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Names of crash victims ·released

in a mountainous reglon southwest

of Adana while returning to lncirlik
from the U.S. bases in Pirlinclik and
Divarbakir in eastern Turkey. The
cr~sh occurred during a thun·
derstorm, and one report said the
plane had been struck by lightning.
Among the victims identified
Saturday were two teen-aged sons of

- Army Sgt. John Saunders, based
at Sinop;
.
- Army Spe~: . Carl Carr, based at
a communications station in Er·
zurum in eastern Turkey;
- Navy Petty Officer 2nd Class
Daniel Hartke, based at Slnop;
- Air Force Master Sgt. James C.
Webster,~. based atlncirlik.
-5enior Ainnan Mark Hunstadt,
21, Cedar Rapids, Iowa, based at In·
cirlik;
- Senior Ainnan William S. Lan·
caster, 22, Bono. Ark., based at ln-

an Anny sergeant and the wife of a
senior ainnan. The youths - Paul
and Joseph J olmson - were part of
an eight-member amateur band
from the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization airbase in !ncirlik,
near Adana, the officials said.
According to the embassy , the victims included 12 passengers and six
crew members. Except as noted,
their ages and home towns were not
unmediately available.
The passengers :
- Army Pvt. Keith H. Dowdell,
based at the Sinop intelligence base
on the Black Sea coast;

·-.-·-,,.,
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cirlik;
- Mrs. Karin Lancaster, Bono,

Ark.;
- - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , . - Paul E. Jolmson, 17, and Joseph

r..................,i~T .. ~. ~~;~~:~~:~~:~;
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Willi~ T .B~eadi~gham

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Realtor

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ntE TRUE MIDDLEMAN
Wh n a REAL TOR exec utes the purchase and sale of r eal es tat e, ~e
custo~a r i!y receives hi s entire r em unerationhin thhe ff~m ~~~to:O~'f~
· on the tr ansacti on For the most part . t aug ' e
. .
~~~"true middleman . Hf is legally entit led to r eceive his c: omm1~S 1 o~,
under the laws of most states, from either_ t he s~ ll er or b.uy~r , u 1 1 ~
pr ac tic e he r epresents the seller and rece1ves hiS comm1ss •on au o

e

th~h~~cdeo~~a~~~ ~~~~01 ~~~ ~~~~EAL TOR, as the seller 's agent, is not

e

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in a position to protect the interests of the buyer. Indeed~ u,nder th~ ~~h~
und codes of ethi cs, the REAL TOR must protect the .'" eres o
.
buyer as well as the seller because of his status as the 11ce~.se~ .rot~se
sional who executes th e sa le. Also, as a matter ?f prac 1ca I X• .
agent also wan t s both buyer and ~elle r as !utu~e cl1ents or as sa t 1sf1ed
cus tomers who wi l l recommend h1m to the•r fnends .

If there is anything we can do to help you in the field ot real estate
please phone or drop in at LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE, 512 Second
Ave., Gallipolis . Phone 44 6-7699. We ' re hereto help.

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based at !ncirlik;
- Air Force sgt. Jinuny L. As~&gt;burn, 23, based at !ncirlik.
Thecrew :
-Capt. Richard J. Wagner, 30,
Caledonia, Minn., the pilot;
- Maj.CalifMichaelil L. Jones, 35,
Fresno, . '' CCMl ol;
- U . Col. Benjamin H. Barnette,
45, Lenoir, N.C., navigator;
-Staff Sgt. T. L. Cyper, '!1, Stet·
sonville, Wis., flight engineer;
-Sgt. George Moreau, 26, Shirley,
Mass., loadmaster;
- Aimlan Howard K. Watkins, 18,
Big Spring, Texas, crew chief.
Today's birthdays: comedian
Jerry Lewis is 55. Fonner first lady
Pat Nixon is 68. U.S. Sen. Daniel
Patrick Moynihan of New York Is 53.
Thought for today : Victory
belongs to the most persevering. Napoleon Bonaparte (176~1821)

~-·~

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Carter, Reagan expected to ·take Illinois

D-12- The Sunday Times-Senl1nel. Sunday , Mar. 16, 1980

ANKARA, Turkey tAPI - U.S.
Embassy officials have released the
names of 18 Americans killed m the
crash of a U.S. Air Force transport
plane near the southern city of
Adana.
The C-130 aircraft crashed Friday

- - . _ ....

·~

CHICAGO (AP) - The news Ia
190&lt;1 for President Carter and
Ronald Reagan u they look for
another big boost toward their party
prwidenllal IIOIJ)Inatlons in the
Illlnola primary on Tueaday.
A poD publlahed today by the
Ollcago Tribune sbowed Ragan
IIIIIViDc ahead ct Rep, John Andenon ct Dllnols, while Qlrter held
a large lead over Sen. Edward M.
Kennedy.
.
Carter a1ao got a push by w1nn1ng
the popular vote in Puerto Rico's
prealdential primary Sunday,
galnlnc 21 ct the laland'a41 delegate
votes at the Democratic National
Convention.

And It appeared the prelldellt
would pick up at leall 114 delegate
votes In victories over Kennedy In
Democratic party caucuses over the
weellend In Milswlppl, South
Carolina and Wy11Dlin8.
The latest Dllnola poll gave
Reagan 38 percent, Andenon 34 percent and George Buab 12 percent
among people wbo IBid they fn.
tended to vote In the Republican
presidential primary. A week ago,
Anderson led with 33 percent to 31
for Reagan and mfor Bush.
On the DemOC!'BUc side, Qlrter
had 56 percent and Kennedy 2S percenl Carter's precentage dropped
from 61 a week ago while Kennedy's

"~

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WASHINGTON (AP)- President
Carter Is counting on bipurtlsan support for his latest salvo against
raging lnflatlon, but many In
Congress are skeptical that be wiD
get it - especially in an election
year.
The ink was barely dry Friday on
Carter's proposals to balance the
1981 federal budget, limit conswner
and business borrowing and raise
the tax on gasoline by 10 cents a
gallon when critics opened fire.
"Too little, too late," charged Sen.
Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass., Carter's chief rival for the Democratic
presidential nomination.
"Utterly and totally inadequate,"
said the ftepublican National Com·
mittee.
"Good politics but bad
economics," cautioned Sen. WWlam
V. Roth Jr., R·Del.
Stlll, Carter's call for a

"cooperative effort" to wring fn.
flatlon from the economy attracted
Immediate support from sOme key
officials.
Sen. EdmundS. Muskie, D-Malne,
chalnnan Dl the Senate Budget Committee, said he would guarantee
passage of a balanced budget. Rep.
John Dlngell, D-Mich., chairman ct
a key House energy subcommittee,
said ,he would back the gas tax,
although it "Is going to be very uno
popular.''
Even Carter admitted that the
task would not be easy.

"There are no quick answers to Inflation," he told the nation in a
televised news conference. "There
are no painless answers to Inflation."
.
Carter said the new anti-Inflation
proposals, worked out In almost two
weeks of talks with congresslonsl
leaders, "make it certain In my

!-::::==============================; .;
ELBERFELDS

By ~iieefUela

..•

Unue several more ~~~jmthe.
··•
Only a littie more than a mooth .: · :
ago, Carter l8aued a "prudent and ; : :
responsible" budget for 1981 calling '• . :
for f616 bllllon In federal &amp;pelllllng ; :
and a f15.8 bllllon deficit. White . ;
House documents show that more:· :
reallstic projections were f625 . :
bWlon spending 'and a f2$ bWlon . :
deficit.

By Tbe Aaaoclated Press

Hostage Ambassador Gomez escapes
BOOOTA, Coloml)la -Uruguayan Amballador Fernando Gomez,
one of the hostages held by guerrillas In the embassy of the Domlnlcan
Republic for nearly three weeks, jumped from a III!COIICktory window
of the building early today, scrambled under a parked car and was
rescued, mllltary police said.
Gomez escaped about 12:40 a.m. He got behind one ct the cars
parked In front of the embassy, shouted out his Identify to military
pollee, who picked him up In a Mercede Benz and drove him to a
military hoapllal.
.
.

Wildcat strike returns to coal fields
FAIRMONT, W.Va.- A wildcat coal strike that lnduatry oftlclals
thought dl.ed out two weeks agp apparently bu resumed, a spokesman
for the Marion County aberlff's department said today.
Chief Deputy Charles Selan said aU ct ConsoUdatlon Coal Co.'s
Marion Co!mty mlnel were cloaed on thla IIIOI'IIin8's midnight lbltt by
rov1n11 banda of pickets. Consol operatesflvemlnellln the county.
· Consol's Four states Mine wu ~ fOCUI ct a wildcat lrike tha~
began Feb. 25 over the firing ct a loCal union pr:esldent and two JD1ne
aafety committeemen. The strike apread to a number ct otlitr IIOI1h
ceatra1 West Virginia mines, and Idled u many u6,000 mlnen ilt Ill

&amp;ben Vaughan received the
legionnaire ct the year award and
Fred Crow, the outstandlnil citizen
award at the 611t annual birthday
party of Drew WebBier Poat 39,
American Legion, Saturday night.
Vaqhan Wll8 presented a tropby
In rec:Ognltlon ct hla contributl01111
during the put year. Annually the
poet recocnlr.es an outslandlng
legionnaire.
Paul Cucl made the presentation
ct the outstanding citizen awad to
Crow reflecting on bls foothaU accompllahments both locally and at
Oblo State, and hla work with the
FBI and hla legal career.
He apolre ct bls aCCOinpillhmenta
In CGIIIIIlunlty affalra mentioning
particularly the covered wagon trip
to Columbus which, he 1181&lt;1, wu a
contributing factor In the construction ct the Route 33 four lane

Tribe approves huge settlement
INDIAN ISLAND, Maine - Mernbi!rs ct the Penobecot Indian tribe
have approved a propoaedf61.5 mUllan settlement ct the Maine Indian
land claims case.
Members of the Passamaquoddy tribe have already voted to endorse the proposal, which would extinguish the two tribes' eight-yearold claim to 12.5 mllllon acres - roughly the northern twcH.hlrda of
Maine. The tribes say the land wu taken from them In violation of an
lith century federal law.
In a day-long merendum on their reservation north ct Bangor on
SaturdaY, the Penobl!cot Indiana voted 234-to-118 In favor ct the
propoeal. That tally lncluded some mailed ballots from tribal members llvtng outside Maine, said tribe! Governor WUfred Pehrson.

Board reviewing 50 applications
HARRISON, Oblo - More than 50 applications have been received
by the Southwest Local School District for the auperlntendent's poet,
vacant since Paul Kuhn left In January for a similar poaltion In Middletown; .
Most of the applicanll are from Ohio, with several from kentucky
and Indiana, sajd Robert Wooldridge, the district's treasurer.
Acting Superintendent Joaeph Wileman said It would probably take
board members tiD the end ct April to go through the resumes. He said
interviews llrill moat likely be scheduled for May, with Selection
com1ng IIOI'Detime In June.

Instead· Bras &amp;
Free Spirit" Bras and Bottoms

the views enunciated by the people
in the other party.'"
Anderson responded by saYing at
one campaJgn stop, "I am proud to
be a Republican."
Ragan also got good news over
the weekend when fonner President
Gerald R. Ford BMOIUiced be would
not enter the presidential race. Ford
had said be was considering f'1llllling
because be feared Reagan was too
conservative to win the general election In November.
(Continued on page 8)

en tine
PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Mary Martin to Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Hoeflich of The Dally Senllnel staff
In appreciation ct service and
assistance In the advancement of the

American Legion Auxiliary programs, and to Mrs. Ruth Ann
Dowler for WMPO Radio for air
time alloted to the Auxiliary.

hlglnray.
Crow responded briefly to Cucl's
commentl and spoke ct bla pride in
Melp County. He said tllat while
othenl may feel there Ia little to attract people to .Mel&amp;J County, he
feelllt'a not where you live but the
people ·you -oclate with, and that
be's bappy to be here.
Awards were pm!Dted by Mrs.

peak.

SUGGESTED
RETAIL PRICES

didates, lw attracted support from
Independent and Democratic voters
CI'OISing over to vote In Republican
primaries. But Anderson's reluctance to declare he would support
any GOP nominee, Including
Ragan, bu drawn fire for alleged
disloyalty.
Reasan told a news conference
Swlday he thought Anderson ought
to ult blmlelf If he might be more
comfortable as a Democrat.
Reagan, himself a former
Democrat, said be wun't going to

"An Individual must take a look

Vaughan chosen 'Legionaire of Year'

..•

mind that we wiD have a IIUbetantla1 ~ :
reductfon In the lrillatlon rate clurinB
thla year - the latter part a( this : :·
year - and I believe It wiD be under : :
double-dlgl.t lnflatloa nezt year.''
, ·. :
Carter . a1ao bad boped to keep . : :
prices In line In the flrat tine yean· : ··
of his ~dency. But lnflatiOII'~· : :
roared from 9 pe~t In Ul'll to .• · ~
more than 13 percent last Yt:al'· Con- : · ·
sumer prices til Janwiry I'OIMI at a :··· :.
pocketbook-wrenching 11 percent · : :
annual rate, and carter admitted · . ;
that the forrld pace Is likely to con-." : :.

at y

and say, 'Am I more sympathetic to

"read anyone" out of the party but
noted:

.

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delegates.
Carter victory In the WyiiDlinll
cauC\IIes should give blm 13 of the
state's18 delegates and Kennedy the
other five. But since WyiiDlinll actually will have only 11 convention
votes - u oppo&amp;ed to delegates this means something !Ike 7.9 votes
for &lt;;arter and3.1 for Kennedy.
While Reagan lw opened a
sizeable lead over the Republican
field u a result of two primary victories L'l two New England Bnd four

in southern states, he Ia locked In a
battle In Dl1nola with Anderson.
Anderson, whose views are In
9harp contrast to other GOP can-

Crow, others recognized

~

.' .~·". ·

Carter counts on bi-partisan vote

Based on preliminary percentages
from caucuses Saturday, Carter Ia
ezpected to gain 30 of Mississippi's
32 Democratic convention delegates
and '!I of South Caronna's 37

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO, MONDAY, MARCH JJ, 1980

VOL 28, NO. 235
now worb at both the Pomeroy and the ~Bowllng
Lanes. He and bls wife, Mary, b&amp;ve five children. Wilen
Ellis first began hla wOrk with the 1anel, pinl were let
for band and bowling was 25 centl a pme.

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PRESENTED GOLD WATCH - Neacll Carsey;
owner of the Pomeroy Bowling Lanes, presents a gold
watch to Pleasant Arthur Ellis, Middleport, wbo completed 25 years of service with the lanes March 1. Ellis

IUpport- uncllaJIIed.
With the ~on of Carter, wbo
Ia cmtlnulng ctf the campalcn traU,
the major candidates were In llllnoll
on the final day before this fll'ltlelt
with the voters ct a large lndllllrlal
state.
Rea1an was addrell.llng the
Chicago Council on Foreign
RelaUORI, wblle Kennedy planned to
March In ClliCBIO'S St. Patrick's
Dey parade. Bush and Anderson
were.to villt several cities aCI'OIIS the
state.
With 98 percent ct Puerto Rico's
preclncll reporting, Carter had 52
percent ct the vote to 48 percent for
Kennedy.

Speaker for the birthday party
was Manning Webster, retired
Meigs County judge.
Webster outilned the important
role of the American Legion as a
force In keeping America free. He
dlscuased Imports, .lnflatlon, the
situation In Iran, the Panama Canal
give-away, and stressed the need lor
American Legion members to maintain constant contact with their
elected officials. He was given a
standing ovation following his talk.
OTHER AWARDS PRESENTED
Recognized .and presented
membership awards were Charles
Swalzel, Paul Casci and Leonard
Jewell, gold pins ; and Robert
Vaughan, Raymond Jewell, Frank
Vaughan and Edward Van !nwagen,
bronze pinl.
It was noted that the late Walter
Vaughan was the last charter
member of the post. Casci commented on bis five sons and their
contributions particularly to the
bloodmobile. He said that Leo
Vaughan had given 14 gallons,
Robert, over 11 gallons, and Frank,
over 10 gallons.
The program followed a potluck
dinner hosted by the American
Legion Awdllary. Flowers were
(Continued on page 8)

Weather
Cooler with sbowera and thunderstorma likely tonight. Lows In the
mid $08. Partly cloudy Tuesday.
Hlgba In the low 601. 1be chance ct
precipitation Is 70 percent tonllbt.
and :/AI percent Tuesday.

ElTBNDED FORECAST
Wet day 1llnlqll ll'rldly:
hlrWeG ad17ad'l'laz. .y.A
elauiee II IIIIWell Jl'rtday. lliPa
llnap tile perled hallie .....
tile low • · Lcm Ira tile 1IJlPel'
. . te Clle .. Wedrndll)'...,.
lliDI. l181'111iqlellle 1IJlPel' ....
low til Friday.

Rutland principal
dies unexpectedly
EriC Alan Hart, 38, Pllmeroy, pri&amp;
clpa1 of the Rutland Elementary
School for a number ct years, died
1llllmiJeCtedly Saturday eveninl at
Veterlld Memorial Hoilpttal.
Mr. Hart became Ill and was tUen
to the baapttal wbere .. died sbortly

u-tter. Death wu believed to

Instead Bras

have been cauaed by a heart attack.
Mr. Hart • !IW!Ihoor ct the
Pwietoy United Metbodlat Cburch
andthei.O.O.F. Lodae at Pwie.tvy.
Survlvfnl are hla father, Lester
Hart, Pomeroy; his fiancee,
Margaret Suunne Teafonl, Minersville, an aunt, Mrs. Homer (Edna)
Cooper ct Pomeroy, and aevera1
couslnl.
He - preceded In death by bls
mother, Jean ~ Halt 'tlbo
wu Pameioy Ullrarlan for a num. her of years, Funeral eervlces will be held at 1
p.m. ~Y at theE~ Funeral
llome with the Rev. Roblrt MeGee
ctflclatlnl. Burial will be In Beech
Grove Cemetery. Frlenda Dll)' call
aUhifuneral '-anytime.

Free Spirit Bras
Free Spirit Fanny S .........,v
&amp;Smoothers
Pantsliners
Body.Briefers

.

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Sale ends April 12, 1980

WM"*'PaiiOIIPti'AII!RD
~. ObiCI (AP) -An uno

IMII~eaPiolllonataMW'9111qe

pump .•tton

'

•

111'17

thla

. CMIMd balpltalllltlon ·ct tine.men
'Wbo 1ftl'l wwldntl )II a DIIIIMle ao.

.

jaceatlo the fadllty'
Tbe IJilUred, wbo _ , !lot IJn.
lllldlately ldlialltlfled,' wwetakea to

Laacaater-J'alrfleld

ELBERFELD$ I.N PGM.IRQ~-

-mng

~ ~- ~ICdw•.t.•IIP'Ia •....., • • tO~IIlltw•dl'

face In lftPIII'RiloO f« Ponlel'oY BOY 8eout Troop Jtl'l Order ct the fttt.,
rcnrindlanDa~tlonattheM.Q.IfScclutShuwSatruitay. ·
't

•·

Coan,ty

lfqlpltal, All tine tepartedl1 wen.
~but r-naiMtl OOI1Id.a llid

.en-It IDJured. TbaJ were
u.ted In tatllifactory condition.

llllt

SERVICE AWARD- Mr. and Mil. Bob Hoeflich American Legion program at the Legion's birthday
ct The Dally Sentlnelltaff were given recosnltlon for . party. They were presented a plaque by Mrs. Marge
service 8J1d us1atance In the advancement ct the Fetty, president, left, and Mrs. Mary Martin.

House B&amp;E solved Saturday
Ii Wu IOIDeWbat • coincidence,

but, In a matter ct a few hours,
Melia County llberlff'a deputies late
Saturday aftemopn iolved a boule
breaking and entering with the
arnatct two Columbus areayouthl.
Accordlnc to report, o. c.
Qllprin's residence on SIICCtllll Rd.
- lllltered with llfMII'Rlltema locludlnl a lhotcun. rifle, pocDt.·watch, lady's 1rrlat,atcll, lmlvea,
hnlrlnp and medication milling.
Captain Robert . . ct the '

Melia.County sberlff'a department

The youth, according to fn.
was In the vicinity at that time fonnatlon obtained by deputies, Ia
checldng another matter; While · aougirt by the Ohio Youth Com. t•lklng to a Columbus family, the
mission for parole violation.
c:all came inl 'lbe mother of the
Charges · a1a1nst the 14-year old
family that Beegle was lalldng to youth wW be forwarded to the
bepn cl!!lckhJI her car to make slire Franklin Cotmty Juvenile Court.
her children were not Involved In the .
A 16-year old brother was a1ao
.Band E.
taken Into custody for parole
When some of the mlsalng Items violation tram the Oblo Youth Qm.
were found In her car, one of her mlBslon.
children ran from the vehicle Into a . .Asslat:lng In the four hour search
.-rbywooda.
.
for the YOUIJIIer brother were
deprtles Keith Wood, Jim Soubby, .
Walt Manley, and Charles. Sbaln.
'nle. Oblo Highway Patrol also ·
as81sted.
wblcle which had Prevlous!Y slid off
the J!8Vement owned by Joy
Morarlty, Racine.
CAN STiLL REGISTER
Any youth who miBied the
'l'llcker dilpl8yed villble signs ct
Pomeroy Youth League IIUIIIIIlel'
IDJury and · tranlported to
Vet.erana Memorial Hoapltal for program sign up on Saturday may
ltiU regiater by contac:ttng Phil
. treatment.
Harrlaon, league president, at IIIIZBoth vehld.es Incurred moderate
!(lamage. No dta~(\1'1 wM wued.
62411, liO later than ·Wednesday It'*
·
week.

Racine woman
hurt in wreck
..
.

.

011e ~ wia IDJ~ Clurlnl ·a
twHehlcle ICcldellt lnveatiga\ed
Saturday In ,. ._ County by the
'GeDi' Malp Pollt, HlflbnY Patrol.
Called to the - I n 8)'racllle on
SRiJI, aU:ULDL,oftlcenreporta
W1!lt ~ auto operatad by Ruth
'l'uckll', .,.. Raclbl, 111c1 orr the ~
~ . of • the roa~y atte11 encounterinl an Icy apot and hit I

J

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' - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, March 17,191!0

ou~ l='OU(~
AU\.

The Daily Sentinel

T~I&lt;£61Sli,

Opinions and comments

_ 1\tt\lLUOW
SllCt'S!I TI-IAT

GU..,

An editorial opinion

~LEW

lly AHoelated Prwl .

Lack of protection in

MA~,

WITH

'

TI-\Ai Klt.ID 01=
BREAD "E COULDA
BOllGI-\i TAE Wl·tliE
1-\(){l(;E, COt.lGRESS At.ID

~T

Anlw'er: 'lbulrl to the~ rl.

I8Ccilld-rlnked LoW.svllle lt'alhe forbut the .l aU. wouldn't be too
bldalllell. ·
Jil~Diha the Cardinali ci Loullvllle
In lhe NCAA ilemlflnala at Jn.

mar,

TAE WASI-IING'fOtJ
iZCOSKit.IS !!

...

SHAREHOLDERS '
.

ASTRQ GRAPH

MEETING
hereby given
.1
that, pursuan I I ° ca II 0 I 's
Notice i s

D i rectors,

meeting

a

of

•

m

Bernice Bede Osol

specia l
the

shareholders of Pomeroy
National Bank will be held
at its banking Office at
court and Second Streets,
Pomeroy, Oh io, on AprilS,

1980, at J p.m ., for the pur·
pose of considering and
determining
by
~ote
whether an a~reement to
merge the sa1d bank and
Bank One of Pomeroy,
N .A., Located in the City of
Pomeroy, State of Ohio, un·
der the provisions of the
laws of the Un ited States.
shall be ratified and con·

firmed, subject to the ap·
proval of the Comptroller
of
the
CurrencY,
·washington, D. C., and for
pur~se of voting upon
·the
h
tt
·
any o er ma ers .ncidental to the proposed

tl

'\bur
'Birthday

Marett 11, 1110
Your financial proapecta look
encouraging ror tht months
anead. ihart are alae po"'bllltlea that ~ou may be able to
lncreaae ·your Income through
setUni up ptorltablo oJUanceo.
PIIC I (F... :IO-MIN~ •1
You, aa wellaa othera, ma~ begin

majority of the Directors of
each of the two banks,

' providing for the merger,
.•s on tile at the bank and
may be Inspected during
buSiness hours.
Edison Hobstetter
President
(2) 25 (3 ) 3, 10, 17,4tc

NOTICE

FOR SALE OF
COUNTY-OWNED
VEHICLE

Ten'•

Hawkeyel erased 114-point ~
balf dellclt 8lld nipped lltb-ranked
Georaetown 81.., for the cham-

Purs!Jant to Section
307 12 0 R c th
M 1

County Commlssio"ners~~~
receive sealed bids until 12
noon on Tuesday, March
25, 1980, In the office of the
Mei~s
County
Com
misSioners,
located tn
the·
Courthouse,

Pomeroy ,

score

-

Crime victims entitled to payments
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Oblo
offlclala want to make the public

extremely rewarding.

IOCS1y. Flndoutmcnolwlla111ea
tor you In tM )'Hf' follOW·
inQ your !&gt;frthdly by NndlftQ for
yourcopyoll.ltto-Gropnl..ollw.

QE-(Illly21.,.,M201Your
greatest utlafactton comes from
being with you1 loved cna. Now
ts the time to have dlsculliona

date.

CAHCER (...,. 21-.luiJ 221 Be
perlllslent """"'your ambillons
Ire concerned. Once you
achieve IM diiUOCI results, you
will find addil!onal ways to

at\Nd

Mall$1torMCtltoAatro--Graph,
y
Box41Q, RadiO City StatiOn, N. .
t00t8. Be lUre to ~fy birth

ttlatcoutdleedtodOSerbOnds.

ARIII (Moroh 11-A,rttt) Thla
iugooddaytOIOVIIWtl10foctl
todetermlnelfyou're milking the

expand the berl8fits.

most of apportunlttea available
to you. TMre'a something fortunate In the wind.
TAURUS {April . . . _ , 101 Go
oot at your way to lhow ypur
conc.rn for friend• toda~. An

t----------1
NOTICE BY

4576
place of

the

residence of each of Sllid
Defend • nls
being
g

!Jnknown, wlll take notice
that on September 19, 1979,

Citizens National Bank,'
now Central Trust Com·
~r~h\ ~~Ac;~'i::o~ ~1'.,~~
COUrt Of Meigs County,
Ohio, all~ 1ng -ma 1 the
James

R:

LEO ,......, U.Aug. 22) You've
added a powerful ally to your list
ol close friends. You may team
up to do aomethlng that will be
protitabMJ to both of you.
v•oo tAut· 21-Sept. 22) This is
the ttme to do something posltive about those plana in the
baci: of your hlad. Juat get started . Lady Luck will put you on tP'te

right triCk.
.
LfiU (lopt. H-Oct. 131
Fr'-"da and contacts could be
most ttelplui toooy In giving you
new ln•""-htalnto a altuat~ ... n thai
...
~
may steer you right into Dame
Fortune'slap.
8CDIIPIO (Oct.-·· 221

You

can win t•·support of·-·~

-·~··

who cou ld prove to be quite
valuable, becwN or the auen-

attroct ftom tne excel·
lenl;#z;r.llndtoajob.
:!.. 101.,.,.1 ~=·:~
today attaight from the ltotoe's
"""'t"• ""'Y be very •--~-~·~Ill in
lion you

helping you

solve a problem.

more aware of a program .In which
the state reimburses certain crime
victims up to$50,000.
Under a biU now before a SenateHouse cooference committee, the
state would make a greater effort to
advertise the availabiUty of the funds.
The Senate wants the attorney
general to draft lnformati111 cards
describing the program and
distribute them to law enforcement
agencies, city law directors,
pmleC\Itors and others around the
state wbo In tum would give them to
potentially eligible crime victims.
But House Judiciary Chairman
Harry J. Lehman, D-Beacbwood,
the chief 8JlUilSOI' of the bill, wants
mort1 than that + he wanta media
advertising. "This Ia one of the few
well funded programs we have in
tbla state, but the people d111't know
about It," hellid.
Tbe advertising quest1111 was one
rl. the major reasons the bill wound
up in conference, Le1unan said. Bl4
be added he apects a compromise
to be reached.
lu PI upo5ed by the Senate, the Jn.
formation cards would Include but
lilt be Umlted to the following in-

fonnation:

-VIctims of crime and dependents of deceased victims may apply
to the Ohio Court Ill Claims fur awar- .
dsorre~tl~.
·
-Awards or re~tions are
limited to IU~Se~J caused by physical
Injury resulting from criminal conduct.
-Applications for reparations,
such as those lllllklng up time IllS! at
work, must be filed within one year

Ohio perspective
after the crime.
- An attorney who rePresents au
applicant C81Ulot charge the victim
for his services, but Is required to
apply to the state Court of Claims for
paymeut.
- Appllcatluna for awards or
reparations may be obtained from
the clerk of the Ohio Court Ill Claims ·
or the clerk of a court of oommoa
pleas.
Under the existing program, the
money for the awards e&lt;mes from
assessments of $3 for each con- ·
vlctlon In Oblo's adult courts. The $3
Is added to regular court costs and
paid by litigants, as directed by the
judge.
Sen. Marcus A. Roberto, D-

Ohio, with bids to be Pooler and Beverlv ClNICDIIN (Dec. - . 1tl
--'---------1 opened at 2:15 P.M. and Mariene Pooler, are jointly WOII&lt;ing with onother on a
read aloud, for the sale of
and severally liable to the
protect could lead toward deYelNOTICE
the following vehicle:
Plaintiff in the sum of oping a - · maaninglui relaFOR SALE OF
One 1967 Caterpillar 0 ·7 $1,000.00 Dlus interest at the Uonahlp.
COUNTY-OWNED
Bulldozer, with Bfade.
rate of 9'12 percent per an· AQUAIIIUI (Jan. 20-Fei&gt;. ttl A
·
VEHICLE
Said vehicle may be num from May 18, 197'/, on warm friendship with ono you
.. Pursuant to Sec11on
viewed at the Meigs County
a note; that they are joir.tly
care a great deal tor should add
307 .1 2 O.R.C. the Mei9s sanitary Larrdft!!, located and severally liable to thE immeasurably lo tOday·a enJoy·
County Commissioners WI!! off state Route loll in Plaintiff on a second note In mont IO&lt; both otyou. This can be
receive seated bids unlil12
Salisbury Township, bet· the amount of s·.s,215.&lt;13 a happy day.
noon on Tuesda{;' March ween the hours of 7:30A.M. plus interest at !he rete of 9
l lfWSP••••ENT••••.,,...... thatNEW
YORK (AP). - Tbe question
It Ia true: Many coocur In the
25M, 11980, inCthe of1 ice Col lmhe and 4:3C P.M.
percent per onnum from
conc:ems W"""'".,._ today Is belle! It will have lltUe Impact tbla
e IJS
oun Y
o ·
Dozertobesoldastswith March3C, 1979 and further I
_.,._
.miss•oners, located in lhe no guarantees. Said bids to alleging that the Platnl!f1
whether tbla anti-Inflation program, year + primarily because It Ia nen
Courthouse, Pomery, Ohio, be submlrted in sealed en· has a first mortgage on
the tblrd or fourth ul ,,_ Carter
y~ .Bat tJ8Iit ·~et.l, If
with bids to be opened at velopes marked "Bid on D· real estate descrltted tn
""'
'1 :30 P.M. and read aioud, 7 Dozer"
Volume 141, Page 167.
years, will be considered prudent maintained for years, are a1mo&amp;t
for the sale of the following
The Board of Meigs Meigs County Mortgag&lt;
FF A DAY
and-•'ble.
certainly autl-lnflatiunary.
venicle:
·county Commissioners Records,
securing
LA
• •
•....-One 1972 International
reserve tne right to reject payment 01 the note tnt~
Or will II, as many fear, be
tbla Instance also.
Front Loading Garbage
11 b'd
amount of •15 215 •• plus
.Moreover, . In
. .·Truck
any or a 1 s.
Interest. PlaTntltt ciemends
dhmdesed 88 more Ill the aame that
Said vehicle may be
Meigs County Lu dgmenl against th'"
~ rfailed In the past, or aa ezpedlent
viewedal!heMeigsCounty
commissioners
Def.ondanls
In
the
amount
r&lt;\'~0.
~
·
polltlcs and superflclal--•
Sanitary Landfill, located
Mary Hobstel!er,
of $1,1100.00 plus Interest at
~
"""'""""'cs,
oft Stale Route loll, in
Clerk the rete of 9!h percent per
or mere window dressing for a the jiiyChOIOgicai effect canoot bti
.Salisbury Township, bel· !31 17, He
annum from May 18, 1979,
... R.._,.,. .. __ ,puJlcy'.
discounted. It could be slgnficant.
weenthehoursof7 :30A.M.
on the first nole ana
.,..._...,.........,
Tbrvugbout the Carter years, for
and4 :3C P.M.
t - - - - - ------1 $15,215.&lt;13 plus !nteresl at
L
: ~~&amp;
Credlbllltylstheleaue.
Truck lo be sold as Is
the rate of 9 percent per an·
·
It •- difficult to ...,.l•lm that eumple, there bas been an emwith no guarantees. Said
num from March JO, 1979,
~~
"'
· - --bids to be submil!ed in
on the second note, cosiS
~ ·
credibility for an sdmlnlstratlon pbasla 1m spending and a concurrent
sealed envelope markl!d
LEGAL NOTICE
for suit and further
/1 ~\'&gt;/ 1 r~ ~ '"·t In the _ .. "-- _ , _ . worsening rl. budget 'deficlta, In"Bid on 1972 Garbage
REQUESTS FOR
demand the foreclosure of
n
'
""'
.-- """ ... Truck."
PROPOSALS
the reel estate mortgage
repeatedly to slay the beast and flation and lnteteat rates. Ptq~le
Tile Board of Meigs
PRIVATE SECTOR
described In Volume 141, j
\1.*~
then, .-...
bea
of
county Commissioners
INITIATIVE
Page 167, Meigs' county
;~-----•·"
,...-pe
use
coo- haven't faUed t,t! observe the
reserve the right to reject
PROGRAM
Mortgage Records, and for "To impress your friends, you tradlctory pu1lc1es, · obllerved the relatltnlblp.
any or ali bids.
PRIVATE
such olher and turtller
lh bu
beast--'nso+-4
Clllliltellcy and respwutlblllty Ia
Meigs County
INDUSTRY
retiefasmaybeproper.
press is lion, and the price
"'v"....,.-.,.er.
Commissioners
COUNCIL
Each of the Defendants rl. the watch is displayed in the AmeriCIIIS nrv!ootbtedly will ser- shown by the federal government
Mary HobStec"teerrk,
The Private Industry named above Is required to wt' nduw ."
c1ae their "'"'"' ,_ ........_.__~, the public Ia Uke1y to ber'*'• aware
Council &lt;PICI for the answeronorbeforetheex·
'""'' "' ...........,.......,
(3) 17, He
Balance of Slate !BOSI Is pirationof28daysafterthe
1bey will ask bow blgber g&amp;Mline . Ill it, and to denwwdnate that
accepting public relations last publication of this
........ ..,...._
-'--~---'- and
awareoess In greater Coofldeot:e "In
proposals pertatnlnQ to the notice which dale wilt b•!
"""""• . _ . wage .......,.......,
NOTICE FOR
Private Sector IOI!iattve April 21, 1980.
, .
blgber Interest rates cau do the future.
SALE OF
Program under Tille VII of
IANK'ONE OF
.U the past Is a Clriterloo, tbat cooCOUNTY-OWNED
the Comprehensive Em· Citizens National Bank, '
POMEROY,N:A.
anything but add to Inflation In the
'
VEHICLES
fldence Ia Ullely to be shown In a
SHARHOLDERS'
, sbortnm.
ploymenland Training Act MiddlePOrt, Ohio
: Pursuant to Section Of1978(CETA).
Now Central Trust Com·
MEETING
Tbelnith'·thata•-wiliiDF n to save, to foreco price
111 •---'-'
.307.12 O.R .C. the Mei9s
10
The PIC requests the pany, N·A
Nolice Is hereby given
......- ....
county Commissioners wolf public relations proposals
and
wage me.-, and to CCIIIlllllt
that, pursuant to call Of !Is crudelilcan'trestralnlnflatloolfoll
receive sealed bids unlit 12 onclude methOds to educate (2) · 25 (3) 3, 10, 17, u, 61c !)free tors, a special
funds
far lido tbe futlre for product
noon on Tuesday, March
and Involve employers in
.nee II n g
of
the CCIIIlpllllles fall to dlmjnlsb their tile
devel..,....m
and ~nt:~ovet~ons:
,25, 1980, in llle office of the Tille VII , and suggesl!ons
PROBA'I'E COURT
Shareholders of Bank One ul foreign l!lle11Y and If American
,Me!Qs County Com · of obtaining public
OFMEiaS
Of Pomeroy, N.A. will be
dri · _ _.._
tbelr
lu tblnp staDd, II)IIJil' lndlvllluala.
·.missioners, lbcaled In the awareness of the acllvilies
COUNTY,OHIO
' held tn the Office of Bane
veri ..........ueto use
CA1'I u
·-Courthouse,
Pomeroy,
CllrJIC!ftu- are luoldng 110 far.
·Ohio. w!lh bids to be of·~~M~I. activities in· ESTATE OF JESS ;.EE ~:I ~~t~':t t~u::. before.
·opened at 2:00 o'clock P.M. etude: the coordination of ANOERS03;.DI!CEASED. bus, Ohio, on APrile, 1980,
UltfalllllnlboeegOIIll, lt181n fact
:and read aloud for the sale employer seminars and In· CASEt1fiLIC1TION
! at 11 a.m., tor fhe purlnflatlollar7,
jl!lt 11 blgber 1ntere1t
.of the follow ina 2 vehicles:
formational
conferences;
OF
NOTICE
of
considering
end
deter..
,_
lnflatl
· · If •.._ faU
· · 1. One (1) 1972 Chevrolet the coordination and ' TO ALL PERSONS IN· mtnlng by voli! whether an ra.... an
OIIII'Y
-•
to
-~door Impala Sedan
preparation of Tille VII TERESTED IN THE •greemenl to merge the slow·borruwlng, and blgber wages
• ' 2. One I11 1977 Chevrolet news ~vents such as press ESTATE OF JESS LEE 't .aid bltn• ·and Pomeroy
ln!lati
lf..,_;donot'-dto
. 4·door Impala Sedan
press release ANDERSON, DECEASED, : National Ban1c, located In are
onary - •
'""'
· Said vehicles may be conferences.
news
stories
feature
ar·
LATE
OF
R
t
3
R
1
'he
Ctty
01 Pomeroy, Slate
more__.,,...,
......
· viewed at the Meigs County tictes, and olher publicity 01110
ou e :.&lt;. K "!&lt; &gt;f Ohio, under the
.,. __ wm;.
.Highway Garage, Rock items; end !he develop• MEIGS t.OUNTT l1'0VIstonsof the lows of the
And what sbould we make of coo-Springs Road, Pomeroy, menlo! attadverlls!ngand· PROBATE
COURTf CASE United Slates, shall be trolloacredltcardnwll""?
22965
-&lt;lh!o, and are robe sold as or public service en· NO.
• An •PP !cation ratified end contlr~,
•
..,
athey are with no guaran· nouncement cam(&gt;lllgn for ~~ev':"tl:. ~~~"'~.:::!'
SUbject to file approyaf "'
Tbat the aim ,Is mainly
1ees.
mlnlltrallon. MVIIIV that the Compltoil'"r of the ..JICbalogll'll What el8e, wt.Dit Ia
Sep;lrale bids must be Title VI!.
.submlned tor the two ar!:'"to ::S~r.1:~ 515
the 000
- " tiD not mtecl ~~·~:;=To,."t~pu~~ ~ ·aimed at l!'fiPie wbo bouow a few .
· .vehleles and the envele&gt;pes rural counttn known IS the
•
and tile creditors votl- u~ anw ot~·t· .................. ...,.,_ t
time and
: &lt;:ontatntng the bids Shall Balance of State. ProPOSits will not be r,;eludl&lt;*l teri"'1n'Ciciente1 To "tit. ' ww _,.. 1 a
'
. 'designate either "Bid for wtl! be accrued until 5:00 =Ti&gt;lit~
"Lon~
~
met\Jtl oftttetwo , -Juatacoupleoln••tll• after
1972 Veh1cle" or "Bid for
P~~k"'B~~r, t-lt'ttatson April~. 1910, at 1:30o'cto&lt;:k . a;'~';';$al~ c'flre:'met:!, llbell Oil bo11Dfied • • bllloo for a
1977 Vehicle."
Department of Ad· P.M. Pei'SOII$ knowing any ·executedbylhemajort~. wgaT
··
; Tile Board of Meigs
..County Commissioners ministrettve
Services
reason why
!hebeajlpl!cei!CIIl
the Dl-of
of
.....~ ·
-... ·tbe .....,..
..._~.;_ ....
.R
~
E
B
·
d
s
should
not.
granted
·-·~.
....,_.,.
_..
oreserve the right to reject
1 roa
,.,
as
tree!,
should
aP!&gt;fer
end
Inform
·
two
banks,
l!f'Ovl
lng
for
tolwllnee
the
um..,.......
bu
~
·.
-any or au bids..
28th
Floor ·Ohio ol3215
the Court.· The c~rt· Is· !he
.
me.r..,...
-.• ft ll(l tlle.et
tiM!
_...,
Columbus,
_._
. Ciit~ lwt ·-tr"Y
• r1. ,......
II actd!llonel lnformltion . locatld In Pomerov, .~to. . ~"f'~nil~mey
'T.:i;;r.'....·-.--MEIGS COUNTY
COMMISSIONERS ts ltftdl!d, contact Mr.
' R~E ...~
J , _ . . t . iD ~ IIIQatloo, ,bat
Mary Hobstel!er, Uherat (6141 A66·1033.
P~teJ;i;
, Pr:l'icitfit J- that myth btlpD II aayateriDUI
Clerk
(l)
1
C!el'k
:21
~.
(3)
3,
10,
17,41C
andllll)'beclencerolis.
(31t7 ttc
17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 5 c
(3110, 17, 2-4, 3tc

Ravenna, said the ~ effort to
make the publlc more aware of the
program will probably mean an Jn.
crease in the number Ill claims
received by the state.
He made mention of this In explalnlng another part of the bill
which extends the court assessments to Oblo's juvenile courts, rather
than limiting them to adult courts,
as is now the case.
Sen. Thomas A. Vau Meter, RAabland, who bas been critical of the
program In the past, questioned the
need to bring the juvenile courts into
the picture.
He said the court of claims currently Is laking In about $5 million a,
year but paying out only $2 million to

r$3 million.
'Oiat may be, Roberto said, 1
"because the publlc just doesn't
know about it." This is wby the court
bas requested the Information
program.
Van Meter and others criticized a
1979 award .to a widow WilD also was
beneficiary of a •150,000 life Jn.
S1U'8J'lce puJlcy. He hal a lawsuit
pending on that matter, aud baS introduced a bW requiring closer
scrutiny Into the financial status o'
applicants.

Responsible inflation plan

'----------!

~

Business mirror

.(Y ·

u

----------1

.

and

_:

"!'Tri

=r;

f

'

Tigers 'most dedicated'
LAKELAND, Fla. (AP) - The
troops making the swing of
beaehaU's Florida exbbitilll circuit

IIY the blttingest, ICI'IIppinleBt,
moet dedicated bunch In spring
training Is the youthful Detroit
Tlgel'l.
.
Put a sign out front: "Sparky An- ·
derlon at Wort."
"You l!lll&amp;ee It In their eyes," Inslated the sUver-balred onetime
manager of the Cincinnati Reds,
repiylng to a reporter's queatlon 011
IJDW be COUld detect signs of greatneu.
"It'athe look of the tigles.lsaw It
In the eyes Ill th8le ldda. TheY're
uger. T1Je¥'re determined."
Andenon, fired by the Reds alter
leadlllil the team · to two World
Championships, four National
League pennants and five Western
DIVlalon tltlei, picked up the telna of
the ~aced Tlgm In the inlddle
ollaat...on.
Now be II on the tbrelhold of bls
fl1'lt full year at the flelm, and be II
10 Inflated with entbullum and CIIQo
fidenee that me might expeCt 111m to
blow away at .the lightest puff of
wind.
Suddenly be turned to. Infielder
Alan Tral'lllj!e)), a1ready a tblrd year
manataga22.
·
"What did you eay to that J1UY who
nrmlnded you that the Tlgel'l were
being piCked third or fourth In the
dlvllil!ll?"~uid.

"I told blin, !~olley, we're going

to be No.1,"' Trammell replied.
"That's

ther ahead than next year. To look
beyond Is to look Into darkness. ~
ders don't waut to lend; Investors
don't want to Invest.
Greater productivity, however,
requires lung-term commitments.
The coustructlon of a mighty,
modem, higMechnology plant that
will lead to lower per-unit costa
doesn't take place via short-tenn
borrowing.
· II doesn't take place, In fact,
unlees a I'O!Dpany baa a fair idea ol
what to expect frlmgovemment
U the past Ia a liilerl111, that confidence Ia likely to be shown In a
wllllngne8a.to save, to forego price
and wage lnc:re88el, and to conun1t
lunda far Into the future for product
· develQI)IIIeDt and Innovations.
AI things stand, many Individuals
and 001poratlona an looking no farther ahead than next year. To look
beyond Is to look Into~ Lenders don't want to lend; lnvestAn
dm't want to Invest.
Greater prod11Ctlvlty, bowe~er.
requirel long-term commltmerJtl.

OOilltructl'-' · of

a ~.
modem, blgMecbnology plant that
will lead to lower per-unit costa
cto.l't take place via shcJrt.tenn
· bouowln!.
Tbe

..

'

right," Sparky
beamed"Tttlnk No.1. 'I'b1nk No.1.
Think No.1."
Sparky II dellglltful peraonallty
- pert Billy Graham, put Knllte
Rockne, part Slgml!lld Freud; plirt

a

•

Vlllee Lombardi, Bobby lCnlgbt and
\\'oocly Hayes. He II lroo-tougb on
dllclpllne yet soft u a kitten In
dealllqj with playeta One-oiHlne.
"l d111't see bow anyone could
conlpare me with 110111e of thOIIe
feUOWl," Anderloo aaid, obviDUily
referring to the fiercest taskmaalel'l the modern lpori8 world
hal known - the late Lombardi,
Knight and Hayes.
"I never yelled at anybody In my
Ufe. 1 never bOwed to physical enforce!llent ul my will. All I have ever
uked ci my pllyera In that they act
like gentlemen at au tlmea"
Wblle be was establishing hlmlelf
at Clnclnnatl aa the wlnnlngeat
manager In the club's history,.
Sparky often wu chided for .the
boardlni school rules be lmpoled 011
the grown men who pllyed for himHe deD'Ianded cltialicUt hairstyles,
no abaW' mustaches and beards,
coata and ties In pUblic, 8lld neat
Jockerroclml, He baa amended bla
precejlll sllgbtly Iince moving over
to the Tlgel'l, but baa not compn:mlled bla baalc ltandlrds.
Another·Andenlon I1CH10 Ia "high
stlrrupl" 7 cutting ~ cliltt overSOCk to lboir a lot of wblte stocking.
"A team should look uniform,"
aald!lpliky.
Andel'IDII blld no problem enforcing his discipline at Cincinnati,
wbire Jobnni Bench, Pete Roae,
Tony Pms and Joe Morpn were
moclell for the leliit playeri. 'nle
Tlgel'll are going alcmg. \Vben
vetetan Rein LeF-lore dlcln't, be was
traded.
"I tell them not to do aal do, but do
881 eay," aaid Sparky. "I teU them
dOO't win fur 111e- I'm here for five
yeal'l- bit go out and win for themselvu."

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seconds.,,
Brookins finished with 22 polnll
wblle Eric Floyd had 31 for
Georgetown, wblch Bllw the natim's
longest winning streak snapped at 15

games.

''Any time a team cornea out of Ita
region and plays Uke Iowa, they
deeerve all the credit," eald
Georgetown Coach John 'l'bompB011.
Lowville's Griffith, WilD picked up
hla first pel'IOIIal jlllt two seconds into the game against LSU, aat out 14
mlnutea of the fl1'lt half, scoring only
four J)Ointa. But be Ignited the Cardinali' second-hal! surge 8lld wound
up with 17 polnta.
A 16-polnt l.SU run Ufted the
Tigers Into a :5-21 lead before
Louisville reeled off the 1ut 10 polno
ta of the flm half. WUey Brown
IICOI'ed 12 of his 18 polntlln the first
20 minutes tor the winners. I.8U's

bla gwJS, forwards DeWayne Scales

and Durand Macldln, were held to 12
and nine polnta, reepecllvely, for the
game.
"Darrell wanted to jump oo them
(l.SU) fmn the start. 1 think be got
too overanxious," llid Coach DeMy
Crum. "But our team Ia ll(lt a oneman show. We just stayed Iii OlD'
regular offense and worked harder.
Tbe dther guys picked up tor him-"
l.SU Coach Dale BI'QWII called
Loullvllle ''the best · team we've
played. 1 don't thlni: anyone can beat
them. They juat have 10 ~~~any
dlnlenslons and that's WhY t pick
them. Their ptUI beat us and they
rebounded .well and got a lot ~
aecond llhotl...
.
"There's something about tbla
team that 1can't put my finger on,"
eald Crwn. "l gueu they juat dim't
quit and advel'lity doesn't bother
them.''
On Saturday, JtJe Barry Carroll,
Purdue's 7-1 AU-American center,
scored 2lli points to lead the BoUermakel'l over Duke wblle sophOmore

:Floyd edges Nicklaus in golf ·playoff
'
a,. ww orlmltey
AP Cornlpoqdellt

Ideas u you put them to work

~

before

Sports World

Important relatlons~p can De
strengthened. It may prcve to be

Defendants,

~can pard DerreU Griffith for
baU lhe gime with foul trouble and
lltGiilped lblrd-ranked Lou1llana
State . . with a blllterlna aecond'baU auault to capture the Mld1rut
Regional at Houston.
winnel'l
anly led 31-28 at the lntennllalon.
The other aeinlflnal will match
Purdue, :zz.e, and UCLA, 21..e, wblch
pGIIttd lmpl'elllive trlumplill on
Saturday. Putdue won the Mlcleut
Regional at LUington, Ky., bulilplnglfthoranked Duke SNO, wblle
UCLA outed Cleumoo ._74 In the
West RegiGWI at 'I'Ucton, Ariz.
Nm Saturday's wtnner will meet
for the NCAA cbamplmihlp on Mooday night, liJardl ~. And~ In case
. you'te wonilerlnc, the IDIIIt loeaes
ever for 111 NCAA champion was
Marquette'III8Ven In 19'17.
Iowa tralled Georgetown 42-32 at
halltlme and an1y Vlllee Broolllnl' 11

Today's

to ... anCI understand tt\e rtal
value and worth or tomt of your

otherw•se

recuJar-

final

IWcill ~but OI!IY tbltd In lhe
Big Ten ltal1cllnp; linrllllied Iowa,
tile ~
JCJIIl'tb.place qu!Atet,
8lld IWinked uCLA; ooc:e eoneae ·
blibtblll's pwtest dynut)l but
GillY the fDIII'th belt team In the
~10 Conference IIIIi ...on.
"We\.e been C1'DIIIed olf the Ust
111111)'1 111111)' limea," iDWI Collch
Lllte ' Ollon llid after 1118 2M

PUBLICATION
James R. Pooler and
p
1----------1 whose
Beverly Marlene 001er
last l&lt;nown address
was olll
Hooker Street0
Middleport, Ohio

merger of the two banks. A
copy of the aforesaid
agreement, executed by a

Preas'

It became 411-32 early In the leCOIId
baU
Iowa rallied behind s.
foot-10 reserve Steve Waite.
He came off the bench with the
'M-64 8lld scored 13 of hla 15
po1nta In the lut 11 minutes, including a tlebreaklng tiJree.polnt
play - a bukei frlm undemeeth
8lld a free throw after Georgetown
called twO. tlnleouts - wi.t h five
II8CDIIda to play that gave IIIWB an 81781ead.
"My flrit thought was to JIIW the
ball hack tO a shooter," Waite said of
hla game-winning play. tortunately
for Iowa, be tbought better of lt.
"I don't believe In setting up a
play for one pei'IOn at the conclusion
Ill a game,'' Olaon eiJ)Ialned. ''U the
other team goes Into a zone, we go
Into OlD' regular zone attack. U they
go II18Jl-tOoman; we attack that. 1
just wanted a shot In the last five

n.

~nat weekenci an- aurprla I - PurdUe1 No.lll In The

AIIDCIIted.

Tuelclay, Ma-h

NCAA roundup

Pblll&amp;i!pbla.
11le Hawkeyu · oppoueat next
llit fOlD' t - admitted to the . Saturdaf will be . Lwlsvllle, 31-3, ·
cs....,ded *Wm NCAA basketball which lllnJaed off the lou Ill AlJ. polnta kept the Hawke;v.ee that cloee.

CO~t.\All\l

'whistle blowers' law

POMEROY
NATIONAL
BANK

ull o surprzses·

plllllilhip of the East Reg!oaal at ,

Qlaeltloa: Does "Finil four"
111111111 the fllllll fOlD' surv!Vin or the

TI-IAI MOCH
RUNNI~' fOR
?RESIDENT'?

A new law to protect ''whistle blowers" is apparently not
helping federal workers who expose waste and
wrongdoing, or leading to correctiGil of fraud and abuse.
A panel of fonner federal officials-all of whom had been
dismissed from their positions after disclosing such activities as corruption at the General Services Administration, cost over runs on Naval projects, and overcharges to the government for computer servicestestified recenUy before a House civil service conunittee
to discuss the "ineffectiveness" of the legislation.
The "whistle blowers" said the new law, which requires
federal workers who believe they have been wrongly fired
to provide affadavits supporting their contentions, had not
prevented their superiors from retaliating against them.
A more reasonable approach might be to require employers who have dismissed a subordinate after such information has been disclosed to prove that the tennination
was based upon factors other than the disclosure.
There is no demonstrated overall protection of so-ealled
whistle blowers, especially those individuals who reveal .
truths embarrassing to politically powerful special interests.
On the other hand, protection of the politically powerful .
seems deeply rooted in the bureaucratic structure of
governn1entatalllevels.
One is hard put to recall an incident when a bi~·time
waster or cover-up artist has been fired for wasting or
covering up.

•

Final big

,---------------~~

aaodU.ot

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11111
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,
.

MIAMI (AP)- Jack Nicklaus a~
mltted be wu dlaappolnted In bla
pllyolf lou to Ray Floyd In the
Dora! Open Golf TU~~n~~D~ent, bl4
found a few bright spota.
"Obviously, I'm disappointed,"
said Nicklaus, who came 10 very
cl~~~e to ending hla »month. nonwinning string Sunday but bad to
settle for what might have been.
"But the Important thing Ia that 1
played a whole good tournament.
From a mental standpoint, tbla Is
going to help me aa.the year goes 011.

It's pretty encouraging."

After twice holding the lead In the
final round, be W88 a l011er again
wbeu Floyd capped a dramatic
ahoobiut by chipping In for a birdie
on the second bole of a sudden death
plaJoff.
"I'm flabbergasted," said the
dellgbted Floyd, wbo acquired
$45,000 and the 12th title of his

career.

Nicklaus was looking at· a birdie
putt of 1118 own - which Floyd w88

State girls
tournament
pairings

convinced he would make - when
Raymond stroked the delicate UtUe
shot from the lhort rough on the 18th
hole on the Blue Monster COU1'!II! at
the Dora! Country Club.
Nicklaus mined 8lld one Of the
more dramatic finishes In recent
years was complete.
Nicklaus appeared on the verge of
winning In the dramatic run down
the windswept etretch. Buth he and
Floyd executed aome remarkable
saves, and aome equally remarkable
birdies, In one of golf's moet exciting
flniBbee In recent years.
Both made scrambling pars,

Weekend stock
Crenshaw
car racing results• •
HAMPTON, Ga. (AP) - Dale Earnbardl took the lead with 28 !ape to
go and pulled away to eaally win the
f238,675 Atlanta 500 Grand Nallunal
stock car !'IICil. It wu the seconrl
Grand National victory of EaJ11o
hardt, who was NASCAR's Rookie
onne Year In 1979.
Rusty Wallace, In hla first Grand
National race, was second, finishing
U seconds behind Earnhardt. who
earned $36,000.

--

HAMPTON, Ga. (AP) - Bobby
A1llson, a lDIII!tlme veteran of the
NASCAR Grand Natloaal circuit,
outlasted Rick Mean and Johnn¥
Rutherford In winning· lhe International Race rl. Champl011 VD
series finale at Atlanta Intematiunal
Raceway.
Allla011 won f/5,000 from the total
pul'lle ul $278,000 and became the first stock car driver to win the IROC
cbamplonahlp. Oarrell Waltrip
finished second overall and won
~.ooo. Mean, second In the race,
lees than one second behind, and
third In the series, won $22,000.

Fred Undatrom II the New York
Glanta, playing aplnlt Wlllhlngton
In l&amp;al, wu the yoqest man ever

totakepertlnaaerlesgame.Hewaa

Floyd with an eye-openlrig blab book
over trees from deep trouble and
Nicklaus from wiUiln 18 lncbet ul a
bank that dropped off Into a pond, on
the 72nd bole.
That finished ulf a 89 for Nicklaus
and a 84- the but round Ill the tournament - for Floyd. They flnlabed
regulatlon play it279, nine shotl under par.
Texaan Keith Fergus once had the
lead alone• 'i'bat was after hla cblp.ln
eagle-3 011 the loth bole. H~ flllllbed
with a 70 and llllued the playoff by a
single shot at • ·
It wu three more strokes back to
Wayne Levi at '12-283. Ed Flori
played the last 181n 70 and tied Ben
at284. Crenshaw had a 71.
Even though l"ergua was In It unUl
the final bOle, It was a beadoto-head
match between Nicklaus, aeeklng to
regain the form that made him the
greatest player the game hall
known, and Floyd, afCII'Dier Maatera
and PGA ~on who rarely

MARTINSVILLE, Va. (AP)
Mike POrter, driving a Pontiac, won
the first half ul the Dopood 500
Cla11lc doubleheader at Martinsville Speedway. Geoff Bodine,
who led the first race fot 88 !ape,
came back to win the second half of
the »lap Modified race.

made lt.

On iht nat Glill, lie thnir a
brilltant lhot ~ wHbln lhtet ie.t IIIII
made the birdie tliat lied 1t. 011 tile
lii:tt, lle Chipped in II'IID II re.t for·
tirdle. Now be led. FlD1d bll!lltd t~~e·
Slime bole to stay lirllllill-.
On the nut, tlie 1'1111. Jl'loJd clrapo ·
peel a pUtt, ~
Ia JinCtb,.
from Uie upper tier !idle.- to 11a
it.
.
Each had a cba!MW to '11'111, 8111 ·

10,...

each bad 1 ""''" to lole, .111 alia,·
18th. Tbey matdll6d pan and,.......-.

~pla)'off.Ontbef~~'*!·~
bqtb jliihlllillld on~(J!lltl: ' ...:_

Ontbueeond,FIOJil'a~llt"

Bonham hnpressive, but Reds . 1~~·4

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - Pittsburgh
Pirates Manager Chuck T8111le1' Isn't
about to claim any mastery over the
'Cincinnati Reds.
.
besptte two victories thla weekend
and 1 sweep In the NatlmW Lea,ue
playOffs lilt fall, Tanner scoffi at
sucbclllms.
"Yeab, we WOII me game In eltra
inniJip and the other by one tun,"
Tanner llid, ref~ to Saturday's
8-6 victory and Sunday's 4-3
declalon.
,One thing that Tanner Ia pleased
with II the bitting ul Bill Robinson,
who had three blta Sunday.
"He's been swlngiiJI the hat very
weU," Tanner aald.
Both Tanner and McNamara
found scmethlng to be happy about
with their pitching eta!!.
Tanner waa (lleued with tbe pltcblng Ill Dave Roberta and Jlm Bibby.
Reds Manager John McNIIll'llr8
llid despite the kla, Bill BOnham
continues to tlirDW better au the lime
and Ia nearly full)t recovered from
elbow llllllltry that
more than
a:rearago.
·
.
"We're very pleaaad with him,"

"'Jmd

I;::da coach· worried about
caliber of Virginia school
NIT roundup

rec:e.IVI!I the ~lion be . _ .
vet.
They played In the aame IJ'OUP.
ADd the drama stai'ted juat u IIIey
reaebad the I'IIIIJe rl. ~ 111111-'
television eameru. On the ltUI,
Nlcklald was tra1lng by -llld iut
In llwble. He wu faced witll 1 IDfooter to aaVe pat llldata)'lll,..lle

mattnf

McNIUII8tll llid. "He'a
acme good pitches in sood locaiiOM.
He's more advanced thiiiJlriDC tblif
be wu a :rear .,o.''
1:
Paul Moat.au flllllll IICIIDI camlaf!
In btl Satlu'day ttrlllf; . . . . IIIli
fact that be .1ave lip four 111111 In ~
two IMinP he WGIUdo
'
•ill
"Tbe t~ U I 1 ~ 11\,,ll*i ~'
dltlooll what~-

ttild·mw

cll.scourl8«&lt;." ..bi ill4. ·~ ' . ' . ·.
fatigue. f d!cln't lil'ior. ~~eca.. ·
put In the 'lrOit, it•j jut IJeed I~

tllliulnce l pitdlild."
· . · '\l.
MOibu W1ili lliit to Ule ~
leagues lilit Alii· 1,. -~
aparlqlJ becalllie of _i
.
sboulder
'
•V'
Tbe ~- toot the
both
the &amp;itunla1&lt; aal
_......
.
....,.-.

i.d

t*,J
•. '
.
.. ill.
.,

Tbe
' s.iiudll)l '.
. Redl. ~
'-"' ~~
to tie the game
~:
In tbillOIIilnillll«lowtn.
. ·,
0n Swida)'1 the Pbiltlli IIIIIJt lip # '
+0 lead It tiW elld ol fM lnnfap,

•!iN__.

a· .

Clnclllnall
JilMigtill lilii1 '- ' • 'it· .
c!udnii
thai time.
1n the mtb;· ~tl «uno
three I'Uiil

Rhoden.

aft ft!liei· ~ . ~·
'
:·.,'!

1980'
SPIRIT

�··-··-

~

...,.

...

_.,...

' - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, March 17,191!0

ou~ l='OU(~
AU\.

The Daily Sentinel

T~I&lt;£61Sli,

Opinions and comments

_ 1\tt\lLUOW
SllCt'S!I TI-IAT

GU..,

An editorial opinion

~LEW

lly AHoelated Prwl .

Lack of protection in

MA~,

WITH

'

TI-\Ai Klt.ID 01=
BREAD "E COULDA
BOllGI-\i TAE Wl·tliE
1-\(){l(;E, COt.lGRESS At.ID

~T

Anlw'er: 'lbulrl to the~ rl.

I8Ccilld-rlnked LoW.svllle lt'alhe forbut the .l aU. wouldn't be too
bldalllell. ·
Jil~Diha the Cardinali ci Loullvllle
In lhe NCAA ilemlflnala at Jn.

mar,

TAE WASI-IING'fOtJ
iZCOSKit.IS !!

...

SHAREHOLDERS '
.

ASTRQ GRAPH

MEETING
hereby given
.1
that, pursuan I I ° ca II 0 I 's
Notice i s

D i rectors,

meeting

a

of

•

m

Bernice Bede Osol

specia l
the

shareholders of Pomeroy
National Bank will be held
at its banking Office at
court and Second Streets,
Pomeroy, Oh io, on AprilS,

1980, at J p.m ., for the pur·
pose of considering and
determining
by
~ote
whether an a~reement to
merge the sa1d bank and
Bank One of Pomeroy,
N .A., Located in the City of
Pomeroy, State of Ohio, un·
der the provisions of the
laws of the Un ited States.
shall be ratified and con·

firmed, subject to the ap·
proval of the Comptroller
of
the
CurrencY,
·washington, D. C., and for
pur~se of voting upon
·the
h
tt
·
any o er ma ers .ncidental to the proposed

tl

'\bur
'Birthday

Marett 11, 1110
Your financial proapecta look
encouraging ror tht months
anead. ihart are alae po"'bllltlea that ~ou may be able to
lncreaae ·your Income through
setUni up ptorltablo oJUanceo.
PIIC I (F... :IO-MIN~ •1
You, aa wellaa othera, ma~ begin

majority of the Directors of
each of the two banks,

' providing for the merger,
.•s on tile at the bank and
may be Inspected during
buSiness hours.
Edison Hobstetter
President
(2) 25 (3 ) 3, 10, 17,4tc

NOTICE

FOR SALE OF
COUNTY-OWNED
VEHICLE

Ten'•

Hawkeyel erased 114-point ~
balf dellclt 8lld nipped lltb-ranked
Georaetown 81.., for the cham-

Purs!Jant to Section
307 12 0 R c th
M 1

County Commlssio"ners~~~
receive sealed bids until 12
noon on Tuesday, March
25, 1980, In the office of the
Mei~s
County
Com
misSioners,
located tn
the·
Courthouse,

Pomeroy ,

score

-

Crime victims entitled to payments
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Oblo
offlclala want to make the public

extremely rewarding.

IOCS1y. Flndoutmcnolwlla111ea
tor you In tM )'Hf' follOW·
inQ your !&gt;frthdly by NndlftQ for
yourcopyoll.ltto-Gropnl..ollw.

QE-(Illly21.,.,M201Your
greatest utlafactton comes from
being with you1 loved cna. Now
ts the time to have dlsculliona

date.

CAHCER (...,. 21-.luiJ 221 Be
perlllslent """"'your ambillons
Ire concerned. Once you
achieve IM diiUOCI results, you
will find addil!onal ways to

at\Nd

Mall$1torMCtltoAatro--Graph,
y
Box41Q, RadiO City StatiOn, N. .
t00t8. Be lUre to ~fy birth

ttlatcoutdleedtodOSerbOnds.

ARIII (Moroh 11-A,rttt) Thla
iugooddaytOIOVIIWtl10foctl
todetermlnelfyou're milking the

expand the berl8fits.

most of apportunlttea available
to you. TMre'a something fortunate In the wind.
TAURUS {April . . . _ , 101 Go
oot at your way to lhow ypur
conc.rn for friend• toda~. An

t----------1
NOTICE BY

4576
place of

the

residence of each of Sllid
Defend • nls
being
g

!Jnknown, wlll take notice
that on September 19, 1979,

Citizens National Bank,'
now Central Trust Com·
~r~h\ ~~Ac;~'i::o~ ~1'.,~~
COUrt Of Meigs County,
Ohio, all~ 1ng -ma 1 the
James

R:

LEO ,......, U.Aug. 22) You've
added a powerful ally to your list
ol close friends. You may team
up to do aomethlng that will be
protitabMJ to both of you.
v•oo tAut· 21-Sept. 22) This is
the ttme to do something posltive about those plana in the
baci: of your hlad. Juat get started . Lady Luck will put you on tP'te

right triCk.
.
LfiU (lopt. H-Oct. 131
Fr'-"da and contacts could be
most ttelplui toooy In giving you
new ln•""-htalnto a altuat~ ... n thai
...
~
may steer you right into Dame
Fortune'slap.
8CDIIPIO (Oct.-·· 221

You

can win t•·support of·-·~

-·~··

who cou ld prove to be quite
valuable, becwN or the auen-

attroct ftom tne excel·
lenl;#z;r.llndtoajob.
:!.. 101.,.,.1 ~=·:~
today attaight from the ltotoe's
"""'t"• ""'Y be very •--~-~·~Ill in
lion you

helping you

solve a problem.

more aware of a program .In which
the state reimburses certain crime
victims up to$50,000.
Under a biU now before a SenateHouse cooference committee, the
state would make a greater effort to
advertise the availabiUty of the funds.
The Senate wants the attorney
general to draft lnformati111 cards
describing the program and
distribute them to law enforcement
agencies, city law directors,
pmleC\Itors and others around the
state wbo In tum would give them to
potentially eligible crime victims.
But House Judiciary Chairman
Harry J. Lehman, D-Beacbwood,
the chief 8JlUilSOI' of the bill, wants
mort1 than that + he wanta media
advertising. "This Ia one of the few
well funded programs we have in
tbla state, but the people d111't know
about It," hellid.
Tbe advertising quest1111 was one
rl. the major reasons the bill wound
up in conference, Le1unan said. Bl4
be added he apects a compromise
to be reached.
lu PI upo5ed by the Senate, the Jn.
formation cards would Include but
lilt be Umlted to the following in-

fonnation:

-VIctims of crime and dependents of deceased victims may apply
to the Ohio Court Ill Claims fur awar- .
dsorre~tl~.
·
-Awards or re~tions are
limited to IU~Se~J caused by physical
Injury resulting from criminal conduct.
-Applications for reparations,
such as those lllllklng up time IllS! at
work, must be filed within one year

Ohio perspective
after the crime.
- An attorney who rePresents au
applicant C81Ulot charge the victim
for his services, but Is required to
apply to the state Court of Claims for
paymeut.
- Appllcatluna for awards or
reparations may be obtained from
the clerk of the Ohio Court Ill Claims ·
or the clerk of a court of oommoa
pleas.
Under the existing program, the
money for the awards e&lt;mes from
assessments of $3 for each con- ·
vlctlon In Oblo's adult courts. The $3
Is added to regular court costs and
paid by litigants, as directed by the
judge.
Sen. Marcus A. Roberto, D-

Ohio, with bids to be Pooler and Beverlv ClNICDIIN (Dec. - . 1tl
--'---------1 opened at 2:15 P.M. and Mariene Pooler, are jointly WOII&lt;ing with onother on a
read aloud, for the sale of
and severally liable to the
protect could lead toward deYelNOTICE
the following vehicle:
Plaintiff in the sum of oping a - · maaninglui relaFOR SALE OF
One 1967 Caterpillar 0 ·7 $1,000.00 Dlus interest at the Uonahlp.
COUNTY-OWNED
Bulldozer, with Bfade.
rate of 9'12 percent per an· AQUAIIIUI (Jan. 20-Fei&gt;. ttl A
·
VEHICLE
Said vehicle may be num from May 18, 197'/, on warm friendship with ono you
.. Pursuant to Sec11on
viewed at the Meigs County
a note; that they are joir.tly
care a great deal tor should add
307 .1 2 O.R.C. the Mei9s sanitary Larrdft!!, located and severally liable to thE immeasurably lo tOday·a enJoy·
County Commissioners WI!! off state Route loll in Plaintiff on a second note In mont IO&lt; both otyou. This can be
receive seated bids unlil12
Salisbury Township, bet· the amount of s·.s,215.&lt;13 a happy day.
noon on Tuesda{;' March ween the hours of 7:30A.M. plus interest at !he rete of 9
l lfWSP••••ENT••••.,,...... thatNEW
YORK (AP). - Tbe question
It Ia true: Many coocur In the
25M, 11980, inCthe of1 ice Col lmhe and 4:3C P.M.
percent per onnum from
conc:ems W"""'".,._ today Is belle! It will have lltUe Impact tbla
e IJS
oun Y
o ·
Dozertobesoldastswith March3C, 1979 and further I
_.,._
.miss•oners, located in lhe no guarantees. Said bids to alleging that the Platnl!f1
whether tbla anti-Inflation program, year + primarily because It Ia nen
Courthouse, Pomery, Ohio, be submlrted in sealed en· has a first mortgage on
the tblrd or fourth ul ,,_ Carter
y~ .Bat tJ8Iit ·~et.l, If
with bids to be opened at velopes marked "Bid on D· real estate descrltted tn
""'
'1 :30 P.M. and read aioud, 7 Dozer"
Volume 141, Page 167.
years, will be considered prudent maintained for years, are a1mo&amp;t
for the sale of the following
The Board of Meigs Meigs County Mortgag&lt;
FF A DAY
and-•'ble.
certainly autl-lnflatiunary.
venicle:
·county Commissioners Records,
securing
LA
• •
•....-One 1972 International
reserve tne right to reject payment 01 the note tnt~
Or will II, as many fear, be
tbla Instance also.
Front Loading Garbage
11 b'd
amount of •15 215 •• plus
.Moreover, . In
. .·Truck
any or a 1 s.
Interest. PlaTntltt ciemends
dhmdesed 88 more Ill the aame that
Said vehicle may be
Meigs County Lu dgmenl against th'"
~ rfailed In the past, or aa ezpedlent
viewedal!heMeigsCounty
commissioners
Def.ondanls
In
the
amount
r&lt;\'~0.
~
·
polltlcs and superflclal--•
Sanitary Landfill, located
Mary Hobstel!er,
of $1,1100.00 plus Interest at
~
"""'""""'cs,
oft Stale Route loll, in
Clerk the rete of 9!h percent per
or mere window dressing for a the jiiyChOIOgicai effect canoot bti
.Salisbury Township, bel· !31 17, He
annum from May 18, 1979,
... R.._,.,. .. __ ,puJlcy'.
discounted. It could be slgnficant.
weenthehoursof7 :30A.M.
on the first nole ana
.,..._...,.........,
Tbrvugbout the Carter years, for
and4 :3C P.M.
t - - - - - ------1 $15,215.&lt;13 plus !nteresl at
L
: ~~&amp;
Credlbllltylstheleaue.
Truck lo be sold as Is
the rate of 9 percent per an·
·
It •- difficult to ...,.l•lm that eumple, there bas been an emwith no guarantees. Said
num from March JO, 1979,
~~
"'
· - --bids to be submil!ed in
on the second note, cosiS
~ ·
credibility for an sdmlnlstratlon pbasla 1m spending and a concurrent
sealed envelope markl!d
LEGAL NOTICE
for suit and further
/1 ~\'&gt;/ 1 r~ ~ '"·t In the _ .. "-- _ , _ . worsening rl. budget 'deficlta, In"Bid on 1972 Garbage
REQUESTS FOR
demand the foreclosure of
n
'
""'
.-- """ ... Truck."
PROPOSALS
the reel estate mortgage
repeatedly to slay the beast and flation and lnteteat rates. Ptq~le
Tile Board of Meigs
PRIVATE SECTOR
described In Volume 141, j
\1.*~
then, .-...
bea
of
county Commissioners
INITIATIVE
Page 167, Meigs' county
;~-----•·"
,...-pe
use
coo- haven't faUed t,t! observe the
reserve the right to reject
PROGRAM
Mortgage Records, and for "To impress your friends, you tradlctory pu1lc1es, · obllerved the relatltnlblp.
any or ali bids.
PRIVATE
such olher and turtller
lh bu
beast--'nso+-4
Clllliltellcy and respwutlblllty Ia
Meigs County
INDUSTRY
retiefasmaybeproper.
press is lion, and the price
"'v"....,.-.,.er.
Commissioners
COUNCIL
Each of the Defendants rl. the watch is displayed in the AmeriCIIIS nrv!ootbtedly will ser- shown by the federal government
Mary HobStec"teerrk,
The Private Industry named above Is required to wt' nduw ."
c1ae their "'"'"' ,_ ........_.__~, the public Ia Uke1y to ber'*'• aware
Council &lt;PICI for the answeronorbeforetheex·
'""'' "' ...........,.......,
(3) 17, He
Balance of Slate !BOSI Is pirationof28daysafterthe
1bey will ask bow blgber g&amp;Mline . Ill it, and to denwwdnate that
accepting public relations last publication of this
........ ..,...._
-'--~---'- and
awareoess In greater Coofldeot:e "In
proposals pertatnlnQ to the notice which dale wilt b•!
"""""• . _ . wage .......,.......,
NOTICE FOR
Private Sector IOI!iattve April 21, 1980.
, .
blgber Interest rates cau do the future.
SALE OF
Program under Tille VII of
IANK'ONE OF
.U the past Is a Clriterloo, tbat cooCOUNTY-OWNED
the Comprehensive Em· Citizens National Bank, '
POMEROY,N:A.
anything but add to Inflation In the
'
VEHICLES
fldence Ia Ullely to be shown In a
SHARHOLDERS'
, sbortnm.
ploymenland Training Act MiddlePOrt, Ohio
: Pursuant to Section Of1978(CETA).
Now Central Trust Com·
MEETING
Tbelnith'·thata•-wiliiDF n to save, to foreco price
111 •---'-'
.307.12 O.R .C. the Mei9s
10
The PIC requests the pany, N·A
Nolice Is hereby given
......- ....
county Commissioners wolf public relations proposals
and
wage me.-, and to CCIIIlllllt
that, pursuant to call Of !Is crudelilcan'trestralnlnflatloolfoll
receive sealed bids unlit 12 onclude methOds to educate (2) · 25 (3) 3, 10, 17, u, 61c !)free tors, a special
funds
far lido tbe futlre for product
noon on Tuesday, March
and Involve employers in
.nee II n g
of
the CCIIIlpllllles fall to dlmjnlsb their tile
devel..,....m
and ~nt:~ovet~ons:
,25, 1980, in llle office of the Tille VII , and suggesl!ons
PROBA'I'E COURT
Shareholders of Bank One ul foreign l!lle11Y and If American
,Me!Qs County Com · of obtaining public
OFMEiaS
Of Pomeroy, N.A. will be
dri · _ _.._
tbelr
lu tblnp staDd, II)IIJil' lndlvllluala.
·.missioners, lbcaled In the awareness of the acllvilies
COUNTY,OHIO
' held tn the Office of Bane
veri ..........ueto use
CA1'I u
·-Courthouse,
Pomeroy,
CllrJIC!ftu- are luoldng 110 far.
·Ohio. w!lh bids to be of·~~M~I. activities in· ESTATE OF JESS ;.EE ~:I ~~t~':t t~u::. before.
·opened at 2:00 o'clock P.M. etude: the coordination of ANOERS03;.DI!CEASED. bus, Ohio, on APrile, 1980,
UltfalllllnlboeegOIIll, lt181n fact
:and read aloud for the sale employer seminars and In· CASEt1fiLIC1TION
! at 11 a.m., tor fhe purlnflatlollar7,
jl!lt 11 blgber 1ntere1t
.of the follow ina 2 vehicles:
formational
conferences;
OF
NOTICE
of
considering
end
deter..
,_
lnflatl
· · If •.._ faU
· · 1. One (1) 1972 Chevrolet the coordination and ' TO ALL PERSONS IN· mtnlng by voli! whether an ra.... an
OIIII'Y
-•
to
-~door Impala Sedan
preparation of Tille VII TERESTED IN THE •greemenl to merge the slow·borruwlng, and blgber wages
• ' 2. One I11 1977 Chevrolet news ~vents such as press ESTATE OF JESS LEE 't .aid bltn• ·and Pomeroy
ln!lati
lf..,_;donot'-dto
. 4·door Impala Sedan
press release ANDERSON, DECEASED, : National Ban1c, located In are
onary - •
'""'
· Said vehicles may be conferences.
news
stories
feature
ar·
LATE
OF
R
t
3
R
1
'he
Ctty
01 Pomeroy, Slate
more__.,,...,
......
· viewed at the Meigs County tictes, and olher publicity 01110
ou e :.&lt;. K "!&lt; &gt;f Ohio, under the
.,. __ wm;.
.Highway Garage, Rock items; end !he develop• MEIGS t.OUNTT l1'0VIstonsof the lows of the
And what sbould we make of coo-Springs Road, Pomeroy, menlo! attadverlls!ngand· PROBATE
COURTf CASE United Slates, shall be trolloacredltcardnwll""?
22965
-&lt;lh!o, and are robe sold as or public service en· NO.
• An •PP !cation ratified end contlr~,
•
..,
athey are with no guaran· nouncement cam(&gt;lllgn for ~~ev':"tl:. ~~~"'~.:::!'
SUbject to file approyaf "'
Tbat the aim ,Is mainly
1ees.
mlnlltrallon. MVIIIV that the Compltoil'"r of the ..JICbalogll'll What el8e, wt.Dit Ia
Sep;lrale bids must be Title VI!.
.submlned tor the two ar!:'"to ::S~r.1:~ 515
the 000
- " tiD not mtecl ~~·~:;=To,."t~pu~~ ~ ·aimed at l!'fiPie wbo bouow a few .
· .vehleles and the envele&gt;pes rural counttn known IS the
•
and tile creditors votl- u~ anw ot~·t· .................. ...,.,_ t
time and
: &lt;:ontatntng the bids Shall Balance of State. ProPOSits will not be r,;eludl&lt;*l teri"'1n'Ciciente1 To "tit. ' ww _,.. 1 a
'
. 'designate either "Bid for wtl! be accrued until 5:00 =Ti&gt;lit~
"Lon~
~
met\Jtl oftttetwo , -Juatacoupleoln••tll• after
1972 Veh1cle" or "Bid for
P~~k"'B~~r, t-lt'ttatson April~. 1910, at 1:30o'cto&lt;:k . a;'~';';$al~ c'flre:'met:!, llbell Oil bo11Dfied • • bllloo for a
1977 Vehicle."
Department of Ad· P.M. Pei'SOII$ knowing any ·executedbylhemajort~. wgaT
··
; Tile Board of Meigs
..County Commissioners ministrettve
Services
reason why
!hebeajlpl!cei!CIIl
the Dl-of
of
.....~ ·
-... ·tbe .....,..
..._~.;_ ....
.R
~
E
B
·
d
s
should
not.
granted
·-·~.
....,_.,.
_..
oreserve the right to reject
1 roa
,.,
as
tree!,
should
aP!&gt;fer
end
Inform
·
two
banks,
l!f'Ovl
lng
for
tolwllnee
the
um..,.......
bu
~
·.
-any or au bids..
28th
Floor ·Ohio ol3215
the Court.· The c~rt· Is· !he
.
me.r..,...
-.• ft ll(l tlle.et
tiM!
_...,
Columbus,
_._
. Ciit~ lwt ·-tr"Y
• r1. ,......
II actd!llonel lnformltion . locatld In Pomerov, .~to. . ~"f'~nil~mey
'T.:i;;r.'....·-.--MEIGS COUNTY
COMMISSIONERS ts ltftdl!d, contact Mr.
' R~E ...~
J , _ . . t . iD ~ IIIQatloo, ,bat
Mary Hobstel!er, Uherat (6141 A66·1033.
P~teJ;i;
, Pr:l'icitfit J- that myth btlpD II aayateriDUI
Clerk
(l)
1
C!el'k
:21
~.
(3)
3,
10,
17,41C
andllll)'beclencerolis.
(31t7 ttc
17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 5 c
(3110, 17, 2-4, 3tc

Ravenna, said the ~ effort to
make the publlc more aware of the
program will probably mean an Jn.
crease in the number Ill claims
received by the state.
He made mention of this In explalnlng another part of the bill
which extends the court assessments to Oblo's juvenile courts, rather
than limiting them to adult courts,
as is now the case.
Sen. Thomas A. Vau Meter, RAabland, who bas been critical of the
program In the past, questioned the
need to bring the juvenile courts into
the picture.
He said the court of claims currently Is laking In about $5 million a,
year but paying out only $2 million to

r$3 million.
'Oiat may be, Roberto said, 1
"because the publlc just doesn't
know about it." This is wby the court
bas requested the Information
program.
Van Meter and others criticized a
1979 award .to a widow WilD also was
beneficiary of a •150,000 life Jn.
S1U'8J'lce puJlcy. He hal a lawsuit
pending on that matter, aud baS introduced a bW requiring closer
scrutiny Into the financial status o'
applicants.

Responsible inflation plan

'----------!

~

Business mirror

.(Y ·

u

----------1

.

and

_:

"!'Tri

=r;

f

'

Tigers 'most dedicated'
LAKELAND, Fla. (AP) - The
troops making the swing of
beaehaU's Florida exbbitilll circuit

IIY the blttingest, ICI'IIppinleBt,
moet dedicated bunch In spring
training Is the youthful Detroit
Tlgel'l.
.
Put a sign out front: "Sparky An- ·
derlon at Wort."
"You l!lll&amp;ee It In their eyes," Inslated the sUver-balred onetime
manager of the Cincinnati Reds,
repiylng to a reporter's queatlon 011
IJDW be COUld detect signs of greatneu.
"It'athe look of the tigles.lsaw It
In the eyes Ill th8le ldda. TheY're
uger. T1Je¥'re determined."
Andenon, fired by the Reds alter
leadlllil the team · to two World
Championships, four National
League pennants and five Western
DIVlalon tltlei, picked up the telna of
the ~aced Tlgm In the inlddle
ollaat...on.
Now be II on the tbrelhold of bls
fl1'lt full year at the flelm, and be II
10 Inflated with entbullum and CIIQo
fidenee that me might expeCt 111m to
blow away at .the lightest puff of
wind.
Suddenly be turned to. Infielder
Alan Tral'lllj!e)), a1ready a tblrd year
manataga22.
·
"What did you eay to that J1UY who
nrmlnded you that the Tlgel'l were
being piCked third or fourth In the
dlvllil!ll?"~uid.

"I told blin, !~olley, we're going

to be No.1,"' Trammell replied.
"That's

ther ahead than next year. To look
beyond Is to look Into darkness. ~
ders don't waut to lend; Investors
don't want to Invest.
Greater productivity, however,
requires lung-term commitments.
The coustructlon of a mighty,
modem, higMechnology plant that
will lead to lower per-unit costa
doesn't take place via short-tenn
borrowing.
· II doesn't take place, In fact,
unlees a I'O!Dpany baa a fair idea ol
what to expect frlmgovemment
U the past Ia a liilerl111, that confidence Ia likely to be shown In a
wllllngne8a.to save, to forego price
and wage lnc:re88el, and to conun1t
lunda far Into the future for product
· develQI)IIIeDt and Innovations.
AI things stand, many Individuals
and 001poratlona an looking no farther ahead than next year. To look
beyond Is to look Into~ Lenders don't want to lend; lnvestAn
dm't want to Invest.
Greater prod11Ctlvlty, bowe~er.
requirel long-term commltmerJtl.

OOilltructl'-' · of

a ~.
modem, blgMecbnology plant that
will lead to lower per-unit costa
cto.l't take place via shcJrt.tenn
· bouowln!.
Tbe

..

'

right," Sparky
beamed"Tttlnk No.1. 'I'b1nk No.1.
Think No.1."
Sparky II dellglltful peraonallty
- pert Billy Graham, put Knllte
Rockne, part Slgml!lld Freud; plirt

a

•

Vlllee Lombardi, Bobby lCnlgbt and
\\'oocly Hayes. He II lroo-tougb on
dllclpllne yet soft u a kitten In
dealllqj with playeta One-oiHlne.
"l d111't see bow anyone could
conlpare me with 110111e of thOIIe
feUOWl," Anderloo aaid, obviDUily
referring to the fiercest taskmaalel'l the modern lpori8 world
hal known - the late Lombardi,
Knight and Hayes.
"I never yelled at anybody In my
Ufe. 1 never bOwed to physical enforce!llent ul my will. All I have ever
uked ci my pllyera In that they act
like gentlemen at au tlmea"
Wblle be was establishing hlmlelf
at Clnclnnatl aa the wlnnlngeat
manager In the club's history,.
Sparky often wu chided for .the
boardlni school rules be lmpoled 011
the grown men who pllyed for himHe deD'Ianded cltialicUt hairstyles,
no abaW' mustaches and beards,
coata and ties In pUblic, 8lld neat
Jockerroclml, He baa amended bla
precejlll sllgbtly Iince moving over
to the Tlgel'l, but baa not compn:mlled bla baalc ltandlrds.
Another·Andenlon I1CH10 Ia "high
stlrrupl" 7 cutting ~ cliltt overSOCk to lboir a lot of wblte stocking.
"A team should look uniform,"
aald!lpliky.
Andel'IDII blld no problem enforcing his discipline at Cincinnati,
wbire Jobnni Bench, Pete Roae,
Tony Pms and Joe Morpn were
moclell for the leliit playeri. 'nle
Tlgel'll are going alcmg. \Vben
vetetan Rein LeF-lore dlcln't, be was
traded.
"I tell them not to do aal do, but do
881 eay," aaid Sparky. "I teU them
dOO't win fur 111e- I'm here for five
yeal'l- bit go out and win for themselvu."

. ._.....,.,__~-..,----.....,-,..,.,....,..--~-....._-:--'-I'

r ~:uma:.e.:!.:.:'.:es
.......

'! I

J,_

r"··r ..,,.._.

.vr , •.,._Clollop
~.uA\'wa

I

C!evt. ll.!iDOIIi!l...~ II
AI

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llekili
ae. ~ ...~... ....,::·•-

, ...· I".u. -,deli.
1tf!£U.1~"
=.:

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ib

..._..·
't=-"~
_.~,.,,
~·•

MUIIta,_ll,_

Toi.-~Al.:..

II

At~t\'l

I

c.LC I . IA ..,...,.VollorM
...._.,..~lri,lletftntct

..-- • AU fp 2 SC(iillilt

I·

'll'illanl!l,lloi10J!rt

·.

.

AtOWI...,-•W•• ..LJ

NtpoloonM,WIIilo'lliCt•

Arn , ,..,_

fri.Vollqfl 1lf.IWmoUI

A I -....

l'ladiiJ'Il..J:'~f...
·. AI~ '
.....

seconds.,,
Brookins finished with 22 polnll
wblle Eric Floyd had 31 for
Georgetown, wblch Bllw the natim's
longest winning streak snapped at 15

games.

''Any time a team cornea out of Ita
region and plays Uke Iowa, they
deeerve all the credit," eald
Georgetown Coach John 'l'bompB011.
Lowville's Griffith, WilD picked up
hla first pel'IOIIal jlllt two seconds into the game against LSU, aat out 14
mlnutea of the fl1'lt half, scoring only
four J)Ointa. But be Ignited the Cardinali' second-hal! surge 8lld wound
up with 17 polnta.
A 16-polnt l.SU run Ufted the
Tigers Into a :5-21 lead before
Louisville reeled off the 1ut 10 polno
ta of the flm half. WUey Brown
IICOI'ed 12 of his 18 polntlln the first
20 minutes tor the winners. I.8U's

bla gwJS, forwards DeWayne Scales

and Durand Macldln, were held to 12
and nine polnta, reepecllvely, for the
game.
"Darrell wanted to jump oo them
(l.SU) fmn the start. 1 think be got
too overanxious," llid Coach DeMy
Crum. "But our team Ia ll(lt a oneman show. We just stayed Iii OlD'
regular offense and worked harder.
Tbe dther guys picked up tor him-"
l.SU Coach Dale BI'QWII called
Loullvllle ''the best · team we've
played. 1 don't thlni: anyone can beat
them. They juat have 10 ~~~any
dlnlenslons and that's WhY t pick
them. Their ptUI beat us and they
rebounded .well and got a lot ~
aecond llhotl...
.
"There's something about tbla
team that 1can't put my finger on,"
eald Crwn. "l gueu they juat dim't
quit and advel'lity doesn't bother
them.''
On Saturday, JtJe Barry Carroll,
Purdue's 7-1 AU-American center,
scored 2lli points to lead the BoUermakel'l over Duke wblle sophOmore

:Floyd edges Nicklaus in golf ·playoff
'
a,. ww orlmltey
AP Cornlpoqdellt

Ideas u you put them to work

~

before

Sports World

Important relatlons~p can De
strengthened. It may prcve to be

Defendants,

~can pard DerreU Griffith for
baU lhe gime with foul trouble and
lltGiilped lblrd-ranked Lou1llana
State . . with a blllterlna aecond'baU auault to capture the Mld1rut
Regional at Houston.
winnel'l
anly led 31-28 at the lntennllalon.
The other aeinlflnal will match
Purdue, :zz.e, and UCLA, 21..e, wblch
pGIIttd lmpl'elllive trlumplill on
Saturday. Putdue won the Mlcleut
Regional at LUington, Ky., bulilplnglfthoranked Duke SNO, wblle
UCLA outed Cleumoo ._74 In the
West RegiGWI at 'I'Ucton, Ariz.
Nm Saturday's wtnner will meet
for the NCAA cbamplmihlp on Mooday night, liJardl ~. And~ In case
. you'te wonilerlnc, the IDIIIt loeaes
ever for 111 NCAA champion was
Marquette'III8Ven In 19'17.
Iowa tralled Georgetown 42-32 at
halltlme and an1y Vlllee Broolllnl' 11

Today's

to ... anCI understand tt\e rtal
value and worth or tomt of your

otherw•se

recuJar-

final

IWcill ~but OI!IY tbltd In lhe
Big Ten ltal1cllnp; linrllllied Iowa,
tile ~
JCJIIl'tb.place qu!Atet,
8lld IWinked uCLA; ooc:e eoneae ·
blibtblll's pwtest dynut)l but
GillY the fDIII'th belt team In the
~10 Conference IIIIi ...on.
"We\.e been C1'DIIIed olf the Ust
111111)'1 111111)' limea," iDWI Collch
Lllte ' Ollon llid after 1118 2M

PUBLICATION
James R. Pooler and
p
1----------1 whose
Beverly Marlene 001er
last l&lt;nown address
was olll
Hooker Street0
Middleport, Ohio

merger of the two banks. A
copy of the aforesaid
agreement, executed by a

Preas'

It became 411-32 early In the leCOIId
baU
Iowa rallied behind s.
foot-10 reserve Steve Waite.
He came off the bench with the
'M-64 8lld scored 13 of hla 15
po1nta In the lut 11 minutes, including a tlebreaklng tiJree.polnt
play - a bukei frlm undemeeth
8lld a free throw after Georgetown
called twO. tlnleouts - wi.t h five
II8CDIIda to play that gave IIIWB an 81781ead.
"My flrit thought was to JIIW the
ball hack tO a shooter," Waite said of
hla game-winning play. tortunately
for Iowa, be tbought better of lt.
"I don't believe In setting up a
play for one pei'IOn at the conclusion
Ill a game,'' Olaon eiJ)Ialned. ''U the
other team goes Into a zone, we go
Into OlD' regular zone attack. U they
go II18Jl-tOoman; we attack that. 1
just wanted a shot In the last five

n.

~nat weekenci an- aurprla I - PurdUe1 No.lll In The

AIIDCIIted.

Tuelclay, Ma-h

NCAA roundup

Pblll&amp;i!pbla.
11le Hawkeyu · oppoueat next
llit fOlD' t - admitted to the . Saturdaf will be . Lwlsvllle, 31-3, ·
cs....,ded *Wm NCAA basketball which lllnJaed off the lou Ill AlJ. polnta kept the Hawke;v.ee that cloee.

CO~t.\All\l

'whistle blowers' law

POMEROY
NATIONAL
BANK

ull o surprzses·

plllllilhip of the East Reg!oaal at ,

Qlaeltloa: Does "Finil four"
111111111 the fllllll fOlD' surv!Vin or the

TI-IAI MOCH
RUNNI~' fOR
?RESIDENT'?

A new law to protect ''whistle blowers" is apparently not
helping federal workers who expose waste and
wrongdoing, or leading to correctiGil of fraud and abuse.
A panel of fonner federal officials-all of whom had been
dismissed from their positions after disclosing such activities as corruption at the General Services Administration, cost over runs on Naval projects, and overcharges to the government for computer servicestestified recenUy before a House civil service conunittee
to discuss the "ineffectiveness" of the legislation.
The "whistle blowers" said the new law, which requires
federal workers who believe they have been wrongly fired
to provide affadavits supporting their contentions, had not
prevented their superiors from retaliating against them.
A more reasonable approach might be to require employers who have dismissed a subordinate after such information has been disclosed to prove that the tennination
was based upon factors other than the disclosure.
There is no demonstrated overall protection of so-ealled
whistle blowers, especially those individuals who reveal .
truths embarrassing to politically powerful special interests.
On the other hand, protection of the politically powerful .
seems deeply rooted in the bureaucratic structure of
governn1entatalllevels.
One is hard put to recall an incident when a bi~·time
waster or cover-up artist has been fired for wasting or
covering up.

•

Final big

,---------------~~

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.

MIAMI (AP)- Jack Nicklaus a~
mltted be wu dlaappolnted In bla
pllyolf lou to Ray Floyd In the
Dora! Open Golf TU~~n~~D~ent, bl4
found a few bright spota.
"Obviously, I'm disappointed,"
said Nicklaus, who came 10 very
cl~~~e to ending hla »month. nonwinning string Sunday but bad to
settle for what might have been.
"But the Important thing Ia that 1
played a whole good tournament.
From a mental standpoint, tbla Is
going to help me aa.the year goes 011.

It's pretty encouraging."

After twice holding the lead In the
final round, be W88 a l011er again
wbeu Floyd capped a dramatic
ahoobiut by chipping In for a birdie
on the second bole of a sudden death
plaJoff.
"I'm flabbergasted," said the
dellgbted Floyd, wbo acquired
$45,000 and the 12th title of his

career.

Nicklaus was looking at· a birdie
putt of 1118 own - which Floyd w88

State girls
tournament
pairings

convinced he would make - when
Raymond stroked the delicate UtUe
shot from the lhort rough on the 18th
hole on the Blue Monster COU1'!II! at
the Dora! Country Club.
Nicklaus mined 8lld one Of the
more dramatic finishes In recent
years was complete.
Nicklaus appeared on the verge of
winning In the dramatic run down
the windswept etretch. Buth he and
Floyd executed aome remarkable
saves, and aome equally remarkable
birdies, In one of golf's moet exciting
flniBbee In recent years.
Both made scrambling pars,

Weekend stock
Crenshaw
car racing results• •
HAMPTON, Ga. (AP) - Dale Earnbardl took the lead with 28 !ape to
go and pulled away to eaally win the
f238,675 Atlanta 500 Grand Nallunal
stock car !'IICil. It wu the seconrl
Grand National victory of EaJ11o
hardt, who was NASCAR's Rookie
onne Year In 1979.
Rusty Wallace, In hla first Grand
National race, was second, finishing
U seconds behind Earnhardt. who
earned $36,000.

--

HAMPTON, Ga. (AP) - Bobby
A1llson, a lDIII!tlme veteran of the
NASCAR Grand Natloaal circuit,
outlasted Rick Mean and Johnn¥
Rutherford In winning· lhe International Race rl. Champl011 VD
series finale at Atlanta Intematiunal
Raceway.
Allla011 won f/5,000 from the total
pul'lle ul $278,000 and became the first stock car driver to win the IROC
cbamplonahlp. Oarrell Waltrip
finished second overall and won
~.ooo. Mean, second In the race,
lees than one second behind, and
third In the series, won $22,000.

Fred Undatrom II the New York
Glanta, playing aplnlt Wlllhlngton
In l&amp;al, wu the yoqest man ever

totakepertlnaaerlesgame.Hewaa

Floyd with an eye-openlrig blab book
over trees from deep trouble and
Nicklaus from wiUiln 18 lncbet ul a
bank that dropped off Into a pond, on
the 72nd bole.
That finished ulf a 89 for Nicklaus
and a 84- the but round Ill the tournament - for Floyd. They flnlabed
regulatlon play it279, nine shotl under par.
Texaan Keith Fergus once had the
lead alone• 'i'bat was after hla cblp.ln
eagle-3 011 the loth bole. H~ flllllbed
with a 70 and llllued the playoff by a
single shot at • ·
It wu three more strokes back to
Wayne Levi at '12-283. Ed Flori
played the last 181n 70 and tied Ben
at284. Crenshaw had a 71.
Even though l"ergua was In It unUl
the final bOle, It was a beadoto-head
match between Nicklaus, aeeklng to
regain the form that made him the
greatest player the game hall
known, and Floyd, afCII'Dier Maatera
and PGA ~on who rarely

MARTINSVILLE, Va. (AP)
Mike POrter, driving a Pontiac, won
the first half ul the Dopood 500
Cla11lc doubleheader at Martinsville Speedway. Geoff Bodine,
who led the first race fot 88 !ape,
came back to win the second half of
the »lap Modified race.

made lt.

On iht nat Glill, lie thnir a
brilltant lhot ~ wHbln lhtet ie.t IIIII
made the birdie tliat lied 1t. 011 tile
lii:tt, lle Chipped in II'IID II re.t for·
tirdle. Now be led. FlD1d bll!lltd t~~e·
Slime bole to stay lirllllill-.
On the nut, tlie 1'1111. Jl'loJd clrapo ·
peel a pUtt, ~
Ia JinCtb,.
from Uie upper tier !idle.- to 11a
it.
.
Each had a cba!MW to '11'111, 8111 ·

10,...

each bad 1 ""''" to lole, .111 alia,·
18th. Tbey matdll6d pan and,.......-.

~pla)'off.Ontbef~~'*!·~
bqtb jliihlllillld on~(J!lltl: ' ...:_

Ontbueeond,FIOJil'a~llt"

Bonham hnpressive, but Reds . 1~~·4

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - Pittsburgh
Pirates Manager Chuck T8111le1' Isn't
about to claim any mastery over the
'Cincinnati Reds.
.
besptte two victories thla weekend
and 1 sweep In the NatlmW Lea,ue
playOffs lilt fall, Tanner scoffi at
sucbclllms.
"Yeab, we WOII me game In eltra
inniJip and the other by one tun,"
Tanner llid, ref~ to Saturday's
8-6 victory and Sunday's 4-3
declalon.
,One thing that Tanner Ia pleased
with II the bitting ul Bill Robinson,
who had three blta Sunday.
"He's been swlngiiJI the hat very
weU," Tanner aald.
Both Tanner and McNamara
found scmethlng to be happy about
with their pitching eta!!.
Tanner waa (lleued with tbe pltcblng Ill Dave Roberta and Jlm Bibby.
Reds Manager John McNIIll'llr8
llid despite the kla, Bill BOnham
continues to tlirDW better au the lime
and Ia nearly full)t recovered from
elbow llllllltry that
more than
a:rearago.
·
.
"We're very pleaaad with him,"

"'Jmd

I;::da coach· worried about
caliber of Virginia school
NIT roundup

rec:e.IVI!I the ~lion be . _ .
vet.
They played In the aame IJ'OUP.
ADd the drama stai'ted juat u IIIey
reaebad the I'IIIIJe rl. ~ 111111-'
television eameru. On the ltUI,
Nlcklald was tra1lng by -llld iut
In llwble. He wu faced witll 1 IDfooter to aaVe pat llldata)'lll,..lle

mattnf

McNIUII8tll llid. "He'a
acme good pitches in sood locaiiOM.
He's more advanced thiiiJlriDC tblif
be wu a :rear .,o.''
1:
Paul Moat.au flllllll IICIIDI camlaf!
In btl Satlu'day ttrlllf; . . . . IIIli
fact that be .1ave lip four 111111 In ~
two IMinP he WGIUdo
'
•ill
"Tbe t~ U I 1 ~ 11\,,ll*i ~'
dltlooll what~-

ttild·mw

cll.scourl8«&lt;." ..bi ill4. ·~ ' . ' . ·.
fatigue. f d!cln't lil'ior. ~~eca.. ·
put In the 'lrOit, it•j jut IJeed I~

tllliulnce l pitdlild."
· . · '\l.
MOibu W1ili lliit to Ule ~
leagues lilit Alii· 1,. -~
aparlqlJ becalllie of _i
.
sboulder
'
•V'
Tbe ~- toot the
both
the &amp;itunla1&lt; aal
_......
.
....,.-.

i.d

t*,J
•. '
.
.. ill.
.,

Tbe
' s.iiudll)l '.
. Redl. ~
'-"' ~~
to tie the game
~:
In tbillOIIilnillll«lowtn.
. ·,
0n Swida)'1 the Pbiltlli IIIIIJt lip # '
+0 lead It tiW elld ol fM lnnfap,

•!iN__.

a· .

Clnclllnall
JilMigtill lilii1 '- ' • 'it· .
c!udnii
thai time.
1n the mtb;· ~tl «uno
three I'Uiil

Rhoden.

aft ft!liei· ~ . ~·
'
:·.,'!

1980'
SPIRIT

�-.

.
._'lbe Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Monday, March 17,19M

RENA SWARTZ ol CoolvOle II
- alllle Career Gradutes wbo
will l'fteive a diploma from
Patrlcla Sleven~ Career College
al Milwaukee Ia Commencemetd
Eurelles lobe be1d OD Slllllrday,
Matth ZZ at Bradley Pavlllon al
llle Perlormlag Arts CeDter. The
CommeDCemeat Address will be
delivered by Ml8l Doua Dollue,
Dlltrld MaDager ol OperaUOIUI
Services ol Tbe Wlleouln
Telephone Company. Mill Swar1111 the daugbter of Mr. and Mn.
Ve..- Swartz, CoolvOle. Sbe
will gracloate from a nlae-montb

reported on the state legislative
A contribution to the Kathy
Parker "Whirlwind in '80" for the meeting he attended in Columbus. A
girl scout "wider opportunities" trip contribution was made to the Ohio
to New jersey and New York was Society lor Prevention of Blindness.
Members reported ill were Tracy
made by tbe Rock Springs Grange at
Whaley and Leona Karr. The
a meeting Thursday night.
meeting time was changed to 8 p. m.
During the meeting plans were an·
nounced for the aMual banquet to be beginning in April.
Mrs. Ethel Grueser presented the
held on April 22 at 7: 3Q p.m. at the
program with group singing by Ray
Salisbury Elementary School.
Speaker will be James Rose, state and Lisa Pullins, Pilt Holter,
master, instead of tbe youth director William Radford, Nancy Radford,
Sue Fry, and Harold Blackston, aL'as had been earlier arutounced.
The charter was draped in companied by Pullins on tbe guitar.
memory of Emma Findling, a ffl Easter and St. Patrick's Day
year grange member. Sympathy readings were given by Mrs. Agnes
was extended to the Findling family, · Dixon, Mrs. Nancy Morris, Mrs.
and a thank you note was read from Dorothy Long, and Helen Blackston,
and Ruth Ann Fry. A contest was
them.
Mrs. Barbara Fry, Women's conducted by the lecturer.
Acitivities chairman, announced Refreshments were served by Mr.
that the state baking contest and the and Mrs. Rollin Radford, Mr. and
Mrs . .William Radford, and Homer
sewing contest will be held in April.
William Radford, legislative agent Radford.

.'

.. rr

Infant Neece
NEECE
Mr. and Mrs. Chris Neece ol
Salley Run Road are aiUiounclng the
birth of a daughter, Christina
Elizabeth, born on Feb. 25 at the
Holzer Medical Center. The Infant
weighed seven pounds, 13 ounces.
Maternal grandparents are
Herbert Whaley of Middleport and
the late Evelyn Whaley. Paternal
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Neece, Pomeroy. Great·
grandparents are Mrs. Ruth Hendricks, Parkersburg, W. Va., Mr.
and Mrs. C. C. Sargent ol Man, W.
Va., and Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Neece, Sr., Middleport.

.
:

ASHLEY

Mr. and Mrs. Keith D. Ashley

•

: (Enuna English) rJ. Chester,

an-

nounce the birth of their first child,
Rachel Audrey, born OD March 5 at
the Holzer Medical Center,
Gallipolis.
Paternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Robert D. Ashley, Racine.
Maternal grandparents are Ellis R.
English and the late Freda Blake
Eng1lah, Coolville. Paternal greatgrandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Holter, Racine, and Ralph
Ashley, Pinecrest Nursing Home,
Gallipolis.

TOPS meets,
names officers
New olflcers were elected at the
recent meeting o1 the Rutland TOPS
OH 1488 meeting held in the EMS
buUding at Rutland.
Elected were Shorty Wright,
leader; Pbyllls Clay, &lt;»-leader;
Ellen Rife, secreetary; Lynda
Atldns, treasurer. They wW be Installed at the next meeting.
Tbe meeting opened with the
TOPS pledge and weigb-in ol
members. Mrs. Clay was queen for
tbe week with Mrs. Rife u the
riUllleMIP· Mrs. Clay waa awarded
$1 and members sang in her honor. ·
She also waa presented a gilt for
having aUalned ber weigbt goal.
.
Plana were made lo start a new
· . eontest at the next meeting. lnfllrmation on joining the weight club
· may be obtaiDed fnm Mn. Wright
at74WOII2.

Helen Help Us:

Daughter-in-law 's past
dead.· leave it lie
By Helen Bottel

DEAR HELEN:
My problem is so appalling that I
can't talk to anyone close. I grieve
until I am hardly able to function.
Our children were brought up
chiJI'Ch.golng Christians, with high
principles; given good educations;
and now our son has thrown it all
away.
Five years ago he married a girl
none af us knew. Two years later we
discovered she had been a prostitute
before marrisge. My trauma Is increased by the concern I feel for our
3-year-old grandchild. We would try
to get our son to break olf with his
wife, were it not for fear that she
would get custody. How could a person Uke this bring up a child we
could be prood of?
I no longer have anything to do
with her. Since we don't live nearby,
we don't know what kind of life she
leads now. Our son seems to love
her, and we he8r the little glrlls well
taken care ol, bul ..
This situation Is absolutely unaL'ceptable to me. What can I do? H.D.
.
DEAR H.:
Correction: your ATTITUDE is
"ablolutely unacceptable"!
I'd suggest a refresher course in
the good Christian principles you
must bave taught your son: Try a.littie faith, charity, love, acceptance,
forgiveness, combined with
understanding that what a· woman
WBB, becomes as nothing compared
to what she Is and will be. - H.

________

.

· Sclentl.lls estimate that 99 percent
of au the frwh
on the.aurlace
of the earlb II In BOild form - ·aa

wa._

· -~rice.
{

D~HELEN:

· What can a mother do with a 17·
year-old son who steals from her,
c:uraes us, is failing in acbool, and
demands a Jtuge allowance In return
for nothing, then throws tantrums if
I cutlt down Ull\ll he ahapea up.
·
I had to qUit work on account al
him. We tbreatened to take blm to
juvenlie ball, but his father II oaly
home 011 weekends (be WorD out of
lo*n),IIO we've.pat it oil.
When .our ~ughters and t go
!lllfWhere, we stay ·away aa 101111 aa
poaslblt If
know their brother II
gol!tgtobebome. .
'
In falmesi, I must add be doelo
have soine good points. For· ex am-

n

pie, he'll twist.his little sister's arm
and threaten to break It, but then
later when I get onto her about
something she's done, be takes her
side and makes me let up. Can you
help me?- HOPELESS
DEAR HOPELESS:
You're evidently not strong
enough to handle this boy alone, nor
do you underalond what motivates
his meanness, but I could guess he ls
almost as unhappy with himself u
.you are with him.
Why not call juvenile hall and ask
about counseling services? He needs
a tum-around that can be aL'compllshed much better with professional help.- K

-1 know this isn't your field, but I

need Information on travel by

freighter. I hear it's much cheaper
than a luxury liner cruise, and really
quite a good way to go. Where could
lhearmoreabout this? -J.D.
DEARJ.:
Write to TravLtlpe Freighter
Travel Asoc., 193--09 Depot Road,
Flushing, N.Y., 11358 for information about reasonably priced tripa.
Some ships, I'm told, charge aa little
as $20 per person per day and aL'commodations are generally good td
&amp;L-ellent. But passengers (usually
no more than a dozen) must be fiellble as to time avallable: one-week
pleasure cruises aren't for
freighters.
P. S. Speaking ol one-week
pleasure cruises, should anyone be
interested in a crulse to various
Mexican ports, combined with •a

CHUCK

BEEF
31

.

$1

;

.

.

,

.

WHOLE OR CUT UP

19 .

LB.

lot

•

FRY.ERS

49c,

WHOLE LEGS ..............L!.,~.·;

LB.

'

~

.!·.

.

.

...~.~ti•
..

9
9
c
BOLOGNA .......l!
.·

·.

SlOJt~ SUCED

$J39

FRESH CHICKEN

MtXm FRYER PARTS

GOOD CITIZENS - Mn. Gene Yost, regent; aDd
Mrs. WUma Sargent, good citizen chalnpan, pfttelited
pins to the Meigs County seniors wbo were winners of

$'

.

,.:. -PORK·&amp; 8E£F
· .. HONEY lDAF
~CHOPPm HAM
-HAM ·ROLL

CUBE STEAKS............~.. .
$ 19
ST.EW BEEE........•..•.••,...

3 LB. OR. MORE
.

·DAR commemorates 72nd anniversary

fund made Thursday

New arrivals

:

Mrs. Harold O'Dell had a lesson on
hou.seplants. She cautioned against
dropping water on leaves since it
can discolor them, to give a good
soaking instead of just a little water
at a time, to place them where they
receive enough light, and to tum
them several times a week. She gave
hints for proper containers,
drainage, soils, potting, training and
fertilizing plants noting that they
have a rest period after active
growth periods. She said they require less water and no fertilizer at
the rest time.
Attending were Mrs. OWe Browning, Mrs. Alva Luckeydoo, Mrs.
George Lewis, Mrs. John Ferguson,
Mrs. Roger Luckeydoo, Mrs. Roberta Maynard, Mrs. Gerald Clark,
Mrs. Violet Stanton, Mrs. Oscar
Casto and Mrs. Harold O'Dell,
hostess.

$
ROASI ........... ~~h

BONELESS . .

GROUND

the fund.

'Whirlwind in '80'

ae.

.

••

m. at the Mason County Ubrary.
Mrs. Oscar Casto reported on the
heart fund collected by the Cherokee
Homemakers and tbe Four Corners
4-H Club. The total amount was
S252.14. The club voted to ·donate to

Contribution to

aecredlted public relaiiODJ conr-

.

$-'lbe Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, March 17,1980

Cherokee Homemakers
have noon luncheon ·
A noon luncheon was held at the
recent meeting ol the Cherokee
Homemakers Club at the home ol
Mrs. Harold O'Dell, New Haven.
Mrs. OWe Bl1!wning presided at the
meeting which opened with the
pledge to the flag.
Mrs. Alva Luckeydoo gave dev&amp;tions entiUed "The Gift of Life."
Scripture was from Psalms 'rl and
36, and there was a poem, "Life."
The devotional leader noted that life
Is a gift from God, given not in
years, but in a day at a time,
sometimes carelessly spent. She
closed with prayer.
Mrs. Violet Stanton was welcomed
into the club. Mrs. O'Dell, cultural
arts chairman, discussed the
musical, "Oklahoma", held the past
weekend at Point Pleasant. An·
nounced were several meetings ·Including the County Council meeting
held last week, the Easter basket
workshop to be held Monday at the
home of Mrs. O'Dell, the
honeysuckle basket workshop on
March 19 and 00, 10 a . m. at the annex, and the April lesson leader
training program, March 20, at 10 a.

-~

.

.

.

;

-~ -

POMEROY - .The annual Chuter man Manuel, Soutliem High School,
Day luncheon marking the 72nd an- and Clifford Kennedy. Melp Hl&amp;b
niversary of the organization of School. She presented each me witb
Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter, a Good Citizen pin, almg with corDaugbters or·the AmeJican Revolu- sages lor the girls and a boutonniere
tion, March 14,19(MI, waaheldFrtday lor Kennedy and gJita. Also·pc-'
f~r the 1wlcbeon were the atudenta'
at Trinity Church.
Highlighting tbe IWicheon waa the mothers, Mra. Cliffqrd Kennedy,
presentation of Good Citizen awards Mrs. Charles Manuel and Mrs.
to three outstanding seniors, and a GObert Spencer.
Each al tbe studellts spoke briefly
program, "VarietY ol Mualc," by
'
on
career p~ms: Mn. Gene Yost,
Mrs. Robert Robinson, Middleport.
Mrs. WUma Sargent, award chair- regent, reported that at tbe state
man, introduced · Teresa Lynn conference abe bad leamed that a
number al boya were in the lop
Spencer, Eastern High Scbool; Car-

MIDDLEPORT BUSINESS AND
Prolessional Women's Club, 7:30
MondaY night at the Colwnbus Gas
Co. office. I. Carson Crow, aaalstant

CLASSIC WORial
BOSTON (AP) -A loan collection
of 50 classic drawings and watercolors by major 20th-century
European artists Is being shown at
the Museum rJ. Fine Arta through
April27.
The works on display In "The
Modem Tradition: 20th Century
Drawings and Watercolors"
represent tbe main currents in the
tnodem tradition fnm the first
decade of the 20th century to the
1!1608.
Artists represented Include
Braque, Leger, Klee, and Mlro.

brief writing-tHe~! course, on one rJ.
the "Love Boats," please aend a
stamped, self-addressed envelope to
me, care of this newspaper, for fur..
ther details.

&gt;

VAUGHAN'S

mrs. Roc• !AicteYdoo attended tbe :

I

Sentinel social calendar
MONDAY

category ol awards. Mrs. Yost and

proeecutor, to dllcua the prosecutor's role In highway CIIBell.

1111!21DAY
CHESTER CcJoncll 323, Daugbtera
~ America, 7:30 Tlaeslay evening.
Quarterly birtbdaYI to be observed.
It will not be pothM'It Tile kitchen
cmunlttee will serve refreahments.
SALISBURY P'i'o.at school, 7:30
p.m. Room vi81tation, 7·7:30 p.m.
Porgram by girl scouta. Refresh.

ments.

state meeting, Mrs. Luckeydoo lleJ"llngasapage.
For tbe prvgram, Mrs. Robinson
pc !I ltoed plano; ~. and organ .
mualc, Interspersed with comrnen- ~
taries on tbe IDUIIc by ._ husband, •
tbe Rev. Robert Robinson.
..
Her plano selectlona Included •
"Sunnyaide of the Street," Sonata ,
lor Plano by Mozart, and then abe :
played and aang "Light My Life". ' :
She accompanied heraelf on ber
guitar as abe s&amp;ng "Thil Land Ia .:
YQW' Land," 111d then moved to tbe ~
organ fir "I Walked With God", :.
"Prelude in G Minor" by Bacb, and •
"Let Tbere Be Peace on Earth." Her ~
concluding numbers were "Ode to ~
Our country, •• a recent ClliJII)OSition, ~
and "Climb Every Mountain."
•
The Rev. Mr. and Mrs. RobiDIOD.~
and Mrs. Fred Blaettnar were ·:
guesta at tll!lluncheon along with tbe ~
Good Cltilen winQers and their ~
mothers.
Chairmen of arrangements were •
Mra. Sargent, Mnl. John'llllse, Mn. ;
Gerald Powell. The tables were :
decorated in a patriotic theme and :
the women of Trinity served tbe•lun- :
cheon.
.;

Middleport, Ohio

YELLOW''
30-oz.

CLING

Can

'RifNDLIIST SfRVICI IN TOWN
BIGGEST BARGAINS IN TOWN

'

HEINE IS

.'

.

·RITE DIET
BREAD ·

Prices Effettiw
thru
March 22, 1980

kiMs

...,.

KRAFT
'
"AMERICA'S FAVORITE"

7 -oz.
Pkgs.

MIRACLE
WHIP
32 oz.
$109
JAR
NELCII'S

-

BEST POLICY

SKIPPY

JACKETS

JACKET

1aao
·

CH£F 8 80Y-AA · D~It

PLAIN, MUSil ROOM OR GR. BEEF

SPAGHEnl SAUCE ......................

:: :!:

SALE- ' :11 ao

2 sz. 2, blue
.1 Sz. 3

Was$25

WasS45.50
~-·

SNOWSUITS ·
·sWEATERS

SME

REG .. TIIIN OR EL"O MACARONI

PRINCE SPAGHml ...................

·

.

KRAF.T AMERICAN.

ASSORTEO ..
.. NOW .

t

SNOWSUITS

1 !l!'een Ill. .; lltiuuiU 4, 1 . '

1 blue size 5, 1 blue size 6, 1

ALL aAI~a

size t· .

•

Houn:
fi.NJI ..

.........
'*"-' .

lilllft,"'"' hi.· .
~ ~

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..

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$HOPPE .
_.,,
-=- '

I'OMEitOY,O.
I

f

•

·

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_!:FREEZER VA ..UES· -·-------~-

.'

.,
-

.

.

.

•

·-~··.

.=::~r~~. . . . .,.l ·
8,EEF, CHICKEN OR TURKEY

. .....

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. ' Dllf Olt REGUlAR
L

10 Gift WIAPPIJIG .

..

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'
I

liD 6

.

,. ·

'

'19J0

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.

.

·FRENCH .FRIES ...:.............~ ...........:.....:........~2-- i!~ ,49'

'

NOW

1.Piice '

Lb

M

DAIRY VALUES----......_-----:-

o~Rotf\1 DELIO~T RE&lt;;ULAR OR CRI,NKlE

.

1

.

.

1
49

·. 'PARKAY ·MARGARINE.....•....•.-..•••.•..~~.59~

'· •

NOW.

. .

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PIMENTO. SWISS

KW\'

WasS4 5 .f1.9~

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Jar

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t-----~--------------~~~~~P~o~m~~~y~~~~

... c.....,.,.,.-~.,

MOIARCH KIDIEY BEAIIS ..... "g~o:· 79c

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1ilmn size 2. 1 blue size 3, 1 blue slze4 ·

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.

.

. :t:.

.

a9c

PEPSI ... :..........~ ............. ~ ... :....:..,... 8

t6 oz.

. ' ,..
;.,

' .

U. S. NO. 1 MAINE

.
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&lt;.: . .

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· 10-oz.

'

1 blue
SALE
2plnk wasS35

. SNCMSIJITS

zg.gz. $

'

PKAN SAltDIIS

'

99c

.

.

Jar

MONARCH PORK &amp; BEANS .... ~- .79c

'1971

. 2 PIICI

"2·2143
lOl w. Main

R

18-o:t~

MAXWELL HOUSE

J~· ·

.

·~ ·

..

CREAMY OR CRUNCHY

i

32 oz

00·.3:0-05

Ul.

OPII
... PIT 110 SAUCE .~ ............. ~:~~ 79c

1 Girls Red

DALf C. WARNER·
INS.

.

OR JELLY ...............

.._

PAiD
Mil
. :~':.:.."'!.=. 2
.89

REGULAR, 8MOKEY. ONION OR HOT N SPICY

1 pink

3Girls

As an Independent Insurance
agency, our primary function Is
to provide policies whlcn afford
financial protection In case o1
loss.
But, we also have a vital In·
terest In loss prevention, as
should our clients. We encourage
care, caul! on · and safety ...
preventive ·measures which can
keep that car accident from nap·
penlng, tnat !Wilding fire from .
starting, !hat ,home bUrglary
from being committed.
,
Prevention saves life, limb and
property ... and helpS control In·
sura nee costs and premiums.
wnen losses do occur, our
pollcyhold&amp;rs can count on pro·
tectlng and serving In lime and
need. But we sllll say- proven·
lion Is tne best !)Olley.

•

GR~PE JAM

Was 543.00
.

·-

E. ." 1/ 22 /10

2Girls Grey

NOW t

- · •'fnoo

GO&amp;II •t C.din..

CHECK. THESE PRICES
Size 16

'

K~AFT

...

COATS

..

'•

2 16Roz '1.58 '1._19

QUANTITY RIGHTS
RESERVED

'

PREVENTION

.

.,-,
Ptr..

.

"

.

..

.

·''

�-.

.
._'lbe Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Monday, March 17,19M

RENA SWARTZ ol CoolvOle II
- alllle Career Gradutes wbo
will l'fteive a diploma from
Patrlcla Sleven~ Career College
al Milwaukee Ia Commencemetd
Eurelles lobe be1d OD Slllllrday,
Matth ZZ at Bradley Pavlllon al
llle Perlormlag Arts CeDter. The
CommeDCemeat Address will be
delivered by Ml8l Doua Dollue,
Dlltrld MaDager ol OperaUOIUI
Services ol Tbe Wlleouln
Telephone Company. Mill Swar1111 the daugbter of Mr. and Mn.
Ve..- Swartz, CoolvOle. Sbe
will gracloate from a nlae-montb

reported on the state legislative
A contribution to the Kathy
Parker "Whirlwind in '80" for the meeting he attended in Columbus. A
girl scout "wider opportunities" trip contribution was made to the Ohio
to New jersey and New York was Society lor Prevention of Blindness.
Members reported ill were Tracy
made by tbe Rock Springs Grange at
Whaley and Leona Karr. The
a meeting Thursday night.
meeting time was changed to 8 p. m.
During the meeting plans were an·
nounced for the aMual banquet to be beginning in April.
Mrs. Ethel Grueser presented the
held on April 22 at 7: 3Q p.m. at the
program with group singing by Ray
Salisbury Elementary School.
Speaker will be James Rose, state and Lisa Pullins, Pilt Holter,
master, instead of tbe youth director William Radford, Nancy Radford,
Sue Fry, and Harold Blackston, aL'as had been earlier arutounced.
The charter was draped in companied by Pullins on tbe guitar.
memory of Emma Findling, a ffl Easter and St. Patrick's Day
year grange member. Sympathy readings were given by Mrs. Agnes
was extended to the Findling family, · Dixon, Mrs. Nancy Morris, Mrs.
and a thank you note was read from Dorothy Long, and Helen Blackston,
and Ruth Ann Fry. A contest was
them.
Mrs. Barbara Fry, Women's conducted by the lecturer.
Acitivities chairman, announced Refreshments were served by Mr.
that the state baking contest and the and Mrs. Rollin Radford, Mr. and
Mrs . .William Radford, and Homer
sewing contest will be held in April.
William Radford, legislative agent Radford.

.'

.. rr

Infant Neece
NEECE
Mr. and Mrs. Chris Neece ol
Salley Run Road are aiUiounclng the
birth of a daughter, Christina
Elizabeth, born on Feb. 25 at the
Holzer Medical Center. The Infant
weighed seven pounds, 13 ounces.
Maternal grandparents are
Herbert Whaley of Middleport and
the late Evelyn Whaley. Paternal
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Neece, Pomeroy. Great·
grandparents are Mrs. Ruth Hendricks, Parkersburg, W. Va., Mr.
and Mrs. C. C. Sargent ol Man, W.
Va., and Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Neece, Sr., Middleport.

.
:

ASHLEY

Mr. and Mrs. Keith D. Ashley

•

: (Enuna English) rJ. Chester,

an-

nounce the birth of their first child,
Rachel Audrey, born OD March 5 at
the Holzer Medical Center,
Gallipolis.
Paternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Robert D. Ashley, Racine.
Maternal grandparents are Ellis R.
English and the late Freda Blake
Eng1lah, Coolville. Paternal greatgrandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Holter, Racine, and Ralph
Ashley, Pinecrest Nursing Home,
Gallipolis.

TOPS meets,
names officers
New olflcers were elected at the
recent meeting o1 the Rutland TOPS
OH 1488 meeting held in the EMS
buUding at Rutland.
Elected were Shorty Wright,
leader; Pbyllls Clay, &lt;»-leader;
Ellen Rife, secreetary; Lynda
Atldns, treasurer. They wW be Installed at the next meeting.
Tbe meeting opened with the
TOPS pledge and weigb-in ol
members. Mrs. Clay was queen for
tbe week with Mrs. Rife u the
riUllleMIP· Mrs. Clay waa awarded
$1 and members sang in her honor. ·
She also waa presented a gilt for
having aUalned ber weigbt goal.
.
Plana were made lo start a new
· . eontest at the next meeting. lnfllrmation on joining the weight club
· may be obtaiDed fnm Mn. Wright
at74WOII2.

Helen Help Us:

Daughter-in-law 's past
dead.· leave it lie
By Helen Bottel

DEAR HELEN:
My problem is so appalling that I
can't talk to anyone close. I grieve
until I am hardly able to function.
Our children were brought up
chiJI'Ch.golng Christians, with high
principles; given good educations;
and now our son has thrown it all
away.
Five years ago he married a girl
none af us knew. Two years later we
discovered she had been a prostitute
before marrisge. My trauma Is increased by the concern I feel for our
3-year-old grandchild. We would try
to get our son to break olf with his
wife, were it not for fear that she
would get custody. How could a person Uke this bring up a child we
could be prood of?
I no longer have anything to do
with her. Since we don't live nearby,
we don't know what kind of life she
leads now. Our son seems to love
her, and we he8r the little glrlls well
taken care ol, bul ..
This situation Is absolutely unaL'ceptable to me. What can I do? H.D.
.
DEAR H.:
Correction: your ATTITUDE is
"ablolutely unacceptable"!
I'd suggest a refresher course in
the good Christian principles you
must bave taught your son: Try a.littie faith, charity, love, acceptance,
forgiveness, combined with
understanding that what a· woman
WBB, becomes as nothing compared
to what she Is and will be. - H.

________

.

· Sclentl.lls estimate that 99 percent
of au the frwh
on the.aurlace
of the earlb II In BOild form - ·aa

wa._

· -~rice.
{

D~HELEN:

· What can a mother do with a 17·
year-old son who steals from her,
c:uraes us, is failing in acbool, and
demands a Jtuge allowance In return
for nothing, then throws tantrums if
I cutlt down Ull\ll he ahapea up.
·
I had to qUit work on account al
him. We tbreatened to take blm to
juvenlie ball, but his father II oaly
home 011 weekends (be WorD out of
lo*n),IIO we've.pat it oil.
When .our ~ughters and t go
!lllfWhere, we stay ·away aa 101111 aa
poaslblt If
know their brother II
gol!tgtobebome. .
'
In falmesi, I must add be doelo
have soine good points. For· ex am-

n

pie, he'll twist.his little sister's arm
and threaten to break It, but then
later when I get onto her about
something she's done, be takes her
side and makes me let up. Can you
help me?- HOPELESS
DEAR HOPELESS:
You're evidently not strong
enough to handle this boy alone, nor
do you underalond what motivates
his meanness, but I could guess he ls
almost as unhappy with himself u
.you are with him.
Why not call juvenile hall and ask
about counseling services? He needs
a tum-around that can be aL'compllshed much better with professional help.- K

-1 know this isn't your field, but I

need Information on travel by

freighter. I hear it's much cheaper
than a luxury liner cruise, and really
quite a good way to go. Where could
lhearmoreabout this? -J.D.
DEARJ.:
Write to TravLtlpe Freighter
Travel Asoc., 193--09 Depot Road,
Flushing, N.Y., 11358 for information about reasonably priced tripa.
Some ships, I'm told, charge aa little
as $20 per person per day and aL'commodations are generally good td
&amp;L-ellent. But passengers (usually
no more than a dozen) must be fiellble as to time avallable: one-week
pleasure cruises aren't for
freighters.
P. S. Speaking ol one-week
pleasure cruises, should anyone be
interested in a crulse to various
Mexican ports, combined with •a

CHUCK

BEEF
31

.

$1

;

.

.

,

.

WHOLE OR CUT UP

19 .

LB.

lot

•

FRY.ERS

49c,

WHOLE LEGS ..............L!.,~.·;

LB.

'

~

.!·.

.

.

...~.~ti•
..

9
9
c
BOLOGNA .......l!
.·

·.

SlOJt~ SUCED

$J39

FRESH CHICKEN

MtXm FRYER PARTS

GOOD CITIZENS - Mn. Gene Yost, regent; aDd
Mrs. WUma Sargent, good citizen chalnpan, pfttelited
pins to the Meigs County seniors wbo were winners of

$'

.

,.:. -PORK·&amp; 8E£F
· .. HONEY lDAF
~CHOPPm HAM
-HAM ·ROLL

CUBE STEAKS............~.. .
$ 19
ST.EW BEEE........•..•.••,...

3 LB. OR. MORE
.

·DAR commemorates 72nd anniversary

fund made Thursday

New arrivals

:

Mrs. Harold O'Dell had a lesson on
hou.seplants. She cautioned against
dropping water on leaves since it
can discolor them, to give a good
soaking instead of just a little water
at a time, to place them where they
receive enough light, and to tum
them several times a week. She gave
hints for proper containers,
drainage, soils, potting, training and
fertilizing plants noting that they
have a rest period after active
growth periods. She said they require less water and no fertilizer at
the rest time.
Attending were Mrs. OWe Browning, Mrs. Alva Luckeydoo, Mrs.
George Lewis, Mrs. John Ferguson,
Mrs. Roger Luckeydoo, Mrs. Roberta Maynard, Mrs. Gerald Clark,
Mrs. Violet Stanton, Mrs. Oscar
Casto and Mrs. Harold O'Dell,
hostess.

$
ROASI ........... ~~h

BONELESS . .

GROUND

the fund.

'Whirlwind in '80'

ae.

.

••

m. at the Mason County Ubrary.
Mrs. Oscar Casto reported on the
heart fund collected by the Cherokee
Homemakers and tbe Four Corners
4-H Club. The total amount was
S252.14. The club voted to ·donate to

Contribution to

aecredlted public relaiiODJ conr-

.

$-'lbe Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, March 17,1980

Cherokee Homemakers
have noon luncheon ·
A noon luncheon was held at the
recent meeting ol the Cherokee
Homemakers Club at the home ol
Mrs. Harold O'Dell, New Haven.
Mrs. OWe Bl1!wning presided at the
meeting which opened with the
pledge to the flag.
Mrs. Alva Luckeydoo gave dev&amp;tions entiUed "The Gift of Life."
Scripture was from Psalms 'rl and
36, and there was a poem, "Life."
The devotional leader noted that life
Is a gift from God, given not in
years, but in a day at a time,
sometimes carelessly spent. She
closed with prayer.
Mrs. Violet Stanton was welcomed
into the club. Mrs. O'Dell, cultural
arts chairman, discussed the
musical, "Oklahoma", held the past
weekend at Point Pleasant. An·
nounced were several meetings ·Including the County Council meeting
held last week, the Easter basket
workshop to be held Monday at the
home of Mrs. O'Dell, the
honeysuckle basket workshop on
March 19 and 00, 10 a . m. at the annex, and the April lesson leader
training program, March 20, at 10 a.

-~

.

.

.

;

-~ -

POMEROY - .The annual Chuter man Manuel, Soutliem High School,
Day luncheon marking the 72nd an- and Clifford Kennedy. Melp Hl&amp;b
niversary of the organization of School. She presented each me witb
Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter, a Good Citizen pin, almg with corDaugbters or·the AmeJican Revolu- sages lor the girls and a boutonniere
tion, March 14,19(MI, waaheldFrtday lor Kennedy and gJita. Also·pc-'
f~r the 1wlcbeon were the atudenta'
at Trinity Church.
Highlighting tbe IWicheon waa the mothers, Mra. Cliffqrd Kennedy,
presentation of Good Citizen awards Mrs. Charles Manuel and Mrs.
to three outstanding seniors, and a GObert Spencer.
Each al tbe studellts spoke briefly
program, "VarietY ol Mualc," by
'
on
career p~ms: Mn. Gene Yost,
Mrs. Robert Robinson, Middleport.
Mrs. WUma Sargent, award chair- regent, reported that at tbe state
man, introduced · Teresa Lynn conference abe bad leamed that a
number al boya were in the lop
Spencer, Eastern High Scbool; Car-

MIDDLEPORT BUSINESS AND
Prolessional Women's Club, 7:30
MondaY night at the Colwnbus Gas
Co. office. I. Carson Crow, aaalstant

CLASSIC WORial
BOSTON (AP) -A loan collection
of 50 classic drawings and watercolors by major 20th-century
European artists Is being shown at
the Museum rJ. Fine Arta through
April27.
The works on display In "The
Modem Tradition: 20th Century
Drawings and Watercolors"
represent tbe main currents in the
tnodem tradition fnm the first
decade of the 20th century to the
1!1608.
Artists represented Include
Braque, Leger, Klee, and Mlro.

brief writing-tHe~! course, on one rJ.
the "Love Boats," please aend a
stamped, self-addressed envelope to
me, care of this newspaper, for fur..
ther details.

&gt;

VAUGHAN'S

mrs. Roc• !AicteYdoo attended tbe :

I

Sentinel social calendar
MONDAY

category ol awards. Mrs. Yost and

proeecutor, to dllcua the prosecutor's role In highway CIIBell.

1111!21DAY
CHESTER CcJoncll 323, Daugbtera
~ America, 7:30 Tlaeslay evening.
Quarterly birtbdaYI to be observed.
It will not be pothM'It Tile kitchen
cmunlttee will serve refreahments.
SALISBURY P'i'o.at school, 7:30
p.m. Room vi81tation, 7·7:30 p.m.
Porgram by girl scouta. Refresh.

ments.

state meeting, Mrs. Luckeydoo lleJ"llngasapage.
For tbe prvgram, Mrs. Robinson
pc !I ltoed plano; ~. and organ .
mualc, Interspersed with comrnen- ~
taries on tbe IDUIIc by ._ husband, •
tbe Rev. Robert Robinson.
..
Her plano selectlona Included •
"Sunnyaide of the Street," Sonata ,
lor Plano by Mozart, and then abe :
played and aang "Light My Life". ' :
She accompanied heraelf on ber
guitar as abe s&amp;ng "Thil Land Ia .:
YQW' Land," 111d then moved to tbe ~
organ fir "I Walked With God", :.
"Prelude in G Minor" by Bacb, and •
"Let Tbere Be Peace on Earth." Her ~
concluding numbers were "Ode to ~
Our country, •• a recent ClliJII)OSition, ~
and "Climb Every Mountain."
•
The Rev. Mr. and Mrs. RobiDIOD.~
and Mrs. Fred Blaettnar were ·:
guesta at tll!lluncheon along with tbe ~
Good Cltilen winQers and their ~
mothers.
Chairmen of arrangements were •
Mra. Sargent, Mnl. John'llllse, Mn. ;
Gerald Powell. The tables were :
decorated in a patriotic theme and :
the women of Trinity served tbe•lun- :
cheon.
.;

Middleport, Ohio

YELLOW''
30-oz.

CLING

Can

'RifNDLIIST SfRVICI IN TOWN
BIGGEST BARGAINS IN TOWN

'

HEINE IS

.'

.

·RITE DIET
BREAD ·

Prices Effettiw
thru
March 22, 1980

kiMs

...,.

KRAFT
'
"AMERICA'S FAVORITE"

7 -oz.
Pkgs.

MIRACLE
WHIP
32 oz.
$109
JAR
NELCII'S

-

BEST POLICY

SKIPPY

JACKETS

JACKET

1aao
·

CH£F 8 80Y-AA · D~It

PLAIN, MUSil ROOM OR GR. BEEF

SPAGHEnl SAUCE ......................

:: :!:

SALE- ' :11 ao

2 sz. 2, blue
.1 Sz. 3

Was$25

WasS45.50
~-·

SNOWSUITS ·
·sWEATERS

SME

REG .. TIIIN OR EL"O MACARONI

PRINCE SPAGHml ...................

·

.

KRAF.T AMERICAN.

ASSORTEO ..
.. NOW .

t

SNOWSUITS

1 !l!'een Ill. .; lltiuuiU 4, 1 . '

1 blue size 5, 1 blue size 6, 1

ALL aAI~a

size t· .

•

Houn:
fi.NJI ..

.........
'*"-' .

lilllft,"'"' hi.· .
~ ~

"'

..

'

$HOPPE .
_.,,
-=- '

I'OMEitOY,O.
I

f

•

·

1-ll. ,

_!:FREEZER VA ..UES· -·-------~-

.'

.,
-

.

.

.

•

·-~··.

.=::~r~~. . . . .,.l ·
8,EEF, CHICKEN OR TURKEY

. .....

........ •

. ' Dllf Olt REGUlAR
L

10 Gift WIAPPIJIG .

..

''.

'·

•·

ra"'""

IIJ lAY..U
'
I

liD 6

.

,. ·

'

'19J0

WesMt

Pi.u.

C

.

.

·FRENCH .FRIES ...:.............~ ...........:.....:........~2-- i!~ ,49'

'

NOW

1.Piice '

Lb

M

DAIRY VALUES----......_-----:-

o~Rotf\1 DELIO~T RE&lt;;ULAR OR CRI,NKlE

.

1

.

.

1
49

·. 'PARKAY ·MARGARINE.....•....•.-..•••.•..~~.59~

'· •

NOW.

. .

1

PIMENTO. SWISS

KW\'

WasS4 5 .f1.9~

. SNOWSUI~
. wu~u• ••12~~':
1 blueslz• 3, 1 tan size 2, 1 tan size 2 ·

.

Jar

SLICED

SIZ!S .

I PIICI .

t-----~--------------~~~~~P~o~m~~~y~~~~

... c.....,.,.,.-~.,

MOIARCH KIDIEY BEAIIS ..... "g~o:· 79c

•14io

1ilmn size 2. 1 blue size 3, 1 blue slze4 ·

J•• ·

t

.

.

. :t:.

.

a9c

PEPSI ... :..........~ ............. ~ ... :....:..,... 8

t6 oz.

. ' ,..
;.,

' .

U. S. NO. 1 MAINE

.
"' .\I

'

' . , ., .

&lt;.: . .

·riTATOEs:I 0:8
.

'

.

ta.·:BA&amp;
·~

•

ans.

.,

...

'i.

'

(

•·

---·- ....-99""

· 10-oz.

'

1 blue
SALE
2plnk wasS35

. SNCMSIJITS

zg.gz. $

'

PKAN SAltDIIS

'

99c

.

.

Jar

MONARCH PORK &amp; BEANS .... ~- .79c

'1971

. 2 PIICI

"2·2143
lOl w. Main

R

18-o:t~

MAXWELL HOUSE

J~· ·

.

·~ ·

..

CREAMY OR CRUNCHY

i

32 oz

00·.3:0-05

Ul.

OPII
... PIT 110 SAUCE .~ ............. ~:~~ 79c

1 Girls Red

DALf C. WARNER·
INS.

.

OR JELLY ...............

.._

PAiD
Mil
. :~':.:.."'!.=. 2
.89

REGULAR, 8MOKEY. ONION OR HOT N SPICY

1 pink

3Girls

As an Independent Insurance
agency, our primary function Is
to provide policies whlcn afford
financial protection In case o1
loss.
But, we also have a vital In·
terest In loss prevention, as
should our clients. We encourage
care, caul! on · and safety ...
preventive ·measures which can
keep that car accident from nap·
penlng, tnat !Wilding fire from .
starting, !hat ,home bUrglary
from being committed.
,
Prevention saves life, limb and
property ... and helpS control In·
sura nee costs and premiums.
wnen losses do occur, our
pollcyhold&amp;rs can count on pro·
tectlng and serving In lime and
need. But we sllll say- proven·
lion Is tne best !)Olley.

•

GR~PE JAM

Was 543.00
.

·-

E. ." 1/ 22 /10

2Girls Grey

NOW t

- · •'fnoo

GO&amp;II •t C.din..

CHECK. THESE PRICES
Size 16

'

K~AFT

...

COATS

..

'•

2 16Roz '1.58 '1._19

QUANTITY RIGHTS
RESERVED

'

PREVENTION

.

.,-,
Ptr..

.

"

.

..

.

·''

�_8-Tbe DailY Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, March 17,1980

..

54
Misc. Merchlnlse
COAL,
LIMESTONE ,
Sllnd, gravel, c=e lc!Um

J
Announcement•
GUN SHOOT EVERY
SUNDAY 1 PM. FACTORY
CHOKE ONLY . RACINE
GUN CLUB .
GUN SHOOT . Racine
Volunteer Fire Dept.
Every Saturday . 6:30p.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.
BUYING U.S. SILVER
COl NS DATED 1964 OR
EARLIER
(A NY
AMOUNT) . DON ' T LOSE
MONEY, SIMPLY PICK
UP THE PHONE AND
DIAL
6H · 99 2 · 5113,
BROWN 'S.

chloride,

22
Maney to Lolli
FINANCING· VA·FHA LO·
ANS. LOW OR NO DOWN
PAYMENT. PURCHASE
OR
REFINANCE.
IRELAND MORTGAGE.
77 E. STATE, ATHENS .
614·592·3051.

Mortgage
money
available. New homes. old
homes and refinancing
your present home. ICON ·
VENTIONAL · 5 Pel. down.
VA · rio down payment.
FHA · low down payment.
FHA -- 245 graduated
payment program. FHA
265 subsidy program. Call
tor details. IRELAND
MORTGAGE CO., 77 E.
State St., Athens. 592·3051 .

..-·.

I PAY hiQhest prices
possible for gold and sliver

·- . . . . ....

coins, rings, jewelry, etc .
contect Ed Burkett Barber
ShOp, Mlddleporl.
GOLD, SILVER OR
FOREIGN COINS, OR
ANY OTHER GOLD OR
SILVER ITEMS. ALSO,
ANTIQUE FURNITURE
OR OTHER ANTIQUE
ITEMS. WILL PAY TOP
DOLLAR. CHECK WITH
OSBY (OSSIE) MARTIN
BEFORE
SELLING .
PHONE 9'12--6370. ALSO
DO APPRAISING .
Picking up an Easy play
organ In your area .
Looking for a responsible
party to take over paymen·
Is. Call credit manager
collect. 614--592·5122.
Jones Meat Processing
Slaughter facilities now
open. Washington County
Rd. 248. Little Hocking,
OH . 667·6133.

Learn to make your own
Easter Candy . Free candy
making demonstration
every Sat. at 1 or call for
evening

class.

Carousel

Contecllonary. Middleport,
992·6342,

4
3

Glv...,way
Boston

Terrier

and

Beagle puppies to give
away. Going to be very
small. Ph . 992-7115.
Male dog. Giveaway to
home In country . Not quite
one year old . Loves kids.

31
Homes lor Sale
Well built 3 bedroom hom

situated

on

3

acres

APPLES - ROME beauty
apples at $.4 per bu. Bestfor
apple butter. Call 669·3785,
Fitzpatrick Orchard, SR
689.
EMERGENCY power
alternators - own lhe best
- buy Wlnpower. Call513·
788·258'1.
IN STOCK for Immediate
delivery : various sizes of
pool kits. Do· it·yoursell or
let us Install for you. D.
Bumgardner Sales, Inc .
9'12·5724.

Boys 10 speed bicycle. 27
Inch, like new. 6 mos. ~ld .
992·6261. Ask lor L.ynn.
Seve Money - Play gold
with new grips Installed.
$5.00 each or &lt; lor $18.50.
John Teaford 414·985·3961.

32

Racine Emergency Squad
will be making and selling
Easter candy . If you wish
to place orders call by Mar·
ch 29. 949· 2028, 9&lt;9·2533 or
949·2491 .

Mobile Homes
lor Sole
1973 Falrp&lt;ilnt, 14x65 2
bedroom
1971 Cameron, 14x65, 2
bedr.
1971 Fleetwood, l&lt;x65 3
bdr., bath 'h
1971 Shakespear , l&lt;x65 2
bedroom
1965 Yanor 12X52, 2 bedr.
1968 Fleetwood 12X63, 2
Bdr.
B 8. S MOBILE HOME
SALES, PT . PLEASANT,
wv. 304-675·4&lt;20.

Reduce Safe and Fst with .
GoBese Tablets and E·Vop
" water pills" Nelson Drug .

Pels lor Sale
HOOF HOLLOW, English
and Western, Saddles and

56

harness .

COUNTRY HOME with
stocked pond for swimming
or fishing, 9 rooms, bath,
carpeted . 3 to 17 acres
available. Located opprox.
7 miles lrom Pomeroy off
Rt . 7or 33. &lt;46·2359 after 6.

7
YordSale
Heated Garage Sale, 123
Park Drive,
Point
Pleasant, W. Va . Mon.-Sat.
8·3.

BRADFORD, Auctioneer,
Complete Service. Phone
9&lt;9·2487 or 949·2000. r acine.
Ohio, Crill Bradford .
Wanted to Buy

35

HILLCREST KENNELS.
Boarding, all breeds. Clean
Indoor-outdoor facilities .
Also AKC registered
Dobermans. 61&lt;·&lt;46·7795.
HUMANE
SOCIETY.
Adopt a homeless pet. ·
Healthy, shots, wormed.
Donations required. 992·
6260, noon-7 p.m.

Lots &amp; Acreope

57

Musical
Instruments
Picking up a plano In your
area. Looking lor a resppnslble parly to take over
payments . Call credit
manager collect. "4.. 592·

Lot for sale on Broadway
St. In Middleport. Also 1
bedroom Mobile Home.
9'12·2598.

5122.

- .'
...... .....
...
........

5 acres, Just off FlatwOOds
Road, 1 mile from old Rt. 33
and 6 miles from Rt. 7. Call
-9'12·3900 alter after 5:00.

BUY ING U.S. 51 L.VER
CO INS DATED 1964 OR
EARLIER. ALSO GOLD
ITEMS, DON'T LOSE
MONEY, SIMPLY PICK
UP THE PHONE AND
DIAL
61&lt;·992 · 5113.
BROWN ' S.

·41

Help Wanted
GET VALUABLE training

' Available April 15. Two
bedroom house Lincoln
Heights, Pomeroy . $200 per
month. Six months lease,
lSI end last month's rent
end security. Reference
mandatory . Call 992·3381 .

11

, '

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

~

42

Earn extra .money at home,
OOOd pay, easy work, no

44

Full lime and part time RN
or LPN . 11 ·7. Contact Mr.
Zldlan at Pomeroy Heolth
Care Center Monday thru
Friday 9·5.
Substanllal part time
Income taking short phone

S$$

messages at home. Call
!6W 779·3235 Ext. 453.
13

Insurance

AUTOMOBILE
SURANCE been

IN ·
ca n-

celled?
Lost
your
operator's license? Phone

9'12·2143 .
17

Houses for Rent

ANTIQUES,
FUR ·
NITURE, glass, china,
anything. Stt or call Ruth
Gosney, antiqu1s, 26 N.
2nd, Mlddlepo•t, OH. 992·
3161 .

Mobile Homes
tor Rent
2 Bedroom trailer tor rent.
Adults Only . 992-3324.
Apartment
tor Rtnt

11

Wanted to Do
Give plano lessons to begin·
ners and advanced student
In my home. Also teach
chording and transposing If
lnteresllld. 0111992·~ .

GOLD AND SILVER
COINS OF THE WORLD.
RINGS ,
JEWELRY,
STERLING SILVER AND
MISC. ITEMS. PAYING
RECORD
HIGH,
HIGHEST UP·TO·DATE
PRICES . CONTACT E&amp;l
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP, MIDDLEPORT,
OHIO, OR CALL 992·3476.

Furnished Rooms
SleepIng room for working
man $27.50 per wtek . Call
992·6022.
45

O~D

S!Nice for Rent
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33. north of
Pomeroy . Large lots.Call
9'12·7479.

... .

' '

53

.• ' .' "' r .'

Ice

beda, desks. etc .. complete
household•. Write M.D.
Miller. Rt. 4, Pomeruy or
call 9'12· 7760.
OLD FURI'IITURE. Ice
boxes, brass beds, Iron
beds, deski, et~ .• complete
houtthOI~i. Write M.D.
Mill!!.._ Rt. 4, l!'om•roy or
CIIIY'n·7760.

u

Llvutock
Nice Plgl. 949·2857.

AntlquH

iiM·
AT.TE NTION :
PORTANT TO YOU) Will
pay cash or ~ertlfled check
for antiques lind aollec· ,
tlbles or entire estates,
Nothing too large. Also,
guns, I&gt;C!Cktl Watches anci
cp1rl collactli!IIJ, Call 614·
7oN167 D;·SINAl1 .
, ., '·
ATTENTION :
( IM •
PORTANT TO YOU) Will
pay caah or certllle~ chetk
lor antiques and cOII.C·
tlbln or entl,.. estates,
HOthlriO 100 I.,_, AIIO,
tul1l; t*lltl 11Jafcllel 11111
~Oin collections. cru · 6U·

767·3167 or 5SNm .

FURNITURE,

boxes, breu beds, Iron

Have room and board In
my home for elderly, good
meals, reasonabte rates.
9'12·6022.
46

·

AutO Paris
.. ACCtSIOrlts
1972 Monte carlo, bOdy par·
ts lor sale. Call after 5. 992·

72
Trucks lor Slit
1979 Jeep Wagoneer. 4 dr .•
fully equipped, exc . cond .
S7,500. 7~2 - 3117 after 5 p.m.
79 Ford F -250,14 ton, heavy
duty, 24,000 miles. Ph. 843·
2032.

Business Services
INSULATION
VInyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding

11

Homt
Improvements
s &amp;. G carpet ·Cleaning.
Steam cleaned. Free
ntlmate .
Reasonable
rates. Scotchguard. 992·
6309 or 742·2211.
WALL PAPERING
painting. 7-42·2328.

78
Ford
Bronco .
custom I zed am·fm 8··
track, cruise control and
running boards. 992·3310 or
992·7894 .

Free Eatunate

75

loatsand
Motors lor Sale
1977 Quachlto bass boat,
fully equipped, has 1978 80
h.p. Mercury motor. Call
9'12·3900 after 5:00 .

DENNY CHAIN LINK
FENCE. Free estimate,
Ken Soles, phone 245·9113.

2•17ci

$58,000.00.

FAMILY HOME - 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, laundry, modern k lichen,
dining room, living
room and 112 basement
wlfh wOOd burner. Close
to Meigs High . A•klng

$.12,000:00.
POMEROY - Lovely 3
bedroom home. Extra
nice kitchen . L.ook at
this one tor $.10,000.0011
NEW HOME - Situated
on a little over an acre. ·3
bedroom, total elactrlc.
Quality built. $45,600.00.
TWO
MODERN
HOMES - Both In ex·
cellent condition. L.lve
In one and rent ·ffle
other. On Beech Grove
Rd . across from
Rutland
L.eglon.
S87,500.00for both I!
We're small enough to

enoug"

you,

yet

to 11rve
you II Give us a call lor

lrltndly, COUrtiOUS llr·
viet on buying or selling
property.
Cheryl Lomlty, Assoc.
Phone 742-2001
Velma Nlclnsky,
Assoc.
Phone 742·3092
Geor" s. Hobslttler
Broker "2-5739

ROUSH

OONSTRUChON

Garage

•New hgntis extensive
remod~l ·
"• mile oil Rt, 7 by-pass ,
on st. Rt. 124 toward
. (Afl
Rutland.
•Electrical work
Auto &amp; Truck .
•Masonry work
12 Years
Repair
Experience
A Iso Tra nsmlsslon
Greg Roush
Repair
Ph. 992-7583
Phone 992·5682
·I

TEEN DISCO
DANCE
AI Thl Orchid Room
E . Main St. Pomeroy, 0 .
EVERY
SATURD,lY NIGHT
1: DO Tllll :30

ff2·2259
NEW LIST I HG

10

acres vac-ant land. Gas,

electric, an9 water
available, close to
Meigs High School on
hard road . Good
building sites, lots o1
road
frontage.
$10,000.00.
NEW LISTING - 44
acres,
1 room,
4
bedroom 2 yr . old
modular home, stocked
pond, 2 story birn, other
buildings, extra lrollar
hookup with septic,
close
to
mlh@!.
$.42,000.00.
NIW LISTING
Syracuse - 4 rooms, 2
bedroom with bath,
aome furniture, nice
starter home or rental.

"Disco L.lghllng"
Admission 12.00 Single
$3.00 Couple
Sponsored bY Music
Unlimited. ctiaperones
will ·bo present. No
alCOholic bevera11s por·
milled . For further In' to., c111 "2--6'051.
2-28-1 mo. pd .

' r . , ·,. - ~ ·
(h- ....;

PAR~

FINANCIAL
· · SERVICES, INC. ·
Hours 9·1 M., w., f/;
Ollltr limn by appOint·
men!. ·
107 SycamDI'I (RIIr
Pomeroy,o.

618 E. Main

~

,,.."' .

ASSOCI&amp;TIS
Roger a Dottle Turner
742-2474
949·21160
Joan

"FREE

"Lowest Rates
In Town"
"TtnYurs
Exoerlenca"
''Wortc
Guaranteed"
Ph. 992-6116
After Five

ESTIMATES"
3rd St. In
Syrcuse, Oh.
Ph. 992·3752
or 9•2·3743

Investment.
POMEROY - Two bedroom and bath frame home
on Hill St. Now rented for Sl50.00 per mo. Only
110,000.
RACINI - Peace and quiet In tht country . Jlist a .
few mlleslrom Racine. Remodeled home on 2 acres
of ground. $39,000.
' .

··-

MIDDbEPORT - Three bedt \)Om, 1.'/:fbjth, nice lot '
Just one block from hUrl of town. $25,000.
POMEROY - on Lincoln His. - Two b*droom and
bath, full basement, gas turnact, storm windoWs II.
doors. ownar will help llnaricelf ybu need li. Slt,soo.
RUTLAND - Older hi&gt;hne needs soine repaltl on
Solem SlrHt. Nlc,corner lot. f990Q.O!i.
·• ·
BUILDING OR TRAilER LOT - Hysell Run Rdad
-.! acr:es. $7,000,
SYRACUSE - Old house on a nlcel9f, 111,~ .
LaTIN MIDbL.BPORT - We will build a house on
thl~ one If .you choose - south second Ave.

BO.-WSER

REALTY

NOW HOLDING
TOLl &amp; DICORATIVE
PAl NTI NG CLASSES
-WI will bo havlnl
1 mecr•m• cl•s. ..
-Now
urrv1n1
· chOca'-t• wraiiPirl llld
molds lor eaniy mailing
. -Full lint ol Kraft supplln
-SptCIIl rallS for ,
orglnlratton\ _

,
!

1
I

0

ANNIE

~AMIM

.

.... cre11t lll'l!i~l"!l,l-11 =
mo".

.'

.. -.

'

. .. ..
'

'

·-SINCE I DO HAPPeN TO BE ONE
OF THE WUH6EST ME:N EVEF!
ELECTEll 10 THAT OFFICE ...

.- ~ENATOR BRA~SI E .. -liND 'IOU COULOI'I'T
HAG CONSENTED 10 HAVE AADE A
SEE 'IOU ~ELY
BETTER CHOICE,
'l'OJR HIGHNESS!
HOME IN HIG
CUSTODY, ANNIE !

SOUTH
.J8 7513
.A 2
+3
+KQJ 8

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: East
West North East

GEORGE'S
ROOFING

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

/'

Roofing, siding,
gutter,
built-up
roof and homa
repair.

2+
3+
4+

,.

3+

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

6+

3•
1•
Pass

for six." ·
Oswald: "You can amuse
yourselves by finding other
ways to get to this very dlffi·
cult slam. There are lots of
ways to get there."

Opening lead:+ 2
ALIEYOOP

Free Estimates
388-9759

WEU. 'TJ.IE SERGEANT'S G0t1E
OOWN 10 'TJ.I' BEACM 10 BUILD
A RAFT 10 TRANS!'ORT OUR
TRAllE GOODS! rM SURE HE
AND HIS MEN WILL FINISH IT
IN SHORT ORDER!

2·1Hfc

AND WE
CAN LEAliE

WI-ll' NEVER
IT'S READY...
CAN'T WE,
ALLEYOOP?

By Osweld Jacoby

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

.. and Alu Sua lag
Oswald: " We are Indebted
to bridge teacher Sumner Cot·
zin of Worcester, Mass., for
today's hand. It illustrates the
modern all-purpose cue bid at

its best."

Gutter . work, down
spolits, som1 concrete
worlr, w1lks
and
drlv.Ways.
' (I'IIEE ISTIMATESI

17 ;

(For a copy of JACOBY
MODERN, ssnd $1 to; " Win at
Bridge, " care of this newspaper, P. 0. Box 489, Radio City
Station, New York, N. Y.
10019.)

TUESDAY, MARCH 18,1980
5:45-Farm Report 13; 5:50-PTL
Club 13.
6 : ~700 Club 6,8; PTL Club 15;
6 :05-World at Large 17.
6 : 3~Concerns

&amp;

Comm ents 10;

News 17; 6:45-Mornlng Report
3; A.M. Weather 33; 6:55-News
13 .
7 : ~Today 3,15; Good Morning
America 6,13; Tuesday Morning
8; Batman 10; Three StoogesLittle Rascals 17.
7:3~Famlly Altair 10; 7 : 55-Chuc~
White Reports 10.
8:0D-Capt. Kangaroo 8.10; Lucy
Show 17 ; Sesame St. 33.
8 : 3~Romper Room 17 ; 9:~Bob
Braun 3; Big Valley 6; Beverly
Hillbilli es 8; Jelfersons 10; Phil
Donahue 13. 15; Family affair 17 .
9 : 3~Bob Newhart 8; One Day At A
Time 10; Green Acres 17 .
10:oo-card Sharks 3,15; Edge of
Night 6 : Jeffersons 8; Joker's
wild 10; Morning Magazine 13;
Movie "Out of the Pas1" 17.

10:30- Hollyw ood squares 3, 15;
$20,000 Pyramid 13; Whew! 8,10;
Andy Griffith 6.
10:55-C BS News 8; House Call 10.
11 : ~High Rollers 3,15; Laverne 8.
Shirley 6,13; P rice Is Righi 8,10.
11: 30- Wheel of Fortune 3,15 ;
Family Feud 6.13; Sesame 51.
20; 11 : 55-News 17.
12 : 00- Newscenter
3;
New s
6,8,10,13; Health Field 15; Love,
American Style 17 .
12 :3~R yan 's Hope 6,13 ; Search for
Tomorrow 8, 10; Password Plus

15; Movie " Robbery

,

V. C. YQUNG Ill

ACROSS
1 Active cause

POMIROY,O.
992-1215or
992·7Jl4
1-28·1 mo.

fll bet if you went Meqo

t..o him he'a take
baclt,!

PREGNANT7
'

Let the molehill
to lilm? come to the mountain!

Ha!

See Us First for All
of Your Maternity
Needs.

5 Famous

Roman

6 "Salome" role

fountain

I Susan
or Leland

11 Flub
U Spanlah city
13 Coffee,
in WWU
Gljargon
15 Summer : Fr.
11 Knightly

7 Wagnerian

role
8 Uttle
ol comedy
9 Potpourri

pledge
17 Farming
Implement

Tops-Panll
Jumfiii'I:DrtiiiS

10 Florida

county
It Wander
about

WATERMELON
PA1af
Sth St.
Haven, W. va.
3·17·1 mo.

WINNIE
IVE 13EEN 50 PREOCCUPIEC7
WITHMYOWN BUBINE&amp;o,I
NEVER NOTICED 1HAT A
NEW Rf::7TAUAANT WAS

OOING UP HERE!

Yatenlay'• Aanrer
22 Ethiopian
prince

35 Peak
36 In those

24 Maglie

days
37 Verdi opera

or Mineo
18 Kentucky 2S "Down
under"
23 Pencil-bolt
Derby
item
symbol
bird
:t'1 "Hold It, male! " 19 Pine tree Z6 Hebrew
Z9 Play
20 Suffered
teacher
30 Leave alone
from
Z8 Rundown
32 Social group
21 Night
31 Faithful
33 One of the
before
U Confuse
Churchills
35·strain '

Ill Adversary
20 VaUanl one

39 Greek

mountains
te Assemble

n

Hairdo
style

t3 Actor
Hingle
«Exclude

38Word with

pack 01' cat
· ·39 Ex boxer,

Com~~tllll .liOml,
C:IMII In, I i'ma., fully
furnished,
nice
110rch, · .vara •nd
.....,., This . won't
l•aiiOIIilat su,ooo.

Lee -

r •··

. UArmy

· culsine item
Ultem for

.,'

ltArEs-itEAI:rf ·

''IOU DON'T
NEVER HOLD

ME

IN 'fORE

NO

MOI~E

'IOU WUZ

SHORE·-

IN MV LAP

UPSIDE

JEST 'IESTIDDY

DOWN!!

20Across
M Subsequently
UGrowlng
outward
48 4've poetry

muse
DOWN
1 French priest
1 Fall guy
3 Grafted: her.
t~re '

RODNiY DOWNING, I _ROK.IR- ItO.
.ILL CHILDS, I RANCH MGR.- HO. ft2·2449

hr+-+-+-1-L-~~~~-

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR
11 · L 0 N G F B L L O.W

. u•suRMCE' ·· · ·

One letter simply standi for another. In· lliia sample A Is

used

lor the three L's, X lor the two O's, etc. Single letters,
a)loftrophea, the length and formation ol the · wo~s are ell ·.
.hiJIII. Each day the code leiters are different.

SERVING
Oit10 SINCE
. ' SOUTHEAstERN
. .. ·,
.

ARE Y.OU PAYING TQO MUCH? DO
YOtl H~VI T.11a FOVIRA.O.,;
. .

•

-••

.", ,.~·NI. Yotia~. . . . ~~-·:

..
••

·

.._ _ . . . , . - -

.

CRYPTOQUOTES

ARE I{OU 601N6
.OUT TODAI(?

OQCO

'

GLBK

•• •

'992·2342.

.,

IC R
' .
'

.

XQH

CBHRL

BMFLG
.

· BMFLG

IHSOCB

'

KHS

KHS
OQL

•

ILCRLGO

•••

E
IMBBLS
~~,
IF YOU CAN'T GET HALF A LOAF,
TAKE A WHOlE ONELA WHOLE LOAF IS BETI'ER THAN

"

.

•• I
•'
•

.,

WRHXR •

.• CrypU;q.-..

NO BR)i:AD.-JOSH BIWNGS

,

1:06-DaysoiOur Llves3,15; All My
Children 6.13 ' Young II. the
Restless 8,10.
·
2:~Doclors3,15 ; One Life to Live
6,13; As The World Turns 8, 10;
2:25-News 17.
2: 30-Another
World
3,15;
Glgglesnorl Hotel 17.
3 : ~General Hospllal 6,13; 1 Love
Lucy 11; French Chef 20.
3 : 3~Fiintslones 17; French Chef
20; Over Easy 33 .
4 :00- Mister Cartoon 3; Merv
Griffin 6 ; Petticoat Junction 8;
Sesame St. 20.33; Real McCoys
13; Little rascals 15; Spectreman
11 .

4: 3()-Lone Ranger 3; Gomer Pyle 8;
Brady Bunch 10; Tom 8. Jerry
13; Merv Griffin 15; Gilligan's Is.
17.
5: ~Carol Burnell 3; San lord 8.
Son 8; Mary Tyler Moore 10; My
Three Sons 17; Mister Rogers'
Neighborhood 20,33.
5:30-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 : ~News 3,8,10,13,15 ; ABC News
6; Carol Burnett 17; 3-2-1 Contact

20,33.

- gnat

LimestOne for driveways.
Pomeroy-Mason area. 367·
7101.

Under

Arm s" 17; EleC. Co. 20,33 .

6£~".,"
by THOMAS JOSEPH

.·CALL ·. 992-2342
HN~1
...... __________

.CAll ut. ·

Soulb

1+

'

•

+6

+10 95
~A

UNITED
II ~ANNIE IEE15 LOOK KIND
STATES
THE MAN 'HHO
OF "'IUttS 6ENA10R? I
T'8E A... CAN'T HE!.P
WILL ESCORT
THAT, I'M
HER BACK TO
AFRAID ...
THE UNITED
STATEs ...
-GEE YOU

Alan: "There is very little
to the play at six clubs. South
wins the diamond lead in
dummy, leads a trump to his
king to find out that trumps
are not going to break worse
than 3·1 and then plays' two
rounds of spades . With spades
breaking 3·2, there is no need
t o take the nearly certain
heart finesse ."
Oswald: "The problem with
this hand is how to find the
club slam. Some pairs would
not even get to game. Others
would land at four spades."
Alan: "The bidding in the
box is elegant. South decides
to show his good four-card
club suit. North repeats his
cue bid to show first-round
diamond control. South rebids
his spades. North raises clubs.
South cue bids in hearts, and
North considers bidding a
grand slam but wisely settles

NORTH
3- 17-80
.A2
.QJ 5
t A 10 7
+AH 32
WEST
EAST
.109 ,
.KQ6
• 98 76
.K 10 43
• Q 6 52
+KJ981

DCMNINGQtiLDS AGENCY INC.

. Hay F., Sale eoc per bale
Candtllver. 843·2795.
;

2 : ~News

13; 3:05 - Unlouchables
4:0s-&lt;&gt;pen Uo 17

Cue bidding locates slam

mo.

·-----------~

MIXed Hay, 60c a bal •. 992·
3981 .

Movie "Three Cheers for the
Irish " 17.

Treasure Island" 17 ;

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

'ttl -~flll/1

7:3()-That Nashville Music 3; Solid
Gold '79 6; Joker's Wild 8; Dick
Cavett 33; Family Feud 10,13;
Nashville on !he Road 15; All In
The Family 17 ; MacNeil-Lehrer
Report 20.
8 : ~Little House on the Prairie
3,15; Thai' s Incredible! 6,13;
WKRP In Cincinnati 8,10 ; James
Michener's World 20.33; Movie
" The Macomber Affair" 17 .
8:3~L.ast Resort 8,10.
9 : ~Bob Hope 3,15; Family 6,13 ;
Mash 8; American Short Story
20,33; NIT Basketball 10; 9 : JI)House Calls 8.
IO : ~Tom Snyder 3.15; Slone 6, 1:1:
Lou Grant 8; Big Battles 17.
IO ::JG-News 20; Synthesis 33.
11 :00-News 3,8,6,10,13,15; Last of
the Wild 17 ; Dick Cavell 20;
Family Towers 33.
11 : 3~Tonlghl3 , 15 ; ABC News6,13;
Harry 0 8; ABC Captioned News
33; Movie " Hurry Sundown" 10:
11 :45-Barney Miller 6,13; 12 :20Pollce Story 13.
1 2 : 4~McC i oud 8; 1 : ~Tomorrow
J; News 15; 1:3~ News 17.
:35-Movle "C harlie Chan at

BRIDGE

G111eral Hau11111
WILL HAUL. llmlttone and
gravel . 'Also, lime hauling
and spreading . Leo Morris
Trucking . Phone7~2-245$.

HAYES

LATEST JERSEY

Moadav. March 17

15

RENT OR IUY - YOU PAY
YOU OCCUPY.
- Commercial office building, on
center Of town. Fully rented. A good

.

~-2 ; 1

New

WE HAVE FINANCING AVA.LABLE .
AS LOW AS 5% DOWN AND 30 YEARS
TO PAY, ON MOST HOMES.

SUAVE

Jumble Book No. 13,cont•lnllli 110pua~a,la aullablalor 11.75 po1tpald

ASk FOR DAVE

Rewind and Repair electric
motors. W!ll make service
calls. 992·2356.

REAL ESTATE

I IJ

I rom Jumble, Clo thll n1wapaper, BoM34, Norwood, N..J. OT648.1nclu&lt;Myour
name, ad. .aa, zip code and mttla ch.cka pa.,abla to Newapaperbooke.

CALL 992:3238

Electrical
&amp; Relrldptrallon

SEWING
MACHINE
BOWERS
Repairs, s•rvlce, all ELWOOD
REPAIR
Swttpers,
makes . 992· 22U . Tht
Fabric Shop, Ppmeroy. toasters, Irons, ell small
Authorized Singer Sales appliances. Lawn mower.
and Service. We sharpen Next to State Highway
Scissors.
1 Garage on Route 7, 9853825.

rI 1 I

Answer: What he said wh en he fmall y achieved
success in the ·shoe bus!ness ~ AT " LAST "!

~ou

M

form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon .

(Answers tomorrow)

littn In 'ualnear
For5Yeua

3·12·1 mo.

2·18·1 mo.
Electrical

AND llON'T
· INT!RFS!Ul

~-

992-3795
.2-~Hmo: ·

TO YOUfl!

Now arrange the circled letters to

01

OF MY WAY··

ADD ONS ;;
REMODEuNG

UPHOLSTERING

&amp; Refrld~ratlon

DIBOUT

THEN GeT OUT

~I!T

B!!
PUT it-l A ZOO'f
--NO THANIC~ l

We Do lbfq,
Gutten and
..
Remodalil&amp;
"FR£E ESTIMATES"

A&amp;H

M

ANI:&gt;

C~AUPIA

Prlnr answer here:

•.. 1 Midi It Myiolf"

Pomeroy, Oh.

CAPTAIN EASY

Saturday's! Jumbles: AORTA

H&amp;R BLOCK OFFICI LOCATION.

approx.

li' 6ENEI\'Al..LY
MEANG NO WO~K ,
THOUGH WE CAN 'T
E!IANI&lt; ON rT.

KJ I

No Surld6Y Calls

CALL 992-7544

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

TUPPERS PLAINS - 3
yrs. old, large moden
kitchen, large garage
with workshop area,
separate utility, ·wood·
burner, one acre. Good
c;ondltlon. Should sell
fast . $34,900.00.
IN TOWN - l'h story, 2
bedroom house, lull
basement,
fr•ahly
pointed
throughout,
aluminum oldlng, porch
with wrough' Iron rail·
lng, neat at $25,000.00.
STOP PAYING lt&amp;NT
·Let someone elM
make your house pay·
ment lor you. Large
brick aparlment h~se
In Syracuse. Live in par.t
and rent part. $28,000.00 . .
L.OCALL. Y OWNED,
FUL TIME, PROPES·
StONAL
lEAL.
ISTATE SERVICE.
OfiiN FRIDAY TIL I .
REALTOR
Honry E . Clelalld, Jr.

Federal Housing a
Veterans Admin . LCNIM .

,Tri-County
Bookkeeping
Service

-·~~

$5,600.00.

bedroom ranch,

REAL STATE
F'NANetNG

KNABIG

· Pll. 949-2801

2-24-1 mo.

oo-tfc /

HOBSTffiE
REALTY
STARTER HOME Cozy 2 bedroom In Tuppers Plains . Nice
gorden spot. Only
$23,000.00.
MIDDLIPORT
Large 2 story home. 5
bedrooms. living room,
dining room, family
room, mOderr'l kitchen, 2
full baths and base·
mont. ShOwn by oppt.
CHESTER
3
bedroom, living room,
dining room, kitchen
with garbage disposal
end radar range, Family room has fireplace.
Nice lot . Sells for

0.

Ro&amp;er Hysell

Real Estate- General

11rge

II I

PAYING
'20.00 AND UP
FOR
'SILVER

Frlf lsllmttts
Rtesanabll Prices
Call HOWII'd
M9·2N2
1-11-Hc

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992·2772

and

Will do odds and ends,
paneling, floor tile, and
ceiling llle. Call Fred
Miller, 992-6338.

All types root work, ntw
or rapelr guttert tnd
downspouts,
gutttr
cl1anlno 1nd- ptilnllng.
All work gu1rantted .

• lnsullllon
·••mDOors
• Slorm Wlmlows
• Rtplactmlnt
Wlndqws

Vans-.4 W. D,
1979 Ford 150 •x~. auto., . CARPENTER WORK . p.s., p.b., topper. Positive complete remodeling by AI
traction fronf and rear . 985· Tromm , 742·2328. References.
4339.
73

H. L WHITESEL
ROOfiNG ·

Television
Viewing
MONDAY, MARCH 17,1980

OINES

·•

r-'-::J,.,. . ,&amp;L ~BLOW~N--.

~ THAT SCRAIIIILED WORD GAME
byHenriArnoldandBobLee

1. .-~LL
- . . _P

2779.

76 Monzo 4 cyl., 4 speed, 2
snow tires Included. 59,000
miles. 992·7060.

6-462.

RENTER 'S IISIStance for
Senior Citizens In Village
Manor apls. Call992·7787.

'• , ., • ., '

Wanted : Flghers·Brawler·
s, win 150,000. 30&lt;-:145·8103
Mon. lhru Fr i. 10 a .m. to 5
p.m.

OLD COl NS, poeket wit·
ches, clus rings, wedding
bonds, diamonds. Gold or
sliver. Call J . A. Wamsley,
7&lt;2·2331. Treasure Chott
Coin Shop, Athens. OH. 592·

3 AND 4 RM furnished apts. Phone 992·5434.

Miscellaneous

,'

62

..
. "' ...' .......

and earn good money plus
some great gilts as a Sen·
tlnel route carri@r. Phone
us right away and get on
the eligibility list at 992·
2156 or 992·2157.

Salt or Trade: M Corvette
Strlngroy Convertible.
$3.800. 1973 Monte Carlo,
runs good, $700. 949·2125.

lppreclate

as a young business person

exp. necessary . Send for
application report, W. L.
Ohlinger, W. Columbia, w.
Va . 25287.

and

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

Property for sale. Over 3
. acres of wooded land In
Pomeroy . Only $7,000. Call
9'12·3886.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Horses

ponies. Ruth Reeves. 61&lt;·
698·3290 . Bordlng and
Riding Lessons and Horse
12x60 Mobile Home, 2 Care products. Western
bedroom, good cond. Can ' bOOts. Children's $15.50.
rent lot or move. $5,000. Adults 129.00.
7&lt;2·2898.
RISING STAR Kennel.
Boarding. Call367·0292.
33
Forms lor Sale

basement, buildings, born,
some timber, all mineral
rights. $77,000. 9'12·7559.

76

PHONE 742-2003

1971 12x65 Trailer, com·
pletely furnished, A.C.,
very good condition . On a
lot that can be rented.
Ready to move· Into. $6500
firm . 992·5304.

36 acres farm with 9 room
11!:~
story house, full

9

food, and all types of salt.
Excelsior Sell Works. Inc .,
E. Main St .. Pomeroy, 9'12·
3891 .

overlooking the Ohio River .
After 3:30 p.m. call 247·
2032 .

742-2648.

8

dog

Decorated cakes tor all oc·
caslons. Character cakes
and sheet cakes. Call 992·
63&lt;2 or 9'12·2583.

~ ·-- ~._ , ,

~

fertlllrer,

Autos tor Sale

11

ID1t

~ ~ ~~!~h

·~CY

Your Best Buys Are Found in the Sentinel Classifieds
_': .:.: :·: .: :.: :.: .: ;...

ilii~Nl

7-Tbe Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, March 17,1980

6:3()-NBC News 3,15: ABC News
6,13; CBS News 8,10 ; Carol
Burnell 6; Bob Newhart 17; Over
Easy 20 ; Wild Wild World of
Animals 33.
7:oo-cross-WIIs 3; Tic Tac Dough
8; Newlywed Game 6,13; News
10; Love, American Style 15;
Sanford II. Son 17; Dick Cavett 20.
7:3~Hollywood Squares 3; Solid
Gold '79 6; Joker's Wild 8; Dick
Cavell 33; Hollywood Squares
10; Sha Na Na 13; TV Honor
Society 15; All In The Family 17;
MacNeil-Lehrer Report 20.
8:0C&gt;-Misadventures of Sheriff Lobo
3,15; Happy Days 6,13; While
Shadow 8,10; Novo 20,33; NHL
Hockey 17.
8:3()-Laverne 8. Shirley 6,13.
9 : 0D-Big Show 3,15; Three's
Comoanv 6,13; Movie " W.W. &amp;
the Dixie Dancek
Mystery! 20,33 .
9:3G-Taxi 6,13; lO:OQ-Hart to Hart
6,13; News 20; City Notebook 33.
10 :3G-Unlled Slates 3,15; Fight
Against Slavery 17; Over Easy
20; Camera Three 33.
11 :DO-News :1 ,6, 8,10,13 ,15 ; Dick
Cavell 20; Monty Python's ..
Flying Circus 33.
.
11 :3()-llllnols Primary 3,6,1,13,15;
ABC Captioned News 33; Movie
"Woman ol the Y""r" 10; Movie
"AIIectlonately Yours" 17. .
!~ : DO-Tonight 3,15; Movie . "The
King of Marvin Garclolns" 6,13;
1 Barnaby Jones 8.
1: l~vle "Cactus In the Snow" 8;
1:25-News 17: 1:3o-Tomorrow
3; News 15; Movie "Marine .
,
. Raiders" 17.
2:25-News 13; 3:30-Movle "Storm .,

over Jamaica" 17.;
American Style 17.

"

5:35-Love, ~

�_8-Tbe DailY Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, March 17,1980

..

54
Misc. Merchlnlse
COAL,
LIMESTONE ,
Sllnd, gravel, c=e lc!Um

J
Announcement•
GUN SHOOT EVERY
SUNDAY 1 PM. FACTORY
CHOKE ONLY . RACINE
GUN CLUB .
GUN SHOOT . Racine
Volunteer Fire Dept.
Every Saturday . 6:30p.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.
BUYING U.S. SILVER
COl NS DATED 1964 OR
EARLIER
(A NY
AMOUNT) . DON ' T LOSE
MONEY, SIMPLY PICK
UP THE PHONE AND
DIAL
6H · 99 2 · 5113,
BROWN 'S.

chloride,

22
Maney to Lolli
FINANCING· VA·FHA LO·
ANS. LOW OR NO DOWN
PAYMENT. PURCHASE
OR
REFINANCE.
IRELAND MORTGAGE.
77 E. STATE, ATHENS .
614·592·3051.

Mortgage
money
available. New homes. old
homes and refinancing
your present home. ICON ·
VENTIONAL · 5 Pel. down.
VA · rio down payment.
FHA · low down payment.
FHA -- 245 graduated
payment program. FHA
265 subsidy program. Call
tor details. IRELAND
MORTGAGE CO., 77 E.
State St., Athens. 592·3051 .

..-·.

I PAY hiQhest prices
possible for gold and sliver

·- . . . . ....

coins, rings, jewelry, etc .
contect Ed Burkett Barber
ShOp, Mlddleporl.
GOLD, SILVER OR
FOREIGN COINS, OR
ANY OTHER GOLD OR
SILVER ITEMS. ALSO,
ANTIQUE FURNITURE
OR OTHER ANTIQUE
ITEMS. WILL PAY TOP
DOLLAR. CHECK WITH
OSBY (OSSIE) MARTIN
BEFORE
SELLING .
PHONE 9'12--6370. ALSO
DO APPRAISING .
Picking up an Easy play
organ In your area .
Looking for a responsible
party to take over paymen·
Is. Call credit manager
collect. 614--592·5122.
Jones Meat Processing
Slaughter facilities now
open. Washington County
Rd. 248. Little Hocking,
OH . 667·6133.

Learn to make your own
Easter Candy . Free candy
making demonstration
every Sat. at 1 or call for
evening

class.

Carousel

Contecllonary. Middleport,
992·6342,

4
3

Glv...,way
Boston

Terrier

and

Beagle puppies to give
away. Going to be very
small. Ph . 992-7115.
Male dog. Giveaway to
home In country . Not quite
one year old . Loves kids.

31
Homes lor Sale
Well built 3 bedroom hom

situated

on

3

acres

APPLES - ROME beauty
apples at $.4 per bu. Bestfor
apple butter. Call 669·3785,
Fitzpatrick Orchard, SR
689.
EMERGENCY power
alternators - own lhe best
- buy Wlnpower. Call513·
788·258'1.
IN STOCK for Immediate
delivery : various sizes of
pool kits. Do· it·yoursell or
let us Install for you. D.
Bumgardner Sales, Inc .
9'12·5724.

Boys 10 speed bicycle. 27
Inch, like new. 6 mos. ~ld .
992·6261. Ask lor L.ynn.
Seve Money - Play gold
with new grips Installed.
$5.00 each or &lt; lor $18.50.
John Teaford 414·985·3961.

32

Racine Emergency Squad
will be making and selling
Easter candy . If you wish
to place orders call by Mar·
ch 29. 949· 2028, 9&lt;9·2533 or
949·2491 .

Mobile Homes
lor Sole
1973 Falrp&lt;ilnt, 14x65 2
bedroom
1971 Cameron, 14x65, 2
bedr.
1971 Fleetwood, l&lt;x65 3
bdr., bath 'h
1971 Shakespear , l&lt;x65 2
bedroom
1965 Yanor 12X52, 2 bedr.
1968 Fleetwood 12X63, 2
Bdr.
B 8. S MOBILE HOME
SALES, PT . PLEASANT,
wv. 304-675·4&lt;20.

Reduce Safe and Fst with .
GoBese Tablets and E·Vop
" water pills" Nelson Drug .

Pels lor Sale
HOOF HOLLOW, English
and Western, Saddles and

56

harness .

COUNTRY HOME with
stocked pond for swimming
or fishing, 9 rooms, bath,
carpeted . 3 to 17 acres
available. Located opprox.
7 miles lrom Pomeroy off
Rt . 7or 33. &lt;46·2359 after 6.

7
YordSale
Heated Garage Sale, 123
Park Drive,
Point
Pleasant, W. Va . Mon.-Sat.
8·3.

BRADFORD, Auctioneer,
Complete Service. Phone
9&lt;9·2487 or 949·2000. r acine.
Ohio, Crill Bradford .
Wanted to Buy

35

HILLCREST KENNELS.
Boarding, all breeds. Clean
Indoor-outdoor facilities .
Also AKC registered
Dobermans. 61&lt;·&lt;46·7795.
HUMANE
SOCIETY.
Adopt a homeless pet. ·
Healthy, shots, wormed.
Donations required. 992·
6260, noon-7 p.m.

Lots &amp; Acreope

57

Musical
Instruments
Picking up a plano In your
area. Looking lor a resppnslble parly to take over
payments . Call credit
manager collect. "4.. 592·

Lot for sale on Broadway
St. In Middleport. Also 1
bedroom Mobile Home.
9'12·2598.

5122.

- .'
...... .....
...
........

5 acres, Just off FlatwOOds
Road, 1 mile from old Rt. 33
and 6 miles from Rt. 7. Call
-9'12·3900 alter after 5:00.

BUY ING U.S. 51 L.VER
CO INS DATED 1964 OR
EARLIER. ALSO GOLD
ITEMS, DON'T LOSE
MONEY, SIMPLY PICK
UP THE PHONE AND
DIAL
61&lt;·992 · 5113.
BROWN ' S.

·41

Help Wanted
GET VALUABLE training

' Available April 15. Two
bedroom house Lincoln
Heights, Pomeroy . $200 per
month. Six months lease,
lSI end last month's rent
end security. Reference
mandatory . Call 992·3381 .

11

, '

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

~

42

Earn extra .money at home,
OOOd pay, easy work, no

44

Full lime and part time RN
or LPN . 11 ·7. Contact Mr.
Zldlan at Pomeroy Heolth
Care Center Monday thru
Friday 9·5.
Substanllal part time
Income taking short phone

S$$

messages at home. Call
!6W 779·3235 Ext. 453.
13

Insurance

AUTOMOBILE
SURANCE been

IN ·
ca n-

celled?
Lost
your
operator's license? Phone

9'12·2143 .
17

Houses for Rent

ANTIQUES,
FUR ·
NITURE, glass, china,
anything. Stt or call Ruth
Gosney, antiqu1s, 26 N.
2nd, Mlddlepo•t, OH. 992·
3161 .

Mobile Homes
tor Rent
2 Bedroom trailer tor rent.
Adults Only . 992-3324.
Apartment
tor Rtnt

11

Wanted to Do
Give plano lessons to begin·
ners and advanced student
In my home. Also teach
chording and transposing If
lnteresllld. 0111992·~ .

GOLD AND SILVER
COINS OF THE WORLD.
RINGS ,
JEWELRY,
STERLING SILVER AND
MISC. ITEMS. PAYING
RECORD
HIGH,
HIGHEST UP·TO·DATE
PRICES . CONTACT E&amp;l
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP, MIDDLEPORT,
OHIO, OR CALL 992·3476.

Furnished Rooms
SleepIng room for working
man $27.50 per wtek . Call
992·6022.
45

O~D

S!Nice for Rent
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33. north of
Pomeroy . Large lots.Call
9'12·7479.

... .

' '

53

.• ' .' "' r .'

Ice

beda, desks. etc .. complete
household•. Write M.D.
Miller. Rt. 4, Pomeruy or
call 9'12· 7760.
OLD FURI'IITURE. Ice
boxes, brass beds, Iron
beds, deski, et~ .• complete
houtthOI~i. Write M.D.
Mill!!.._ Rt. 4, l!'om•roy or
CIIIY'n·7760.

u

Llvutock
Nice Plgl. 949·2857.

AntlquH

iiM·
AT.TE NTION :
PORTANT TO YOU) Will
pay cash or ~ertlfled check
for antiques lind aollec· ,
tlbles or entire estates,
Nothing too large. Also,
guns, I&gt;C!Cktl Watches anci
cp1rl collactli!IIJ, Call 614·
7oN167 D;·SINAl1 .
, ., '·
ATTENTION :
( IM •
PORTANT TO YOU) Will
pay caah or certllle~ chetk
lor antiques and cOII.C·
tlbln or entl,.. estates,
HOthlriO 100 I.,_, AIIO,
tul1l; t*lltl 11Jafcllel 11111
~Oin collections. cru · 6U·

767·3167 or 5SNm .

FURNITURE,

boxes, breu beds, Iron

Have room and board In
my home for elderly, good
meals, reasonabte rates.
9'12·6022.
46

·

AutO Paris
.. ACCtSIOrlts
1972 Monte carlo, bOdy par·
ts lor sale. Call after 5. 992·

72
Trucks lor Slit
1979 Jeep Wagoneer. 4 dr .•
fully equipped, exc . cond .
S7,500. 7~2 - 3117 after 5 p.m.
79 Ford F -250,14 ton, heavy
duty, 24,000 miles. Ph. 843·
2032.

Business Services
INSULATION
VInyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding

11

Homt
Improvements
s &amp;. G carpet ·Cleaning.
Steam cleaned. Free
ntlmate .
Reasonable
rates. Scotchguard. 992·
6309 or 742·2211.
WALL PAPERING
painting. 7-42·2328.

78
Ford
Bronco .
custom I zed am·fm 8··
track, cruise control and
running boards. 992·3310 or
992·7894 .

Free Eatunate

75

loatsand
Motors lor Sale
1977 Quachlto bass boat,
fully equipped, has 1978 80
h.p. Mercury motor. Call
9'12·3900 after 5:00 .

DENNY CHAIN LINK
FENCE. Free estimate,
Ken Soles, phone 245·9113.

2•17ci

$58,000.00.

FAMILY HOME - 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, laundry, modern k lichen,
dining room, living
room and 112 basement
wlfh wOOd burner. Close
to Meigs High . A•klng

$.12,000:00.
POMEROY - Lovely 3
bedroom home. Extra
nice kitchen . L.ook at
this one tor $.10,000.0011
NEW HOME - Situated
on a little over an acre. ·3
bedroom, total elactrlc.
Quality built. $45,600.00.
TWO
MODERN
HOMES - Both In ex·
cellent condition. L.lve
In one and rent ·ffle
other. On Beech Grove
Rd . across from
Rutland
L.eglon.
S87,500.00for both I!
We're small enough to

enoug"

you,

yet

to 11rve
you II Give us a call lor

lrltndly, COUrtiOUS llr·
viet on buying or selling
property.
Cheryl Lomlty, Assoc.
Phone 742-2001
Velma Nlclnsky,
Assoc.
Phone 742·3092
Geor" s. Hobslttler
Broker "2-5739

ROUSH

OONSTRUChON

Garage

•New hgntis extensive
remod~l ·
"• mile oil Rt, 7 by-pass ,
on st. Rt. 124 toward
. (Afl
Rutland.
•Electrical work
Auto &amp; Truck .
•Masonry work
12 Years
Repair
Experience
A Iso Tra nsmlsslon
Greg Roush
Repair
Ph. 992-7583
Phone 992·5682
·I

TEEN DISCO
DANCE
AI Thl Orchid Room
E . Main St. Pomeroy, 0 .
EVERY
SATURD,lY NIGHT
1: DO Tllll :30

ff2·2259
NEW LIST I HG

10

acres vac-ant land. Gas,

electric, an9 water
available, close to
Meigs High School on
hard road . Good
building sites, lots o1
road
frontage.
$10,000.00.
NEW LISTING - 44
acres,
1 room,
4
bedroom 2 yr . old
modular home, stocked
pond, 2 story birn, other
buildings, extra lrollar
hookup with septic,
close
to
mlh@!.
$.42,000.00.
NIW LISTING
Syracuse - 4 rooms, 2
bedroom with bath,
aome furniture, nice
starter home or rental.

"Disco L.lghllng"
Admission 12.00 Single
$3.00 Couple
Sponsored bY Music
Unlimited. ctiaperones
will ·bo present. No
alCOholic bevera11s por·
milled . For further In' to., c111 "2--6'051.
2-28-1 mo. pd .

' r . , ·,. - ~ ·
(h- ....;

PAR~

FINANCIAL
· · SERVICES, INC. ·
Hours 9·1 M., w., f/;
Ollltr limn by appOint·
men!. ·
107 SycamDI'I (RIIr
Pomeroy,o.

618 E. Main

~

,,.."' .

ASSOCI&amp;TIS
Roger a Dottle Turner
742-2474
949·21160
Joan

"FREE

"Lowest Rates
In Town"
"TtnYurs
Exoerlenca"
''Wortc
Guaranteed"
Ph. 992-6116
After Five

ESTIMATES"
3rd St. In
Syrcuse, Oh.
Ph. 992·3752
or 9•2·3743

Investment.
POMEROY - Two bedroom and bath frame home
on Hill St. Now rented for Sl50.00 per mo. Only
110,000.
RACINI - Peace and quiet In tht country . Jlist a .
few mlleslrom Racine. Remodeled home on 2 acres
of ground. $39,000.
' .

··-

MIDDbEPORT - Three bedt \)Om, 1.'/:fbjth, nice lot '
Just one block from hUrl of town. $25,000.
POMEROY - on Lincoln His. - Two b*droom and
bath, full basement, gas turnact, storm windoWs II.
doors. ownar will help llnaricelf ybu need li. Slt,soo.
RUTLAND - Older hi&gt;hne needs soine repaltl on
Solem SlrHt. Nlc,corner lot. f990Q.O!i.
·• ·
BUILDING OR TRAilER LOT - Hysell Run Rdad
-.! acr:es. $7,000,
SYRACUSE - Old house on a nlcel9f, 111,~ .
LaTIN MIDbL.BPORT - We will build a house on
thl~ one If .you choose - south second Ave.

BO.-WSER

REALTY

NOW HOLDING
TOLl &amp; DICORATIVE
PAl NTI NG CLASSES
-WI will bo havlnl
1 mecr•m• cl•s. ..
-Now
urrv1n1
· chOca'-t• wraiiPirl llld
molds lor eaniy mailing
. -Full lint ol Kraft supplln
-SptCIIl rallS for ,
orglnlratton\ _

,
!

1
I

0

ANNIE

~AMIM

.

.... cre11t lll'l!i~l"!l,l-11 =
mo".

.'

.. -.

'

. .. ..
'

'

·-SINCE I DO HAPPeN TO BE ONE
OF THE WUH6EST ME:N EVEF!
ELECTEll 10 THAT OFFICE ...

.- ~ENATOR BRA~SI E .. -liND 'IOU COULOI'I'T
HAG CONSENTED 10 HAVE AADE A
SEE 'IOU ~ELY
BETTER CHOICE,
'l'OJR HIGHNESS!
HOME IN HIG
CUSTODY, ANNIE !

SOUTH
.J8 7513
.A 2
+3
+KQJ 8

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: East
West North East

GEORGE'S
ROOFING

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

/'

Roofing, siding,
gutter,
built-up
roof and homa
repair.

2+
3+
4+

,.

3+

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

6+

3•
1•
Pass

for six." ·
Oswald: "You can amuse
yourselves by finding other
ways to get to this very dlffi·
cult slam. There are lots of
ways to get there."

Opening lead:+ 2
ALIEYOOP

Free Estimates
388-9759

WEU. 'TJ.IE SERGEANT'S G0t1E
OOWN 10 'TJ.I' BEACM 10 BUILD
A RAFT 10 TRANS!'ORT OUR
TRAllE GOODS! rM SURE HE
AND HIS MEN WILL FINISH IT
IN SHORT ORDER!

2·1Hfc

AND WE
CAN LEAliE

WI-ll' NEVER
IT'S READY...
CAN'T WE,
ALLEYOOP?

By Osweld Jacoby

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

.. and Alu Sua lag
Oswald: " We are Indebted
to bridge teacher Sumner Cot·
zin of Worcester, Mass., for
today's hand. It illustrates the
modern all-purpose cue bid at

its best."

Gutter . work, down
spolits, som1 concrete
worlr, w1lks
and
drlv.Ways.
' (I'IIEE ISTIMATESI

17 ;

(For a copy of JACOBY
MODERN, ssnd $1 to; " Win at
Bridge, " care of this newspaper, P. 0. Box 489, Radio City
Station, New York, N. Y.
10019.)

TUESDAY, MARCH 18,1980
5:45-Farm Report 13; 5:50-PTL
Club 13.
6 : ~700 Club 6,8; PTL Club 15;
6 :05-World at Large 17.
6 : 3~Concerns

&amp;

Comm ents 10;

News 17; 6:45-Mornlng Report
3; A.M. Weather 33; 6:55-News
13 .
7 : ~Today 3,15; Good Morning
America 6,13; Tuesday Morning
8; Batman 10; Three StoogesLittle Rascals 17.
7:3~Famlly Altair 10; 7 : 55-Chuc~
White Reports 10.
8:0D-Capt. Kangaroo 8.10; Lucy
Show 17 ; Sesame St. 33.
8 : 3~Romper Room 17 ; 9:~Bob
Braun 3; Big Valley 6; Beverly
Hillbilli es 8; Jelfersons 10; Phil
Donahue 13. 15; Family affair 17 .
9 : 3~Bob Newhart 8; One Day At A
Time 10; Green Acres 17 .
10:oo-card Sharks 3,15; Edge of
Night 6 : Jeffersons 8; Joker's
wild 10; Morning Magazine 13;
Movie "Out of the Pas1" 17.

10:30- Hollyw ood squares 3, 15;
$20,000 Pyramid 13; Whew! 8,10;
Andy Griffith 6.
10:55-C BS News 8; House Call 10.
11 : ~High Rollers 3,15; Laverne 8.
Shirley 6,13; P rice Is Righi 8,10.
11: 30- Wheel of Fortune 3,15 ;
Family Feud 6.13; Sesame 51.
20; 11 : 55-News 17.
12 : 00- Newscenter
3;
New s
6,8,10,13; Health Field 15; Love,
American Style 17 .
12 :3~R yan 's Hope 6,13 ; Search for
Tomorrow 8, 10; Password Plus

15; Movie " Robbery

,

V. C. YQUNG Ill

ACROSS
1 Active cause

POMIROY,O.
992-1215or
992·7Jl4
1-28·1 mo.

fll bet if you went Meqo

t..o him he'a take
baclt,!

PREGNANT7
'

Let the molehill
to lilm? come to the mountain!

Ha!

See Us First for All
of Your Maternity
Needs.

5 Famous

Roman

6 "Salome" role

fountain

I Susan
or Leland

11 Flub
U Spanlah city
13 Coffee,
in WWU
Gljargon
15 Summer : Fr.
11 Knightly

7 Wagnerian

role
8 Uttle
ol comedy
9 Potpourri

pledge
17 Farming
Implement

Tops-Panll
Jumfiii'I:DrtiiiS

10 Florida

county
It Wander
about

WATERMELON
PA1af
Sth St.
Haven, W. va.
3·17·1 mo.

WINNIE
IVE 13EEN 50 PREOCCUPIEC7
WITHMYOWN BUBINE&amp;o,I
NEVER NOTICED 1HAT A
NEW Rf::7TAUAANT WAS

OOING UP HERE!

Yatenlay'• Aanrer
22 Ethiopian
prince

35 Peak
36 In those

24 Maglie

days
37 Verdi opera

or Mineo
18 Kentucky 2S "Down
under"
23 Pencil-bolt
Derby
item
symbol
bird
:t'1 "Hold It, male! " 19 Pine tree Z6 Hebrew
Z9 Play
20 Suffered
teacher
30 Leave alone
from
Z8 Rundown
32 Social group
21 Night
31 Faithful
33 One of the
before
U Confuse
Churchills
35·strain '

Ill Adversary
20 VaUanl one

39 Greek

mountains
te Assemble

n

Hairdo
style

t3 Actor
Hingle
«Exclude

38Word with

pack 01' cat
· ·39 Ex boxer,

Com~~tllll .liOml,
C:IMII In, I i'ma., fully
furnished,
nice
110rch, · .vara •nd
.....,., This . won't
l•aiiOIIilat su,ooo.

Lee -

r •··

. UArmy

· culsine item
Ultem for

.,'

ltArEs-itEAI:rf ·

''IOU DON'T
NEVER HOLD

ME

IN 'fORE

NO

MOI~E

'IOU WUZ

SHORE·-

IN MV LAP

UPSIDE

JEST 'IESTIDDY

DOWN!!

20Across
M Subsequently
UGrowlng
outward
48 4've poetry

muse
DOWN
1 French priest
1 Fall guy
3 Grafted: her.
t~re '

RODNiY DOWNING, I _ROK.IR- ItO.
.ILL CHILDS, I RANCH MGR.- HO. ft2·2449

hr+-+-+-1-L-~~~~-

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR
11 · L 0 N G F B L L O.W

. u•suRMCE' ·· · ·

One letter simply standi for another. In· lliia sample A Is

used

lor the three L's, X lor the two O's, etc. Single letters,
a)loftrophea, the length and formation ol the · wo~s are ell ·.
.hiJIII. Each day the code leiters are different.

SERVING
Oit10 SINCE
. ' SOUTHEAstERN
. .. ·,
.

ARE Y.OU PAYING TQO MUCH? DO
YOtl H~VI T.11a FOVIRA.O.,;
. .

•

-••

.", ,.~·NI. Yotia~. . . . ~~-·:

..
••

·

.._ _ . . . , . - -

.

CRYPTOQUOTES

ARE I{OU 601N6
.OUT TODAI(?

OQCO

'

GLBK

•• •

'992·2342.

.,

IC R
' .
'

.

XQH

CBHRL

BMFLG
.

· BMFLG

IHSOCB

'

KHS

KHS
OQL

•

ILCRLGO

•••

E
IMBBLS
~~,
IF YOU CAN'T GET HALF A LOAF,
TAKE A WHOlE ONELA WHOLE LOAF IS BETI'ER THAN

"

.

•• I
•'
•

.,

WRHXR •

.• CrypU;q.-..

NO BR)i:AD.-JOSH BIWNGS

,

1:06-DaysoiOur Llves3,15; All My
Children 6.13 ' Young II. the
Restless 8,10.
·
2:~Doclors3,15 ; One Life to Live
6,13; As The World Turns 8, 10;
2:25-News 17.
2: 30-Another
World
3,15;
Glgglesnorl Hotel 17.
3 : ~General Hospllal 6,13; 1 Love
Lucy 11; French Chef 20.
3 : 3~Fiintslones 17; French Chef
20; Over Easy 33 .
4 :00- Mister Cartoon 3; Merv
Griffin 6 ; Petticoat Junction 8;
Sesame St. 20.33; Real McCoys
13; Little rascals 15; Spectreman
11 .

4: 3()-Lone Ranger 3; Gomer Pyle 8;
Brady Bunch 10; Tom 8. Jerry
13; Merv Griffin 15; Gilligan's Is.
17.
5: ~Carol Burnell 3; San lord 8.
Son 8; Mary Tyler Moore 10; My
Three Sons 17; Mister Rogers'
Neighborhood 20,33.
5:30-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 : ~News 3,8,10,13,15 ; ABC News
6; Carol Burnett 17; 3-2-1 Contact

20,33.

- gnat

LimestOne for driveways.
Pomeroy-Mason area. 367·
7101.

Under

Arm s" 17; EleC. Co. 20,33 .

6£~".,"
by THOMAS JOSEPH

.·CALL ·. 992-2342
HN~1
...... __________

.CAll ut. ·

Soulb

1+

'

•

+6

+10 95
~A

UNITED
II ~ANNIE IEE15 LOOK KIND
STATES
THE MAN 'HHO
OF "'IUttS 6ENA10R? I
T'8E A... CAN'T HE!.P
WILL ESCORT
THAT, I'M
HER BACK TO
AFRAID ...
THE UNITED
STATEs ...
-GEE YOU

Alan: "There is very little
to the play at six clubs. South
wins the diamond lead in
dummy, leads a trump to his
king to find out that trumps
are not going to break worse
than 3·1 and then plays' two
rounds of spades . With spades
breaking 3·2, there is no need
t o take the nearly certain
heart finesse ."
Oswald: "The problem with
this hand is how to find the
club slam. Some pairs would
not even get to game. Others
would land at four spades."
Alan: "The bidding in the
box is elegant. South decides
to show his good four-card
club suit. North repeats his
cue bid to show first-round
diamond control. South rebids
his spades. North raises clubs.
South cue bids in hearts, and
North considers bidding a
grand slam but wisely settles

NORTH
3- 17-80
.A2
.QJ 5
t A 10 7
+AH 32
WEST
EAST
.109 ,
.KQ6
• 98 76
.K 10 43
• Q 6 52
+KJ981

DCMNINGQtiLDS AGENCY INC.

. Hay F., Sale eoc per bale
Candtllver. 843·2795.
;

2 : ~News

13; 3:05 - Unlouchables
4:0s-&lt;&gt;pen Uo 17

Cue bidding locates slam

mo.

·-----------~

MIXed Hay, 60c a bal •. 992·
3981 .

Movie "Three Cheers for the
Irish " 17.

Treasure Island" 17 ;

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

'ttl -~flll/1

7:3()-That Nashville Music 3; Solid
Gold '79 6; Joker's Wild 8; Dick
Cavett 33; Family Feud 10,13;
Nashville on !he Road 15; All In
The Family 17 ; MacNeil-Lehrer
Report 20.
8 : ~Little House on the Prairie
3,15; Thai' s Incredible! 6,13;
WKRP In Cincinnati 8,10 ; James
Michener's World 20.33; Movie
" The Macomber Affair" 17 .
8:3~L.ast Resort 8,10.
9 : ~Bob Hope 3,15; Family 6,13 ;
Mash 8; American Short Story
20,33; NIT Basketball 10; 9 : JI)House Calls 8.
IO : ~Tom Snyder 3.15; Slone 6, 1:1:
Lou Grant 8; Big Battles 17.
IO ::JG-News 20; Synthesis 33.
11 :00-News 3,8,6,10,13,15; Last of
the Wild 17 ; Dick Cavell 20;
Family Towers 33.
11 : 3~Tonlghl3 , 15 ; ABC News6,13;
Harry 0 8; ABC Captioned News
33; Movie " Hurry Sundown" 10:
11 :45-Barney Miller 6,13; 12 :20Pollce Story 13.
1 2 : 4~McC i oud 8; 1 : ~Tomorrow
J; News 15; 1:3~ News 17.
:35-Movle "C harlie Chan at

BRIDGE

G111eral Hau11111
WILL HAUL. llmlttone and
gravel . 'Also, lime hauling
and spreading . Leo Morris
Trucking . Phone7~2-245$.

HAYES

LATEST JERSEY

Moadav. March 17

15

RENT OR IUY - YOU PAY
YOU OCCUPY.
- Commercial office building, on
center Of town. Fully rented. A good

.

~-2 ; 1

New

WE HAVE FINANCING AVA.LABLE .
AS LOW AS 5% DOWN AND 30 YEARS
TO PAY, ON MOST HOMES.

SUAVE

Jumble Book No. 13,cont•lnllli 110pua~a,la aullablalor 11.75 po1tpald

ASk FOR DAVE

Rewind and Repair electric
motors. W!ll make service
calls. 992·2356.

REAL ESTATE

I IJ

I rom Jumble, Clo thll n1wapaper, BoM34, Norwood, N..J. OT648.1nclu&lt;Myour
name, ad. .aa, zip code and mttla ch.cka pa.,abla to Newapaperbooke.

CALL 992:3238

Electrical
&amp; Relrldptrallon

SEWING
MACHINE
BOWERS
Repairs, s•rvlce, all ELWOOD
REPAIR
Swttpers,
makes . 992· 22U . Tht
Fabric Shop, Ppmeroy. toasters, Irons, ell small
Authorized Singer Sales appliances. Lawn mower.
and Service. We sharpen Next to State Highway
Scissors.
1 Garage on Route 7, 9853825.

rI 1 I

Answer: What he said wh en he fmall y achieved
success in the ·shoe bus!ness ~ AT " LAST "!

~ou

M

form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon .

(Answers tomorrow)

littn In 'ualnear
For5Yeua

3·12·1 mo.

2·18·1 mo.
Electrical

AND llON'T
· INT!RFS!Ul

~-

992-3795
.2-~Hmo: ·

TO YOUfl!

Now arrange the circled letters to

01

OF MY WAY··

ADD ONS ;;
REMODEuNG

UPHOLSTERING

&amp; Refrld~ratlon

DIBOUT

THEN GeT OUT

~I!T

B!!
PUT it-l A ZOO'f
--NO THANIC~ l

We Do lbfq,
Gutten and
..
Remodalil&amp;
"FR£E ESTIMATES"

A&amp;H

M

ANI:&gt;

C~AUPIA

Prlnr answer here:

•.. 1 Midi It Myiolf"

Pomeroy, Oh.

CAPTAIN EASY

Saturday's! Jumbles: AORTA

H&amp;R BLOCK OFFICI LOCATION.

approx.

li' 6ENEI\'Al..LY
MEANG NO WO~K ,
THOUGH WE CAN 'T
E!IANI&lt; ON rT.

KJ I

No Surld6Y Calls

CALL 992-7544

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

TUPPERS PLAINS - 3
yrs. old, large moden
kitchen, large garage
with workshop area,
separate utility, ·wood·
burner, one acre. Good
c;ondltlon. Should sell
fast . $34,900.00.
IN TOWN - l'h story, 2
bedroom house, lull
basement,
fr•ahly
pointed
throughout,
aluminum oldlng, porch
with wrough' Iron rail·
lng, neat at $25,000.00.
STOP PAYING lt&amp;NT
·Let someone elM
make your house pay·
ment lor you. Large
brick aparlment h~se
In Syracuse. Live in par.t
and rent part. $28,000.00 . .
L.OCALL. Y OWNED,
FUL TIME, PROPES·
StONAL
lEAL.
ISTATE SERVICE.
OfiiN FRIDAY TIL I .
REALTOR
Honry E . Clelalld, Jr.

Federal Housing a
Veterans Admin . LCNIM .

,Tri-County
Bookkeeping
Service

-·~~

$5,600.00.

bedroom ranch,

REAL STATE
F'NANetNG

KNABIG

· Pll. 949-2801

2-24-1 mo.

oo-tfc /

HOBSTffiE
REALTY
STARTER HOME Cozy 2 bedroom In Tuppers Plains . Nice
gorden spot. Only
$23,000.00.
MIDDLIPORT
Large 2 story home. 5
bedrooms. living room,
dining room, family
room, mOderr'l kitchen, 2
full baths and base·
mont. ShOwn by oppt.
CHESTER
3
bedroom, living room,
dining room, kitchen
with garbage disposal
end radar range, Family room has fireplace.
Nice lot . Sells for

0.

Ro&amp;er Hysell

Real Estate- General

11rge

II I

PAYING
'20.00 AND UP
FOR
'SILVER

Frlf lsllmttts
Rtesanabll Prices
Call HOWII'd
M9·2N2
1-11-Hc

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992·2772

and

Will do odds and ends,
paneling, floor tile, and
ceiling llle. Call Fred
Miller, 992-6338.

All types root work, ntw
or rapelr guttert tnd
downspouts,
gutttr
cl1anlno 1nd- ptilnllng.
All work gu1rantted .

• lnsullllon
·••mDOors
• Slorm Wlmlows
• Rtplactmlnt
Wlndqws

Vans-.4 W. D,
1979 Ford 150 •x~. auto., . CARPENTER WORK . p.s., p.b., topper. Positive complete remodeling by AI
traction fronf and rear . 985· Tromm , 742·2328. References.
4339.
73

H. L WHITESEL
ROOfiNG ·

Television
Viewing
MONDAY, MARCH 17,1980

OINES

·•

r-'-::J,.,. . ,&amp;L ~BLOW~N--.

~ THAT SCRAIIIILED WORD GAME
byHenriArnoldandBobLee

1. .-~LL
- . . _P

2779.

76 Monzo 4 cyl., 4 speed, 2
snow tires Included. 59,000
miles. 992·7060.

6-462.

RENTER 'S IISIStance for
Senior Citizens In Village
Manor apls. Call992·7787.

'• , ., • ., '

Wanted : Flghers·Brawler·
s, win 150,000. 30&lt;-:145·8103
Mon. lhru Fr i. 10 a .m. to 5
p.m.

OLD COl NS, poeket wit·
ches, clus rings, wedding
bonds, diamonds. Gold or
sliver. Call J . A. Wamsley,
7&lt;2·2331. Treasure Chott
Coin Shop, Athens. OH. 592·

3 AND 4 RM furnished apts. Phone 992·5434.

Miscellaneous

,'

62

..
. "' ...' .......

and earn good money plus
some great gilts as a Sen·
tlnel route carri@r. Phone
us right away and get on
the eligibility list at 992·
2156 or 992·2157.

Salt or Trade: M Corvette
Strlngroy Convertible.
$3.800. 1973 Monte Carlo,
runs good, $700. 949·2125.

lppreclate

as a young business person

exp. necessary . Send for
application report, W. L.
Ohlinger, W. Columbia, w.
Va . 25287.

and

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

Property for sale. Over 3
. acres of wooded land In
Pomeroy . Only $7,000. Call
9'12·3886.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Horses

ponies. Ruth Reeves. 61&lt;·
698·3290 . Bordlng and
Riding Lessons and Horse
12x60 Mobile Home, 2 Care products. Western
bedroom, good cond. Can ' bOOts. Children's $15.50.
rent lot or move. $5,000. Adults 129.00.
7&lt;2·2898.
RISING STAR Kennel.
Boarding. Call367·0292.
33
Forms lor Sale

basement, buildings, born,
some timber, all mineral
rights. $77,000. 9'12·7559.

76

PHONE 742-2003

1971 12x65 Trailer, com·
pletely furnished, A.C.,
very good condition . On a
lot that can be rented.
Ready to move· Into. $6500
firm . 992·5304.

36 acres farm with 9 room
11!:~
story house, full

9

food, and all types of salt.
Excelsior Sell Works. Inc .,
E. Main St .. Pomeroy, 9'12·
3891 .

overlooking the Ohio River .
After 3:30 p.m. call 247·
2032 .

742-2648.

8

dog

Decorated cakes tor all oc·
caslons. Character cakes
and sheet cakes. Call 992·
63&lt;2 or 9'12·2583.

~ ·-- ~._ , ,

~

fertlllrer,

Autos tor Sale

11

ID1t

~ ~ ~~!~h

·~CY

Your Best Buys Are Found in the Sentinel Classifieds
_': .:.: :·: .: :.: :.: .: ;...

ilii~Nl

7-Tbe Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, March 17,1980

6:3()-NBC News 3,15: ABC News
6,13; CBS News 8,10 ; Carol
Burnell 6; Bob Newhart 17; Over
Easy 20 ; Wild Wild World of
Animals 33.
7:oo-cross-WIIs 3; Tic Tac Dough
8; Newlywed Game 6,13; News
10; Love, American Style 15;
Sanford II. Son 17; Dick Cavett 20.
7:3~Hollywood Squares 3; Solid
Gold '79 6; Joker's Wild 8; Dick
Cavell 33; Hollywood Squares
10; Sha Na Na 13; TV Honor
Society 15; All In The Family 17;
MacNeil-Lehrer Report 20.
8:0C&gt;-Misadventures of Sheriff Lobo
3,15; Happy Days 6,13; While
Shadow 8,10; Novo 20,33; NHL
Hockey 17.
8:3()-Laverne 8. Shirley 6,13.
9 : 0D-Big Show 3,15; Three's
Comoanv 6,13; Movie " W.W. &amp;
the Dixie Dancek
Mystery! 20,33 .
9:3G-Taxi 6,13; lO:OQ-Hart to Hart
6,13; News 20; City Notebook 33.
10 :3G-Unlled Slates 3,15; Fight
Against Slavery 17; Over Easy
20; Camera Three 33.
11 :DO-News :1 ,6, 8,10,13 ,15 ; Dick
Cavell 20; Monty Python's ..
Flying Circus 33.
.
11 :3()-llllnols Primary 3,6,1,13,15;
ABC Captioned News 33; Movie
"Woman ol the Y""r" 10; Movie
"AIIectlonately Yours" 17. .
!~ : DO-Tonight 3,15; Movie . "The
King of Marvin Garclolns" 6,13;
1 Barnaby Jones 8.
1: l~vle "Cactus In the Snow" 8;
1:25-News 17: 1:3o-Tomorrow
3; News 15; Movie "Marine .
,
. Raiders" 17.
2:25-News 13; 3:30-Movle "Storm .,

over Jamaica" 17.;
American Style 17.

"

5:35-Love, ~

�8-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, March 17,191ll

Flight from Columbus

Emergency landing S UcceedS
CHARLOTI'E, N.C. (AP) - The
1lf passengers and five crew members aboard Eastern Airlines flight
339 Sunday knew there were
prublems 88 the plane jarred when it
took off from Columbus, Ohio, for
Tampa.
The DC-9 had blown a tire and
what followed W88 a two-hour minidrama that ended at Charlotte's
Douglas Municipal Airport. The
plane landed safely on a foamed runway at 11:33 a.m. 88 d&lt;TZeiUi of
emergency vehicles stood by.
"There were a lot of tight nerves
there for a moment," said Charlotte
Fire Chief J.E. Atkins. "When I

heard the all-dear, that w88 some
nice feeling."
The outer of two tires under the
plane's left wing exploded with an
audible bang 88 the plane lifted off
from Columbus about 9:40a.m.
Capt. John Parker immediately
radioed the Easternpatcher in
Miami and reported the problem. He
then summoned head stewardess
Susan Steegman, whose crew would
comfort passengers during the 01'deal.
Parker first planned to complete
the flight to Tampa. But a vibration
felt in fuselage, later traced to a
piece of rubber trailing from the

Area deaths •••
Willie Robert Estep
Willie Robert Estep, 50, Maaon,

was dead on arrival at Veterans

brothers, W. E. Brown, Syracuse;
Walter and Woodrow Brown, both of
Route I, Letart; W. Va., and several
grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held at
1:30 p.m. Tuesday at the Naah
Funeral Home in Waterman and
burial will be there.

Memorial Hospital, Pomeroy, Satlll'lay.
.
Born Nov. 19, 1929 in Maaon, Mr.
~tep was the son of the late William
md Mary Young Estep. Also
Harry Swan
&gt;receding him in death was one
lister.
Harry Swan, 93, Portland, died
Mr. Estep was an employee of the
Sunday at Veterans Memorial
Won Auto Mart, served in the U.S.
Hospital.
\nny, and was a soldier in the
Mr. Swan was a son of the late
;aivation Army, Pomeroy Corp.
Levi and Mary Fellows Swan. He
Surving are four brothers, Charles
was a member of the Pomeroy
1., Herman L., and Harry L., all of
United Methodist Church and
won, and George E. of Mcbelonged to the Pomeroy Maaonic
:Onnelsville, Ohio: four sisters,
Lodge, F. and A.M. He retired in
~rs .
Nellie Albright, Mc1964 after serving 42 years 88 a rural
OOIIelsville, Ohio, Mrs. Catherine
mail carrier.
.yons, Wellington, Ohio, Mrs. Leona
Surviving are his wife, Ethel; a
lcCarty, Delaware, Ohio, and Mrs.
son, Marvin Swan, Ceredo, W.Va.;
ennie Neal, Beckley.
two daughters, Maxine Price, Por·
Funeral services will be held
tland, and Mary Jo Maser, Glendale,
rednesday at 11 a.m. at the ChrisCalif.: three grandchildren, Pat
an Brothern Church In Mason with
Price Jordan of Cookeviille, Tenn.;
te Rev. James Lewis officlating. . Marilyn Swan Anderson, Mid·
!ajor Glenna Rummel will also pardleport, and Bill Swan, Ashland,
clpate In the services. Burial wiD
Ky.: three great-grandchildren,
Uow in the Clifton Hill Cemetery.
Kelly and Jodi Jordan and Kristen
rlends may call at Foglesong
Swan: a daughter-In-law, Ruth
Wteral Home in Mason Tuesday
Swan, and sons-In-law, Clarence
om 2-4 p.m. and 7-9 p.m. The body
Price and William Maser.
ill also lie in state at the church one
Funeral services will he held at 1
•ur prior to the services.
p.m. Wednesday at the Ewing
Funeral Home with the Rev. Mark
i'red A. Brown
Flynn officiating. Burial will be In
Fred A. Brown, 73, Waterman, Ill.,
Sand Hl1l Cemetery. Friends may
rmer resident of New Haven, died
call at the funeral home from 7 to 9
mday morning at a hospital In
p.m. Tuesday. Maaonic rites will be
~lb, IU.
conduced at the funeral home at 7:30
Mr. Brown was a son of the late
p.m. Tuesday.
r. and Mrs. A. C. Brown of Letart,
. Va. He was also preceded In
ath by five brothers, Henry, Waid,
EASTERN SPEI J ,ER
C. Brtown, Jess and John and two
Jeff Chevalier, a sixth grader who
lters, Alice and Esther.
will
represent the Riverview
&gt;urvivlng are his wife, Edna: two
Elementary
School in tonight's
liS, David and Joseph of Illinois:
county
spelling
bee at the Eastern
o sisters, Mrs. Edna Clark, Mid·
High
School,
ill
the
son of Mr. and
•town, and Mrs. Louise Huffman,
Mrs.
Lowell
Chevalier
of Reedsvtlle.
tart Route
y_a.; _.tl!ree

Vaughan, Crow, others recognized
(Continued f~m page 1)

.._._
given In lnelllOry ol Orew We...,..,r
for whom the post W88 named, a
brother ol the late Josephine
Webster Crow, by her sons, Robert
and Thcmas Crow.
Ed Van lnwagen and Leonard
Jewell of the Legion, and Frankie
Runnel and Pearl Knapp of the Auzillary, a~ the colors to open
the meeting. The pledge of
allegiance was led by Troy Z~.
and James Gllmore, chaplain, gave

Powell, Mn. ~
Mn.
Gemma Cuel, Mn. Catheriiie
Welah, 111111 Mrl. Veda Devil.
The -plllt COIDIIIIIDder lntrocluced
past . eommattdera, Clarence
SJnnc:hr, Raymund and Leonard
Jewell, Don Henne! Paul Cud,
E1za Gilmore, Jr.,
Jla)'M,
Clarl• Swatzel, Frank VauehiD
and Bob Vaucban. alq with
guests, Mr. IUid Mn. Fred Crow,
Mr. and Mn. ear- Crow, Mr. IIIII
Mrs. Rick O'ow, and Mr. and Mrl.
Kennlt Walton.
The meeting cloled with IJ'OUP
lllnglng ot "Glocl B1eu America"
and "HaPPY Blrtbday." '1bere wu
group singing IUid clanciDi to the
lllllllc ot Armand Turley, organist,
and Mn. Dorothy Jenkins, pianlat.

the Invocation. Josepb Zwilling,
CWIIJIIIIIder,pvetbe weJCQIIII.
Mrs. Gemma ~ lntrocluc:ed the
A111illary guests, an. 1Mrene
Snider, ElChth District pl'llllclent;
Dorta Mowrey, Eighth Dlatrlct
veterans affairs and rehabilitation
chairman; Mrs. Leoon Atkins,
Eighth DIBtrlct Amerlea!!lam c:balrman; and ftlrl. Mary Martin, El&amp;hth
Dlatrict Junior activities chairman.
Past Presidents Introduced were
mrs. Rhoda Hackett, Mrs. lva

K
. n a p p,

dsmaged tire, forced Parker to
abort the flight.
Federal Aviation Administration
(FAA) officials In Atlanta diverted
the craft 70 mlles east to Douglas
because the airport's newest nmway
Is the longest In the area.
In the Douglas control tower, Nick
Susco broadcast the emergency on
pollee radio. "We had no quesUon In
our minds. We rolled 'em," Susco
said rJ. the more than 2ll fire trucks
BRUSHFIRE
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
and ambulances that eventually
The Syracuse Fire Department
Dllcbaqes, March lf
lined the east side ct the runway.
was
called Sunday at 2:50 p.m. to
Carolyn Bush, Wllllam Cade,
Air controller Richard Wentworth
Bald
Knobs to fight a brush fire.
talked the jet ln. He had Parker Lavinia Carper, Charles Caddy, Nine men BliSWered the eall.
make a low pass by the tower, tlltlng · Neal ~ Theta Clark, Zephie
HOSTING II'IRE W I lNG
the plane to one side so officials Conley, Debra Cox, Albert Finley,
Frances Horton, Wayne Jarvia,.
The Mason Volunteer Fire Depart·could assess the damage.
SIGN UP WEDNESDAY
"It didn't look g~" Wentworth James Knapp, Charles Undauer, . ment wW holt the Area Fire and
The
SYJ'ICIIIMt'MIDenvtlle Atbletlc
Alice
Lockhart,
John
McDaniel,
UnEmergency Association at 7:30p.m.
said. One tire was blown and shredwill meet Wed""'''ay
Alaoclatlon
ded, exposing B bare rim that could da McGowan, WlDlam Mullins, Tuesday at the fire station at Mason.
fOI'
lign
up'for
baaebeD IIIII IIOftbaJl
spark and catch fire on landing, "the Johnny Oldaker, Lori Pope, Joshua
illltead
of
Thursday
due to
Quillen, Meli\sa Roberts, James
most imminent danger."
Southern's
game
'l'bunday
ni8bt."
FOX PRESIDENT
Parker told the passengers it Stephens, Sharon Templeton, Jerry
Penona are to ~ at the
A
vonelle
Welles,
Penelope
Waters,
NEW
YORK
(AP) - Norman B.
would be about 45 minutes untu Jan.
Syracuse Fire station w~
'
Levy has been .named prealclent ol
ding - time to bum off some of the Wilson.
fnm 5:1.5 to 6:30 to ligD up. A lhort
2llth
Century-Foz
Entertainment
Blrtlu
13,000 pounds of fuel on board and
Inc.
BIIIOCiation meeting wW take place
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Edward
Martin,
give ground crews the chance to
tiDtll7 p.m.
The
appointment
Wll8
announced
daughter,
Wellston;
Mr.
and
Mrs.
spread foam on the nmway.
FOJ'IIIII will be paged out at
by
Alan
J.
Rlrscliield,
vice
c:balrLarry
Daniels,
deught!lr,
Gallipolis.
Stewardesses told passengers how
Syracuse
Elementary School
Dllcbaqea
March
U
man
and
chief
operating
officer
of
to sit, where the exits were and how
Tuesday.
Parents
must sign the forthe
parent
2llth
Century-Foz
FUm
Doris
Atkins,
Rebekkah
Bowen,
to respond to the emergency.
Corp.
Dill
wbich
are
to
turned
In on WedParker made a -second pass by the De!Ue Caudill, Minnie Denny,
nesday
evening.
tower to check the placement rJ. Marian Eberseach, Tim Green,
foam, which stretched 2ll feet wide Carolyn Hays, Trudy Henry, Johnny
Logan, Michael Marcum, Ruth
and 1,200 feet down the runway.
Miller,
Raymond Mulllns, Mason
The plane touched down In the cenSelb,
Everett
Sharp, Paul Scltes U,
ter of the foam strip, sending up a
(Continued from page 1)
Jeffrey
Swisher,
Diana Wheeler,
Reagan also WOII AWira's GOP
spray that all but obscured the craft
Mrs.
Charles
Williams
and
from view. When the plane emerged
Ford's declsl011 must. have been a eaUIUiel over the weekend, gaining·
Intact from the foam, Wentworth daughter.
"very hard" one, Reaganllald, ad- 108 ot tbe 2tO delegalell to a Illite
Birth
and Susco sighed.
ding, "He wanted to get In, I know convention to 14 fOI' 811111 and 19
Mr. and Mrs. Willard Ross, son,
whole allegiance Ia not lmolm. The
"He greased it," Susco shouted,
that."
Jackson.
grinning. "Super landing. Wouldn't
reaults
of that vote are being
The California governor also hinDllcllarlet, March 11
challenged,
however.
even have made your false teeth
ted that he expects 80011 to have the
James Baker, Robert Barker,
In
Callfomla,
a Illite GOP convibrate."
support rJ. Jobn B. Connally, who
vention
gave
Reagan
110 upected
Buses took passengers from the Bessie Dotson, Audrey Fisher,
dropped out of the race for the
plane to the terminal. Through a Nellie Henderson, Oscar Jorden,
atraw-ballot
victory
ol
821 votes to
nomination after losin&amp; to Reagan In
Betty
Kalinowski,
Mrs.
Jeff
Lenegar
108
fOI'
BUlb
and
84
for
Andenon.
comhilllltion of emtlng and special •
South Carolina.
and
daughter,
Rachel
Little,
Susan
flights, all the passengers were
At 110 appearance In Schaumburg, But that was no real victory In the
home by 7 p.m. Sundey, Eastern Massie, Mn. Mark Rhea and
a questioner asked Reagan if be ex- race fOI' the nominatiM becaWie It
deughter, Gamet Smeltzer, Perlle
spokesman Ed Bennett said.
pected to have Connally's help In the has nothing to do with chooeing
Stonns, Mrs. Edward Martin and
Te:raa primary. "I believe 'Big Callfomla 108 conventloa delegates.
daughter, Stephen stout and son.
Jobn' Is going to cooperata quite They wW be picked In a June 3
SQUAD RUNS
B!rtbll
primary.
warmly," Reagan replied.
The Rutland Emergency Squad
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Brown, son,
was called to Route 1 Rutland at 8:59 Oak HID; Mr. and Mrs. Robert
a.m. Sunday for Helen Long who Rochella, daughter, Vinton: Mr. and
was taken to Holzer Medical Center.
Mrs. Kenneth w.-ler, deughter,
Dexter.
The Middleport Emergency Squad
was called to Beech St. at 10:43 a.m.
Saturday for Patrick Milbom who
VETERANS MEMORW.
Easter's early this year-- April 6! Remember
was inJured In a bicycle accident
Saturday
admlssloDB-Patricla
He was taken to Veterans Memorial
friends and relatives with thoughtful
Roger, Middleport; Harley Roberts,
Hospital.
cards.. .from Hallmark. of. course!
Moundsville; Marilyn Powell,
Racine.
Saturday discharges-Gladys
The Pomeroy Emergency Squad
Spencer,
Flora Friley, Rodney
was called to 127'h Mulberry Ave.,
Spires,
James
Young, Dallas Barat $:56 p.m. Saturday where Robert
ber,
David
Grimm,
Murl Ours, Lois
Estep was ill. He was dead upon the
Schoonover.
unit's arrival.
Sunday admlssl~oan Justis,
Vinton; RG8S Kent, Addlaon; Bessie
Young, Racine; Callie Metheney,
Ewlngton; George Carper,
Pomeroy: Carl Autberson,
Syracuse.
Sunday discharges-Matilda
Rowley, Mary Weaver, Wayne
Gilliand, Stella Smith, Harold Jef·
fers, Laura Coon.

Cban•

WELL PREPARED - These 17 finalists in the annual Meigs County
Spelling Bee held at the Eastern High Scliool Monday night apparently

had done their homework. They spelled for almost an hour and one-half
before a winner emerged. The ftnalists and the school they represented Include: frontrow,ltor, Veronica Provo, Chester Elementary: Lori Louks,
. Eastern Junior High: Jeff Chevalier, Riverview Elementary: Royce
Bissell, Tuppers Plains Elementary: Carol Smith, Bradbury Elemen-

e

Carter, Reagan

ELBERFELD$

Share Easter Joy!

ASK TOWED

VOL. 28,

Ga!Ua-Mason Scout.().Rama held Saturday at the National Guard Armory In Point Pleasant. Pictured
above are Michl King, standing, and Matt Harri.a and
Gary Curtis, seated left to right.

••
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•
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ds.
Another avenue would be to
renovate the present building which
would run as high as $200,000. The
letter advised that since the present
building ill a member of the National
Historic District serious consideration for its renovation should
be given.
The last priority was to demolish
the present building. Council could
possibly secure $235,000 from FHA
for new construction and an EDA 8620 grant in the amount of tso,ooo.
The letter added that demolishing a
structure whicb is a member of the
National Historic District would
seriously jeopardize an FHA loan
application. Council took no action

By The Assoelated Press

Saturdily postJJl closings studied
WASHINGTON -The Carter administration still is considering an
end to Saturday mail delivery as part of Its anti-Inflation strategy, administration officials said Monday.
The proposal, if It ill made by the administration, likely will be opposed bY representatives of rural areas and may have a hard time getting congressional approval.
Postal unions, seeing !he threat of a reduction In jobs, also have opposed the cutback and are expected to lobby Congress on the issue if
the administraation raises thli Issue.

Pickets

~se

five coal mines

FAIRMONT, W.Va. - Roving pickets closed five Consolidetion Coal
Co. mines Monday following reports that miners had lost four more arbitration battles ~o the company.
The action came In United Mine Workers District 31, the scene of
· other wlldcat strikes In recent weeks.
The five mines, apparenUy all located In Marion County, employed
2,000 workers, authoriUea said.
. Conaol,.the nation's second largest coal producer, has dealt swifUy
•with work stoppages this year, relying to a large extent on a landmark
arbitrator's decision that says picketing is an offe!Uie punishable by
flfll.lg.
The disputes have centered at CoiUiOI's Four States mine in Marion
County.

The Farmers.
. Bank
pays ·. high ·.interest
•
on sav~ngs
.

•

.·

Ohio pilot makes force landing
SRREVEPORT, La. - An Ohio pilot made a forced landing on the
belly of his four-seat, single-engine Comanche at a regional airport
Monda)', then walked away unhurt:
l&gt;aVid E. Root of Dayton, said he discovered his plane's electrical ,
system bad falled shortly after he took off from Austin, Texas. He said
he could not lower the craft's landing wheels.
'nil! plane was diverted to the Sbrev.eport airport as the best place
for a · wheels-up landing, he said. But his craft came down and
screeched along the cement runway before officials could lay on a
foam coating 19 make it slick and reduce fire hazards.

Media reps subpoenaed in court case

.INDIAN DANCERS - Pomeroy Boy Scout TroGp
.fll's Order ot the Arrow lndian Dancers entertained

· 1C!1Uta.

parenti·llllj vialtort to the MO-M lleout.().
Rama held Saturday at the Natloilal Guird ,Annory In
Point PJeuant.

.•.

.

OHIO·
.POMEROY,
..
. ': ' ·,

..
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PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

on the building sites and the
proposals.
DISCUSS FINANCES
Council discussed at length the
present financial condition of the
village.
Council asked for a list of outstanding bills and a breakdown of
appropriations to see if it is within
its budget.
Columbia Gas of Ohio informed
council ( by letter) that gas rates
will be increased eight and thirtyfour hundredths cents per 1,000
cubic feet of gas effective April10.
Council 'decided last night to
recommend ·r:ate·-lncre'ii'Ses- to the
cemetery trustees. lt was suggested
that perpetual care of new graves be

tment. The weed killer cost $10.95 a
gallon for a 55 gallon tank. Council
will make a decillion later on the
weed spray.
It was reported that city employes
are parking on the parking lot owned
by Eleberfelds. Council agreed that
city employes are not to use the
parking lot. It was also agre:d to
place a "stop sign ahead" on
Mulberry Heights due to the
numerous complaints regarding
traffic failing to stop at the intersection of Mulberry Heights and
Highland Church Road.
Council also agreed to advertise
for the purchase of a new truck for
the village street department.
MAYOR'SREPORT

given a mandatory increase from
$100 to $200 per year. For those who
do not apply for perpetual care cost
of cleaning lots will be $25 a year. lt
was indicated that bills will be sent
to Jot owners.
An ordinance granting the director of highways authority to maintain state highways inside the
. viuBge corporation was given the
second reading.
Richard Barnhart of SMA
Chemical Corp., meeting with council displayed a first aid kit for the
crosier. The kit equipped costs $88.
Collilcil approved the purchase.
Barnhart also asked if council was
interested in purchashing weed
spray to be used by the street depar-

Steve Hartenbach, meterman,
was aksed to submit a monthly
report of his activities similar to the
one submitted by the Chief of Police.
The report of Mayor Clarence Andrews showing receipts in the
amount of $2,556 for the month of
February was approved.
Mayor Andrews announced that if
dogs and cats are not confined to
owners' property, owners will be or·
dered to court and fined. The
violation carries a $50 fine .
The meeUng was opened with
prayer by Mayor Andrews. At·
tending were Andrews, Jane Walton,
· cjerk: · Betty Baronick, Larry
Wehrung, Harold Brown, Rod Karr
and BiU Young, council persons.

Feds' anti-inflation plans could cost
Ohio $50 million in revenue sharing

ELBERFELDS IN POME·ROY

•

enttne

at

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO, TUESDAY, MARCH 18, 1980

NO. 236

By Katie Crow
Pomeroy villllge council members
learpedMonday night three avenues
they could take In securing a new
city building.
A letter from Pamela W. Callahan
and David C. Reiser, architects, was
read to council members regarding
various available ,options.
The letter expjained that council
could pilrchase the former General
Hospital Building and receive FHA
funding for purchase in the amount
ot $235,000. They could also possibly
reclevie an EDA 80 - 20 grant In the
amount.of t5(),00o;'8nd a!!!&gt; come uiJ..
~r the Departme11t of Interior
Historic Preservations grants
jlrogram with.50 - 50 matching fun-

~

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•

•

Options outlined for new City Building

Add it up.
CUB CRAFT - Members of Cub Scout Pack 23$,
ponsored by the Chester, Ohio PI'O, demonstrate
•oodburning and leather craft during the Meig&amp;-

tary: Richelle White, Harrisonville Elementary: Clinton Turner, Meigs
Junior High: back, I to r, Barry Yeauger, Middleport Elementary;
Cheryl Roush, Pomeroy Elementary: Chris Black, Rutland Elementary:
Michelle Barr, Salem Center Elementary; Lori Adams, Racine Elementary, runner-up; Melinda Hill, Letart Elementary, county champion:
Todd Adams, Syracuse Elementary : Karla Smith, Portland Elementary:
Anita Smith, Salisbury Elementary, and Lee DiU, Southern Junior High.

In Pomeroy

~~~·~--"-'"_m•-~-~~m_•_'"_'------~------------------

A 11181Tiage llcnese was issued to
Michael Wayne Branham, 21,
Pomeroy, and Rebecca Lynn Carson, 24, Rt., 3, Pomeroy.

PRESENTED AWARDS - Meigs County Superintendent of Schools
Robert Bowen presented awards to winners of the annual Meigs County
Spelling Bee held Monday at Eastern High School. Receiving a personal
trophy and the traveling trophy for her school was champion, Melinde
Hill, center, Letart Elementary, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Hill,
Racine. Receiving the runner·up trophy was Lori Adams, right, Racine
Elementary, daughter of Roger and Nancy Adams, Racine. Miss Hill will
represent the county at the state contest to be held in Columbus on Saturday, April 19. Pronouncer was Thomas Kelly, Eastern High School
facrulty member, and judges were superintendents of the local districts,
Richard Roberts, Eastern: David L. Gleason, Meigs Local, and Bob Ord,
Southern. Russell Moore of the county office was chairman of the bee.

HAMILTON, Ohio- - Newspaper and broadcast representatives
were subpoe~ed todsy to appear a.t a hearing on a request for a
ch!Jnlle of venue In the second murder trial of a ltamllton man.
The defendant, James u. Ruppert, :tli, is aecused of the slaylngs of 11
members of his family !ll1 Easter Sunday of 1975.
Ruppert, 45, wa, returned Monday from Lima State ltospital to the
Butler County Jail for ~ hearing before visiting Judge A. R09!i
Siverling Of Allhland County: .
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COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Federal anti-inflation plans will cost
Ohio at least $50 million in revenue
sharing funds and could jeopardize
voter approval of a highway bond
issue in June, officials predict.
But the severity of the impact will
not be known until details of the
proposallj are announced, probably
later this month when President
Carter submits a revised budget to
Congress.
Ohio's two-year budget, which

ruiUi through June 30, 1981, anticipated $200 million in revenue
sharing funds, according to William
D. Keip, director of the Office of
Budget and Management.
But the total received could drop
to $150 million under the Carter administration's previously announced
intention to eliminate $1.7 billion
granted to state governments
through revenue sharing.
Ohio's general revenue fund was
already $17.5 million out of balance

at the end of February as a result of
a decline in tax revenue.
But that was an improvement
from the previous three months, in
which the ending negative balances
ranged up to $103 million, tile
Legislative Budget Office said Moodey.
Meanwhile, attempts to balance
the federal budget and certain credit
restrictions could produce an anti·
debt atmosphere that would spell
trouble for the highway bond issue
June3.
The "sense of inflation" and need
for government caution "will make
it difficult to sell" the proposal to the
voters, said Rep. Waldo Bennett
Rose, R-Lima. Skeptical voters may
think the bond issue represents an
' 'Inflationary policy," he said.
Passage of the consUtutional
amendment would allow the state to
issue up to $100 million in bonds
during each of the next five years to
finance road and bridge improvements.
"But I think you can make a case
that it (the bond Issue) is respon·
sible, although not the preferable
way to go," said Rose, the ranking

Chain letter warning issued
Pomeroy. Postmaster James
Soulsby todsy urged local postal
customers not to berome involved in
the mailing of chain letters.
Not only are these letters in
violaUon of federal law, criminal
codes and mail fraud statutes, but
the end result ill that the public ends
up as losers of large sums of moriey,
Soulsby said.
.
· Despite overwheiming odds that
investors will berome losers instead
of winners, these illegal chain letters
continue to surface.
The latest variation, known as the
"business concept list" or simply
the "llat" has been oper:tting In Ohio
as well as Oregon and Washington,
the postmaster reports.
The chain requires a participant to
buy two copies of the letter for $100
In cash. The buyer gives $50 of the
total to the person from whom the
letter was purchased and' sends the
other too to the flrst person at the top
of the llat.
The top name Is then crossed off
and the buyer'~ name ill added to the
bottom of each copy before it is sold
again. There may be several
variations to this type of scheme.
Typically, the operators of these,
schemes often control several
nam~.s- on the list but the fact
remains that if no one tampers with
or alters the list, oiuy some 10 out of
every 100,000 pu\'Chllsers wquld ever
win, Soulshy re~ . .
Within a short span of time there
· will be no new ' buyers because the
entire j&gt;opulation of the United
St~tc~ wonld be used up, he wams

Six people in the Pittsburgh area
who were investigated by the postal
inspection service recently agreed
to stop circulaling a chain letter after they were fined under a Pennsylvania state law. Violation of
federal law could result in penalUes
of up to five years in prison, a $1,000
fine of both, Soulsby reports.
Soulsby states that copies of a
chain letter being circulated locally
have been sent to the chief postal inspector and the Attorney General of
Ohio.

Bailey seeks commission nod
J . Otis Ba)ley, lifelong resident of
Meigs County, has filed his petition
for the Republican nomination to
run for Meigs County Com·
missioner, term expiring Jan. 2, ·
1985.

Effective March 31, the combined price of Tbe Dally SeoUuel
aud Suuday 11me&amp;-Senllnel will
be adjusted to $1 a week where
deUvered by youtb carrlen aad
$UO pet month to euatemers served by motor route driven. The
sblgle COllY price wllloot change.
Carrlen 'will •bare a portion of
the increase. Rlsblg coslll of
paper, tran&amp;portatlon and labor
IIUIIIe the adjustment n~ssary.

Clear IUid cold toalgbt. Lowlla the ,
upper ZO.. Sunny IUid warmer Wednesday. Rlgbl Ia the mid to apper
5111. The ebaDce of preclpltatiGD 15
aear zero tonfgllt aad Wednelday.

.l

He is a Jong-tune member o~ the
Racine First Baptist Church. The
family resides on Elm St. in Racine.

Notice to readers

Weather

Bailey was born and reared In the ·
West Shade area near Chester. He Is
a son of the late Forest and
Margaret Fell Bailey. He ill married
to the former Phyllls Bailey of Reedsville and the couple has two
children. TeddY J. and LoisM.

BaUey is a veteran of World. War II
and has been employed for 'J:/ years
with the Pomeroy Cement Block Co.,
primarily in production.
,

GOP member of the House Finance
Committee.
Rose and others had favored a
gasoline tax increase to finance
highway work on a pay-as-you-go
basis, but the Legislature could not
reach agreement on it late last year.
Revenue sharing had "generally
been used very well ... by political
subdivisioiUi and should not have
been the first program hit by the
federal ax, said Rep. William E.
Hinig, D-New Philadelphia.
The Ways and Means Committee
chairman would have preferred the
elimination of other programs imposed by the federal government on
the states, but for which no funding
was provided.
Sen. Stanley Aronoff, R·
Cincinnati, a member of the Senate
Finance Conunittee, agreed.

EXTENDED FORECAsT

,..,.

J. 01'JII BAILEY

Tbanday tbrough· Saturday:
Fair ThUJ'IIday nnd Salnrday with
a clianc~ of lbowen t'riday.
Highs from the 50111n the 1101111 to
tbe lOri In tile aonth Thllnday,
dropping to the ... 'llltarday.
LoW. from the fOs Tllnnday to
tbe 30s Saturday.

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