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                  <text>President not ruling out blockade
•

bv Dick

WINTHROP
MY

DAD's REALLY O:::RE

I WOULDN'T C1A.RE
OA5~

AT ME ...
HE 5A.Y5 I 5A66SD HIM.

~

T V'e NEVER, EVER ~55ED
HIM IN MY WHOJ....E: LIFE.
1

C) -

'
'
.,••.
Me , TMIIIg.1t.l. lloL a no 0&amp;

•f

!

Da-J'rYOLJ 00

A~TH~q
WHHEC$:T6

'IOU MAD~

M'Y DAD.

OH,

6UR.E ...

WASHINGTON (AP) - The Sunday as he ended a vacation in
Reagan admlnlstratlon, preparing California that he is " very conto release what lt claims is un- cerned" about political instability in
deniable evidence of Soviet-bloc aid El Salvador. But he refused to say
to lnaurgents ln El Salvador, is not whether he could conceive of ever
rullng out a blockade or any other sending U.S. !llllitary advisers or ar·
action against Cuba lf it continues ms because "I think too
in .the
anns shipments to the Central past we told what we might or miglt
American nation.
not do."
Presidential counselor Edwin
Meese, asked if the United States
Meeae In said Sunday the ad- would send troops to El Salvador,
ministration is exploring replied, "I don't rule out anything,
diplomatic, economic and military l&gt;ut it is highly unllkely we will move
options to stop the anns traffic, military forces.'' ·
Direct action to punish Cuba ls "en·
, He said evidence of Soviet-bloc
tirely possible,'' he said.
complicity with leftist Salvadoran
''I think it's to Cuba's own self- guerrillas is ''incontrovertible.''
interest to halt them (anns shipAdministration officials hoped
ments) right now and· end this tran- .that releasing the evidence today
smittal of subversion into Central would buttress their contention that
America," Meese said on ABC's the Soviet Union and its allies are
"Issues and Answers" program.
committed to converting the country
President Reagan told reporters into the first Marxist state on the

often

e

~WALL-Y

FILL L..IP HIS
VQqG-INq SUIT
.

Wl11-t RA.NCA.KE SYRUP.

American continent.
U.S. government" that the Reagan
The administration also decided to administration won't tolerate fur·
release its findings to build public ther artn3 shipments. State Departsupport for actions to ensure that El ment spokeswoman Sondra Me·
Salvador remains friendly toward Carty refused comment on the
westem interests, U.S. officiats said. report.
The lnfoimation, much of which
Meese said the administration has
already has been revealed, has been .developed contingency plans for
condensed into a "special report" dealing with developments in El
several thousand words long.
Salvador, but he added, "We're not
The basic message of the report is going to say what they are nor are
that, directly or indirectly, the we precluding anything."
Soviet Union, Cuba, Ethiopia, Viet·
"We're not necessarily limited to
narn, Nicaragua and some Eastern military force,: ' he said. ''There are
European countries have un· economic steps that can ~ taken.
dertaken a major effort to supply the There are intermediate actions that
Salvadoran guerrillas with tons of can be -taken which have to do with
weaponry and other equipment over infonning the peoples of other counthe past year. Much of lt ls believed tries about what's happening."
to flow through Cuba.
At least twice during last year's
. ABC quoted State Department election campaign, Reagan publicly
sources. Sunday nighf as Saying suggested an economic blockade of
Cuba "has heard directly from the Cuba as one possible way of corn-

•

at

batting Soviet-bloc expansiOf\ism,
Meese, asked Sunday lf the administration had ruled out · a
blockade of Cuba, said:
"One of the things you don't do is
r_yie out anything. It's not wise to let
tliose who are trying to ship the ar·
rns know what steps we will take until it's necessary to do that.' '
Statements by Secretary of State
Alexander M. Haig Jr. and other·
snindicate that serious consideration is not being given . to
deployment of American forces in El ·
Salvador.
In comments to NATO ambassadors last week, Haig was
quoted as saying that the United
States does not intend " to have
another Vietnam and engage ourselves in . another bloody conflict
where the source rests outside the
target area.' '

en tine
I Section, 10 Pages

• I

IS Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomerov:-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, February 23,1981

,.

Excerpts of Haig's remarks were
published in Saturday's ~lions of
the New York Times. U.S. officialS
said they had no reason to believe
the quotes were not accurate . .
The one country not fonnalll'
linked to the Soviet Union that ls
assisting the Salvadoran irururgents
ls Nicaragua, a major recipient of
American aid last year.
The Reagan administration has
been circwnspect in its attitude
toward the Nicaraguan role. It does
not rule out the possibility that it can
persuade Nicaragua to end its support for the Salvadoran irururgents.
The State Department has said it
has raised the issue with
Nicaraguan authorities, and there
have been unconflnned reporta thai
Nicaragua has given assurances lt
will stop the arms traffic to El
Salvador.

•

Cold weather hurts tourist trade

by Ed Sullhiall

Priscilla's Pop
IN SPITE OF ALL
HIS ECCENTRICITIES,
I ADMIRE 'STUART

HE AI\!
AMERICAN
ORIGINAL.'

NOSTOF USGO
ALONG WITH THE C~'V
IN EVERYTHING WE
SAY~D

VERY MUCH .

ro.

NOT STUART .1
HE'D RATI-IER

DIE.'

MIAMI - Cold weather, a well-publicized crime increase and the
sluggish "national economy have cursed the winter of '81 and driven
away the tourists, say hotel operators and tourism officials ln this
resort city.
Hotel-motel occupancy in Miami Beach was a dismal51.4 percent in
December. In January, it improved to 73.7 percent - still 15 percentage points below nonnal, The Miami Herald reported Sunday.
Officials said the Northerners who nonnally vacation in South
Florida every year never arrived this season. They blam~ the
economic slwnp and "propaganda" about the crime rate.

Sheik's expensive jewelry taken
MIAMI BEACH, Fla. - Saudi Arabian Sheik Wadji Tahlawi spent
$12.5 million last year to buy the Eden Roc Hotel in Miami Beach. Now
he's out an additional $1.5 million following a burglary at his pen·
thotise suite, officials said Sunday.
Police said 21 pi~ces of uninsured jewelry were taken in the
bUrglary, which was discovered Friday night.
The theft came less than a month after the Miami apartment of
another Saudi sheik, Ill-year-old Miami-Dade Conununity College
student Tarek AI·Fassi, was burl(larized. Spokesmen for the voun2
sheik said jewelry and cash worth at least $1 miUlon were taken in the
Jan. 28 break-in. The case still is unsolved.

NO. I

DID YOU
I=INISH YQJR
ESSAY YET.
STUART?

AT THIS
IN TIME
I NEE'V SPACE
SEE
WHERE' (M AT. GET IT ALL
TOGETHER, AND GIVE IT

ro

SEEM TO GET
roNN TO

TACK-So.

MY.

eesr SHOT.'

AND

Student calls swamp office

THATS
THE ·

eaT TOM

COLUMBUS, Ohio - Phone calls from fanner Ohio college students
being sued for defaulting on federal loans swamped the U. S. Attorney's office last week.
Some of the callers were wiiling to pay their debt while others denied
charges, according to officials in the U. S. Attorney'S,office.
Last week, the federal government sued 501 fanner students to
recover unpaid college loans.

LINE.'

Moral Majority applaudes effort ·
CINCINNATI - The Ohio chapter of the Moral Majority has applauded the prosecution of a radio station and the host of a program
for homosexuals.
The Rev. Thomas Tranunel, chainnan of the Ohio Moral Majority,
said he considered remarks on the WAIF -FM "Gaydrea1ns" program
to be obscene.
.
AbOut 100 people rallied Sunday in support of the station and broadcaster John Zeh, indicted by a grand jury on four counts each of
disseminating material hannfulto juveniles.
They were indicted after a Cincinnati couple objected to one
program describing sex lubricants and ways to u.se food items in seJ .

Teachers picket for second day
YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio - Teachers ln the second day of a citywide
strike picketed most Youngstown schoots today, and officials reported
only scattered attendance of students and non-striking instructors.
Police said there were no incidents as the strike went on despite a
court back-to-work order.
'
Only about 20 of 1,071 students reported to East High School. No
teachers crossed picket lines, according to Charles Zillo, director of
conununity relations ~or the school bOard.

Ex-energy official faces hearing ·
"NO, YOU CAN'T 00 OUT AND PLAY TODAY.
I'M PUNISHING YOUR FATHER!"

"THA!f·YEAR UNDERGRADUATE PROGRAMS MAY
WORK FOR MEDICINE AND LAW, BUT FOOTBALL
PLAYERS NEED FOUR YEARS!"

WASHINGTON - The fanner Energy Department official who gave
$4 milllon in federal money to charitable organizations on the next-tolast day of the Carter administration was called before a
congressional subcommittee today to explain his actions.
Paul Bloom, fonner DOE special counsel, was scheduled as the star
witness before the House Government Operations subcornrnlttee on
environment, energy and natural resources.

Weather
Periods of rain tonight, possibly becoming mixed with snow. Lows
near 40. Cloudy with a chance of showers mixed with snow flurries
Tuellday. Highs In the lower 40s. Chance of precipitation 80 percent
tonight and 40 percent Tuesday.

' MAYBE HI'D RETRIEVE IF WE COULD JUST FIGURE nt IT ~·

"IF I'D KNOWN HE'D &lt;JET CONTROL OF 51% OF THE COM·
PAW¥ STOCK, I NEVER WOULD HAVE BUllT HIM!"
·~

WHATTO THROW TH~T HE REALLY WANTS!"

1

'I

Extended Ohio Forecast
Wednesday through Friday :
Fair Wednesday and Thursday. A chance of showers Friday. Highs
mainly In the 40s Wednesday, warming Ill the upper 4011 and 50s by
Friday. Lows at night In the 20s to lower 30s early Wednesday and in
the 30s early Thursday and Friday.

.FLOOD?-Pomeroy merchants are keeplilg a watchful eye on tile Ohio
River whlcb lr!l&amp; movS!flato ,the s~ac between ~ twq parkla&amp; lots Ia
front of tile bUIIaess seetlon, pictured. Repol18 this morniDg, however,
were encouraging as far as a flOod ls concerned. At 10 a.m., the river was
on a stand apparently at 41.5 feel, five feel under the 46.5 Hood stage of

Pomeroy. Pomeroy VIllage Hall spokesmen reported t~e river io be
falllDg upriver. Flooding will depeod upon future weatller coadUioDB and
lt was rainy today. The State Rlgbway Department reported Route 338
closed at Antiquity and Route 124 closed by water between Ralites 7 and
325, west, and cast between tile Routes 338 and 181

Ohio River crests .at Racine Locks
Mix warm temperatures, melting the upper .gauge recorded a level of
9110w and on-again, off-again rain 41.6 feet and the tower gauge a
showers, and what do you get ?
reading of 19.9 feet at 7 a.m.
The Ohio River rising to near flood · Flood level at the dam is set at 50
leveL
feet, according to the spokesman.
The National Weather Service
The spokesman said the river has
said today most of the high water is crestep at 34.8 feet at the Belville
caused by heavy runoff from the locks and at 38.6 feet at the Racine
Allegheny and Monongahela rivers .
facility.
· 'No· official predictions for a
The onl~ area road closed due to
possible flood were expressed this high water is on SR 124 in Meigs
morning by a spokesman for the County near Long Bottom and AnGallipolis Locks and Dam, although

tiquity, according to the Gallia·
Meigs Post of the Ohio Highway
Patrol.
High water has also crept up to the
municipal parking lot in Pomeroy,
officials said today. No damage as
yet has been reported due to rising
water.
Flood level for Poirit Pleasant is
set at 40 feet, while the level at
Gallipolis is about 52 feet, according
to Jim Northup, fire chief.

"At around 52 feet it stops traffic
on the lower end of town," he said.
The city waterworks recorded .56 inch of rain overnight.
Temperatures are expected to
drop today, with rain to continue into
the evening and then possibly
change to snow flurries, with no accumulation expected. Warme'r
weather and fair skies are anticipated to return to the area
Tuesday.

Work begins on economic proposal
WASHINGTON (APJ - Congress
begins intensive work this week on
President Reagan 's economic
proposals with Democrats vowing
not to rubber-stamp them ,
Republic11ns countering that the
nation won't accept foot-dragging
and the administration insisting its
three-year income tax cut not be gut·
ted.
Legislators from both parties have
expressed concern over the
economic effects of Reagan's
proposal that tax rates be slashed 10
percent a year for three years, star·
ting July 1.

Democrats have said they favor a
tax cut, but not the one the ad·
ministration wants.
Senate Minority Leader Robert C.
Byrd, O.W.Va., said Saturday the
administration's plan "will not favor
the working people, the people who
pay taxes and have nothing left. It
will make the rich richer and the
poor poorer. It is unfair ,
unreasonable and inequitable."
The tax-writing House Ways and
Means Conunittee operis hearings on
the tax ·package Tuesday and colnlnittee chainnan Dan Rostenkowski,

0.111., said it will take weeks to hear
all the anticipated witnesses.
· White House budget director
David A. Stockman told The
Associated Press in an interview
that the administration is open to
negotiation with Congress on some
part,s of the tax plan but is insisting
on a three-year package.
A one-year tax cut " won't help
(the economy) a lot," Stockman
S&lt;lid.
"One-year tax cuts do not
generate the kind of pennanent
economic response that we're

looking for,' ' he said. " People can't
make long-term plans on the basis of
only one year."
At the same time, Energy
Secretary James Edwards was
scheduled to lobby for Reagan·
backed cuts in energy research
programs before the Senate Energy
Comrmnittee.
The Senate Budget Committee,
meanwhile, is beginning to move on
a package of spending cuts, with
Republican leaders pressing for
quick action in an effort to pressure
the House into acting promptly.

F eds consider additional two cent gas tax
WASHINGTON (AP ) - The
Reagan administration is considering a 2-cent-a-gallon increase in
the federal gasoline tax to help state
and local goverrunents finance highway maintenance.
The proposal, which would raise
abOut $2 billion annually, would need
congressional approval.
Budget director David A. Stock·
Jlllln told the National Governors'
Association on Sunday the administration 1nay ask that states be
allowed to pre-empt some or all of
the addltlonal revenues raised
through an increase in the tax.
which now ls 4 cents a gallon.
Revenue from the gasollne tax
now ls eannarked for a trust fund
used primarily for highway construction.
.
.
Transportation Secretary Drew
Lewis acknowledged that Congress
had rejected several Carter ad·
1ninistratlon proposals to raise the
tax 5 ce~ts to 15 cents a gallop to

promote conservation. But he said
he thought Congress would approve
the measure now as a "user tax" to
finance bridge and highway maintenance programs cut in President
Reagan's proposed budget for fiscal
year 1982.
Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. of
California criticized the proposal,
saying the federal govcrrunent
would increase the tax as a state
rellef measure and then drop lt,
leaving the states to re-impose it as
a state tax.
" Reagan would have it both
ways," Brown told reporters later.
"He would get benefit for providing "
the money for us, and we would bear
the blame for the higher tax."
What Brown called the " tax shu!·
fle," and the sparks it struck,
provided a vivid example of the
problems the governors face with
Reagan's economic recovery
program. They had an hour-long appointment with the president today

to discuss their concerns.
The governors' greatest fear, as
expressed in the meeting 's opening
sessions, is that federal programs
and aid will be cut without ensuring
that state and local goverrunents
will be able to absorb the blow.
"I don't want to transfer the mess
in Washington to a mess in all of the
states with a lot less money ," said
Gov. Richard Riley of South

Carolina.
"We appeal to you to stick with ·
us," begged Gov. James Hunt of
North Carolina. "We believe that
when it gets to Congress, a lot of
people are not going to want the
states to have this flexibility." .
The governors say they need
flexibility in administering federally
assisted or mandated programs,
less federal regulation,

Deputies recover stolen Jeep
A 1979 Jeep stolen in Colwnbus on
Jan. 26, was recovered Sunday mor·
ning off Strong's Run Road just inside the Meigs County line near
Wilkesville the Meigs County
Sheriff's Department r~port ed­
today.
T!re vehicle was owned by
Evangelos Pavloudis, Clncinnati. It
had been partially dismantled. The
only item reported taken from the

vehicle was the spare tire and wheel.
The incident is under investigation.
William Thornton , Danville,
rep&lt;&gt;rted gasoline was taken from
two Meigs Local School buses.
parked at his residence.
Edie Martin, Chester, atso reportedlhat gasoline was taken from his
vehicle that was parked at the
Ravenswood bridge approach early
Sunday morning,
·

�Commentary

Monday, February 23,1981
Page-2-The Dally sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, Fe~ruarv 23.1981

Setback for earthL---__. . .:._______________Art:..=..=...=B=ire;:;..;.;;.hwa=ld
The Grwnrnan Company, which
built vehicles for the · moon, and
which is one of the leaders in space
technology, has been having trouble
building a bus that won't collapse
when it tries to get from 23rd Street
to 57th Street on Madison Avenue in
New York City.
This has caused tremendous consternation in engineering circles.
How can someone develop a lunar
lander for the moon without any difficulty and not be able to build a bus
for New York and other cities?
I discussed this with an urban
transportation expert, and he said
the Grumman people were not at
faull
,
"Building a bus for New York City
ls not the same as developing a moon
vehicle. There were no many
unknown factors that Grumman had
to deal with. New York streets have
a far harsher atmosphere than th!!
moon. For one thing, New York's
craters are much larger than
anything up there. For another, the
environment in Manhattan is so unpredictable that no one can be sure
what pressures a bus will enejlunter

sportation is still not an exact science, and it could have happened to
anybody."
Does this mean New Yorkers will
never be able to have buses they can
count on?''
"Not necessarily. But a lot more
work has to be done in bus research.
First of all, we must devise a way of
mapping New York City's potholes. ·
No bw can be expected to hit one

when it tries to crawl across town ."
"But surely the Grumman people
must have tested its Flxible bus
before it delivered it."
" Of course they did, but all they
had to go on where aerial maps of
Manhattan taken from five miles up.
"They had no idea what they
would face once the Flxible model
was actually . put on a street.
Everything worked perfectly in the
lab, and Grumman scientists were
certain their bus could hold up under
the toughest jobs it would have to
perform on Earth. But unfortunately, when · you're dealing
with a'\ unknown crust, such as New
York City, you have to expect setbacks.
"We now think we know what the

and not collapse, ~ no matter how survive anything that could happen
strong you build the truruiion. For to them in Manhattan."
"Does the failure of the Grumman
another, we hitve to test these buses
uoder'the worst-situation conditions. Flxible bus mean that our entire
This means we have to load them space program on Earth will be
with twice their capacity, and drive delayed? "
them for days through Queens, the . ''No, it only means that New
Bronx and Brooklyn, where the Yorkers will have to do their exploration on foot until the
streets are almost impassable.
" If the trunnions hold up to these engineering mistakes , have been
rugged tests, they should be able to ironed out. We can'i afford to send

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

another bus to New York City unW
we're sure it will work. Actually, the
failure of the Grununan F!Dble
could be considered a plw for the
space program. We know that many
cities were going to order the Fbible
buses, and If something terrible had
to happen, better It be in New York,
which is used to Its public transportation breaking down, than In
Boston."

..

.

7

WHITE
DOMESTIC

pubiJSher

BOB HOEFLICH

DALE ROTHGER, JR.

20

LB

. BAG.

A MEMBER ol The Aaaocll1ed Pnss, llllaod DaUy Prus Aaaoclltion aud tbt
Ameri[!ll]l Newsp1per PubUsher~~ Anodatioa.
,

-----------Leuerstoeditor-------------

LE'M'ERS OF OPINION arc weh:omed. Tbey sbould br less ttiU 3M words loa&amp;· AU
!etten are subject to editing aod muat be slped with ume, addros aud &amp;eltpboat

Forgotten veterans

a~~mber. No uuiped lettera wUI bepGbUslled. Lttttrs sllould be iD good tlilte,adcbusiq

When the American Embassy in
Iran was taken over almost a year
and a half ago, I, like most people
didn't take it too seriously at first. I
thought, oh, well, they'lllet them go
in a day or two. I wasn't too concerned abolit it, but, things were
pretty dull in the good old U.S.A. and
above all, election day was drawing
near. So, consequently the "hostage
crisis" came into being. Now, the
through no choice of their own B.nd
American people had something in
others volunteered to go, but that's
which to divert all their energies and
beside the point.
sympathies for 12 months. It ws all
The point is that they knew the
you heard about, all you read about,
chances of being killed or wounded .
and If that wasn't enough, there
But, I'm sure, not one of them
were yellow ribbons all over the
thought about being disabled only to
have their country, a few years
place.
later, forget them and leave them to
Now, don't get me wrong . I felt
bad for these people and their
survive as best they can. Are we as
Americans going to let this happen? ·
families, but I ahd another emotion
that was much stronger than my
It's no wonder there's so much
concern for the hostages. It was, and
static from the young people about
still is, anger. Yes, I'm angry to
the draft and even signing with the
selective service. Look what examthink that the American people can
be so blind and so stupid as to go
ples we have made of the Vietnam
veterans. No one in their right mind
bananas over this hotage thing but
when it comes to our men who fought
would choose to fight for a country
that won't even back them up. I'm
in Vietnam, they turn their backs.
I know, people probably think I
proud of my country, but I'm
have a special interest such as a ashamed of the people who run it.
husband, father, or brother who
We have grossly mistreated our
fought in Vietnam, but you're Vietnam veterans. We never did
wrong. All I have is a deep respect give them their due thanks and
and ~ppreciation for (hese men. And . welcomes when they came home.
I always have. I never have been And now, our president wants to
able to understand why more people

.

life

No western palace
Give President Reagan high preliminary marks for one achievement.
Despite that morning-roated inaugural and all the talk of a new age of
elegance in White House social affairs, he has been going out of his way to
avoid the trappings - or at least the appearance - of power that tripped up
a number of his predecessors.
He has gone out of his way to cultivate a personal relationship with
Congress. And he has made himself reasonably accessible to others outside
. the inunediate White House staff, including selected representatives of the
press.
It may not last. Such well-meant gestures at the beginning of an administration very often ·do not. But it is an encouraging start and carries
some hope that while this administration may inevitably become more functionally formal, it will have the sense and the will to stop short of a full-blown
"imperial presidency.II

Another hopeful indication in this direction is the report out of
Washington that the Reagans have no desire to keep up with the Nixons.
This president wants construction and other changes at his California
rancllkept to the minimum.
The minimum when it involves accommodating a president, however,
can be extensive. Secret Service and Defense Department spokesmen mention a helipad, fencing and alarm systems and housing for essential staff
members.
But nothing like the working over of Richard Nixon's residences at Key
Biscayne, Fla., and San Clemente, Calif., the cost of which, estimated in the
miltions, would have been worthy of palaces and continues to be a cause of
some controversy.
While the mountaintop ranch near Santa Barbara will be Reagan's principal private residence after he completes the sale of his Palos Verdes home,
it is not to be designated the Western White House.
At least not yet. To repeat, much at the beginning of an administration
can change by its end.
But we can always hope for exceptions.

take away the funds that would go to
help veterans. I know, you're
thinking, yes, but he's cutting furids
for other projects too. And I agree,
this is the only way our economy can
be helped.
But there are many less important
projects that won't be cut.
One problem with our government
is who they consider a Vietnam
veteran. Over the years, •• ·one who
served in the armed fortes during
the years of the Vietnam war were
considered Vietnam vets.
This is wrong. These benefits
should go only lo those people who
actually served in the war in
Southeast Asia. This would cut·down
greatly on the money being paid out
and would give creditwhere credit is
due .
I'msure that I don't standalone on
these issues and there will be many
who agree. If you feel as I do, please
write letters · to your senators and
congre.smen. Do it quickly so that
these brave men who risked their
lives, and in many cases lost their
ability to ever work again, became
addicted to drugs, and or lost their
families can be shown some appreciation.
Thank God, I still have the
(reedom to write such a letter! Susan Suttle, Long Bottom, Ohio,
985-4313.

Blames Congress

CABBAGE •••••••• !.~~.l!i;.19e

~

II
"The way I see it, as long as the Soviet media
knocks our foreign policy, we're on the right
· track."

••

provided by an article in the current

everyone. And the Reagan administration certainly has been
doing its energetic best to provide
new proof for that old truth during
its initial weeks on the job.
Take the case of the bilingual
education regulations, lovingly drafted by the Carter administration's
Department of Education only to be
summarily junked by the new
secretary, Terrel Bell. The move
has drawn both fervent praise, for
relieving the public school system of
a costly and overly complex burden,
and bitter criticism, for shortchanging a sizable minority of the
students in those schools.
Many on both side~. however, may
be reading more into the development than is actually there . And
they also may be less informed on
the issue than they think. Under the
confusing circumstances, a bit of
historical perspective conveniently

issue of "F oundation News", a
bimonthly publication of the philan-

thropically oriented Council on
Foundations, is particularly timely.
Contrary to apparently
widesw-ead belief, notes author Alan
Pifer, president of the Carnegie
Corp., instruction in languages other
than English is not new in American
education. It was common during
the 19th century in cornmunities
with concentrations of recent immigrants from continental Europe.
Bilingual education did not
become an issue until 1971, and then
it was one of a political rather than
social or cultural nature. German,
as a matter of patriotism, was out.
Along with it went almost all instruction in any lan~uage other than
English.
.
It was a dead Issue for almost half
a century, until the influx of Cubans
into Florida in the 1960s again

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created large-scale problems of
cultural assimilation. During the
next decade, Pifer observes, the concept of bilingual education underwent a change. These were the
years of the civil-rights movement
and heightened interest in ethnic
identity. Instruction in languages
other than Ef!8lish, along with courses in minority-oriented subject
matter, came to be regarded, at
least by advocates, as less a service
available than a right due.
. Bilingual education also became a
politically charged issue because of
its obvious greatest benefit to one
population group - Hispanics. The
story is in the statistics. Federal funds suport instruction in 74
languages, but Spanish programs
absorb65 percent of the money.
The reason is also obvious because they are the most
nwnerous, possibly 3 million of the
estimated 3.6 million students in the

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nation in need of language usistance. Hispanics represent 32 percent of
the Miami school population, 30 percent in New York, 45 percent in Los
Angeles, 52 percent in San Antonio,
31 percent in Denver, 35 percent in
Hartford.
The figures are from Pifer, ,who ·
goes on to note that if the nwnbers ·
are there so is the need because
these students are typically two or
three grade levels behind their age
peers, only 30 percent complete high
school, the dropout rate In some urban ghettos hits 85 percent and lw
than 7 percent complete college.
The federal government began to
involve Itself ·deeply in the problem
llttle more than a decade ago with
the bilingual Education Act of 1968.
Involvement grew rapidly, from expenditures of f/.5 milllon for 76
projects affecting some 26,000
students In 1969 to S107 inilllon for
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TENDER

Well, America, who do you think
will fight for us?
Well, I really wonder after watching the NBC report February 6.
It's a shame to see our country in
this shape but we can't blame ourselves. Congress has not let the pay
to our military men go up as fast as
inflation which has brought them to
getting food stamps and welfare. It's
no wonder their living in groves.
In this report hospitals are understaffed as the doctors left to get
higher paying jobs. And why not? As
one military man put it, "We are not
respected any more. The people
don't show it."
Well, 1 would like to get my heart
right out in the open on that note.
I've got love for our military men
and now women in the arrned forces
in this country and overseas.
They're one of a kind. They fight for
freedom and die for it to keep this
country free of Communist rule
because we know what It ia like. If
we could stop it we would. Our
military men and women do the
greatest job that can be done and the
American people haven't forgotten
them not by far.
So, God bless you all. - Floyd H.
Cleland, Box 223, Rutland, Ohio
45725.

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Berry's World---.

Today is Monday, Feb. 23, the 54th day of 1981. There are 311 days left in
the year.
Today's highlight in history: ·
On Feb. 23, 1954, the first mass inoculation of children with Salk antipolio vaccine began in Pittsburgh.
On this date:
In 1836, the siege of the Alamo began in San Antonio, Texas.
In 1861, President-elect Abraham Lincoln arrived secretly in
Washington to take office after a plot to assassinate him in Baltimore was
foiled.
In 1870, Mississippi was readmit\ed to the union after the Civil War.
In 1933, Japan began its occupation of China north of the Great Wall.
Ten years ago: The International Conference of Jews opened in
Brussels, Belgium.
·

didn't feel the way I do. They seem
to be forgotten, not only the ones who
were lucky enough t~ get hoine, but
some who are believed to still he
held prisoner in Southeast Asia. Why
are the American people so quick to
forget someone who risks their
to go to a God-forsaken jungle to
fight a war for them, to try to keep
them from some day having to live
under Communism.
A lot of men went over there

$149

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SOLID GREEN

News Editor

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1981

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�Page-~

Monday, February 23,1981

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The DailY Sentinel

'

Athens sophomore takes MVP honors

Gallipolis takes SEOAL's
'81 wrestling tournament

HOLDING ON - Meigs' Greg Thomas and
Logan's Doug Lattimer battle during Saturday's

SEOAL Wrestling competition at Meigs High Scbopl.
Gallipolis was the oversllleague champion with 183\2
points. Athens llolsbed second.

ROCK SPRINGS - Gallipolis
emerged as the winner of the
Southeastern Ohio League Wrestling
tolJI11Alllent Saturday ·at Meigs High
School.
The Blue Devils of Coach Steve
Lambert compiled 184 and one half
points over runnerup Athens which
had 161 points. Placing third was
Logan with 150 points; Ironton fourth, 70, and Meigs, fifth with 53 points.
In opening rounda of action, it
became evident that the competition
was going to be close right down to
the wire. As the day grew longer and
the final round of action got underway the league championship
still was not decided until the final
matches had been completed.
During the course of the day
senior grapplers of Meigs High
School were honored. ,Scott Hartinger, Brian King, Doug Neece,
Steve ea..Son, Brian Bauer, and
statistician Patty Cremeans and
Linda Eason were honored.
Here's how Meigs' wrestlers die!:
Scott Harrison, 98 lbs., third; Brill
King, 105lbs., first; Scott Hartinger:
112lbs., fourth; Brian King, .132lbs.,
second; Brian Bauer, 138 lbs .. fourth: Doug Neece, 155lbs., third; Mike

Jackson, 167lbs., fourth.
98lbs. Jones,

Heavvwelght -

.

Kevin Pull ins, pinned by
t renton ;

declsioned

by

..
GRAPPLING FOR POSmON - Gallipolis
wrestler Jeff Phlllips. 038 lbs.) struggles for position

~~Marauder
•

gals advance .in tour11,ey

ATHENS- The Meigs Marauders
scored an impressive to 411-37 win
over second seeded Belpre here
:. Saturday afternoon in first round
• play of the class AA Sectional girls'
• basketball tournament at Athens
High School.
The victory advanced Meigs to the
•. sectional finals against top-seeded
New Lexington at 2 p.m. Saturday.
,~-· Andrea Riggs led the Marauderet: .. tes with 14 points and was joined in
' double figures by Kristin Anderson.
Bobbie Nessel road and Cynthia Grif·
fin had 13 apiece for the Belpre
• Golden Eagles.
Coach Ron Logan's Marauder gals
jumped to a ~ first quarter lead to
take command of the game, keeping
the strong Belpre club from utilizing
.·· its game plan.
A great team effort by Meigs,
coupled by a second quarter drought
that allowed the Eagles only three
points that period, enabled the
Marauders to build up a 17-9 first
: ' half lead.
.
•·
After the halftime intermission,
Belpre stormed out of the
lockerroom with new hope and
pulled within one at the I: 59 mark in
the third period. Unlike the first
•· half, Belpre started to set the tempo
, of the game and put together a
•' comeback led by Nesselroad and
•· Griffin.
Before the quarter was over,
however, Meigs got back in the
•' groove by scoring four unanswered

:. Meigs' JV's
stop Logan
,
;:
,·
,·
,
•'

..
.• •
::
:;
,•
::

r;. :
,·
::
~;

,~
•, ,

with Logan's Jeff Russell during the SEOAL .wrestllng
tournament at Meigs High School Saturday. Athens'
EUi~ won the MVP trophy at the march.

ROCK SPRINGS - Last Friday
evening the Meigs Marauder junior.
varsity of Coach Mick Childa scored
one of its biggest victories of the
season}29-22 over Logan.
Meigs is now &amp;-13 overall and en·
ded the season 3-ll in league play.
After a slow start Meigs posted a 5-4
record during the second half of the
season.
Earlier in the season Meigs was
defeated by 17 points by the young
Chieftains, ·but Friday night the
game was all Meigs' .
Rick Chancey and Randy Murray
shared top-scoring honors with
seven points each. Eddie Johnson
led Logan with eight.
Meigs was 10 of 30 for 33 percent
from the field, while hitting nine of
16 from the line for 56 percent. Meigs
had 17 rebounda and Logan 15.
Friday evening Meigs' varsity will
play New Lexington in the first
round of the sectional tournament.

points, ending the quarter at 28-23.
Belpre made another comeback in
the fourth quarter, pulling wilhin
two poi'nts, ' 32-30, with 5:45
remaining in the game. Belpre
couldn't score again until the 2:48
mark , however, while Meigs
unreeled eight unanswered points to
put the game out of reach and claim
a berth in the sectional finals with
the 411-37 win.
Meigs canned 16 of 49 field goal attempts for 32 percent and hit 17 of 30
for 57 percent from the line. Belpre
hit 13 of 41 from the field for 32 per·
cent and canned three of 17 from the
foul circles for 53 percent.
Meigs had 16 turnovers and 15
fouls, while Belpre had 18 miscues
and 25 fouls . The winner of the Sectional finals will advance to the
D~strict Tournament also held at
Athens High &amp;hool.
Box score:

Mike Rowa.n, pin ·

Harrison, Meigs, 11 ·3.

105 lbs. - Russ Shaw, pinned bv . - - - - - - - - - - - - King_, Meigs ; pinned Thompson,
Logan.
112 lbs . - Rick · Shaw, pinned by
Geiger, Logan; pinned by Richar -

dson, 1ron ton.

119 lbs. - Mark Phillips, pinned
Johnson, Athens; won by default
O\ler Bacon, Ironton ; pinned Mc Bride, LOgan .
126 · lbs. John Acl&lt;erman,
decisioned Brennaman, Athens, ~- 0;
decis loned Latimer, Logan , 5·3.
132 lbs . - Scott Sm ith, pinned bV
King, Meigs; decisioned Lewis,
Ironton, 4·1; decisioned Ahamed,
Athens, 6·4.
138 lbs. - Jeff Phillips, declsioned
Russell , Logan, 10· 1; decisioned
sower, Meigs, 14· ~ ; decisioned by
Ellis, Athens, 7 ~ 5.
145 lbs. - Jeff ·Lahman, pinned
Carson , Meigs ; pinned BlackwelL
lron1on; declsloned Snyder, Athens,

11-6.

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Miller takes second tourney
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Johnny
Miller, 11 star on the PGA Tour in the
mid ·11170s, and one of its biggest
disappointments since, may at last
be fulfilling the recurring predictions that he would return to the top .
Miller won the $300,000 Glen Campbell· Los Angeles Open Sunday for
his second victory of 1981 - the first
time since 1976 that he has won more
than a single tournament in one
year.
During the years immediately
following 1976 Miller would have settled for one victory. Not until 1980
did he win again when he captured
the Jackie Gleason-Inverrary
Classic.
No wonder the blond from Northern California was down on himsell.
.
"I thought about quitting last
year, but I didn't want to quit
because it would be a bad motivation
for my 10-year-old son," he recalled
after receiving the $54,000 winner's
check Sunday.
Miller shucked off the despondency of his losing years with that
1980 victory, and came back to win
the 1981 Tour opener, the Tucson

Open. Now, he has added the Los
Angeles event, with a two-stroke
margin and a tournament record

score.
" I didn't set any recorda, the
weather did," said Miller whose 270
for 72 holes over the 7,~yard
Riviera Country Club was two
strokes better than the mark set by
Hale lrwln in 1976. On his final
round, the &amp;-foot-2 Miller shot a 3under-par 68 with an 111-foot putt on
the final hole when he was merely
trying to set up a sure closing putt
and preserve a one-stroke victory.
Tom Weiskopf finished second
with a closing round 68 and a 72-hole
total of 272, eqUalling the tournament record. He collected $32,400.
At 273, earning checks of $17,400
were Miller Barber, 71, and Gil
Morgan, 69. Morgan led the first
round and Barber the second.
On the sixth hole, Miller sank a 12foot putt that put him a stroke ahead
of Weiskopf lind he never was
headed.
He also birdied the seventh with a
!().foot putt and sank a 4G-footer on
the 14th to ail but wrap up the triunr
ph.

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Just give us a call or
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INSURANCE
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NAME

~ ADORES ~

____ ...___ _,. __ J

.~~~O.:E

··f)
· fAICt·UGP.N

Bfilpre (31) Griffin 5·3· 13;
Nesselroad 4·5·13 ; Hapney 4·0·8;

Muscari 1·0·2; Wigal 0·1-1. Totals 14·
9·37 .
Meigs (491 - Riggs 6·2· 14; An ~
derson 5·2·12 ; Smith l-4·6; Drehel 2·
1-5; K ing 1 4·6; Ol iver 1-3-5 ; Crooks

0·1·1. Totals 16·17-49.

·

Score by quarters:
Belpre
Meigs

centers in the league by naming five
Gibson , working with only
to the first two teams.
. Bruning as a starter, guided AHS to
Steve Bruning, a multi-talented an 18-2 mark and copped the SEOAL
sophomore center of the champion championship with a 13-1 record .
Since ·the 1979-M team was cornAthens Bulldogs, won out as Most
Valuable Player in a very dose race posed. entirely of seniors, there are
with Wellston's John Jeffers.
no repeaters on this year's squad.
Fred Gibson, fifth year coach of
Four of the 10 players named to
the Bulldogs, won out as Coach of the the first two teams w'ere unanimous
Year over two other nominees.
choices including Bruning and Jeffers on the first team while Logan's
· Dave Bell and Rick Teeters of
Waverly received all15 votes for the'
1984).81 ALL SEOAL
second team.
.
BASKETBALL TEAM
A total of 27 players were recomFlRSTTEAM
mended by the coaches for
HT.YR.
NAME-SCHOOL
nomination to the team. Eighteen
6-4 So.
Steve Bruning, Athens
landed berths on the squad.
6-4 Sr.
Todd Nibert, Gallipolis
Jeffers, a &amp;-3 senior, was officially
6
0 Sr.
Chris Barnes, Ironton
named the best free throw shooter,
6 3 Sr.
Rick Milburn, Jackson
hitting on 71 of 89 for an 80 percent
6-3 Sr.
John Jeffers, Wellston
average.
SECOND TEAM
Unofficially, he also led in scoring
6-9 Sr.
Scott Riggs, Athens
with a 21.8 per game average, and in
~ Sr.
Kent Price, Gallipolis
rebounding, picking off 13 per con&amp;-5
Sr.
Dave Bell, Logan
test. ·
6 I Sr.
Steve Ohlinger, Meigs
All of the senior players named to
5 9 Sr.
Rick Teeters, Waverly
HONORABLE MENTION
ATHENS : Brian Lavery ; GALLJPOLJS : Phil King; IRONTON:
J.inuny Morris; JACKSON: Allen Collins; LOGAN: Dave Berry;
MEIGS : Mike Miller; WAVERLY : Chris Smith ; WELLSTON: John
Derrow.

Nine seniors and one sophomore
make up the 1980-81 All SEOAL
Basketball Team selected Sunday
by members of the SEO Sportswriters
and Broadcasters
Association.
Meeting at Jolly Lanes in Jackson
along with seven of the league's
eight head coaches, the members
recognized the depth In outstanding

ned Perry , Logan; deciSioned
Morehead, Athens, U ·Q.

155 lbs. - Todd Fowler, pinned
Ogg, Logan; decisioned Gibson,
Athens, 6·2.
.
167 lbs. Andv Mills, pinned
Jackson, Meigs; declsioned Adams,
Logan, 10· 1.
1751bs. - James Johnston, pinned
by Ogg, Logan ; pinned Adams, Iron·
ton .
.
185 lbs. - Mike Stowers, pinned
Davis, Meigs; decisioned Whalen,
Logan, 8· 4; pinned by Sanders, Iron·
ton .

6 3 14 14- 37
9 8 ll 21- .t9

FIRES AT BASKET~ Scott Barnltz, (14) goes up lor a two point play
in Wahama's 79-59 non-conference win over Kyger Creek Saturday night.
Barn112 had 10 points on the night. Watching Barnllz Is KC's Terry Porter
(13).lo the bottom Is the Bobcats' Tim Barr (33).

Wahama defeats
Bobcats, 79-59 ...

Local bowling

IUSPSI-1

Feb. 18. 1981

Tum

Pomeroy, Ohio.

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Teaun scrit.'K - Zlde' ~ Sport Shop 2048.
Tc1un ~ame - Zlde'.ll Sptlrl Shop 708.

FIGHT FOR REBOUND - Kyger Creek's David Sands ( 11) lind
Brent Love ( 15) try to ootmuscle Wabama's York Ingles (25) as they bat·
tie for a rebound in Saturday's 79-59 Wahama victory at Mason. Saods
was the game'slop scorer with 17 points .

We've got you covered.
In these Inflationary times It should be
comforting to note that, although we're
your hometown power company, we're also
part of the American Electric Power System.
It's a 7-state network of generating
pJants that Is supplied by an extensive coal
delivery network and linked bY the most

Subscribers not desiring· to pay the carrier
may remit in advanet direct lo The Dallr.
Sentinel on a 3, 6 or 12 month bi.sis. Cred t
wfii be given carrier each m011th.

No aubecriptioi'UI by maU pennitted in toWN
where homf' carrier service Is avaUable.

MAIL SUII8CRIPTIONS

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Quisenberry signs contract

efficient power lines available. Plus It has a
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we deliver the most economical electricity
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..
So, as a result of all this, we·ve been
able to keep your electric rates below the
national average.·

FORT MYERS, Fla. (AP )- Dan
Quisenberry, as it turns out, will net
become the first spring training
holdout In the history of the Kansas
City Royals, American League 1980
baseball champions.
The side-armed sinke1·ball
specialist was on the field when the
Royals began their official workouts
Sunday, after he and club player
personnel vice president John

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Schuerholz shook banda on a oneyear contract.
Quisenberry, the team's bullpen
ace and the American League's
'Fireman of the Year in 1980 with a
12-7 record and 33 saves, is believed
to have signed for a little more than
$100,000.
Last year, Quisenberry made a lit·
tie more thar. the $.11,000 major
leai!U~ minimum.

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CORN and PEAS
17 oz.

MEAT..~.~ ..4/'1 00

~!ENNA SAUSAGE ....2/89$

'1 00

M OZ.

MAGIC

FIRESIDE

SALTINES

OXYDOL

BLEACH

69' lb.

•.279

79'

SUNBEAM

'169

SWEET ROLLS
Ore-Ida
Crinkle Cut

PARKAY

QUARTERS
2-LBS.
9~

FRENCH
FRIES .

Valley Bell 24 oz.

.Junior Ph.llp:tM&amp;, Ctt r11lyn &amp;clulcr ~ .

Junior Phc\~ 208, ISMbelle

GENERAL
MIDLAND, Texas ( AP)
Dillon, a spurtswriter fnr
Midland Repnrtc• ·'l'elegram, '1'1\S
killed in an automobile accident,
authorities said. He was 45 and had
been a sports writer for the
newspaper the ;~•st 12 years.

FLOUNDER
$

99

DIET RITE

14
- John Tyn.oe 557, Betty Smith ~21 ;

Cou.1h 192 ; John Tyn.oe 204,, Carolyn Bachner IYI .
Tt:um t~"rlell - 7.!dc'll Spurt Shop 1991.
1\·~un IHUilC - Zitlt&gt;':~ Sp11rtShup 709.

Vande Kamp 14 oL

conAGE

Drug

llitlh gume -

·source: E.E.I. StatistiCal 'n!larDook NO. 47 November, 1980.

Rita Oulllde Oblo
udWHIVIrllolo

Earlr Wt.daesday
MliC!d League
Ftb. 11, ltU

Tt·am

Sc armer5

It

»eries - Hob Cuuch 599, Piit Csrlitll 534;
Junior Phelps, J ohn Tyree, Btl! Porter ~I . Hel en

Send address to The Dally ·

,

Slarti new. r w~&gt;e k :

24

Hi~h

Sentlnel,lll Court St., Pomeroy, Ohiv 45769 .

. ..
_,.............

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

50
J.t

Ht!¥tlquarters
Tony's Carry dut

Member: The Associated Press, Inland Daily Press A.ssociatioo and the American
Nt!wtpaper Publishers Assoclatlon , National
Advertising Representative, Landing
AsSOciates, 3101 Euclid Ave., Cleveland,
Ohio,45115.
,

~~~~~=.~M~;".,;u•

w....., . '"• .,.,,.,

Pta.

Zld e 's Spt~rtShop

Honorable mention

~t:il~a:bo:u~t800=pe=op:le~j:w:n:pe:d~o:n:m:e~."...:...~Se=c~o:n:·:d~te~a=m=-~S:E::O~A_:L:_l~~~~~~~~~~

6 Rolls

MlxtdiA'IIUf!

Publiahftl eft~")' aft2rnooo ucept SwulJ.y,
Monday lhrouah Friday, lll Coorl St.-..t by
the ()hjo VaTiey Publl!hlng Compan).o •
Multimftll.a, Inc., Pomeroy , OtUc ~711t ,
fm..21~ . Serond cl.au pm~tage paid at

Notre Dame came out on top with
the help of a Cavalier blunder. With
10 secunda left and Virginia leading
5&amp;-55, the Cavs' Lee Raker failed to
get the ball in play within five seconda, turning it over to the Irish. Mter
a timeout, Tracy Jackson missed a
jwnper and Kelly Tripucka was
stripped of the ball before he could
shoot. Woolridge then grabbed the
ball and hit the winning shot from
about16 feel.
" I grabbed the ball, turned and
shot and 1 didn't think about it until!
saw it went through the hoop," noted
Woolridge, who said he didn't realize
the impact of what he had done " un-

CARMIN FAM. PAK

Pomfwy Bowllftll.anel
F...arly Wedaelday

A Dhllloa of M1ll~,lnc.

Mike Miller

8~9.

By Associated Press
It's getting to be old hat for Digger
Phelps.
"It's never the same the second
time around," says the Notre Dame
basketball coach.
Or the third, fourth or fifth, etc.
For still another time, the
Fighting Irish pulled off one of their
patented, headline-making victories
Sunday. They beat top-ranked
Virginia this time, 57-$, on a lastgasp jump shot by Orlando
Woolridge, who claimed: "I never
made a bigger basket."
The triumph by the 11th-ranked
Irish broke the nation's longest
streak by a Division I college basket·

WallaiDa scored II unanswered tack was led by Gibbs' 11 points.
points in the third quarter Saturday Barnitz, Gray and Ingles finished
night to take a conunanding lead with 10 points each.
enroute to a lopsided 711-59 nonSands led KC with 17 points, freshconference victory over Kyger man Brent Love 'came off the bench
ball team,
28 games
dating
back to r
Creek.
to score 11 points during the fourth last
year. But
you can
understand
Holding a 34-29 lead at the half, quarter and Barr canned 10.
why Phelps has become so nonCoach Lewis D. Hall's White
The loss ended KC's regular .. rhalant about such things - for the
F'alcons came out blasting in the season play at IH3. The Bobcats face
:sh, these high-profile triwnphs
third stanza behind the shooting of Southern in tonighfs Class A Sec- have become traditional.
York Ingles and Larry Gibbs to tional Tournament at Meigs High
The biggest one of all, of course,
jwnp into a 4!&gt;-29 advantage with School.
was on Jan. 19, 1~74. when they stop4:48 left in the canto.
Coach Gary Minton's KC reserves ped UCLA's record 83-game winning
Before the quarter ending buzzer, bouncing back from a lopsided loss streak 71·70 at South Bend. On other
Waharna held a 53-34 lead. The West Friday night at North Gallia, posted occasions, the Irish ended UCLA's
Virginians wrapped up the game their 14th victory this season, 47-44.
115-game nonconference streak at
with a 26 point fourth quarter.
. The win avenged an earlier loss to horne in 1!176, ended San Francisco's
Kyger Creek had 25 points during the Falcon reserves . Roger Stroud 29-game streak in 1977 when the
that final eight minutes, but as has led the way with 13 points while Ron Dons were No. I and beat DePaul in
been the story all year long, it came Martin and J . D. Bradbury had 11 1980 when the Blue Demons brought
too late.
·
points apiece . Jim Powell paced a 25-0 record and No. I ranking into
During the game's first two Waharna with 18 points. Overall, the Notre Dame's Athletic and Conperiods, Wahama held an IIHJ lead Bobcat reserve squad was 14-5, 6-4 vocation Center.
·
at the end of the first period behind against SV AC opponents.
With the end of the Cavaliers'
the shooting of Gibbs and Travis
Box score:
string, Louisiana State emerged
Gra)'. KC's Tim Barr, Rob Waugh
Kyger Creek 1591 - Sands 5·7 17;
with the nation's longest Division I
and Dave Sands kept the Bobcats Ba rr -4 2 10 ; Porte r J 1· 7; Moles J ·O· streak at 25 games - including Sun·
6; W a ugh 3 J 9; L,ove 3 .4· 11. Totals
moving.
day's 67-57 tNumph oyer Texas
2f· l7·59 .
During the second quarter, Scott
Wahama (79) - Gibbs 4·3·11 . Bar·
A&amp;M . The fourth-ranked Tigers clin·
Barnitz had six points while Gray 'n l1Z 4 2·10 ; Fowl e r 2 59 ; Roush 3·0· ched the Southeastern Conference
Gra y 5·0 10; Ingl es 50 10; Sisk 1 0·
and Ingles provided four each to 6;
championship by beating No. 8 Ten·
2 ; Kit c hen 408 ; Gi lland 0·2·2;
help Wahama maintain its lcad: San· Weaver 3·0 6; Paugh 2 I 5 and nessee 6IHi5 Saturday. ·
da and Jeff Moles kept KC in the con- Lavender 0 0·0. l'ptals JJ· 1l-79.
In other action Saturday, No. 2
By Quarters :
test with eight and four points Kvger
Oregon
State routed Washington
Cr eek
13 16 5 2.&gt;-59
respectively.
State 81-53; No. 3 DePaul stopped
Wahama
18 16 12 26-79
Wahama's balances scorinl! atMarquette 78-71; fifth-ranked Wake
Forest was upset by 20th-ranked
Maryland 94-80; No . .6 UCLA lost a
74-72 decision to Stanford; No. 7
Arizona State turned back Arizona
71-% ; ninth-rated Utah downed
Texas·El Paso 611-59 and No. 10 Kentucky defeated Vanderbilt IM48.
Also, No. 12 Iowa trinuned Purdue
67~2; 13th-ranked North Carolina
whipped Clemson 7rHil; 14th-rated
Wichita State beat Creighton 83-70;
15th-ranked Illinois downed
Michigan State 82~2; No. 16 Indiana
tripped Minnesota 7~; 17th·
ranked Brigham Young stopped
New Mexico 78-72; Northwestern upset No. 18 Michigan 74-70 and No. 19.
Lamar turned back Arkansas State

The Daily Sentinel

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the first and second teams will
represent the SEOAL in the second .
annual all-star game to be played at
Ironton on March 23.
Fred Gibson will coach the SEOAL
team against ihe Ohio Valley Conference all stars who won last year's
contest in the Ironton High School
Sports Center.

Notre Dame upset winner

,--------------1

~TMASTER :

The Daily Sentinel-Page-S

Pomerov-Middleport, Ohio

IDAHO

POTATOES
10-lb.

'199

RC 100
2 Liters

�Page-~- The

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Daily Sentinel

OSU establishes Gerald Rice fund
COLUMBUS - The Gerald B.
Rice Memorial Fund has been
established at Ohio State University
to honor the memory of an alumnus
and former assistant professor of
English at the Mansfield Campus.
Rice earned a bachelor's degree in
1952 and a master of arts degree in
1955 from Ohio State. While teaching
English at the Mansfield Campus
from 1965-00, he was active in the
campus' theater productions.
The fund will he used to support
theater and English programs at the
Mansfield Campus as well as to

ASTRO
GRAPH
.

PISCES (Feb. 2:0-March 2:0) Those with

whom you associste today are likely to hne
some rather clever ideas, but don't discount

your own. Yours could prove to be the best.

Find out more or what lies ahead for you in

the )'ear following yOW' birthday by sending

for your copy of Astro-Graph. Mail $1 for
each to A!itro-Graph, Bo:t 489, Radio City
Station, N. Y. 10019. Be 5ure to spedfy birth
dBte.

ARIES (March 21·Aprlll9) You're able to
add impetlL!l to situations which others
inaugurate today, and also do some good for

yourself because they 111 realize they need
you.

TAURUS f ApriJ %0-May %0) Associate with
active friends, rather than those wtw choose
to sit on the!r duffs. You tend to emulate the
behavior of your companions today.

GEMINI (M•y U-Juae Zll) Major
achievements are likely today . Once your
ambitiON are aro115ed there'll be no stopping you, especially if rewards are in .sight.
CANCER (June ZI·July !!) Your
organiZBlional abilities are honed to a sharp
edge today and you're apt to find several
situations where they can be put to good UM!.
LEO IJilly !l-A11g. !%) A little extra push
may be required today to finalize a matter
which you deem important. Give it top
priority. Stay with it until C(lnclwion.

VIRGO (Au1. %3-Sept. !2) U there is

someone you've met recently you'd like to
know better, don't wait for this penon to
make the first moves. The ball is in your

court.
LIBRA (Sept 23-0&lt;'L !31 Wortc: or service
which yoo've performed but for which
you've not been paid should be brought to
others' attention tc.day. Be tactful, however.
SCORPIO (Ocl.lt-Nov ..ZZ) You have excellent leadership qualities today but the):
may not be brought into full we unless exposed to challenging situations. Pressure
awakell5 your ~t.
SAGITrARfUS jNov. !3-Dt--c. ZH You function well today li.S the power behind the
throne, especially in matters where you feel
the need to protect the interests of one you

care for.

CAPRICORN ll)e(. !2--Ju. 19) You have
the rare ability today to add zest and ex-

citement to any group: Notice how others
will be watching you for their cues.
AQUARIUS (Ja•. !t-Fcb. lt) You will be
vel)' respoll5ive to the profit motive today.
When you see opportunities for gain )'ou' re
apt to move swiftly. Your assertiveness
won't be objecUonable.

.Exercise
classes to
·he offered
An eight week exercise dance
class will he held at the Meigs Senior

Citizens Center in Pomeroy beginning March 16.
Instructing the eight week class
which will heeld on each Monday
from 7 to 8 p.m. will be Kenda
Williams,
Meigs
High
d Junior
. t School
t
.
.
p hystca 1 e uca1ron ms rue or.
Ouring the classes, Mrs. Williams
willteachnewroutineswhichwiilbe
~.performed to music. She recommends that residents signing up for
the course wear shorts leotards and
,other comfortable cloUting.
~ Registrations will close on March
~ and may be made by sending
' iuune, address, phone nwnber and a
$15 registration fee to Kenda
,...~illiams, P. 0. Box 663, Pomeroy,
phio 45769. Those registering are
requested also to indicate if they
could attend an earlier class 6 to 7
l p.m. since registrationS are iimited
Md a second class will he fonned if
~ the first class is filled.
·
'

f

l

Fun ·with Foods
Delicious recipes offered
Many organizations compile and
sell cookbooks and the Syracuse
PTO advises that they have about 65
still available .
The recipes in the book are per·
sonal favorites of the members and
friends of the PTO. If you'd like one,
just caU Carol Jean (Mrs. Jim)
Adams and she'll he delighted to sell

you one.
One of the recipes in that hook is a
favorite of the Adams family
PATIO POTATOES
6 to 8 potatoes
I cup sour cream
I cup cottage cheese
2 tbsp. finely chopped onion ·
Sail and pepper to taste
% cup pa.nnesan cheese
2-4 tbsp. butter.

Cook, cool and mash the potatoes.
Do.not whip. Combine with the sour
cream, cottage cheese and onion and
then turn into a greased casserole.
Top with the parmesan cheese and
the butter. Bake uncovered for 2!!
minutes at 350 degrees.
Evelyn E. Hollon of Route I,
Minersviile, is a recipe clipper and
collector (and admits to an
unorganized mess).
Among the recipes she shares is
one for "Never Fail Pie Crust." The
thing about it which fascinates us is
that she says you can re-roli the
dough and it will always he flaky.
A second recipe she sent is for an
easy pie crust which calls for an oil
rather than a solid shortening .
NEVER FAIL PIE CRUST
4 cups flour

TUESDAY
;,o; AMERICAN
LEGION
rAUXILIARY'; Racin~ Post 602,7:30
;:_p.m. at the hall. Buckeye Girls'
{ State delegate and alternate to he
';-selected.
·
:. AMERICAN
LEGION
• AUXILIARY, Drew Webster Post,
~ 39, junior and senior meeting, 7:30
: p.m. Tuesday with Mrs. Florence
; Richards, Americanism district
chairman, guest speaker.
·
. MIDDLEPORT · POMEROY
Area Branch, American Association
of University Women, 7:30 p.m.

FY• cups Crisco
IT. sugar
I I; tsp. salt
If. cup water
I egg, beaten
IT. vinegar
Mix dry ingredients, cut in shortening. Mix other ingredients and
mix with a fork. Can he refrigerated
until time to use or can he rolled out
and frozen.
•
EASY PIE CRUST
Mix together 2 cups flour and I tsp.
salt. Stir in with a fork two-thirds
cup Mazola oil. Sprinkle over and
stir in with a fork 3 T. cold water.
Mix together and roll out between
two sheels of plastic wrap. Peel off
the top sheet and fit into the pie plate
then remove the other sheets of
plastic wrap. Bake at 450 degrees.
Another recipe sent by Mrs.
Hollon is for Date Delight and it
sounds delicious (and filled with
calories! ).
DATEDEUGtrr
Bring to a boil, I cup of chopped
dates, '~'• cup water and '4 tsp. salt.
Sirruner three minutes, add 2 cups
miniature marshmallows and cool.
Add If. cup chopped nuts.
Crush 14 Oreo cookies. Spread one'half of the crumbs in a nine inch
square pan; Spread date mixture
over the crumbs.
Whip one cup cream and spread
over the date mixture, then sprinkle
the rest of the cookie crumbs and the
chopped nuts on top.
Chill overnight.

Artists' Assn. sees watercolor ·
painting techniques recently
Mrs. Harry Lodwick, Chester,
demonstrated her technique of pain·
ting flowers in watercolor when the
Meigs County Artists Association
held an informal meeting at the Lod·
· wick home.
Mrs. Lodwick displayed several
pieces of her work and let the group
tour her studio. Several worked on
their own painting projects during
the evening. Don Salmons of Racine
shared some of his poetry al\d Mr.
and Mrs. Harold Circle gave a mat·
·
·ling demonstration.
Mrs. Lodwick

served cake and coffee.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs. Gircie, Mr. and Mrs. Lodwick, Mrs.
Delores Long, Betty McKinley,
Robert Smith, Sarah Fisher, Don
Salmons, Janet Koblentz, Angie
ha
d Rh
McCl
C pman, an
ojean
ure.
A meeting will take place Monday
night at 1 p.m. at Meigs High School
in the art room. A business session
will he held prior to the work
session. Some items to he discussed
will he a name for tire group, special
projects, and election of officers.

Rau /e:J1 uemons
,]
trates ShuuOW
_,] bOX
·
.
Mrs. Lot~ Pauley was guest
demonstrator at a meeting of the
Rutland Friendly Gardeners held
recently at the home of Mrs.
Margaret Edwards.
Mrs. Pauley s.howed how to make
shadowboxes wtlh srlk flowers and
then the members made s.ilk flower
P,la,ues. Two a~ra.~gements entitled
II s Cold Outsrde usrng weathered
wood were displayed by Mrs. Mar·
jorie Davis and Mrs. Judy Snowden.
Joan Stewart was welcomed as a
new member. For roll call members

Social Calendar,

I

'
:\""

wiU help to remind them of one of the
Mansfield Campus' most heloved
professors," said David Kramer,
dean and director of the campus.
"We are certain that Professor
Rice would have been delighted with
the enrichment that will come to the
English and theater programs,
especially with the theater prize that
annually will recognize the talent
and effort of an undergraduate
student," he added.
"All of us are grateful to the
generosity of Mrs. Fischer and Miss
Joachim,'' Dean Kramer said.

February !4, 1911

Tile ways and means may open this
coming year for you to take a speeial trip
you've always dreamed about Begin to
pn!pare for It so that )'ou'll be ready to go if
the owortunity prP.Sen~ itself.

t.

establish the Gerald B. Rice Theatre
Prize for the student or students who
contribute the most to the success of
theatrical productions at the campus.
The memorial fund was made
possible by contribu.tions through
the university's Development Fund
from Rice's mother, Mildred Rice
Fischer, and aunt, Cora Mae
Joachim, both of Pomeroy.
Rice, who was a native of
Pomeroy, died last April 'n.
"Faculty, staff and students are
looking forward to the way this fund

named a grain. Mrs. Edwards has
two poems, "Love" and "Roses" for
devotions. It was announced that the
club membe~ had received an invitation to the Chester Garden Club
open meeting in observance of its
42nd anniversary on March 4. Mrs.
Janet Bolin will he the guest demonstrator.
It was noted that an evergreen
tree had he planted by the club in
front of the Rutland High gymnasiilm. Mrs. Bolin announced a
home tour to he held in Colwnbus.
Sharon Black and Hazel Hilt were

Mondav, February 23,1981

..

fluoride--where
to find it. ..

DICK TRACY
ALWAYS DISCONNECTS
BEFORE' HE GOES

This is one in a series of articles
on dental health published by lhe
Dally Sentinel, In cooperatloa
with the Rehwinkel Dentar ·
Society, In observance of
National Children's Dent•!

Heallh Month.

The Dailv

' '' : .'

FEB. Z~, 11111

''
8:00

'

CAROL 6URNETT AND
FRIENDS
(I) ABC NEWS
(I) 3·2· 1 CONTACT
illlOYEREASYGuesi:SingsrMox·
ine Andrew a. Hostl!l : Hugh Oowna

&amp;lld

8:88

r:oo

The Original Pomeroy Bend C. B.
Radio club met at the home of
Elwood and Eileen Bowers recently
for a potluck supper. Next meeting
will he held at the home of Jim and
Virginia Buchannon in Middleport
with the date and time to he annouhced later.

BORN LOSER

'i?U'~&lt;E. JtSr

7:30

oor ~100 our

- __,..16 A ~OJIST,
~llWJKS.

Denise Adams

7:61
8:00

Miss Adams to wed
POMEROY- Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Adams, 414 Adams St., Ironton, an·
nounce the engagement of their
daughter, Denise Ann, to Michael E.
Rowley, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. H.
Rowley, Jr., 424 Delaware St., .lronton, fonner Meigs County residents.
The groom-elect is the grandson of
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Murray of
Ironton, and Mr. and IV!rs. W. .H.
Rowley, Sr., Route 4, Pomeroy. He
is also the great-grandson of Otho
Murray, 284 Mulberry Ave .,

Pomeroy.
Miss Ada1ns will graduate from
Ironton High School with the class of
1981. Mr. Rowley is • 1979 graduate
of Ironton High School. He has at·
tended the University of Cincinnati
and the Ironton Branch of Ohio
University. He is presen€ly employed with Rowley BuilderS of Ironton and the Ironton Tribune .
An open church wedding is pianned for June 6, 1981 at the First Baptist Church, Fifth and Vernon Sis.,
Ironton.

ANNIE

TO MET TUESDAY
HARRISONVILLE
The
Harrisonville Senior Citizens Club
meeting will he held Tuesday at 1
p.m. Susan Rogers will show slides
of Indonesia taken during her visit
there. Refreshments will he servej.

...HERE'S MRS. SPIHEW'S A17011E55,

Lm
TALK1116 TO THE OTHER SEE IF HE'S 8EEH

BRIN6 ALOH6 HER COPIES

PATIENTS! THIN H. HE

ANY RECENT MEDICARE
CLAIMS!

COULD &amp;E ••

Plans for the observance of
Husbands Night were made when
the Middleport Child Conservation
League met Thursday night at the
home of Mrs. Susie Soulsby.
Mrs. Peggy Harris presided at the
meeting. A request was made for
members to donate blood for Steve
S1nith at the Wednesday visit of t~e
Bloodmobile here. Husbands' Night
will he held at the American Legion
hall in Pomeroy with a potluck din·
nerat6:30p.m.
An invitation was read from the
Toddlers to Tassiers Mothers' Club
for a St. Patrick"s Day dinner on
March 17 at the Senior Citizens Cen·
ter, State Route 160.
The president thanked Mrs.
Soulsby for purchasing a vaienlin•
gift for a child remembered on
holidays by the club. The Mother"s
Prayer and the pledge to the flag
opened the 'meeting. Mrs. Nancy
Morris had devotions using "Widen
My Vision" and "It's Such a Busy
World'" by Helen Steiner Rice.
Twelve members responded to roll
call.
A hostess prize was presented to
Mrs Soulsby and Mrs. Mary Powell
gave a products demonstration at
l.lle close of the meeting.
Others attending and served
refreshments
by Jean Whobery and
·
Tonda Seidelable, hostesses, ·were
Mrs. Eloise White, Mrs. Janet Duf·
fy, Mrs. Thelma Osborne, Mrs. Susie

Abbott, Mrs. Helen Blackston, Mrs.
Debbie Thomas, Mrs. Ann Colburn.

Donations reach $32
The donation of proceeds of $32
from a products sale will he sent to
the Winslow Indian Mission, it was
reported when the Joppir United
Methodist Women met at the Loren
Benedum Home.
At the meeting several get·well
and thinking-of.you cards were
signed. A program on self-control
was given by Glenda Benedum with ·
Bible questions and readings by
each member.
Refreslunents were served to Opal
Harris,
Madeline
Buchanan,
Elizabeth Brooks, Gladys Dillon,
Margaret and Patricia Grossnickle,
and Helen Kibble.
The March meeting will he at the

karate expert at·
-; tempts to break an arrow a a it
whines past him at taO mph, an
amazing deep sea-diving, lifesaving robot. 8nd an astounding
new invention that enables a blind
peraonto actually feel thelettera on
the _E!IQ!. (80 mine.)

chall portrays Shylock in the
a4cond Shakeapeare play of the
new aeaaon. (3 hrs .)
·
8:30 Cll NEW BIBLE BAFFLE SHOW
8:68 C1J CBN UPDATE NEWS
8:00 (])IJC!l MONOAYNIGHTATTHE
MOVIES '.Evita Peron' 1981 Stare:
Faye Dunaway, JameaFarentino.
Cll 700CLUB
(I) 1121 •
DYNASTY Alt~ough
Blake's financial crisis is deepen1rtg. it' a Ma It hew who bene lit a when
Kryatle pawns her jewelry to help
bail him out after his rig ia sabo·
taged lor a second time. (80
mlna.)
Ill CIJ ®I M.A.S.H. WhUe the
-4077th plotaa aurprlaetocheer up
t)omeaick B.J. on hla wedding an·

Al,i.EYOOP
YESSIR. WE OUGHTA MAKE A
Mt'-JT OFFA Tl-1' ECOlOGY IW' TH'
WlLDERNESS G~PS WITH
S LICK SCHEME!

AS A MATTER OF

WE 1LL CA.L.L IT
WILDERNESS
RIGHT WITH 'rOU,

nlveraary, a fearlul Charleala nnt
on an ina~tection toor to the front

GASOLINE ALLEY

lines.
11:30 Cii
HBO SNEAK PREVIEW:
MAR:CH Jerrv Stiller and Anne
Meara highlight the upcoming
movies, sports and specials on
HBO In March.
111(1)®1 HOUSE CALLS Ann An·
deraon Ia upset because her ex·
husband is remarrying, Or. Ml·
chaeta is upset because Ann
seem a Inlet ua ted with a new doctor
at the hospital, and Or. Weatherby
is upset becsuae he's not getting

•
1 THOUSHT MY
H&lt;ITHER IVOULP
15E (SLAP TO
eEE ~\E . . .

.. . EIUT

-' lL 1

DIP wAe CRE ..TE
f'l?OEII.EM G,.. FOR.
EVE!&lt; Ya:JD) / .

enough sleep .

CIJ

il%J

WINNIE

Th' two qran'mas
was arquin'?

Over who
qit t'qive
Gretchen
a pi·ana!

Farrow, who h!i secretly involved in

Jes' 'cause th'chile
ain't talk the(J's
spoilin' 'er rotten!

an internationaljewel heist, lalla for
Gloria and perauadea Tucker, a
violiniat, to appear'wllh him In con-

cert . _(60 mine.)

8 CIJ I]D)

YO'RE CLEAN AS
A HOUfoJD'S TOOTH,
TATE.R • • --~.;.

SIZES 28-44

'G et o go od tim e go a, · o n th e~e

30% OFF

co ld w onter d a ys ron d nog ht s v; ith

a de li cious G u1o s p 1zzo . Choo se

Reg . 54.00

only $2.50

you r fa vo nte to p pon g fr om p ep p ero no, sau sa g e . mu sh·
ro o m !i , o li"e ':o , b on o no pepp ers, o nio m o r g reen p ep pe r!. .

___ ___
BAHR CLOTHIERS

/

NOW COMES
RIN5E·OFF

1 1:15
11:28
11,30

TIME

13"" Pizza ~ith your
choice of any 1 toppin

lEVI

.._N. 2nd AVE.

10:15
10:28
, 10:30
10:58
1 1:00

BARNEY

Winter
"Warm-up"
SPECIAL

_,,

-

3 DAYS ONLY

Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday
Februery 23 · 24 · 25

Gina's

MIDDLEPORT, OH.
·r

r=::ll

PEANUTS

IT LuAS A GREAT
OM IN T~E !fEAR

1605, MA'AM ...

·

LEXO: ALEXANDER TOA·
ADZE, PIANIST Thla program tealures Russian pianist Alexander
Tradr.e performing Stravinak~'a
'Three
Movement a
· from
Petrouchka ' .
·
10:00 CiiCHERINCONCERTCherlofeo·
lured In her own dazzling nightclub
act , which features her hltsonos.
(I)
ID FOUL PLAY Tucker· a
friend, world famous planlat Paul

LOU GRANT A Tribune
story about a doomsday group that
ie preparing a tall coat a to aurvivein
a dlsastercomea to frightening life
lor lou and Rou i when they a'e
caught in a killeratorm . (60mina.)
CIJ THE SHAKESPEARE PLAYS
'The Marchant of Venlce' Gemma
Jones playa Portia and Warren Mit·
chell portrays Shylock In the
second Shakespeare play of the
new season. (3 hra.) •
CIJ TBSEVENING NI!WS
CIJ CBN UPDATE NEWS
C1J RISE AND BE HEALED
CIJ CBN UPDATE NEWS
(]) • (I) C!l • (I) ®I il%1 •
NEWS
CIJ FESTIVAL OF PRAISE
illl OUTER LIMITS
(() NIGHT GALLERY
Cll CBN UPDATE NEWS
CIJD(!) THE TONIGHT SHOW
Guest hoet : Rich Little . Guests:
Charlton Heaton, Paul Williams
Peter Cook. (80 mine.)
Cll ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
CII MOVIE ·(COMEDY) ••lio
""Con't BIO@]"he MUIIC" 1880
(I) il%1 IIJ
ABC NEWS·
NIGHTUNE
8(1) C8SLATEMOVIE "QUINCY
M.E.: Aaheato Ashes' Stara: Jack
Klugman, Garry Walberg. An ambllious young buaineasman haatlly
ardara hie wife's cremation after
her apparent heart attack, making
11 almost imponlblelor Quincy to
prove hla suaplciona that he'e ac tually polaoned her . (Repeat) 'THE

NEW AVENGERS: K Iaior Kill' Part

IT ALL HAPPENED
IN ANTWERP

A PRINTER NAMED
ABRAf.IAM VERKOEYEN
BEGAN PUBLICATION OF
THE FIRST NEWSPAPE!i: ...

IMMEOIAfEL\" PROMPTING

TWELVE NASW LETTER:S
TO THE EDITOR

1

I. Stare; Patrick Ma'cnea, JOanna
Lumley. (Repeat}
®I MOVIE -(COMEDY) • ., "LoUIu •• 1850
11:46 CIJ MOYIE ·(DRAMA) • ., "No
Down Payment" 1G87
12:00 (1)1121. FANTASY ISLAND Two
l\eaulitul women get a once·
in -a -lifetime chance to see if they
can spend a half million dol lara with·
in 48 houra, and one of the world's
foremo at game h unteralearns what
it 's like to bathe target when ha,ia
hunled by killers . (Repeat; 70
mins.)

· ,

I XXX)
(Answers l9'"orrow)

,

Saturday"s l Jumbles: ALTAR CURIQ GROUCH MALLET
•
Answer : The cop attempted to se:lze an article of the • ;
'
crook"s
clorhlng- ··coLLAR"" HIM
•. '
.

.

.

Jllmbll Book No. 15; cont1lning 110 puzztu, Ia •w•llablt for 11.75 potlptikl
from Jumble, clo IN• f'IBWIP&amp;per, Box 34, NOfWOOd1 ~ .J. 07848. trtelude your
name, addrMa, zip code and make ctteckl peyaDtt to Newlp8petbookt.

.g

'IJ'42
tAKQ~i2

42

WEST

EAST

• 8 6 52
'IJ' A6

.Q97
'IJ'Q 3

tJ84

• 10 9 6 3
• K Q 10 5

.A J 8 7

.

SOUTH

• A J 10 4

'IJ'KJ10987&gt;

. ...

•s

3

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North
North

t+

Pass
Pass
Pa~s

2+

East
Pass

South

t'IJ'

2.

Pass

3t
Pass

4'IJ'

Pass

Pass

Opening lead :·~

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alon Sontag
O&lt;wald: "Here is a hand
thai decided a Swiss learn
match. The bidding in the box
took place at table one. South

.•

. ''

.'

..,'

'

'•'
!'

.

was one of those scientists

.K3

• •
•

.

Bidding tips off defense
NORTH

I

. ..

BRIDGE

Wt-sl

Jonaa playa POrtia and Warr8nMit-

Now arrange the circled letters to
fonn the surprise answer, as sug·
gestett b~ the above cartoon.

Print answer here: {

IIICIJ Ml THE WHITE SHADOW A
pretty, new English teacher, only
recently recovered from a nervoua
breakdown,becomeathetargetfor
a siniater harassment. (60 mine.)
lllJ THE SHAKESPEARE PLAYS
'The Merchant ol Venice' Gemma

I

t
I I I ]

courageoua

PATIENT •••

I

I HYDING

CIJ 1121e THAT'S INCREDIBLE A

1\HYOHE ELSE'S

Brannon home.

TO END MARRIAGES
Shelba J . Wickline, Racine, filed
suit for divorce in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court against James
D. Wickline, Rt. 2, Racine.
Reba E. Bo~nl '1'as grated a divorce from Burley A. Board. The
marriage of Norman Eugene
Hawley and Linda Sue Hawley was
dissolved.

I BOYHB
I [J

"WaltUntHDarlc" 1817

MANYTIMES ,. J1JGT

ANNIE ·· AND, OH- AGK HER TO

LUFEK

il%J.

U.S.A.)
AMERICAN CATHOLIC
Cil MOVIE ·(SUSPENSE) •••

I'VE Sfftf HiM HERE ,•. THE MGRAY

REDUCED I

BY

(Cioeed-

CIJ

MCCL plans Husbands' Night

WAY TO SOLVE
PROBLEM
The way to solve the ring-aroundthe-bathtub problem is to permit the
kids to indulge 'their natural

MEN'S
FASHION
JEANS

Blair.

seta up a law practice, and lnCLH"I
the fury of l'lia friend sand neighbora
by defending a man accuaed ot
C\aaJing them In a land fraud deal.
(60 mina.) (Cioaad-Captioned;

.-g-ue-sts_.----------a-b-ho_rr_e_nc_e_fo_r_w_as_hi_·ng_.- - - - 1

Tuesday at the Meigs Inn. Mrs.
Ellen Ball to speak on " Facing the
,,
Problem of Abuse."
HARRISONVILLE ., SENIOR
CITIZENS CLUB, 1 p.m. Tuesday
with Susan Rogers to show slides on
Indonesia. Refreshments.

Frank

Copjionod; U.S.A.)
( ] ) . C!J NBC NEWS
Cll THE DOOR
CIJ BOB NE-ART SHOW
(I) FACE THE MUSIC
•
Ill (I) 1BJ CBS NEWS
(I) WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
illl HISTORY OF SPACE FUGHT
ABC NEWS
Cll CBH UPDATE NEWS
(])8 PM MAGAZINE
C1J NORM-'" VINCENT PEALE
CIJ ALLIN THE FAMILY
FAMILY FEUD
C!l NASHVILLE ON THE ROAD
111(1) TICTACDOUGH
(I) lllJ
MACNEIL-LEHRER
REPORT
®I NEWS
CIJe BULLSEYE
CIJ WORDS OF HOPE
CIIMOVIE-(COMEDY)'• "FooHn'
Around" ttaa
Cil SANFORD AND SON
CIJIII(I) JDKER'SWILD
C!l®l HOLLYWOOD SQUARES
(I)
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Marehallva The Citadel
@ DICK CAVETT SHOW
il%1. FACE THE MUSIC
Cll CBH UPDATE NEWS
CIIDC!J LITTLE HOUSE ON THE
PRAIRIE Adam and Mary Kendall
return to Walnut Grove where Adam

&lt;Ilil%Je

Sweetheart banq1.jet
success recently

CBer 's meet recently

RAINBOW FACTORY
CII MOVIE ·(CARTOON) •••

Cil

8:30

four ordinary word a,

tiJeC!le&lt;Il®HiJid NEWS

C1J

"Snoopy, Come Home" 1172

I was fortunate in growiJ!g up in
a community that had fluoridated
water, but this is not available
where my fa,mily and I live now.
How can I obtain fluoride protection for my children?
There are various ways you
can provide fluoride proteetion
for your ,children on a continuous
basis, through topical applications, tablets, gels, mouthwashes and toothpastes.
The best person to guide you in
administering fluoride to your
children is your family dentist.
The dentist is able to decide what
will be most appropriate for your
children hased on the conditions
of their mouths and their dietary
habits. In non-fluoridated com·
munities, dentists often apply
topical fluoride solutions to the
surfaces of children's teeth at the
time of the regular checkup and
For in-between
cleaning.
checkup times, the dentist may
.advise the use of fluoride tablets
or gels and prescribe ac·
cordingly.
Fluoride toothpastes and
mouth rinses are easily obtainable without prescription
and, while they do not have the
strength of the prescribed
products, studies show that they
are helpful in preventing dental
disease.

Unscramble these four Jumbtea,

one letter to each square, to form

I I I

EVENING

'

The Men's Group and the Young
Adults of the Laurel Cliff Free
Methodist Church held a sweetheart
banquet recently in the multipur·
pose room of the Senior Citizens
Center.
.
Uoyd Wright gave grace and
following the banquet a program of
music was presented by the Rev.
Floyd Shook and Mrs. Sharon
Wright. Scripture from I Cor. 13 was
read by Mrs. Brenda Haggy. Steve
Eblin had prayer and there were
readings by Mrs. Doris Shook and
Mrs. Jean Wright.
Attending the dinner prepared by
the church women were Mr. and
Mrs. Harry Surface, Mrs. Euia
Haggy, the Rev. ancj Mrs. Floyd
Shook, Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd Wright,
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Haggy, Mr. and
Mrs. Ernie Haggy, Mrs. Evelyn
Young, Mr. and Mrs. James
Gilmore, Mr. and Mrs. Mike Wright,
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Eblin, Mr. and
Mrs. Wallace Fetty, Mrs. Iva
Powell, Mr. and Mrs. Richard John, son, Mr. and Mrs. Larry Clark, Mr.
and Mrs. Harold Meadows, Mrs.
Diana Ash, Mrs. Janealee Johnson,
Myron Eirich, ·Virgil Saunders, and
Charles Bush.

Television
• I •
vtewmg

ftfll}f.\.ftiDft

~ THATSCRAMBLEDWOADGAMi ;
~· ~ ~~.,
byHenriAmotdandl!.&gt;bLae

who believe firmly that the
more bi~s you make the bel·
ter you are playing. Warned
away from a spade lead, West
opened his ace of clubs. The
defense started wjth two club
tricks. Later on, when South
played trumps he went up
with his king. lost two trump
tricks and a vulnerable
game."
Alan: "I suppose at the
other table, South bid lour
hearts righl over the two dia·
mood retiid. got a spade lead,
never lost a club trick and
made five or six odd ..,
Oswald: '" Exactly so 1 The

'

:•
·:
~

•
; :
;
· '
;
'
·l
: ;
r

:
, ,
' ;
' '
. l
•

losing South went through all

:

sorts of explana lions of how
lucky the man who didn't
show his four card spade suit
had been. How failure to bid
sr,ades might have cost a
sam, etc. , etc."
Alan: '"He might be right
once in a blue moon, but if
North couldn't lind a rebid
alter South's one heart, fol·
lowed by a direct jump to four
hearts. then slam was not
likely to be missed .""
Oswald: "As the late Harry
Fishbein, one of the greatest
natural players once said, 'Let
others have the education. I

,
: :
· '
:
.
·:
.

:.
·;
·
.
:·
,
• ·•

want to win.' "
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

~tUJM'Otlt'
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
I Business
1 Dlataff title
place
2 Sports
5 Proclamation setting
10 Region
3 Pay
11 Bellowed
f Scottish
13 Paper size
river
If One of the
5 Wandering
f Destruction
Yestenllly's Alllwer . '
Cesars
15 Black cuckoo 7 Answer to
IS Gear
"Who's the
20 Terrify
31 Sultanic
17 Nigerian
greatest?"
Z3 One pursuing
decree ·
UibeKnan
&amp;Inventive
24 Little
32 Stay clear
18 Prison
one
red flower
of
attendant
9 OUtdoor
25 Lace
33Snake
!0 Dutch
area
21 Repudiate
35 Identical
township
1% Thingumabob %8 Biblical
38Sterlin&amp;
Z1 Scrap
18 Nucleus
sacrificial
orSmut,s
%%Caesar's
II Lover boy
site
38 Headed,
partner
Z3 White sauce
21 Challenged
%7Whetatone
Zl Apt. adjunct
(abbr.)
Zl Regardin(
38 New York lake
3f Stitch

35He snoops

to conquer
38 Dangerfield,
to paLs
37Hebrew
prophet
3t Diane or Alan
fG Appoint anew
41"'1lre
Razor's

-~~

e Principle
f3Sambar

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here'a how to work It:
AXYDL. BAAXIl
Ia LONGFBLLOW
One lett•r simply stonds for oncither. In this sompte A to
used for the three L's, X for th• two O's, etc. Sln1le lellers,
•po~trophea, the lenph and formotion of the worda are oU .
hints. Eath doy the code tellers are dlfterent.
•·

...'.

..•
•J

caYPrOQUOTBS
NLG

WGCN

RHIKV'C
LGE

CLG

AEHSUTG.

NH

LGKM
LKC

uc
K

NBEV
NH

.

Jt ·

NGT'l:

WGKBNUSB~

C K "J L K

.

YBUNEP

Yeate,Uy's CrypiOq!IOte: HE IS ALWAYS THE SEVEREST
CENSOR OF THE MERIT OF OTHERS WHO HAS THE LEAST •
WORTHOFHISOWN.-EUASLYMANMAGGON

�February 23,1981

••
Paqo&gt;-3-The Daoly Sentonel

Monday, February 23,1981

Pomeroy-Moddleport, Ohoo

for Ren1

Food for Thought

Tips for storing bread.
BY DIANA S EBERTS

County Extension Agent
Home Ecuomrucs
Fore1gn breads are fun to make
and their dehcoous flavors add zest
to the daoly menu. People m dol
ferent countr1es take pnde m the1r
ethn1c rec1pes, and breads are one of
the most mterestmg foods to compare The flaky, filled pastry known
to AmeriCans as Damsh Pastry was
ongmally prepared m V1enna . This
pastry became very popular m Den
mark and was therefore called
Damsh Pastry even though the
people m Denmark shU refer to thiS
bread as V1enna Bread
Cardamon 1s a favonte sp1ce m the
Scandinavian countnes Jule Kaga
IS a Norwegian sweet bread made
wtlh frwt and flavored w1th th1s
sp1ce
The French peoi)le are

famous for baking long, slender
loaves of crusty bread that they serve at almost every meal French
bread has a rmld flavor and may be
served w1th JUSt about any mam
dish At breakfast French bread IS
popular as a food to be eaten w1th
coffee or hot chocolate The CriSp
texture of thLS bread makes 11 a
special attractiOn w1th soups,
salads, and soft entrees such as
spaghetti and eggs It may even be
served for dessert w1th frUit and
cheese
English muffms are now a popular
breakfast and brunch treat m
America They have a crusty texture and dehcwus flavor when served w1th spread, peanut butter or
Jelly When Enghsh muffms are
prepared, they are coated wtth corn
meal to gtve them the crusty texture

I

I

that we ail enJOY Swedish Almond
Buns are very popular m Sweden
This sweet bread os often served
wtth coffee for breakfast or nudmormng snack Swedish Almond
Buns are very easy to make because
the~ don't have to be kneaded
The homemaker should thmk
about stormg the mgred1ents and
fomshed product when bakmg bread
to keep them as fresh as poss1ble
Followmg 1s a hst of helpful hmts for,
stormg bread and rec1pe mgredients
SfORAGE TIPS FOR
BREAD AND
BREAD INGREDIENTS
Flour can be stored at room temperature m a b ghtly closed con-

tamer
Whole gram flours keep best m a
cool dry place or m the refrigerator

Dry yeast may be stored several
months m a dry cool place Compressed yeast should be stored m the
refngerator Be sure to use before
the expiration date stamped on the
package
Bread becomes stale less qwckly
m a bread bO• at room temperature
than when 1t 1s store~ m a
refrigerator
Wl'llp freshly baked bread and
rolls m mo1sture proof after they
have cooled to keep them m01st

Laurel Cliff Health Club meets
A donatoon to the heart fund was
made when the Laurel Cliff Better
Health Club met at the home of Jean
Wroght
Dons Shook had the openmg
prayer and readings mcluded " A
Heart 1s Like a Valentme" by Mrs
Wnght , "Heart Gifts" by Mrs Ann
Mash, " Heart and Flowers" by Mrs

Troop leader to speak

Remove as much a1r from the
package as possible
White bread may be stored m the
Mrs A R Kmght, long-tune
freezer for s1x months if 1t 1s bghtiy .leader m Me1gs County G1rl Scoutmg
wrapped m mOisture proof paper
actlVlhes, Will be speaker for the
Breads woth nuts and frutt should be Middleport JuniOr Troop 1039 next
eaten after three months of freezer week
storage
At Tuesday's meetmg the girls
KORN CONFINED
discussed lntematlonal Thinkmg
Mrs Janet Korn remams confmed Day and made posters for G1rl Scout
to Veterans Memonal Hospital, Week to be observed March 8
Room 146 She needs '72 pomts ci through 14 Cathy Thomas and MIDreplacement blood The Red Cross dy Spencer held the flags for the flag
Bloodmobile wtll be m Pomeroy ceremony, and Kun Stewart and
Wednesday and blood g1ven can be Amy Luckeydoo served refreshcredited to her then
rnents

SLINDEREu.A MEETS
Conme Rankm lost the most
we~ght and Carla Chevalier was runner-up m we1ght loss at the Thur- ,
sday mght meetmg of Slmderella
held at the Chester f1re stab on
)'
At the Mason Class, Francos
Oliver lost the most weight w1th · Sh•rley Tucker as nmner-up The
Tuesday evemng, Pomeroy class was
cancelled due to the bad weather

Ads~

FINANCIAL
REPORT OF
TOWNSHIPS

For Ftscal Year

Endtng December

31, 1980
Oran9e Townshtp
Metgs County

Rf 2 COOIVtlle,
Ohto
Feb 12 1981
I certtfy the followtng

report to be correct

Ntna Robtnson
Townshtp Clerk
Tel No 614
985 3869
SUMMARY OF
CASH BALANCES,
RECEIPTS AND
EXPENDITURES

Balance

Jan 1, 1980
General Fund
$4 941 00
Motor Vehtcle

Lt cense Tax

Fund
Gasoltne Tax
Fund
Road and Brtdge
Fund

2 293 84
I 281 86

F tre Protectton

791 53

80 96
Fund
Federal Revenue
101 08
Shanng Fund
9 490 27
Total
Total Rece1pts
General Fund
l4 147 34
Motor Veh1cle
L1cense Tax
1004216
Fund
Gaso11ne Tax
16 BOO oo
Fund
Road and Bndge
Fund
2 625 34
F 1re Protect• on
Fund
2 365 91
Federal Revenue
Sharmg Fund
3 125 00
Total
4'1105 75
Total Rece1pts
and Balances •
General Fund
19 088 34
Motor Veh1cle
L1cense Tax
Fund
1233600
Gasol •ne Tax.
Fund
18 081 86
Road and Br1dge
Fund
341687
F1re Protect1on
1 446 87
Fund

F ederal Revenue
Sharmg Fund
3 326 08
Total
58 696 02
Expenditures
10 364 08
General Fund
Motor VehiCle
1 IN•n~P. T~x

Fund
11 099 89 9
Gaso11ne 1ax
14 620 95
Fund
Road and Br1dge
Fund
2 556 88
F •re Protec t1on
Fund
2 401 54
Federal Rever!ue
Shartng Fund
574 77
Total
41 ,5 13 II
Balance
Oec 31 , 1980
General Fund
B 724 26
Motor Veh1cle
L 1cense Tax
Fund
1 241 11
Gasolme Tax
Fund
3 460 91
Road and Brrdge
Fund
959 99
Ftre Protect1on
Fund
45 33
Federal Revenue
Shanng Fund
2 751 31
Tolal
17 182 91
CASH BALANCE ,
RECEIPTS AND
EXPENDITURES
BY FUND
General Fund
Balance Jan 1
1980
494100
Rece1pts
General Proper ty
Ta x- Rea l Estate
and Tra1ler
(Gross)
3 698 81
Tang1ble Persona l
Property T a:x
(Gross)
51 65
Estate Tax
(Gross)
3,084 62
Local Government
and State Income
Tax
3,209 25
L 1quor Perm.t
Fees
100 60
C1garette L1cense
Fees and F 1nes
(Gross)
78 75
Ad1ustments and
Refunds
435 6U
Other
3,488 OS
Total Rece•pts
14,147 34
Total Beqmnmq

~------------------------.

I
1

Cu'rb Inflation.
I
p ay cas h f Or
I
I
I Classlfleds and
I
I
Savelll

Publtc Not1ce

Balance Plus
Rece 1pts
19 088 34
Expenditures
Total E&lt;p ~
Adm
8 707 23
Town Ha lls,
Memonal Bu ld1ngs
and Grounds
125 00
Cemeter 1es
766 48
L1ght1ng
765 37
Grand Total Exp General Fund 10 364 08
Balance Dec 31
1980
8 714 16
Tota l Ex.p Plus
Bal Dec 31
1980
19 088 34
Motor Veh•cle
L1cense Tax
Fund
Ba lance Jan 1
1980
1 293 84
Rece1pts
Motor Vet11cle
License Tax
10 042 16
Total Rece•pts
10 042 16
Total Beinn•ng
Balance Plus
Recetpls
12 336 00
Expend1tures
Total Exp MISC
11 094 89
Grand Total Exp Motor VehiCle
L •cense T a)(
Fund
1109489
Balance, Dec 31
1980
I 141 11
To tal Exp Plus
Bal Dec 31
1980
12 336 00
Gasoline Tax
Fund
Balance Jan 1
1980
I 281 86
Rece1pts
Gasot •ne Tax.
16 800 00
Total Rece1pls
16 800 00
Total Beg10n1ng
Balance Plus
Rece1pts
18 081 86
Expend1tures
Total Exp MISC
8 705 45
Mamt
5 915 50
Grand Total Exp Gasoline Tax
Fund
14 620 95
Ba lance Dec 31
1980
3 46{) 91
Total E&lt;p Plus
Bal Dec 31
1980
1808186
Road and Bndge
Fund

2 625 34
Total Rece• pts
Total Begmn•ng
Balance Plus
3 416 87
Rece1pts
Expenditures
Tofal Exp M1SC
1 456 88
Grand Tota l Exp Road and Br• dge
Fund
245688
Balance Dec 31
1980
959 99
Total Exp Plus
Sal Dec 31
1980
3 416 87
Ftre Protect1on
• Fund
Balance Jan I
1960
80 96
Rece1pts
General Property
Tax - Rea l Estate
and Trail er
(Gross)
2 324 60
Tang1ble Personal
Property Tax
(Gross)
41 31
Total Re ce1pts
2 365 91
Tot at Begmnmg
Balance Plus
Rece1pts
2 446 A7

II B~~~ce ~::e:pts

791 53

General Property
Tax - Real
Estate and Trailer
[Grassl
2 625 34

,_Milppy .flcll

u- FRoom~

I - lou i111d Fauna
1- Y.ard Sillf
1- l'ubl 1c S.lt
&amp; Auc11on

u - S pice tor Rent
t1-Wilnlld IO IIIII I
41- Equlpmtnllor 1te11t

eMERCHANDISE
51 - HouSfhOICI GOOCII

u - ca

TV Rad10 Equ pmflll
5J- AIIt quu

11- Htlp Wilnttd

SIIuilted W•nttd
lnsyrilnce
Bus lnltn lr111n nt
Schools lnstrycl on
R11d10 TV
A Cll Rt'Pillf
1- W•ntld To Oo

11I 314 1' 1-

54- MISt Mtrch1nd1Jt

U.- Butldl"l Supphel

5'- """ lor hie

Bustnen

n - l1vutock
14- HI'( &amp; C.r• n
15- Seed &amp; Ftrtll ur

Serv1cu

eTRANSPORTATION
71 - AUfO~ fOr hlf
1J- V&lt;1"s&amp;4W 0
74- Molercycln
15Auto P•rt5
&amp; Acnuones
71- Ayto RtP&lt;1 r

e REAL ESTATE
31 - Homfl· tor Slit I
)2- Molui•.Homu
lorhle

ll- F•rm• tor S.lt
34- I"IIAitU IUI Idilltl

1
3 _ _ _ _ __
4 _ _ _ _ _ __

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

8 _ _ _ _ __

1~

----'-----

11 _ _- : - - - - - - 12
13 _ _ _ _ _ __

23 - - - - - - - 24
-_
--_
- -_
--_25 _
_
_
26 ______.______
27
28 . _ _ _ _ _ __
29 . _ _ _ _ _ _ __
30. _ _ _ _ _ __

U-- loh I Acrlillt
J•- •••1 Est•le W•nlld

Want Ad Adver11s1ng
Deadlines
1 JO PM D11IV

12 Noon Ulklrllrt

lor Mond6V

31
32 _ _ _ _ _ __
33. __________
34. _ _ _ _ _ _ ___
35 _ _ _ _ _ __

14 _ _ _ _ _ __

eSERVICES

31 - Rt~llon

11-Home 1mproveme1111
12 - Piumblnt I Euu•hnJ
U - E,uv•hnt

••Eleclnc•l
&amp; tlelrialtrlhon

u - Gtner•l H•ullnt
U- M H

Rates and Other lnformahon

..

,
'"
"'

C11h
I diV

l diiYS

15 - - - ' - - - - - - - 16

Rep•tr

11- Upholtltrv

1S Word I or Under

IJO

1d•r•
• ell )II

l6.ch

word O\ltr tnt m inimum II wordlll

Chtrtt

"'

IU

110

'"

l11

4 nnfl 11r word'" dill'

Ach runn1ng olhtr INn conucutiYt dlyt will bt Chilrlld 111 lfll Idly
,..,,

Mao I Th1s Coupon w1th Remottance
The Daoly Sentmel
Box 729
Pomeroy, Oh1o 45769

~-----------------------J

In memor'( Cud ol _.nk' ilnd Ob1lutrv 'cent1 pltr word SlOG
mtn1mum Cillh lnldv•nn
MODIIIt HOmt Ulll 6nd T 'rd lillill Itt ICCIPttd n&gt;~l¥ with Ulh wlll'l
order 15 (ll'tl cl\lrllt tor iidl urrylna l o• "'umDr In C•r• ol TPII
5tntlntl

!21 13 lie
--~P~u~b~
ltc ~N~
o~
h~
ce~--­
PUBLIC NOTICE
B1ds Will be rece1ved by
the V•llage of M •ddleport at
the Mavor s off1ce 237
Race Street until 4 00 PM
March 4
1981 for the
lollowmg veh• cle
19 70 Ford
Sty les•de
P1c kup
The V11/a9e reserves the
nght to re1ect any or all
bids and t o wa•ve any 1n
formal •f• eS 1n b•dd•ng
(21 16 23 2tc

Public Notice
by law and are set forth '"
the b 1d proposa I
The date set for com
plet1on of th 1s work shall be
set forth 1n the b1dd•ng
proposal
Each b1dder shall be
r equ•red to file W1th h1S b•d
a certtf•ec;l check or
cash1er s check for an
amount equal to five per
cent of hts b1d, but In no
event more than f1fty
thousand dollars or a bond
for ten per cent of has b1d,
payable to. the D•rector
B1dders must apply, p.p
the proper forms, Rfr
qual!f•cafion at least ten
days pr1or to the date set
for open1n9. b•ds 1n ac
cordance w1th Chapter 5525
Oh•o Rev•sed Code
Plans and speclf1cat10ns
are on f1 e in the Depart
ment of Transportation and
the off1ce of the D•strtct
Deputy D~rec tor
The Dt r ector reserves
fhe r ight to re 1ect any and
all b•ds
OAVIDL WEIR
DIRECTOR
Rev 8 17 73
(1113 (3) 1 2tc

Public Notice
NOTICE
OFFICE SPACE
FOR MEIGS
COUNTY WELFARE
DEPT
In accordance w•th Sec
f1on 307 86 of the Oh•o
Rev•sed Code sealed b•ds
w1ll be rece ved by the
Me1gs County Board of
Comm1ss•oners •n the1r ot
Ice located '" t he Cour
thouse Pomeroy Oh•o un
111 12 noon Qn March 10
1981, and W1fl be opened
and read aloud at 2 00 PM
for the followmg bulld.ng
lease Each b1d to meet the
c ond.t1ons
and
speCi hcattons as follows
Off• ce budd.ng to house
the Me1g s County Welfare
Depar tment 3 000 square
feet m1n1mum to ta l sp~ce
2 500
sq uar e f ee l
m•n•mum off1ce space
co ns•st•ng of a m1n1mum of
15 rooms toil et faclllf•es
for men and women and at
least 15 parkmg spaces for
automob• les
Ren.tal requtred for sa1d
bu1ld 1ng
and
r e lat ed
facd1t•es should be broken
down for a I vear 2 year
and 5 yea r bas•s All b1ds
shoul d •nd1 cate the ren tal
necessa ry f or the b•dder lo
prov1de ma1ntenance for
the exter1or and tntenor of
the buildtnQ and the rental
requtred
f The ma.n
tcnance •s prov1ded bv the
underSigned
The Board of County
Com m• SSIOners
may
requ re add•t •onal contract
prov s1ons w1th the sue
cess ful btdder •nclud1ng
but not lim• ted to the nghl
of the opt1on to cancel the
lease, tf necess ary
The front of the envelope
enc los•ng th e b•d must be
marked
Sealed B•d
Welfare
Department
BulldtnQ
B1dder to fur
nlsh the•r own form
The Board of County
Comm•sstoners may ac
cep t the lowest b•d, or
select th e best btd for the
and
•ntended purpose
r eserve th e nght to re1 ec t
any or all b•ds and or any
part thereof
MEIGS COUNTY
COMMISSIONERS
MARY HOBSTETTER
CLERK
11123 (3)2,21c

--

Public Not1ce

11 - l='lrm Eq111pmenf
&amp;1- WilniiCI to euv
11- Truclu lor S.alf

Opportunuv
11- Mon•v lo L.ou
11- Prof.JSIOR&lt;11

publ1c sale on th e prm1ses
of
BANK
ONE
OF
POMEROY NA Court 8.
Second Streets Pomeroy
Oh10 on the 5th day of Mar
ch, 1981 at 10 00 AM EST
Terms of sale Cash
Items may be sold m
un.ts or parcels and the
seller rese rves the nght to
re \ect any and all b1ds
974 New Moon un
furniShed 60 x 12 Mob1le
Home

~

e FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

eFINANCIAL
21 -

21
22 _ _ _ _ _ __

eRENTALS
41 - Housu lor Rent
H - Mobtlt Homu
tor Rtnt
44- Ap•rtment lor Rtnl

e EMPt.OYMENT
SERVICES

------1'-

NOTICE OF
PUBLIC SALE
The follow.ng descnbed
1tem(sl will be offered for

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

9- Wanlflt to BuJ

18 _ _ _ _ _ __
19
20 _ _ _ _ _ __

~--P
,_u
,_b,_,IIC Not1ce

or Wrote Daoly Senhnel Class1f1ed Dept
111 Court St., Pomeroy, 0 , 4S769

1- 1nMtmOr111m
J- illnno"numtnh
4- GtttiiWii'P'

17 _ _ _ _ _ __

&lt;11 23 ltc

PHONE 992-2156

eANNOUNCEMENTS
1-C•rd ol T~ilnks

Wanted
For Sale
Announcement
For Rent

Balance, Dec 31
1980
4S 33
Total Exp Plus
Sal Dec Jl ,
1980
2 446 87
FEDERAL RESERVE
SHARING FUNO
Balance, Jan 1
1960
101 08
Rece1pts
Grants Federal
3 225 00
Total Rece1pt s
3 225 00
Tota l Beg1nn1ng
Balance Plus
Rece1pts
3 326 08
Expenditures
Ma1nt and
Operat1on
Supplies
574 77
Total Exp
574 77
Ba l Dec 31
1980
1751 31
Tota l E:xp Plus
Bal Dec 31
1980
3 l26 08

WANT AD INFORMATION

Name---------Address _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

These ca sh rates
nclude d1scount

E:xpend1tures
Contracts
2 375 00
Other Expenses
26 54
Total Exp
2 401 54

I
I
11,------------~~-----------,

Wr 1te your own ad and order by mall w1th th1s
coupon Cancel your ad by phone w llen you get
results Money not refundable

Prmt one word 1n each
space below Each 1n
• 111al or group of f1gures
counts as a word Count
name and address or
phone number If used
You II get better results
1f you descr.be fully
g1ve pr ce The Sentmel
reserves the nght to
class1fy edlf or re1ect
any ad Your ad Will be
put 10 the proper
clas1f1cat•on 1f you 11
check th e proper box
below

~--~P
~u
~b
~hcNo~
t1~
c~
e _____

Pubhc Not1ce

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbus, Oh10,
February 13, 1981
Contract Sales
Legal Copy
No 81 79
UNIT PRICE
CONTRACT
PMS OOOS (1901
sealed proposals Wtll be
rece•ved a t the otf1ce ot the
D~rector of the Oh•o Depar
tment of Transportatio!'1
Columbus Oh10 untlllO w
AM Ohto Standard T1me
Tuesday M ar ch 17 1981
for Improvements m
Ada ms Athens Brown
Ga l l1a Hock1ng Jackson
Lawrence, M e•gs, Morgan
Noble Sc1oto, Vinton and
WaSh1ngton Counties, Ohto
on vanous locat•ons, by ap
plying
retroflectonzed
polyestef'\ compound for
ce nter lines
The Ohio Department of
Transportat1on
hereby
no11t1es all bidders that 1t
wdl atflrmattvely msure
that 1n any contract en
tered 1nto pursuant to th1S
advert•sement
m1nOr 1tY
bus•ness enterpr•ses..w•ll be
afforded full opportun1ty to
submit btdS 1n response to
th• s 1nv•tat1on and w111 nor
be d scr1m matc.J aga1nst
on the grounds of race,
color or nat1onal origin 1n
cons •d eratlon
for
an
award
Mm1mum wag e rates
for th1s pq ec l ha •o been
pre(1etcrmmed as r equ~red

Pubhc Nohce
PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
The fo l lowmg persons
were, on the dates shown
appo1nted to adrrumster the
follow•ng
decedents'
estates pendmg .n the
Me1gs County Probate
Court
F1dUc1ary s Name Ad
dress and T1tle Date of Ap
potntment
Dece dents
Name anct. Address and
Case Number are listed
Lou•se Thompson , 547
Ma•n St, Middleport, Oh10
and Dorotha Neutzhng ,
L•ncoln Hill , Pbmeroy
Oh•o Co Adm1n1stratnces
1 28 81
Ol1ve Isabella
W1nebrenner
693 South
Second M •ddleport Oh•o
23317
J B 0 Bnen 1001h Court
Street Pomeroy, Oh10, Ad
m1n1strator 2 9 81 Ronald
Harbour Rt 4 Pomeroy
Oh10 23343
Bla.ne S Milhoan Rt 1
Long
Bottom
Oh 1o
Executor 2 10 81 Glenn1e
S Milhoan R D Long
Bottom Oh10 23048
Paul E Kloes, R 0,
M•nersv•lle, Oh10, Ad
mtn.strator
2 17 81
Thomas C
Edwards
MmerSVIIfe Oh10 23346
(2J 13 (31 2 9 Jtc
~~P
,__u,b,.,
ll c

No!lce

IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT
PROBATE
OIVISION MEIGS COUN
TY , OHIO
IN THE MATTER OF SET
TLEMENT
OF
AC
COUNTS ,
PROBATE
COURT, MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
Accounts and vouchers of
the
fo l lo~1ng
named
f •du ctanes tihve been flied
•n the Probate Court ,Me1gs
County Oh10 for approval
and settlement
CASE NO 22139 Second
Annual Account of PhYlliS
Cadle, Guardian of lhe per
son and estate of Mary
Ellen
Fetty , an
m
co mpetent person
CASE NO. 1910S Fifth An
nual Account of Louts B
vaughan Guard1an ot the
Estate of W1fliam Reeves
an mcompetent person
CASE NO 23171 F1nal
Account of Pearle Wdhs,
Exec utnx of the Estate of
Helen R Slack Deceased
Unless except1ons are
flfe&lt;1 thereto sa1&lt;1 accounts
w•ll be for hear 1ng before
sa1d court on the 24th day
of March 1981 al which
t1me satd accounts will be
cons•dered and contmued
from day to day unt1l
f1nally d1sposed of
Any person mterested
may file wntten e)(rept1ons
to Sjtld accounts or to mat
ters perta.nmg to the
e)(ecut1on of the trust, not
less than five days pnor to
th e date set for .heanng .
RobertS Buck
JUDGE

LAFF- A- DAY

@k

.1.

~ ~r f}'\\r
~,· J

.

·r~\

:-\. ~fJ AA¥ ,ry,
0\i

~~0 I

-~

I
1

I

\ '

I

, .... .._...... - -'

""' '1 n

_

H1111 ~ ~~~~ 1 new fo!Jrlfru nd
I II · ~ plllllllll)C ll comcb.~, k
!\II ~ lH" IIIII VIt! IS prCnt iC'rlllg

ltHII/.!Itl

111d

d u l/1 \"Ill

YOU HI! \\OrrluJ

t ~fo!s

Pubhc Not1ce
COMMON PLEAS
COURT PROBATE
DIVISION MEIGS
COUNTY OHIO
(2123 11c

ARROQAEements
J

Announcements

I PAY h1ghest prtces
poSSible for gold and silver
COinS, nngs, 1ewe1ry, etc
Contact Ed Burkett Barber
Shop Middleport

9

WANTED
TO
BUY
GOLD
SILVER
PLATINUM, STERLING
COINS, RINGS JEWELR
Y
MI SC
ITEMS AB
SOLUTE
MARKET
PRICE GUARANTED ED
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP
M I DOLE PORT
OH I 0 991 3476

wanted to Buy cl ass nngs
weddmg bends an-;th ng
stamped 10K J.4K or 18K
gold S l'.'er co1ns pocke t
watches Call Joe Clark at
YOUR
PIANO
Too 992 2054 at Clark s Jewelry
valuable to neglect expert Store Pomeroy Oh10 45769
tun•ng &amp; and repa 1r Lane
Dan•els 742 2951 or 992 USED FURNITURE Gold
2081
&amp; sliver class rmgs pocket
watches cha1ns diamonds
Rac1ne Volunteer F 1re &amp; so on Copper brass and
Department sponsors a battenes an ti QUe Items
shot gun &amp; nfle match also do appra sals com
every Sal n1ghl 6 30 p m plete auct 1oneer se r v1ce
at the•r buildtng •n Bashan Over 30 years expe r~ e n c e 1n
Faclory choke 12 guage bus•ness Will buy com
shot guns only Open s•ghts plete estates Osby Martm
22 nf le
General Store M idd leport
Oh 992 6370
Tax serv•ce federal , state
&amp; quarterly taxes done by CHIP WOOD Poles max
appo1ntment See Wanda d1ameter 14 on l arges t
Ebltn, 41000 Laurel Cl1ft end S\2 SOperton Bund led
Road
Pomeroy Oh1o
slab
$10 50 per
ton
45769 9&lt;/2 2272
Delivered to Oh10 Pall '= t
Co
Rock Spnngs Rd
MEIGS MUSEUM open by Pomeroy 992 2689
appo•ntment January Mar
ch 992 2264 992 2602 992
2360 or 992 2639 H1stones
for
sale
Pomeroy
11
Help wanted
Middleport L1brar 1es
GET VALUABLE tr a1ntng
as a young business person
Put a co ld nose '" your life
and ea rn good money plus
Call the Metgs County some great g,tts as a Se n
Humane Soctety at 992
tmel route earn er Phone
6260
us nght away and ge r on
the ehg•bd •tv hst at 992
NOW DOl NG hauling, 2156or992 2157
mov •ng 10bs
prunt1ng
houses 1ns1de or out
LADY or g rl to I ve n 992
Basement att•c clean1ng 1686
also carpet cleaning yard
work etc Phone 9&lt;12 3849
Ask for Velma and leave DO YOU have ba nkmg or
1nst1tut •on
name and number and we f•nan c•al
will return the call Free backg round but would like
esttmates tn Me•gs County to be outstde' We need out
side contact person Must
area
be res1dent at area w1th
outgo,ng
per sonallfy
LOCKSMI H
Ser"lce, Ret •rement med•cal den
Master Keytng
Com
tal all patd, salary open
b•nat•ons
Bonded caq
Send resume to Box 729M
New Haven W Va (3041 co The Da11y Sentl n ~ l
882 2079
Court Street
Pomeory
Oh10 1115769
INCOME TAX serv1ce
Federal and state Wallace APPLICATIONS for luture
Russell Bradbury Phone CETA traln1ng pos•t•ons
992 7228
are be1ng accepted at the
Gallla Meigs Commun1ty
Act•on Agency Res1dents
VEGETABLE PLANTS
Tomatoes sweet potatoes, of Gall1a and M e1gs cou n
strawberry peppers ca b T•es may obta in further m
bage cauliflower broccoli, formatiOn at the M e1gs of
celery, head lettuce, egg fl ee tn Pomeroy 11 7 w 2nd
plant cucumbers, melons Sl , (Warner build1ng) 992
squash
For vanefles, 2313 the Gallipolis off1ce
pnces and ordermg, call (Old Thaler Ford bu ild ing)
Harr1s
Farms
and 446 4612 extens.ons 63 or
Greenhouses, Portland 67 or the Chesh•re off•ce
367 7342 or 992 6619 When
Oh10 at 843 2698 or 843 2693
callmg as k f or t he CETA
1ntake off•ce Equal Op
THE
ELITE 5.000
portun1ty
Employer
Sw1ng•ng
soc1al club
s1ng1es
and
couples,
d1screet
l1mlfed mem $165 00 to $500 weekly doing
No ex
bersh•P dating servtce, ma•llng work
AP
cocktail part1es and on per 1ence requ.red
prem1sed swmg club For PLY Ctrcle Sales P 0
more mformat10n wnte Bo x 224 D R•chmond H111
P 0 Box. 4789 Frurv1ew NY 11418
Park , OhiO 44126
Attract •ve part t1m e work
for
we l l
groomed
APPLES golden delici ous
$3 75 per bushel
Other hom emaker.$ who love
var.ettes at S4 00 per bushel pretty fa shions and want to
keep up on current styles
and up F11zpatrlck Dr
chard, St Rl 689 Phone Average S18 00 per · hour
plus free wardrobe for
669 3785
thos e who qual 1fy
Malernlly Clolhes Nursmg Management opportun ity
bras children s clothes 1 2 open For free •nfomal1on
pnce NEW g.rl's 7 to 14 please phone 992 3941 or
tops and pants 25 percent 669 4535
oft Maven ck shorts and
pants sets sizes 2 7, 25 per
cent off Watermelon Pat
VETERANS! IF YOU
ch, New Ha"en 662 3410
CAN SPARE 39 DAYS A
YEAR, IT COULO BE
WORTH OVER Sl,SCIO
Ttred ol penny plnchmg??
TO YOU PLUS FREE
Hous~wlves and mothers,
TUITION ASSISTANCE
change spare time Into SSSS
TO ANY WEST VIR
Flex1ble hours ex.cellent
GINIA COLLEGE OR
earn1ngs free wardrobe
ACCREDITED BUSI
Two evenings a week For
NESS OR
TRADE
SCHOOL
CONTINUE
more Information call 992
YOUR RETIREMENT
3941 or 669 4535
BENEFITS
HELP
YOUR COMMUNITY
IN TIMES OF EMER
4
Glveawa
GENCY
THE
NA
TIONAL
GUARD
Small peekapoo, male
NEEDS YOUR EX
Loves k 1ds 992 7876
PERIENCE
GOOO
PAY, GOOD BENE
One large puppy
F1ve
FITS FOR OETAILS
CALL SSG
O'NEAL
months old Very friendly
(304)675·3950
843 3171

&amp; Up

SHAlL

$ 99 Sq.

Farm Buil~ings

Yd .
Casn-n-Carr

backed

carpet

Installed

10 lb. Chocolate

,ANN'S CAKE
DECORATING
SUPPLIES

S11es
.,From 30JC30"
SMALL

25 rolls carpel on stock to pock from.
Regular

WIN

ALL STEEL

Re,STS.95

Utility Buildings

free,

Slzts from 4X61ol2x40

wolh pad.
Drive A Lottie- Save A Lot

ReedSVIlle, OH .
Ph 667 6485

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

RUTLAND FURNITURE
St.

M'NAMARA,

901 FRANI&lt;LIN S'&lt;

WIU;IoiiSR:&gt;Rl: P!iNNA

Apartment

44

~;;~~~;~~~~+~~~~~~~~;;~ 3 AND 4 RM
for Rent
furn1shed ap

~

n

Help wanted

Setuat1ons Wanted

13

Mobile Homes
tor Sale

32

Part t1me off1ce clerk, two
to three days per week
Vanety of general off1 ce
dut1es Could develop Into
full l1me P&lt;&gt;S1t1on Send
resume, 1ncludmg referen
ces to
Po Box 123
Syracuse Ohio, 4577'1

Unfurn•shed one bedroom
apartment for rent Ren
1ers ass1stance available
for senior clt1zens Contact
Vtllage Manor Apartments
at992 7787

TRAILER LOT for sale
$4 000 00 992 2571

HALF of a double
2
bedroom completely fur
mshed Available 1st of
monlh 992 27 49

Housing
1

II

Wanted lo Do

Furnace repatrs, electncal
work, plumb1no
mobile
home or res1dence 992

5858

Wtll do paneling, ceiling,
floor llle, plumbing Free
est1mates Fred M•ller at
992 6338

31

Homes for Sale

Tra1ler lot for sale, $5,000
Modular home lot on Route
7, three bedroom farm
house located on Route 7
992 2571
Beautiful three bedroom
ranch brick home tn Baum
Add1f1on Pomeroy Oh10
Gas heat, central air Call
992 2571 or I 687 6429
3 BEDROOM
2 bath
modern kttchen, 1tv1ng
ro.. - d•nmg room off1ce
full basement new neat
system w1fh central a~r
unattached garage
2
blocks from school 9&lt;/2
J4.43
ATTRACTIVE home on
two and one half acres
Pnvate setting on St Rt 7
by Memory Gardens Ter
ms 9&lt;12 7741

ts Phone 992. 5434

1975VIKINGMob•leHome
12X65 10 excellent con
d1f1on
underplnnmg .n
eluded $5500 00 2ot7 3941

Headquarters

t

EAFORD[H
VIRGIL 8 SR ~~" 10 "
16 E Second Street

Insurance

AUTOMOBILE
IN
SU RANCE
been can
celled.,
Lost
your
operator's license? Phone
992·21&lt;3

Phone

1 (614)-992-3325
Good A
frame locat•on w1th
sewer
and
wa1er
available V1ew of the
nver Only$15,000 00
350 ACRES - Large
&lt;;attl e farm nearly all
fen ced
10
room
renovated farm hou se
wllh 2 ful l baths, free
gas
n •ce carpetmg
modern kttchen den,
family room
garage
etc
overlook1ng th e
Oh•o R1ver frontage
S215 000
OPPORTUNITY
Large 10 room home for
2 fam•lles Obi garage
apt w ith bath furna ce,
bus•ness bldg on State
Rt 33 Potential great
Only $23 500
NEW LISTING - 1979
mobile home 12x65, lwo
bedrooms
bath
carpettng, e1ectr1c heat
stove and refngerator
Ready to move 1nto
Just$7 500
10ACRES, MOR L - of
land for A frames or
small farm
Lead1ng
Creek. water Rr 124
frontag e and some larg e
trees
WAIT NO LONGER TO
SELL
JUST CALL
992 3325 or 992 3876 to
gel lhe lob ol selling
done

Four room apartment for
renl 992 5908
2 BEDROOM aparlment n
Middleport No ch1ldren 1
304 882 2566
THREE ROOM and bath
upsta~rs
apartment •n
Pomeroy 992 5621
Apartment tor rent, f1ve
Two
room and bath
bedroom, close to town
991 3592 afler 7 p m

9 ACRES -

Housing .
Headquarters
Real Estate- General

37 ACRES w1th small house
and garage and barn St
Rt 338 near alummum
plant 247 3072

46

S ace for R en I

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park Route 33 North of
Pomeroy Large lots Call
991 7479
TRAILER spaces for rent
Southern Valley Mobile
Home Park Chesh 1re Oh
991 3954
Wanted to Ren1

47

WORKING COUPLE With
one ch1ld would like to rent
mce house m th country
Very clean, responSible
~nd
have
referenc~s
Phone 992 5126 afler 6 p m

53

Ant1ques,__ _

ATTENTION
liM
PORTANT TO YOUI Will
pay cash or certified check
for ant1ques and collec
t •bles or ent,re estates
Noth•ng too large Also
guns pocket watches and
co•n collect1ons Call 614
767 3167 or 557 3411
An ant1que S1nger sewmg
machme and one light wtn
ter coat s1ze 16 Reason for
se11 1ng too large 991 2052

Put a cold nose •n your
outure Adopt a pet from
the Me1gs County Humane
Soc1ety
Phone 992 6260
Available 1mmed1ate1y, 2
1fiSh setters, bpth males
two bent! types, one male
and one female, one St
Bernard type, male, one
Labrador type, male one
American Fox. Hound,
female
Chesapeke Bay
Retriever,
male ,
one
Doberman type, female
one terner type female
Phone 992 6260

61

Farm Equ1pment

PICKING up a p1ano tn
your area
Take pver
payments
Call cred1t
manager collect as 1 592
5122
GOOD F-'\RMALL tractor
w1th six foot snow blade
plow 4 foot bush hog Two
wheel tratler Gary Welch
Pagevllle, $1650 00
698
6716

32

Mobile Homes
for Sale

1973 Crown Haven, 14 )( 65
three beeljooms, new car
pet 1971 Cameron. 14 x 6&lt;
two bedrooms new carpet
1972 Champ1on, 12 x 6U lwo
bedrooms new carpet 197~
Cameron, 12 x 60, two
bedrooms, all electnc 1971
Skyl1ne, 12sx 61 , two
bedrooms, bath &amp; 113 new
carpet
1970
PM C
12 x 60 lwo bedrooms, new
carpet B X S Sales In c
2nd x V1and Street, Point
Pleasant, WV Phone 675

«H

19~9
PMC 3 bedroom
tra11er 12x60 9923954

Real Estalt

General

HOBSTETIER REALTY
OFFICE 742 2003
GeorgeS Hobstetter Jr
Broker
REOUCEO ~ 7 2 acres
wllh 2 bedroom home 2
septic systems and 2
water 1aps Located on
Hysell Run Road, was
S21,500 00
Now only
$19,000 00
LOTS OF LAND - 168
acres, minerals
old
house and two barns
Sells for $55,000 00
ACREAGE - 41 acres
on Sliver Ridge Road 2
cisterns, septic system
barn and garage Some
limber and spring fed
paslure Good buy at
$20,000 00
POMEROY - Large 2
story home wtth wrap
around porch Full base
01enl off slreel parking
Asking S26,500 00
NICE
STARTER
HOME - 2 bedrooms,
oas forced air furnace
Has nice space for a
garden or trailer Sells
for only $21.500 00
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc
Phone 742 3171
Velma Nlc1nsky, Assoc
Phone 742 3092

992·2259
NEW LISTING - Ap
prox 8 acres of n•ce lay
mg land, partlv cleared
and
has
utd1t• es
available Close to town
$9 100
SMALl BUT NICE - A
cute little 2 bedroom
home w1th a n•ce front
yard ONLY $12,000
HUNTERS LOOK' - 56
acres of vacant ground
w•th lots of wild I If~ and
could make a n ce place
to live ASKING ONLY
$23 900
MIOOLEPORT - Close
to shopp•no - level lo1
li'J
basement
front
porch makes th1S 2
bedroom house a real
sleal at$16 700
A
LARGE
RED
BEDROOM - Is one of
the beauttful aspects of
th iS 4 bedroom home
w1th a large lot cqu1p
ped kitchen
sewmg
room, a full basement,
and
many
more
features $28 500
SAVE ON HEATI~G ­
W•th this 6 room ranch
slyle home thai has a
wood burner A full
basement and 2 acres
$29 900
REALTOR
Henry E Cleland, J r
992 6191
ASSOCIATES
Dottle&amp; Roger Turner
992 5692
Jean Trussell949 2660
OFFICE 992 22S9

lH
II fAllON

SIX ROOM house on Nye
Avenue 367 7811

'
House for rent 4 room and
bath
n 1ce and clean
Oeposll required 992 3090

1974 Pont1ac two door Ven
tura SIX cyltnder 1n ex
cellent cond1f1on stereo,
am fm e1ght track, good
gas m1leage, Will accept
older and larger car or
truck as trade 1n or W1ll sell
for $1195 00 Call 667 3065
Tuppers Plams, Oh10
1975 Dlds Roya le w1th vmyl
top, new paint tob am fm
rad1o tape player, a.r con
d•tonmg power steenng
power brakes, 41 000 m11es
992 2117 or 9&lt;12 2528 after 5
1979
Mercury
$4 300 00 992 2603

Capn

72

Her Wardrobe!
l'rinlt•cll'.lllt•rn

4737

SIZES

28

7S

81

82

CONSOLE color lelevtS10n
Good cond Zenllh $100
992 5706 after 7

FOUR

preNy dresses plus
smock lop and panls- her all
seasons wardrobe IS all 10 one
pattetn Choose n11ty lhnlty col
ton blends tn checks platds
solids ond save lots ol S$$ 1
Prtnled Patletn 4l3l Ch1ld s
Sues 1 4 S 8 S11e S lakes 1
yards 45 1nch fabrtc

$2 00 for eoch patteon Add SM
lof Neh paHton for host clas
11nw11l and handhn&amp; Send Ia:

R~tr•ger111or

Anne Adams
PaHom Dtpl

1 11

$150 01

llt!m!i m t!IV
ct lltnl (O"dll on All i r f priced
to !iell •mmt~dlalfl't' '.i ee u\ 10

The DallY sentonel

•• ,

10011 Pnnt NAil£, AD011ESS,
ZIP SIZE, and Slll£ NUMBER

All Ol 11'11! ai)OIII:I

POMEROY

E Ma•n Sf
56

9922181
Pomeroy

Pels lor Sale

Female peek a poe, apricot
In ector w•th black and
while l1pS 11 week s old
773 5241

(4 Bags L1m1t Per week)

PHONE 992 7802
or 992 7443

992-5682

2 13

10 7 tic

243 Wtst 17 Sl New Ton, NT

mo

GOlF QIJB$
Hew l 1lstd J..
LISIONI
RIPAI.. Cltooln• !ttinillllna

VA loans no money down
Federal Hous&amp;ng 3% on 525,000
5% on balance
Convent•onal Loans5%
down
Call lor lnformatton
992 7544

!,. Gnoo.

Lltt~h

C!01p Wtlcltt thtntt

FAST SERVICE
HICIIOIT SHAmD CWBS
11011

~~

&amp;

Body Repair lnsurilnce
work ColliSion Repair.
Expert painting, body
work, p1nstnp1ng &amp;
vinyl tops
Free Esttmates
Call992 3421
K1ngsbury Rd, 2 m1
wesl Co Rd 18
Pomeroy ,Oh 45769
Domes1tc, Japanese &amp;
European Cars g
Trucks
2 15 1 me

KAUFPS

KLUB

992-7544

~Old

Ntw

or

u~ ed

PLUMBING
AND
HEATING
12 Park 51
Moddleport, Oh.
Ph 992-6263
Anytome

PHONI61

2 I 1 mo

fiN

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

REESE
TRENCHING
SERVICE

• New Homes - ex
tensove remodelong
• Electro cal work

water sewer Electnc
Gas Lme Otlches
water Lme Hook ups
Sept1c Tanks
county Cert1hed
Roush Lane
Chesh1re, Oh
Ph 36 7 7560
1 7 tfc

Greg Roush
Ph 992-7583
1 22 1 mo

f tc«P Tlus Ad lor PYIUrl R.. trlltef

APPLIANCE SERVICE
Call Ken Young
F'Dr F'nt !ervltl

Ms-3561
PARTS AHD IIIVICI
ALL MAKII
IWII Sh t &gt;
10r~eu

llf'II!IU

IDI&gt;poSIII
IDIII!wlllllrl

IMGIWIIIrUnU

"'"lrtntsllcflnJ

s~cloollhlei

,.Ill'

..- (Oinlmdru

.... ::~'~':U::':;~'~:5

..- Moblt•Hom•P'•rtu
1;nmc

~~=========~t~======~~~~Fr~~~~;;~~~=;

Plumb1ng
&amp; Heating

MILlER I.LL"
SERVICE
For all of your wor·
ong needs,
Let George M•ller check
your present electncal
system
•
Res1dent1al
&amp; Commerc1al
Call 742·319S
or 992-7680
2 8 lfc

J&amp;F
ENltRPRISES

All types of root work,
new or repa1r gu11ers
and downspouts gutter
cleanmg and pamtmg
All work guaranteed

Backhoe, snow plowtng,
excavat1on, water gassewer lmes, certified'!
s.ep11c systems, dump
truck, stone coal, etc 1
General home repair &amp;
carpenter work Sprints
developed &amp; ponds
cleared
Rt 2 Pomeroy
Ph 992-7201
1 25 1 o.\

THE DABBLE SHOP
NOW OPEN
Mon Wed 10 00 9 00
Tues Frl · Sat
10 oos 00
Closed Thursdays
Stop 1n and see our hne
of plastercraft You can
enaov mak1ng your g1fts
and help fight mflahon
Located next to Dale
Hill Ford Tractor 1n
Pomeroy
2 ~3 1 mo

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

H&amp;R BLOCK OFFICE LOCATION
Pomeory, Oh.

H. L WRITESR
ROOFING

Free Eshmates
Reasonable Pnces
Call Howard
949 2862
949 2160
1 4 tfc

BOOKKEEPING SERVICE

618 E Mam

~

THE
KOUNTRY

CUNNINGHAM
&amp; ASSOC.
Mortgage Bankers

TRI-COUNTY

Reduce Save &amp; fast wtfh
GoBese Tablels &amp; E Vap
water pills Nelson Drug

2 191fc

H&amp;R BODY SII)P

Bedford Townshop
and
F Jatwoods A rea
s5.00 Per Month
weekly Pockup

-Auto and Truck
Repa1r
-TransmissiOn
Repaor
Hrs Mon Fr.
9AM530PM

WATER
WELLS
Domest•c and commerc1al,
pump sales and serviCe
TOm
LeW IS
Drilling
Set'Jsonal d1scount on pum
ps 1 304 895 3802 or 1 304
895 3641

,,

KEN SOLES
245-9113

pd

HART'S
TRASH HAULING

ROGER HYSELl'S
GARAGE
..

WILL DO ALL kinds of car
pentry work
.nclud1ng
paneling ceil1ngs repa•rs
etc
Expenenced, w1th
references Phone 992 3941

Baby
c lothes,
boys
clothes between s1ze 10 8.
14 women s clothes s1ze 10
&amp; 12 Some mans clothmg
sheer curta•ns &amp; many
new drapes All sizes Sale
I rom 23 27 991 5917 298
Mulberry Ave Close to ap

Free Estomates

~~=========t.====~~=~~~t.======~~~;

Expenence

chqua rd 992 6309 or 742
reasonable
rates
scot
2211

F1 rewood for sale 742 2409

$aYI!

7\LJ 1 mo

40625 51 Rl 68)

Home
Improvements

Genes Carpet Cleanmg,
deep stream extract1on
Fr ee
est 1m a ted,

Coli Trouper MK Ill 357
Magnum $250 oo 985 3301
days or 965 4319 afler 5
pm

St1U' lew ttiiW Ktr ou ne
Hellh!rs
s 19 fS
1 Onl't' New 011 Slove~ Clo"out

•Backhoe •Dump Truck •Remodeling
•New
conslructoon
•Guttermg
&amp;
Downspouts

• Roofmg work
12 Years

SEASONED FIREWOOD
for sale $30 00 Phone 992
5240

1- Good Holpolnt was.tt..r

2 9 tfc

1-===========l~====~=====+===========
DAVID &amp;RICKLES
DENNEY
CONSTRUCTION
CHAIN LINK
•Sodong •Insulation •Rootong•Storm WonFENCE
dows • Concrete Work • Septoc Systems

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessones

ser 11ees

1- 11 GE rv
1- 15 cu It Hotpomt

V.C. YOUNG II

Boa1s and
Motors for Sate

World Book Encycl opediaS
- L •m•ted number 1980
ed11ton sets Save $100 00
$15 00 per month Elizabeth
Coffman, 949 1592

1- 11 Hone Power Rld1nt
Mo..,er

All Models
ll•a1lable
LEO MORRIS
Rl. T Side H1ll Rd
Rulland 0~

PH. 992-7119

SPECIAL DISCOUNT
pr1ces
on
turn•ture
Reupholstenng
Jan
&amp;
Feb ,
1981
Mowrey s
Upholstery PI Pleasanl,
wva 13046754154

Repossessed
Items

50"-2G-30'H. P.
60"-25·60 H.P.
60"-45·80 H.P.

99l-62150r9927314
Pomeroy, Oh

Trucks for Sale

1979 NORRIS Craft bass
boat and tratler 16foot 115
h p Ev.nrude fully equ1p
ped L1ke new Phone 992
3401

landrnarl&lt;

-Addonsand
remodehng
-ROOfing and gutter
work
-concretework
- Plumbing and
electnc•l work
(Free Estimates)

Ten foot two passenger
speed boat 35 h p Mercury
motor trailer and cover
$800 00 985 3301 days or
985 4319 after 5 p m

M1sc Merchan1se

ow At
Pomeroy

CARPENlJR
SERVICES"

1977 Ford Granada lhree
speed w1th overdrive 742
2351

76

~-

~LANDMARK
4!_ ___H_!)uses for Rent

1977 Monte Carlo cru1se
control tilt wheel am fm
tape deck, a.r cond1tlomng,
for $3150 00 Phone 9&lt;/2
70S4

1977 DODGE four wheel
All
steel clear span drtve, 8 fool bed In good
buildings sale'' 30 x 48 x
12 for $3 991 00 40 x 72 x 197 4 Scout 6 cy Iinder two
14 tor $6 339 00 48 x 96' x cond1l10n
0000 Also
wheel dnve,$2600
S1275
992
14 for $8,881 00 60 x 100 x 6323
16
for $13 993 00
Call
collect today at 1 614 294
1976 CHEVY p1ckup truck
2675ti16pm
wtll sell or trade for a van
64
Hay &amp; Gratn
of equal value Also we
have
a gas heat.ng
Corn for sale at $3 35 stove 992 7453
bushel also hay al $1 00
per bale Ca l l 667 3945 after
1978 Ford F 150 4 X 4 351 V 8
5p m ,
power steenng
power
brakes. automat1c, tilt
I ransportalitfn== wheel slldmg rear w1ndow,
chrome step bump~
cru1se control new f•res
wh•te
spokes
ask1ng
71
Au1os for Sale
$4 500 00 949 2571
1977 Cutlass Supreme
Brougham, black w•th red 73
vans&amp;4WO
p1nstnpmg red velour 1n
tertor ,
brand
new
1978 Jeep CJ7 Renegade
Goodyear ra1sed whtte let
Hardtop
sun roof
v8
ter G T rad 1a ls Loaded automat1c
quadratrac
wtth equ•pment Be.ng sold headers 985 3597 $4 100 00
by Crenson Pratt Call 992
3093 alters 30 p m
1978 BLAZER 21000 m1 les
no rust 992 2\78

POMEROY,O

1

2 Rolls
Rubber Back

1nstalled
Buy Now &amp; Save S2-S6 Per Yard.

5272

TREE TRIMMING and
removal 949 2129 or 991
6040

RACINE GUN SHOOT
Rac1ne Gun Club, every
Fnday n1ght start.ng at
7 30 p rn Factory choke
guns only

Paddin~

$995 ~~

FOR SALE or renl Ap
prox•mately 34 acres w1th
three bedroom modular
home 1n Portland Oh10
area N me m11es from the
Ravenswood bndge Call
afler 5 p m at I 304 273

6U22

OLD COINS pockel wat
ches c lass nngs wedd •ng
bands, diamonds Gold or
silver C'all J A Wam sl ey
Treasure Chest co n Shop
Athens OH 594 4111

With

1975 Two Bedroom mobile
home Part1afly furn•shed
located m the country
Mobile Home Park $1SCI 00
per month 247 39.42

HAVE VACANCY
for
elderly persons who need
board, room and laundry
Eat tn d~nmg room, men
and women have separate
baths pr.vate rooms and 1
sem1 pr ivate
available
Pnces to f 1t Income 992

Wanted to Su_L_

CARPET

THREE
BEDROOM
mobilehome on Slory Run
Road 3&lt;17 7811

U
Pubhc Nottce

Business Services

2 bedroom tra1ler Adults
only
Brown's Trader
ParK 9&lt;12 3324

Donna Gilmore, " Memor~es by
Abraham Lincoln" by MarJOrie Fetty , "February" by Mrs Iva Powell
Mrs Shook presented symptoms
and treatment of nervous tensiOn
Several
donations
were
acknowledged along w1th a thankyou note from a child remembered
at Christmas Games were played ,
and pmes won by Mrs Shook, Mrs
G1lmore, Mrs Fetty and Mrs Mash '••
Mrs G1lmore had prayer and Mrs
Wnght served refrestunents

Small investment, large returns, Sentinel Want
Public Nottce

Sentlnei-Pag-f

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes - extensove remodeling
• Eleclncal work
• Roofing work
12 years
Experoence
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583
2 23 1 mo

ELECTRICAL
SUPPLIES

992·3795
21 2 ma

ReStdenhal &amp; Light
Commercial Electrical
S••aDites
Ouahly Producls
Re•sonillble Pr1ces

We streamlmed the sewmg lo
save you t1me so you can save
money' Send now i01 NEW 1981

JOYCE ELECTRICAL
SUPPLIES

SP RING SU MMER PATIERN CAT
ALOG I 00 llyles flee patletn

coupon ($1 Value) C~laiO(, $1
134-14 q.ucl ~oils
.$1 75
133-fllltieo Homo ~ihina St 75
130-SWIIltiS SIZII Jt-56 $1 )5
129Qulck/ Eny Ttlll'llon $1 75

College Rd
Syracuse,
Oh
Ph "2 31114
2 23 1 mo

'

�Monday, February 23,1911

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

I

Area deaths

Cecile McClanahan

OVER THE EDGE- Elgbt people were Injured as
a bus traveling from Kerbollkson, N. Y. to Wildwood,
N.J. went partway off a cliff at a hairpin torn along !be

Mlnnewaska TraU (N.Y. route 44-55) Sunday. The bus
was filled with N. J. poli~e officers and their famllles.
. (AP Laserpboto) .

Weekend traffic deaths totall4

.

Velma E. Keller
Velma E. Keller, 75, Route I . Middleport, died Saturday at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Mrs. Keller was born May 26, 1905
in Meigs County, a daughter of the
late John and Effie Searles Wilt. She

Linley Roush
Linley Roush Jr., 54, Depot ~reet,
Rutland, Ohio, died Sunday at his
home.
Born April 5, 192Jl, in Hartford, he
was the son of the late Linley and
Mary Janette James Roush .
He was employed at the Rutland
Fuel Company, was a member of the
Church of Jesus Christ, Rutland , and
D.A.V. Meigs Chapter 53.
Surviving are his wife, Martha
Ann Hobbs Roush; two daughters,
Darlene Roush, Rutland, and Correna Farmer, Cheshire; two sisters,
Mrs. Elizabeth Chriner, Cincinnati;
and Mrs. Emma Sams, Albany,
Ohio; five brothers, Robert of Norwalk, Ohio ; Pearl of East Liverpool,
Ohio; Virgil of El Paso, Texas; Ernie of Letart, and James of
Marysvllle, Ohio; one granddaughter and two great·
grandchildren.
Funeral services will be condueled Tuesday, 1:30 p.m., at the
Foglesong Funeral Home with the
Rev. Errunett Rawson officiating.
Burial will follow in the Graham
Cemetery.

•

at y

e

AS!( TOWED
Marriage liceMeS were iuued to
Danny Lane Hobbs, 18, Albany, and

voi.29,No.ll8
copvriphted 1981

Sara Lenay Gaus, 18, Rt. 1, Rutland;
Charles Daniel Ohllnger 29, Letart,
W. Va. , and Connie E~ Warner,
2G, Pomeroy.
·

Disney movie, "Pete's Dragon"
from 7 to 9:30 p.m. Friday at the
Pomeroy Elementary School
Auditorium. AdmiBslon is
and
refreslunenll will be sold.

MADRID, Spam (AP) - More bright winter sunshine, they shouted
than 300 deputies and ministers held to crowd of several thousand, "Long
hostage in the Spanish Parliament Live Freedom!" "Long Live
left the building today after most of . Democracy!"
As caretaker Premier Adolfo
their 200 right-wing Civil Guard captors deserted, many jumping from Suarez left the building he was emwindows with the subrnachine guns braced by members of his family
they fired at the beginning of the and the crowd.
takeover.
Tejera Molina and a hard core of
The Civil Guard officer who led his guardsmen remained brieny inthe attempt to resurrect the Franco side the building, then gave up. One
dictatorship, Lt. Col. Antonio Tejera of the freed hostages quoted Tejero
Molina , surrendered Inside the Molina as telling the captives just
Parliament building, then was before the ordeal ended: "You can
whisked away in a black official car leave quietly. Nothing will happen
with a motorcyle escort.
here. The only thing that will happe
The ministers and deputies is that I will have to pay with 30 or 40
emerged one by one from their all- years in prison."
night ordeal in the Parliament
Authorities said Tejern Molina ,
building. As they stepped irto the

.1

r;;::==========::
LET UNQ.£ ROY,

lHE
PAT-A-

MAN,
BAJ(£ HIS BEST
I'AII£

"""

GOODIES fOR
YOIJ
•
POMEROY PASTRY

Fears of a possible flood from the
rising Ohio River lessened today as
cresting waters are apparently
receding, according to a spokesman
at the Gallipolis Locks and Dam .
The locks reported a 42.7-foot
reading on the lower gauge, with the
river stationary s ince 6 a.m.
A reading of 21 .I feet was recorded
today on the upper gauge. Normal
pool stage on both gauges is 12 feet
(formerly 18), the spokesman said.
Although dam officials had no
crest predictions, they said the rise

You'll hate to get c:i'essed
Introducing

Beautiful··
Ones

. MADRID, SPAIN- JUMPING OUT- A member of the Civil Guar·
ds who seized the Parliament lost nlght, pictured as he jumps from a window of the Parliament building when the rebellious action started. to come
to an end, Tuesday. He Is received outside by members of the National
Pollee which remained loyal to the King. Some of the Civil Guards left the
building through the window before the actual surrender. (AP
Wirephoto) .

ToDAY
'

o:

••.•IN· THE ·W

Prime lef!.ding rate decreases
NEW YORK - 11le prime lending rate has dropped as low as 18.5
percent at some of the nation's banks, renecting a widespread
weake ning in .demand for business loans, and bank officials and
economists predict further rate reductions .
Co ntinental Illinois National Bank &amp; Trust Co., the 7th-largest U.S.
cormnercial bank , was the only one of the nation's 20 largest banks to
post an i8.5 percent prime. It trimmed its rate a full percentage point,
and some smaller banks matched its rate.

Man receives five year sentence
AKRON, Ohio - Thomas D. Mitchell was sentenced Monday to one
to five years in the Southern Ohio Correctional Facility at Lucasville
for destroying evidence in the Constantine R. "Dean" Milo murder
case.
Mitchell, 32, of Norton, Ohio was arrested Dec. 10 in a Dallas suburb
on a charge of aggravated murder. On Feb . 9, Mitchell pleaded guilty
.
to a reduced charge of obstructing justice.
Mitchell's attorneys and prosecutors in the case have declined to say
what evide nce Mitchell destroyed or give details of his involvement in
the case.

Cattle buyer pleads not ~:,ruilty
CINCINNATI - Ca ttle buyer Fernand Allart remained free on
$1,000 bond after pleading innocent in federal court here to five counts
sie nuning from the slaughte r of 287 allegedly diseased beef.
The 4f&gt;.year-old Allart, from Middletown, was the sixth person indicted by a federal gra nd jury following a Nov. 18, 1980, raid on an after-hours slaughter operation at the Robert L. Runtz Inc. plant in Cin-

')

For generations we've been lending money (all kinds of loans
for all kinds of reasons) to businesses and people in our
community. They have deserved our help and we intend to
continue serving them through our responsible and openminded lending policies. After all, the bank that doesn't take
the opportunity to be a part of a community's social and
economic progress is passing up a great investment.
To help, we make the following types of loans: •
• Residential real estate loans to individuals
• ·Home improvement loans
• Commercial loans to small and large businesses
• Consumer loans
• Farm loans
• Education loans

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

who plotted a similar takeover more Civil, Spain's paramilitary federal
than twoyears ago but got only a
police.
·
seven-month sentence; aceepted full
Dozens of Tejera Molina's
responsibility for the latest coup at- followers jwnped from ground-floor
tempt ·but insisted that all non- windows of the Parliament with
commissioned officers and enlisted their submachine guns strapped to
men involved in the takeover be their shoulders after it became clear
given a guarantee against reprisals.
they ~ad no chance of winning.
The hostages were freed after
About 20 of the hostages - inmilitary authorities announced that eluding women deputies and sick
Tejero Molina accepted conditions captives - were freed early today ,
for a "face saving surrender."
and the captors then began surrenTejera Molina at first demanded · dering by the dozens.
he be allowed to surrender in the ofTejera Molina and his followers in
fice of the late dictator Francisco the Guardia Civil seized the lower
Franco. He also insisted that no ar- house and Spain's caretaker Cabinet
my officers or press photographers Monday evening. But the attempted
be allowed to witness his surrender coup seemed doomed shortly after it
to fellow officers of the Guardia was launched .

would level off up river and along
the Kanawha River . The river
crested early Monday at the Belville
and Racine locks.
The Ohio was rising Sunday about
one-half of one-tenth of a foot an
hour at the Gallipolis facility .
Locally, the river flooded out the
lower section of the upstream public
use area below the city park, and the
old lock gates were also submerged
by rising currents. The
Chickamauga Creek also nooded out
lower sections of the city, including

Memorial Field and 'spruce Street
extension.
· Normal flood stage for the city is
set at around 52 feet , according to
city officials.
The National Weather Service announced today the river would crest
in the Cincinnati area at 7 a.m. Thursday. Flood level in the Queen City is
the same as in Gallipolis, 52 feet.
In Pomeroy Monday, water rose to
the level of the municipal parking
lot.

The only area road reported
closed today was SR 338 in Meigs
County in the Antiquity and Long
Bottom area, the Gallia-Meigs Post
of the Ohio Highway Patrol said.
The city weather station in East
Gallipolis said this morning .08 of an
inch oi rain fell on the area overnight. Officials said accumulation
from the weekend would not affect
the decreasing level of the river.
Weather' is expected to be fair
today and Wednesday, with nurries
possible tonight.

Middleport council rejects five 'b ids
By BOB HOEFLICH
Five bids offering to purchase a
village-owned lot at the corner of
Garfield St., and Third Ave., were
rejected when Middleport Village
CounCil met in regular session Monday night:
The lot was given to the village
several years ago by the late Mary
Elizabeth Hartinger Thomas .
Recently, council voted to sell the lot
since no firm suggestions were offered as to ·c ommunity use of the lot.
Last night, council became
deadlocked in a 3-3 vote on whether
to accept one of the bids, but rejected all of them as the result of the tiebreaking vote of Mayor Fred Hoff-

num.
Bids ranged from $1,000 to $8225,
the highest being submitted by Dr.
R. R. Pickens. Several council members feel the lot is worth more than
the top bid . Others, along with
Mayor Hoffman , indicated they do

not believe the village will receive a
received two letters from Ashland
higher bid.
. Oil since the last council meeting
Council, with Mayor Hoffman's two weeks ago with the result being
vote, rejected all five bids and a total of four cents per gallon inagreed to advertise for new bids.
crease on all grades of gasoline.
Voting in favor of a motion for rejecCONFERENCE TODAY
tion of all bids and readvcrtising the
Mayor Hoffman announced a prelot were Allen Lee King, Carl Horky
construction conference on the
and Marvin Kelly while councilmen,
Marina West Sewer Project lor
today with the Holley Brothers who
Dewey Horton , Jack Satterfield and
William Walters voted against the . will build the system and Horton and
Satterfield agreed to represent the;
motion .
Mayor. Hoffman said he is anxious
village at the annual meeting of the
to sell the lot but cast his vole in
Meigs County Board of Health:to be
fa,vor of rejecting the bids arid readheld on March 2 in Pomeroy.
vertising. The lot was appraised
Council voted unanimously to
have
a three mill current expenses
recentlv for $8.000.
Clerk-Treasurer Jon Buck read a
levy renewed and placed on the
letter from Colwnbia Gas of Ohio
ballot for the June primary elecreporting that natural gas costs on
tions . One-half of the proceeds from
March 6 will reflect an increase of
the levy are used for street light bills
12.3 cents per thousand cubic .feet as
and the other half lor street resura result of the gas cost recovery
facing. Council stressed that the
clause. Buck also reported he has
levy is a renewal and not any additional tax.

At the request of Jeff Darst, a
meeting between fire department
representatives and the fire committee of council was set for 7 p.m.
on March 5 at the fire station.
Another trash hauling permit was
approved for issuance with the und'erstanding that the applicant will
not be pennitted to solicit customers
of other haulers in the community.
Councilman King discussed the
dangers of the erosion of the river
bank in the town and reported that
large sections are breaKing away.
He warned of the dangers to children
who might be along the bank. It was
agreed to have the police patrol the
river bank area more frequently and
warn people of the dangers involved.
Council made plans for placing
limestone in several alleys and a
complaint against the dwnping of
shredded trees in the Broadway St.
area due to the odors involved.

Six people hurt in SR 7 collision.
Six people and one hospitalized in
Injured were Wilson and two
a tw&lt;&gt;-ear crash in Meigs County passengers in his auto, Wiima F .
Monday morning .
Eynon, 68 , Reedsville, and Monte L.
The Gallia-Meigs Post of the Ohio Riffle, 24, Pomeroy. Perkins was
Highway Patrol reported Ricky D. also injured, as were two passengers
Wilson, 23; Reedsville, was nor· . in her car, Dorothy M. Barlow, 59,
thbound on SR 7 at 9:30a.m. and was
Parkersburg, W.Va., and Randy A.
being followed by another vehicle
Perkins, II, Huntington, W.Va.
and an auto driven by Wanda J .
Wilson, the Perkinses and Barlow
Perkins, 41, Huntington, W.Va .
were all taken to Veterans Memorial .
According to the rePQrt, the othe~
Hospital by the Tuppers Plains
vehicle slowed when Wilson
emergency squad, where the
prepared to make a left turn.
Perkinses and Barlow were treated
Perkins' car then passed the other
and released. Wilson was admitted
vehicle and collided with the rear of
for observation.
the Wilson auto.
Eynon and Riffle were also in-

jured in the crash, but not treated.
Severe .damage was reported to
Perkins' car and moderate to the
Wilson auto, and Perkins was citedfor improper parking.
Injury was reported in another
tw()ocar crash in Meigs County Mon. day morning , the patrol said.
Lenora M. Moore, 24, Pomeroy,
and Richard A. Embler, 51 , Colwnbus, were both travelling on the offramp from U.S. 33 to SR 7· at 10:35
a.m. and stopped for traffic.
The rePQrt said Moore then started when she saw an emergency
vehicle approaching, and then stop-

ped. Embler's car collided with the
rear of the Moore auto, causing
moderate damage to both.
Moore was injured. but not
treated, and Embier was cited for
assured clear distance.
. No injury was reported in a onecar accident in Gallia County Mon- .
day morning.
George H. Young, 18, Gallipolis ,
was northbound on CR 5 at 10:15
a.m. when he swerved his car to .
avoid an oncoming vehicle, slid on
cinders and collided with a bridge,
caU.ing severe damage to his car.

cinnati.

Allart was accused of conspiracy to defraud, slaughter of
adulterated cattle, false representation, mixing uninspected and inspected meat and failure to mark condemned meat.

Police identify headless body
l..ONOON, Ky . - '111e headless body of a man was found Sunday
noating in a farm pond in rural Laurel Cqunty, according to Kentucky
~~~~ -

.

County coroner Eddie Bowling ide ntified the body as that of Ray
Wagers, 27, of Manchester, who had been !Hissing since last October.
State police said officers searched the area and found Wagers' head in
a nearby field .
Officers said the body was recovered about 5 p.m., about 12 miles
east of London near the Black Water community. Wagers' body was
found in the pond by Alvin Mills, the owner of the farm.

Ohio winning lottery number

• From time to time the availability or the abo&gt;~t loans may t1avt to be curtelled or llmlltd dtPtndlng on the blnk 'l

CLEVELAND - The winning number selected Monday In the Ohio
I.ottery's daily ga me "The Number" was 354.
.
The lottery reported earnings of $292,7116 from the wage~mg on the
drawing. Lottery ofricials said sales prior to the drawmg totaled
$954,901.50, and holders of winning tickets are entitled to share
$662,115.50.

aupply of lendable tunda.

Serving the needs of people who deserve our help.

BANKONETM

15 Cents

A Multime.di.a Inc, Newspaper ·

Possible flood fears lessen

S1f0p

We know the meaning of the word.

1 Section, 12 Pages

300 hostages freed

PTA MOVIE SET

Tlie Pomeroy PTA wiJ1 hold a Walt

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

entine

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, February 24,1981

lr;;;;~~~~~~~~~;~~~~~~~~~~t;~

Patrol cites driver for DWI

VETERANS MEMORIAL .
Saturday Admissions--Lois
Schoonover, Rutland; William l{ennedy, Middleport; Vivian Phelps,
Middleport; William Morris,
Pomeroy; Charles Page, Mason.
Saturday
Discharged--Doris
Haynes, Eula Welker, Bernadine
Meier, Janetta West, Carol Dailey,
otho Karr, Mildred Moore, Corrine
Ferrell, Pamela Diddle, Teresa Canterburg, Reannie Wells, Victor
Braley.
Sunday Admissions--Timothy
Adams, Pomeroy ; Bruce Carman,
Pomeroy; George Moore, Portland;
Mildred Wolfe, Pomeroy; Sharon
Cogar, Syracuse; Lauren Hoffman,
Dexter; John Dill, Middleport ; Mitzi
Ann Lewis, Racine.
Sunday
Discharge--Annette
Oldaker.

Cecile McClanahan, 89, Route 3,
Albany, died Sunday afternoon at
the home of her grandson, Frank
Shiltz, with whom she made her
home.
Born in West Virginia, she was a
daughter of the late William and
Luella Dixon. She was a housewife
and attended the Colwnbia Chapel
Church.
Mrs.McCianahan is survived by a
qaughter, Mildred Smitley, Logan;
two grandchildren, Frank Shiltz,
Albany, and Annette Foster, The
Plains, whom she reared, four other
grandchildren and 15 greatgrandchildren.
Preceding her in death was her
husband , Everett.
Funeral services will be held at 10
a.m. Tuesday at the Bigony-Jordan
Funeral Home , Albany, with the
Rev. Marvin Markins officiating.
Burial will be in the School Lot
Cemetery. The family will receive
·friends from 2 to 4 and 7 to9 p.m. this
evening.

She was preceded in death by her
husband, Ralph Meredith, in 1959:
Funeral services were held at 11
a.m. Saturday at the Ogdin Funeral
Home with the Rev.Baber Morris officiaiing. Burial was in the Elizabeth
K. ofP. Cemetery.

Jr., 25, of Washington Court House, ,
. and David J. Rammell, 42, of
Powell, in a tw&lt;&gt;-car accident north
Main St.
Pomeroy
992-2971
of Colwnbus on U.S. 23 in Delaware
County .
husband,
Kellerin indeath
1976,by
seven
was also Guy
preceded
her
COLUMBUS- Charles E. Koons,
sisters and four brothers.
38, of Colwnbus, in a one-car acMrs. Keller was a member of the
cident in Colwnbus.
Middleport United Pentecostal
PAINESVILLE -Carl M. Safick,
Church.
17, of Madison, in a one-c~r smashup
Surviving are two daughters,
on0hio84 in Lake County.
Mabel Pearman, Middleport, and
COLUMBUS~ Palmer Self, I3, of
Mrs. Eleanor Larson, Minnesota;
to the tractor.
Colwnbus,
when struck by a van on three sons, Gene Keller, Middleport;
There were no injuries and
Weber Road in Colwnbus.
Guy Keller, Jr., Salem Center, and
Calvert was cited by the patrol. ·
SATURDAY
John Keller, Orient, and three granTroopers also investigated a oneCLEVELAND - Marie Harris, 33, dchildren .
.car crash in Meigs County Sunday
of Cleveland, in a one-car accident
Funeral services will be held at
afternoon.
on Interstate 71 in Cleveland.
1:30 p.m . Tuesday at the Middleport
According to the report, Paul
REYNOLDSBURG - Guy L. United Pentecostal Church with the
Milliron, '1:1, Rt. 2, Racine, was eastCusick
; 20, of Reynoldsburg , in a Rev. William Knittel officiating.
boundonSR338at 1:25 p.m. when he
ooe-car
accident on Ohio 256 near The body will lie in state at the churlost control of his vehicle on high
from Playtex "Cross Your Heart&lt;!'
Columbus
suburb.
the
ch one hour preceding the services.
water and collided with a guard rail,
COLUMBUS - Edward L. Ranf~
Friends may call at the Rawlingscausing heavy damage . Milliron was
18,
of Colwnbus, in a tw&lt;&gt;-car ac- Coats-Blower Funeral Home from 2
not injured.
Special Introductory Price
cident on a city street.
to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. today. Burial will
BATAVIA- Walter T. Abner, 48, be in Miles Cemetery.
LAND TRANSFERS .
Soft Cup #600 in white or beige
Felicity,
in a one-car accident on
Dennis I. Boothe, Irma J ..Boothe
Lelah
Meredith
(34/36A, 34/40B,C) $7.99
Ohio
133
in
Clermont
County.
to Roger Hayman, Luvenia
CHAGRIN
FALLS
Ian
S.
MacHayman, .9 acre, Chester.
Mrs. Lelah Meredith, 92, Parkerdiarmid, 'P, of Willowick, in a one- sburg, died Wednesday at St. Joseph
Ronald J . Browning, Anna
Lightly Lined #646 in beige
Browning, Ronald K. Browning to car accident on a Geagua County Hospital.
(32/36A, 32/38B,C) $8.99
She was born in Elizabeth, W. Va .,
Dale Lee Browning, Lot 135, Mid- road.
ST. MARY'S Herbert A. a daughter of the late George and
dleport.
Jr.
23,
of
Minster,
in a one- ·Frances Dye.
Leugers
Offer ends April 25, 1961
Melody R. Hoschar to William E.
car
accident
on
an
Auglaize
County
Bartels,1.3 acres, Salisbury.
Surviving are a son, Richard C.
.•
Meredith of Pomeroy;
two
Alva J. Coates, Mary J . Coates to road.
ASHLAND
Charles
W. Myers,
Robert L. Taylor, Kathy M. Taylor I
daughters, Wilm" Provance and
53, of Ashland in a car-pedestrian ac- Thelma Fielder of Parkersburg, six
acre, Chester.
cident on U.S. 250 in Ashland County.
grandchildren and 11 greatWARREN- Edward L. Burrows,
Marcus Moore, Gertrude Moore to
grandchildren.
35, of Louisville, in a one-car acLowell Ridenour, Pauline Ridenour,
cident on U.S. 62 in Trwnbull Coun- r-------~-----1-----------------------Parcel, Cllester.
ty.
Ethel T. Weise, dec. to Gordon A.
FRIDAY NIGHT
Weese, John M. Weese, Clarence B.
COLUMBUSBenjamin Miller, 25,
Weese, Paul H. Weese, Cert. Trans.,
of
Zanesville,
while
jogging on a
Meigs.
Colwnbus street.

The patrol counts weekend traffic
By The Associated Press
deaths
from 6 p.m. Friday until midOhio traffic accidents claimed 14
lives - half of them in the Greater night Sunday.
Colwnbus area- over the weekend.
The dead:
SUNDAY
AU but two of the fatal accidents involved only one vehicle, the High- DELAWARE - James R. Hunter
way Patrol said.

A tw&lt;&gt;-vehicle accident in Gallia
County resulted in a DWI citation for
an area man Saturday afternoon.
The Gallia-Meigs Post of the Ohio
Highway Patrol said Steven Calvert,
20, Rt. 2, Gallipolis, was northbound
on SR 160 at 1:30 p.m. when he attempted to pass a tractor driven by
Dnna Greene, 16, Rt. 2, Bidwell.
Calvert then swung his vehicle
back into !be northbound lane and
collided with the tractor, causing
heavy damage to his car and slight

Friends may caii at 'the funeral
home today, 3 to 5 and 7 to 9 p.m.
Military graveside rites will also be
conducted.

--

Farmers
Bank

Member FOIC

Your. Community Owned Bank

Weather
Member FDIC

Mostly cloudy with scattered snow nurries tonight. Lows in the up:
(&gt;Cr 20s. Partly sunny Wednesday. Highs near 50. Chance of
prec ipitation 30 PQrcent tonight and near zero percent Wednesday.
Winds westerly t&lt;l northwesterly 1()-2() mph tonight.
Extended Ohio Forecast- Thursday through Saturday: Fair through
the period. Highs in the 40s to lower 50s Thursday and in the 40s •'riday
and Saturday. Lows in the mid-21ls lo mid·30s .

SVAC CAGE CHAMPIONS - For !be fifth slraiKht year, lhe
Soutllem Valley Athlellc . Conference championship belongs to the
Southern Tornadoes. Coach Carl Wolfe's team defeated Eastern last
Friday night for the league Iitie.
Into Friday's sectional loul'

Goi"'

namenl championship, !be team has an 111-3 record. Team members are,
front row, Jell to rlpt, Joe ·Bob Hemsley, Tom Roseberry, Allen Pape aDd
Terry McNickle. Backrnw, Rlebard Wolfe, paul Cardone, Jay Rees, Dale
Teaford, Robert BroWD, Dwayne Curfman and Kent Wolfe.

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