<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="14475" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/14475?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-30T02:32:41+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="45582">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/7c314cd9a21524379c33ee2ee7201d5b.pdf</src>
      <authentication>5fdcc863c7f3ccecf0d8332ca738d964</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45187">
                  <text>•

•

nvacy surrounds reunions
WINTHR

b Dick.C valli

p
NOBODY WANTO 10 61T N~XT
W /11€ ON l"HE::6CHOOL. BLJS .•.

I c:oN 1T KNON WHY, BUT
NOf30DY
SEE=/v\6 TO L.ii&lt;E: ME.

! NEVER &lt;*=T \NVITEI? 1'0

6L&amp;EPOVE:R,6,

OR BIR.Tl-lf::~,y PARTIE6. ··

WEST ~!NT, N.Y. (AP) - The
liberated hostages awoke on U.S.
soil today for the first time in 14¥..
months and their sympathetic
govenunent gave them what they
wanted most- privacy.
·
Privacy to become reacquainted
with children grown a precious year
older, privacy to re-establish contact with spouses alone for those
many nights, privacy to reflect on
j&gt;icklng'up their lives.
Today was set aside for a con·
tinll!ltion of the reunion with no intrusion from outside.
The hostage group was whisked
away to a retreat at the U.S.
Military Academy shortly after they
landed Sunday, but not so swiftly
that they CO\IId miss a whiff of what
awaits them In coming days - an
outpouring of emotion !lOt ex-

perienced since the prisoners of war
came home from North Vietnam in
. 1973.
"It was just so danmed nice that
everyone was together," said a
beaming Steve Adallls, manilger of
the Hotel Thayer where the former
hostages and their families spent
their first night together since their
· ordeal began a world away.
One of the 52, Army Master Sgt.
. Regis RBgan, left immediately for
· Johnstown, Pa., to see his mother,
Anna, 69, who was taken to a
hospital coronary unit~after greeting
him on the telepho11e Wednesday.
After a night of gourmet meals
and quiet reunions with their
families- some watched the Super
Bowl while the hotel showed the
. movie '101 Dalmations" for the
children - the guests started

e

50M~TIMC:6

I Yvt::iNDER IF IT
COWLD BE MY FSR60NALITY.
Vol. 26,

No. 199

sUrring about the hotel at dawn
today.
Virgil Sickrnann of Krakow, Mo.,
father of Marine Sgt. Rodney V.
"Rocky" Sickrnann, 23, wandered
down the driveway to a large group
of reporters behind a barricade. He
said that Rocky embraced him as he
got off the airplane and said:
"Thank God, Dad."
"He is bouncing back to the same
old Rocky who left home a couple of
years ago," the elder Sickmann
said, "but he will need a Jot of lime, I
think. I can speak for aU the hoys ,
and they will need a lot of lime~ "
The only hostage with 110 family
present is Clair Barnes, 35, of Falls
Church, Va. , a bachelor and state
departme11t communications
specialist who had been In Iran only

his son had been issued.

He sail! families were introducing
their hostage-kin to each other. It
was mostly small talk, he said:
"This is so-and-so and that is suchan~such and we did thls-an~that."
He said Donald is "doing fme."
It seemed that the entire nation
shared In the joy of the hostages,
their wives, parents, children and
sweethearts. Yellow ribbon became
the national symbol for the day.
Yellow was everywhere.
Americans celebrated the newfound freedom of 52 of their countrymen in many other ways. In
Chalfonte, Pa., 52 residents took turns ringing an antique fire bell. In
South Paris, Maine, Christmas
lights blinked on again. In Newark,
N-::1., fire sirens howled for thr"!!

minutes and 250 firefighters paused
for a moment of silence in remembrance of the eight American servicemen who died In last April's
failed rescue attempt.
And the hostages' . bus caravan
passed eight flagpoles flYing the
colors at half staff.
The hostages' private time will
end abruptly Tuesday, with a 9 a.m.
news conference for those who want
to share their story with the nation.
Many details already have been told
by some, and most paint a captivity
that was as brutal, as austere and as
terrifying as the families had
feared.
·
That chore over,'the entire group
has been invited to fly to Washington
for the official welcome led by a
president only one week in office.

•

•

enttne

at
idd

1911

five days at the time of the takeover.
Because his mother is ill in San
Diego, the only person who met him
was a friend from the state department
The first fonnal ceremony for the
group will come Tuesday af the
White Ho.ise, where they will be
joined by the families of the eight
servicemen killed during an · abortive rescue attempt in AP.,rll.
Bruce L. Laingen, 57, of Bethesda,
Md., the charge d'affaires and top
U.S. diplomat in Iran when the embassy was seized, will speak on
behalf of the hostages.
After dinner Sunday, Ernest Cook
of Memphis, Tenn., father of former
hostage Donald Cooke, 25, wandered
outside into the sub-freezing night,
wearing the l)ew fur-hooded jacket

2 Sections, 1'Z pages

Ohio Monda

A

15 cents

Inc.

Reagan plans
royal welcome
Suspect dies in gun battle

by Eel Sullivan

Pr.iscilla's Pop
WHAT WRONG Will-i
&lt;rOU TW? THI$ 1$ R::R
lHE 6ACHEL..ClR$ CW6 ./

ARIJNGTON, Texas - A man who police said was suspected ol
klliing one motorcycle rider and critically wounding another died in a
hall of pollee gunfire Sunday after officers using tear gas stormed a
holise where he was hiding.
The man, who police said had complained in the past about motorcycles being ridden near his home, opened fire on officers about 7 p.m.
Sunday as they approached his house near the end of a four-hour standoff.
A 14-year-old boy llad been shot and killed by a sniper about 3 p.m.
Sunday as he wu riding his motorcycle near the man's house, said
Sgt. PerranSpencer of the Arlington Police Department said.

Bomb explosion rips Iran bank
c..

SAN FRANCISCO- A bomb blast ripped the Bank Melli Iran early
today with an explosion strong enough to shatter windows on buildings
across the street, pollee said.
Thore were no lnjuriea and no one cia~ reoponsibillty for the
12:35 a.m. PST blast at the bank, located on Montgomery Street in San
Francisco's financial dl!trict, a police spokesman said.
The explosion blew out all of the windows in the Iranian bank, which
had offices in the .Wells Fargo Building, as well as the windows in the
Union Bank office across the street, the spokesman said.

c.C:
C"

WHERE'$ I.,.QUR

YeA~/

9ENS~

OF
DUTY?

Sisters die in house fire
PONTIAC, Mich. - A fire that apparently started in a couch swept
through a wood-frame house, killing two young sisters and injuring
their babysitter and her two children, authorities said.
Fire Marshal Bobby Cone identified the victims of Sunday's blaze as
Nicole Bobier, 3, and her sister, Amy, 2. Cone said the children died
shortly before 2 a.m., from smoke inhalation and burns.
He said the babysitter, Mary Odie, 23, and the woman's !&gt;-year-old
daughter and 9-month-old son were treated at a local hospital after the
fire.

Fog, smoke cause 1-75 pileups
VALDOSTA, Ga. - Fog and dense smoke from a smouldering
swamp fire cut visibility to zero along a Jl)·mile section of Interstate
75, resulting In traffic accidents that killed three people and injured 15,
said state Department of Transportation officials.
The stretch of highway about 15 miles north of Valdosta was closed
about five hours but was reopened by late morning. DOT spokesman
Jerry Stargell said traffic was rerouted along a 12-mile detour while
the interstate was closed. He said smoke along the detour route was so
heavy traffic had to be led by_a pilot car.

WASHINGTON (AP) - President
, Reagan, saying the freed hostages
"don't need any outsiders" at their
reunion, 'was staying on the sidelines
today while fii:tnlng up plans to give
them a red-earpet welcome at the
White House.
'with all the hoopl,a usually reserved for visiting heads of state,
Reagan will salute the hostages with
a ceremony Tuesday on the South
Lawn of the White House and a
reception in the East Room.
As the freed hostages' plane flew
over the Atlantic toward home Sunday, Reagan opened the second
week ci his administration by
assembling their relatives at the
White House for a pep talk and sendoffto New York.
"We won't be going with you to
New York because we feel very
deeply that you don't need any out·
siders," he told 139 relatives in the
ornate, gold-chandeliered State
Dining Room. "This is a moment for
you and for them."
The president praised the courage

of the 52 Americans held captive so
long, and then told the families:
"I think it might be appropriate
here to say a word about the CO~Vage
of all ~f you, the dignity with which
you have horne this, the courage
when all you could do was wait
through the many disappoiniments.
Not only those who are coming
home, but all of you too - America
has to be very proud of you."
The president's eyes swelled with
tears and his voice choked with
emotion as he said :
"Since we all didn't go to church
this !TX&gt;rning because d. this
(ceremony), can we just say, Dear
God, Thank You. Thank You for ·
what You've done. And God give you
the understanding and the patience
that you'll need now with regard to
this homecoming and get-together.
Amen."

At his side, his wife Nancy wept
openly.
Vice President and Mrs. George
Bush also talked with the families.

Four hurt in fiery accident
A fiery two-car crash on U.S. 35
Sunday resulted in injuries for four
people, according to the GalliaMeigs Post of the Ohio Highway
Patrol.
The patrol said an eastbound car
driven by Michelle Howard, 18, Rt.
2, Jackson, stopped to make a left
turn and was struck In the rear by
another eastbound auto driven by
Toshiyukl Taguschi, 23, Rio Grande.
According to the report, the
Howard car burst into flames and
went off the right side of the road intoadltch, demolishing it. Taguschi's
vehicle was heavily damaged.
Both drivers were injured, Including a passenger in the Howard
car, Mabel Evans, 72, Rt. 3, Oak
Hill, and another in Taguschi's auto,
Kumi Nakano, 20, Rio Grande.

Howard, Evans and Taguschi were
not treated, but Nakano was taken to
Holzer Medical Center by the Gallia
EMS, where he was treated and
released for cuts.
Taguschi was cited by the patrol
for.assured clear distance.
No injuries were reported in a onecar crash in Meigs County Saturday
night.
Troopers said Clarence R. Barnett, :U, Reedsville, was northbound
on CR 36 at 9:25p.m. when he lost
control of his car and collided with
an embankment, causing moderate
damage.
Dorothy 0. Kennard, 41, Trimble,
was not injured when her car struck
and killed a deer onSR 7 at 6:55p.m.
Saturday, causing moderate
damage to her car.

SPRING-LIKE WEATHER- Spring probably hasa't "spnuig" yet
but some of the y01111ger set took advantage of Sunday's sprlng•llke
weather- temperatures in the 60s- to shed some of the winter clothing,
such as Bob Petrie, Middleport, who was peeled down to a t-sblrt and
slacks lD downtown Middleport.

OHSA checks explosion site
Officials from the Charleston
region of the Occupational Safety
and•Health AdminiStration (OSHA)
were schedulll!i to arrive . at Foote
Mineral Company's Graham Plant
near New Haven at !0:30a.m. today, .
to begin their investigation into the
explosion and flash fire which occurred Friday.
Charles Freeman Johnson, SO,
Clifton, died Saturday morning in
University Hospital, Columbus,
from bums suffered in the accident.
Leroy James, Mason, also injured

in the el&lt;)llosion, was listed In "guarded critical condition" this morning

at University Hospital's Bums Center.
William D. Beard, plant manager,
said the explosion and fire occurred
at 4 p.m. Friday in the plant's shipping department.
Following the explosion, both victims were transported to Pleasant
Valley Hospital, and were later
taken to University by Point
Pleasant 'and New Haven Rescue
squads.

, Seek community participation
In conjunction with a national welcome for the former 52 hostages in
Washington, D. C., Tuesday, Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews and
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman are requesting that their communities become a part of the official welcome
The two mayors are asking that American flags he displayed
throughout both towns on Tuesday. They are also requesting that church bells and other bells at various locations in the community be rung
atl2noon.
Sunday afternoon when._.the hostages arrived in the United States
from Germany, some church bells in the Big Bend area were rung and
sirens sounded in some locations.
The mayors request that all residents stop for a moment of silent
prayer when the bells ring tomorrow at noon.

Police probe escape attempt
NEW YORK - Authorities were trying to detennine today who was
targeted for freedom tn a daring but bungled attempt by a man and a
woman to pluck an illlll8te from atop a Manhattan federal prison by
using a hijacked helicopter.
The escape attempt fizzled In mid-morning Sunday when the
hijackers gave up trying to cut through a grating over a rooftop
recreation area at the Metropolitan Correction Center in downtown
Manhattan's Foley Square near City Hall.

"BUT HOW CAN I TELL IF ITS Al'TRACTIVE,
BECOMING AND THE REAL YOU IF YOU
WON'T LET ME SEE THE PRICE TAG?"

"AT LEA,SJ WE WON'T STARVE, DARLING!
THREE CAN OPENERS!"
'

No leads found in man's death
AKRON, Ohio - Stark County Jaw enforcement officers said Sunday
they had no leads in the weekend shooting death of a Louisville, Ohio,
towing service operator.
William L. Horton, 41, had been shot seven times at close range with
a high-caliber handgun, according to Chief Deputy George A. Hardesty.
"It was an execution-type slaying - vehement and vicious," Hardesty said.
He said the victim had received a telephone call about 12 :30 a.m.
Saturday requesting a tow truck ln Marlboro TownRhip.

Weather
Cloudy and colder tonight with lows near 30. Cloudy and colder with
scattered showers or snow flurries Tuesday. Highs near 40. Chance of
precipitation 20 percent tonight and 30 percent Tuesday. Winds northwesterly !0..20 mph tonight.

"NQ.W WE'LL A'LL REST OUR HEADS ON THE

TABLE FOR TEN MINIIJTES AS PARlf OF
MY ENERGY CONSERVATION PROGRAM!"

"MY.ki!ISBAND CAN'T T-OLERATE LATE MEALS, SO I'VE GOT
ANEW ENGLAND BOILED IlNNEA IN HERI'i WI'TH MEl"

""FHE VOlE IS TWO TO ONE, WILMA1 BUSTER
AND I WANT TO WATCH M.A.S.H.I"

Exteoded Ohio ForecMt- Wednesday through Friday:Fair Wed-

nesday. A chance of snow nurries thursday and mainly in the northeast half of the state Friday. Highs in the 20s to low 30s. Lows 10-20.

'

...

SIGNS OF THE TIMES - Freelag of the holtagea IUid their
bomecomillg brought rucllou from Bob Klag, King Builders, and Veroon Weber of the Quality Prtot Shop, left, who keep the community in·
fonned and entertained wltb ooutantly changing slgus .at their

buslneues. King ch011e a more patriotic lign relating to proteet1011 of
freedom with a oae nation under God UJed on the other side of the alp
while Weber kidded about his sign about Iran being eeDBored.

"

�Commentary

January 26, 198.1
The DailY sentinel

Balance, like beauty, lies
in the eye·of the beholder
WASIDNGTON - In nominating
James G. Watt to become secretary
of the interior, Ronald Reagan invited controversy. Last :week con·
troversy came to call. My guess, for
whatever it may be worth, is that

cast in the unconvincing role of the'
pot that calls the kettle black. Mr.
Watt, they cried, was an extremist..
As the saying goes, it takes one to
know one.
Rightly or wrongly, such outfits as

]ames ]. Kilpatrick
controversy over the Watt
nomination will hang around for
quite some time.
·The saying around Washington is
that only three Cabinet jobs : maybe four - are worth having. Af.
ter you've parceled out State, Defen·
se, Treasury and perhaps Justice,
what's left? The conventional
cynicism says, nothing much. But
Interior in the coming decade might
well prove to be filth dominion of
: great importance. As energy sup. plies diminish, Interior's role will
enlarge.
A secretary's authority extends
not only to the obvious forms of
energy- to oil wells, coal mines and
shale deposits - but to other areas
that are peculiarly vital to the West.
He deals in water rights, grazing
rights, Indian lands and the har·
vesting of timber. The secretary is
chief steward of our national parks
and forests. His physical domain,
measures in acres or square miles,
,
. ·is unbelievably vast.
· At last week's confirmation
bearings, the operative word :was
"balance." If Mr. Watt's supporters
and opponents agreed upon anything
(and they agreed upon very little ), it
was on the necessity for "balance"
in reconciling the conflict between
conserving and developing these
resources. As a score of witnesses
· came and :went, it became evident
that balance, like beauty, lies in the
eyes of the beholder.
The opposition's view of " balance" might have been more im·
pressive if these critics had demon·
strated a greater affection for balan. ces in the past. As it :was, such
· calamity howlers as Brock Evans,
David Brower, Russell Peterson and
Gaylord Nelson found themselves

the Sierra Club, the Friends of the
Earth, the Audubon Society and the
Wilderness Society have lost some of
the clout they used to wield in the
name of conservation. Their general
idea has seemed to be that the
national interest :would best be served by leaving the :whole of Alaska to
six backpackers, and to God. Insisting that wilderness areas belong
to "all the people," they have advocated policies that would ef· .
fectively exclude 99.999 percent of
the people from them. This is the
new elitism, and it has laid an egg on
Capitol Hill.
Mr. Watt. by contrast, is· per·
ceived by his foes as a reincarnation
o{ Genghis Khan. lt-l£ supposejl that,
once in power, he would ravage the
forests and lay waste the mountains.
At the end of the glorious rainbow,
the golden arches of McDonald's. He
would sell out to the cattlemen, the
sheep. men, the timberman, the strip
miners and the drillers. Plunder!
Rapine! Exploitation! No wonder
that former Senator Nelson, now a
lobbyist lor the Wilderness Society,
was alanned.
My own feeling is that neither of
the Caricatures bears much resem..

blance to the truth. The en·
virorunentalists, depicted as ex·
tremists, are not mere boys :with
butterfly nets pursuing a dream of
Eden. And I have not the slightest
notion that Mr. Watt, a native
Westerner, intends to despoil the
. land of his birth. In recent years as
president of the Molintain States
Legal Foundation, Mr. Watt several
times took positions in adversary
litigation that dismay his foes today.
My own review of the litigation per·
suades me that more often than not,

he took the sensible side.
A minor example may suffice. Mr.
Watt's opponents want to prohibit
motorized rafts on the Colorado
River, because tbey "interfere with
the sounds of silence." Mr. Watt
argues that in the roaring twnult of
the Colorado, motor noises can
barely be heard ; he :would yield this
.small distraction for the larger gain
of safer access. Who's the extremist.
The same Election Day that dumped Gaylord Nelson in Wisconsin
elevated Ronald Reagan in the
nation - and Jim Watt is Ronald
Reagan's man. His policies will be
President Reagan's policies. That's
what the election was all about. If
such policies dlsplea~ the en·
vironmentalists, they know :where to
find the polls in 1984.

at

Today in history.

• •

Today is Monday, Jan. 26, the 26th day of 1981. Thereare339days left in
the year.
Today's highlight in history:
On Jan. 26, )942, the United States landed its first expeditionary force in
Europe in World War II. The troops went ashore in Northtrn Ireland
On this date:
·
In 1841, British sovereignty was proclaimed over Hong Kong.
In 1934, Gennany signed a non-aggression pact with Poland.

Southern tops Wahama

l

· F~A.BJJT

~ W/&gt;.11 Iff' ~
A~~R(

.

cf INiel\\oR.•'f I'll\

'

~ .~tLtx&gt;~
GooD Q}Jt?...v,wT

'#J. cl~---r

~~~~~ ·

Reag~ :naive or fundamentally incompetent?
purpose of improving their chances
By Robert Walters
WASIDNGTON (NEA) - Is it of winning an election.
If the second statement is correct,
possible that the nation's alrea~y
troubled economy deteriorated the citizenry ought to brace itseU for
dramatically in the brief 2~ months four years of governance at the han·
between Ronald Reagan's election ds of a president :who is hopelessly
naive if not fundamentally in·
as president and his inauguration1
There is absolutely no evidence to competent.
Consider the record of recent mon·
support such a proposition, but
ths,
beginning with Reagan's
that's the only charitable explanation for Reagan's apparent remarks :when asked about the
decision to back away from his economy at a press couference on
pledge to prpduce an early solution Nov. 6, two days after his election:
" I expect to move as swiftly as
to the country's economic problems.
There are two more conventional possible. I think this js the most im·
explanations for the furious back- portant thing . I think it :was the issue
pedaling now under way within the of the campaign. I think it is what
the American people told us with
Reagan camp:
- Reagan was well aware during their votes they :wanted, and so we 'll
the campaign that the simplistic move instantly on that."
At the top of the list of proposed
solutions he was offering the voters
would not work well, but he per- · remedies was the 30 percent reducsisted in pursuing those themes tion in individual income taxes,
because President Carter :was very spread over three years and begin·
ningJan. l, 1981.
vulnerable on economic issues.
Mter discovering that such a
- Reagan truly believed that his
ill-conceived nostrwns (balancing scheme would produce a loss of apthe federal budget, for example, by proximately $2 billion a month in
merely eliminating "waste, fraud, federal revenues, Reagan's aides
abuse and mismanagement") would leaked :word that they'd prefer to
promptly and efficiently produce the postpone the cuts until next swn·
mer. So much for tax relief.
desired results.
There's · also Reagan's campaign
If the first statement is accurate,
promise
to balance the federal
Reagan joins a long tine ct.
·budget
no
later
than his third year in
distinguished politicians who
office
a
commitment
already
knowingly peddled unfilfillable
by
the
man
he
picked
to
abandoned
promises to the voters for the sole

be treasury secretary, Donald T.
Regan.
The budget will be balanced no
earlier than Reagan's fourth year in
office, says Regan, and that will occur only "if everything works well
and nothing else changes." In other
words, don't bet on the fourth year
either.
Reagan may lack a coherent
economic policy, but he's surely not
at a loss for trial balloons, well·
placed leaks and assorted other
devices that leave the impression of
chaos and confusion in his administration.

predictions" about "huge budget
deficits" during his tenure in the
White House.
Perhaps it's time f9r Reagan to
answer the central question
repeatedly asked but studiously
avoided throughout his campaign:
How can he simultaneously reduce
income taxes, increase defense
spending and balance the budget?

OOONESBURY

ByRobertJ. Wagman
WASHINGTON (NEA ) -One of
the most vexing and controversial
questions facing Ronald Reagan's
administration - at least within its
own ranks - is whether to continlle
the embargo on U. S. grain sales to
the Soviet Union.
Iri response to the Soviet invasion
of Afghanistan, President Carter on
Jan. 4, 1980, embargoed all such
sales in excess of the 8 million tons a
year covered ·in a fiv.,.yelir contract
now entering its fifth year. The
Soviets :were thus prevented from
buying an additional 13 million tons
of corn, 4 million tons of wheat and 2
million tons of soybeans.
Carter put the issue of the embargo's continuance squarely in
Reagan's lap by renewing the on.,.
year proclamatioo for another year
rather than allowing it to expire. If
Reagan wants the embargo .ended,
he will have to issue an order of his
own to countermand Carter's.

_Transition sources report that a
split has arisen over the matter
among Reagan's advisers.
Candidate Reagan firmiy opposed
the embargo - espedally in front of
farm audiences. And John Block, the
Incoming agriculture secretary, has
spoken out against the embargo in
speeches and at his Senate confinnation hearings.
But a different opinion is held by
members of Reagan's foreign policy
transition team, :who want to send
the Soviet Union a clear message the
United States will not be pushed
around anymore. They are urging
that the embargo be retained for
now because the Soviets might
misinterpret its lifting as a sign of
weakness.
Further complicating the debate
are the embargo's mixed effects
upon U. S. farmers and upon the
Soviet Unio!'.
The embargo has not hurt the
American farmer all that muc~ ..

Letter to editor
Is this legal???
Dear Sir&lt;
Someone juat decided Racine and
Syracuse villages needed a sewer
system, all well and good.
I didn't concern myseH too much
as I had juat completed a septic set
up complete with county permits
and approvals and a haH·mile of
leach bed. They asked and I agreed
to allow them to cr088 my property
with the necessary sewer line for
which right I was pald. Still O.K.
. Jan. 00, I received a per month bill
for $8.40. I journeyed to Racine to
see what it was for. I w8!1 told by a
gentleman in the just. opened office it
was to pay interest on some money
borrowed to build the system due to
a lack of sufficient funds from a
government grant.
How long, I asked, unW the
system is in operation - not more
than 600 days because that's what
the agreement said between .•ystem
organizers and contractors. at :whlrh
time a charge of $16.80 would be pu~

•

HI, I)(JA!l. l

[}/{) '1'01/ ll4)1;
ANIC£ 0AY?

I

BY SCOTT WOLFE
ROCK SPRINGS - What is more
exciting than the "Friday night
fights"'' Well , a crowd of more than
1,400 poured into l..arry·R. Morrison
g)1tmasiwn saturday evening for
the Meigs County Jaycees' Boxing
matches :would definitely answer
"The Saturday night fights!"
The largest crowd ever to witness
a Meigs County Jaycee sponsored
match was on hand.
Jaycee Brian Conde termed the
ev~ nt a " huge success" and ex~
pressed .his appreciation to those
who gave their support to the local
boxers.
The evening started out on a high
note in a highly competitive bout
between Glouster's. Dennis Davis
a nc! Ripley's Rick l:lalcher, who are
12 and 13 years old respectively. The
bout, won by Hatcher, was a heated
contest that kept the en ·wd on the
edge of Its sea t the entire evening.
The always tough Meigs County
boxing club, headed by Roger
Stewart, provided the hometown
fans with a Jot of excitement. The
Meigs club has become inc,easingly
stronger on each outing and continued to build with every match.
Meigs had a successful evening as
it claimed five out of nine matches.
Winners :were James Acree, Scott
Neigler, Brian Tannehill, Ben

Coterill, and Roger Coterill. This
quintet had awesome perfonnances
in the ring :with a lot of hard-fought
action. Despite performing well,
Charles Whittington, Tim Cassell,
Brad Robinson, and Brian Nitz dropped bouts.
Overall, there were 00 bouts and a
tough man competition won by Tim
Phillips. Four tough man com·
petition bouts were slated, but were
cancelled due to the fact that the
participants were medically
disqualified.
Seven clubs participated in the
event including Meigs, Athe~.
Glouster, Ripley, Coshocton,
. Crooksville, and Logan. ·
The most exciting bout of the night
was a healed contest between
Glow.ter's Leon Butcher and Meigs'
Roger Colerill.
'
The quality match saw Coterill
take the upper hand in the second
round, then after a competitive
finale Coterill made a decisive pun·
ch at the bell to emerge the winner.
Coterill received s~ 'ing ovation
to cap a thrilling evening.
Meigs county sheriff James Prof·
fltt presented trophies to the win·
ners, while the runner-up in each
bout was presented a medal for their
efforts.
Below is a list of results:

Red Corner

Bo)Cer - Club'
Denn is Oc1v is. Glouster
x Joe Dfx on, G lous ter
x J ohn Jones, Glaus fer

SOUTHERN (79)- K. Wolfe 14·1·
Teaford 7'6' 20; Cardone 2·2·6;

29 ;

McNi cho l 3·0-6; Curfman 3·0·6; R.
Wolfe 2-0·4; Brown 2-0-4; Rees 1·0·2;
Roseberry 1·0·2; Pape 0·0·0; Hem·
sley 0·0·0. Totals 35-9-79.
WAHAMA (56) - Gibbs 7-5·19;
Roush 5·0·10; Weaver 4·0-8; Fowler
3·0·6; Barnitz 2-0·4; Gray 1·1·3;
Ingels 1·0·3; Sisk 1·6·2; Gilland 1·0·2;

Kitchen 0·0·0. Totals 25·6·56.

Score by quarters :

Southern
Wahama

Sports briefs.
FOOTBAlL
PIDLADELPIDA (AP) - Joe
Kuharich, coach of the Philadelphia
Eagles from 1964-l!l69, died at
Graduate Hospital while his former
National Football League team
. played in the Super Bowl, officials
said.
Kuharich, 63, spent years battling
multiple myeloma, a form of bone
cancer. The aliment was diagnosed
in 1970, and Kuharich later recalled
that doctors gave him two years to
live.
Kuharich, whose record with the
Eagles was 211-41-l, was fired in 1969
when the club was st&gt;ld to present
owner Leonard Tose. He coached at

19 17 18 25--79
10 15 13 1tr-56

• •

Notre Dame from 1959 to 1962 with a
17-21 record, making him the only
Fighting Irish football coach ever
with a losing career record.
GOLF
PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP)
Australian David Graham holed a
four-loot birdie putt on the 72nd hole,
capping a final round :&gt;-under-par 66
and a one-stroke victory over Lon
Hinkle in the $300,000 Phoenix Opeq
GoU Tournament.
Graham acquired the sixth victory
of his !~year American Tour career
with a 268 total, 16 strokes under par.
Hinkle, who came from six shots
back with nine holes to play, had a
spectacular, S.under-par 63 final
round.

•

Ray Smlth , R i pley
x Tony Jerett, Ripley
x Da n McKee. Gl ouster
Ken ny M cC iellrmd, Glouster
John COI I1n s, Glouster
x Scott N elgler, Meigs
x Jim N elson , CoShoc ton
x Brian Tannehill , M ei gs
Brian Ni tz , M eigs
Jack Jerett. Ripley
x s en CotriiL Meigs
Tom Fletcher, Coshocton
Mark Davee, Athens
x Scott Nixon, Glouster
x Sco tt Berry, Glouster
Leon Butcher, Glouster

111 CIIU18tnet

11-.1111
·
- Oldo ·
DEVOTED ro THE INTEJIEST OF THE MEIGS-III.UON AREA

ROBERTL. WINGETI

'

DALE RO'IliGEB, JR.

--

BOB HOEFLICH

charges.
Pay most bills by phone, write checks and earn
5114% interest compounded continuously ... all
with no minimum balance and no monthly servic~ charges. You can even get a free VISA card!
Here's how it works:
Pay your bills by phone. Just give us a call and
we can automatically pay most bills for you.
Available toll-free, 24 hours a day, seven days a
week from anywhere in the U.S. No checks to
write. No postage to pay. What could be easier?
Earn interest on NOW Checking. Our checking
plan is designed to make, not cost, you money.
You 'll earn 51/4% interest compounded continu·
ously ... the highest amount allowed by law. And
there are no minimum balance requirements or
service charges.

II tl
.I!J l!) f&amp;
lZJ l!J t!J
~

AgeWt.

Tom Da·rr. Cos hocton

The Daily Sentinel

.

12
18
17
14
15
16

11
12
22
9
14
11
14
9
20
20
21
18
24
21

Blue Corner

Age
13
16
17
14
16
16
11
14

Name - Club
x Rick Hatcher, RJpley
Greg Caddell , Coshocton
Char les Whittington . Meigs
x Ja'mes Acree, Meigs
x Leon Farrell. Coshoc ton
Mike Thomas, Crooksvi ll e
Tirn Cassell , Meigs
K Denver Scarberry. Rip ley
x Miguel Guzzo, A thens
Ma tt Jones. Coshocton
Brad Robinson, M eigs
J . J . Johnson. Coshoclon
x R lck .R oyer , Coshocton
x Trqy Gatt ar t. Coshocton
Tony Rangernden, Athens
x Seth Garcia, Athens
x Dt1n Clarkson, Ripley

92
150
150
125
137
131
89
112
152
70
100
86
108
73
175
171
180
165
163
170

Jetl Bush. Logan
John Bush. Logan

x -Roger Cater il l, Meigs
x -'-- Denotes winners.

Kl!nt St. 82, Ohio U. 8tl
Loyola, til. t%, Oklahoma City 86
Michigan St. 74, Pu~due 68
Minllf~ota

Clnl'innatl 116, SU .ouis 57

O'cl~o~ ht ull 86, W . Tut~s St. 69

o..yton

85. Marquette 73
DrMkc ft9, Wld1itu St. 88
R.Mich!HIIII 58. 1\nw\inM Green 65
lndlunll 93. Nu•·tll wt·:~lt: rn 511
Kun~t'l iV\ f'•lh•nultJ Si

•

ABC

'

DEF

GHI

JKL

MNO

PRS

TUV

WXY

~
-

l2J

~

Get the highest Interest. No one pays you more
than Diamond Savings. With 365/360 Continuous
Compounding, the 51/4% interest you earn on
our Pay-by-Phone/NOW account has an effective
.annual yield of 5.4671%.
Even our VISA is free. You can qualify for a VISA
charge at no cost simply by maintaining an ac• tive Pay-by-Phone/NOW account. Apply for your
card when you open the account.
Only Diamond Savings offers all these services
with no minimum balance and no service
charges. And w~·re still a complete savings
center with lots of good ideas on mortgage
loans, Money Market Certificates and more.
St~p in today for all the details!

PAYB~PHONE

WI.
85

••
••••
••••
••••

DIAMOI'D SAVINGS
ANJ LOAN COMPANY

Formerly Athens County Savings and Loan
216.W. MAIN STREET
POMEROY, OHIO
992· 6655

MON -TU ES·WE D· FR I
9 am til6 pm
THURS -SAT
9 am til Noon

College results
Jtll)W~.:ST

.

'

160
148
122
131
139
73
112
19 18)
10 59
12 97
10 93
14 115
10 75
20 172
21 167
16 176
22 155
18 152
21 165

1\r!ullt!)l :$6, s.rllinoill 47
~hlc nHo 83, Knox 12

'I

Wahama will now have a week in
which to regroup before welcoming
county-rival Point Pleasant next
Friday night at Wahama. Point
Pleasant will be seeking revenge
over the White Falcons after suffer·
ing a P,.ir of setbacks to the Bend
area cagers last year which should
make for an exciting night of
baskegball action.

•

True, its initial effect was to depress
farm prices. For example, the price
of corn fell to about $2.00 a bushel.
But a combination of slimmer
drought and record exports has
driven com back up to a healthy
$3.40.
Neither has the embargo been a
debilitating to the Soviet Union as
was forecast. The Soviets probably
imported mly about 5 million
bushels of grain fewer than they had
intended before the embargo thanks
to their increased purchases from
other countries.
However, they had to buy that
grain at premiwn prices - about $1
billion more than U. S. farmers
would have charged. This has
caused serious foreign currency
problems for their centrally planned
economy. Ironically, U. S. grain ex·
ports were pushed to record levels
more or less as a result of the embargo.
The Soviets ·made a huge grain
purchase from Argentina, :whose
traditional customers - including
Italy, Spain, Japan and Colombia were then forced to turn to the
United States for much of their
grain.

-l:dl...

Southern committed just nine tur·
novers.
Coach Howie Caldwell's Little
Tornadoes made it a clean sweep by
capturing the preliminary contest
by a narrow 46-41 margin.
The win gives the Southern
reserves an ll·2 slate while Coach
Tom Cullen's Little Falcons fell to
l&gt;-4 after putting UP. a gallant fight.
Southern actually :won the game at
the foul line :where they connected on
22 of 34 attempts. Wahama.outgoal·
ed the hosts 1:&gt;-12 but hit on II of 18 ·
free throw tries which spelled the
difference.
Scott Fredrick, Chris Bostic and
Zane Beegle had 12, 12 and 10 points
reSIJCCtively for the winners while
Donnie VanMeter and Wayne
Greene had 11 and 10 points for the
White Falcons.

1400 attend Pay-by-Phone/
•
braxing event
minimum balance.

There :was, for example, the notion
of having the new president declare
a special state of economic
emergency. That trial balloon disintegrated only two days after it :was
unall!!piciously launched.
Then there was the leaked news
story that Reagan's aides were to
meet with him in early January "to
present him for the first time with
their grim predictions for huge
budget deficits during his first term
unless deep cuts are made in
politically popular programs."
Where have these people been
during the past decade • Why is a
man who campaigned throughout
1980 on a pledge to balance the
federal budget only now receiving
" for the first time" his staff's "grim

on to operate the system. If this
$16.80 is to operate on, doe sit also
pay off the loan? If not does my $8.40
per month go on also 1
I asked, if you don't have enough
will you borrow more and let me pay
that Interest too? Does every
resident here pay - no, only proper·
ty owners - will It later be like the
water system, more for a business,
or a trailer court or a school building
or Is that settled now1 I'm not sure.
By the way, who decided I needed
thia and where can I. get a' grant to
pay my share. Looks like I have to
pay for something I don't need don't want - don't have and may
never get. Is it really legal for
someone to borrow money without
my approval and make me pay it
back? - Brooks Sayre, Box I,
Syra~use. Oh., 992-5280.
P.S. - I Just heard from . my
neighbor that my septic tank rnWit
be filled with gravel. Wonder :what I
have to do with my leach bed.

A1TRACTS GOOD CROWD- Approximately 1,408 penoDI were on
hand Saturday night for an excellent boxing card presented by the Meigs
County Jaycees. Boxers from Meigs, Ripley, Athens, Logan and Glouster
participated.

,

•

second period field goal attempts
By Gary Clark
Thirty turnovers and the combln· but still managed to lake a 30-25 half·
time lead.
ed scoring efforts of Kent Wolfe and
Kent WoUe and Dale Teaford
Dale Teaford enabled the Southern
Tornadoes to score a relatively easy :werethe entire story of the second
79-56 cage victory over the Wahama . half by scoring 14 and 13 points
White Falcons Saturday night before respectively for the Tornadoes in the
a packed house at Southern High half. Wahama, even though they cut
their .turnovers considerably,
School.
The setback snapped a three game couldn't match Wolfe and Teafords'
victory string by the White Falcons scoring and as a result feU behind by
and gives the Bend area team a 6-4 as much as twenty-five at 7[&gt;.50 with
record at the half-way point of the 1:35 remaining.
In the half Wolfe made seven of
1980-81 campaign.
Southern, the elite of southeastern nine field goal attempts with
Ohio basketball. increases their Teaford connecting on five of nine . It
season slate :with the victory to 11·2 was a bucket by Teaford in the wanunder veteran cage mentor Carl ing seconds that capped off the
nights scoring with Southern holding
WoUe.
Despite scoring the first four a 79-56 edge for the triwnph.
Kent WoUe led all scorers with 29
points of the game Wahama quickly
fell behind in the opening quarter . points on 14 of 21 field goals and one
and never headed the Tornadoes of five at the free throw line. Teaford
throughout the remainder of the con- was the only other 'rornadoe in doutest. Larry Gibbs' bucket at the 4:34 ble figures with 20 points on 7 of 16
mark gave the White Falcons their field goals, and six of seven charity
final lead of the evening at 6-4. From tosses.
Wahama got 19 markers from
that point on it was all Tornadoes as
Kent Wolfe completed a three point RainbOw Gibbs who ·was seven of
play to give Southern a' 7-5 ad- twelve from the foul line. Roushedd·
vantage :which they never relin- ed 10 while Kendall Weaver popped
in eight tallies in only four minutes
quished.
Twelve turnovers in the stanza of action.
Team totals show Wahama
kept Wahama from putting the ball
through the hoop while WoUe spark· shooting 44 percent from .the floor
ed the hosts to a 19-10 edge after (~) and a dismal 35 percent at
the charity stripe (6-17). The White
eight minutes of play.
The West Virginians continued falcoi)S committed 30 turnovers and
with their errant ways in the second outrebounded Southern 39-32. Gibbs
canto by corrunitting ten more tur- led all reboilnders with twelve.
The Tornadoes connected on 46
novers and only a 11oor shooting
quarter by Southern kept the White percent of their field goal attempts
Falcons in contention. The Tor- (3:&gt;-75) and added 64 percent of their
. nadoes made only 29 percent of their free throws by converting 9 of 14.

~~C) AU. lltlo

An energy ag~nda
for the 1980's
Question of grain embargo
of Russia faces Reagan
(TIDRD IN ASERIES)
In energy policy, the President's Commission for a National Agenda for
the Eighties makes clear that if present production trends continue, the
U.S. energy predicament is likely to worsen during the 1980's. The report
reviews energy source&lt;H&gt;il, coal, synthetic fuels, nuclear power and
solar power forms-and concludes that conservation-meaning energy efficiency at all levels of the economy-&lt;&gt;flers for the short term the greatest
potential benefits, with the least environmental costs.
"For the balance of the 1980';&lt;; at least, energy conservation represents
the most practical means to adapt to the new realities of energy
economics. Energy conservation need not entail cutbacks in economic ac.
tivity or the standard of living. Indeed, conservation may offer the best
approach to sustaining growth, if conservation is regarded as a :way of
raising the productivity of energy resources."
The teport recornniends:
-Reexamination of funding priorities for major energy development,
including reconsideration of the currently planned use of $88 billion for
synthetic fuel development only.
-Accelerating the Strategic Petrolewn Reserve Program.
-Accelerating direct government spending on weatherization projects
for low-income housing units, coupled with a restructuring of tax credits
·
designed to stimulate the insulation of rental properties.
In environmental policy, the report contrasts continued public support
for environmental programs with the increasing compliance costs of en·
vironmental standards. The Commission recommends that new
proposals aimed at controlling pollution more quickly and less cost be
tested. Experimentation could include :
·
-Improved mediation procedures between industrial and environmental interests.
-Shifting from "command and control" regulation to less intrusive
and more fiexlble regulatory techniques as associated with emissions
taxes.or ' 'offset" policies.
The report points out that economic growth and progress in science and
technology are reciprocally linked. According to the report, without in·
creased funding of research and development, U.S. world standing in
science and technology will deteriorate. The Commission considers a
major issue of the 1980's to be the extent to which government should
provide incentives for Rand Din the private sector or provide direct support, with greater control.
In regulatory reform, the corrunission cals for continued economic
deregulation in finance, transportation, communications, energy and in·
surance, but recognizes the need for continued regulation in en·
vironmental, safety and health matters.
The. report calls for a more analytic framework for assessing the appropnateness of regulatory intervention and determining the level of
government that should regulate certain areas.
Specifically, the report notes that political and regulatory institutions
have not developed the capability to deal with questions of risk and uncertainty in .scientific and technological developments. It calls for
clarifying the role of scientific expertise in policy making in science and
technology.
(Next: The Social Agenda)

2

The Da il y Sentinel-Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

60, low11 41

Nebr.uka 66, Mlsaoun ~
N.llllnois ~. Miami, Ohio 51
Olt!t&gt; St. 89, Mll'hil!tlll\ 6.'\
OllhihOU\11. 6:1, KHIULII ~ St 53

Toh.&gt;do 70, c;:ent. Mi rh!Kan ~. OT
W}w,il•hilum 78 , Rwll Sl. 17. 01'

•

�Pomeroy

January 26, 1981

Middleport, Ohio

January 26, 1981

a

HEADING BACK - O&amp;klaod Raiders quarterback Jim Phmkett
fades \lack to pass to the first quarter of Sunday's Super Bowl SV game to
New Orleans, (AP Laserpboto).
\

es~blishment .

"We have a strong feeling for each
other and it makes us stronger and
better as a team," said flanker Bob
ChaJidler, one of the retreads, who
· caught four of Plunkett's passes for
77yards.
The pass Chandler remembered
best was the one he didn'' t catch - a
busted play which developed into an
~yard touchdown for running back
Kenny Klog. It was in the final
wasn't happy with a lot of things,
seconds of the first quarter with the
especially the final score."
The win gives '!he Rockets a 1&gt;-1
conference mark, a first-place tie in
the MAC with Northern IUiDois,.and
an 8-8 record overall. Central falls to
1~ in the conference and 8-8 over aU.
MASON - The ~iting Eastern
In Dekalb, m., Northern Illinois
Eagles of Coa~ Buddy, Moore
outdistanced Miami of Ohio on the
posted its sixth win of the year with a
hot shooting of center Allen Rayborn
come-from-behind win ' over
and forward Ro.n Lindfors, who comWahama, 22-17, in freshman high
bined for 26 points.
school basketball.
Rayborn also pulled down II
After a shaky first.period that saw
rebounds for the Huskies, who imEastern trailing a!4 at the buzzer,
proved their MAC mark to 1&gt;-1 and
the local Eagles came to Ufe and
their overall record to ~.
took advantage of an eight point
The Redskins were led by Tubbs,
quarter to lead 12-10 at the inwho chalked up a game-high a pointermission.
ts.
Eastern, who controlled the tempo
Miami's record now stands at 3-3
of the entire game played on even
in conference play and 8-8 overall.
terms with the White Falcons in the
In Muncie, Ind., Ball State lost a
third period aJ\d led 14-12 when time
home game for the first time in two
ran out.
seasons as Western Michigan edged
In the last round Easten put eight
the Indiana team 78-TI in overtime.
more points on the board, while
The victory came when guard
holding Wahama to just nve and
Todd Dietrich hit a !&amp;-foot jwnper
held on for the 22-17 win.
with 'SilConds seconds left in overtime.
"The final shot wasn't put on
anybody's shoulders," said Western
Michigan Coach Les Wothke.

Toledo given scare;
Redskins lose, 56-51
By The Associated.Press
In Mid-American basketball action Saturday, Central Michigan
scared first-place Toledo before the
. Rockets eked out a 70-68 overtime
win.
In other action, Northern Illinois
kept its share of the league lead alter whipping Miami of Ohio 56-:il,
while Western Michigan edged Ball
State 78-77, Eastern Michigan
downed Bowling Green 68-65, and
·Kent State snapped a eight-game
losing streak with an 82-'9 win over
Ohio University.
Toledo got hot in the second half on
the shooting of Harvey Knuckles,
1
who poured in 20 points.
"It was a good game fo watch.
Both teams played well," said
Toledo Coach Bobby Nichols. "We
played well, especially in the second
half."

. "I was a little disappointed in
losing the six-point lead. But we
came up with the big free throw and
the big rebounds when we had to. I
guess we made the big plays when
we had to," he said.
Disgruntled Central Michigan
Coach Dick Parfitt said, "Perhaps
we deserved to win this game. I

Raiders on their own 20-yard line
and leading 7~.
King had been running a simple
short pattern, but when Plunkett
started to scramble, all bets were
off. The linebacker covering King
moved in to try and trap Plunkett.
Suddenly, the running back was
alone and Plunkett saw him.
King caught the ball at the
Oakland 39 and turned the play into
the longest touchddwn pass in Super
Bowl history. And when he highstepped his way into the end zone,
there was Chandler, the original
primary receiver, right behind hiin.
· ''I told him with 100 million people
watching I didn't want to fall away
from him too quickly," said Chandler who, at 31, isn't exactly the
fleetest player in the league. "I was
surpriSed to see him," King said admiringly. "That boy's fast." ·
That touchdown gave Oakland a
14-0 lead and all three players in·
volved in that key play were
reclamation projects, aCquired and
nurtured- by owner Al Davis, who
never let his war with the league interfere with his team's drive for the
championship.
Plunkett was a washed-up quarterback, ready for retirement, when
Davis signed him. He spent two
seasons virtually unused and a
disappointing career seemed . at a
dead-end for the 32-year-old quarterback.
When Don Pastorini broke his leg
in tbe season's fifth game, Plunkett
inherited the quarterbllck job. The
move was made as much out of
desperation as anythin~ else

. . . .ina\

SUPERMARKO

Where Friendliness &amp; Savings Go Hand in Hand

QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED

KAHN'S BEEF, REGULAR OR JUMBO

9
WIENERS ...... ~~;~} 5
KAHN'S

US!JA

Clflc~"Abt ..

lEG. EN .

.

BACON...................!.~~. $}
.

12 oz.

.

69

$}39

BOLOGNA.............~~~;.... .
BRAUNSWEIGER

9

~..
P£R6
·
Cf14ar
···········~•••
¢
h. "A SlJ.I.

'"IIKtrs ~''Nc
"•• ••

•••

P[p

l.ftlf

"4.

••••••••

............ :·...~.~~..~·. 9«r

•

I I I

Eagle freshmen post 6th win
Eastern was without the services
of two starters, who were at home
due to an illness.
.
Roger &amp;Biser and Larry Cowdery
got the call and did a fine job at both
ends of the court. Bill Call came off
the bench to do a fine job and play
well in crucial moments.
Jim Newell led the winning Eagles
with 10 points, Tim Probert had six,
Roger Balser two, Bill Call two, and
Larry Cowdery two. Usually hothanded Mike Collins was held
scoreless.
.•
Eric Embleton led Wahama with
six points, Bradley had four, HoffTIP TOES,- oaldaocJ Raldersllllebadter MapUn (531 tip toes down
man three, Fink two aod Simonton
llle
sldelille after lnter«ptlng 1 pall from Pblladelpbla Eagles ~uar­
two.
.
terback
Roa Jaworski in tile oecood quarter ol S !day's Super Bowl SV In
Eastern shot 21 perc:oent from the
New
Orle&amp;lll.
The paa waatoteoded for Eagles llgbt end John Spagnola.
field and 66 percent from the line.
(AP Luerpboto).
+
Eastern plays Southern tonight.

The

D~ily

L J. HARRIS

PUMPKIN
PIES
26

oz.

''WI START WITH QUALITY"
U. S. NO. 1

::~rsc.~ . S::; 5 13'
Velvet's

CREAMY SMOOTM 12 PAK $}l9
ICE MILK BARS .................

Sentinel

IUSPSIIWIII

ROMEl

B~UTY

.

3

~-79~

69~ APPLES ............

YELLOW

BANQUET
DINNERS ............. ,~~:.· 65c

CARROTS.... u.

BANANAS

~~EAM .......... g~!· $2
Velvets

11111 mnlt In 14'1..... to Tilt DollY
lontlntl 001 I I, I ..- II lnCIC\tll bull. Cnd!t

.

24 CT.

Velvets

No1Ubocrtpt10011 by moll ponnltlod iJI towno
wtwn homt carrier III'Vtet Ia a'I&amp;Uiblt.

ICE CREAM
. $}59
SANIMIDiES ..........~~..~~~- ..

MAIL IUBICIIIPI'IONI

Ollloud !loot VlqiUo
I Mootll .......................... 110.10

lila .-til ........................ ~7. 10

:~~~~.........~~;~--~ }19

ggf;

~~~~~ ~G.~.~~ Q9
.........

$}SS

POPSICLE ......... ~~~: .... .

wUI lit II""' eonier ooch montll.

-;GGS.~~~~-~. . . . ~~~ 79f;

GARVIN'S

49

Dolly ........... .. : .. .. ....... . II Cento

"""""'- n« doolr1nl to paylhl Cll'litr

VAU.EY FARMS

BUTTERMILK.~..~~~.

LIGHT RED

CARDINAL

.

MILK .....................

~~VIN'S .

~=====~JOAN OF ARC

PC8'1'MASTER : ..... ...,_.to Till Dolly ·
!efttinll, 1U COw18t., Pornlro)l, Ohio "781.

$}89

GARVIN'S FRESH

Auoclat., 3101 EucUd Avt ., Cltvt!.nd,
Ohlo,4 &amp;111.

Ono- .......................... 11.00
Ono11Go1111 ............ . ....... ' .... f4,40
OnoYNr ...... .. .......... ...... . 111.10
IINGLII COPY
PIIICBI

J.l

BEANS. FRANKS OR CHOPPED BEEF

_
, 1'111"--ltod PNI, Inland DollY Pro. AloocloUon and 1111 American
N._por l'lobllohon "-loUon. NoUonal
Advtrtflinc Rtprtatntativt, Landln11

IIIJIIICIUPTION llATEl

CABBAGE ...

00

SPINACH ...~~..~~... 79~

TURKEY, SALISBURY STEAK,

11&gt;e OIIJo Vollty l'loblillllnl Compol\)' •
MIIIUmodll. lllC.. Pomeroy. Ohio l67!t.
-..tue. Stcond. eM p!lltqt ~ld at
P&lt;&gt;moroy, Ohio.

a,c.nter ....... ~~....

4

SOLID GREEN

CHICKEN. MEATLOAF,

Publilhed ntry afternoon exctpt SW'Id.ly, ,
MondoylhrwahFrlclay,lll COIIri Stroot, by

CARDINAL

~~TOES ............ ~..~.149

99~

GARDEN DELIGHT REGULAR OR CRINKLE CUT

A Dt" ..laa ol Mllltimed.W, Iat: .

Fourth quarter sharp shooting of from Billy Blackburn and Bruce
junior Greg Dee! kept visiting North Shriver. Keith Payne netted eight. , .
FH's lead scorer was Glass with 18
Gallia in the lead Saturday night as
the . Pirates collected their fourth points, followed by Smith with 12.
NG shot 43 percent of its field
victory this season, 58-49 over
Federal Hoc~ing.
goals with 23 of 48 tries, while FH
The Pirates are now 4-9 overall · sank 41 percent of the attempts, 18
and!_,.in the.SVAC.
out of43.
The Pirates travel to Miller for a
NG took a !().{) lead in the opening
·of the first quarter, but Federal non-league match Tuesday and to
Hocking bounced back to remain in Eastern Friday.
the game with a seq&gt;nd period outNORTH GALLIA (58) - Black·
burst.
burn 4-2-10; Oeel S·-4-14; Shriver S·O·
However, the third canto played 10 ; Lee 3-0·6; Queen 3- 4~10 ; Payne 3·
. like a repeat of the first, as the 2·8. Totals 23-12·58.
FEDERAL HOCKING (49) Pirates held eight-point edge by the
Bennett 0·0·0; Gi !lin l-0·2; Glass 5·8·
closing buzzer.
18 ; Kennedy 1·3·5; Parsons 2· H ;
By the fourth quarter, a four- Smith 6·0·12; Tabler 3· 1-7. Totals 1corner stall was all that was needed 13·49.
Score by quar1ers:
to preserve the NG lead.
North Gallia
16 8 20 1A-58
Dee! dwnped in 14 points to lead
Fed. Hocking
8 16 12 1349
NGHS. He received 10 point support

WAVERLY The Meigs
Meigs hit 11 of 34 for 32 percent
Marauder girls lost a 35-37 heart- from the floor and hit 15 of '!I from
breaker to the Waverly Tigers here the line for 56 percent. Waverly canrecently despite a 19 point effort ned 17 of 64 for 26 percent hit Wee of
from Meigs' Andrea Riggs. Meigs is five for 60 percent from the line.
now 8-7 overall.
Meigs had 20 rebounds led by
Followjng Riggs' 19 was Kristen Riggs' 10 and Drehel's 10, while
Anderson with 11.
Waverly had a whopping 42 caroms
Pam Crooks, who has consistenUy led by Reed's 16.
been hitting double figures was
Meigs conunitted 25 turnovers and
limited to just three minutes playing 13 personala, while Waverly had 35
time due to illness.
miscues and 21 perSonals.
J. Nutt led Waverly with 10 and B.
Waverly edged Bonnie Chapman's
Reed had eight.
reserves, 36-29, in another hardMeigs jwnped out to a 13-6 first fought affair. Waverly scored the
period lead behind a good hustling winning bucket with just two
attack, and rolled into the second minutes remaining . Ault led
period to maintain a 23-2llead at the Wnerly with 13, Arnett had six, and
half.
Massie five.
In the third period Meigs started
For Meigs Cindy Crookl! had~,
to falter and trailed at the buzzer 32- Paula Horton nine, Krts Snowden
30. The last quarter Meigs and six, Robin Bufflitgton three, · and
Waverly played nip-a11d-tuck right Susan Lightfoot two.
down to the wit·e.
Meigs (JSJ - Anderson 0 · 11 :
The game ended on a jump ball Riggs H ·19 ; Smith 1· 1·3; Drehel 0· 1·
1i King 0·1 ·1; Crooks 0·0·0; Oliver 0·
with four seconds remaining on 0·0. TolalsiO·lS-35.
Waverly's end of the court. Meigs
waverly (311 - Null 5·0·10; Reed
won the tip and went for the last 4·0·8;'Copelond 2-H ; Pendleton 3·0·
6; Sowers 2· 1·5; Tripp 1-0·2. TotalS
shot, but it was partially blocked.
17·3·37.
Coach Ro'l Logan said that the
By quarters:
13 10 ' 5-35
inability to hit free throws and costly Meigs
W•verly
6 11 ~ s-37
turnov~rs led to his team's d.ownfall .

79°
USDA CHOICE
.
. .
•
••
RIB STEAK•••••.•.•.••••.••.. ~~~!-!.... 2
USDA CHOICE
39
SIRLOIN STEAK......... ~~~!!-.. '2
PICNIC HAM$ ••••....••.. ~~!!..

KAHN'S

North Gallia posts
fourth win, 58-49·

Waverly tops Marauderettes

SMOKED

OPEN 7 DAYS
8 AM TIL 10 PM
CORNER. OF LOCUST
&amp; PEARL ST.
MIDDLEPORT, OH.

because prized rookie Marc Wilson King burned the Eagles with their
~yard TD for a 14-0 lead.
simply wasn't ready for the job.
Early in the second period, the
Given the chance, Plunkett
flourished, weaving the Raiders Eagles got on the scoreboard when
through the regular season and the barefoot kicker Tony Franklin conmine field that awaits any wild-card verted a 36-yard field goal.
Then, in the last 311 minutes of the
team in the playoffs. When it was
first
half, Philadelphia t)rove from
over, he was the Most Valuable
its
'P
to the Oakland 11. The Raider
Player iri the Super Bowl sod
stiffen\!(! and the. Eagles
defense
beamed at the designation.
to
setUe
for three more points.
tried
The game went badly for the
they
got none when
Instead,
Eagles right from the start. On their
linebacker
Ted
Hendricks
blocked
third play frun scrinunage, Ron
Franklin's
28-yard
field
goal
try.
Jaworski threw his first pass. It was
coniptete... to Oakland linebacker
The blocked field goal sent the
Rod Martin - the first of a record
three swipes recorded by Martin in Eagles into the dressing room on a
depressing note. It got worse when
the game.
He returned the interception from they came out for !he second half.
miidfield to the Philadelphia 30 and Plunkett drove the Raiders to their
seven plays later Pluilkett had the third touchdown, this time hitting
Raiders in the end zone with a 2-yard Branch wlth a :IS-yard scoring pass.
Branch simply outwrestled rookie
pass to Cliff Branch.
For a fleeting moment, com~rback Roynell Young for the
Philadelphia thought it had the tying ball. .
'
Now
the
Raiders
were
clearly
in,
touchdown late in the first quarter
control.
They
were
dominating
the
when Jaworski hit Rod Parker with
a 4().yard pass in the end zone. But line of scrinunage and had conan illegal motion penalty against structed a 21-3 lead. They had the
Harold Carmichael nullifed the play Eagle defensive backs bickering
and moments later Plunkett and among themselves.

The Daily Sentinel-Page-S

_,

SALE DATES JANUARY 26-31, 1981

Vaughan's

Oakland U(ins SUper .Bowl

NEW ORLEANS (AP) - They are
a roster of rejects, living in the half·
way house of the National Football
League.
They are outcasts, playing for
franchise operated by an owner .
called ~&lt;an outJ.aw."
They are a tearJl torn between two
cities, 45 men who play for each
other lind against the rest of. the
world.
Call the Oakland Raiders all those
things today, but don't forget .to call
them champions. They are the world
champions of professional football,
convincing winners of Super Bowl
XV witli a 27-10 victory over the
Philadelphia Eagles Sunday.
Led by . Cinderella quarterback
Jim Plunkett, who completed a
storybook return from football 's
scrap heap with a record-shattering
three-touchdown, 261-yard game,
the Raiders stepped gingerly into
the glass slipper and found the fit
was perfect.
" World champions! That sure
sounds nice," said guard Gene Up- ·
shaw, captain of this scrappy team
which delights in confounding the

Pomeroy-Micldleport, OhiG

BORDEN'S
SLICED
12
AMERICAN SINGLES OZ.

CAMP BELLS
CHICKEN NOODLE

CHEESE

11/., ........................... P1.110

"'* 0.-0IIIo
ud Wilt Vq~U~

I M&lt;11tll .......................... 111.110
I Monti! .......................... 1111.110
lYMr . .. ........................ . ..110

10-oz.
Can

GIVING 11IE HARDWARE - NFL Colllllllalouer Pete RooeUe
rtgbt, pre~eola die Super Bowl XV trophy to Oaldaod Raiders maugJni
general partller AI Davis, left, after Suuday's Super Bowl In New
Orleans. Raiders bead coach Tom Flores, second from left, aoc1 sporl.lcaoter Bryant Gumble look on.

Loses duel match
The Meigs High' School Wrestlers
dropped their fourth straight dual
match recently to Gallipolis,~.
Scott Harrison, Keith Kinzel, Brill
King, Scott Hartinger, Brian King,

Doug Neece, Mike Jackson, and Bill
Powell all recorded wins on the mat.
Meigs returns to the mat on Wednesday, January 28 at home and will
host Trimble, and Vinton County In a
Tri·match. Starting time is 1 p.m.

...-------------------------l

B. A. Chhlbber, M.D•. ,

RC 100 or
·RC
8-16 oz.

Announces the opening of his
PQint Pleasant, W.Va. oHice of

PEDIATRICS

coLA . ········ ....

and
INTERNAL MEDICINE
Located in the Professional Building at
2513 Jackson Avenue

DIAMOND
'

'

DR. CHHIBBER's OFFICE-will open
I

IN THE SHELL .. , ....................

for appointments call

•

..

)~~.... 89~

----WALNUTS .... ~:~. .~l 79

FEBRUARY 2, 1981

675-5511

RETURNABLE

I

TOWELS

1-Lb.
Can

$} 59

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-6 The Da ily Sentinel

January 26, 1981

Sampson's 40 points too much for OS

REBOUND TANGLE- Ohio State's Larry Huggills (20) taagles with
University of Virginia Ralph Sampson (50) as.lhey struggle for .a rebound
. during the first half of the UVa.-Ohio State college basketball game
· played in Charlottesville Sunday. (AP Laserpboto) ..

High school scores
Ohio High Scbool Basketball
By Tbe Associated P rt'n
· Ada 65, McComb 61
Adena 62, Unioto 60
Akron E. 63, Tallmadge 61
Akron Kenmore 72, Walsh Jesuit 63
Akron Spring. 52 . . Canton GlenOak 49
Alliance 57, Louisvtlle 51
Amherst Steele 65 , Loratn Brooksid e 52
Archbold 93, Stryker 70
Ayersville 78, N. Baltimore 76
Beachwood )8, Cardinal 48
Beavercreek 8J, l' a1rbom Park Hi!ls 68
Beaver Eastern 95, Ports. East 62
Bellbrook 73, Day. Carroll 59
Bellvue 29, Upper Sandusky :l8
Berlin Hiland 59, Ga raway !10
Berkshire 60, Chardon JO
Boardman 73, Barberton 66
Brunnerdale 69, Trinity Christ. 67 OT
Bryan &amp;4, Pau..lding 47
Buckeye Trail 80, Fort Frye 62
Buckeye W. 69, Bellaire St. John ~
Calva ry Christ. 97, Day. Christia n 88
: Canal Winchester 81 , Fairfield Un ion 71
Canton McKinley 78, Massillon 62
Carrollton 61, Sandy Valley 60
. Cin. Elder 65, Lakewood St. Edward 56
Cin. Hug hes 75, Day. White 69
Cin. LaSalle 56, Cin. Colerain SO
Cin. Perfonning Arts 73. Brown County

«

Cin. Moeller &amp;4 , Cm. Pnnceton 50
Cleve. Central Cath. 78, Lutheran W. ~ ~
· Cleveland Ht6. 80, Shaker Hts. ~9
Cleve. Univers ity 118, Grace Lutheran.
Mich., 63
Clinto~M assie 67 , Blanchester fl5
Culwnbi.ann 67, S. Range 59
Col. DeSales 63, Col. Hamilton Twp. 55
Col. Wehrle 84, Lancaster Ftsher 63
Co!. Franklin Hts . 58, Westerville N 57 ·
Connot on Val. 80 , Malvern 59
ContinenU!l 62, Patrick Henr)' 61
Day. Cham-J ul Ql, Twin Valley S. 50
Delphos St. John 71 , Wauseon 53
Delta 60, Genoa 46
Eastlake N. 51. Geneva 39

E atun 67, Brookville 44
E~ e wood 62, W. (.'hester l..ukota 55
Er~e (Pa.) McDowell S7, Young. Ursuline 48
Fairless 63 , Norwaynt&gt; 56
Fainnonl E. 52, Vandalia 51
• Granville

~~,

J ohnslllwn

Northndge 17

Heath ~7 . Hebron lakewood 38
Hilltop 73, Ottawa Hills 53
· Hunlington 73, Piketon 68
Indi an Valley N . 83 , Ca l d ~·dl &amp;6
Indian Valley S. ~ . Kidron -40
Jackson Center 80, DeG raff Riversi de
59
Johrultown 7S , Watkins Memurial 63
Kalida ~. Tinorl:l 52
Kettering Alter 1;6 , Day. Belmont 54
Kings ~ . Valley V1ew 52
Kirtland 65, ~e w bury 52
l£ branon 60, Xema fH
l£x.ington 94, Col. Easl 82
Ucking Va l. 81. Utica 67
Uma 89, Wapakoneta 57
Lorain Cath. 76, ClearFork 60
Lorain Clectrview 51 , Ven nilion 41
Macon Eastern 81, Southern Hills 56
Maf\.5. Christian 67. CVCA 62
Marui . St. Peter S2, Wynford 51
Marion Local 58, Fort Jennint:s ~
Massillon Perry 76, Wooster ::,0
Miami Trace 45, Grandview 36
Middletown Fenwick 77, Waynesville 71
Midview 67, N. Ridgeville 6S
Miller Cit}' 60. Cory-Rawson 38
Millersport 97, Miller 61
Nelsonville-York 75, VintOn County 49
Newark Cath, &amp;4, Licking HU. H
Ne"'' Bremer1 70, Fort Loramie 63
Ne"'· Reigel 74, Mohawk 60
Wililtrd 69, Galion 57 .
Napuleo11 , 73, She rwood Fairview 58
N. Gallia 58. Federa l Hockinlt! 49

Ou.k Hills 45, qn. St. Xavier- 41
Oberlin 73, Wellington 6$
Ohio Deaf ~ . Xenia Wilson 41
Orrv11le 58, W. Salem NW 4S
Ott o ~· ille 76, Lincolnview 51
Ott1&gt;wa Glandorf &amp;3, Tol. St. FrancU! 61
Od ord Talawanda 67, Hamilton Ross S6
Painesville Harvey 62, Hudso n W. Re-serv e «
"
Paint Val. 75, Zane Trace 56

Parkway 54, Oelphoo Jeffen100 49
Panna Padua 77, Louisv ille Aqllina s 72
Piqua 72, Miami E. ~
Racine &amp;tuthern 79, Wahama , W. Ya . 56
Ravenna 53, Kent Rooeevelt t9
Ridgemont 65, Riclgeda\e 511
Ripley 78, Cin. Country Day 56
· Richmond Dale SE &lt;16, Chillicothe ·Flaget 36
Rive r Val. 63, N. UniGn 56
Ridgemont 65, Ridgedale 57

Salem 58, Niles McKinil.•y t7_
Summit Country Da y n , Cin. Chrl.stian
52
Sidney 60, Greenville 57
Tifin Colwnbian ~. Norwa lk 50
To!. DeVilbiss &amp;4 , Defiance 62
Toronto 67, Jefferson- Un.ion 61
Tri -VaUey 63, W. Muskingwn 52
Upper Scioto Val. 68, Waynesfield 57
Urbana 71 , Indian Lake 45
Warrensville 71, Cleve. Benedictine ~
Waverly 58, Washington C.H. 45
Wayne Trace 103, Ohi o City 67
W. Brown 64, Cin. Reading ~
W. Carrolton 60, Miamisburg 52
W. Uberty-&amp;lem 64i , Botkins 60
Woithingtdn Christ. 65, Centerburg 46
Zanes. Rosecrans 6S, Tuscarawas Ca th.
41

Eastern junior high
defeats Southwestern
EAST MEIGS - The Eastern
junior high girls claimed a 37-19 win
over Southwestern here recently.
Eastern is now &amp;-2 and Southwestern
is 7·1. The loss was Southwestern's
first.
Angie Spencer led Eastern with 14
points, Lea Ann Gaul had 13, Melinda Mankin six, Beth Berkhimer two,
and Lori Hudson two.
Southwestern was led by Teresa
Mcneal with 'nine, D. Nida tallied
six, and M. Nida had four.
Coa ch Pam Douthitt's Eagles
were .credited with playing a very
gond defensive game, holding Southwestern's "Big Girl" McNeal, to just
nine points. Previously McNeal led
her club to a win over Eastern with a
16 point effort. Also talented M. Nida
was held to just four points by the
tough Eastern defense.
Melinda Mankin led Eastern with
15 rebounds, Berkhimer had five,
Spencer five , Gaul two, Hudson one,
Sherrie Ritchie one, and Rhonda
Phillips one.
Eastern hosts Southern Tuesday
night at 6 p.m. This contest will
precede the girls' high school game
hetween the two schools.

Ralph Sampson could only have
been more impressive if he had hopped a jet to New Orleans, donned
football pads and earned himself a
Super Bowl ring.
Virginia's 7-foot-4 center quieted
all critics of his aggressiveness and
durability Sunday on national
television when he turned University
Hall at Charlottesville, Va., into his
private showcase.
He scored a career-high 40 points,
grabbed !6 rebounds and blocked
three shots to lead second-ranked
and undefeated Virginia to an 89-73
rout of Ohio State. He scored 14 of his
points in a seven-minute streak mid·
way in the first half during which the
Cavaliers outscored the Buckeyes
24-6 and grabbed a 19-point lead.
He produced his points from a
variety of locations and angles - a
sky-high layup, a hook, a short jllffi'
per, a ·Slam dunk and a jump shot
from the perimeter among them.
" It was one of my hetter games,
I'd say. I felt like I could he
devastating from the beginning,"
said Sampson, who led the Cavaliers
to their 21st consecutive victory - 16

this season - and kept alive the
nation's longest winning streak.
The game was Ohio State's second
in two days, coming 24 hours after a
6~ upset at Columbus of No.16
Michigan. Buckeyes Coach Eldon
Miller was not sure how to measure
the effect of the consecutive games
against ranked opponents.
Saturday's action included a pair
of upsets of Top 10 teams on their
own courts. Notre Dame, ranked
!3th, stunned loth-ranked Maryland
73-70 at College Park, and Minnesota
upended No.9 Iowa 61}.48 at Iowa
City.
In other Top !0 games, top-ranked
Oregon State defeated Washington
97-91 in overtime; third-ranked
Wake Forest clobbered UNCAsheville ~ ; DePaul, tied for
third, trimmed La Salle 6~ ; No.5
Louisiana State downed eighth·
ranked Tennessee 80-63; sixthranked Kentucky siopped Vanderbilt 711-04, and No.7 Arizona State
defeated Arizona 113-05.
In the Second 10, it was : No.ll
South Alabama 64, McNeese State
60; No.!2 UCLA 75, California 61:

No.14 Utah 86, Colorado State 56;
Wisconsin 54, No.IS D!inois 45; No.l7
North Carolina 100, Georgia Tech
60: No.18 Brigham ·Young 84,
Wyoming 70; Duke 75, No.19 Clemson 57, and No.20 Connecticut 75,
Georgetown 73 in overtime. ·

Conference game.
Mark Aguirre SCI&gt;red 35 points and
grabbed 14 rebounds to pace DePaul
over La Salle. Aguirre sparked a 11&gt;-2
burst that included 11 Wl8llllwered
points and erased a three-point i...a
Salle lead early in the second half.

Kelly Trlpucka scored six of his 25
Mike Helms scored 14 points and
points from the free-throw line in the led five players in double figures as
final 1:53 to help Notre Dame Wake Forest tuned up for next Wedsqueeze by Maryland. Tripucka nesday's Atl!!Diic Coast Conference
came to the line three times -down matchup at Virginia.
the stretch, all in 1-and-1 sittiations
Howard Carter S(!Ored 21 , points
with Maryland down by one, and and Leonard Mitchell added 16,
sealed the Terrapins' fate by bitting pacing ~U to an early lead !hat
both shots each time.
· stood up over Tennessee in a matRandy Breuer, a 7-foot-2 center, chop of Southeas(jlrn Conference
scored 17 points, including four powers. The victory was the Tigers'
straight that snapped a 36-36 tie with !6th straight since losing their
14:19 to play and gave Minnesota the second game of the seaaon.
lead for good over Iowa in the Big
Ten.
Guards Dirk Minnifield and Jim
Oregon State remained un·
defeated at 11&gt;-0, in large me!lsure Master took over Kentucky's
doe to the work over the Beavers' scoring load when center Sam Bowie
big man, Steve Johnson. Johnson left with a bruised hip midway in the
scored 38 points, five in overtime, to second half, and they powered the
help rally Oregon State from a Ill- Wildcats to an SEC victory over
point deficit late in the Pacific 10 Vanderbilt.

Cedarville knocks off Rio
94-93 in overtime thriller
Cedarville's Yellow Jackets
flulshed first half play .with an un·
blemished mark in the Mid-Ohio
Conference following Saturday
night's 94-93 overtime victory over
visiting Rio Grande.
The Yellow Jackets, now 16-1
overaU, are 74! inside the conference . Rio Grande dropped to 11·10
overall and 1&gt;-2 in the MOC.
It was nip-and-tuck affair. Rio
managed six point leads twice in the
'iirst half. The home club was up by
four just before halftime before Tom

I

Dorsey's goal knotted the count at
41-all just before the buzzer.
Watson McDonald's two free
throws with five seconds left in
regulation play tied the score at 81·
all, and sent the game into overtime.
The Jackets were liP by three with
five seconds left when a Rio goal
reduced the margin of victory to one
point.
Rio Grande outscored the Jackets
from the field, 41.;!0, but the home
club was 34 of 43 at the foul tine. Rio
was II of 17 at the charity line.

For the' record.

Nad0011l Buiru.JI Aalociadoa
Euiena C oole~
Allaudc Dlvilloa
W L
PeL GB
Philadelphia
« 9 . .830 &lt;2
9
. 82~
1
Boston
:10 . 21
NewVurll
.IM 13
Washington
2~
21!
.412 19 ...
NewJeney
.284 :10
14 ~
Cea.tral Dlvllioa

II
:II
IS
20
19

Milwauk«

Indiana

Chicago
Cleveland
AUanta
Detroit

~

13

12
rl
32

1:1

39
Weatml CHfernct
Midwest Dlvllloa

San Antonio
Kansas City

.7&lt;6
.!17
.411
.315
.:173
.210

33

20

Howton ·

21
13

21!
21!

.623
.412
.151

Utah
Denver
Dalla$

21 31
18 32
a l4

.300

,&lt;(14

.1$4

-

I I&gt;
13\;
111&gt;
19
25 \;
-

I

• •

M..-y· . o~

Photnil at New YlM"k
Detroit at Utah
Portland at L«'' Mgele!

Tundly'• GaiDd
Washington at AUanla
lndiana It ~nd
NI!W J er9l!y at Ollila.!
Gol~n Stare at Chica wo

Detroit at Denver

Kai\S8!1 City Ill San Diego
Utah at Lo.'l An"e l ~

Wedellll Sporll Trauaetiolll

BASEBAU.
Nadoul Lcape
CJNCINN"n
REDS- Announcfd th a t
Tom Hwne. pitcher, had agreed to a on~
year contnu::l.

Four Rio players :- Watson McDonald, Kev Castleman, VInce
Phelps and Tom Jutze fouled out.
Rio Grande had 28 personals, the
Yellow Jackets 20.
David Carr paced the wi'lllers
with J2 points. Mark Womack had 22
and Eric Mounts 24.
McDonald scored 31 for the Red·
men. Kev CasUeman and Vince
Wollenberg each had 12 and Nick
Penrod 10.
The Redmen hit 41 of 78 field goal
attempts for 52 percent. The Redmen had 42 rebounds, 11 each by Me·
Donald and Dorsey. Rio had 23
assists, 10 by Vince Phelpa. and 19
turnovers .
Tuesday, the Redmen will play at
Tiffin. Rio returns home Saturday
for a contest against Walsh. it will be
Bob Evans Farm Night.
Box score:
RIO GRANDE (9]) - Phelps 1 0·
2; Dorsey 7·1· 15; McDonal d 1J.5·31 ;
Caslleman s.2 · 12 ; Wollenberg 6·0· 12;
Ha irston 1·0·2;
Penrod 4·2· 10;
Qu isenber ry 0·0·0; Matach 1·0-2;
Jutze 3 · 1· 7. TOTALS 41-11-93.
CEDARVILLE (94) - Berger 3·0·
6; Gr e ve H ·8; Ca r r 9· 102;
Womack 9·&lt;·22 ; Mounts 7·10·24;
Dix on 0·0·0; Pryor 1·0· 2. TOTALS 30·

34-94.

Halftime score- Rio 41, Cedar·

January 26, 1981

Fire victim honoree
of household shower
Mernben of the Riverview Garden Mrs. Margaret Brown, Mrs. Pauline
Club ·honored Mrs. Opal Johnson Myers, Mrs. Nola Young, Mrs. Sanwith a miscellaneous sliower Jan. 15. !IY Roberts, Mrs. Ella Osborne, Mrs.
Games were played and prizes were Kathy Spencer, Mrs. Edith Henawarded. Refreshments of cooldes derson, Miss Barbara Hend~rson,
.
'
punch, coffee and nuts were served.
Mrs. Judy .Adams, Mrs. Frances
Gifts were presented to Mrs. J olJn. Reed, Mrs. Nancy Buckley, Miss
son who recenUy lost her home by Sheila Buchanan, Mrs. Judy Adams,
fire, by garden club members and Mrs. Frances Reed, Mrs. Nancy
people of the area. Attending were . Buckley, MiSs Shella Buchanon,
Mrs. Lucille Smith, Mrs. Gloria Ann Mrs. Betty Buchanan, Mrs. Marlene
Johnson, Mn. Pat Martin and Matt, Putman, Mrs. Juanita . Med!lng,
Mrs. Mary Alice Bise, Mrs. Thelma Kevin and Calvin, Mrs. Debbie
Smith, Mrs. Polly Reed, Mrs. Mary Begley and Joey Bame, Mrs. Grace
Grace Cowdery, Mrs. Janet Con- · Weber, Mrs. Maxine Whiiehead,
nolly, Mrs. Margaret Cauthorn, Mrs. Ruth Anne Balderson.

Prayer, self-denial
services noted Tuesday
Mrs. Ann Watson conducted a
prayer and self-denial service at the
Tuesday night meeting of the Forest
Run United Melhodlst Church held
at the home of Mrs. Faye Hamilton.
There was a meditation and
prayer by Mrs. Watson with scri~
ture from Luke 18 being read by
Mrs. Hilda Yeauger. Readings were
given by Mrs. 1\:'lary Nease and Mrs.
Kathleen Scott interspersed with
scriptures. An offering was taken
and scripture read by Mrs. Erma

Roush. Leah Nease had the closing
prayer.
During the bUsiness meeting of.
ficers' reports were given. The love
offering wsa taken and 46 sick and
shut-incalls were reported.
Refreshments were served by
Mrs. Hamilton and Mrs. Nancy
Merrifield to 11 mernhers and
guests, Rose Ann Jenkins, Debbie
Hauber, Mary Bentz, Dreama Bentz, Sandy , Gerri and Brian
Hamilton.

Girl Scouts name officers

vil le 41.

FREE
lRAVEL SHaN
HAWAII
THURSDAY,
JAN. 29

7:30 P.M.
DIAMOND SAVINGS

Several new officers were elected
at the Tuesday night meeting of the
Middleport Junior Girl Scout Troop
1039 held at the home of the leader,
Mrs. Joy Clark.
To serve until Septe.mher will be
Amy Luckeydoo and Kim Stewart,
refreshment committee; Shannon
Coates, taker of attendance; Lesley
Carr, dues collector; and Lisa Whit'
tington, Tammy Hawley and Kathy

Thomas, patrol leaders.
The annual girl scout cookie sale
was discussed. Members will hegin
taking orders after 4 p.m. on Friday,
Jan. 30. Also discussed was the
sustaining membership drive to be
carried out in February, and the
various holiday activities of the
group.
Refreshments were served by
Mindy Spencer and Shannon Coates.

Legion auxiliaries meet
for mid-winter conference

Pomeroy, Ohio

PUBLIC INVITED
Film and
R etreshments

GALLIPOLIS

..(,._,tutA .

Local units of the American
Legion Auxiliary were represented
at the mid-winter conference held
over the weekend in Columbus.
Hlghilghts included a leadership
training course conducted by Mrs.
Jack Balzhiser an!( Mrs. Lester
Merritt, a national security program

under the direction ·of Mrs. William
Muncapher, and a tribute to the,
program for hospitalized veterans
and the auxiliary members who
work in that program. On Saturday
evening a banquet was held
honoring the Central Division
National Vice President.

Gallipolis couple. donate
organ to new Rio Center

I ll
9
11 11
1311

2~ 1&gt;

P•clfk Dlvilloa

I~

Phoenix

40

I.JJI!I An15:eles
Golden State

33

. ~7

211
211
%2

.531
.500
.431

Portland

San O ie~S:o
Settttle
Olicagu
Indiana
Detruit

11
Z3
211
29
21 :10
Saturday', GIIDel
104. Atlanta 102
107 . Octlla.s 89
117, Oeveland 94

.741

. ~1 2

RIO GRANDE - A Hammond
organ was donated to the soon-to-bededicated Fine and Performing Arts
Building at Rio Grande College and
Community College.
The console Is the gift of William
and Opal Uoyd of Gallipolis, and is
given in memory of their parents,
Mr. and Mrs. J. c. Miller and Mr.
and Mrs. Howard P. lJoyd.
In giving the gift, the Uoyds expressed their love of music and their
desire to assist in the education of
Rio Grande students.
Opal Lloyd has been a teac her in
the Gallia County area for the past
28 years. William [Joyd is a retired

H~Wlon 106. Ut.ah 91

Denver 129. San Anturtiu 11~
Milwaukee 121, &amp;In Die!!O l17
Gulden State )11. N!!w Yort 110
Suadly 'a Gamr~

Buston liS, Seoatlle 100
Philadelphi.a 911, Phueni..I 93
Washington _118, New Jeney 100
Portland WI , San Antonio 100

sales representative of the A. P.
Green Company, Division of U. S.
Gypsum Corporation.
College President, Paul C. Hayes
expressed his pleasure and
gratitude on learning of the donation
and commented : " This is a
generious gift that will not only
benefit the students, faculty, and
staff of Rio Grande College and
Corrununity College, but will provide
many years of pleasure and entertsinment to the entire com·
munity."
The dedication of the Fine and
Performing Arts Building will take
place February 8.

Water pills lower potassium
By Robert G. Stoelunal
potassium level to still be unacD.O.Pb.D.
ceptably low, a special suppleAsalstaat Profeuor
ment will usually be prescribed.
of Famlly Medicine
Monitoring the potassium level is
Obio Ualvenlty College
especially important in those per·
of Osteopathic MedleiDe
sons who are also taking the
Question: RecenUy you talked
heart medication digoxin or
about low salt diets and the
digitoxin since low potassium can
. body's need for sodium chloride
lead to irregularities in their
(table salt). What about the
heart rhythm which can he
body's need for potassium?
dangerous .
. ·
Answer: · . Potassium, · like
Question: ~t foods are high
sodium, is present in the fluid of
in potallsium content?
the body. This body fluid is usualAnswer: Some foods conly spoken of as being either sidered rich in potassium are
within cells (introcellular) or out- · veal, chicken, beef liver, beef,
side of cells (extracellular). The
port, dried apricois, dried
outside fluid is that which bathes
peaches, raisins and bananas.
and nourishes the cells including
Also the juice of oranges,
that found in the circulatory
tangerines, pineapples as .weU as
system. While sodium is present yarns, winter squash, broccoli,
in Its highest concentration outpotatoes and brussel sprouts are
side the cell, higher levels .of
high in this mineral. There are
potassium are found inside each
other foods high in potassium, but
of the body's cells. The two comthey tend to he high in sodium.
plement each other. Both are im· Often when high potassium is
portant in the control of water
needed, now sodium is desired
movement and· pressur!l', as well
too. Therefore, make certain that
as influencing, muscle activity,
you check with your physician
nerve conduction and cell memregarding the diet for you.
brane funcl;on.
Question : What are the
A well-balanced diet will propotassium supplements?
vide more than enough potassium
Answer: These are either li·
for the body's needs, while the quids, tablets or powders containhealthy kidney will regulate the
ing potassium salts, with
amount retained or excreted.
potassium chlorille heing the
Question : Why do some people
most commonly used. Except for
have to take potassium supthe slow release forms, most are
plements?
diluted with juice to improve
Answer: The most common use
their flavor and are taken imof supplements is associated with
mediately after meals to
the concurrent use of certain
minimize side effects.
blood pressure medications
As I mentioned hefore, it could
known as diuretics (water pills ).
he dangerous to stop taking your
In general, these diuretics tend to
potassium supplement, parlower the body's potassium level
ticularly when you're taking
and, therefore, users are enheart medication. So don't stop
couraged to increase their
just because you don't care for
dietary intake of foods known to
the taste. Discuss it with your
be rich in potassium. If
doctor - perhaps, there is a more
laboratory tests reveal the blood
suitable form for you.

Shaun Imboden turns one

If you get a govern·
ment check, you can
sign up for
Direct Deposit at the
Farmers Bank..

vlted could cauae complicatiol\.!l,

TAURU81Aprii ..May "I Unu.ualolrt,.

1n Important relaUOillhlpa ia something you
miKht have to contend with today. If op-

poeed, keep your cool.
GEMINI (May U..Jue zt) Yuur way of
doll\fC thll'lt(l and yuur boaa'a nwy not synchronl&amp;e today , Think twice before biUng the

CELEBRATION - Oaklaad Raiders' bead coach
Tom F1ores and Raiders' quarterback Jim Plunkett
embrace and celebrate after they guided the Raiders

to a 27·10 wiD .over tbe Pblladelpbla Eaglel for tbe NFL

title In Super Bowl XV In New Orleaat Sllllday. (AP
Laserphoto).

Your Community Owned Bank

Member FDIC

On the Light Side
Message Comes Blowlo'
InTheWIDd
HAYW ARDEN, Saskatchewan
(AP) - A :&gt;-year-old Califurnia
boy has discovered that sending a
message by air mail can get
quick results - as long as the
wind is true .
. On a farm about 50 miles south
of Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, 8. year-old Bradley Jess was
checking animal traps Sunday
morning when he found a small
helium-filled balloon stuck in a
tree .
A note attached to the balloon
asked the finder to send a letter to
Timmy Clang of Diamond Bar,
near Los Angeles.
Bradley's mother telephoned
the Clang family and was told
Timmy had released the balloon
Friday afternoon as part of a
school project.
The balloon travelled almost
2,000 miles in less than two days .
National Weather Service
meteorologist Glenda Williams
said such a flight was possible.
"There
was
a
jet
stream ... leading to Saskat·
chewan Friday" at an altitude of
!8,000 feet, she said.
Timmy has launched five or six
balloons since last year llut this
was the only one found.

Olympian, Ed Mendoza, who
finished in 2:'13 :55 to break last
.year's record by two minutes.
The dog's time was "about four
hours," Ms. Wallin said.
Mter milling around at the site
of the awards ceremony, the dog
was taken to the Humane Society,
which said it couldn't guarantee
the dog would remain alive after
five days. So it got a reprieve.
"The feeling was this dog ran
this whole race and at least
should get a chance to find his
owner or get adopted if nobody
claims him," said Kay Skogland,
a veterinary clinic worker who
will keep the dog until an owner is
found.
Mao Repays Newspaper For
Stolen Sports SectiOOll
ST. LOUIS (AP) - A man who
snatched sports pages from the
St. Louis Globe-Democrat for
four years has 'fessed up.
He sent the newspaper $72 in
repayment.
"The enclosed money order is
payment of .the newspapers
stolen between Septemher 1965
and June 1968," Bob Urban said
in a letter io ihe paper. " I feel
lead (sic) by the Lord to repay
this money ."
Urban, who lived at the St.
Joseph's Home for Boys, said he
stole the papers from open boxes
wrule walking to school.
"(. never could get a paper of
my oWn, so that's the only way.(
could," Urban said. "I was really
interested in sports, and I had
free access to a paper."
The 27-year-old Urban, who
now lives in Baltimore, figured
four weeks to a month, nine
school months to a year, four
years of taking the paper and 10
cents per copy.
"With the economy being the
way it is, I could use the money,"
he said. "But the Lord made a
way."

WEEKEND GUESTS
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Bise were
weekend guests of Major and Mrs.
Frederick Smith and daughters at
Dayton.

'

Vicky Maniey Barnes and threeyear-old son, Ryan of Irving , Texas
are here for a visit with her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Manley, Middleport, and Mrs. Dorothy Woodard.
Morton Barnes, his wife and son
moved from Indiana where he was
employed as a ceramic engineer
with Logan Clay to Texas in eary
Novemher. He is now employed as a
motor control electrician witti the
Anchor Hoist Crane Co.

. ............ .......... ....,.,,,.
~

MORE MILES PER DOLLAR
FOR VW OWNERS.
Take advantage of these special
Service De pa rtme nt offers today:

hand lhat •lgflll your paycheck.
CA.NCER (JIUM! Zl..July !!) NonTUilly
you're caUtlow and prudent In finRncial or
conunercla\ dealings, but today you rnay act
w!.ttklut h.avlrt~alllht facta.
LEO IJuly U.Aq. H) Neither you nor
your mate should make major decisloM ·
today without the full coruent of 1M other.
'IWo heads should prove wl.ter. than one.
VIRGO IAq. D-Sepl. t%) You're extn!mely oblervant today, but you may focus
more on the ~rtcomings ci others than on
!.heir vtrtutl. l.ook for the lattenc.
I.IBRA (Sfpt. ~L !31 Treat your
resourcea and poaeulons with respect
today, or you nU~ not end up with as much
as you started uut with.
SCORPIO IOd. U-Nfl\', D) It's nice til be
abl~ to operate in a free and independent
manner, but today this prtvilege may be
denl1..'&lt;1 you. Make the most ol the hand
yiMJ'redealt .
SAGI'rrARIUS INo\'. ZS.~ . U) Instead
of operatl~ as you usually do, Idling
byteooes be byl( 1m e~ . toda y you may allow
Hmnethlntt anolher did lo you in the pa st
&lt;.'0 \or your thinking.
CAPRICORN \I&gt;«. twaa. lt) Steer clear
lJl friends who 11ut.ke unreasonable 4emands
upon your PU nt! or p~rty tod1:1y. You
C()u\tl be maneuve red Into a l(iveaway
po.~t~ it l on .

Social calendar

Farmers
Bank

Michigan. " Hill program Is so
unique and so entertaining that he
has been invited to appear on stages
and television throughout the world,
says Doris Ross, Star Dates coordinator.
Hill program on " What to do until
the physician comes" Is the second
most frequently given talk in the
world . He has given it in person to
clubs, colleges, conventions and
stages over ~.VOO times.

Barnes visit here
Shaun lmo.bden

SHOWER FOR FIRE
VICUMS TIJESDAY
A miscellaneous shower will be
held for Martha and Bill Durst who
recently lost their home by fire at
the Riverview Elementary School
ThursdaY evening, Jan. 29, at 7:30
p.m. Everyone IB invited to attend.

RIO GRANDE - Dr. Murray
'Banks, who has been described as a
" one man monopoly" with his bien-'
ding of good psychology and mental
health with hilarious entertainment,
will speak ilt Rio Grande College and
Community College, January 28, at
the newly constructed Fine and Performing Arts Building. The program
will begin at 8 p.m.
Dr. Banks is the Adjunct
Professor of Psychology at the Northwood Institute in Midland,

Dog Gets Special treatment
For Running M!trathoa
TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) - A
yellow Labrador retriever who
tagged along for at least 18 miles
of the :!S-mile Tucson Marathon
crossed the finish line only to run
into the arms of the dog pound.
The dog was first spotted at the
7.:&gt;-mile station Sunday by race
official Lois Wallin, who said the
Lab arrived with a stick in his
mouth. The dog dropped the stick
to drink water and ERG, a liquid
forrunners .
·
The winner of the. race was a
former University of Arizona

Shaun Bradley Imboden, son. of
Mr. and Mrs. Skip Imboden, Middleport, observed his first birthday
on Jan. 13 with a party at his home.
A Winnie-the-Pooh cake was served with ice cream, chips and punch
to his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Keith Woods and Mr. and Mrs. Gene
Imboden, Mrs. Brenda Neigler and
Scott and jason, Pam and Gary
Honaker and Jeremy , Mrs. Rosalyn
Stewart, Shannon and Brett, and
Melissa Woods.
Sending gifts were his great·
grandmother, Mrs. Minnie Kapteina, Fred and Mary Davis and
children, Tom and Mary Woods,
Roger and Veronica Imboden and
Chad, Larry and . Teresa Hoffman,
and Mike and Jane Horton and Kristy of Fayettesville, N. C.

ASTROGRAPH
Jaaury n • •••
In the year following yuur birthda y thlnt(ll
may not always be a bed of r-Mes, but you
won'! let any adversitll!ll dl~ra ct or hnld )'Otl
back from your goai.J. Becaust of thi5, sucL'ftll is )'Cllf'S.
.
AQUARfl.JS IJ.....Feb. It) Fulfill your
ambiUons COO.y, but do so In ways that you
will be prood to talk about later . Tbt end ·
m11.1t justify the means. Romance, travel,
luck, resources, poulble pitfalls and career
for the romlntf months lrf all dlJCuued In
your A.lltro-Graph which beMIT\1 with your
b6rtbdly. Mail fl for e.ch to A.!trD-Graph ,
Bux 481, Rac:Uo City S..tion, N. V. 10019, Be
aure to tpec:Uy birth date.
PISC!:S IFe.. ..MII'dl !I) Methods
.tllch proved Wlfrvitlul for you previously
are likelY to come up empty ~ Ma in toda y,
l.eam from past miN.kea. Don 't rtpeat
thm\.
ARIES (MirebJI-Aprilll) Bea n obaerver
rather thin a partlclpanl In the affairs of
others todly. ButUnc In where you are not In·

Psychologist to speak
at Rio on W.ednesday

Health Review

'I

5\i
1111
13
16\i
t7'rl

The Daily Sentinei-Page-7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

THESE COUPONS MUST BE PRESENTED .
TO RECEIVE THESE SPECIALS

I~-----------------------~
TUNE UP SPECIAL
I
I •POINTS
•VALVE COVER GASKET I
I •PLUGS .
•ADJUST VALVES I
I •SET co PERCENTAGE
. . •SET TIMING I
I •SET TIM~ &amp;DWEU •REPLACE FUEL FilTER I
1
· $55ss
PlusTax
I
~-----------------------~
r··-c;.LjlNo-ruiEiPielirL
___i
I
i

•OIL
•WINDSHIELD WASHER SOLVENT I
•OIL FILTER
•SET TIRE PRESSURE I
I •BODY LUBE
~CHECK ALL FLUID LEVELS
I
.
I

I

0

MONDAY
Plan bowling party
ANNUAL MEETING Meigs Coun·
ty Regional Planning Commission,
The Eastern FHA/Hero Club
' 3:10 p.m. Monda.Y at agricultural
members met Tuesday night at
conference room of Farmers Bank Eastern High School to plan for a
Building ; election of officers and skating and bowling party and to
review on priority· of highway im· work on this year's information
provements.
booklet. Pinguards were ordered
SPECIAL MEETING, Colwnbla and the name of Tina Spencer was
Township Trulltees 7 p.m. Monday at submitted as a convention helper
township building:
prospect. Next ~ling will be on
RUTLAND GARDEN CLUB, . Feb. 3 at 7 p.m. with a speaker on
Monday night 7:30 p.m. at the home teenage pregnancy.
of Mrs. Ralph Turner.

'

L~----!JL~. ~----!~!2!____ J
.N.ow Thru February 28, 1981

RIVERSIDE
VOLKSWAGEN
Upper River Road

Gallipoli~.

111111

....

we care
Ohio

Please Call For Appointment

446-9800

Winter
'Warm-up"
SPECIAL
13" Pizza with your
choice of any 1 topping
GET A GOOD TIME GOIN ' ON THESE COLD ·
WITH A
WINT E R DAYS AND NIGHTS
DELICIOUS GINO' S PIZZA. CHOOSE YOUR
Reg.1
FAVORITE TOPPING FROM PEPPERONI.
SAUSAGE , MUSHROOMS, OLIVES, BANANA
PEPP E RS . ONIONS OR GREEN PEPPERS . Oft Y

$4 •00

I

'$2 •50

3 DAYS ONLY
Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday
L--_,

January 26, 27, 28
Gino's gels good tbMsgoln'.

.----1

�January 26, 1981

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-8-The Daily Sentinel

Pom

Racine church ·Administrative Breast cancer strikes one of 13,
says S. Michael, Meigs Co. unit
Council.names new officers
'

f!!

nurture and membership care with trustees with members, Margaret
Marlene Fisher, Nancy Johnson, West, Howard Roush, J . R. Lee, J .
Ruth Stearns, Dorothy McKenzie, W. Lee, Herbert Shields, Bill
and Alleyne Rees on that com- Stewart, Paul Sayre, and Dorothy
mittee; Virginia Rees, chairman of , McKenzie.
outreach, with members, Louise
Named communion stewards
Stewart, Frances Roberts, Paula . were Grace. Furbee, Vinas Lee, and
Sayre, . Betty Roush, Fred Smith, Mabel Shields. Maxine Wingett is
Raymond Furbee, Howard Ervin, the county council representative.
Robert Hill, Maxine Wingett, Ralph
During the meeting Bob Hill
McKenzie, Bill Stewart and Emma reported on the progress of the new
Jane McClintock; Ernest Shuler, church. Several money-making
chairman of the pastor parish projects were planned. Members of
relations, with members, J. R Lee the Council plan to attend church
and Alleyne Rees.
workshops in the near future . The
Alice Wolfe, chairman of finance; pastor announced that the first class
Margaret West, financial secretary, for the study course on "The Outand Harold Roush, chairman of the ward Bound" will be Jan. 29 at 7
p.m. at the church.
'

School kicks ·off fund raiser
Pomeroy Elementary School has is the National Program Director.
kicked off a collection drive aimed He believes it is vital "to develop a
at acquiring new physical education love of exercise and physical fitness
. equipment.
among young people."
· The equipment will be provided
"We are delighted to be able to get
through the national Post " Fun and physical education equipmentfree,"
Fitness" Program, This program of- l said April Smith, Secretary and
fers schools free athletic equipment ' Chairman of this project. "We hope
in exchange for proof-of-purchase all of our friends in th~ corrununity
seals from Post cereals, Wonder will help us reach our goal by saving
. Bread, Log Cabin Syrup, Log Cabin and turning in the special proof-of·
· Pancake and Watne Mix and tear purchase seals from Fun 'n Fitness
· strips from Birds Eye Awake and brands. They may be turned over to
Orange Plus Breakfast beverages.
any Pomeroy Elementary student or
Bob Grelse, all-pro quarterback of delivered to the school any time
the Miami Dolphins and a strong before the end of this school year,
supporter of good athletic programs.
The school Is also saving Campbell

Babies arrive

Soup lavels for education programs.
Campbell's Soup Company is offering various items of equipment to
elementary schools in exchange for
labels from the company's products.
The labels can be redeemed for
audio/visual equipment, athletic
equipment, reference books and
teaching aids. The school presently
has 6,730 labels and is hoping to go
over 10,000 before February 20, 1981,
which is the campaign deadline.
The school saves RC, Nehi, Upper
10, Diet Rite bottle caps, which the
Royal Crown Bottling Company will
redeem for one-half cent each for
needed school equipment.

Polly's Pointers

Hot spots on

· Infant Smith
Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Smith,
the former Terri Viriing, Pomeroy,
are announcing the birth of their first child, a son, born on Saturday,
Dec. 20, at O'Bleness Memorial
Hospital, Athens.
The infant has been named Shan·
non Eugene. He weighed eight poun·
ds, one ounce and was 18 inches long.
Maternal grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Ehlon Vining of Rutland.
Maternal great-grandmother is Mrs.
Goldie Graham, Rutland. Paternal
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Eugene Smith, Middleport; and the
paternal great-grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Harrison Smith of
Racine and Mrs, Elizabeth Johnson,
Columbus.

Hill
Mr. and Mrs. Dean Hill, Apple
Grove, are announcing the birth of a
daughter, Harmony Jane, born at
the Holzer Medical Center, Jan. 9.
The infant weighed six pounds, eigtt
ounces and was 19 inches long.
Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Hill, Apple
Grove, are the paternal grand·
parents, and Mrs. Dolly Wolfe, Apple Grove, is the paternal great·
grandmother.
.
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Chapman,
Syracuse, and the maternal greatgrandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Chester Hutton, Pomeroy, and Mrs.
Emma Chapman, Rutland. Mrs.
Edith Ryther of Syracuse is a mater·
nal great-great-grandmother.
Mr. and Mrs. Hill have a 14-monthold son, Dean, Jr.

By Polly Cramer
Special correspondent
DEAR POLLY - How do you
remove spots from a table' top
(inlaid with pretty
wood) that had
hot baked food
placed on it.
These spots make
it necessary to
keep a tablecloth
on to hide them. MRS. E. S.
Cr~~mer
DEAR MRS. E .
S. - As many of you readers well
know, my favorite cure for this
problem is to make a paste of cold
cigarette ashes and butter and then
rub the spots, going with the grain of
the wood. Another method is to put a
bit of toothpaste on a damp cloth and
rub, also with the grain of the wood.
Of spots are not entirely removed,
add a bit of soda to more toothpaste
and reapply it. - POLLY
DEAR POLLY - This is for the
reader who has a hole in a down
jacket. I once stood too close to a
heater while wearing mine and it
melted a hole in the back, near the
bottom, of the coat. I looked through
my box of material and had nothing
to match the jacket, which is bright
green. However, I did have a piece
of plaid cotton that was yellow, blue,

Helen Help Us

LEGAL AID

Almost all major companies
provide legal protection to their
board members, protecting them
against lawsuits. A Conference
Board survey shows that the most
C&lt;"runon policy is directors' and of·
ficers'liability insurance:

4

tab!~

DEAR HELEN:
Wasn't it Malcolm Muggeridge,
the English pundit, who said, "Sex is
vastly overrated?" I quite agree!
Please tell me my people are so
preoCcupied with such a silly
pastime.- EARL
DEAR EARL :
I

According to the American
Cancer "society, breast cancer
will strike one out of every 13
American women with the
greatest niJ!IIber of cases occurring among women over the age of
50, says S. Michael, · public in·
formation chairman of the Meigs
County Unit.
Breast cancer therapy varies
according to the individual patient's condition and needs. The
physidan selects the best treatment after careful evaluation.
Reconunendations for surgery,
radiation, hormonal therapy and
chemotherapy depend on the
type, size, location and extent of
the tumor, as well as other pertinent factors.
When an operable breast
cancer is found, depending on the
type and stage of the caneer, the
operation may vary from
removal of the lump, and some
adjacent breast tissue, removal
of the breast (total mastectomy),
removal of the breast and aux·
iliary lymph riodes (modified
radical mastectomy), or removal
of the breat, underlying muscles
and auxiliary lymph nodes
(radical mastectomy). A plastic
surgeon may be consulted by the .
general surgeon before a mastectomy to plan for possible

JAN: 26, 1981

bathing suits ,' Reach to Recovery
volunteers reassure patients that
they are the same women as
before, points out Michael.
If anyone needs any assistance,
wants to know more about cancer
of the breast, or the Reach to
Recovery Pr&lt;Jgram call 992-7531
or come to the office on Mulberry
Heights (former Children's
Home), Tuesday and Thursday, I
to 4:30p.m.

reconstruction of the breast later
on, says Michael.
Radiation can be used in combination with other treatment
methods to help cure breast
cancer; to control tumor growth,
or to alleviate pain or ulceration
of an advanced cancer.
Chemotheraphy may be used in
combination with surgery or
radiation therapy to· cure some
breat cancers.
Newer drug combinations can
sharply reduce the recurrence
rate of breast cancer in some patients after surgery. Drug combinations also can provide prolonged control for a number of
advanced breast cancers, says
spokesman,
Those women who have
undergone breast surgery can get
help from volunteers who have
had breast surgery themselves.
The volunteers work under the
guidance of physiciallB and help
patients with exercises, selection
of appropriate clothing and adjustment to the emotional shock
of having cancer and losing a
breast. This program is called
Reach to Recovery. The
volunteers may offer patients
practical advice on artificial
breast forma and adjustments in
their wardrobes, including

EV£N!NG

year·oldstarMollyPicon , wh o ta lks
about her theatrical comeback .

CAPTAIN EASY
THAT~

RI@HT! AND I

Host a:Hugh Downs and FrankB Ia ir:
(Closed-Captioned ; U.S.A.)

OH,INPEEPr ..,
WELL,GST O'!li
THING 5TIZAIISHT
RIGHT '-!OW,
YANKSE
&amp;'OY-

TAKE IT YOU'~ Mcl&lt;fE'!&gt;
MAN-- CAPTAI~ EA!&gt;Y-l

"Realistic Alternatives in
Cancer Treatment" by Marion
Morra and Eva Potts is a source
book in questions and answers
form which provides down-toearth information on many forms
of cancer, on doctors and on
hospitals, on diagnosis, tests and
treatments and includes material
on controversial and unproven
treatments, says S. Michael,
public information chairman of
the American Cancer Society,
Meigs County Unit. The book also
lists cancer centers, hospitals,
special research programs, ACS
Divisions and other sources of
help lor cancer patients.
If interested in purchasing a
copy, see a local bookstore or
order direet from the publisher :
Richard Brenner, Avon Books,
959 Eighth Avenue, New York,
New York !0019, says Michael.

,,.AT L.EA:!&gt;T 'IQU DO ·
IF McKEE INPU5Til:IE5
HOPES TO CLOSE ANY .JOI'-JT
OIL LfASINIS D~I'IL WITH
· WARFI:ICK I?KPLOftATION5l _,.A

...'a.•
l

a
I

6:30 (l) IJ C1) NBC NEWS
Cil THE DOOR
® BOB NEWHART SHOW
CIJ FACE THE MUSIC
QCIJ(!Q) CBS NEWS
ClJ WILD, WILD WORLD qF
ANIMALS
{jj) HISTORY OF SPACE FLIGHT
il2J 01 ABC NEWS
6:58 Cil CBN UPDATE NEWS
7:00 CIIIJ PM MAGAZINE
(I) NORMAN VINCENT PEALE
(JJ MO.VIE· ·(COMEDY) "II

physician for analysis. Preparation·
for the test requires that one eat no
ACS recorrunends that women bet- meat for at least 18 hours and conween 20 and 40 !vlve a breast sume some roughage during that
physical examination every three time.
years; annually over the age of 40.
Question : "What is melanoma?"
All women past 20 should practice
ANSWERline : It is cancer that
breast self-&lt;!xamination · monthly . develops in cells of the skin that
Women between 40 and 50 should form melanin, the body's pigment or
consult their physicians about the coloring. It may occur in any section
need for mammography in par- Of the body or in the mucous memticular cases. Women over 50 should branes of he genitalia, anus, or oral
obtain a marrunogram every year.
cavity. It frequently occurs on one's
Question : "What is a guaiac hands, feet, or face . Any mole that
test?"
· changes, previously smooth surface
ANSWERline: Tbe guaiac test is a that becomes rough and scaly, or abprocedure to find hidden blood in the nonnal discharge or bleeding after a
stool. The first step can be taken in minor injury is highly suspicious
the privacy of one's own home. Tiny and should be e:~~~mined by one's
samples of stool are placed on physician.
treated paper slides in a special
For further Information call 992folder which is returned to one's 75:11.
•

Q

DO

ffi

of your breast in later years. The

THEY WANTA MAKE
A TRADE1' OU~ FAST

Tom Brokaw and Hal linden ho!!t a
thought comprehensive,
provoking rev iew focusing on the
major stories. trends and persori ·
alities that dominated the tele'o'sion
season in the past year. (2 hrs.)

STUFFP

Cil 700CLUB
Cil MD VIE ·(WESTERN)"! "Big

----Chester News Notes-----

Got a problem? An adult subj(!Ct
for discussion? You can talk it over
in her colwnn if you write to Helen
Bolte!, care of this newspaper,
COMPLETES TRAINING
Navy Seaman Apprentice Donald
0 . Russell II, son of Fay A. and
Donald 0. RIIS.'lell I of Box 256,
Mason, W. Va., has completed
recruit training at the Naval
Training Center, Orlando, Fla.
A 1979 graduate of Wahama High
School, he joined the Navy in ()c.
Iober 1980.
NO FAULT DIVORCE
No fault divorce Is actually an ad·
mission that both parties made a
mistake.

675-1333

GASOUNE ALl..EY
9:30

to

THE APPEAR;lNCE

OF A GIRL WHO CL Ahlf5 TO 8E BILL~
DAUGHTER SENOS WINNIE ANlJ BILL
TO A LAWYER,

one'

I

II

i:&gt;IFFICULT

TO

DISPROVE.

AFTER ALL, YOU WERE IN GOUTH
AMERICA ABOUT THE TIME SHE
WA5 BORN ... AND YOU HAP
AMNESIA ..

AND MY WIFE IS
AN INTERNATIONALLY
KNOWN DESIGNER. I
0UESS THAT MAI&lt;E S

!ems of the older generation touc h
the Tri bune when en elderly neigh·
bor of Lou's is hassled bv mi'schievous kids end Charlie Hume 's
father escapes the boredom of
retirement bv shoplifting . (60
mms.)

I

ADDHE '&gt;'

I

- ·- - - -·- I

.. -~-.-- "!""'~~·--;-~

views, this film forms a contrasting
portrait of the older generation and
the newer arriva ls, with thei r
greater expectations oft he ' Amer·
icen Dream '.

EH?

{jj) NEWS
10:5f, Cil CBN UPDATE NEWS
II :OC• C2J 1J ()) C1) 0 (J) (jQ) il2l 01
NEWS
(I) FESTIVAL OF PRAISE
f
CJl MOVIE·(SCIENCE·FICTIONl
.. "Moonraker 11 1979
CD NIGHT GALLERY
ClJ MORECAMBE AND WISE
{jj) OUTER LIMITS
11:28 (]) CBN UPDATE NEWS
11 :30 {l)IJCIJffi THETONIGHTSHOW

BARNEY

SIT UP STRAIGHT,
JUGHAID !!

DON'T

HOLLER

HOLLER AT
TH'CHAIR

Guest ho st : George Carlin . Gu es t:
Debbie Reynolds. (60 mins .)

Cil ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
([) MOVIE ·(DRAMA) "

AT ME ··

"Fraulein" 1958

BRIDGE
Safet~

play insures slam
Stayman to see-if South has a
.four-card major suit and then
bids a proper six notrump,"
Alan: "A quic~ count shows
South that he has 11 top tricks
and he can get the twelfth in
either minor suit. He wants to
try to guard against the
chance that West will hold the
queen of clubs and both miss·

t -~ 6· 81

NORTH
.AKJ2
'I'AQS3
• 10 8 6

•As

WEST

EAST
+10 9 7

• 863 •
'1'!0986

'1'742

ing diamond honors while
retaining all other options . He

t7Z

tKJ4
tQ 10 2

+98al3
SOUTH

• Q' 4
'I' K J
tAQ9S3
+KJ7

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South
West

North

Eut

South

Pass

2•

Pass

1 NT
2t

Pass
Pass

6 NT

Pass

Pass

can ·and does find a safety
play to to insure 12 tricks."
Oswald: "He takes his sec·
ond high heart at trick two
and starts on the spades. Both
opponents follow to the three
leads so South takes dummts
ace and queen of hearts wh1le
discardtng
two little
- diamonds. All hearts and
spades are now accounted

Crib Job ' Stars : Jack ' Kiugman .
Garry Walberg.After an elderly man
is killed, Quincy is ab out to close
the case against the juvenile ac·
c use or the slaying . But Rasey
Greer, guest starring as himsett ,
pleads with Quincy to investigate
further in an effort to seve a Juvenile·
senior Cltiten' s project ttlreatened
by the murder. (Repeal) 'THE NEW

I

AIRCRAFT

..
o..J

12:3(•
12 : 5~
1:DC
1;10
1:15
·'~

... , ~ ....... II/,

,""'r- . ..__

Oswald: "Here is another
play problem. North uses

Oswald: "West is in with the
jack and must give South his
twelfth trick. lt should be
noted that if East held both
the king and /·ack of diamonds,
South wou d have made
seven."
{NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)

~~M~tr
~~~~~
P

5 Jalopy

l

language

it Unwilling

Insipid

2 "When Your
Has Gone''

13 Caucasian

3 Seeing red '

4 Apiece
5 Cowardly
IS Ultimate
• Yesterday' s A111wer
16 Night before 6 Footloose
•
one
19 Word of
28 More than one
17 Gazzara
18 Visionary
7 Vigoda
approval
30 Ship's prow
zo H ·
or
22
Buck
(poet.)
osptce
heroine
31 N.H. city
%1 " ... schemes Beame
of mice
8 Motor
23 Tell
32 Artist's item
and - "
9 Perfwne 24 Generally
33 Speech habit
22: Fonnerly
12 Sawbuck 25 Melancholy 38 54 on Caesar's
23 C
· t · 16 Wife of
26 Beer
calculator
S~~C S rip r:-Cu=c.;,;h.;;;ul;;;a;;in~,...;head r:-'!':""-,;;39;...;;;,r::.;;,.2&amp; Scoff

27 In ·balance
28 Blue grass
(genus)

29 Man's
nickname

30 _ steak

34 -gratia
artis
35
36

Liquor

Attention
37 ''Needling"
expert
39 Arizona

river
40 "-Madigan"'=+--+(1967 movie)
41 Freshly
42 On the
square

DAILY CRYJ!TOQUOTE- Here's how to work ' It:
AXYDLBAAXR
Is

LONGFELLOW

One leller simply stands lor another. In this sample A Ia

used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single 1~tters
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words 1re ali

hints. Each day the code letters are ditrerent.

, CRYI'TOQUOTES
NA

FN W

Men Tell No Tale•" 1971

DAVKE

l"ii'Cb
~;;;g~ROW
CBN SPORTS REPORT

Alan: "Note that South does
not cash the fourth spade. He
would squeeze himself if he
did. He sim~ly leads a dia-

t---:~---------;:;;:;:;:;;;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;;:;:;;;-I
J

U V BA K

escape artist seeks the ultimate
, ohallengn and two plain girl s went
· to sampltt the jet· aetters l ite .
7

I

I

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

AVENGERS: Emily' (Repeal)
()) ABC CAPTIONED NEWS
ilQ) MOVI~ ·(DRAMA)" II "Dead

GlJ ID ABC NEWS NIGHTLINE
12:()(o IJl GlJ 01 FANTASY ISLAND An

for."

mond to his ntne.''

'

D CIJ CBSLATEMOVIE 'QUINCY

PATROI.LED BY

tell me more 1bout the

10;21• (I) CBN UPDATE NEWS
10:3(• (I) RISE AND BE HEALED
ClJ CHINESE AMERICANS: THE
SECONDCENTURYThroughlnler·

AN IDEAL PAT,5Y

THIS HIGHWAY

NA M(

I) H O NE

OUT?

BECAUSE IT
I&gt;\OULO BE

I'EANUTS

l•S~E:R;I::E:S:O:N:E~B:u:':ln:n:s:P:o:ti&lt;:V:·-·.1

I

BUT IVH Y
WOULD SHE
S INGLE ME

STATE

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

•

II Hale

somewhere in Kensingt on Hospital
and lert a th re at ening note wh ich
has the entire staff crawling the
walls .

WINNIE

...PieiSt

JumiMe Book No. 1!5; contaiOing 110 puzzles, Is a.,.. liable for $1.15 postpllld
tram Ju!Tible, cJo lhla new~p~per, BoX 34, NOIWood, N.J. 07641.. Include your
name, addraas, zip code and make checks l)llyable to Newspaperbooks.

DClJ
ilQ) HOUSE CALLS Ader·
anged man has planted a bomb

i'~ @J LOU GRANT The prob·

AUTOMOBILE
MUTUAL
INSURANCE
COMPANY

(Answers tomorrow)

Answer : What· she said her husband was A "STALE MATE "

10 Knowledge

Rat lin and Barry Bostwick star as a
televisiol'! personality and a San
Francisco police detective whose
tovefor eath other cOrOP ilCBte SthG~
wild adventures they stumble into.
lnthisepisode,thevinvesligatethe
hijacking of 30 pounds of plutonium
end the kidnapp ing of a 13-yeer-old
genlus,who's ca pebleotmakingan
atomic bomb . (Premiere; 60

Represent1ng

I I I J( r I I )

Salurday's Jumbles': LEGAL EMPTY FAUCET BUSILY

sion. rips_through lhe operating

10:00 @ TBS EVENING NEWS
CIJil2J 01 FOUL PLAY Deborah

NEWSPAPER CARRIER NEEDED
FOR lliE PT. PLEASANT REGISTER
IN THE TOWN OF Cllfi'ON.
Call Immediate~

M.A.S.H. Klinger saves
Winchester's lite when an explo-

tr4

NOTICE

I

gested bv the above cartoon .

rI

ACROSS
43 VaUey
I Radar sound DOWN

1J (]) ®)

M4 turn

Mr. and Mrs. Rlchard Gaul and
David, Mr. and Mrs, Warden Ours
and Mr. and Mrs. John Wickham at·
tended a dinner at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Larry Circle, Carmel, Sunday.

Answer hare: A

"THESe. t:&gt;AYS,TE.ND'E~
MEAT G5N5'~AL..t.:
MEANSIHIS.
Now arrange the clrcted letters to
form the surprise answer, as sug-

mlnoJ

her with a potent weapon in the bat·
tie to ouster her step-mother. (60

Do you own or operate a
small or medium-size
retail store, office, apart·
mentor church?
Then - you mav qualify
for State Auto Mutual's
, SERIES ONE Business
Policy .. , a modern·as·
tomorrow package plan
that combines an array of
broad property and ilablll·
ty coverages required to
safeguard your opera ·
tions. All for a vw,y attrac·
five, affordable premium.
Let us explain the
superior
features
of
SERIES ONE ... the short
tl me we spend together
could prove Interesting ''
and rewarding to you.
Just give us a call or
mail the handy coupon.
DALE C. WARNER
INSURANCE
102 w. Moln "2· 2143 Pomarov, o.

IUNMOLC~
I KI .

heard by Fallon. thereby providing

Krystaltha t hestllllovesheriso¥er·

Insurance Package
For You

1)

6&amp;.
. "y THOMAS JOSEPH

Jake" 1971
.
(j)(ft)IIJ
DYNASTY
After a lavish

late, Mallhew 's admission lo

Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Orr called on
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lee, Becky and
Bob. Sunday at Bashan .

r

.I I

1963

dinner party at tlie Carrington es·

Christmas dinner guests of Mr.
and Mrs. B. K: Ridenour were Mr.
and Mrs. ,John Wickham and Mr.
and Mrs. John Ridenour, Jason and
Jared. Afternoon visitors were
James Ridenour, Lowell and John.
Opal Eichinger and Laura spent
Christmas day in Columbus with Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Eichinger and
Suzannah,
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Nice have
returned home from a visit in
Louisville, Ky., with Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Hartung and other
relatives,
Mr, and Mrs. Herman Carson,
Bashari, called on Mr. and Mrs. Warden Ours Sunday.
D. D. Clelland, Columbus, visited
Tuesday with Denzel Cleland and
Mrs. Clarice Allen.
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Hawk, Belpre,
called on Mrs. Letha Wood Friday.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Christy, Mrs.
Letha Wood, Mr. and Mrs. Virgil
Wood, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Wood,
Miss Sandy Wood, were all supper
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Hawk, Tuppers Plains, Christmas
day.
Opal Eichinger and Laura were
Christmas Eve dinner guests of Mr,
and Mrs. Dennis Eichinger, Riggs·
crest.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Wood spent
Christmas Eve with Mr. and Mrs.
Bill Beegle and Bruce, Gallipolis.

IGORFTO±

....

8:30 W NEW BIBLE BAFFLE SHOW
I!Jfll(!Q) LAOIES' MAN
8:58 (]) CBN UPDATE NEWS
9:00 (])IJffi THETVGUIDESPECIAL

AU..EYOOP
FOOD FOR TillS

rr

'Taming of the Shrew' Monty
Python's John Cleese is Petru cc lo
and Sarah Badelthefiery Katherine
in th is latest presentation in PBS's
highly acc laimed series of the Sha ·
kespeare Plays . The new series
pro ducer Jonathan Miller also dir·
acted th is knockabout larce
depicting the endless bailie
between the sexes. (2 hrs., 30
mins.)
(fi) MAKING M. A.S.H. Narra ted by
Mary Tyler Moore . th is special
looks at what manv consider to be
commercial television's best and
most successful entertainment
series, ' M .A.S.H.', and seeks to
answer the question most viewers
~k week aflerweek: 'How do they
[Q_ it?' (90 mins.)

WALK-·SOMETHIN' ...

'""

-~. ~

AMERICAN CATHOLIC
MOVIE ·(COMEDY)
'"o
11

"Move Over, Darllng

byHenriArnoldandBobLee

I.... .l,........l ..,,.... 0
·-·I PLIME

CiJ GlJ at T~AT ' S INCREDIBLE'
O CIJ@J FLO
C]J
SHAKESPEARE PLAYS

5HIJCR6! HE DIDN'T HEAR ...SOMETHIH' n"ILIAR
ME! I'IELL ~ HE GAID HE ABOUT 11'11T DOCTOR,
~AS OH AN EMER6EHCY THOUGH .. THE SET 0'
HIS ~OULOERS·..HIS
CAU ··

OH, !SEE! I
MADE HIM DROP
HIS HANDKERCHIEF!

physician in evaluating the condition

I

~ THATSCAAIIBLEDWQROGAME

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one lettar to each square, to IOTm
four ordinary words.

PRAIRIE Jot! Kagan sets out to do
some serious courting of Hester
Sue. on I~ to learn she ia planning to
~arry someone else.. (60 mins .}
osed -C ap tioned; U.S .A.)

•

DO

ftJI\}1.\.ft ~'\l

~ ~ ~~ ~

"Meatballe" 1979

([) ALL IN THE FAMILY
CIJil2JOI FAMILY FEUD
C1) NASHVILLE ON THE ROAD
llJ CIJ TIC TAC DOUGH
ClJ {jj)
MACNEIL·LEHRER
REPORT
@J NEWS
7:30 C]JIJ BULLSEYE
Cil WORDS OF HOPE
CD §_AN FORD AND SON
CIJIIJCIJ JOKER'S WILD
C1) ilQ) HOLLYWOOD SQUARES
ClJ {jj) DICK CAVETT SHOW
GlJOI FACE THE MUSIC
7:58 CIJ CBN UPDATE NEWS
8:00 C]JIJ C1) LITTLE HOUSE ON THE

i

At 30, should she have annual PAP?
A regular feature prepared by the
American Cancer Society, to help
save your life from cancer.
Question : "I am 30 years old .
Should I have a Pap test annually? "
ANSWERline: Assuming that you
have no symptoms, guidelines
developed by the Americn Cancer
Society suggest that at your age you
should have a Pap test at least every
three years. This, however, holds
only after you have had two negative
Pap tests one year apart.
Question: "I am 37 years old, and
have read that the Society recommends that women between the ages
of 3!i and 40 have a baseline mammogram. What is it•"
ANSWERline: A baseline mammogram is an initial X-ray of the
breasts that can be uSed as a subsequent reference pojnt by the

6:00 Cl)8(ZJ0(])®)(ii)l) NEWS
Cil RAINBOW FACTORY
([) CAROL BURNETT AND,
I'll lENDS
CIJ ABC NEWS
CIJ 3·2·1 CONTACT
{jj) OVER EASY Guest: The 81

HIDING GUN
UNDER NAPKIN

Cancer Answerline

white and green.
I cut a square to cover the hole and
sewed right through it on the sewing
machine. It looked so good that I cut
several more plaid pieces and sewed
them on the quilled squares all over
the front, the pockets ~nd every
other square on the back. When I
wore it to town, I got many com·
ptiments on my jacket. I never did
buy a new one.
The only places that do not have
patches are the sleeves. I do not
have a free-arm sewing machine. By
the way, I cut these squares with
pinking shears, so I did not have to
tum hems. I stitched very close to
the edges. The jacket has been
washed and dryed as usual and the
patches have stayed in perfect
shape.- ROSE
DEAR POLLY - I recently put a
decorative toilet tissue holder in our
bathroom. Not wanting to be
By Clarice Alleo
wasteful and throw out the old one, I
Chri,'!tmas
dinner guests of Mr.
put it in the kitchen to use as a dish
and
Mrs.
Richard
Gaul, Mark and
towel rack. This works well for
David, were Mr. and Mrs. Warden
small mother's heli&gt;ers in the kit·
chen.- CHARLOTTE
Ours. Afternoon callers were Mr.
Polly will send you orie of her and Mrs. Rich Gaul, Addison, Mr.
signed thank-you newspaper coupon and Mrs. George Powell and son,
clippers if she uses your favorite
Bill, Parkersburg; Mr . and Mrs.
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in ber John Ayers and son, John, Beckley;
column. Write POLLY'S POIN· · Miss Tanya Salser, Racine; Mrs.
TERS in care of this newspaper.
Evelyn Gaul and Mr. and Mrs .
Ronald Clay, Todd and Suzanne,
local.
Dr. and Mrs. Billy Robert Allen
and Katie, Westerville, spent a few
days wi!f Mr. and Mrs. Clayton
Allen .
Mr. and Mrs. James Cornell.
Pomeroy, spent a couple of days
with Mrs. Letha Wood.
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Wood,
Silly compared to what? Would
Springfield,
spent a couple of days
you prefer a rousing column on the
with
Mrs.
Letha
Wood.
Joyo!JumpRope?- H.
Christmas dinner guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Wood were Miss
DEAR HELEN:
Sandy
Wood, Belpre; Mr. and Mrs.
A friend of mine is very much ant~
Bill
Beegle
and Bruce, Gallipolis;
abortion. She's even picketed
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Bobby Wood, Amy and
clinics, and calls those running them
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil
Charlie,
Racine;
baby murderers.
Wood,
Springfield;
Mr. and Mrs.
Yet she wears an IUD, because the
Roy
Christy
and
Mrs.
Letha Wood,
pill doesn 'I agree with her.
local.
I tell her that each time the IUD
Mrs. Opal Eichinger and Laura
stops pregnancy it performs a little
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
visited
abortion as the fertilized egg is
Don
Eichinger,
Rio Grande.
prevented from staying in the
James
Ridenour
and Lowell were
womb.
of Mr. and
Christmas
dinner
guests
She says this isn't the same, but
and
family,
TupMrs.
Carl
Barnhill
after all if a new life has started,
pers
Plains.
what's the difference between
Mr. and Mrs. Kirk Chevalier and
whether it's one hour old or two mon·
Jessica
and Mr. and Mrs. Russell
ths old?- T. J.
Well
and
Heather spent Chrislrl!as
DEART:
day
with
Mr.
and·Mrs. Roger Youug
... No difference, really.
and
family,
Pomeroy.
A right-to-lifer who relies on an .
IUD is Uke the SPCA member who
wears a leopardskin coat. - H.

Tenants get cold shoulder
along with the hot water

BY HELEN BOTIEL
Special correspolideot
DEAR HELEN :
We tenants live in cold water flats
of eight families. The landlord has
one of the apartments, and he plays
favorites.
He lets one family use all the
water they want for a vegetable and
flower garden, but the rest of us are
very restricted. We other tenants
have no water pressure because it's
all going to the garden or other
needs of the "favorite."
Also, we have to do our own painting and repair work, even paying
for materials. When we complain,
the landlord says, " Move!" He wan·
ts us out so he can raise the rent for
JOHNSON ·
the next people. We can't afford to
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Johnson, Sr., move - the rent ceiling law protects
Morning Star Road, Racine, are an·· . us, but It sure doesn't inspire apartnouncing the birth of their second ment house owners to make their
child, a son, Jeremiah J'(yan, Jan. 6 flats livable.
at St. Joseph Hospital, Parkersburg.
We've complained to the rent conThe infant weighed seven pounds , trol board and other departments,
and was 20 inches long.
Maternal grandparents are Mr. but we get no satisfaction.
Please ask your readers what
and Mrs. Walter Wilson, Pomeroy,
and the maternal great· they've done in similar situations. grandmother is Mrs. Virginia King, BETWEN A ROCK AND A HARD
Pomeroy. Paternal grandparents PLACE
are Mr. and Mrs. Dougla~ Johnson, DEARBRHP :
Duly asked.
Racine.
Meanwhile, contact your city's
Mr. and Mrs. Johnson have
tenants' association. It conducts
another son, Roy, Jr., eight.
periodic workshops where problems
can be aired and solutions often
found. - H.

'

Television
•
•
VIewmg

'

Officers were elected at the Wednesday night meeting of the Administrative Council of the Racine
Wesleyan Methodist Church held ;tt
' the church.
Pastor David Harris presided at
the meeting of the council attended
by 15 members. Elected were Mrs.
Betty Roush, chairman; Larry
Fisher, vice chairman; Mrs .
Marlene Fisher, secretary; Mrs.
Martha Dudding, treasurer. Mrs.
·Louise Stewart was appointed
publicity chairman.
Other officers for the year are
John Dudding, lay leader; Ruth
Smith, church school superintendent; Ruth Wolfe, chairman of

The Dai

'

U VB A K
ENA

ENA

MWDHSO;
NA

ADHIVPAEN

KMAASN

E'I'HAK , -

LTAF

Yesterday's Cryptoquok: IF FOOlS WENT NOT TO
MARKET, BAD WARES WOULD NOT BE SOLD.- ANON

D. JAMES KENNEDY

G) NEWS
CJ

MOVIE ·(DRAMA) "

"Tin

Drum" 1979

1;35 CD MDVIE ·(DRAMA)"' "MarkOt
The Hawk " 1958

VE

CIVIL ENGINEER
Thomas Jefferson's father, Peter,
was a ci vi! engineer of Welsh
descent.

�January 26,1981

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-1o-The Daily Sentinel
Thanksgiving besides those ru.med
above were Mrs. Dorothy Parsons,
s on Billy, Mrs Cindy Morris,
daughter Michelle and Mr and Mrs.
Bob Lawson.
Wtlliarn (BtU) Manuel, student at
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Piedmont College at Charlotte, N.
Michael and Mandy Russell, C , spent a few days with his father,
Stepha rue and Brad Hagey, spent a Don Manuel and family and enjoyed
recent weekend With Mr. and M rs. deer hunting
Robert Russell at Wolf Pen.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Manuel, son
Don Manuel, s on Wtlliam (Bill) Tim, Mr. and Mrs. Std Manuel of
Manuel of Piedmont College at Long Bottom, were Thanksgiving
Charlotte, N. C., VISited Mr. and Day guests of Mr and Mrs. Marvtn
Mrs. Arnold Hupp Sunday evenmg.
McGwre at Minersvtlle.
Mr and Mrs Gar; Miller,
Mr. and Mrs. Chester Durst, granchildren Amy and Jason of Bellvue, dsons, Craig Reeder and Ronnie
Oh , spent Thanksgtvmg through Cox, son-m-law, Don Thomas of
Saturday wtth Mr. and Mrs. Charles Niles, spent Wednesday through
Lawson and famtly
Guests Thanksgtvtng weekend wtth Mr. and

Fairview
.
News Notes

Mrs. Russell

Roush and family and
enjoyed rabbtt and deer hunting
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Russell,
Mandy and Michael, were dinner
guests of Mr. and Mrs Russell
(loush Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Roush
visited Howard Roush at Pleasant
Valley HOIIpttal Sunday. How•rd
W8ll returned to his home Tuesday.
David Roush of Manchester spent
the Thanksgiving weekend with his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Russell
Roush.

Christmas Day

guests of Mr.

and
Mrs. Russell Roush were Mr. and
Mrs. Dorsa Parsons, Mr and Mrs
Eddie Hupp and son, Jeremy, Mr.
and Mrs. Ronald Russell and

children, Michael and Mandy, Mr.
and Mrs Dana Lewis, Cindy Roush,
DaVId Roush and Ed Roush.
Mrs. Etha Warner spent Christmas Day wtth Mr. and Mrs. Thoffi8ll
Warner and family at Racine and
Christmas Eve wtth Mr. and Mrs
Clarence Roy and family at Racine
David Roush and fiancee, Teressa
McDennott, spent Sunday evening
wtth Mr. and Mrs. Russell Roush.
Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Hupp and Mr. and Mrs. Eddie
Hupp and son, Jeremy, were Jim
and Opal Hupp and sons, Jlrnmy and.
Billy, Irene Hupp, Robert Lawrence,
Charles Jones of Wisconsin, Mrs.
Shirley Belt, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest '

Bush

Christmas Day guests of Mr. and

chlldren, Michael and Mandy and

Mrs. Joe Manuel and son, Tim, were

David Roush of Manchester were
Sunday dinner guest.. of Mr. and
Mrs. Russell Roush.

Sid and Denise Manuel of ~g Bottom; Betty and Marvin McGuire of
MinersVille; Steve and Recka Elder
of Huntington
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Roush, Mr.
and Mrs. Dorsa Parsons spent
Fnday evenmg with Mr. and Mrs.
Arnold Hupp, Mr. and Mrs. Eddie
Hupp and son, Jeremy.
Christmas Day guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Lawson and Wilda
were Mr. and Mrs. Ed Lawson and
son of Syracuse; Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Parsons and sons, Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Lawson and family, Mr and Mrs.
Harold Lawson and son of Letart.
Mr. and Mrs . Ronald Russell and

' OHIOANS CHARGED
WHEEUN:G, W.Va. (AP ) - Two
Ohio men have been charged with
the heating desth 18llt September of
an elderly Wheebng psychiatrist,
PoUce • Chief Edward Wetth said
Fnday.
Dr. Arthur L. Osterman was found
dead Sept. 31 in his office
PoUce charged Robert Barritt, 29,
of llellatre, Ohio, and Michael G.
Zann, 28, of Lansing , Ohio, With the
murder.
Bamtt told WTRF-TV he had been
a patient of Ostennan and had first
seen him 11 years ago.

Small investment, large ·r eturns, Sentinel Want Ads
__

_,

No11ce
- - - -Public
--------

_ _ _P~IC NOtiCe

WANT AD INFORMAnON

ORDINANCE
NO . 110310
An Ordmance to est1blish
Village Jobs and Wage
Rates, and establishing
legal holidays, vacations
and s1c1c l•ve.
Be ot ordaoned by the
Counc1l of the V1llage of
Meddleport as follows
~~r: I Thtrtt th~ tniiOWinC
wa9e scale is hereby adopt
ted tor employees of tfie
Village of Moddleport
Chief of Poloce, $903 00
oer month
Regular Patrolmen
Over 1 year of serv1ce,
$4 20 per hour
Less than 1 year of ser
v1ce, u 00 per hour
Part t 1me patrolman.
$4 00 per hour
Part t1me patrolman
(probatoonal), S3 60 per
hour
Street Employees
Over 1 year of serv1 ce,
SJ 52 per hour
Less than 1 year of ser
voce, $3 35 per hour
Pool and Park Director.
U50 00 per month
L1feguards, S2 25 per
hour
Secretary to Mayor,
$389 00 per month
Extra Clencal Help ,
$3 90 per hour
Clerk ,
Cemetery
Trustees, SlOl 00 per month
Volunteer
Fireman ,
S31 00 per year
Counctl ,
S8 00
per
meetong 124)
PreSident of Counc11 ,
$10 00 per meetong (24)
Board of Public Affairs,
U 00 per meetl ng 112 l
Clerk , Board of Public
Affa~rs , $614 00 per month
OISpetcher, $132 00 per
month
Clerk , Water Depart
ment, less than 6 rnonths
service, $558 00 per month
Clerk, Water Depart
ment over 6 months ser
v1ce, $588 00 ~r month
Water and Sewage Supt ,
$4 62 per hOur
( 1112 t tmes over 40 !"lours) ,
S6 93 per hour
Water and Sewege Ass' 1
Supt , SJ 76 per hour
Meter Reader, $3 83 per
hOur
Water and Sewage Dept ,
Extra Help
Over 1 year serv1ce.SJ 52
per hour
Less Than 1 year service,
SJ 35 per hOur
Mechan1c, S4 31 per hour
Cemetery
Over 1 year serv1ce, S3 52
per hour
Less than 1 year serv1ce,
SJ 35 per hour
Relief Dospatcher. SJ 35
per hour
Sw1mming Instructor ,
SJ 25 per hour
Custod tan , S-47 00 per
month
(All extra hours for
hourly employees w ill be at
I he hourly rate )
Sec II That secretana l,

PHONE 992-2156
or

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

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX
eANNOUNC.EMENTS

eRENTALS

1- C,rdofTh.lnks
l - In Memort• ..

41 - Houses tor lhnt
42- MotHitHomts
,.,... lt.nt

J- Annovncem e r~h
•- ~ 1 n1way

44-Apo~nmtnr

~ A•PPI' Ads
*-Lost 1nd Found

45-- FRC)Oml

7- Yird Sale
I - PubliC $1le
&amp; Auchon

47 -Wo~nttcl

tor RtnT

46-S..-ctlorRtr~t

to Rtnt

41-Equll~ment

for R tnt

,_Wanted to Buy

e MERCHA!IDISE

11-Htlp wanTHI
12-SIIIIafed WantH

)1 - Hous.ttotd G...:ls
s:z-ce TV. Radio •lllulpmtnr
n - ant•quts
S4 - MIK Mtrclt•ndl.)5-llyltdlnt Sllppllts
»-Ptts for Salt

eEMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

13- lnsur•nci
14-Butlne:n Tr•ln•nll
1!--Schoolslnstructlon

e FARM SUPPLIES

1._
Ra~IIO TV
&amp; CB Re,.ir

&amp; LIVESTOCK

11- Winted To De

a1-F1rm Equlpmtnt

62-Wanttct to Buy
11-Trucks for Salt

eFINANCIAL
aus•neu

11-

63-LIYtUotll
.._Miy &amp; Gr••n

OpPOrfunlh'
12- Money tm Lo.n

U - 5ttcl&amp;

n-Protesslon•l
Serv ices

Ftrhiir.,.

e TRANSPORTATION

e REAL ESTATE

7l - AYfos tor S.lt
73-VInt &amp;4 W 0
74-Motorc:yclts
nAuto Parts
&amp; ACctl$0t'lti
17- AYto RttN ir

31-Momts tor S.11e
32-Mobilt-Homts
tor Sate
ll-Filrms tor S•'3t-llullntu eulld lnts
31--Lots &amp; ACrNJI

36--Re•l Est.1te Wantlld
J7-Realton

eSERVICES
11 - Homttmprovtmtflfl

12- Piumbint &amp; E xcav.t•nt

Want-Ad Advert1s1ng
Deadlmes

ll-E IIIUY.Itint
M-EI.ctrk•l
&amp; lhfrlttrttlon

1 JO PM D.l l l'f

u-Get~trill

12 Noon S.1turd.,

Naullnt

f6-M H Rt,.lr

tor Mond•v

17- UptiCIIIttry

Rates and Other Information
15 Words or

Under
100

Claar ..
IH

1!50
1 10

'"
125

300

l7S

Cash
1 City

2diYI
ldiYI
auys

Eo~ch word O'ltr the min• mum IS wordt It 4 c:ents " ' wonl JtrcM!y
Ads r unning other ffliln constcutln d•ys will • clulrtect .It ttlt1 da.,.
rtf~

In memory C.ltcl of Th.lnk' 1nd

Ob1tuary 'cents per word, UN

m1n1mum Cash In ldYance
Mobile Home ••let •ncl Y :u d ••Its .1re .tuepleCI llftly wlll'l cull wirl'l
n ctnl ctl.trte tor .Ids urryht9 Bol NumtMr In c.,. of Tttt
Sentinel
ordf!l"

Public-Nottce
Salary schedule, and those
employees pa1d on an
hourly bas1s who do not
elect to part1c1pate 1n the
tnsurance plan be paJd an
add1t1onal 20c per hour
Any employee may at any
t 1m e elect to w ithdraw
from the plan . and m such
event electton for w1th
draw~ l shall. lokew•se, be
flied In wnt lng with the
Clerk Any employee who
elects nof to partici pate m
the ptan may ftle a sub
sequent elect •on to par
ttetpat1on, and. tf ac
ceptable to the 1nsurance
company on a non rated
basts, then such employee
may become a part topant
tn the plan Upon par
t Jc 1pat10n 10 th e plan the
addit1onal compensat1on
shall
be
cance l led
L 1kew1 se, any employee
who partiCipa tes •n the
plan may f1le an elect1on to
w1thdraw from the plan , 1n
wht ch event h1S wages or
sa l ary, as the case may be,
shall be adJUSted as
prov1ded 1n t h1s garagraph
Sec XI All rd1nances
'" conflict w1th thes Or
d t nance
are
hereby
repea led
Sec X II That all fu II
ttme hourly personnel shall
be patd an add1tlonal three
cents ( Jc) cer hour for each
year of consecut1ve serv1ce
wolh lhe Vollage and that
all full t1me salary per
sonnel shall be pa 1d an ad
d1t1onal six dollars (S6 00)
per month for each year of
c onsecut1ve serv1ce w1th
the v1llaoe
Sec XIII. Thai VIllage
counc il shalt determine
whi Ch employees are
c lass•fted as full t1me em
ployees
Sec X IV ThiS Ord1nance
shall take effect and be 1n
force from and after Jan
12 t981
Passed the 12th day of
January 1981
-~

ciencal .o " and / or book
keepeng record keeping
hourly ei"nDiovees be em
ployed at a maxomum of 35
hours per week, except for
an emer~en c y that shal l
anse, sa•d emergenc y of
ex.tra hours to be approved
bv counc11
Sec Ill The follow'"g
ar e hereby declared as
legal holiday s for the em
pioyees of the V• II age of
Mtddleport
New Year ' s
Day , Memonal Dpy. In
dependence Day , Labor
Day, Thanksg1vtng Day ,
Chr tstmas Day
Sec
IV
That sa1d
salar.es w•ll be '" effect
retroa ct1ve to January l,
1981
Sec V v , Each full t1me
employee '" of the Vtllage
shall be ent1tled to Si ck
leaYe tn the amount of one
and one fourth ( JIJ•) days
per month, and shall be en
titled to accrue sa1d sick
leave up to one hundred
twenly 11201 days
Sec VI Each full t1me
employee of the Vdlage, m
eluding full t1me hourly
rate employees, shall be
ent1tted dunng each year
after the f1rst year to two
weeks \l'acatton, excludmg
leQal hol•days, w1th pay
Employees With fltteen
more years serv 1ce sha l l be
ent1tled to three weeks
vacat1on w1th pay each
year
Sec VI I Each emplo yee
of the V1llage ent1tled to
vac8tl0n shall use the
vacat1on t•me tn year of en
t1t1ement or shall be pa td
tor an y unused port•on
vacat1on at thetr prevail1ng
wage rate at the f1me of
payment If at the end of
any year an y such em
ployee has an accrued and
unused vacat1on t1me, the
Clerk shall make payment
to the employee for such
unused time w1thtn thtrty
days IJO) after lhe end of
the
Yacat1on
year
Vacat1on ttme shal l m ean Attest
each 12 month penod Jon BU Ck
follow•ng the llrst full year Clerk
M L Ke lly
of employment
Pres1dent of
Sec VIII That a group
Counctl
hosp1tat and med• cal 1n
surance pl an be proY1ded 11119 ,26 21c
for all full t 1me employees
of the Village of M iddleport
Pubhc Nohce
wno elect, en wnttng, to
partiCipate m the same,
LEGAL NOTICE
and that the prem 1ums
Not1ce 1S hereby g1ven
therefor be pa1d by the
Village up to the amount of that Pearl Norris, Marshall
the prem1um quoted for the Adams, Herschel Norns ,
Clarence T Nor ns and
present contrac t
Sec 1X That all full
t•me employees des 1nng to
parttc1pate m the plan shall
file an elecTion W1Th The
Clerk w tth1n ten da ys after
the effect1Ye date of tht s or
d1nance
sec X • That sa 1ar1ed
employees who do not elect
to parttetpate, be pa1d an
e-x,tra $40 00 per month 1n
addtt1on to the present

or

Public Notice
PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
The following persons
were, on the dates shown,
app01nted to admln1ster the
following
decedents
estates pending 10 the
Me1gs County Probate
Court
FidUctarv's Name, Ad

l Curb· Inflation.
Pay Cash for
Classlfleds and
Savell I

In punuanu of Law, I, Georp M. Collins, Treuurer of Melp Coanly, Ohio, In COIDPUance with re\'·
laed Code No. 323 08 of Stale of Ohio, do hereby rlvo notlte of tho Ral• of Tuatlon fiJI the Tax
Yeor ot 1980. Rates npreo&amp;fd fn dollan and eealto on each one thouoaad dollan tax valuation.

~

wnte your own ad and order by mall with tnls
coupon {;ance l your ad by phone when you get
results Money not reh/ndable

}

Nam•----------

TOWNSHIPS

!

SCHOOL DISTRlr.TS

Phone _______________

Pnnt one word In each
CIRCLE
space below Each In
1t1al or group of f1gures
counts as a worc4 Count
name anct address or
phone number 1f used
1
Y ou' ll get better results Words
of you descrobe fully , -+=da~Yi-=~~::..:.~;;;..:.;_;
give price The Senttnei
reserves the nght to
classify, ed1t or re1ect
any ad Your ad Wtll be
put In the proper
c laSifocatlon If you'll
ch eck the proper box --.&amp;....-L---'---'--~ ' 1
I
below
These cash rates
I
Include dtscount

AD WANTED

I 70 24 00 .IO
I 70 21.00 10

2 50 2I 00
2 60 24.00
3 70

26 90

40
40

10 40
10 .40
10

40

10

20

I 00

lO

20

1 00

10 20
10 .20

I 00
1 00

lu

20 1,00

1.00
I 00
1.00
100
2 50

1.00

32 80
29 80
30 60
3360
40 20

031467
034624
046906

.267767

025 187
027582
0379 1h

240559

LEBA ~\ ON

Eastern LocalS D ... 4.30
Sout hern LocalS D .. 4 30
LETART
Sout hern Loeal S D .. 4.30
OLl\iE
Eut ern Local S. D ... 4.SO
ORA!': GE
Eastern LocalS D .... 430
RUTLAI\ D
Meoga Local S D --- - 4 30
Rut'and V!l ln~e . - ---- 4.30
SALEM
Mel&amp;'' Local S D .... £30
SALISBURY
Melg• Local S D .... 1 30
M1ddlepoot VIl lage .... 4 30
Pomeroy Voltage ...... 430
SCIPIO
Meogs Local S D -- -- 480
SU'ITON
Southem Local S D _. 4 so
Racine Voltage ....... 4 30
Syracuse Voltage ..... 4 30
SlJTTO N
Mew• l ncnl S n .. 4 '!0

2 70 21 00 .10 .40
2 70 24 00 10 .40
3.20

10
10

20
20

l 00
l 00

100
1 00

30 80
S3 80

061987
046682

04911 6
044104

24 00

.10

40

10

.20

1.00

I 00

34 30

044764

0.17336

2.70 21.00

10

40

10

20

1 00

I 00

30 80

04877S

04238;

2 50 21.00

.10

40

10

20 1.00

1.00

30 60

044632

038369

2 SO 24.00
I 00 24.00
1 70

10
10

20
20

100
1 00

10

40

10

20

1 70 24.00 10
20 24 00 .10
20 24 00 10

40
40
40

10
10
10

.20 I 00
.20 1.00
20 100

240

24 00

10 40
.10 .40

24.00

.10

40

10

6 50

1 00

20 ; 1.00

620
5.80

1.00
I 00

3340
37.80

OS791 5
094062

031741
Of&gt; 4000

I 00

32.80

OS1467

025187

I 00
1.00
I 00

32.80

87.50

.031467
074879
074244

02:l !B7

100

37.10
3360

041 225

035217

10
10
10

40
40
40

10 20 I 00
10 ' .20 100
10 .20 100

1.00 33 20
10 10 I 00 41 80
uo 1.00 37 00

034794
130701

027273
080995

07170 ~

1152844

210

10

40

.10 .20 1 00

I 00

014794

02727'!

33 20

1m· h h.ne not bee n paid llt trhe close of each colledion earry a penalty nf len
P8 1 cent r:~. ,e- m.,, be p,ud at th e office of the county treasurer or by mall Please bring your
laet ttl ' 1ece1pt and Jf vou pay by mail be sure to locate your property by taxinr dl.~trict and enclose ~tsunped eelf add t eased envelope
l\

Alwn 1 !\ o mm" ) our tax rece1pt t(l see that i t covers all your property. Offu!e Hour~:~ 8 :10 A M
to 4 30 P M , Mon~ay thru Fr&gt;day, Closed on Saturday
'
GEORGE M. COLLINS, Meora Co Trcao

TAX BOOKS CLOSE FEB.13, 1981

Wanted
For Sale
Announ cement
For Rent

-_
-- _21· __
_:_
J _ _ _ _ __
4 _ _ _ _ __
5._ _ _ _ __
6 _ _ _ _ __
7 _ _ _ _ __

a _ _ _ _ __

059694
061096

2 10 24 00
60 24 00
60 24 00
2400

Il l 26, 12) 2, 9, 3tc
Public Nottce

ORDINANCE
NO 1104·80
An Ord1nance to authonze
the sale of VIllage Real
Estate not needed for any
MuniCipal Purpose.
Be 1t ordamed by the
Counc1l of the Village of
M•ddlerort as follows
Sec
That the follow1ng
real estate, belongtng to
the Vollage of Middleport
IS not needed for mun1clpa 1
purposes, to w1t
S•tuated 1n the Village of
Middleport, Me1gs County ,
Ohoo
Beg~nntng on the upper
!me of Lot No 15 10 the
Vollage of Sheff ield (now
Middleport) SI Xty SI X feel
and three •nches from the
Northeast corner of ~"'in
Lot No
15 , !hence
westerly along the upper
line of said lot one hundred
and twenty SI X feet and
three 1nches from the Nor
thwest corner of satd lot,
thence down Th ird Street
sixty SIX feet to the South
west corner of "'Said lot.
thence easterly i!!ilong the
dlvid1ng l1ne between satd
Lot No 15 and Lot No 16
one hundred and twenty s1x
feet and three 1nches to a
stake. lhence across sao d
Lot No 15, sl xty SllC leet to
the place of begmnmq .
~AVING
AND EX
CE PTI NG 30 feet elf of I he
backendofsoodLotNo 15
Sec II That the Counc•l
of the v Illage ol M1d
dleport, by 1ts President
and the Mayor be and
hereby ts authonzed to sell
Sil1d real esta1e to the
h1ghest b1dder accordeng to
law upon the followmg ter
ms
_
Cash In hand upon
delivery of deed
Sec II Th1s Ordtnance
shall take effect i!!lnd be 1n
force from and after the
earl~est date provided bv
law
Passed the 12th day of
January 1981

I I. 19, 26, 2tc

8
BEDFORD
Meo gs Local S D .... 4 30
Eastern Local S D. . . .4 30
CHESTER
Eastern Local S D
. 4 30
Meogs Local S D .... 4 30
COLUMBIA
Alexander S D ______ 4 30

Name and Address, and
Case Number are listed
Harry C Watson, 310
Watzgall St,
Pomeroy ,
Oh1o, Admtnistrator, Dec
30, 1980. Maroe H Walson,
310 Wetzgall St , Pomeroy,
Ohio 23298
Ronald E Hart, Racine,
Oh•o, Executor, January 6,
1981. Earl Hart. Rac1ne,
Ohoo, 23303
Norman W Johnson, Rt
3, Pomeroy , Ohio, Ad·
min 1strator , January 8,
1981. Noamo F Johnson.
Rt
3, Pomeroy, Oh1o,
233011
Pamella McEldowney
Kelly, 301 s S1x:th, M•d·
dleport, Ohto, Ex:ecutnx: .
January 16, 1981 , Donald
Edwin Kelly 301 S S1xlh ,
Middleport. 6 hlo, 2JJ19
Leonard Ramsburg, 4330
A Malin St, Columbus.
Oh1o, '!:x:ecutrlx, January
23, 1981 , Earl Ramsburg,
R D , Rutland, Ohio, 2JJ26
loretta Allen, Albany ,
Oh10, Executnx, Jan 23,
1981, Grover B Stoul, R D
3, Pomeroy, Oh1o, 23297

Attest
Jon Buc k
Clerk

Addreu--------

t

AND CORPORATIONS

_.

Public Notice
='= iiressanc.11'
11e:Decedent
oareOI Ap
polntment,
s

- - ~ ~P~~·~ t!o~~=
Florence Adams as the
duly appointed. qualified
and acfino Trustees of the
U B Church, have f1fed
thetr Pe1ttlon In the Com
mon Pleas Court of Meigs
County, Ohio, being case
No 17731 , praying for
authonty to sell, conYey
and transfer to Oon R Hell
and Mary E Hill, for the
consoderatlon of S'IOO oo the
following described real
estate
The following described
real estate situate in the
TownShiP of Letart tn the
County of Meogs and State
of Oh•o
bounded and
descnbed as follows Bemg
in sect 1on 16, Town 1,
Range 12, t&gt;egonnlng at the
Northeast corner of Casste
Sayre lot, running East 30
feet thence Soutfl 45 feet ,
thence West 30 feet , thence
North -1.1 feet to the place of
begonnong
Reserving to the State of
Ohio, however, ell 011, gas,
coal and other mtnerals
The prayer of sa1d
Pet1t1on is as follows
" Wherefore Pet1t1oners
demand an order of the
court authoriZing them to
sell , convey and transfer
the real estate described tn
thos petot1on to Don R Hill
and Mary E H1ll , or the
survivor of them, whose
address 1s •9585 State
Route 338 Rac1ne, Ot'I!O
ol5771 , for the conSideration
of $900 00 and for such
other relief as may be
proper '
Satd Petition will come
on for hearing at 9 00 A M
On the 27th day ol
February , 1981 , or as soon
thereafTer as may be
Pearl Norns
Marshall Adams
Herschel Norns
Clarence T Norns
F Iorence Adams
Trustees of the
U B CHurch
11 I 26, 12!. 2. 9, 16 , 41c

~----------~----------~~

Rates
of Taxation for 1980 .
,

Ben! f-:11\H h: tnxe,;

---~-

_ _______ _

Tll12,19,26(2l2,4tc

9. _ _ _ _ _ __

I
I
I
ol

II
1I

w' _ _ _ __
11....,..

·- - - - -

12 -L~---------

13
- ----14.______
_
15-----16 _ __ _ __

17
18
19
20
21 . _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
~

"·-------23 - - - - - - - 241._;_ _ _ _ _ _ _
25
26

27
28

29
30
31 .._ _ _ _ _ _ _
32. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
JJ
;
J•
35

I
f

II
I
I
I
I

Mail This Coupon with Remittance
The Daily Sentinel
Box 729
Pomeroy, Oh10 45769

M L Ke lly
President of
,. Counc il

Public Notoce

IN THE
COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS,
PROBATE DIVISION,
MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO, 55 :
In the MaHer of the Estate
of E1rle
A . Price,
DecaAstd
case No. 23213
LEGAL
NOTICE
TO
CREDITORS OF ESTATE
OF
NON-RESIDENT
DECEDENT TO FILE
CLAIMS WITHIN SIX (6)
MONTHS
Notice Is hereby given,
1 pursuant to Orders of the
Probate Court of Meigs
I county, dated oocember9,
11 1980. lhat John E Wren,
Esq , 444 Bedford Rd , In
I , the
Village of Pleasant
l o ville, County of West
1 chester, State of New York,
of the Estate or
I Executor
Earle A Price, who died
I testate on June 19f 1980, a
11 resident of the own of
Mount Pleasant, In the
11
of Westchester,
I' County
Stele ol New York, I lied In
I' Said Proba~ Court of
1 Meigs County. on oocem
11 ber 9, 1980, an aulhen
1 tlcated copy of his Letters
I Teslementary Issued to
him by the Surr011ale' s
I Court Of said County of
I' Westchester, Slate of New
I York, and that all creditors
said decedenl shall
I] : of
present their claims to sald
Probate Court of Meigs
COunty, Within Sl• (6) mon
ths after the date of f11ing,
to wit . by June 9, 1981, or
be forever barred as a
possible lienholder upon
the real estate of said
decedent SifUllte In the
State of. Oh1 0( pursuant to
0 hI o
Rev sed
Code
$2, 129.02
and related
statutes.
John E Wren
Executor of the
Estate of
Earl A. Price,
Doceasea

~----------------------~

DATED January22, 1981
(1) 26, 121 2, 9, 3tc

Classified Ads
br1ng

you

extra cash
for
shopp1na sprees

. ... .............
-·······
................. .,.
2

In Memor~am

IN LOVING memory of our
dear &amp; beloved husband,
father. II. grandfather, Ed
Ward Chevalier, who left us
a year ago today Jan 26,
1980, Althou'gh he IS gone
from our Sight he will
always remain forever in
our hearts and memories
A place ts va cant In our
home wh1ch never can be
f tlled
Sad and sudden was the
call of one so dear l y loved
by all A biller grief, a
shock severe, 1t was to part
wtth one so dear
Sadly m1ssed .. but not
forgotten by hiS Wile Lana.
daughters , Evelyn and
Cary l, sons, Lowell, Zen1th
and Garvtel and the ir
fam11i es

l

January 26, 1981
9

Wanted to Buy

11

Help wanted

GET VALUABLE traonong
as a young bust ness person
and earn good money plus
some great gifts as a Sen
tinel route carrier Phone
us nght away and get on
lhe ellgfbolo ty list al 992
2156 or 992 2157
Babysitter needed tn the
Racme area, for one school
age child &amp; one Infant Call
alter 5 30 p m at 949 2624

WANTED People 10 sell
Avon 742 2J54 or 742 2755

Announcements

1 PAY nighest pn ces
poSSible for gold and silver
co•ns, nngs, 1ewelry , etc
Contac t Ed Burkett Barber
Shop, Middleport

SHOOTING MA TCH at
Corn Hollow In Rutl and
Every Sunday start 1ng at
noon
Proceeds bemg
donated lo lhe Boy Se oul
Troop 249 12 gauge factory
choke gun only 1

PART TIME bookkeeper 4
hrs per day Knowledge of
bookkeeping II. good
references a must Call
Margaret Cremeans, Mon
Fro 95at'l926606
12

Situations wanted

WILL CARE for e lderly on
nice one floor level. L pian
home
Room &amp; board
Reasonable 992 7314

RACINE GUN SHOOT ,
Raclne Gun Club, ever y
Freday ntght starting at
7 30 p m Factory choke
guns only

WILL do house keepmg &amp;
cooktng for an elderly per
son Also live •n Dorothy
Warth '192 7226

YOUR
valuable
tuning &amp;
oan1el s,

Have va cancy for elderly
person , room &amp;. board
Laundry , r easonable 992
6022

P I ANO
Too
to neg lect. e.:pert
and repa~r Lane
742 2951 0&lt; 992

2082
Rac1ne Volunt eer F~r e
Department sponsors a
shot gun &amp; rtfle match
every Sat n1 ght 6 30 p m
at thetr bUtld.no 1n Bash an
Factory choke 12 guage
shot guns only Ope n soghts
22 rifle
Tax servtce, federal , state,
&amp; quarterly taxes done by
appolntmenl See Wanda
Ebltn , 41000 Laur~l Cl1ff
Road, Pomeroy, Oh10
ol5769 992 2272
Income tax servi ce. federal
&amp; state Wallace Russell
Bradbury , ca ll992 7228

MEIGS MUSEUM open by
appa•ntment January Mar
ch 992 2264, 992 2802, 992
2360 or 992 2639 H iston es
for
sale
P o meroy
Middleport L1branes
Gun Shoot every Sunday
at 1 p m
at Rutland
Amer ican Legion '" a fur
nace heated bulldmg Fac
tory choked guns only

Put a cold nose In Your lofe
Cal l the Me igs Counly
Humane Socoety al 992
6260
BAKER ' s
Busy
Be e
Cer&amp;mtcs w ill open for
classes Tues &amp; Thurs Hrs
10 a m 2 p m &amp; 7 p m 10
p m We will permanently
close March 31 due to Air
Force transfer Buseness
will be sold Pauline Baker ,
667-3252
APPLES
Golden
delic ious, S3 75 per buschel
Other vanet1es at $4 00 per
buschel II. up Fitzpatrick
Orchard, State Route 689
Phone 669 3785

Call leo cat 985 39«
3 female yellow 11. white kit
tens, about 3 months old
See Ray Gorllnger on Little
Kyger Rd In Cheshire on
house on right posl the
church or call 992 7102 forlnformotlon
6

Lost and Fo-u-nd-

-

'-- -'='==::..:.==--

Found
very
small
chihuahua, male, black II.
tan, has on a knitted d011gle
sweater that has been pur
pie &amp; white at one time
Found under the bridge In
Pomeroy Possibly blind In
one eye Phone 992 3«8

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

They'll Do It Every Time

Homes for Sale
-------------

IRON AND BRASS BEDS,
old furniture, desks, gold
HAYES REALTY
rings , lewelry,
silver Charles M Hayes. Broker
dollars, sterling, etc., wOOd
Neacll E . Carsey, Branc h
ice bol&lt;es, [ars antiques, Mgr
etc Complete hounholds.
Pomeroy, Oh. 992 2403
Wrote M. D. Miller, Rt 4,
Pomeroy, OH1 or call '192
7760
House for sale · three
bedroom for $7 ,soo oo
WANTED TO
BUY
Located on Wel chtown
GOLD,
SII..VER , Road In M1nersvillej Oh 10
PLATINUM, STERLING· 992 5754
COINS, RINGS ,JEWELR·
Y, MISC. ITEMS. AB·
SOLUTE
MARKET
PRICE GUARANTED ED
Mobile Homes
,BURKETT
BARBER 32
for Sale
SHOP, Ml DOLE PORT,
OHIO 992 3476
1975 VIKING Tra iler .
OLD COl NS, pocket wat
12x65 Exc cond under
ches, cl&amp;ss nngs, wedding penning Included $6,000.
bands, diamonds Gold or 247 3942
s1lver Call J A Wamsley,
742 2331 . Treasure Chest
Coin Shop, Athens, OH 592
1969 PMC 3 bedroom
~2 trailer 12x60 992 3954
wanted to Buy class nnos.
wedding bands, anything
stamped, 10K, 14K, or 18K
gold Sliver coins, pocket
watches Call Joe Clark at
992-20~ ai Clark's Jewelry
Store, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
USED FURNITURE Gold
&amp; sliver, class nngs, pocket
watches, cha1ns, dtamonds
&amp; so on Copper brass and
batteries, antique 1tems,
also do appraisals, com
plete auct•oneer serv•ce
Over 30 years experience tn
business Will buy com
plete estates Osbv Martm
General Store, Moddleport,
Oh 992 6370

1l

The real estate of Lou ts A
DeLuz, twenty two acres
with large Holly Park
mobile home, 1n Lebanon
Townsh10p, near Portland,
Will be offered for sate to
the highest bidder, cash on
day of sale, on saturday,
January 21, 1981 at 10 00
am
at the off tce ot
O'Brien II. O'Broen, 100 &amp;
one half Court Street,
Pomeroy, Oh 10 For more
mformat ton cal1992 2720 or
949 2664

Real Estate- General

HOBSTETTER REALTY
OFFICE 742 2003
GeorgeS Hobstetter Jr.
Broker
NEW LISTING - Ex
cellent trailer lot In Har
riSOnVIIIe ApprOk J/4
acre wtth water tap
ONLY $2,800 00''
NEW
LISTING
Brand new home, be 1t' s
f1 rst owner The total
e1ec tr1c, 3 bedroom
home IS situated on nice
SIZe l ot In Rutland
Village FHA approved
Sells for $41.000 00
NEW LISTING - Large
frame
hom e
on
Sycamore St tn Mid
dleport
3 bedrooms,
aluminum Siding, gas
forced a~r furnace L ot
IS approx 50 X100' ON
LY $20,500 00

A P A R T M E NT

BUILDING Rover
front property w1th
many poss1biht1es Has
rental mcome Owner
wtll take land contra c t
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc
Phone 742 ·3111
Velma NICinSky, ASSOC
Phone 742 3092

Get Ahead!

Insurance

AUTOMOBILE
IN
SURANCE be e n can
ce ' led?
Lost
your
operator's license? Phone
992 214J

18

Wanted to Do

Furnace repatrs, electrical
work, plumbing ; mob ile
home or res1d ence 992

1- 11 Moru Power Riding
Mowo•

1- U" GE

Four year old house on 3
acres, 7 rooms. 1 &amp; one half
bath. nice location, Route
2, Recine 949 2706
Nice house on 2 &amp;
acres on s R 7
Memory Gardens
garage
Priced
spectlon '192 77AI

one half
between
&amp; stBte
on In

For sale older home on
large lol behond Burger
Chef In Pomeroy Call bet·
ween lhe hours of 7 10 P m

992 7547

TV

1- 6 cu n Notpoint
Refrlt• ntor
All etl the 1bove lf•m• in u ·
nl!tflt condiTion All •n prlcfll

.lif'l._
,'*"

POMEROY

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

992-2111 -

to

1973 Crown Haven, U x 65,
three bedjooms, new car
pet 1971 Cameron, 1.4 x 64,
two bedrooms, new carpet
1972 Champoon, 12 x 60, two
bedrooms, new cl!lrpet 1976
Cameron, 12 )( 60, two
bedrooms, all electroc 1971
Skyline, 12sx 6), two
bedrooms, bath &amp; 1/J , new
carpet
1970 PMC ,
12 x 60, two bedrooms, new
carpet B x s Sales, Inc,
2nd X Viand Street, Point
Pleasant, wv Phone 675
4424

1970 PARKWOOD custom
Mobile Home 12x60 un
furn1shed 2 bedroom, 1
bath , fuel ool heat 992 3823
Business Buildings
34
Hotel lounge w1t11 three
commerctal rentals, two
apartments LaSalle Motor
Inn on Moddleport 992 9917

·142

Three bedroom furnished
tr&amp;ller, available 1m ·
mediately
Must have
deposit &amp; references
$200.00 a month plus
utilities Phone 992 5511
anytemeafter 3

Headquarters

-w:~~~L~-~:.t
Ji
I ~16
E. second Street

Phone
1-( 614) -992-3325
NEW - 2 bedroom log
type home on the Oh•o
River w•th all ctty
uttlitles aiJallabte and
level lot
NEW LAND - Clear ot
yourself or let the Wild
life roam Natural gas,
water, and el ec tne~ty
ava1lable
NEW LOCATION - For
your tra11er or home
septiC tank, electr'tcity
and dr illed well on 1112
acres near the c oal
m ines on 124
SMALL - 2 car garage
w1th 2 bedroom apart
ment over on level lot
Bath , carpetmg, natural
gas furnace and c 1ty
waler Only $16.000
10 ACRES - Nl c;e bot
tom land on Rt 124 for
your new home on
t ra1l er Water and elec
tn c ava•lable
A LOCAL REALTOR
CAN BEST SHOW AND
SELL YOUR PROPER
TV. CALL 992 · 3325,
992·3176

$32,000

$2.00 fa&lt; uch palttrn Add 5M
101 uch pattem fa&lt; firsl-class
111m11l 1nd h1ndllnr.. Send lo·
Anne Atllms

Polletn O.pl

The DallY Sentmel
243 W•t 17 Sl, Ntw Yorl, NY
10011. Prinl NAME, ADDRESS,
ZIP, SIZ£, and snLE NUMBER.
We slreamloned the sewong lo

save you lime so you can ~ ve
mone1' Send now lor NEW 198 I

SPRING SUMMER PAnERN CAT

ALOG I 00 st1ies '"' patleon
coupon ($2 Value) CalaiiJ&amp;. Sl
134-14 Quic- Quilts
.$175

133-F...,lon Homo Quiltina s1 75
130-Sweallrs-Sius ll-56 $1 75
129 QulC-/(IIJ 1ranslers $1 75

-AddOIIsand
remodeling
-Roofing and guHar
work
-concrete work
-Plumbing and
electric• I work
&lt;FrH Estimates)

12 Park St.
Middleport, Oh.
Ph. 992-6263
Anytime
1 21 i'mo

V.C. YOUNG II

992·6215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Oh.

11 20·J mo pd

l mm.ctlttaly

Se•

u1

11IE
KOUNTRY
KWB

to-

~LANDMARK

GDI1 UIJIS:

Now' UlldIIIIONI
. . .Alii - . , lof'loNow lloleo. ~ Ctooooco. Woil!ot Cfolrco

56

ALSO
NEAR
THE
bridge! 5 country acres
wtth 4 bedroom nouse,
bath,
he•lolator
fireplace. House recent
ly remodeled $45,000
MIDDLEPORT 3
bedroom house on large
lot - aluminum s1dtng,
lull basement. nice k1t
chen S26, 900
BUILDING SITE - Ap
prox
13 acres that
would be an exc ellent
place for your new
home $11,200
IN TOWN - 1972 Holly
Park mobile home on
approx 1 acre lot 2
bedrooms, fl replace,
equipped
kot c hen
$16,500
REALTOR
Henry E Cleland, Jr
992 6191
ASSOCIATES
Jean Trunell949·2660
Roger &amp; Dottle Turner
992 5692
OF FlCE 992· 2259

WIN

J&amp;f
ENTERPRISES

Pets for Sale

HOOF HOLLpW Horses
and ponies end riding
lessons
Everything
Imaginable In horse equipment
B Iankets, belts,
bOols, etc English and
Western
Ruth Reeves
(614 ) 698 3290.

10 lb. Chocolate

ANN'S CAKE
DECORATING
SUPPLIES

Backhoe, snow plowing,
excavatton, water-gas
sewer lines, certihed
septic systems, dump
truck, stone-coal, etc.
General home repaor r.
carpenter work. Springs
developed &amp; ponds
deered.
JIM CLIFFORD
Rt. 2 Pomeroy
ph. 992-7201

Reedsv1Ue, OH.
Ph. 667-64a5

10% to 20% Discount
On Entire Stock
1 25 1 mo

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

For rent. two bedroom
mobile home, ut•lit•es paid
One chold accepted No
drunks or pets
John
Sheets, 3 one half miles
south of Middleport on Rt

7

44

Hor1sing

Mobile Homes
for Rent

3 bedroom Mobile Home
very nlce II. completely fur
noshed 2 children ac
ceptable No pets, deposit
required 992 7479.

Real EstAte- O.neral

PEACE IN THE COUN·
TRY 23 beaUtifU l
acres w1th stream
t tmber land, butldmg
s1te and some t1llable
Utilit i es
ava•lable
$18 ,000
WORK IN RAVENS
WOOD? L tve near the
new bridge m this neat 5
bedroom home w1th
enclosed rear porch,
basement , forced a~r
heat on a n1ce lot Owner
wdlmg to help ftnance

Get ahea d ol lh e new season
w1lh !htS deliCIOUSly demure
sh trldress Gathe1ed shou lders V
yoke pully ~lee~ es No wa1st
seam no l1!1!ng com p l•ca t10n ~
P11 n1ed Patl" n 4945 M•sses
S11es 8 10 12 14 16, 18 S11e
12 (bust 34) lakes 3 718 y21 ds
45 onch lab11 c

PWMBING
AND
HEATING

1-Good HotpolntWuher

POMEROY, 0.
992-2259

Homes for Sale

Beautifu l three bedroom
ranch brick home •n Baum
Addlt1on, Pomeroy, Oh10
Gas heat, central air con
dll lonlng Call 985 3814 or
992 2571

• Dozers
eBackhoes
Hourly Contract
Large or
small jobs.
Ph. 992·2478

Apartment
for Ren1

3 AN o 4 RM furnished ap
ts. Phone '192 5434
Unfurnished one bedroom
apartment for rent Ren
ters asslslance available
for senior clt•zens. Contact
Village Ml!lnor Apl!lrtments
at 992-7787 .
2 bedroom furnished apart·
ment 2 miles out Rt 143
Oepos1t &amp;
references
requored Adults only 992
J647 .
2 bedroom apartment for
rent In Middleport S200 a
month plus utilit1es 992
5545 sam 3p. m
4 room furnished apart
ment Adults only 992 2676
46

TRA ILER spaces for rent
Southern Valley Mobile
Home Park . Cheshire , Oh
992 3954

Household Goods

Huge refngerator In fair
condition $30 00 Can be
seen at 400 Lesley Street on
Pomeroy
53

Dozer. Chase 850, SIX WOY
blade
Backhoe loader,
Case 580 B 1973 Crawler
loader John Deere 2010 gas
engine. perlect. Massey
dozer 22« 6 way blade &amp;
w'"ch, cheap Call 1 614
457 3139

Space for Rent

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy Large lots Calf
992 7479

Sl

Bobcat loader, must sell
$3,500.00 1 -1.17 3139. Dozer,
Case 850, 6 way blade, 2300
hours. Backhoe Case 580
1973, 1400 hours, Massey
Ferouson, 300 crawler
loader, 1977, 400 hours per·
feet. Celli 873 3008 or 1 873·
4996
Trencher con
slructlonn or field tole 12
Inch to 24 Inch wlde, 6 feet
deep Vermeer t 600 100
horsepower. 1· ol57·3139

Antiques

Bobcat
style
loader,
hydrostatic Ditch w1tch
lrencher J20 18 hp, Ver
meer trencher, 100 hp,
model T600 crawler 1 614
-157 3139

utiity Buildings

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
R-1. 3, Box 54
Racine, Oh
Ph. 614-143-2S91
6 IS tfc

ROGER HYSELl'S
GARAGE
-Auto and Truck
Repair
- TransmIssion
Repair
Hrs.: Mon.-Fri.
9A M. 5: 30P.M.

992·5682
10 7 tfc

62

Misc. Merchanlse

Firewood for sale, M ixed
types of wood $35 00 per
p1ck up toad Delivered,
will stock for Senior
Cot!Zens 843-4951 or 843
2815

SPECIAL
DISCOUNT
prices on
furniture
Reupholstering
Jan
II.
Feb , 1981
Mowrey ' s
Upholstery , Pt Pleasant,
w va 1 J04 675 41S4
NEED otems for your
Mobile Home? Visit our
parts store 11. pick up a free
catalog
At Kingsbury
Home Sales Park &amp; Ac
cessorles Rt 124 Miner·
svolle, Oh. 992 5587
Firewood, $35 00 a truck
load, S60 00 • cord All har
dwood, split, 11. delivered
843 4831 or 843 4734
MODEL 70 Wonchester,
Bolt act1o with 6 power red
f1eld scope Caliber .270
$350 Gibson Guotar with
built In electroc plck·up
wllh case 2A7 2575
Golf clubs, 2 woods, 51rons,
bag, &amp; head covers Also
several put1ers available
985 3961
Firewood for sale Her
dwood, spi lt 11. delivered
$30 00 load delivered 992
5240

WHIRLPOOL coppertone
refrigerator
SBO
Gas
dryer S65 , electric stove
$20 992 2707

1 221 mo

114·1mo

Carousel
Confectionery

COFFEE HOUSE

317 N 2nd Ave.
M_1ddleport
Order your decorated
cakes for all occas1ons·
Birthdays,
Ann1ver ·
saries,
Weddings,
Showers, etc.
"Beg1nner
Cake
Decorating Classes"
start1ng soon. Please
note, we wtl be closed on
Mondays during the
month of January.
1·11 1 mo

Pomeroy, Oh.
Open
Saturday Only
4 P.M. to 11 P.M.
Free Coffee &amp; Tea
Free Food
Live MUSIC
12311mo

Wanted to Buy

CHIP WOOD F'oles max
diameter 10" on largest
end $12 p·er ton Bundled
slob SlOper ton. Delivered
lo Ohio Pallet Co, Rt 2,
Pomeroy 992· 2689

---· ...' ..........
.....
· ·~ ···.

71

eNew Homes- extenSIVe remodeling
• Electrical work
• Roofing work
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583

Slzestrom 4x6 to 12x40

Autos for Sale

J&amp;D '

January Inventory Sale

AUTOMATIC
TRANSMISSIONS
REPAIR &amp; SERVICE

cash 'n' Carry
2 Rolls
Rubber Back

SHAG

ON MOST CARS
Reg. Proce U2S.OO

Re,S15.9S
$ 99 Sq.
Yd.
casn-n-carr
Buy Now &amp; Save 52·56 Per Yard.
25 rolls carpet in stock to pick from.
Regular backed carpet tnstalled free,
with pad.
Drive A Little- Save A Lot

Spec. Pnce 5225.00
Plus Ta.: &amp; Flutd
109 Spnng Ave
Pomeroy,
Oh .
ph 99:Z.S543
1221mo

73

NATIONWIDE IN
SURANCE
Neacol E Carsey, Agent
Pomeroy, Oh 992 6226

lot for sole, $5 ,000
Modular home tot on Route
1, three bedroom farm
house located on Route 7
992 2571

rEXCAVATING

KAUFPS

CARPENTER
SERVICES"

1- Good Chi R•nte

S4

Tr~ller

PUWNS

1- Good Trailer A,rtvtd Wood
Burner S'-v•wlth blower

1980 Pontiac Pheomx, 2
door, frontwheel dnve. air
conditioning, am·fm radio,
33 mpg, 2,000 miles,
$6,400 00, new car warran
ty 992· 2849

Professional
Servrces

10 ROOM brick , 3 baths, 1'1•
acre. 6 rooms. 2 baths, l 'h
1 acres . 6 rooms basement ,
bath, 2 mobile homes,
Mason, 3 bedroom neYer
lived 1n, 2 bedroom, rented
2 acres John Sheels, 3'h
miles south of Middleport ,
Rt 1

Business Services

THREE Quarter bed, complete. sso. Firm. 66'·3085.

Will dO babySitting tn my
home i n Portland HaYe
references Call 843 4801

31

Misc. Merch1nise

KING WOODBURNER
GOOd cond . 985 ·~262 alter 4.

Headquarters

Will do panel tng, ce111no.
floor tile , plumbing Free
estimates Fred Miller at
992 6338

54

1 new mult i color afghan.
hand made for single bed
Never been used. '192 7226.

Housiny

5858

23

The Daily Sentinei-Page-1_1_

Ohio

Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

1973 Silver Pontiac LeMans
GT 2 door sport coupe '192
3478 after 5

1979 Chevy Cheyenne
Blazer with low mlle.,ge,
lots of extras $6,000.00.
Phone992·5170
74
Motorcycles

1979 Chevelle Malibu two
door, 6 cylinder, automatic:
transm i ssion.
power
steering, power brakes, air
conditioning, cruise con
trol, tilt wheel, sports
wheels, &amp;m fm radio Mar
vln Keebaugh, days . 992
6614 or alter 7 p m call985·
3913

1978 KAWASAKI KZ 650
motorcycle, color blue
Call949 2649
1980 Honda Odyssey Like
new for $1100 00 Phone 667
6594
75

Boats and
Motors for Sale

197A • MAZDA
RX4,
auomatic, air, am·fm, gOOd
llres, runs good Will trade
for small pickup of equal
value or $750 992-78A1

1979 Starer aft aluminum V
hull open bow. so hp Mer
cury outboard, canopy &amp;
trailer In excellent all
around condition Boat like
new. $3.700.00 . 992 2849

72

KIT 'N' CARLYLE "'

RUTlAND FURNITURE
742-2211
11

J II. F BACKHOE SE R
VICE loscensed II. bonded,
septic tank onstallatoon.
water &amp; gas lines Ex
covatlng work II. transit
layout 992 7201.

Home
Improvements

Gene's Carpet Cleaning,
deep stream extraction .
Free
estimated,
reasonable rates, scot·'
chquard 992·630'1 or 742
2211

•Dozer wOrk Small lobs a
specialty 742 2753.

&amp;4

-------- 1---------..,.---------1
Trucks tor Sale

For sale: 1970 Ford pickup
one half ton with overload
springs better
than
average condltlon or 1977
Chevrolet one half ton
pickup In good condlton
Victor Bahr three miles
north of Chesler 985· 4240

by Larry Wright

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

SEWING
MACHINE
Repl!l i rs,
service,
all
makesl
992 2284. The
F obrlc Shop, Pomeroy
Authorized Singer Sales
lind Service We sharpen
Scissors.
ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR
Sweepers,
toasters, Irons, all small
epplll!lnces Lawn mower
Next to State Highway
Garage on Roule 7, 985

' 382~.

CHEVY Truck \12 ton, 1970
Good cond $695 f lrm 667
30115
73

vons&amp;4W D

1978
CJ 7
hardtop
Rene9ade Levi package,
headers. sun roof, white
spoke
wheels,
,3 04
l!lutomatlc , quadratrac
trailer hllch,
carpet
U600 00 Phone 985· 3597
1971 Chevy van, 6 cylinder,
standard, two new tires, all
carpeted Inside, runs good
$10'15 oo 742 2211 , after s
phone 992 2201 .

APPLIANCE SERVICE
all makes washer, dryers,
ranges, dishwashers ,
disposals, water tanks. Call
Ken Young at 985 3561. 28
years experience Also Will
sell parts you fix .
D x M Electrlcol Con·
tractors Residential, com·
mercia!, &amp;
Industrial
wiring . Serv1ce calls. Free
estimates . Call collect 388
9764.

15

General Hauling

AI'S Trash Service. Box 65.
Portland, Ohio 843·4912
We have entire Metgs
County SS 00 monthly

�Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

I

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Area deaths

Ch arIes Johnson

Grace Turner

I

Grace Turner, 69, Middleport, formerly of Guysville, died Sunday at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
She was born at Carpenter, a
daughter of the late William and
Maggie Dudgeon Swearingen.
She . was a member of the
Guysville CotQffiunity Church, the
Meigs County Seniors Citizens
program and the R.S.V.P. program.
She was also a member of the
Harrisonville Chapter 255, Order of
Eastem Star, the Star Garden Club
andtheHarrisonvilleSeniorCitizens
Club,
Surviving are her husband,
Henry; a daughter, Mrs. Joe (Janet)
Bolin, Rutland ; two sons, Roger and
his wife, Dottie, Pomeroy, and
Donald and bis wife, Gail, Albany; a
daughter-in-law, Barbsra Turner,
Mount Corey, 13 grandchildren, two
nephews, Lester Swearingen,
Rutland and John Swearingen,
Albany.
·
Mrs. Turner was preceded in
death by a son, Larry, and five
brothers.
Funeral services will be held at 1
p.m. Wednesday at the BigonyJordan Funeral Home in Albsny
with the Rev. Olan Harvey of·
ficiating. Burial will be in the School
Lot Cemetery. The family will
receive friends from2 to 4 and 7 to 9
p.m. Tuesday. Eastern Star rites
will be held at 7:30 .m. Tuesda .

Januar\'_26, 1981

.

Meigs County happenings•.

MEETS TUESDAY
Past matrons of Pomeroy Chapter
186, Order of the Eastem Star will
· meet at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday night at
the home of Mrs. Tl!elrna Dill.

Early ·retirement may save jobs

EMERGENCY RUNS
Four runs were made by local
WASHINGTON...., Early retirement may be designed to save the
units over the weekend.
jobs of younger workers, but the General Accounting Office reports
The Pomeroy unit took Hinze
that it cost taxpayers $109 million during the 1!JI!I fiscal year.
Coates, Nye Ave., to Veterans
"This is a laudable objective," the GAO said. "However, -uy
Memorial Hospital; Christi lauderearly retirements ... are saving few, if any, jobs."
milt from the Kiddie Shoppe to
_The GAO called for congreasional action to change the taw that perHolzer Medical Center and L. Steinmits early retirements during reorganizations and staff cutbscks.
metz from Kingsbury Road to
Veterans Memorial. The Middleport~==:::::::::::::::=:::::::::::::::::::::::::::=
unit took David Fisher from the fire
station to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
.
SPECIAL MEETING
A special meeting of Pomeroy
Chapter 110, Royal Arch Masons, will
be held at 7:30p.m. Monday. Work
will be in the moat excellent master
Clearance prices on
degree.

Charles Freeman "Mose"
Johnson, 50, Clifton, died Saturday
inoming in the Ohio State University
ASK TOWED
Hospital, Columbus, Ohio, from inA
marriage
license was issued to
juries received in an el!J)losion at
Jon
M.
Grueser,
26, Minersville, and
Foote Mineral Company's Graham
Angela
Kay
Ginther,
!9, Pomeroy. ,
Plant in New Haven late Friday
"
. aftemoon.
END
MARRIAGES
· Bom Oct. 21, 1930, in Clifton, he
In Meigs · County Common Pleas
was the son of Mabl~ Bass Johnson,
Court
Juanita M. Linville was granwho survives in Clifton, and the late
ted
a
divorce
from James Franklin
Harry E. Johnson.
Linville.
The
plaintiffs name was
He was a foreman at the Foote
restored
to
Juanita
M. Moore.
Mineral Company 's Graham Plant.
Marriages
dissolved
were Sandra
Survivors,. other than his mother,
Kay
Stanley
and
Mitchell
Owen
- include his wife, Jeanenne L.
fashion jewelrY . for
Stanley;
Joy
Lacomb
and
Vioncent
Johnson; two sons, Charles ·M. of
the entire family.
DEGREE WORK
Lacomb.
Clifton, Donald D., who is .serving
Work will be in the entered apItems for
men,
with the U.S. Army, stationed in
prentice degree when Racine Lodge
women and children.
Fulda, Germany; a daughter, Mrs.
461, Free and Accepted Masons,
Margaret M. Roush, Mt. Alto; six
Includes are chains,
COIN CLUB MEETING
meets in special session at 7:30p.m.
sisters; Mrs. Ellen ·Tober, Toledo,
The OH KAN Coin Club will meet TUesday.
bracelets,
pins, earr: Ohio, Mrs. Jody Caldwell, East
in re~ular session this evening at the
ings, hair jewelry &amp;
' Liverpool, Ohio, Mrs. Masil Cole,
Riverboat Room of the Diamond
WEDNESDAY SESSION .
watches.
· Sylvania, Ohio, Mrs. Charlotte
Savings and Loan Co., West Main
The Pomeroy-Middleport Lions
Roush, New Haven, Mrs. Irene
St., Pomeroy. A social hour and Club will meet at noon Wednesday at
Fisher, Clifton , Mrs. Donna Glaze,
trading with dealers will take place the Meigs Inn.
· Middleport, Ohio; three brothers,
at 7 p.m. Plans will he made for a
George of Clifton, Pat of Middleport,
coin show on March 15 and a 32-lot
SPECIAL MEETING
. and Eugene of Mason.
coin auction will follow the meeting.
A special meeting of Middleport
: Funeral services will be conRefreshments will be served.
Lodge 363, Free and Accepted
Jewelry Dept. 2nd Floor
• · dueled Wednesday, 10 :30 a.m., at
President David Edwards invites Masons, will be held at 7 p.m.
the Foglesong Funeral Home with
any area resident interested in coins Tuesday. Work will be in the
the Rev. Lester VanMeter of.
or psper money to attend the fellowcraft degree. All members are
ficiating. Burial will follow in
meeting.
asked to attend.
Kirkland Memorial Gardens.
Friends inay call at the funeral t'=.:;:.========'--------:-------------------_JL-----------------,-------homeTuesday, 2 to 4and 7 to 9 p.m.

ELBERFELD$
JEWELRY CLEARANCE

OFFICERS ELECTED
The commission elected officers for the ~ear in:
eluding The,reon Johnson; president; Orien Roush, first
vice president; Henry Wells, secimd vice president ; L.
W. McComas, secretary, and George, Collins,

•

•

e

enttne

at

Vol. 27, No. 200
Copyrighted 1981

treasurer.
C. E. Blakeslee was appointed to serve again as
executive director. Named to the executive board were
the officers and Richard Jones, H. E. Shields, E. F.
Robinson, Fred Hoffman and Eleanor Thomas with
William D. Childs.as an alternate·.
Johnson reviewed activities for 1980.
·Robert First of the Meigs Soil and Water Conservation District discussed possible road funds which
might be available for !llaking repairs in areas where
mining had been the cause of the road problems.
Frank Petrie announced a meeting of tlie Meigs
County Health Department Advisory Board for 7 p.m.
on March 2 at the multi-purpose building on Mulberry
Heights.

•

I S'eCtion, 8 15 Cents

Pomeroy- Midoleport, Ohio Tuesday, January 27, 1981

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

•

Man given $2.8 million damages
NEW YORK - A 27-year-old New Jersey man who said he was blinded shortly after birth in an unauthorized hospital experiment has
been awarded $2.8 million from New York Hospital.
The malpractice darnages w~re awarded Monday to Oal)iel Burton
Jr. by a slllteSupreme Court jury.
The Union City resident, who said he was blinded in a test of oxygen
levels while he was in an incubator, sought damages for suffering, injuries, loss of earnings and future medical expenses and costs.

Haig assumes complete control
NEW YORK - Secretary of State Alexander M. Haig began trying
to ensure his depsrtment's primacy in foreign policy even before
.Ronllld Reagan had taken off his inaugural suit, Reagan aides have
told The New York Times.
The newspaper reported today that the president still was in lonna!
attire last Tuesday when Haig approached him with a 20-page
memorandwn urging that intra-agency working committees be
placed under the Sl!lte Department's leadership.

Trio enters guilty plea to charges
NEWARK. Ohio - Three men. apprehended by Licking County
sheriff's deputies during a raid three month!! ago, have pleaded guilty
to dogfighting charges.
Two of the men, Jnhn Norris, 3{], of Pataskala, and Gary Smith, 29,
of centerburg, were cha rged in con nection with incidents on Aug. 17,
19110, and Sept. 3, 19110. The third, Robert Arnt'ltrong, 23, of New
Philadelphia, was charged in the Aug. 17 incident.
'

No plea given hy teach~r
LANCASTER, Ohio- A 22-year-old high school teache r has entered
no plea for allegedly starting a fire in the ventilating system of his
cia,.. room .
Christopher Tope, of Baltimore, was charged with aggravated arson. He teaches vocational agriculture at Liberty Union High SChool in
Baltimore. which was evacuated for 20 rninutes Jan. 20 after a blaze. .
Tope was freed Monday on $10,000 bond. No date has heen set for his
hearing.

Johnson, Daman Lawson, James

Leitch, Bobby . McCoy, Thomas
Miller, Harold Morgan, Roger Randolph, Larry Roach, Myrtle Ross,
Frank Starkey, Melissa Theiss,
Fred White, Iris Whittington.

Police will sue for hack wages

BIRTHS

The Meigs County Sheriff's Depar·
tment is investigating the theft of a
1975 Ford pickup truck owned by
-Sharon L. Jacks, Rt. 1, Rutland.
According to the sheriff's depart·
ment, Mr. and Mrs. Jacks left Thur.sday with relatives to travel of
Columbus and when they returned
home Saturday they were informed
by their neighbor that the state
patrol was looking for them.
It was reported their truck had
been involved in a hitskip Friday at
. Langsville and had been abandoned
· in Rutland and recovered by the
.State Patrol. The incident is being
· investigated by the patrol and the
sheriff's department.

Route 33 around Nelsonville to Logan. It was agreed to
concentrate more on local highway problems.
During the discussion, it was reported by Metgs
Comm.issioner Henry Wells that the new access road to
be built with grants from Union Ave., to Mulberry
Heights should be up for bidding in March. The road
will provide a better flow of traffic to the several public
facilities on Mulberry Height.'&gt; and will open up an area
which would be suitable for new housinl(, it is reported.

NEW YORK - New York City was pressing ahead today with plans
to honor the former hostages with a ticker-tape parade, despite war•
nings that some of the 52 Americans were suffering from stress and
might not be up to a big celebration.
Former hostage Barry Rosen telephoned City Hall later Monday to
say he would be in the parade.
Parade organizers expected to get some idea later today of how
many of the 52 planned to participate in the parade, said Joseph Fitzgerald, a spokesman for the City Council.

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGES JAN. 2
Mrs. John Bishop Jr. and
daughter, Vicky Brannon, Mrs. Randal Shamhess and son, Margaret
: Coast, Gloria Cox, Phillip Dunlap,
: Julian Eynon, Wavie Fitzwater,
Virgin Gahm, Richard Haller, Glenna·Hunt, Mrs. Ben McCauley II and
son, William Merrick, Amanda
Miller, Andrew Miller, Heith Miller,
John Murray, Phyllis Napper, Mary
- Nelson, Garrett Salyer, Richard
: Smith, Gloria Snyder, Rebecca
Stewart, Patricia Walter, John
Watkins, Bertha Waugh, Hurl Westfall, Faye Williams, Russell
Williamson.
Bffi'I'HS
Mr. and Mrs .. Roy Canterbury,
son, Gallipolis Ferry; Mr. and Mrs.
- Thomas Weaver, daughter,
Syracuse.
1
JAN.24
Floyd Bennett, Virginia Bocook,
Bertha Brown, Clyde Brown, Arthur
Clark, Oshel Dabney, Beatrice
_Davis, Evan Davis, Charlotte Griffith, Richard Harrison RR, Scott
Himernan, Stephen Howard, Frank

Couples' truck
reported stolen

th place among the priorities went to improvement of
SR 124 from Long Bottom to Portland, and sixth would
be eliminating road flooding on SR 243 in the Keno
area . .
The group discussed county improvements and
priorities and agr~ to invite Meigs County Engineer
Phlllip Roberts to the April 'll meeting for receiving input on the projects which could be carried out and the
priorities of thsoe projects.
Improvements were compiled by James M. Jennings Associates Co., Columbus, planning consultants,
as a result of several public input meetings. The group
yesterday approved two of the listings dealing with the
completion of the Appalachian Highway. Also a!&gt;'
proved was a limited access and four l•n• hi~hwPv nri

New York presses ticker parade

VETEI\ANS MEMORIAL
Saturday Admissions--Rosella
Secoy, Syracuse; Sharon Cogar,
Syracuse; Ruth Hysell, Pomeroy;
_Guy Guinther, Syracuse.
Saturday Discharges--Martha
Stewart, Brenda Maurer, Linda
Fields, Carmel Jewett, Terry
Barrett, Teresa Hunt, Betty Bailey,
Donald George, Kathryn Metzger.
- Sunday Admissions-Patricia Day,
· Middleport; Elizabeth Murray,
: Pomeroy; Margaret White,
Pomeroy;
Lesia Kruskamp,
Ewington; Nicholas Bostic, Racine ;
Marie Dixon, Coolville.
Sunday Discharges--James
Thomas, Charles McKinney, David
: Grimm, Kethel Hatfield, Wilbur
: Bailey.

Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Gillispie Jr.,
daughter, Bidwell; Mr. and Mrs.
David Hendricks, son, Middleport.
JAN.25
Vera Brwnfield, Connie Cline,
Larry Delaney Jr., Marilyn Hayth,
: George Lemley, Gladola Mitchell,
Mrs. Stewart Queen and son, Blan- ·
che Sievers, Caroline Tripp
BIRTHS
Mr. , and Mrs. Alan Mills, son,
Racine; Mr. and Mrs. Jefrey Patterson, daughter, Pomeroy; Mr. and
: Mrs. Steven Riegel, daughter,
Jackson; Mr. and Mrs. William
Wickline, daughter, Jackson.

BY BOB HOEFUCH
Highway improvements, federal and state routes,
were given priority and officers were reelected at the
annual meeting of the Meigs County Regional Planning
Commission held Monday aftemoon.
Top priority was given to connecting US 33 to the
Ravenswood bridge, including from Rock Springs to
Five Points and a second segment, Five Points to the
bridge.
Second priority went to development of a four lane
highway to Athens via Route 33 while third priority is
upgrading State Route 124 from the Route 7 bypass, to
Wilkesville and a bypass of Rutland on Route 124.
Fourth priority went to upgrading the intersection
of US 33 and SR 124 at a Pomeroy intersection while fif.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

HOSPITAL :\E\'\ S

~

US 33 connection to bridge top priority

IRONTON, Ohio - Police in this financially plagued city say they
plan to sue for their bsck pay unless they get it soon.
The southern Ohio corrununity has been declared in a state of fiscal
emergency by state Auditor Thomas Ferguson.
Grover Carter, president of the local Fraternal Order of Police, said
the city owes police officers about four weeks' pay. Legal advice has
been sought in getting that money, he said.

CHECKING TWO is our very best. You'll earn interest every
day on every dollar you have in your accoont. And a checking
accot,mt at a real bank makes a difference: A real bank with
years of experience in the checking business can give you all
the other advantages you need to back up your checking
account. Things like the Total Account Bank Statement, which
gives you one complete monthly report of all your checking
transactions as they were cleared by BANK ONE.
At BANK ONE you also get experienced people and
programs that guarantee the accuracy of your account.
Interest on checking is important, but developing services to
support your checking account is what we do best because
we have the experience. Get CHECKING TWO at a real
bank ... BANK ONE.

BANK ONE .
BANK ONE OF POMEROY
· Pomeroy • Rutland • Tuppers Plains
Member FDIC

.. .• .

Officials probe meat practices
CINCINNATI - Federal officials say they're probing rneat industry
practices in southern Ohio following the conviction of a slaughterhouse
official on charges of processing diseased and cancerous cattle. ·
'James Cissell, U.S. attorney for southern ohio, declined to reveal the
.
'
extent of the probe.
Cissell also would not say whether other slaughterhouses and meat
processing plants were under investigation.

Fate of l,tH)() people unknown
JAKARTA, Indonesia - An Indonesian passenger ship being towed
in the storm-tossed Java Sea after a 12-hour fire was sinking today and
the fate of nearly 1,000 people was unknown, Indonesian officials
reported.
A spokesman for the National Search and Rescue Operation said
only 17$ of the 1,137 people aboard were known to have been rescued,
and that a search was under way for the others.
·

...
--

Daily lottery winner
CLEVELAND - The winning nwnber selected Monday night in the
Ohio Lottery's daily game "The Number" was 016.

Weather
Considerable cloudiness tonight and Wednesday. Lows tonight in the
lower 30s. Hi Nbs Wednesday in the upper 30s. Chance of precipitation
20 percent tonight and 10 per,ccnt Wednesday, Winds we;'terly to northwesterly &gt;tO mph tonight.
Extend&lt;d Ohio Forecut- Thursday through Saturday: Fair and
cold throu~h the period. Highs in the upper 20s to upper 30s Thursday
aud in the 20• ~·rirluy and Saturday. Lows in the teens.

•

MEET THE PRESS- Freed American h08tages, 41 of 52, take up their positions at the Eisenhower Hall news conference at the U. S.
Milltafj' Academy in West Point Tuesday. (AP Laserphoto 1.

Ex-hostages offer prayers
WEST POINT, N.Y . (AP) - The watery-eyed." But Brady did not
liberated hostages offered prayers identify the hostages involved.
Brady said the former hostages'
of gratitude in a chapel service at
over-riding
concern was their jobs
West Point today and 110ng the
and
future.
"They
want to ~et back
paa~ns that kept their faith alive
on
the
career
peth,"
he said.
during their long ordeal in Iran.
•
Reagan
issued
a
proclamation
In Washington, President Reagan
declaring
Thursday
a
national day
received a briefing from Secretary
of
thanksgiving
and
made
of State Alexander M. Haig with the
arrangements
to
welcome
the
freed
disquieting news that about a dozen
Americans
to
the
ca
pital
on
of the 52 freed Americans are sufTuesday.
fering Severe damage," mostly
During a morning press conpsychological .
ference,
hostage Katherine Koob,
White House Pres.' Secretary
whose
singing
of " Away in a
James Brady said, " People were
Manger"
stood
out
in the Christmas
talked about by name, what specific
interviews
released
to AmeriC'.!ll
problerns were, and all that." He
said the briefing left Reagan' ' a little television by Iran, told the news con11

ference she picked that carol
because it' s a favorite in her family.
11
1 was concerned about the reac-tion of my nieces and nephews to my
captivity, " she said. "It was my way
of sharing Christmas ·and also
praying with all of the people that
were praying for us, because that
was a prayer verse that I sang."
The highest-ranking diplomat
among the 52 freed hostages said
the agreement which liberated them
from Iran did no damage to
America's honor.
Bruce Laingen, who was the
charge d'affaires in the U.S. Embassy in Tehran, also said that the
nation must assUille that it will hap-

pen again - that, somewhere else,
American officials will be seized and
held by hostile forces.
He said the way the Carter adrni.nistralion handled the situation
could not be compared to making a
bargain with terrorists .

Rodney firm gets contract
By Bob Hoentch
ministration funds which rnight be
Holley Brothers Construction Co. available. Shields _said that the
of Rodney was awarded a $246.29'1 .25 village would be advised on the
contract for the West Marina sewer status of the pre-application within
project and lift station, a HUD fun- 90 days .
ded project, when Middleport
Dr.Craig Matthews spoke to counVillage Council met in regular • cil on National Children 's Dental
session Monday night.
Health Month to be observed during
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman February and Mayor Hoffman
clarified the earlier bid of the Rod- signed a proclamation on the obney firm which had ornitted, through servance.
Representatives of trash hauling
an oversight, the type of pipe to be
used in certain instances of the finns discussed the issuance of perproject. The firm last night correc- mits and whether or not they are
ted the oversight before the bid was permitted to advertise for
accepted. The other bidder at about customers. Rates were discussed
$9,000 higher on the project was the but no price was set. It was pointed
Ontario Pipe Co.
out that haulers rnay have to
Kim Shields, grant consultant of traveled to landfills in Gallia County
the village, discussed a pre- or Coolville if the county landfill is
application for HUD funds. The closed this year.
program covers a three year period
Council passed a mollon that
with emphasis on housing in the haulers can advertise their service
community and seeks grants of but they cannot solicit customers
$71l,700 the first year; $861,300, the
persomilly. Council also granted a
second year and $933,700 the third specialized corrimercial permit to
year in addition to Farm Home Ad· Arthur Powers, Gallipoli!&gt;, who has a

Foani extinguishes plant fire
A furnace fire ~it the Foote nnanager, who satd damage was conMineral Compa ny's Graham Plant, . tained to the furnace and air comnear New Haven, Monday evening, pressor.
three days following an explosion
Beard further stated the plant was
there.
back in operation at 10 p.m.
According to Bill Jarnes, chief of
An explosion and flash fire octhe New Haven fire department, curred at the plant Friday afwhich was called to the scene at 6 ternoon, injuring Charles Freeman
p.m. a furnace was engulfed in Johnson, 50, Clifton, who died Saturnames upon its arrival.
day at University Hospital in ColumJames said foam was used on the bus of fatal burns, and Leroy James,
blaze due to the electrical wiring and Mason , who remains in criti ca l con~
fuel oil contained in the furnace .
dltion at University Hospital's burns
Mason fire departrnet was also center.
called and additional foam was obOfficials from the Charleston
tained from the nearby Mountioneer re~ion of OSHA arrived at the plant
Plant.
Monday morning to be~in their in·
One plant worker, Kenneth Im- vestigation of the explosion.
boden, Middleport, was transported
Accon)ing to plant manager
to Veterans Memorial Hi&gt;spital,
Beard, officials are now reviewing
where he was treated for smoke
plant records and are expected to ininhalation.
terview witnesses today and WedDamage to the plant was minor,
nesday.
according to Wlllaim Beard, plant
..

'"

contract for hauling with the Imperial Electric Co.
Representing the Board of Public
Affairs, Willis Anthony requested a
billing machine for the water department. Council approved the purchase of a Monroe billing machine at
a price of $8100. The machine will be
prograrruned by the company and
personnel will be trained on its
operation. Anthony also reported
that the board has located a newer
pickup truck which is needed but no
action was taken on that matter last
night.
A second reading was given a
sewer tap ordinance and a mutual
aid contract with the Syracuse Fire
Department, at no cost to the village
which was approved. Council
renewed its contract to be responsible for the mnrina boat launching
facility for five more years.
Council approved the appointment
o! three persons to the recreation
corrunission. They are David Baker
for one year; Judy Crooks for three .
years and Charles Cassell lor five
years.

In conjunction with a national
welcome for the former 52 hostages
in Washington, D. C., today,
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews
and. Middleport Mayor Fred Hoff·
man requested that their com·
munltles become part of the official
welcome.
The two mayors asked that
American flags be displayed
throughout the both towns today.
Pomeroy, however, has a problem.
According lo Bob Morris,
president of the Pomeroy Lions
Club, nags wiU not be flown In
Pomeroy, as all the Hags owned by
the LloDH Club are lu the cleaners.
Morris extended his apologies to
the officials of the community and
its residents.

l.
;(:'

~''

•

DOWN TilEY COME- TakinR
advaotagee ol the sprlngllke
weather, Jim Frecker, Pomeroy
businessman and active
Pomeroy Cbamber of Commerce
ml'mber, Monday afternoon completed taking down the town's
Christmas decorations in the
business section. On Sunday,
John Anderson, a busluessman
and chamber of commerce
president, removed a number o1
the decorations from their blp
positions. A truck to make the job
easter wasloaned.to the two men
by the Ben-Tom Corp.
I,

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="106">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2672">
                <text>01. January</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="45189">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="45188">
              <text>January 26, 1981</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="126">
      <name>johnson</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="6069">
      <name>swearingen</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="789">
      <name>turner</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
