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                  <text>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.

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day on every dollar you have in your accoont. And a checking
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the other advantages you need to back up your checking
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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,

�The Daily 5entinei-Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.

Commentary
Time magazine (whose cover
story on Ronald Reagan by Roger
R~nblatt is a masterpiece in jour·
nalistic portratture) reports ~bout
Mrs. Reagan that "she bleeds pretty
good" - and attrtbutes the words to
her husband . Those who know Nan·
d
thi As
cy Reagan wo uld not eny s. a
matter of fact she would consider it
less than dutiful if she failed to bleed
overcriticismofherhusband.
So much for that. But during the
past period, the lady has here and
there put through the wringer, and
those who know her wonder at the
gullibility of those who pass along as
truth reports that are totally out of
· ha t
c My
rae er.
colleague William Rusher has
over the years devised a few
Rusher's Laws, and the pertinent
one to cite on this occasion is : " If
someone rushes into your office and
tells you that your best friend Joe
Jones was Been stark naked on
Times Square carrying a billboard
denouncing you - doubt, not joe
Jones but the man who thus spoke of
him."'
When Nancy Reagan is rumored

· d
to ~v~ recommen
tearmg own
a wall m the Lincol~ bedroom of the
Whit~ _House ~ f~lft~ soo:e~d~f!
capnce, or 3 s ~
.
whole of the West wmg emptoed so
that she nught have a better look at
it; or that she suggested President
Carter and his wife remove them.
.
selves for the convemence of her mterior decorator ; or that she cut her
son's allowance in half for
marrying, so to speak, out of the
reservation; or that she objected to
the designation of a press chief on
the grounds that he was unsufficiently handsome: Doubt not
the lady, but the nonsense in bel·
ween. Jackie Kennedy claims, over
the years to have gotten used to it, as
Eleanor Roosevelt claims.

reproduced as saying unpleasant
thin s abo~t President Carter and
dis g ra in thin s about the insti:o;of~arri!ge. Specifically he
was uoted as sa i that he would
decli~e to sbak/:::;, hand of the
.d nt f th U "ted Stat
t ih
preSI e
e 01 · etas!~ t" e
tnaugura1ceremomes, m re ta ton
f the
t ths
k
b the
or .
un ru
,., en ~ .
prestdent about Ron s father. Ftr~
of ali, 1 never.satd that I wouldn_l
shake han~ wtth Mr. Carter. lsatd
that 1 dtdn t know if I could, qutckly
adding that, gtven the me~ttable ctr·
cwnstances of our meeting, I was
s~e I. would. There f?llowed a
discussion of appropnate han·
dshakes and salutatiOns (dead fish.
s·
u· kiss· of dea.th • etc · ) - of
IC tan
course, that .. doesn t make such
splashy copy.
But it isn't true. Sensitive women
Then young Reagan ws quoted as
- .and men - are easily hurt by saym~ that the . inStitution of
fabricated misrepresentatives. mamage was nothing more than a
Time magazine reports that Mrs. · $20 license fee and clap test. That
Reagan will not give press con- pronounceme~t, b! the~ of the fir·
ferences. No wonder. ..
st family, qwte JUStiftably caused
Look what happened to her son. He the eyebrows to rtse, not because
was "quoied, in ar article in New
Ronald Reagan, fils, has any
York Magazine, extensively obligation to regurgitate only the
views of Ronald Reagan, pere; but
because to disparage the institution
that binds in love and devotion tet.s
ol millions of people is venture in

The Daily Sentinel
111 CtutStrHt
POIDtroy, Obio
tlWft.UII
DEVOTED ro THE ~OF t1IE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~lb ....,.....__....___,..,,....,.=,,_
ts:ml'!:l
~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Pablllber

BOB HOEFLICH
GntraJ Mauaer

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
Nn~EcUtor

A MEMBER .. Tbe Auoetlled Pml, IDIIDd DaOy Prell A.laotliUoa IDd tM

AlllerlcuN......,..Palllll-"-11-

__

t.r:Tl'EI\8 OP OPINION are weltnletl Tbty aboald ~ ._ thaD. wonh laq. AU
an nftjed co tdl1lq ud ..., be •IIDtd wttb . ., .-... ud lit&amp;epltMt
Ntaolpodlellon w1l1 be pollll*d.~Aften- be lalood luto. ldCetolq

-r..,..........
~etten

A social agenda
for the eighties
(Fourth ina series)
The President's Commission for a National Agenda for the Eighties endorses the goals of the social refonn tradition of the New Deal and the
Great Society: the nation no longer needs to debate the legitimacy of 'the
federal goverrunent's role in the provision of human services. Buth the
Commission also notes that acceptance of the refonn tradition does not
exempt the hwrtan service areas from hard questions and critical
reexamination. The Commission concludes that "the country does not
pursue its hwnan service goals in either an efficient or caring manner."
The C9ffi111ission further concludes that the delivery of health care is
" woefully inadequate." It reviews national health care proposals and
asserts that, on balance, a national health insurance " which relies on
competition, consumer choice·and market incentives rather than government control is more likely to create the much needed stimulus toward
greater efficiency, cost consciousness, and responsiveness to consumer
preference... lack.ing in our present arrangements for providing health

care.''
The Commission proposes a three-part National Health Policy which
includes:
-A univel'llal, comprehensive national health insurance program on a
health-voucher basis, with premium subsidies for individual selection of
appropriate health plans that guarantee certain levels of cove rage.
- Aprogram of non-institutional fonns of care for the elderly.
- A program of disease prevention, including maternal and child
·screening, immunization, and nutrition services.
The report assesses the current welfare system for equity, adeQuacy
and efficiency and concludes the present welfare system meets none of
these criteria. According to the report, the " welfare system continues to
be a maze of uncoordinated programs that trap people in poverty and
dependency."
The Commission recommends a minimum security income program
that provides an income of tw&lt;&gt;-thirds to three-quarters of the poverty line
with a 50 percent tax on earnings (negative income tax ) as a replacement
for AFDC, food stamps and general assistance. The negative income tax
features are designed to enable welfare programs to reach the working
poor without taking away the incentive of those poor people to work. The
Commission points out "this program will aid the poor not covered by
current prograJilll, raise the level of welfare benefits in many states to
adequate levels; and :
"relieve state and local governments of much of their welfare burden
and enable them to perfonn the sorts of functions they perform best:
providing social services rather than income transfers."
Next: An Urban Policy Agenda.

°

EAST
American Int'l 87, Brandeis 6.'l
Boston Coli. 73, Vlllanova so
BO.!iton U. 89, Towson St. 71
SOt.ml
~tl1une-Cookman
48 , N.Carolina

•

Wil1iam F. Buckey Jr;

Did you hear the one about Nancy Reagan?
ded

College scores

2~

January 27, 1981
The Daily Sentinel

tastlessness.
"As for the remark about
marriage, 'What . is marriage,
aNyway? ' should have read, 'Our
marriage was ... " This referred not
to the institution itself, but rather
the drab bureaucracy we confronted 1 also added that church
·
weddings were another thing

altogether - just fine for people of a
particular religious persuasion."
Once again, a position rather considerably modifiPd. But, once again,
less splashy as copy.
"The . trouble with people who
don't believe in anything" Chester·
ton said "is that they end by
•
believing in everything." The

" ·Dtlt.a
ar

St. &amp;1, lAuisiam~ Coli. 61
NW loUisiana 71, Hardin-S inunon.!l 70
St.B onavemure 74, Syracuse 71
SE l.ouisiana 81, NE Lo uisi8.na 80
MIDW&amp;Yr
Mar:q_uette 78, Xavh:•r, Ohio 59
Wichita St. 9~, Indlana St. 59
SOUniWF.'lT
McMurry 81. Austin Coli. 72
Tens 67, Texas A&amp;M 63, OT
Texas-Arlington 66, Arks nm~s Sl. IH

rumor-people, Gibbon reminds us in
his classic, plagued Rome. They will
no doubt plague that long file of applicants outside St. Peter's Gate
("Did you hear about Jirruny? Two ,
thousand years in purgatory ... How
do I know? .. . Why, er, I know a
friend of Rosalynn's ... ")It would be
fine , wouldn't it, to have less of it?

·--,
,....... ,
b~ ~·~'Ci
..

~

....

s

editorialist continues, as concerns

El Salvador where the U.S.-backed
government ' 1 is the current target of
Soviet-Cuban expansionism and is
engaged in a bloody and vicious war
with leftist guerrillas."
Come again? Would thatthe agony
of El Salvador were so simple a mal·
ter as a face-off of good and bad
guys. That "goverrunent" happens
to he a military-dominated junta.
paralyzed by internal differences.
recently reshuffled for the umpteenth time to squeeze out moderate
moderate elements and the target of
nut only the radical left but a
ruthless right .
It is the latter. with connection to
the rightwing members of the junl&lt;!,
that is responsible for most of the
viciousness in a war being waged not
against foreign elements but upon
the people of El Salvador. Some
9,000 or 10,000 or quite likely many

commentary .

It is also a criticism of former
President Jirruny Carter, who embarked on four different economic
programs that left business uncertain about what to expect next
and, consequently, wary of taking
lung-lenn risks.

·1

more - the body counts vary and in·
volve considerable grim guesswork
- have been killed in the past year,
frequently following torture. Over·
whelmingly, they have been the vic·
tilns of either the rightist-controlled.
an ned forces operating openly or of
militiamen moonlighting on "death
squads" that terrorize t~ peasants .
of the back country.
That .information is readily
available fr om the Journal's
correspondents on the scene. See the
edition of Tuesday, Dec. 9, 1900,
"Military Coup Feared in El
Salvador," a dispatch from staff ·
reporter Steve Frazier who infonns
that " ... the people of El Salvador
are caught in a treacherous world of
killers, torturers, infonnants and
double-dealers with a variety of
loyalties ... Some people have
received threats from both sides.
Lately, however, the right seems to
have dealt the most telling blows."
And from many other sources, nul
least the United States embassy in
El Salvador. Also the Council on
Hemispheric Affairs, a private
organization of American public
figures, which states in a current
report that the Salcadoran blood·
bath has been " largely as the result
of government-condoned right-wing
'death squad' killings ... "
Victims recently have included a
nwnber of Americans, which has
made the Salvadoran situation more
than a squabble among distant
foreigners. It is continuing news in
the American press and the press
should keep the American public in·
funned as to its essentials.
- El Salvador has been a feuda l
society. run for the benefit of an
oligarchy of a few hundred wealthy
families owning almost all the land
- rich coffee haciendas and cotton
plantations. The remainder of the
five million Salvadorans, largely In·
dians, have been virtually serfs on

His wasn 't the only administration
to attract that charge. Nixon, for
one, imposed a wage-price freeze
without any warning and in O!&gt;position to his own philosophy. But
Carter did itin a wholesale way.
Last year, for example, he said he
had balanced the budget, but three
weeks later •everyone could see rt
was unbalanced again. He promised
to cut inflation, but he condoned inflationary spending. He instituted .
wage-price guidelines, but after a
year he relaxed the. wage standsrd.
He began a new economic program '
just weeks before the elections.
And the result seems to have been
a loss of credibility and public confidence, rooted in the feeling thst if
the boss didn't believe in his

Letter to the editor

By Associated Press
Things are usually uproarious
when Florida and Florida State
tangle in anything ...and Monday
night was no exception.
With Mickey Dillard scoring 22
points and five teamlnates joining
him in double figures, Florida State
avenged an earlier defeat and beat
Florida 82-7l. .. but not without some
extra-curricular activities on the
part of the Florida fans .
With just over seven minutes
remaining, Florida frestunan Mike
Moses was charged with a fifth personal foul. Coach Nonn Sloan
protested and was hit with a
technical. .That set off the crowd of
8,321. largest ever to see a Florida
home game. They hurled ice, trash

the death squads to drive peasants
off the fonner esl&lt;!tes, massacre
their leaders, torture and kill
moderate and leftist leaders.
Vicious is certainly the word for
the situation, but it is misinfunning
the American public to present it as
a simple goverrunent vs. guerrillas
conflict, or to blame it on "Soviet·
Cuban expansionism."
There is certainly a communist interest and involvement in El
Salvador. but there has been no need
~iderable utmost every since to 'tor outsiders of any ideological
block meaningful refonn - using coloration to create a revolutionary
situation.
the great estates.
- A military dictatorship was
ousted in October of 1979 by
moderate officers seeking to reform
the society and economy to heal off
ptltenlial violent revolution. A multi·
phased land refon n program was
initiated to transfer land to the
peasants.
- The oligarchy resisted and in a
countercoup its right-wing military
allies forced their way into the junta . .
They have been doing their con-

"You think HAIG 's had it rough at the hearings
- wait 'II you hear about MY day. '·
.I •

Kennedy

Mike Vail

"But there has been precloWl llltle negotiation relallve lo Collins. There
have been no significant numbers put forth. We're In the ballpark wllli
Nolan, but we're not even In the same city with Collins," said Bry.
The Reds signed pltcber Mario Solo to a one-year contrsct.
In addition to the five who have asked arbltrstlon, The Reds have not
signed pitchers Frank Putore, Charlie Lelbrandt and Joe Price, second
baseman Ron Oesler and plncb-hltter Harry Spilman,.

fW'T&amp;lf'Mf
11/HY, f!lANK, THAT, MEeSE.
HO/i/11/CUJf /KJIIJ aMI' I
lW WIJIIOP CANTGfT!N
7V 5f£fi()N ~

I

()! .. AN

WANr~

81$A!i H/5

LM. fJ)S5 ;

\~

storage, the Elks and various
restaurants for the coffee and food
provided, and the generous offers to
help since the 1088 occurred.
We appreciate the cooperation of
the Extension Service In the moving
of their office from the Court House
to allow the relocation of the Common Pleu Court.
. Columbia Fuel Gas Company has
generously allowed the Conunon
Pleas Court to operate from their offlee since the fire .
We think the City Manager and

JU§f
!(JIJCIING
A/ir)UNP.
I

~0?

~Jettelers

programs after a few weeks then · to the big job the more realistic he
they couldn't be trusted at all.
was becoming, that he would back
Reagan comes into office with his off from his tax-cut proposals, that
economic goals clear. He hopes to he move slowly rather than
cut spending, cut the size of the aggressively.
bureaucracy, cut taxes, cut red tape
His lenn has just begun, and there
and wasteful regulations, spur in- are indications the public wants to
vestments, raise productivity.
give him every break, but in a few
Because he has stated his views so months the ubiquitous polls will
distinctly, the burden on him to begin picking up the mood and the
follow through or else lose respect is assessment of the American people.
now probably greater than it ever
What will they think if President
was on Carter. His perfonnance or Reagan hasn't really pushed for a
lack of it Is measurable .
onajor tax cut?
And so, even before he took the
Will the American people feel
oath of office speculation arose over duped? Will they lose confidence in
whether he might postpone goals Reagan because he seemed to be
that .months earlier he had so losing confidence in his goals? Will
strongly espoused. Everyone has they decline to corrunit themselves
heard them - that the closer he got to a future they cannot visualize?

·· Warren Champion 71-4 9 and
Youngstown Liberty 66-41. Academy
Inastered West Jefferson 64-35.
... In Class AAA, Canton South
' remained in the fifth spot,
Chillicothe moved from eighth to
sixth, Dayton Roth slipped one to
seventh, Cincinnati Elder was up
one to eighth, Akron Central-Hower
down two to ninth, and Steubenville
and Youngstown South tied fur lOth.
In Class AA, Elyria Catholic and
Napoleon kept the fourth and fifth
spots, Navarre Fairless jw_nped first

Ohio CoUege Basketball
Monday'sRe!!.ulbl
Heanland Coni.

St. Joseph'!:i, Ind. 89, Ashl~tnd 67
OtllerGarnes
Cleveland St. 78, Akron 68
Marqul!tte 78, X&lt;tvier 59
Ohio U. 86, N. Carolina-Wilmingto n 81

vote!l 1t1 pHrt~ n these!l, thl~ !lelt·
rec.'Clrtls tHitl l.utu\ pullll.'i. I"Uinls

hii :~ OO

'

seek professions! assistance in legal
matters, in structural soundness,
and adjusting the loss to miniml2e
the reconstruction time and to
protect the county's interests.
For the next two to three years,
Gallia County olricea will be working
IDlder stress and hardship due to
temporary qusrters, construction,
parking problems, etc.
We ask the Indulgence of all concerned.
Jim, Lonnie and Paul

lll 20..19- l&amp;. 1.7- l ll- 1~14 - l:t- 12 ·1 J.10 -9-37~2· 1 :

I. Oregon st. (29)

(lie ) Vlrglnll:l (:!91
l Oeflxul
4. l.ool.11iana St. f1 1

S. Arir.ona St.
&amp;. Wilke l''oreNI

"

, ..
'·'

,•..,

7, Kentucky
a. No\rt: Dame
9. u.. h
10. UCI.A
II , Tennes.ree
12. North Ca r~lirut
13. Iowa
14. Mar')'land
1 ~. BriMham VuUiltl
18. &amp;lU th 1\hti}HIIUI

J:M&gt;

REG. '130

1,039

11·1
1.. 2

1,02$

1 ~1
1~3

lll-3

17·1
11-3
13-3

It-&lt;
12·3
1. ..

lf&gt;-.1
11&gt;2

17, M1rh l ~an

12·3

19. Mlnnt.:snlJI
20. Curmectu ul

U·?

18. Kan~i'l

IH
II ·~

NOW

I

8110
8:!&lt;l

766
732
G:ll
6l'l

"'
ill

46.1 •
400
3~

"'1611
"
171

"••

SVAC STANDINGS
W L

ALL SIZES

P

Southern

11

Eastern

1l 3 801
6 7 741
5 7 688

Hannan Trace
Southwestern

North Gallia

2 858

We do:
FMC Computerized Wheel
Balancing

• 9 697
J 8 601

Kyg er creek
SVAC ONLY

Southern

6 o 363

E astern
5
Hannan Trace
3
Southwestern
3
North Gallia
I
Kyger Creek
o
This week's schedule :

1
3
3
4
6

342
356
342
290
283

Tuesday - Kyger Creek at Hannan , w. va ., North Gallia at Mil ler
and

Southwestern

at

Sy mmes

FMC Computerized Wheel
Alignment.

Va l ley .
Friday Sou thern at Hannan
Tra ce;
Kyger Creek at SoutH-

western

and

North

Gallia

at

MEIGS TIRE CENTER, INC.

Eastern .

Saturdav ---"- Southeastern Ross at

Southern .

WEEKEND AT MEI,GS INN
- - - - - - F R I D A Y SPECIAL--S~~

Salad Bar, 6 OL Kansas City Steak

$7 25

Plus Tax

Entertainment
Friday &amp; Saturday

All LEGAL
BEVERAGES
SERVED

sggoo

1,147

It'- I

IN STOCK

DAY-N-NITER

1, 147

I~

SVAC schedule
TEAM

Beautlf.ul seating by day that becomes comfortable twin
beds at night. Practical and perfect for the family,
~~Uest, children's room or vacation house . Complete with
removable bolsters and 8" thick foam mattresses.

BAKER FURNITURE
OPEN MONDAY - SATURDAl'
CALL FOR EVENING APPOINTMENT
-3307
·
Middleport, OH .

•

RECAPS &amp; NEW TIRES

REPEAT OF A SEU OUT
•

f lr~l·plat&gt;e

SIM I's

Good ·supply Of

~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;j

The Tup Twenty teauLS in The As~i­
Prcll.'l l' QI Ic ~e b~:~kc thu ll poll. with

HI.t."tl

Bunce stole the ball from Pat Nunley
and fed Michael Young for an un·
contested layup with two seconds
left.
In other SWC games, Arkansas
downed Rice 57-52 behind Scott
Hastings' 21 points and David Gadis
scored 18 to help Suuthern Methodist
upset Texas Tech 5848.
Marquette defeated Xavier of
Ohio for the 23rd lime in a row, this
one by a 78-li9 count as Michael
Wilson scored 19 points and Oliver
Lee added 18.
Zam Frederick's 29 points led
South Carolina over Richmond 93-77,
John Sagle's career-high 30 points
helped Boston College trounce
Villanova 73-60 and Ronnie McAdoo
had 22 as Old Dominion, conqueror
of DePaul, flattened Stetson 7ii-6li.

1

College top 20

County expresses thanks
City Commission of Gallipolis for the
use of the city building and the offer
of the old Ubrary . However, after
considerable thought into the cost of
remodeling and the need to remain
centrally located, we are pursuing
the use of temporary modular units
In the parking lot of the courthouse.
We thank our local insurance
representatives Jack Matthews and
Tom Wiseman for their continual
assistance in the advance payment
of $300,000 and numerous problems
relating to our loss. It ill our intent to

members of The Associated Press
Top Twenty were idle. However,
Southem California hopes to crack
the rankings shortly ·now that
Dwight "Lightning" Anderson is
eligible.
·
The fleet S-foot-3 transfer from
Kentucky, where he was the second
leading scorer as a freshman, finally
got into action at the start of ihe
second half when the year he had to
sit out as a transfer was up. He made
only four of II shots but scored nine
points and grabbed seven rebounds
as the Trojans wanned up for Satur·
day night's visit to No. 1-ranked
Oregon State with a 72-66 triumph
over California. Jacque Hill paced
the Trojans with 16 points, including
six free throws in the final2: 19.
In an upset of sorts, St. Bonaven·
ture ~\Docked off Syracuse 74-71,
erasing a six-point deficit in the last
three minutes as Earl Belcher
scored nine of his 23 points in the
final!: 52.
Deep in the heart of Texas,
LaSalle Thompson scored a career·
high 32 points, including two crucial
free throws in overtime, as the
Texas Longhorns shaded Texas
A&amp;M 67-03 in a Southwest Con·
ference game that had 14 ties and 2tl
lead changes.
" I thought we played better than
they did and deserved to win it,"
_said Coach Abe Lemons.
Said A&amp;M's Shelby Metcalf : "I
felt good about the ballgame. It's
probably the most disappointing loss
that we've had." Huh?
Houston moved into undisputed
possession of first place in the SWC
by edging Baylor 5~1 as David

ByGEORGESTRODE
. to sixth, Youngstown Hayen one to
AP Sports Writer
seventh, Portsmouth second to
COLUMBUS , Ohio I AP I- Canton eighth, Circleville Logan Elm dipMcKinley. Willard and Kinsman ped third to ninth and newcomer
Badger protected their unbeaten Hillsboro took over the No. 10
records and rank as Ohio's No. I position.
boys' prep basketball powers for a
In Class A, Old Washington
fourth straight week .
Buckeye Trail and Kalida were four·
Astatewide panel of sports writers th and fifth again, Maria Stein
and broadcasters, rating the teams \'darion Local up first to sixth,
for The Assll&lt;'iated Press, accorded Zanesville Rosecra ns fell first to
McKinley in Class AAA and Badger seventh, Beaver Eastern up second
in Class A big leads today .
to eighth, Richmond Dal e
But Willard, breezing along with Southeastern down first to ninth and
13 stratghl victories, held only a lii· McDonald lost first to loth.
point lead over runner-up Struthers
in the Class AA poll. Willard had 293
points to 278 for 15-0 Struthers.
McKinley. unbeaten in 14 games
this season, piled up 32tl points, 84
more than second-rated Kette ring
Alter in Class AAA . Badger, 12-0,
owned a 293-2.14 bulge over runner·
up Columbus Academy in Class A.
The top three ranked powers in all
three divisions remained the sa me
except fur Hamilton. The Big Blue,
winning at Middletown 110-64 for a 13·
0 record, took over the No. 3 position
ih Class AAA from Columbus
Siladium &amp;class rings from ArtCarved are made
Brookhaven . 12-0 but idle la•-t ·
from a ;eweler "s fine stainless metal. Stronger,
weekend .
lighter and more durable than gold, its brilliant
Millersburg West Holmes kept the
luster lasts forever.
No. 3 spot in Clas. AA, while
You can also select from a numb er of features
Covington was ranked third again in
that will make your ring one -of-a-kind Uke your
Class A.
first name or your favorite activity.
In last week's results, McKinley
Come in with this ad to
swept by neigh boring rival
get
the $69.95 offer.
Massillon 7~2 . and Alter defeated
Dayton Jefferson 75-58 and Dayton
Belmont 56-54.
Willard handled Upper Sandusky
47-42 and Galion 69-57. and Struthers
211 E. Main, I&gt;Gmaroy
heat Beloit West Branch 57-52.
Badger's victories came over

DOONESBURY

BY' \

and frisbees onto the court.
Sloan grabbed the .inicrophone .
"Hey," he shouted, "please don't do
that. Let me handle this."
The crowd quieted down but the
Gators were unable to handle the
Seminoles. Bobby Parks added 14
points for Florida State, Kris An·
derson had 13, Rodney Arnold and
Elvis Rolle II each and James
Bozeman!O.
Florida lost three starters on fouls
and was .whistled for 33 fouls to 23 for
the visitors.
" We have to play however the officials call the game and it was very
physical," said FSU Coach Joe
WilliaJns. "A lot of people got bwnped inside ."
Despite a heavy schedule, all

AP leaders on top
•
fourth week zn row

-

The Gallia County Commissioners
wish to acknowledge and thank the
many people assisting in the recent
fire of the Court House. We thank the
fire departments of Gallipolis,
Gallipolis Developmental Center,
?t. Pleasant, Middleport and
Pomeroy who gallantly fought the
disaster and kept the 1088 of records
to a minimwn and to protect the
Court HoWle AnneX and adjoining
property. We thank the many in·
dividuals and !Inns who provided
assistance at the fire, for temporap-

Moskau

he was close on Nolan's contrad.

Florida State whips Florida

A call for consistency, credibility
NEW YORK (AP) - Whatever
programs Ronald Reagan decides to
push during his presidency must be
pushed hard, long and with few
reservations if he is to sustain
credibility and public confidence.
Which is to say that consistency is
a much admired virtue of leaders
and an economic necessity as well.
Anyway, that seems to he the
message running through a vast
assortment of recently published

Nolan

SEEK ARBITRATION- Centerflelder Dave Co!Uos has filed for cootrsct arbitration for the second coDBecutlve year, jolnlogJour others who
disputed offers by the Cincinnati Reds.
Others wbo filed with the Major League Players Association on Monday
for appointment of au arbltrstor were catcher Joe Nolan, Infielder Junior
Keooedy, outfielder Mike Vall and pitcher Paul Moskau.
"I've had quite a few conventions with Diet Wagner," Reds president,
~ld agent Rich Bry, represenllng both Nolan ~nd Colllrui. Dry Indicated

Where do they get their information?
By Don Graff
The Wall Street Journal is one of
the glories of the American press.
Business oriented but much more
than a business newspaper, its
reportage on national and world af·
fairs is as infonned and insightful as
any available . to the American
public. The standard of excellence
set by Journal correspondents is
such, in fact, as to raise a question :
Wh e re do the Journal 's
editorialists get their infonnation'
Not, it would appear on considerable evidence, from their
colleagues on the news pages. Take
for convenient example recent
editorial conunents on the preinauguration meeting of American
President-elect Ronald Reagan and
Mexican President Jose Lopez Portillo, which made the point that a
variance of views toward volatile
Central America is one of the must
complex problems confronting the"
two nations.
That it is. And particularly, the

A. x T

THE MEIGS INN
Phone 992·3629

Pomeroy, Oh.

You must be 21 or accompanied
by parent or legal guardian.

�Pa e-4

The Daily sentinel

'

Polly's Pointers

Repair needed on playpen
that started at the seams in the toes.
By Polly Cramer
Now I cover these seams with the
Speela1 correspondent
DEAR POLLY - I am going to clear nail polish after l put on my
have another baby and will be hose and BEFORE the runs start. I
get lots more wear from my nylons
nee.d ing · the
by doing this. - MRS. R.H.F.
paypen again.
DEAR POLLY - For many yea rs
However, it once
we did not have running water in the
fell against a
house, but now that I have city
heater and the
water, it remains precious and exnetting melted on
pensive to me. There is a hot and
one side. Othercolct mixing faucet at my sink, but I
wise · it 'is in ex·
feel I must not waste water to get
cellent shape. I
either the hot-or cold temperature. I
must use it, as I
Cramer
cannot afford to buy a new one. I fill empty 16 oz. pop bottles that have
don't know how to repait it. Do you screw-on lids with water while
waiting for the right temperature.
have any ideas? - MRS. B.S.
DEAR MRS. B. S. - If the name This is used to water my flowers. I
and address of the maker are on the might also grab a couple of bottles to
playpen, you might write them and take outside to put in the birds'
see if you can buy a piece of netting water pen.
I find sticliing a needle in the
for that one side. As a substitute, I
would go to a needlework shop and thread on a spool weakens the
buy the correct amount of that thread, so I leave at least a W-inch
plastic - with holes in it - that is knotted double thread on a needle,
sold for making those pu .. co l"pe 'or lay it against the side of the spool
gros point rugs. You could douutless and wind that thread around the
fasten this to the frame with braids spool. It stays there and I have ·a
or lace it on with heavy twines. Some threaded needle when I am in a
of our readers may have been fared . hurry.- MAXINE
Polly will send you one of her
with the same problem and
hopefully will share their solution signed thank-you newspaper coupon
clippers if she uses your favorite
with us. Good luck.- POLLY
DEAR POLLY - I wear san- Pointer, Peeve or Problem in her
, dalfoot nylons and was always dab- colwnn. Write POLLY'S POINbing ·clear nail polish on the tinv runs TERS in care of this newspaper .

Helen Help Us

Marilyn Monroe incarnate
causing problems for girl
BY HELEN AND SUE HOTTEL
Special correspondents.
DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
My friend Patty thinks she is a
reincarnation of Marilyn Monroe.
She's only 15, but looks almost exacUy like Marilyn's early pictures .
And she's watched so many of her
movies, she acts like her too. She's
been in several school plays, and got
written up in our local paper.
She used to do just imitations but
lately she's getting weird. She wants
us · to call her Marilyn who, she
abnost believes, she was in her former life.
Now she's decided to run away to
Hollywood where she expects to be
discovered immediately. Her folks
don't know anything about this side
of her personality. Like I say, she's a
good actress.
I'm worried about her, but she
made me swear I wouldn't tell her
parents.
What can I do ? - PAITY 'S
FRIEND
DEAR FRIEND:
If Patty has acted in several
school plays (with good notices )
then she must have a drama coach
who could tell her what Hollywood
often does to II;.year-old runaways.
Discuss the problem with this
teacher and let him or her take it
from there .
Patty may have a future in pic-

..

The Daily Sentinel
!USPSI*-*1
ADivilloaofMillttm~ IDe.
Publiahed every afternoon e:.:cept Sunday,

MondoythroqhFriday,_111 Cour\Slr&lt;et, by
the Ohio Valley Publlal1lng Company •

Multimedia, Inc., Pomero:y, Ohio 45769,
112-2151. Second clul p&lt;Olage plld at

Pomeroy, Ohio.

"

Member: Tbe Aaaodatocl Prwo, Inland Dally Prao Aalodatlon and the American
,
- ··'

Nrtnp~per Publiabon Aalo&lt;loUon, NaUona1

Adnrtl1inJ

Rtprtnntatlvt,

Landin&amp;

"-latu. 1101 Euclid Ave., Cleveland,
Oll!o,lllll.

P06TMASTER ' Send • - to lilt Dally ·
Sontlnol, 111 Courl St 0 Pomeroy, Ohio 41719.

~~

r-.
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·-,.
1

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~ I ••

I

SUBSCIIIPI'ION IIATD
B)' Canter or'MIMr Roult

One week .... .......... ' ..... "" .. 11.110
One Month ....... ................. . 11.10
One Year .. ...... ......... : ....... 161.11)
SINGLE COPY

PRICE&amp;

-1

Dolly .. .. . .. .... ..............

!ubocrlben not dulrinl
1110)'

II Conti

to poy tho corrior
to Tbe Dally

rtrnlt In advllllCe dlnct

on 1 3, 6 or 11 monlh bull. Crodlt
wW be ,tven urrter each D'Kinth.
NoltlbacrlpU~m~ by mall pannlllad In towno

wbln home carrier Hrvlce ll avlillblt.

lures, but not until she gets her head
together.- HELEN
FRIEND :
A talented Marilyn Monroe look~like has more chance for discovery
in her hometown than as a runaway
on Sunset Strip.
~lil(gest that she send some
professionally posed photographs
and her newspaper writ.,.up to a
Hollywood talent agency (William
Morris is the biggest ; the address,
151 El Camino Drive, Beverly Hills,
Calif . 90212), include return postage,
' and wait for an answer.
The key word is " wait": it will
keep her from splitting until friends
(and parents) can show her there's a
better way. - SUE
DEAR RAP:
About the religious couple who nix
Halloween. I agree, because:
1. As we know it, Hallow!"'n is a
paganized version of what used to be
a joyful, ·christian celebration for •
All Saints Day . Now it features witches and hobgoblins: an apple gone
rotten.
2. Halloween is dangerous. Trick
or treaters can get hurt, and not just
by the s ugar content in overflowing
bags.
3. It contributes to selfishness:
Why promote an anti-social attitude
of " Gimme, gimme , gimme or I'll do
something bad to you?"
I may sound like Scrooge, but I say
Halloween should be shaped up or
laid to rest. If you don 't print this,
I'll put a hex on you. ...: PETE
FROM FRESNO
PETE:
A Halloween letter in late
January? Our editor will probably
put a hex - or an XXX - on this
column ! (Editor's Note : It's a
definite temptation! )
Many people feel as you do about
trick or treating but we still enjoy
the little masqueraders of October .
- HELEN
NOTE FROM SUE: Howeve we're
most happy to see parents or older
siblings accompanying them on
their rounds.
(GOT A PROBLEM? Or a subject
for discussion, two-generation style?
Direct your questions to either Sue
or Helen Bottel - or both, if you
want a combination motherdaughter answer - in care of this
newspaper. )

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ASTROGRAPH
JaaUiey !II, 1181
Advancement in your rhosen fitld ur stan·
ding in tht community is a strun.: rrobabilily

tud.y.
CANCER I JIUie t i-Jul y ftl Members o(
t~ uppu5ite sex find you extremely appellling tuday. lf you wtmt this fact verified,
be sun! to get out in the social scene.
LEO (July ts-Auc. ZZ) Yoo take your
family obligations very seriOU51Y today.
Chll.octa are. yoo'll have little tolerance for
anything which threatens to distract you
frvrn your domesUc duties.
VIRGO lAve. 23--Sepl. !Z\ Mental tak.s
which require deep coocentration are a snap
fur you todlly . Your ability to shut out the
oul:!ide world'.!! distractioos will be the

this coming year. MUr h of it wll be due to
the ~itlve and self-assured way ~· ou handl e
your life at th.is time.
AQUARIUS !Jan. ZD-Feb. U) In eom·
petitive s itw.~tlons . you're the One who'll
have the sUt ying power today. E\'en if y ou
don't :iCfk it, once challenged you'll w nunlt
yuuJself all the wuy.-Fmd out mort! uf what
lies ahead for you in the ye11r following )'OUr
birthday by sendi ng fur your ropy or Astri.)Gruph . Mail $1 for each to Astro-Graph, Box
489 , Radio City SUttion, N. Y. li~H9 . Be sur ~
to specify birth date.
PISCES IFeb. 20-March 201 Vuur strong
fai th .in yuur ideas and abilities can sway
ot~rs to your wuy ol lhmldn~ if it becum~ ~
lll't.'e:SSllry to do so today. Yol,\ 'll not be

1n~jorreas011 .

LIBRA (Sept. %3-0ct. !3) Once )'OU assert
your:I(Jf t oward nU:Iterial acquisition today,
there is no tumln~ back for you. If there's a
way to ~et what yoU: feel you deserve, you'll
find ll.
SCORPIO Ukt. 24-Nov. %Z) It's high!)'
unlikely ttuit any place·you ~o today ytJu'\1 go
Wl!mticed, »tJ put yollr best foot fo~ard .
You 'll want ttl n'l.llke the ri~ht impression.
SAG mARIUS I Nov. ~De&lt;:- !11 Ue luw
t~nd be subtle If you have an important purP'tle you wish to accomp ll!!h today . By letting others think ll'll their idea, you 'll gain

wrong .
ARIES IMau·h Zl·Aprill9J Yuur busines.s
instincts are quite keen today. But nothint!
eKL'iling will happen fur rou unlt!ss you
utillze this hu:ulty. Don't wait so lun g y ou
miss ttw parade.
TAUJ\US I Ap_rll m-May Ztl The loyalty
you display today JI'UI.ke; you a formidabl e
bulwark agairu.'\, linyone who uppor&gt;es your
pals. Onet&gt; Committed, you won't retreat .
GEMINI I May U-JUDt' Zfl Get an early
st.ort and tackle tasks which you mi ght m.)rJIUIIIYshy away from. You havt! the stick·tl,)ttivencs.s to complete t&gt;\' P" hnri"" " ''~~'~"~

I Y- ...... ........... .......... 131.110
RaiOoOvaltle

'*"'

alldWncVIriiUI

lltlamlt ........ ........ .......... 111.110
t Month .. ...... . ....... . .. ....... 111.110
1 y- ......... .......... ....... 131.00

FREE CLOTIIING DAY
Free cldthing day will be held at
the Salvation Army, Pomeroy, Thursday from 10 a.m. unti l noon. All
area residents in need of clothing
are welcome to come.

Valentine remembrances for shutins were planned during a meeting
of the EJecta Circle of the B. H. Sanborn Missionary Society, Middleport
First Baptist Church, held at the
home of Cathy Riggs.
A potted plant will also be sent to
Eddie Demoskey, husband of a
inember of the circle who is· ill.
Reports were gi~en on Christmas
projects and several thank you notes
were read including one from David
Stone, home missionary, and Mitchell Linquist, Ohio Baptist scholarship student, who received ~ ifts of
money from the Circle. Round-robin
ca rds were signed for Kathryn Metzger and Demoskey.
Arrangements were made to com-

'

••

,.
(,

FOR THE PT. PLEASANT REGISTER
IN THE TOWN OF CLIFTON.

,.
!.

CAPTAIN EASY
FRANKL'&gt;'• Ml~!i WARRI CK· ·
!, GOT THE IMPRE~~ION
Hf WA5N'T TOO KEI'N
ON P.A!751NG THE TIME'
OF DAY WlfH 'IOU !

'/OVR PILOT !&gt;!OEMEiD

lt.J

QUITIO A HURRY
TO TAI&lt;E OFf!

~NOI'/5

KICK HI;;

TAIL FR0.\1 HERE

HIM GROUNP~D -- AND
FIRE'D !

TO ~A~~ATOON-­
fQR FLOUTING OUR
COMPAN Y RUL~ ~
•OR l!oU!iH
PILOT~!

BORN LOSER

He: WMF3?
lDL.IR'-

/o-i!J/&gt;-ItJ
@/~!('{

DA'{ AT

'i:oo.
J,JJ2,

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...AND GINCE IT 5EEM5 rME NE
SEEN THAT OOCTOR &amp;EFORE, 1'1\
&amp;OIJND T' llECOGNIZE HIM IF l_ ~­
SEE HIM AGAIN ...

... [:11RN.

DOCTOR'S NAME, 50 I DCI'I'T K~i'l
T' RETURit

THIS HAN~'l'

TO .. I'll JUST HA'/ E T' HOLD
ON TOIT FOR
AWHilf ..,

: l

.I
''

A tribute to the American
hostages highlighted the Thursday
night meeting of the Rock Springs
Grange held at the hall.
Mrs. Ethel Grueser, lecturer .
planned the inspirational program
on " Thankfulness" which opened ,
with a reading of the Jooth Psalm by
Mrs . Lucille ~ifheit. Mrs. Nancy
Morris read Acts 12, I through 23 ,
and Mrs. Beuna Grueser gave a

prayer for the nation. Readings
were "Your Flag and My Flag" by
Mrs. Louise 'Radford, and 'A Prayer
of Thanksgiving" by Mrs. Nancy
Radford
Mrs. Ethel Grueser then read
from her diary of the time in 1973
when she was among those aboard
the ship " Romantica, which was
held hostage for several days in a
bay off the Mediterranean Sea.

' \~

MASON FURNITURE

ALI..EYOOP

Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday &amp; Saturday
8 : 30 to 5:00, Thursday tilll2 noon

IN
THI S CASE
I'M · NOT
E.l\ACTLY

OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT ONLY
Mason, W. Va.

WHtCI-4

WHICH!

INSURANCE FOR
YOUR FARM ...
•••REUTER·

SKIN TROUBLE
ROCKVILLE, Md. (AP) - The
nwnber of reported cases of occupationa l skin dis9rder s has
declined but they remain a major
problem, according to a medical

publica tion.
Skin and Allergy News says that,
as of 1977, 42 percent of reported occupational diseases affected the
skin, compared with 65 percent in
1950.

STIHJ:FARM BOSS"'
0 111' o l lilt• h &lt;~ t dv:,l '.A. IIIb'T"- In !

1ht • t.nm y n1'l l ,,.., , 1 hnd t!. Si dd's
F. m1 1 ~ ~~ ',' It h n 1qh
d• '! o;I Jll LI hl oJ , ... til e' 11'11 1 •I nrl
d t'SHIIl\ 'd In lo~:-:1

A nd

J,l fl t lf' l

0

'bd l llld kt "' •l IIH · l. ll l! l + ' ) ~

I t Vtl lilt~
Stlill f- d l lll l·lo sn " l,! 'll cj+'t
wht•n ·~

t. t•' J t '&lt;t l l y It 1 1 I',

l1 1!

'

t.he most
cructal
point
in her
musical
development!

STIHL-

LET ' ~ FACE IT, 61 LL, YO U ANI' )OUR

WIFE A J;:E NOT
E\ ACTL Y

I

Income averaging
con save you money. But
only if you make more
than $30,000 a year.
D True 0 Folse
What you don't know ai&gt;out income averaging
t·ouk1 cost ynu mont.-y.
H&amp;R Rlock knows that no maltcr how much
you make , if your it1&lt;.:omc went up suhslantialty last
year you may he: able to inwme aVCf28C. We'll
take adv.mtage of this if it's to your benefit. '!be
anwcr is FALSE, since there l~ n(1imlnimtml
an10unt of incoll'le requirt~d to qualifY,

618 E. Main St.
2nd &amp; Brown St.
Pomeroy, OH ,
Mason, W.Va.
THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE
Ph. 773·9128
Ph . 992-3795

I,:.J.:.H l t\N . . , ..._,u PROVE IT' -5 -\ HL"'AX :''
CAN ' L'li OTEc4JRI CAL LY f?EIVY
TH AT TH IS SOUTH AMERICAN G IRL
1:'- \ c'UI~ r AU6HTER "

THc\l , C oUPLED WITH TH E F·\CT
THr\T \O U .::: AN 'T ~CCOU NT Fe.'!';
A LAR0E P-\~T OF YO UR LIFE ...

POORl

r 11

tf&amp;R BLOCK'

Pomeroy, Oh.
pa s~e nger cars.

I.

· WINNIE

·--

M.\hfS \·I E ·\N UN\vi TliNc;
To\f&lt;&amp;ET r~ A HC\•·\\.. ~,.)f

fHI S I\1Nr

a,oo

'BRIDGE

.

9 :30

[ji)Gzlm TOO CLOSEFOR COM·

I

40 Peruvian
Indian
41 Borgnine
film
42 Converge

tot

m

~

I'M GOIN' TO SKIN

TH' NEXT DADBURN
ANIMAL I KETCH
IN MV HOUSE!!

.

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'

an

PEANUTS

'

WHAT DO '1'0V
HAVt THERE :.112. 1

IT' S A BOOK ON

FIRST AID,

MARCIE

~!ERE':;

THE
CH.I\PTER l WA:
~OOkiNG

FOR ..

'' LIJI-1AT TO DO IN
CASE OF STUPIDIT'f' .,

Drum " 1979

2,00 l 3) WORLDVIEW
(15) MOVIE -(DRAM AI ••• " Bad
Seed " 1956
..L NEWS
ItO) I BELlEY~ .
2 :10 M I GI NEWS
2 :28 (11 CBN SPORTS REPORT
2 '3C
ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
) :58 ql CBN SPORTS REPORT
4 :0C ( 3) 700GLUB
4' 3C t&amp;J MAVERICK

m

Open 9 A. M. - 6 P.M . weekdays, 9-5 sa,t.
ApPointments Available

ACROSS
I Colombian
city
5 Edged
10 '.'Green

FORT Sara throws the Ru sh family
into a pam c when shE~, tak es il upon
· herse lf to help college fri end Monroe gn1duate into manhood .
9 :45 (]) TBS EVENING NEWS
10'0&lt;' (J) 0 (!) FLAMINGO ROAD A
DOWN
MaruiiOns 11
grievingm oth e~discovers lhe fa c t s
I
Jewelry tenn
hero
be hindth e ar son-caused flre wh ich
2 Overhead
kllled her daught er and co nfro nt s
II Choir Sheriff Tit us Semplew1th a frighten 3 Lifting
1% Meander
i ll~ threa t. (60 mins .~
Yesterday'• Answer
device
13 Sniff· '
Cu@GIHARTTOHART Jonathan
play
15
Mother
27 Fettucine,
4
O'Neill
a nd Jennifer f ind mys tery and
14 Part of a
da nger when they take a lu xurio us
!Fr.)
e.g.
5 Apprehend
st. sign
ocea n cr uise to break up an interne 6 What a laugh ( 18 Drumbeat Z9'Virile
Ilona! ring o f te wel th ieve s. (60
15 Kettle
mins.)
21 By nature 311 "Goodnight"
and Perkins 7 Mechanical
IIJ SOUNDSTAGE 'Don Will iams '
device
22 Reversion
girl
16 fencing
(Closed -Captioned: U.S .A) (60
8
Manumit
to
type
31
Subllequently
mins.)
dummy
(til NEWS
9 Church
23 Italian dish 3% Attacked
17 Earthly
10:28 [3] CBN UPPATE NEWS
24 Big dish
37 Porker ·
dignitary
19 Chinese
10,30 C3J FAITH 20
11 Climbing
2S Tilt, as
38 Dickens'
@ TWILIGHT ZONE
pagoda
t0' 4~, (l) LOVE AMERICAN STYLE
vine
an airplane
;ro Hour (lt. l
10:5f, (J) CBN UPDATE NEWS
Zl Letter
11:o&lt; •
(jf)
I&gt;!_EWS
sign-&lt;&gt;ff
(&lt;J TODAY IN BIBLE PROPHECY
22
Beatles'
l 4! MOVIE ·(SCIENCE· FICTIONI
.. " Moonrakar j' 1979
record
NIGHT GALLERY
company
lt M&lt;IRECAMBE ANP WISE
25 Wattle tree
11 :21: (! CBN UPDATE NEWS
26 Bridge
11 :3!• ri1 0 C'I i THE TONIGHT SHOW
Gues t h ost : D avi d letterman .
charge
Gues t s ; Franklin Aj aye . Kurt
27
Golf term
Thomas. (60 m1ns,)
(:3) ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
28 Wing
@ MOVIE· (COMEDY·ROMANCEI
29 On the
• ••• \ ' 'P rlnceAndThaShowglrl"
male side
1957
ABC
NEWS
LIJ @ Gl
33 LegioMaire
NIGHTLINE
0 (j) CBS LATE MOVIE ' LOU 34 Beseech
GRANT :Phys1cal' Stars : Ed Asner, · 35 Spanish
M ason Adam s. All er lou reluc tantinlet
ly ag rees to a phystc al, he learn s
s om e frtgh t enlng news -h e has
36 Purpose
c anc er and must under~o surgery .
38 Conduce
(R epea t) ' M OST WANTE D ' 1976
311 Dallas of
Star s : Rob ert St ac k , Shell ey
Nova ck . A pollee ca ptain he ads a n
radio fame
elit e inve s ti ga t l ll~ Ufl ll tr ying tot ~ap
I
the man who •s terr orizing th e Ci ty,
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how lo work It:
assaulting and mur denng nun s.
AXYDLBAAXR
(f) ABC CAPTIONED NEWS
@! MOVIE -(WESTERN) •• " Timo
Is
I. 0 N G F E L L 0 W
' For Killing " 1967
12:0(• (jf) ID TUESDAY MOVIE OF THE
One lett er simply stands fnr a nother. In this sample A i1
WEEK 'The Broken Sedg e' t 979
u sed for th e three L 's, X fur the two O's, e t C' . Single letters,
Star s : S t ov e La wr ence , C l aud e
apostrophes , the le ngth ami fonnatinn of th e words are
Akins .
hin ts Each d ay th e code l etters are different
12:3l• l~) l) (7 : TOMORROW
12 ,5t l ~) CBNSPORTSREPORT
CRYPTOQUOTES
· 1'00 ( ~ ) OLD TIME GOSPEL HOUR
t : 15 l 41 MOVIE · (PRAMAJ •' " Tin
HNFWHINYFWXA
PWFD

m o m m a m l1!!l

1

BARNEY

WE'lL MAKE THE TAX LAWS WORK FOR YOU

lc' d

t'~aLJ,

Rufus!
Folhs
has quit
call1n' on
folks'

REUTER-BROGAN
INSURANCE
SERVICE
214 Main St.
Pomeroy, Oh.
992-6687

That's
what's
wronq
with the
worl'

Mebbe Slim an' Clovia
don't want no cal lers,
iss Me lba!

Gre tchen is at

CALL FOR
ESTIMATES
1

rI I I I I 1

~-~

GASOIJNE ALI..EY

BROGAN'S
GOT IT.

I

[]

g,oo

FOR THE BEST DEALS IN THE TRISTATE AREA

Baptist Worn~ organize in January
The Baptist Women, an auxiliary formation on the new organization
of the Women's Missionary Union, may be obtained from Mrs. Silencer,
was organized at the First Southern 992·7830.
Baptist Church of Pomeroy at a
Mission Friends, also an auxiliary
meeting held recently at the home of . of the Women's Missionary Union
Mrs. Donna Spencer.
was organized recently at the churOfficers elected · were Mr. Spen- ch with Janie Coleman and Brenda
,cer, president; Rachael LefebFe, Newman as leaders. Mission Frienmission action chainnan; Janet ds study about missionaries, one
Matthews, mission' support chair- each month, through activities and
man ; Betsy Newman, mission study stories and Is for children ages two
chairman; Sue King, secretary- through five. Meetings are held at
treasurer. The prayer calendar for the church each Wednesday
missionaries was·observed.
evening , 7:30 p.m.
More inRefres hments were served formation on the program can be obfollowing 'the meeting.
Next tained from Miss Coleman , 742-212:).
meeting will be held on Feb. 17 . In-

I LEBALT
rJ
DAILIN
1 rJ

I

•Ks

MASON FURNITURE

HERMAN GRATE

I TOQLYA
rJ

CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
1
' I]) ABC NEWS
C1J 3· 2· 1 CONTACT
ill) OVER EASY Hosts : HlJgh
Downs and Frank Blai r .
6:3C CIJ O CI) NBC NEWS
(]) 20th CENTURY GUIPELINES
1
Cii BOB NEWHART SHOW
(}] E._ACE THE MUSIC
(J (})@J CBS NEWS
IIJ WILD WILD WORLD OF
Now arrange the circled teners to
ANIMALS
form the surprise answer, as sug (1jJ LILIAS , YOGA AND YOU
1
gested by the above cartoon .
il}) Gl ABC NEWS
6:5E (I) CBN UPDATE NEWS
7:00 rn 0 PM MAGAZINE
Printanswer .hera;
(])
GERALD
DERSTINE
PRESENTS
{Answers tomorrow}
@ ALL IN THE FAMILY
CIJil2) Gl FAMILY FEUD
Yester~ay· s Jumbles: LAUGH BLIMP FORGOJ COLUMN
CD STAN HITCHOCK SHOW
Answer : The se days, tende r meat generally means
O CIJ T1CTACDOUGH
thi s- A TOUGH BILL
IIJ @
MACNEIL-LEHRER
REPORT
@ NEWS
Jumble Book No. 16, containing 110 puzzles, Is nallabl• tor S1.75 postJ)IIkl
from Jumble, cJo lhls newspaper, BoX 34, Norwood, N.J. 07648. lnc:lude your
7:30 rn a BULLSEYE
name, address, zip coda and make checks ptyable to Newspaperbooh.
(I) FAITH THAT LIVES
@ NBA BASKETBALL Atlant a
Hawks \15 Washington Bullets
I]) (J (I) JOKER'S WILD
CD HOLLYWOOD SQUARES
IIJ@ DICK CAVETT SHOW
@ MATCH GAME
il}) Gl FACE THE MUSIC
7,55 I]) CBN UPDATE NEWS
CV 0 CD LOBO
I]J ORAL ROBERTS
(j) (j]) G} HAPPVDAYSAterr ified
Fonzie makes a reluctant visit to a
most unusual de ntist alt er a horren dous tooth ache cramps his roman lie 1!!11G.
(J llJ@J THE BUNKER The sto&lt;y
depi cts the event s in and around
Swiss team match. The play
Adolf Hi tler 's underground B erlin
was short and sweet for the
hideo ut during the final . harrowing
days before the co llap se ol th e
defense, but bitter for South.
Third Reich . Stars : Anthony Hop ·
l -t7 -8l
NORTH
East overtook his partner's •
kins. Sus an B lak ely . {3 hrs.)
• 10.3 2
king of clubs at trick one,
([) NOVA 'Dead Sea' NOVA looks
.AQJ&gt;
cashed his ace of diamonds,
at th e p ossibility o f coo p eratio n
led back a club to his
emerging as a result of seiHntere at
+7 6 3
partner 's queen and ruffed a
between the joint owners of th 1s
diamond for down one.
EAST
geol ogically, histo ric a lly and
WEST
c hemica lly intrigu ing bodyofwa ter.
"Nice defense ," compli·
.Q7
+a
(C lose d-Ca ptioned : ~.S .A .) (60
.9 7 432
ments South. "There goes our
• 10 6
min s.)
tA
chance to win the match."
tl8 16432
@ FAST FORWARO
.
+A10812
+KQ 9
"Not at all," replied East
9 ,30 00 GOOD NEWS
modestly
. "It is· the sort of
SOUTH
l])(jf)Gl LAVERNE ANDSHIRLEY
play that your partner is sure
.AKJ 96 1
Wh en the girls step out , the ir zany
to make."
friends Lenny and Squiggy button
''You don 't know our
th ei r lips for· once, and fa ntasiz e
t K Q 10
about what a riot lif e would~ if they
r,artners." replied South.
+J&gt;
were silent movie stars
'They 're desperadoes and not
Vulnerabie: North-South
l1lJ CROSS COUNTRY SKI
vulnerable. They will have
SCHOOL
Dealer: South
defended at the five level and
a :58 (]) CBN UPDATE NEWS
will have been set badly."
Soutb
West Nortb Easl
(J) 0 CD BJANDTHEBEARBJand
Sure enough, at the other
1+
his seven lady t r uc kers ra ce .t he
Pass
4+
tabl'e East had doubled
2+
Pass
thugs from transcalto Los Angel~s
t o win an important contract. while
Pass
Pass
North's two spades. South had
Pass
the diabolical Ruthertord T. G ran t
jumped to game and West had
plans t o bust BJ for drug s and put
bid five diamonds. The con·
Opening lead :+K
him o ut of business forever. (Con ·
tract had been doubled and set
elusi on: eo mins .)
500 for a t2 IMP swing and
(]) 700 CLUB .
the match just as South had
(!) MOVIE ·(WESTERN I " ' "Big
predicted.
Jake" 1..i,71
Whose fault was it? The
(]) (jf) W THREE' S COMPANY
By
Oswald
Jacoby
Ja ck pla ys c upid to his girUriend' s
East
player who made a lak- _
and Alan Sontag
wldowedfather , but his arrow s mis eout double with a singleton
lir e wh en th e love -starved o ld er
.
The bidding in the box diamond
man m akes Janet his t arget .
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE A.SSN .)
occurred
at
table
one
in
a
(Closed -C apt ioned ; U.S .A .)
·
CtlruJ MVSTERV! 'Malice Aforeth ough t' Episodejj . Dr. 8 ickleigh ' s
condu ct becomes unprofessional
mdeed as he sl owly and meth ·
odic a lly goos a b o ut putting a
murderous sc heme int o action .
Meanwhile, til e tea -t ime goss ip of
Wyve rn 's Cross stillthreatens to
lead to Dr. Bi ck l eig h 's undoing .
by THOMAS JOSEPH
(Closed -Capti oned : U.S.A.) (60

.H

ANNIE

SHOP

7~

rr

, . , . . OW.. . ,.,.,.M , ..... ...
....
...,..,_

Rapid-fire fatal defense

i

'

}

1

I

.0I.

I.

HE'

I 'D

WHAT HE 'Ll FiND OUT WHEN
H~ l Ao.JD~ BA CK IN 'IEL LDWKNIFE l5 THAT I'V~ JU~f HAD

Hostage tribute highlights meeting

606 E. Main
Ph . 992 -2094
F ron I end alignment 512 .50 most
! 3 r a ~ o S{'rvice

•

Diana King, Racine, is announcing
the birth of her daughter, Kara
Ruth, Jan. 17. She weighted six
pounds, 14 ounces and was 21 inches
long. Grandparents are Mary and
Bill Porter, Racine, and the late
Marvin King, Pomeroy. Greatgrandparents are Susie Fischer,
Racine, and Mr.•and Mrs. Edward
F. King, Pomeroy.

I I I -

~3- 55?2

POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO

675-1333

Cii

New arrival

Monthly parties begin

Mary Clark, Etta Will, Erma Hendricks, P eggy Caton, and Gerri Parsons.
;
Garnes are conducted each Wednesday a I the nursing home and
currently there is a need for game
prizes for the 32 women and 29 men.
Mrs. Parsons can be contacted
a bout suitable types of prizes. Parties for the residents there will be
staged on the fourth Monday of each
month by the Auxiliary.

[}] U CZJO ctJIEJWCD NEWS
(I) BACKYARD

:6lt\0'$:

~~aaw..w~.._~hlllll9cw.-

Call Immediate~

6 :0C

I

NOTICE

NEWSPAPER CARRIER -NEEDED

EVENING

ll" PIUA •

The first of monthly parties for the
parties at the Arcadia Nursing
Horne, Coolville, was staged Monday afternoon by members of the
American Legion Auxiliary,
Feeney-Bennett Post 128, Mid·
dleport.
Games were played and refreshments of sandwiches, cookies and
soft drinks served by the Auxiliary
members to the 61 patients, including 26 veterans, attending .
Going up to stage the party were

'

JAN. 27, 1981

r-···

STIHL
'

Mrs. Mora honoree
of layette shower

12 in Arlington, VQ. The co.uple spent
their honeymoon in Washington, D.
C. Mr. Dunfee is employed at Hobson with Consolidated Rail Corporation. They reside at 806 South
Fourth Ave ., Middleport.

Valentine remembrances
underway by Electa Circle

Oblo aDd W•t Viqtalll

lllcllllt .. .. .. .. ......... ......... 110.10
.... .......... ...... .... 111.10

Mrs. Anna Ebersbach, · Middleport, is announcing the marriage
of her youngest daughter, Nancy
Lee, to Steven Harold Dunfee, son of
Mrs. Colleen Dunfee and the late
William Dunfee, Mid!!leport.
The ceremony took place on Dec. ·

Television
•
•
VIewmg

SHE ANO VITAMIN WORK
\'YELL TOGETHER.

A layette shower was held recen. tly for IJ&lt;;nise Mora at the home o(
Darla Kelly. Games were played
with prizes being awarded to the
honoree and Janet Mora. Refreshments were served. Mildred Fry
made the mints for the shower.
~ l rsupport .
Attending were Kathryn Mora,
CAPRICORN !Dec. D-Jaa. 1t1 Becawoe
Janet Mora, Judy Hoschar, Susie
you art earnest and Sincere with everyon.e
today, you 'll be treated in a friendly fashion.
Karr, Judy Eichinger, Becky
Like be~et.s like.
Eichinge r, Mildred Fry, June
Eichinger( Paula Eichinger, TamCOPY COSTS p()UBLE
my Eichingerr Jackie Frost, Carol
MOUNT PROSPECT, Ill. (AP) and Kim Ada1ns, Debbie and Charlie
American business will spend more
Mills, and Darla Kelly .
than $6 bilion this year copying
Sending gifts were Polly
docwnents on office copiers.
Eichinger, Paula Mora, Marilyn
Ten years ago, copying costs were
Spencer, Ruth Karr, Eva Mills,
half that, according to AM lnfortext,
Mary Stewart, Barbara, Ruth and
which designs and sells copyplete the white cross quota to be Sue Fry, and Altona Karr.
machine devices and systems.
dedicated at the February Sanborn
A significantly large increase in
meeting. The circle will have
the nwnber of docwnents copies as
GEOTHERMAL POWER
devotions at that meeting.
well as inflationary trends were
Mrs. Riggs gave devotions using
MILFORD, Utah (AP) - Geother- responsible for the doubling of costs,
scripture from Luke 18 with the
mal energy which uses the earth's the company said.
internal heat as its 'source will he
topic, "Let's Get Personal When We
Pray" taken from " Our Daily
used to generate electricity for the . - -- Bread" and " Women's World. "
~
first time in Utah history under terms of an agreement between Utah
Mary Brewer, circle chairman, had
Power and Light and Phillips.
the program entitled " I Am Hur"WIIIIIIP" SP£al.
ting ."
The agreement provides for UP&amp;L
•
Refreshments were served by to plan and build a 2tl-megawatt
•
•
Your &lt;hoi&lt;t of any
Mrs. Riggs to those named and power plant designed to use geother• ono lopping . Rog. $4
Rhoda Hall, Elizabeth Searles, mal energy produced by Phillips
Ethel Hughes, Golda Roush, Gwin- from ,the Roosevelt Hot Springs near
$2 .50 1 ..,, Ooly
nie White, Texanna Well, and Freda
here
in 2().megawatt
southwestern power
Utah. plant, to
This
Hood
be completed by 1983 if necessa ry
approvals can be obtained, will
generate enough electricity to serve
•
All LOCAYIOHS
•
the needs of a city of 20.000 people.
•

MAlLSIJiliCJIIPTION
~~o-u.

Announce marriage

The

Ohio

Pomeroy-M

Januar 27, 1981

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

w

L CU W CSC

ZXQK

PXKM

KNFWX

PWFD

WH
Z XQK

WA

· EWKCYF

Y XAFKWLQFWXA .

- YDNKU C H
I
MCFFCKWAO
'r'esterday 's Cryptoquote : HE WHO MAKES THE SPEECH
MAKE~ THE POLICY ; AT lE AST, HE TRIES.- EJJZABETH
DREW

.,,

�Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

Birthday celebrations
honor local children

Township area.
Dec. 17 - Meters in Middleport
and Pomeroy were freed for shoi&gt;pers during the Christmas season.
Dec. 18 - Richard Warnecke, 21,
Pomeroy, who escaped from the
Meigs County Jail and Amanda
Autherson, 18, Pomeroy, who aided
and abetted Wameeke were apprehended by tbe Coal Grove Police
Department.
Dec. 19 - A reprieve was granted
by EPA (or the operation of the
Meigs County Landfill for a one year

Bookmobile schedule for Wed·
nesday, Jan. 28 - Torch, Post Of.
!ice, .3:35-4:10 p.m.;· Hockingport,
Community Bldg., 4:35-5:20 ;
Coolville, School Lot, 5:4!Hi:25;
Riggscrest Addition, 6: 4:;..7 :30.
Thursday, Jan. 29 - Keno, N. of
Keno Bridge, 3:45-4:15 p.m.;
Racine, Home National Bank, 4:455;45; Syracuse, Pool, 6-7.
Drop by your nearest bookmobile
stop for free entertainment and in·
formation . The bookmobile has ·
paperbacks, 45 and lp records,
magazines, large print books and
how-t&lt;HI&lt;&gt;-it help for everything
from car repair to dieting.
·
2

David Tatterson

January 27,1981

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

ANNOUNCEMENT
A soup dmner will be held by the
Racine Ladies Auxiliary at the
Racine fire house Thursday with
serving to begin at 11 a.m.
Homemade vegetable soup, chili
and bean soup will be served with
corn bread, pie, cake and chicken
salad sandwiches.

Dec. 21 - Legionnai"'s of Feeoey·
Bennet Post !28, Middleport, gave
Santa a helping hand by sacking
over 500 bats of candy to be
distributed by Santa.
Dec. 22 - Appointed to serve on
the Meigs County Housing Authority
by Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffrman were Manning Kloes, Mid·
dleport banker, lor a five year term,
and Steven Story, attorney for a one
year term.
Dec. 23 - · Toys and food were

Girl scout
leaders to meet
Wednesday

ever be,
For as long as there is li fe,
we w i ll remember thee!
There is a link death cannot

sever,
Lo\le &amp; remembrance last

Mrs. Bertha Russell, Wolf Pen, observed he" 93rd birthday Friday
evening at the home of her son a nd
daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
William Russell, Five Points. Others
attending the dinner were her sons,
Earl of Pomeroy, Carl of Colum'bus,
her daughter, Marguerite Boyce,
Columbus, and Mrs. Janet Venoy
and sons, Craig and Kevin, Chester.

Social calendar
TUESDAY
SPECIAL MEETING, Racine
Masonic Lodge 461, F&amp;AM, 7:30
tonight; work in entered apprentice
degree.
MIDDLEPORT MASONIC 'Loctge
363, F&amp;AM special meeting, 7 this
evening; work in fellowcraft degree.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT Lions
Club meeting, 12 noon Wednesday at
Meigs Inn .
AMERICAN LEGION AND
AUXIIlARY, Feeney-Bennett Post
128, Middleport, 7:30p.m. meetings
at the hall. Dinner for legionnaires
and Auxiliary members at6:30 p.m.

Poet 's Corner
1'0 MELISSA AND LOWELL
l.111n sendin !! lu\'t: and wishes
For your curmng ~o~·t•ddi n~ day,
And for each d &lt;~~' uf t!ll' future
While upon th1s earth )'IJU.stay:
May your luv ~ lw t•\·~ n sweeter
After you are man and wife ,
.MaY you both b\• t ru ~ and faithful
Till the end of ca1thly hfe.

You will find a Jot ul prublcm.s
But if you are kiml and true ,
And have love fur 1me another,
I.ove will bring you safely thru .
If God ble~ yoLJ w1th ehlldren,
May you train thcm 111tht&gt; way
Thlt will lead to life eternal,

·In that land or endlc :;.~ da y.

Don't negiect our lu\'ln ~ Sav1 uur.
Go to church and do ;·uu1• p&lt;t rt
[nthe work winmn g uthcr.s,
11tru the love within yuur heart_
God has given different talt•nt:;
To Hia chosen here below ,
And if you will~~se;)' Uur.s wt ~ly,
He will frnjke your tal ent~ ~row .

or

'

Ali things work fur good t u~cthe r
If we cnlly love the Lord,
A-lid believe each precious J&gt;TOntL Se
Thit is written in Ills Word.
May He blew and keep you evt~r
In the center of His will,
Is ihe prayer of your l!!randmulher,
Who still lives upon the hill .
Coml)t)Sed Nov. 10, 1980, by Mrs. Hilt&lt;y Pi ~ott,
Lonlj Bottom, Ohlu 4:i74J. Mcli SS&lt;t Bush and
Lowell Taylor were rtliiiTit--d Dt.'C . 20. 1900.

FOR TilE BIRDS
LONDON (API - The North Sea
is 11 home" to more than 25 species of
seabirds.
A surrounding coastline full of
isolated c[if[s , islands and estuaries
for birds to breed and spend winters
contributes to the wide selection,
says the RCI)•al S• •dety for the
Protection nf ll ~rtl•·

PERM •., .............. NOW 117 50
25 PERM ................. NOW 122'50
30 PERM .... """ .... ". NOW szs:oo

foreve r!
Sorrowfully &amp; sadly missed

by wite, Mabel ; daughters.
I ris,

Aldlne,

Donna ,

&amp;

at their building In Bashan.
Factory choke 12 guage
shotguns only . Open sights
22 rifle .

at

Corn Hollow in Rutland.
Every Sunday start1ng at
noon
Proceeds being
donated to the Boy Scout
T roop249. 12 gauge factory
choke gun only!

I

n .oo

Tax se rvl c;e, federa l, state,
&amp; quarterl y ta xes done by
appointment. See Wan da
Eblin, 41000 Laurel Cliff
Road, Pomeroy , Ohio
45769 . 992 ·2272.
J,ncome 'tax service, federal
&amp; state. Walla ce Russell

Bradbu,y, call 992·7228.

MEIGS MUSEUM open by
appointment January Mar·

ch. 992·2264, 992·2802, 992·
2360 or 992-2639. His·tori es

WANT AD INFORMATION

for
sa le
Pomeroy
Middl eport Librar;-.;~ .

PHONE 992-2156

Gun Shoot : every sur. ~J .:tY
at 1 p.m .. at Rutl a nd
American Legion in a tur
nace hea ted building . F .:.Jc ·
tory choked guns only .

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

Put a cold nose in your life .
Call ' the Meigs CouOty
Humane Sor: ief y at 992 -

CLASSIFIED · AD INDEX

6260 .

1. _ _ _ _ _ __

2. _ _ _ _ __
3. _ _ _ _ __
4. _ _ _ _ __
5._ _ _ _ __
6. _ _ _ _ __
7. _ _ _ _ _ __

B. _ _ _ _ __
9. _ _ _ _ __
10. _ _ _ _ _ __

II . _ _ _ _ __

42- Mobile Homu
lor lil~nt

U - Apartmenltor Rent
~ s-FRoo ms

I 1- H•Ip w,nlfd
11- Situeted W•ntfli
13- lntur•nc•
14- IUIIneu Tnin lnt
t hSchoolslnltrwctlon
1._
ll..tlo.TV
&amp; CI' Rtp&amp;lr
tt--W•nted To Oo

U - LI¥nlodl

H - Hiy&amp;Gnln

eTRANSPORTATION

Two temate ye ll ow &amp; white
kftens , thr ee mon ths old .
Also female adult ye l low &amp;
white cat, one grey tiger
adult fema l(' c at . Se'e Ray
Garlinger
one house on
right past the ch urch on
Little Kyg er Road , beside
The h igh schoot m Cheshire.
Ohio on Co. Rd . 20.

ri - AIHOs tor hie
71-Vens&amp;4 W. D.
rt- Mctorcyclu
rs- Awlo Part1
&amp; AcUUOf"itl
H - Auto R•.,.ir

e SERVICES
11 - Ho"'tlmpro\ltments
11-PiumiHng &amp; E•ce,..tlnl
al-EII,UII•IInt
14- lltdrltal

want~Ad

Advertising
De•dlines

&amp;

1:MP.M. D•ilv

Babysitter needed in the
Raci ne area, for one school
age ch ild &amp; one infant . Call

Reedsville, OH.

PART TIME bookkeeper . 4
hrs . per day . Knowledge of
bookkeeping &amp; good
r eferences a must. Call
Margaret Cremeans , Mon .·

Fri. 9·5 at 992-6606.

·--Situations Wanted
12
........_.

.

WILL do house keeping &amp;
cook ing for an elderly per·
son . Also live in . Dorothy

Warth. 992·7226.

Relrlflreflor~

lor Mond•Y

6022 .

------IN
Insurance

AU TOMOBILE
SURANCE been

I S Words or Undtr

1 dey

1 der•
l dll'l"l
• diVI

C"fl
1.00

Ctter,.
l .U

UO
1.10

l ,to

us

3.00

l ,1S

Hom e_1~ Sale. -'-

1nd Oltitvery : 6 ctntt ,.r word. U .OO

9

- .....----------- ..------,

PRICES

5858 .

Wi ll do panel1ng, cei1 1ng,
fl oor Tile, plumbing. Free
es tinlates. Fred ·Mill er a t

992 6338.

Will do babysitti ng in my
home in Portland . Have
references . Cal l843 4801.

t-----------1
Cool, Quick, Easy!
l'rinh·cll'allo·rn

949·226&lt; .

Four year o ld house on J
a c r es, 7 rooms, 1 &amp; one ha lt
bath, n ice loc ati on , Route
2 , Ra cine. 949 2706.

34

Nice house on 2 &amp;. one
acres on SR 7 between
M em ory Gart.Jens 8. sta te
garage.
Priced on
in
spection . 992· 7741.
For sa le; old er hom'e on
large lot behind Burger
Chef in Pomeroy . Call bet
ween the h ours of 7 10 p.m .

HAYE S REALTY
Char les M . Hay es, Broker
Nea cil E . Carsey , Branch
M gr .
Pomeroy, Oh . 992 2403
Hou se for
o;a Je : three
bedroom f or S7 ,50 0 00 .
Loca ted o n Wc lc htown
Ro ad in Minersville.. Ohio .
9n 575 4.
Four &amp; one h a lf acres in th e
South ern Loca l School
D ist r ict. two bed r oo m ,
brtth , l iv i ng room, k i tche n,
n ot &amp; cold water , dr i lled
well. Located on Manuel

t
f

J2

Mobi Je Homes
for Sale

1973 Crown Haven , 14 x 65,
three bedjooms . new car
pet. 1971 cameron , 14 ~ 64 ,
t wo bedrooms, new carpet .
1972 Champion. 12 ~ 60 . two
bedroom s, new ca rpet . 1976
Camero n, 12 x 60 , two
bedrooms, all el oc tn c. 1971
Skylin e, 12sx 6).
two
bedrooms, ba th &amp; 1 .l, new
1970
PMC ,
c arp e l .
12 x 60, two bedroom s, new
ca rpet . B x S Sales. Inc ..
2n d x ~iand Stree t. Point
Pleasant, W V Phone 675 ·

t

l
'

t

l
'

10o/o On All Gas Models
5% On All Diesel Models
NOW THRU JANUARY 31, 1981
REDUCTIONS OF AT LEAST '355 00

-

AS MUCH AS '110000

"INTEREST RATES ARE FALLING AND SO ARE OUR PRICES"

AT A TIME WHEN MOST NEW CAR DEALERS ARE DECREASING THEIR INVENTORIES,
RIVERSIDE VW HAS INCREASED THEIR FEBRUARY ALLOCATION BY 400% AND
WE'RE PASSING THE SAVINGS ALONG ·TO OUR CUSTOMERS.

•I

HoteHounge with three
co mmercial rentals. two
apartments. LaSa ll e Motor
Inn in Middleport . 992·9917 .

Rentals
Mobile Homes
for Rent

3 bedroom Mobile Ho m e
v ery nice &amp; comp l etely fur ·
ni shcd . 2 children ac
cept abl e. No pets, deposit
r eq uired . 992 7479.
Three bedroorn furnished
av a ila bl e im ·
m edi at e ly . Mus t have
d e po s it &amp;
references .
~r aile r ,

$200.00

a

month

utilities. Phone
anytime after 3.

plus

992 55 11

For r en t : two bedroom
mobile home, uti lit ies paid .
On e child a ccept ed . No
drunks or pets. John
Sheets, J one ha ll miles
so uth of M idd leport on Rt

7.

.

h~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;+,~~;;;;;;~~

S4
Mise , Merclianise .
J
Fi r ewood for sal e, Mi)(ed
types of wood. SJ5.00 per
pi ck · up load . Del ivered,
will st ack for Senior
Ci t izens. 843· 4951 or 843·

ALL STEEL

REESE .J.......J~
~

2815.
SPEC IAL DISCOUNT

"From 30x30"

SERVICE

N EE D item s for your
Mobile Home? Vi sit our
parts store &amp; pi ck up a free

Utility Buildings
Sizes from 4x• to 12X40

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rf.3, BoxS4
Racine, Oh.

Ph. 614 ·843 ·lS9I

~~===~~=~1·~7~·t~fc~t======~6~·1~5~-t~fc=~~;;;;;;;;~ ,
ROIJSH
Carousel
ROGER
HYSEU.'S
Con·f ectionery
truck

Fi rewood. $35.00 a
load, $60 .00 a cord. All har·
'dwood , spli t, &amp; del iver ed .
843·4831 or 843· 4734 .

MODEL 70 Winc hester ,
Bolt actio with 6 power red ·
field scope. Caliber .270 .
$350. Gibson Guitar with
bu i lt in electric pick -up
wit h case. 247·2575.

bag, &amp; head covers. Also
Golf
clubs,
2 woods,
5 irons
severa
l putt
ers avai
lable.,

CONSTRUCTION

• New Homes • ' ex ·
tensive remodeling
• Electrical work
e Roofing work
12 Years
Experience
Greg R'oush
Ph. 992·7583
1·22 ·1 mo.

HARVEST
cofFEE HOUSE

Firewood lor sa le. Har ·
dwood , spli t &amp; deliver ed .
$30 .00 load del i vered . 997

52&lt;0.

-

KING

GARAGE
-Auto and Truck
Repair
-Transmission
Repair
Hrs.:

Pomeroy, Oh.
Open
saturday Only
4 P.M. to 11 P .M.
Free Coffee &amp; Tea
Free Food
Live Music

_,_

WOODBURNER .

Good cond . 985 4262 after 4.

THRE E Quarter bed, com
plete . $50. Firm . 667 3085.

Ap&amp;trtment
for Rent

Now At
Pomeroy
landmark
Repossessed
Items

3 AND 4 RM lurn ished ap ·
IS. Pt1011 c 992 543 4.

2 bedroom furnished apa rt
m ent. 2 mil os ouT Rt . \43.
D ep osi t &amp;
rc t e r e nces
r equired . .1\du tts on ly 992

36&lt;7.

4 room furn ished apart
mt"nt Adu tr s on l y , 9Y2 2676.

1- 11

Hone

Power

Atd1ng

Mow er
1- GoOO Trdrlu Apgrov~ Wood
IJlJ rn er !otovtwi tn btower
1- Cood G,I S Ra n9e
1- GoQ(I Holpoirlt Washer
t - H " GE

rv

l - 6cu . ll , f.iolpo1nt
~e l rlq ero\lor

All ot the above rte m ~ 1n e~
collent condollon . All .:rre pnud
to se ll intmCd•lll ely . See YS 10

12·31 · 1 mo .

Farm Equipment

61

Bobca t
sty l e
loader,
hydrostat ic. Ditch witch
trencher J20 18 hp, Ver meer trencher, 100 hp,
model T600 crawler . 1·614·

457 ·3139 .

992-5682

-----ousing
Headquarters

~--~-

IRON AND BRASS BEDS,
ol d furniture , desks, go ld
rings , jewe lry : silve r
dollars, sterling, etc ., wood
lee boxes,jars antiques.
etc . Compl et e hou seholds.
Write M . D. Miller, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, OHl or c all 992

t~~~L~.~~u3

I
tl

WANTED TO BUY :
GOLD.
. SILVER ,
PLATINUM, STERLING
COINS, RINGS,JEWELR
Y, MISC. IT EMS . AB
SOLUTE
MARKET
PRICE GUARANTED . ED
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP. MIDDLEPORT .
:oHIO 992·3476.
,OLD .CO IN S, pocKet wat

f

t

t
t

ches, class rings , wedding
bands, d iamonds. Gold or
!ilver. Ca ll J . A . Wamsley,
.142 2331 . Treasure Chest
Coin Shop, Athens, OH . 592

64.12.

Wanted to Buy : class rings,
.wedding bands. anything

•tamped, IOK , I4K, or IBK

"'SSOid . Sll\ler coi ns, pocket
Watches. Call Joe Clark at

992 2054 at ClarK's Jewelry
'Store, Pomeroy , Ohio 45769

,USED FURNITURE. GOld

&amp; sl iver, cla ss rings, pocket
\va tches. chains. diamonds
&amp; so on . Copper qrass and
batteries, antique items,
•lso do appraisa ls, com·
'Piete auctioneEtr service.
.Over 30 years experie nce In
business. Wi ll buy com
:Atet e esta tes. Osby Martin
General Store , Middleport,

Oh. 9YH370.

Phone
1· ( 614) ·992· 3325

Sa•e Sll ' Whtp up IHee&lt;y lops,
Pr111t~d Pd tlem 4654 Wom
S11es a1e J6 (40 1n c h bu ~ t
wtlh 41 tnch htp), 'JB (41 h11SI.
44 h•PI. 40 (44 bust. 46 htpl. 41

en's

(46 buS!, 48 hiP). 44 148 busl .
10 htp), 46 (10 b'" '· 11 htp), 48

(52 busl. 14 htp) 50 (54 busl.
56 htp). 51 (56 husl 58 htp)
$2.00 lor uch paHern. ~dd ~04
lor uch paHtm lor llllt·CIIII
tin•ail and handlin&amp;. Send to:
~nne

Adlms
1 'I I

PtHern Otpt.
The Daily Sentinel
243 Wtst 11 Sl, Ntw YO&lt;k, NY
10011. Print NQIE, AOORESS,
ZIP, Sill, tnd STYLE NUMBER.
We streamlined the sewtng to

save ~ou ltrne so you can save
moner' Send now lot NEW 1981
~PRING·SUMM (R PArTERN CAT

ALOG 100 s111es. lree pHIIetn
toupon 111 Value) CataiO(. SI
· ll4-14~ickQvilts ..... 11.1~
13J.Fasluonltomt Qviltina.$1.15
lJO.Swultn·Sirts 31-56 $1.15
l29·Qvid1Etsr lronsltn . $1.7~

NEW - 2 bedroom log
type home on the Oh io
River
with all city
util i ties available and
le¥ellot.

NEW LAND - Clear It

J&amp;D

POMEROY, 0.
992·2259
PEACE IN THE COUN·
TRY - 23 beautiful
acres wifh stream •
ti mber land, bu i ld ing'
site and S:ome ti l lable .
Utili t ies
av ailable .

$18.000.
WORK IN

RAVENS -

WOOD? Live near the
new bridge in thi s neat 5
bedroom home with
enc losed rear por ch ,
basement, for ce d a ir
heat on a nice lot . Own er
wi lling to. help linance .

$32,000.
ALSO NEAR

THE

bridge! 5 country acres
with .4 bedroom house,
bath ,
heat ol ator
fireplace . House recent
ly remodeled . $45,000.

MIOOLEPORT

NEW LOCATION - For

chen. 526,900
BUILDING SITE - Ap

water. On ly $16,000.
1G ACRES
Ni ce bot
tom land on Rt. 124 for
your new home on
trailer . Water nnd eloc
tr ic availabl e.

A LOCAL REAL TOR
CAN BEST SHOW AND
SELL YOUR PROPER ·
TY . CALL 992·3325,
•92-3876.

Housing
Headquarters

PUU.INS
EXCAVAT1NG

AUTOMATIC
TRANSMISSIONS
REPAIR &amp; SERVICE

• Dozers
• Backhoes
Hourly Contract
Large or
small jobs.
Ph. 992· 2478
11 ·20·3 mo . pd.

ON MOST CARS
Reg. Price $325.00

Spec . Price $225.00
Plus TaM &amp; Fluid
109 Spring Ave.
P o m eroy,
Oh .
Ph . 992-SS43

74

62

1978 KAWASAKI KZ
motorcyc l e,

-

3

bedroom house on large
lot ...._ aluminum siding,
tu l l basem ent . nice k it..

prox . 13 a cres that
would be an excel lent
place for your new

home. $11 ,200 .
IN TOWN
1972 Holly

Park mob ile hom e~ on
approx . I acre lot . 2
bedroom s, firepla ce,
eq uipp ed
kit c h e n .

$16,500.
REALTOR

Henrv E . Clel.1nd. Jr.
IJI92 6191

ASSOCIATES
Jean 'rrussell949· 2660
Rog&lt;'r &amp; Dottie Turner

992-1692
OFFICE 992·2259

HOOF HOLL OW : Horses
and poni es a nd r idi ng
Everything
l essons .
imaginable in horse equ i p
m e nt . Bl a nk et s, bells.
boo ts, ere. English and
Western . Ruth Reeves

16141698·32'10.

I Llw tttB£1&lt;==
61

F_~r'!!. Equ~m~n!._

Ditc h W itch tr enchers (3) ,
R 65 di esels . (3) small. 1
John Deere crawler loader
m odel 2010. (3) John Deer e
310 loader backhoes . {1)
Case 580 loader ba ckho e.
(1) Case 850 dozer with 6
way blade . ( 1) Ma ssey
d oier with 6 way blad e,
c heap . (4) Bobcat sty le
1830 Case
unitoad er s,
hydrostatic . Call 1 ~ 614 457

3139 or I 873·8963 .

to Ohio Pallet Co., Rt . 2.
Pomeroy 992 · 2689 .

1980 Pontiac Pheonix , 2
door, frontwhec l drive, a i r
conditionin g, am-fm rad io,
33 mpg , 2,000 miles ,
$6,400.00, new car warran

ty. 992-2849.

Fabri c Shop, Pom eroy .
Authorized Singer Sales
an d Service. We sharpen
Scissors .

7S

Boats and
Motors for Sale

1979 Starcraft aluminum V ·
hull open bow, 80 hp Mer·
cury outboard , canopy &amp;
trail er in excell ent all
around condi tion. Boat like

service,

992 2284 .

E LWOOD

81

1974

MAZDA

RX4 ,

auomatic , air, am tm. good
ti res, runs good . Will trade
l or sma ll pi ckup of eq ual
value or S750 . 992· 7841 .

BOWERS

REPAIR
SweeperS ,
toasters, irons, all sma ll
applian ces. Lawn mower .
Next to State Highwa y
Garage on Route 7, 985 ·

3825.

---

Trucks for Sale

Home
Improvements

years experience. Also will
sell parts you fix.

Gene's Carpet Clean ing ,
deep str eam extrac tion .
Fre e
estima t ed ,
reasonable rates, scot ·

2211 .

E ~tcavatin

J &amp; F BACKHOE SER ·
VICE liscensed &amp; bonded,
septic tank installation,
water &amp; gas lines. Ex·
cavating work &amp; transit

Dozer work . Smal l iobs a

For sal e : 1970 Ford pickup
one half ton with overload
spr i ng s
better
than
average condition or 1977
Chevrol e t one half ton
pi ckup i n good conditon .
Victor Bahr three miles
north of Chest er . 985·4240 .

ton . 1978 Mer!lury Cougar .
Both in excell ent condi ti on .
Phone 992·7644 .

73
19 78

vans &amp; 4 w .o .
-CJ 7 har dlop

Renegade Levi package,
headers , sun roof , white

spoKe

wheels.

304

automatic , quadratr.::.c
tra i ler
hit ch 1
carpe t.

S4600.oo. Phone9B5 3.197 .

Case 580 B 1973. Crawler
loader John Deere ?010 gas 1971 Chevy van, 6 cy linder ,
two new tires. all
engine, p ertecl. Massey st a
do£cr 22 44 6 way blade &amp; l e&lt;~roete'd inside, runs goad .
winch. cheap. Call 1 614
7412211, after 5

phone 992 2201.

SERVICE :

all makes washer, dryers ,
ranges , dishwasher s ,
disposals, water tanks. Call

layout. 992·7201.
72

a ll

The

ser. lees

chquard. 992-6309 or 742·
1973 Silver Pontiac L eMans
G T . 2 door sport co upe. 992
3478 after 5:

BobcaT loader . must se ll

•

MACHINE

1980 Honda Odyssey. Like

maKes I

__ Autos ~or Sale

$3,500.00. H57·3139. Dozer,
Case 850, 6 way blade, 2300 1977 Ford pic kup truck 3·&lt;

457 313Y. •

SEWING

APPLIANCE

3085.

Dozer, Chase 850, six way
blade. Backhoe
loader,

Electrical

!..Refrigeration

Repairs ,

new. $3,70&lt;1.00. 992·2849 .

CHEVY Truck 1/ :l ton, 1970.
Good cond. $695 . firm. 667 ·

hours . Back h(le Case 580
1973, 1400 hours , Massey
Ferguson. 300 crawl er
loader, 1977, 400 hours per
tee I. C ~rr I 873 3008 or I 8734996 . Trencher
con
stru ct ionn or f iel d til e. 12
inc h to 24 inch wide, 6 fee t
deep . Verm eer t ·600 100
horsepower. 1 457-3139.

650
blue.

84

Ca II 949·2649.

83
==yarm!••~

color

Wanted to Bu

CH I P WOOD. Poles ma x.
diameter 10" on largest
end. 512 p ·er ton . Bundled
sl ab. S10 per ton. Delivered

71

Pets tor Sale

- - --

Motorcycles

6594 .

Vn _ POMEROY

yourself or l et the wil d
life roam . Natural gas,
water . a nd elec tri city
availabl e.
your trail er or home .
Septi c tank , elec tri city
and drill ed well on 1111
ac res near the coal
mines on 124.
SMALL - 2 car g arage
with 2 bedroom apart·
m ent over on leve l lot .
Bath, c arpet ing, na tural
gos tu rnflce a nd city

I· II· I mo.

10·7-tfc

new for $1100.0&lt;1. Phone 667 ·

do~v .

56

Wa!_lted to Suy

Mon .~ Fri.

9 A.M.-5 :30P.M.

317 N. 2nd AVe .
Middleport
Order your decorated
cakes tor all occasions:
Birthdays ,
Anniver·
sa ries,
Weddings,
Showers, etc.
" Beginner
Cake
Decorating classes"
starting soon . Please
note, we wil be closed on
Mondays during the
month ot January.

~~~~;~~~;~~t=========~E=========;-

9B5 3961.

Main St.

Real Estate- General

Call992·3421

Kingsbury Rd., 2 mi.
west Co. R-d. 18 .
Pomeroy, Oh . 45769
Domestic, Japanese &amp;
European
cars &amp;
Trucks.
1·14·1 mo.

. At Park
Kingsbury
catalog
Home Sales
&amp;. Ac ·
cessor ies. Rt . 124 Miner ·
sv itie, Oh . 992·5~8~ _ ~

~LANDMARK
992·21 81

-

Expert painting, body
pinstrlplng. &amp;
vinyl tops.
Free Estimates

work,

SMALL

Water· Sewer-Eiectric
Gas Line-Ditches
water Line Hook-ups
Septic Tanks
Count¥ Certified
Roush Lane
Cheshire, Oh .
Ph. 367 -7560

W.Va . 1-304-675·4154.

Body Repair - Insurance

Work · Collision Repair.

Size~

TRENOiiNG

prices on
furnitur e.
Reupholster ing . Jan. &amp;
1981.
Mowrey's
F eb.,
Upholstery, Pt. Pleasan t,

H&amp;R BODY SHOP

Farm Buililings

1·22 I mo .
44

442 4.

16 E . Second Street

ON ALL 1981 VOLKSWAGENS

--

42

992-7544

1·25·1 mO .

-.-Business Buildings

Road . 949·230 1.

Lost and Found

3 bedroom

o·

992-2511 .

992 7547.

7760.

REDUCED \

PMC

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

·-

I~ .

1969

10% to 20% Discount
on Entire Stock

trai ler . 12x 60. 992·395-4.

10 ROOM bri c k , 3 baths, 11 d
acre ; 6 rooms, 2 baths, l'h 1968 12 x 60 Richardson
acres; 6 r ooms base m en t, mobile home in good con·
bath , 2 mobile homes ; d i tion. Ca ll 992·6103 or 949·
Mason. 3 bedroom neve r 2714.
lived in, '1 bedroom, rented
2 acres . John Sheets, Jl/1 The r eal estate of Louis A .
miles soUth of Middleport, DeLuz, twen ty ·two acr es
Rt. I.
with large H olly Park
Trailer lo t for sa le, $5,000 . mobile home, in Lebanon
M odu lar home lot on Route Townsh iop, near Portland,
7, thr ~e bedroom farm · wil l be offered tor sal e to
house Joe a ted on Route 7. the highest bidder , c ash on
day of sale, on Saturday,
992 2571.
January 31, 1981 at 10: 00
at the of fice of
Beautiful three bedroom a .m
Brien &amp;
Brien, 100 &amp;
ran ch brick home i n B aum
Addition, Pom eroy. Ohio . one half Court Street,
Gas heat, central air con · Pomeroy , Ohio. For more
ditioning . Ca ll 985 3814 or information ca \1992·2.720 or

Found : Male
p(lkinese,
small redd ish brown lon g
hair , white strak on fa ce &amp;
chest . 992·3760 . Found on
Condor Street .

••v

c..

Furnace r epairs. el ect r ica l
work, plumbing, mobile
home or residence . 992 ·

VA loansno money down
Federal Housing 3% on $25,000
5% on balance.
conventional Lo~nsS%
down
call for Information

U-IIIM •

E•c" Wltf'd 0111r tne minimum 15 worGI 1t 1 ctnfiiNr wH"CC per dly .
Adl rYnnlng otner ltten eon•ecuiiYt d•v• will IN cflerfl4 et ~ 1
rue.
In mtmOr'f', Clrct ol Tn•'*'
min imum .
n In lci\IIACI .

~- _

-

wanted to Do

18

Found :
very
small
chihuahua, mal e, black &amp;
tan , has On a knitted dogg ie
swea ter th a t has been pur
pi e &amp; whit e at one time .
Found under th e br idge in
Pomeroy . Possibly blind in
one eye. Phone 992 3448.

Rates and Other Information

34. _ _ _ _ _ __
35._ _ _ _ _ __

can·
your
Lost
license? Phone

992 3996.
4

- '=

o·

Have vacancy for elderly
person , room &amp; board.
Laundry, reasonab le. 992·

13

flea! estate

'
'

Mortgage Bankers
992·7544

Ph. 667-6485

after 5:30p.m. at949·2624 .

Avon. 742·2354 or 742· 2755.

CUNNfNGHAM
&amp;.ASSOC.

ANN'S CAKE
DECORATING
SUPPLIES

2156 or 992·2157.

Two &amp; one half year old
yellow boxe r pup. M a le.

,,_G•r""' ""1tin1J
N-M .H . llep.elr
17- Upl'lotlferv

1.

WIN
10 lb. Chocolate

949·2343 .

u - hed &amp; Perfllinr

l '- lllullorl

33._ _ _ _ _ __

Three bea g l€- puppies . two
&amp; one half m onth old , two
fema les &amp; one male. Very
cute. Also one beagl e dog,
on e year old, f e ma le . Cal i
anyday after 5:00 a.m . at

lqwlpm•nl
U - W•n11C11o lu~
n - Truckt fOr hie

..,IIINIII

Giveaway

4

61 .... ferm

eFINANCIAL

n Noon S•turdo

tree trim
ming
&amp;
removal .
Reasonable insured rates.
Call anytime for tree
est 1mate. 1 614 667 303 1 or
1·614-667 3248.

eFARM SUPPt iES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

Jl.- LOII&amp; .&amp;UIIII
:M-IIIut Eat,., Wentld

25.- - - - - - 26.-,;._
-_
-_
27 . ___
28. _ _ _ _ _ __
29, _ ___:..._ _ __
30. _ _ _ _ _ __
31. _ _ _ _ _ __
32 ._ _ _ _ _ __

Experi e n c~ d

si - Houslhald G!Mids
n - CI, TV , Aed lo Equlpmenl
n - Antlquu
i4r Mllc . Merc:h•ndiu
ss-autiCIIng Supplln
s.-Ptn tor hie

eREALESTATE

24 _ _ _ _ _ __

II""'

eMERCHANOISE

eEMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Jt-Homts tcr hie
32- Mobllt-Homn
tor Sill
Jl- lt.,ms tor hi•
34- lullnttllulklhtgs

23 . _ _ _ _ _ __

Phone 669·3785.

..-s,ece tor
47- WenMG tclilent
4t--Equlpmenl for fhnl

9-WantedtoBuy

TRAILER Spa ces for rent .
South ern Valley Mobile
Home Park , Cheshire, Oh .

VALUABLE training

Golden

delici ous , $3 .75 per busche l.
Other varie ties ar S4.00 per
buschel &amp; up . Fitzpatrick
Orch ard, State Route 689 .

41 - HOUIII for lilt!'l

O,por!ufllty
11- Monty to Loan
2J-Protnsion•t
StrltiUI

22. _ _ _ _ __

APPLES :·

eRENTALS

1-C•nl ol Tttuks
2- ln Memoriem
l-Announc•m•ntt
._Gin•wly
5- H•PPVAds
.-Lost end Found
1- Yuct5ell
1-Pt~OIIc Sill
&amp; Auctlc.n

H-

17._ _ _,.-_ __
18. _ _ _ _ _ __
19._ _ _ _ _ __
20._ _ _ _ __
21. _ _ _ _...;___

..._

WANTED : People to sell

eANNOUNCEMENTS

CIRCLE
AD WANTED

992·7479 .

as a young business person
and earn good money plus
some great gifts as a Sen·
ti ne! route carrier. Phone
us righ t away and get on
the eligi bil ity l ist at 992·

ce ll ed?

Print one word in eac h
space below. Each in·
ttial or group of figures
counts as a word . Count.
name and address or
6
10
I
phone number if used.
J
You ' ll get better resu lts Words
days
days
daY days
if you describe fully ,
give price. The Sentinel to u
sr.oo $2.00 $4 .00 Sl.oo
reserves the right to
c laSsify, edit or reject
I
any ad . Your ad will be to 25 suo $).75 5.50
1
put in the
pr oper
clasification if you ' ll to Jl Sl.50 $4.l0 7.$0 10.~
check the proper box
below
. These cash rates
· lncl""de discount
wan red
For Sale
Announ ce ment
For Rent

Too

every Sat . night 6:30p.m.

Shop, Middleport .

Phone ___________________

James Carnahan and son, Tony and
Ronald Cowdery. The Goodyear Qut·
standing Award at annual Meigs Soil
and Water Conservation district
went to Virgil ahd Thomas Hamm.
The Meigs High Future Farn1ers of
America won the soil judging con·
test.
Nov. 22 - Middleport Village
Postmaster, Paul Casci, and his
assistant Adrian Carson, announced
their retirement effective Jan. 9.
Nov. 25- The Meigs County Cornlnissioners changed the hours at the
county landfill from 8 a .m. to 5 p.m.
beginning Dec. I.

PIANO .
to negl ect,

Racine Volunteer Fire
Department sponsors a
shot gun &amp; · rifle match

highest prices
f or gold and si lver
coins, rings, jewelry , etc.
Contact Ed Burkett Barber

.

Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy. Large lots. Ca \1

992·3954 .

Announcements

Curb Inflation.
Pay Cash for
Classlfieds and
Savell I

.

CO UNTRY MOBILE Home

992·2725~~,-

2082 .

Nancy Clark, Service Unit direc- grandch i ldren.
tor, announces that al) Girl Sco~:
Leaders in Gailia County will hold
their monthly Service Ul\lt meeting ~----------~----------~at 9:30 a .m. on Wednesday,
r;
February 4, at the Ohio Valley Bank, 1
370 Jackson Pike, Gallipolia.
Judy Ball, 1981 Cookie Chairman,
has stated the Girl Scout cookie
sales information will be
distributed. The Seal of Ohio Girl
Scout Council states that the cookie
sale will be held from February 1322. Ail Brownie, Junior, Cadette and
Write yo ur own ad and order by mail with this
Senior Girl Scouts in Gallia County
coupon . cancel your ad by phone when you get
will call door-t&lt;rdoor, taking orders
results . Money not refundaQie .
for this annual event.
Thinking
Day/Girl . Scout Week
Name _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
.
events w1ll also be discussed, says
Christi Bird, Field Director.

~efor Rent

46 -·

SPECIAL WAVE LENGTH PERM
Reg. $35 .00
.
NOW $30.00

valuable
expert
tuning &amp; and r epair. Lane
Daniels, 742 ·29!1 or 992·

SHOOT IN G MATCH

at 992-77B7.

1
2()11
1
1

I PAY
Gone Dear Bob. buf not possible
forgotten, nor shall you

'80 news highlights
Mrs. Russell

SPECIAL

In Memoriam

J

Business Services

Unfurn ished one bedroom
for rent. Renters assistance available
for senior citizens. Con ta ct
Vi llage Manor Apartm~nTs

(Now Through February 14th)

YOUR

ner, who departed fh is lite

lor Rent _ __

ap~rtment

Small investme~t, large
returns, Sentinel Want Ads

January 24, 1972 .

Ap&lt;~rtment

44

KAY'
S BEAUTY SALON
169 N. 2nd Middlepor"t_

Address----------------

NOVEMBER
Nov . I - The Eastern Eagles
defeated Southern 49-6 earning a
share of the SV AC title.
Nov. 2- Five members of Meigs
Football squad were named to· the
· All.SEOAL football team. They were
Bob Ashley, Richard Dean, Jerry
Fields, Tom Schoonover and Chris
Judge.
Nov. 3- Reserve parking areas in
Pomeroy were eliminated by
Pomeroy Council with the deciding
vote cast by Mayor Clarence An·
drews. William Radford of the Rock
Springs"' area was naJned a new
member of the Meigs County Fair
Board.
Nov. ·4 - James L. Garnes, 36,
Pomeroy, who allegedly shot two
Meigs County residents at the Century Bar, W. Main St., Pomeroy, on
Oct. ;&gt;.5, was found dead from an •!&gt;'
parent self-inflicted gunshot wound.
James J. Proffitt, Democrat, was
reelected sheriff of Meigs County ·
and David J . Koblentz. Republican,
was chosen as a new county commissioner.
Nov. 5 - Six Eastern football
players named to 1980 All-SVAC
team. They were Dennis Durst,
Greg Wigal , P. G. Riffe, Rodney ·
Keller, Ray Werry and Mike Bissell.
Nov. 6- The financial condition of
the Syracuse Board of Public Affairs
was discussed at length by Syracuse
Village Council. Green box garbage
collection service in Meigs County
was tenninated by the Meigs County
Con11nissioners because of the
defeat of a landfill levy.
Nov. 10 - Mayor Fred Hoffman
reported Middleport has grown 6.5
percent In population and 15 percent
in housing units since 1970.
Nov . 12 - The Syracuse-Racine
sewage project will cost $750,000 less
than anticipated according , to bids
opened at Syracuse Municipal·
Building. Over half of the gr""n
boxes in Meigs County were picked
up and areas cleaned.
Nov. !3 - Robert L. First, soil conservationist, U. S. Soil Conservation
Service (SCS) was assigned to the
local SCS office in Pomeroy as
district conservationist.
Nov . 16 - Winners of the
Southeast Ohio Junior Miss Pageant
from Meigs were Bonnie Boso,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Clair Boso,
first runner-up; Sonja Hill, daughter
of Sandra Hill and Dennie Hill,
Junior Miss ; and Pebbles Blake,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Elden
Blake, Jr., first runner-up of Vinton
County.
Nov. 17 - Construction of a planned access road from Union Ave.,
Pomeroy, to the multi-purpose
building on Mulberry Heights will
open an area of more than 100 acres
for new housing, Richard Joncw,
president uf the Meigs County ComlrJ ssioners told Pomeroy Council.
Nov. 20 - ,putstanding. faqn
family awards oftile Meigs Soil and
Water Conservation Distr1rt went to

The

distributed by the Salvation Army.
Over 100 families received food supplies and approximately 250
young,ers rectived a new toy plus
several used toys.
'Dec. 29- The Meigs Local School
District to participate in a program
lor training teachers to work with
talented and gifted students.
Dec. 30 - Nine county officials
were given oaths of office before
beginning new tenns in 1911 by
Judge John c. Bacon, common pleas
court.

In memory &amp; honor of our
dea r Husband &amp; Father,
Charles Robert W l nebren·

Jeremy Michael

Jeremy Heath Michael was
David Joseph Tatterson, son of
honored
on his first birthday with ·a
Stephen and Robyn Tatterson, East
Main St. , Pomeroy, observed His · party at the home of his greatsecond birthday Jan. 19 with a party grandmother, Mrs. Edythe Bowen,
at the home of his grandmother, Mason.
A cookie monster cake, baked and
Mrs. Joanne Tatterson, Ebenezer
decorated by his mother, was served
St., Pomeroy.
· There for the celebration were his with ice cream, potato chips, sugar
great-aunt, Mrs. Kate Welsh, his cookies, and pop. Gifts were presen·
great-grandfather, Millard Gilmore, ted to Jeremy.
Attending were his parents, Susi
and his parents. Sending gifts were
Della Norton, Pomeroy, Mr. and and Terry Michael, his grandMrs. James Trent , New parents, Joan and Richard Varian,
Philadelphia, and Barbara Tat· Phyllis McDaniel, David Varian,
Peggy McDaniel, Jayne· Varian,
terson.
Debi Grubb, Melissa McDaniel,
Mikey McDaniel, and the hostess .
Sending a gift was Jeremy's grandmother, Maxine Michael.

period.

specialty . 742·2753.

Ken Young at 985-3561 . 28

D x M Electrical con·
tra ctor s. Residential , com
mercia!,
&amp;
industr ial ·
w i r ing. Service cal ls . Free
estimates. Call collect 388·
9764 .
E lec tri cal service tor a ll
wiring needs, servic e calls,
es t imates . Call Mill er E l ec· ·
tri c at742· 3195 or992 7~80 .

BS
A! 's Trash Serv ice. Box 65 ,
Portland , Ohio. 843·49\ l' .
We have entire Meigs
Cou nty . $5 .00 monthly .

KIT 'N' CARLYLE '"

by Larry Wright

I'M~~. CAA!-YI£, aJT
'tV'~;~.. HAVefo 5fAY IN THE

~, lt\Y M6f!S'S
C,ooJ,tN~ ~AND SfiE.'.s

A~61lC. lo

CAf+1AIR .
....._,

H~ABoOf

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f'ReltNb
11/1\ A

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�•

Pomeroy

·Emergency squad runs

Gallipolis woman hurt in accident
day afternoon .
Jocelyn A. Zerkle, 16•. Syracuse,
was southbound on CR 35 at S:10
p.m. when her car failed to negotiate
a curve, went orr the right side of the
road and overturned: ·The car was demolished, ·but
Zerkle was not injured and no
citations were issued.

A Gallipolis woman was injured in
a on«H!ar accident in Meigs County
Monday, according to the GalliaMeigs Post of the Ohio Highway
Patrol . .
The patrol said Debbie Abbutt was
a passenger in a car driven by John
W. Lehew, 25, Rt. 1, Gallipolis,
which was westbound on Orange
Twp. Rd. 59 at lO:SOa.m.
Lehew then reportedly lost control
of his car on ice, went off the right
side of the road and collided with an
embankment, causing moderate
damage.
Abbutt was injured and taken to
Holzer Medical Center by private
vehicle. where she was treated and
released for cuts and bruises.
The patrol investigated another
tw&lt;&gt;-Car crash in Meigs County Mon-

i

IIIII

PROCJ,AMATION - Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews sigus a
proclamation announcing the observance of ReligioiiS Emphasis Week,
Feb. 1-8 and Four Chaplains Day, Feb. 1, as James Gilmore, chaplain rl.
Drew Webster Post 39, American Legion, looks on. Foor Chaplains Day
will be observed by the post at 10:30 a.m. on Feb. 1 at the Laurel CWf
Free Methodist Church with the Rev. Floyd Shook, pastor, speaking. The
day is in tribute to four service chaplains who calmly issued their life
belts to American serviceman aboard the troop transport when it was torpedoed on Feb. 3, 1943. Their arms around one another's shoulders the
four chaplains, heads bowed in prayer, went down with the ship.

I

Area deaths

Story E. Blake

Funeral services for Story E.
Blake, 59, who died at his residence
iri Coolville, have been set for II a.m.
Thursday at the White Funeral
Home with the Rev. Eldon Blake of·
ficiating.
Mr. Blake was born on May 23,
1921, a son of the late William Sher·
· man and Nora Buchanan Blake. He
was employed in various plants in
the area. · He was a veterans of

Now

to

BLOOD APPEAL ASKED
An appeal for replacement
blood for Mrs. Janet Korn, who
remains critically ill in the
Cleveland Clinic, has been
issued. Over the weekend Mrs.
Korn received 71 pints of plasma,
platelets and blood.
Residents may give blOOd in
Mrs. Korn's name at the next
visit of the Red Cross Bloodmobile here.
Cards may be sent to Mrs. Korn
at 3N34, Cleveland Clinic, P. 0.
Box 982. Cleveland, Ohio, 44106.

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGES JAN. 26
Qarence Baier, Florence Barnhouse. Mrs. Roy Canterbury and
son, Jere Clark, Jeffrey Qarke,
Robert Crow, Oma Curry. Walter
Evans, Rita Hayes, Donald Hermann, John Johnson II, William
Miller, Mary Montgomery, Patricia
Riegel, Robert Robbins, Beverly
Snider, Mary Sparks, Kimberly
Spurlock, Cheryl Stollings, Mrs.
Thomas Weaver and.daughter
BffiTilS
Mr. and Mrs. James Miller,
daughter, Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Whetstone Sr., daughter,
Wellston.

I

World War II.
Surviving are two sisters, Sadie
Cubbison, Coolville, and Gladys
Riggleman, Parkersburg; a
brother, Glen of Reedsville, and a
number of nieces and nephews. Two
brothers, a sister and his parents
preceded him in death.
Friends may call at the funeral
horne anytime after noon on Wednesday. Burial will be in the Eden
Cemetery at Reedsville.

Montgomery from Pomeroy Health
care Center to Veterans Memorial
Hospital and treated Doris Miller on
the scene, E; Main St., at 10:12 p.m.
The Middleport Unit at 11:51 p.m.
took Unda Darst to Veterans
Memorial.

Local emergency units answered
four calls Monday according to the
report of the Meigs 'Emergency
Medical Services. At 10:10 a.m., the
Tuppers Plains Unit took George
Sirruns from Route 681 East to
O'Bleness Hospital, Athens; at 6:19 .---~------.--.=~==­
p.m. the Pomeroy Unit took Ruth
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted-Jenny A~. Reedsville; Valerie LaBonte, Long Bottorn; Sherri Jewell, Cheshire; Paul
Cesto, Columbus; Kenneth Imboden, Middleport;
Thomas
Morrisey, Long Bottom.
Discharged-JoAnn Clark, Maude
Bailey, Theresa Becker, William
Morris, Agnes Coleman, Edith
Searles, Opal Capehart, Vada Cald·
well.

..... IP" SPUW.

••
•

13" PIZZA ••

Your choi&lt;t of any
-

toppiftt.

I $2.50

I

Rtf.$4.0oll
I ..,. Ooly
5,6 &amp; 7

Ja n .

:Gtno's:
•••••••
•

All LOCA liONS

•

ELBERFELD$
BED BLANKETS

SALE

SUPER
SAVINGS

e

ANT1QUESTAKEN
The unoccupied house owned by
Addie Pu!Uns, Lakewood Road,
township road 85, was broken into
last week and antiques were taken
according to the sheriff's department.
Antiques taken were china cubbard. dishes, chifforobe, chest of
drawers and cedar chest. Entry was
gained through a kitchen window.
Anyone in the area that may
remember seeing any suspicious
Yehicles are ased to contact the
sheriff's department.

I

At last--hostages go.home
By JAMESGERSTENZANG .
Assoelated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) .- And today
they really go home.
Their 444 days of bondage in Iran
are more than a week behind them,
their decompression period is over,
the official welcome in the nation's
capital is a warm remembrance,
and the 52 freed Americans are
finally heading home.
Washington embraced the
hostages Tuesday and President
Reagan threw open the White House
to them and their families in a
display
termed "absolutely
staggering" by L. Bruce Laingen.
The air of jubilation at the White
House was tempered by a stern warning from Reagan that any
terrorists ever again daring to seize
American captives would face
"swift and effective retribution."
Today, after most of them spent
the night at a suburban Arlington,
Va., hotel, the hostage beroes were

dispersing to cities and small towns was admitted Tuesday night to an·
around the country.
Arlington hospital suffering from
They anticipated at least 30 days' · pneumonia, severe bronchitis and . ·
vacation, although some expressed exhaustion. He was listed in fair con·
Interest in returning to work sooner.
dition.
"Where's my next post?" asked
With 6,000 guests spread out on the
Katherine Koob, one of ·the two White House South Lawn, and a
women held in captivity for the en- nationwide television audience wat·
tire 444 days, as soon as she arrived ching live coverage, Reagan capped
in Washington.
the freed Americans' first week of
"If I had my choice, I'd report liberty Tuesday, saying:
back to duty tomorrow," said
".Your freedom and your inMarine Sgt. John D. McKeel, Tl, of dividual dignity are much
' cherished. In the representation of
Balch Springs, Texas.
Although most of the former this nation you will be accorded
hostages remained at the hotel, John every means or· protection that
E. Graves returned home to subur- America can muster.
ban Reston, Va., where neigh"Let terrorists be aware that
borhood children gave him a can- when the rules of international
dlellght welcome Tuesday night. ''I behavior are violated; our policy will
can't believe I'm here, but I am," be. one cl. swift and effective
said Graves, 53, a senior foreign ser- retribution.
"We hear it said that we live in an
vice inspector.
The homecoming will wait a little era of limits to our power," Reagan
longer yet for Robert Ode, at 6S the added. "Well let it Also be unoldest of the fonner hostages. He
(Continued on page 121

Call for

observance

SAlE

REDUCED

Middleport,

ACTION SOUGIIT
A petiton of the trustees of the U.
B. Church, Letart Falls, to sell and
convey real estate to Don R. Hill and
Mary E. Hili was filed in Meigs
County Corrunon Pleas.Court.
Cynthia Marie Blackwell,
Pomeroy; filed suit for divorce
against Stever J. aiackwell,
Pomeroy.

The Meigs County Corrunissioners
are calling for a county wide observance on Thursday to honor the
return of the 52 hostages.
The following resolution was
passed Tuesday calling for the ob-

20%

Our remaining stock of blankets including thermals ·
sheet blankets · electric blankets and others. Good
selection of sizes and colors.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

servance.

U)uple negi1tiates finding
RICHMOND, Va. - A Richmond husband and wife who found
$300,000 in small bills stuffed in their attic insulation have placed the
money in escrow while negotiating with the house's fonner owner.
Mr. and ·Mrs·. Robert E. Comet bought the house from the widow of
Emmett J. Morgan, a bondsman who died in 19'18 and left an estate
valued at more than $2 million. He did not leave a will.

Slate No. %%3X
CONSOLIDATED REPORT o~· CONDITION

The Farmers Bank &amp;
Savings Con:'pany

State.

of Pomeroy, Ohio a~d Foreign aod DomesUe Subsidiaries, al the elose of
business December 31, 11!80, a slate banklllg fnslitulioo orgaalzcd aod
operating under the bao.klng laws of this Slate aod a member of the Federal
Reserve System. Published io accordance with a call made by the Slate Bank·
log Authorilles aod by the Federal Reserve Bank of this District.
ASSETS
Cash and due from depository iru,titutions ... : . . ... . ... . . . . . .... 2,608,000.00
U.S. Treasury securities . . ... .. . .. . ... .. , ... .... . . .. . ........ 4,893,000.00
Obligations of U.S. Government
·
agencies and corporations . ... . ... . .. ... .. .. ...........•.... 2,520,000.00
Obligations of States and political subdivisions
in the United States . . .. . .... . .. . . ...... . . .. . . . . . . . .... . . ... 2,764,000.00
Federal Reserve stock and corporate stock .. . ........... . . . ....... 30,000.00
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
under agreements to resell . . . ...... . ........ .. .............. 900,000.00
a. Loans, Total (excluding unearned
income) .... . .............. . . . ........ .. ..... ." 14,104.,000.00
b. Les8 : allowance for possible loan losses .......... . ... $140,000.00
c. Loans, net ... .. ............ . .. . ... . ..... . ...... . ...... . .. 13.964.000.00
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and
other assets representing bank premises . . . . . . ... . . , .. .•. .. . ... 352,000.00
Other assets . . . . . . . ..... . . . .. .... . .. . . ... ... ... . . . .......... , 276.0!!Q.OO
TOTAL ASSETS . ... .. ... . ... . ......... .. .. . ..... . ... . . . .. . . 28,307,000.00

.choice
gas last, too.

EQUITY CAPITAL
Common stock :
a. No. shares authorized 16,000
b. No. shares outstanding 16,000 . . . . .. ... ... .. .. (par value!
400,000.00
Surplus ..... . ............. . .. . .... . ... .. .. ...... .. . ... . ...... 600,000.00
Undivided profits . .......... . ..... . . : . .. . .. .... . ...... . . ... .. 1,013,000.00
TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL . .. ... . . . •. . . ... . ... ... .... ... .. ... .. 2,013,000.0
TOTALLIABIUTIESAND
__
EQUITY CAPITAL .. .. .. .. . ................ .. ........ .... 28,307,000.00
MEMORANDA
Amounts outstanding as of report date:
b. Time certificates of deposit in denomination
of $100,000 or more .... . ...... ... . . .. . .. .. . . . .. . ., ........ SOO,OOO.OO
Average for 30 calendar days (or calen&lt;l!'r month)
ending with report date:
a. cash and due from depository institutions ........ . ... . . ... . . . 2,4-42,000.00
b. Federal funds sold and securities purchased
under agreements to resell . ...... .. .. . .... . . . ........... " .. 1,168,000.00
c. Total loans . . .. ... . ... . ...... ..... .. ... . ... . ..• , ......... 14,138,000.00
d. Time certificates of deposits in denominations
of $100,000 or more . .. .... . . . ... . .......... . ..... . ........ . .. 500,000.00
e. Total deposits ................... ·.............. ., ••....... 25,698,000.00
h. Total assets ..... . .. .. ...... , .•. . .. . ... . ... , . . ..... ... . .. 28,939,000.00

Quaker State is America's first
choice for helping cars last. And
as if that's not enough. now Quaker
State helps gas last, too.
Try Quaker Stale Super Blend
_ ·.
lOW-30 Deluxe lOW-40 or Sterlmg Motor Otis . .
Now all.three br;md s give you gas-saving efficiency for extra miles per
gallon at no extra cosr.

I, Roger W. Hysell, Cashier, of the above-named bank do hereby d!l&lt;'lare
that this report of condition is true to the best of my knowledge and belief.
Roger W. Hysell

State
last.
helps

We, the ~ndersigned directors, attest the correctness of this report of condition "and declare that it has been examined by us and to the best of our
knowledge and belief is true and correct.
THEODORE T. REED, JR.
RICHARD C. FOLLROD - Director•
FRED W. CROW, JR.
I

enttne

Vol. 28, No. 201
Copyrighted 1981

SIMPLICITY
PAlTERN

THE SEWING
CENTER

•

at

All
KNITS
20% OFF

UABILmES
Demand deposits of individuals,
.
partnerships and corporations , . . . . . . ....................... 5,713,000.00
Time and savings deposits of Individuals,
.
partnerships. and corporations . ........... . ....... .. ...... . 19,320,000.00
Deposits of United States Government ...........•. ... .... .. ....... 17,000.00
Deposits of States and political subdivisions
in the United States .. ......... . ................ . ... . . . ... . .. . 520,000.00
Certified and officers' checks ............... . ......... ......... . 255,000.00
a. Total Deposits ... ........ .. ......... . .... .. ...... . . ... .. . 25,825,000.00
(I) Total demand deposits ............... .. ........ 6,505,000.00
(2) Total time and savings deposits .......... . ..... 19,320.00Q,OO
other liabilities , .... ......... .. . . . . ...... .. ... .. . . ... .. . ... . .. 469,000.00
TOTAL LIABIUTIES (excluding subordinated notes
'
and debentures) ............ .. . .. . . . . . .... ... . ... .. .. .. ... 26.294.Q90.00

I.

•

January 27, 1781

Middleport, Ohio

1

Earthquakes jost California
LOS ANGELES - No injuries or damage were reported when a pair
of earthquakes jostled california, Officials said.

A slight earthquake registering 3.1 on the Richter Scale rwnbled
through the area south of Culver City on Tuesday night, about six
hours after the 2:10 p.m. PST quake of 4.0 that struck 30 miles
southeast of San Jose, officials said.
'!'he Richter scale is a measure Of ground motion. A quake
measuring 4.0 on the scale can do moderate damage in a populated
area, while a quake of 3.5 is capable of slight damage.

Hard drugs make way to inmates
'•

UMA, Ohio - The head of Lima State Hospital says heroin. opiwn
and other hard drugs are making their way to some inmates and ern-'
ployees.
Superintendent Ronald Hubbard told a citizens advisory panel
Tuesday that the drugs and liquor are getting past the gates.
"On some days, vodka and Sprite is the drink of the day," he said.
Thooe caught with the s~bstances will be prosecuted, he said.

School board fires 14 teachers
CINCINNATI - .A suburban school ooard has fired 14 striking
teachers, effective at the end or the school year, and told others to
report to work by Friday or also lace dismissals.
•
.
Dennis Roberge, a consultant with the Ohio Education Association,
said action by the Mariemont Board of Education on Tuesday night
would be challenged in C&lt;Jurt.
The Madeira District Education Association struck the 1,38!&gt;-sludent
system, covering the communities of Mariemont, Terrace Park and
Fairfax, on Monday. Classes have been held since then by substitutes
and parents.

.

Sick out contines in Steubenv"ille

"Be it resolved that the Meigs
County Corrunissioners do hereby of·
ficially designate Thursday, Jan. 29.
1981 as a day of Thanksgiving in
Meigs County in honor of the sale
return of the 52 American hostages.
"Be it further resolved that all
businessestablishments and private
homes are urged to display the
American flag on this date, and
requests that all churches in every
conununity ring their church bells at
12 n&lt;Hln.
" And be it further resolved that
each and every citizen of Meigs
County pause for one minute at noon
on this date for a moment of silent
prayer.
"The commissioners hope that
everyone, no rna tter wha I they are
doing or where they are, stop and
join in the observance."

Commission
opens bids

.

Bid• for additional space to at'comodate the county welfare department department were opened when
the county conunissioners met in
regular session Tuesday.
Bids were received from the
village of Pomeroy to rel).\ space at
the !onner Pomeroy Seriior High
Building and from Jay Hall Jr., to
rent space in a building on North
Second Ave., in Middleport. The bids
were tabled for additional study.
The commissioners signed and approved the final project budget and
contract docwnents ror submission

to the State Oepartmewnt of Mental
Retardation
Developmental
Disabilities for the construction of
the Meigs County Mental Retar·
1 Continued on page 12)

WITHOUT FLAGS - Since American flags normally placed throughout tho business section of
Pomeroy by the .Pomeroy-Middleport Lions Club were
at the dry cleaners Tuesday when Mayor Clarence Andrews had asked lor a flag display in tribute to the 52
former hostages, some business people such as Joe
Clark of Clark's Jewelry Store became resourceful.
Many months ago, Drew Webster Post 39. American

Legion, had distributed small American ·flags for
display by busineiis hyuses to display as a remem- ·
braoce to the hostages. Tuesday, Clark placed the
small flag oo a parking metet In !root of his business
establishment io tribute to the hostages being honor¢
in Washington, D. C. Bells tolled In the community at 12
noon .

Church ·tof~:ghens position
in current contract talks
WILLIAMSON , W.Va. (AP ) United Mine Workers President Sam
Church has toughened his position
regarding lhe possibility of a strike
by the union should negotiators fail
to present a new contract before the
current agreement expires.
In an address Tuesday to southern
West Virginia local union officials,

Church said he would not seek an extension u! the current contract if
UMW members fail to ratify a new
agreement by March 27. the day the
current 3-year-old contract ends.

Union representatives and
.negotiators for the Bituminous Coal
Operators Association last week
opened serious contract talks in
Washington, D.C. The next round of
bargaining is scheduled for
Tuesday.
Both sides have agreed to a March
15 settlement deadline, Church said,
to give the union 12 days in which to
c'Onduct a ratification vote.
II the unio!l membership rejects or
fails to approve a woposed contract
by the end of the current agreement,

Church predicted the union would
strike.
A Ill-day strike by the UMW
during 1977·78 contract negotiations
virtually halted the nation's coal
production . .
Last sununer, Church said he
would consider asking the union's
governing board to extend the
current contract if union and industry officials had failed to agree
on a new package by March 27.
That idea was criticized by many
(Continued on page 12)

STEUBENVILLE, Ohio - aty officials met behind closed doors
early today in an attempt to end a sickout by nearly all of its JSO
. municipal workers.
It was not immediately known whether any decisions were made.
Members of City Council called the closed door session at about 9: 30'
p.m. Tuesday, two hours alter its meeting had begun. Tl)e move drew
protests from many attending the meeting.

550 people feared drowned
JAKARTA, Indonesia - Military ships and aircraft searched Wed·
nesday for !i50 people missing and feared drowned when a burning Indonesian ship sank in the stormy Java Sea. Authorities said only 20
bodies had been spotted in the rough waves.
A-spokesman for the search and rescue teams aboard 13 ships and
five aircraft from the Indonesian navy and air force said crews also
sighted empty life vests from the ship and some of the 60 rubber
dinghies air-dropped into the stonny waters the day before. All were
empty, he said.
Agovernment spokesman said 566 people, including crew members,
were rescued from a total of 1,1:MI on board the stricken Tampomas 2
wMn it sank Tuesday.

Ohio lottery winner
CLEVEl.AND - The winning number is selected Tuesday night in
the Ohio Lottery's daily game "The Number" was 486.

Weather

•

Partly cloudy tonight. Lows near 20. Mostly sunny Thursday. Highs
in the low 30s. ChallCe of precipitation 10 percent tonight and near 1.ero
percent Thursday. WindS westerly to northwesterly 1().20 mph toni~ht .
Extended Ohio Forecaot- Friday throughSunday:F~irlhnJUgh the
period. Highs in the mid-20s to mid-30s Friday and S!Jturday and in the
30s Sunday. Lows 1().20 Friday and S!Jturday and in the mirl··lccns to •
the mid-20s Sunday.

FINE AND PERFORMING ARTS BUILDING- Thla oo.w structure
will be dedirated on th~ campu• of Rio Graode ColleKe-Commualty
College on Sunduy, Ft•b. 8. Ceremooles wf)l start 11 2 p.m. Wayne P.
Lawstin, Uhin Arts Couodl's executive director, wlll be the keynote

•

~·

.

speaker. A plano concert wlll be presented by Marl Cbristlue Epling.
Following afternoon loon and refreshments, the Ohio State Ualvenlty
Jazz Ensem~le will perform at 7:30p.m.

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