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                  <text>Three Republicans file for offices

Local men purchase
Gateway Supermarket
Two local men, John Greene and
Tony Cole, have purchased the
Gateway Supennarket in Middleport.
Greene resides at 510 North
Second St., Middleport. After serving in the U. S. Navy as a
storekeeper, he began his creer in
the grocery business in 1948 and has
managed various supermarkets
throughout Ohio.
He opened Twin City Gateway in
l!rl&amp;, the former A. and P . Store, and
has been here since its opening.

"'PJ'Iio

•

'.

' ...

f,
.( I

~··

TONY COLE

JOHN GREENE

for future tax cuts or reduction of the
federal debt. It was not included in
the $1.8 billion surplus in Giaimo's
recommendations.
''We're going to come up with a
balanced budget - there's no
question about that- and possibly a
litUe surplus," Wright said at a news
conference. A balanced federal
budget in fiscal1981 would be the first in 12 years.

{ Cont i nued from page 1)

•
•
commlsSlon
&lt;Continued from page 1)

Jones also asked Buehl if he ,
Buehl, felt if he had any responsibilty toward the House Nwnbering
Project and Plat Map project in,
hiring the CET A workers on the
county payroll. Buehl said he did not
feel he had any financial responsibilty toward the projects.
Naoma Brinker, CETA administrator, discussed a bidder conference to be held pertaining to the
proposed CETA programs for Meigs
County in the future. The board will
work on proposals for the next grant
period.
It was agreed to advertise for bids
for bituminous and aggregate
materials. Bids will be opened on
AprilS at 2:30p.m.
Attending were Jones, Henry
Wells. and Chester Wells, commissioners, and Mary Hobstetter,
clerk.

Mayor~s

court

Two defendants were fined and
eight others forfeited bonds in the
court of Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman Tuesday night.
Fined were Linda L. Freeman,
Pomeroy, $13 and costs, and Betty
Caldwell, Route I, Middleport, $15
and costs, both charged with
speeding.
Forfeiting bonds were James M.
Dunkey, Riverview, Md., $27 ; Scott
E. Wooding, Helena, Mont., $28;
Peggy S. Neigler, Route 2, Racine,
$27; Abra L. Burris, Point Pleasant,
$28; David S. Wells, Rand, W. Va.,
$41; Floyd W. Kingery, Route 1, Bidwell, $27; Steven A. Smith, New
Haven, $28, all posted on speeding
charges, and Jackie L. Large, Route
I, Middleport, $25, assured clear
distance.

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted-Bill Perrin, Pomeroy;
Eva Bibbee, Pomeroy; Blanche Gi~
bs, Pomeroy; Diane Caruthers,
Pomeroy; Kathleen Anthony, Middleport; Elizabeth Bartoe, Long Bottom; Carolyn Estep, Mason.
Discharged--Charles
Blake,
Robert Rhodes, Minnie Johnson,
William Owens, Betty Reed,
Marilyn Powell, Alma Young.

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Dlscbarges, Marcb 18
Lola Bohlen, Deborah Buck, Randolph Byus, Robert Casto, Emil Corbin, Robin Daniels, Gorden, Fannin,
Esther hansgan, Clarence Jarvis,
Jr., Ray Jones, Rose Lee, Lewis
Long, Mildred Long, Geoffrey Matthews, William Forrest, Donald
Phillips, Joyce Redmon, Alice
Rulen, Cressa Shain, Donald
Skaggs, James Spencer, Karl
Sprague, Gary Watson, Betty
Williams, Opal Zerkle.
Births
Mr. and Mrs. Tim Richardson,
daughter, Bidwell; Mr. and Mrs.
John haffelt, daughter, Crown City;
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Ours, son,
Crown City; Mr. and Mrs. Billy Parsons, daughter, Wellston ; Mr. and
Mrs. Larry Prater, daughter Oak
Hill.
'
ASK TOWED
A marriage license was issued to

Terry Edward Albright, 19, West
Columbia, and Ruthanna Lynn Plants, 18, Middleport.

John A. Logan
Funeral services for Jolm A.
Logan, 31, West Main St., Pomeroy,
killed Tuesday night in an auto accident, will be held at 1 p.m. Friday
at the Pomeroy House of Prayer.
Mr. Logan was born July 2, 1948,
at Mason, W.Va.
Surviving are his father, Delmar
J. Logan, Colwnbus; his mother,
Ethel Mae Stewart Stitt, Route 2,
Racine; his stepfather, AHred Stitt,
Racine; his wife. Kathy Elaine
Miller Logan, a son, John Michael
and a daughter, Tamitha Elaine,
both at home; a sister, Mrs. Dale
(Josephine) C. Riffle, Route 2,
Racine; his father-in-law and

Twenty-three defendants were
fined and 10 others forfeited bonds in
Meigs County Court Monday.
Fined by Judge Charles Knight
were KeMeth Hsrtley, Pomeroy,
James Sharp, Lancaster, David
Grindstaff, Racine, Richard L. Forbes, Colwnbus, Dale Weinhardt,
Urichsville, Margaret J . Ruhl,
Westerville, Gary L. Strain,
Zanesville, Carl M. MaUack, Reedsville, Joyce Wells, Lancaster,
Katherine Dukas,. Belpre, Carl
Pringle, Parkersburg, Paul Regan,
Belpre, Carl H. Hom, Coolville, and
Gregory Spurlock, Proctorville, $15
and costs each, speeding; Michael
E. King, Minersville, $5 and costs,
altered rear bwnper; Margaret
Goett, Pomeroy, $15 and costs, improper passing; Ralph Stewart,
Pomeroy, $15 and costs, insecure
load, GeorgeS. WHite, Stewart, $200
and costs, overload; Budd Darst,
Cheshire, $15 and costs, left of center; Terry Napper, Lucasville, $175
and costs, overweight; James Will,
Jr. , Pomeroy, $100 and costs, disorderly conduct, $75 suspended,
barred from Tall Timbers for two
years; Thomas Cleland, Cheshire,
$150 and costs, three days confinement, license suspended 30 days,

Pomeroy, 0 .
remodeled , new carpet . b11se
ment, welllnsul•ted . reasonable

vtlllfv bil ls. toea teo on two tots .
Mulberry Avt .• Pomeroy. OH
Owner wilt help finM ce to

responsible pllrtv
New l..bfintt-HA -Sl, New spl iT
level nome . l ih bafi'IS. J
bedrooms, basebOard elec:lrlc
heat, Thermopane wlnaows. plus
1 2 car gar11Q1!! . A~prox . 11r• &amp;ere ,
Tuppers Plains, Ohio. Only
·~ . 000 .

Cho~rtes

M. Hn••· Realtor

Nelell E . C•n•J · lr. Mgr.

We

Ph. ••H•our itantia
have no

mother- in-law, Thomas and Jessie
Miller, South Carolyn, a brother-inlaw, two sisters-in-law and several
cousins, nieces and nephews. A
sister and two brothers preceded
him in death.
Mr. Logan was a member of the
Pomeroy House of Prayer and had
served with the U. S. Marine Corps.
He was employed with the RobbinsMyers Co., Gallipolis.
Officiating at the services will be
the Rev. Keith Adkins and burial
will be in Riverview Cemetery.
Friends may call at the RawlingsCoats-Blower Funeral Home in Middleport from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
Thursday and until 11:30 a.m.
Friday.

0

House studying hard budget cut decisions
WASHINGTON (AP) - House
budget writers appear on track
toward recommending the first
balanced federal budget in 12 years,
•but bard decisions over spending
cuts are stllJ ahead.
In its first day of work on the 1981
budget Wednesday, the House
Budget Committee tentatively approved cutting $2.6 billion from the
budget originally proposed by
President Carter in January. LitUe
opposition appeared to be emerging
to the revised budget proposed by
Rep. Robert N. Giaimo, 0-Conn., the
conunlttee chairman.
The committee was to reswne

work on the budget today with votes
poi!Sible on some of the more controversial cuts, such as an end to
Saturday mail deliveries and
elimination of the state share of
federal revenue sharing.
Giaimo, who declared Wednesday
that rising inflation "makes a balanced budget imperative," recommended a total of $15.9 billion in
spending cuts to produce a budget
surplus of U.4 billion for the fiscal
year starting Oct. 1.
In other economic news Wednesday:
-New figures showed the profits
of U.S. business sagged in the final

Some teachers at Wahama, Point
Pleasant and Hannan in the Mason
County School Systerr. are apparently planning to join fellow instructors
Friday in a statewide, one-day protest of "legislative apathy towards
education".
Jim Wilson, Mason County
Teachers' Association spokesman
said, "Contrary to current rumors,
this Is not a strike. All participating
teachers will be returning to the
clasaroom Monday.
Wilson also said the action would
not be taken at the taxpayers' expense since those educators participating will be taking a one-day
pay cut rather than utilizing personal or sick leave.
Mason County Supt. of Schools
Robert Brewster reported that,
despite the teachers' protest,
schools in the county will be officially open Friday - at least unW a
determination is made whether adlt"
quate supervision can be provided
by available personnel.
Brewster recommends that
parents send their children to
school. Bus operators will remain on
call Fridsy morning while principals determine the teacher
absentee rate at individual schools.
The principals have been instructed to phone the board office

DISCONTINUED PATTERNS AND COLORS
I ..

prior to 9:30 a.m., at which time a
decision will be made on whether
classes will be continued.
Jim Wilson, in putting forth the
West Virginia Teacher Allociation's
stand on the issue, noted:
"According to various medla
sources, the sole motivating factor
for the protest is the 7. 7 percent
salary increase granted educators
by the legislature - an amount far
below the current inflation rate.
While it Is true that this Is a source It
grief among teachers (many of
whom already work part-time jobs
to make ends meet), it is not the only
nor most important reason for the
protest. During the recently concluded legislative session, many
bllls pertaining to the welfare of
students were defeated. One bill
would have required multicultural
education courses for teachers;
another would have established a
Professional standards Board to
deal with upgrading the certification
standards for prospective teachers.
A third would have mandated certain educational standards to be present within individual school
districts in order for state financial
aid to be granted. Other bllls to limit
class size in grades 4-6, stabilize the
school calendar and equalize extra
duty assignments also were
defeated.

Non-Slip
. . . · .. ,,..,, ........

'

I

l!r"
·~-:\,')'"
o

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1

•

I

.;.

MULTI-USE
URETHANE

By Tbe Allsoctated Press

FOAM BACK

Abuse allegations investigated
ST. CLAIRSVIlLE, Ohio - The attorney general's office is to be
asked to investigate allegations of mi.streabnent of youngsters at the
Belmont County Children's Home.
ROOert Olexo, preaident of the county's board of commissioners,
said Wednesday the state probe was being sought because, "our No. 1
concern is the welfare of the children in the home now.''
Four children ran away from the home last Friday and went to the
Bellaire Police Department. They told police that they had experienced sexual abuae, beatings and general mi.streabnent. They
have since been placed in foster homes.

MACHINE
WASHABLE
NO IRONING
NEEDED

Everyday!
Now th~t's ':'hat we ~.all "getting a
good n•ght s sleep! By opening
one of our high interest
savings accounts
you'll wake up to real p~ofits!
We put your interest to work as
. well as your savings. So you can
s•t back and watch your money grow!

CURRENT 6 MO. MONEY
MARKO CERTIFICATE RATE

14.950%

$10,000 Minomum, Week of March 20·26, 1980

FRINGED
ALL AROUND

"The Friendly Rank"

nfE CENTRAL mUST COMPANY, N. A.

COVINGTON, Ky.- The jury which found the alwninwn, wire and
electrical device industry blameless in the tragic Beverly Hllls Supper
Club blaze may have erred in absolving it from all guilt, according to a
motion filed in U.S. District Court.
Atlorneys for the 165 persons who died and the so Injured in the May,
28, 1977, blaze at the Southgate night spot asked U.S. Dlslrlct Judge
Carl Rubin to amend the verdict In the lawsuit.

PROTECTS YOUR
FURNITURE

fOR SOFAS

fOR STUOIO COUCH£5

fOR MOll YWOOO UDS

FOR OAVENO MIDE·A·IEDS

AVAILABLE IN

Substanttaltnterest penalty for early withdrawal.
Open M ·W, 9 til3. Thurs. &amp; S•• · 911112
Friday 9 ti! 3 &amp; s Til 7.
'

Judge asked to amend verdict

4

SIZES

Sin 60 K 70 For Most Chain
Size 70 x 90 For large Chairs
Siu 70
Size 70

111
111

&amp; Davenos
120 For Most Divan•
140 For Extra Large Divans

Energy boom rumors circulating

FOR IED!Wfi!AOI

FOR CAR SEATS

FOil CARD TAILU

Reg. '7.49 Size 60x70 ..................... .. Sale 13.99
Reg. 110.99 Size 70x90 ...................... Sale '8.99
1

Reg. 14.99 Size 70x120 .................... Sale '10.99
Reg. '17.99 Size 70x140 .................... Sale '12.99
Home Furnishings- Ist Floor

Middleport, Ohio
Member FDIC

FOR CMIUSII

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

BUCYRUS, Ohio - Oil and gas leases for about 95,000 acres in
Crawford and Wyandott counties have been purchased or transferred
in recent montha, spurring speculation of a forthcoming energy boom
in the area.
A spokesman for the Columbia Gas Transmission Co., which has
purchaaed many of ,the rights, said the firm will start extensive
seismographic and geological testing in the area soon.
Most of the land is located in Crawford County. Colwnbia Gas officlal C8ryJl Shafer said the company, in partnership with Berea Oil
and Gas, plari to start drilling operations in 1981.

PUCO rejects reopening reqoosts
COLUMBUS, Ohio- Motlons"by the Consumer's Counsel to reopen
cases involving rate hikes granted to Cincinnati Gas &amp;Electric Co. and
Colum)Jua &amp;Southern Ohio Ele~c Co. have been denied by the Public
UUllties Commls81on It Ohio.
The PUCO granted the CG&amp;E a $35 million increase in Januacy, an
amount that was expected to increase tbe average residential
cuatomer' bUI by about 7.5 percent.

·•

airports and waterways and by
reducing tax breaks, such as the
business lunch deduction.
Rep. James R. Jones, D-Okla., an
influential conunittee member, said
the tax cut likely would reduce
Social Security taxes by about $10
billion and allow businesses $3
billion for faster tax write-offs on investments.
'The tax cut issue provoked the
sharpest debate Wednesday as committee Republicans tried to firmly
commit the panel to a tax reduction
as well as to deeper spending cuts.
" We're trying to lock in a tax cut,"
said Rep. Barber Conable, R-N. Y.

The GOP proposal, defeated on a

17~

party line vote, sought a $20
billion tax cut - $11 billion in fiscal
1981. By mandating sharper spending cuts, the GOP plan still projected a $1 billion budget surplus.
Overall, Giaimo's budget proposal
for fiscal 1981 calls for spendin8
$612.4 billion, revenues of $613.8
billion and a surplus of $1.4 billion.
Normally, the president's budget
submitted in January serves as the
framework for the congre&amp;!lional
budget review. although Congress
retains final power over spending
levels.
(Continued on page 10)

•

enttne

THURSDAY, MARCH 20, 1980

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Signals indicate
hostage freedom
now indefinite

One day walkout
scheduled Friday

SPECIAL SALEI

·,

at y

Good Luck Southern

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

)0

to recommend.
In the absence of Carter's revised
budget proposal, Giaimo's recommendations - which are generally
supported by the congressional
leadership and the administration are emerging as the framework for
the 1981 budget.
Giaimo also proposed enacting
"modest" tax cuts, essentially by
rebating the $10.3 billion expected
from the president's oil import fee.
That fee will boost gasoline prices by
10 cents a gallon.
Giaimo said an additional $3.5
billion could be raised for general
taxs cuts by increasing user fees lor

•

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY, OHIO

VOL 28, NO. 238

DWI; Steve Hill, Racine, $SO and
costs, reckless operation.
Forfeiting bonds were Cecelia
Thompson, Addison, $35.50, failed to
stop for stop sign; Ronald Grady,
Racine, $35.50, no operator's license; Patricia Ritchhart, Chillicothe,
$35.50, failed to stop for stop sign;
James Clifford, Pomeroy, John
Fore, Athens, Donnie Evans, Portland, David Hough, Gallipolis, and
Arthur Moore, Carrollton, $35.50
each, speeding; Kaaron Hatfield,
Racine, $360.50, DWI; John Curry,
Ripley, $35.50, no mud flaps.

G

quarter rJ. 1!179, despite a jwnp in oil
company profits. Analysts called the
profit figures another sign of an
economic slowdown.
--Savings deposits at the nation's
savings and loan associations
registered the smallest February increase in a decade, rising $1.6 billion
last month, another negative
economic indication.
In aMouncing his new antiinflation plan tast week, President
Carter called for $13 billion in spending cuts to balance the 1981 budget.
However, administration officials
said the president has yet to make
final decisions on what specific cuts

e

Wakeup a
little richer. .•

tires.

EUCutlve U111nv- NR ·5L 3
bedroom hOme . co mpl etely

Hospital and was later removed to
Holzer Medical Center. At 6:16
p.m., the squad went to Bradbury
for Nora C&amp;qlbron who was ill. She
was taken to Holzer Medical Center.

County Court

Four defendants were fined and
three others forfeited bonds in the
court of Pomeroy Mayor Clarence
Andrews Tuesday night.
Fined were Brenda Graham,
Pomeroy, and James Peck
Pomeroy, $300 and costs, each, o~
assault charges; Cecil Eiselstein,
Pomeroy, $SO and costs, unsafe
motor vehicle, and David Dillard,
Pomeroy, $SO and costs, squealing
Forfeiting bonds were lnezmae
Babcock, Essexville, Mich., $30,
posted on a charge of passing on the
wrong side ; Franklin Prater
Albany, $30, speeding, and Bernard
Caruthers, Cheshire, $50, failure to
register a motor vehicle.

SQUAD HAS TWO RUNS
The Middleport Emergency Squad
was called to 916 Locust St., at 5:47
p.m. Tuesday for Margaret
Winebrenner who had fallen. She
was taken to Veterans Memorial

the nomination to run for county
sheriff; Fred W. Crow, Ill, who will
seek the nomination to run for county prosecutor, a position he now
holds, and David J. Koblentz seeking
the nomination to run for county
commi.!lsioner, the term expiring
Jan. 2, 1985.

I

Area deaths •••

Delay forces
called for $16.4 billion in new sperr
ding cuts - about $3.4 billion more
than the Carter plan - and approval
of $5.5 billion in savings already included in Carter's January budget
Wright said the cuts would produce a
$1.8 billion surplus.
Carter's new plan would leave a
surplus between $10 billion and $13
billion, but most of that would come
from an oil import tax that will raise
about $10 billion in goverrunent
revenues.
Wright said the oil import fee
would be treated separately in the
House budget, possibly being used

Cole, a resident of 1676 Lincoln
Heights, has been cutting meat since
he was 14 and has cut for supermarkets in different parts of Ohio
before coming to Meigs County.
He has been with Gateway in Middleport for three and one-half years
and prior to that time was meat cutter for Gateway in Columbus.
The new owners announce that all
present employes, (all local people).
will be retained. A grand opening
sale will be announced in the near
future and the store will continue to
support all community projects.

Three Republicans filed petitions
of candidacy for the nomination of
their party to run for county posts in
the fall with the Meigs County Board
of Elections Tuesday.
They include J. J. Cremeans, Middleport Chief of Police, who will seek

First balanced budget in 12 years

WANTS GOP NOD - Da"rid
Koblenz of tile Cbester ana bas
fDed hill petition for Cbe Reppublican nomination to nm for
Meigs County Commtsstoaer,
term expiriD&amp; Jan. z, lll8:i. FlllDg
deadliDe for party candldales
was at t p.m. today.

SEEKS SHERIFF'S POST- J.
J. CremeaDll, Middleport Chief of
Pollee, bas fDed llil petition for
the Republican nomination to run
for aberHf of Meigs Connty. So
far, be iB lbe only Republican to

me for tile nomllladon.

Filing deadline for
primary 4 p.m. today
By ROBERT E. MD I ER
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
Representatives of President Carter
and other candidates for the nation's
top office were filing petitions under
a 4 p.m. deadline today to enter
Ohio's June 3 presidential primsry.
One Democratic contender, Sen.
Edward M. KeMedy, D-Mass, sent
his petitions to the secretary of
state's office Wednesday, becoming
the first of either major party to formally enter the field.
No Republicans had filed as of tate
Wednesday, but their spokesmen
predicted t.'le deadline would be met.
Sen. John H. GleM, D-Ohio, sent a
top aide with his petitions a day
ahead of the deadline, as did his
likely November re-election
challenger, State Rep. James E.
Betts, R-Rocky River.
KeMedy' s campaign aides said
despite the senator's defeat by Carter in six of seven primaries - including a 2-1 drubbing in Dlinois
Tuesday - thelr man Is gaining
momentum, while ~r is slipping.
Gary Meisel, a California lawyer
and member of Kennedy's national
.,ampaign staff, said the senator
faced problems in Dlinols because of
his endorsement by Chicago Mayor
Jane Byrne, whose popularity has
sagged because of a firemen's
strike. That race became "a
referendwn on Mayor Byrne, and
we got caught in the middle," he

said.
Meisel also noted that only 25 percent of the Democratic National
Convention delegates have been
selected so far.
Fonner Ohio House Minority
Leader John C. McDonald, now a
·Columbus attorney, and Greg Hsas
of Columbus were presented as cocoordinators of Kennedy's Ohio effort. Their filings held names of Kerr
nedy petitioners to be represented
by his name on the ballot.
The delegate candidates listed on
the petitions seek the party's 51 state
delegate slots for the national corr
vention. By today's deadline, Kerr
nedy will have fielded candidates for
110 district delegate slots allocated
among Ohio's 23 congressional
districts, McDonald said.
Stephen Avakian, one of Glenn's
top aides, filed nearly 3,000 petitions
for Ohio's senior senator. At least
1,000 signatures are required for
statewide races, with no more than
3,000 accepted. Each of the 88 counties must be represented on the
states.
Betts, 46, who is supported by the
state's GOP &lt;rganization and is
regarded as shoo-in for his party's
nomination, held a news conference
to attack the incumbent's voting
record. He said Glenn must accept
part of the blame for the nation's
current economic and foreign policy

woes.

Patrol checks two accidents
One person was injured during two
accidents investigated Wednesday
by the Gallla-Meigs POIII, Highway
Patrol.
Officers were called to the scene It
a two-vehicle mishap on SR 160,just
south of Bulaville-Porter Rd., at 8: IS
a.m.
'The patrol reports a south bound
auto operated by James C. Stafford,
33, Gallipolis, had stopped in traffic.
A vehicle operated by Ann L. .
Fellure, 33, Gallipolis, faDed to stop
and struck the Stafford auto in the

rear.

Stafford claimed injury, but was

not immediately treated. Both
vehicles Incurred minor damage.
One driver was cited following a ·
tw~vehicle accident in Rutland, on
SRI24.
Called to the scene at 2:15 p.m.,
the patrol reports a parked auto
operated by Mabel Oliver, 78, ,
Rutland, pulled Into the path of a
south bound vehicle driven by Mabel
Pauley, 72, Middleport.
Both vehicles incurred minor
damage. OUver was cited on a
charge of failure to yield.

Mayor says animals must be confined
Miudleport MayCll' Fred Hoffman
today warned village residents that
all dogs and cats must be confined to
the owner's property or on leash at
all times.
Numerous complaints have been
received at the mayor's office
regarding cats and dogs running

.'

loose on other people's property.
The mayor warned that owners of
animals who are fOund running loose
in the village will be cited Into
mayor's court.. Village ordinances
require that all anhna1s be kept on
the owner's property or on leash at
all times.

By The Alsoclated Press
Signals coming from Iran indicate
the American hostages may be held
indefinitely, the U.S. governrilenl
said today. Meanwhile, Iranians
celebrated the new year with fiery
incantations, lucky goldfish and
strolling minatrels after 61 prisoners
were freed under an amnesty by
Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini.
The new year holiday, called Now
Ruz, closed government offices for
the next week and took public attention away from the slow counting
of votes in the parliamentary election last week and the SO hostages,
who began their !38th day in captivity in the U.S. Embassy today.
"The signals which are now
comlng out of Iran suggest that the
detention of the hostages may continue indefinitely," State Department legal adviser Roberts B. Owen
~ld the World Court in the Hague,
Netherlands.
"No one in this courtroom has any
way of knowing whether the
Ayatollah Khomeinl will continue to
hold the hostages in captivity for a
month or for a year or for a decade,"
he declared.
Owen said that U.S. hopes for
release of the hostages were shattered early this month when the
U.N. investigating commission left
Iran without seeing the captives. He
called the World Court the most
promising hope for the ultimate
release of the hostages and called
for an urgent final judgment on the
U.S. case against Iran.
Owen told the court on Wednesday
the hostages were held under "harsh
and inhumane conditions" and were
"confined like conunon criminals."
He said 13 black o nemale
hostages who were released Nov. 16
reported that women were tied to
straight chairs facing the wall for 16
hours at a time, that at night the
hostages' hands were bound or handcuffed and they were kept under

Prisoners transferred
Four persons were transported to
Colwnbua this morning to begin serving prison terms handed down
when they appeared in Meigs County
Common Pleas court Saturday.
Taken to Columbus by Meigs
County Sheriff Deputies Keith Wood
and Cliff Longenette were Marvin
Paul Cremeans, 25, Coolville, on
charges of vandalism; Robert Riffle, Pomeroy, receiving stolen
property; Randy VanMeter, 18,
Reed.sville, breaking and entering
and robbery; Hubert Stewart, . 45,
Middleport, carrying a weapon.

lights around the clock to inhibit
sleep, that some were made to sleep
on the cold bare floor without
blankets, that some were denied
changes of clothing and that baths or
showers were allowed only rarely.
"On one occmlion a student who
was interrogating a woman hostage
showed her his revolver to let her
know that one of its chambers was ·
loaded, and then proceeded to intimidate her by pointing the gun at
her and repeatedly pulling the
trigger," said Owen. "HappUy he
stopped in time, but the experience
must have been terrifying."
He also denied Iranian charges
that the embassy was a spy center.
He said it was "a normal diplomatic
mission operating as such missions
normally do."
The 61 amnestied Iranians left
Evin Prison Wednesday and were
kissed and hugged by waiting
relatives and friends. Most or all
were believed to be minor offenders,
and it was not known if any had been
arrested because of activities while
Shah Mohanunad Reza Pahtavi was
still in power.
Some 400 other prisoners were expected to be freed in the next few
Continued on Page 1

Applicants sought
Applications are now being accepted at the Middleport mayor's office for employment during the swnmer at the municipal park.
Positions available are park director, swinuning instructor and life
guards.
Employment applications are
available at the mayor's office and
all applications will be reviewed at
the April meeting of the Middleport
Recreation Commission.

Weather
Breezy and mild with showers
and possible thunderstorms
tonight and turning cooler late
tonight. Lows from the upper 30s
to the low 40s. Showers ending
Friday morning, then becoming
partly cloudy by afternoon. Highs
in the low to mid 50s. The chance
of rain is 100 percent tonight and
70 percent Friday.
EXTENDED FORECAST

Fair Saturday. A ~~ of
sbowen Snnday, ending MUDday.
lllgblln Cbe 511 Satnrday, coo11ag
to tile mld 401 to mid 5411 by MODday. Lows lllrouplhe pertod In
the3011.

�2-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Th111'9day, Mar. 20, 1980

3-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Mar. 20,1980

The Daily Sentinel

Virginia edges Minnesota for NIT crown

Opinions and comments

NEW YORK (AP) - The Virginia
Cavaliers believe their victory in the
National Invitation Tournament
qualifies them as ooe ol the best
college basketball teams in the coWltry - despite their 10 losses and fifth-place finish In the Atlantic Coast

Conference.

But with three of the NCAA champlnnship tournament's final four
were aJso.rans In their own conferences, who's to say Coach Terry

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What happened to Big John?
mercia! and staying at Holiday Inns.
Big John and his sizable retinue
were never without their chartered
Lears and only stayed in the best
suites of the best hotels.
And who will ever forget some d.
the parties Big John threw for
delegates? In the summer of '79, it
was a rare weekend Indeed that
planeloads of potential delegates
and reporters were not flown to the
ranch in Texas to receive the full
treatment.
After all, it appeared that the
money would never end. It poured in
from corporate contributors who felt
that Connally was their candidate,
one of their own.
Then, suddenly, the campaign
began making some major blunders.
The campaign's biggest error undoubtediy was the decision to run
full out in all primary states, ignoring the political calendar and the importance of the early testa. Frcm the
very start, the Connally people said
Iowa was no more important than
Florida, New Hampshire no more
important than Illinois. So it was full
out everywhere.
But then came the early results.
Connally got 9 percent of the vote In
Iowa, less than I percent in Puerto
Rico and less than 2 percent in New
Hampshire, Vermont, Minnesota
and Massachusetts.
The kind of men backing the Connally campaign were pragmatic,
hardheaded businessmen who can
spot a loser and never send good
money after bad. So, when Connally
started posting such low vote totals,
the money dried up.
Actually, this was a campaign suf-

Jimmy's Whitehouse

Poet Brzezinski

•

•
•
:
:
:

I

Capers add delicious flavor to
saiad greens. Be!qre using, wash
those that • hav~ been dried and
salted; drain those that are packed
in vinegar.

Schecter Is being succeeded by
Alfred Friendly Jr., former
correspondent abroad for the New
York Times and Newsweek
magazine. Friendly's father once
was managing editor of the
Washington Post.
Greeting a group of New Yorkers
invited to the White House last week
for a day of top-level briefings, just
two weeks before the state's
presidential primary, Carter offered
to pose for photos shaking hands
with each guest.
"Then, if I don't do well in the
future," Carter added, "you can
throw It away."
After meeting with Carter, Mayor
Maynard Jackson d. Atlanta
emerged to offer reporters a
lengthy, rather Involved account of
the session that left some scribes In
wonderment.
"What does that mean?" asked
Sam Donaldson d. ABC News.
Grinning, and obviw.ly aware
that he had over-pontificated,
Jackson replied, "I'm not sure I'm
qualified to interpret what I just
said."

Use sage with a light hand - a
small amount of both the fresh and
dried variety goes a long way. Sage
is moot commonly .used in stuffings
for roast chicken and turkey as wtll
as with pork or sausage.

fering from snakebite from the

start.
Ida Mills Is a nice, 67-year-old
from Clarksville, Ark. She likes
John Connally and will go to the
Republican convention in Detroit as
his only delegate. How she was
chosen really typifies the whole Connally campaign and Is the basis of
future political campfire stories.
Arkansas will s.end 24 delegates,
who were chosen by fewer than 200
Republican regulars, to the convention. Rather than stump the state
himself, Connslly had all200bused to
Fairfield Bay, a luxury resort In the
Ozarks, for a weekend on him.
Saturday was given over to booze
and food and good times. On Sunday
morning, all gathered for a
breakfast where the candidate was

to make his pitch.
Just aa Connally was about to
speak, an older man came up to wish
him well, reached for his hand and
died orl the spot of a heart attack. .
Apall fell over the group. Prayers
were said for the deceased. Connally
got up and, in a show of what was
described
as "oratorical brilliance "
.
began a eulogy d. the deceased that
ended with all those assembled on
their feet for a glve-ell)oheU stump
speech. The dead man's widow later
told a reporter she was sure her hwr
band died happy shaking the hand d.
John Connally. The assembled were
bused home and, a week iater, gave
23 d. their 24 delegates to Ronald

.

Reagan.
Flnlto Big Jobn. But lt was fun
whlle it laated.

Washington
By Clarence
Report Miller
The econ~c pressures facing proposed at election wne that can
our nation continue to worsen with create great havoc in our economy.
each passing month. With inflation
In the 15 years from 1951-196S
running at an annual rate of 18 per- when the Inflation rate was very low,
cent and interest rates skyrocketing the federal deficit averaged $2.5
to record highs, the majority party ml!llon per year. In four of those
in control of Congress and the years, we actually experienced a
President finally appear to Wl- surplus. In the late 1960s, the pattern
derstand the need for a curb on changed, and Inflation worsened.
federal spending and a balanced From 1966 to 1979, the deficit
budget. Is this turnaround in Ad- averaged$25 bllllonperyear.
ministration policy for real or only
To finance this massive debt inUp service? Only time will tell.
crease, the US Treasury and
As we have stated before, there Federal Reserve System increased
are many factors which contribute the money supply at a rste' of 13 jlerto inflationary pressures. The 60 per- cent per year. The result was 00.
cent boost in OPEC oll prices in the vious: double-digit money caused
first half of 1979 aggravated high double-digit inflation. As the feder.r
prices. But all inflatioo is not caused government entered the priva~
by OPEC. Germany, for example, ·money market to borrow the
bas not undergone the Inflation remaining funds to pay for the debt,
crisis which bas hit the US even interest rates were forced up.
though it Is more dependent on
"During the past decade, the total
foreign oll than America. Nor Is .increase In the Federal deficit has
overall Inflation caused by been horrendous, riaing from $38'1
businessmen or wage earners. The billion in 19119 to an estimated $893
overall profit and wage rates of the billion this year. A huge portion of
private sector of our economy have this (approximately $1M! bllllon) has
remained about the same aa when ·been added during the Carter Adinflation was 3 percent as contrasted ministration which pledged to
with the current 18 percent.
"balance the budget." The
Federal regulations and high Congressional Budget Office
taxes definitely piay a role in en- estimates that the original 19111
couraging rising prices. The Joint .budget, would add an additional $25
Economic Committee of . the bllUon to the debt. However, this
Congress puts the cost of compliance
figure may change since · the
with federal rules in 1979 at $100 President indicated in hts speech at
bllllon. Some of these regulations the White House last Friday (March
are needed for safety and en- :ltthl that things will change and we
vironmental reasons; many, ' will have a balanced budget for FY
however, are a toial waste.
19111."
Whatever the case, the consumer
Unless changes are made, the Inmust ultimately bear the cost as terest on the federal debt alone will
busineu is forced to pass on the
run around $80 billion for FY 1911,
price Increased.
about one-eighth of tHe Wtal budget!
However, there Is no question
This averages out to $367 per person
about the major cause of Inflation: . per year just to pay the interest!
out-of-eontrol federal spending! We
To control Inflation, the US must
have repeatedly warned the blg
revise Ita phllosophy of bOw far
spenders about the dangers of Wlgovernment should go in providing
bslanced budgets. For the most part goods and services for the
my IIJiell(ltluift colleagues would not
population at iarge. As long as
even ·approve 11\Y simple 2 percent
people demand that government
acro8!Jothe.board cut amendments to programs Increase, the more unvarious multi-billion ' dollar apcontrollable the budget will become,
propriation bills. This gradual
and the resulting deficits and lnreduction effort is far superior to the
flatioo will only grow worse.
'
one big reduction now being

,,

Americans never received mfre diverse communications than they get today. Yet many claim they
comprehend less rather than more. Without doubt the
cris~ ~ecting our society are inc~ in intensity, but
few citizens st:em adequately to understand these events.
James Madison once said, "A diffusion of knowledge is
the only guardian of true liberty.'' Yet many Institutions of
higher education have been steadily retreating from that
truth.
Increasingly we hear that education's role should be
simply the development of occupational skills. As colleges
and universities have strengthened such skill training
however, far too often they have ~nnitted the
dete~oration. of learning processes and diSciplines vital
for unpartmg knowledge, understanding, mental
stlmu1ation, self discipline and other positive qualities
essential for responsible citizenship.
Alanning cutbacks in programs and classes offering
tra~tional liberal arts education, both locally ana
nationally, represent a serious erosion of the understanding that education in a free society has a broader
range of responsibilities than the lhnitations of today's
popu1ar employment training concept.
~e stakes are IJ!gh as '!e look to the years ahead. The
quality and quantity of higher education detennine our
civilization's future. At what point will it be decided that
we can no longer afford to lhnit the educational options of ·
our citizens? At what point will it become apparent that
our educa~onal resources are not well utilized? At what
po~t willtt ~ obvious that the cost of strengthening our
entire e,ducational system w!ll be insignificant compared
to the disastrous cost of penrutting its erosion?

Today in history.
Today Is Thursday, March 20, fhe
80th day of 1980. There are 286 days
left in the year.
Today's highlight in history:
On March 20, 1942, Gen. Douglas
MacArthur said, "I shall return" as
he left the Philippines for Australia
during the early days of the Pacific
War.
On this date:
In 1802, the Dutch East India Company, which financed many New
World explorations, was fonned.
In 1852, the controversial slavery
novel, "Uncle Tom's Cabin," by
Harriet Beecher Stowe, was
published.
In 19119, a federal grand jury in
Chicago indicted eight policemen
and eight demonstrators in connection with the violence at the 1968
Democratic National Convention.

.

co;:u:a~~~";;;e :n~hOs

in higher education

Washington today

.• ---------------

It's not an important year for me the

:OP

Quality and quantity

WASHINGTON (APl- Zbigniew
Brzezinski, the president's resident
foreign policy adviser, is emerging
as a budding poet. Well, perhaps not
a poet but, at least, an author of
doggerel.
Brzezinski, beaming and seeming
. to relish his efforts at rbyme, sur. · prised a group of reporters by
: reading a specially prepared verse
: at a recent farewell luncheon for his
: departing press secretary, Jerrold
Schecter.
. Schecter, who winds up three-plus
. · years at the White House this week
· : after having been chief diplomatic
: : corresponderit for Time magazine,
• : IS m?vrng to Los Angeles to set up a
: . public affairs program for Oc. : cidental Petroleum.
· _ "As you leave to a chorus of
·• cheers from your many admirers
; and peers," read Brzezinski "we
:: have only one thought: Your' work
: • was not for naught. You set press
:: relations back 10 years!"
• Another verse: "Your departure
: .fllls us with regret. You are someone
• we'll never forget. As you leave this
: mess, we wish you success. Goodbye
: White House, hello Oxy Pet!"
Rumor has it that Brzezinski bad a
: collaborator, his wife, Muska.

beeause I want to have a good year.

.thhtsthe boos of W1ans
m
and the
knowledge that manyears
observer.~
think the N tiona! Lea
time Most \
bl ~· s tw?"
thr ugh
a1ua e
yer IS
B:t
he's out ~an laughsl when asked if
S
. prove peop e wrong.
"l'~::~~ll; ...hesaid,
Then
held ~ th ·
f
.
~b and
y:r~:lling~mch ar~ And now
ve to ~~
. me

M

Editorial opinion

Robert J. Wagman
WASIUNGTON (NEA) - No matter what happens from here on, in
the future when old political
reporters gather to fondly
remember Campaign '80, it will be
John Cormally about whom they will
remlnlsce most. His dream of the
White House came to an end two
days after his dismal finish in South
Carolina when he announced in the
ballroom of a Houston hotel that he
was accepting the inevitable. He
was calling it quits.
The Cormally run may be the last
of the old-style big bucks campaigns
in this age of campaign-spending
limitations. It may be the last one in
which a candidate runs wide open
everywhere at once in this age of
pick· your-spot-and-concentrate
campaigns.
Connally began his quest early
enough - more than two years ago ,
in fact. And he had enough money,
raising more than $10 million, the
most of any candidate. But from the
very beginning, he and his campaign
organization made some basic errors and, in the end, they were impossible to overcome.
Eddie Mahe, a respected political
professional, ran the Connally campaign. For him. it was the old-style
game. With what appeared to be
unlimited funds at his disposal, he
hired political professionals right
and left. At one point, he was paying
top dollar to more than 500
operatives.
For the Connally campaign, it was
always first class. In those tlays,
most of the other early starters,
such as George Bush, were traveling
with one or two aides, flying com-

~~~~· ~AP) -Joe Morgan
sentimental f

•"

'-

tory. ''We had our ups and downs all
season and the adversity pulled us
together."
Lamp, who scored 30 points in
Monday nights semlfiNil victory
over Nevada-Las Vegas but was
held to nine in the championship,
was refe~ to Virginia's seasonlong struggle to adjust to highly
recruited freshman center Ralph
Sampson.
The 7-foot-4 Sampson, amazingly

Morgan feels he's not 'washed up'

&lt;

/.

Holland and his team are wrong?
"I believe we're as good as any
team in the country when we play
well," said Holland after Virginia
defeated Minnesota 58-65 in the
championship game of the NIT Wednesday night.
"We didn't get enough time to jell
together durtng the season, but we
played well in the 1\&gt;Umament,'' said
Jeff Lamp, whose four free throws in
the last 19 seconds secured the vic-

••

In 1974, a gunman in London fired
several shots into the car carrying
Briiain's Princess Anne and her
husband Mark Phillips. They were
unhurt, and the assailant was captured.
Five years ago, South Vietnam
was hurrying to complete
evacuation of its northern sections
as refugees from the central
highlands streamed southward.
last year, the govenunent reported business profits up more than 25
percant in 1978, triggering angry
questions about the effectiveness d. ·
the fight against inflation.
Today's birthday: Actor Michael
Redgrave Is 72.
Thought for today: The most
manifest sign of wisdom Is continued
Montalgne (1533- ·
cheerfulness.
1592)

Berry's World

dynasty called "The Bl Red
.. Is
..
d g
Macbine
now
""
an
two of the wonit ~coming
of his off
•
1.,.
year e&amp;reer. He was angered last
season w~n booed even though he
was piaytng hurt, and there were
other problems he won't discuss ("I
a change of uniform. They
coul~ t,have kept me there for $10
mlllion. ).
Morgan was one of least-rewarded
free agenta this winter, signing with
Houston for just $250,000 (not counling bonus clauses).
Morgan thinks he'll bounce back

wantel!

this year, but showed his feelings
that he's not out to prove anything
with a nonstop, !&gt;minute talk.
"It's an important year for me

way
·
.. people seem to think 1•t IS.
No one can play forever. If I
can't piay like I want to anymore this year or in 10 years-I'm ~o~
to quit, and I'm still going to be very
proud of ~sell .. I've. accomplished
so many things m this game that a
lotofgreatpiayershaveneverdone.
I've got over
stolen bases, I've
got over 200 home runs...
"If somebody would have told me
when I left home to piay this game,
'You're going to ~ Most Va.Iuable
Player two years m a row, hit .320,
hit '!I home runs, drive in 100 runs,
steal 60 bases·• Y0 u•n; gomg
to wm
·
·
gold gloves, you're gDillg to drive in
the winning run in the seventh game
of the World Series with two out in
the ninth inning • I wonld have been
~-happy. '
"So how could I be despondent If
the time has come for me?" he
asked.
"You only have to prove
something If you have doubts yourself. If I didn't think I could play, I
uldn'
•
wo
t say, Well, If they think I
can piay I'm going to take their
money.'
"When I look in the mirror, I don't
ever lie to myseif, beeause I'm going'
to be Joe Morgan long after I quit

600

Today's

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some unexplained

King said for

reason people pose the "Blg 31)" as

the competitive tlfe d. athletes from that point, they're supposed to
start downhill.
"Not so,'' she adds. "Decay starts
in the head. An athlete, physically
sound, should be able to last until he
Is 43 if willlnll to work hard."

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were 20 years old.
,
The ranks of the "Over the Hill
Gang" keep swelling like an Inflated
balloon. Nobody wants to hang it up
any more. Workhorse Phil Nlekro,
40, Is just coming off a 21-20 season
of pitching for the Atlanta Braves.
Gaylord Perry, 41, was a 21-game
and Cy Young winner two years ago. ·
Both expect their anm to last
forever.
PittsbUrgh's Willie StargeU was a
World Series and National League
MVP last year at age 38. Boston's
Carl Yastrzemski, 40, and the
PhiWes' Pete Rose, 39 In April, are
just getting their second wind.
Dallas' RDger Staubach, 38, and
Denver's Craig Morton, :rl, are two
of the older wonders of the National
Football League.
"People have been asking me why
I don't retire ever since I was 24,"
Blllle Jean said durtng a break at the
Garden this week. "I'll never forget
8 comment by Arthur Ashe 8 couple
of years ago. He said, 'Can you
Imagine being No.7 in your
profession and people asking why
you don't quit? What If you were the
seventh best lawyer, doctor or accountant in the world? Nobody
would think of asking why you didn't

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- . _ Gov . assisted loans tor qualified buyers-

W L Pet. Gil
57 II .700

GolclonSiate

"I am still physically capable and
motivated - I want to beat
everybody."
That's Billie Jean King's
comeback chant. It comes from her
throat with all of the fervor of a
challenge from some female Tarzan. Billie Jean thinks she can do it
all again, and who among us bas nerveenoughtodoubther?
She Is truly a sports phenomenon.
Now 36 years old, both knees so
scarred from operations that you
could piay tic-tac-do on them, COWlted out on numerous occasions, the
so-called "Old Lady" of tennis keeps
bounding back.
All the young lionesses of the
game are looking apprehensively
over their shoulders as the top
women players vie In New York's
Madison Square Garden this week
for their richest prize, the $300,000
Avon Championships.
Why not?
Within the past month King put
together tt-~· victories in Detroit and
Houston, beating Evonne Goolagong
6-a, 6-0 and following that with a 6-1,
6-a rout d. Martina Navratllova,
rated the world's best.
The tougb die hard.
Muhammad All, 38, Is trying to
shed 50 pounds In hopes of winning
the buing's 1heavyweight championship a fourth time. The 41-yearold Jim Kaat ts pitching like 8
schoolboy in the Yankees' baseball
camp In Fort Lauderdale, Fla. The
legendary Gordie Howe, 51, and
Bobby Hull, 41, are playing Ice
hockey with the same enthusiasm
and dariiiR as when their bodies

MODULAR
HOMES

1!1

y·llootoo

Ulah

King keeps bounding back

"loser's tournament" In some
basketball circles, especially with 48
teams in the NCAA tournament thla
year. Lamp answered by saying,
''There are only two happy teams In
the nation when the season ends, and
we're one of them."
In the consolation game, Illinois
got 25 points from Eddie Johnson to
defeat Nevada-Las Vegas 84-74.

AtluUe-

&lt;llicago

By wm Grimiiey
Al' Correapoadeal

"I've been in a lot of l-and-Is this
year," Lamp said. "I admit I was a
little nervous, but I was confident,
too.''
Asked If he was glad to see Lamp
go to the line twice in the crucial
final seconds, Holland replied, "Are
you kidding' He's one d. the best
free throw shooters in the country.' •
The NIT has been criticized as a

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Denver

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.

playing this game .
"No, I don't think I can do things
·
as consiStenUy
at .36 as I did at 22.
But there was a time when no one
could do the things I could do So if I
can do 90 percent of the~ I~
to do, that's still better than 90 percent of the other players,'' Morgan
said
"Even last year, my year (.250
batting average, nine hmlers) was 8
lot better than a lot of people's. !feel
in my own mind that I can piay, if I
stay healthy.
"I'll say this to you: If I can go out
and piay 150 games, my statistics
will be very good. Then you'll say
·weli, Joe, I knew you could come'
back."'

mobile and agile for his size, was
named the NIT's Most Valuable
Piayer after scoring 15 points and 15
rebounds Wednesday night following
his 26 points and 15 rebounds Monday.
"You can't really caU him a freshman anymore,'' said Holland. ''This
was his 34th game (Virginia finished
24-10) and that's a lot of basketball.
He has developed into an ex·
ceptional player.''
Virginis shot only 38.2 percent for
the game to Minnesota's 41.7 percent, leading Lamp to say, "We won
the game on defense. Intensity
throughout the game and the tournament was the reason we woo."
"We had lots of desire and husUe
defensively, but didn't have any offensive movement," said Minnesota
Coach Jim Dutcher. "We just didn't
move to ule basket strong enough.
Almost all of our turnovers were on
intercepted passes.''
The game was almost a free-throw
shooting contest at the end. Sampson
hit two witlr 1:31 remaining to give
Virginia a '54-53 lead before Lee
Raker intercepted a pass with 1: 08
left.
Then Sampson pulled down a key
rebound of a missed Virginia free
throw, forcing Minnesota to foul
again. But this time It was Lamp,
who hit M percent of his free throws
and once hit 48 foul shots in a row
this year, who went to the line.
He hit both with 19 seconds left for
a 56-53 le~jd, then Kevin McHale
made it 56-55 with two free throws
for the Gophers before Lamp iced it
with twg more free throws with two
seconds remaining.

.

.

,

I

~~~~M,!R;,o_!H!~M~R21.:..12_B~..!

VIllAGE PHARMACY

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�2-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Th111'9day, Mar. 20, 1980

3-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Mar. 20,1980

The Daily Sentinel

Virginia edges Minnesota for NIT crown

Opinions and comments

NEW YORK (AP) - The Virginia
Cavaliers believe their victory in the
National Invitation Tournament
qualifies them as ooe ol the best
college basketball teams in the coWltry - despite their 10 losses and fifth-place finish In the Atlantic Coast

Conference.

But with three of the NCAA champlnnship tournament's final four
were aJso.rans In their own conferences, who's to say Coach Terry

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What happened to Big John?
mercia! and staying at Holiday Inns.
Big John and his sizable retinue
were never without their chartered
Lears and only stayed in the best
suites of the best hotels.
And who will ever forget some d.
the parties Big John threw for
delegates? In the summer of '79, it
was a rare weekend Indeed that
planeloads of potential delegates
and reporters were not flown to the
ranch in Texas to receive the full
treatment.
After all, it appeared that the
money would never end. It poured in
from corporate contributors who felt
that Connally was their candidate,
one of their own.
Then, suddenly, the campaign
began making some major blunders.
The campaign's biggest error undoubtediy was the decision to run
full out in all primary states, ignoring the political calendar and the importance of the early testa. Frcm the
very start, the Connally people said
Iowa was no more important than
Florida, New Hampshire no more
important than Illinois. So it was full
out everywhere.
But then came the early results.
Connally got 9 percent of the vote In
Iowa, less than I percent in Puerto
Rico and less than 2 percent in New
Hampshire, Vermont, Minnesota
and Massachusetts.
The kind of men backing the Connally campaign were pragmatic,
hardheaded businessmen who can
spot a loser and never send good
money after bad. So, when Connally
started posting such low vote totals,
the money dried up.
Actually, this was a campaign suf-

Jimmy's Whitehouse

Poet Brzezinski

•

•
•
:
:
:

I

Capers add delicious flavor to
saiad greens. Be!qre using, wash
those that • hav~ been dried and
salted; drain those that are packed
in vinegar.

Schecter Is being succeeded by
Alfred Friendly Jr., former
correspondent abroad for the New
York Times and Newsweek
magazine. Friendly's father once
was managing editor of the
Washington Post.
Greeting a group of New Yorkers
invited to the White House last week
for a day of top-level briefings, just
two weeks before the state's
presidential primary, Carter offered
to pose for photos shaking hands
with each guest.
"Then, if I don't do well in the
future," Carter added, "you can
throw It away."
After meeting with Carter, Mayor
Maynard Jackson d. Atlanta
emerged to offer reporters a
lengthy, rather Involved account of
the session that left some scribes In
wonderment.
"What does that mean?" asked
Sam Donaldson d. ABC News.
Grinning, and obviw.ly aware
that he had over-pontificated,
Jackson replied, "I'm not sure I'm
qualified to interpret what I just
said."

Use sage with a light hand - a
small amount of both the fresh and
dried variety goes a long way. Sage
is moot commonly .used in stuffings
for roast chicken and turkey as wtll
as with pork or sausage.

fering from snakebite from the

start.
Ida Mills Is a nice, 67-year-old
from Clarksville, Ark. She likes
John Connally and will go to the
Republican convention in Detroit as
his only delegate. How she was
chosen really typifies the whole Connally campaign and Is the basis of
future political campfire stories.
Arkansas will s.end 24 delegates,
who were chosen by fewer than 200
Republican regulars, to the convention. Rather than stump the state
himself, Connslly had all200bused to
Fairfield Bay, a luxury resort In the
Ozarks, for a weekend on him.
Saturday was given over to booze
and food and good times. On Sunday
morning, all gathered for a
breakfast where the candidate was

to make his pitch.
Just aa Connally was about to
speak, an older man came up to wish
him well, reached for his hand and
died orl the spot of a heart attack. .
Apall fell over the group. Prayers
were said for the deceased. Connally
got up and, in a show of what was
described
as "oratorical brilliance "
.
began a eulogy d. the deceased that
ended with all those assembled on
their feet for a glve-ell)oheU stump
speech. The dead man's widow later
told a reporter she was sure her hwr
band died happy shaking the hand d.
John Connally. The assembled were
bused home and, a week iater, gave
23 d. their 24 delegates to Ronald

.

Reagan.
Flnlto Big Jobn. But lt was fun
whlle it laated.

Washington
By Clarence
Report Miller
The econ~c pressures facing proposed at election wne that can
our nation continue to worsen with create great havoc in our economy.
each passing month. With inflation
In the 15 years from 1951-196S
running at an annual rate of 18 per- when the Inflation rate was very low,
cent and interest rates skyrocketing the federal deficit averaged $2.5
to record highs, the majority party ml!llon per year. In four of those
in control of Congress and the years, we actually experienced a
President finally appear to Wl- surplus. In the late 1960s, the pattern
derstand the need for a curb on changed, and Inflation worsened.
federal spending and a balanced From 1966 to 1979, the deficit
budget. Is this turnaround in Ad- averaged$25 bllllonperyear.
ministration policy for real or only
To finance this massive debt inUp service? Only time will tell.
crease, the US Treasury and
As we have stated before, there Federal Reserve System increased
are many factors which contribute the money supply at a rste' of 13 jlerto inflationary pressures. The 60 per- cent per year. The result was 00.
cent boost in OPEC oll prices in the vious: double-digit money caused
first half of 1979 aggravated high double-digit inflation. As the feder.r
prices. But all inflatioo is not caused government entered the priva~
by OPEC. Germany, for example, ·money market to borrow the
bas not undergone the Inflation remaining funds to pay for the debt,
crisis which bas hit the US even interest rates were forced up.
though it Is more dependent on
"During the past decade, the total
foreign oll than America. Nor Is .increase In the Federal deficit has
overall Inflation caused by been horrendous, riaing from $38'1
businessmen or wage earners. The billion in 19119 to an estimated $893
overall profit and wage rates of the billion this year. A huge portion of
private sector of our economy have this (approximately $1M! bllllon) has
remained about the same aa when ·been added during the Carter Adinflation was 3 percent as contrasted ministration which pledged to
with the current 18 percent.
"balance the budget." The
Federal regulations and high Congressional Budget Office
taxes definitely piay a role in en- estimates that the original 19111
couraging rising prices. The Joint .budget, would add an additional $25
Economic Committee of . the bllUon to the debt. However, this
Congress puts the cost of compliance
figure may change since · the
with federal rules in 1979 at $100 President indicated in hts speech at
bllllon. Some of these regulations the White House last Friday (March
are needed for safety and en- :ltthl that things will change and we
vironmental reasons; many, ' will have a balanced budget for FY
however, are a toial waste.
19111."
Whatever the case, the consumer
Unless changes are made, the Inmust ultimately bear the cost as terest on the federal debt alone will
busineu is forced to pass on the
run around $80 billion for FY 1911,
price Increased.
about one-eighth of tHe Wtal budget!
However, there Is no question
This averages out to $367 per person
about the major cause of Inflation: . per year just to pay the interest!
out-of-eontrol federal spending! We
To control Inflation, the US must
have repeatedly warned the blg
revise Ita phllosophy of bOw far
spenders about the dangers of Wlgovernment should go in providing
bslanced budgets. For the most part goods and services for the
my IIJiell(ltluift colleagues would not
population at iarge. As long as
even ·approve 11\Y simple 2 percent
people demand that government
acro8!Jothe.board cut amendments to programs Increase, the more unvarious multi-billion ' dollar apcontrollable the budget will become,
propriation bills. This gradual
and the resulting deficits and lnreduction effort is far superior to the
flatioo will only grow worse.
'
one big reduction now being

,,

Americans never received mfre diverse communications than they get today. Yet many claim they
comprehend less rather than more. Without doubt the
cris~ ~ecting our society are inc~ in intensity, but
few citizens st:em adequately to understand these events.
James Madison once said, "A diffusion of knowledge is
the only guardian of true liberty.'' Yet many Institutions of
higher education have been steadily retreating from that
truth.
Increasingly we hear that education's role should be
simply the development of occupational skills. As colleges
and universities have strengthened such skill training
however, far too often they have ~nnitted the
dete~oration. of learning processes and diSciplines vital
for unpartmg knowledge, understanding, mental
stlmu1ation, self discipline and other positive qualities
essential for responsible citizenship.
Alanning cutbacks in programs and classes offering
tra~tional liberal arts education, both locally ana
nationally, represent a serious erosion of the understanding that education in a free society has a broader
range of responsibilities than the lhnitations of today's
popu1ar employment training concept.
~e stakes are IJ!gh as '!e look to the years ahead. The
quality and quantity of higher education detennine our
civilization's future. At what point will it be decided that
we can no longer afford to lhnit the educational options of ·
our citizens? At what point will it become apparent that
our educa~onal resources are not well utilized? At what
po~t willtt ~ obvious that the cost of strengthening our
entire e,ducational system w!ll be insignificant compared
to the disastrous cost of penrutting its erosion?

Today in history.
Today Is Thursday, March 20, fhe
80th day of 1980. There are 286 days
left in the year.
Today's highlight in history:
On March 20, 1942, Gen. Douglas
MacArthur said, "I shall return" as
he left the Philippines for Australia
during the early days of the Pacific
War.
On this date:
In 1802, the Dutch East India Company, which financed many New
World explorations, was fonned.
In 1852, the controversial slavery
novel, "Uncle Tom's Cabin," by
Harriet Beecher Stowe, was
published.
In 19119, a federal grand jury in
Chicago indicted eight policemen
and eight demonstrators in connection with the violence at the 1968
Democratic National Convention.

.

co;:u:a~~~";;;e :n~hOs

in higher education

Washington today

.• ---------------

It's not an important year for me the

:OP

Quality and quantity

WASHINGTON (APl- Zbigniew
Brzezinski, the president's resident
foreign policy adviser, is emerging
as a budding poet. Well, perhaps not
a poet but, at least, an author of
doggerel.
Brzezinski, beaming and seeming
. to relish his efforts at rbyme, sur. · prised a group of reporters by
: reading a specially prepared verse
: at a recent farewell luncheon for his
: departing press secretary, Jerrold
Schecter.
. Schecter, who winds up three-plus
. · years at the White House this week
· : after having been chief diplomatic
: : corresponderit for Time magazine,
• : IS m?vrng to Los Angeles to set up a
: . public affairs program for Oc. : cidental Petroleum.
· _ "As you leave to a chorus of
·• cheers from your many admirers
; and peers," read Brzezinski "we
:: have only one thought: Your' work
: • was not for naught. You set press
:: relations back 10 years!"
• Another verse: "Your departure
: .fllls us with regret. You are someone
• we'll never forget. As you leave this
: mess, we wish you success. Goodbye
: White House, hello Oxy Pet!"
Rumor has it that Brzezinski bad a
: collaborator, his wife, Muska.

beeause I want to have a good year.

.thhtsthe boos of W1ans
m
and the
knowledge that manyears
observer.~
think the N tiona! Lea
time Most \
bl ~· s tw?"
thr ugh
a1ua e
yer IS
B:t
he's out ~an laughsl when asked if
S
. prove peop e wrong.
"l'~::~~ll; ...hesaid,
Then
held ~ th ·
f
.
~b and
y:r~:lling~mch ar~ And now
ve to ~~
. me

M

Editorial opinion

Robert J. Wagman
WASIUNGTON (NEA) - No matter what happens from here on, in
the future when old political
reporters gather to fondly
remember Campaign '80, it will be
John Cormally about whom they will
remlnlsce most. His dream of the
White House came to an end two
days after his dismal finish in South
Carolina when he announced in the
ballroom of a Houston hotel that he
was accepting the inevitable. He
was calling it quits.
The Cormally run may be the last
of the old-style big bucks campaigns
in this age of campaign-spending
limitations. It may be the last one in
which a candidate runs wide open
everywhere at once in this age of
pick· your-spot-and-concentrate
campaigns.
Connally began his quest early
enough - more than two years ago ,
in fact. And he had enough money,
raising more than $10 million, the
most of any candidate. But from the
very beginning, he and his campaign
organization made some basic errors and, in the end, they were impossible to overcome.
Eddie Mahe, a respected political
professional, ran the Connally campaign. For him. it was the old-style
game. With what appeared to be
unlimited funds at his disposal, he
hired political professionals right
and left. At one point, he was paying
top dollar to more than 500
operatives.
For the Connally campaign, it was
always first class. In those tlays,
most of the other early starters,
such as George Bush, were traveling
with one or two aides, flying com-

~~~~· ~AP) -Joe Morgan
sentimental f

•"

'-

tory. ''We had our ups and downs all
season and the adversity pulled us
together."
Lamp, who scored 30 points in
Monday nights semlfiNil victory
over Nevada-Las Vegas but was
held to nine in the championship,
was refe~ to Virginia's seasonlong struggle to adjust to highly
recruited freshman center Ralph
Sampson.
The 7-foot-4 Sampson, amazingly

Morgan feels he's not 'washed up'

&lt;

/.

Holland and his team are wrong?
"I believe we're as good as any
team in the country when we play
well," said Holland after Virginia
defeated Minnesota 58-65 in the
championship game of the NIT Wednesday night.
"We didn't get enough time to jell
together durtng the season, but we
played well in the 1\&gt;Umament,'' said
Jeff Lamp, whose four free throws in
the last 19 seconds secured the vic-

••

In 1974, a gunman in London fired
several shots into the car carrying
Briiain's Princess Anne and her
husband Mark Phillips. They were
unhurt, and the assailant was captured.
Five years ago, South Vietnam
was hurrying to complete
evacuation of its northern sections
as refugees from the central
highlands streamed southward.
last year, the govenunent reported business profits up more than 25
percant in 1978, triggering angry
questions about the effectiveness d. ·
the fight against inflation.
Today's birthday: Actor Michael
Redgrave Is 72.
Thought for today: The most
manifest sign of wisdom Is continued
Montalgne (1533- ·
cheerfulness.
1592)

Berry's World

dynasty called "The Bl Red
.. Is
..
d g
Macbine
now
""
an
two of the wonit ~coming
of his off
•
1.,.
year e&amp;reer. He was angered last
season w~n booed even though he
was piaytng hurt, and there were
other problems he won't discuss ("I
a change of uniform. They
coul~ t,have kept me there for $10
mlllion. ).
Morgan was one of least-rewarded
free agenta this winter, signing with
Houston for just $250,000 (not counling bonus clauses).
Morgan thinks he'll bounce back

wantel!

this year, but showed his feelings
that he's not out to prove anything
with a nonstop, !&gt;minute talk.
"It's an important year for me

way
·
.. people seem to think 1•t IS.
No one can play forever. If I
can't piay like I want to anymore this year or in 10 years-I'm ~o~
to quit, and I'm still going to be very
proud of ~sell .. I've. accomplished
so many things m this game that a
lotofgreatpiayershaveneverdone.
I've got over
stolen bases, I've
got over 200 home runs...
"If somebody would have told me
when I left home to piay this game,
'You're going to ~ Most Va.Iuable
Player two years m a row, hit .320,
hit '!I home runs, drive in 100 runs,
steal 60 bases·• Y0 u•n; gomg
to wm
·
·
gold gloves, you're gDillg to drive in
the winning run in the seventh game
of the World Series with two out in
the ninth inning • I wonld have been
~-happy. '
"So how could I be despondent If
the time has come for me?" he
asked.
"You only have to prove
something If you have doubts yourself. If I didn't think I could play, I
uldn'
•
wo
t say, Well, If they think I
can piay I'm going to take their
money.'
"When I look in the mirror, I don't
ever lie to myseif, beeause I'm going'
to be Joe Morgan long after I quit

600

Today's

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33

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King said for

reason people pose the "Blg 31)" as

the competitive tlfe d. athletes from that point, they're supposed to
start downhill.
"Not so,'' she adds. "Decay starts
in the head. An athlete, physically
sound, should be able to last until he
Is 43 if willlnll to work hard."

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,
The ranks of the "Over the Hill
Gang" keep swelling like an Inflated
balloon. Nobody wants to hang it up
any more. Workhorse Phil Nlekro,
40, Is just coming off a 21-20 season
of pitching for the Atlanta Braves.
Gaylord Perry, 41, was a 21-game
and Cy Young winner two years ago. ·
Both expect their anm to last
forever.
PittsbUrgh's Willie StargeU was a
World Series and National League
MVP last year at age 38. Boston's
Carl Yastrzemski, 40, and the
PhiWes' Pete Rose, 39 In April, are
just getting their second wind.
Dallas' RDger Staubach, 38, and
Denver's Craig Morton, :rl, are two
of the older wonders of the National
Football League.
"People have been asking me why
I don't retire ever since I was 24,"
Blllle Jean said durtng a break at the
Garden this week. "I'll never forget
8 comment by Arthur Ashe 8 couple
of years ago. He said, 'Can you
Imagine being No.7 in your
profession and people asking why
you don't quit? What If you were the
seventh best lawyer, doctor or accountant in the world? Nobody
would think of asking why you didn't

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GolclonSiate

"I am still physically capable and
motivated - I want to beat
everybody."
That's Billie Jean King's
comeback chant. It comes from her
throat with all of the fervor of a
challenge from some female Tarzan. Billie Jean thinks she can do it
all again, and who among us bas nerveenoughtodoubther?
She Is truly a sports phenomenon.
Now 36 years old, both knees so
scarred from operations that you
could piay tic-tac-do on them, COWlted out on numerous occasions, the
so-called "Old Lady" of tennis keeps
bounding back.
All the young lionesses of the
game are looking apprehensively
over their shoulders as the top
women players vie In New York's
Madison Square Garden this week
for their richest prize, the $300,000
Avon Championships.
Why not?
Within the past month King put
together tt-~· victories in Detroit and
Houston, beating Evonne Goolagong
6-a, 6-0 and following that with a 6-1,
6-a rout d. Martina Navratllova,
rated the world's best.
The tougb die hard.
Muhammad All, 38, Is trying to
shed 50 pounds In hopes of winning
the buing's 1heavyweight championship a fourth time. The 41-yearold Jim Kaat ts pitching like 8
schoolboy in the Yankees' baseball
camp In Fort Lauderdale, Fla. The
legendary Gordie Howe, 51, and
Bobby Hull, 41, are playing Ice
hockey with the same enthusiasm
and dariiiR as when their bodies

MODULAR
HOMES

1!1

y·llootoo

Ulah

King keeps bounding back

"loser's tournament" In some
basketball circles, especially with 48
teams in the NCAA tournament thla
year. Lamp answered by saying,
''There are only two happy teams In
the nation when the season ends, and
we're one of them."
In the consolation game, Illinois
got 25 points from Eddie Johnson to
defeat Nevada-Las Vegas 84-74.

AtluUe-

&lt;llicago

By wm Grimiiey
Al' Correapoadeal

"I've been in a lot of l-and-Is this
year," Lamp said. "I admit I was a
little nervous, but I was confident,
too.''
Asked If he was glad to see Lamp
go to the line twice in the crucial
final seconds, Holland replied, "Are
you kidding' He's one d. the best
free throw shooters in the country.' •
The NIT has been criticized as a

Byn.-todi'MI

y-Mllwaukee
y·Kanoas
Denver

Sports World

'.

...

Pro
standings

Dttroll

")! .
t. ..

.

playing this game .
"No, I don't think I can do things
·
as consiStenUy
at .36 as I did at 22.
But there was a time when no one
could do the things I could do So if I
can do 90 percent of the~ I~
to do, that's still better than 90 percent of the other players,'' Morgan
said
"Even last year, my year (.250
batting average, nine hmlers) was 8
lot better than a lot of people's. !feel
in my own mind that I can piay, if I
stay healthy.
"I'll say this to you: If I can go out
and piay 150 games, my statistics
will be very good. Then you'll say
·weli, Joe, I knew you could come'
back."'

mobile and agile for his size, was
named the NIT's Most Valuable
Piayer after scoring 15 points and 15
rebounds Wednesday night following
his 26 points and 15 rebounds Monday.
"You can't really caU him a freshman anymore,'' said Holland. ''This
was his 34th game (Virginia finished
24-10) and that's a lot of basketball.
He has developed into an ex·
ceptional player.''
Virginis shot only 38.2 percent for
the game to Minnesota's 41.7 percent, leading Lamp to say, "We won
the game on defense. Intensity
throughout the game and the tournament was the reason we woo."
"We had lots of desire and husUe
defensively, but didn't have any offensive movement," said Minnesota
Coach Jim Dutcher. "We just didn't
move to ule basket strong enough.
Almost all of our turnovers were on
intercepted passes.''
The game was almost a free-throw
shooting contest at the end. Sampson
hit two witlr 1:31 remaining to give
Virginia a '54-53 lead before Lee
Raker intercepted a pass with 1: 08
left.
Then Sampson pulled down a key
rebound of a missed Virginia free
throw, forcing Minnesota to foul
again. But this time It was Lamp,
who hit M percent of his free throws
and once hit 48 foul shots in a row
this year, who went to the line.
He hit both with 19 seconds left for
a 56-53 le~jd, then Kevin McHale
made it 56-55 with two free throws
for the Gophers before Lamp iced it
with twg more free throws with two
seconds remaining.

.

.

,

I

~~~~M,!R;,o_!H!~M~R21.:..12_B~..!

VIllAGE PHARMACY

(

II

,

,,

•

•

•

�&lt;l-The Daily Sentinel, Midd!eport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Mar. 20,1980

~Tbe Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thunday, Mar. 20, 19111

Crum pushes Griffith; Iowa coach likes Ronnie Lester
INDIANAPOLIS
( AP )Louisville Coach Denny Crwn calls
Darrell Griffith, the Cardinals' star,
"a true AU-American, the best aUaround guard in nation."
But Iowa Coach Lute Olson, whose
unranked Hawkeyes will go up
against the No. 2-rated Cardinals
Saturday in the semifinals of the
NCAA BasketbaU Championships,
feels just as strongly about his
team's backcourt ace, Ronnie
Lester.
"When he's 100 percent, Ronnie is
the best guard in America," Olson
. declared.

But that's the catch- "when he's
healthy."
How weD the Hawkeyes do may
hinge on juat how healthy Lester Is.
Tbe senior and leading scorer In
. Iowa history, missed 15 games this
:season because of a knee injury, and
in his absence Iowa was a verv ordinary IH team. With Lester ~ the
llneup, the Hawkeyes are lf&gt;.l.
Lester showed the after-effecL&gt; v•
his Injury last weekend, as Iowa
beat Syracuse and Georgetown to
win the East Regional. At times he

the Midwest Regional final even
though Griffith played just 17
minutes because of foul trouble.
" II was very fMIBtrating for me
not to be able to play," said Griffith,
expressing a feellng that Lester
knows aU too weU. "But the other
guys just took over. I was just
another cheerleader. It made me
feel good to see them go ahead and
play weU without me."
The win over LSU had Coach
frum crowing that Louisville is "not
a one-man show," and Griffith
agrees .
"I get all the nicknames and labels
and stuff like 'Dr. Dw!kenstein,' and
I reaUy do appreciate them," Griffith said. "But basketball is a team
sport. It's the University of
Louisville, not the University of
Darrell Griffith."
That same point was made by Purdue Coach Lee Rose, who contends
that there is more to his Boilermakers than 7-foot-1 AU-American
center Joe Barry Carroll.
But the fact remains, stopping
Carroll wiD be the major task confronting the UCLA Bruins when the

limped while on the court, and never
did he display the blazing speed that
had the pro scouts raving about him
a year ago.
" I'm still not 100 percent," concedes the 6-foot-2 Lester. Olson says
it's more like 75 percent.
But even that is remarkable when
you consider that Lester underwent
knee surgery in midseason.
' 'I thought when Ronnie had
surgery his season was over," said
Olson. "But he left the recovery
room at 4 a.m. and by 10 a.m. he was
lifting weights with the leg. If you
don't think he wanted to come back,
you 1re mistaken."

And now?
"He is a little better each day,"
Olson said. "He's stlU a great
player, but he doesn't have that
blazing quickness back yel He's a
little reluctant to turn it on. But by
Saturday, you will see the afterburners going."
Iowa figures to need Lester
operating at or close to top speed
against Louisville, which clobbered
a tough Louisiana State team BH6 in

teams square off in Saturday's
second semifinal. And UCLA's starting center, sophomore Mike Sanders, is only~ .
"I don't mind playing against guys
6-10 or more," says Sanders, one of
tlie youngsters Inserted into the starting lineup in nlidseason by firstyear coach Larry Brown who helped
turn the Bruins' fortunes around. "I
was a center in high school, so I had
to play against bigger people all the
lime. I look forward to the
chaUenge."
' The Bruins take some of the
pressure off Sanders by starting a
pair of senior forwards, 6-8 Kikl Vandeweghe and 6-7 James WUkes.
They can also bring 6-9 seniors
Darrell AUums and Gig Sinns off the
bench.
"We don't need a real center," insists Wilkes. "We just put our three
best guys on the fioor. Then you
block out and get position.''
How weU that formula will work
against CarroU, dubbed by ex-eoach
turned broadcaster AI McGuire an
~~aircraft caiTier," remains to be
seen.

Reds having problems finding receiver
TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - The Cincinnati Reds continue to have
problems finding a backup catcher
for Johnny Bench who is slated this
year to play more games at another
po5ition, possibly first base.
Vic Correll tore an Achilles tendon
on March 8 and underwent surgery
two days later. He is expected to he
. in a leg cast for two months.
Don Werner, the obvious
replacement choice, is having knee
problems and the Reds have ordered
a medical examination for him.
Werner was scheduled today to undergo an arthroscopy on his left knee
by the National FootbaU League
: Tampa Bay Sues' doctor. The
· examination involves inserting an
instrument into the knee to search
for muscular or cartilege problems.
Werner can catch, squat, throw,

bat and run, but lh&lt;ire is a "pinching" in the kneecap when he takes
the crOSlHlver step out of the ba Iter's box, the Reds reported.
"I talked with Mr. (Dick ) Wagner
and (Manager John) McNamara
about it and I can see their point,"
Werner said Wednesday night.
"They want to make sure, if they
keep me as the second catcher, that
my leg will be okay and not that it
can go at any time.
Werner has been hitting well this
spring, with four hits in six times at
bat. But twice he could not run out
his hits, with the latest such instance
coming Tuesday night in a game
against the New York Mets in St.
Petersburg, which he then left.
"It's strange, because 20 seconds
later, he's okay," said Reds trainer
Larry Starr.

Werner, 27, was examined
Tuesday at Clearwater Commnnity
Hospital, but doctors could not
determine the cause of the pain, the
team said.
" It feels to me like there's
something in there that maybe the
arthroscopy can clip. Maybe a litUe
piece of cartilage. n that's the case,
they told me I'd only be out for five

:O utspoken Perry traded by Bengals
CINCINNATI (AP) - Defensive
back Scott Perry has accused the
Cincinnati Bengals of using public
relations statements to mask the
real reason for trading him to the
· San Francisco 49ers.
"I was expecting it," said Perry,
who during the off-season made 10
speeches accusing the Bengals' top
management of preoccupation with
"image and business" and not being
interested in providing fans with a
· .,· ·

winning team. Cincinnati finished
with a H2 National Football League
mark for the second year in a row
last season.
"The decision to trade Scott was
made in consultation with (new)
head Coach Forrest Gregg and
defensive backfield coach Dick
LeBeau," said Mike Brown, the
team's assistant general manager,
in a prepared statement.
"Our coaches felt that Perry

Ohio Sportlight
.

.

George Strode
i

TOlEDO, Ohio (AP) - The big
salary demands of the players may

Tatum excels it. He's a good

cloud the future of the National FootbaD League, says Mike Current, who
juat reUred after 13 seasons in the
professional sport.
"Money is going to hurt the game
- over-Inflated salaries, ticket
prices going up," said the 6-foot-4,
271l-pound dfensive tackle via
. telephone from his Florida business.
That was never a problem for
CUrrent, who played with Denver,
Tampa Bay and Miami in the NFL,
after the- native of Uma, Ohio,
graduated from Ohio State University. He made $14,000 by his second
pro season and never reached
f]OO,OOO annually.
"I think there'U be a problem of
athletes relating to the salaries they
will he making. Talent goes to waste
because players stop being hungry,"
heaaid.
"They're getting more money
. than they're worth. It's either that or
· they think they're worth a lot more
: than they're making. Their minds
: are conatantly on money. The game
II too money oriented.''
Despite the publicity created by
Jack Tatum's book, "They CaU Me
: AS'assln," CwTent maintains there
· 18 no ezcesslve violence in the NFL.
· "Maybe a handful of players puU
that stuff," he said. "U you try it,
lhey'U CGCDe back and get you.
There's pretty good .self-regulation
, In tbe league. I don't think Tatum is
: 111 much out of line as some people
· think. It's a game of Intimidation,
: phya!CIIl and mental.
' "I've · had playel'll stick their
flngen through my mask and grab
at my eyes, and they'D talk to_youaU 'kinds ci different metbodll. When
you get a chance to lay a good shot
oo SCIIII!bodY, you hate to,.paaa It up.

Current says pro football is at its
zenith in interest because "the networks are giving the public what it
wants. But they have to be careful
they don't overdo it - leave people
wanting more. I think when you
schedule games Ill Wednesdays,
Fridays, days like that, you're
looking for trouble."
He says the owners must chance
the Jack of any free agency in the
sport. "Owners can't continue to
justify it,'' he S!lid. "It's not
equitable for the player. There
really is no such thing unless a
player is released from his con-

'

'•

sticker.' '

tract.

fl

would not be such a large factor that
we could not afford to move him.
"After reviewing the films of the
1979 season, they did not feel he
could be a starter for us. Achange of
scenery should help Scott. He'll do
betterwithacleanslateandwewish
him well," Brown said.
Perry, 26, when contac,ted Wednesday night in Florida, said he was
happy to go to San Francisco but
was sad about leaving the Bengals.
He was drafted In the fifth round in
!976 out of Williams College.
"All they are doing is pulling off a
big PR job. It's just not going to add
up. They are taking my 1979
statistics. Why don't they talk about
my 1978 statistics when I led the
NFL in pass Interceptions for touchdowns (three)' I was their best
defensive back statistically and play
for play,'' said Perry.
Perry reitterated his previous
charges that the Bengals are interested only in making money and
preserving the image of a team so
they can put fans in the stands.
"You don't have to win to make
money in the NFL" since aU teams
split television Income equally. "It's
not worth the risk to pay the extra
money for players to gamble on getting into post-season playoffs,"
Perry said.
"Ask Lemar Parrish, Tony Davis,
Bill Bergey," who the Bengals have
traded in recent years. "They've
traded away what I consider the
heart of the team," Perry said.
Perry's charges prompted a blast
in January from Mike Brown.
Brown suggested that the
criticisms "might violate the collective bargaining agreement" between the owners and players, in
which both sides have agreed to
make efforts to avoid public;
criticism of coaching, operations
and policies.

to seven days," Werner said.
Meanwhile, the Reds believe they
have found the hard-hitting lefthandertheyneedrorpinchrutting

in John Hale, 27.
Hale has been assigned the
position held at the beginning of last

Church circles meet, plan annual tea
Plana for the annual fellowship tea
to be held at the Middleport First
Baptbt Church were made when the
circles of the B. H. Sanborn MilllliCIIIIII')' Society met Tuesday night.
Tbe circles alao discussed
assistance to Glynda Rice, the Baptist scholarahlp student at Judson
College with ber expenses lis a
member d the UBI Sports Ambeaaadors bulletbaU team during

NCAA roundup

the 8\IDiiner months.

Meetlnl! at the borne of Mrs. June
Kloea, members ci the Dorcas Circle
repeated the Lord's Prayer · In
.unison. Mrs. Sarah Fowler gave

\

./

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

Group names Amsbaty coordinator

Mrs. Norma Amsbary was named
lntemaUona! coordinator for the

Preceptor Beta Beta Chapter of
Beta Sigma Phi's golden anniversary In 19111 when the chapter
members met at the Meigs Inn
Thursday night.
Mrs. Mary MorTis presided at the
meeting with a box social being announced for April 12. A bakeless
bake sale was held, and the
Founder's Day observance was arr
nounced for Aprll24.
Mrs. Madhu Malhotra, a native of
India, was guest speaker for the program on India to carry out the Beta
Sigma Phi theme, "Around the
World with Beta Sigma Phi." She
told of her trip to America following
BEN nJRNER CONFINED

I~~~~;;;;;0~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~:;,

season by Champ Swruners, who
was later traded to the Detroit
Tigers, where he rut 20 home runs as
a regular.
"I know he had problems here,"
Hale said of Summers.
"It's a similar situation with me,
but we're different personalities.
Right now I feel like I'm fitting in. I
don't feel like I'm numing against
the grain. I know it sounds like a
cliche, but I feel a part of
everything."
Hale slugged a home run against
the New York Mets on Tuesday but
also struck out three times.
"I'd rather give up the home run
and make contact four times," he
said. "I got behind on the count and
wasn't discipllned up there. I was
overswinging. Next time I'll have
something in my head. I can't be a
free swinger.
"U I make contact, I'U usually get
a hit. That's been my nemesis over
the years - striking out," Hale said.

white Cnl8S quota was by Mrs.
Katheryn Metzger who used as her
theme, "And Yet It is Not Finished."
For Easter the circle made plans
to prepare trays of cookies, candies
and fruit on April 3 and dellver
them. Mrs. Bernice Baker presided
at the meeting with Mrs. Frances
Smart giving prayer. A Jello salad,
crackers, and ccifee were served by
the hostess to Mrs. Helen Bodlmer,
Mrs. UlJian Demosltey, Mrs. Smart,
Mrs. Freda Hood, Mrs. Sarah Dawn
Owen, Mrs. Eva HarUey, Mrs. Bernice Baker, Mrs. Katheryn Metzger,
and a guest, Miss Rhoda HaU.

devoUons using "Hands d Christ"
as her theme. Cards will be sent to
shutlns at Eastertime. Get·weU
cards were signed for Mrs. Kathleen
Anthony, Mrs. Alwtlda Werner, and
Mrs .
Dreama
• Hudson .
Refreshments were served by the
hostess to Mrs. Mary Brewer, Mrs.
Golda Roush, Mrs. Fowler, Mrs.
Elizabeth Searles, and Mrs.
Elizabeth Slavin. The April meeting
will he at the borne ci Mrs. Brewer.
The EJecta Circle met with Mrs.
Dorothy Anthony who gave devotions on the "Ten Questions on
Spiritual Growth." Dedication ci the

Ben Turner, confined to the Pleasant vauey Hospital for the past

her marriage and spoke

librarian and substitute teacher
here, Mrs. Malhotra demonstrated
how to wrap saris. She dlaplayed her
wedding attire and several articles,
including handmade punes, which
she brought from India. She noted
that there people llve IJIOIIIIy as join!
families, that is, grandparents,
parents, and children, au together.
The children go to school 10 months
each year and the examinations are
prepared and carried out state-wide.
Mrs. Norma Amsbary served ·
refreshments. Mrs. Janet Hill was a
contributing hostess.

OUR
20TH
YEAR

Turns two years
Nakama Tyree, son of Oluck and
Shirley Tyree, Middleport,
celebrated his second birthday

THRU

recenUy.
He Is the grandson ci Josephine
Tyree, Pomeroy, Chuck Tyree, Mid-

MONDAY MARCH 24TH

dleport, and Mr. and Mrs. Buddy
McKinney, Middleport.
Cake, lee cream, Kool-Aid and coffee were served to Heath Richmond,
Carla McKinney, Anna and Ryan
McKinney, Roy Bareswilt, Gene
McKinney, Mr. and Mrs. Andy
Batey, Randy, Andrea and Love,
Chris McKinney, Vickie Boyles,
Jolm McKinney, and Carol Triplett
and Buddy.
Sending glfta were Bill, Myra and
. Jess! McKinney, Eugene McKinney,
Wllllam McKinney, and Nola

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Mr. and Mrs. Douglaa Hauber and

family , local; Jeremy Jobnston and
Ray Lynn DaUey, both of Portland.
The "Vial ci l.Jfe" ia being
distributed by Mrs. Leona Hensley
lilld Mrs. Mae McPeek In Long Bottom. It is free ci charge. To obtain
more information on where you can
pick YOUI'!l up, caU the McPeekHensley home at 98f&gt;.3320 or your
local Senior Citizens group or the
Meigs County Health Dept.

Callers to the borne ci Mr. a ·,d
Mrs. Bud Adams have been Mr.
Dale Evans, Logrr: Mrs. Sharon
Evans and daughters, Lancaster;
and Joe Evans has been a weekend
guest. He llves In Columbus.
Word has been received that Mrs.
Bill (Dorothy) Thurston has been
feellug much better. BW and
Dorothy reside In Long Bottun
during the summer months and
Columbus the rest of the year. U you
wish to write or send a card you may
do so by maillng correspoodence to
this address: P. 0 . Box 23096 Central
Point, Columbus, Ohio 43223.

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The Ohio High School Athletic
Association is accepting applications for ass!Btant corrunissioner
through Apr:ll 25 to begin employment on Aug. I, 1980
Appllcants should have the ability
to speak in public, have experience
in writing and a background In
several sports as a coach or official
as weU as administrative ez.
perience.
Applications may be obtained by
writing to Richard L. Annstrong,
ComJillssioner Designate, Ohio High
School Athletic Association, 4080
Roselea Place, Columbus, OhiCl
43214. Telephone requests for applications will not he accepted.

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LEBANON RF3ULTS

LEBANON, Ohio (AP) -Max Artway, with a best-ever time of 2:06,
won til~ $1,200 featured mile pace
Wednesday night ~t Lebanon and
paid $5, $4 and $2.40.
Monk finished second and paid
$10.40 and $4, while Edgewood Dirk
was third, returning$2.80.
.., The 3-3 combinaUon of Purple
Gunner and Real Warrior paid $36.80
In the double and the crowd d 1,010
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Notice is hereby given th:Jt the Public Utihtlt&lt;S Commission of OhiO
will conduct further hearings regarding,t,he measured bus.iness tete- .
phone service charges of the Ohio Bell Telephone Comparl&gt;', aPQI'C)v9d
by order of the Commission in Case No. 74-761-TP-AIR.
·
The Ohio Bell Telephone Company has rates· and regufation§J n
effect in its Exchange Rate Tariff. P.U.C.O . No.3, which provide1M'
nonoptional measured local telephone service ,to its business C\W
tomers. These tariff provisions establish a basic rate for each truni •
or line used by a business customer;
P!OVide for·an allowance
of 80 calls per month on each trunk.or line; each additionat.canlieyon(l
the 80-call allowanCe is charged for at the rate of 9 cents per cali.
In the case of Centrex service. there i.s no monthly call allowance
and each call is charged for at the rate'Of 9 cents per call. Acopy of
the tariff schedules containing the rates and regulations applicable
to measured business telephone service is availabl.e at the offices
of the Commission, 180 E:ast Broad Street •. Columbus, OhiQ,
··
Public hearing pri this matter will be convened on May 28, 19bu AI
9:30 a.m. at the offices of the Commission. 180 East Broad 'Street,
Columbus. Ohio. ·
·
' ·•
&gt; .
All parties desiring to Intervene in. tnis matt~r must file a w~!!t!" · ·
petition for leave to interveru:iwith the CominiS$ion by April4, 1980
Further information rriay be obtained by addresoing an i.nQuil'y to tht ·
Commission. attention Mr..David M. Polk. secre14!ry. The Public Utl\i,t~
Commission of Ohio. 180 East Broad Street. Columbus. Ohio ·4 32:1!;. : ;.

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LEGAL NOTICE
NEW SHIPMENT

By Melody RoberD
Mr. and Mrs. stanley (Juanita)
WeUa have received word that they
have won an au expenses paid trip to
Florida, with a choice of five big
cltiea to c~ from, with five days
and four nights and free tickets to
Disneyworld. The Wells had no idea
that when they entered the
"Publishers Clearing House"
giveaway that they would win.
Congratulations! (More detaus will
be announced when the couple have
received their packet of instructions
and choices of arrangements.)
Best wishes for a speedy recovery
this week go to Tammy Pierce,
Carolyn Whaley, Pat Thomas,
Harold Brewer, Ruth Larkins. Of the
above Mrs. Larkins is still In the
Veteran.s Memorial Hospital. Please
send au these good folks a cheerful
card.
Mrs. Shirley Salisbury and sons of
Gallipolis were recent overnight
guests of her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Dorsal Larkins.
Mr. and Mrs. Millard Balls' guests
have been Mr. and Mrs. BW
WhiUock, Cleveland; Mr. and Mrs.
Dougie Ball, Montgomery, W. Va.;

week, was transferred Tuesday to
the Pleasant Vauey Nursing Care ·
Unit at Point Pleasant His room'
number is 140.

Nakuma Tyree

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�&lt;l-The Daily Sentinel, Midd!eport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Mar. 20,1980

~Tbe Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thunday, Mar. 20, 19111

Crum pushes Griffith; Iowa coach likes Ronnie Lester
INDIANAPOLIS
( AP )Louisville Coach Denny Crwn calls
Darrell Griffith, the Cardinals' star,
"a true AU-American, the best aUaround guard in nation."
But Iowa Coach Lute Olson, whose
unranked Hawkeyes will go up
against the No. 2-rated Cardinals
Saturday in the semifinals of the
NCAA BasketbaU Championships,
feels just as strongly about his
team's backcourt ace, Ronnie
Lester.
"When he's 100 percent, Ronnie is
the best guard in America," Olson
. declared.

But that's the catch- "when he's
healthy."
How weD the Hawkeyes do may
hinge on juat how healthy Lester Is.
Tbe senior and leading scorer In
. Iowa history, missed 15 games this
:season because of a knee injury, and
in his absence Iowa was a verv ordinary IH team. With Lester ~ the
llneup, the Hawkeyes are lf&gt;.l.
Lester showed the after-effecL&gt; v•
his Injury last weekend, as Iowa
beat Syracuse and Georgetown to
win the East Regional. At times he

the Midwest Regional final even
though Griffith played just 17
minutes because of foul trouble.
" II was very fMIBtrating for me
not to be able to play," said Griffith,
expressing a feellng that Lester
knows aU too weU. "But the other
guys just took over. I was just
another cheerleader. It made me
feel good to see them go ahead and
play weU without me."
The win over LSU had Coach
frum crowing that Louisville is "not
a one-man show," and Griffith
agrees .
"I get all the nicknames and labels
and stuff like 'Dr. Dw!kenstein,' and
I reaUy do appreciate them," Griffith said. "But basketball is a team
sport. It's the University of
Louisville, not the University of
Darrell Griffith."
That same point was made by Purdue Coach Lee Rose, who contends
that there is more to his Boilermakers than 7-foot-1 AU-American
center Joe Barry Carroll.
But the fact remains, stopping
Carroll wiD be the major task confronting the UCLA Bruins when the

limped while on the court, and never
did he display the blazing speed that
had the pro scouts raving about him
a year ago.
" I'm still not 100 percent," concedes the 6-foot-2 Lester. Olson says
it's more like 75 percent.
But even that is remarkable when
you consider that Lester underwent
knee surgery in midseason.
' 'I thought when Ronnie had
surgery his season was over," said
Olson. "But he left the recovery
room at 4 a.m. and by 10 a.m. he was
lifting weights with the leg. If you
don't think he wanted to come back,
you 1re mistaken."

And now?
"He is a little better each day,"
Olson said. "He's stlU a great
player, but he doesn't have that
blazing quickness back yel He's a
little reluctant to turn it on. But by
Saturday, you will see the afterburners going."
Iowa figures to need Lester
operating at or close to top speed
against Louisville, which clobbered
a tough Louisiana State team BH6 in

teams square off in Saturday's
second semifinal. And UCLA's starting center, sophomore Mike Sanders, is only~ .
"I don't mind playing against guys
6-10 or more," says Sanders, one of
tlie youngsters Inserted into the starting lineup in nlidseason by firstyear coach Larry Brown who helped
turn the Bruins' fortunes around. "I
was a center in high school, so I had
to play against bigger people all the
lime. I look forward to the
chaUenge."
' The Bruins take some of the
pressure off Sanders by starting a
pair of senior forwards, 6-8 Kikl Vandeweghe and 6-7 James WUkes.
They can also bring 6-9 seniors
Darrell AUums and Gig Sinns off the
bench.
"We don't need a real center," insists Wilkes. "We just put our three
best guys on the fioor. Then you
block out and get position.''
How weU that formula will work
against CarroU, dubbed by ex-eoach
turned broadcaster AI McGuire an
~~aircraft caiTier," remains to be
seen.

Reds having problems finding receiver
TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - The Cincinnati Reds continue to have
problems finding a backup catcher
for Johnny Bench who is slated this
year to play more games at another
po5ition, possibly first base.
Vic Correll tore an Achilles tendon
on March 8 and underwent surgery
two days later. He is expected to he
. in a leg cast for two months.
Don Werner, the obvious
replacement choice, is having knee
problems and the Reds have ordered
a medical examination for him.
Werner was scheduled today to undergo an arthroscopy on his left knee
by the National FootbaU League
: Tampa Bay Sues' doctor. The
· examination involves inserting an
instrument into the knee to search
for muscular or cartilege problems.
Werner can catch, squat, throw,

bat and run, but lh&lt;ire is a "pinching" in the kneecap when he takes
the crOSlHlver step out of the ba Iter's box, the Reds reported.
"I talked with Mr. (Dick ) Wagner
and (Manager John) McNamara
about it and I can see their point,"
Werner said Wednesday night.
"They want to make sure, if they
keep me as the second catcher, that
my leg will be okay and not that it
can go at any time.
Werner has been hitting well this
spring, with four hits in six times at
bat. But twice he could not run out
his hits, with the latest such instance
coming Tuesday night in a game
against the New York Mets in St.
Petersburg, which he then left.
"It's strange, because 20 seconds
later, he's okay," said Reds trainer
Larry Starr.

Werner, 27, was examined
Tuesday at Clearwater Commnnity
Hospital, but doctors could not
determine the cause of the pain, the
team said.
" It feels to me like there's
something in there that maybe the
arthroscopy can clip. Maybe a litUe
piece of cartilage. n that's the case,
they told me I'd only be out for five

:O utspoken Perry traded by Bengals
CINCINNATI (AP) - Defensive
back Scott Perry has accused the
Cincinnati Bengals of using public
relations statements to mask the
real reason for trading him to the
· San Francisco 49ers.
"I was expecting it," said Perry,
who during the off-season made 10
speeches accusing the Bengals' top
management of preoccupation with
"image and business" and not being
interested in providing fans with a
· .,· ·

winning team. Cincinnati finished
with a H2 National Football League
mark for the second year in a row
last season.
"The decision to trade Scott was
made in consultation with (new)
head Coach Forrest Gregg and
defensive backfield coach Dick
LeBeau," said Mike Brown, the
team's assistant general manager,
in a prepared statement.
"Our coaches felt that Perry

Ohio Sportlight
.

.

George Strode
i

TOlEDO, Ohio (AP) - The big
salary demands of the players may

Tatum excels it. He's a good

cloud the future of the National FootbaD League, says Mike Current, who
juat reUred after 13 seasons in the
professional sport.
"Money is going to hurt the game
- over-Inflated salaries, ticket
prices going up," said the 6-foot-4,
271l-pound dfensive tackle via
. telephone from his Florida business.
That was never a problem for
CUrrent, who played with Denver,
Tampa Bay and Miami in the NFL,
after the- native of Uma, Ohio,
graduated from Ohio State University. He made $14,000 by his second
pro season and never reached
f]OO,OOO annually.
"I think there'U be a problem of
athletes relating to the salaries they
will he making. Talent goes to waste
because players stop being hungry,"
heaaid.
"They're getting more money
. than they're worth. It's either that or
· they think they're worth a lot more
: than they're making. Their minds
: are conatantly on money. The game
II too money oriented.''
Despite the publicity created by
Jack Tatum's book, "They CaU Me
: AS'assln," CwTent maintains there
· 18 no ezcesslve violence in the NFL.
· "Maybe a handful of players puU
that stuff," he said. "U you try it,
lhey'U CGCDe back and get you.
There's pretty good .self-regulation
, In tbe league. I don't think Tatum is
: 111 much out of line as some people
· think. It's a game of Intimidation,
: phya!CIIl and mental.
' "I've · had playel'll stick their
flngen through my mask and grab
at my eyes, and they'D talk to_youaU 'kinds ci different metbodll. When
you get a chance to lay a good shot
oo SCIIII!bodY, you hate to,.paaa It up.

Current says pro football is at its
zenith in interest because "the networks are giving the public what it
wants. But they have to be careful
they don't overdo it - leave people
wanting more. I think when you
schedule games Ill Wednesdays,
Fridays, days like that, you're
looking for trouble."
He says the owners must chance
the Jack of any free agency in the
sport. "Owners can't continue to
justify it,'' he S!lid. "It's not
equitable for the player. There
really is no such thing unless a
player is released from his con-

'

'•

sticker.' '

tract.

fl

would not be such a large factor that
we could not afford to move him.
"After reviewing the films of the
1979 season, they did not feel he
could be a starter for us. Achange of
scenery should help Scott. He'll do
betterwithacleanslateandwewish
him well," Brown said.
Perry, 26, when contac,ted Wednesday night in Florida, said he was
happy to go to San Francisco but
was sad about leaving the Bengals.
He was drafted In the fifth round in
!976 out of Williams College.
"All they are doing is pulling off a
big PR job. It's just not going to add
up. They are taking my 1979
statistics. Why don't they talk about
my 1978 statistics when I led the
NFL in pass Interceptions for touchdowns (three)' I was their best
defensive back statistically and play
for play,'' said Perry.
Perry reitterated his previous
charges that the Bengals are interested only in making money and
preserving the image of a team so
they can put fans in the stands.
"You don't have to win to make
money in the NFL" since aU teams
split television Income equally. "It's
not worth the risk to pay the extra
money for players to gamble on getting into post-season playoffs,"
Perry said.
"Ask Lemar Parrish, Tony Davis,
Bill Bergey," who the Bengals have
traded in recent years. "They've
traded away what I consider the
heart of the team," Perry said.
Perry's charges prompted a blast
in January from Mike Brown.
Brown suggested that the
criticisms "might violate the collective bargaining agreement" between the owners and players, in
which both sides have agreed to
make efforts to avoid public;
criticism of coaching, operations
and policies.

to seven days," Werner said.
Meanwhile, the Reds believe they
have found the hard-hitting lefthandertheyneedrorpinchrutting

in John Hale, 27.
Hale has been assigned the
position held at the beginning of last

Church circles meet, plan annual tea
Plana for the annual fellowship tea
to be held at the Middleport First
Baptbt Church were made when the
circles of the B. H. Sanborn MilllliCIIIIII')' Society met Tuesday night.
Tbe circles alao discussed
assistance to Glynda Rice, the Baptist scholarahlp student at Judson
College with ber expenses lis a
member d the UBI Sports Ambeaaadors bulletbaU team during

NCAA roundup

the 8\IDiiner months.

Meetlnl! at the borne of Mrs. June
Kloea, members ci the Dorcas Circle
repeated the Lord's Prayer · In
.unison. Mrs. Sarah Fowler gave

\

./

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

Group names Amsbaty coordinator

Mrs. Norma Amsbary was named
lntemaUona! coordinator for the

Preceptor Beta Beta Chapter of
Beta Sigma Phi's golden anniversary In 19111 when the chapter
members met at the Meigs Inn
Thursday night.
Mrs. Mary MorTis presided at the
meeting with a box social being announced for April 12. A bakeless
bake sale was held, and the
Founder's Day observance was arr
nounced for Aprll24.
Mrs. Madhu Malhotra, a native of
India, was guest speaker for the program on India to carry out the Beta
Sigma Phi theme, "Around the
World with Beta Sigma Phi." She
told of her trip to America following
BEN nJRNER CONFINED

I~~~~;;;;;0~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~:;,

season by Champ Swruners, who
was later traded to the Detroit
Tigers, where he rut 20 home runs as
a regular.
"I know he had problems here,"
Hale said of Summers.
"It's a similar situation with me,
but we're different personalities.
Right now I feel like I'm fitting in. I
don't feel like I'm numing against
the grain. I know it sounds like a
cliche, but I feel a part of
everything."
Hale slugged a home run against
the New York Mets on Tuesday but
also struck out three times.
"I'd rather give up the home run
and make contact four times," he
said. "I got behind on the count and
wasn't discipllned up there. I was
overswinging. Next time I'll have
something in my head. I can't be a
free swinger.
"U I make contact, I'U usually get
a hit. That's been my nemesis over
the years - striking out," Hale said.

white Cnl8S quota was by Mrs.
Katheryn Metzger who used as her
theme, "And Yet It is Not Finished."
For Easter the circle made plans
to prepare trays of cookies, candies
and fruit on April 3 and dellver
them. Mrs. Bernice Baker presided
at the meeting with Mrs. Frances
Smart giving prayer. A Jello salad,
crackers, and ccifee were served by
the hostess to Mrs. Helen Bodlmer,
Mrs. UlJian Demosltey, Mrs. Smart,
Mrs. Freda Hood, Mrs. Sarah Dawn
Owen, Mrs. Eva HarUey, Mrs. Bernice Baker, Mrs. Katheryn Metzger,
and a guest, Miss Rhoda HaU.

devoUons using "Hands d Christ"
as her theme. Cards will be sent to
shutlns at Eastertime. Get·weU
cards were signed for Mrs. Kathleen
Anthony, Mrs. Alwtlda Werner, and
Mrs .
Dreama
• Hudson .
Refreshments were served by the
hostess to Mrs. Mary Brewer, Mrs.
Golda Roush, Mrs. Fowler, Mrs.
Elizabeth Searles, and Mrs.
Elizabeth Slavin. The April meeting
will he at the borne ci Mrs. Brewer.
The EJecta Circle met with Mrs.
Dorothy Anthony who gave devotions on the "Ten Questions on
Spiritual Growth." Dedication ci the

Ben Turner, confined to the Pleasant vauey Hospital for the past

her marriage and spoke

librarian and substitute teacher
here, Mrs. Malhotra demonstrated
how to wrap saris. She dlaplayed her
wedding attire and several articles,
including handmade punes, which
she brought from India. She noted
that there people llve IJIOIIIIy as join!
families, that is, grandparents,
parents, and children, au together.
The children go to school 10 months
each year and the examinations are
prepared and carried out state-wide.
Mrs. Norma Amsbary served ·
refreshments. Mrs. Janet Hill was a
contributing hostess.

OUR
20TH
YEAR

Turns two years
Nakama Tyree, son of Oluck and
Shirley Tyree, Middleport,
celebrated his second birthday

THRU

recenUy.
He Is the grandson ci Josephine
Tyree, Pomeroy, Chuck Tyree, Mid-

MONDAY MARCH 24TH

dleport, and Mr. and Mrs. Buddy
McKinney, Middleport.
Cake, lee cream, Kool-Aid and coffee were served to Heath Richmond,
Carla McKinney, Anna and Ryan
McKinney, Roy Bareswilt, Gene
McKinney, Mr. and Mrs. Andy
Batey, Randy, Andrea and Love,
Chris McKinney, Vickie Boyles,
Jolm McKinney, and Carol Triplett
and Buddy.
Sending glfta were Bill, Myra and
. Jess! McKinney, Eugene McKinney,
Wllllam McKinney, and Nola

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SKIRTS

ASSORTED

_-TOPS --8LOUSES
'\

Mr. and Mrs. Douglaa Hauber and

family , local; Jeremy Jobnston and
Ray Lynn DaUey, both of Portland.
The "Vial ci l.Jfe" ia being
distributed by Mrs. Leona Hensley
lilld Mrs. Mae McPeek In Long Bottom. It is free ci charge. To obtain
more information on where you can
pick YOUI'!l up, caU the McPeekHensley home at 98f&gt;.3320 or your
local Senior Citizens group or the
Meigs County Health Dept.

Callers to the borne ci Mr. a ·,d
Mrs. Bud Adams have been Mr.
Dale Evans, Logrr: Mrs. Sharon
Evans and daughters, Lancaster;
and Joe Evans has been a weekend
guest. He llves In Columbus.
Word has been received that Mrs.
Bill (Dorothy) Thurston has been
feellug much better. BW and
Dorothy reside In Long Bottun
during the summer months and
Columbus the rest of the year. U you
wish to write or send a card you may
do so by maillng correspoodence to
this address: P. 0 . Box 23096 Central
Point, Columbus, Ohio 43223.

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See all th e e xcttem ent you've been rntS'StnQ 60u
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for OHSAA position
The Ohio High School Athletic
Association is accepting applications for ass!Btant corrunissioner
through Apr:ll 25 to begin employment on Aug. I, 1980
Appllcants should have the ability
to speak in public, have experience
in writing and a background In
several sports as a coach or official
as weU as administrative ez.
perience.
Applications may be obtained by
writing to Richard L. Annstrong,
ComJillssioner Designate, Ohio High
School Athletic Association, 4080
Roselea Place, Columbus, OhiCl
43214. Telephone requests for applications will not he accepted.

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These Calif.omia Straight Leg Jeans
are just the trick," our cowgirl cooed.
"It seem s that Levi~'® Womenswear
Has styles to fit my every mood."

LEBANON RF3ULTS

LEBANON, Ohio (AP) -Max Artway, with a best-ever time of 2:06,
won til~ $1,200 featured mile pace
Wednesday night ~t Lebanon and
paid $5, $4 and $2.40.
Monk finished second and paid
$10.40 and $4, while Edgewood Dirk
was third, returning$2.80.
.., The 3-3 combinaUon of Purple
Gunner and Real Warrior paid $36.80
In the double and the crowd d 1,010
het$106,243.

401 ..

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SWISHER LOHSE
Kettntftl McCUIIOUtfl,

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the California Straight Leg Jean

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Boos ts all TV and FM
Signals. yel does not ampl ify
In terf erence p1cked up b y
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mou ntmg hardware
m struc t1on s 15·1134

"Soft-hearted denim snugs my waist
' AMd lets me move quite comfortably.
J,' They look jus t like my daddy's jeans,
r
But every curve you see is me."

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Notice is hereby given th:Jt the Public Utihtlt&lt;S Commission of OhiO
will conduct further hearings regarding,t,he measured bus.iness tete- .
phone service charges of the Ohio Bell Telephone Comparl&gt;', aPQI'C)v9d
by order of the Commission in Case No. 74-761-TP-AIR.
·
The Ohio Bell Telephone Company has rates· and regufation§J n
effect in its Exchange Rate Tariff. P.U.C.O . No.3, which provide1M'
nonoptional measured local telephone service ,to its business C\W
tomers. These tariff provisions establish a basic rate for each truni •
or line used by a business customer;
P!OVide for·an allowance
of 80 calls per month on each trunk.or line; each additionat.canlieyon(l
the 80-call allowanCe is charged for at the rate of 9 cents per cali.
In the case of Centrex service. there i.s no monthly call allowance
and each call is charged for at the rate'Of 9 cents per call. Acopy of
the tariff schedules containing the rates and regulations applicable
to measured business telephone service is availabl.e at the offices
of the Commission, 180 E:ast Broad Street •. Columbus, OhiQ,
··
Public hearing pri this matter will be convened on May 28, 19bu AI
9:30 a.m. at the offices of the Commission. 180 East Broad 'Street,
Columbus. Ohio. ·
·
' ·•
&gt; .
All parties desiring to Intervene in. tnis matt~r must file a w~!!t!" · ·
petition for leave to interveru:iwith the CominiS$ion by April4, 1980
Further information rriay be obtained by addresoing an i.nQuil'y to tht ·
Commission. attention Mr..David M. Polk. secre14!ry. The Public Utl\i,t~
Commission of Ohio. 180 East Broad Street. Columbus. Ohio ·4 32:1!;. : ;.

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:

LEGAL NOTICE
NEW SHIPMENT

By Melody RoberD
Mr. and Mrs. stanley (Juanita)
WeUa have received word that they
have won an au expenses paid trip to
Florida, with a choice of five big
cltiea to c~ from, with five days
and four nights and free tickets to
Disneyworld. The Wells had no idea
that when they entered the
"Publishers Clearing House"
giveaway that they would win.
Congratulations! (More detaus will
be announced when the couple have
received their packet of instructions
and choices of arrangements.)
Best wishes for a speedy recovery
this week go to Tammy Pierce,
Carolyn Whaley, Pat Thomas,
Harold Brewer, Ruth Larkins. Of the
above Mrs. Larkins is still In the
Veteran.s Memorial Hospital. Please
send au these good folks a cheerful
card.
Mrs. Shirley Salisbury and sons of
Gallipolis were recent overnight
guests of her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Dorsal Larkins.
Mr. and Mrs. Millard Balls' guests
have been Mr. and Mrs. BW
WhiUock, Cleveland; Mr. and Mrs.
Dougie Ball, Montgomery, W. Va.;

week, was transferred Tuesday to
the Pleasant Vauey Nursing Care ·
Unit at Point Pleasant His room'
number is 140.

Nakuma Tyree

PRICES EFFECTIVE

ot the

customs and practices of India. A

Long Bottom News Notes

549

Two stainless steel straps.
, ,., 10'. Weather resislant fights rust. Attaches anlenna
mast 10 chimney . 15·527

WIIEilEVEil YOU LIVE, WOilK Oil PLAY, THEilE'S A llAOIO SHACK STORE NEAR YOUi

Silver
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TANDY CORPOAAf iON

Mos1 •h"ns
tlso avaliab lt at
RIC!Io Shac k

Deelers
Look for th•s

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• _ _ _ _ _. .

ne•ghbor hood
PRICES MAY IIAAY AT INDIVIDUAL Sf0fll£ S

�s-- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Mar. 20, 1980

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Mar. 20, 1980

PTO names Polly's Pointers:
Cheese cloth needs job
officers

Mrs. Nancy Roush, Tuppers Plains, is pictured with her Bambi
scene, used in a large brandy bowl, which won for her first place and best
of show honors in Louisville, Ky.

Nancy Roush bakes her
way to top honors. . .
Nancy Roush, Tuppers Plains,
continues her win record in cake
shows over a several state area,
her latest honors coming
in 1-&lt;&gt;uisvile, Ky., and Middletown.
Mrs. Roush created a scene of
Bambi and his friends, all edible,
in natural tones and this scene
was Inside a large brandy bowl
for the seventh annuall-&lt;&gt;uisville
Cake Club Show held in early
March at the Jefferson Mall. This
is one of the largest cake shows in
the United States.
The entiry of Mrs. Roush, one of
308 from several states in the
show, won first place in marzipan
category, first in the division,
fancy goodies, and went on to win
the best of show open division including some 11 categories of en·
tries such as wedding cakes, doll
cakes, and entries employing
foreign techniques.
Mrs. Roush's entiry is the scene
from a children's book where
Bambi is attempting to see his

Sentinel
social calendar
TIIURSDAY
DEMOCRAT COMMITTEE Thur·
sday 7:30 p.m. at Carpenter's hall,
Pomeroy. PubUc invited.
EPISCOPAL CHURCH Women
Thursday !2:30p.m. at home of Mrs.
Phillip Kelly.
•
ROCK SPRINGS Better Health
Club Thursday 5: 15 p.m. at home of
Frances Goeglein. 1-&lt;&gt;uise Fohner is
in charge of the program and Sandy
Fohner in charge of the contest.
MIDDLEPORT CHILD Conserva·
tion League, 7:30 Thursday at the
Riverboat Room of the Athens County Savings and Loan Co., Meigs Office. Mary Powell to give a product
demonstration.

reflection in a pond. All of the
animal friends and scenery included in tbe book are in the
Roush entry. It Is made using
marzipan royal icing, piping jell,
marshmallows, rolled fondant
and pieces of cones used with ice
cream.

Manuel Lopez, who is a master
decorator with Wilton En·
terprises and who did many of the
cakes pictured in Wilton books,
was judge for the 1-&lt;&gt;uisvllle
show. Mrs. Roush also won a
third place using foreign
techniques at the Kentucky
event.
Last week, Mrs. Roush was in
Middletown, where she won a first and second place.
The next event? The fifth an·
nual cake show of the Parkersburg Cake Club to be held April
19 at the Grand Central Mall in
Vienna. Mrs. Roush is president
of the Parkersburg club and has
entry blanks available for anyone
who might want to enter that
show.
FRIDAY
PUBLIC 100L auction Friday,
March 21, Eastern High School
under sponsorship of Eastern Band
Boosters; wide variety of name
brand items.

GRANGE BANQUET PLANNED
The annual Grange banquet will
be held on Aprilll at the Salisbury
Elementary Scbool instead of April
22 as was earlier announced.

Officers were elected at the recent
meeting of the Racine PTO. They
are Mrs. Nancy Yoacham, president; Mrs. Mickie Damron, vice
president; Mrs. Donna Johnson,
treasurer; Mrs. Barbara Dugan,
secretary; and Mrs. Maxine Rose,
reporter.
Mrs. Nancy Circle was named
chairman for the basketball dinner
committee, while Mrs. Mickey
Hoback arid Mrs. Donna Norris
were appointed to the art fair committee. Mrs. Jean Cleland discussed
the possibility of starting a cub scout
pack in Racine.
The Easter party at the school was
set for April 3. There will be no
school on April4, Good Friday.
Signup day for Racine baseball
was announced for March 22 a 10
a.m. to 12 noon. in the kindergarten
building at !Uicine. Mrs. Shirley
Carpenter presided at the meeting
which opened with officers' reports,
the pledge to the flag and the lArd 's
prayer. Mrs. Mary Hill's first grade
won the room count.
Following the business meeting
Carpenter's Dance Studio presented
the program. Dancing to "Cuddle
Up a Little Closer" were Angie
Bostic, Lisa Pape, Wendy Wolfe,
Tricia Wolfe, Lee Ann Clark, Mayla
Jo Yoacham, Aimee Wolfe, Alisia
Willford, and Becky Evans. Mandy
Hill, Cherri Russell, Dixie Dugan,
Tonya Cummins, and Angie Bostic
danced to "Dim the Lights" while
Peggy Neigler, Julie Gibbs, Beth
Hollman, Keri Ginther, Cindy
Warden and Christa Beegle did a
routine to '' Electric Horseman.''

Surprise party held
A surprise party was held Sunday
honoring Mrs. Ethel Priddy on ber
birthday. The party was hosted by
her husband, Roy, and daughters,
Maxine, Floria, Carolyn and
Marilyn.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs. Randall Gibbs, Gina and Rhonda, Mr.
and Mrs. Pat Aeiker, Penny, Patsy,
and Patrick, Mrs. Patricia
Capehart, Tanuny and Michelle,
and Mrs. Clarence Jordan, Chester;
Mr. and Mrs. George Bing, Judy and
Georgina, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Azbell,
Lancaster; Mr. and Mrs. William
Van Meter, Ricky, Misty, Thonda
!llldShonda, Clifton, W. Va.; Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Rife, Larry, Valerie,
Debbie, Teresa, Chuckie, and
Shann, and Dave Talbott, Wellston.

Lessons begin at church
Lessons on the new study book,
"The Parables of Jesus", were
started at the recent meeting of the
Afternoon Circle of the Heath United
Methodist Church.
Mrs. Emerson Jones gave an introduction to the book which descrif&gt;.
ed the parables and the importance
of the parables to the people of Jesus
time as well as being a timely
message of today. She noted that he
used very common and ordinary
things in his parables. Mrs. Robert
Rinehart opened the meeting with a
piano prelude. She gave some St.
Patrick's Day readings and prayer.
The May fellowship luncheon was
announced for May8 at 12:30 p.m. at
the church. Thank you notes for
valentine trays were read. Green
and white table arrangement was
used with the refreshments being
served by Mrs. Rinehart and Mrs.
Jessie Houchins.

to loosen, dissolve
and exlract

deep-seated dirt and
residues.
Gels carpels
ckJaner. Faster! And
it's easy to operate

Kids love dressing up.
~

for Easter ·
in
Stride Rite~

up'

Stride Rite®shoes are perfect for oreS~ Ill\)
because they're the dress shoes kids love to wear
And they come in more sizes and widths than any
other children's shoes made, to fit better.
Your kids will look great and feel great in Stride
Rite dress shoes. Bring them in lora fitting today.
We'll take all the time necessary to ensure a
healthy fit.

otrideRite ~
Anything else is something leSs.

loa .

DROP IN AND REGISTER FOR
OUR FAMILY SPRINC SHOE·IN

STAR SUPPLY
Racine, 0 .

TO MEET TIJESDAY
The Harrisonville Senior Citizens
Club will meet Tuesday night at 6:30
p.m. at the Harrisonville townhouse.
The meeting will be preceded by a
covered dish dinner at which time
those with birthdays during
January, February and March will
be honored,

money by carefully l'liiiCIIIng ribbonll
and bows from gift packages. It is
well worth the trouble to spend a bit
of time packing them away so they
are ready to be used again.
Aa I roU any pieces of ribbon I
measure them and jot the length
down on a_piece of paper that Is
held In place by the paper cUp tllat

A mlacellaneoua

recenUy at the Keno Chrt8tlan
Church honoring George Pickens,
their paator, and Debbie Dawson.
Cake, punch, nuts and mints were
served. Attending were OUver Swain
and son, Lee, Mrs. Leota Muaar,
Mrs. Maude Gray, Mr. and Mrs.
Starling Massar and son, Charles,
Mr. and Mrs. Kevin Buckley, Mr.
and Mrs. Harold Osborne, Mr. and
Mrs. Gall Osborne, Mr. and Mrs .
Hobart Newell, Mrs. Esta Wblte,
Mrs. Elmer Newell, Mrs. Mary
Newell, daughter, Misty, Mrs. Hilda
Hunt, Mrs. Kenneth Davis, Mr. and
Mrs. Harlls Frank, Mr. and Mrs.
I(tbble, Mrs. Erma Cleland.

holds the ends together. When rolled
the ribbon stays smooth and can be
packed In much less space. I store
these rolls In plastic see-through
bags, according to color.
I use large coat or suit boxes for r-:;·;;· ;;·~
· · ;·;·;;;;;;·;·;;;;::­
storing bows but any box used must
be deep so they are not smaahed. I
put a layer of waxed paper and then
another layer of bows and so on until
a box Is filled. I also try to place
these In the box according to colors.
Be sure to use wued paper. The
bows will not lltlck to it as they do to
plastic wrap and similar papers.
Label the outside of the box
"crushable" so no one • will put
anything beavy on top of it. - SAN·
DRA

Polly will send you one of her signed thank-you newspaper-coupon
clippers If she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem In her
colwnn. Write Polly's Pointers In
care of this newspaper.

CaseyKasem
LIBRARY TO CLOSE
The Pomeroy Library will be closed Friday, March 21, at 5 p.m.

CHAPMAN SHOES
Next to Elberfelds in Pomeroy, o.

Miller announces reelection plans

held

WMPO
·SATURDAYS
8 til Noon

. I

MEANS

JOGGING

M1reh 21, 1980
H behooves yoo this corning year
to take advantage of all opportunities to make new acquaintances. Several rel atio nships
tho! w ill start out on a casual
basts will develop Into to rm l d ~ ­
ble alli ances

Yo -Yo s makes sole halos worth
b00st1ng about 'cause on tcp of thDS~;:­
corntorto bte bo.Jncy OOifoms he
fresh. new stvles you'll absolutely

ARIES (Morch 21 · Aprll 19) The

love Sporly. casual and ctessy styles
will rtf vour style And each comes
with its OINn spec1ully -desigr·oo hole
Ia make your Connte 1Yo·Yos
definitely wort h boosting about

-

We Have The
Shoes - All Sizes

temptatio n" lo talk about something th at another to;d you in the
strictest confidence may be very
great today. You'll like. yourself
bellflr II you say noth1ng Find
.out mora of what lies ahead tor

RACY
In Mid· Brown
Leather

you in the year following your
birthtl ay by send ing for your
c;opy of Aslro-G raph Letter . Mail
S 1 tor eac11 to As1ro-Graph, Box
-4 89. Radio City Station, N.V.
.,0019. Be sure to specify bir th

'27.99

v•·v•~

Chlte.

'AURUS (April :ZO.Mor 201 lfs
lirlportant to be prudent regardUlO small expenses tod ay. Ttiese

AT
OF SHOES
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

''The• phone

systems

big

phone
one.
It
••
•
forus ... ,

When is a coal company not a coal
company?
When it's also into trucking, farming and mine supply.
They're all parts of the Bowman fam ily businesses, each with
its own phone system. But they
out grew th ese systems, and
asked the General Telephone
Communica tions Consultant for
help. We suggested a GTD120C computer-controlled system.
"Without Communications Consultant Esther Klinebriel, we wouldn't have
known what was available to save us time and
money," said Mr. Bowman. "Our new phone system handles calls for
all four companies. Yet each gets its own phone bills for accounting
purposes. The night-answer featUre is very
important. Now we get after-hours calls at
home - these are almost always very important calls.''
Our Communications Consultants
have only one job; to make your telecommunica~ ti ons better and better.
We have what you need.

We keep you talking.

(c[j#J

little eKpendilures will dama ge
ur budget if yoo ·re not ca reful .
EMINI ~May 21 - June 20)
stead ol talking aboul all the
things you hope to do today.
IJlake a small start Accompllshil)ents. rather than imaginative
dreams, are what counl.
CANCER (June 21 -July 22) It
9bu can't speak well of a mutual
ec qu atntance today. you'd be
baUer off saying nolhing . Your
word s will be d istor ted when
repeated.
LEO (JUI)' 23-Aug. 22) Informat ion r ece i~ed regarding deals,
dlsco unl s or inveslmenls should
nol be taken literally. Do your
own ln ~e sUgat l ng .

~

heritage house
N. 2ND AVE.

Signals. ..

Racine firefighters
answer three alarms

1)

days . Although Khomeini's
proclamation specified lila! It would
apply to members of the anned forces, the secret police and the clergy
during the monarchy, it excluded
those accused of killing, torture or
misuse of pubUc funds or property ..
Throughout Tehran, families
celebrating Now Ruz built small
street fires and ran through them,
chanting to the fire to take away
sickness and give them bealth.
Holidayers bought goldfish for goodluck charms and swayed to the
drumbeat of minstrels who begged
from the crowds as they danced
through streets jammed with cars.
The hoUday dates back more than
,
3,000 years to Iran's Zoroastrian
tered on Congressman Miller's announced plans to run __ religion, which views life as a
TEN'Ill DISTRICT CONGRFSSMAN Clarence
struggle between good and evil.
for reelection to the House this fall. The Tenth District
Miller confers with the Minority Leader of the U. S.
lawmaker
has
pledged
his
continued
efforts
to
cut
the
Many of the practices promise good
House of Representatives, Congressman John Rhodes
size
and
cost
of
government
and
help
resolve
the
luck
or protection against evil or Ill
and Mrs. Muine Charlton of Lancaster, Chairman of
nation's
pressing
energy
and
economic
problems.
bealth.
the Miller for Congress Corrunittee. Discussion cenConservative Moslem clerics say
tbe Now Ruz custoiiiB should be
discouraged because they are not
Discharged-Harriett Warner,
dleport; Lucille Garten, Middleport;
VETERANS MEMORIAL
rooted in Islam and are
Donna Dixon, Guysville; Hubert
Patricia Rogers, Nonnan Evans,
Admitted- Robyn
Campbell,
nationalistic. But President
Mary Evans, Ross Kent.
Sharp, New Haven.
Pomeroy; Naomi Bentley, MidAbolhassan Bani-Sadr and moderate
clerics defend the observance, and
tuNer.
could start an Argument.
so far there has been no official at·
luster from the deed. Keep quiet ;
Friday, March 21
ICORPIO (Del. 2'·N••· 22) In
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jon. 18)
others will learn of it In due time.
tempt to curb it.
your social Jnvotvam9ntl today
Normally you 're very methodical ,
PISCES (Fob. 20-Morch 20) This
don't Inflict last-minute changes
but today your aptneas for detail
Meanwhile, the United States told
Is apt to be a ·rather busy day .
on frlendl. ll could c:ause every·
could desert you . Watch out for
You'd better tie a string around
the
lllternational Court of Justice
one to f•llllat ease .
small mistaKes.
your finger so that you'll remem ~
that the American hostages in the
: Bernice Bede Osol IAOITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec. 21) AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob. 18)
ber something iyou promised to
MaKe It a point In dealing with
Doing something nice for anoth·
do tor a member of your family
·U.S. Embassy in Tehran were held
your mate to skirt abrasive · er Ia admirable , but talking about
!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ... SSN .)
Issues. ThouQhtlesa remarks
under "liarsh and inhumane con:what you've done takes the
ditioru~" and were "confined Uke

In white &amp;
ca mel.

conne.

Expressing his concern for the
state of our nation's economy and
the present rate of double digit inflation, Miller pledged to continue
his light for sound fiscal policies.
Pointing to the heavy burden of
govenunent regulation, Miller ex·
pressed his opposition to big govern-

(Continued from page

BASI&lt; •

boast about
brand new Yo-Yos ...
updated versions
you'll positively love

Tenth District Congressman
Clarence miller today announced his
intention to seek reelection to tbe U.
S. House cl Representatives in this
fall's general election. The Lancaster lawmaker is a member of the
influential House Appropriations
Committee.

The Racine Fire Department
answered three calls over the
weekend.
Saturday at 5 p. m. they were
called to the William Rizer
residence, Dorcas, to fight a
brush fire. Twelve men and three
trucks answered the call.
Sunday at 2:30 p.m. they were
called to Bald Knobs to fight a
five acre brush fire. Three trucks
were used and 15 men answered
the call.
Monday at 10:30 a. m. they
were called to the John Golden.
residence, Great Bend, where a
chimney was on fire. Three
trucks and 16 men answered the
call. There was no damage.

ment and to the ever expanding role
of Washington in the every day lives
of the average citizen.
"If we as a people are to maintain
our present standard of living, we
must find solutions to our current
energy crisis," Miller said. Critical
of the present leadership for failing.,
to take the lead in addressing this
problem, Miller warned that the
longer the administration and
Congress sit on their hands, the
more serious the energy problem
will become.
He appealed to the citizens of
Ohio's loth District to join with him
in seeking solutions to these pressing
problems by supporting his candidacy for reelection.

~

Your "Extra Toucll~l
~lorist Since 1957
~

I1

I
I

.-

Pt~
FLORIST

PH. 992·2644
35l E. Main, Pomer·oy
Your FTD

.

,,

VIRQO (Aug . 23-Sopl. 22)

Being

, ...oVerly in fluenced by others could
cause you to be Indecisive today .
tsten t o sage advice , but use
'Your own judgm flnl as well .

LIBRA

(Bopl.

23· 0cl.

23)

There's a likelihoOd you may be
"'I bit of a daydreamer tod .. y and
let you r mind wander from leaks
.at hand. Your prod u c ll~lty will

LEGAL NOTICE
REQUESTS FOR
PROPOSALS
PRIVATE SECTOR
INITIATIVE
PROGRAM
PRIVATE
INDUSTRY
COUNCIL
The Private I ndus1ry
Council (PIC) for the
Balance of Stale (80S) Is
accepting public relations
proposalspertalnlnq to the
Private Seclor lntflative
Program under Title VII of
the Comprehensive Employment and Training Ac'
of 1978 (CETA) .
The PIC requests the
public relations proposals
1nclude methods to educate
and involve employers in
Title v 11 , and suggestions
of
obtaining
pub I ic
awareness of the activit ies
of Tille VII .
Possible activities include: the coordination of
employer seminars and informational conferences:
the coordination
and
preparation of . Title VII
news events such as press
conferences, press release
news slorles feature ar·
ticles, and other publicity
items; and the d~velop ·
ment of an advertising andor pub lic service an nouncement campaign for
Tille VII.
The basic geographic
area to be served is the 56
rural ·counties known as the
Balance of S1ate. ProP.&lt;Jsars
will be accepted unt11 5:00
PM on Aprll25 1980.
Mark Uher. PIC Liaison
Oepartmenl
of
Ad·
minlstratlve Services
30 East Broad Stree1,
28th Floor
C1&gt;lumbus, Ohio .0215
It additional information
is needed, contact Mr.
Uher al (614) 466·1033.
(3) 17, 18, 19, 20, 21. Sic

Riggs named to
president's club
POMEROY - Kenneth E. Riggs,
Reedsville, bas been named a
memller of the President's Honor
Club of John Hancock Mutual Life
Insurance Company, an association
: of leading sales representatives
~ from the firm's nationwide
:: general agency field force.
· A member of the Columbus
· 'general agency, he was among 288
:.members attending the company's
:.annual President's Honor Club
:"IDeeting last week at Caesar's
:'Palace In Las Vegas, Nevada.
; Heading the home office officials
' :tn attendance were Edwin Matz,
chairman cl the board and chief ex·
• ecutive officer, and John G.
" McElwee, president and chief opera~tloos clflcer.
.
"' Flfty·nlne first-time quaUflers and
eleven new Ufe members . were
presented with medallions, symboUc
cl membership In the Honor Club, by
McElwee.
ruggs joined the Jolm Hancock in
1965, and ill a flve-Ume qualifier for
membership In the company's
Pre.'lident's Honor Club.

ACTION FILED
Floren&lt;:e Thornton fUed suit for
support under the Reciprocal
Agreement Act In Meigs County
Common Pleas Court against Bernard 'Ibornton·
Ella MaY Southern was granted a
divorce from Robert Trenton
Southern on charges of gross neglect
of duty.

,·
-

I'

COUNTY- MEIGS
PUBLIC NOTICE
The following documents
were received or prepared
by
The
Ohio
En v.ronmental Protection
Agency during the previous
week . The effective date of
each final action is slated .
The issuance dl!lte of each
proposed action is stated .
Anyone aggrieved or adversely alfected by a final
action to issue, deny,
modify, revoke, or renew a
permit, license, or variance; or to approve or disapprove
plans
and
specifications, may file an
appeal with The En ·
v1ronmental Board of
Review Suite 305, 395 E.
Broad St., Columbus, Ohio
.0216, within thir1y (30)
days of the effective da1e,
~ursuanl to Ohio Revised
Code Section 3745.07, unless
such final action was
preceded by the same of
substantially the same
proposed action. In ad·
dillon, pursuant to Section
3745.04 of The Revised
Code, I)Oiice of the fill n~ of
the appeal shall be f tl ed
with The Director ol The
Environmental
OhiO'
Prolection Agency, 361 E.
Broad Street, Col umbus,
Ohio .0216, within three (3)
days after the appeal is
filed with
The En ·
vironmenlal Board of
Review. All !uch final ac ·
lions are so Identified. Such
persons may request an ad1udication nearmg before
The Ohio EPA on a
proposed action lo issue,
deny, modify, revoke, or
renew a permit, license, or
variance; or to approve or
disapprove plans and
speclf•catlons within lhir ·
ty (30l'days o1the issuance
dale. ORC 3745 .07 does not
provide for adjudication
nearing requests or appeals from orders, verified
complaints, or en ·

forcement
compliance
schedule letters. Within 30
days of publication in a
newspaper in the affected
county, any person may
also : (I) submit wrinen
comments relating to ac ~
tions, proposed actions,
verified co mplaints, enforcement
compliance
schedule
!elfers
or
preliminary stall determinations or permits to insta ll ; (2) request a public
meeting
regarding
proposed actions or on
preliminary staff determinations on permits to insta ll ; and -or (3) request
notice of further actions or
proceedin!IS. All requests
lor adjudication hearings
and public meetings, and
other communications concerninp public meetings,
adjud1cation
hearings,
verified complaints, and
regu lations, should be ad·
dressed to The Legal .
Records Section , Ohio
EPA, P. 0 . Box 1049,
Columbus, Ohio 43216,
(614) ~66 · 6037 . Unless
otherwise stated in par·
tlcular notices, all other
commuf1ications Including
comments on proposed actions should be addressed
either to The Division of
Authorization and Com·
pliance (Air) or Permit
and Approva I Section
(Water), whichever is ap·
propriate, at The OHio
EPA, P. 0. Box 1049,
Columbus, Ohio .0216.
Issuance of modification
to N PDES permit con·
dltlons
Ohio Power company,
Racine
Hydroelectnc
Plant
St. Rt. 338
Racine, OH , Effective
dateOJ-11-80
Receiving waters: Ohio
River
Permit No. B019·CO

"If you Block people make an
error, you pay the interest
and penalty? I shoulda
come here last
r."

COJIUllOn criminals."
The court Issued an Interim ruling

Dec. 15 calling on Iran to release the
remaining hostages immediately
and restore the diplomatic immunity of the embassy and its stall.
Iran ignored the ruling and boycot·
ted the current court se!!Sion, which
is expected to end today.

NEGOTIATIONS CONTINUING
STEUBENVIUE, Ohio (AP) Negotiations were to continue today
in a contract dispute involving poUce
officers, firefighters and employees
of the city's sanitation, water and
recreatioru~ departments.
Most of the city's, 53 pollee of·
fleers, 61 firefighters and employees
of the other departments Wednesday
returned to their jobs while the
negotiations continued The employees had gone on strike Monday.
The employees are seeking a 15
percent, aci'06S the board pay hike.

"

FOR THE BEST D&amp;ALS IN THE
TRISTATE AREA

MASON FURNITURE
Mon., Tues., Wed., Friday &amp; Sat.
8:30to5 :00Thursdaytill12 Noon

•

Vegetable
RnU,
Tea,
Coffee or Milk

N. 2nd St.

Middleport, 0.

... .

$625
.
.
Plus Tax

Mason, W. Va.

HEADQUARTERS
FOR MEN &amp;
WOMEN'S WEARING
APPAREL
IN THE ~TEST
SPRIN~ STYLES
AND FASHIONS

Appointment Available But Not Necessary

Tossed Salad
8 oz. New York Strip
Baked Polato

Herman Grate

CLOTHIERS

2nd &amp; BROWN ST .
MASON, W. VA.
OPEN TUES .
THURS &amp; SAT.
9 A.M .-5 P.M .
PHONE 773·9128

FRIDAY NIGHT SPECIAL 5 TIL 10

OPE.N EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT ONLYi

BAHR

THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

·MENU

MASON FURNITURE

. 773·5592

H&amp;R BLOCK

Weekend At Meigs Inn

(3) 20, lie

SHOP

If we should make an erro r !h at costs you additional tax .
you pay only the tax. Block pays any penalty and Interest .
We stand behind our work .

618 E. MAIN ST.
POMEROY, O.
OPEN 9 A.M . TO
6 P.M. WEEKDAYS
9·5SATURDAY
PHONE 992-3795

ENTERTAINMENT
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY
NIGHT

g \\\\
ALLL£GAL

5 WHEEL
DRIVE
FORMERLY
MIDNIGHT DUES
4 PIECE GROUP
FROM PARKERSBURG, W. VA.

BEVERAGES SOLD
You must be 21 or accompanied by parents or legal guardian.

THE MEIGS INN
Phone 992-3629

Pomeroy, 0.
'•

I
I

Flori~.:...J

'·===--==-=-=
:ASTRO•GRAPH

""'"""'Iii..•,

- Phil Bowman, Vice President, Waterloo Coal Co., Oak BiB

CARO LINE

Combines
VIBRATING' BRUSH
AGITATION and
powertul
STEAM EXTRACTION
CLEANING

By Polly Cramer
Newspaper EDterprlse Aasn.
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY- I have three bolts
of cheese cloth and would appreciate
any ideas anyone may have as to
how I could put this to good use
besides the usual ones of straining
foods, making dust cloths, etc. MARGARET
DEAR MARGARET - Sorry
but I am completely at a loss
and cannot get all
that cheese cloth
off my mind.
Surely some of
our clever readers will come to our rescue. - POI.r
LY
DEAR POLLY - Before starting
on a painting project, such as doing
a ceiling, I always put on a shower
cap. I find I paint faster and keep my
temper down, too, if I am not worrying about getting paint in my hair.
After doing my laundry I clip all
bras, pants and socks on wire coat
hangers and hang them on the outside line to dry. If the weather does
not permit then the bangers are
hung on a hook in the laundry room HELEN H.
DEAR POLLY - I save time and

Showersbower
held
wu

�s-- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Mar. 20, 1980

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Mar. 20, 1980

PTO names Polly's Pointers:
Cheese cloth needs job
officers

Mrs. Nancy Roush, Tuppers Plains, is pictured with her Bambi
scene, used in a large brandy bowl, which won for her first place and best
of show honors in Louisville, Ky.

Nancy Roush bakes her
way to top honors. . .
Nancy Roush, Tuppers Plains,
continues her win record in cake
shows over a several state area,
her latest honors coming
in 1-&lt;&gt;uisvile, Ky., and Middletown.
Mrs. Roush created a scene of
Bambi and his friends, all edible,
in natural tones and this scene
was Inside a large brandy bowl
for the seventh annuall-&lt;&gt;uisville
Cake Club Show held in early
March at the Jefferson Mall. This
is one of the largest cake shows in
the United States.
The entiry of Mrs. Roush, one of
308 from several states in the
show, won first place in marzipan
category, first in the division,
fancy goodies, and went on to win
the best of show open division including some 11 categories of en·
tries such as wedding cakes, doll
cakes, and entries employing
foreign techniques.
Mrs. Roush's entiry is the scene
from a children's book where
Bambi is attempting to see his

Sentinel
social calendar
TIIURSDAY
DEMOCRAT COMMITTEE Thur·
sday 7:30 p.m. at Carpenter's hall,
Pomeroy. PubUc invited.
EPISCOPAL CHURCH Women
Thursday !2:30p.m. at home of Mrs.
Phillip Kelly.
•
ROCK SPRINGS Better Health
Club Thursday 5: 15 p.m. at home of
Frances Goeglein. 1-&lt;&gt;uise Fohner is
in charge of the program and Sandy
Fohner in charge of the contest.
MIDDLEPORT CHILD Conserva·
tion League, 7:30 Thursday at the
Riverboat Room of the Athens County Savings and Loan Co., Meigs Office. Mary Powell to give a product
demonstration.

reflection in a pond. All of the
animal friends and scenery included in tbe book are in the
Roush entry. It Is made using
marzipan royal icing, piping jell,
marshmallows, rolled fondant
and pieces of cones used with ice
cream.

Manuel Lopez, who is a master
decorator with Wilton En·
terprises and who did many of the
cakes pictured in Wilton books,
was judge for the 1-&lt;&gt;uisvllle
show. Mrs. Roush also won a
third place using foreign
techniques at the Kentucky
event.
Last week, Mrs. Roush was in
Middletown, where she won a first and second place.
The next event? The fifth an·
nual cake show of the Parkersburg Cake Club to be held April
19 at the Grand Central Mall in
Vienna. Mrs. Roush is president
of the Parkersburg club and has
entry blanks available for anyone
who might want to enter that
show.
FRIDAY
PUBLIC 100L auction Friday,
March 21, Eastern High School
under sponsorship of Eastern Band
Boosters; wide variety of name
brand items.

GRANGE BANQUET PLANNED
The annual Grange banquet will
be held on Aprilll at the Salisbury
Elementary Scbool instead of April
22 as was earlier announced.

Officers were elected at the recent
meeting of the Racine PTO. They
are Mrs. Nancy Yoacham, president; Mrs. Mickie Damron, vice
president; Mrs. Donna Johnson,
treasurer; Mrs. Barbara Dugan,
secretary; and Mrs. Maxine Rose,
reporter.
Mrs. Nancy Circle was named
chairman for the basketball dinner
committee, while Mrs. Mickey
Hoback arid Mrs. Donna Norris
were appointed to the art fair committee. Mrs. Jean Cleland discussed
the possibility of starting a cub scout
pack in Racine.
The Easter party at the school was
set for April 3. There will be no
school on April4, Good Friday.
Signup day for Racine baseball
was announced for March 22 a 10
a.m. to 12 noon. in the kindergarten
building at !Uicine. Mrs. Shirley
Carpenter presided at the meeting
which opened with officers' reports,
the pledge to the flag and the lArd 's
prayer. Mrs. Mary Hill's first grade
won the room count.
Following the business meeting
Carpenter's Dance Studio presented
the program. Dancing to "Cuddle
Up a Little Closer" were Angie
Bostic, Lisa Pape, Wendy Wolfe,
Tricia Wolfe, Lee Ann Clark, Mayla
Jo Yoacham, Aimee Wolfe, Alisia
Willford, and Becky Evans. Mandy
Hill, Cherri Russell, Dixie Dugan,
Tonya Cummins, and Angie Bostic
danced to "Dim the Lights" while
Peggy Neigler, Julie Gibbs, Beth
Hollman, Keri Ginther, Cindy
Warden and Christa Beegle did a
routine to '' Electric Horseman.''

Surprise party held
A surprise party was held Sunday
honoring Mrs. Ethel Priddy on ber
birthday. The party was hosted by
her husband, Roy, and daughters,
Maxine, Floria, Carolyn and
Marilyn.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs. Randall Gibbs, Gina and Rhonda, Mr.
and Mrs. Pat Aeiker, Penny, Patsy,
and Patrick, Mrs. Patricia
Capehart, Tanuny and Michelle,
and Mrs. Clarence Jordan, Chester;
Mr. and Mrs. George Bing, Judy and
Georgina, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Azbell,
Lancaster; Mr. and Mrs. William
Van Meter, Ricky, Misty, Thonda
!llldShonda, Clifton, W. Va.; Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Rife, Larry, Valerie,
Debbie, Teresa, Chuckie, and
Shann, and Dave Talbott, Wellston.

Lessons begin at church
Lessons on the new study book,
"The Parables of Jesus", were
started at the recent meeting of the
Afternoon Circle of the Heath United
Methodist Church.
Mrs. Emerson Jones gave an introduction to the book which descrif&gt;.
ed the parables and the importance
of the parables to the people of Jesus
time as well as being a timely
message of today. She noted that he
used very common and ordinary
things in his parables. Mrs. Robert
Rinehart opened the meeting with a
piano prelude. She gave some St.
Patrick's Day readings and prayer.
The May fellowship luncheon was
announced for May8 at 12:30 p.m. at
the church. Thank you notes for
valentine trays were read. Green
and white table arrangement was
used with the refreshments being
served by Mrs. Rinehart and Mrs.
Jessie Houchins.

to loosen, dissolve
and exlract

deep-seated dirt and
residues.
Gels carpels
ckJaner. Faster! And
it's easy to operate

Kids love dressing up.
~

for Easter ·
in
Stride Rite~

up'

Stride Rite®shoes are perfect for oreS~ Ill\)
because they're the dress shoes kids love to wear
And they come in more sizes and widths than any
other children's shoes made, to fit better.
Your kids will look great and feel great in Stride
Rite dress shoes. Bring them in lora fitting today.
We'll take all the time necessary to ensure a
healthy fit.

otrideRite ~
Anything else is something leSs.

loa .

DROP IN AND REGISTER FOR
OUR FAMILY SPRINC SHOE·IN

STAR SUPPLY
Racine, 0 .

TO MEET TIJESDAY
The Harrisonville Senior Citizens
Club will meet Tuesday night at 6:30
p.m. at the Harrisonville townhouse.
The meeting will be preceded by a
covered dish dinner at which time
those with birthdays during
January, February and March will
be honored,

money by carefully l'liiiCIIIng ribbonll
and bows from gift packages. It is
well worth the trouble to spend a bit
of time packing them away so they
are ready to be used again.
Aa I roU any pieces of ribbon I
measure them and jot the length
down on a_piece of paper that Is
held In place by the paper cUp tllat

A mlacellaneoua

recenUy at the Keno Chrt8tlan
Church honoring George Pickens,
their paator, and Debbie Dawson.
Cake, punch, nuts and mints were
served. Attending were OUver Swain
and son, Lee, Mrs. Leota Muaar,
Mrs. Maude Gray, Mr. and Mrs.
Starling Massar and son, Charles,
Mr. and Mrs. Kevin Buckley, Mr.
and Mrs. Harold Osborne, Mr. and
Mrs. Gall Osborne, Mr. and Mrs .
Hobart Newell, Mrs. Esta Wblte,
Mrs. Elmer Newell, Mrs. Mary
Newell, daughter, Misty, Mrs. Hilda
Hunt, Mrs. Kenneth Davis, Mr. and
Mrs. Harlls Frank, Mr. and Mrs.
I(tbble, Mrs. Erma Cleland.

holds the ends together. When rolled
the ribbon stays smooth and can be
packed In much less space. I store
these rolls In plastic see-through
bags, according to color.
I use large coat or suit boxes for r-:;·;;· ;;·~
· · ;·;·;;;;;;·;·;;;;::­
storing bows but any box used must
be deep so they are not smaahed. I
put a layer of waxed paper and then
another layer of bows and so on until
a box Is filled. I also try to place
these In the box according to colors.
Be sure to use wued paper. The
bows will not lltlck to it as they do to
plastic wrap and similar papers.
Label the outside of the box
"crushable" so no one • will put
anything beavy on top of it. - SAN·
DRA

Polly will send you one of her signed thank-you newspaper-coupon
clippers If she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem In her
colwnn. Write Polly's Pointers In
care of this newspaper.

CaseyKasem
LIBRARY TO CLOSE
The Pomeroy Library will be closed Friday, March 21, at 5 p.m.

CHAPMAN SHOES
Next to Elberfelds in Pomeroy, o.

Miller announces reelection plans

held

WMPO
·SATURDAYS
8 til Noon

. I

MEANS

JOGGING

M1reh 21, 1980
H behooves yoo this corning year
to take advantage of all opportunities to make new acquaintances. Several rel atio nships
tho! w ill start out on a casual
basts will develop Into to rm l d ~ ­
ble alli ances

Yo -Yo s makes sole halos worth
b00st1ng about 'cause on tcp of thDS~;:­
corntorto bte bo.Jncy OOifoms he
fresh. new stvles you'll absolutely

ARIES (Morch 21 · Aprll 19) The

love Sporly. casual and ctessy styles
will rtf vour style And each comes
with its OINn spec1ully -desigr·oo hole
Ia make your Connte 1Yo·Yos
definitely wort h boosting about

-

We Have The
Shoes - All Sizes

temptatio n" lo talk about something th at another to;d you in the
strictest confidence may be very
great today. You'll like. yourself
bellflr II you say noth1ng Find
.out mora of what lies ahead tor

RACY
In Mid· Brown
Leather

you in the year following your
birthtl ay by send ing for your
c;opy of Aslro-G raph Letter . Mail
S 1 tor eac11 to As1ro-Graph, Box
-4 89. Radio City Station, N.V.
.,0019. Be sure to specify bir th

'27.99

v•·v•~

Chlte.

'AURUS (April :ZO.Mor 201 lfs
lirlportant to be prudent regardUlO small expenses tod ay. Ttiese

AT
OF SHOES
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

''The• phone

systems

big

phone
one.
It
••
•
forus ... ,

When is a coal company not a coal
company?
When it's also into trucking, farming and mine supply.
They're all parts of the Bowman fam ily businesses, each with
its own phone system. But they
out grew th ese systems, and
asked the General Telephone
Communica tions Consultant for
help. We suggested a GTD120C computer-controlled system.
"Without Communications Consultant Esther Klinebriel, we wouldn't have
known what was available to save us time and
money," said Mr. Bowman. "Our new phone system handles calls for
all four companies. Yet each gets its own phone bills for accounting
purposes. The night-answer featUre is very
important. Now we get after-hours calls at
home - these are almost always very important calls.''
Our Communications Consultants
have only one job; to make your telecommunica~ ti ons better and better.
We have what you need.

We keep you talking.

(c[j#J

little eKpendilures will dama ge
ur budget if yoo ·re not ca reful .
EMINI ~May 21 - June 20)
stead ol talking aboul all the
things you hope to do today.
IJlake a small start Accompllshil)ents. rather than imaginative
dreams, are what counl.
CANCER (June 21 -July 22) It
9bu can't speak well of a mutual
ec qu atntance today. you'd be
baUer off saying nolhing . Your
word s will be d istor ted when
repeated.
LEO (JUI)' 23-Aug. 22) Informat ion r ece i~ed regarding deals,
dlsco unl s or inveslmenls should
nol be taken literally. Do your
own ln ~e sUgat l ng .

~

heritage house
N. 2ND AVE.

Signals. ..

Racine firefighters
answer three alarms

1)

days . Although Khomeini's
proclamation specified lila! It would
apply to members of the anned forces, the secret police and the clergy
during the monarchy, it excluded
those accused of killing, torture or
misuse of pubUc funds or property ..
Throughout Tehran, families
celebrating Now Ruz built small
street fires and ran through them,
chanting to the fire to take away
sickness and give them bealth.
Holidayers bought goldfish for goodluck charms and swayed to the
drumbeat of minstrels who begged
from the crowds as they danced
through streets jammed with cars.
The hoUday dates back more than
,
3,000 years to Iran's Zoroastrian
tered on Congressman Miller's announced plans to run __ religion, which views life as a
TEN'Ill DISTRICT CONGRFSSMAN Clarence
struggle between good and evil.
for reelection to the House this fall. The Tenth District
Miller confers with the Minority Leader of the U. S.
lawmaker
has
pledged
his
continued
efforts
to
cut
the
Many of the practices promise good
House of Representatives, Congressman John Rhodes
size
and
cost
of
government
and
help
resolve
the
luck
or protection against evil or Ill
and Mrs. Muine Charlton of Lancaster, Chairman of
nation's
pressing
energy
and
economic
problems.
bealth.
the Miller for Congress Corrunittee. Discussion cenConservative Moslem clerics say
tbe Now Ruz custoiiiB should be
discouraged because they are not
Discharged-Harriett Warner,
dleport; Lucille Garten, Middleport;
VETERANS MEMORIAL
rooted in Islam and are
Donna Dixon, Guysville; Hubert
Patricia Rogers, Nonnan Evans,
Admitted- Robyn
Campbell,
nationalistic. But President
Mary Evans, Ross Kent.
Sharp, New Haven.
Pomeroy; Naomi Bentley, MidAbolhassan Bani-Sadr and moderate
clerics defend the observance, and
tuNer.
could start an Argument.
so far there has been no official at·
luster from the deed. Keep quiet ;
Friday, March 21
ICORPIO (Del. 2'·N••· 22) In
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jon. 18)
others will learn of it In due time.
tempt to curb it.
your social Jnvotvam9ntl today
Normally you 're very methodical ,
PISCES (Fob. 20-Morch 20) This
don't Inflict last-minute changes
but today your aptneas for detail
Meanwhile, the United States told
Is apt to be a ·rather busy day .
on frlendl. ll could c:ause every·
could desert you . Watch out for
You'd better tie a string around
the
lllternational Court of Justice
one to f•llllat ease .
small mistaKes.
your finger so that you'll remem ~
that the American hostages in the
: Bernice Bede Osol IAOITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec. 21) AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob. 18)
ber something iyou promised to
MaKe It a point In dealing with
Doing something nice for anoth·
do tor a member of your family
·U.S. Embassy in Tehran were held
your mate to skirt abrasive · er Ia admirable , but talking about
!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ... SSN .)
Issues. ThouQhtlesa remarks
under "liarsh and inhumane con:what you've done takes the
ditioru~" and were "confined Uke

In white &amp;
ca mel.

conne.

Expressing his concern for the
state of our nation's economy and
the present rate of double digit inflation, Miller pledged to continue
his light for sound fiscal policies.
Pointing to the heavy burden of
govenunent regulation, Miller ex·
pressed his opposition to big govern-

(Continued from page

BASI&lt; •

boast about
brand new Yo-Yos ...
updated versions
you'll positively love

Tenth District Congressman
Clarence miller today announced his
intention to seek reelection to tbe U.
S. House cl Representatives in this
fall's general election. The Lancaster lawmaker is a member of the
influential House Appropriations
Committee.

The Racine Fire Department
answered three calls over the
weekend.
Saturday at 5 p. m. they were
called to the William Rizer
residence, Dorcas, to fight a
brush fire. Twelve men and three
trucks answered the call.
Sunday at 2:30 p.m. they were
called to Bald Knobs to fight a
five acre brush fire. Three trucks
were used and 15 men answered
the call.
Monday at 10:30 a. m. they
were called to the John Golden.
residence, Great Bend, where a
chimney was on fire. Three
trucks and 16 men answered the
call. There was no damage.

ment and to the ever expanding role
of Washington in the every day lives
of the average citizen.
"If we as a people are to maintain
our present standard of living, we
must find solutions to our current
energy crisis," Miller said. Critical
of the present leadership for failing.,
to take the lead in addressing this
problem, Miller warned that the
longer the administration and
Congress sit on their hands, the
more serious the energy problem
will become.
He appealed to the citizens of
Ohio's loth District to join with him
in seeking solutions to these pressing
problems by supporting his candidacy for reelection.

~

Your "Extra Toucll~l
~lorist Since 1957
~

I1

I
I

.-

Pt~
FLORIST

PH. 992·2644
35l E. Main, Pomer·oy
Your FTD

.

,,

VIRQO (Aug . 23-Sopl. 22)

Being

, ...oVerly in fluenced by others could
cause you to be Indecisive today .
tsten t o sage advice , but use
'Your own judgm flnl as well .

LIBRA

(Bopl.

23· 0cl.

23)

There's a likelihoOd you may be
"'I bit of a daydreamer tod .. y and
let you r mind wander from leaks
.at hand. Your prod u c ll~lty will

LEGAL NOTICE
REQUESTS FOR
PROPOSALS
PRIVATE SECTOR
INITIATIVE
PROGRAM
PRIVATE
INDUSTRY
COUNCIL
The Private I ndus1ry
Council (PIC) for the
Balance of Stale (80S) Is
accepting public relations
proposalspertalnlnq to the
Private Seclor lntflative
Program under Title VII of
the Comprehensive Employment and Training Ac'
of 1978 (CETA) .
The PIC requests the
public relations proposals
1nclude methods to educate
and involve employers in
Title v 11 , and suggestions
of
obtaining
pub I ic
awareness of the activit ies
of Tille VII .
Possible activities include: the coordination of
employer seminars and informational conferences:
the coordination
and
preparation of . Title VII
news events such as press
conferences, press release
news slorles feature ar·
ticles, and other publicity
items; and the d~velop ·
ment of an advertising andor pub lic service an nouncement campaign for
Tille VII.
The basic geographic
area to be served is the 56
rural ·counties known as the
Balance of S1ate. ProP.&lt;Jsars
will be accepted unt11 5:00
PM on Aprll25 1980.
Mark Uher. PIC Liaison
Oepartmenl
of
Ad·
minlstratlve Services
30 East Broad Stree1,
28th Floor
C1&gt;lumbus, Ohio .0215
It additional information
is needed, contact Mr.
Uher al (614) 466·1033.
(3) 17, 18, 19, 20, 21. Sic

Riggs named to
president's club
POMEROY - Kenneth E. Riggs,
Reedsville, bas been named a
memller of the President's Honor
Club of John Hancock Mutual Life
Insurance Company, an association
: of leading sales representatives
~ from the firm's nationwide
:: general agency field force.
· A member of the Columbus
· 'general agency, he was among 288
:.members attending the company's
:.annual President's Honor Club
:"IDeeting last week at Caesar's
:'Palace In Las Vegas, Nevada.
; Heading the home office officials
' :tn attendance were Edwin Matz,
chairman cl the board and chief ex·
• ecutive officer, and John G.
" McElwee, president and chief opera~tloos clflcer.
.
"' Flfty·nlne first-time quaUflers and
eleven new Ufe members . were
presented with medallions, symboUc
cl membership In the Honor Club, by
McElwee.
ruggs joined the Jolm Hancock in
1965, and ill a flve-Ume qualifier for
membership In the company's
Pre.'lident's Honor Club.

ACTION FILED
Floren&lt;:e Thornton fUed suit for
support under the Reciprocal
Agreement Act In Meigs County
Common Pleas Court against Bernard 'Ibornton·
Ella MaY Southern was granted a
divorce from Robert Trenton
Southern on charges of gross neglect
of duty.

,·
-

I'

COUNTY- MEIGS
PUBLIC NOTICE
The following documents
were received or prepared
by
The
Ohio
En v.ronmental Protection
Agency during the previous
week . The effective date of
each final action is slated .
The issuance dl!lte of each
proposed action is stated .
Anyone aggrieved or adversely alfected by a final
action to issue, deny,
modify, revoke, or renew a
permit, license, or variance; or to approve or disapprove
plans
and
specifications, may file an
appeal with The En ·
v1ronmental Board of
Review Suite 305, 395 E.
Broad St., Columbus, Ohio
.0216, within thir1y (30)
days of the effective da1e,
~ursuanl to Ohio Revised
Code Section 3745.07, unless
such final action was
preceded by the same of
substantially the same
proposed action. In ad·
dillon, pursuant to Section
3745.04 of The Revised
Code, I)Oiice of the fill n~ of
the appeal shall be f tl ed
with The Director ol The
Environmental
OhiO'
Prolection Agency, 361 E.
Broad Street, Col umbus,
Ohio .0216, within three (3)
days after the appeal is
filed with
The En ·
vironmenlal Board of
Review. All !uch final ac ·
lions are so Identified. Such
persons may request an ad1udication nearmg before
The Ohio EPA on a
proposed action lo issue,
deny, modify, revoke, or
renew a permit, license, or
variance; or to approve or
disapprove plans and
speclf•catlons within lhir ·
ty (30l'days o1the issuance
dale. ORC 3745 .07 does not
provide for adjudication
nearing requests or appeals from orders, verified
complaints, or en ·

forcement
compliance
schedule letters. Within 30
days of publication in a
newspaper in the affected
county, any person may
also : (I) submit wrinen
comments relating to ac ~
tions, proposed actions,
verified co mplaints, enforcement
compliance
schedule
!elfers
or
preliminary stall determinations or permits to insta ll ; (2) request a public
meeting
regarding
proposed actions or on
preliminary staff determinations on permits to insta ll ; and -or (3) request
notice of further actions or
proceedin!IS. All requests
lor adjudication hearings
and public meetings, and
other communications concerninp public meetings,
adjud1cation
hearings,
verified complaints, and
regu lations, should be ad·
dressed to The Legal .
Records Section , Ohio
EPA, P. 0 . Box 1049,
Columbus, Ohio 43216,
(614) ~66 · 6037 . Unless
otherwise stated in par·
tlcular notices, all other
commuf1ications Including
comments on proposed actions should be addressed
either to The Division of
Authorization and Com·
pliance (Air) or Permit
and Approva I Section
(Water), whichever is ap·
propriate, at The OHio
EPA, P. 0. Box 1049,
Columbus, Ohio .0216.
Issuance of modification
to N PDES permit con·
dltlons
Ohio Power company,
Racine
Hydroelectnc
Plant
St. Rt. 338
Racine, OH , Effective
dateOJ-11-80
Receiving waters: Ohio
River
Permit No. B019·CO

"If you Block people make an
error, you pay the interest
and penalty? I shoulda
come here last
r."

COJIUllOn criminals."
The court Issued an Interim ruling

Dec. 15 calling on Iran to release the
remaining hostages immediately
and restore the diplomatic immunity of the embassy and its stall.
Iran ignored the ruling and boycot·
ted the current court se!!Sion, which
is expected to end today.

NEGOTIATIONS CONTINUING
STEUBENVIUE, Ohio (AP) Negotiations were to continue today
in a contract dispute involving poUce
officers, firefighters and employees
of the city's sanitation, water and
recreatioru~ departments.
Most of the city's, 53 pollee of·
fleers, 61 firefighters and employees
of the other departments Wednesday
returned to their jobs while the
negotiations continued The employees had gone on strike Monday.
The employees are seeking a 15
percent, aci'06S the board pay hike.

"

FOR THE BEST D&amp;ALS IN THE
TRISTATE AREA

MASON FURNITURE
Mon., Tues., Wed., Friday &amp; Sat.
8:30to5 :00Thursdaytill12 Noon

•

Vegetable
RnU,
Tea,
Coffee or Milk

N. 2nd St.

Middleport, 0.

... .

$625
.
.
Plus Tax

Mason, W. Va.

HEADQUARTERS
FOR MEN &amp;
WOMEN'S WEARING
APPAREL
IN THE ~TEST
SPRIN~ STYLES
AND FASHIONS

Appointment Available But Not Necessary

Tossed Salad
8 oz. New York Strip
Baked Polato

Herman Grate

CLOTHIERS

2nd &amp; BROWN ST .
MASON, W. VA.
OPEN TUES .
THURS &amp; SAT.
9 A.M .-5 P.M .
PHONE 773·9128

FRIDAY NIGHT SPECIAL 5 TIL 10

OPE.N EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT ONLYi

BAHR

THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

·MENU

MASON FURNITURE

. 773·5592

H&amp;R BLOCK

Weekend At Meigs Inn

(3) 20, lie

SHOP

If we should make an erro r !h at costs you additional tax .
you pay only the tax. Block pays any penalty and Interest .
We stand behind our work .

618 E. MAIN ST.
POMEROY, O.
OPEN 9 A.M . TO
6 P.M. WEEKDAYS
9·5SATURDAY
PHONE 992-3795

ENTERTAINMENT
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY
NIGHT

g \\\\
ALLL£GAL

5 WHEEL
DRIVE
FORMERLY
MIDNIGHT DUES
4 PIECE GROUP
FROM PARKERSBURG, W. VA.

BEVERAGES SOLD
You must be 21 or accompanied by parents or legal guardian.

THE MEIGS INN
Phone 992-3629

Pomeroy, 0.
'•

I
I

Flori~.:...J

'·===--==-=-=
:ASTRO•GRAPH

""'"""'Iii..•,

- Phil Bowman, Vice President, Waterloo Coal Co., Oak BiB

CARO LINE

Combines
VIBRATING' BRUSH
AGITATION and
powertul
STEAM EXTRACTION
CLEANING

By Polly Cramer
Newspaper EDterprlse Aasn.
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY- I have three bolts
of cheese cloth and would appreciate
any ideas anyone may have as to
how I could put this to good use
besides the usual ones of straining
foods, making dust cloths, etc. MARGARET
DEAR MARGARET - Sorry
but I am completely at a loss
and cannot get all
that cheese cloth
off my mind.
Surely some of
our clever readers will come to our rescue. - POI.r
LY
DEAR POLLY - Before starting
on a painting project, such as doing
a ceiling, I always put on a shower
cap. I find I paint faster and keep my
temper down, too, if I am not worrying about getting paint in my hair.
After doing my laundry I clip all
bras, pants and socks on wire coat
hangers and hang them on the outside line to dry. If the weather does
not permit then the bangers are
hung on a hook in the laundry room HELEN H.
DEAR POLLY - I save time and

Showersbower
held
wu

�3-The Daily Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pome~y. 0 ., 'Thursday, Mar. 20, 1980

Television
Viewing

·Y our Best Buys Are Found in the Sentinel Classifieds
Wanted to Buy
WANT ITEMS on con·
signment . Call 985·4133,
985·4327, or 985·3951

9

WANT AD INFORMATION

Rentals
~- - =::c==-~

PHONE 992-2156

for Sale
1971

11

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

Help wanted

firm 992 -5304.

1- C•nt ot Thanks
:r- ln Memoriam

41 - Houses tor li:tnt
42- Mobilt Homes

l- Announcements

lor Rent
44- Apartment lor Rent

J-H•ppy Ads
6-Lost and Found
7- Yard Solie

9--Wanted to Buy

Earn extra money at home,
exp . necessary . Send for
application report , W. L.

eMERCHANDISE

e EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

,, _ HeiPwanted
12 - Situo~ted

wantPd

13- tnsunnce
14- Busineu Training
IS- Schools Instruction
16-Radio, TV
&amp; ca Repair
It--Wanted To Do

.

H-

Zi dian at Pomeroy Health
Care Center Monday thru
Friday 9·5.

eFARMSUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

n - Money to Lou
13- Profenional

Services

e REAL ESTATE
31 - Hom•• for Sale
32- Moblle Homes
lor Sale

eTRANSPORTATION
JI - Autos fOr S.ale
73- 'lans &amp; ~W.O.

AUTOMOBILE
SURANCE
been

?~-Motorcycles

&amp;

33- Farms for S.le
34- 8usineu 8uil0in'ln
U - Loh &amp; Acrnge

Mll ~t.i\06\'~ &lt;i

Mon . thru Fri. 10 a.m. to 5

p.m .

Is--General Hauling
16-'M. H. Repair
17- Uphohterr

18

15 Words or Under
Cash
1.00

Charge
1.15

1.50
1.80
3.00

1.90
2.25
3.15

•ctavs

Wanted to Do

NEW LISTING -

~r

word,

u .oo

Mobile Home sales and Y:\rd sales a reaccepted only with ush wilh

order . 25 cent charge for ads carrying Bo• Number In care of The
Sentinel .

3
In Memoriam

2

In memory of our son and

grandson, Ryan Roger
Roush who was stillborn at
birth 3 years ago today,
March 20, 1977.
The day, the month, we'll
never forget, For in our
hearts you'll always stay,
Fon~
memories linger

road

every day .
Sadly missed by : Parents,

(Roger and Christy) Sisler
Kimberly
parents.

and

interested call 992· 5403.

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.
prices

highe~t

Money to Loan

22

buildings, extra trailer

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

and

GUN SHOOT EVERY
SUNDAY 1 PM . FACTORY
CHOKE DNL Y. RACINE
GUN CLUB .
GUN SHOOT. Racine
Volunteer
Fire Dept .
Every Saturday . 6:JO p.m.
At their buildingin Bashan .
Factory choke guns only .

GUN SHOOT every Sunday
12:00. Factory choke only .
Corn Hollow Gun Club,
Rutland . Proceeds donated

Picking up an Easy play
organ
in your area.
Looking for a responsible

party to lake over pay men·
ts.

Call

credit

manager

close

to

OO·Ifc

Furnished Rooms

meals. reasonable
992-6022 .

46

Space lor Rent

septic,
mines .

4 rooms, 2

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, nor!h of
Pomeroy . Large lots .Call
992 ·7479.

Unlimited. Chaperones
will be present No

.................
... ... .... ......se

4 yrs. old, large moden
kitchen, large garage
with workshop area,

separate utility, wood·
burner, one acre. Good

condition. Should sell
fast . Sl-4,900,00.
IN TOWN - 1'12 story, 2
bedroom house, full
basement,

paioled

freshly

throughout,

aluminum siding, porch
wini wrought iron rail -

ing, neat at $25,000.00.
STOP PAYING RENT
Let someone else
make your house payment for you. Large
brick apartment house
in Syracuse. Live in pa("t

Mobile Homes

32

tor Sale
1973

Fairpoint,

14x65

2

bedroom

and rent part. $28,000.00.
LOCALLY
OWNED,
FUL TIME, PROFES·
SIONAL
REAL
ESTATE . SERVICE .
OPEN FRIOAY TIL 8.
REALTOR
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
992·6191
ASSOCIATES

1971 cameron, 14x65, 2
bedr.
1971 Flee!wood, l4X65 3
bdr ., bath •;,
1971 Shakespear, 14x65 2
bedroom
1965 Yanor 12x52, 2 bedr.
1968 Flee!wood 12x63, 2
Bdr.
B /1. S MOBILE HOME
SALES, PT . PLEASANT,
wv . 304·675·4424 .

Roger &amp; Dottie Turner

742-2474
Jean Trussell949·2660
OFFICE PHONE
992-2259

col lect. 614··592·5122.
Real Estate- General

Learn to make your own

I~=========~

~

Easter Candy. Free candy
demonstration

PUSLIC NOTICE
NOTICE IS HEREBY
GIVEN THAT ON Mauh
22nd 1 1980, at 10:00 A.M . a
· public sale will be held at
105 Union Avenue ,
Pomeroy, Ohio, to sell for
cash
the following
collateral, to-wit :

1971 Plymouth, 2 Dr. Ht.

Cp.,

serial

no .

V L29G 1B408761, Model ·
Duster
The Farmers Bank and

Savings
Pomerof,

Company,
Ohio reserves

the righ to bid a! this sale.
(3) 19, 20, 21, 3tc

class .

Carousel

REAL ESTATE

confectionary . Middlepor!,
992-6342 .
Log

Cabin

Gift

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

Shop

reopeningj in New location
in former Eblin's Shake

Shop at Laurel Cliff . Open

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

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
of remodeling .

Federal

PUBLIC NOTICE
Notice is hereby given
thai on March 22nd, 1980, at
10 :00 A.M . a public sale
will be held at 105 Union

Avenue,

Pomeroy, Ohio, to

sell for cash the following
collateral, to·wit :
1974 Chevrolet Impala 4
Or . Sedan Mfr . senal no.

1L69H4S 148832, Model
li!!L69
The Farmers Bank and
Savings
Company,
Pomerof, Ohio reserves
the righ to bid all his sale.

urged

to

attend.

pay cash or certified check

antiques and collec ·

tibles or

entire

estates.

S4

work, down
spouts, some concrete
work',
walks
and
driveways.

7

Heated Garage Sale, 123
Park

Drive ,

Point

LIMESTONE,

POMEROY,O.
992·6215 or
992·7314
1·28-1 mo.

food, and all types of s~ll.
Excelsior Sail Works, Inc.,
E . Main St., Pomeroy, 992·
3891.

56

8

(3) 19, 20, 21, lie

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

BRADFORD, Auctioneer,
Complete Service. Phone
949·2487 or 949·2000. racine.
Ohio, Crill Bradford.
9

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE IS HEREBY
GIVEN THAT ON March
22ndr 1980, at 10:00 A.M . a
publ c sale will be held at
105 Union Avenue,
Pomeroy, Ohio, Ia sell for
cash
the followIng
C!&gt;llateral, to·wit :
1974 Pontiac Flreblrd 2
Dr . 1•
Serial
No .
2SI7m4N10'1864
The · Farmers Bank and
Savings
Company,
Pomeroy OhiO reserves
the right fa·bld at this sale.
(3) ·19, 20, 21. 3tc

wanted to Buy ,

BUYING U.S. SILVER
COINS DATED 1964 OR
EARLIER. AL.SO GOLD
ITEMS, DON'T LOSE
MONEY, SIMPLY PICK
UP THE PHONE AND
DIAL
614 - 992 · 5113 .
BROWN ' S.
$Cash$ for lunk cars.·
Frye' s 742 ·2081 . Open 9·5.
Closed sunday and Monday .

,

harness.

57

DOWNING4iiLDS AGENCY INC.
INSURANCE
SERVING SOUTHEASTERN OHIO SiNCE
ARE YOU PAYING TOO MUCH? DO
YOU HAVE THE COVERAGE?

FOR ALL YOUR INSURANCE NEEDS
CALL US.

992-2342
.DOWNING-CHILDS AGENCY, INC.
OHIO

and

Picking up a piano In your
area. Looking for a respon·

delivery: various sizes of

pool kits. Do-it·yaurself or
let us install for you . D.
Bumgardner

Sales,

Decorated cakes tor all oc·

Mandolin . Very
nice.
Black, trimmed in ivory.

casions. Character cakes

and sheet cakes. Call 992·
6342 or 992-2583.

Arched front and back.
New Gibson strings, copy
of Gibson model. $100. Paul
Sayre, Rl. 338, Portland,
OH. Great Bend Rd. 843·
4591.

Play gold

with each
new grips
installed
$5.00
or 4 tor
$18.50..
John Teaford 614·985· 3961.

---·.......
. ...............
·······. . . .
-

Racine Emergency Squad
will be making and selling
Easter candy. If you wish
to place orders call by Mar·

61

ch 29. 949-2028, 949-2533 or
949·2491.
Winter

Clearance.

All

2 coolers tor sale. One old
type R.C. cooler, wet or 1

dry . SlOO.
Kald ·dratt
cooler. $1.50. Both in good
cand. 992 ·2969 or can be
seen at Betty's Carryout.

POMEROY
LANDMARK
Jacic

w. Carsey~

Mgr . .
Phone 992·2181
56

Pels for Sale

RISING STAR Kennel
Boarding. Call367·0292.
·
POODLE GROOMING
Judy Taylor. 614·367-7220. ·

John Deere 640 Skidder.
Low hours. 614·423·5450
from 8 a.m.-4 p.m. or 614·
678·2289 after 6 p.m .
John Oeere·-2010 Dozer,
diesel . Good cand. $5,000.
742·2819.

DISCOUNT
PRICES
Hotpoint and
Genera I Electric
Appliance
Sales &amp; Service

Farm Equipment

Oliver Supperlor grain drill
16 disc. Wooden seed and
grain fertilizer boxes.
Automatic power lift. Trac·
tor hitch. $500. Paul Sayre,
Rt. 338, Portland, OH .
Great Bend Rd. 843·4591.

items priced to go. Fri.,
Countv

I I I II IJ

II

Jumbles OLDER

BOGUS

FORAGE

KERNEL

Answer: Their "turns" are p rimarily connected with
entrances and exits-DOORKNOBS

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Setting up needed tricks
NORTH
• A 10 6

ANNIE
6EE- HOW D''!OO
HAPPEN T' KI'IOW
50 MUCH A80UT
AAASIAN HISTORY,

OH- 16UE551
JUST HAPPEN
TO KNOW A LOT

6ENiffi)R BRASSIE?

EVERYTHING ...

ABOUT

New

+AK8

62

1

Wanted to Buy

CHIP WOOD. Poles max.
diameter 10" on largest
end. $12 p-er ton . Bundled
slab. $10 per ton. Delivered
to OhiO Pallet 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.

71

Autos for Sale

1979

camaro

1977 GMC Heavy duty 'lz
ton 8ft. bed truck with topper. Reg. gas, 350 v 8

OLD FURNI\URE, Ice
boxes, brass beds, Iron
HILLCREST KENNELS · beds, desks, etc .• complete
Boarding, all breeds. Clean
households. Write M.D.
Miller. Rt. 4, Pomerpy or
I ndoor·outdoor facilities
call992-7760.
Also AKC
registered
Dobermans. 614·446·7795.
OLD, FURNITURE, l~e
bOxes, brass beds, !r;-on
HUMANE
SOCIETY
beds, de!lks, etc:, complete
Adapt 8 homeless pet:
households. Write M.D.
Healthy, shots, warmed
Miller. Rt. ~. Pomeroy br .
Donations required . 992:
6260, noon·7 p.m.
call992-7760 .

p.b .,

p.s.,

board,

m·

PROVE ONE~
APPEAf?ANCE!

LO~E

MY flUS BAND BY
DEfAULT I

and

Excavating
-===~===""

· 83

DENNY CHAIN LINK
FENCE. Free estimate,
Ken Sales, phone 2-45·9113 . .

1973 Dodge Sportsman
Van. 1 ton. · Exc. cand.
$2,900. 773-5876.

tires,

84

AND t M 171ETER TIPPE,
A WIN WHO/.t:JPES

m

HAVE A IZE5TAURANT
HERE BE-

FORE 100 LONG J

GLORV BE !! 1F 'IOU

IT'S TIME FER

SPRING PLOWIN;
AUNT SUKEY

Electrical
&amp; Refrldgeratlon

DON'T MAKE TH' TOP

TEN ON TH' BEST
DRESSED LIST THIS
'-I'EAR, I'LL

MACHINE
all
makes.
992·2284,
The
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales
and Service. We sharpen
Scissors.

, Repairs,

p.s·., p.b., a.c., cruise

control. 985·4297.

service,

J977 Quachlta bass boat,
fully equipped, has 1978 80
h.p. Mercury rnotor. Call
992-3900 after 5:00.

3825.

'

85

43 Adolescent
emperor
DOWN
I% With 25 Across, I Called
noted newsman
the shots
13 Hangar
2Make
yourself 14 Stick
15 Distress call
3 1960
16 Wire measure
Mitchum
17 Aida's "0,
film
Patria -"
4 Coal scuttle
18 Australian
5 Laud
.bird
6 Big spoon
19 Put into
7 Belgian
service
commune
20 Poetical
8 1953 Holden
adverb
fUm
Zl Be a sign of
!3 1776 loyalisl
Z4 Unpaid
%5 See 12 Across
Z6 Pict's
descendanl
Z6 Companion
of Spanky
and AlfaHa
31 Marble
32 Cozy spot
33 Lush
34 Girl's name
35 Annoy
36 Plant
study: abbr.
37Gennan

9 More
unearthly
10 Tedious
16 Silent
22 Opposite
of 2 Down
23 Salty
character
25 Wet
Z6 Lost flavor

27 Eyetooth
Red-eyed
polecat
29 Improvise
musically
30 Finally
realize
32 San -, Ca.
38 Drop the bait
39 Teachable

zs

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter simply stands for .another. In t his sample A Ia
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters.
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

'

CRYPTOQUOTES

I
IT'S TOO
LATE FOR ME TO LEARN
A SECOND LANGVAGE

'®''
I

II .

EFF

LS

LRF

EGSNNSA ;

ASLR

LRF

QGTAF;

HTNNXSW;

F T Z.R

LS

RXN

IRTL ' N

XW

T

WTAF?

RFGFW
PTZDNSW
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: INDEPENDENCE IS THE ONLY
BOND THAT CAN TIE AND KEEP US TOG~THEit.THOMAS PAINE
.

'

C) • • Kine Futurn SyncUce,., tnc .

.,

I·

..

l'

6. 13 ;

1:00-

Tomorrow 3; News 15; 1: lsMary Hartman 8.; 1: 25-News
17
1: 30- Movie
" New
Or lean s
Uncensored" 17 ; 2:0&gt;-News 13;
J·Os-Movie " Paula" 17 .

FRIDAY, MARCH 21.19110
5: 45-Farm Report 13 ; World at
Large 17; 5:~PTL club 13 .
6:IJ0-700 Club 6.8 ; PTL Club 15;
Health Field 10.
6 30-Kidsworld 10; News II; 6:45A. M . Wealher 33; Morning
Report 3; 6 : ~Good Morning
Wes t VIrginia 13; 6:55--News 13.

7:()(}-Today 3,15; Good Morning
America 6, 13; Friday Morning 81
Batman 10; Three Stooges-Little
Rascals 17.

7:30-Famil y Affair 10; 7:5S-Chuck
While Reports 10.
8 :1J0-Capt. Kangaroo 8,1 0; Lucy
Show 17; Sesame St . 33.
9: IJO-Bob Braun 3; Phil Donahue
15, 13; Big Vlley 6; Jeffersons 10;
Beverly Hillbillies 8; Family
Affair 17.
9: 30-Bob Newhart8 ; One Day AI A
Time 10; Green acres 17 .

10:1»-Card Sharks 3,1S; Edge of
Night 6; Jeffersons 8; Joker's
Wi ld 10 ; Morning Magaz ine 13;
M ovie " The Naked Jungle" 17.

10 : 30-Hollywood S&lt;l'fares 3, 15 ;.
$20,000 Pyramid 13 ; Whew ! 8, 10;
Andy Griffith 6 .
10:5&gt;-CBS News 8; Hause Call 10.
11 :C»-High Rollers 3, 15 ; Laverne /1.
Shirley 6, lJ; Price Is Right 8, 10;
E lee. Co. 20.
11 :3 0- Wheel of Fortune 3.15 ;
Family R!1Jd 6,13; Sesame St .
20,33; 11:5&gt;-News 17 .
12 :00- Newscenter
3;
News
6.8.10. 13; Health Field 15; Love
American Style 17 .
12 :30-Ryan' s Hope 6 , 13; Search for
Tomorrow 8,10 ; Password Plus
15; Movie "Walk like a Dragan"
17; Elec. Co . 33.
I :IJO-DaysofOur Lives 3,15; All My
Children 6. 13; Young /1. the
Restless 8, 10.
2: IJO-Doclors 3,15 ; One Life Ia Live
6, 13; As The World Turns 8, 10;
2:2&gt;-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; Personal Time Management
33.
3:30-Fiintslones 17; Over Easy 33 .
4:00- Misler Cartoon 3; Merv
Griffin 6; Petticoat Junction 8;
Sesame 51 . 20,33 ; Real McCoys
13; Little Rascals 15; Spec4:30-Lone Ranger 3; Gomer Pyle 8;
Brady Bunch 10; Tom &amp; Jerry
13; Gilligan 's Is. 17.
5: IJO-Caral Burnell 3; Sanford &amp;
Son 8; Mary Tyler Moore 10; My
Three Sons 17; Mister Rogers'
Neighborhood 20,33 .
5:30-Mash 3; News 6 ; Play the
Percentages 8; E lee. Co. 20;
Mash 10; Happy Days Again 13; I
Dream of Jeannie 17; Doctor
Who 33.
6:1»-News 3,8,10,13, 15; ABC News
6: Carol Burnettl7 ; 3-2·1 Contact
20,33.
6: 30-NBC News3 ,15; ABC News 13;
CBS News 8, 10; Carol Burnett 6;
Bob Newharl 17; VIlla Aleor.e 20;
Wild Wild World of Animals 33.
t: IJO-Cross-Wits 3; Tic Tac Dough
8: Newlywed G•me 6,13 ;
MacNeil -Lehrer Report 33 ;
News 10; Love, American Style
15; Sanford /1. Son 17; Dick
Cavett 20.
7:30-Prlce Is Right J ; Solid Gold '79
6: Family Feud 10; Joker's Wild
8; Dick Cavell 33 ; Pap Goes The
Country 13,15; All In The Family .
17; MacNeil -Lehrer Report 20.
8:1»-Here' s Boomer 3, 15; When the
Whistle Blows 13; Incredible
Hulk 8, 10 ; Angel · Death 6;
Washington Week In Review
20,33; Movie " The Curse of the
Werewolf" 17.
8 : 30-Facts of Life 3, 15; Wall Street
Week 20,33.
9 :()(}-Gosslp Columnist 3; Movie " A
Vacation In Hell" 6; Pink Lady
15; Oukes of Hazzard 8, 10; Roots
13; Ruth ~f.'age: 20; American
Short Story 33.
·
IO:C»-Besl of Saturday Night Live
lS; Dallas 8,10; Perspective on
Greatness 17; News 20.
10:30-()ver Easy 20; Murder Most
English 33.
11 : e»-News 3,6,8,10, 13,15; Last of
the Wild 17; Dick Cavett,20 .
ll : 30-Tonlght3,15; ABC News6,13;
NBA Basketball 8; ABC Cap·
llon4d News 33; Movie "Death
Curse. of Tarfu" 10; Movie "The
Omegans" 17.

LS

'

m-

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

Yesterday's Allswer

star

Ia

Genenl Hauling

12 : 55-Barelta

treman 17 .

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

WILL HAUL limestone and :
;:======~===
gravel. Also, lime hauling'
76
Auto Pam
~ 'and spreading. Lea Morris:
Trucking. Phone 7-42··2-155. :
&amp; Accossot'les
'
1.972 Monte Carla, body par- · Ll mestone for driveways '
ts for sale. Call after 5.
Pomeroy-Mason area. 367: ,
2779.
.
"7101.
.
'

'.

dog

t2 Tyrant

art songs

EAT 'lORE
HAT

Reynolds Electric, 651 •
Beech St., Middleport, OH. :
Rewind and Repair electric.
motors. 992-2356.

1979
BAJA
Trl - 16
Fiberglass boat, with side
curtains and tap; and 115
h-P· Mercury outboard
motor and ·Tenn. custom
trailer. Used one boating
sea~n. Mariy extras. 9926288.

41 Hungarian

39 11 MASH"

ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR Sweeperf1
toasters, Irons, all small
appliances. Lawn mowem
Next to State HlghwQ
Garage an Route 7, 985-

Boatsand
Motors for Sale

'

I RUN A LfTTlE
SHOP A FEW
BLOCK!&gt; FROM
HERf:.

~ARNEY

SEWING
78 Chevv van. 31,000 mi.
Reclining swivel bucket
seats, carpet and paneling,
rally wheels and radial

IM 61 LL WRIGHT.

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

vans&amp;4W.D.

1979 Ford 150 4x4, auto.,
p.s., p.b., topper. Positive
traction front and rear. 985·
4339.

IT'S. NEVER 100 IHQD.E NOT! I
lATE TO IMVON'T WANT 70

Reasonable

ces.

27,600 actual miles. A-1
cond. 949·2820.
73

WINNIE

CARPENTER WORK
complete remodeling by AI
Tromm. 7-42·2328. Referen·

sliding back window, am
radio, CB, 4 new !Ires, rustrunning

Home
1mprovements

WALL PAPERING
painting. H2·2328.

fO Infuriate

ACROSS

I aty in Maine
5 Covered, as
II Roman

.
40"x9"x1Q"

rates. scotchguard.
6309 or 742·2211 .

(For a copy of JACOBY
MODERN, senti $1 to: " Win at
Bridge, " care of this newspaper. P. 0 . Box 489. Radio City
Statton. New York, N. Y
100 19.)

by THOMAS JOSEPH

with annor

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

estimate .

Trucks for Sale

proof,

He must
have done it
in his sleep!

l ihouqht he
didn't do am~­
ihinql

s &amp; G Carpet Cleaninw,
Steam
cleaned.
Free

1979 Jeep Wagoneer, 4 dr.,
tully equipped, exc. cond.
$7,5011.7-42-3117 after 5 p. m.

75
OLD COINS, pocket wat·
ches, class rings, wedding
bands, diamonds. Gold or
sliver. Call J. A. Wamsley,
742·2331 . . Treasure Chest
Coin Shop, Athens, OH . 592·
6462.

81

cellent condition . Loaded.
Cast over $9,000. Priced for
quick sale. 742·2143.

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

~~tal

GASOIJNE AUEY

Z · 28.

Automatic, 5500 miles, ex-

automatic,

3•:l0

high. used !Wice $15. 992 ·
5390 .

..0.0 • I J&gt; . 0.0 _, ....... •••

I NT
Pass

The student smiled happily
when his jack of spades held
the first trick . He had already
left his seat on his way to
watch the Professor operate.
He couldn't believe his eyes
when the Professor played the
deuce of diamonds from dum-

2·28-1 mo.

Auto Ramps,

Pass
Pass

By Oswald Jaeoby
and Alan Sontag

No Sunday Calls

76

1+

Opening lead :+ 4

. .. ARE'IOU
DENY THEM
RIG&gt;IT TO BETTER
THEIR UVES??

7

PH. 949-2801

............ , •........

72

NOW 'IOU LISSEN T'ME,
OOP! THIS WHOLE TRADE
DEAL DEPENDSONVOU
GOI"'' WITI-1 THESE
LITTLE GUYS!

FOR
SILVER DOllARS

Mixed Hay, 60c a bale~ 9923981.

1t
3 NT

Easl · Soutb

AUEYOOP

PAYING •••
$20.00 AND UP:i

Hay &amp; Grain

North

Pass
Pass
Pass

Call Howard
949-2862
1-22-lfc

Nice Pigs. 949-2857.

•

West

Free Estimates

Livestock

63

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

Reasonable Prices

62
Wanted to Buy
GOLD AND
SILVER
COINS OF THE WORLD.
RINGS,
JEWELRY ,
STErlLING SILVER AND
MISC. ITEMS. PAYING
RECORD•
HIGH ,
HIGHEST UP·TO· DATE
PRICES . CONTACT ED
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP, Ml DDLEPORT,
OHIO, OR CALL 992-3476.

+A 8 7

+J6 542

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

5th St.
Haven, w. Ja.
3·17-1 mo.

+K 109

.KQJ
t75

ROOFING

WATERMELON
PATCH

+KQ8642
+Q3
WEST
EAST
+Q964 2
• 7 53
• 87 3
• 9 54 2
• 10 3
t AJ9
SOUTH

l H. L WHITESEL

See
First for All
of Your Maternity
Needs.
Tops-Pants
Jumpers· Dresses

East won with the nine and
led a spade won by the Professor's king.
Now the Prof led a diamond
toward dummy .and rose with
the king. East ducked bu t had
to win the next diamond .
East led a third spade,
whereupon the Prof wound up
with three spades, three
hearts, four diamonds, game,
rubber and an overtrick .
" Why didn't you come to
your hand with a heart at
trick two and lead a diamond
to dl!mmy 's king or queen ''"
asked the student . .
"'Because I wanted to win
the rubber," was the reply.
This is the sort of hand that
many players throw out the
window. If a diamond is ledfo
dummy's king, all East has to
do is duck. Then he wins the
second diamond and leads a
spade. Diamonds are not set
up. And sihce there is only one
entry to dummy. that diamond suit is going to produce
just that one trick taken at the
start. South will wind up with
seven tricks instead of nine or
10.

3·20·80

+Jio

HMMPH! CAN'T
SAY I'M TOO
GRATEFUL 10
THEM FOR
THAT••

Texas " 17.
11 : 45---Police Woman 6 ,13 .

BRIDGE

~TI()I.)$, TOO!

THE ARABS ARE A GREAT
PEOPLE, ANNIE! THEY 6AVE
UG MUCH OF WHAT WE KNOW
ABO\JT MEDICINE, ASTRONOMY,
MATHEMATICS · ·ALGEBRA IS
THEIR IINENTIOM··

8 :C»-Buck Rogers 3. 15 ; Mark &amp;
Mindy 6. 13 ; Pa l merstown ,
U.S.A. 8.10; Bill Moyers' Journal
20,33; Movie " Games" 17.
8 · 30- Benson 6, 13; 9 : 00-Qulncy
3, 15; Barney M iller 6; Roots 13;
Sneak Pre'liews 20,ll.
9:30-Soap 6 ; Camera Three 20;
Sports : Close Up 33.
10 :1»-Rockford Files 3,15; 20·20 6;
Knots Landing 8, 10; Americans
17 ; News 20; Austin City Limits
33 ; 10: 30--&lt;lver Easy 20.
II :C»-News 3,6,8, 10, 13, 15; Last of
the Wild 17 ; Dick Cavell 20; Fll!_
a. Rise oi R~inald Perrin 33.
11 :30-TonightJ ,lS ; ABC News6, 13;
Columbo 8; ABC Captioned News
33; Movie " And Mill ions Will
Die " 10; Movie " Two Guys from

4:3&gt;-Movie " Castle in the Desert"
17 .

Tbunday, March ZU

992-3795-

sible party to take over

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

Inc.

992·5724 .

Save Money -

Free Estimates
388 9759
.2-14-lfc

Musical
Instruments

IN STOCK for immediate

Society Thrill Shop, Mid·
dleport, OH.

RODNEY DOWNING, BROKE R-HO. 992-3731
.;.., 992-2449
BILL CHILDS, BRANCH MGR.-HO.

Horses

ponies. Ruth Reeves. 614·
698 ·3290. Barding and
Riding Lessons and Horse
Care products. Western
boots. Children's $15.50.
Adults $29.00.

EMERGENCY
power
alternators- own the best
-buy Winpower . Call513·
788·2589.

rnvestment.

_______________ ___ --

Pels tor Sale

HOOF HOLLOW, English
and Western. Saddles and

APPLES- ROME beauty
apples at $4 per bu. Besttor
apple buller. Call 669·3785,
Fitzpatrick Orchard, SR
689.

and 22.

CALL 992-2342

Pleasant, W. Va . Mon.·Sat.
8·3.

r I IJ I

lrom Jumble, do this newspaper, 8o• 34, NorwOOd, N.J .07&amp;41. 1ncludl your
n~me, addre.. , zip cOde 1twl make eheekl ,..,.able to Newapa~•-

'WADf&gt;..'it&gt;. I.AE&gt;NJ z
'(OI.J Ml~ I&gt;U.-

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

repair-

it. C. YOUNG Ill

sand, gravel, calcium
chloride, fertilizer, dog

BUILDING OR TRAILER LOT - Hysell Run Road
- 5 acres. $7,000.
SYRACUSE - Old house on a nice lot, $11./oOO.
LJ:)T IN MIDDLEPORT- We will build a house on
this one if you choose - south Second Ave .

Yard Sale

gested b)' the above cartoon

Jumb.. BOOk No. 14, eont1lnlng 110purzlea, ls IVIillble torS 1.75 postp11CS

BORN LOSER

WE BRING THE
GARAGE TO YOU!!!

Roofing,
siding,
gutter,
atuil1-up
roof
and
home

(FREE ESTIMATES)

Misc. Merchanise

COAL,

RUTLAND - Older home needs sOfTie repairs on
Salem Street. N ice corner tot. $9900.00.

992·7106, Jim Anderson949·
2534, or Roy Howell 992
5421.

Now arrange the Clrded letters to
form lhe SUfPrise ·answer. as sug-

(Answ."trs tomorrow)

.AUTO REPAIR

us

Gutter

coin collections. Call 614·
767 -3167 or 557·3411.

doors. Owner will help finance if you need it . $17,500.

questions call Bill Greuser

Pomeroy, Oh.

PREGNANT?

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING

bath, full base ment, gas furnace, storm windows &amp;

Any •

Answer hare :

3·2·1 mo.

l·==========t======~~~~~==::==~~~~

ATTENTION:
(1M ·
PORTANT TO YOU) Will

Humane

MIDDLE PORT - Three bedr9om , l'h bi'lh, nice lot
1ust one block from heart of town . $25,000.
POMEROY - On Lincoln His. - Two bedroom and

r J

1

ASK FOR DAVE

ROOFING

&amp;

CALL 992-7544

coin collections. Call 614·
767-3167
or 557·3411.
guns, pocket
watches and

far

Housing

Hours9·1 M .. w .. F.
Other times by appointment.
101 Sycamore CRear
Pomeroy,O.

AT TENT 1oN :
c 1M .
PORTANT TO YOU) Will
pay cash or certified check
for antiques and collec·
tibles or entire estates.
Nothing too large. Also,

Sat., March 21

of ground . $39.000 .

members and anyone in·
terested in joining are

CAU. 992-3238

GEORGE'S

veterans Admin. Loans.

Antiques

53

Meigs

RACINE - Peace and quiet in the country. Just a
few miles from Racine . Remodeled home on 2 acres

The Big Bend Bass Anglers
Club will have a meeting
Tues. night, 7 p.m. at Shade
Valley Clubhouse. All old

ts]YRINT±

2·25 · 1 mo :~

REAL ESTATE
FlNANCtNG

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.

~usy corner rn center of town . Fully rented. A good

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

appearance . In the process

618 E. Main

FOR \H IS.

my at trick two .

every Sat. at 1 or call for
evening

Been in Business
For 5 Years

ONE WOULDN 'T CLOSE
A \AILOR 5HC'"'

Household Goods

Nothing too large. Also,

bedroom ranch, approx.

for details. IRELAND
MORTGAGE CO., 77 E.
State St., Athens. 592·3051.

51'READIN&amp; Oun NOW '5
MV CHANCE FOil A CLEA&gt;I SHOT:

H&amp;R BLOCK OFFICE LOCATION

mitted. For further info., call992·6058.
2-28·1 mo. pd .

guns, pocket watches and

$5,600.00.
TUPPERS PLAINS - 3

refinancing

"FREE ESnMATES"

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

alcoholic beverages per-

bath,

with

b
D -

_J

THEY'~E

CHRIS! U5! '1'01)11. ~I!AOI
TI!AT 'S A POLICe CHOPPEII.-ANO THEY'VE SPOTTED YOU!

·Tri-County
·Bookkeeping
Service

"Disco Lighting"
Admission $2.00 Single
$3.00 Couple
Sponsored by Music

..._

,

tYAARTS

Remodeling

YEEN DISCO
DANCE
At The Orchid Room
E. Main 51 . Pomeroy, 0.
EVERY
SATURDAY NIGHT
8:00 Til11 :30

rates .

some furniture, nice
starter home or rental.

bedroom

your present home. CON
VENTIONAL · 5 Pel . down.
VA · no down payment.
FHA · low down paymenl.
FHA ·- 245 graduated
payment program. FHA

to Boy Scout Troop 249 .
making

with

Syracuse -

Mortgage
. money
available . New homes, oldhomes

hookup

$42,000.00 .
NEW LISTING

Contact Ed Burkett Barber
Shop, Middleport.
GOLD,
SILVER
OR
FOREIGN COINS, OR
ANY OTHER GOLD OR
SILVER ITEMS. ALSO,
ANTIQUE FURNITURE
OR OTHER ANTIQUE
ITEMS. WILL PAY TOP
DOLLAR . CHECK WITH
OSBY COSSIE) MARTIN
BEFORE
SELLING .
PHONE 992··6370. ALSO
DO APPRAISING.

44

pond, 2 story barn, other

265 subsidy program. Call
possible for gold and silver
coins, rings, jewelry, etc.

frontage.

acres,
7
room,
4
bedroom 2 yr. old
mpdular home, stocked

Grand -

Announcements

3

RENTER' S assistance for
Senior Citizens In Village
Manor apts. Call992·7787 .

10

$10.000.00.
NEW LISTING -

Announcements

1 PAY

3 AND 4 RM furnished apIS. Phone 992-5434.

oven, about 1 yr. old . In ex -

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

Give piano lessons to begin·
ners and advanced student
in my home . Also teach
chording and transposing if

rate.

' u nts

Auto &amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992 -5682

for Rent

cellent cond. $150. 992 -7051.

acres vacant land. Gas,
electric, and water
available,
close
to

Each word OYer the minim1.1m 15 words is 4 cenfs per word per dir .
Ads running other than consecutin dns will be chugeG 11 the 1 an

In mtmory, Card ot Thank' and Obituary ;
minimum. Cuh in advance.

Apartment

992-2259

Rates and Other Information

1 days
3 days

44

tric range. Equipped with
clock. timer, self cleaning

JY

608 E.

Will lay brick and block .
Pour concrete. 992-3714.

....

Rutland .

General Electric gold elec -

•~- Electrical

tor Monday

mile off Rt. 7 by-pass
on St. R:t . 124 toward

Gutters and

•New homes
extensive remod~l . ing
*Electrical work
*Masonry work
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992· 7583
2·24·1 mo.

THURSDAY . MARCH 20, 1910

rJ 1n

We Do Roofing,

CONSTRUCTION

l '"

rooms and bath . 992-3090.

Sl

s, win $50,000. 304·J4Hl03

ROUSH

Roger Hysell
Garage

Reference

....

Wanted : Fighers-Brawler·

&amp; A'etrigeratlon

P .M. Daily
1'l Noon Saturday

security .

mandatory. Call992·3381.

General

81 - Home lmproYtmenh

.t

l si and last month's rent
and

my hpme for elderly , good

Miscellaneous

17

12- Piumblng&amp; E•tnatln\1
U - E,cavatintj!

Want-Ad Advertising
Deadlines

month. Six months lease,

992·2143.

eSERVICES

Lincoln

Have room and board in

Lots &amp; Acreage

Real Estate

house

Heights, Pomeroy. $200 per

celled?
Lost
your
operator's license? Phone

AufoPuh

Accnsorln

71- Auto Rep.alr

l6-Raal Estate wanted
l7 - N'eanon

IN ·
can·

bedroom

45

10 Acres more or less. Rt .
248 be!Ween Chester and
Long Bottom. 985·3368 .

Insurance

.,._ ._

Yesterdays

S acres, just off Flatwoods
Road, 1 mile from old RI.3J
and6milesfrom Rl. 7. Call
m -3900 after after 5:00.

House.
1~

a-

35

Grill Cook Wanted. No ex·
perience necessary . Apply
in person Crow's Steak

n-wanrHI ro Buy
72- Truckslor Sill!
63- Livaslock
6.t- H.ay &amp; Grain
U - Seed &amp; Fertilirer

BUsiness
Opportunity

rights. 577,000. 992·7559.

Full lime and part lime RN
or LPN . 11 ·7. Contact Mr.

61 - Farm EQuipment

e FINANCIAL

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

Ohlinger, W. Columbia, W.
Va . 25287.

51 - Household GCIOCls
H-CB, TV, Aadlo Equipme nt
53-Antiques
S.t-Misc . Mtrdlandlle
5!- Buildlng Supplies
56- Pets for Sale

with

available. Located approx .
7 miles from Pomeroy off
Rt. 7 or 33. 446·2359 after 6.

good pay, easy work, no

I Auctlcm

HOME

stocked pond for swimming
or fishing , 9 rooms, bath,
carpeted . 3 to 17 acres

the eligibility list at 992
2156or992·2157.

4s-FRooms
46-Sp.ce lor Rent
47-Wanted to Rent
• 48- Equipmtntlor Rent

I- Public Solie

COUNTRY

Business Services

Houses for Rent

Hou se for
Rent, un furnished , no inside pets. 4

Farms for Sale

33

tinel route carrier. Phone
us right away and get on

eRENTALS

A.C .,

Ready to move into. $6500

some great gifts as a SeneANNOUNCEMENTS

furnished ,

very good condition. On a
lot that ca n be rented .

GET VALUABLE training
as a young business person
and earn good money plus

41

Available April 15. Two

12x65 Trailer, com-

pletely

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

4- Givuway

Mobile Homes

32

I'-..I . .. __J
---

11 :45--Charlle's Angels 6; Movie
"Fall Sale" 13 .
12 : 55- FBI , 6 ; 1 :00-Midnlght
Special 3,15; 1:25--News. 17.
1 : 45-News 13; Movie "Last
Treasure of the Aztecs" 17:.
2:30-News 3.
3: o!O-Movle "Sergeant 1&lt; of the
Foreign Legion" 17; 5:-40---Love,
American Style 17.

�3-The Daily Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pome~y. 0 ., 'Thursday, Mar. 20, 1980

Television
Viewing

·Y our Best Buys Are Found in the Sentinel Classifieds
Wanted to Buy
WANT ITEMS on con·
signment . Call 985·4133,
985·4327, or 985·3951

9

WANT AD INFORMATION

Rentals
~- - =::c==-~

PHONE 992-2156

for Sale
1971

11

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

Help wanted

firm 992 -5304.

1- C•nt ot Thanks
:r- ln Memoriam

41 - Houses tor li:tnt
42- Mobilt Homes

l- Announcements

lor Rent
44- Apartment lor Rent

J-H•ppy Ads
6-Lost and Found
7- Yard Solie

9--Wanted to Buy

Earn extra money at home,
exp . necessary . Send for
application report , W. L.

eMERCHANDISE

e EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

,, _ HeiPwanted
12 - Situo~ted

wantPd

13- tnsunnce
14- Busineu Training
IS- Schools Instruction
16-Radio, TV
&amp; ca Repair
It--Wanted To Do

.

H-

Zi dian at Pomeroy Health
Care Center Monday thru
Friday 9·5.

eFARMSUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

n - Money to Lou
13- Profenional

Services

e REAL ESTATE
31 - Hom•• for Sale
32- Moblle Homes
lor Sale

eTRANSPORTATION
JI - Autos fOr S.ale
73- 'lans &amp; ~W.O.

AUTOMOBILE
SURANCE
been

?~-Motorcycles

&amp;

33- Farms for S.le
34- 8usineu 8uil0in'ln
U - Loh &amp; Acrnge

Mll ~t.i\06\'~ &lt;i

Mon . thru Fri. 10 a.m. to 5

p.m .

Is--General Hauling
16-'M. H. Repair
17- Uphohterr

18

15 Words or Under
Cash
1.00

Charge
1.15

1.50
1.80
3.00

1.90
2.25
3.15

•ctavs

Wanted to Do

NEW LISTING -

~r

word,

u .oo

Mobile Home sales and Y:\rd sales a reaccepted only with ush wilh

order . 25 cent charge for ads carrying Bo• Number In care of The
Sentinel .

3
In Memoriam

2

In memory of our son and

grandson, Ryan Roger
Roush who was stillborn at
birth 3 years ago today,
March 20, 1977.
The day, the month, we'll
never forget, For in our
hearts you'll always stay,
Fon~
memories linger

road

every day .
Sadly missed by : Parents,

(Roger and Christy) Sisler
Kimberly
parents.

and

interested call 992· 5403.

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.
prices

highe~t

Money to Loan

22

buildings, extra trailer

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

and

GUN SHOOT EVERY
SUNDAY 1 PM . FACTORY
CHOKE DNL Y. RACINE
GUN CLUB .
GUN SHOOT. Racine
Volunteer
Fire Dept .
Every Saturday . 6:JO p.m.
At their buildingin Bashan .
Factory choke guns only .

GUN SHOOT every Sunday
12:00. Factory choke only .
Corn Hollow Gun Club,
Rutland . Proceeds donated

Picking up an Easy play
organ
in your area.
Looking for a responsible

party to lake over pay men·
ts.

Call

credit

manager

close

to

OO·Ifc

Furnished Rooms

meals. reasonable
992-6022 .

46

Space lor Rent

septic,
mines .

4 rooms, 2

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, nor!h of
Pomeroy . Large lots .Call
992 ·7479.

Unlimited. Chaperones
will be present No

.................
... ... .... ......se

4 yrs. old, large moden
kitchen, large garage
with workshop area,

separate utility, wood·
burner, one acre. Good

condition. Should sell
fast . Sl-4,900,00.
IN TOWN - 1'12 story, 2
bedroom house, full
basement,

paioled

freshly

throughout,

aluminum siding, porch
wini wrought iron rail -

ing, neat at $25,000.00.
STOP PAYING RENT
Let someone else
make your house payment for you. Large
brick apartment house
in Syracuse. Live in pa("t

Mobile Homes

32

tor Sale
1973

Fairpoint,

14x65

2

bedroom

and rent part. $28,000.00.
LOCALLY
OWNED,
FUL TIME, PROFES·
SIONAL
REAL
ESTATE . SERVICE .
OPEN FRIOAY TIL 8.
REALTOR
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
992·6191
ASSOCIATES

1971 cameron, 14x65, 2
bedr.
1971 Flee!wood, l4X65 3
bdr ., bath •;,
1971 Shakespear, 14x65 2
bedroom
1965 Yanor 12x52, 2 bedr.
1968 Flee!wood 12x63, 2
Bdr.
B /1. S MOBILE HOME
SALES, PT . PLEASANT,
wv . 304·675·4424 .

Roger &amp; Dottie Turner

742-2474
Jean Trussell949·2660
OFFICE PHONE
992-2259

col lect. 614··592·5122.
Real Estate- General

Learn to make your own

I~=========~

~

Easter Candy. Free candy
demonstration

PUSLIC NOTICE
NOTICE IS HEREBY
GIVEN THAT ON Mauh
22nd 1 1980, at 10:00 A.M . a
· public sale will be held at
105 Union Avenue ,
Pomeroy, Ohio, to sell for
cash
the following
collateral, to-wit :

1971 Plymouth, 2 Dr. Ht.

Cp.,

serial

no .

V L29G 1B408761, Model ·
Duster
The Farmers Bank and

Savings
Pomerof,

Company,
Ohio reserves

the righ to bid a! this sale.
(3) 19, 20, 21, 3tc

class .

Carousel

REAL ESTATE

confectionary . Middlepor!,
992-6342 .
Log

Cabin

Gift

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

Shop

reopeningj in New location
in former Eblin's Shake

Shop at Laurel Cliff . Open

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

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
of remodeling .

Federal

PUBLIC NOTICE
Notice is hereby given
thai on March 22nd, 1980, at
10 :00 A.M . a public sale
will be held at 105 Union

Avenue,

Pomeroy, Ohio, to

sell for cash the following
collateral, to·wit :
1974 Chevrolet Impala 4
Or . Sedan Mfr . senal no.

1L69H4S 148832, Model
li!!L69
The Farmers Bank and
Savings
Company,
Pomerof, Ohio reserves
the righ to bid all his sale.

urged

to

attend.

pay cash or certified check

antiques and collec ·

tibles or

entire

estates.

S4

work, down
spouts, some concrete
work',
walks
and
driveways.

7

Heated Garage Sale, 123
Park

Drive ,

Point

LIMESTONE,

POMEROY,O.
992·6215 or
992·7314
1·28-1 mo.

food, and all types of s~ll.
Excelsior Sail Works, Inc.,
E . Main St., Pomeroy, 992·
3891.

56

8

(3) 19, 20, 21, lie

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

BRADFORD, Auctioneer,
Complete Service. Phone
949·2487 or 949·2000. racine.
Ohio, Crill Bradford.
9

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE IS HEREBY
GIVEN THAT ON March
22ndr 1980, at 10:00 A.M . a
publ c sale will be held at
105 Union Avenue,
Pomeroy, Ohio, Ia sell for
cash
the followIng
C!&gt;llateral, to·wit :
1974 Pontiac Flreblrd 2
Dr . 1•
Serial
No .
2SI7m4N10'1864
The · Farmers Bank and
Savings
Company,
Pomeroy OhiO reserves
the right fa·bld at this sale.
(3) ·19, 20, 21. 3tc

wanted to Buy ,

BUYING U.S. SILVER
COINS DATED 1964 OR
EARLIER. AL.SO GOLD
ITEMS, DON'T LOSE
MONEY, SIMPLY PICK
UP THE PHONE AND
DIAL
614 - 992 · 5113 .
BROWN ' S.
$Cash$ for lunk cars.·
Frye' s 742 ·2081 . Open 9·5.
Closed sunday and Monday .

,

harness.

57

DOWNING4iiLDS AGENCY INC.
INSURANCE
SERVING SOUTHEASTERN OHIO SiNCE
ARE YOU PAYING TOO MUCH? DO
YOU HAVE THE COVERAGE?

FOR ALL YOUR INSURANCE NEEDS
CALL US.

992-2342
.DOWNING-CHILDS AGENCY, INC.
OHIO

and

Picking up a piano In your
area. Looking for a respon·

delivery: various sizes of

pool kits. Do-it·yaurself or
let us install for you . D.
Bumgardner

Sales,

Decorated cakes tor all oc·

Mandolin . Very
nice.
Black, trimmed in ivory.

casions. Character cakes

and sheet cakes. Call 992·
6342 or 992-2583.

Arched front and back.
New Gibson strings, copy
of Gibson model. $100. Paul
Sayre, Rl. 338, Portland,
OH. Great Bend Rd. 843·
4591.

Play gold

with each
new grips
installed
$5.00
or 4 tor
$18.50..
John Teaford 614·985· 3961.

---·.......
. ...............
·······. . . .
-

Racine Emergency Squad
will be making and selling
Easter candy. If you wish
to place orders call by Mar·

61

ch 29. 949-2028, 949-2533 or
949·2491.
Winter

Clearance.

All

2 coolers tor sale. One old
type R.C. cooler, wet or 1

dry . SlOO.
Kald ·dratt
cooler. $1.50. Both in good
cand. 992 ·2969 or can be
seen at Betty's Carryout.

POMEROY
LANDMARK
Jacic

w. Carsey~

Mgr . .
Phone 992·2181
56

Pels for Sale

RISING STAR Kennel
Boarding. Call367·0292.
·
POODLE GROOMING
Judy Taylor. 614·367-7220. ·

John Deere 640 Skidder.
Low hours. 614·423·5450
from 8 a.m.-4 p.m. or 614·
678·2289 after 6 p.m .
John Oeere·-2010 Dozer,
diesel . Good cand. $5,000.
742·2819.

DISCOUNT
PRICES
Hotpoint and
Genera I Electric
Appliance
Sales &amp; Service

Farm Equipment

Oliver Supperlor grain drill
16 disc. Wooden seed and
grain fertilizer boxes.
Automatic power lift. Trac·
tor hitch. $500. Paul Sayre,
Rt. 338, Portland, OH .
Great Bend Rd. 843·4591.

items priced to go. Fri.,
Countv

I I I II IJ

II

Jumbles OLDER

BOGUS

FORAGE

KERNEL

Answer: Their "turns" are p rimarily connected with
entrances and exits-DOORKNOBS

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Setting up needed tricks
NORTH
• A 10 6

ANNIE
6EE- HOW D''!OO
HAPPEN T' KI'IOW
50 MUCH A80UT
AAASIAN HISTORY,

OH- 16UE551
JUST HAPPEN
TO KNOW A LOT

6ENiffi)R BRASSIE?

EVERYTHING ...

ABOUT

New

+AK8

62

1

Wanted to Buy

CHIP WOOD. Poles max.
diameter 10" on largest
end. $12 p-er ton . Bundled
slab. $10 per ton. Delivered
to OhiO Pallet 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.

71

Autos for Sale

1979

camaro

1977 GMC Heavy duty 'lz
ton 8ft. bed truck with topper. Reg. gas, 350 v 8

OLD FURNI\URE, Ice
boxes, brass beds, Iron
HILLCREST KENNELS · beds, desks, etc .• complete
Boarding, all breeds. Clean
households. Write M.D.
Miller. Rt. 4, Pomerpy or
I ndoor·outdoor facilities
call992-7760.
Also AKC
registered
Dobermans. 614·446·7795.
OLD, FURNITURE, l~e
bOxes, brass beds, !r;-on
HUMANE
SOCIETY
beds, de!lks, etc:, complete
Adapt 8 homeless pet:
households. Write M.D.
Healthy, shots, warmed
Miller. Rt. ~. Pomeroy br .
Donations required . 992:
6260, noon·7 p.m.
call992-7760 .

p.b .,

p.s.,

board,

m·

PROVE ONE~
APPEAf?ANCE!

LO~E

MY flUS BAND BY
DEfAULT I

and

Excavating
-===~===""

· 83

DENNY CHAIN LINK
FENCE. Free estimate,
Ken Sales, phone 2-45·9113 . .

1973 Dodge Sportsman
Van. 1 ton. · Exc. cand.
$2,900. 773-5876.

tires,

84

AND t M 171ETER TIPPE,
A WIN WHO/.t:JPES

m

HAVE A IZE5TAURANT
HERE BE-

FORE 100 LONG J

GLORV BE !! 1F 'IOU

IT'S TIME FER

SPRING PLOWIN;
AUNT SUKEY

Electrical
&amp; Refrldgeratlon

DON'T MAKE TH' TOP

TEN ON TH' BEST
DRESSED LIST THIS
'-I'EAR, I'LL

MACHINE
all
makes.
992·2284,
The
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales
and Service. We sharpen
Scissors.

, Repairs,

p.s·., p.b., a.c., cruise

control. 985·4297.

service,

J977 Quachlta bass boat,
fully equipped, has 1978 80
h.p. Mercury rnotor. Call
992-3900 after 5:00.

3825.

'

85

43 Adolescent
emperor
DOWN
I% With 25 Across, I Called
noted newsman
the shots
13 Hangar
2Make
yourself 14 Stick
15 Distress call
3 1960
16 Wire measure
Mitchum
17 Aida's "0,
film
Patria -"
4 Coal scuttle
18 Australian
5 Laud
.bird
6 Big spoon
19 Put into
7 Belgian
service
commune
20 Poetical
8 1953 Holden
adverb
fUm
Zl Be a sign of
!3 1776 loyalisl
Z4 Unpaid
%5 See 12 Across
Z6 Pict's
descendanl
Z6 Companion
of Spanky
and AlfaHa
31 Marble
32 Cozy spot
33 Lush
34 Girl's name
35 Annoy
36 Plant
study: abbr.
37Gennan

9 More
unearthly
10 Tedious
16 Silent
22 Opposite
of 2 Down
23 Salty
character
25 Wet
Z6 Lost flavor

27 Eyetooth
Red-eyed
polecat
29 Improvise
musically
30 Finally
realize
32 San -, Ca.
38 Drop the bait
39 Teachable

zs

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter simply stands for .another. In t his sample A Ia
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters.
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

'

CRYPTOQUOTES

I
IT'S TOO
LATE FOR ME TO LEARN
A SECOND LANGVAGE

'®''
I

II .

EFF

LS

LRF

EGSNNSA ;

ASLR

LRF

QGTAF;

HTNNXSW;

F T Z.R

LS

RXN

IRTL ' N

XW

T

WTAF?

RFGFW
PTZDNSW
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: INDEPENDENCE IS THE ONLY
BOND THAT CAN TIE AND KEEP US TOG~THEit.THOMAS PAINE
.

'

C) • • Kine Futurn SyncUce,., tnc .

.,

I·

..

l'

6. 13 ;

1:00-

Tomorrow 3; News 15; 1: lsMary Hartman 8.; 1: 25-News
17
1: 30- Movie
" New
Or lean s
Uncensored" 17 ; 2:0&gt;-News 13;
J·Os-Movie " Paula" 17 .

FRIDAY, MARCH 21.19110
5: 45-Farm Report 13 ; World at
Large 17; 5:~PTL club 13 .
6:IJ0-700 Club 6.8 ; PTL Club 15;
Health Field 10.
6 30-Kidsworld 10; News II; 6:45A. M . Wealher 33; Morning
Report 3; 6 : ~Good Morning
Wes t VIrginia 13; 6:55--News 13.

7:()(}-Today 3,15; Good Morning
America 6, 13; Friday Morning 81
Batman 10; Three Stooges-Little
Rascals 17.

7:30-Famil y Affair 10; 7:5S-Chuck
While Reports 10.
8 :1J0-Capt. Kangaroo 8,1 0; Lucy
Show 17; Sesame St . 33.
9: IJO-Bob Braun 3; Phil Donahue
15, 13; Big Vlley 6; Jeffersons 10;
Beverly Hillbillies 8; Family
Affair 17.
9: 30-Bob Newhart8 ; One Day AI A
Time 10; Green acres 17 .

10:1»-Card Sharks 3,1S; Edge of
Night 6; Jeffersons 8; Joker's
Wi ld 10 ; Morning Magaz ine 13;
M ovie " The Naked Jungle" 17.

10 : 30-Hollywood S&lt;l'fares 3, 15 ;.
$20,000 Pyramid 13 ; Whew ! 8, 10;
Andy Griffith 6 .
10:5&gt;-CBS News 8; Hause Call 10.
11 :C»-High Rollers 3, 15 ; Laverne /1.
Shirley 6, lJ; Price Is Right 8, 10;
E lee. Co. 20.
11 :3 0- Wheel of Fortune 3.15 ;
Family R!1Jd 6,13; Sesame St .
20,33; 11:5&gt;-News 17 .
12 :00- Newscenter
3;
News
6.8.10. 13; Health Field 15; Love
American Style 17 .
12 :30-Ryan' s Hope 6 , 13; Search for
Tomorrow 8,10 ; Password Plus
15; Movie "Walk like a Dragan"
17; Elec. Co . 33.
I :IJO-DaysofOur Lives 3,15; All My
Children 6. 13; Young /1. the
Restless 8, 10.
2: IJO-Doclors 3,15 ; One Life Ia Live
6, 13; As The World Turns 8, 10;
2:2&gt;-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; Personal Time Management
33.
3:30-Fiintslones 17; Over Easy 33 .
4:00- Misler Cartoon 3; Merv
Griffin 6; Petticoat Junction 8;
Sesame 51 . 20,33 ; Real McCoys
13; Little Rascals 15; Spec4:30-Lone Ranger 3; Gomer Pyle 8;
Brady Bunch 10; Tom &amp; Jerry
13; Gilligan 's Is. 17.
5: IJO-Caral Burnell 3; Sanford &amp;
Son 8; Mary Tyler Moore 10; My
Three Sons 17; Mister Rogers'
Neighborhood 20,33 .
5:30-Mash 3; News 6 ; Play the
Percentages 8; E lee. Co. 20;
Mash 10; Happy Days Again 13; I
Dream of Jeannie 17; Doctor
Who 33.
6:1»-News 3,8,10,13, 15; ABC News
6: Carol Burnettl7 ; 3-2·1 Contact
20,33.
6: 30-NBC News3 ,15; ABC News 13;
CBS News 8, 10; Carol Burnett 6;
Bob Newharl 17; VIlla Aleor.e 20;
Wild Wild World of Animals 33.
t: IJO-Cross-Wits 3; Tic Tac Dough
8: Newlywed G•me 6,13 ;
MacNeil -Lehrer Report 33 ;
News 10; Love, American Style
15; Sanford /1. Son 17; Dick
Cavett 20.
7:30-Prlce Is Right J ; Solid Gold '79
6: Family Feud 10; Joker's Wild
8; Dick Cavell 33 ; Pap Goes The
Country 13,15; All In The Family .
17; MacNeil -Lehrer Report 20.
8:1»-Here' s Boomer 3, 15; When the
Whistle Blows 13; Incredible
Hulk 8, 10 ; Angel · Death 6;
Washington Week In Review
20,33; Movie " The Curse of the
Werewolf" 17.
8 : 30-Facts of Life 3, 15; Wall Street
Week 20,33.
9 :()(}-Gosslp Columnist 3; Movie " A
Vacation In Hell" 6; Pink Lady
15; Oukes of Hazzard 8, 10; Roots
13; Ruth ~f.'age: 20; American
Short Story 33.
·
IO:C»-Besl of Saturday Night Live
lS; Dallas 8,10; Perspective on
Greatness 17; News 20.
10:30-()ver Easy 20; Murder Most
English 33.
11 : e»-News 3,6,8,10, 13,15; Last of
the Wild 17; Dick Cavett,20 .
ll : 30-Tonlght3,15; ABC News6,13;
NBA Basketball 8; ABC Cap·
llon4d News 33; Movie "Death
Curse. of Tarfu" 10; Movie "The
Omegans" 17.

LS

'

m-

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

Yesterday's Allswer

star

Ia

Genenl Hauling

12 : 55-Barelta

treman 17 .

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

WILL HAUL limestone and :
;:======~===
gravel. Also, lime hauling'
76
Auto Pam
~ 'and spreading. Lea Morris:
Trucking. Phone 7-42··2-155. :
&amp; Accossot'les
'
1.972 Monte Carla, body par- · Ll mestone for driveways '
ts for sale. Call after 5.
Pomeroy-Mason area. 367: ,
2779.
.
"7101.
.
'

'.

dog

t2 Tyrant

art songs

EAT 'lORE
HAT

Reynolds Electric, 651 •
Beech St., Middleport, OH. :
Rewind and Repair electric.
motors. 992-2356.

1979
BAJA
Trl - 16
Fiberglass boat, with side
curtains and tap; and 115
h-P· Mercury outboard
motor and ·Tenn. custom
trailer. Used one boating
sea~n. Mariy extras. 9926288.

41 Hungarian

39 11 MASH"

ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR Sweeperf1
toasters, Irons, all small
appliances. Lawn mowem
Next to State HlghwQ
Garage an Route 7, 985-

Boatsand
Motors for Sale

'

I RUN A LfTTlE
SHOP A FEW
BLOCK!&gt; FROM
HERf:.

~ARNEY

SEWING
78 Chevv van. 31,000 mi.
Reclining swivel bucket
seats, carpet and paneling,
rally wheels and radial

IM 61 LL WRIGHT.

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

vans&amp;4W.D.

1979 Ford 150 4x4, auto.,
p.s., p.b., topper. Positive
traction front and rear. 985·
4339.

IT'S. NEVER 100 IHQD.E NOT! I
lATE TO IMVON'T WANT 70

Reasonable

ces.

27,600 actual miles. A-1
cond. 949·2820.
73

WINNIE

CARPENTER WORK
complete remodeling by AI
Tromm. 7-42·2328. Referen·

sliding back window, am
radio, CB, 4 new !Ires, rustrunning

Home
1mprovements

WALL PAPERING
painting. H2·2328.

fO Infuriate

ACROSS

I aty in Maine
5 Covered, as
II Roman

.
40"x9"x1Q"

rates. scotchguard.
6309 or 742·2211 .

(For a copy of JACOBY
MODERN, senti $1 to: " Win at
Bridge, " care of this newspaper. P. 0 . Box 489. Radio City
Statton. New York, N. Y
100 19.)

by THOMAS JOSEPH

with annor

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

estimate .

Trucks for Sale

proof,

He must
have done it
in his sleep!

l ihouqht he
didn't do am~­
ihinql

s &amp; G Carpet Cleaninw,
Steam
cleaned.
Free

1979 Jeep Wagoneer, 4 dr.,
tully equipped, exc. cond.
$7,5011.7-42-3117 after 5 p. m.

75
OLD COINS, pocket wat·
ches, class rings, wedding
bands, diamonds. Gold or
sliver. Call J. A. Wamsley,
742·2331 . . Treasure Chest
Coin Shop, Athens, OH . 592·
6462.

81

cellent condition . Loaded.
Cast over $9,000. Priced for
quick sale. 742·2143.

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

~~tal

GASOIJNE AUEY

Z · 28.

Automatic, 5500 miles, ex-

automatic,

3•:l0

high. used !Wice $15. 992 ·
5390 .

..0.0 • I J&gt; . 0.0 _, ....... •••

I NT
Pass

The student smiled happily
when his jack of spades held
the first trick . He had already
left his seat on his way to
watch the Professor operate.
He couldn't believe his eyes
when the Professor played the
deuce of diamonds from dum-

2·28-1 mo.

Auto Ramps,

Pass
Pass

By Oswald Jaeoby
and Alan Sontag

No Sunday Calls

76

1+

Opening lead :+ 4

. .. ARE'IOU
DENY THEM
RIG&gt;IT TO BETTER
THEIR UVES??

7

PH. 949-2801

............ , •........

72

NOW 'IOU LISSEN T'ME,
OOP! THIS WHOLE TRADE
DEAL DEPENDSONVOU
GOI"'' WITI-1 THESE
LITTLE GUYS!

FOR
SILVER DOllARS

Mixed Hay, 60c a bale~ 9923981.

1t
3 NT

Easl · Soutb

AUEYOOP

PAYING •••
$20.00 AND UP:i

Hay &amp; Grain

North

Pass
Pass
Pass

Call Howard
949-2862
1-22-lfc

Nice Pigs. 949-2857.

•

West

Free Estimates

Livestock

63

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

Reasonable Prices

62
Wanted to Buy
GOLD AND
SILVER
COINS OF THE WORLD.
RINGS,
JEWELRY ,
STErlLING SILVER AND
MISC. ITEMS. PAYING
RECORD•
HIGH ,
HIGHEST UP·TO· DATE
PRICES . CONTACT ED
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP, Ml DDLEPORT,
OHIO, OR CALL 992-3476.

+A 8 7

+J6 542

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

5th St.
Haven, w. Ja.
3·17-1 mo.

+K 109

.KQJ
t75

ROOFING

WATERMELON
PATCH

+KQ8642
+Q3
WEST
EAST
+Q964 2
• 7 53
• 87 3
• 9 54 2
• 10 3
t AJ9
SOUTH

l H. L WHITESEL

See
First for All
of Your Maternity
Needs.
Tops-Pants
Jumpers· Dresses

East won with the nine and
led a spade won by the Professor's king.
Now the Prof led a diamond
toward dummy .and rose with
the king. East ducked bu t had
to win the next diamond .
East led a third spade,
whereupon the Prof wound up
with three spades, three
hearts, four diamonds, game,
rubber and an overtrick .
" Why didn't you come to
your hand with a heart at
trick two and lead a diamond
to dl!mmy 's king or queen ''"
asked the student . .
"'Because I wanted to win
the rubber," was the reply.
This is the sort of hand that
many players throw out the
window. If a diamond is ledfo
dummy's king, all East has to
do is duck. Then he wins the
second diamond and leads a
spade. Diamonds are not set
up. And sihce there is only one
entry to dummy. that diamond suit is going to produce
just that one trick taken at the
start. South will wind up with
seven tricks instead of nine or
10.

3·20·80

+Jio

HMMPH! CAN'T
SAY I'M TOO
GRATEFUL 10
THEM FOR
THAT••

Texas " 17.
11 : 45---Police Woman 6 ,13 .

BRIDGE

~TI()I.)$, TOO!

THE ARABS ARE A GREAT
PEOPLE, ANNIE! THEY 6AVE
UG MUCH OF WHAT WE KNOW
ABO\JT MEDICINE, ASTRONOMY,
MATHEMATICS · ·ALGEBRA IS
THEIR IINENTIOM··

8 :C»-Buck Rogers 3. 15 ; Mark &amp;
Mindy 6. 13 ; Pa l merstown ,
U.S.A. 8.10; Bill Moyers' Journal
20,33; Movie " Games" 17.
8 · 30- Benson 6, 13; 9 : 00-Qulncy
3, 15; Barney M iller 6; Roots 13;
Sneak Pre'liews 20,ll.
9:30-Soap 6 ; Camera Three 20;
Sports : Close Up 33.
10 :1»-Rockford Files 3,15; 20·20 6;
Knots Landing 8, 10; Americans
17 ; News 20; Austin City Limits
33 ; 10: 30--&lt;lver Easy 20.
II :C»-News 3,6,8, 10, 13, 15; Last of
the Wild 17 ; Dick Cavell 20; Fll!_
a. Rise oi R~inald Perrin 33.
11 :30-TonightJ ,lS ; ABC News6, 13;
Columbo 8; ABC Captioned News
33; Movie " And Mill ions Will
Die " 10; Movie " Two Guys from

4:3&gt;-Movie " Castle in the Desert"
17 .

Tbunday, March ZU

992-3795-

sible party to take over

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

Inc.

992·5724 .

Save Money -

Free Estimates
388 9759
.2-14-lfc

Musical
Instruments

IN STOCK for immediate

Society Thrill Shop, Mid·
dleport, OH.

RODNEY DOWNING, BROKE R-HO. 992-3731
.;.., 992-2449
BILL CHILDS, BRANCH MGR.-HO.

Horses

ponies. Ruth Reeves. 614·
698 ·3290. Barding and
Riding Lessons and Horse
Care products. Western
boots. Children's $15.50.
Adults $29.00.

EMERGENCY
power
alternators- own the best
-buy Winpower . Call513·
788·2589.

rnvestment.

_______________ ___ --

Pels tor Sale

HOOF HOLLOW, English
and Western. Saddles and

APPLES- ROME beauty
apples at $4 per bu. Besttor
apple buller. Call 669·3785,
Fitzpatrick Orchard, SR
689.

and 22.

CALL 992-2342

Pleasant, W. Va . Mon.·Sat.
8·3.

r I IJ I

lrom Jumble, do this newspaper, 8o• 34, NorwOOd, N.J .07&amp;41. 1ncludl your
n~me, addre.. , zip cOde 1twl make eheekl ,..,.able to Newapa~•-

'WADf&gt;..'it&gt;. I.AE&gt;NJ z
'(OI.J Ml~ I&gt;U.-

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

repair-

it. C. YOUNG Ill

sand, gravel, calcium
chloride, fertilizer, dog

BUILDING OR TRAILER LOT - Hysell Run Road
- 5 acres. $7,000.
SYRACUSE - Old house on a nice lot, $11./oOO.
LJ:)T IN MIDDLEPORT- We will build a house on
this one if you choose - south Second Ave .

Yard Sale

gested b)' the above cartoon

Jumb.. BOOk No. 14, eont1lnlng 110purzlea, ls IVIillble torS 1.75 postp11CS

BORN LOSER

WE BRING THE
GARAGE TO YOU!!!

Roofing,
siding,
gutter,
atuil1-up
roof
and
home

(FREE ESTIMATES)

Misc. Merchanise

COAL,

RUTLAND - Older home needs sOfTie repairs on
Salem Street. N ice corner tot. $9900.00.

992·7106, Jim Anderson949·
2534, or Roy Howell 992
5421.

Now arrange the Clrded letters to
form lhe SUfPrise ·answer. as sug-

(Answ."trs tomorrow)

.AUTO REPAIR

us

Gutter

coin collections. Call 614·
767 -3167 or 557·3411.

doors. Owner will help finance if you need it . $17,500.

questions call Bill Greuser

Pomeroy, Oh.

PREGNANT?

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING

bath, full base ment, gas furnace, storm windows &amp;

Any •

Answer hare :

3·2·1 mo.

l·==========t======~~~~~==::==~~~~

ATTENTION:
(1M ·
PORTANT TO YOU) Will

Humane

MIDDLE PORT - Three bedr9om , l'h bi'lh, nice lot
1ust one block from heart of town . $25,000.
POMEROY - On Lincoln His. - Two bedroom and

r J

1

ASK FOR DAVE

ROOFING

&amp;

CALL 992-7544

coin collections. Call 614·
767-3167
or 557·3411.
guns, pocket
watches and

far

Housing

Hours9·1 M .. w .. F.
Other times by appointment.
101 Sycamore CRear
Pomeroy,O.

AT TENT 1oN :
c 1M .
PORTANT TO YOU) Will
pay cash or certified check
for antiques and collec·
tibles or entire estates.
Nothing too large. Also,

Sat., March 21

of ground . $39.000 .

members and anyone in·
terested in joining are

CAU. 992-3238

GEORGE'S

veterans Admin. Loans.

Antiques

53

Meigs

RACINE - Peace and quiet in the country. Just a
few miles from Racine . Remodeled home on 2 acres

The Big Bend Bass Anglers
Club will have a meeting
Tues. night, 7 p.m. at Shade
Valley Clubhouse. All old

ts]YRINT±

2·25 · 1 mo :~

REAL ESTATE
FlNANCtNG

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.

~usy corner rn center of town . Fully rented. A good

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

appearance . In the process

618 E. Main

FOR \H IS.

my at trick two .

every Sat. at 1 or call for
evening

Been in Business
For 5 Years

ONE WOULDN 'T CLOSE
A \AILOR 5HC'"'

Household Goods

Nothing too large. Also,

bedroom ranch, approx.

for details. IRELAND
MORTGAGE CO., 77 E.
State St., Athens. 592·3051.

51'READIN&amp; Oun NOW '5
MV CHANCE FOil A CLEA&gt;I SHOT:

H&amp;R BLOCK OFFICE LOCATION

mitted. For further info., call992·6058.
2-28·1 mo. pd .

guns, pocket watches and

$5,600.00.
TUPPERS PLAINS - 3

refinancing

"FREE ESnMATES"

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

alcoholic beverages per-

bath,

with

b
D -

_J

THEY'~E

CHRIS! U5! '1'01)11. ~I!AOI
TI!AT 'S A POLICe CHOPPEII.-ANO THEY'VE SPOTTED YOU!

·Tri-County
·Bookkeeping
Service

"Disco Lighting"
Admission $2.00 Single
$3.00 Couple
Sponsored by Music

..._

,

tYAARTS

Remodeling

YEEN DISCO
DANCE
At The Orchid Room
E. Main 51 . Pomeroy, 0.
EVERY
SATURDAY NIGHT
8:00 Til11 :30

rates .

some furniture, nice
starter home or rental.

bedroom

your present home. CON
VENTIONAL · 5 Pel . down.
VA · no down payment.
FHA · low down paymenl.
FHA ·- 245 graduated
payment program. FHA

to Boy Scout Troop 249 .
making

with

Syracuse -

Mortgage
. money
available . New homes, oldhomes

hookup

$42,000.00 .
NEW LISTING

Contact Ed Burkett Barber
Shop, Middleport.
GOLD,
SILVER
OR
FOREIGN COINS, OR
ANY OTHER GOLD OR
SILVER ITEMS. ALSO,
ANTIQUE FURNITURE
OR OTHER ANTIQUE
ITEMS. WILL PAY TOP
DOLLAR . CHECK WITH
OSBY COSSIE) MARTIN
BEFORE
SELLING .
PHONE 992··6370. ALSO
DO APPRAISING.

44

pond, 2 story barn, other

265 subsidy program. Call
possible for gold and silver
coins, rings, jewelry, etc.

frontage.

acres,
7
room,
4
bedroom 2 yr. old
mpdular home, stocked

Grand -

Announcements

3

RENTER' S assistance for
Senior Citizens In Village
Manor apts. Call992·7787 .

10

$10.000.00.
NEW LISTING -

Announcements

1 PAY

3 AND 4 RM furnished apIS. Phone 992-5434.

oven, about 1 yr. old . In ex -

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

Give piano lessons to begin·
ners and advanced student
in my home . Also teach
chording and transposing if

rate.

' u nts

Auto &amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992 -5682

for Rent

cellent cond. $150. 992 -7051.

acres vacant land. Gas,
electric, and water
available,
close
to

Each word OYer the minim1.1m 15 words is 4 cenfs per word per dir .
Ads running other than consecutin dns will be chugeG 11 the 1 an

In mtmory, Card ot Thank' and Obituary ;
minimum. Cuh in advance.

Apartment

992-2259

Rates and Other Information

1 days
3 days

44

tric range. Equipped with
clock. timer, self cleaning

JY

608 E.

Will lay brick and block .
Pour concrete. 992-3714.

....

Rutland .

General Electric gold elec -

•~- Electrical

tor Monday

mile off Rt. 7 by-pass
on St. R:t . 124 toward

Gutters and

•New homes
extensive remod~l . ing
*Electrical work
*Masonry work
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992· 7583
2·24·1 mo.

THURSDAY . MARCH 20, 1910

rJ 1n

We Do Roofing,

CONSTRUCTION

l '"

rooms and bath . 992-3090.

Sl

s, win $50,000. 304·J4Hl03

ROUSH

Roger Hysell
Garage

Reference

....

Wanted : Fighers-Brawler·

&amp; A'etrigeratlon

P .M. Daily
1'l Noon Saturday

security .

mandatory. Call992·3381.

General

81 - Home lmproYtmenh

.t

l si and last month's rent
and

my hpme for elderly , good

Miscellaneous

17

12- Piumblng&amp; E•tnatln\1
U - E,cavatintj!

Want-Ad Advertising
Deadlines

month. Six months lease,

992·2143.

eSERVICES

Lincoln

Have room and board in

Lots &amp; Acreage

Real Estate

house

Heights, Pomeroy. $200 per

celled?
Lost
your
operator's license? Phone

AufoPuh

Accnsorln

71- Auto Rep.alr

l6-Raal Estate wanted
l7 - N'eanon

IN ·
can·

bedroom

45

10 Acres more or less. Rt .
248 be!Ween Chester and
Long Bottom. 985·3368 .

Insurance

.,._ ._

Yesterdays

S acres, just off Flatwoods
Road, 1 mile from old RI.3J
and6milesfrom Rl. 7. Call
m -3900 after after 5:00.

House.
1~

a-

35

Grill Cook Wanted. No ex·
perience necessary . Apply
in person Crow's Steak

n-wanrHI ro Buy
72- Truckslor Sill!
63- Livaslock
6.t- H.ay &amp; Grain
U - Seed &amp; Fertilirer

BUsiness
Opportunity

rights. 577,000. 992·7559.

Full lime and part lime RN
or LPN . 11 ·7. Contact Mr.

61 - Farm EQuipment

e FINANCIAL

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

Ohlinger, W. Columbia, W.
Va . 25287.

51 - Household GCIOCls
H-CB, TV, Aadlo Equipme nt
53-Antiques
S.t-Misc . Mtrdlandlle
5!- Buildlng Supplies
56- Pets for Sale

with

available. Located approx .
7 miles from Pomeroy off
Rt. 7 or 33. 446·2359 after 6.

good pay, easy work, no

I Auctlcm

HOME

stocked pond for swimming
or fishing , 9 rooms, bath,
carpeted . 3 to 17 acres

the eligibility list at 992
2156or992·2157.

4s-FRooms
46-Sp.ce lor Rent
47-Wanted to Rent
• 48- Equipmtntlor Rent

I- Public Solie

COUNTRY

Business Services

Houses for Rent

Hou se for
Rent, un furnished , no inside pets. 4

Farms for Sale

33

tinel route carrier. Phone
us right away and get on

eRENTALS

A.C .,

Ready to move into. $6500

some great gifts as a SeneANNOUNCEMENTS

furnished ,

very good condition. On a
lot that ca n be rented .

GET VALUABLE training
as a young business person
and earn good money plus

41

Available April 15. Two

12x65 Trailer, com-

pletely

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

4- Givuway

Mobile Homes

32

I'-..I . .. __J
---

11 :45--Charlle's Angels 6; Movie
"Fall Sale" 13 .
12 : 55- FBI , 6 ; 1 :00-Midnlght
Special 3,15; 1:25--News. 17.
1 : 45-News 13; Movie "Last
Treasure of the Aztecs" 17:.
2:30-News 3.
3: o!O-Movle "Sergeant 1&lt; of the
Foreign Legion" 17; 5:-40---Love,
American Style 17.

�10- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Mar. 20, 1980

Initial steps taken toward building usage

Interest rate may hit 20 percent
NEW YORK IAP J - Some hank
analysts expect the prime lending
rate to reach 20 percent soon,
following another round of rate in·
creases by the nation's largest
banks.
The latest boost Wednesday to a
record 19 percent marked the eighth
time in the last month that business
borrowing costs have jumped. On
Feb. 19 the rate stood at 15\'•percent.
Economists and bankers say the
new rate increases can be tied to the
Federal Reserve Board's latest
moves to tighten credit and to increases in banks' cost or acquiring
funds.

,------------------------i

: Area Deaths :
I

I

Earl S. Davenport

Some analysts are forecasting fur- today .
ther increases in the prime, which is
Most businesses that don't qualify
the minimum interest rate banks lor the prime rate usua lly pay at
charge on loans to their most credi t- least 2 percentage points more on
worthy corporate customers.
their loans, although Chase has an" It could be at least 20 percent
nounced it is offering to loan money
within a week or two, " said Maria to a limited number of small
Ramirez, assistant v1ce pres1dent at businesses at 18Y• percent.
Merrill Lynch Co . in New York. " !
Separately, Wells Fa rgo Bank at
wouldn 'I be suprised if the prime San Francisco, the nation 's 11th
rate is at 20 percent by Friday."
largest, said Wednesday it had
Chase Manhattan Bank, the
frozen credit limits on its 1.28 million
nation's third-largest, led the move
Master Card and Visa credit cards
to 19 percent by increasing its rate
in response to the govenunent's
Tuesday from the 18%percent it had credit-tightening moves.
posted just one week ago. Most other
major banks matched the 19 percent
rate on Wednesday, including San
Francisc&lt;&gt;-based Bank of America,
the nation's largest, and No. 2
Citibank.
The prime rate is not tied to rates
on consumer loans, but is a widely
Longe r whee lbase fo r bet·
watched indicator or interest rate
t er ride ye t sho rte r overall
trends. American Saving &amp; Loan
l eng t h
fo r
better
Association of Loa Angeles sa id
m a neuv e rabi I it y
than
Wednesday it had boosted its home
Fa ir mont wag on.
mortgage rate from 17 percent to
17\2 percent, while Chase Manhattan said its mortgage rate would rise
Gallipolis, Ohio
from 15\\! percent to 16 percent
~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

FOR FRIDAY, MARCH 21ST AND SATURDAY, MARCH 22ND
OPEN FRIDAY TIL 8 P.M.

MEN'S PARIS

DRESS

BELTS

1980 AMC CONCORD
4 DOOR
STATIONWAGON

Ea rl S. Davenport, Jr., 59, Third
St. , Middleport, died Wednesday at
the Holzer Medical Center.
Mr. Davenport was born Jan. 24,
1921 at Quinwood, W. Va ., a son of
the late Earl S. and Harriett Hughes
Davenport, Sr.
He is survived by his wife, Audrey
Eliza beth Zeigler Davenport ; a son
and dauHhter-in-law, Jerry and Gail I
Davenport, Middleport; a son, Mick,
at home ; two grandchildren,
Heather and Brad Davenport, Mido
dleport; two sisters, Mrs. C. A.
(Peggy ) Lynch, Jr., and Mrs. James
E. (Frances) Dale, both of Beckley,
W. Va.; a brother, John R. Davenport, Springfield, Mo.; his motherin-law, Mrs. Mildred Zeigler who
makes her home with the Davenports, several cousins, nephews and
nephews.
Mr. Davenport was a member of
Heath United Methodist Church in
Middleport and of Middleport
Masonic Lodge 363, F&amp;AM. He
belonged to the I.B.E.W., the electricians' union, at Beckley, W. Va.,
and was employed at the Mountaineer Plant.
Funeral services will be held at 2
P·fll· Saturday at the RawlingsCoats-Blower Funeral Home with
the Rev. Max Donahue and the Rev.
Robert Robinson officiating. Burial
will be in Riverview Cemetery. The
Middleport Masonic Lodge will conduct rites at the funeral home at 7;30
p.m. Friday. Friends may call at
the funeral home from 2 to 4 and 7 to
9 p.m. Friday.

Regular prices $5 .00 to
$10.00. Sizes 30 to 44 . Not
eve ry size in every style. But
good overall selection . Quan·
tit ies are limited .

~

PRICE

RIVERSIDE AMC-JEEP

SUMMER FURNITURE

*Spring base chairs .

*Two passenger gJ iders .

* Swivel base rockers.
wCanopy swings.
5 br ight colors : green, yellow, brown, bittersweet
and white .

FOR TWO DAYS ONLY

SAVE 20%

ELBERFELDSWAREHOUSE

TONIGHT!

Glass Cleaner
Solventol
Household Cleaner

Formbys Furniture

Reg. S·l.S5 Sale .99
Reg. S2.39 Sale $1.75

Trealmenl Lemon Oil Reg. $3.85
Formbys
Furnilure Cleaner
Reg, $2.19
Rooto Drain Cleaner Reg. S1.89
Rooto Toilet
Bowl Cleaner
Reg. S1.89

Sale $2.79
Sale $1 .59
Sale $1 .49
Sale $1.49

Special purchase and
sale of discontinued col -

chairs,

sotas,

davenports ,

and secllonals.

Judge Webster indicated that \!II!
Board of Retardation will pay a fair
share of the utilities and, hopefully,
would not have to pay rent. Aplan is
expected to be worked out for the
group by April 8.
SEEK RUTLAND GYM
Vernon Weber, ,Rutland VIllage
Clerk, and Jolm Miller, Rutland
Mayor, requested that the Rutland
gymnasium be conveyed to Rutland
Village for lll!4l as a community cerr
ter. Weber said the building could
be put to many uaes and will be completely maintained by the village.
The village would have two years
to repair the sb'ucture.
Greg Walker and Dottle Pierce of
the Rutland Youth Association spoke
in support of the transfer of the
structure to Rutland Village stating
that a youth center could be located
in the building alOIIj! with other

inged all around, non
slip.

Reg. $7.49 Size 60x70 • . •.... • ...• $3.99
Reg. $10.99 Size 70x90 .... ,, .•.•• $8.99
Reg. $14.99 Size 70x120 ••.•.... , $10.99
Reg , $17.99 Size 70X140 ...•..• , • $12.99

MEN'S AND BOYS' Sl.J9
SPRING SALE

FURNITURE DEPT.

SALE
en's sizes ll to 15. Boys sizes 7 to 11 .
White with colored tops. Made by Spr·
ingfoot.

oom MANN
SPORTSWEAR
New spring styles and
colors in quality Dotty

Mann co-ordinate sport·
swear. Jackets, skirts,
slacks , v e sts and

blouses . Misses sizes 8
lo 18.

Reg. 514.00
Reg. $18.00
Reg. $24.00
Reg . $26.00
Reg, $28.00

. .. . Sale $11.89
• ••. Sale $15.29
.... Sale $20.39
••.. Sale $22.09
. . .. Sale $23 .79

LIVING ROOM SUITES

BY SCOTI' WOLFE
ATHENS - A "barnburner!"
That's the only way to describe it. It
took four quarters and one overtime
to decide the winner, but after the
dll8t had setUed the Southern Purple
Tornadoes came away the winner
over the talented Frankfort Adena
Warriors, ~. In the Class A
Regional Tournament here Thursday night. The Tornadoes, who put
together another well-balanced
scoring attack, were led into victory
lane by the detennlned Dale Teaford
who paced his team with 20 points
and hauled down six crucial rebounds.
The Tornadoes are now 23-l and
have earned a berth in the district
finals against Indian Valley South,

SPRINGTIME SALE

MEN'S BLUE DENIM

FASHION
JEANS

A complete: new selec·
tion of styles. In sizes 28
to 42 waist, lenglhs 3() to
36 inches . Most all styles
are pre-washed. Sav·
ings are great . Stop In

Long and shorl sleeve

21-3, Saturday afternoon at 2:30 p.m.
Opealug Slama

The first quarter was just a
preview of what was to come later In
the game. After Adena controlled
the opening tip, It started to look
rather gloomy for the Tornado quintet, as the Warriors raced to a 7~
lead in the first two minutes of play
behind baskebJ by aU-district selection Steve Ragland.
Coach Carl Wolfe quickly called
time out with 6:17 showing on the
clock to make some necessary adjustmenbJ and put his "Purple
Machine'' Into proper gear.
The Tornadoes quickly responded
with Teaford at the controla who
sank four baskets in, a row to help the
Tornadoes comeback to a 14-14 first

By Tbe Alsoelaled Preu

sty les. Solid colors and

patterns. True western

sly ling. Stock up on your
needs now and save.
(14·14'/7). M (15·151h}, L---(16·16112) and XL
17 1f:l ) '

Men's $11.95
Western Shirts .. ........ . .
Men's$14.95
Western Shirts . . . . .. .. • 0. S12.16

Men's$16.95
Weslem Shirts ...... ... . . $13.76
Men's $19.9S
••••

•

•••

S16. 16

SPRING SALE

UTTl£ GIRLS

DRESSES
New tor spring! Knll dresses,
poly / cotton dresses, sun
dresses and dressy Easter
dresses. Sizes 2·4, .4·6x, 7·14.

and let us help ou find

TO

your size.

Men's $16.95
Fashion Jeans .... .. .$13.69
Men's $17 .95
. Fashion Jeans .. .... $14.49
Men's $18.95
Fashion Jeans .. . , . . $1S.29
Men's S19.95

SOUTHERN
TORNADO
BASKETBALL
TEAM

SPRING SALE

WOMEN'S

WHITE
UNIFORMS
Excellent selection of the
latest styles in uniforms.

Meigs County

SAVE FRIDAY AND SATURDAY

VAN HEUSEN
MEN'S DRESS

SHIRTS
Our new spring selec·
lion of Ven Heusen.
WhiiB, solid colors and
patterns. Short sleeve

styles In neck sizes 14'1•
to 17.

junior sizes (J to 15), misses sizes

,People
•

RACINE
HOME NATIONAL
Racine, Oli! ...

Reg. $5.00 .... Sale $4.25
Reg. $8.00 •. ,. Sale$6.80
Reg. $12.00 .. Sale $10.20
Reg. $17.00., Sale '$14.45
Reg. $20.00 .. Sale Sl7.00
Reg. $24.00 .. Sale $20.40

Pant suil and dress slyles In
14 lo 201 and extra sizes (Ulh to
16'17 I .

'

Reg, $9.00 .•... . Sale $7.98
Reg. 513.00 ... , Sale $11.48
Reg. $17.00 . , • , Sale S14.98
Reg , 523.00 . .. • Sale 520.28
Reg. 528.00 , .• , Sale $24.68

MEN'S 113.00 DRESS SHIRTS ........ ..S10.45
MEN'S 114.00 DRESS SHIRTS ........ 111:25
MEN'S 11450 DRESS SHIRTS..........111.55
MEN'S $16.00 DRESS SHIRTS..........112.75

OPEN SATURDAY 9:30 TO 5 .P.M.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

(,

•

suggested that those attending
"listen" to the pubUc session.
SCHEDULE PROBLEMS
Randy Hunt, hand director, and
Ed Harkless, vocal music supervisor, appeared before the board to
straighten out a scheduling problem.
Harkless has scheduled a musical
production on the same weekend in
May when the band was to make a
trip to Nashville, Tenn.
Hwtt said he was able to charter
buses for the band trip on that
weekend only until sometime in
August. It was agreed that the
band will be able to make the trip
during the week thereby freeing the
weekend at the last of May for the
musical which had been placed on
the master schedule of events by
Harkless.
The board approved the use of
fields at the high school this summer
(continu ed on p age 10)

•

FRIDAY, MARCH 21, 1980

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------PRICE FIFTEEN

WESTERN SHIRTS

•

A discussion developed on the employment of the ll&amp;'listanl coach for
girls' softball and it was agreed that
Supt. Gleason will interview the
recommended individual as well as
any other persons wanting the j)()llt
with the possiblity of some action to
be taken at a special board meeting
Monday night. The request of the
Boy Scout Troop leaders is expected
also to be discussed at that meeting.
Dwight Goins, administrative
assistant, reported he will see that
action Is begun for the construction
of a storage area for the girls unifor·
ms.
When the lengthy meeting got un·
derway last night, the cafeteria was
crowded and the crowd applauded
various speakers addressing the
board.
However, Board President Carol
Pierce later warned that there
would be no more applause or noise
pennitted during the meeting. He

enttne

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

OUR NEW SPRING SELECTION
MEN'S

0

at

VOL. 28, NO. 239

Two and three piece living room suites
in a large variety of colors, fabrics and
styles.

Western Shirts.

•

e

SAVE 20% ON ANY SUITE IN STOCK
SPRING SALE

ANOTHER REQUEST

Robert Arms and Ray Laudermilt,
representing Boy Scout Troop 249,
requested permission for the use or
a lease for a building behind the
Pomeroy High School as a
headquarters. Arms said the troop
has already spent some $2,000 on the
frame building which was once a
football team shower building.
It was agreed to check on the
status of building and for Supt.
Gleason to look over the facility and
get back with the scout leaders.
It was reported that a check will
be made with Pomeroy VIllage
which at one time secured the former Pomeroy Senior High School

building for J1068ible use as a village
hall but has taken no action in
several years in that dlnlctlon.
During the meeting, Middleport
Police Chief J . J . Cremeans, also
spoke on behaH of the use of Rutland
facilities for youth of that i:ommunity.
WANTS GIRU' COACH
Dick Rupe, new president of the
Girls' Athletic Boosters, addressed
the board on several matters including the employment of an
assistant coach for the girls softball
program. A reconunendation was
made on an individual to be employed for the j)()IJI.
Rupe spoke on other matters such
as storage space for girls' athletic
uniforms, the need for a reserve
volley ball coach, the need for work
on the ball fields at the high school
and the need to have a volley ball
program started on the junior high
level.

CENTS

Tornadoes advance to regional finals with overtime win

Machine washable, fr -

SOCKS

facilities such Bll a lleadquarters for
the emergency squad.
It was informally agreed that the
plan can be worked out and Supt.
Gleason will meet with representatives of the village to work out the
details.

Teaford, Davis provide winning margin

ors and patterns for

TUBE

BANK
Meigs Local Board 'of Education
will meet this evening at Meigs
Junior ffigh :'ichool at 7:30p.m.

Reg. S2.69 Sale $1 .99

SPRING SALE

(Cont inu ed from p age 1)

MEETS TONIGHT

Panel Magic
Bon Ami

FURNITURE
THROWS

This year, however, the process

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Dlscbarges March 19
Audree Belville, Lois Blair, Garnet Boswell, Marilyn Boling, Jason
Dlllenger, Charles Fowler, Carolyn
Henson, Mrs. Robert Hochella and
daughter, Elaine Holter, Virgil Lan·
dnun, Greg Lee, Elizabeth Masters,
Stanley Mayo, Teresa Miller, Ora
Moore, Stephen Orender, Mrs.
Stephen Pullins and son, Jeffrey
Perkins, Jeremy Potts, Shirley
Price, Susan Richmond, Theodore
Riley Sr., George Robinson , James
Sayre, Mary Sisk, Ruth Sisson,
Claude Slagel, Patricia Sprague,
Kevin Taylor, Charles Wallace, Mrs.
Ken Wheeler and daughter, Shawn
Whlttlken, Kathy Williams, Vicky
Wright, Margaret Yankuns.
BIRTHS
Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey Donnley,
daughter, Crown City.

CLEANING
SUPPLIES

ported that progress 19 being made

on the COMtruction plans.

SPECIAL SALE

SPRING SALE
LLOYD FIBERCRAFT

House. • •
was complicated when Carter
repudiated his January budget,
which called for a $15.8 billion
deficit, and said the budget must be
balanced as part of the fight to
reduce the nation's 18 percent an·
nual inflation rate.
Since Carter has yet to send
Congress a revised budget proposal,
the House Budget Committee has
turned to Giaimo's plan as the key
recommendation.
The spending cuts approved Wednesday included $1 billion from the
strategic petroleum reserve, $300
million in deferred park acquisition
and water projects and $200 million
from construction d: veterans'
hospitals.
Giaimo has estimated $836 million
could be saved by ending Saturday
mail deliveries and reducing the
subsidy for bulk mail.
Elimination of the •tate share of
federal revenue sharing would save
$1.~ billion, dropping anti-recession
aid for cities $1 billion, reducing
youth and other jobs programs $1
billion and trimming the federal
highway program $500 million.
Other possible major savings
being talked about include $1 billion
by postponing proj)()lled welfare
changes, $1 billion by awarding costof-living increases once • year instead d. twice to civilian and
military retirees and $400 million by
cutting hack the food stamp
program.

SA I.E I

CLEARANCEI

By 11Gb Hoeflich
Initial steps which will probably
lead to the use of district-owned
buildings by several groups were
taken Thursday night by the Meiga
Local Board d. Education during a
sii hour seaalon.
Manning Web6ter, ChriB Layh and
Richard Jones representing the
Meigs County Board of Mental
Retardation spoke to the board on
the possibilities of using the
Pomeroy Junior High structure,
soon to be vacated by the county
senior citizens group.
Supl David L. Gleason WBll
autborized to visit the structure with
the trio to detennlne how much of
the building will be needed for the
county's menially retarded.
The structure, according to Webster, would be used as a location for
a school for some 50 Meiga County
retarded persons until a new school
19 completed in Syracuse. Layh re-

Tornado watches posted in nation
·"'Tornado watches were posted aCI'09S much of the Southeast early
today as. thunderstorms dumped heavy rains from the MWisslppl
Valley to the Tennessee Valley.
Flash flood watches were j)()llted In parts of Alabama, Tennessee,
Georgia and the CaroUnas while spring rains gorged already swollen
rivera and streams.
Eight tornadoes were reported aCl'OIJS the Southeast on Thursday.
Several psrsons were reported Injured in Alabama after twisters and
severe thWJderstonns shattered windows and downed trees. Initial
reports indicated that six to 15 persons may have received injwies,
and wind gusts were clocked unofflclally at 78 mph near Fairhope,

Gas conservation targets announced
WASIIINGTON- The Energy Department on Thursday announced
gasoline conservation targets,_which each state is expected to meet
during the next three months.
1be targets call for a nationwide reduction of about &amp;. 7 percent in
gasoline use during April, May and June, compared with the
corresponding months of 1979.
1be proposed state reductions range from a low of 1.1 percent in
Wyoming to 17 percentfor Alaska.
Department representatives said the percentages for each state are
not actually related to the amoWJt of gasoline used in the states last
year.

Veteran detective fired from force
COLUMBUS, Ohio - Narcotics detective Edward W. Sullivan,
charged with hiring someone to kill a Colwnbus businessman, has
been fired from the police force.
Safety Director Bernard Chupka fired the 34-year-old Sullivan after
he failed to·appear before him on departmental charges. ·
Sullivan, free on bond on a charge of conspiracy to commit
aggravated murder, faced departmental charges rl inllubordlnation
and pos~~es•lon of marlluana.
tiP

quarter deadlock.
The second stanza was as thrilling
as the first as Southern hit a torrid
hot streak early In that round, but
then faltered late in the period after
twirling head-on Into a cold front.
The Southern five found some holes
in the Warriors' :h'l zone and came
through to score early on baskets by
Johnny Davis, Kent Wolfe, and
Teaford. The Warriors then shut the
door and started to peck away at
Southern's 1-3-1 zone to regain the
lead at the haH, 36-31.
Southern's zone shut off Adena's
Inside threat, but the Warriors ripped the neb! from the outside to
c shoot a red hot 63 percent, and at this
point this was a definite key in the
game. The Warriors were led by
Tim Hester and Ragland who both
played long ball to total 12 potnbJ
apiece at the half. Teaford and WoHe
paced the Tornadoes with 12 and
seven respectively.
As the second half was about to get
underway the enthusiastic crowd of
.4(123 people applauded their favorite
team In hcpes of boosting them to a
victory.
Secolld Half
Adena controlled the tip and
quickly railled liB lead to six on a
Ragland bucket, but Dave "Big
Red" Foreman had other Ideas and
sank two Important baskebJ to pull
his team within two at 35-37.
Then after Hester's missed shot
Kent Wolfe drove In to tie the score
IConlinuedonpage JJ

Commission race draws most attention
By Bob Hoeflich
Seven Republicans and two
Democra!B had filed for the Me!gs
CoWlty Collllllissioner's post, tenn
ending Jan. 2, 1!185, when the
deadline for filing arrived at 4 p.m.
Thursday.
Seven RepubUcans seeking the
nomination for the post include J .
Otis Bailey, Racine; Henry E.
Cleland, Jr., Pomeroy; David J.
Koblentz, Route 7, Pomeroy; Donald
L. Moore, Route 2, Pomeroy; Kerr
neth Guy Rose, Route 1, Long Bottom; Manning K. Roush, Minersville, and Elden C. Walburn, Mid-

dleport.
Two Democrats seeking
nomination fijr the tenn are Oscar
Weber, Long Bottom, and incumbent commissioner, &lt;llester E.
Wells, Route 1, ~Bottom.

OOLUMBUS, Ohio - State Auditor Thomas E. Ferguson said Thursday that the Ohio Rail Transportation Authority bas not properly accounted for over $3.1 million In federal funds and $330,000 in public flUIds It received from railroads.
Authority officials contend that the federal funds and the mon~y
railroads pay are not public funds and need not be spent under lllate
accounting methods. They have asked for an opinion from the attorney

Technicians working to seal leak

J

MIDDlE'l;'OWN, Pa. - Technicians worked to find and plug a leak
caii!IIDg a slight increase In radiation Inside the Three Mile laJand
nuclear pOwer plant's auDIIary building Thursday. Officials said It
posed no health threat.

u.s.
'-----..._-_______
________,
..

'

Meigs Sheriff James J. Proffitt,
D., Pomeroy, is unopposed In the
primary election in his bid to be
reelected . However, two
Republicans are seeking the
sheriff's nomination. They are J. J.
Cremeans, Middleport Pollee Chief,
and John C. Welsh, Dexter. The
RepubUcan winner will oppose Prof·

!Itt In the fall.
In the second commission post on
the primary ballot, (term expiring
Jan. 3, 1985), two Republicans are
seeking the nomination. They are incumbent, Richard E. Jones,
Pomeroy, and Don R. Hill, Racine.
No Democrats are seeking the
nomination for the post. .

R~G UNOPPOSED
Frederick W. Crow Ill,
Repablleaa lneambeat, II uaop~ · Ill bla hid for reeledloa ••
Melp CcMIJity Ptolecutlllg A~
tuney. He II completfa8 hll

lint term.

Incumbent Larry E. Spencer, R.,
Racine, will be opposed by another
ReptJblican, Robert G. Pickett,
Pomeroy, for the nomination to run
for county clerk of courts. No
Democrats filed for nomination to
run for that office.
Other county office holders run' &lt;Continued on oaqe 10J

President's race has 5 contenders
COLUMBQS, Ohio (AP) - The
race for president In Ohio will involve five major contenders,
although one Republican could
claim jll8t 30 of the state's 77
RepullUcan National Convention
delegates.
U.S. Rep. Phl11ip Crane, R-DL, did
not submit a statewide slate prior to
Thursday's 4 p.m. filing deadline.
But Sen. John Kaslch, R·
Columbus, a Crane campaign
worker, said petitions were filed foc
the Congressman in 10 congressional
districts which have three delegates
apiece. Those districts include the
2nd, 5th, 7th, 9th, lOth, 11th, 12th,
15th, 16th and 17th, Kaslch said.
U.S. Rep. John Anderson, R-ru.,

was the last contender to file
petitions Thursday. He met the
deadline with just 10 minutes to
spare because of the delayed arrival
of some signatures from Cleveland.
Earlier Thursday, President Carter, former California Gov. Ronald
CLEAN-UP DAY
Racine Village Council asks
residents of the village to participate
In clean-up day in the village on
March 28 and 29.
Residents are asked to clean
sidewalks, ditches , yards and
vacant lots. The cleaning does not include outbuildings and basements,
however. Debris may be placed at
the curb for village pick up.

A !~year-old Columbus youth was
placed Into the custody fi the Ohio
Youth ConuniaiJion Thursday after
pleading guilty to breaking and err
terlng charges in Meigs CoWJty
Juvenile Court. ··
Law enforcement officers are still
looking for a second youth Involved
in the March 15 incldenl at the 0. C.
Gilpin residence on Success Rd.
Also pleading gullty to charges
Thursday were Brenda Wllllams,
Rt. 2, Pomeroy, no brakes; and Randy Smith, Racine, speeding.
Williams' •10 fine and cos!B were
suspended while Smith was fined
and costs.

•n

Reagan and former Ambassador
George Bush officially were entered
in their parties' respective races by
campaign workers.
Tim Kraft, Carter's national campaign manager who submitted his
candidate's papers, said the
president
"has
almost
mathematically eliminated his opposition' ' following his major victory in llllnois this week. He
referred to Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass., who submitted his
Ohio petitions Wednesday.
One contender who hasn 'I done
well in other stale primaries Dernocratic .Gov. EdmWJd G. Brown
Jr. of California - didn't enter a
statewide slate of convention
delegates in Ohio. But reports inIContinued on page 10)

Youth sentenced

general.

primary reactor cooling s~.
·
The plant bas been out of operation sin~ It wu damaged on March
28, 1979, when the real,ltor lOBt cooling water and overbeated In the worst accident In the history cl
commercllll nuclear power plants.

Ohio University. Teaford paced Southern's offense
with 20 points as the Tornadoes rallied from 8 7~
deficit to pull out 8 68-64 overtime victory. More photos
appear on Page 3.

Seven Republicans seek nomination

$3.1 million still unaccounted

Officials sUBpected the airborne radioactive particles came from a
small wate~ leak. In ·a pump system that adds water to the plant's

GIANTS - Southern's 6-foot-2 forward Dale
Teaford arcs a baseline jumper over Frankfort
Adena's 6-foot-4 center Steve Ragland during the first
half of Thumlay's Class A Regional semifinal clash at

Weather
Clearing and colder tonight. Lows
near 30. Sunny and cool Saturday.
Highs In the mid to upper 41':;, Thechance of rain is near zero tonlghf
and Saturday.

CLEVELAND (AP, - 1be
aumben drawu 1banday Dlght
Ia the Ohio Lottery'• dally game
"The Number'' aail Ill weekly
"Pyramid" game were:
The Number- 981
Pyramtd-38; 291; 1567.

,,

EXTENDED FORECAST
Swlday tbroagb 'l'llelday: A
chance ., rain late Sullday IIDd
Mouday. Fair Tuesday. Hlglll
from the 501 SUllday to tile mid :
tGI to low 50s Mollllay ud
'l'llflday. Lowe from the se. Soday IIDd Tuesday to the upper 301
to low 4ts Mllllday.

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