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10-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday , Jan. 28, 1980

e

Full house attends Jaycee boxing program
'

BV DAVE HARRIS
Saturday night at Larry R.
Morrison Gym, the Meigs Jaycees
Boxing Club WJder the direction of
Roger Stewart, held its second annual boxing tollflUIIIlent before a
near capacity crowd.

YoWJg men ages 8-25 from boxing
clubs at Glouster, Crooksville,
Ripley, Zanesville, and Meigs par·
ticipated in 16 bouts.
Results are as follows:
(Bout, Boxers, Age, Weight, and
Boxing Club) :

(1), Scott Niegler, 8, 63, Meigs,
defeated Tim Pastol, 10, 66,
Glouster.
(2), Brian Tannehill, 10, 77, Meigs,
defeated Peter Moore, 10, 83,
Glouster.
(3), Billy Russell, 12, 68, Glouster,

lost to Chip Moore, 9, 71, Glouster.
. (4), Brill King, 14, 106, Meigs, lost
to Jeff Reed; 16, 108, Zanesville.
(5), Dan Thompson, 12, 100,
Crooksville, lost 'to Jeff Eing, 12, 99,
Glouster.
(6) , Scott Aufman, 12, 79,

Referendum balloting Feb. 19-22
Meigs county cattlemen will have
an opportunity to vote Feb. 19-22 on a
proposed nationwide Beef Research
and Information program, according to Gary Michael, Meigs
County BeeferendumCoordinator.
Beeferendum is a cattle industry
effort to win approval of a uniform
collection plan for beef research,

consumer information, promotion
and foreign market development.
The Beef Research and Information
program will be established if a
majority of cattlemen vote "yes" in
the Feb. 19-22 referendum.
Michael said the four-day voting
period in February will follow a

- and will not until the referendum
registration period of Jan. 28-Feb. 6.
passes and the Beef Board (made up
Both the registration and voting will
of cattlemen) is appointed - Michael
take place at the Meigs County ASCS
did say that every cattleman along
office.
the production chain will
Absentee registration and voting
automatically invest two-tenths of I
will be permitted; cattlemen inpercent (20 cents per $100) of the
terested in the absentee procedures
value
he adds to the animal. At the
should contact the ASCS office.
end of the chain, the packer will
The referendum rules provide for
collect and remit the combined
one vote for each separate cattle
assesaments
to the Beef Board. A
business entity- be it an individual,
HOSPITAL NEWS
producer
may
get a refund upon
a family business, a partnership or a
request.
Randy VanMeter, 18, Reedsville, corporation.
VETERANS MEMORIAL
appeared
in
Meigs
Common
Pleas
For
the
referendum
to
be
vatld,
50
Saturday Admissions--Kathy
Court before Judge John C. Bacon on
percent of those registering must
Robinson, Pomeroy; Ida Dudding,
Friday,
Jan.
25,
to
enter
a
voluntary
vote.
And for the referendum to
Middleport.
plea
of
guilty
to
a
charge
of
breaking
pass,
a simple majority of those
Saturday Discharges-Ross Kent,
and
entering.
voting
must be in favor of the
Marian Van Cooney, Dwight Burton,
(Continued from page 1)
VanMeter
admitted
that
he
did
program.
John Grueser, Doris Miller, Charles
existing law, such as cost-of-living
break and enter the Milhoan
Michael urged all local cattle
Williams, Cheryl Long.
hikes in Social Security benefits.
residence
in
Meigs
County
on
Jan.
and
feeders
to
vote
"yes"
producers
Sunday Admissions-Betty Moore,
The budget forecast that the mild
14,
with
purpose
to
commit
a
theft
ofin the referendum. He pointed out
Pomeroy; Susan Waid, New Haven;
fense.
recession
will boost unemployment
the urgent need for a self-help
William Johnson, Pomeroy; Norma
to7.5
percent.
At the same time, conBreaking and entering is a
program that would provide the funEvans, Portland; Clarence Hill,
sumer prices are expected to rise
ds to fight anti-beef propagall\la,
Syracuse; Eugene Johnson, Racine; violation of section 2911.13 of the
10.4 percent. It is the first time in
Ohio
Revised
Code
and
is
a
felony
of
promote
the
nutritional
value
ri
Samuel Dailey, Middleport; Helen
memory
that an administration has
the
fourth
degree,
carrytog
a
beef,
combat
beef
substitutes,
counNelson, Rutland; Albert Keeton,
forecast
so
severe an inflation rate a
possible
penalty
of
six
months
to
five
ter
extremes
of
the
cattle
cycle,
exPomneroy; Nita Conard, Mason.
in
advance.
year
years
in
a
proper
penal
institution
pand
foreign
markets
and
increase
SWJday Discharges-Robert Van
demand for beef.
The $142.7 billion spending request
Meter, Robert Byer, John Rhodes and fine of not more than $2,500.
UI)on
reveiving
VanMeter's
plea
"Consumer demand for beef, as
is $15.3 billion bigger than the fiscal
and Oscar Imboden.
of guilty Judge Bacon ordered the
measured by share 111 income spent
UNIO total and represents "real
matter of sentencing continued for
for
beef, will continue to decline
growth"
- after inflation is conHOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
pre-sentence investigation and
unless
we
tske
positive
steps now.
sideredof about 3.3 percent.
DISCHARGFS JAN. 25
report. I. Carson Crow, assistant
Nobody
else
is
going
to
provide
the
carter
at
the same time asked for
Robert Allen, Eva Baldwin,
prosecutor, represented the Sate of
and
information
nutrition
research
budget
authority
totaling $158.2
Merrill Brown, Tollison burleson, · Ohio.
that
are
needed.
We
are
going
to
billion,
up
$19.5
billion.
The budget
Mrs. Paul Butler and son, Betty
have
to
do
the
job
ourselves,
and
the
authority
figure
is
larger
than the
Call, Hildan Chapman, Stanley
only
way
to
be
sure
an
adequate
job
..
Pomeroy
squad
busy
fiscal 1981 spending estimate
Cook, Cecilia Easterling, James
is done is to set up an industry-wide,
because some of the authorized
Ferguson, Donna Floyd, Violet
uniform collection plan.
The Pomeroy Emergency Squad
outlays in that section are part of
Goheen, Dorothy Griffith, Urias
"Just having a superior product
was kept on the move over the
ongoing programs and would come
Hall, Marilyn Hayth, Mrs. James
isn't
enough
any
more.
We
must
weekend.
At
2:12p.m.
Saturday
the
in future years.
Hill and daughter, Mary Hoffman,
tske
charge
of
our
own
destinies.
We
unit
went
to
122
Kerr
St.
for
May
"The increased level of defense
Perry Hoffman, Stephanie Houck,
must
be
sure
the
research
and
inEnlllish
who
was
tsken
to
Pleasant
resources
proposed for 1981 would
Mrs. Wayne Johnson and son, Uoyd ·
formation
progl'IUD
is
approved."
Valley
Hospital.
belp
preserve
strategic deterrence,
Kidd, Elizabeth McKnight, Vernon
While
all
111
the
details
111
the
At
3:30
p.m.,
Saturday,
Marie
improve
the
combat
effectiveness
Mann, Mary Mayo, Kimberly Mcprogram
have
not
been
determined
Dudding,
South
Second
Ave.,
Midand
readiness
of
our
NATO
forces,
Fann, Stephen Pelfrey, Unda Pugh,
dleport,
was
tsken
to
Veterans
and
enhance
our
capability
to
deter
Rhonda RAder, Charles Reed, MarMemorial
Hospital.
At
4:35
p.m.,
worldwide
through
the
rapid
conflict
jorie Robinson, Christina Rouse,
SMml ELECI'ED
the
squad
went
to
300
Cherry
St.
for
a
Patricia Russell, Debra Shaw, Mrs.
Officers were elected at the deployment of forces," Carter's
Dallas Short and son, Charles Snook, Sampson infant who was ill and was
organization session of the Olive message said.
The president proposed spending
Patricia Spires, Larry Taylor, treated on the scene. At 4: l1 a.m.
Township Trustees. Grant Smith
advances
all across the spectrum 111
Susan Taylor, Brian Triplett, Glyn- Monday, the unit was called to the
was named president and Franciis
Clarence Randolph home near
U.S.
defense
programs, including
nis Wallen, Ruth Waugh.
Andrew, vice president.
The
Pomeroy.
Randolph
who
waa
strategic
weapons
such as the new
BIRTHS JAN. %5 .
trustees will meet in regular session
having
difficulty
breathing
was
MX
mobile
intercontinental
ballistic
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Malone,
on the first Saturday of each month
taken
to
Holzer
Medical
Center.
missile,
additional
Air
Force
and
son, Jackson; Mr. and Mrs. Edward
at the fire station in Reedsville.
Navy
fighter
and
attack
planes,
Hayes, son, Pomeroy.
During the summer months
SQUAD CAlLED
DISCHARGFSJAN. 26
meetings will be at 7:30p.m. and at more new warships and significant
The
Rutland
Emergency
Squad
production of the Anny's new XM
Ricky Bailey, Jill Barber, James
6:30p.m. during the wln\l'rmonths.
was
called
to
Route
1,
Middleport,
at
tank
if it passes aU technical tests.
Belcher, Charles Boyd, Debbie
7:23
p.m.
Sunday
for
Kathleen
A major focus in the new budget is
• CHIMNEY FIRE
Browning, Claire Burdette, Beverly
Caskey who refused treatment. At
a start-up of two hardware
The Syracuse Fire Department
Burris, Jacqueline Davies, Ella
7:39 p.m. the squad was called for was called SWlday at 8:20p.m. to the
programs designed to give U.S. forEbersbach, Paul Fraley, Charles
Helen M. Nelson, Rutland, who was Hugh McPhail residence where the
ces the ability to reach distant areas
Frye, Rhonda Gibbs, Elaine Holter,
such as the Persian Gulf quickly in
Sherry Kurtiey, Shelly Tyler, Becky taken to Veterans Memorial chimney was on fire, Mayor Eber
emergencies, and to fight when they
Pickens reported. Eleven men anMullins, Doris Nolen, Nick Perry, Hospital.
get there.
swered
the
call
and
two
vehclles
Lynne Poston, Norman Rizer, Callie
Carter proposed about $294 million
were
used.
Sharp, Mrs. Gale Sluimplin and
PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
for
the first two of an eventual fleet
daughter, June Snyder, Andrew
DISCHARGFS AND BIRTHS
FIREFIGIITERSCAU.ED
111
about
14 depot ships, which would
Thompson.
Debra Gooderham, Stella Holley,
The Middleport ·Fire Department
be
loaded
with Marine combat gear
DISCHARGES JAN. 27
Patricia McCartney, Sarsah answered two calls to the Robert
and stationed at strategic ports
Brandy Angel, Walter Asbury, Suskind, Russell Meadows, Anna
· Duckworth residence Monday morabroad, and for development of a
Jean Burdette, Lawrence Bush, Nibert, Rosalee Nelson, Norma
ning. A small building on the Ducknew long-range ex transport plane,
Vada Carson, Irene Delaney, Fisher, Janet Cunningham, Norma
worth property had caught fire at
which could carry heavy equipment
Gabriel Edwards, Kathryn Evans, Markhain, Daisy Hickle, James
12:38 a.m. and was heavily
such as tanks over thousands of
Stacey Lambert. Jeffrey McKinney,, Hively, Charles Neutzling,
damaged. Fire broke out in the ruins
miles. Air Force planners hope ·to
Danise Mitchell, Ora Moore, Timora
Son to Mr. and Mrs. John Jones, again at 2:14 a.m. al)d firemen
build between 80 and 200 of the new
Plants, Elsie Pohl, Christopher
Henderson; son to Mr. and Mrs . returned to the scene to extlngulsh
transport
planes.
Slone, Brian Stover, Mabel Wood.
Michael Craig, Mason.
the blaze.
The depot ship and transport
programs together probably will
cost about $10 biJJion in the long run.
One intriguing aspect of Carter's
defense budget is a request for about
a 50 percent increase in research to I
develop a weapon to destroy hostile
satellites in space. The request for
next year totals $124.9 million.
Defense
Secretary Brown said this
53.6
./
research should be pushed "while
we attempt... to negotiate with the
Soviet Union in this area."

Guilty plea taken

Glouster, lost to Buck WUUams, 12,
79, Ripley .
(7), Randy Stewart, 14,160, Meigs,
defeated Bill Rucker, 15, 140,
Crooksville. (Referee stopped contest).
(8), Chris Allen, 15, 146, Meigs,
defeated Eddie Banak, 16, 146,
Glouster.
(9), Rick Allen, 17, 153, Meigs,
defeated Jeff Murray, 16, 150,
Ripley.
(10), Milre Thomas, 16, 132,
Crooksville, defeated Terry Jewell,
16, 144, Meigs.
(11), Randy Murray, 15; 169,
Meigs, lost'to Danny Clarkson, 15,
170, Ripley. (Referee stopped contest).
(12), Jerry Davis, 17, 119,
Zanesville, defeated Tony Jarrett,
15, 117, Ripley.
(3), Robert Butchef, 21, 157,
Meigs, lost to Gus Brunoni, 23, 137,
New Matamoras.
(14), Roger Cotrill, 21, 160, Meigs,

New military

'!

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.I

••••

••••
••••
••••
••••

Tlie Farmers Bank
pays high interest
•
on saVIngs accounts.

••••

Farmers
Bank.
POMEROY, Oi:tiO
t

\

Member FDIC

(USPS 145-960)

One driver

FREDA GRUESER
Freda Grueser, 88, Minersville,
died Saturday at the Arnericare
Health Care Center, Arlington
Heights, Ill.
Miss Grueser was born Aug. 31,
!891 the daughter of the late Leonard
and Elizabeth Hughes Grueser. She
was also preceded in death by two
sisters and two brothers.
Miss Grueser was a retired school
teacher having taught in Minersville
and Sugar Run. She was a member
of the Trinity Church and the
Pomeroy Chapter Order of Eastern
Stars.
She is survived by two sisters,
Maude Grueser, Minersville, and
Mrs. Audrey Neff, Mt. Prospect, Ill.,
one brother-in-law, Charles Neff,
Mt. Prospect, sister-in-law, Daisy
Grueser, Morengo, Ohio, and
several nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be held Wednesday at 10 a.m. at Ewing Chapel
with the Rev. W. H. Perrin of·
ficiating. Burial will be in Minersville Hill Cemetery. Eastern Star
services wlll be held Tuesday at 7:30
p.m. at the fWJeral home. Friends
may call at the fWJeral home after 7
p.m. this evening.

Mrs. Douglas was a member of the
Bradford Church 111 Christ.
She is survived by her husband,
Frank Douglas, three daughters,
Alpha Bailey, Pomeroy, Ola
St. Clair, Pomeroy, and Bessie
Williams, Beaver, Ohio, eight grandchildren, several great gran·
children, and several nieces and
nephews.
Funeral services will be held Wednesday at 1 p.m. at the Ewing
Funeral Home with the Rev. CecU
Cox officiating. Burial will be in
Wells Cemetery. Friends may call at
the funeral home Tuesday from 2 to
4and7to9.

Two accidents
investigated

The Meigs County Sheriff's Depar·
tment is investigating two incidents
that occurred on .SR 7 Saturday
evening.
According to Sheriff James J.
Proffitt a 1977-78 dark colored
vehicle traveled up into the Milford
W. Leonard's driveway and drove
through the yard.
The vehicle ·was traveling at a
high
rate of speed and came within
EMMA DOUGLAS.
25
feet
of the trailer. The vehicle
Emma Douglas, 83, Rt. 4,
traveled
bac~ out onto SR 7 and
Pomeroy, died Sunday night at her
headed
north.
residence.
Gene Riggs, Rt 1, Reedsville,
Mrs. Douglas was born Aug. 22,
·reported
Sunday morning that
1896 the daughter of the late James
sometime
during
the night a vhelcle
and Josephine Saul. She was also
drove
up
into
his
driveway across
preceded in death by two sl!!ters.
hlslawn. ·
Deputies believe this Incident may
BOOSTERS MEETING
be connected with the Incident at the
The Meigs Athletic Boosters will
Leonard property a short distance
meet this evening at 7 p.m. at the
north of the Riggs residence.
high school.
Mrs. Helen Jordan, Dexter, infanned the sheriff's deparUnent that
a battery and gasoline were tsken
JUDGMENT SOUGIIT
from her residence sometime
A suit in the amount 111 $5,455.53
Friday evening.
has been filed in Meigs County ComT~rry Barrett, Rt. 1, Rutland,
mon Pleas Court against Jackie I.
reported that a battery was tsken
Lyons, Sr., and Dolores Gene Lyons,
from his car and the glass on the
Racine.
driver's side 111 the car waa broken.
Granted divorces were Vicki A.
The vehicle had broken down Friday
Morris from KeMeth H. Morris on
evening and Barrett had parked the
charges of gross neglect of duty and
car near the intersection of oounty
extreme cruelty. The plaintiff was
road 3 and coWJty road 21 at Hobrestored the use of her maiden name . son.Boih incidents are under inVicki A. Dent.
vestigation.
Minnie Kathryn Riggs was granSheriff Proffitt advised that his
ted a divorce from Earl William
department is having problems with
Riggs on' charges of gross neglect of
phone number 992-3371 and ask that
duty and extreme cruelty.
persona calling use 992-3889.

'

FIRST QUALITY

REG. 515.00 QUALITY
100% NYLON
SHEARED LEvEL LOOP
SALE
9' .

'12

SQ. YD.

INSTALLED OVER W' FOAM PAD.
BROW" TONES AND GOLD TONES

WA

ON MECHANIC ST.

..ELB.ERFELDS IN POMEROY·
.
.

TUESDAY, JANUARY 29, 1980

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

648 board returning
facility operations

PRESENTED FLAG - Ron James, State
Representative, presented a State flag to May Bird, first resident of Pomeroy Health Care Center, who accepted the flag on behalf of the residents, Monday
during brief ceremonies at the center. James expressed his appreciation for the opportunity to be at the
center. He said, "It is important to me to visit health
care centers. I am available to all residents at any
time." James stated that the flag of the State of Ohio

was the only peJUJant-shaped flag in the Nation. Ron
Zidisn, administrator of the Pomeroy Health Care Center, extended his thanks to James, the residents and
friends who attended the ceremonies. Refreshments of
coffee and homemade cookies were served following
the ceremonies. Pictured, 1-r, Ron James, Mrs. Bird
and Ron Zidian. Mrs. Bird is the aunt of Leo, Dick and
L. B. Vaughan and niece of Kay Spencer, all of
Pomeroy.

Blakeslee reelected

Meigs Planning Commission
make funding application
Olflcera were e!e.cted and a p~
application for a Farmers Home Administration grant for rural development comprehensive planning in the
county was approved at Monday's
annual meeting of the Meigs County
Regional Planning Commission.
Elected were C. E. Blakeslee,
executive director; Thereon Johnson, president; Orlen Roush, first
vice president; Henry Wells, second
vice preaident, and George Collins,
treasurer.
The secretary's post now held by
Edison Baker was not filled.
Appointed to serve on the
executive committee with the officers were Richard Jones, Fred
Hoffman, H. E. Shields and E. F.
Robinson with Chester Wells to serve as an alternate.
The grO\IP approved the pre-

No response

CARPET SALE

entfne
Intention indicated ·

Area deaths

. (Continued from page 1)
6:05p.m.
Officers report Fraley went 111f the
right side of the roadway, recrossed
and passed off the left side of the
pavement into a ditch.
J'wo drivers were cited following a
two-vehicle mishap on TR 48, fivetenths 111 a mile north 111 CR 4, in
Meigs County al5p.m.
The patrol reports a south bound
auto operated by Phillip Bullington,
29, Rutland, turned left into the path
of a north boWld vehicle driven by
NamonJoseph, 18,Aibany.
J05eph was cited on a charge fi
ficetlous registration. Bullington
was cited on a charge of failure to
yield. There was slight damage to
the vehicle.
Despite rumcirs, no traffic
fat&amp;Uties were recorded over the
weekend in Meigs County. An
Associated ·P ress story had a
Becksville, Ohio man killed in a two
car accident on a Meigs County
. road, however, It was learned the
· report was in error. The inom was
!lilled in Coyahoga CoWJty. .

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POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

VOL. XXVIII NO. 201

'I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.

Add it up.

II

defeated Jerry Borman, 26,178, New
Matamoras.
(15), J. B. Coey, 13, 112, Glouster,
won by retirement over Charlie Hat.
cher, 13, 112, Ripley.
(16), Scratched, Harry Nill;on, 21,
190, Glouster, over Larry Stewart,
19, 1M, Meigs.
Following the bouts A.B.C. spqrtscaster Dave Diles awarded
trophies to the winners. Sheriff J. J.
Proffitt awarded medallions to all
participants.
Judges for the event were Dr.
Dayo of Middleport, Tom Woods 111
Middleport and Jolumy Buar of
Glouster. The referee for the event
was Sam Jones of Glouster.
There was a bando exhibition put
on by Eric Chambers of Middleport
and Rex Phll1lps ~.Coalton .
Sando is a fonn of martial arts.
Our hats off to Roger Stewart, Meigs
County Jaycees, and all who took
part in putting on a fine show.

at

•7

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (AP)
- Divers received no response
early today when they lapped the
shattered hull of a sunken Coast
Guard cutter, looking lor 25
crewmen still missing after an !ill
tanker ripped into the cutter's
port side and sent it down into -ID(eet of water outside of Tampa
Bay.
The 180-foot cutter Blackthorn
sank Monday night minutes after
the 805-foot ss Capricorn slammed into Its port side, Coast
· Guard spokesmen said.

Odd wedding
RAVENNA, Ohio (AP) .:_ The
bride and groom spent their wedding night In Portage County Jail
after a light broke out at the wedding reception.
Newly-married Susan Stacy,
21, was released on $750 Sunday
after one night in jail, but the
groom, Larry Stacy, 28, failed to
mate bond and spent the whole
weekend behind baf8, sheriff's
deputies reported.
.
The bridegrqom finally posted
bond and got out of jail Monday
after being arraigned on assault
charges In Portage Municipal
Court, the sberiff's office saldt

,,

appllcation which would provide
$12,000 in federal funds and $4,000 in
local funds for comprehensive planning In rural development.
The grant, if approved, would be
effective Oct. 1, 1980.
During the meeting, it was reported that the 1972 comprehensive plan
is getting outdated.
.A report was given on a comprehensive study made by Jennings
and Associates, Columbus, during
1979 and a letter was read pertaining
to the Jack of certification of tbe
study by the Ohio Department of

Pomeroy man
given suspended
sentence

Economic Community Development. .
The study dealt with land use and
housing plana. The Columbus firm
will be advised to provide information needed for state certification. Payment to the firm was
withheld pending that certification.
It was agreed that the commission
will hold quarterly meetings with
the first to be in April and it was
reported that Blakeslee, the
executive director who was not
present for the meeting, has urged
the coWJty commissioners to employ
a full time executive director for the
commission.
Commissioner Chester Wells said
the commissioners might take some
action in that direction later.
Commissioner Wells also reported
that the county commissioners will
be in Columbus on Feb. 8 to confer
with state officials on the sewage
ban in Tuppers Plains.
He reported that the new multipurpose building is expected to be
completed on Mulberry Heights,
Pomeroy, this April.
Several agencies will occupy the
new building. Mulberry Heights will
be improved to help accommodate
the increased traffic expected in the
area where the new structure is
going up with an access road to go to
Mulberry Heights from Union Ave.
He said that 100 additional parking
places will be provided u1 the area of
the new multi-purpose structure.
Theron Johnson presided over the
meeting with L. W. McComas acting
as secretary.
Others present were Orion Roush,
Fred Hoffman, David Fox, E. F.
Robinson, Kim Winebrenner,
Chester Wells and H. E. Shields.

DannyM. Griffith, 39, 1667 Uncoln
Hts., Pomeroy, Monday entered a
plea 111 no contest to a charge of
Fraudulent Misrepresentation filed
by the Ohio Bureau of Employment
Services in the Meigs County Court.
Judge Charles Knight fOWJd Griffith guilty as charged and sentenced
him to 90 days in the county jail,
assessed court costs, and ordered
restitution.
Investigation by t!le Ohio Bureau
of Employment Services of Griffith's unemployment claim revealed
that he was employed 11 weeks
during the period of receiving
benefits. It was found that Griffith
received $2,079 in benefits by
fraudulent means while working.
Judge Knight suspended the 90
days and placed Griffith on two (2)
years probation.
William L. Garrett, Investigator
for the Ohio Bureau advised the law
provides penalties of up to six months in jail and up to a $1,000 fine or
SCHOOL FUNDING
both, for obtaining unemployment The January State School Founbeneflts by fraudulent means.
dation subsidy payment in Ohio
totaled $84,418,035.92.
Of the total, Meigs CoWlty's three
Registration underway local school districts received
$291,799.17 which included following
The Meigs· County Agricultural
deductions for retirement, Eastern
Stabilization and Conservation SerLocal, $79,372.91; Meigs Local,
vice (ASa'l) office is now registering
$134,148.82, and Southern Local,
cattle producers until February 6, to $78,277.44.
vote in the National Beef ReferenIn addition the Meigs County
dum.
Board of Education received a
Anyone producing cattle sold for direct allotment of $18,705.24.
beef during 1979 Is eligible to
register. Jf 50 pe~cent of those that
register vote·and a majority of those
DEADLINE THURSDAY
voting favor the referendum a beef 1 All Meigs County prOducers who
board will be formed for research sold wool or unshorn lambs duri!lg
and promotion of beef products.
1979 were today ,reminded that Jan.
The pron:10tion will be funded by a
31, this year, is the final day to
,check-off from beef sales. For more timely file a·wool incentive payment
details con~ct th~ ASCS office.
this year by the Meigs ASCS office.

The Gallla-Jackson-Meigs Com- met in executive session ftom 7 p.m.
munity Mental Health and Mental Wltil shortly after 8 p.m. - Dr.
Retardation 648 Board acted last Richard Simpson asked that the
night to announce its intention to minutes of the December 17 meeting
return the operation of the Nelson- be amended to reflect his motion
ville Alternative Residential calling for the 648 Board to operate
Facility to the G-J-M Center Board. the children's facility did not call for
The 648 Board further moved to con' a "wtilateral" relationship with the
tract, retroactively from last Oc· Center, and to specify that the
tober until this July, with the Center "takeover" was intended as a temfor delivery of menial health ser- porary action, "until such time a
vices to the tri-eoWJty area.
relationship could be established
Those actions were part of several with the Center, or another agency."
motions passed, including the
Many board members expressed
removal of 648 Board staff offices surprise concerning the wording of
from the Community Mental Health the motion· as expressed in the
Center located on Jackson Pike, minutes of the December 17
redefining and claifying the relation- meeting. The general feeling of the
ship between the 648 Board and the board was they had intended to temCenter.
porarily operate the facilty, through
Many of the actions taken last ·the Christmas season, and then turn
night were in line with concerns ex- it back to the Center; not, as inpressed by the Gallla County Board dica\fd by the minutes or subof Commissioners, and transmitted sequent actions by 648 Board adto the full 648 Board by board mem- ministrators to permanently assume
ber Mrs. Charles Holzer.
control of the facility.
Shortly after the meeting was
Other items reflected in the
opened to the public - the 648 Board minutes of that meeting which were

amended last night were: That Rev.
Frank Hayes, who had been listed as
present on Dec. 17, did not attend
that meeting; and, that a motion appropriating $25,000 for the
publication of a book was not
authorized, but rather that further
study should be made concerning
the publication.
The first item dealt with by the
board was the granting of a contract
to the Center Board for the dellvery
of services. The contract authorized
for signing last night, which runa
retroactively from last October
through this July, provides for the
same contractual arrangement as
before between the two boards. They
further moved that both boards
would begin negotiations In
preparation for the next contract
period.
The 648 Board further passed a
motion, made by Rev. Hayes, that
the board annoWJce its intention to
return the operational authority of
the children's facility to the Center
(Continued on page 8)

Middleport council okays
inactive fund investment
Plana tor ~·ebruary investment of price 111 $1. The vehicle was purinactive fWJds were approved Mon- chased through department acday night when Middleport Village tivities originally and put in the
Council met in regular session.
name 111 the village.
Harry Evans with whom tbe
Mayor Hoffman said that only one
village has a contract for investment · bid was received on fire hose and fitof such funds oullined plans with tings for the fire department and
Clerk Jon Buck who was authorized that was from the Sutphen Co. The
to proceed with the action. Buck fire department had indicated that
will inveat $40,000• in six month the bids are too high and it was
money market certificates probably agreed to readvertise for the hose
today. On Feb. l2 he will invest and fittings.
Mayor Hoffman also announced
another $40,000 in the same type of
certificates. During February he
that a request for $10,000 in grant
wiJI also place $120,000 in two month money from the Department of
treasury notes. Evans said the in- Natural Resources which would
vestments will leave a healthy bank have been used with matching funds
balance on which the village can for installing lights at the Midoperate while the investments are
dleport Community Park had not
drswing interest. Evans indicated
been funded.
he will attend future meetings to adDISAPPOINTMENT
vise council on actions to be tsken.
CoWlcUman Allen King expressed
extreme diSappointment that the apCouncil agreed to request the
plication for the grant had been turTrustee Bank of Cincinnati to return
ned down.
unused water tank funds to the
village so that the funds can be inMayor Hoffman reported that he
vested by council. Plans were also
has conferred with Solicitor Bernard
made for investing cemetery funds
Fultz on the purchase of a new dump
in longer term certificates of
deposit.
The contract between Cheshire
Village and the Middleport Fire
Mostly cloudy and cold tonight.
DeparUnent for 1980 was accepted
for a total of $2800. Of that total $1500 The low 10 to 15. Cloudy Wednesday
with snow likely during the afwill go into the new fire deparUnent
ternoon. The high in the mid to upper
truck fund.
20s. The chance of precipitation is 20
SPLIT VOTE
percent tonight and 60 percent WedIt was reported that Mary Brown
has resigned as assistant to the nesday.
village clerk-treasurer. By a 3-2 :·:::::::,:::::-:·::::;.;:;:;.;:;: :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;. '
vote, council employed Tami
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Buck to fill the vacancy. Amotion to
Thursday
through Saturday table the matter until the next
Snow
likely·
Thursday. Fair
meeting was defeated 3-2.
Friday
and
Saturday.
Highs In
Counctimen Allen King and Carl
the
upper
teens
to
mid
20s
ThurHorky wanted the matter table for
sday rising to the mid 20s to mid
further consideration. However, the
30s by Saturday. Overnight lows
motion was defeated.
of 10 to 20 Thursday, five to 15
The vote to hire Mrs. Buck was
Friday and In the teens Saturday.
also 3-2 with Councilmen Dewey
Horton, William W,alters and Marvin
Kelly casting the affll'III8tive votes
and King and Horky, the negative
votes.
SEMINARS ANNOUNCED
Mayor Fred Hoffman annoWJced
several seminars for CDWJcil members to be held early this year in
Ohio. It was agreed to sell the 1957
rescue truck which is in the village
COLUMBUS - State Represenname to the fire department at a
tative Ron James (!}.Proctorville)
announced today that he will seek
reelection for a fourth term as state
representative from the 92nd Ohio
House District.
Meigs County Juvenile Officer
"I plan to run a campaign based
Carl Hysell transported a !&amp;-year old
on my record. I believe that I have
Rt. 1, Reedsville youth to the youth
giveri the .people of the 92nd House
commission at Maumee Youth
District excellent representation in
Camp near Toledo following his
Columbus, lmd I would like to concommittmennt by Meigs County
tinue to do · so," the 31 year-old
legislator said.
Juvenile Judge Robert Buck for a
breaking and entering Jan.14 of the
A significant indication of James'
Steve Milhone residence.
legislative abilities was given when
Sheriff James Porffltt reported he was named Chainnari of the
the adult. in the case, Randy Van- House Committee on Public Utilities
Meter, 18, Rt. 1, Reedsville, has en- by Speaker of the House, Vern Riftered a guilty plea in Meigs County
fle. The Speaker expressed his conCommon Pleas Court on a bill of in- fidence in James' ability to deal with
formation charging breaking and utility Issues competently and fairly.
entering and has been release&lt;! by
In addition, it WIIS largely through
the judge pending a pre-sentence inthe efforts of Representative James
''~sttgation b~· ;~parole officer.
that:

Weather

truck at a cost of $16,500. He has
been advised that the only legal
manner in which the village can
borrow money for the purchase is to
agree to pay back the funds within a
one year time span.
It was reported that $8,000 has
been allocated for the truck and it
was suggested that the f:;,OOO
allocation set aside as matching funds for Ughting the community park
could be added to make a total of
$13,000 with the balance on the truck
to be paid out of street maintenance
moneys. However, King objected to
using the park lighting allocation
money for the truck and Horky
raised a question on using street
maintenance funds on the truck. The
matter was tabled until the next
meeting again on a 3-2 vote with
Walters and Horton voting against
the tabling.
PARKING PROBLEM

Council agreed to look into a
parking problem on North Fourth
St., after Carl Davidson had
discussed the problem with the
group. It was agreed to limit
parking in front of the Middleport .
Public Library to 30 minutes and to
instsll a new street light at the rear
of the Riverview Apartments.
Another parking problem at the cor·
ner of Race and Third Sts. wu
tabled for further discussion.
Council voted to remove a control
box from one of the traffic lights in
the community in order to use it for
the traffic light at Pearl and Locust
Sts. CoWl«iJman King said that the
intersection is extremely dangerous
because the school children crossing
there and council has been unable to
secure control box parts for that
Ught.
It was agreed also to have a police
officer at the intersection before
school starts and at dismissal time
for the safety of children WJtil the
change is made in the control box.

Representative James
to seek fourth tenn

Youth transferred

\

~ Retirees under Ohio's state pension system received cost 111 living
increases this year.
- Ohio's pollee and firemen
received increased benefits WJder
their retirement system.
- An office of weatherization was
establlshed to assist low-Income and
elderly households to weatherize
their homes for the winter months.
- Legislation to abollsh the fuel
adjustment clause used on elecb'ic
bills has passed the Ohio House and
is expected to pass the Senate soon.
- Legislation to improve emergency medical care available to coal
miners on the job has passed the
Ohio House and Is pending in the
Senate.
-Ohio's second mortgage law was
rewritten to make It easier for
homeowners to obtain second mortgage Joana.
(Continued on page 8)

�. 2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Jan. 29, 1980
'

DAV, THE 9.21~T OFT~£

IRANIAN CRI8&gt;1§, THE AYATOLLA~
KHOM£1NJ ANNOUNCED TIIAT TI-l&amp;:
1-iO~lAGE&amp; HAD COMPL£TED RE&amp;IDENGY I
REQUIREMENT~ FoR CITIZENfuHIP

CAPITAL

I

F

AND WouLD BE

1

•

been picked in each of the targeted
districts. Almost without exception,
the candidates are young and ar·
ticulate. Three of them are women.
The National Republican Congres·
sional Committee has held three
special workshops for the candidates to help them put together effective campaign organizations.
Special training sessions have been
held for campaign managers and
fund-raising chairmen. Even direct
help from party experts has . been
available.
Once the individual campaigns get
into high gear next fall , major GOP
figbres will be sent into the 35
districts to campaign and direct
financial support from a national
campaign fund .
Republican planners say the
Democratic party will lose much of
its strength in the House if its share
of representatives drops to around
240. Party unity is becoming a thing
of the past and, with conservative
Democrats voting with Republicans
on ever more issues, a 35-seat swing
could represent a major shift in the
House power balance.
Many political obllervers here say
the GOP is a bit too optimistic in
talking of capturing 35 seats. One
private study of House races shows
taht only one of the 'l/6 seats current·
ly held by Democrats is now openly
leaning the other way. Eight are
toss-ups at the moment, 23 more are
possible upsets if all goes weU, and
26 are remotely possible upsets, but
don't bet on any of them.
While the study shows 34 current
Democratic seats possibly going
Republican, which is close enough to
the GOP's 35, there is another side to
the coin. The study shows 14 currently Republican seats in serious
danger of going Democratic, with
another 19listed as possible upsets . .
The survey suggests that the
Republicans can hope to pick up 11
House seats in November, about
what they managed to win in 1978.
About th eonly way for the GOP to
gain many more, say the experts
here, would be for the Repubicans to
nominate a presidential candidate
with very strong "coattails." That,
however, appears even less likely
than the 35-seat net gain.

Business mirror
NEW YORK (AP) - Inllationadjusted annual reports soon will be
In the hands of corporate investors,
some of whom will realize for the first time that their companies are in
the process of liquidation.
That might appear to be an ex. treme statement of the condition,
:but the fact is that scores of companies we think of as mighty giants
will have failed to cover their
dividends after the adjustments are
made.
Yes, even General Motors. The
world's largest manufacturer GM
·earned $10 a share in current d~llars
last year, which more than covered
its dividend of $5.30. But adjusted for
tnflation, it earned about $5.
· Accounting in terms of the current
dollar, whose value almost always
changes, mostly downward, has hid·
den industrial weaknesses, and
mislead investors into thinking their
companies were stronger than they

are.
. So deceiving is the practice that
companies now are required to insert annual report footnotes that
relate profits to inflation, and to
carry a management discussion that
explains the significance to readers.
The overstating of earnings - a
Consequence of failing to account for
i)'tflation- is caused by two factors :
· · Under-appreciating plant and
equipment, and listing inventories
on the basis of the cost when bought
rather than the cost of replacement.
If silver is a product component,
for example, tbe practice of ex·
pensing it at $20 an ounce, which is
the price it used to be, or double that
which is close to the replacement

price, might mean the difference
between profit and loss. But you
might never have known it.
Under the new regulatioiiB you will
know, and you might be shocked.
Steven Lewins, vice president and
research director of Value Line, the
nation's largest advisory service,
feels the shock is overdue.
" Acccounting methods have
masked a problem so serious that
unless corrected it will prevent any
substantial growth in the future," he
said in an interview.
"What it means," he said, "is that
companies are in liquidation,"
managing to cover the evidence of it
by borrowing.
" Masking the problem," he continued, "is worse than facing up to it.
Interest rates go up and up, and the
system becomes crystalline ~ in
great danger of cracking. ··
While business often complains it
is being driven into the groun&lt;j, by
laxing policies that assume aU is
well, it stops short of screaming too
loudly - lest investors we frightened a way en masse.
Lewins traces the problem to 1965.
"From then on the debt burden goes
up and earnings do down. And this
rundown of liquidity becomes one of
the causes of inflation and high interest."

Over a lour-year stretch, 1976
through 1979, Penn State played in
four different football bowl games,
the Gator, Fiesta, Sugar and Liber·
ty.

Today in history
Today is Tuesday, Jan. 29, the 29th
day ol1980. There are 337 days left in
the year.
Today's highlight in history :
On Jan. 29, 1900, tbe "American
League of Baseball Clubs" was
organl.zed in Philadelphia. The
· Nati,pnal League had been in
operation for years.
On this date:
In 1737, Thomas Paine - who
wrote the revolutionary pamphlet
"Common Sense" - was born in
England.
In 1949, Britain grarlied de facto
recognition to the new state of
Israel.
•
In 1963, the French vetoed
Britain's request for entrance into
the European Conunon Ma~ket.
In 1972, an FBI agent at New
York's Kennedy Airport shot and
killed the hijacker of a jet en route
from Los Angeles.
Ten years ago, Syrian jets roared
over the Israeli port of Haifa, shattering windows with sonic booms. It
was the first such raid in three
years.

''

COMMENTARY
Donald F. Graff.

A high price for high prices~

ByDouGnlff
The zooming ppces that make the
headlines can only be described as
fantastic. But there's another word
for another aspect of the current
frenzied market in precious metals.
Tragic.
"
It's not only old class rings and
partial place settings thai are being
turned in by the ton to dealers by a
public MJShing to cash in on the gold
and silver boom.
Some of the items are 1leklooms,
worth more lor craftmanship, brigin
and age than for their metal content,
even at today's wild prices.
In London, according to a current
New York Times report, pieces that
should be considered part of the national heritage are going into the
mass meltdown. Dealers in most
cases are aware of the situation and
regret it, but lack the time and
facilities to sort out the valuable
items and store them.
It's much the same story in New
defense spending. That's up from
York, Paris, Hong Kong and
$126 billion in his last budget, which
wherever else there are volume
was up from $115 billion the year
markets in precious metals.
before.
It is by no means the first tin1e Carter has promised increases ci
nor undoubtedly the last- that quick
~bout $4.5 billion in defense spending
profits have been turned at the ex·
m real dollars, adjusted lor in- · pense of works of art.
flation, in each of the next five
Back when a New World empire
years.
was being built on the ruins of the
He made that commitment when 1 native cultures, tons upon tons of Inhe was trying to gain support for the
ca and Aztec treasures were shipped
SALT I! treaty, now shelved because
across the Atlantic and melted down
of Afghanistan. Instead, the promise
to finance the Spanish king's Eurohas become a symbol of the adpean wars. Most of it iB still around
ministration's vow to stand firm
today' as ingots in vauits, refashion·
against Soviet expansion.
ed into contemporary jewelry and
Ford doesn't see it that way. He
crowning innumerable teeth. Even
says the Carter administration en·
as part of the heirlooms sucked into
couraged Soviet aggressiveness by
·the current meltdown.
"cutting back ... our military
The immediate consequence is to
capability."
increase vastly the marketable sup"The Carter administration must
ply of the metals. The long·tenn ef·
and can be blamed for what's hapfeet, with fewer of them around, will
pening in Afghanistan," Ford said
be to increase vastly· the price of
Wednesday in Rochester, N.Y.
gold and silver antiques.

Washington today
WASffiNGTON (AP)- President
Carter's transition from a campaigner for defense spending cuts to
an advocate of increased anns
budgets for "peace through
strength" was under way long
before Soviet troops marched into
Afghanistan.
It is one of the major differences
between Carter the candidate of 1976
and Carter the president of the past
three years. He has not increased
defeiiBe spending as much as former
President Gerald R Ford wanted to,
but increase it he has.
As a candidate, he had said that he
could cut defense spending by $5
billion to f1 billion a year and still
create a tougher, more efficient U.S.
fighting force.
After his nomination, he said he
was talking about cuts from projected levels of future defense spending, and not necessarily about
scaling down prior budgets.
But his statement on June 16, 1976,
to the Democratic platform committee, was clear:
"Without endangering the defense ·
of our nation or our conunitments to
our allies, we can reduce present
defense expenditures by about $5
(billion) to $7 billion annually."
He made that statement
repeatedly, always saying he was
conunitted to a defense that would
guarantee American security. "The
cuts are waste, not legitimate defen·
se spending," he said.
That's old business now.
With the Russians in Afghanistan
and American hostages held in
Tehran, Carter heard only cheers
Wednesday night when he told
Congress he wants to put more
money into defense.
"We have increased annuaUy our
real conunitment for defense and we
will sustain this increased effort .... "
be said. " It is imperative that the
Congress approve this strong defense budget without any reduction."
The budget Carter sent Congress
today seeks about $143 billion in

Marauder varsity .players

'••

D.. .

GOP hopes for House gains
By Robert J. Wagman
WASffiNGTON (NEA) - The
Grand Old Party must really believe
198o is its year, because party
strategists are predicting substantial gains on Capital HilL And not
just in the Senate, either, where the
Republicans have a good chance of
capturing control.
Along with that hoped-for gain,
party strategists are saying that,
with a little luck, as many as 35
Democratic seats in the House of
Representatives will go to the GOP
come November.
This, more than Senate control or
a return to White House power, will
mean Republican progress to the
pro pols behind the scenes. That's
because House seats are won on
local levels, congressional district
by congressional district. It has
nothing to do with who heads the
ticket; 1nstead, it reflects how the
party is doing at the far more important ward and precinct levels, where
rest the power and the patronage.
The relative numbers of
Democrats and Republicans in the
House have changed little in the last
six years. They currently stand at
'l/6 Democrats and 159 Republicans.
The last major shift came in 1974,
but that was mainly a result of
Watergate. Forty seats swung to the
Democrats that year and, because of
the door-to-door nature of House
campaigns, most of those newly
Democratic seats were kept in 1976
and 1978.
•
But the GOP believes this could be
the year. To this end, it has targeted
35 current Democratic seats it
believes are ripe for the picking. In
three cases, the Democratic incumbents already have announced
ihey will not seek re-election. The
other seats a!\, held by incumbents
who appear to be substantially more
liberal than demographic studies
say their districts are or who won
their last election by a very narrow
margin.
Six of the districts are in CaWor·
nia. There are three each in
Missouri and Pennsylvania, two
each in Colorado, Ohio and Texas.
The remaining 17 are spread around
the country.
GOP challengers already have

.

'

That could be the good news if you •
hapPen to be a seller, or just more of
the had in the case of buyers.

A touch of success
And speaking of good news, of
which there isn't too much around
these days, the American economy
appears to be doing something r1g1t
,after all.
Contrary to a general Impression
that lagging marketing savvy along
wit.b productivity is a major faC(()r
in the economic sag, a current
survey spotlights marketing of new
products as a notable success area.
The study by the Conference
Board, a New York based economic
research organization, covered
items introduced to the market during the past five years by 148
medium-to-large manufacturers.
Both consumer· and Industrial·
oriented products were included.
The success rate was two out of
three, countering the common conception that most new products fall.
Even more encouraging, some ci
the notable successes were in product lines and areas of advanced
technology where economists
believe the future of the American
economy lies. One metal components and equipment flrJJI had a
perfect batting record with more
than 100 successful new products
and an electric components company scored with 25.
These successes by themselves
will not turn the economy around.
Much more of the same is needed. ·
But it is at least encouraging to have
evidence that at a time when so
much attention is being paid to shoring up aging traditional industries of
questionable economic future, successful innovation has not gone out
of style.

MEIGS JUNIOR VARSITY - Making up the
M~ Junior Varsity baskethall squad are, left to
right, J. R. WlllilJley, Tony Jewell, Mike Edwards, Jeff

Mike Miday's coach says the ft.
foot-7 Bowling Green junior keeps
getlng better.
Tbe Falcons took sole possession
of first place in the Mid-American
Conference college haskethaU race
Monday night by posting an 80-M .

mE DAILV SEN'ftNEL__ _
IUSPS 115-tiO)

~~ ~~:.:_.,.,_

'

.,

.

DEVOTED TO 111E
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
ROBERT HOEFLICH
CltyEdllor
PubliJII&lt;d dally e..,.ptSalunlay by 'Die ObH
Vlllley PubliJblo&amp; C.mpuy- MlllllllledJa, Inc.,

mittee, and I am expecting quick
passage of House Bill ~1 by the
Senate Energy and Public Utillties
Committee. After that, the bill
should be sent to the Senate Floor.
• I believe that the fuel adjustment
clause should be elimina~ and that
fuel costs should be included within
the rate base so that electric com:
panies cannot change the consumer's biU each month witllout
prior approval of the Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio. If my bill
passed the Senate as it passed the
House, electric companies will no
longer be able to pass through fuel
costs to consumers through the use
of the separate, constantly fluctuating fuel adjustment clause.
House Bill 381 is now being heard
by the Senate Education and Health
Committee. H.B. 381 would include
Ohio in the Midwest Education Com·
pact, an organization of midwestern
states whose purpose is to provide
,greater educational opportunities to
citizens of those states.
Agreements will be made to allow
cooperation in post-secondary'
vocational and higber education
among the member states. Student
exchange programs would allow a
student from one state to attend
school in an out~f-state institution
and still pay in-state fees. If Ohio
votes to join the Compact, op-

Aaron· snubs Kuhn
NEW YORK (AP) - Still
steaming over what he considea:s a
sil·year-old slight, all·time home
run king Hank Aaron has laahed out
at Commissioner Bowie Kuhn, snubbing an •award presentation that
commemorated his record 715th
holne run as the greatest moment of
the decade of the 1970$.
Aaron was to be honored by
Baseball Magazine Monday along
with Pete Rose of the Phlladelphis
Phillies, named player of the
decade, and Keith Hernandez of the
St. Louis Cardinals and Don Baylor
of the California Angels, chosen the
top performers of 1979.
Rolle, Hernandez and. Baylor all
showed up but Aaron sent a
telegram, read by his agent, Bob
Flamm. Itsaldinparl:
"Because of the inadequacies in
the ballot selection, retirement for
blilck playea:s from ~ball, and
with the cnmmlssloner of baseball I
fee! I cannot support this activity.
"I underatand that Mr. Kuhn
requested !hay he present me the
award for the outstanding moment
of the 1970s, ln honor and recognition
of the iaew all-time home run record
set oo the eighth of ,APril 1974.
However, looking back on that time,
I remember the commissioner did
not see the need to'attend."
Spealring later !run the offlces·of
the Atlanta Braves, Aaron explained
his telegram.
"All for player of the decade, I
think the things I achieved oversbadowed anything · anyone else
did, .. he Said.
Aaron said of retired blaCk
players, "There remains a shortage
of blacks ln the front offices and as
managers and coaches. Baseball
sbould Uve up to its respon-

portunlties for students in Ohio will
increase abaundantly.
Another issue of concern to me Is
the weatherization program that I
helped initiate in Ohio to assist low·
income and elderly households to
weatherize their homes.
Weatherization of homes saves
energy and cuts down on home
heating costs. Last week I was elected by and from among the
legislative members of the newly
formed Weatherization Policy Advisory Conunittee to be Chairman of
the Committee.
The Weatherization Policy Advisory Conunittee will oversee the
work of the new Office of
Weatherization of the Ohio Depart·
ment of Economic and Community
Development.
Finally, I should mention that the
Ohio Conunillslon on Aging has instituted a toU·free number, 1-8J0.2821106, which will be lllled by the Nursing Home Ombudsman office in
Columbus. Any nursing home
resident, family member, nursing
home staff person, or nursing home
administrator will be able to use the
number to make complaintS or
discuss problems of people who live
and work in nursing homes.
I expect legislative activities at
the Statehouse to continue at a full
pace until we recess in spring.

sibllltles."
But Aaron seemed angriest at
Kub!l, who saw the record-tying
714th home run in Cincinnati on
April 4, 1!1'14, but was not oo hand
wilen Aaron broke Rptb's record
four nlgbts )ater ln Atlanta.
"H it's the moment of the decade
now, It was the moment of the
decade in 1974, too," Aaron said. "I
thought It was a slap at me and at
the people af AUanta that the commiMimer W8811't there. And I think
it's an even bigger slap that he wanted me to get up oo that podium
today. I jlllt didn't think it'd be to
my benefit to do that.
"It would have been like Kuhn was
treating me like a damned idiot.
What am I supposed to do? Scratch
my head and forget what happened
in1974?''
Kuhn was obviously shocked and
saddeiwl by the sudden blast from
Aaioo, with whom he has appeared

Berry's World

Ill Court Sl, PomerGJ, Ob1e 4S711. Bullaeu ·
Office ·Pbooe 1ft. 1151. Edllorial Pbooe
tn-IID.
Sealad tlau p.tqe paJdat Pomerey, Olllo. ·
NadouladverUIIDI repreaeatatt.e, t.adea
Alloc:iltn, 3101 EDclld Ave., Cleveiaacl, Olalt
44115.
Saboerlptioo ....., DeUvenod by cam.:.
where availlble • ceatl per week. 8}' Meeor
R4Mik wbcrt earrier ~ 1111t anH.ble, o.e

moodi,IUt.
'Tbr: o.oy SeattoeJ, by man 1:a Oblo ud We.I
VlrtlaJa,

GDt

year

tu.• ; Sb:

moatU $[7.50;

thne moalbl IIUI. Ellewbere Ill.• , als

moatblttt.•; three moulhi fU.•.

Tbe Alloellled Pral ii ·e xelulvely eadtled

Co the 11R for pqbUCIUOII of alJ DeWI dii)NIIcbet
crcdUed to tilt .ew1~per ud •IH the loc•l

several times.

DeWI pabltlbed bereJ.a.

"I WW continue to admire Henry's
aCbleVemenl8 as among the greatest
in the ldltory pf baseball and I have
no CGII)III!'Iit beyond that," the commialllllller said.
But tben Kuhn continued.

American productivity declines in '79
: WASmNGTON (AP) - The
:productivity of American businesses
:and workers leU 0.9 percent during
.1979, only the second time since 1947
that a decline has been recorded lor
a full year, the government reported
today.
• The Labor Department sa1d
~onomic output increased by 2.3
:J&gt;ercent last year, but paid hours
'tlpent on the job rose by a higher
'rtlte, 3.3 percent, to account for t!Ml
productivity slide. '
Productivity is a measure of goods
II

and services the economy produces
per hour of paid working Pn1e. The
rate this y_ear has alarmed govern·
ment economists because declining
productivity means rising unit tabor
costs that contribute to high in·
flation.
The only other time productivity
feU for a full year since the Labor
Department began collecting quar·
terly data was the recession year of
1974, when the rate declined 3 percent.
In 1978, productivity rose by 0.5

percent.
Hourly compensation of workers
during 1979 rose by an average 9.3
percent. But unit labor costs rose
10.4 percent 'because business was
unable to offset any of the higher
wages through Increased productivity.
The unit labor cost figure was up
from 8 percent in 1978 and was the
highest since 1974, wben costs ino
creased 12.5 P,Orcent.
·
During the fourth quarter of the
year, the Labor Department said,

'
productivity decreased at an annual
rate of 1.6 percent,' the fourth
straight quarter of decline.
The 1979 productivity rate for nonfarm bWJiness sector declined 1.2
percent. However; the productivity'
rate in maqufacturing increased by
1.8 percent.
Carter administration ecooomists
have said AmericaiiB will be confronted with high inflation and a
reduced standard of livipg for the
near tenn future unless productivity
increases.

victory over Kent State, with
Mlday's 18 point, seven-rebound performance leading the way.
Ohio University was pounded ~
by VIrginia Tech in a norH:Onference
game. All other MAC teams were
Idle Monday night.

"I've talked to Henry at various
functions aild I never heard any of
that from Henry," he said. "Quite
the contrary. It's kind of sad."
Kuhn saw Aaron tie Ruth's record
in Cincinnati - "I know he was
there for No. 714," cracked Rose.
"The ball went over my head." but had a speaking ·engagement in
Cleveland the night the record was ·
broken. Hall of Farner Monte Irvin,
a member of the col1lmission~'s
staff, represented Kuhn in Atlanta at
that game.

High school
•
cage ratmgs
COLUMBUS, OHio (API .. How a
state-wide panel of oports writers
and broadtasters rates Ohio high
sthool basketball teams for The
Assotlated Press (10 points for first
to I point for lOth]:
I. Akron Centrai·Hower, U-0, 296
points.
,
2. Barberton, 14·1, 221.
J. Warren Western Reserve, 12·0,
198.
4, Columbus Llnden·MtKinley, 13·
I, 189.
5. Toledo Stoll, 13-0, 137.
6, Columbus South, 10·1, 119.
7. Mansfield Madison, 15·1, 85.
8. Findlay, 14-1,81.
9. (lie], Lorain King, 11 ·1, and
Canton Me: Kinley, 12-3,59.
Other sthools retelvlng 10 or more
points: 11. (tie), Dayton Roth and
Bretksvllle 33. 13. (tie), Medina and
Chillicothe 20. 15. Columbus
Brookhaven 18. 16. Groveport 16. 17.
(tiel, Austintown Filch and Warren
Harding 15. 19. Lexington 14. 20.
(tiel, Mansfield Senior and Canton
south 12.
CLASS AA
1. warren Kennedy, U-0, 254.
2. Napoleon, 14·0, 208.
3. Willard, 14·0, 205.
4. Dresden Tri-Valley, 11 ·0, 166 . .
5. Steubenville, 12-1,158.
6. Dayton Jefferson, 12-3, 98.
7. Dayton Chamlnade-Jullenne, 14·
2, 95.

8. Ironton, 12·1, 85.
9. Navarre Fairless, 12·2, SO.
10. Oberlin Flrelands, 15~, 43.
Other sthools retelvlng 10 or more
points: 11. St. Clairsville 33. 12. Orr·
ville 27. 13. (tie), Miami Trace and
Olmsted Falls 25. 15. Creston Norwayne 23. 16. (lie), Bellefontaine
and Elyria Cathollt 19 . 18.
Perrysburg 16. 19. Bellevue 16. 20 .
Marlins Ferry 15. 21. LaGrange
Keystone 12. 22. Millersburg West
Holmes10.
Class A
1, Mogadore, 14·0, 262.
2. St. Henry, 12·1, 179.
3. Zanesville Rosecrans, 12·1, 169.
4. Sandusky St. Mary's, 13-0, 156.
5. Clntinnatl Summit Country
Day,13·1, 122.
6. Jackson cenler, 16-0, 115.
7. Strasburg,12·1,100.
8. Gnadenhutten Iridian Valley
south, 12-2, 86.
9. Arcanum, 13·1,67.
10. Lorain Clearvlew, 12·2, 51.
Other stlloOis reteivlng 10 or me
points: 11 . Kalida 29. 12. Mingo June·
tlon 27. 13. Canal Winchester 26. 14.
(tie), Racine Southern. Mechanic·
sburg and East Canton 21. 17.
Mineral Ridge 20. 18. Southington
Chalker 19. 19. (tiel, Ottoville and
Cortland Maplewood 18. 21. Ashland
Crestview 16. 22, Mowrystown
Whiteoak 15. 23. (tiel. Peebles,
Beaver Eastern and Windham 14. 26.
(tie), Old washington Buckeye
Trail, Covington and Youngstown
~orth-13.

White ~alcon cagers
have good first half

Bowling Green DOW is &amp;-1 in the
cooference and 14-3 overall. The
Falcons hold a half-game lead over
Toledo, whicb is 7·1 in MAC ptay and
hclsts DaYton in a non-league game
tonight. All other conference teams
bave at least three losses in MAC
competition
"Whether this was the best game
Mlday has played yet l can't say," '
claimed BowUng Green Coach John
Welhert after the contest. "In the
last lour or live games, Mlday has
been outstanding...
Kent stayed close through the first
half, trailing only 34-30 at intennlssloo. But late in the second
half, the Fla$ls fouled repeatedly
trying to get the ball, and the
Falcons capitalized on the freethrow opportunities.
BowUng Green hit on 26 of 33·free
throws, while the Flashes were 8-for·
11 from the line as they feU to 4-6 in
the conference and ~13 overall.
Kent Coach Ed Douma said, "We
were hwt badly by their foul.
shooting. Our shooting was bad, our
selection was bad and our shooting
was bad when we had the shot."
Dale Solomon's 21 points led
VIrginia Tecll, which iB 13-3 overall, ·
to its victory over Ohio, which·fell to
4-14.
Wayne Robinson added 17 points
and Jeff Schneider 13 for the Gobblers. Kirk Iaman bad 12 points
and was the oilty double-figure
scorer for the Bobcats.
The visitors took command early,
going out front 2M and leading 3&amp;-29
at the half. Ohio cut the lead to 58-48
with 10:02 left in the game, but
Vlrglnili Tech outscored the Bobcal8
by an 18-t margin to go ahead 78-52
with 3:53 to play.
Lolling Coacb Dale Bandy said the
Gobblers "are a very physical team .
Our plan was to control the tempo,
wblch we did fairly well, but we
missed too many free throws. We
could have been very close to them
· at ~e. but once they got their
inside glime going ln the second half,
we were in trouble."
"Tbe second half was, in my
opinion, the best basketball that
we've played all year," said
VIrginia Tech Coach &lt;barlle Molr.
"We were very, very strong, and
wben we got the ball lnalde, we
seemed to be able to score at will."
In league games Wednesday, Ball
State Is at Western MichJian, Ohio
boell Kent State and Qmtral
Michigan visits Miami of Ohio. Nonconference games lind Eastem
Michigan going to Detroit, BowUng
Green at home against Butler and ,
Nortbem Illl,nois at Vaiparalso.

By Gary Clark

After enjoying a highly successful
first half of the 1!1'1NG basketball
campaign, the Wahama White

Falcons are hoping for more

mthe

same when they open up the second
hall of their 20 game schedule Tuesday night against Buffalo.
Through the first ten games the
White Falcons accomplished eight
wins while suffering through just
two defeats. Only Southern and
Ravenswood were able to turn the
tide oo the Bend area cagers who are
currenUy riding a sil game consecutive winning streak.
Wabama opened the year with
anarrow 56-65 victory over Kyger
Creek and followed with a 71-37
trlwnph over Buffalo of Putnam.
Southern then brought' the locals
down to earth with a convincing
94-75 decision.
Ravenswood scored a 69-86 victory
over the Bend area cagers after
Wabama held a 15 point lead just
before the half. The loss g,ve the
locals a 2-2 slate and raised some
questions in many people's minds.
1lle White Falcons, however, have
since reeled off six straight wins
following that January 4th loss to the
REd Devils, Kyger Creek, 37·28,
Spencer, 71-67, Meigs, 58-02, Hannan
Trace, 101.&amp;'1, North Gallia, 101·73,
and Southwestern, 7i-56, all succumbed to the Wabama cagers.
Statistic wise the Mason County
team Is also faring pretty weU. As a
tearn'the White Falcons are averag·
ing 72.0 points per game while the
opposition iB scoring at 61.4 clip.
Wahama has aCCIUDulated a total of
276 field goals while converting 168
of 'l/5 free throw attempts for a 81.0
percenllige. .
1lle foe has scored 231 field goals
and have made 152 of 260 charity
ICIIIaes for 58.4 percent.
Rick Damitz continues to lead the
in scoring as he has for the
past three years. The senior guard
has amassed 147 points on 58 field

seam

NEW TALK HOST
CINCINNATI (AP) - Sportswriter Bob Hertzel is to take over
as host of WCKY Radio's nightly
"SportsTalk" show, the station said
~y.

.

Hertzel, 38, suc:ceeds former Cincinnati Bengal tight end Bob Trumpy, who moved to WLW to boat a
similar show.
Hertzel, who has writlen three
books about baBebaU, covered tbe
Cincinnati Reds lor 10 years for the
Cincinnati Enquirer. He previously
worked for newspapers in Dayton,
Atlan(f and Wilmington, Del.

PAPER CARRIER
NEEDED IN -THE
POMEROY AND
MIDDLEPORT AREA ~
FOR THE
DAILY SENTINEl
I

:'What a fantastic coincidence! WE're trapped
m false lives. too."
.

I

BETWEEN .8:30 AM '&amp; 5 PM
,,

'

goals and 35 of 50 free throws for a
14.7 per game average. He is also the
team leader in free lhrolf percentage (70%) along with York Ingels (7
of 10) .
Larry Gibbs and Vince WEaver
are also scoring in double figures
with Gibbs averaging 11.8 points per
game and Weaver averaging 11.0.
Gary Richards and Tim Roush are
close to double figure averages with
9.4 and 8.2 respectively.
Looking ahead to the second half
schedule the Wahama cagers may
find the going a little tougher for no
other reason than the two games
with the Point Pleasant Big Blacks.
1lle White Falcons entertain Buffalo of Putnam on Tuesday night
before journeying to Point Pleasant
on Friday for their inter-rounty battle. Their final regular season contest will be against Ravenswood on
February 26 with the all Important
sectional tourney to follow one week
later.
Game time for Tuesday's clash
will be 545 p.m. for the preliminary
game wblch pits Coach Keith
Sayre's 7-3 LiWe Falcons against
the Bisons. BuHalo downed the
Wabama junior varsity in their first
n*etlng by a 66-53 margin.
The varsity tilt follows at 7:30p.m.
when the Bisons try and avenge an
earlier seasoo 71-37 defeat dealt
them by Coach Lewis Hall's
charges.

1979·80 WAHAMA
CAGE STATISTICS
10 GAME TOT ALS
SCORING
Player
g tg fl -a pt t. tp avg.
R. Barnili 10 56 35-50 70. 0 147 14.7
Gibbs
10 48 22-35 62.8 118 11 .8
V.Weaver 10 42 26·43 60 .4 110 11.0
Richards 10 39 16-23 69 .5 94 9.4
T. Roush 10 26 20·53 56.6 82 8.2
s. Barn iii 9 27 11 ·23 47.8 65 • 6·. 5
Arnold
8 18 6- 9 66.0 42 5.2
Fowler
8 9 10-19 52.6 28 3.5
Ingels
4 4 7-10 70.0 15 3.7
J . Roush
4 4 5 8 62 .5 13 3.2
K. Wea ver
4 3 0 0
6 l.S
BuiZard
1 0 0 2
0 0.0
Totals 10 276 168-275 61.0 720 72.0
Wahama

Score by Quarters

Opposition

157 189 167 207- 720 72.0

127 146 143 198-614 61.4

Team Averages Per Game
fg

Wahama
Opposifi on

Top twenty
The AP Top Twenty
By The Associated Press

The Top Twenty teams in The
Associated Press college basketball

ft-a

pet. avg .

27.6 16 .8-27.5 6J .O 72.0
23.1 15.2-26.0 58.4 6U

CHECK WITH
US FIRST

See our
Bargain
Rack for
Used

Tires
LOW·
LowPrices .

poll, with first-place votes in paren -

theses, records and total poit.ts .

Points based on 20 - 19 - 1B- 17 - 16 - 15
. 14. 13 . 12 . 11 . 10 . 9 . 8 7 . 6. 5 . 4. 3 .
2 . 1:
I. DePaul

(61) (17-0) 1,220
(18-1) 1,14.4
(17-3) 988

2. Oregon St.
3. KenlutkY

(17 -1)

4.Svracuse

5. Duke
6. Ohio St.
7. Louisville
B. Notre Dame
9, St . John's, N.Y .
10. Louisiana
11. N. Carolina
12. Maryland
13. Virginia
14. Missouri
15. Weber St.
16. Clemson
17. Purdue
18. lndlona
19. Brlghom Young
20. Kansas State

(16-3)
(14·3)
(16·2)
(13-2)

(17-11
(13·41
(12 -4)
(14-3)

(16-4)
(15·3)
(18-1)
(13·4)

911

904
900

887
855
805
543
513
470

403
369
347

(15·4)

305
226
221
156

(15-3)

95

(12 -5)
(12 -5)

MEIGS TIRE
CENTER, INC.
John F. Fultz
Manager

Pomeroy, 0.
992-2101

ATTENTION:

CALL 992-2156
.,

MlbMlller
WJr.

CUHKeiUiedy
5-10, Sr.

BrlanSwaun
5-11, Jr.

Falcons defeat Kent State,
Virginia Tech rips Bobcats

View from Ohio Statehouse
BY: STATEREPRF8ENTATIVE
RONJAMF8
(J&gt;-PROCI'ORVILLE,
92ND HOUSE DISTRICT)
Last week in Columbus, my work
was concentrated most heavily in
legislative committees, where
proposed bills receive the most extensive examination.
Two of my most important bills,
House Bill21, which would eliminate
the fuel adjustment clause used by
Ohio's major electric utility companies, and House Bill 381, which
would allow entry of Ohio into the
Midwest Educational Compact,
were both being heard in Senate
committees.
House Bill 21, which passed the
House of Representatives on June
'll, by a vote of 82-10, was reported
back to the full Senate Energy and
Public Utilities Conunittee by the
.special sub-committee that was lor·
med to hear the fuel adjustment
clause problem.
The sub-cominittee recommended
that House' Bill 21 be voted on
laborably by the full Senate com-

Wayland, Randy' Murray, Jolm Cremeans, Chris
Judge, Dave IannareW. Terry Adkins and RIJIIer
' Kovalchik. Absent was Brian Whaley. · '

\

II""""'" tit lll~tt•IIH ttlllfl, Yeti llru•y
1111-.-1 t ,niiiHII. AI ftlt IIU11rtiH:t1Mrtllllt
lftlltYttltll'l'"'• clololllll ,..H...,,.. It~~~; II
,... .. ,,.,..,.,,._..mltrYtv.
ttu~r t111*"•r• ''flll!n ·tllrHtll ltrvlu. ''

u-

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*' ,,.,,.,.,,......_,,..,.,, •• ctn

e!HIIIIowl'l'• with rn1ny liM l!llurtn •. .

Ilk I Tt•l Conll n~nt•ttnturtnct CII'II~Jtftltt ,

,.,. • ••m•lt. AM WI-~~... hew tlllel ..
JI&lt;U rKIIW 1 f"l , "lllle"t ll'tt\ftnffll tf
JIMII C.. llfl .

•IMI-t•'

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•ct~wllnt.t •nhMr "cr,. ...
Wt' ll " ' " yllol 1111 llrtl~l CMitll Ill lilY

1111111"11\U •r"l•m - •r~llllllltiNII Ytll eutl11
rnt~ "uthlr .

·

�. 2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Jan. 29, 1980
'

DAV, THE 9.21~T OFT~£

IRANIAN CRI8&gt;1§, THE AYATOLLA~
KHOM£1NJ ANNOUNCED TIIAT TI-l&amp;:
1-iO~lAGE&amp; HAD COMPL£TED RE&amp;IDENGY I
REQUIREMENT~ FoR CITIZENfuHIP

CAPITAL

I

F

AND WouLD BE

1

•

been picked in each of the targeted
districts. Almost without exception,
the candidates are young and ar·
ticulate. Three of them are women.
The National Republican Congres·
sional Committee has held three
special workshops for the candidates to help them put together effective campaign organizations.
Special training sessions have been
held for campaign managers and
fund-raising chairmen. Even direct
help from party experts has . been
available.
Once the individual campaigns get
into high gear next fall , major GOP
figbres will be sent into the 35
districts to campaign and direct
financial support from a national
campaign fund .
Republican planners say the
Democratic party will lose much of
its strength in the House if its share
of representatives drops to around
240. Party unity is becoming a thing
of the past and, with conservative
Democrats voting with Republicans
on ever more issues, a 35-seat swing
could represent a major shift in the
House power balance.
Many political obllervers here say
the GOP is a bit too optimistic in
talking of capturing 35 seats. One
private study of House races shows
taht only one of the 'l/6 seats current·
ly held by Democrats is now openly
leaning the other way. Eight are
toss-ups at the moment, 23 more are
possible upsets if all goes weU, and
26 are remotely possible upsets, but
don't bet on any of them.
While the study shows 34 current
Democratic seats possibly going
Republican, which is close enough to
the GOP's 35, there is another side to
the coin. The study shows 14 currently Republican seats in serious
danger of going Democratic, with
another 19listed as possible upsets . .
The survey suggests that the
Republicans can hope to pick up 11
House seats in November, about
what they managed to win in 1978.
About th eonly way for the GOP to
gain many more, say the experts
here, would be for the Repubicans to
nominate a presidential candidate
with very strong "coattails." That,
however, appears even less likely
than the 35-seat net gain.

Business mirror
NEW YORK (AP) - Inllationadjusted annual reports soon will be
In the hands of corporate investors,
some of whom will realize for the first time that their companies are in
the process of liquidation.
That might appear to be an ex. treme statement of the condition,
:but the fact is that scores of companies we think of as mighty giants
will have failed to cover their
dividends after the adjustments are
made.
Yes, even General Motors. The
world's largest manufacturer GM
·earned $10 a share in current d~llars
last year, which more than covered
its dividend of $5.30. But adjusted for
tnflation, it earned about $5.
· Accounting in terms of the current
dollar, whose value almost always
changes, mostly downward, has hid·
den industrial weaknesses, and
mislead investors into thinking their
companies were stronger than they

are.
. So deceiving is the practice that
companies now are required to insert annual report footnotes that
relate profits to inflation, and to
carry a management discussion that
explains the significance to readers.
The overstating of earnings - a
Consequence of failing to account for
i)'tflation- is caused by two factors :
· · Under-appreciating plant and
equipment, and listing inventories
on the basis of the cost when bought
rather than the cost of replacement.
If silver is a product component,
for example, tbe practice of ex·
pensing it at $20 an ounce, which is
the price it used to be, or double that
which is close to the replacement

price, might mean the difference
between profit and loss. But you
might never have known it.
Under the new regulatioiiB you will
know, and you might be shocked.
Steven Lewins, vice president and
research director of Value Line, the
nation's largest advisory service,
feels the shock is overdue.
" Acccounting methods have
masked a problem so serious that
unless corrected it will prevent any
substantial growth in the future," he
said in an interview.
"What it means," he said, "is that
companies are in liquidation,"
managing to cover the evidence of it
by borrowing.
" Masking the problem," he continued, "is worse than facing up to it.
Interest rates go up and up, and the
system becomes crystalline ~ in
great danger of cracking. ··
While business often complains it
is being driven into the groun&lt;j, by
laxing policies that assume aU is
well, it stops short of screaming too
loudly - lest investors we frightened a way en masse.
Lewins traces the problem to 1965.
"From then on the debt burden goes
up and earnings do down. And this
rundown of liquidity becomes one of
the causes of inflation and high interest."

Over a lour-year stretch, 1976
through 1979, Penn State played in
four different football bowl games,
the Gator, Fiesta, Sugar and Liber·
ty.

Today in history
Today is Tuesday, Jan. 29, the 29th
day ol1980. There are 337 days left in
the year.
Today's highlight in history :
On Jan. 29, 1900, tbe "American
League of Baseball Clubs" was
organl.zed in Philadelphia. The
· Nati,pnal League had been in
operation for years.
On this date:
In 1737, Thomas Paine - who
wrote the revolutionary pamphlet
"Common Sense" - was born in
England.
In 1949, Britain grarlied de facto
recognition to the new state of
Israel.
•
In 1963, the French vetoed
Britain's request for entrance into
the European Conunon Ma~ket.
In 1972, an FBI agent at New
York's Kennedy Airport shot and
killed the hijacker of a jet en route
from Los Angeles.
Ten years ago, Syrian jets roared
over the Israeli port of Haifa, shattering windows with sonic booms. It
was the first such raid in three
years.

''

COMMENTARY
Donald F. Graff.

A high price for high prices~

ByDouGnlff
The zooming ppces that make the
headlines can only be described as
fantastic. But there's another word
for another aspect of the current
frenzied market in precious metals.
Tragic.
"
It's not only old class rings and
partial place settings thai are being
turned in by the ton to dealers by a
public MJShing to cash in on the gold
and silver boom.
Some of the items are 1leklooms,
worth more lor craftmanship, brigin
and age than for their metal content,
even at today's wild prices.
In London, according to a current
New York Times report, pieces that
should be considered part of the national heritage are going into the
mass meltdown. Dealers in most
cases are aware of the situation and
regret it, but lack the time and
facilities to sort out the valuable
items and store them.
It's much the same story in New
defense spending. That's up from
York, Paris, Hong Kong and
$126 billion in his last budget, which
wherever else there are volume
was up from $115 billion the year
markets in precious metals.
before.
It is by no means the first tin1e Carter has promised increases ci
nor undoubtedly the last- that quick
~bout $4.5 billion in defense spending
profits have been turned at the ex·
m real dollars, adjusted lor in- · pense of works of art.
flation, in each of the next five
Back when a New World empire
years.
was being built on the ruins of the
He made that commitment when 1 native cultures, tons upon tons of Inhe was trying to gain support for the
ca and Aztec treasures were shipped
SALT I! treaty, now shelved because
across the Atlantic and melted down
of Afghanistan. Instead, the promise
to finance the Spanish king's Eurohas become a symbol of the adpean wars. Most of it iB still around
ministration's vow to stand firm
today' as ingots in vauits, refashion·
against Soviet expansion.
ed into contemporary jewelry and
Ford doesn't see it that way. He
crowning innumerable teeth. Even
says the Carter administration en·
as part of the heirlooms sucked into
couraged Soviet aggressiveness by
·the current meltdown.
"cutting back ... our military
The immediate consequence is to
capability."
increase vastly the marketable sup"The Carter administration must
ply of the metals. The long·tenn ef·
and can be blamed for what's hapfeet, with fewer of them around, will
pening in Afghanistan," Ford said
be to increase vastly· the price of
Wednesday in Rochester, N.Y.
gold and silver antiques.

Washington today
WASffiNGTON (AP)- President
Carter's transition from a campaigner for defense spending cuts to
an advocate of increased anns
budgets for "peace through
strength" was under way long
before Soviet troops marched into
Afghanistan.
It is one of the major differences
between Carter the candidate of 1976
and Carter the president of the past
three years. He has not increased
defeiiBe spending as much as former
President Gerald R Ford wanted to,
but increase it he has.
As a candidate, he had said that he
could cut defense spending by $5
billion to f1 billion a year and still
create a tougher, more efficient U.S.
fighting force.
After his nomination, he said he
was talking about cuts from projected levels of future defense spending, and not necessarily about
scaling down prior budgets.
But his statement on June 16, 1976,
to the Democratic platform committee, was clear:
"Without endangering the defense ·
of our nation or our conunitments to
our allies, we can reduce present
defense expenditures by about $5
(billion) to $7 billion annually."
He made that statement
repeatedly, always saying he was
conunitted to a defense that would
guarantee American security. "The
cuts are waste, not legitimate defen·
se spending," he said.
That's old business now.
With the Russians in Afghanistan
and American hostages held in
Tehran, Carter heard only cheers
Wednesday night when he told
Congress he wants to put more
money into defense.
"We have increased annuaUy our
real conunitment for defense and we
will sustain this increased effort .... "
be said. " It is imperative that the
Congress approve this strong defense budget without any reduction."
The budget Carter sent Congress
today seeks about $143 billion in

Marauder varsity .players

'••

D.. .

GOP hopes for House gains
By Robert J. Wagman
WASffiNGTON (NEA) - The
Grand Old Party must really believe
198o is its year, because party
strategists are predicting substantial gains on Capital HilL And not
just in the Senate, either, where the
Republicans have a good chance of
capturing control.
Along with that hoped-for gain,
party strategists are saying that,
with a little luck, as many as 35
Democratic seats in the House of
Representatives will go to the GOP
come November.
This, more than Senate control or
a return to White House power, will
mean Republican progress to the
pro pols behind the scenes. That's
because House seats are won on
local levels, congressional district
by congressional district. It has
nothing to do with who heads the
ticket; 1nstead, it reflects how the
party is doing at the far more important ward and precinct levels, where
rest the power and the patronage.
The relative numbers of
Democrats and Republicans in the
House have changed little in the last
six years. They currently stand at
'l/6 Democrats and 159 Republicans.
The last major shift came in 1974,
but that was mainly a result of
Watergate. Forty seats swung to the
Democrats that year and, because of
the door-to-door nature of House
campaigns, most of those newly
Democratic seats were kept in 1976
and 1978.
•
But the GOP believes this could be
the year. To this end, it has targeted
35 current Democratic seats it
believes are ripe for the picking. In
three cases, the Democratic incumbents already have announced
ihey will not seek re-election. The
other seats a!\, held by incumbents
who appear to be substantially more
liberal than demographic studies
say their districts are or who won
their last election by a very narrow
margin.
Six of the districts are in CaWor·
nia. There are three each in
Missouri and Pennsylvania, two
each in Colorado, Ohio and Texas.
The remaining 17 are spread around
the country.
GOP challengers already have

.

'

That could be the good news if you •
hapPen to be a seller, or just more of
the had in the case of buyers.

A touch of success
And speaking of good news, of
which there isn't too much around
these days, the American economy
appears to be doing something r1g1t
,after all.
Contrary to a general Impression
that lagging marketing savvy along
wit.b productivity is a major faC(()r
in the economic sag, a current
survey spotlights marketing of new
products as a notable success area.
The study by the Conference
Board, a New York based economic
research organization, covered
items introduced to the market during the past five years by 148
medium-to-large manufacturers.
Both consumer· and Industrial·
oriented products were included.
The success rate was two out of
three, countering the common conception that most new products fall.
Even more encouraging, some ci
the notable successes were in product lines and areas of advanced
technology where economists
believe the future of the American
economy lies. One metal components and equipment flrJJI had a
perfect batting record with more
than 100 successful new products
and an electric components company scored with 25.
These successes by themselves
will not turn the economy around.
Much more of the same is needed. ·
But it is at least encouraging to have
evidence that at a time when so
much attention is being paid to shoring up aging traditional industries of
questionable economic future, successful innovation has not gone out
of style.

MEIGS JUNIOR VARSITY - Making up the
M~ Junior Varsity baskethall squad are, left to
right, J. R. WlllilJley, Tony Jewell, Mike Edwards, Jeff

Mike Miday's coach says the ft.
foot-7 Bowling Green junior keeps
getlng better.
Tbe Falcons took sole possession
of first place in the Mid-American
Conference college haskethaU race
Monday night by posting an 80-M .

mE DAILV SEN'ftNEL__ _
IUSPS 115-tiO)

~~ ~~:.:_.,.,_

'

.,

.

DEVOTED TO 111E
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
ROBERT HOEFLICH
CltyEdllor
PubliJII&lt;d dally e..,.ptSalunlay by 'Die ObH
Vlllley PubliJblo&amp; C.mpuy- MlllllllledJa, Inc.,

mittee, and I am expecting quick
passage of House Bill ~1 by the
Senate Energy and Public Utillties
Committee. After that, the bill
should be sent to the Senate Floor.
• I believe that the fuel adjustment
clause should be elimina~ and that
fuel costs should be included within
the rate base so that electric com:
panies cannot change the consumer's biU each month witllout
prior approval of the Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio. If my bill
passed the Senate as it passed the
House, electric companies will no
longer be able to pass through fuel
costs to consumers through the use
of the separate, constantly fluctuating fuel adjustment clause.
House Bill 381 is now being heard
by the Senate Education and Health
Committee. H.B. 381 would include
Ohio in the Midwest Education Com·
pact, an organization of midwestern
states whose purpose is to provide
,greater educational opportunities to
citizens of those states.
Agreements will be made to allow
cooperation in post-secondary'
vocational and higber education
among the member states. Student
exchange programs would allow a
student from one state to attend
school in an out~f-state institution
and still pay in-state fees. If Ohio
votes to join the Compact, op-

Aaron· snubs Kuhn
NEW YORK (AP) - Still
steaming over what he considea:s a
sil·year-old slight, all·time home
run king Hank Aaron has laahed out
at Commissioner Bowie Kuhn, snubbing an •award presentation that
commemorated his record 715th
holne run as the greatest moment of
the decade of the 1970$.
Aaron was to be honored by
Baseball Magazine Monday along
with Pete Rose of the Phlladelphis
Phillies, named player of the
decade, and Keith Hernandez of the
St. Louis Cardinals and Don Baylor
of the California Angels, chosen the
top performers of 1979.
Rolle, Hernandez and. Baylor all
showed up but Aaron sent a
telegram, read by his agent, Bob
Flamm. Itsaldinparl:
"Because of the inadequacies in
the ballot selection, retirement for
blilck playea:s from ~ball, and
with the cnmmlssloner of baseball I
fee! I cannot support this activity.
"I underatand that Mr. Kuhn
requested !hay he present me the
award for the outstanding moment
of the 1970s, ln honor and recognition
of the iaew all-time home run record
set oo the eighth of ,APril 1974.
However, looking back on that time,
I remember the commissioner did
not see the need to'attend."
Spealring later !run the offlces·of
the Atlanta Braves, Aaron explained
his telegram.
"All for player of the decade, I
think the things I achieved oversbadowed anything · anyone else
did, .. he Said.
Aaron said of retired blaCk
players, "There remains a shortage
of blacks ln the front offices and as
managers and coaches. Baseball
sbould Uve up to its respon-

portunlties for students in Ohio will
increase abaundantly.
Another issue of concern to me Is
the weatherization program that I
helped initiate in Ohio to assist low·
income and elderly households to
weatherize their homes.
Weatherization of homes saves
energy and cuts down on home
heating costs. Last week I was elected by and from among the
legislative members of the newly
formed Weatherization Policy Advisory Conunittee to be Chairman of
the Committee.
The Weatherization Policy Advisory Conunittee will oversee the
work of the new Office of
Weatherization of the Ohio Depart·
ment of Economic and Community
Development.
Finally, I should mention that the
Ohio Conunillslon on Aging has instituted a toU·free number, 1-8J0.2821106, which will be lllled by the Nursing Home Ombudsman office in
Columbus. Any nursing home
resident, family member, nursing
home staff person, or nursing home
administrator will be able to use the
number to make complaintS or
discuss problems of people who live
and work in nursing homes.
I expect legislative activities at
the Statehouse to continue at a full
pace until we recess in spring.

sibllltles."
But Aaron seemed angriest at
Kub!l, who saw the record-tying
714th home run in Cincinnati on
April 4, 1!1'14, but was not oo hand
wilen Aaron broke Rptb's record
four nlgbts )ater ln Atlanta.
"H it's the moment of the decade
now, It was the moment of the
decade in 1974, too," Aaron said. "I
thought It was a slap at me and at
the people af AUanta that the commiMimer W8811't there. And I think
it's an even bigger slap that he wanted me to get up oo that podium
today. I jlllt didn't think it'd be to
my benefit to do that.
"It would have been like Kuhn was
treating me like a damned idiot.
What am I supposed to do? Scratch
my head and forget what happened
in1974?''
Kuhn was obviously shocked and
saddeiwl by the sudden blast from
Aaioo, with whom he has appeared

Berry's World

Ill Court Sl, PomerGJ, Ob1e 4S711. Bullaeu ·
Office ·Pbooe 1ft. 1151. Edllorial Pbooe
tn-IID.
Sealad tlau p.tqe paJdat Pomerey, Olllo. ·
NadouladverUIIDI repreaeatatt.e, t.adea
Alloc:iltn, 3101 EDclld Ave., Cleveiaacl, Olalt
44115.
Saboerlptioo ....., DeUvenod by cam.:.
where availlble • ceatl per week. 8}' Meeor
R4Mik wbcrt earrier ~ 1111t anH.ble, o.e

moodi,IUt.
'Tbr: o.oy SeattoeJ, by man 1:a Oblo ud We.I
VlrtlaJa,

GDt

year

tu.• ; Sb:

moatU $[7.50;

thne moalbl IIUI. Ellewbere Ill.• , als

moatblttt.•; three moulhi fU.•.

Tbe Alloellled Pral ii ·e xelulvely eadtled

Co the 11R for pqbUCIUOII of alJ DeWI dii)NIIcbet
crcdUed to tilt .ew1~per ud •IH the loc•l

several times.

DeWI pabltlbed bereJ.a.

"I WW continue to admire Henry's
aCbleVemenl8 as among the greatest
in the ldltory pf baseball and I have
no CGII)III!'Iit beyond that," the commialllllller said.
But tben Kuhn continued.

American productivity declines in '79
: WASmNGTON (AP) - The
:productivity of American businesses
:and workers leU 0.9 percent during
.1979, only the second time since 1947
that a decline has been recorded lor
a full year, the government reported
today.
• The Labor Department sa1d
~onomic output increased by 2.3
:J&gt;ercent last year, but paid hours
'tlpent on the job rose by a higher
'rtlte, 3.3 percent, to account for t!Ml
productivity slide. '
Productivity is a measure of goods
II

and services the economy produces
per hour of paid working Pn1e. The
rate this y_ear has alarmed govern·
ment economists because declining
productivity means rising unit tabor
costs that contribute to high in·
flation.
The only other time productivity
feU for a full year since the Labor
Department began collecting quar·
terly data was the recession year of
1974, when the rate declined 3 percent.
In 1978, productivity rose by 0.5

percent.
Hourly compensation of workers
during 1979 rose by an average 9.3
percent. But unit labor costs rose
10.4 percent 'because business was
unable to offset any of the higher
wages through Increased productivity.
The unit labor cost figure was up
from 8 percent in 1978 and was the
highest since 1974, wben costs ino
creased 12.5 P,Orcent.
·
During the fourth quarter of the
year, the Labor Department said,

'
productivity decreased at an annual
rate of 1.6 percent,' the fourth
straight quarter of decline.
The 1979 productivity rate for nonfarm bWJiness sector declined 1.2
percent. However; the productivity'
rate in maqufacturing increased by
1.8 percent.
Carter administration ecooomists
have said AmericaiiB will be confronted with high inflation and a
reduced standard of livipg for the
near tenn future unless productivity
increases.

victory over Kent State, with
Mlday's 18 point, seven-rebound performance leading the way.
Ohio University was pounded ~
by VIrginia Tech in a norH:Onference
game. All other MAC teams were
Idle Monday night.

"I've talked to Henry at various
functions aild I never heard any of
that from Henry," he said. "Quite
the contrary. It's kind of sad."
Kuhn saw Aaron tie Ruth's record
in Cincinnati - "I know he was
there for No. 714," cracked Rose.
"The ball went over my head." but had a speaking ·engagement in
Cleveland the night the record was ·
broken. Hall of Farner Monte Irvin,
a member of the col1lmission~'s
staff, represented Kuhn in Atlanta at
that game.

High school
•
cage ratmgs
COLUMBUS, OHio (API .. How a
state-wide panel of oports writers
and broadtasters rates Ohio high
sthool basketball teams for The
Assotlated Press (10 points for first
to I point for lOth]:
I. Akron Centrai·Hower, U-0, 296
points.
,
2. Barberton, 14·1, 221.
J. Warren Western Reserve, 12·0,
198.
4, Columbus Llnden·MtKinley, 13·
I, 189.
5. Toledo Stoll, 13-0, 137.
6, Columbus South, 10·1, 119.
7. Mansfield Madison, 15·1, 85.
8. Findlay, 14-1,81.
9. (lie], Lorain King, 11 ·1, and
Canton Me: Kinley, 12-3,59.
Other sthools retelvlng 10 or more
points: 11. (tie), Dayton Roth and
Bretksvllle 33. 13. (tie), Medina and
Chillicothe 20. 15. Columbus
Brookhaven 18. 16. Groveport 16. 17.
(tiel, Austintown Filch and Warren
Harding 15. 19. Lexington 14. 20.
(tiel, Mansfield Senior and Canton
south 12.
CLASS AA
1. warren Kennedy, U-0, 254.
2. Napoleon, 14·0, 208.
3. Willard, 14·0, 205.
4. Dresden Tri-Valley, 11 ·0, 166 . .
5. Steubenville, 12-1,158.
6. Dayton Jefferson, 12-3, 98.
7. Dayton Chamlnade-Jullenne, 14·
2, 95.

8. Ironton, 12·1, 85.
9. Navarre Fairless, 12·2, SO.
10. Oberlin Flrelands, 15~, 43.
Other sthools retelvlng 10 or more
points: 11. St. Clairsville 33. 12. Orr·
ville 27. 13. (tie), Miami Trace and
Olmsted Falls 25. 15. Creston Norwayne 23. 16. (lie), Bellefontaine
and Elyria Cathollt 19 . 18.
Perrysburg 16. 19. Bellevue 16. 20 .
Marlins Ferry 15. 21. LaGrange
Keystone 12. 22. Millersburg West
Holmes10.
Class A
1, Mogadore, 14·0, 262.
2. St. Henry, 12·1, 179.
3. Zanesville Rosecrans, 12·1, 169.
4. Sandusky St. Mary's, 13-0, 156.
5. Clntinnatl Summit Country
Day,13·1, 122.
6. Jackson cenler, 16-0, 115.
7. Strasburg,12·1,100.
8. Gnadenhutten Iridian Valley
south, 12-2, 86.
9. Arcanum, 13·1,67.
10. Lorain Clearvlew, 12·2, 51.
Other stlloOis reteivlng 10 or me
points: 11 . Kalida 29. 12. Mingo June·
tlon 27. 13. Canal Winchester 26. 14.
(tie), Racine Southern. Mechanic·
sburg and East Canton 21. 17.
Mineral Ridge 20. 18. Southington
Chalker 19. 19. (tiel, Ottoville and
Cortland Maplewood 18. 21. Ashland
Crestview 16. 22, Mowrystown
Whiteoak 15. 23. (tiel. Peebles,
Beaver Eastern and Windham 14. 26.
(tie), Old washington Buckeye
Trail, Covington and Youngstown
~orth-13.

White ~alcon cagers
have good first half

Bowling Green DOW is &amp;-1 in the
cooference and 14-3 overall. The
Falcons hold a half-game lead over
Toledo, whicb is 7·1 in MAC ptay and
hclsts DaYton in a non-league game
tonight. All other conference teams
bave at least three losses in MAC
competition
"Whether this was the best game
Mlday has played yet l can't say," '
claimed BowUng Green Coach John
Welhert after the contest. "In the
last lour or live games, Mlday has
been outstanding...
Kent stayed close through the first
half, trailing only 34-30 at intennlssloo. But late in the second
half, the Fla$ls fouled repeatedly
trying to get the ball, and the
Falcons capitalized on the freethrow opportunities.
BowUng Green hit on 26 of 33·free
throws, while the Flashes were 8-for·
11 from the line as they feU to 4-6 in
the conference and ~13 overall.
Kent Coach Ed Douma said, "We
were hwt badly by their foul.
shooting. Our shooting was bad, our
selection was bad and our shooting
was bad when we had the shot."
Dale Solomon's 21 points led
VIrginia Tecll, which iB 13-3 overall, ·
to its victory over Ohio, which·fell to
4-14.
Wayne Robinson added 17 points
and Jeff Schneider 13 for the Gobblers. Kirk Iaman bad 12 points
and was the oilty double-figure
scorer for the Bobcats.
The visitors took command early,
going out front 2M and leading 3&amp;-29
at the half. Ohio cut the lead to 58-48
with 10:02 left in the game, but
Vlrglnili Tech outscored the Bobcal8
by an 18-t margin to go ahead 78-52
with 3:53 to play.
Lolling Coacb Dale Bandy said the
Gobblers "are a very physical team .
Our plan was to control the tempo,
wblch we did fairly well, but we
missed too many free throws. We
could have been very close to them
· at ~e. but once they got their
inside glime going ln the second half,
we were in trouble."
"Tbe second half was, in my
opinion, the best basketball that
we've played all year," said
VIrginia Tech Coach &lt;barlle Molr.
"We were very, very strong, and
wben we got the ball lnalde, we
seemed to be able to score at will."
In league games Wednesday, Ball
State Is at Western MichJian, Ohio
boell Kent State and Qmtral
Michigan visits Miami of Ohio. Nonconference games lind Eastem
Michigan going to Detroit, BowUng
Green at home against Butler and ,
Nortbem Illl,nois at Vaiparalso.

By Gary Clark

After enjoying a highly successful
first half of the 1!1'1NG basketball
campaign, the Wahama White

Falcons are hoping for more

mthe

same when they open up the second
hall of their 20 game schedule Tuesday night against Buffalo.
Through the first ten games the
White Falcons accomplished eight
wins while suffering through just
two defeats. Only Southern and
Ravenswood were able to turn the
tide oo the Bend area cagers who are
currenUy riding a sil game consecutive winning streak.
Wabama opened the year with
anarrow 56-65 victory over Kyger
Creek and followed with a 71-37
trlwnph over Buffalo of Putnam.
Southern then brought' the locals
down to earth with a convincing
94-75 decision.
Ravenswood scored a 69-86 victory
over the Bend area cagers after
Wabama held a 15 point lead just
before the half. The loss g,ve the
locals a 2-2 slate and raised some
questions in many people's minds.
1lle White Falcons, however, have
since reeled off six straight wins
following that January 4th loss to the
REd Devils, Kyger Creek, 37·28,
Spencer, 71-67, Meigs, 58-02, Hannan
Trace, 101.&amp;'1, North Gallia, 101·73,
and Southwestern, 7i-56, all succumbed to the Wabama cagers.
Statistic wise the Mason County
team Is also faring pretty weU. As a
tearn'the White Falcons are averag·
ing 72.0 points per game while the
opposition iB scoring at 61.4 clip.
Wahama has aCCIUDulated a total of
276 field goals while converting 168
of 'l/5 free throw attempts for a 81.0
percenllige. .
1lle foe has scored 231 field goals
and have made 152 of 260 charity
ICIIIaes for 58.4 percent.
Rick Damitz continues to lead the
in scoring as he has for the
past three years. The senior guard
has amassed 147 points on 58 field

seam

NEW TALK HOST
CINCINNATI (AP) - Sportswriter Bob Hertzel is to take over
as host of WCKY Radio's nightly
"SportsTalk" show, the station said
~y.

.

Hertzel, 38, suc:ceeds former Cincinnati Bengal tight end Bob Trumpy, who moved to WLW to boat a
similar show.
Hertzel, who has writlen three
books about baBebaU, covered tbe
Cincinnati Reds lor 10 years for the
Cincinnati Enquirer. He previously
worked for newspapers in Dayton,
Atlan(f and Wilmington, Del.

PAPER CARRIER
NEEDED IN -THE
POMEROY AND
MIDDLEPORT AREA ~
FOR THE
DAILY SENTINEl
I

:'What a fantastic coincidence! WE're trapped
m false lives. too."
.

I

BETWEEN .8:30 AM '&amp; 5 PM
,,

'

goals and 35 of 50 free throws for a
14.7 per game average. He is also the
team leader in free lhrolf percentage (70%) along with York Ingels (7
of 10) .
Larry Gibbs and Vince WEaver
are also scoring in double figures
with Gibbs averaging 11.8 points per
game and Weaver averaging 11.0.
Gary Richards and Tim Roush are
close to double figure averages with
9.4 and 8.2 respectively.
Looking ahead to the second half
schedule the Wahama cagers may
find the going a little tougher for no
other reason than the two games
with the Point Pleasant Big Blacks.
1lle White Falcons entertain Buffalo of Putnam on Tuesday night
before journeying to Point Pleasant
on Friday for their inter-rounty battle. Their final regular season contest will be against Ravenswood on
February 26 with the all Important
sectional tourney to follow one week
later.
Game time for Tuesday's clash
will be 545 p.m. for the preliminary
game wblch pits Coach Keith
Sayre's 7-3 LiWe Falcons against
the Bisons. BuHalo downed the
Wabama junior varsity in their first
n*etlng by a 66-53 margin.
The varsity tilt follows at 7:30p.m.
when the Bisons try and avenge an
earlier seasoo 71-37 defeat dealt
them by Coach Lewis Hall's
charges.

1979·80 WAHAMA
CAGE STATISTICS
10 GAME TOT ALS
SCORING
Player
g tg fl -a pt t. tp avg.
R. Barnili 10 56 35-50 70. 0 147 14.7
Gibbs
10 48 22-35 62.8 118 11 .8
V.Weaver 10 42 26·43 60 .4 110 11.0
Richards 10 39 16-23 69 .5 94 9.4
T. Roush 10 26 20·53 56.6 82 8.2
s. Barn iii 9 27 11 ·23 47.8 65 • 6·. 5
Arnold
8 18 6- 9 66.0 42 5.2
Fowler
8 9 10-19 52.6 28 3.5
Ingels
4 4 7-10 70.0 15 3.7
J . Roush
4 4 5 8 62 .5 13 3.2
K. Wea ver
4 3 0 0
6 l.S
BuiZard
1 0 0 2
0 0.0
Totals 10 276 168-275 61.0 720 72.0
Wahama

Score by Quarters

Opposition

157 189 167 207- 720 72.0

127 146 143 198-614 61.4

Team Averages Per Game
fg

Wahama
Opposifi on

Top twenty
The AP Top Twenty
By The Associated Press

The Top Twenty teams in The
Associated Press college basketball

ft-a

pet. avg .

27.6 16 .8-27.5 6J .O 72.0
23.1 15.2-26.0 58.4 6U

CHECK WITH
US FIRST

See our
Bargain
Rack for
Used

Tires
LOW·
LowPrices .

poll, with first-place votes in paren -

theses, records and total poit.ts .

Points based on 20 - 19 - 1B- 17 - 16 - 15
. 14. 13 . 12 . 11 . 10 . 9 . 8 7 . 6. 5 . 4. 3 .
2 . 1:
I. DePaul

(61) (17-0) 1,220
(18-1) 1,14.4
(17-3) 988

2. Oregon St.
3. KenlutkY

(17 -1)

4.Svracuse

5. Duke
6. Ohio St.
7. Louisville
B. Notre Dame
9, St . John's, N.Y .
10. Louisiana
11. N. Carolina
12. Maryland
13. Virginia
14. Missouri
15. Weber St.
16. Clemson
17. Purdue
18. lndlona
19. Brlghom Young
20. Kansas State

(16-3)
(14·3)
(16·2)
(13-2)

(17-11
(13·41
(12 -4)
(14-3)

(16-4)
(15·3)
(18-1)
(13·4)

911

904
900

887
855
805
543
513
470

403
369
347

(15·4)

305
226
221
156

(15-3)

95

(12 -5)
(12 -5)

MEIGS TIRE
CENTER, INC.
John F. Fultz
Manager

Pomeroy, 0.
992-2101

ATTENTION:

CALL 992-2156
.,

MlbMlller
WJr.

CUHKeiUiedy
5-10, Sr.

BrlanSwaun
5-11, Jr.

Falcons defeat Kent State,
Virginia Tech rips Bobcats

View from Ohio Statehouse
BY: STATEREPRF8ENTATIVE
RONJAMF8
(J&gt;-PROCI'ORVILLE,
92ND HOUSE DISTRICT)
Last week in Columbus, my work
was concentrated most heavily in
legislative committees, where
proposed bills receive the most extensive examination.
Two of my most important bills,
House Bill21, which would eliminate
the fuel adjustment clause used by
Ohio's major electric utility companies, and House Bill 381, which
would allow entry of Ohio into the
Midwest Educational Compact,
were both being heard in Senate
committees.
House Bill 21, which passed the
House of Representatives on June
'll, by a vote of 82-10, was reported
back to the full Senate Energy and
Public Utilities Conunittee by the
.special sub-committee that was lor·
med to hear the fuel adjustment
clause problem.
The sub-cominittee recommended
that House' Bill 21 be voted on
laborably by the full Senate com-

Wayland, Randy' Murray, Jolm Cremeans, Chris
Judge, Dave IannareW. Terry Adkins and RIJIIer
' Kovalchik. Absent was Brian Whaley. · '

\

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·

�4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 ., Tuesday, Jan. 29, 1980

Birthdays

Helen Help

US • • •H' ll..!t •n Bullt •l
TEEN ASKS HOW SHE CAN
HELP ALCOHOUC SISTER
By Helen aod Sue Bottel
DEAR HELEN :
My sister is an alcoholic. We're
both in high school. She used to be
very popular, but now people mosUy
tell me what a fool she makes of
herself at parties, etc. She's obsessed with drinking and L&lt;lrd knows
what else. It's most embarrassing
forme.
Our parents know, and try to
punish her, but she always gets out
of it, using the excuse, "I'm so netvous." That's not the real reason she does these things because she
likes to .
Her boyfriend is no help. He's so
nice my sister doesn't deserve him;
and she cheats on him too. He'd do
anything not to lose her, so he won't
crack down on her boozing .
What can I do before she ruins
herself? - A CARING SISTER
P.S. Since we're only a year and
one-half apart in age, we don't get
along so well, as you can maybe
read between the lines.
DEAR SISTER :
What we have here are weak
parents who won't address the problem, a boyfriend likewise, and an
· embai'!'8B8ed sister who faces facts
but isn't much help because she is
too resentful.
Your sister needs therapy, not
half-hearted punishment, misplaced
sympathy or put-ilowns. You and
your parents can learn best how to
reach her by contacting the
Alcoholism Center in your city, or
attending AI-Anon meetings.
HELEN AND SUE

.•• ....
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DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
I really hated Jennifer becauSe
she took my boyfriend away from
me. So I made a little cloth doll,
named It "Jenny" and stuck pins in
it, one each night, with some pretty
bad wishes, like "Drop Dead! ", etc.
(We had been friends, before.)
Yesterday I heard tbat Jenny was
in a terrible car accident. She nearly
died. I couldn't sleep and I can't eat.
I'm scared and terribly sorry. I took
all the pins out and burned the doU, •
and I've been praying and praying.
Did I cause this, and what can I do to
undo my · curse? Should I tell her
about it? -VOODOO
VOODOO:
Pins in a doll won't cause a car accident any more than a child's angry
"I wish you were dead!" makes his
mother die .
Send Jennifer flowers and visit her
often through her convalescence.
That will undo the s&lt;H:alled voodoo
much better than a confession .
HELEN
VOODOO:
"Carrie" and like witchcraft
thrillers are chilling fiction, but if
wishes really made itso, think of all
the people who would drop dead
tomorrow!
Next Ume you're mad at someone,
don't stick pins in her image: nail
her down with sharp truths. - SUE

•

David Tatterson
David Joseph Tatterson observed
his first birthday on Jan. 19 at the
home of his grandmother, Mrs.

Joanne Tatterson, Pomeroy.
Cake and ice cream were served
to his parents, Steve and Robyn Tatterson, his great-aunt, Kate Welsh,
his great-great-great uncle, Hobart
Raub, Pam Hill, his grandmother,
Pat Rickman, and his greatgrandfather, Millard Gilmore.

Mothers of
Twins meet
IWgul.ar meetings of the Mid-Ohio
Valley Mothers of Twins Club are
being held on the second Monday of
each month and information on joining the group can be. obtained from
Cindy Aeiker, Route 3, Pomeroy,
telephone 992-5060.
Meeting recenUy at the home of
Mrs. Pat Lovell of Parkersburg, the
club members enj9yed a display of
colorful craft items by Evelyn
Cullum. Monday members par·
ticipated in a craft workshop at
Evelyn's Shop, Beachcraft Drive,
Belpre.
Members elected the name,
"Multiple Miracle" for the name of
their monthly newsletter. A change
in dues was discussed and will be
voted on at the February meeting. It
was announced tbat on Wednesday,
March 12, Dr. Fred J. Krieg, child
psychologist, will speak to the club.
Mrs. Lovell, an expectant mother,
was presented with gifts.
Refreshments were served.
Meetings are held the second Monday of each month at 7 p.m. in the
Wood County Library board room,
Parkersburg, and mothers of twins
in the area are invited to join the
group.

A rnateur A utbnrs meet
Original literature was read and
discussed at the Monday night
meeting of the Amateur Authors and
Artists of Meigs County held at the
Pomeroy Library.
The first copy of the group's
newsletter was distributed to the
members. Next meeting will he held
on Feb. 25 at the Library.
Attending were Dave Salmons,
Carol Salmons, Melinda Salmons,
Peggy Bush, and Donald Salmons,
Racine ; Myriam Ruthchild,
Pomeroy; Jayne Lee Hoeflich,
Joann Clark, Ponneroy.
MONDAY GUESTS
Jack Smith of Lancaster and Arthur Smith, Jr., Chauncey, were
Monday guests of their aunts, Mrs.
Genevieve Meinhart and Miss Erma
Smith.
Knapp, Middleport, and the grand·
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Walter
Baker, Long Bottom, and Mr. and 1
Mrs. Olin Knapp, Syracuse.

~-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .• Tuesday, Jan. 29, 1980

Preparing your childret.
for a hospital visit
By WUISE coOK
Associated Press Writer
The succe:!S or failure of your
child 's hospital stay may depend on
you.
More than three million,
Youngsters are hospitalized every
year and the experience is often a
frightening one. Officials of the
Department of Health, Education
and Welfare say, however, that
parents can do a lot to make things
easier.

" Preparation helps," say the
authors of a department guide on
children and halpitals. "Children
who've been prepared have less dif.
ficulty ... Prepared children even
seem to recover better. •'

Wedding
plans
completed

Recorda compiled by the National
Center for Health Stalistics show
that about 3.5 million youngsters under 15 were discharged from short·
tenn hospitals in 1978. (The center
measures discharges rather than actual stays. Its figures do not include
newborn infants. J
Almost one child in three - 31.3
percent - WI&gt;.S treated for a disease'
of the . respiratory system, a
category that includes ton·
silectomies. Fourteen percent of the
youngsters suffered from accidents,
poisonings or violence lijld 10 percent had diseases of the digestive
system. Other major ailments in
children under 15 wh!7 were
hospitalized included infecUous and
parasitic diseases and disorders of
the nervous or sensory system.
HEW says tbat people often used
to he reluctant to tell children of an
approaching trip to the hospital;
they didn't want to worry the
youngsters. But the agency says tbat
children who do not undel'8tand the
need for treatment may develop
their own, unrealistic views. They
"may conclude that all adults - including parents - cannot be trusted
and loved," says HEW.
Older, school-age children should,
when possible, be told about what's
ahead a week or so before they have
to go to the hospital so they can get
used to the idea and ask questions.

Health Review
By Lamar C. Mlller, D.O.

Younger children generally should
he given a few days warning; they
will have enough Ume to think about
the idea without getting overly
worried.
'_ ,.
Be reallstic when you talk to your · ~
youngsters. Don't overestimate or •
underestimate problems. U there :
will be some pain - a sore throat af. ••
ter an operation, for elllllllple - tell :
the child what to expect. Don't make ;
unrealistic proml.ses like, "It won't·.
hurtatall."
.
Encourage children to talk abo~ •
their specific fears and explain why ,
each step of treatment is neces.saT)' •
and what it will entail.
Ask your doctor to explain exacUy '
why your child has to go to the ,
hospital. What sort of tests and,
,::
procedures will be used?
If your conununicy Is large enough•
to present a choice of hospitals and if
the procedure involved is not an
emergency one, you may find It worthwhile to shop around for a hospital.~
to find the one with the best set-Uif,!' '.
for your youngsters.
''" ·
Some hospitals offer special
publications describing rules and
policies, particularly as they apply .
to children. Some even have picture
books or coloring books for young
patients.
Ask the hospital if it is possible to
take a tour of the facilities, with your
child, in advance.

.

Plans have been completed for the
open church wedding of Miss Lucy
Jean Holter, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. David Holter, Route 3,
Pomeroy, and Larry Keller, son d
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Keller, Massillon.
p
.
The wedding wi1J he held Saturday, Feb. 2 at 1:30 p.m. at the Mt.
Hennon United Brethern Church .-----------------------------~~·with the Rev. Jaines Leach perfonn·
ing the double-ring ceremony. Mrs.
SHOP
Dale Machir will present music
preceding the wedding.
Mrs. Julia Will, Pomeroy, will be
FOR THE BEST DI!ALS IN THE
the maid of honor, and the
bridesmaids will he Mrs. Melinda
TRISTATE AREA
Rowland, Cincinnati, and Mrs. Jennifer Ray, Indiana. Best man will be
William Hnat of Akron, and the
Mon., Tues., Wed., Friday' &amp; Sat.
ushers will be Jim Gillen, East
8:30 to 5:00 Thursday till12 Noon
Liverpool, and Jeffrey Holter,
Pomeroy. Mrs. Janet Hnat Akron"
OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT ONLY ~will register the guests.
Herman Grate
~·
A reception will be held in the
773·5592
Mason, w. Va.
feUowship hall immediately following the ceremony.
'
~

Life Style

MASON FURNITURE

Clubs

MASON FURNITURE

®

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Featuring:

.

.......
~ t, .

Carrie Diane Knapp . recenUy
celebrated her third birthday at thehome of Deanna Knapp in Athens.
A Raggedy Ann cake was served
with ice cream and and Kool-Aid to
Bonnie Walker and Alisha, Guy
Walker, Ann Curry and Bryan, Mike
and Debbie Frost, Jeremy Blake,
Penni Sheppard, Mike and Dorothy
Baker.
Carrie is the daughter of Duane

.

.

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.

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It •

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'

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Searcl!ing for the clever way to say "I Love
You?" Our Happy Valentine Ads will be
published on February' 14, and oHer you ·a truly
u~usual way to proclaim your love and best
WIShes.

.. '( :- 1
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SAY "I LOVE YOU" WITH A
$1.00 SENTINEL VALENTINE AD.

~® GALLIPOLIS

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credils that can help Senior Citizens .

i·~-t&amp;~R~B~L.....
O_C_K

FOR

SPEED
QUEEN

Because elephants digest only 40
percent of their food, they may consume up to 500 pounds and 60 gaUons
of water a day.

THE INC:OME TAX PEOPLE
618E.MAIN ST .
POMEROY , O.
OPEN 9 A.M . TO
6 P.M. WEEKDAYS
9·5SATURDAY
PHONE "2·3795

BAKER FURNITIJRE
Middleport, 0.

446~99

wonderful

To Mom •nd O.d ...

A-inlmtnl A•ollable But No! Neces.. ry

Wo COUldn't llaYO pld&lt;ocl

the world! Have a
Happy Volontlno'o Dey I
'Miko and Sue

'

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• nicer pelr ot perenta 111

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WRITE YOUR MESSAGE BEUM AND

'\

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OR MAIL IT Wlnt 1.00 BY FEBRlMRY 12TH TO ntE
DAILY SENTINEL, P. 0. IKJX 729, POMEROY, 0•
1

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Send Letter or Resume to:
District Manager Ed Jones

5.
9.
13.

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16 WORDS 'UIO-CASH WITH ORDER
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49'
POTATO
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79¢
PAPER TOWELS........
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BREAD
HEFTY ·························:6 ~ HOLSUM BUNS....~.~~~~.49¢
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OPEN TUES .
THURS. &amp; SAT.
9A.M. ·5 P.M.
PHONE 773·9128

FRANKIES
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SUPERIOR

ONI

'T Travel Agency

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If you are 65 or over, you a're' enti tled to
tax ~
benef•ls. AI H&amp;R Block; we know alllhe deductions and

t • f •

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After. 1.4

,I

ed a bake sale and bazaar to be held
later in the spring.
The youth meetings are held at the
church at 6:30 Sunday evenings and
anyone of the conununlty is invited
to attend.

SUPERIOR

~"'

·'./
·'

POMEROY-A lesson on being a
spiritual mechanic was given at the
recent meeting of the Alfred United
Methodist Youth Fellowship. Scriptures used in the study were Proverbs 3, 5 and 6, and John 16, verse
13.
Sixteen young people 11ttended the
meeting and the offering taken was
$4.88. The youth talked about their
recent tirp to Belpre for bowling and
pizza. They made plans for another
outing this month, and also discuss-

1111111111111111111111111111 II 11111111111111111111111111

·'
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.

Spiritual lessons heard

I-~

~

..

Kendall Clendennan, Mrs. Mark
Hupp and son, Mrs. Howard WoodaU
and son, Mrs. Mark Lynch and
daughter, Patricia Rice, Dinah Carper, Dwayne Mays, Eula Glover,
Sara McDaniel, Michael Russell,
Uoyd Friedly, Greg Weaver, David
Hindy, Wanda Humphreys, Jason
Wallace, Tammy Keefer .

.

To My Wife, Ann ...

••
,.

PLEASANT VAILEY HOSPITAL
DISCHARGES

..

'

~n ~~~;~ "WASH~~~TON

Public Invited
AAA Travel Agencies
Serve both members
and the traveling public.

"Special tax benefits for Senior
Citizens? ... I shoulda
come here last year!"

:;:::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;-:.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·

'.

Carrie Knapp

THURSDAY, JAN 31
7:30 P.M.

,,
'

...
...

Features •.•.

Gart, Jr. of the Talahatcher
Development League thanking the
group for the layette.
Barbara Gheen had the program
entitled "Reflections" and pertaining to the Christian's life in Christ.
Taking part in the skit were Mary
Kay Yost, Phyllis Bailey, Marjorie
Grimm, and Martha Lou Beegle.
The group sang "More About Jesus"
and Mrs. Grinun had the closing
prayer. Refreshments were served
by the hostess.
The following evening, circle met
to roU 103 bandages to he sent for use
in overseas hospitals.

' ·. r •

;~•~•••~;nn,tcSti\'fiLWiliiamsbur~.

•...

TIJESDAY
RAILROAD
RETIREMENT
Board representative will be at Hobson Yard office, !Oa.m. to 11 :30 a.m.
Tuesday for anyone wishing to con·
fer.
'
WEDNESDAY
PAST Conunanders and trustees
of Drew Webster Post 39, Pomeroy,
special meeting at 7 p. m . Wednesday with a dinner.
--- ·
TIIURSDAY
LONG BOTTOM Community
Association will hold a meeting
Thrusday at 7 p.m. in the conununity building .
FRIDAY
POMONA GRANGE, 8 p.m. Fri·
day at the Rock Springs Grange
Hall. The fifth degree will he given.
Harrisonville Grange will be
hostess.
HAPPY HARV&amp;'lTERS CLASS,
Trinity Church, 1:30 p.m. Friday at
the church. Mrs. Joseph Cook to
have devotions.

PERECTATTENDANCE
PINS AWARDED
Perfect attendance pins were
awarded Sunday at tbe Asbury
Uolted Metbodlst Church.
Receiving the pins were Gladys
Robson, !1 yean; Eleanor Robson
and Uoyd Jellklns, 17 years; Jaoice
Usle, 15 years; Jeanne Allen, 10
years ; Tonia Ash, 10 yean; Sonia
Asb, 8 years; $tephaoie Asb, six
years; Todd Lisle, five years; ScoU
Usle, four years; Brian Allen, Tracy
Hubbard and Mark Allen, one year.

ing to be a missionary.
Nondus Hendricks was hostess for
the meeting which opened with
prayer by Gamet Ervine and a
reading by Phyllis Bailey, president.
Officers' reports were given and a
fellowship dinner held at the church
on Jan. 19 was noted. A thank you
letter was read for a cash gift to
Latin America and the group also
read correspondence from VaUey
Forge, Pa. for the white cross quota
which was sent on the white cross
purchase plan and for white cross
materials sent to Bunna.
A letter was read from Solomon

: 1 •

ESCORTED MOTORCOACH TOURS

HOLIDAY INN

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Gallipolis

guts of money to Glynda Rice,
scholarship student at Judson College, and to Sue Curtis, who is study-

Community •••

FREE TRAVEL SHOW

1980

HIVES

QUESTION : What is the hives?
ANSWER: Often caUed urticaria by physicians, hives is a rash characterized by red, raised welts on the skin. The swellings often cover the entil-e body, causing intense itching. Hives usually comes on suddenly and
disappears just as quickly. The rash affects a majority of the population
some time during their lives.
QUESTION : What causes the hives?
ANSWER: Often no specific reason for the development of the rash can
be found, but researchers have identified sonne of the substances which
cause hives to develop. These include: drugs (especially penicillin) ;
foods such as cheese, milk, eggs, pork, nuts, strawberries and seafOQds;
insect bites (especiaUy from spiders, · bees, fleas, ticks and certain
moths); and inhalants such as pollens, animal fur and feathers.
Other suspected causes that are not as easily connected with hives in·
elude nervousness and various internal diseases such as rheumatic fever,
parasite infections, liver disease and cancer. If one can remember when
the welts first appeared, the cause can often be traced to emotional upset
and stress which occurred at that Ume. It is not uncommon for a patient
with hives to discover thst the rash first occurred as the result of a
situation for which there is no known or apparent solution satisfactory to
the patient. A typical example would be a child faced with deciding which
of his parents he wishes to live with after a divorce. No matter which
parent he chooses, the child knows he will not he completely satisfied.
QUESTION: What occurs in the skin to cause the rash to appear?
ANSWER: Any of the factors mentioned in the previous answer can
cause a chemical (histamine) to be released fronn "mast" cells which
surround the small vessels in the skin. This chemical causes the blood
ves~~els to release fluid into the surrounding tissues.·While this may hat&gt;pen in any organ in the body, the skin is the organ in which changes are
most visible.
QUESTION: What is the usual treatment for hives and can it he treated
at home?
ANSWER: The best treatment, obviously, is to eliminate the offending
agent. Soothing water baths CliO he used to relieve the itch using starch
water or oatmeal (aveeno) batha, two or three times each day for 15 or 20
minutes. A physician's treatment may be required for more severe cases
of hives .

It" . •

'

r ---Social Calendar

of Family Medicine
Ohio Unlvenlty of
Osteopathic Medlclae

~~~

r

The Ruth Missionary Circle of the
Racine Baptist Church meeting
recently at the church voted to send

C1lalcal Associate Professor

\.. ' :
II .. L

,•

Ruth Missionary Circle· meets at church

8 PACK 16 OZ. BTL CTN.

THE DAILY ·sENTINEL
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BTLS.

SUPER MARKET - OPEN
DAILY
9 TO lO P-.M.
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•

�4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 ., Tuesday, Jan. 29, 1980

Birthdays

Helen Help

US • • •H' ll..!t •n Bullt •l
TEEN ASKS HOW SHE CAN
HELP ALCOHOUC SISTER
By Helen aod Sue Bottel
DEAR HELEN :
My sister is an alcoholic. We're
both in high school. She used to be
very popular, but now people mosUy
tell me what a fool she makes of
herself at parties, etc. She's obsessed with drinking and L&lt;lrd knows
what else. It's most embarrassing
forme.
Our parents know, and try to
punish her, but she always gets out
of it, using the excuse, "I'm so netvous." That's not the real reason she does these things because she
likes to .
Her boyfriend is no help. He's so
nice my sister doesn't deserve him;
and she cheats on him too. He'd do
anything not to lose her, so he won't
crack down on her boozing .
What can I do before she ruins
herself? - A CARING SISTER
P.S. Since we're only a year and
one-half apart in age, we don't get
along so well, as you can maybe
read between the lines.
DEAR SISTER :
What we have here are weak
parents who won't address the problem, a boyfriend likewise, and an
· embai'!'8B8ed sister who faces facts
but isn't much help because she is
too resentful.
Your sister needs therapy, not
half-hearted punishment, misplaced
sympathy or put-ilowns. You and
your parents can learn best how to
reach her by contacting the
Alcoholism Center in your city, or
attending AI-Anon meetings.
HELEN AND SUE

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DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
I really hated Jennifer becauSe
she took my boyfriend away from
me. So I made a little cloth doll,
named It "Jenny" and stuck pins in
it, one each night, with some pretty
bad wishes, like "Drop Dead! ", etc.
(We had been friends, before.)
Yesterday I heard tbat Jenny was
in a terrible car accident. She nearly
died. I couldn't sleep and I can't eat.
I'm scared and terribly sorry. I took
all the pins out and burned the doU, •
and I've been praying and praying.
Did I cause this, and what can I do to
undo my · curse? Should I tell her
about it? -VOODOO
VOODOO:
Pins in a doll won't cause a car accident any more than a child's angry
"I wish you were dead!" makes his
mother die .
Send Jennifer flowers and visit her
often through her convalescence.
That will undo the s&lt;H:alled voodoo
much better than a confession .
HELEN
VOODOO:
"Carrie" and like witchcraft
thrillers are chilling fiction, but if
wishes really made itso, think of all
the people who would drop dead
tomorrow!
Next Ume you're mad at someone,
don't stick pins in her image: nail
her down with sharp truths. - SUE

•

David Tatterson
David Joseph Tatterson observed
his first birthday on Jan. 19 at the
home of his grandmother, Mrs.

Joanne Tatterson, Pomeroy.
Cake and ice cream were served
to his parents, Steve and Robyn Tatterson, his great-aunt, Kate Welsh,
his great-great-great uncle, Hobart
Raub, Pam Hill, his grandmother,
Pat Rickman, and his greatgrandfather, Millard Gilmore.

Mothers of
Twins meet
IWgul.ar meetings of the Mid-Ohio
Valley Mothers of Twins Club are
being held on the second Monday of
each month and information on joining the group can be. obtained from
Cindy Aeiker, Route 3, Pomeroy,
telephone 992-5060.
Meeting recenUy at the home of
Mrs. Pat Lovell of Parkersburg, the
club members enj9yed a display of
colorful craft items by Evelyn
Cullum. Monday members par·
ticipated in a craft workshop at
Evelyn's Shop, Beachcraft Drive,
Belpre.
Members elected the name,
"Multiple Miracle" for the name of
their monthly newsletter. A change
in dues was discussed and will be
voted on at the February meeting. It
was announced tbat on Wednesday,
March 12, Dr. Fred J. Krieg, child
psychologist, will speak to the club.
Mrs. Lovell, an expectant mother,
was presented with gifts.
Refreshments were served.
Meetings are held the second Monday of each month at 7 p.m. in the
Wood County Library board room,
Parkersburg, and mothers of twins
in the area are invited to join the
group.

A rnateur A utbnrs meet
Original literature was read and
discussed at the Monday night
meeting of the Amateur Authors and
Artists of Meigs County held at the
Pomeroy Library.
The first copy of the group's
newsletter was distributed to the
members. Next meeting will he held
on Feb. 25 at the Library.
Attending were Dave Salmons,
Carol Salmons, Melinda Salmons,
Peggy Bush, and Donald Salmons,
Racine ; Myriam Ruthchild,
Pomeroy; Jayne Lee Hoeflich,
Joann Clark, Ponneroy.
MONDAY GUESTS
Jack Smith of Lancaster and Arthur Smith, Jr., Chauncey, were
Monday guests of their aunts, Mrs.
Genevieve Meinhart and Miss Erma
Smith.
Knapp, Middleport, and the grand·
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Walter
Baker, Long Bottom, and Mr. and 1
Mrs. Olin Knapp, Syracuse.

~-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .• Tuesday, Jan. 29, 1980

Preparing your childret.
for a hospital visit
By WUISE coOK
Associated Press Writer
The succe:!S or failure of your
child 's hospital stay may depend on
you.
More than three million,
Youngsters are hospitalized every
year and the experience is often a
frightening one. Officials of the
Department of Health, Education
and Welfare say, however, that
parents can do a lot to make things
easier.

" Preparation helps," say the
authors of a department guide on
children and halpitals. "Children
who've been prepared have less dif.
ficulty ... Prepared children even
seem to recover better. •'

Wedding
plans
completed

Recorda compiled by the National
Center for Health Stalistics show
that about 3.5 million youngsters under 15 were discharged from short·
tenn hospitals in 1978. (The center
measures discharges rather than actual stays. Its figures do not include
newborn infants. J
Almost one child in three - 31.3
percent - WI&gt;.S treated for a disease'
of the . respiratory system, a
category that includes ton·
silectomies. Fourteen percent of the
youngsters suffered from accidents,
poisonings or violence lijld 10 percent had diseases of the digestive
system. Other major ailments in
children under 15 wh!7 were
hospitalized included infecUous and
parasitic diseases and disorders of
the nervous or sensory system.
HEW says tbat people often used
to he reluctant to tell children of an
approaching trip to the hospital;
they didn't want to worry the
youngsters. But the agency says tbat
children who do not undel'8tand the
need for treatment may develop
their own, unrealistic views. They
"may conclude that all adults - including parents - cannot be trusted
and loved," says HEW.
Older, school-age children should,
when possible, be told about what's
ahead a week or so before they have
to go to the hospital so they can get
used to the idea and ask questions.

Health Review
By Lamar C. Mlller, D.O.

Younger children generally should
he given a few days warning; they
will have enough Ume to think about
the idea without getting overly
worried.
'_ ,.
Be reallstic when you talk to your · ~
youngsters. Don't overestimate or •
underestimate problems. U there :
will be some pain - a sore throat af. ••
ter an operation, for elllllllple - tell :
the child what to expect. Don't make ;
unrealistic proml.ses like, "It won't·.
hurtatall."
.
Encourage children to talk abo~ •
their specific fears and explain why ,
each step of treatment is neces.saT)' •
and what it will entail.
Ask your doctor to explain exacUy '
why your child has to go to the ,
hospital. What sort of tests and,
,::
procedures will be used?
If your conununicy Is large enough•
to present a choice of hospitals and if
the procedure involved is not an
emergency one, you may find It worthwhile to shop around for a hospital.~
to find the one with the best set-Uif,!' '.
for your youngsters.
''" ·
Some hospitals offer special
publications describing rules and
policies, particularly as they apply .
to children. Some even have picture
books or coloring books for young
patients.
Ask the hospital if it is possible to
take a tour of the facilities, with your
child, in advance.

.

Plans have been completed for the
open church wedding of Miss Lucy
Jean Holter, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. David Holter, Route 3,
Pomeroy, and Larry Keller, son d
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Keller, Massillon.
p
.
The wedding wi1J he held Saturday, Feb. 2 at 1:30 p.m. at the Mt.
Hennon United Brethern Church .-----------------------------~~·with the Rev. Jaines Leach perfonn·
ing the double-ring ceremony. Mrs.
SHOP
Dale Machir will present music
preceding the wedding.
Mrs. Julia Will, Pomeroy, will be
FOR THE BEST DI!ALS IN THE
the maid of honor, and the
bridesmaids will he Mrs. Melinda
TRISTATE AREA
Rowland, Cincinnati, and Mrs. Jennifer Ray, Indiana. Best man will be
William Hnat of Akron, and the
Mon., Tues., Wed., Friday' &amp; Sat.
ushers will be Jim Gillen, East
8:30 to 5:00 Thursday till12 Noon
Liverpool, and Jeffrey Holter,
Pomeroy. Mrs. Janet Hnat Akron"
OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT ONLY ~will register the guests.
Herman Grate
~·
A reception will be held in the
773·5592
Mason, w. Va.
feUowship hall immediately following the ceremony.
'
~

Life Style

MASON FURNITURE

Clubs

MASON FURNITURE

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Featuring:

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Carrie Diane Knapp . recenUy
celebrated her third birthday at thehome of Deanna Knapp in Athens.
A Raggedy Ann cake was served
with ice cream and and Kool-Aid to
Bonnie Walker and Alisha, Guy
Walker, Ann Curry and Bryan, Mike
and Debbie Frost, Jeremy Blake,
Penni Sheppard, Mike and Dorothy
Baker.
Carrie is the daughter of Duane

.

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It •

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Searcl!ing for the clever way to say "I Love
You?" Our Happy Valentine Ads will be
published on February' 14, and oHer you ·a truly
u~usual way to proclaim your love and best
WIShes.

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SAY "I LOVE YOU" WITH A
$1.00 SENTINEL VALENTINE AD.

~® GALLIPOLIS

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credils that can help Senior Citizens .

i·~-t&amp;~R~B~L.....
O_C_K

FOR

SPEED
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Because elephants digest only 40
percent of their food, they may consume up to 500 pounds and 60 gaUons
of water a day.

THE INC:OME TAX PEOPLE
618E.MAIN ST .
POMEROY , O.
OPEN 9 A.M . TO
6 P.M. WEEKDAYS
9·5SATURDAY
PHONE "2·3795

BAKER FURNITIJRE
Middleport, 0.

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wonderful

To Mom •nd O.d ...

A-inlmtnl A•ollable But No! Neces.. ry

Wo COUldn't llaYO pld&lt;ocl

the world! Have a
Happy Volontlno'o Dey I
'Miko and Sue

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WRITE YOUR MESSAGE BEUM AND

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OR MAIL IT Wlnt 1.00 BY FEBRlMRY 12TH TO ntE
DAILY SENTINEL, P. 0. IKJX 729, POMEROY, 0•
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Send Letter or Resume to:
District Manager Ed Jones

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OPEN TUES .
THURS. &amp; SAT.
9A.M. ·5 P.M.
PHONE 773·9128

FRANKIES
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SUPERIOR

ONI

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still head-over--Is in

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years of marriage. I'm

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If you are 65 or over, you a're' enti tled to
tax ~
benef•ls. AI H&amp;R Block; we know alllhe deductions and

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After. 1.4

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ed a bake sale and bazaar to be held
later in the spring.
The youth meetings are held at the
church at 6:30 Sunday evenings and
anyone of the conununlty is invited
to attend.

SUPERIOR

~"'

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POMEROY-A lesson on being a
spiritual mechanic was given at the
recent meeting of the Alfred United
Methodist Youth Fellowship. Scriptures used in the study were Proverbs 3, 5 and 6, and John 16, verse
13.
Sixteen young people 11ttended the
meeting and the offering taken was
$4.88. The youth talked about their
recent tirp to Belpre for bowling and
pizza. They made plans for another
outing this month, and also discuss-

1111111111111111111111111111 II 11111111111111111111111111

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Spiritual lessons heard

I-~

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Kendall Clendennan, Mrs. Mark
Hupp and son, Mrs. Howard WoodaU
and son, Mrs. Mark Lynch and
daughter, Patricia Rice, Dinah Carper, Dwayne Mays, Eula Glover,
Sara McDaniel, Michael Russell,
Uoyd Friedly, Greg Weaver, David
Hindy, Wanda Humphreys, Jason
Wallace, Tammy Keefer .

.

To My Wife, Ann ...

••
,.

PLEASANT VAILEY HOSPITAL
DISCHARGES

..

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~n ~~~;~ "WASH~~~TON

Public Invited
AAA Travel Agencies
Serve both members
and the traveling public.

"Special tax benefits for Senior
Citizens? ... I shoulda
come here last year!"

:;:::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;-:.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·

'.

Carrie Knapp

THURSDAY, JAN 31
7:30 P.M.

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Features •.•.

Gart, Jr. of the Talahatcher
Development League thanking the
group for the layette.
Barbara Gheen had the program
entitled "Reflections" and pertaining to the Christian's life in Christ.
Taking part in the skit were Mary
Kay Yost, Phyllis Bailey, Marjorie
Grimm, and Martha Lou Beegle.
The group sang "More About Jesus"
and Mrs. Grinun had the closing
prayer. Refreshments were served
by the hostess.
The following evening, circle met
to roU 103 bandages to he sent for use
in overseas hospitals.

' ·. r •

;~•~•••~;nn,tcSti\'fiLWiliiamsbur~.

•...

TIJESDAY
RAILROAD
RETIREMENT
Board representative will be at Hobson Yard office, !Oa.m. to 11 :30 a.m.
Tuesday for anyone wishing to con·
fer.
'
WEDNESDAY
PAST Conunanders and trustees
of Drew Webster Post 39, Pomeroy,
special meeting at 7 p. m . Wednesday with a dinner.
--- ·
TIIURSDAY
LONG BOTTOM Community
Association will hold a meeting
Thrusday at 7 p.m. in the conununity building .
FRIDAY
POMONA GRANGE, 8 p.m. Fri·
day at the Rock Springs Grange
Hall. The fifth degree will he given.
Harrisonville Grange will be
hostess.
HAPPY HARV&amp;'lTERS CLASS,
Trinity Church, 1:30 p.m. Friday at
the church. Mrs. Joseph Cook to
have devotions.

PERECTATTENDANCE
PINS AWARDED
Perfect attendance pins were
awarded Sunday at tbe Asbury
Uolted Metbodlst Church.
Receiving the pins were Gladys
Robson, !1 yean; Eleanor Robson
and Uoyd Jellklns, 17 years; Jaoice
Usle, 15 years; Jeanne Allen, 10
years ; Tonia Ash, 10 yean; Sonia
Asb, 8 years; $tephaoie Asb, six
years; Todd Lisle, five years; ScoU
Usle, four years; Brian Allen, Tracy
Hubbard and Mark Allen, one year.

ing to be a missionary.
Nondus Hendricks was hostess for
the meeting which opened with
prayer by Gamet Ervine and a
reading by Phyllis Bailey, president.
Officers' reports were given and a
fellowship dinner held at the church
on Jan. 19 was noted. A thank you
letter was read for a cash gift to
Latin America and the group also
read correspondence from VaUey
Forge, Pa. for the white cross quota
which was sent on the white cross
purchase plan and for white cross
materials sent to Bunna.
A letter was read from Solomon

: 1 •

ESCORTED MOTORCOACH TOURS

HOLIDAY INN

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Gallipolis

guts of money to Glynda Rice,
scholarship student at Judson College, and to Sue Curtis, who is study-

Community •••

FREE TRAVEL SHOW

1980

HIVES

QUESTION : What is the hives?
ANSWER: Often caUed urticaria by physicians, hives is a rash characterized by red, raised welts on the skin. The swellings often cover the entil-e body, causing intense itching. Hives usually comes on suddenly and
disappears just as quickly. The rash affects a majority of the population
some time during their lives.
QUESTION : What causes the hives?
ANSWER: Often no specific reason for the development of the rash can
be found, but researchers have identified sonne of the substances which
cause hives to develop. These include: drugs (especially penicillin) ;
foods such as cheese, milk, eggs, pork, nuts, strawberries and seafOQds;
insect bites (especiaUy from spiders, · bees, fleas, ticks and certain
moths); and inhalants such as pollens, animal fur and feathers.
Other suspected causes that are not as easily connected with hives in·
elude nervousness and various internal diseases such as rheumatic fever,
parasite infections, liver disease and cancer. If one can remember when
the welts first appeared, the cause can often be traced to emotional upset
and stress which occurred at that Ume. It is not uncommon for a patient
with hives to discover thst the rash first occurred as the result of a
situation for which there is no known or apparent solution satisfactory to
the patient. A typical example would be a child faced with deciding which
of his parents he wishes to live with after a divorce. No matter which
parent he chooses, the child knows he will not he completely satisfied.
QUESTION: What occurs in the skin to cause the rash to appear?
ANSWER: Any of the factors mentioned in the previous answer can
cause a chemical (histamine) to be released fronn "mast" cells which
surround the small vessels in the skin. This chemical causes the blood
ves~~els to release fluid into the surrounding tissues.·While this may hat&gt;pen in any organ in the body, the skin is the organ in which changes are
most visible.
QUESTION: What is the usual treatment for hives and can it he treated
at home?
ANSWER: The best treatment, obviously, is to eliminate the offending
agent. Soothing water baths CliO he used to relieve the itch using starch
water or oatmeal (aveeno) batha, two or three times each day for 15 or 20
minutes. A physician's treatment may be required for more severe cases
of hives .

It" . •

'

r ---Social Calendar

of Family Medicine
Ohio Unlvenlty of
Osteopathic Medlclae

~~~

r

The Ruth Missionary Circle of the
Racine Baptist Church meeting
recently at the church voted to send

C1lalcal Associate Professor

\.. ' :
II .. L

,•

Ruth Missionary Circle· meets at church

8 PACK 16 OZ. BTL CTN.

THE DAILY ·sENTINEL
.

.

.

BTLS.

SUPER MARKET - OPEN
DAILY
9 TO lO P-.M.
.
.
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~18

Hedgewood Drive
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

f

. .

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~1111n11v

vv~•uril

Plus Tax &amp; Dept.

, , """ • ..
lV ,IU lU

Federal Food ;,wuaps- ne Keserve me Right To Umit Quantities

..

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1 19

•

�6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-P om eroy, 0., Tuesday , J an. 29, 1980

Buy~

Your Best
•

WANT AD
CHARGES
I 5 W ord~ or U rxier
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2. ~

J.OO

J.7S

f.ac h word over the minimum
IS words Cl 4 cents per wonJ p..r
1ht .v Ad'! n mnmg other than con.
•:..r utl w da ys wlll tw;&gt; charged at
~ie l d&lt;~.) ' ra~e

I11 memory , Card of Thank.s
a_nd ObiiUilfJ . 6 cents per wurd ,
$:\.00 rmrmn um CJish ln advance

Mob1Je Home sales and Ya rd
s.a les are accepted only wi th
Cll.:ih wtlh order. Z!i e~n t charge
for Ad'&lt; c~trryi ng Box NumlW!'r In
Care of The Sentinel.
to edit or reject any ads

drcme d obj ect ionali . The
PubUsher w11J not be responsible
for m or e

than one mcorrect in-

~ rliOn .

Phone 002·2 156

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES
MOnday

Noon on Sa turday
Tuesday
thru

Lhe da}'

been dulv a uthor ized by

th is Council; and

G U N SHOOT . Ra c ine
votunteer
F i re
Dept.
Every Saturday . 6:30 p.m .
At their building in Bashan .
F act or y choke guns onl y .

determined that the bid of ·

GUN SHOOT eve ry Sunday

WHEREA S, it has been

Central Trust Co.. N.A. of

M iddl eport, Ohio t or said
notes with a premium of SO
and to bear an interest rate
of 7 per- centum per annum
is the highest bid based

upon the lowest rate of in·
terest rece ived tor such

Notes;
NOW , THEREFORE ,
BE IT RESOLVED by the

Council of the Village of
M iddleport :

The Publisher reserves the
n ~~: ht

Notices
GUN SHOO T E VE RY
SUNDAY 1 PM. FACTORY
CHOK E ONL Y. RAC INE
GUN CLUB .

du l y pub lished as requ ired
by l aw , bids have been
r eceived t or the purc hase
of an issue of $90,000 Fire
Tru ck Notes ot the .Village
ot M idd leport, whi ch have

Friday

4 P. M.
before pllbli cation
Sm1 Wi y
~ P. M .

Frttiay afternoon

H e lp W a nted
CAR R IER S NEEDED in
lh e
M iddle p o rt
and
Pom eroy areas . Catl t he
Daily Sent inel between8 :30
and 5: 00p .m .. 992 2156.

GET VA LUA BLE train ing
as a you ng busi ness person
and ea rn good money plus
some gr ea t gi ft s as a Sen·
ti ne l r oute carr ier . Phone
us r ight away and get on
the eli gib ili ty list at 992 ·

1156 or 9921157 .
R N OR LP N, ful l tim e. 3·
11: 30 and 11 to 7. 30 . Part

lime RN or LP N, 11 to 7:30.
Ca ll Mr . Zidia n at Pom eroy
Hea lt h Care Center , Man·
day th r ough Fr iday, 9·5.

Section

1.

That

the

aforesaid Fire Truck Notes
in th e principal amount of
$90,000 be and they are
hereby awarded and sold to
Central Tru st Co., N.A ., in
accordance with the terms
of the ir bid, said notes to
bear the rate of interest
provided in said bid and
herei nbefore r ec ited .
Section 2. That said
notes, after being duly
ex e c ut e d , s hall
be
delivered by the Clerk·
Treasurer to said bidder

up9n payment of the sum

provided
in
th e bid
aforesaid, together with a
true transcript of the
proceedings.
Section 3. That the Clerk·
Treasurer
is
hereby
authorized and directed to
deliver a certified copy of
this r esolution to the
Auditor of Meigs County .
section 4. That it is
hereb'J fqund and deter·
mine that al l formal ac·
tions of thi s Council con·
cern ing and r elating to the
passage of this resolution
were adopted in an open
meeTing of this council,

and that all deliberations of

this Council and of any of
it s committees thaT
resulted in such formal ac·
tion, were in meetings open
to the publi c, in compl .iance
w ith all legal requirements

including Secllon 121.22 of

the Ohio Rev ised Code .
SectionS. This resolution
is declared to be an
measure
em e rgency
necessary for the im ·
mediate preservr~tion of
the public peace, health

and safety of this Village,

and for the further reason
that the immediate issuan·
ce and sale of the Notes is
necessary
to
protect
property and the ~rsons
w i th i n
the
Village ;
wherefore, this resolution

Passed : January 14, 1980

SEC R E TAR IAL ·CLE RI C.
Al job open ing at local
bus iness . Initially part time ; ma y develop into
ful t·Tim e. Typing prof icien 'Y
r e qu i r e d,
some
oookk eepi ng exper ience

he lpful.

Send

complete

res ume
with
recom menda t ions to Th e Daily
Sentinel, c-o P .0 . Box 729
G, Pome roy , Ohio 45769 .
M A N or woman . MusT be

ab le t o work full or part
ti me, neat in appearance .
Pr ef er
ex peri ence
in
wor k ing with publ ic, good
.per sonal ity, abl e to work
w ith fi g ures, and have Tffe
ability t o get along well
w ith others. Mu st have
high school education . Ap ·
pie in person at Sears in
Pom ero y . No phone calls
accepted .

s·Fred Hoffman

Mayor

Attest : Jon Buck

Clerk· Treasurer

l ll29, ltc
Lost and Found
LOST : Men's glasses, 4
p.m. Monday, Jan . 21.
around Sears Store loading
area . $5 reward. Call 992 ~

5707.

LOST : Tennessee Brindle
coon hound, Kyger Creek Cheshire area . Answers to

Rock . Reward . Call 992·
3041 or 302-882·3348.
FOUND

COONHOUN~

ASTRO·GRAPH

Phone 667·3073.
LOST : Chocolate colored
poodl e, male, lost in Rose

Hill area . Call992·2428.

Bernice Bede Osol

~'Your

~ 'Birthday
January 30, 1980
Sudden or unusual changes
where your work or career is
concerned could prove to your
benelil 1n the months ahead Be
mo~e
sw1!t1y wtlen
oppo rtuni ty Knocks

re ady to

(Jan . 20·Feb. 19)
Th mlo&lt; lhmgs out as you go
Romance. travel , ca reer. luck,
resources anct possrble pitfalls
fer the com1ng month s are all
AQUARIUS

diSc ussed

your Astro -Graph
Lefl er that beQin S wilh your brrlh
tn

date. Mall S 1 -,01 each to As tro.
Graph, Box 489 , Radio City
Stat1on . N Y. t0019 . Be sure to
spec1l-y birth da te.

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Don't let people draw you into
s1tuat1ons today where th ey wan t
to keep things from other s. You
ct on' t need their brand of
intrigue
ARIES (M.,ch 21~Aprll 19)
You'll wantthmgs done your way
today because you feel your way
1s right However. allow ott1ers
tfle same la!ilude so they , too,
can d o a good job without in terference.
TAURUS (Aprii20-M•y 20) What
you hope to accompl ish tod ay

may not come off smoothly on
the lirst try . Things wilt work out
with a Qooct second tor even

Rutland . Proceeds donated

to Boy Scour Troop 249.
ATTENTION :
liM ·
PORTANT TO YOU) Will
pay cash or cerTified check
for antiques and collec ·
tibl es or entire estates.
Nothing too large. Also,
guns, pocket watches and_
co in collect ions. Cal l 6U·

767·3167 or 557 ·3411.
BUYING U.S. SILVER
COINS DATED 1964 OR
EARL I ER
IANY
AMOUNT&gt; . DON ' T LOSE
MONEY , SIMPLY PICK
UP THE PHONE AND
DIAL
614 · 992 · 5113 ,
BROWN'S .
IN COME TAX SERVICE .
Quarterly, Federal and all
sTate income tax reports

will be prepared by ap·
pointment. 992·2272 or see
Wonda Eblin, Laurel Cliff
Rd ., Pomeroy .

OLD

FU RNITURE ,

ice

I PAY highest prices
possible for gold and silver
coins, rings, jewelry , etc .

Contoct Ed Burkett Barber
Shop, Middleport.
2ND SEMESTER classes
in ballet, tap and lazz now
open . Classes offered are

pre·school,

ballet,

tap,

i azz, and adu It e•ercise
iazz classes. Call Shirley

Carpenter,

Dance

Carpenter's

Studio,

boxes, bra ss beds, iron
beds, desks, etc., complete
households. Write M.D.
M i ller . R t, 4, Pomer oy or

ANTIQUES ,

FUR ·

NITURE , glass, china ,
anything . see or call Ru th
Gosne y, antiques, 26 N.

2nd, Middleport, OH . 992·
3161.
OLD COl NS, pocket

wat ~

ches, class rings, wedding
bands, diamonds. Gold or
silver. Call J. A. Wam sley ,

save used batteries, mercury and silver oxide,

redeem

lor cash.

Hearing

Aid

Diles

Center,

'Athens. Tel. 614 ~ 5943571 .

only) and State, both for
$10. Fast service. Teresa
Cremeans, 591 Broadway,

Middleport, OH 45760, 1
block from swimming pool,
after6p.m .

GOLD, SILVER OR
FOREIGN COINS, OR
ANY OTHER GOLD DR
SIL.VER ITEMS. ALSO,
ANTIQUE FURNITURE
OR OTHER ANTIQUE
ITEMS. WILL PAY TOP
DOLLAR. CHECK WITH
OSBY (OSSIE) MARTIN
BEFORE
SELLING .
PHONE 992-6370. ALSO DO
APPRAISING .
third) effOrt.
GEMINI (Mar

21~Jun•

20)

Unless you stay on top of things
today your financial affairs eQuid
get out of order. Keep everything
in balance by not spending more
than you take ln.

(Jun• 21-Julr 22)
Sticky situations can be resolved
today through diplomacy. Count
lo 10 so that you won 't say
things that you shouldn 't.
LEO (July 23-A\Ig. 22) Your Initial appraisal of matters today
could be a trllle negative. Alter
studying everything more closely, you 'll lind your early fears
were paper dragons
CANCER

wanted to Buy : Four loot
S·curve rolllop desk. Call
GOLD , SILVER OR
FOREIGN COINS, OR
ANY OTHER GOLD OR
SILVER ITEMS . ALSO,
ANTIQUE FURNITURE
OR OTHER ANTIQUE
ITEMS . WILL PAY TOP
DOLLAR. CHECK WITH
OSBY lOSS IE) MA~TIN
BEFORE
SELLING .
PHONE 992-6370 . ALSO DO
APPRAISING.
Pets for Sale
HOOF HOLLOW, English
and Western. Saddles and

SCORPIO

(Oct.

698 ·3290 .

Bording

is necessary.
SAGinAAIUS (Now. 23-Dec. 21)

your schedule today so
that the most Important matters
are tended to first. Eliminate any
Arrange

Fraley Jordan. The little one has a
sister, Keziah Mae. Other grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Clinton
Fraley, and great-grandparents,
Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Dwelley, Orlando, Florida. The Jordall8 also visited
with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. B.
Dwelley and her brothers and
families in the Orlando, Florida
area .
Colwnbia Grange No. 2435 held
their regular January meeting. A
potluck supper preceded the
business meeting. Wort)!y Master,
Bertha Crippen, discussed various
Grl!nge projects and a program on
January was presented by the lecturer, Arthur Crabtree. It was announced that the All-County
Grangers banquet would be held in
April, date and particulars to he
completed at a postponed Pomona
Grange meeting to be held February
I.
The Busy Bee Society of the Carpenter Baptist Church met with
Beulah Perry. Devotions were led by
Emma' Whittington. It was reported
that the quilt they are making is
nearing completion. TIIOie present
werr Ida Cheadle, Metta Fisher,

$600. 992·53Bl.

71,000

CHEVY Suburban, $1200.
Guy Sargent . 992 ~ 7312 .

GARAGE

Middleport, 0 .
Automotive Repair
Open 9-6 Mon . lhru Sal.
Additional Hours
By Appointment
Phone 992-2390
Reasonable Rates
' ' Don't cuss -Calf us"

HB· (pd .)

Best offer, must sell. 992
7861.

1975 BRONCO 4X4, V·B,
auto ., P .S., posi -traction,
front and rear. 992 -2679.

1973 CUTLASS Supreme,
P .S., P.B.. air, FM radio,
63,000 miles. Good con·
dition, 992· 7567.

speed, lock·out, $1995. 1913
Jimmy

Blazer

speed,

4

lock·out. $1095 . Harold
Brewer, Long Bonom, OH .
9B5·3554.
197B THUNDERBIRD, 302
engine, excellent condition,
gOOd gas mileage. $3500 .
Contact George Grate,
Rutland . Phone 742·2103.
1978 FORD F· l50 Custom
buill 4·wheel drive pickup
truck . Lock ~ in lock·out
hubs. New tires. AM· FM

stereo B·track tape player.

ROUSH

992 ~ 5071

1979 Ford 4X4 F· lOO, P.S. ,
P. B., AM ·FM radio. Low

ExcellenT condition. $5600.

378·6384.

POODLE GROOMING .
Judy Taylor. 61067·7220.

1977 CHEVY 4x4, short
wheel base. 992·54-49.

HIL-LCREST KENNELS.
Boarding, all breeds . Clean
lndoor·outdoor facilities.
Also AKC registered
Dober mans. 614·446· 77'15 .

For Sale
COAL,
LIMESTONE,

CONSTRUCTION
•New homes extensive remodeling
*Electrical work
*Masonry work
12 v 'ears
Experience
Greg Roush .
Ph, 992-7583
H7·1 mo.

C. R. MASH
VINYL &amp; ALUM.
SIDING
* New Kitchens
•Bathrooms
•New Home
•AddOns
* Remoldings
•Free Estimates
Phone99HOI1 1·4-(Pd.)

1979 BRONCO, 8,000 miles.

Real Estate for Sale
Fl NANCING· VA· FHA LO·
ANS. LOW OR NO DOWN
PAYMENT. PURCHASE
OR
REFINANCE .
IRELAND MORTGAGE,
77 E. STATE, ATHENS .
614 ·592·3051 .

sand, gravel, calcium
chloride, fertilizer, dog

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

fOOd, and all types of salt.

CIDER
HONEY . Fitzpatrick Or· .
chard, State Route 689 .
Phone Wilkesville, 669·
37B5.

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

power

alternators - own the best

-

buy Winpower .

Call513~

RESTER'S assistant for
Manor apts. Cat1992·7787.

struction men. All pflvate,

all utilities paid. 992-7791,
weekdays after 4.

CONDITIONED hay
sale. 614-667·3349.

for

PARTS from a 1970 Dodge
truck, 318 engine . Phone

742·3161.

4 ACRES On

Rl. 124
near Pomeroy. 2 trailer
hookups, Leading Creek
water, and sewage
system. Ideal for
chi ldren . Just 512,500.
THIS SPACE RESERVED FOR YOUR PROERTY AD, IF LISTED
WITH US.
LINCOLN HTS . - Buill
in 1945. Has 3 bedrooms,
bath, 2 porches, full
basement, birth kit·

DECORATED CAKES f&lt;&gt;r

CAPRICORN

(Doc. 22-Jon.

18)

An Indirect approach rather than
a straightforward attack may be
the most efficient method to
reach your goals today . Don't be
pushy.
iN£WSP,t,PEA

E~T E R P R IS E

According to the Ohlo Department
d. Natural Resources (ODNR ),
cross-rountry Skiing requires about
as much physical exertion and Ill an
efficient, quiet way rl geUing
around on snow-coverecJ ground.
Crols-country skllng Is permitted on
traila and bri~. paths at many of
Oh.io's state parks and forests. For
more lnfonnation, contact ODNR 's
Division of Parks and Reeeation,

phMe (614) 4fi64152.

ing.

FIX·IT - Buill In 1956. 1
floor plan 3 bedroom
home, nice c losets,
woodburnlng fireplace,

full basement with 5

992-6342 or 992·2583 .

view of river for only
$15,500.
511,000 - 5 rooms on one

LIKE NEW 24" Homelile
chalnsaw, 6 cyl. Chevy 11
motor. 949·242B.

FIREWOOD ~

Ph'one 992·

rooms, front porch and

floor,

masonarv

building, wit/l bath,
natural gas, ai'I:J outside
chimney for
wood
burner. This is a whale

of a buy,
Guess what the above

property will cost 3 to s

52&gt;10.

years from now. CALL

1976 PICKUP truck in gOOd

BRUCE FOR YOUR
ROOST AT 992-3325 or
9U-3876.

shape. Contact Joe Young,

992·2133.

Housing
Headquarters

,t,SSN )

Hester Peck, Kathy Frank, Bonnie
CbeaPJe, Edith Lyons, Freda Smith
and the hostess, Beulah Perry.
Friends and relatives gathered at
the home of Dwaine Jordan to help
him celebrate his birthday on
Tuesday evening,
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Jordan (Lynnette Dougan) are announcing the
birth of a son, Jeremiah Reed, on
January 13 at O'Bleness Memorial
Hospital in Athell8. Grandparents include Mr. and Mrs. Lavern Jord;jn,
local; Colleen Dougan, Shade;
Ronald Dougan, Albany; and greatgrandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Reed
Jeffers, local; Mr. and Mrs, Garold
Hayes, Shade; and Mr. and.Mrs. D.
B. Dougan, Athell8. The little one
has two brothers, Jason Eric and
JerodLee.

nace and copper plumb·

all occasions. Character
cakes and sheet cakes. Call

RUGS, will do weaving.
Ca II 992-7782.
time wasters.

RIFUGE
Answer;

Ye st erd a.y s

Tuesday , Jan. 29

Concrete Finishing

~H'(

Guaranteed Work
Free E•limates
After 5 P.M. 992-5547
12·13·2 mo. Pd.

Gutter

DISCOUNT
PRICES

All types roof work, new

work,

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

NORTH

down

• 9 87
+AQJ 2

WEST
... WARBVCK6 HAS NOT

REPLOED TO MY RAH50M
, DEMAH DS! HE CANHO T

eE TO O AN )(I OUS TO
~ HAVE YOU ~AC K /

room house,

bedrooms for S6,.50(.,uu.

EXCELL-ENT
UPKEEP - A nice 6
room, 3 bed.r oom with
bay window, hardwood
floors, full basement,
block garage and a good
buy atS26,700.00.
FARM A modern
ranch type house with
lull basement and
w.b.f.p. Built·ln kitchen,
on 84 acres of nice lay·
ing land. Cleared and
tillable with barn and
other outbuildings. You
must see at only
$76,325.00.
PORTLAND- Abcut 56
acres, pasture, woods,
and building sites. Good
hunting area. $25,000.00.
SEE YOU AT OUR
OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY!
REALTOR
Henry
E.
Cleland,
Jr. 99:1-6191
ASSOCIATES
Jean Trussell 949-2660
Roger and Dottle
Turner
742-2474
OFFICE PHONE
992-2259

REAL ESTATE

PQMEROY
LANDMARK

ner lot. 7 rooms, 3 or 4 bedrooms, 11h bath, garage.

W. Carsey,

~

MIDDLE PORT - cement block nome on Jarge cor·
$27,000.

Mgr.
Phone 992-2181

ROCK SPRiNGS-2 bedroom and both, fully equlpped kitchen,' near Meigs High School, fUll 'f. furnish·
ed: $25,000.

Real Estate for Sale

POMEROY - Lincoln HIS. 2 bedroom, ll•th, large
· livlng room, full basement, new furnace. S17,500.

-

COUNTRY HOME With
stocked pond for swimming
or fishing , 9 rooms, bath,
carpeted. 3 to 17 acres·
available. Located approx.
7 miles from Pomeroy off
Rt. 7 or 33 , «6-2359 after 6,
TWO STORY house, 9
rooms, 1'(2 baths. garage,
College·Rd., Syracuse. Call
992·5133 or 992·3981.

MIDDLEPORT- Two bedroom brick only 1 block
from center Of town. l.ow utilities. A bargain at
$12,500.
· RUTLAND - One bedroom dOwn, two upstatn, on
large corner lot. Just needs a little paint &amp; paper.
$9,900.

5 ACRES OF LAND on Hy1sell Run, beautifUl
building lot . $7,000.
·
· MiDDLI!P.ORT- Building lot on S. Second, 63'x53'.
SA,500.

full basement. Large lot,

·CALL 992.2342

FARM . FOR SAL.E'. Barn
and building .. GOOd land .
Mineral rights. 36 acres.
Pomeroy •rea . Phone 992·
.

- - - -·
'

ARMG ... I&gt;= "'E 6 TI LL. T HI NKS

OF ~ THE SAME WAY ..

.Bill Childs, Branch Mgr., Home 992-2449 ·
Rodney Down ina, Broker, Home 992·3731 .·
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

+6 5
SOUTH
• Q J 10 9

GE TS

• A2

Pass

4•

Now, South thought that
West had to hold the last two
spades so South just went
after clubs. On the third club
Besse discarded his last
diamond. West ruffed with the
seven of spades and led the
las t diamond whereupon
Besse scored the setting trick
wilh the king of spades .

Soutb

I+ .
3+
3+
Pass

Pass

Pass

We sharpen

Scissors.

Opening lead:t K

AIJF.VOOP
WHAT'RE '0-1 WArnN'
FOR, OOPi' SET' OFFA

AUTOMOBILE
IN ·
SURANCE been tan·
celled?
Lost
your ,
op... ator's license? Phone
992·21-43.

n4AT

~e

VA~MINT SE• 1

Sales,

Inc .

ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR Sweepers,
toasters, Irons, ell small
appllonces. Lawn mower.
Next to State Highway
Garage on Route .7, 985·
3825.

We've never seen
a de vi I before!

by THOMAS
ACROSS
1 Ship's jail
5 Rabbit'lur
10 Fuel ship
12 Oo penance,
with "for"
13 Name for
a big bag
of wind?
15 One kind
of ranch
16 Steps
19 Defell8e
alliance
23 "Sweet Molly"
24 Same
25 Tenpercenter
26 "Mule Train"
singer
27 Witty one :

There's
no devil

here!

Just a

harmless
little
donke4!

s

&amp; G carpet Cleaning.
Steam
cleaned.
Free '

estimate .
Reasonable
rates. Scolchguard. 992·
6309or742-2211 .

Run

alonq! /Uill~

ond

PIANO TUNING. Lane
Danlets. New phone num ·
ber, 742-2951 . Service to
. schools and home since
1965.

W1NNIE •
'

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

AT Tll/5
jjQUIZ. ???
YDU MU5T BE
OUT OF YOUR

• CDME ON1 0 LO

611ZL. UP ANI7
AT 'f.M I

M IND

10019.)

JOSEPH

4 Colloidal
substance

5 Deplane
6 Hellenes
7 "To Helen"
poet
8 - Claire
9 Man's
nickname
11 Beaver, e .g.
14 English
river
16 Idol
worshiper
17 Vigilant
18 Refrigerator part
20 Italian
river
21 Basic belief

Yesterday's Answer

22 Hebrew

33 On 34 I: Ger.
35 Specialty
by mom
36 Editorial
pronoun
37 Aniline, e.g .
38 Confederate
stalwart
39 Purpose

measure
23 Crowd
control
product
26 Julie Z8 German
song
32 Literary
Jane

slang

!!1

28 More protracted
%9 Being : Sp.
30 Map within
a map
31 Require
33 Tricky baseball pitch

J&amp;D Pointing. Interior, ex·
terlor. ReaSCIIlable rates, In
Mason. 30A·773-5566 or 304·
n3·5704.

Services Offered
WILL DO odds and endS,
paneling, floor rna, ceiling
tile. Fred Miller, 992-6338.

tO Less

CUSTOM remodeling. We
bUild to suit your tastes. AI
Tromm, 742·2328.

friendly
41 Actress,
France 42 Not here
43 Actor
Hadley

BARNEY
DON' T THAT

OL' SUNSHINE
FEEL GOOD ON
A COLD DHY
LIKE THIS?

WE DO wallpapering. Call
9'12-3760.

IT SHORE DOES.
SNUFFY-- -

--YOU GOT
TH' ONLY HOUSE
IN TH ' HOLLER
WIF SOLAR
HEAT

DOWN

1 Hope

zInlet

3 Feeling
poorly

Giveaway
FOUR SMALL PiiPI&gt;ln to
s. 3rd, · )
Middleport, OH.
'

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it :

good hOme. 2411h

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

Ia

TO GOOD HOMES: 1 male
puppy, 4 rnonths. 7 beagle
puppies, , 6-7 weeks. 9'12·
3760.

CRYPTOQUOO'ES

I KNOW,
~ARCIE ...

l THINK

I'M601N6
TO SUE .

AHER I

FIND OUT
WHATTI-lAT

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'A U ,

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KVO

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VJL

HE

S V J 'E

HE' K

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v

ET .HVD.
F .HDD
TWCATK
~etlerdly'• Cryploqllole: 'ME li'OOUSH AND 111! WD
ALONE NEVF.R CHANGE THEIR OPINIONS.-JAMES

RUSSEI:.L WWEU..

.,
"'

I

'AU

FWTEN

~·

Movie

"The Condemned of Altona" 17.
10 :30- Hollywood Squares 3, 15;
$20,000 Pyramid 13; Andy
Grlffllh 6: Whew! 8.10.
10:55--CBS News B; House Call 10.
11:QO--High Rollers 3.15; Laverne &amp;
Shirley 6, 13 ; Price Is Rlghl 8, 10.
11 :30-Wheel offortune 3, 15; Family
Feud 6, 13; Sesame St . 20,33.
12 :00-Newscenter
3;
News
6,8,10.13; Health Field 15.
12 :2()--Movle "Dear Brlgltte" 17 .
12 :3()--Ryan ' s Hope 6, 13; Search for
Tomorrow 8, tO; Password Plus
15; E lee. Co. 20,33.
1 :oo--Days of Our Lives 3. 15; All My
Chlldren 6, 13; Young &amp; the
REstless B, 10.
1 :3()--AS The World Turns 8, 10.
2:QO--Ooctors 3, 15; One Life to Live
6, 13; 2:25-News 17.
2:3()--Anolher World 3, 15; Guldlng
Light B,lO; Glgglesnort Hotel 17.
3:oo--General Hospital 6, 13; I Love
Lucy 17 ; Soundstage 20.
3 :3()-{)ne Day AI A Tlme 8; Joker's
Wild 10; F llnlslones 17 ; Over
Easy 33.
4 :00- Mister Cartoon 3; Merv
Griffin 6; Petticoat Junction B;
Sesame St. 20,33; Real McCoys
13 ; Little Rascals 15; Spec·
treman 17.
4:3Q-- Lbne Ranger 3; Gomer Pyle 8;
Brady Bunch 10; Tom &amp;. Jerry
13 ; Merv Griffin 15; Glllglon's Is.
17 . .
'
S:oo--Carol Burnell 3; Sanford &amp;
Son 8; Mary Tyler Moore 10 ; My
Three Sons 17 ; Mister Rogers
20,33.
'5:30-Mash 3; News 6; Play th•
Percentages 8 ; Elec. Co. 20 .
Mash 10; Happy Days Again 13; I
Dream of Jeannie 17 ; Doctor
Who 33.
6:00- News 3,6,8 , 10, 13. 15 ; ABC
News 6; Carol Burnell 17; 3·2·1
Contact 20,33 .
6:30-NBC News3,15; ABC News 13;
Carol Burnett 6; CBS News 8, 10;
Bob Newhart 17; VIlla Alegre 20;
Wild Wild World of Animals 33.
7:1l0-Cross.WIIs 3; Tic Tac Dough
Newlywed Game 6, 13;
8;
MacNeil · Lehrer Report 33;
News 10; Love, American Style
15; Sanford &amp; Son 17; Dick
Cavett 20.
7 : 30-Country Roads 3; Match
Game PM 6; Joker's Wild 8;
Dlck Cavett 33 ; The Judge 10;
Family Feud 13 ; Wild Kingdom
15; All In The Family 17;
MacNeil· Lehrer Report· 20.
9:1l0-Real People 3,15; Eight Is
Enough 13; Edward &amp; Mrs.
Simpson 6; Young Maverick
B, 10; Great Performances 20,33;
Upstairs, Downstairs 17.
9 :00- Diff'renl STrokes 3, 15;
Charlle's Angels 6, 13; Movie
"Marathon" 8, 10; Every Four
Years 20,33; College Bosketball .
17.
9:30-Hello, Larry 3.15 .
lO :QO--Best of Saiurday Night Live · ·
3, 15; Vegas 6, 13;
News 20;
F.Y. I. 33; 10 :3()-{)ver Easy 20.
11 :QO--News 3,6,B, 10, 13, 15; Last of
the Wild 17; Dlcf; Cavett 20;
Wodehouse Playhouse 33.
11:30-Tonlght 3.15; Love Boot 6,13;
CBS News Special 8; Movie
"Move Over, Darling" 10; Movie
"The· STory of Vernon &amp; Irene
Castle" 17; ABC News 33.
12,:30-Movle "Togetherness" ~~
12 :40- Baretta 6,13; 1:00- .
Tomorrow 3; News 15; 1:35Movle "The Mob" 17.
1:50- News
13 ; 3 :3()--Movle ·
"Paratrooper" 17 ; 5:25-Love,

.~ 1MO IUnv Feetuf'ft S.,ndlc•te, tnc .

r

'

One Jetter simply stands for another. ln this sample A Is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, lhe length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are ·different.

PEANUTS
Mobile Homes- S.le
1972 LYNN, HAVEN IAX65 3 '
bedroom
1970 Villde.l e 12lc63 With expando, 2 bedr.
' 19~ NM•Moon 12lc603bdr
1973 · Skyline Ux55 2
bedroom · .
19lll Bonanz~ 12x52."2 bedr '
, . &amp; s MOBILE HOME
SAL&amp;$, PT. PLEASANT,
wv. 304-675-4424. .

(For a copy of JACOBY
MODERN, send $1/o: "Win at
Bridge, " care of this newspaper. P.0 . Box 489. Radio Cit}
Station . New York, N. Y

ti~·V&gt;I!d'

BRADFORD, Auctioneer,
Complete Service. Phone
949·2487 or 949-2000. racine,
Ohio, Crltt Bradford.

WALL PAPERING
painting. 742-2328.

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.I

Swedish expert Jean Besse
has long been known as one &lt;&gt;f
the world's greatest players.
Today's hand sees Jean sitting
East and defeating a fourspade contract.

992·5724.

Morning Magazine 13;

A really beautiful hand
whether it was actually
played or merely devised by
.Jean's fertile brain .

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

IT 60\85 '0-1 ·

IN STOCK for lmmediote
delivery : various sizes of
pool kits. Do-lt-yourself or
let us ·Install for you. D.
Bumgardner

•to 8 1 s
• Q J 10 3

t AK62
+81

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North
West
North Easl
1•
Pci.ss
•Pass 2 + Pass
Pass
3•
Pass

SYRACUSE - 6 room house on nlce lot. $11,600.

7 ROOM hoUSI&gt; Racine, 3
bedroom. l'h !laths, with
utility bulldlng ."992 ·3738.' ·

WHeH DADDY

YES, YIJ6SUF.' I'M HERE TO
5EE ·"1Y OLD CO MRAOE - IN -

EAST

+K 8 2

+743
.Q9 53

t&gt;l
+KI0973

.

·· -

EIUT YOU MIGHT T ~Y
YOUR HAHD AT 'IIASHIH'
DISI-IE6 YOUR:SE!...F, SI-IEH&lt;.
YOU' LL ~e HE ED IH' A JOB

· SEWING MACHINE
Repairs, service, all
makes. 992-2284. The
Fobrlc Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales
S~rvice.

1·29

.KJ4

Business ·services
WI'LL HAUL limestone and
gravel. Also, llme hauling
and spreading. Leo Morris
Trucking. Phone 7ol2·2455.

and

4:2()--Movle " Fire Over Afrlco "
17 .
WEDNESDAY,JANtiARY 30,1980
5:45-Farm Report 13 ;, 5:5().-PTL
Club 13.
6:CI0-700 Club 6,B; PTL Club 15;
Health Field 10; 6:1().-World at
Large 17 .
6:3().-A .M. Weather 33 ; Morning
Report 3; 6 :5()--Good Morning,
West VIrginia 13; 6:55-News 13.
7:CIO-Today 3, 15; Good Morning
America 6, 13; Wednesday
Morning B; Batman 10; Three .
Stooges. Little Rascals 17.
7:3().-Family Affair 10; Freestyle
33 ; 7:55-Chuck While Reports
10.
.
B:oo--Capt . Kangaroo 8, 10; Leave It
To Beaver 17 ; Sesame St. 33 .
8:3().-Romper Room 17 .
9:CIO-Bob Braun 3; Big Valley 6;
Beverly Hillbillies 8; One Day At
A Time 10; Phil Donahue 13, 15;
Lucy Show 17.
9:3().-Bob Newhart 8: Love of Life
10; Green Acres 17.
lO :oo--Card Sharks 3, 15; Edge of
Night 6; Beat the Clock 8, 10;

The defense starled with
three rounds of diamonds in
which Jean played his queen,
jack and 10. South had to ruff
tha t third diamond and go
after trumps.
With trumps breaking 3-3
he was sure to make the contract if East won the first or
second trump with his king.
He couldn't hurt South with a
fourth diamond lead. Then
how did South go down?
Jean simply let South's
queen and jack hold the first
lwo lrump tricks.

+A 6 5

RACINE, 0 ,
949-2748 or
992-7314
12-28-pd.

Call Howard
949-28'2
1·22·tfc

1 : 5~Movie '' F ire Down Below" 17;

Brilliant defense gambit

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices

31;, YR. OLD RANCH HOME -Just 4 n111ts from
Pomeroy : Quiet ~ountry living In this beautiful 3
bedroom, two bath with cenr._l near and air condl ·
lion. over 3 acres of flatland with a spill rail fence,
garage and workshop. Just $44,900.00.

Jack

BRIDGE

W~D?

work,
walks anel
driveways.
(FREE ESTIMATES)
Reduced Winter Rates

All work guaranteed.

Hotpoint and
General Electric
Apppliance
Sales &amp; Senl.ice

7.159 .

1?1-l'T IT fbi FT-

spouts, same concrete

or repair gutters and
dowospouts,
gutter
cleaning and painting,

Pomeroy, 5

MISFIT

Answer· Why you shouldn 't let g rass grow under yo ur

Jumble Book No. 14, eonltlnlng 110 puultl,lt IYtiltblt tOf $1.75 ~tpald
from Jumble, cJothla n.wtp•per, Box 34, NCHWood, N.J.07141.1ncluMyow
nam•, addreta, zip code and melle checks p1ytble to Ntwaptperboc*t.

ROOFING

with • good roof and 2
acres of lan~_1 - ·

KINKY CLUCK PIRATE
leei- IT TI CKLES

Remodeling
Additions
Siding
Brick Work
Block work

REMODEUNG

freshly

(Answers tomorrow )

I J umbles

.

rr I I I)

I IIII I

ITWASA"[

rusonable rates.

ADD ONS &amp;

painted throughout.
Alumlnum siding, porch
with wrought iron rail ·
ing. Neotal $25,000.00.
NEW LISTING - Ren·
tal
property
In

form the surprise answer, as sug -

gested by the obcve cartoon .

Quality construction at

H. L WHITESEL

Real Estate for Sale

Now arrange the circled letters to

[J I

N. L CONSTRUCTION

CALL 992-7544

basement,

chen, natural gas h.Jr ·

FOUR ROOM apt. in
Racine. Phone 992·2838 or
992·2429.

I !HILL THit.JI&lt; IT:5
A LONG !:'HOT - E)(P~CTit.J' T'Fit.ID
CH~I!&gt; lr.J,.HEREH .

10·19·1 mo.

Hours 9~1 M., w., F.
Other times by appointment.
107 Sycamore (Rear
Pomeroy,O.

pletely remodeled. Just
right for small family or
retired couple. Only
$17,600.00.
NEW LISTING - In
town, 1112 story, 2
bedroom house, full

E . Main sr ., Pomeroy, 992·
3891 .

78B · 2589 ~

Senior Citizens in Village

CAPTAIN EASY

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.

District.
Aluminum
siding, new roof, com ·

road.

For Rent
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, north of
Pomeroy. Large lots.Call
992·7479.

Veterans Admin. Loans.

608 E.
MAIN . __
.
. POMERO,Y,
('1,
. . -.
.
992-2259
NEW LISTING - A
beautiful 2 bedroom on 1
acre land In Eastern

m · APPLES

AKC Pekinese puppies . 843·
2684.

"TT lAKE \HE CAr:&lt;:
OUT IN i~E 5o1'0~M .

THROUG H WITH YOU!

Excelsior Sa lt Works, Inc .,

shots, wormed .

elnsulatlon

•Storm Doors
•Storm Windows
• Replacement Win dows
Free Estimate

Auto &amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992-5682
4-JO·Ifc

10; Love, American Style 15 ;
Sanford &amp; Son 17; Di ck Cavell 20.
7:3().-H ollywood Squares 3; Baxters
6; Joker' s Wild B; HollywOOd
Squa res 10; Sha Na .Na 13 ; Ab·
bot! &amp; Costello 15; All In The
Fam ily 17 MacNeii · Lehrer
Report 20. ·
8:CIO-Misadventures ot Sher iff Lobo
3,15; Happy Days 6,13; Wh ite
Shadow 8, 10 ; Nova 20.33 .
8:3().-Goodlime Girls 6, 13.
9 :00- Marllan Chronicles 3, 15 ;
Three's Company 6,13 ; Movie
" Carrie" B. 10 ; World 20,33 ;
College Basketball 17.
9:3()-Taxl6 ,13 ; lO :oo--Hart to Hart
6,13; News 20; City Notebook 33.
10 :3()-{)ver Easy 20; Another Voice
33.
11 :CIO-News 3,6,8, 10, 13, 15; Last of
the Wi ld 17; Dick Cavell 20;
Carry On Laughing 33.
11 :3().-Tonight 3, 15; Movie " Sur.
vlve! " 6, 13; CBS News SpecialS;
ABC Captioned News 33; Movie
"Send Me No- Flowers" 10;
Movie "The Gay Dlvorcee" 17 .
12 :00- Barnaby Jones 8; 1:00Tomorrow 3; News 15.
1: 1().-Movle " The Impostor " B;
1:35-News 13; 1:45-News 17.

WHY HE DECIDED

after

RISING STAR Kennel.
Boarding . Call 367·0292.

Donations required .
6260, noon· 7 p.m.

mile off Rt . 7 by-pass
on St . Rt . 124 toward
Rutland.
l~

REAL ESTATE
FINANCING
Federal Housing &amp;

8; New l ywed Game 6, 13; News

Vinyl &amp; :
.Aluminum Siding

351 V·8 automatic trans.

mileage. 949·2273 .

Healthy,

I

ton Ford 4X4, 4

l;.o~~

Care products. Western
boots. Children's $15.50.
Adults $29 .00.

HUMANE
SOCIETY .
Adopt o homeless pel.

Roger Hysell
Garage

Carol Burnett 6; CBS News 8,10 ;
BobNewharl l7 ; Vll loAiegre 20;
Wild Wild Wor ld of Animals 33.
7:CIO-C ross Wils 3; Tic Tac Dough

0

LI J

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

I.

1974 FORD Courier. No

and

Riding Lessons and Horse

24-Nov. 22)

Study things carefully today
without letting thoughls become
y~al.m . Being too Introspective
will retard your progress and
keep you tram doing that which

mil es.

harness .
Horses
and · 17,000 miles.
ponies. Ruth Reeves. 614· 5.

LIBRA (Sept, 23-0ct.

Wllh-

runs good .

1975

HOUSE FOR RENT, com ·
pletely furnished. 3 con ·

23)

tires,

ALL GOLD AND SILVER
COINS OF THE WOR LD.
ALSO,
RINGS,
JEWELRY , CHAINS, AND
MISC .
ITEMS
AT
RECORD HIGH HONEST
UP ·TO· DATE PRICES.
CONTACT ED BURKETT
BARBER SHOP . MID ·
DLEPORT, OH OR CALL
992·3476.

THREE BEDROOM home
for rent in Middleport . Un·
furnished. Call742-2562.

out proper motivation you 're not
likely to be an act11ever today.
But 11 there Is something you
strongly desire to do, success
will be e,asy.

1973 BUICK LeSabre, gOOd

1967 FORD Pickup, 6 cyl .,
3·speed , S500. 1975 Olds
Starfire V·6, 4 speed, $900.
992·6323 after 6.

VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22) Overall conditions tend to lal(or you
today. The one exception : You
could be a trifle careless or
extravagant In handling your

resources.

1977 PL YMOU TH Vol are, 6
cyl., P.S., P.B., 843 ·2684.

rust, low mileage. Topper .

WILL FILL out income
tax, Federal (short form

1978 DATSUN 210 hat·
c hback. S3450. 949·2754.

742·2331. Treasure Chest
Coin Shop, Athens, OH . 5926462 .

before January 30th.

HEARING AID USERS:

RAILROAD
STREET

call992 7760.

949·2710

INCOME TAX service,
Federal and State. Wallace
Russell, Bradbury . 992·
722B .

TUESDAY JANUARY2!JUO

6 : J()-NB~ 3;15; ABC News 13:

SAVIT

cel lent condition . Call 949 ..
2196 afte r 4.

Television
Viewing

byHenriArnold andBob l ee

lhese four Jumbles ,
one lener to each square, to form
tour ordinary words.

1976 CO RDOBA, while,
A.C , P.S., P. B., C.C. E x·

742-2316, evenings .

Carpenter Personals
Mr. and Mrs . .Earl Starkey, local,
along with their son-in-law and
daughter, Mr. and Mrs . Roy
Wiseman, Harrisonville, were in
Colwnbus whe re they visited Mr.
Starkey's sister, Jessie Jewell, and
Mrs. Starkey 's sister, Elma Vernon.
Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Lewis
Smith were his brother-in-law and
sister, Mr. and Mrs. John Whittington, Lancaster, and their son-inlaw and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
Reece Prather, Westerville.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Gillogly,
local, spent a vacation in Florida .
They accompanied her brother-inJaw and sister, Mr. and Mrs . Clinton
Gilkey, Albany, to their home at Inverness, Florida, and from there
they visited points of interest, Busch
GardeiiS and a trip to Lakeland to
tee Mr. Gillogly's uncle and aunt,
•~ Mr. and Mrs. James Bethel.
•
Mr. a nd Mrs. Clay Jordan
., vacationed in Florida with their son
and ·da ughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Dale J ordan and daughters. They
went at this time especially to see
~ r ne w granddaughter, Knrry
Sue, born in Orlando, florida, on
December 4 to Dale and Bonnie

Pomeroy 992·2689.

shor t bed, blctck and sil ver .

Ca ll 949 ·2196 afte r 4.

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORO GAME

~~ ®

Un scramble

WE CAN WORK OUT
TH E PARTICULA RS
FRIDAY MORNIN GIF THAT'S
ACCEPTABLE •

Business Services

1975 GMC •;, ton pickup,

I!!J ~

DICK TRAcY

Auto Sales

CHIP WOOD. Poles m ax .
di ameter 10" on la rgest
end. $12 p -er ton . Bundled
slab . $10 per ton. Deli vered
to Oh io Pal let Co., Rt . 2,

ft ~~~rut ID'il

7 _ The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pom eroy, 0 ., Tuesday , Jan. ~, 1980

the Sentinel Classifieds

Ill

Wanted to Buy

Corn Hollow Gun Club,

Approved : January 14, 1980

s·Bernard Fultz
Sol icitor

mostly white, brown face .
Spots on back . Female .
Wednesday, Jan. 30

12 :00. Factory choke onl y.

shall be in full force and el ·
feet from and immediately
after i ts passage .

t'ouJ· ~d

Are

RESOLUTION
NO. 229
RESOLUTION PROVID·
lNG FOR THE AWARD
OF AN ISSUE OF NOTES
IN THE SUM OF 590,000
WH E REA S, after notice

•

~

American Style 17 .

,

�6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-P om eroy, 0., Tuesday , J an. 29, 1980

Buy~

Your Best
•

WANT AD
CHARGES
I 5 W ord~ or U rxier
~s h

I day
2 tiHys
Jday!l
6 days

Chargr

1 00
I~
1.80

12:1
1.90
2. ~

J.OO

J.7S

f.ac h word over the minimum
IS words Cl 4 cents per wonJ p..r
1ht .v Ad'! n mnmg other than con.
•:..r utl w da ys wlll tw;&gt; charged at
~ie l d&lt;~.) ' ra~e

I11 memory , Card of Thank.s
a_nd ObiiUilfJ . 6 cents per wurd ,
$:\.00 rmrmn um CJish ln advance

Mob1Je Home sales and Ya rd
s.a les are accepted only wi th
Cll.:ih wtlh order. Z!i e~n t charge
for Ad'&lt; c~trryi ng Box NumlW!'r In
Care of The Sentinel.
to edit or reject any ads

drcme d obj ect ionali . The
PubUsher w11J not be responsible
for m or e

than one mcorrect in-

~ rliOn .

Phone 002·2 156

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES
MOnday

Noon on Sa turday
Tuesday
thru

Lhe da}'

been dulv a uthor ized by

th is Council; and

G U N SHOOT . Ra c ine
votunteer
F i re
Dept.
Every Saturday . 6:30 p.m .
At their building in Bashan .
F act or y choke guns onl y .

determined that the bid of ·

GUN SHOOT eve ry Sunday

WHEREA S, it has been

Central Trust Co.. N.A. of

M iddl eport, Ohio t or said
notes with a premium of SO
and to bear an interest rate
of 7 per- centum per annum
is the highest bid based

upon the lowest rate of in·
terest rece ived tor such

Notes;
NOW , THEREFORE ,
BE IT RESOLVED by the

Council of the Village of
M iddleport :

The Publisher reserves the
n ~~: ht

Notices
GUN SHOO T E VE RY
SUNDAY 1 PM. FACTORY
CHOK E ONL Y. RAC INE
GUN CLUB .

du l y pub lished as requ ired
by l aw , bids have been
r eceived t or the purc hase
of an issue of $90,000 Fire
Tru ck Notes ot the .Village
ot M idd leport, whi ch have

Friday

4 P. M.
before pllbli cation
Sm1 Wi y
~ P. M .

Frttiay afternoon

H e lp W a nted
CAR R IER S NEEDED in
lh e
M iddle p o rt
and
Pom eroy areas . Catl t he
Daily Sent inel between8 :30
and 5: 00p .m .. 992 2156.

GET VA LUA BLE train ing
as a you ng busi ness person
and ea rn good money plus
some gr ea t gi ft s as a Sen·
ti ne l r oute carr ier . Phone
us r ight away and get on
the eli gib ili ty list at 992 ·

1156 or 9921157 .
R N OR LP N, ful l tim e. 3·
11: 30 and 11 to 7. 30 . Part

lime RN or LP N, 11 to 7:30.
Ca ll Mr . Zidia n at Pom eroy
Hea lt h Care Center , Man·
day th r ough Fr iday, 9·5.

Section

1.

That

the

aforesaid Fire Truck Notes
in th e principal amount of
$90,000 be and they are
hereby awarded and sold to
Central Tru st Co., N.A ., in
accordance with the terms
of the ir bid, said notes to
bear the rate of interest
provided in said bid and
herei nbefore r ec ited .
Section 2. That said
notes, after being duly
ex e c ut e d , s hall
be
delivered by the Clerk·
Treasurer to said bidder

up9n payment of the sum

provided
in
th e bid
aforesaid, together with a
true transcript of the
proceedings.
Section 3. That the Clerk·
Treasurer
is
hereby
authorized and directed to
deliver a certified copy of
this r esolution to the
Auditor of Meigs County .
section 4. That it is
hereb'J fqund and deter·
mine that al l formal ac·
tions of thi s Council con·
cern ing and r elating to the
passage of this resolution
were adopted in an open
meeTing of this council,

and that all deliberations of

this Council and of any of
it s committees thaT
resulted in such formal ac·
tion, were in meetings open
to the publi c, in compl .iance
w ith all legal requirements

including Secllon 121.22 of

the Ohio Rev ised Code .
SectionS. This resolution
is declared to be an
measure
em e rgency
necessary for the im ·
mediate preservr~tion of
the public peace, health

and safety of this Village,

and for the further reason
that the immediate issuan·
ce and sale of the Notes is
necessary
to
protect
property and the ~rsons
w i th i n
the
Village ;
wherefore, this resolution

Passed : January 14, 1980

SEC R E TAR IAL ·CLE RI C.
Al job open ing at local
bus iness . Initially part time ; ma y develop into
ful t·Tim e. Typing prof icien 'Y
r e qu i r e d,
some
oookk eepi ng exper ience

he lpful.

Send

complete

res ume
with
recom menda t ions to Th e Daily
Sentinel, c-o P .0 . Box 729
G, Pome roy , Ohio 45769 .
M A N or woman . MusT be

ab le t o work full or part
ti me, neat in appearance .
Pr ef er
ex peri ence
in
wor k ing with publ ic, good
.per sonal ity, abl e to work
w ith fi g ures, and have Tffe
ability t o get along well
w ith others. Mu st have
high school education . Ap ·
pie in person at Sears in
Pom ero y . No phone calls
accepted .

s·Fred Hoffman

Mayor

Attest : Jon Buck

Clerk· Treasurer

l ll29, ltc
Lost and Found
LOST : Men's glasses, 4
p.m. Monday, Jan . 21.
around Sears Store loading
area . $5 reward. Call 992 ~

5707.

LOST : Tennessee Brindle
coon hound, Kyger Creek Cheshire area . Answers to

Rock . Reward . Call 992·
3041 or 302-882·3348.
FOUND

COONHOUN~

ASTRO·GRAPH

Phone 667·3073.
LOST : Chocolate colored
poodl e, male, lost in Rose

Hill area . Call992·2428.

Bernice Bede Osol

~'Your

~ 'Birthday
January 30, 1980
Sudden or unusual changes
where your work or career is
concerned could prove to your
benelil 1n the months ahead Be
mo~e
sw1!t1y wtlen
oppo rtuni ty Knocks

re ady to

(Jan . 20·Feb. 19)
Th mlo&lt; lhmgs out as you go
Romance. travel , ca reer. luck,
resources anct possrble pitfalls
fer the com1ng month s are all
AQUARIUS

diSc ussed

your Astro -Graph
Lefl er that beQin S wilh your brrlh
tn

date. Mall S 1 -,01 each to As tro.
Graph, Box 489 , Radio City
Stat1on . N Y. t0019 . Be sure to
spec1l-y birth da te.

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Don't let people draw you into
s1tuat1ons today where th ey wan t
to keep things from other s. You
ct on' t need their brand of
intrigue
ARIES (M.,ch 21~Aprll 19)
You'll wantthmgs done your way
today because you feel your way
1s right However. allow ott1ers
tfle same la!ilude so they , too,
can d o a good job without in terference.
TAURUS (Aprii20-M•y 20) What
you hope to accompl ish tod ay

may not come off smoothly on
the lirst try . Things wilt work out
with a Qooct second tor even

Rutland . Proceeds donated

to Boy Scour Troop 249.
ATTENTION :
liM ·
PORTANT TO YOU) Will
pay cash or cerTified check
for antiques and collec ·
tibl es or entire estates.
Nothing too large. Also,
guns, pocket watches and_
co in collect ions. Cal l 6U·

767·3167 or 557 ·3411.
BUYING U.S. SILVER
COINS DATED 1964 OR
EARL I ER
IANY
AMOUNT&gt; . DON ' T LOSE
MONEY , SIMPLY PICK
UP THE PHONE AND
DIAL
614 · 992 · 5113 ,
BROWN'S .
IN COME TAX SERVICE .
Quarterly, Federal and all
sTate income tax reports

will be prepared by ap·
pointment. 992·2272 or see
Wonda Eblin, Laurel Cliff
Rd ., Pomeroy .

OLD

FU RNITURE ,

ice

I PAY highest prices
possible for gold and silver
coins, rings, jewelry , etc .

Contoct Ed Burkett Barber
Shop, Middleport.
2ND SEMESTER classes
in ballet, tap and lazz now
open . Classes offered are

pre·school,

ballet,

tap,

i azz, and adu It e•ercise
iazz classes. Call Shirley

Carpenter,

Dance

Carpenter's

Studio,

boxes, bra ss beds, iron
beds, desks, etc., complete
households. Write M.D.
M i ller . R t, 4, Pomer oy or

ANTIQUES ,

FUR ·

NITURE , glass, china ,
anything . see or call Ru th
Gosne y, antiques, 26 N.

2nd, Middleport, OH . 992·
3161.
OLD COl NS, pocket

wat ~

ches, class rings, wedding
bands, diamonds. Gold or
silver. Call J. A. Wam sley ,

save used batteries, mercury and silver oxide,

redeem

lor cash.

Hearing

Aid

Diles

Center,

'Athens. Tel. 614 ~ 5943571 .

only) and State, both for
$10. Fast service. Teresa
Cremeans, 591 Broadway,

Middleport, OH 45760, 1
block from swimming pool,
after6p.m .

GOLD, SILVER OR
FOREIGN COINS, OR
ANY OTHER GOLD DR
SIL.VER ITEMS. ALSO,
ANTIQUE FURNITURE
OR OTHER ANTIQUE
ITEMS. WILL PAY TOP
DOLLAR. CHECK WITH
OSBY (OSSIE) MARTIN
BEFORE
SELLING .
PHONE 992-6370. ALSO DO
APPRAISING .
third) effOrt.
GEMINI (Mar

21~Jun•

20)

Unless you stay on top of things
today your financial affairs eQuid
get out of order. Keep everything
in balance by not spending more
than you take ln.

(Jun• 21-Julr 22)
Sticky situations can be resolved
today through diplomacy. Count
lo 10 so that you won 't say
things that you shouldn 't.
LEO (July 23-A\Ig. 22) Your Initial appraisal of matters today
could be a trllle negative. Alter
studying everything more closely, you 'll lind your early fears
were paper dragons
CANCER

wanted to Buy : Four loot
S·curve rolllop desk. Call
GOLD , SILVER OR
FOREIGN COINS, OR
ANY OTHER GOLD OR
SILVER ITEMS . ALSO,
ANTIQUE FURNITURE
OR OTHER ANTIQUE
ITEMS . WILL PAY TOP
DOLLAR. CHECK WITH
OSBY lOSS IE) MA~TIN
BEFORE
SELLING .
PHONE 992-6370 . ALSO DO
APPRAISING.
Pets for Sale
HOOF HOLLOW, English
and Western. Saddles and

SCORPIO

(Oct.

698 ·3290 .

Bording

is necessary.
SAGinAAIUS (Now. 23-Dec. 21)

your schedule today so
that the most Important matters
are tended to first. Eliminate any
Arrange

Fraley Jordan. The little one has a
sister, Keziah Mae. Other grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Clinton
Fraley, and great-grandparents,
Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Dwelley, Orlando, Florida. The Jordall8 also visited
with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. B.
Dwelley and her brothers and
families in the Orlando, Florida
area .
Colwnbia Grange No. 2435 held
their regular January meeting. A
potluck supper preceded the
business meeting. Wort)!y Master,
Bertha Crippen, discussed various
Grl!nge projects and a program on
January was presented by the lecturer, Arthur Crabtree. It was announced that the All-County
Grangers banquet would be held in
April, date and particulars to he
completed at a postponed Pomona
Grange meeting to be held February
I.
The Busy Bee Society of the Carpenter Baptist Church met with
Beulah Perry. Devotions were led by
Emma' Whittington. It was reported
that the quilt they are making is
nearing completion. TIIOie present
werr Ida Cheadle, Metta Fisher,

$600. 992·53Bl.

71,000

CHEVY Suburban, $1200.
Guy Sargent . 992 ~ 7312 .

GARAGE

Middleport, 0 .
Automotive Repair
Open 9-6 Mon . lhru Sal.
Additional Hours
By Appointment
Phone 992-2390
Reasonable Rates
' ' Don't cuss -Calf us"

HB· (pd .)

Best offer, must sell. 992
7861.

1975 BRONCO 4X4, V·B,
auto ., P .S., posi -traction,
front and rear. 992 -2679.

1973 CUTLASS Supreme,
P .S., P.B.. air, FM radio,
63,000 miles. Good con·
dition, 992· 7567.

speed, lock·out, $1995. 1913
Jimmy

Blazer

speed,

4

lock·out. $1095 . Harold
Brewer, Long Bonom, OH .
9B5·3554.
197B THUNDERBIRD, 302
engine, excellent condition,
gOOd gas mileage. $3500 .
Contact George Grate,
Rutland . Phone 742·2103.
1978 FORD F· l50 Custom
buill 4·wheel drive pickup
truck . Lock ~ in lock·out
hubs. New tires. AM· FM

stereo B·track tape player.

ROUSH

992 ~ 5071

1979 Ford 4X4 F· lOO, P.S. ,
P. B., AM ·FM radio. Low

ExcellenT condition. $5600.

378·6384.

POODLE GROOMING .
Judy Taylor. 61067·7220.

1977 CHEVY 4x4, short
wheel base. 992·54-49.

HIL-LCREST KENNELS.
Boarding, all breeds . Clean
lndoor·outdoor facilities.
Also AKC registered
Dober mans. 614·446· 77'15 .

For Sale
COAL,
LIMESTONE,

CONSTRUCTION
•New homes extensive remodeling
*Electrical work
*Masonry work
12 v 'ears
Experience
Greg Roush .
Ph, 992-7583
H7·1 mo.

C. R. MASH
VINYL &amp; ALUM.
SIDING
* New Kitchens
•Bathrooms
•New Home
•AddOns
* Remoldings
•Free Estimates
Phone99HOI1 1·4-(Pd.)

1979 BRONCO, 8,000 miles.

Real Estate for Sale
Fl NANCING· VA· FHA LO·
ANS. LOW OR NO DOWN
PAYMENT. PURCHASE
OR
REFINANCE .
IRELAND MORTGAGE,
77 E. STATE, ATHENS .
614 ·592·3051 .

sand, gravel, calcium
chloride, fertilizer, dog

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

fOOd, and all types of salt.

CIDER
HONEY . Fitzpatrick Or· .
chard, State Route 689 .
Phone Wilkesville, 669·
37B5.

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

power

alternators - own the best

-

buy Winpower .

Call513~

RESTER'S assistant for
Manor apts. Cat1992·7787.

struction men. All pflvate,

all utilities paid. 992-7791,
weekdays after 4.

CONDITIONED hay
sale. 614-667·3349.

for

PARTS from a 1970 Dodge
truck, 318 engine . Phone

742·3161.

4 ACRES On

Rl. 124
near Pomeroy. 2 trailer
hookups, Leading Creek
water, and sewage
system. Ideal for
chi ldren . Just 512,500.
THIS SPACE RESERVED FOR YOUR PROERTY AD, IF LISTED
WITH US.
LINCOLN HTS . - Buill
in 1945. Has 3 bedrooms,
bath, 2 porches, full
basement, birth kit·

DECORATED CAKES f&lt;&gt;r

CAPRICORN

(Doc. 22-Jon.

18)

An Indirect approach rather than
a straightforward attack may be
the most efficient method to
reach your goals today . Don't be
pushy.
iN£WSP,t,PEA

E~T E R P R IS E

According to the Ohlo Department
d. Natural Resources (ODNR ),
cross-rountry Skiing requires about
as much physical exertion and Ill an
efficient, quiet way rl geUing
around on snow-coverecJ ground.
Crols-country skllng Is permitted on
traila and bri~. paths at many of
Oh.io's state parks and forests. For
more lnfonnation, contact ODNR 's
Division of Parks and Reeeation,

phMe (614) 4fi64152.

ing.

FIX·IT - Buill In 1956. 1
floor plan 3 bedroom
home, nice c losets,
woodburnlng fireplace,

full basement with 5

992-6342 or 992·2583 .

view of river for only
$15,500.
511,000 - 5 rooms on one

LIKE NEW 24" Homelile
chalnsaw, 6 cyl. Chevy 11
motor. 949·242B.

FIREWOOD ~

Ph'one 992·

rooms, front porch and

floor,

masonarv

building, wit/l bath,
natural gas, ai'I:J outside
chimney for
wood
burner. This is a whale

of a buy,
Guess what the above

property will cost 3 to s

52&gt;10.

years from now. CALL

1976 PICKUP truck in gOOd

BRUCE FOR YOUR
ROOST AT 992-3325 or
9U-3876.

shape. Contact Joe Young,

992·2133.

Housing
Headquarters

,t,SSN )

Hester Peck, Kathy Frank, Bonnie
CbeaPJe, Edith Lyons, Freda Smith
and the hostess, Beulah Perry.
Friends and relatives gathered at
the home of Dwaine Jordan to help
him celebrate his birthday on
Tuesday evening,
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Jordan (Lynnette Dougan) are announcing the
birth of a son, Jeremiah Reed, on
January 13 at O'Bleness Memorial
Hospital in Athell8. Grandparents include Mr. and Mrs. Lavern Jord;jn,
local; Colleen Dougan, Shade;
Ronald Dougan, Albany; and greatgrandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Reed
Jeffers, local; Mr. and Mrs, Garold
Hayes, Shade; and Mr. and.Mrs. D.
B. Dougan, Athell8. The little one
has two brothers, Jason Eric and
JerodLee.

nace and copper plumb·

all occasions. Character
cakes and sheet cakes. Call

RUGS, will do weaving.
Ca II 992-7782.
time wasters.

RIFUGE
Answer;

Ye st erd a.y s

Tuesday , Jan. 29

Concrete Finishing

~H'(

Guaranteed Work
Free E•limates
After 5 P.M. 992-5547
12·13·2 mo. Pd.

Gutter

DISCOUNT
PRICES

All types roof work, new

work,

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

NORTH

down

• 9 87
+AQJ 2

WEST
... WARBVCK6 HAS NOT

REPLOED TO MY RAH50M
, DEMAH DS! HE CANHO T

eE TO O AN )(I OUS TO
~ HAVE YOU ~AC K /

room house,

bedrooms for S6,.50(.,uu.

EXCELL-ENT
UPKEEP - A nice 6
room, 3 bed.r oom with
bay window, hardwood
floors, full basement,
block garage and a good
buy atS26,700.00.
FARM A modern
ranch type house with
lull basement and
w.b.f.p. Built·ln kitchen,
on 84 acres of nice lay·
ing land. Cleared and
tillable with barn and
other outbuildings. You
must see at only
$76,325.00.
PORTLAND- Abcut 56
acres, pasture, woods,
and building sites. Good
hunting area. $25,000.00.
SEE YOU AT OUR
OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY!
REALTOR
Henry
E.
Cleland,
Jr. 99:1-6191
ASSOCIATES
Jean Trussell 949-2660
Roger and Dottle
Turner
742-2474
OFFICE PHONE
992-2259

REAL ESTATE

PQMEROY
LANDMARK

ner lot. 7 rooms, 3 or 4 bedrooms, 11h bath, garage.

W. Carsey,

~

MIDDLE PORT - cement block nome on Jarge cor·
$27,000.

Mgr.
Phone 992-2181

ROCK SPRiNGS-2 bedroom and both, fully equlpped kitchen,' near Meigs High School, fUll 'f. furnish·
ed: $25,000.

Real Estate for Sale

POMEROY - Lincoln HIS. 2 bedroom, ll•th, large
· livlng room, full basement, new furnace. S17,500.

-

COUNTRY HOME With
stocked pond for swimming
or fishing , 9 rooms, bath,
carpeted. 3 to 17 acres·
available. Located approx.
7 miles from Pomeroy off
Rt. 7 or 33 , «6-2359 after 6,
TWO STORY house, 9
rooms, 1'(2 baths. garage,
College·Rd., Syracuse. Call
992·5133 or 992·3981.

MIDDLEPORT- Two bedroom brick only 1 block
from center Of town. l.ow utilities. A bargain at
$12,500.
· RUTLAND - One bedroom dOwn, two upstatn, on
large corner lot. Just needs a little paint &amp; paper.
$9,900.

5 ACRES OF LAND on Hy1sell Run, beautifUl
building lot . $7,000.
·
· MiDDLI!P.ORT- Building lot on S. Second, 63'x53'.
SA,500.

full basement. Large lot,

·CALL 992.2342

FARM . FOR SAL.E'. Barn
and building .. GOOd land .
Mineral rights. 36 acres.
Pomeroy •rea . Phone 992·
.

- - - -·
'

ARMG ... I&gt;= "'E 6 TI LL. T HI NKS

OF ~ THE SAME WAY ..

.Bill Childs, Branch Mgr., Home 992-2449 ·
Rodney Down ina, Broker, Home 992·3731 .·
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

+6 5
SOUTH
• Q J 10 9

GE TS

• A2

Pass

4•

Now, South thought that
West had to hold the last two
spades so South just went
after clubs. On the third club
Besse discarded his last
diamond. West ruffed with the
seven of spades and led the
las t diamond whereupon
Besse scored the setting trick
wilh the king of spades .

Soutb

I+ .
3+
3+
Pass

Pass

Pass

We sharpen

Scissors.

Opening lead:t K

AIJF.VOOP
WHAT'RE '0-1 WArnN'
FOR, OOPi' SET' OFFA

AUTOMOBILE
IN ·
SURANCE been tan·
celled?
Lost
your ,
op... ator's license? Phone
992·21-43.

n4AT

~e

VA~MINT SE• 1

Sales,

Inc .

ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR Sweepers,
toasters, Irons, ell small
appllonces. Lawn mower.
Next to State Highway
Garage on Route .7, 985·
3825.

We've never seen
a de vi I before!

by THOMAS
ACROSS
1 Ship's jail
5 Rabbit'lur
10 Fuel ship
12 Oo penance,
with "for"
13 Name for
a big bag
of wind?
15 One kind
of ranch
16 Steps
19 Defell8e
alliance
23 "Sweet Molly"
24 Same
25 Tenpercenter
26 "Mule Train"
singer
27 Witty one :

There's
no devil

here!

Just a

harmless
little
donke4!

s

&amp; G carpet Cleaning.
Steam
cleaned.
Free '

estimate .
Reasonable
rates. Scolchguard. 992·
6309or742-2211 .

Run

alonq! /Uill~

ond

PIANO TUNING. Lane
Danlets. New phone num ·
ber, 742-2951 . Service to
. schools and home since
1965.

W1NNIE •
'

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

AT Tll/5
jjQUIZ. ???
YDU MU5T BE
OUT OF YOUR

• CDME ON1 0 LO

611ZL. UP ANI7
AT 'f.M I

M IND

10019.)

JOSEPH

4 Colloidal
substance

5 Deplane
6 Hellenes
7 "To Helen"
poet
8 - Claire
9 Man's
nickname
11 Beaver, e .g.
14 English
river
16 Idol
worshiper
17 Vigilant
18 Refrigerator part
20 Italian
river
21 Basic belief

Yesterday's Answer

22 Hebrew

33 On 34 I: Ger.
35 Specialty
by mom
36 Editorial
pronoun
37 Aniline, e.g .
38 Confederate
stalwart
39 Purpose

measure
23 Crowd
control
product
26 Julie Z8 German
song
32 Literary
Jane

slang

!!1

28 More protracted
%9 Being : Sp.
30 Map within
a map
31 Require
33 Tricky baseball pitch

J&amp;D Pointing. Interior, ex·
terlor. ReaSCIIlable rates, In
Mason. 30A·773-5566 or 304·
n3·5704.

Services Offered
WILL DO odds and endS,
paneling, floor rna, ceiling
tile. Fred Miller, 992-6338.

tO Less

CUSTOM remodeling. We
bUild to suit your tastes. AI
Tromm, 742·2328.

friendly
41 Actress,
France 42 Not here
43 Actor
Hadley

BARNEY
DON' T THAT

OL' SUNSHINE
FEEL GOOD ON
A COLD DHY
LIKE THIS?

WE DO wallpapering. Call
9'12-3760.

IT SHORE DOES.
SNUFFY-- -

--YOU GOT
TH' ONLY HOUSE
IN TH ' HOLLER
WIF SOLAR
HEAT

DOWN

1 Hope

zInlet

3 Feeling
poorly

Giveaway
FOUR SMALL PiiPI&gt;ln to
s. 3rd, · )
Middleport, OH.
'

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it :

good hOme. 2411h

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

Ia

TO GOOD HOMES: 1 male
puppy, 4 rnonths. 7 beagle
puppies, , 6-7 weeks. 9'12·
3760.

CRYPTOQUOO'ES

I KNOW,
~ARCIE ...

l THINK

I'M601N6
TO SUE .

AHER I

FIND OUT
WHATTI-lAT

PVSBFVTLK .

'A U ,

T GJ

KVO

UWXHAK?

VJL

HE

S V J 'E

HE' K

NGTE

v

ET .HVD.
F .HDD
TWCATK
~etlerdly'• Cryploqllole: 'ME li'OOUSH AND 111! WD
ALONE NEVF.R CHANGE THEIR OPINIONS.-JAMES

RUSSEI:.L WWEU..

.,
"'

I

'AU

FWTEN

~·

Movie

"The Condemned of Altona" 17.
10 :30- Hollywood Squares 3, 15;
$20,000 Pyramid 13; Andy
Grlffllh 6: Whew! 8.10.
10:55--CBS News B; House Call 10.
11:QO--High Rollers 3.15; Laverne &amp;
Shirley 6, 13 ; Price Is Rlghl 8, 10.
11 :30-Wheel offortune 3, 15; Family
Feud 6, 13; Sesame St . 20,33.
12 :00-Newscenter
3;
News
6,8,10.13; Health Field 15.
12 :2()--Movle "Dear Brlgltte" 17 .
12 :3()--Ryan ' s Hope 6, 13; Search for
Tomorrow 8, tO; Password Plus
15; E lee. Co. 20,33.
1 :oo--Days of Our Lives 3. 15; All My
Chlldren 6, 13; Young &amp; the
REstless B, 10.
1 :3()--AS The World Turns 8, 10.
2:QO--Ooctors 3, 15; One Life to Live
6, 13; 2:25-News 17.
2:3()--Anolher World 3, 15; Guldlng
Light B,lO; Glgglesnort Hotel 17.
3:oo--General Hospital 6, 13; I Love
Lucy 17 ; Soundstage 20.
3 :3()-{)ne Day AI A Tlme 8; Joker's
Wild 10; F llnlslones 17 ; Over
Easy 33.
4 :00- Mister Cartoon 3; Merv
Griffin 6; Petticoat Junction B;
Sesame St. 20,33; Real McCoys
13 ; Little Rascals 15; Spec·
treman 17.
4:3Q-- Lbne Ranger 3; Gomer Pyle 8;
Brady Bunch 10; Tom &amp;. Jerry
13 ; Merv Griffin 15; Glllglon's Is.
17 . .
'
S:oo--Carol Burnell 3; Sanford &amp;
Son 8; Mary Tyler Moore 10 ; My
Three Sons 17 ; Mister Rogers
20,33.
'5:30-Mash 3; News 6; Play th•
Percentages 8 ; Elec. Co. 20 .
Mash 10; Happy Days Again 13; I
Dream of Jeannie 17 ; Doctor
Who 33.
6:00- News 3,6,8 , 10, 13. 15 ; ABC
News 6; Carol Burnell 17; 3·2·1
Contact 20,33 .
6:30-NBC News3,15; ABC News 13;
Carol Burnett 6; CBS News 8, 10;
Bob Newhart 17; VIlla Alegre 20;
Wild Wild World of Animals 33.
7:1l0-Cross.WIIs 3; Tic Tac Dough
Newlywed Game 6, 13;
8;
MacNeil · Lehrer Report 33;
News 10; Love, American Style
15; Sanford &amp; Son 17; Dick
Cavett 20.
7 : 30-Country Roads 3; Match
Game PM 6; Joker's Wild 8;
Dlck Cavett 33 ; The Judge 10;
Family Feud 13 ; Wild Kingdom
15; All In The Family 17;
MacNeil· Lehrer Report· 20.
9:1l0-Real People 3,15; Eight Is
Enough 13; Edward &amp; Mrs.
Simpson 6; Young Maverick
B, 10; Great Performances 20,33;
Upstairs, Downstairs 17.
9 :00- Diff'renl STrokes 3, 15;
Charlle's Angels 6, 13; Movie
"Marathon" 8, 10; Every Four
Years 20,33; College Bosketball .
17.
9:30-Hello, Larry 3.15 .
lO :QO--Best of Saiurday Night Live · ·
3, 15; Vegas 6, 13;
News 20;
F.Y. I. 33; 10 :3()-{)ver Easy 20.
11 :QO--News 3,6,B, 10, 13, 15; Last of
the Wild 17; Dlcf; Cavett 20;
Wodehouse Playhouse 33.
11:30-Tonlght 3.15; Love Boot 6,13;
CBS News Special 8; Movie
"Move Over, Darling" 10; Movie
"The· STory of Vernon &amp; Irene
Castle" 17; ABC News 33.
12,:30-Movle "Togetherness" ~~
12 :40- Baretta 6,13; 1:00- .
Tomorrow 3; News 15; 1:35Movle "The Mob" 17.
1:50- News
13 ; 3 :3()--Movle ·
"Paratrooper" 17 ; 5:25-Love,

.~ 1MO IUnv Feetuf'ft S.,ndlc•te, tnc .

r

'

One Jetter simply stands for another. ln this sample A Is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, lhe length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are ·different.

PEANUTS
Mobile Homes- S.le
1972 LYNN, HAVEN IAX65 3 '
bedroom
1970 Villde.l e 12lc63 With expando, 2 bedr.
' 19~ NM•Moon 12lc603bdr
1973 · Skyline Ux55 2
bedroom · .
19lll Bonanz~ 12x52."2 bedr '
, . &amp; s MOBILE HOME
SAL&amp;$, PT. PLEASANT,
wv. 304-675-4424. .

(For a copy of JACOBY
MODERN, send $1/o: "Win at
Bridge, " care of this newspaper. P.0 . Box 489. Radio Cit}
Station . New York, N. Y

ti~·V&gt;I!d'

BRADFORD, Auctioneer,
Complete Service. Phone
949·2487 or 949-2000. racine,
Ohio, Crltt Bradford.

WALL PAPERING
painting. 742-2328.

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.I

Swedish expert Jean Besse
has long been known as one &lt;&gt;f
the world's greatest players.
Today's hand sees Jean sitting
East and defeating a fourspade contract.

992·5724.

Morning Magazine 13;

A really beautiful hand
whether it was actually
played or merely devised by
.Jean's fertile brain .

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

IT 60\85 '0-1 ·

IN STOCK for lmmediote
delivery : various sizes of
pool kits. Do-lt-yourself or
let us ·Install for you. D.
Bumgardner

•to 8 1 s
• Q J 10 3

t AK62
+81

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North
West
North Easl
1•
Pci.ss
•Pass 2 + Pass
Pass
3•
Pass

SYRACUSE - 6 room house on nlce lot. $11,600.

7 ROOM hoUSI&gt; Racine, 3
bedroom. l'h !laths, with
utility bulldlng ."992 ·3738.' ·

WHeH DADDY

YES, YIJ6SUF.' I'M HERE TO
5EE ·"1Y OLD CO MRAOE - IN -

EAST

+K 8 2

+743
.Q9 53

t&gt;l
+KI0973

.

·· -

EIUT YOU MIGHT T ~Y
YOUR HAHD AT 'IIASHIH'
DISI-IE6 YOUR:SE!...F, SI-IEH&lt;.
YOU' LL ~e HE ED IH' A JOB

· SEWING MACHINE
Repairs, service, all
makes. 992-2284. The
Fobrlc Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales
S~rvice.

1·29

.KJ4

Business ·services
WI'LL HAUL limestone and
gravel. Also, llme hauling
and spreading. Leo Morris
Trucking. Phone 7ol2·2455.

and

4:2()--Movle " Fire Over Afrlco "
17 .
WEDNESDAY,JANtiARY 30,1980
5:45-Farm Report 13 ;, 5:5().-PTL
Club 13.
6:CI0-700 Club 6,B; PTL Club 15;
Health Field 10; 6:1().-World at
Large 17 .
6:3().-A .M. Weather 33 ; Morning
Report 3; 6 :5()--Good Morning,
West VIrginia 13; 6:55-News 13.
7:CIO-Today 3, 15; Good Morning
America 6, 13; Wednesday
Morning B; Batman 10; Three .
Stooges. Little Rascals 17.
7:3().-Family Affair 10; Freestyle
33 ; 7:55-Chuck While Reports
10.
.
B:oo--Capt . Kangaroo 8, 10; Leave It
To Beaver 17 ; Sesame St. 33 .
8:3().-Romper Room 17 .
9:CIO-Bob Braun 3; Big Valley 6;
Beverly Hillbillies 8; One Day At
A Time 10; Phil Donahue 13, 15;
Lucy Show 17.
9:3().-Bob Newhart 8: Love of Life
10; Green Acres 17.
lO :oo--Card Sharks 3, 15; Edge of
Night 6; Beat the Clock 8, 10;

The defense starled with
three rounds of diamonds in
which Jean played his queen,
jack and 10. South had to ruff
tha t third diamond and go
after trumps.
With trumps breaking 3-3
he was sure to make the contract if East won the first or
second trump with his king.
He couldn't hurt South with a
fourth diamond lead. Then
how did South go down?
Jean simply let South's
queen and jack hold the first
lwo lrump tricks.

+A 6 5

RACINE, 0 ,
949-2748 or
992-7314
12-28-pd.

Call Howard
949-28'2
1·22·tfc

1 : 5~Movie '' F ire Down Below" 17;

Brilliant defense gambit

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices

31;, YR. OLD RANCH HOME -Just 4 n111ts from
Pomeroy : Quiet ~ountry living In this beautiful 3
bedroom, two bath with cenr._l near and air condl ·
lion. over 3 acres of flatland with a spill rail fence,
garage and workshop. Just $44,900.00.

Jack

BRIDGE

W~D?

work,
walks anel
driveways.
(FREE ESTIMATES)
Reduced Winter Rates

All work guaranteed.

Hotpoint and
General Electric
Apppliance
Sales &amp; Senl.ice

7.159 .

1?1-l'T IT fbi FT-

spouts, same concrete

or repair gutters and
dowospouts,
gutter
cleaning and painting,

Pomeroy, 5

MISFIT

Answer· Why you shouldn 't let g rass grow under yo ur

Jumble Book No. 14, eonltlnlng 110 puultl,lt IYtiltblt tOf $1.75 ~tpald
from Jumble, cJothla n.wtp•per, Box 34, NCHWood, N.J.07141.1ncluMyow
nam•, addreta, zip code and melle checks p1ytble to Ntwaptperboc*t.

ROOFING

with • good roof and 2
acres of lan~_1 - ·

KINKY CLUCK PIRATE
leei- IT TI CKLES

Remodeling
Additions
Siding
Brick Work
Block work

REMODEUNG

freshly

(Answers tomorrow )

I J umbles

.

rr I I I)

I IIII I

ITWASA"[

rusonable rates.

ADD ONS &amp;

painted throughout.
Alumlnum siding, porch
with wrought iron rail ·
ing. Neotal $25,000.00.
NEW LISTING - Ren·
tal
property
In

form the surprise answer, as sug -

gested by the obcve cartoon .

Quality construction at

H. L WHITESEL

Real Estate for Sale

Now arrange the circled letters to

[J I

N. L CONSTRUCTION

CALL 992-7544

basement,

chen, natural gas h.Jr ·

FOUR ROOM apt. in
Racine. Phone 992·2838 or
992·2429.

I !HILL THit.JI&lt; IT:5
A LONG !:'HOT - E)(P~CTit.J' T'Fit.ID
CH~I!&gt; lr.J,.HEREH .

10·19·1 mo.

Hours 9~1 M., w., F.
Other times by appointment.
107 Sycamore (Rear
Pomeroy,O.

pletely remodeled. Just
right for small family or
retired couple. Only
$17,600.00.
NEW LISTING - In
town, 1112 story, 2
bedroom house, full

E . Main sr ., Pomeroy, 992·
3891 .

78B · 2589 ~

Senior Citizens in Village

CAPTAIN EASY

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.

District.
Aluminum
siding, new roof, com ·

road.

For Rent
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, north of
Pomeroy. Large lots.Call
992·7479.

Veterans Admin. Loans.

608 E.
MAIN . __
.
. POMERO,Y,
('1,
. . -.
.
992-2259
NEW LISTING - A
beautiful 2 bedroom on 1
acre land In Eastern

m · APPLES

AKC Pekinese puppies . 843·
2684.

"TT lAKE \HE CAr:&lt;:
OUT IN i~E 5o1'0~M .

THROUG H WITH YOU!

Excelsior Sa lt Works, Inc .,

shots, wormed .

elnsulatlon

•Storm Doors
•Storm Windows
• Replacement Win dows
Free Estimate

Auto &amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992-5682
4-JO·Ifc

10; Love, American Style 15 ;
Sanford &amp; Son 17; Di ck Cavell 20.
7:3().-H ollywood Squares 3; Baxters
6; Joker' s Wild B; HollywOOd
Squa res 10; Sha Na .Na 13 ; Ab·
bot! &amp; Costello 15; All In The
Fam ily 17 MacNeii · Lehrer
Report 20. ·
8:CIO-Misadventures ot Sher iff Lobo
3,15; Happy Days 6,13; Wh ite
Shadow 8, 10 ; Nova 20.33 .
8:3().-Goodlime Girls 6, 13.
9 :00- Marllan Chronicles 3, 15 ;
Three's Company 6,13 ; Movie
" Carrie" B. 10 ; World 20,33 ;
College Basketball 17.
9:3()-Taxl6 ,13 ; lO :oo--Hart to Hart
6,13; News 20; City Notebook 33.
10 :3()-{)ver Easy 20; Another Voice
33.
11 :CIO-News 3,6,8, 10, 13, 15; Last of
the Wi ld 17; Dick Cavell 20;
Carry On Laughing 33.
11 :3().-Tonight 3, 15; Movie " Sur.
vlve! " 6, 13; CBS News SpecialS;
ABC Captioned News 33; Movie
"Send Me No- Flowers" 10;
Movie "The Gay Dlvorcee" 17 .
12 :00- Barnaby Jones 8; 1:00Tomorrow 3; News 15.
1: 1().-Movle " The Impostor " B;
1:35-News 13; 1:45-News 17.

WHY HE DECIDED

after

RISING STAR Kennel.
Boarding . Call 367·0292.

Donations required .
6260, noon· 7 p.m.

mile off Rt . 7 by-pass
on St . Rt . 124 toward
Rutland.
l~

REAL ESTATE
FINANCING
Federal Housing &amp;

8; New l ywed Game 6, 13; News

Vinyl &amp; :
.Aluminum Siding

351 V·8 automatic trans.

mileage. 949·2273 .

Healthy,

I

ton Ford 4X4, 4

l;.o~~

Care products. Western
boots. Children's $15.50.
Adults $29 .00.

HUMANE
SOCIETY .
Adopt o homeless pel.

Roger Hysell
Garage

Carol Burnett 6; CBS News 8,10 ;
BobNewharl l7 ; Vll loAiegre 20;
Wild Wild Wor ld of Animals 33.
7:CIO-C ross Wils 3; Tic Tac Dough

0

LI J

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

I.

1974 FORD Courier. No

and

Riding Lessons and Horse

24-Nov. 22)

Study things carefully today
without letting thoughls become
y~al.m . Being too Introspective
will retard your progress and
keep you tram doing that which

mil es.

harness .
Horses
and · 17,000 miles.
ponies. Ruth Reeves. 614· 5.

LIBRA (Sept, 23-0ct.

Wllh-

runs good .

1975

HOUSE FOR RENT, com ·
pletely furnished. 3 con ·

23)

tires,

ALL GOLD AND SILVER
COINS OF THE WOR LD.
ALSO,
RINGS,
JEWELRY , CHAINS, AND
MISC .
ITEMS
AT
RECORD HIGH HONEST
UP ·TO· DATE PRICES.
CONTACT ED BURKETT
BARBER SHOP . MID ·
DLEPORT, OH OR CALL
992·3476.

THREE BEDROOM home
for rent in Middleport . Un·
furnished. Call742-2562.

out proper motivation you 're not
likely to be an act11ever today.
But 11 there Is something you
strongly desire to do, success
will be e,asy.

1973 BUICK LeSabre, gOOd

1967 FORD Pickup, 6 cyl .,
3·speed , S500. 1975 Olds
Starfire V·6, 4 speed, $900.
992·6323 after 6.

VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22) Overall conditions tend to lal(or you
today. The one exception : You
could be a trifle careless or
extravagant In handling your

resources.

1977 PL YMOU TH Vol are, 6
cyl., P.S., P.B., 843 ·2684.

rust, low mileage. Topper .

WILL FILL out income
tax, Federal (short form

1978 DATSUN 210 hat·
c hback. S3450. 949·2754.

742·2331. Treasure Chest
Coin Shop, Athens, OH . 5926462 .

before January 30th.

HEARING AID USERS:

RAILROAD
STREET

call992 7760.

949·2710

INCOME TAX service,
Federal and State. Wallace
Russell, Bradbury . 992·
722B .

TUESDAY JANUARY2!JUO

6 : J()-NB~ 3;15; ABC News 13:

SAVIT

cel lent condition . Call 949 ..
2196 afte r 4.

Television
Viewing

byHenriArnold andBob l ee

lhese four Jumbles ,
one lener to each square, to form
tour ordinary words.

1976 CO RDOBA, while,
A.C , P.S., P. B., C.C. E x·

742-2316, evenings .

Carpenter Personals
Mr. and Mrs . .Earl Starkey, local,
along with their son-in-law and
daughter, Mr. and Mrs . Roy
Wiseman, Harrisonville, were in
Colwnbus whe re they visited Mr.
Starkey's sister, Jessie Jewell, and
Mrs. Starkey 's sister, Elma Vernon.
Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Lewis
Smith were his brother-in-law and
sister, Mr. and Mrs. John Whittington, Lancaster, and their son-inlaw and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
Reece Prather, Westerville.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Gillogly,
local, spent a vacation in Florida .
They accompanied her brother-inJaw and sister, Mr. and Mrs . Clinton
Gilkey, Albany, to their home at Inverness, Florida, and from there
they visited points of interest, Busch
GardeiiS and a trip to Lakeland to
tee Mr. Gillogly's uncle and aunt,
•~ Mr. and Mrs. James Bethel.
•
Mr. a nd Mrs. Clay Jordan
., vacationed in Florida with their son
and ·da ughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Dale J ordan and daughters. They
went at this time especially to see
~ r ne w granddaughter, Knrry
Sue, born in Orlando, florida, on
December 4 to Dale and Bonnie

Pomeroy 992·2689.

shor t bed, blctck and sil ver .

Ca ll 949 ·2196 afte r 4.

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORO GAME

~~ ®

Un scramble

WE CAN WORK OUT
TH E PARTICULA RS
FRIDAY MORNIN GIF THAT'S
ACCEPTABLE •

Business Services

1975 GMC •;, ton pickup,

I!!J ~

DICK TRAcY

Auto Sales

CHIP WOOD. Poles m ax .
di ameter 10" on la rgest
end. $12 p -er ton . Bundled
slab . $10 per ton. Deli vered
to Oh io Pal let Co., Rt . 2,

ft ~~~rut ID'il

7 _ The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pom eroy, 0 ., Tuesday , Jan. ~, 1980

the Sentinel Classifieds

Ill

Wanted to Buy

Corn Hollow Gun Club,

Approved : January 14, 1980

s·Bernard Fultz
Sol icitor

mostly white, brown face .
Spots on back . Female .
Wednesday, Jan. 30

12 :00. Factory choke onl y.

shall be in full force and el ·
feet from and immediately
after i ts passage .

t'ouJ· ~d

Are

RESOLUTION
NO. 229
RESOLUTION PROVID·
lNG FOR THE AWARD
OF AN ISSUE OF NOTES
IN THE SUM OF 590,000
WH E REA S, after notice

•

~

American Style 17 .

,

�8 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Jan. 29, 1980

Carleton College trustees sign over deed

Legislative hearing slated on coal issue
agency's regional office in Chicago.
By JOHN W. CHALFANT
Gilmartin said representatives of
Associated Press Wrtler
the United Mine Workers union, the
COLUMBUS, OHio (API - Two
coal
industry and utilities have also
legislative committees digging into
been
invited to participate.
problems which face Ohio's troubled
The coal washing bill is backed by
coal industry have , scheduled
Sen. R. Kinsey Milleson, D·
hearings that could lead to some
Freeport, whose 30th District is in
help for about 4.000 jobless miners in
the heart of eastern Ohio's coal
the state.
·
fields . It would allow the Ohio EPA
Both panels are dealing with ways
to
require that coal which is burned
to overcome the reduced demand for
Ohio's high-sulfur coalm the face of
tough federal clean air regulations.
The Senate Energy and Public
Utilities Committee meets Wednesday night to hear testimony
about a bill to require the washing of
CLEVELAND (AP)- Banking ofhigh-sulfur coal which is burned to
ficials say they're worried that Ohio
generate steam as an alternative to
banks will join a growing movement
low-sulfur coal from out of state.
to abandon the Federal Reserve
Meanwhile, the House Energy and
System and switch to state charters.
Environment Committee will meet
"The trickle of members leaving
on Feb. 6 to hear reports from the
the system has turned into a flow
Ohio Environmental Protection
and it might grow into a flood," said
Agency and federal EPA officials

to generate steam must he washed
as a condition for obtaining certam
air pollution control permits.
Coal washing removes or reduces
the sulfur and sulfur compounds
which lead to pollution when the fuel
is burned.
"The coal washing program en·visioned in this bill could be implemented in one of three ways,"
Milleson said. "Coal could be

washed at the mine prior to shipment, by a coal broker before it is
marketed to the user or at the user 's
facility itself."
Also before the committee is a
House-pasSed bill sponsored by Rep.
Thomas J . Carney, D-Boardman. It
replaces a graduated coal consumption tax that was declared unconstitutional by a federal judge in
Cleveland with a flat-rate tax of 5()

Banking officials worried

Patrick Motil, Ohio's chief bank
Martin Abrams, a spokesman for ·
examiner,
said that about a dozen
Cleveland's Federal Reserve Bank.
banks have contacted the state
Only about one-third of the banks
Department of Commerce's
throughout the country are memDivision of Banks to inquire about
bers of the Federal Reserve System.
the provisions associated with state
But those banks have 70 percent of
charters.
all the state's bank deposits.
"At the present high interest
Officials in Cleveland said they
rates, banks are deciding that mem·
told the Federal Reserve Bank's
concerning " acid rain," which is
bership in the Federal Reserve
Washington headquarters that
thought to be caused by windborne
System is just too expensive," said
they're "concerned about" 37 Ohio
pollutants carried eastward from
Cleveland Federal Reserve Bank
banks which hold about $2 billion in
Ohio smokestacks.
President Willis J. Wino.
assets and which eventually couid
Rep. Thomas P. Gilmartin, !).
The primary difference between
The January meeting of the pull out of the system.
Youngstown, called for the hearing
the
two systems centers on earnings.
Southeastern Ohio Board of
to clear up apparent discrepancies
Banks
belonging to the Federal
Realtors, Inc. was held recenUy at
about the problem.
Reserve
System are required to
Oscar's Riverboat Room, Gallipolis.
The Ohio EPA has conducted an
place a percentage of savings and
President Don W. Shaffer
inquiry into the matter and agency
(Continued from page I)
checking deposits on reserve. But
presided. Mter business of the board
official Charles Taylor will report on
and to call for joint negotiations bel·
those reserves are sterile and earn
was
conducted, Don Shaffer anhis findings . Results of another
ween the two boards, to begin no
no interest.
nounced his resignation as chairman
study conducted by the federal EPA
later than mid-February, con·
The Fed uses reserve accounts to
of the MUl committee. Mike Gillum
will be discussed by Ms. Charlie
cerning the operation of the facility.
buy
large volumes of government
was elected Shaffer's successor.
Smith, Ohio coordinator for the
Rev. Hayes' motion specified there
securities
and sells them so it can
There was no speaker.
should be no retribution against any
vary
the
amount
which
-------------t " Members and guests were: Willis of the employes stationed at the banks have availableof formoney
loans.
Leadingham, Marie Leading)lam,
children's facility.
Stat.,..,hartered banks in Ohio and
John Boggs, Maxine Robbins, Dottle
Board chairperson Annette Levine
Pennsylvania,
on the other hand,
Turner, Jean Trussell, (Ralph
said
she
saw
no
reason
to
return
the
can
include
interest-bearing
governTrussell, guest), Herik Cleland, Bill
facility to the Center, since it was
ment
securities
toward
half
of their
Tony, Bill Tony, Jr., Bruce Teaford,
currently, ''operating effectively.' •
reserve requirements.
Bonnie Stutes, Connie Saunders,
Rev. Hayes motion passed by a
Switching to a state charter could
John Fuller, Mr. and Mrs. Ken
majority
vote.
result
in a substantial increase in
let's talk value.
Morgan, Morris Lewis, Harry H.
The board further authorized a
earnings
for banks.
Naugle, Becky Lane, Vicki
motion calling for the 6-48 Board to
For
example,
Equibank, N.A., of
Hauldren, James E. Sprague, Willa
As a local insurance
look for new housing for its staff,
Pittsburgh,
dropped
out of ijle
Davis, Virginia L. Smith, Ike
agency, we can help you
specifying that the 6-48 employes Federal Reserve System this week.
Wiseman, Michael Gillum and Don
find the best value for
should not be quartered with any It is now able to earn interest on $50
W.Shaffer.
your insurance dollars.
contract agency.
million formerly tied up in the
Commenting on that motion, Dr. .sterile reserves which banks need to
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Simpson said, "We ·should be in belong to the federal system.
And, we'll show you how
Admitted--Everett
Douglas,
another building, preferably in
Several bank officials argue that
to make sure your covAthens;
Kenneth
Reed,
Pomeroy;
membership
'
another
county,
to
eliminate
the
in the Fed has many
erage stays current with
Clara
Paulsen,
Hemlock
Grove;
which
provide extra
advantages
problem of identity."
your h'lme's rising value.
Billy Brewer, Portland; Rosanna
Statements from other board
confidence for their depositors.
Prater, Albany; Brian Thompaon,
members included: "They should be
Stewart; Eva Diehl, Racine; Aman·
removed, or physical barriers
da Sauvage, Albany; Lillian Gress,
established"; "There is a direct
Middleport; Ruth Mulford,
chain of command that should not be
1•
Pomeroy; Carolyn Nicholson, Radviolated"; and, "We are only a funcliff; Shelba WickHne, Racine;
ding agency ... they are the operating
(Continued from page 1)
Walter Kennedy, Pomeroy.
Bill Quickel
agency, so let them operate."
- LegiSlation to include Ohio in a
Discharged-Susan Halley, Lir ""
"Across from the
The motion passed by a majority
Midwest Educational Compact with
Jarrell,
Helen
Carpenter.
Courthouse in Pomeroy"
vote. The board further moved to
other states has passed the Ohio
form a committee to adopt specific
House.
9'/2·6677
guidelines by which the Center
"I am very proud of my legislative
board would be reviewed in tine with
record," James said, "and I am
SQUAD RUN
the 6-48 Boards' legal obligation to
gratified that my bU!s receive at·
FEDERAl
The Pomeroy Emergency Squad monitor the delivery services of its
tention and get action ill committees
KEMPER
answered a call to Mechanic St., -at·-··contracting agencies.
and on the floor of the House."
8:22 p.m. Monday for Walter Ken·
Reacting to that . motion,
INSURANCE
nedy who was taken to Veterans Executive Director Maxine S. Plum·
. COMPANY
Memorial Hospital where be was ad- mer, said she would need direction
WEDNESDAY SESSION
mitted. At 9:12p.m., the unit went to to contact the Department of Mental
A meeting of the Long Bottom
Veterans Memorial Hospital for Health and Mental Retardation in·
Community Association is listed in·
Darra Peck who was transferred to forming that state department that
correctly for 7 p.m. Thursday in the
the Holzer Medical Center.
the 648 portion of the application for
social calendar. The 11ssociation will
a new administrative annex at the meet at 7 p.m. Wednesday in the
Center was being withdrawn.
community building.
Plummer was so authorized and,
further, directed to examine other
possible means for the use of the
grant monies available through the
grant, which may be lost, due to the
nature of the joint application of the
Center and 648 Board.
Reacting to that, Dr. Bernard
JACKSONVIlLE, Fla. (AP) - A
Neihm, acting center director, said : salling trip that turned into a five"We can live without the annex."
day nightmare had a happy ending
The board passed over a for three men - including one from
suggestion offered by the Gallia Ohio - listed in satisfactory con·
County Commission that the 648 dillon early Monday by a Jackson·
Board use accounting guidelines ville hospital.
followed by othfll' county agencies.
"We couldn't have lived out there
The general feeling of the- board another day," Jerry Willis said Sun·
members was since they used state day from his bed at St. Luke's
guidelines, and since they have been Hospital, recalling how he and two
audited by the state every six mon· companions were rescued Saturday
ths without any findings against
afternoon by a tanker 95 miles at sea
them, such accounting was .un· from Jacksonville. The trto is
necessary.
'
recovering from exposure and
"We're
already
covered
up with
YOUR SURPLUS CASH
dehydration.
paperwork," one board member
Willis, 35, said he and his com·
PLUS ONE OF OUR
said, ''we don't need any more.''
panions, 21-year-old Doug Dixon of
Board members emphasized Waverly, Ohio, and 19-year-old Chris
SAVINGS PLANS EQUALS
throughout the meeting that the ac- Napolitano of Bowie, Md., sailed
PEACE OF MIND
tions taken were not motivated by from Maryland in a 40-foot sailboat
recent moves and court actions by he bought there.
the County Commission, but rather
Tuesday they were about 10 rnilles
Let your money make
by concerns they had had for some
off the southeastern Florida coast at
time . .
money ... with our special
Stuart - where they planned to sail
Chairperson Levine pushed,
through a cross-state waterway over
recipe! When you deposit
throughout the meeting, at first for a to the Gulf of Mexico to his NavalTe,
letter and later for a resolution,
Fla., home - when the sailboat sud·
your savings with us, you'ii
directed to the County Board of
deniy sank.
Commissioners telling them to, in
be preparing a warm nest
"Doug came running up on deck
essence, mind their own business.
and said the boat was flooding. I
egg that's safe and insured
Levine's suggestion drew very litwent down below, and it was like the
tle support from the full board. That
and earning high interest.
bottom had fallen out of the boat,"
body acted instead to direct its legal
Willis
said.
See us today for our ideas
council Lynn Boster to approach the
He said the boat sank quickly, and
COillliiissioners to explain to the
on bread making!
that he was dragged underneath it.
county that the two mental health
"I thought I was through. When I
boards are now working together, . swam to the surface, the life raft had
trying to solve their problems, and
Open M·W, 9 till, Thurs . &amp; Sat, 9 till2,
been turned over. All the survival
requesting that they be given the opFriday 9til3 &amp; s tl 7
gear, all our food, was lost. There
portunity to do so,
was no debris. There was nothing
'7he Friendly Bonk"
Bos~r mel with the County Comfloating og the water. n ·was as if It
mission this morning and scheduled
had ail vanished," he said.
a second meeting later In the day to
The men huddled undet a poncho
cliscuss last night's actions/ and to
on the tiny raft, with no way to con·
Middleport, o.
explore the possibility of diSnnissing
troi their direction. The)' used tennis
liti~atlon currently pending between
shoes to bail·.v~ter out. They stopped
the county and the 648 Board.
e~ch other Irom giving into thirst

Shaffer resigns
committee post

cents per ton on coal which is burned
to generate steam or electricity.
Revenues from the tax would be
used by the state's Coal Research
and Development Commission. The
agency would make low-interest
loans for installation .of
desulfurization equipment on coal·
fired boilers that do not meet air
pollution standards.

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Buyer complains

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Parent disturbed

Dear Editor:
Dear Mr. Editor:
As a parent and director of Meigs
As a purchaser of a Jaycee Coupon
County's
libraries, I am disturbed
Booklet, I feel the need to complain
by
the
quality
of education available
about one of the coupon advertisers.
in
the
Meigs
Local
School District First of all, let me say that all of
or,
to
be
more
accurate,
the lack of
my previous encounters with the
quality.
business establishments, which are
I see Meigs County's children
listed in the coupon booklet, have
before
they go to school, while they
been more than satisfactory in
are
in
school, and after they
honoring th~ir coupqns.
Recently, I contacted a local firm graduate.
I am left wondering when higb
for service. I called the company on
Monday and was told by the person school graduates have a reading
who answered my call that more level that tests as low as fourth
than likely a worker would be at my grade, whether "meaningful
residence the next day. By Friday education" (which was a hot issue
morning, with still no repair done, I during the recent strike) goes on in
made a second call to the firm. I was Meigs Local even when there is no
told, at that time, they probably strike.
Meigs Local hi!s many very bright
would~ at my house by afternoon.
and
talented children. Our schools
On the following Monday, I felt
don't
lack quality raw material that
justified in calling the firm still a
third time. By then my presumption way; but what the schools give us
seemed correct, that the firm did not cannot be called "finished producwant to bother with clientele who ts."
I have heard that Superintendent
used coupons. I was again given the
"run-around" so to speak, by being Gleason will be meeting with concerned parents on February 7 at the
told the workers would probably
come that very afternoon.· Riverboat Room of the Meigs CounFrustrated, I told the lady who an- ty Branch of the Athens County
swered not to bother, that I would Savings and Loan at 7:30p.m.
I know that many Meigs Local
call someone else.
parents
are so worried about their
My only point in aU of this is that I
children's readiness to compete in
purchased the booklet in good faith,
the world after 12 or 13 years of
since I feel the Jaycees contribute
school here.
tremendously to the good of the com·
I hope that every parent who is
munity. With a substantial amount
unhappy with the quality of
of money involved, am I being
education in Meigs Local will eorne
treated fairly? - Name withheld
to this meeting.
upon request.
Let's show Mr. Gleason that many
of us care, so that he will know that
we "care enough to want the very
beat" education for our children.
Let's tell him what we think the
beat
is and try to find a way to get it.
DANCE SCHEDULED
Sincerely
yours, Ellen Bell, RD 1,
There will be a round and square
Box 9, Langsville, OH 45741.
dance at the Senior Citizens Center,
Pomeroy, Friday, Feb. I, from 8 to
II p.m.
SQUAD CAlLED
The dance is open to the public.
The Middleport Emergency Squad
Admission is $1 for adults with
answered a call to I26 State St.,
children under 12 admitted free if
Pomeroy, at 3:02 p.m. Monday for
accompained by their parents.
Darra Peck who was taken to
Music by the Stringdusters.
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

Home
Insurance

R epresentat ve

the right
• •••
mtx

Letters of opinion are welcomed. They should be less
than 300 words long 1or subject to reduction by the editor)
and must he signed with the signee's address. Names may
be withheld upon publicatioll. However, on request,
names will. be disclosed. Letters should be in good taste,
addressing issues, not personalities.

I ...r~,.,&amp;O~~~t,:

648 Board•.•

DAVIS-QUICKEL
.INSURANCE AGENCY

The bill would also authorize use
of up to 2 percent qf the revenue to
pay operating expenses of the Ohio
Department of Energy.
Carney said he expects opposition
on the bill from utilities. But he told
the panel at the first hearing on the
measure last week that the bill
would make Ohio's coal more competitive and put miners back to
work.

Waverly man., friends rescued from
five-day Florida water nightmare
and drinking the salty ocean water.
. Saturday morning, they were
awakened by a large shark.
"We were asleep when the shark
starting bumping the raft. We had
seen sharks before, and they had circled us, but this one was determined
to get us,'' Willis said.
"Finslly, he came toward us and
rolled over to bite the raft. You could
see the teeth and you could see his
eyes staring at us. I took out my
knife (a four-inch pocket knife) and
stabbed him right forward of the
dorsal fin, next to the spine. It made
a good penetatlon. It must have
discouraged him, because he left,"
he said.

1.

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e
(USPS 145-960)

VOL. XXVIII

at
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT,

NO. 202

'

~ ,;,/'&gt;.~' &lt;

•

Richard J 9nes, president of the
Meigs County Board of Commissioners, feels It was time for the
board to review the present need for
garbage service in the county.
Jones at Tuesday's regular commission meeting explained that he
was presenting the issue for consideration since it is costing the
county $100,000 a year, which comes
from revenue sharbig, tovperate the

'

Divers returning
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (AP)
- Divers are returning to the
murky depths of Tilmpa Bay
today in search of 17 Coast Guardsmen feared lost when their cutter and an oU tanker rammed in a
tragedy that happened so fast
some victims died with startled
looks etched on their faces. .
The final toll from Monday's
collision of the cu~r Blackthorn
and the SS Capricorn likely would
reach 23, authorities said,
making the accident the Coast
Guard's worst in more than 35
years.

,

ELBERFELDS IN POM.EROY
...

0~10

SPECIAL MEETING
The Meigs County Board of Commissioners will meet In special
sessional noon on Friday, Feb.l, for
the purpose of opening bids on a van
tu be used for the chlldreu ret~lden­
tlal facUlty of the GaJlla..JacbonMelgs 648 Board.

.. :·:.:.:-:-:-::

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 30, 1980

landfill and to service the green bage business and run a packer
boxes.
truck seven days a week, we just
Jones further stated that the time cannot afford such an operation"
has come to look at the possibility of
Jones commented.
garbage pick up service in the coun·
The commissioners will study the
ty by Individual contractors.
proposal and review the situation in
Jones said he was not advocating 30 days.
abolishing the green boxes, but
Jones read a letter from the
having them serviced by individuals Department of Rehabilitation and
rather than the county.
Correction Center, Columbus, in·
"The county can't be in tlle"R'ill "' ' £orming the commissionerS that last

July the Legislature passed a Community Correections Act.
The act is designed to reduce
prison commitments of non-violent
offenders. Fifteen local govern·
mental units, cities or counties are
eligible for $10,000 planning g~ants
and subaidy payments from an an·
nual allocation of $1,000,000.
The $10,000 is for a survey to be
made in three counties, Meigs,

Litigation proceedings to be dropped
Utlgation currently pending bet- ling the 6-48 Board, met with the
ween the Gallis County Board of county co.mmission Tuesday to
Commissioners and the Gallis- discuss actions taken by the mental
Jackson-Meigs Mental Health and . health board on Monday evening.
Mental Retardation 648 Board will
During that meeting, the 648
be dismissed as the result of recent Board passed a number of motions
actions taken by the 648 Board to redefining and clarifying the
change its operating relationship relationship between the 648 Board
with its primary contracting agen- and the Center. Many of the actions
cy, the G-J-M Community Mental taken were in line with concerns exHealth Center, Inc.
pressed by the Board of ComAttorney Lynn Boster, represen- missioners and .•transmitted to the

Sohio gas goes up
CLEVELAND (AP) - The
Standard Oil Co. (Ohio), which
last week announced record
profits, has raised the prices of
Sohio and Boron gasoline sold in
Ohio, Michigan, Indiana and Ken·
tucky.
Increases of 3 cents a gallon on
wholesale prices and at self-serve
pumps were announced Tuesday.
Full-serve prices were raised 2
· cents a gallon for all grades of
gasoline.

• d
D
h Offle
.C0ffleroy
F lre eStroVS
.l '
The two-story frame home of Mr.
and Mrs. Norman Doidge, Lincoln
Hlli Road, was termed practically a
complete loss after it was struck by
fire early Wednesday morning.
Pomeroy and Middleport firemen

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f:

NECKLACES EARRINGSBRACELETSHAIR COMBS
REMEMBER HER ON
VAI.ENTINE'S DA Yl

terst from the money will be used to
award scholarships.
Guidelines for the distribution of
the money will be outlined at a
meeting of the trustees in June.
Current officers of the Carleton
College Board of Trustees are Her·
bert S. Parker, president; Dick Ash,
vice president; Robert M. Varian,
secretary and Carl B. Weese,
treasurer. Other board members
are Fred W. Crow, Jr., Orville
Brooks Sayre, John Sauvage, C. L.
Patterson, George Holman, Milton
Roush, Carroll Neig!er, Dana
Winebrenner, William Eichinger,
John Van Meter, Ernest Sisson, Jr.,
Don Houdashelt, John Lisle,
Kathryn Crow, Robert Wingett,
Aaron Sayre and Ralph Radcliffe.
All board members, with the exception of Mr. Radcliff who is
currenUy hospitalized, attended
Tuesday night 's meeting.
Meigs County Prosecutor
Frederick Crow m represented the
county at the session.

en tine

Norris urges study of Ohio system

HEART JEWELRY
'

strength of a large tract of coal
rights it holds on property underlying Syracuse.
While the Carleton College Board
of Trustees was organized in 1865
following an offer to donate land for
it by Isaac Carleton, high school
classes were not held in the structure until during the 1880s. For many
years, the facility was also the
location where Meigs County
educators obtained their teaching
certifications.
Classes were discontinued at
Carleton College in 1930 and a short
time later a portiun of the original
11~-acres of land was sold. The area
of land where the college building, a
three-story structure, stood was on
part of the property sold and the
building was razed.
The school for the mentally han'
dicapped will be known as Carleton
School in tribute to Isaac Carleton
who died in the 1870s.
In addition to donating the land for
the college, Isaac Carleton donated
a large portion of the funds for construction of the building.
Estimated cost llf the construction
is $1,118,000 with the state share
being $930,000 and the county share
from local bond money $250,000.
The trustees Tuesday night voted
to invest the $?.5,000 for six months at
the highest money market rate of in·
terest with the Farmers Bank and
Savings Co. It was indicated that in·

Jones wants garbage needs reviewed

NEW FOR SPRINGI

/

niE CENTRAL TRUST COM~

1it;_
. ....

Willis noted that the shark
provided an important wake-up call.
"H It hadn't attacked, we would
never have seen the tanker," Willis
said.
The men succeeded in attracting
the attention of the tanker ExxonLexington, and were pulled aboard
by Its crewmen, who radioed the
CoastGuard.
"
Willis said the trio had seen other
ships but "they couldn't see us. We
yelled and waved, but they didn't see
us.
"We talked to God for five days
and • . You can't help but think
about It when you know you've got to
be picked up or die,'' he said.

property. The trustees voted to invest the $25,000 for six
months at the highest money market rate of interest
with the Farmers Bank and Savings Co. Pictured front,
1-r, Rick Crow, prosecuting attorney, Herbert Parker,
president, and Milton Varian, secretary; back, Carl
Weese, treasurer and Dick Ash, vice President.

DEED SIGNED - The deed to the Carleton College
property, a 5.5 acre tract of land located in the village ·
of Syracuse, was signed Tuesday night by the Carleton
College Trustees. The property was sold to the Meigs
County Commissioners for $25,000. A school for the
mentally retarded and workshop will be erected on the

The rerna"ining 5.5 acres of
Carleton College land in Syracuse
was deeded to the Meigs County
Board of Commissioners Tuesday
night for the long-sought Meigs
County school for the mentally han·
dicapped.
Twenty of the 21 members of the
board of trustees of Carleton College
gathered at the Syracuse Municipal
Building to ink the legal instrument
that officially turns the land over to
the commissioners for the proposed
school.
The board of .commissioners also
Tuesday approved payment of a
sum of $25,000 to the Carleton
College Board of Trustees for the
property. The trustees of Carleton
College, a non-profit entity that was
originally chartered in 1865 and has
been in continuous existence ever
since, will administer the funds
derived from the sale of the property
in accordance with a court order
filed last week by Meigs County
Probate Judge Robert Buck.
Judge Buck's ruling authorizes the
Carleton College Board of Trustees
to establish a Carleton Memorial
Trust and to utilize interest derived
from the $25,000 for scholarships to
aid Syracuse youths seeking
education beyond high school and
other educational related projects in
accordance with state law.
The Carleton College Board of
Trustees is remaining intact on the

were wrapping up their work at the
scene at 10 a.m. this morning.
The Pomeroy Department was
called to the home at 6:23a.m. Wed·
nesday with Middleport answering a
mutual aid call at 6:46 a.m.
According to reports, Doidge had
fallen asleep on the couch and was
awakened by heavy smoke in the
house. He attempted to phone for a
fire department but the telephone
was dead.
He ran to the home of a neighbor
but was unable to arouse anyone. He
ran then to the Jerry Rought
residence wllere he called for the
fire department.
Only a few items were saved from
the burning home by Doidge who
grabbed up items from the dining
room on the way out of the bouse.
Walls of the home still stood this
morning but the home· was heavily
gutted and there was extensive
water damage.
Mrs. Doidge and the couple's
children had stayed overnight at the
horne of her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Ferman Moore. The Doidge home
was known In,the community as the
Ullle Coates home and . was purchased and remodeled several years
ago by Mr. and Mrs. Doidge.
Cause of the fire and monetary
losses were not · set 'this morning. There Is some Insurance
coverage.

full 648 Board by board member
Mrs. Charles Holzer.
Actions taken by the 648 Board and
recommended by the county commission include : the renewal of the
contract for services betwen the 648
Board and the Center; the payment
of monies due the Center from the
6-48 Board; the removal of 648 Board
offices from the Community Mental
Health Center located on Jackson
Pike; the announced intention of the
6-48 Board to return the operation of
theNelsonviUeAlternativeResiden·
tial Facility to the authority of the
Center; and the guarantee of
operational autonomy for the Center .
The only suggestion offered by the
county commission which was not
acted upon by the 648 Board was the
recommendationthat the 6-48 Board
use accounting guidelines followed
by other county agencies.
The general feetin~ of the board,

as reported Tuesday by Attorney
Boster to the County Commission
and Prosecuting Attorney Joseph L.
Cain, was that since they used state
guidelines and since they have been
audited by the state every six months without any findings against
them, such accounting was unnecessary.
One 6-48 Board member com·
mented during Monday evening's
meeting that he did not feel the
board should be subjected to any
more paperwork.
When asked Monday who approved expenditures of the 648
Boan(. two board members said
they did not know.
During the Tuesday meeting bet·
ween 6-48 Board representative
Boster and the county officials,
Commission President Paul D.
Niday said his board had suggested
the use c1 county accounting
(Continued on page 12)

Jackson, and Gallia. The letter
suggested that an investigation be
rilade to see what the needs are in
the three counties.
Meigs County and the city of
Pomeroy have been invited to apply
for funds under this program. A
meeting will be held in the near fur·
ture on the issue.
A letter was also read from Chris
Layh, administrator of the Meigs
County Board of Mental Health and
Retardation.
It was a copy of another letter ,
Layh had written to David Gleason,
superintendent of the Meigs Local
School District.
The letter explained that the
Board of Mental Health and Retardation was requesting the use of the
Pomeroy Junior High school, when
vacated by the senior citizens, for
the 1980-81 school year, for a school
and workshop for the mentally
retarded.
Layh explained that ?.5 children
and 21 adults are presenUy at·
tending the Guiding Hand School.
When the new building is con·
structed in Syracuse approximately
60 persons will attend.
PAYMENT APPROVED
The board voted to pay SEOEMS
$1,500 for a vehicle that has been turned over to the county.
Frank Petrie, deputy health commissioner, presented the board five
quotations from various equipment
suppliers to be considered for pur·
chasing office and clinic equipment
for the Health Department's space
in the · new Multi-Purpose Health
(Continued on page 12)

·Weather
NEW ASStsTANT COMMANDER- Sgt. Ezra (J~~~=:·
''welcomed . home'' 'by Gallla-Meigs Post C
. Ern~t
Wlgglesworth..Sgt. Sheela,usumed new assistant co0)1!18nder duties at
the local state highway patrol post Tuesday. A former resident of Meigs
. County, Sgt. Sheets' first patrdl assignment was at Steubo:nvtlle, Ohio in'
JW)e,1A86. He was transferred to the GaWa-Meigs post on Alig. 4, 1967.
Sgt. Sheets tllen transferred to Delaware, Ohio on Aug. 28, 1978. Sgt.
Sheets and·wlfe Unda have three childnm, Vicki, James and Bernard. .
1\1,

If '

Winter storm watch for tonight.
Snow- tonight. Accumulations of two
to folir Inches possible by this evening. Alow tonight around 10. Cloudy
with a goocj. chance of snow Thursday. THehigh20to25. The chance of
snow 90 percent today, tonight and
5() percent Thursday.

. OUTDOORSMAN HONORED- Art Skinner Middleport resident, was bonored Monday evenJni at a
dirmer by the Izaak Walton League of America, Ken
Amsbary Chapter. Skinner is a 35-year chl!rter mem-

ber of the club a~d has been the treasurer for the lAst 18
years. President Russ Well, left, Is pij:!ured giving a
plaque and fishing reel to Skinner from the members 11
,,pte club.

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