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                  <text>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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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,
..
. ': ' ·,

..
. ... "

-~ -

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.

�. &amp;-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Mar. 18, 1980

2-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday. Mar. lB. 191!()

Virginia, Gophers advance

The Daily Sentinel
Opinions and comments

nI..I

Sampsoanot ready for pros

Editorial comment

Freedom of
Information

View from the Statehouse
BY: STATE REPRESENTATIVE

RON JAMES
([).PROCOORVILLE,
92ND HOUSE DISTRICT)
The Ohio General Assembly has
acted to place the Highway Bond
Referendum on the June 3, election
ballot.
If approved by the voters, the
measure would amend the Ohio Constitution to allow the General
Assembly to authorize the Issuing of
bonds for the construction and improvement of highways and highway
facilities and the acquisition of real
estate in co!Ulection with such
projects.
l would · like to take this O!"
portunity to answer some questions
about the Highway Bond Referendum. Since the voters will decide the
issue, it is important that they he
well informed.
(Q) Why didn't the General
Assembly go ahead and pass a
gasoline tax increase since it was obviously needed?
(A) There are two reasons: The
first, and most important, is the
current consumer inflation. As
things now stand the top four state
taxes paid by Ohioans go up every
time wages and prices increase.
Sales tax collections increased
38.8 percent between fiscal year 1976
and 1979, Ohio taxpayers paid
S1,427,000,1XJ() in sales and use tax in
1979, that is $142.70 for every man,
woman and child in the state. In 1976
it was $102.83 ... the difference is
basic inflation.
Income tax collections increased

69.7 percent in the same four years
as paychecks went up with inflation.
Ohioans paid $868,100,000 in state income tax in fiscal 1979. That is $86.81
for every person in the state up from
$51.16 in 1976 ... again the difference
is basic inflation.
Corporate Franchise tax is colle0ted on the net worth of corporations
or net income whichever is greater.
The tax collections went up 55.5 percent in four years.
Public Utilities tax is basically
collected on the gross receipts that's the rate we pay for electricity,
gas and phones which have shot up
as the OPEC cost of energy has
fueled inflation. The 1979 utility tax
collections were $358,000,1XJ() up 82
percent over the four year period.
Those four taxes together are tw&lt;r
thirds of all the taxes paid to the
state for the general revenue fund,
what inflation has done in four years
is increased taxes without any actual new tax being passed. The 53.1
percent increase in the four major
sources means that Ohio taxpayers
anted-up over a billion dollars more
($1,120,200,000) to pay their state
taxes in 1979 than in 1976.
The inflation situation in 1980 is
bound to be worse.
As a consequence of this situation
there is understandable and justified '
resistance among all state
legislators to enact any tax increase
unless there is NO OTHER ALTERNATNE. Any other attitude on the :
part of the state lawmakers would
simply fuel inflation- not fight it.
The second reason for not now

passing a gasoline tax increase is
confusion. Throughout the long
hearings in both houses there was
not- and still is not- finn testimony
as to what the state needs to keep the
highways in good repair and to do
the necessary construction and reconstruction. What we did know
specifically was the amount of unmatched federal funds which could
not be used because of lack of state
matching funds, and what wsa
needed to do the matching.
Under such circumstances it was
prudent to try to solve the immediate and speclfic problem protecting Ohio's federal road funds
- and wait for finn details to be
brought to the Assembly if more is
needed for the state hiRhwav
system.
(Q) Isn't the license pte increase
plus the bond issue enough.
(A) State govenunent acts as the
tax collector for the license plate
(registration) fee payments. NONE
of that moneyh is spent by the state- ALL of it goes back to the cities,
counties and townships to be used on
the streets and roads there. What we
knew specifically from those local
govenunents were that their road
funds were broke all over the state.
The Ohio registration fee does not
vary with inflation and hadn't been
changed (except for the $5 local option tax) for over twenty yeal'!l.
There was much pressute to put a
big increase on vehicle registration
and slide the rates up even further
the larger or more eXpensive the
vehicle. Again, this type of fee

Senator Collins ' report...
During last week the Ohio Senate
passed legislation which would
repea l the use of the fuel adjustment
clause by electric companies.
A fuel adjustment clause is a
provision in the rate schedule of an
electric company authorizing it to
pass through or adjust the rate it
charges its customers due to higher
fuel and delivery costs for the electrk company than were anticipated
on and figured into the electric company's last rate increase application.
While Subatitute House Bill 21
would eliminate the fuel adjustment
clause, it substitutes in the place of
the fuel adjll•tment clause a sixmonth review by the Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio.
If the PUCO after reviewing the
electric utility's fuel and delivery
costs during the six-month period
finds that an increase is necessary
for the company, the PUCO then has
the power to order the rate increase.
The. PUCO can act more frequently
than the six-month period if fuel
costs fluctuate 20 percent or more
during the six-month period.
H. B. 21 also makes some major
changes in the way in which utility
companies can calculate their fuel ·
and delivery costs when seeking ·
their readjustment before the
PUCO.
First, the electric company Would
be prohibited from including any
amount of cost of power purchased
from another utility company which
would exceed the electric company's
actual acquisition and delivery cost
calculated for the six-month read·
justment period.
Second, H. B. 21 would set a limit
on the price which a "captive" coal
company could charge the electric
utility for its coal. A so-called "captive" coal company is one which is
owned or controlled in whole or in
part by the electric light company to
which it sells its coal.
In other action last week, the
House of Representatives concurred
in Senate amendments to House Bill
22.

.

H. B. 22 w•)uld require that motor

'

~

vehicle liability insurance companies make available uninsured
motorist coverage if a policyholder
requested it. H. B. 22 would make a
slight change in the current law
regarding uninsured motorist
coverage.
Currently, an insurance policy
cannot be issued unless the policy
provides for uninsored motorist
coverage. The person who purchases the policy, however, does
have the right to reject the uninsured motorist coverage or can
select a smaller amount of uninsuredmotoristcoverage.
What H. B. 22 does is gives the person who purchases an auto liability
insurance policy the option of
choosing the type and amount of
uninsured motorist coverage, rather
than automatically recei\(ing the
coverage and paying for that
coverage unless the person who buys
the policy rejects that type of
coverage.
The Senate-passed Senate Bill '1m
would change the procedures by
which a person is committed to
medical treatment if they are found
not guilty by reason of insanity in a
criminal case. Current law requires
that an individualfOWJd not guilty by

Berry's
World

...

--.....

reason of insanity must be transferred to the Probate Court for
treatment of their mental illness.
What occurs in this instance is a person who, although committing a
crinne, was found not guilty due to
their mental condition is placed in a
mental institution for treatment
rather than given a senf!l"ce for the
crinne which they conurutted.
By being placed under the Probate
Court for treatment of their mental
illness, they are taken out of the
criminal justice system. If they
become "rehabilitated" it is the
Probate Court's duty to release that
individual back into society.
The result of this is that the
Probate Court while discharging its
duty in many instances will return a
hardened criminal who was able to
obtain a plea of not guilty by 'reason
of insanity to the streets without
ever serving a day of hard time in
prison. S.B. '1m would keep the person found not guilty by reason of insantiy under the control of the Common Pleas Court, and would thus
permit that court to provide
criminal sentencing down the road
shJuld the mentally ill person
become "rehabilitated."

As the result of a national promotion by the Society of

system would simply fuel inflation
Professional Journalists, Sunday was proclaimed by Gov.
as automobile prices go up and up.
James
A. Rhodes as Freedom of Infonnation Day in Ohio.
The $10 per year increase was the
Access to public meetings and public documents is obleast we could do and rescue local
viously
essential to the operation of the media. We would ·
road improvements from stopping
like to remind our readership, however, that that right Is .
completely.
not within the exclusive domain of the press-a journalist
Since the proposed bond referenhas no greater right to public infonnation than any other
dum is intended to deal specifically
with capturing existing federal road
citizen.
funds the other state problems of inWith few exceptions, public meetings and public records
creasing costs of road maintenance,
are open to everyone. We would urge the public to exercise
snow-removal, edge-lining and spot
its right to attend and scrutinize.
repairs will not he solved with the
Any freedom always is in danger, because that Is the
two together. The state highway
nature of freedom. One way people may decide against
system carries 60 percent of the
freedom
is by failing to experience it in their lives.
state traffic so paying for needed
In
addition
to the pragmatic and legitimate right of the
repairs and maintenance on that
people to know how their tax dollars are being spent, there
system must he expected to he a conare-perhaps even more importantly-other basic reasons
tinuing problem as inflation continues.
to support the public's right to know.
(Q) What's so important about
Once one accepts the premise of the Declaration of Inthose federal funds?
dependence-that governments "derive their just powers
(A) First, they're important
from the consent of the govemed"-it follows that the
because they are our own dollars.
governed must, in order to.exerclse their riRht of consent,
The federal government collects
have full irifonnation of government activrty in order to
over $300 million a year from Ohio
fonn individual and common judgment.
road users and then gives part of it
The reasons which make open access to public inback - usually less than $250 million
•
fonnation
essential for an intelligent individual ju&lt;Wnent
per year - for the state to use on the
"~
likewise make it imperative for rational social and
state highway system (federal aid
political judgments.
roads) providing the state - and
sometimes local - governments
Man in his capacity as a member of society has a right to
t
match the monies according to
share . in the common decisions that affect him. To
•
several ratios depending on use.
•
withhold that infonnation is to elevate the state to a
••
Unless we use the funds within set
despotic conunand over him and to place him under the ar••
time limits the feels take our money
bitrary
control
of
others.
.
'
back and give it to other states to use
One of the corruptions of power is the desire to suppress
on their roads. It is the usual form of
infonnation
''for the public good."
.
·
pocket-book pressure which allows
Such
suppression
makes
rational
judgment
impossible;
·
the federal government as a tax
because it prevents society from adjusting to changing circollector to enforce federal
cumstances or developing new ideas; and because supprograms.
Second, Those federal funds
pression conceals the real problems confronting a society,
(about $450 million now avaltable)
diverting public attention from the critical issues.
get used on the heavily traveled
roads and expressways in the state.
Because road transportation is
essential to both work trips and
freight transfer It is those very roads
which are vital to keeping jobs and
industry in Ohio.
Third, the conclusions are obWASHINGTON (AP) Phil ferent. There, 32 percent of , the
vious:
Crane likes to say, "lf you're looking voters said Reagan's age made him
- It makes no sense to give our
for a younger Ronald Reagan, here I less able to,handle the job, .while 56
.own money away.
am."
percent said it made no difference.
-Our state highways need the conUnfortunately for the 4~year-old
In each state, Reagan rolled up big
struction work involved.
· llilnoill congreasman, the GOP rankmargins among thoae to whom his
- It takes one state dollar to use
and-file doesn't seem to be looking age Is Irrelevant.
three or more federal-aid dollars, so
for a "younger" Ronald Reagan.
He took that group by a 113-15
the leverage ratio is attractive.
They appear ~ be quite satlsified margin in New Halllpshire, a ..,_22
(Q) What, will the. bond referenwith the genuine ~rtlcle - with all69 edge In · Florida an&lt;l . similar
dum really doH It is passed June 3?
years behind him.
majorities in the other.states.
(A) The shortest answer is that it
The GOP voters In the early
Among thoee RepubUcans who
will protect for Ohio the use of our
primaries don't seem to care much were concetned flbout Reagan',111ge,
own available federal aid road funds
whether the former California Anderson ·· and G.eorge Bush
for 4 or 5 years. That Is likely to he $1
governor is 69 years old or 39. They generally spUt the vote. But ~en ll
billion of federal funds over the
dismiss the repeated suggestion by
one candld8te had gotten all thole
period which will call for something
columnist.s and competitors that votes, lie could not have overcome
like $350 million of bond funds which
Reagan Is just too old for the job.
Reagan's lead among thole .. I'Jho
will be needed at a rate of $100
A majority of the GOP voters In bru.lhed aside his age. ,
million or so a year.
five of the recent primaries said
And how did Crane do In his effort
(Q) lf that level of bonding likely
Reagan's age made no difference In to be the younger ReaP,~~?
to be dangerous to the state's credit
their judgmellts of his abllltiei! to
He 11ot the vcMilli only 2 pea;cent
or ablllty to pay?
handle the presidency, Associated of the Republicans In New ~
(A) As things now stand bonds are
Press-NBC News polls in those . pshlre, Massacbl!ietts and Floflda
to be paid for with one cent of the
states showed.
who laid Reagan ~ too old to: be
state gasoline tax plus the state's
Of course, Reagan doesn't get the
president.
truck tax (axle mile tax which
votes of those who think his age Is a
collects 2 cents per mile per 18problem. But that group generally
wheeler for miles traveled In Ohio).
has been so small that .tt reaiiJr
Those two together produced $109
hasn'thurthlm.
million last million. With gasoline
All of this could change, as the
Use down about 5 percent and truck
nominating process drooes along,'
travel up 4 to 5 percent, the conmoving Into the Midwest this week.
Today Ia Tuelday, March 18,-~ .
servative estimate is that the InAn incident that hlghllghts the 78th day !1. 19110. Tbere are 2111 days · '
come will level out at $103 million or
drawbacks of an older president cr leftlntheyear.
·
so.
some other event could swing perToday'shi8NigbtinblstAiiry:
The current highway bonds out..
ceptiOIJI! aroWJd before the conOn Ma~ Jl, .!??~, .~.~~
standing require fT3 million a year
ventionfourmonthaaway.
.
W~ and pll' reve!J......IIL&lt;1 '
to pay off both Interest and principal
But thus far, tile "age issue" ju8t ann,y toot control li Bostoa ~
.:. and tills reduces each year.
hasn't been an issue.
. . forclilg ~tile 8ritilll: ·
So, we have f30 milllOI) a year in
In Florida, ·ror el18111[1le, -64 pej..
on thla date: · "· '
WJused bond resource which Is
cent
of
the
GOP
voters
said.
,
In
1187, inore tbaa toO people, ;
adequate to support the 26-year bonReagllll'S age · didn't make a dH· IDOIIt ol tbenl clllldfen, died in a pa !
ds at $350 million or more even If inference.
Fifteen percent~ his age exp!OIOO ID a New IAIIdoa, ·Tau, \
terest rates are above 7 percent for
made
him
less able to haDdle tbe .· il6booL ,
,
!
state bonds.
presidency,
but
14
percent llllid it·
In
18118,
HA!will
'became
tbe
10th
l
Further;. cl COUI'Be, the bond
made
him
more
able.
The
rest
were
•
state.
~
.
--·!:_
•
.
~
n!ferendum requires the General
no€
sure;
·
.·
.
.·
·
ln
1&amp;
a
&amp;Wiet:mr
fatee,offlcer
·
1
Assembly to approve. iSsuing each
Republican
voters
in
New
Ham,
1;1ecame.
the
lint
.to
'Wilk
In
\
Increment of bonds each lear so the
~. Soutli Carolina and Geoqla space.
' 1' '
'
•
' ••
!
situation ean not get out of hand.
eXp.
essed
very
Bimltar
opinions.
In
li'Tf,
lbe
Nldel~
oil;
. It is not a proposal which jeoparOtily In l'tJusachlllletts, where l prodljclnllltat., aclllt UbJa !'.1111 .
dizes either the state's credit or
~san came in a very cllille third, Syria, ended tbelr oil ~
ability to pay.
tile pattern ev\n slightly dif· -~ tbe tJidted lllallf,' '
·~ ·

..

NEW YORK (AP) - Ralph SamJII!OII. probably the most sought-after
high school basketball player slnc.e
Wilt Chamberlain, says he ill n&lt;t
rea"y to forego his final three years
of college ball for the pros.
The 7-foot-1, 21~pound Sampson
led the Virginla Cavaliers into the
final of the National Invitation Tournament, ~ring 26 points, grabbing
15 rebounds I!Jid blocking four shots
Monday night In a 9().71 victory over
Neva~-Las Vegas.
Sampson bas averaged 14.6 points
and 11 rebounds with the Cavaliers
this season, and he has blocked 155
shotaln33games. His statistics have
lllii1ed interest in the front office of
the Boston Celtics, who would like
him to go hardship and tum pro.
"I haven't established anything
about turning pro yet," said the I~
yeaMld from Harrisonburg, Va. "I
know I'm not physically ready, and
I'm probably not all the way
emotionally ready for the pros."
With Virginia tied 35-35 at the half
with Nevada-Las Vegas in the NIT
semifinals, Sampson led a surge that
gave Virginla a l~polnt lead. Sampson scored nine points as the

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - An elite
what is expected of me - I have to
crowd stood around the batting cage
show that I can make contact off the
·watching John Hale stroke ball after
bench (as a pinch-hitter)."
The 26-yeal'&lt;Jld Hale hit .321 and
ball over the right-field fence - Ted
Kluszewskl, Johnny Bench and
.340 in 1976 and 1977 at Albuquerque,
Manager John McNamara.
N.M. But each time he was called up
Hale, a tw&lt;rtime loser with the Los
by the Dodgers, he flunked out. The
Angeles Dodgers and Seattle
first two seasons at Seattle, he hit
.171 and .222.
Mariners, is making what may be
his last attempt to play hig league
Now he's convinced he's ready to
baseball, this time with the Cinhandle big league pitching, and the
cinnati Reds.
Reds are interested.
"I signed a Class AAA contract
"I've got to think maybe I came up
with the .Reds club in Indianapolis
a little early. I wasn't mature
with the understanding that I would
enough to handle big league
come to spring training and ~ to pressure," he said. "I know I'm a
make this club," Hale said. "I know
good ballplayer - if I can hit .340 in
,__ _ _...;,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,
..
.,

,

Today's

Sports World

•

Crane younger Reagan

.

Today•••
in 'history:

~

waa .

t

~

--------------------"""'~
By Will Grimlley
AP Correapoodent

"'
Mixing
booze and baseball
.
.

Booze and baseball- mix 'em and

weep.
That's the sermon big Don
Newcombe is carrying to the ears of
every major llll!gue player willing to
listen in a baseball-sponsored tour of
ail the training camp9 in Florida,
Arizona and California.
"Not .ju8t baseball - booze and
any kirid cl business don't mix,"
warns the gargantuan fanner pitcher of the old Dodgers, both
Brooklyn and Los Angeles variety.
"Nobody knowa that better than I
do."
The 8-foot-4, 20-pound onetime Cy
Young winner is like a bamstonning
evangelist a.s he moves from one site
to another preaching the evils of
Demon'Rwn and other spirits.
;;I was a wlld one In my day," he
recalls. "S.ome people are
sopbistlcated drinkers. Some just sit
and soak up the stuff. others get
belligerent. Me? I was just a damn
drunkard.
"I never wanted to go home after a
· ballgame. I wanted to go some place
and live it ·up. I was a happy-g&lt;r
lucky, free-wheeling drunk. I was
heavy On both booze and broads.
"It shortened my career. It
bankrupted me in business. Worst of
all, it fllnKist broke up IllY home. My
llllllTiai!e at one time hung by a very
slender thread. I amJucky my whole
.Ute wasn't ruined."
Newcombe managed to right hlm8elf before tragec!Y struck and, as a
result, became . one of ·the most
mwtant spokesmen against alcohol
abuse in bllseball or any other endeavor. ,.
At tJie baseball winter meetings in
Hawaii I iJt 1977 he niade a presen- ·

tation to te8m physicians. Dr. F~ank
Johe, renowned orthopedic surgeon
of Los Angeles, was so impressed
that he persuaded the Dodgers to set
up an Alcoholic Rehabilitation
. Program. Assistance was provided
by the Union 011 Co.
News of the good work achieved in
. the Dodgers' program reached the
office of Commissioner Bowie Kulm
in New York. Kuhn named Newcombe a consultant to work with Leslie
c. Gray, a staff member of the
National Institute on Alcohol Abuse
and Alcoholism in Washington, D.C.
Newcombe and Gray made their
first tour of the spring training camps two years ago, appearing before
25 of the 26 clubs.
Only the New York Yankees were
missed. "Billy Martin didn't want' us
to appear,'' Newcombe said.
The pair gave its message to the
world champion Pittsburgh Pirates
in Bradenton, Fla., Moodily and
closed the Florida portion of the tour
in the camp of the Boston Red Sox
today in Winter Haven.
Then it's off to the West where this
time they may find lltUe objection
from the subdued Martin, new
manager of the Oakland A's, Billy
announced to the world last week
that he Is off the juice for a month . .
"This will be good for my health,"
said Billy.
~
The erusade is already reaping
dividends. Bob Welch, one of the
Dodgers impressive young pitchers,
took a treatment over the winter In
Arizona. A couple of weeks ago
Newcombe was asked to rescue a
former pitcher who had locked himself In a room and was reported
"drinking himself to death."

··

'mu

Illinois. Darryl Mitchell hit two free
throws with 14 seconds remaining to
provide Minnesota with it's final
margin.
" We watched the Minnesota game
real close," Cavaliers Coach Terry
Holland said. "I marked down the
score when Breuer came into the
game. I tl\ink it was 1~ (in favor of
Illinois). Even when he didn't get the
rebound, he had a hand on it."
When Breuer came off the bench,
Gophers Coach Jim Duteher was
able to move his top scorer, 6-11
Kevin McHale, to forward . . That
gave Minnesota plenty o.f height on
the front line with the other forward,
Gary Holmes, going&amp;-10.
"Their height will present some
problems for us," Holland said.
Asked if he would. compare Minnesota with big and burly Atlantic
Coast Conference foe Clemson,
Holland said: "Minnesota looked
more like the Russians tonight.' '
Breuer scored 13 consecutive points for Minnesota over a span of six
minutes in the second half, all from
the inside and the foul line, as the
Gophers battled to take a four-point

Hale striving to make Reds' bench

:

Washington today

Cavaliers outscored the Runnin'
Rebels ~10 and took a ~5 lead
with 13 minutes left in the game.
Jeff Lamp, a 6-6 swingman, had
seven points in the surge, and wound
up with game honors at 30 points.
Michael Bums led Nevada-Las
Vegas with 20 points.
"We work well together," Sampson said of he arid Lamp. "We
move well. He gets the ball to me
when I need it, and I get It to him
when he needs it.
"We had to get out and establish a
lead in the second half," Sampson
said.
With the victory, Virginia, 23-10,
earned the right to face Minnesota,
21·10, in the NIT final Wednesday
night. Minnesota edged Illinois 6&amp;-6:1
in the first game of the semis.
Illinois, 21-13, and Nevada-Las
Vegas, 2J.8, will meet in the consolstion game preceding Wednesday
night's final.
Another big freslunan, 7-2 reserve
center Randy Breuer, was the key to
Minnesota's..victory. Breuer scored
24 polnta and grabbed nine reboiUlds
as the Gophers held on · to beat

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Herman Grate

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Mascin, w. Va;
oJ. .

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COLUMBUS. OH IO !AP) -· The
Associated Press· 1980 Ali ·Oh io
Class AA high school girls basketball selections, made with the
recommendation s of a statewide
panel of sports writers and broadcasters:
FIRST TEAM - Barb Sturgeon ,
Navarre Fairless, 5-foot -4 Sr ., 21.4
points per game; Sue Wise, Chagrin
Falls, 5·10 Sr., 22.9; Francine Lewis ,
Mansfield Malabar, 6-1 Soph ., 24.5;
Diana Swearingen, Martins Ferry ,
5-10 Sr , 16.4; Beth Rist. Ironton, 5·
J lf2 Sr., 14.0; Pam Wi lls, Newark
Licking Valley, Hoot Sr .. 25.9 ;
Miriam Banks, Dayton Dunbar, 5·8
Jr., 16.0; Cathy Smithey, Pem ·
berville Eastwood, 5· 10 Sr ., 21 .1.
SECOND TEAM - Jo Swartz.

Ch committee, aiUIOunced the begin·
ning of the search for Lanham's successor.
Evans noted that at this time the
college is accepting applications for
two separate positions; however,
candidates may apply for both
positions.

Wooster Triway , 6-foot Sr ., 26.0 ;
· ·'
Mary Tonies, Sherwood Fairview, 6- _..
1 Sr ., 27 .0; Ju l ie BelL Rocky River
&lt;1
Lutheran·West, H Sr ., 17 .7: Nancy
Beatty, Warsaw River View, S-11
Jr , 17.9; Debby Lightfritz, Albany
Al exander , 6-foot Sr ., 19 .0; Patricia •.. ~
Stiles, Ashville Teays Va ll ey, 5-9 Sr . , .. .;.,,
24.0;
Kim
Hi ll ,
Jamestown :.-~f.
Greeneview, 6-1 Sr ., 19.0; K r is Watt, ;
Huron, 6-foot Jr., 23 .2.
THIRD TEAM - Oiane Kah le.
Defiance T inora, 5·8 Sr., 15.0; Janet
Ebbeskotte. Delphos st . Jonn·s. 5·4
Sr. , 9.0; Joa nne lneman, Olmsted
Falls, H Soph ., 28.9 ; Lisa Kusz·
maul , Leav ittsburg La Brae, 5-9 Sr .,
23.5; Renee Perdue, Steub enville, 5·
9 Sr .• 20.0; Kama Sharfenaker.
Waverly, 5-8 Sr ., 2~ . 1 ; Teresa
Stonerock, Wi II iam sport Westfall ,
Jr ., 20.0; La uri e Thomsen, Gran ville, 6·8 Sr. , 17.1; Jane H aw1horn,
M iddletown Mad ison, 5·8 Soph., !1 .0 ;
Valerie Green, Cincinnati Wyoming,
5·10 Sr., 16.0.
PLAYER OF YEAR Barb
Spurgeon, Navarre Fa irl ess.
HONORABLE MENTION
Rochelle McKenzie, Warrensvi lle ;
Shannon Hammer , Doylestown
Chippewa; Deann V iebranz, Union ·
town Lake; Amy Bratcher, Navarre
Fairless ;
Colleen
Karnes ~
Strut hers; JoAnn Kor chnak, Campbe l l -Memoria l ;
Sus ie Gordon ,
Magnol ia Sa ndy Valley; Judy Erb,
Uniontown Lake ; Sue Zirafi,
Gi rard; Te'ri Birch, Struthers ;
Karen Welter, North L i ma South
Range ; Dani elle Carson, Petersburg
Springfiel d.
Bec ky Hillyer, Uhrichsville
Claymont ; Jill Roy, Toronto; Pam
Hicks, Dresden . Tri -Valley' Sue
Scott, Jefferson Un ion; Jan M c Cleary, West Lafayette Ridgewood ;
Ter esa
Kastor,
Uhrichsvi li e
Claymon t; Kim Se ich, Carrollton;
Brenda Williams, Newcomerstown;
Mary Ambrose, St. Cla irsville ; Connie Hibbitts, Bella ire.
Lauren Triplett, Ironton ; Teresa
Baumgardner, Rock Hill ; Valerie
Mullins, McArthur Vinton County;
Sarah Evans, Gallipolis Gallia
Academy;
Teresa
Stonerock ,
Williamsport Westfall ; Stephanie
corw in, New Ri chmond ; Lo ri
Perrin, St. Paris Graham; Diana
Brumbaugh, West Milton Milton·
Union ; Liz Hardy , Dayton Oakwood .
Debbie Leffler, Mar ion Pleasant ;
Kethy Hinkle. Sparta Highland ; Pat·
ty McClure, Bloom -Carroll; Toni
Roesch, Columbus Hartley : Molly
McCaughey, Sunbury Big Watnul ;
Karen Cole, Columbus Hamilton
Township .

.f

ATTENTION BOYS &amp; GIRLS
THE PT. PLEASANT REGISTER
NEEDS CARRIERS FOR THE
MASON, W. VA. AREA.
CAU 675-1333
BElWEEN 8:30 AND 5:00.

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" "You people found deductions and ··
redits I didn't know about. I shoul
have come here last year:'
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H&amp;R Block preparers are carefully trained to ask the right questions.
They dig for every hone$! deduction and credit. And they want 10
make sure you pay only the taxes you owe.

BELTONE Consul!l.nt WhO Will be AI :

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H&amp;A BLOC!t

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MEIGS INN. POMEROY,'OHI0-THURS., MAR. 20 .
Anyone who has 't rouble hearing Is welcome to have a hearing test us·
lng modern electronic equlpmeritiO deTermine If, his loss Is one which
may be helped . Some of the c.auses .of hearing I05S will. be explained
and dlagr.ams of how t,h e earworkswlll .be shown,
.
AlSo servlc·e and Repair ·A ll·Makos of Hearing Aids • .
a.tterlesand Suppli&lt; . For All Makes For Sale. ·
. IFYOUCANNOTCOMEIN '
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,
CALL THE HOTEL FOR A HOMf'APPOlNTMENT,
.
PHONE'"l-362'

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ELECTRONIC
HEARING ltSTS
Will Be Given By

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O~~N 'ivt:l~~; I;;t·:;:F!d;~;;~NT ONLY~ .'
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the decision over Campbell.
Randy Stewart, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Roger Stewart, Rt. 1, Middleport, in an exciting bout with
Shawnee's Steve Banik, won over
Banik after three rounds of excellent
boxing. Randy fought in the 14 to 15
year old class.
Receiving silver medals, narrowly
missing the gold were: Rickey
Allen, son of Mr. and Mrs. Douglas
Allen of Rt. I Minersville, lost by a
close decision to Joe Dixon of
Glouster. This too was one of the
most exciting bouts of the evening.
Rickey fought in the 16 to 17 year old
class.
Roger Cottrill of Harrisonville,
fighting in the 18 to 25 year class, after winning the ·first two rounds of
his fight, lost in the last two seconds
of his bout when the referee stopped
the fight as Cotterill was dazed. This
also was near win.

HEARING TEsTs SET
For Pomeroy, Ohio

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·¥11n., Tues., Wed., Friday &amp; sar.

· ··

Rio Grande CollegM:ommunity
College is in the pr:ocess of accepting
applications for the men's varsity
basketball coaching position, recently vacated by Art Lanham.
In addition to the coaching
position, the college also announced
the opening of Ute position of athletic
director. Lanham held both
positions.
Dr. Clyde Evans, provost, and a
member of the college's athletic
council which is serving as the sear-

Hearing .Aid Specialist

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Lewis was worth 24.5 points and 15.2
rebounds.
Second team berths went to J o
Swartz of Wooster Triway, Mary
Tonjes of Sherwood Fairview, Julie
Bell of Rocky River Lutheran-West,
Nancy Beatty of Warsaw River
View, Debby Lightfritz of Albany
Alexander, Patricia Stiles of Ashville Teays Valley, Kim Hill of
. Jamestown Greeneview and Kris
Watt of Huron.
On the third team were Diane
Kahle of Defiance Tinora, Janet Ebbeskotte of Delphos St. John's, Joanne Ineman of Olmsted Falls, Lisa
Kuszmaul of Leavittsburg LaBrae,
Renee Perdue rl Steubenville,
Kama Sharfenaker of Waverly,
Teresa Stonerock of Williamsport
Westfall, Laurie Thomsen of Granville, Jane Hawthorn of Middletown
Madison and Valerie Green of Cincinnati Wyoming.

Applications are being accepted for
Rio ·Grande AD and coach

. Mr. H: W. Mattingly

tilJ .st'AT·t? AREA
'

By GEORGE STRODE
AP Sparta Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Barb
Spurgeon of Navarre Fairless, a first tesm aU-state selection for two
straight seasoDll, is The Associated
Press' Class AA Player of the Year
in high school girls basketball.
The f&gt;.foot-4 senior averaged 21.4
points, six assists and four steals per
game in leading Fairless to 24 victories in 25 games this winter and a
spot in the state semifinals.
She was the only repeater on the
first unit, selected with the recommendatioDll of a statewide panel of
sports writers and broadcasters.
Spurgeon has scored 1,356 points
and ranks as Stark County's all-time
girls career scorer.
Sue Wise, a f&gt;-10 senior from
Chagrin Falls, moved up from the
1979 second team to the No. I squad
with Spurgeon. Wise averaged 22.9
points this season.
Other seniors chosen on the first
team were Diana Swearlngen of
Martins Ferry, a f&gt;-10 senior
averaging 16.4 points; Beth Rist of
Ironton, a Ht senior with a 14-point
norm; Pam Wills of Newark Licking
Valley, a &amp;-foot senior hitting at a
25.~int clip, and Cathy Smithey of
Pemberville Eastwood, a S.10 senior
with a 21.1-point mark.
A junior, Miriam Banks of Dayton
Dunbar, and one sophomore, Francine Lewis of Mansfield Malabar,
also made the first unit. The 5-3
Banks averaged 16 points, while

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,., MAsotf FuRNITURE
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Spurgeon top Class AA
girl eager in s~te

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FOR THE BEST DIALS IN THE

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SHOP
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The Meigs Jaycee Boxers walked
away from the Southeastern Ohio
Golden Gloves Championships with
four gold medals and two silver
medals. The finals, held at the
Jacksonville Trimble High School
Gym Saturday night, turned out to
be a big event with 36 bouts.
Winning gold medals by defeating
their opponents wer'e: Brian Tannehill, son of Mr. and Mrs. Mark
Tannehill, Pomeroy, was matched
with Tony Grubbs in the 10 to 11
class. TBillleshill scored heavily
against Grubbs, Athens, and won the
judge's decision.
Brian Willis, son of Mr. and Mrs . .
Harold Willis, Harrisonville, won
over Bill Russell of Glouster in the 12
to 13 yeaMld class.
James Acree, son of Mr. and Mrs.
James Acree, Rt. 2, Pomeroy,
fought Mark Campbell of Glouster in
the 12 to 13 year old class. Acree won

Gray with 9:20 left.
" I think some of our big people got
tired toward the end," Dutcher said.
"Breuer and McHale weren't
moving as well.''

Gallia 's Sarah Evans Honorable Mention

Jaycee boxing team
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post zmpresszve wzns

MASON FURNITURE

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Class AAA, I can hit .280 or .290 in
the big leagues. And something I've
always prided myself on is being a
clutch hitter."
Hale already has delivered twice
this spring for the Reds. He's been in
three exhibition games as a lefthanded pinch hitter, twice getting
hits and once driving in the gamewinning run.
He was given the supreme test
Sunday when McNamara put him in
against a left-handed pitcher "just
to see what he'd do."
Hale took a called third strike,
which didn't necessarily dash all his
chances of making the club. But it
didn't enhance his position, either.
"Not playing every day the last
couple of years hurt me. I've got to
make up 2'hyears of swings here in
spring training," · he said.
"Realistically, if I fell on my face
this time, I'd have to take another·
look at myself and decide if it's worth itto stay in baseball.
"I can't worry about it now though
-· that's counterproductive. I
worried the last two years at Seattle
and had the two worst years of my
career.
"The Reds need a left-handed pinch-hitter and somebody with power.
I'd like to think I could be a little
small part of the puzzle to make the
picture complete and go to the World
Series with this dub."

lead, 48-44, with nearly 13 minutes
left.
Minnesota never led by more than
three after that, and even trailed 5150 once on a bucket by Illinois' Reno

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THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE
618 E. MAIN ST.
. POMEROYO.
OPEN 9 A.M. TO
6 P.M. WEEKDAYS,
9-SSATURDAY
PHONE 992:3795

2ND a, BROWN ST. ,
MASON, W.VA.
OPEN TUES.
THURS. &amp; SAT.
9AM.·S P.M . .
PHONE 773-9128

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Appointment Available But Not Necessory

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�. &amp;-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Mar. 18, 1980

2-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday. Mar. lB. 191!()

Virginia, Gophers advance

The Daily Sentinel
Opinions and comments

nI..I

Sampsoanot ready for pros

Editorial comment

Freedom of
Information

View from the Statehouse
BY: STATE REPRESENTATIVE

RON JAMES
([).PROCOORVILLE,
92ND HOUSE DISTRICT)
The Ohio General Assembly has
acted to place the Highway Bond
Referendum on the June 3, election
ballot.
If approved by the voters, the
measure would amend the Ohio Constitution to allow the General
Assembly to authorize the Issuing of
bonds for the construction and improvement of highways and highway
facilities and the acquisition of real
estate in co!Ulection with such
projects.
l would · like to take this O!"
portunity to answer some questions
about the Highway Bond Referendum. Since the voters will decide the
issue, it is important that they he
well informed.
(Q) Why didn't the General
Assembly go ahead and pass a
gasoline tax increase since it was obviously needed?
(A) There are two reasons: The
first, and most important, is the
current consumer inflation. As
things now stand the top four state
taxes paid by Ohioans go up every
time wages and prices increase.
Sales tax collections increased
38.8 percent between fiscal year 1976
and 1979, Ohio taxpayers paid
S1,427,000,1XJ() in sales and use tax in
1979, that is $142.70 for every man,
woman and child in the state. In 1976
it was $102.83 ... the difference is
basic inflation.
Income tax collections increased

69.7 percent in the same four years
as paychecks went up with inflation.
Ohioans paid $868,100,000 in state income tax in fiscal 1979. That is $86.81
for every person in the state up from
$51.16 in 1976 ... again the difference
is basic inflation.
Corporate Franchise tax is colle0ted on the net worth of corporations
or net income whichever is greater.
The tax collections went up 55.5 percent in four years.
Public Utilities tax is basically
collected on the gross receipts that's the rate we pay for electricity,
gas and phones which have shot up
as the OPEC cost of energy has
fueled inflation. The 1979 utility tax
collections were $358,000,1XJ() up 82
percent over the four year period.
Those four taxes together are tw&lt;r
thirds of all the taxes paid to the
state for the general revenue fund,
what inflation has done in four years
is increased taxes without any actual new tax being passed. The 53.1
percent increase in the four major
sources means that Ohio taxpayers
anted-up over a billion dollars more
($1,120,200,000) to pay their state
taxes in 1979 than in 1976.
The inflation situation in 1980 is
bound to be worse.
As a consequence of this situation
there is understandable and justified '
resistance among all state
legislators to enact any tax increase
unless there is NO OTHER ALTERNATNE. Any other attitude on the :
part of the state lawmakers would
simply fuel inflation- not fight it.
The second reason for not now

passing a gasoline tax increase is
confusion. Throughout the long
hearings in both houses there was
not- and still is not- finn testimony
as to what the state needs to keep the
highways in good repair and to do
the necessary construction and reconstruction. What we did know
specifically was the amount of unmatched federal funds which could
not be used because of lack of state
matching funds, and what wsa
needed to do the matching.
Under such circumstances it was
prudent to try to solve the immediate and speclfic problem protecting Ohio's federal road funds
- and wait for finn details to be
brought to the Assembly if more is
needed for the state hiRhwav
system.
(Q) Isn't the license pte increase
plus the bond issue enough.
(A) State govenunent acts as the
tax collector for the license plate
(registration) fee payments. NONE
of that moneyh is spent by the state- ALL of it goes back to the cities,
counties and townships to be used on
the streets and roads there. What we
knew specifically from those local
govenunents were that their road
funds were broke all over the state.
The Ohio registration fee does not
vary with inflation and hadn't been
changed (except for the $5 local option tax) for over twenty yeal'!l.
There was much pressute to put a
big increase on vehicle registration
and slide the rates up even further
the larger or more eXpensive the
vehicle. Again, this type of fee

Senator Collins ' report...
During last week the Ohio Senate
passed legislation which would
repea l the use of the fuel adjustment
clause by electric companies.
A fuel adjustment clause is a
provision in the rate schedule of an
electric company authorizing it to
pass through or adjust the rate it
charges its customers due to higher
fuel and delivery costs for the electrk company than were anticipated
on and figured into the electric company's last rate increase application.
While Subatitute House Bill 21
would eliminate the fuel adjustment
clause, it substitutes in the place of
the fuel adjll•tment clause a sixmonth review by the Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio.
If the PUCO after reviewing the
electric utility's fuel and delivery
costs during the six-month period
finds that an increase is necessary
for the company, the PUCO then has
the power to order the rate increase.
The. PUCO can act more frequently
than the six-month period if fuel
costs fluctuate 20 percent or more
during the six-month period.
H. B. 21 also makes some major
changes in the way in which utility
companies can calculate their fuel ·
and delivery costs when seeking ·
their readjustment before the
PUCO.
First, the electric company Would
be prohibited from including any
amount of cost of power purchased
from another utility company which
would exceed the electric company's
actual acquisition and delivery cost
calculated for the six-month read·
justment period.
Second, H. B. 21 would set a limit
on the price which a "captive" coal
company could charge the electric
utility for its coal. A so-called "captive" coal company is one which is
owned or controlled in whole or in
part by the electric light company to
which it sells its coal.
In other action last week, the
House of Representatives concurred
in Senate amendments to House Bill
22.

.

H. B. 22 w•)uld require that motor

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vehicle liability insurance companies make available uninsured
motorist coverage if a policyholder
requested it. H. B. 22 would make a
slight change in the current law
regarding uninsured motorist
coverage.
Currently, an insurance policy
cannot be issued unless the policy
provides for uninsored motorist
coverage. The person who purchases the policy, however, does
have the right to reject the uninsured motorist coverage or can
select a smaller amount of uninsuredmotoristcoverage.
What H. B. 22 does is gives the person who purchases an auto liability
insurance policy the option of
choosing the type and amount of
uninsured motorist coverage, rather
than automatically recei\(ing the
coverage and paying for that
coverage unless the person who buys
the policy rejects that type of
coverage.
The Senate-passed Senate Bill '1m
would change the procedures by
which a person is committed to
medical treatment if they are found
not guilty by reason of insanity in a
criminal case. Current law requires
that an individualfOWJd not guilty by

Berry's
World

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reason of insanity must be transferred to the Probate Court for
treatment of their mental illness.
What occurs in this instance is a person who, although committing a
crinne, was found not guilty due to
their mental condition is placed in a
mental institution for treatment
rather than given a senf!l"ce for the
crinne which they conurutted.
By being placed under the Probate
Court for treatment of their mental
illness, they are taken out of the
criminal justice system. If they
become "rehabilitated" it is the
Probate Court's duty to release that
individual back into society.
The result of this is that the
Probate Court while discharging its
duty in many instances will return a
hardened criminal who was able to
obtain a plea of not guilty by 'reason
of insanity to the streets without
ever serving a day of hard time in
prison. S.B. '1m would keep the person found not guilty by reason of insantiy under the control of the Common Pleas Court, and would thus
permit that court to provide
criminal sentencing down the road
shJuld the mentally ill person
become "rehabilitated."

As the result of a national promotion by the Society of

system would simply fuel inflation
Professional Journalists, Sunday was proclaimed by Gov.
as automobile prices go up and up.
James
A. Rhodes as Freedom of Infonnation Day in Ohio.
The $10 per year increase was the
Access to public meetings and public documents is obleast we could do and rescue local
viously
essential to the operation of the media. We would ·
road improvements from stopping
like to remind our readership, however, that that right Is .
completely.
not within the exclusive domain of the press-a journalist
Since the proposed bond referenhas no greater right to public infonnation than any other
dum is intended to deal specifically
with capturing existing federal road
citizen.
funds the other state problems of inWith few exceptions, public meetings and public records
creasing costs of road maintenance,
are open to everyone. We would urge the public to exercise
snow-removal, edge-lining and spot
its right to attend and scrutinize.
repairs will not he solved with the
Any freedom always is in danger, because that Is the
two together. The state highway
nature of freedom. One way people may decide against
system carries 60 percent of the
freedom
is by failing to experience it in their lives.
state traffic so paying for needed
In
addition
to the pragmatic and legitimate right of the
repairs and maintenance on that
people to know how their tax dollars are being spent, there
system must he expected to he a conare-perhaps even more importantly-other basic reasons
tinuing problem as inflation continues.
to support the public's right to know.
(Q) What's so important about
Once one accepts the premise of the Declaration of Inthose federal funds?
dependence-that governments "derive their just powers
(A) First, they're important
from the consent of the govemed"-it follows that the
because they are our own dollars.
governed must, in order to.exerclse their riRht of consent,
The federal government collects
have full irifonnation of government activrty in order to
over $300 million a year from Ohio
fonn individual and common judgment.
road users and then gives part of it
The reasons which make open access to public inback - usually less than $250 million
•
fonnation
essential for an intelligent individual ju&lt;Wnent
per year - for the state to use on the
"~
likewise make it imperative for rational social and
state highway system (federal aid
political judgments.
roads) providing the state - and
sometimes local - governments
Man in his capacity as a member of society has a right to
t
match the monies according to
share . in the common decisions that affect him. To
•
several ratios depending on use.
•
withhold that infonnation is to elevate the state to a
••
Unless we use the funds within set
despotic conunand over him and to place him under the ar••
time limits the feels take our money
bitrary
control
of
others.
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back and give it to other states to use
One of the corruptions of power is the desire to suppress
on their roads. It is the usual form of
infonnation
''for the public good."
.
·
pocket-book pressure which allows
Such
suppression
makes
rational
judgment
impossible;
·
the federal government as a tax
because it prevents society from adjusting to changing circollector to enforce federal
cumstances or developing new ideas; and because supprograms.
Second, Those federal funds
pression conceals the real problems confronting a society,
(about $450 million now avaltable)
diverting public attention from the critical issues.
get used on the heavily traveled
roads and expressways in the state.
Because road transportation is
essential to both work trips and
freight transfer It is those very roads
which are vital to keeping jobs and
industry in Ohio.
Third, the conclusions are obWASHINGTON (AP) Phil ferent. There, 32 percent of , the
vious:
Crane likes to say, "lf you're looking voters said Reagan's age made him
- It makes no sense to give our
for a younger Ronald Reagan, here I less able to,handle the job, .while 56
.own money away.
am."
percent said it made no difference.
-Our state highways need the conUnfortunately for the 4~year-old
In each state, Reagan rolled up big
struction work involved.
· llilnoill congreasman, the GOP rankmargins among thoae to whom his
- It takes one state dollar to use
and-file doesn't seem to be looking age Is Irrelevant.
three or more federal-aid dollars, so
for a "younger" Ronald Reagan.
He took that group by a 113-15
the leverage ratio is attractive.
They appear ~ be quite satlsified margin in New Halllpshire, a ..,_22
(Q) What, will the. bond referenwith the genuine ~rtlcle - with all69 edge In · Florida an&lt;l . similar
dum really doH It is passed June 3?
years behind him.
majorities in the other.states.
(A) The shortest answer is that it
The GOP voters In the early
Among thoee RepubUcans who
will protect for Ohio the use of our
primaries don't seem to care much were concetned flbout Reagan',111ge,
own available federal aid road funds
whether the former California Anderson ·· and G.eorge Bush
for 4 or 5 years. That Is likely to he $1
governor is 69 years old or 39. They generally spUt the vote. But ~en ll
billion of federal funds over the
dismiss the repeated suggestion by
one candld8te had gotten all thole
period which will call for something
columnist.s and competitors that votes, lie could not have overcome
like $350 million of bond funds which
Reagan Is just too old for the job.
Reagan's lead among thole .. I'Jho
will be needed at a rate of $100
A majority of the GOP voters In bru.lhed aside his age. ,
million or so a year.
five of the recent primaries said
And how did Crane do In his effort
(Q) lf that level of bonding likely
Reagan's age made no difference In to be the younger ReaP,~~?
to be dangerous to the state's credit
their judgmellts of his abllltiei! to
He 11ot the vcMilli only 2 pea;cent
or ablllty to pay?
handle the presidency, Associated of the Republicans In New ~
(A) As things now stand bonds are
Press-NBC News polls in those . pshlre, Massacbl!ietts and Floflda
to be paid for with one cent of the
states showed.
who laid Reagan ~ too old to: be
state gasoline tax plus the state's
Of course, Reagan doesn't get the
president.
truck tax (axle mile tax which
votes of those who think his age Is a
collects 2 cents per mile per 18problem. But that group generally
wheeler for miles traveled In Ohio).
has been so small that .tt reaiiJr
Those two together produced $109
hasn'thurthlm.
million last million. With gasoline
All of this could change, as the
Use down about 5 percent and truck
nominating process drooes along,'
travel up 4 to 5 percent, the conmoving Into the Midwest this week.
Today Ia Tuelday, March 18,-~ .
servative estimate is that the InAn incident that hlghllghts the 78th day !1. 19110. Tbere are 2111 days · '
come will level out at $103 million or
drawbacks of an older president cr leftlntheyear.
·
so.
some other event could swing perToday'shi8NigbtinblstAiiry:
The current highway bonds out..
ceptiOIJI! aroWJd before the conOn Ma~ Jl, .!??~, .~.~~
standing require fT3 million a year
ventionfourmonthaaway.
.
W~ and pll' reve!J......IIL&lt;1 '
to pay off both Interest and principal
But thus far, tile "age issue" ju8t ann,y toot control li Bostoa ~
.:. and tills reduces each year.
hasn't been an issue.
. . forclilg ~tile 8ritilll: ·
So, we have f30 milllOI) a year in
In Florida, ·ror el18111[1le, -64 pej..
on thla date: · "· '
WJused bond resource which Is
cent
of
the
GOP
voters
said.
,
In
1187, inore tbaa toO people, ;
adequate to support the 26-year bonReagllll'S age · didn't make a dH· IDOIIt ol tbenl clllldfen, died in a pa !
ds at $350 million or more even If inference.
Fifteen percent~ his age exp!OIOO ID a New IAIIdoa, ·Tau, \
terest rates are above 7 percent for
made
him
less able to haDdle tbe .· il6booL ,
,
!
state bonds.
presidency,
but
14
percent llllid it·
In
18118,
HA!will
'became
tbe
10th
l
Further;. cl COUI'Be, the bond
made
him
more
able.
The
rest
were
•
state.
~
.
--·!:_
•
.
~
n!ferendum requires the General
no€
sure;
·
.·
.
.·
·
ln
1&amp;
a
&amp;Wiet:mr
fatee,offlcer
·
1
Assembly to approve. iSsuing each
Republican
voters
in
New
Ham,
1;1ecame.
the
lint
.to
'Wilk
In
\
Increment of bonds each lear so the
~. Soutli Carolina and Geoqla space.
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situation ean not get out of hand.
eXp.
essed
very
Bimltar
opinions.
In
li'Tf,
lbe
Nldel~
oil;
. It is not a proposal which jeoparOtily In l'tJusachlllletts, where l prodljclnllltat., aclllt UbJa !'.1111 .
dizes either the state's credit or
~san came in a very cllille third, Syria, ended tbelr oil ~
ability to pay.
tile pattern ev\n slightly dif· -~ tbe tJidted lllallf,' '
·~ ·

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NEW YORK (AP) - Ralph SamJII!OII. probably the most sought-after
high school basketball player slnc.e
Wilt Chamberlain, says he ill n&lt;t
rea"y to forego his final three years
of college ball for the pros.
The 7-foot-1, 21~pound Sampson
led the Virginla Cavaliers into the
final of the National Invitation Tournament, ~ring 26 points, grabbing
15 rebounds I!Jid blocking four shots
Monday night In a 9().71 victory over
Neva~-Las Vegas.
Sampson bas averaged 14.6 points
and 11 rebounds with the Cavaliers
this season, and he has blocked 155
shotaln33games. His statistics have
lllii1ed interest in the front office of
the Boston Celtics, who would like
him to go hardship and tum pro.
"I haven't established anything
about turning pro yet," said the I~
yeaMld from Harrisonburg, Va. "I
know I'm not physically ready, and
I'm probably not all the way
emotionally ready for the pros."
With Virginia tied 35-35 at the half
with Nevada-Las Vegas in the NIT
semifinals, Sampson led a surge that
gave Virginla a l~polnt lead. Sampson scored nine points as the

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - An elite
what is expected of me - I have to
crowd stood around the batting cage
show that I can make contact off the
·watching John Hale stroke ball after
bench (as a pinch-hitter)."
The 26-yeal'&lt;Jld Hale hit .321 and
ball over the right-field fence - Ted
Kluszewskl, Johnny Bench and
.340 in 1976 and 1977 at Albuquerque,
Manager John McNamara.
N.M. But each time he was called up
Hale, a tw&lt;rtime loser with the Los
by the Dodgers, he flunked out. The
Angeles Dodgers and Seattle
first two seasons at Seattle, he hit
.171 and .222.
Mariners, is making what may be
his last attempt to play hig league
Now he's convinced he's ready to
baseball, this time with the Cinhandle big league pitching, and the
cinnati Reds.
Reds are interested.
"I signed a Class AAA contract
"I've got to think maybe I came up
with the .Reds club in Indianapolis
a little early. I wasn't mature
with the understanding that I would
enough to handle big league
come to spring training and ~ to pressure," he said. "I know I'm a
make this club," Hale said. "I know
good ballplayer - if I can hit .340 in
,__ _ _...;,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,
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Today's

Sports World

•

Crane younger Reagan

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Today•••
in 'history:

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By Will Grimlley
AP Correapoodent

"'
Mixing
booze and baseball
.
.

Booze and baseball- mix 'em and

weep.
That's the sermon big Don
Newcombe is carrying to the ears of
every major llll!gue player willing to
listen in a baseball-sponsored tour of
ail the training camp9 in Florida,
Arizona and California.
"Not .ju8t baseball - booze and
any kirid cl business don't mix,"
warns the gargantuan fanner pitcher of the old Dodgers, both
Brooklyn and Los Angeles variety.
"Nobody knowa that better than I
do."
The 8-foot-4, 20-pound onetime Cy
Young winner is like a bamstonning
evangelist a.s he moves from one site
to another preaching the evils of
Demon'Rwn and other spirits.
;;I was a wlld one In my day," he
recalls. "S.ome people are
sopbistlcated drinkers. Some just sit
and soak up the stuff. others get
belligerent. Me? I was just a damn
drunkard.
"I never wanted to go home after a
· ballgame. I wanted to go some place
and live it ·up. I was a happy-g&lt;r
lucky, free-wheeling drunk. I was
heavy On both booze and broads.
"It shortened my career. It
bankrupted me in business. Worst of
all, it fllnKist broke up IllY home. My
llllllTiai!e at one time hung by a very
slender thread. I amJucky my whole
.Ute wasn't ruined."
Newcombe managed to right hlm8elf before tragec!Y struck and, as a
result, became . one of ·the most
mwtant spokesmen against alcohol
abuse in bllseball or any other endeavor. ,.
At tJie baseball winter meetings in
Hawaii I iJt 1977 he niade a presen- ·

tation to te8m physicians. Dr. F~ank
Johe, renowned orthopedic surgeon
of Los Angeles, was so impressed
that he persuaded the Dodgers to set
up an Alcoholic Rehabilitation
. Program. Assistance was provided
by the Union 011 Co.
News of the good work achieved in
. the Dodgers' program reached the
office of Commissioner Bowie Kulm
in New York. Kuhn named Newcombe a consultant to work with Leslie
c. Gray, a staff member of the
National Institute on Alcohol Abuse
and Alcoholism in Washington, D.C.
Newcombe and Gray made their
first tour of the spring training camps two years ago, appearing before
25 of the 26 clubs.
Only the New York Yankees were
missed. "Billy Martin didn't want' us
to appear,'' Newcombe said.
The pair gave its message to the
world champion Pittsburgh Pirates
in Bradenton, Fla., Moodily and
closed the Florida portion of the tour
in the camp of the Boston Red Sox
today in Winter Haven.
Then it's off to the West where this
time they may find lltUe objection
from the subdued Martin, new
manager of the Oakland A's, Billy
announced to the world last week
that he Is off the juice for a month . .
"This will be good for my health,"
said Billy.
~
The erusade is already reaping
dividends. Bob Welch, one of the
Dodgers impressive young pitchers,
took a treatment over the winter In
Arizona. A couple of weeks ago
Newcombe was asked to rescue a
former pitcher who had locked himself In a room and was reported
"drinking himself to death."

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Illinois. Darryl Mitchell hit two free
throws with 14 seconds remaining to
provide Minnesota with it's final
margin.
" We watched the Minnesota game
real close," Cavaliers Coach Terry
Holland said. "I marked down the
score when Breuer came into the
game. I tl\ink it was 1~ (in favor of
Illinois). Even when he didn't get the
rebound, he had a hand on it."
When Breuer came off the bench,
Gophers Coach Jim Duteher was
able to move his top scorer, 6-11
Kevin McHale, to forward . . That
gave Minnesota plenty o.f height on
the front line with the other forward,
Gary Holmes, going&amp;-10.
"Their height will present some
problems for us," Holland said.
Asked if he would. compare Minnesota with big and burly Atlantic
Coast Conference foe Clemson,
Holland said: "Minnesota looked
more like the Russians tonight.' '
Breuer scored 13 consecutive points for Minnesota over a span of six
minutes in the second half, all from
the inside and the foul line, as the
Gophers battled to take a four-point

Hale striving to make Reds' bench

:

Washington today

Cavaliers outscored the Runnin'
Rebels ~10 and took a ~5 lead
with 13 minutes left in the game.
Jeff Lamp, a 6-6 swingman, had
seven points in the surge, and wound
up with game honors at 30 points.
Michael Bums led Nevada-Las
Vegas with 20 points.
"We work well together," Sampson said of he arid Lamp. "We
move well. He gets the ball to me
when I need it, and I get It to him
when he needs it.
"We had to get out and establish a
lead in the second half," Sampson
said.
With the victory, Virginia, 23-10,
earned the right to face Minnesota,
21·10, in the NIT final Wednesday
night. Minnesota edged Illinois 6&amp;-6:1
in the first game of the semis.
Illinois, 21-13, and Nevada-Las
Vegas, 2J.8, will meet in the consolstion game preceding Wednesday
night's final.
Another big freslunan, 7-2 reserve
center Randy Breuer, was the key to
Minnesota's..victory. Breuer scored
24 polnta and grabbed nine reboiUlds
as the Gophers held on · to beat

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Herman Grate

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Mascin, w. Va;
oJ. .

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COLUMBUS. OH IO !AP) -· The
Associated Press· 1980 Ali ·Oh io
Class AA high school girls basketball selections, made with the
recommendation s of a statewide
panel of sports writers and broadcasters:
FIRST TEAM - Barb Sturgeon ,
Navarre Fairless, 5-foot -4 Sr ., 21.4
points per game; Sue Wise, Chagrin
Falls, 5·10 Sr., 22.9; Francine Lewis ,
Mansfield Malabar, 6-1 Soph ., 24.5;
Diana Swearingen, Martins Ferry ,
5-10 Sr , 16.4; Beth Rist. Ironton, 5·
J lf2 Sr., 14.0; Pam Wi lls, Newark
Licking Valley, Hoot Sr .. 25.9 ;
Miriam Banks, Dayton Dunbar, 5·8
Jr., 16.0; Cathy Smithey, Pem ·
berville Eastwood, 5· 10 Sr ., 21 .1.
SECOND TEAM - Jo Swartz.

Ch committee, aiUIOunced the begin·
ning of the search for Lanham's successor.
Evans noted that at this time the
college is accepting applications for
two separate positions; however,
candidates may apply for both
positions.

Wooster Triway , 6-foot Sr ., 26.0 ;
· ·'
Mary Tonies, Sherwood Fairview, 6- _..
1 Sr ., 27 .0; Ju l ie BelL Rocky River
&lt;1
Lutheran·West, H Sr ., 17 .7: Nancy
Beatty, Warsaw River View, S-11
Jr , 17.9; Debby Lightfritz, Albany
Al exander , 6-foot Sr ., 19 .0; Patricia •.. ~
Stiles, Ashville Teays Va ll ey, 5-9 Sr . , .. .;.,,
24.0;
Kim
Hi ll ,
Jamestown :.-~f.
Greeneview, 6-1 Sr ., 19.0; K r is Watt, ;
Huron, 6-foot Jr., 23 .2.
THIRD TEAM - Oiane Kah le.
Defiance T inora, 5·8 Sr., 15.0; Janet
Ebbeskotte. Delphos st . Jonn·s. 5·4
Sr. , 9.0; Joa nne lneman, Olmsted
Falls, H Soph ., 28.9 ; Lisa Kusz·
maul , Leav ittsburg La Brae, 5-9 Sr .,
23.5; Renee Perdue, Steub enville, 5·
9 Sr .• 20.0; Kama Sharfenaker.
Waverly, 5-8 Sr ., 2~ . 1 ; Teresa
Stonerock, Wi II iam sport Westfall ,
Jr ., 20.0; La uri e Thomsen, Gran ville, 6·8 Sr. , 17.1; Jane H aw1horn,
M iddletown Mad ison, 5·8 Soph., !1 .0 ;
Valerie Green, Cincinnati Wyoming,
5·10 Sr., 16.0.
PLAYER OF YEAR Barb
Spurgeon, Navarre Fa irl ess.
HONORABLE MENTION
Rochelle McKenzie, Warrensvi lle ;
Shannon Hammer , Doylestown
Chippewa; Deann V iebranz, Union ·
town Lake; Amy Bratcher, Navarre
Fairless ;
Colleen
Karnes ~
Strut hers; JoAnn Kor chnak, Campbe l l -Memoria l ;
Sus ie Gordon ,
Magnol ia Sa ndy Valley; Judy Erb,
Uniontown Lake ; Sue Zirafi,
Gi rard; Te'ri Birch, Struthers ;
Karen Welter, North L i ma South
Range ; Dani elle Carson, Petersburg
Springfiel d.
Bec ky Hillyer, Uhrichsville
Claymont ; Jill Roy, Toronto; Pam
Hicks, Dresden . Tri -Valley' Sue
Scott, Jefferson Un ion; Jan M c Cleary, West Lafayette Ridgewood ;
Ter esa
Kastor,
Uhrichsvi li e
Claymon t; Kim Se ich, Carrollton;
Brenda Williams, Newcomerstown;
Mary Ambrose, St. Cla irsville ; Connie Hibbitts, Bella ire.
Lauren Triplett, Ironton ; Teresa
Baumgardner, Rock Hill ; Valerie
Mullins, McArthur Vinton County;
Sarah Evans, Gallipolis Gallia
Academy;
Teresa
Stonerock ,
Williamsport Westfall ; Stephanie
corw in, New Ri chmond ; Lo ri
Perrin, St. Paris Graham; Diana
Brumbaugh, West Milton Milton·
Union ; Liz Hardy , Dayton Oakwood .
Debbie Leffler, Mar ion Pleasant ;
Kethy Hinkle. Sparta Highland ; Pat·
ty McClure, Bloom -Carroll; Toni
Roesch, Columbus Hartley : Molly
McCaughey, Sunbury Big Watnul ;
Karen Cole, Columbus Hamilton
Township .

.f

ATTENTION BOYS &amp; GIRLS
THE PT. PLEASANT REGISTER
NEEDS CARRIERS FOR THE
MASON, W. VA. AREA.
CAU 675-1333
BElWEEN 8:30 AND 5:00.

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" "You people found deductions and ··
redits I didn't know about. I shoul
have come here last year:'
•

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H&amp;R Block preparers are carefully trained to ask the right questions.
They dig for every hone$! deduction and credit. And they want 10
make sure you pay only the taxes you owe.

BELTONE Consul!l.nt WhO Will be AI :

we

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H&amp;A BLOC!t

1

MEIGS INN. POMEROY,'OHI0-THURS., MAR. 20 .
Anyone who has 't rouble hearing Is welcome to have a hearing test us·
lng modern electronic equlpmeritiO deTermine If, his loss Is one which
may be helped . Some of the c.auses .of hearing I05S will. be explained
and dlagr.ams of how t,h e earworkswlll .be shown,
.
AlSo servlc·e and Repair ·A ll·Makos of Hearing Aids • .
a.tterlesand Suppli&lt; . For All Makes For Sale. ·
. IFYOUCANNOTCOMEIN '
• •
,
CALL THE HOTEL FOR A HOMf'APPOlNTMENT,
.
PHONE'"l-362'

-

.

ELECTRONIC
HEARING ltSTS
Will Be Given By

.

O~~N 'ivt:l~~; I;;t·:;:F!d;~;;~NT ONLY~ .'
•

the decision over Campbell.
Randy Stewart, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Roger Stewart, Rt. 1, Middleport, in an exciting bout with
Shawnee's Steve Banik, won over
Banik after three rounds of excellent
boxing. Randy fought in the 14 to 15
year old class.
Receiving silver medals, narrowly
missing the gold were: Rickey
Allen, son of Mr. and Mrs. Douglas
Allen of Rt. I Minersville, lost by a
close decision to Joe Dixon of
Glouster. This too was one of the
most exciting bouts of the evening.
Rickey fought in the 16 to 17 year old
class.
Roger Cottrill of Harrisonville,
fighting in the 18 to 25 year class, after winning the ·first two rounds of
his fight, lost in the last two seconds
of his bout when the referee stopped
the fight as Cotterill was dazed. This
also was near win.

HEARING TEsTs SET
For Pomeroy, Ohio

.·.

·¥11n., Tues., Wed., Friday &amp; sar.

· ··

Rio Grande CollegM:ommunity
College is in the pr:ocess of accepting
applications for the men's varsity
basketball coaching position, recently vacated by Art Lanham.
In addition to the coaching
position, the college also announced
the opening of Ute position of athletic
director. Lanham held both
positions.
Dr. Clyde Evans, provost, and a
member of the college's athletic
council which is serving as the sear-

Hearing .Aid Specialist

'

Lewis was worth 24.5 points and 15.2
rebounds.
Second team berths went to J o
Swartz of Wooster Triway, Mary
Tonjes of Sherwood Fairview, Julie
Bell of Rocky River Lutheran-West,
Nancy Beatty of Warsaw River
View, Debby Lightfritz of Albany
Alexander, Patricia Stiles of Ashville Teays Valley, Kim Hill of
. Jamestown Greeneview and Kris
Watt of Huron.
On the third team were Diane
Kahle of Defiance Tinora, Janet Ebbeskotte of Delphos St. John's, Joanne Ineman of Olmsted Falls, Lisa
Kuszmaul of Leavittsburg LaBrae,
Renee Perdue rl Steubenville,
Kama Sharfenaker of Waverly,
Teresa Stonerock of Williamsport
Westfall, Laurie Thomsen of Granville, Jane Hawthorn of Middletown
Madison and Valerie Green of Cincinnati Wyoming.

Applications are being accepted for
Rio ·Grande AD and coach

. Mr. H: W. Mattingly

tilJ .st'AT·t? AREA
'

By GEORGE STRODE
AP Sparta Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Barb
Spurgeon of Navarre Fairless, a first tesm aU-state selection for two
straight seasoDll, is The Associated
Press' Class AA Player of the Year
in high school girls basketball.
The f&gt;.foot-4 senior averaged 21.4
points, six assists and four steals per
game in leading Fairless to 24 victories in 25 games this winter and a
spot in the state semifinals.
She was the only repeater on the
first unit, selected with the recommendatioDll of a statewide panel of
sports writers and broadcasters.
Spurgeon has scored 1,356 points
and ranks as Stark County's all-time
girls career scorer.
Sue Wise, a f&gt;-10 senior from
Chagrin Falls, moved up from the
1979 second team to the No. I squad
with Spurgeon. Wise averaged 22.9
points this season.
Other seniors chosen on the first
team were Diana Swearlngen of
Martins Ferry, a f&gt;-10 senior
averaging 16.4 points; Beth Rist of
Ironton, a Ht senior with a 14-point
norm; Pam Wills of Newark Licking
Valley, a &amp;-foot senior hitting at a
25.~int clip, and Cathy Smithey of
Pemberville Eastwood, a S.10 senior
with a 21.1-point mark.
A junior, Miriam Banks of Dayton
Dunbar, and one sophomore, Francine Lewis of Mansfield Malabar,
also made the first unit. The 5-3
Banks averaged 16 points, while

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,., MAsotf FuRNITURE
'

Spurgeon top Class AA
girl eager in s~te

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FOR THE BEST DIALS IN THE

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SHOP
.

The Meigs Jaycee Boxers walked
away from the Southeastern Ohio
Golden Gloves Championships with
four gold medals and two silver
medals. The finals, held at the
Jacksonville Trimble High School
Gym Saturday night, turned out to
be a big event with 36 bouts.
Winning gold medals by defeating
their opponents wer'e: Brian Tannehill, son of Mr. and Mrs. Mark
Tannehill, Pomeroy, was matched
with Tony Grubbs in the 10 to 11
class. TBillleshill scored heavily
against Grubbs, Athens, and won the
judge's decision.
Brian Willis, son of Mr. and Mrs . .
Harold Willis, Harrisonville, won
over Bill Russell of Glouster in the 12
to 13 yeaMld class.
James Acree, son of Mr. and Mrs.
James Acree, Rt. 2, Pomeroy,
fought Mark Campbell of Glouster in
the 12 to 13 year old class. Acree won

Gray with 9:20 left.
" I think some of our big people got
tired toward the end," Dutcher said.
"Breuer and McHale weren't
moving as well.''

Gallia 's Sarah Evans Honorable Mention

Jaycee boxing team
•
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post zmpresszve wzns

MASON FURNITURE

,.
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Class AAA, I can hit .280 or .290 in
the big leagues. And something I've
always prided myself on is being a
clutch hitter."
Hale already has delivered twice
this spring for the Reds. He's been in
three exhibition games as a lefthanded pinch hitter, twice getting
hits and once driving in the gamewinning run.
He was given the supreme test
Sunday when McNamara put him in
against a left-handed pitcher "just
to see what he'd do."
Hale took a called third strike,
which didn't necessarily dash all his
chances of making the club. But it
didn't enhance his position, either.
"Not playing every day the last
couple of years hurt me. I've got to
make up 2'hyears of swings here in
spring training," · he said.
"Realistically, if I fell on my face
this time, I'd have to take another·
look at myself and decide if it's worth itto stay in baseball.
"I can't worry about it now though
-· that's counterproductive. I
worried the last two years at Seattle
and had the two worst years of my
career.
"The Reds need a left-handed pinch-hitter and somebody with power.
I'd like to think I could be a little
small part of the puzzle to make the
picture complete and go to the World
Series with this dub."

lead, 48-44, with nearly 13 minutes
left.
Minnesota never led by more than
three after that, and even trailed 5150 once on a bucket by Illinois' Reno

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THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE
618 E. MAIN ST.
. POMEROYO.
OPEN 9 A.M. TO
6 P.M. WEEKDAYS,
9-SSATURDAY
PHONE 992:3795

2ND a, BROWN ST. ,
MASON, W.VA.
OPEN TUES.
THURS. &amp; SAT.
9AM.·S P.M . .
PHONE 773-9128

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Appointment Available But Not Necessory

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�4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Mar. 18, 1980

AA UW week March 16-23
By Ethel Guthrie
Marlena Braocb AAUW
This Is for the purpose of
making knowu the lnlereoto and
work of members of American
Assocla11on of Uolvel'lllty Women
during AAUW week March l&amp;-Z3.
lotematlo118l Year
of the Child
1979 was establisbed as the International Year of the Child by the
United Nations with two main objectives:
(I ) "To provide a framework for
advocacy on behalf of children and
for enhancing the awareness of the
special needs of children on the part
of decision-makers and the public.
(2) "To promote the recognition of
the fact that programs for children
should be an integral part of
economic and social development
plans, with a view to achieving, in
both long-term and short-term,
sustained activities for the benefit of
children at the national and in-

ternationallevels."
There is every indication that the
year has achieved its principal objective: the placing of ch,ildren at
the center of the world. Com·
missions have been established in
some 145 countries. UNICEF has
provided funds for these cornmissions to initiate programs to
benefit children and has supplled
film and photographic materials as
well. Tremendous efforts have been
made not only by the UN, but also by
organizations such as the World
Bank , t he Worl d Healt h
Organization, the Food and
Agriculture Organization, and the
World Food Council. Three countries
plan to incorporate the Declaration
of the Rights of the Child in their
constitutions.
Much is yet to be done. Of 12()
million children born in 1979 more
than 12 million in the developing
world will die before they are five.
Many other children are victims of

Health Review

Smokers' risks repeated
Americans. Women under the age of
By Lamar C. Miller, D.O.
CUolcal Associate Professor
of Family Medicine
Ohio Unlverslty College
of Osteopathic Medicine

.' ·..
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..
,

QUESTION: My doctor has told
me to quit smoking because of my
hea rt, but when I stop smoking I
gain weight. lsn 't weight as important a factor in causing heart
disease as smoking?
ANSWER : There are seven or
eight important risk factors involved in cardiovascular disease
(disease of the heart and blood
vessels). Of these, smoking, hypertension and cholesterol are the three
most important. Hypertension, a
disorder characterized by increased
blood pressure, is probably the most
significant one. My advice is to stop
smoking first and pay attention to
weight loss once the habit is permanently conquered. Weight is not
in itself a primry risk factor on cardiovascular disease. However,
obesity in combination with
smoking, hyptertension or high
amounts of cholesterol in the body
can substantially increase the chan·
ce of heart attack.
QUESTION : I .have heard that
women are beginning to have lung
cancer as much as men. Is this due
to smoking?
ANSWER: Yes. Lung cancer has
become the second leading cause of
death from cancer in women, with
breast cancer still ranking first. On
the other hand, lung cancer has
dropped from the first to the second
most frequent type of cancer to kill
males. Colon cancer has replaced it
as the primary cause of cancer
deaths in men. Since other factors
have remained relatively constant,
we can attribute this change in
statistics almost entirely to changes
in the smoking patterns of young

50 who smoke have a seven times

greater chance of heart attack than
non-smoking women of that age
group. The incidence of heart at·
tacks among women who smoke
heavily (two or more packs a day) is
2() times greater than among those
who do not smoke.
QUESTION: ilow much greater
risk do smokers have of having a
heart attack, compared to nonsmokers?

ANSWER : The average smoker
has about a 70 percent greater chan·
ce of having a heart attack than a
non-smoker. It has been estimated
that twc&gt;-pack-a-&lt;lay smokers reduce
their life expectancy by about 10
years. This risk percentage is influenced by a number of factors
which include the number of cigaret·
tes smoked and the duration of time
a person has smoked continuously.
Other lesser factors might include
the percentage of tar and nicotine in
the brand of cigarette smoked.
If a smoker cuts the number of
cigarettes in half, this will also
reduce the chances of heart attack
by 50 percent. Fortunately for the
smoker, risk of heart attack rapidly
diminishes when the person reduces
his consumption or quits entirely.
However, the risk of lung cancer and
chronic lung disease is not reduced
nearly as quickly when a smoker
conquers his habit.
. SmQking also causes a greater
risk of lung and oral (mouth and
tongue) cancer, as well as chronic
bronchitis and emphysems. Some
readers may remember a song
popular during World War II with
the lyrics "Smoke, smoke, smoke
that cigarette, puff, puff, puff until
you smoke yourself to death. •• These
words, in my opinion, summarize
the ultimate effect of cigarette
smoking.

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Helen Help Us:

'Deaf' or forgetful?
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BY HELEN AND SUE IIOTIEL
King Featureo Syoldlcate
DEAR HELENAND SUE :
I'm 13 and have a nice mom and
stepdad. Only one thing is wrong :
When Dad wants me to do
something, he thinks he tells me but
he doesn't and than later he yells at
me for not doing it. What should I
do?-ANGRY
DEAR ANGRY:
Absent-minded stepdad, or unmindful stepdaughter? Sometimes,
when you•re busy with other things,
you don't hear a parent's "suggestions," and you're that surprised
when he yells at you for ignoring an
order you•re sure he didn 't give.
Good cure for forgetfulness, either
side, is the bulletin board. Ask your
dad to write II down and pin it up so
you can check it out and get on with
it. - SUE

DEAR ANGRY'S STEPDAIJ:
Why don't you try repetition? A
on~time suggestion can sail right
over a 13-year-old's head, but if you
.... say
it twice, or ask, "Should I run
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that by you again?" she'll probably
~-::-'
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•
(As for acting on it post-haste,.
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. well, weren't you also a little put........ . . offy when you were 1:,?) - HELEN

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tempora ry sterilization of all
until age 25, so that the "litfemales
flltt. : ..
.........
'
tle
ladies"
can fool around all they
..... ...
want
without
increasing welfare
' .
payments, crime problems, etc. that
· come with unwanted pregna ncies:
Howabout sterilizing males instead ]
With new technology,· it's easier to
reconnect on men than on women.
Alter all, boys are usually the ag.;.~

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gressors, convincing girls it's okay.
Once again, some misbegotten
male is placing all.the blame on the
female, ignoring the fact that men
have equal responsibility in preventing, planning, or caring for
children. The only place this does
not hold true is in some parts of tlle
animal world. We're supposed to be
a little higher order, but after
reading "Male's" letter, I have my
doubts. - ELEANOR
RAP :

Why didn't you lambaste "Male"
for his crazy idea, rather than merely saying it struck you "like very old
fish on a hot day"?
·
Well ' here's what I think about the
likes of him (in about 1,000 words ending with, "He should have a closed
mouth to match his closed mind so
he wouldn't put his foot in it so
much.")- SICK OF SAPS
READERS ALL:
"Male's" outlandish suggestion
brought a cross-country blast that
would singe his eyeballs if he were
within reading range.
Evidently readers don't agree
with our rule, "Never argue with a
certified nut - let his letter do thti
talking." - HELEN AND SUE
DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
Should baby-sitters stay awake
until parents get home, even if it's
after midnight? I dropped off after
the kids were safely in bed for hours
- and was fired lor it. - WITHOUT A.
JOB
DEARWAJ:
We think it's asking far too much
that a sitter rel!lllin awake at an
unreasonable boW. when children
are safely bedded. But you should
have an underStanding with parents
before you take the job. What dJ
others lhlnk?- HELEN AND SUE
I.

111a lnutnllon , a bu. . .t' and poverty.

More than half of the children of
these countries have no chance for
an education. Industrialized nations
such as ours face a rising incidence
of broken homes, juvenile crime and
violence, alcohol and drug addiction
and other social problems.
The value of the International
Year of the Child lies in the
awakened interest" by the whole
world in its most precious resourceour children. Many people have been
stimulated to work on the local level.
Many others are now better informed about the needs of children.
We are now better prepared to
look at our surroundings and
scrutinize more carefully the institutions which deal with children,
and demand greater commitment
from our leaders and policy makers
to save our children.
Because of IYC, we will work
together to leave our children with a
legacy of hope and confidence in
their own future and the future of the
.world.
May the year 1980 - International
Year of the School '~ continue and
advance with the -efforts already
begun !
:·f

Riverview
PTO meets

i

and Brian Spencer point out poetry they wrote as the
culminating exercise of a poetry-study unit recently
completed by their English class at Meigs High School.

Children and education topic of meeting here
""All God's Children Need an
Education" was the program topic
of Mrs. Jane Snouffer at the Wednesday night meeting of the Womens
Missionary Society of the Pomeroy
First Baptist Church.
The readings included " Church
School Education" by Mrs.
Margaret Bailey; "Public School

Approximately 50 people, in·
eluding the faculty of Riverview
School, were in attendance at the
March PTO. meeting.
Highlighting the evening's events
was the book fair under the direction
of Ms. Eggleston, librarian, and
Marlene Putman.
Betty Jo Hunt, sixth grade
Mr·. and Mrs. Oris Hubbard of
student, led the group with the flag
Syracuse entertained Saturday with
pledge. Marlene Putman, president,
a luncheon honoring Sherman and
presided with secretary, Yvonne
Mickey Cundiff who are leaving
Sisson, and Geraldine Holsinger,
Tuesday (today) for New Orleans,
treasurer, serving in their respec- · La. where they will be enrolled in the
tive offices. Auditing and
Salvation Army School.
nominating committees were named
On Sept. 1 they will be transferred
by the president.
to Atlanta, Ga. to begin their duties
Mrs. Weber, principal, announced
as officers of the Salvation Army.
the school operetta date for March
Guests at the farewell observance
'!I as well as Easter parties at the
were Thelma Miller, Norma Baker,
school on March 28. It was noted that
Nettie Moore, Glenna Sools~y. Oma
spring vacation will be the week of
Hysell, Rachel Cundiff, Laura ImMarch 3~April 5. Also announced
boden, ley Miller, Bob Moore, Ruth
was that Jeff Chevalier was to
Moore, Abby Green, Judy Green,
represent the school at the county
Lawrence Kline, Pat Kline, Mary
spelling contest which was to be held
Kline, Robert, Sharon, Robbie and
at Eastern High School, March 17.
Shawn Cunningham, Sue and MeJ.in..
Discussion was held concerning
da Lemley, Fannie Aleshire, Rita,
the projects being conducted at the
Cindy, Cris and Shelly Arnold, Ranschool as well as a report from the
dy Dudding, Dennis Morre, Pam
purchasing committee.
Spencer, Oris and Mae Hubbard,
Rooms with highest percentage of
Todd Hubbard, Dena, Doug, and
attendance were grades one and
Cassie Owens, an~ Claude and
four.
Margie Cunningham.
Refreshments were·served.

Hubbards entertain

'

College recruiter
to visit school
TIFFIN - Alice A, Mitchell, an
admissions counselor for Heidelberg
College here, will visit the guidance
counseling office of Meigs High
School, Pomeroy, Bf.' 10:30 a .m.
Thursday, March 27 .
Miss Mitchell will tell coWJSelors
and prospective college students
about Heidelberg's academic
programs, admissions procedures,
financial aid packages, off-&lt;!ampus
study programs, and social opportunities.
Heidelberg is in its 130th year as a
co-educational liberal arts college.
Its 24 academic departments offer 33
majors and three second majors,
along with preprofessional
'programs and wide options for independent study, self-designed
graduation requirements, internships, and off-&lt;!ampus study opportunities in the United States and
abroad.
Bachelor's degrees are awarded
in arts, science, and music.
The college has noted strong
growth in the last three years in its
expanded Department of Business
Administration and Economics and
continued strong inte~st fu music,
education, and the biological scien·
C:JS among other a&lt;:4demic areas .
(Heidelberg's nationally known
Water Quality l:.abot~fPry has over
the last decade recel\&gt;'~ $2 million in
grants for research iJr northwestern
Ohio streams and in Lllle Erie.)
Fully accredited bytlieNorth Cen·
· ti:al Association, Heidelberg has a
total enrollment of about 800.

Rowena, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Rogelio Averlon,
and Brian, SOI\.of Mr. and Mr.!· Don Dixon, are two of 46
students who participated in the poetry unit in Mrs.
Dorothy Oliver's freshman English classes.

lET ME COUNT THE WAYS - Rowena Averion

Birihday supper held

The congregation of the Syracuse
First Church of God sWl)rised their
pastor) he Rev. George Oiler, with a
supper in honor of his birthday Tues·
day evening.
Following the supper he was
presented with a decorated birthday
cake and the group sang "Happy
Birthday."
Attending were Mr' and Mrs. Lee
Cadle, Charlene and Lee, Martha
Phillips, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Loomis,
Mrs. Joy Clark and f'enny, Donna
Koehler, Lenora Jenkins, Sampson
Hall, Mr. and Mrs. Lanny Jenkins,
Mr. and Mrs. Cletis Arnett, Gina and
Lina, Mr. and Mrs. Mike Nease, and
Cassie, Janet Lee Russell, Mon!Ia
Lee Neal, Agnes Mowery, Norma
Wilson, Kim and Marla, Mary Voss,
Tinil Brown and Tony, Jo Ann
Wears, Myrna Swearinger, Tabitha
and Megan, Sberri Wears, llfld t\te
wife of the honored guest, Mrs.
Virginia Oiler.
TFSnMONIES FEAT\fflES
Giving testimonies was a feature
of the Light and Life · Men's
Fellowship of the Laurel Cll.ff'Free
Methodist Ch'urch held In the' church
fellowship hall Thursday night.
Robert Barton had prayer, and
Steve Eblin, president, read from
John 15. Plans were made to secure
a fiag pole for the flag donated in
memory of Ernest Powell on FoUr
Chap)ains Sunday, Seldon Baker, Jr.
had prayer, and refreshments were
served.

Education" by Mrs. Marla Foster;
"The Church and Public Education"
by Mrs. Snouffer; and "Who is
Eligible for Education?" by Mrs.
Harriet Sterrett with responses from
Mrs. Burton Smith, ·Mrs. Ellen
Couch, Mrs. Audrey Young, and
Mrs. Eula Price.
Mrs. Phyllis Skinner presided at
the meeting which opened with

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singing "He Keeps Me Singing"

followed by the Lord's Prayer. Cor·
respondence was read from the
$Cholarship girl thanking the Society
for a Christmas gift. Mrs. Ellen
Couch and Mrs. Smith served
refreshments following the meeting:
The closing meditation by Mrs.
Sno)lffer was entitled " Try Planting

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Mr. ;md Mrs. Hayward Bissell of
Keno visited at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Douglas Circle on Friday.·
.Mr. and Mrs, Douglas Circle call·
ed on Mr·. and Mrs. Warden Ours of
Chester on Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. James Circle of New
Haven, W.Va., were at the home of
Mar¥ Circle on Sunday.
Charles Griswald of Belpre, Ohio;
called at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Douglas Circle on Sunday.
Cathy Johnson and son of Eagle
Ridge spent Monday evening with
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Circle.
Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd Johnson and
daughter, of Middleport, called at
the home of Arthur Earl Johnson on
Sunday afternoon.
Mrs. Robert Lee, son Bob Bill, and
daughter, Becky, visited Mr. and
Mrs. Arthur Orr of Chester Sunday
afternoon.
·
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Orr of
Chester called at the 'Robert Lee
home a recent afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. George Circle, New
Haven, W. Va., spent a recent
evening with Mary Circle.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Earl Jolmson
called at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Douglas Johnson of Racine on Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. James Circle of New
Haven, W. Va. were at the home of
Mary Clrcle on Sunday.
·
Buren Duncan from Blue Ridge,
Georgia called at the home of
Douglas Circle on a Monday.
Brent Patterson, a student frun
Rio Grande and his mother, Linda
Pattenion, RD Racine, were at the
Douglas Circle home on Tuesday.
William Carelton and daughter
Angela Dawn of Racine and Eunie
Brinker called at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Arthur Earl · Johnson,
Patrick, Sheryl Leann and Betty ,.
VanMe~ron Monday evening.

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Carmel News~ Velvet·Elkins
By the Day
turns sixteen

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Velvet Elkins, daugh~r of Mr. and
Mrs. David Elkins '"'ot Tuppers
Plains, ct!lebrated her 16th birthday
recently . with ~ party at the
Reedsville fireholise.-;....- . . ,
The party was hosted by her
mother, Judy Elkins, and her aunts,
Ruth Ann Griffin and Dorothy
Lanee. Cake, punch, potato chips,
and n.uts were served to Cassie
Sheets, Joe Stout, Beth Ritchie,
April Parker, Pam Murphy, Wendy
Elkins, Robin . Wilfong, Allison
Cauthorne, Darlene Barton, Mark
Smith, Rodney Spurlock, Greg Cole,
P. G. Riffe, Johnny Riebel, James
Reed, Mike Bissel, Pebles Blake,
Ernie Griffin, and Jeff Jones.

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PWP CALENDAR
Following is the weekly activity
schedule for the Gallia-Meigs-Mason
Chapter of Parents Without Part·
ners:
March 19- 7:45 p.m., Star Trek
movie for the family at: Colony
Theater, second Ave., Gallipolis;
meetat7:45 p.m. in front of theater.
March 21 ~ 7: :lo p.m., roller
skating for the family at Skate-Away
Rink on Route 7. north of Pomeroy.
March 22 - Adult dance at Krodel
Park Club House, Point Pleasant,
stal1ing at8:30 p.m. ·
March 23 - 6 p.m. , chili supper for
adults al Marilyn Mayes home,
Gallipolls.
March 25 - 6:30 p.m., eat out for
. the family · at · Captain D's in
Gallipolis.

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HJKE.BIKEMAV17
The Meigs As.soclatlon for Retarded Citizens has set lhe.armual hlk~
bike for Saturday, ~Y 17. Adate for
the fltst planning ' se811ion for . the
event will be announced soon.
The Fraternal Order of Eagles has
given
a donation to tbe organlzatlon
CLASSES DISMISSED
to
pay
for a. ·Walk!!" and other equipMeigs Local School District
ment
to
be used 1!~ t,vo lrfelgs County
classes were dismissed ap·
children
attending the Guiding Hand
proximately three hours early today
Schopl.
The . MARC ls extending
due to funei'IJI services for Eric Aljm
:
thanks
to
the Eagles.
Hart, 36, principal o( the Rutland
Tfle next monthly MARC meeting
Elementary School, who die&lt;!•over
the weekend.
· · will be held April3.

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150
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LODGE MEETS THURSDAY
Middleport Lodge 363, F. and A.
M., will have w,ork in.,the feUowcraft
degree ThUrsday · at 7 p.m. at .,
theMiddleport Masonic Temple. All
master masons are illvited to attend.

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�4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Mar. 18, 1980

AA UW week March 16-23
By Ethel Guthrie
Marlena Braocb AAUW
This Is for the purpose of
making knowu the lnlereoto and
work of members of American
Assocla11on of Uolvel'lllty Women
during AAUW week March l&amp;-Z3.
lotematlo118l Year
of the Child
1979 was establisbed as the International Year of the Child by the
United Nations with two main objectives:
(I ) "To provide a framework for
advocacy on behalf of children and
for enhancing the awareness of the
special needs of children on the part
of decision-makers and the public.
(2) "To promote the recognition of
the fact that programs for children
should be an integral part of
economic and social development
plans, with a view to achieving, in
both long-term and short-term,
sustained activities for the benefit of
children at the national and in-

ternationallevels."
There is every indication that the
year has achieved its principal objective: the placing of ch,ildren at
the center of the world. Com·
missions have been established in
some 145 countries. UNICEF has
provided funds for these cornmissions to initiate programs to
benefit children and has supplled
film and photographic materials as
well. Tremendous efforts have been
made not only by the UN, but also by
organizations such as the World
Bank , t he Worl d Healt h
Organization, the Food and
Agriculture Organization, and the
World Food Council. Three countries
plan to incorporate the Declaration
of the Rights of the Child in their
constitutions.
Much is yet to be done. Of 12()
million children born in 1979 more
than 12 million in the developing
world will die before they are five.
Many other children are victims of

Health Review

Smokers' risks repeated
Americans. Women under the age of
By Lamar C. Miller, D.O.
CUolcal Associate Professor
of Family Medicine
Ohio Unlverslty College
of Osteopathic Medicine

.' ·..
..

..
,

QUESTION: My doctor has told
me to quit smoking because of my
hea rt, but when I stop smoking I
gain weight. lsn 't weight as important a factor in causing heart
disease as smoking?
ANSWER : There are seven or
eight important risk factors involved in cardiovascular disease
(disease of the heart and blood
vessels). Of these, smoking, hypertension and cholesterol are the three
most important. Hypertension, a
disorder characterized by increased
blood pressure, is probably the most
significant one. My advice is to stop
smoking first and pay attention to
weight loss once the habit is permanently conquered. Weight is not
in itself a primry risk factor on cardiovascular disease. However,
obesity in combination with
smoking, hyptertension or high
amounts of cholesterol in the body
can substantially increase the chan·
ce of heart attack.
QUESTION : I .have heard that
women are beginning to have lung
cancer as much as men. Is this due
to smoking?
ANSWER: Yes. Lung cancer has
become the second leading cause of
death from cancer in women, with
breast cancer still ranking first. On
the other hand, lung cancer has
dropped from the first to the second
most frequent type of cancer to kill
males. Colon cancer has replaced it
as the primary cause of cancer
deaths in men. Since other factors
have remained relatively constant,
we can attribute this change in
statistics almost entirely to changes
in the smoking patterns of young

50 who smoke have a seven times

greater chance of heart attack than
non-smoking women of that age
group. The incidence of heart at·
tacks among women who smoke
heavily (two or more packs a day) is
2() times greater than among those
who do not smoke.
QUESTION: ilow much greater
risk do smokers have of having a
heart attack, compared to nonsmokers?

ANSWER : The average smoker
has about a 70 percent greater chan·
ce of having a heart attack than a
non-smoker. It has been estimated
that twc&gt;-pack-a-&lt;lay smokers reduce
their life expectancy by about 10
years. This risk percentage is influenced by a number of factors
which include the number of cigaret·
tes smoked and the duration of time
a person has smoked continuously.
Other lesser factors might include
the percentage of tar and nicotine in
the brand of cigarette smoked.
If a smoker cuts the number of
cigarettes in half, this will also
reduce the chances of heart attack
by 50 percent. Fortunately for the
smoker, risk of heart attack rapidly
diminishes when the person reduces
his consumption or quits entirely.
However, the risk of lung cancer and
chronic lung disease is not reduced
nearly as quickly when a smoker
conquers his habit.
. SmQking also causes a greater
risk of lung and oral (mouth and
tongue) cancer, as well as chronic
bronchitis and emphysems. Some
readers may remember a song
popular during World War II with
the lyrics "Smoke, smoke, smoke
that cigarette, puff, puff, puff until
you smoke yourself to death. •• These
words, in my opinion, summarize
the ultimate effect of cigarette
smoking.

r

.-

Helen Help Us:

'Deaf' or forgetful?
·•

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.
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BY HELEN AND SUE IIOTIEL
King Featureo Syoldlcate
DEAR HELENAND SUE :
I'm 13 and have a nice mom and
stepdad. Only one thing is wrong :
When Dad wants me to do
something, he thinks he tells me but
he doesn't and than later he yells at
me for not doing it. What should I
do?-ANGRY
DEAR ANGRY:
Absent-minded stepdad, or unmindful stepdaughter? Sometimes,
when you•re busy with other things,
you don't hear a parent's "suggestions," and you're that surprised
when he yells at you for ignoring an
order you•re sure he didn 't give.
Good cure for forgetfulness, either
side, is the bulletin board. Ask your
dad to write II down and pin it up so
you can check it out and get on with
it. - SUE

DEAR ANGRY'S STEPDAIJ:
Why don't you try repetition? A
on~time suggestion can sail right
over a 13-year-old's head, but if you
.... say
it twice, or ask, "Should I run
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that by you again?" she'll probably
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•
(As for acting on it post-haste,.
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. well, weren't you also a little put........ . . offy when you were 1:,?) - HELEN

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tempora ry sterilization of all
until age 25, so that the "litfemales
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tle
ladies"
can fool around all they
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want
without
increasing welfare
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payments, crime problems, etc. that
· come with unwanted pregna ncies:
Howabout sterilizing males instead ]
With new technology,· it's easier to
reconnect on men than on women.
Alter all, boys are usually the ag.;.~

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gressors, convincing girls it's okay.
Once again, some misbegotten
male is placing all.the blame on the
female, ignoring the fact that men
have equal responsibility in preventing, planning, or caring for
children. The only place this does
not hold true is in some parts of tlle
animal world. We're supposed to be
a little higher order, but after
reading "Male's" letter, I have my
doubts. - ELEANOR
RAP :

Why didn't you lambaste "Male"
for his crazy idea, rather than merely saying it struck you "like very old
fish on a hot day"?
·
Well ' here's what I think about the
likes of him (in about 1,000 words ending with, "He should have a closed
mouth to match his closed mind so
he wouldn't put his foot in it so
much.")- SICK OF SAPS
READERS ALL:
"Male's" outlandish suggestion
brought a cross-country blast that
would singe his eyeballs if he were
within reading range.
Evidently readers don't agree
with our rule, "Never argue with a
certified nut - let his letter do thti
talking." - HELEN AND SUE
DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
Should baby-sitters stay awake
until parents get home, even if it's
after midnight? I dropped off after
the kids were safely in bed for hours
- and was fired lor it. - WITHOUT A.
JOB
DEARWAJ:
We think it's asking far too much
that a sitter rel!lllin awake at an
unreasonable boW. when children
are safely bedded. But you should
have an underStanding with parents
before you take the job. What dJ
others lhlnk?- HELEN AND SUE
I.

111a lnutnllon , a bu. . .t' and poverty.

More than half of the children of
these countries have no chance for
an education. Industrialized nations
such as ours face a rising incidence
of broken homes, juvenile crime and
violence, alcohol and drug addiction
and other social problems.
The value of the International
Year of the Child lies in the
awakened interest" by the whole
world in its most precious resourceour children. Many people have been
stimulated to work on the local level.
Many others are now better informed about the needs of children.
We are now better prepared to
look at our surroundings and
scrutinize more carefully the institutions which deal with children,
and demand greater commitment
from our leaders and policy makers
to save our children.
Because of IYC, we will work
together to leave our children with a
legacy of hope and confidence in
their own future and the future of the
.world.
May the year 1980 - International
Year of the School '~ continue and
advance with the -efforts already
begun !
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Riverview
PTO meets

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and Brian Spencer point out poetry they wrote as the
culminating exercise of a poetry-study unit recently
completed by their English class at Meigs High School.

Children and education topic of meeting here
""All God's Children Need an
Education" was the program topic
of Mrs. Jane Snouffer at the Wednesday night meeting of the Womens
Missionary Society of the Pomeroy
First Baptist Church.
The readings included " Church
School Education" by Mrs.
Margaret Bailey; "Public School

Approximately 50 people, in·
eluding the faculty of Riverview
School, were in attendance at the
March PTO. meeting.
Highlighting the evening's events
was the book fair under the direction
of Ms. Eggleston, librarian, and
Marlene Putman.
Betty Jo Hunt, sixth grade
Mr·. and Mrs. Oris Hubbard of
student, led the group with the flag
Syracuse entertained Saturday with
pledge. Marlene Putman, president,
a luncheon honoring Sherman and
presided with secretary, Yvonne
Mickey Cundiff who are leaving
Sisson, and Geraldine Holsinger,
Tuesday (today) for New Orleans,
treasurer, serving in their respec- · La. where they will be enrolled in the
tive offices. Auditing and
Salvation Army School.
nominating committees were named
On Sept. 1 they will be transferred
by the president.
to Atlanta, Ga. to begin their duties
Mrs. Weber, principal, announced
as officers of the Salvation Army.
the school operetta date for March
Guests at the farewell observance
'!I as well as Easter parties at the
were Thelma Miller, Norma Baker,
school on March 28. It was noted that
Nettie Moore, Glenna Sools~y. Oma
spring vacation will be the week of
Hysell, Rachel Cundiff, Laura ImMarch 3~April 5. Also announced
boden, ley Miller, Bob Moore, Ruth
was that Jeff Chevalier was to
Moore, Abby Green, Judy Green,
represent the school at the county
Lawrence Kline, Pat Kline, Mary
spelling contest which was to be held
Kline, Robert, Sharon, Robbie and
at Eastern High School, March 17.
Shawn Cunningham, Sue and MeJ.in..
Discussion was held concerning
da Lemley, Fannie Aleshire, Rita,
the projects being conducted at the
Cindy, Cris and Shelly Arnold, Ranschool as well as a report from the
dy Dudding, Dennis Morre, Pam
purchasing committee.
Spencer, Oris and Mae Hubbard,
Rooms with highest percentage of
Todd Hubbard, Dena, Doug, and
attendance were grades one and
Cassie Owens, an~ Claude and
four.
Margie Cunningham.
Refreshments were·served.

Hubbards entertain

'

College recruiter
to visit school
TIFFIN - Alice A, Mitchell, an
admissions counselor for Heidelberg
College here, will visit the guidance
counseling office of Meigs High
School, Pomeroy, Bf.' 10:30 a .m.
Thursday, March 27 .
Miss Mitchell will tell coWJSelors
and prospective college students
about Heidelberg's academic
programs, admissions procedures,
financial aid packages, off-&lt;!ampus
study programs, and social opportunities.
Heidelberg is in its 130th year as a
co-educational liberal arts college.
Its 24 academic departments offer 33
majors and three second majors,
along with preprofessional
'programs and wide options for independent study, self-designed
graduation requirements, internships, and off-&lt;!ampus study opportunities in the United States and
abroad.
Bachelor's degrees are awarded
in arts, science, and music.
The college has noted strong
growth in the last three years in its
expanded Department of Business
Administration and Economics and
continued strong inte~st fu music,
education, and the biological scien·
C:JS among other a&lt;:4demic areas .
(Heidelberg's nationally known
Water Quality l:.abot~fPry has over
the last decade recel\&gt;'~ $2 million in
grants for research iJr northwestern
Ohio streams and in Lllle Erie.)
Fully accredited bytlieNorth Cen·
· ti:al Association, Heidelberg has a
total enrollment of about 800.

Rowena, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Rogelio Averlon,
and Brian, SOI\.of Mr. and Mr.!· Don Dixon, are two of 46
students who participated in the poetry unit in Mrs.
Dorothy Oliver's freshman English classes.

lET ME COUNT THE WAYS - Rowena Averion

Birihday supper held

The congregation of the Syracuse
First Church of God sWl)rised their
pastor) he Rev. George Oiler, with a
supper in honor of his birthday Tues·
day evening.
Following the supper he was
presented with a decorated birthday
cake and the group sang "Happy
Birthday."
Attending were Mr' and Mrs. Lee
Cadle, Charlene and Lee, Martha
Phillips, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Loomis,
Mrs. Joy Clark and f'enny, Donna
Koehler, Lenora Jenkins, Sampson
Hall, Mr. and Mrs. Lanny Jenkins,
Mr. and Mrs. Cletis Arnett, Gina and
Lina, Mr. and Mrs. Mike Nease, and
Cassie, Janet Lee Russell, Mon!Ia
Lee Neal, Agnes Mowery, Norma
Wilson, Kim and Marla, Mary Voss,
Tinil Brown and Tony, Jo Ann
Wears, Myrna Swearinger, Tabitha
and Megan, Sberri Wears, llfld t\te
wife of the honored guest, Mrs.
Virginia Oiler.
TFSnMONIES FEAT\fflES
Giving testimonies was a feature
of the Light and Life · Men's
Fellowship of the Laurel Cll.ff'Free
Methodist Ch'urch held In the' church
fellowship hall Thursday night.
Robert Barton had prayer, and
Steve Eblin, president, read from
John 15. Plans were made to secure
a fiag pole for the flag donated in
memory of Ernest Powell on FoUr
Chap)ains Sunday, Seldon Baker, Jr.
had prayer, and refreshments were
served.

Education" by Mrs. Marla Foster;
"The Church and Public Education"
by Mrs. Snouffer; and "Who is
Eligible for Education?" by Mrs.
Harriet Sterrett with responses from
Mrs. Burton Smith, ·Mrs. Ellen
Couch, Mrs. Audrey Young, and
Mrs. Eula Price.
Mrs. Phyllis Skinner presided at
the meeting which opened with

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singing "He Keeps Me Singing"

followed by the Lord's Prayer. Cor·
respondence was read from the
$Cholarship girl thanking the Society
for a Christmas gift. Mrs. Ellen
Couch and Mrs. Smith served
refreshments following the meeting:
The closing meditation by Mrs.
Sno)lffer was entitled " Try Planting

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Mr. ;md Mrs. Hayward Bissell of
Keno visited at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Douglas Circle on Friday.·
.Mr. and Mrs, Douglas Circle call·
ed on Mr·. and Mrs. Warden Ours of
Chester on Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. James Circle of New
Haven, W.Va., were at the home of
Mar¥ Circle on Sunday.
Charles Griswald of Belpre, Ohio;
called at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Douglas Circle on Sunday.
Cathy Johnson and son of Eagle
Ridge spent Monday evening with
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Circle.
Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd Johnson and
daughter, of Middleport, called at
the home of Arthur Earl Johnson on
Sunday afternoon.
Mrs. Robert Lee, son Bob Bill, and
daughter, Becky, visited Mr. and
Mrs. Arthur Orr of Chester Sunday
afternoon.
·
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Orr of
Chester called at the 'Robert Lee
home a recent afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. George Circle, New
Haven, W. Va., spent a recent
evening with Mary Circle.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Earl Jolmson
called at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Douglas Johnson of Racine on Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. James Circle of New
Haven, W. Va. were at the home of
Mary Clrcle on Sunday.
·
Buren Duncan from Blue Ridge,
Georgia called at the home of
Douglas Circle on a Monday.
Brent Patterson, a student frun
Rio Grande and his mother, Linda
Pattenion, RD Racine, were at the
Douglas Circle home on Tuesday.
William Carelton and daughter
Angela Dawn of Racine and Eunie
Brinker called at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Arthur Earl · Johnson,
Patrick, Sheryl Leann and Betty ,.
VanMe~ron Monday evening.

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Carmel News~ Velvet·Elkins
By the Day
turns sixteen

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Velvet Elkins, daugh~r of Mr. and
Mrs. David Elkins '"'ot Tuppers
Plains, ct!lebrated her 16th birthday
recently . with ~ party at the
Reedsville fireholise.-;....- . . ,
The party was hosted by her
mother, Judy Elkins, and her aunts,
Ruth Ann Griffin and Dorothy
Lanee. Cake, punch, potato chips,
and n.uts were served to Cassie
Sheets, Joe Stout, Beth Ritchie,
April Parker, Pam Murphy, Wendy
Elkins, Robin . Wilfong, Allison
Cauthorne, Darlene Barton, Mark
Smith, Rodney Spurlock, Greg Cole,
P. G. Riffe, Johnny Riebel, James
Reed, Mike Bissel, Pebles Blake,
Ernie Griffin, and Jeff Jones.

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PWP CALENDAR
Following is the weekly activity
schedule for the Gallia-Meigs-Mason
Chapter of Parents Without Part·
ners:
March 19- 7:45 p.m., Star Trek
movie for the family at: Colony
Theater, second Ave., Gallipolis;
meetat7:45 p.m. in front of theater.
March 21 ~ 7: :lo p.m., roller
skating for the family at Skate-Away
Rink on Route 7. north of Pomeroy.
March 22 - Adult dance at Krodel
Park Club House, Point Pleasant,
stal1ing at8:30 p.m. ·
March 23 - 6 p.m. , chili supper for
adults al Marilyn Mayes home,
Gallipolls.
March 25 - 6:30 p.m., eat out for
. the family · at · Captain D's in
Gallipolis.

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HJKE.BIKEMAV17
The Meigs As.soclatlon for Retarded Citizens has set lhe.armual hlk~
bike for Saturday, ~Y 17. Adate for
the fltst planning ' se811ion for . the
event will be announced soon.
The Fraternal Order of Eagles has
given
a donation to tbe organlzatlon
CLASSES DISMISSED
to
pay
for a. ·Walk!!" and other equipMeigs Local School District
ment
to
be used 1!~ t,vo lrfelgs County
classes were dismissed ap·
children
attending the Guiding Hand
proximately three hours early today
Schopl.
The . MARC ls extending
due to funei'IJI services for Eric Aljm
:
thanks
to
the Eagles.
Hart, 36, principal o( the Rutland
Tfle next monthly MARC meeting
Elementary School, who die&lt;!•over
the weekend.
· · will be held April3.

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CRAGER ·or StRAtTON
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150
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LODGE MEETS THURSDAY
Middleport Lodge 363, F. and A.
M., will have w,ork in.,the feUowcraft
degree ThUrsday · at 7 p.m. at .,
theMiddleport Masonic Temple. All
master masons are illvited to attend.

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�9-The DailySentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Mar. 18, 1980
Nat1ceof
For1enctlohsure
e

Common Pleas
CourtofMel_gs
Countt;,Otuo

FONROET~L~s'lfRe
OF LIENS FOR
DELINQUENT
.
LAND TAXES
IY ACTION IN

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and address are unknown ;
the
unknown
heirs
devisees, legatees, ad:
mlnislrato~s. executors
and·or assogns of Fred
Pullins,
If
deceased.
William Davis; if living,
whose ·!asl known address
Is M iddlepOrt. Oh[o: the
unknown spouse, of any,
whose name and address
are unknown; the unknown
heirs, d~vlsees• . legatees,
adm inistrators. executors
and·or assigns Of William
Davis, If deceased. Anna
Louise Young; if living,
whose last known address
Is Zanesville, Ohio; the
unknown spouse if any,
whose name ani:! address
are unknown: the unknown
heirs, dev isees, legatees,
ad ministrators, executors
and·or assigns of Anna
Louise Young, if deceased.
Albert Knowllon: If living,
whose last known address
If Ypsilanti, Mi chigan; the

unknoWn spouse~

if

any,

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spouse, If any, whose name

whose name and address
are unk nown; the unknown
heirs, devisees. legatees,
administrators, executors
and-or assigns of Albert
Knowlton, If deceased. Bel·
ty Myers; if living, whose
last known address is
Monroe, Michigan: the
unknown spouse, if any,
whose name and address
are unknown; the unknown
heirs, devisees, legatees,
administrators, executors,
and·or assigns of Betty
Myers, if dec eased .
Virginia Murphy; if living,
whose last known address
Is Mlddlepart, Ohio; the
unknown spouse. if any,
whose name and address
are unknown; the unknown
helr.s, devisees, leg_atees,
administrators; executors
and·or assigns of VIrginia
Murphy, If deceased. Mar·
the Morrl!i; If living, whose
last known address is
Monroe. Michigan; the
unknown spouse, if .any,
whose name and address
are unknown: the unknown
heirs, devisees, legatee$,
administrators, executors
and·or assigns of Martha
Mprrls,lfdeceased.
Pear! McKibben· if
living, whose !aS! known
'•
address IS Vlckerv. Ohio;
t"' unknown spouse. If any,
whOse name and address
are unknown; the unknown
heirs deviSO!OS legatees
·administrators,' executors
and· or assigns of Pear!
Mcl&lt;ibben
If deceased
c~ar!es • Knowlton ; if
l1vlng, whose last known
address
Is
Monroe,
Michigan· the unknown
spouse, if'any, whose name
and address are unknown:
the
unknown
heirs ,
devisees, legatees, ad·
minlstrators, executors
and-or assigns · of Charles
Knowllon
If deceased .
Melvin Knowlton; if living,
whose last known address
Is Erie Michigan· the
unknown spause if any
whose name and address
are unknown; the unknown
heirs, devisees, legatees,
administrators, ex!!(:utors
and-or assigns Of ' Melvin
Kriowllon
If deceased .
Ronnie Kriowlton; If living,
whose last knnwn address
Is Monroe, Michigan; the
unknown spOuse If any
who$&lt;! name and address
are unknown; !he unknown
heirs, devisees. legatees.
administrators, executors
and·or assigns .of Ronnie
Knowllon
11 deceased .
Rlckv Knawlton; if living,
whose last· known address
Is Monroe Michigan · the
unknown spouse, If 'any,
whose name and address
are unknown; the unknown
heirs devisees, legatees,
administrators. executors
and·or assigns of Ricky
Knowllon
If deceased.
Janet Marie lurton; if
living whcse !as! known
address is Temperance,
Michigan ; the unknown
spause If any, whose name
and address are unknown ;
the
unknown
heirs .
devisees, legatees, ~ mlhlstrators 1 executors
and-or . assigns of Janet
Marie Burton , If deceased.
Charles · E. Warner; if
living whose last known
addreSs IS ~oger Clly,
Michigan; the unknown
spouse, If any, whose name
and address are. unknown ;
!he
unknown heirs.
devisees, legatees, ad·
mlnlstrators, executors
and-or assigns of Chlllrles
E Warner if deceased.
Danny warner; If living,
whose las! known address
Is 3278 Jackmar Rd., Peter·
sburg, Michigan; the
unknown spouse, If any,
whose name and . address
are unknown; !he unknown
heirs, devisees, legatees,
administrators. executors
and· or assigns of Danny
warner, If deceased. Henry
warner.- Jr.; If living,
whose lest knoWn ~ddress
Is LaSalle. Michigan; the
unknown spouse. If any.
whose name and address
are u.nkf'IO'Vn; the unknown
heirs · devisees legatees
administrators ' executors
and·or assign$ of'r Henry
warner Jr., If deceased.
Cora Bowen;- if liVIng,
whose address Is unknown:
the unknown spause,lf any,
whose name and address
··'legatees, '- admlnl,tr~tors, · are unkn~n; ttle unknown
~ executors and asslgnsr the
heirs, devisees, leGatees,
. unknown spouse. If any, of
aQmlnlstralors, executors
Minnie Adams.
and·or assigns Of Cora
• Sltu~ted In Village Of An·
Bowen,
If
deceased.
: tlqultr&lt; ·Letart Township,
Charles Bowen; If living.
~~ Meigs county, Qhlo. Being
whose address is unknown;
., that part .Of Lot No. 1ft
the unkriown spouse, If any,
• Town ·of Antiquity East 01
whose name and address
: public road. Also being !hal ere unknown: the unknown
part 75 feet Of South part Of • heirs ''devisees legatees
~ Lot i No. 11._ Recorded In admlnistrators.'JxecutorS
• Volume 12~. _page 224, · and·or assigns · Charles
• Mergs· CountY Deed Recor·
Bowen If deCeased. The
~ ds. Judgement $15.4 .38 plus ui1knoWn heirs,, devisees,
• accrued faxes, assessmen· legatees
lf9mlnlstrators
• Is penalties and costs of 'exeeutor's and·or assigns 01
• action.
I Ernest Bol!(en, deceas!!d.
: ca.- No. IO'DL T -30• Pa~· '
Sl)ua.ted !n t~e., City Of
• eel No. POMV-1)6, ~erial
Pomeroy county 01 Meigs
• No. 80.D l:T·JO, tilled lh !he Slate of Ohio. containing ~
.. riame of Edward ~C1_W..!n.t e.t acres. ·fi!elng Lot No. 307
: al , if living, . whose last and 308, City of Pomeroy.
• known addr111s Is Pomeroy, Recorded In VolufTie 228,
~ Ohll'l •tha unknown SpOU~, . page 969., . Meigs County
: .ff any, whose name and • · Deed Records. Judgment
• drtU , are ~nknown; !he $108.53 plus accrued taxes,
• ~nknown llelrs, devisees, assessments, penaltres ana
• legatees administrators' costsofaction
•
~ executo~s and·or assigns 0#
Cate No SO:Dt.l1·31 Par·
• Edward' Bowen,
If eel No POMV ·07 • serial
No ''80-Dt."t·31 fltiOd 1 the
: deCeased Denver Bowen,
• If IIV~n• whose las! known ria
Of Henry Kra~tter.
• eddr
11 Mason, W"t deceased; "the unknown
... Vlrglnl • tllJ unknown heirs devisees legatees
~ spouse ilan\1. whose name • administrators; • executors
- ~and 11ddr~ .,,. unknown ' and·Or aS$Igns of Henry
.. ,. lht un~t~own
heirs ! Krautter deceased Laura
1-- devisees legatees ad · K Shrelnerr If · ~ lvlng ·
. • ~' mlnlstritors, - executors whose last known aCidrm·
'" " ond·or atsl~na: of Denller ls' Hornestead Penna. the
u...._ BoweoJ
. deceased
unknown spo'use If ''any )
~; tt Ctll!rles Pu un,; If 'living) wt'lose natne and ad~re$$
WhOM· last· known address !lore unknj&gt;Wn; the unkown
Is 'COlumbus, Ohio; !he heirs, devisees, legatees.
unknown spOuse If any, administrators, executors
whose name aiicl address and·or aplgill of Laura K
are u~known ' the unknown Schreiner If deceased:
heirS, deviit.lt, legatees, Nellie K. ~wart%; If living,
administrators. e&gt;&lt;ec:utor
s whose last known aQdress
and-or assigns Of ·cnar 1es Is Ma~on . w. Va .; me
Pullins. If deceased. Fred· unknoym· spouse, If an 1,

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MEIGS COUNTY
'
OH IO
Public nolle~ Is t&gt;oreby
given that on !he 4th day of
March, 1980, !he County
TreasurerofMelgsCounty,
Ohio, filed a compla in! In
the CD\Jrl of Common Pleas
ofp Meogs C.o0uhn1ty, Of hlo, heal
omeroy,
o, or 1
foreclosure of liens for
delinquent
taxes ,
assessments, p~naltles ,
and charges aga1nst cer!•In real properly Situ~led
on such county as descrobed
in sald.c;omplalnl.
. .
The object of the act1on •s
lo obtain from ·fhe court .of
a iudgrrent foreclosing the
tax !lens agaJnst such real
estate ,lind ordering the
sale~ such real estate for
the satisfaction of the lax
liens thereon.
Such action Is brought
against the real properly
~n!v and no personal
shall be entered
judgment
herein.
Tt'le per.manent parr;el
number of each pa_rcel on·
eluded In such acloo"' the
full street address 01 the
par~el , II avaJiable, a
description of th e parcel, a
statement of the amount of
tax,s1
assessments, ·
pena!loes and charges due
and, unpaid on such par.gel ,
and the name_~nd adc;tress
of !he last known owner
· thereof, as such appear on
!he general tax list, .a!! as
more f~!ly ~t forth on the
complaont,areasfollows :
Ca~ No. 80·DL T-27, Par·
eel No: RUT-10, Serial No.
80·DL T·27, filled in the
name ·Of Allen E. Braley,
deceased, the unknown
heirs. devisees, legatees,
administrators, executors,
and-or assigns of Allen E .
Braley, ·deceased ; Mary G.
Braley, a~a Mary C.
Braley, II !lvong, whose last
know~ ~ddress If Rutland,
Ohio; of deceased,_ the
unknown heirs,_ devosees,
Jegatees, admonlslr~lor~.
executors and·or. assogns;
the unknOW.Jl SQ{lll!!f' . II anv
of Mary G. Bral.e.v ~K~ .
Mary ,c. ~ra!ey; Wo!6ur G.
Braley, of ·!fvlng1 . whose
!as! ·know~ ~doress Is
Rutland, Ohoo; of dece~sed ,
the . unknown
heirs,
dev1sees, legatees, ad·
ministrators, . executors
and · or
assogn.s . the
U'1known SPOuse, 1f any, of
Wo!bur G. !lra!•Y : Leona L.
John~n. •f llvtno . wh~
Ia~!. knQwn address '·' Rulland, 6hlo, If deceased,
!he . unknown
heirs,
dev•~ees , legatees, ad·
mlnlstrators, executors
and · or
assigns , !he
unknown spouse, if any, of
Leona L. Johnson; Effie
Hull, If living, whose last
known addr~ss Is St. Peter·
sburg, Fla .• ·If deceased,
!he unknown
heIrs,
devisees, legatees, ad·
mlnlstrators • . executors
and -,or
assogns , the
unknown spause, If any, of
Effie Hall; VIctor Fraley,
if living, whose last k~own
add~ess Is Rutland, Ohoo; If
dece"sed, the unknown
. heirs,, devisees. leg~,tees,
· administrators, executoh
and· or
asslgn.s . the
unknown spause, of any, of
Victor Braley.
Situated I~ Rutland
Township, Meogs County.
Ohio. Being 9.94 acres In
Fracllon 31, Township 6,
·Range 14. Recorded In
Volume 118, page 169,
Meigs County Deed Recor·
ds. Judgment $59.03 plus
accrped ,taxes, assessmen·
Is, ;lenaotles ' and costs of
action.
Case No. 80·DLT ·28, Par·
eel . No. 01 ·011 ·~17 , Serial
. No. 80·DLT·28,lol!ed on !he
name of Haze! M. Dunlavy,
If living, whose lasttkhnowGifnt
address Is 272 Sou
Street, Apt. 1009, Co!um·
bus, Ohio; if deceased, the
unknown · heirs, devis~s,
legatees. adminlslra!ors.
executors and·or a~slgns.
the unknown spouse, 1f any,
of Ha~el M. Dunlavy.
· Situated In Bedfor d
Township, /Yielgs County,
Ohio. Contaonlng lO . acres
more or less In Sect1on 11 ,
Town 3, Range 13, O.C.P. .·
Recorded In Volume 258,
page 171. Meigs County
Deed Records. Jud~ment
S35.50 plus accrued. axes,
assessments, pena!toes and
costsdfacl!on.
Case No. 80-DL T·29, Par·
. eel Nos. 05·016·012, 05·016·
, 013, serUtl No. 80·DL T·29,
• filled In the name of Ernest
• Adams aka Joseph E.
; Adams: If living, whose last
~ known address is Rt. 2,
• Racine Ohio; if deceased,
• the
unknown
heIrs.
, devisees, · legatees, ad ·
mlnlstrators, executors
· and assigns: the unknown
·. spouse If any, of Ernest
. Adfrtis', ikl Joseph' E.
Ada,h1's; Minnie Adams, If
. 'living, WhOse . last kn~n
·, address Is Rt. 2, Racine.,
, Ohio; , . If deceased~- the
~ unknoWn · h!!Jirs, · d~vlsees,

whose n~ me ano address
are unknown ; the unknown
heirsr dev isees, legatees ,

Pullins ; if livlng, whose
last known address i$ Mid·
dleport, Ohio; the unknown

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beta.. ~ tne da Te s~ci f i ed as
tne lasr day for f1 1i ng an an
swer, a judgment of
administrators, executors foreclosure will be tak.en by
and·or ass igns of Nellie K. default as to anv Oit r t~•
Swartz
if
deceased .
lis·ted in the compl a•n1 a!. ro
Richard Kraul1er; if liv ing,
which no answer has been
whose las I known address
fi led . A ny par cel a s to
os Mason, w. va.; me
which a foreclosure is
unknown SPOuse, If any,
taken by default shall be
whose name and address
sold for the satisfaction of
are unknown · the unknown
the taxes. assessments,
heirs, . devisee.. legatees,
penalties, charges, and
admlnoslralors, executors
costs incurred in the
and-or assigns of Richard
foreclosure that are due
Krauner, if deceased. Mar· and unoaid.
jorie B. WOOdard ; if living,
any time prior to the
whose last known address filiAt
ng of an entry of con· .
is Smithfield, Ohio; !he flrmation
of sale, any
unknown spouse. If any , owner or lienholder
of a
whose name and address parcel
listed In the com·
are unknown ; t he unknown plaint may
redeem suc h
heirs, devisees. legatees. Rarcel by tend
ering to the
administrators. executors County Treasurer th e
and-or assigns of Majorle amount
ta xes,
B. Woodard. if deceased . assessmentsof
,
penalties,
Catherine B. Mees: if
charges due and un·
living, whose last known and
paid on such par cel.
address IS Pomeroy, Ohio;
together with all costs
!he unknown sPOuse. If anv. which have been incurred
whose name and address In any proceeding In ·
are unknown ; the unknown
stituted against such par ·
heirs, devisees, legatees , eel
under Section 5721.18 of
administrators, executors_
the Revised Code. Upon the
and-or assigns of Catherine filing of any entry Of con ·
B. Mees
if ~ecease&lt;~ .
firmation of sale, there
Evelyn B. Strauss : of . shall be no further equity of
living, whose last known
redemption. Anv person
address Is Pomeroy, Ohio;
thereafter claim ing any
the unknown spause, if any,
right, title .and i'nteresl in ,
whose name and address or lien upon, any such par·
are unknown : the unknown eel, shall be forever barred
heirs, devisees. legatees, and foreclosed of any s~ c h
administrators, executor s right, title, interest i':', lien
and ·or assigns of Evelyn 8 . upon,. and any eQuity of
Strauss
if dece~sed .
redemption in, such parcel .
Homer Brailey; If loving ,
whose last known address
Larry E . srencer
is Pomeroy , Oh l ~ ; the
Clerk o Court
unknown spouse, 1f any , ·
of Common Pleas
whose name and address
are unknown ; !he unknown
13111. 18. 25, 3tc
heirs, devisees, legatees,
administrators. executors
and ·or assigns of Homer
Brailey ;
If dece ased .
LEGAL NOTICE
Harrv Krautter; if living,
REQUESTS FOR
whose last known address
PROPOSALS
is Mason, w . V~.; ·the
PRIVATE SECTOR
unknown spouse, of any ,
INITIATIVE
whose name and address
PROGRAM
are unknown ; the unknown
PRIVATE
heirs. devisees, legalee.s,
INDUSTRY
administrators, executors,
COUNCIL
~nd ·or ass l ~ns of Harry
The Private Industry
Kra~tter, of decease&lt;! .
Council (PICI for the
c:;:hr1stlne Kraut ter ; 1f
Balance of Stale I BDS&gt; is
hving, whose last known
accepting public relations
address is Pomeroy, Ohio;
propasalsperlalnin~ to !he
!he unknown spouse, if any ,
Private Sector ln1tiative
whose name and address
Program under Title VII of
ar~ unknown ; !he unknown
the Comprehensive Em·
heors. devisees, legatees,
ployment and Tra ining Acl
adrninlslr"lors, executors of
1978 ICETA).
and·or assogns of Christine
The PIC requests the
Krau!lerL If deceased . . public
relations propasals
Gladys t-erry; if living,
mclude me.thods to educate
whose last known ~ddress
and involve employers in
Is Portsmouth, OhJO: the
Title VII, and suggestions
unkn9wn spouse, of any, of
obta i ning
public
whose name and address
awareness of the activities
ar~ unkno~n ; the unknown . of
Tille VI!.
heors. , devosees. lega!ees,
Possible activities in·
administrators, execu1tors
elude : the coordination of
and-or assigns of Gladys
employer seminars and in·
Perry, If d!!C~ased . Helen
formational conferences;
P. Vance; 1f llvlng,.whose
the coordination
and
last known addr~s os Por·
preparation of Title VI I
tsmouth ,
Oh1o ;
the
news events such as press
unknown spouse, If any ,
conferences, press release
whose name and address
ne\.vs stories feature ar·
ar~unkno~n ; the unknown
licles, and ofher publicity
he1r~, dev1sees, legatees,
items: and the develop·
admonl~trators. executors
ment of an advertising and·
and·or assigns of Helen P.
or public service an·
Vance, If CJe~eased. Albert
nouncement campaign for
Perry; If llvong, whose !as!
Title VII .
known address. os Por·
The basic geographic
!Smoulh,
Ohoo.:
the
area to 'be served is the 56
unknown spo~se, If any,
rural counties known as the
whose name and address
Balance of State . PrOf&gt;OSals
an~ unknown; the unknown
will be accepted unto! 5:00
heor~ • . devisees, legatees,
PM on Apri I 25 1980.
admonostrators. executors
Mark Uher. PIG Liaison
and·or assigns of Alber t
Department
of
Ad·
Perry, If deceased. Fr~nk
ministrative Services
Krauller, Jr .: If llvong ,
30 East Broad Slreel,
whose last known address
281h
Floor
os Pomeroy, Ohoo; !he
Columbus, Ohio 43215
unknO)I{n spou~. If any,
If additional information
whose name and address
Is needed, contact Mr.
ar~ unkno~n : the unknown
Uher al (6141 466· 1033 .
heors, · devosees, legatees,
administrators. executors,
(3) 17, 18, 19, 20, 21 , Stc
and·or assigns of Frank
Woclnndey, Meroh 11
Krauner, Jr. If deceased..
Marie K. THomas ; of
living, whose last known
address is Middleport,
Ohio; the unknown spouse,
if any, whose name and ad·
Bernice Bede Osol
dress are unknown; ·the
unknown heirs, devisees,
legatees. admlnlst~ators,
executors and-or ass1gns Of
Marie K . Thomas, if
deceased. Lillian Krautler;
if living, whose last known
address is Pomeroy, Ohio ;
!he unknown spouse, if any,
whose name and address
are unknown ; the unknown
March 11,1110
heirs, devisees, legatees,
Your Imagination and creativity
administrators, executors
wiH be channeled Into mora con·
and·or assigns of Lillian
llnJCtlvol!tlllhlo coming voa1.
Krautter, if decea~ed .
Your ldooo will bo vlolonory, vet
Evelyn Krautter ; If IIV1ng,
they'll havt practice! appllcawhose last known .address
11on1.
is Pomeroy, Ohoor !he
PIICII (Fob. ao-Maroh 201
unknown spouse, If any,
Thorolo ..melhlng commanding
whose name ana address
about your olllludolhol will bo
are unknown ; the unknown
obvloua to all with whOm ~ou
heirs, devisees, legatees,
d 1 IOdl Yo · a g
adm(nlstr.;~tors, executors b~r plouint. R";,a~c:.'~!,~~:
and·or assigns of Evelyn
luck. rooourcoo. pooolblo pllfollo
Krau!ler, If deceased .
and coroor for tho coming
Harry Krautter: If living,
monlho aro all 'dlocuaoad In your
whose last known address
Awe-Graph Lollar, which
Is Pomeroy, O.hloj the
b~lna with your birthday. Moll
unknown spause, h any:
·•
1t, tor ooch to Allro·Oroph, Box
whose name and address
are unknown ; the unknown
&lt;IBQ, Radio Clly Station, N.Y.
heirs, devisees, legatees,
10019. Bo ouro lo opoeltv birth
administrators, executors
dllo.
and·or assigns of Harry
ARIII (March 21·Aprll 111
Krautter, · If deceasec:f.
Today your prime concern It
Freda May Krautter; of · llktl)' to be delng oomalhlng nice
living, whose last knO¥Jn '101 one you love. This peroon will
address Is Pomeroy, Oh1o;
be thinking of ways to brighten
the unknown spouse. if any ,
your life, too.
whose name' .and address TAURUI (April ao-Mar 201 11
are unknown; !he unkown your ears are buzzing today 11 will
heirs, devisees, legatees,
be because others are talking
~dmlnlstrators, executors
about you . You ' d feel very
and-or ,asslgi)S of Freda
llallered If you could hear what
Mlly,l~rautter If deceased.
lhey'resaylng.
. Sil~ated In he IJ.IIIage of GEMINI (May 21 - ~uno 201
Pomeroy, COUntY Of Meigs, ' Someone yOu may be surprised
State of Ohio; Being · on
to learn Is In your corner wm try
west side of Nye Sfreet. to do something to boost your
Recorded In Volume 116, career . Your benefactor may
page 503, Meigs County
never even mention lt.
Deed Records, Judgment CANCER (~uno 2bluly 22)11 will
,1314.30 plus accrued taxes, help you gel your thoughts In
assessments, penalties and ord8r If you are able to di scuss
costs of action.
·
your Ideas wllh one who oper.
Case No. 80·DL T·32, Par· alas on your wave length. Select
eel Nos. SYRV·01, SYRV· a posilivetnlnker.
02, Serial No. ·80·DLT·32,
LEO (~uly 23·AIIll. 221 In comtitled In the name Of James , pelltlve situations tOday the odds
A. Rast; If llvldn9, whose are apo to be 111gnuv lllled In
last , known a ress Is ' your favor. However, you won't
Syracuse, Ohio(· the make those you surpass teel llke
unknown spoused f any • losers.
·
w~ose name an address VIIIOO (AU9. 23-Sopt. ~~Good
are U~known ; !he rn)lnown lhlngs will happen IO you In pari·
heirs. devisees, egateets, ne11hlp arranoemanls. Thlo will
administrators, execu ors
and·or assigns~ James A . ~~!1~:~~~~.~uall aomeono vou
Rast, 11 decerse VIII
of LIIAA
:n-Oel. 211 You
Situated n
f'Rt..~
have a· 1a1 1 Ieday for Improving
Syracus~ County o
elg_st
dl
~a:t ~ 'f~~· !e1:~ L~!fa rc~~~~~ 1(&amp;;~~"N::.n) ~~;
bel
L
ldeApp' le grace and polso are the tools
ng 0 1 37 ;..'!. R
. lhal enable "ou 10 oommuniC.:fe
Street SO x 50 '""1·, ecor
.
•
ded In Volume 160. page :· wllh lust about anybody today.
6411, Meigs Count( ·Deed u.. them to shore up a dlfllcull
Records. Judgmen SUjl.ol5 rolaliOI)Ohlp.
plus etcrued taJ&lt;es r " I .AQITTAIIIU8(Nov. 23-0oc.21)
assessments. pena!r; es and ' II'S. • good day IO pul I he finiSh·
CQSisof action. .
lng touches. on somw small
Any per~on owning or cho1os you ve temporar ily
claiming any right, Iitie or llhelved. You 're nol likely to
Interest In, or lien upon, leave any loose lhr~edo hon~ln~
any parcel of real estate allhlslime.
above listed mav file an an· CAPRICOIIN (Doc. 22·~•·· 111
swer In such action selling Things onou!d .go raltlersmoothfort~ the nature . an1 ly today. Youre not apt to 101
amount of !nterest owned
petty annoyances rutile vo'rlr
or claim.ed and any defense leathers. Thl; ;tilit have a catml~g
ofor · o b!ectlosn h to st~~ ol!e« on ohooe w11~ w110111 you ,
rec 1osure . . uc an. w
associate.
'
.
must be foled on !he offoce,of ACIUAIIIUS (~on. 20-Fob. 1tl E.
the u"derslgned Clerk off unsellls~ly showing oono,. ·cor·
Court a~d " copy the reo
toln things they can oq oo roap
:,er;::~ul~on ~r"bef~~~~~ prOiilabl&lt;l beneJHo. you can alSo
dav 01 Apr il
do yoursell some ~ood ln,dav.
22rnd
1980
.
r
• 'n
d.
INf:WS'"~PE~ ·· .. f: ... ~Qiil .,&lt;,r.. '
If no answer, os oe on or

ASTRO•GRAPH

~'-Your

'W'Birthday

1

I'""'·

w·

,,

Nora Rice named Philathea president
New Offi cers were elected· at the

Thursday meeting of the Philathea
Women of the Middleport Church of
Christ.
Elected following a report by Miss
France.o; Roush were Mrs. Nora
Rice, president : Mrs. Roush, vice
president: Mrs. Cathy Erwin,
secretary; Mrs. Dorothy Roach,
assistant secretary; and Mrs. Farie
Cole, treasurer. They will be installed at the April meeting by Mrs.
Clarice Erwin and Mrs. Rose
Reynolds. That meeting will be
preceded by a potluck dinner with
Mrs. Clyda Allensw&lt;.rtb, Mrs. Erwin, and Mrs. Betty McKinley, retir·

"

ing president, to have charge or the
tables and drinks .
The women's Bible study class
was aMounced for Thursdays at
9:30 with Debbie Melton as the
guide. The afternoon is spent in call·
ing on residents.
Plans were made to serve a wedding reception in June with Mrs.
Regina Swift and Mrs. Allensworth
to have charge. Two Easter lillies
will be purchased for the sanctuary.
MrS. Dorothy Roach and Mrs.
Martha Childs presented officers'
reports. The flower report was given
by Mrs. Grace Hawley. Reported ill
were Mrs. Farie Cole, Ted Riley,
Delcie Forth, and Jessie Saunders.

A thank ; ou note was received from
Mrs. Cole for remembrances.
A skit, "The Tater Family" was
presented by Mrs. Rice , Mrs.
Hawley, Mrs. Erwin, Mrs. Roach,
Miss Rnush, Mrs. Childs, Mrs.
McKinley, and Mrs. Melton.
Miss Mildred Hawley, Mrs.
Hawley, Miss Rnush, and Mrs.
louise McElhinny se rved
refreslunents to those named and
Mrs. Helen Reynolds, Mrs.
Margaret Jones, Mrs. Margaret
Lallance, Mrs. Beulah Roush, Mrs.
Gertrude Miller, Mrs. Kathryn Ervin, Mrs. Ella Mae Daugherty, and a
guest, Mrs. Eleanor Lohse.

$100 gift bestowed for restoration
of stained glass windows of church
A$100 gift to be applied to the project of restoring and sealing the
stained glass windows of the United
Methodist Church of Chester was
given at the recent meeting of the
United'Methodist Women.
Mf!t!ting at the church, the
members made plans for an Easter
bake sale to be held on April 5 at
Gauls Market in Chester, 9 a.m. to 2
p.m. Members will have charge of
the Easter sunrise service to be
followed by a breakfast served in the
fellowship dining room. Cards were

signed and sent to sick and shut-in
members and friends.
Mrs. Ruth Karr, president, conducted the business meeting when
officers' reports were given. The
Rev. Richard Thomas discussed the
Athens District Mission Saturation
being held May 3-8. The program
will emphasize global ministry for
all United Methodist Churches in the
district. Purpose was described as
being to help global outreach come
alive. The minister explained that

Sentinel social calendar
TIJFSDAY

CHESTER Counci1323, Daughters
of America, 7:30 Tuesday evening.
Quarterly birthdays to be observed.
It will not be potluck. The kitchen
committee will serve refreslunents.
SALISBURY PTO at school, 7:30
p.m. Room visitation, 7-7:30 p.m.
Porgram by girl scouts. Refreshments.
MASON VOLUNTEER Fire
Departinent will host Area Fire and
Emergency Assn., at 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday (tonight) at Mason Fire
Station.
ANNUAL. INSPECTION, Racine
LOOge 461, F and AM, 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday. Work in fellowship degree
and refreshments following
meeting.

than Wednesday.

OHIO VALlEY Conunandery will
confer the order of the temple on two
candidates Wednesday.
SYRACUSE
MINERSVILlE
Baseball Association sign up Wednesday at Syracuse Fire Station 5: 15
to 6:30 p.m. Short meeting untU 7
p.m.

mission interpreters will be visiting
churches throughout the district to
tell the story of the global outreach
of the church.
Mrs. Daylene Bahr and Mrs.
Kathryn Mora were program
leaders. Mrs. Bahr welcomed the 14
members and one guest and the
group sang "Trust and Obey" with
Mrs. Clarice Allen at the piano.
"The Privilege of Giving" was the
program topic with Mrs. Bahr
reading scripture from II Cor. 8 and
a statement of purpose. She con·
tinued with dicusslon of
undesignated giving which i! the
part of the local unit budget called
pledge to missions. All members
read the purpose of the Worilen's
Division and the purpose of the
United Methodist Women. Prayer
and another verse of "Trust and
Obey" closed the meeting.
A total of 55 sick and shutin visits
reported by members. Next meeting
will be on April 3at I:30 p.m.

OUR

20TH
YEAR

WEDNESDAY

ANY YOUTH who missed signup
for Pomeroy Youth League Swruner
Program last Saturday, may still
sign up by contacting Phil Harrison,
league president, at 992-6248 no later

Host Past Councilors
Mrs. Goldie Frederick and Mrs.
Mary Hayes were hostesses for a
meeting of the Past CoWtciltirs Club
of Chester Council323, Daughters of
America, held at the hall Wednesday
night. .
Mrs. Pauline Ridenour presided
and opened the meeting by reading
the 32nd Psalm and leading in the
. Lord's Prayer and the pledge to the

GI'IANVILLE OVAL

UP
TO

20% OFF

ON ALL
POOLS

ABOVE AND BEl OW GROUND

~ROGER

HORSBY----.
SWIMMING POOlS

SHOWROOM IN COOLVILt.E. OHIO
Day 614-667·3146, Night 614·667·3546

flag . .

Officers' reports were given by
Mrs. Betty Roush and Mrs.
Frederick. For roll call members
told something pertaining to st.
Patrick's Day. The April meeting
will begin at 8 p.m. The club decided
to purchase a wreath to be placed on
the grave of Dorothy Lawson.
Games were conducted by Leona
Hensley and Mae McPeek. Mae
Spencer WQII the !loor prize. Others
attending were Margaret TutUe, Erma Cleland, Thelma White, Mary K.
Holter, Ada , Bissell, Elizabeth
Hayes, Inzy Newell, Opal Hollon,
and Ada Neutzling.

(OMPUll

INIUUNCI llltYICI

• ........ I.....
m-s13o

PROGRAM CHANGE
Rnn Zldlan, administrator of the
Pomeroy Health Care Center, will

POMEROY

"QUALITY lnd
SERVICE"

not be presented a program at the
Meigs Senior Citizens Center In
Pomeroy Thursday. His appearance
will be rescheduled at a later date.

··J OIN THE CLUBI
THE NEW
JAYMAR GOLF CLUB
'
(Formerly the Pomeroy Golf Club)
Make up your mind that you're going to have fun this year •
Come on - forget your troubles - get out in the fresh air
- get some exercise - feel better - Join the Club.
Membership now open. Course will open March 30
&lt;weather permitting), ·

DUES: .

MenSlSO
Man &amp; Wife 5225

Ladies SlOO
Students sso

SEND TO: BILL CHILDS, M.ANAGER, BOX 32, MIDDLEPOR!, OHIO
'.
'
we have a New Pro Shop ; New sandwich and Lunch Room - New
Locker Room , New Club HO!!Se ·Course Improvements. We nee~
your~upport-JOIN .THECLUB! .
.

�9-The DailySentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Mar. 18, 1980
Nat1ceof
For1enctlohsure
e

Common Pleas
CourtofMel_gs
Countt;,Otuo

FONROET~L~s'lfRe
OF LIENS FOR
DELINQUENT
.
LAND TAXES
IY ACTION IN

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and address are unknown ;
the
unknown
heirs
devisees, legatees, ad:
mlnislrato~s. executors
and·or assogns of Fred
Pullins,
If
deceased.
William Davis; if living,
whose ·!asl known address
Is M iddlepOrt. Oh[o: the
unknown spouse, of any,
whose name and address
are unknown; the unknown
heirs, d~vlsees• . legatees,
adm inistrators. executors
and·or assigns Of William
Davis, If deceased. Anna
Louise Young; if living,
whose last known address
Is Zanesville, Ohio; the
unknown spouse if any,
whose name ani:! address
are unknown: the unknown
heirs, dev isees, legatees,
ad ministrators, executors
and·or assigns of Anna
Louise Young, if deceased.
Albert Knowllon: If living,
whose last known address
If Ypsilanti, Mi chigan; the

unknoWn spouse~

if

any,

L

C)

?-*"

spouse, If any, whose name

whose name and address
are unk nown; the unknown
heirs, devisees. legatees,
administrators, executors
and-or assigns of Albert
Knowlton, If deceased. Bel·
ty Myers; if living, whose
last known address is
Monroe, Michigan: the
unknown spouse, if any,
whose name and address
are unknown; the unknown
heirs, devisees, legatees,
administrators, executors,
and·or assigns of Betty
Myers, if dec eased .
Virginia Murphy; if living,
whose last known address
Is Mlddlepart, Ohio; the
unknown spouse. if any,
whose name and address
are unknown; the unknown
helr.s, devisees, leg_atees,
administrators; executors
and·or assigns of VIrginia
Murphy, If deceased. Mar·
the Morrl!i; If living, whose
last known address is
Monroe. Michigan; the
unknown spouse, if .any,
whose name and address
are unknown: the unknown
heirs, devisees, legatee$,
administrators, executors
and·or assigns of Martha
Mprrls,lfdeceased.
Pear! McKibben· if
living, whose !aS! known
'•
address IS Vlckerv. Ohio;
t"' unknown spouse. If any,
whOse name and address
are unknown; the unknown
heirs deviSO!OS legatees
·administrators,' executors
and· or assigns of Pear!
Mcl&lt;ibben
If deceased
c~ar!es • Knowlton ; if
l1vlng, whose last known
address
Is
Monroe,
Michigan· the unknown
spouse, if'any, whose name
and address are unknown:
the
unknown
heirs ,
devisees, legatees, ad·
minlstrators, executors
and-or assigns · of Charles
Knowllon
If deceased .
Melvin Knowlton; if living,
whose last known address
Is Erie Michigan· the
unknown spause if any
whose name and address
are unknown; the unknown
heirs, devisees, legatees,
administrators, ex!!(:utors
and-or assigns Of ' Melvin
Kriowllon
If deceased .
Ronnie Kriowlton; If living,
whose last knnwn address
Is Monroe, Michigan; the
unknown spOuse If any
who$&lt;! name and address
are unknown; !he unknown
heirs, devisees. legatees.
administrators, executors
and·or assigns .of Ronnie
Knowllon
11 deceased .
Rlckv Knawlton; if living,
whose last· known address
Is Monroe Michigan · the
unknown spouse, If 'any,
whose name and address
are unknown; the unknown
heirs devisees, legatees,
administrators. executors
and·or assigns of Ricky
Knowllon
If deceased.
Janet Marie lurton; if
living whcse !as! known
address is Temperance,
Michigan ; the unknown
spause If any, whose name
and address are unknown ;
the
unknown
heirs .
devisees, legatees, ~ mlhlstrators 1 executors
and-or . assigns of Janet
Marie Burton , If deceased.
Charles · E. Warner; if
living whose last known
addreSs IS ~oger Clly,
Michigan; the unknown
spouse, If any, whose name
and address are. unknown ;
!he
unknown heirs.
devisees, legatees, ad·
mlnlstrators, executors
and-or assigns of Chlllrles
E Warner if deceased.
Danny warner; If living,
whose las! known address
Is 3278 Jackmar Rd., Peter·
sburg, Michigan; the
unknown spouse, If any,
whose name and . address
are unknown; !he unknown
heirs, devisees, legatees,
administrators. executors
and· or assigns of Danny
warner, If deceased. Henry
warner.- Jr.; If living,
whose lest knoWn ~ddress
Is LaSalle. Michigan; the
unknown spouse. If any.
whose name and address
are u.nkf'IO'Vn; the unknown
heirs · devisees legatees
administrators ' executors
and·or assign$ of'r Henry
warner Jr., If deceased.
Cora Bowen;- if liVIng,
whose address Is unknown:
the unknown spause,lf any,
whose name and address
··'legatees, '- admlnl,tr~tors, · are unkn~n; ttle unknown
~ executors and asslgnsr the
heirs, devisees, leGatees,
. unknown spouse. If any, of
aQmlnlstralors, executors
Minnie Adams.
and·or assigns Of Cora
• Sltu~ted In Village Of An·
Bowen,
If
deceased.
: tlqultr&lt; ·Letart Township,
Charles Bowen; If living.
~~ Meigs county, Qhlo. Being
whose address is unknown;
., that part .Of Lot No. 1ft
the unkriown spouse, If any,
• Town ·of Antiquity East 01
whose name and address
: public road. Also being !hal ere unknown: the unknown
part 75 feet Of South part Of • heirs ''devisees legatees
~ Lot i No. 11._ Recorded In admlnistrators.'JxecutorS
• Volume 12~. _page 224, · and·or assigns · Charles
• Mergs· CountY Deed Recor·
Bowen If deCeased. The
~ ds. Judgement $15.4 .38 plus ui1knoWn heirs,, devisees,
• accrued faxes, assessmen· legatees
lf9mlnlstrators
• Is penalties and costs of 'exeeutor's and·or assigns 01
• action.
I Ernest Bol!(en, deceas!!d.
: ca.- No. IO'DL T -30• Pa~· '
Sl)ua.ted !n t~e., City Of
• eel No. POMV-1)6, ~erial
Pomeroy county 01 Meigs
• No. 80.D l:T·JO, tilled lh !he Slate of Ohio. containing ~
.. riame of Edward ~C1_W..!n.t e.t acres. ·fi!elng Lot No. 307
: al , if living, . whose last and 308, City of Pomeroy.
• known addr111s Is Pomeroy, Recorded In VolufTie 228,
~ Ohll'l •tha unknown SpOU~, . page 969., . Meigs County
: .ff any, whose name and • · Deed Records. Judgment
• drtU , are ~nknown; !he $108.53 plus accrued taxes,
• ~nknown llelrs, devisees, assessments, penaltres ana
• legatees administrators' costsofaction
•
~ executo~s and·or assigns 0#
Cate No SO:Dt.l1·31 Par·
• Edward' Bowen,
If eel No POMV ·07 • serial
No ''80-Dt."t·31 fltiOd 1 the
: deCeased Denver Bowen,
• If IIV~n• whose las! known ria
Of Henry Kra~tter.
• eddr
11 Mason, W"t deceased; "the unknown
... Vlrglnl • tllJ unknown heirs devisees legatees
~ spouse ilan\1. whose name • administrators; • executors
- ~and 11ddr~ .,,. unknown ' and·Or aS$Igns of Henry
.. ,. lht un~t~own
heirs ! Krautter deceased Laura
1-- devisees legatees ad · K Shrelnerr If · ~ lvlng ·
. • ~' mlnlstritors, - executors whose last known aCidrm·
'" " ond·or atsl~na: of Denller ls' Hornestead Penna. the
u...._ BoweoJ
. deceased
unknown spo'use If ''any )
~; tt Ctll!rles Pu un,; If 'living) wt'lose natne and ad~re$$
WhOM· last· known address !lore unknj&gt;Wn; the unkown
Is 'COlumbus, Ohio; !he heirs, devisees, legatees.
unknown spOuse If any, administrators, executors
whose name aiicl address and·or aplgill of Laura K
are u~known ' the unknown Schreiner If deceased:
heirS, deviit.lt, legatees, Nellie K. ~wart%; If living,
administrators. e&gt;&lt;ec:utor
s whose last known aQdress
and-or assigns Of ·cnar 1es Is Ma~on . w. Va .; me
Pullins. If deceased. Fred· unknoym· spouse, If an 1,

"'
""'

£:

MEIGS COUNTY
'
OH IO
Public nolle~ Is t&gt;oreby
given that on !he 4th day of
March, 1980, !he County
TreasurerofMelgsCounty,
Ohio, filed a compla in! In
the CD\Jrl of Common Pleas
ofp Meogs C.o0uhn1ty, Of hlo, heal
omeroy,
o, or 1
foreclosure of liens for
delinquent
taxes ,
assessments, p~naltles ,
and charges aga1nst cer!•In real properly Situ~led
on such county as descrobed
in sald.c;omplalnl.
. .
The object of the act1on •s
lo obtain from ·fhe court .of
a iudgrrent foreclosing the
tax !lens agaJnst such real
estate ,lind ordering the
sale~ such real estate for
the satisfaction of the lax
liens thereon.
Such action Is brought
against the real properly
~n!v and no personal
shall be entered
judgment
herein.
Tt'le per.manent parr;el
number of each pa_rcel on·
eluded In such acloo"' the
full street address 01 the
par~el , II avaJiable, a
description of th e parcel, a
statement of the amount of
tax,s1
assessments, ·
pena!loes and charges due
and, unpaid on such par.gel ,
and the name_~nd adc;tress
of !he last known owner
· thereof, as such appear on
!he general tax list, .a!! as
more f~!ly ~t forth on the
complaont,areasfollows :
Ca~ No. 80·DL T-27, Par·
eel No: RUT-10, Serial No.
80·DL T·27, filled in the
name ·Of Allen E. Braley,
deceased, the unknown
heirs. devisees, legatees,
administrators, executors,
and-or assigns of Allen E .
Braley, ·deceased ; Mary G.
Braley, a~a Mary C.
Braley, II !lvong, whose last
know~ ~ddress If Rutland,
Ohio; of deceased,_ the
unknown heirs,_ devosees,
Jegatees, admonlslr~lor~.
executors and·or. assogns;
the unknOW.Jl SQ{lll!!f' . II anv
of Mary G. Bral.e.v ~K~ .
Mary ,c. ~ra!ey; Wo!6ur G.
Braley, of ·!fvlng1 . whose
!as! ·know~ ~doress Is
Rutland, Ohoo; of dece~sed ,
the . unknown
heirs,
dev1sees, legatees, ad·
ministrators, . executors
and · or
assogn.s . the
U'1known SPOuse, 1f any, of
Wo!bur G. !lra!•Y : Leona L.
John~n. •f llvtno . wh~
Ia~!. knQwn address '·' Rulland, 6hlo, If deceased,
!he . unknown
heirs,
dev•~ees , legatees, ad·
mlnlstrators, executors
and · or
assigns , !he
unknown spouse, if any, of
Leona L. Johnson; Effie
Hull, If living, whose last
known addr~ss Is St. Peter·
sburg, Fla .• ·If deceased,
!he unknown
heIrs,
devisees, legatees, ad·
mlnlstrators • . executors
and -,or
assogns , the
unknown spause, If any, of
Effie Hall; VIctor Fraley,
if living, whose last k~own
add~ess Is Rutland, Ohoo; If
dece"sed, the unknown
. heirs,, devisees. leg~,tees,
· administrators, executoh
and· or
asslgn.s . the
unknown spause, of any, of
Victor Braley.
Situated I~ Rutland
Township, Meogs County.
Ohio. Being 9.94 acres In
Fracllon 31, Township 6,
·Range 14. Recorded In
Volume 118, page 169,
Meigs County Deed Recor·
ds. Judgment $59.03 plus
accrped ,taxes, assessmen·
Is, ;lenaotles ' and costs of
action.
Case No. 80·DLT ·28, Par·
eel . No. 01 ·011 ·~17 , Serial
. No. 80·DLT·28,lol!ed on !he
name of Haze! M. Dunlavy,
If living, whose lasttkhnowGifnt
address Is 272 Sou
Street, Apt. 1009, Co!um·
bus, Ohio; if deceased, the
unknown · heirs, devis~s,
legatees. adminlslra!ors.
executors and·or a~slgns.
the unknown spouse, 1f any,
of Ha~el M. Dunlavy.
· Situated In Bedfor d
Township, /Yielgs County,
Ohio. Contaonlng lO . acres
more or less In Sect1on 11 ,
Town 3, Range 13, O.C.P. .·
Recorded In Volume 258,
page 171. Meigs County
Deed Records. Jud~ment
S35.50 plus accrued. axes,
assessments, pena!toes and
costsdfacl!on.
Case No. 80-DL T·29, Par·
. eel Nos. 05·016·012, 05·016·
, 013, serUtl No. 80·DL T·29,
• filled In the name of Ernest
• Adams aka Joseph E.
; Adams: If living, whose last
~ known address is Rt. 2,
• Racine Ohio; if deceased,
• the
unknown
heIrs.
, devisees, · legatees, ad ·
mlnlstrators, executors
· and assigns: the unknown
·. spouse If any, of Ernest
. Adfrtis', ikl Joseph' E.
Ada,h1's; Minnie Adams, If
. 'living, WhOse . last kn~n
·, address Is Rt. 2, Racine.,
, Ohio; , . If deceased~- the
~ unknoWn · h!!Jirs, · d~vlsees,

whose n~ me ano address
are unknown ; the unknown
heirsr dev isees, legatees ,

Pullins ; if livlng, whose
last known address i$ Mid·
dleport, Ohio; the unknown

::r=:

(I) (I)

VI-

me

'

•
(

(

J

f

1,

Y.

,,

beta.. ~ tne da Te s~ci f i ed as
tne lasr day for f1 1i ng an an
swer, a judgment of
administrators, executors foreclosure will be tak.en by
and·or ass igns of Nellie K. default as to anv Oit r t~•
Swartz
if
deceased .
lis·ted in the compl a•n1 a!. ro
Richard Kraul1er; if liv ing,
which no answer has been
whose las I known address
fi led . A ny par cel a s to
os Mason, w. va.; me
which a foreclosure is
unknown SPOuse, If any,
taken by default shall be
whose name and address
sold for the satisfaction of
are unknown · the unknown
the taxes. assessments,
heirs, . devisee.. legatees,
penalties, charges, and
admlnoslralors, executors
costs incurred in the
and-or assigns of Richard
foreclosure that are due
Krauner, if deceased. Mar· and unoaid.
jorie B. WOOdard ; if living,
any time prior to the
whose last known address filiAt
ng of an entry of con· .
is Smithfield, Ohio; !he flrmation
of sale, any
unknown spouse. If any , owner or lienholder
of a
whose name and address parcel
listed In the com·
are unknown ; t he unknown plaint may
redeem suc h
heirs, devisees. legatees. Rarcel by tend
ering to the
administrators. executors County Treasurer th e
and-or assigns of Majorle amount
ta xes,
B. Woodard. if deceased . assessmentsof
,
penalties,
Catherine B. Mees: if
charges due and un·
living, whose last known and
paid on such par cel.
address IS Pomeroy, Ohio;
together with all costs
!he unknown sPOuse. If anv. which have been incurred
whose name and address In any proceeding In ·
are unknown ; the unknown
stituted against such par ·
heirs, devisees, legatees , eel
under Section 5721.18 of
administrators, executors_
the Revised Code. Upon the
and-or assigns of Catherine filing of any entry Of con ·
B. Mees
if ~ecease&lt;~ .
firmation of sale, there
Evelyn B. Strauss : of . shall be no further equity of
living, whose last known
redemption. Anv person
address Is Pomeroy, Ohio;
thereafter claim ing any
the unknown spause, if any,
right, title .and i'nteresl in ,
whose name and address or lien upon, any such par·
are unknown : the unknown eel, shall be forever barred
heirs, devisees. legatees, and foreclosed of any s~ c h
administrators, executor s right, title, interest i':', lien
and ·or assigns of Evelyn 8 . upon,. and any eQuity of
Strauss
if dece~sed .
redemption in, such parcel .
Homer Brailey; If loving ,
whose last known address
Larry E . srencer
is Pomeroy , Oh l ~ ; the
Clerk o Court
unknown spouse, 1f any , ·
of Common Pleas
whose name and address
are unknown ; !he unknown
13111. 18. 25, 3tc
heirs, devisees, legatees,
administrators. executors
and ·or assigns of Homer
Brailey ;
If dece ased .
LEGAL NOTICE
Harrv Krautter; if living,
REQUESTS FOR
whose last known address
PROPOSALS
is Mason, w . V~.; ·the
PRIVATE SECTOR
unknown spouse, of any ,
INITIATIVE
whose name and address
PROGRAM
are unknown ; the unknown
PRIVATE
heirs. devisees, legalee.s,
INDUSTRY
administrators, executors,
COUNCIL
~nd ·or ass l ~ns of Harry
The Private Industry
Kra~tter, of decease&lt;! .
Council (PICI for the
c:;:hr1stlne Kraut ter ; 1f
Balance of Stale I BDS&gt; is
hving, whose last known
accepting public relations
address is Pomeroy, Ohio;
propasalsperlalnin~ to !he
!he unknown spouse, if any ,
Private Sector ln1tiative
whose name and address
Program under Title VII of
ar~ unknown ; !he unknown
the Comprehensive Em·
heors. devisees, legatees,
ployment and Tra ining Acl
adrninlslr"lors, executors of
1978 ICETA).
and·or assogns of Christine
The PIC requests the
Krau!lerL If deceased . . public
relations propasals
Gladys t-erry; if living,
mclude me.thods to educate
whose last known ~ddress
and involve employers in
Is Portsmouth, OhJO: the
Title VII, and suggestions
unkn9wn spouse, of any, of
obta i ning
public
whose name and address
awareness of the activities
ar~ unkno~n ; the unknown . of
Tille VI!.
heors. , devosees. lega!ees,
Possible activities in·
administrators, execu1tors
elude : the coordination of
and-or assigns of Gladys
employer seminars and in·
Perry, If d!!C~ased . Helen
formational conferences;
P. Vance; 1f llvlng,.whose
the coordination
and
last known addr~s os Por·
preparation of Title VI I
tsmouth ,
Oh1o ;
the
news events such as press
unknown spouse, If any ,
conferences, press release
whose name and address
ne\.vs stories feature ar·
ar~unkno~n ; the unknown
licles, and ofher publicity
he1r~, dev1sees, legatees,
items: and the develop·
admonl~trators. executors
ment of an advertising and·
and·or assigns of Helen P.
or public service an·
Vance, If CJe~eased. Albert
nouncement campaign for
Perry; If llvong, whose !as!
Title VII .
known address. os Por·
The basic geographic
!Smoulh,
Ohoo.:
the
area to 'be served is the 56
unknown spo~se, If any,
rural counties known as the
whose name and address
Balance of State . PrOf&gt;OSals
an~ unknown; the unknown
will be accepted unto! 5:00
heor~ • . devisees, legatees,
PM on Apri I 25 1980.
admonostrators. executors
Mark Uher. PIG Liaison
and·or assigns of Alber t
Department
of
Ad·
Perry, If deceased. Fr~nk
ministrative Services
Krauller, Jr .: If llvong ,
30 East Broad Slreel,
whose last known address
281h
Floor
os Pomeroy, Ohoo; !he
Columbus, Ohio 43215
unknO)I{n spou~. If any,
If additional information
whose name and address
Is needed, contact Mr.
ar~ unkno~n : the unknown
Uher al (6141 466· 1033 .
heors, · devosees, legatees,
administrators. executors,
(3) 17, 18, 19, 20, 21 , Stc
and·or assigns of Frank
Woclnndey, Meroh 11
Krauner, Jr. If deceased..
Marie K. THomas ; of
living, whose last known
address is Middleport,
Ohio; the unknown spouse,
if any, whose name and ad·
Bernice Bede Osol
dress are unknown; ·the
unknown heirs, devisees,
legatees. admlnlst~ators,
executors and-or ass1gns Of
Marie K . Thomas, if
deceased. Lillian Krautler;
if living, whose last known
address is Pomeroy, Ohio ;
!he unknown spouse, if any,
whose name and address
are unknown ; the unknown
March 11,1110
heirs, devisees, legatees,
Your Imagination and creativity
administrators, executors
wiH be channeled Into mora con·
and·or assigns of Lillian
llnJCtlvol!tlllhlo coming voa1.
Krautter, if decea~ed .
Your ldooo will bo vlolonory, vet
Evelyn Krautter ; If IIV1ng,
they'll havt practice! appllcawhose last known .address
11on1.
is Pomeroy, Ohoor !he
PIICII (Fob. ao-Maroh 201
unknown spouse, If any,
Thorolo ..melhlng commanding
whose name ana address
about your olllludolhol will bo
are unknown ; the unknown
obvloua to all with whOm ~ou
heirs, devisees, legatees,
d 1 IOdl Yo · a g
adm(nlstr.;~tors, executors b~r plouint. R";,a~c:.'~!,~~:
and·or assigns of Evelyn
luck. rooourcoo. pooolblo pllfollo
Krau!ler, If deceased .
and coroor for tho coming
Harry Krautter: If living,
monlho aro all 'dlocuaoad In your
whose last known address
Awe-Graph Lollar, which
Is Pomeroy, O.hloj the
b~lna with your birthday. Moll
unknown spause, h any:
·•
1t, tor ooch to Allro·Oroph, Box
whose name and address
are unknown ; the unknown
&lt;IBQ, Radio Clly Station, N.Y.
heirs, devisees, legatees,
10019. Bo ouro lo opoeltv birth
administrators, executors
dllo.
and·or assigns of Harry
ARIII (March 21·Aprll 111
Krautter, · If deceasec:f.
Today your prime concern It
Freda May Krautter; of · llktl)' to be delng oomalhlng nice
living, whose last knO¥Jn '101 one you love. This peroon will
address Is Pomeroy, Oh1o;
be thinking of ways to brighten
the unknown spouse. if any ,
your life, too.
whose name' .and address TAURUI (April ao-Mar 201 11
are unknown; !he unkown your ears are buzzing today 11 will
heirs, devisees, legatees,
be because others are talking
~dmlnlstrators, executors
about you . You ' d feel very
and-or ,asslgi)S of Freda
llallered If you could hear what
Mlly,l~rautter If deceased.
lhey'resaylng.
. Sil~ated In he IJ.IIIage of GEMINI (May 21 - ~uno 201
Pomeroy, COUntY Of Meigs, ' Someone yOu may be surprised
State of Ohio; Being · on
to learn Is In your corner wm try
west side of Nye Sfreet. to do something to boost your
Recorded In Volume 116, career . Your benefactor may
page 503, Meigs County
never even mention lt.
Deed Records, Judgment CANCER (~uno 2bluly 22)11 will
,1314.30 plus accrued taxes, help you gel your thoughts In
assessments, penalties and ord8r If you are able to di scuss
costs of action.
·
your Ideas wllh one who oper.
Case No. 80·DL T·32, Par· alas on your wave length. Select
eel Nos. SYRV·01, SYRV· a posilivetnlnker.
02, Serial No. ·80·DLT·32,
LEO (~uly 23·AIIll. 221 In comtitled In the name Of James , pelltlve situations tOday the odds
A. Rast; If llvldn9, whose are apo to be 111gnuv lllled In
last , known a ress Is ' your favor. However, you won't
Syracuse, Ohio(· the make those you surpass teel llke
unknown spoused f any • losers.
·
w~ose name an address VIIIOO (AU9. 23-Sopt. ~~Good
are U~known ; !he rn)lnown lhlngs will happen IO you In pari·
heirs. devisees, egateets, ne11hlp arranoemanls. Thlo will
administrators, execu ors
and·or assigns~ James A . ~~!1~:~~~~.~uall aomeono vou
Rast, 11 decerse VIII
of LIIAA
:n-Oel. 211 You
Situated n
f'Rt..~
have a· 1a1 1 Ieday for Improving
Syracus~ County o
elg_st
dl
~a:t ~ 'f~~· !e1:~ L~!fa rc~~~~~ 1(&amp;;~~"N::.n) ~~;
bel
L
ldeApp' le grace and polso are the tools
ng 0 1 37 ;..'!. R
. lhal enable "ou 10 oommuniC.:fe
Street SO x 50 '""1·, ecor
.
•
ded In Volume 160. page :· wllh lust about anybody today.
6411, Meigs Count( ·Deed u.. them to shore up a dlfllcull
Records. Judgmen SUjl.ol5 rolaliOI)Ohlp.
plus etcrued taJ&lt;es r " I .AQITTAIIIU8(Nov. 23-0oc.21)
assessments. pena!r; es and ' II'S. • good day IO pul I he finiSh·
CQSisof action. .
lng touches. on somw small
Any per~on owning or cho1os you ve temporar ily
claiming any right, Iitie or llhelved. You 're nol likely to
Interest In, or lien upon, leave any loose lhr~edo hon~ln~
any parcel of real estate allhlslime.
above listed mav file an an· CAPRICOIIN (Doc. 22·~•·· 111
swer In such action selling Things onou!d .go raltlersmoothfort~ the nature . an1 ly today. Youre not apt to 101
amount of !nterest owned
petty annoyances rutile vo'rlr
or claim.ed and any defense leathers. Thl; ;tilit have a catml~g
ofor · o b!ectlosn h to st~~ ol!e« on ohooe w11~ w110111 you ,
rec 1osure . . uc an. w
associate.
'
.
must be foled on !he offoce,of ACIUAIIIUS (~on. 20-Fob. 1tl E.
the u"derslgned Clerk off unsellls~ly showing oono,. ·cor·
Court a~d " copy the reo
toln things they can oq oo roap
:,er;::~ul~on ~r"bef~~~~~ prOiilabl&lt;l beneJHo. you can alSo
dav 01 Apr il
do yoursell some ~ood ln,dav.
22rnd
1980
.
r
• 'n
d.
INf:WS'"~PE~ ·· .. f: ... ~Qiil .,&lt;,r.. '
If no answer, os oe on or

ASTRO•GRAPH

~'-Your

'W'Birthday

1

I'""'·

w·

,,

Nora Rice named Philathea president
New Offi cers were elected· at the

Thursday meeting of the Philathea
Women of the Middleport Church of
Christ.
Elected following a report by Miss
France.o; Roush were Mrs. Nora
Rice, president : Mrs. Roush, vice
president: Mrs. Cathy Erwin,
secretary; Mrs. Dorothy Roach,
assistant secretary; and Mrs. Farie
Cole, treasurer. They will be installed at the April meeting by Mrs.
Clarice Erwin and Mrs. Rose
Reynolds. That meeting will be
preceded by a potluck dinner with
Mrs. Clyda Allensw&lt;.rtb, Mrs. Erwin, and Mrs. Betty McKinley, retir·

"

ing president, to have charge or the
tables and drinks .
The women's Bible study class
was aMounced for Thursdays at
9:30 with Debbie Melton as the
guide. The afternoon is spent in call·
ing on residents.
Plans were made to serve a wedding reception in June with Mrs.
Regina Swift and Mrs. Allensworth
to have charge. Two Easter lillies
will be purchased for the sanctuary.
MrS. Dorothy Roach and Mrs.
Martha Childs presented officers'
reports. The flower report was given
by Mrs. Grace Hawley. Reported ill
were Mrs. Farie Cole, Ted Riley,
Delcie Forth, and Jessie Saunders.

A thank ; ou note was received from
Mrs. Cole for remembrances.
A skit, "The Tater Family" was
presented by Mrs. Rice , Mrs.
Hawley, Mrs. Erwin, Mrs. Roach,
Miss Rnush, Mrs. Childs, Mrs.
McKinley, and Mrs. Melton.
Miss Mildred Hawley, Mrs.
Hawley, Miss Rnush, and Mrs.
louise McElhinny se rved
refreslunents to those named and
Mrs. Helen Reynolds, Mrs.
Margaret Jones, Mrs. Margaret
Lallance, Mrs. Beulah Roush, Mrs.
Gertrude Miller, Mrs. Kathryn Ervin, Mrs. Ella Mae Daugherty, and a
guest, Mrs. Eleanor Lohse.

$100 gift bestowed for restoration
of stained glass windows of church
A$100 gift to be applied to the project of restoring and sealing the
stained glass windows of the United
Methodist Church of Chester was
given at the recent meeting of the
United'Methodist Women.
Mf!t!ting at the church, the
members made plans for an Easter
bake sale to be held on April 5 at
Gauls Market in Chester, 9 a.m. to 2
p.m. Members will have charge of
the Easter sunrise service to be
followed by a breakfast served in the
fellowship dining room. Cards were

signed and sent to sick and shut-in
members and friends.
Mrs. Ruth Karr, president, conducted the business meeting when
officers' reports were given. The
Rev. Richard Thomas discussed the
Athens District Mission Saturation
being held May 3-8. The program
will emphasize global ministry for
all United Methodist Churches in the
district. Purpose was described as
being to help global outreach come
alive. The minister explained that

Sentinel social calendar
TIJFSDAY

CHESTER Counci1323, Daughters
of America, 7:30 Tuesday evening.
Quarterly birthdays to be observed.
It will not be potluck. The kitchen
committee will serve refreslunents.
SALISBURY PTO at school, 7:30
p.m. Room visitation, 7-7:30 p.m.
Porgram by girl scouts. Refreshments.
MASON VOLUNTEER Fire
Departinent will host Area Fire and
Emergency Assn., at 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday (tonight) at Mason Fire
Station.
ANNUAL. INSPECTION, Racine
LOOge 461, F and AM, 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday. Work in fellowship degree
and refreshments following
meeting.

than Wednesday.

OHIO VALlEY Conunandery will
confer the order of the temple on two
candidates Wednesday.
SYRACUSE
MINERSVILlE
Baseball Association sign up Wednesday at Syracuse Fire Station 5: 15
to 6:30 p.m. Short meeting untU 7
p.m.

mission interpreters will be visiting
churches throughout the district to
tell the story of the global outreach
of the church.
Mrs. Daylene Bahr and Mrs.
Kathryn Mora were program
leaders. Mrs. Bahr welcomed the 14
members and one guest and the
group sang "Trust and Obey" with
Mrs. Clarice Allen at the piano.
"The Privilege of Giving" was the
program topic with Mrs. Bahr
reading scripture from II Cor. 8 and
a statement of purpose. She con·
tinued with dicusslon of
undesignated giving which i! the
part of the local unit budget called
pledge to missions. All members
read the purpose of the Worilen's
Division and the purpose of the
United Methodist Women. Prayer
and another verse of "Trust and
Obey" closed the meeting.
A total of 55 sick and shutin visits
reported by members. Next meeting
will be on April 3at I:30 p.m.

OUR

20TH
YEAR

WEDNESDAY

ANY YOUTH who missed signup
for Pomeroy Youth League Swruner
Program last Saturday, may still
sign up by contacting Phil Harrison,
league president, at 992-6248 no later

Host Past Councilors
Mrs. Goldie Frederick and Mrs.
Mary Hayes were hostesses for a
meeting of the Past CoWtciltirs Club
of Chester Council323, Daughters of
America, held at the hall Wednesday
night. .
Mrs. Pauline Ridenour presided
and opened the meeting by reading
the 32nd Psalm and leading in the
. Lord's Prayer and the pledge to the

GI'IANVILLE OVAL

UP
TO

20% OFF

ON ALL
POOLS

ABOVE AND BEl OW GROUND

~ROGER

HORSBY----.
SWIMMING POOlS

SHOWROOM IN COOLVILt.E. OHIO
Day 614-667·3146, Night 614·667·3546

flag . .

Officers' reports were given by
Mrs. Betty Roush and Mrs.
Frederick. For roll call members
told something pertaining to st.
Patrick's Day. The April meeting
will begin at 8 p.m. The club decided
to purchase a wreath to be placed on
the grave of Dorothy Lawson.
Games were conducted by Leona
Hensley and Mae McPeek. Mae
Spencer WQII the !loor prize. Others
attending were Margaret TutUe, Erma Cleland, Thelma White, Mary K.
Holter, Ada , Bissell, Elizabeth
Hayes, Inzy Newell, Opal Hollon,
and Ada Neutzling.

(OMPUll

INIUUNCI llltYICI

• ........ I.....
m-s13o

PROGRAM CHANGE
Rnn Zldlan, administrator of the
Pomeroy Health Care Center, will

POMEROY

"QUALITY lnd
SERVICE"

not be presented a program at the
Meigs Senior Citizens Center In
Pomeroy Thursday. His appearance
will be rescheduled at a later date.

··J OIN THE CLUBI
THE NEW
JAYMAR GOLF CLUB
'
(Formerly the Pomeroy Golf Club)
Make up your mind that you're going to have fun this year •
Come on - forget your troubles - get out in the fresh air
- get some exercise - feel better - Join the Club.
Membership now open. Course will open March 30
&lt;weather permitting), ·

DUES: .

MenSlSO
Man &amp; Wife 5225

Ladies SlOO
Students sso

SEND TO: BILL CHILDS, M.ANAGER, BOX 32, MIDDLEPOR!, OHIO
'.
'
we have a New Pro Shop ; New sandwich and Lunch Room - New
Locker Room , New Club HO!!Se ·Course Improvements. We nee~
your~upport-JOIN .THECLUB! .
.

�'
10-Tile Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Mar. 18, 1980

11-:rhe DaUySentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Mar. 18, 1981&gt;

Your Best .Buys Are Found in the Sentinel Classifieds,
WANT AD INFORMATION

7
Yard Sale
Heated Garage Sale. 123

32

Park
Drive ,
Point
Pleasan t. W. Va . Mon .-Sat.

1973 Fairpo!nt .
bedroom

8·3.

PHONE 992-2156

Porch

or Write Dally Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St., Pomeroy, 0., 45769

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

Sale :

191h 9 to 4. Rain or shine .
Tvrn first road left past
radio station, wat ch for
signs. Tool box, tools, pi c ture frames, storm door,
lots of misc .

Public Sale

8

&amp; Auction

eANNOUNCEMENTS

eRENTALS

1- C,rdot Ttlankt
2- ln Mtmoriam
J- Announcements

41-Houseslor lhnl

$-Happy ... CII
6-lostend Found
7- YerdS.Ie
I - Public Selt
&amp;Auction

I -Wanted to Buy

st - Houseflold Gl)o)dl
S2- CI. TV, Riidlo Equipment
SJ- Antlqun
S4- Miu:. M trthiindist
Js-Bulldtnv Supplln.
U- P eh for 51111

11_ Htlpw1 nted

11:- Sltuattd Wanlecl
u - susintu. Tr-'ning
15-Sctlools Instruction

Rtdlo, TV
&amp;CI RetNir

e FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

11--WenTMI To Do

•t - Filrm Equipment
72---- Truc:tls tor Siile

IIUs lntu
Opport11nily

U - Livestock
M - Hty &amp; Gr8in
u-seect &amp; FerUIIEer

Z2- Money to lou
U - Proltulooel

S.rvlces

J !-AUIOs tor Sale
7l-\ltnt&amp; 4W. D.
74 - Motoruclu
nAuto P1rts
&amp; Acceuorlts
71 - Auto R epai~

JJ .....:! Hom U fo r Sele
U - Mobilt Home~
for Sele

:U- Ferms tar Sale
l4-lulin.. s 8uildlngs

n-Lots &amp; A crt~ge
3.._Rt.lil E1t 1ftWenttd

eSERVICES

37- Rultun

Want·Ad Advertising
Deadlines
4 P .M. Dally
11 Noon Seturdty
tor Mondey

l.

bedroom

45

man $27.50 per week. Call
992-6022.

1971 12x65 Trailer, com ·
pletely furnished, A .C.,
very good Condition . On a
lot tha1 can be ren1ed .

992-6022.

Sleeping room for working

33
Farms for Sale
COUNTRY HOME with

Pomeroy. Large lots .Call

CONSTRUCTION

Lots &amp; Acreage

5 acres, just off F l atwoods

Ch&amp;rtt

Property for sale. Over 3
acres of wooded land in

ATTENTION :
{IM·
PORTANT TO YOU) Will

'·"

1. 00

l .H
3.7 5

'·"

6tli1Vl

tor antiques and collec-

992·3900 after after 5:00.

tibles or

Elich word over the minimum 1J words I$ 4 unts per word per dily ,
Ads runntnv ottler lhiln consecutive dn s will be chuged •• the 1 diiy
,-ate.
~r

In memory, Cilrd of Th•nk' and Obilu•rv : 6 cents

word, $3 .00

coin c~ llections. Call
767·3167 or 557·3411 .

sand,

" .....
_.......
............
. . . .......... ..... .

3

Card of Thanks

Pi cki ng up an Easy play

We would like lo thank all
of those friends and neigh-

bors who helped, sent food ,
flowers or called in the loss
of our dear husband and

father,

Russell

Announcements

IN ·
Comfortable

992-214(.

organ
in your area .
Looking for a respons ibl e
party to take over payments. Cal l credit manager

collect. 614··592·5122 .
Learn to make your own

and

the

Easter candy . Free candy

Pallbearers,

Paul

Pa t ·

making

Kennedy .

Homer

Parker ,

Bill

music and Walker Funeral
Home, also Barbara Van

Meter. R.N. Your thought·
fulness

will

never

be

forgollen . God bless each

and everyone .

The Russell Little Family .
3

Announcements

GUN SHOOT EVERY
SUNDAY 1 PM. FACTORY
CHOKE ONLY . RACINE
GUN CLUB.
GUN

SHOOT .

Volunteer

Fire

dem ons trat io n

eve ry Sat. at 1 or call for

David Davis, Jerry Black, · evening
Williamson, Rev. Wilbur
Hilt for h is con soling wor ds, Hazel Thompson for the

class.

Carousel

Confectionary. Middleporl,
992-6342.
Log

Cabin

Gill

Shop

reopeningj in New ! ::&gt;cation

in former Eblin's Shake
Shop at Laurel Cliff . Open
Thurs., Fri. and Sat .,
beginning March 20 . 10
a.m .·4 p.m . Come in and
see our selection of Easter
items. Please excuse our
appearance. In the process
of r emodeling.
Giveaway

4

8 Fl. Green Couch . Good
cond . Call992-3429.

Rac ine

Factory choke guns only .

GUN SHOOT every Sunday
12 :00 . Factory choke only .
Corn Hollow Gun Club,
Rutland. Proceeds dona ted
to Boy Scout Troop 249 .
BUYING U.S. SILVER
COINS DATED 1964 OR
EARLIER
(ANY
AMOUNT! . DON' T LOSE
MONEY, SIMPLY PICK
UP THE PHONE AND
DIAL
614 · 992 · 5113,
BROWN ' S.
I PAY highest pri ces
possible for gold and silver
coins, rings, jewelry, etc.

Contact Ed Burkett Barber
Shop, Middleport.

~g~~(GN 51~~~~~- g~
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 992--6370. ALSO
DO APPRAISING .

HAYES REALTY

EMERGENCY
power
alternators - own the best
-· buy Wlnpower. Call 513788·2589 .

Neacll E. Carsey
BranchMgr.
Phone 992-2403
&amp; 992-2710

Wanted to Do

have

Give piano lessons to begin·
ners and adYanced student
in my home. Also teach
c hording and transPOsing if

Measurements of the
, gaseous element argon in
rocks provide scientists
with the raw figures needed to date things as old as
4.5 blllloJi years, the
estimated age of the Earth.

The first library In the
United States was founded
in 183&amp; with a gift of money

and some 400 books from
John Harvard. Today, the
Harvard

University
Ubrary has a coDectlon of
some 9.5 mU:!on books.
(

CALL 992-7544

Sales,

Answerhere:A[

·

A·30·tf ·~

.

"FREE ESTIMATES"
Been In Business
Fors Years

CALL S92·3238
ASK FOR DAVE
3-2-1 mo.

,

~.tetliu
"lfu~rllc/1

618 E . Main

Yesterday's

C.OOCOL.~'re

1.;

~ F/&gt;..VORIT!:&gt;~

HE'LL &amp;E I'IELL.
ATTENDED TO! I'LL
SEE TO THAT! .

I GUcSG IT'S

GOODS'IE, MR.
KAF• TAN ··I

MEAN, 'lOtJII
HIGHNESS-

2-1-4-lfc :

.A&amp;H
UPHOLSTERING

Yoit.IAT 15 THIS?
FORMALITIES
BElWEEN US?! HO,
NO! FROM NOW Oti

'lOUR UHCLE

'YOU HAVE roHE
WELL ENLISTING

~AVE

SENA10R 5RA661!$
AID, ACHMED!

I, FATHER'?
I HAVE &amp;EEN
\loiONDeRII'tei IF I
AAOe A MISTliKE!

ASU!

,,
••·
0

I

A

·'
••

"FREE
ESTIMATES"

•

3rd St. In
svrcuse, Oh.
Ph. 992-3752

or992-3743

992-3795-

2-11•1 mo.

Decorated cakes fOr all oc-

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

Real Estate

General

will be making and selling

and

refinancing

road
ac res,

7

bedroom

room,

2

yr .

44
4

buildings, extra trailer

With

close

to

septic,
mInes .

$42,000.00.
NEW LISTING

WE HAVE FINANCING AVAILABLE
AS LOW AS 5% DOWN AND JO YEARS
TO PAY, ON MOST HOMES.

$5,600.00 .
TUPPERS PLAINS - 3

WHETHER YOU RENT OR BUY - YOU PAY
FOR THE PLACE YOU OCCUPY .
MIDDLEPORT - Commercial office building on

wflh workshop area.
separate utility, wood·

with wrought iron rail ·

Three bedroom, P / 2 ba1h, nice lot

ing, neal al$25.000.00.
STOP PAYING RENT

just one block from heart of town . $25.000.
POMEROY - On Lincoln Hts. - Two bedroom and

-

bat~ ,

full basement, gas furnace, storm windows &amp;
doors. Owner will help finance lf you need it. $17,.500.
RUTLAND - Ol der home needs som e repa irs on
Sa lem Street . Nice corner lot. $9900.00 .

Let

someone

else

make your house pay·
ment for you . Large

brick apartment house
in Syracuse . Live in part

and rent part. 528,000.00.
LOCALLY OWNED,
FUL TIME, .PROFESSIONAL
REAL
ESTATE SERVICE .
OPEN FRIDAY TILl.
REALTOR
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
992-6191
ASSOCIATES

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

CALL 992-2342

Roger &amp; Dohie Turner

742-2474
Jean Trussell 949-2660
OFFICE PHONE
992-2259

·---------------------DOWNING-CHILDS AGENCY INC.
INSURANCE

freshly

.

SERVING SOUTHEASTERN OHIO SINCE '1868
ARE YOU PAYING TOO MUCH? DO
YOU tiAVE THE CO.VERAGE?

FOR All YOUR INSURANCE NEEDS
CALl US.

992-2342
DOWNING-CHIU)S AGENCY, INC.
MIDDI.fPORT, OHIO
1'

Jack W. Carsey,
Mgr.
Phone 992-2181

r

painted throughout,
aluminum siding, porch

few miles from Racine. Remodeled home on 2 acres
of ground. $39,000.

.

POMEROY
LANDMARK

acre . Good

condition. Should sell
fast. S34,900 .00 .
IN TOWN - Jl/2 story, 2
bedroom house , full
basement,

41
Houses lor Rent
Available April 15. Two
bedroom hous.e Lincoln
Heights, Pomeroy. S200 per
month. Six months lease,
lst and last month's rent
and security . Reference
mandatory. Call992·3381 .
42

Mobile Homes
for ·Renl

~ Bedroom fraile r for rent.
Adults Only . 992·3324.

'

61
Farm Equipment
Oliver Supperlor grain drill
16 disc. Wooden seed and
grain fertilizer boxes .
Automatic power lift. Tractor hitch. S500. Paui.Sayre,
Rt. 338, Portland, OH .
Great Bend Rd. 843-4591 .

H otpoint and
General Electric
Appliance
Sales &amp; Service

kitchen, large garage

POMEROY - Two bedroom and bath frame home
on Hil l St . Now rented for $150.00 per mo. Only
$10,000.
RACINE - Peace and quiet in the country . Just a

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

DISCOUNT
PRICES

4 yrs. old, large mOden

on~

Musical
Instruments

_,

bedroom ranch, approx .

burner,

57

........

Syracuse - 4 rooms. 2
bed room with bath,
some furnitu r e, nice
starter home or rental.

good

All

Pick ing up a piano .In your
area. Looking lor a respon2 coolers for sale. One old sible party to lake over
type R.C. cooter-, wet or
payments . Call cre.dlt
dry . $100 . Kold -drafl . manager collect. 614--592cooler. $150 . Both In good 5122.
cond. 992·2969 or can be
seen at Belly 's Carryout.

old

modular home, stocked

hOOkUP

Clearance .

Sat., March 21 and 22.
Meigs County Humane
Society Thrift Shop, Mid·
dleport, OH .

pond, 2 story barn, other

REAL ESTATE

MIDDLEPORT -

Winler

Items pri ced to go. Fri.,

frontage.

$10,000 .00 .
NEW LISTING -

General

busy corner in center of town. Fully rented. A
investment.

to place orders call by Mar·
c h 29. 949·2028, 949·2533 or
949-2491.

Meigs High School on
hard road . Good
building sites. lots of

your present home. CON ·
VENTIONAL · 5 Pel. down.
VA · no down payment .
FHA · low down payment.
FHA
245 graduated
payment program . FHA
265 subsidy program . Call
for de tai ls . IR ELAND
MORTGAGE CO ., 77 E .
Stale St ., Athens. 592·3051.
Real Estate

Easter candy. If you wish

10

acres· vacant land. Gas,
electric, and water
available,
c l ose to

money

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

Racine Emergency Squad

-

992-2_,.

avai lable . New homes, old
homes

WE BRING lHE
GARAGE TO YOUII!

Save Money - Play gold
wilh new grips ' Installed.
$5.00 each or 4 for $18.50 . .
Joh n Teaford 614-985· 3961 .

NEW LISTING
M o rtgage

AUTO REPAIR

s.

Pets tor Sale
HOOF HOLLOW, English
and Western. Saddles and
harness .
Horses •and
ponies. Ruth Reeves. 614698 -3290. Barding and
Riding Lessons and Horse
Care products. Western
boots. Children's SIS.50.
Adults$29.00.
.

62
WantiCI to Buy
CHIP WOOD. Poles max .
d iameter 10" on largest
end. $12 p·er ton. Bundled
slab. SIO per ton. Delivered
to Ohio Palle) Co., Rl. 2,
Pomeroy 992-2689.
ANTIQUES ,
FUR NITURE, glass, ·China,
anything. See or call Ruth
Gosney, antiques, 26 N.
2nd, Middleport, OH . 992·
3161.
OLD COl NS, pocket wat-

PREGNANT?

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING
Gutter

work,

down

work,
walks
and
driveways .
(FREE ESTIMATES I

POMEROY,O.
"H215or
992-7314
1-28-1 mo.

Hay For Sale 80c per bale.
can deliver. 843·2795.

. .. . .....
.......... ...
.....
~

'

71

...

I turned it ·

~urned

it down?

down!

"Happy Days"
U French
river
DOWN
1 Pelt
2 Unwritten
Yeaterday'a ADiwer
3 Course for
%5 Yemen's
Mr. America 1% Daniel
Webster
capital
4 At forte
%1 Triangular
(in accord)
saU
5 Roy Rogers' 11 Valley
"Happy -" 19 Britlsher's zt "Don't tread
conversaon me,"
8 Adjective
for
example
Uonal
for Andy
comment
33 Hercules'
18 A Carter
7 Suffix
%1 Desert
captive
ZO After Tommy for subsist
sight
%1 Provo10 Former
34 Fruit
22 No great
·salad
caUons
"911-pound
shakes
Z3 Et weakling"
iJI8redlent
31 Swlsa river
(and othel'll) 11 Leading
Z3 Ilallan
S7 Foxy .
U Concerning
lady
bell town

Ton4's Grill

needed a
waitress!

o ' "' I'

11

Home
Improvements
s a. G carpet Cleaning. _
Steam cleaned.
Fr.et
estimate .
Reasanebl••
rates. Scotc~guard . 992·
6309 or 742-2211 .

________,

WALL PAPERING
painting. 742-2328.

ene·'

Aulol for Sole
Sale or Trade: 6-4 Corvelle
Strlngray
Convertible.
SJ,800. 1973 Monte Carlo,
runs good, S700. 949-2125.

ces.

72
T.-.,cl&lt;• for $ele
1979 Jeep Wagoneer, 4 dr.,
fully equipped, exc. cond.
$7,500. 742-31171ifter 5p.m.

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

WAT"5 QU rTE ALL
RI6HT,_ :I SHOULD

HAV.E .:&gt;EEN YOU
COMINS.

birds
%5 One kind
of poal
ze Depend (on)

CARPENTER WORK complete remodeling by AI ·
Tromm, 742-2328. Reteren· ·

Z7Wolf
of fiction

ZSSUfflx
for drunk
Z9Craze
30 Llberlan

Exc•vellnp
79 Ford 1=-250; ~ ton, heavy 13
duty, 24.000 miles. Ph. 843· · DENNY CHAIN LINK
2032.
FENCE . Free estlmete'·
Ken Soles, phone 245-911). 1.,
1977 GMC .Heavy d~ty '12
ton 8 fl. bed truck with top- . 14
per. Reg. gas, 350 V-8
p.b .,

naUve

!I Japanese
river
!!Speaker
O'NeW's
nictn&amp;me

· p:s.,

automatl,c,

GOLD AND SILVER
COINS OF T.HE WORLD.
RINGS.
JEWELRY,
STERLING SILVER AND
MISC . ITEMS. PAYING
RECORD
HIGH,
I'IIGHEST U"I1·TO-DATE

73

HILLCREST KENNELS.
Boarding, all breeds. Clean
indoor·ouldoor facilities.
Also AKC
registered
Dobermans. 614·446·7795.
SOCIETY .
HI.IMANE
Adopt a homeless pet.
Healthy, Shots, wormed.
Cfonatlons required . 9926260, ncion·7 p.m .

SHOP, MIDDLEPORT,
OHIO, OR CALL 992-3476.

Musicel
ln1trumen11

There was
one offer, but

.... -.. . . . .

Mixed Hay, 60c a bale. 9923'181.

~

51h 51.
Hoven, w. VI.
3·17·1mo.

ACROSS

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories
1972 Monte Carlo, body par· ,
ts for sale. Call alter 5. 992·
2779.

sliding back windOW, am
radio, C8, "4 neiN !Ires, r~SI·
proof, · running boaTd,
27,600 actual miles, A-1
cond , 94~2820.

57

New

J•ck

1 Vagrant
5 Word in
many titles
8 Age after
Bronze
9 Dietrich's
"Nvtorlous"
13 Florida
county
14 Stamen part
IS TV Tarzan
11 Sheep
affliction
17 Coach
Par6eghian

76

bands, diamonds. Gold or
sliver. Call J . A. WafTISiey,
742·2331. Treasure Chest
Coin Shop, Athens, OH . 5926462 . .

POODLE GROOM ING .
Judy Taylor. 6U-367 -7220.

WATERMB.ON
PATCH

V. C. YOUNG Ill

"ches, class rings, wedding

RISING STAR Kennel.
Boarding . Cal1367-0292.

See Us First for All"
of Your Maternity ·
.Needs.
"Tdps-Pents
Jumper1-Drenn

spouts, some concrete

63
Livestock
Nice Pigs. 949-2857.

bank on ii- SUNOAY

.A

388-9759

2-2s-1mo.

and sheet cakes . Call 9926342 or 992-2583.

I

Jumbles: DANDY NOISE BAKING OUTBID
Answer: It generally means no work, though we can't

well . Three rounds of clubs
forced declarer to ruff In
dummy with the spade six.
NORTH
S-18-8 0
South's only problem was to
tK96
.KQJ76
guess the trump jack.
• QJ 9
South led a heart to hls ace
tu
at trick four and played a
spade to the king, wblch lost
EAST
WEST
to East's ace. East returned a
tAJ42
ts
diamond, which was won In
.10 9 4 2
53
dummy. Declarer led the
te 3
t8 712
tAKQ6 5
tJ93
spade nine and passed it wben
East followed small. West
SOUTH
showed out!
• Q 10 8 7 3
South knew where the
trump
was but bad no
t A K 10 &gt;
way of inessing for It as dumtl07 2
my no longer had any trumps.
Vulnerable: North-South
Declarer was no amateur. In
Dealer: South
an Instant he found the wlnw..t North Eut Soatb nlngline of play.
He led tbe king of hearts
It
2+
from the dummy and ruffed it
Pass 2 •
Pass
Pass
Pass
small when East followed.
Pass I t
Pa..,
Delarer was now down to tbe
same trump length as East two spades each.
Opening lead:+ K
South led a small diamond
to dummy and wben East followed small claimed the contract on a trump coup. South
announced he would lead blab
By Oswald Jacoby
hearts from dummy and clfsand Alan Soatag
card hls high diamonds on
The most advanced plays at them until East ruffed.
South would then overruff
bridge - like squeezes, end
plays, trump coups - are and draw the last trump. East
thought to be in the realm of conceded and South had hls
only the great players. game.
However, brld~e has devel- (NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)
oped so much smce the 1920s
(For a copy of JACOBY
that today all of these plays
are familiar to most experi- MODERN, IHNid $1 to: "Win 81
Bridge, " cart~ of this MW8P8enCed pl.yers.
North-South easlly climbed (J6r, P. 0 . Box 489, Radio City
to their four-spade game Station, New York, N.Y.
10019.)
contract. The defense started

IT 50 HAPPWS

Free Estimates

·, , Made It Myself"
.... crafts ere fun I
L - - - - - - 2-18-1 mo.

Pomeroy, Oh.

HIS

Trump coup routs defense

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

H&amp;R BLOCK OFFICE LOCATION

Inc.

rJ (IX I)
(Anawerslomooow)

GEORGE'S
ROOFING

macr1me classes.

organizations

II I

•a

NOW-HOLDING
TOLE &amp; DECORATIVE
PAINTING CLASSES
-We will be h•vlng
-Now
curving
chocoloie wroppers oncl .
molds for cendy mlklng
-Full line of KraH IUt&gt;pll"os
-special rates for

AS515TANT.

I

TEEN DISC
DANCE
:· ~
A!The Orchid ~ooin .:,
E. M•In St. Pomeroy, Ow
EVERY
··
SATURDAY NIGHT · :
l:otTIIli : JO
"Disco Llglltlng" 1
Admission $2.00 Slntl,e
suo Coupl,
I Spon1oriCI • bY Molle.
UnllmltiCI . Clulperone.
will be present. No
olcohollc bever~gel per- ·
mii!ICI. For furtlltr ln- .
·
' 10., Clil 992...51.1
2-28-1 mo. pd ..

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

992·572~.

interested . Cal l992-5403 .

RemocW'
. 1111

Tri-County
Bookkeeping
Service

pool kits. Do-it-yourself or
let us install for you. 0.
Bumgardner

Gutters and

Pomeroy, 0.

IN STOCK lor Immediate

need your

·

We Do Roofin&amp;

107 Sycamore &lt;Rear

del ivery: various sizes of

potential

bui•ers -

RODNEY DOWNING, BROKE R- HO. 992-3731
Bl LL CHILDS, BRANCH MGR.- HO. 992-2449

'

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

· Realtor

Dep t .

Every Saturday . 6:30p.m.
At their buildlngin Basnan .

ment.

calcium

close in, 6 rms., tully
furnl5hed,
nice
porch, yard and
garage. This won't
last long at 535,000.
Charles M. Hayes

s, win $50 ,000 . 304·345-8103
Mon. thru Fri. 10 a.m. to 5
p.m

2-28·1 mo.

lloJCOMPETENT

gested by the above cartoon.

casions. Character cakes

Edwards
Duke

Wanted : Fighers· Br-awler-

home,

Li ttl e .

Special thanks to Margaret

terson,

Miscellaneous

18

gravel ,

Hours .9~1 M., W., F.
Other times by appoint-

chloride, . fertilizer, dog
food, and. all types of salt .
Excelsior Salt Works, Inc .,
E . Main 51., Pomeroy, 9923891.

c an ·
your
operator' s li cense? Phone

11

/ARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.

61~ -

54
Misc. Merchanlse
COAL,
LIMESTONE,

m inimum . C••h in •dv•nce.
MGIJIIe Home salts •nct Y:.rd Ultsilre•cce pted only witt! cuh witt!
on:ltr . 25 cent ctluge for &lt;1dt c:arrylnt Bo,. Number In C11re of The
S.ntlntl.

estates .

guns, pocket watches and

Insurance

AUTOMOBILE
SURANCE been
celled?
Los t

entire

Nothing too large . Also,

Care Cente r Monday thru
Friday 9·5.
13

REAL ESTATE
FlNANCING
Federal Housing &amp;
Veterans Admin. Loans.

pay cash or certified check

and 6 miles from Rt . 7. Call

1.25

LSO

No Sunday Calls

C.HI!F (S;AVE H15

Now arrange lhe clrt:fed lette&lt;s 10
form the surprise answer, as sug-

'

•New homes extensive remodel53
Antiques
ing
*Electrical work
ATTENTION :
!IM - •Masonry work
PORTANT TO YOU) Will
12 Years
pay cash or certified check
for antiques and collec·
Experience
tibies or entire estates.
Greg Roush
Nolhing too large. Also, ·
Ph. 992-7583
guns, pocket watches and
coin collections. Call 6142·24·1 mo.
767·3167 or 557·3411 .

Zidian at Pomeroy Health

CISh
1. 00

can Howard
949-2862
1-22-tfc

ROUSH

Rl . 7or33. ~46 · 2359atter6 .

the eligibility list at 992 2156 or 992 ·2157.

PH.
, 949-2801

WHAiiHE

I. I I riJ

'" mile off Rt , 7 by-p..s •
on St. Rt. 124 toword '
Rutloncl.

\

I

ENFRYZr..~~...,

Gaage
Auto&amp;Truck
Repair
••
Also Transmission ·:
Repair .
,
PhOne 992-5682 -;·

Television
Viewing

When do I gel paid?

ttfto '"'" '"'

:.

992·7479.

Full time a nd part time RN

1 dii y
2dilyS
Jdiiys

Space for Rent

COUNlRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, north of

or LPN . 1H . Contact Mr .

1S Words or UIMler

All work guaranteed.

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

35

I

Roaer Hysell

PAYING
'20.00 AND UP
FOR
SILVER DOllARS

Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices

46

Va . 25287.

Rates and Other Information

or repair gutters and
downspouts,
gutter
cleaning and p•lnting.

Have room and board In
my home for elderly, good
meals, reasonable rates.

Ready to move into. 56500
firm . 992·5304 .

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

Earn extra money at home,
good pay, easy work, no
exp. necessary . Send for
application report, W . L.
Oh linger, w. Columb ia, w.

ROOFING
All types rool work, new

Road, 1 mile from old Rt. 33

11-Homt lmprovements
U-Piumblng &amp;.E lUV81int
IJ-E,c•watlnt
14-EIKtrlcill
&amp; Refrtgeratlon
U - Gentril l Hauling
..-M.H. Rtpilir
17-Upnotnwv

H. L WHITESEL

Furnished Rooms

1965 Yanor 12x52, 2 bedr.
1968 Fleetwood 12x63," 2
Bdr.
B &amp; 5 MOBILE HOME
SALES, PT . PLEASANT ,
wv . 304-675·4424.

as a young business person
and earn good money plus
some great gifts as a Sentinel route carrier . Phone
us right away and get on

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one let1er 10 each square. lo form
four ordinary words .

I POANI

Manor apt5. C•ll992-7787 .

11

Help Wanted
GET VALUABLE training

•

RENTER ' S assistance for
Senior Citizens in Village

rights. $77,000. 992·7559.

e TRANSPORTATION

eREAL ESTATE

1971 Cameron. Ux65 . 2
bedr .
1971 Fleetwood. l4x65 3
bdr .• bath 11&gt;
1971 ShakespeM, l4x65 2

.

Wft~f.\hl }Pj)l} ~THAT SCRAMBLED WOAD GAME
byHenn,t,moldandBobLoe

~ ~ ~~ .,

··

Business Services

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

2

1~x65

36 acres farm with 9 room
1 'll story house,
full
basement, buildings, barn,
some timber, all mineral

n - w•nttcl to 11uv

eFINANCIAL
21-

BUYING U.S. SILVER
CO IN S DATED 1964 OR
EARL IE R . ALSO GOLD
ITEMS, DON'T LOSE
MONEY, SI MPLY PICK
UP THE PHONE AND
DIA L
614 · 992 · 5113.
BRO WN 'S .

Apartment
tor Rent

44

for Sale

Wanted to Buy

9

e MERCHANDISE

eEMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

,.,.___

BRADFORD, Auctioneer,
Compl ete Service . Phone
949-2487 or 949·2000. racine,
Ohio, Critt Bradford.

42- Mobilt Homu
tor Rent
44-Ap~rtment tor Rent
4s-FR:oems
46--Space for Rtnl
47- Wented to Rent
41--~Qui gm entfor Rent

4- GIYtiWIV

Wednesday

Mobile Homes

. DICK TRACY

:IS Related
paternally

31 Blackthorn
fruit .
Ill Deny

\lens &amp; 4 w .D.

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to

work

It:

AXYDLBA.A.X.
LONGFELLOW

II

' One letter simply stand• for another. In tble 11mple A Ia
used for the three L's, X for .the two O's, etc. Single letters.
llp()Jirophes, the length and f&lt;&gt;"nnatlon of the word1 ere ell
hints. Each day the code letters are dlll'etent.

=~~~~h~ON~Af~a ~~

CRYPTOQUOT1!8
OLD FURNITURE, Ice
bOxes, brass beds, Iron
beds, desl&lt;.1, etc ,, complete
househOlds. Write M.D.
Miller. Rt. 4, Pomeroy or
' ..
' call992-7760 .

Mandolin . Very nl~e .
Black, trimmed In Ivory.
Arched front and back.
New Gibson strings, copy ·
of Gibson model. $100. Paul
Sayre; Rt . )38, Pltrlland,
OH . Great Botnd Rd. 843·
4591. .

loatulld
OLD . FURNITURE, Ice · 75
Moton tol' hit
tio•es, brass beds, Iron
beds, desl&lt;.s, etc .• complete
1977 Quachlta basi bo,at,
households. Write M.D.
fully equl~, he• 1978 10
Miller. Rt . 4, Pomeroy or. . h.p. Mercury mOtor, Cell
call992-7760.
1192·3'100 after 5:00.
·

----- - - -

OF COURSE, IF I WERE
ON A PEDESTAL, I
COl ILD REALLV IWN THIN65

-

UZIEWU

Y'

~~

·--- . . . . .... ... ... _&gt;- .

EGZO

GS

EIARN,

W U·Z N Z

GO

SR

WR

AJW

WUNRJHU

GW

CZSFZEE

NRK

IE

IS F
N R IF

WRGE . -

TUGEEGTO

Yesterday'a Cryptqqaote: THAT MAN WHO LIVES FOR SELF
ALONE UVES FOR TilE MEANEST MORtAL KNOWN.J,MJLIER
~

II&gt; ltlio K... . . . _.S....~, Inc.

TUESDAY, MARCH 11,1910
7:IJO-Cross-Wifs 3; Tic Tac Do09h
8; Newlywed Game 6, 13; News
10: Love, American Style 15;
Sanford &amp; Son 17: Dick Cavell 20 .
7: JG--Hollywood Squares 3; ·solid
Gold '79 6; Joker 's Wild 8; Dick
Cavett 33; Hollywood Squares
10; Sha Na 1\ia 13; TV Honor
Society 15: All in The Family 17;
MacNeil-Lehrer Report 20.
8:IJO-Misadventures of Sheriff LobO
3.15; Happy Days 6,13; While
Shadow 8,10; Nova 20.33; NHL
Hockey 17 .
8:30-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13.
9:00-Big Show 3,15: Three's
Company 6,13 ; Movie " W.W. &amp;
t he Dixie Danceklngs" 8,10;
Mystery! 20,33 .
9:JG--Taxl6,13 ; lO :oo-Hart to Hart
6,13; News 20; City Notebook 33.
lO:JG--Unlted States 3,15; Fight
Against Slavery 17: Over Easy
20; Camera Three 33.
11 :OQ-New s 3,6,8,10, 13, 15 ; Dick
Cavett 20 ; Monty Python's
Flying Circus 33 .
11 :Jo-llllnols Primary 3,6,8, 13, 15;
ABC Captioned News 33; Movie
" Womon of the Year" 10; Movie
" Affectionately Yours" 17.
12:oo-Tonight 3.15; Movie "The
King of Marvin Gardens" 6.13;
Barnaby Jones 8.
1: lo-Movle "Cactus In the Snow" 8;
1:25-News 17; l:Jo-Tomorrow
.3; News 15; Mov ie "Marine
Raiders" 17 .

2:25-News 13; 3:3Q-Movle "Storm
over Jamaica" 17: 5:35-Love.
American Style 17 .
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 19,1980
5:45-Farm Reporl 13; 5 :50-;-PTL
Club 13.
6:IJ0-700 Club 6,8; PTL Club 15;
Hea lth Field 10; 6:05-World at
Large 17.
6 :Jo-Chrlstopher Closeup 10; News
17; 6:45-Mornlng Report 3;
A.M . Weather 33; 6:50---G~
Morning , West VIrginia 13;
6 :55-News 13.
7:1J0-Today 3,1 5; Good Morning
America 6, 13 ; Wednesday
Morning 8; Batman 10; Three
Stooges-LIIIl'e Rascals 17.
7:Jo-Famlly Affair 10; 7:55-Chuck
Whit!' Reports 10.
B:IJO-Capt. Kangaroo 8, 10; Lucy
Show 17 ; Sesame St. 33.
8:3()--Romper Room 17.
9:IJO-Bob Braun 3; Big Valley 6:
Beverly Hillbillies 8; Jeffersons
10; Phil Donahue 13, 15; Family
Affair 17.
.
9:Jo- Bob Newhart8; One Day AI A
Time 10; Green Acres 17.
lO :IJO-Card Sharks 3,15; Jellersons
8; Edge of Night 6; Joker' s Wild
-10; Morning Magazine 13; Movie
"The Tattered Dress" 17.
10 : 3Q-Hollywood Squares 3, 15 ;
520.000 Pyramid 13; Andy
Griffith 6 ; 10 :55-CBS News 8;
House Call 10.
ll ;IJO-High Rollers 3,15; Price Is
Righi 8, 10.
11 :30-Wheel of Fortune 3,15;
Family Feud 6,13 ; Sesame St .
20,33; 11 ;55-News 17 .
12: 0o-Newscenl er
3;
News
6,8, 10,13; Health Field 15; Love
American Style 17.
12 :Jo-Ryan's Hope 6,13; Search for
Tomorrow 8,10; Password Plus
15; Movie "Everything but the
Truth" 17; Elec . Co. 20,33.
1:IJO-Days of Our Lives 3, 15; All My
Children 6, 13; Young &amp; the
Restless 8, 10.
2: IJO-Doctors 3, 15; One Life to Live
6,13; As The World Turns 8,10;
2:25-News 17.
2:30-Another
World
3,15 ;
Glgglesnort Hotel 17.
.
3: 00-General
Hospital
6,13 :
Guiding Light 8.10; I Love Lucy
17; Austin City Llmlfs 20.
3:3G--FIInlstones 17; Over Easy 33.
~ : IJO-Mister Cartoon 3; Bewitched
6; Petticoat Junction 8; Sesame
Sf. 20,33; Gomer Pyle 10; Real
McCoys 13; Little Rascals 15:
Spectreman 17.
4: JG--Looe Ranger 3; Alter school
Soeclal 6,13 · Gomer Pyle 8;
Brady Bunch 10; Merv Griffin
15; Gilligan' s Is. 17.
5:IJO-Carol Burnett 3; Sanford &amp;
Son 8; Mary Tyler Moore 10:
Three Sons 17; Mister Rogers'
NeighbOrhood 20,33.
5:Jo-Mash 3; News 6; Play the
Percentages 8; Mash 10; Happy
Days Again 13; I Dream of
Jeannie 17; Doctor Who 33.
6:IJO-News 3,8,10,13,15; ABC News
6; Carol Burnett 17; 3-2-1 Contact
20,33 . '
6:Jo-NBC News3,15; ABC News 13;
CBS News 8, 10; Carol Burnell 6;
Bob Newhart 17; VIlla Alegre 20;
Wild Wild World ot Animals 33.
7;IJO-Cross-Wlls 3; Tic Tac Dough
8; Newlywed Game 6, 13 ;
MacNeil-Lehrer Report 33;
News 10; Love, American Style
15; Sanford &amp; Son 17; Dick
Cavett20.
7:30-Country Roads 3; Solid Gold
'796; Joker's Wild 8; Dick Cavell
33; The Judge 10; Family Feud
13; Wild Kingdom 15; All In The .
f'amlly 17; MacNeil-Lehrer
Report 20.
8:oo-Real People 3,15; Eight Is
Enough 6,13; Beyond Weslworld
8,10; Shakespeare Plays 20,33;
Movie " Desiree" 17.
9:IJO-Diffrent Strokes 3, 15; Vegas
6,13; Movie "Jimmy 8 . &amp; Andre" 8; NIT Basketball 10.
9:3()--Hello, Larry 3,15.
IO :IJO-From Here to Eternity 3,15;
10 : 15-Upslalrl, Oownstilrs 17.
11 : 00..,- News 3,6 ;8, 10 , 13~1S . 20;
Goodies
33 ;
11 ; 15-Love.
American Style 17.
11 :30-Tonight 3,15; ABC News6. 13;
Black Sheep Squeclron 8; Movie

""V

.,Hammerhead" 10; Movie " God

Is my Co-Pilot" 17.
11;.45-Love Boa\6, 13; 12:~ovle
"Billy: Portrait of a Street Kid"
8; 12:55-'-Barethl 6,13.
·
1:1&gt;0-Tomorrow 3; News 15; I :25Newt 17; 1 :3()--Movie " Nigl&gt;f.
· mare In Chlcago" .17.
13;
3:05-,Movle
2: 05- News
"Esc.,...toMincloneo" 17; 5:GSUnlouchables 17.

'

�'
10-Tile Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Mar. 18, 1980

11-:rhe DaUySentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Mar. 18, 1981&gt;

Your Best .Buys Are Found in the Sentinel Classifieds,
WANT AD INFORMATION

7
Yard Sale
Heated Garage Sale. 123

32

Park
Drive ,
Point
Pleasan t. W. Va . Mon .-Sat.

1973 Fairpo!nt .
bedroom

8·3.

PHONE 992-2156

Porch

or Write Dally Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St., Pomeroy, 0., 45769

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

Sale :

191h 9 to 4. Rain or shine .
Tvrn first road left past
radio station, wat ch for
signs. Tool box, tools, pi c ture frames, storm door,
lots of misc .

Public Sale

8

&amp; Auction

eANNOUNCEMENTS

eRENTALS

1- C,rdot Ttlankt
2- ln Mtmoriam
J- Announcements

41-Houseslor lhnl

$-Happy ... CII
6-lostend Found
7- YerdS.Ie
I - Public Selt
&amp;Auction

I -Wanted to Buy

st - Houseflold Gl)o)dl
S2- CI. TV, Riidlo Equipment
SJ- Antlqun
S4- Miu:. M trthiindist
Js-Bulldtnv Supplln.
U- P eh for 51111

11_ Htlpw1 nted

11:- Sltuattd Wanlecl
u - susintu. Tr-'ning
15-Sctlools Instruction

Rtdlo, TV
&amp;CI RetNir

e FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

11--WenTMI To Do

•t - Filrm Equipment
72---- Truc:tls tor Siile

IIUs lntu
Opport11nily

U - Livestock
M - Hty &amp; Gr8in
u-seect &amp; FerUIIEer

Z2- Money to lou
U - Proltulooel

S.rvlces

J !-AUIOs tor Sale
7l-\ltnt&amp; 4W. D.
74 - Motoruclu
nAuto P1rts
&amp; Acceuorlts
71 - Auto R epai~

JJ .....:! Hom U fo r Sele
U - Mobilt Home~
for Sele

:U- Ferms tar Sale
l4-lulin.. s 8uildlngs

n-Lots &amp; A crt~ge
3.._Rt.lil E1t 1ftWenttd

eSERVICES

37- Rultun

Want·Ad Advertising
Deadlines
4 P .M. Dally
11 Noon Seturdty
tor Mondey

l.

bedroom

45

man $27.50 per week. Call
992-6022.

1971 12x65 Trailer, com ·
pletely furnished, A .C.,
very good Condition . On a
lot tha1 can be ren1ed .

992-6022.

Sleeping room for working

33
Farms for Sale
COUNTRY HOME with

Pomeroy. Large lots .Call

CONSTRUCTION

Lots &amp; Acreage

5 acres, just off F l atwoods

Ch&amp;rtt

Property for sale. Over 3
acres of wooded land in

ATTENTION :
{IM·
PORTANT TO YOU) Will

'·"

1. 00

l .H
3.7 5

'·"

6tli1Vl

tor antiques and collec-

992·3900 after after 5:00.

tibles or

Elich word over the minimum 1J words I$ 4 unts per word per dily ,
Ads runntnv ottler lhiln consecutive dn s will be chuged •• the 1 diiy
,-ate.
~r

In memory, Cilrd of Th•nk' and Obilu•rv : 6 cents

word, $3 .00

coin c~ llections. Call
767·3167 or 557·3411 .

sand,

" .....
_.......
............
. . . .......... ..... .

3

Card of Thanks

Pi cki ng up an Easy play

We would like lo thank all
of those friends and neigh-

bors who helped, sent food ,
flowers or called in the loss
of our dear husband and

father,

Russell

Announcements

IN ·
Comfortable

992-214(.

organ
in your area .
Looking for a respons ibl e
party to take over payments. Cal l credit manager

collect. 614··592·5122 .
Learn to make your own

and

the

Easter candy . Free candy

Pallbearers,

Paul

Pa t ·

making

Kennedy .

Homer

Parker ,

Bill

music and Walker Funeral
Home, also Barbara Van

Meter. R.N. Your thought·
fulness

will

never

be

forgollen . God bless each

and everyone .

The Russell Little Family .
3

Announcements

GUN SHOOT EVERY
SUNDAY 1 PM. FACTORY
CHOKE ONLY . RACINE
GUN CLUB.
GUN

SHOOT .

Volunteer

Fire

dem ons trat io n

eve ry Sat. at 1 or call for

David Davis, Jerry Black, · evening
Williamson, Rev. Wilbur
Hilt for h is con soling wor ds, Hazel Thompson for the

class.

Carousel

Confectionary. Middleporl,
992-6342.
Log

Cabin

Gill

Shop

reopeningj in New ! ::&gt;cation

in former Eblin's Shake
Shop at Laurel Cliff . Open
Thurs., Fri. and Sat .,
beginning March 20 . 10
a.m .·4 p.m . Come in and
see our selection of Easter
items. Please excuse our
appearance. In the process
of r emodeling.
Giveaway

4

8 Fl. Green Couch . Good
cond . Call992-3429.

Rac ine

Factory choke guns only .

GUN SHOOT every Sunday
12 :00 . Factory choke only .
Corn Hollow Gun Club,
Rutland. Proceeds dona ted
to Boy Scout Troop 249 .
BUYING U.S. SILVER
COINS DATED 1964 OR
EARLIER
(ANY
AMOUNT! . DON' T LOSE
MONEY, SIMPLY PICK
UP THE PHONE AND
DIAL
614 · 992 · 5113,
BROWN ' S.
I PAY highest pri ces
possible for gold and silver
coins, rings, jewelry, etc.

Contact Ed Burkett Barber
Shop, Middleport.

~g~~(GN 51~~~~~- g~
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 992--6370. ALSO
DO APPRAISING .

HAYES REALTY

EMERGENCY
power
alternators - own the best
-· buy Wlnpower. Call 513788·2589 .

Neacll E. Carsey
BranchMgr.
Phone 992-2403
&amp; 992-2710

Wanted to Do

have

Give piano lessons to begin·
ners and adYanced student
in my home. Also teach
c hording and transPOsing if

Measurements of the
, gaseous element argon in
rocks provide scientists
with the raw figures needed to date things as old as
4.5 blllloJi years, the
estimated age of the Earth.

The first library In the
United States was founded
in 183&amp; with a gift of money

and some 400 books from
John Harvard. Today, the
Harvard

University
Ubrary has a coDectlon of
some 9.5 mU:!on books.
(

CALL 992-7544

Sales,

Answerhere:A[

·

A·30·tf ·~

.

"FREE ESTIMATES"
Been In Business
Fors Years

CALL S92·3238
ASK FOR DAVE
3-2-1 mo.

,

~.tetliu
"lfu~rllc/1

618 E . Main

Yesterday's

C.OOCOL.~'re

1.;

~ F/&gt;..VORIT!:&gt;~

HE'LL &amp;E I'IELL.
ATTENDED TO! I'LL
SEE TO THAT! .

I GUcSG IT'S

GOODS'IE, MR.
KAF• TAN ··I

MEAN, 'lOtJII
HIGHNESS-

2-1-4-lfc :

.A&amp;H
UPHOLSTERING

Yoit.IAT 15 THIS?
FORMALITIES
BElWEEN US?! HO,
NO! FROM NOW Oti

'lOUR UHCLE

'YOU HAVE roHE
WELL ENLISTING

~AVE

SENA10R 5RA661!$
AID, ACHMED!

I, FATHER'?
I HAVE &amp;EEN
\loiONDeRII'tei IF I
AAOe A MISTliKE!

ASU!

,,
••·
0

I

A

·'
••

"FREE
ESTIMATES"

•

3rd St. In
svrcuse, Oh.
Ph. 992-3752

or992-3743

992-3795-

2-11•1 mo.

Decorated cakes fOr all oc-

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

Real Estate

General

will be making and selling

and

refinancing

road
ac res,

7

bedroom

room,

2

yr .

44
4

buildings, extra trailer

With

close

to

septic,
mInes .

$42,000.00.
NEW LISTING

WE HAVE FINANCING AVAILABLE
AS LOW AS 5% DOWN AND JO YEARS
TO PAY, ON MOST HOMES.

$5,600.00 .
TUPPERS PLAINS - 3

WHETHER YOU RENT OR BUY - YOU PAY
FOR THE PLACE YOU OCCUPY .
MIDDLEPORT - Commercial office building on

wflh workshop area.
separate utility, wood·

with wrought iron rail ·

Three bedroom, P / 2 ba1h, nice lot

ing, neal al$25.000.00.
STOP PAYING RENT

just one block from heart of town . $25.000.
POMEROY - On Lincoln Hts. - Two bedroom and

-

bat~ ,

full basement, gas furnace, storm windows &amp;
doors. Owner will help finance lf you need it. $17,.500.
RUTLAND - Ol der home needs som e repa irs on
Sa lem Street . Nice corner lot. $9900.00 .

Let

someone

else

make your house pay·
ment for you . Large

brick apartment house
in Syracuse . Live in part

and rent part. 528,000.00.
LOCALLY OWNED,
FUL TIME, .PROFESSIONAL
REAL
ESTATE SERVICE .
OPEN FRIDAY TILl.
REALTOR
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
992-6191
ASSOCIATES

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

CALL 992-2342

Roger &amp; Dohie Turner

742-2474
Jean Trussell 949-2660
OFFICE PHONE
992-2259

·---------------------DOWNING-CHILDS AGENCY INC.
INSURANCE

freshly

.

SERVING SOUTHEASTERN OHIO SINCE '1868
ARE YOU PAYING TOO MUCH? DO
YOU tiAVE THE CO.VERAGE?

FOR All YOUR INSURANCE NEEDS
CALl US.

992-2342
DOWNING-CHIU)S AGENCY, INC.
MIDDI.fPORT, OHIO
1'

Jack W. Carsey,
Mgr.
Phone 992-2181

r

painted throughout,
aluminum siding, porch

few miles from Racine. Remodeled home on 2 acres
of ground. $39,000.

.

POMEROY
LANDMARK

acre . Good

condition. Should sell
fast. S34,900 .00 .
IN TOWN - Jl/2 story, 2
bedroom house , full
basement,

41
Houses lor Rent
Available April 15. Two
bedroom hous.e Lincoln
Heights, Pomeroy. S200 per
month. Six months lease,
lst and last month's rent
and security . Reference
mandatory. Call992·3381 .
42

Mobile Homes
for ·Renl

~ Bedroom fraile r for rent.
Adults Only . 992·3324.

'

61
Farm Equipment
Oliver Supperlor grain drill
16 disc. Wooden seed and
grain fertilizer boxes .
Automatic power lift. Tractor hitch. S500. Paui.Sayre,
Rt. 338, Portland, OH .
Great Bend Rd. 843-4591 .

H otpoint and
General Electric
Appliance
Sales &amp; Service

kitchen, large garage

POMEROY - Two bedroom and bath frame home
on Hil l St . Now rented for $150.00 per mo. Only
$10,000.
RACINE - Peace and quiet in the country . Just a

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

DISCOUNT
PRICES

4 yrs. old, large mOden

on~

Musical
Instruments

_,

bedroom ranch, approx .

burner,

57

........

Syracuse - 4 rooms. 2
bed room with bath,
some furnitu r e, nice
starter home or rental.

good

All

Pick ing up a piano .In your
area. Looking lor a respon2 coolers for sale. One old sible party to lake over
type R.C. cooter-, wet or
payments . Call cre.dlt
dry . $100 . Kold -drafl . manager collect. 614--592cooler. $150 . Both In good 5122.
cond. 992·2969 or can be
seen at Belly 's Carryout.

old

modular home, stocked

hOOkUP

Clearance .

Sat., March 21 and 22.
Meigs County Humane
Society Thrift Shop, Mid·
dleport, OH .

pond, 2 story barn, other

REAL ESTATE

MIDDLEPORT -

Winler

Items pri ced to go. Fri.,

frontage.

$10,000 .00 .
NEW LISTING -

General

busy corner in center of town. Fully rented. A
investment.

to place orders call by Mar·
c h 29. 949·2028, 949·2533 or
949-2491.

Meigs High School on
hard road . Good
building sites. lots of

your present home. CON ·
VENTIONAL · 5 Pel. down.
VA · no down payment .
FHA · low down payment.
FHA
245 graduated
payment program . FHA
265 subsidy program . Call
for de tai ls . IR ELAND
MORTGAGE CO ., 77 E .
Stale St ., Athens. 592·3051.
Real Estate

Easter candy. If you wish

10

acres· vacant land. Gas,
electric, and water
available,
c l ose to

money

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

Racine Emergency Squad

-

992-2_,.

avai lable . New homes, old
homes

WE BRING lHE
GARAGE TO YOUII!

Save Money - Play gold
wilh new grips ' Installed.
$5.00 each or 4 for $18.50 . .
Joh n Teaford 614-985· 3961 .

NEW LISTING
M o rtgage

AUTO REPAIR

s.

Pets tor Sale
HOOF HOLLOW, English
and Western. Saddles and
harness .
Horses •and
ponies. Ruth Reeves. 614698 -3290. Barding and
Riding Lessons and Horse
Care products. Western
boots. Children's SIS.50.
Adults$29.00.
.

62
WantiCI to Buy
CHIP WOOD. Poles max .
d iameter 10" on largest
end. $12 p·er ton. Bundled
slab. SIO per ton. Delivered
to Ohio Palle) Co., Rl. 2,
Pomeroy 992-2689.
ANTIQUES ,
FUR NITURE, glass, ·China,
anything. See or call Ruth
Gosney, antiques, 26 N.
2nd, Middleport, OH . 992·
3161.
OLD COl NS, pocket wat-

PREGNANT?

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING
Gutter

work,

down

work,
walks
and
driveways .
(FREE ESTIMATES I

POMEROY,O.
"H215or
992-7314
1-28-1 mo.

Hay For Sale 80c per bale.
can deliver. 843·2795.

. .. . .....
.......... ...
.....
~

'

71

...

I turned it ·

~urned

it down?

down!

"Happy Days"
U French
river
DOWN
1 Pelt
2 Unwritten
Yeaterday'a ADiwer
3 Course for
%5 Yemen's
Mr. America 1% Daniel
Webster
capital
4 At forte
%1 Triangular
(in accord)
saU
5 Roy Rogers' 11 Valley
"Happy -" 19 Britlsher's zt "Don't tread
conversaon me,"
8 Adjective
for
example
Uonal
for Andy
comment
33 Hercules'
18 A Carter
7 Suffix
%1 Desert
captive
ZO After Tommy for subsist
sight
%1 Provo10 Former
34 Fruit
22 No great
·salad
caUons
"911-pound
shakes
Z3 Et weakling"
iJI8redlent
31 Swlsa river
(and othel'll) 11 Leading
Z3 Ilallan
S7 Foxy .
U Concerning
lady
bell town

Ton4's Grill

needed a
waitress!

o ' "' I'

11

Home
Improvements
s a. G carpet Cleaning. _
Steam cleaned.
Fr.et
estimate .
Reasanebl••
rates. Scotc~guard . 992·
6309 or 742-2211 .

________,

WALL PAPERING
painting. 742-2328.

ene·'

Aulol for Sole
Sale or Trade: 6-4 Corvelle
Strlngray
Convertible.
SJ,800. 1973 Monte Carlo,
runs good, S700. 949-2125.

ces.

72
T.-.,cl&lt;• for $ele
1979 Jeep Wagoneer, 4 dr.,
fully equipped, exc. cond.
$7,500. 742-31171ifter 5p.m.

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

WAT"5 QU rTE ALL
RI6HT,_ :I SHOULD

HAV.E .:&gt;EEN YOU
COMINS.

birds
%5 One kind
of poal
ze Depend (on)

CARPENTER WORK complete remodeling by AI ·
Tromm, 742-2328. Reteren· ·

Z7Wolf
of fiction

ZSSUfflx
for drunk
Z9Craze
30 Llberlan

Exc•vellnp
79 Ford 1=-250; ~ ton, heavy 13
duty, 24.000 miles. Ph. 843· · DENNY CHAIN LINK
2032.
FENCE . Free estlmete'·
Ken Soles, phone 245-911). 1.,
1977 GMC .Heavy d~ty '12
ton 8 fl. bed truck with top- . 14
per. Reg. gas, 350 V-8
p.b .,

naUve

!I Japanese
river
!!Speaker
O'NeW's
nictn&amp;me

· p:s.,

automatl,c,

GOLD AND SILVER
COINS OF T.HE WORLD.
RINGS.
JEWELRY,
STERLING SILVER AND
MISC . ITEMS. PAYING
RECORD
HIGH,
I'IIGHEST U"I1·TO-DATE

73

HILLCREST KENNELS.
Boarding, all breeds. Clean
indoor·ouldoor facilities.
Also AKC
registered
Dobermans. 614·446·7795.
SOCIETY .
HI.IMANE
Adopt a homeless pet.
Healthy, Shots, wormed.
Cfonatlons required . 9926260, ncion·7 p.m .

SHOP, MIDDLEPORT,
OHIO, OR CALL 992-3476.

Musicel
ln1trumen11

There was
one offer, but

.... -.. . . . .

Mixed Hay, 60c a bale. 9923'181.

~

51h 51.
Hoven, w. VI.
3·17·1mo.

ACROSS

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories
1972 Monte Carlo, body par· ,
ts for sale. Call alter 5. 992·
2779.

sliding back windOW, am
radio, C8, "4 neiN !Ires, r~SI·
proof, · running boaTd,
27,600 actual miles, A-1
cond , 94~2820.

57

New

J•ck

1 Vagrant
5 Word in
many titles
8 Age after
Bronze
9 Dietrich's
"Nvtorlous"
13 Florida
county
14 Stamen part
IS TV Tarzan
11 Sheep
affliction
17 Coach
Par6eghian

76

bands, diamonds. Gold or
sliver. Call J . A. WafTISiey,
742·2331. Treasure Chest
Coin Shop, Athens, OH . 5926462 . .

POODLE GROOM ING .
Judy Taylor. 6U-367 -7220.

WATERMB.ON
PATCH

V. C. YOUNG Ill

"ches, class rings, wedding

RISING STAR Kennel.
Boarding . Cal1367-0292.

See Us First for All"
of Your Maternity ·
.Needs.
"Tdps-Pents
Jumper1-Drenn

spouts, some concrete

63
Livestock
Nice Pigs. 949-2857.

bank on ii- SUNOAY

.A

388-9759

2-2s-1mo.

and sheet cakes . Call 9926342 or 992-2583.

I

Jumbles: DANDY NOISE BAKING OUTBID
Answer: It generally means no work, though we can't

well . Three rounds of clubs
forced declarer to ruff In
dummy with the spade six.
NORTH
S-18-8 0
South's only problem was to
tK96
.KQJ76
guess the trump jack.
• QJ 9
South led a heart to hls ace
tu
at trick four and played a
spade to the king, wblch lost
EAST
WEST
to East's ace. East returned a
tAJ42
ts
diamond, which was won In
.10 9 4 2
53
dummy. Declarer led the
te 3
t8 712
tAKQ6 5
tJ93
spade nine and passed it wben
East followed small. West
SOUTH
showed out!
• Q 10 8 7 3
South knew where the
trump
was but bad no
t A K 10 &gt;
way of inessing for It as dumtl07 2
my no longer had any trumps.
Vulnerable: North-South
Declarer was no amateur. In
Dealer: South
an Instant he found the wlnw..t North Eut Soatb nlngline of play.
He led tbe king of hearts
It
2+
from the dummy and ruffed it
Pass 2 •
Pass
Pass
Pass
small when East followed.
Pass I t
Pa..,
Delarer was now down to tbe
same trump length as East two spades each.
Opening lead:+ K
South led a small diamond
to dummy and wben East followed small claimed the contract on a trump coup. South
announced he would lead blab
By Oswald Jacoby
hearts from dummy and clfsand Alan Soatag
card hls high diamonds on
The most advanced plays at them until East ruffed.
South would then overruff
bridge - like squeezes, end
plays, trump coups - are and draw the last trump. East
thought to be in the realm of conceded and South had hls
only the great players. game.
However, brld~e has devel- (NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)
oped so much smce the 1920s
(For a copy of JACOBY
that today all of these plays
are familiar to most experi- MODERN, IHNid $1 to: "Win 81
Bridge, " cart~ of this MW8P8enCed pl.yers.
North-South easlly climbed (J6r, P. 0 . Box 489, Radio City
to their four-spade game Station, New York, N.Y.
10019.)
contract. The defense started

IT 50 HAPPWS

Free Estimates

·, , Made It Myself"
.... crafts ere fun I
L - - - - - - 2-18-1 mo.

Pomeroy, Oh.

HIS

Trump coup routs defense

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

H&amp;R BLOCK OFFICE LOCATION

Inc.

rJ (IX I)
(Anawerslomooow)

GEORGE'S
ROOFING

macr1me classes.

organizations

II I

•a

NOW-HOLDING
TOLE &amp; DECORATIVE
PAINTING CLASSES
-We will be h•vlng
-Now
curving
chocoloie wroppers oncl .
molds for cendy mlklng
-Full line of KraH IUt&gt;pll"os
-special rates for

AS515TANT.

I

TEEN DISC
DANCE
:· ~
A!The Orchid ~ooin .:,
E. M•In St. Pomeroy, Ow
EVERY
··
SATURDAY NIGHT · :
l:otTIIli : JO
"Disco Llglltlng" 1
Admission $2.00 Slntl,e
suo Coupl,
I Spon1oriCI • bY Molle.
UnllmltiCI . Clulperone.
will be present. No
olcohollc bever~gel per- ·
mii!ICI. For furtlltr ln- .
·
' 10., Clil 992...51.1
2-28-1 mo. pd ..

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

992·572~.

interested . Cal l992-5403 .

RemocW'
. 1111

Tri-County
Bookkeeping
Service

pool kits. Do-it-yourself or
let us install for you. 0.
Bumgardner

Gutters and

Pomeroy, 0.

IN STOCK lor Immediate

need your

·

We Do Roofin&amp;

107 Sycamore &lt;Rear

del ivery: various sizes of

potential

bui•ers -

RODNEY DOWNING, BROKE R- HO. 992-3731
Bl LL CHILDS, BRANCH MGR.- HO. 992-2449

'

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

· Realtor

Dep t .

Every Saturday . 6:30p.m.
At their buildlngin Basnan .

ment.

calcium

close in, 6 rms., tully
furnl5hed,
nice
porch, yard and
garage. This won't
last long at 535,000.
Charles M. Hayes

s, win $50 ,000 . 304·345-8103
Mon. thru Fri. 10 a.m. to 5
p.m

2-28·1 mo.

lloJCOMPETENT

gested by the above cartoon.

casions. Character cakes

Edwards
Duke

Wanted : Fighers· Br-awler-

home,

Li ttl e .

Special thanks to Margaret

terson,

Miscellaneous

18

gravel ,

Hours .9~1 M., W., F.
Other times by appoint-

chloride, . fertilizer, dog
food, and. all types of salt .
Excelsior Salt Works, Inc .,
E . Main 51., Pomeroy, 9923891.

c an ·
your
operator' s li cense? Phone

11

/ARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.

61~ -

54
Misc. Merchanlse
COAL,
LIMESTONE,

m inimum . C••h in •dv•nce.
MGIJIIe Home salts •nct Y:.rd Ultsilre•cce pted only witt! cuh witt!
on:ltr . 25 cent ctluge for &lt;1dt c:arrylnt Bo,. Number In C11re of The
S.ntlntl.

estates .

guns, pocket watches and

Insurance

AUTOMOBILE
SURANCE been
celled?
Los t

entire

Nothing too large . Also,

Care Cente r Monday thru
Friday 9·5.
13

REAL ESTATE
FlNANCING
Federal Housing &amp;
Veterans Admin. Loans.

pay cash or certified check

and 6 miles from Rt . 7. Call

1.25

LSO

No Sunday Calls

C.HI!F (S;AVE H15

Now arrange lhe clrt:fed lette&lt;s 10
form the surprise answer, as sug-

'

•New homes extensive remodel53
Antiques
ing
*Electrical work
ATTENTION :
!IM - •Masonry work
PORTANT TO YOU) Will
12 Years
pay cash or certified check
for antiques and collec·
Experience
tibies or entire estates.
Greg Roush
Nolhing too large. Also, ·
Ph. 992-7583
guns, pocket watches and
coin collections. Call 6142·24·1 mo.
767·3167 or 557·3411 .

Zidian at Pomeroy Health

CISh
1. 00

can Howard
949-2862
1-22-tfc

ROUSH

Rl . 7or33. ~46 · 2359atter6 .

the eligibility list at 992 2156 or 992 ·2157.

PH.
, 949-2801

WHAiiHE

I. I I riJ

'" mile off Rt , 7 by-p..s •
on St. Rt. 124 toword '
Rutloncl.

\

I

ENFRYZr..~~...,

Gaage
Auto&amp;Truck
Repair
••
Also Transmission ·:
Repair .
,
PhOne 992-5682 -;·

Television
Viewing

When do I gel paid?

ttfto '"'" '"'

:.

992·7479.

Full time a nd part time RN

1 dii y
2dilyS
Jdiiys

Space for Rent

COUNlRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, north of

or LPN . 1H . Contact Mr .

1S Words or UIMler

All work guaranteed.

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

35

I

Roaer Hysell

PAYING
'20.00 AND UP
FOR
SILVER DOllARS

Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices

46

Va . 25287.

Rates and Other Information

or repair gutters and
downspouts,
gutter
cleaning and p•lnting.

Have room and board In
my home for elderly, good
meals, reasonable rates.

Ready to move into. 56500
firm . 992·5304 .

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

Earn extra money at home,
good pay, easy work, no
exp. necessary . Send for
application report, W . L.
Oh linger, w. Columb ia, w.

ROOFING
All types rool work, new

Road, 1 mile from old Rt. 33

11-Homt lmprovements
U-Piumblng &amp;.E lUV81int
IJ-E,c•watlnt
14-EIKtrlcill
&amp; Refrtgeratlon
U - Gentril l Hauling
..-M.H. Rtpilir
17-Upnotnwv

H. L WHITESEL

Furnished Rooms

1965 Yanor 12x52, 2 bedr.
1968 Fleetwood 12x63," 2
Bdr.
B &amp; 5 MOBILE HOME
SALES, PT . PLEASANT ,
wv . 304-675·4424.

as a young business person
and earn good money plus
some great gifts as a Sentinel route carrier . Phone
us right away and get on

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one let1er 10 each square. lo form
four ordinary words .

I POANI

Manor apt5. C•ll992-7787 .

11

Help Wanted
GET VALUABLE training

•

RENTER ' S assistance for
Senior Citizens in Village

rights. $77,000. 992·7559.

e TRANSPORTATION

eREAL ESTATE

1971 Cameron. Ux65 . 2
bedr .
1971 Fleetwood. l4x65 3
bdr .• bath 11&gt;
1971 ShakespeM, l4x65 2

.

Wft~f.\hl }Pj)l} ~THAT SCRAMBLED WOAD GAME
byHenn,t,moldandBobLoe

~ ~ ~~ .,

··

Business Services

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

2

1~x65

36 acres farm with 9 room
1 'll story house,
full
basement, buildings, barn,
some timber, all mineral

n - w•nttcl to 11uv

eFINANCIAL
21-

BUYING U.S. SILVER
CO IN S DATED 1964 OR
EARL IE R . ALSO GOLD
ITEMS, DON'T LOSE
MONEY, SI MPLY PICK
UP THE PHONE AND
DIA L
614 · 992 · 5113.
BRO WN 'S .

Apartment
tor Rent

44

for Sale

Wanted to Buy

9

e MERCHANDISE

eEMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

,.,.___

BRADFORD, Auctioneer,
Compl ete Service . Phone
949-2487 or 949·2000. racine,
Ohio, Critt Bradford.

42- Mobilt Homu
tor Rent
44-Ap~rtment tor Rent
4s-FR:oems
46--Space for Rtnl
47- Wented to Rent
41--~Qui gm entfor Rent

4- GIYtiWIV

Wednesday

Mobile Homes

. DICK TRACY

:IS Related
paternally

31 Blackthorn
fruit .
Ill Deny

\lens &amp; 4 w .D.

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to

work

It:

AXYDLBA.A.X.
LONGFELLOW

II

' One letter simply stand• for another. In tble 11mple A Ia
used for the three L's, X for .the two O's, etc. Single letters.
llp()Jirophes, the length and f&lt;&gt;"nnatlon of the word1 ere ell
hints. Each day the code letters are dlll'etent.

=~~~~h~ON~Af~a ~~

CRYPTOQUOT1!8
OLD FURNITURE, Ice
bOxes, brass beds, Iron
beds, desl&lt;.1, etc ,, complete
househOlds. Write M.D.
Miller. Rt. 4, Pomeroy or
' ..
' call992-7760 .

Mandolin . Very nl~e .
Black, trimmed In Ivory.
Arched front and back.
New Gibson strings, copy ·
of Gibson model. $100. Paul
Sayre; Rt . )38, Pltrlland,
OH . Great Botnd Rd. 843·
4591. .

loatulld
OLD . FURNITURE, Ice · 75
Moton tol' hit
tio•es, brass beds, Iron
beds, desl&lt;.s, etc .• complete
1977 Quachlta basi bo,at,
households. Write M.D.
fully equl~, he• 1978 10
Miller. Rt . 4, Pomeroy or. . h.p. Mercury mOtor, Cell
call992-7760.
1192·3'100 after 5:00.
·

----- - - -

OF COURSE, IF I WERE
ON A PEDESTAL, I
COl ILD REALLV IWN THIN65

-

UZIEWU

Y'

~~

·--- . . . . .... ... ... _&gt;- .

EGZO

GS

EIARN,

W U·Z N Z

GO

SR

WR

AJW

WUNRJHU

GW

CZSFZEE

NRK

IE

IS F
N R IF

WRGE . -

TUGEEGTO

Yesterday'a Cryptqqaote: THAT MAN WHO LIVES FOR SELF
ALONE UVES FOR TilE MEANEST MORtAL KNOWN.J,MJLIER
~

II&gt; ltlio K... . . . _.S....~, Inc.

TUESDAY, MARCH 11,1910
7:IJO-Cross-Wifs 3; Tic Tac Do09h
8; Newlywed Game 6, 13; News
10: Love, American Style 15;
Sanford &amp; Son 17: Dick Cavell 20 .
7: JG--Hollywood Squares 3; ·solid
Gold '79 6; Joker 's Wild 8; Dick
Cavett 33; Hollywood Squares
10; Sha Na 1\ia 13; TV Honor
Society 15: All in The Family 17;
MacNeil-Lehrer Report 20.
8:IJO-Misadventures of Sheriff LobO
3.15; Happy Days 6,13; While
Shadow 8,10; Nova 20.33; NHL
Hockey 17 .
8:30-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13.
9:00-Big Show 3,15: Three's
Company 6,13 ; Movie " W.W. &amp;
t he Dixie Danceklngs" 8,10;
Mystery! 20,33 .
9:JG--Taxl6,13 ; lO :oo-Hart to Hart
6,13; News 20; City Notebook 33.
lO:JG--Unlted States 3,15; Fight
Against Slavery 17: Over Easy
20; Camera Three 33.
11 :OQ-New s 3,6,8,10, 13, 15 ; Dick
Cavett 20 ; Monty Python's
Flying Circus 33 .
11 :Jo-llllnols Primary 3,6,8, 13, 15;
ABC Captioned News 33; Movie
" Womon of the Year" 10; Movie
" Affectionately Yours" 17.
12:oo-Tonight 3.15; Movie "The
King of Marvin Gardens" 6.13;
Barnaby Jones 8.
1: lo-Movle "Cactus In the Snow" 8;
1:25-News 17; l:Jo-Tomorrow
.3; News 15; Mov ie "Marine
Raiders" 17 .

2:25-News 13; 3:3Q-Movle "Storm
over Jamaica" 17: 5:35-Love.
American Style 17 .
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 19,1980
5:45-Farm Reporl 13; 5 :50-;-PTL
Club 13.
6:IJ0-700 Club 6,8; PTL Club 15;
Hea lth Field 10; 6:05-World at
Large 17.
6 :Jo-Chrlstopher Closeup 10; News
17; 6:45-Mornlng Report 3;
A.M . Weather 33; 6:50---G~
Morning , West VIrginia 13;
6 :55-News 13.
7:1J0-Today 3,1 5; Good Morning
America 6, 13 ; Wednesday
Morning 8; Batman 10; Three
Stooges-LIIIl'e Rascals 17.
7:Jo-Famlly Affair 10; 7:55-Chuck
Whit!' Reports 10.
B:IJO-Capt. Kangaroo 8, 10; Lucy
Show 17 ; Sesame St. 33.
8:3()--Romper Room 17.
9:IJO-Bob Braun 3; Big Valley 6:
Beverly Hillbillies 8; Jeffersons
10; Phil Donahue 13, 15; Family
Affair 17.
.
9:Jo- Bob Newhart8; One Day AI A
Time 10; Green Acres 17.
lO :IJO-Card Sharks 3,15; Jellersons
8; Edge of Night 6; Joker' s Wild
-10; Morning Magazine 13; Movie
"The Tattered Dress" 17.
10 : 3Q-Hollywood Squares 3, 15 ;
520.000 Pyramid 13; Andy
Griffith 6 ; 10 :55-CBS News 8;
House Call 10.
ll ;IJO-High Rollers 3,15; Price Is
Righi 8, 10.
11 :30-Wheel of Fortune 3,15;
Family Feud 6,13 ; Sesame St .
20,33; 11 ;55-News 17 .
12: 0o-Newscenl er
3;
News
6,8, 10,13; Health Field 15; Love
American Style 17.
12 :Jo-Ryan's Hope 6,13; Search for
Tomorrow 8,10; Password Plus
15; Movie "Everything but the
Truth" 17; Elec . Co. 20,33.
1:IJO-Days of Our Lives 3, 15; All My
Children 6, 13; Young &amp; the
Restless 8, 10.
2: IJO-Doctors 3, 15; One Life to Live
6,13; As The World Turns 8,10;
2:25-News 17.
2:30-Another
World
3,15 ;
Glgglesnort Hotel 17.
.
3: 00-General
Hospital
6,13 :
Guiding Light 8.10; I Love Lucy
17; Austin City Llmlfs 20.
3:3G--FIInlstones 17; Over Easy 33.
~ : IJO-Mister Cartoon 3; Bewitched
6; Petticoat Junction 8; Sesame
Sf. 20,33; Gomer Pyle 10; Real
McCoys 13; Little Rascals 15:
Spectreman 17.
4: JG--Looe Ranger 3; Alter school
Soeclal 6,13 · Gomer Pyle 8;
Brady Bunch 10; Merv Griffin
15; Gilligan' s Is. 17.
5:IJO-Carol Burnett 3; Sanford &amp;
Son 8; Mary Tyler Moore 10:
Three Sons 17; Mister Rogers'
NeighbOrhood 20,33.
5:Jo-Mash 3; News 6; Play the
Percentages 8; Mash 10; Happy
Days Again 13; I Dream of
Jeannie 17; Doctor Who 33.
6:IJO-News 3,8,10,13,15; ABC News
6; Carol Burnett 17; 3-2-1 Contact
20,33 . '
6:Jo-NBC News3,15; ABC News 13;
CBS News 8, 10; Carol Burnell 6;
Bob Newhart 17; VIlla Alegre 20;
Wild Wild World ot Animals 33.
7;IJO-Cross-Wlls 3; Tic Tac Dough
8; Newlywed Game 6, 13 ;
MacNeil-Lehrer Report 33;
News 10; Love, American Style
15; Sanford &amp; Son 17; Dick
Cavett20.
7:30-Country Roads 3; Solid Gold
'796; Joker's Wild 8; Dick Cavell
33; The Judge 10; Family Feud
13; Wild Kingdom 15; All In The .
f'amlly 17; MacNeil-Lehrer
Report 20.
8:oo-Real People 3,15; Eight Is
Enough 6,13; Beyond Weslworld
8,10; Shakespeare Plays 20,33;
Movie " Desiree" 17.
9:IJO-Diffrent Strokes 3, 15; Vegas
6,13; Movie "Jimmy 8 . &amp; Andre" 8; NIT Basketball 10.
9:3()--Hello, Larry 3,15.
IO :IJO-From Here to Eternity 3,15;
10 : 15-Upslalrl, Oownstilrs 17.
11 : 00..,- News 3,6 ;8, 10 , 13~1S . 20;
Goodies
33 ;
11 ; 15-Love.
American Style 17.
11 :30-Tonight 3,15; ABC News6. 13;
Black Sheep Squeclron 8; Movie

""V

.,Hammerhead" 10; Movie " God

Is my Co-Pilot" 17.
11;.45-Love Boa\6, 13; 12:~ovle
"Billy: Portrait of a Street Kid"
8; 12:55-'-Barethl 6,13.
·
1:1&gt;0-Tomorrow 3; News 15; I :25Newt 17; 1 :3()--Movie " Nigl&gt;f.
· mare In Chlcago" .17.
13;
3:05-,Movle
2: 05- News
"Esc.,...toMincloneo" 17; 5:GSUnlouchables 17.

'

�12- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy . U., rucsday, Mar. 18, 1980

ALL TIED UP - Members of Boy Scout Troop 249
of Pomeroy demonstrated knot tying skills ·at their
booth at Saturday's M-G-M Scout-0-Rama. Pictured

M-G-1\'1 Scout-0-Rama huge success

n--

BY JUDY OWEN
Nearly 1,200 people attended
Saturday's MGM District Scout
Show htlld in the National Guard Ar·
mory in Point Pleasant. It was the
area's first scout-{)-rama since 1974.
Charles Henson, Point Pleasant,
M-G-M District chairperson, termed
the event " An outstanding show ... a
huge success''.
Although Saturday's show was the
first in six years for the local
district, Henson assured that it
won't be the last.
" I feel we had an outstanding
scout-{)-rama this year. I am confident we will rise again next year."
Henson also said TriState Council
Scout Executive Bob Cree and Dave
Elmdorf, overall Tri State Scout4
Rama chairman, reported late afternoon visitors in Point Pleasant
Saturday felt the district put on an
excellent show.
Nineteen girl scouts, cub scout and

Area deaths. • •

above, seated from left to right, are John Arnold, Ray
Tryall, Mike Stone and Billy Weaver; standing are
Jolm Bacon and scoutmaster Ray Laudermilt.

Evans A. Rutherford
Funeral services lor Evans
Augustus Rutherford, 68, Denton,
Texas, former resident of Car·
penter, were held Saturday at 2 p.m.
at the Jack Schmitz and Son Funeral
Chapel, Denton, Texas. Burial ·was
in the IOOF Cemetery in Denton.
Mr. Rutherford was born at Car·
penter Oct. 2, 1911 the son of the late
Jasper Augustus and Melinda
(Matlie) Perry Rutherford. He was
also preceded in death by one hallsister, Bessie Strong.
He was a gra,duate of Albany High
School, a veteran of World War II,
member of Carrollton, Texas
Masonic Lodge and Mosiah Shrine
Temple, and a retired teacher of the

I

'

15-year old
faces charges
CADETTE CANDLEMAKERS - Tammy
Capehart, left, and Shari Cogar of the Southeastern
Meigs Cadette Troop 1180, dip candles at the troop's

TICKETS ON SALE
Tickets for Thursday night's
regional basketball tournament in
which Southern High School is participating are on sale at the Middleport Book Store and the New
York Clothing House, Pomeroy.
They are to be purchased no later
than Wednesday or can be purchased at Southern High School no
later than noon on Thursday .
Southern receives a 12.5 percentage of the advance ticket sales
but no proceeds from tickets at the
door on tournament night. All persons planning to attend are asked to
buy their tickets in advance at one of
the three locations.
CORRECTION
Harry Swan, 93, Portland, who
died Sunday was a member of Portland Methodist Church not
Pomeroy as was reported. He is also
survived by several nieces and
nephews.

booth at the M-G-M Scout-0-Rama Saturday. Nineteen
Girl Scout, Cub and Boy Scout units participated in the
booth exhibits at the scout show held at the National
Guard Armory in Point Pleasant.

ACTIONS FILED
A suit in the amount of $1,711.56
was filed in Meigs County Conunon
Pleas Court by the Pomeroy
National Bank against Gerald
Wilkinson, Pomeroy.
Mary Lou Longenette was granted
a divorce from CW!ord Longenette
on charges of gross neglect of duty.
Herman C. Michael was granted a
divorce from Maxine C. Michael.
Marriages dissolved were Walter
D. Roush and Litlian L. Roush ; Linda Wilkinson and Eonard Wilkinson;
Florence Griggs and Jerry W.
Griggs; Robert Williarnn Caruthers
and Diane Caruthers; Mark Elliott
Johnson and Kathleen Sue Johnson.

MCCLTOMEET
The Middleport Child Conservation League will meet at 7:30 Thursday night at the Riverboat Room of
the Athens County Savings and

SHARED HOUR OBSERVED
One Great Hour of Sharing was
observed Sunday at the St. Paul
United Methodist Church, Tuppers
Plains, by the 65 persons attending.
The Rev. Richard Thomas read
scripture from Jolm I and used as
his sermon topic, "The Unknown
Among us."
Lenten Bible study will be held
tonight at St. Paul's Church at 7: 3()
p.m. and on March 30 at 2:30 p.m.
there will be a cantata, "Hallelujah
for the Cross." A spring revival is
planned for April21.

Laon, Meigs Office. Mrs. Peggy
Harris will have devotions, Mrs.
Jeanette Duffy will provide the
traveling prize, and there will be a
product demonstration by Mrs.
Mary Powell.

boy scout troops from the three
counties exhibited crafts and
presented demonstrations.
Noteworthy booth exhibits included a puppet show by a Gallla
County Cub Scout Troop; a turtle
race staged by Cub Scout Pack 258 of
Point Pleasant; an outstanding knot
display by Gallipolis Boy Scout
Troop :!!3; finger printing demonstration by Boy Scout Troop 200 of
Gallipolis, and a macrame deq~on­
stration by Point Pleasant Girl Scout
Troop2029.
Cadet Troop 1100 of Southeastern
Meigs County demonstrated the art
of candle making; the New Haven
Cadetes collected signatures rl
visitors to the scout-o-rama which
will be placed on letters of
congratulations to the United States
Winter Olympic team; support to
the American hostages in Iran;
thanks to the Canadians who
assisted in the escape of six

Charges of recetvmg stolen
property have been fUed in Meigs
County Juvenile Court against a 16year old Columbus youth following
the breaking and entering of the 0.
C. Gilprin residence; Success Raod,
Saturday.
Meanwhile, a 14-year old Columbus youth is still at large. The
juvenile is also wanted for the
breaking and entering of the GUprin
residence. The youth was last seen
in Athens County late Sunday
evening.
The department is also investigating the theft of a 40 channel
CB radio from
Robert Riffle's
vehicle at Syracuse. The theft occurred sometime within the last two
days.
Deputies are also investigating the
theft of a chain saw from the John
Hill residence, Letart Falls.
MEETS WEDNESDAY
The
Third
Wednesday
Homemakers Club of Syracuse will
meet Wednesday, March 19, at the
Syracuse Municipal Building at 10
a.m.
Project for the month is making
Easter eggs. Members are to bring
one pound of confectionary sugar,
one stick of butter, flavoring and
chocolate.

Carrollton Independent School
District.
He is survived by his Wife, Maggie
Joe Rutherford; give sons, James of
Coppell, Texas; Howard of Carlinville, Ill.; Larry, of Springfield;
Everett, Corpus Christi, Texas and
Wayne of Denton; four daughters,
Betty Church, Mesquite, TelUIS;
Sarah Zimmerman, Dallas; Maxine
Porter, U. S. Navy and Kay Rutherford, Denton; one sister, Mrs.
Elizabeth Jordan, Albany,12 grandchildren and five great·
grandchildren; two nephews,
Dwaine and Walter Jordan, Albany,
and one niece, Mrs. Melva Faye
Crabtree, Albany.

Americans from Iran; Boy Scout ~
Troop '1!17 of Point Pleasant demonstrated the art of making lead
figureines and Boy Scout Troop 253
of Mason, assisted by the Mason
Volunteer Fire Department,
displayed first aid and rescue equipother groups entering booths were .
Girl Scout Troops m and 2095 of
New Haven and 2153 of Apple Grove;
CUb Scout Packs :lnl and 7Jl4 of
Gallipolis and 235 of .Chesteri and •
Boy Scout Troops 203,1n5, and 215 of
Gallipolis; 249 of Pomeroy, and 259
of Point Pleasant.
A Pinewood Derby was also held
during the afternQOII with John
Cremeans of Pack 7Al4; Gallipolis, ,.
claiming the M-G-M title. Rumeruti ::
was Billy McCulty of Pack 2CH;
Charley Young, pack 203, Gallipolis, '
and Mark Smith of pack 258, Point :
Pleasant, came in third and fourth ·
respectively.
Other bigbllghts included perfonnances by the Wahama High
School stage band, the group Anns ,
from Point Pleasant and the Order
of the Arrow Indian dancers from
Pomeroy and a magic show by
Kevin Hollingshead and John Gl0118.
,-~~~~~~~----

Auto

Insurance
Let's talk value.
Multiple car and other
availab le discounts can save
you as much as 15 % on your

at
'

Delay forces
more slicing
WASHINGTON (AP)- President
Carter's delay in submitting a
revised 1981 budget is shilling the
congressional spotlight to a proposal
by the chairman of the House
Budget Committee for more spending cuts and possibly a lower surplus than the administration is
seeking.

Many observers believe that in the
absence of a detailed Carter plan,
the proposals by Rep. Robert N.
Giaimo, 0-Conn., the committee
chairman, will become the
framework for the 1981 federal
budget.
Giaimo outlined his proposals to
Democratic committee members
Tuesday and was slated to unveil
them publicly today as the committee begins preparing its budget
recommendations for the full House.
Normally, the president's
proposed oodget, submitted in
January, establishes the framework
for congressional action although

Congress retains final control over
the budget.
However, this year, Carter
repudiated his January proposal,
which called for a $15.8 billion
deficit, and vowed last Friday to
fight inflation by balancing the
budget with $13 billion in spending
cuts. Administration officials say
those proposals will not be ready until the end of the month.
By then, the House Budget Committee expects to have completed
work on its own version of the budget
for fiscal 1981, which starts Oct. I.
The Senate Budget Committee also
will have started work on its version
by the end of the month.
Although Giaimo's budget
proposals were not officially
released, several members of the
· conunittee revealed their general
contents.
House Majority Leader Jim
Wright, D-Texas, said the package
(Continued on page 16)

..

help you find the best value
for your insurance dollars.

TRAFFIC FATALITY- A Pomeroy man was killed Tuesday afternoon
during a aui&lt;Hlemi accident on SR 7, near the Kyger Creek Power Plant.
Fatally injured was John A. Logan, 31, 417 W. Main Sl, Pomeroy. Semi
driver John K. Gill, 24, Patriot, claimed injury, but was not Immediately
treaty. Called to the scene, just north of CR :In, at 3:45p.m., the Gallla·
Meigs Post, Highway Patrol, reports three north bound vehicles were

DAVIS-QUICKEL
INSURANCE AGENCY
Bill Quickel
"Across from the
Courthouse in Pomeroy"

992·6677
FEDERAL
KEMPER
INSURANCE
.COMPANY

Commission airs Middleport project

By Tbe Associated Press

State cancels bond issue sales
COLUMBUS, Ohio- The state has canceled a $65 million bond issue
because of soarring interest rates -the first time it's ever backed off
from a bond sale before accepting bids, one officlal says.
Instead, the state Is pursuing plans to temporarily borrow funds
from the general fund to finance higher education construction projects now under way.
The Public Facilities Financing Commission, ~hich seliB non-voted
bonds, decided against the bond sale aftet learning that interest rates
on the 25-year package could top 10 percent.

Computer buying hard for Soviets

ELBERFELD$

Spring's
on the Wing

WASHINGTON - The Soviet Union will find It very difficult to buy
computers and other high-technology goods from American
bu.dnesses under the Carter administration's strict new Soviet trade
policy.
Officials have estimated that more than $1 billion in goods and services could be involved. The only apparent exception, one official said,
would be for products related to health or safety.
The restrictions could spell rejection of "a substantial number" of
the 700 export \lcense cases held up in January by President Carter
while trade with the Soviets was reviewed, government officials said.

.Patient mixup found

too

stopped on SR 7 prepaiing to turn left.I.Algan's north bound auto went out
of control, went left of center and struck Gill's south bound semi. Logan
was pronounced dead at the scene by Gallla County Coroner Donald R.
Warehime. Photo courtesy of the Gallia County Sheriff's Department,
Deputy R.L. Wiseman.

late

PHILADELPHIA - "They did a spine operation which wasn't
necessary, but lt was nothing big or dangerous and It may have been a
blessing in disguise," says the family doctor of a woman wbo got the
wrong surgery last week at Graduate Hospital.
Dr. Nathan Steinberg said Tuesday his office was notified immediately of the mistake made on his patient, Annie Robinson, 58. She
was In the hospital for removal of a parathyroid gland and got an
operation on her cervical vertebrae, at the back of her neck.
"It is one of those things that can occur, but in 55 years of practice
that kind of mistake has never happened to any of my patients,'' said
Steinberg, (Who is 00.

BY KATIE CROW
Meigs County commissioners
Tuesday meeting with Middleport
Mayor Fred Hoffman and Howard
Gifford of the Ohio DepaJ'!;!neqt, C!f,
TransportaUon, Marietta, disci&lt;Sied
the Page Street project for the
village of Middleport.
Financing was the major point
discussed concerning a resolution
for the project submitted by Gifford.
At the present time, the total
amount needed to complete the
project is $180,925, minus remaining
Issue I money totaling $100,300, thus
leaving $68,625 in local monies.
Mayor Hoffman indicated the
village will have the needed funds.
He said he has been given verbal approval to use HUD funds if
necessary.
It was indicated that state and
federal funds are being used for the
project.
DEADLINE NEARS
The resolution must be signed by
the fiscal officer and submitted to
the Ohio Department of Transportation by March 24. ·
If the project is not completed, the
county would lose $200,000 in off
systems money and over $100,000 in
IsSue I money., Conunissioners in·
dicated they want the project to go
through as soon as possible.
The project has been under con-

sideration for some eight years and
much surveying and engineering
work has been carried out.
At a meeting of Middleport Coun·
cil on Feb. 25, It was stated that If all
goes· well, the Page Street project
would be under construction in May.
Also meeting with the com
missioners was Wesley Buehl, county engineer. Buehl submitted an inventory of culvert pipe, which was
requested at the last meeting.
Buehl reported that he and the
county highway superintendent had
recently gone to St. Clairsville to inspect a used conveyor-screen. The
piece of equipment Is five years old
and would cost $13,500.

Buehl said he could make the in the future and Buehl replied no.
Jones also asked If Buehl had inscreener work, but he could
probably buy a piece of screen to use spected county road 19 with respect
with the hopper at a cost of apto the fact that beaver dams at the
proximately $2,000. The board was creek have caused considerable
of the opinion that the screen alone
damage to the road. Buehl said his
would have too much sand in the mix department was aware d. the
and require too much asphalt. Buehl problem and would try to have the
stated he would give the matter ad- Director of Wildlife do something
ditional study and make a ~with the beavers.
rnendation at the next meeting.
Jones again asked Buehl is he had
POUCY DISCUSSED
made any contacts with Conrail con·
Richard Jonea, president, asked
ming the.railroad crossing at the
Buehl If he , Buehl, had a standard lower· -end of Middleport. Buehl
policy to give pipe and gravel to reported that he had contacted them
assist township trustees. Buehl an· but that no improvements have been
swered yes. Jones also asked If there made.
would be any varation of this policy
(C ontinued on pagel6 1

Begin probe on waste of
taxpayers' funds in Ohio
ByROBERTE.MIIJ ER
Associated Presa Wrller
OOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
House Finance Committee, spurred
by news reports suggesting waste of
taxpayers' funds, has launched a
probe into community agencies
which provide services for Ohio's
mentally retarded.
An initial hearing Tuesday
focused mainly on the Franklin
County "648 Board," which has borne the brunt of the publicity. But
several other county board
spokesmen were questioned about
their operations.
The committee questioned

salaries in Franklin County and purchases of vehicles, television sets
and microwave ovens. One contract
agency hired by the board paid
$1,600 for four chairs, members
noted.
Harold Bussell, the Franklin
County agency's executive director
wbo earns $54,683 a year, gave some
answers. But he said he couldn't
respond for other agencies providing
services to the board under contract.
Ohio's "648" boards, called that
since they were created by the
Legislature 10 years ago in House
Bill No. 648, serve counties or groups

of counties. They use federal, state
and local funds to provide services
to the mentally retarded, mostly under contract.
·
Rep. Michael Stinziano, D·
Columbus asked Bussell why the
Franklin County board listed among
its personal property several cof·
feemakers and servers, two
refrigerators and other food equipment valued at a total of $1,042.
Bussell replied that the items were
bought before a state auditor's
manual was ·published, prohibiting
purchases of equipment "for the
personal use of employees.' '

G-J-M board turns over operations

TO THE 1979-80

SOUlliERN TORNADO BASKETBALL TEAM

FB

enttne

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

and

1HURSDAY
NIGHT!!

•

auto insurance.

insurance agency, we can

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Dlscbarged, Mareh 17
Ralph Ashley, Paul Aspery,
Georgiana Bright, Paul Caruthers,
Christine hale, Ellen Jorden, Edna
Kegley, Julie Kitchen, Beth McClure, Billie McCormick, Mrs.
Robert O'Connor and son, Sandra
Riley, John Ricksrd, Rebecca
Snavely, David Spe&amp;rTY, Betty Watson.
Birth
Mr. and Mrs. David Bush,
daughter, Oak Hill.

VOL. 28, NO. 237

ment.

As an independent
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted-Mary Evans, Portland;
Nonnan Evans, Portland; Bernard
Ralrden, Hartford; Flora Murphy,
Langsville; Beatrice Rairden, Hart·
ford; Robert Smith, Racine; Alpha
Russell, Pomeroy.
Discharged-Marvin Darst, Bessie
Young.

e

•

.from the DIRECTORS, OFFICERS, and EMPLOYEES of the

Farltlers Bank
POMEROY, OHIO

Member FDIC

TONI TODD
Smashing sportdr&lt;'SS in a f~brie combo th~t thriVl's
on 'non-stop days. Toni Todd 's embroidered poly ·
cotton knit top tnl'r!(t's to swirl of Khaki poplin,
cU\lght in th&lt;· •niddl&lt;· hi' a narrow cord hPit.
Elasticiz&lt;•d 1\·aist .. ~lac~ine wash-dry. Red or
Navy With l&lt;hakl. 6·14. S34 . · ·
. ·
Easter Is Early This, Yea r-Ap:,, 6

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY.
(.

·•.

sER\IE;D AT BEE - Traditionally, the local
superintendents of Meigs .County Schools serve as
Judges of the annual county spelling bee. Monday
night, two of the superintendents were serving for the
first time in the judging capacity. The local •nperintendenb, from the left, are Bob Ord, Souti~~:ru, vekran

judges; Richard Roberts, Eastern, and David L.
Gleason, Meigs Local, right, serving their first hitch.
Standing are, left, Russell Moore, chairman of the bee,
and Thomas Kelly of the Eastern High School faculty
who served l&lt;l! pronouncer for the 17 contestants
repres! nlng all schvols of the county.

The Gallla..Jackson-Melgs Community Mental Health and Mental
Retardation 648 Board has fonnally
returned the operation of the Alternative to Nelsonville Children's
Residential Treatment Center to the
Community Mental Health Center
Board.
As a result of that action, the coordinator of the children's center and
two key staff members have submitted their resignations.
According to published reports,
Wllllam E. McGee, in a letter to 648
Board Executive Director Maxine
Plurmner, said his resignation is ef.
. fectlve Friday.
Last December 17, the 648 Board
voted to take control of the
children's factlity away from the
Center Board saying the factlity had
n~t been opened and should be
opened inunedlately.
Intervening controversy and
litigation !lave kept the children's
center virtually Inoperative. With
the exeption of two clients served
shortly after ' the takeover, no
children have been housed in the
facility since the 648 Board's Decem
ber action, according to Center
Board sources.
Follo\\ing the board's December

17 action, 648 administrative staff
told Center employes assigned to the
children's facility that If they wished
to retain their jobs they would have
to resign from the Center Board to
be employed by the 648 Board.
December 19, according to sources, the 648 board bad a temporary
license to operate the resld~ntial
facWty from the State Department
of Mental Health and Mental Retardation.
Following the takeover, the Gallia
County Board of Commissioners and
County Prosecutor Joseph L. Cain,
after meeting with Center Board
representatives, fUed a motion for a
temporary · restraining order
seeking to bave the 648 Board action
overturned.
For three days in January, the 648
board staff was evicted from the
main mental health center on
Jackson Pike and the children's
facWty on VInton Pike-both county
owned buildings-at the request of
the county·commlssion.
In ~ate January, the 648 Board
adopted a resolution announcing Its
intent to return the 'Operation of the
children's facility to the Center
Board.
At that time,. some ~rd mem-

bers said it had not been their intent
to permanently takeover the
operation of the facility, but rather
to take control for a limited period of
time.
Dr. Bernard Niehm, interim director of the Conununity Mental Health
Center, told reporters in Columbus
Tuesday his first step would be to
recruit new staff for the children's
lactlity and to get It reopened as
soon as possible.

Weather
Increasing cloudiness tonight.
Lows in the low 408. Mostly cloudy
Thursday with afternoon sl)owers
likely. Highs near 60. The chance of
rain is near zero tonight and 50 percent Thursday.
EXTENDED FORECAST
Friday through Sunday: A
chance of showers Friday. Fair
Saturd&amp;y. Showers possible Sunday. Highs from the 50s to the low
60s Friday, cooling to the mid 408
to mid 50s Sunday. Lows from the
408 Friday to the 30s Saturday
and Sunday.
(

I

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