teaford lived up to
his name by producing a sparkling
13-point offensive perfonnance as
well as getting things underway the
second half by out-jwnping another
star by the.name of Tom Bowman.
Jack Duffy then climbed on the offensive Merry-go-round and quickly
pulled Southern within two at 28-26.
After Bill King added to the Titan
score, Teaford picked up his third
foul. Southern fell into a full court
press in hopes of getting another
scoring opportunity and it came
when sophomore Kent Wolfe launched and swished three straight
jwnpers under pressure to give the
Tornadoes a 32-30 lead which the
rampaging Tornadoes never gave
up.
Then the curtain opened for the
Duffy and Bowman show. The two

Commentary

"The executive power shall be centrate on improving his working
vested in a President of the United relationship with Congress and the
States of America. He shall hold hiB bureaucracy. He could devote more
office during the term fl four time and greater resources to
years." Article II, Section I of the pressing non-political issues. In adConstitution
dition, better relationships with the
An ongoing controversy continues media would surface and comin the 96th Congress over a proposed munication in general would benefit.
Constitutional amendment to limit Most importantly, the President
the length of Presidential tenns. The would have the opportunity to obsubject is timely and the issues jectively analyze federal programs
surrounding It are complex,
and could act in a non-politically
Originally the Constitution set no · motivated environment. Tile
limits on the number of four-year President 's decision making
terms a President could serva. flexibility would be greatly imhanHowever, the Twenty-second Amen- ced.
.
dment to the Constitution ratified on
Opponents of the six-year term
March 1, 1951, contains this limitation contend that the
American people are the best judges
limitation:
"No ilerson shall be elected to the of whether or not a person is fit for
office of the President more than the Presidency. They contend that
twice, and no person who has held six years is too long for a President
the office ·of President, or acted as to serve without meuurable acPresident, for more than two years countabillty to the ,people. The
of a term to which some other person public should be allowed to pass
was elected President shall be elec- ballot box judgment on the
ted to the office of President mare Pre$1dent and remove him from ofthan once."
· flee or return him for a second term.
The two-term limitation remains Furthermore, opponents argue that
in effect ~Y. midst an.advocacy of there is no guarantee that the
imposing a single Presidential term relationship with any particular inofsix years.
.teres! group or segment of our
A single six-year term has both society would improve because the
positive and negative aspects, The President is limited to one term.
key quest111n invlves Presidential
The question ·remains whether
flexibility versus PresldenUal acPresidential accliuntabllity . or
countabllity.
Presidential flexibility is most irnProponents of an absolute temi portant.
There-llfC several bills pending in
limitation for Presidents argue that
relationships between the Presldeftt the.House and Senate relating to one
and IJ8rtiCular groups will [¥! bettet
fashion or anoiher to the limitation
served by a single slx·yl!ar lerm. Six
or extenaton .of Presidential tel'lll!l ol
):'ears is con.sidered ·adequate time .offlce:'Ail are under COMideratlon,at .. ·
for a President to achieve II!·.· · · the Committee level, With It unlikely ·
legislative, domestic, and ' inthat any legislation· ·Will be for·
tcrnational goals. During this time, ·~ng in the 96th COngress to
a President· would be free from
dnistieally change the present ierm
re~ie ct !on prP~sures and could ··nn·
status.

11/RNING POINT

Then if there was ever a crucial
turning point in the game it came
Dame. Duffy dwnped in 18 points to lead the Tornadoes
DEADLY SOUTIIPAW - Jack Duffy, 6-0 senior,
with five minutes still left to play
to a 62-51 victory in the Class A District at Chillicothe.
named just Tuesday morning as " Player of the Year"
and Southern up by two.
Duffy
is guqrded by the Titans' Joe Miller (24).
in
Southeastern
Ohio
by
the
Associated
Press
scores
The heroics were provided by
one of his clutch baskets against Portsmouth Notre
Jonathan Rees, who turned a
twisting drive into a three-point play
that seemed to break the Titans'
backs. The enthusiasttc Rees played
a flawless floor game and was the
man who passed the bali to Jlnuny
O'Brien for the miracle shot that
won the District Championship
exactly one year ago.
Duffy, Foreman, Wolfe, and
Teaford then picked up the victory
knife and spread the icing on the
cake as they sank two important foul
By GEORGE STRODE
Jett2r of intent one month from now.
rrummum of five scholarships
shots apiece.
AP Sports Writer
"The rule of thwnb for building a
available, but concedes the late anDuffy led the winners with 18 poin·
- COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) - Danny
program is three years," said
nouncement may hinder the Bo'r
ts, Kent Wolfe came through with an
Nee and his new boss, Harold
McElhane)'. " But it may take Danny
cats' efforts for 1900 recruits.
important 15, "Big Red" Foreman
McElhaney, concede the Ohio
longer
because of his late start this
Athletes can sign a binding national
netted 12, and high-jumping Dale
University basketball coach's first
season.''
Teaford poured in 13 points in the
task .will be seiling.
Nee began searching for two
clutch. Johnny Davis the defensive
"We have a tremendous selling
assistant coaches t008y, including
franchise, sank one and Jonathan
job to do -:- with the high school
interviews with current Ohio aides
Rees added three.
recruits, the students and the alumMike Backus and Larry Epperly.
Bowman led N. D. with a gameni. We felt Danny was the guy to do
McElhaney says the decision to
high 20, Bill King sank 12, and Rob
it," said McElhaney, the school's
select Nee over Florida Southern
Pierron had 11. The Titans shot !!.HO
athletic director who introduced Nee
Coach Hal Wissel and Jene Davis, an
from the field for 38 percent and 7•
at news conferences Tuesday.
assistant at Indiana, was a very dif.
for-15 from the charity stripe for 56
"I don't think I will have any
ficult one.
percent. Sclunidt led his team with
trouble. If you're sincere and you
There will be a double elimination,
six assists and King had four. The
sell yourself and your program, I
men's independent basketball tourteam ha:d a total of 13 assists.
think high school coaches will iden- nament held at Meigs High School
The Titans claimed the battle of
tify with you," said the 34-year-old
March 17·23.
the boards 44-27. Bowman hit the · Notre Dame assistant coach.
The event is sponsored by the
boards for 19 carOIIlB while Pierron
The need for salesmanship is ob"Meigs Athletic Boosters." The enhauled down 10: Southern's reboun·
vious. The Bobcats finished last in
DRAFT
LADIES
try fee will be $50 per team.
ding ace Foreman came through in
the Mid-American Conference last
No player with more than one year
NilE
NITE
the clutch to grab 11 caroms while
season with a 5-11 record and won
of college basketball experience or
Teaford had six.
TUESDAYS THURSDAYS
only 8 of 26 overall games under
player who participated in college
lt
9P.M. to
:
The winners shot 111-36 from the
Dale Bandy, who resigned.
basketball this past season will be
lt9 P .M. tol A.M.
12Midnight llfield for a hot 50 percent and canned
' However, J::{ee is promising no imeligible to play unless that player is
7 for 35 from the foul line for 50 permediate miracles in his first assignnow 30 years of age or older.
cent. One key in the outcome of the
ment as a head coach at the major
For further information call Gene
game was that Duffy hit eight for 12
college level.
Wise, m-622~ or Jerry Davenport,
from the :oulline and Wolfe hit 5-7
"I have a vote of confidence from
lt748 N. 2nd St.
Middleport, 0 . ~
992-7323.
doring the later stages of the game.
the administration to give me time.
Teaford also hit seven important
We're not goiljg to over commit ourfree throws under pressure.
selves. You luiye to find the players
Southern conunitted 12 turnovers,
that suit your program," said Nee,
//f./:·~
claimed nine steals, and had eight
once"the captain of AI McGuire's
r; .
assists as a team.
freshman team at Marquette.
Southern will play this Thursday
McElhaney said Nee will have a
night at 7 p.m. at Chillicothe High
School against Lucasville Valley in
the District Finals. The w!Jmer will
SOFl'BALL MEETING
advance to the Regional Tourney
A
meeting
will be held for the fornext Thursday at Ohio University in
mation of the new M-G-M (men's
Athens. Tickets for this Thursday's
slow-pitch) softball league Sunday,
game are on sale at the high school.
March 16, at 1 p.m.
SOV1IIERN (1%1 - Davis 0-1·1: Duffy 5-8-Ill ;
The meeting will be held at the R.
Rees 1·1-.3 ; K. Wolfe $-$-J5; Foreman 4+12 ;
Tworol-7·13. , • ..., ~MNZ.
C. garage on · North Second Ave.,
POJU-111 N. D. lUI - Sctunidt U-4 : Klnt! &amp;Middleport. All teams are asked to
IH2; MWer 2--U ; Schaefer 5-1-lland Pierron&amp;+
20. TolaltZS.7.U.
have at least one representative
Score by qu.rten:
present.
League officers will be elellSouthern
18 6 17 16--62
ted
and
rules
Ifill be foimed .
Portsmouth
12 16 11 14-53

Danny Nee named
new OU cage coach
Meigs boosters
to sponsor
tournament

******************

**
*

Wage guidelines to be hiked
..
WAs!UNGTON (AP) -President
Carter is preparing to raise his administration's . voluntary wage
guidelines to allow pay increases of
up to 9~percent this year, but labor
leaders say their support for worker
wage restralnt won't last much
longer if inflation escalates further.
Government and labor sources
said Monday Carter has decided to
accept a union-backed proposal to
loosen the wage guidelines from last
year's 7 percent ceiling to a range of
7~to 9~percent - and even higher
for some workers who receive cost·
of-living raises.
The sources, who declined to be
named, said Carter will announce
the revised guidelines as part of a
major speech he is expected to
deliver within a week on his new inflation-fighting efforts, including a
renewed drive to balance the 1981
budget.
A Pay Advisory Conunittee of
represenatives from business, labor
and the public propOsed nearly two
months ago that Carter adopt the
higher guideline figures. But final
action by the president was delayed
because of an unsuceBI!ful behindthe-scenes struggle by some govern-

skilled marksmen exchanged bucket
after bucket, with Duffy showing
· why he was chosen Southeastern
Ohio's Player of the Year.
Duffy went on a torrid streak in
which he canned 7 straight points,
followed by a bucket by Dave "Big
Red" Foreman to end the quarter at
41-39. .
The fourth stanza started out as a
thriller with Bowman and Company
reeling off sill unanswered points,
tying the score at 41-41.
The outlook started to look gloomy
for the Tornadoes as Teaford picked
up his fourth personal foul with 7
minutes left to go in the game.
But then, all of a sudden, the
devastating Tornado winds got
stronger.
Johnny Davis, who played a
superb defensive game and an ex·
cellent floor game for the Tor·
nadoes, hit Teaford who swished a
long jwnper from the corner to take
the lead 43-41.

**
*

!

ment officials to tlgbten the CQIJlmlttee's proposed guidelines - a
position strongly opposed by la6or
leaders.
;
At a meeting of the pay cumnltfee
Monday, several business and latior
officials complained that the ildministration wu talting so tonrto
approve the guidelines that they
soon would become outdated ~Y
cbanging economic conditions. :
Carter's chief inflation advlaW,
Alfred E. Kahn, refused to tell the
conunittee whether the presld&amp;i
bad decided finally to accept Ole
panel~s guideline propot!ll]a, BlliJO!II"
ces have confinned.
"
Saying he did not want to preeu'ipt
Carter's own aMouncement, Kli&amp;n
promised a formal responae fr&amp;n
the president would come "wlthl4 a
matter of days, though I can not ~
you how many days."
•
Meanwhile, in the seven weeks
since the panel proposed the blgber
guidelines, inflation has
of accelerating fnm last year's 13.3
percent rate, and labor leaders warned that even a ~ percent wage
ceiling wW be unscceptallle If Inflation continues to surge.

!
!

!

!

i

CITY LIMITS
DRIVE THRU

3C

JUST IN TIME
FOR ASPRING PROJECT

Berry's World
F6REMAN SH()WS FORM - Big ·Dave Foreman, 6-4 senior center
for the Southern Tornadoes, enjoyed a fine night Tuesday in the Class A
Dlstrli!t game against Portsmouth Notre Dame. In addition to scoring 12
points! he led the Tm:nado rebounders with 11. Foreman was named
second team all Southeastern Ohio District Tuesday by the Associated

Press,•

GARDEN SEED,
ONION SETS,
AND

FERTILIZER

- ..
.--..""......
""
-·
....
_,

~ 1.

"Two-bits Ronald Rf'Bgan · doesn't have lut
week's Time magazine cover tram«J."

!.

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�-·-

Syracuse captures fifth and sixth grade champion-s hips

4-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, March 12, 1980

-

STIFFI.IR'S CLEAN SWEEP

VALUES TO '1.79
ASST. COLORS

VALUES TO '1.59 YARD

KNIT FABRICS
MFG.
CLOSE .
OUTS I

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HANGING P

. 5o~ YARD

$1_00

~

POM.EROY STORE ONLY
FIFTH GRADE CHAMPS - Members of the
Syracuse fifth gradse squad were: Front, 1-r, Chris
Baer, Barry McCoy, Jerry Aleshire, Mike Kloes. Back

-David Dunn, T. J. Robanna, J. L. Jeffers, Scott McPhail, Coach Barry McCoy.

with 15, J . L. Jeffers six, T. J.
Robanna four, and Chris Baer two.
Brian Warden led Racine with eight,
Matt Jewell four, Chris Diddle one,
and Brial Dethl poured in five.
In the fifth grade championship
game Coach Barry McCoy's
youngsters took home the victory af·
ter coming on strong the second half.
Things started out slow with both

RACINE - In the Southern Local
Grade School Championship tour·
nament Syracuse grade school came
home the winner in both the fifth and
sixth grade. The two Syracuse
teams invaded Southern Junior High
School and took home two weU
deserved championship victories.
In the fifth grade semi-final game
Syracuse downed Racine 27-18. The
winners were led by Barry McCoy

teams playing even the first half.
At the start of the second half Portland took the lead and added to it
the final period to lead by four with
two minutes to go.
Portland then lost D. Arnbergy to
fouls and Syracuse came back with
the aid of three Barry McCoy steals
to win by four, 111-14.
McCoy led the winners with nine,

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YOUR SHOPPING EARLY AND SAVEll FINAL CLEARANCE PRICES I STIFFLER'S CLEAN SWEEP SALE DA YSII
SIXTH GRADE CHAMPS - Players for the
Syracuse sixth grade team were: Front, 1-r - Brian
Freeman, Eric Thoren, Kelly Grueser, Sean Grueser.
Robanna five, Deem two and Baer
two. Portland scorers were Ambergey with 10 and K. Turley with
four.
In the sixth grade semi-final game
Syracuse rolled to victory behind an
18 point perfonnance by Todd
Adams, over the Racine Royals, 3~
37. SGS was led by Adams' 18, Mike
Chancey's ten, Kelly Grueser's
seven and J. Frank's three. Jay
.

Back_ - Todd Adams, Mike Chancey, David Duffy,
Jackie Justice, Jeff Frank. Absent, Randy Roush.
Coach Jim Adams.

Bostick had an outstanding 17 point
perfonnance for Racine while U&gt;ri
Adams added six, and Clark two.
In the championship game Coach
Jim Adams' squad jumped out to an
early lead and led all the way
despite some sharpshooting by Scott
Wickline. SGS downed the Letart
Blackha"'ks by a score of 32-17 led
by Mike Chancey's If points. Todd
Adams added six, J . Frank four, K.
Grueser four, David Duffy two, and
Sean Grueser two. Syracuse's well
balancedscoringattackwasjusttoo
in
eight, Heath Hill netted four, R.
AUen two, and M. Jarrell two.

Syracuse also captured the Meigs
Jaycees sixth grade tourney while
Letart finished third in that tourney.

apart Arizona State 1$-75. "AU of our times and I haven't seen a better
guys are following their shots and
team this season. Playing them is
putting the ball hack in.''
like playing a pro team, they're so
"We're attacking the boards,
physical. They're bigger than us at
which I'm not sure we were doing a every position, they're well coached,
few weeks ago," Jim Ellinghausen, and I'm a little frightened."
a reserve forward for OSU, said,
If the Brutus win the tournament
looking back to a spell in which the
it'll be the surprise of the year- and
Buckeyes lost three straigt games
that in itself must sound strange to
and four of five against other teams
fans who remember when the NCAA
from the Big Ten.
·
tournament was known only half"Lately we've been getting a lot jokingly as the UCLA Invitational.
more second shots, and that will win
The Bruins, who won 10 chamyou a lot of games. I think we're con- pionships in 13 years, entered this
centrating on blocking out more. year's tournament unranked - but
We've stopped being hesitant under they put to rest the suggestion they
the basket," said Ellinghausen.
didn't deserve to be in the 411-team
Larry Brown, UCLA's coach, is field by shocking top-ranked DePaul
concerned about Williams' presence · 77·71 in last Sunday's second-round
under the boards for OSU, par- game.
ticularly if the officiating is loose.
UCLA's victory wasn't the only
"If they let it go, it'll be tough on
upset of this tournament. Equally
us because Ohio State plays power shocking was Lamar's 81-77 triumph
offense and loves to get the ball in· over fifth-ranked Oregon State. It
side to Williams," Brown said. " If was, Lamar Coach Billy Tubbs said,
we win, it'll have to be with defense "the best we played all year," and
and quickness.
he said the Cardinals would have to
"I've seen Ohio State play a few play at least as well to beat Cleinson
in a meeting of unranked squads.

By The Associated Press
Rebounding - from a midseason
slwnp and on the offensive boardsis what has gotten Ohio State this
far. And· it's what the loth-ranked
Buckeyes are hoping to use Thur·
sday night to beat UCLA in the third
round of the NCAA basketball tOurnament.
Clemson, 2NI, plays Lamar, 22·10
before UCLA, 1~9 and Ohio State,
21-7, go at it in the West Regionals.
Also on Thursday night it's Purdue,
~9. vs. Indian&amp;, 21-7, and Duke, ~
8, vs. Kentucky, ~.in the Mideast
Regionals.
In Friday night's regionals it's
Iowa, 21-8, vs. Syracuse, 26-3, and
Maryland, 2~. vs. Georgetown, 25-5
in the East and Louisville, 29-3, vs.
Texas A&amp;M26-7, and Missouri, 25-5,
vs. Louisiana State, 2$-5 in the Midwest.
"We're getting more offensive
rebounds now ," says Herb Williams,
Ohio State's 6-foot-10 center who
scored 25 points and grabbed nine
rebounds to help the Buckeyes rip

At Columbua CoU.eum
Buckeye Val. 68, Col. Hartley i2
....,.. OJl. Centennial 57, Col. Watterson fll
At Elyrk Hlah Sebool
Oberlin 79, Olnuted Falls 68
At Solem HIP School
Youngs. Hayen 55, W. Branch Sl
CampbeU-memoriaiM, Uniontown lake 62
Clan A Toumameatl
At Culoa Fleldltouse
Berlin W. Reserve 84, Hawken 62
Mogadore ~ .E . Canton 47
At Chillicotlte HJ&amp;b Scbool
Racine Southem62, Notre Dame 52

Boy• Butelball
By The A11oda&amp;ed Pm1
Tumilly's Rn:ultl
Cla11 AAA Tovaameatl

AI Baldwio-WaU.ceCGUqe
Clevt. Sl. Ignatius 71, CJeve. Marshall62
AtCoplef Hlgb!kbool
Akron Cen-Hower r;t;, Akron Kenmore 39
At EueUd HJgb Stbool

Cleve. St. Joseph 67, Mayfield 54
At Lorain Klog
Htgh Scbool
Loraln King fl2, Lorain 35

ObloH. S.
Boy• Balketball
By Tbt Alaoclated Preu
DilbidTovu.meul Palrlac•
W..........y
CluJA.U

AtLonlnKlq
HlabStbool
Brwl.'lwick 20-2 vs. Mid view 13-10, ap.m.
At Maple Htlgbtl
Ill&amp;~ Scbool
Breckll:ville 19-2 vs. Cleveland Heights 12-10,
7:30p.m.
AI EacUd ~ Sebool
Mentor Lake Cathollc 1&amp;-4 vs. Ashtabula

.U 8\eabeavOie Arepa

AtStniUlen IUgbSc!Hol

Warren W. Reserve81, Struthers 1)8

Indian VaUey S. 51, Shenandooh t4

Mingo63, Strubucg53

ClaN AA ToumlmeaLI

ranked Indiana against No. 20 Purdue comes into play in the Mideast.
"We played twice last year and
got to go to New York and play them
again in the National Invitation
Tournament," said Purdue Coach
Lee Rose, "and Io·and behold we end ·
up against them this year in the
NCAA.
"Both teams play with commitment and emotion, yet it comes
down to which team executes best.
As far as the rivalry, it's just
amazing. This is one of the most
unique rivalries in athletics."

At Baldwt...Wallltt CoBece
Parma 19-3 vs. Parma Padil.a 1._.., 8 p.m.
At Cutoll ADCIJtortam
CantonSouth2o-2vs. Massillon Perry 18-4,7:00
p.m.
At Slnltben lll(hSebool
Ymmgstown Unullne 11·11 vs. Austintown Fit~
ch 21).2, 8 p.m.
At Copley lll(h Sdlool
Barbe- !H YO. Akron Buchtel 1H, 7:30

Pro standings
NaUoul Hod.ey League

Thandly'aGam.es

Detroit 11t Boston

AtAGlaace

By 1be AIIOCillted Prst:
CampbeU Collfereate
Patrld Ofvllioa
W.I.T. Pio. GF
:a~Phila
46 7 15 ·~ 283
NY Rangers
32 26 9 7! 256
NY l.lllarxiers
32 38 9 73 232
Atlanta
:XI 25 11 . 71 2:Hl
Washingt.on
22 35 10 54 2111

ChJcago
St. Louis

Vancouver at Hartford
lm Anseles at Atlanta
GA
200

237
221
214
248

Smythe Dlvillou
30 21 II 76 1113 196
28 za 11 &amp;7 211 m

Vancouver

22 l3 13

Edmonton

:!1 37 12 52 2411 2.8.5
17 3t 11 45 204 256
15 43 10 4(1 178 275

Colorado

WIMlpea

~7

2111 244

Wales CODfe~
A.daml Dlvbloo

Buffalo
.Bosloo
Mlnneooln

41 17 10
39 18 10
JJ 23 "
)&lt;) 32 5
13 :w 9

Toroolo
Quebec

92
88
72
8l
55

261
258
261
259
1119

177
195
216
272
237

NorrtJ DI..Uloo

x·Monlreal
Lol Angel..
' Plttaburf)l
Hartlonl

40 20 8 88
" 23 10 62
" 32 12 110
13 29 1s 59
!&lt; 32 10 M

Detroit

z -Qincbed'dMsion UUe
. 'heM.y'1 Gll~DM

NY lalandm 4, Colorado!
PIIJiodolpllla I, Plttsbtli'gh 3

,_,.,c.m..

•

~do at NY Jlant!ers
BadDnatW~

1M 21111
258 283
211 256
249
228 232

m

N•tioaaJ Bullett.u ANoclaUoa
AtAGiuee
By The Auoclated p,..,.,
l!»stenaCoDfereaee

At Bowttac Grt!ell
·
&amp;•te Uatvenlly
Findlay 21-1 va. MaMileld Madlooo !J.I, 1:30
p.m.

Atlaotlc Division

12 .425 23\;

At Cutft ll'leklboue
Orrville 18-4 vs. Canton C&amp;tholic 12-10, 7 p.m.
Navarre Fairless 18-4 vs. Cl'eston Norwayne
18-l,8,30p.m.
·
A.t t..blaud Celle~:e'
Cbagrin Falls 15-6 va. Cleveland CathoUc tU,
7:30 p.m.
At Wam:m. WttCtna Raen~

·

28 .611
37 .479 91•
IQ .ill 12

IIJ&amp;hlldlool
Cortland Laltevtew 13-fl n . Warren Kennedy
21-0, 7p.m.
Brookli&lt;ld 12-10 YO. Wa""" Champion 11-11,

5.1 17 .757

Phlladelphln
New York

Washin8too
New Jersey
AllanIa
Houstoo
lndlana
Cleveland
Detroit

52 18 .757 I
36 36 .500 18
33 37 .471 20
31
Cet.tral Dtvt.toa
44
33
32

30 43 .411 141,1,

16 55 .225 271&gt;

WetleMI Coale~
MJdwett Dlvbloo
Kan.suClty
MUwaui:ee

13 30 .!189

Denver
Chicago

27 II .311 151&gt;

Ulab

Los Anaeles
ScatUe
Photnh
San Diego
Golden Slate

II 31
25 47
t2 :11
PacUl&lt; Dlvilloa
$1 21
50 22
47 24
33 38
JJ 40
2'..! 51
'nleldly'a Gamet

llouotonalllooton

Hu1fot'd II Ootrok
·Lqa~lliat Piltoburgh
a,~ at
-·tQuobec

w.,hin8too at Phlladolpllln
New Jersey allletrolt
Seattle at MUwaukee
Phoenix at Golden $tate
Portland at lM Angelea

Buffalo at Wlr.nlpeg

'
Tbunday'•q me
Indlanfl :~t :'\t WY11rk
Denver il l S.V.ulJit&gt;Oo

T"""""

=:!.J!!'.:=o

Cl.ASII.U

W.l. Pet. GB

Boston

Portland

l

p.m.

lHAT SPECIAL
OUlFIT FOR EASTER
TWO'S

.wt

II&gt;

.M7 111&gt;
.301 21
.708
.194
.6fi2

l
3~

.416 17 1 '1

.462 18'l
,3(1) 29~,

8:30 p.m .
At CohuabiUCoU.eam
CirclevtUe Logan Elm J&amp;-6 VI. Hebron
Lakewood 11-4,7 p.m.
Columb.., St. CharleaiH vs. Spol1a llishland
2G-2,11:30p.m.

..,......,...Hl&amp;h_

Bellville Clear Forlt 16-6 vs. BeUevue 18-2, 7:30
p.m.
At Toledo Wille
IIJ&amp;h8cloool
PerrYSburg 21.0 VI, FOI&amp;Orla lz.t, 7: 3Cl p.m.
At QIIIO No-.. UDivenll)'
Otlawo~landorl 15-7 ·vs. llaYiland Wayne
Trace19-3, 7:30p.m.
·
At El)'ril Hlp ~"·tlool
Oberlin Firelands 2U va. Elyria CathOlic 1~.
7:30p.m. •
AtSteubealilleAr··•
W.U.vtlle 11&lt;1VI. Mlllon!Jur8 W..t Holin" jS.
!, 6p.m.
Martina Ferry 15-41 VI. Zanelvtlle .Miynlllll !IS,9p.m.
, ..

~

CS.•A
At Alltlud Hlah Sdldol
Tiffin Calwrt 18-5 vs. A!lhland Cnatvtew Hl3

, :;xJ p.rn

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You thought the Convertible was gone- but ·
it's back in a uniquely styled ring- one ,
· side high fashion, one side casual

At CbJIIJcotb•Hlgh 8cliool
Frankfort Adena 16-6vs. Peebles 22-1,7 p.m.
WiMer to Athena Regional
AtlJmaSealor
HighStloool
.
St. Henry 21~1 vs. Ada 19--3, 7:30p.m.
AtNapoleoaHJpSehool
Pioneer NorU! ctntra ll7-5 vs. Defiance Tinora
:D-2, 7:30p.m.
AI Ftadlay Hl&amp;h Sebool
V8Jl Buren 19--2 vs. Elmore Woodmore lS.lO
7:3(1p.m.
'
At EUda Hlr• School
Rockford Parkway 18-6 vs. Kalida 21-1, 7:30
p.m.

.

SWEATERS
OFF
~2 REGULAR
PRICE

SPECIAL GROUP

BASEBALLSIGN·UP SET
Young people wishing to participate in the Pomeroy Youth
League sununer baseball program
are to sign up Saturday from 10 a.m.
to 2 p.m. on the second floor of
Pomeroy Village haU.
A $6 registrstion fee must be paid
at the time of sign up. The league
sponsors programs for pony league,
13-15; little league, HH2; pee wee, 89; tee ball, f&gt;-7, and girls softball, II-

Edgewood~2,8p. m .

WARM WINTER

TO 99'

~~ ~;;;~'";;;;:;c~~l pairings

Boys tournament scores
ObJo HIP SclJool

'

CLOSE.OUT MEN'S

JEANS

r-----------

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Business Adml!lls'lr'ation
Executiye Secr.elary
Secrtl•ry ·

Jr.

Accounting' · ·
Gt.n er •I Qffict

STOCK

I
I
I

UP

17~

VAWES TO '8.99
CANVAS-MACRAME
LADIES

REG. 35' VALUE
% INCH WIDTH
WHITE

ELASTIC

.

SAVE BIG ' NOW '

SCRAMBLE,
. ·.
.
TABLE ·

·---

I---·.
· -== ,..,.

·' ··=
......

'

GYM OXFO ._...

VALUES TO 59'
CLEAN UP .LOT

VALUES TO 11.99
ONE LARGE TABLE

PIECE GOOD

ASST. DOUAR
ITEMS
YOUR
$100

QUILT BAITS

.

$355

REG. 1t29 -VALUE
COAfS.CLARKS
KNITTING

SAVE
LARGE TABLE
BETTER PIECE

'YARN

GOOD REMNANTS
'

"

·. . .1:::;

VALUES TO 14.99
MEN'S &amp;BOYS

19~YARD !~ $20~R.
REMNANTS

I
I ----

CLEAN SWEEP

EACH ·

MEN'S'.BEJTER
SPORT SHI~TS

, 5oo·

CHOICE ·

REG; 15.00 VALUE
'
81196 SIZE
100% POLYESTER.

PRICED AS
· MARKED

$

ONE LOT
LADIES BrnER

DRESSES

1

,....

·r"'-

.,;.

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.,.

11.

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I
•

•

�-·-

Syracuse captures fifth and sixth grade champion-s hips

4-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, March 12, 1980

-

STIFFI.IR'S CLEAN SWEEP

VALUES TO '1.79
ASST. COLORS

VALUES TO '1.59 YARD

KNIT FABRICS
MFG.
CLOSE .
OUTS I

.

HANGING P

. 5o~ YARD

$1_00

~

POM.EROY STORE ONLY
FIFTH GRADE CHAMPS - Members of the
Syracuse fifth gradse squad were: Front, 1-r, Chris
Baer, Barry McCoy, Jerry Aleshire, Mike Kloes. Back

-David Dunn, T. J. Robanna, J. L. Jeffers, Scott McPhail, Coach Barry McCoy.

with 15, J . L. Jeffers six, T. J.
Robanna four, and Chris Baer two.
Brian Warden led Racine with eight,
Matt Jewell four, Chris Diddle one,
and Brial Dethl poured in five.
In the fifth grade championship
game Coach Barry McCoy's
youngsters took home the victory af·
ter coming on strong the second half.
Things started out slow with both

RACINE - In the Southern Local
Grade School Championship tour·
nament Syracuse grade school came
home the winner in both the fifth and
sixth grade. The two Syracuse
teams invaded Southern Junior High
School and took home two weU
deserved championship victories.
In the fifth grade semi-final game
Syracuse downed Racine 27-18. The
winners were led by Barry McCoy

teams playing even the first half.
At the start of the second half Portland took the lead and added to it
the final period to lead by four with
two minutes to go.
Portland then lost D. Arnbergy to
fouls and Syracuse came back with
the aid of three Barry McCoy steals
to win by four, 111-14.
McCoy led the winners with nine,

REMEMBER QUANTITIES ON MOST ITEMS ARE LIMITED AND DRASTICALLY REDUCED! WE URGE YOU TO DO
YOUR SHOPPING EARLY AND SAVEll FINAL CLEARANCE PRICES I STIFFLER'S CLEAN SWEEP SALE DA YSII
SIXTH GRADE CHAMPS - Players for the
Syracuse sixth grade team were: Front, 1-r - Brian
Freeman, Eric Thoren, Kelly Grueser, Sean Grueser.
Robanna five, Deem two and Baer
two. Portland scorers were Ambergey with 10 and K. Turley with
four.
In the sixth grade semi-final game
Syracuse rolled to victory behind an
18 point perfonnance by Todd
Adams, over the Racine Royals, 3~
37. SGS was led by Adams' 18, Mike
Chancey's ten, Kelly Grueser's
seven and J. Frank's three. Jay
.

Back_ - Todd Adams, Mike Chancey, David Duffy,
Jackie Justice, Jeff Frank. Absent, Randy Roush.
Coach Jim Adams.

Bostick had an outstanding 17 point
perfonnance for Racine while U&gt;ri
Adams added six, and Clark two.
In the championship game Coach
Jim Adams' squad jumped out to an
early lead and led all the way
despite some sharpshooting by Scott
Wickline. SGS downed the Letart
Blackha"'ks by a score of 32-17 led
by Mike Chancey's If points. Todd
Adams added six, J . Frank four, K.
Grueser four, David Duffy two, and
Sean Grueser two. Syracuse's well
balancedscoringattackwasjusttoo
in
eight, Heath Hill netted four, R.
AUen two, and M. Jarrell two.

Syracuse also captured the Meigs
Jaycees sixth grade tourney while
Letart finished third in that tourney.

apart Arizona State 1$-75. "AU of our times and I haven't seen a better
guys are following their shots and
team this season. Playing them is
putting the ball hack in.''
like playing a pro team, they're so
"We're attacking the boards,
physical. They're bigger than us at
which I'm not sure we were doing a every position, they're well coached,
few weeks ago," Jim Ellinghausen, and I'm a little frightened."
a reserve forward for OSU, said,
If the Brutus win the tournament
looking back to a spell in which the
it'll be the surprise of the year- and
Buckeyes lost three straigt games
that in itself must sound strange to
and four of five against other teams
fans who remember when the NCAA
from the Big Ten.
·
tournament was known only half"Lately we've been getting a lot jokingly as the UCLA Invitational.
more second shots, and that will win
The Bruins, who won 10 chamyou a lot of games. I think we're con- pionships in 13 years, entered this
centrating on blocking out more. year's tournament unranked - but
We've stopped being hesitant under they put to rest the suggestion they
the basket," said Ellinghausen.
didn't deserve to be in the 411-team
Larry Brown, UCLA's coach, is field by shocking top-ranked DePaul
concerned about Williams' presence · 77·71 in last Sunday's second-round
under the boards for OSU, par- game.
ticularly if the officiating is loose.
UCLA's victory wasn't the only
"If they let it go, it'll be tough on
upset of this tournament. Equally
us because Ohio State plays power shocking was Lamar's 81-77 triumph
offense and loves to get the ball in· over fifth-ranked Oregon State. It
side to Williams," Brown said. " If was, Lamar Coach Billy Tubbs said,
we win, it'll have to be with defense "the best we played all year," and
and quickness.
he said the Cardinals would have to
"I've seen Ohio State play a few play at least as well to beat Cleinson
in a meeting of unranked squads.

By The Associated Press
Rebounding - from a midseason
slwnp and on the offensive boardsis what has gotten Ohio State this
far. And· it's what the loth-ranked
Buckeyes are hoping to use Thur·
sday night to beat UCLA in the third
round of the NCAA basketball tOurnament.
Clemson, 2NI, plays Lamar, 22·10
before UCLA, 1~9 and Ohio State,
21-7, go at it in the West Regionals.
Also on Thursday night it's Purdue,
~9. vs. Indian&amp;, 21-7, and Duke, ~
8, vs. Kentucky, ~.in the Mideast
Regionals.
In Friday night's regionals it's
Iowa, 21-8, vs. Syracuse, 26-3, and
Maryland, 2~. vs. Georgetown, 25-5
in the East and Louisville, 29-3, vs.
Texas A&amp;M26-7, and Missouri, 25-5,
vs. Louisiana State, 2$-5 in the Midwest.
"We're getting more offensive
rebounds now ," says Herb Williams,
Ohio State's 6-foot-10 center who
scored 25 points and grabbed nine
rebounds to help the Buckeyes rip

At Columbua CoU.eum
Buckeye Val. 68, Col. Hartley i2
....,.. OJl. Centennial 57, Col. Watterson fll
At Elyrk Hlah Sebool
Oberlin 79, Olnuted Falls 68
At Solem HIP School
Youngs. Hayen 55, W. Branch Sl
CampbeU-memoriaiM, Uniontown lake 62
Clan A Toumameatl
At Culoa Fleldltouse
Berlin W. Reserve 84, Hawken 62
Mogadore ~ .E . Canton 47
At Chillicotlte HJ&amp;b Scbool
Racine Southem62, Notre Dame 52

Boy• Butelball
By The A11oda&amp;ed Pm1
Tumilly's Rn:ultl
Cla11 AAA Tovaameatl

AI Baldwio-WaU.ceCGUqe
Clevt. Sl. Ignatius 71, CJeve. Marshall62
AtCoplef Hlgb!kbool
Akron Cen-Hower r;t;, Akron Kenmore 39
At EueUd HJgb Stbool

Cleve. St. Joseph 67, Mayfield 54
At Lorain Klog
Htgh Scbool
Loraln King fl2, Lorain 35

ObloH. S.
Boy• Balketball
By Tbt Alaoclated Preu
DilbidTovu.meul Palrlac•
W..........y
CluJA.U

AtLonlnKlq
HlabStbool
Brwl.'lwick 20-2 vs. Mid view 13-10, ap.m.
At Maple Htlgbtl
Ill&amp;~ Scbool
Breckll:ville 19-2 vs. Cleveland Heights 12-10,
7:30p.m.
AI EacUd ~ Sebool
Mentor Lake Cathollc 1&amp;-4 vs. Ashtabula

.U 8\eabeavOie Arepa

AtStniUlen IUgbSc!Hol

Warren W. Reserve81, Struthers 1)8

Indian VaUey S. 51, Shenandooh t4

Mingo63, Strubucg53

ClaN AA ToumlmeaLI

ranked Indiana against No. 20 Purdue comes into play in the Mideast.
"We played twice last year and
got to go to New York and play them
again in the National Invitation
Tournament," said Purdue Coach
Lee Rose, "and Io·and behold we end ·
up against them this year in the
NCAA.
"Both teams play with commitment and emotion, yet it comes
down to which team executes best.
As far as the rivalry, it's just
amazing. This is one of the most
unique rivalries in athletics."

At Baldwt...Wallltt CoBece
Parma 19-3 vs. Parma Padil.a 1._.., 8 p.m.
At Cutoll ADCIJtortam
CantonSouth2o-2vs. Massillon Perry 18-4,7:00
p.m.
At Slnltben lll(hSebool
Ymmgstown Unullne 11·11 vs. Austintown Fit~
ch 21).2, 8 p.m.
At Copley lll(h Sdlool
Barbe- !H YO. Akron Buchtel 1H, 7:30

Pro standings
NaUoul Hod.ey League

Thandly'aGam.es

Detroit 11t Boston

AtAGlaace

By 1be AIIOCillted Prst:
CampbeU Collfereate
Patrld Ofvllioa
W.I.T. Pio. GF
:a~Phila
46 7 15 ·~ 283
NY Rangers
32 26 9 7! 256
NY l.lllarxiers
32 38 9 73 232
Atlanta
:XI 25 11 . 71 2:Hl
Washingt.on
22 35 10 54 2111

ChJcago
St. Louis

Vancouver at Hartford
lm Anseles at Atlanta
GA
200

237
221
214
248

Smythe Dlvillou
30 21 II 76 1113 196
28 za 11 &amp;7 211 m

Vancouver

22 l3 13

Edmonton

:!1 37 12 52 2411 2.8.5
17 3t 11 45 204 256
15 43 10 4(1 178 275

Colorado

WIMlpea

~7

2111 244

Wales CODfe~
A.daml Dlvbloo

Buffalo
.Bosloo
Mlnneooln

41 17 10
39 18 10
JJ 23 "
)&lt;) 32 5
13 :w 9

Toroolo
Quebec

92
88
72
8l
55

261
258
261
259
1119

177
195
216
272
237

NorrtJ DI..Uloo

x·Monlreal
Lol Angel..
' Plttaburf)l
Hartlonl

40 20 8 88
" 23 10 62
" 32 12 110
13 29 1s 59
!&lt; 32 10 M

Detroit

z -Qincbed'dMsion UUe
. 'heM.y'1 Gll~DM

NY lalandm 4, Colorado!
PIIJiodolpllla I, Plttsbtli'gh 3

,_,.,c.m..

•

~do at NY Jlant!ers
BadDnatW~

1M 21111
258 283
211 256
249
228 232

m

N•tioaaJ Bullett.u ANoclaUoa
AtAGiuee
By The Auoclated p,..,.,
l!»stenaCoDfereaee

At Bowttac Grt!ell
·
&amp;•te Uatvenlly
Findlay 21-1 va. MaMileld Madlooo !J.I, 1:30
p.m.

Atlaotlc Division

12 .425 23\;

At Cutft ll'leklboue
Orrville 18-4 vs. Canton C&amp;tholic 12-10, 7 p.m.
Navarre Fairless 18-4 vs. Cl'eston Norwayne
18-l,8,30p.m.
·
A.t t..blaud Celle~:e'
Cbagrin Falls 15-6 va. Cleveland CathoUc tU,
7:30 p.m.
At Wam:m. WttCtna Raen~

·

28 .611
37 .479 91•
IQ .ill 12

IIJ&amp;hlldlool
Cortland Laltevtew 13-fl n . Warren Kennedy
21-0, 7p.m.
Brookli&lt;ld 12-10 YO. Wa""" Champion 11-11,

5.1 17 .757

Phlladelphln
New York

Washin8too
New Jersey
AllanIa
Houstoo
lndlana
Cleveland
Detroit

52 18 .757 I
36 36 .500 18
33 37 .471 20
31
Cet.tral Dtvt.toa
44
33
32

30 43 .411 141,1,

16 55 .225 271&gt;

WetleMI Coale~
MJdwett Dlvbloo
Kan.suClty
MUwaui:ee

13 30 .!189

Denver
Chicago

27 II .311 151&gt;

Ulab

Los Anaeles
ScatUe
Photnh
San Diego
Golden Slate

II 31
25 47
t2 :11
PacUl&lt; Dlvilloa
$1 21
50 22
47 24
33 38
JJ 40
2'..! 51
'nleldly'a Gamet

llouotonalllooton

Hu1fot'd II Ootrok
·Lqa~lliat Piltoburgh
a,~ at
-·tQuobec

w.,hin8too at Phlladolpllln
New Jersey allletrolt
Seattle at MUwaukee
Phoenix at Golden $tate
Portland at lM Angelea

Buffalo at Wlr.nlpeg

'
Tbunday'•q me
Indlanfl :~t :'\t WY11rk
Denver il l S.V.ulJit&gt;Oo

T"""""

=:!.J!!'.:=o

Cl.ASII.U

W.l. Pet. GB

Boston

Portland

l

p.m.

lHAT SPECIAL
OUlFIT FOR EASTER
TWO'S

.wt

II&gt;

.M7 111&gt;
.301 21
.708
.194
.6fi2

l
3~

.416 17 1 '1

.462 18'l
,3(1) 29~,

8:30 p.m .
At CohuabiUCoU.eam
CirclevtUe Logan Elm J&amp;-6 VI. Hebron
Lakewood 11-4,7 p.m.
Columb.., St. CharleaiH vs. Spol1a llishland
2G-2,11:30p.m.

..,......,...Hl&amp;h_

Bellville Clear Forlt 16-6 vs. BeUevue 18-2, 7:30
p.m.
At Toledo Wille
IIJ&amp;h8cloool
PerrYSburg 21.0 VI, FOI&amp;Orla lz.t, 7: 3Cl p.m.
At QIIIO No-.. UDivenll)'
Otlawo~landorl 15-7 ·vs. llaYiland Wayne
Trace19-3, 7:30p.m.
·
At El)'ril Hlp ~"·tlool
Oberlin Firelands 2U va. Elyria CathOlic 1~.
7:30p.m. •
AtSteubealilleAr··•
W.U.vtlle 11&lt;1VI. Mlllon!Jur8 W..t Holin" jS.
!, 6p.m.
Martina Ferry 15-41 VI. Zanelvtlle .Miynlllll !IS,9p.m.
, ..

~

CS.•A
At Alltlud Hlah Sdldol
Tiffin Calwrt 18-5 vs. A!lhland Cnatvtew Hl3

, :;xJ p.rn

'

'

I.I

,
I
I

I
I

BATH TOWELS

SHOP

Pomeroy, o.

LADIES BETTER

ON DIES

PLASTICS

REG. 11.00 VALUE
18"x24" SIZE .

UTILITY
MAT

• Wear it as an opal for casual wear

·e Flip it over to Diamo nds &amp; Rubies for evening
• Or choose yo ur own favorhe stones

..A~

PR.

ASST. COLORS

C}Jou mugt come gee

thw

untque fttnql

MANY
USES

lllustr1tlon1
enflrttd

KITCHEN
TOWELS

SPORTSWEAR

YOUR
CHOICE

COTTAGE SET

DRAPES
PLASTIC

$}00

YOUR
CHOICE ·

PR.

1~

OFF

THREE DAYS
ONLY!
WE ARE
CLEANING
HOUSE

REGULAR
PRICE

REG. 35' AND 39' VALU
ASST. PLAIN TERRY

SKILLETS· WASH CLOTHS
ASST.
44
$2 EACH PLAIN l9¢EACH
COLORS

CLEAN UP LOT
CHILDREN'S BETTER

SPECIAL VALUE
FULL SIZE

BLANKETS
OFF

$200
.
· EACH

VALUES TO 11.99

FALl AND WINTER

EA.

REG. $3.99 VAWE
NON-STICK

50¢EACH

REG. 12.99 VALUES
FESTIVAL HOUSEHOLD

.

LADIES' BRANDED

PLACE. MATS
VALUES

V~~ESsoe

REG. $1.19 VAWE
ASST. FANCY

STOCK UP
NOW

REG. ggc VAWE
ASsoRTED QUILTED

REG. 12.99
LARGE SIZE

COMPANY
DRESS

VA~ES

REG.
PRICE

'4.49

VALUES TO 12.99 PR.
ASST. FANCY

$333
EACH

REG. 11.19 .VALUE
ASSORTED BOXED

PILLOW
CASES

GREETING
CARDS

$}.44PAIR

50~

ALL OCCASION

MFG. CLOSE OUTS
VALUES TO 110.99.112.99

MEN'S ASST.

KNIT
SHIRTS
•ASST. STYLES
•SHORT
SLEEVES

$

VALUES

TO

~~·~(, G BC ~.. ,.C4t

.,_,~

$60~.

lAY-A-WAY

You thought the Convertible was gone- but ·
it's back in a uniquely styled ring- one ,
· side high fashion, one side casual

At CbJIIJcotb•Hlgh 8cliool
Frankfort Adena 16-6vs. Peebles 22-1,7 p.m.
WiMer to Athena Regional
AtlJmaSealor
HighStloool
.
St. Henry 21~1 vs. Ada 19--3, 7:30p.m.
AtNapoleoaHJpSehool
Pioneer NorU! ctntra ll7-5 vs. Defiance Tinora
:D-2, 7:30p.m.
AI Ftadlay Hl&amp;h Sebool
V8Jl Buren 19--2 vs. Elmore Woodmore lS.lO
7:3(1p.m.
'
At EUda Hlr• School
Rockford Parkway 18-6 vs. Kalida 21-1, 7:30
p.m.

.

SWEATERS
OFF
~2 REGULAR
PRICE

SPECIAL GROUP

BASEBALLSIGN·UP SET
Young people wishing to participate in the Pomeroy Youth
League sununer baseball program
are to sign up Saturday from 10 a.m.
to 2 p.m. on the second floor of
Pomeroy Village haU.
A $6 registrstion fee must be paid
at the time of sign up. The league
sponsors programs for pony league,
13-15; little league, HH2; pee wee, 89; tee ball, f&gt;-7, and girls softball, II-

Edgewood~2,8p. m .

WARM WINTER

TO 99'

~~ ~;;;~'";;;;:;c~~l pairings

Boys tournament scores
ObJo HIP SclJool

'

CLOSE.OUT MEN'S

JEANS

r-----------

•
k
.
...
e
oun
zng
s
l
OSU hopes to rely on b
d
11 m~~~f~~r:ta~=~e~ured
•

lADIES· .
BWE DENIM

REG 35' SPOOL
225 YARD SPOOL
WHITE AND ASST. COLORS

THREAD

4

PROVIDES
THE TRAINING YOU NEED
FOR THE BUSINESS WORLD

·

.fto

Months
Not YeiirJ Prep•r• You
To E•rnl

INQUIRE rot. ~ E~:~lnt ca..ses
CALI.a (614) 4q-4$67
NOW ENROLLING
.fOR NEW TIIM . .
' and

12

mo11l~l c4i~•ir Progr.mt and

11

i .

months Anoclate OetrH In Stotcwlla..
lutlnen Program•.

Business Adml!lls'lr'ation
Executiye Secr.elary
Secrtl•ry ·

Jr.

Accounting' · ·
Gt.n er •I Qffict

STOCK

I
I
I

UP

17~

VAWES TO '8.99
CANVAS-MACRAME
LADIES

REG. 35' VALUE
% INCH WIDTH
WHITE

ELASTIC

.

SAVE BIG ' NOW '

SCRAMBLE,
. ·.
.
TABLE ·

·---

I---·.
· -== ,..,.

·' ··=
......

'

GYM OXFO ._...

VALUES TO 59'
CLEAN UP .LOT

VALUES TO 11.99
ONE LARGE TABLE

PIECE GOOD

ASST. DOUAR
ITEMS
YOUR
$100

QUILT BAITS

.

$355

REG. 1t29 -VALUE
COAfS.CLARKS
KNITTING

SAVE
LARGE TABLE
BETTER PIECE

'YARN

GOOD REMNANTS
'

"

·. . .1:::;

VALUES TO 14.99
MEN'S &amp;BOYS

19~YARD !~ $20~R.
REMNANTS

I
I ----

CLEAN SWEEP

EACH ·

MEN'S'.BEJTER
SPORT SHI~TS

, 5oo·

CHOICE ·

REG; 15.00 VALUE
'
81196 SIZE
100% POLYESTER.

PRICED AS
· MARKED

$

ONE LOT
LADIES BrnER

DRESSES

1

,....

·r"'-

.,;.

.,.

.,.

11.

'

I
•

•

�-6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0., Wednesday. March 12,1980

PTA meets

\

Teacher-parent mini-eonferences
were held at the Monday night
meeting of the Pomeroy PTA held at
the Pomeroy Elementary School.
Parents visited stations on the
various topics with Mrs. Ida Diehl,
Mrs. Mary Carolyn Wiley, Mrs.
Eleanor Blaettnar handling information on health; John Arnott
and Sandy Kom on discipline; Paula
Whitt and Becky Tate on responsibility; Carolyn Ohlinger, Carolyn
. Smith and Pam Crow on questions to
ask at home; Bonnie Fisher on
school supplies and home study, and
. Dan Morris and Robert Morris on
school programs, present and
future.
Brownie Troop 1271 led in the
pledge to the flag, with the Rev.
- Robert McGee giving devotions. Officers' reports were given and the
second grade won the room count.
Several ways and means projects
were discussed including a country
jamboree with the report being
given by Margaret Johnson, a country store d(scussed by Anita Dean,
. and a country bakery by Becky Tannehill.
Carolyn Parker reported on the
book sale. Refreshments prepared
by the third grade parents were
served.

I0

NEW COLUMN - Annie Brown, left, and Myrtle Clark, are the Meigs County Extension Service
nutrition aides.

New food column begins tomorrow
Beginning this week, Myrtle Clark
and Annie Moon, EFNEP nutrition
aides, will be providing a weekly
column in the Thursday edition of
The Daily SentineL
Entitled "Food for Thought," the
column will feature timely information relating to food. Topics
will include such items as food
preparation, food buying, menu and
meal planning, budgeting, food
preservation, storage, and
sanitation.

HOSPITALIZED IN
PARKERSBURG
Barbara Sargent, Chester, Is a
. patient at St. Joseph Hospital,
:: Parkersburg. Her room number is
' ; 242 for those who wish to send cards.
SPAGHETI'I SUPPER
A spaghetti supper will be held at
Salem Center School, March 15. Dinners are $2 for adults and $1 for
children. Family pictures, llx14,
will be taken.

-~

The ladies are nutrition aides for
the Expanded Food and Nutrition
Education Program (EFNEP) sponsored by the Meigs County
Cooperative Extension Service. This
free program is designed to help
low-income families, especially
those with young children, learn to
properly prepare and eat wellbalanced meals.
The nutrition aides visit
homemakers who express interest in
this program. The aides may meet
with one person at a time or arrange

Boy scouts step out
in de Ia Renta shorts
IRVING, Texas (AP) - The Boy
Scouts of America, never particularly stylish, are stepping into
the 1980s in haute couture shorts.
The last time · the Scouts
overhauled their uniform styles, in
1922, a fellow could buy the whole
works for $11. Scouting officials
today are unveiling a new line of
unUorms designed by Oscar de Ia
Renta that will cost in the neighborhOod of $38, sans coat. ·
De Ia Renta, one of the nation's
foremost fashion designers, kept the
haBic look of the traditional unUorm
but did away with garter tabs on the
shorts and added a few pockets.
"We felt the unUorm should meet
several criteria," said de Ia Renta,
who donated his services. "It should
be suitable for strenuous activity, it
should be -made from an easy care
fabric and at the same time the
wearer should stili look like a
Scout."
The new unUorms won't be in use
for America's 4 million Cubs and
Scouts until August. The old-style
shorts and slacks will still be cons1·d red ul t' 0 ff ' · Is 581'd
e reg a •on, •c•a
·
Boy Scout officials say the
cha
nges were made "in response to
=~: received from the mem-

.

;'--::;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:::-l

Polly's Pointers:

"

;J~~~~~Mi~ddleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, March 12, ·1980

0

"It was just a question of updating," said marketing director
Matt Dorfman. "Members said they
never had enough pockets, so we added patch pockets to the pants.

We're also using a heavier weight of
fabric for durability."
The fabric weave also is tighter,
"so a Cub Scout in Minnesota is not
going to be standing outside with the
cold wind blowing through his
trousers," said J. Jay Cassen,. head
of the Boy Scouts supply division.
"We have tested hundreds of pairs
across the country, rather quietly,
rather secretly,'' he said. "We've
had a lot of positive feedback."
Little old ladies who need help
crossing the street will still
recognize a Scout since the most
noticeable change is that the once
all-tan unUorrns will have dark
olive-green slacks and tan shirt.
The unUorm also sports new
headgear, including a cap that looks
like a baseball cap.
Cub Scouts, troop leade"' and den
mothers also get a new look,
although the unilorms are still navy
blue with yellow trim.
The newest feature on Cub ouUits
are revel'!lible shirts with collars
that can be tucked in when a neck
scarf is worn. Leader uniforms will
be available in a wider selection of
styles.
The scouting movement was faunded in England by Lord BadenPowell and made its way to America
just after the tum of the century.
American Scouts celebrated their
70th birthday on Feb. 8, the anniversary of the incorporation of the
BoyScoutsofAmerica.

r-;:::::::;;:~:::::::::::::::::::::~

FINAL

a small group meeting of friends
who would like to meet together in
someone's home. At the meetings,
the aides and homemakers talk
about such topics as nutrition, food
buying, and food preparation and actually practice preparing different
types of foods.
If you kaow of anyone who might
be interested in participating in this
free program, call the Meigs County
Cooperative Extension Service at
99U696.

r-----'------.

I

Social Calendar

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT AMATEUR
GARDENERS, 6:30 Wednesday
night at the Riverboat Room of the
Athens County Savings and Loan Co.
Pomeroy office. Covered dish din·
ner.

POMEROY - NUDDLEPORT
Lions Club Wednesday at noon at
Meigs Inn. All Lions urged to attend.
MEIGS Athletic Boosters Wednesday at the high schooL
POMEROY CHAPTER 80, RAM,
7:30 p.m. Wednesday; regular
meeting, Bosworth Counci146, Royal
and Select Masters, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday. ·
SOUP SUPPER, ·bean and
vegetable, 4 to 7 p.m. Wednesday at
Wesleyan United Methodist Church;
sandwiches, com bread, pie also 1
available; for take out orders, take
own containers.
THURSDAY
THE TEEN CHALLENGE
GROUP at Albany United Methodist ·
Church, Albany, -'l'hursday, 7:30
p.m. Everyone welcome.
MEIGS County Humane Society
Thursday 7:30p.m. at ThrUt Shop,
Middleport.
PRECEPTOR BETA BETA
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority,
7:4~ P·ll!· Thursday~ night at the
Me1gslnn.

By Polly Cramer
Nekwspaper Enterprise Aasn.
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY- The chrome fixtures in my new apartment look as
though some disinfectant was
sprayed on them. It left a dark,
sme·a red look. I have tried
everything I can think of but nothing
has helped. I hope someone has.an
answer for me.- GLENNA
DEAR GLEN·
NA - ~lever
was used previously may have
left, a look that
cannot be removed, but I have
always had very
good luck using
either rubbing alcohol or club soda
on smeared-looking chrome fixtures.-POLLY
DEAR POLLY - If you want to
clean the feathers that are in a
pillow buy a piece of heavy screening ( l'l inch square mesh) and place
it over the open top of a large carton.
Open one-thin! of a pillow seam.
Remove two large fisUuls of
feathers and put on .the screen, gently lift, tum and shake over . the
screen. Put the clean feathers in a
clean case. You lose nothing but
broken stems but the waste will surprise you and the feathers will look
washed and new. My European
grandmother taught me this 40
years ago and I have made good use
of it. SUting feathers can be fun. MRS.RG.
DEAR POLLY - While bringing

28TII ANNIVERSARY
CELEBRATED

Triedstone Baptist Church wishes
to announce the 28th anniversary of&gt;.
servance of the church this Sunday,
March 16, at 3 p.m. The Rev. Walter
Taylor and his congregation of the
Mt Olive Baptist Church, Ironton,
will be the guests present at this service. The pastor of T.B.C. is Rev.
John D. King.

up two active boys I have discovered
the answer to getting crayon marks
off walls. I put baking Soda on a
damp rag, full strength, and the
crayon marks come off with little or
no effort. This also works with pencil
and some pen marks.- SUE
DEAR POLLY - If you have an
oven with a pUot light keep your
crackers and cereal in the oven
wben•it is not in use. With prices so
high you can keep them fresh and
crisp that way.
At rummage or garage sales I pick
up hand knitted garments very
cheaply and then I unra'/el them,
wash the yam and then reuse it to
knit garments for my family. IRENE
DEAR POLLY - This past
Christmas I had the table all set and
company coming when r·discovered
my coasters did not match t11e other
decorations. I had several empty
potato chip cans so I removed the
plastic lids, cut circles from some
old Christmas cards so they fit snugly inside the lids and had attractive
coasters that cost nothing.
This Idea could be used aU year
round with birthday and other type
cards. When circles are soiled they
can be replaced.- RUBY

WANT A
REAL ESTATE
LICENSE?
It's so easy to be a member of a fast growing
profession. Start now, by
studying _at GBC, 2 or 3
evenings a week.
we offer the accredited
program of class work
you're req'uired to complete before taking the
·Ohio
State
Board
Examination.
. Complete in only 12
weeks, enroll now! ,Classes
will begin March 31. For
more information contact
Mr's, ,~,.fl,Jln

~I

..

.,.
.
'.,,
.•

I'

•

.I

·j ·
J

.t·l '

/'

~:

,

lmoglnotlve styling ~Kpresses this
fine quoliry jewel.y from KrPmenrz

SALE STARTS THU~S. AT 9:30 THRU SAnJRDAY
AU. SALES FINAL

In rtch. long losfln9 14 Kr. Gold
Ove-doy these pieces will compll·
menr rhto most fashionable of word-

'

NO lAYAWAYS

NO GIFT WRAPPING ·

robe!.

Hours:

9:30tO, :OO
Mon. thr,11 Sat.
9:30to8:00
Friday

I

KIDDIE SHOPPE

I .'

2nd St.

• I

POt.1EROY, 0.

.•••..
~·

.

~-- Social Calendar

11

ISea~s l

BERMUDA ·STEAK$1.19
WITH FRIES •••••• $1.59

UMWTOMEET
United Mine Workers Supporters
Club will meet Friday at 6:30p.m. at
the home of Patsy Oiler, 674 Plum
St., Middleport. All· members are
urged to attend and new members
are welcome. Refreshments will be
served.

ADOLPH'S
•
DAIRY VALLEY
992-2556
570 W. Main

Pomeroy, o.

PRICES EFFECTIVE

.FREE
HAWAil·. : ~-

EscoRno TOURS

:!~?.~s
446-0699·
CALL FOR FREE BROCHURES

HERE'S $50 TO SPEND -/!\
THE SINGER STORE.

FRESH
SLiCED

..'
i

NEW SNACK CRACKER
FROM 'NABISCO

CHEDDAR
TRIANGLES
.

'8 OZ. BOX

1

(

0

:rop

MONDAY
THRU
SATURDAY

MOST WINTER ITEMS

h. PRICE .

Baby turns one

THURSDAY
WOMEN FOR INFORMED·c
MOTHERING, 7:30 Thursday,
Pomeroy United Methodist Church,
Pomeroy. Discussion on prenatal
care, labor and delivery, child care.
MEIGS UNIT, American Cancer ·
Society, crusade township_chairmen
and co-chairmen, training session;·§
p.m.

THE SALE YOU HAVE BEEN WAITiNG FOR!!!
LESS
THAN

NEW YORK (AP) -CBS seems to
to 18.6 for ABC and 16.9 for NBC. The
have regained some of the momen- networks say that means in an
average prime-time minute during
tum It lllSt to ABC's Winter Olympics
the week, almost 20 percent of the
coverage, winning the networks'
homes in the country with television
prime-time ratings race for the
were tuned to CBS.
week ending March 9 by a full point,
The rating for "60 Minutes" was
figures from the A.C. Nielsen Co.
28.7, and Nielsen says that means of
show.
Some industry experts had
all the TV~uipped homes in the
country, 28.7 percent watched at
forecast the Olympics, broadcast in
least part of the broadcast.
mid-February, would put ABC in the
The two remaining Top 10 shows
lead for the rest of the season.
belonged to ABC, and of them was
But after two winning weeks in a
row for CBS, and a dozen in the last the premiere edition of "That's Incredible." Tbe- new show, which
17, ABC's lead for the season is down
to tw~ths of a point, 19.7 to CBS'
resembles NBC's "Real People"
19.5; withNBCthirdatl7.7.
program, was fifth in the ratings,
CBS, in the most recent survey,
while "Real People" finished 12th.
Charles Tyree .
Usted eight of the week's 10 highest"Real People" was, in fact, NBC's
-rated shows, Including No. 1 "60 ~rated program.
CBS won the week despite a rather
Minutes." CBS scored as it ha8 most
poor
showing at the bottom, with
of the season with Its regular lineup,
A party was hi!ld recently in observance of the first birthday of &lt;llarles . though the network did get a boost three of the week's five leastfrom the clasalc motloo picture, watched programs, Including
Albert Tyree, son of Mr. and Mrs.
"1be Wizard of ()z," No. 8 in the "Hawaii Five-0" in 59th place,
LaMy Tyree, at the home of his
ratings.
followed by the premiere of "Beyond
grandparent&amp;, Mr and Mrs. Albert
CBS'
rating
for
the
week
was
19.6,
in 60th and ''The
Westworld"
Roush, Bailey Run Road, Pomeroy.
.
Chisholms,"
tied with an NBC
A rabbit cake was baked and
decorated by bis aunt, Usa Roush.
Attending and presenting gifts to
PWP CALENDAR
Charles Albert were bis parents, Mr.
Following Is the weekly schedule
PRAYER MEETING SUNDAY
and Mrs. Albert Roush, maternal
of the Gallla ' _Meigs - Mason ChapA
county-wide prayer meeting will
grandparents, Virgil and Gerry Parter of Parents- WithOut· Partnel'!l.
be
held
at 2 p.m. Sunday at the
!OIIS, Kim and Lois Roush, Ken, Lisa
March 13 - 7 p.m., orientation for
Chester
Church
of the Nazarene with
and JBIOII Roush, all of Pomeroy;
new members Gallipolis Mental
Glen
Bissell
as
class
leader.
LaMy and Jenny Tyree, Cheshire;
Health Center; attendance at orienLarry and Judy Flowel'!l, Pickertation is required for membership;
ington; Kevin and Chris Smith, and
7:30 p.m. general business meeting
Sue Parsons, Pomeroy. Tbe pater- at the mental health center and
VISIT IN EAST
nal grandparents are Charles Tyree,
Cathy Dyer will show slldes and
The
Rev.
and Mrs. Floyd Shook of
Middleport, and J011ephine Tyree, speak on AAA services.
the
Laurel
Cliff Free Methodist
Pomeroy.
Match 14-8:30 p.m., adult dance
Church are in the East where he Is
at Shade River Coon Hunters' Lodge
attending a seminar in New York
on Meigs County Fairgrounds,
and Mrs. Shook is visiting relatives
Pomeroy; ladies, take snacks.
in Pennsylvania. March
15
7:30
p.m.,
adult
house
'i'lruRsDAY
SQUARE DANCE FRIDAY
SHADE RIVER Lodge 453, F and party at Roger Theiss bome, Route
l2f
througb
Racine.
.
A
square
dance will be held from 8
AM, 'Ibunday 7:30 p.m. at lodge
March
18
7
p.m.,
neW!Iletter
to
II
p.m.
Friday
at the Meigs Senior
ball. All master masons invited.
mailing
at
Gallipolis
Mental
Health
Citizens Center In Pomeroy. Adomo vALLEY Grange 21112,
mission is $1 with music at the public
Letart Falls, Thuraday 7:30 p.m. · Center; 8 p.m., board meeting at the
dance being provided by the String
·home ol Ula Wolfe. Potluck refresh- center; aU officers to take reports;
aU members welcome.
Dusters.
menta.

446-4357.

laaraaa

.•
.
•''
...t'·.

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
BAKE SALE MARCH Z%
DISCHARGF.'i MARCH 11
The Middleport Alwnni AssociaMichael Amodio, Mrs. Roger tion will hold a bake sale on March
Baisden and daughter, Frank Bell, 22 at the Central Trust Bank in MidJane Bush, . Erica Byler, Mary dleport, 9 a .m. until noon. Alumni
movie, "Brave New World," for
Coleman, Mrs. Gregory Cremeans are asked to donate baked items for
6lst. ABC's ~~one in a Million" was
and son, Glenna Crisp, David the sale. Items may be taken to the
last in the ratings.
Dailey, Anina Denny, Lura Duffy, Bank at 9 a.m. or for pickup alumni
The week's
10 shows : "60
Eva Eisnaugle, John Ellison, Harry may cal1992~212, 992-7214, 992-5877,
Minutes," with a rating of 28.7 Harrison, Benjamin Higgens, Loren or 992·2723. The banquet and dance
representing 21.9 million homes,
King, Sandra Montgomery, Phyllis
will be held on Saturday , May 24.
"M-A-S-H," 27.7 &lt;r 21.1 million, Russell , Stanley Saunders,
Alice," 27.4 or 20.9 million, and
Margaret Sheline, Jack Smith, Mrs.
"The Jeffersons,' 26.4 or 20.1 Edwin Simpson and son, Margaret
ASK TOWED
million, aU CBS; "That's In· Smith, Webster Swain, Mrs. Tim
Marriage ticenses were issued to
credible," 2fi.4 or 19.4 million, and
Roger Douglas Clark, 22, Rt. 1,
Taylor and son, Mrs. Gerald Taylor
"Three's Company," 2fi.2 or 19.2 and son, Benjamin Upton, Polly
Reedsville, and Jennie May Miller,
million, both ABC, and "One Day at Wetherholt, Delores Wiseman, Mrs.
17, Rt. I, Long Bottom; Robert F .
a Time," 25.1 or 19.1 million, Movie- David Yates and daughter.
Powers, 21, Middleport, and June A.
"The Wizard of &lt;n," 24 or 18.3 ·
Hutton, 16, Middleport.
BIRTIIS
million, "Archie Bunker's Place,"
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Pullins, son,
23.7 or 18.1 million, and "Dukes of Oak Hill; Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Hazzard," 23.6 or 18 million, aU CBS. O'Conner, son, Jackson.
Authorized CATALOG
The next 10 programs: "Fantasy
SALES MERCHANT
Island," ABC; "Real People," NBC;
"Disney's 25th Anniversary Show,"
LANGUAGE FAIR SLATED
CBS; "Happy Days,'' ABC, and
ATIIENS,
Ohio - The fifth annual
~'CHiPs," NBC, tie;
"The Big
Ohio
University
Language Fair for
Show," NBC; "Eight is Enough,"
Phone 992· 2178
1
high
school
students
will be held on
108 W. Main St.
ABC, and ' House Calls," CBS, tie,
'Pomeroy, 0 .
the Ohio University campus on·
and "Laverne and Shirley" and
OWNED
AND OPERATED BY
Saturday, Apri119. Schools that have
" Love Boat," both ABC.
Jack &amp; Judy Williams
not received Information and
Open: Mon. thru Wed. 9-5
Thurs . 9-12, Fri. 9-5, Sat. 9-2
registration materials should conSatisfaction Guaranteed
- tact C. P. Richardson, director of the
or Your Money Back
language fair at (614) 594-5795.
LEGION PARTY SATURDAY
The annual birthday party honorIng the members of Drew Webster
,,
Post 39, American Legion, will be
THIS
WEEK'S
held Saturday night at the post
home.
SPECIAL
The partY will begin with a potluck
dinner and every wife of a legionnaire attending is asked to take a
covered dish. Following the dinner
there will be · a short business
meeting. Music by Annand Turley
at the organ will be provided during
the evening.

CBS regains lost momentum

-Fixtures are smeared\

r

GROUP TO PERFORM
The Teen Challenge Group from
Pennsylvania, will be singing and
- giving testimonies at the Albany
: United Methodist Church, Albany,
- on Thursday, March 13, at 7:30p.m.
. Everyone welcome especially youth
: and youth advisors.

PROMOTED - Bobby L.
Casto, Mason, was promoted to
Master Sergeant on Feb. 22. He Is
•.
S
S
• servlllg wltb tbe U. ·Army. gt.
•· Casto joined tbe Army In 1962 and
. has had ass Ignments In VI etnam,
• Korea, and Germany. Casto Is
• :- tbe son of Otbo and norida Casto
:; of Mason. Pictured wltb Casto Is
:• his wife, Ursula. They are
•: presenlly stationed In Warren,
:: Mlcb.

···-------- - -

Touc~ ·lro'tl t200 1

I) much1ne- ouch to sew al'lv
ol 27

pre - progr~IT)med

memory

st1lches.

Touch to select stll o~ length and

I

wid!h Push· biJttoo sell·winding
bobbln,ildJustabta soh touch fa biiC

,

. leed. 1·step buttort fining
bunonholer end much tnOfe

'

'

11

~

fHiSTS-NOfPLAYMONEY.
In these lnllatoonary times, earning $50 may be easy. But saving $50 Isn't.
· -•
·
So Singe~ Is pleased to give you a S50 bill Iabove) that can apply toward the purchase of one Of our
finest el~ctronlc or mechanical sewing machines ... mOdels that seldom go on sale. ·
. ..
And then YOU can start on a real savings seree. Because the clothes you make yourself cost less
than half as much as the ready· to, wear you'd b v In the store.
·
So cut out,ourS50 bill within the sewlng- m~chlnes 01) the face of 11 «nd take to the Singer Store or a
participating Singer dealer: You'll find ll's worth every bit as much os a u.s. S50 bill wllh President
Grant's face on the tace of II. Offer expires Aprll26, 1980..
.
'

FABRIC SHOP .

~ ~:~r!~~o. .
992-2284

.

.

.

LB.

39~

BEEF
LIVER .........................
.
.
.

FRESH. SIDE................................. '!;.. 79~
.

-

PORK ·ROAST............... ~~: ..sl

BOSTON
BUn

29

CHOPPE.D SIRLOIN. PATTIES

'

'.M ILK

*1'·

QUARTER
LOI~NS

~a99~

..
I

SATURDAY ONLY

PORK

85% LEAN

.as .~

BROUGHTON
HOMOGENIZED

,

HEARTH FARMS

FRESH CRISP

GREEN BELL

.

•

PE-PPERS
•

WHEAT

CARROTS

·....
11ao
FOR ·&amp; .: -. .
0

BUTTER .SPLIT

1

4

BREAD

SAVE 10• LOAf

PKGS.

S 100

79~-

20 OZ.' LOAF

,

•

'

•

�-6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0., Wednesday. March 12,1980

PTA meets

\

Teacher-parent mini-eonferences
were held at the Monday night
meeting of the Pomeroy PTA held at
the Pomeroy Elementary School.
Parents visited stations on the
various topics with Mrs. Ida Diehl,
Mrs. Mary Carolyn Wiley, Mrs.
Eleanor Blaettnar handling information on health; John Arnott
and Sandy Kom on discipline; Paula
Whitt and Becky Tate on responsibility; Carolyn Ohlinger, Carolyn
. Smith and Pam Crow on questions to
ask at home; Bonnie Fisher on
school supplies and home study, and
. Dan Morris and Robert Morris on
school programs, present and
future.
Brownie Troop 1271 led in the
pledge to the flag, with the Rev.
- Robert McGee giving devotions. Officers' reports were given and the
second grade won the room count.
Several ways and means projects
were discussed including a country
jamboree with the report being
given by Margaret Johnson, a country store d(scussed by Anita Dean,
. and a country bakery by Becky Tannehill.
Carolyn Parker reported on the
book sale. Refreshments prepared
by the third grade parents were
served.

I0

NEW COLUMN - Annie Brown, left, and Myrtle Clark, are the Meigs County Extension Service
nutrition aides.

New food column begins tomorrow
Beginning this week, Myrtle Clark
and Annie Moon, EFNEP nutrition
aides, will be providing a weekly
column in the Thursday edition of
The Daily SentineL
Entitled "Food for Thought," the
column will feature timely information relating to food. Topics
will include such items as food
preparation, food buying, menu and
meal planning, budgeting, food
preservation, storage, and
sanitation.

HOSPITALIZED IN
PARKERSBURG
Barbara Sargent, Chester, Is a
. patient at St. Joseph Hospital,
:: Parkersburg. Her room number is
' ; 242 for those who wish to send cards.
SPAGHETI'I SUPPER
A spaghetti supper will be held at
Salem Center School, March 15. Dinners are $2 for adults and $1 for
children. Family pictures, llx14,
will be taken.

-~

The ladies are nutrition aides for
the Expanded Food and Nutrition
Education Program (EFNEP) sponsored by the Meigs County
Cooperative Extension Service. This
free program is designed to help
low-income families, especially
those with young children, learn to
properly prepare and eat wellbalanced meals.
The nutrition aides visit
homemakers who express interest in
this program. The aides may meet
with one person at a time or arrange

Boy scouts step out
in de Ia Renta shorts
IRVING, Texas (AP) - The Boy
Scouts of America, never particularly stylish, are stepping into
the 1980s in haute couture shorts.
The last time · the Scouts
overhauled their uniform styles, in
1922, a fellow could buy the whole
works for $11. Scouting officials
today are unveiling a new line of
unUorms designed by Oscar de Ia
Renta that will cost in the neighborhOod of $38, sans coat. ·
De Ia Renta, one of the nation's
foremost fashion designers, kept the
haBic look of the traditional unUorm
but did away with garter tabs on the
shorts and added a few pockets.
"We felt the unUorm should meet
several criteria," said de Ia Renta,
who donated his services. "It should
be suitable for strenuous activity, it
should be -made from an easy care
fabric and at the same time the
wearer should stili look like a
Scout."
The new unUorms won't be in use
for America's 4 million Cubs and
Scouts until August. The old-style
shorts and slacks will still be cons1·d red ul t' 0 ff ' · Is 581'd
e reg a •on, •c•a
·
Boy Scout officials say the
cha
nges were made "in response to
=~: received from the mem-

.

;'--::;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:::-l

Polly's Pointers:

"

;J~~~~~Mi~ddleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, March 12, ·1980

0

"It was just a question of updating," said marketing director
Matt Dorfman. "Members said they
never had enough pockets, so we added patch pockets to the pants.

We're also using a heavier weight of
fabric for durability."
The fabric weave also is tighter,
"so a Cub Scout in Minnesota is not
going to be standing outside with the
cold wind blowing through his
trousers," said J. Jay Cassen,. head
of the Boy Scouts supply division.
"We have tested hundreds of pairs
across the country, rather quietly,
rather secretly,'' he said. "We've
had a lot of positive feedback."
Little old ladies who need help
crossing the street will still
recognize a Scout since the most
noticeable change is that the once
all-tan unUorrns will have dark
olive-green slacks and tan shirt.
The unUorm also sports new
headgear, including a cap that looks
like a baseball cap.
Cub Scouts, troop leade"' and den
mothers also get a new look,
although the unilorms are still navy
blue with yellow trim.
The newest feature on Cub ouUits
are revel'!lible shirts with collars
that can be tucked in when a neck
scarf is worn. Leader uniforms will
be available in a wider selection of
styles.
The scouting movement was faunded in England by Lord BadenPowell and made its way to America
just after the tum of the century.
American Scouts celebrated their
70th birthday on Feb. 8, the anniversary of the incorporation of the
BoyScoutsofAmerica.

r-;:::::::;;:~:::::::::::::::::::::~

FINAL

a small group meeting of friends
who would like to meet together in
someone's home. At the meetings,
the aides and homemakers talk
about such topics as nutrition, food
buying, and food preparation and actually practice preparing different
types of foods.
If you kaow of anyone who might
be interested in participating in this
free program, call the Meigs County
Cooperative Extension Service at
99U696.

r-----'------.

I

Social Calendar

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT AMATEUR
GARDENERS, 6:30 Wednesday
night at the Riverboat Room of the
Athens County Savings and Loan Co.
Pomeroy office. Covered dish din·
ner.

POMEROY - NUDDLEPORT
Lions Club Wednesday at noon at
Meigs Inn. All Lions urged to attend.
MEIGS Athletic Boosters Wednesday at the high schooL
POMEROY CHAPTER 80, RAM,
7:30 p.m. Wednesday; regular
meeting, Bosworth Counci146, Royal
and Select Masters, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday. ·
SOUP SUPPER, ·bean and
vegetable, 4 to 7 p.m. Wednesday at
Wesleyan United Methodist Church;
sandwiches, com bread, pie also 1
available; for take out orders, take
own containers.
THURSDAY
THE TEEN CHALLENGE
GROUP at Albany United Methodist ·
Church, Albany, -'l'hursday, 7:30
p.m. Everyone welcome.
MEIGS County Humane Society
Thursday 7:30p.m. at ThrUt Shop,
Middleport.
PRECEPTOR BETA BETA
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority,
7:4~ P·ll!· Thursday~ night at the
Me1gslnn.

By Polly Cramer
Nekwspaper Enterprise Aasn.
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY- The chrome fixtures in my new apartment look as
though some disinfectant was
sprayed on them. It left a dark,
sme·a red look. I have tried
everything I can think of but nothing
has helped. I hope someone has.an
answer for me.- GLENNA
DEAR GLEN·
NA - ~lever
was used previously may have
left, a look that
cannot be removed, but I have
always had very
good luck using
either rubbing alcohol or club soda
on smeared-looking chrome fixtures.-POLLY
DEAR POLLY - If you want to
clean the feathers that are in a
pillow buy a piece of heavy screening ( l'l inch square mesh) and place
it over the open top of a large carton.
Open one-thin! of a pillow seam.
Remove two large fisUuls of
feathers and put on .the screen, gently lift, tum and shake over . the
screen. Put the clean feathers in a
clean case. You lose nothing but
broken stems but the waste will surprise you and the feathers will look
washed and new. My European
grandmother taught me this 40
years ago and I have made good use
of it. SUting feathers can be fun. MRS.RG.
DEAR POLLY - While bringing

28TII ANNIVERSARY
CELEBRATED

Triedstone Baptist Church wishes
to announce the 28th anniversary of&gt;.
servance of the church this Sunday,
March 16, at 3 p.m. The Rev. Walter
Taylor and his congregation of the
Mt Olive Baptist Church, Ironton,
will be the guests present at this service. The pastor of T.B.C. is Rev.
John D. King.

up two active boys I have discovered
the answer to getting crayon marks
off walls. I put baking Soda on a
damp rag, full strength, and the
crayon marks come off with little or
no effort. This also works with pencil
and some pen marks.- SUE
DEAR POLLY - If you have an
oven with a pUot light keep your
crackers and cereal in the oven
wben•it is not in use. With prices so
high you can keep them fresh and
crisp that way.
At rummage or garage sales I pick
up hand knitted garments very
cheaply and then I unra'/el them,
wash the yam and then reuse it to
knit garments for my family. IRENE
DEAR POLLY - This past
Christmas I had the table all set and
company coming when r·discovered
my coasters did not match t11e other
decorations. I had several empty
potato chip cans so I removed the
plastic lids, cut circles from some
old Christmas cards so they fit snugly inside the lids and had attractive
coasters that cost nothing.
This Idea could be used aU year
round with birthday and other type
cards. When circles are soiled they
can be replaced.- RUBY

WANT A
REAL ESTATE
LICENSE?
It's so easy to be a member of a fast growing
profession. Start now, by
studying _at GBC, 2 or 3
evenings a week.
we offer the accredited
program of class work
you're req'uired to complete before taking the
·Ohio
State
Board
Examination.
. Complete in only 12
weeks, enroll now! ,Classes
will begin March 31. For
more information contact
Mr's, ,~,.fl,Jln

~I

..

.,.
.
'.,,
.•

I'

•

.I

·j ·
J

.t·l '

/'

~:

,

lmoglnotlve styling ~Kpresses this
fine quoliry jewel.y from KrPmenrz

SALE STARTS THU~S. AT 9:30 THRU SAnJRDAY
AU. SALES FINAL

In rtch. long losfln9 14 Kr. Gold
Ove-doy these pieces will compll·
menr rhto most fashionable of word-

'

NO lAYAWAYS

NO GIFT WRAPPING ·

robe!.

Hours:

9:30tO, :OO
Mon. thr,11 Sat.
9:30to8:00
Friday

I

KIDDIE SHOPPE

I .'

2nd St.

• I

POt.1EROY, 0.

.•••..
~·

.

~-- Social Calendar

11

ISea~s l

BERMUDA ·STEAK$1.19
WITH FRIES •••••• $1.59

UMWTOMEET
United Mine Workers Supporters
Club will meet Friday at 6:30p.m. at
the home of Patsy Oiler, 674 Plum
St., Middleport. All· members are
urged to attend and new members
are welcome. Refreshments will be
served.

ADOLPH'S
•
DAIRY VALLEY
992-2556
570 W. Main

Pomeroy, o.

PRICES EFFECTIVE

.FREE
HAWAil·. : ~-

EscoRno TOURS

:!~?.~s
446-0699·
CALL FOR FREE BROCHURES

HERE'S $50 TO SPEND -/!\
THE SINGER STORE.

FRESH
SLiCED

..'
i

NEW SNACK CRACKER
FROM 'NABISCO

CHEDDAR
TRIANGLES
.

'8 OZ. BOX

1

(

0

:rop

MONDAY
THRU
SATURDAY

MOST WINTER ITEMS

h. PRICE .

Baby turns one

THURSDAY
WOMEN FOR INFORMED·c
MOTHERING, 7:30 Thursday,
Pomeroy United Methodist Church,
Pomeroy. Discussion on prenatal
care, labor and delivery, child care.
MEIGS UNIT, American Cancer ·
Society, crusade township_chairmen
and co-chairmen, training session;·§
p.m.

THE SALE YOU HAVE BEEN WAITiNG FOR!!!
LESS
THAN

NEW YORK (AP) -CBS seems to
to 18.6 for ABC and 16.9 for NBC. The
have regained some of the momen- networks say that means in an
average prime-time minute during
tum It lllSt to ABC's Winter Olympics
the week, almost 20 percent of the
coverage, winning the networks'
homes in the country with television
prime-time ratings race for the
were tuned to CBS.
week ending March 9 by a full point,
The rating for "60 Minutes" was
figures from the A.C. Nielsen Co.
28.7, and Nielsen says that means of
show.
Some industry experts had
all the TV~uipped homes in the
country, 28.7 percent watched at
forecast the Olympics, broadcast in
least part of the broadcast.
mid-February, would put ABC in the
The two remaining Top 10 shows
lead for the rest of the season.
belonged to ABC, and of them was
But after two winning weeks in a
row for CBS, and a dozen in the last the premiere edition of "That's Incredible." Tbe- new show, which
17, ABC's lead for the season is down
to tw~ths of a point, 19.7 to CBS'
resembles NBC's "Real People"
19.5; withNBCthirdatl7.7.
program, was fifth in the ratings,
CBS, in the most recent survey,
while "Real People" finished 12th.
Charles Tyree .
Usted eight of the week's 10 highest"Real People" was, in fact, NBC's
-rated shows, Including No. 1 "60 ~rated program.
CBS won the week despite a rather
Minutes." CBS scored as it ha8 most
poor
showing at the bottom, with
of the season with Its regular lineup,
A party was hi!ld recently in observance of the first birthday of &lt;llarles . though the network did get a boost three of the week's five leastfrom the clasalc motloo picture, watched programs, Including
Albert Tyree, son of Mr. and Mrs.
"1be Wizard of ()z," No. 8 in the "Hawaii Five-0" in 59th place,
LaMy Tyree, at the home of his
ratings.
followed by the premiere of "Beyond
grandparent&amp;, Mr and Mrs. Albert
CBS'
rating
for
the
week
was
19.6,
in 60th and ''The
Westworld"
Roush, Bailey Run Road, Pomeroy.
.
Chisholms,"
tied with an NBC
A rabbit cake was baked and
decorated by bis aunt, Usa Roush.
Attending and presenting gifts to
PWP CALENDAR
Charles Albert were bis parents, Mr.
Following Is the weekly schedule
PRAYER MEETING SUNDAY
and Mrs. Albert Roush, maternal
of the Gallla ' _Meigs - Mason ChapA
county-wide prayer meeting will
grandparents, Virgil and Gerry Parter of Parents- WithOut· Partnel'!l.
be
held
at 2 p.m. Sunday at the
!OIIS, Kim and Lois Roush, Ken, Lisa
March 13 - 7 p.m., orientation for
Chester
Church
of the Nazarene with
and JBIOII Roush, all of Pomeroy;
new members Gallipolis Mental
Glen
Bissell
as
class
leader.
LaMy and Jenny Tyree, Cheshire;
Health Center; attendance at orienLarry and Judy Flowel'!l, Pickertation is required for membership;
ington; Kevin and Chris Smith, and
7:30 p.m. general business meeting
Sue Parsons, Pomeroy. Tbe pater- at the mental health center and
VISIT IN EAST
nal grandparents are Charles Tyree,
Cathy Dyer will show slldes and
The
Rev.
and Mrs. Floyd Shook of
Middleport, and J011ephine Tyree, speak on AAA services.
the
Laurel
Cliff Free Methodist
Pomeroy.
Match 14-8:30 p.m., adult dance
Church are in the East where he Is
at Shade River Coon Hunters' Lodge
attending a seminar in New York
on Meigs County Fairgrounds,
and Mrs. Shook is visiting relatives
Pomeroy; ladies, take snacks.
in Pennsylvania. March
15
7:30
p.m.,
adult
house
'i'lruRsDAY
SQUARE DANCE FRIDAY
SHADE RIVER Lodge 453, F and party at Roger Theiss bome, Route
l2f
througb
Racine.
.
A
square
dance will be held from 8
AM, 'Ibunday 7:30 p.m. at lodge
March
18
7
p.m.,
neW!Iletter
to
II
p.m.
Friday
at the Meigs Senior
ball. All master masons invited.
mailing
at
Gallipolis
Mental
Health
Citizens Center In Pomeroy. Adomo vALLEY Grange 21112,
mission is $1 with music at the public
Letart Falls, Thuraday 7:30 p.m. · Center; 8 p.m., board meeting at the
dance being provided by the String
·home ol Ula Wolfe. Potluck refresh- center; aU officers to take reports;
aU members welcome.
Dusters.
menta.

446-4357.

laaraaa

.•
.
•''
...t'·.

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
BAKE SALE MARCH Z%
DISCHARGF.'i MARCH 11
The Middleport Alwnni AssociaMichael Amodio, Mrs. Roger tion will hold a bake sale on March
Baisden and daughter, Frank Bell, 22 at the Central Trust Bank in MidJane Bush, . Erica Byler, Mary dleport, 9 a .m. until noon. Alumni
movie, "Brave New World," for
Coleman, Mrs. Gregory Cremeans are asked to donate baked items for
6lst. ABC's ~~one in a Million" was
and son, Glenna Crisp, David the sale. Items may be taken to the
last in the ratings.
Dailey, Anina Denny, Lura Duffy, Bank at 9 a.m. or for pickup alumni
The week's
10 shows : "60
Eva Eisnaugle, John Ellison, Harry may cal1992~212, 992-7214, 992-5877,
Minutes," with a rating of 28.7 Harrison, Benjamin Higgens, Loren or 992·2723. The banquet and dance
representing 21.9 million homes,
King, Sandra Montgomery, Phyllis
will be held on Saturday , May 24.
"M-A-S-H," 27.7 &lt;r 21.1 million, Russell , Stanley Saunders,
Alice," 27.4 or 20.9 million, and
Margaret Sheline, Jack Smith, Mrs.
"The Jeffersons,' 26.4 or 20.1 Edwin Simpson and son, Margaret
ASK TOWED
million, aU CBS; "That's In· Smith, Webster Swain, Mrs. Tim
Marriage ticenses were issued to
credible," 2fi.4 or 19.4 million, and
Roger Douglas Clark, 22, Rt. 1,
Taylor and son, Mrs. Gerald Taylor
"Three's Company," 2fi.2 or 19.2 and son, Benjamin Upton, Polly
Reedsville, and Jennie May Miller,
million, both ABC, and "One Day at Wetherholt, Delores Wiseman, Mrs.
17, Rt. I, Long Bottom; Robert F .
a Time," 25.1 or 19.1 million, Movie- David Yates and daughter.
Powers, 21, Middleport, and June A.
"The Wizard of &lt;n," 24 or 18.3 ·
Hutton, 16, Middleport.
BIRTIIS
million, "Archie Bunker's Place,"
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Pullins, son,
23.7 or 18.1 million, and "Dukes of Oak Hill; Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Hazzard," 23.6 or 18 million, aU CBS. O'Conner, son, Jackson.
Authorized CATALOG
The next 10 programs: "Fantasy
SALES MERCHANT
Island," ABC; "Real People," NBC;
"Disney's 25th Anniversary Show,"
LANGUAGE FAIR SLATED
CBS; "Happy Days,'' ABC, and
ATIIENS,
Ohio - The fifth annual
~'CHiPs," NBC, tie;
"The Big
Ohio
University
Language Fair for
Show," NBC; "Eight is Enough,"
Phone 992· 2178
1
high
school
students
will be held on
108 W. Main St.
ABC, and ' House Calls," CBS, tie,
'Pomeroy, 0 .
the Ohio University campus on·
and "Laverne and Shirley" and
OWNED
AND OPERATED BY
Saturday, Apri119. Schools that have
" Love Boat," both ABC.
Jack &amp; Judy Williams
not received Information and
Open: Mon. thru Wed. 9-5
Thurs . 9-12, Fri. 9-5, Sat. 9-2
registration materials should conSatisfaction Guaranteed
- tact C. P. Richardson, director of the
or Your Money Back
language fair at (614) 594-5795.
LEGION PARTY SATURDAY
The annual birthday party honorIng the members of Drew Webster
,,
Post 39, American Legion, will be
THIS
WEEK'S
held Saturday night at the post
home.
SPECIAL
The partY will begin with a potluck
dinner and every wife of a legionnaire attending is asked to take a
covered dish. Following the dinner
there will be · a short business
meeting. Music by Annand Turley
at the organ will be provided during
the evening.

CBS regains lost momentum

-Fixtures are smeared\

r

GROUP TO PERFORM
The Teen Challenge Group from
Pennsylvania, will be singing and
- giving testimonies at the Albany
: United Methodist Church, Albany,
- on Thursday, March 13, at 7:30p.m.
. Everyone welcome especially youth
: and youth advisors.

PROMOTED - Bobby L.
Casto, Mason, was promoted to
Master Sergeant on Feb. 22. He Is
•.
S
S
• servlllg wltb tbe U. ·Army. gt.
•· Casto joined tbe Army In 1962 and
. has had ass Ignments In VI etnam,
• Korea, and Germany. Casto Is
• :- tbe son of Otbo and norida Casto
:; of Mason. Pictured wltb Casto Is
:• his wife, Ursula. They are
•: presenlly stationed In Warren,
:: Mlcb.

···-------- - -

Touc~ ·lro'tl t200 1

I) much1ne- ouch to sew al'lv
ol 27

pre - progr~IT)med

memory

st1lches.

Touch to select stll o~ length and

I

wid!h Push· biJttoo sell·winding
bobbln,ildJustabta soh touch fa biiC

,

. leed. 1·step buttort fining
bunonholer end much tnOfe

'

'

11

~

fHiSTS-NOfPLAYMONEY.
In these lnllatoonary times, earning $50 may be easy. But saving $50 Isn't.
· -•
·
So Singe~ Is pleased to give you a S50 bill Iabove) that can apply toward the purchase of one Of our
finest el~ctronlc or mechanical sewing machines ... mOdels that seldom go on sale. ·
. ..
And then YOU can start on a real savings seree. Because the clothes you make yourself cost less
than half as much as the ready· to, wear you'd b v In the store.
·
So cut out,ourS50 bill within the sewlng- m~chlnes 01) the face of 11 «nd take to the Singer Store or a
participating Singer dealer: You'll find ll's worth every bit as much os a u.s. S50 bill wllh President
Grant's face on the tace of II. Offer expires Aprll26, 1980..
.
'

FABRIC SHOP .

~ ~:~r!~~o. .
992-2284

.

.

.

LB.

39~

BEEF
LIVER .........................
.
.
.

FRESH. SIDE................................. '!;.. 79~
.

-

PORK ·ROAST............... ~~: ..sl

BOSTON
BUn

29

CHOPPE.D SIRLOIN. PATTIES

'

'.M ILK

*1'·

QUARTER
LOI~NS

~a99~

..
I

SATURDAY ONLY

PORK

85% LEAN

.as .~

BROUGHTON
HOMOGENIZED

,

HEARTH FARMS

FRESH CRISP

GREEN BELL

.

•

PE-PPERS
•

WHEAT

CARROTS

·....
11ao
FOR ·&amp; .: -. .
0

BUTTER .SPLIT

1

4

BREAD

SAVE 10• LOAf

PKGS.

S 100

79~-

20 OZ.' LOAF

,

•

'

•

�I -The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, March 12. 1980

.-

11

WANT AD INFORMAnON

'A

.•

.•

•

Man e:.:per ienced in com ·
merci a!
roof ing
and
r ejpai r . Phone 9•9·2763 .

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

U-Aputment for Rent
41- FROOITII
46-Spacefor Rent
41-Wenfed to Renl
· 41- E"ulpme nt lor Rent

I Auctl0t1

~Wanted t€1 Buy

COUNTY : MEIGS
PUBLIC NOTICE
The following documents

were received or prepared

eMERCHANOISE

eEMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

by

,;1- Hou"helld GOOdS
52-CB. TV , RadiO EC!ulpl)"en1

,, _ Help w1 n1ec1
IJ- SIIUIIICI WlniiHI
11-lnsuranct
14- Bvslness Tr1ining
15-Schools lnstructlon
16Radio, TV

U-Antlques
s-4- Misc . Mtrchandlle
U-luildlng Suppllll
S6- Pet1 for S.le

e FARM SUPPLIES

&amp;CBRepalr

&amp; LIVESTOCK

To 00

61 - Ferm Equipment
62- Winltcl to Ivy
72- Trucka for- Sa~

eFINANCIAL
BUsinen
Opportunity
12- Money to L.o..r~
21 -

U - liYIIIock

•TRANSPORTATION

eREAL ESTATE

71-Autos tor Sate

73- \lens &amp;4 W. O.
74-Molorcyclll
75Auto Parts

~ !- Homes tor 511e
32-Moblle Homes

lor Sale
ll- Farmslor 5ele

&amp; AtCI IlOri.S
n - Auto Repair

34- luslnus Build ings
U - L.ots I Acreqe

U- R1ill!state Wantecl
J7- Aeauors

eSERVICES

Want-Ad Advertising
Deadlines
4 P. M. Dally
12 Noon Setvrday
for MondiY

1.

11-Homllmprovements
12- Piuml)l ftt&amp; EXCIVItl"l

ll- E-'eavallng
1-4-Eiectrlcal
&amp; R efrlatratlon
U - Gifterll Hauling
H-M.H. Repair
17- Upi'IOISfery

....

l dan
J d.IVS

Ch~rge

....'·"

• dl')ll

us
uo
us
3.15

E1ch word O'o'tr the mlnlmvm IS words 11 4 c' "" per word per day .
Ads rvnning other than conucutlve days will bt charglld 11 the 1 dey

rate ,

rn memory, Carel ol Thank\ and Ob itvary : 'cenh per wor-d, 13.00
mlnlmvm. Cash lnedvance .

Mobile Home 51111 and Y.lrd aa1es •r• acupl.cl only wllh e~tttwUh
orde r, U cent charg&amp; lor ads c1rrying Bo • Number In Care of The
!ientinll .

·······

_..........
' ....... ..........
. , ....
3

Announcements

GUN SHOOT EVERY
SUNDAY .I PM . FACTORY
CHOKE ONLY . RA&lt;;INE
• GUN CLUB .

•'
•
•
•
•

GUN SHOOT. Racine
Volunteer Fire
Dept .
Every Saturday. 6:30 p.m .
At their building in Bashan.
Factory choke guns only .

, GUN SHOOT every Sunday
12 :00. Factory choke only .
- Corn Hollow Gun Club,
: Rutland. Proceeds donated
• to Boy Scout Troop 249

.
•
•
"
"

Giveaway

4

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,
BROWN ' S.
I PAY- highest prices
possible lor gold and silver
coins, rings, jewelry, etc .
Contact Ed BurketT Barber
Shop, MiddlepOrt.

:. GOLD,
SILVER
OR
- FOREIGN COINS, OR
: ANY. OTHER GOLD OR
• SILVER ITEMS. ALSO,
" ANTIQUE FURNITURE
~ bR OTHER ANTIQj.JE
ITEMS. WILL PAY TOP
-DOLLAR . CHECK WITH
•OSBY (OSSIEJ MARTIN
.: BEFORE
SELLING .
' PHONE 992 .. 6370. ALSO
: DO APPRAISING .
no
: Due Ia illness
• tresp'asslng at lhe Carol
· Triplett residence on Cor·
nell Rd. Portland, OH .
without
written
per ·
m ission.

Red Irish Setter about 9
mos. old . Will give to good
Farm
Home . t..oves
children. 742· 2562.

6

Lost and Found

Found : Nice male Beagle

dog . In Minersville. Call
992·6218.
Lost : Billfold, brown. Keep
money, send billfold back,
collect 992·5568 or Martha
Stewart, Middleport, Rt. I.

Yard Sale

7

4 Family garage sale, 123
Park Dr. Near Burger
Chef, Point Pleasant, W.
Va . March 10. 11, 12, 13, 14.
9·3.

8

En ·

Protection

Agency during the pre'Wious
week . The effective date of
each final action Is stated .
Anyone aggrle,ed or ad·
'ersely affected by a fin al
action to issue. deny.

modify, revoke, or renew a

permit, license, or varian ce; or to approve or disap·
pro'e
plans
and

appeal with The En ·
Vlronmental Board of
Re,lew Suite 305, 395 E .
Broad St .• Columbus, Oh io
.0216, within thirty (30)
days of the effectl'e date,
pursuant to Oh io Re,lsed
Code Sec)ion 3745.07, unless
such final action was
preceded by the same or
substantially the same
propOsed action . In ad·
dition, pursuant to Section
3745.04 of The Revised
Code, notice of the fil i ng of
the appeal shall be filed
with the Director of the
Ohio Environmental Board
at Review. Ail such final
actions are so Identified.
Such ~rsons may request
an adLudlcation hearing
before The Ohio EPA on a
proposed action to issue,
deny, modify, revoke, or

diSaP.prove

H Words or Und1r
c•stt
1.00

Ohio

renew a permit, license, or
variance; or to approve or

Rates and Other Information
1 day

The

vi ronmental

specifications, may file an

64- Hiy &amp; Grain
u- !iMd &amp; Fertlllur

U- Prolession•l
Ser'fiUS

...

Insurance

tor Rent

7-Y ard S. Ie
t- P'ubllc Sa le

..

Wanted to Do

18

992· 21~ .

41 - Htvlll tor Rent

..,_Givea1uy
5- Happy Ad i 6- L.osf and Found

l ~ Wa n teCI

p.m .

operator's license? Phone

42-Mobi le Hom1u

J- AnflO\Inceme r~ tl

Wanted : Fighers· Brawl er ·
s, win $50,000. 304·345·8103
Mon. th r u Fri. 10 a.m . to S

G ive piano lessons to begin·
ners and advanced student
AUTOMOB I L E
I N · in my home. A lso teach
chording and transposi ng if
SURANCE
been can ·
c e l le d ?
L ost
you r Interested . Cali992·5403 .

eRENTALS

1- C.rd of Tl\flnks
2- ln M em or l•m

Waitress ove r 21. no e&gt;&lt;perlence necessary . Night
sh ill. Friendly Ta,ern, 992·
9975.

13

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX
eANNOUNCEMENTS

Miscella neous

17

Help Wanted

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

BRADFORD, Auctioneer,
Complete Service. Phone
9•9·2487 or 949·2000. racine,
Ohio, Crill Bradford .
wanted : Locust fence
posts. U inch used tires.
Bernie 992· 7275 .

plal'ls and
speCiftcatlons within thir·
ty (30) days o1the Issuance
date. ORC 3745.07 does not
provide for adjudication
hearing

requests

or

ap·

peals from orders, verified
complaints,
or
en forcement
compliance
schedule letters. Within 30
days of publication in a
newspaper In the affected
county, any person may
also: (I submit written
comments relating to ac tions, proposed actions,
verified complaints, en forcement
compliance
schedule
letters
or
preliminary staff determinations on permits to install : (2) request a public
meeting
regarding
propased actions or on
preliminary staff determinations on ~rmlts to In-

stall; and·or (3) request
notice of further actions or
proceedln~s . Ail requests
lor adjudtcatlon hearings
and public meetings, and
other communications con cerning public meetings,
adjudication

hear.ings,

verified complaints, and
regulations, should be ad·
dressed to The Legal
Records Section, Ohio
EPA, P. 0. Box 1049,
Columbus, Ohio 43216,
(614) 46o·6037 . Unless
otherwise stated In par·
ticular notices, all other
communications including
comments on proP9sed actions should be addressed
either to The Division of
Authorization and Com·
pllance (Air) or Permit
and Approval Section
(Water), whichever Is ap·
proprlate, at The Ohio
EPA, P. 0. Box 1049,
Columbus, Ohio 43216.
Issuance of certification
Jaymar Coal Company
Cheshire, OH, Effective
date03·04-80
Pertains to 401 Cer·
tilicatlon Grant.
(3) 12, ltc

REQUI:ST FOR
PROPOSALS
COMPREHENSIVE
EMPLOYMENT ANO
TRAINING ACT
OF 1978
OHIO
OEPARTMENT
OF
AOMINISTRATIVE
SERVICES
The Office of Manpower
Development
is an ·
nouncing plans for a Bidders' Conference to1&gt;e held
In Columbus Oh io at the
State Office Tower, 30 Easr
Broad Street, Columb~.,ts,
Ohio, on April 8, 1980, in the
LObby Hearing Room . The
pur pose of meeting will be
to distribute proposal in·
formation for Title 1v
Yourh communily and
Im Conservation
provement Projects (YC·
CIP) ; Title IV Youth Em·
ployment and Training
Pro~ram
Demonstration
Pro 1ect (YETPJ; and Title
II B Priority Projects.
Under these programs,
employment an.d training
acttviltes will be offered to
the appropriate eligible
groups as defined in The
Federal Regulations of
April 3, 1979 for Title II B
and Oclober 2, 1979 for Y tCIP and YETP . All op·
portunities available 10
programs funded under the
act shall be mode without
regard to race
color,
creed, national origin, sex,
age, handicap( political at·
filiation, or be iefs.
The purpase Of YCC I P IS
to provide community ser·
VIce opportunities through
labor intensive communily
conse"at·lon and lm ·
provement projects which
would otherwise not be
carried out. The purPOse of
YETP

Demonstration

NOTICE OF
PUBLIC SALE
Notice is hereby given
that on March 21 , 1980 at 10
a.m. a public sale will be
held at the offices of the
Central Trust Co. N.A ..
Middleport, to sell lor cash
the following collateral , to
wit:
One 1978 Honda Hal·
chback
Ser .
No.
SBC6124765. The Central
Trust Co., Middleport, OH .
reserves the right to bid at
this sale.
(3) 10, 11, 12, Jtc

Programs is to derive in·
formation about yout h
rO:grams and their ef erttveness. Project s must
be concerned with the·
fo llowing youth populi!tion
gr ou ps: Youth parents, offende rs, school dropouts,
l-4·15 year olds. The B id ·
der s' conference for YC·
CI P wl llbeginat9 :00A.M.,
and YETP Demonstration
Program •t !0 :30A .M .
The purpose of T i t le II B
priority proj ects is to
provide emp oyment and
tra ining acti v iti es to the
econ om ica ll y . d is ad ·
vantaged . s pecial groups
i n skill
sh orta ge oc·
cupational areas through
classroom training, on-the·
job tra i ning, less-than·
c lass tr aini ng, work experience, or other appropr iate activities as
defined b y the prime spon sor.
Proposal should identify .
the training need and
corroborate suc h by use of

r.

Labor Market Information.

The Bidders' Conference
f or Title II B priority

projec ts will begin at 1: 30
p .m .
Mor~
detailed
i n·
format1on as to goals, ob-

l_ectlves ,
performance
standards, review criteria ,
t arget .POPUlations~ forms,
matenal s
anc;t
other
releyant data w~ll b~
provlded at the Bidders
~ onfe r ence .
~rC?gram
duration will be 1tm1ted to
fiscal year 1981. (October 1,

1980 - S~J?tember, 30, 1981):

Additional
1,n format1on
may be obtau,-.ed from
Douglas B . Marltn at 1-800·
282· 1050 or 1-614·466·8326.
Reservations for the con lerences may be made by
contacting Mrs. K . c. Hale
at the above numbers no
later than March 28, 1980.
( 3) 11, ltc

Thuroday, Mari:h 13

ASTRO •GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

Astro-Graph, Box 489. ~io
City Statton. N.Y. 10019. Be tura
to apec:::ny birth date.
ARIES (MArch 21·Aprll 111 Be
careful tOday about making arw
cofnmltmenta without first hav.
tng e clear understanding of
what you're getting tntQ. You
could bite on more than you can
chew.
,

wesl to ' lands owned bv
INTHECOMMPN
Will iam JobS. Thence south
•PLEAS COURT,
Meigs County, Ohio
with William Jobs line to
St;RVICE BY
Mat h i as Pu'lllns land .
Thence east with Mathia!
PUBLICATION
No. ll,,409
Pullins land Ia the publ ic
RICHARD R. CRAMLET road on Long Run. Thente '
and
norlh following the mean·
SARP.H E• CRAMLET, hiS derlngs of said publi c r oaa ·
TAURUS (April 211oMay 20)
to the place of beOinnlng, to
wife.
St~r a middle course If you 're
conta in twenty•six acres, to
1616 7th Streeet
with people who nave conflicting
26101,
Parkersburg,
be the same more or less.
views. It's all right to arbitrate,
Plaintiffs,
Reference Deed : Vol. 83,
but don 't take Stdea.
Page 411 , Meigs County I
vs .
GEiloiiNI (May 21-Ju.. 20) Uso
J . 0 . DEWITT, whose last Deed Records.
no methods to advance your
address
Is unknown
. Excepting therefrom J
alms that cou ld tarnish your
UNKNOWN
HEIRS, acres conveyed to Samuel
image. The means wift not justl ty
OEVISEES, LEGATEES,
T•vlor bY deed recorded In
the ends.
DISTRIBUTEES,
AD·
Vol. 86, f'•Of 79, Meigs,
CANC"' (June 21.Julr 22) You
may be tempted to poke your
MINISTRATQRS, AND County Deed Records.
nose Into a situation with no
EXECUTORS, IF ANY,
Excepting therefrom '
direct beari ng on you. You 'll
OF THE FOLLOWING :
acres conveved ' to Ida M.
have a sticky time getting ou t of
ETTA
TAYLOR . T aytor by deed recorded In
It 1r yolJ do.
CRAMLEY , Deceased i · Vol. 97, Page 356, Meigs
LEO (July 23-AIIfl. 221 Make no
WILLIAM
CRAMLET,
County Deed Records.
transactions today where there
and the demand of the
Deceased ;
BESSIE
Is something of material value al
CRAMLET,
Deceased;
Complaint is that Plaintiffs
atake, unless you know exactly
what you 're aotng . You could
WILLIAM
RAY
title to the premises
suHer a permanent loss.
. CRAMLET,
Oeceased;
described herein be gran·
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Bepl. 22) Stall
MAY
CRAMLET , ted against ail claims of the
for time If you feel you're being
Deceased; J , D; DEWITT, defendants and that the
pressed Into making a decision
Deceased,
plaintiffs are the owners in
you 're unsure of, espeCially if 11 _
Oefendants fee simple of the premises
Involves your work . There could
. TO THE DEFENDANTS and are entitled· to i m
be long-term effects.
ABOVE NAMED :
mediate passesslon of the ·
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) You're
You are hereby notified premises. ·
likely to have a heavier work loa&lt;+
than usual today. Pace yoursetr
that you have been named
You are notified that you
wisely so you don't create addlDefendants In a leo•l ac · are required to arswer the
uonal str'1SS.
lion entitled : " RIchard R. Complaint within twenty·
SCORPIO (OCI. 24-Nov. 22J Be
Cramlet, el al. vs. J. D. eight days after the last
very selective as lo whom you
DeWitt, et al ." in the Com · publication, which will bf.
chum around with. Associating
mon Pleas Court of Meigs published once each week
with the wrong types could leEIVe
County, Ohio, Case No. for six consecutive weeks.
8 permanent scar on your reputallon.
17,409 . .The object of the The last publication will be
BAGinARIUB (Nov 23-Doc:.21)
Complaint being to set up made on the 2nd day of
.
·
any interest the Defen · April, 1980.
Don t skim Ove r Important sltuadants may claim In . the
lions. Things swept under the
In case of your failure to
rug may later surface In an ugly
following described real answer
or
otherwise
fashion.
estate, to·wlt :
respand as perm Itied · by
CAPRICORN jO.C. 22-Jon. 11)
Situated in Lebanon the Ohio Rules of Civil
Nothing advantageous will be
Township, Meigs County,
Procedure within the time
gained today by trying to Impose
State of Onio. Being a part stated,
Judgment
by
unpopular Ideas or suggestions
of Section No. 28, Range 11 default wi II be rendered
on unwiiUng listeners. Know
of the Ohio Company's Pur · against you for rhe relief
when to be quiet.
chase : Being Twenty-six demanded In the Com·
AOUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fob. 11)
acres, more or less, on the
plaint.
Bettet put a lock and key on the
old money belt today. You could
south·west corner of saill
Larry E. Spencer,
be talked Into spending far more
Section No. 28 beginning on
Clerk of Courts,
than you can really afloro. ae
the south·east corner of
Meigs County, c;lhlo
prudent In all your dealings.
lands owned by Annie M .
By: Marlene Harrison
(t.IEWSPAPER ENTEFIPFIISE ASS N.)
Tennant, in the public road
Deputv
2-18-80 (TAPE NO. II )
leading from the Oh io (2) 29; (3) S, 12, It, 26; (4)
River to Bashan. Thence 2, 't

w. va.

Revival at MI. Union Bap·
list Church, conducted by
William Tillis and Family,
Penns
Creek,
Pen nsyl\lanla . March 11 -16,
7 : 30 nightly . Cecil Cox,
pastor .

GET VALUABLE training
as a young business person
and e•rn good money plus
some greal(ll lfts as a Sen·
tine I route carrier . Phone
us right away and get on
the eligibility list at 992·
2156 or 992·2157.

-.10.
FooclerlleJien: Good and Otoi&lt;o =o to 100 lito.
71 .liNUJ; 3110"' 400 lito. 1111.10-71.10; 4110,. 1011
lito. N-7uo: 1011 to 111111bo. s1.J0.73.»: eoo ro 1110
lito. 17~ 700 lo 1110 ll&gt;tt. ili.IIUUO: IIIII and
OYWU.
.25.
. Foocler Blllltt: Good and Otoi"' =oro 3110 11&gt;1.
IHI.IO: 101 lo tOO lito. 7W2.7$; tOO lo 10111110.
n .IN2.10: 100 ro1100 ll&gt;tt. 17.10-71.10; _eoo ro 1110
lito. 11.10-11.10; 7011 ro 11110 lilt. 1'1-ta.w: IIIII and

PRICES EFFECTIVE

over5MUG.

lloillola

10.10.

sr..n and

Bulla 13111H1111i lbt.) l!A-

Bulla (I,DIIta. and over)5M4.
(utilltlea) IMUO; (cannont

Slauoltler Cowtt

llllloufton)40~.10.

S!trlnrrerCowtt (by tile boacl) 340431.
C'crwKalYa (lwlhebeod) I!WII.

Veal Cllveol7Jo.m.

.

Baby Calvoai0-155. ·
•
11008
Topllou (llO.Dl) 1Ht1.21.
Boari!HJ.
l'lp (by the bead) 10.31.
Sow1 (tOO lito. andover) 11.10&amp;.

Ground Beef.........~!~ 1

49

·-u-tacl:
=~

8tdoo

CA1TLEPRICES:
·
Foocler sr..n (Good aDd Cbolc•l -lito.
lUI; ICI0-700llto. II.7W'I.n.
FooclerlleJient (Good and Ololce ) 300«101110.
00.111).7$,10;_100-700 lito. 17-46.
Foocler """'' (Good and Utolco) 300«101110.
M.IHJ; 101).7000..1UI·71.
Slallf!l*r Blllltt: (Ova-1,000 lito.) ill.zr..&amp;!.
Slaucbttr Cowtt: Ulilltl,.17.111147.10; Canners
lllllet-.-.
S!trlnrrerCowtt (bJ tbe bead) CWI. iiUII.
Cow tiitit Coli ptlin: (by the unit) S2HIIO.
Veala: (Clttioellld prime) 111.50-UI.
Baby CIIYell: (by tile head) 112.10-127.10.

% PORK LOIN.~ .. ~.~~

SIIEEPPI!Ia!'.S:
lbuaiUrLambo!M2.
'Feeder Lomlto 112..11141.

but you muat be careful that negative thinking doean't spoil them.
Look lor the posjtlve side In all
your endeavors.

Chances are you wUI be , If you
allow others to overly Influence
you . Romance, travel, luck ,
resourcea, posalble Pitfalls and

for the

CHICKEN.

coming months

&lt;Jl 10, 11. 12, 3tc

"·"

Drumstick oR Breasts~·.

are all discussed In your Astra-

Graph letter, which begins with·
your blrthda~. Mall S1 ~or each to

MOTIIERS TO MEET
Women for Informed Mothering
will meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at
the Pomeroy United Methodist
Church, 112 East Second St. There
will be discussions on prenatal care,
labor and delivery, and chUd care,
and the programs planned for the

Chicken Thighs.....~

group will include speakers and

USDA CHOICE BONELESS

NOTICE OF
PUBLIC SALE ,
that on March 21, 1980 at 10
a.m. a public sa1e will be
held· at the offices of the
Central Trust Co. N.A.,
Middleport, to sell lor &lt;ash
the folfowlng collateral, to
wit :
One 1975 Dodge 2·dr. hd·
tp.
Ser .
No.
XS22GSR 121480. The Cen·
tral Trust Co., Middlepart,
OH . reserves the right to
bid a !this sale.

BACON.................. ~~.

PISCES (Fob. :JI).March 20) You
may feel a bit like you're being
pulled In two directions today.

c areer

09

SAVORY SLICED

'

fUms. Danette Hoffman may be contacted for further infonnation,
742-2368.
Notice is hereby given

298 SEOOND ST.
POMEROY, 0.
SATURDAY, MARCH 15, 1980

Butcllor Sowli2HI.
Butcllor Boarl ZUihll.
FooclerPiu: (bylhebead)7.5CJ.16.

Morch 13, 11110
There are a lot of good surprises
In s~ore for you this coming year,

ta

$

Chuck Roast .......... ~ ..

l98o
AMC CONCORD
.,
2 DOOR SEDAN

59

More rear seat leg room .
than Ford Fairmont and
Mercury Zephyr . 1

RIVERSIDE AMC-JEEP
Gallipolis, Ohio
11 She will explain the many benefits of mlcrowav~ cooking, InCluding
now you can save 50% to 75% of the energy normally used .in cOOk·
lng.
·
.
• She will explain how you can cook mosttoods gourmet perfect In jUS\
one·fourth the time.
• • Learn tiow you can brown, sear, grill, fry, bake and .saute with a
microwave oven browning sklllt!t.
.
·
• There will be a question ard answer period so you can get the
straight facts abOut mlcrowq,ve cooking.
• You will receive llter~ture explaining how microwaves actually
cook . It is completely different from conventional methods.

Cooking School wm·Be
Conducted At Our Store.

organ

Help Wanted

NO CHARGE e NO OBLIGATION TO BUY

INGELS FURNITURE &amp; JEWELRY

I

FOR MORE INFORMATION
24&amp;-11313 Ell. 200

"Two 1nOne Store"
Middleport, 0 . .

N. 2nd Ave.

,MAINE

POTATOES
10 LB.

SMOKED
'

PICNICS

,,.

79e
\

'

.~G~AP~FRUIT
· 5 'LB. BAG ·
it.

'1

Racine, 0.

Stiversville
News Notes
Mrs. Fem Cooper and Janice,
Sprlncfleld, Va., Miss Mabel McDaniels, Falla Chw'ch, Va., ~ .
Vlrglnla Pickens and sons, Reedy,
W. Va., Paster David Harris,
Racine, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Abels
ind Mrs: Gene Co!lgo, Long Bottom,
were gue8ta recently at the home ol
Mr. and Mrs. Louis De .L ui
Mr. and Mri!. Bill Bryant, Debl"llll

and Dave, speut a recent ·weekend
with Mrs. Myrtle Lewta and family,

"uffalo, W.Va.
.
Mrs. Merle Evans visited Mrs.
Mae Vim Meter and Ruby, Long Bot' tGm, and Mr. and Mrs. Nonnan
Evans and family ,local, on SUnday. '
Mrs. Larry Fitch, Belpre, Mrs.
. Denver Curtis, Chester, Mrs. Nita
Wells, Long Bottom, and Mrs. Fannie Durst and .Leota Birch, local,
were callers at the hlme of Mr. and
Mia. R. R.Duritrecently.
Mr. and Mnl. LaiTy Lehew,
Pomeroy,~ Mr. !ll1d Mrs. Nor' man Lebew and Elaine recently.
. Mr. llhd Mn. Harold ' Roush,
Racine, were aupper guests at the
)lome of Leota Birch a recent Mon- · ·
clay eVening.

We Glady Accept Fed. F-..., Stamps
Monday thru Fr!•av

BRAUNSCHWEIGER

9:0011•: . 110
(-"!t:.; ;·toi•v t : oo., :OG

· Mrs. Zetts llOyd, Mrs. Ruth
and Mn. Reva. Taylor,
Parkersburg, W.Va., call~ 1111 Mrs.
IVa Carpenter and daughter on Sunday afternoon, •

t

CLOSED
SUNDAYS

CHUNK
101(2 oz.

.

Se1e110

69~

6

DETERGENT

32 oz ..

Of' '

8 PB~k-16 OZ.

99~ DIET' RITE

LETTUCE ........:.. ~~~.
FLAVORITE

. ' Wlien· you · think . YOU have
. troubJet, C!lilllder the 'pJight of .the

-

.

P-lASTIC

FRANCO.:AMERICAN
...

EXTRA LARGE

Spag~etti-0 ... ,.~5•'!';

EGGS ................. ~l!~.

~·= ··-

co IS

·~~~

N -

····- ·· · -

.. ~--

CORONET

FLAVO.ITE

GERBER STRAINED

TOILET·TISSUE

NAVY BEANS

BABY FOOD

$139
'

· 8 ROLL
.

. Limit 1 Per customer .
G90d Only a.f l"owen·~
Offer Expires Mar."lS, 1980

r.dlo . . reader wholedaDY paper
ftln't delivered.
"
·~

$ 99 ·

ICE CREAM ........G!~ •••
VALLEY BELL
FlAVORITE
69
(//
M
$
7%0l4/$
2lO ILK ......... :~~ ....
Mac. &amp; Cheese ....

.

•'
·j

t..;II~U.IIU Launo~rv

:

. Mrs. Beulah Larldn, . Mrs. LOis
· Goede,' Paw'' Paw, W. · Va., Mn. '
Carolyn Price, Portland, vlslted
Leota Birch on Frlday evl!l)lna.

PHEBE'S STORE

20 Count

Sunday 10 am-10 pm

, _ sr..n:

-~.80.

BUYING U.S. SILVER
COINS DATED 1964 OR
EARLIER. ALSO GOLD
ITEMS, DON'T LOSE
MONEY, SIMPLY PICK
UP THE PHONE AND
DIAL
614 · 992 5113 .
BROWN ' S.

11

Mon.-sat. 8 am-10 pm

HOG PRla!'.S:
ll&lt;tlll" (No. 1, Banon and GUll) 11110-230 lito.

Buying u.s . sliver coins
dated 1964 or earlier. Also
gold Items, don't lose
money, simply pick up the
phone and dlai614·992·5113 .
Brown's.

Picking up an Easy play
in your area .
Looking for a responsible
party to take over paymen·
ts . Call credit manager
collect . 614··592-5122.

Store Hours:

l*la V-U.-Co.
lfortttllepeo1
Sale rNflf"/ SolUI&lt;Iay at 1p.JD.
All ...,... - - t h e alldlon"' Sat.rday,
Mar&lt;&amp; 1,111). 'l'rlndtt: Feeder catlle "--y 1o 14
blcher. c:onll·UOWIII'jjYoal calv,. oteady.
ToOtl oadtl'l
Good and a.orco =o "'1100 ll&gt;tt.
IT·IUO; 1110 lo 400 Jill. 11.-; 4110 lo 1110 ll&gt;tt.
77.7HI; 1011 lo 1011 lito. 'IUUO: 100 1o 1110 lito.
a .illl-11; 700 lo., Jill. fU0·71.111; 1011 and over

.

••

•

2LB.
Pl\ti.

..

.2/$1

09

4.50

oz.

.6./$1

·. Limit 1 Per Clastomer
Good Only lit Powell's
Ex
15, i980

COFFEE
2 LB. $599
AU GRINDS
(050x5 .·

-

Lil'llitl Per Customer
Good oniy at Powell's
Offer E
Mar. 15, 1980

�I -The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, March 12. 1980

.-

11

WANT AD INFORMAnON

'A

.•

.•

•

Man e:.:per ienced in com ·
merci a!
roof ing
and
r ejpai r . Phone 9•9·2763 .

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

U-Aputment for Rent
41- FROOITII
46-Spacefor Rent
41-Wenfed to Renl
· 41- E"ulpme nt lor Rent

I Auctl0t1

~Wanted t€1 Buy

COUNTY : MEIGS
PUBLIC NOTICE
The following documents

were received or prepared

eMERCHANOISE

eEMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

by

,;1- Hou"helld GOOdS
52-CB. TV , RadiO EC!ulpl)"en1

,, _ Help w1 n1ec1
IJ- SIIUIIICI WlniiHI
11-lnsuranct
14- Bvslness Tr1ining
15-Schools lnstructlon
16Radio, TV

U-Antlques
s-4- Misc . Mtrchandlle
U-luildlng Suppllll
S6- Pet1 for S.le

e FARM SUPPLIES

&amp;CBRepalr

&amp; LIVESTOCK

To 00

61 - Ferm Equipment
62- Winltcl to Ivy
72- Trucka for- Sa~

eFINANCIAL
BUsinen
Opportunity
12- Money to L.o..r~
21 -

U - liYIIIock

•TRANSPORTATION

eREAL ESTATE

71-Autos tor Sate

73- \lens &amp;4 W. O.
74-Molorcyclll
75Auto Parts

~ !- Homes tor 511e
32-Moblle Homes

lor Sale
ll- Farmslor 5ele

&amp; AtCI IlOri.S
n - Auto Repair

34- luslnus Build ings
U - L.ots I Acreqe

U- R1ill!state Wantecl
J7- Aeauors

eSERVICES

Want-Ad Advertising
Deadlines
4 P. M. Dally
12 Noon Setvrday
for MondiY

1.

11-Homllmprovements
12- Piuml)l ftt&amp; EXCIVItl"l

ll- E-'eavallng
1-4-Eiectrlcal
&amp; R efrlatratlon
U - Gifterll Hauling
H-M.H. Repair
17- Upi'IOISfery

....

l dan
J d.IVS

Ch~rge

....'·"

• dl')ll

us
uo
us
3.15

E1ch word O'o'tr the mlnlmvm IS words 11 4 c' "" per word per day .
Ads rvnning other than conucutlve days will bt charglld 11 the 1 dey

rate ,

rn memory, Carel ol Thank\ and Ob itvary : 'cenh per wor-d, 13.00
mlnlmvm. Cash lnedvance .

Mobile Home 51111 and Y.lrd aa1es •r• acupl.cl only wllh e~tttwUh
orde r, U cent charg&amp; lor ads c1rrying Bo • Number In Care of The
!ientinll .

·······

_..........
' ....... ..........
. , ....
3

Announcements

GUN SHOOT EVERY
SUNDAY .I PM . FACTORY
CHOKE ONLY . RA&lt;;INE
• GUN CLUB .

•'
•
•
•
•

GUN SHOOT. Racine
Volunteer Fire
Dept .
Every Saturday. 6:30 p.m .
At their building in Bashan.
Factory choke guns only .

, GUN SHOOT every Sunday
12 :00. Factory choke only .
- Corn Hollow Gun Club,
: Rutland. Proceeds donated
• to Boy Scout Troop 249

.
•
•
"
"

Giveaway

4

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,
BROWN ' S.
I PAY- highest prices
possible lor gold and silver
coins, rings, jewelry, etc .
Contact Ed BurketT Barber
Shop, MiddlepOrt.

:. GOLD,
SILVER
OR
- FOREIGN COINS, OR
: ANY. OTHER GOLD OR
• SILVER ITEMS. ALSO,
" ANTIQUE FURNITURE
~ bR OTHER ANTIQj.JE
ITEMS. WILL PAY TOP
-DOLLAR . CHECK WITH
•OSBY (OSSIEJ MARTIN
.: BEFORE
SELLING .
' PHONE 992 .. 6370. ALSO
: DO APPRAISING .
no
: Due Ia illness
• tresp'asslng at lhe Carol
· Triplett residence on Cor·
nell Rd. Portland, OH .
without
written
per ·
m ission.

Red Irish Setter about 9
mos. old . Will give to good
Farm
Home . t..oves
children. 742· 2562.

6

Lost and Found

Found : Nice male Beagle

dog . In Minersville. Call
992·6218.
Lost : Billfold, brown. Keep
money, send billfold back,
collect 992·5568 or Martha
Stewart, Middleport, Rt. I.

Yard Sale

7

4 Family garage sale, 123
Park Dr. Near Burger
Chef, Point Pleasant, W.
Va . March 10. 11, 12, 13, 14.
9·3.

8

En ·

Protection

Agency during the pre'Wious
week . The effective date of
each final action Is stated .
Anyone aggrle,ed or ad·
'ersely affected by a fin al
action to issue. deny.

modify, revoke, or renew a

permit, license, or varian ce; or to approve or disap·
pro'e
plans
and

appeal with The En ·
Vlronmental Board of
Re,lew Suite 305, 395 E .
Broad St .• Columbus, Oh io
.0216, within thirty (30)
days of the effectl'e date,
pursuant to Oh io Re,lsed
Code Sec)ion 3745.07, unless
such final action was
preceded by the same or
substantially the same
propOsed action . In ad·
dition, pursuant to Section
3745.04 of The Revised
Code, notice of the fil i ng of
the appeal shall be filed
with the Director of the
Ohio Environmental Board
at Review. Ail such final
actions are so Identified.
Such ~rsons may request
an adLudlcation hearing
before The Ohio EPA on a
proposed action to issue,
deny, modify, revoke, or

diSaP.prove

H Words or Und1r
c•stt
1.00

Ohio

renew a permit, license, or
variance; or to approve or

Rates and Other Information
1 day

The

vi ronmental

specifications, may file an

64- Hiy &amp; Grain
u- !iMd &amp; Fertlllur

U- Prolession•l
Ser'fiUS

...

Insurance

tor Rent

7-Y ard S. Ie
t- P'ubllc Sa le

..

Wanted to Do

18

992· 21~ .

41 - Htvlll tor Rent

..,_Givea1uy
5- Happy Ad i 6- L.osf and Found

l ~ Wa n teCI

p.m .

operator's license? Phone

42-Mobi le Hom1u

J- AnflO\Inceme r~ tl

Wanted : Fighers· Brawl er ·
s, win $50,000. 304·345·8103
Mon. th r u Fri. 10 a.m . to S

G ive piano lessons to begin·
ners and advanced student
AUTOMOB I L E
I N · in my home. A lso teach
chording and transposi ng if
SURANCE
been can ·
c e l le d ?
L ost
you r Interested . Cali992·5403 .

eRENTALS

1- C.rd of Tl\flnks
2- ln M em or l•m

Waitress ove r 21. no e&gt;&lt;perlence necessary . Night
sh ill. Friendly Ta,ern, 992·
9975.

13

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX
eANNOUNCEMENTS

Miscella neous

17

Help Wanted

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

BRADFORD, Auctioneer,
Complete Service. Phone
9•9·2487 or 949·2000. racine,
Ohio, Crill Bradford .
wanted : Locust fence
posts. U inch used tires.
Bernie 992· 7275 .

plal'ls and
speCiftcatlons within thir·
ty (30) days o1the Issuance
date. ORC 3745.07 does not
provide for adjudication
hearing

requests

or

ap·

peals from orders, verified
complaints,
or
en forcement
compliance
schedule letters. Within 30
days of publication in a
newspaper In the affected
county, any person may
also: (I submit written
comments relating to ac tions, proposed actions,
verified complaints, en forcement
compliance
schedule
letters
or
preliminary staff determinations on permits to install : (2) request a public
meeting
regarding
propased actions or on
preliminary staff determinations on ~rmlts to In-

stall; and·or (3) request
notice of further actions or
proceedln~s . Ail requests
lor adjudtcatlon hearings
and public meetings, and
other communications con cerning public meetings,
adjudication

hear.ings,

verified complaints, and
regulations, should be ad·
dressed to The Legal
Records Section, Ohio
EPA, P. 0. Box 1049,
Columbus, Ohio 43216,
(614) 46o·6037 . Unless
otherwise stated In par·
ticular notices, all other
communications including
comments on proP9sed actions should be addressed
either to The Division of
Authorization and Com·
pllance (Air) or Permit
and Approval Section
(Water), whichever Is ap·
proprlate, at The Ohio
EPA, P. 0. Box 1049,
Columbus, Ohio 43216.
Issuance of certification
Jaymar Coal Company
Cheshire, OH, Effective
date03·04-80
Pertains to 401 Cer·
tilicatlon Grant.
(3) 12, ltc

REQUI:ST FOR
PROPOSALS
COMPREHENSIVE
EMPLOYMENT ANO
TRAINING ACT
OF 1978
OHIO
OEPARTMENT
OF
AOMINISTRATIVE
SERVICES
The Office of Manpower
Development
is an ·
nouncing plans for a Bidders' Conference to1&gt;e held
In Columbus Oh io at the
State Office Tower, 30 Easr
Broad Street, Columb~.,ts,
Ohio, on April 8, 1980, in the
LObby Hearing Room . The
pur pose of meeting will be
to distribute proposal in·
formation for Title 1v
Yourh communily and
Im Conservation
provement Projects (YC·
CIP) ; Title IV Youth Em·
ployment and Training
Pro~ram
Demonstration
Pro 1ect (YETPJ; and Title
II B Priority Projects.
Under these programs,
employment an.d training
acttviltes will be offered to
the appropriate eligible
groups as defined in The
Federal Regulations of
April 3, 1979 for Title II B
and Oclober 2, 1979 for Y tCIP and YETP . All op·
portunities available 10
programs funded under the
act shall be mode without
regard to race
color,
creed, national origin, sex,
age, handicap( political at·
filiation, or be iefs.
The purpase Of YCC I P IS
to provide community ser·
VIce opportunities through
labor intensive communily
conse"at·lon and lm ·
provement projects which
would otherwise not be
carried out. The purPOse of
YETP

Demonstration

NOTICE OF
PUBLIC SALE
Notice is hereby given
that on March 21 , 1980 at 10
a.m. a public sale will be
held at the offices of the
Central Trust Co. N.A ..
Middleport, to sell lor cash
the following collateral , to
wit:
One 1978 Honda Hal·
chback
Ser .
No.
SBC6124765. The Central
Trust Co., Middleport, OH .
reserves the right to bid at
this sale.
(3) 10, 11, 12, Jtc

Programs is to derive in·
formation about yout h
rO:grams and their ef erttveness. Project s must
be concerned with the·
fo llowing youth populi!tion
gr ou ps: Youth parents, offende rs, school dropouts,
l-4·15 year olds. The B id ·
der s' conference for YC·
CI P wl llbeginat9 :00A.M.,
and YETP Demonstration
Program •t !0 :30A .M .
The purpose of T i t le II B
priority proj ects is to
provide emp oyment and
tra ining acti v iti es to the
econ om ica ll y . d is ad ·
vantaged . s pecial groups
i n skill
sh orta ge oc·
cupational areas through
classroom training, on-the·
job tra i ning, less-than·
c lass tr aini ng, work experience, or other appropr iate activities as
defined b y the prime spon sor.
Proposal should identify .
the training need and
corroborate suc h by use of

r.

Labor Market Information.

The Bidders' Conference
f or Title II B priority

projec ts will begin at 1: 30
p .m .
Mor~
detailed
i n·
format1on as to goals, ob-

l_ectlves ,
performance
standards, review criteria ,
t arget .POPUlations~ forms,
matenal s
anc;t
other
releyant data w~ll b~
provlded at the Bidders
~ onfe r ence .
~rC?gram
duration will be 1tm1ted to
fiscal year 1981. (October 1,

1980 - S~J?tember, 30, 1981):

Additional
1,n format1on
may be obtau,-.ed from
Douglas B . Marltn at 1-800·
282· 1050 or 1-614·466·8326.
Reservations for the con lerences may be made by
contacting Mrs. K . c. Hale
at the above numbers no
later than March 28, 1980.
( 3) 11, ltc

Thuroday, Mari:h 13

ASTRO •GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

Astro-Graph, Box 489. ~io
City Statton. N.Y. 10019. Be tura
to apec:::ny birth date.
ARIES (MArch 21·Aprll 111 Be
careful tOday about making arw
cofnmltmenta without first hav.
tng e clear understanding of
what you're getting tntQ. You
could bite on more than you can
chew.
,

wesl to ' lands owned bv
INTHECOMMPN
Will iam JobS. Thence south
•PLEAS COURT,
Meigs County, Ohio
with William Jobs line to
St;RVICE BY
Mat h i as Pu'lllns land .
Thence east with Mathia!
PUBLICATION
No. ll,,409
Pullins land Ia the publ ic
RICHARD R. CRAMLET road on Long Run. Thente '
and
norlh following the mean·
SARP.H E• CRAMLET, hiS derlngs of said publi c r oaa ·
TAURUS (April 211oMay 20)
to the place of beOinnlng, to
wife.
St~r a middle course If you 're
conta in twenty•six acres, to
1616 7th Streeet
with people who nave conflicting
26101,
Parkersburg,
be the same more or less.
views. It's all right to arbitrate,
Plaintiffs,
Reference Deed : Vol. 83,
but don 't take Stdea.
Page 411 , Meigs County I
vs .
GEiloiiNI (May 21-Ju.. 20) Uso
J . 0 . DEWITT, whose last Deed Records.
no methods to advance your
address
Is unknown
. Excepting therefrom J
alms that cou ld tarnish your
UNKNOWN
HEIRS, acres conveyed to Samuel
image. The means wift not justl ty
OEVISEES, LEGATEES,
T•vlor bY deed recorded In
the ends.
DISTRIBUTEES,
AD·
Vol. 86, f'•Of 79, Meigs,
CANC"' (June 21.Julr 22) You
may be tempted to poke your
MINISTRATQRS, AND County Deed Records.
nose Into a situation with no
EXECUTORS, IF ANY,
Excepting therefrom '
direct beari ng on you. You 'll
OF THE FOLLOWING :
acres conveved ' to Ida M.
have a sticky time getting ou t of
ETTA
TAYLOR . T aytor by deed recorded In
It 1r yolJ do.
CRAMLEY , Deceased i · Vol. 97, Page 356, Meigs
LEO (July 23-AIIfl. 221 Make no
WILLIAM
CRAMLET,
County Deed Records.
transactions today where there
and the demand of the
Deceased ;
BESSIE
Is something of material value al
CRAMLET,
Deceased;
Complaint is that Plaintiffs
atake, unless you know exactly
what you 're aotng . You could
WILLIAM
RAY
title to the premises
suHer a permanent loss.
. CRAMLET,
Oeceased;
described herein be gran·
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Bepl. 22) Stall
MAY
CRAMLET , ted against ail claims of the
for time If you feel you're being
Deceased; J , D; DEWITT, defendants and that the
pressed Into making a decision
Deceased,
plaintiffs are the owners in
you 're unsure of, espeCially if 11 _
Oefendants fee simple of the premises
Involves your work . There could
. TO THE DEFENDANTS and are entitled· to i m
be long-term effects.
ABOVE NAMED :
mediate passesslon of the ·
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) You're
You are hereby notified premises. ·
likely to have a heavier work loa&lt;+
than usual today. Pace yoursetr
that you have been named
You are notified that you
wisely so you don't create addlDefendants In a leo•l ac · are required to arswer the
uonal str'1SS.
lion entitled : " RIchard R. Complaint within twenty·
SCORPIO (OCI. 24-Nov. 22J Be
Cramlet, el al. vs. J. D. eight days after the last
very selective as lo whom you
DeWitt, et al ." in the Com · publication, which will bf.
chum around with. Associating
mon Pleas Court of Meigs published once each week
with the wrong types could leEIVe
County, Ohio, Case No. for six consecutive weeks.
8 permanent scar on your reputallon.
17,409 . .The object of the The last publication will be
BAGinARIUB (Nov 23-Doc:.21)
Complaint being to set up made on the 2nd day of
.
·
any interest the Defen · April, 1980.
Don t skim Ove r Important sltuadants may claim In . the
lions. Things swept under the
In case of your failure to
rug may later surface In an ugly
following described real answer
or
otherwise
fashion.
estate, to·wlt :
respand as perm Itied · by
CAPRICORN jO.C. 22-Jon. 11)
Situated in Lebanon the Ohio Rules of Civil
Nothing advantageous will be
Township, Meigs County,
Procedure within the time
gained today by trying to Impose
State of Onio. Being a part stated,
Judgment
by
unpopular Ideas or suggestions
of Section No. 28, Range 11 default wi II be rendered
on unwiiUng listeners. Know
of the Ohio Company's Pur · against you for rhe relief
when to be quiet.
chase : Being Twenty-six demanded In the Com·
AOUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fob. 11)
acres, more or less, on the
plaint.
Bettet put a lock and key on the
old money belt today. You could
south·west corner of saill
Larry E. Spencer,
be talked Into spending far more
Section No. 28 beginning on
Clerk of Courts,
than you can really afloro. ae
the south·east corner of
Meigs County, c;lhlo
prudent In all your dealings.
lands owned by Annie M .
By: Marlene Harrison
(t.IEWSPAPER ENTEFIPFIISE ASS N.)
Tennant, in the public road
Deputv
2-18-80 (TAPE NO. II )
leading from the Oh io (2) 29; (3) S, 12, It, 26; (4)
River to Bashan. Thence 2, 't

w. va.

Revival at MI. Union Bap·
list Church, conducted by
William Tillis and Family,
Penns
Creek,
Pen nsyl\lanla . March 11 -16,
7 : 30 nightly . Cecil Cox,
pastor .

GET VALUABLE training
as a young business person
and e•rn good money plus
some greal(ll lfts as a Sen·
tine I route carrier . Phone
us right away and get on
the eligibility list at 992·
2156 or 992·2157.

-.10.
FooclerlleJien: Good and Otoi&lt;o =o to 100 lito.
71 .liNUJ; 3110"' 400 lito. 1111.10-71.10; 4110,. 1011
lito. N-7uo: 1011 to 111111bo. s1.J0.73.»: eoo ro 1110
lito. 17~ 700 lo 1110 ll&gt;tt. ili.IIUUO: IIIII and
OYWU.
.25.
. Foocler Blllltt: Good and Otoi"' =oro 3110 11&gt;1.
IHI.IO: 101 lo tOO lito. 7W2.7$; tOO lo 10111110.
n .IN2.10: 100 ro1100 ll&gt;tt. 17.10-71.10; _eoo ro 1110
lito. 11.10-11.10; 7011 ro 11110 lilt. 1'1-ta.w: IIIII and

PRICES EFFECTIVE

over5MUG.

lloillola

10.10.

sr..n and

Bulla 13111H1111i lbt.) l!A-

Bulla (I,DIIta. and over)5M4.
(utilltlea) IMUO; (cannont

Slauoltler Cowtt

llllloufton)40~.10.

S!trlnrrerCowtt (by tile boacl) 340431.
C'crwKalYa (lwlhebeod) I!WII.

Veal Cllveol7Jo.m.

.

Baby Calvoai0-155. ·
•
11008
Topllou (llO.Dl) 1Ht1.21.
Boari!HJ.
l'lp (by the bead) 10.31.
Sow1 (tOO lito. andover) 11.10&amp;.

Ground Beef.........~!~ 1

49

·-u-tacl:
=~

8tdoo

CA1TLEPRICES:
·
Foocler sr..n (Good aDd Cbolc•l -lito.
lUI; ICI0-700llto. II.7W'I.n.
FooclerlleJient (Good and Ololce ) 300«101110.
00.111).7$,10;_100-700 lito. 17-46.
Foocler """'' (Good and Utolco) 300«101110.
M.IHJ; 101).7000..1UI·71.
Slallf!l*r Blllltt: (Ova-1,000 lito.) ill.zr..&amp;!.
Slaucbttr Cowtt: Ulilltl,.17.111147.10; Canners
lllllet-.-.
S!trlnrrerCowtt (bJ tbe bead) CWI. iiUII.
Cow tiitit Coli ptlin: (by the unit) S2HIIO.
Veala: (Clttioellld prime) 111.50-UI.
Baby CIIYell: (by tile head) 112.10-127.10.

% PORK LOIN.~ .. ~.~~

SIIEEPPI!Ia!'.S:
lbuaiUrLambo!M2.
'Feeder Lomlto 112..11141.

but you muat be careful that negative thinking doean't spoil them.
Look lor the posjtlve side In all
your endeavors.

Chances are you wUI be , If you
allow others to overly Influence
you . Romance, travel, luck ,
resourcea, posalble Pitfalls and

for the

CHICKEN.

coming months

&lt;Jl 10, 11. 12, 3tc

"·"

Drumstick oR Breasts~·.

are all discussed In your Astra-

Graph letter, which begins with·
your blrthda~. Mall S1 ~or each to

MOTIIERS TO MEET
Women for Informed Mothering
will meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at
the Pomeroy United Methodist
Church, 112 East Second St. There
will be discussions on prenatal care,
labor and delivery, and chUd care,
and the programs planned for the

Chicken Thighs.....~

group will include speakers and

USDA CHOICE BONELESS

NOTICE OF
PUBLIC SALE ,
that on March 21, 1980 at 10
a.m. a public sa1e will be
held· at the offices of the
Central Trust Co. N.A.,
Middleport, to sell lor &lt;ash
the folfowlng collateral, to
wit :
One 1975 Dodge 2·dr. hd·
tp.
Ser .
No.
XS22GSR 121480. The Cen·
tral Trust Co., Middlepart,
OH . reserves the right to
bid a !this sale.

BACON.................. ~~.

PISCES (Fob. :JI).March 20) You
may feel a bit like you're being
pulled In two directions today.

c areer

09

SAVORY SLICED

'

fUms. Danette Hoffman may be contacted for further infonnation,
742-2368.
Notice is hereby given

298 SEOOND ST.
POMEROY, 0.
SATURDAY, MARCH 15, 1980

Butcllor Sowli2HI.
Butcllor Boarl ZUihll.
FooclerPiu: (bylhebead)7.5CJ.16.

Morch 13, 11110
There are a lot of good surprises
In s~ore for you this coming year,

ta

$

Chuck Roast .......... ~ ..

l98o
AMC CONCORD
.,
2 DOOR SEDAN

59

More rear seat leg room .
than Ford Fairmont and
Mercury Zephyr . 1

RIVERSIDE AMC-JEEP
Gallipolis, Ohio
11 She will explain the many benefits of mlcrowav~ cooking, InCluding
now you can save 50% to 75% of the energy normally used .in cOOk·
lng.
·
.
• She will explain how you can cook mosttoods gourmet perfect In jUS\
one·fourth the time.
• • Learn tiow you can brown, sear, grill, fry, bake and .saute with a
microwave oven browning sklllt!t.
.
·
• There will be a question ard answer period so you can get the
straight facts abOut mlcrowq,ve cooking.
• You will receive llter~ture explaining how microwaves actually
cook . It is completely different from conventional methods.

Cooking School wm·Be
Conducted At Our Store.

organ

Help Wanted

NO CHARGE e NO OBLIGATION TO BUY

INGELS FURNITURE &amp; JEWELRY

I

FOR MORE INFORMATION
24&amp;-11313 Ell. 200

"Two 1nOne Store"
Middleport, 0 . .

N. 2nd Ave.

,MAINE

POTATOES
10 LB.

SMOKED
'

PICNICS

,,.

79e
\

'

.~G~AP~FRUIT
· 5 'LB. BAG ·
it.

'1

Racine, 0.

Stiversville
News Notes
Mrs. Fem Cooper and Janice,
Sprlncfleld, Va., Miss Mabel McDaniels, Falla Chw'ch, Va., ~ .
Vlrglnla Pickens and sons, Reedy,
W. Va., Paster David Harris,
Racine, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Abels
ind Mrs: Gene Co!lgo, Long Bottom,
were gue8ta recently at the home ol
Mr. and Mrs. Louis De .L ui
Mr. and Mri!. Bill Bryant, Debl"llll

and Dave, speut a recent ·weekend
with Mrs. Myrtle Lewta and family,

"uffalo, W.Va.
.
Mrs. Merle Evans visited Mrs.
Mae Vim Meter and Ruby, Long Bot' tGm, and Mr. and Mrs. Nonnan
Evans and family ,local, on SUnday. '
Mrs. Larry Fitch, Belpre, Mrs.
. Denver Curtis, Chester, Mrs. Nita
Wells, Long Bottom, and Mrs. Fannie Durst and .Leota Birch, local,
were callers at the hlme of Mr. and
Mia. R. R.Duritrecently.
Mr. and Mnl. LaiTy Lehew,
Pomeroy,~ Mr. !ll1d Mrs. Nor' man Lebew and Elaine recently.
. Mr. llhd Mn. Harold ' Roush,
Racine, were aupper guests at the
)lome of Leota Birch a recent Mon- · ·
clay eVening.

We Glady Accept Fed. F-..., Stamps
Monday thru Fr!•av

BRAUNSCHWEIGER

9:0011•: . 110
(-"!t:.; ;·toi•v t : oo., :OG

· Mrs. Zetts llOyd, Mrs. Ruth
and Mn. Reva. Taylor,
Parkersburg, W.Va., call~ 1111 Mrs.
IVa Carpenter and daughter on Sunday afternoon, •

t

CLOSED
SUNDAYS

CHUNK
101(2 oz.

.

Se1e110

69~

6

DETERGENT

32 oz ..

Of' '

8 PB~k-16 OZ.

99~ DIET' RITE

LETTUCE ........:.. ~~~.
FLAVORITE

. ' Wlien· you · think . YOU have
. troubJet, C!lilllder the 'pJight of .the

-

.

P-lASTIC

FRANCO.:AMERICAN
...

EXTRA LARGE

Spag~etti-0 ... ,.~5•'!';

EGGS ................. ~l!~.

~·= ··-

co IS

·~~~

N -

····- ·· · -

.. ~--

CORONET

FLAVO.ITE

GERBER STRAINED

TOILET·TISSUE

NAVY BEANS

BABY FOOD

$139
'

· 8 ROLL
.

. Limit 1 Per customer .
G90d Only a.f l"owen·~
Offer Expires Mar."lS, 1980

r.dlo . . reader wholedaDY paper
ftln't delivered.
"
·~

$ 99 ·

ICE CREAM ........G!~ •••
VALLEY BELL
FlAVORITE
69
(//
M
$
7%0l4/$
2lO ILK ......... :~~ ....
Mac. &amp; Cheese ....

.

•'
·j

t..;II~U.IIU Launo~rv

:

. Mrs. Beulah Larldn, . Mrs. LOis
· Goede,' Paw'' Paw, W. · Va., Mn. '
Carolyn Price, Portland, vlslted
Leota Birch on Frlday evl!l)lna.

PHEBE'S STORE

20 Count

Sunday 10 am-10 pm

, _ sr..n:

-~.80.

BUYING U.S. SILVER
COINS DATED 1964 OR
EARLIER. ALSO GOLD
ITEMS, DON'T LOSE
MONEY, SIMPLY PICK
UP THE PHONE AND
DIAL
614 · 992 5113 .
BROWN ' S.

11

Mon.-sat. 8 am-10 pm

HOG PRla!'.S:
ll&lt;tlll" (No. 1, Banon and GUll) 11110-230 lito.

Buying u.s . sliver coins
dated 1964 or earlier. Also
gold Items, don't lose
money, simply pick up the
phone and dlai614·992·5113 .
Brown's.

Picking up an Easy play
in your area .
Looking for a responsible
party to take over paymen·
ts . Call credit manager
collect . 614··592-5122.

Store Hours:

l*la V-U.-Co.
lfortttllepeo1
Sale rNflf"/ SolUI&lt;Iay at 1p.JD.
All ...,... - - t h e alldlon"' Sat.rday,
Mar&lt;&amp; 1,111). 'l'rlndtt: Feeder catlle "--y 1o 14
blcher. c:onll·UOWIII'jjYoal calv,. oteady.
ToOtl oadtl'l
Good and a.orco =o "'1100 ll&gt;tt.
IT·IUO; 1110 lo 400 Jill. 11.-; 4110 lo 1110 ll&gt;tt.
77.7HI; 1011 lo 1011 lito. 'IUUO: 100 1o 1110 lito.
a .illl-11; 700 lo., Jill. fU0·71.111; 1011 and over

.

••

•

2LB.
Pl\ti.

..

.2/$1

09

4.50

oz.

.6./$1

·. Limit 1 Per Clastomer
Good Only lit Powell's
Ex
15, i980

COFFEE
2 LB. $599
AU GRINDS
(050x5 .·

-

Lil'llitl Per Customer
Good oniy at Powell's
Offer E
Mar. 15, 1980

�operating unsafe vehicle ; Randall
Reeves. Pomeroy, $3S and costs,
failed to report accident; Charles
Hatfield, Ashville, costs only, 20
days confinement, non-support.
Forfeiting bonds were Donald
Gentz, Hamilloo, Michael McC!ead,
Uttle Hocking, Melissa Hubbard,
Syracuse, Roland McDole, Winchester, Virginia Dunn, Vinton,
Davie Lowe, Coolville, James
Richardson, Belpre, and Donald
Price, Madison, W. V11., $35.ii0 each,
speeding; Tery Walker, Rutland,
$360.50, DWI; Ira Bumpas, The

11- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. , Wednesday. March 12.1980

1(1....The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy . 0 ., Wednesday, March 12, 1980

31 traffic cases tenninated
Eighteen defendants were lined
and 11 others forfeited bonds in
-Meigs County court Monday.
Fined by Judge Charles Knight
were Bobby Rupe, Rutland, Roy
Howell, Jr., Pomeroy, Joyce Bing,
Long Botlom, WUliarn . Weaver,
Belpre, Janet E. Connolly, Reedsville, Donald Bush, Racine, Terry
Spaun, Racine, Betty Wolfe,
Rutland, Terrence Smith, Cir-

She's Aying High!

cleviUe, Charles Stone, Pomeroy,
Kenneth Cook, Syracuse, and Anthony Miller, Vienna, $15 'and costs
each, speeding; Michael Bra~,
Pomeroy, $10 and costs, passmg
without assured clear distance;
Timothy Adams, Pomeroy, $10 and
costs, failed to stop for stop sign;
Timothy Buchanan, Reedsville, $15
and costs, defective exhaust; Ricky
Smith, Reedsville, $15 and costs,

Plains, $60.50, failed to have or
display highway US&lt;' tax sticker;
George Frederick, Big Bend, W.
Va., $35, speed ; Terry Walker,
Rutland, $3S.50, expired operator's
license; Leonard Wilkinson, Middleport, $37.55, disorderly conduct.

MEETS11WRSOAY
Ohio Valley Grange :1!612, Letart
Falls will meet Thursday at 7:30
p.m. at the home of Ula Wolfe.
Potluck refreshments will be served.

'
ERROR REPORTED

CORRECTION
It was Randall Roberts not Randy
RobertS who discovered the broken
window at Southern High School. He
ill a member of the Racine ER Squad
not the fire department.

David Napper, who died Saturday,
was survived by 20 grandchildren
not 21 as was reported to the Daily
Sentinel. He was not survived by a
great-granddaughter as was also
reported.

FUNDS RECEIVED
State Auditor Thomas E.
Ferguson 's office reported a total of
$58,:1!62.69 sent to 22 Ohio counties as
reimbursement of costs incurred under Ohio's public defender program.
This amount was for court"iipproved
legal counsel.
Meigs County received $289.25 of
the total.
GRANGE TO MEET
The Rock Springs Grange will
meet at 7:30 p.m . Thursday at the
hall.

KROGER COST CUTTER COUPON

;\~

Rinso Laundry.
Detergent

I

GIRL SCOUTS

I

Meeting New Challenges

*

Girl Scouts are encouraged
to try new things, and to do
(heir best at all they try.
We salute their high values!

We're proud to salute this
fine organization for showing girls · how to aim high in
their lives and their ideals.

*Except Closed Saturday Midnight TII9AM Sunday
*Except Hinton , White Sulphur, 7th Avenue , Cha
And Williamson Kroger
b&lt;;h

Of

ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY
theM adv8f'tiaed itemS IS ICIQUII ed

10

be

rudit'r available tor sale rn MC:h Kroger Store, flltCec&gt;t as
~ not.d in thil ad. It - do n.m out of an ad\«tiMd
item, 'N'I will off• you your chOice ot a comparltble rtem,
~ avlillble, reflectillQ the samr~ savrnliJI. or a ralncheck.
wtlich will ent itle you to purchale thcl advert~ 11811'1 at the
.dvert;.d price within :1) da¥11

Girl Scouts Know

I

A Girl Scout Is

I

Del Monte
Tomato Juu:e

GUAR AN TEE

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

2

Everything yoo buy at Kroger •• guaran188d for vour total

tlhl fact!On regardleu of ~nutactur8f If you are not satrs·
ritd.
will replace rou r item with the
brand or a
brand or rel und
COrYIUG HT 1910- THE KII OCE it CO . ITE.M S AND PRICE$

GOOD SUNDA Y MARCH 9 THIU S~ TUIIOA Y MARCH 15 .

'

l tln IN

POMEROY AND GA L L I PO LlS STORE S.

WI: RESERVE TH E. RIGHT TO liMIT QUA NTITIU . NONE
SOl O TO DEALERS.

KROGER COST CUTTER COUPON
•

U.S.GOVT GRADED CHOICE

.

T-Bone Steak.b

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

$7 99 Pork
99
C
Roast .. :.......

'

DOWNING CHILDS AGENCY

Swansoft

·POMEROY, OHIO

Towels

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

POMEROY, OHIO

TISSUe ..... Pak

.

MIDDLEPORT,
. OHIO
"~(·.

!

.'

TUPPERS PLAINS

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
.•'· '. .

.,

':;
,

KINGSBURY HOME SALES

GRAVELY TRACTOR SALES

POMEROY, OHIO

POMEROY, OHIO

::·,

WARNER INSURANCE

20

•..

'

'

I

J

.

i

1

LVI .

·

2 ggc
7

MULTI·GRAIN
16
Kroger Bread . L~~~·
KROGER FROZEN
Gl d D t 1A·01.
aze onu s .. aox

-

KROGER NATURAL FLAVOR

69
~~am ~;~~ $ 1
KROGER
,,. age
.lk
B tterm1 .........
KROGER (IN THE DAIRY DEPT.)
7gc
•
•t
3
B
KROGER CIE'AM OF MUSHROOM
DRCIEAMOF
sgc
10
Chicken Soup. c~~~· ·
&amp;gc
Kroge.r Saltanes.

KROGER

u2%

Milk

$ 49

Gal.
Paper or
astic Ctn. ·

G0 I

.

'l''"' ' .•

POMEROY, OHIO
I

,.

Ct n.

IS CUI S...........

. Tubes

15·Ct.

..

'

"

16·o•.
aox

,.______'"""'!~::--"!'"'":"~iiiiiii =~......;;:~__,~-:----""'
IIOOIIIDIIKINLISI
1-NCII QP CHIC IIN

""*'

· ~11y

Pale
Frltd Chlcktn

llellluaor
Sllloktd

nnn

Lemon
lrunch Pit

99
.
"'$199 ~3 ff:.t.•·
~~139
:::...
IOrvt••tkll•

k'

:-·'~',· '

•

.

.,.
(

,

3 ,~

POMEROY, OHIO , .
I

•

U

.

r

57c

gg

•

'
~

,

'.

'

S·MITH NELSON MOTORS
.

POMEROY, OHIO

'

.

~

..

'

EBERSBACij' HARDWAR.E ·9

.

.

)' :

o..

•

.

R~TtAND,

Bread

KIOGER HU AVAILAILl

I•

POMEROY,

89

SWANSOFT
$
2
Facial Tissue ...... ::;~~JOHNSON'S TODDLER
$180
DISPOSABU
12 Ct
jl
Diapers .. ... .. .. .. .. B~x ·

POMEROY NATIONAL BANK MIDDLEPORT'LUNCH ROOM'.',

POMEROY, OHIO

•c whi~;K3·0G:.$119

2

.

'

G&amp;J AUTO PARTS

ROll,

Swansoft
•
A·Roll

CENTRAL.
. TRUST CO.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

PER

BATHROOM

POMEROY, OHIO

RAWLINGS COATS
FUNERAL HOME

SIMMONS OLD5-CADILLAC

$ f2 9
7c Whit~OUND
:~:::rs .·~J . Potatoes i!; 1

FRESH

15

· MEIGS AUTO .PARTS

POMEROY, OHIO

RACINE, OHIO

::::

- :?--

POMEROY, OHIO

K&amp;C JEWELERS

Grade A
Medium Egg•

POTATOES lO·LI. lAG ... 79'
GRAPE, ORI·. NGE OR CHERRY TR~ICANA $1
.Winesap Apples 5 ao9
lb $139
. •t ri. • k
10-oz.
F
fUI lilfiR S .......
••••·
JUMIO
27 SIZE FRESH
C
JUMBO 72 SIZE
C
Cantaloupe ........... Each
Navel Oranges ..... Eoch
380

· RACINE HOME NATIONAL
BANK

~1)e\)

SHEETS PER ROLL

SUGAR RUN ·MILLS

VILLAGE PHARMACY

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

~~~t)\l~~

THE DAILY SENTINEL

POMEROY, OHIO

Broccoli

1

POMEROY, OHIO

FRANCIS FLORIST

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

$2

2

121

ERWIN'S GULF SERVICE

Fresh

SLICED INTO CHOPS. lb .
$129
59 FRESH QUARTER
KRO~~~
.
.
.
·-lb .
k
L
PebftUt Butter . 3 Pail ·
Por oan .. ..... ....... lb .
KGR~cf1~!T.
~BEIRIRYOR
sr
·lb
$199
rapef~e
y.... 9 '/,.o% . $149
·
ace'N', riaeon .... 2 Pkg.

POMEROY FLOWER SHOP

POMEROY, OHIO

age

FRESH BOSTON BUTT

Coffee .. 3~=~

A PRESENTATION BY THE FOLLOWING COMMUNITY MERCHANTS

ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY

~!Y.~E~!rts

45c
..b.

ggc

&amp;;~G~T

heritage house

Mixed

REGULARORCHUBPAK
CHEESEOI
lb $149
ANYSIZEPKG.
$139 Jumbo Wieners ~icg :
Ground Beef .......... lb . .
· oscARMAYERMEAT
SER~E'N'SAVE
l·lb .
SLICED
.
8
Waeners ............. Pkg.
Bologna ............ .. P-k;:

Loyal, Helpful, Caring
Girl Scouting brings out the
best in our girls .. .shaping
them to become outstanding people.... We 're proud.

The Way to Good Health
Looking and feeling good
means keeping active. Girl
Scouts are urged to join in
sports for fun and fitness.

1~iiR:L;~; $299

HOLLy FARMS,U.S.D.A.INSPECTED

.,

:
:

•

"'
'••

�operating unsafe vehicle ; Randall
Reeves. Pomeroy, $3S and costs,
failed to report accident; Charles
Hatfield, Ashville, costs only, 20
days confinement, non-support.
Forfeiting bonds were Donald
Gentz, Hamilloo, Michael McC!ead,
Uttle Hocking, Melissa Hubbard,
Syracuse, Roland McDole, Winchester, Virginia Dunn, Vinton,
Davie Lowe, Coolville, James
Richardson, Belpre, and Donald
Price, Madison, W. V11., $35.ii0 each,
speeding; Tery Walker, Rutland,
$360.50, DWI; Ira Bumpas, The

11- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. , Wednesday. March 12.1980

1(1....The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy . 0 ., Wednesday, March 12, 1980

31 traffic cases tenninated
Eighteen defendants were lined
and 11 others forfeited bonds in
-Meigs County court Monday.
Fined by Judge Charles Knight
were Bobby Rupe, Rutland, Roy
Howell, Jr., Pomeroy, Joyce Bing,
Long Botlom, WUliarn . Weaver,
Belpre, Janet E. Connolly, Reedsville, Donald Bush, Racine, Terry
Spaun, Racine, Betty Wolfe,
Rutland, Terrence Smith, Cir-

She's Aying High!

cleviUe, Charles Stone, Pomeroy,
Kenneth Cook, Syracuse, and Anthony Miller, Vienna, $15 'and costs
each, speeding; Michael Bra~,
Pomeroy, $10 and costs, passmg
without assured clear distance;
Timothy Adams, Pomeroy, $10 and
costs, failed to stop for stop sign;
Timothy Buchanan, Reedsville, $15
and costs, defective exhaust; Ricky
Smith, Reedsville, $15 and costs,

Plains, $60.50, failed to have or
display highway US&lt;' tax sticker;
George Frederick, Big Bend, W.
Va., $35, speed ; Terry Walker,
Rutland, $3S.50, expired operator's
license; Leonard Wilkinson, Middleport, $37.55, disorderly conduct.

MEETS11WRSOAY
Ohio Valley Grange :1!612, Letart
Falls will meet Thursday at 7:30
p.m. at the home of Ula Wolfe.
Potluck refreshments will be served.

'
ERROR REPORTED

CORRECTION
It was Randall Roberts not Randy
RobertS who discovered the broken
window at Southern High School. He
ill a member of the Racine ER Squad
not the fire department.

David Napper, who died Saturday,
was survived by 20 grandchildren
not 21 as was reported to the Daily
Sentinel. He was not survived by a
great-granddaughter as was also
reported.

FUNDS RECEIVED
State Auditor Thomas E.
Ferguson 's office reported a total of
$58,:1!62.69 sent to 22 Ohio counties as
reimbursement of costs incurred under Ohio's public defender program.
This amount was for court"iipproved
legal counsel.
Meigs County received $289.25 of
the total.
GRANGE TO MEET
The Rock Springs Grange will
meet at 7:30 p.m . Thursday at the
hall.

KROGER COST CUTTER COUPON

;\~

Rinso Laundry.
Detergent

I

GIRL SCOUTS

I

Meeting New Challenges

*

Girl Scouts are encouraged
to try new things, and to do
(heir best at all they try.
We salute their high values!

We're proud to salute this
fine organization for showing girls · how to aim high in
their lives and their ideals.

*Except Closed Saturday Midnight TII9AM Sunday
*Except Hinton , White Sulphur, 7th Avenue , Cha
And Williamson Kroger
b&lt;;h

Of

ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY
theM adv8f'tiaed itemS IS ICIQUII ed

10

be

rudit'r available tor sale rn MC:h Kroger Store, flltCec&gt;t as
~ not.d in thil ad. It - do n.m out of an ad\«tiMd
item, 'N'I will off• you your chOice ot a comparltble rtem,
~ avlillble, reflectillQ the samr~ savrnliJI. or a ralncheck.
wtlich will ent itle you to purchale thcl advert~ 11811'1 at the
.dvert;.d price within :1) da¥11

Girl Scouts Know

I

A Girl Scout Is

I

Del Monte
Tomato Juu:e

GUAR AN TEE

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

2

Everything yoo buy at Kroger •• guaran188d for vour total

tlhl fact!On regardleu of ~nutactur8f If you are not satrs·
ritd.
will replace rou r item with the
brand or a
brand or rel und
COrYIUG HT 1910- THE KII OCE it CO . ITE.M S AND PRICE$

GOOD SUNDA Y MARCH 9 THIU S~ TUIIOA Y MARCH 15 .

'

l tln IN

POMEROY AND GA L L I PO LlS STORE S.

WI: RESERVE TH E. RIGHT TO liMIT QUA NTITIU . NONE
SOl O TO DEALERS.

KROGER COST CUTTER COUPON
•

U.S.GOVT GRADED CHOICE

.

T-Bone Steak.b

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

$7 99 Pork
99
C
Roast .. :.......

'

DOWNING CHILDS AGENCY

Swansoft

·POMEROY, OHIO

Towels

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

POMEROY, OHIO

TISSUe ..... Pak

.

MIDDLEPORT,
. OHIO
"~(·.

!

.'

TUPPERS PLAINS

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
.•'· '. .

.,

':;
,

KINGSBURY HOME SALES

GRAVELY TRACTOR SALES

POMEROY, OHIO

POMEROY, OHIO

::·,

WARNER INSURANCE

20

•..

'

'

I

J

.

i

1

LVI .

·

2 ggc
7

MULTI·GRAIN
16
Kroger Bread . L~~~·
KROGER FROZEN
Gl d D t 1A·01.
aze onu s .. aox

-

KROGER NATURAL FLAVOR

69
~~am ~;~~ $ 1
KROGER
,,. age
.lk
B tterm1 .........
KROGER (IN THE DAIRY DEPT.)
7gc
•
•t
3
B
KROGER CIE'AM OF MUSHROOM
DRCIEAMOF
sgc
10
Chicken Soup. c~~~· ·
&amp;gc
Kroge.r Saltanes.

KROGER

u2%

Milk

$ 49

Gal.
Paper or
astic Ctn. ·

G0 I

.

'l''"' ' .•

POMEROY, OHIO
I

,.

Ct n.

IS CUI S...........

. Tubes

15·Ct.

..

'

"

16·o•.
aox

,.______'"""'!~::--"!'"'":"~iiiiiii =~......;;:~__,~-:----""'
IIOOIIIDIIKINLISI
1-NCII QP CHIC IIN

""*'

· ~11y

Pale
Frltd Chlcktn

llellluaor
Sllloktd

nnn

Lemon
lrunch Pit

99
.
"'$199 ~3 ff:.t.•·
~~139
:::...
IOrvt••tkll•

k'

:-·'~',· '

•

.

.,.
(

,

3 ,~

POMEROY, OHIO , .
I

•

U

.

r

57c

gg

•

'
~

,

'.

'

S·MITH NELSON MOTORS
.

POMEROY, OHIO

'

.

~

..

'

EBERSBACij' HARDWAR.E ·9

.

.

)' :

o..

•

.

R~TtAND,

Bread

KIOGER HU AVAILAILl

I•

POMEROY,

89

SWANSOFT
$
2
Facial Tissue ...... ::;~~JOHNSON'S TODDLER
$180
DISPOSABU
12 Ct
jl
Diapers .. ... .. .. .. .. B~x ·

POMEROY NATIONAL BANK MIDDLEPORT'LUNCH ROOM'.',

POMEROY, OHIO

•c whi~;K3·0G:.$119

2

.

'

G&amp;J AUTO PARTS

ROll,

Swansoft
•
A·Roll

CENTRAL.
. TRUST CO.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

PER

BATHROOM

POMEROY, OHIO

RAWLINGS COATS
FUNERAL HOME

SIMMONS OLD5-CADILLAC

$ f2 9
7c Whit~OUND
:~:::rs .·~J . Potatoes i!; 1

FRESH

15

· MEIGS AUTO .PARTS

POMEROY, OHIO

RACINE, OHIO

::::

- :?--

POMEROY, OHIO

K&amp;C JEWELERS

Grade A
Medium Egg•

POTATOES lO·LI. lAG ... 79'
GRAPE, ORI·. NGE OR CHERRY TR~ICANA $1
.Winesap Apples 5 ao9
lb $139
. •t ri. • k
10-oz.
F
fUI lilfiR S .......
••••·
JUMIO
27 SIZE FRESH
C
JUMBO 72 SIZE
C
Cantaloupe ........... Each
Navel Oranges ..... Eoch
380

· RACINE HOME NATIONAL
BANK

~1)e\)

SHEETS PER ROLL

SUGAR RUN ·MILLS

VILLAGE PHARMACY

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

~~~t)\l~~

THE DAILY SENTINEL

POMEROY, OHIO

Broccoli

1

POMEROY, OHIO

FRANCIS FLORIST

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

$2

2

121

ERWIN'S GULF SERVICE

Fresh

SLICED INTO CHOPS. lb .
$129
59 FRESH QUARTER
KRO~~~
.
.
.
·-lb .
k
L
PebftUt Butter . 3 Pail ·
Por oan .. ..... ....... lb .
KGR~cf1~!T.
~BEIRIRYOR
sr
·lb
$199
rapef~e
y.... 9 '/,.o% . $149
·
ace'N', riaeon .... 2 Pkg.

POMEROY FLOWER SHOP

POMEROY, OHIO

age

FRESH BOSTON BUTT

Coffee .. 3~=~

A PRESENTATION BY THE FOLLOWING COMMUNITY MERCHANTS

ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY

~!Y.~E~!rts

45c
..b.

ggc

&amp;;~G~T

heritage house

Mixed

REGULARORCHUBPAK
CHEESEOI
lb $149
ANYSIZEPKG.
$139 Jumbo Wieners ~icg :
Ground Beef .......... lb . .
· oscARMAYERMEAT
SER~E'N'SAVE
l·lb .
SLICED
.
8
Waeners ............. Pkg.
Bologna ............ .. P-k;:

Loyal, Helpful, Caring
Girl Scouting brings out the
best in our girls .. .shaping
them to become outstanding people.... We 're proud.

The Way to Good Health
Looking and feeling good
means keeping active. Girl
Scouts are urged to join in
sports for fun and fitness.

1~iiR:L;~; $299

HOLLy FARMS,U.S.D.A.INSPECTED

.,

:
:

•

"'
'••

�..... . . . . . .. ....... - .....

· ··~·

······~

12- 'lbe Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, March 12, 1980

.

.13- The Dail,ySentinel, Mldi!Jeport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, March 12, 1980

Your Best Buys Are Found in the Sentinel Classifieds
MORE ClASSIFIEDS
ON PAGE 8

31

Homes for Sale

4 r oom house and bath. All
new car oet . 992·5871 .

DILLON
HEY! YOU
BELIEVE -

VIRGIL B. SR . II~ AI
:i16 E. Sec~d StrMt

Mortgage
mon e y
available . New homes, old
homes and refinan cin g
your present home . CON -

Phone
1-( 614) -992-3325
MOBILE HOME - 1972

VENTIONA L - 5 Pet. down .
VA

no down payment .
FHA · low down payment .
FHA
245 graduated

Three bedcroom, 2 bath,
furn i shed
M idland
mobile home on 7/ 8 of
an acre of land with
country sett ing.

payment program . FHA
265 subsidy program . Call
tor details . IRELAND
MORTGAGE CO ., 77 E .
State St ., Athens. 592·3051.

2

SET-UPS

-

for

tra ilers on 4 acres of
land near town on State

Route for ony $12,500.
CHEAPY - one floor 5

flpai estate

room building with bath
and flue for wood

burner. Only Sl LOOO.
OUT OF TOWN -

Homes for Sale

Large 2 story home w ith
2 rentals . Has city
water, central heating,
and large lot . Conve ~
nient location. Come
take a look .
INCOME - Si x rentals
in Middleport. Will pay
out in a few yers . Will
help supplement your
S.S. or income .

Roomy J bedroom home
with bath, natural gas,
Leading Creek water ,
utility room. Immediate
occupancy . $9,500 . Phone
742 -2460 .

Real Estate - General

NEW LISTING -

One

floor plan . 3 n ic e
bedrooms w ith cl osets .
Large living, formal
dining, lots of cupboards
in the kitchen, natural
. gas heat, storm doors &amp;
windows and 2 lots in
Racine out of high
water.

JY

608 E .
- MAIN..-..., .
' POMc ,.(),, 0.
992-2259

WE CAN SELL IT IF
ANYONE CAN. CALL

NEW LISTING - This 2

large lot. Good Value al
$18,300.00.
MINERS DEAL - Cen-

54 Misc. Merchanise
Homes for Sale
LIMESTONE ,
Modern J bedroom home, - COAL ,
basement w ith fireplace, sand , grav el , cal ci um
cenlral air, fully carpeted, chloride, fe r ll llzer. dog
located on 6\1:1 ac res nea r food, and all types of salt.
31

REAL ESTATE

22 Money to Loan
FINANCIN G-VA-FHA LOAN S. LOW OR NO DOWN
PAYMEN T. P URCHASE
OR
REFINANCE .
IRELAND MORTGAGE ,
77 E . STATE . ATHEN S.
614-592 ·3051.

bedroom home has new
carpetIng, modern kit·
chen. aluminum siding,
new roof, and sits on a

General

Will iam Fred Sm ith, Sr .,

532 S. 3rd, M;ddleport, OH .

fiB8HEI31

31

Real Estate

992-3325 or 992-3876.

~

WON ' T
3' BR

f r ame house. Ca rpeted
, &amp; paneled, on a quiet
stree t in Rac ine. Close
to schools &amp; stores.
Won ' t last long . $21,000. _

MIDDLEPORT

-

TWO BEDROOM home
located on one acre,
Middleport area, tra i ler
hookup for addJtionalln·

come. $11.000.
MIDDLEPORT AREA
2 bedroom home,
paneling and carpet,
eat-in kitchen . $10.500.

APPLE S - ROME beauty
apples a t S4 per bu. Bestfor
apple butter . Co li 669-3785,

After 3:30 p .m . cal l 247 ·
2032.

689 .

JUST

OFF

SR

7, 2

bedroom home, hard·
wood floors, new panel·
ing, on four acres of

land, barn. in Middleport area, will sell on
land contract, 512,500.

EMERGENCY

INVESTMENT
PERTY
established
the heart of
on corner
apartments
ly rented.
part .

PRO·
Well

business In
M iddleport,
lot, plus _.
all present·
Sell all or

2

DILLON
REAL ESTATE
Hobart Dillon, Broker
BranchMgr.

always

2

bedrooms, living room,
kitchen and bath . Also,
a four car garage and
approx . 1 acre . Yours
for only $13,300.00.

dining &amp; bath . City water and septi c. Nice vinyl
siding, located in Pomeroy Cpr. Priced at 514,900.

LOTS ON LINCOLN HILL FOR SALE.
$11,o·o o- Trailer &amp; lot. 3 Br, all carpeted, front
porch, wood underpinn ing, inc ludes pool. Anxious to
sell.
WON'T LAST - 4 yrs . old, 3 B R, bath 8. utilities, kit·
chen w-dishwasher, D. R. w-sliding glass doors to
patio, 3/.o~ acre. Carpeted in beautiful taste. $44,900.
BUSINESS AND BUILDING FOR SALE IN
POMEROY
WELL KEPT - 4 BR home, lg . L.R . .- lam. room,
eat-in kitchen, attached garage, hardwood floors,
plenty of yard, fruit trees &amp; garden space. $48,900.
NEWLY LISTED - This brick &amp; alum. sided home
welcomes you with its spit entry hall. Carpeted
throughout, 3 BR , utility area, sliding glass door to
redwood deck . Only 4 yrs. Old . lmmed . Pass.

WELL BUILT HOME -

room. Jus! $26,700 .00 .
OFFICE HOURS ON
FRIDAY TILL8 P.M.
REALTOR
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
992-6191
ASSOCIATES

$47 , 500 .
LOTS OF LOTS -

Donie &amp; Roger Turner

with

' lh 9

Priced to se ll. $39,000.

Property for sale. Over 3
acres of wooded land in

STARTER

HOME

-

Co.zy 2 bedroom in Tup·
pers Plains . N i ce
garden
spot . On l y

$23,000.00 .
MIDDLEPORT
Large 2 story home. 5
bedrooms. living room ,
dining room, family
room, modern kitchen, 2
full baths and base·
ment . Shown by appt .

CHESTER

3

bedroom , living room,
dining room, kitchen
with garbage disposal .
and radar range. Fami ly room has fireplace.

Nice lot. Sells for
$58,000.00.
FAMILY HOME - 3
bedrooms, 2 baths , laundry, modern kitchen ,
dining room, living
room and 1h basement
with WOOd burner .· Close
to Meigs High . Asking

$42,000.00.
POMEROY -

Lovely 3

bedroom home . Extra

nice kitchen . Lock al
thisonefor$40,000 .00!!
NEW HOME - Situated
on a little over an acre . 3
bedroom, lola! electric .
QIJallty b~ilt . $45,600 .00.
TWO
MODERN
HOMES - Both In ex·
cellent condition . Live
In one lind rent the
other . On Beech Grove
Rd . across from

Rutland
Legion .
187,500.00 for bolh!!
We're sm111· enough to
IPPreC:IIIe you, yel
larte enough to serve
you II Give us a call for

friendly, courteou1 ser-

vice on buying or selling
proper,ty.
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.
Phone 742-2003
Velma Nl&lt;insky,

Assoe.

Phone 742-3092
George s. Hobltetter
• llf'olcer "2-5739

1---

Mobile Homes
for Rent

992-7479.

REAL ESTATE.

WE HAVE FINANCING AVAILABLE
AS LOW AS 5% DOWN AND 30 YEARS
TO PAY, ON MOST HOMES.
WHETHER YOU RENT OR BUY - YOU PAY
FOR THE PLACE YOU OCCUPY.
MIDDLEPORT - Commercial office building, on
busy corner in center of town . Fully rented. A good

Apartment
for Rent

investment .

POMEROY - Two bedroom and bath frame home
on Hill St. Now renled for $150.00 ,per mo. Only
$10,000.

RACINE - Peace and quiet in The country . Just a
few miles from Rac ine. RemOdeled home on 2 acres

of ground. $39.000 .
MIDDLEPORT - Three bedroom , w, bath , nice lot
just one block from heart of town . $25,000 . ·
POMEROY - On Lincoln Hts. - Two bedroom and
bath, full basement, gas furnace, storm windows &amp;
doors. Owner will help finance if you need it. $17,.500.
~UtLAND - Older home needs some repa irs on
Salem Street . Nice corner lot . $9900 .00.

BUILDING OR TRAILER LOT - Hysell Run Road
- 5 acres. $7,000 .
·
SYRACUSE - Old house on a nice lot, $11,600.
LOT IN MIDDLEPORT - We will build a house on
this one If you choose - South Second Ave .

CALL 992-2342
.RODPfEY DOWNING, BROKER-HO. 992-3731
BILL CHI_LDS, BRANCH MGR.-HO. 992-2449

·---------------------DOWNINGOIILDS AGENCY INC. -·
INSURANCE
SERVING. SOUTHEASTERN OHIO SINCE 1
ARE YOU PAYING TOO MUCH? DO
YOU HAVE THE COVERAGE?

FOR AU YOUR INSURANCE NEEDS
CAU US.

992·2342
. DOWNINGafll.DS AGENCY,- INC.
MIDDLEP-ORT, OHIO

Garage
. 3'" mile off Rt: 7 by -pass

on St. Rt. 124 toward

REAL ESTATE
FtNANCING
Federal Housing &amp;

E. Main St. Pomeroy, 0.

Veterans Admin. Loans.

EVERY
SATURDAY NIGHT
8:00 Tll11: 30
"Disco Lighting"
Admission $2 .00 Single
$3.00 Couple

Sponsored

by

Music:

and western. Saddles and
harness .
Horses
and

alcoholic beverages permitted . For further in·

HILLCREST

Manor apts. Call992-7787.

KENNELS .

Boarding, all breeds. Clean
indoor-outdoor facilities.
Also
AKC
registered

45 Furnished Rooms

/ARK· FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.
Hours 9-1 M., W., F.

Other times by appoint·

ment.
107 Sycamore (Rear

SALON

Donations

Pomeroy -Middleport

area. Phone 992·2946.

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

March 28, 1980 al 7 p.m. at
lhe
Rock
Springs

__ ,., .,
1

..,. __
... . .

62
Wanted to Buy
CHIP WOOD. Poles max.
diameter 10" on largest
end. $12 p-er ton . Bundled
slab. S10 per ton. Delivered
lo Ohio Pallet Co., Rt. 2,

more times. We have bat·
tery chargers, CB's base
and mobile, antennas,
mastlng, all size co·axiel
wire and hardware for Installation. Stereo systems,
with or without matching

Pomeroy 992·2689 .

color

ANTIQUES,
FUR ·
NITURE, glass, china,
anything. See or call Ruth

televisions and scanners
programmable with fac·

lory rebate up to $25.
Crystal type wllh four free
crystals . France TV and
Eleclronics, 39260 Bradbury Rd .. Middleport, OH.
992-2276.

Gosney, antiques,

Hereford

Fairgrounds,

26 N.

silver. Call J . A. Wamsley,
742·2331 . Treasure Chest
Coin Shop, Athens, OH. 592·
6462.
Now acceplng logs at our

guns, pocket watches and

coin collections. Call 614·
767·3167 or 557·3411 .
(IM ·
.ATTENTION :
PORTANT TO YOUl Will
pay cash or certified check

dwoods, Box 66, Vincent,

for antiques and collec·
tibles or entire estates.
Nothing too large. Also,

GOLD AND
SILVER
COINS OF THE WORLD.
RINGS,
JEWELRY,
STERLING 51 LVER AND

OH &lt;15784. 61i678·2960.

618

E.

Main

Been in Business
For 5 Years

ANNIE

3·2·1 mo.

HIGHEST UP: TO ·DATE
PRICES. CONTACT ED
BURKETT
BARBER
· SHOP, MIDDLEPORT,
OH 10, OR CALL 992-3476.

Bob&lt;:at M· 700 Hydrostatic
30 HP $3,950. Bob&lt;:il M·611
Diesel like new, 30 H p
S7,900. Dllcb Witch J -20
S4,500.Calll-614 · 45N1~ . .

1973 Pontiac ventura. Exc.
cond. new exhaust and
brakes . S950. 949-2333 afler
5:30p.m.

OLD FURNITURE, Ice
b&lt;&gt;xes, brass bec;ls, Iron
beds, desks, etc., complete
househ.olds. Write M.D.
Miller. Rt. 4, Pomeroy or,
call992-7760.

- Boys 10 speed bicycle. 21
Inch, 'like new. 6 mos. old. ·
992·62~l. A*'&lt; for Lynn.
' ..
'

OLD

'
,.... ,_
·sav.e - M~ - ' Play go,ld

liURNIT~RE .

'ce

=~· ~... ...,da, Iron

dHkS. etc., cl)mplete
house11olds. Write M.O,
Miller. Rl. 4; P.,meroy or
coll992·7760
'

wllh new grillS installed.
each or 4 tor 518.50.
Joh~ Teaford 614-985-3961 .

ss.oo

·- - - - -··

''

Jumbles : TULI P

GROIN

HOME '
SOMEHOW?

MUCH MORE POWERFUL
ENEMIES ...

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: West

track, cruise control and

'

&amp;er

Home
1mpr11vements
-· - .,.

81

Home
Improvements

"'

Rutland Furnlture'l

CARPET
SHOP
_
A
"Dr.lve LlltliS~tvtt'A Lot"
SHOP 1.S FULLY. 5TOC~ED
·

KITCHEN CARPET

$8f5 sq. .

·

EDROO
LIVING ROOM

C'A RP!t .·
• $gt5 And Up

Padd.lna ~ C:atpet tn~alled Free
wllh Purcnase . . .

NICe S•l•ctlon of Remnant•
AII Sizes - Good Prlee1

RUTLAND FURNITURE

-·

East
Pass
Pass

South
1•
3t
4•

Pass
Pass

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

ALLEYOOP · •

North and South were using
a 15-17 point notrump, which
explains why North opened
one club and jumped to two
notrump over the heart
reponse.
South's three-diamond call
was normal, as was North's
three hearts. At this point
South might well have tried
three notrump instead of four
hearts. Three notrump would
bave waltzed home and four
hearts might have made, but

'

'

.

You promised this
valve job b4 five!

992-3795 • :

ACROSS

sic~?

4G Abrasive

1 "Little Things u Heavy blow
Mean-"
DOWN
5 Pursuit
1 Played a part
10 Nlght.Ufe
Z Actreas
setting

"FREE
ESTIMATES"

2·18·1 mo.

• OUR FAIAILY AND FRIENO.S HELPEO
U.S A LOT WHEN WE FIR.ST
AND WE 171DOI&lt;AY 1/Uf&lt;IN&amp;

HOUOAY .7EA.SON ...

Antonelli

11 EJ:tant

3 Carnal

13 Clu.ster

nature

14 Parson
t Hanoi
Down, e.g.
holiday
15 Bard's before 5 Like some
18 Greeting
ham
in Pompei
6 Took on
17 Domeaday
7 One Mrs.
Book money
Slnalra
18 Jiggled,
8 Transas jewelry
gression
zo Way off
9 Incise
Zll.egal paper 12 Equipped,
ZZ Tennis tenn
as with lools
Z3 "Age
af Reason"

WINNIE

Home
Improvements

(For a copy of JACOBY
MODERN, send $1 to: " Win at
Bridge,·· csre of this newspa{HJf; P.0 . Box 489, Radio City
Station, New York, N.Y.
10019.)

by THOMAS JOSEPH

Is he

UPHOLSttRING

3r.d St. in
Syrcuse, Oh.
Ph. 992-3752
or 992-3743

{NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

~'(H4'

Where's Slim?

A&amp;H

~~__,.,.,....-,.ml

and

Anlwer
Z7 "- to Look
At": 1935

Yesterday'•

11 Nautical
term
18 Hackman

song

ZZ Not
taped
Z3 Gustatory

Z9 Measuring
device

311 Harry
31 Flsb-eatlng
mammal

sense
U Windflower
!$Iranian's

31 Soul: Fr.
3'1 To and -

anc:estor

author

CARPENTER WORK
complete remodeling by AI
Tromm, 7~2-2328. Referen-

!5 Imitated
%8 Katherine

ces.

-Porter
Z7 Dolly af

s &amp; G Carpet Cleaning.
Steam cleaned . Free
· estimate.
Reasonable
rates. Scotchguard. 9926309 or 742·2211 .
· 84

Will do odds ond ends,
paneling, floor tile, and
ceiling, file . Call Fred
Miller, 992-6338.1

North
1•
2 NT
3•
Pass

Opening lead:• Q

,tdU4

WALL P,APER I NG
pointing. 742-2328.

3·1 2·80

"Hello,
Dolly!"
28 Section
of journey

Z9 Calif. city
3Z Church

--AN' THAT AIN'T
ECHO MOUNTAIN!!

Electrical
&amp; Refridgeralion

vessel

33 Twllght
31 Clique
35 Till now
37 Legal order
38Coating
39 Kennedy
matriarch

SEWING
MACHINE
Repairs,
service, . _all
makes.
992·2284. The
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy,
Authorized Singer Sales
and Service . We . sharpen
Scissors.
·
ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPA I.R Sweepers,
toasters, lf'l!lls, all· small
appliances . . Lawn ·mower.
Next to stole Highway
Garage on -Route 7, 9853825.

.,•

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's

..

11

.. PEANUl'S
Rewind and Repair eleclrlc
molol'$. Will make service ·
·calls. 992•2356.
. 85 Generai Hauling
WILL HAUL limestone and
grovel. Also, Jlme hauling
and spreading, Leo Morris
Trucking. Phone 742, ~45.5.

MAifi~E HE'LL-DISCOVER

-I'M GON~. 'AND
LOOKING FOR ME

LV/YII:

'

-~.d

DOGS HAVE AN
UNUSUAL SEN5!: OF
BOUND
TO HAVE MISSED ME.,.

'I~

l'

I

- ~YPTOQUOTES

D)IQFQ

HQ

GMZ

M

ZA

FMPZHAE

GI AR L

MZL

M

J •D A F K . - V.
B ..
NPZGQZD
Yeslerday's· Cryp&amp;oeuole: LET THE MAN WHO DOES NOT
WISH.'l'O Fr: IDLE FALl, J-N J,.OVE.-OVID
·

.t

1

to work It:

LO~ALT't' ... ~E':,

EPDBARD

1 .IN;

how
AXYDLBAAXR
LC)NGFBLLOW

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

Limestone for driveways.
·Pomeroy.Mason area. 367-

:7101 .

t,.+--+-+-+-i3- ll

·~· L.:-~--EI.l'"&gt;...:
·~

:;,_ ,z

~ lMD~t l nw

••

F••tvNI tvM•c•'-· 1nc.

·,

Anderson Tapes " 10 ; Movie
" Calamity Jane" 17 .

11 :45---Love Boat 6,13; 12 :00-Biack
Sheep Squadron 8; 12 :55Baretta 6, 13.
1 :00-Tomorrow 3; News 15; 1: 1{}--Movle "A Sensitive, Passionate

Man" 8; 1 :35---News 17.
1:4{}---Movie " The Midnight Story"
17; 2:05--News 13; 3 :55---Movle
" Star In the Dust" 17 ; 5 :30Love, American Style 17.

South went wrong at tric k one
and gave East a chance to
make the killing defensive
play.
West's spade lead gave lhe
defense its only chance. If
South had ducked that queen
he would have made the
game. l\ut he dec ided that
maybe there was a 5-1 spade
break against him, so South
clattered up with dummy's
ace.
Now it was East's turn to
think. If he followed small to
the ace, as most players
would automatically do, South
would still make his heart
game. He would come to one
s~ade trick, three hearts, four
diamonds and two clubs.
East knew his side had
three tricks: one spade and
two trump. If West held lhe
jack or spades, as his lead
indicated, there was a way,
East realized, of scoring three
trump tricks and one spade
trick.
Consequently, East dropped
his king on the ace of spades
and now declarer could no
longer make his game. When
East won the first heart with
his queen, he returned a spade
to West's jack and ruffed the
spade return. The ace of
trump was the defense's
fourth trick.

• QJ6
+A

4339 .

Autos for. Sale
1976 Ford Granada,- am·fm,
8 frock, a.c ., reclining
bucket seats, vinyl top, 2
dr., 302' auto. $1,400. 949·
2691.

st.

T'GET ME

West
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

79 Ford F-250; 34 ton, heavy
duty, 24,000 miles. Ph. 8432032.
73
Vans&amp;4W.D.
1979 Ford 150 4X4, auto.,
p.s., p.b .• torper. Positive

CORNEA

CUTTING IN

• J 10 9 8 3

organizations

81

BLITHE

Answer: Plenty of I his at the su·rgeons' annual ball-

• 9842

YES. WHICH IS NOT TO GilY
THAT HE DOES NOT HAVE
ENeMIES THERE AS WELL ...

macrame cl~sses.

Trucks for Sale
For Sale 1973 GMC 1 ton
truck with utility bed. Call
992·3467.

71

.Mai11

NOT TRUST ME!
WELL- PERHAPS
I CANNOT BL!IME

THEN 'o()U'RE
GOHNA TRY

· -Now
carrying
chocolate wrappers and
molds for candy making
-Full line of Krall supplies
-Special rates for

72

.. . . . ........
.......
......... .

· Rubber
Backed

'"6UT I MEREL"i MEANT
THAT THIS 15 NOT A
SAFE PLACE FOR 'o()U,
ALI-\IAH WARSUCkS HAS
TOO MANY ENEMIES
HERE.
.

NOW HOLDING
TOLE &amp; DECORATIVE
PAINTING CLASSES
-We will be having

Autos for Sale

running boards . 992·3310 or
992·7894.

~

Al-l, YOU STILL lXl

2-2s-1mo. •

78
Ford'
Bronco,
customized am ·lm 8-·

·~

•• lF ANYTHINIS'S
GONNA BE i 1DONE 11
WITH ME, I'LL BE
TH' ONE WHO DOES
IT.'
.

CAU 992·3238
ASK FOR DAVE

.

Chester, Ohio
985·3300

~~sgo~'bEMs. p~n~~

54 Misc. Merchandise

I

SOUTH

·, I Made 11 Myself"

-· ~ ·

guns, pocket walches and
coin collections. Coli 614·
767·3167 or 557-3411 .

(Answers tomorrow)

+A 10 5
.K 7 6
+A K 10 3
+KJ6
WEST
EAST
+QJ 7 6
+K3
.52
.AQ4
• 974
+&amp;52
+8543
+QI0972

"FREE ESnMATES"

Pomeroy, Oh.

J

Deft drop dumps declarer

?f~

traction fron and rear. 985·

RICHARD GAUL

10!1 yard 7:30·3 :30 week·
days. High prices for good
qualifY logs wllh a limited
amoun.t of low grade.
Payment upon delivery
and sealing. Blaney Har- 81

Nothing too large. Also,

xr Kx r xxI

"K I

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

RemP.Iing

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

Aug. Wt. 560 Lbs.

· ches, class rings, wedding
bands, diamonds. Gold or

tibles or entire estates.

Pomeroy,

REGISTERED POUED
HEREFORD HEIFERS
90' Per Lb.

OLD COINS, pocket wat·

ATTENTION:
{IM PORTANT TO YOU) Will
pay cash or'certllled check
lor antiques and collec·

Friday,

5 OPEN

2nd. Middleport, OH. 992·
3161.

Antiques

Sale,

Ohio. For information
write or call Judith Miller,
Rt. 2, Box 372. McArthur,
OhiO 45651 . 614-596-5564.

I bi.I!SIBEII

~.~~~~~::/e to~·~~~ie~;

Nice Pigs . 949·2857 .

payments. Call credit
manager collect. 614--592·
5122.

.....

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

BRIDGE

H&amp;R BLOCK OFFICE LOCATION ;

71

Livestock

Southeastern Ohio Polled

--· J

CB,TV,
Radici
Equipment
All populr sizes in nickel

63

Picking up a pieno in your
area. Looking for a respon·
slble party to take over

-....

52

portable

required . 992·

6260, noon-7 p.m.

Wan! lo rent house localed

Answer: THE

BORN LOSER

-We Do Roofing,
Gutters and

~

stairs 17.

10 : 30- New s 20 ; II :00- News
3,6,8,10,13, 15; LastolfheWIId 17;
Dick Cavett 20.
1!. 30- Tonlght 3, 15; ABC News
Speclal6,13 ; Your Turn : Letters
to CB S News 8; Movie " The

Wednesday , Marcb IZ

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

Free Estimates
388-9759
2-IHfc

HUMANE
SOCIETY .
Adopt a homeless pet.
Healthy, shots, wormed .

Wanted to Rent

WA'TC.H OU'T FO~
'TH IG AI A

IJ

I

B. A. BEAUTY

CALL 992 75

Roofing,
siding,
gutter,
bu i 11-u p
roof
and
home
repair.

Dobermans. 614·446-7795.

man $27.50 per week. Call
992-6022.

IZEMENYt

rJ

Great

of the Yankees" 33.
9 : 15--- Dukes of Dixi eland &amp; Fr iends
9; 9:30--Facls of Life 3, 15.
10 :00-From Here to. Eternity 3, lS;
Vegas 6, 13; Upslalrs, Down-

6UNNY "e:AC..H,

Yesterday·s

Menor Women
by Diann Jewell
at

Pomeroy, o.

fo., call99 2-6058·

Sleeping room for working

53

I

*New homes extensive remodel, ing
* E lectrica I work
•Masonry work
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583
2·24-1 mo.

TEEN DISCO
DANCE
AI The Orchid Room

Unlimited. Chaperones
will be present. No

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

RENTER'S assistance for
Senior Citizens in Village

tab les,

HAiR·STYLING

~

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

in

FIRiST--THE COP5

MAY IIR1Ni9 I!ACIC
A DEAD TltiE/ICI

2·18-1mo
~~===~2-~28~~
1
~m~o~.
~pd~~
~==-~===-=44=~:t=~
=·
·
:
C:••:':":a:r~e=fu~n~1~
-~~
Care products. Western
boots. .Children 's $15.50.
' r·
·
Adultss29oo._
GEORGE'S
~~~ _ Tri-County
:~;~~~~g g~~~1-o~2~ne1.
ROOFING
Bj
___ b:r
_~{II_:,_ ::~~~:eping

Pomeroy. Large lots.Call

47

2·17· 1 mo.

[]

NORTII

CONSTRUCTION

56
Pets for Sale
HOOF HOLLOW, English
ponies. Ruth Reeves. 6146
Riding
Lessons
and Horse
Bordlng
and
98 -3290.

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Roule 33, north of

CALL JIMMY DEEM, ASSOCIATES 949·2388
==O=R NANCY
JASPERS, ASSOCIATE
949·2654 or 949·2591

:;;;;;;;;;ii~~~~~

ROjlef' Hysell

Jack W. Carsey,
Mgr.
Phone 992-2181

Pomeroy. Only $7,000. Call
992-3886.

Want To Seii?-Give Us A Ca 11

~

POMEROY
LANDMARK

Lots &amp; Acreage

44

t 'LL TELL YA THE POII.!Tl THE POLICe ~
ARE.ARMED WITH RIFL59 ANP9HOTGUNS •• AND THE'&gt;' DON'T AIM T'TAKE
ANY CHAN CEO!&gt;!
UNLE!&gt;9 :t
FIND CHRI,_
AND CLAUDIA

Wed . &amp; Thurs.
call for Appt.
949·2320
Racine, 0.
2·11 mo.

ROUSH

Auto&amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992-5682
4·30·1fc

H otpoi nt and
General Electric
Appliance
Sales &amp; Service

rlghts. $77,000. 9927559.

42

'IOU'LL !&gt;TILL HAFTA 01' COURSE: I 1
TURt.J 'EM 0VEI'2
CAN'T Kl!eP THe
T'THe LAW!
I!IRUTE HeRe ON
M'l &amp;!&gt;TATe ANY
LON&amp;ER l

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

2-28-1 mo.

Rutland.

DISCOUNT
PRICES

Rt. 7 or 33. «6-2359 afler 6.

Race lhe Wind" 8, 10;

Performances 20; Movie " Pride

I~========~+=========~_::========~
~

6342 or 992·2583.

From I to 75 acres, bordering

Pomeroy .
MUST SELL - 3 BR home in nice development. In·
eludes family room , set up for wood burning stove.
All carpeted, partially closed in carport, storage.

742-2474
Jean Trussell949-2660
FULL TIME
OFFICE PHONE
992-2259

PHONE 742-2003

payments on spinet piano.
Can be seen locally. Write

1112acres
story
full
36
a'\m house,
WI
room

JUST LISTED - Good 3 bedrm . house with kitchen,

One floor plan home
with a full basement,
block garage, nice front
porch, and a garden
space . Has 3 bedrooms,
a bay window in the din·
ing room , and a
fireplace in the living

REA[JY

Wanted
Responsible
party
to
take : over
low monthly

stocked pond for swimming
or fishing, 9 rooms, bath,
carpeted. 3 to 17 acres
available. Located approx.
7 miles from Pomeroy off

$25,000.

CAPT-UNEASY
Wt\IT I HOLD Oklo EA9Yl !WEN IF
Y'P'IklD CHRI,_ AND THE TI&amp;ER
1!1-EFOR!S THE POLl Ce DO-WHAT'S THE POINT l

es-rm Doors .
estorm WlndoW1
• Replacement
Windows
Free Estimate

No Sunday Calls

1·22·tfc

Decorated cakes for all oc·
casions. Character cakes
and sheet cakes . Call 992·

acres near town, with a
7 room, llf2 story home.
Gas hot water heat,
water soffener, and 2
outbuildings . Mostly
carpeted .
Nice
at

elnsulation

PH. 949-2801

949·2862

during March .

Farms for Sale

go, with 2 working stations. Nice location in Racine
on corner lot. Also has trailer hook-up. Asking

PAYING
$20.00 AND UP
FOR
SILVER DOllARS

Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices
Call Howard

S&amp;E Gill ShOp (Syracuse)
10 Percent Off on all items ·

~~~;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~i;~;ji basement, buildings, barn,

$29,500 .00
RENTAL INCOME - 2

·

33

Only $16,500.00.
IN THE COUNTRY - 6

HOBSTEITE.R.I

Teaford . 614-985·3961 .

credll manager: P.O. B.ox
537, Shelbyville, Ind. 45676.

35

has

earlier for purchases . John

992-7034.

WE HAVE CONVENTIONAL FINANCING FOR
MOST OF OUR HOMES FOR AS LOW AS S%
DOWN.
BEAUTY SALON - Fully equipped and ready to

WEDNESDAY, ~RCH 12,_1910

VIRFED

Aluminum Siding

POMEROY,O.
99H215or
"2-7!14
1-28·1 mo.

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

Pawn Broker, goll and
guns, used silver 1964 or

Contact

Centra 1Realty Co.

Each

Roule
689 .
Ph'one
Wilkesville 669-3785.

Kingsbury Home Sales at

f

V. C. YO.UNG Ill

H. L WHITESEL
ROOFING

pies, sauce and butter. Fitzpatrick Orchard, State

central air. located on
spacious lot which can be

trally located near all 3
miles on Route 124. 5
rooms and a bath . Par·
tial basement, forced
air heat and an extra lot
with its own water tap.
Needs a little repair.

, rented .

Apples, Rome Beauty · at

Mobile

HOME

(FREE ESTIMATES)

inc .

eludes full length awning,

·Phone992-2S98

JUST LISTED - One of the finest established
residen t ial homes in Racine . This two story with
finished basement boasts of an " up to date•: eat· in
kitchen, formal dining area, family room, 3 to 5
bedrooms, l lf:~ baths, thermo w indow s, (heavily in·
sulated J, carpeted on a II 3 levels, most drapes sTay .
The exterior is Real Perma Stone, has 2 large in·
viting porches and a two car garage . All of this and
more for $57,500 .

Sales,

$4 .00 per bushel . Exc . lor

Home 14x64, 3 bedroom, in·

COUNTRY

r

1

I KI

992-S724.

firm. 992·5304.

some timber, all mineral

apartments ,

pool kits. Do·it·yourself or
let us install tor you . D.
Bumgardner

Gutter work , down
spouts, some concrete
work ,
walks
and
driveways. 1

"Lowest Rates
In Town"
"Ten Years
Experience"
"Work
Guaranteed"
Ph. 992-6186
After Five
3· 12·1 mo.

power

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSUlATION
Vinyl &amp;

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING

WE BRING THE
GARAGE TO YOU!!!

delivery : various si.zes of

12x65 Trailer, com·
pletely furnished, A.C..
verv good condition . On a
lot that can be rented .
Ready to move into. $6500

$7 ,900.

AUTO REPAIR

IN STOCK for Immediate

bedr.
1971 Fleetwood, 14x65 3
bdr ., bath v,
1971 Shakespear, 14x65 2
bedroom
1965 Yanor 12x52, 2 bedr.
1968 Fleetwood 12x63, 2
Bdr.
B &amp; S MOBILE HOME
SALES, PT. PLEASANT,
wv . 304-675-«24.

rented .

J.

Slrokes
3, 15;
Charl ie's Angels 6,13; Movie ''To

- buy Winpowe r. Call 513·
788-2589.

14x65, · 2

Freedom

I JEECTb

9 :00- Diff ' renl

alternators - own the best

32

1971

Unscramble these four Jumbles:,
one leHer to each square. to form
four ordinary words.

Business · Services

Fitzpatric k Orchar d, SR

1971

Fay Manley,

Housing
Head uat(ets

Well built 3 bedroom hom
sit ua ted on 3 ac r es
overlooking the Ohio Ri ver .

bedroom
1971 Cameron,

Televisio~
Viewing

~THAT SCRAMBLED WQRD GAME
by Hemi lltnoldandBob l ee

E . Main St., Pomeroy, 992·
3891.

Rd . 949-2836 afte r 5 a nd
weekends . Larry Wolfe.

Mobile Homes
for Sale
1973 Fa;rpoint, Ux65

ID'i1

Excelsior Salt Works, Inc.,

Racine on Racine·Bashan

3

bedroom home. new
vinyl siding, insulated,
new FA gas furnace,
woodburning fireplace,
equipped kitchen, 11h
baths, mostly carpeted,
two bl o cks
fr o m
downtown .

'ilft~Nt

~ ~ ~~ s

THURSDAY, MARCH 13,1980
5:45---Farm Reporl 13; 5:5{}---PTL
Club 13 .
6 :00-700 Club 6,8; PTL Club 15;
Hea'lth Field 10; World at Larg&lt;
17.
6:30-For You ... Btack Woman 10;
News 17; 6 :45---Mornlng Report
3; A.M. Weather~ ; 6:SG-Good
Morning, West VIrginia 13;
6 :55---News 13.
7:00-Today 3,15; Good Morning
America 6, 13; Thursday Morning B; Batman 10; WTBS
Funhouse 17 .
7:30-Famlly Affair 10: 7 : S~huck
White Reporls 10.
8:00-Capl . Kangaroo 8, 10; Lucy
Show 17; Sesame St. 33.
8 :»-Romper Room 17.
9 :00-Bob Braun 3;' Big Valley 6;
Beverly Hillbillies 8; Jeffersons
10; Phil Donahue 13,15; Family
Affair 17.
9:3{}---Bob Newhart 8; One Day AI A
Time 10; Gr~n Acres 17.
10 :00-Card Sharks 3,15; Edge of
Night 6; Joker's Wild 10; Morning

Magaz i ne

13 ;

Movie

"Shadow over Elveron" 17.
10 : 30- Hollywood Squares 3, 15;
$20,000 Pyramid 13; Whew 8, 10;
Andy Griffith 6.
10:55-CBS News 8; House Call 10.
11 :00-High Rollers 3,15; Laverne &amp;
Shirley 6,13 ; Price is Right 8,10.
11 :30- Wheel of Fortune j, 15;
Family Feud 6,13; Sesame ST .
20 ; 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 for
Tomorrow 8, 10; Password Plus
15; Movie "Wild and Wonderful"
17: Elec. Co. 20,33.
I :00-Days of Our Lives 3, IS; All My
Children 6, 13; · Young &amp; the
Restless 8, 10.
2:00-Docfors 3,15; One Life to Live
6, 13; As The World Turns 8, 10;
2:25---News 17.
World
3, 15;
2: 30-Anofher
Glgg lesnorl Hotel 17.
3 : 00- General . Hospital
6,13;
Guiding Ugh! 8, 10; I Love Lucy
17; Masterpiece Theatre 20.
3:3{)--FIIntstones 17; Over Easy 33.
4 :00-Mister Carloon 3; Merv ·
Griffin 6: Pelllcoat Junction B;
Sesame St. 20,33; Gomer Pyle
10; Real McCoys 13; Little
Rascals 15; Spectreman 17.
4:3{)--Lone Ranger 3; Gomer Pyle 8;
Brady Bunch 10; Tom &amp; Jerry
13; Merv Griffin 15; Gilligan's Is.
17.
5:00-Carol Burnett 3; Sanford &amp;
Son 8; Mary Tyler Moore 10; My
Three Sons 17; Mister Rogers
20,33.
5:3{)--Mash 3;- News 6; Play the
Percentages 8; Elec. Co. 20;
Mash 10; Happy Days Again 13; I
Dream of Jeannie 17; Doctor
Who 33.
6 :00-News 3,8, 10, 13,15; ABC News
6; Carol Burnelt 17; 3-2-1 Contact
20,33.
6:3G-NBC News3,15; ABC News 13;
CBS News 8, 10; Carol Burnett 6; .
Bob Newhart 17; Over Easy 20;
Wild Wild World of Animals 33.
7: oo--cross-Wits 3; Tic Tac Dough
8; Newlywed Game 6, 13;
MacNeil-Lehrer Report 33;
News 10; Love, American Style
15; Sanford &amp; Son 17; Dick
Cavelt 20.
7 : 30- Hollywood Squares 3; In
Search 016; Joker's Wild 8; Dick
Cavell 33 ; $100,000 Name That
Tune 10; Nashville On The Road
13; Country Roads 15; .All In The
Family 17; MacNeil - Lehrer
Report 20.
8:00-Buck Rogers 3,15; Mork &amp;
Mindy
6, 13;
Waltons
8;
Pavarotll : King of the High C's
33; NIT Basketball 10; Movie
"Banning" 17; 8111 Moyers'
Journal 20.
8 :3li--Benson 6, 13.
9 : ~ulncy 3, 15; Barney Miller
6, 13; Barnaby Jones 8; Sneak
Previews 20; Movie "The
Student Prince" 33.
9 :30-Soap ·6, 13; Camera Three 20.
10 :00-Rockford Flies 3,15; 20-20
6, 13; Knots Landing 8, 10; News
20.
10 :15-Amerlcans 17; 10:3D-Over
Easy· 20.
11 :0{}---News 3,6,8, 10, 13,15; Dick
Cavell · 20; Fall &amp; Rise of
Reginald Perrin 33.
11: 15---Love, American StYle 17;
11 :30--Tonlght 3,15; ABC News
Special 6, 13; Columbo 8; Movie
"The Long Duel" 10; Movie ,
"Lucky Me" 17; ABC Captioned
News 33.
11 :45-Pollce Woman 6,13; 12•5.5-·Baretta 6, 13; 1:OQ-Tomorrow 3;
N•ws 15.
1: 15'--Mary Hartmai18; 1:30-Movle
. ''Mr. Soft Touch" 17; 2:05-Nows
' 13.
3: JS- Movle-" My Six Convicts" '17;
5: 4G-Loye, American Stv' l 17

,,

�..... . . . . . .. ....... - .....

· ··~·

······~

12- 'lbe Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, March 12, 1980

.

.13- The Dail,ySentinel, Mldi!Jeport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, March 12, 1980

Your Best Buys Are Found in the Sentinel Classifieds
MORE ClASSIFIEDS
ON PAGE 8

31

Homes for Sale

4 r oom house and bath. All
new car oet . 992·5871 .

DILLON
HEY! YOU
BELIEVE -

VIRGIL B. SR . II~ AI
:i16 E. Sec~d StrMt

Mortgage
mon e y
available . New homes, old
homes and refinan cin g
your present home . CON -

Phone
1-( 614) -992-3325
MOBILE HOME - 1972

VENTIONA L - 5 Pet. down .
VA

no down payment .
FHA · low down payment .
FHA
245 graduated

Three bedcroom, 2 bath,
furn i shed
M idland
mobile home on 7/ 8 of
an acre of land with
country sett ing.

payment program . FHA
265 subsidy program . Call
tor details . IRELAND
MORTGAGE CO ., 77 E .
State St ., Athens. 592·3051.

2

SET-UPS

-

for

tra ilers on 4 acres of
land near town on State

Route for ony $12,500.
CHEAPY - one floor 5

flpai estate

room building with bath
and flue for wood

burner. Only Sl LOOO.
OUT OF TOWN -

Homes for Sale

Large 2 story home w ith
2 rentals . Has city
water, central heating,
and large lot . Conve ~
nient location. Come
take a look .
INCOME - Si x rentals
in Middleport. Will pay
out in a few yers . Will
help supplement your
S.S. or income .

Roomy J bedroom home
with bath, natural gas,
Leading Creek water ,
utility room. Immediate
occupancy . $9,500 . Phone
742 -2460 .

Real Estate - General

NEW LISTING -

One

floor plan . 3 n ic e
bedrooms w ith cl osets .
Large living, formal
dining, lots of cupboards
in the kitchen, natural
. gas heat, storm doors &amp;
windows and 2 lots in
Racine out of high
water.

JY

608 E .
- MAIN..-..., .
' POMc ,.(),, 0.
992-2259

WE CAN SELL IT IF
ANYONE CAN. CALL

NEW LISTING - This 2

large lot. Good Value al
$18,300.00.
MINERS DEAL - Cen-

54 Misc. Merchanise
Homes for Sale
LIMESTONE ,
Modern J bedroom home, - COAL ,
basement w ith fireplace, sand , grav el , cal ci um
cenlral air, fully carpeted, chloride, fe r ll llzer. dog
located on 6\1:1 ac res nea r food, and all types of salt.
31

REAL ESTATE

22 Money to Loan
FINANCIN G-VA-FHA LOAN S. LOW OR NO DOWN
PAYMEN T. P URCHASE
OR
REFINANCE .
IRELAND MORTGAGE ,
77 E . STATE . ATHEN S.
614-592 ·3051.

bedroom home has new
carpetIng, modern kit·
chen. aluminum siding,
new roof, and sits on a

General

Will iam Fred Sm ith, Sr .,

532 S. 3rd, M;ddleport, OH .

fiB8HEI31

31

Real Estate

992-3325 or 992-3876.

~

WON ' T
3' BR

f r ame house. Ca rpeted
, &amp; paneled, on a quiet
stree t in Rac ine. Close
to schools &amp; stores.
Won ' t last long . $21,000. _

MIDDLEPORT

-

TWO BEDROOM home
located on one acre,
Middleport area, tra i ler
hookup for addJtionalln·

come. $11.000.
MIDDLEPORT AREA
2 bedroom home,
paneling and carpet,
eat-in kitchen . $10.500.

APPLE S - ROME beauty
apples a t S4 per bu. Bestfor
apple butter . Co li 669-3785,

After 3:30 p .m . cal l 247 ·
2032.

689 .

JUST

OFF

SR

7, 2

bedroom home, hard·
wood floors, new panel·
ing, on four acres of

land, barn. in Middleport area, will sell on
land contract, 512,500.

EMERGENCY

INVESTMENT
PERTY
established
the heart of
on corner
apartments
ly rented.
part .

PRO·
Well

business In
M iddleport,
lot, plus _.
all present·
Sell all or

2

DILLON
REAL ESTATE
Hobart Dillon, Broker
BranchMgr.

always

2

bedrooms, living room,
kitchen and bath . Also,
a four car garage and
approx . 1 acre . Yours
for only $13,300.00.

dining &amp; bath . City water and septi c. Nice vinyl
siding, located in Pomeroy Cpr. Priced at 514,900.

LOTS ON LINCOLN HILL FOR SALE.
$11,o·o o- Trailer &amp; lot. 3 Br, all carpeted, front
porch, wood underpinn ing, inc ludes pool. Anxious to
sell.
WON'T LAST - 4 yrs . old, 3 B R, bath 8. utilities, kit·
chen w-dishwasher, D. R. w-sliding glass doors to
patio, 3/.o~ acre. Carpeted in beautiful taste. $44,900.
BUSINESS AND BUILDING FOR SALE IN
POMEROY
WELL KEPT - 4 BR home, lg . L.R . .- lam. room,
eat-in kitchen, attached garage, hardwood floors,
plenty of yard, fruit trees &amp; garden space. $48,900.
NEWLY LISTED - This brick &amp; alum. sided home
welcomes you with its spit entry hall. Carpeted
throughout, 3 BR , utility area, sliding glass door to
redwood deck . Only 4 yrs. Old . lmmed . Pass.

WELL BUILT HOME -

room. Jus! $26,700 .00 .
OFFICE HOURS ON
FRIDAY TILL8 P.M.
REALTOR
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
992-6191
ASSOCIATES

$47 , 500 .
LOTS OF LOTS -

Donie &amp; Roger Turner

with

' lh 9

Priced to se ll. $39,000.

Property for sale. Over 3
acres of wooded land in

STARTER

HOME

-

Co.zy 2 bedroom in Tup·
pers Plains . N i ce
garden
spot . On l y

$23,000.00 .
MIDDLEPORT
Large 2 story home. 5
bedrooms. living room ,
dining room, family
room, modern kitchen, 2
full baths and base·
ment . Shown by appt .

CHESTER

3

bedroom , living room,
dining room, kitchen
with garbage disposal .
and radar range. Fami ly room has fireplace.

Nice lot. Sells for
$58,000.00.
FAMILY HOME - 3
bedrooms, 2 baths , laundry, modern kitchen ,
dining room, living
room and 1h basement
with WOOd burner .· Close
to Meigs High . Asking

$42,000.00.
POMEROY -

Lovely 3

bedroom home . Extra

nice kitchen . Lock al
thisonefor$40,000 .00!!
NEW HOME - Situated
on a little over an acre . 3
bedroom, lola! electric .
QIJallty b~ilt . $45,600 .00.
TWO
MODERN
HOMES - Both In ex·
cellent condition . Live
In one lind rent the
other . On Beech Grove
Rd . across from

Rutland
Legion .
187,500.00 for bolh!!
We're sm111· enough to
IPPreC:IIIe you, yel
larte enough to serve
you II Give us a call for

friendly, courteou1 ser-

vice on buying or selling
proper,ty.
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.
Phone 742-2003
Velma Nl&lt;insky,

Assoe.

Phone 742-3092
George s. Hobltetter
• llf'olcer "2-5739

1---

Mobile Homes
for Rent

992-7479.

REAL ESTATE.

WE HAVE FINANCING AVAILABLE
AS LOW AS 5% DOWN AND 30 YEARS
TO PAY, ON MOST HOMES.
WHETHER YOU RENT OR BUY - YOU PAY
FOR THE PLACE YOU OCCUPY.
MIDDLEPORT - Commercial office building, on
busy corner in center of town . Fully rented. A good

Apartment
for Rent

investment .

POMEROY - Two bedroom and bath frame home
on Hill St. Now renled for $150.00 ,per mo. Only
$10,000.

RACINE - Peace and quiet in The country . Just a
few miles from Rac ine. RemOdeled home on 2 acres

of ground. $39.000 .
MIDDLEPORT - Three bedroom , w, bath , nice lot
just one block from heart of town . $25,000 . ·
POMEROY - On Lincoln Hts. - Two bedroom and
bath, full basement, gas furnace, storm windows &amp;
doors. Owner will help finance if you need it. $17,.500.
~UtLAND - Older home needs some repa irs on
Salem Street . Nice corner lot . $9900 .00.

BUILDING OR TRAILER LOT - Hysell Run Road
- 5 acres. $7,000 .
·
SYRACUSE - Old house on a nice lot, $11,600.
LOT IN MIDDLEPORT - We will build a house on
this one If you choose - South Second Ave .

CALL 992-2342
.RODPfEY DOWNING, BROKER-HO. 992-3731
BILL CHI_LDS, BRANCH MGR.-HO. 992-2449

·---------------------DOWNINGOIILDS AGENCY INC. -·
INSURANCE
SERVING. SOUTHEASTERN OHIO SINCE 1
ARE YOU PAYING TOO MUCH? DO
YOU HAVE THE COVERAGE?

FOR AU YOUR INSURANCE NEEDS
CAU US.

992·2342
. DOWNINGafll.DS AGENCY,- INC.
MIDDLEP-ORT, OHIO

Garage
. 3'" mile off Rt: 7 by -pass

on St. Rt. 124 toward

REAL ESTATE
FtNANCING
Federal Housing &amp;

E. Main St. Pomeroy, 0.

Veterans Admin. Loans.

EVERY
SATURDAY NIGHT
8:00 Tll11: 30
"Disco Lighting"
Admission $2 .00 Single
$3.00 Couple

Sponsored

by

Music:

and western. Saddles and
harness .
Horses
and

alcoholic beverages permitted . For further in·

HILLCREST

Manor apts. Call992-7787.

KENNELS .

Boarding, all breeds. Clean
indoor-outdoor facilities.
Also
AKC
registered

45 Furnished Rooms

/ARK· FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.
Hours 9-1 M., W., F.

Other times by appoint·

ment.
107 Sycamore (Rear

SALON

Donations

Pomeroy -Middleport

area. Phone 992·2946.

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

March 28, 1980 al 7 p.m. at
lhe
Rock
Springs

__ ,., .,
1

..,. __
... . .

62
Wanted to Buy
CHIP WOOD. Poles max.
diameter 10" on largest
end. $12 p-er ton . Bundled
slab. S10 per ton. Delivered
lo Ohio Pallet Co., Rt. 2,

more times. We have bat·
tery chargers, CB's base
and mobile, antennas,
mastlng, all size co·axiel
wire and hardware for Installation. Stereo systems,
with or without matching

Pomeroy 992·2689 .

color

ANTIQUES,
FUR ·
NITURE, glass, china,
anything. See or call Ruth

televisions and scanners
programmable with fac·

lory rebate up to $25.
Crystal type wllh four free
crystals . France TV and
Eleclronics, 39260 Bradbury Rd .. Middleport, OH.
992-2276.

Gosney, antiques,

Hereford

Fairgrounds,

26 N.

silver. Call J . A. Wamsley,
742·2331 . Treasure Chest
Coin Shop, Athens, OH. 592·
6462.
Now acceplng logs at our

guns, pocket watches and

coin collections. Call 614·
767·3167 or 557·3411 .
(IM ·
.ATTENTION :
PORTANT TO YOUl Will
pay cash or certified check

dwoods, Box 66, Vincent,

for antiques and collec·
tibles or entire estates.
Nothing too large. Also,

GOLD AND
SILVER
COINS OF THE WORLD.
RINGS,
JEWELRY,
STERLING 51 LVER AND

OH &lt;15784. 61i678·2960.

618

E.

Main

Been in Business
For 5 Years

ANNIE

3·2·1 mo.

HIGHEST UP: TO ·DATE
PRICES. CONTACT ED
BURKETT
BARBER
· SHOP, MIDDLEPORT,
OH 10, OR CALL 992-3476.

Bob&lt;:at M· 700 Hydrostatic
30 HP $3,950. Bob&lt;:il M·611
Diesel like new, 30 H p
S7,900. Dllcb Witch J -20
S4,500.Calll-614 · 45N1~ . .

1973 Pontiac ventura. Exc.
cond. new exhaust and
brakes . S950. 949-2333 afler
5:30p.m.

OLD FURNITURE, Ice
b&lt;&gt;xes, brass bec;ls, Iron
beds, desks, etc., complete
househ.olds. Write M.D.
Miller. Rt. 4, Pomeroy or,
call992-7760.

- Boys 10 speed bicycle. 21
Inch, 'like new. 6 mos. old. ·
992·62~l. A*'&lt; for Lynn.
' ..
'

OLD

'
,.... ,_
·sav.e - M~ - ' Play go,ld

liURNIT~RE .

'ce

=~· ~... ...,da, Iron

dHkS. etc., cl)mplete
house11olds. Write M.O,
Miller. Rl. 4; P.,meroy or
coll992·7760
'

wllh new grillS installed.
each or 4 tor 518.50.
Joh~ Teaford 614-985-3961 .

ss.oo

·- - - - -··

''

Jumbles : TULI P

GROIN

HOME '
SOMEHOW?

MUCH MORE POWERFUL
ENEMIES ...

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: West

track, cruise control and

'

&amp;er

Home
1mpr11vements
-· - .,.

81

Home
Improvements

"'

Rutland Furnlture'l

CARPET
SHOP
_
A
"Dr.lve LlltliS~tvtt'A Lot"
SHOP 1.S FULLY. 5TOC~ED
·

KITCHEN CARPET

$8f5 sq. .

·

EDROO
LIVING ROOM

C'A RP!t .·
• $gt5 And Up

Padd.lna ~ C:atpet tn~alled Free
wllh Purcnase . . .

NICe S•l•ctlon of Remnant•
AII Sizes - Good Prlee1

RUTLAND FURNITURE

-·

East
Pass
Pass

South
1•
3t
4•

Pass
Pass

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

ALLEYOOP · •

North and South were using
a 15-17 point notrump, which
explains why North opened
one club and jumped to two
notrump over the heart
reponse.
South's three-diamond call
was normal, as was North's
three hearts. At this point
South might well have tried
three notrump instead of four
hearts. Three notrump would
bave waltzed home and four
hearts might have made, but

'

'

.

You promised this
valve job b4 five!

992-3795 • :

ACROSS

sic~?

4G Abrasive

1 "Little Things u Heavy blow
Mean-"
DOWN
5 Pursuit
1 Played a part
10 Nlght.Ufe
Z Actreas
setting

"FREE
ESTIMATES"

2·18·1 mo.

• OUR FAIAILY AND FRIENO.S HELPEO
U.S A LOT WHEN WE FIR.ST
AND WE 171DOI&lt;AY 1/Uf&lt;IN&amp;

HOUOAY .7EA.SON ...

Antonelli

11 EJ:tant

3 Carnal

13 Clu.ster

nature

14 Parson
t Hanoi
Down, e.g.
holiday
15 Bard's before 5 Like some
18 Greeting
ham
in Pompei
6 Took on
17 Domeaday
7 One Mrs.
Book money
Slnalra
18 Jiggled,
8 Transas jewelry
gression
zo Way off
9 Incise
Zll.egal paper 12 Equipped,
ZZ Tennis tenn
as with lools
Z3 "Age
af Reason"

WINNIE

Home
Improvements

(For a copy of JACOBY
MODERN, send $1 to: " Win at
Bridge,·· csre of this newspa{HJf; P.0 . Box 489, Radio City
Station, New York, N.Y.
10019.)

by THOMAS JOSEPH

Is he

UPHOLSttRING

3r.d St. in
Syrcuse, Oh.
Ph. 992-3752
or 992-3743

{NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

~'(H4'

Where's Slim?

A&amp;H

~~__,.,.,....-,.ml

and

Anlwer
Z7 "- to Look
At": 1935

Yesterday'•

11 Nautical
term
18 Hackman

song

ZZ Not
taped
Z3 Gustatory

Z9 Measuring
device

311 Harry
31 Flsb-eatlng
mammal

sense
U Windflower
!$Iranian's

31 Soul: Fr.
3'1 To and -

anc:estor

author

CARPENTER WORK
complete remodeling by AI
Tromm, 7~2-2328. Referen-

!5 Imitated
%8 Katherine

ces.

-Porter
Z7 Dolly af

s &amp; G Carpet Cleaning.
Steam cleaned . Free
· estimate.
Reasonable
rates. Scotchguard. 9926309 or 742·2211 .
· 84

Will do odds ond ends,
paneling, floor tile, and
ceiling, file . Call Fred
Miller, 992-6338.1

North
1•
2 NT
3•
Pass

Opening lead:• Q

,tdU4

WALL P,APER I NG
pointing. 742-2328.

3·1 2·80

"Hello,
Dolly!"
28 Section
of journey

Z9 Calif. city
3Z Church

--AN' THAT AIN'T
ECHO MOUNTAIN!!

Electrical
&amp; Refridgeralion

vessel

33 Twllght
31 Clique
35 Till now
37 Legal order
38Coating
39 Kennedy
matriarch

SEWING
MACHINE
Repairs,
service, . _all
makes.
992·2284. The
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy,
Authorized Singer Sales
and Service . We . sharpen
Scissors.
·
ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPA I.R Sweepers,
toasters, lf'l!lls, all· small
appliances . . Lawn ·mower.
Next to stole Highway
Garage on -Route 7, 9853825.

.,•

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's

..

11

.. PEANUl'S
Rewind and Repair eleclrlc
molol'$. Will make service ·
·calls. 992•2356.
. 85 Generai Hauling
WILL HAUL limestone and
grovel. Also, Jlme hauling
and spreading, Leo Morris
Trucking. Phone 742, ~45.5.

MAifi~E HE'LL-DISCOVER

-I'M GON~. 'AND
LOOKING FOR ME

LV/YII:

'

-~.d

DOGS HAVE AN
UNUSUAL SEN5!: OF
BOUND
TO HAVE MISSED ME.,.

'I~

l'

I

- ~YPTOQUOTES

D)IQFQ

HQ

GMZ

M

ZA

FMPZHAE

GI AR L

MZL

M

J •D A F K . - V.
B ..
NPZGQZD
Yeslerday's· Cryp&amp;oeuole: LET THE MAN WHO DOES NOT
WISH.'l'O Fr: IDLE FALl, J-N J,.OVE.-OVID
·

.t

1

to work It:

LO~ALT't' ... ~E':,

EPDBARD

1 .IN;

how
AXYDLBAAXR
LC)NGFBLLOW

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

Limestone for driveways.
·Pomeroy.Mason area. 367-

:7101 .

t,.+--+-+-+-i3- ll

·~· L.:-~--EI.l'"&gt;...:
·~

:;,_ ,z

~ lMD~t l nw

••

F••tvNI tvM•c•'-· 1nc.

·,

Anderson Tapes " 10 ; Movie
" Calamity Jane" 17 .

11 :45---Love Boat 6,13; 12 :00-Biack
Sheep Squadron 8; 12 :55Baretta 6, 13.
1 :00-Tomorrow 3; News 15; 1: 1{}--Movle "A Sensitive, Passionate

Man" 8; 1 :35---News 17.
1:4{}---Movie " The Midnight Story"
17; 2:05--News 13; 3 :55---Movle
" Star In the Dust" 17 ; 5 :30Love, American Style 17.

South went wrong at tric k one
and gave East a chance to
make the killing defensive
play.
West's spade lead gave lhe
defense its only chance. If
South had ducked that queen
he would have made the
game. l\ut he dec ided that
maybe there was a 5-1 spade
break against him, so South
clattered up with dummy's
ace.
Now it was East's turn to
think. If he followed small to
the ace, as most players
would automatically do, South
would still make his heart
game. He would come to one
s~ade trick, three hearts, four
diamonds and two clubs.
East knew his side had
three tricks: one spade and
two trump. If West held lhe
jack or spades, as his lead
indicated, there was a way,
East realized, of scoring three
trump tricks and one spade
trick.
Consequently, East dropped
his king on the ace of spades
and now declarer could no
longer make his game. When
East won the first heart with
his queen, he returned a spade
to West's jack and ruffed the
spade return. The ace of
trump was the defense's
fourth trick.

• QJ6
+A

4339 .

Autos for. Sale
1976 Ford Granada,- am·fm,
8 frock, a.c ., reclining
bucket seats, vinyl top, 2
dr., 302' auto. $1,400. 949·
2691.

st.

T'GET ME

West
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

79 Ford F-250; 34 ton, heavy
duty, 24,000 miles. Ph. 8432032.
73
Vans&amp;4W.D.
1979 Ford 150 4X4, auto.,
p.s., p.b .• torper. Positive

CORNEA

CUTTING IN

• J 10 9 8 3

organizations

81

BLITHE

Answer: Plenty of I his at the su·rgeons' annual ball-

• 9842

YES. WHICH IS NOT TO GilY
THAT HE DOES NOT HAVE
ENeMIES THERE AS WELL ...

macrame cl~sses.

Trucks for Sale
For Sale 1973 GMC 1 ton
truck with utility bed. Call
992·3467.

71

.Mai11

NOT TRUST ME!
WELL- PERHAPS
I CANNOT BL!IME

THEN 'o()U'RE
GOHNA TRY

· -Now
carrying
chocolate wrappers and
molds for candy making
-Full line of Krall supplies
-Special rates for

72

.. . . . ........
.......
......... .

· Rubber
Backed

'"6UT I MEREL"i MEANT
THAT THIS 15 NOT A
SAFE PLACE FOR 'o()U,
ALI-\IAH WARSUCkS HAS
TOO MANY ENEMIES
HERE.
.

NOW HOLDING
TOLE &amp; DECORATIVE
PAINTING CLASSES
-We will be having

Autos for Sale

running boards . 992·3310 or
992·7894.

~

Al-l, YOU STILL lXl

2-2s-1mo. •

78
Ford'
Bronco,
customized am ·lm 8-·

·~

•• lF ANYTHINIS'S
GONNA BE i 1DONE 11
WITH ME, I'LL BE
TH' ONE WHO DOES
IT.'
.

CAU 992·3238
ASK FOR DAVE

.

Chester, Ohio
985·3300

~~sgo~'bEMs. p~n~~

54 Misc. Merchandise

I

SOUTH

·, I Made 11 Myself"

-· ~ ·

guns, pocket walches and
coin collections. Coli 614·
767·3167 or 557-3411 .

(Answers tomorrow)

+A 10 5
.K 7 6
+A K 10 3
+KJ6
WEST
EAST
+QJ 7 6
+K3
.52
.AQ4
• 974
+&amp;52
+8543
+QI0972

"FREE ESnMATES"

Pomeroy, Oh.

J

Deft drop dumps declarer

?f~

traction fron and rear. 985·

RICHARD GAUL

10!1 yard 7:30·3 :30 week·
days. High prices for good
qualifY logs wllh a limited
amoun.t of low grade.
Payment upon delivery
and sealing. Blaney Har- 81

Nothing too large. Also,

xr Kx r xxI

"K I

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

RemP.Iing

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

Aug. Wt. 560 Lbs.

· ches, class rings, wedding
bands, diamonds. Gold or

tibles or entire estates.

Pomeroy,

REGISTERED POUED
HEREFORD HEIFERS
90' Per Lb.

OLD COINS, pocket wat·

ATTENTION:
{IM PORTANT TO YOU) Will
pay cash or'certllled check
lor antiques and collec·

Friday,

5 OPEN

2nd. Middleport, OH. 992·
3161.

Antiques

Sale,

Ohio. For information
write or call Judith Miller,
Rt. 2, Box 372. McArthur,
OhiO 45651 . 614-596-5564.

I bi.I!SIBEII

~.~~~~~::/e to~·~~~ie~;

Nice Pigs . 949·2857 .

payments. Call credit
manager collect. 614--592·
5122.

.....

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

BRIDGE

H&amp;R BLOCK OFFICE LOCATION ;

71

Livestock

Southeastern Ohio Polled

--· J

CB,TV,
Radici
Equipment
All populr sizes in nickel

63

Picking up a pieno in your
area. Looking for a respon·
slble party to take over

-....

52

portable

required . 992·

6260, noon-7 p.m.

Wan! lo rent house localed

Answer: THE

BORN LOSER

-We Do Roofing,
Gutters and

~

stairs 17.

10 : 30- New s 20 ; II :00- News
3,6,8,10,13, 15; LastolfheWIId 17;
Dick Cavett 20.
1!. 30- Tonlght 3, 15; ABC News
Speclal6,13 ; Your Turn : Letters
to CB S News 8; Movie " The

Wednesday , Marcb IZ

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

Free Estimates
388-9759
2-IHfc

HUMANE
SOCIETY .
Adopt a homeless pet.
Healthy, shots, wormed .

Wanted to Rent

WA'TC.H OU'T FO~
'TH IG AI A

IJ

I

B. A. BEAUTY

CALL 992 75

Roofing,
siding,
gutter,
bu i 11-u p
roof
and
home
repair.

Dobermans. 614·446-7795.

man $27.50 per week. Call
992-6022.

IZEMENYt

rJ

Great

of the Yankees" 33.
9 : 15--- Dukes of Dixi eland &amp; Fr iends
9; 9:30--Facls of Life 3, 15.
10 :00-From Here to. Eternity 3, lS;
Vegas 6, 13; Upslalrs, Down-

6UNNY "e:AC..H,

Yesterday·s

Menor Women
by Diann Jewell
at

Pomeroy, o.

fo., call99 2-6058·

Sleeping room for working

53

I

*New homes extensive remodel, ing
* E lectrica I work
•Masonry work
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583
2·24-1 mo.

TEEN DISCO
DANCE
AI The Orchid Room

Unlimited. Chaperones
will be present. No

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

RENTER'S assistance for
Senior Citizens in Village

tab les,

HAiR·STYLING

~

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

in

FIRiST--THE COP5

MAY IIR1Ni9 I!ACIC
A DEAD TltiE/ICI

2·18-1mo
~~===~2-~28~~
1
~m~o~.
~pd~~
~==-~===-=44=~:t=~
=·
·
:
C:••:':":a:r~e=fu~n~1~
-~~
Care products. Western
boots. .Children 's $15.50.
' r·
·
Adultss29oo._
GEORGE'S
~~~ _ Tri-County
:~;~~~~g g~~~1-o~2~ne1.
ROOFING
Bj
___ b:r
_~{II_:,_ ::~~~:eping

Pomeroy. Large lots.Call

47

2·17· 1 mo.

[]

NORTII

CONSTRUCTION

56
Pets for Sale
HOOF HOLLOW, English
ponies. Ruth Reeves. 6146
Riding
Lessons
and Horse
Bordlng
and
98 -3290.

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Roule 33, north of

CALL JIMMY DEEM, ASSOCIATES 949·2388
==O=R NANCY
JASPERS, ASSOCIATE
949·2654 or 949·2591

:;;;;;;;;;ii~~~~~

ROjlef' Hysell

Jack W. Carsey,
Mgr.
Phone 992-2181

Pomeroy. Only $7,000. Call
992-3886.

Want To Seii?-Give Us A Ca 11

~

POMEROY
LANDMARK

Lots &amp; Acreage

44

t 'LL TELL YA THE POII.!Tl THE POLICe ~
ARE.ARMED WITH RIFL59 ANP9HOTGUNS •• AND THE'&gt;' DON'T AIM T'TAKE
ANY CHAN CEO!&gt;!
UNLE!&gt;9 :t
FIND CHRI,_
AND CLAUDIA

Wed . &amp; Thurs.
call for Appt.
949·2320
Racine, 0.
2·11 mo.

ROUSH

Auto&amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992-5682
4·30·1fc

H otpoi nt and
General Electric
Appliance
Sales &amp; Service

rlghts. $77,000. 9927559.

42

'IOU'LL !&gt;TILL HAFTA 01' COURSE: I 1
TURt.J 'EM 0VEI'2
CAN'T Kl!eP THe
T'THe LAW!
I!IRUTE HeRe ON
M'l &amp;!&gt;TATe ANY
LON&amp;ER l

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

2-28-1 mo.

Rutland.

DISCOUNT
PRICES

Rt. 7 or 33. «6-2359 afler 6.

Race lhe Wind" 8, 10;

Performances 20; Movie " Pride

I~========~+=========~_::========~
~

6342 or 992·2583.

From I to 75 acres, bordering

Pomeroy .
MUST SELL - 3 BR home in nice development. In·
eludes family room , set up for wood burning stove.
All carpeted, partially closed in carport, storage.

742-2474
Jean Trussell949-2660
FULL TIME
OFFICE PHONE
992-2259

PHONE 742-2003

payments on spinet piano.
Can be seen locally. Write

1112acres
story
full
36
a'\m house,
WI
room

JUST LISTED - Good 3 bedrm . house with kitchen,

One floor plan home
with a full basement,
block garage, nice front
porch, and a garden
space . Has 3 bedrooms,
a bay window in the din·
ing room , and a
fireplace in the living

REA[JY

Wanted
Responsible
party
to
take : over
low monthly

stocked pond for swimming
or fishing, 9 rooms, bath,
carpeted. 3 to 17 acres
available. Located approx.
7 miles from Pomeroy off

$25,000.

CAPT-UNEASY
Wt\IT I HOLD Oklo EA9Yl !WEN IF
Y'P'IklD CHRI,_ AND THE TI&amp;ER
1!1-EFOR!S THE POLl Ce DO-WHAT'S THE POINT l

es-rm Doors .
estorm WlndoW1
• Replacement
Windows
Free Estimate

No Sunday Calls

1·22·tfc

Decorated cakes for all oc·
casions. Character cakes
and sheet cakes . Call 992·

acres near town, with a
7 room, llf2 story home.
Gas hot water heat,
water soffener, and 2
outbuildings . Mostly
carpeted .
Nice
at

elnsulation

PH. 949-2801

949·2862

during March .

Farms for Sale

go, with 2 working stations. Nice location in Racine
on corner lot. Also has trailer hook-up. Asking

PAYING
$20.00 AND UP
FOR
SILVER DOllARS

Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices
Call Howard

S&amp;E Gill ShOp (Syracuse)
10 Percent Off on all items ·

~~~;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~i;~;ji basement, buildings, barn,

$29,500 .00
RENTAL INCOME - 2

·

33

Only $16,500.00.
IN THE COUNTRY - 6

HOBSTEITE.R.I

Teaford . 614-985·3961 .

credll manager: P.O. B.ox
537, Shelbyville, Ind. 45676.

35

has

earlier for purchases . John

992-7034.

WE HAVE CONVENTIONAL FINANCING FOR
MOST OF OUR HOMES FOR AS LOW AS S%
DOWN.
BEAUTY SALON - Fully equipped and ready to

WEDNESDAY, ~RCH 12,_1910

VIRFED

Aluminum Siding

POMEROY,O.
99H215or
"2-7!14
1-28·1 mo.

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

Pawn Broker, goll and
guns, used silver 1964 or

Contact

Centra 1Realty Co.

Each

Roule
689 .
Ph'one
Wilkesville 669-3785.

Kingsbury Home Sales at

f

V. C. YO.UNG Ill

H. L WHITESEL
ROOFING

pies, sauce and butter. Fitzpatrick Orchard, State

central air. located on
spacious lot which can be

trally located near all 3
miles on Route 124. 5
rooms and a bath . Par·
tial basement, forced
air heat and an extra lot
with its own water tap.
Needs a little repair.

, rented .

Apples, Rome Beauty · at

Mobile

HOME

(FREE ESTIMATES)

inc .

eludes full length awning,

·Phone992-2S98

JUST LISTED - One of the finest established
residen t ial homes in Racine . This two story with
finished basement boasts of an " up to date•: eat· in
kitchen, formal dining area, family room, 3 to 5
bedrooms, l lf:~ baths, thermo w indow s, (heavily in·
sulated J, carpeted on a II 3 levels, most drapes sTay .
The exterior is Real Perma Stone, has 2 large in·
viting porches and a two car garage . All of this and
more for $57,500 .

Sales,

$4 .00 per bushel . Exc . lor

Home 14x64, 3 bedroom, in·

COUNTRY

r

1

I KI

992-S724.

firm. 992·5304.

some timber, all mineral

apartments ,

pool kits. Do·it·yourself or
let us install tor you . D.
Bumgardner

Gutter work , down
spouts, some concrete
work ,
walks
and
driveways. 1

"Lowest Rates
In Town"
"Ten Years
Experience"
"Work
Guaranteed"
Ph. 992-6186
After Five
3· 12·1 mo.

power

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSUlATION
Vinyl &amp;

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING

WE BRING THE
GARAGE TO YOU!!!

delivery : various si.zes of

12x65 Trailer, com·
pletely furnished, A.C..
verv good condition . On a
lot that can be rented .
Ready to move into. $6500

$7 ,900.

AUTO REPAIR

IN STOCK for Immediate

bedr.
1971 Fleetwood, 14x65 3
bdr ., bath v,
1971 Shakespear, 14x65 2
bedroom
1965 Yanor 12x52, 2 bedr.
1968 Fleetwood 12x63, 2
Bdr.
B &amp; S MOBILE HOME
SALES, PT. PLEASANT,
wv . 304-675-«24.

rented .

J.

Slrokes
3, 15;
Charl ie's Angels 6,13; Movie ''To

- buy Winpowe r. Call 513·
788-2589.

14x65, · 2

Freedom

I JEECTb

9 :00- Diff ' renl

alternators - own the best

32

1971

Unscramble these four Jumbles:,
one leHer to each square. to form
four ordinary words.

Business · Services

Fitzpatric k Orchar d, SR

1971

Fay Manley,

Housing
Head uat(ets

Well built 3 bedroom hom
sit ua ted on 3 ac r es
overlooking the Ohio Ri ver .

bedroom
1971 Cameron,

Televisio~
Viewing

~THAT SCRAMBLED WQRD GAME
by Hemi lltnoldandBob l ee

E . Main St., Pomeroy, 992·
3891.

Rd . 949-2836 afte r 5 a nd
weekends . Larry Wolfe.

Mobile Homes
for Sale
1973 Fa;rpoint, Ux65

ID'i1

Excelsior Salt Works, Inc.,

Racine on Racine·Bashan

3

bedroom home. new
vinyl siding, insulated,
new FA gas furnace,
woodburning fireplace,
equipped kitchen, 11h
baths, mostly carpeted,
two bl o cks
fr o m
downtown .

'ilft~Nt

~ ~ ~~ s

THURSDAY, MARCH 13,1980
5:45---Farm Reporl 13; 5:5{}---PTL
Club 13 .
6 :00-700 Club 6,8; PTL Club 15;
Hea'lth Field 10; World at Larg&lt;
17.
6:30-For You ... Btack Woman 10;
News 17; 6 :45---Mornlng Report
3; A.M. Weather~ ; 6:SG-Good
Morning, West VIrginia 13;
6 :55---News 13.
7:00-Today 3,15; Good Morning
America 6, 13; Thursday Morning B; Batman 10; WTBS
Funhouse 17 .
7:30-Famlly Affair 10: 7 : S~huck
White Reporls 10.
8:00-Capl . Kangaroo 8, 10; Lucy
Show 17; Sesame St. 33.
8 :»-Romper Room 17.
9 :00-Bob Braun 3;' Big Valley 6;
Beverly Hillbillies 8; Jeffersons
10; Phil Donahue 13,15; Family
Affair 17.
9:3{}---Bob Newhart 8; One Day AI A
Time 10; Gr~n Acres 17.
10 :00-Card Sharks 3,15; Edge of
Night 6; Joker's Wild 10; Morning

Magaz i ne

13 ;

Movie

"Shadow over Elveron" 17.
10 : 30- Hollywood Squares 3, 15;
$20,000 Pyramid 13; Whew 8, 10;
Andy Griffith 6.
10:55-CBS News 8; House Call 10.
11 :00-High Rollers 3,15; Laverne &amp;
Shirley 6,13 ; Price is Right 8,10.
11 :30- Wheel of Fortune j, 15;
Family Feud 6,13; Sesame ST .
20 ; 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 for
Tomorrow 8, 10; Password Plus
15; Movie "Wild and Wonderful"
17: Elec. Co. 20,33.
I :00-Days of Our Lives 3, IS; All My
Children 6, 13; · Young &amp; the
Restless 8, 10.
2:00-Docfors 3,15; One Life to Live
6, 13; As The World Turns 8, 10;
2:25---News 17.
World
3, 15;
2: 30-Anofher
Glgg lesnorl Hotel 17.
3 : 00- General . Hospital
6,13;
Guiding Ugh! 8, 10; I Love Lucy
17; Masterpiece Theatre 20.
3:3{)--FIIntstones 17; Over Easy 33.
4 :00-Mister Carloon 3; Merv ·
Griffin 6: Pelllcoat Junction B;
Sesame St. 20,33; Gomer Pyle
10; Real McCoys 13; Little
Rascals 15; Spectreman 17.
4:3{)--Lone Ranger 3; Gomer Pyle 8;
Brady Bunch 10; Tom &amp; Jerry
13; Merv Griffin 15; Gilligan's Is.
17.
5:00-Carol Burnett 3; Sanford &amp;
Son 8; Mary Tyler Moore 10; My
Three Sons 17; Mister Rogers
20,33.
5:3{)--Mash 3;- News 6; Play the
Percentages 8; Elec. Co. 20;
Mash 10; Happy Days Again 13; I
Dream of Jeannie 17; Doctor
Who 33.
6 :00-News 3,8, 10, 13,15; ABC News
6; Carol Burnelt 17; 3-2-1 Contact
20,33.
6:3G-NBC News3,15; ABC News 13;
CBS News 8, 10; Carol Burnett 6; .
Bob Newhart 17; Over Easy 20;
Wild Wild World of Animals 33.
7: oo--cross-Wits 3; Tic Tac Dough
8; Newlywed Game 6, 13;
MacNeil-Lehrer Report 33;
News 10; Love, American Style
15; Sanford &amp; Son 17; Dick
Cavelt 20.
7 : 30- Hollywood Squares 3; In
Search 016; Joker's Wild 8; Dick
Cavell 33 ; $100,000 Name That
Tune 10; Nashville On The Road
13; Country Roads 15; .All In The
Family 17; MacNeil - Lehrer
Report 20.
8:00-Buck Rogers 3,15; Mork &amp;
Mindy
6, 13;
Waltons
8;
Pavarotll : King of the High C's
33; NIT Basketball 10; Movie
"Banning" 17; 8111 Moyers'
Journal 20.
8 :3li--Benson 6, 13.
9 : ~ulncy 3, 15; Barney Miller
6, 13; Barnaby Jones 8; Sneak
Previews 20; Movie "The
Student Prince" 33.
9 :30-Soap ·6, 13; Camera Three 20.
10 :00-Rockford Flies 3,15; 20-20
6, 13; Knots Landing 8, 10; News
20.
10 :15-Amerlcans 17; 10:3D-Over
Easy· 20.
11 :0{}---News 3,6,8, 10, 13,15; Dick
Cavell · 20; Fall &amp; Rise of
Reginald Perrin 33.
11: 15---Love, American StYle 17;
11 :30--Tonlght 3,15; ABC News
Special 6, 13; Columbo 8; Movie
"The Long Duel" 10; Movie ,
"Lucky Me" 17; ABC Captioned
News 33.
11 :45-Pollce Woman 6,13; 12•5.5-·Baretta 6, 13; 1:OQ-Tomorrow 3;
N•ws 15.
1: 15'--Mary Hartmai18; 1:30-Movle
. ''Mr. Soft Touch" 17; 2:05-Nows
' 13.
3: JS- Movle-" My Six Convicts" '17;
5: 4G-Loye, American Stv' l 17

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14--The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Wednesday, March 12, 1980

Carter, Reagan
(Continued from p;ige l l
delegates in his colwnn, Kennedy
141. The target for Democratic
nomination is 1,666.
California Gov. Edmund G. Brown
Jr., also stayed away to campaign
next for the April · I Wisconsin
primary.
The Democrats will battle for 179
delegates in lliiJl9is. Kennedy has
been pointing to the contest for
weeks; he said that and the New
York primary on March 25 are the
contests in which his challenge wiU
take hold.
KelUledy has defeated Carter only
once, in Massachusetts.
A poll published by the Clncago
Tribune said Carter is favored by
lliinois voters by a wide margin. The
Tribune said the president was
preferred by 62 percent, Kennedy by
23 percent.
Two statewide polls released
today - one by the Tribune, the
other by the Clncago Sun-Times and
WMAQ-TV - rated Anderson the
preferred candidate among illinois
Republicans. The Tribune poll
showed Reagan so close behind as to
be in a virtual tie - 33 percent to 31
percent, while the Sun-TimesWMAQ poll had Anderson ahead 39
percent to 30 percent. Bush had ID
percent and 15 percent, respectively.
Tuesday night, Anderson predicted that lliinois will be a showdown
between him and Reagan. "! do
believe it wiU be a different race
when he comes to lliinois," Anderson said. " .. .If the people want an
alternative, I will present myself as
that choice."
Since there is no party registration
SQUAD RUNS
The Tuppers Plains Emergency

Squad answered three calls on
Tuesday.
At 8:40a.m. Gordon Caldwell, former Meigs County auditor, was
taken to Camden-Clark Hospital in
Parkersburg.
At 11 :25 a.m. Wayne Gillian was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital in Pomeroy and at 2 p.m.
Jeremy Calaway was taken to Camden-Clark HospitaL

•

in Illinois, Anderson could gain iJ1 his

.•

home state from the kind of independ e nt and c ros sover
Democratic support that helped
boo6t him to strong second place
finishes in the Massachusetts and
Vermont primaries.
Reagan, in Beverly Hills, CaiH.,
said the Illinois primary is an important test he wants badly to win.

w

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Census take1 jobs
still being offered

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Full-time, temporary jobs as census takers in this area are still
available, Vince Santucci, Manager
of the local 1980 census office, said
today.
"We're counting on you if you can
work a tG-hour week visiting
households and interviewing the
residents," the manager said, adding that some evening and Saturday work wiU be required.
Census takers will begin work
soon as part of the 1980 Census of
Population and Housing. They will
attend a training session for which
they will be paid. Most census takers
will be paid a piece rate for the number of household interviews completed. In a few instances, pay will
be by the hour. For all workers, pay
will aver11ge $4 an hour or more.
Census takers must be able to
follow printed instructions, do simple arithmetic, and read maps for
which they wiU be tested before
hiring. They should be able to walk a
considerable amount, climb stairs,
and ought to have good eyesight and
hearing. They should have a home
telephone and many wiU need a car,
for which mileage will be paid when
it is used in census work.
The Census Bureau is an equal opportunity employer.
Forapplicaon write to: u. s . Census District Office 2420, Prior Montgomery Ward Building, 1st Floor,
35 S. Fourth Street, Zanesville, OH
43701.

BEFORE RENOVATION - This is the front of the store that housed
Simon's Pick-A-Pair Shoe Store before the front of the building was
remodeled. The building is owned by Franklin Rizer.

Area deaths •••
Hospital in Warren, wiU be held at 1
p.m. Thursday at the Ewing Funeral
Paul Eugene Martin, 67, a resident Home.
of Rt. 1, Cheshire (Roush Lane) died
Mrs. Miller was a daughter of the
at 8:55 p.m. Tuesday at his home. late William and Cora Mae Smith
Mr. Martin had been in failing Peacock. She was also preceded in
health the past six months.
death by three brothers and two
A retired Cheshire businessmen, sisters.
Mr. Martin was born June 3, 1912, in
Surviving are three daughters,
Clarington, Ohio, son of the late . Mrs. Wilmer (Cora Mae) Byers,
Luther and Sallie Ward Martin.
Warren; Mrs. Bernard (Opal) DidHe married Jewell Neville on Dec. dle, Racine, and Mrs. Kennit
13, 1936, in Gallipolis. She survives, (Jeane) Fisher, Gallipolis; three
along with one daughter, Mrs. Paul sons, Robert of Sophia, ,W. Va.;
(Katie) Shoemaker, Cheshire. One William of Gallipolis and Fred of
grandson survives.
Pomeroy; two step-daughters, Mrs.
Two brothers and one sister sur- Charles (Irene) Hayman, Westervive: Harold, Cheshire, and J ~ ville, and Mrs. Lydia Stultz, GreenRt. I, Gallipolis, and Miss Lucy Mar- field; a stepson, Lewis Miller, Tuptin, Cheshire.
pers Plains; a twin sister, Mrs. MinHe resided in Cheshire Twp. for 66 nie Moran, Navarre; 20 grandyears. He attended Cheshire Baptist children and 21 great-grandchildren.
Church. He was an avid sportsman.
Mrs, Miller was a member of the
After graduating from Cheshire Letart Falls United Methodist ChurHigh School in 1931, he owned and ch. Officiating at services wiU be
operated a Standard Oil Station and the Rev. Freeland Norris. Friends
garage in Cheshire for more than 42 may call at the funeral home from 2
years. The station was located to 4 and 7 to 9 this evening.
where the Gavin Power Plant now
stands.
WiJJiam Sigler
Mr. Martin was employed by the
Funeral services for William
Ohio Power Co., during constructior.
Sigler,
79, 246 Hudson St., Midof tlte Gavin Plant in the 1970s.
dleport, who died Monday evening
He was one of the two oldest wiU be held at 3 p.m. Thursday at th~
businessmen in Cheshire. During his EWing Funeral Home.
business career, Mr. Martin supMr. Sigler was a son of the late
ported many civic affairs in the
Campbell and Sarah Kessinger
Cheshire collUllunity. He was a bus Sigler. He is survived by his wife,
driver for the Cheshire schools in the
Gladys, and several nieces and
early 1940s.
nephews. He was a coal miner
Funeral services wiU be held 1 before retirement.
p.m. Saturday at the Waugh-HalleyFriends may call at the funeral
Wood Funeral Home with Rev.
home f~ 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
Alfred Holley and Rev. William
today. Burial will be in Beech Grove
Uber officiating. Burial wiU be in Cemetery.
Gravel Hill Cemetery, Cheshire.
Friends may call at the funeral
homefrom3 unW 9p.m. on Friday.

Paul Eugene Martin

MEETS FRIDAY
Mary ShriJle No. 37 will meet
Friday at 8 p.m. at the Masonic
Temple. There will be 11!1 election of
officers. Members to be a dessert.

Eckrich

SMOKED SAUSAGE •••••••••••~~·. s1.79
Eckrich

12 oz. FRANKS ••.••••••••••••••••.sl.29
Homemade

.••
.•

' NEWLY REMODELED - The front of the building that formerly
housed Siinop's Pick·A-Palr is shown after remade~ was Clllllpleted In
front is, 1-r, Judy Williams and Jan RousiL The building now houses Sears
Store. Owners and operators of Sears are Jack and Judy WU1lams of
Syracuse. A grand opening of the Sears Store is planned for the near
future.
·

•••

JUDGMENT ACTION FILED
A suit in the amount of $3,862 has
been filed in Meigs County Conunon
Pleas Court by GariaDd and Sarah
Caldwell, Rt. 3, Pomeroy, against
Curtis Dalton and Cletis Dalton, dbil,
Dalton Logging, RuUand.
The suit charges that the defendants, Dalton Logging, failed to pay
balance due from timer cut, logged,
removed and sold from the plaintiff's property,

SLIDE PRESENTATION

Mr. and Mrs. ShermaJ} Cundiff,
Syracuse, wiU show slid'es of the
Holy Llind Thursday at 7:30p.m. at
the Salvation Anny, 115 Butternut
Ave., Pomeroy.
Mr. and Mrs. Cundiff have made
several trips to the Holy Land. There
will speical singing and
testimonials. The public is invited.

·
.
•

DAIRY

• Regular
Savings
• Certificates
of Deposit
• Checking
Accounts
• Farm- Loans
• Auto Loans
•Home
Improvement·
Loans
• Personal Loans
• Bualness Lo"""
• Christmas Clubs
• Home Mortgager '
• Bank By Mall
• 24 Hour Deoository
• Direct Depoalt or
Social Security Checks
• Drive-In Banking
• Traveler• Checks

16 oz. Cello Bag

MARGARINE ....... 2/99' CARROTS .......... 2139'
Land of Lake Sharp Cheddar

3 Lb. Bag Rome Beauty

CHEESE .........~~:.. $2.29 APPlfS ....... --.. ~.~~.79'
Broughton
s lb. Bag White
BUTTERMILK:~.?~ • ~~ 89' GRAPEFRUIT ...__ .. _... 9f
11

CARIBOU CATFISH ••••••••••••;~}1.98
46 oz.

ch Aid

GRAPE
JUICE ••••••••••••••••••••••••• 69'
10112 oz. Campbell's Old Fashion
VEGETABLE
SOUP.•••••••••••••••• 2/59'
17 oz. Stokely

are all part of the
services we . offer you

FRUIT
COCKTAIL.
••••••••••••••••••••
59e
!5112 oz. Joan of Arc
KIDNEY BEANS••••••••••••• 217~

And the list . goes on! Enjoy the
~nef1ts of. our one-stop, full ser·
v1ce bankmg . .. you might just
save more than steps! Come in!

12 oz. Tender Vittles

CAT FOOD.....•.••••.•••..••••••••••••. 7f
BOUNTY TOWELS .••••••••••••••~:~~ •. 39e
VIENNA SAUSAGE •••••••• :'2~.0!!. 2/99'
·BEEF BBQ SAUCE •••••••••••• ~ .c:.n s1.29
Jumbo Roll

'

CURRENT 6 MO. MONEY
MARKO CERTIFICATE RATE

5 oz. Armour

510,000

Substantial Interest penally

10 oz. Vienna

29 oz. Stokely

PEACH HA.LVES ••••••••.•••••••• 2/sl.59
Livingston Garden Seeds and Onion Sets Are
and Read For Sa

Now on.

14.956%
minimum . Week of

March 13-19 19io

tor early withdrawal.

l'oen M·W, 91113, Thurs . &amp; Sat. 91ii 12.
!'rldoy 9111 J &amp; 5111 l

COUPLES END MARRIAGES
In Meiga County Common Pleas
Court Jennie RUSBell was granted a
divorce from Eddie Rtwell on
charges of gross neglect of duty and
extreme cruelty.
Marriages dissolved were Ray C.
Frank and Denise Racbelle Frank;
Donna Jean Chadwell' and David
Lynn Chadwell; Jeffle Ferrell and
Clyde H. Ferrell.

'

Property
Transfers

· io; lllDI.EPORT,

MEMBER

PANAMA CITY, Panama - Famed American surgeon Michael
DeBakey wiU fly tQ Panama to el1811line Shah Mohammad Reza
Pahlavi and wW remove his spleen If he decides the operation is
neceaaary ,.a Bpokesman for the doctor says.
Altho!igh the shah's personal physician had said .the operation was
·neiecled, •JiloiiBldw'a llp('tHman .uld WedJJeiDI}' bl Jtoutorr; Tau,
that "no one Ia conuDltted to surgery. The shah's New York
physlci8n, Dr. Benjamin Kean, said earller that he eumined the
depol!ed monarch last week in Panama and that his spleen was inflamed, C!llarled and probably associated with a tumor. He said the
shah would soon unde!'Ro "hazardous" surgery to have It removed,

Arrests 'have impact on hostages ·
MONROE, La. - Charging that the lranianB jalled here were
arrested.without just cause and are being treated cruelly, an Iranian
diplomat says he cannot rule out solile impact on the American
hostages in Tehran- .
.
All Asghar Agah, charge d'affaires of. the Iranian Embassy in
Washington, visited the studenta in their cells for five hours Wedneeday. ·
Of the 48 Iranians arrested Thursday, U remain in Jail in the seventh
day II. a hunger strike, three were hospitalized and four had been
released on bond.
Pam Bayer, one of two lawyers representing the prisoners, visited
the hospitalized studenlll and said they were kept in shackles.

Seek information for missing woman
GENOA, Ohio - Persons who have infonnation about the disappearance of Debra Sue VIne, 19, have been asked to come forward. ·
Thli parents a£ the 1&amp;-ye&amp;Mld woman, who has been missing since.
Feb. ~ and is believed to· bave been kidnapped, have urged that
IIIIYOIIe with Wormation about their daughter's disappearance contact the pollee, FBI agents, nel't's media or "whomever you wlah."
Speaking at a news conference Wednesday at the town hall ~ this
small northwestem Ohio CQmmunity, Mr. and Mrs. Dennis .Vine
lii8Ured their missing daughter ol their love and lJiled her or her kidnappers to make con~ct with~·

Court refuses Flynt a mistrial
COLUMBUS, Ohio ~ Common Pleas Judge Craig Wright Wednesday refused to grant a mlatriaJ bl the libel case against Hustler
magazine publlaher Larry Flynt.
·
However, WrigJ:lt said he may reduce the amo(lllt ~ damages or o!'
der a new trial on the amount of damages awarded in the case.
A jury awarded Penthouse Magazine publisber Robert Guccione
$39.3 mlllion in a.libel judgement March 1. The amount is believed to
be the ~est Ubelaward In history.
'

' ~ordovin· with the

~"~) Seaftop"hemllne.

Cleland files for commission

It'I a fancy window shade at a plain lo.w price.

Henry E. (Hank) Cleland, Jr., Pomeroy. · ·
Republican,. bas filed his pet!Uon of
He and biB wife, Kathy, and four
candidacy wfth the Meigs County
90119 reside . Cll Wright st. In
8olu'd ol ElectionS for Meigs County Pomeroy.
•
Commissioner for the full term, ending ilan. 2, 1985, the poBt currently
beld by Cbester Weils.
.
Halik ii a graduate ol Pomeroy
Hljjh School and Ohio University
witl;l.wGt'k on the 111881er'slevel. He
Ia preaident•elect of the
Southe11tern Ohio Board of
Realton; viCe preSident II. the
Mlddlepcrt:.POIIM\l'OY Rotary Club; a
IIIMDhir ol the board ~ f:be Meiga
Coun!J Planned Parentbood; a
- - I I . the Trinity Own:b Council IIIII SUnday Schoo1, the PccDeroy
Qwmbw fl . QiM!illwsde Drew ,
'
w......
- Poaf38' Amerl
I ...._ .
~
cap~.,

Now you can buy stock window shades with
a handsome Princess Scall.o p hemline,
Joanna West~rn's Kordovln Is a plastic, .
translucent wmdow shade which Is available
In Ivory, Apple Green, Curry, Tiger Lily
Celery, Paris Blue and White.
'
- . Clloose Kordovln shades with the
Princess Scallop, hemline ·t or many .rooms In
your home. The.y II give you a custom look at
stock shade,prlces. For'lmmedlate delivery
brlnq your window 111easurements, because
your Kordovm shades will be outto lit right at
our store.
•
·
And, .like all Joanna Window Shades,
Kordovln 1s an !111portant energy ~ver.lt can ·
sa~e ~p to 8% 1n heating fuet costs and up to
· 21 Yo 1n air cond1t1onlng costs.
·
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3? '4" \',{IDE X 6' LONG

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·HOME FURNISHINGS-1ST flboR . ' '

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OHIO

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"•

FDi~
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POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO,

Houston surgeon ex.amining Shah

ELBERFELD$

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VOL 28, . NO. 233

at y

SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico- A gwunan flredfromambushona government car carrying the colon~l in charge of Puerto Rico's ROTC
program and two other Army men Wednesday, authorities said. No
one was hurt seriously and no group inunediately claimed responsibility for the attack, theY said_
It was the second ambush of U.S. miUtary personnel in this largely
seU11ovemlng U.S. commonwealth in four months. On Dec. 3,
terrorists with automatic rlfies ambushed a Navy bus west of San ..
Juan, kl1ling two sailors and wounding 10. TIIree groups seeking lndepende~ for Puerto Rico claimed responsibility for that attack.

Bring your window mea&lt;llrements;

THE CENTRAL TRUST.COMPANY.
'
, NA

e

U. S. military personnel targets

A marriage ll~ was issued to
William . Robert Smiddie, 49,
Pomeroy, and Elizabeth Rose
Amoriya, ~. POlneroy.

•I.M Larger widths available.

''Tile Fr/end!y Bank"

•

J1J3t last week Ford, who has held
a grudge against Reagan since their
blUer primary battles in 19'16, s8id
he thought the former California
governor was ton conservative to
beat Carter.
Reagan, who grabbed a strong
lead in the Republican race with lopsided primary victories in Alabama,
Georgia and Florida on Tuesday,
said Wednesday that if Ford entered, It would draw votes from aU
GOP candidates.
"I think I understand the strategy
of those advising Ford to enter the
primaries," Reagan said. "Then no
one will bave the delegates for a first-round victory."
He discounted a recent ABcHarris Poll that showed Ford as a

stronger Republican candidate,
saying an earlier Gallup Poll had
shownhimalleadofFord.
Bush discouraged by his triple
loss to' Reagan on Tuesday, said
Ford's . time has passed and be
should stay on the sidelines.
He also vowed to confront Reagan
on the issues in Illinois, where latest
polls show him running third behind
Anderson and Reagan.
Anderson has been campaigning
in lliinois, his home state, for a
week, skipping the southern
primaries after scoring surprising
second-place finishes to Bush in
Massachusetts and to Reagan in
Vermont.
The three southern wins raised
Reagan's delegate count to 167, with

•

9118 needed for nomination by the
Republican National Convention in
Detroit in July. Bush has 45
delegates and Anderson 13.
Carter, who defeated Sen. Edward
M. Kennedy in he same three
primaries, now has 283 delegates,
with 1,666 needed for nomination at
the Democratic National Convention
in New York in August. Kennedy has
145delegates.
.
Carter has stayed home, refusing
to campaign actively because of
troubles in Iran and Afghanistan and
isrelyingoncampaignproxles.
Patrick Lucey, KelUledy's deputy
campaign manager, said it is "entlrely possible" that Kennedy wiU
win a majority of the 179 lliinois
delegates, although polls show Carter with a wide lead.

enttne

THURSDAY, MARCH 13, 1980

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Man dies
in plant
accident .

LIS!Elf HEBE

PRODUCE ·

ter next Tuesday's Illlnois primary
whether to challenge frontrunner
Ronald Reagan for the nomination.
The four GOP contenders in
tonight's debate. are eiJ)OO!ed to
have something to say about a potenUal Ford ·candidacy. They are
Reagan, George Bush, John B. Anderson and Phlllp Crane.
Carter's chief Democratic rival,
Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, was also
in illinois today campaigning in
Peoria and Chicago.
Ford told reporters he felt he had
the best chance of beating Carter in
November. But he said the need to
defeat Carter was so great that he
would back any Republican
nominee, including Reagan.

·

ASK TOWED
SQUAD RUN
The Middleport Emergency Squad
went to Riverview Drive at 7:43p.m.
Tuesday for Ann Davis who was
taken to Pleasant Valley Hospital as
a medical patient.

advisers and said he will :decide af-

GOP congressional fund-ralalng dinner that "this country is in deep,
deep trouble," and that he is determined to drive Carter, the man who
defeated him in 1976, from office.
"eaiier must go," he said. "My
soul, single purpose, politically or
otherwise, is to get President Carter
out ol the White House and to
replace him with a Republican
president.
. .
"The nation ISm peril," he said.
"The Carter policies are the vilJain.
His economic program has been a
disaster. His energy policies have
been misguided and Ineffective. His
foreign policies have been contradlctory, erratic and dangerous."
Ford earlier Wednesday conferred
privately with his closest political

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted-Laura Self, Racine;
Bessie Stitt, Racine ; Lola
Schoonover, Rutland ; Wayne
Glllland, Reedaville.
Discharged-Leslie Whittington,
Joyce Quillen, Josephine Mallory,
Ithamer Neal, Brady Knapp,
Eleanor Gordon, Douglas Bell, Antone Lucke, Alberta Laudennllt.

HAM SALAD ••••••••••••••.•••••:~·•. s1.19
1 lb. Teen Queen
Quarters

WASHINGTON (AP) - As four
active candidates for the Republican
presidential nomination ready for ·
tonight's GOP debate in Chicago, the
"phantom candidate," Gerald Ford,
Ia carrying the party's ,attack on
President Carter and talking like he
wants to ruil.
The former president, who
deliv~red a biting attack oo Carter's
polictes Wednesday night, aOO!pted
an invitation to meet today with the
president at the White House.
"I don't know wbat he wants to
discuss," Ford told reporters. "He
asked me to come over, and I
assume we'll talk about what he
wants to talk about."
The fonner president received a
rousing reception when he told a

Meigs county happeWngs •.• •:

Backwood&amp; Log Homes, Partnership to Richard Fick, Jr., Annette Kaye Fick, 0.5 acre, Chester_
Ruby Hayes, J. D. Hayes to Jimmy Preston Hayes, Jufuo Sue Hayes,
SQUAD CAlLED
3.27acres, Pomeroy -Scipio. ·
Mamie Miller
The Syracuse ER Squad was
Jinuny Preston Hayes to J . D.
Funeral services for Mamie called this morning at 8:55a.m. for
Hayes, Life Estate, Pomeroy Miller, 81, Route 2, Ractne, who died Bessie Stitt, Racine, who was taken Scipio.
Monday at St. Joseph Riverside . to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Leonard L. Bass, Ora P. Bass to
r;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;~;;~;;;~:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~ half
Phlllp Bearhs, Barbara Bearhs, oneacre, Sutton.
·
Bill J. Donahue, dec., Mona M.
Donahue to Holly M. Friend, Mary
Jane Friend, Pl. of Lot, Syracuse,
.Village.
.. .

r

GOP debate tonight; Ford attacks Carter

••
•

•

=~~~~~r.r.:
. . ..

. tlonl. '

Clelancl ...ect, thfee ~In the

.

u.s..~uaflnt~lnd ·
I¥Oitrecl for the Stlte of Obio B~~reau
ll Rtbabllltatlon. He Ia currently· o
realtor with qeland Real!f. Inc., In

A Gallipolis man was killed
yesterday afternoon, reportedly, at
approximately 1 p.m., in an accident
at the Kyger Creek Power Plant.
Timothy Rutherford, 27, Upper
River Rd., was transported to
Holzer Medical Center, where he
was pronounced ·dead-onarrival, An autopsy was scheduled
to be per!onned this morning, according to Gallia County Coroner
Dr. Donald R. Warehinle.
Notified of the incident at 5:03
p.m., the Gallia County Sheriff's
Dep&amp;rtment ·reports that Rutherford, an employe of the Union Boller
Co., a contracting finn working at
the plant, and two others were
working on the outlet duct of the No.
2 precipitator removing gunnlte-a
concre~like substance-from the
frame work of a doorway.
.
Witnesses told deputies a pl~of
the !II~ fell and
ck
·Rtth I'C 11)11~ lnjeqri'll~.l!llto a
metal frame where he struck 1iia
head. A second piece of the concrete(Continued on page 12)

Malpractice
suit filed
Charging medical malpractice,
Jean and Eugene H. GlOSB, Halliday
Heights, G&amp;Wpolls, filed suit Wednesday in Gallla County Common
Pleas Court against Dr. Oscar W.
Clarke, Gallipolis, and Dr. Daniel H.
Whitely, GaDlpolla.
The sull charges a pleural biopsy
was perfonned In September 1978 as
a diagnostic procedure for
congestive besrt failure suffered by
JeanGIOSB.
Wednesday's action charges that
Mn,· \_GlOSB' lung was punctured
dunng the medical procedure. .
According to the suit, failure to
monitor· the situation represents a .

TABLE OONATED- A new ping-pong table
ping-pong table wW be used as an additional inside

Approve iusanity ~ bill
•

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
Senate has acted on a bill in an attempt to answer increasing public
concern about the qulck releases of
persons found innocent of crimes by
reason of Insanity.
The measure, approved 31-0 and
sent to the House on Wednesday,
would change procedures under
which persons are committed,
treated and 'released from the Lima
State Hospital for the criminally insane.
Meanwhile, the House approved a
Sena~passed bill to ouUaw dirty
tricks played for or against liallot
issues. The measure now· returns to
the Senate for consideration of
House amendments.
·
Sen. M. Morris Jackson, 0.
Clevellind, sponsor of the Insanity
bill, said the public is "horrified"
that present Jaw allows persons
found innocent by reason of Insanity

to be released · "without super- ·
vision."
Persons found innocent by reason
of insanity are not held responsible
for their crimes and later are
released once found to be sane, he
said.
Those release decisions currently
are made by the probate court in
Allen County, where Lima State is
located. The bill would shift responsibility for holding commitment and
release hearings for such persons to
the trial court that originally handled the case.
Sen. Richard H. Finan, RClnclrmati, said the provision was
''the guts of the bW."
In addition, the measure provides
the trial court with the option of continuing to monitor patients after
their release. It also closes "a

~~:roc::~~:s:: Economy top

serious medical damages to Mrs.
GlOSB.
As a result of that alleged
negligence, the action claims, Jean
GIOSB has lost aculty of vision,
hearing and taste as the result of
cerebral vascular Insufficiency due
to lriadequate oxygenation of the
blood.
WedDesday's suit seeks damages
in an IIIIStaied amount of money.
SUSPEcr ARRESTED

· Carl R. Johnson, 2t, Kanauga,

charged with aggravated trafficking
bl drugs by the Meigs County
sheriff's department has been arrested. In .Conway, Arkansas.
Johnson was one of two pe1'8011S
secretly bldlcted by the January
tenn of the Meigs County Grand
Jury. J~ now faces extradltloo
.~there.

. Weather
•

$oow fiurrles likely and a little colder tonight. Low In the mid to upper
218. Partly cloudY Friday. High in
the upper 30s to the low .OS. The
chanced of precipitation: 80 percert
tonight, ind 10 percent Friday.

EXTENDED FOU(.UT
Sa\lu'dlly:•aa-p MOIIII8y -

..

Fair s.~l ~ Wi" • ·
chaaee ., lela 011 ~ . aad
.._.y, L#irl mabiJy ID die Jtl,

IIIIIH81

ud Ill flnw1sy m1

......y. 1111!- ID ~ ... aortla

and•.-.:

recreational activity for the children. Pictured with
the table are students, I to r, Terri Stout, Laura
Koenig, Tricia Sams, Kim Schul, and Lisa Henderson.

has been doriated to the Tuppers Plains Elementary. The donars wish to remain anonymous. The

CLEVELAND (AP) - Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, O.Mass., said
W~esday night the reason he is
tralllng President Carter in the polls
ls the nation's preoCcupation with
the U.S. hostages being held In Iran.
Kennedy made tM remarks at a
Cleveland area news conference as
he arrived to at1end a $250-a-person
fund-raialng event in suburban Fairview Park- ·
"I don't think that there's any
question in any of our minds that
there has been a central preoccupation and concern by all
Americans which I share and which
I feel about the safety and security
of the hostages.
" "'l'bat's predominated the news.
and the media ~er the period of
these past 3 montha," Kennedy said
when asked why he is trailing in ~
polls If he believes the fundamental
issue in the campaign Is the
economy.
"I think all of us want to~ those
hostages - returned safely and
secw'eJy. I do beli.eve If I had had the
opportuuity to debaw the. issue of
our economy that more people would
have bad the ~ to view the
current economic efforts ,of this ad. mlltlstration whiclt Mr. Carter has
Indicate&lt;! suit him flrie . and the
, titopoilla that! have adVI\ftCed.
. "I am convinced that the
econmllc isaues lire grabbing hold
now and I do believe that they Will be
a decisive factor In the Democratic
~ting ~. 1100ner rather
lhMn . later, I would hope, · but

gaping loophole'' in existing Jaw that
allows persons found innocent by
reason of insanity to voluntarily
discharge themselves from mental
hospi(@ls, Jackson said.
"This wiU alleviate the problem of
insane people, who need
hospitalization, from roaming the
streets," he said.
Meanwhile across the Statehouse,
the issue-election measure - win'ning 91-0 HOIIlWl endorsement would bring issue campaign
organizations under the same
prohibitions now applied to candidates' campaigns.
Cllmpalgn committees supporting
candidates are barred from
espionage, bribery and issuing false
statemenlllabout their candidate or
opponent. The Jaw Is silent on issue
campaigns, however.

issue--Kennedy

.
Inevitably, I believe."
He said the issue of dealing with
·Inflation rates close to 20 percent
and 18 percent interest rates Will be
the deciding factor in the,choice of a
. Democratic presidential nominee
and in the election of a preslcent this

fall.
.
Kennedy was Joined by u.s. Sen.
Howard Metzenbaum, )).()hio, and
u.s. Rep. Louis Stokes, D-Ohlo, both
of whom said they supported his can-

didacy.
Kennedy said the only way .to
break the back of high Inflation rates
is to impose a freeze oa prices,
wages, profits and dividends ah'oss
the board..
He said once such freezes are
pillced, an effective economic
program to restore pnJ&lt;Iuctivity of
the U.S. economy should be implemented and · the controls
gradually removed.

Hostage .door still
open to U.S. effort
'

By Alloelated Press
minlatratlon said earlier: "/Ne bave
Secretary of State Cyrus R. Vance nofalseu:pectationsabout'thechansays "the door is still open" for U.N. ces the commission can do
efforts to help free the American something positive..But we have no
hostages In Tehran. And two mem- very delltrable opti01111 either." ·
bers ol the U.N. Investigating com- · Vance said he ~t the work of the .
· misBion express optlmlam despite . • commission Spent rr da;ys
their !allure to see the cAptives in in Tehran investigating · the
lheU.S.Embassy.
, •revolutionary re~'s charges
qainlt the ousted sbah and trying in .
''The door Ia still open and I will be vain to see the bofltagee .+ was
keeping In touch with the seCretary· useh!l. but he declined to say wilat it·
general,"
said as be left for m!&amp;ht do next.
.
Washington Wedneeday night after
"I am .COWJBellng patience," he
meeting at u..N. llefd!luarters in · declared. "I believe th!!t!!Jia Ia the
New York with Kurt Waldhelm and belt course to follow. ~ ~cated, .
the · nve1 .Dembers of the In- the door is not cloeed,llld I think we
vestigating 'P8nel. .
should continue to (iursue this opAnother officialll the Cl\rter ad- tion."

w¥,1

vance

•'

i .

•

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