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                  <text>wednesda , Februar. 4, 1981

Page-16-The Daily Sel)tinel

New administration would
employ
neutron
weapons
w

·Hunter in contention

Ashland patrolman
'Trooper of Year'
Trooper Dennis M. Hunter of the
Gallia-Meigs Post of the Ohio Highway Pa!rol was one of nine OSP personnel in contention for the trooper
of the year award Tuesday.
Troop.;r Stanley R Steiner of the
Ashland Post was announced as the
winner by Patrol Supt. Jack Walsh.
Hunter recently selected post
trooper of the year, was selected for
the competition based on outstanding service in 19110.
A graduate of Fairland High
School in Proctorville, Hunter joined
the patrol in Athens in !970 after sel'
ving in the U.S. Navy and com·
pleting .his education at Rio Grande
College. He joined the GaU1poiis
Post in 1972 and was elected post
trooper of the year in 1974 and 1975..
Hunter and his w1fe. Pat. hve on

Area

Rodney with their children Denise,
14, and Mat, 11.
In addition to Steiner's award,
Walsh annowiced the Blue Max
award for batlling auto theft went to ·
Trooper Monte L. McGowen of the
Swanton Post, and the proficiency
award for auto larceny investigation
went to Trooper Donald A. Cannan
of the Steubenvil)e Post.
The O.W. Merrell Meritorious Service award went to Trooper
TROOPER HUNTER
Frederick A. Raby of the Swanton
Post for his handling of three armed
felons who took two hostages in a
stolen vehicle on the Ohio Turnpike
on Aprii2S, 1980.
Local emergency units answered
The superintendent's trophy pistol
five
calls Tuesday, the Meigs
award went to Sgt. Arthur H.
Emergency
Medical Services ·
Williams of the Mansfield Post.
Headquarters reports.
At 11 :16 a.m., the Syracuse Unit
took Blythe Theiss to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; at 2:10p.m., the
Syracuse Unit took Mary Ryan,
MinersviUe, to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; the Rutland Unit at I :47
Cheshire; 12 grandchildren, one a.m. took Sam Kamento from Meigs
great-grandchild and several nieces Mine 2 to O'Bleness Hospital in
and nephews.
Athens; at II :32 p.m., the Tuppers
Funeral services will be held at II Plains Unit took Dorsel Miller from
a.m. Friday at the Rawlings-Coats- Chester to Holzer Medical Center,
Blower Funeral Home with the Rev. and at 2:22 p.m. the Pomeroy Unit
Harold Runyan officiating. Burial took Mabel Miller to Veterans
will be in the Story Boggess Memorial Hospital:
Cemetery at Gold Town, W. Va.
Friends may caU at• the funeral
home anytime after 10 a.m. Thursday. Graveside rites will be held at
MOBILE HOME ENTERED
1:30 p.in. Friday.
Meigs County sheriff's deputies
Tuesday investigated a breaking
and entering of the trailer home of
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted-Dorotha McKenzie, Ted Hayes, Horner Hill, early
Tuesday morning.
Pomeroy; Wilma Rizer, Syracuse;
Entry was gained by breaking
Bertha Dutton, Pomeroy; Benny
through
the front door. The residenGoodman, Langsville; Tame Ia
ce
was
ramsacked.
Nwnerous items
Bearhs, Pomeroy.
were
taken.
Anyone
having any inDischarged-Jenny Adams, Jean
Moore, Susanna Hubbard, Oval Did- formation concerning the incident is
asked to call the sheriff.
dle, John Henry and Otis Casto.

Charles F. Cook, 77, former
resident of Hemlock Grove in Meigs
County, died Tuesday at Fayette,
Arkansas.
A retired farmer, stone mason and
carpenter, Mr. Cook was born Mar·
ch 30, !903, a son of the late Hugh R
and Stella Blanche Cook.
·
Surviving are a son, William
Charles Cook, Pomeroy; two
daughters, Mrs. Roger (Connie)
Malone, Hamden, and Mrs. &lt;;harles
(Bonnie) Pratt, Radcliff; a brother,
Jerome Cook, Pomeroy, and six
grandchildren.
Besides his parents, he was
preceded in death by two brothers
and a sister.
Funeral services will be held at 2
p.m. Thursday at Shiloh, Ark.

\

(Continued from page! )
programs and giving school boards
more flexibility in the ways they
spend state subsidies.
One of the agency casualties appeared to be the Ohio Rail Transportation Authority although It was
transferred into the transportation
department rather than being .
abolished. But it is not a favorite of
the administration and its
operations may be effeclively curtailed.
The appropriation for the transportation department, which has
sUffered major revenue losses due to
declining gasoline sales, was listed
at $1.1 billion, down 0. i percentfrom
1979-1981.
Rhodes' budget does not mention
an increase in the gasoline tax to
help rejuvenate the department's
stymied construction program, as
some officials have advocated.
In a news release that accompanied the document, the administration said "the major issue
facing the department of transportation in the 1982-1983 biennium
is the need to adjust to declining
motor vehicle fuel·tax revenues.

Phone 742-2100
l:ttect1ve thru Saturday, February 7th
Eckrich Sweet

SMOKED HAM ••••••••••••.•• ~~~.$3.19
Eckrich

BAR-B-QUE LOAf.•••••••.•••• !-.~·. $2.79
Homemade

HAM SALAD •••••••••.••••••••••~~; $1.39
DAIRY

RODUCE

12 oz. Kraft Style

10 lb. Maine Eatinq

Sliced Sharp

POTATOES· ··········'2.19

~~~~Q:~:~$1.79
MARGARINE

s lb. Bag White

Bag

GRAPEFRUIT·······'1.29
30 Count Florida

Quarters 2 / $ 1 . 1 9

Bag

Bunch

CELERY ............... 49'

FROZEN
1 lb. Booth

Deibert A. Milam, 80, Pearl St.,
Middleport, died Tuesday at Holzer
Medical Center following a lingering
illness.
Mr. Milam was bom Sept. 6, 1900
in Jackson; W. Va., a son of the late
James and Jemina Anderson
Milam. He was also preceded in
death by two brothers, Kenneth and
Felt, and a sister, Esta Harper.
Mr. Milam before his retirement
was a machinist at the Marietta
Plant at Point Pleasant, W. Va,
Surviving are his wife, Ethel; two
daughters, Mrs. James (Edith)
Derrick, Ravenswood, W. Va., and
Mrs. Louise Johnson, Middleport;
two sons, Delbert H. (Jim) Milam,
Xenia, and Henry K. Milam,

ELBERFELD$ WAREHOUSE

,

PERCH FILEJS .••••••••••••••••~~~··'2.09

~

12' '• oz. Campbell's

Cream of Mushroom Soup
oz. Chicken ol the Sea
TUNA •••••••••••••••••••••••••~:~ •• s1.29
6' •

S'• oz . zest Bar

TOILET SOAP ••••~•• ••••••• • 2 Bars 9'

3 oi.

REGULAR
JELLOS ••••• ••• ••••• 3/s1.00
Roll Softweve
TOILET TISSUE············ •••••~~~·. 6'
2

Mayor's Court

derly
conduct
and while
Kim
Hayman,
Racine,charge,
$350, driving
intoxicated.

defense policies of the .Carter years.
On Monday, President Reagan
rejected Carter's long-stalled plan to
gradually Withdraw U.S. troops
from South Korea.
In 1978, Carter ordered producti~n
or the neutron warheads put olf mdefinitely and then authorized the
Energy ~partment to manufacture
~orne cr1tical elements m case a
decision was made later to deploy
the weapons.

RUTLAND
DEPARTMENT
STORE

No new

Delbert A. Milam

Three defendants were lined $225
and costs each and were given three
day jail sentences when they appeared in the court of Middleport
Mayor Fred Hoffman Tuesday night
on charges · of driving while intoxicated.
The trio includes Tony Manley,
Middleport; Stephen P. Hankla, Ci~o·
cinnati, and Paul H. Schuler,
Rutland.
Forfeiting bonds in the court
TuesdaynlghtwereLarryC.Porter,
Stockport, $:)0, posted on a di.sor-

shelved by Carter "cannot but cause
alarm at the prospects of world
peace and the easiRg of tension."
The new Pentagon chief said Cal'
ter's decision to defer deployment of
the enhanced radiation weapon was
wrong and caused consternation in
the governments of West Germany
and other European allies.
·
lt was the second time in as many
days the new administration had indicated it may dismantle the major

Emergency nms

death~

Charles F. Cook

ASIDNGTON (AP) - The
Rea an administration quickly
bre!king ranks with former
President Carter's military policies,
"very probably" will want to deploy
the neutron weapon in Europe,
Def
Secretary Caspar Weinbe ense
~~~:~~~r also said Tuesday the
Reagan administration would be
sympathetic to requests to station
u.s, troops in Israel, Egypt or any
other friendly country.
The neutron weapon statement
drew strong reaction from the Soviet
Union, where Radio Moscow said the
possibility of reviving the project

GET UP TO '75 00
INSTANT SAVINGS

14 " 2 oz.

HUNTS
TOMATOES··········· 2/$1.19
46 oz. Del Monte Unsweetened
PINEAPPLE JUICE ••••••••••~:~. $1.19

On Selected RCA Televisions
STOP IN OUR MECHANIC STREET
WAREHOUSE ··- SEE THE TELEVISIONS
AND GET THE DETAILSI

IN

...,, - -

17 oz . Del Monte

FRUIT
COCKTAIL ··············2/$1.39
4 Pack G. E . Regular Frosted
LIGHT BULBS 4(r Off Pack Ctn .

y

4

l~::::::~::~~~~~~~~~~~~~::::::!::::~~~~::::::::::::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

'

Two defendant. were fined and
five others forfeited bonds in the
court of Pomeroy Mayor Clarence
Andrews Tuesday night.
Fined were Christopher Taylor,
Pomeroy, $:iO and costs, running a
red light, and Kenneth ~aries,
Pomeroy, $30 and cost., speeding.
Forfeiting bonds were George
Collins, Reedsville, $29, posted on a
·si&gt;eedJng charge; Michael Proffitt,
Racine, $30, assured clear distance;
Keith Aeiker, Pomeroy, $100, public
intoxication; Resa Sawyer, Racine,
$31, speeding, and Judy Trainer,
· Wheelersburg, $31, speeding.

THE
CENTRAL TRUST
COMPANY

is INTERESTED in YOU!!
.,

LUIS McELHINNY handles a wide range ol' services and she's
interested in you.

e
Vol.29, No. 207
Copyrlghlecll?ll

MINISTER NAMED
The Rev. Charles Bush will officiate at funeral services for John
R. Villars, 67, Route 1, Long Bottom,
to be held at I p.m. Thursday at the
White Funeral Horne in Coolville. : .
Buriai will be in Mount Olive
Cemetery.

WASHINGTON (AP) - President
Reagan takes his case to the people
tonight to drive home his message
that sweeping budget and tax cuts
are necessary to avoid "economic
calamity."
Aides said the nationaUy broadcast address from the Oval Office, at
9 p.m. EST, would offer a broad view
of the economic dilenuna, rather
than specifics for paring government spending and individual tax
bills. The details will come in a
speech to Congress Feb. 18.
White House press secretary
James S. Brady said Reagan would
seek to reassure the nation that
everyone will be treated evenhandedly as he tries to cut spending

.Budget won't allow state
to keep inflationary pace . r:
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Gov.
James A. Rhodes has given the
General Assembly a proposed twl)o
year budget which, although larger
than before, will not aUow the state
to keep pace with inflation.
The spending plan, presented
Wednesday, anticipates total expenditures of $20.5 billion during the
fiscal biennium which beginl1 July I,
compared to almost $17.5 billion in
fiscal years 1980 and 1981.
But it is based on the predicted
performance of an uncertain
economy. William D. Kelp, Rhodell'
top budget expert, said revenue
estimates will have to be revised 'up or down - in April.
"Our revenue estimates reftect
our prediction of a stagnant
economy in early IIIII, followed by a
recovery in late 1981." Keio told a

neWI conference. "Calendar 1982
will be a recovery year but, of course, the range of expectations for this
recovery Is wide."
Spending In the general revenue
fund, the account from which most
direct state services are paid and
which iB lllOIIt sensitive to economic
ills, totals •12.7 billion, an increase
of 16.9 percent from the current,
budget.
'
''Even though spending is going up
17 percent, I think the taxpayer
ought to know that's less than the in·
nauon rate for the next two years,"
Keipsaid.
"Apart from welfare, the general
fund budget increases by only 12.8
percent for the next two years, substantially belol' anticipated inDation. And this low rate of increase

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- For the
second time in as many months,
Gov. James A. Rhodes has propoled
a tax increase to help recession-hit
Ohio recover from staggering unemployment and other economic ills.
But in his State of the Slate
message to the Legislature Wednesday, he called lor a propolled con·
stitutionai amendment letting the
people decide if they will pay a penny more a gallon in the gaaollne tax'
to finance a five-year, $2 billion road
and bridge improvement program.
Rhodes made a series of other
economic proposals in his speech to
a joint seilSion, claiming that if they
are all enacted, ~.ooo new johs will
be created to put Ohio on the road to
economic recovery.
His speech highllghted a busy
legislative day which began · when
Budget Director WiUiam D. Kelp
submitted to lawmakwel'll the governor's $20.5 billion, 1981·1983 budget
proposal, a lean document which
Rhodes said "mirrors the hard
times that all Ohioans face today."
In the only other significant
legislative activity Wednesday, the
Senate Judlciary Committee recommended passage ~ of a biU
restoring the death penalty in Ohio.
It will come to a vote before the full
Senate next Wednesday.
Rhodes conceded that his budget,
while nearly 17 percent more in
dollars than 1~1981, wiU not be
enough to keep up with inflation.

But it calls for no new general
revenue ,fund taxes, IU1d it wiU end
the temporary sales and other tax
hikes the Legislature approved, at
the governor's request, just before
Christmas, he stressed.
"Those taxes wiU be removed
June 30th, as pledged," Rhodes said.
He said the state's seven-cents-agalion gasoline tax, unchanged in 22
years, is the lowest in the Midwest.
Referring to the proposed bond
Issue, he said, "I personaUy favor
and would support such an approach
to meet our highway and construction needs and provide jobs."
Otherwise, in his 18-mlnute speech
the governor proposed prog1'81l1S to
help provide jobs in inner cities, including use of Uquor profits for that
purpose, and a constitutional amendment that would allow the state to
Issue revenue bonds to help provide
low interest housing loans.
Rhodes said he thinks the ad·
ministration of President Reagan
will correct federal fiscal poli~ies·

Syracuse Mayor Eber Pickens announced today his aP{IOintment of
members of councU and others to
various committees. .
Committees appointed, first
named tO aerve as chairman, were
street, Wllllam Guinther, Michael
l!truble, Mlck Ash, Katie Crow, Jack

Williams, and Troy Zwilling; finance, Jack Williams, Michael Struble,
Katie Crow; ordinance, Michael
Struble, William Guinther, Troy
Zwilling; safety, emergency and
fire, Troy Zwilling, Mick Ash,
William Guinther; planning and
development, WiUiam Guinther,
Mick ASh, Jack Williams, Robert
Wingett; recreation and scheduling,
Mick Allh, B!U Hubbard, William
Guinther, Jack Williams, news,
Katie Crow; London Pool, Robert
Wingett, Mayor Pickens, Mick Ash,
Katie Crow, Michael Struble and the
pool manager.

NEW "VILLAGE HALL - Tbe former Pomeroy
Senior Hlgb Sebool, bnllt ID 111&amp;, II to be tile "oew"
Pomti'Oy VUiage HaiL Tbe aeglecled 1truclure wu
deeded to Pomeroy 'illillce five yan •10 Ia AprD, this
year, for possibly developtq lato a vtllage balL
Pomeroy bas been given a f15,ZOO EDA ~t wbleb

. ,.

t.:ENTRAL TRUST is conveniently located at the corner of Second
A\'c, and Haec• Stl't'ct in Middleport. Do stop in and discover thdr

man) banking st•n ict•s.

CENTRAL IDEA
BIG VALENTINES - Melp CouaUau h11Vea't1dopted Vlllealllle
Dlly decoratlllg at their homel u IIIey have for other oeeu-. of th&amp;
year oo the home of Mr. IIIII Mn. Jolullllab IDd family ID MlcldJeport
Ia unusual with large valeaiiDtll deeontiDg froat wladows.

Two people were cited in three accidenls Investigated Wednesday by
the Gallia-Meigs Post or the Ohio
Highway Patrol.
The patrol said Ricky D. Sargent,
23, Vinton, was w,esthound on Gallla
CR 30 (Kemper Hollow Road) at 3: 20
p.m. when his car went left of center
and collided with an eastbound auto
driven by Hattie M. Nibert, 65,
Gallipolis.
Slight damage was reported to
Sargent's car and moderate to the
Nibert auto. Sargent was cited for
left of center.
Troopers said Gary M. Altier, 20,
Addison, was eastbound on Zuspan ·
Hollow Road in Meigs County at 3:10
p.m. when his car went left of center
on curve and collhled with a wust-

wtJl be used to reDO\'Bte tbe flnt two rioon of tbe
baiJdla&amp;. Tbe balldlq bu had few u.ea ID he -put
l1eftJ'8I yean bnt.bu been ued aannally for tbe haWJo
ted -.e fealarel ol tbe Melp Jaycees. The village
wtlllleek addltloaal nuovaUon fuDda from tbe FHA.

Rhodes
proposes
job plan
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Gov.
James A. Rhodes has prClpOI!ed a 12point program he says can create
250,1100 new jobs and briilg Ohio out
of its economic doldrwns.
He outlined the package Wednesday in his "State .of lhe.:!tate" liddress to a joint session of the Ohio
Legislature.
The proposals include:
-A $2 billion highway bond issue,
financed with a penny hike in the
gasoline tax, to penni! road and
bridge improvements while creating
new.jobs in highway construction industries.
-Passage o! legislation permitting use of billions of doUars in
state .pension reserves as seed
money for economic development
loans and loan guarantees.
-Legislation permitting set aside
of a portion or state liquor profits to
generate up to $1 billion to assist inner cities in attracting and retaining
business and industry.
- Special tax incentives to attract
and keep business in the inner cities.
"We will present an inner citieS
bill," Rhodes said.
-.A program, unspecified, "to
construct better prison faciUties
throughout Ohio."
-Construction of hazardous waste
and coal washing facilities. "We
have the money to do .this through
the Ohio Water Development
Authority." .
- An unspecified capital Improvements program, which woilld
be financed with debt service he said
was included in his new budget.
- Construction plans of the Ohio
Building Authority, apparently state
office buildings in various clUes,
wnong other projects "must com·
mence immediately."
-Direct loans and loan guarantees to help small businesses.
-Expansions of state parks in urban areas, development of water
resources, and incrreased efforts to
promote tourism .
- Approval of a constitutional
(Continued on page 10) -

Patrol cites two drivers

by (:OMPETENT and EXI,ERIENCED PEOPLE. You receive

,.

which caused the national recession.
"But we must be realistic. The
'federal government is slow to act ...
we must do something about unenr
ployrnent in Ohio. And we must do it
starting today," he told the
lawmakers.
Meanwhile, members of the
Senate Judiciary Committee
debated at length before voting on
the capital punishment bill. It would
replace an Ohio law which ruled unconstitutional by the U.S. Supreme
Court in 1978.
·
Judiciary Chairman Paul E.
Pfeifer, R-Bucyrus, said he thinks
the measure is "tough, clear cut,
and one that will be acceptable to the
people of Ohio." He and the other
four Republicans who voted for the
measure pointed to various polis
showing a majority of Ohioans in
favor restoring the death penalty.
Sen. Thomas F. Walsh, R-Canton,
the only Republican to vote against
the bill, argued against it on
philosophical grounds and said a Ia w
substituting life imprisonment.

Name committee members

banking business, you art~ sure of PE~SONALIZED service, provided ·

MEMBER : FD1C

is over actual current spending, after the major budget reductions this
year," he said.
The budget includes spendlng increases of 9 petc8llt for primary and
secondary education; IS. 7 percent
for higher education; 26.8 percent
for welfare; 16.6 percent for mental
health; and 15.8 percent for mental
retardation.
But it includes no funds for a state
employee pay raise this year and,
despite the higher welfare budget,
no increases in aid to dependent
children or general relief benefits
untiil983.
Keip said the 'r/ percent increase
in the welfare budget stems from a
large number of caseloads and
rising costs of medical and nursing
home care.

Gov. Rhodes proposes tax hike.

When you wnlk through the doors at CENTRAL TRUST to do your

I;&amp;

2 Sections, 12 pages IS cents
A Mulllmetlla Inc. News,...per

and taxes. "There won't be any one, fight economic problems.
two or three group~~ singled out,"
Reagan will take a different apand the thrust will be to "weed out proach, aides said.
the greedy to help the needy," Brady
"It is not a share-shortages, dosaid.
wltbout, the-glory-of-America-is-be,
The speech is Reagan's first effort hind-us speech," Brady said.
to build public pressure on Congress . Reagan spent Wednesday af·
to accept his proposals. He made a ternoon and part of the evening
highly unusual visit to Capitol Hill rewriting the speech,
Wednesday to . consult with
One source said David A. Stockcongressional leaders and, in man, director of the Office of
Brady's words, "grease the skids" Management and Budget; Treasury
for the coming economic program.
Secretary Donald Regan; Murray
The address comes four years and Weidenbaum, chainnan of Reagan's
three · days after JimlnY Carter, Council of Economic Advisers, and
wearing a cardigan sweater, Martin Anderson, the assistant to
delivered a "fireside chat" in which the president for policy develophe asked the nation to make a ment, each had an impact on the
sacrificial effort to save energy ·and speech.

SHE recognizes and understands your banking needs.

THAT'S THE

en tine

President. to reveal
budget cut proposal

YOU have seen lois at the Bank in Middleport for the past 22 years.

INDIVIDUAL attention.

a1 y

Pomeroy-,-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, February 5, 1981

. Mid week revival set
. A mid-week revival will be held at
· the Victory Baptist Church, North
Second Ave., Middleport, with the
Rev. Guy Lowther, national known
evangelist, as speaker.
The Rev. Mr. Lowther is president
of the Christian Evangelistic
Association, is a radio speaker and
serves as pastor of the Liberty Baptist Church, Parkersburg.
Services will be at 7 p.m. Thul'
sday, Friday and Saturday evenings
and at 10 a.m. on Sunda~. The Rev.
James Keesee, pastor, invites the
public.

•

hound auto driven by Fern L.
Daniels, 43, Middleport. ,
Moderate damage was reported to
both cars and Altier was cited for
left of center.
No injuries were reported in a twcr
car crash on the merging ramp from
U.S. 35 toSR 7 in Gallipolis late Wednesday afternoon.
According to the report, Linda M.
Henry, 33, Point Pleasant, was
driving down the ramp when she
collided with the rear of a car driven
by Jan W. Doolittle, 25, Gallipolis.
, Doolittle was , t3pped for traffic
when the collision occurred, the
report said. Moderate damage was
done to both cars and ther~ were no
citations.
·

Negotiations
- reach. standstill
.

'

ASHTABULA, Ohio - Negotiations between Ashtabula General
Hllllpital and striking nurses have returned to a standatill after the administration rejected a bid for binding arbitration to end a six-monthlong strike.
The next step is in the hands of a federal mediator: No further
sessions have been set up.
The Ohio Nurses Association, representing about 120 registered nurses at the hospital, made the proposal at a bargaining session last
Saturday. Floyd Farley, administrator of the private, non-profit
hospital, announced the rejection Wednesday.

Felon given permission to leave
COLUMBUS, Ohio - A Columbus man convicted in a $400;000 bank
fraud case has again been given pennission to leave the city with his
family.
U.S. District Judge John Holschuh granted Timothy L. Hooper permission Tuesday to be with his wife, Dorothy, who is to undergo
surgery in an Army hospilal.
Hooper was convicted of fraud last surruner after he claimed to be a
representative of British Leyland Ud., an English automaker that
Hooper said was planning a parts plant in Newark.
The scheme cost two Colilmbus banks $400,1100.

State has knotty money pr.oblem
· COLUMBUS, Ohio - State officials have a knotty problem in trying
to allot $8.4 million in federal outd.oor recreation fWlds for $18.3 million
worth of requests for the money.
There are never enough funds anyway, but a $3 lflillion drop in
federal spending wlll make it even tougher this year, said Roger Hubbell, chief of the Office of Outdoor Recreation Services for the Ohio
Department of Natural Resources.
.
He said Congress has slashed 1981 outdoor recreation grants to Ohio
by $3 miUion. The state will receive$8.4 million this year, compared to
$11.4 million in 1980.

Tax payments rising faster
WASIDNGTON- Arnertcans' tax payments are rising even faster
than the brlak pace of inftaUon, the Internal Revenue Service reported
W~y. •

That lnfom\ation - 8ll wtU ll8 news of the government's first half·
trillion-dollar collection year - waa released In an IRS annual report
which also includee a plea for congressionaf help in going after highstakes taJ: cheaters.
Gl'OIIS federal tax receipts for llacal1980 reached $519.4 biUion, a 12.8
percent increase over the previous year, ~ IRS reported.

Ohio daily lottery winner
CLEVELAND - The winning nwnber selected Wednesday night in
the Ohio Lottery's daily game "The Number" was 726.
The lottery reported earnings of $394,'r/4.50 from the wagering on
the drawing. LOttery officials said sales prior to the drawing totaled
f/56,38$, and holders of winning tickets are entitled to share
$362,110.50.

WPMher•

l

.

'

Cloudm, over todiS)It with thanee of sno:;v after midnight. Lows lli20: CloudJ with acattered snow fturrles Friday. Highs In 'the low to
nud-30s. Chance fi 8I10W 40 percent tonight and 50 percent Friday.
Winds southwesterly 10.15 mph tonight.
Exteaded Oblo Fereciut- Saturday through Monday :Snow or snow
flurries Saturday. Fair Sunday and Monday. Highs in the 30s Saturday
and upper 2011to low 30s Sunday and Monday. Lows in the teens early
Saturday, warmingtothe20searlyMonday.
o '

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

:Commentary

'

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, February 5, 1981

.

Old Miss, DePaul, !(entucky post wins

MleyesonPo~nd-~----~--------~-~-~_m_F_._._~_ey_J_~
When you come down to it, the
under his superior, Cardinal
biggest show in town is : the Wyszynski - had bee~ to keep the
developing situation in Poland. Con- church alive; to make it possible for
cerning which, a few observations:
schoolchildren to learn about the
I) Writing in 1954, Whittaker
legacy of Christianity; to administer
Chambers predicted that the future
the sacraments. Here he is now, face
of the West's relations with the
to face with the only man sueSoviet Union would hest be un- cessfuliy to have delied Communist
derstood by closely examining the authority in the postwar world, in his
role &lt;i Cardinal Wyszynski in own country as leader of a mass
POland. The cardinal managed to movement - and what does the
keep the church alive in Poland · Polish pope coun"el the Polish union
while his brother churctunen in leader to do? To remain a member
Hungary and Yugoslavia and else- of the Communist principles; not, in
where were neutralized. Elaewhere, a word, to challenge the. authority of
Chambers (who emerges as the the regime.
mostpropheticWesternwriteroftlle
One thinks back to 1948, when the
postwar generation) reminded us Christian Democrats and the Com·
that "to live is to maneuver." Con- monists were fighting for the soul of
sider that phrase in the light of:
Italy. On that occasion Pope Pius
2) The recent visit of Lech Walesa XII issued a writ of automatic ex·
·. to Pope John PauUI. By all odds the communication from the church of
most theatrical ericounter in modem •any Catholic who voted for the Com: politics. Here - suddenly - you munists or who added or abetted
· have the ~~ Polish pope in history. them in their work. That interdict
A man who has wrestled with the has never heen disavowed. A
day-to-day problems of life as a .canonical laWYer given to eristic adsatellite subject of the Soviet empire vocacy could theoretically prove
(which term, introduced by that by giving such advice as the
President Reagan at his Cabinet present pope gave to Wa!esa, the
meeting, has that appeal that only pope excommunicated himself from
instantly perceived reality can in· the Catholic Church. Ridiculous, of
vest in a term) . His responsibility- course; but only that grand mosaic

The Daily Sentinel
IIJCoartS~t

Poattre)l, Oltio
IIWIMlJI
DEVOTED TO 11IE INTEREST OF mE MEIGS-MASON AREA

of paradoxes and accommodations
slaved. Such arrangements, decreed
can account for the survival of the
by Marxism and its current
church over the centuries. And indisciples, are being compulsorily
deed, perhaps they are testimony to
taught at Lodz. 1'he Pb!es are in a
its providential mission.
position to point out that those Polish
3) So Walesa goes back to Poland,
farmers who are permitted to
having humbled himself before the
cultivate their own little plots are 10
pope, and the first thing you know,
times as productive as the collecSolidarity 'kicks up another strike.
tivized farmers.
The labor unions want several
· But, of course, questiorts such as
things. The first is a five-day work
thesecannotgetventilatedwithouta
week, the second an end to cenfree press. But the mom~nt you have
sorship, .the third, access to the
a free press, the truth has a chance
public press. Meanwhile students at
Lodz, the second largest Polish city,
are occupying universitY. buildings.
Ten thousand students. Their
demands are that they be relieved of
~
the obligation of attending compulsory classes in Marxism; that.
&lt;t~T\1/if~
~
the free speech (not the kind of free
speech demanded by the students at
,\~T~~Y
Berkley in 1965. The Polish students
are demanding the right to utter not
profanities, but pieties).
The economic question in Poland
is by no means an easy one. The
West has advanced $20 billion in
credits to Poland over the past 20
years, and the Polish economy is a
wreck. The Communist leadership
concludes from this that obviously
the Poles must continue to work a
six-day week - you don't 'ease the
working schedule of a man who isn't
earning enough to live on. But of
. course the answer to this, and one
reads it mostly between the lines of
what Walesa and his fellow union
members are · saying, is that the
reason the Polisy economy faltered
isn't the lassitude of its working 1 ~;v,..-.1.
class, but the preposterous
arrangements
by which theysocialist
are en- ~

to emerge. It doesn't necessarily
emerge (look at the British who sup- ·
port Tony Benn); but it has a chance
to emerge. And the last thing the
Soviet empire can stand is to I~
truth in the face. If Lenin looked in
the mirror, he would today see an
image alongside to whjch Dorian
Gray's was Adonis.
4) So what now? Another quote .
from Chamhers: "Those who
remain in the world, if lhey will not
surrender on its terms must

maneuver in its tenns. That is what
conservatives must decide: how
much to give in order to survive at
all; how much to give in order ll\)t to
give up the basic principles. And, of
coutse, that results in a dance along
a precipice. Many will drop over,
and, always, the cliff-dancers will
hear the screaming curses of those
who fall, or be numbed by the sullen
silence of those, nobler souls
perhaps, who will not joln the dance."

NOTRE DAME's sopbomore guard Jobn Pauoo drive~ doWDcourt as LaSalle's Don Word punues during Wednellday night action
at Notre Dame. (AP Laserphoiol

·

'£11

..

Meigs, Eastern
Southern battle
this weekend

l ~~~W!~~~~!~~:_~.:_~~~~~~~,~~~~,,~~~~~~~~~~'

ROBERT L. WINGETr
PUbllsber

BOBHOEFUCH
GeDmll Mur•er

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
New.Edl1ar
/1. asf:anmR ol '1'110 ANoclaled Pm~ IDiaad O.Uy
AmmcuN.,..paper 1'11bl1Ueil .U-lloa.

Pr.u .Uooclltioa aDd' !be

LE1'I'I!IIII OF OPINION an ""leomed. 'l'bey Jboold be lell- JIG wonlo loOC.'AU
lelten an IIOblt&lt;l It odlllal ud mul be olped will&gt; ..,.., addreu aDd telepbooe
- · No IMiped lollen wtll be pablltbed. Lelten Jbtold bela lood taole, addmo•••
taalea,IIGI,.....UUO..

-.

Public patience?
In his inaugural address, President Ronald Reagan said: ''The
economic ills we suffer have come upon us over several decades. They
will·not go away in days, weeks or months .. ." It follows that there are no
panaceas which, adopted one day, will end inflation, increase employment and otherwise restore the nation's economic health.
According to a pair of surveys commissioned by the New York Stock
Exchange, at least 60 percent of the general pUblic accepts that our
economic problems are real and that it could require three years or more
to overcome them. But the American public is notoriously impatient.
Unless it is provided with evidence of immediate action to resolve
whatever problems concern it, it turns to the proposers of new solutions.
The NYSE survey results are interpreted to sho that a majority of
Americans are wiiling to suffer high inflation for another year and other
"short-term hardships" while Reagan's administration puts into effect '
its program to resolve our economic ills. We hope this is true-but we have
our doubts.
We wonder instead whether the protestations that the public is patient
. are not an effort to defuse the criticism which will soon surface if the
policies Reagan proposes and induces Congress to prove aren't working.
Under our political procedures, as they have developed in the last 20
years, candidates begin to run for the next election every before the last
one is over. There is no end to campaigning. It has become a continuous
process. Those who have been defeated and newcomers aspiring to elective office are not going to withhold their criticisms Qr wait to promote
their alternative solutions ..
This is, perhaps, good politics. But It is bad government to change a
policy before it has a chance to prove effective. We side, at this time, with
Reagan's defenders who plead tllat he be given time. But we reserve the
right to be critical of delay and of specific proposals not obviously directed lo economic_improvementas rapid as possible.

WASJUNGTON (AP) - The
Reagan administration is taking advantage of a period of relative calm
in the Middle East to re-evaluate
U.S. policy in that part of the world.
With the war between Iran and
Iraq in low gear, and no other crises
looming, the administration has the
luxury of time to deliberate its approach to the Aralrisraeli dispute.
Marked by more sympathy
toward Israel and appreciation of its
security value, the Reagan policy
discussions 'tOuld foreshadow a
sharp departure from the hyperactivity - shuttle diplomacy and
Camp David's public summitry - of
the Carter, Ford and Nixon administrations.
Already there are clear signals of

a shift from President Reagan and
his two principal Cabinet officers,
Secretary of State Alexander Haig
and Secretary of Defense Caspar
Weinberger.
Reagan, in an interview Monday, .
broke ranks with his predeCessor,
Jimmy Carter, on the status of the 77
Israeli outposts on the West Bank of
the,Jordan River.
Carter said the settlements were
"inconst..tent with international
law" and "an obstacle to peace."
Clearly, he saw them as standing in
the way of a Palestinian homeland in
the territory occupied by Israel since the 1967 war.
Reagan disagrees.
"They're not illegal," he said,
"not under the U.N. resolution that

• •

Today is Thursday, Feb. 5, the 36th day of 1981. There are 329 days left
in the year.
Today's highlight in history:
On Feb. 5, 1917, Mexico became a federated republic of 28 states.
On this date:
In 1783, Sweden recognized the independence of th~ United States.
In 1918, separation of church and stale was ordered in Russia.
In 1968, Gamal Abdel Nasser became the first president of the United
Arab Republic.
·
In 1962, ~·rench President Charles de Gaulle called for independence for
Algeria on the basis of friendly cooperation with France.
Ten y~arsago: Apollo 14 astrunaub landed on the moon . ·

leaves the West Bank open to aJl berger are leaving the door open to a
people - Arab and Israeli alike, . larger U.S. military presence In the
region, including possibly in Israel.
Christian alike."
Carter, responding to the Soviet
The thorniest element in dealing
military
intervention In
with the Middle East is the future of
the Palestinians, more than I million Mghanistan, arranged last year for
of whom live under Israeli jurisdic- American use of facilities on the
tion. Reagan acknowledged "that's region's rim, in Kenya, Oman and
got to be part of any settlement," but Somalia. He sent four AWACs radar
be stood by his campaign criticism planes to Saudi Arabia and a small
of the Palestine Liberation squadron ofF-4 jets and an airborne
battalion to Egypt.
Organization's terrorist activities.
An overture by Israeli Prime
Even so, he suggested- as Carter
had - that if the PLO dropped its Minister Menachem Begin to sign a
"outspoken utterance that Israel defense treaty with the United
doesn't have a right to exist," his ad- States went unanswered during the
ministration might be prepared to Carter administration and no congive PLO leader Vassar Arafat a sideration was given to U.S. use of
modem air bases in Sinai that are
role in peace talks.
Meanwhile, Reagan and Wein- being returned by Egypt to Israel.

Carter, Reagan routines different
WASHili!GTON (AP I - As
president, Jimmy Carter jogged in
the rain. He got out of bed well
before sun-up. And he seemed to
think nothing of calling for the
American people to sacrfice.
Ronald Reagan likes to lope along
on a horse. He sleeps well past the
hour when Carter got to the office.
And when it comes to the economy,
he doesn't see .why anyone has to be
miserable.
There's no question the two men
are different in their lifestyles and
Reagan's speech tonight on the
economy is likely to illustrate their

different approaches in dealing with
the same problem.
At the same time, look for some
similarities when it comes to
lowering expectations about what a
president can accomplish. '
Throughout his presidency Carter
said hard times were ahead whether it came to energy conservation or economic matters. In
Carter's view, they were problems
that could not be overcome without
sacrifice.
,-1
Carter set that tone Feb. 2, 1977,
when much of the East Coast was
suffering through a severe ;;cld

wave. Seated before a roaring fire
and wearing a cardigan sweater the
president began a rhetoricar pitch
that would mark his four years:
"Some of these efforts will also
require dedication - perhaps even
some sacrifice - from you.
"But if we all cooperate and make
modest sacrifices, if we learn to live
thriftily and remember the importance of helping our neighbors,
then we can find ways to adjust and
to make our society more efficient
and our own lives more enjoyable
and productive."

There Is little likelihood Reagan
will present his plan in such
language.
When he goes before the television
cameras in the White House tonight,
Reagan will not "lay out the
sacrifices," in the words of one aide.
There will be no hair shirt for the
American public while Ronald
Reagan tells us how to extricate ourselves from our economic problems.
"We're not going to tell you you
have to be miserable to get out of
this," the Reagan aide said.
But there may also be a familiar
ring to the speech.

Algeria's good offi.ces"-L.._____In_W._a_sh_ingt_o_n
What makes Algeria different
By Don Graff
from
most of that Third World It
You can run into some of the
strangest people in the 1nidst of an champions so energenticaJly is oil. It
is no Saudi Arabia, but has enough to
international crisis.
Such as the Algerians. They did pay its own way and provide the
economic security that translates inno~ resolve the Tehran hostage crisis
by any means, but they provided the to political clout. But in other
good offices through whi~h Iranians respects, Algeria's experience of the
and Americans c&lt;luld reach the point past quarter century is archtypical.
Mter more than a century of subof bilateral settlement.
Good offices are not where the jegation, the country emerged vicmore established members of the in- torious from a prolonged and bitter
ternational community have war of independence that almost
become accustomed to running Into · plunged the colonial power, France,
the Algerians.
into its own civil war.
The Algerian revolution promptly
More often than not such encounters have involved opposite went the usual route. Instead of
sides of an . issue separating the opening the way to political
developed democracies from the democracy, it decayed into a onedemanding Third World. of which party authoritarianism that until
Algeria has been an outspokenly very recently was also essentially a
self-annointed leader.
one-man show.

"You 're kidding! All you have in stock are
DESIGNER jeans ?'

Today in history.

Reagan officials reevaluate policies

rr'5 roo&lt;: U/()(f UIIY.IJAW
{1olt, ~ fEtN 7QJJ 7() 6lXXI PIAN.

KEEP 1W All"" As A
BAII6AINJNG

'tW llbl7'
IIIQI3T

Jr
I

Initially, that man was Aluned
Ben Bella, youthful and charismatic
hero of the struggle against the
French. He was Algeria's undisputed strongman from 1962. jo
1965, at which point his role was successfully disputed by another but
less Oamboyant veteran of the war
of liberation, Houarl Boumediene.
Under the doctrinaire ascetic
Boumediene, Algeria made its mark
on world affairs as an OPEC oilprice hawk, a haven for political
dissidents and terrorists of various
persuasions and a supporter of
liberation movement, particularly
the P•Iestine Liberation
Organizatl.on adn the Polisarlo
guerrillas who continue to pursue
their goal of an independent state In
the Western Sahara territories abandoned by Spain. It is a cause that has

brought Algeria· into continuing conmet with neighboring Morocco,
which was of considerable a!ISistance to Algeria during the Algerian independence struggle but now claims
the desolate Saharan territory .
Two years ago, with the death of
Boumediene, Algeria appeared to be
eyeball to eyeball with crist... It was
the test that every authoritarian
regime must meet and so many fall
to pass without violence- a transfer
of power.
Not. however, in Algeria's case.
Bownedlene was succeeded by a little known military man, Benjedld
Chadi, who was expected to be more
an arbiter' among rival factions of
the Inner circle ihan personally
dominant. In reality, It is working
out somewhat differently. He appears to have become a bit of both.

DOONESBURY

By Auociated Preas
4 lead on th~· straight baskets by ·
At the start of the Southeastern
Dillard, who rang up 16 points in the
Conference basketball season, Ten- first half. The Blue Demons beg&amp;n
nessee Coach Don DeVoe knew there
applying full-court pressure at the
would be some bad nights.
four-minute mark and converted a
But he didn't know how bad.
slew of Titan turnovers to steadlly
"Ole Miss just gave us a good widen 111eir lead.
thrashing tonight," said DeVoe after
Forwards Guy Morgan and Alvis
his 11th-ranked Volunteers were
Rogers sparked a late surge in the
routed 71-52 by Mississippi Wed- second half to lead Wske Forest over
nesday night. "They showed us how Maryland. The Demon Deacons ·held
to play basketball .. They played• a 56-55 lead when they scored nine
defense the way all coaches hope straight points in two minutes late in
their teams would."
· the game to settle'lhe issue.
. DeVoe was not figuring on .
Jim Johnstone led the winners
Mississippl giving him such trouble. with 16 points, while Rogers and
Kentucky and Louisiana State were . Morgan scored 15 each. Maryland
supposed to be tlie teams to beat in was led by Ernest Grahams' 19 poin, the·conference, not Ole Miss.
ts.
·
"They just did a good job of setting
" It was a team victory and we are
the tempo from the start and we did very, very pleased with the win,"
not do a good job of anytlhing," said saidWakeForestCoachCarl Tacy.
DeVoe after losing his fourth SEC
The triumph improved Wake
game in 11 starts.
Forest's record to 17·2, i&gt;-2 In the
Center Howard Wood has Atlantic Coast Conference.
averaged 14.9 points a game, but Maryland lost its fifth game in 20
scored just eight points against decisions and holds a 5-3 ACC mark.
MiSsissippi. Also, Dale Ellis, the
"We played good at times but let it
Vols' leading scorer with a 17.5 get away," said Maryland Coach
average, had only nine points Wed-

Lefty Drlesell. "They did a good Job
taking the ball inside and hurt us a
lot."
Forward Durand Macklin scored
20 points and hauled down !5 rebounds to lead l.SU past SEC foe Vanderbilt. The victory kept the Tigers'
record unblemlshed In the conference a'l 11-0. The Tigers, 20-1
overall, became the first Division I
team to hit the 20-victory .level thll!

season.
Va!lderbilt Cosch Richard Sell-

mldt was reasonably happy with his
team's play, despite the loss.
" We accomplished just about
everything we wanted except
rebounding," Schmidt said,
referring to the 38-24 margin I.SU
held in the rebounding department.
Schmidt also lamented that the
Commodores shot 60 percent from ·
the floor in the first half, but were.
still down by five points at intermission.

r----------------......:.---..,-----

r------------------------------------o\i.YeM ... l

The Dally Sentinei-Page-3

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No.13Maryland67~andNo.9Notre

Dame edged La Salle66-59.
Elston Turner scored 26 points to
lead the Mississippi offense. Ole
Miss took the lead for good with
10:.32 left In the first half when Turner hit a slam dunk to put the score
at IIHfi. That shot also made Turner

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nesday
night. games involving the
In other
ranked teams, No.3 DePaul stopped
the University of Detroit 69-58; No.4
l.SU turned back Vanderbilt 86-81;
No.6 Kentucky walloped Auburn 10274; No.8 Wake Forest turned back

F ·d
·
11 thr M
point average that has been rising
n ay evemng a
ee eigs
County High School hasketball steadily each week. Wolfe has a l.li.3
learns will return to action after lea~ue average.
posting wins last weekend.
Robert Brown has been doing a
Meigs will travel to Gallipolis to great job under the basket for the
face the Blue Devils in a crucial Tornadoes and is a serious rebounSEGAL game; Eastern will he on ding threat, while the defense of
the ·road at Kyger Creek, and Terry McNickle, Richard Wolfe, Jay
Southern will host Southwestern. Recs, and Dwayne Curfman took
Both are SVAC contests.
form and produced a well-knit team
Mter dropping a 60-46 decision to effort against Ross Southeastern.
league leading Athens last Friday,
Saturday evening, the Tornadoes
Meigs came back in style Saturday are at home to face the Nelsonvilleto blast Federal Hocking's Lancers York Buckeyes in a tough non7&amp;-46. Meigs is now 3-12 on the year league battle. Coach Howie Caldand is winless in the SEOAL.
weJl's reserves, owning a 13-2
Gallipolis will be trying to make a · record, will precede the varsity concomeback after it dropped on im- tests at 6:30p.m.

SHOP

s

SPECI

the third highest scorer In Ole Miss
history with a career total of I,S67
pqjJ'J!issippl, now !1).9 overall and 56 in league play, also got 16 points
from Carlos Clark. TeMessee, !5-4
overall, was led by Gary Carter's 11
points.
Skip Dillard scored 30 points to
lead DePaul over Detroit. The Blue
Demons never trailed, opening an s-

Our Exclusive Super•Power
~;:;::r:;;;,"l ntercontinental System"
Now Slashed 31%

portant
league(59-47)
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to Ironton
~~--jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.l
last
Friday
. Earlier
this
season Gallipolis had scored. an impressive win Qver Athens throwing
the SEGAL cage standings into a tte
for several weeks. After last week's
defeat, Gallipolis draped two games
behind Athens. The Blue Devils are
11-4 overall and 6-3 in the league.
Earlier in the season Gallipolis
CJ-5
MONTE CARLO
PHOENIX
defeated Meigs S1-34, after leading
by just three points at the half. Quick
New VW Sirocco
Dark Brown with
' Edra nice". You
and talented playmaking guard Phil
trade . Denim top and
r ich beige trim .
must see this one to
interior .
Custom
King runs the Blue Devil offense and
cruise, tilt wheel ,
believe it .
wheels.
AM· FM· Tape player.
provides an e.tra punch with his
shooting ability. Todd Nibert, Kent
'5795
'3.1 95
Price and Rick Martin complete Jim
'3895
Osborne's club.
Coach Gordon Fisher's Marauders
4 WHEEL
1978 FORD
1978 CHRYSLER
are led by three year lettermen
Steve Ohlinger, who now owns a 13.2
CORDOBA"
DRIVE
PINTO WAGON
scoring average, after dumping in 31
GO IN THE SNOW
Charcoal gray out·
points against Federal Hocking last
4
cylinder,
side wittl gray In·
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Saturday.
(11 '78Chevv Blazer
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Ohlinger was flanked by Chris
tras!
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Judge on Saturday as he hit double
(1) ' 76Chevv Blazer
figures with 10 points. Also putting
'3795
'4295
forth good efforts have been Kevin
Smith, Jeff Wayland, and Mike
1976 CHEVY
1978 DATSUN
1977 DODGE
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The varsity tilt is scheduled lor 8
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PICKUP TRUCK
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SVACACTION
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in the SV AC standings Southern
and Eastern are locked tight in the
'4494
'1295
'2995
nwnber one spot with identical S-1
marks in the league. Both clubs also
195 UPPER RIVER ROAD
hold 12-3 records against equally
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
tough opponents. Eastern's lone loss
came against Southern two weeks
ago, while Southern suffered its first ~~;;~~;;~:;;:~;;;:~;;~~;;~:;;;:::;;;~:;;;league defeat In two seasons last I ~
-.
Friday against Hannan Trace.
'
Last Friday, Eastern defeated
North Gallia in its only game of the A
•••
'
week , while Southern, after losing '
Friday, came back with a bang to
defeat the previously ninth ranked ~
Ross Southeastern Panthers.
•
This week Eastern travels to
Kyger Creek to face the Bobcats of ~
Coach Keith Carter.
Coach Dennis Eichinger's Eagles
are led by sharp-shooter Gene Cole
with a 17.8 overall scoring average.
•
Tim
Dill,
who
joins
Cole
as
on~ of
the team's leading rebounders,
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maintains a 13 point average, and
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Tlm Simpson warming up the mets
ats :311.
Despite suffering a disappointing
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The state-ranked Tornadoes of
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After last week Dale Teaford owrn!
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Thursday, Februar S, 1981

Pomeroy-Middle ort, Ohio

e-4- The Daily Sentinel

Wagner blames
owners for mess

.

Spolfs World
By WW Grlmlley
AP Correspondent
Now that boxing is immersed in a
new wild, globe-spanning scandal in·
volving multimillion-dollar bank
swindles, disappearing witnesses,
alleged kidnapping and death
threats that would tax the
imagination of such fiction writers
as Ian Fleming, we are bound to see
an old chestnut pulled out of the fire.
You know: " What the fight game
needs is a czar."
We heard it back in the 1950s when
New York Attorney General Frank
Hogan blew the lid off gangster influences that sent underworld
figures to prison.
It was raised just a few years ago
when ABC. TV and Promoter Don
King got their fingers singed in a
caper called the "U.S. Boxing
Championships," which died with
the disclosure of phony rankings and
under-the-table payments.
The network and King pleaded
· naivete and only got singed. But
boxing suffered another black eye.
It has absorbed many damaging
wallops down through the years
because of unethical promoters and
managers, fixed fights and other
assorted wheeling and dealing
abuses. In boxing, angles have
angles.
But, like the men who populate it,
the game bounces back.
Now we have what is being called
the HMA.PS scam." It's messy. It's
ludicrous. It's hair-raising. But
boxing - the primal sport, man
against man in a roped cage, the
ultimate spectacle - will survive
this one, too.
But a boxing czar is not the an·
swer.
''Every time some crime or
misdemeanor is committed by
someone in boxing, the whole industry is blame&lt;!," insists Murray
Goodman, a 5().year veteran of

ringside shenanigans. "Muhammad
Ali had the right answer when he
said you can't blame the whole
government just because one
president did wrong. You don't close
all the banks just because some guys
raid the vaults of a fevi million.
" A czar, a central commission -

that's not the answer. The boxing
game is too divers~. too widespread,
too individualistic. It can't be ad·
ministered like major league
baseball or the National Football
League, where owners get together
and formulate a set of rules. "
The boss of Muhammad Ali
Profe~onal Sports, Inc., was not
Ali but a man named Harold Smith,
who bought up fighter contracts and
parceled out millions to promote
fights, one of them an $8 million ex·
traganza scheduled at Madison
Square Garden Feb. 23.
Smith mysteriously disappears.
So do members of his family and a
banking associate. Rumors abound.
Did Smith take it on the lam? Was he
kidnapped? Was he slain, gangster
style? The FBI moves in. The bank,
Wells Fargo, files a $21.3 million suit
against Smith and other MAPS
associates.
The Garden promotion, a Gerry
Cooney·Ken Norton headliner and
three world title bouts, appears
doomeil. Ali, disassociating himself
from MAPS, jwnps in to try save the
card.
Then a man claiming to be Smith
surfaces and, by telephone, relates a
harrowing tale of how his son was
kidnapped, he and his family
threatened by bank officers seeking
to make them scapegoats of a $200 to
$300 million swindle. There was supposedly a flight to Sweden. The man
promises to appear and spill all the
beans. Spine-tingling stuff.

Kyger Creek defeats

Walton five., ·63-45
With four players hitting double
figures, Kyger Creek rolled to its fif:th victory this season, 63-45 over
:Walton. Ironicall, all five wins have
;.._orne against West Virginia op:ponents.
: • Junior guard David Sands paced
the attack Wednesday night canning
)~ points, on five field goals and six
'free throws. Senior Terry Porter
i:!wnped in 14 points, while Jeff
Moles, and Bob Waugh, both juniors,
canned 10 points apiece.
Three players hit double figures
for Walton. Larry Huffman and
. Steve Marks led the way with 13
points. Dan Marks had 12.
According to the charts, Kyger

Creek connected on 21 of 43 field goal
attempts lor 50.5 percent while
Walton hit 19 of 57 shots. The Bobcats held a 2&gt;17 advantage.
Kyger Creek won the reserve con·
test, 4&amp;-26. J . D. Brsdbury. Brent
Love and Ron Martin had 11 points
each.
KC hosts Eastern Friday night.
Kyger Creek (63) - Sands, H · 16 ;
Barr, 3-0-6; Porter, 2-10·24 ; Moles, 50· 10; 'l.augh, 4-2· 10 and Helms, 4·2·
10 . Totals 21 -19-63 .
Walton (4l) - Marks, 5·2·12 ; S.
Marks, 6-1-13 ; Huffman , 5·3· 13;
Seabold, 3·0· 6 and Gaines. 0· 1· 1.
Totals -19-7-45.

By Quarters :

Thursday, Ftbruary s, 1981

Kyger Creek

13

Walton

1.4 6 10 15- 45

9 18 23- 63

Hannan Trace evens
·record, tops Hannan

. DAYTON, Ohio (AP)- Cincinnati
Reds President Dick Wagner, trying
to hold the line on escalating player
salaries, blames baseball owners
and executives for getting the sport
into a financial mess.
" In the last decade we've let ourselves in the industry get into the
darndest mess any industry could
get into," . Wagner said. ' 1We've
given up control of.our business."
Wagner has bucked the trend
toward ·signing high-priced free
agents and offering guaranteed con·
tracts. The Reds signed only their
first free agent this winter when for·
Reds' President
mer Chicago Cub Larry BUttner
came to tenns.
Dick Wagner
Wagner , responsible for
negotiating players' contracts, said
· he didn't understand why some
owners are paying large players
sums of money.
" We average $200,000 (salary) per
man on our 25-man roster," Wagner
said, at a luncheon thls week. "The
average gross for a 'lllljor league
baseball team in 19'79, cqunting saleS
CINCINNATI (A P ) Cen- of wieners, parking, everything, was
terfielder Dave Collins' agent con·
finns the figur es of Collins' contract
demands and says he's surprised
that Cincinnati Reds President Dick
Wagner revealed them .
Wagner, speaking at the Agonis
Sports Club in Dayton this week,
said Collins demanded $360,000 for
the 1981 season. 'The Reds offered
him $267,000.
An arbitrator in Chicago will
NEW YORK lAP) - One thing
decide Feb. 16 which figure is lair
sure about the scheduled big boxing
for Collins, who hit .303 and stole 79 show at Madison Square Garden
bases in 1980. Collins also becomes Feb. 23 is that Muhammad Ali
eligible for veteran free agent status
Professional Sports, Inc., won't be
after this season.
involved .
"I find it unusual that he would
Whether the card survives in part
give out the numbers. It was my un:
and 1\'hen it would be held are among
derstanding that he prefered not to many questions still to be answered.
make those things public," said
"MAPS attorney (Ed Franklin)
agent Rich Bry of Wagner.
and Sam Marshall ( MAPS
" It was said in answering
president) have indicated to me
questons at the Agonis Club."
they're concluding their business,"
Wagner said Wednesday nighl
said Sam Glass, president of Tiffany
"There was a period there when we Promotions, which was to cowere on the Reds Caravan, where
promote with MAPS the four-fight
there were a lot of questions and incard with $6.5 million in purses at
terviews. I like to try to explain
the Garden.
things as much as I can for the
Is MAPS out of the boxin_g
fans."
promotion business ? Glass: "I
The Reds have had a long- would assume so."
standing·poiicy of refusing to discuss
•The condition· of MAPS : -'The
salaries of players.
Well Fargo National ~nk charged
Wagner has recently •been cam· in a suit filed in Los Angeles Monday
paigning against the high salaries that it had been defrauded of $21.3
demanded by players, contending million, and among the defendants
they ultimately would hurt the name are Harold J . Smith, MAPS
game.
chainnan, and two other MAPS of·
Wagner revealed during the
ficials.
publicity tour that Ali.Star catcher
- The whereabouts are unknown
Johnny Bench decided he would only
for Smith, whose company has lost
catch two games a week this season
heavily on fight cards but has
after Wagner refused to renegotiate always
paid the fighters ... and well.
Bench's contract.
But Tuesday night two Los Angeles
Reds Manager John "McNamara
sportscasters and Michael Katz of
had made reference to the Bench
the New York Times received calls
situation, and when Mac's com· from a man they all agreed was
ments went on the wire, that kind of
Smith. The man proclaimed his intouched things off. Now we need to .
put this whole Bench thing aside and
concentrate on spring training,"
Wagner said.
But first Wagner must deal with
Ohio Coll~gt Basketball
contract arbitration for Collins and
Wednrsda)"1 RetiUIU
Mid-Amulran Con(.
three other players.
Buwling Green 54, Ball St. SJ
They include infielder Junior Ken·
C. MJchJgan Hl3, Miami 87
E. Micllit(an 67 Kent St. 57
nedy, outfielder Mike Vail and pit·
N. Illinois 73, Tolt'du 6:1
eher Paul Moskau.
Ohio U. 79, W. Michi~~n 74

Collins seeks
$200,000 hike

Muhammad Ali Sports Inc.
out of big boxing show
Four of the other fighters - Gerry
nocence and claimed the alleged emCooney
vs. Ken Norton in a !().round
bezzlement really involved as much
heavyweight
bout and Tonuny Hearas $300 million, 35 officals and 20
ns
defending
the WBA welterweight
banks in the Wells Fargo system.
Wilfred
Benitez - were
title
against
- MAPS assets have been frozen.
to
get
purses
of
$1
million each.
Some fighters have not received all
Wilfreda
Gomez
was
to
get $350,000
of their advance payments under
and
Mike
Ayla
$100,000
in
match for
contracts while others are paid up.
Gomez'
World
Boxing
Council
junior
Eddie Mustafa Muhanunad, the
featherweight
title.
World Boxing Association light"The problem here is there are
heavyweight champion, reportedly
many
possiblities," said Glass.
put his $300,000 in a Wells Fargo
"Start
from
scra tch ? Yes, that's a
branch, and it also has been frozen.
'·
John F.X. Condon, president of possiblity."
" We would be interested in this if
Madison Square Garden, said Wednesday said the Garden, which is the card breaks up and the fighters
only the landlord for the Feb. 23 become free." said Condon. " We
show, is owed money by Feb. 12 or would be interested in Cooney·
Norton and Hearns-Benitez.
"the contract is null and void."
However, Prentiss Byrd, Hearns'
"We'll speak with the Garden
about financial arrangements," said assistant manager, indicated in
Glass. I am trying to keep the show Detroit that the WBA chainp was out
together. I am asking the Garden to of the Garden show.
bearwithme."
,-----------Keeping the show together means
· getting the lighters to cut their pur·
out
ses and, Glass said, · dropping
Mustafa Muhammad's bout against
haw
Matthew Saad Mutuurunad for the
Get It........, you ~tllhrO\&gt;gh .... 1n
l~o.tnt lnt ur•nctAGtnl BtctUit I
universal light-heavyweight chamdon't .....o.-h lor ,.,., O"ltlrwurtnct eompto('ly.
I !'loo,..theciQul tonegotit!t ln your!Mhtll.
pionship for purses of $1.5 million.
pl,.cing vour JMurtrw::t co.,..~ with the

\bui-e
don't

.-------------1
· ·----...,\
r -· · -;..-.~---·-·-·Y n ur " Ex traTou c h " '

College scores

Coch Mike Jenkins played all of
· Despite a sluggish start, some of
OhiuCnnt.
Capital 78. Mount Unil)n 76
his
starters in the first half and then
the good feeling over Friday's upset
DEFENSIVE COORDINATOR
Hmdelberg 69, Mar1etta 66
of Southern remained with the Han· took some of his other 'Cats off the
Muskmgum 50, Wooster 49
CINCINNATI (AP) Van
Ohio Northern 102, Baldwin-Wallace 89
J)an Trace Wildcats as they tri~n· bench in the last two cantos to cinch Hollaway, defensive coordinator at
Ohio W e~ lty~tn 69. Denison S7
phed over Hannan, W. Va., 73-36, the liT victory.
Otterbein SS, Kenyon t9
Morehead State the past two
Wittenberg 79, Oberlin 55
!£ading scorer for liT was Rod· seasons, today was named
Wednesday night at Hannan Trace
·
HOOIIer-Buckeye Co llf.
ney
Pack
with
13,
while
Hannan's
,
flighSchool.
Defiance 69, Blufflun 62
linebacker coach at the University
Prt11ldents' Coni.
The Wildcats jumped to a 12-41ead , Bruce Rainey had 15.1IT shot 43 per- of Cincinnati by new football Coach
Allegheny 93, John Carroll 88 4 OT
i
cent
of
its
field
goals
(34
out
of
78)
at the close of the first quarter and
Wa:ih. x Jeri. 71, Case Rest!rve 61
Mike Gottfried.
1
0\if'r Gamt'S
eontinued to build upon it to a 33-16 and Hannan 31 percent (16 out of 51).
Hollaway, who worked under Got!·
Cleveland St. 74, Valpa raiso 5:4
The
Wildcats
also
sunk
71
percent
Lead at the half.
Dayton 68, Buller 64
fried at Morehead, also served three
SteubenVJ Jle 92, Dyke 70
of their free throws (five out of seven years as an assistant at Iowa State
Wright St. 66, YOUlll(litOwn Sl. 59
-:-- - - - - - - - - - - - , attempts) and Hannan 33 percent under Earle Bruce, now coach at
Xavier 63. Ev~tn:sville 00
(fouroutoll2).
Ohio State.
The Daily Sentinel
Hannan Trace was 49' rebounds
Gottfried also announced that Ron
O~lu Hlllh School Rasketball
and 22 turnovers, and Hannan Zook, hired earlier. wiU be defensive
JUSPSIU.Ntl
Cupley 85, fo.. ield SO
A Dl\llllloo ol r.tu,IUmedll, IDe.
Revere 6J, Greensbun~ Greene 49
racked up 29 rebounds and 28 tur- coordinator at Cincinnati.
Norton 71 , Medina H i~ hl and 59
novers.
Published every afternoon except Sunday,
. Mvnday through Friday, ll1 Court Street, b)'
In the reseve game, lead scoring ~~;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;tt
· the Ohio Valley Publishing Company •
by Dan Bays (12) and ~elf Barnes I
"Multimedia, [nc., Pomeroy, Ohio 4&amp;76t,
' lm-2156. Second cl.,. pootqe pold ot .
(11) led the 'Cats to a 52-18 win.
: Pomeroy, Ohlo.
HT is now 8-8 overall and 4-3 in the
; Member : The Alloclated Prell, Iflland Dalo
SV
AC. They travel to North Gallia
· ly Preu Allsoclat!on and the American
Friday for a league game.
• Newapaper Publiahera Auoclatlon, National
' Advertla!ng Repre1entatlve, Landini
HANNAN TRACE (Jl) - Jones, 1·
; Auocllltea, 3101 Euclid Ave., Cleveland,
1·3; Pack, 11 ·0·22; Chapman, 5· 4· 14 ;
. Ohio,4UU.
Angel , 2·0· 4; Petrie, 1·0·4; waugn, 3·
0·6; Webb, 4·0·8; Sheets, 2 ~ 0 · 4 ;
•POSTMASTER: Send oddttlo to Tilt Dally ·
James, 4·0·8. Totals 34·5-73.
· SenUnel, 111 Cor.&amp;rtSt., Pomeruy, Ohto407W.
HANNAN (36) - Rainey, 7 - 1 ~ 15 ;
SUBSCRIPTION IIA'I'EI
Rockovich, 1·0·4; Tolliver, 1·0·2:
.
ly Carrter or Mator Roate
Kinnard. 3 1·7; Spurlock, '0· 1· 1;
. One week .... . : . .. •.. . ...... , ...... • 1.00
Power, 3·0·6: Young , O·l · l . Totals 16·
. One Mooth .. ............ ... ........ lUll
4·36.
· One Year . . . .. . ..... .. ... .. ....... PJ.IO
Score by Quarters :
SINGLE COP\'
Hannan Trace
12 21 26 14- 73
PRICES

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Sentinel on a J, e or 12 month bull. Crtdfl
will be ilvtn carrier each month.
No •ublcrlptlonJ by mtdl permitted ln tow1111
where home c1rrler aervlce ls IIVIihable.

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H~nnan

4 13 7 12- 36

LEBANON RESULTS
LEBANON, Ohio (AP)
Buckeye's Bretta captured the
$1,000 featured pace mile with a twolength victory Wednesday night in
the eighth race at l£banon and paid
$3.60, $3.40 and $3.:JI.
Brei's Beau placed, $6.60 and
$5.40, and Greedy Gal, thinU12.40.
The 1·2 double of Ramble FrOiSt
and Net Adios paid f37 .60 and the
crowd of 1,068 bet $94,536.
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for Volentine's Day. Feb.14 ·

~

By The Auoclated Prell
Michigan.
.
The Mid American conference
The Bobcats, now 4-16 on the ·
was thrown intc a free-for-ell Wed- 3e8liOI1 and :Win the MAC, have won
nesday when victories by Northerh their only victories at home.
Illinois, Ohio University and
"We kept rnlxlng up our defenses
· Eastern Michigan resulted in a fourand I think it frustrated some of the
way tie for first.
Western Michigan players," said
The league lead is shared by Nor· Bobcat Coach Danny Nee.
them Dlinols, Toledo, Wmem
"We &lt;lldn't play with very much
Michigan and Eutem Mlchgan, intensity. When you're in the midst
each with a &amp;-3 conference record.
· of the MAC race as we are, we
In MAC action, Northern Illinois should have been sky high for Ohio
downed Toledo 73-«1, Ohio Univer· ·University,'' said Western Michigan
slty beat Western Michigan 79-74, Coach us Wothke
Bowling Green edged Ball state 54At Ypsilanti, Eastern Michigan
53, Central Michigan downed Miami fought off a determined full-court
of Ohio 103-87, and Eastern Michigan press and Jeff Zatkoff hit 21 points
topped Kent state 67-57.
for a 87-57 win over the Golden
At Toledo, junior center Allen Flashes:
Rayhom scored 37 points in NorThe Hurons, u.- overall, led
them Illnois' win over Toledo. After throughout and were up by as much
a torrid first half, Toledo fell fiat, as ll1 points, 43-28, at one point in the
prompting Coach. Bobby Nichols to second half. Kent state is now 3-16
lamment, "I'm not res! sure if we overall and 1.- in MAC play.
beat ourselves or not but offensively
Bowling Green survived a nip-andwe ' did not do a good job in the tuck battle with Ball State for a 54-53
second half."
verdict. The two teams turned over
"We played a little more team- the ball 'tl times. Ball state shot 40
concept ball tonight," said Northern percent and Bowling Green 39 perIllinois Coach John McDougal, who cent from the field . Bowling Green
called the win one of his biggest also connected on only six of 12 free
while at the school. Nortllem Illinois throws, including four misses early
is
overall and Toledo is 14-5.
in the second half.
At Athens, Sophomore forward
The victory gives Bowling Green a
Tim Woodson pumped in 18 points ~ conference record, and a 1~9
and junior guard Eric Hilton record overall. Ball State falls to~
followed with 17 and four critical and 12-7.
foul shots to pace Ohio University to
In Mount Pleasant, Mich.,
a 79-75 victory over Western Sophomore guard Melvin

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CJnCAGO =-~~ Scott
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the Paclllc eout Leaaue. Named lilm
Ewina manqer of their AppletOn club In

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OAKLAND A'S--Sipod MaU
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FOil'nALL
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Na_. , _ ' CJnCAGO BEARS-Nuned Ted Man:hlbrodll cflenatve coe&gt;nltnot« ond Dick
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RHOOE ISLAND-Annllllll&lt;ed the realg·
lllltloo tJl Mawice Zlrehen 1 aUlleUc director.

Miaml1Q3.87 ,'
The victory raised Central
Michigan_to 3-3 in the MAC and 10.9
overall. Miami fell tc 4-6 in the con·
ference and 11'10 for all games.
In other Ohio basketball action
Wednesday, the University of
Dayton Flyers, 12-7, edged Butler, r..
13, 6U4 in 'non-conference action.
And, senior guard Rodney Benson
pumped in 23 points to lead Wright
state, 17·2, to a 6&amp;-59 non-conferen.ce
victory over Youngstown, 7·9.
Wright St. entered the game as the
No.2 ranked NCAA Division II
school.
Cleveland State, 111-3, defeated
Valparaiso,1().12, 74-53 on Frank Ed·
wards' 29 points in other nonconference action.
Otterbein retained its first·place
bold on the Ohio Abietic Couference
·
with a $.4:9 win over the Kenyon
Lords.
Denison edged Ohio Wesleyan 6957, and it was Muskingwn over
W
te "'"
oos r ...,...9, Wittenberg over
Oberlin 79-55, Deflance beating Bluf·
ft
on 6~2. Capital over Mt. Union 7876, Heidelberg edging Marietta 6966, and Ohi~ Northern over Baldwin·
Wallace 1~.
In ~sidents Conference action,
Washington and Jefferson beat Case
Western Reserve 71~1.

_ _.:..__:....::.....::...::__ _ _ _ __

Daily ...•.
Spring Shoes
Arriving.
A great shoe at a great price Thorn MeAn casuals have
genuine suede or leather uppers, padded lining and soft,
ftex1ble soles. All at a very affordable price.
·

the heritage house
M.

Second Ave.

0.

r't-----------------------L-------------------------------------------~-----

.

chase.

Rio GraJ\de, now 14-10 overall, upped its conference record to 8-2.
.Cedarville is 16-2 overall and 9-1 in
conference play.
The Blue Knights dropped to 11·11
on the season and S-5 inside the con·
ference.
.It was a thriller from the start
' Tuesday. Rio had the upper hand
throughout the first half. It WS 32-27
during the halftime intennlsslon, in
favor of the visitors.
Rio was on top by eight, 49-41,
early in the second half when the
Blue Knights caught fire and forged
ahead, 60-53, with six minutes left.
At this point, Coach Lawhorn in·
serted Richard Quisenberry into the
lineup. He promptly had a steal
which resulted In two Rlo points.
QuisenberrY'S pressure defense
seemed to spark the Redmen in their
comeback effort.
The lead exchanged hands seveal
times during the final minutes of
play.
After Castleman's tip put the Red·
men on top~ with 18 seconds left,
Urbana d one more chance. Vince
Phelp.!l was charged with a personal
with three seconds left.
Bob Draher went tc the foul line.
He made the first .of a one-and-one.
After a Rio timeout, Draher missed
his second shot. McDonald tapped it
into the hands of Castleman as the
final buzzer sounded.

--

We'll have a
real fit with

\ I
I

'

'/

r:oes

1 Lot of

MEN'S

lADIES'
DRESSES

lADIES
SWEATERS

LEATHER
JACKETS

~PRICE

REDUCED

* ·PRICE
lADIES'

r

WOOL

I

That 's because we ' r e professlonats when It cor:nes to
lUting your ch ild's feet wilh
t he p rope r shoes .

THE
SHOE BOX

MEN'S
SWEATERS

AND LONG SlEEVE KNIT
PULLOVER SHIRTS

PANT
SUITS

DRESS COATS

~

lf2 PRICE

~PRICE

MEN'S

.
SPORT COATS
~-~

I

REDUCED

20-50%

MIDDLEPORT, Ott

CAR
COATS

RE-OPENING

FOR THE SEASON
I THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 5TH

I •

SPECIAL

,

OF THI WIIK

~

BERMUDA STEAK $129~

MEN'S

FASHION
JEANS

30W,
,..FRI

-A

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLEY
Ph. 992·2556

S70W. Main
Pomeroy, Oh.
"Located at the end of the
Pomeroy·Mason Bridge"

MEN'S

LEVI

REDUCED

ALSO AN EXCELLENT SELECTION OF

Colognes and Jewe.lry

Transactions

1_,...;.;.;.:......~..::::...:.:::_~::=::::::::....::

record was the best on the club last
season. He compiled a 3.26 earned
run average del!pite missing six
weeks with an injured finger on his
throwing hand.

Watson McDonald's free lhfow
and a tipin by Kev Castleman with 18
seconds left g&amp;VI! Coach John
Lawhorn's Rio Grande College Redmen a 118-67 Mid-Ohio Conference
basketball victory over host Urbana
Tuesday night.
The victory, coupled with Cedar·
vllle's ' M-87 triwnph over Mt. Vernon Nazarene, left the Redlnen one
game behind in the 1~1 MOC title

\

Valentine
Candy

29 as Central Michigan pulverizlid

McLaughlin hit for 32 points while
senior center Mike Robinson added

PASTORE INKS CONTRAcr
CINCINNATI .(AP) - Frank
Pastore, who had a 13-7 record last
season, has signed a one-year contract with the Cincinnati Reds.
The 23-year-old righthander's

•

ASSORTMENT OF

PH. 992·6669

PoJTieroy, OH.

clout!

company ttwt1 ulta your

-MOST ITEMS REDUCED 50% OR MORE!

EXCELLENT CHOICE
AT
EXCELLENT
PRICES

If you

i

Florist S1nce l Y57

WINTER CLEARANCE
SALE CONTINUES

: o.11y ...................... , ... IICento

OU whips Western Michigan

ownership of some baseball clubs is
an indicatcr of the sport's financial
predicament.
"We've had nine new owners of
the 26 teams recently. That's the
tipoff, the indicator, because some
changes have been forced because
guys couldn't P!'Y their bills. We
haven't policed ourselves."
Wagner said he loves his role as a
baseball executive, ''but when I get
through talking to some of the player
agents, my stomach hurts. ''
The Re&lt;ls traditionally preferred
to build their teams through their
owh fann system and trading.
Wagner said the practice would continue.
·
"We've stayed in contention
through a transitional period,'' he
said. "We know we can't blow people
away as we did in 1975 and 19'76
(world championship years). But we
are strong enough to contend.
"We have a strong bench and we
have people who want to play which isn't always the case on some
teams. In the long run, we're gonna
win on this ba.•is."

$11 Jlli)lion. To pay one guy $1
million a year, or even $800,000, does
not make sense.
"The owners have tnade bad
moves, scary moves ... and it is continuing."
Free agency is the sticking point
in current negotiations between the
baSel!all owners and the players'
union. Owners want compensation
when they lose a highly regarded
player through the free agent draft. .
Wagner said owners must show
more restraint in the salaries they
offer free agents.
"Some of the darndest things are
going on," Wagner said. "We should
have had a better handle on labor.
Union activity began in this country
in the 1890s, but we haven't handled
it well.
"We (baseball owners and
executives) have to develop
restraint and leadership, get back on
an even keel. It's very frightening to
me. We have not been united, .have
not stood together, when key times
came."
Wagner ""id the turnover in

The Daily Sentinel Page-S ·

Pomeror-Midd!teort, Ohio

1 LOT OF

lADIES' .

LADIES'
SlACKS

LEVI DENIM
JEANS, SKIRTS &amp;
OORDUROY PANTS

LEVI'S
Sizes 28-44

SIZes 8·20

REDUCED

30~
MEN'S

LADIES'
BLOUSES

STRAIGHT LEG

INSULATED
COVERAUS
REG. $55.00

LADIES'
LEVI

BENOOV~R

PANTS
REDUCED

20%

�OU provides Center for Higher Education here
ATHENS - Ohio University's
Board of Trustees Saturday approved the creation of two new units
designed. to underscore the university's commitment to Southeast
Ohio.
A Center for Higher Education
located in the College of Education
will provide instructional, research
and service programs to tw()-year
and small four-year higher
education institutions throughout
the region.
An advisory committee of seven
presidents of Southeast Ohio community and and technical colleges

ASTRO
GRAPH
February&amp;, ltll

From time to time UUs comin" year you 11re
likely to discard old goals fo r n e~e r , more
productive ones. Although the change of targets
ITLII)I disrupt th~s 1t bit, you'll come out better
in the long run.
AQDARruS (Jan. zt.Feb. 191 This can be a
succe.s!&gt;iul day for you, provided )'OU don't make
a foolish move at t.he last minute and tum a vil'tory into a defeat. Guard against erratic actions
toda)', Find out •more of what lies ahead f1&gt;r you
in the year fol11&gt;wing you r birthday b)' sending
for your copy of A:.1nrGraph. Mail 11 for each to
Astr~raph, Box 489 , Radio City Station, N. Y.
10019. Be sure to specify birth dttte.
PISCES &lt;Feb. 20-Ma~ll tel) Unfortunately ,
persons may not treat you as generously as ~ou
would treat them tf the roles were reversed. It's
too bad they won't rnatch your noble standards.
ARJ~ (March n-AprU 19) Tolerance it~ not
your long :;uit tOOay, especially if a3.'5ociates
want to change things from the way you're doinJI
them. Keep your methods 10 yourself.
TAURUS IAprti!O-May Ull Your allies arer.'t
likely to h.ave the ~~a me staying power as you du
today concerning an important goo(. Play it 9olu
if they sudden!)' withdraw their Support.
GEMINI IMa)' 21·Juur: ZC!) 1lli&amp; l.s one of thiM
day!i when it may prove wise to temponrily
shelve an unpleasant tllslt, rather than to do it
half·h4!artedly. Don't settle for second-best.
CANCER (June 21-July !%) In your ,lighter
diversions with friends today, don't apPOint
yourself the head honcho. They'll appreClate it
tl'll)re if everyone has a vote.
LEO (July t:I-A~~&amp;. ttl Your nonnal patil'nee
with the family rould be at B low ellb tOOay. If
you carry a chip on your shoulder, there's a
strong chance someone will knock it off.
VIRGO tAug. 23-Stpt. ZZ) When worlti nJ! on
tedious tasks you usually display ample patil'nce, but today if things don't go right on the fin;t
try, you 'rl! apl tu rne.s.s up thl!/' ob.
LIBRA (~pt. !3-0ct. 23) I you're in\•olved in
any games of chance today, keep t~ings on a penny ante level. Above all, if you ~et a bad tland,
toos it in. Don't play it out.
SCORPIO (Oct. tf..Nov . %%) Try nut to pul your:!elf in a J)Q51tion today where situatiom )'llU
should be in control of can be t.ak~n over by ~r­
sons less competent than younelf
SAGITI'ARIUS t Nov. %3-0«. ll) You are able
to fStasp ideas very quickly, but lod.ay yoo must
be careful not to jwn p tu conclusions. Make your
judgment only after you hear all the ft~cb ..
CAPRICORN I D~ . 2!-Jau. 191 Instead of
managing yuur resource!! with your u.sual
prudence, you eould ~ &lt;~ bit ur a showy spt!nder
today. Unfortunately, this won't make the impression you hoped fur .

Thursday, February 5, 1981

Pomeroy-Middleport, Qhio

Page-6-The l)aily Sentinel

has been in on planning for the center and will continue to work closely
with the new unit.
The center will offer plannlng and
management assistance as well as a
wide variety of research and consulting services.
An Institute for Local Admihlstration and Rural Development housed in the College of Arts
and Sciences will mobilize the
university's resources to bear on the
need of communities throughout Appalachian Ohio's 28 counties.
Activities carried out by the institute will include working with

Social calendar
111URSDAY
SHOWING OF movie, "Prophecy
of Doomed America," 7 p.m. Thursday at Midway Community Chlireh,
on County Road 10 in Langsville
area; public invited.
LAUREL CLIFF BETTE;R
HEALTH CLUB, 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Riverboat Room of the
Diamond County Savings and Loan
Co., Pomeroy, with Mrs. Jean
Wright, Mrs. Della Curtis and Mrs.
Ruby Frick as hostesses. Members
to take an article to read on the
theme of a holiday in February or
about health.
MEIGS ASSOCIATION For Retarded Citizens, 7:30 Thursday night at
the Meigs Community School.

local officials and commynity
leaders on economic and social planning and on infonnation gathering
and analysis. · It will also offtlf
workshops and other training
sessions on the university's Athens
and regional campuses, . with other
Southeast Ohio educational institutions also involved.
Like the Center f(J" Higher
Education, the institute is the resul_t
of planning between Ohio University
faculty an administrators and
government and regional development officials and interested individuals throughout the region.

A-H News
1;,.

Cancer AnsweiLine

.

d
110W uoes cancer sprea :ri::=(;.£?=
J

l.J

Hillbllllea l-H
meet1np In the pul

·

Club llu held three
few l1lllfllho. The flrat

lte!lll of busineU included electJon rl officers,

A regular feature prepared by the
QUESTION: ''I have 1everallum- - dueswereJdal50&lt;e~~ll, pr&lt;&gt;~WII"IHlected,
American Cancer Society, to belp ps in !IQ: breast, but h:!ve been told andOfficer~
certiii&lt;Jlea ...... haDded 0111.
elected are Lark Nap!er, pru.ldenl;
Am
I
lik
I
save your life from cancer.
they are not cancerous.
e Y Dean Cohr•U. vi&lt;e praldoftt: Corio Rile.
""'"tory; BUiy Oyer. U...W...; Kevin Napiu,
QUESTION: "How does cancer to get cancer?"
news reporter; BenyAMLottisandBeci:)'-IWe,
Y
hi
h
ha
Rl
spread?"
ANSWE ine: ou ve a g er .......u.. leoden; MortMcGuln,healthcbolr&gt;
ANSWERJine: The action by risk of cancer than someone with man; and Potu Dllllan,aofety cbolnnon.
The December 22 meeling wu held at the
which maligtlant cells spread normal b reasts· You s hOuld consult homeoiOeanColweU.EiKhtmemben.thn&lt;adthroughout one's body is called a specialist for advice concerning 'Project
'""""- ond
..,.,. viallon ,.... In attendance.
books Wl!!re dlalributild. ·Recr'l!l.tlon inmetastasis. Cancer begins with one your condition since you may need to eluded uno and bingo. A potluck dinner wauermalignant cell which reproduced it- be more ciosely followed.
voo.
"I
k
filtered
The January ll meeting wu held at the hoqle
QUESTION
s~lf. The new cells also reproduce,
:
smo e a
o1 Carla and llccl;y Rile. Eight memben. three
and an endless process of low-tar cigarettes. Does this protect advisurs and w.. vlaltora ...,. ,.....nl. The
?
grwp dbcussed sav\01 of bottle capt to ra1ae
multiplication gets underway. If not me f rom I ung cancer·
""""'Y· R«Teatlon included Canula, d&lt;scriparrested liy surgery, drugs, or , ANSWERllne: No. The low-tar, ~.'lt'~·~y~~rla~n:.,,~,i!d
radiation, the multiplying . cells low-rucotine cigarettes of today are tacoo,potolochlpo,Kooi·Aldandcootdea.
cigarettes of twenty
The next meeting will be February llat 2,:10
EV ANGEUNE CHAPTER 172, eventually break away from their safer than the
1. t
·
tt ·
p.m. at the home oC Patti Dugan. At thlt time
Order of the Eastern Star, Thur" original site. Tbey set up new years ago, ~u no c1gare e IS en- , . demmstrallons '"' 1o be Klven by Mark
McGuire on Plant Reprnductlonand PotU llliB•n
sday, 7:30 p.m. at the Middleport colonies in other parts of the body by tlrely safe.
QUESTION : "Can a man have a "'ttic~==~~;·=~l:"~b held
Masonic Temple. Members to take migrating through the blood and
prostate tumor that is not can- their first meetinoi January JS at the Meltla Counbaked items for a sale with proceeds lymph systems.
QUESTIO~: "Pma man of 4Q and cer'ou.s?"
~~:tckr~!~~~i:~~~ete 11 membersand
to go to the Heart Fund.
have piles. Do they turn into canANSWERllne: Yes. About half of
Of!i"'rs '"'"' elected " followa: president.
Ameri,c an men over the age of . 5C secretary,
Rodney Tripp:. vice president. llodney Beeg.le:
cer•"
·
~ta Beegle; treasurer, Nick
MID-WEEK revival starting
ANSWERJine : No, but this con- develop some kind of benign Leonard: news reporter. Julie Tho....,; safely
tonight through Saturday and at 10
a.m. Sunday at Victory Baptist dillon very often callses rectal swelling that can cause enlargement ~~~'/W':t!•rk Wolfe: and health chairman.
shou)d be checked by of th~ prostate . gland, It may
The sroup diacussed the '""-omln~ fair •nd
Church, 525 N. Second, Middleport, bleeding and
.cl
·
an
.
sometimes
be
pamful
or
mterfere
assiKned
lhe first cbopler in the proJect books.
Nick and Danny Leonard served refreahments.
with Rev. Guy Lowther, Parker- Your Physl
QUESTION:
"I
have
a
mole
on
my
with
one's
urination,
but
it
isn't
canJulle1"h&lt;ln:rl
. ....,.ner.
sburg, speaking, 7 p.m. each
face that has begun to bleed from
cer.
The
Metss
Coumy
·Bolter lleef and Liveslock
Club met January lS al the Metga County El·
evening.
· time to time. Is this a sign of canFor more infonnation, call 992- tension omce. Nineteen members and hro atl"1 ·
visors wert in attendance. The members
7""'
cer?"
discua5ed buyinK a grooming chute, set the duea
FRIDAY
ANSWERline : It could be. Any
fo' tlili&lt; year. and elected ol!lcera. Advisor&gt;
PENNY SAVED ·
Brian Wlndoo and Roger Gaul demonstr~~;ted to
HAPPY HARVESTERS CLASS, bleedin'g·or change in a mole is cont.hl! nwmbers on how to lie~ knots to make a
Trinity Church, 1:30 p.m. Friday, at sidered a cancer warning signal and
A penny saved is a penny earned halter.
The next meetin~ wiU be February 19 at lhe
the church. Mrs. Caryl Cook to s hould be cared Ior bY your - but picking one up is liable to in- Extellllon
OlfiC.. Members ,,. to brlns their
present the program.
physician.
cur a 75-buck chiropractor's bill.
feed rations to lhe next meeting and abo brin111ln
tl

bottle cap3.- Lee Ami Robinson. Reporter .•

Thursday, February

1981

.
I Healthy teeth--mo.re than brus_hin_g
By Robert G. Sloc!llmai,D.O., Ph.D.
AIII.PnfeuorofFamOyMedlelae
Oblo Unlversii)'College
ofO.teo.,.lhkMedleille

Question: My doctor told me that I
have chronic bronchitis. What does
that mean7
Anawer: Bronchitis is an inflammaUon (-itis) of the air ·ways of
the lungs (bronchi). Chronic means
that it has been going on for some
_time. A widely accepted definition of
chronic bronchitis is the presence of
a chronic cough with the production
of sputum (rather than a dry cougb)
that lasts for at least three months "of
the year for a period of at least two
succtl9Sive years. This definition
asswnes that there are no other
causes of the cough dwing that time.
Add)Uonal symptoms can include
difficulty breathing , on exertion,
frequent or lingering chest colds, as
well as wheezit!g.
Chronic bronchitis is most often
due to irritanjs that range from
tobacco smoke, noxious fumes and
gases to infectioUB agents. The inflammaUon Produces secretions

DEAR HELEN:
I was bored silly with my
marriage and dreamed of getting a
divorce. My good, solld, loving
hUBband was finally ptllhed into an
affair by my indlffereuce. And this
gave me the opportunity: I could
leave him without feellng guilty. I
did!
A year has passed and I know how
foolish I was. Single life is the pita.
I've met only losers or opportunities,
and I know now what a line man my
ex-hwlbend Ia - and how lnunature
and apoUed-brattlah I was.
I hear from friends that he dates
·occasionally ·but Isn't serious about
any woman. They say be seems pret.
ty happy with his life, however.
Shame (or is It pride?) won't let
me call and tell him I want another
chance. I keep boplng be'll try to get
in touch but be never has. Is there
any hope for UB? -MELISSA
DEAR MEUSSA:
Douse shame or pride or
whatever, and call your ex. You'll
never know whether or not there's
hope for this match unless you make
the first move.
Invite him to lunch, and be as
honest as you were in your letter to
me. Good luck! - H.

Offer Lamaze cfllsses
ATHENS - A series of Lamaze
Childbirth Preparation Classes,
sponsored by O'Bieness Memorial
Hospital, will begin on Monday, Feb.
!6. Tills class is lor couples whose
expected date of delivery is prior to
Aprill2.
Class participants will learn
breathing and relax!.tion techniques
for first stage labor, effective ex. pulsion techniqu~ lor second stage
labor, physical and emotional aspects of the birth process, and bodyconditioning exercises to promote
comfort during pregnancy and postpartum.
The fee for the series is $40. To
pre-register for this series, or to
request a schedule of future classes,
contact Pamela Collier, 20 Woodside
Drive, Athens, OH 45701, or call ~3-

diseases.

She longed for divorce,
but she wants another try
BY HELEN JI01TEL

•

which interfere with the free flow of
air in and out of the lungs. This
produces the cough an~ in more
severe situations the difficulty in
breathing and poealbly wheezing.
Question: Is this an unusual condiUon?
Anawer: No. More than one-fourth
of all adulta in the general
population aufferfromchronic bronchitta. The typical sufferer is a male
smoker over the age of forty. Most
will have had a chronic productive
cough lor many years before they
seek medical help and . it iS not
uniiSU81 lor them to remember
having this eough since their early
twenties or even earlier.
There is no doubt that smoking is a
major cause. More than 90 percent
of thotle with chronic bronchitis do
smoke. Contributing factors. in the
non-smoker .include respiratory
irritsnta in the home and work envlronment, respiratory daffijlge
related to infectious dlsea~s sucll as
pneumonia and tuberculosiS, as well
as asthma and occupational lung

Helen Help Us

Speclal eorraJIOIIdent

r

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

DEAR HELEN:
My husband has turned 65 and is
retiring thla month. He can't wait,
and thinks I should retire too so we
can "play and enjoy."
But his Idea of enjoyment is TV,
tbree square meals a day, sex in the
aftemoon, and a yearly trip to tt.e

beach, 40 miles distant. I couldn't
live thla way, 11 !love my job and
feel very young aU2.
·
Our children are on his side: they
have a "grandma flu lion" and imply I'm not acting my years. Just
talking to them agea mel Besides
they'd like more baby-sitting from
WI.

With the whole family against me,
should I retire or follow my feelings?
- NOT READY FOR THE
SCRAPHEAP
DEAR.NOT:
Follow your feelings!
If you retired against your will,
resentment would turn your
nnarrlage miserable. It may not
thrive unde the present set-up either
- your and your husband aren't
exactly llimpaUco now, right? - but
at least you won't be thrown
tot~etherconstanUy.

It's your life: Uve it your way, say
I. (But I'll bet a good number of my
readersdl8agree'llith me.)- H.
DEAR HELEN:
I have a 1&lt;l-year-old girl who wears
boys' jockey shorts. Sbe says they're
comfortable and what's the big
deal? Is thla nonnal?- WORRIED
MOTHER
DEAR MOTHER:
I don't know, but perhaps sbe's
maJdng a statement: If a girl can
shop menswear for jeans, T-shirts,
etc., why not for jockey shorts?- H.
Got a problem? An adult subject
for discussion? Yilu can talk it over
in ber colwnn if you write to Helen
Bottel, care of this newspaper.

5049.

ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATED
The 54th wedding anniversary of
Mr. and Mrs. William F. Smith, Sr.,
Bradbury, was celebrated Wednesday with a dinner at the home of
their son-in-law and daughter,
Eugene and Shirley Smith, Middleport. The birthday of Mrs. Shirley
Smith was also observed.

HOSPITALIZATION
Mrs. Elizabeth Murray is confined
to Veterans Memorial Hot!pltal,
Room 133. She underwent .-gery.
Monday. Called here by her iUness
were her son, Dana, of Pittsburgh,
Pa. and Mr. and Mrs. Bill Murray
and sons of Columbus.

..
We'll give you service from a real bank. Sure, CHECKING
TWO customers are earning interest on their checking
·account funds, but it's what's behind the service that gives
them the best checking account around. Unlike financial
institutions that are brand new to the checking business,
we've been offering this service for a long time. So we've
developed people and programs that provide you with the
most complete and accurate checking services possible. For
example, our Total Accou11t Bank Statement lists all your
checks in numerical order and in the order your transactions
are cleared by the bank. And that makes balancing your
checking account much easier.
.
· Interest on checking is important ... that's why so many
BANK ONE customers all over Ohio have had CHECKING
TWO for over two years. But CHECKING TWO customers
know they're getting much more than just interest on their
checking accounts ... they're getting everything that only a
real bank can offer.

1240 11 '" E~glneer Boot, Black
Relan leather vamp, black split
quarter, black rubber tapper
sole. black rubber heel. shaped
heel base, black flat welt, Texon
insole, steel shank, retan leather
straps with roller buckles.
Goodyear welt construction .
Sizes 6· 14 Cmedlum width) .

BANK ONE." ...-

BANK ONE OF POMEROY
· Pomeroy • Rutland •1\Jppers Plains
Member FDIC

SIMON'S PICK-A-PAIR
"Heart of Pomeroy"

Hours 9:30 a.m.·S:OO p.m.

•

Question : Ho.,w IS chronic bronchitisidentified.
.
·
Answer: The history of the
problem IS very helpful since by
definition this is a chronic pr~ucUve cough, of the specifl_ed durabon,
commonly assocJated With smokmg.
Howe~er, a smoker, who has . a
chrome cough shoul.dn t be too qwck
to blame it on bronchitis. These
same symptoms could also be due to
othe~ respiratory problems ineluding asthma, emphysema, tuberculosis, congestive heart failure or
even lung cancer. This means that
testing sho~d be done to rule out
these ~diUons and to detenrune
the specific treanntent to be used.
(Note: Although Dr. StOckmal
caMot respond personally to lette!"S
from readers, he . will answer
~uesti?ns of gener~l mterest m the
F~y Medicine ~lwnn .. If you
have a medical question which you
feel would be of interest to other
readers, please Wfite to: Dr. Robe~
G. ~kmal, Colll!f!e of Osteopathic
Medicme, Ohio Uruversity, Athens,
Ohio 45701.)
OLDESTCOLLEGE
' Harvard College, founded on Oct.
28, 1663, is now the oldest in the ·
United States.

Mr. Ralph Anderson, Akron, lind Allen and~hildn!n,Zane8vi11e.
Campbell, Belpre, recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Hill, Cleveland,
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Alkire visited
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Barnhart,
spent a week at the Halliday-Atkins Monday with their aunt, Mrs. Ava Bradbury, were Christmas dinner
home. Sunday diMer guests were Lutz,Lancaster.
guestsofMr.andMrs.BudDougias.
Mr. and Mrs. Philip Smith and Mrs:
Mr. and Mn. Jerry Sieple and aon,
Recent vtaitors of Mr. and Mrs.
Frank Casto and children, Pomeroy, Dayton, were guests of Mrs. Fran- Waldo Neal were Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Jewell and ces Young over the holidays.
RusaeU Beekman, Lebanon and Mr.
daughter.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Starkey, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Neal and children,
Mr and Mrs. Herb Riggs and and Mrs. Larry Glark, Tamra, Pen- The Plains.
chi1~en, Ravenna, and Mr. and ny and.Wendy, and Mrs. Lola Clark . Mra. Audra (McKinney) Febning,
Mrs. Fred Riggs and Mrs. Stella were dinner ~ts ctu1stmas of Mr.. Ft. Myers, Fla. and Mr. and Mrs.
Atkins were Thanksgiving diMer and Mrs. Roy WJSeman.
Richard McKnight and daughter
guests of Mr. and Mrs. David Riggs
Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Gilkey, Johnstown visited Mn. Nonna ~
and family.
Albany, visited Mr. and Mrs. Dale recenUy.
Dr. and Mrs. Don Gibson, Rock· r:;-=~=-=:-::~:::~~::::-:-:::::-::::::;;::-::-=:;_:~:2:~~~=:":'
ville, Md., Gay Lynn GibBon, CoUirnbus, were weekend visitors of Mr.
and Mrs. Bud Douglas and Mrs.
Lana Gibson.
'
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Gibson and
daughter, Columbus, and Ray
Alkire, Athens, were Thursday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Alkire.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry McGrath and
children, Shade, and Otis McGrath,
Athens, were Thanksgiving dinner
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Earl
McGrath.
Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Gilkey,
Albany, and Mr. and Mrs. Howard
Schreiber, Denver, Colo., visited
~unday eve rung with Mr. and Mrs.

1~---------------------~-----~-------~---------PRICES IN EFFECT NOW IN POINT PLEASANT OR MASON
.
I
HOSIERY SA V/NGS!
I
I SEAMLESS STRETCH
I
I WOMENS_

!'PANTYHOSE
e~o~ery
I

SIZE 24X42
LACE
EDGE
DRESSER
SCARFS

Pert.ctQuatlty. Tiken from our
day
..:k . Regular 99c. Colors of , beige or
raupe. Fits 5' to S'l". From 100 lbs. to 100
lbs . Gntat Savings .

l2

Regular
. 99'

- PAIR

White And Colo!$

~ QUEEN SIZE PANTY HOSE

•
•I

E•ira wide, 9111
•••.

the l11r;er

Regul1n 51.39.

66e

REG.

PR

11.00

mas party held at the Meigs IM.

68¢

•

WOMENS SHEER

KNEE HI HYLONS
Comfort Top ' Fits B'h To 11
TAUPE OR
BEIGE
PAIR

4 88¢

Regular 39'

Bean Bag

ASHTRAYS

Regular 10'

4 29¢ w· 2
FOR

FOR$1

MEN OR
LADIES
STYLES

00

SCHOOL AGE
CHILDREN$
VALENTINES

I

PUT LIGHT WHERE YOU NEED IT

UTILITY
LIGHT FIXTURE

Complete with envelopes. for
the giving of valentines in
c!anrooms. Don't watt too

HEAVY
WEIGHT
SCREEN PRINT

Energy Saver . For do~h .
sta lrw8y S, attics , e tc .
Mount on walt or ceiling.
ReQular 52 .49,

99~

BATH TOWELS
Don 't Miss These'! F loral Prints In many
pl'ttler-ns . They llrfl Cannon Irregulars. you
wou ld pay up to 15.99 if perfect . A rainbow
of pr inted

I

Mill . Solid colon of
pink, green. white ,

beige. etc . Reg . value1
to '11.99.

TERRY
SOLID COLOR

Size
72d0
72a84

BATH TOWELS

2 For

LONDON OR SPARTUS

$300

BATTERY OPERATED

WALL
CLOCKS
stor1 . Scenic
clock$, not ell.actly a&amp;
shown. at Big Price

9 each

Rec:tuctklns .

WO"IN WICKIR ALL PURPOSI BASKET

REG. 19'

Sorority meeting

ANNOUNCEMENT
The Big Bend C. B. Club wlll meet
Tueaday, 7:30 p.m. at the Rock
Springs Falrgrounda. Dues may be
paid through that date. All membera
are urged to attend since plans wll
be made for a c0ffee break.

$139

ARCYLIC
BLANKETS
1st Quality itnd Run of

color designs . Come see .

HOUSEWARES &amp; TOY RIOT!

Mrs. Ida Diehl had devotions UBing
an article "The Joy of Coming
Home" with Mn. Buck giving an inspirational reading followed by .the
club poem and prayer.
Mn. Ruth Bamitz had the envtrorunental PfOill8li1 on Cluiatmaa
roeea. She spolle of their beauty and
gave Ups on bow to grow and care
f(J" them. For roll call members
commented an what they Uke best
about belonging to a garden club.
Refeshments were sarved by the
hosteues, Mra. PhlLson and Mrs.
Bamltz, from a table centered with
white candles. Attending besides
thotle named were Mrs. Chiorus
Grimm, Mra. Either West, Mrs.
Nora Cnlla, Mrs. Joyce Manuel,
Mrs. Bemlce Carpenter, Mrs. Dean
Brinker. ·

Nancy Hammond of the llesrt "Heart Sunday in Pomeroy and
Association was guest speaker at a Racine.
recent meeting of the Ohio Eta Phi
Kathy Cumings presided at the
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority rneetln8 during which time pla111
beld at the Meigs Inh.
were clilculled for an ice skating
Introduced by Mrs. Nancy Hill, party to take place on Sunday, Feb.
who had the cultural report for the 8. A date change for the state conmeeting, Ms. Hammond talked venUon wu noted. It will be held in
about the work of the AsaociaUon Toledo on June 1~14.
and the fund drive which wiU be · Refreshments were served by
taking part In February. Plans were DebbleJoneaand Nancy Hill.
made lor the members to ~licit ;;n

AND

ST. MARYS AND CANNON

Asst. Color$

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...,

Harrisonville Bo~~yvtattorsofMr.and ~=enS:y,:;~-wtn~
Social News
::.ire:.mr!s.E8!'~ ::~~~- oo;;~~-BobA!kireandRay
Sandusky, Mr. !lnd Mn. Robert Alkire Vialted Rev. and Mra. Louis

B~::er~es
$144
ot Included ·

Garden club meets
"The Wide World of Compost"
was the program topic presented by
Mrs. Eileen Buck at a recent
meeting of the Bend 0' the River
Garden Club held at the home of
Mrs. Maxine Philson.
Mrs. Buck noted that compost Is
composed of leaves, broken col'
nstock, grass, dead animals, table
scraps, or anything wllich will
decay.
She said the different
elements should be placed in layers
with leaves on the bottom and can be
about any size up to eight feet in
diameter, and four or five feet deep:
She displayed pictures of compost
piles and its uses fnm National
Geographic.
During the meeting a dlscUBSion
was held on bulbs, such u amarylla
and Ulies, and how to grow then Inside. Reports were given on the tour
taken in November and the Christ-

1·

The Dally Sentinef-Page-7

2

$100 -

FOR

SUIIIIEAM - PETili WRE

ELECtRIC
ALARM CLOCK

45 PIECE

MEN'S BROWft

MELAMINE
DINNERWARE
SET

JERSEY
GLOVIS
99'
Value

CORD

Specie! Buy fTom iunBeem.
LIHI1 alarm clock regulllf"ly
s•lts tor $7 .u E•v to reM

·

10~_.'
-' - ~ a t

8

'

;

a

$366 ~·'1!:::~~~--=.J,l
·~
II

dill.

Y-0-VAC
BAnERIES

74~

ATI'END8 F1JNEUAL
Mrs. Clara Belle Landers went to
Florida for the funeral services for
Charlea T. White, and her s!Jters,
Mn. Fortner and Mrs. Bailey
brought her ho~e this week.

---- .•...

-~-----....,.,--~--:.

�Thursd ay, February 5, 1981

r

DICK TRACY

Health Review

EVEN SO, YOU
MANAGED TO
CAUSE A

Smokers prone to chronic bronchitis
Thill is the first of a series of articles on dental health published
by The Dally Sentinel · in
cooperation with the Rehwinkel
Dental Society in observance of
National Children's. Dental
Health Month.
Along with regular brushing
and flossing, are there any other
things I can do to keep my teeth
healthy?
Yes, there are several other
preventive measures you can Wldertake to assure good dental
health for your entire life, including the use of fluorides, a
well-balanced . diet, regular
checkups by a dentist and the use
of sealants.
Fluoride, which occurs
naturally in water. is an eff.ctive
element in preventing tooth

RUbe Teaford, Fanny Sayre, Delbert WUcoxen, Marie
~11; second row, J01le Tale, Alma Sayre, Bertha
Adams,. ·Pearl McGraw, WUkle Sarsons, Fred
ShUIDger, Okey Plclleos, Mtllard Adams, Wright
Rousb; back row, Jessie McGraw, Clarence WUcoxen, '
OrvU Flesber, Ira FlesbeT, teacber, Byron Rousb, Fanny UuscoU, Mary Flesber and Deleab Rousb.

DUTY?

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

decay.
Regular dental checkups are
basic to your dental health: A per' son who delays seeing a dentist •
until there is a serious problem
may find treatment more ex·
tenslve, more costly, and perhaps
more pair)lul in the long run.
Another well-regarded preven·
tive measure is the use of resin
sealants on the chewing surfaces
of the teeth. Dentists apply
sealants to the decay-susceptible
area of the tooth to create a
barrier that resists decayproducing bacteria and acids.
Sealants should not be regarded
as a panacea, but rather as part
of an overall prevention program
that includes good oral hygiene
habits, checkups by your dentist,
fluoridation and a sensible diet.

decay. Studies show that
fluoridation of community water
supplies can reduce tooth decay
by as much as 65 percent. Where·
fluoridated water is noi
available, yQU can have..nuoride
solutions applied by a dentist.
The use of toothpastes, mouth
rinses and gels containing
fluoride are good preventive

measures, too.
A well-balanced diet that contains a minimum of sugar is
another importan.t factor to good
dental health. Poor nutrition can
roster s115Ceptibility to gum
disease and weaken bones which
support the teeth.
It's wise to limit your sugar ·
coliSumptlon because sugar combines with bacteria in the mouth ·
to form acids that cause tooth

Polly's Pointers
MT. MORIAH SCHOOL 18111 - James Teaford,
Syracue, nbmllted llle above piJoto ol Mt Moriah
School lakeD ID 11111. Tile old scbool wu deslrGyed by
fire and on 111 fowtdatloa was placed Ml Moriah Cburrb of GOO, located Olie mlle from MUe Hill bac~ of
Racine. In tbe picture are, ltrsl row, l·r, Virginia
Sayre. Addle Flesber, Wbeeler Sanons, Ora Sayre,

OEATH-

Television
•
•
VIewmg

THE TOWN, WITH
IN YOUR POCI'&lt;ETTRACY

Social calendar

Yellowed pillowcases

By Polly Cramer
them whiter and clean smelling.
Special correspondent
This is a good way to use that soda
DEAR POLLY- Help! How does you have had in the refrigerator. one get the yellow stains and odor RITA
.
out •
· or
DEAR POLLY - I had tried
pillowcases? Over
everything I could think of to take
the years I have
the strong smell of bleach of£ my Road.
SA""'DnAY
hands. Out of the blue, I thought of
w .....
tried everything_
Mr. and Mrs. David Buskirk, . Do hope someone
vinegar and it worked wonderfully.
REGUtAR MEETING, HarrisonJust rub on the hands as it comes out ville Lod!le 411, F&amp;AM, 7:30 p.m.
Syracuse, ·a re announcing the birth can beip me. of the bottle._ CONNIE
Saturday; work in Master Mason
of their second son, James Donald. MRS.Y.
DEAR
POLLY_
1
would
like
to
degree; all Master Masons invited.
He was born on Jan. 21 at the Holzer
DEAR MRS. Y.
share
the
way
1
get
strong
and
stub_Re_fres_hm_en_ts_.
_ _ _ _ _ __
Medical Center and weighed seven - For the odor,
'
try
born
perspiration
soaking
the
Cramer
odors
out
of
~
pounds, five ounces, and was 20 inches long. Mr. and Mrs. Buskirk's cases in a colorless mouthwash. I clothing. In a jar you can mill a
would presume you have tried using liquid detergent, baking soda and
other son, Jeremy, is two.
Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. bleach in the wash water. If that did ammonia OR white vinegar, and
Donald Hartley, New Haven, W. Va., not belp, you might · use color blend into a mediwn thick paste.
and Mr. and Mrs. Sherman Buskirk, remover (buy at the dye counter) to Moisten the underanns of garments
whiten white pillowcases. Blueing with wann water and then smear
Jr., Lincoln St. , Middleport.
will sometimes remove yellow the whole area with this paste, rub in
caused by age.- POLLY
slightly, leave for about 20 minutes
DEAR POLLY - To remove that and then wash. Hope this works for
ring around the collar, grease or others as it has for me. -ANN
other spots from any of your wash,
DEAR POLLY - I keep cut
make a paste of baking soda and flowers fresh longer by putting a pinwater. With a small paint brush or ch of soda in the water.- DAREEN
old toothbrush, cover the_spots with · Polly will send you one of her
this paste and then drop them in the signed thank-you newspaper coupon
washer. They really come out clean. clippers if she uses your favorite
Naomi Ohlinger was hostess for a Also, I use baking soda in my wash Pointer, Peeve or Problem in her
meeting o£ the Koinonia Young instead of bleach, especially on my column. Write POLLY'S POIN·
Adult Class held at the Pomeroy little grandson's things . .It makes TERS in care of this newspaper.
Church of Christ Monday night.
Dano King presided at the meeting
during which lime support to the
children's home was discussed along
with an emergency pantry fund and
WMPO
grandchildren, Sharon Folmer, Unclass goals. Next meeting will be
da Foster, Cathy Scarberry and Gorheld at the home of Judi Groghan on
SATURDAYS
tney, Roberta Dill and Tanya. A
April6.
floral arrangement and other gifts
Devotions were given by Roger
8 til Noon
were presented to Mrs. Miller.
Alkire with scripture Coming from
John 3:16 on love. Neil Proudfoot
gave the closing prayer. Refreshments were served to Dana and Joan
Bing, Charldine and Roger Alkire,
Neil Proudfoot, Anna Davison,
Naomi Ohlinger, Judi Groghan.
COATS
ALL PURSES
A valentine theme was carried out
Values to $78.99
in the table decorations.
NOW

5. 1981

Rhonda Barnhart

Announce engagement
POMEROY - James and Bessie
Barnhart, Butternut Ave., Pomeroy,
are announcing the approaching
marriage of their daughter, Rhonds,
to Mark Proffitt, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Homer Proffitt, Route I, Racine.

The wedding will take place on
Feb. 14 at the Salvation Army with
the Rev. Noel Herman conducting
the ceremony.
Both the bride-elect and her fiance
are students at Meigs High School.

i 6 J ABC NEWS

191 3· 2· 1 CONTACT
111

, 31 PAUL AND MONA
5 1 BOB NEWHART SHOW
8 • FACE THE MUSIC
'0 18 )110) CBS NEWS

9I

...IC)J..U:DY&gt;~I~D 'IOU
OF saAiffill IJ(O • ,....,.-,....,
I: CA\.l'T

HI,
!

St10w' Produced by Cosumers
Utuon. this special combiines fact ·
packed information with entertain·
men! tohe lp co naumE!rs c hoose the
!:Wi es t. hea lthi est and most econurn1ca l household products in

I

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!
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I

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0

ANNIE

- THIS MAH IUE61mlt811'11TH LET 1'\E
THE A.M.A., MR. ~ltliUCI(S~

HIM

AHO HE'S AH;!IEREV Alli'IY
TEt~ICAL

IIEDIC(IL.

r-_J.._---.

,-1

QUESTI~ -

d~""==h·&lt;:' ~:=1

COLLEGE BASKETBAll
ltlmols vs Ohio State
f) f 61(11j) THE WAL TONS Mary
Ellen is skeptical over the shocking
n('ws th at her deceased husbartd is
all11ea nd li'ltng in Florida, afld sets
uul on a dtlt tc u!t tourney to see tor
herself . (BO mins.)
f 9 H11) PAPERCHASE 'Moot Court'
IIH:~ l ackada isi cal Be ll is intlmidat ·
··LI tnl o becominga lorm ldablelegal
adversa ry byhts partner lora 'moot
cu urt' com petili on, while Hart, who
ts patred wtthEiizabeth Logan, also
v;..cells m the compe tition despite
1hedts traction of havingd9veloped
o1 1 oma n! ic a !la chmenot I ohls attra c·
ltve tea mma te . (60 mins.)
1121CD MORK AND MINDY Mark
ga ms cosmt c revenge one repair
sho p owner who ha s treated Mindy
Llt shones tly by making a ghostly
ap pea rance at night to put him on

Master Fetty turns four

•
: t.

·'

Poets ' Comer ·\
rru

rn this land cl joy and sorrow,
Jnucconhmce to God's will.
He haiJ come to join his sister
And tu be a source of joy
Tu hisMher and hismuther,
Who Hure JIM! their little buy .

SEASON CLEARANCE
SALif

'

'

REPORTS FOR DUTY
John Howard Vroman, grandson
of John C. Vroman, North Second
Ave., Middleport, has reported to active duty with the U. S. Army at Fori
McClelland, Ala.

l. 20% OFFWorkCarhartt Brown
I'

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I' I
I

J

PRfVAJ.

EYI!

.....
' ~-

.~
~· .~ .: "7"~

Duck

Clothes

All Insulated Footwear
I

Red Wing
Chippewa
Sheboygan
Lacross

This Sale ln~ludes A Good Stock' o)
World Famv\JS- 40 Chippewa.

"The Place to S

Buy 2 at Reg. Price, Get

()f~f~--~-5-ec•o•nd. .P.ai•r•fo•r---~-·---4

1U ANDREW DAVII:18USH
Ytl:l.t~nulher prtcii.IW! baby
H.&amp;~ be@IJ born. lib pl.i!i-..'t! to

A party honoring David Michael
Fetty D on his fourth birthday was
held recently at the home of his
parents, Mike and Janice Fetty,
They nave namtd him. Andrew Da vid,
Village Green Apartments
And hr is my K~•t11randcttild ,
He 1ru1kes thirty·nlne in nwnber,
Pomeroy.
l
Mlyhe bell hulthy baby,
A Super Heroes theme was carried
And ~row up t o~ a man
Who 13 ever king and noble.
out with a Batman cake being serAnd does all the ~ocld he can.
ved with ice cream and punch.
May he seek and find our Saviour,
I¥membering Davl~ on his birthday
And for JesU5Uke his!lll!nd,
were his grandparents, Bob and
May he be asuurce ol blessing
Untu others in this land .
Isabelle Couch, his great·
May he find a good C'OOipaniun.
grandmother, Ellen Coach, his granWhu will be a !o~~ithlul wife,
And remain both kind and l ov! n~o~
dparents, Hank and Phyllis Fetty,
Tulhetndof e1rthly life .
andJenniferro,:h, Less Fetty, Jim
Vei, l h.Hve thr! best of wishe!i
Slrmns, Janet and Frant Fetty, Bob
Forthil pt'@dous baby boy,
and Jeff Couch, Ric Couch, Jpne
And r'm prayinl! for Ilia future,
May IUVt! llrin, wtlerJ thlfll!l!IIMUy.
Wamsley, Ron Couch, Debbie DoerAndrn' David. when you're ultkr,
fer, Nancy, Todd and Becky AckerM11y yuu then,thiA poem read,
And whene 'er our Saviour Cllls you,
man, Andy and Kevin Fields, Patty
May you he1r, and HLs voice heed.
Jones, Jennifer Reed, Jan and Chris
Cum~ Jan. 2, 191U, by Mn1. Riley Pisutt .'
Wng Bottum, Oh!o 4$743 .
Judge, Melody and Michelle
David
Fetty
Hoschar.
A party honoring David was held r.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
al his school, the Gingerbread House
in Middleport. A Superman cake and
punch were served to David and his
classmates and party favors were
given to each one.

r·.

111$1
8 '30 f31 DR. JACK VANIMPE
12 CD BOSOM BUDDIES When

M·S, 9·S, Fri. 9·8
318 N. 2nd Ave.
Ph. 992·3684
Middleport,
Ohio
for Work &amp; Western"

Mrs. Miller

Buy 1 at lf2 Price, Get 2nd

Mrs. Bonnie Miller of Middleport
was given a surprise birthday parly
Jan . 30 at her home hosted by her
daughter and son-in-law, Betty and
Charles Dill.
A birthday cake baked and
decorated by her granddaughter,
Cathy Scarberry, was served with
ice crewn and soft drinks.
Others attending were Sid Taylor
and her grandchildren and great-

One of Equal or Less
Value for
ail

DENIM JEANS 20%
SKIRtS

1 Group
CORDUROY JEANS 30%
~~;;;.;.;~;..;.;.lWO';;...S..... SPRING DRESSES

COMPANY

251

WINNIE
CON'5UEl0'5 TURNING UP HERE ...
C LAIM ING 10 BE 0\r 'S DAUGHTER ...

&lt;SAVE ME A TEii'/111"/C IDEA!

ALL WINTER

elJPRJSE l WENT TO SOUTH :
AMERICA ... CHECKED OUT
STORY... TRIED TO RETRACE
I:JC\D 'S STEPS DURING HIS
LONG ABSENCE ... ?

DRESSES MOFF

IT MIGHT
CLE"AR UP A lOT

PERHAP5, BUT
WE MIGHT Al S O

OF MYSTERIES.

LEARN M O RE THAN

ANSWER A lOT
OF

k NO W !

WE CARE TO

::lonny thr eatensto leave New York
C11 'I be cause she ca n' t get work as
d dance r, Kip and Henry devise a
wtld sc heme so Sonny ca n strut her
stuff
6 :58 13 1 CBN UPDATE NEWS
g,oo 210 171 A LOVE LETTER TO
JACK BENNY George Burns, Bob
Hupe and Johnny Carson ho!illhls
o~ll · s t a r co medy t ribute to the tate
beloved co medt"n , whic h will in·
d ude highlight s from his television
s•mes with Mary Li\~tngstone , Den ·~
111 :; Day . Roc hest-er. Don W iiSOI).
and Phtt Hams. (2 hrs.)
3 700CLUB
O ~ fl ·j 1101 MAQNUM, P.l.
9 1111
SNEAK PREVIEWS
Gllltquc s Roge r Eberl and Gene
Stske l revtew some o f the nRwfH"I
l•l nls , ulc ludmg ·Alt ered Sta te s' and
!'he MirrorCrack ' d' ,
121CI) BARNEY MILLER An am~z ­
llly suspe ct in an assault case' ' a
:; ~~ l t · proc laimed psy ch ic, and
w edtc ts ternbte things will happen
tu Hru ns tlh e goes o ut on a robbe ry
ell II . {Ctosed·Ca ptloned: U.S.A.)
9 :30 4 MOVIE · {COMIEDY) •• "Stlrttng Over" 1979
I !I I TO THE MANOR BORN
11 THIS OLD HOUSE The e•·
l or mtiHltOr gtves I he house a thor·
mtgh
bug
check .
(CiosedCap honed , U.S .A .)
1:21181T'SALIVINGLais'a ndJan' 8
tu stln ondshtp np s apart when Jan
lomt s a g1rl te m tlgal tn e in her nine·
year ol d daught er's book bag. and
, jw accuses l oi s' sonol giving ili a
ilt.ll

10:00 ' 5 1 TBSEVENINGNEWS

' 6 t21&amp;J 20.20
f) i 8 1110) KNOTS LANDING Abby
c onTe nds wtth he r inse c ure end
~~ ~~s l t l e l or mer husband. Jell, over
Tilt) c ustody ot t heir children, end
K&lt;~r e rl ge ts trapped tn lhe middleol
111orr fe ud (60 mins.) ·
9 1 AUSTIN CITY LIMITS ' Johnny
Rodnguez .. Alabama ' (60 mins .)

Your Valentine will Love
our New Gingham Hearts

111 1 N~WS

10 .26

3 CBN UPDATE NEWS
3l NORMAN VINCENT PULE
11 OUTER LIMITS
IU 56 3' CBN UPDATE NEWS
t LOO ' 2 10 i t 11 71 0 (1)(10) U2J G)
NEWS
3 JOHN ANKERBERG SHOW
5 NIGHT GALLERY
9 MORECAMBE AND WISE
tt .28 3 CBNUPOATEN£WS
11 .30 2 0 1I I THE TONIGHT SHOW
3 ROSS SAGLE V SHOW
4 · MOVIE ·(SUSPE.NS!) •••
" Bloodline ' ' 1977
f $ 1MOVIIE ·(COMEDY) •••... " Mr.
Hobba T1ke1 a Vec:atlo" " 1962
t ' 1121
ABC
NEWS
NIGHTLINE 1
0 1OI CBSLATEl!OVIE 'THEJEF ·
FERSONS. Georut! s Diploma '
·l.t r t&gt; t ~n b u t Sll tll o td , Sherman

BARNEV
Filled with delicious chocolates
and creamy butter bons, our
gingham hearts are
available in pink,
yellow, or blue,
with matching
silk flower.

I BRUNG MY
RAG DOLLY OVER
FOR VISIT
MIZ

10,30

GOODY!!

SHE OUGHT TO
FEEL RIGHT
AT HOME

DON'T GIT

SARCASTICAL

We also have a
wide selection
of traditional red
foil hearts aa well
as many beautiful
satin hearts.

12

oz.

m:

PEANUTS

WELL, WHV DON'T '(OU

................
. . ...
-.........
..........
~~~)1)1

• ...... McC.......... ~.

ol1()(..,

c...,... ......... ""

ANSWER. ME?

OH, I DIDN'T HEAR '(OU ...
I CAN'T 11EAR ATI11N6
WHEN I'M EATING TOAST
BECAUSE IT ECHOES
lt'ISIDE MV HEAD...

(j

EATING TOAST IS

i

rip codtl 1nd make otwcka p.y1ble to Newspaf*'booli•·

BRIDGE
Two in three true masters
NORTH

LIKE GETTiNG AWA'f j
FOR THE WEEKEND j

I

The play always started
with the ace of clubs lead and
a heart shift followed by an
attempt to cash · a second
heart.

2-5-81

+AK IOH
\18 2
tAJ875

Tho~e

+?
WEST

EAST

dummy, cash dummy's ace of

+s

+J2
\'QJ9 543
• Q 10 9

\'A K 76

+AQ

+KJfOj81 3

trumps , lead a trump to the
queen and ruff thetr last club.
West would show out ,
wtereupon it would be a cinch

t6

to count the East hand as sev-

SOUTH

en clubs, four hearts (because
of the jump raise) and one

+Q8763
\'10

ca rd

t KI 3 2

Vulnerable: East· West
Dealer: East
West
Norlb llaal Soutb

s•

in spades

and

and take the sure·thing finesse

,.

I+

on the way back.
We really feel that the nine
declarers who lost a diamond
trick misplayed the hand.
After all , this was a world
championship even though a

Pass

1•
Pass

each

diamonds . Thus, they would
lead a diamond to their kmg

+6 52

Dbl.

declarers who knew

what they were domg proceeded to ruff a club in

Pass

mtxed pa1r event.

We also regret that the
report did not say what hap·
pened at the other tables
except to point out that when
John Collings of Great Britain
held the West hand, he bid on
to six hearts. John had, and
still has, a reputation for wiz-

Opening lead:4A

By O.wald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag
Twenty-sev~n .

declarers in
the 1966 World Olymptad
mixed pairs played in five
spades on bidding like this.
. Eighteen dllClarers made the
contract

while

nine

ardry as declarer and his

opponents bid on to six spades
for fear he would bring the
heart slam home.

John doubled and got a real
top score when declarer mis· guessed the diamon~s and

went

down when they tried to drop
the queen of diamonds.

went down two tricks.

,

tNE WSPAPER ENTERPRISE AS.';N 1

'

6iHt1•~·~

by THOMAS JOSEI'H
ACROSS
fJ Indian

I "Pistol
Packin ' -"
5 Bellamy
10 Actor,
Richard 11 Ethically
insensitive
13 Color
i4 Extract
15 Hebrew
for Lord
If Marsh
1TRapid eye
movement
(abbr. 1
18 Jump back
28 Yemen city
21 Work at ·
22 WeUington's
school
%3 Pension

buffalo
42 Drift
t3 Shed skin
DOWN
1 Rhythm
ln verse
2 Supple
3 Obsessive
Yesterday's ADBwer
4 Opp. of syo.
5 Seldom
19 Price's fleld 31 Victor
8 So. shall it be! 20 French
or Melba
7 Actor,
32 Book by
river
Herbert 23 So help me !
Adm.
8 Divide pro24 Play
Byrd
portlonally
33 Himalayan
the glutton
9 Poor one
25 Balcony
land
12 French
26 Cozy spots
35 Major city
28 Hostility;
38 Hoodwink
11 Satiate
39 Baby food
combat
.,.......,.._,,.,...,.,.._

21Food

regimens
27 Once again
28Biddy
29ltalian
river
3G Kind of band
34 Be at fault
35 Tippler's
curse
31 "This

-House"
(11164 song)
37 Aquatic
mammal
39 Deck

40 Washington
city

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
It

AXVDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

CRVPTOQUOTES

' McMILLAN AND WIFE
11 1 1 ~ I• Ji tll :n l.t J,., C uf; t· ot Murd er'
• ' '"'' Hn1 ,k llud""" Slt"~fl" Sain t

.J.ttH t..·~

11

AB C CAPTIONED NEWS
t.! MOVlE ·(MUSICAll .. 1 :~ " Dart·

ULQ
SQ

I . MINt

p_..,.,, 0 .

'•'

ll•t~

1,' PO

UIQOMLSNLW

SL

QOU

(Hu pea l)

PM. Mlttl

m

· '111 " 1 '· Pil ~t t h.! ch sr:o wher e
•' li:.d\tvdll lin t• ·t111l e llwtHP
I "lll fl : I.J o•tll tJ IIIUifiEl r ed
!IIIJ\ .. )

'

.•dd,....,

l l li·~~.: .t t)

HIICai,IOtil

,,...,,,,...Ia
0,... N61Ml lilt

IUime,

11 li• ·t1 hL' lhtn.,_ s hts co llegtt·
, lltt1 .. h.l i:J :;on tS ~\ s humed o f h101

Ul ll 1970
6 12
CHAHLtl: :i AN;GELS
I ,. ,1.1, 1\u q( ·h 1h&lt;• .tl\ ~l t:; I S gn1'1 ab s

.....,lt,.ltlll ............. .

Ju- -No. 11. -.~n~ng 110 puzzln. It mllablo for 11.75 pootpokf
lrom JumtM, tio thla ,.....per, Box34, Norwood, N.J. 07648.1oci1Jde rour

I tt •• nmHs a hum t ltal t nge~tpertence

o~o •y e ' s ombarras s·
!1 •• ·111dlllCVIH f111tS htllQ htQh SChOOl

C, IIJ I'"J HFR l UH'JE

YeSielday'sl Jumbles LEAKY QUAKE CLERGY BELIEF
Answer: What the opticians called their annual
shindig- THE "EY E BALL"

One letter simply .•lands for another., In thia sample A ;1
used for the thl'&lt;e L s. X lor the two 0 s, etc. Single letters
apoatrophe1, the length and !ormation of the word1 are ali
hints. Eaoh day I he code letters are dllferent.

~~~ · tll:tluy

$8.25

r

D (I I I

(Answers tomorrow)

• .. " Junior Bonner" 1972

'61

gasled by the ·above cartoon.

Prlnt.answerhere:

t O, MATCH GAME

121 Ci) FACE THE MUSIC
7: 58 ' 3 f CBN UPDATE NEWS
a,oo 2 10 11 1B.UCK ROGERS Thouoh
told that he's halluc inet ing when he
1 lt11ms to have seen green lizard·
ltk.e cre atures
aboard the
!:it) ar ch er , Buck risks his life to
prove he 's nght .,(60 mins.)
3 1 MISSIONARIES IN ACTION
4 MOVIE ·(DRAMA) ••• "De•th
Wiah" 1974
5 ' MOVIE ·(COMEDV·DRAMAI

Now arrange the cirCled letters 10
foi'ITI lhe a.urpriee answer, as sug·

1

today's marketplace;
' S I SANFORD AND SON
6 10 11 1 JOKER'S WILD
• 7 HOLLYWOOD SQUARES
l lt111 DICK CAVETT SHOW

DRESS .SLACKS

ALL GLOVES
AND MlmNS

rJ
IRE1EMEI
IPAYNOCt
rJ J
I

4 1 CONSUMER REPORTS PRE·
SENTS 'The AII· ArOund ·the-House

Re.MeMEJe~

!

I KLAYN

110) NEWS
7 ,30 f 210 BULLSEYE
I 3 I ZOLA LEVITT

40% OFF

I •

WILD WILD WORLD OF

ANIMALS
111 LILIAS YOGA AND YOU
121Ql ABC NEWS
6 '58 f 31 CBNUPOATENEWS
7 ,00 2 10 PM MAGAZINE
3 COME TO THE WATER
S I ALL IN THE FAMILY
6 i11l] Ci) FAMILY FEUD
7 ' BACKSTAGE AT THE GRAND
OLE OPRY
0 18 1 TICTACDOUGH
9 I 1111
MACNEIL-LEHRER
·REPORT

~ 61FT§~~~~~/

I

OVER EASY Hos ts : Hijgh

Dow"'s and Frank Blair:.
6 '30 12 111 (1) NBC NEWS

CaseyKasem

·!)r.

2 1 0 1 71 0 1 4 17iol ii~ Ql NEWS
3 BACKYARD
: 4 1 MOVIE · (CARTOON) n• " A
Boy Named Ctlarlle Brown" .
1969
51
CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS

6 '00

Koinonia Class
meets Monday

Mrs. Miller honoree ofparty

I

EVENING

BORN LOSER

FRIDAY
MEIGS COUNTY REACT
meeting, 7:30p.m. Friday at the former senior citlzens center, old
Pomeroy Junior High building.
SAUSBURY Township trustee
meeting, 7 p.m. Friday, home. of
clerk, Wanda Eblin, Laurel Cliff

New arrival

F~B.

NLLUQ
GUNQL

Sl
WBIUZ

QOU
NlA

TJUNQXBJPA .
DBXUJ

NIA SIYPMUlFU . - OUIJZ FOULQUJ
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: MY FAITH, MY FAMILY, MY CITY
AND MY FRIENDS ARE THE VALUABLE THINGS IN MY
LIFE _ ARTROONEY

�Page

10

Pomeroy

The Daily sentinel

Thursda , Februar 5,1981

Middle ort, Ohio

U. S. farmers encounter staggering income
resulting in losses for hog and cattle
producers, the report said.
· " Beef output is greater than a
year ago as short forage supplies
and high production costs are forcing a large nwnber of nonfed cattle
(those that have not been fed grainbased rations ) to slaughter," it said.
Retail food prices still are I""
peeled to climb 10 percent to 15 per·
cent, on average, above last year.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Many farmers are encountering sagging
profits this winter and may wind up
with Jess net ineome in 1981 than
governm ent experts had been
·
predicting.
"Commodity prices hilve been under pressure in recent weeks from
favorable crop prospects in some
Southern Hemisphere countries,
larger-than-expected meat supplies,

and high

in~erest

rates/'

a

pr elim inary • report by the
Agriculture Department said Wednesday.

Market report

Also, it showed fanners' net in·
At~ens

Unstuck Sal~
Albllny, Ohio
Jaa. U, 1981

come in 1980 at about $23 billion, a
drop of more than 25 percent from
$31 billion in 1979. Two months ago, a
similar report estimated last year's
net farm income in a range of $23
billion to $25 billion.
There was no 1981 farm income
forecast beyond midyear in the
latest report. In December, officials
said farm income this year could
rebound sharply this year, " perhaps
regaining all the Joss of 1980."
For all of 1981, the previous repor·
ts - including one last Novembersaid net farm income might rise to
between $27 billion and $32 billion.
The latest report said farmers in
the first three months are expected
to have an annual rate of net income
of $22 billion to $24 billion. Two monthS ago the first quarter's forecast
was for an annual rate of $24 billion
to J26 billion.
The forecast for the second quar·
ter, April-June, was unchanged at
$2~ billion to $28 billion.

CAITLE PRICES '

Feeder Steers: &lt;Good and Choice) 300-500 lbs.
67 .:;1)-17 ; ~700lbs . 51.2&amp;-73.75.
Feeder Heifers (GoociHnd Chuiee l 3()(J..SOO lb.s.
57.51).64 ; 500-700 lbs. 49.50-53.25.
Feeder Bulls: (Good and Choice I J00.500 lbs.

64.75-73; \i(I0-700 lbs . .s-&amp;t .25.
Slaughter Bulls : (0\•er 1,000 \bs. l ol8.2&amp;-50.50.

Slaughter Cows : Utilities 41.75-45.20: C~m n e~
llnd Cutters 31-43 . ~ .

SprinKerCows: (BytheHead i3 IO.J75.

Veal:s : &lt;Choi ce and Prime) 74.51)...89.Sil.
Bllb)ICa.lve:s : CBy thellead l 11·93.
HOG PRICES:
Hogs: rNo. I, Barrows and Gilts) ~230
39.0040.40.
.
Butcher Sows J0.38.
Butcher Boar.s 27-3:1.60.
Fi'eder Pig!f: f By the Head I 4.;,(}-34.
SHEEP PRICES :

lb.~ .

That forecast was made by the
department last fall.
"Despite the recent freeze in
Florida, orange and orange juice
supplies will be adequate because of
large stocks, a good crop in Brazil,
and good supplies of fresh-market
oranges from California," the report
said.
"First-quarter vegetable supplies
fell after the freeze, with considerable Joss of tomatoes, green
peppers. cucwnbers and squash, " it
.said. "Tomatoes and green peppers
will be replanted, but it will be
several weeks before Florida
reswnes full production."
LOOking further . at the general
situation, the report said, " Supplies
and strong demand for farm products continue to underlie the U.S.
agricultural outlook. "
Crop supplies i~ the Unit¢ States
are down by more than 7 percent
from year-ago levels because of last
summer's drou ght, including
declines of 17 percent to 24 percent in
the 1980 harvests of feed grains,
soybeans and cotton. Reduced SUJ&gt;'
plies of those " will support prices in
coming months," the report said.

Slaughtl!r l~mbs 42 .25

LIVESTOCK COMPANY
Markel Report

Sale ever.)' Saturday at 1p.m.
Prices t.aken from the auction of Saturday,

January 31, 1981 . Trends : Veal calves steady.
Cows .steady S2 higher. Feeder Cattle Steady.

Feeder Steers: Good and Choice 250 to 300 lbs.
62 to T1; 300 to 400 lbs. 6Cl to n .50: 400 to 500 lbs. :ill
to 68.S(I ; 500 to 600 lbl. $S to 65: 60.1 to 700 lbs . 54 to
64; 700to800lbs. 50lo64 ; 1Dland&lt;lver43to65.75.
Feeder Heifers : Good and Choice 2:50 to 300 100.
61 tli 72: 300 to 400 !bel. OO.SO to 72. ~ ; 400 to $00 lbs.
5Sto61: ~to 600 lbs. SCI to 60; 600 to700 IDs. •7.50
to 54.75; 700 to 10) lbs. 47to~ : 800 and over 46to

...Feeder

means that if farm income during a
three-month period held steady over
the entire 12 months, that would be
fa~mers ' net income for the calendar year.
The annual rate does not indicate

.

Bulls: Good and Choice ~to 300 II».
59tu i4; 300 to 400 lbs. 57 .SO to 67 : 400 to 500 lbs. S5
to 65; 500 to 600 lbs. 54 tu 62.50; 600 tu 700 lbs . Situ
69: 700 to!Dl lbs. 43 to 55: 1100 and uv~r .S 11151 .

farmers' actual net income in a
three-month period, but does give an
idea on their general financial condition.
Livestock and poultry prices at the
producer level " are currently being
held down by large meat supplies,"

Holstein steers and bulls (3t)()..«ll Jbs. l 46 . ~ .
Bulls ( I.OOJ lbs. and over l 46.51)-}1.
Slaughter Cows (uti!ities l39.50 to ~ .25 : (can·
ners and ['Utter.~ ) 34-43.50.
Springer cuws (b)' the head l 350 to 52.S.
OJws-Calves fby the head l ~ Veal calves - choice and prbne. 85-95.00:
GoodeoaJ.
Baby ['a\ves ta--110 .
Hogs ,.

Top hogs 1210 to230) 40 to 41 .50.

Eklarg 33.50to31.50.
Pigs - by the head 12.50-34.
SoWll - 450 lbs. and over 36.SG-38.75.

Terminate 21 cases
·Thirteen defendants were fined
and eight others forfeited bonds in
Meigs County Court W~esday.
Fined by Judge Patrick O'Brien
wre Janette Roach, Middleport, $28
and costs, speed; Thomas Ball,
Pomeroy, $26 and costs, speed ; Rex
Cumings, Syracuse, $27 and costs,
speed ; James Hupp, Racine, Del
Ogdin, Langsville, and Jackie
Large, Middleport, $j20 and costs
each. speed; Carl Salser, RAcine,
$10 and costs, failure to yield onehalf of roadway; Darrell Krauter,
Minersville, $tO and costs, left of
center; Thomas Harper, Pomeroy,
$10 and costs, stop sign; Edison
jlaker, Middleport, and Brian K.
Craig, RAcine, $21 and costs each,
speed ; Rodney White, Long Bottom,
$23 and costs, speed; Paul R. Alley,
Rt. 2, Racine, $20 and costs, failure
to display license plates.

Forfeiting bonds were Michael
Brandon, Middleport, $80.50, no
operators license; William A.
Crouse, Colwnbus, Acie Hager, Hardy, Ky., Christopher Wllt, Colurn·
bus, Jimmie Johnson, Racine, Jobn
F . Hoffman, New Haven, and Glenn
0. Lockhart, Glenville, W. Va.,
$40.50 each, speed; Earl L. Sexton,
Belpre, $35.50, expired operators
license.

SIGN CONTRACf
C~ester Township trustees have
entered into a fire contract with
Pomerov Village thus affording
protection for residents in the
western part of the township.
In other business, Tuesday's
regular township trustees' meeting
has been changed to 7:30p.m. Monday.

Rhodes .••
(Continued from page 1)
amendment creating a state
Housing Authority io issue tax free
bonds. Proceeds from the bonds
would be channeled to financial institutions to provide low interest
loans for owner-occlijlied housing.
-Expansions of programs for the
training and tbe retraining of
workers, to attract and retain industry.

Project nears finish
GUYSVILLE - A project to meet
customer requesls for new and improved grades of service is nearing
completion, General Telephone Co.
of Ohio announced today.
Cal(-switching equipment to
provide 100 customer lines has been
installed as part of tbe $37,700
project, said Jim L. Parker of
Athens, customer service manager.
The new equipment is designed to
accommodate growth in the 6!&gt;square-mile exchange through 1984.
It also increased calling paths to
Athens and Coolville.

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted--James
Spangler,
Rutland; Grace Wolfe, Pomeroy;
Doris Williams, Racine ; Hilah
Jones, Middleport; Carl Manley,
Middleport ; Charles McGraner,
Pomeroy ; Beulah Hill, Pomeroy;
Timmy Smith II, Reedsville ; Penny
Lewis, Middleport; Hilda White,
Long Bottom ; Eric Taylor, Racine.
Discharged-Ivor Logan, Clarence
McDaniel, Clifford Demoskey,
Robert Card, Evelyn Hartley, Lesia
Kruskamp, James Fugate , Carla
Soulsby, Patrick Souls by.

Motor
Vehic
le
License
Tax
Fund
Gasoline
Fund Tax
Road and Bridge
Fmuentde ry Fund
Ce
Federai Reve nue
Sharing Fund
Total

9,047 .75

15,720 .00

•Other

Total Receipts
Totlll Beginning
Balance Plus
Receip. ts

License Tax

G:s~~~~e Tax

Federal
Total Receipls

Supplies

Township Debt-

Notes

Nole DeFor
bt Wh ich
~~======::::::::::========:::\ Purpose
Was Created

20%
THIS INCLUDES JiEART
SHAPED AND ALL
·BIRTHSTONES

ALL

KRUGERRANDS

14K FLOATING
HEART
WitH THE PURCHASE
OF A14K CHAIN
... 14K GOLD
;
DIAMOND
EARRINGS
.

~'SIIfiJHWT
If
RINGS

24KARATGOLD
l NVESTMENT COINS

25%

REDUCED

~:~~119.95
S30 .00

ssggs

1-----...:..----------------1
PUblic Notice

53 6 1
Q

-

_ _ ...,...

- -public Noticf ---

KEY QWNS, TIE TACKS
MONEY CUPS

AVAILABE IN
1
1f2
1/4
AND J/lOOZ .

oz .. oz.,

oz.

PRICES QUOTED
ON REQUEST

NOW

20%

Off

40,172.03

Jca~~Jernment

11 · 166.62
169655"0

'o"

3,491.69

B%'Wce, Dec. 31 ,
91
Total Exp . Plus
Ba l., Dec. 31 ,
1980
11 ,166 .62
Gasoline Tax
Fund
Balance. Jan . 1.
1980
1,245 .58
0
Receipts
Gasoline Tax
15,600 .00
Other
120.00
Total Receipts
15,720 .00
Total Beginning
Balance Plus
Recelf
· ts
16,965.58
d'
xpen 1tures
Tota l Exp.~i~c.
12,299 .59
Mamtenanc~
3,7.44..47
Grand Total Exp .Gasoline Tax
B F,unDd 31
1~,044. 06
a ·• ec. ·
1980
921.52
Total Exp . Plus
Sa10-• Dec . 31 ,
198
. 16 ,9 ~5 . 58
Road and Bridge
Fund
Balance, Jan . I,
5,608.70
19BO
Receipts
General Property
Tax - Real Estate
and Trailer
(Gross)
5•754 ·54
Tangible Personal
Pro rtyT
6,782.57
(Grrss)
ax

~S'ia~

f~come

~

4 . _ _ _ _ __

FOR YOUR
SWEETHEART

5. _ _ _ __ _
6 . _ _ _ _ __
7. _ _ _ _ _ __
8. _ _ _ _ __

FREE

9 . _ _ _ _ ___

10. _ _ _ _ __
11 . _ _ _ _ __
12. _ _ _ _ __

ENGRAVING
RING SIZING
GIFT WRAPPING

13.- - - - - -

" ·-----,--

11 . _ _ _ _ __

18.-_
"_
--_
-19.
__
_
_
20. _ _ _ _ __
21. _ _ _ _ __

0

t~
JEWWY

113 COURT ST.

·

POMEROY

Watch Reparr
Jewelry Repairs
A ppr'!isal
1

992-2054

I
1

I- Card ol Thank•

41 - Houseslor At"'
U - Mobllt Homn

4- Giveawa~

u - ,.pa,mtntlor A t nt
~5-- Fft()Oml

t-Lo1t al\c:l Found
1- Yard S.lt

-.- span"' A tnt
47 - Wa,.ttf to A tnt

t-Publlc 5111
&amp; Auctiw.
,

U- Equ i pm~llor

U - Anflqutl

t2- 51tuattcl WantM

51- MIIC . Mtrcl'llndill

ll-lnsurancl
14- •v•intn Tralni"tl
IJ-S,hOOIIIrutrvctlon

U -- llulldint Supplitt
56- P .. I IOf' hlo

tt-WanNtl To Del

o FINANCIAL

I
I
I

21 --

8'1sln1n

OpPQrtunlty
n - Monty lo Lotn

n - ProllnlonAi
Strvlcu

I

I
I
I
I

1
I
1

33.

I

e REAL ESTATE
n - Hom" for Sat•
U - Mobllt-Homtl

ror lote
l l- FArmJ ttll' SAlt

l,._au•lneu lulkUngs
~1-Lots &amp; Aetllte
,._Rill l&amp;ttfl WIAtld
l7- Retlton

want·Ad Advertising
Deodlines

1
1

t ; IO FI ,M, D.ally
11 Noon S1turdr

I

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

1
1

eMERCHANDISE

,, _ Help wanted

Rldio, TV

tor Mondn

U - C• . TV , Ihdio Eq_ulpmlnt

e FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK
61 - Farm lqulpm.nt
n - warued to auv
72- Truckllor 1111
ll - Livtttocll
... - Hay &amp;O rtln
tJ- Sttcl &amp; Ftrlrhttr

eTRANSPORTATION
JI - Auto, fOr lall
n - Von1 &amp; 4 W. O .

74- Motorcyclu
Aulo P'arh

a-

17-- AutoRtpt.r

e SERVICES
11 - HomllmprOYimlnts
l:t- Ph.rtnbint&amp; ••uvetlnt
1:1- E II.Uitlllt\t

tdtn

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

--Income tax service, federal

&amp; state . Wallace Russell
Bradbury, call992'7228.
MEIGS MUSEUM open by
appointment January -Mar·
ch. 992-2264, 99.2·2802. 992·
2360 or 992 ·2639. Hlotorles
tor sale Pomeroy ·
Middleport Libraries.
Put a cold nose In your life
Call the Meigs county
Humane Society at 992·
6260.
APPLES '
Golden
delicious, 53.75 P&lt;!r buschel.
Other varietle5 ~t ~.00 per
buschel &amp; up. Fltzpa!rick
Orchard, State Route 689 .
Phone 669-3785.
SHOOTING
MATCH :
Rutland American Legion
every Sunday at 1:00 . Big
prizes &amp; games. Factory
choke ouns only.
LOG Cabin Gift &amp; Supply
Shop will reopen Feb. 5.
Will have gifts for
everyday &amp; SP&lt;!Cial oc'
caslons. Many supplies at
low prices. Open Thurs
Fri .. &amp; Sat. 10,00 10 3, 00 , ·•
4

Giveawa

TWO female vel1oW and
white three month old kittens; also adlJtf female
yellow cal and an adult
gray tiger fema le cat. See
Rav Garlinger one house
on right after you past the
church on Little . Kyger
Road on Co. Rd. 20 In
Cheshire, Ohio.
'
Lost and Found
LOST : COCKAPOO, black
with brown and gray . Lost
on Co. Rd. 25 near Chester.
Phone 985·3875.

.

'·"

l.JI

o.oo

us

E•c" word over 1111 m inimum 1 ~words 1' • nnll ptr word,.., dtv .
A411 runnlnt ottltr thin conltrutlvt dtY I Wi ll bt chtrfeCI AI lilt I day
rate.
In mlmOI''f , Cord Ill Th•n•, tnd Obllu•ry ! • cents .,., word. n .oo
minimum . Clltlll\.,ltlftU.

Mobile Home 111.. eMI V~rd 11111 ere •cctptiCI onlr witt! c11tl wltf'
order. u cent chlrrttlor edl urrylnv 1011 Number In Ctrt Dl The
Sentinel.

Firewood for sale, MIKed
types of wood. $35.00 P"r
plck·up load. Delivered,
will stack for Senior
Citizens. 84H951 or 8432815.

MIF .

SPECrAL DISCOUNT
prices on furniture.

1970 PARKWOOD custom
Mobile Home. 12x60 un·

41
Houses tor Rent
HOUSE FOR RENT on
Nye Avenue. Six rooms,
$200.00 per month plus
deposit. Phone J6J.7811.

IZ
Situallons wanted
turnls~ed. 2 bedroom, 1
WANTED : Items tor con- bath, fuel oil heat. 992 -3823. 42
. Mobile Homes
signment for all upcoming
tor Rent
hOlidays II. everyday. Call 1969 PMC 3 bedroom
2 bedroom trailer. Adults
985-4327 or 985-3951.
!railer. 12x60. 992-3954.
on ly . Brown's Trailer
Park. 992 3324.
Have room, board, laundry '1972 12x60 Windsor mobHe
tor
elderly
on l y, home, $5500.00. 77J.Sl56 or
2 bedroom mobile home
Reasonable. 992·6022.
71J·5688.
furni5hed . Available im ·
mediately. No P&lt;!ts or
RHI Estato G•naral
children. Deposl1. 992·2749.
WILL CARE tor elderly
man or woman in my
au sing
~oblle homes for rent, fur ·
private home. ResPOnsible.
nrs~e&lt;I. very nice . Call 992 ·
Reasonable rates. Good ex1479.
Headquarters
perience. Call 667·3402,
Tuppers Plains.
44
Apartment
WANTED : ligh! carpentry
for Rent
wo-rk,
paneling,
3 AND 4 RM furnished apremodeling, painting, etc .
ts. Phone 992 ·5434.
Also custodian work . 992·
- 216 E. Second Street
6341.
Unfurnist}ed one bedroom
Phone ·
apartment for rent. Ren·
IJ
Insurance
1-( 614)·992·3325
ters assistance available
AUTOMOBILE
IN · ON RT. 3l - 5 room
for senior citizens. contact
SURANCE been can· block home with city
Village Manor Apartments
your water, nat . gas, 3
celled?
Lost
at 992·1787 .
operator's license? P~one bedrooms, bath, cellar
992·2143.
and f~ont porch on one
HALF of a double. 2
'shady acre. Priced nice,
bedroom completely furlao.
nished. Available 1st of
II
Wanted to Do
LAND CONTRACT - 7
monlh. 992·2749.
rooms and bath on le'Yel
Fur_n ace rep.!!Jrs, electrical
lot. Space for trailer and
work, plumbing, mobile
Four room with bath aparthome or residence. 992·
all uti lltles.
ment in Middleport, fur·
5858.
RENOVATED - Large
nished
recently
10 room home with lots
redecorated &amp; refurnished.
of
remodeling
.
5
Will do paneli~g. ceiling,
Utilities paid. Phone 992·
bedrooms for a family,
floor tile, plumbing . Free
2676.
Iaroe yard, new bath,
estimates. Fred Miller at
new furnace, b!!lsement.
992-63311 .
and fireplace . All
Three bedroom furnished
I.;;;;;;;;;;;;;==;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=~ utilities.
apartment. Phone 992·3129
SOMETHING NICE- 8
or99B914or 1·30H82·2566.
rooms, 2 lovely baths,
lots of closets, back
For rent : two bedroom
pore~ 12x26 with sliding
apartment with utilities
glass door from dining,
paid. No pets or drunks.
garage, carpeting and
Sheets, three and one
Printed Pattern large lot . In A· l condi· John.
halt miles south of Mid·
tion at a price of ·only
dleport on Route 7.

t~~~L~.~:.t J3

r

Wrap Up Spring!
4920

$43,500.

Happy New Moon Day
Tammy.
HAVING SOLO MANY
HOMES WE NOW
NEED YOURS. WANT
TO
SELL7
CALL
"2·3325 or "2-3176.
Real Estate- General

Four room apartment for
rent. 992-5908 ,
45
Furrilshed Rooms
Sleeping rooms for rent on
Main Street In Mason .
Cooking facilities, table.
$40.00 P&lt;!r week. Phone 1·
304·773· 5651.

OLD COINS, pocket wat·
ches. class rings, wedding
bands, diamonds. Gold or
sliver . Call J. A. Wamsley,
742·2331. Treasure Chest
Coin Shop, Athens, OH . sn
6462.

from lhe Iron!. graceful, cun·
rng Iones. from the back. a
sweeprng wrap. Thts dress IS
EASY to fo1 and sew as well as
bea~lrful . Hlie ilrn conon. lrnen.
,Pronled Pattern 4920 : Mrsses
Srm 8. 10. 12 . 14.' 16, 18. 20.
S11e 12 (bus1 Jli lakes 1 3/ 8
yards 60·mch fabric .

12.00 r. lld1 potllrn. AH 50C

batteries, antique ltemo,
also do appraisals. com· "' lld1 llltllm "' ftrst.cla
plete auctioneer ser'Yice. 111111111 •4 lllodllna. Send 111:
Over 30 years experience In Anne ~1111
business. Will buy com·
;t '1 I
plete estates . Osby MartJn ,1111nt Dopl
General Store, Middleport.
The Daily sentinel ·
Oh . 992·6370.
ZU IIIII 17 Sll.!i- Jaft, IY
WANTED : Large or small 10011. ,litlt Ngl ADDlES$,
building 10 tear down for ZIP, Sill, ..d Smf IUMIU.
the lumber. 949·2692 .
We slreamlined the sewrn&amp; lo
sne 1Qu tome so you can save
money! Send now lor NEW 1981
SPRING.SIJMMER PAnERN CAT·
ALOG. I00 s!yles. flee
coupon. ($2 Vllue). Cotoloc, SI.
11
'-'' - - Help Wanted

PI"""

,.

'm2.1clQullll ..... sm
I
111111 Qulllilli.,US
I»S...Sizll JI.H. 1.75

12t-qoolcltblr T-'oft 1.75

POMEROY, 0.
992·2259
NEW LISTING
EASTERN DISTRICT
- N bedroom house
with full basement on
approx. v. acre lot.
Forced air gas furnace,
aluminum
siding,
T.P .C. water. In good
condition .
JUST!
$14;500.
NEW LISTING
SOUTHERN DISTRICT
- A furnished 5 room
house with J car garage
on lower level, 2
bedrooms, gas heat.
$33,000.
NEW LISTING
CLOSE TO TOWN I - 3
bedroom h~use on ap·
prox. 1112 acre level lot.
Garage and large metal
storage building, Iorge
ga~den space. $25,000.
LARGE FAMILY? This
10 room home In
Eastern District has •
bedrooms, 1v, baths,
full basement, carport,
and above ground swim ·
mlng pool, on approx. 2
acres land. Should be
,a pproved by FHA o(
VA . $41,500.
' ACRES MINI FARM
Barn, pony shed,
chicken houae, shad,
and fruit cellar, garden
space, fehcing, nice
yard, wood burner plus
a 3 bedroom lotally
remodeled
home ,
carpet_ing, new wiring,
new plumbing . Allin ex ·
cellent condition. ON ·
LYl $28,500. Financing
available.
REALTOR
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
992-6191
ASSOCIATES
Aoger &amp; DoHia Turner
. 992-5"2
Jtln TrUIIIll 949·2MO
c.H;cE 992·2259

m.

TRAILER spaces for ren1.
Southern Va lley Mobile
Home Park, ·Cheshire, Oh .
992·3954.

Sizes
°From 30)130"
SMALL

Utility Bu"lld"m.,.
r

Slz~s from 4M61o 12x40

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt. 3, Bo• 54
Raclne,Oh.
Ph.614·843·2591

H&amp;R BODY
Body Repair-Insurance
Work· Collision Repair.
Expert painting, body
work, pinstriping._ &amp;
vinyl tops.
Free Estimates
· Call992·3421
Kingsbury Rd., 2 mi.
west Co. Rd. 18.
Pomeroy, Oh . 45769
Domestic, Japanese &amp;
European cars &amp;
Trucks.

~F~~~§~g~~~fr:::::::=:=:=:==;:~6~·1~5~·t~fc~~~=====l~·~14~-~l~m~o~.~
Carousel
CIJNNJNGHAM
ROGER HYSEU.'S
Confectionery
NEED items tor your
317 N. 2nd Ave.
Mobile Home? Visit our
&amp; ASSOC.
Middleport
·GARAGE
parts store &amp; pick up a free
Mortgagl! Bankers

catalog. At KIQgsbury
Home Sales Park &amp; Ac·
cessories. ~~ - 124 Miner·
Sville, Oh. 99H587.
Firewood, $35.00 a truck
load, $60.00 a cord. All ~ar·
dwood, split, &amp; delivered.
843·4831 or 843-473~.

World Book Encyclo"""ias
- Ll mo
number, 1980
"""
edllton 'ted
sets. Save $100.00.
$15.00 per month. Elizabeth
Coffman, 949-2592.
ONE BABY bed with foam
mattress. One well recliner
easy chair. 992·7537 .
KING wood burning heater
with blower . Call985·3368.
ROTOTILL.ER tor lnternafio·nal Cub Cadet.
$300.00. 742·2932 alter 5.

Now At
Pomeroy
Landmarl&lt;
Repossessed
Items
1- 11

HOI'U

Power

992·7544
VA loansno money down
Federal Housing - ·
3% on 525,000
s~on balance.
conventional Loans5%
down
Call for Information
992-7544

AUIDMATIC
TRANSMISSIONS
REPAIR &amp; SERVICE
ON MOST CARS
Reg. Price S32S.OO
Spec. Price $225.00
Plus Ta• &amp; Fluid
109 Spring Ave.
Pomeroy,
Oh.
Ph. 992-5543
l·nl mo.

PWMBING
AND
HEATING

Rklirtg

12 Park St.
Middleport, Oh.
Ph. 992·6263
Anytime
2·1·1 mo.

1- U " GETV
1- thu . tt. HotPOint

Rttrl.,.,-ator
AU of tl'lt tbove lttms in tJC ·
cell tnt condition. AU •r• priced
to nil immtdi•tety . Set u1 lod•y .

Q .. _ POMEROY
~~-·=•·LANDMARK
992·2181

Musical
Instruments

GUILD Mark Ill - classical
guitar, $360 . Also 8 pc . set
of drums. Call 304-675·1513
after 5 wk. days, all day
Sat.

Farm Equipment
61
Sh&lt; ton farm hay wagon.
Cal Iafier 5, 992·7501.
·
62

992-5682

I

PUWNS
EXCAVATING

CARPENTER
SERVICES"
- Addonsand
remodeling
-Roofing and guHer
work
-Concrete work
-Plumbing ond
electrical work
(Free Estlmatel)

V.C. YOUNG II

992·6215 or 992·7314
Pomeroy, Oh.

• Dozers
• Backhoes
Hourly Contract
Large or
small jobs.
Ph. 992·2478
1H0·3 mo. pd .

APPLIANCE SERVICE

1- GoodGUAinte
t - Good Hofpolnl Washer

57

-Auto aoid Truck
Repair
-Transmission
Repair
Hrs.: Mon.-Fri.
9 A.M.-5:30P.M.

J&amp; D

Mower
t-Good Trtlltr Apttrovtcl waoa
Burner SfDitl with blewtr

-

Order your d"ecorated
cakes for all occasions :
Birthdays, Anniver·
saries.
Weddin'gs/
Showers, etc.
"Beginner
Cake
Decorating Classes"
starting soon. Please
note:, we wll be closed on
Mondays during the
month of January.
HI · I mo.

~~==~~~~~~;fr==~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=~·~o~-7~·t~tc~'.

H. L WRITESEL
ROOFING

All types of roof work,
new or repair gutters
and downspouts, gutter
cleaning and painting.
All work guaranteed.
Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices
Call Howard
949·2862
949-2160
2·Htc ·

46
Spoce tor Rent
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy . Large lots . Call
992·7479.

WANTED TO BUY '
GOLD,
SILVER,
PLATINUM, STERLING·
COINS, RINGS,JEWELR ·
Y, MISC . ITEMS. AB·
SOLUTE
MARKET
PRICE GUARANTED. ED
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP, MIDDLEPORT ,
OH 10 992·3476.

Girl 18 or 19 years old to
live ln. 99n686.

Backhoe, 1now plowing,
excavation, water-gassewer lines, certified
septic systems, dump
truck, stone-coa I, etc.
General home rep;~ir &amp;
carpenter. work. Springs
developed ,
ponds
cleared.
JIM CLIFFORD
Rt.2Pomeroy
Ph.•"·"'"

-:"""j
Farm Buildings
ALL STEEL

Reupholstering.
Jan. &amp;
Feb., 1981. Mowrey's
Upholstery, Pt. Pleasant,
w.va . IJ0467H1.54.

=---===::.:::.:c.__

Black
wllh
brown stripe.
Small male dog . One year
old . Bashan Road. 94'r2521.

watches, Chains, diamonds

.....
o...

J&amp;F
ENTERPRISES

Mobile Homes
for Sale

OLAN MILLS needs people
!o do llg~t delivery work.
Must provide economical
transportation. Apply In
person to Jackie Carsey,
Brown's Trailer Park,
Minersville, Ohio on Mon·
day, February 9 between 9
a.m . and 12 noon, and bet·
ween 5 and 6 p.m. Equal
Opportunity Employer .

"'" G/ol. UoociJo llono1&lt; WO(trt Ckontt

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

LOSL

&amp; so on. Copper brass and

Chr . .
l . JI
0,"

32

G&lt;lf CUllS:
lito &amp; llMd
LIIIC»K
RIP.AIII Clooo... lnlnoiohioot.

Reedsville, OH.
Ph. 667-4415

FOR SALE OR RENT. Ap·
proximately 34 acres with
three bedroom modular
home In Portland, Ohio
area. Nine miles from the
Ravenswood bridge. Call
after 5 p.m. 27B272.

yellowiS~

&amp; sliver, class rings, pocket

11-Gtnertl Haullnt
11- M . H . Rt,•lr
17- Uphollttry

1

I

Tax service, federal, state,
&amp; quarterly taMes done by
appointment. -See Wanda
Eblin, ~1000 Laurel Cliff
- Road, Pomeroy, Ohio
&lt;15769. 992·2272.

USED FURNITURE . Gold

11-Eiec:trlul
a Rtfrltetatlon

c.nh
I dty

MIF .

Rac ine Volunteer Fire
Department sponsors a
shot gun &amp; rifle match
every Sat. night 6:30 p.m.
at their building In Bashan .
Factory choke 12 guage
shot guns only. OP&lt;!n sights
22 rifle.

Wanted to Buy : cla!l!!o rings,
wedding bands, anything
stamped, IOK , 14K, or 18K
gold . Silver coins, pocket
watches. Call Joe Clark al
992·2054 at Clark's Jewelry
S!ore, Pomeroy, Ohio &lt;1.5769

&amp; A(UIIOf'lll

Rates and Other Information

2dlyl
)dO't'l

YOUR
PIANO . Too
valuable to neglect, e•P&lt;!rt
tuning &amp; and repair. Lane
Daniels, 742·2951 or 9n
2082.

Rtnl

11 - Hou"tiOICI Goocll

a Cl Rtp,air

RACINE GUN SHOOT,
Racine Gun Club, e.ery
Friday night starting at
7:30 p.m. Factory choke
guns only.

7760 .

e EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

ll-

OLAN MILLS has several
Immediate openings tor
telephone appointment
clerks. No experience
nece5sary. We train. May
work trom 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.
or 5 p.m . to 9 p.m. Apply In
person !o Jackie Carsey at
Brown's Trailer Park
Minersville, Ohio; on Mon~
day, February 9 between 9
a.m . and 12 noon or bet·
ween 5 and 6 p.m . Equal
Opportunity Employer

'
wanted to Buy
I RON AND BRASS BEDS.
old furniture, desks, gold
rings, lewelry, sliver
dollars, sterling, etc ., wood
ice boxes.l ars antiQues,
elc. Complete hOusehOlds.
Wrlle M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, OHI or call 992·

101" "'"''

S- Happy Acll

. t-Want.edto8uy

25 .
26.
21 .
28.
29 .
30.
31 . _ _ _ _ __
32. _ _ _ _ __

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

oRENTALS

!- In Mtmorllm
J- ,.nn.unumenll

24 . -----~-

34 · _
-----~35.
_ _ _ __

eANNOUNCEMENTS

Announcements

FOUND ' black and tan
german shepherd, male.
Contllct the Meigs County
Humane Society at 992·
6260.

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

~~· ------ ·,

PRICES IN EFFECT THRU SATURDAY, FEB. 14TH

Public Notice
NOTICE OF SALE
By v irtue of an Order of
Sale issued out of the Com ·
mon Pleas Court of Meigs
County . Ohio, in the case of
The Farmers Bank and
Savi ngs
Company ,
Pomeroy, Ohio, P laintiff .
against Kenneth McFann,
e t. al. , Defendants, upon cl
judgment therein ren·
dcred, being Case No . 11624
in said Court, ·1 will otter
tor sale, at the front door of
the
C ourthous e i n
Pomeroy , Meigs County ,
Ohio, on th e 26th day ot
March, 1981 al 10 ' 00 A.M..
the follow ing lands and
tenem ents, located at 56A
Locust Street, Middleport,
Oh io, to wit :
Situate in the Village of
Middleport', County of
Mei gs and State of Ohio :
Being 40 teet off the east
end of Lot 133, and "0 feet
off the east end of Lot 134,
in Mar cu s Bosworth' s Ad
dition to Lower Pomeroy .
now ·, M iddleport , Ohio.
Being a parcel ot 1ar1d 100
feet by 40 fee t. Reference is
made to Plat Book. 2, Page
10 in the Off ice of the
Recorder of Meigs County ,
Ohio , for pial of Mar cus
Bosworth' s Add iti on .
Refer ence Deed : Vol.
270, Po&lt;;~ e 707 Deed Records
Meigs County , Ohio .
Appraised al S5,500 .
Terms of sale : Cash.
James J . Proffitt
Sheriff of Meigs County
(21 5, 12. 19 , 31c

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

,

1.---~--

8,99600

I
I

I

'

~~oing Year

PHONE 992-2156

I

I

wanted
For Sale
Announcement
Far Rent

Rotary Mower
Outstanding
Jan. 8,996,66
1, 1980
Redeemed Dur ing
R Y1ear1 1980
8,996.66
o:t~gt~Vrla
l
Bpct.
Mal .
11 ·6-81
Tota l- OUtstanding
ro{:r~· ~:~~emed 8,996,66

WANT AD INFORMATION

Pr int one word in· each
CIRCLE
s p~ cc bP!ow, Each initia l or group of figures '
cou nts as a word . Count
AD WANTED I
na rn e and address or
I
6
10 I
I
phone number it used . ords
You ' ll ge1 better resu lts W
day day• doys days I
if you describe fully,
give pri ce. The Sentinel lo 16 $1.00 52.00 54.00 57 .00 :
reserves the right to
I
classify , edit or reject
any ad . Your ad will be to 25 51.30 $3.75 ~5.50 u.oo I
put in the proper
clasi fic atior1 if you' ll to 35 ,suo $-4.50 ~7.50 ~1o.oJ,
check the proper box
I
These cash rates
below
include discount
I

I
I
I
I

Traclor with
loader,
backhoe
and Motrim

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

Name--...,..-------1I
Address---------'I
Phone __________ l

15. - - - - - 16. _ _ _ ___:_
VISA
M/ C
Layaway

.--

---------

Jx

2.
-_
- -_
--,
-_3. _
_
_

1ncludes All
Pre-engagement Rings

acres on SR 7 betWeen
Memory Gardens &amp; state
garage. Priced on In·
spectlon. 99H741.

---- ---~-

1~78Case 480-C

Buy· classi·fieds

Wri te vour own ad and order by mail with this
cou pon . Cancel . your ad by phone when you get
results. Money not refundable.

FREE

6 ,645 .00
6 ,645 .00

Tota l Exp .

\

WE HAVE REDUCED
ALL NECKLACES

6,6&lt;1.5.00
6,645.00

Maint. and
Operation

Curb Inflation.
Pay Cash for
Classifleds and
Savell I

JEWELRY

I PAY highest prices
possible for gold and sliver
coins. rlngsj tewelry, etc.
Contact Ed Burkett Barber
Shop, Middleport .

Expenditures

!n

Valentine's
Day
t~
Spec#a Is

80.00
456.81
536.81

Receipts

Grants -

x
2,961.75
Fund
C arette
~nse
'
·
~an
mes
Road and Bridge
Gross)
18.75
ct,!i~:!rk Fund 18 · ~~~:~1 A 'uae
untmentsand
e! &lt;Is
~
3
·
Federa I evenue
Sthaal ring Fund
6,645 .00
H-~
·
2S' ·
94 .291.58
""•
' '
TO
Expenditures
a~&amp;: ~
Gene ral Fund
29 ,284.34
e:r,'ts
40,172.03
Motor Ve hi cle
d 1't
Li cense Ta x
xpen ures
Fund
10 669 71 Total Exn. Gasoline Tax
' ·
Adminfstrati'Ye 24,938 .09
Fund
Town Halls,
Road and Bridge 16,044.06
Memorial Buildings
and Grounds
135.89
ct~~t~ry Fund 15 ,~g~:~
Fire Protection 1.350.00
Fede ral Re.venue
Cemeteries
2.036 .21
Sharing Fund
6 645 00
Lig~ling
224 .15
Tolal
' ·
Grand Total Exp.Balance 78,876.30
General Fund 29.284 .34
Dec. 31. 1980
Balance. Dec . 31,
Genet at Fund
10,887.69
1980
10,887 .69
To! a I Exp . Plus
MEti~~~;eh~c~~
Bal ., oec. 31 ,
1980
40.172.03
G:s~7i~e Tax
.496.91
Motor Vehicle
License Tax
Fund
921.52
Fund
Road and Br idge
J
1
8
Fund
2,652.35
a a nee, an . 1·
118 87
Ceme tery Fund
456.81
1980 Receipts 2· ·
Tolal
15,415.28 Molor Vehicle
CASH BALANCE .
Lo' cense Tax
9•047 ·75
RECEIPTSANO
EXPENDITURES
tg~:: ~:cgr~h!~g 9,047 .75
&lt;109. 73
BY FUND
PI
omer
12,946.84
General Fund
Balance us
Total Retelpts
166
62
11
Bala nce, Jan . 1.
Receipts d '
· ·
Total Beginning
1980
11 ,752 ..40
Ex pen •tures
Balance Plus
ecei~s
Total Exp. R . t
1
5
GCileral rOll!l y
Miscellaneous
4,477.84
eceop s
8,555. 4
Tl
r t;
Maintenance
6,191.87
Expenditures
aJ'Tr~Yf:,r s tc
Tolar
Exp. Misc.
4.881.97
8.37116
ross
.
Maint .
11.021.22
Grand Total Exp.Road and Bridge
~----------..J·------------·
Fund
15,903 .19
I
.. Dec . 31 ,
I Bal1980
2.652 .35
I Total Exp. Plus
Bal .. Dec . 31
I
18,555 .54
1980

re

J

786.81

EKpenditures

6,645 .00 T~
' blerl't:rsoaxnal
Grand Total Exp .73,316 .03
D' T
Motor Vehicle
~~t3~~f~~~~~s
Es e
9,689.40
~~~~seTax
10,669.71

K,~7~~'!,j.ft,y~,~

250.00

Salaries
3Jli.OO
Total Exp .
330 .00
Balance. Dec. 31 ,
456.81
1980
Total Exp. Plus
Bal., Dec . 31,
1980
786 .81
FEDERAl REVENUE
SHARING FUND

12 •946 ·. 24

·

B&amp;lance,
1980 Jan . I ,
Receipts
Sale of Lots

KWB

ANN'S CAKE
DECORATING .
SUPPLIES

Nice house on 2 &amp; one half

Public Notice

~~~~~~~~ 1

KOUNTRY

10 lb. Chocolate

- -,- etnetery Fund
FINANCIAL
REPORT OF
TOWNSHIPS
For Fiscal Year
Ending December
31 , 1980
Columbia Twp.
Meigs County
Rt. 3, Albany, Ohio
January 23, 1981
1 certify the following
report to be correct.
Gloria Hutton
Townshi_p Clerk
Tel. No. 614·
698-6204
SUMMARY OF
CASH BALANCES,
RECEIPTS AND
EXPENDITURES
Balance
Jan. 1, 1980
General Fund
$11,752.40
Motor Vehicle
Li ce nse Tax
2,118.87
Fund
Gasoline Tax
1,245.58
Fund
Road and Bridge
5,608 .70
Fund
Cemetery Fund
20-975
.55
Total
250 .00

ntE

WIN

-·-~--.~~--

Total Receipts
General Fund
28,419.

OHIOVAU.EY

An annual rate, in this case,

Small investment, large
returns, ·Sentinel Want Ads

78

Camping

Equipmen1

Wanted to Buy

INSUlAnON
Vinyl &amp;

Call Ken Young
for fnt hniu

PAITS AND IIIYtcl
AU. MAKIS
1Wnt1e.-.

•DI$pQIIII
IDI,hwuhen

•Dr~tn

• ..,ot Waltr Tenkt

•RII'IfU
I
" lij~~~Citl

Sl"etltn
R1111 For"

... colnlll/rldrln
"'"'"Ill Pruperllll
"' Apl. HevMOWI'Itrl
.- MoDI II! Home Pirkl

'"

•
•
•
•

Aluminum Siding
t nsulation
Storm Doors
Storm Windows
Replacement
Windows
Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph. 992·2772
1·28·1 mo.

TRI.COUNTY

BOOKKEEPING SERVICE
•BUSINESSES
•FARMS
•PARTNERSHIPS
•CORPORATIONS
Payrolls, profit and loss statements, all
federal and state forms.

H&amp;R BLOCK OFFICE LOCATION

MereflaRdlse
53
Antiques
ATTENTION:
!IM ·
PORT ANT TO YOU)· Will
pay cash or certified check
for antiques and collet·
llbles or entire estates.
Nothing too large. Also,
guns, pocket watches and
coin collections. Call '14·
76nl67 or 55n411.
54

Misc. Merchanise

CIDER , Fresh Swee! c
lder ava liable at F ltz·
palrlck Orchard, State Rt .
689 . 669-3785.
Maternity Clothes now on'e
half price. Watermelon
Patch, New Haven, West
VIrginia . 882·3410.
FIREWOOD for sale .
SJO.OO pickup load. Any
lengths . Call 667·3402
anytrme .
L-ADIES beautiful size 42,
46 dre55es, slac~s.
lackets. never been worn .
High quality, Will Sell
cheap. 992·3283 .

.w,

I GUN CABINET that
holds six guns; one curio
cabinet, 6 fool high, glass
sides and shelves, mirror
back; one copy P&lt;!n water
bench; one copy dark pine
secretllry desk; one Grand ·
tat~er Clock, one oak hall
tree chair; one Ice boK bar;
two baby . cradles; one
easel, one breH b&lt;»&lt;,
several wood doll cradles;
one cedar lot cheat; .fwo !Sf!t
solid walnut domino with
walnot boK; toys; cars and
truck! All can be seen at
the WoOd Shea, on Broad·
Wa"f 'ltreet, Racine, Ohio.

1ranspartatlan
Autos tor Sale
71
1975 NOVA Halchback.
Good cond . 7~2 · 2421.
1917 Plymoulh Fury . Sale
or take over payments. For
more Information call 742·
3040 .
1975 Olds Delta 88 Royale,
air conditioning, am·fm
tape
player, power
steering, power brakes,
new pa int job. 992·2528 after S.
1979 CHEVELLE Malibu,
two door, sl• cylinder,
automatic transmission,
power steering, power
brakes, air conditioning,
cruise control. tilt wheel.
sports wheels, AM· F M
radio . Mar&gt;Jin Keebaughj
days, 99H614 or afler 5
p.m . call985·3913.
72 ,

Trucks for Solo

1968 Ford three fourlhs ton
truck, heavy duty wlth .flat
bed, good, shape,$350 oo
firm . 98H351.
·
74
Motorc_ycles
1978 KAWASAKI KZ 650
motorcycle 1 color blue
Call9~9 ·2649 .
·
1980 Suzuki GS 750 L., win·
dlammer , saddle bags,
luggage rack with case, all
vetter equipment, 700 miles
ld $3900 .00 new must sell
$3500.00 . 992 ·7403.

Gene's Carpet Cleaning,
deep stream ex!raction.
Free
estimated,
reasonable rates, scot·
chquard. 992-6309 or 742·
2211 .
13

Excavating
J &amp; F BACKHOE SER·
VICE llscensed &amp; bonded,
septic tank Installation,
water &amp; gas lines. Ex·
cavatlng work &amp; transit
layout. 99H201 .
Dozer work . Small jabs .-a
specialty , 74n753 .

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration
SEWING MA..:HINE
Repairs, ser'Yice.
all
makes! 992-2284 . The
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales
and Service. We sharpen
Scissors.
.'
84

ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR
Sweepers,
toasters, Irons, all small
appliances. Lawn mower.
Ne•t to Slate Highway
Garage on Route 7, 985·
3825.
Electrical service tor all
wiring needs, service calls,
estimates. Call Miller ElK
trlc at 742·3195 or 992·7680.
85~-G.-!'!!':al

Hauling
J&amp;C Sanllatlon Service.
Tr.!!sh pickup llvailable In
VIllage ot Middleport.
Phone 992 ·5016 or 992·7597
anytime.

CONSJRUCTION
• New Homes • extensive remodeling
• Electrical work
• Roofing work
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992·7583
1·22-1 mo.

REESE~
TRENatiNG
SERVICE
Water-Sewer· Electric
Gas Line-Ditches
Water Line Hook-ups
SepUc Tanks
County Certified
Roush Lane
Cheshire, Oh.
Ph. 367-7560
1-Htc

r---------....!----------+
KIT 'N' CARLVL£ "'

byLarrv

'

�•
I

•

Page-12

Pomeroy

The Daily Sentinel

The McClintic WUdllfe StationTNT area near Point Pleasant may
be one of 10 sites nationwide containing eiJ)losives and dangerous
wastes left behind by the U.S. Army
after World War II ended, accordlngtoareportbytheNewYorl!
Legislature.
Television station WOWK In
Huntington reported Tuesday that
McClintic was listed by legl.!lative
Investigators studying chemical
dumping grounds like the Love
Canal in New York.
According to WOWK, the report
said the ordnance works, where
TNT was once manufactured for
the Army, might contain ex·
ploslves, chemical residues and
perhaps some atomic materials.
But while officials were quoted as
saying there was a good chance that
the ha~ardous wastes were
dl.!posed of on the property when
the war ended, Tom Dotson, chief

COIIDty site bas beeD named by lnvesUgators for the
New Vorl! Legislature as one of 10 nationwide whicb
lllllf still contain OIJ)Ioslve material and dangerous
wastes left beblnd by the Army at the end of the war.

·I Emergency runs

Area .deaths·
Charles White
Funeral services for Charles
Theodore White of Port Ritchie, Fla.
a fonner Meigs County resident,
were conducted Jan. 28 at the Hudson Chapel North Funeral Home in
Hudson, Fla.
Born on Nov. 24, 191)1, the son of
the late Atha and Rosa White of
Meigs County, he is survived by his
wife, Jennie, five daughters, Cora E.
Bailey of Hudson, Fla.; Clara BeUe
Landers, Pomeroy; Joan Fortner,
Elfers, Fla. ; Helen Dichson, Pontego. N. C. and Jane Wright, Orlando, Fla.; two sons, Charles of Colum·
bus and Raymond of Canton, a
sister, Elizabeth Murray, Pomeroy,
a brother-in-law, Harold Will,
Pomeroy, 30 grandchildren, 25
great-grandchildren, and several
nieces and nephews of Meigs County. Besides his parents he was
preceded in death by two sisters, Erma WiU and Della Douglas. and a
brotber, J ames.
The Rev. Rue! Coruierof the Grace
Baptist Church officiated at the services and burial was in the
Meadowlawn Memorial Gardens at
Hudson, Fla.

Jimmie F. Evans
A memorial fellowship 'service in
memory of Jimmie F. Evans, 48,
Racine, who died in a river accident
Monday rooming, will be held at 7
p.m. Friday at the Syracuse Mission
Church, Cherry St.
The pastor, Rev. CHuck MC.
Phersoo extends an invitation to
family, friends and work associates
of the late Mr. Evans to attend the
special service.
The family of Mr. Evans is presenUy at the home of Mrs. Judy
McGraw at Bownans Run rather
than at their own residence.

biologist
at McClintic,
saidposslbUity
today he
has
no knowledge
of the
of discarded explosives In the area.
'I run a fl.!hing and hunting
ground," Dotson said, "and I have

however. Dotaon said thaf while no
no way of knowing what the Army vegetation
baa grown on the one to
1118Y have left here."
one-half
acre
affected, the barren
He added, however, that "If I
area
1.!
smaller
than It once was, an
thought there were any hazardous Indication that
some fertility
materl.!ls here I'd be working with 1.! coming back.
·
people more lmowledgable than I
about the situation to have t h e m , . . - - - - - - - - - - dug up."
The Army kept explosives In
Continuing Clearance
camouflaged igloos that ' stand
today on the land, most of which 1.!
ALL WINTER MERCHANDISE
now operated by the West Virginia
Department of Natural Reaources
( DNR) for recreational purposes,
Including fl.shlng and bunting.
Those Igloos are now owned by
several different parties, Including
the DNR which says the Igloos It
uses for storage purposes have been
cleaned out completely.

1h PRICE

ECONOMIC MESSAGE- President Roaald Reagan bolda lbe doUar
bill be uaed duriDg 1111 economic speech iD the Oval Office of the White
Hoase Thursday Dlght. Tbe prealdent said the U. S. wao In Its "worst
ecooomic meu since the Great Depression." j AP Laserpbolo).

For socia I security checks .. .
other government and business
checks .. . come in and arrange
now for direct deposit. It's safe,
it's fast, it's convenie'nt!

SIX MONTH MONEY MARKET
13.985

Claims she didn't 'k ill lover

ltlc:o.a.
Bank __
· ....
3RO ST., RACINE, OH .
Member FDIC

SAVE

I·Month Money Market Certificate

3D-Month Money Market Certltlcat

12.937%

13.985%

•MEN'S RANNEL WORK SHIRTS

Effective Annual Yield On

•WOMEN'S WINTER SLIEPWEAR
•OfiLDREN'S WINTER PANTS
•MEN'S SWEATERS

12.00%

$10,000 minimum. Interest
may be paid monthly, quar·
terly, at maturity or transferred to a savings account.
Federal regulations prohibit
compounding of interest.

No minimum investment is
required. Interest will be
compounded continuously
from date of deposit to date
of withdrawal.
·

•JUNIOR Sportswear

.

•GIRLS' WINTER DRESSES
•MEN'S &amp; BOYS' WINTER VESTS

A substantial Intents! penalty 11 requlrtld lor . .ty withdrawal. *Eifectlveannullt ';'leld 11 build on reln~aaunent ol principal and tmerettat
maturiT)'. Thla i11an annual rata aubject to change at ren.wal.

•WOMEN'S WINTER DRESSES

Ask about Pay-by-Phone/NOW and VISA.
No minimum balance. No service charges.

SAVE
Form~rly
A cc ounl l n&amp;~reG

!o SIOO,OOO by FSliC

A thms County Savlnrs and Loan
Hours: M., T.,
9·4, Th. &amp; Sat. Noon

w.

Fri. 9·3, 5·7
POMEROY,OHIO

216 W. MAIN ST.
992-6655

Y2 ON

•WOMEN'S SWEATERS
•WOMEN'S KNIT ACCESSORIES
•WOMEN'S &amp; JUNIORS COATS

:·:
:·:

•MEN'S &amp; BOYS' CORDUROY
JEANS
•WOMEN'S WINTER
BLOUSES
•MEN'S DRESS SlACKS
•OfiLDREN'S WINTER
COATS
•WOMEN'S COORDINATE
SPORTSNEAR
•MEN'S &amp; BOYS'
WINTER JACKETS
eCHILDREN'S
WINTER HATS

Y2 ·SAVE 1f2

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

WHITE PLAJNS, N.Y. - Former headmistress Jean Harria, in a
tearful conclusion· of eight days in the witness box, insisted she
couldn't have killed. Scarsdale Diet developer Dr. Herman Tarnower
and that "fourteen years of my life bore testimony to that."
But the 57-year-old defendant left unexplained the multiple gunshot
wounds caused by her revolver In the body of her lover.
She testified Thursday she only remembered shooting Tarnower in
the band last March 10, the night the millionaire cardiologist was
fatally wounded In the bedroom of his Purchase, N.Y., estate.

Heavy snow, rain needed badly

ALL SALES FINAL

"It was an excellent summary ol.
Reagan's views as to the condition
he finds the economy in," said Rep.
John Seiberling, !).()hio, "but I'm
stiU waiting for that other shoe to
drop.
"What does he specifically expect
to do about it (the economy)?"
Another
Dempcratic
congressman, Louis Stokes of
Cleveland, said Reagan "spoke in
such general terms It was reaDy Impossible to get any meaningful In·
dlcatlon of precisely what he an·
ticipates Congress or the American
people doing.
"He portrayed a picture of gloom
and doom (and) gave a very graphic
picture of what America already
·knows, that we're llvlng tn a terribly
infl.!ted economy," Stokes said.
"There is no way of knowing what
cuts he is going to propose or what
programs."
Sen. John Glenn, !).()hio, called
the speech "a stage setter" for Feb.
18, when Reagan plans to present his
economic plan to Congress.
"I'm waiting to get a look at what

he will propose," Glenn said.
Republican Rep. Clarence Brown
said the principal message was
"that we are In trouble. He
(Reagan) was saying that in another
13 days we'U try to bring you the
solutions as I see them."
Brown caU.id it a "sort of bad
news-good news speech.
"The bad n~ws was the !rouble
(the economy is In); the good news
wall that help is on the way.
.
'iThe bad news was that we're
going tQ cut spending; the good was
that ... there will be some tax cuts to
encourage you to save and invest
and do better."
Meanwhile, President Reagan,
summoning Congress to approve
without delay his drastic anti·
government remedy for an economy
in crisis, is finding lawmakers
willing to cooperate but already
promising to change a program they
have yet to·see.
Growing government has allowed
the economy to veer out of control,
Reagan told the nation Thursday
night. Now, he tnsl.!ted, government
must "chart a different course" of
swift and stem cuts In spending,
taxes and regulation.
Declaring the economy is in the
"worst... mess since the Great
Depression,'' the president Implored
a Congress accustomed to slow

CHARTING ECONOMY - President Ronald Reagan poses for
photographers with the chart be used for bls economic address from the
Oval Office of the White House Thursday. Tbe president said government
policies lire reoponslble for an·"economic calamity." (AP Laserpboto).
,
deliberation to act now.
"We've stalled the judgment
day ...We're out of time," Reagan
declared In his first nationally
broadcast address from the Oval Of.
fice.
Congressmen from both political
parties said they were moved by
Reagan's dramatic description of
the economy's problems and the
need for immediate and strong
steps.

Reagan outlined· the general
economic policies he advocated
throughout his campaign: budget
cuts in "virtually every depart·
ment~· of goverrunent, a 10 percent
individual income tax cut each of the
next three years, a rollback of
federal regulations and accelerated
tax depreciation allowances for
business to spur investment and lift
sagging productivity. He did not
(Continued on page 10)

Syracuse council gets correct gas ordinance

ELBERFELD$
CLEARANCE SALE CONTINUES .

DIAMOND SAVINGS.

WASHINGTON (AP) - After
listening to President Reagan's address to the American people, some
Ohio congressmen said they were
still waiting to see specific proposals
for solving the country's economic

DEPOSIT

QUANTITIES LIMITED -

1 Section, 10 pages 15 Cents
A Multlmedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio, Friday, February 6, 1911

woes.

~

•

enttne
•

Ohio congressmen take
wait and see approach

KIDDIE SHOPPE
111 w. 2nd Pomeroy, Oh.
~~~~~~~~~~~=~~~~~~;;~~~~~~

Seven caUs were answered by
local emergency units on Monday,
the Meigs Emergency Medical Ser·
vices reports.
Fannie Roush
At 1:30 p.m., the Syracu.:;e Unit
Fannie Winona Roush, . 82, of
took
Carl Autherson from the
Letart, died Wednesday at Holzer
Syracuse
Town Hall to Veterans
Medical Center.
Born Aug. 10, 1898, in New Haven, Memorial Hospital and the same
DUMPING WARNING
daughter of the late Thomas B. and unit at 9:40 a.m. took Tonuny Ed·
Mike Fetty, manager of the
wards,
Minersville,
to
Holzer
Mary Margaret Fry Roush, she was
Village Green Apartments,
preceded in death In 1974 by her Medical Center.
Mulberry Ave., warns againsl per·
At
2:55
a.m.
the
Syracuse
Unit
husband, Fred M. Roush.
sons, other than residents of the
She was also a member of the St. - took Roy Frecker, Eagle Ridge to apartments, dumping trash in con·
Veterans Memorial. The RuUand
Marl! Lutheran·Church.
tainers provided for residents only.
Surviving is a sl.!ter, Eula Jane Unit at 2:22a.m. took Diana Denny Fetty warns that persons other than
from
Salem
St.,
to
Holzer
Medical
Wolfe of Racine; a sl.!ter-in-law,
residents caught dwnping trash in
Mrs. Garnet Roush of Letart; and Center and later took Louise Myers, the containers will be prosecuted.
Harrisonville, to Veterans
several nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will he held at Memorial. At · 12:03 a.m., the
I :30 p.m. Saturday in the Foglesong Rutland Unit took Mary Howell of •
MONDAY"MEETING
Funeral Home, with the Rev. Pageville to Veterans Memorial and
a
8:01
p.m.
took
Irwin
Potter
from
A
meeting
of the Meigs County
George Weireck officiating. Burial
Meigs
Mine
2
to
the
hospital
in
Oak
Refunders
Club
has been called for
wiU be.in Graham Cemetery. Frien·
Hill.
6:30
p.m.
Monday
at the Riverboat
ds may can at the funeral home af.
Room
of
the
Diamond
Savings and
ter 3 p.m. Friday. ·
Loan
Co.,
West
MainS!.,
Pomeroy.
William L. Strauss
Seven runs were made by local
William L. Strauss, 64, 38157 Rock emergency units Wednesday, the
Springs Road, died Wednesday at Meigs Emergency Medical Services
JUDGMENT SOUGHT
Holzer Medical Center.
reports.
A suit In the amount of $2,592.45
At I :48 p.m., the Pomeroy Unit bas been [iled in Meigs County ComHe was 8 son of the late John and
Margaret Kloes Strauss. Also took Charles Murray from Laurel St. mon Pleas Court by D&amp;S Plumbing
preceding him in death were a wife, to Veterans Memorial Hospital and and Heating, Inc., dba Ohio Valley
Georgta Marcelene, and a brother, at 3:31p.m., the Pomeroy Unit took Plumbing and Heating, Pomeroy,
r Otto Strauss.
MOdred Jacob:; from the county in-· against LaSaUe Hotel Corp., Mid·
Mr . Stra usswasarnem ber of t he
flrmary to Holzer Medical Center. dleport, Betty Gilkey, Middleport
Pomeroy Masonic Lodge and the At 7:53p.m., the Pomeroy Unit took and Geneva Shackelford, Mid·
Trinity Church in Pomeroy.
Lois Frum from the roUer rink on dleport.
Surviving are his wife, Jean; a Houle 7 to Pleasant Valley Hospital.
A suit for foreclosure was filed by
daughter, Sheila Eastman, At 9:30 a.m., the Middleport unit · First Bank of Marietta, Marietta,
Gallipolis; two grandsons, Brent took Hilah Jones from her residence against Harold N. Hudnell, Rt. 4,
Robert and Kevtn William Eastman, to Velerans Memorial and the Pomeroy, eta!.
·
Gallipolis; two brothers, Arthur Racine Unimt at 7:12 p.m. took
Strauss, Middleport, and Charles J . Gilbert Hart, Oak Grove Road, to
Strauss, Columbus, and several Holzer Medical Center.
nieces and nephews.
The Syracuse Unit at 6:56 a.m.
Funeral services will he held at I took Leo Cooper from Seventh St. to
p.m. Saturday at the Ewing Funeral Pleasant Valley Hospital and at 5:55
Home with the lb!v. William Mid· p.m. took thomas Edwards from
dleswarth officiating. Burial will be Minersville to Veterans Memorial
in Beech Grove Cemetery. Masonic Hospital. At 4:44p.m., the Rutland
rites will be held at 7:30p.m. Friday. Unit took Shirley Jacks from her
Friends may call at the funeral residence to Holzer Medical Center.
home an · e at7thiseventng.

No one pays you IIIOr8 than

Vol.lt, No. 201
Copyrighted 1981

One area of the McClintic WUdllfe
Station, fonnerly a TNT burning
ground, bas apparently been left
Infertile by the Army's waste,

CORRECfiON .
In an accident report published in
The Daily Sentinel Tuesday it was
erroneously reported that a car
driven by Theodore P. Hayes, 26,
Athens, slid left of center and
collided with the front of a car
driven by Steve A. Gillespie, 25,
Point Pleasant, on Rutland Town·
ship Road 41 Monday. Actually, the
Gillespie car slid left to center and
hit the Hayes vehicle.

at y

e

TNT area may have dangerous .
wastes left beh~nd after WWII

POSSWLE EXPLOSIVE SITE - The rabble
above Is all that remains of an old powder plaDt at tbe
Md:Untic WUdlife Station where the u. S. Army
manufac111red TNT during World War n. Tbe Mason ·

•

Thursday, February s, 1981

Middleport, Ohio

:··

DES MOINES, Iowa - Last weekend's snowfall in Iowa was only a
dusting compared to what's needed to head ol.f a serious drought in the
nation's breadbasket this summer, weather experts say.
The storm left up to 61nches of snow in some area·s but less than 2 in·
ches in others.
Although it provided a snow cover that will keep powdery topsoil
from blowing away, it amounted to less than a half-inch of moisture.
The National Weather Service, whose extended forecasts co.ver only
90 days, also predicts continued wanner and drier·than·nonnal
weather.
That could mean serious trouble for the five Midwestern states that
typically produce one-third to one-half the total U.S . harvest of com,
soybeans, grain sorghwn and wheat.

Cancer kills Governor Grasso
HARTFORD, Conn. - Ella Grasso won national attention and the
admiration of feminists when she became the first woman ever elected governor of a state In her own right; but to her it was nothing
special.
Mrs. Grasso, who resigned in December after six years in office
because she was bedridden by cancer, died Thursday of carcjiac arrest
caused by multiple organ failure, a Hartford Hospital spokesman said.

Pet cat helps save two lives
COSHOCTON, Ohio - A pet cat has been credited with saving the
lives ol. a Coshocton County man and his 7-year'""ld daughter.
Fire officials say Herbert Southerland and his daughter were asleep
when their fuel oil furnace malfunctioned, causing a blaze shortly
before 5 a.m. Tburaday.
The cat jwnped on Southerland and woke him. He crawled through
the smoke across the house to his daughter's bedroom and awakened
her. The Sl5,000 llome was destroyed. The cat escaped safely.

·Winning Ohio.lottery number
CLEVELAND - The winning nwnber drawn Thursday in the Ohio
Lottery's daUy game "The Number" was 208.
In the weekly "Pyramid" game, the winning numbers announced
Thursday were 13; C'HI: 11546.
The lottery reported earnings of SJ86,841.50 on the dally game.
The earnings came on sales of S821),498, while holders of winning
tickets are entitled to share ~2,656.50, lottery officials said.

Weather
Partly cloudy tonight. Lows In the low to mid-208. Increasing
cloudiness Saturday with chance of sno" by late afternoon. Highs near
40. Chance of snow~ percent tonight and 30 percent Saturday. Winds
southerly 1.._~ mph tonight.
Extended Ohio Forecut - · Suoday through Tuesday: Achance of
snow Sunday. Fair and colder Monday and Tuesday. Highs in upper
20a to' upper 30s Sunday, dropping to the upper teens to upper 20s
Tuead!!Y· Lows 1().25 early.Sunday and 1.._15 early Tueaday.

Gas rates for the viUage of charge is the purchase gas adSyracuse were clartfied during a justment charge or better known aa
meellng of village council Thursday the fuel cost clause.
Esther Harden, collection agerit
night.
for
Syracuse Home Utilities, said
Jim Diddle, president of the
there
were errors In ~ readings, aU
Syracuse Home Utilities, explained
but
three
were discovered before the
that the gas rate ordinance that apbills
were
mailed. The three bills
peared under Katie's Korner in last
that
went
out uncorrected were
Sunday's Times-Sentinel edition was
•
.rev!Jed
with
new bilhl were Imincorrect. He pre~ented council with
mediately
mailed.
ErroNI were aU in
the correct ordinance.
the
reading
of
the
meters it was
The gas rate ordinance dated June
noted.
l'¥!7, bad been corrected, but the
Diddle explained that if a biU is
corrected ordinance was never
over-read
or under-read an adreturned to council to replace the In·
justment
wiil
made on the following
correct ordinance.
month.
According to Diddle the gas rate
Diddle did say the Syracuse Home
for the village of Syracuse is $3.85.
Utilities
are requesting a raise ol. 25
However, It is not computed by simcents
per
1,000 cubic feet. Council
ply multiplying the nwnber of cubic
did
not
dl.!cuss
the raise, but asked .
feet times the rate.
that
a
rate
sheet
be submitted.
The way to calculate bilhl was ex·
Diddle
Informed
council that a
plained as follows: If a person uses
rate
sheet
on
the
present
rates and
35,000 cubic feet of gas a month you
one
with
the
proposed
increase
deduct 1,000 cubic feet since there is
would
be
submitted.
a minimum rate ol. S5 for the first
Also meeting with council were
1,000 cubic feet. Then a person must
Aaron
Sayre and Gordon Wlnel!ren·
multiply 3rl times $1.55 and 35 times
ner,
members
of the Board of Public
$2.30 then take the total.! of the two
Affairs
who
asked
council to trade
plus the S5 minimum charge and this
the
water
board
truck
for the old
will give the amount of your biU to
emergency
vehicle
at
no cost to
the nearest five cents.The $2.30

colincil. Council agreed.
ACCEPT BID
In other business, council accepted the bid of Denny and Glass, a
Gallipolis firm, to install 225 feet of
eight foot fence from the backstop on
the ballfield to first and third base at
acost of $1,312.50.
Council agreed to take the old fence and place It along the roadway
near the. tennis ~urts and
playground to help prevent children
from going to the river.

Ernie Sisson met with council,
concerning two large trucks
traveling up Sixth Street onto
College Road and unable to make
the turn and traveling on private
property.
Council agreed to contact Frank
Porter, viUage solicitor, regarding
the present ordinance regulating
weight limits and draw up a new or·
dtnance if necessary to control ·the
weight limits·on village streets.
(Continued on page 10) .

·Mayor applies for grant
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews has signed necessary papers
for a $75,200 EDA grant to be used in converting the old Pomeroy
Senior High School to a village hall.
Mayor Andrews said David Reiser, Athens architect, will he
requested to draw plans for the conversion of the building. He wiU also
draw specifications to be used in seeking bids on the project.
Additional funds will be neded for the project which will include
extensive work on the first and second floors of the school which will
be sought through the Farmers Home Admlnjstralion.
,
Village officials have been attempting to secure funds for the
renovation of the high school building for more than four years. The
building was secured from the Meigs Local School District with the
provision that it be occupied by the village within five years.

Eastern board
gives Roberts
new contract
Richard L. Roberts was given a
three year contract to continue as
superintendent of the Eastern Local
School District earlier this week.
Roberts' new contract begins Aug.
1st.
In other action, the board accepted the resignation of Buddy
Moore as head football coach. It was
indicated that Moore hopes to stay
on in the district as a teacher.
Kathleen A. Manlcke was named
to the substitute teacher list and the
board approved a field trip for Fren·
ch II classes.
James Wilhelm, band director,
was authorized to attend the Ohio
Music Education Association
meeting being held this weekend In
Cleveland arid the two sons of
Deborah J. Bigley were accepted as
tuition students in the dl.!trlct.
Approval was given for the use of
a bus to Rio Grande College by talon·
ted and gifted students and a
discussion was held on the use of a
computer system tn the treasurer's
office. No action was taken,
however, but the board wiU view a
demonstration at Its regular
meeting on Feb. 18. A discussion
was held on arbitration involving
Ralph Wigal.
A,group of parents was ,present to
discuss with the board Changes in
·the bus route over Silver Rldle and
Cherry Ridge.

BIG HEART - Yau "pltll" ..,. bout ud lleld by EUora Faullmer, Meigs Hlgb School •eol!lr,
a.y, too, d you plu Ia , . . . _ tldlllve poud box selja Ibis year for ~Z.50.
.
II I~ 1. '-ln.H I Valelltllle'l Day lift. ThlB "&amp;oodle,"

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