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                  <text>Mayor's

16- The TJaily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, .Ja n. 2;1, 19110
!

Area deaths

. . .,

American l£gion .

DARRELL HANNtN(.;
Funeral services for Darrell !Dix l
Hanning, who was killed Monday in
a car-truck accident will be held
Friday at 2 p.m. at the BigonyJordan Funeral Home, Albany.
Burial will be in Athens County
Memory Gardens. Friends may call
at the fun eral home after 4 p.m. on
Thursday.

A son 6f the late Joseph and
Margaret Baer Neutzling, he was
born on March 25, 1980. Besides his
parents he was preceded in death by
his wife, Carrie; a daughter, Mrs.
Mary Riggs, and several brothers
and sisters.
.
Surviving are a daughter, Mrs.
Marvin (Lois) Burt of Pomeroy,
eight gra ndchildren and three greatgrandchildren.
Funeral services will be held at 2
p.m. Friday at the Ewing Funeral
Home with the Rev. W. H. Perrm officiating. Burial will be in Beech
Grove Cemetery. Friends may call
at the funeral home from 2to 4 and 7
to9p.m. Thursday.

BENJAMIN NEUTZLING
Benjamin Neutzling, 89, lOS Maple
Place, Pomeroy, well known
Pomeroy resident, died Tuesday at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Mr. Neutzling was a member of
Trinity Church in Pomeroy and for
many years had been an active
member of the church choir. He was
a member of Drew Webster Post 39,

YEARBOOK ORDERS TAKEN
Orders for the 1979-80 Meigs High
School yearbook are being taken at
the high school. Cost of the book will
be $11 for underclassmen and others
and $12 for seniors whose names will
be engraved on the book. The book
will be available for delivery about
Oct. 1, 19110.

Authorili!d CAT -!\LOG
SALES MERCHANT

ISears I
"Pllone 992-2178
234 E. Main St.

TO MEET TONIGIIT

Pom e roy , 0.

Pomeroy Boy Scout Troop 249 will
meet from 7 to 8:30p.m. this evening
at the Meigs Senior Citizens Center
in Pomeroy. All boys interested in
troop membership are invited.

OWNED AND OPERATED BY
Jack &amp; Judy Williams
Open: Mon . thru Wed. 9-S,

Thur. 9-12, Fri . 9·5, Sal. 9-2
Satisfaction Guaranteed
or Your Money Back

EXTENSION GRANTED
Last day to pay first half 1979 Real Estate
Taxes will be F)b. 14, 1980.
Trailer Tax must be paid by Jan. 31, 1980.

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Dog and Kennel License must be purchased by
Jan. 20, 1980 to avoid penalty.

MEIGS COUNTY TREASURER
GEORGE M. COLLINS

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GETS OATH CERTIFICATE - Roy Miller, left, Route 3, Pomeroy,
was sworn into dmce as a supervisor of the Meigs Soil and Water Conservation District by Ohio's Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, Frank D.
Celebrezze.

Election certificate
given by Celebrezze
Roy Miller of Route 3, Pomeroy,
recently reelected supervisor of the
Meigs Soil and Water Conservation
District, was sworn into office and
given his election certificate by
Ohio's Chief Justice of the Supreme
Court, Frank D.' Celebrezze at the
37th Annual Meeting of the Ohio
Federation of Soil and Water Conservation Districts in Columbus.
Miller elected to a three year
term, joins Rex Shenefield, Thomas
Theiss, David Gloeckner, and
Thereon Johnson in administering
the Meigs District's conservation
programs.
Miller said the challenge ·of
providing guidance in proper land
management and solving our energy
problems without destroying our

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EXTENDED FORECAST
Friday through Sunday: Fair
Friday. A chance of snow flurries
Saturday. A cbauce of showers In
tbe south and snow flurries In the
north Sunday. lligbs from the 20s
to the low 3Gs Friday, wannlng to
tbe 30s to low tOs Sunday. Lows
from between five and 15 Friday
to the upper teens and 20s Sunday.
:-:-:-:·:·:.:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:&lt;·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::&lt;·:::·:·:·:·:·:·::::::;:;:;:::::::::::

Student, gunshot
victim transferred

Eckrich Sweet

Sliced or Center Portion

SMOKED HAM

Whole or Half

S2.89
s2.79

lib. Golden Isle Vacuum Packed

SLICED BACON •••••••••••••••• ~~;. s1.19
Homemade

HAM SALAD ••••• .-••••••••••••• ~~; •• s1.19
DAIRY

PRODUCE
10 lb. Idaho Baking

aoz. American Single

Pkg.

$1.1
2/ 99

SLICED CHEESE

I lb. Tee'n Queen Quarters

MARGARINE

POTATOES --- --· ---·sl.49
New

CABBAGE .......... ~ .--- 3ge
~

30 Count

CELERY ........~-~~-~~..4f

~~

21b. Banquet 10 pc.

CHICKEN DINNER ................s2.99

The Middleport Emergency Squad
and Fire Department answered four
calls Tuesday and early Wednesday
morning.
At 12:57 p.m. Tuesday the unit
went to the Meigs Junior High
School )n Middleport for Christy
Laudennilt a student, who was
taken to' Veterans Memorial
Hospital. At 2:04a.m. Wednesday,
the squad went to 12841&gt; Powell St.
. for Misty Lewis, 26, who had a gunshot wound in the thigh. She was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital. According to police, the incident is under investigation. At
3:33a.m., the fire department went
to Rutland to assist in the fire at the
Rutland Furniture Store. At 5:02
a.m. the squad weant to 126 State St.
in Pomeroy for Darra Lynn Peck
who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
SPAGHETII SUPPER
SATURDAY
The Pomeroy Elementary School
PTA will stage a public spaghetti
supper Saturday from 4: 30 to 7:30
p.m. Admission will be $1 for adults
and $1 for children with spaghetti,
salad, bread and coffee, tea or milk
to be included. Dessert and soft
drinks will be sold separately. Entertairunent is also being planned.

natural resources so vital to future
generations, is staggering and will
require the use of our best conservation practices.
He considers the district's future
role in reducing pollution from
agriculture. and urban development
sites as a major district challenge.
"With the help of the people in the
district we will coordinate the work
of our district staff with that
provided by the Soil Conservation
Service and other local, state and
federal agencies to bring the people
of the Meigs District an efficient and
effective program.
"We are aU elected by the people
in the district and serve without pay .
We are dedicated to helping our
community," said Miller

OHIO VALLEV LIVESTOCK CO.
MARKET REPORT
Saturday, Jan . 19, 1980

~ourt

.

Move.••

(ConuOued from page I)
Conta&lt;".ed foUowing the county
board meeting, 'MaxineS. Plmnmer,
Executive Director of the G-J-M 648
Board said she was unconcerned
about the boards' action.
"Construction of the bUildings was
financed with federal and state
grants that require mental health ~
services be provided in them ... the .
648 Board is the mental health ••
authority in the tri-eounty area ... and we are supplying direct services," ~
Plummer said, "Tbey may own the .buildings, but we supply the
required service."
Tuesday's motion further directed
Prosecutor Joseph L. Gain to fUe a •
suit, which was dismissed Monday ~~
in GaillpollB Municipal Court, in :
Gallia County Common Pleas Court ~
seeking an injunction restraining
both the 648 Board and the Center .:
Board from carrying on the business ••
of the Nelsonville Alternative
Residential Facility until questions
surrounding the staffing and licensing of that facility were determined . .
On Monday Judge Jamt!IJ A. Bennett ruled that tbe litigaticln did no.t
faD within the limited jurisdiction of
the Municipal Court.
HOSPITAL NEWS
Judge Bennett's written opinion, ..
which carne in response to a n.otion
VETERANSMEMOJifAL
for dismissal filed by the 648 Board . :
Admitted-Okey Haggy~etoy;
~tes, "In r~viewing the complaint, · . :
John Rhodes Bidwell: ~e Court fmds that although the -·
Grant, Vinton;' Evelyn McCaskey, existence of vari?U£ con~acts are ·
Rutland; Sarah Brown, MinersviUe; alledged, the realtSSue ratsed by the
Florence Werry, Racine; Mark Par- complaint concerns the actual ..
sons Racine.
operation of the Nelsonville Alter- '·.
Di~charged- Charles
Payne, native Residential Facility; the
Frieda Fields Mildred Fisher, Jen- propnety of tts takeover by the 648 :
ny Williamso~. Della Proffitt, Jef- Boa~d, its licensing, its staff and
frey McKinney Melanie Harrison.
possible unpact of the operation of
'
the facility upon patients residing

Five defendants forieited bonds,
aU posted on speeding charges, and
eight others were fined in the court
of Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
Tuesday night.
Forfeiting bonds were Roy
GJlleser, R011te 3, Pomeroy, $29;
Joseph P. Ehlich, Cleveland, $28;
Ronald S. Willis, Belpre, $28; James
P. Riepenhoff, Wellston, $25; Joann.
Culp, Route 3, Pomeroy, $31..
Fined were Barry M. Johnson,
Clifton, W. Va., $225 and costs and
three days in jail, drlvi!ig while intoxicated; Hwnphries Nelson, Dunbar, W. Va., $18 and costs, speeding;
Cynthia L. Faulk, Route 4; Pomeroy,
$15 and costs, speeding, and $10 and
costs, running a stop sign; Robert E.
"Rickard, Clifton, W. Va., $16 and
costs, speeding; Don Lovett, Middleport, $50 and costs, disorderly
manner; John Tyret-, Middleport,
$100 and costs, criminal mischief;
Paul Klein, Pomeroy, $100 and costs,
assault, and Sheila Haley, Pomeroy,
$100 and costs, destruction of property.

~

M

there.''
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGES JAN. 22
John Brabham, Ellen Denny, Mrs.
Lewis DiNunzio and son, Amy Doss,
Ruth Drust, Charles Ellis, Barbara
Harper, Virgil Hartley, Carrie
Jackson, Juanita Johnson, Thomas
Jorden, Kiberly Kearns, Charles
Knotts, William lEwis, Shirley
McKane, Rosessa Minnis, Tim
Morris, James Music, Alta Nida,
Earle Painter, Margaret Rose, Lena
Sells, Brucie Sargeant, Mary Etta
Skeens, Birdie Flack, Donna Smith,
Susan Vanco, Charlotte Whobrey,
Harry Wiiford, Cary Willis, Mildred
Withee.
BffiTHSJAN.%2
Mr. and Mrs. Francis Shriplin,
daughter, Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs.
PaUl Butler, son, Crown City; Mr.
and Mrs. Dallas Short, son, JaCkson.

Jumbo

BOUNTY TOWELS·....................79~
46 oz. Hunts

TOMATO JUICE-............. ~ .........79'

10'12 oz. campbells Old Fashion

ANNOUNCING..
LORETTA HOLSINGER

Feeder Steers : Good and Choice

240 to 300 lbs . 7B to 99, 300 to 400 lbs.
75.50·94, 400 to 500 lbs. 69·B2.75, 500 to
600 lbs. 6B to 76.50, 600 to 700 lbs. 65 to
72. 700 to BOO lbs. 61.50 to 67 .50, BOO
and over 55 to 63.25.
Feeder Heifers: Good and Choice

Pomeroy

Call for Appointment 992 ·7606
Open All Day Saturday

ELBERFELD$
HOUSEWARES HOUSEWARES
.. DEPARTMENT 1ST FLOOR

NEW SHIPMENT

Chicago Cutlery-KNivEs

B.

AND LOOK

CRUSHED PINEAPPLE ............. s9~
17 oz. Green Giant
SWEET PEAS ................ •..... 2/89'

A watch that runs like new
should _look the part. And
nothing does the job better
than a stylish watchband from
Spedidel. Speldel-origi nator
of famous Twlst·O·Fiex• wat·
chba~ d construction . Just the

12 oz. Del Monte

watch .

thing tO""glve new life to an old

CORNED BEEf.....................sl.59

6'12 o.z.

STAR ·. KIST -TUNA ...·........... 2/sl.89
16 oz. Golden Isle

GRAPEFRUIT SECTIONS ...... ~ .... 59'
,.

Authorized

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~~
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212 1 . Miln, POmeroy

Individual knives in a · fine selection of sizes.....: Pa
knives. Butch~r knives - Steak knives· Slicers plus
set$.
'
'
.
.
All made from (:hlcago special steel which resists .
pitting and_staining, yet is e.a sy to resharpenn.~·;~s~~~~;t;~:~
walnut hartdle, full tong and ,three 'rhilt · c1
m'a kes the' knife both $turdy and ' long lasting ••• .
!!d9e Is ,razor shilr!J::. ' ·

. ELBERFELDS-:

operational board (Center Board),"
Niday said.
"There needs to be checks and
balances," the county commissioner
continued.
E;xecutive Director Plununer said
Wednesday she fully supported the
concept of merging the two mental
health boards.
"Merger would not sacrifice
care," Plununer said, "and it would
eliminate some of the administrative positions that are
currently duplicated by the
board;s."

"I would like to see more direct

services,'' she continued.

Tuesday evening's motion further
directed Prosecutor Joseph L. Cain·
to file a suit, which was dismissed
Monday in Gallipolis Municipal
Court, in Gallia County Common
Pleas Court seeking an injunction
restraining both the 648 Board and
the Center Board from carrying on
the business of the Nelsonville Alternative Residential Facility.
Prosecutor Gain said late Wednesday afternoon that, as of then, he
had taken no steps to implement the
actions authorized by the board of •
county conunissioners Tuesday .

en tine
THURSDAY, JANUARY 24, 1980

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

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&lt;.

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Heart problem
Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini
was reported in a Tehran hospital
today with heart trouble, but his
doctors said he waa in satisfactory condition and would give a
radio-television interview "in the
very near future."
NI revolutionary committees
throughout Iran were placed on
alert to guard against trouble
during the presidential election
Friday.
Khomeini, Iran's 7~year-illd
revolutionary leader and Shiite
Moslem patriarch, bad been
report,ed suffering from fatigue
and went into seclusion Jan. 12
for two weeks at his home in
Qom, the Shiite holy city 100
miles south of Tehran.

A plea for clothing or any other
donation Is being made for the Tim
Priddy family who lost aU their
possessions when a fire at the
Rutland Furnitre Store Wednesday
morning deatroyed ~ small block
building at the rear of the furniture
store in which the family resided.
The family escaped only in brief
clothing. There are five in the
family, husband, wife, and three
children.
The father wears a 15 and one-half
shirt, 36 in slacks, and 8and one-half
tq 9 and one-half in shoes; the wife
wears a siz,e 14 in dresses and slacks,
medium or large top and 6 and onehalf in shoes; the oldest boy wears a
size 14 in a boys shirt, 14 in pants and
size nine in a mans' shoe; the
daughter wears a size 8 dress and 10
slack, and one and a half L&lt;1 shoes;
the youngest, who is age two. wears

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
Clarksville, TeM. pilot was killed
early today when the twin engine.
Cessna he : was flying crashed
near Port Columbus shortly after
take-off.
The pilot was Identified as Leon
Stevens, an employee of Volunteer Aviation of Clarksville.
The crash occurred on North
American Rockwell property
near the airport.
The Cessna 402 bad just been
loaded with small parcels at the
Purolator Courier Corp. facillty
and was bound for Louisville and
Lexington, Ky.

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from many Republicans as well as
from leaders of his own party.
But some long-time advocates of ·
bolstering the nation's military
defenses were openly skeptical
about the president's determination
to folly develop his new approach.
Many Republicans claimed Carter
is exploiting the foreign policy
challenge posed by the Soviet intervention in Afghanistan to quell
criticism of what they said are the
overall failures of his ad-

Plea made for clothing

Pilot killed

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) - Police
found the bodies of a young
woman and her 3-year-old son .at
theli- home Wednesday after a 7·
yeaMldboy with a stab wound In
his cheSt walked 1~blocks to his
school and told officials his
mother had been killed.
· SourCes sald police found the
bodies ·after the boy, . Travis
Crook/ walk_ed to the' school With
his collie·dog and related the incident' lo principal BW D.
· Wagaman.
· Pollee Identified the mother as
Kal:eD Crook, 28, who they said
wu tl!e daughter of a Kansas
. . JdilrnY patrolman; and her son,
BJ'IIIl(lop. Both had been stab~.

.

WASillNGTON - Congress appears ready to back President Carter's tough new doctrine aimed at
containing the Soviet thrust toward
the oil lifelines of the Middle East.
But reaction to reviving peacetime
draft registration is decidedly
mixed.
.
Carter used the annual State of the
Union address to reverse much of
the foreign Bl)d military policy
estabUsbed in the first three years of
his administration. He drew support

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MEIGS VARSI'I'Y BASKETBALL SQUAD - Making up the 197~
Meigs Varsity squad are, left to right, Greg O'Brien, Brian Swan, Dave
-

Kennedy, Bob AShley, Kevin Smith, Tony Scott, Todd Snowden, Dave
Ohlinger, Tim Faulk, Cliff Kennedy and Mike Miller.
(,l;:..,"'&lt;Fd}'

.J.. . p.-.- -

~ ·.

....... ._ ..... - .......

--·-

Congress ready to back President

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a three or four in shirts and pants
and 7 and one-half in a toddler shoe.
Those wishing to make a donation
of clothing or househol~ roods may
call992-2626 or 992-2987.

ministration.
The president's speech Wednesday night before a joint session of
Congress wa s interrupted
repeatedly by applause.
The loudest and most sustained
ovation came when carter said
neither he nor the American people
will support sending an Olympic
team to Moscow while Soviet occupation troops remain in
Afghanistan.
The president also confirmed that
the Soviet action in Afghanistan has
caused him to shift his strategy in
the continuing effort to persuade
Iran to release 50 American
hostages held in Tehran since Nov.

4.
He said the United States now will
attempt to persuade Iranian leaders
"that the real danger to their nation
lies to the north from Soviet troops in

.

A 11&gt;-year-illd Meigs County girl
was cited We$e8day on a charge of
reckless operation following an accident on TR 352, One and six-tentha
of a mile aouth of Rutland.
Caned to the scene at .8:15 a.m.,
the · Gallla-Melgs Post~ Highway
Patrol, reports a south bol!,lld ,auto
operated by Usa Arin Gardner, Middleport, \vent out of control, struck
both sides of a bridge, spun around
anll came to test In the middle of the
roadway.
Two passengers, Bonnie.Smith, 15,
and J.!IFk MIUer, 16, both of J',Jiddleport, w'ere treated at Veterans
Memorial Hospital . for injuries
Sllltalned diuing the aC!)ident.
. The :vehi,cle was demolished.

- ~'

Afghanistan and that the unwarranted Iranian quarrel with us
hampers their response to this far
greater danger."
The core of what amounts to a Carter Doctrine on the Middle East was
delivered in these words:
"Let our position be absolutely
clear. An attempt by any outside force to gain control of the Persian Gulf
region will be regarded as an assault
on the vital interests of the United
States of America. And such an
assault will be repelled by any
means necessary, including military
force. "
Sen. Richard Stone, D-Fla., chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations

Special evening ·

hours scheduled
Sarah Gibbs, deputy registrar for
Meigs County, announces that
special evening hours have been set
for the purchase of auto licenses.
The special hours will be from 5: 30
to 8 p. m. on Friday evenings. The office , which is the fanner Gibbs '
Grocery building on Mulberry
Avenue., Pomeroy, is also open from
9 to 12 noon on Saturdays and from 9
a. m. to noon on Thursdays.
Purchases of licenses must take
their certificate of title and
. registration together with the cash
for their license plates. All car
owners with last name first initials
of Aand B must obtain their licenses
by Feb. I.

•. HEART OF•
HEART -;- CJ'lris~s may haye )list passed, but
Valentine's Day is not far away. Heart boxes of Valentine candy 1all sizes,
are available in local st~Jres. Elda-Bailey, 10, daughter Of Mr. and Mrs.
Oliver E. BaUey, Success ltoad, Reedsvllle1 holds one of the ~ller
,boxes which sells for '10.95. Some hox~s go as high as $35.

Mv

subcommittee on the Middle East,
said Carter outlined "a clear containment doctrine and if it means
what it implies, it is the strongest .
statement that any president in
recent years has ever made."
Sen. Sam Nunn, 0-Ga., a vocal
and influential advocate of
strengthened U.S. military defenses,
said the president clearly drew the ·
lines and defined the sphere of vital
American security interests in the
Persian Gulf region.
But Sen. Ted Stevens, R-Alaslta,
the acting Senate Republican
leader, saw dangers lurking beneath
the surface of the president's words.

More snow predicted
_ Tonight's weather will be shaped
by a low pressure center which this
morning was located in northern
North Dakota, with a wann front
!railing southeast through western
Iowa into southernll!inois.
The National Weather Service expected the low and the front to move
eastward today and spread snow in-

Patrol cites
15-year--old

BOdies located

LIKE NEW

20 oz. Sweetbrier

.•..

't

CHATEAU
BEAUTY SALON
2nd St .

•

at

MARAUDER COACHES - Coaches for the Meigs High School
BasketbaU squads are, left to right, Ron Logan, head coach and Gordon
Fisher, junior varsity coaci{

AT THE

250 to 300 lbs. 72.50 to B7.50, 300 to 400
lbs. 6B to BO. 400 to 500 lbs. 62.50 to 75,
500 to 600 lbS. 58 to 6B.50, 600 to 700
tbs. 52 to 63.75, 700 to BOO lbs. 51 .50 to
61 , BOO and over 4B .50 to 56.50.
Feeder Bulls: Good and ChOice 250
to 300 lbs. 77 to 95.50, 300 to 400 lbs.
72.50 to 90, 400 to 500 lbs. 68 to 77 .50,
500 to 600 lbs. 63 lo 72.75, .600 to 700
lbs. 5B.50 to 62.75, 700 to BOO lbS. 53 to
61.75, BOO and over 4B to 55.
Holstein steers and bulls (300-BOO
lbs.) 57 to 63, Bulls \1,000 lbs. and
over) 52.50 to 54.50.
·Slaughter Cows (utilities) 46.50 to
52, (canners &amp; cullers) JB to 45.50 .
Springer Cows \by the head) 300 to
550, Cows-Calves (by the head) 525
to 700, Veal Calves B5 to 104 .
HOGS - Top Hogs 1210·230) 37 .25
to 38.20, Boars 23.50 to 26, Pigs (by
the headl 12.50 to 27.50, Sows 1450
lbs. and over) 31 .50 to 36.

facilities, and we are the legally
established m@n\al health authority
in the area, " Plununer continued.
Commission President Paul D.
Niday, who made Tuesday 's motion,
said, at that time, he had made the
motion because he was bothered by
an apparent attempt to merge the
two boards that have been offering
mental health services within the
county.
·'The motion was based on the fact
that we (the county commission )
have always been informed there
would be two boardS.. .the planning
board (648 Board) and the

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

VUL. XXVIII NO. 198

f•

Our experts specialize in the repair of
all makes and models of watches.

VEGETABLE SOUP ...... ~ ......... 2/59'

(USPS 145-960) ·

higher, cows 1.00 to 2.00 lower. veal

calves B.OO tb 10.00 lower .

Center houses offices and facilities
of both the 648 Board and the G-J-M
Community Mental Health Center
Board. Tbe Nelsonville Altema ti ve
Facility has been, since December
17- when the 648 Board ordered the
takeover, from the Center, of the
building and its operation-under the
authority of the 648 Board.
Plummer reaffinned .an earlier
statement that she was unconcerned
about the county board's action.
"I feel very comfortable that we
shall remain in the buildings," the
executive director said.
"The county is required to supply
mental health services in the

e

Total Head'387
Trends : Feeder cattle 1.00 to 4.00

CLASSES OFFERED
MASON - Multi-media first aid
and CPR classes will be held at the
Mason, W. Va., rescue building. The
eight hour first aid class will be two
evenings a week from 6 to 10:30 p.m.
on Monday, Jan. 28,- and Friday,
Feb. 1. The CPR classes will be the
following week from 6 to 10:30 p.m.
on Monday, Feb. 4, and Friday, Feb.

"I think it is involving politics to
interfere when they take such steps
without consulting either board affected by their action," 648 Board
Executive Director Maxine S. Plwnmer said Wednesday.
"I can't see any reason for such an
action except politics," she continued.
Tuesday evening's motion by the
county board concerns two facilities
owned by Gallia County-the Community Mental ijealth Center,
located on Jackson Pike, and the
Nelsonville Alternative Residential
Facility on SR 160.
The Community Mental Health

:

WE'll MAKE YOUR WATCH
RUN LIKE NEW

·

The Executive Director of the
Gallla-Jackson-Meigs
Mental
Health and Mental Retardation 648
Board has charged the Gallia County Board of Commissioners with
playing politics with the delivery of
mental health services in Gallia
County.
That claim came in reponse ·to a
Tuesday evening action by the county board directing the Prosecuting
Attorney to take, " ...whatever steps
neceSsary to evict the G-J-M 618
Board..." from the two county
owned buildings currently housing
mental health services in Gallia
County.

· "The Court in dismissing 'this ac- :
tion is not making any assessments ·,or evaluations of the merits of the ·:claims or defense of any of the par- .
ties named. Tbe Court is saying that . .:
the matters raised are not within the
specific grounds of jurisdiction .. :
made by the legislature." Judge
Bennett's opinion concluded.
.
Controversy surrounding the operation of that facility surf_aced on ·December 17 when the 648 Board
directed the takeover by 648 board
persoMel of the building and Its
operation.
Beginning the day following that ·
action, Center employes were reportedly told by 648 administrators that .
if they wished to retain their jobs at
the children's facility they would
have to resign from the Center and
be hired by the 648 Board. The Cen: ,
ter reportedly encouraged Its em- :
ployes not to resign.
'"

64 oz. Tropical

ORANGE JUICE .................... s1.59

Mrs. Plummer charges county playing
•
politics with mental health services

CORRECTION
The Meigs County Boatd of Elections repo~ that the position of
county auditor was erroneously
listed as a county post which will be
open this year. 1\ctually, the county
auditor's post, held by Howard
Frank, R., will not be opening until
the 1982 elections.

' "\,

to Ohio once again.
Additional snow accwnulations
are expected to range from 2 to 4 inches in northern Ohio to 2 to 3 inches
in the southern part of the state by
tonight. Snow will fall again on.
Friday in most of Ohio except the extreme south, where there will be
rain.
Temperatures will be in the 20s
today and drop into the teens to low
20s tonight. Temperatures Friday
will be only slightly warmer, with
highs ranging from the mid 20s to
the low 30s in northern Ohio to near
40 in the extreme south.
.
Snow continued across northeast
Ohio during the night as west to northwest winda picked up moisture
from Lake Erie and dt!tJOSited It as
snow. However, tht! primary
snowbelt did not get as much snow
as some ofthe southern suburbs of
Cleveland.
The snowfaU early this morning in :
Ashtabula County ranged from 2 to 3
inches in the northern part of the
county to 4 to 5 inches in the south.
Chardon had 4 inches and there
were six to eight inches in southern
Geauga County. At ClevelandHopkins Airport, 7 inches had fallen ·
by5a.m.
.
Skies this morning' were mosUy ·
clear in northern OJ!lo and have been :
the same way during must of the
night In the rest of the state. Tbl.s
caused earlY. morning temperatures ·
to drop. They ranged from 2 degre_es
at Mansfield to 16 at Cincinnati.
.
The· temperature reached 4 ; .
degrees at Cleveland early . today,'
This Is the coldest It has been there
this winter.

�2-Tbe Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Jan. 24, 1980

.

Advisers opposed to naming action 'Carter
WASIDNGTON (AP)- With transparent modesty , some of President
Carter's closest advisers are
suggesting it not be called the "Car·
ter Doctrine.''
But, tn this Madison Avenue age,
the package of strategies, military

prepared at the White House will
inevitably be called that - and com·
pared to the Truman Doctrine.
Tbe goal is the same - to dissuade
the Soviets from expanding beyond
their spheres of influence. This time
the focus is the oil-rich Persian Gulf.

postures and aid programs being

-------------------------------.

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l

.l Sentinel
i
J
Editorial !
~

I
I

I

I

I
I

L------------------------------Jimmy's Whitehouse
WASIDNGTON (AP) - Jirruny
Carter's Georgians harbor searing
memories of the War Between the
States and Union Gen. William
Tecumseh Shennan's scorchedearih march through Georgia is,
even now, a cause celebre.
This became evident after a fellow
White House habitue tried to play a
prank on press secretary Jody
Powell.
Displayed prominently near
Powell's desk is a framed montage
of portraits ri. "Leaders of the
Rebellion," headed by the president
of the confederacy, JefferSon Davis.
The prankster found a head-andshoulders likeness of the hated Sherman and surreptitiously pasted it
over the visage of the sainted Davis.
Two days later, Powell discovered
the alteration, ripped down the of·
fensive picture of Sherman and,
cussing mightily, consigned it to the
roaring names in his office
fireplace.
What's more, Powell announced
he would keep his office locked
during future absences so there
could be no further acts of
desecration.
On the morning after Carter's big
win in Iowa, presidential consultant
Gerald Rafshoon was greeted at the

Wolf Pen
News Notes

White House by an acquaintance
who shouted resigned President
Richard M. Nixon's 1972 campaign
slogan, ''Four More Years!."
AI Eisele, press secretary to Vice
President Walter F. Mondale, Interrupted with. a shout of "Twelve
More Years!''
·
Want to know the headlines you'll
be reading in March'

Although most of us might be
hesitant to predict such things, the
White House last week announced
that Helmut Schmidt, the chancellor
of West Gennany, will visit Carter
on March 5 to discuss, among other
things, "the cogtinuing crisis tn

Iran.''
Soon afterward, Jerrold Schecter,
who is press secretary for the
National Security Council staff,
sought out reporters and urged them
to disregard the reference to Iran.
A substitute announcement later
was prepared and distributed.
Obviously, gremltns get into the
prose-producing machinery at the
White House from time to time.
Another example:
When Carter sent Congress a written State of the Union message Monday, the document referred to the
Camp David, Md., Israeli-Egyptian
swrunit of August 1978.
Although the swrunit was one of
the landmark events of Carter's
presidency, the prose machine lu\d
him fo&lt;getting the proper tlate. It
was September 1978.

Pre-Christmas was enjoyed Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Charley D. Smith. Visitors were
Mrs. Iva Johnson, local, Mr. and
Mrs. Doyle Knapp, Kail, Charles
and Kevin, and Mr. and Mrs. Daniel
Attendance at the Free Methodist
Worley and Stacy of Daniels. Also
visiting w&lt;:re Mr. and Mrs. Roy Jan. 13 was 97. Choir members
Jresent was 13.
Smith of Rock Springs.
The film, The Uves She Has
Mr. ard Mrs. Paul McElroy were
Touched,
by Corrie Ten Boom, was
Christmas Eve visitors of Mr. and
shown Sunday evening at the local
Mrs. Bill McElroy and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul McElroy and church. A large crowd attended.
Mrs. Grace Richerson, Athens ,
family were Christmas dinner
Mrs.
Audera Hayes, Shade, Mr. and
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Bing
Mrs.
Pearl Gilkey visited recently
ardfamlly.
with
Mrs.
Della Stahl.
Iva Johnson was Christmas Day
Mrs.
Della
Curtis of Brown T,9wn
guest of Mr. and Mrs. Harley Johnspent
a
Sunday
with Ms. Bertha
soo, Tanuny, Cheryl, and Ten-Y.
Parker.
Also visiting was Jerry Holly.
Mrs. Mildred Bowen was hostess
Mrs. Jwnes Reeves, Mr. and Mrs.
Eugene Hanning, Rhonda and Thursday evening, Jan. 10. Seven
Rooald, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Elwn, members were present. RefreshBill and Carolyn, Mr. and Mrs. Paul ments were served. The February
Darnell, Jeff and Lester Frank were . meeting will be at the Riverboat
Christmas Day visitors of Mr and llP.staurant.
Attenc18nce a.. church serv1ce~
Mrs. Fred Tuckerman.
Sunday,
Jan. 20, was 93, choir memMr. and Mrs ..Charley Smith were
bers
present
15.
Christmas dinner guests of Mr. and
Tbe
funeral
of Mr. Ernest (Pill)
Mrs. Doyle Knapp, Kail, Charles
Powell
was
held
Sunday afternoon at
· ardKevin.
the
Free
Methodist
Church of which
1\fr. and Mrs. Guy Sargent and
he
was
a
member.
A large number
family were Christmas Day visitors
of
people
attended.
ocMr. and Mrs. Elmer Bailey.
Mr. and Mrs. Phil Wise of Beverly
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Murphy,
attended
services Sunday at tbe
Robbie, Valorie and Debbie, Mr. and
local church and attended the
Mrs. John Downs, Adam and Eric of
funeral
of Mr. Powell.
: Jacksonville, Mr. and Mrs. John E.
Mr.
and
Mrs. Roy Howell spent
· Murphy and Chris, Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Sunday
with
Mr. and Mrs. John
· Evans, were Christmas Day visitors
Douglas
of
Guysville.
d Mr and Mrs. John R. Murphy,
Mr. Ray Jane~ is a patient at
Peggy and Barbara.
Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
· Mr. ard Mrs. Robert Bailey wen
Ms.
Katy
Parker, Mrs. Ann
Christmas dinner guests of Mrs.
Colman
and
daughter,
Rosa, spent
Hall and family of Cheshire.
an
afternoon
in
Parkersburg
recen·
. Mr. and Mrs. Bailey, Mr. and Mrs.
tly
· Robert Bailey and Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Mash atMike Johnson were Christmas
tended the funeral of a relative tn
visitors of Mr. Robert Bailey.
Columbus.
: Myrtle Stalnaker and friend,
l&gt;hyllis Eiler of Glerdale, California
·were Christmas visitors of her
sister, Mr. ard Mrs. Maury Miller,
Jane, Sandi and Mary.
Today is Thursday, Jan. 24, the
Mrs. Charley Smith was ~-•daY.
24th day of 1980. There are 342 days
:afternoon visitor of Mrs. Iva John·
lefttntheyear.
:SOn.
Today' s highlight tn history:
• Helen Johnson is spending some
On Jan. 24, 1005, Sir Winston Chur·
with Mr. and Mrs. Lee Roush
chill, EngUsh statesman and war•ard fauiily of Pomeroy.
time prime minister, died at the age
Mrs. Robert Reed was a Wed· . of90.
nesday visitor of Mr. and Mrs. Guy
On this date :
Sargent and famlly.
In 1848, the men building a saw
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Russell and mill for' John Sutter near Coloma,
Jamlly were recent visitors of Mr. Calif., foimd a little gold nugget +
· and -Mrs. Robert Russell and other
and touched off the great gold rush.
: relatives.
ln 1966, an Alr India jetliner bound
• Bryan Reeves . of Chester was for New York crashed Into Europe's
weekend visitor of his grandmother, tallest mountain, Mont Blanc tn the
Dorothy Reeves.
Alps. All17 aboard were killed.
J

Laurel Cliff
News Notes

Today in history

:time

.

•

In his day, President Trwjlan
wanted to discourage a Soviet thrust
mto Greece, Turkey and Italy. He
succeeded, for reasons that can
never be certain.
The fact that the United States still
had a monopoly on the atom bomb
may have influenced the Soviets to
back off. Or the caution that often
guides Kremlin deciBions may have
made the difference.
In any event, with the doctrine,
Truman established the policy of
"containment." It quickly became
the domiilant Ingredient of U.S.
foreign policy and was applied
globally by succeeding administrations.
Now Jimmy Carter, responding to
the Soviet intervention into
Afghanistan and the political
season, is about to bring Truman's
doctrine of 1947 up to date tn a State
of the Union speech to Congress
tonight.
"The Soviet Union has built a war

Business
•
m:trror
NEW YORK (AP) - After watching the economy expand last year,
contrary to expectations of his
economic advisers, President Carter is hoping his luck might last a
while more.
111 doing so, however, he is conceding the administration's vision of
the economic future is blurred and
that maybe hope, rather than insight
or perhaps control of events, is the
beacon that guides it.
"In recent months the economy
has displayed much more strength
than earlier forecasts had predicted," the President announced in his
State of the Union message, a
preliminary to tonight's address to
Congress.
Therefore, he declared,
"Forecasts of impending recession
might .. . prove to be as wrong as

machine far beyond any reasonable
requirement for their own defense
and security," the president said
Monday, in a written Sta1e of the
Union message.
He said the United States is
prepared to "confront" any Soviet
threat. One of his top advisers, un·
derlining that clear warning, told
White House reporters, "When we
say we are prepared to use force to
defend our interests in that part of
the world, we mean it."
Times have changed since 1947.

.

3-The i:&gt;aily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Jan. 24, 1980

'

STANDINGS

Doct~Ine

Marauder varsity players

because with a change tn leaders,
the recipient state can shift abruptly
into the Soviet camp.
And above all else, there ill the fact
that Persian Gulf oil is the Ufeblood
of Western economies.
In shaping a modem containment
policy, Carter is boofJttng the Pentagon's budget and military aid to
Pakistan and Egypt, shopping
around fOt- military bases in Oman,
Kenya and Somalia, and speeding
development of a rapid deployment
force.

The Soviets have the bomb, too,
making the world a more dangerous

place.
Britain has retreated from the
region, leavillg the West without the
territorial footing to block Soviet expansion toward the Iranian oil fields
and gulf shipping lanes.
Reliable U.S. friends are few.
Radicalism ill on the rise among the
Arab countries, some of whom swit·
ch back and forth between the East
and West. Tbe U.S. is taking a risk
by sending in American anns

'V HA standings
Nahonilt Basketball Association

At A Glance
BV .The Auo.:iated Press

Eastern Conference
At A Glance
W . L.

Ph i lade lp hia
Boston

New York

2

Tim Faulk

PRICE
PRICE
PRICE
PRICE

~,Sr.

&amp;-1, Jr.

Meigs Jaycees to sponsor

.740
.700
.640
.500
.471
.306

2
5
12
13'1&gt;

21'1'

Thursday's Games

Los Angeles at Portland

Kansas City at Utah

san Diego at 1ndiana

boxing program January 26

105 SUITS ........ ....... ...... .. ................... '84.00
SUITS ;~ ....................................... '108.00

175 SUITS. ..... .. ............................. ....'140.00
1
195 SUITS .............................. , ......... '156.00
1
'168.00
210 suITS.
1
285 SUITS .••...•......•..•...•..••.•••••••••••. '228.00

..

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

Enti_r.e Stock of Men's

SPORT COATS REDUCED 25% .
FINf FU~NISHINGS &amp;SPORTSWEAR
ENnRE STOCK
Dress Shirts Reduced .................................. 25%
Topcoats - All Weather Coats Reduced ..............25%
Dress Slacks Reduced ........................ 20 'Y· • 25%
Outerwear (Leather Coats included) Reduced.. 25% - 25
GROUP OF MEN'S
Sweaters Reduced .............................. ... ...... 25%
Ladies' Wear Reduced
(At Thomas Crothiers Only) .............. % • % OFF .
Dress Hats ..••.•••• ~ ••.••.•..•.•.•••... •••......••.••...• 25%

Sport Shirts Reduced .. ........ -.............. 20% - 50%

SUPER VALUES
Levi's Casual Slacks Polyester or Corduroy Reduced ................. -............ 25%
Large Group Men's Sweaters .................... ........ ............. ............ % PRICE
Samsonite Luggage 'Reduced ............... ! . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20%
Large Group Men's Dress Shirts ........................................ :........ % PRICE
All Men's Jogging Suits Reduced (Lar~e Size Only).................................. 50%
All Florsheim Shoes Reduced .......................................................... 20%

Saturday, Jan. 26, tn the Larry
Morrison gym at Meigs High School,

Landry wants to
win NFL Pro Bowl
HONOLULU (AP) -He spent a
year aiming for the Super Bowl and
landed two victories and 2,500 miles
off target. But the Pro Bowl is still a
football game and that's what keeps
Tom Landry's juices flowing.
"I enjoy coaching and being with
outstanding athletes. That's really a
treat for a coach - gotng out and
watching the best there is in
professional football, getting to
know them better, having a better
,understanding of each player," Landry said.
Landry's Dallas Cowboys were
almost everyone's pick to return to
last Sunday's Super Bowl as the
National Conference champions.
But they were shot down by Los
Angeles in their first playoff gwne
and Landry was detoured from
Pasadena, CaUl., to Hawaii.
"Well, if you have to do something
after losing out on the Super Bowl,
this is just about as good a thing to
do as anything," Landry said Wednesday before putting the NFC stars
through another light workout for
Sunday's game against the
American Conference.
Preparing for this game is vastly
different than preparing for any
Cowboys game, of course. No flex
defense. No multiple-set offense.
" Basically, you have to make it
fairly simple because you have less
than a week together and you work
ordy an hour or two on the field each
day," Landry said. " The most difficult thing is eliminating the numbers so you don't have confusion
among players from different
teams. You do everything with basic
descriptions.
·
uvou know, 'Anderson run right,'
or 'screen pass left,' so everybody
won't get milled up by numbers,"
Landry added.
The Anderson he referred to is Ot·
tis Anderson, the sensational rookie
running back of the St. Louis Car·
dinals who rolled up huge chunks of
yardage in each of his games against the Cowboys in 1979. Being able to
coach ·him once, Landry said, won't
help him to slow down Anderson
next season.
"I don't think you can defense that
much talent," Landry said.
"Besides, I already know how good
he is, but knowing It and doing
something about it are two different
things."
It's Landry's fifth Pro Bowl and
his first since 1974. His counterpart
with the AFC, Don Coryell of the San
. Diego Chargers, ill making his Pro
Bowl coaching debut.
Landry was a winner tn his first
one, before the American Football
0

League became (along with
Baltimore, Cleveland and Pittsburgh) the American Conference.
Before 1971 it was East vs. West tn
the NFL and, in 1967, Landry's
Eastern stars defeated George
Allen's tewn 20-10. Two years later
Allen reversed the outcome as the
West beat Landry's squad Ul-7.

ThreeSVAC
games slated
this Friday

Hannan Trace

0 10 474 661

. SVACONLY
Southern
6 9 -459 308
Southwestern
4 1 263 264
Eastern
3 3 381 329
North Gallia
2 3 317 347
Kyger creek
1 4 221 307
Hannan Trace
0 5 251 336
SVAC RESERVES
Southern
6 0 354 2-45
North Galli a
4 1 248 217
Kyger Creek
3 2 208 182
Eastern
3 3 221 209
Hannap Trace
0 5 196 256
Southwestern
0 5 U7 253
Thl•
week 's
games:
Friday Kyger Creek at
Eastern; North Gallla at Hannan

Trace

and

Southern

FOR THE BEST DeALS IN THE
TRI .STAT.E AREA

MASON FURNITURE
Mon ., Tues.,-wed.; Friday -&amp; sat.
8:30 to 5: oo Thursday till12 Noon

OPEN EVfNINGS BY APPOINTMENT ONLY.
Herman Grate
773-5592
I~

at

Southwestern .
Saturday - Portsmouth N.D. at
KC.

SHOP

STOCK.

Carl Hysell ann9unced Friday.
On hand for the event wilf be area
youth along with young men from
Glouster, Chillieothe and Belpre
Boxing Clubs. The youths' ages in·
valved range from 8 to 25 years.
Thirty trophies have been made
available, courtesy of the Meig!r
Gallla chapter of the F.O.P. Also
each participant will receive a 1.,.
Inch boxing medallion and ribbon.
Three sportsmanship medallions
and ribbons will be awarded for
sportsmanship.
Officiating the bouts will be Sam
Jones of Glouster, who is well known
for working with youth and boxing
programs.
Judges will be Dr. Dayo and Tom
Woods, both from Middleport, the
third judge will be from Glouster.
Announcing the program will be
Jeff Daniels from WMPO radio.
Ringside physician will be Dr.
James Conde to handle any medical
needs.
Also volunteering services will be
members of the Meigs Emergency
Medical Service and Sheriff James '
Proffitt's offices.
After the progrwn, all youths involved with the boxing progrwn will
receive a free meal ticket at the
Burger Chef, courtesy of the Meigs
Jaycees.
There have been many donations
received, both ftnancia) and time, to
present this progrwn, which is expected to be a big event.
Ringside tickets can be obtained
from Jaycee members. General and
student tickets will be sold at the
gate.

Detroit at New Jersey

Kansas City at Chicago

Seattle at San Antonio

MiJwaukee at Phoenix
New York at Golden Slate
Ph i!adelphia at Los Angeles
Ohio High School Basketball
By :rhe Associated Press
Wednesday's Results

Cleve. Adams 58, Cleve. Kennedy 56
Cleve. East 56, Cleve. Hayes 51
Cleve. E. Tech 71, Cleve. Rhodes i69
Cleve. Glenville 46, Cleve. W. TEch
34
Cleve. Lincoln-West 75, Cleve. Hay

Mason, W.Va.

.,

Messengale ready for
$250,000 tournament
SAN DIEGO, Calif. (AP l - A
small correction in his swing has
given Rik Massengale a new lease
on his golfing life.
"I'm loving it," said Massengale,
once one of the game's more
promising young players liut a
struggling scrambler for 21'.!years.
"I haven't hit a duck hook in two
weeks ," he said before teeing off
today in the first round of the
$250,000 Andy Williams-San Diego
Open golf tournament. He smiled
and repeated a golfing axiom:
"It's a lot easier to play out of the
fairways than over there on the
wrong side of the (ga llery control)
ropes."
In 1975, Massengale won one tournament a season and averaged better than $100,000 a year for three
consecutive seasons.
Then it all went bad.
In the last two years he won a total
of $29,000. The quiet, pleasant
Massengale drifted back into the
ranks of the Monday morning
quaUfiers. His game was in tatters
and his career in jeopardy . Last
year he won only $13,000. His stroke
average was a high 73.7. He made
money in ordy II of 31 starts.
. "I put the clubs away for five

weeks Ial the end of last season ).:·
Massengale 'aid. Then, starting t~
1980 campaign, hr got a littl e tip
from teaching p.-o Ernie Vossler .
" I had the clubface dosed at the
top of the backswing," Massengale
said. "I was pull-hooking or duckhooking everything. Now, I'm juSt
trying to concentrate on keeping it
open at the top , and I haven't hit a
hook in two weeks."
His refound swing and building
confidence + bolstered by a second·
place finish last week in Phoenix
that produced a $32,000 check, more
than he'd made in the two previotL'
years - made him one of the leading
candidates for the $45,000 first prize
in this, the third tournament of the
season.

Other major contentlers in the 156man field were Tom Watson, threetinle Player of the Year who is
opening his season here; PGA
champ David Graham; Fuzzy
ZoeUer, ti1e Masters champion who
won his first title in this tournament
a year ago; Lon Hinkle; Andy Bean;
tw&lt;&gt;-tlme San Di ego winner J.C.
Snead; John Mahaffey; Jerry Pate
and Ben Crensha w.
The la,t lwo rounds will 00
televised nationally by CBS.

66
Cleve. Marshall 69, Cleve. South 60

Cleve. Univers ity 74, lake Ri dge

Acad . 34
Copley 67, Akron Coventry 65
Hudson 96, Medina Highland 60
Norton 96, Greensburg Green

Revere 78, Field 41

7~

Hockey standings
National Hockey League

At A Glance
By The Associated Press
Campbell Conference
Patrick Division

Philadelphia
NY Rangers
NY Islanders
Atlanta
Washington

w 1 t p
31 3 12 74
21 19 8 54
2~ 17 6 so
19 21 6 44
12 27 7 31

Smy1he Division

Chicago
St. ~o uls
Vancouver
Edmonton
Colorado
Winnipeg

18 18 12 .,
19 21 7 -45
15 25 8 38
13 23 10 36
13 28 5 31
13 31 5 31

gf
195
192
162
154
144

ga
136
179

130
145
151
158
146
125

1-16
154
169
197
180
195

179

145
160

Three league games are scheduled
Friday night in the Southern Valley
Wales Conference
Athletic Conference where
Adams Division
Southern, the 19'19 defending chamBuffalo
29 12 6 64 177 129
Boston
27 12 6 60 174 125
ps, continue to lead the pack with a
Minnesota
22 14 8 52 183 138
1().1 record overall and 6-0 league
Quebec
19 21 6 44 143 157
mark.
Toronto
19 2~ 4 42 166 182
Norris Division
Friday night, Southern plays at
Montreal
24 17 6 54 178 152
second place Southwestern; Kyger
Los Angeles
20 17 8 48 189 174
Creek visits Eastern and Norih
Pillsburgh
18 17 11 47 158 164
Gallia is at Hannan Trace.
Detroit
17 21 7 41 153 151
Harflord
13 20 10 36 147 158
Saturday night, Portsmouth Notre
Wednesday's Games
Dame is at Kyger Creek.
New York Islanders 5 Detroit 3
Based upon statistics through Jan.
Quebec 6 Minnesota 4
Phi ladelphia·• Chicago 1
12, Southern's Jack Duffy was the
Edmonton
4 Pittsburgh 3
Dave
Diles,
ABC
sportscaster,
will
SVAC's top point-maker with 18.6
New York Rangers 6 Vancouver 4
present
awards.
points. Others in the top five are
Thursday's Games
Buffalo at Boston
Southwestern's Dale Newberry with
'::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:
Montreal vs. Hartford at
a 16.8 average; Mark Miller, North
Springfield, Mass.
AUCI'ION MONDAY
Gallia, 15.8 average; Gene Cole,
Pmsburgh at Colorado
The anoual Izaak Walton
Toronto at Los Ange les
Eastern, 15.4 points and Brian
Friday's Games
League aucUon will be held lhls
Bissell, Eastern, 14 points per outing
Chicago
at Atlanta
Monday. beglnniDg at 7 with a
in league competition.
Philadelphia at Winnipeg
poilucl diDDer. Members aud
Southern continues to be the
the~ wlv~ wre uted to ~
area's top offensive club with 815
something
to auction aud table
points in 11 games 74.1 average .
service
for
the meal. 'lbere will
Defensively, Southern has permitted
WEST
also
be
some
very Important
54.3 points, not the top but one of the
No. Colorado 68, Denver 6.4
business maUen d!Bcussed, aud
best in the area.
San Francisco 90, San Diego 76
Seattle u . 92, Santa Clara 73
every
member Is uted to attend.
SVAC STANDINGS
So. Colorado 87, Adams St. 77
ALL GAMES
.:;:;:::;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::::::::::::::.
TEAM
W L P OP
Southern
10 1 815 597 r--------------------------""1
Southwestern
S 5 577 613 ·
Kyger Creek
6 7 670 719
North Gallia
5 8 737 835
Eastern
4 9 767 810

MASON FURNITURE

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

13
15
8
27
27
34

Friday's Games

1

E

37
35
32
27
24
15

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.354 12
.327 14
.314 ]41; ,

New Jersey at washington

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Washington at Boston

&amp; MARX - JOHNNY CARSON
PALM BEACH - SEWELL SUITS

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17
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16

Seattle 98, Atlanta 96
Boston 131, Detroit 104
Houston 111, San Diego 110. 2 OT
san Antonio 144, Indiana 130
New Jersey 117, Cleveland 103
Philadelphia 118, Denver93
New York 119, Phoenix 109
Milwaukee 104, Golden State 102

Todd Snowden

6-0, Sr.

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Phoenix
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Detroit
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previous ones."
:rhey might, but Albert Cox, a former presidential economic adviser
who no heads Merrill Lynch
Economics Inc., a relative of the big
brokerage firm, has just raised the
odds on a "major downturn" to 75
percent.
While, like Carter, that still leaves
Cox wit)) hope !hat one mightn't oocur, it · is rare for economic
forecasters to corrunit themselves so
strongly. Remember, survival dictates thai they learn double-speak.
Cox foresees "a steep drop" tn
economic activity beginning soon, if
not already, and persisting into the
third or July-August-september
quarter. It would be followed by
"modest" recovery later tn the
year."Look for declines tn conswner
spending and inventory liquidation
to trigger production curtallments
across most major Industries," Cox
and his · associates say in their
"Planning Report" for business
clients.
"Business spending on plant and
equipment in real tenns would fall,
housing starts would reach a second
quartllr low of 1.1. million units, and
corporate profits would sag," if the
scenario is played out.
In his message, President Carter
stated that so long as double-digit In·
flation continues and a recession
doesn't appear, his top priority
would be on "reduction of the
deficit" rather than a tax cut.
Many economists place little
credence in such statements.
Having seen huge budget deficits
persists \Jiroughout a prolonged expansion, they wonder why and how
deficits can be reduced as the
economy weakens. And they see a
tax cut as too alluring to forego tn an
election year.
Cox is among them. The Merrill
Lynch forecast "asswnes a tax cut
in the third quarter and some
automatic escalation in federal
spending."
Almost all economists are hedging
their bets to some extent. Many of
them foresee the posS.ibility of
stagflation, a word which describes
an economy that limps and stumbles
but never falls for any length of
time.

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�2-Tbe Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Jan. 24, 1980

.

Advisers opposed to naming action 'Carter
WASIDNGTON (AP)- With transparent modesty , some of President
Carter's closest advisers are
suggesting it not be called the "Car·
ter Doctrine.''
But, tn this Madison Avenue age,
the package of strategies, military

prepared at the White House will
inevitably be called that - and com·
pared to the Truman Doctrine.
Tbe goal is the same - to dissuade
the Soviets from expanding beyond
their spheres of influence. This time
the focus is the oil-rich Persian Gulf.

postures and aid programs being

-------------------------------.

I

I

l

.l Sentinel
i
J
Editorial !
~

I
I

I

I

I
I

L------------------------------Jimmy's Whitehouse
WASIDNGTON (AP) - Jirruny
Carter's Georgians harbor searing
memories of the War Between the
States and Union Gen. William
Tecumseh Shennan's scorchedearih march through Georgia is,
even now, a cause celebre.
This became evident after a fellow
White House habitue tried to play a
prank on press secretary Jody
Powell.
Displayed prominently near
Powell's desk is a framed montage
of portraits ri. "Leaders of the
Rebellion," headed by the president
of the confederacy, JefferSon Davis.
The prankster found a head-andshoulders likeness of the hated Sherman and surreptitiously pasted it
over the visage of the sainted Davis.
Two days later, Powell discovered
the alteration, ripped down the of·
fensive picture of Sherman and,
cussing mightily, consigned it to the
roaring names in his office
fireplace.
What's more, Powell announced
he would keep his office locked
during future absences so there
could be no further acts of
desecration.
On the morning after Carter's big
win in Iowa, presidential consultant
Gerald Rafshoon was greeted at the

Wolf Pen
News Notes

White House by an acquaintance
who shouted resigned President
Richard M. Nixon's 1972 campaign
slogan, ''Four More Years!."
AI Eisele, press secretary to Vice
President Walter F. Mondale, Interrupted with. a shout of "Twelve
More Years!''
·
Want to know the headlines you'll
be reading in March'

Although most of us might be
hesitant to predict such things, the
White House last week announced
that Helmut Schmidt, the chancellor
of West Gennany, will visit Carter
on March 5 to discuss, among other
things, "the cogtinuing crisis tn

Iran.''
Soon afterward, Jerrold Schecter,
who is press secretary for the
National Security Council staff,
sought out reporters and urged them
to disregard the reference to Iran.
A substitute announcement later
was prepared and distributed.
Obviously, gremltns get into the
prose-producing machinery at the
White House from time to time.
Another example:
When Carter sent Congress a written State of the Union message Monday, the document referred to the
Camp David, Md., Israeli-Egyptian
swrunit of August 1978.
Although the swrunit was one of
the landmark events of Carter's
presidency, the prose machine lu\d
him fo&lt;getting the proper tlate. It
was September 1978.

Pre-Christmas was enjoyed Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Charley D. Smith. Visitors were
Mrs. Iva Johnson, local, Mr. and
Mrs. Doyle Knapp, Kail, Charles
and Kevin, and Mr. and Mrs. Daniel
Attendance at the Free Methodist
Worley and Stacy of Daniels. Also
visiting w&lt;:re Mr. and Mrs. Roy Jan. 13 was 97. Choir members
Jresent was 13.
Smith of Rock Springs.
The film, The Uves She Has
Mr. ard Mrs. Paul McElroy were
Touched,
by Corrie Ten Boom, was
Christmas Eve visitors of Mr. and
shown Sunday evening at the local
Mrs. Bill McElroy and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul McElroy and church. A large crowd attended.
Mrs. Grace Richerson, Athens ,
family were Christmas dinner
Mrs.
Audera Hayes, Shade, Mr. and
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Bing
Mrs.
Pearl Gilkey visited recently
ardfamlly.
with
Mrs.
Della Stahl.
Iva Johnson was Christmas Day
Mrs.
Della
Curtis of Brown T,9wn
guest of Mr. and Mrs. Harley Johnspent
a
Sunday
with Ms. Bertha
soo, Tanuny, Cheryl, and Ten-Y.
Parker.
Also visiting was Jerry Holly.
Mrs. Mildred Bowen was hostess
Mrs. Jwnes Reeves, Mr. and Mrs.
Eugene Hanning, Rhonda and Thursday evening, Jan. 10. Seven
Rooald, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Elwn, members were present. RefreshBill and Carolyn, Mr. and Mrs. Paul ments were served. The February
Darnell, Jeff and Lester Frank were . meeting will be at the Riverboat
Christmas Day visitors of Mr and llP.staurant.
Attenc18nce a.. church serv1ce~
Mrs. Fred Tuckerman.
Sunday,
Jan. 20, was 93, choir memMr. and Mrs ..Charley Smith were
bers
present
15.
Christmas dinner guests of Mr. and
Tbe
funeral
of Mr. Ernest (Pill)
Mrs. Doyle Knapp, Kail, Charles
Powell
was
held
Sunday afternoon at
· ardKevin.
the
Free
Methodist
Church of which
1\fr. and Mrs. Guy Sargent and
he
was
a
member.
A large number
family were Christmas Day visitors
of
people
attended.
ocMr. and Mrs. Elmer Bailey.
Mr. and Mrs. Phil Wise of Beverly
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Murphy,
attended
services Sunday at tbe
Robbie, Valorie and Debbie, Mr. and
local church and attended the
Mrs. John Downs, Adam and Eric of
funeral
of Mr. Powell.
: Jacksonville, Mr. and Mrs. John E.
Mr.
and
Mrs. Roy Howell spent
· Murphy and Chris, Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Sunday
with
Mr. and Mrs. John
· Evans, were Christmas Day visitors
Douglas
of
Guysville.
d Mr and Mrs. John R. Murphy,
Mr. Ray Jane~ is a patient at
Peggy and Barbara.
Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
· Mr. ard Mrs. Robert Bailey wen
Ms.
Katy
Parker, Mrs. Ann
Christmas dinner guests of Mrs.
Colman
and
daughter,
Rosa, spent
Hall and family of Cheshire.
an
afternoon
in
Parkersburg
recen·
. Mr. and Mrs. Bailey, Mr. and Mrs.
tly
· Robert Bailey and Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Mash atMike Johnson were Christmas
tended the funeral of a relative tn
visitors of Mr. Robert Bailey.
Columbus.
: Myrtle Stalnaker and friend,
l&gt;hyllis Eiler of Glerdale, California
·were Christmas visitors of her
sister, Mr. ard Mrs. Maury Miller,
Jane, Sandi and Mary.
Today is Thursday, Jan. 24, the
Mrs. Charley Smith was ~-•daY.
24th day of 1980. There are 342 days
:afternoon visitor of Mrs. Iva John·
lefttntheyear.
:SOn.
Today' s highlight tn history:
• Helen Johnson is spending some
On Jan. 24, 1005, Sir Winston Chur·
with Mr. and Mrs. Lee Roush
chill, EngUsh statesman and war•ard fauiily of Pomeroy.
time prime minister, died at the age
Mrs. Robert Reed was a Wed· . of90.
nesday visitor of Mr. and Mrs. Guy
On this date :
Sargent and famlly.
In 1848, the men building a saw
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Russell and mill for' John Sutter near Coloma,
Jamlly were recent visitors of Mr. Calif., foimd a little gold nugget +
· and -Mrs. Robert Russell and other
and touched off the great gold rush.
: relatives.
ln 1966, an Alr India jetliner bound
• Bryan Reeves . of Chester was for New York crashed Into Europe's
weekend visitor of his grandmother, tallest mountain, Mont Blanc tn the
Dorothy Reeves.
Alps. All17 aboard were killed.
J

Laurel Cliff
News Notes

Today in history

:time

.

•

In his day, President Trwjlan
wanted to discourage a Soviet thrust
mto Greece, Turkey and Italy. He
succeeded, for reasons that can
never be certain.
The fact that the United States still
had a monopoly on the atom bomb
may have influenced the Soviets to
back off. Or the caution that often
guides Kremlin deciBions may have
made the difference.
In any event, with the doctrine,
Truman established the policy of
"containment." It quickly became
the domiilant Ingredient of U.S.
foreign policy and was applied
globally by succeeding administrations.
Now Jimmy Carter, responding to
the Soviet intervention into
Afghanistan and the political
season, is about to bring Truman's
doctrine of 1947 up to date tn a State
of the Union speech to Congress
tonight.
"The Soviet Union has built a war

Business
•
m:trror
NEW YORK (AP) - After watching the economy expand last year,
contrary to expectations of his
economic advisers, President Carter is hoping his luck might last a
while more.
111 doing so, however, he is conceding the administration's vision of
the economic future is blurred and
that maybe hope, rather than insight
or perhaps control of events, is the
beacon that guides it.
"In recent months the economy
has displayed much more strength
than earlier forecasts had predicted," the President announced in his
State of the Union message, a
preliminary to tonight's address to
Congress.
Therefore, he declared,
"Forecasts of impending recession
might .. . prove to be as wrong as

machine far beyond any reasonable
requirement for their own defense
and security," the president said
Monday, in a written Sta1e of the
Union message.
He said the United States is
prepared to "confront" any Soviet
threat. One of his top advisers, un·
derlining that clear warning, told
White House reporters, "When we
say we are prepared to use force to
defend our interests in that part of
the world, we mean it."
Times have changed since 1947.

.

3-The i:&gt;aily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Jan. 24, 1980

'

STANDINGS

Doct~Ine

Marauder varsity players

because with a change tn leaders,
the recipient state can shift abruptly
into the Soviet camp.
And above all else, there ill the fact
that Persian Gulf oil is the Ufeblood
of Western economies.
In shaping a modem containment
policy, Carter is boofJttng the Pentagon's budget and military aid to
Pakistan and Egypt, shopping
around fOt- military bases in Oman,
Kenya and Somalia, and speeding
development of a rapid deployment
force.

The Soviets have the bomb, too,
making the world a more dangerous

place.
Britain has retreated from the
region, leavillg the West without the
territorial footing to block Soviet expansion toward the Iranian oil fields
and gulf shipping lanes.
Reliable U.S. friends are few.
Radicalism ill on the rise among the
Arab countries, some of whom swit·
ch back and forth between the East
and West. Tbe U.S. is taking a risk
by sending in American anns

'V HA standings
Nahonilt Basketball Association

At A Glance
BV .The Auo.:iated Press

Eastern Conference
At A Glance
W . L.

Ph i lade lp hia
Boston

New York

2

Tim Faulk

PRICE
PRICE
PRICE
PRICE

~,Sr.

&amp;-1, Jr.

Meigs Jaycees to sponsor

.740
.700
.640
.500
.471
.306

2
5
12
13'1&gt;

21'1'

Thursday's Games

Los Angeles at Portland

Kansas City at Utah

san Diego at 1ndiana

boxing program January 26

105 SUITS ........ ....... ...... .. ................... '84.00
SUITS ;~ ....................................... '108.00

175 SUITS. ..... .. ............................. ....'140.00
1
195 SUITS .............................. , ......... '156.00
1
'168.00
210 suITS.
1
285 SUITS .••...•......•..•...•..••.•••••••••••. '228.00

..

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

Enti_r.e Stock of Men's

SPORT COATS REDUCED 25% .
FINf FU~NISHINGS &amp;SPORTSWEAR
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Dress Shirts Reduced .................................. 25%
Topcoats - All Weather Coats Reduced ..............25%
Dress Slacks Reduced ........................ 20 'Y· • 25%
Outerwear (Leather Coats included) Reduced.. 25% - 25
GROUP OF MEN'S
Sweaters Reduced .............................. ... ...... 25%
Ladies' Wear Reduced
(At Thomas Crothiers Only) .............. % • % OFF .
Dress Hats ..••.•••• ~ ••.••.•..•.•.•••... •••......••.••...• 25%

Sport Shirts Reduced .. ........ -.............. 20% - 50%

SUPER VALUES
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Large Group Men's Sweaters .................... ........ ............. ............ % PRICE
Samsonite Luggage 'Reduced ............... ! . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20%
Large Group Men's Dress Shirts ........................................ :........ % PRICE
All Men's Jogging Suits Reduced (Lar~e Size Only).................................. 50%
All Florsheim Shoes Reduced .......................................................... 20%

Saturday, Jan. 26, tn the Larry
Morrison gym at Meigs High School,

Landry wants to
win NFL Pro Bowl
HONOLULU (AP) -He spent a
year aiming for the Super Bowl and
landed two victories and 2,500 miles
off target. But the Pro Bowl is still a
football game and that's what keeps
Tom Landry's juices flowing.
"I enjoy coaching and being with
outstanding athletes. That's really a
treat for a coach - gotng out and
watching the best there is in
professional football, getting to
know them better, having a better
,understanding of each player," Landry said.
Landry's Dallas Cowboys were
almost everyone's pick to return to
last Sunday's Super Bowl as the
National Conference champions.
But they were shot down by Los
Angeles in their first playoff gwne
and Landry was detoured from
Pasadena, CaUl., to Hawaii.
"Well, if you have to do something
after losing out on the Super Bowl,
this is just about as good a thing to
do as anything," Landry said Wednesday before putting the NFC stars
through another light workout for
Sunday's game against the
American Conference.
Preparing for this game is vastly
different than preparing for any
Cowboys game, of course. No flex
defense. No multiple-set offense.
" Basically, you have to make it
fairly simple because you have less
than a week together and you work
ordy an hour or two on the field each
day," Landry said. " The most difficult thing is eliminating the numbers so you don't have confusion
among players from different
teams. You do everything with basic
descriptions.
·
uvou know, 'Anderson run right,'
or 'screen pass left,' so everybody
won't get milled up by numbers,"
Landry added.
The Anderson he referred to is Ot·
tis Anderson, the sensational rookie
running back of the St. Louis Car·
dinals who rolled up huge chunks of
yardage in each of his games against the Cowboys in 1979. Being able to
coach ·him once, Landry said, won't
help him to slow down Anderson
next season.
"I don't think you can defense that
much talent," Landry said.
"Besides, I already know how good
he is, but knowing It and doing
something about it are two different
things."
It's Landry's fifth Pro Bowl and
his first since 1974. His counterpart
with the AFC, Don Coryell of the San
. Diego Chargers, ill making his Pro
Bowl coaching debut.
Landry was a winner tn his first
one, before the American Football
0

League became (along with
Baltimore, Cleveland and Pittsburgh) the American Conference.
Before 1971 it was East vs. West tn
the NFL and, in 1967, Landry's
Eastern stars defeated George
Allen's tewn 20-10. Two years later
Allen reversed the outcome as the
West beat Landry's squad Ul-7.

ThreeSVAC
games slated
this Friday

Hannan Trace

0 10 474 661

. SVACONLY
Southern
6 9 -459 308
Southwestern
4 1 263 264
Eastern
3 3 381 329
North Gallia
2 3 317 347
Kyger creek
1 4 221 307
Hannan Trace
0 5 251 336
SVAC RESERVES
Southern
6 0 354 2-45
North Galli a
4 1 248 217
Kyger Creek
3 2 208 182
Eastern
3 3 221 209
Hannap Trace
0 5 196 256
Southwestern
0 5 U7 253
Thl•
week 's
games:
Friday Kyger Creek at
Eastern; North Gallla at Hannan

Trace

and

Southern

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MASON FURNITURE
Mon ., Tues.,-wed.; Friday -&amp; sat.
8:30 to 5: oo Thursday till12 Noon

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Carl Hysell ann9unced Friday.
On hand for the event wilf be area
youth along with young men from
Glouster, Chillieothe and Belpre
Boxing Clubs. The youths' ages in·
valved range from 8 to 25 years.
Thirty trophies have been made
available, courtesy of the Meig!r
Gallla chapter of the F.O.P. Also
each participant will receive a 1.,.
Inch boxing medallion and ribbon.
Three sportsmanship medallions
and ribbons will be awarded for
sportsmanship.
Officiating the bouts will be Sam
Jones of Glouster, who is well known
for working with youth and boxing
programs.
Judges will be Dr. Dayo and Tom
Woods, both from Middleport, the
third judge will be from Glouster.
Announcing the program will be
Jeff Daniels from WMPO radio.
Ringside physician will be Dr.
James Conde to handle any medical
needs.
Also volunteering services will be
members of the Meigs Emergency
Medical Service and Sheriff James '
Proffitt's offices.
After the progrwn, all youths involved with the boxing progrwn will
receive a free meal ticket at the
Burger Chef, courtesy of the Meigs
Jaycees.
There have been many donations
received, both ftnancia) and time, to
present this progrwn, which is expected to be a big event.
Ringside tickets can be obtained
from Jaycee members. General and
student tickets will be sold at the
gate.

Detroit at New Jersey

Kansas City at Chicago

Seattle at San Antonio

MiJwaukee at Phoenix
New York at Golden Slate
Ph i!adelphia at Los Angeles
Ohio High School Basketball
By :rhe Associated Press
Wednesday's Results

Cleve. Adams 58, Cleve. Kennedy 56
Cleve. East 56, Cleve. Hayes 51
Cleve. E. Tech 71, Cleve. Rhodes i69
Cleve. Glenville 46, Cleve. W. TEch
34
Cleve. Lincoln-West 75, Cleve. Hay

Mason, W.Va.

.,

Messengale ready for
$250,000 tournament
SAN DIEGO, Calif. (AP l - A
small correction in his swing has
given Rik Massengale a new lease
on his golfing life.
"I'm loving it," said Massengale,
once one of the game's more
promising young players liut a
struggling scrambler for 21'.!years.
"I haven't hit a duck hook in two
weeks ," he said before teeing off
today in the first round of the
$250,000 Andy Williams-San Diego
Open golf tournament. He smiled
and repeated a golfing axiom:
"It's a lot easier to play out of the
fairways than over there on the
wrong side of the (ga llery control)
ropes."
In 1975, Massengale won one tournament a season and averaged better than $100,000 a year for three
consecutive seasons.
Then it all went bad.
In the last two years he won a total
of $29,000. The quiet, pleasant
Massengale drifted back into the
ranks of the Monday morning
quaUfiers. His game was in tatters
and his career in jeopardy . Last
year he won only $13,000. His stroke
average was a high 73.7. He made
money in ordy II of 31 starts.
. "I put the clubs away for five

weeks Ial the end of last season ).:·
Massengale 'aid. Then, starting t~
1980 campaign, hr got a littl e tip
from teaching p.-o Ernie Vossler .
" I had the clubface dosed at the
top of the backswing," Massengale
said. "I was pull-hooking or duckhooking everything. Now, I'm juSt
trying to concentrate on keeping it
open at the top , and I haven't hit a
hook in two weeks."
His refound swing and building
confidence + bolstered by a second·
place finish last week in Phoenix
that produced a $32,000 check, more
than he'd made in the two previotL'
years - made him one of the leading
candidates for the $45,000 first prize
in this, the third tournament of the
season.

Other major contentlers in the 156man field were Tom Watson, threetinle Player of the Year who is
opening his season here; PGA
champ David Graham; Fuzzy
ZoeUer, ti1e Masters champion who
won his first title in this tournament
a year ago; Lon Hinkle; Andy Bean;
tw&lt;&gt;-tlme San Di ego winner J.C.
Snead; John Mahaffey; Jerry Pate
and Ben Crensha w.
The la,t lwo rounds will 00
televised nationally by CBS.

66
Cleve. Marshall 69, Cleve. South 60

Cleve. Univers ity 74, lake Ri dge

Acad . 34
Copley 67, Akron Coventry 65
Hudson 96, Medina Highland 60
Norton 96, Greensburg Green

Revere 78, Field 41

7~

Hockey standings
National Hockey League

At A Glance
By The Associated Press
Campbell Conference
Patrick Division

Philadelphia
NY Rangers
NY Islanders
Atlanta
Washington

w 1 t p
31 3 12 74
21 19 8 54
2~ 17 6 so
19 21 6 44
12 27 7 31

Smy1he Division

Chicago
St. ~o uls
Vancouver
Edmonton
Colorado
Winnipeg

18 18 12 .,
19 21 7 -45
15 25 8 38
13 23 10 36
13 28 5 31
13 31 5 31

gf
195
192
162
154
144

ga
136
179

130
145
151
158
146
125

1-16
154
169
197
180
195

179

145
160

Three league games are scheduled
Friday night in the Southern Valley
Wales Conference
Athletic Conference where
Adams Division
Southern, the 19'19 defending chamBuffalo
29 12 6 64 177 129
Boston
27 12 6 60 174 125
ps, continue to lead the pack with a
Minnesota
22 14 8 52 183 138
1().1 record overall and 6-0 league
Quebec
19 21 6 44 143 157
mark.
Toronto
19 2~ 4 42 166 182
Norris Division
Friday night, Southern plays at
Montreal
24 17 6 54 178 152
second place Southwestern; Kyger
Los Angeles
20 17 8 48 189 174
Creek visits Eastern and Norih
Pillsburgh
18 17 11 47 158 164
Gallia is at Hannan Trace.
Detroit
17 21 7 41 153 151
Harflord
13 20 10 36 147 158
Saturday night, Portsmouth Notre
Wednesday's Games
Dame is at Kyger Creek.
New York Islanders 5 Detroit 3
Based upon statistics through Jan.
Quebec 6 Minnesota 4
Phi ladelphia·• Chicago 1
12, Southern's Jack Duffy was the
Edmonton
4 Pittsburgh 3
Dave
Diles,
ABC
sportscaster,
will
SVAC's top point-maker with 18.6
New York Rangers 6 Vancouver 4
present
awards.
points. Others in the top five are
Thursday's Games
Buffalo at Boston
Southwestern's Dale Newberry with
'::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:
Montreal vs. Hartford at
a 16.8 average; Mark Miller, North
Springfield, Mass.
AUCI'ION MONDAY
Gallia, 15.8 average; Gene Cole,
Pmsburgh at Colorado
The anoual Izaak Walton
Toronto at Los Ange les
Eastern, 15.4 points and Brian
Friday's Games
League aucUon will be held lhls
Bissell, Eastern, 14 points per outing
Chicago
at Atlanta
Monday. beglnniDg at 7 with a
in league competition.
Philadelphia at Winnipeg
poilucl diDDer. Members aud
Southern continues to be the
the~ wlv~ wre uted to ~
area's top offensive club with 815
something
to auction aud table
points in 11 games 74.1 average .
service
for
the meal. 'lbere will
Defensively, Southern has permitted
WEST
also
be
some
very Important
54.3 points, not the top but one of the
No. Colorado 68, Denver 6.4
business maUen d!Bcussed, aud
best in the area.
San Francisco 90, San Diego 76
Seattle u . 92, Santa Clara 73
every
member Is uted to attend.
SVAC STANDINGS
So. Colorado 87, Adams St. 77
ALL GAMES
.:;:;:::;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::::::::::::::.
TEAM
W L P OP
Southern
10 1 815 597 r--------------------------""1
Southwestern
S 5 577 613 ·
Kyger Creek
6 7 670 719
North Gallia
5 8 737 835
Eastern
4 9 767 810

MASON FURNITURE

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

13
15
8
27
27
34

Friday's Games

1

E

37
35
32
27
24
15

.596
.538 3
.354 12
.327 14
.314 ]41; ,

New Jersey at washington

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ALL MERCHANDISE FROM OUR REGULAR

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31
35
35

Washington at Boston

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II' IJI

31
28
17
17
16

Seattle 98, Atlanta 96
Boston 131, Detroit 104
Houston 111, San Diego 110. 2 OT
san Antonio 144, Indiana 130
New Jersey 117, Cleveland 103
Philadelphia 118, Denver93
New York 119, Phoenix 109
Milwaukee 104, Golden State 102

Todd Snowden

6-0, Sr.

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SPORT COATS

Houston

Pacific Division

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SUITS &amp;

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Seattle
LosAngeles
Phoenix
San Diego
Port la nd
Golden State

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Milwaukee
Chicago
Denver
Utah

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JEA.NS.......................................... ;............

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22 26 .458 4 lf1
Cleveland
22 29 .431 6
Detroit
13 37 .260 H lf2
Western Conference
Midwest Division

Rack of

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Pet.

Indiana

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WINTER COATS ...............................% to % PRICE
DRESSES ....................................... % to % PRICE

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previous ones."
:rhey might, but Albert Cox, a former presidential economic adviser
who no heads Merrill Lynch
Economics Inc., a relative of the big
brokerage firm, has just raised the
odds on a "major downturn" to 75
percent.
While, like Carter, that still leaves
Cox wit)) hope !hat one mightn't oocur, it · is rare for economic
forecasters to corrunit themselves so
strongly. Remember, survival dictates thai they learn double-speak.
Cox foresees "a steep drop" tn
economic activity beginning soon, if
not already, and persisting into the
third or July-August-september
quarter. It would be followed by
"modest" recovery later tn the
year."Look for declines tn conswner
spending and inventory liquidation
to trigger production curtallments
across most major Industries," Cox
and his · associates say in their
"Planning Report" for business
clients.
"Business spending on plant and
equipment in real tenns would fall,
housing starts would reach a second
quartllr low of 1.1. million units, and
corporate profits would sag," if the
scenario is played out.
In his message, President Carter
stated that so long as double-digit In·
flation continues and a recession
doesn't appear, his top priority
would be on "reduction of the
deficit" rather than a tax cut.
Many economists place little
credence in such statements.
Having seen huge budget deficits
persists \Jiroughout a prolonged expansion, they wonder why and how
deficits can be reduced as the
economy weakens. And they see a
tax cut as too alluring to forego tn an
election year.
Cox is among them. The Merrill
Lynch forecast "asswnes a tax cut
in the third quarter and some
automatic escalation in federal
spending."
Almost all economists are hedging
their bets to some extent. Many of
them foresee the posS.ibility of
stagflation, a word which describes
an economy that limps and stumbles
but never falls for any length of
time.

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�~The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .,

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Thursday, Jan. 24, 1980

Mis_s ouri bombards ColoradQ

TodJJy 's

Sports
World
Hy Will Grimsley
The Na tional Football League
should change its logo. Somewhere
on the red, white and blue, starspangled NFL shield there should be
the three monkeys - "See No Evil,
Hear No Evil. Speak No Evil."
The prim and proper and normally
well-administrated pro football
establishment has outdone its major
league baseball counterpart in the
abridgement of free speech.
Thi s fact was brought
dramatically to light this week with
the announcement that . Commissioner Pete Rozelle IJad levied a
$10,000 fine on Paul Brown, general
manager of the Cincinnati Bengals,
for some uncomplimentary remarks
he made about Art Modell, owner of
the Cleveland Browns, in a recently
published autobiography.
Modell has long been one of the
powers of the NFL, whereas Brown,
a highly successful coach fired by
Modell after the' 1962 season, once
was a wheel in the old All-America
Conference.
In his book, " PB : the Paul Brown
Story," Brown referred to basic differences in his and Modell's football
phil osophi es - "one from
knowledge and experience, the other
from a complete lack of either."
He had some other acid conunents
about his ex-boss over the space of24
pa ges, wh ich brought down
Rozelle's punishment under the Arti cle IX, Section 91c of the league
constitution .
The rule stipulates that " no membe r stockholder, partner or official
shall publicly cri ticize any member
cl ub. management personnel, coach
ur offic1al employed by the league."
The owners wrote that into their
code personally and Rozelle had lit-

tie choice but to enforce it.
Thus the First Amendment gets
another belt in the breadbasket from
bigtime sports.
Baseball has no such restraints in
its constitution but lays out broad arbitrary powers for its conunlssioner
that Bowie Kuhn has seen fit to use
against owners too loose with their
tongues.
The two most notorious cases in
recent years have been those involving Ted Turner, the freespirited, maverick owner of the
Atlanta Braves, and Ray Kroc, the
millionaire hamburger king who
owns the San Diego Padres.
In 1976, Turner was fined $10,000
and suspended for a year (a term
later reduced) on charges of tampering with Giants outfielder Gary
Matthews, whom the Braves finally
landed.
Kroc's indiscretion was regarded
as 10 times worse, and he got belted
with a fine of $100,000.
This episode resulted from a
phone call. The hamburger tycoon
said he planned to spend $10 million
beefing up the Padres. A reporter
(Norm Clarke of the AP) suggested
casually that the Yankees' Graig
Nettles and the Reds' Joe Morgan
might be free agents.
Would Kroc be interested in that
pair?
"I'd love to have them," Kroc
replied honestly. Who wouldn't?
Boom. That was a n&lt;&gt;-no. Before he
knew it, the conunlssioner was on
the phone and Kroc was writing out
a $100,000 check.
B~jamin Franklin and friends
didn't exclude the fun-makers when
they wrote that docwnent in
Philadelphia nearly 200 years ago.

OSU must improve
rebounding game
. Ohio State 's fourth-ranked
· Buckeyes, their lead in the Big Ten
sliced to one game over Indiana,
Minnesota and Purdue, seek to improve their rebounding game when
they invade Illinois tonight.
"One of the major keys to winning
: is rebounding and in our last few
: games we have not rebounded with
- nearly enough intensity," said
Buckeye Coach Eldon Miller. "If we
can improve there, I think the rest of
our game will get better."
While the Buckyes risk their conference lead against a Fighting Illini
team that has won its last two

Southern gals
•
bJe
~ rzm
d ump 'T'
The Southern Junior High Girls
cage squad raced to a 1f&gt;-7 first
period lead Thursday night and then
held off a stubborn visiting Trimble
team for a 47-29 victory. Southern
still remains unbeaten .
Debbie Michael led the Southern
scoring with 16 points while Laren
Wolfe contributed 12.
Becky Michael had nine for the
wi1mers, Teresa Hill added four, and
Becky Johnson, Tract Mearns, and
Lois !hie each had two.
Jan Downs led Trimble with her 12
markers, and Lori Bycofske had 11.
Sonja Johnson added four and Helen
Skinner had two.
By qua rters:
7 17 26 29
Trimble
15 25 41 47
Southern

games, Indiana will be at Minnesota, Purdue at Wisconsin,
Michigan State at Michigan and
Northwestern at Iowa.
Ohio State has a ~1 record,
followed by Indiana, Minnesota and
Purdue who are all at 4-2. Illinois
and Michigan are 3-3, with Iowa,
Michigan State and Wisconsin at 2-4
and Northwestern I-5.
By the end of the week, the race
could draw even tighter, but there
also are races within races in the Big
Ten.
Purdue's Joe Barry Carroll is the
scoring leader with a 22.5 game
average, a shade ahead of Wisconsin's Wes Matthews at 22.2. Jay Vincent of Michigan State at 20.5 and
Mike McGee of Michigan at 20.0 are
the only other players averaging 20
or more points in conference play.
Another interesting battle is being
staged by Kelvin Ransey of Ohio
State and lsiah Thomas of Indiana.
Ransey is averaging 7.5 assists a
game to 7.2 for Thomas. Nobody else
Is close to the two outstanding ball
handlers.

BY ASSOCIATED PRFSS
·JoJo Hunter scored all of his
team's points in the first half Wednesday night, an achievement to be
proud of. Except that the Colorado
Buffaloes scored oniy four points
during those 20 minutes.
In the meantime, loth-ranked
Missouri reeled off 29 points to take
an embarrassing 29-4 lead at intermission. The final - 78-45 wasn't any closer.
"The slowdown decision was
made before the game," said
Colorado Coach Bill Blair. "We just
kept missing shots.
"At halftime, I told them I thought
we ought to score more points.
Looking back on it, the slowdown
hurt us. But yes, I'd do it again ?"
The Colorado slowdown was partially responsible for the low halftime nwnbers, which set records for
both schools : least points made by
an opponent for Missouri and the
fewest scored in a half for the Buffs.
Colorado's Z.for-15 shooting helped
even more.
Missouri, 1l&gt;-2, grabbed a quick &lt;Hl
advantage before Colorado, 12-5,
went into a stall. Hunter hit a 1f&gt;-foot
jwnper at 9:15 and scored the other
Colorado points a minute later. The
Tigers then blitzed to 16 consecutive
points while Colorado went scoreless
the final !It minutes of the half.
Ricky Frazier led a balanced
Missouri attack with 17 points.
Elsewhere on a busy night that
saw 10 ranked teams play, No.3
Duke was upaet by No.l7 Virginia 0064; fifth-rated Kentucky downed
Mississippi State ~7; No.8 Notre
Dame eased by Canisius 64-63; No.11
Louisiana State beat Mississippi 7266; No.12 Clemson topped Furman
65-&lt;i7; No.13 North Carolina defeated
Wake Forest 73-01; 15th-ranked
Maryland took North Carolina Stale
66-li2 to remain atop the Atlantic
Coast Conferenc~. and No.19 Tennessee was upended by Georgia 5$-

before."
Lamp hit on half of his 22 shots
from the floor in what he called "as
much a must-win for us as anything
we've played this year."
Kyle Macy had 20 points as Kentucky routed Mississippi State,
which reportedly has been split by
dissension recently. The Bulldogs'
problems hardly would have mattered as the Wildcats, 1:&gt;-2, played
what Coach Joe Hall called "our top
· perfonnance this year.
"We played better as a team, we
moved the ball better, we spotted the
open man. That's the best we've run
the offense,"noted Hall.
l.SU Coach Dale Brown was
thrilled with his team's defense,
specifically by Willie Sims, who
came off the bench to score 10 points
in the second half.
"Sims was the difference - his
defense created a lot of turnovers,"
said &amp;rown. "His defense sparked

us."
Notre Dame didn't need much
spark to beat outmanned Canlsius.
Tracy Jackson had 18 points in a
game the Irish led from the start.
John "Moose" Campbell, one of
the country's most improved
players, devastated Funnan almost
singlehandedly with 26 points, nine
rebounds and five blocked shots. The
S-10 center hit on 10 of 11 floor shots
for the 13-3 Tigers. Funnan is 15-3.
North Carolina didn 'I miss freshKENNEDY SIGNS
CINCINNATI (AP) - The Cin·
cinnati Reds have announced that
Junior Kennedy, one of the top candidates to take over tbe starting spot
at second base, has signed his con·
tract for the upcoming baseball
season.
Kennedy hit .'I/3 last year and
filled in for the injured Joe Morgan.
Morgan has since played out his option with the Reds.
The 29-year-&lt;Jld infielder had to
wait 10 years in the minor leagues to
get his first real chance to play in the
majors, but then he hit .255 in 89
games with the Reds in 1978.

54.
Duke might be ranked third in the
nation but it's only fourth in the ACC
with a 4-3 mark. Overall, the Blue
Devils are at 15-3, same as Virginia,
which used its Big Three to win at
Durham. Jeff Lamp had 'XI points,
Ralph Sampaon scored 23 and Lee
Raker 19.
''I knew he was a good shooter,''
said Duke center Mike Gminski, who
scored 20 but saw the 7-foot-4 Sampson hit 11 of 17 shots and grab 13
rebounds, "but I never saw him
have a shooting night like that

eOhio Building Codes
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See our lot model today.

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KINGSBURY
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1100 E. Main
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992-1034

Features ..•.

Sermonette
A UNIVERSAL INVITATION
"And the Spirit and the bride say, Col)le. And let him that hearth say,
Come. And let him that ill athirst come. And whosoever will, let him take
the water of life freely." Revelations22: 17.
Last words are treasured words. When a relative or friend passes
from this life those who remain are very much interested in the last
words of the one who is departing. In our text we have some of the last
words in the closing chapter of God's revealed Word. What are they? The
context in verse 16 makes it clear that it ill a universal invitation to accept
.Jesus Christ as Lord and Saviour. The door of mercy now stands open. If
the Invitation is rejected the time will come when the door will be closed,
or we read in Revelation 3: 7b ''He that openeth, and no lll8n shutteth, and
shutteth, and no man openeth;" But now the invitation is extended to all
the human race.
Notice:
1. THE FREEDOM OF CHOICE
In Revelations3:00 we read, "Behond, I stand at the door, and knock:.
if any man hear my voice, and open the door, I will come in to him, and
will sup with him, and he with me.'' Jesus Christ will not force His way into your life. He patiently waits for you to open the door. We are free to accept or reject the invitation, but we are not free to choose the consequences of that choice. It will be life or death according to our choice. "I
call heaven and earth to record this day against you, that I have set
before you life and death, blessing and CUI'Sing: therefore choose life, that
both tbou and thy seed may live:" Deuteronomy 30:19.
II. THE EXTENT OF THE INVITATION
No one is excluded. If the President of the United States were to make
a feast and invite guests most of us would be left out. But here is the Ruler
and Maker of the universe extending an invitation to freely take of
everlasting life. "And whosoever will, let him take the water of life freely." Also in St. John 3:16 we read, "For God so loved the world, that He
gave His only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in Him should not
perish, but have everlasting life."
m. THE TIME TO ACCEPT TinS INVITATION
In the text we read, "And the Spirit and the bride say, Come." The
writer to the Hebrews says, ''Wherefore (as the Holy Ghost saith, Today
if ye will hear his voice, Harden not your hearts, as in the provocation, in
the day of temptation in the wilderness:" (Hebrews 3:7-88. Do you hear
his voice? Then come! Are you thirsting for something more~than you
· now have? The invitation ill to come. How does one come? Come just as
you are. Confess your sins to Jesus Christ and believe on Him. Listen to
God Word as found in Roma!15 10:9 "That if thou shalt confess with thy
mou ... ...~ Lord Jesus, and shalt believe in thine heart that God hath raised him fromt the dead, thou shalt be saved." Will you accept hte invita-

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GARDEN CWBTOMEET
Mrs. Chris Diehl and Mrs. Ralph
Turner will be hostess when the
, Rutland Garden Club meets at 7:30
~ Monday night at the Tumer home. .
• Members are to name their
favorite evergreen in answer to roll
call. Miss Ruby· Diehl will present
facts on poinsettia care in the home.
1
' ''Making the Most of your Christmas
, Plants'-' will be the topic of Mrs.
: Harvey Elewine. Mrs. Dayton Par1 sons will give timely gardening Ups
from February, Members are to
, have an exhibit of evergreen cull lings at the meeting.

4

sPeed, rally stripes, custom in·
terior .

I

BRUSHED PIGSKIN IN:
~COPPERTONE
•DROMEDARY

The Vinton County Athletic
Boosters are sponsoring an independent cage tourney on March 1,
2,'4, 5, 8 and 9. Weekend games will
begin at10 a. m. and alternate dates
will be March 3and 5.
An entry fee of $50 ill to be in by
February 22 with the nameof the
team to be designated.
Checks should be made payable to
Vinton County Athletic Boosters,
and aU checks and correspondence
should be send to Bob Caldwell, 307
West High, McArthur, Ohio 45651.
Disorderly conduct will not be
tolerated, including arguing with officials or fighting. Possible penalties
could include suspension of a player
for a game or remainder of the tournament.
Trophies will be awarded to the
first, second, third and fourth palce
teams with an all-tourney team to be
selected by the players.

Clubs •.•

VW - AMC - JEEP - RENAULT

pY:

Independent cage
toum.ament slated

Community ..•

RIVERSIDE

THE ''ROGUE"
PUPPIES

Life Style

'

Southern, 13-3 and ranked third in
Division II, scored 14 of its last 16
points at the free throw line.
In another SEC game, Alabama
outlasted Auburn SG-46 Iii overtime. In other Big Eight contests, KallS88
beat Oklahoma 72-lr/ behind Darnell •
Valentine's 18 • points; Nebraska :
edged Oklahoma State 74-73 in over- ~
time on Mike Naderer's bucket with :
35 seconds to go, and KallS88 State ~
remained tied for the conference ,
lead with Missouri by taking a 73-63
decillion from Iowa State.
Elsewhere, Georgetown routed ,
U.S. International 107·79 behind ~
Craig Shelton's 23 points and 10
rebounds; West Virginia edged
American 71 ~9 in overtime as Phll
Collins had five straight points in the
extra sesalon; Cleveland State sur·
prised Pittsburgh 69-66 as Frank Edwards hit for 26 points; Corney
Thompson scored 'II to boost Con· · ·
necticut over Providence 74-43 •

Now'3995

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SMOOTH LEATHER IN:

1980 RENAULT LECAR

•CAMEL

CORRECTION
Cutlines accompanying a picture
of the three top officers of the Meigs
Chapter, Order of DeMolay, to be installed at a public installation at 7:30
p.m. Friday at the Middleport
Masonic Temple were not complete.
The cutlines should have read that
Greg Bush, wiMJ:ls being installed as
master councilOr, is beginning his
second consecutive tenn in that
position. The photograph appeared
in Wednesday's edition of The Daily
Sentinel.
:;:::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;::::::::::

See Doug Lease, Jim Walker, Terry Hamilton or Rick
Hesson.

THE
SHOE BOX

-------------------------

••
'•

POLLY.$ POINT!PS

Middleport, Ohio

Polly Cramer

Germs in water bed

splinter or small sliver of glass in a
DEAR POlLY- When we bought hand or foot I use the following
our water bed we were advised to emergency method. I fill a small
add some sort of gennlcide to it botUe with boiling water, pour it out
every six months. Only a small and then hold the mouth of. the botUe
amount is required but we find it · over the silver and It will pull it out.
quite eiJ)ei!Bive so I would like to -INEZ
know if there is anything I could buy
Polly will send you one of her signat the grocery store that would do ed ~-you newspaper coupon
the
job, he cheaper and not clippen if she uses yow- favorite
bannmywaterbed. -MRS, W.G.W.
Pointer, Peeve or Problem In her
DEAR MRS. W.G.W.- A water column.
Wri1e POLLY'S
bed expert advised me that this com· POINTERS in care of this
merclal conditioner is required for
newspaper.
retarding algae In the water. If It is •
added as suggested, you do not have
to drain the water out of the bed. It
would ~ertalnly he false econ~my to
· try to substitute. - POLLY
DEAR POlLY- If you have dif.
flcully separating the tightly packed
fllleni for your automatic drip coffee
maker hold a section of the filters by
the top edge with one hand and slap
bottoms sharply into the palm of the
other hand once or twice. They will
aeparate easily.- AILEEN
' DEAR POLLY - Of all the
· wastefQ!Ideas I have ever read Ber·
: nadine's for drying a plastic bag
over a roll of paper towels takes the
cake - or should I say "paper
·towel." Where is the economy bi usIng a 5Ck:ent roll of paper towel!~ to
dry a plastic bag that cost 10 cents or .
less?
·
For years I have laid a washed
plastic bag fiat on the counter and
· wiped it on both sides with a cloth
dlah towel. Then the bag ill turned inBide 'out imd wiped on-both aisles. I
work .it open and lay It back on the
.
countertoalr.-MARYC.
DEAR MARY- The small amount
of 1vater .on a · just-:.vashed plastic
bag would not soak thrOugh mqre
than two or three~ the paper-towels
' .
·on a roll and when removed the
towels would soon 'dry so they could
stlllheUaed.-,POLLY
.
DEAR POLLY - When I get a

same

· and

·

·

bnfldfong materials

Heart-to-heart expressions for those
you love and care for.

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BUILDING OR REMODELING?
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PRICES.

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VALLEY LUMBER &amp;
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CORPORATION
923 S. 3rd Ave.

Pha rmacy

Middleport, 0,

992·2709of 992-6611
Open: 7:00to5:00Mon . thru Fri.
1:00 to 3:00 Saturday

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QUALITY

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~

Legislative changes a ff ec llll~
veteran:; were discussed by Frankie
Hunnel at the Tuesday night
meeting of the American Legion
Auxiliary of Drew Webster Post 39,
Pomeroy, held at the hall.
Mrs. Hunnel, legislative chairman , talked about increased
benefits for veterans and their
families. Sbe noted that a new bill re
recently signed by President Carter
provided an almost 10 percent increase for most veterans, and a 30
percent increase for some disabled
veterans. She talked about date
changes in which Viet fiam veteransa can qualify for benefits and
membership in the American
Legion.
The chairman called on the
membership to write their state
representatives and Governor
Rhodes to encourage Washington
support for a bill which would put

~---Social Calendar
THURSDAY
SOUTHERN IDLI1i District of the
Ohio Nurses' Assn ., monthly
meeting, 7:30p.m. Thursday at Ohio
University College of Osteopathic
Medicine, Grosvenor Hall, West
Green; membership includes
registered nurses from Hocking,
Athens, Meigs and Gallia Counties.

TWIN-CITY SHRINETIE, 7:30
Thursdy Thursday at the home of
Mrs. Gertrude Mitchell.
SAnJRDAY
PUBIJC SPAGHETII supper at
Pomeroy Elementary School, 4: 30 to
7:30 p.m. Saturday by PTA; $2,
. adulis; $1 children, entertairunent.
SuNDAY GUESTS
Mrs. Beulah Lamb, Colwnbus,
was the Sunday guest of Mr. and
Mrs. George Freeland, Syracuse.
MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT PTA, 7:30 p.m.
David Gleason, Meigs Local School
District superintendent, will be the
speaker. Refreslunents will be served. Parents urged to support the
school through the PTA with their
attendance at the meeting.

(
,'• ~

4

--~----------~----~ ~~=====-==~;~~~-==~====~l~~

Kenneth McCullougtl, R. Ph,
. Charles Riffle, R. Ph.
Ronald lianning, R. P'h.
Mon. thru Sat. 8:00a.m. to 9 p.m.
Sunday 10: 30'to 12:30 and 5 to 9 p.m.
PR ESCRI PTlONS
PH. 992-2955
Fr.iendly service
E . Main
Open Nights til 9
Pomeroy, 0.

••

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PAPER CARRIER
NEEDED IN THE
POMEROY
AND
.
MIDDLEPORT AREA
FOR THE
DAILY SENTINEL

SALES, INC.

$6195

Pre-Owned Cars

1977 BUICK

1976

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CHEVROLET
MONZA
silver, V-6 auto.
$3895

1975 FORD

PONTIAC
GRAND PRIX

SKYLARK
V-6, air, auto., p.s., p.b.
$3395

PINTO

Station Wagon auto .,
p. steenng ; 1 7 9 5

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1973 Fairpoint
14x65
2 bedroom, oil heat,
front living room

1972 Crown
12x65
3 bedroom, all electric,

Mobile
Homes

1971
Fleetwood 14x64
bath 1 ':lz, tront
bedroom

front bedroom

1970 Newmoon
12x60
3 bedroom.
front kitchen

1969
Champion 12x50
2 bedroom, all electric,
tront kitchen

B&amp;S SALES, INC.
675-4424

2nd &amp; Viand Street

Point Pleasant

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CAR
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Reg. 518.00

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DRESSES
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CALL '992-2156
-

BElWEEN 8:30 AM &amp;5 PM

1978

Rally Sport, 7,000 miles
air, auto. p.s. p.b.
am-fm stereo .

OFFICERS ~STAI I ED
New officers were installed at the
recent meeting of the Harrisonville
Senior Citizens Club held at the hall.
Installed were Minnie McGrath,
president; Mrs. Sadie Carr, vice
president; Louise Eshelman,
secretary; and Mrs. Hazel Stanley,
treasurer. Fifteen members were
,.present for the meeting. Dues were
paid. Next mee).ing will be at 8 p.m.
on Feb. 26.
PAUL BURTON HOSPITALIZED
Paul E. Burton, Racine, has been
admitted to Ward 2B of the Veterans
Hospital in Huntington, W. Va.
Cards may be sent to the hospital.

planned by Mrs. Dorothy Jenkins,
Adam Martin pla yed several
on gina! songs on the oiano.
A round robin card was signed for
Mrs. Iva Powell . A thank you note
fPOm Mr. and Mrs. Fred Goeglein
was read for a Christmas remembrance. Goeglein, a World War I
veteran, enclosed a donation. Thank
you notes were also read from Harry
Davis, Inez Stivers, and Eulelia
Webster.
The midwinter conference was announced for Feb. 29 and March I at
the Neil House in Colwnbus.
Hostesses for the February
meeting will be Mrs. Davis, Mrs.
Loretta Tiemeyer , and Miss Cheryl
Lehew. It was noted that the unit
still has about 25 packages of pecans
for sale. The prayer for peace was
given by Genevieve Meinhart , acting chaplain, and tbe group sang
" America" in closing.
Refreshments were served by
Peggy Harris and Mrs. Hunnel.

8&amp;$

,o'7Q CAMARO

Past matrons meet
Mrs. Emma ciatworthy and Mrs.
Virginia Buchanan hosted a meeting
of the Past Matrons Club of
Evangeline Chapter, Order of the
Eastern Star, Friday night at tbe
Clatworthy home.
Mrs. Grace French opened the
meeting with two poems, "In God
We Trust" and "Keep America."
Cards were signed and sent to Mrs.
Cora Pullen and Mrs. Bea Kuhn. A
birthday card was sent to Allen
Hu• hes. Games were played with
prizes going to Mrs. French, Mrs.
Kathryn Knight, Mrs. Marie
Hawkins, and Mrs. Rosemary
Lyons.
Mrs. Clatworthy and Mrs.
Buchanan served cake, ice cream
nuts and coffee to those named and
Mrs. Beulah Hayes, Mrs. Evelyn
Lewis, and Mrs. Mary Hughes.

19 veterans at Arcadia. two at the
veterans hospitals, and six veterans
in the local hospital or home were
remerl'lbered at Christmas time. It
was also noted that three members
attended the Christmas party at the
Chillicothe hospital, with 31 pounds
of ca ndy and four cakes being taken.
Twelve towel bibs were made by
Mrs. Casci and these were taken.
A discussion wa s held on gasoline
allowances for veterans work with
funding being increased. Mrs. Casci
reported that the unit is one over
goal in membership. She also an·
nounced that 2800 small poppies and
100 large poppines have been
ordered. A fWld raising project with
an afghan or a quilt was discussed.
Mrs. Veda Davis, junior advisor,
announced that her juniors will be
entering the national coloring contest using three different pictures on
Americanism. The juniors wUI also
be entering a an energy conservation contest. For the music program

l""l""' back into the school•.
Mrs. Hunnel also mentioned the
SALT Tn·«t y an&lt;' the fact that further debate on arms limitations will
probably nor be resumed until 1981.
Members were also urged to contact
their representatives to urge that V.
A. hospitals not be put on mandatory
cost control.
To conclude her program, Mrs.
Huimel read excerpts from lincoln's
Gettysburg Address.
In the ahsence of the president,
Mrs. Marjorie Goett, Mrs. Genuna
Casci, first vice president opened
themecting in ritualistic form .
Special guest was Commander
Joseph Zwilling who thanked the
Auxiliary and especially the
veterans affairs and rehabilitaion
co-chairmen, Pearl Knapp and
Mary Martin, for an outstanding job
of remembering veterans, those
hospitalized, in nursing homes and
at home. In concluSion he presented
$10 to Mrs. Marlin for the veterans'
work. '
Cmdr. Zwilling announced the
Four Chaplain Services to be held at
the Laurel Cliff Free Methodist
Church on Feb. 3 at 9:30a.m. Miss
Enna Smith urged the members to
attend the church in a group that
Sunday and noted that in February
she will present a program on
Americanism.
Mrs. Knapp read the community
service report in the absence of Mrs.
Ruby Marshall, chairman. A report
was given on veterans affairs by
Mrs. Martin with a copy being sent
to the district chainnan, Mrs'
Nelson Mowery. It was reported that

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Increased benefits meeting subject

.---------------------------+

MODULAR
HOMES
By
ALL AMERICAN
Meets

man sensation James Worthy, who
is out for the season with a broken
ankle. AI Wood started in his stead
and scored 26 points.
Maryland, the surprise leader of
the ACC, got a key · block from
backup center Taylor Baldwin and
16 points by both Albert King and
Greg Manning to nip N.C. State.
" He went l"'(Jn·l with me," said the
S-10 Baldwin of State's Sidney Lowe,
"and tried to throw up a reverse
.layup. I kind of had the advantage,
being a foot taller than he Is."
Freshman Lamar Heard followed
a missed shot with a layup with two
seconds left to secure Georgia's victory. Despite the loss, Tennessee
remained atop the SEC by a halfgame over Kentucky.
The state of Florida was the site of
some high-scoring individual ef·
forts. Jacksonville's James Ray set
a Sunbelt Conference scoring record
with 45 points as the Dolphins overwhelmed South Florida 91-75. Ray,
who had 30 points in the first hall, hit
16 of 25 shots from the field and 13 of
17 free throws. He also grabbed 11
rebounds.
Bo Clark of Division II Central
Florida, the leading scorer in the
nation last year, connected for 49
points in his club's 130-83 an·
nihilation of Florida Tech.
South Carolina journeyed to the
Sunshine State only to be upaet by
Florida Southern 7~2. Florida

'•

Thursday, Jan. 24, 1980

.

REDUCED

40%

�~The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .,

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Thursday, Jan. 24, 1980

Mis_s ouri bombards ColoradQ

TodJJy 's

Sports
World
Hy Will Grimsley
The Na tional Football League
should change its logo. Somewhere
on the red, white and blue, starspangled NFL shield there should be
the three monkeys - "See No Evil,
Hear No Evil. Speak No Evil."
The prim and proper and normally
well-administrated pro football
establishment has outdone its major
league baseball counterpart in the
abridgement of free speech.
Thi s fact was brought
dramatically to light this week with
the announcement that . Commissioner Pete Rozelle IJad levied a
$10,000 fine on Paul Brown, general
manager of the Cincinnati Bengals,
for some uncomplimentary remarks
he made about Art Modell, owner of
the Cleveland Browns, in a recently
published autobiography.
Modell has long been one of the
powers of the NFL, whereas Brown,
a highly successful coach fired by
Modell after the' 1962 season, once
was a wheel in the old All-America
Conference.
In his book, " PB : the Paul Brown
Story," Brown referred to basic differences in his and Modell's football
phil osophi es - "one from
knowledge and experience, the other
from a complete lack of either."
He had some other acid conunents
about his ex-boss over the space of24
pa ges, wh ich brought down
Rozelle's punishment under the Arti cle IX, Section 91c of the league
constitution .
The rule stipulates that " no membe r stockholder, partner or official
shall publicly cri ticize any member
cl ub. management personnel, coach
ur offic1al employed by the league."
The owners wrote that into their
code personally and Rozelle had lit-

tie choice but to enforce it.
Thus the First Amendment gets
another belt in the breadbasket from
bigtime sports.
Baseball has no such restraints in
its constitution but lays out broad arbitrary powers for its conunlssioner
that Bowie Kuhn has seen fit to use
against owners too loose with their
tongues.
The two most notorious cases in
recent years have been those involving Ted Turner, the freespirited, maverick owner of the
Atlanta Braves, and Ray Kroc, the
millionaire hamburger king who
owns the San Diego Padres.
In 1976, Turner was fined $10,000
and suspended for a year (a term
later reduced) on charges of tampering with Giants outfielder Gary
Matthews, whom the Braves finally
landed.
Kroc's indiscretion was regarded
as 10 times worse, and he got belted
with a fine of $100,000.
This episode resulted from a
phone call. The hamburger tycoon
said he planned to spend $10 million
beefing up the Padres. A reporter
(Norm Clarke of the AP) suggested
casually that the Yankees' Graig
Nettles and the Reds' Joe Morgan
might be free agents.
Would Kroc be interested in that
pair?
"I'd love to have them," Kroc
replied honestly. Who wouldn't?
Boom. That was a n&lt;&gt;-no. Before he
knew it, the conunlssioner was on
the phone and Kroc was writing out
a $100,000 check.
B~jamin Franklin and friends
didn't exclude the fun-makers when
they wrote that docwnent in
Philadelphia nearly 200 years ago.

OSU must improve
rebounding game
. Ohio State 's fourth-ranked
· Buckeyes, their lead in the Big Ten
sliced to one game over Indiana,
Minnesota and Purdue, seek to improve their rebounding game when
they invade Illinois tonight.
"One of the major keys to winning
: is rebounding and in our last few
: games we have not rebounded with
- nearly enough intensity," said
Buckeye Coach Eldon Miller. "If we
can improve there, I think the rest of
our game will get better."
While the Buckyes risk their conference lead against a Fighting Illini
team that has won its last two

Southern gals
•
bJe
~ rzm
d ump 'T'
The Southern Junior High Girls
cage squad raced to a 1f&gt;-7 first
period lead Thursday night and then
held off a stubborn visiting Trimble
team for a 47-29 victory. Southern
still remains unbeaten .
Debbie Michael led the Southern
scoring with 16 points while Laren
Wolfe contributed 12.
Becky Michael had nine for the
wi1mers, Teresa Hill added four, and
Becky Johnson, Tract Mearns, and
Lois !hie each had two.
Jan Downs led Trimble with her 12
markers, and Lori Bycofske had 11.
Sonja Johnson added four and Helen
Skinner had two.
By qua rters:
7 17 26 29
Trimble
15 25 41 47
Southern

games, Indiana will be at Minnesota, Purdue at Wisconsin,
Michigan State at Michigan and
Northwestern at Iowa.
Ohio State has a ~1 record,
followed by Indiana, Minnesota and
Purdue who are all at 4-2. Illinois
and Michigan are 3-3, with Iowa,
Michigan State and Wisconsin at 2-4
and Northwestern I-5.
By the end of the week, the race
could draw even tighter, but there
also are races within races in the Big
Ten.
Purdue's Joe Barry Carroll is the
scoring leader with a 22.5 game
average, a shade ahead of Wisconsin's Wes Matthews at 22.2. Jay Vincent of Michigan State at 20.5 and
Mike McGee of Michigan at 20.0 are
the only other players averaging 20
or more points in conference play.
Another interesting battle is being
staged by Kelvin Ransey of Ohio
State and lsiah Thomas of Indiana.
Ransey is averaging 7.5 assists a
game to 7.2 for Thomas. Nobody else
Is close to the two outstanding ball
handlers.

BY ASSOCIATED PRFSS
·JoJo Hunter scored all of his
team's points in the first half Wednesday night, an achievement to be
proud of. Except that the Colorado
Buffaloes scored oniy four points
during those 20 minutes.
In the meantime, loth-ranked
Missouri reeled off 29 points to take
an embarrassing 29-4 lead at intermission. The final - 78-45 wasn't any closer.
"The slowdown decision was
made before the game," said
Colorado Coach Bill Blair. "We just
kept missing shots.
"At halftime, I told them I thought
we ought to score more points.
Looking back on it, the slowdown
hurt us. But yes, I'd do it again ?"
The Colorado slowdown was partially responsible for the low halftime nwnbers, which set records for
both schools : least points made by
an opponent for Missouri and the
fewest scored in a half for the Buffs.
Colorado's Z.for-15 shooting helped
even more.
Missouri, 1l&gt;-2, grabbed a quick &lt;Hl
advantage before Colorado, 12-5,
went into a stall. Hunter hit a 1f&gt;-foot
jwnper at 9:15 and scored the other
Colorado points a minute later. The
Tigers then blitzed to 16 consecutive
points while Colorado went scoreless
the final !It minutes of the half.
Ricky Frazier led a balanced
Missouri attack with 17 points.
Elsewhere on a busy night that
saw 10 ranked teams play, No.3
Duke was upaet by No.l7 Virginia 0064; fifth-rated Kentucky downed
Mississippi State ~7; No.8 Notre
Dame eased by Canisius 64-63; No.11
Louisiana State beat Mississippi 7266; No.12 Clemson topped Furman
65-&lt;i7; No.13 North Carolina defeated
Wake Forest 73-01; 15th-ranked
Maryland took North Carolina Stale
66-li2 to remain atop the Atlantic
Coast Conferenc~. and No.19 Tennessee was upended by Georgia 5$-

before."
Lamp hit on half of his 22 shots
from the floor in what he called "as
much a must-win for us as anything
we've played this year."
Kyle Macy had 20 points as Kentucky routed Mississippi State,
which reportedly has been split by
dissension recently. The Bulldogs'
problems hardly would have mattered as the Wildcats, 1:&gt;-2, played
what Coach Joe Hall called "our top
· perfonnance this year.
"We played better as a team, we
moved the ball better, we spotted the
open man. That's the best we've run
the offense,"noted Hall.
l.SU Coach Dale Brown was
thrilled with his team's defense,
specifically by Willie Sims, who
came off the bench to score 10 points
in the second half.
"Sims was the difference - his
defense created a lot of turnovers,"
said &amp;rown. "His defense sparked

us."
Notre Dame didn't need much
spark to beat outmanned Canlsius.
Tracy Jackson had 18 points in a
game the Irish led from the start.
John "Moose" Campbell, one of
the country's most improved
players, devastated Funnan almost
singlehandedly with 26 points, nine
rebounds and five blocked shots. The
S-10 center hit on 10 of 11 floor shots
for the 13-3 Tigers. Funnan is 15-3.
North Carolina didn 'I miss freshKENNEDY SIGNS
CINCINNATI (AP) - The Cin·
cinnati Reds have announced that
Junior Kennedy, one of the top candidates to take over tbe starting spot
at second base, has signed his con·
tract for the upcoming baseball
season.
Kennedy hit .'I/3 last year and
filled in for the injured Joe Morgan.
Morgan has since played out his option with the Reds.
The 29-year-&lt;Jld infielder had to
wait 10 years in the minor leagues to
get his first real chance to play in the
majors, but then he hit .255 in 89
games with the Reds in 1978.

54.
Duke might be ranked third in the
nation but it's only fourth in the ACC
with a 4-3 mark. Overall, the Blue
Devils are at 15-3, same as Virginia,
which used its Big Three to win at
Durham. Jeff Lamp had 'XI points,
Ralph Sampaon scored 23 and Lee
Raker 19.
''I knew he was a good shooter,''
said Duke center Mike Gminski, who
scored 20 but saw the 7-foot-4 Sampson hit 11 of 17 shots and grab 13
rebounds, "but I never saw him
have a shooting night like that

eOhio Building Codes
eAFHA&amp;VA
See our lot model today.

fl!dM
KINGSBURY
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SALES
1100 E. Main
Pomeroy, Ohio
992-1034

Features ..•.

Sermonette
A UNIVERSAL INVITATION
"And the Spirit and the bride say, Col)le. And let him that hearth say,
Come. And let him that ill athirst come. And whosoever will, let him take
the water of life freely." Revelations22: 17.
Last words are treasured words. When a relative or friend passes
from this life those who remain are very much interested in the last
words of the one who is departing. In our text we have some of the last
words in the closing chapter of God's revealed Word. What are they? The
context in verse 16 makes it clear that it ill a universal invitation to accept
.Jesus Christ as Lord and Saviour. The door of mercy now stands open. If
the Invitation is rejected the time will come when the door will be closed,
or we read in Revelation 3: 7b ''He that openeth, and no lll8n shutteth, and
shutteth, and no man openeth;" But now the invitation is extended to all
the human race.
Notice:
1. THE FREEDOM OF CHOICE
In Revelations3:00 we read, "Behond, I stand at the door, and knock:.
if any man hear my voice, and open the door, I will come in to him, and
will sup with him, and he with me.'' Jesus Christ will not force His way into your life. He patiently waits for you to open the door. We are free to accept or reject the invitation, but we are not free to choose the consequences of that choice. It will be life or death according to our choice. "I
call heaven and earth to record this day against you, that I have set
before you life and death, blessing and CUI'Sing: therefore choose life, that
both tbou and thy seed may live:" Deuteronomy 30:19.
II. THE EXTENT OF THE INVITATION
No one is excluded. If the President of the United States were to make
a feast and invite guests most of us would be left out. But here is the Ruler
and Maker of the universe extending an invitation to freely take of
everlasting life. "And whosoever will, let him take the water of life freely." Also in St. John 3:16 we read, "For God so loved the world, that He
gave His only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in Him should not
perish, but have everlasting life."
m. THE TIME TO ACCEPT TinS INVITATION
In the text we read, "And the Spirit and the bride say, Come." The
writer to the Hebrews says, ''Wherefore (as the Holy Ghost saith, Today
if ye will hear his voice, Harden not your hearts, as in the provocation, in
the day of temptation in the wilderness:" (Hebrews 3:7-88. Do you hear
his voice? Then come! Are you thirsting for something more~than you
· now have? The invitation ill to come. How does one come? Come just as
you are. Confess your sins to Jesus Christ and believe on Him. Listen to
God Word as found in Roma!15 10:9 "That if thou shalt confess with thy
mou ... ...~ Lord Jesus, and shalt believe in thine heart that God hath raised him fromt the dead, thou shalt be saved." Will you accept hte invita-

Your "EKtra Touch"
Flnrist SinCe 1~57

1

i,

FLORIST
PH. 992-2644

352 E. Main, Pomer·oy
.
1
Your FTD Flori,!l..,..--.t

.

The Dealer That Cares About Quality

WEEKEND

SPECIAL

1977 CHEVY
C-10 lf2 TON
4 WHEEL DRIVE

1979 CHEVROLET
4 WHEEL DRIVE
TRUCK
Charcoal gray, customized in·
terior, 350 v-a, 4 speed, aluminum
wheels.

Was $4595

$AVE

THUNDERBIRD
The ultimate in Ford luxury,

along with economy with the 302
V·Bengine. Well equipped.

, ~Uon?
-IJoyd D. Grimm, Jr., Pastor Rutland Church of the Nazarene

1978 AMC
GREMLIN

1979 FORD

HUSH

19 000 miles, six cylinder,

GARDEN CWBTOMEET
Mrs. Chris Diehl and Mrs. Ralph
Turner will be hostess when the
, Rutland Garden Club meets at 7:30
~ Monday night at the Tumer home. .
• Members are to name their
favorite evergreen in answer to roll
call. Miss Ruby· Diehl will present
facts on poinsettia care in the home.
1
' ''Making the Most of your Christmas
, Plants'-' will be the topic of Mrs.
: Harvey Elewine. Mrs. Dayton Par1 sons will give timely gardening Ups
from February, Members are to
, have an exhibit of evergreen cull lings at the meeting.

4

sPeed, rally stripes, custom in·
terior .

I

BRUSHED PIGSKIN IN:
~COPPERTONE
•DROMEDARY

The Vinton County Athletic
Boosters are sponsoring an independent cage tourney on March 1,
2,'4, 5, 8 and 9. Weekend games will
begin at10 a. m. and alternate dates
will be March 3and 5.
An entry fee of $50 ill to be in by
February 22 with the nameof the
team to be designated.
Checks should be made payable to
Vinton County Athletic Boosters,
and aU checks and correspondence
should be send to Bob Caldwell, 307
West High, McArthur, Ohio 45651.
Disorderly conduct will not be
tolerated, including arguing with officials or fighting. Possible penalties
could include suspension of a player
for a game or remainder of the tournament.
Trophies will be awarded to the
first, second, third and fourth palce
teams with an all-tourney team to be
selected by the players.

Clubs •.•

VW - AMC - JEEP - RENAULT

pY:

Independent cage
toum.ament slated

Community ..•

RIVERSIDE

THE ''ROGUE"
PUPPIES

Life Style

'

Southern, 13-3 and ranked third in
Division II, scored 14 of its last 16
points at the free throw line.
In another SEC game, Alabama
outlasted Auburn SG-46 Iii overtime. In other Big Eight contests, KallS88
beat Oklahoma 72-lr/ behind Darnell •
Valentine's 18 • points; Nebraska :
edged Oklahoma State 74-73 in over- ~
time on Mike Naderer's bucket with :
35 seconds to go, and KallS88 State ~
remained tied for the conference ,
lead with Missouri by taking a 73-63
decillion from Iowa State.
Elsewhere, Georgetown routed ,
U.S. International 107·79 behind ~
Craig Shelton's 23 points and 10
rebounds; West Virginia edged
American 71 ~9 in overtime as Phll
Collins had five straight points in the
extra sesalon; Cleveland State sur·
prised Pittsburgh 69-66 as Frank Edwards hit for 26 points; Corney
Thompson scored 'II to boost Con· · ·
necticut over Providence 74-43 •

Now'3995

'5095

'3295

'

See Our New Line of Economy Models

SMOOTH LEATHER IN:

1980 RENAULT LECAR

•CAMEL

CORRECTION
Cutlines accompanying a picture
of the three top officers of the Meigs
Chapter, Order of DeMolay, to be installed at a public installation at 7:30
p.m. Friday at the Middleport
Masonic Temple were not complete.
The cutlines should have read that
Greg Bush, wiMJ:ls being installed as
master councilOr, is beginning his
second consecutive tenn in that
position. The photograph appeared
in Wednesday's edition of The Daily
Sentinel.
:;:::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;::::::::::

See Doug Lease, Jim Walker, Terry Hamilton or Rick
Hesson.

THE
SHOE BOX

-------------------------

••
'•

POLLY.$ POINT!PS

Middleport, Ohio

Polly Cramer

Germs in water bed

splinter or small sliver of glass in a
DEAR POlLY- When we bought hand or foot I use the following
our water bed we were advised to emergency method. I fill a small
add some sort of gennlcide to it botUe with boiling water, pour it out
every six months. Only a small and then hold the mouth of. the botUe
amount is required but we find it · over the silver and It will pull it out.
quite eiJ)ei!Bive so I would like to -INEZ
know if there is anything I could buy
Polly will send you one of her signat the grocery store that would do ed ~-you newspaper coupon
the
job, he cheaper and not clippen if she uses yow- favorite
bannmywaterbed. -MRS, W.G.W.
Pointer, Peeve or Problem In her
DEAR MRS. W.G.W.- A water column.
Wri1e POLLY'S
bed expert advised me that this com· POINTERS in care of this
merclal conditioner is required for
newspaper.
retarding algae In the water. If It is •
added as suggested, you do not have
to drain the water out of the bed. It
would ~ertalnly he false econ~my to
· try to substitute. - POLLY
DEAR POlLY- If you have dif.
flcully separating the tightly packed
fllleni for your automatic drip coffee
maker hold a section of the filters by
the top edge with one hand and slap
bottoms sharply into the palm of the
other hand once or twice. They will
aeparate easily.- AILEEN
' DEAR POLLY - Of all the
· wastefQ!Ideas I have ever read Ber·
: nadine's for drying a plastic bag
over a roll of paper towels takes the
cake - or should I say "paper
·towel." Where is the economy bi usIng a 5Ck:ent roll of paper towel!~ to
dry a plastic bag that cost 10 cents or .
less?
·
For years I have laid a washed
plastic bag fiat on the counter and
· wiped it on both sides with a cloth
dlah towel. Then the bag ill turned inBide 'out imd wiped on-both aisles. I
work .it open and lay It back on the
.
countertoalr.-MARYC.
DEAR MARY- The small amount
of 1vater .on a · just-:.vashed plastic
bag would not soak thrOugh mqre
than two or three~ the paper-towels
' .
·on a roll and when removed the
towels would soon 'dry so they could
stlllheUaed.-,POLLY
.
DEAR POLLY - When I get a

same

· and

·

·

bnfldfong materials

Heart-to-heart expressions for those
you love and care for.

-

.,

•

-.

BUILDING OR REMODELING?
CASH&amp;CARRY
PRICES

.

PRICES.

ct~1.1!~
.
. .

SWISHER LOHSE

VALLEY LUMBER &amp;
SUPPLY
CORPORATION
923 S. 3rd Ave.

Pha rmacy

Middleport, 0,

992·2709of 992-6611
Open: 7:00to5:00Mon . thru Fri.
1:00 to 3:00 Saturday

ffj/leeti?pA

Creative excellence is an American tradition.

QUALITY

WE
DELIVER

~

Legislative changes a ff ec llll~
veteran:; were discussed by Frankie
Hunnel at the Tuesday night
meeting of the American Legion
Auxiliary of Drew Webster Post 39,
Pomeroy, held at the hall.
Mrs. Hunnel, legislative chairman , talked about increased
benefits for veterans and their
families. Sbe noted that a new bill re
recently signed by President Carter
provided an almost 10 percent increase for most veterans, and a 30
percent increase for some disabled
veterans. She talked about date
changes in which Viet fiam veteransa can qualify for benefits and
membership in the American
Legion.
The chairman called on the
membership to write their state
representatives and Governor
Rhodes to encourage Washington
support for a bill which would put

~---Social Calendar
THURSDAY
SOUTHERN IDLI1i District of the
Ohio Nurses' Assn ., monthly
meeting, 7:30p.m. Thursday at Ohio
University College of Osteopathic
Medicine, Grosvenor Hall, West
Green; membership includes
registered nurses from Hocking,
Athens, Meigs and Gallia Counties.

TWIN-CITY SHRINETIE, 7:30
Thursdy Thursday at the home of
Mrs. Gertrude Mitchell.
SAnJRDAY
PUBIJC SPAGHETII supper at
Pomeroy Elementary School, 4: 30 to
7:30 p.m. Saturday by PTA; $2,
. adulis; $1 children, entertairunent.
SuNDAY GUESTS
Mrs. Beulah Lamb, Colwnbus,
was the Sunday guest of Mr. and
Mrs. George Freeland, Syracuse.
MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT PTA, 7:30 p.m.
David Gleason, Meigs Local School
District superintendent, will be the
speaker. Refreslunents will be served. Parents urged to support the
school through the PTA with their
attendance at the meeting.

(
,'• ~

4

--~----------~----~ ~~=====-==~;~~~-==~====~l~~

Kenneth McCullougtl, R. Ph,
. Charles Riffle, R. Ph.
Ronald lianning, R. P'h.
Mon. thru Sat. 8:00a.m. to 9 p.m.
Sunday 10: 30'to 12:30 and 5 to 9 p.m.
PR ESCRI PTlONS
PH. 992-2955
Fr.iendly service
E . Main
Open Nights til 9
Pomeroy, 0.

••

-•

PAPER CARRIER
NEEDED IN THE
POMEROY
AND
.
MIDDLEPORT AREA
FOR THE
DAILY SENTINEL

SALES, INC.

$6195

Pre-Owned Cars

1977 BUICK

1976

,,,

J

•

CHEVROLET
MONZA
silver, V-6 auto.
$3895

1975 FORD

PONTIAC
GRAND PRIX

SKYLARK
V-6, air, auto., p.s., p.b.
$3395

PINTO

Station Wagon auto .,
p. steenng ; 1 7 9 5

•3395

1973 Fairpoint
14x65
2 bedroom, oil heat,
front living room

1972 Crown
12x65
3 bedroom, all electric,

Mobile
Homes

1971
Fleetwood 14x64
bath 1 ':lz, tront
bedroom

front bedroom

1970 Newmoon
12x60
3 bedroom.
front kitchen

1969
Champion 12x50
2 bedroom, all electric,
tront kitchen

B&amp;S SALES, INC.
675-4424

2nd &amp; Viand Street

Point Pleasant

WINTER

I'IIDC8
LE CONTINUES
MEN'S
SPORTCOATS
MEN'S

SUITS
!LOT

Reduced

LADIES

40%

DRESS
COATS

$45 to $110

REDUCED 30%

REDUCED

40%

1 LOT LADIES

Reg. 570.00 to $180.00
SALE $45To $126.00

SALE $13.00

CAR
COATS

Reg. 518.00

l-ADIES

BETTER
DRESSES
I'.'EN'S

REDUCED

30%
REDUCED . ;

40%

1 RAC

UATHER
JACKETS

BLOUSES
SKIRTS, SLACKS

Men's Corduroy

REDUCED

40 %

W.ORK
$17.95

BLOUSES

Men's Wools, Knifed Nylon,
or Corduroy.

PRICE

103 LADIES

' 1 Rack Men's Long Sleeve

KNIT
SHIRTS

REDUCED

SLACKS ETC. ~
SUITS
PANTSUITS

REDUCED

30%

CALL '992-2156
-

BElWEEN 8:30 AM &amp;5 PM

1978

Rally Sport, 7,000 miles
air, auto. p.s. p.b.
am-fm stereo .

OFFICERS ~STAI I ED
New officers were installed at the
recent meeting of the Harrisonville
Senior Citizens Club held at the hall.
Installed were Minnie McGrath,
president; Mrs. Sadie Carr, vice
president; Louise Eshelman,
secretary; and Mrs. Hazel Stanley,
treasurer. Fifteen members were
,.present for the meeting. Dues were
paid. Next mee).ing will be at 8 p.m.
on Feb. 26.
PAUL BURTON HOSPITALIZED
Paul E. Burton, Racine, has been
admitted to Ward 2B of the Veterans
Hospital in Huntington, W. Va.
Cards may be sent to the hospital.

planned by Mrs. Dorothy Jenkins,
Adam Martin pla yed several
on gina! songs on the oiano.
A round robin card was signed for
Mrs. Iva Powell . A thank you note
fPOm Mr. and Mrs. Fred Goeglein
was read for a Christmas remembrance. Goeglein, a World War I
veteran, enclosed a donation. Thank
you notes were also read from Harry
Davis, Inez Stivers, and Eulelia
Webster.
The midwinter conference was announced for Feb. 29 and March I at
the Neil House in Colwnbus.
Hostesses for the February
meeting will be Mrs. Davis, Mrs.
Loretta Tiemeyer , and Miss Cheryl
Lehew. It was noted that the unit
still has about 25 packages of pecans
for sale. The prayer for peace was
given by Genevieve Meinhart , acting chaplain, and tbe group sang
" America" in closing.
Refreshments were served by
Peggy Harris and Mrs. Hunnel.

8&amp;$

,o'7Q CAMARO

Past matrons meet
Mrs. Emma ciatworthy and Mrs.
Virginia Buchanan hosted a meeting
of the Past Matrons Club of
Evangeline Chapter, Order of the
Eastern Star, Friday night at tbe
Clatworthy home.
Mrs. Grace French opened the
meeting with two poems, "In God
We Trust" and "Keep America."
Cards were signed and sent to Mrs.
Cora Pullen and Mrs. Bea Kuhn. A
birthday card was sent to Allen
Hu• hes. Games were played with
prizes going to Mrs. French, Mrs.
Kathryn Knight, Mrs. Marie
Hawkins, and Mrs. Rosemary
Lyons.
Mrs. Clatworthy and Mrs.
Buchanan served cake, ice cream
nuts and coffee to those named and
Mrs. Beulah Hayes, Mrs. Evelyn
Lewis, and Mrs. Mary Hughes.

19 veterans at Arcadia. two at the
veterans hospitals, and six veterans
in the local hospital or home were
remerl'lbered at Christmas time. It
was also noted that three members
attended the Christmas party at the
Chillicothe hospital, with 31 pounds
of ca ndy and four cakes being taken.
Twelve towel bibs were made by
Mrs. Casci and these were taken.
A discussion wa s held on gasoline
allowances for veterans work with
funding being increased. Mrs. Casci
reported that the unit is one over
goal in membership. She also an·
nounced that 2800 small poppies and
100 large poppines have been
ordered. A fWld raising project with
an afghan or a quilt was discussed.
Mrs. Veda Davis, junior advisor,
announced that her juniors will be
entering the national coloring contest using three different pictures on
Americanism. The juniors wUI also
be entering a an energy conservation contest. For the music program

l""l""' back into the school•.
Mrs. Hunnel also mentioned the
SALT Tn·«t y an&lt;' the fact that further debate on arms limitations will
probably nor be resumed until 1981.
Members were also urged to contact
their representatives to urge that V.
A. hospitals not be put on mandatory
cost control.
To conclude her program, Mrs.
Huimel read excerpts from lincoln's
Gettysburg Address.
In the ahsence of the president,
Mrs. Marjorie Goett, Mrs. Genuna
Casci, first vice president opened
themecting in ritualistic form .
Special guest was Commander
Joseph Zwilling who thanked the
Auxiliary and especially the
veterans affairs and rehabilitaion
co-chairmen, Pearl Knapp and
Mary Martin, for an outstanding job
of remembering veterans, those
hospitalized, in nursing homes and
at home. In concluSion he presented
$10 to Mrs. Marlin for the veterans'
work. '
Cmdr. Zwilling announced the
Four Chaplain Services to be held at
the Laurel Cliff Free Methodist
Church on Feb. 3 at 9:30a.m. Miss
Enna Smith urged the members to
attend the church in a group that
Sunday and noted that in February
she will present a program on
Americanism.
Mrs. Knapp read the community
service report in the absence of Mrs.
Ruby Marshall, chairman. A report
was given on veterans affairs by
Mrs. Martin with a copy being sent
to the district chainnan, Mrs'
Nelson Mowery. It was reported that

ATTENTION:

Valentine's Day Cards
SEE US FIRST AND COMPAHE OUR
MATERIAL AT REASONABLE PRICES .

Increased benefits meeting subject

.---------------------------+

MODULAR
HOMES
By
ALL AMERICAN
Meets

man sensation James Worthy, who
is out for the season with a broken
ankle. AI Wood started in his stead
and scored 26 points.
Maryland, the surprise leader of
the ACC, got a key · block from
backup center Taylor Baldwin and
16 points by both Albert King and
Greg Manning to nip N.C. State.
" He went l"'(Jn·l with me," said the
S-10 Baldwin of State's Sidney Lowe,
"and tried to throw up a reverse
.layup. I kind of had the advantage,
being a foot taller than he Is."
Freshman Lamar Heard followed
a missed shot with a layup with two
seconds left to secure Georgia's victory. Despite the loss, Tennessee
remained atop the SEC by a halfgame over Kentucky.
The state of Florida was the site of
some high-scoring individual ef·
forts. Jacksonville's James Ray set
a Sunbelt Conference scoring record
with 45 points as the Dolphins overwhelmed South Florida 91-75. Ray,
who had 30 points in the first hall, hit
16 of 25 shots from the field and 13 of
17 free throws. He also grabbed 11
rebounds.
Bo Clark of Division II Central
Florida, the leading scorer in the
nation last year, connected for 49
points in his club's 130-83 an·
nihilation of Florida Tech.
South Carolina journeyed to the
Sunshine State only to be upaet by
Florida Southern 7~2. Florida

'•

Thursday, Jan. 24, 1980

.

REDUCED

40%

�&amp;--The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. , Thursday, Jan. 24, 1980

Library

•o'

,o~~

,.
:•'

.'

,~

Letters

'=''

.,.r

January 23/ 80
Ed Holter
Star Route
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Dear Ed,
When you were helping move the
folding dislay boards, you said there
were some records you wish the

~wP"-

I

R
A
R

'i

\ '\1•'"'

. '"

~~~~ ~

. '\"~•'"I •' " '

\1" ~

libraries had so you could borrow
them. And I said, "Make me a list
and we'll get them. ''
Well, this is the time to give me a
list. I'm getting my once-a-year $150
record order ready - and where's
your list?
What I'd really like to have is a list
from every Meigs Countian, but I'll
settle for what I can get. So if you
and your friends will get a list
together and a few other folks will
drop a word in my ear or leave a
me.sage with Ruth, or Aggie, or
Madhu, or Margaret (or maybe tell
Patti or Kay or Julia or Brian at
school ), I'll try to get the records
you ask for.
Remember if the libraries don't
have any "good" records this year,
it will be YOUR fault.
Sincerely yours,
Ellen Bell, Librarian
Serving all of Meigs County

) ames will present
flag to health

"

e

'"'''"'",...

·•

Ct'!n ter

COLUMBUS - State Representative Ron James ([).Proctorville)
will present an Ohio State flag to the
residents of the Pomeroy Health
Care Center on Jan. 28, at 3p.m.
Residents of the Pomeroy Health
Care Center asked James to donate
a flag of the State of Ohio to them so
that the flag could be displayed at
the Center.
A committee of residents will be
chosen to receive the flag f~om
Representative James at the presentation ceremony.
"I am honored to present the flag
of our state to the residents of the
Pomeroy Health Care Center," Rep.
James said, "I know that they will
display the flag proudly."

The best fireplace fuels - ha rdwoods such as rock cim, hickory,
white oak, maple, beech and birch bum slowly with plenty of heat.

::s&amp;

1 GROUP MEN'S RAND B-D Widths

h PRICE

1

ALL WOMEN'S FALL &amp; WINTER

/z PRICE

1

SHOES

WOMEN ' S, CHILDREN'S, MEN ' S

1/2

ANGEL TREADS

PRICE

heritage house
OF SHOES
Open til B p.m. Fri.

'·
•••

,,r

..,

INVESTITURE-Brownies of Salisbury Girl Scout
Troop 1220 participated in an investiture ceremony
Tuesday night at the Enterprise United Methodist
Church. Mrs. Janet Sunpson is leader of the troop, and
her. assistant is Jennifer Warth. Invested we re left to
ri~ht, front, Amy Warth, Amy Rouse, Tracy Eblin ,

•w"
•
•••
•
I

powe rful

Staci Young and Tara Humphi-eys; second row, Jennifer Taylor, Melanie Beegle, Heidi Caruthers, Kristin
King, and Amy Brothers; and third
row, Jody Taylor, Tracl Casto, Joan Simpson, Marsha
· King, and Traci Bartels.

represented.
In the summer of 1929, the Ohio
Junior Chamber of Commerce was
formed and in January 1966
members voted to adopt the name,
Jaycees, in accordance with the Na·
tiona! Organization.
Today the Ohio Jaycees are the
fourth largest Jaycee Orga~tion
in the world, ranking behind such
coWJtries as the Japan Jaycees and

Governor James Rhodes has pro. claimed Jan. 2().28, 191!0 as JAYCEE
WEEK in Ohio and urged all
Ohioans to give full regard to the
past services of the Ohio Jaycees.
He said this organization of young
men has contributed materially to
the betterment of this state through
their. participation and involvement
in such local programs as Energy
and Environment, Youth in Sports,
C.P.R., and Muscular Dystrophy for
the past 51years.
The week celebrates the founding
of the Jaycees in 1915, when Henry
Giessenbier saw a need for a young
men's civic group and organized the
first chapter in St. Louis. The movement spread so fast that in 1920, the
U.S. Junior Chamber of Commerce
was formed with 24 cities

STEAM EXTRACTION
CLEANING
to loosen, dissolve
and e.:tract
deep-seated dirt and
residues

t,

Gets carpets
cleaner. Faster! And
it's easy to ope rate

•
[

too

the United States Jaycees, with a
memership of over 22,000 and
representing 430 communities in
Ohio with Nick Frank as their 51st
president.
The author of the Jaycee Creed,
adopted as the official Jaycee Creed
all over the world, was William
Brownfield from Columbus.
The Ohio Jaycee State Headquarters is located in Marion.

~

t

NO LIFT ING!
CLEANING WAND

EQUIPPED WITH

tI

W'HEE LS
HANDLES LIK E
A VACUUM
SWEEPER

i•

••
•'

STAR SUPPLY

~
L

Racine, 0 .

WINTER MDSE. MUST SEL
TO MAKE ROOM FOR SPRING ITEMS

96

SAVE
UP
TO
TEU
YOU II
NEIGHBOII
SIIE' LIKES
BARGAINS TOOl

Buy
Now
For Next Year

When cooking fish allow 10
minutes per inch of thickness + 20
minutes for solidly frozen fish measuring the fish at its thickest
point.

Incl udi ng

~RICES

Ill
EFFtCT NOW

Entire-Witter I HelliiiJ Stoc'l
,-r

Dtnlms.. polyeJter,
;llbs.
Noltll"liJ '-'d ~;··· Wt need
room for new trrlvlng spring .
panb.

WOMEIIS, JUIIIORS, MISSES

MENS
SHIRTS

~

Womens and Teens
FASHION PANTS
AND JEANS

All ADVERTISED PRICES ARE IN EFfECT NOW!!
• BLOUSES
• FASHION TOPS

n,, Alllio!

heavy .

fl an ne ls, cor
du r ov
co lt o n

51"" or Sbort

Lon&amp;

b lends and others.
Al l winter shirts
must go. Val ves to
l1A .99

Yes, your chOi ce of our enti re

stock; . Wt nMCI
get bargai ns.

112 PRICE

'~)a c t ,

so you

1 h·PRICE

CANNON

Salad Bar
Ham Steak
Sweet Potatoes
Vegetable

THEY WERE 16.991

THICK VELOUR
BATH TOWELS

WOMEN$
SKIRtS

Prints - Solids · Jacquards

SLEEP
WEAR

Our stcre• uNCI

them, they' re the

F" ante stl c Sa le Group . I I
pef fec t, y ou would pay $3 .99.

best
qua l i ty .
l ncludn
c;o -

Come look these over. It's e

RoU,_
Tea,

WOMENS SWEATERS

Coffee or Milk

1ST QUALITY!

J

We'vi Mel • wondtr1vl sweeter ...son.
bot tt'a II,..· N..siMn them up. Former

-·" ~
YIIIM to

sh".

Styled

and

tt.IIC-

I..,.ttn. tMt you'll ....,. lor m.,y more

P'IIICE

CENTER
PIECES

JeffreyS. Jones, ~. Rt. ! ,Albany,
islodged in Meigs County Jail on
charges of OWl, hit-skip and driving
a motor vehcile while license uder
suspension the Meigs County
Sheriff's Department reported.
According to deputy Manning
Mohler's report, Jones was northbound on SR 143, in a vehicle
owned by Wilkie Hoyd, Rt. 2,
Albany, when he went left of center
going off the highway, knocking
down five mailboxes near the Welch
residence.
The vehicle continued on, striking
a low bridge abutment. The vehicle
then went into a ditch and stopped
for a few minutes; the driver, finally
able to rock the car out of the ditch,
continued on north.
When Deputy Mohler arrived on
the scene, he began following the
vehicle; the tire was leaving black
marks on the pavement after the
steering was damaged.
Deputy Mohler followed . the
vehicle's tracks into Athens County
where an Ohio State Patrol unit had
located it in a ditch o!\ RT. 50. J ones
is residing in Meigs County Jail
awaiting a court appea rance.
The department is investigating a
two car accident on Welsh Town

The largest argency funded by the
local 648 Board is the GalliaJackson-Meigs Community Mental
Health Center Inc., a non-profit corporation.
Approximately $2 million of the
t3.6 million annual budget of the 648
Board is spent for services con·
tracted from the Center Board.
Direct funding of the G-J-M 648
Board comes from federal and state
grants, as well as .2mill tax levies in
each of the three counties served by
the local board.
In recent weeks a severe rift has
developed between the 648 Board
and its primary service agency, the
Center Board. That controversy sur·
faced on December 17 when the 648
Board,directed the takeover -by Ma·
Board staff of the Nelsonville Alternative Residential Facilty. That

MAYOR'S COURT
Fourteen defendants forfeited
bonds in the court of Pomeroy
r&gt;fayor Clarence Andrews Tuesday
night.
Forfeiting bonds were Edith Rose,
Racine, $30, assured clear distance;
Robert Murphy, Minersville, $48,
speed; Terry Brown, Minersville,
and James Sheets, Rutland, $33,
speed; Thomas Weaton, Miner·
aviUe, $30, failure to yield; Richard
McDonald, Nelsonville, $30, speed;
James Lupardus, Stockport, $27,
speed; John Brudge, Dexter, $50,
open flask; Jimmy Narsh, Ravenswood, and Cynthia Craig, Athens,
t32, speed; Kenneth Hartley,
Pomeroy, $34, speed; Richard
Hysell, Middleport, $30, speed ;
Robert Sushka, Little Hocking, $29,
speed; Mildred Haning, Pomeroy,
$50, crossing double yellow line.

SCHOOLS DISMISSED EARLY
Due to inclement weather, schools
of the Meig.!l Local' School District
were dismissed two hours early this
aftemoon. II) the Southem Local
Scbool District, classes were
dismissed at 12:30 p.m. In the
Eastem Local District classes were
dismissed at 11 :30 a.m. Snow was
falling with two to three inches of accumulation predicted.

fiscal officer Mark Johnson.
Other 648 Board salaries are :
Joyce New, fiscal officer, $928.80 biweekly ; Edith · Gill ispie, administrative assistant, $633.60 biweekly; Gwen Longbotham, administrative assistant, $688.80 biweekly. Employe Marshall Gordon,
mental health administrator, is
listed with the Meigs County Auditor
as making $10.82 per hour.
Also listed in the Meigs County
books as an employe of the 648 Board
is Jeff Plummer, son of Maxine
Plummer. The high school senior is
listed as making $185.60 bi-weekly,
working 32 hours a week as the
janitor at a branch center located in
Jackson.
Salaries of the approximately 150
persons employed by the G-J-M Cen·
ter Board are equally impressive.
According to a Community Plan,
developed yearly by the 648 Board,
the Center Director makes $32,099
yearly. . Dr. Bernard Niehm is
currently serving as acting Center
Director.
Despite the salary, the rate of
tum-()ver for that position approaches a near whirlwind- in the
past six years, there have been five
Center Directors.
Dr. Niehm's daughter, Julie
Niehm , a college student, was employed last summer under the
authority of the 648 Board. She made
$260 bi-weekly. Miss Niehm has
reportedly worked for the board
during the past several summers.
Clinical Director Dr. Harriet
Kaufman receives $28,352 annually;
Director of Operations Malcolm
Orebaugh is paid at an annual rate
of $20,864, according to the Com-

facilty had, prior to that date, been
operated under the authority of the
Center Board.
Following the takeover, Center
employes who wer¢ assigned to the
children's residential facility were
reportedly told by 648 Board administrators that if they wished to
retain their jobs they would have to
resign from the Center to be employed by the 648 Board.
Within days most of those employes did so. As of January 9, five
former Center employes-including
Marc Levine, son of 648 Board Chairman Annette Levine-were listed on
the payroll voucher filed with the
Meigs County Auditors Office. The .
other new 648 employes were
William McGee, mental health administrator ; William Kizer, social
service worker ;. Karen Frogale,
secretary; and, Robert Wiedeback,•
night assistant. Three additional
employe s , Dick Pa r adi se
(psychologist I, Barb Paradise (attendant) and Kathy McGee (attendant), were added to the
children's residential roll of the 648
Board voucher Tuesday.
Salaries of those employes range
from t3. 78 per hour for night
assistant to $10.96 per hour for
psychologist. It is reported, WJofficially, that there are no clients
currently residing at the children's
facility. Since the time of the
December 17 takeover, according to
informed sources, two clients have
received service at the facility.
Employes of both the 648 Board
and the Mental Health Center are
among the highest paid in any of the
three counties served.
According to Mark Johnson, for·
mer fiscal officer for the Center and
current 648 Board employe, approximately 70 percent of the tricounty mental health budget, goes
toward the payment of salaries.
At an annual salary of $38,292.80
($1,472.80 bi-weekly ) 648 Board
Executive Director Plummer is the
highest paid government official in
any of the three counties served by
her board. Salaries of the other six
648 Board employes-excluding the
eight emploxes at the children's
residential ·~nter-range from
$427.20 bi·w~y for secretary Mary
Jo Thaler to $1,120 bi-weekly for

QUINTESSENCE

1978 PLY. HORIZON

'

W.

Hundreds o f Unadvertised Price
Cuts at Radio Sha c k St ores &amp;
Parti cipati ng D ea lers . LOOK FOR
THE RED TAGS!

I

cond., a utomatic trans., power

L&gt;

-

-

-

steer i ng &amp; brakes. Rally wheels .

1977 CHEV. MONTE CARLO
Local 1 owner , 350 V·B engin e,
auto., P .S., P .B., air cond .. g o~
tires, landau model, solid wh1t e

Annual meeting set

1974 D9DGE VAN
Van

3695
12895 .
1

Conversion includes bed,

sink, refr igerator, V-8, auto.,

The annual meeting of the Meigs
County Regjcipal Planning Commission willi]r.l held at 3:10 p.m.
Monday in th&amp;,4gricultural rooms of
the Fanners l!ll!lk bulding.
There will 'lie a report of the
nominating conunittee, election of
officers for 1980, presentation of the
first quarterly report on comprehensive planning and response to
questions ;•;,il!ed by Joe Kelly, Ohio
Department of Economic and Community Development on the Housing
and Land use certification for Meigs
County.'•

P.S.,

P . B.,

good t ires.

Runs

perfect.

_

' TM Dolby l a barato ries

1972 FORD MAVERICK 2 DR
Auto . trans., good tir es. Lots of
servi ce in this one.
1

977 CHEVROLET

895
1
3895

4 doo r, s mall V-8, automatic ,
power steeri ng, power brakes,
lock ing differ enti al, air cond i ·
ti oning , clean interior , green.

1977 DODGE

MONAC0'~2695

4 Dr . Brougham , V·B, auto ., P.S.,
P .B. , air , local 1 owner car &amp; real
sharp .
1

1974 CHEV. /z T. PICKUP
1
1495
1969 CHEVROLET 1/z T.
PICKUP
'949
14-WH. DRIVE wv IN STOCK

AFFIRMS ACTIONS

The ·fourth District Court of Appeals has recently affirmed Com·
mon Pleas Judge John C. Bacon in
several actions wherein he presided
at the trial level, including Meigs
County cases of State vs Donald
Swealinger, a felony conviction; the
case of Pauline Hysell vs Olan
Hysell, In domestic relations, BrK!
the Lawrence County case ri
Allstate Insurance Co. vs Clarence
Rule, insurers' duty to defend and
idemnify its named insured.
Appeals · Judges Homer Able,
Lawrence Grey and Earl Stephen·
son will assemble Feb. 'n, in
Pomeroy for the next session of the
Meigs County Court of Appeals to
consider a number of pending cases.

~:~~~3~~~~
![

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our remaininl winter 8oodl and You Savt!

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72

ft'IDVII

The Middleport Emergency Squad
answered a call to Laurel St. at 2:28
p.m. Wednesday for Jeffrey McKinney who was taken to Holzer
Medical Center.

4 Door , dark red. co lor with mat ching red vi ny l trim , radi o, ai r

lL

and Boys
WINTER
JACKETS
Yep -

SQUAD CALLED

~18SALE

SAVISO%

4 PIECE GROUP
FROM
MARiffiA, 0.

Hill.
Kenny R. Wilt, 20, Minersville, advised that at 2 a.m. Thursday, his
pickup was parked in his driveway. .
whan a vehicle owned by Jerry
Stone, Rutland, backed into the Wilt
vehicle. There was heavy damage to
the Wilt vehi cle.
Wednesday evening the department received a report of an ac·
ctdent tha occurred on US 33.
Raymond L . Andrews, 18 ,
Ebenezer Street, Pomeroy, was
traveling north on 33, just north of
the Pomeroy Corp., and lost control
on the slick highway. The vehicle
went off the road on the right and
over an embankment. . There was
slight property damage.
Wednesday evening Ray R.
Pickens, 33, Rt. 3, Pomeroy was
traveling east on county road 82
when a deer ran into the path of his
vehicle and was killed.
There was light property damage
to the right front fender.

WE'RE UI:I-UII\IU
ON GREAT
USED CARS

co lor .

Ge

munity Plan.
Other annua l Center salaries,
listed by position in the Community
Plan, are: administrative assistant,
$15,802; C and E Director, $28,258; R
and E Director, $23,989; Medical
Director, $58,847; Gallla Clinic
Chief, $20,471; Jackson Clinic Chief,
$17,379; Meigs Clinic Chief, $14,922.
As employes of a private nonprofit co rporation, salary information concerning Center employes is not listed with any county
auditor's office. Since the relationship between the 648 ~rd and the
Center is contracted-and despite the
fa ct the Center spends approximately $2 million annually in
federal, state and local tax dollarscountyofficials do not see the Center
Board's payroll or how it spends its
money.
(Tomorrow, 648 Board charges
Center with inefficiency~ Board
is charged with attempting to create
a mental health empire)

Jlot In llaon

THE MEIGS INN
\

s~rvice .

FLORAL POLY

Cl'\eckl ot stripes. Regut1r
Sl.OO pac k. Good wtlgtlt
Import qua lity.

You must be 21 or accdmpan ied by parents or legal guardian .

Phone 992-3629

PULLOVER 01 CARDJCAIIS

PRICES
Ill
EFFECT
NOW

DISH CLOTHS

The establishment of 648 Boards
W8ll inspired by federal law and
created by state legislation that
P~ve counties the authority to
establish agencies for the delivery of
mental health services.
The term '6118 Board' comes fr om
the legislative number of the bill
that created COtmty mental health
systems-House Bi11648.
Locally, the Gallia.Jackson-Melgs
Mental Health and Mental Retardation 648 Board will spend approximately t3.4 million this year in
the delivery of services. 648 Boar·
ds wer~ rtot originally designed to to
deliver""direct services to clients.
They were created to serve as
parent organizations for smaller
agencies that would provide mental
health services to clients.
According to G-J-M 648 Board
Executive Director Maxine S. Plummer, legislation (Senate Bill160) is
currently pending which would
·allow 648 Board's in population
areas under 100,000 to SUiJPIY direct

ordlnate nengeu ·
Two PI~ .

very spec:l•l prlce l

$625 Plus Tax

..
•
t

r

WE NEED SPACE!

MENU

All LEGAL
BEVERAGES SOLD

By LAiutYEWING
In announcing a legislative
initiative which would impose spen·
ding and accounting goidlines on
COWlty mental health 648 Boards,
Rep. Alan Norris, R-Westerville,
last week called the 12-year-dd state
law that created such boards a

~

FRIDAY NIGHT SPECIAL 5 TIL 10

g \\\ \

tlvltles and Issues.

"
"

Weekend At Meigs Inn

ENTERTAINMENT
FRIDAY &amp;SATURDAY
NIGHT

Editor's Note- ThiB iJ the first
Ia a series of arUcles oo GaUia •
Jacboo • Meigs Mental Health
and Mental Retardation 648
Board and Center Board ac·

•~

AlL

I

.,

:
:;
,,""

Jaycee Week proclaimed january 20-26 in Ohio

Y2 PRICE

648 Boards were
inspired by federal law,.
.
created by state legislation 12 years ago.

~~ muddle ."

· VIBRATING BRUSH
AGITATION and

Man cited on three charges

.

Dab a little scent on a cold light
bulb and its real will diffuse the
(ragrance when the light is turned
on.

Combines

NOW

Middleport, 0 .

A therapist at the Meigs Mental
Health Center has been awarded her
A.C.S.W "The ACSW is the highest
level a social worker can reach,"
said David Krasner, ACSW, the
Mental Health Center Coordinator at
the Meigs Clinic.
In order to receivq . the ACSW
(which stands for Acad'emy of Certified Social Workers), the candidate, after receiving a Master's
degree and having two years of
supervised direct service, must pass
a comprehensive test.
Ms. Most has heen a therapist at
the Meigs clinic for over two years.

"£.f0....,.

L

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursctay, Jan. 24, 1980

A .CS W awarded

WMPO ·

SATURDAYS~
. --

8 til Noon

- ---'

•

·RittGS, STICKPINS, BRACELETS, EARRINGS,
NECKLACES AND CHAINS
'

VILLAGE PHARMACY
.
. .

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

•

M ost nems
a lso ava• iable at
Rad •o Shack
Dealers.
Look for th •s
St~ n tn you r
netghborhood. . ._

..a.

.o•AL • ~

. ._ _ _. .

'

271 N. 2nd Ave.

,,

RADIO SHACK HAS OVER 70()() STORES AND DEALERS IN THE USA AND CANADA!

Middle ort, Ohio
l

!I A DIVI SION O F TANDY CORPORATION

PRICES MAY VARY AT INDIVIDUAL STO RES

. '

.
.'

�&amp;--The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. , Thursday, Jan. 24, 1980

Library

•o'

,o~~

,.
:•'

.'

,~

Letters

'=''

.,.r

January 23/ 80
Ed Holter
Star Route
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Dear Ed,
When you were helping move the
folding dislay boards, you said there
were some records you wish the

~wP"-

I

R
A
R

'i

\ '\1•'"'

. '"

~~~~ ~

. '\"~•'"I •' " '

\1" ~

libraries had so you could borrow
them. And I said, "Make me a list
and we'll get them. ''
Well, this is the time to give me a
list. I'm getting my once-a-year $150
record order ready - and where's
your list?
What I'd really like to have is a list
from every Meigs Countian, but I'll
settle for what I can get. So if you
and your friends will get a list
together and a few other folks will
drop a word in my ear or leave a
me.sage with Ruth, or Aggie, or
Madhu, or Margaret (or maybe tell
Patti or Kay or Julia or Brian at
school ), I'll try to get the records
you ask for.
Remember if the libraries don't
have any "good" records this year,
it will be YOUR fault.
Sincerely yours,
Ellen Bell, Librarian
Serving all of Meigs County

) ames will present
flag to health

"

e

'"'''"'",...

·•

Ct'!n ter

COLUMBUS - State Representative Ron James ([).Proctorville)
will present an Ohio State flag to the
residents of the Pomeroy Health
Care Center on Jan. 28, at 3p.m.
Residents of the Pomeroy Health
Care Center asked James to donate
a flag of the State of Ohio to them so
that the flag could be displayed at
the Center.
A committee of residents will be
chosen to receive the flag f~om
Representative James at the presentation ceremony.
"I am honored to present the flag
of our state to the residents of the
Pomeroy Health Care Center," Rep.
James said, "I know that they will
display the flag proudly."

The best fireplace fuels - ha rdwoods such as rock cim, hickory,
white oak, maple, beech and birch bum slowly with plenty of heat.

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PRICE

heritage house
OF SHOES
Open til B p.m. Fri.

'·
•••

,,r

..,

INVESTITURE-Brownies of Salisbury Girl Scout
Troop 1220 participated in an investiture ceremony
Tuesday night at the Enterprise United Methodist
Church. Mrs. Janet Sunpson is leader of the troop, and
her. assistant is Jennifer Warth. Invested we re left to
ri~ht, front, Amy Warth, Amy Rouse, Tracy Eblin ,

•w"
•
•••
•
I

powe rful

Staci Young and Tara Humphi-eys; second row, Jennifer Taylor, Melanie Beegle, Heidi Caruthers, Kristin
King, and Amy Brothers; and third
row, Jody Taylor, Tracl Casto, Joan Simpson, Marsha
· King, and Traci Bartels.

represented.
In the summer of 1929, the Ohio
Junior Chamber of Commerce was
formed and in January 1966
members voted to adopt the name,
Jaycees, in accordance with the Na·
tiona! Organization.
Today the Ohio Jaycees are the
fourth largest Jaycee Orga~tion
in the world, ranking behind such
coWJtries as the Japan Jaycees and

Governor James Rhodes has pro. claimed Jan. 2().28, 191!0 as JAYCEE
WEEK in Ohio and urged all
Ohioans to give full regard to the
past services of the Ohio Jaycees.
He said this organization of young
men has contributed materially to
the betterment of this state through
their. participation and involvement
in such local programs as Energy
and Environment, Youth in Sports,
C.P.R., and Muscular Dystrophy for
the past 51years.
The week celebrates the founding
of the Jaycees in 1915, when Henry
Giessenbier saw a need for a young
men's civic group and organized the
first chapter in St. Louis. The movement spread so fast that in 1920, the
U.S. Junior Chamber of Commerce
was formed with 24 cities

STEAM EXTRACTION
CLEANING
to loosen, dissolve
and e.:tract
deep-seated dirt and
residues

t,

Gets carpets
cleaner. Faster! And
it's easy to ope rate

•
[

too

the United States Jaycees, with a
memership of over 22,000 and
representing 430 communities in
Ohio with Nick Frank as their 51st
president.
The author of the Jaycee Creed,
adopted as the official Jaycee Creed
all over the world, was William
Brownfield from Columbus.
The Ohio Jaycee State Headquarters is located in Marion.

~

t

NO LIFT ING!
CLEANING WAND

EQUIPPED WITH

tI

W'HEE LS
HANDLES LIK E
A VACUUM
SWEEPER

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STAR SUPPLY

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WINTER MDSE. MUST SEL
TO MAKE ROOM FOR SPRING ITEMS

96

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UP
TO
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YOU II
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BARGAINS TOOl

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For Next Year

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minutes per inch of thickness + 20
minutes for solidly frozen fish measuring the fish at its thickest
point.

Incl udi ng

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Ill
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Entire-Witter I HelliiiJ Stoc'l
,-r

Dtnlms.. polyeJter,
;llbs.
Noltll"liJ '-'d ~;··· Wt need
room for new trrlvlng spring .
panb.

WOMEIIS, JUIIIORS, MISSES

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SHIRTS

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FASHION PANTS
AND JEANS

All ADVERTISED PRICES ARE IN EFfECT NOW!!
• BLOUSES
• FASHION TOPS

n,, Alllio!

heavy .

fl an ne ls, cor
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b lends and others.
Al l winter shirts
must go. Val ves to
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Yes, your chOi ce of our enti re

stock; . Wt nMCI
get bargai ns.

112 PRICE

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so you

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CANNON

Salad Bar
Ham Steak
Sweet Potatoes
Vegetable

THEY WERE 16.991

THICK VELOUR
BATH TOWELS

WOMEN$
SKIRtS

Prints - Solids · Jacquards

SLEEP
WEAR

Our stcre• uNCI

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best
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1ST QUALITY!

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We'vi Mel • wondtr1vl sweeter ...son.
bot tt'a II,..· N..siMn them up. Former

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P'IIICE

CENTER
PIECES

JeffreyS. Jones, ~. Rt. ! ,Albany,
islodged in Meigs County Jail on
charges of OWl, hit-skip and driving
a motor vehcile while license uder
suspension the Meigs County
Sheriff's Department reported.
According to deputy Manning
Mohler's report, Jones was northbound on SR 143, in a vehicle
owned by Wilkie Hoyd, Rt. 2,
Albany, when he went left of center
going off the highway, knocking
down five mailboxes near the Welch
residence.
The vehicle continued on, striking
a low bridge abutment. The vehicle
then went into a ditch and stopped
for a few minutes; the driver, finally
able to rock the car out of the ditch,
continued on north.
When Deputy Mohler arrived on
the scene, he began following the
vehicle; the tire was leaving black
marks on the pavement after the
steering was damaged.
Deputy Mohler followed . the
vehicle's tracks into Athens County
where an Ohio State Patrol unit had
located it in a ditch o!\ RT. 50. J ones
is residing in Meigs County Jail
awaiting a court appea rance.
The department is investigating a
two car accident on Welsh Town

The largest argency funded by the
local 648 Board is the GalliaJackson-Meigs Community Mental
Health Center Inc., a non-profit corporation.
Approximately $2 million of the
t3.6 million annual budget of the 648
Board is spent for services con·
tracted from the Center Board.
Direct funding of the G-J-M 648
Board comes from federal and state
grants, as well as .2mill tax levies in
each of the three counties served by
the local board.
In recent weeks a severe rift has
developed between the 648 Board
and its primary service agency, the
Center Board. That controversy sur·
faced on December 17 when the 648
Board,directed the takeover -by Ma·
Board staff of the Nelsonville Alternative Residential Facilty. That

MAYOR'S COURT
Fourteen defendants forfeited
bonds in the court of Pomeroy
r&gt;fayor Clarence Andrews Tuesday
night.
Forfeiting bonds were Edith Rose,
Racine, $30, assured clear distance;
Robert Murphy, Minersville, $48,
speed; Terry Brown, Minersville,
and James Sheets, Rutland, $33,
speed; Thomas Weaton, Miner·
aviUe, $30, failure to yield; Richard
McDonald, Nelsonville, $30, speed;
James Lupardus, Stockport, $27,
speed; John Brudge, Dexter, $50,
open flask; Jimmy Narsh, Ravenswood, and Cynthia Craig, Athens,
t32, speed; Kenneth Hartley,
Pomeroy, $34, speed; Richard
Hysell, Middleport, $30, speed ;
Robert Sushka, Little Hocking, $29,
speed; Mildred Haning, Pomeroy,
$50, crossing double yellow line.

SCHOOLS DISMISSED EARLY
Due to inclement weather, schools
of the Meig.!l Local' School District
were dismissed two hours early this
aftemoon. II) the Southem Local
Scbool District, classes were
dismissed at 12:30 p.m. In the
Eastem Local District classes were
dismissed at 11 :30 a.m. Snow was
falling with two to three inches of accumulation predicted.

fiscal officer Mark Johnson.
Other 648 Board salaries are :
Joyce New, fiscal officer, $928.80 biweekly ; Edith · Gill ispie, administrative assistant, $633.60 biweekly; Gwen Longbotham, administrative assistant, $688.80 biweekly. Employe Marshall Gordon,
mental health administrator, is
listed with the Meigs County Auditor
as making $10.82 per hour.
Also listed in the Meigs County
books as an employe of the 648 Board
is Jeff Plummer, son of Maxine
Plummer. The high school senior is
listed as making $185.60 bi-weekly,
working 32 hours a week as the
janitor at a branch center located in
Jackson.
Salaries of the approximately 150
persons employed by the G-J-M Cen·
ter Board are equally impressive.
According to a Community Plan,
developed yearly by the 648 Board,
the Center Director makes $32,099
yearly. . Dr. Bernard Niehm is
currently serving as acting Center
Director.
Despite the salary, the rate of
tum-()ver for that position approaches a near whirlwind- in the
past six years, there have been five
Center Directors.
Dr. Niehm's daughter, Julie
Niehm , a college student, was employed last summer under the
authority of the 648 Board. She made
$260 bi-weekly. Miss Niehm has
reportedly worked for the board
during the past several summers.
Clinical Director Dr. Harriet
Kaufman receives $28,352 annually;
Director of Operations Malcolm
Orebaugh is paid at an annual rate
of $20,864, according to the Com-

facilty had, prior to that date, been
operated under the authority of the
Center Board.
Following the takeover, Center
employes who wer¢ assigned to the
children's residential facility were
reportedly told by 648 Board administrators that if they wished to
retain their jobs they would have to
resign from the Center to be employed by the 648 Board.
Within days most of those employes did so. As of January 9, five
former Center employes-including
Marc Levine, son of 648 Board Chairman Annette Levine-were listed on
the payroll voucher filed with the
Meigs County Auditors Office. The .
other new 648 employes were
William McGee, mental health administrator ; William Kizer, social
service worker ;. Karen Frogale,
secretary; and, Robert Wiedeback,•
night assistant. Three additional
employe s , Dick Pa r adi se
(psychologist I, Barb Paradise (attendant) and Kathy McGee (attendant), were added to the
children's residential roll of the 648
Board voucher Tuesday.
Salaries of those employes range
from t3. 78 per hour for night
assistant to $10.96 per hour for
psychologist. It is reported, WJofficially, that there are no clients
currently residing at the children's
facility. Since the time of the
December 17 takeover, according to
informed sources, two clients have
received service at the facility.
Employes of both the 648 Board
and the Mental Health Center are
among the highest paid in any of the
three counties served.
According to Mark Johnson, for·
mer fiscal officer for the Center and
current 648 Board employe, approximately 70 percent of the tricounty mental health budget, goes
toward the payment of salaries.
At an annual salary of $38,292.80
($1,472.80 bi-weekly ) 648 Board
Executive Director Plummer is the
highest paid government official in
any of the three counties served by
her board. Salaries of the other six
648 Board employes-excluding the
eight emploxes at the children's
residential ·~nter-range from
$427.20 bi·w~y for secretary Mary
Jo Thaler to $1,120 bi-weekly for

QUINTESSENCE

1978 PLY. HORIZON

'

W.

Hundreds o f Unadvertised Price
Cuts at Radio Sha c k St ores &amp;
Parti cipati ng D ea lers . LOOK FOR
THE RED TAGS!

I

cond., a utomatic trans., power

L&gt;

-

-

-

steer i ng &amp; brakes. Rally wheels .

1977 CHEV. MONTE CARLO
Local 1 owner , 350 V·B engin e,
auto., P .S., P .B., air cond .. g o~
tires, landau model, solid wh1t e

Annual meeting set

1974 D9DGE VAN
Van

3695
12895 .
1

Conversion includes bed,

sink, refr igerator, V-8, auto.,

The annual meeting of the Meigs
County Regjcipal Planning Commission willi]r.l held at 3:10 p.m.
Monday in th&amp;,4gricultural rooms of
the Fanners l!ll!lk bulding.
There will 'lie a report of the
nominating conunittee, election of
officers for 1980, presentation of the
first quarterly report on comprehensive planning and response to
questions ;•;,il!ed by Joe Kelly, Ohio
Department of Economic and Community Development on the Housing
and Land use certification for Meigs
County.'•

P.S.,

P . B.,

good t ires.

Runs

perfect.

_

' TM Dolby l a barato ries

1972 FORD MAVERICK 2 DR
Auto . trans., good tir es. Lots of
servi ce in this one.
1

977 CHEVROLET

895
1
3895

4 doo r, s mall V-8, automatic ,
power steeri ng, power brakes,
lock ing differ enti al, air cond i ·
ti oning , clean interior , green.

1977 DODGE

MONAC0'~2695

4 Dr . Brougham , V·B, auto ., P.S.,
P .B. , air , local 1 owner car &amp; real
sharp .
1

1974 CHEV. /z T. PICKUP
1
1495
1969 CHEVROLET 1/z T.
PICKUP
'949
14-WH. DRIVE wv IN STOCK

AFFIRMS ACTIONS

The ·fourth District Court of Appeals has recently affirmed Com·
mon Pleas Judge John C. Bacon in
several actions wherein he presided
at the trial level, including Meigs
County cases of State vs Donald
Swealinger, a felony conviction; the
case of Pauline Hysell vs Olan
Hysell, In domestic relations, BrK!
the Lawrence County case ri
Allstate Insurance Co. vs Clarence
Rule, insurers' duty to defend and
idemnify its named insured.
Appeals · Judges Homer Able,
Lawrence Grey and Earl Stephen·
son will assemble Feb. 'n, in
Pomeroy for the next session of the
Meigs County Court of Appeals to
consider a number of pending cases.

~:~~~3~~~~
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72

ft'IDVII

The Middleport Emergency Squad
answered a call to Laurel St. at 2:28
p.m. Wednesday for Jeffrey McKinney who was taken to Holzer
Medical Center.

4 Door , dark red. co lor with mat ching red vi ny l trim , radi o, ai r

lL

and Boys
WINTER
JACKETS
Yep -

SQUAD CALLED

~18SALE

SAVISO%

4 PIECE GROUP
FROM
MARiffiA, 0.

Hill.
Kenny R. Wilt, 20, Minersville, advised that at 2 a.m. Thursday, his
pickup was parked in his driveway. .
whan a vehicle owned by Jerry
Stone, Rutland, backed into the Wilt
vehicle. There was heavy damage to
the Wilt vehi cle.
Wednesday evening the department received a report of an ac·
ctdent tha occurred on US 33.
Raymond L . Andrews, 18 ,
Ebenezer Street, Pomeroy, was
traveling north on 33, just north of
the Pomeroy Corp., and lost control
on the slick highway. The vehicle
went off the road on the right and
over an embankment. . There was
slight property damage.
Wednesday evening Ray R.
Pickens, 33, Rt. 3, Pomeroy was
traveling east on county road 82
when a deer ran into the path of his
vehicle and was killed.
There was light property damage
to the right front fender.

WE'RE UI:I-UII\IU
ON GREAT
USED CARS

co lor .

Ge

munity Plan.
Other annua l Center salaries,
listed by position in the Community
Plan, are: administrative assistant,
$15,802; C and E Director, $28,258; R
and E Director, $23,989; Medical
Director, $58,847; Gallla Clinic
Chief, $20,471; Jackson Clinic Chief,
$17,379; Meigs Clinic Chief, $14,922.
As employes of a private nonprofit co rporation, salary information concerning Center employes is not listed with any county
auditor's office. Since the relationship between the 648 ~rd and the
Center is contracted-and despite the
fa ct the Center spends approximately $2 million annually in
federal, state and local tax dollarscountyofficials do not see the Center
Board's payroll or how it spends its
money.
(Tomorrow, 648 Board charges
Center with inefficiency~ Board
is charged with attempting to create
a mental health empire)

Jlot In llaon

THE MEIGS INN
\

s~rvice .

FLORAL POLY

Cl'\eckl ot stripes. Regut1r
Sl.OO pac k. Good wtlgtlt
Import qua lity.

You must be 21 or accdmpan ied by parents or legal guardian .

Phone 992-3629

PULLOVER 01 CARDJCAIIS

PRICES
Ill
EFFECT
NOW

DISH CLOTHS

The establishment of 648 Boards
W8ll inspired by federal law and
created by state legislation that
P~ve counties the authority to
establish agencies for the delivery of
mental health services.
The term '6118 Board' comes fr om
the legislative number of the bill
that created COtmty mental health
systems-House Bi11648.
Locally, the Gallia.Jackson-Melgs
Mental Health and Mental Retardation 648 Board will spend approximately t3.4 million this year in
the delivery of services. 648 Boar·
ds wer~ rtot originally designed to to
deliver""direct services to clients.
They were created to serve as
parent organizations for smaller
agencies that would provide mental
health services to clients.
According to G-J-M 648 Board
Executive Director Maxine S. Plummer, legislation (Senate Bill160) is
currently pending which would
·allow 648 Board's in population
areas under 100,000 to SUiJPIY direct

ordlnate nengeu ·
Two PI~ .

very spec:l•l prlce l

$625 Plus Tax

..
•
t

r

WE NEED SPACE!

MENU

All LEGAL
BEVERAGES SOLD

By LAiutYEWING
In announcing a legislative
initiative which would impose spen·
ding and accounting goidlines on
COWlty mental health 648 Boards,
Rep. Alan Norris, R-Westerville,
last week called the 12-year-dd state
law that created such boards a

~

FRIDAY NIGHT SPECIAL 5 TIL 10

g \\\ \

tlvltles and Issues.

"
"

Weekend At Meigs Inn

ENTERTAINMENT
FRIDAY &amp;SATURDAY
NIGHT

Editor's Note- ThiB iJ the first
Ia a series of arUcles oo GaUia •
Jacboo • Meigs Mental Health
and Mental Retardation 648
Board and Center Board ac·

•~

AlL

I

.,

:
:;
,,""

Jaycee Week proclaimed january 20-26 in Ohio

Y2 PRICE

648 Boards were
inspired by federal law,.
.
created by state legislation 12 years ago.

~~ muddle ."

· VIBRATING BRUSH
AGITATION and

Man cited on three charges

.

Dab a little scent on a cold light
bulb and its real will diffuse the
(ragrance when the light is turned
on.

Combines

NOW

Middleport, 0 .

A therapist at the Meigs Mental
Health Center has been awarded her
A.C.S.W "The ACSW is the highest
level a social worker can reach,"
said David Krasner, ACSW, the
Mental Health Center Coordinator at
the Meigs Clinic.
In order to receivq . the ACSW
(which stands for Acad'emy of Certified Social Workers), the candidate, after receiving a Master's
degree and having two years of
supervised direct service, must pass
a comprehensive test.
Ms. Most has heen a therapist at
the Meigs clinic for over two years.

"£.f0....,.

L

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursctay, Jan. 24, 1980

A .CS W awarded

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Look for th •s
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Middle ort, Ohio
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.
.'

�S-Tile Datly Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Jan . 24, 1980

Your· Best

9--The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Jan. 24. 19110

Are }'ound in the 'S entinel Classifieds

8U)7 S
-

lnMemorL _

WANT AD
CHARGES

I N MEMORY ol John Prof
Ja nuary 24, 1974
God ca lled him to r est
He always ta kes Th e best.
Sadly missed by his w1fe '
h 1s
ch ildr en,
grand
childre n, brothers , and
friends

f1 ff ,
\:,Words or Under

Coii.sh

Cll.llrgr

I d&lt;ly

100

1 2:)

'ldsys

I 50

I 90

Jdays

I 80

2.25

6dnys

JOO

J7a

Each word over lhe rrurumwn
!5 words IS 4 cents per wor d per

day Ad.:J run.,ltl~ other than consecutive dHy:~ w11l t.. dJ.H rgL&gt;d at
the 1 day rate

In memory, Card of llwnks
and Ollllwtry 6 et:nl~ per word ,
$3 00 rrumrnlltTl

Cllsh m ad-

van~..-e

Mobil ~ Home SHI~~ Hnd Yt~ rd
sales art' acct&gt;pled only w1lh

cash w1lh order. 25 crnt c har~o:e
for ads ca.rrymg Rox Nwnber In
Care of Tiw. St&gt;nltntl.

The Publl3hcr reserv e:~ the

n1o1ht to edit or reJect any 111is
dee me d
obJecttOna l
The
PubliSher Will not be respons1blt&gt;

lor more than one mcorrt-ct m-

serbon
Phone 992-2156

NOTICE

IN LOVI NG memory of our
dear husba nd and father '
Charles Robert Win ebren
ner , who departed th1 s lite
'
Ja nua ry 24, 1972
Dear Bob, look ing back
W1Th fond remembrance
On th e years we had
tog eth er
Aefor e your ca ll fro m God
You are alwavs 1n our
Thoughts
No matter where we go
A lways 1n our hea r t s
Beca use we love you so
There 1S a l1nk death ca nnot
sever
Love and remembrance
last foreve r
Sa dly missed and dearly
loved bY wtfe Mabel
da ught er s. Iris, Aldine ''
Dona, Gra nddaughters

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES
MOnda y

Noon on Saturday
Tuesday
Lhru f'f'1d.ay

4 P.M
U1e day befure ]N.JIJ IIUilmn
SUl1daV

4 P M:
f'nday Hftemoon

NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION
IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COU RT, ME IGS COU NTY,
OHI O
PROBATE DIV ISION
E D NA N. WOOD as Ad·
ministr atrix of the E stclte
of
Ida
M.
Chrtstte,
Deceased/
Pl ain iff
vs .
EDNA N. WOOD ,
2080 Greenwtch Road
Wad sworth , Ohto 44281
Et a l .,
Defendan ts.

No . 21704
NOT I CE
TO THE DEFENDANT,
THOMAS F. TAYLOR,
WHOSE RES ID ENCE I S
UN KNOW N BU T WHO SE
LAST KNOWN ADDRESS
WAS BOX 43. 51BBERT,
WES T VIRG INIA ; T HE
U N K NOWN
H E l RS,
DE VI SEE S, LE GAT EES .
DI STRI B UT EES ,
AD ·
MINI ST RATORS, EXEC ·
UTORS AN D A SS I G N ~ IF
AN Y, DF EAC H OF 1HE
FOLLOW IN G
I DA M .
CHR ISTI E, DECE ASE D ;
DOU G L A S
YO UNG ,
DEC EAS E D : RANA KING
LIGH T FOOT, DE CE ASE D; GLADYS GOEGLEIN,
DE CEA SE D ; DE L L A R I F ·
FLE,
D E C E A SE D ;
FLOR E N CE
H E NR Y,
DEC EA SED;
DAVID
KI NG, DECE ASE D ; BER ·
NARD
K ING ,
D ECE A SE D ; HARO L D
D ECEASE D ;
K IN G,
L ENA
OOERFE R ,
DEC EASED A.K.A. LANA
DOR FER, DECEASE D :
OTHO
YO UN G,
DE CE A SE D ; LAURA
K NAPP,
D ECE A SE D ;
HENR Y
DO ERFE R ,
DEC E A SE D ;
OL E N
DO ERFER , DECE A SE D;
DA Y TON
Y OU NG ,
DECEA SE D ;
AD A
Y OUN G
DANI E LS ,
DE CE A SE D , GE ORGE
YOUN G,
DECE A SE D ;
F RED
·
KING ,
DECEA SE D ; SAMU E L J .
CHRI STI E, DECE ASE D ;
AND
THOM AS
F.
TAY LOR , DECEASE D .
Pl aintiff has broug ht this
act1on naming you
as
defendants in the above ·
named court by f iling her
com plaint on November
13th 1979. The Complaint
recites t h at each of you is
possibl y an heir at ·l aw and
next of kin of Ida M
Chris t ie , Deceased , that at
t he t1me of her death Ida
M . Chris t te was se i zed of
the en t i r e inter est of the
rea l estate described i n the
F l RST COU NT of the Com ·
pl amt. which sa id real
es tate i s described as
follows :
S1tuate tn the Coun ty ot
Mei~s. in the State of Ohio
and 1n the Township of Bed ·
ford , and bounded and
described as fo ll ows :
Beginning at the Southeast
corner of the West half of
the Sou theast quarter of
Section No . Seven, Town
No Three and Range No
Thirteen of the Oh io Com ·
pa ny 's Purchase ; thence
Nort h far enough so th at by
running due West to the
center of the State Road ;
t hence along t he center of
said road to the sec t ion
line ; thence East to the
place of beginni ng so t hat it
sha ll con t ain t h1rty acres,
but subjec t toa ll legal hi gh ·
ways .
The
aforesaid
described rea l estate being
the same rea l esta t e con
veyed by Will iam Smith,
Jr. to Lucetta Sm ith by
deed beari ng dal e of the
15th day of September
1876, and recorded in Vol.
45, Pages IIJ7 and 60B of the
records of deeds i n the
Recorder's Office of M eigs
count y, Ohio.
A nd bein g t he same
proper ty conveyed by Guy
A . Sm ith , E:.t:ecutor of th e
Estale of Lucetta Sm ilh ,
Dec_g_ased, to Sa muel J.
Chris11e
and Ida M .
CHrist ie . by deed d at ed
June 1, 1925, and r ecorded
in Book 127, at Page M B of
the Deed Records of M eigs
county Oh io.
EXCEP T I NG one ·four th
• of an acr e more or less con ·
veyed by Ida M . Christie lo
ceci l C. Hell man and A llen
c . Heil ma n by deed r ecor ·
ded in Vol. 247, Page 483
Deed Records, Meigs Coun ·
ty , Ohio.
In SECOND COUNT Ida
M . Chri st ie was seized of
the undi vi ded one fourth
part of the following
described rea l estate:
The foll owing descri bed
real est at e situ ated in the
Stal e of Ohio, in the County
of Meigs and in Sa lisbury
Township : It bei ng near
ttie middle of the South hall
of the Norlh half of Secllon

No . 18, Town No 2 1n Range
13 Ohto Company's Pur
chase and on the South li ne
of sa1d South half of th e
North ha lf and beg inning at
th e Northwes t corner of
Jam es A Young's 36 acr e
lot, thence nor t h 2lf2 Deg
East 7 chains and 75 l inks
to t he County road , t hence
South 40 Deg . East 5 ch ains
and 40 l1nks along said
road, t hence South 68 Deg
East 1 chain and l4 1in ks fo
Finnan Smit h's West line;
thence South 21f2 Oeg . Wes t
J chains and 40 li nks t o hi s
Southwest corner ; t hence
West t o t he pl ace of beg1 n
ntng, conta inin g two acr es
more or less
A lso, the following r ea l
es t ate s1tuated 1n Secti on
No . 18, Town 2 and Range
13 of the Oh io Com pany's
Purc hase and desc r ibed as
fol lows, to wit : Beg inni ng
at the SoutHwest corner of
George Young's lot in sa id
Section; thence South 8
rods and 7 fee t ; thence
East 19 r ods , thence North
8 rods and 7 feet ; t hence
west 19 rods to t he p l ac e of
beginni ng, com amt ng one
acre .
Also, the f oll owing r ea l
es tate s1tua t ed in Secti on
No 18 , Town 2 and Range
No 12 of the Ohio Com ·
pany 's Purc ha se and boun ·
ded and descr ibed as
f oll ows, to-wit : Begi nn ing
at
Geo r ge
Y o ung 's
Southeas t corner in said
sec ti on ; th ence East 21
rods to th e road ; t hence m
a Westerl y di rect ion a long
said r oad 15 r ods a nd 10
feet , t hence Wes t 20 r ods;
t hence 15rodsand I Ofeet to
the place of beginn ing , con ·
t aining 2 Beres
Also ,
t he
f ollow in g
desc r ibed r eal es tate in
Sa lisbury Township, M ei gs
County, Oh io. Begmning at
a stone corner E as t 70.545
r ods of t he North west cor ·
ner of W. S. Will s 69 l!2 ac r e
lot near a w illow tree abou t
30 i nches 1n d ia m eter ;
thence South 8.85 r ods to a
stake East of a double
chestnut about 3 t ee t tn
d i ameter; thence South
70 112 degrees w est 6 .94 r ods
to a st ake 1 foot South of
white oa k 4 f eet in
dia m eter ; thence Sout h
59114 Deg . w est 8.33 1!3 rod s
to a st ake 3 teet E ast of a
chestnut tree, th ~ n ce South
49 '12 Deg . Wesfb 212 rods to
a st ake 2V1 fee t SOuth of an
ash 6 In in di ameter , t hen ·
ce SOuth 49 lf.c Deg . w est
8.272 ro ds to a staKe 3 feet
West of w hite oa k tree 3
feet in diam et er; th ence
South 69 Deg. w est 14.515
rods to ce nt er of road;
thence in an easterl y d irec t ion fo llowi ng said ro ad to a
stone co rn er on So uth side
of road 31 feet East of
Sugar t ree 6 In in d ia m eter
abou t 51 .97 rods; thence
North to pl ace of beg inning
62 .C83 rods contai n ing 7
ac r es 2Ssquar e r ods .
Also, beg1 nning at a stone
at t he South east corn er of 7
ac r es above mentioned 31
fee t fro m sa id sug ar t r ee 6
In 1n d ia meter ; thence in
an Easterly di recti on
fo llowi ng sai d road about
24 .84 rods to Ida Young 's 2
ac r e lot,· thence Wes t 20.84
rods ; thence North to
aforesa id sugar tree or to
pl ace of beg mning, con ·
tat ning 1 1h acre.
Reference Deed . Vol
135, Page 241 Deed Recor ·
ds, M eigs County, Oh io.
The ob 1ect of t he Com ·
plaint is to sel l the i nter est
of Ida M . Chr ist ie In eac h
parcel of rea l estate in or
der to pay the debts of the
estat e and cost s of ad
ml ni s t er~ n g t he es t ate.
Plainti ff dem ands the
r eal es tate descr ibed in t he
F l RS T (0 UN T be sold;
th at th e entire i nt eres t in
t he real es tate descr ibed in
SECO ND COUN T be sold,
tha t the nghts , Inter es t s
and liens of all pa r ttes may
be fu ll y determined , ad·
·usted and pr olected, and
hat Plai ntiff be authorized
and ordered 10 se n rne en·
t~r e tnterest in the r ea l
estate
desc r i b ed
in
SECO N D CO UNT ac ·
cordtng to t he statute s in
such case m ade a nd
prov ided, ar'ld f ar such
other r eli ef as to whi ch she
may be enti tl ed IO.
You are r eq ui red to answer t he Compl ai nt within
twen t y-eight days after the
lasl publi cation of this
notice w hi c h will be
pub I ished once each week
lor six succ essive weeks
and the last pu blic ation will
be made on the 7th . d ay of
Februar y, 1980. ,
In case of your failure lo
an swe r
or
oth e rw ise
respond as permitted by
th e Ohio Rules Ql Civil
Proced u re within the t ime
stated ,
\udgm enl
by
default w i I be render ed
aga1nst you for the re lief
dem anded in the com ·

l

p l ai~t .

. Robe rt E . Buck
J udge and E• -Off lcio Clerk
common Pl eas c ourt
Meigs County , Oh io
Probat e D ivision
&lt;m 21 &lt;ll 3, 10. 11, 24, 31.

1

( 2 ) 7 , 7~

--

Card of Thanks

ap .
DEEPEST
MY
precta t1 on to all wh o had
my interes t at heart during
"my stay 1n the hospital .
Your cards, flowers, visits,
prayers , and smallest
thoughts mea ns so very
much.
Freema n " Lee"
Mrs
Enoch .

-----

CHIP WOOD . Poles ma x.
diameter 10" on largest
end. Sl2 per ton . Bundl ed
slab S10 per ton Delivered
to Ohio Pallet Co .. Rt . 2.
Pomeroy 992 ·2689 .

OLD FURNITURE , ice
boxes, brass beds, iron
beds, desks, etc .• complete
households . Write M .D .
Mi ller Rt . 4, Pomeroy or
ca ll 992 ·7760 .

Notices
' GUN SHOOT EVERY
SUNDAY 1 PM . F,ACTORY
CHOKE ONLY . RACINE
GUN CLUB
Racine
GUN SHOOT
Depl .
Volunteer
Fir e
Every Saturday 6: 30pm.
At their buildingin Bashan
F.actor y choke guns onl y

GUN SHOOT every Sunday
12 : 00. Factory choke only.
Cor n Hollow Gun Club.
Rut land . Proceeds donated
to Boy Scout Troop 249
( IM
ATTENTION :
PORTA NT TO YOU ) Wi ll
pay cash or cert• f ied check
for antiques and col lec ·
t1 bles or e nt ~re estates .
Nothing too large . A lso,
gu ns, pocket watches and
coin collec ti ons. Ca ll 614
767·3167 or 557·34 11 .
BU Y I NG U.S. SIL VER
CO IN S DATED 1964 OR
I A NY
EARL l ER
AMOUNT! . DON ' T LOSE
MONEY , SIM PLY PICK
UP THE PHONE AND
6 14 · 992 5 11 3,
D I AL
BROWN 'S.
IN COME TAX SERVI CE .
Qua rterl y, F edera l and all
sta te mcom e t ax r epor ts
wi ll be pr epar ed by ap·
pointm ent . 9'12 2272 or see
Wanda E bl in, La urel Cli ff
Rd ., Pom er oy
I PAY highest pr ices
possib le f or go ld and sil ver
coins, ring s, jewe lry, etc.
Cont act E d Bu r kett Bar ber
ShOp, M iddl epor t .
2ND SE M ESTE R classes
in ba ll et, tap and jazz now
open. Cl asses offer ed ar e
pre -sc hooL ball et, tap,
jazz, and adu lt exercise
1azz c lasses . Ca ll Sh1 r ley
Ca rp ent er , Carpenter's
Dance Studio. 949 271 0
bef or e J anuary 30th .
IN COM E TAX ser vice,
Feder a l a nd State. Wa llace
Russe ll. Brad bu ry . 9'12·
722B.
HEA RIN G A ID USE RS:
sa ve used batteri es, mer ·
cury an d stl ve r ox i de,
redeem tor cash . Diles
Ce nter ,
Hear in g
Aid
Ath ens. Tel. 614·594-3571
Lost and Found
LOST IN RACIN E, mat e
white toy pood le, wear ing
re d coll ar . An swer s to
Snowba ll Rew ard f or in·
lead i ng to
forma t •o n
relur n. 949·2304 or 949 2164.
LOS T : Ten nessee brindl e
coon hound. K yger Cr eek
Chesh ire area. An swer s to
Rock Ca ll 992·3041 or 304·
BB2·3348. Rewar d.
Hell! Wanted
CA RRIE RS NE EDE D in
t he
M id dl e p ort
and
Pomer oy area s. Cal l th e
Daily Sent inel between B.30
and5:00 p m .,992-2156.
HO M E
ADD RE SS ER S
wa nted
$500 per wee k
POSSi bl e. No ex perience
r eq u 1re d .
A. S. D., PO
Drawer 1.40069, Da ll as, T X
752 14.
GET VA LU A BLE tra ining
as a young business person
and earn good money plus
some g r ea t gifts as a Sen
t inel r oute carri er . Phone
us r ight away and get on
the eli gi bil ity list al 992 ·
2156 or 9'12 ·21 57.
LAD Y TO li ve in w ith
elderly lady . 6 days per
week . Ca ll 304-BB2.2393.
Lady is ambul atory · lives
in Middl epor t, OH . NO
heavy w ork r equi red
NEED EX T RA CASH? We
tak in g ap
ar e now
p1 1cat ions f or fu ll or part
time he lp. For m ore in·
form ati on, write bo x 729H .
c·o the Dail y Sent inel ,
Pomer y, OH 45769.
RN OR LPN , fu ll ti me. 3·
ll : 30 and 11 to 7 30. Par t
time RN or LPN , 111o 7:30 .
Ca ll Mr . Zi di an at Pomeroy
Health Care Center , M anday through Frid ay , 9·5

JOB OPENING
Maintenace Man
For
Rutland Village
Should ha ve some ex ·
per i ence in machinery
operation, backhoe &amp;
truck driving, etc.
If iOterested for further
tnform at ion, cont act ·
Ru t la nd V11t age Clerk ,
Vernon Weber
o ay ttm e: 992·334)
or at hom e ~
742-2143.
Appl i cants should live in
or nea r Rutl and .

ANT I QUES ,
FUR
NITURE, glass, china,
anythi ng. See or ca ll Ruth
Gosney, antiques, 26 N .
2nd, Mi ddleport, OH 992 ·
316 1
OLD CO l NS, pockel wat
c hes, class r ings, wedding
bands, diamonds . Gold or
sil ver. Ca ll J . A . Wamsley,
142·233 1. Treasure Chest
C01n Shop, Athens, OH. 5926462 .
MART IN 'S APP RA ISAL.
St op, thin k, ar e you abou t
to lose m oney? Over 25
yea r s exper ience in buying
and se ll ing . Will appraise
new, used or a nti que fu r ·
ni tur e. One piece or com ·
p! ete househOl d . Gold ,
si l ver and ot her old coins,
china, glass, ol d toys, doll s,
ir on ban ks, tool s, ant ique
cloth 1ng, r a zor s, pocket
kntves and ot her ol d item s.
Ca \1992 6370 .
WILL PAY TOP dollar for
go ld and silver coins,
stlver wa r e, other gold and
silver items, jewelry, ol d
g l ass fr ames and ant1 que
f urni t ure Will bu y one
p;ece or househol d. Ca ll
992·6370.
A LL GO LD A ND SILVE R
CO IN S OF T HE WORLD .
RIN GS,
A L SO.
J EWEL RY, CHA INS, AND
MI SC.
IT E MS
AT
RECORD HI GH HONE ST
U P· TO DA TE PRI CES.
CONTACT ED BURKET T
BAR BE R SHOP. MID·
DLE POR T, OH OR CALL
992·3476.
Fou r f oot S·cu rve ro lltop
desK.
Call
742· 2316 ,
even ings.

Pets for Sale
HOOF HO L LOW, Engli sh
and western . Sadd les and
h ar ne ss
H o r ses
a nd
pon tes. Ruth Ree ves. 614
69 B·3290 &lt;Bor d ing and
Rid ing Lessons and Horse
Ca r e pr odu ct s. West ern
boot s. Children's $1.5.50
Adults$29.00.

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

ROOM AND BOARD, laundry . E lderly or working
men . 9'12· IIJ22 .
RESTER'S assista nt for
Senior C1t1zens in Vil lage
Manor apts. Call992·7787

APT . FOR RENT. $150 plus
depOSit . 992·6130 .
FOUR ROOM apt . in
Rac1 ne. Phone 992 ·2838 or
992 ·2429 .
F or Sale
COA L ,
LI M ES TON E ,
sa nd, grave l, ca l ci u m
ch lor ide, fer ti lizer , dog
food, and all t ypes of sa lt .
Excelsior Sa lt Wor ks, Inc ,
E . M ain St., Pomero y, 992·
3B91.

ROUSH

CONSTRUCTION
• New homes
e xten sive remodel i ng ,
*E l ect rica l w ork
* Ma sonry work
12 Years
Ex perience
Greg Roush
P h . 992· 7583
1· l7· lmo.

N. L CONSTRUCTION
Quality construc t ion at
reasonable rates.
Remod eling
Addition s
Sidi ng
Br ick Work
Block Work
Concrete Fin ishing

A PP LES
CI D ER
HON EY . F i t zpat nck Or ·
char d, St ate Route 689
Phone W ilkesv il le, 669·
37B5.
A PPLES - ROM E beauty
apples al $4 per bu . Best for
apple b•ller . Ca ll 669·37B5,
Fitzpatri ck Orchard , SR
689.
E M ERGE N CY
po w e r
altern ators - own the best
- buy W1npower . Ca ll 513
7BB·2589
CONDITIONED hay
sale. 614·667·3349 .

for

POTATOE S, $B per hun·
dred . 3 miles w est of Dar
win . Cecil Toban .
1975 KA WASAKI motor·
cyc le 175 F 7, verv good cor·
dil lon, ssoo . Sunray gas
range, avocado green, 30",
$150. Gibson r efrigerator ,
19 cu. ft ., avocado green,
S175. M ay tag automati c
w asher ,
w hile,
$1 50.
Gener al elec tr ic dryer ,
wh 1te, $125. E veryth ing in
good condition . Call 367·
7149
FOUR YEAR old 3
bedr oom home . Carpeted.
A ll electric . Bui lt -in kit·
chen Att ached garage. ll/2
acres Near Mmes 1 and 2.
Moving out of state. Will
sacrif ice. 742·2385.

Guaranteed Work
Free Estimates
All er 5 P.M . 992-5547
12·13·2 mo. pd.

J&amp;l BWWN
INSUlATION

Vinyl &amp;
.Aluminum Siding
elnsulation
• Storm Doors
• Storm Windows
• Replacement Win ·
dows

Free Estimate

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772
10-19·1 mo.

Real Estate for Sale

1969

TRAV E L -AL L 4x4,
Ham el ite gener ato r,
l ike new, $700. 992:3B47.

R:Gil B. SR . ~· t "I I

POODL E G ROOM! NG.
J udy Ta ylor 614-367 7220 .
HI LLCRE ST K ENNE L S.
Boa rding, all br eeds. Clean
indoor -outdoor f aciliti es.
A l so
AKC
re giste r e d
Doberman s. 614·446·7795.
HUM A NE
SOC IET Y.
Adopt a hom eless pel .
Hea lthy, shot s, w orm ed
Donat 1ons requtred. 992
6260, noon-7 p. m .
AKC Register ed bassett
pup pies, 8 w eek s old Call
9B5·4279

TH ESE DOG S beg for I
Ias t t ime for a chance to
I ive : Af ghan sheep dogs,
M anches t er c h ihuah ua,
shepherd husky , one mi xed
breed Gordon se tters, 1
bord er colli e, 2 small St .
Berna rd types, terrier l a b ,
Iab type, German police·
Nor weg ian elkhound, fl op
py earned shepherd type,
shepherd and beagle t ypes.
Tw o cocker spanial types,
m ale . Shot s and worm ed .
M eigs Count y Huma ne
SOC I el y, 992-6260.

JUST rece ived a shipment
of figu r ines, owl jewelry,
owl lamps, brass item s and
many other items. Open 6
days a week S&amp;E Gift
Shop , Syracuse, OH .

WHITE Whirlpool dryer .
good running cond ition .
$125. Call 985-4276.
PA RT S from a 1970 Dodge
tru ck, 318 engine. Phone
742 ·3161 .
DECORATED CAK E S for'
all . occasions. Chara cte r
ca kes and sheet cakes. Call
9'12-6342 or 992·2583.
1979 FORD Pickup F-150
Ranger , automatic , low
miles, 9243 miles, radio,
I ike new, ni ce topper, large
mirror s, $5,000. 1976 Pinto
Runabout 2·door, 4 cylinder, new tires, "' on the
fl oor , easyon gas, battery,
49,639 mi les, $2300 . 1'12
mil es south of Tuppers
Platns, CR 46, 1112 mites.
Willi am Connoll y . Phone
667·3536.

DIS 0 NT
PRICES

Auto Sales

- -====----·

I 974 SUZUKI TM·400. Ex·
ce llent cond ition. $350,
Phone 742·2143 after 5.

1975 M ERC URY Montego,
35 1. 4·dor hardtop. P. B.,
P S.; A. C., blac k v iny l
seat s and l op. Excel lent
cond iti on . $1395. Call 843·
2094 or see Donna Bogard,
L ong Bottom , OH.

Hotpoint and
General Electric
Apppliance
- Sales &amp; Service

POMEROY
LANDMARK
Jack W. Carsey,
Mgr.
Phone 992-2181

1979 FO RD PIN TO, 4 cy l. , 4
speed . 949·2176.
1979 CAMARO Z·28, auto .,
ru st proofed, brown with
buck skin i nterior . E x·
cel lent condition, $7700
Ph one
742·2143.
L ow
m ileage and loaded .
1977 CHEVR OL ET Capr ice
Cl assic, 3 seat er , st. w gn .,
P . S.,
P . B .,
air,
low
mileage. Reg retai l $3600.
sal e $29'15. Ing els Fur·
nitur e, M idd leport, OH.
1976 V EGA wagon, good
mileage, good condition,
aul o., good tires, $1100. 742·
2927.
1967 FOR D Pickup, 6 cy l. ,
3·speed, $500 . 1975 Olds
Starfi re V-6, 4 speed, S900.
992·632 3 aft er 6

Wanted to Rent
AT L EAS T 2112 ca r gara ge
i n Pomeroy, M iddleport or
A thens Coun ty . For a t r an ·
sm ission shop . Call 992·
517B.

Real Estate for Sale
COUNTRY HOME w ith
stocked pond for swimming
or fishing, 9 rooms, bath,
carpeted . 3 to 17 acres
avai lable. Located approx
7 miles from Pomeroy ofi
Rt. 7 or 33. 446·2359 after 6 .
TWO STORY hou se , 9
rooms, llh baths, garage.
College Rd ., Syracu se. Call
9'12·5133 or 992·39Bl.
B Y OWN ER, house in
Pom eroy . Large living
room, dining room, bui l t· in
kitchen, 3 or 4 bedrooms ,
lots of carpet and paneling .
FA gas heat, full basement
One·third acre lot close to
hospital and school. Call
992·5917 for information .
TWO ACRE S of land Wilh a
14X70 1973 Vindal e mobile
home thai has 2 bedrooms,
14x7 expando room, air
condi t ioning, front porch
w i th awn in g , $19,000 .
Located on New Lima Rd .,
Rutland . Ca ll 6 1 4-696-In~~ .

-----··- - 1

216 E . Second

Streol

Sl750.00 DOWN - Buy•
this 4 bedroom home.
Has a formal dining
room. equipped kitchen,
basement, 2 car garage,
smal l business bldg. on
a corner level lot on Rt .
124.
11 ROOMS - 1'12 baths,
gas furna ce, basement,
nice
5 bedrooms ,
carpet ing, hobby room,
2 car garage on nice
level lot. Only $17,500.
$800.00 DOWN - If you
c an
qualify .
Has
baseboard heat, T.P.
water , 2 bedrooms,
balh , and large lot for
garden on Rt . 7 in Top·
per s Plains.
80 ACRES - Ni ce laying land, lots of good
outbuildings,
good
fences, and minera ls.
Nice ·old 10 room home,
bath, porches and good
garden .
SALEM CENTER - 4
year old 3 bedroom
home. w, baths, gas
furnace, ni ce kitchen,
L.C . water and one acre.
$2,000 .00 DOWN .
SECLUDED Native
sand stone 1 bedroom
home. Inside woodwork
like new. Natural gas
F .A. furnace,
c ily
wa ter, ba th, and over 2
acres $1,000.00 DOWN.
BUY YOUR
ROOST
FROM BRUCE . 5%
DOWN. LINE

992-3325 or 992-3876

Housing
Headquarters

H. L WRITESEL
ROOFING
All types root work , new
or repair gutters and
down spouts,
gutter
cleaning and painting.
All work guaranteed.

l'ree Estimates
Reasonable Prices
Call Howard
949-2862
1·22·tfc

Rea l Estate for Sale

608 e .
, MAIN •
POMEROY,O.
99Z·2259
NEW LISTING - 5 Pis.,
3 Bdrm. ranch, level lot,
good condition, central
air &amp; hea t , fully equip·
ped kit .. many features.
WON ' T LAST LONG AT
S30,500.00.
NEW LISTING 3
acres, !&gt;mall barn, small
house, needs some
repairs .
ONLY
$7,000.00.
NEW LISTI f\IG 2
story ho"';ri'-~·omeroy ,
up
to ~'-'odrm s .•
Carpetiny, pane li ng .
CHEAP at$7,000.00.
NEW LISTING
Ranch with ful l base··
ment, t acre, needs
some re pairs . ONLY
$11 ,500.00.
NEW ~ISTING
Mobile home like new,
located near f""" ' nes, on
St. Rt. , fu'e,l\\.~ 'shed, 1
a c re ,
r.~V
water ,
storage bldg ., cement
drive, EXCE L LENT AT
$13,500.00.
NEW LISTING
Rutland area 140 acres,
farm with 6 room house,
lots of timber, coal
rights, many other
possibilities, call for
details.
NEW REMODELING
2 family in Mid·
dleport, looKs nice. rent
the upstairs, live in tne
downstairs. SJl.OOO.OO.
WATCH FOR THE
"OPEN
HOUSE "
NEXT WEEK .. .
ANOTHER SERVICE
OF CLELAND REAL·
TY .
REALTOR
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
992-6191
ASSOCIATES
Jean Trussell949·2660
Roger &amp; Dottie Turner
742-2474
OFFICE PHONE
992-2259

REAL ESTATE
'

MIDDLEPORT - Cement block home on large corner lol . 7 rooms, 3 or 4 bedrooms. 1112 both, garage.
$27,000.
ROCKSPRINGS - 2 bedroom and bath , fully equipped kitchen, ne•• '~elgs High School, fully furnish-·
ed . $25,000.

)

(]

t

r ROGLE
WH ILe ...

SOUND L IKE' A
SPOI LED 6P:AT!
THAT'5 NOT LIKe
C HRJ:; AT At..t..~

5- ULK III!G

OR GWOM!JoJG

50MeWHERE

'CAU!'&amp; We GOTfA

O KAY~ [ GU E5 '-, IT S OAR/&lt;..
ENOUGH rr w~ NA IT LL YA

ME;\N·

YO U AAAI&lt;E- HIM

HE- '3- PRO f,' L'OF~

Au t o &amp; T ru c k
Repa ir
A lso Transmi s sion
R e pair
Phone 992 -5682
4·30-tfc

SEE- WHAT l VE
O VER

I~ ~.AR

ORNA '-' EN r•"

S~r

THE REPAI~MAN
6A 1D WHS.N THE
DRIVE ~ COM P~AI "-J ED
THAT HIS E N G INE
WAS SMOKI NG .

HI DDEN

"

I"' EE S
"'·/ PO~D.

Now, arrange th e circled leners to
lonn the surpr~se answer . as sug·
gested by the above car1oon

J I I

GH RID Or
CLAUDIA:

Answer:

WELL, IT'S

Vesle,day 5

I Jumbles

r I I )[ I I I 1 1 ]I
{Answers tomorrow)

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING

..

·

Gutter work , down
spouts, some concrete
work ,
walks
and
driveways.
(FREE ESTIMATES)
Reduced Winter Rates

SKULL

GUISE BEWARE DAWNED
What the two metal wo rkers called thetr mar" age- " WELDED" BLISS

Answer

I: 50--News 13 ; 3 :41}-M ov 1e " We
Were St ra ngers" 17.

BORN LOSER

RACINE , O.
U9-2748or
992-7314
12 2B-pd .

l.~ST '(6;\R, f&lt;JR 11-lST~ , ot.JR

RBP.U..'{;;

CWFtaJJ'{ PAID 0/6R $7 MILL.IN
Fa( I~~~. ~F.NG AAD ~

DO Wffi.\ A.l-L OF n\t&gt;M ~

WH ~T OOiti€-Y

BRIDGE

GQI.A-e CIJ BALK'

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

W ... 11-\A.T Wfl6
JUST M'l l-ITTL6

Playing odds scores slam

J0\&lt;8 , t;;D .. ,

RAILROAD
STREET
GARAGE

E'D '?
NO RTH
. AQ 9B

i

Middleport, o.
Automotive Repair
Open 9-6 Mon . thru Sat,
Additional Hours
By Appointment

+ KJ942
+ 5

WEST
EAST
. 1 54 2
+ 3
. QIOB632
• J1
+6
+ Ql0813
+ A8
+ 109763
SOUTH
• K J 10 6
. A5
+ A5

ANNIE

~ijj'J[=J::=::I::::::r-:,.AAGGM;i:MINE

Phone 992-2390
Reasonable Rates
" Don' t cuss·Call us"
1-1B (pd .)

15 N' T

5COLDINS "rrll, .'!Nt..IIE!
.. ,JU6T SA-,' lNG THAT

IT WAS VERY fQQ!&amp;Ij
OF YOU

· + KQJ42

Vuln erable Both
Dea ler . South

Business Services

POMEROY - Lincoln His. 2 ~droom , bath, large
living room. full basement, new furnace. $17,500. ·

SEWING
MACHINE
Repair s,
serv i ce.
all
makes . 992 -22B4 . T he
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
Authorized Singer Sales
and Service. We sharpen
Scissors.

Ml DOLEPORT - Building lOt on S. Second, 63' X53'.
$4,500.

CALL 992-2342

Bill Chlds, Branch Mgr., Home 992·2449
Rodney ·Downing, Broker, Hollie 992-3731
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

2+

6•

4•
5 'f

Pass

There re• lly

IS

JUmps to two spades as hts
scqon d btd and ll IS up to
North to get to 1he slam under
hb ow n puwer Nort h starts
by merely ratsmg to t hree
spades to see 1f Sout h rea lly
ha s spades T hen he pushes to
st x: after usmg Blackwood
As for the play it is j ust a
matter of proper techmq ue
At l n ck two South leads a
club West plunks hi s ace on
South's kmg and leads a second Lr um p.
South Wins m hts hand and
now lea ds a low cl ub for dum-

my tu ru ff He must co me
ba ck Lo hiS hand w it h a red

ace m order to ru ff his last
low cl ub and right here IS
where we tell the men from
t he boys If South com es back

the ace of hearts he lS go mg
to lose h1s slam beca use when
tO

he ru ffs his last li l lie club
West w tll chuck hiS smgleton
diamond and wtll r uff South' s
ace of th aLSUIL
Why should SouLh pl ay the
diamond first' Beca use the
opponents hold only siX diamonds and th ere IS a grea ter

nothmg of

cha nce to ftnd a singleton dta·
m ond tha n a slnJi!:leton heart
IN t-:WS I'A I'UJ. ENH:R I' HI SE ASSI\ J

(For a copy of JACOBY
MODERN send$ 1 to " Wm at
Bndge · care of thts newspa per. P 0 Box 489. Radio C&lt;ty
S fat1on. New York, NY

sla m and nctther decl arer
boLhered to make 12 tncks
after West opened a Lrump

100 19.)

~-'61d'
by THOMAS JOSEPH

No fire ·

brealihinq
donke~

in here.

·I'm

afraid!

WINNIE

REYNOLDS ELECTRIC,
651 Beech St. Rewind and
repair electric motors. 992·
2356. Will make servi ce
calls.

1•

.. BUT I'D !?ETTER: NOT. IF 131LL
CATCHEt7 ME , HE 'LL KNOW
T\1AT J!M JUST AS
ANX IOUS ABOUT
HER: A'J HE I'J!

tM TEMPTED
TO CALL WENDY

i3EFORE GOING
TO BLEEP.

DAVID
GRINDSTAFF
construction now ava ilable
for work . Call 949·2125, 949·
2061 , evenings.
'

.

Z6 Villain : sl.
27 Suffix
of enzymes
28 Burn
28 Marker on
the links
;w One, in
Nantes
31 Pallid
34 Brought out
36 Penalty
37 Tenant
38 Spirit lainp

........
. ... M ' ' "••'' '
...
. . . ,..........
~,

'

Services Offered
WILL DO odds and ends,
paneling, floor til e, cei:!lng
tile. Fred Miller, 992·633B.

·BARNEY

PAW!! LOOKY
WHAT TATER

WILL CARE for the elderly
in our home, trained and
experienced . I Phone 992·
7314.

ACROSS
I Rwn -soaked
cake
5 Put in place
8 The E merald
Isle
9 Investigations
13 Open to
the breeze
14 Halt
15 Kind of r ace
16 Before
17 Makedouble
18 Ran swiftly
20 Flying or
Singing 21 Not hollow
22 Antiaircraft guns
23 Crusoe's
creator

DOWN
1 Russtan
symbol
2 La Scala
highlight

3 Bolticelli
painting,

with ''The''
4Some
5 Exempted
6 Transgressed
7 Craggy spot
10 Simply adore
11 Arm of the sea
12 Pesky Eddie
of baseball
16 Lacka-

Yesterday's Answer

19 Medicinal

26 Impede
plant
28 Leather
21 Of the shore 112 Undy's
22 National
wife
symbol
33 Without
23 Man wtth
the
the goods
chaser
24 Wilder
35 Townsman
person
36 Not many

warma's
partner

Z4 Old · %5 Frenzy

J&amp;D Painting . Interior, ex·
terlor. Reasonabl e ra1es, in
Mason. 304·773·5566 or 304·
773·S704.

SPELT

WHAT'S SO
. HOTABOUT
THAT?

1.:-+--+-

39 Thrice : Lat.

WORK .

40 Sharpen ·

~nellng,

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE Ia

Giveaway

Here's how to work
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

It :

One letter s impl~ stands for another. In this sample A Ia
used for th e three L 's, X for the tw o O's, cl c. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of th e words are all
hints. Each day t he cod e letters are different.

.~~------------ ··

CRYPTOQUOTES

WHATEVER YOU CALL
IT, ~AM, IT'5·
SURE COMIN6 IN ..

Mobile Homes - Sale
1972 LYNN HAV N 14x65 3
bedroom
1970 Vlndale 12x . w1111 expando, 2 bedr. '
1970 New Moon 1 603bdr.
1973 · Skyline · 12x5S 2
bedroom
,
.
1972 Bonanza 12x52, 2 bedr.
B &amp; S MOBILE HOME
SALES, PT . ·PLEASANT,
wv. 304-675·4424.

I•
3•
4 NT

LeL s look at I he biddmg
Sout h g1ves his al l w hen he

th at when th e hand was
pla yed m a fa trl y good team
game only one pair got to th e

PIANO TUNING . Lane
Dan ie ls. New phone num·
ber, 742·2951. Service to
schools and home since
1965.

LON G HAIRED black cat
949-2854.
.

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

tnt{'rest m today's ha nd South
btds and ma kes s1x sp&lt;H.l cs and
that IS all th e re ts .to 1t Except

and

SYRACUSE - 6 room hOuse on nice lot. $11,600.
, 5 ACRES OF LAND on Hysell Run, beautiful
bulldl ng lot. S7 ,ooo.

WOULDN 'T '('LET GO OF !T?

s &amp; G carpet Cleaning .
Steam
cleaned .
Free
est i mate .
Reasoneble ·
rates . Scotchguard . 992·
6309 or 742-2211.

COUCH . 992·2857.

South

By Os wald Jacob v
and Alan Sontag ·

WELL, SUPPu:5E 'IOU HAD AHIXD
OF SOME'Tf.&lt;ING AN' ALL OF
A SUDDEN 'i'WENT BLIND!

ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR
sweepers,
toasters, irons, all small
appliances. Lawn mower .
Ne•t to Slate Highway
Garage on Route 7, 985·
3825.

RUTLAND - One bedroom down, two upstairs, on
large corner lot. Just needs a IIHie paint &amp; paper.
$9,900.

Eas t

Openi ng lead + 2

BRADFORD. Auctioneer,'
Complete Service . Phone
949-2487 or 949-2000. raci ne,
Ohio, Crill Bradford.

WILL DO BABYSITTING
In my home. 9'12-5875 .

North

.

IN STOCK for immediate
delivery: various sizes of
pool kits. Do it yourself or
let us install for you . D.
Bumgardner Sales, Inc.
9'12-5724.

MIDDLEPORT - Two bedroom brick only 1 block
from center of town . Low utilities. A bargain at
$12,500.
.

,.

Wes t

Pass

IN AUTOMOBILE
SURANCE
been can ·
celled?
Lo s t
your
operator' s license? Phone
992-2143.

WALL PAPERING
pa inting . 742-2328.

,.,.

• K94

'

O T BUJ
Z TM

.
',
'
;
'

Z G B K Y

K R R

QT

'
8 ·00-Buck Rogers 3, 15; Mork
&amp;
Mmdy ~ . 13 ; Waltons 8, 10; Los
Angeles Philharmonic at .the
Hollywood Bowl 20; Movie " PT
109" 17 ; Camera Three 33 .
8 31}-Sports : Close Up 33 .
9 ·00-Skag 3, 15; Barney Miller 6, 13;
People 's Choice B. 10: Sneak
Previews 20.33 .
9 : 31}-Soap 6, 13; Ca mera Three 20;
Dancing Disco 33.
10 :00-20·20 6, 13; News 20; Sound·
stage 33 .
10 . JO.-Over Easy 20 .
11 ·00-News 3,6,B, 10, 13, 15: Last of
lhe Wild 17; Dick Cavet t 20; Fa ll
&amp; Rise of Regi nald Per rin 33 .
11 : 31}-Tonlghl 3, 15; Pol lee Wom an
6, 13; Columbo 8, ABC Cap ti oned
News 33 : Movie "Cisco Pike" 10;
Movie "Touch ol Evi l" 17.
6, 13;
1 : 0012: 40- Bar etta
Tomorrow 3; News I S: 1: 31}News 17.
· JS--Movle " Walk East on B eacon"
17; 1· 4S-- Biack Sheep Squadron
B.

Thu rsday, Jan. 24

V. C, YOUNG Ill

CARPENTRY
Floors, ceilings,
992-2759.

Television
Viewing
THURSDAY.JANUA R Y 24,1980

WI L L HAUL l im estone and
gr avel. Al so, lime haul ing
and spreading . Leo Morr is
Trucking Phone 742-2455.

JV2 YR. OLD RANCH HOME :..:. :Ju"'st~4-:-::m"i-;-;
les from
Pomeroy . Quiet country living In this beautiful 3
bedroom. two bath with central heat and air condi tion. over 3 acres of flat land with a split rall·fence,
garage and workshop . Just S.U,900.00.

J

1-=~~:;-f;

i

FINANCIN G·VA· FHA LOANS . LOW OR NO DOWN
PAYMENT. PURCHASE
OR
REFINAN C E .
IRELAND MORTGAGE,
77 E. STATE, ATHEN S.
614·592·305 1.

$900

'o NE 125,000 BTU Baird
propane gas, like new, un·
damaged furna ce complete
with al l re9 ist er and duc t s.
Buyer to dismang le. Best
offer, 9B5·3B62.

I

I

byHennArnoldandBob Lee

.

s

~~1 · 3!25

RI SING STA R Kennel.
Boarding . Ca ll 367·0292 .

Hours 9·1 M., W., F.
Ot her times by appointm ent.
107 Sycamore I Rear
Pomeroy. 0 .
,

*New Kitchens
•Bathrooms
•New Home
•AddOns
* Remoldings
*Free Estimates
Phone 992-60 II 1·4-1 Pd )

lour ord1nary words

CASE~'

3'4 m ile off Rt. 1 bV · P8SS ,
on St. Rt. 124 towar d
Rutla nd .

,;.PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.

C. R. MASH
VINYL &amp; ALUM.
SIDING

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square. to lorm

Roger Hysell
Garage

REAL ESTATE
FINAN C ING
F ed e r a l Hou si ng &amp;
Veterans Adm in . Loans.

CALL 992 -7544

SAM.

,.

Business Services

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, north of
Pomeroy Ldrge lots.Call
992 7479.

~ THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~ ~ ~~ ®

SPOKEN SINCE
OVER

For Rent. ___

__wanted to Buy

lt Jt\1'1.\ift fii}lt

TRACY

,

A ST B
JQKL

GY ZKDDEYU J J
YTQ

V· YTMEYX

H G EUQRL

EY

K
STTB
DKJOKR
Yesterday 's Cryploquote: CHARACfER BUILDS SLOWLY
BUT IT CAl'/ BE TORN DOWN WITH INCREDIBLE SWIFTNESS.-F AITH B ALDWIN
JR\ 1910 King Featu re• Sy ndlcete, Inc .

FRIDAY,JANUARY 25,1980
5: 4S--Farm Reporl 13; 5:SI}-PTL
Club 13 , 5.5S--World a t L arge
17
6 :00-700 Cl ub 6,8; PT L C lub 15;
Heallh Fiel d 10.
6 :31}-K idswor ld 10; News 17; 6 :4S-Morn ing Report 3; 6:SI}-Good
Morning , Wes t Virg i n i a 13 ;
6: 5S--New s 13.
7·00-Today 3, 15; Good Morning
Ameri ca 6, 13; Fr iday M orning B;
Batman 10. Three Stooges- Litll e
Rascals 17, 7: 1S--A .M We ather
33
7:31}-Family Affair 10; Studio See
33; 7: SS--Chuck White Report s
10.
B:OO-Capt . Kangaroo B, 10; Family
Affa ir 17; Sesame St . 33.
B:JI}-Romper Room 17 .
9 :00-Bob B r aun 3; Big Valley 6 ;
Bever ly Hillbi llies B; One Day At
A T ime 10; Phil Donahue 13,15;
Lucy Show 17 .
9:31}- Bob Newtiarf 8, Love of Life
10; Green Acres 17.
10 ·00-Card Sharks 3. 15; E dge of
Night 6; Beat l he Cloc k B. 10;
Morni ng Maga z·lne 13; Movie
"The Pl easure of His Company"
17.
10 :30- Hollywood Squ ares 3, 15;
$20,000 P y ramid 13 ; Andy
Gr i ffllh 6; Whew B, 10.
10 ·SS--House Call 10; CBS News B.
11 llO-High Roller s 3, 15; L averne &amp;
Shirl ey 6, ll; Pri ce is R lght B.10;
E lee. Co . 20
11 : 30- Whee l o f Fortun e 3, 15 ;
Famil y Feud 6, 13; Sesam e St
20.33.
12 : 00- New scent er
3;
New s
6,B,I0,13; Heallh Field 15 .
12 :31}-Ryan's Hope 6,13 ; Search for
Tomorrow 8,10; Password Plus
15 ; Movie " Die! Die! My
Dar l ing" 17; Elec. Co. 33 .
·ex&gt;-Days ofOur Llves 3,15, All My
Children 6, 13, Young &amp; the
Restless 8,10 .
I 31}-As The World T urn s B. 10.
2·00-Doctors 3,15; One L ife to Li ve
6. 13 ; 2:2S--News 17.
2: 31}-Another World 3, 15; Guiding
Light B,10 : Giggle.snort Hotel 17.
J·O&lt;&gt;-General Hospital 6, 13; I Love
Lucy 17; Upslalrs, Downstairs
20 .
3 ·3D-One Day AI A Time 8; Joker's
Wil d 10; Flintstones 17 ; Over
Easy 33
.
4 : 00- Mi ste r Cartoon 3; Mer v
Gr iffin 6; Petllcoat Junction B; .
Sesame St . 20,33; Gomer Pyle
10; Real McCoys 13; Little
Rascals 15; Spectreman 17.
4: 30--Lone Ranger 3; Gomer Pyle B;
Brady Bunch 10; Tom &amp; Jerry
13; Merv Gr iffin 15; Gi lligan' s Is.
17.
5 · oo-Carol Burnetl 3; Sanford &amp;
Son B; Mar y Tyler Moore 10; My ·
Three Sons 17; Mist11r Rogers
20.33
5. 31}-Mash 3; News 6; Play the
Percentages 8; Elec . Co. 20;
Mash 10; Happy Days Again 13; I
Dream of Jennie 17; Ooctor W~o
33.
6:()()--..New s 3,8,10,13, 15; ABC News
6; Carol Burnell 17; 3-2-1 Contact
20,33.
6 : 31}-NBC News3,15; ABC News 13;
Carol Burnell 6; CBS News B,10;
Bob Newhart 17; Villa Alegre 20;
Wild Wild World of Anim als 33.
7·00-Cr oss-Wits 3; T ic Tac Dough
B; New l ywed Gam e 6, 13,
Mac Neil - Lehrer Report 33;
News 10; Love , Ameri can Style .
15; Love Ameri can Style 15;
Dick Cavell 20.
7: 31}-Prlce is Right 3; J' s A Crowd
6; Joker ' s Wild 8; Family Feud
10; Pop Goes the Country 13, 15;
All In The Family 17; Mac Neil .
Lehrer Report 20.
8 : llO-Shlrley 3, 15; B.A. D. Cats 6, 13;
In c r edible
Hulk .
B. 10;
Washington Week In Review
20,33; Movie "The Raven" 17 .
8:31}-Wall Sfreet Week 20,33 .
9: 00-Top of the Hill 3; Movie
"Mother &amp; Daughter " 6,13 ;
Movi e " Marriage Is Alive and
Well " 15; Dukes of Hazzard 8, 10;
Capitol Beat 33; Fr ee to Choose

20.
10:00-l&lt;nots Landing 8, 10; Per.
spectlve on Greatness 17; News
20; David Susskind 33.
10:31}-Pavarolll at Jutlllard 20.
11 :00-New s 3,6,8,10,13,15; Last of
!he Wild 17; Dick Cave11 20;
Monty Python' s Flying Circus 33.
11 . 30- Tonlght 3, 15; Charlie's
Angels 6; Movie " Dial a Deadly ·
Number" 8; ABC Captioned
News 33; Movie " The Hound of
the Baskervllles" 10; Movie
" The .GreeJ! Berets" 13; Movie
" THX 113B" 17.
6;
1 : 00- Midnlght
12 40- FBI
Special 3, 15; Movie "The ln.
des!rucflble .Man" 10; 1:2sNews 17. '
1 :31}-Movle " Beach Ball" 17; 2:00- .
News 13.
2 :3~News31 3:2S--Movle " Edge of .
Darkness" 17.

�S-Tile Datly Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Jan . 24, 1980

Your· Best

9--The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Jan. 24. 19110

Are }'ound in the 'S entinel Classifieds

8U)7 S
-

lnMemorL _

WANT AD
CHARGES

I N MEMORY ol John Prof
Ja nuary 24, 1974
God ca lled him to r est
He always ta kes Th e best.
Sadly missed by his w1fe '
h 1s
ch ildr en,
grand
childre n, brothers , and
friends

f1 ff ,
\:,Words or Under

Coii.sh

Cll.llrgr

I d&lt;ly

100

1 2:)

'ldsys

I 50

I 90

Jdays

I 80

2.25

6dnys

JOO

J7a

Each word over lhe rrurumwn
!5 words IS 4 cents per wor d per

day Ad.:J run.,ltl~ other than consecutive dHy:~ w11l t.. dJ.H rgL&gt;d at
the 1 day rate

In memory, Card of llwnks
and Ollllwtry 6 et:nl~ per word ,
$3 00 rrumrnlltTl

Cllsh m ad-

van~..-e

Mobil ~ Home SHI~~ Hnd Yt~ rd
sales art' acct&gt;pled only w1lh

cash w1lh order. 25 crnt c har~o:e
for ads ca.rrymg Rox Nwnber In
Care of Tiw. St&gt;nltntl.

The Publl3hcr reserv e:~ the

n1o1ht to edit or reJect any 111is
dee me d
obJecttOna l
The
PubliSher Will not be respons1blt&gt;

lor more than one mcorrt-ct m-

serbon
Phone 992-2156

NOTICE

IN LOVI NG memory of our
dear husba nd and father '
Charles Robert Win ebren
ner , who departed th1 s lite
'
Ja nua ry 24, 1972
Dear Bob, look ing back
W1Th fond remembrance
On th e years we had
tog eth er
Aefor e your ca ll fro m God
You are alwavs 1n our
Thoughts
No matter where we go
A lways 1n our hea r t s
Beca use we love you so
There 1S a l1nk death ca nnot
sever
Love and remembrance
last foreve r
Sa dly missed and dearly
loved bY wtfe Mabel
da ught er s. Iris, Aldine ''
Dona, Gra nddaughters

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES
MOnda y

Noon on Saturday
Tuesday
Lhru f'f'1d.ay

4 P.M
U1e day befure ]N.JIJ IIUilmn
SUl1daV

4 P M:
f'nday Hftemoon

NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION
IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COU RT, ME IGS COU NTY,
OHI O
PROBATE DIV ISION
E D NA N. WOOD as Ad·
ministr atrix of the E stclte
of
Ida
M.
Chrtstte,
Deceased/
Pl ain iff
vs .
EDNA N. WOOD ,
2080 Greenwtch Road
Wad sworth , Ohto 44281
Et a l .,
Defendan ts.

No . 21704
NOT I CE
TO THE DEFENDANT,
THOMAS F. TAYLOR,
WHOSE RES ID ENCE I S
UN KNOW N BU T WHO SE
LAST KNOWN ADDRESS
WAS BOX 43. 51BBERT,
WES T VIRG INIA ; T HE
U N K NOWN
H E l RS,
DE VI SEE S, LE GAT EES .
DI STRI B UT EES ,
AD ·
MINI ST RATORS, EXEC ·
UTORS AN D A SS I G N ~ IF
AN Y, DF EAC H OF 1HE
FOLLOW IN G
I DA M .
CHR ISTI E, DECE ASE D ;
DOU G L A S
YO UNG ,
DEC EAS E D : RANA KING
LIGH T FOOT, DE CE ASE D; GLADYS GOEGLEIN,
DE CEA SE D ; DE L L A R I F ·
FLE,
D E C E A SE D ;
FLOR E N CE
H E NR Y,
DEC EA SED;
DAVID
KI NG, DECE ASE D ; BER ·
NARD
K ING ,
D ECE A SE D ; HARO L D
D ECEASE D ;
K IN G,
L ENA
OOERFE R ,
DEC EASED A.K.A. LANA
DOR FER, DECEASE D :
OTHO
YO UN G,
DE CE A SE D ; LAURA
K NAPP,
D ECE A SE D ;
HENR Y
DO ERFE R ,
DEC E A SE D ;
OL E N
DO ERFER , DECE A SE D;
DA Y TON
Y OU NG ,
DECEA SE D ;
AD A
Y OUN G
DANI E LS ,
DE CE A SE D , GE ORGE
YOUN G,
DECE A SE D ;
F RED
·
KING ,
DECEA SE D ; SAMU E L J .
CHRI STI E, DECE ASE D ;
AND
THOM AS
F.
TAY LOR , DECEASE D .
Pl aintiff has broug ht this
act1on naming you
as
defendants in the above ·
named court by f iling her
com plaint on November
13th 1979. The Complaint
recites t h at each of you is
possibl y an heir at ·l aw and
next of kin of Ida M
Chris t ie , Deceased , that at
t he t1me of her death Ida
M . Chris t te was se i zed of
the en t i r e inter est of the
rea l estate described i n the
F l RST COU NT of the Com ·
pl amt. which sa id real
es tate i s described as
follows :
S1tuate tn the Coun ty ot
Mei~s. in the State of Ohio
and 1n the Township of Bed ·
ford , and bounded and
described as fo ll ows :
Beginning at the Southeast
corner of the West half of
the Sou theast quarter of
Section No . Seven, Town
No Three and Range No
Thirteen of the Oh io Com ·
pa ny 's Purchase ; thence
Nort h far enough so th at by
running due West to the
center of the State Road ;
t hence along t he center of
said road to the sec t ion
line ; thence East to the
place of beginni ng so t hat it
sha ll con t ain t h1rty acres,
but subjec t toa ll legal hi gh ·
ways .
The
aforesaid
described rea l estate being
the same rea l esta t e con
veyed by Will iam Smith,
Jr. to Lucetta Sm ith by
deed beari ng dal e of the
15th day of September
1876, and recorded in Vol.
45, Pages IIJ7 and 60B of the
records of deeds i n the
Recorder's Office of M eigs
count y, Ohio.
A nd bein g t he same
proper ty conveyed by Guy
A . Sm ith , E:.t:ecutor of th e
Estale of Lucetta Sm ilh ,
Dec_g_ased, to Sa muel J.
Chris11e
and Ida M .
CHrist ie . by deed d at ed
June 1, 1925, and r ecorded
in Book 127, at Page M B of
the Deed Records of M eigs
county Oh io.
EXCEP T I NG one ·four th
• of an acr e more or less con ·
veyed by Ida M . Christie lo
ceci l C. Hell man and A llen
c . Heil ma n by deed r ecor ·
ded in Vol. 247, Page 483
Deed Records, Meigs Coun ·
ty , Ohio.
In SECOND COUNT Ida
M . Chri st ie was seized of
the undi vi ded one fourth
part of the following
described rea l estate:
The foll owing descri bed
real est at e situ ated in the
Stal e of Ohio, in the County
of Meigs and in Sa lisbury
Township : It bei ng near
ttie middle of the South hall
of the Norlh half of Secllon

No . 18, Town No 2 1n Range
13 Ohto Company's Pur
chase and on the South li ne
of sa1d South half of th e
North ha lf and beg inning at
th e Northwes t corner of
Jam es A Young's 36 acr e
lot, thence nor t h 2lf2 Deg
East 7 chains and 75 l inks
to t he County road , t hence
South 40 Deg . East 5 ch ains
and 40 l1nks along said
road, t hence South 68 Deg
East 1 chain and l4 1in ks fo
Finnan Smit h's West line;
thence South 21f2 Oeg . Wes t
J chains and 40 li nks t o hi s
Southwest corner ; t hence
West t o t he pl ace of beg1 n
ntng, conta inin g two acr es
more or less
A lso, the following r ea l
es t ate s1tuated 1n Secti on
No . 18, Town 2 and Range
13 of the Oh io Com pany's
Purc hase and desc r ibed as
fol lows, to wit : Beg inni ng
at the SoutHwest corner of
George Young's lot in sa id
Section; thence South 8
rods and 7 fee t ; thence
East 19 r ods , thence North
8 rods and 7 feet ; t hence
west 19 rods to t he p l ac e of
beginni ng, com amt ng one
acre .
Also, the f oll owing r ea l
es tate s1tua t ed in Secti on
No 18 , Town 2 and Range
No 12 of the Ohio Com ·
pany 's Purc ha se and boun ·
ded and descr ibed as
f oll ows, to-wit : Begi nn ing
at
Geo r ge
Y o ung 's
Southeas t corner in said
sec ti on ; th ence East 21
rods to th e road ; t hence m
a Westerl y di rect ion a long
said r oad 15 r ods a nd 10
feet , t hence Wes t 20 r ods;
t hence 15rodsand I Ofeet to
the place of beginn ing , con ·
t aining 2 Beres
Also ,
t he
f ollow in g
desc r ibed r eal es tate in
Sa lisbury Township, M ei gs
County, Oh io. Begmning at
a stone corner E as t 70.545
r ods of t he North west cor ·
ner of W. S. Will s 69 l!2 ac r e
lot near a w illow tree abou t
30 i nches 1n d ia m eter ;
thence South 8.85 r ods to a
stake East of a double
chestnut about 3 t ee t tn
d i ameter; thence South
70 112 degrees w est 6 .94 r ods
to a st ake 1 foot South of
white oa k 4 f eet in
dia m eter ; thence Sout h
59114 Deg . w est 8.33 1!3 rod s
to a st ake 3 teet E ast of a
chestnut tree, th ~ n ce South
49 '12 Deg . Wesfb 212 rods to
a st ake 2V1 fee t SOuth of an
ash 6 In in di ameter , t hen ·
ce SOuth 49 lf.c Deg . w est
8.272 ro ds to a staKe 3 feet
West of w hite oa k tree 3
feet in diam et er; th ence
South 69 Deg. w est 14.515
rods to ce nt er of road;
thence in an easterl y d irec t ion fo llowi ng said ro ad to a
stone co rn er on So uth side
of road 31 feet East of
Sugar t ree 6 In in d ia m eter
abou t 51 .97 rods; thence
North to pl ace of beg inning
62 .C83 rods contai n ing 7
ac r es 2Ssquar e r ods .
Also, beg1 nning at a stone
at t he South east corn er of 7
ac r es above mentioned 31
fee t fro m sa id sug ar t r ee 6
In 1n d ia meter ; thence in
an Easterly di recti on
fo llowi ng sai d road about
24 .84 rods to Ida Young 's 2
ac r e lot,· thence Wes t 20.84
rods ; thence North to
aforesa id sugar tree or to
pl ace of beg mning, con ·
tat ning 1 1h acre.
Reference Deed . Vol
135, Page 241 Deed Recor ·
ds, M eigs County, Oh io.
The ob 1ect of t he Com ·
plaint is to sel l the i nter est
of Ida M . Chr ist ie In eac h
parcel of rea l estate in or
der to pay the debts of the
estat e and cost s of ad
ml ni s t er~ n g t he es t ate.
Plainti ff dem ands the
r eal es tate descr ibed in t he
F l RS T (0 UN T be sold;
th at th e entire i nt eres t in
t he real es tate descr ibed in
SECO ND COUN T be sold,
tha t the nghts , Inter es t s
and liens of all pa r ttes may
be fu ll y determined , ad·
·usted and pr olected, and
hat Plai ntiff be authorized
and ordered 10 se n rne en·
t~r e tnterest in the r ea l
estate
desc r i b ed
in
SECO N D CO UNT ac ·
cordtng to t he statute s in
such case m ade a nd
prov ided, ar'ld f ar such
other r eli ef as to whi ch she
may be enti tl ed IO.
You are r eq ui red to answer t he Compl ai nt within
twen t y-eight days after the
lasl publi cation of this
notice w hi c h will be
pub I ished once each week
lor six succ essive weeks
and the last pu blic ation will
be made on the 7th . d ay of
Februar y, 1980. ,
In case of your failure lo
an swe r
or
oth e rw ise
respond as permitted by
th e Ohio Rules Ql Civil
Proced u re within the t ime
stated ,
\udgm enl
by
default w i I be render ed
aga1nst you for the re lief
dem anded in the com ·

l

p l ai~t .

. Robe rt E . Buck
J udge and E• -Off lcio Clerk
common Pl eas c ourt
Meigs County , Oh io
Probat e D ivision
&lt;m 21 &lt;ll 3, 10. 11, 24, 31.

1

( 2 ) 7 , 7~

--

Card of Thanks

ap .
DEEPEST
MY
precta t1 on to all wh o had
my interes t at heart during
"my stay 1n the hospital .
Your cards, flowers, visits,
prayers , and smallest
thoughts mea ns so very
much.
Freema n " Lee"
Mrs
Enoch .

-----

CHIP WOOD . Poles ma x.
diameter 10" on largest
end. Sl2 per ton . Bundl ed
slab S10 per ton Delivered
to Ohio Pallet Co .. Rt . 2.
Pomeroy 992 ·2689 .

OLD FURNITURE , ice
boxes, brass beds, iron
beds, desks, etc .• complete
households . Write M .D .
Mi ller Rt . 4, Pomeroy or
ca ll 992 ·7760 .

Notices
' GUN SHOOT EVERY
SUNDAY 1 PM . F,ACTORY
CHOKE ONLY . RACINE
GUN CLUB
Racine
GUN SHOOT
Depl .
Volunteer
Fir e
Every Saturday 6: 30pm.
At their buildingin Bashan
F.actor y choke guns onl y

GUN SHOOT every Sunday
12 : 00. Factory choke only.
Cor n Hollow Gun Club.
Rut land . Proceeds donated
to Boy Scout Troop 249
( IM
ATTENTION :
PORTA NT TO YOU ) Wi ll
pay cash or cert• f ied check
for antiques and col lec ·
t1 bles or e nt ~re estates .
Nothing too large . A lso,
gu ns, pocket watches and
coin collec ti ons. Ca ll 614
767·3167 or 557·34 11 .
BU Y I NG U.S. SIL VER
CO IN S DATED 1964 OR
I A NY
EARL l ER
AMOUNT! . DON ' T LOSE
MONEY , SIM PLY PICK
UP THE PHONE AND
6 14 · 992 5 11 3,
D I AL
BROWN 'S.
IN COME TAX SERVI CE .
Qua rterl y, F edera l and all
sta te mcom e t ax r epor ts
wi ll be pr epar ed by ap·
pointm ent . 9'12 2272 or see
Wanda E bl in, La urel Cli ff
Rd ., Pom er oy
I PAY highest pr ices
possib le f or go ld and sil ver
coins, ring s, jewe lry, etc.
Cont act E d Bu r kett Bar ber
ShOp, M iddl epor t .
2ND SE M ESTE R classes
in ba ll et, tap and jazz now
open. Cl asses offer ed ar e
pre -sc hooL ball et, tap,
jazz, and adu lt exercise
1azz c lasses . Ca ll Sh1 r ley
Ca rp ent er , Carpenter's
Dance Studio. 949 271 0
bef or e J anuary 30th .
IN COM E TAX ser vice,
Feder a l a nd State. Wa llace
Russe ll. Brad bu ry . 9'12·
722B.
HEA RIN G A ID USE RS:
sa ve used batteri es, mer ·
cury an d stl ve r ox i de,
redeem tor cash . Diles
Ce nter ,
Hear in g
Aid
Ath ens. Tel. 614·594-3571
Lost and Found
LOST IN RACIN E, mat e
white toy pood le, wear ing
re d coll ar . An swer s to
Snowba ll Rew ard f or in·
lead i ng to
forma t •o n
relur n. 949·2304 or 949 2164.
LOS T : Ten nessee brindl e
coon hound. K yger Cr eek
Chesh ire area. An swer s to
Rock Ca ll 992·3041 or 304·
BB2·3348. Rewar d.
Hell! Wanted
CA RRIE RS NE EDE D in
t he
M id dl e p ort
and
Pomer oy area s. Cal l th e
Daily Sent inel between B.30
and5:00 p m .,992-2156.
HO M E
ADD RE SS ER S
wa nted
$500 per wee k
POSSi bl e. No ex perience
r eq u 1re d .
A. S. D., PO
Drawer 1.40069, Da ll as, T X
752 14.
GET VA LU A BLE tra ining
as a young business person
and earn good money plus
some g r ea t gifts as a Sen
t inel r oute carri er . Phone
us r ight away and get on
the eli gi bil ity list al 992 ·
2156 or 9'12 ·21 57.
LAD Y TO li ve in w ith
elderly lady . 6 days per
week . Ca ll 304-BB2.2393.
Lady is ambul atory · lives
in Middl epor t, OH . NO
heavy w ork r equi red
NEED EX T RA CASH? We
tak in g ap
ar e now
p1 1cat ions f or fu ll or part
time he lp. For m ore in·
form ati on, write bo x 729H .
c·o the Dail y Sent inel ,
Pomer y, OH 45769.
RN OR LPN , fu ll ti me. 3·
ll : 30 and 11 to 7 30. Par t
time RN or LPN , 111o 7:30 .
Ca ll Mr . Zi di an at Pomeroy
Health Care Center , M anday through Frid ay , 9·5

JOB OPENING
Maintenace Man
For
Rutland Village
Should ha ve some ex ·
per i ence in machinery
operation, backhoe &amp;
truck driving, etc.
If iOterested for further
tnform at ion, cont act ·
Ru t la nd V11t age Clerk ,
Vernon Weber
o ay ttm e: 992·334)
or at hom e ~
742-2143.
Appl i cants should live in
or nea r Rutl and .

ANT I QUES ,
FUR
NITURE, glass, china,
anythi ng. See or ca ll Ruth
Gosney, antiques, 26 N .
2nd, Mi ddleport, OH 992 ·
316 1
OLD CO l NS, pockel wat
c hes, class r ings, wedding
bands, diamonds . Gold or
sil ver. Ca ll J . A . Wamsley,
142·233 1. Treasure Chest
C01n Shop, Athens, OH. 5926462 .
MART IN 'S APP RA ISAL.
St op, thin k, ar e you abou t
to lose m oney? Over 25
yea r s exper ience in buying
and se ll ing . Will appraise
new, used or a nti que fu r ·
ni tur e. One piece or com ·
p! ete househOl d . Gold ,
si l ver and ot her old coins,
china, glass, ol d toys, doll s,
ir on ban ks, tool s, ant ique
cloth 1ng, r a zor s, pocket
kntves and ot her ol d item s.
Ca \1992 6370 .
WILL PAY TOP dollar for
go ld and silver coins,
stlver wa r e, other gold and
silver items, jewelry, ol d
g l ass fr ames and ant1 que
f urni t ure Will bu y one
p;ece or househol d. Ca ll
992·6370.
A LL GO LD A ND SILVE R
CO IN S OF T HE WORLD .
RIN GS,
A L SO.
J EWEL RY, CHA INS, AND
MI SC.
IT E MS
AT
RECORD HI GH HONE ST
U P· TO DA TE PRI CES.
CONTACT ED BURKET T
BAR BE R SHOP. MID·
DLE POR T, OH OR CALL
992·3476.
Fou r f oot S·cu rve ro lltop
desK.
Call
742· 2316 ,
even ings.

Pets for Sale
HOOF HO L LOW, Engli sh
and western . Sadd les and
h ar ne ss
H o r ses
a nd
pon tes. Ruth Ree ves. 614
69 B·3290 &lt;Bor d ing and
Rid ing Lessons and Horse
Ca r e pr odu ct s. West ern
boot s. Children's $1.5.50
Adults$29.00.

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

ROOM AND BOARD, laundry . E lderly or working
men . 9'12· IIJ22 .
RESTER'S assista nt for
Senior C1t1zens in Vil lage
Manor apts. Call992·7787

APT . FOR RENT. $150 plus
depOSit . 992·6130 .
FOUR ROOM apt . in
Rac1 ne. Phone 992 ·2838 or
992 ·2429 .
F or Sale
COA L ,
LI M ES TON E ,
sa nd, grave l, ca l ci u m
ch lor ide, fer ti lizer , dog
food, and all t ypes of sa lt .
Excelsior Sa lt Wor ks, Inc ,
E . M ain St., Pomero y, 992·
3B91.

ROUSH

CONSTRUCTION
• New homes
e xten sive remodel i ng ,
*E l ect rica l w ork
* Ma sonry work
12 Years
Ex perience
Greg Roush
P h . 992· 7583
1· l7· lmo.

N. L CONSTRUCTION
Quality construc t ion at
reasonable rates.
Remod eling
Addition s
Sidi ng
Br ick Work
Block Work
Concrete Fin ishing

A PP LES
CI D ER
HON EY . F i t zpat nck Or ·
char d, St ate Route 689
Phone W ilkesv il le, 669·
37B5.
A PPLES - ROM E beauty
apples al $4 per bu . Best for
apple b•ller . Ca ll 669·37B5,
Fitzpatri ck Orchard , SR
689.
E M ERGE N CY
po w e r
altern ators - own the best
- buy W1npower . Ca ll 513
7BB·2589
CONDITIONED hay
sale. 614·667·3349 .

for

POTATOE S, $B per hun·
dred . 3 miles w est of Dar
win . Cecil Toban .
1975 KA WASAKI motor·
cyc le 175 F 7, verv good cor·
dil lon, ssoo . Sunray gas
range, avocado green, 30",
$150. Gibson r efrigerator ,
19 cu. ft ., avocado green,
S175. M ay tag automati c
w asher ,
w hile,
$1 50.
Gener al elec tr ic dryer ,
wh 1te, $125. E veryth ing in
good condition . Call 367·
7149
FOUR YEAR old 3
bedr oom home . Carpeted.
A ll electric . Bui lt -in kit·
chen Att ached garage. ll/2
acres Near Mmes 1 and 2.
Moving out of state. Will
sacrif ice. 742·2385.

Guaranteed Work
Free Estimates
All er 5 P.M . 992-5547
12·13·2 mo. pd.

J&amp;l BWWN
INSUlATION

Vinyl &amp;
.Aluminum Siding
elnsulation
• Storm Doors
• Storm Windows
• Replacement Win ·
dows

Free Estimate

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772
10-19·1 mo.

Real Estate for Sale

1969

TRAV E L -AL L 4x4,
Ham el ite gener ato r,
l ike new, $700. 992:3B47.

R:Gil B. SR . ~· t "I I

POODL E G ROOM! NG.
J udy Ta ylor 614-367 7220 .
HI LLCRE ST K ENNE L S.
Boa rding, all br eeds. Clean
indoor -outdoor f aciliti es.
A l so
AKC
re giste r e d
Doberman s. 614·446·7795.
HUM A NE
SOC IET Y.
Adopt a hom eless pel .
Hea lthy, shot s, w orm ed
Donat 1ons requtred. 992
6260, noon-7 p. m .
AKC Register ed bassett
pup pies, 8 w eek s old Call
9B5·4279

TH ESE DOG S beg for I
Ias t t ime for a chance to
I ive : Af ghan sheep dogs,
M anches t er c h ihuah ua,
shepherd husky , one mi xed
breed Gordon se tters, 1
bord er colli e, 2 small St .
Berna rd types, terrier l a b ,
Iab type, German police·
Nor weg ian elkhound, fl op
py earned shepherd type,
shepherd and beagle t ypes.
Tw o cocker spanial types,
m ale . Shot s and worm ed .
M eigs Count y Huma ne
SOC I el y, 992-6260.

JUST rece ived a shipment
of figu r ines, owl jewelry,
owl lamps, brass item s and
many other items. Open 6
days a week S&amp;E Gift
Shop , Syracuse, OH .

WHITE Whirlpool dryer .
good running cond ition .
$125. Call 985-4276.
PA RT S from a 1970 Dodge
tru ck, 318 engine. Phone
742 ·3161 .
DECORATED CAK E S for'
all . occasions. Chara cte r
ca kes and sheet cakes. Call
9'12-6342 or 992·2583.
1979 FORD Pickup F-150
Ranger , automatic , low
miles, 9243 miles, radio,
I ike new, ni ce topper, large
mirror s, $5,000. 1976 Pinto
Runabout 2·door, 4 cylinder, new tires, "' on the
fl oor , easyon gas, battery,
49,639 mi les, $2300 . 1'12
mil es south of Tuppers
Platns, CR 46, 1112 mites.
Willi am Connoll y . Phone
667·3536.

DIS 0 NT
PRICES

Auto Sales

- -====----·

I 974 SUZUKI TM·400. Ex·
ce llent cond ition. $350,
Phone 742·2143 after 5.

1975 M ERC URY Montego,
35 1. 4·dor hardtop. P. B.,
P S.; A. C., blac k v iny l
seat s and l op. Excel lent
cond iti on . $1395. Call 843·
2094 or see Donna Bogard,
L ong Bottom , OH.

Hotpoint and
General Electric
Apppliance
- Sales &amp; Service

POMEROY
LANDMARK
Jack W. Carsey,
Mgr.
Phone 992-2181

1979 FO RD PIN TO, 4 cy l. , 4
speed . 949·2176.
1979 CAMARO Z·28, auto .,
ru st proofed, brown with
buck skin i nterior . E x·
cel lent condition, $7700
Ph one
742·2143.
L ow
m ileage and loaded .
1977 CHEVR OL ET Capr ice
Cl assic, 3 seat er , st. w gn .,
P . S.,
P . B .,
air,
low
mileage. Reg retai l $3600.
sal e $29'15. Ing els Fur·
nitur e, M idd leport, OH.
1976 V EGA wagon, good
mileage, good condition,
aul o., good tires, $1100. 742·
2927.
1967 FOR D Pickup, 6 cy l. ,
3·speed, $500 . 1975 Olds
Starfi re V-6, 4 speed, S900.
992·632 3 aft er 6

Wanted to Rent
AT L EAS T 2112 ca r gara ge
i n Pomeroy, M iddleport or
A thens Coun ty . For a t r an ·
sm ission shop . Call 992·
517B.

Real Estate for Sale
COUNTRY HOME w ith
stocked pond for swimming
or fishing, 9 rooms, bath,
carpeted . 3 to 17 acres
avai lable. Located approx
7 miles from Pomeroy ofi
Rt. 7 or 33. 446·2359 after 6 .
TWO STORY hou se , 9
rooms, llh baths, garage.
College Rd ., Syracu se. Call
9'12·5133 or 992·39Bl.
B Y OWN ER, house in
Pom eroy . Large living
room, dining room, bui l t· in
kitchen, 3 or 4 bedrooms ,
lots of carpet and paneling .
FA gas heat, full basement
One·third acre lot close to
hospital and school. Call
992·5917 for information .
TWO ACRE S of land Wilh a
14X70 1973 Vindal e mobile
home thai has 2 bedrooms,
14x7 expando room, air
condi t ioning, front porch
w i th awn in g , $19,000 .
Located on New Lima Rd .,
Rutland . Ca ll 6 1 4-696-In~~ .

-----··- - 1

216 E . Second

Streol

Sl750.00 DOWN - Buy•
this 4 bedroom home.
Has a formal dining
room. equipped kitchen,
basement, 2 car garage,
smal l business bldg. on
a corner level lot on Rt .
124.
11 ROOMS - 1'12 baths,
gas furna ce, basement,
nice
5 bedrooms ,
carpet ing, hobby room,
2 car garage on nice
level lot. Only $17,500.
$800.00 DOWN - If you
c an
qualify .
Has
baseboard heat, T.P.
water , 2 bedrooms,
balh , and large lot for
garden on Rt . 7 in Top·
per s Plains.
80 ACRES - Ni ce laying land, lots of good
outbuildings,
good
fences, and minera ls.
Nice ·old 10 room home,
bath, porches and good
garden .
SALEM CENTER - 4
year old 3 bedroom
home. w, baths, gas
furnace, ni ce kitchen,
L.C . water and one acre.
$2,000 .00 DOWN .
SECLUDED Native
sand stone 1 bedroom
home. Inside woodwork
like new. Natural gas
F .A. furnace,
c ily
wa ter, ba th, and over 2
acres $1,000.00 DOWN.
BUY YOUR
ROOST
FROM BRUCE . 5%
DOWN. LINE

992-3325 or 992-3876

Housing
Headquarters

H. L WRITESEL
ROOFING
All types root work , new
or repair gutters and
down spouts,
gutter
cleaning and painting.
All work guaranteed.

l'ree Estimates
Reasonable Prices
Call Howard
949-2862
1·22·tfc

Rea l Estate for Sale

608 e .
, MAIN •
POMEROY,O.
99Z·2259
NEW LISTING - 5 Pis.,
3 Bdrm. ranch, level lot,
good condition, central
air &amp; hea t , fully equip·
ped kit .. many features.
WON ' T LAST LONG AT
S30,500.00.
NEW LISTING 3
acres, !&gt;mall barn, small
house, needs some
repairs .
ONLY
$7,000.00.
NEW LISTI f\IG 2
story ho"';ri'-~·omeroy ,
up
to ~'-'odrm s .•
Carpetiny, pane li ng .
CHEAP at$7,000.00.
NEW LISTING
Ranch with ful l base··
ment, t acre, needs
some re pairs . ONLY
$11 ,500.00.
NEW ~ISTING
Mobile home like new,
located near f""" ' nes, on
St. Rt. , fu'e,l\\.~ 'shed, 1
a c re ,
r.~V
water ,
storage bldg ., cement
drive, EXCE L LENT AT
$13,500.00.
NEW LISTING
Rutland area 140 acres,
farm with 6 room house,
lots of timber, coal
rights, many other
possibilities, call for
details.
NEW REMODELING
2 family in Mid·
dleport, looKs nice. rent
the upstairs, live in tne
downstairs. SJl.OOO.OO.
WATCH FOR THE
"OPEN
HOUSE "
NEXT WEEK .. .
ANOTHER SERVICE
OF CLELAND REAL·
TY .
REALTOR
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
992-6191
ASSOCIATES
Jean Trussell949·2660
Roger &amp; Dottie Turner
742-2474
OFFICE PHONE
992-2259

REAL ESTATE
'

MIDDLEPORT - Cement block home on large corner lol . 7 rooms, 3 or 4 bedrooms. 1112 both, garage.
$27,000.
ROCKSPRINGS - 2 bedroom and bath , fully equipped kitchen, ne•• '~elgs High School, fully furnish-·
ed . $25,000.

)

(]

t

r ROGLE
WH ILe ...

SOUND L IKE' A
SPOI LED 6P:AT!
THAT'5 NOT LIKe
C HRJ:; AT At..t..~

5- ULK III!G

OR GWOM!JoJG

50MeWHERE

'CAU!'&amp; We GOTfA

O KAY~ [ GU E5 '-, IT S OAR/&lt;..
ENOUGH rr w~ NA IT LL YA

ME;\N·

YO U AAAI&lt;E- HIM

HE- '3- PRO f,' L'OF~

Au t o &amp; T ru c k
Repa ir
A lso Transmi s sion
R e pair
Phone 992 -5682
4·30-tfc

SEE- WHAT l VE
O VER

I~ ~.AR

ORNA '-' EN r•"

S~r

THE REPAI~MAN
6A 1D WHS.N THE
DRIVE ~ COM P~AI "-J ED
THAT HIS E N G INE
WAS SMOKI NG .

HI DDEN

"

I"' EE S
"'·/ PO~D.

Now, arrange th e circled leners to
lonn the surpr~se answer . as sug·
gested by the above car1oon

J I I

GH RID Or
CLAUDIA:

Answer:

WELL, IT'S

Vesle,day 5

I Jumbles

r I I )[ I I I 1 1 ]I
{Answers tomorrow)

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING

..

·

Gutter work , down
spouts, some concrete
work ,
walks
and
driveways.
(FREE ESTIMATES)
Reduced Winter Rates

SKULL

GUISE BEWARE DAWNED
What the two metal wo rkers called thetr mar" age- " WELDED" BLISS

Answer

I: 50--News 13 ; 3 :41}-M ov 1e " We
Were St ra ngers" 17.

BORN LOSER

RACINE , O.
U9-2748or
992-7314
12 2B-pd .

l.~ST '(6;\R, f&lt;JR 11-lST~ , ot.JR

RBP.U..'{;;

CWFtaJJ'{ PAID 0/6R $7 MILL.IN
Fa( I~~~. ~F.NG AAD ~

DO Wffi.\ A.l-L OF n\t&gt;M ~

WH ~T OOiti€-Y

BRIDGE

GQI.A-e CIJ BALK'

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

W ... 11-\A.T Wfl6
JUST M'l l-ITTL6

Playing odds scores slam

J0\&lt;8 , t;;D .. ,

RAILROAD
STREET
GARAGE

E'D '?
NO RTH
. AQ 9B

i

Middleport, o.
Automotive Repair
Open 9-6 Mon . thru Sat,
Additional Hours
By Appointment

+ KJ942
+ 5

WEST
EAST
. 1 54 2
+ 3
. QIOB632
• J1
+6
+ Ql0813
+ A8
+ 109763
SOUTH
• K J 10 6
. A5
+ A5

ANNIE

~ijj'J[=J::=::I::::::r-:,.AAGGM;i:MINE

Phone 992-2390
Reasonable Rates
" Don' t cuss·Call us"
1-1B (pd .)

15 N' T

5COLDINS "rrll, .'!Nt..IIE!
.. ,JU6T SA-,' lNG THAT

IT WAS VERY fQQ!&amp;Ij
OF YOU

· + KQJ42

Vuln erable Both
Dea ler . South

Business Services

POMEROY - Lincoln His. 2 ~droom , bath, large
living room. full basement, new furnace. $17,500. ·

SEWING
MACHINE
Repair s,
serv i ce.
all
makes . 992 -22B4 . T he
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
Authorized Singer Sales
and Service. We sharpen
Scissors.

Ml DOLEPORT - Building lOt on S. Second, 63' X53'.
$4,500.

CALL 992-2342

Bill Chlds, Branch Mgr., Home 992·2449
Rodney ·Downing, Broker, Hollie 992-3731
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

2+

6•

4•
5 'f

Pass

There re• lly

IS

JUmps to two spades as hts
scqon d btd and ll IS up to
North to get to 1he slam under
hb ow n puwer Nort h starts
by merely ratsmg to t hree
spades to see 1f Sout h rea lly
ha s spades T hen he pushes to
st x: after usmg Blackwood
As for the play it is j ust a
matter of proper techmq ue
At l n ck two South leads a
club West plunks hi s ace on
South's kmg and leads a second Lr um p.
South Wins m hts hand and
now lea ds a low cl ub for dum-

my tu ru ff He must co me
ba ck Lo hiS hand w it h a red

ace m order to ru ff his last
low cl ub and right here IS
where we tell the men from
t he boys If South com es back

the ace of hearts he lS go mg
to lose h1s slam beca use when
tO

he ru ffs his last li l lie club
West w tll chuck hiS smgleton
diamond and wtll r uff South' s
ace of th aLSUIL
Why should SouLh pl ay the
diamond first' Beca use the
opponents hold only siX diamonds and th ere IS a grea ter

nothmg of

cha nce to ftnd a singleton dta·
m ond tha n a slnJi!:leton heart
IN t-:WS I'A I'UJ. ENH:R I' HI SE ASSI\ J

(For a copy of JACOBY
MODERN send$ 1 to " Wm at
Bndge · care of thts newspa per. P 0 Box 489. Radio C&lt;ty
S fat1on. New York, NY

sla m and nctther decl arer
boLhered to make 12 tncks
after West opened a Lrump

100 19.)

~-'61d'
by THOMAS JOSEPH

No fire ·

brealihinq
donke~

in here.

·I'm

afraid!

WINNIE

REYNOLDS ELECTRIC,
651 Beech St. Rewind and
repair electric motors. 992·
2356. Will make servi ce
calls.

1•

.. BUT I'D !?ETTER: NOT. IF 131LL
CATCHEt7 ME , HE 'LL KNOW
T\1AT J!M JUST AS
ANX IOUS ABOUT
HER: A'J HE I'J!

tM TEMPTED
TO CALL WENDY

i3EFORE GOING
TO BLEEP.

DAVID
GRINDSTAFF
construction now ava ilable
for work . Call 949·2125, 949·
2061 , evenings.
'

.

Z6 Villain : sl.
27 Suffix
of enzymes
28 Burn
28 Marker on
the links
;w One, in
Nantes
31 Pallid
34 Brought out
36 Penalty
37 Tenant
38 Spirit lainp

........
. ... M ' ' "••'' '
...
. . . ,..........
~,

'

Services Offered
WILL DO odds and ends,
paneling, floor til e, cei:!lng
tile. Fred Miller, 992·633B.

·BARNEY

PAW!! LOOKY
WHAT TATER

WILL CARE for the elderly
in our home, trained and
experienced . I Phone 992·
7314.

ACROSS
I Rwn -soaked
cake
5 Put in place
8 The E merald
Isle
9 Investigations
13 Open to
the breeze
14 Halt
15 Kind of r ace
16 Before
17 Makedouble
18 Ran swiftly
20 Flying or
Singing 21 Not hollow
22 Antiaircraft guns
23 Crusoe's
creator

DOWN
1 Russtan
symbol
2 La Scala
highlight

3 Bolticelli
painting,

with ''The''
4Some
5 Exempted
6 Transgressed
7 Craggy spot
10 Simply adore
11 Arm of the sea
12 Pesky Eddie
of baseball
16 Lacka-

Yesterday's Answer

19 Medicinal

26 Impede
plant
28 Leather
21 Of the shore 112 Undy's
22 National
wife
symbol
33 Without
23 Man wtth
the
the goods
chaser
24 Wilder
35 Townsman
person
36 Not many

warma's
partner

Z4 Old · %5 Frenzy

J&amp;D Painting . Interior, ex·
terlor. Reasonabl e ra1es, in
Mason. 304·773·5566 or 304·
773·S704.

SPELT

WHAT'S SO
. HOTABOUT
THAT?

1.:-+--+-

39 Thrice : Lat.

WORK .

40 Sharpen ·

~nellng,

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE Ia

Giveaway

Here's how to work
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

It :

One letter s impl~ stands for another. In this sample A Ia
used for th e three L 's, X for the tw o O's, cl c. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of th e words are all
hints. Each day t he cod e letters are different.

.~~------------ ··

CRYPTOQUOTES

WHATEVER YOU CALL
IT, ~AM, IT'5·
SURE COMIN6 IN ..

Mobile Homes - Sale
1972 LYNN HAV N 14x65 3
bedroom
1970 Vlndale 12x . w1111 expando, 2 bedr. '
1970 New Moon 1 603bdr.
1973 · Skyline · 12x5S 2
bedroom
,
.
1972 Bonanza 12x52, 2 bedr.
B &amp; S MOBILE HOME
SALES, PT . ·PLEASANT,
wv. 304-675·4424.

I•
3•
4 NT

LeL s look at I he biddmg
Sout h g1ves his al l w hen he

th at when th e hand was
pla yed m a fa trl y good team
game only one pair got to th e

PIANO TUNING . Lane
Dan ie ls. New phone num·
ber, 742·2951. Service to
schools and home since
1965.

LON G HAIRED black cat
949-2854.
.

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

tnt{'rest m today's ha nd South
btds and ma kes s1x sp&lt;H.l cs and
that IS all th e re ts .to 1t Except

and

SYRACUSE - 6 room hOuse on nice lot. $11,600.
, 5 ACRES OF LAND on Hysell Run, beautiful
bulldl ng lot. S7 ,ooo.

WOULDN 'T '('LET GO OF !T?

s &amp; G carpet Cleaning .
Steam
cleaned .
Free
est i mate .
Reasoneble ·
rates . Scotchguard . 992·
6309 or 742-2211.

COUCH . 992·2857.

South

By Os wald Jacob v
and Alan Sontag ·

WELL, SUPPu:5E 'IOU HAD AHIXD
OF SOME'Tf.&lt;ING AN' ALL OF
A SUDDEN 'i'WENT BLIND!

ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR
sweepers,
toasters, irons, all small
appliances. Lawn mower .
Ne•t to Slate Highway
Garage on Route 7, 985·
3825.

RUTLAND - One bedroom down, two upstairs, on
large corner lot. Just needs a IIHie paint &amp; paper.
$9,900.

Eas t

Openi ng lead + 2

BRADFORD. Auctioneer,'
Complete Service . Phone
949-2487 or 949-2000. raci ne,
Ohio, Crill Bradford.

WILL DO BABYSITTING
In my home. 9'12-5875 .

North

.

IN STOCK for immediate
delivery: various sizes of
pool kits. Do it yourself or
let us install for you . D.
Bumgardner Sales, Inc.
9'12-5724.

MIDDLEPORT - Two bedroom brick only 1 block
from center of town . Low utilities. A bargain at
$12,500.
.

,.

Wes t

Pass

IN AUTOMOBILE
SURANCE
been can ·
celled?
Lo s t
your
operator' s license? Phone
992-2143.

WALL PAPERING
pa inting . 742-2328.

,.,.

• K94

'

O T BUJ
Z TM

.
',
'
;
'

Z G B K Y

K R R

QT

'
8 ·00-Buck Rogers 3, 15; Mork
&amp;
Mmdy ~ . 13 ; Waltons 8, 10; Los
Angeles Philharmonic at .the
Hollywood Bowl 20; Movie " PT
109" 17 ; Camera Three 33 .
8 31}-Sports : Close Up 33 .
9 ·00-Skag 3, 15; Barney Miller 6, 13;
People 's Choice B. 10: Sneak
Previews 20.33 .
9 : 31}-Soap 6, 13; Ca mera Three 20;
Dancing Disco 33.
10 :00-20·20 6, 13; News 20; Sound·
stage 33 .
10 . JO.-Over Easy 20 .
11 ·00-News 3,6,B, 10, 13, 15: Last of
lhe Wild 17; Dick Cavet t 20; Fa ll
&amp; Rise of Regi nald Per rin 33 .
11 : 31}-Tonlghl 3, 15; Pol lee Wom an
6, 13; Columbo 8, ABC Cap ti oned
News 33 : Movie "Cisco Pike" 10;
Movie "Touch ol Evi l" 17.
6, 13;
1 : 0012: 40- Bar etta
Tomorrow 3; News I S: 1: 31}News 17.
· JS--Movle " Walk East on B eacon"
17; 1· 4S-- Biack Sheep Squadron
B.

Thu rsday, Jan. 24

V. C, YOUNG Ill

CARPENTRY
Floors, ceilings,
992-2759.

Television
Viewing
THURSDAY.JANUA R Y 24,1980

WI L L HAUL l im estone and
gr avel. Al so, lime haul ing
and spreading . Leo Morr is
Trucking Phone 742-2455.

JV2 YR. OLD RANCH HOME :..:. :Ju"'st~4-:-::m"i-;-;
les from
Pomeroy . Quiet country living In this beautiful 3
bedroom. two bath with central heat and air condi tion. over 3 acres of flat land with a split rall·fence,
garage and workshop . Just S.U,900.00.

J

1-=~~:;-f;

i

FINANCIN G·VA· FHA LOANS . LOW OR NO DOWN
PAYMENT. PURCHASE
OR
REFINAN C E .
IRELAND MORTGAGE,
77 E. STATE, ATHEN S.
614·592·305 1.

$900

'o NE 125,000 BTU Baird
propane gas, like new, un·
damaged furna ce complete
with al l re9 ist er and duc t s.
Buyer to dismang le. Best
offer, 9B5·3B62.

I

I

byHennArnoldandBob Lee

.

s

~~1 · 3!25

RI SING STA R Kennel.
Boarding . Ca ll 367·0292 .

Hours 9·1 M., W., F.
Ot her times by appointm ent.
107 Sycamore I Rear
Pomeroy. 0 .
,

*New Kitchens
•Bathrooms
•New Home
•AddOns
* Remoldings
*Free Estimates
Phone 992-60 II 1·4-1 Pd )

lour ord1nary words

CASE~'

3'4 m ile off Rt. 1 bV · P8SS ,
on St. Rt. 124 towar d
Rutla nd .

,;.PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.

C. R. MASH
VINYL &amp; ALUM.
SIDING

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square. to lorm

Roger Hysell
Garage

REAL ESTATE
FINAN C ING
F ed e r a l Hou si ng &amp;
Veterans Adm in . Loans.

CALL 992 -7544

SAM.

,.

Business Services

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, north of
Pomeroy Ldrge lots.Call
992 7479.

~ THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~ ~ ~~ ®

SPOKEN SINCE
OVER

For Rent. ___

__wanted to Buy

lt Jt\1'1.\ift fii}lt

TRACY

,

A ST B
JQKL

GY ZKDDEYU J J
YTQ

V· YTMEYX

H G EUQRL

EY

K
STTB
DKJOKR
Yesterday 's Cryploquote: CHARACfER BUILDS SLOWLY
BUT IT CAl'/ BE TORN DOWN WITH INCREDIBLE SWIFTNESS.-F AITH B ALDWIN
JR\ 1910 King Featu re• Sy ndlcete, Inc .

FRIDAY,JANUARY 25,1980
5: 4S--Farm Reporl 13; 5:SI}-PTL
Club 13 , 5.5S--World a t L arge
17
6 :00-700 Cl ub 6,8; PT L C lub 15;
Heallh Fiel d 10.
6 :31}-K idswor ld 10; News 17; 6 :4S-Morn ing Report 3; 6:SI}-Good
Morning , Wes t Virg i n i a 13 ;
6: 5S--New s 13.
7·00-Today 3, 15; Good Morning
Ameri ca 6, 13; Fr iday M orning B;
Batman 10. Three Stooges- Litll e
Rascals 17, 7: 1S--A .M We ather
33
7:31}-Family Affair 10; Studio See
33; 7: SS--Chuck White Report s
10.
B:OO-Capt . Kangaroo B, 10; Family
Affa ir 17; Sesame St . 33.
B:JI}-Romper Room 17 .
9 :00-Bob B r aun 3; Big Valley 6 ;
Bever ly Hillbi llies B; One Day At
A T ime 10; Phil Donahue 13,15;
Lucy Show 17 .
9:31}- Bob Newtiarf 8, Love of Life
10; Green Acres 17.
10 ·00-Card Sharks 3. 15; E dge of
Night 6; Beat l he Cloc k B. 10;
Morni ng Maga z·lne 13; Movie
"The Pl easure of His Company"
17.
10 :30- Hollywood Squ ares 3, 15;
$20,000 P y ramid 13 ; Andy
Gr i ffllh 6; Whew B, 10.
10 ·SS--House Call 10; CBS News B.
11 llO-High Roller s 3, 15; L averne &amp;
Shirl ey 6, ll; Pri ce is R lght B.10;
E lee. Co . 20
11 : 30- Whee l o f Fortun e 3, 15 ;
Famil y Feud 6, 13; Sesam e St
20.33.
12 : 00- New scent er
3;
New s
6,B,I0,13; Heallh Field 15 .
12 :31}-Ryan's Hope 6,13 ; Search for
Tomorrow 8,10; Password Plus
15 ; Movie " Die! Die! My
Dar l ing" 17; Elec. Co. 33 .
·ex&gt;-Days ofOur Llves 3,15, All My
Children 6, 13, Young &amp; the
Restless 8,10 .
I 31}-As The World T urn s B. 10.
2·00-Doctors 3,15; One L ife to Li ve
6. 13 ; 2:2S--News 17.
2: 31}-Another World 3, 15; Guiding
Light B,10 : Giggle.snort Hotel 17.
J·O&lt;&gt;-General Hospital 6, 13; I Love
Lucy 17; Upslalrs, Downstairs
20 .
3 ·3D-One Day AI A Time 8; Joker's
Wil d 10; Flintstones 17 ; Over
Easy 33
.
4 : 00- Mi ste r Cartoon 3; Mer v
Gr iffin 6; Petllcoat Junction B; .
Sesame St . 20,33; Gomer Pyle
10; Real McCoys 13; Little
Rascals 15; Spectreman 17.
4: 30--Lone Ranger 3; Gomer Pyle B;
Brady Bunch 10; Tom &amp; Jerry
13; Merv Gr iffin 15; Gi lligan' s Is.
17.
5 · oo-Carol Burnetl 3; Sanford &amp;
Son B; Mar y Tyler Moore 10; My ·
Three Sons 17; Mist11r Rogers
20.33
5. 31}-Mash 3; News 6; Play the
Percentages 8; Elec . Co. 20;
Mash 10; Happy Days Again 13; I
Dream of Jennie 17; Ooctor W~o
33.
6:()()--..New s 3,8,10,13, 15; ABC News
6; Carol Burnell 17; 3-2-1 Contact
20,33.
6 : 31}-NBC News3,15; ABC News 13;
Carol Burnell 6; CBS News B,10;
Bob Newhart 17; Villa Alegre 20;
Wild Wild World of Anim als 33.
7·00-Cr oss-Wits 3; T ic Tac Dough
B; New l ywed Gam e 6, 13,
Mac Neil - Lehrer Report 33;
News 10; Love , Ameri can Style .
15; Love Ameri can Style 15;
Dick Cavell 20.
7: 31}-Prlce is Right 3; J' s A Crowd
6; Joker ' s Wild 8; Family Feud
10; Pop Goes the Country 13, 15;
All In The Family 17; Mac Neil .
Lehrer Report 20.
8 : llO-Shlrley 3, 15; B.A. D. Cats 6, 13;
In c r edible
Hulk .
B. 10;
Washington Week In Review
20,33; Movie "The Raven" 17 .
8:31}-Wall Sfreet Week 20,33 .
9: 00-Top of the Hill 3; Movie
"Mother &amp; Daughter " 6,13 ;
Movi e " Marriage Is Alive and
Well " 15; Dukes of Hazzard 8, 10;
Capitol Beat 33; Fr ee to Choose

20.
10:00-l&lt;nots Landing 8, 10; Per.
spectlve on Greatness 17; News
20; David Susskind 33.
10:31}-Pavarolll at Jutlllard 20.
11 :00-New s 3,6,8,10,13,15; Last of
!he Wild 17; Dick Cave11 20;
Monty Python' s Flying Circus 33.
11 . 30- Tonlght 3, 15; Charlie's
Angels 6; Movie " Dial a Deadly ·
Number" 8; ABC Captioned
News 33; Movie " The Hound of
the Baskervllles" 10; Movie
" The .GreeJ! Berets" 13; Movie
" THX 113B" 17.
6;
1 : 00- Midnlght
12 40- FBI
Special 3, 15; Movie "The ln.
des!rucflble .Man" 10; 1:2sNews 17. '
1 :31}-Movle " Beach Ball" 17; 2:00- .
News 13.
2 :3~News31 3:2S--Movle " Edge of .
Darkness" 17.

�-

Hl- The Daily Sentinel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Jan. 24, 198()

ELBERFELD$ IN POM-EROY
I

-~

A..

11.

a.«

(USPS 145-960)

SWEATERS - SHIRTS - BLOUSES - TOPS
FOR MEN AND BOYS - WOMEN AND CHILDREN
OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8

--·------·-·----·------··
GIRLS'

BOYS'
SWEATERS
Regular prices $10.95
to $14.95. Slipover
styles - solids and

patterns.

TOPS
BLOUSES
SWEATERS
Quality at big savings!
Sizes 2 to 4, 4 to 6x, 7 to

NEW HAYEN DONATES TO CEP - Mrs. Sandy Capehart presents Robert Brewster, Mason County
superintendent of schools, with a $200 check on behalf of the New Haven Parent Teacher Organization to help cover
advertising costs for the upcoming Comprehensive Education Plan bond issue. The PTO voted unanimously to
endorse the. bond issue following a presentation by Brewster, William Capehart,Mason County assistant superintendent of schools, and Albert Stevens of the Central Office. School board members Donna Thompson, Don Waldie,
Howard Miller and Harry Siders, board pr~sident, also entertained questions at the meeting.

lh PRICE

lh PRICE

MEN'S
SHIRTS

BLOUSES
Long

sleeved

solid and print
styles

First fatality recorded
MASON -- Mason County recorded its first highway fatality of 1980 with the death in Pleasant
Valley Hospital Tuesday of Diane Lee Hissom Randolph, 38, HeQderson.
Mrs. Randolph had been hospitalized since Jan. 5 with injuries received in an accident on
Charleston Road (Route 62) . She was a passenger in a truck driven by William Rallins 33 Henderson, which went over an embankment, landing on its top, after colliding with another ;ehi,cle on
the icy highway.

14.

WOMEN'S

Mason County happenings

in sizes

30 thru 46.

Sizes S (14· 14'121, M 115· 15'12 ).
L 116-16'h ). XL il7·17'h ) .
Entire stock of men's sport
and dress shirts
Polyester knits · western
flannels . velours . corduroy r
knits - gingham plaids - sport
flannels - Van Heusen dress
shirts. Regular price $7.95 to
$25.00.

1

/z PRICE

1/2

LlffiE BOYS'

Diagonal parking vetoed
MASON -- Adelegation of property owners on Center Street in Mason attended the Mason Town
Council meeting Monday evening to discuss the possibility of having diagonal parking on that street.
Members of the Christian Brethren Church had requested that the town begin using diagonal
parking during a pr~yious meeting. No action was taken at the earlier meeting, so the council could
obtain the views of the Center Street residents.
·
Attending the meeting from the delegation were Mr. and Mrs. Cevil Devrick, Mrs. Brad Johnson,
Carl Cline and OliruWolf. Following a lengthy discussion, the council agreed the idea is not feasible at
this lime due to the cost involved to prepare the street.
Floyd Maye~ of the Region II Planning Council in Huntington also attended the meeting to
establish a working relationship between his council and the Mason Town CounciL Mayes answered
questions put forth by the council members.
It was noted that the siren on the city building had been repaired and is now in use.
In other action, the council made plans for a parade in April, paid all outstanding bills, and
agreed to send a counctl member to the CETA meeting in Parkersburg Feb. 5.

JUNIOR

SHIRTS
AND
TOPS

SWEATERS
QUALITY FASHIONABLE

Sweatshirts, flannel
shirts, knit tops and
sweaters. Sizes 2 to 7

SWEATERS IN
. JUNIOR SIZES

1

/2 1h PRICE
PRICE

Program grant announced
A federal award of $5,100 to Mason County for the operation of a county-wide program aimed at
the speeding driver has been announced by Mason County Sheriff James C. Hall.
Labeled "Operation 55-55," the program has been praised as a highly innovative traffic enforcement measure, Hall said. He stated the program will be operated state wide as a grass-roots approach to gaining compliance with the 55 MPH speed limit.
Federal funds: channeled through the Governor's Highway Safety Program, will be used to pay
overtime to deputies for patrolling areas within the county which are posted 55 MPH and have been
determined as high accident areas. The patrols will operate chiefly on W. Va. Route 2, north and
south, US Route 33 and US Route 35.
Sheriff Hall pointed out that fatality rates were SZI in 1979, an increase of 60 deaths or 11 percent
from the 1978 totaL
"This is intolerable," Hall said. " With the 'Operation 55-55' grani, my department deputies will
be able to beef up law enforcement and warn motorists of an all out effort to crack down on offenders ."

FHA loans total $1,446,350

.,

Tops, pants, dresses,
jump suits, bubbles
and sets.
Infant sizes, Newborn
to 24 mos.

X~VII I

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

NO. 199

MEN'S
SWEATERS

1978. Loans under this program were
used primarily for consolidation and
restructuring of • debts and
reorganizing the farming operation
so that they could continue their farming operation. This loan authority
is presently due to expire on May 15,
1980.
Three loans totaling $216,700 were
made under the Farm Ownership
program. These loans were made
primarily to assist eligible farmers
to purchase and improve farms.
Fifty-one percent of FArm Ownership loan funds were used to assist
fanners with limited resources. The
purpose of this program is to assist

PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE
OF
RILEY
PIGOTT, DECEASED
Case No. 22940
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF Fl OUCIARY
On J anuary 17, 1980, i_f'l
rne M~IGS County Probate
Courl, Case No. 22940,
Donald Pigott, Route 1
Long. Bottom, Ohio 4574J
was appointed Executor of
the esta te of Riley Pigoft ,
deceased, late of Route 1,
Long Bottom , Ohio45743 .
Rober! E . Buck
Probate Judge
Clerk --....
(l/ 24, 31(2)7 , Jtc

eligible applicants to become owneroperators of family farms, to make
efficient use of land, labor and other
resources, to carry on sound and
successful operations on the farm.
He also said that eight operating
loans totaling $1295,150 were made
to farmers for operating purposes
such as livestock, machinery, and
annual operating expenses. Thirtynine percent of these funds were wr
ed to assist farmers with limited
resources.
Information about each of these
programs can be obtained from
Stegall at the FmHA office, 221 West
Second St., Pomeroy, OH 45769.

1h PRICE

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Consumer prices climbed 1.2 percent in December, pushing inflation for all of last year to 13.3 percent, the worst annual increase in33 years, the Labor Department reported today.
What cost consumers $1 in the 1967 base year cost them nearly $2.30 as 1979
ended.
Over the year, workers' real spendable earnings were down 5.3 percent as
a result of higher taxes and other rising costs. While average wages before
taxes rose 8 percent, they were offset by a slight decrease in hours worked
and a very high inflation rate.
The acceleration last year was caused primarily by housing and energyfueled transportation costs, which rose relentlessly and accounted for about
three-fourths of the entire increase in the Consumer Price Index in 1979.
Through the inflation-ravaged year, the price of a gallon of gasoline rose
an average of 35.7 cents, while home heating oil jumped an average of 33.8
cents a gallon, the department said.
All energy costs rose 34.7 percent.
Last year also saw:
-Home financing costs skyrocket 34.7 percent;
-House prices shoot up 15.8 percent;
-Food and beverages rise 10 percent;
-All transportation costs, including automobile prices, jump 18.2 percent;
-Medical care climb 10.1 percent.
December's 1.2 percent rise offered little prospect of relief to inflation-

The Orange Township Volunteer
Fire Department; only 10 years old,
is becoming one of the most active
and progressive groups in Meigs

County.
Thirty-~me

members ·strong - including four women who receive all
of the training taken by male mem-

eviction order today
Gallia County's board of commission, in emergency session this
morning, took action to evict the 648
Board from county-owned facilities
off State Rt. 160.
Cornmillsioner Lonnie Burger
made the motion to give Sheriff
.- James Montgomery authority to "go
' to the real estate owned by the county to reclaim those facilities on
behaH of the Gallia County Commission.''
A letter Is to be sent by the county
cornmissloners directing 648 Board
personnel, located in the center and
children's facility, to remove themselves from the premises immediately.
According to commission, 648
Board personnel will not be forced to
leave the facilities today, but will not
be allowed to return after today.
Gliards Will _be posted by the

sheriff's department barl-ing entry
by 648 Board personnel afte.r today.
Today' s . action stems from a
motion made Tuesday night by Commission President Paul Niday
authorizing Gallia County
Prosecuting Attorney Joe Cain to
take whatever steps necessary to
evict the Gallia.Jackson-Meigs Mental Health and Mental Retardation
648 Board from the two countyowned buildings currently housing
mental health services as a result of
a squabble between 648 Board and
Center Board officials.
Commissioner Jim Saunders was
out of town this morning and unable
to attend the emergency session.

EXTENDED FORECAST
Achance of snow flurries In the
northeast Sunday and Tuesday.
Snow possible Monday. Highs
through lbe period from lbe upper 208 to the low 3011. Low. from
between 10 and 20 Sunday to lbe
teens to low 208 Monday and
Tuesday.

long sleeve shirts
in this sale. Sizes 8
to 20. Includes

knits,

TOPS
AND

BLOUSES
-

westerns

and sport · fla·nels,
cotton
blends.

to

Wrcingler tops and
blouses in many
styles and colors .
Sizes S·M -L .

1/2 PRICE

lh PRICE

$4.9~

WOMEN'S

COATS

SWEATERS

il l

24,

Robert E. Buh
Probate Judge
Clerk
Jl 121 7, 3tc

VESTS
Sites S-M-L
and
Extra Sizes

AND

Men's and boys iackets
and coats. Women's and
Junior size coats and
jackets .
Children's

President Carter has proposed a J percent increase in fiscal 1981 defense
spending, af,ler discounting fqr inflation. And several members of Congress
indicate they will push to increase that amount in light of the Russian occupation of Afghanistan.
Kahn also said recent rises in mortgage interest rates and oil prices "will
continue to give u.s a high rate of increase in the CPI for months to come."
Housing and energy costs were the primary propellants of inflation
throughout !979. That's particularly troublesome because -- along with food
--they comprise the bulk of an average family's budget.
In the 12 months ending last November, housing coots rose 14.3 percent,
the Labor Department reported. From September through November, the
increase was 16.7 percent, reflecting skyrocketing mortgage rates caused by
the Federal Reserve Board's tight money policies.
In other economic news Thursday, the Commerce Department reported
that orders received by U.S. factories for durable goods rose a modest 0.6
percent in December, but auto orders continued to skid.
The small overall increase last month followed a 1.6 percent decline in
November.

bers of the department - the group

by Kevin Dailey, active Middleport
Fire Department member.
Recently, the Orange Department
purchased a pumper truck which is
now ready to be put into action. The
new vehicle was purchased from
McClinton Chevrolet in Parkersburg, the firm which submitted the
lowest bid to meet speCifications.
The truck was purchased at a cost
of S7,314.33. Although the Department of Natural Resources furnished $3,000, the department which
equipped the vehicle still owes
$4,000.
Department members report the
new pumper is invaluable in that it
can get to fires much quicker than
their larger vehicle.
The department also now hasdeveloped an emergency service for
lhe area it serves and residents
having need for 'the service are to
(Continued on page 10)

ACTIVE MEMBERS - These active members of
the Orange Township Volunteer~("' Department were
on hand for Wednesday night's meeting. The group includes: front, I tor, Charles Weber, Gary McDonald,
Karen Miyashiro, Lois Deem, Nina J. Ritchie, Terry

iackets, coats and snow

The Meigs County budget recently
adopted by the Meigs County Commissioners' totaled $5,0J0,039.27.
Big categories budgeted include
Public Assistance, $669,445.90; M
and R (Road and maintenance),
$984,681.51 and Mental Health,
$1,640,774.
A breakdown of the budget is as
follows:
Board of county commissioners,
salaries, officials, $35,200; salaries,
employees, $22,789; supplies, $3,000,
equipment, $5,000; contracts-repair,
$500; travel and expenses of commissioners, $1,000; advertising and
printing, $500; other expenses,
$8,000; microfilming, xerox and
photostats, supplies, $3,500; equipment, $500; total county com:
missioners, $79,989.
County auditor, salary, official,
$18,000; salaries, employes, $40,000;
supplies, S7,QO!J; equipment, $500;
contracts-repairs, $500; travel,~;
advertising and printing, $300; other
expenses, $500; assessing personal
property, salaries, , employees,
$1,520; professional services, $2,000;
total, f70,720.
. County treasurer, salary, official,
$12,000; salaries, employes, $21,500;
supplies, S7,000; equipment, $1,000;
contracts--services, $300; travel,
$500; advertising and printing, $700:

-

. Junior.Soldiers' Day of Renewal
will be observed Sunday at the

lf2 PRICE
r .

'

ElBERFElDS ·1N-POMEROY

Deem; second row, I tor, Mike Yoke, Joe Lantz, Bruce
Hager, Roger WIUford, Lawrence Ba\8er, Larry
Mlllhone, Norman Weber; back, I to r, Keith Miller,
Jeff Householder, Lamar Lyons, Tim Spencer, -Charles
Savoy, Gordon Caldwell, and Clifford Longenette, Jr.

Commissioners release county budget
other expenses, $500; total, $43,500.
Prosecuting attorney, salary, official, $20,000; salaries, employes,
$25,384.56; sujpplies, $500; equipment, $200; travel, $300; allowances,
$10,000; total, $56;364.56.
County planning commission,
salaries, employes, $1,750; contracts-repairs, $1,250; other expenses, $150; total, $3,150.
Common pleas couri, salaries, official, $3,563.82; salaries, employes,
$8,764.45; supplies, $250; equipment,
$1,000; attorney fees, $10,000; jurors
fees, $1,500; witness fees, $1,500;
transcripts, $1,500; .travel, $300; expenses, foreign judge, $600; other
expenses, $300; jury commission,
salaries, emJ?loyes, $1,600; supplies,
$300; equipment, $200; advertising
and printing, $100; other expenses,
adult ·probation, $1,000. Bureau of
support, salaries, employes, f7 ,500;
supplies, $1,000; equipment, $500;
travel, $300, other expenses, $200;
total, $41,978.27.
Juvenile court, salaries, employes, $7,844.72; jurors fees, $500;
witness fees, $500; expenses, foreign
judge, $150; other expenses, $1,000;
probation department, salaries, employes, $10,092; supplies, $500; guardian, $300; per diem support, $300;
travel, $4,200; other expenses,
$1,000; total, $26,386.72.

Probate court, salary, official,
$3,563.82; salaries, employes,
$7,396.ZI; supplies, $3,000; jurors
fees, $300; witness fees, $300; t_ranscripts, $200; expenses, foreign
judge, $150; other expenses, $750;
total, $15,660.09.
Clerk of courts, salary, 'official,
$12,000; salaries, employes, $27,681 ;
supplies, $5,500; equipment, $700;
contracts--repair, $550; travel, $300;
advertising and printing, $66; other
expenses, $200; total, $46,996.
Coroner, salary, official, $6,000;
salaries, employes, $500; supplies,
$50, contracts, services, $1,500;
other expenses, $650; total, $8,700.
County court, salary, official,
$10,500;
salaries, employes,
$19,764.72; supplies, $2,500; contracts-repair, $400; witness fees,
$200; other fees, $1,500; other expenses, $3,000; total, $37,864.72.
Board of elections, salary, official,
f7,200; salaries, employes, $3,600;
supplies, $5,800; equipment, $1,000;
contract services, $12,000; travel,
$584; other expenses, $950; total,
$63,534. .
Building and grounds, maintenance and operation, contracts-repair, $2,500; contracts--services,
$35,000!_ total, $37,500.
Sheri!!, salary, official, $13,000;
salaries, employes, f75,7JO; over-

to be foUowed by the Carleton ' Syracuse, between the Carleton ·
CoUege Board of Trustees.
College Board of Trustees and the
The principal sum of $25,000
Meigs County Commissioners shall
received as the ptirehase price from
be invested in such a manner as
the slae of real estate located in
d~med appropiate by the existing
trustees of Carleton College
prususnt to any and all laws which
govern educational trusts in Ohio at
this time.
.
·
The sum sail be deemed to be
retired, at 10 a.m. and the Sunday called the Carleton Memorial Trust.
evening osel"{ance by YPSM Eloise
• The trustees have the right to ex·
Adamsat7:30p.m
pend all income from this principal
Participants will be Jackie J u.stis, sum at any time for any purpose
Rhonda Barnhart, LeSley Artrip, which they deem approplate which
Christine anjl Loretta Laudermilt, follows the specific intent of the
Jeannie Arms and Mary Morton.
original grantor and lies within
Singing, drums and timbriles will _boundaries of' the law which applies
be a feature. The public is invited to to eucational trust at the time of exthe observance.
penditure.

ObServance SCheduled SUTIda-y_

suits.

••

' 'aggravate' ' inflation.

will start an advanced fire fighting
course on March I.
l'he 30-hour course will be taught

According to an entry filed with
Common Pleas Court, Meigs County
Common Pleas Court Judge John C.
Bacon has made the following determination in establishing procedures

JACKETS

OPEN. .SATURDAY
9:30 AM
TO '5 PM
.
.

sday that no relief ts in sight.
In fact, Alfred Kahn, chairman of the Council on Wage and Price Stability,
said increased defense spending to counter Soviet actions could

Carleton College trustees
-g iven procedur~s to follow

CONTINUING OUR SALE

AND
PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF VASHTI
GRIMM, DECEASED
Case No. 22947
NOTICE OF
APOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
..On January 17, 1980, In
the Meigs County Probate
Court, case No. 22947, Bar·
bara J . Brut"an, 11239
I ron wood
Court.
Cin ·
c;nnatl 1 Ohio 45242 was ap·
pointeo Executrix of the
estate of Vash1J Grimm,
deceased, late of Route 2,
Racine, Ohio.

Partly cloudy tonight and Saturday. Lows tonight between 15 and 20.
Highs Saturday from the upper 20s
50-Cent Pyramid: 96; 284; 5701.
• to the low 30s. The chance of
$1 Bo08DZ8: 09; 384; 2680; 54139; precipitation is 20 percent tonight
595M6.
and Saturday.

JUNIOR

BOYS'
SHIRTS
All of our boys

Weather

PRICE

' monthly in- ,
weary Americans, for it was somewhat higher than the average
crease through November.
·
The final CPI for 1979 is especially important because it affects the wages
and benefits of more than 90 million Americans and the spending of billions
offederal dollars.
·
That's because the index is used to calculate cost of living raises for more
than 9 million union and non-union workers; benefit increases for more than
34 million Social Security recipients, and adjustments for 16 million food
stamp recipients, 28 million children and elderly persons receiving meal
subsidies and millions of other welfare recipients.
Economists estimate the government spends $1 billion to$2 billion for each
percentage point rise in the . CPl. Tbe index is a survey of the average
changes in retail prices for a fixed list of goods and services ranging from
food, housing and energy to shoes, tobacco and vacation travel.
All a result of risin!l' consumer prices throughout the year, the average
gross weekly earnings of Americans fell5.3 percent, the Labor Department
reported.
An 8 percent increase in average hourly earnings + slightly above the
figure prescribed by President Carter's voluntary wage guidelines + was offset by a slight decrease in hours worked and the high inflation rate.
-the CPI's rise has been reientless, increasing at least I percent a month
since last January. And President Carter's chief inffution fighter said Thur-

Orange Township volunteers
becoming most active group

Vests, cardigans
and slipovers. s,
M, L and XL sizes.
Reg. price $11.95 to
$27.95.

1/2

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

FRIDAY, JANUARY 25, 1980

December consumer prices continue climb

:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::;:::::::;:;::::;;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:

Quoting Richard Carvell, the Governor's Representative for Highway Safety and Director of the
Highway Safety Office, Hall said a significant decrease is expected in highway fatalities and injuries
due to "Operation 55-li5" which is designed to reinforce the present State Police 55 MPH program on
the mterstates and the West Virginia Turnpike.

PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS
.
COUNTY , OHIO
ESTATE OF HERTHA J .
COMPTON, DECEASED
Case No. Z2871
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On January 11. 1900. in
the Meigs County Probate
Court, Case No . 22871.
Ramona Kay Compton, 210
W. Main Slreet, Pomeroy ,
Ohio 45769 was appointed
E)(eclJtrix of the estate of
Hertha
H.
Compton,
deceased, late of 210 w.
Main Street, Pomeroy,
Ohio45769.
Robert E . Buck
Probate Judge ·
Clerk
Ill 17, 24, 31 , Jtc ·

INFANTS'
SPORTSWEAR

VOL.

County proceeds with

PRICE

-

Farmers Home Administration
(FmHA) provided $1,446,350 in loans
to farmers in Athens and Meigs
counties during the fiscal year ending Sept. 30, 1979 according to Archie Stegall, County Supervisor at
the Pomeroy FmHA Office. These
loans were made to farmers who
were \mabie to obtain credit from
commercial lending institutions in
the area.
Archie Stegall stated further than
10 of the loans totaling $1,034,500
were made under the Economic
Emergency Loan authorization
created by the Agricultural Act of
1978 which was passed in August of

en tine

•

.

.

PAPERS DEIJVERED- Neither rain, nor hail, nt;~r sleet, nor snow
will
the delivery boy from his duties. All the mall goe~. so does the
.paper. J;Yindy Lee, .a carrier for tf!e DallY. Sentin.el, is shown here braving.
~cold and snowy weather on Thursday aftern'?On, to rteliver his papers.
.

~

stoP

~

Salvation Arn:!Y,l15 Butternut Ave.,
Pomeroy; · •·
,
"God's Love' Makes the World Go
'Round'! is· the prllcl8Jll8tion in observance of the 100 years Of '"rv!ce
of the Al'my in the United States.
The Sunday mQmlng service will
be lead by Ms.-jor Glenna R~ell,

~

•

time; · $2,500; supplies, $24,000; /
equipment, $6,750; contracts-repair/
$3,500; contracts--services, $2,200;
training school, $500; fees, $200;
allowances, $6,500; travel, $250; advertising and printing, $400; other
expenses, $1,000; total, $.136,530.
Recorder, salary, official, $11,500;
salaries, employes; $7,1144.72; supplies, $7,500; other expenses, $500;
total, $27,344.72.
Disaster services, other expenses,
$1,400; total, $1,400.
Agriculture, grants, $24,562; fair
board grant, $7,500; apiary inspection, $900; cattle disease
prevention, $500; total,.$33,462.
Health and weHare, general
hospital and care, ·contractsservices, speech and hearing,
$4,100; total, $4,100.
Tuberculosis hospital clinics and
care, salaries, $25,820; supplies,
$5,000; equipment, $4,000; contracts-repair, $400; contracts--services,
$15,000; 1ees and costs, $100; transportation, $250; travel, $2,500;
other expenses, $5,027 .64; total
$58,097.64.
Registration of vital ststistics,
fees, $100, total, $100. Other health,
crippled children aid, $10,897, total,
$10,897.
County board of mental retardation, salary, lfficial, $16,050;
salaries, employes, $10,500; supplies, $9,000; equipment, $600; contracts--services, $16,000; expenses,
$600; travel, $1,800; other expenses,
$8,500; total, $63,050.
County home, salary, official,
$10,491.60; salaries, employes,
$27,437.98; supplies, $18,500; equipment, $500; contracts-repair, $300;
contracts-services, $6,500; contingency fund, $300; expenses,
$1,500; other expenses, $400; total,
$65,979.58.
Children services board, salaries,
employes, $2,425.15; supplies,
$4,000; contracts-services, $14,000;
other child care services, $4,001);
travel, S700; other expenses, $3,000;
total, $28,125:15.
Soldiers relief, salary, official, .
$3,000; supplies, $800; contractsrepair, $350; relief allowances,
$10,000; expenses, $300; travel, $600;
other expenses, $3,000; total, $18,050.
Veteran's services, salary, of·
ftcial, $9,983.76; salaries, employes,
$4,000; burials, $300; grave
markers, $1,800; Memorial day expense, $700; other expenses, :
lContinued on page 10) .

.

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