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                  <text>Buckeye Girls' State delegates announced
WINTHROP

LINDA EASON

KIM ROUSH

LORIRUPE

e
VOL 28,

NO. 250

•

American Legion Auxiliary units
of Feeney-BeMett Post 128, Mid. dleport, and Drew Webster Post 39,
Pomeroy, have selected six Meigs
High School juniors as delegates and
alternates to Buckeye Girls' State
which this year will be held at
Ashland College, Ashland, Ohio,
June 14-21.
The delegates are Linda Eason,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Eason, Pomeroy, sponsored by the
Drew Webster unit; Kim Roush,
foster daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Virgil Parsons, Pomeroy, sponsored
by Feeney-BeMett Post unit ; and
Lori Rupe, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Rupe , Pomeroy, cosponsored by Preceptor Beta Beta
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority.
· The alternates are Beth Perriri,
daughter of the Rev. and Mrs. W. H.

at y
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

PHONE TOO LONG.

•

MAYBE I CAN
SAVE SOME CF
ITI AT

TRAIN DERAilS - Offiaials were keeping a close watch this morning on three cars of a Ghessie System train which derailed early today
near the Mountaineer Power Plant at New Haven. Acc;ording ~ a

'L:EAST·"

railroad spokesman, 12 cars on the 92 car train derailed. Three' cars con·
tained flamable chemicals. The incident caused officials to close SR 33.
Several employes could not report to work at power plant.

Train derailment blocks plant traffic
TI!ree tank cars carrying flammable chemicals were amoll£ 12
railroad cars of a Chessie System
train that derailed early this morning near New Haven, W. Va .
According to T.H . Rollins,
Superintendent of the Railroad's
Grafton office, one of the tank cars
was loaded with vinyl chloride,
while the others were transporting
ethulene oxide.
Railroad officials arrived at the
scene at approximately 4 a.m. and
·reported none of the cars were

~tarcher
Damages· were estimated at between $15,000 and $20,000 as the result
of a fire IVhiCh struck the George
Starcher home, Route 2, Pomeroy,
at 12:&lt;13 p.m. Sunday.
Pomeroy Fire Chief Charles
Legar said the blaze was caused by a
wood burning stove which caught

leaking. There were no injuries
reported.
The cause of the derailment was
not known, but according to Rollins,
a full investigation will be made.
The train was made up of a total of
92 cars. U.S. Rte. 33, near the
derailment, is closed today and according to State Police
Bill
Adkins of the Charleston Detachment traffic is being rerouted across
Broad Run Rd.
Employees of the Mountaineer
Power Plant located above New

u:

•

I

l

.,

By The Auoclated Press
At least 12 persons were killed in
traffic accidents in Ohio this
weekend, according to the Highway
PatroL
The patrol keeps count of weekend
traffic fatalities from 6 p.m. Friday
unW midnight Sunday.
The dead:
SUNDAY
EATON - Amy- E. Stoneburner,
75, of West Alexandria, a passenger,
in a twtH:ar accident on U.S. 40 in
Preble County.
DELAWARE Gregg W.
Larrimer, 25, of Columbus, in a onecar accident on a Delaware County
road.
WOOSTER - Mark D. KeMedy,
21, of Medina, iq a one-ear accident
on Ohio94 in Wayne County.
SATURDAY
HAMILTON - Jeffrey L. Kolb, 17,
of Oxford, in a car-train accident at
a Butler County railroad crossing.

Haven were unable to get to the
plant this morning due to the
derailment.
Bob Adams, construction
manager of the plant, cannot be
reached for comment this morning,
but a spokesman at the plant reported employees who are already at
work were being evacuated at approximately 11: 15 a.m.
Assisting at the scene this morning, along with railroad officials,
were the Mason Co. Sheriff's Dept. ,

State Police, Pt. Pleasant Detach-ment, New Haven Police Dept. , and
·
the New Haven Fire Dept.

The Assoelated Press
Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini
ruled today that the 50 American
hostages must remain in the hands
of the young militants QCCupying the
U.S. Embassy in Tehran unW the
new Iranian Parliament decides
their fate,. Khomeini's office announced.
The 7!i-year-{)ld leader of the
Iranian revolutionary regime vetoed
President Abolhassan Bani-Sadr's
proposal to transfer custody of the
captives to the ruling Revolutionary
Council after a meeting with Bani·
Sadr and Foreigo Minister Sadegh
Ghotbzadeh.
In Washington, President Carter,
after spending part of the Easter
weekend considering the .hostage
crisis, said he was near a decision on
a new set of economic and
diplomatic sanctions against Iran.
He remarked that the hostages' captors - he called them " terrorists"
- had agreed to release their
orisoners to the Iranian government
· 1'but the governn\ent refused." He
did not elaborate.
Talking briefly to reporters after
returning from Camp David, Md., he
was asked whether he was about to
invoke new sanctions. "We'U be
deciding that in a few minutes,"
Carter replied, then went direcUy to
his Oval Office to prepare for a
meeting with his national security
and foreigo affairs advisers.
Press Secretary Jody PoweU said
he did not know if the White House
meeting would lead to an immediate
aMouncement of U.S. retaliatory

moves.
Although there was no suggestion
from Washington that military action was cont~mplated, two U.S.

senators who visited American
Navy pilots on a carrier in the Indian
Ocean said the pilots seemed eager
to bomb selected targets in Iran.
Today was the !56th day in captivity for the 50 Americans in the
embassy and three held in the
Iranian Foreigo Ministry. Three
U.S. clergymen invited by the
militants to hold Easter services at
the embassy reported the hostages
were in excellent condition.
The Revolutionary Council met for
4'h hours Sunday. Gpotbzadeh said
it reached a decision on Bani-8adr's
proposal to take custody of the
hostages. But he said the decision
would not be &amp;Mounced unW after it
was submitted to Khomeini.
Diplomatic sources said BaniSadr and other senior Iranian officials submitted two opposing
solutions to Khomeini for his ruling.
said one solution, backed by
Bani-8adr and Ghotbzadeh, would
have meant a transfer of the
hostages to government custody to
assure the United Stateo and the
world that the American captives
were secure aml,in good health.
The other position, supported by
some other Revolutionary Council
members, would have left the
hostages in the militants' control,
the sources said.

Ther

Weather
Showers likely through Tuesday
with a chance of thunderstonns
tonight and Tuesday. Brisk 'winds.
Highs Tuesday in the low 70s. Low
tonight in the low 50s. Chance of
precipitation is 60 percent this afternoon, and 70 percent tonight and
Tuesday.

home hit by fire
soot in the flue on fire . The fire
spread up the side of the home into
the attic. There was heavy smoke
and water ctamBges to the interior of
the home.
Middleport Fire Department
assisted the Pomeroy Department
with a tanker. There is insurance,

12 killed on Ohio highways

*I

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Hostages ·remain
in militant care

M!f VI!!~ FI~T
TEXAS SHEET CAKE .'

DeAl": .f I WA*3
TALKING ON THE r

!Conllnued on page 81

MONDAY, APRIL 7, 1980

Ed Sulliva

Qot,

•

summers, and the field commander
camp at Lebanon Junction, Ky. oqe
summer. She has also attended band
workshops at Whitewater, Wise.,
and TeMesse Tech.
Her choir activities have included
being president for four years,
singing in the madrigal and girl's
octet, and performing in two
musicals serving as student director
for one. She has received the director's award three years, and is listed
in Wbo' s Who in Music. Her other activitiies have included being on the
student council two years, and
belonging to the Pep Club and
Spanish Club.
Besides her school activities, linda is assistant organist at the
Pomeroy United Methodist Church,
a member of the Meigs Association

enttne

I

Priscilla's
Po
.

Perrin, Pomeroy; alternate to Miss
Eason; Angela Payne, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Bobby E. Payne, Middleport, alternate · to. Miss Roush;
and Jena Welker, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Jack Welker, Hemlock
Grove, alternate to Miss Rupe.
Linda Eason is a college
preparatory ;~tudent who is actively
invofved in nwnerous school and
community activities. At Meig;~
High School she is in the marching,
concert and i8Z1! bands, has served
on the hand council for three years
and as field commander for two
years. She is now active with the
Winter Guard. Her awards through
the ban\! have included the director's award, two years, the student
award as a sophomore. She has attended the Ohio University Swnmer
Music Institute for the past thrf'P

DAYTON - Sherry L. Acosta, 19,
of Xenia, in a one-car accident on a
Dayton city street.
COLUMBUS- Betty J . Ryser, 36,
of Columbus, in a motorcycle accident on a Columbus city street.
CLEVELAND - Helen Bozic, 58,
of Cleveland, a pedestrian struck by
an automobile on a Cleveland city
street.
CALDWELL - Velma Sills, &amp;:i, of
Minerva, and Harry L. Sills, 29, of
Canton, in a one-Car accident on
Ohio513 in Noble County.
FRIDAY NIGHT

CLEVELAND - Juana Delvalle,
65, of Cleveland, a pedestrian struck
by a car on a Cleveland city street.
TOLE!)() -'- David J. Osthimer,
33, of Toledo, a pedestrian struck by
a car on a Toledo city street.
PORTSMOUTH - Marian M.
Miller, 74, of Otway, a pedestrian
struck by a car on a Portsmouth city.
street.

Chief Legar said.
Monday · morning, a wood burner
also caused a fire at the mobile
home of Walter Wears in the Rock
Springs area.
Chief Legar
estimated damages at $500 to the
mobile home. He said the chimney
outside of the home will probably
have to .be rebuilt since it was badlv
damaged as a result of the fire.
There was some smoke damage to
the interior of the residence .
'
Saturday evening, Middleport
volunteer firefighters were'C8Ued to
the Middleport Lunchroom where a
car owned by BillY Cremeans was on
fire. There was light damage.

Reservations needed
Meigs Countians wishing to make
the trip to Washington, ·D. C., as a
part of the " Jesus to Washington" on
April29 are to make reservations no
later than tomorrow for their transportation.
A local group is chartering buses
for local Christians and the April 29
trip will include at least one million
people from across the nation.
Those wishing to arrange transportation should contact 992-7414 at
once.
11

WINNERS - These are the big winners at the annual Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club Easter egg
hunt Sunday afternoon at the Middleport Corrununity
Park. From the left arc Jackie Bacon, Middleport, who

found the silver egg, worth $5; Eddie Patrick, Route 1,
Middlepol't, finder ol the gold egg, worth $10; the
Easter Bwmy (Pat O'Brien) and Pat Hill, chalnnan of
the club event.

�3--The Daily Sentinel, Mi;'dleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, April 7, 1!160

2-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Mondav. Alll'il7 .)!160

The Daily Sentiriel ;:

Meigs
Property
Transfers

..

Opinions and comments ~ ·

EditoriJJl opinion

Oil tax could lead
•

• •

to positive action
Congress has created an unprecedented new excise tax
:pn U.S. crude oil production. It is estimated that the tax
!win provide government an additional $227 billion over the
}!ext ten years-total tax revenues that will accrue to
government from oil production during this time will be
much higher.
· The tax is being designed so different tax formulas will
apply to different categories of oil, with newly discovered
oil and harder-to-produce oil not as heavily taxed. But, the
key eoint is that all oil production will be taxed more
heavily.
·
Since the tax will inevitably be taking some investment
dollars away from direct energy production, it is hoped
that the funds will be used at least indirectly to hell? overcome the energy problem,
·
Some of the money should be used to help people who
face hardships because of higher energy costs.
Some should be used to encourage development of better
methods and forms of energy production.
Some should be used toward balancing the federal
budget so as to stabilize the dollar.
· The point being: it is now, to a considerable extent, the
government's responsibility to see that revenues from the
.
crude oil tax are used for positive results.

Gladys Sigler, Affidavit, Middleport.
Ernest E. TonkiD, Mary E. Tonkin
to Jay Hall, Jr., Lot 32, Pt. Lot 33, .
Middleport.
James J . Proffitt, Shff., Frank G.
Weaver, Nancy L. Weaver, Michael
L. Conley to Charles H. Morrison,
Sara Ann Morrison, 20 acres, 48'&gt;2
acres, Olive.
Shennan Buskirk, Artie Mae
Buskirk, Mary Hindy, Kalad Hindy
to Richard Vaughan, Ruby
Vaughan, Lots 53-64, Pt. Lots ~1,
Middleport.
James J . Proffitt, Shff., Nellie
Robey, etal, to Leonard L. Lentz,
Lots, Pomeroy.
Reed Jeffers, Helen E. Jeffets,
Gene L. Jeffers, Martha E. Jeffers
to Luther Lee Osborne, Brenda Kay
Osborne, 2.4 acres, Scipio.
Lois Dean, dec. to William K.
Dean, Thomas H. Dean, Elizabeth
Ann Krauss, William F. Dean, Aff.
for trans.; Sutton.
Donald E. Miller, dec. to Lewis
Miller, Ruby Miller, CeJ:i. of Trans.,
Olive- Orange.
Lewis Miller, Ruby M. Miller to
Lewis Miller, Ruby M. Miller, Parcels, Orange- Olive.
Robert Hatfield to Anne Hatfield,
Court Entry, Rutland.
Nettie Evelyn Hicks, Paul Hicks,
Leona Lydia Young, Noel Young to
George Molden, Bernice Molden,
Lots, Pomeroy.
Wayne W. Beal, Janeth Beal,
Stanley Beal, Juanita Beal, Mildred
Lucille Swart, Maartin Swart to
George Molden, Bernice Molden,
Lots, Pomeroy.
Dale Wallace Hill, Amy R. Hill -to
Dale W. Hill, Amy R. Hill, 55.03 \
acres, Sutton.

Dotting Ireland's countryside are
some 150 ancient stone tombs. Experts believe that revered dead were
buried in such places. However, it
remains unknown why the large
stones - some weighing as much as
a hundred tons - were moved and
erected.

For majority leader Byrd

where bills go when they're introduced and why sometimes bills
are debated with only a handful of
senators present.
He showed wbere Republicans and
Democrats sit and translated the
Latin inscripti0118 over uie chamber
doors. 'fben be took a dollar from his
pocket to read the Latin on it, too.
Several coins fell to the floor.
"There went a quarter and a
nickel and a dime on the floor," he
said. "I will get them. I must not let
them getaway!"
Byrd then went on to describe
memorable duels that took place
among members of Congress in a
rowdier time in the nation's history.
Interrupting Byrd to transact
some business, Sen. David I. Boren,
D-Okla., said: "l wonder if the

Ohio perspective

Discipline bill
baffles lawmakers
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) Lawmakers have a tough time
agreeing on legislation aimed at
school action .agalnst young thugs
and arsoniBts who wreck and disrupt
Ohio's schools.
Dispute arises when the
Legislat!VI! moves to mandate rules
for state's more than 600 school
districts without providing funds for
implementation.
Last week the Senate spent nearly
.three hours in an emotional debate
before finally voting 2G-13 to approve
and send a sChool discipline and
truancy bill to the House.
1 Nearly everyone agreed the bill
has "some problems," with the chief
sponsor, Sen. John K. Mahoney, DSpringfleld, and others saying they
hope it might be. improved by the
lower chamber.
Most uf the debate centered
around a series of Republican amendments which more or less would
have allowed locaiiChool districts to
handle their own discipline
.'
problems.
The amendments by Sen. Paul R.
Malia R-Wesllake, would have
'
.
deleted state mandates for vanous
types of paper work, and a provision
under which school officials and
parents would advi.!e each other by
telephone when a· student was gomg

to be or had been abSent.
Mahoney and Senate Education
Chainnan Marcus A. Roberto, !).
Ravenna, deplored the amendments
and said if they were approved, it
would be the same as the
Legislature "doingnotblng."
Roberto said pubUt CjJI!Cern is at a
high pltd! becaust rlleacbers being
Injured and property being
destroyed and added "either we are
going to do something or we are

not."

LEGAL NOTICE
THE STATE PRIME
SPONSOR COU NCI L (SPSC)
WILL
HOLO
A
MEET ING ON APRIL 15,
1980, at 10 : 00 A .M . AT THE
STATE OFFICE TOWER
LOBBY HEARING ROOM
LOCATED AT 30 EAST
BROAD
STREET ,
COLUMBUS, OHIO .

base.

Pavement Widtl:l - 20
teet.
Proje ct
Length 2,496 .49 fetor 0.472 mile .
Work Length - 2,609.49
fee.! or 0.494 mile . The Ohio Department of
Transportation
hereb_y
notifies all bidders that 11
wi ll affirmatively insure
t hat i n any contract en ·
tered into pursuant to this
advertisem en t , m inoritY
business enterpr ises will be
afforded ful l opportunity to
su bm it bids in response to
this invitation and wi l l not
be discrimina ted agai nst
on the grou nd s of ra ce,
color. or na t ional origi n in
consideration for a award.
" Minimum wage rates
for t his project ha ve been
predetermined as required
by law and are set forth in
the bid proposa l."
" T he date set lor com
pletion of th is work sha ll be
set forth in the bidding
proposal. "
·
Ea!!: h bi dder sha ll be
required to file with his bid
a · certified check or
cash ier's check for an
amount equal to five per·
cent of his bid, but in no
event more than fift y
thousand dolla rs, or a bond
for ten percent of his bid ,
payable to the Dir ec tor. ·
Bidders must apply, on
the proper form s, for
qualifcatton at least ten
days pr ior to the date se t
for openin9. biQs in ac ·
cordance wrth Chapter 5525
Ohio Revised Code.
Plans and specif ications
are on file in the Depart ·
m ent Of Transportation and
the office of the District
Deputy DIrector .
The Director reserves
th e r ight to rejec t any and
all bids.
OAVID L. WEIR
DI RECTOR
Rev _8-17-73

14)7, 1tc

All One Piece!

( 4)

·

Senate Finance Chairman Harry
Mesbel, D-Youngstown, said 'GOP
senators were _euggerating the envisioned costs, and that most if not
all of the requlreme_nts of the bill
could be mel with existing personnel.
The telephone calls, for instam;e,
could be made by anyone the principal designates, even Jtigh school
seniors, be said. ·
· Sen. H. Cooper, Snyder, R·
Blanchester, ~)and cited
commltteeteJ~~ting ~~

the administratlve· l:llllt.i-coIIIII increase by. asmuch as 30 perceqt, at
least m big·school~ where hundreds
of calls might oo ve to be made each
.,
. '
day.
He said the schools in hiS district
barely have the funds to operate
currently and "if&gt;&gt;? j&gt;I"S thiS. SOme
of then! a r~- !!'.J 111 1: i :; t; ... •. ,· tnt:! · to . "

"

distinguished majority leader might
yield to me. And I will say that my
request will not bear upon dueling or
present any challenge."
If Byrd's speech on the number of
states and senators might have
seemed a little elemental to anyone
out of grade school, one need only
turn to a recent congressional study
to see that he isn't the only one on
Capitol Hill stating the obvious.
The study was by Congress' Office
of Technology Assessment and was
entitied: "The Effects of Nuclear
War."

Aone-page summary listed this as
a central conclusion: "In the period
following a nuclear attack, conditions could get worse before they
started to get better."
Senate Assistant Minority Leader
Ted Stevens of Alaska got a full
room of reporters for a news conference rf(.-ently wben he announced
he'd beser&gt;'ing Alaska red salmo~.
· After Stevens and the press had
devoured the tasty fish, the
Republican lawmaker decided to
open the news conference. He asked
if there were any questions.
"Senator, how was this fish
cooked?" came one query.
Stevens said he wasn't sure, but
gladly would share with; reporters
his own favorite method of cooking
salmon: by wrapping it in alwninum
foil and putting it in the dishwasher.
Once through for a small fish, twice
for a big one, be said.

You·u en1oy lh•s jac ~et JU St as
much m SeptemDer itS m May 1

NOTICE OF
PROPOSED
BANK MERGER
Notice is hereby Qi'Ven
that application has been
made fo the Comptroller of
the Currency, Washington ,
D. C., 20219 for h is consent
to a merger of Pomeroy
National Bank, Pomeroy,
Ohio and Bank one of
Pomeroy, N. A ., Pomeroy,
Ohio. This application was
accepted for fi II ng on Mar·
Ch 25, 1980.
It Is contemplated that
all offices of the above·
named banks will continue
to be operated .
Thi s notice is published
pursuant to section 16 &lt;c) of
th e Federal Deposit In·
surance A ct and Part s of
the Regulations of the Comptro ller of the Currency (12
CFRS).
'
March 31 , 1980
POMEROY
NATIONAL BANK
Pomeroy. Ohio
BANK ONE OF
POME I- OY, N. A .
. Pomeroy, Oh i"'
(3 ) J l , l 4) 7 , 14. 21, 28, ')9 ,

h C
1

shell strtch ra cke( over dresses.
pants. Crochet of synlhelrc
worsted all m one piece from the
collar down . Pallern 7496 ·
Mrsses Srzes 11-14; 16·1 8 rncl.
$1.75 f01 ""' h patlem. Add 501

each pettern for fi rst-class anmail and handling. Send to:
Alitt Broolls
Neodlecraft Depl
:J 1 _,-

• (lmert name of '""' p.1per)

Box 163, Old Chelsu Sta., New

Yort, NY 10011. Print Name,
Addrm, Zip, Pattern Number.
EXCITING' New 1980 NEEDLE CRAFT CATALOG wrth over I 70

designs in great vanety of cratts.

3 free patterns inside. SendS 1.00
132-Quilt Oririnal$ ... ... $1.50.
131-Add a Bloclo Quills . __ $1.50
130-Swuters-Sizes 38-56 .$).50
129-Quick/Easy Transfers . $1.50
12Hatchwort Quilts . .. . $1.50
127-Af&amp;fians 'n' Doilies . __ $1.50
126-Crafty Flowers ... . .. $1.50
125-Petaf Quilts ... .. . .. $1.50
12~ifts 'n' Omaments .. $1.50
IZJ.Stitch 'n' Patch Quilts$1.50
122-Stuff 'n' Puff Quilts .. $1.50
121-Pillow Show.offs .... $1.50
120-Crochet a Wardrobe .. $1.50
119-flower Crochet. . _... $1.50
Ill-Crochet with Squares .SUO
liS-Nifty Fifty Quilts . . $1.50
liS-Ripple Crochll . , .... $1.50
114-Complete Al&amp;flans ... $1.50
liZ-Prize Afrtlans . .. ... _$1.50
107-Instant Stw~ne ...... $1.50
lOS-Instant Crochet . .... $1.50
102-MuSIIm Quilts .. _.. $1.50
101-Quilt Collection .. .$1.50

ASTRO•GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

A

"Your

~'Birthday
lp&lt;lll, 1110
Lllttn carefully thll coming year
to tlpt given you by pals who
know how to make money. A
lrltnd. who It on to aomtthlng
gOOd may cut you In on the

(~)

' you lhPect others to do the

same
.
LEO (July 23-Auo. 22) Tasks you
..;an almost do by rote may pr ove
more t:l ''ttcult ltlan usual today .
Seltmg 'llO fast a pace may
Cltl1Sfl v• ,, tn rnake mistakes
&lt;/ IRC ~

' {.,

?:t-Sept . 2?1 '.'!
• on&lt;""
,,,

I

I .

61

Sentinel
Classifieds

wanted To Buy

HIND QUARTERS
SIDES ................~~: ....~ 129

- -c
=-a- r-=
d---:-oi Th_a_n-ks -

CENTER CUT RIB

our sincere thank s to
everyone which hel ped
during the sickness and
death of our beloved sister
Edythe Hazelton Welch.
Special thanks to Teh nur·
ses at Pi necrest Care Cen
ter , Or~ Va ll ee , th e
minister Bob Pur tell dnd
allof our neighbors.
The Family of Edythe
Welch.
Announcements __

3

GUN SHOOT.
Ra ci ne
Volun teer
Fire
Dept.
Every Saturday . 6:30p .m .
At tt"' eir bu ild ingin Bashan.
Factory choke gu ns only .
GU N SHOOT every Sunday
12 :00 . Fa ctory choke on ly.
Corn Hollow Gun Club,
Rutland . Proceeds donated
to Boy Scou t Troop 249 .

PAY highest pr ices
possible t or gold and silver
coi ns, rings, jewelry, etc.
Conta ct Ed Bu rkett Bar ber
Shop, Middleport .
1

GOL D ,
S IL VER
OR
FOREIGN COINS , OR
ANY OTHER GOLD OR
SILV ER ITEMS. ALSO,
FURNITURE
A NTIQUE
OR OTHER ANT IQUE
ITEMS . WILL PAY TOP
DOLLAR . CHECK WITH
OSBY (OS SIE ) M A RT IN
B E FOR E
SELLING .
ALSO
PHONE 992 6370
DO APPRAISING .
GU N SHOO T EVERY
FRIDAY NI GHT 7:30PM.
FACTORY CHOKE ONLY .
RACINE GUN CLU B.

Through the month of April
Hea dquarter s
Beauty
Sa lon is offering all perms
and frost ing s at a re duced
rate . Come out and meet
Connie Aldridge and Judy
Co ttrill . Phon e 992·6311 for
an appointment . Open
w eek. days p l us two
eve ni ngs a week for your
convenience .

11

Hel p Wanted

In f l nan c;l al and business
matters, but tod8y you may be
tempted to loss discretion to the
winds. Gambles'eou ld misfire .
LIBRA (Bopl. 23-0cl. 23) You
and your mate could be poles
apart on a major issue today.
One ot you will hllllfl to be a
peacemaker. Anumethe rOle.
SCORPIO ' 1001. 24-Nov. 22)
Take great care today not to
btun out thing• to others that
they may deem offensive. even
though thlt Isn 't your basic
Intention . Looae lips cause
con frontation•.
IAOITTAAIU8 (Nov. 23-Doc. 21)
tmpu l si~e spending today could
do your budget a gi"Bat disservice . You know the limit of your
resources, ao try to live within
your means.
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jan. II)
Having too many irons In the tire
today will prove self-defeating.
Keep you r priorities In ord er.
Don 't take on more the11 you can
manage
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob. It) S.
very careful today about jumping
to conclusions before all the
fact s are ln. Premature ju dg ~
ments are apt to be erroneous.
PISCES (Feb. 20-.March 20) 86
t-ntptu! to olt1ers tod • r· but con tina 'r'Our aid to rK)nmaterial

w~ty s ,

Souno advice Will dn more
goOd t hafl di001n.; '"IO )'Our
..... -~ f'

CHUCK ROASt............~!':,~ 1
CHUCK
!}69 :s . .. ~ 179
STEAKS
49

FREEZER BEEF
CUT. WRAPPED AND FROZ£f~ LB.$ }39

10 karat, I~ k~rat, 18 karat,
gold . Denial gold and gold
ear pins. 675-3010.

~~~~- ............. ~~: .......~149

GET VALUABLE trai ning
as a young business person
and earn good money plus
some great gifts as a Senti nel route carrier. Phone
us right away and get on
tr.c eligibility list at 9922156 or 992-2157 .

0

0

0

•

0

••• ••• 0

0

•

SUPERIOR'S

FRANKIESOR

SPARE
LB.
RIBS ....................... .

SUPERIORS

12

BACON

BONELESS

LOIN END

89~

mmed iate openings for
registered nurses having
expe r ien ce in intensi ve
ca r e, corona ry care, units.
Appl icati ons are now being
accepted for full time and
part time pos itions on 7·3
and 3-11 shifts. Sa lar y co m mensurate
wi ·th
ex perience . An equa l op·
portunity emp loyer. Cont act Teresa Coll ins , R N
di re c to r
of
nursing
Ve terans
Memor i al
Hospital, Pomeroy, OH .
Phone 614-992 ·2104.

SEA STAR

P FISH ........................................... ~· 99~

VAUGHAN'S

BALLARDS

LB

SAUSAGE ..............•..........•.•••........ :-•.•..•• 89~

Middleport, Ohio

FOLGERS

income tak ing short phone
message$ at home . Call
615-779-3235 Ext. 406D .

.

FRIENDLIEST SERVICE IN TOWN
BIGGEST BARGAINS IN TOWN

KRAFT

SALE DATES
APRIL 7-12,

QUANTITY
RIGHTS
RESERVED

1980

DEL MONTE

MACARONI &amp;CHEESE
DINNERS
3 7 oz. 9~

DEL MONTE

IE

ABL~S

COKE

YELLOW CLING SLICED OR HALVES

65~

29-oz .
Can

16-17 oz .

... nit two with

Cans

8

S 10.00 purchase

PEAR HALVES ....................... '~~"..' 59c

• Whole Kernel or Creem Style Corn
• Sweet Peas

PINEAPPLE / GRAPEFRUIT. PINEAPPLE/ ORANGE
OR PINK PINEAPPLE/ GAAPEFRUIT

5 LB. BAG

IFI.c:)~lt e••••e•e••••e••··················e·······e••e•e•e••e•• 89~
.

SALAD DltESSING... .-.•.•.•.....•. ~······JtQ~.!~t. 89

~

DEL MONTE DRINKS ..........

4

~~~·

PEl MONTE

TOMATO JUICE ...................

~~~·

4

FOLGER'S

6 oz.

•

C:c:)IFIFI51E·······•ee•e··········e••••ee•••e····

13

Pi cki ng up an Easy play
o rgan
in your area .
Looking for a responsible
party to tak e over pay men
ts. Cal l credit manager
collect. 614-- 592-5122.

SAUERKRAUT ...................2 ~~~: 791
OZ.
16CANS

SPINACH ....._......... 1 .
894
SLICED PICKLED BEETS ..... t~~~· 491

Anouncong
Randy Carpentc' r
New Factory
Traincll
Frontend
AlognmPnl
Specialrst
Ct~ll

49

CARDINAL

CRISCO OIL

BROWN·N·SERVE ROLLS •• ••••••••• •• 39e

GAINESBURGER

(614) 991 q93;•

German Shepherd, 6 mos.
old, male, gentle . 669·3265 .

OZ 891
CORN MUFFIN MIX ....... 4 B"·
Pko.

Wanted to Bu :t__

9

Iron and brass beds, old
furn i ture , desks, gold
rin gs,
Jewel ry , silver .
dol tars, sterling, etc., woad
i ce bo xes, antiques, etc .
Comp l ete
·households
Wr ite M . D. Mill er, Rt . -4 ,
Pom eroy , OH . or ca ll 992·
7760.
Gold, Si lver or fore ign
coi ns or any gold or silver
ia~ ms. A ntique furn iture,
glass or chi na, will pa y top
Jo llar, or· complete esta tes.
No Item too large or too
sma ll. Check prices before
sell ing . Also do appral!.ing .
Osby ( Ossi~) Martin . 992
6370 .

••

ct. .
Pkg

w ith coupon

72-o•.$249

19

Box

fapifU 4/ 12: /10

Good 11 Ca rdlr~al

~

ti;~~·~·~..~~·~'';';"';'"~;, ~~~~=00=-~=·=0·==~==~

WHITE OR
ASSORTED
COLORS

GRAVY BOAT

89~
LIMIT 1

Money to Loan
Mortgage
Mone y
Ava ilable . New homes, old
homes, and refinancing
your present home. CONVENT IONAL 5 Pet . down,
SECOND MORTGAGES.
VA · No down payment.
FHA -Low down payment,
FHA -245-Graduated paym·
ent program , FHA-265Subs idv program . Call 592·
3051 , Ireland Mortgage Co.,
77 E . State St, Athens, OH .

GARVIN'S

64 oz.

.

OltANGE JuICE ...............

Homes for Sale

House f or Sale. Large lot,
completely remodeled , 3
bedrooms, l iving room. kit·
chen and bath. Wood burner heat. 521,500. 100 percent financing at 11 percent
int . If interested ca ll 698·
7331 . In Pagetown.

99~

0 • • • • • • • • • • • I • • • • • • • • • • • • • 0.

MAitGAitiNE ......................·~-~~-~~~~~ .......... ~:. 5 9e
_

•

12 OZ S]

.

C:HEESE ·· ···· ··· ··· ··· ····· ···· ··· ··· ··· ···· ········ ··· ···· ·····

9 Room House, l V2 baths,
basement and oar8ge .
College Rd ., Syracuse, OH .
992-5133 or 992-3981 .

39

••• ••• •

•

•

4 Bedroom brick home In
Middleport. 992-3457 or 992·
2549.

--------FREEZER VALUES-------.BANQUET

~:~~~EN..............................................2 p~~- s1''

Large attracti ve home on
one acre In Syracuse.
Modern Ki tchen, 2 baths,
basement, garage. 9927727.
I

GAHOi:N DELIGHT RlGULAA OR ,;RiNKLf CUT

0

0

0
•

•

•

•••

0
•••••••• •

CARDINAL V~NILL"

•

•

•

••••••• •

•••••

o······ o·

5

POTATOES
.

10

LB.

89~

lb.
Bog

5129

IC:E C:ltEAM ,.............:...................:.·...... :..~~~ ....... '2 49

LUABLE COUPON WORTH S4.00
I
I

I
I

TOW-RD THE PURCHASE OF THIS WEEK'S FEATURED ITEM

GRAVY BOAT

FLORIDA FRESH YELLOW

NEW CROP YELLOW

ON IONs ........ 3-ts. BAG sge
MIX OR MATCH

4
FOR

'100

FLORIDA PINK OR WHITE .

GRAPEFRUIT

4 00

$15.99

In the pattern of youf choice

CORN ................5 EARs gge
BELL PEPPERS
CUCUMBERS
GREEN ONIONS
RED RADISHES 6 OZ.
CARROTS
LB.

$19 99

Our Reg. Discount Price .
Coupon sa~ings
Your Price (wi th coupon)

•

;~NA~ILK ............. ~ ....................................~.~~ .....~.1 69

FRENCH
·FRIES. ····

U. S. NO. 1 MAINE

0

0

~ouse for Sal e. Large lot,

completely remodeled, 3
bedroom, kitchen, 2 baths,
living room, full basement.
525,000 . 100 percent financ ing 'at 11 percent interest.
If Interested call698-7331 In
Pagetown .

!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

--------DAIRY VALUES:--------

KRAFT AMERICAN SLICED SINGLES
31

BRADFORD, Auctioneer,
Complete Service. Phone
949·2487 or 949·2000 . ra ci ne,
Ohio, Crill Bradford.

COTTO. ELLE

JIFFY

St . Bernard. 2 yea r s ol.d . 1
family ,
g oo d
watch
dog .992 -2092 or 992 -7803 .
Public Sale
&amp; Auction

OZ.

BATHROOM TISSUE

Bottle

0011

0"1 coupon p1r l1mily

DOWNY.......................................... '3
136

38-oz.

liE=::-............
.
-··· · ··~ . . .. .

Nice hunting dog. A lot of
Slue Tic in it. 5112 mos . old.
Male . 992-7240 .

8

FABRIC SOFTENER

$159

BEEF

Umit

AUT 0 M 0 B I L E
I N -SU RANCE
been
ca n·
celled?
Los t
y o ur
opera tor 's li cense? Phone
992 -2143.

oz.

. I

Insurance

Gi ve p lano lessons to beg in·
ners and advanced 'Student
in my home . Also teach
chord ing and tra nsposing if
interes ted. Ca ll992-5403.

Pomeroy . 0

CHEEit
DETEitGENT

~-------BAKERY BUY.--------~

Wanted to Do

LANDMARK
SERVICE
STATION

NEEBLER

DEL MONTE

Del Monte

2'9

' I

59c
691

Announcements

3

I

DEl MONTE

INSTANT

PAK
',,.
16 OZ. BrJ_S.

l MONTE CALORIE REOU Cttl

• Cut or French Style Green Beans

R~W

Lb.
Can

-BEVERAGE BUY-

PEACHES

•

PILLSBURY

JOB CORPS RECRUITER SCHEDULED
A Job Corps Recruiter will be in the area next
week to interview potential applicants for a
Federally Funded Program designed to beHer
qualify young peopl~ tor employment .
The Program is FREE Job Training for persons
16 thru 21. not yet 2'J years of age . Enrollees will go
to a training center away from home to learn a skill
for employment, and continue education; every
Center offers the High School equivalency diploma.
While in Job Corps persons are given tree food~
housing, medical care, clothing allowance and some
spending money .
Job Corps trains males and females tor job skills
such as auto mechanics, keypunch, bricklaying,
nursing skills, welding, office skills and many more.
Enrollees with a High School or GED diploma will
be ~ligible to attend Junior College, Community Col~
lege and post-secondary Vocationa 1schools tor up to
two years of advanced education and training under
Job Corps, after successfully completing 90 days in
the regular Job Corps Program.
A Field "Staff Repres entatiwe of the Job Corps Project will be ava ilable tor interview at- POMEROY
CITY HALL - Council Chambers (2nd floor) 110
2nd 51 .
Tues. Apr. 8,1 -4:30 PM; Wed . Apr. 9, 9-4:30 PM
Thur. A ril10, 9· 12 Noon

All GRINDS

COFFEE

1

$$$ Substantia l part time

Lb.

. . . '. '. . .~:.~219

Office, Clerical Help .
Typing ,
proficiency
required. Send complete
r es um e c·o The Daily Sen·
tinel. Box 729-C, Pomero y,
Ohio 45769.
Wanted : Woman to sit with
older lady . S2.40 per hr . 9927255.

or more

LEAN &amp; nNDER BONELESS

.-

Babysitter Needed in the
Raci ne area to care for .a 9
month old girl. Hours 8-4
Mon. thru Fri. Please ca ll
949 -2406 after 5 p.m .

oz.

:~~~ .... .'.......... LB $}89 :!~
'

PORK
LB. $} 09
ROAST.......................
-

Need money for vacation?
Model for Sarah Coventr y
Jewelry. 6t4-992-3211 9
a.m .· 12p.m .
Bar Maid or Bar Tender,
part ti m, work into possible
full t i me . Call 992-5509 bet w een9·5.

•

COUNTRY STYLE

Full ti me and part time RN
or LPN . 11 -7. Contact Mr .
Zid i an at Pomeroy Health
Care Center Monday thru
Friday 9-5.

7, 14, 2tc

'--------- ---1

action.
ARIII , (Moroh II·Aprll II) T
AIIOCiatll will bl WitChing you
ciOMiy today lo 1M It you're
doing things for Hlflth rea10n1.
A~old any tyr,u of action whlcn
could tarn sh )lour Image .

Aomanoe ,
travel,
luck,
reaourc11, poaetblt pltfatlt and
ci.r11r ftr ' the coming montht
are all dltcuaHd In your Al1ro Graph Letter 11"111 btglnt with
your birthday. MiltS 1 tor each to
At1ro-Grapf'1 , Box 48&amp;, Radle
City Station. N.Y. 100ta. Be sure
to tpeclfy birt h date.
TAURUI (April 20-May :10) 5o
more ol 1 llatentr than a talker
today, especially If you 're dll·
CUlling subjects In which you
are not well versed. Pretending
to know something you aon't
may prqve embarraaaing.
GEMINI (Mar 21·June 20) You
mav ba called upon toaay to
unravel a mesa in which a friend
got Involved . Stralghten ma1ters
out wl1hout tying yourself up in
the proces s.
CANCER (Juno 21·July 22)
Dealings today may require all
the diplomatic tact you can
muster. St10w a willingness to
cooperate and compromise U

7, 14, 2t c

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
· STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbus, Ohio
March 28, 1980
Contract Sales
Legal Copy No.
80-114
UNIT PRICE
• CONTRACT
PMS-0005 ( 173 )
Sea led proposals will be
received at the olfjce of the
Director of the Oh10 Oepar ~
tment of Transportafion,
Columbus, Oh io, untillO :OO
A .M ., Ohio Standa~d Time.
Tuesday, April 29, 1980, for
improvements in :
Athens, Gall~ a , Hocking,
Meigs and Washin~ton
Counties, Ohio, on vanous
loca tions, by applying
retrof lectorized polyester
compound for centerlines,
lane lines and channelizing
lines.
The Ohio Department of
Transpo r tation
hereby
notifies all bidders that it
will affirmative ly insure
that in any c ontract en ·
tered into pursuant to this
advertisement, minority
business enterprises wil l be
afforded full opportun ity to
submit b ids in response to
this invitation and w ill not
be discriminated against
on the grounds of race,
color, or national origi n in
co'nsiderati on
for
an
award .
" Minimum wage ra tes
for this project have been
predeterm ined as required
by law and are set forth in
the bid proposal. "
''' The date set f or com pletion of this work shall be
set forth in the bidding
proposa I."
.
Each b idder shall be
required to file with his b id
a certified check or
cas hier's check for an
amount equal to five per
cent of his bid, but in no
event more than f Jfty
thousand dollprs, or a bond
for )en per cent of his bid ~
pay·able t o the Director .
Bidders must apply, on
1he proper forms , for
q ualifca tton at least ten
days prior 'to the date set
for openln~ bids in ac cordance wtfh Chapter 5525
Oh io Revised Code .
Plans and spec ificati ons
are on file in the Depart ·
ment of Transportati d"n and
the office of the District
Deputy Director .
The Director reserves
the r ight to reject any and
aH b i ds .
DAVIDL . WEIR
DIRECTOR
Rev .
8 - 17 · 73

loss thts casual. easy open

Senate floor.-hoth
stage and classroom
WASHINGTON (AP) - For
Majority Leader Robert C. Byrd, the
Senate floor is not only a stage but
frequently doubles as a classroom.
"The Senate, wilike the House of
Representatives, is made up of two
members fnrn each state," the
West Virginia Democrat told an
al:most-i!mpty chamber the other
day . -"There being 50 states, there
are 100 senators."
Actually; the place wasn't quite
that empty that day. In the spectators' gallery was a group of
schoolchildren, including one of
Byrd's granddaughters, Mary Anne
Moore.
"There wasn't much going on, so
he decided to give a civics lesson,"
said Byrd aide Mike Willard.
-Byrd explained how senators vote,

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbus, Ohio
March 28, 1980
ContraCt Sales
Legal Copy No .
80-140
UNIT PRICE
CONTRACT
(ISSUE N0.1)
SOS-5301(I)
Sealed proposals wi ll be
received at the office of t he
Director of the Ohio DeJ?'ar ·
tment of Transportation,
Columbus, Ohio, untillO :OO
A .M ., Ohio StaOdard Time,
Tuesda y, April 29, 1980, for
improvements in:
Meigs County, Ohio, on
Page Street in the Vi llage
of M iddleport, )Jy gradi~g.
draining and Pav ing wtth
asphalt concrete on a
bituminou s
c:f'g gregate

NOTICE OF
DRAWING JURORS
Office of Com missioner
of Jurors, Meigs Count~ .
Ohio
April! , 1980
To All Whom It Mav Concern :
On Wednesday, the 16th
day of April, 19M at 10 : 00
o'clock, A.M .• at fhe office
of the Commissioners ot
· Jurors of Meigs County,
Ohio, Jurors w ill be
publ icly drawn for. the
Mayh 1980 Term Of the
Common Pleas Court of
said County .
Freeland Norris.
Lauren Hoffman
Comm issioners
of Jurors
(41 7, lie

5 lb. bag SI.l9

COUPON GOOD THAU

4/12/BO

�3--The Daily Sentinel, Mi;'dleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, April 7, 1!160

2-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Mondav. Alll'il7 .)!160

The Daily Sentiriel ;:

Meigs
Property
Transfers

..

Opinions and comments ~ ·

EditoriJJl opinion

Oil tax could lead
•

• •

to positive action
Congress has created an unprecedented new excise tax
:pn U.S. crude oil production. It is estimated that the tax
!win provide government an additional $227 billion over the
}!ext ten years-total tax revenues that will accrue to
government from oil production during this time will be
much higher.
· The tax is being designed so different tax formulas will
apply to different categories of oil, with newly discovered
oil and harder-to-produce oil not as heavily taxed. But, the
key eoint is that all oil production will be taxed more
heavily.
·
Since the tax will inevitably be taking some investment
dollars away from direct energy production, it is hoped
that the funds will be used at least indirectly to hell? overcome the energy problem,
·
Some of the money should be used to help people who
face hardships because of higher energy costs.
Some should be used to encourage development of better
methods and forms of energy production.
Some should be used toward balancing the federal
budget so as to stabilize the dollar.
· The point being: it is now, to a considerable extent, the
government's responsibility to see that revenues from the
.
crude oil tax are used for positive results.

Gladys Sigler, Affidavit, Middleport.
Ernest E. TonkiD, Mary E. Tonkin
to Jay Hall, Jr., Lot 32, Pt. Lot 33, .
Middleport.
James J . Proffitt, Shff., Frank G.
Weaver, Nancy L. Weaver, Michael
L. Conley to Charles H. Morrison,
Sara Ann Morrison, 20 acres, 48'&gt;2
acres, Olive.
Shennan Buskirk, Artie Mae
Buskirk, Mary Hindy, Kalad Hindy
to Richard Vaughan, Ruby
Vaughan, Lots 53-64, Pt. Lots ~1,
Middleport.
James J . Proffitt, Shff., Nellie
Robey, etal, to Leonard L. Lentz,
Lots, Pomeroy.
Reed Jeffers, Helen E. Jeffets,
Gene L. Jeffers, Martha E. Jeffers
to Luther Lee Osborne, Brenda Kay
Osborne, 2.4 acres, Scipio.
Lois Dean, dec. to William K.
Dean, Thomas H. Dean, Elizabeth
Ann Krauss, William F. Dean, Aff.
for trans.; Sutton.
Donald E. Miller, dec. to Lewis
Miller, Ruby Miller, CeJ:i. of Trans.,
Olive- Orange.
Lewis Miller, Ruby M. Miller to
Lewis Miller, Ruby M. Miller, Parcels, Orange- Olive.
Robert Hatfield to Anne Hatfield,
Court Entry, Rutland.
Nettie Evelyn Hicks, Paul Hicks,
Leona Lydia Young, Noel Young to
George Molden, Bernice Molden,
Lots, Pomeroy.
Wayne W. Beal, Janeth Beal,
Stanley Beal, Juanita Beal, Mildred
Lucille Swart, Maartin Swart to
George Molden, Bernice Molden,
Lots, Pomeroy.
Dale Wallace Hill, Amy R. Hill -to
Dale W. Hill, Amy R. Hill, 55.03 \
acres, Sutton.

Dotting Ireland's countryside are
some 150 ancient stone tombs. Experts believe that revered dead were
buried in such places. However, it
remains unknown why the large
stones - some weighing as much as
a hundred tons - were moved and
erected.

For majority leader Byrd

where bills go when they're introduced and why sometimes bills
are debated with only a handful of
senators present.
He showed wbere Republicans and
Democrats sit and translated the
Latin inscripti0118 over uie chamber
doors. 'fben be took a dollar from his
pocket to read the Latin on it, too.
Several coins fell to the floor.
"There went a quarter and a
nickel and a dime on the floor," he
said. "I will get them. I must not let
them getaway!"
Byrd then went on to describe
memorable duels that took place
among members of Congress in a
rowdier time in the nation's history.
Interrupting Byrd to transact
some business, Sen. David I. Boren,
D-Okla., said: "l wonder if the

Ohio perspective

Discipline bill
baffles lawmakers
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) Lawmakers have a tough time
agreeing on legislation aimed at
school action .agalnst young thugs
and arsoniBts who wreck and disrupt
Ohio's schools.
Dispute arises when the
Legislat!VI! moves to mandate rules
for state's more than 600 school
districts without providing funds for
implementation.
Last week the Senate spent nearly
.three hours in an emotional debate
before finally voting 2G-13 to approve
and send a sChool discipline and
truancy bill to the House.
1 Nearly everyone agreed the bill
has "some problems," with the chief
sponsor, Sen. John K. Mahoney, DSpringfleld, and others saying they
hope it might be. improved by the
lower chamber.
Most uf the debate centered
around a series of Republican amendments which more or less would
have allowed locaiiChool districts to
handle their own discipline
.'
problems.
The amendments by Sen. Paul R.
Malia R-Wesllake, would have
'
.
deleted state mandates for vanous
types of paper work, and a provision
under which school officials and
parents would advi.!e each other by
telephone when a· student was gomg

to be or had been abSent.
Mahoney and Senate Education
Chainnan Marcus A. Roberto, !).
Ravenna, deplored the amendments
and said if they were approved, it
would be the same as the
Legislature "doingnotblng."
Roberto said pubUt CjJI!Cern is at a
high pltd! becaust rlleacbers being
Injured and property being
destroyed and added "either we are
going to do something or we are

not."

LEGAL NOTICE
THE STATE PRIME
SPONSOR COU NCI L (SPSC)
WILL
HOLO
A
MEET ING ON APRIL 15,
1980, at 10 : 00 A .M . AT THE
STATE OFFICE TOWER
LOBBY HEARING ROOM
LOCATED AT 30 EAST
BROAD
STREET ,
COLUMBUS, OHIO .

base.

Pavement Widtl:l - 20
teet.
Proje ct
Length 2,496 .49 fetor 0.472 mile .
Work Length - 2,609.49
fee.! or 0.494 mile . The Ohio Department of
Transportation
hereb_y
notifies all bidders that 11
wi ll affirmatively insure
t hat i n any contract en ·
tered into pursuant to this
advertisem en t , m inoritY
business enterpr ises will be
afforded ful l opportunity to
su bm it bids in response to
this invitation and wi l l not
be discrimina ted agai nst
on the grou nd s of ra ce,
color. or na t ional origi n in
consideration for a award.
" Minimum wage rates
for t his project ha ve been
predetermined as required
by law and are set forth in
the bid proposa l."
" T he date set lor com
pletion of th is work sha ll be
set forth in the bidding
proposal. "
·
Ea!!: h bi dder sha ll be
required to file with his bid
a · certified check or
cash ier's check for an
amount equal to five per·
cent of his bid, but in no
event more than fift y
thousand dolla rs, or a bond
for ten percent of his bid ,
payable to the Dir ec tor. ·
Bidders must apply, on
the proper form s, for
qualifcatton at least ten
days pr ior to the date se t
for openin9. biQs in ac ·
cordance wrth Chapter 5525
Ohio Revised Code.
Plans and specif ications
are on file in the Depart ·
m ent Of Transportation and
the office of the District
Deputy DIrector .
The Director reserves
th e r ight to rejec t any and
all bids.
OAVID L. WEIR
DI RECTOR
Rev _8-17-73

14)7, 1tc

All One Piece!

( 4)

·

Senate Finance Chairman Harry
Mesbel, D-Youngstown, said 'GOP
senators were _euggerating the envisioned costs, and that most if not
all of the requlreme_nts of the bill
could be mel with existing personnel.
The telephone calls, for instam;e,
could be made by anyone the principal designates, even Jtigh school
seniors, be said. ·
· Sen. H. Cooper, Snyder, R·
Blanchester, ~)and cited
commltteeteJ~~ting ~~

the administratlve· l:llllt.i-coIIIII increase by. asmuch as 30 perceqt, at
least m big·school~ where hundreds
of calls might oo ve to be made each
.,
. '
day.
He said the schools in hiS district
barely have the funds to operate
currently and "if&gt;&gt;? j&gt;I"S thiS. SOme
of then! a r~- !!'.J 111 1: i :; t; ... •. ,· tnt:! · to . "

"

distinguished majority leader might
yield to me. And I will say that my
request will not bear upon dueling or
present any challenge."
If Byrd's speech on the number of
states and senators might have
seemed a little elemental to anyone
out of grade school, one need only
turn to a recent congressional study
to see that he isn't the only one on
Capitol Hill stating the obvious.
The study was by Congress' Office
of Technology Assessment and was
entitied: "The Effects of Nuclear
War."

Aone-page summary listed this as
a central conclusion: "In the period
following a nuclear attack, conditions could get worse before they
started to get better."
Senate Assistant Minority Leader
Ted Stevens of Alaska got a full
room of reporters for a news conference rf(.-ently wben he announced
he'd beser&gt;'ing Alaska red salmo~.
· After Stevens and the press had
devoured the tasty fish, the
Republican lawmaker decided to
open the news conference. He asked
if there were any questions.
"Senator, how was this fish
cooked?" came one query.
Stevens said he wasn't sure, but
gladly would share with; reporters
his own favorite method of cooking
salmon: by wrapping it in alwninum
foil and putting it in the dishwasher.
Once through for a small fish, twice
for a big one, be said.

You·u en1oy lh•s jac ~et JU St as
much m SeptemDer itS m May 1

NOTICE OF
PROPOSED
BANK MERGER
Notice is hereby Qi'Ven
that application has been
made fo the Comptroller of
the Currency, Washington ,
D. C., 20219 for h is consent
to a merger of Pomeroy
National Bank, Pomeroy,
Ohio and Bank one of
Pomeroy, N. A ., Pomeroy,
Ohio. This application was
accepted for fi II ng on Mar·
Ch 25, 1980.
It Is contemplated that
all offices of the above·
named banks will continue
to be operated .
Thi s notice is published
pursuant to section 16 &lt;c) of
th e Federal Deposit In·
surance A ct and Part s of
the Regulations of the Comptro ller of the Currency (12
CFRS).
'
March 31 , 1980
POMEROY
NATIONAL BANK
Pomeroy. Ohio
BANK ONE OF
POME I- OY, N. A .
. Pomeroy, Oh i"'
(3 ) J l , l 4) 7 , 14. 21, 28, ')9 ,

h C
1

shell strtch ra cke( over dresses.
pants. Crochet of synlhelrc
worsted all m one piece from the
collar down . Pallern 7496 ·
Mrsses Srzes 11-14; 16·1 8 rncl.
$1.75 f01 ""' h patlem. Add 501

each pettern for fi rst-class anmail and handling. Send to:
Alitt Broolls
Neodlecraft Depl
:J 1 _,-

• (lmert name of '""' p.1per)

Box 163, Old Chelsu Sta., New

Yort, NY 10011. Print Name,
Addrm, Zip, Pattern Number.
EXCITING' New 1980 NEEDLE CRAFT CATALOG wrth over I 70

designs in great vanety of cratts.

3 free patterns inside. SendS 1.00
132-Quilt Oririnal$ ... ... $1.50.
131-Add a Bloclo Quills . __ $1.50
130-Swuters-Sizes 38-56 .$).50
129-Quick/Easy Transfers . $1.50
12Hatchwort Quilts . .. . $1.50
127-Af&amp;fians 'n' Doilies . __ $1.50
126-Crafty Flowers ... . .. $1.50
125-Petaf Quilts ... .. . .. $1.50
12~ifts 'n' Omaments .. $1.50
IZJ.Stitch 'n' Patch Quilts$1.50
122-Stuff 'n' Puff Quilts .. $1.50
121-Pillow Show.offs .... $1.50
120-Crochet a Wardrobe .. $1.50
119-flower Crochet. . _... $1.50
Ill-Crochet with Squares .SUO
liS-Nifty Fifty Quilts . . $1.50
liS-Ripple Crochll . , .... $1.50
114-Complete Al&amp;flans ... $1.50
liZ-Prize Afrtlans . .. ... _$1.50
107-Instant Stw~ne ...... $1.50
lOS-Instant Crochet . .... $1.50
102-MuSIIm Quilts .. _.. $1.50
101-Quilt Collection .. .$1.50

ASTRO•GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

A

"Your

~'Birthday
lp&lt;lll, 1110
Lllttn carefully thll coming year
to tlpt given you by pals who
know how to make money. A
lrltnd. who It on to aomtthlng
gOOd may cut you In on the

(~)

' you lhPect others to do the

same
.
LEO (July 23-Auo. 22) Tasks you
..;an almost do by rote may pr ove
more t:l ''ttcult ltlan usual today .
Seltmg 'llO fast a pace may
Cltl1Sfl v• ,, tn rnake mistakes
&lt;/ IRC ~

' {.,

?:t-Sept . 2?1 '.'!
• on&lt;""
,,,

I

I .

61

Sentinel
Classifieds

wanted To Buy

HIND QUARTERS
SIDES ................~~: ....~ 129

- -c
=-a- r-=
d---:-oi Th_a_n-ks -

CENTER CUT RIB

our sincere thank s to
everyone which hel ped
during the sickness and
death of our beloved sister
Edythe Hazelton Welch.
Special thanks to Teh nur·
ses at Pi necrest Care Cen
ter , Or~ Va ll ee , th e
minister Bob Pur tell dnd
allof our neighbors.
The Family of Edythe
Welch.
Announcements __

3

GUN SHOOT.
Ra ci ne
Volun teer
Fire
Dept.
Every Saturday . 6:30p .m .
At tt"' eir bu ild ingin Bashan.
Factory choke gu ns only .
GU N SHOOT every Sunday
12 :00 . Fa ctory choke on ly.
Corn Hollow Gun Club,
Rutland . Proceeds donated
to Boy Scou t Troop 249 .

PAY highest pr ices
possible t or gold and silver
coi ns, rings, jewelry, etc.
Conta ct Ed Bu rkett Bar ber
Shop, Middleport .
1

GOL D ,
S IL VER
OR
FOREIGN COINS , OR
ANY OTHER GOLD OR
SILV ER ITEMS. ALSO,
FURNITURE
A NTIQUE
OR OTHER ANT IQUE
ITEMS . WILL PAY TOP
DOLLAR . CHECK WITH
OSBY (OS SIE ) M A RT IN
B E FOR E
SELLING .
ALSO
PHONE 992 6370
DO APPRAISING .
GU N SHOO T EVERY
FRIDAY NI GHT 7:30PM.
FACTORY CHOKE ONLY .
RACINE GUN CLU B.

Through the month of April
Hea dquarter s
Beauty
Sa lon is offering all perms
and frost ing s at a re duced
rate . Come out and meet
Connie Aldridge and Judy
Co ttrill . Phon e 992·6311 for
an appointment . Open
w eek. days p l us two
eve ni ngs a week for your
convenience .

11

Hel p Wanted

In f l nan c;l al and business
matters, but tod8y you may be
tempted to loss discretion to the
winds. Gambles'eou ld misfire .
LIBRA (Bopl. 23-0cl. 23) You
and your mate could be poles
apart on a major issue today.
One ot you will hllllfl to be a
peacemaker. Anumethe rOle.
SCORPIO ' 1001. 24-Nov. 22)
Take great care today not to
btun out thing• to others that
they may deem offensive. even
though thlt Isn 't your basic
Intention . Looae lips cause
con frontation•.
IAOITTAAIU8 (Nov. 23-Doc. 21)
tmpu l si~e spending today could
do your budget a gi"Bat disservice . You know the limit of your
resources, ao try to live within
your means.
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jan. II)
Having too many irons In the tire
today will prove self-defeating.
Keep you r priorities In ord er.
Don 't take on more the11 you can
manage
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob. It) S.
very careful today about jumping
to conclusions before all the
fact s are ln. Premature ju dg ~
ments are apt to be erroneous.
PISCES (Feb. 20-.March 20) 86
t-ntptu! to olt1ers tod • r· but con tina 'r'Our aid to rK)nmaterial

w~ty s ,

Souno advice Will dn more
goOd t hafl di001n.; '"IO )'Our
..... -~ f'

CHUCK ROASt............~!':,~ 1
CHUCK
!}69 :s . .. ~ 179
STEAKS
49

FREEZER BEEF
CUT. WRAPPED AND FROZ£f~ LB.$ }39

10 karat, I~ k~rat, 18 karat,
gold . Denial gold and gold
ear pins. 675-3010.

~~~~- ............. ~~: .......~149

GET VALUABLE trai ning
as a young business person
and earn good money plus
some great gifts as a Senti nel route carrier. Phone
us right away and get on
tr.c eligibility list at 9922156 or 992-2157 .

0

0

0

•

0

••• ••• 0

0

•

SUPERIOR'S

FRANKIESOR

SPARE
LB.
RIBS ....................... .

SUPERIORS

12

BACON

BONELESS

LOIN END

89~

mmed iate openings for
registered nurses having
expe r ien ce in intensi ve
ca r e, corona ry care, units.
Appl icati ons are now being
accepted for full time and
part time pos itions on 7·3
and 3-11 shifts. Sa lar y co m mensurate
wi ·th
ex perience . An equa l op·
portunity emp loyer. Cont act Teresa Coll ins , R N
di re c to r
of
nursing
Ve terans
Memor i al
Hospital, Pomeroy, OH .
Phone 614-992 ·2104.

SEA STAR

P FISH ........................................... ~· 99~

VAUGHAN'S

BALLARDS

LB

SAUSAGE ..............•..........•.•••........ :-•.•..•• 89~

Middleport, Ohio

FOLGERS

income tak ing short phone
message$ at home . Call
615-779-3235 Ext. 406D .

.

FRIENDLIEST SERVICE IN TOWN
BIGGEST BARGAINS IN TOWN

KRAFT

SALE DATES
APRIL 7-12,

QUANTITY
RIGHTS
RESERVED

1980

DEL MONTE

MACARONI &amp;CHEESE
DINNERS
3 7 oz. 9~

DEL MONTE

IE

ABL~S

COKE

YELLOW CLING SLICED OR HALVES

65~

29-oz .
Can

16-17 oz .

... nit two with

Cans

8

S 10.00 purchase

PEAR HALVES ....................... '~~"..' 59c

• Whole Kernel or Creem Style Corn
• Sweet Peas

PINEAPPLE / GRAPEFRUIT. PINEAPPLE/ ORANGE
OR PINK PINEAPPLE/ GAAPEFRUIT

5 LB. BAG

IFI.c:)~lt e••••e•e••••e••··················e·······e••e•e•e••e•• 89~
.

SALAD DltESSING... .-.•.•.•.....•. ~······JtQ~.!~t. 89

~

DEL MONTE DRINKS ..........

4

~~~·

PEl MONTE

TOMATO JUICE ...................

~~~·

4

FOLGER'S

6 oz.

•

C:c:)IFIFI51E·······•ee•e··········e••••ee•••e····

13

Pi cki ng up an Easy play
o rgan
in your area .
Looking for a responsible
party to tak e over pay men
ts. Cal l credit manager
collect. 614-- 592-5122.

SAUERKRAUT ...................2 ~~~: 791
OZ.
16CANS

SPINACH ....._......... 1 .
894
SLICED PICKLED BEETS ..... t~~~· 491

Anouncong
Randy Carpentc' r
New Factory
Traincll
Frontend
AlognmPnl
Specialrst
Ct~ll

49

CARDINAL

CRISCO OIL

BROWN·N·SERVE ROLLS •• ••••••••• •• 39e

GAINESBURGER

(614) 991 q93;•

German Shepherd, 6 mos.
old, male, gentle . 669·3265 .

OZ 891
CORN MUFFIN MIX ....... 4 B"·
Pko.

Wanted to Bu :t__

9

Iron and brass beds, old
furn i ture , desks, gold
rin gs,
Jewel ry , silver .
dol tars, sterling, etc., woad
i ce bo xes, antiques, etc .
Comp l ete
·households
Wr ite M . D. Mill er, Rt . -4 ,
Pom eroy , OH . or ca ll 992·
7760.
Gold, Si lver or fore ign
coi ns or any gold or silver
ia~ ms. A ntique furn iture,
glass or chi na, will pa y top
Jo llar, or· complete esta tes.
No Item too large or too
sma ll. Check prices before
sell ing . Also do appral!.ing .
Osby ( Ossi~) Martin . 992
6370 .

••

ct. .
Pkg

w ith coupon

72-o•.$249

19

Box

fapifU 4/ 12: /10

Good 11 Ca rdlr~al

~

ti;~~·~·~..~~·~'';';"';'"~;, ~~~~=00=-~=·=0·==~==~

WHITE OR
ASSORTED
COLORS

GRAVY BOAT

89~
LIMIT 1

Money to Loan
Mortgage
Mone y
Ava ilable . New homes, old
homes, and refinancing
your present home. CONVENT IONAL 5 Pet . down,
SECOND MORTGAGES.
VA · No down payment.
FHA -Low down payment,
FHA -245-Graduated paym·
ent program , FHA-265Subs idv program . Call 592·
3051 , Ireland Mortgage Co.,
77 E . State St, Athens, OH .

GARVIN'S

64 oz.

.

OltANGE JuICE ...............

Homes for Sale

House f or Sale. Large lot,
completely remodeled , 3
bedrooms, l iving room. kit·
chen and bath. Wood burner heat. 521,500. 100 percent financing at 11 percent
int . If interested ca ll 698·
7331 . In Pagetown.

99~

0 • • • • • • • • • • • I • • • • • • • • • • • • • 0.

MAitGAitiNE ......................·~-~~-~~~~~ .......... ~:. 5 9e
_

•

12 OZ S]

.

C:HEESE ·· ···· ··· ··· ··· ····· ···· ··· ··· ··· ···· ········ ··· ···· ·····

9 Room House, l V2 baths,
basement and oar8ge .
College Rd ., Syracuse, OH .
992-5133 or 992-3981 .

39

••• ••• •

•

•

4 Bedroom brick home In
Middleport. 992-3457 or 992·
2549.

--------FREEZER VALUES-------.BANQUET

~:~~~EN..............................................2 p~~- s1''

Large attracti ve home on
one acre In Syracuse.
Modern Ki tchen, 2 baths,
basement, garage. 9927727.
I

GAHOi:N DELIGHT RlGULAA OR ,;RiNKLf CUT

0

0

0
•

•

•

•••

0
•••••••• •

CARDINAL V~NILL"

•

•

•

••••••• •

•••••

o······ o·

5

POTATOES
.

10

LB.

89~

lb.
Bog

5129

IC:E C:ltEAM ,.............:...................:.·...... :..~~~ ....... '2 49

LUABLE COUPON WORTH S4.00
I
I

I
I

TOW-RD THE PURCHASE OF THIS WEEK'S FEATURED ITEM

GRAVY BOAT

FLORIDA FRESH YELLOW

NEW CROP YELLOW

ON IONs ........ 3-ts. BAG sge
MIX OR MATCH

4
FOR

'100

FLORIDA PINK OR WHITE .

GRAPEFRUIT

4 00

$15.99

In the pattern of youf choice

CORN ................5 EARs gge
BELL PEPPERS
CUCUMBERS
GREEN ONIONS
RED RADISHES 6 OZ.
CARROTS
LB.

$19 99

Our Reg. Discount Price .
Coupon sa~ings
Your Price (wi th coupon)

•

;~NA~ILK ............. ~ ....................................~.~~ .....~.1 69

FRENCH
·FRIES. ····

U. S. NO. 1 MAINE

0

0

~ouse for Sal e. Large lot,

completely remodeled, 3
bedroom, kitchen, 2 baths,
living room, full basement.
525,000 . 100 percent financ ing 'at 11 percent interest.
If Interested call698-7331 In
Pagetown .

!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

--------DAIRY VALUES:--------

KRAFT AMERICAN SLICED SINGLES
31

BRADFORD, Auctioneer,
Complete Service. Phone
949·2487 or 949·2000 . ra ci ne,
Ohio, Crill Bradford.

COTTO. ELLE

JIFFY

St . Bernard. 2 yea r s ol.d . 1
family ,
g oo d
watch
dog .992 -2092 or 992 -7803 .
Public Sale
&amp; Auction

OZ.

BATHROOM TISSUE

Bottle

0011

0"1 coupon p1r l1mily

DOWNY.......................................... '3
136

38-oz.

liE=::-............
.
-··· · ··~ . . .. .

Nice hunting dog. A lot of
Slue Tic in it. 5112 mos . old.
Male . 992-7240 .

8

FABRIC SOFTENER

$159

BEEF

Umit

AUT 0 M 0 B I L E
I N -SU RANCE
been
ca n·
celled?
Los t
y o ur
opera tor 's li cense? Phone
992 -2143.

oz.

. I

Insurance

Gi ve p lano lessons to beg in·
ners and advanced 'Student
in my home . Also teach
chord ing and tra nsposing if
interes ted. Ca ll992-5403.

Pomeroy . 0

CHEEit
DETEitGENT

~-------BAKERY BUY.--------~

Wanted to Do

LANDMARK
SERVICE
STATION

NEEBLER

DEL MONTE

Del Monte

2'9

' I

59c
691

Announcements

3

I

DEl MONTE

INSTANT

PAK
',,.
16 OZ. BrJ_S.

l MONTE CALORIE REOU Cttl

• Cut or French Style Green Beans

R~W

Lb.
Can

-BEVERAGE BUY-

PEACHES

•

PILLSBURY

JOB CORPS RECRUITER SCHEDULED
A Job Corps Recruiter will be in the area next
week to interview potential applicants for a
Federally Funded Program designed to beHer
qualify young peopl~ tor employment .
The Program is FREE Job Training for persons
16 thru 21. not yet 2'J years of age . Enrollees will go
to a training center away from home to learn a skill
for employment, and continue education; every
Center offers the High School equivalency diploma.
While in Job Corps persons are given tree food~
housing, medical care, clothing allowance and some
spending money .
Job Corps trains males and females tor job skills
such as auto mechanics, keypunch, bricklaying,
nursing skills, welding, office skills and many more.
Enrollees with a High School or GED diploma will
be ~ligible to attend Junior College, Community Col~
lege and post-secondary Vocationa 1schools tor up to
two years of advanced education and training under
Job Corps, after successfully completing 90 days in
the regular Job Corps Program.
A Field "Staff Repres entatiwe of the Job Corps Project will be ava ilable tor interview at- POMEROY
CITY HALL - Council Chambers (2nd floor) 110
2nd 51 .
Tues. Apr. 8,1 -4:30 PM; Wed . Apr. 9, 9-4:30 PM
Thur. A ril10, 9· 12 Noon

All GRINDS

COFFEE

1

$$$ Substantia l part time

Lb.

. . . '. '. . .~:.~219

Office, Clerical Help .
Typing ,
proficiency
required. Send complete
r es um e c·o The Daily Sen·
tinel. Box 729-C, Pomero y,
Ohio 45769.
Wanted : Woman to sit with
older lady . S2.40 per hr . 9927255.

or more

LEAN &amp; nNDER BONELESS

.-

Babysitter Needed in the
Raci ne area to care for .a 9
month old girl. Hours 8-4
Mon. thru Fri. Please ca ll
949 -2406 after 5 p.m .

oz.

:~~~ .... .'.......... LB $}89 :!~
'

PORK
LB. $} 09
ROAST.......................
-

Need money for vacation?
Model for Sarah Coventr y
Jewelry. 6t4-992-3211 9
a.m .· 12p.m .
Bar Maid or Bar Tender,
part ti m, work into possible
full t i me . Call 992-5509 bet w een9·5.

•

COUNTRY STYLE

Full ti me and part time RN
or LPN . 11 -7. Contact Mr .
Zid i an at Pomeroy Health
Care Center Monday thru
Friday 9-5.

7, 14, 2tc

'--------- ---1

action.
ARIII , (Moroh II·Aprll II) T
AIIOCiatll will bl WitChing you
ciOMiy today lo 1M It you're
doing things for Hlflth rea10n1.
A~old any tyr,u of action whlcn
could tarn sh )lour Image .

Aomanoe ,
travel,
luck,
reaourc11, poaetblt pltfatlt and
ci.r11r ftr ' the coming montht
are all dltcuaHd In your Al1ro Graph Letter 11"111 btglnt with
your birthday. MiltS 1 tor each to
At1ro-Grapf'1 , Box 48&amp;, Radle
City Station. N.Y. 100ta. Be sure
to tpeclfy birt h date.
TAURUI (April 20-May :10) 5o
more ol 1 llatentr than a talker
today, especially If you 're dll·
CUlling subjects In which you
are not well versed. Pretending
to know something you aon't
may prqve embarraaaing.
GEMINI (Mar 21·June 20) You
mav ba called upon toaay to
unravel a mesa in which a friend
got Involved . Stralghten ma1ters
out wl1hout tying yourself up in
the proces s.
CANCER (Juno 21·July 22)
Dealings today may require all
the diplomatic tact you can
muster. St10w a willingness to
cooperate and compromise U

7, 14, 2t c

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
· STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbus, Ohio
March 28, 1980
Contract Sales
Legal Copy No.
80-114
UNIT PRICE
• CONTRACT
PMS-0005 ( 173 )
Sea led proposals will be
received at the olfjce of the
Director of the Oh10 Oepar ~
tment of Transportafion,
Columbus, Oh io, untillO :OO
A .M ., Ohio Standa~d Time.
Tuesday, April 29, 1980, for
improvements in :
Athens, Gall~ a , Hocking,
Meigs and Washin~ton
Counties, Ohio, on vanous
loca tions, by applying
retrof lectorized polyester
compound for centerlines,
lane lines and channelizing
lines.
The Ohio Department of
Transpo r tation
hereby
notifies all bidders that it
will affirmative ly insure
that in any c ontract en ·
tered into pursuant to this
advertisement, minority
business enterprises wil l be
afforded full opportun ity to
submit b ids in response to
this invitation and w ill not
be discriminated against
on the grounds of race,
color, or national origi n in
co'nsiderati on
for
an
award .
" Minimum wage ra tes
for this project have been
predeterm ined as required
by law and are set forth in
the bid proposal. "
''' The date set f or com pletion of this work shall be
set forth in the bidding
proposa I."
.
Each b idder shall be
required to file with his b id
a certified check or
cas hier's check for an
amount equal to five per
cent of his bid, but in no
event more than f Jfty
thousand dollprs, or a bond
for )en per cent of his bid ~
pay·able t o the Director .
Bidders must apply, on
1he proper forms , for
q ualifca tton at least ten
days prior 'to the date set
for openln~ bids in ac cordance wtfh Chapter 5525
Oh io Revised Code .
Plans and spec ificati ons
are on file in the Depart ·
ment of Transportati d"n and
the office of the District
Deputy Director .
The Director reserves
the r ight to reject any and
aH b i ds .
DAVIDL . WEIR
DIRECTOR
Rev .
8 - 17 · 73

loss thts casual. easy open

Senate floor.-hoth
stage and classroom
WASHINGTON (AP) - For
Majority Leader Robert C. Byrd, the
Senate floor is not only a stage but
frequently doubles as a classroom.
"The Senate, wilike the House of
Representatives, is made up of two
members fnrn each state," the
West Virginia Democrat told an
al:most-i!mpty chamber the other
day . -"There being 50 states, there
are 100 senators."
Actually; the place wasn't quite
that empty that day. In the spectators' gallery was a group of
schoolchildren, including one of
Byrd's granddaughters, Mary Anne
Moore.
"There wasn't much going on, so
he decided to give a civics lesson,"
said Byrd aide Mike Willard.
-Byrd explained how senators vote,

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbus, Ohio
March 28, 1980
ContraCt Sales
Legal Copy No .
80-140
UNIT PRICE
CONTRACT
(ISSUE N0.1)
SOS-5301(I)
Sealed proposals wi ll be
received at the office of t he
Director of the Ohio DeJ?'ar ·
tment of Transportation,
Columbus, Ohio, untillO :OO
A .M ., Ohio StaOdard Time,
Tuesda y, April 29, 1980, for
improvements in:
Meigs County, Ohio, on
Page Street in the Vi llage
of M iddleport, )Jy gradi~g.
draining and Pav ing wtth
asphalt concrete on a
bituminou s
c:f'g gregate

NOTICE OF
DRAWING JURORS
Office of Com missioner
of Jurors, Meigs Count~ .
Ohio
April! , 1980
To All Whom It Mav Concern :
On Wednesday, the 16th
day of April, 19M at 10 : 00
o'clock, A.M .• at fhe office
of the Commissioners ot
· Jurors of Meigs County,
Ohio, Jurors w ill be
publ icly drawn for. the
Mayh 1980 Term Of the
Common Pleas Court of
said County .
Freeland Norris.
Lauren Hoffman
Comm issioners
of Jurors
(41 7, lie

5 lb. bag SI.l9

COUPON GOOD THAU

4/12/BO

�5-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Monday , April 7, 1980

I

Band Boosters elect
Ed.Kitchen president

Stadler's· attention on
Master's Tourney

SAFE SIGNAL - An official gives the safe signal
(left) dUring a recent game between the Meigs High
School sophomores and junior girls in class basketball

JUMP BALL - Senior and freshman boys and
referee Red Tucker are seen here in action in a recent

GREENSBORO, N.C.. ( AP) Craig Stadler, a six-shot winner of
the Greater Greensboro Open golf
tournament, turned his attention to
Augusta, Ga., and this week's
Masters.
And Stadler liked his prospects.
"My confidence couldn't be
higher," said the chunky rna~ who
carries 215 pounds on a Hoot-10
frame.
·
"I know I'm playing well. I know I
can score well. I just want to get out
there on the golf coiii'Se and play
more golf right now. I just want to
keep it going. I want to work on this
string as long as I can."
He goes to Augusta with credentials he wouldn't have dreamed of
possessing four months ago.
At that time, just before the 1980
season began, Stadler was a nonWinner in four years of PGA tour activity.
He won the first tournament of the
year, the Bob Hope Desert Classic.
"'ith this latest victory, secured on a
4-under-par 68 that left him without
major challenge over the last 18
·holes, he ranks with Tom Watson as
the only men to score multiple
triumphs this season.
The $45,000 he collected off his 275
winning total, 13 shots under par on
the 6,984 yard Forest Oaks Country
Club course, vaulted him into
second place on the season's moneywinning list with $117,611.
Only Watson, the outstanding
player in the game for the past three

competition in a recent tournament sponsored by the
J unior Class. The junior girls were victorious in this
game, but went on to lose to the senior girls in the
finals.

preliminary round of the Meigs High School Class
Basketball Tournament. The senior boys defeated the
freshmen, later winning the entire tournament as well.

Another crisis rocks Yankee camp
By The Auoclated Press
As usual, the owner and manager
of the New York Yankees areatodds
with one of their outfielders ... but
this time the cast includes a couple
of new characters.
Don 't go looking for Reggie
Jackson in this brouhaha: Owner
George Steinbrenner is the only constant. The manager these days is
Dick Howser, not Billy Martin, and
the outfielder in question is, of all
people, Sweet Lou Piniella.
After reversing themselves twice
on the subject of intrasquad games
when the Major League Baseball
Players' Association struck the last
week of exhibitions, the Yankees
finally agreed to some intrasquad
contests.
\

Howser left it up to the individual
players and Piniella was one o
e
who declined to play. That wa. , .:,
'
but Piniella
also sounded off about it
and that didn'tsit well.
"I told Lou if he didn 't want to
play, he didn't have to, but I didn't
want him bitching about it," Howser '
said.
Piniella went home.
"I'm disappointed in Piniella."
Steinbrenner said. "Wait until he
comes to me and asks me to do him a

.

favor ." ·

Elsewhere, two pitchers currently
on the disabled list tested their ailing
shoulders with positive results. •
Dennis ,Martinez, a member of the
Baltimore Ori_oles' starting rotation,

won the third games of their respective mini-series. Phoenix beat the
Kansas City Kings 114-99 and will
next fa ce Los Angeles, while
Houston won its Texas showdown
with the San Antonio Spurs 141-120
and will take on Boston. Those series
open in Los Angeles Tuesday and
Boston Wednesday.
SonlC!i 103, Blazers 8li
Gus Williams led Seattle's balanced attack with 21 points as the
Sonics took command early and
never relinquished it. Seattle led 7146 early in the third quarter and 8065 going into the final period, saw
Portland close within nine but turned aside that challenge with a 12-2
spurt in a span of 3'k minutes for ~
94-75lead.
Bates led Portland with 26 points,
while John Johnson added 18 points
for Seattle.
76ers 107, Hawks 104
Philadelphia scored 37 points off
its fast break, compared to 10 for
Atlanta, in winning the series
opener. Julius Erving led the Sixers
with 28 points, including 11 In the
final period.
·
The Sixers trailed Atlanta 8HI
with nine minutes to play , hut F.r.ving drove for a three-point play that
started a 12-0 surge that pul
Philadelphia ahead to ~ tay .

Reds trim roster,
cut lefty Burnside
TAMPA, Fla . (AP) - The Cincinnati Reds have cut pitcher
Sheldon Burnside to trim their
roster .below the 2lt-man limit for
Opening Day.
The Reds currently hav~ 24
players on their roster and are also
carrying catcher Don Werner, wbo
is still technically assigned to the
club's Indianapolis minor league
team.
Burnside came to the Reds from
Detroit over the winter as late
payment for Champ Summers.
The 2lt-year-old left-handed relief
pitcher was sent to •the National
League club's Redsland minor
league complex for reassignment.
Sunday's,decision assured pitcher
Paul Moskau of a trip back to Cincinnati for Opening Day.
The Reds have been talking about
Moskau spelling Bill Bonham in the
starting rotation early in the season,
if necessary. Bonham is recovering
from a sore shoulder.
Moskau, who has parts of three
seasons in the major leagues,
believes ihat he has answered any
questions the Reds have a bout him.
" I think they wanted to see my
weight and attitude this spring," he
said. "It was important to them ; it
was important to me. I've kept my
weight down and I've done my
work."
Both Burnside and Moskau had
one option left, which meant that the
Reds could send either down to the
minor leagues and recall them at
any time during the baseball season.
''It's funny,'' Burnside said before

the announ~ement came. "They
traded for me and now I don't know
if they think I'm what they wanted
or not. I jusf hope they haven't hit
· the panic button with me yet."

threw for 20 minutes and reported no
problems.
"I felt much better today, " said
Martinez, who is eligible to come off
the disabled list April 17. "I threw
the fastball, curve and slider and
will try the changeup next time and
see what happens. I felt loose and
was able to throw nice and easy. "
Meanwhile, reliever Bill Campbell
of the Boston Red Sox, who is on the
60-day disabled list, threw for the
second day in a row.
"He looks good," said pitching
coach Johnny Padres. "He threw ·
pretty fair and looks if he's on his
way back. He'~ ll\!ginning to let it
hang out, extending his ann."

$100.00 .TO $20000 DISCOUNT
WE HAVE A LOT OF NEW
PATTERNS TO SELECT FROM
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GET $100.00 DISCOUNTS ON

BUSINESS POLICY

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D o you own or operate a
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a modern · as ~
tomorrow pac kage pla n
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julia Gheen and Thomas Sayre

Gheen-Sajre to wed
POMEROY-Julia Marie Gheen
and Thomas Edward Sayre are announcing their forthcoming l)larnage.
The wedding will take place at the
Vernon Church Yard, Letart, W.Va.
on April 16 at 6 p.m. The bride-elect
ill the daughter of C. Vincent Gheen
of Racine and Carol Gheen of Porn
eroy. Her fiance is the son of Herbert
Sayre of Ari2ona and Eleanor Huff-

Free classes offered
The Chester PrO and the Shade
allow~ to participate.
River Jaycees will co-sponsor a
The April 17 class will present
C.P .R. (Cardio Pulmo nary
techniques on the clearing of the airResuscitation) course at the Eastern
ways (throat) and the April18 class
High School building on April 17th
will present the proper techniques of
and 19th.
performing Cardio Pulmonary
The two three hours session will
Resuscitation. Both classes must be
begin at 7 p.m. and will be taught by
attended to receive certification
the American Heart Association in·
from the American Heart
structor, Mrs. Janet Bolin.
. Association.
Those wishing to learn the proper
The sessions are free and
C.P.R. techniques must register
available to the public upon
ahead of time l;ly calling Vic Gaul at . registration. The sessions are
·985-4329 between 6 p.m. and 10 p.m.
limited so early registration is addally. Class size will be limited and
vised.
only those who register will be

'

WeekeDd Spor11 Trulat'Uou
By Tbe A.ssod akil Pres•
BASEBALJ..
Amerlcu Lap
B&lt;l!iTON RE D SOX - Traded Allen Ripley,
pitcher, to Phoenix of the Pacific Coast League
for a pla yer to be named later or cash.
lhe America n Association.
OAKLAND A's - Placed GieM 8w1te, out·

·'

fielder , on the 21-day disabled List .

TEXAS RANGERS - Sent John Henry Johnson. Jim Umbnrger aad Bob Babcock, pitchel'3;
G re~ ' Mahl ber g, cai.Cher , and Mike Richan!t, infielder . to Charleston of the lntematiooa\

ODD' CHEST OF DRAWERS
;

5 DRAWERS .
AReal ijood Buy

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Breakfast Chops ~ 1
Fresh lean

All 3 Pieces

20%

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RECLINERS &amp;ROCKER RECLINER

t

I

MASON FU: - ITURE CO.

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Secretary .

39

WHITE OR ASSORTED COLORS

FRESH CRISP

Iii ~ ·

!lerm; ' ! &lt;';rate, Owner

TH E PU B LIC U TILI T IE S
CO MM ISSION OF OHIO
By :
Da vi d M. Polk ,

49

_ FARM FRESH PRODUCE

3

P l ease tell me more ab ov t lne

I

be given an oppor tun ity t o
be heard . Fu rth er infor·
mation ma y be obtaine d
by 'contact ing t he Commission

.

,

Remember We Have Easy Terms (Ask Us)

. I

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All in terested persons w_ill

3 LB. OR MORE.

Ground Beef

0

COMPANY

TUESDAY
SHADE RIVER Jaycees meeling,
8 p.m. Tuesday at Jaycee~
Headquarters in Chester; all young
men between 17 and 35 invited.
EASTERN BAND Boosters, 7: 3li
p.m. Tuesday in band room d
Eastern High School.
SYRACUSE Pl'O Tuesday, 7:3li
p.m. with the Syracuse Brownie
Troop to present the program.

sch eduled to begin at 9: 30
a.m. on A pril 28, 1980 , at
the Comm issi on's Of fices ,
180 East Broad Street ,
Colum bus, Oh io 432 15.

'139
LB.
.

Pork Chops

DON'T MISS THIS: WE HAVE ONE GOLD AND
ONE GREEN 2 PIECE EARLY AMERICAN LIVING
ROOM SUITES WE'RE MARKING 50% OFF.
"HURRY FO THIS", REMEMBER JUST 2 TO SELL.

I N~~ ~~~CL

RECEIVE'il RIBBON
Elva Dailey received her 35 pound
ribbon and certificate for weight loss
at last week's meeting of Slinderella
at Heath United Methodist Church in
Middleport.
Kathy Elias and Brenda Pettit lost
the most weight at the cla$s, while at
the Mason Class, ones losing the
most weight were Connie Goodnite;
Cora Folmer, Becky Benson of the
evening class, and Roberta
Maynard, ·ctoreen Lewis and Etta
O'Dell of the morning .class. Two
new members were welcomed. Mrs.
Jo Ann Newsome is lecturer for the
classes.

ment Clause, and related
matters. This hearing is

Center Cut

,

0

REVIVAL, Bald Knob United
Gospel Mission Church, beginning
April 7-12, 7:30p.m. Special singing
nightly; evangelist, Clyde Lee
Ferrell.
PRACTICE SESSION 7 p.. Monday for initiatory work by Pomeroy
Chapter 186, Order of Eastern Star.

'

Th e Publ 1c Uti lit ie s Com·
mission of Oh io has set for
publ iC he ari ng Case No.
79 - 232- EL - FAC (Su bfile AI t o review the fuel
procure men t practices and
pol ici es oi Co lumbus and
· Southern Oh io Electric
Compa ny, the operati on
of •ts Fu el Cost A&lt;J ju st ~

SATURDAY

SEVERAL ODD CHAIRS
WE'RE REDUCING AT

$4995

Only

Bill Anderson, and Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Dillard.
April 12 was set aa a work day on
the ball field at the high school.
Fathers of girls involved in softball
were urged to help with the work of
preparing the field. Pomeroy Youth
League workers will also be there on
that date.

LE GA L NOTICE

THRU

WE HAVE ONE 3 PIECE
LIVING ROOM SUITE EARLY
AMERICAN PRICED AT $499.95
YOU CAN HAVE IT FOR

$.29995

MONDAY
B . H. SANBORN MISSIONARY
SOCIETY r1. the Middleport First
Baptist Church annual fellowship
tea, 7:30 Monday night at the
church. Women of churches in the
Rio Grande Association, and women
of all Middleport and Pomeroy Churches invited to attend.

with Mrs. Grimm as leader and all
of the members participating.
The discussion centered on what
the organization is , who may belong,
why we have it, nad how it may be
obllerved. It wa8 noted that the
prayer and self-denial service ill
usually observed in January
throughout the world by Methodist
women, all of women belong, and
that while much of the aid goes
abroad, much is given in the community and considered missionary
work at home.
'
The Bible study was led by Mrs.
Erma Hill and participating in that
were Mrs. Shuler, Mrs. Alice Balser,
Mrs. Margie Roush, Mrs. Nora
Cross, Mrs. Linda Turley,rley, and
Mrs. Grimm. Mrs. Roush will host
the next meeting. Mrs. Hill served
refreshments .

PRICES EFFECTIVE
MONDAY

l .cal!{ue.

AU T OMO Btt. f:"

1

Atotal of $558 waa collected for the
Meigs Girls Athletic Association
during the recent tag day, according
to a report presented at Thursday
night's meeting of the Association
Boosters.
Richard Rupe presided at the
meeting with the Association\extending a vote of thanks to all who contributed during tag day. The money
. will be used for new equipment for
the reserve softball team and new
unifonns for the girls in track.
Several ways and means projects
were discussed and a yard sale waa
set for April 25 and 26 at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Rupe, Wright St.,
Pomeroy. A"pricing party" waa set
for Thursday evening preceding the
sale. Named to the ways and means
committee were Mr. and Mrs.
WUliam.Swisher, Mr. and Mrs. Ed·
die Blake, Mr. and Mrs. Dwight
Wallace, Mr. and Mrs. Alan King,
Mr. and Mrs. Dewey Horton, Mr.
and Mrs. Bill Perrin, Mr. and Mrs.

DETROIT TIG!:RS - Sent Ed Putman, iJ&gt;.

PURCHASE A BEDROOM
SUITE AND GET
FREE A BOX SPRING
AND MATTRESS

Only

Sentinel
social calendar

$5 58 collected for girls' athletics

fielder. and Mike Chri s, pitcher to Evansville of

-------------- ,!l'l_lil l l_________..______________________1
~

man, Gallipolis. The couple selected
the wedding date to honor the bride's
maternal grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. Jewell Curtis, and the groom's
paternal grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. Thomas Clarke Sayre, the wedding anniversary date of both
couples.
The gracious custom of open
church will be observed.

NOW GOING ON AT MASON FURNITURE

ON LIVING ROOM SUITES

107 W. Ma in 9 92 · 2 1 ~ 3 Po m ~ r o t

Easter Sunday came with something
approaching ease.
He started the final round with a :Z..
stroke lead, built the advantage to
four with birdies on his first two
holes and still had a three stroke advantage after he'd finished No.7,
which he considers the toughest hole
on the course.
After that, it was easy.
" It turned into a lot of fun,"
Stadler said. "A walk in the park. I
really enjoyed myself for once."
There really wasn't a strong
challenge and be settled any
lingering doubts with consecutive
birdies on the 14th and 15th holes, on
putts of 8 and 10 feet.
The only thing remaining was to
settle second place, which eventually wound up in a four-way tie at
281 between Jerry Pate, George Burns, Bill Kratzert and Australian
Jack Newton.
Pate, ·a playoff loser the week
before and now a runnerup on successive weekends, shot a 67 that was
the best round of. the day. Burns,
who has been runnerup in this tour- .
nament three of the last four years,
had a 69. Newton birdied the last
hole for a 68. Kratzer! shot 70.
No one else was within eight shots
of Stadler, whose .victory margin
was the largest of the year.
Ray Floyd, the defending
titleholder, and Fuzzy Zoeller, who
will defend his Masters crown this
week, each shot 7~284. South
African Gary Player had 75-289. Bill
Calfee, who started the final round
in second place, faded quickly, shot
a fat 79 and finished 13 strokes back
at 288.

Mrs. Erma Hill hosted a meeting
of the United Methodist Women of
the Letart Falls Church at her home
recently,
An inspirational reading by Mrs.
Chlorus Grimm opened the meeting
with Mrs. Nora Cross giving devotions using scripture from Luke and
a reading on prayer. During the
business meeting, Mary Louise
Shuler read a letter from the group's
compassion child, Yusmine, who is
seven years old and lives in Jamaca.
It was announced that 18 convalescent calls have been made during
the past month by members of the
UMW. The program was on the .
World Day of Prayer and Self-Denial

Eddie Kitchen was elected presi· to Nashville, Tenn. and Opryland
dent of the Meigs Band Boosters at a and then enroute home to visit Mammeeting held Tuesday night at high mouth cave in Kentucky. Students
schooL
•
. will travel by chartered bus leaving
Other officers elected were Mrs. the school on June 9 at 9 a.m. and
Jean TI!omas, first ·vice president; returning · the evening of June 11.
Mrs. Pat Kitchen, second vice presi- Cost will be about $8,000 with the
dent; Mrs. Florence Snowden
amount to be paid through various
treasurer; and Mrs. Shirley Friend: projects of the band boosters and the
secretary.
students including the jazz festival
Plans were discussed for the an- scheduled for May 3 at the high
nual band banq11et to be held in May. schooL It was reported that tci date
It was decided that the conce511ion 18 bands have entered the festival.
stand will be in operation for the
It was voted to order 250 !-shirts
boxing match on April 28. On display with a jazz festival design prepared
waa another trophy won by the color by Randy Hunt, director, arid Jack
guard with the band directors stresS- Slavin of the Meigs art department.
ing the good performance of the The shirts will sell for $5 each and a
guard, and noting that final competi- committee will be appointed to hantion will take olace this month at dle the sale.
·
Dayton and Lexington.
The new officers will be installed
The band trip waa announced for at the band banquet in May.
June 9, 10 and II with the group to go

SPRING SALE

Sonics advance
with big victory
BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
"Nobody blows out the world
champions," said Seattle's Dennis
Johnson, responding to a prediction
made by Portland's brash Billy Ray
· Bates regarding Sunday's deciding
game of their playoff mini-series,
and he waa right.
The Sooics, defending National
Basketball Association champions,
raced to a 2lt-point third-quarter lead
and breezed to a 103-a6 victory over
the Trail Blazers to win their firstround series :Z..l.
Next on the agenda for the Sanies,
who are bidding to become the
NBA's first repeat champions since
the Boston Celtics of 1968-69, are the
Midwest Division champion
Milwaukee Bucks. That best-&lt;lfseven second-round set opens in
Seattle Tuesday night.
"Milwaukee has a much better
outside dimension than Portland,"
said Sonics Coach Unny Wilkens.
"We're gonna have to be ready for
that."
One second-round series got under
way Sunday, with the Philadelphia
Flyers r11llying-behind Julius Erving
in the final period to beat the Atlanta
Hawks 107·104.
The other second-round matchups
were detennined Sunday when the
Phoenix Suns and Houston Rockets

seasons, is ahead of him. Watson,
who did not compete in Greensboro,
has $140,275.
Stadler's victory on a bright

Erma Hill hosts UMW meeting

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'119

�5-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Monday , April 7, 1980

I

Band Boosters elect
Ed.Kitchen president

Stadler's· attention on
Master's Tourney

SAFE SIGNAL - An official gives the safe signal
(left) dUring a recent game between the Meigs High
School sophomores and junior girls in class basketball

JUMP BALL - Senior and freshman boys and
referee Red Tucker are seen here in action in a recent

GREENSBORO, N.C.. ( AP) Craig Stadler, a six-shot winner of
the Greater Greensboro Open golf
tournament, turned his attention to
Augusta, Ga., and this week's
Masters.
And Stadler liked his prospects.
"My confidence couldn't be
higher," said the chunky rna~ who
carries 215 pounds on a Hoot-10
frame.
·
"I know I'm playing well. I know I
can score well. I just want to get out
there on the golf coiii'Se and play
more golf right now. I just want to
keep it going. I want to work on this
string as long as I can."
He goes to Augusta with credentials he wouldn't have dreamed of
possessing four months ago.
At that time, just before the 1980
season began, Stadler was a nonWinner in four years of PGA tour activity.
He won the first tournament of the
year, the Bob Hope Desert Classic.
"'ith this latest victory, secured on a
4-under-par 68 that left him without
major challenge over the last 18
·holes, he ranks with Tom Watson as
the only men to score multiple
triumphs this season.
The $45,000 he collected off his 275
winning total, 13 shots under par on
the 6,984 yard Forest Oaks Country
Club course, vaulted him into
second place on the season's moneywinning list with $117,611.
Only Watson, the outstanding
player in the game for the past three

competition in a recent tournament sponsored by the
J unior Class. The junior girls were victorious in this
game, but went on to lose to the senior girls in the
finals.

preliminary round of the Meigs High School Class
Basketball Tournament. The senior boys defeated the
freshmen, later winning the entire tournament as well.

Another crisis rocks Yankee camp
By The Auoclated Press
As usual, the owner and manager
of the New York Yankees areatodds
with one of their outfielders ... but
this time the cast includes a couple
of new characters.
Don 't go looking for Reggie
Jackson in this brouhaha: Owner
George Steinbrenner is the only constant. The manager these days is
Dick Howser, not Billy Martin, and
the outfielder in question is, of all
people, Sweet Lou Piniella.
After reversing themselves twice
on the subject of intrasquad games
when the Major League Baseball
Players' Association struck the last
week of exhibitions, the Yankees
finally agreed to some intrasquad
contests.
\

Howser left it up to the individual
players and Piniella was one o
e
who declined to play. That wa. , .:,
'
but Piniella
also sounded off about it
and that didn'tsit well.
"I told Lou if he didn 't want to
play, he didn't have to, but I didn't
want him bitching about it," Howser '
said.
Piniella went home.
"I'm disappointed in Piniella."
Steinbrenner said. "Wait until he
comes to me and asks me to do him a

.

favor ." ·

Elsewhere, two pitchers currently
on the disabled list tested their ailing
shoulders with positive results. •
Dennis ,Martinez, a member of the
Baltimore Ori_oles' starting rotation,

won the third games of their respective mini-series. Phoenix beat the
Kansas City Kings 114-99 and will
next fa ce Los Angeles, while
Houston won its Texas showdown
with the San Antonio Spurs 141-120
and will take on Boston. Those series
open in Los Angeles Tuesday and
Boston Wednesday.
SonlC!i 103, Blazers 8li
Gus Williams led Seattle's balanced attack with 21 points as the
Sonics took command early and
never relinquished it. Seattle led 7146 early in the third quarter and 8065 going into the final period, saw
Portland close within nine but turned aside that challenge with a 12-2
spurt in a span of 3'k minutes for ~
94-75lead.
Bates led Portland with 26 points,
while John Johnson added 18 points
for Seattle.
76ers 107, Hawks 104
Philadelphia scored 37 points off
its fast break, compared to 10 for
Atlanta, in winning the series
opener. Julius Erving led the Sixers
with 28 points, including 11 In the
final period.
·
The Sixers trailed Atlanta 8HI
with nine minutes to play , hut F.r.ving drove for a three-point play that
started a 12-0 surge that pul
Philadelphia ahead to ~ tay .

Reds trim roster,
cut lefty Burnside
TAMPA, Fla . (AP) - The Cincinnati Reds have cut pitcher
Sheldon Burnside to trim their
roster .below the 2lt-man limit for
Opening Day.
The Reds currently hav~ 24
players on their roster and are also
carrying catcher Don Werner, wbo
is still technically assigned to the
club's Indianapolis minor league
team.
Burnside came to the Reds from
Detroit over the winter as late
payment for Champ Summers.
The 2lt-year-old left-handed relief
pitcher was sent to •the National
League club's Redsland minor
league complex for reassignment.
Sunday's,decision assured pitcher
Paul Moskau of a trip back to Cincinnati for Opening Day.
The Reds have been talking about
Moskau spelling Bill Bonham in the
starting rotation early in the season,
if necessary. Bonham is recovering
from a sore shoulder.
Moskau, who has parts of three
seasons in the major leagues,
believes ihat he has answered any
questions the Reds have a bout him.
" I think they wanted to see my
weight and attitude this spring," he
said. "It was important to them ; it
was important to me. I've kept my
weight down and I've done my
work."
Both Burnside and Moskau had
one option left, which meant that the
Reds could send either down to the
minor leagues and recall them at
any time during the baseball season.
''It's funny,'' Burnside said before

the announ~ement came. "They
traded for me and now I don't know
if they think I'm what they wanted
or not. I jusf hope they haven't hit
· the panic button with me yet."

threw for 20 minutes and reported no
problems.
"I felt much better today, " said
Martinez, who is eligible to come off
the disabled list April 17. "I threw
the fastball, curve and slider and
will try the changeup next time and
see what happens. I felt loose and
was able to throw nice and easy. "
Meanwhile, reliever Bill Campbell
of the Boston Red Sox, who is on the
60-day disabled list, threw for the
second day in a row.
"He looks good," said pitching
coach Johnny Padres. "He threw ·
pretty fair and looks if he's on his
way back. He'~ ll\!ginning to let it
hang out, extending his ann."

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r et a il stor e, offi ce, apart·
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Th en - you may qualify
f or State Auto Mutual ' s
SERIES ONE Bu Si ness
Pol icy
a modern · as ~
tomorrow pac kage pla n
t hal com bin,es an array of
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julia Gheen and Thomas Sayre

Gheen-Sajre to wed
POMEROY-Julia Marie Gheen
and Thomas Edward Sayre are announcing their forthcoming l)larnage.
The wedding will take place at the
Vernon Church Yard, Letart, W.Va.
on April 16 at 6 p.m. The bride-elect
ill the daughter of C. Vincent Gheen
of Racine and Carol Gheen of Porn
eroy. Her fiance is the son of Herbert
Sayre of Ari2ona and Eleanor Huff-

Free classes offered
The Chester PrO and the Shade
allow~ to participate.
River Jaycees will co-sponsor a
The April 17 class will present
C.P .R. (Cardio Pulmo nary
techniques on the clearing of the airResuscitation) course at the Eastern
ways (throat) and the April18 class
High School building on April 17th
will present the proper techniques of
and 19th.
performing Cardio Pulmonary
The two three hours session will
Resuscitation. Both classes must be
begin at 7 p.m. and will be taught by
attended to receive certification
the American Heart Association in·
from the American Heart
structor, Mrs. Janet Bolin.
. Association.
Those wishing to learn the proper
The sessions are free and
C.P.R. techniques must register
available to the public upon
ahead of time l;ly calling Vic Gaul at . registration. The sessions are
·985-4329 between 6 p.m. and 10 p.m.
limited so early registration is addally. Class size will be limited and
vised.
only those who register will be

'

WeekeDd Spor11 Trulat'Uou
By Tbe A.ssod akil Pres•
BASEBALJ..
Amerlcu Lap
B&lt;l!iTON RE D SOX - Traded Allen Ripley,
pitcher, to Phoenix of the Pacific Coast League
for a pla yer to be named later or cash.
lhe America n Association.
OAKLAND A's - Placed GieM 8w1te, out·

·'

fielder , on the 21-day disabled List .

TEXAS RANGERS - Sent John Henry Johnson. Jim Umbnrger aad Bob Babcock, pitchel'3;
G re~ ' Mahl ber g, cai.Cher , and Mike Richan!t, infielder . to Charleston of the lntematiooa\

ODD' CHEST OF DRAWERS
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Breakfast Chops ~ 1
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t

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}7 3 ' 12
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NORTHERN

TOILET·
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4 ROLl
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U. S. NO. 1

GREAT OF SOUPS &amp;STEWS

YELLOW ONIONS

FRESH CARROTS

LB.
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Secretary .

39

WHITE OR ASSORTED COLORS

FRESH CRISP

Iii ~ ·

!lerm; ' ! &lt;';rate, Owner

TH E PU B LIC U TILI T IE S
CO MM ISSION OF OHIO
By :
Da vi d M. Polk ,

49

_ FARM FRESH PRODUCE

3

P l ease tell me more ab ov t lne

I

be given an oppor tun ity t o
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by 'contact ing t he Commission

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Remember We Have Easy Terms (Ask Us)

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All in terested persons w_ill

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0

COMPANY

TUESDAY
SHADE RIVER Jaycees meeling,
8 p.m. Tuesday at Jaycee~
Headquarters in Chester; all young
men between 17 and 35 invited.
EASTERN BAND Boosters, 7: 3li
p.m. Tuesday in band room d
Eastern High School.
SYRACUSE Pl'O Tuesday, 7:3li
p.m. with the Syracuse Brownie
Troop to present the program.

sch eduled to begin at 9: 30
a.m. on A pril 28, 1980 , at
the Comm issi on's Of fices ,
180 East Broad Street ,
Colum bus, Oh io 432 15.

'139
LB.
.

Pork Chops

DON'T MISS THIS: WE HAVE ONE GOLD AND
ONE GREEN 2 PIECE EARLY AMERICAN LIVING
ROOM SUITES WE'RE MARKING 50% OFF.
"HURRY FO THIS", REMEMBER JUST 2 TO SELL.

I N~~ ~~~CL

RECEIVE'il RIBBON
Elva Dailey received her 35 pound
ribbon and certificate for weight loss
at last week's meeting of Slinderella
at Heath United Methodist Church in
Middleport.
Kathy Elias and Brenda Pettit lost
the most weight at the cla$s, while at
the Mason Class, ones losing the
most weight were Connie Goodnite;
Cora Folmer, Becky Benson of the
evening class, and Roberta
Maynard, ·ctoreen Lewis and Etta
O'Dell of the morning .class. Two
new members were welcomed. Mrs.
Jo Ann Newsome is lecturer for the
classes.

ment Clause, and related
matters. This hearing is

Center Cut

,

0

REVIVAL, Bald Knob United
Gospel Mission Church, beginning
April 7-12, 7:30p.m. Special singing
nightly; evangelist, Clyde Lee
Ferrell.
PRACTICE SESSION 7 p.. Monday for initiatory work by Pomeroy
Chapter 186, Order of Eastern Star.

'

Th e Publ 1c Uti lit ie s Com·
mission of Oh io has set for
publ iC he ari ng Case No.
79 - 232- EL - FAC (Su bfile AI t o review the fuel
procure men t practices and
pol ici es oi Co lumbus and
· Southern Oh io Electric
Compa ny, the operati on
of •ts Fu el Cost A&lt;J ju st ~

SATURDAY

SEVERAL ODD CHAIRS
WE'RE REDUCING AT

$4995

Only

Bill Anderson, and Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Dillard.
April 12 was set aa a work day on
the ball field at the high school.
Fathers of girls involved in softball
were urged to help with the work of
preparing the field. Pomeroy Youth
League workers will also be there on
that date.

LE GA L NOTICE

THRU

WE HAVE ONE 3 PIECE
LIVING ROOM SUITE EARLY
AMERICAN PRICED AT $499.95
YOU CAN HAVE IT FOR

$.29995

MONDAY
B . H. SANBORN MISSIONARY
SOCIETY r1. the Middleport First
Baptist Church annual fellowship
tea, 7:30 Monday night at the
church. Women of churches in the
Rio Grande Association, and women
of all Middleport and Pomeroy Churches invited to attend.

with Mrs. Grimm as leader and all
of the members participating.
The discussion centered on what
the organization is , who may belong,
why we have it, nad how it may be
obllerved. It wa8 noted that the
prayer and self-denial service ill
usually observed in January
throughout the world by Methodist
women, all of women belong, and
that while much of the aid goes
abroad, much is given in the community and considered missionary
work at home.
'
The Bible study was led by Mrs.
Erma Hill and participating in that
were Mrs. Shuler, Mrs. Alice Balser,
Mrs. Margie Roush, Mrs. Nora
Cross, Mrs. Linda Turley,rley, and
Mrs. Grimm. Mrs. Roush will host
the next meeting. Mrs. Hill served
refreshments .

PRICES EFFECTIVE
MONDAY

l .cal!{ue.

AU T OMO Btt. f:"

1

Atotal of $558 waa collected for the
Meigs Girls Athletic Association
during the recent tag day, according
to a report presented at Thursday
night's meeting of the Association
Boosters.
Richard Rupe presided at the
meeting with the Association\extending a vote of thanks to all who contributed during tag day. The money
. will be used for new equipment for
the reserve softball team and new
unifonns for the girls in track.
Several ways and means projects
were discussed and a yard sale waa
set for April 25 and 26 at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Rupe, Wright St.,
Pomeroy. A"pricing party" waa set
for Thursday evening preceding the
sale. Named to the ways and means
committee were Mr. and Mrs.
WUliam.Swisher, Mr. and Mrs. Ed·
die Blake, Mr. and Mrs. Dwight
Wallace, Mr. and Mrs. Alan King,
Mr. and Mrs. Dewey Horton, Mr.
and Mrs. Bill Perrin, Mr. and Mrs.

DETROIT TIG!:RS - Sent Ed Putman, iJ&gt;.

PURCHASE A BEDROOM
SUITE AND GET
FREE A BOX SPRING
AND MATTRESS

Only

Sentinel
social calendar

$5 58 collected for girls' athletics

fielder. and Mike Chri s, pitcher to Evansville of

-------------- ,!l'l_lil l l_________..______________________1
~

man, Gallipolis. The couple selected
the wedding date to honor the bride's
maternal grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. Jewell Curtis, and the groom's
paternal grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. Thomas Clarke Sayre, the wedding anniversary date of both
couples.
The gracious custom of open
church will be observed.

NOW GOING ON AT MASON FURNITURE

ON LIVING ROOM SUITES

107 W. Ma in 9 92 · 2 1 ~ 3 Po m ~ r o t

Easter Sunday came with something
approaching ease.
He started the final round with a :Z..
stroke lead, built the advantage to
four with birdies on his first two
holes and still had a three stroke advantage after he'd finished No.7,
which he considers the toughest hole
on the course.
After that, it was easy.
" It turned into a lot of fun,"
Stadler said. "A walk in the park. I
really enjoyed myself for once."
There really wasn't a strong
challenge and be settled any
lingering doubts with consecutive
birdies on the 14th and 15th holes, on
putts of 8 and 10 feet.
The only thing remaining was to
settle second place, which eventually wound up in a four-way tie at
281 between Jerry Pate, George Burns, Bill Kratzert and Australian
Jack Newton.
Pate, ·a playoff loser the week
before and now a runnerup on successive weekends, shot a 67 that was
the best round of. the day. Burns,
who has been runnerup in this tour- .
nament three of the last four years,
had a 69. Newton birdied the last
hole for a 68. Kratzer! shot 70.
No one else was within eight shots
of Stadler, whose .victory margin
was the largest of the year.
Ray Floyd, the defending
titleholder, and Fuzzy Zoeller, who
will defend his Masters crown this
week, each shot 7~284. South
African Gary Player had 75-289. Bill
Calfee, who started the final round
in second place, faded quickly, shot
a fat 79 and finished 13 strokes back
at 288.

Mrs. Erma Hill hosted a meeting
of the United Methodist Women of
the Letart Falls Church at her home
recently,
An inspirational reading by Mrs.
Chlorus Grimm opened the meeting
with Mrs. Nora Cross giving devotions using scripture from Luke and
a reading on prayer. During the
business meeting, Mary Louise
Shuler read a letter from the group's
compassion child, Yusmine, who is
seven years old and lives in Jamaca.
It was announced that 18 convalescent calls have been made during
the past month by members of the
UMW. The program was on the .
World Day of Prayer and Self-Denial

Eddie Kitchen was elected presi· to Nashville, Tenn. and Opryland
dent of the Meigs Band Boosters at a and then enroute home to visit Mammeeting held Tuesday night at high mouth cave in Kentucky. Students
schooL
•
. will travel by chartered bus leaving
Other officers elected were Mrs. the school on June 9 at 9 a.m. and
Jean TI!omas, first ·vice president; returning · the evening of June 11.
Mrs. Pat Kitchen, second vice presi- Cost will be about $8,000 with the
dent; Mrs. Florence Snowden
amount to be paid through various
treasurer; and Mrs. Shirley Friend: projects of the band boosters and the
secretary.
students including the jazz festival
Plans were discussed for the an- scheduled for May 3 at the high
nual band banq11et to be held in May. schooL It was reported that tci date
It was decided that the conce511ion 18 bands have entered the festival.
stand will be in operation for the
It was voted to order 250 !-shirts
boxing match on April 28. On display with a jazz festival design prepared
waa another trophy won by the color by Randy Hunt, director, arid Jack
guard with the band directors stresS- Slavin of the Meigs art department.
ing the good performance of the The shirts will sell for $5 each and a
guard, and noting that final competi- committee will be appointed to hantion will take olace this month at dle the sale.
·
Dayton and Lexington.
The new officers will be installed
The band trip waa announced for at the band banquet in May.
June 9, 10 and II with the group to go

SPRING SALE

Sonics advance
with big victory
BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
"Nobody blows out the world
champions," said Seattle's Dennis
Johnson, responding to a prediction
made by Portland's brash Billy Ray
· Bates regarding Sunday's deciding
game of their playoff mini-series,
and he waa right.
The Sooics, defending National
Basketball Association champions,
raced to a 2lt-point third-quarter lead
and breezed to a 103-a6 victory over
the Trail Blazers to win their firstround series :Z..l.
Next on the agenda for the Sanies,
who are bidding to become the
NBA's first repeat champions since
the Boston Celtics of 1968-69, are the
Midwest Division champion
Milwaukee Bucks. That best-&lt;lfseven second-round set opens in
Seattle Tuesday night.
"Milwaukee has a much better
outside dimension than Portland,"
said Sonics Coach Unny Wilkens.
"We're gonna have to be ready for
that."
One second-round series got under
way Sunday, with the Philadelphia
Flyers r11llying-behind Julius Erving
in the final period to beat the Atlanta
Hawks 107·104.
The other second-round matchups
were detennined Sunday when the
Phoenix Suns and Houston Rockets

seasons, is ahead of him. Watson,
who did not compete in Greensboro,
has $140,275.
Stadler's victory on a bright

Erma Hill hosts UMW meeting

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�6-The Dally SenUnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, April 7, 191W

,

.
7-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-P omeroy, 0 ., Monday, Apri1 7, 1980

Your Best Buys Are Found in the Sentinel Classifieds

DICKTRACY

•'

.

~ THATSCRAMBLEDWORDGAME

,lf\}N'J)e}lt

~

\.9 ~~ (I)

Television
Viewing

by Henri Arnold and.Bob Lee

Unscramble these four Jumbles,

54

WANT AD INFORMATION

Misc. Merchanlse

16mm

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

col or

an d

11

sound

m ovie pro jector in very
gOod condition. $200. Old
Sm a ll cast iron wood cook
stove in very good conditi on. $120. 247·2624.
85 Bushel ba sket s, 25 li ds .

992-3019. Can be seen a t 200
Las le y St. a ft er 5 F riday on
weekends.

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

E arl y Amer ica n so fa and

eANNOUNCEMENTS

la r ge cha ir . $75. 985·42 17.

eRENTALS

I -Card of Thank s

41 - Hot.~ sts

2- ln Memoriam

1-HIIlP't' Ads

42- Mobilt Homes
101' A: t nt
44--Apllrlmtnl tor R t nl
45-- FRooms

6--- l..ostand Found
7- Yud hl1

46-Spect tor Rut
u - wanted to Rtrn

l-Announcemenll
4- GiVIIIWily

t-Putuie Sali
1 Auction

fo r Rent

3 axle tr ail er fram e. 60 ft .
lo ng . Never burned . 992·
5992.

DISCOUNT
PRICES

s1 - Houatholct GC»&gt;d1

51- CB, TV, Radio Equlpm r nt

,, _ Htlp :.Vani.CS
12-Situatftl wanttd

SJ- .t.ntiqUII
S4-Misc . Merch•ndiu
ss--euildlng hpl)lles

13---tnsurance
14-Buslness Tra ining
1~Sctloatstnstru.clion

5..,_Pet!i lor 5•1•

16-

e FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

Raclio , TV

a C:l RtjNi r
It-Wanted To Do

Hotpoint and
General Electric
Appliance
Sales &amp; Service

f1 - Filrm Equi pment

n - wanttd to lluy
12- Trucks tor hie

e FINANCIAL
Billlneu

POMEROY
LANDMARK

t l -Livestock

Opportunity
22- Money to L"n
23- Profltllional

64- HiiY &amp; Gnin
U - SHCI &amp; Fertlllrtr

Str'J iCU

Jack W. Carsey,
Mgr.
Phone 992-2181

eTRANSPORTATION

e REAL ESTATE

71--A ut0s tor S.te
73-Vans&amp;4W .D .

lt - Momes tor Slit
32-MoblltHomts

Auto

Puts

SS

eSERVICES

Want·Ad Advertising
Deadlines

11 - Home ImprovemenTS
n - Ph.lmblnt &amp; E xca vating
tl- El(,CIVItlng
14- EiectriCJll

361 Gra nt St., Midd lepor t,
OH or call '1'12·7567 or 992 ·
3844.

Mu st Sell. 77 Sta r c raft
boa r, 16' open bow, 85 hp

11 Noon S•turday

1.

tor Mondn

United Methodist Church .
Call742·2635 .

15--General Haul ing
1.-M.H. Repair
17- Uphoht ery

harness.
Horses
and
pon ies. Ruth Reeves . 614·

..

698 ·3290 .

1SWords or Uncler

, ,

Cash

....

da~s

Rid ing Less ons and Horse

:us

1.10

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3.15

l!ach word eve r the minimum 15 words 11 4 cenfl per word per d1y .
AdS run•'l!ng other than consec:utiVII da ys will De CftUJed at tftll 1 da~

rate.
In memory , C•nl of Th•nk' 1nd Obituuv : 'c11nts per word, ll .OCI
minimum . CISft in advanu.

Mobile Home sales •nd Y;ud Il les are•ccepted on tv with cash with
order. 2J unt chargt! for 1ds carrying Box NumC.r In Cart! ol Tht
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On Page 2
41

Houses for Rent

Nice 2 bedroom house wltf·
Homes for Sale

House for rent. Piano for

3 Bedroom, 1 .story house
on Long St. in Rutland, OH .
AlSO 1, 29,000 BTU air con·

sale. Call 992 ·3489 or 992·
2594.

dltioner . Phone 742·2975.

42

paneled,

finished

basement With bar, garbage disposal , good win·
dow air conditioner, storm
windows . See
to ap·
preci ate, reasonable. 992·

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

KENNELS.

fully equ ipped, exc. cond .

$7, 500. 742·31 17 after 5 p.m .
1972 For d F -10 1J2 ton 302
automati c trans .. p.s.,
custom c ab, exc . cond. f or
a 1972. 614·667·3593.
Ford

F&gt;i cku p.

1 bedroom mobi le home .

EASTER BUNNIES . Call
742 2301 .

Purebred Husky, male . 5
mo.old . Blac k and white .
Has all shots. SSO. John
Vroman. 187112 2nd Ave.,

M iddleport. 992·2741.
Apar1ment
for Rent

RENTER ' S assistance for
Senior Cit izens 'in Village

Manor apts. Call992-7787 .
Furnish~

Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

1979 Ford 150 4x4, auto.,
p .s., p. b., topper . Positive
tra c1ion f ront and r ear . 985-

4339.
steering , Levi interior, 3
speed, tilt steering wheeL

10,000 miles. $5600. Cali992·
3149 or 992-2705 .

1978 CR2SO-Honda Dirt
Bike, like new . 1979 CR125·
Honda Dirt Bike, like new .
4 w estern dual spoke
wh eels, 14 i nch bar fit . 1979
Camara Z28
factory
whee ls, 15 in . 742·3154.
Real Estate

Picking up a piano in your
area . Looking for a respon·
sible par ty to take over
payments . Call c re d it

manager co llect. 614--592·
5122 .

Rooms

General

Farm Equipment

1 Farmall H Tractor, 1967-

ATTENTION :
( IM PORTANT TO YOU) Wil l

very good condit ion. On a

pay cash or certified check
for antiques and collec·
tibles or entire estates.
Noth ing too large . Also,
guns, pocket watches and
coin collec tions. Call 614·

be rented.

For

Sale, Mobile Home

196~.

60x12, exc . cond . Com-

767-3167 or 557 -341.1 .

plete with washer, dryer,

dishwasher, 3 ton central
and

storable

building. Completely lur·
nished and ready for im·
mediate
occupancy .

Located on nice rented lot.
Phone992·2451 after 5 p.m .
1971 Zimmer trailer 12x60.
1972 Buddy Trailer 12x60.
992,5304.

ATTENTION :
(IM ·
PORTANT TO YOU! Will

from the Texaco Station in

Syracuse. Ph. 992·3752 or
992-3743.
12x60 Kirkwood with large
living room extension, 3
bedrooms. central air con·

dltlonlng . Good cond., must
sell. 304·773 ·5173.
l3

Farms for Sale

COUNTRY HOME with
stocked pond for swimming
or fishing, 9 rooms, bath,
carpeted . 3 to 17 . acres
available. Located approx.
7 mill!' lrom Pomeroy off
Rl. 7 or 33. «6'-2359 aller 6.

CHIP WOOD . Poles max .
d i ameter 10" on largest
end .. $1 2 p·er t on . Bund led

slab. $10 per to n. Delivered
to Ohio Pal let Co., Rt . 2,
Pomeroy 992-2689 .
ANTIQUE S,
NITURE , glass ,

house. Full basement,
barn, bUildings, mineral
rights, good land. $77.000.
992-7559 .
35

767·3167 or 557 ·3411.

ches, class r ings, wedding
bands, diamonds. Gol d or

Misc . Merchanise

COAL,

LIMESTONE ,

sand , g r ave l , ca lc ium
chloride, fert i lizer, dog

food , and all types of s alt.
E xcejsior Salt Works, Inc .,
E . Main Sf. , Pomeroy , 9923891.
APPLES - ROME beauty
appleS I!,I $4 per bu. Best lor
apple butter. Call 669·3785,
Fitzpatrick Orchard, SR

689.
EMERGENCY
alternators -

power

own 1he best

- -buy Winpower . Call513788·2589.

2nd, Middleport, OH . 992·
3161 .
OLD COINS , pocke t wat·
silver. Call J. A. Wamsle y,
742-2331. Treasure Chest
Coin Shop, Athe ns, OH . 592·
6462.
GOLD AND
SILVER
COIN S OF THE WORLD .
RING S,
JEWELRY ,
STERLING SILVER AND
MISC . ITEMS. PAYING
RECORO
HIGH ,
HIGHEST U P -TO-DATE
PRICE S. CONTACT ED
BURKE TT
BARBER
SHOP , MIDDLEPORT ,
OHIO, OR CALL 992-3476.

PrOP,erly For Sale. Over J
acreS 01 lind in Pomeroy.
Only 57,000. 992·3886.

5 Acres for sale. 1 mile
·from old 33 and 6 miles
trom Rt. 7. . Possibility
Land Contract. 992·3900 ..

ol

L.ivestock

63

•;, blood Bee falo bull. 742·
2630.

I

delivery : various sizes of

ran:qM_ta.tBHF

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

Bumgardner
992-5724.

Sales,

Inc .

Decorated ca kes for all oc casions. Character c akes

Lois &amp; Acreage

F U R·
china ,

any t hing . See or call Ruth
Gosney, ant iques, 26 N .

1N STOCK for immediate

36 Acre Farm, 1112 story

Wanted to Buy

pay cash or certif ied check
for antiques and col lec tibles or entire estates.
Nothing · too large! A lso,
guns, pocket watches and
coin collec t ions. Call 614·

S4

A&amp;H Upholstering, across

62

and sheet cakes. Call 992*342 or ~92 - 2583 .
wurlltzer Organ all tran·
sister, beginners chord. A· l
· cond. ·Cost $1 ,599 new. Will
take $595. 2 beige swivel
overstuffed rockers S150.
GOod c6nd. 667·3187 .

1979 Camaro
Z· 28.
Automatic, 5500 m iles, excellent cond ~ fion . L oaded.
Cost over S9,000. Pri ced for

quick sal e. 742·2143.
1971 Nova, 6 cy l. , au to.,
good work ca r . 992 3886.

1976

C o r dob~ .

A .C., p .b.,

.cruise control, good
cond . After 4 p "l 1 949·2196 .
p .s.~

of

~

the

speci al features of this
home are original wood·
work , fireplace, c:entrl
Reduced

to

acres all fenced with a 2
yr . otd modular home.
Has a beautiful floor
ptan ~ with 4 bedrooms
and 2 baths. Also has a
bar,n
and
other
buildings, and an extra
frail er hook-up. Yours

949-2"0 .
calls.

HOME - This distinc·
tive brick &amp; frame
house has 9 rooms, 1112

Pomeroy,
New

Lht i n'II - NR · 5f ,
Outstandi n'll· home . Spr ing
Ave ., Pomeroy , Q _, fully
c ar peteo.

f i r epla ce,
3
bedroom , bVilt· ln ld tc nen,
pan ettnv . Fen ced in yard
w.ttl dr iv ewa y . Ca ll lor
more inl o.

· work &amp; care that has
gone into this stately
home . Every room is artisti d tlly dec orated .
Located on a quiet
street
in
a
good
neighborhoo d .

cMn . Has a full base·
ment and is c arpeted

Comfortable
Home NR - n , close in, 11 rm ~ .• ful
ty fur nl~tleQ , nice POrc h .

throughout .
Only
$35,000.00.
ECONOMY PRICED 5 rtooms and a bath all

yar d and oaraoe . Thi s won't
ln 1 long

bed rooms, basl!!bo i!trd
!r ic heat , thermopane
dows, plus a 2 ur Qa ra9e
Approx . Jl;. acre, Tupper'
Pla ins, Ohio. On ly S4!i,OOO.

bed room

house ,

lovely home with lust a
OUR SALES STAFF IS
READY TO ASSIST
YOU, SALES DO NOT
JUST HAPPEN
THEY ARE MADE .
REALTOR

bu&amp; i n ~ss

Ph. 992· 2403 or H2·27IO

We

have

potential

bu ers-need

your

Ofl one floor , and is
located on a level 3;_.
acre . lot. Has an extra
water tap. Could be a
little work . $16,500.00 .

Investment
Property NR · SS, lh \ i de nc e p tu~
tlu ~l ne u
oppor tun iTy, 1

'

Henry Cleland, Jr.

992·6191
ASSOCIATES
Jean Trusseii949·:Z66
Roger &amp; Dottie Turner

742·2474
Office Phone 992·7259

REAL ·ESTATE
WE HAVE FINAN&lt;:ING AVAILABLE
AS LOW AS 5% DOWN AND 30 YEARS
TO PAY, ON MOST HOMES .
WHETHER YOU RENT OR BUY FOR THE PLACE YOU OCCU F'Y.

YOU PAY

MIDDLEPORT - Commercia l office build ing, on
busy corner in center of town . Fully rented . A gOOd
investment .

POMEROY - Two be
L D ' ath ·frame home
on Hill St. Now rent.S.O· • 10 per m o. Only
· S10,000.
.

RACINE - Peace and qu iet in the countr y. Just a
few miles from Rac ine. Remodeled home on 2 acr es

of ~round . $39,000 .

MIDDLEPORT - Thr&lt; S.O L Dl 'n bat h, nice lot
j ust one block from hea
• • . • 5,000 .

All lypes of roof work,

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

NORTH

Free Estimates
2- u -ttc

Real Estate

ANNIE

... .

WEST
.AK&gt;

- I'M AFRAID l GOT

'REMEMBER
ME , ANNIE !

- HUCKlE

. . .. .

t653
.AQJ98
.A1542
.KQJ I08
SOUTH

... .

FOOT 'N 1TH YOU
,.,_~

EAST
.832

•a1

OFF ON THE I'IF/ON6
EARLIER '"

s

"'

rates . Scotchguard.
6309 or 742·2211 .

CALL 992-2342
RODNEY DOWNING, BROK ER - HO . 992-3711
BILL CHILDS, BRANCH MGR .-H0: 992 -2449

----------------------DOWNINGOIILDS AGENCY INC.
INSURANCE

SERVING SOUntEASTERN OHIO SINCE 1868
ARE YOU PAYING TOO MUCH ? ·DO
YOU ~lAVE THE COVERAGE?

FOR ALL YOUR INSURANCE NEEDS
CALL US.
"-..

992·2342
DOWNING-CHILDS JK:ENCY, INC.
MIDDLEPORT,' OHIO

1-( 614 )-992-3325

.

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

CALIFORNIA
CON ·
TEMPORARY - With
5.2 acres . Has 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, total
electric home on Ohio
Power. Leading Creek

water .

Landscaped

yard . ·

STORAGE
General

HOBSTETTER
REALTY
PHONE 742·2003'
"Small enough to appreciate you, yet large
enough to serve vou ."

· · PHONE 742-2003
NEW LISTING - Extra
ni ce total electric, 3
home .

Has

modern kitchen, utility,
bath and 1 car garage.
Alumin -u m
sid i ng .
Si tuated on nice size. lot .
Priced to sell.

ThiS

one you won ' t believe! 3

bedrooms,

2'12

baths,

family
room with
fireplace. living room ,
din i ng room, extra
modern kitchen and 2
work hand stained. Ap·

prox . 2 yrs. old . Situated
on 4 acres. There' s more
so give us a call! Decor
is exquisite.
home . Close to ' Meigs
H igh . Owner says sell,
so we ha~e redu ced this

loading dock. Out ot al l
floods .
2 LOTS ·- Restricted 1
acre plus for a nic e
home and privacy with
shade trees.

LINCOLN HILL -

cellent neighborhood
with all utilities.
TRAILER ACRES - On
blac ktop road wilh pten·
ty of room for pets,
garden &amp; children .

TRAILER ACRES -

3

bedrooms, ·11h

baths,
L.l'. furnace, back &amp;
front porches, and 1

level acre for S29,500.oo.
On Rt. 124.
10 ACRES - 01 good
bottom land for farming
or for a hotne on Rt. 124

west. Only S10,000.00.
RACINE
Ni c e
building
lot
near
schools . All utilities

available.
NEARS PTS. - WOoded
lot in private develop·
menf for your privacv .

HAVE
YOU
HAD
YOUR
PROPERTY
ADVERTISED
TOO
LONG? THEN TRY US
FOR A QUICK SALE.
CALL 992 · 3325 or
992-3876.

Housing
Headquart.ers

hom e is qual i ty PLUS.
Lovel y 3 bedroom ranch

family

dau back on the
job!

ACROSS

Electrical

&amp; Relrlgeralion

Repairs ,

makes.

MACHINE
all
992 2284 . The

WINNIE

service ,

){)U1RE NOT OUT OF
'mE BALL GAME YET,

Fabr ic Shop, Pomeroy ,
Authori zed Singer Sales
and Service. We sharpen
Scissors.

ELWOOD
RI;PAIR -

1/AD. MOM 1\ND I
CA N HELP YOU
LANO THAT

BOWERS
Sweepers,

SURE WE'RE

PES16NER.Sc_AREN'T
WE ? AND 1. HAVE
1\ DATE WITH
TIPPY' TONIGHT!

11

J OP.&gt;.

Next

to

Sta te

Highway

Garage on Route 7, 985·

3825.

Reynolds Elec tri c, 651
Beech St ., Middleport, OH .
Rewind and Repair electric

motors. 992·2356.
Miller Elec trica l Service.
Resident and Busi ness.
Rel iable a nd Experienced.

BARNEY

742·3195.

~!

___

GLORY BE!!

Gene!~ I Hauling

I SHORE HAD
A BODACIOUS

WI LL HAU L limestone and
Qri!lvel. Al so, lime hauling
and spreading , Leo M orr ls

I SEEN IT,
PARSON ·-

• COLLECTION
LAST SUNDAY,

Trucking. Phone 742 ·2.1.15.

! SEEN
IT!!

I TOOK IN THREE
SUCKLIN' PIGS, NINE ~..,._~;;o&lt;J
HEN

EGGS, A JAR

OF PEACH BUTTER,
35~ CASH AN '--

PASSIN' AROUND
THAT 5HOPPIN'
CART WUZ A

PLUMB GOOD
IDEE

LOWEEZY

Rutla.nd Furniture's

room has fireplace, !iv·
i ng r oom , d ining room ,
k i tchen and garage. On
a nice lot in Chester.

'

SellS for 558,000.00.
LOTS OF ROOM - - 2

"Drive A LiHie Save A Lot"
S.HOP IS FULLY STOCKED

acr es with a famlly
home. 3 bed r ooms, 2

KITCHEN CARPET

baths, family room, kit '
chen and din ing area ,
laundry
room
and

Rubber
Backed

garage .
Se lls f o r
$39,900.00.
.
MIODLEPORT
Large 2 story home.

$895

SQ.

yd.

BEDROOM
LI .V ING ROOM ·

vetm• Nlcinsky,
Assoc.
Phone 742·3092

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

E161-1N-51X TO NOTHING!
HOW COULD WE LOSE
E16HW-SIX TO NOTHIN6?

I'M SURI'RI5~0 THAT ·
TI-lE 81JZZARC75.AREN'T

u

WE CAN'T EVEN I-lAVE
A REAL BUZZARD!

GUOSW

CIRCLING ABOVE US ...

.

VBSPX

~

J H W L

"

TPSE

PSOSF
HP
QUV

RUTLAND fURNITURE

L ..

"

Main St.

742-2211

'

'

·-·~-~· - 1

YHVQ

Batman 10; Three Stooges-Little
Rascals ·17 .

7: 30- Faml ly Affa ir 10; 7:55-Chuck
Wh ite REports 10.
8: DO-Cap I Kangaroo 8, 10; Lucy
Show 17; Sesame 51. 33 .
8 : 3~ Romper Room 17 .
9:DO- Bob Braun 3; Big Valley 6;
Beverly H i llbillies 8; Jeffersons
10; Phil Donahue 13, 15 ; Fami ly
Ailalr 17.
9 : 3~ Bob Newhar t 8; Afternoon
P layhouse 10; Green Acres 17.

IO:DO-Card Sharks 3. IS; Edge of
Mov i e " Th e lnspec1or Generar"
17 .

10 : 30- Holl y wood Squares 3, 15;
S20.000 Pyramid 13; Whew 8, 10;
Andy Griffith 6.
10:55-CBS News 8; House Call 10.
11 :DO-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13; Price
is Right 8,10.
11 : 30- Whee l of Fortune 3. 15 ;
Sesame St. 20 ; 11 :55- News 17.
12:DO-Newsc enter 3; News 8, 10;
He a lt h F ield 15 ; Love American
Slyle 17 .

17; El ec . Co. 20 .
1 DO-Days of Our Lives 3. 15; All My
Ch ildren 6, 13; Yo"ng &amp; the
Restless 8, 10.
2:DO-Doctor s 3, 15; One Life to Live
6, 13; As The World Turns 8, 10;
2·25- News 17.

Yesterday's Answer

24 Defensible
2S Aircraft
engine

30 Nervous
31 Sequence

36 Cooper in

26 Food

" Meet
John

27 Extinct
I bird

29 Took baby

:18 " Oh, give
- home . ''

It :

· C

J DX

QHBS
HGW

NCP

CZS

SGVS ' V

ex

EQH

E Q C X.
VHNS..

SIBS~VS .

I

GeorgeS . H~bstett e r Jr .
6r,,ker ~9 2 "173'1

Am er ica 13; T uesday Morning 8:

12:3G-R yan 's Hope 13 ; Search for
Tomorrow 8, 10 ; Password Plus
l S; M ovie " I Dream Too Much "

CRYPTOQUOTES

PEANtrrS

CARPET
$995 And Up

Nice Selection af Remnanta
A II Sizes - Good Prices

Phone 742·2003

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)

6 ne leller simply sl ands lor anothe r. In this sample A II
used (or the three L's, X fo r Lh (' two O's, ftc Single l etters.
apostrophes, the l en gth and fM mnti ~ n of the wo rds are all
hints. Eac h day I he code lcllers arc different.

Padding &amp; carpet Instil lied Free
with Purchase

Must see to appreciate.
We hCheryl Lemley,
Assoc.
Cheryl Lemley , Assoc .

one."

Here's how to work
AX"DLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW '

is

TUESDAY, APRILS, 1980
Reporl 13; 5 : 5~PTL
Club 13.
6:D0-700 Cl ub 6,8; PTL Club 15;
' Health Field 10; 6:15-World at
Large 17 .
6 : 3~Concerns &amp; Comments 10;
News 17; 6:45-Mornlng Report
3; A.M . Weaiher 33;. 6 : 5~Good
Morning West Vi r gin ia 13; 6: 55New s 13.
7:DO-T oday 3. 15; Good Morning
5 : 45- F~rm

Alan : " Six hearts doubled
with an overtrick comes to
I ,860 points. You came out of
the river with two fish , not

DOWN

.

17.

Night 6; Jeffer-.,sons 8; Joker' s

DAILY CRYPTOQlTOTE -

CARPET SHOP

4: 15- Finding

Wild 10 ; Morning Magazine 13;

!:-:-+-+-+--!-

toasters, ir ons, all small
appl iances. Lawn mower.

13;

the Path to an Uncertai n FuttJre

five clubs, etc., etc."

grand jury
meeting
of Italy
4 Whale
s Wrap
14 Overhead
15 Go amiss
6 Netting
16 This instant!
7 Old
18 On the road to radio show
8 Figaro's city
19 Of the
9 Furtive
breastbone
11 Sawbuck
21 Lodge
17 Paddle
member
20 Iranian cash
22 Pinafore
Z3 Skin
'
Z3 Bereft
of color
24 RIISSian
potentate
zs New York city 1
26 Whirl
27 Painter,
- Cassatt
28 USNA grad .:
abbr.
, . 29 Awakens
32 Faux 33 Reign : India
34 Thrice: Lat.
35 Dwell
37 Correct
a text
39 Sailing
vessel
40 Succinct
U Basic belief
42 Town in Mass.

7101.

SEWING

•

12 Reddy of song
13 Province

Fred

LimeS1one for driveways.
Pomeroy· ·Mason area . 367·

••

Pass

I Mexico money I Bowtdaries
5 Cheese
2 Tennis name
3 Type of
10 Ward off

Excavating

83

a•

·Pass

. by THOMAS JOSEPH

I thouqht
come on
autcmaticaiiLJ when I qot
ml.j job back!

Oh,bo4! M4 first

Wi ll do odds and ends,
paneling , floor t ile; and

Nice

corner building lot ln ex·

one lo ONLY $39,900.00.
EXTRA NICE - ThiS
w it h 2 baths,

All

utilities, air conditioned, concrete floor , gas
storage
tank ,
and

Pass

~dM~tr:l

GASOLINE ALlEY

Home
Improvements

ceiling tile. Call
Miller, 992 ·6338.

South

1•

Oswald: "Here is a great
example of falling in the river
and coming up with a trout in
your mouth. It was on of those
seven -board Swiss team
matches. East and West were
playir.g old-fashioned style so
that West's double of three
hearts was lor penalty. Mayto
East should have taken lt out,

I

3·26· 1 mo.
81

East

but he didn 't. And alte r the
king of spade lead, South had
no trouble taking all 13 tricks
to score 1,530 points."
Alan: 11 ( guess there was
considerable laughter at
West ' s expense , wasn ' t
there?"
Oswald: " I was West and
joined in. It was a friendly
match . Then I suggested that
the board just might not be
the disaster it looked like.
Just possibly South might get
doubled at six hearts at the
other table."
Alan: "You didn't really
believe that, did you?"
Oswald : " No 1 But, believe it
or not, that is just what
happened. The other EastWest pair were playing nega·
live doubles to the lour level
with an agreement tha t suc h
negative doubles would guar·
antee lour spades so West
passed alter South made t he
same three-heart bid. North
raised to lour hearts. East bid

By O.wald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

Free Estimate
James.Keesee
Ph. 992-2772

Phone

and

Nortb

Opening lead:• j(

nsulallon
• Storm Doors
• Storm Windows
• Repl•cement
Windows

992-

WALL PAPER ING
pa inting . 742-2328 .

NEW LISTING -

Obi.

Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding

&amp; G carpet Cleaning.

bedroom

West

INSULATION

Steam
cleaned .
Free
estimate .
Reasonable

R~al Estate

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: East

J&amp;L BUMN

Home·
Improvements

81

• K72
• 96 3

3·12· 1 mo.

General

5£F"IFPS

PRICE . REDUCED!! 3 bedroom. total electric

We Are Sellin~ - We Need Lktings

Call Howard
949·2862
949-2160
1· 22-llc

388-9759

BUILDING OR TRAILER LOT - Hyse ll Run Roa d
SYRACUSE - Old house on a nice lot , $11 ,600 .
\.OT IN MIDDLEPORT - We Will build a hOuse on
th is one if you choose - South Second Ave.

1-1-80

• A Q9 5
• 10 4

"Lowest Rates
In Town"
"Ten Years
E xp~rience"
"Work
Guaranteed"
Ph. 992-6186
After Five

Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices

News 17 .
l : 15- Movie " Objective Burma " 17;

1: 35- Ne ws

WE BRING THE
GARAGE TO YOU!!!

new or repair gu"ers
and downspouts, gutter
cleaning and painting,
All work guaranteed .

ABC News6, 13;
Ha rry 0 8; ABC Captioned News
33; Mo vie "The Tyrant" 1.0:
Movie " Hangman 's Knot" 17.
1 0 : 5~ Barney Miller 6,13; 12 :25P o li ce Wo m a n 6, 13 ; 12 : 40McC ioud 8.

Double reels in points

AUTO REPAIR

H. L WRITESn
ROOFING

Paref\ts

1 :QO-Tomorrow 3; New s 15 ; 1: 10---

.QJI09 7 61

FLYNN?

Wise

33 ; 11: 15-L ove, A m erican Style

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

PROB!.e:Mo?. .,.___....

992·379!

News 20;

Know The ir Children 33.
10 :1 5- Big Ba tlles 17 : 10 : 3D--Over
Easy 20.
11 DO- New s 3, 6,8, 10 , 13, 15; Dick
Cavett 20; Dave Allen a t Large

BRIDGE

WHe't.l '11?1&gt; FIR~ Vi'SITe;.D w;,,
Y(J(JR WiJDef.IC:{ Wf&gt;6 TO RlJtJ
~A'{ FROv. YOUR

Free Estimates
After 5 P .M. 992·5547
3·26·1 mo.

8. 10;

17.

~~.w ~ OORtJ,o\f"fU:...

4·2-tfc

GEORGE'S
ROOFING

CAVO RT · HOTBED

Movie " Brighl Leaf" 17; 8 : 3~
Sloc kard Ch a nning 8,1 0.
9 : 0~ T he O ldes t Liv ing Graduate
3, H; Mov ie " High Plains
D r if te r " 6, 13; Mash 8, 10;
Am e r ican Short STory 20,33.
9 :3~ Fi o 8, 10; 10 :DO-Lou Grant

1 1 : 3~To n ig ht 3,1 5 :

'(oJ AR6 M~KI!Jb ru.e:u..ellT

Guaranteed Work

Pomeroy, Oh.

FAB LE

.KJ106432

POMEROY - On Lincol n Hts. - Two bedroom and
bath, full ba se m ent , gas furna ce~ storm w indows &amp;
door s. Owner w ill help financ e if you need it , $17,500.
RUTLAND -:- Older home needs ~om e re pairs on
Sa lem St reet Ni ce corner iol . S9900 .00.
.

(Answers tomorrow )

Jumbles: LYI NG

Monday, April 7

3·21 -1 mo.

car garage. All wood-

- Sacr es. $7 ,000.

618 E. Main

]I

Jumble Book No. 14,contalnlng 110 puzzles, is available torst .75poltpeld
I rom Jumble, cJctthls nawspa;rer, Box 34, NorwOOd, N.J.076'8. lncluda your
name, addr.. a, zip coda an make chech pay1ble to Newapal)erbooka.

BORN LOSER

H&amp;R BLOCK OFFICE LOCA liON

Sunday

I

A " LIG HT " TAN

baths and shows all the

Unbelievabl y clean and
well kept 1lf2 story
frame
home .
Just
perfect for a 'family with
4 bedrooms, spacious
living room , formal dining room,, and beautiful
cabinets w i th built·in
ov~n &amp; range in the kit·

o.

No

I

r I XXI

YOUR

Answer: One might acquire t hiS !rom a sunlamp-

Business-Farms-Partnerships
and corporations
Payrolls, profit and loss statements, al
federal and state forms .

or

949· 2801

r I XX)

Saturday's

1

Call 'for a Free Siding
Estimate,

Answer:

Tri-County
Bookkeeping
Service

BISSELl
SIDING CO.

down payment you c an
own this 5 room home
for less than what
you ' re paying for rent.

Now arrange the circled letters to
tonn the surpr ise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.

w.

Concrete Finishing

Vinyl and Aluminum
Siding .

for only $42,000.00.
TIRED OF PAYING
RENT? - With a small

W K RP in Cin ci nna t i 8, 10;
N a ti on al .Geog r aphic 20 ,33;

Brick Work

POMEROY, O.
992-6215 or
9'12-7314
1·28· 1 mo.

CALL 992-7544

d4

PRDMI~IOO! A~t&gt;

l

&amp;ELIEVE ME .. 'IOU AND CLAUDIA
HAVE- f'ieALLY
IT!

Va .
3-17· 1 mo.

Remodeling
Additions
Siding

V. C. YO.UNG Ill

o.

61/RPRI*~

WHEhl THE DEMON6TRAT ION
16 OV~R .. THE TV $TUDIO
ROCK!&gt; WITH AF'PLA U6E!

Block Work

107 Sycamore (Rear

tx:1

Quality construction at
reasonable rates.

(FREE ESTIMATES)

men1.

Pomeroy,

Haven,

·-· ..... .....

rx:tJ

OKAY, CHI'i15-- HEI'IJS'~ THAT

N. L CONSTRUCTION

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

Other times by appoint·

air, buill-in k itchen, full
basement and many
$29,500.00.
RURAL FLAVOR -

ADCJ ONS &amp;
REMODELING

5th 51.

New

Hours9-1 M., W., F.

VA or FHA approved .
$28,900.00 . .
DISTINCTIVE &amp; DIFFERENT

GMC Truc k . Long bed,
could be used for logg i ng .
304· 773-5873.
1971 12x65 Trailer, com·.
pletely furnished, A.C..

some

ment. Has up to 4
bedrooms ,
sew i ng
room, fireplace in fami ·
ly room . Lots of cl osets .

Ch•i-111 M. Hayes, Rf."hor
Nucu E . c~r~ev . 8r . Mgr.

61

room .

$59,500.00.
IN TOWN Ni ce 2
story with l ull base ·

bui ld ing with garage on
la r ge lots. Re-edsville , Oh
Call us, $25,000 .

Sleeping Room for working
·man . Call992·6022.

PARK FINANCIAL
· SERVICES, INC.

dining room , k itchen,
family room , &amp; living

St&lt;ip by today and take a
look. just $8 ,000 .00.
HEAD
TURNING

Motorcycles

74

Veterans Admin. Loans.

Th is charming 2 story
home has 3 bedrooms.

WATERMELON
PATCH

Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614-843-2591
3-30-1 mo.

&amp;

Housing

Sizes From 4x61912x40

Rt. 1, Box 54

REAL ESTATE
FINANCING
Federal

Jumpers· Dresses

MONDAY, APRIL 7. 1980 ·
/ :DO-Cross-Wits 3: Tic Ta c Uough
8; M ac Ne il -Le hrer Re port 33;
News 10;. Face The Music 13;
Love, Am er ican Sty le 15; San- '
ford &amp; Son 17; Dick Cavell 20.
7:30- T ha t Nas hv ille M u si c 3;
Muppe l Show 6: Joker' s Wild 8;
Fa mi ly Feud 10; Nashville On
The'Road 15; All In The Family
17; MacNe il-Lehrer Re port 20.
8:DO-Liltle House on tne Prai rie
3, 15; That's Incred ible ! 6,13;

DINTUCl

Tops· Panrs

Utility Buildings .
P&amp;S BUILDINGS

4- ·80

608 E .
Y
MAIN
POMEROY,O_.
992· 2259
PRICE REDUCED

more .

Just Ri'llftf- Nll ·SJ , N ew
spli t level hom e, w, ;:; ·'.:·,'!~'-11

Musical
Instruments

57

3 AND 4 RM furnished ap·
ts. Phone992-5434.

Ready fa move into. S6500
firm . 992· 530.4.

1979

Healthy, shots, wormed.
Donations required. 992·
6260, noon· 7. p .m .

o ld . $60 . 985·3567 .

Adults only. 992·2598 .

45

1979 Jeep Wagoneer, 4 dr .,

Boarding, all breeds . Clean
indoor-outdoor fa c iliti es.
Also AI&lt;C
regi ster ed
Dobermans. 614-446 7795 .

pis. Tri -colored , 6 weeks

Mobile Homes
for Rent

5566.
Mobile Homes
for Sale

R ISING STAR Ke n ne l.
Board ing . Call 367 ·0292 .

AKC Registered Co lli e pup-

44

Trucks tor Sale

72

SMALL

l~::,~'t:.!:,- •.

I I I'

See us First fC)r All :
of Your Maternity
Needs.

Sizes
" From JOxlO''

tJ

rJ

COTTE

PREGNANT?

Farm Buildings

extensive remodeling
*Electric Ia work$
•Masonry work
·12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583

1977 Dodge Aspen, Good

J eep s $59._50 ; Car s $37 .00;
Tru cks $159. 00 . Ca ll615·779·
3235 Ex t . 814.

ALL STEEL

CONSTRUCTION
•New homes

All run good . 992·7675 .

HUMANE
SOCIETY .
Adopt a homeless pet.

garage. 992-2502.

6 Rooms, l lf2 baths, car-

and

Care products . Western
boots.' Children' s $15.50.
Adults $29.00.

u .s
uo

.

l d•ys

Bording

Ch~rte

1.00

cond.,

top-s terli ng tr a iler . $2, 800 .
Call after 5.p.m . 992-2791.

1972 Chevy 1h ton pickup.

1979 JEEP CJ-- 7, power

Pets for Sale

S6

Rates and Other Information

ai r

ROUSH

prop-canvas

1972 Chevy 4 Or. sedan .
1973 Dodge, 4 d r. sedan .

73

· Building Supplies

HOOF HOLLOW , English
• and Western. Saddle s and

lot that can

Merc .·JS.S.

1'

992·6259.

Ford P ic kup. '1'12·5304.

Large roofing slates. Very
r e asonabl e.
Rutland

&amp; llll!lfrl geratlon

4 P.M . D•ity

32

F ully equ ipped . May be
able to hel p Wi th f inancing.

'1'12"3900.

· 1974 Veg a Ha tch back . $500.

Business Services

1977 Quachita bass boat .

good ties, recent t u ne u p,
dr ives good . M al( be seen at

Redu ce sale and fast with
GoBese Tablets and E -Vap • 1970 Pontiac G TO . Good
cond . Ca ll after 5. 992 ·5487 .
" water pi l ls" Nelson Drug .

&amp; Acctuor les
17- Au to Rualr

34--luslneululldings
lt-Loh &amp; Atreage
36-At" Eltate wanted
l J- Realton

Peted,

1973
O i ds . Cu t la ss
Supreme. 63,000 miles, p.s.,
p.b., a .c., a m ·frn rad io,

1974

1 4- Motorc~cles

a-

lor Salt
ll-Farrns for hit

31

Boats and

Motors for Sale

con d . 949· 2227 .

e MERCHANDISE

eEMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

J

75

• 41-Equipme-nt t or R.nt

9-WantedtoBuy

21 -

Autos for Sale

one letter to each square, to torm
four ordinal)' words.

, JUGGUPZV

Yesterday's Crypioquole: SOM~: MEN ARE SO MEAN
WHEN THEY AlTEND ,\ llALLGAME, THEY WANT TO SEE
TilE HOME TEAM liE \TE N.- F .W.HOWE

THAT

2 30- Ano th e r
World
3, 15;
Gigglesnort Hole l 17.
3 :00- Gene ral
Hospital
6, 13 ;
Gu 1di ng Lighl 8, 10; I Love Lucy
17; Lap Quilt ing 20.
3:3o- Fiintstones 17; As We See It
20; Over Easy 33.
4:0G-M ister Cartoon J; Afternoon
Playhouse 8; Sesame ST . 20,33;
Gom e r P yle 10; Real McCoys 13;
L i ttl e Rascal s 15; Spectreman
17 .
4: 30- Lone Ranger 3; Gomer Pyle 8;
Br a dy Bunch 10 ; Tom &amp; Jerry
13 ; Me rv Griffin 15; G il ligan's Is .
17.
5 DO-Caro l Burnell 3; ; Sanford &amp;
So n 8; Ma ry Tyler Moore 10; My
Thr ee Sons 17; M ister ROgers'
Neighborhood 20,33 .
5. J~ Mash 3; Play Ihe Pe rcentages
8; E lee . Co. 20 ; Happy Days
Aga in 13; Doctor Who 33 ; I
D ream of Jeannie 17.
6:DO- News 3,8,10,13, 15; ABC News
6; Caro l Burnett 17; 3-2-1 Contact
20.
6 : 3~ NBC News3, 15 ; ABC News 13;
CBS News 8, 10; Bob Newhart 17;
Wild Wild World of Animals 33 .
/:DO-C ross-Wits 3; Tic Tac Dough
8; Newl ywed Game 6; News 10;
F a ce th e Musi c 13 / Love
Am er ican Style 15; Sanford &amp;
Son 17; Di ck Cavett 20 .
7: 3o-Hollywood Squares 3; Joker· ~
Wild 8; Hol lywood Squares 10;
Sha Na Na 13 ; TV Honor Society
15; All In ,the Fam ily 17; MacNei 1-Lehrer Report 20.
8 DO-Misadvenl ures of Sheriff Lobo
3. 15; Happy Days 6, 13 ; White
Shadow 8, 10; Nova 20,33.
8 J~ Laverne &amp; Shirley 6, 13.
9 :00- Big Show 3,15 ; Three's
t ompany 6,13; Movie " Kenny
Rogers as the Gambler" 8, 10;
Mystery 20,33; 9 : 3~Taxl 6, 13.
IO :DO-Harl lo Hart 6,13; Maverick
17; Ne ws 20; City Notebook 33.
10 30-Uniled Slates 3, 15;; Over
Easy 20; Camera Three 33 .
11 :DO- Ne ws 3,8, 10, 13, 15; Las! of the
Wild 17; Dick Cavett 20: Dave
All en , a I Large 33.
11: J~ Tonight 3, 15; ABC News 6, 13;
Barnaby Jones 8; ABC Cap t i oned
News
33 ;
Movie
" W aterm elon Man " 10; Movie
" The Westerner." 17.

11 :50-Movie "H it! " 6,13; 12 : 4~ :
Movie " Destiny of a Woman" 8;
1 :DO-Tomorrow 3; News 15;
1 ; 40--N F'! W'l 17.

1:45- -Mov io
Now s .

" Konga" 1.7: 2:3013 :
'3 : 45- Movle
·~ t' :"~!l ~ nqe of the G!adlcttor" 11 r

�6-The Dally SenUnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, April 7, 191W

,

.
7-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-P omeroy, 0 ., Monday, Apri1 7, 1980

Your Best Buys Are Found in the Sentinel Classifieds

DICKTRACY

•'

.

~ THATSCRAMBLEDWORDGAME

,lf\}N'J)e}lt

~

\.9 ~~ (I)

Television
Viewing

by Henri Arnold and.Bob Lee

Unscramble these four Jumbles,

54

WANT AD INFORMATION

Misc. Merchanlse

16mm

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

col or

an d

11

sound

m ovie pro jector in very
gOod condition. $200. Old
Sm a ll cast iron wood cook
stove in very good conditi on. $120. 247·2624.
85 Bushel ba sket s, 25 li ds .

992-3019. Can be seen a t 200
Las le y St. a ft er 5 F riday on
weekends.

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

E arl y Amer ica n so fa and

eANNOUNCEMENTS

la r ge cha ir . $75. 985·42 17.

eRENTALS

I -Card of Thank s

41 - Hot.~ sts

2- ln Memoriam

1-HIIlP't' Ads

42- Mobilt Homes
101' A: t nt
44--Apllrlmtnl tor R t nl
45-- FRooms

6--- l..ostand Found
7- Yud hl1

46-Spect tor Rut
u - wanted to Rtrn

l-Announcemenll
4- GiVIIIWily

t-Putuie Sali
1 Auction

fo r Rent

3 axle tr ail er fram e. 60 ft .
lo ng . Never burned . 992·
5992.

DISCOUNT
PRICES

s1 - Houatholct GC»&gt;d1

51- CB, TV, Radio Equlpm r nt

,, _ Htlp :.Vani.CS
12-Situatftl wanttd

SJ- .t.ntiqUII
S4-Misc . Merch•ndiu
ss--euildlng hpl)lles

13---tnsurance
14-Buslness Tra ining
1~Sctloatstnstru.clion

5..,_Pet!i lor 5•1•

16-

e FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

Raclio , TV

a C:l RtjNi r
It-Wanted To Do

Hotpoint and
General Electric
Appliance
Sales &amp; Service

f1 - Filrm Equi pment

n - wanttd to lluy
12- Trucks tor hie

e FINANCIAL
Billlneu

POMEROY
LANDMARK

t l -Livestock

Opportunity
22- Money to L"n
23- Profltllional

64- HiiY &amp; Gnin
U - SHCI &amp; Fertlllrtr

Str'J iCU

Jack W. Carsey,
Mgr.
Phone 992-2181

eTRANSPORTATION

e REAL ESTATE

71--A ut0s tor S.te
73-Vans&amp;4W .D .

lt - Momes tor Slit
32-MoblltHomts

Auto

Puts

SS

eSERVICES

Want·Ad Advertising
Deadlines

11 - Home ImprovemenTS
n - Ph.lmblnt &amp; E xca vating
tl- El(,CIVItlng
14- EiectriCJll

361 Gra nt St., Midd lepor t,
OH or call '1'12·7567 or 992 ·
3844.

Mu st Sell. 77 Sta r c raft
boa r, 16' open bow, 85 hp

11 Noon S•turday

1.

tor Mondn

United Methodist Church .
Call742·2635 .

15--General Haul ing
1.-M.H. Repair
17- Uphoht ery

harness.
Horses
and
pon ies. Ruth Reeves . 614·

..

698 ·3290 .

1SWords or Uncler

, ,

Cash

....

da~s

Rid ing Less ons and Horse

:us

1.10

,_

'da~l

3.15

l!ach word eve r the minimum 15 words 11 4 cenfl per word per d1y .
AdS run•'l!ng other than consec:utiVII da ys will De CftUJed at tftll 1 da~

rate.
In memory , C•nl of Th•nk' 1nd Obituuv : 'c11nts per word, ll .OCI
minimum . CISft in advanu.

Mobile Home sales •nd Y;ud Il les are•ccepted on tv with cash with
order. 2J unt chargt! for 1ds carrying Box NumC.r In Cart! ol Tht
Sllnfinel.

More Classifieds

On Page 2
41

Houses for Rent

Nice 2 bedroom house wltf·
Homes for Sale

House for rent. Piano for

3 Bedroom, 1 .story house
on Long St. in Rutland, OH .
AlSO 1, 29,000 BTU air con·

sale. Call 992 ·3489 or 992·
2594.

dltioner . Phone 742·2975.

42

paneled,

finished

basement With bar, garbage disposal , good win·
dow air conditioner, storm
windows . See
to ap·
preci ate, reasonable. 992·

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

KENNELS.

fully equ ipped, exc. cond .

$7, 500. 742·31 17 after 5 p.m .
1972 For d F -10 1J2 ton 302
automati c trans .. p.s.,
custom c ab, exc . cond. f or
a 1972. 614·667·3593.
Ford

F&gt;i cku p.

1 bedroom mobi le home .

EASTER BUNNIES . Call
742 2301 .

Purebred Husky, male . 5
mo.old . Blac k and white .
Has all shots. SSO. John
Vroman. 187112 2nd Ave.,

M iddleport. 992·2741.
Apar1ment
for Rent

RENTER ' S assistance for
Senior Cit izens 'in Village

Manor apts. Call992-7787 .
Furnish~

Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

1979 Ford 150 4x4, auto.,
p .s., p. b., topper . Positive
tra c1ion f ront and r ear . 985-

4339.
steering , Levi interior, 3
speed, tilt steering wheeL

10,000 miles. $5600. Cali992·
3149 or 992-2705 .

1978 CR2SO-Honda Dirt
Bike, like new . 1979 CR125·
Honda Dirt Bike, like new .
4 w estern dual spoke
wh eels, 14 i nch bar fit . 1979
Camara Z28
factory
whee ls, 15 in . 742·3154.
Real Estate

Picking up a piano in your
area . Looking for a respon·
sible par ty to take over
payments . Call c re d it

manager co llect. 614--592·
5122 .

Rooms

General

Farm Equipment

1 Farmall H Tractor, 1967-

ATTENTION :
( IM PORTANT TO YOU) Wil l

very good condit ion. On a

pay cash or certified check
for antiques and collec·
tibles or entire estates.
Noth ing too large . Also,
guns, pocket watches and
coin collec tions. Call 614·

be rented.

For

Sale, Mobile Home

196~.

60x12, exc . cond . Com-

767-3167 or 557 -341.1 .

plete with washer, dryer,

dishwasher, 3 ton central
and

storable

building. Completely lur·
nished and ready for im·
mediate
occupancy .

Located on nice rented lot.
Phone992·2451 after 5 p.m .
1971 Zimmer trailer 12x60.
1972 Buddy Trailer 12x60.
992,5304.

ATTENTION :
(IM ·
PORTANT TO YOU! Will

from the Texaco Station in

Syracuse. Ph. 992·3752 or
992-3743.
12x60 Kirkwood with large
living room extension, 3
bedrooms. central air con·

dltlonlng . Good cond., must
sell. 304·773 ·5173.
l3

Farms for Sale

COUNTRY HOME with
stocked pond for swimming
or fishing, 9 rooms, bath,
carpeted . 3 to 17 . acres
available. Located approx.
7 mill!' lrom Pomeroy off
Rl. 7 or 33. «6'-2359 aller 6.

CHIP WOOD . Poles max .
d i ameter 10" on largest
end .. $1 2 p·er t on . Bund led

slab. $10 per to n. Delivered
to Ohio Pal let Co., Rt . 2,
Pomeroy 992-2689 .
ANTIQUE S,
NITURE , glass ,

house. Full basement,
barn, bUildings, mineral
rights, good land. $77.000.
992-7559 .
35

767·3167 or 557 ·3411.

ches, class r ings, wedding
bands, diamonds. Gol d or

Misc . Merchanise

COAL,

LIMESTONE ,

sand , g r ave l , ca lc ium
chloride, fert i lizer, dog

food , and all types of s alt.
E xcejsior Salt Works, Inc .,
E . Main Sf. , Pomeroy , 9923891.
APPLES - ROME beauty
appleS I!,I $4 per bu. Best lor
apple butter. Call 669·3785,
Fitzpatrick Orchard, SR

689.
EMERGENCY
alternators -

power

own 1he best

- -buy Winpower . Call513788·2589.

2nd, Middleport, OH . 992·
3161 .
OLD COINS , pocke t wat·
silver. Call J. A. Wamsle y,
742-2331. Treasure Chest
Coin Shop, Athe ns, OH . 592·
6462.
GOLD AND
SILVER
COIN S OF THE WORLD .
RING S,
JEWELRY ,
STERLING SILVER AND
MISC . ITEMS. PAYING
RECORO
HIGH ,
HIGHEST U P -TO-DATE
PRICE S. CONTACT ED
BURKE TT
BARBER
SHOP , MIDDLEPORT ,
OHIO, OR CALL 992-3476.

PrOP,erly For Sale. Over J
acreS 01 lind in Pomeroy.
Only 57,000. 992·3886.

5 Acres for sale. 1 mile
·from old 33 and 6 miles
trom Rt. 7. . Possibility
Land Contract. 992·3900 ..

ol

L.ivestock

63

•;, blood Bee falo bull. 742·
2630.

I

delivery : various sizes of

ran:qM_ta.tBHF

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

Bumgardner
992-5724.

Sales,

Inc .

Decorated ca kes for all oc casions. Character c akes

Lois &amp; Acreage

F U R·
china ,

any t hing . See or call Ruth
Gosney, ant iques, 26 N .

1N STOCK for immediate

36 Acre Farm, 1112 story

Wanted to Buy

pay cash or certif ied check
for antiques and col lec tibles or entire estates.
Nothing · too large! A lso,
guns, pocket watches and
coin collec t ions. Call 614·

S4

A&amp;H Upholstering, across

62

and sheet cakes. Call 992*342 or ~92 - 2583 .
wurlltzer Organ all tran·
sister, beginners chord. A· l
· cond. ·Cost $1 ,599 new. Will
take $595. 2 beige swivel
overstuffed rockers S150.
GOod c6nd. 667·3187 .

1979 Camaro
Z· 28.
Automatic, 5500 m iles, excellent cond ~ fion . L oaded.
Cost over S9,000. Pri ced for

quick sal e. 742·2143.
1971 Nova, 6 cy l. , au to.,
good work ca r . 992 3886.

1976

C o r dob~ .

A .C., p .b.,

.cruise control, good
cond . After 4 p "l 1 949·2196 .
p .s.~

of

~

the

speci al features of this
home are original wood·
work , fireplace, c:entrl
Reduced

to

acres all fenced with a 2
yr . otd modular home.
Has a beautiful floor
ptan ~ with 4 bedrooms
and 2 baths. Also has a
bar,n
and
other
buildings, and an extra
frail er hook-up. Yours

949-2"0 .
calls.

HOME - This distinc·
tive brick &amp; frame
house has 9 rooms, 1112

Pomeroy,
New

Lht i n'II - NR · 5f ,
Outstandi n'll· home . Spr ing
Ave ., Pomeroy , Q _, fully
c ar peteo.

f i r epla ce,
3
bedroom , bVilt· ln ld tc nen,
pan ettnv . Fen ced in yard
w.ttl dr iv ewa y . Ca ll lor
more inl o.

· work &amp; care that has
gone into this stately
home . Every room is artisti d tlly dec orated .
Located on a quiet
street
in
a
good
neighborhoo d .

cMn . Has a full base·
ment and is c arpeted

Comfortable
Home NR - n , close in, 11 rm ~ .• ful
ty fur nl~tleQ , nice POrc h .

throughout .
Only
$35,000.00.
ECONOMY PRICED 5 rtooms and a bath all

yar d and oaraoe . Thi s won't
ln 1 long

bed rooms, basl!!bo i!trd
!r ic heat , thermopane
dows, plus a 2 ur Qa ra9e
Approx . Jl;. acre, Tupper'
Pla ins, Ohio. On ly S4!i,OOO.

bed room

house ,

lovely home with lust a
OUR SALES STAFF IS
READY TO ASSIST
YOU, SALES DO NOT
JUST HAPPEN
THEY ARE MADE .
REALTOR

bu&amp; i n ~ss

Ph. 992· 2403 or H2·27IO

We

have

potential

bu ers-need

your

Ofl one floor , and is
located on a level 3;_.
acre . lot. Has an extra
water tap. Could be a
little work . $16,500.00 .

Investment
Property NR · SS, lh \ i de nc e p tu~
tlu ~l ne u
oppor tun iTy, 1

'

Henry Cleland, Jr.

992·6191
ASSOCIATES
Jean Trusseii949·:Z66
Roger &amp; Dottie Turner

742·2474
Office Phone 992·7259

REAL ·ESTATE
WE HAVE FINAN&lt;:ING AVAILABLE
AS LOW AS 5% DOWN AND 30 YEARS
TO PAY, ON MOST HOMES .
WHETHER YOU RENT OR BUY FOR THE PLACE YOU OCCU F'Y.

YOU PAY

MIDDLEPORT - Commercia l office build ing, on
busy corner in center of town . Fully rented . A gOOd
investment .

POMEROY - Two be
L D ' ath ·frame home
on Hill St. Now rent.S.O· • 10 per m o. Only
· S10,000.
.

RACINE - Peace and qu iet in the countr y. Just a
few miles from Rac ine. Remodeled home on 2 acr es

of ~round . $39,000 .

MIDDLEPORT - Thr&lt; S.O L Dl 'n bat h, nice lot
j ust one block from hea
• • . • 5,000 .

All lypes of roof work,

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

NORTH

Free Estimates
2- u -ttc

Real Estate

ANNIE

... .

WEST
.AK&gt;

- I'M AFRAID l GOT

'REMEMBER
ME , ANNIE !

- HUCKlE

. . .. .

t653
.AQJ98
.A1542
.KQJ I08
SOUTH

... .

FOOT 'N 1TH YOU
,.,_~

EAST
.832

•a1

OFF ON THE I'IF/ON6
EARLIER '"

s

"'

rates . Scotchguard.
6309 or 742·2211 .

CALL 992-2342
RODNEY DOWNING, BROK ER - HO . 992-3711
BILL CHILDS, BRANCH MGR .-H0: 992 -2449

----------------------DOWNINGOIILDS AGENCY INC.
INSURANCE

SERVING SOUntEASTERN OHIO SINCE 1868
ARE YOU PAYING TOO MUCH ? ·DO
YOU ~lAVE THE COVERAGE?

FOR ALL YOUR INSURANCE NEEDS
CALL US.
"-..

992·2342
DOWNING-CHILDS JK:ENCY, INC.
MIDDLEPORT,' OHIO

1-( 614 )-992-3325

.

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

CALIFORNIA
CON ·
TEMPORARY - With
5.2 acres . Has 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, total
electric home on Ohio
Power. Leading Creek

water .

Landscaped

yard . ·

STORAGE
General

HOBSTETTER
REALTY
PHONE 742·2003'
"Small enough to appreciate you, yet large
enough to serve vou ."

· · PHONE 742-2003
NEW LISTING - Extra
ni ce total electric, 3
home .

Has

modern kitchen, utility,
bath and 1 car garage.
Alumin -u m
sid i ng .
Si tuated on nice size. lot .
Priced to sell.

ThiS

one you won ' t believe! 3

bedrooms,

2'12

baths,

family
room with
fireplace. living room ,
din i ng room, extra
modern kitchen and 2
work hand stained. Ap·

prox . 2 yrs. old . Situated
on 4 acres. There' s more
so give us a call! Decor
is exquisite.
home . Close to ' Meigs
H igh . Owner says sell,
so we ha~e redu ced this

loading dock. Out ot al l
floods .
2 LOTS ·- Restricted 1
acre plus for a nic e
home and privacy with
shade trees.

LINCOLN HILL -

cellent neighborhood
with all utilities.
TRAILER ACRES - On
blac ktop road wilh pten·
ty of room for pets,
garden &amp; children .

TRAILER ACRES -

3

bedrooms, ·11h

baths,
L.l'. furnace, back &amp;
front porches, and 1

level acre for S29,500.oo.
On Rt. 124.
10 ACRES - 01 good
bottom land for farming
or for a hotne on Rt. 124

west. Only S10,000.00.
RACINE
Ni c e
building
lot
near
schools . All utilities

available.
NEARS PTS. - WOoded
lot in private develop·
menf for your privacv .

HAVE
YOU
HAD
YOUR
PROPERTY
ADVERTISED
TOO
LONG? THEN TRY US
FOR A QUICK SALE.
CALL 992 · 3325 or
992-3876.

Housing
Headquart.ers

hom e is qual i ty PLUS.
Lovel y 3 bedroom ranch

family

dau back on the
job!

ACROSS

Electrical

&amp; Relrlgeralion

Repairs ,

makes.

MACHINE
all
992 2284 . The

WINNIE

service ,

){)U1RE NOT OUT OF
'mE BALL GAME YET,

Fabr ic Shop, Pomeroy ,
Authori zed Singer Sales
and Service. We sharpen
Scissors.

ELWOOD
RI;PAIR -

1/AD. MOM 1\ND I
CA N HELP YOU
LANO THAT

BOWERS
Sweepers,

SURE WE'RE

PES16NER.Sc_AREN'T
WE ? AND 1. HAVE
1\ DATE WITH
TIPPY' TONIGHT!

11

J OP.&gt;.

Next

to

Sta te

Highway

Garage on Route 7, 985·

3825.

Reynolds Elec tri c, 651
Beech St ., Middleport, OH .
Rewind and Repair electric

motors. 992·2356.
Miller Elec trica l Service.
Resident and Busi ness.
Rel iable a nd Experienced.

BARNEY

742·3195.

~!

___

GLORY BE!!

Gene!~ I Hauling

I SHORE HAD
A BODACIOUS

WI LL HAU L limestone and
Qri!lvel. Al so, lime hauling
and spreading , Leo M orr ls

I SEEN IT,
PARSON ·-

• COLLECTION
LAST SUNDAY,

Trucking. Phone 742 ·2.1.15.

! SEEN
IT!!

I TOOK IN THREE
SUCKLIN' PIGS, NINE ~..,._~;;o&lt;J
HEN

EGGS, A JAR

OF PEACH BUTTER,
35~ CASH AN '--

PASSIN' AROUND
THAT 5HOPPIN'
CART WUZ A

PLUMB GOOD
IDEE

LOWEEZY

Rutla.nd Furniture's

room has fireplace, !iv·
i ng r oom , d ining room ,
k i tchen and garage. On
a nice lot in Chester.

'

SellS for 558,000.00.
LOTS OF ROOM - - 2

"Drive A LiHie Save A Lot"
S.HOP IS FULLY STOCKED

acr es with a famlly
home. 3 bed r ooms, 2

KITCHEN CARPET

baths, family room, kit '
chen and din ing area ,
laundry
room
and

Rubber
Backed

garage .
Se lls f o r
$39,900.00.
.
MIODLEPORT
Large 2 story home.

$895

SQ.

yd.

BEDROOM
LI .V ING ROOM ·

vetm• Nlcinsky,
Assoc.
Phone 742·3092

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

E161-1N-51X TO NOTHING!
HOW COULD WE LOSE
E16HW-SIX TO NOTHIN6?

I'M SURI'RI5~0 THAT ·
TI-lE 81JZZARC75.AREN'T

u

WE CAN'T EVEN I-lAVE
A REAL BUZZARD!

GUOSW

CIRCLING ABOVE US ...

.

VBSPX

~

J H W L

"

TPSE

PSOSF
HP
QUV

RUTLAND fURNITURE

L ..

"

Main St.

742-2211

'

'

·-·~-~· - 1

YHVQ

Batman 10; Three Stooges-Little
Rascals ·17 .

7: 30- Faml ly Affa ir 10; 7:55-Chuck
Wh ite REports 10.
8: DO-Cap I Kangaroo 8, 10; Lucy
Show 17; Sesame 51. 33 .
8 : 3~ Romper Room 17 .
9:DO- Bob Braun 3; Big Valley 6;
Beverly H i llbillies 8; Jeffersons
10; Phil Donahue 13, 15 ; Fami ly
Ailalr 17.
9 : 3~ Bob Newhar t 8; Afternoon
P layhouse 10; Green Acres 17.

IO:DO-Card Sharks 3. IS; Edge of
Mov i e " Th e lnspec1or Generar"
17 .

10 : 30- Holl y wood Squares 3, 15;
S20.000 Pyramid 13; Whew 8, 10;
Andy Griffith 6.
10:55-CBS News 8; House Call 10.
11 :DO-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13; Price
is Right 8,10.
11 : 30- Whee l of Fortune 3. 15 ;
Sesame St. 20 ; 11 :55- News 17.
12:DO-Newsc enter 3; News 8, 10;
He a lt h F ield 15 ; Love American
Slyle 17 .

17; El ec . Co. 20 .
1 DO-Days of Our Lives 3. 15; All My
Ch ildren 6, 13; Yo"ng &amp; the
Restless 8, 10.
2:DO-Doctor s 3, 15; One Life to Live
6, 13; As The World Turns 8, 10;
2·25- News 17.

Yesterday's Answer

24 Defensible
2S Aircraft
engine

30 Nervous
31 Sequence

36 Cooper in

26 Food

" Meet
John

27 Extinct
I bird

29 Took baby

:18 " Oh, give
- home . ''

It :

· C

J DX

QHBS
HGW

NCP

CZS

SGVS ' V

ex

EQH

E Q C X.
VHNS..

SIBS~VS .

I

GeorgeS . H~bstett e r Jr .
6r,,ker ~9 2 "173'1

Am er ica 13; T uesday Morning 8:

12:3G-R yan 's Hope 13 ; Search for
Tomorrow 8, 10 ; Password Plus
l S; M ovie " I Dream Too Much "

CRYPTOQUOTES

PEANtrrS

CARPET
$995 And Up

Nice Selection af Remnanta
A II Sizes - Good Prices

Phone 742·2003

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)

6 ne leller simply sl ands lor anothe r. In this sample A II
used (or the three L's, X fo r Lh (' two O's, ftc Single l etters.
apostrophes, the l en gth and fM mnti ~ n of the wo rds are all
hints. Eac h day I he code lcllers arc different.

Padding &amp; carpet Instil lied Free
with Purchase

Must see to appreciate.
We hCheryl Lemley,
Assoc.
Cheryl Lemley , Assoc .

one."

Here's how to work
AX"DLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW '

is

TUESDAY, APRILS, 1980
Reporl 13; 5 : 5~PTL
Club 13.
6:D0-700 Cl ub 6,8; PTL Club 15;
' Health Field 10; 6:15-World at
Large 17 .
6 : 3~Concerns &amp; Comments 10;
News 17; 6:45-Mornlng Report
3; A.M . Weaiher 33;. 6 : 5~Good
Morning West Vi r gin ia 13; 6: 55New s 13.
7:DO-T oday 3. 15; Good Morning
5 : 45- F~rm

Alan : " Six hearts doubled
with an overtrick comes to
I ,860 points. You came out of
the river with two fish , not

DOWN

.

17.

Night 6; Jeffer-.,sons 8; Joker' s

DAILY CRYPTOQlTOTE -

CARPET SHOP

4: 15- Finding

Wild 10 ; Morning Magazine 13;

!:-:-+-+-+--!-

toasters, ir ons, all small
appl iances. Lawn mower.

13;

the Path to an Uncertai n FuttJre

five clubs, etc., etc."

grand jury
meeting
of Italy
4 Whale
s Wrap
14 Overhead
15 Go amiss
6 Netting
16 This instant!
7 Old
18 On the road to radio show
8 Figaro's city
19 Of the
9 Furtive
breastbone
11 Sawbuck
21 Lodge
17 Paddle
member
20 Iranian cash
22 Pinafore
Z3 Skin
'
Z3 Bereft
of color
24 RIISSian
potentate
zs New York city 1
26 Whirl
27 Painter,
- Cassatt
28 USNA grad .:
abbr.
, . 29 Awakens
32 Faux 33 Reign : India
34 Thrice: Lat.
35 Dwell
37 Correct
a text
39 Sailing
vessel
40 Succinct
U Basic belief
42 Town in Mass.

7101.

SEWING

•

12 Reddy of song
13 Province

Fred

LimeS1one for driveways.
Pomeroy· ·Mason area . 367·

••

Pass

I Mexico money I Bowtdaries
5 Cheese
2 Tennis name
3 Type of
10 Ward off

Excavating

83

a•

·Pass

. by THOMAS JOSEPH

I thouqht
come on
autcmaticaiiLJ when I qot
ml.j job back!

Oh,bo4! M4 first

Wi ll do odds and ends,
paneling , floor t ile; and

Nice

corner building lot ln ex·

one lo ONLY $39,900.00.
EXTRA NICE - ThiS
w it h 2 baths,

All

utilities, air conditioned, concrete floor , gas
storage
tank ,
and

Pass

~dM~tr:l

GASOLINE ALlEY

Home
Improvements

ceiling tile. Call
Miller, 992 ·6338.

South

1•

Oswald: "Here is a great
example of falling in the river
and coming up with a trout in
your mouth. It was on of those
seven -board Swiss team
matches. East and West were
playir.g old-fashioned style so
that West's double of three
hearts was lor penalty. Mayto
East should have taken lt out,

I

3·26· 1 mo.
81

East

but he didn 't. And alte r the
king of spade lead, South had
no trouble taking all 13 tricks
to score 1,530 points."
Alan: 11 ( guess there was
considerable laughter at
West ' s expense , wasn ' t
there?"
Oswald: " I was West and
joined in. It was a friendly
match . Then I suggested that
the board just might not be
the disaster it looked like.
Just possibly South might get
doubled at six hearts at the
other table."
Alan: "You didn't really
believe that, did you?"
Oswald : " No 1 But, believe it
or not, that is just what
happened. The other EastWest pair were playing nega·
live doubles to the lour level
with an agreement tha t suc h
negative doubles would guar·
antee lour spades so West
passed alter South made t he
same three-heart bid. North
raised to lour hearts. East bid

By O.wald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

Free Estimate
James.Keesee
Ph. 992-2772

Phone

and

Nortb

Opening lead:• j(

nsulallon
• Storm Doors
• Storm Windows
• Repl•cement
Windows

992-

WALL PAPER ING
pa inting . 742-2328 .

NEW LISTING -

Obi.

Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding

&amp; G carpet Cleaning.

bedroom

West

INSULATION

Steam
cleaned .
Free
estimate .
Reasonable

R~al Estate

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: East

J&amp;L BUMN

Home·
Improvements

81

• K72
• 96 3

3·12· 1 mo.

General

5£F"IFPS

PRICE . REDUCED!! 3 bedroom. total electric

We Are Sellin~ - We Need Lktings

Call Howard
949·2862
949-2160
1· 22-llc

388-9759

BUILDING OR TRAILER LOT - Hyse ll Run Roa d
SYRACUSE - Old house on a nice lot , $11 ,600 .
\.OT IN MIDDLEPORT - We Will build a hOuse on
th is one if you choose - South Second Ave.

1-1-80

• A Q9 5
• 10 4

"Lowest Rates
In Town"
"Ten Years
E xp~rience"
"Work
Guaranteed"
Ph. 992-6186
After Five

Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices

News 17 .
l : 15- Movie " Objective Burma " 17;

1: 35- Ne ws

WE BRING THE
GARAGE TO YOU!!!

new or repair gu"ers
and downspouts, gutter
cleaning and painting,
All work guaranteed .

ABC News6, 13;
Ha rry 0 8; ABC Captioned News
33; Mo vie "The Tyrant" 1.0:
Movie " Hangman 's Knot" 17.
1 0 : 5~ Barney Miller 6,13; 12 :25P o li ce Wo m a n 6, 13 ; 12 : 40McC ioud 8.

Double reels in points

AUTO REPAIR

H. L WRITESn
ROOFING

Paref\ts

1 :QO-Tomorrow 3; New s 15 ; 1: 10---

.QJI09 7 61

FLYNN?

Wise

33 ; 11: 15-L ove, A m erican Style

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

PROB!.e:Mo?. .,.___....

992·379!

News 20;

Know The ir Children 33.
10 :1 5- Big Ba tlles 17 : 10 : 3D--Over
Easy 20.
11 DO- New s 3, 6,8, 10 , 13, 15; Dick
Cavett 20; Dave Allen a t Large

BRIDGE

WHe't.l '11?1&gt; FIR~ Vi'SITe;.D w;,,
Y(J(JR WiJDef.IC:{ Wf&gt;6 TO RlJtJ
~A'{ FROv. YOUR

Free Estimates
After 5 P .M. 992·5547
3·26·1 mo.

8. 10;

17.

~~.w ~ OORtJ,o\f"fU:...

4·2-tfc

GEORGE'S
ROOFING

CAVO RT · HOTBED

Movie " Brighl Leaf" 17; 8 : 3~
Sloc kard Ch a nning 8,1 0.
9 : 0~ T he O ldes t Liv ing Graduate
3, H; Mov ie " High Plains
D r if te r " 6, 13; Mash 8, 10;
Am e r ican Short STory 20,33.
9 :3~ Fi o 8, 10; 10 :DO-Lou Grant

1 1 : 3~To n ig ht 3,1 5 :

'(oJ AR6 M~KI!Jb ru.e:u..ellT

Guaranteed Work

Pomeroy, Oh.

FAB LE

.KJ106432

POMEROY - On Lincol n Hts. - Two bedroom and
bath, full ba se m ent , gas furna ce~ storm w indows &amp;
door s. Owner w ill help financ e if you need it , $17,500.
RUTLAND -:- Older home needs ~om e re pairs on
Sa lem St reet Ni ce corner iol . S9900 .00.
.

(Answers tomorrow )

Jumbles: LYI NG

Monday, April 7

3·21 -1 mo.

car garage. All wood-

- Sacr es. $7 ,000.

618 E. Main

]I

Jumble Book No. 14,contalnlng 110 puzzles, is available torst .75poltpeld
I rom Jumble, cJctthls nawspa;rer, Box 34, NorwOOd, N.J.076'8. lncluda your
name, addr.. a, zip coda an make chech pay1ble to Newapal)erbooka.

BORN LOSER

H&amp;R BLOCK OFFICE LOCA liON

Sunday

I

A " LIG HT " TAN

baths and shows all the

Unbelievabl y clean and
well kept 1lf2 story
frame
home .
Just
perfect for a 'family with
4 bedrooms, spacious
living room , formal dining room,, and beautiful
cabinets w i th built·in
ov~n &amp; range in the kit·

o.

No

I

r I XXI

YOUR

Answer: One might acquire t hiS !rom a sunlamp-

Business-Farms-Partnerships
and corporations
Payrolls, profit and loss statements, al
federal and state forms .

or

949· 2801

r I XX)

Saturday's

1

Call 'for a Free Siding
Estimate,

Answer:

Tri-County
Bookkeeping
Service

BISSELl
SIDING CO.

down payment you c an
own this 5 room home
for less than what
you ' re paying for rent.

Now arrange the circled letters to
tonn the surpr ise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.

w.

Concrete Finishing

Vinyl and Aluminum
Siding .

for only $42,000.00.
TIRED OF PAYING
RENT? - With a small

W K RP in Cin ci nna t i 8, 10;
N a ti on al .Geog r aphic 20 ,33;

Brick Work

POMEROY, O.
992-6215 or
9'12-7314
1·28· 1 mo.

CALL 992-7544

d4

PRDMI~IOO! A~t&gt;

l

&amp;ELIEVE ME .. 'IOU AND CLAUDIA
HAVE- f'ieALLY
IT!

Va .
3-17· 1 mo.

Remodeling
Additions
Siding

V. C. YO.UNG Ill

o.

61/RPRI*~

WHEhl THE DEMON6TRAT ION
16 OV~R .. THE TV $TUDIO
ROCK!&gt; WITH AF'PLA U6E!

Block Work

107 Sycamore (Rear

tx:1

Quality construction at
reasonable rates.

(FREE ESTIMATES)

men1.

Pomeroy,

Haven,

·-· ..... .....

rx:tJ

OKAY, CHI'i15-- HEI'IJS'~ THAT

N. L CONSTRUCTION

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

Other times by appoint·

air, buill-in k itchen, full
basement and many
$29,500.00.
RURAL FLAVOR -

ADCJ ONS &amp;
REMODELING

5th 51.

New

Hours9-1 M., W., F.

VA or FHA approved .
$28,900.00 . .
DISTINCTIVE &amp; DIFFERENT

GMC Truc k . Long bed,
could be used for logg i ng .
304· 773-5873.
1971 12x65 Trailer, com·.
pletely furnished, A.C..

some

ment. Has up to 4
bedrooms ,
sew i ng
room, fireplace in fami ·
ly room . Lots of cl osets .

Ch•i-111 M. Hayes, Rf."hor
Nucu E . c~r~ev . 8r . Mgr.

61

room .

$59,500.00.
IN TOWN Ni ce 2
story with l ull base ·

bui ld ing with garage on
la r ge lots. Re-edsville , Oh
Call us, $25,000 .

Sleeping Room for working
·man . Call992·6022.

PARK FINANCIAL
· SERVICES, INC.

dining room , k itchen,
family room , &amp; living

St&lt;ip by today and take a
look. just $8 ,000 .00.
HEAD
TURNING

Motorcycles

74

Veterans Admin. Loans.

Th is charming 2 story
home has 3 bedrooms.

WATERMELON
PATCH

Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614-843-2591
3-30-1 mo.

&amp;

Housing

Sizes From 4x61912x40

Rt. 1, Box 54

REAL ESTATE
FINANCING
Federal

Jumpers· Dresses

MONDAY, APRIL 7. 1980 ·
/ :DO-Cross-Wits 3: Tic Ta c Uough
8; M ac Ne il -Le hrer Re port 33;
News 10;. Face The Music 13;
Love, Am er ican Sty le 15; San- '
ford &amp; Son 17; Dick Cavell 20.
7:30- T ha t Nas hv ille M u si c 3;
Muppe l Show 6: Joker' s Wild 8;
Fa mi ly Feud 10; Nashville On
The'Road 15; All In The Family
17; MacNe il-Lehrer Re port 20.
8:DO-Liltle House on tne Prai rie
3, 15; That's Incred ible ! 6,13;

DINTUCl

Tops· Panrs

Utility Buildings .
P&amp;S BUILDINGS

4- ·80

608 E .
Y
MAIN
POMEROY,O_.
992· 2259
PRICE REDUCED

more .

Just Ri'llftf- Nll ·SJ , N ew
spli t level hom e, w, ;:; ·'.:·,'!~'-11

Musical
Instruments

57

3 AND 4 RM furnished ap·
ts. Phone992-5434.

Ready fa move into. S6500
firm . 992· 530.4.

1979

Healthy, shots, wormed.
Donations required. 992·
6260, noon· 7. p .m .

o ld . $60 . 985·3567 .

Adults only. 992·2598 .

45

1979 Jeep Wagoneer, 4 dr .,

Boarding, all breeds . Clean
indoor-outdoor fa c iliti es.
Also AI&lt;C
regi ster ed
Dobermans. 614-446 7795 .

pis. Tri -colored , 6 weeks

Mobile Homes
for Rent

5566.
Mobile Homes
for Sale

R ISING STAR Ke n ne l.
Board ing . Call 367 ·0292 .

AKC Registered Co lli e pup-

44

Trucks tor Sale

72

SMALL

l~::,~'t:.!:,- •.

I I I'

See us First fC)r All :
of Your Maternity
Needs.

Sizes
" From JOxlO''

tJ

rJ

COTTE

PREGNANT?

Farm Buildings

extensive remodeling
*Electric Ia work$
•Masonry work
·12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583

1977 Dodge Aspen, Good

J eep s $59._50 ; Car s $37 .00;
Tru cks $159. 00 . Ca ll615·779·
3235 Ex t . 814.

ALL STEEL

CONSTRUCTION
•New homes

All run good . 992·7675 .

HUMANE
SOCIETY .
Adopt a homeless pet.

garage. 992-2502.

6 Rooms, l lf2 baths, car-

and

Care products . Western
boots.' Children' s $15.50.
Adults $29.00.

u .s
uo

.

l d•ys

Bording

Ch~rte

1.00

cond.,

top-s terli ng tr a iler . $2, 800 .
Call after 5.p.m . 992-2791.

1972 Chevy 1h ton pickup.

1979 JEEP CJ-- 7, power

Pets for Sale

S6

Rates and Other Information

ai r

ROUSH

prop-canvas

1972 Chevy 4 Or. sedan .
1973 Dodge, 4 d r. sedan .

73

· Building Supplies

HOOF HOLLOW , English
• and Western. Saddle s and

lot that can

Merc .·JS.S.

1'

992·6259.

Ford P ic kup. '1'12·5304.

Large roofing slates. Very
r e asonabl e.
Rutland

&amp; llll!lfrl geratlon

4 P.M . D•ity

32

F ully equ ipped . May be
able to hel p Wi th f inancing.

'1'12"3900.

· 1974 Veg a Ha tch back . $500.

Business Services

1977 Quachita bass boat .

good ties, recent t u ne u p,
dr ives good . M al( be seen at

Redu ce sale and fast with
GoBese Tablets and E -Vap • 1970 Pontiac G TO . Good
cond . Ca ll after 5. 992 ·5487 .
" water pi l ls" Nelson Drug .

&amp; Acctuor les
17- Au to Rualr

34--luslneululldings
lt-Loh &amp; Atreage
36-At" Eltate wanted
l J- Realton

Peted,

1973
O i ds . Cu t la ss
Supreme. 63,000 miles, p.s.,
p.b., a .c., a m ·frn rad io,

1974

1 4- Motorc~cles

a-

lor Salt
ll-Farrns for hit

31

Boats and

Motors for Sale

con d . 949· 2227 .

e MERCHANDISE

eEMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

J

75

• 41-Equipme-nt t or R.nt

9-WantedtoBuy

21 -

Autos for Sale

one letter to each square, to torm
four ordinal)' words.

, JUGGUPZV

Yesterday's Crypioquole: SOM~: MEN ARE SO MEAN
WHEN THEY AlTEND ,\ llALLGAME, THEY WANT TO SEE
TilE HOME TEAM liE \TE N.- F .W.HOWE

THAT

2 30- Ano th e r
World
3, 15;
Gigglesnort Hole l 17.
3 :00- Gene ral
Hospital
6, 13 ;
Gu 1di ng Lighl 8, 10; I Love Lucy
17; Lap Quilt ing 20.
3:3o- Fiintstones 17; As We See It
20; Over Easy 33.
4:0G-M ister Cartoon J; Afternoon
Playhouse 8; Sesame ST . 20,33;
Gom e r P yle 10; Real McCoys 13;
L i ttl e Rascal s 15; Spectreman
17 .
4: 30- Lone Ranger 3; Gomer Pyle 8;
Br a dy Bunch 10 ; Tom &amp; Jerry
13 ; Me rv Griffin 15; G il ligan's Is .
17.
5 DO-Caro l Burnell 3; ; Sanford &amp;
So n 8; Ma ry Tyler Moore 10; My
Thr ee Sons 17; M ister ROgers'
Neighborhood 20,33 .
5. J~ Mash 3; Play Ihe Pe rcentages
8; E lee . Co. 20 ; Happy Days
Aga in 13; Doctor Who 33 ; I
D ream of Jeannie 17.
6:DO- News 3,8,10,13, 15; ABC News
6; Caro l Burnett 17; 3-2-1 Contact
20.
6 : 3~ NBC News3, 15 ; ABC News 13;
CBS News 8, 10; Bob Newhart 17;
Wild Wild World of Animals 33 .
/:DO-C ross-Wits 3; Tic Tac Dough
8; Newl ywed Game 6; News 10;
F a ce th e Musi c 13 / Love
Am er ican Style 15; Sanford &amp;
Son 17; Di ck Cavett 20 .
7: 3o-Hollywood Squares 3; Joker· ~
Wild 8; Hol lywood Squares 10;
Sha Na Na 13 ; TV Honor Society
15; All In ,the Fam ily 17; MacNei 1-Lehrer Report 20.
8 DO-Misadvenl ures of Sheriff Lobo
3. 15; Happy Days 6, 13 ; White
Shadow 8, 10; Nova 20,33.
8 J~ Laverne &amp; Shirley 6, 13.
9 :00- Big Show 3,15 ; Three's
t ompany 6,13; Movie " Kenny
Rogers as the Gambler" 8, 10;
Mystery 20,33; 9 : 3~Taxl 6, 13.
IO :DO-Harl lo Hart 6,13; Maverick
17; Ne ws 20; City Notebook 33.
10 30-Uniled Slates 3, 15;; Over
Easy 20; Camera Three 33 .
11 :DO- Ne ws 3,8, 10, 13, 15; Las! of the
Wild 17; Dick Cavett 20: Dave
All en , a I Large 33.
11: J~ Tonight 3, 15; ABC News 6, 13;
Barnaby Jones 8; ABC Cap t i oned
News
33 ;
Movie
" W aterm elon Man " 10; Movie
" The Westerner." 17.

11 :50-Movie "H it! " 6,13; 12 : 4~ :
Movie " Destiny of a Woman" 8;
1 :DO-Tomorrow 3; News 15;
1 ; 40--N F'! W'l 17.

1:45- -Mov io
Now s .

" Konga" 1.7: 2:3013 :
'3 : 45- Movle
·~ t' :"~!l ~ nqe of the G!adlcttor" 11 r

�·.

I

a-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, April 7, 1980

•

In Pomeroy Village

Buckeye Girls' State

·

·L ack o support irks councilman
BY ItATIE CROW
" It see1ns like there is a personal
vendetta between council mernbe!"S" Larry Wehrung, council mem·
her, told members of Pomeroy
Council Monday night after council
turned down a motion to hire Harry
Lyons who has been a:ding poUce
chief several months.
Wehrung further said council was
acting like a bunch of juveniles and
that whatever be and Mrs. Betty

, BE111 PERRIN

1Continued trom page II
for Retarded Citizens, and the
American Legion Junior Auxiliary
by whom she is being sponsored to
Buckeye Girls' State.
Kim Roush is enrolled in the twoyear course in business clerical office education at Meigs High School
and is a member of the IOECC
Clerical Club. She is an active
member of the American Legion
Junior Auxiliary of Feeney-Bennett
Post 128 and now serves a8
secretary. She is also a past junior
president of the Auxiliary.
Lori Rupe is the junior class president at Meigs. She was also presi·
dent of the sophomore and treasurer

ANGELA PAYNE
of the freshman class. In her
freshman and sophomore years she
was a cheerleader, and last year
was on the school's gymnastic team.
For the past three years shehas been
on the track teamand this year also
plays volleyball.
Lori has been on the yearbook
staff for two years, is a member of
the Student Council, the Booster
Club, the Girl's Athletic Club, and a
member of the Pomeroy United
Methodist Church.
Beth Perrin is in both the mar·
ching and concert ·bands at Meigs, is
on the yearbook staff and the softball team, and last year was a
cheerleader. She is enrolled in a col·
lege preparatory course and is an

with the power steering on his car.
There was light to heavy property
damage.
The bicycle recovered by the
sheriff's department has been

honor student. A member of Trinity
Church, Beth teaches Sunday school
and plays piano there.
Angela K. Payne Is president of
the Meigs Future Homemakers of
America Club and served as vice
president last year and parlimentarian the year before. She belongs
to the Steno Club and last year sang
in the school choir. Angela is a
member of the Mt. Cannel Baptist
Church at Bidwell and a member of
its junior choir.
Jena Welker is active in both the
marching and concert bands at
Meigs High school and is an office
assistant there. She is also a
member of the Arts and Crafts Club.

Mrs. Ruth Larkins, 83, Long Bottom, died Saturday afternoon at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
following an extended illness.
Mrs. Larkins was born in Tuppers
Plains, a daughter of the late John
and Ida Shoemaker Branch. She atteoded the Hazel Comrmmity Chur·
cti and has been a lifelong resident of
Meigs County. She was an active
member of the Meigs Senior Citizens
in Pomeroy.
Surviving are her husband, Fred
E.; two sons, Raymond W., Tuppers
Plains, and Howard D. Portland;
two daughters, Mrs. Norman (Vera)
Weber, Tuppers Plains, and Mrs.
John (Donna ) Bogl\rd, Lo.og Bottom ; a brother, Orland Branch of
Belpre, 12 grandchildren and nine
great-grandchildren. Preceding
her in death were a son, Freddie
Wilford; a daughter, Mae Kathryn
Newlun, four sisters and four
brothers.
. Funeral services will be held at 2
p.m. Tuesday at the White Funeral
Home, Coolville, with the Rev.
Richard Thomas officiating. Burial
will be in Sand Hill Cemetery at
Long Bottom. Friends may call at
the funeral home anytime after I
p.m. today.

Word has been received here of
the recent death of Homer A. Coe in
Suffern, N. Y. Coe was a native of
the Racine area in Meigs County. He
is survived by one son, Stanley, and
three grandchildren, all of New
York and two sisters, Mrs. Dorothy
McK~ie and Mrs. Chlorus Grinun,
Racine.

claimed by the owner.
David Brickles, SR 681, informed
the sheriff's department that the
bicycle was taken from his residence sometime Thursdsy evening.

Meigs County happenings •••
MEETS TIRJRSDAY
The Meigs County Humane
Society will meet Thursday at 7: :ro

Area deaths. • •
Ruth Larkins

three great grandchildren.
Memorial services have been tentatively set for Wednesday at 10 a.m.
at the Frank E. Smith Funeral
Horne, Lancaster. There will be no
call.i.ng hours.

Court actions filed
A suit for support under the
Reciprocal Agreement Ad was filed
in Meigs County Conunon Pleas
Court by Ina M. VanMeter against
Gary E. VanMeter.
Katherine T.Weaver was granted
a divorce from Donald H. Weaver on
charges of gross neglect of duty and
extremecruelty. .
The marriage of Ruby Karen
Young and and Elmer Gerald
Young, Sr., was dissolved.
RUMMAGE SALE
There will be a rummage sale at
the Apple Grove United Methodist
Church Tuesday and Wednesday
from 9 a.m. tO 4 p.m.

p.m. at the Thrift Shop, Middleport.
WATERTOBEOFF
Water on Lincoln Heights will be
off Tuesday for two hours beginning
at 9 a.m. in order that necessary
repair can be made.
SQUAD CALLED

The Tuppers Plains Emergency
Squad was called Saturday at 4: :ro
a.m. to Chester for Edna Sum!f!erfield who was taken to Holzer
Medical Center.
This morning at 5:19 a.m. they
were called for B. L. (Tobe) Bennett
who was taken to Camden Clark
Hospital.
SQUAD RUN

The Middleport Emergency Squad
was called to Vine St. at 5:24 p.m.
Sunday for Debbie Whitlatch, a
medical patient, who was taken to.
Holzer Medical Center.
BAKE SALE SA'IURDAY
The Rutland YouthAssociaton will
hold a bake sale Saturday at the
Kroger Store beginning at 9:30a.m.
Proceeds from the sale will go into
the youth center fund. Residents are
encourage to donate baked goods
for the sale and for pickup of items
either Patty Dugan, 742-2403 or Cindy Weaver, 992-3312 can be called.

VOL. 28, NO. 251
BIG BASKET - This replica of an Easter basket
was created on a lot across from the Middleport Pen·
tecostal Church Sunday morning when an egg hunt was
held for the large crowd attending Sunday services at
the church. Eggs containing slips for prizes were inside
the eggs during the hunt with church members super·

God's acc~ptance urged by Pontiff
By Associated Press
Pope John Paul II, extending
Easter greetings to the Christian
faithful in 33 languages and
apologizing to those whose tongue
was not included, urged the builde!"S
of society to accept God and warned
that to proclaim God's death is to
proclaim the death of man as well.
Speaking to a festive crowd of
350,000 in St. Peter's Square in Rome
on Sunday, the Polish pontiff wished
a "happy, blessed and peaceful
Easter" in 16 eastern European
languages, Chinese, Japanese,
Swahili, Arabic and, for the first
time, Hebrew.
He said his holy day greetings
were intended for "all the other
languages which even if they are not
on my lips are in my heart."
The need for Christian love alao
marked the Easter message of the
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Saturday Admissions--Audrey
Theobald, Middleport; Sadie Bright,
Gallipolis; Charles Snider, Racine;
Gregory Knapp, Middleport.
Saturday Discharges-Hillary
Turley, Mary Derenberger, Joseph
White, Harold Clark, Joyce Frye,
Murl Ours, Martha Anderson.
Supday
Admissions--Beman
Thompson, Vienna, W.Va.; Mildred
Laudermilt. Rutland; Ida Snedley,
Middleport; Charles Barrett,
Rutland ; James .White, Pomeroy;
Cora Will, Pomeroy; Allee Dawson,
Clay, W. Va. ; Jackie Icenhower,
Racine.
Sunday Discharges·-Patricia
Cleland, George Welch, Glendon
Faulk, KeMeth Imboden.

newly installed Archbishop of Canleader of the world's 65 million
terbury.
· Anglicans - said Christians must
Pointing to problems in El
take their "reverence and worship
Salvador, Cambodia and Ireland,
and celebration ... out into the world
the Most Rev. Robert Runcie
where it is in short supply."

ELBERFELD$
JUST RECEIVED

SHIPMENT

JACKSON PERKINS

ROSE BUSHES
Field grown packaged plants
including Tropicana and
Blaze Rambler .
Fertile Potted Redi Plant
packages include Love,
American Pride,
Color ·
Magic, Cynthia, Honor,
Medallion,
New
Day,
Oregold, Prestine,
Red
Masterpiece, Sea Shell,
Cherish Sunsprite, Dazzle
Dazzle.
Select Yours on The 1st Floor

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

,n.
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I
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the exclusive AMC Buyer Protection Pl a~M

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savings plans. .

TO
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Upper River Rd.

•

e • a '

Membe1 FDIC

Thl' Comnnmit' O"nt:d Bank

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Councilman Harold Brown said be
didn't feel the village needed
another truck to which Wehrung
conunented " we sat her and agreed
to advertise for a truck."
Wehrung thought the bid was
reasonable and felt council would be
all sununer without a truck which Is
badly needed. He pointed out that
parts are needed for the present
truck.
• 1Continued on oaae 121

•

enttne

TUESDAY, APRIL 8, 1980

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

100 homes destroyed
by killer _tornadoes
By ABSOClated Press
Tornadoes, high winds and 4-inch
hail slashed the nation from Round
Rock, Texas, to Beaver Dam, Wis.,
lifting one house trailer 75 feet into
the air and destroying more than 100
homes. Two persons were known
dead and ai least 75 others injured.
Businesses were damaged and a
post office, library and drive-in
theater were destroyed as the stor·
· ms hit suburban St. Louis .and
several small towns in Arkansas,
Oklahoma, Texas and Wisconsin.
The National Weather Service said
there were 34 tornadoes in nine
states.
A 1f&gt;.month-old baby in Beaver
Dam was found face-down but
unhurt in a pile of broken glass after
a tornado struck a trailer park. A

woman living in the area was pulled rnov.e," said Janet Eisele. Her house
from a pile of rubble- what was left was damaged, but the family was
of her horne - as a tank of liquefied not hurt.
petroleum gas leaked nearby.
The tornado . flattened some .
In Arkansas, a man said his $500 houses, leaving only piles of rubble
nest egg was scattered by the wind.
and empty shells. Most houses in
The tornadoes were spawned in. a northwest Florissant sustained roof
atmospheric battle between tern- damage.
peratures of 101 in Texas and the low
In central Texas, one man was
30s in North Dakota, where as much • killed, another was injured, 15
as6inchesofsnowfellMonday.
houses were destroyed and 12 were
In the St. Louis suburb of damaged as totnadoes struck Round
Florissant, 12 persons were Rock , Lund and Elgin. The man died
hospitalized, one in serious con- in his home. "The building collapsed
clition, after a tornado struck shortly down on him," said Police Lt.
after 10 p.m., extensively damaging Wesley Wolff.
60 homes.
In Oklahoma, a !&gt;-year-old boy
"We heard the noise. My husband drowned when a boat on Foss Lake
and I each reached for a kid to head
in the west central part of the state
for the basement, but the pressure
capsized in high winds.
was so strong we just couldn't
Bernice and Ketchum, both northeast of Tulsa with populations of
about 300 each, had property
damage estimated at $2 milnon with
four injured and as many as 40
homes demoliShed.
Damage estimates ranged up to $1
million in the eastern Oklahoma city
of Potesu where six persons were in·
jured when a drive-in theater was
flattened and a shopping center
damaged by high winds and
baseball-size hail.
Across the state line in Arkansas,
22 persons were injured as tornadoes
hit near· Mayflower south of Fort
By The Asi!O&lt;Ialed Press
Smith, and nearby Witcherville,
Mansfield and Midland.
Reginald Strunk, his daughter
-Michelle
and his niece, Ann, were
TEL AVJV, Israel - Israeli raids on Palestinian camps in southern
hospitalized
after their mobile home
Lebanon are expected in retaliation for the terrorist attack on a·kibnear
Witcherville
was lifted 75 feet
butz nursery in which three Israelis and the five terrorists died.
into
.
the
air
and
dumped onto a
Defense Mini5ter Ezer Weizman said the Israeli army would "weigh
pickup
truck,
said
Cleo Strunk,
measures and actions" but gave no hint of plans for retaliation.
Reginald's
father,
whose
home near
However, all such previous Palestinian attacks on Israel have been
the
trailer
was
also
damaged.
followed quickly by larg~H~CSle Israeli attacks by land; sea or air on
Palestinian camps which the Israelis claimed were operational or
training bases for the terrorists.

Retaliation raids expected

Peruvian government seeks assistruice

..

and lull flve.year No- Auet-Thru Warranty . ·
FnJnc tt 500 Flea Market. Gellla
co Fr. Gels ., US 160 &amp; lS,
Ga.lllpolls, ~pr.
1 ~. 13 ·

vising hunts held for the Various age groups. Playing
Snoopy in the basket was Tommy Kelly and clowns
were Craig Dougan and Jeff Nottingham. A new public
address system was used at the church on South Third
Ave., by the pastor, the Rev. WUliam Knittel, for the
Easter services.

CORD

All the 1900 AM C vehicles include

police.
· Wehrung voted to accept the bid in
Following Wehrung's statements, the amount of $12,765 but the motion
Chief Lyons handed Mayor Clarence died for the lack of a second.
Andrews his resignation effective
A motion to readvertise for bids
April 15. Lyons, will remain, for a truck was passed on a 4 to 2
however, as a patrolman for the vote.
village.
Council members would like to
BID NOT ACCEPTED
have had a local dealer submit a bid.
Council also failed to accept the It was pointed out that local dealers
only bid on a dump truck for the bad the same opportunity to submit
village.
a ·bid as did John Gibson Motor
On the bid for a dump truck Larry City, Athens.

at y

Florence Neal
Florence A. Neal, 70, 15-1 Uttle
Brook Estates, ·Lancaster, formerly
of Middleport, died at her home
Saturday.
Mrs. Neal who was born May 25,
1909 was the daughter of the late
Raymond and Letha Russell. She
was also preceded in death by her
husband, Charles W. Neal and one
son, Charles Robert Neal.
.She was a member of the Women
rl the Moose.
She is survived by one daughter,
Charlene Foster, Lancaster; me
son, George Ray Neal, Melbourne,
Fla.; three sisters, Mrs. Lola
Harrison, Rutland, Mrs. Louise
Lewlll and Mrs. Eileen Woods, both
of The Plains; 12 grandchildren and

yes.
The reason given for the no vote
was the fact that Lyons lives in the
village of Racine and not ·a resident
of Pomeroy. However, the resolution
stated that Lyons had six months to
move his residence from Racine to
Pomeroy.
It was alao pointed out that a
resolution could be drawn up which
would allow Lyons to reside outside
the village and still be chief of

JENAWELKER

Sheriffs deputies check accident
The Meigs County Sheriff's Department investigated a two car accident over the weekend. No injuries
or citations were reported.
According to the report Gregory
M. Eben, ~. Rt. 2, Racine, was
traveling south on SR 338 went his
car went off the highway and struck
a parked vehicle owned by Virgilo
Walker, Rt. 2, Racine. ·
Eben reported he had problems

Baronick voted for other members
voted against.
"I was elected to this post and I
am not going to resign" Wehrung
stated. "We have got to sit down like
adults and work things out. We were
elected to do a job and I am working
toward that goal," Wehrung said.
On the resolution to hire Lyons,
Harold Brown, Lou Osborne, Bill
Young and Rod Karr all voted no
and Wehrung and Baronick voted

I.JMA, Peru - The Peruvian govenunent turned to its LatinAmerican allies in the Andean Pact for help in finding asylum for the
estimated 10,000 Cubans januning its embassy iri Havana in a
desperate attempt to escape communist rule.
The United States said it would take some of them if the Peruvian
government would let the refugees come to Lima. But so far the
Peruvians were admitting none of them because th~y had no definite
assurances from other countries that they would take them.

Counterfeit suspect nab~ ·
ALEXANDRIA, Va. - An Ohio man was indicted here Monday f'11"
allegedly scheming to seU a Secret Service agent more than $50,000 in
counterfeit money.
According to the indictment, Gary Allen Bush of Mansfield, Ohio,
delivered the phoney money . Jan. 30 to another man, identified as
Charles Edward Coulter.
Govenunent offrclals said Coulter was arrested after trying to sell
the bUlB to a Secret "Service agent in Fairfax County, Va. He has
already been sentenced to a year in prison on charges related to counterfeiting, offlclalB said.

Grange Master main speaker
James Ross, Master rl the Ohio tickets for the annual banquet from
State Grange and the representative
the subordinate grange maste!"S lnfrom the 94th District to the Ohio . eluding Stanford stockton, Earl .
Legislature, will be·speaker at the
Cross, Robert Reed, Ray Midkiff,
annual Meigs County Grange
John Montgomery, Early Roush,
Banquet at 7 p.m. Friday at the
Fred Goeglein, Norman Will.
Salisbury Elementary School.
A veteran of World War D, Ross
served in the U. S. ArmY, South
Pacific, for two and one-half yea!"S.
He has managed fanna in several
sections of Ohio for the Fann ,
Management, Inc., of Irwin and for
over 30 years has been in the Insurance business as well as
operating fnm 1964 to 1964 an appliance and hardware store in
Coshocton.
Ross, at the age rl 45, was one of
the youngest to ever serve BB State
Grange Mster. He was first elected
ln 1968 and is now servirig his sixth
tWo-year tenn ln that )lo8ltlon.
He has been active in Masonic Orders, the Elks, American Legion and
is a member rl the Madison
Presbyterian Church.
JAMES ROSS
· Meigs Countlans may purchase

BLOCK IDGHWAY- Members of the New Haven
Fire Department and Rescue Unit were on duty for
many hours on Route 33 above New Haven Monday

when the highway had to be closed due to the
derailment of a Chessie System train about 4:30a.m.
Monday.

Derailment cause unknown
NEW HAVEN, W.Va. (AP)- The
Chessie System says it doesn't know
what caused the derailment of a
train carrying dangerous . substances near here, but said it would
conduct an investigation into the accident.
'Three chemical tank cars were
among 12 that derailed near New
Haven, W_Va. Monday. Authorities
said none of the cars ruptured, and
there were no injuries.
Two of the derailed cars were
carrying ethylene oxide, a clear
volatile liquid, and the third was
carrying vinyl chloride, a colorless
gas that is fairly easy to ignite, said

Uoyd Lewis, a Chessie System
spokesman at the company's
Cleveland headquarters.
The n-car train was en route from
Parkersburg to Point Pleasant when
the cars jumped the tracks about 4
a.m., Lewis said. The derailment
was the second in three days for the
Chessie System; six cars of a coal
train derailed Saturday near
Hurricane, spilling about J,OOO
gallons of diesel oil from a ruptured
locomotive.
After Monday's derailinent, state
police and Mason County sheriff's
deputies asked five families to leave
their homes. According to Lewis, of-

ficials also halted construction work
at Appalachian Power Co.'s Mountaineer Power Plant.
Traffic on U.S. 33 was stopped and
detoured, deputies said.
Both of the cars carrying the
ethylene oxide overturned in the accident, Lewlll said. Lewis said
cleanup operations began Monday.
Workers would either right the cars
and put them back on the-tracks, be
said, or turn theni over and siphon
the chemical into tanker trucks.
The car carrying the vinyl
chloride was upright after the accident and would be placed back on
the tracks, he said.

FBI agents ·watching Iranian diplomats
WASHINGTON (AP )- FBI agents are shadowing Iranian diplomats
to make sure they leave the United
States, while President Carter's
toughened stance agaifl!lt Iran
draws cautious reaction from the
families of the American hostages
and some surprisingly strong support from Congress.
" It's about time we tried to get
their attention some way,'' said

Robert Hohman, father of Sgt.
Donald R. Hohman of West
Sacramento, Calif. "The president is
right .... He has to do it."
And in Congress, Sen. George
McGovern, the anti-war Democratic
presidential candidate of 1972 and 'a
frequent critic of the Carter ad·
ministration, said Carter should be
planning for a naval blockade or
even . selective air strikes if the
hostages arelj'l released.
lt'was a grim-faced president who

Land use
plan now
available
-

.

.. .

went on live national television Moo·
day afternooon to say he was com·
mitted both to the release of the
hostages and to "the preservation of
American honor. "
" Other

actions

may

become

necessary if IJhese steps do not
produce the prompt release of the
hostages," Carter said.
Neither the president nor his aides
would define " prompt," but officials
said Carter does not feel obliged to
await the convening of Iran's new
legislature, the group Ayatollah
Ruhollah Khomeini has said should
decide what to do with the hostages.
The decision to break diplomatic
relations and embargo trade was
made Monday morning after
Khomeini refused to allow the transfer of the 50 Americans from their
student captors to government con·
trol.
White House officials said Carter's
action will send a clear message to
Iran and the rest of the world that
American patience is exhausted.
Briefing reporters under ground
rules that barred their identification
by name , ·the officials carefully
refused to rule out military force
when asked about the "other ac-

lions" the president warned "may
become necessary ."

The four steps Carter outlined :
- A formal end to diplomatic
relations. The Iranian diplomatic
staff in the United States, reduced to
35 in December, was ordered to
leave the country by midnight
tonight. To insure that none evaded
the order, Carter ordered the FBI to
seal off Iran's embassy in
Washington and its consulates in
Chicago, San Francisco, Houston
and New York. '" Agents were
assigned to tail the 35 registered
diplomats until they left the country.
- A complete trade embargo, except for food and medicine.
However, Carter noted that as a
practical matter even food and
medical shipments would be skimpy
at best. Trade between the two countries, once measured in billions of
dollars annually, has diminished to a
relative trickle because of the
president's previous freeze on
Iranian assets and prohibition on oil
imports.
- The beginning of a process that
could allow the hostages, their
families and American businesses w '
claim some of the$8 billion in frozen

Ir:~nie n assets

in the United States.
·Invalidation of all visas held by
lrama ns for future travel to the
United States. The order will not immediately affect Iranians now in the
United States on valid visas, officials said. They did not explain
what would happen to those Iranians
as their permits to be in the United
States expire.
While a large majority of the
hostage families contacted expressed support for Carter's action,
there was no unanimity.
"Jimmy Carter's out of his mind if
he thinks that's going to improve
anything," said Alan Gfaves, son of
John E. Graves, 52, the embassy's
public affairs officer. "The way be's
going right now, the next step is
war."

A more typical. response came
from Louisa Kennedy, whose
husband, Moorhead, is the embassy's economic and conunercial ·
. officer.
'
"The president is doing the right
thing and it's good for starters," she
said. · ~We're not sure how strong
these measures are. A lot of this is
still undefined. It's going to shake
down in the next few days.''

The village of Middleport Plan-

bas placed a
review copy of the draft certification
report ln the village Mayor's office.
This report updates the land use
portion of the Middleport Comprel\ensive Plan Update. This report
also expands the housing plan por·
tlon of this 1976 comprehensive pian
·and the Village Housing Assistance
ning Commission

Plan(HAP).

Any resident of Middleport Ia Invited to review this report and comment in writing to the Mayor's office
no later than 5 p.m., April 19, 1980.
This report wsa prepared for the
village Planning Commission by the
Buckeye Hills-Hocking Valley
Regional Development District.

Pomeroy woman enters guilty plea
Frances J . Whittington, 35,
Pomeroy, appeared in the Meigs
County Common Pleas Court Mon·
day afternoon to enter a voluntary
pleas of guilty to a charge of grand
theft.
The charge stemmed from the
alleged failure of Mrs. Whittington
to report child support she had
received from her ex-husband while
also receiving aid for dependent
children money through the welfare
department.
The amount of
unreported payments was $3,000.

Mrs. Whittington admitted her
guilt and has made repayment wthe
welfare department in the amount of
$3,000, Crow reports.
The charge carries a possible
penalty of six monihs to five years in
a penal institute of the state as well
as a fine up to $2500.
The welfare department and the
prosecutor's O!fices worked jointly
in the investigation of the fraud and
the repayment of the $3,000 Is con·
sidered an important result of a successful prosecution, officials stated.

Representing the State of Ohio
were Prosecuting Attorney Fred W.
Crow III and Assistant Prosecutor
Carson Crow.
_
Much of the credit for the success
of this prosecution , according to
Crow, goes to Keith · Uttle, investigator for the welfare department.
Upon receiving Mrs. Whittington's
plea of guilty, Judge Buck ordered a
pre-sentence investigation and
report: sentencing .w ill be at a later
date.

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