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Long strike lingers ln m1ners-

Page-lo-The Daily Sentinel

~~~--------E~iJiE!ifiE!~i;~----~~

IIBOXEDNEW!
From BRACH'S
i
CHOCO
. LAJES
CHRISTMAS BOXED

memory as election draws near
UMW members received~ immediate bonus of $100 under the new
contract plus $2.40 per hour over two
years.
In District 6, the miners complaiDed they didn't Uke the contract
but were forced to accept it by the
length of the strike.
"This district is different. .You
can't be sure just how they'll go, but
they'll make up their own minds,''
said Jim Hepe of Bellaire, a 30-yearold miner and forriM!r member of the
union 's international staff in
Washington. Hepe is running for a
position as organizer.
Incumbent district president.John
Guzek, seeking another four-year
term, is being opposed by district

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP l
Memories of the longest strike in the
coal industry's history and massive
layoffs in Ohio set the tone for the
United Mine Workers of America
election Tuesday in District 6.
Some 18,000 miners and retired
miners in Ohio and in four counties
in the northern ·Panhandle of West
Virginia wili be able to vote for Uie
district president and top officers as
well as scores of organizers,
auditors, election committeemen
and division board members.
Voting will take place at union
local offices and at mines between 6
a.m. and 6 p.m. District officials say
they don't expect to have results of
the election before midnight

December a; 1910

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Hoskins of Shady Side is being opposed by Steve Kubic of Pleasant I
Grove.
12
Prout, campaigning last week ~~
with Hepe, compared the contest to
the Nov. 4 general election battle
between President Carter and · I
President-elect Ronald Reagan.
"Alotofthemenjustwanttoseea M
change," said Prout, 32, of Bellaire. !I!
"They don't think they are being ~
represented by the ·peo111e in office, M
and they remember the contract i
they have now."
.
I
Hepe compared the mood of the
UMW election to the shift in control !I!
in the U.S. Senate from the 1(.
Democrats to the Republicans. "The W
best thing you can do in this election I

and John Prout of Bellaire, are.runningforBarton'sposition. .
Incumbent secretary-treasurer
Jerry Vinni of Powhatan Poj.nt is
being opposed by Mike Chaplin of St.
Clairsville. A seat on the international executive board of the
wlion is being sought by·Vernon Lee
Potter of New Lexington and by
Tony Bumbico, 30, of St. ClairSville.
Incumbent safety coordinator .In&lt;&gt;

3 Pounds of Brach's fine quality

m'Oved to file suit against the federal
Envirorunental Protection Agency
just before the Nove.nber election
over the clean air standards that are
hurting production of Ohio coal. But
that suit was stalled when the White
House applied pressure to keep the
case out of court while President
Carter was campaigning for reelection.

with a candy gift.

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11;

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5 Pound box _ assorted chocolates,
Christmas wrapped, ready to gi·ve.
•

OPEN EVERY NIGHT TIL 8

Be sure to see all of the other
Brach's boxed candieS and bagged candies just in for Christmas
buying.

,___--~~~~~~~--~,..,J
SANTA t
Will Be In
·
TUESDAY • 61o 7 P.M.

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WEDNESo~"~,61o7P.M. I
·!r~~~.~~:.r Children in for • Visit I

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY ·

BANK ONE

CHECKING
AROUND.
NEED IS
ALL

was given to the village by the late
By BOB HOEFLICH
Mary Eliza beth Hartinger Thomas
Ordinances providing for 1981 pay
increases for village employes and and wa s the ~i~ of her parents
home.
· the sale of a lot, were given first
Council approved ·a plan for
readings at Monday's Middleport
providing
lights for at least one and
Village Council meeting.
.
possibly
all
of the ball fields at the
Aceording to the ordinance on
Middleport
Community
Park.
salary increases, all village workers
·
John
Hood,
who
has
been in
will receive a five percent across the
charge
of
the
youth
league
at the
board pay hike. In addition, hourly
Ex·BEATLE SHOT - Former Beatie John Lennon was shot and
park
for
the
past
three
years,
and
employes will be given three cents
ldlled outsldt bls New York apartment Monday night. (AP Laserphoto).
David
Baker,
personnel
director
of
an hour for each year of service to
the
Southern
Ohio
Coal
Co.,
reported
the village and salaries personnel
all materials needed for the project
will receive $4 a month more times
have been procured. Baker said this
their number of years of service.
Introducing the ordinance, Mayor was made possible thorugh the efF'red Hoffman .said he had conferred forts of Gene Wise and Gene Oiler
with the finance committee on the and the fact that so many workers of
recommendation before putting it in the company reside in this area.
Installation processes will be hanordinance form.
The second ·ordinance declares dled by Hood and Baker and there
will be no cost to the village. The
that a lot owned by the village' at the
corner of Garfield and Third Sts. is men were commended for their
excess property and will be offered work. Lighting of the ball fields at
NEW YORK (AP) -John Lennon, Roosevelt Hospital, a mile away, in for sale after it is appraised. The lot the park has been discussed a nwnthe singer-songwriter who helped a squad car.
make the Beatles musical super"Tell Jlle it isn't true," sobbed his
stars and popoculture legends in the · wife, Yoko Ono, , ..whep doctors
1960s, was killed in a late-nigiJt pronounceC the 40-year-old
Spray of gurifire outside his luxury songwriter dead soon after.
apartment building.
Nearlk 1,!XMJ people - . some
Two women suffered injuries as back onto old 160, where the car
He was the co-author with Paul keeping a stunned, silent vigil,
the
result of -01 four-car collision in collided with two parked cars,
McCartney of such famous songs as others weeping and still others softly
owned by Edward H. Lynch, 70,
Gallia
County Monday afternoon.
"I Want to Hold Your Hand," singing Belltles' songs - jammed
T.he
Gallia-Meigs
Post
of
the
Ohio
Thurman,
and Dan Hyman, 51,
''Yesterday'' 2nd ''Let it Be.''
the streets and sidewalks around the
Highway
Patrol
reported
Sharon
L.
Syracuse,
respectively.
Minutes after the shots rang out, Dakota, where beunon, his wife, and
Queen, 21, Gallipolis, was norBoth drivers were injured and
police took a suspect into custody. their &amp;-year-old'son, Sean, lived.
thbound
on
old
SR
160
in
Porter
at
taken
to Holzer Medical Center by
Early today, they charged Mark
Hundreds of fans lit candles and
1:42 p.m. when she puUed out to the Gallia Volunteer Squad, where
David Chapman, 25, of Hawaii, with ringed the hospital in silent tribute.
they were treated and released for
murder. No motive was knbwn im"So brilliant, so gifted, so giving,'' cross SR 554.
Queen's car then went into the concussions and bruises .
mediately.
said Sid Bernstein, who produced
path
of a westbound ca:r driven by
Loveday's car was demolished
Yelling "I'm shot," Lennon the Beatles' Shea Stadium concerts
Ruth
A.
Loveday,
31,
Bidwell,
and
and
Queen's suffered moderate
staggered and collapsed face down of 1965 and 1900. "He was the Bach,
collided
in
the
westbound
lane.
damage.
The parked cars were
after the shooting at 10:50 p.m. Mon- the Beethoven, the Rachmaninoff ci
The
force
of
the
collision
sent
slightly
damaged,
the patrol said.
day at the Dakota, a century-old our time."
'Queen
was
cited
for
fai lure to yield
Queen's
car
across
554
to
the
left
and
building at the come• uf 72nd Street
Police said the gunman emerged
and Central Park West. Police
from the shadows as the ~nnons
rushed the former Beatie to
(Continued'on page 10)

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the interest

1,200 attend event

plan .

Approximately 1,200 persons attended the open house festivities
beld · at Hubbard's Greenhouse
Saturday and Sunday.
Winners of the door prizes were
Patty Johnson, Middleport; Bonnie
Theiss, Racine; Florence Powell,
New Haven; Bob Mead, Gallipolis;
Kathy Pooler, Pomeroy; Gloria
Manuel, Racine; Mona Gibbs, ·
Letart, W.Va.

Today's weather forecast
Rain tonight. Lows in the low to mid-30s. Mostly cloudy Wednesday .
fll,;hs in the mid-40s. Chance of percipitation 80 percent tonight and 10
percent Wednesday. Winds northerly 10-20 mph tonight.
Extended Oblo Forecast- Thursday through Saturday: Jl'air Thursday. Chance of snow flurries statewide Friday and in the northeast
Saturday. Cold with highs in the 20s and low 30s, rising into the 30s on
Saturday. Lows in the teens Thursday, rising into the 20s on Saturday.

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One way or the other,
NG TWO will pay you daily interest
on all your money in the bank.* You can keep your balance at
$1000 or more and pay no monthly fees or charges.** If vour
balance falls below $1000, you'll still earn interest on every dollar
you have in the plan. Sure, we'll charge you a $5.00 fee for that
mqnth, but if you subtract the interest you earn from the fee you
pay~ you'll still have one of the most economical checking plans
ava1laple. And we even have a way for business customers to
.
earn interest on. their excess balances.

Santa to make visits
Santa will make personal visits to
home in the five Meigs County towns
through a project being carried out
by Ohio Eta Phi Chapter of Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority.
Schedule for the visits includes
Dec. 15, Syracuse-Racine; Dec. 17,
Rutland; Dec. 18, Middleport, and
Dec. 19, Pomeroy. Visits will start at
7 p.m. each evening and are confined to the corporation limits of the
towns. There is a $2 charge per

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SIGMUPNOWI

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Those interested in a visit from
Santa are to call992-7'102.

CHECKING TWO is

much better than a regular

checking account.

IN HOSPITAL
Arthur Hoyt, Pomeroy, is un. dergoing testing and observation at
the Holzer Medical Center. Cards
may be ~~ent to Room 413.
"AII1unds begh earning mleresl one tJus1ness day aller deposll .
""Ttlere 1s a $.15 charge tor alltransact1ons in excess ol 40 per month
An money 1S 1o:ep11n the savmgs accounl ol me CHECKING TWO piHn
and tne checking accoun t cames n zero balance . When yoo l'fltle a
•
check. the money 1s automatically trenster1ed from the sav•ngs accow11
to the check•ng account and the 1ema1nder of the sav1ngs ~ccounl
balance conhnues to earn dau1y mterest

Member ~DIC

.

BANK ONE.

•

BANK QNE OF:_POMEROY. NA
PomerGJ • Rutland • Tuppers Plains

Member· FDIC

higher student fees and employee
layoffs. Three of them endorsed a
tax hike instead of furlher cuts.
But Sen. John R. Kasich, RColumbus, unveiled a plan of selective cuts which he said would save
the state $400 million and avoid the
need for a tax hike.
"I think we have proven that the
budget can be balanced without the
need for a tax increase," he said.
The decision on whether either of
the school fundin g programs will be
implemented rests with the General
Assembly.
·
School board members approved a
plan that would scrap the current
equal-yield formula of distributing
state aid to local school districts. It
would be replaced with a basic foundation formula calling for the state
to boost its support for schools by $1
billion over the next two years.
The current complex system was

designed to equalize per-pupil su]&gt;port, in psrt, by providing increased
aid to those districts in which
residents shoulder heavier local tax
burdens for schools. That incen.tive
plan would be eliminated by the new
formula.
Under the board's plan, districts
levying real estate taxes of 20 milis
would get $1,520 in per-student aid in
1982 instead of the current $1 ,300.
Big city districts also would get
more support through a cost-ofdoing-business factor.
. The school board left to the
Legislature the decision on how to
pay for the increased support. But
the OEA's proposal contained three
plans to generate between $500
million and $1 .5 billion in new school
revenue. It calls for more reliance
on Ohio's personal income, sales and

corporate taxes, instead of local
property taxes, for support.

ber of times previously, but the
village did not have funds to carry
out the project.
Harry Evans, village financial advisor,

discussed

interest

in·

vestments and the possibilities of his
working with the 'lillage in other
capacities in such endeavors as the
aunual report. His charge will be $15
plus mileage and a minimum
payment of $60 per assignment. He
reported that through 1980 village investments had realized a $14,792.55
gross interest increase over last
year.
The mayor's report showing
receipts of $5728.75 for November
was approved. Clerk Jon Buck
read a letter from the Ashland Oil
Co. announcing an increase of one
cent a gallon on all grades of
gasoline effective as of Nov. 25.
Mayor Hoffman announced that
bids on a sewer .extension project for
Elm, Broadway , Railroad and other

•

lit

streets of that area will be opened at
2:30p.m. on Dec. 30.
Councilmen • Carl Horky and
Dewey l!orton were reappointed to
serve on the. Volunteer Firefighters
Dependency Board for the next
year.
Mayor Hoffman also read a communication from the Interstate ·
Commerce Commission in regard to
the approval of the abandonment of
Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad
properties in Middleport. It was
agreed that Mayor Hoffman will
'contact the railroad to determin~ if
the properties will be available to
the town.
The mayor, in conclusion, also
reported that the applications have
been made for a building permit and
water and sewage permits for a
senior citizen apartment complex on
Powell St. , an indication that a]&gt;parently the project is going to move
ahead.

traffic mis/zap·-

right of way.
The patrol investigated a two-car
crash on 160 later in the afternoon.
According to the report, Mark E.
Allen, 21, Gallipolis, was northbound
at 5:45 p.m. when he stopped to
make a left turn and was struck ·in
the rear by a car driven by Teresa L.
Miller, 19, Kerr . •
Troopers said Miller was unable to
stop when the accident occurred.
Moderate damage was done to both
cars and Miller was cited for DWI.
No injuries were reported in a onecar crash in Gallia County earlier

that afternoon.
Virginia R. Wolfe, 18, Gallipolis,
was northboW1d on CR 3 (Mitchell
Rd.) at 12 :20 p.m. when her car went
off the right side of the road and into
a ditch, causing moderate damage.
According to the report, Wolfe
said the accident was caused by a
southbound vehicle left of center,
which left the scene.
Donna D. Stewart, 26, Vinton, was
not injured when her car struck and
killed a deer on SR 124 in Meigs
County at 6 p.m., causing slight
damage.

Rising waters ground shanty boatman
BELPRE, Ohio (AP) - All but ded?
"Who's safe from anything," he
one of the shanty boaters along the
·Ohio River have vanished, washed
away by increasingly heavy towboat
traffic and bigger barges.
And Bill Johnson, reportedly the
last of the river's shanty boatmen, is
grounded because of rising waters.
He moved his 21-by-7 foot boat,
called the Skipper, off the water and
onto his family's property a few feet
from the river bank here four years
. ~· --~--'
ago.
. "That was in 1976 - worst winter
in the history of the river," the 59year-old Johnson said.
He woke up at about 2 a.m. that
morning to the noise of cracking timbers. Ice, measuring 16 inches thick,
was breaking his boat.
"I used an ax and tried to chip her
out," he said. "Then I put salt on it
(which freezed) harder than the

said. "The only thing that got this
boat up on shore was prayer and the

God Almighty giving me high
water."

ice."

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Officials face an additional cut in
spending, a tax increase or some
combination of both to resolve the
'budget dilemma.
Six Ohio .college and university
presidents said Monday that another
10 percent spending cut could lead to

Gallia woma1t hurt

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lost is another 'reason," he said. wlf

revenue.

Former Beatie
Lennon slain

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elected, I plan on trying to get the
pensions improved for the 1974
president and the 1950 pensioner,
which is a disgrace to the miner who
built this union.
"We have to get stronger contact
language to keep our work in our
shops. protect our seniority and
language to help the surface miner
and the UMWA construction
worker," he continued.
"We need dental care which the
family needs today, and most of all,
improve our vacation where the
miner can spend time wjth ' his
family and be paid for it," Bell
noted. "I plan on getting out into the
field as I have done during this election, talking ,io the miners and not
showing up only when I need your
vote at election time."

Education Association - for a
major hike in state aid to local
schoo.l districts.
The 23-member state school board
also went on record as endorsing a
tax hike rather than additional spending cuts, for solving the current
budget crunch. It adopted a
resolution advising "that the
General Assembly take appropriate
action to increase state revenue to
balance Ohio's· budget." But the
board left to the Legislature the
decision on whether the state sales,
personal income or another tax
should be tapped for the extra

.Council approves pay hike

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at
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MARTINS FERRY - Ed Bell,
president of L. U. lllO Ireland mine
in Belmont County, has aunounced
his candidacy for presidency of the
United Mine Workers District 6.
Bell is facing incumbent president
John Guzek and vice president Okie
Barton in the election, which will be
conducted between 6 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Tuesday in local wlion offices and
mines throughout the district.
Bell, 42, has been a miner for 12
years and has had seven years experience in union politics. He is
married and the father of two
children.
Bell said his reasons for running
relate to a Jack of leadership on the
part of the present district amdinlstration.
"I feel the last contract strike of
Ill days and the benefits that were

REVIVAL CONTINUE'S
Arevival 18 continuing at 7:30p.m.
each evening at the Hysell RUII
Holiness Church ·on County Road 15
and State Route 124. The public is invited.

COLUMBUS, 'Ohio (AP) - A
week-long' bbarr.age of gloomy
forecasts about the impact of state
spending cuts 'bas given way to a
fiscal summit meeting with Gov.
James A. Rhodes and legislative
leaders.
Today' s session marks the third
time .that top offici'lfs have met since Nov. 4 to study ways of solving a
projected $353.7 million deficit in the
state's recession-weakened budget.
And it caps a flurry of news conferences . by welfare, education,
mental health and other officials
·who predict dire consequences if forced to' slice another 10 percent from
their state appropriations to balance
the budget.
But while Rhodes and the
legisltltors discussed ways to erase
the red ink, there were separate
calls from two groups - the Ohio
Board of Education and the Ohio

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chocolates. YQU're sure to please

15 Cents

A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

Board backs tax hike

r - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - --...1_______:________:______:__:_:__..-.:....._:_:...:.:...:..::..:.::....============

Announces
candidacy

familY.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohig Tuesday, December 9; 1980

I

:s;.t~~~~:~a~yanth~~::~ ~~~!~~li::n;a: ~[ ag=~n :::nt;~a::: ~

coal market with more jobs and better representation by district offictals. Many are still disillusioned
by the 1~y strike that crippled
the coalfields through March 1978.
The contract that ended the strike
e)qlires March 'J:l, and candidates
say miners will be voting with an eye
towardnegotiationsnextyear.
The UMW's national contract, a]&gt;proved by 55,000 to 42,!XMJ in 1978,
was rejected by a 2-1 margin in
District 6. Miners in the district also
strongly opposed former UMW
president Arnold Miller in favor of
former UMW official Harry Patrick.

1 Section, 10 pages

Vol . 21, No. 167

Copyrighted 1980

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SPRING LIKE WEATHER - The temperature in downtown
·Pomeroy Moaday reached a high of 7&amp; degrees. Robert Haggy, Starcher
R.l!, Pemeroy, walked about Pomeroy In just his shirt sleeves. The temperatare was UDIIeasonably warm lor the first week in December.

•

Finally, after working aU night,
Johnson chopped all the ice away.
The task proved so large that a
friend asked him the next morning
who had done all the work.
"I s.Bid I hired that done,'' he said.
Then laughed, since l)e doesn't hire
anything done, instead existing on
his gard!!n and odd jobs.
Johnson served in World War II as
a ship gunner and enlisted in the Army during the Korean War. He
worked for 11 years in a machine
shop1_but quit after attaining a top
position there. He also worked for
eight years as head of a maintenance and parts department at an
iron works in Hyattsv.ille, Md.
But he chose to return to his
hometown. of Belpre, and life along
the Ohio River. His sister lives in the
house on the family's property. And
he and his dog, Tater, share the
shahty.
Does he feel safe.frorn high waiei'R
now that his boat h~R been growl-

SHANTY BOATMAN - Bill Johnson,' reportediy

the last of 'the Ohio River's shanty boatmen, stands
lll!lrt to hlo home, the Sllipper, In Belpre. The 59-year-

It

old Johnson moved his boat to th~ river's bub foar
years ago because of rising waters. (AP Lalerpboto).
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�Oecember9."1980

.C ommentary

The Daily Sentinel
P&lt;!ge--

2

swap seven players ••
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additional deals on fire

·•seeks citizen design

DAlLAS (AP) - lllok for the St.
· Louis Cardinals to acquire premier
reliev.er Bruce Sutter and then move
bullPen 'ace Rollie Fingers to
Oakland or some other club. ·

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Today is Tuesday, Dec. 9, the 344th
day of 1980. There are 22 days left in
· the year.
Today' s highlight in history :
, On Dec. 9, 1940, British troops
• opened their· first big offensive in
North Africa during World War II.
On this date :
In 1905, the separation of church
and state was decreed in France.
In 1944, Allied troops cracked German defense lines near Aachen, Ger• many, during World War II.

In 1958, Robert Welch Jr. and 11
others formed a political
organization they named the John
Birch Society.
Ten years ago : President Richard
Nixon said the U.S. would resume
bombing North Vietnam if the Communists stepped up the South Viet·
namesewar.
Five years ago: The death toll was
put at 160 in two days as fighting between Moslems and Christians in
Beirut, Lebanon.

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street

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"I can't believe it's a girdle."

Two games tonight

••

Two games are·scheduled this
evening IDvolviDg SVAC schools.
North Gellla travels to Southern
In a mate-up game postpooed
from last Friday- night. The cootest begiwl at 7:30p.m.
S.outhwestem looking for Its first victory this seasoo Is h01itlng
Symmes Valley. .
Friday night; the Highlanders
.visit Kyger Creek; Hannan Trace
goes to Southern and Eastern is
at North Gallla.
Saturday night, Kyger Creek
plays Elk Valley; Symmes
Valley travels to Southern and
Eastern goes to Mlller.

F·o ur Ohio programs brace for winter
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Ohio is
bracing for winter's onslaught with
$,144 million in four ~eparate
programs to help its needy residents
pay their heating bills and weatherproof their homes.
Most of the money is being
provided by the federal government.
But Ohio has allocated $36.5
million in state funds for its Energy
Credits Program. It helps qualified
elderly and handicapped persons
meet the increasing costs of fuel
used to heat their homes.
The application deadline for the .
program, administered by the Ohio
Department of Taxation , has
already passed. Roger Whaley,
energy credits supervisor, said the
agency received requests for
assistance from about 353,000
households this winter, about the
same nwnbcr as last.Jear.

In order to qualify for energy
credits aid, a person must be head of
a household or spouse and be at least
65 years old or totally and permanently disabled. In addition, they
must have a total income for 1979 of
no more than $9,000.
DeiJending on the type of fuel they
heat with and whether they live In
their own homes' or apartments,
eligible applicants are entitled to
reductions of varying amounts on
their winter fuel bills or one time
payments of$125.
Eligibility guidelines are more
broad for this winter's other !113jor
assisiance effort, the Home Energy
Assistance Program administered
by the state's Economic and Community Development Deparbnent.
It will sub.sidize the winter heating
costs of welfare recipients and, other
poverty level income families. The

amounts of assistance given will be
determined by individual household
income and the costs of heating fuels
used, as provided in a formula based
on federal government guidelines.
Karl Koch, project manager, said
the department hopes to begin accepting applications for assistance
from an expected 550,000 households
by mid-December. Forms are expected to be available from community action agencies, welfare offices or other local groups
throughout the state.
Development official.· re also involved in two other related
programs funded by the federal
government.
The state will seek $14.6 million in
funds for 1981 to , provide
weatherization assistance for lowincome individuals.
Qualified persons niay apply for

grants of $50 to $1,000 to finance
energy conservation projects in
their homes ranging fi·om weatherstripping around doors and windows
to attic insulation.
The assistance is provided by
community action agencies or other
local groups. Interested persons
may contact the deparbnent toll free
at 1-l!00-282-1072 for the name of the
agency in their area providing the
· help.
Ohio has also been allocated $3.2
million in federal funds for an
Energy Crisis Intervention
Program. Administered directly by
conununity action agencies, it is
designed as a "last resort" effort to
provide inunediate help to qualified
low income households which face a
loss of fuel for home heating purposes.

GETl'ING IT DONE - New England Patriots
defeoslve eod To~&amp;y McGee (78) sails over the side of

\

~lb

!SlM~

.

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

~v

ROBERT L. WINGEIT
Publl1ber

PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH
General Mlou:er

As•l•laat PubUthtr/CoocroUer

DALE ROTIIGEB, Jlt.
Newt Editor
A MEMBER of Tbe A11oclaud Pretl, IDllad Ddy Pr~• Anoc.latloo aod the
Amertcaa Newt.-ft!t PubU.ben AlloclatJou.

LETTERS OF OPINION lrt welcomed. rhey tbould be len tau 300 wordt loaa. All
. letter~ •re IUb,tect to edldq: •ocl mU•t be •lloed with DIUDt, •ddreu aod ttlephoor
IUiber. No aadpeclletien will IN! pab!JIIItd. Letten tboald be Ia Jood Yltte, lddrHIIDf

IIRMI, DOC penoa~UJ;tet.

by a united front and the immediate its independent way, is not beiJlg ofterrevolutionary" activities.
· Government-connected press and " result was not a one-party state, but ficially censored, the results are efbroadcasting facilities , which an effort of political pluralism. The fectively the same. The instrument
means just about all, are engaged in new regune also had lines open to is a decree, increasingly invoked,
an all-{)ut media campaign against the United States. At considerable strictly controlling dissemination of ·
the . counterrevolutionary threat political cost to itself, the Carter ad- information impinging on the
while the country's leading and fier- ministraon, which had helped speed national security and economy.
cely independent newspaper, La Somoza's departure, was prying an
It is ironic that La Prensa should
Prensa of Managua, is finding it in- aid package out of a reluctant now be a target. It was the murder of
creasingly tough going to print all Congress. Even the Cubans were the paper's fanner editor, Joaquin
the news about Nicaragua it believes
Chamorro, by the Somoza regime
reported advising the Nicaraguans that possibly more than any otller
should be printed.
What it adds up to is a disturbing against repeating Cuban mistakes. single incident may have guaranturn for the worse in the few short And the new government was teed the success of the revolution. It
months since Nicaraguans politically backed and economically brought the Nicarguan situation to
celebrated the first anniversary of assisted by the Caribbean's two world attention and subjected
the overthrow of one of the most greatest regional powers, oil-rich Somoza regime to continuing
squalidly oppressive regimes the Mexico and Venezuela.
scrutiny it could not endure.
That was ' July. Much has hapHemisphere has had the misfortune
pened since, starting in August wlJen
Nicaragua today is taking on the
to have experienced.
the Sardinians put off until1985 elec- , characteristic coloration of a
At that time, in mid-July, the lions for a ~~nstitutional . govem- revolution in decay, passing from
country, although facing a massive ment that political and busmess m- the first euphoric stage of liberation
reconstruction effort, was seen by terests had been pressing for. Rem- of all from one oppression to the immany as the bright hope of the entire nants of the Somoza national guard position of another repression by
region's future. True, the San- have continued to harry the new those newly dominant.
'
dinistas by their own definition are gov'ernment, which has responded
Still, advocates of political ·
Marxists. Cuban advisers are the with the stepped-up campaign pluralism have not surrendered and
most active evidence of foreign aid against counterrevolutionaries. The · the revolution may ret be saved
to date, and Fidel Castro in flam- ~ssassmation of Anasta_SJo Somoza from its own excesses. The light in
boyant person was the star of the an- m his Paraguayan exile appears Nicaragua is not out completely llut
niversary celebrations.
only to have fueled it further.
it is becoming increasingly difficult
· But the revolution had been won
And H Ia Prensa, in seeking to go to read the good news by it.

ByDooGraff
may be failing in Central

Amertca.
The news out of Nicaragua these
days " not encouraging for those
,. ho
hoped that the overthrow
of the SOmoza dynasty a year and a
hall a~o would bring liberation to
that :ong oppressed and exploited
country, a genuine new order in
which a variety of political viewpoints would be permitted expression. Instead, revolutionary
Nicaragua may be well on the way to
repea ting an all too familiar Latin
story - the replacement of an old
reP.ression with a new one.
The split between the Simdinista
guerrillas, who dominated the
revolution, and their uneasy allies
among private business interests
and traditional political parties ; ,
rapidly deepening. Activities of the
latter are being obstructed, leading
to a protest walkout from the Council of State early in November. Some
50 business leaders are under arrest
and one prominent figure, the head
of the coffee growers association,
died in an armed confrontation with
security forces, a consequence, ace
cordiing to Sandinista spokesmen, of
his involvement in "coun-

MIAMI (AP) - Uwe von
Schariumn's third field goal of the
game, a 23-yarder 3:20 into overtime, lifted the Miami Dolphins to a
16-13 upset of New England Monday
night and dealt a serious blow to the
Patriots' chances for a National
Football League playoff berth. ·
Von Schamann's game-winning
kick was set up by a 54-yard pass
play from rookie quarterback David
Woodley to wide receiver Durie!
Harris. Shortly after the Dolphins
took the opening kickoff in the overtime period, Harris made a leaping
catch over Patriots free safety Tim
Fox at the New England !().yard line
and stumbled to the 5.
The victory improved the
Dolphins' record to 7-7, while the
Patriots dropped to 11-9 - two games
off the pace set by Buffalo, the AFC
East leaders.
· Tight end Russ Francis' diving,
juggling catch of a 38-yard touchdown pass from Matt Cavanaugh
gave the ·Patriots a 13-7 lead with
12:55left in the fourth quarter.
The Dolphins forced the overtime,
however, by launching a !~lay, 78- ·
yard drive that Woodley capped with
an B-yard touchdown pass which
deflected off the hand of tight end

In 1979, Congress mandated that
By RobertJ. Wagman
WASlliNGTON (NEA) - Critics the Surgeon General and the
of the liquor industry have for Treasury Department's Bureau of
several years urged that liquor bot- Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms
ties bear warning labels similar to study the health risks associated
those on cigarette packages to better with alcohol and the ways in which
alert the public to the health dangers the lederal government might warn
associated with drinking. The in- the public of those hazards.
After exclusively reviewing both
dustry has fought this proposal tooth
sides
of the labeling controversy, the
and nail, arguing that warning
labels would be ineffective and Surgeon General and the ATF
dec lared that " it would be
would cost millions of dollars.
Now a major government study premature to· recommend health
has come down on the side of the in- warning labels for alcoholic
dustry. Behind the release of that beverages at this lime." In exreport is a story of poliliral intrigue ' plan,otion, they expressed doubt that
pitting revenge-seel:ing White House " the risks associated with al~oholic
h&lt;&gt;ve rage; could be effectively com~ laffers against C.1 Hreer r iViJ ser" 1unil'&lt;oled through the use of
vants or l \Vu ~ovcrmnent a,E!t !1rjp..;
and a member vf tl;c C.ortt'! CdLillel. labeling ...

'

Further, the agencies concluded
that since "it has not been
established that moderate alcohol
consumption Is hazardous for most
alcohol consumers," it would be improper to demand labels saying
something like "alcohol may be
hazardous to your health."
This is not to say that the agencies
~ave alcohol a clean bill of health.
They cited at length the medical
problems associated with alcohol
consumption, with particular em·
phasis on the potential damage even
moderate drinking by a pregnalt
woman can do to her unborn child.
_ Instead of warning labels, the
agencies recommend .r massive
campaign of industry-financed adverti•ements and government-

Joe Rose into the grasp of wide
receiver Nat Moore.

ated

Preas'

final

13-12-11·10.9-l-7-6-~3-2-l :

1. Georgia (60 )

2. Florida State i -t l
3. Pittsburgh
4. Oklahoma

5. MlchJgan

American U. 103,

Getty~burg

Har~ard 68

64

La Salle 73, Bucknell 63

Long Island U. 90, C.W. Post 76
Northeastern 53, Anny, 51
Robert Morris 86, Colgate 69
Towson SL 75, W.Chester St. 67

Wagner 89, Southampton 1W
SOUTH

Ala.-Blnntngham 61, Texas-Arlingtm 54
Alcorn St. 72, Howard U. 68

13. North Caroli na
14. Brigham Youn!S
15. ·UCLA
115. Washington
17. ~ississfppi State
II. South Carolina

19. So. Methodist
20. Miami. Fl14.

D,avlrl.o!on 79, Manhall 73, 2

E.Carollna 75, Berry 53

Cloist Teaford, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Raymond Teaford, Route I,
.Minersville, bSgged a nil)e-point
buck Saturday morning, the final
day of the hunting season. Last year,
Cloist bagged a seven point buck.

or

McNeese St. 86, Oklahoma A~S 80
Mldtlle TeM1 74, N.Alabama 73

Murray St. 67, NE Louisiana 59, OT
NW Louisiana 91, Louialana Coli. 70
Southern U. 77, S.Carollna st. 75, ar
Wake Forest liD, John Carroll Ml

rr~

.

WHEN: FIVE CONSECUTIVE WED"ESDAYS
JAN. 7, 14, 21, 28 &amp; FEB. 4
TIME: 4 P.M. TO 10 P.M.

~

~

.

Reds-Cards deal off
because of numbers
CINCINNATI (AP ) - The Cincinnati Reds wanted St. LOuis catcher Terry Kennedy badly but simply weren't interested in the rest of
the players the Cardinals wanted
them to take .
So the Cardinals traded Kennedy,
Mike Philips, Steve Swisher, and
four young pitchers and a minor
leaguer to be named later to the San
Diego Padres.
In turn, -the Cards got pitchers
Hollie Fingers and Bob Shirley , and
catcher Gene Tenace.
"The Cardinals served notice on
us that we had to take four of those
guys or we don't have a deal,"
Wagner said at the winter baseball
meetings Monday at Dallas, Tex.
"We would have had to take four
of the other six plus Kennedy . If we
do that, what do we do with the
young people already on our roster?
We wQuld have had to take four
people that we didn't want. We just
don't have the room to lake on a lot
of nwnbers.~~
Wagner said he wanted Kennedy
very much and tried hard to accommodate St. Louis General
Manager Whitey Herzog.
The Reds said they need a ca tcher
because veteran Johnny Bench wants to limit his time at that positi on to
two games a week.

" We negotiated for more than two
months . We started in September,
and we made them several terrific
offers. We altered the deal last Monday and aga in Sunday, at their
request. Monday we shot them a
whole different deal, which they
really had to think about," Wagner
said. ·
" l iell you, I thought we were
going to ma)&lt;e the deal at the World
Series. But I will say that I admire
Whitey Herzog for his willingness to
shoot craps on thi s thi ng. l o I had
taken the St. Louis deal, though, I
would have been in the commissioners's jail ," for having more
players on the roster than the 40 man
limit.
" It's frustrati ng, though, to work
for more than two months and come
up ernpty handed. But it's not the
end of the world," Wagner said.
Wagner said there are a few good
ca tchers available but most
possibilities have been dismissed by
the teams concerned.
·
However , Cleveland Indians
President Gabe Paul sa1d he has
been talking to Wa gner concerning
27-year-old catcher Bob Diaz.
" Yes, we have had discussi ons
with the Reds but they are still in the
embryoni c stage. We will talk
again,'' Paul said.

college

l(~t~

.

'
1,274
1,208
1,127

9-2-0
9-2-0
10.1-0

l ,IJ'l7

9+1

860

9-2.0

IIDI
800
S41
578
563
495
470

9-2.{1
9-2-e
8-2·1
, 1()..1-0
, ll-1-0
!l-:Hl
9-2-0
9-2.(1
8-3-0
8-3-0
S-3-0

947
914

464
439
34:1
171
123
67

UC interviews Coach Carter
CINCINNATI (AP )- Coach Rick . Charlie Davis, offensive coordinator
· Carter, whose University of Dayton at Tulane.
Flyers won the Division III national
McGee said one or possibly two
championship, was interviewed more candidates would be inMonday for the head football terviewed before a recommendation
coaching job at the University of is made to University President
Henry Wi nkler.
Cincinnati.
.
Carter was the third candidate inCarter, 31, has a 39-7:2 record at
terviewed by Athletic Director Mike
McGee and his search committee to Dayton in four years. His 1980 team
replace Ralph Staub, who was went undefeated and stunned Ithaca
College with a 6~ victory Saturday
relieved following the 1980 season.
Others interviewed were Coach in the Amos Alonzo Stagg Bowl at
Mike Gottfried of Murray State and Phenix City, Ala.

~p;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;..,

BAGS DEER

Auburn 77, TeM. Tech 62

Campbell 91, Methodist 7S

'

•

12. So. California

Kansas 90, Marebead St. 56
Michigan. 98, Akron 69
Purdue 82, BuUer 61
W.Michigan 84, Grand Valley 71
Wichita St. 110, Long Beach St. 61
xavier, Ohio 83, Ohio Wesleyan 70

Pitt 79, Indiana, Pa. 64

'
· 11..().{1
10.1-0

!).2~

10. Pf!nn State
11 . Ohio State

MIOWFSJ'
Bowling Green 61, ComeU 47
Cent. MJchlgan «l, Valparaiso 64
Creighton &amp;4, St. Louis 57
DePaul 9:1, N.lliinoiJ 56

SKI SCHOOL·
.

supported public-service an·
nouncements. The industry, through
its Distilled Spirits Council, has
promised to back such a campaign
with hefty funding.
. Bu~s was not good enough for
some of the lame ducks on the White
House domestic-policy staff, who
are accused by Treasury Department sources of attempting to block
.dilltribution of the report and persua de the ATF to impose reguladona
requiring warning !Jibels despite the
report's contrary flndlngs·.
Why? The White House staffers
are furious with business for
backing Ronald Reagan with the
contributions they believe were
crucial to his victory over President
Carter.
..,.

7. Notre Dame
8. Nebraska
9. Alabama

----College scores---Catholic U. 75,

n:gu\ar·se!lS()n

rootball poll, with first-place votes in pllt•
enthe!a, Sl!ason's
recorru
and total
points. POirits based Qn 20-UHS.\7-16-l&amp;-14-

Billsseason
were losing
the final day
the
of the
at SanonFrancisco.
In
the event of a tie, New England
would win the division and an
automatic playoff berth with a better confe~ence record.

By Tbe Auodated Prtu
EAST

Professiooal Baseball Leagues, after addressing the winter baseball
meeting In Dallas Monday. Just after the commissioner's remarks the
wioter draft began. (AP Laserphoto) .

By Tbe ApocJa~ Prell

for 192 yards, while Cavanaugn,
playing with a bruised left knee,
completed 13 of 17 for 175 yards. .1.
New England hosts Buffalo next
Sunday and e&lt;juld still tie the Bills
for the division crown. In order to
tie, the Patriots would have to beat
the Bills and then close the season .
with a victory at New Orleans while

Horace Ivory returned the ensuing
kickoff 39 yards to give the Patriots
the ball at their own 36. Cavanaugh
moved the team downfield to the
Miami 21)-yard line, where John
Smith carne on to attempt a potential game-winning 35-yard,field goal
with three seconds left. Miami nose
tackle Bob Baurnhower blocked the
attempt, however, and the game
went into overtime.
Woodley completed 15 of 24 passes

BAS_EBALL HUDDLE- Baseball Commissioner Bowie Kuhn, right,
talks with John Johnsoo, President of the Naliooal Association of

.'

11M! Top Twenty teams in The AMoci·

'

A jigger of industri~ .r evenge

1

•

College top '2o

Mlami upsets New England
o~ Schamann 's field goal

Pomeroy, Obkt

IIHIZ-2111
DEVOTED TO ntE INTEREST OF 111E MEIGS-MASON AREA

Miami Dolphin quarterback David Woodley In a quick
sack during acdoo at Miami's Orange Bowl. (AP
Laserphoto l. ·

6. Baylor

'"'"'e

• •

baseball's operating statements
have reflected a combined loss
before income taxes amounting to
many tnillions of dollars."
Before Kuhn spoll;e, the Cardinals
and San Diego Padres engaged in an
ll·piayer deal, a.nd the Houston
Astros and San Francisco Giants in
a four-player swap.
St. Louis obtained Fingers, pitcher
Bob Shirley, catcher-first ·baseman
Gene Tenace and a player to be
named later. San Diego received
.catcher Terry Kennedy, infielder
Mike Phillips, catcher Steve Swisher
and pitchers AI Olmsted, Kim
Seaman, ' John LitUefield and John
Urrea.
The Astros acquired pitcher Bob
Knepper and outfielder Chris Bourjos from the Giants for .third
baseman Enos Cabell and a player
to be named later.
The deal may the last for AI
Rosen, as Astros_general manager .
The Associated Press learned Monday night that Tal Smith will be rehired for that job next week to
replace Rosen, who replaced him.
The firing of Smith by John MCMullen last month set off a furor th'!tt
resulted in McMullen being ousted
as Aslros chief executive officer.
The partners who voted McMullen
OQt of power are moving to bring
back Smith.

'
',,'

.~ II~ht

Today in history.

owners and, and indirectly to
The Cubs, who finished last in the players, Monday.
The commissioner said baseball
National League East are anxious to
unload Sutter's $700,000 salary (an ,may have a bad case of "economic
arbitrator's award). Chicago also pneumonia." ·
would be glad to peddle outfielderKului declared, " barring the
first baseman Dave Kingman and
discovery of oil un~P second base or
outfielder Jerry Martin.
The Cub.s figure they can finish some other miracle, one must ask
last with youth and. a stibat.&lt;intially- what is to become of some of our
lower payroll. They're trying to milk more afflicted club.s."
The commissioner said a report by
some team 's fann system of young,
potential major league class an accounting finn was not encouraging, and that the information
players.
Maybe Chicago's attitude falls in was not the result of any tricky
line with Commissioner Bowie bookkeeping.
"For the seasons 1974 thro'ugh 1979
Kuhn's gloom and doom meilsage to
if St. Louis will pay for the right.

Cardinals' General · Manager
Whitey Herzog, who also is the field
boss, is wheeling and dealing to improve his fourth place club, and he
has the Chicago Cuba frothing to
give him Sutter.
,
The latest word at baseball's annual winter meeting 'is · that thitd
baseman Ken Reitz of tbe Cardinals,
part of the ~al to get ,Sutter, Is
willing to wa1ye his ncrtrade clause

Old repressions replaced by new repressions

"/ f)ope Governor Reagan and his people know
what they 're getting in to."

Moddh.' port, Ohio

Cal-~

·war monument
Some times between now and the political and it must have space lor
end of next March, some United inscribing the names of 57,661
States citizens, 18 or older, wiU sul:r Americans who died in the war.
The memorial fund officers
mit the winning design for a
monwnent in Washington, D. C., to already have picked the design
the 57,661 Americans who died in the judges. They are sculptors Richard
Hunt, Constantino Nivola and Jane
Vietnam War . .
Rosati; architects Pietro Belluschi
You could be the winner.
The idea for a monwnent came and Harry Weese; landscape arfrom Jan Scrubb.s, 30, an equal op- chitects Garrett Eckbo and Hideo
portunities specialist in the Labor Sasaki and editor Grady Clay of
Deparbnent. He'd seen "The Deer Landscape Architecture magazine.
Mrs. Kielich says ihe fund is "enHunter" in Apri11979, and as he left
couraging
team concepts" - that is,
the theater had a "flashback" - and
where
an
architect
and a landscape
the idea. At that moment, he says, " I
expert,
lor
example;
put their heads
found myself looking into the eyes of
together
to
work
out
a design. She
my dead buddies, remembering
says "a wonderful group of volunthelr names."
For a year, he knocked on Capitol teers, " some of them widows and
Hill doors, trying to find a sponsor wives of retired miliiary officers,
for his project. Finally, he talked to are helping· out. The fund already
Sen. Charles Mathias, R-Md., who has more than 600 letters requesting
was receptive. All 100 members of information.
the Senate eventually ccrsponsored
Registration forms for the comMathias' biU and it was signed into
petition
are ready and will be mailed
law last July.
to
anyone
requesting them now until
The legislation declared a twcr
the
end
of
the year. You can also get
acre site just northeast of the Linthe
forms
by
phoning Mrs. Kielich or
coln Memoriul to the Vietnam
one
of
her
volunteers
at 20US!HI51.
memorial. No federal funding is to
The
deadline
for
entries
will be the
be required.
end
of
March
1981,
and
the
judges'
Scruggs, aBowie, Md., native who
was wounded while serving as an in- decision will be announced at the
fantryman in Vietnam, became end of April or early May.
. Entry of your design mthe compresident of the Vietnam veterans
· Memorial Fund. Another Vietnam petition will cost you $20. But there's
veteran, lawyer Robert Doubek, a big payoff for the winner and runbecame the fund 's executive direc- ners-up.
First prize will be $20,000, second
tor, aided by Mrs. Kathie Kielich.
They have raised about $500,000 of $10,000, third $5,000. As many as 15
the $2.5 mlllion they estimate they'll honorable mention prizes of $1,000
need to build the memorial. They apiece may also be awarded.
Mrs. Kielich says it looks like
also need a design.
"this
will be one of the largest design
That's where you come in, if
competitions
ever held in the United
you're a professional or a talented
States."
Many
architecture students
amateur.
The design should be relatively plan to enter, she says.
Here's the address to write for
simple, something fitting for quiet,
semi-wooded area near the Potomac regis tration forms: Vietnam
River and not too far from the Veterans Memorial Fund, Design
stately Lincoln Memorial. The Competition, 1130 M Street, NW,
design must, of course, be non- Washington, D. C. 20036.

Pomctoy

WEEKEND
AT
MEIGS
II'lN
(No Specials During Holiday Season)

ENTERTAINMENT
'
Wm., THURS., FRI., &amp; SAJ•.
NIGHTS

\1

1\

9 ti11

~

All LEGAL
BEVERAGES SOlD

WHERE: LOGAN HILLS SKI CENTER, LOGAN,· OH.
Cost: $60 - Includes 30 hours of instruction at ievel of ability
equipment rental, ski lifttickets.

CEASAR
5 Piece Group From

PORTSMOUTH
DEC. 10, 11, 12, 13

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

To Register- Contact the oU .ice of Continuing ECiucation at
Rio Gran,de College, Rio Grande, Ohio .
·
Phone 245-5353 E)Ct. 255
•

THE MEIGS INN

.

Registr,ation Dei1dline: · You must register by Dec. 12, 1980 (Rio
Grande reserv~s the right to cancel the class in the event ot an
enrollmen·t of less than 20 persons.)

,,

Q

•

Phon(' 992-362.9
I'

. Pomeroy, 0 ..

�... -·.

.

. - - ..,.
~

·-••
•

.

Page--4-The Daily Sentinel

By WW Grlmlley
AP Correopoodeul
Ara Parseghian follf)ws the foot" It takes a special kind of person
steps of Harper, Rockne and Leahy to coach at Notre Dame," he added .
into choUege footbaU's HaD of Fame "There has been a oational charactonig t and adds a new glow to the ter and a kind of mystique to the
golden dome of Notre Dame and to school ever since we beat a o"real Arthe cheeks of retiring athletic direc- my team at West Point in 1913. Hartor Edward W. " Moose" Krause.
per was the coach and Rockne, the
"I remember when Ara came over · captain, was on the receiving end of
to us . (~? coach) from Nor- forward passes thrown by Gus
thwestern, Krause said. "He was Dorais.in a 3!&gt;-13 victory.
" The .upset astonished the football
really nervous, frightened of the
tradition and pressure he was step- world. Until then, Notre Dame had
ping into.
always been just 'a little school in In" It was December 1963, dead of diana.' Now it had the whole country
winter. I introduced Ara to the talking. And it popularized the forstudent body at a basketball game ward pass. "
Rockne became head coach in 1918
and he got a OO.minute ovation. He
wanted to meet the seniors so we · and continued through the 1930
went over to a pep rally. He got season when Krause, a 6-foot-3, 2()(1...
another big ovation there ~ a pep pound tackle and 'a kid from
rally in the snow.
Chicago's tough South Side, enrolled
" Notre Dame warmth melted the as a freshman.
snow."
" Eve.rybody looked. upon Rockne
That, according to Moose, wa sn't as a God ~ 1 was In awe of him,"
said Krause, now 61 and preparing
entirely the end of complications.
"We had a great Notre Dame sup- to retire Jan. 1 from the AD post he
porter in Chicago named Hughie has held for 32 years. Ao AllMulligan," Moose continued. " He American in football and basketball
had no education but was a success · and a javelin thrower in track, he
in the ashestos business. He wrote a himself is a Fighting Irish legend.

Boston
New York
Washington

New Jersey

.61:)
.464
.379

'"
Central Divis too"
II

,

Milwaukee

1
17 12
II
10 18
10 20
Dt:!troit
8 20
We!ituu Conference
Midwest Olvlsiuu
San Ant omo
18 II
Utah
14 14
Houston
13
Kcm.sas City
12 18
Denver
10 18
Dallas
3 25
Pacifi c Dlvh:ioo
Phoemx
· 24
6
Los Angeles
10
Golden SUite
16 12
~a ttl~
14 14
San Diego
12 17
Portland
10 19
Monday's Game
Se::ntle 104, San Antonio 99
Tuetiday'sGames

fndiana
Chicago
Atlanta
Cleveland

.586
.ol07
.3fl7

'"

.333
.286
.621
.500

'"

•
•

!

CHRISTMASII

...tt
ac

0

Pomeroy, O H.

•

•

No Purchase Nessary

FAMOUS
BRANDS
GIFTS

There's Someting for Everyol!e
At Moore's

••

We take the hassel out of your
'
Christmas shopping by offering
you brand name gift products at
everyday discount prices.

•
Call
visit us

TREE
ORNAMENTS

')4~ox

PLENTY OF FREE PARKING

352 E. Main St., Pomeroy, OH.

GIFTS fROM STIFFLER'S

MEN'S BLANKET LINED
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Ph. 992-2644
or 991-6290

lined denim work
jackets or longer
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U.SA by Blue Bell .
Regular sizes.

JJ L~

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4

plaid cation flannel
s h i r ts . All sizes
American made. Ve ry
practical
f or
Chr istmas gifts .

-

'7"'

.~71

.500

9

.414

ltl ~

.345

13 \'.i

,_ [r •
'

As low
As

$29900

FURNITURE &amp; JEWELRY
'' Two In One Store''
W. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Oh. ·

National Hockt!y Lug11e
Campbell Confaenre
Patrick Dlvllllon
WLTGFGAPts
19 6 4 119 74 42
18 7 5 130 98 U
12 10 5 99 103 29

7 10 102

91 28

99

121 22

6 1 113

91 38

Bea utifully redesig ned
exterior lor 1981 with new
!II interiors to choose lrom .
« New Designers Accen ts
and Decor Pac kages ava ilable o n all Regals. Drive
o ne soon .

TheJ.981

500 E. Main

GIFTS FROM STIFFLER'S

LADIES' BOOT STYLE
PLUSH PILE

SLIPP~RS

GIFT S£T

/ " ,,'
· ~
r
·
... _ ~

Ladies' acry lic kn it hat
and scart set. Asso rted

patterns and colors.
Was tlable.

J

(

~:·~ =..

,-

~

I ;

AND

.;.

Ladies boo tie slyle,
plus ac r yli c sll_p ·
pers . Assorted co l·
o rs. S1zes 6 to 10.
I dea l Chri s tmas

· -~

· '! i

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gilt

t, -- ~rls
~~ ... '.
'

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Each

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,,~

f;\ ., ';- ~\·'

f , \~'
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lluidcllqal

Famous Brand

SMITH NELSON MOTORS
Jimmy

S]99 . s5 ••.•oS799 .

9

Each

;aBERL~~iNE

Deem, J .D. Story or Bill
Nelson
Ph. 99 2·2174
Pomeroy, OH ,

$

$

50 TO 75 OFf

DAVE GRATE

SANTA'$ SP£CIALS

YOUR CHOICE·MATTEL'S'

FISHER PRICE
'

Big assortmen t of
" Matters" famous
Die Cut Me!al .. Hot
Whee l s" . Great

Rutland, Ohio

SANTA'S SPECIALS

Crib and playpen toys

you can trust fro m
Fisher Price. Hours of
fun for little tots

stocking sluffers!

BOY'S &amp; GIRL'S
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AND SNAP
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CARS

.

RUTLAND FURNITURE

742·2211

SANTA'S SPECIALS

HOT WHEElS

Lowest Prices You'll Find This Year

See:

J

TO

HAT &amp; SCARF

'I'' '
•

Dusting

LADIES' KNIT

Men's soft leather-like
v i nyl dres s gloves .
Assorted co lors and
styles Ia choose I rom .

Me"n's bright colored

Co log ne ,

Choose from 11iny1 an d Iab ri e hand ·
bag s, assorted colors in the newest
styl es. Id eal fo r Ch nstm as g ill gi'fing

GIFTS FROM STIFFL£R'S

GLOUfS

SHIRTS

617

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12

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choice:

.')9:KG,
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LADIES' GIFT

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Lander 's Gift Toiletrie s.

BRIGHT TINSEL
GARLAND

EASY TO ASSEMBLE

Men's warm blanket

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REALISTIC
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TREES

5
10

.357

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SIX FOOT
SCOTCH PINE

CHRISTMAS SPECIAL

14

INGELS

~

llJoLS, ~()~~~

l JL'2

: Seattle HI Golden State

I~

w.

124
Main Street
Pomeroy, OHio
Phone: 992-2841

~·:t~

5~

• Dallas at Denve r

!I

Moore's American ·

7''

Chica go at Philadelphia
Boston 111 Washington
Atlanta at Detro!t
Sctn Diego at Kansa s City
Los Angeles al Houston

9

'\Q'l'&gt;, 6\~ES,

M

FORD TRACTOR

• New York at Neirr .Jersey

.N.Y. Rangers

'

MOORE ' S HAS A LARGE SELECTION OF
CHRISTMAS GIFTS AND DECORATIONS

Hurricane
Lamp

· Phoenix at Indiana

.Washington

..
'

m

WashinK(.on 1:11 New York
Philadelphia at Clevt!land
San Diego at Atlanta
Los Angeles at Dallas
Phoenix at ChiCBgo
San Antoni o at Ut.ah
Sea ttle at P ortland
Wednesday's Games

Philadelphia
N.Y. Islanders
Ca lgary

SPECTACULAR

MOORE'S

Brighten up the season.
With ou r fest ive
arrangement of fres h '
flowers and greens
in an excl us1ve
FTD Snowflake

. Milw1:1ukee at Boston

.

..

.7:i9

" ..wo..

,

VALUE OF$4SO,QO

Holiday Glo~

~ RETAIL •••• ••••.... •••• •• •sl3,725.00
SALE PRICE •••••••••••••• SlO,l85.00

•

'SALf ·STARTS ·.
THURSDAY,
DftfM8ER lith

It's time to send our FTD

FORD 3600 DIESEL 40 HP

Page-S

.;y

'

'k t

The Daily Sentinel

'

.-.;;;;;,;;;~~;;;;;;;;~;;;,;;;,;;;,;;;;;~~;;~~~::_::::.::.:__::::::_:=:_-....:..._::___j_'::=~==;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
!f&lt;O&lt;r&lt;::&lt;!':&lt;::&lt;I'&lt;:!!&lt;::!I!Ol!_!!I::I_!O:I_I!Ol!I'O:&lt;!!I::&lt;

DALE HILL

,,

8
10
15

. 18
16

for 340 yards. we should have scored
V tr 31 points," the coach said. " I
like to win because of what we planned, not in spite of what we did.
" '!'e just can't gel down with 11 to
12minutestugointhegameandput
t ha t kind of pressure on our offell$e
and defense. " ·
Against the Jets, the Browns
allowed two straight touchdowns to
traill4-10 earJv,in the fourth period.
Quarterback.,. Brian Sipe responded with an impressive six-play, 68yard drive highlighted by a 45-yard
completion to Reggie Rucker. Greg
Pruitt's 5-yard touchdown reception
put Cleveland back on top for good.
" Thereare things as you go into a
Among Cleveland 's 10 victories, game that you have to have control
only two ~ over Seattle and Cin- over," Rutigliano said, referring
cinnati ~ have come by margins of specifically to penalties. "They're
greaterthan seven points.
going to happen, but you have to
Regardless of the margin, " \fhy . make sure they don't hilp~n ·at
should anybody in Cleveland be critical times:
unhappy a bout us winning? "
"There was one penalty where
Rutigliano asked. " I hope we never (Jets receiver ) Wesley Walker did a
get involved in having to win every hook and go. Clinton Burrell tackled
game 31-7."
him, and that was good, because
Nonetheless, Rutigliano admitted otherwise it was seven points. pinhe was unhappy witl1 his club's of- ton was fooled on the play, and infensive output against New York.
stead of letting him get open he
" Anytime our quarterback throws tackled him."

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio .

1

~~MERRY

National Basketball Assodatlnn
Easlern Confercnee
Atlaatie Dh•isloa
w L Pet. 08
Philadelphia
25
4
1162 -

•

assember '· 1980
•

BEREA, Oluu 1AP I ~ They're
known as the Kardiac Kids because
vi1tually every game 1s a heartstopper, but (']eveland Browns
Coach Sam Rutigliano has no
qualms about his team's victory
· .
margms
,
" Maybe if we can get Northwcstern and Iowa Stale on our
schedule, it 'll be different,"
Rutigliano sai.d. " But it's tough
every week in t h'IS 1eague. "
The Browns' 11-14 victory over the
3-11 New York J ets on Sunday came
un the heels of a triwnph by an identical score over tile 9-5 Houston
Oilers.

SAVE············ '3,54000 ~

record...

..

margin no
worry-R utigliano

Sports World

For the

•

•
•••

Victo~y

TodBy's

strong letter of protest, saying, 'Why
do we have to hire a Presbytenan
Protestant' Why can't you get a
good Irish coach?"
· Parseghian proceeded to get off to
a flyi ng start.
Krause got another letter from
Mulligan, saying, " Parseghian
seems okay ~ maybe we can convert him the way we did Knute
Rockne."
"I told him if Parseghian keeps
going like he is he might convert all
of us," Krause related with a deepseated laugh at a Monday luncheon
for honorees of the National Football
Foundation and Hall of Fame in New
York.
Parseghian,
Krause says,
measures up to the tradition of
previous Notre Dame Hall of Fame
coaches ~ Jesse Harper (1913-17 ),
the great Rockne (1918-30) and
Frank Leahy (194143 , '46-53).

•

Decemberf 1

t' o meroy-Middlcport, Ohio

MISSES &amp; JUNIORS

MATTEL'S TALKING

HO~IDAY

8A8Y 8£ANS

SWEATERS

So ft , pos able .. ju st
the slze (12") to
love ... pull her string

Special

assortmen t of
samples and irregulars
of better sweaters. Many
styles, sizes and colors.

TOYS l
DOLLS
A

great assortment of toys
for child ren ol all age s. Ideal
for gift C)(Changes o r
ing stuflers

and she talks. Non
toxic .

Smythe Dlvlsloo

St. Louis

17

'VIIll(.'OUVt!f
Colorado
:Chicago

13 9 6
10 13 4
9 15 5
7 13 5
1 19 7
Wale• Conference
Norris Division
19 7 1
14 ll 2
9 14 5
8 14 5

.Edmonton
Winnipeg

' I.mAng~lt!!l

Montreal
HarUord '
.Pitblburgh

·Detroit
'
'Buffalo

'Minnesota

~Toronto
,lbton

Quebec

111 96 32
92 1l1 24
118 134 23
!n 105 19
110 131 9

117 85 39
119 86 30
97 134 23
96 12:2 21
5 79 115 13

4 17
Adams DIVIIIOII
14 7 6 '109
IJ 5 7 97

10 lD
9 11

79 34
70 33
5 104 107 25
6

92

SANTA'S SPECIALS

5-ROLL PKG. CHRISTMAS

- MEN'S AND BOY'S

'

Calgary 4, Los Angeles 2

Butfalo at Colorado
Wednesday'• Game~
Washington at New York Ran1en
Montreal at Pittsburgh

Vancouver at Toronto
Boston at Quebec
Philadelphia at Chicago

Los An!!eies at Minnesota
Hartford at WJnnipe!!
·
New York Islanders at Edmunton

Herman Brix, the American silver
medalist in the. shot put in the 1928
OlympiCs, , later ~!!!came a movie
star under the name Of Bruce Bennett.

25" diagonal COLOR 1V/25YM0815M
EARLY'AMERICAN STYLING ... the warmth and ,;;;;:;;:-'.J

Retail Priees '8.00 .to 122.00

or Eany American cabinei'Y Maple nnish on
hardwood so~ds, wood composition boprd and
simulated wood ac cents.

DISCOUNTED •125
FOR CHRISTMAS

POMEROY lANDMARK

Big !iva roll package,
26" Christmas gift
wrap papeo. Assorted
d8~1QOS

12"

J

Men ' s warm k nit
toboggans in so lid
colors and patlerns.
Santa Special!

Pkg

.

BAKER
.
FURNITURE,

\

All AMITY PRODUCTS

.Fashionable 'Gifts For Him or Her

VILLAGE. PHARMACY

Each

SANTA'S SPECIALS

MEN'S HANES THERMAL

SlltK-ON SOWS

.UNOERWUR
'

Assoned col·

\I

·

25·COUNT PACKAGE
of aasorted
25 stlck·on
cou nt " "

ora.

J 00

•

SANTA'S SPECIALS

40% OFF

I

KNIT TOBOGGANS

GIFT WRAP

9Cl 2t

'

,

f

• SPECIAL POLYESTER
DOUBLEKNITS
full

bolts.

I Yard

Special ·

price!

.

x 96" COTTON

LADIES' POLYESTER

KNIT SLACKS

QUILT BATTS
Mt. Mlsl colton qui ll

batts. The ohoice of

expert s.
Speci al.

~ANT A''S SP£CIALS

J ]2 7

Santa

Each

First quality knil
stacks in your choice
of colors . Elast ic
waist. Sanla Spec ial!

SANTA'S SPECIALS

J 50 0
Pair

SANTA'S SPECIALS

- MEN'S 'BLUE BELL'

SOFT BRUSHED

CANNON AND DUNDEE

• COU~RALLS

NYLON FLANNEL

lATH TOWELS

piece
work gar·
Your choice
of
c loth, denim or

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. Pair

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• Solid color polyes ter
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SANTA'S SP£CIALS

SANTA'S

SANTA'S SPECI~LS

SANTA'S SPECIALS.

. 6 14 7 92 114 19
Mooday'• Game

Tuesday's Games
Vancouver at Washington
Minnellota at St.Louis

Each

Each

J:.

.f

Brushed nylon fiBn·
nel. Ideal for gowns,
robes and children's

Ylrd

wear.

..

Cannon and Dundee
cotton

terry bath
towels . Choice of col·

ors.

•
\

J~~a!

�Mrs. Schaefer is 84

Polly's Pointers

.•

By Polly Cramer
Special correspondent
DEAR POLLY - I am wondering
if anyone can tell me how to dye
~la ss-fiber drapes: I moved recently
~nd the walls are white and my
drapes are also white. It says on the \
dye i&gt;ackage not to use it on glass
tiber· but my drapes are fairly new
and I would like to use them'instead
of having to buy new ones. ELEANOR
DEAR ELEANOR - Glass fiber
does not absorb
dye but I have
been told that
SOME
s uch
draperies have a
resin coating that
will take the dye.
Cramer

,

PRE-FLIGHT FUN - Kidding around wltb a toy
airplane before boarding the real thing In Pittsburgh
eases the tension for tbese 4-H'ers, whose outstanding
4-H projects earned tbem an expense-paid trip to
Cl!lcago, lll. The talented youngsters were among tbe
32-member West Virginia delegation who joined 1,700
otber 4-H'ers fr om around the country to participate in
tbe 59th National 4-H Congress Nov. 30-Dec. 4 In

...

,~-"

,.

~,..

Cblcago. The annual educational session honors 4H'~rs for acblevements In chosen project areas. Included In tbe West VIrginia delegation were: (left to
right), Margaret Buller of Point Pleasant, citizenship;
Carla Mlller of Ripley, food preservation; and Brian
Darst of Point Pleasant, achievement. The 4-H Youtb
Development Program is sponsored by the West
VIrginia University Cooperative Extension Service.

Miss Hindy subject
of Circleville feature
Beth Hi ndy,
granddaughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Cass
Hind y,
Middleport, is the subject of a feature
article in the Circleville newspaper.

Hindy
Miss Hindy is a student at Cir·
deville High School. The stltry
reads:
"When I make up a routine to a
song, I just listen to the music and do
whatever strikes me, placing high
tosses on accents and other tricks
where they seem to fit. " Easy,
right? Ris, according to Beth Hindy,
the Tiger band's feature twirler for a
second year.
Beth. said when she's out on the
field ready for a performance she's
both excited and a little nervous.
That feeling isn't new, however,

because she's been twirling for 11
years and has been in many com·
petitions. Her awards for this year
include a first and a second place for
stunts at the Fred J . Miller Camp
she attended this summer and out·
standing feature twirler at the
Pickerington Band Festival.
" Being feature twirler is
something I just enjoy doing. I can
do what I want and I don 't feel
pushed to do anything I don't like to
do," Beth commented.
"Other things Beth enjoys doing
are playing tennis, shopping,
playing her flute and piccolo and
traveling.
"Beth would like to use her
twirling talent in college if she can
and also become either a National
Baton Twirling Association (NBTA)
or a United States Twirling
Association (USTA) certified instructor and judge," the article concludes.

Sentinel Social Calendar
TUESDAY
CHESTER TOWNSIDP Trustees,
regular meeting Tuesday , 7: 30p.m.
at the Chester Town Hall.
EASTERN Band Boosters, 7:30
Tuesday night, Eastern hand room.
·All members and parents of band
students urged to attend.

The Dail y Sentinel
(USPS lt5-!MID)

A Dl~ llloo of MuiUmedia, Ioe.
Published every afternoon except Sunday,
MIJI"ld.ay through Friday, ll l Court Street, by
the Ohio Valley Publ~ ltlng Company MulUme&lt;lia, Inc., Pomeroy, Ohio '5769,
9tz..2156. Second cl.au postage paid at
Pomeroy, Ohio.

Membo" The "-"''"' Prua, Inland Da&gt;
ly Prell AllociiUon and the American
Newt:paper PubU.hel'i A.noclatJon, National
Representative, Landing
Auoclltes, 3101 Euclld Ave., Cleveland,

Adveftf•lng
Oll!o,4111~ .

POSTMASTER: Send addreaa to The DaUy ·
Sentinel, Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio~711 .
81J118CJUPT!ON RATES

By Carrier or Motor Route
One""k . .. .. ... 1 ................. U.IIO
One Month .... ' .......... ..... ..... 14.40
one Year • , •. . . . . .. ... ......... .... 102.110
8!NGL&amp;COPY

TUESDAY
THE REGULAR MEETING of the
Racine Lodge 461, F and AM will be

held at 7:30p.m. tonight with the installation of officers. All · master
masons are invited. Refreshments
will be served.
MEIGS High School Boo.sters will
meet Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. in the
music room of the high school.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY CHAPTER 80, RAM
and Bosworth Council 46, R and SM
regular meeting will be held Wed·
nesday at 7:30p.m. They will work
in mark master and past degrees.
THE POMEROY- MIDDLEPORT
Lions Club will hold regular meeting
Wednesday at noon at the Meigs Inn.
All Lipns are urged to attend.
THURSDAY
MEIGS Association for Retarded
Citizens with the Meigs Community
Classes and Adult Workshop will
hold a Christmas holiday bazaar and
hake sale at the old junior high
school building, 346 East Main
Street, Pomeroy, on Thursday from
10 a.m.-4 p.m.

PRICES

Dally .......................... II Cenll

Sublcrlbel'l not duirini to pay the eanier
moy nmlt In advance direct to The DallY
Sentinel on a 3, I or 12 month btlil. CredJt
wUl be &amp;Jven canter eteh month.

-

where homf carrier aervlce l.lavalJible.
MAIL 8UIIIICR!P!'!ON8
Oblollll WHI VlrCiail

I Mmth .......................... 110.110
S!xmonth ...... .. ........ .. ...... 117.110
1 Year ........... , ............... 133.110
RafOl Oulllde Oblo
IIIII Weot VlrC1all

8:30

POINSETTIAS
FROM 11.00 TO !10.00

e Christmas
Cactu
• Hanging Baskets
• House Plants

HUBBARD'S GREENHOUSE
Syracuse, Oh.
Open Mon.·Sat. 9 to s
Sun . I to s

1------------!".i

that celebr8tes the life, spirit and
never-ending achievements of the
physically -handicapped DeBolt

Buy a
Bunch,
Save a
.Bunch
with
Valvoline! ·

(}) SANFORD ANO SON
CIJIICIJ JOKER'S WILD
CD HOLLYWOOD SQUARES
CIJ illJ DICK CAVETT SHOW
@I MATCH GAME
rJI) CD FACE THE MUSIC
7:58 ill NEWS UPDATE
8:00 ill U C!J CITY vo COUNTRY

SHOWDOWN Jack Klugnlan hosts
this match-up between ~he city
folks and their country cousins in a
display of athletic feats . The
country team includes Melissa Gl!bert, Brian Kerwin, Glen Campbell,
Tanya Tucker, Charlie Pride, Barb I
Benton ,C atherineBach, and Sonny
Shroyer. The city team includes

GOKR.Y I EK- THAT'§ OKAY SKIP,.,
WAS &amp;OOE BUT I --ER..COIJLDH'T GET
60 LOH6, THE ARf STAKJED,.. THE
AHHIE !
MATCHES !ERE
ALL ~P, ~~~~~-

Judy Mowery, Tim Mulllns, Charlotte P1dterson,

flakes of winter in Peanutland,
Charlie- Brown and his phlloeo- ·
phical peer .Linus. give alltheottler
Peanut a aome tood for thougtlt by
searching bey ond shiny aluminum
trees. tinsel and gaudy neon to find
the real meaning ot the Yuletide
aeaaon.
(])(fi) NOVA 'Touch of Sensitivity'
Ourekin contain ea live milliontouch
cells . Whal are they ror and hoW
imponant are theytoua ?From alec ·
trades read ing our messages of in dividual touch cella to behavioral
experiments with peop!e, this ln vesligat ion explores our sense of
touch . (Ciosed·Captioned;U .S.A.)
(60mins.) .
8 :30 ill GOOO NEWS
(!)MOVIE -(MUSICAL) ••• " Fid·
dler On The Root" 11171
(J)iliJGI LA VERNE ANO SHIRLEY
Shirley hurls daggers at a petrified
Laverne as a stunt during the open ing of Frank De Fazio's restaurant,
alter the girls have an argument
because Laverne can't find a Job .
II([) ®l THE GREAT SANTA
CLAUS CAPER Raggedy Ann and
Andy do battle with the ~lllalnoue
AleMander. who harbors a brilliant
plot lo take over Santa Claus' work-

SSe Per Quart
Sl9.99 Per Case
Per Gal.

MASON FURNITURE
FOR THE BEST DEALS iN THE TRISTATE AREA

MASON FURNITURE

MEIGS TIRE CENTER

IS

wor~inq

992-2101
Pomeroy, Oh :
Mgr., John F. Fultz

out ·
well

•

a

"

Kristen Pape, Shane Simpson, Christopher
S~oul,

and Rebecca Winebrenner.
;
Fifth Grade- JeMifer Arnold, Shawn Arnott,
Chris Ba er, Kristen C()ughlin, Wendr Fry, Angie
Grueser, Scott McPhail, Wendy Triplett.
Sixth Grade - Kim Adams, Cindy Arnold,
Angie Dayis, Tracie Hubbard, Jame JeU, Mike
Kloes, Ke llie Mullen and Terri Roush.

•

..

• WINNif;
• SO BONNIE
TRIE-D TO PLEA
e/IRGAIN , EH? " - -

WILLIAM SMITH
HOSPITAUZED
•
William Fred Smith, Sr. Bradbury; is a patient at Holzer Medical
Center. His room number is 326. Car·
ds may be sent to him in care of the
hospital.

(Cioeed-Captioned ;U.S.A.}
mine.)

Monday, 1 uesday, Wednesday, Friday &amp; Saturday
8:30to5:00, T,hursda;till12noon

. OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT ONLY
Mason, W.Va.

(60

CIJ iliJm TOO CLOSE FOR COM-

9:30

FORT A famil~ squabble erUpts
after Jackie and Sara lose all their
furniture to the former tenant's

.

sister.

10:00 (]) U CD THE STEVE ALLEN
COMEDY HOUR Steve ' s guests
will be Martin Mull, Donald O'Con ner, KsyeBallard, Fred Smoot and
Foster Brooks . (80 mine .)
(l)(JJ)GtHARTTOHART Jonalhan

end Jennifer' a dog, Freeway. wolfe
down a revolutionary new product.
and landS himself a dog food commercia I that t argeta hie ma stare tor
murder when they attempt to diecover ita mysterioua formula. (eo
mins .)

; BARNEY

. BALLS 0' FIRE!!

WAKE UP, VOU VARMINTS!!

MY DADBURI\I FEET
ARE SOUND ASLEEP

VOU GOT ·PLOWIN' TO DO!!

'

••'

.••
I

(Cioaed-

Captloned;U .S.A.) (60 mlna.)
illJ NEWS
(}) TBSEVENINONEWS
(}) NEWS UPDATE
CIJ FAITH 20
illJ EXTENSIONS
(}) NEWSUPDAT~...,.,..

:oo m
• oo CD • .,., ""'. ""'
NEWS

'

,

SOUNDSTAGE 'Joan Arms-

trading'

10:58
11

.!.

•

· CIJ
10:15
10:28
10:30

We will GIVE YOU a Gift ••• a Beautiful
Stainless Steel "Do·lt·AII" · Knife for 1
·your thQughtfulness for~· One Year Gift l
s.u bscription by mail.
·

The Daily Sentinel

II
WOULD 'THeRE

RIPI~G

ON TilE BACK
OF '(OVR MOTHER'S
61Ct(ClE IN THE WIN.TER.
CAN &amp;E AN EXPERIENCE

0

SLIT WE RNALLI{ A~IVE
AT THE S\IPERMARKET
WHERE .S~E BUMPS INTO
AN OLD FRIEND,•• .

CALL TODAY FOR MORE INFORfJATION.
-

992·2156
'·

.'

1,, .

. . " . '• • ..

.

COMPLETELI{ FOR6ETTIN6
A.BOVT I(OU KNOW WHO!

E

i;&gt;~OAN&amp; \F TH IS

J I K ]

C:.AFII:ME.NT WER'e
"DIISAFt:RAN\SED' ?

1 FUSULE I

KJ I . I .I

Now arrange the circled leners to

form the surpri se answer, as sug ·
gested by the above cartoon.

A"[

Prlntanswerhere:

XXI XX r
{Answers tomorrow)

Yesterday·s j Jumbles WOVEN PIOUS JUGGLE EMBRYO
An swer: What a g irl so m etim es cets at a w1n te r
sports re so rt - A SNOW JOB .

BRIDGE
Defenders earn red faces
NORTH

12-9-80

+Q·97 6

'I' K 5
t KJ 65
+K 10 3
EAST
WEST
+ K tO 8
+A 53 2

., to 3 6 3 2
+to 4

'I'J 9 74
• 73

+9 7 5

+8 4 2

SOUTH

+JI

'I'AQ
tAQ982
+AQJ6

Vulnerable: Both ·
Dealer: South
Wesc

Nor1b

Easl

Soutb

Pa ss
Pass
Pass

t+

Pass

3+

It

••Pass

Pass
Pass

6t

North was Ted Lightner, ·
one of the all-time great players who is almost 90 today
and plays very little bridge.
South was Ely Culbertson,
whose name is still a household word in bridge and
deservedly so .
East and West were two of
the great experts or the day .
In line with this column's policy of never speaking ill of
anyone except North, South,
East, West and fictitious characters, they shall be nameless.
The event was the semi·
finals of the Vanderbilt &gt;O
years ago and Ely reached six
diamonds after rather nonnal
bidding.
West studied his lead. He
was sure of one thing ..Eiy was
ready for a heart lead . Clubs
and diamonds looked even
less satisfactory so he decided
on a spade. Had he led the ace
ther e would have been no

story.
He led the deuce. Ely called
for the six from dummy and
East produced the eight. You
can't really blame him. It
By Oswald Jacoby
appeared to him that his part·
and Alan Soulag
ner couldn't possibly hold the
1
Today's hand is rather simi· ace.
Ely took his jack, cashed 11
lar to yesterday's in that West
more
tricks and conceded the
underled an ace against a
slam contract. The result was last trick to the ace and king
spades.
equally bad from the East and of
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRJSE ASSN.)
West viewpoints. .

~..VJ.wt'

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
43 Requisite
I Sourpuss
DOWN
5 Exclamation 1 Kind
S "When
of hammer
Your2 Bathroom
Has Gone"
attire
10
Put
together
3
Eager
shop and turn it into a modern fectorywhere all ot Santa's toysarefor
13 Dwell
4 Partner
sate,
14 One kind ·
of board
B:58 CIJ NEWS UPDATE
of
law
5
German
city
9:00 @ 700 CLUB
C1J iliJ IIJ THREE'S COMPANY 15 Espouse
6 A Carter
Jack dis pi a ys his fa ncleat footwork 16 Diamond
7 Mimipulating
when, on his first night as busboy at
State
(abbr.)
91nsect
a posh French restaurant, the gang
cornea to dinner expect lng himtobe 18 God ,
11 High school
the new chef. (Closed-Captioned;
to Italians
course
U.S.A.)
12 Dice thrower
D CIJ®J SPECIAL MOVIE PRE- 19 Word
SENTATION ' A Chriatmas Without
with table 17 Work unit
SnoW' 1980 Stars : Michael
20
MGM's
lion 19 Vinous
, Learned, John Houaeman.
%1 Scolded
CIJ(jj) BODY IN QUESTION 'Brule 21 Bromidic
Machine' Or. Jonathan Miller ueee
24
Gallon's
analogies from gunpowd~r to·
eightb
electronics in order t o probe the so
called 'Mind·Body Problem' . 25 Blessed

ANTI FREEZER
$3.99 Per Gal.
While Stock lasts

Honor rolls are announced

Scott Pullins, Missy Riggs, Chris Shank, James
Smith, Tim Sloan, Anita Smith, ca rol Smith,
Laura Smith, Daron Stafford, Dawn Thomas,
David Warth and Sherry Wilson.
Eighth Gntde - Kathryn Arnott, USa Ashley,
Debbi e. Boring, Steve Crow, Sfenda Cunningham, Katrina Donahue, Loren::t Donahue,
Kim Eblin , Amy Erwin, David Fisher , Tim
Gilkey, Kelly Ginther, P. J . Harris. Cindy
Hazelton, Frances Hoffman, Bubby Hood, Sandy
Hoyt, Dennis Hysell , Brian Jacobs, Randy
Jewell, Calhy Jones, Mark Landers, Greg
l.ctthey, Betty Lurtis, Carl Moodispc!Ugh, Mary
Moore, Anna Patrick, Debbie Porter 1 Joey Re!lmiN!, Nanna Rhodes, Wayne Shrimplin, Bobby
Spires, But.ch Sliles, Lori Ttt nner, D1m Thomas,
Alison Tromm. Larry Van Coone)', Bill Wt! aver,
Debbie Werry, Pa m West and Brad Young.

tasting those special firat ·snow-·

TakL home Valvoline•
and save by changing
your own oil' Easy stepby-s tep instructions are
included on the back of
Val valine Can s. It's eaSy to
"do-it- yourself' and sa"e
with Valvoline!

0

I

\ LOUGEY±

John 'Bowzer' Bauman, Charlene
Tilton, Larry Wilcox, and Linda
Evans. (2 hra.)
ill ORAL ROBERTS
(}) BASKETBALL Atlanla Hawks
vs San Otego Clippers
C1J rJI) Ul HAPPY DAYS Joanie
buys a carbehlndHowaf d ' aback to
keep boyfriend Chao hi on the road
to romance , but the secret purchase backfii"ea, putting Jeanie on
a collision course with her father.
0 CIJ ®l A CHARLIE BROWN

•• ALLEYOOP

PROBLEMS

I K)

children.

CHRISTMAS As the Peanuts start

YOUR INSURANCE

David A\leri on, Ca role
Bailey, [)eni.se Bentz, Becky Birchfield, Pollie
ChH dwell, Marty Coffey, Gary Colema n, Mary
CWUlingham, Ben Davies, Todd Doczi, Kenda
Do na hue, Melissa Downing, Davi d Dunkle, John
Epple, ChariC3 Gilkerson, Jodi Harrison, Rodd
Harrison, Darren Hayes, Brian Huudashelt, Penny Hysell, Nancy Johnson, Chris Kennedy, Cind y
Uttle, Parker Long, Ryan Mahr, Kelly Milburn,

ill II CD

NBC NEWS
(})
20TH
CENTURY
'GUIDEUNES
(}) 801 NEWHART SHOW
CIJ FACE THE MUSIC
II CIJ ®J CIS NEWS
CIJ Wli.O W!IJ&gt; WORLD OF
ANIMALS
(j]) FEELINGS
rJI). ABC NEWS
8 :58 ill NEWS UPDATE
7:00 ill. PM MAGAZINE
ill
GERALD
DERSTINE
PRESENTS
(}) AU IN 1'11E FAMILY
C1J iliJ CD FAMILY FEUO
CD TV HONOR SOCIETY
G CIJ TIC TA&lt;; DOUGH
CIJ • ®
MACNEIL·LEHRER
REPORT
®l NEWS
7:30 ,ill II BULLSEYE
ill FAITH THAT LIVES
CII STEPPING OUT: THE
DEBOLTS GROW UP HBO pre·
sents an exclusive holiday specie(

Large Selection of

LET US
WRAP UP

Seventh Grade -

NEWS
(}) BACKYARD
(})
CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
(j) ABC NEWS
Cil 3-2-1 CONTACT
ffiJ OVER EASY Gu est : Former Am·
~losed ·CapUoned ; U . S . A . )

AIM THE WINDSHIELD Rli;HT
INTO THE SUN ~

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

subjects were :

Cfl ll ffi O CIJ®Jifii dl

CAnAJNEASY

CHRISTMAS SEASON

A regular feature, prepared by the mography and palpation are prescribed vitamls might contribute
American Cancer Society, to keep ~enerally more efficient at this time. to an improved sense of well-being in
QUESTION : "How many teenage some patients who may in fact be in
you informed about cancer.
QUESTION : " Why did the smokers are there in the United need of overcoming a specific
deficiency.
American Cancer Society withdraw Slates ?"
ANSWERline: About 4,500,000.
its recommendation of annual chest
There
are still more boy smokers
x·rays for the detection of lung can·
than girl smokers, but·unforiunately
cer?"
ANSWERiine: Data currently the girls are rapidly catching up.
avaolable indicate that there's no Teenage smoking increased
evidence of a reduction in mortality significantly in tbe 1960s and early
from lung cancer by having 11·rays 1970s, but a receni government
every yea!'. However, in individual study indicates that overall teenage
situations a physician might smoking may now be in decline."fbe
properly see a need for periodic X· combined total of boy and girl
ray examinations and sputum smokecs between the ages of 12 and
cytology. The Society continues to 18 dropped 25 percent between 1974
emphasize programs of lung cancer and 1979.
QUESPON: Every once ·in a
prevention that will stress the health
while
one hears of a " miracle cancer
advantages of quitting smoking and
cure"
performed by a faith healer.
not starting to smoke cigarettes. The
Does
the
American Cancer Society
Society had formerly. recommended
recognize
such
"cures?" .
chest x-rays for heavy smokers and
ANSWERline:
Faith healing is a
others considered to be at high risk.
religious
matter,
not a medical one.
QUESTION : "What is the
Medical
records
are usually not
American cancer Society,s view on
available
in
such
cases;
so there's
thermography for early detection of
no
way
to
pass
judgement
on their
cancer of the breast?"
ANSWERline: The conce pt of merit.
REUTER-BROGAN
QUESTION : "Are vitamins A, C
dientifying hidden ca nce r by
measuring variations in tissue tem- and E useful in comhatting canSURANC.E
peratures is based on scientific prin· cer?"
ANSWERline: Much has been said
ciples. However, thermog raphy
techniques now in use tend to about vitamins and cancer,
produce too many false negatives especially vitamin C. Solid research
Agent
and false positives to be practical for still is needed to clearly establish the
screening of asymptomati c patients. ~value of any vitamins for cancer
214 E. Main
Pomeroy
Breast self-examination, mam- prevention or treaiment. Properly
992-6687 or 992-5139

Graves, Chaslty ~acks, Trlcia MichaeL
Fourth Grade - Shelley Cormolly, Adrian Kuntz, Barbara Lisle , Todd LLsle, Sarah Philson.

1

basaador Avrell Harriman. Hoata:
Hugh Downs and Fra nk Blair.

NOW OPEN

X -ray recommendation withdrawn

The Me i g~ Junior H!gh School has announced
th e honor roll for the second six weeks grading
period. Student.&lt;; making a " B" or aiJuve in all

1veo
EVENING

8:00

v

Cancer ·A nswerLine

rx

'
u~c. w,

.

SHOP

773·5592

Television
••
•
VIewmg

CORRECMON
, ,
Grandfather of Ryan Eugene Dill,'
son o( Mr. and Mrs. Ryan Dill, Mid-'
dleport, born Nov! 1, at Holz~r
Medical Center is Guy Bing, Middleport, not Guy Ging as was reiM!r·
ted.
.
•.

GIVE
AMAIL
SUBSCRIPTION
TO
.
.. .
· SOMEONE WHO HAS MOVED AWAY

I MM\11 .... , ........ .. ........ . .. 111.110
t Mmth .... ........ .. .. .......... 110.011
I Y•r ...... .. .. .. .. . ........ .. .. 111.110

Pomeroy-Mi'ddieport, .O.,:,h;,;,lo;;.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _-; __________,:.T,::h::;e,:D::,:a::,:i::,lyr..::S,;;e:,:n:,:ti:,:n,;;e:;;l;;;;.:.P.::a:.lgl::e:.;;.:.
7

·:11,
cillfj;

Don't Give Up On Your ·:
,I
Gift List.

No oubocrtptiOI\I by maU pennlttod In lOWIII

HERMAN GRATE

DEAR POLLY - When giving a
gift ·to ,newlyweds write. out a
fa write tried and true ·rectpe on a
card and then on the reverse side
make it a gift card. A usable gift in
itSelf and a nice soqvenir. I know as I
am a bride of only three months.
Store . boiling water used for the
morning meal in a thermos 8o it is
still not for lunch or dinner. Why
waste hot water or the source uaed to
heat it? - MRS..B.
·
DEAR POLLY- My Pointer con·
cerns gift wrapping for the little
ones, the pre-schoolers who are n~
able to read their names on the card
put on their gifts. I simply paste or
tape a snapshot of the child on the
envelope or wrapping paper and the
look of delight on a youngster's face
when the gift is picked up is most
gratifying. This is great ftir birI would not think of attempting thdays, Christmas or whatever. I do
this without first making a test. Put not know who Is more pleased, the
a scrap of the fabric in a cup of hot giver or the receiver. - ANN ·
DEAR POLLY . - I am a hair·
water to which dye has been added. "
dresser
who has found a way to
Leave 10 or 15 minutes and then rinremove hair dye from one's clothes.
se until water is clear.
Had you considered the idea that As soon as possible apply hair spray
your room would look larger if the on it. If it does not disappear spray
draperies and . walls were both again and then rinse with cold
white? Walls and draperies of the water.- WANDA
Polly will send you one of her
same color are' quite effective but if
you feel the need for color why not signed thank-you nerspaper coupon
add braid, fabric bands or some clippers if she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in her
trinuning to your white drap~s? column.
Write POLLY'S . POINPOLLY
TER$ in care of this newspaper.

9, 1980

Norman lkhl!efer, Lanrel
Pomeroy, will celebrate his 84th ~I{;
thday on Dec. 10.
·: •
He along with hili daughter ahij,
son-in-law, Mildred ~nd willi4tl);
Perry, Athens, who will also obserV.'
birthdays, will be bono~ at It;
family dinner. Cards may be sent to&gt;
him at the above address.

Dying to dye drapes
-"'·"'-

~DtSsmber

December 9, 1910

·Pom e rov - Moddl e port, .Oh io

Yesterday's Answer
22 Gorged
30 "Apocalypse
oneself
Now" star
23 To the
33 Compos
point
mentis
24 Word
34 Brink
with house 35 Useless
26 Fate's is
growth
fickle
37 Greek letter
28 Plethora
39 Vehicle ·

or main
26 Picket, e.g.
27 Count (on)
28 "Noted"
individual
29 HYou Never Away" J..,.,,...+-+--+~f-~
30 Put In
the mails
31 Hebrew letter k+-+32 Crone
33 Stitch
3f Russian
stockade
38 Circumvent
40 Luxuriant
41 Extent
42Stannum

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

m

1a LONGFELLOW
One leiter simply stands for another. In this sample A 1a
used for the three L's, X for lhe two O's, etc. Single letters,
apottropheo, the length and formation of the warda are all
hints. Each day the code letters·are dlilerenl.
CRYPTOQUOTES

(§.0 mlna.)

FWP'C

FW

VQZV

MWI

(}) tODAY IN BIBLE PROPHECY
([) MONTY P~ON'S FLYING
CIRCUS
.
(jj) OICK CAVETT SHOW
11:15
NIGHT GALLERY
11:28
NEWSUPOATE
.
11 :30
IICD THE TONIGHT SHOW
·
Guest: Bltl Cosby, Suun George .
(}) 'ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
.
CII lo10VIE ·!ADVENTURE) ••

"For&lt;:e0f0M 11 1971

CIJ

rJI) IB
ABC NEWS
NIGHTLINE
8 CIJ CBS LATE MOVIE 'LOU
GRANT : Spies' Lo~;~ Grant delle&amp; a
C.I.A. request to t~ke hlareportera
ott a . local eapionage atory .
(Aepoat) 'PRICE OF FREEDOM'
1976 Stars: Timoth~ Bottoms. Mlr·
Un Sh9w .

FLWJJGPA

BPMCUGPA
NGPF
XW'LV

UBQNRBM
MWILZVQN

CUBP

HBP

EV

JGHOVF
IJ . - QWIGZ
BLXZCLWPA
Ysterda)''1 Cryptoqaote: IT IS AN EX~ PIUCE IF
OUR BUSINESS dmS US Otm HOME LJFE.-ROY L.

SMITH

�-

'
December 9 1980

Pom

Poland's. labor
problems spread
to private farmers
'

GAMES THAT SPEAK- Karen Nevergall, a buyer for a Columbus
department store, shows 6-year-old Jason Thompson of Columbus one of

the many electronic learulng games being sold by stores this Cbrbitmas .
season. Many such toys seD for $20 to $80. (AP Laserphoto).

·New electronics offer children more
than shooting down space invad·e rs

IJ8rlcultural mechanization, lack ol
adequate transport and lll!even
government support for agriculture
are considered by Western experts
to be key factOrs in the' COWltry's
. acute economic crisis.
The Communist Party ne\vspaper
Trybuna Ludu; Warsaw radio and
television and the' Polish news ageD.
cy PAP said a Soviet report of disorders at the Iskra bearing and sJ;artplug factory In Kielce were : unfot1llded.
Trybuna Ludu said the . factory's
deputy technical director and party
first secretary told it "caln), honest
work was going on, and that this wu
due in no small measure ' to
Soldiarity," Poland~s biggest . todependent union.
· But the Soviet news agency TillS
charged
that
"counterrevolutionary groups operaiing unde~ the cover of local Solidarity~
lions" caused disorders at the Iskra
ptant and disarmed the factory's
guard.
It said such groups were leading
Poli'n!l toward
"furtller
destabilization, toward ·the
aggravation of the politl'c al
struggle" and to "open confrontation" with the Commuiltst
Party.
Moscow !elevision has ral;ely
showed footage of unrest in Poland,
and the broadcast added to
speculation that the Soviets are
planning to intervene in their Warsaw Pact neighbor as they did to put
down the liberal movement In
Czechoslovakia in 1968.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Johnto use words at different grade toys collecting dust just a few weeks "They're often bought as birthday
ny's buzzing, blasting electronic
levels as the child advances," Valen after Chnstrnas."
presents or just out of the blue."
games have taught him how to shoot
said. "Within the next year I think
Parents also seem to justify spenTI was among the first to market
down space invaders, but now they
we'll see this type of toy for pre- ding a lot of money because the toys the toys, begmning with the Little
can help him read, spell or multiply.
school children, with an emphasJs on are educational and not just en- Professor speUing toy that was inA new generation of electronic
word-ptcture association."'
tertaimng.
troduced last year at a price of about
toys smart enough to teach Star
Mike Meeks, assistant manager at
Industry wide, electronic game $15.
Wars hero R2D2 a thing or two are
the Childrens Palace toy store in and toy sales totaled $400 million
Karen Nevergall, assistant elecbecoming best sellers this ChristColumbus, said electronic learning durmg 1979. F1gures are not yet tronics buyer at Lazarus tn Colummas because they encourage aids for children are selling as well if available for 19110.
bus, said she expects the toys to be
children to improve spelling, math not better than electronic games.
''We're finding that the electronic upgraded continuously. "We'll
and reading skills.
"Once a child uses a toy like this aids are not just a Christmas or probably have more sophisticated
The Village of Middleport will submit a pre-application '"
Department store buyers say the they never putit down, " MeekS said. seasonal item," Texas Instruments
ones each year," she said.
to the U.S. Department of Housing anil Urban Developtoys, called electronic learning aids,
"That's an added incentive to paren- spokesman Ted Jerrugan said in the
Belland said ihe electronic aids
ment for a
are popular both with kids and ts to buy the toys, after seeing other firm's Dallas headquarters.
are just beginning to be seen in
parents -who are prepared to pay
classrooms.
dearly to boost their childrens' fun"I think to some traditional
damental educatwnal skills.
teachers this kind of tl)ing might be
Dr. John Belland, a professor of
a threat. The first objection to
educational communication at Ohio ·
pocket calculators in the classroom
Public meetings will be held at Village Hall, 237 Race St.
State University, says the games are
was
that
the
child
wouldn't
learn
on
Tuesday, Dec. 16, 1980 and Monday, Dec. 22, 1980 at
excellent motivators. He said h1s
BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP ) - Iran
Iraqi tank-led advance across the math if they were used. But exactly
7:30
P.M. to explain and discuss the projects proposed '~:
major concern is that the kids who !jBid its jets bombed and burned
Bahmansh1r River bridge to storm the opposite has proven true," he
for funding in this pre-application. This is a competitive '·
really need such games have paren- Iraq's two major oil loading terinto the beleaguered city from its said.
program
and more pre-applications will be received .'
ts who can'tafford $20 to $85 toys.
minals at the northern flank of the
northeastern outskirts.
"I think it's only a matter of time
than
can
be
funded.
The games are miniature com- · Persian Gulf today. Iraq said it
Baghdad Radio said Iraqi helicop- until the child has his own minicomputers that store and display in- crushed an enemy counter-attack
ter gunshtps rocketed Abadan's puler at home which he can program
,.
fonnation. Many also have a voJce aJJJJed at breaking a IW()-month-oJd
All residents of Middleport are encoura·ged to attend.
gtant oil refmmg complex on the to solve lillY kind Of problem,"
box that asks questions or gives an- siege of Iran's burning oil city of
of theatembattled
eastern
swers on recorded tape.
Abadan, killing 420 Iranians.
al-Arab bank
waterway
daybreak,Shalt
set- rB~e~l~la~n~d~sa~i~d~.·~·I~t·~s!a~tr~e~n~d.~"~--~~=====~=================~
For example, the toy might ask a
!~an's official Pars news agency
ting new fires in the facility that
child to spell a word common to clalDled 200 Iraq1 troops were killed
provided 60 percent of Iran's needs
reading texts on the 6th grade level. and 12 captured in fighting at the
before Iraq invaded Sept. 22.
,.
The child pushes letters on a refinery city of Abadan, blunting an
keyboard on the toy, spelling the
'·'
word. If the word IS spelled correctiy, the toy's voice box tells him in an
encouragmg manner , "Good job"
If the child spells the word wrong,
the toy says try again. If the child
again spells the word wrong, the toy
Public Notice
Publtc Notice
burial in the Evergreen Memorial
pronounces the word and spells it out
Kenneth Lee Smar.r
NOTICE TO
Cemetery there. Friencjs may call
Dues
127,82
for him.
BIDDERS
Sr. Fair
..
Kenneth Lee Smarr, Pomeroy, at the funeral home.
The
Board
of
Education
·
The toy can be reprogrammed
Premiums
3,955.36
died at Children's Hospital in Colwnof Eastern Local School Jr. Fair Premiums
.._
with different memories to present
Dist~ict desires to receive
bus Sunday following a lengthy
&amp; Expenses
6, 132_.,
seal~d
bids on the Racing
more difficult questions or
Purses&amp;
following:
illness.
Expenses
35,463'.29
problems. Belland said the toys are
1
Tires
and
Tubes
or
Write
Daily
Sentinel
Classified
Dept.
Kenneth, the son of Delford Lee
Public Utility
2. Gasoline and Oil
not just devices to pacify parental
EKpense
1 11 Court St., Pomero.,., 0., 45769
3. Fuel Oil
Smarr, Parkersburg, ~nd Wanda
Special
worry over their childrens' school
4.
Fleet
Insurance
Kay Buchanan, Parkersburg, would
Attractions
35.37l:ll)
In order to be considered
perfonnan~e .
125.110
have been two years old on Dec. 24.
all sealed bids shall be Sanitation
Advertising
816.32
"I think this kind of game or toy
received
in
the
Treasurer's
CLASSIFIED
AD
INDEX
He was born in Parkersburg and
Office by 12 o'clock noon on Misc.
has tremendous potential because it
E,xpense
2,332.50
December 29 1980.
made his home in Pomeroy with
Premium Books &amp;
motivates a child to do the kmd of
Said
Board
of
Education
Kenneth and Betty Reed. He is sur1,064.59
Printing
reseo;ves the right to accept Mamtenance,
eANNOUNCEMENTS
drill that would get monotonous with
eRENTALS
vived by his parents, a twin sister,
or
re1ect
any
and
all
or
par·
I-Card ot Thanks
41-Housts for Rent
Repairs&amp;
a parent or teacher," Belland said.
IS of any and all bids.
2-1n Memoriam
42:-Mobile Homes
Pamela Kay, Park~~rsburg, the
Supplies
4,859.51
"These games light up and make
J-Announcements
,,
for Rent
Property
Reeds, paternal grandparents,
~-Givuway
Board
of
44-AJMrtment
.
.
Rent
Purchased
35,000.00
noises and talk back to tbe kids."
Education of
5-Hipp.y Ads
4J-FRooms
Delford Smarr, Ritchie County, and
Eastern Local New
6--Lost and Found
Mark Valen, photo and electronics
4i-Sp.lct fGr A tnt
Equipment
SOUl
Mrs. Charles Duff, Parkersburg,
School
District Refunds
1- YardSate
41-Wanted
toR
ent
buyer for the Gold Circle chain of
40.00
Eloise
1-Publll;:
Slle
Boston,
and by Kenneth Reed and Lakie
41-Equlpmtflt tor Rent
C/D
&amp; Auction
discount stores, sa1d educational
Treasurer
Purchased
25,000.qo'
Reed who reared his mother, Mrs.
9-Wanted to Buy
38900 SR 7 Treasury
eMERCHANDISE
games are "key items" this ChristReedsville,
e EMPLOYMENT
Buchanan; his paternal greatNote
10,000.'00
Sl-Householcl Gooctt
Ohio 45772 Bank
mas season and should be for years
SERVICES
Ba I. end
52-C
....
TV,
Radio
E41ulpMtt1t
grandmother, Chloe Denms, Parker,,_Help wantM
to come.
of R~portlng
\
51-AntiqUtl
(12) 9, 16, 23, 3tc
sburg, and his maternal great- .
ll-SituatectW•nted
Period
. 5,171.38
54- Misc. Merch•ndi ..
"Last year the demand ·far exlJ-lnsurance
Total
$186,638.50
U-luilctint Supplies
grandmother, Donna Philabaum of
14--Busineu Tnlning
ceeded the supply. This year we
Prer,ared
by
Muriel
56-Petl for Soli•
Public Notice
Pomeroy.
15-Schoolslnstrvctlon
Brad ord~ Secretary,
finally have enough to meet the
16Radto, TV
Meigs Co. rair
. .,
Funeral services will be held..at
e FARM SUPPLIES
Mel~s countr
a ca Re~Nir
demand," Val en said. "We've gone
&amp;
LIVESTOCK
Agncultura
2:30p.m. Wednesday at the Leavitt
11--WanteG To Do
021 9, ltc
,:,
KENNETH LEE SMARR
Society
from having just a few electronic
61-Farm Equlpmtnt
Funeral Home in Parkersburg with
eFlNANClAL
62-Wifltflt to l11y
Financial
educational aids to an entire field of
Statement
'2-Trucb for S•l•
21- IUslnen
U - Livestock
1980
them.''
Opportunity
Harold E. ysell
RECEIPTS
M--H•..-1 Gtaln"f.,.io
22-Money ro Loan
Ollie Mae Gotschall
Valen said the educational tools
Public Notice
· : Gate
U- SINd I fJrtUh:•r
:U-Protess1on111
Funeral services for Harold E.
Admissions
$48,384.38
are usually selected by parents and
s.rvlces
Membership
14,455.00
Ollie Mae Jacks Gotschall, 73,
eTRANSPORTATION
LEGAL NOTICE 'not specifically requested by (Baldy) Hysell, 66, Ashley, who died
Concessions
8,909.50
71-Auto. tor Sal•
eREAL
ESTATE
Large three bedroom
Baltimore,
Md.,
formerly
of
Meigs
Class
Entry
children as gifts. However, once a Monday at Grady Memorial
13-V .. nl&amp; 4 W.O.
31- Homes lor Sale!
in Pomeroy, ~
Fees
729.00 home
74-Mortrty«ln
praised for S25,000.Q .
n-Mobii•-Momes
child is exposed to the toys, they Hospital in Delaware, will be held at County, died Sunday at South
Speed
nAuto.Parts
House In excellent nelg ·lor S.let
Baltimore General Hospital
Receipts
3,871.00 borhood
prove to be more popular than elec- 2 p.m. Friday at the Ewing Funeral
&amp;Accenori"
and a very good
33- Farms for late
Aid
tJr.
&amp;
state
following
a
lepghthy
illness.
77-A~tto Rep~~lr
purchas~ .
For further
34- BIIIIIliU llullcllnlls
tronic games that are purely for en- Home.
Sr.)
31,396.00
details contact Edn.a
l~Lot1 I Acrup
Mrs. Gotschall was born June 20,
Mr. Hysell was preceded in death
County
Aid
tertainment.
7,500.00
Schoenleb, Administratrix
lf-Real E111fe WUttd
Sales
1,956.15 of the Estate of Mary Dor•
31-ReiUOn
"We ask the parents what the by his father, Edward HyselL Sur- 1907 in Milton, W. Va., the son of the
eSERVICES
Advertising
1,59).00 Miller, telephone area cocte
late Levi and Virginia Morrison
11-Home t m,rov•mentl
Short Term
child is doing with the electronic viving are his wife, Ethel;
614, 992·2074 or Fred ¥1(. ·
Rentals
lt-Plumblnt
&amp; ••c•v•t1n1
Jacks.
Shewas
also
preceded
in
Want-Ad
Ad•ertising
3,277.50
Crow, Attorney at Law,
games they bought last year, and the daughters, Mrs. Barbara Wyatt,
Interest
Q-E
li,C'IY•tint
1,827.29 Pomeroy, Ohio, 992-2692:
Deadlines
death
by
one
son.
14--Eiectrlul
RedeDosit
Cardington;
Mrs.
Lydia
Cleland,
parents tell us the toys are in closets
&amp;Refrltfrat'-t
C/0
25,000.00 (12)7,8,9,10,11, 12,6tc
She was a sales clerk in depart2:30P .M. D~ily
or just stored some where," Valen Ashley, and Miss Ethel Mae Hysell,
Treasury
ls-oenerel H•ulllll
11
Noon
SIMP¥'
ment
stores
most
of
ber
life.
.,..._M.H.
R..-Ir
Note
10,000.00
said. "But with the electronic lear- Ashley; sons, Harold and John
lorMoM•v
17-UI'MtlterJ
Savings
She is ksurivlved by her husband,
ning aids, they don't get bored. Most Hysell, both of, Ashley ; Charles of
Account
10,254.40
Money
parents tell us their children use Gaithersburg, Md.; his mother, Charles . V. Gotschall; three
Borrowed
15,000.00
Mrs. Lydia Hysell, Ashley; 19 grand- daughters, Mrs. · Juanita ctsrk and
them all the time .~
Refunds
1,476.57.
Rates
aild
Other
Information
Mrs.
Nacy
Kay
Smith
both
of
.
'
Misc.
children, three great-grandchildren,
'
Income
100.00
Valen said the most popular and sisters, Mrs. Ethel Gruester, Baltimore and Mrs. Janet Louise
Bal. Beginning of
Cash
Chlroo
educational toys in Gold Circle Menessa, Pa. , 'Mrs. Eileen Martin, Grimes, Florida; 11 grandchildren,
Yr.
910.11
1.00
UIS
2Rya
Total
$186,638.50
t.Jt '
stores ;ire the Speak and Spell, Chester; Mrs . Beulah Autherson, five great grandchildren and several
l Uys
EXPENQtTURES
I.U
ldlys
$9,919.92
Salaries
Speak and Math and Speak and ' Racine; Mrs. Helen Vandall, nieces and nephews.
us
Bufl. &amp; Professional
Funeral services will be · held
Read series manufactured by Texas Delaware, and Mrs. Margaret Wyatt
4,233.83
' E&gt;pense
Each word ever the minimum 15 wol'dtls"' Ctflt1tMr went tMrUy.
Thursday at Walker Funeral Home
Judges
Instruments.
,
of Pomeroy.
Ads runhint •tl'ler th1n ~•tcutln dlin will t. dl•r.- •t ttwl d•¥
(Sr.)
rite.
1,059.56
at I p.m. with the Rev. William Knit"Last year we couldn't get enough
He was a veteran of World War II.
Judges
(Jr.)
of them," Valen said. The TI toys
In m•mory, C•rcl ~~ Tlllnln •ncl Olllttuary : I CHtl per wonl, sl.ll
B•trial will be in the Rock Springs tel officiating. Burial will be in Stan280.00
Directors
minimum. C.. h lfl Hnnc•.
are big sellers despite a price range Cemetery. Friends may call at the dish Cemetery. Friends may call at
E•pense
992.08 .
lif ~to 80 each for the trio.
MobUt Home •••• •"ff Y~rd ula •r• ace.,._. enly wlttl Cllh with
Administrative
.funeral home antyime after noon on the funeral horne Wednesday frum 2
........ u (tnt cNr11 f..- Ms Clrl'\'htflo• ~"""' In Cart ot The
Expense
to4and7ta9.
~23.67
"The games can be programmed Wednesday.
senunet
I T"xes, Licenses,
954.59
•:-~-------"'7"_.,.....-..----...11. Etc.

PUIUC NOTICE

1ran
bombs oil loading docks

COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BLOCK GRANT

Small investment, large

I

Area Deaths

..

lt=r=e=t=u=rn==s,::::S=e=n=t;::--in~el~W=a:-;-il=t~A=-=d~s
WANT AD INFORMATION

PHONE 992-2156

ii

'

.

,,

........

....

J

Business Services

In Memoriam

2

'

WARSAW, Poland JAP)- Labor
and economic unrest in Poland
spread for the first time today to
agriculture when private fanners
accused the government of reneging
on an agreement to approve tbeir
new independent union.
Organizers of a private farmers'
union claimed tbe government
initialed but refused to sign the
papers legalizing their independent
union. They scheduled a meeting in
Warsaw Sunday to disCuss their
grievances.
"Strikes are a matter for
tomorrow, for today there is the
meeting of delegates," said one of
the organizers, Wleslaw Kecik.
The farm trouble developed as the
official Polish media joined the independent labor movement 1 In
denying charges from Moscow that
''counter-revolutionaries'' were
causmg new unrest among industrial workers.
The Soviet media did not repeat
the charges today, but the official
news agen~ Tass accused
Washington
of
making
"provocative" statements about
Pohind.
Independent fanners occupy a
strong position in Polish agriculture,
in contrast to other countries in the
Soviet bloc where collectivized,
state fanns are the norm.
Private farmers In Poland work
about 52 pe~cent of the coUlltry's
tillable land and account for 78 percent of all agricultural production.
The small-farm system, low level of

OhiO

PUWNS
EXCAVATING

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
, , The clock of life is wound
but once,

u

And noone has the power to

-... ~~ know just when ' the clock

will stop,
Ala late or early hour.
- Sadly missed by _ wife,
Midgie, children, · Gene,
wanted to Buy
.. Vivian, &amp; Cindy, grand· 9
•. children, great grand IRON AND BRASS BEDS,
· children.
old ' furniture, desks, gold
rings, jewelry, sliver
' In memo'ty of Mrs. Edna E. dollars, sterling, etc., wood
Wiggins who departed this Ice boxes,jars antiques,
·life two years ago today, etc. complete households.
·· December 9, 1978. Sadly Write M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,
misSed by son, Kenneth Pomeroy, OH1 or call 992·
.
Wiggins, davghler, Mary 776/J.
Bentz &amp; family, step
daughter, Gladys Robson, USED FURNITURE. Gold
&amp; family . .
&amp;: silver, class rings, pocket

3 bedroom house. living

room, dining room. family
room, 1'!, bath, hot water

heat 992·2918.

&amp; so on. Copper brass and

Classified Ads

business. Will buy com·

plete estates. Also take

bring you
extra cash
for
·
,'. , shopp1ng
sprees

consignments.

Auction

1~2'-_.S~i.!!tu~a~tl~o~n~s-!:w,__,a~n~ted,___

Have vacancy, board,
room, laundry for elderly .

Reasonable. Phone 992Ossie's Auction House, 6022.
Middleport Oh.992·6370.
General •Widing &amp; cuttlnll,
quality work, competitive
WANTED TO BUY:
ER rates, portable. Pphone
GOLD,
SILV
,
'..-- - - - - - - - - - 1 PLATINUM, STERLING- 992·2535.
• RACINE GUN SHOOT, COINS, RlNGS,JEWELRRacine Gun Club, every Y, MISC. ITEMS. AB- WILL Do small business
~ Friday night starting at
SOLUTE
MARKET bookkeeping at home .
·, 7:30 p.m. Factory choke
PRICE GUARANTED. ED Have refer,ences. 992-7274
~ guns only.
BURKETT
BARBER after 5 p.m.
SHOI:'. MIDDLEPORT,
GUN SHOOT : Saturday OH 10 992-3476.
: p.m. Sponsored by the
,. Racine Volunteer Fire
: Department, at building in
. Bashan. Factory choke
: guns only .

· APPLES - Sweet Cider:
: we still have plenty of ap·
• pies. S-1.00 per bushel and
· up_ Fitzpatrick Orchard,
• state Route 689. Phone_ 609·
: 3785.
; NO

' HUNTING

or

13

" trespassing day or night on

: the Charles Yost, Ivan Wtll
or John Houdashelt farms.

All violators
prosecuted.

will

be

HAVE YOUR deer trephy
mounted . Birchfield's .
Ed•r on 124 at Rutland. 7422178.
SHOOTING

MATCH.

Rutland American Legion

every Sunday, 1:00. Big
prizes and games. F8ctory
ChOkQSOnly.
MEIGS HlSTORY Books
for sale tor Christmas at
Meigs

Museum

every

Friday and .svnday af·

ternoon during December

or at Pomeroy Library.

DEER Cut &amp; wrapped at
Maple Wood Lake between
Syracuse &amp; Racine, Oh.
$25. per head. $5 addlttonal

Ciures Dairy Isle in Mid-

dleport. Ham &amp; cheese on
rye &amp; chicken pattie,
Italian sub.

Ossie's1 Auction

MiddlepOrt, Oh.992-6370.

Golf Equipment, used sets
Broken shafts, etc. 614·9853961 .
Old stock certificates from
companies

no

longer

business . .1 - 61~-992-5077.

in

weak, narrow minded, &amp;

afraid - of

~-However,

the

Bible.

Intelligent Aevel

oeaded, broad minded
people may like it. Phone
985·4174.-

.

1~

E. Second Street

RT. 33 - On bus line.
Has bath, 3 bedrooms,
nat

gas furnace, city

water, and near town.
One acre
trees.

with

pine

30 ACRES- Ntce lay·
lng on good hard road
that has T.P. water line,
well drained that would
make a nice fi)rm or
development.
BARGAIN - 5 rooms

and bath, city water,
chimney
burner or
Can be
business,

for wood ·
natura 1- gas.
used for a
residence or

both. Want just $11,000.
80 ACRE FARM -

Prime location on four
lane road. All mmerals,

2 houses, barn, large
block building and 2
bedroom mobile home.
SMALL HOME - Has 2
bedrooms, natural gas

nished house In

42

for Rent
3 BEDROOM trailer in
Southern Valley Mobile
Home Park, Cheshire, Oh.
992 -3954. Will accept

11
Help Wanted
GET VALUABLE

2 bedroom mobile home,

as a young busi
and earn good

some great gifts as

with river frontage. After 6

Beavtiful three bedroom
ranch brick home in Baum
Addition, Pomeroy, Ohio.

us right away and get on Gas heat, central air conthe eligibility list at 992- ditioning. Call 985·3814 or
992·2571.
2156 or 992·2157.
TEXAS OIL CO. needs
dependable person who can

7 ROOM HOME. 2'12 acres,
fireplace,
woodburner,
total electric, carpeted, 2
car garage, basement,

1975 two bedroom trailer,

excellent condition located
'" the Country Mobile
Home Park. $175.00 per
month, S100.00 deposit. No
pets. Serious calls only.
Phone 247 -3942.

Apartment

for Rent
Three bedroom riverfront

10x27 sundeck. First house
past Memory Gardens s :R.
7. 992-774],

per month. Small depOsit
Call Hobstetter

Realty at 742 -2003

Crochet &amp; Save!

COMFORTABLE older
home, 6 rooms &amp; bath, cen·
tral heat, garage &amp; carport
B'at:lysitter needed in my on large lot in Rutland.
home In Middleport. Mon· Low utliltles. $12,500. 742·
day through Friday from 3074.
7~ 40 'to 4:-45. Care for two
children ages 4 &amp; 1. Light
housework, S40.00 per

week.

References

reQuired. 992-dt026 after 5
p.m.
8

POMEROY,O.
'992-2259
NEW LISTING - This 8
room house has 4
bedrooms, family room,
big living room, full
basement, nice cabinets
in the kitchen, and builtin book shelves The
woodwork Is original

and it has french doors.
All for $33,000.00.
APPLES - PEACHES GRAPES - right in
yovr own back yard
with this 11/2 story frame

home. Two bedrooms
down and 2 up, dining

room. utility room, and
many ~ other
nice

features. $20,500.00.
LIBERTY MOBILE
almost

new l4x52 mobile home

storage building. Lot
can be rented. $9,00MJQ.
A BRAND
tili;W
HOUSE - Haven yov
always wanted a new
house?

This

one

is

gorgeous. It has a big
living room with a nice
fireplace and glass

sliding doors that open
onto a deck. Situated on
a 1'\14 acre wooded lot
th~t is so peaceful and
quiet. Call for more information. $42,000.00.
WOODED BUli:.DlNG
SITE - Approx. 5 acres
in Riggs Crest Manor. A
beautiful place to buld a
home .

Utilities

available.
AsRing
$10,000.00.
MIDDLEPORT A large

CHRISTMAS AUCTION

kitchen, a large dining .
room, full basement, 2

car garage and 3
bedrooms are but a few
oi the line qualities of 1
this 2 story frame hovse.

THURSDAY, DEC. 11th, 7:00. P.M.
IN HARRISONVILE

Must see this one to

believe how nice. Just
$42,600.00.
REAlTOR
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
992-6191
ASSOCIATES
Jean Trussell 949·2660

•Toys •Decorations eFrult elools
• Furniture • Everything you will
. need for Christmas. ·

They cost a fortune to buy, but
are qutck to croche1
Nrcest way of neck dressing

I~

'n' (IIJ Tilnsftll

121-[~

Pltchwork Qullb

127-A....,. 'n' DriW•
12$-llrtlty (lilly flowm
IZS.Pitll Quilts
124-(IIJ Gifts 'n' Ornaments
IZJ.Siltth 'n' Pitch Quilts
IZZ·SiuH '1' Puff Quilts

IZI·PIIIew Shew.otfs
llt-(IIJ All of Flower Crochet

lll·Niftr filly Quilb
115-faJ Alt oflipple Crochel
IIJ.Campllll Gift lloa!l

110.11 Jjfly ••,
. 101-SIII '+ ln~(lllsictrssueincl)
IOS.I11111nt Crochlt

AUCTIONEER: THURSTON MUSSER

10!-IIMII Qoollb
101-Qoolll 11111-Collettiol! I

•

Sizes
"From l0K30"

Building &amp; Repair
IF YOU NEED IT
FIXED,
WE ~N DO IT!

Utility Buildings
Sizes from 4•6 to 12x40

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

PH. 742-2328

Rt. 3, Bo• 54
Racine, Oh.

Ph. 614·843-2591
6-15-lfc

IL-------,----'

12-8-1 mo.

1----------+----------+---------Apartment

44

UPSTAIRS apt. 3 rooms &amp;
bath tn Pomeroy. 992-5621.

73

Pets far Sale

S6

HOOF HOLLOW: Horses
and ponies and riding
lessons.
Everything
Imaginable 1n horse equip-

ment.

Blankets.

Vans &amp;4 W.O.

1979 Jeep Wagoneer , 4
wheel dr1ve, fully equip-

ped $7,500 742-3117 after 5

belts, 74
Motorcycles
1978 KAWASAKI KZ 650

boots, etc. English and
western. Ruth Reeves

(614) 698·3 290.

motorcycle,

color

blue .

Call949 - 26~9.

AKC

Registered

poodle

pups. 2 small miniature
and 1 toy. 1 female, apricot .
1 light chocolate brown
male, 1 dark chocolate

brown male. Alter 5 p.m
992-2967

Bl

Home
Improvements

GENE'S
CARPET
THE MEIGS County CLEANING. Deep stream
COUNTRY MOBILE Home Humane Soctety pets of the clean puts nu· look back in
Park, Route 33, North of week are . Several adult your carpet, highly recom ·
Pomeroy. Large lots. Call cats, 5 black &amp; tan pupptes, mended,
reasonable rates,
992 -7479.
black labrador. black Irish Scotchg~.tard.
Free
46

Space for Rent

TRAILER spaces~ for rent
Southern

Valley

Mobile

setter,

collie

type,

estlmetes. Gene Smith, call

shepherd type, black &amp; now 992-6309 or 742 2211.
tan; house broke medium

53
Antiques
Farm supplies
84
Electrical
ATTENTION:
(IM &amp; Refrigeration
I bl"tSIBEIC
PORTANT TO YOU) Will
SEWING MA,HINE
pay cash or certified check 62
Wanted to Buy
Repairs, . service,
all
for antiques and collec992-2284. The
tibles or entire estates. CHIP WOOD. Poles max. makes1
Nothing too large. Also, diameter 10" on largest Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Singer Sales
guns, poc~el watcl)es and end. $12 p-er ton . Bundled Authorized
coin collections. Call 614- slab. $10 per ton. Delivered and Service. We sharpen
767-3167 or 557-3411
to Ohio Pallet Co. , Rt. 2, Scissors.
Pomeroy 992-2689 .
ELWOOD
BOWERS
54
Misc. Merchanise
REPAIR Sweepers,
Firewood for sale, Mixed
Traespertatjee
toasters, irons, all small
appliances. Lawn mower.
types of wood. $35.00 per
NeKt to Slate Hlghwoy
pick-up load. Delivered,
Garage on Route 7, 985will stack for Senior 71
· Autos for Sale
Citizens. 843·4951 or 8433825.
1977 CHEVY Chevette.
2815.
Good cond 985 · ~256
APPLIANCE SERVICE ·
all makes washer, drvers,
Fl REWOOD $35 a truck
load. $60 a cord. All har- 1976 Honda four speed, ranges, dishwashers,
dwood, split and delivered. good · condition . 42,000 diSposals, water tanks. Call
miles, ·rad.ial
tires. Ken Young at 985-3561 . 28
843·4831 .
$2,450.00. Phone 742-2211 years eKperlence. Also will
sell parts you fix .
GRAVE Blankets. 949 2493 betore5 &amp;742·2201 after 5.
or 992· 7320.
85
General Hauling
72
Trucks for Sate
1 have two lots &amp; two vaults
AGRI· LlME Spreading,
in Meigs , Memorial Gar·
1976 LUV Pidup. AM·Fm 8 limestone and · fill dirt
dens for sale, rea I cheap track. a.c., topper, good hauling. Leo Morris, 742·
for $600.00. Phone 992·5927 tires, runs good. $2.600. 992· 2-45S.
Also will sell farm ; 20 6323.
acres on Long Hollow
TRASH
HAULING,
Road.
1971 Ford dump truck. Syracuse, Rock Springs,
G~ condition. $3800.00.
Flatwoods Rd . 992·5715.
Sears stereo with two 94V·2042.
Lawrence Manley Jr.

- crochet sca•fs ol 3 ply synthettc hngermg yarn m a lacy
stttch in all you• lavortte colors.
They're lOvely gtfts too Patlern
7561 dtrectmns f01 1 styles
$1.75 for each pattern. Md 501
each pattern lor ftrst-class atr· s p e a k e rs, d i nett e . set, 1 .:;;;;;;;;::::::::::;::::::...L;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.
mail and handling Send Ill:_ dresser, gold nylon chair, 1•
pole lamp, maple twin size
Alice BntOb
J 1 ' bed
frame, coffee table.
KIT 'N' CARLYLE TM by Larry Wright
leedlecllft Depl
Phone 949·2063 after 6 p.m.
or Saturdays.
Daily Senlioel
llai i&amp;3, Jlld Chllsu Sta., New
fork, NY 10113. Point Name, WARM MORNING wood
with 3 speed blower,
Addr•,' Zip, Pattern Number. burner
ltke
new.
$250. 742·2220.
Catch on .to the cralt boom! Send
for our NEW 1981 NEEOLECRAFT
CATALOG. Over 172 destgns, 3 RCA Color TV, 25 inch
XL 100. $125. 992-6259.
free patterns tns;de. $1 00
AU CUFT IIOOIIS. .$1.75 each
UJ.FaiGII Home Quiltin1
Now at
132-Quilt Oriputs
Pomeroy
Ul-Ud 1 lllocll Quilb
131J.Snlllr Fllllions-Sill$ 31-56
-Landmark-

Roger &amp; Dottte Turner

992-5692
OFFICE 992-5692

AL TROMM

Home Park, Cheshire, Oh. size dog ready to be loved, 83
Excavating
lovable mtKed breed. 992
992-3954 _
6260.
J &amp; F BACKHOE SERVICE ltscensed &amp; bonded,
47
wanted to Rent
AKC regtstered Pekingese septic tank installation,
ROOM with cooking puppy. Deposit will hold for water &amp; gas lines. Exprivileges or cons1cter Chnstmas. 843·2684.
cavating work &amp; transit
shanng apartment with
layout. 992·7201.
gentleman. Joe Vadish Box PUREBRED
English
103, Pomeeroy, Oh. 45769.
Shepherd puppies. Stock Dozer &amp; ditcher work, land
and watch dogs. Phone 247 - clearing, water lines, gas
2161.
lines, grate work. Charlie
Hatfield. 742-2819.
Merebaedlse

Housing
Headquarters

with 2 bedrooms, underpinning, and a metal

10-7- tfc

Farm Buildings
SMALL

apartment for $175.00 monrequired

An

992·5682

ALL STEEL

Middleport &amp; Pomeroy.
99l-7511 or 992·6130.

5858.

porches and large rot.
City water and good

1-

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

V.C. YOUNG II

10 K55 two bedroom mobtle
home near Racine. 992- UNFURNISHED apts. tn

SAVE YOUR PROFITS
BY INVESTING AND
WRITE IT OFF. WANT
IT SOLD, THEN TRY
us AT 992-3325 or
992-3876.

Hrs.: Mon.-Fri.

I.

992·6215 or 992·7314
Pomeroy, Oh.

_ _ ___:f_,o,_r~R.::e,_,_nt,___ _
3 AND 4 RM furnished ap
12 K 60 fur4ished trailer ts. Phone 992-5434
with water &amp; trash paid.
AVailable .mmediately.
Furnished apartments, 992Also a 12 x 50 avail~ble 3129,
992-5914, or 1-304-882Monday. Phone 992·2897.
2566.

th . Rooms for rent, $60.00

HOME

electrical work
(Free Estimates)

Middleport, Oh.
Ph. 992-6263
Anytime
11 -16-1 mo.

util ities paid, adults only,
deposit &amp;
references
required . 992-36.47.

acres; 6 rooms basement,,
bath. 2 mobile homes;

992-7284.

-Plumbing and

12 Park St.

acre; 6 rooms, 2 baths, llJz

HOUSE, 7 rooms, on bath,
full basement, large lot

work

-concrete work

AND
HEATING

children

44

-Auto and Truck
Repair
-Transmission
Repair
'

remodeling ·
and guffer

~ Roofing

~LUMBING

Mobile Homes

3"'1'---'--"'
Hom=e=-s.:.:fo,r__,S:.:a:.::le'-:10 ROOM brick, 3 baths,' 1'1•

Wanted to Buy: class rings,
wedding bands, anything miles south of Middleport,
stamped, lOK, 14K, or 18K Rt. 1.
gold. Silver coins, pocket
watches. can Joe Clark at Trailer lot for sale, $5,000.
992·2054 at Clark's Jewelry Modular home lot on Route
Store, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 7, three · bedroom farmho~se located on Route 7_
992-2571.

-Addonsand

KAUFPS

No Sunday calls.

forced air furnace, bath,
store close

• New Homes - extensive remodeling
• E lectrica 1work
• Roofing work
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583
124-1mo.

Racine.

Mason, 3 bedroom never.
lived in, 2 bedroom, rented
2 acres . John Sheets, J1J2

FAYE'S Gilt Shop In Mid- work without supervision
Pomeroy. Contact
dleport will be open from in
customers. Age unim 12·5 untfl Christmas.
portant, but maturity Is.
We train. Write l.F. Dick,
l:leating Fuel, 1 &amp; 2 E•· Pres .,
Southwestern
celsior Oil Company. Petroleum, Ft. Worth, Tx.
Ph,one H 14·992·2205
76101.
To be afratd of the Life
Science Church Is to be

Rocksprings, Flatwoods
Road. Call 992·5715
Law~enoe Manley Jr.

House,

tinel route carrier.

HOMEMADE Chili soup.
New feature at McClure's
Dairy Isle in Middleport. 10
P&lt;t. discount for Golden
Buckeye Members.

Trash hauling, Syracuse,

plete e$tates. Also take Wanted to do: small
consignments .
Auction business bookkeeping in
every Friday night, 7 p.m. my home. 992·7274 alter 5.

for skinning.

NEW sandwich at Mc-

Insurance

OLD COl NS, •pocket wat· AUTOMOBILE
IN·
ches, class rings, wedding SURANCE
been can·
bands, diamonds. Gold or celled?
Lost your
silver. Call J. A. Wamsley, operator's license? Phone
742·2331. Treasure Chesl 992-2143.
Coin Shop, Athens, OH. 592·
6462 .
18
wanted to Do
USED FURNITURE. Gold Furnace repairs, electrical
a. silver, class rings, pocket work, plumbing, mobile
watches, chains, diamonds home or residence. 992·
ads
&amp; so on Copper brass and 5B58.classified
batteries, an\ique items,
also do appraisals,' com·
J)lete ' cluctloneer service.
Over 3 years experience in
business Will buy com-

$200 per monlh. 949-2801.

Phone
1-( 6 I 4) ·992-3325

every Friday night, 7 p.m.

,. evening starting at 6 30

Housing
Headquarters

_

batteries, antique items,

also do appraisals, (Omplete auctioneer service.
over 30 years experience in

NICE two bedroom fur

Tv~~~L~.~:.t 13·

watches, chains, diamonds
Announcements

Real Estate- General

ROGER HYSEll'S
GARAGE ,

CARPENTER
SERVICES"

i'

1 Repossened H!!rdWick De1UJ1e
Gas Dryer . Here's a good Pillet

to save money
1 Used Hotpolnt

Refrigerator

S11S 00

NeW 81kU AS Low As
S106 'IS
Hot point Mlcrowa 11e Oven
Reg ~1Y
$369

Homel•te Super 2 Ch11ln Saws
(281001 Reg SI9S .95 NowS1659.S
( Price ,ncludes Free carrying
c aSI!J

comfort Glow Kerosene
Heo!'ters . Economy (28 ~1.
R~~ iil'195

NowS12995

·j

r.Jl..,._ POMEROY
't{~LANDMARK

-·

3. M~m St. ,

Pomf.'rO!

t

�Pag-10-The Daily Sentinel-

S£TTIAS

o~ceml!er 9,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohin

.

Nix.on 's. scandal

'

1980

I

SALE ENDS SAT. , DEC . 13, 1980

SUPPLEMENTTO THE GALLIPOLIS DAILY TRIBUNE, PO INT PLEASANT REGISTER AND POMEROY DAILYSENTINEL

'

(hreatens ,Haig

POINSETTIA PEDDLER - George Albert Hill Is busy tbese days
selling P&lt;Jin.&lt;ettlas. Hill was on hand for the recent Christmas parade In
downtown Pomeroy.
·

Fire' kills woman, seven children
KANSAS CITY , Mo. - A fire which a pparently bega n in a first-floor
Jiving room roared through a southeast Kansas City home early today,
killing a woman and seven ch1ldren, offic ials said.
·
A 14-year-old girl and the woman's husband survived the blaze,
which was discovered just before I a.m. by a boy who was passing by.
The girl apparently escaped the flame s by jwnping from a secondstory window, according to police and fire officials at the scene . •

Police identify suspect's body
MAYFIELD, Ky. - Police have identified the body of the third
suspect in Saturday night's armed robbbery of a Lone Oak Pharmacy
as an Evansville, Ind., man, a state police spokesman said Monday.
Trooper Richard Wright, public information officer for the Mayfield
post, identified the man as Harr y Ralph Simmons, 36.
Simmons was found shot to death in the back seat of a car allegedly
used as the getaway ca r in the robbery, Wright said.

Miners vote today in District 6
DJLLES BOTTOM, Ohio -·Coal miners in Ohio and four northern
West Virginia counties voted today to elect nwnerous officers in the
United Mine Workers' Dlstrict 6.
Officials said this morning they had no indications of voter tournout.
Results of balloting from some 18,000 UMW members - 12,000 in
Ohio- were not expected until midnight.
The offices of the district's president and top office rs were up for
grabs, along with nwnerous organizers, auditors, election committeemen and division board membe rs.
f...finers cast their vote.s at some 441ocal union halls and severa l construction sites between 6 a.m. and 6 p.m.
·

Bums fatal to OU student
DAYTON . Ohi o - A 21-yea r-old Ohio University stude nt d1ed Monday after suffering severe burns du ri ng a fire at an Athens residence
last month.
David Snow. of Sylvania, was taken to the special burn. center at
Miami Valley Hospital in Da)10n foilowing the Nov. 21 blaze. He died
of burn complications a nd pnewnonia, the Montgomery County
coroner's offi ce said.
Another person injured in the fire is listed in ser ious condition at a
s pecial care unit at O'Bieness Hospital in Athens.
The blaze remains under investi gation.

U.S.-Vietnam agree on program
WASHINGTON - The State Department says the United States and
Vietnam have agreed on a program that initially will allow the immigration of up to 1,500 Vietnamese a nd thei r families to the United
States.
Vietnamese with famil y members in the United States and those
who formerly were employed by the U.S. government will be given
. priority during the selection of parti cipants in the program. The first
departures, of about 250 people, a re expected to begin Thursday .

Daily lottery winner
CLEVELAND - The winning number selected Monday night in the
Ohio Lottery' s daily game " The Nwnber" is 905.

" intense scrutiny" at conliflll3tion
hearings if he were · nominated by
Reagan.
Although aides to the presidenl-elect believe they have the votes to
push the confirmation through the
new · Republican-controlled Senate,
they fear the victory would come at
a high political cost.
It could conceivably give the
Democrats, now 111 the political
defensive, a rallying point and a
chance to embarrass the Reagan administration.
One source said the :;&amp;.:year-old
Haig - who is now president of a
major defense contractor, is also opposed by some conservative
Republicans who distrust · his
Iongiime connections with former
Secretary of State Henry Kissinger.
Reagan said during the flight to
New York that he expected to announce some names of his !3 Cabinet
members in Washington, where he
arrives Wednesday morning.
Later, close Reagan aide Michael
Deaver said he thought the first a~
nouncements would come Thursday .

WASiflNGTON (AP) Gen.
Alexa1ider M. Haig Jr., who watched
first~hand as Watergate destroyed
Ricbard M. Nixon's presidency, is
finding that memories of the eightyear-old scandal are still strong
enough to threaten his OWf1 appointment as secretary of state.
· Sources close to the incornirig administration of President-elect
Ronald Reagan said Monday that
Haig 's chances of being named to
the nation 's top diplomatic job are
fading as Reagan and his advisers
weigh the residual dangers from
Watergate,
One source, asking not to be
named, said that " it was virtually
all over for Haig" ani! that a
decision was likely soon to eliminate
him from contention.
Another transition source said,
" The question is whether or not they
are willing to start out their administration by bringing all the old
stuff from Watergate back into it."
Haig was Nixon's last chief of staff
and the former president's staunch
defender as the Walergate cover-up
unraveled .
Haig first counseled Nixon to hang
on, but, after hearing the tape on
which Nixon acquiesced to the
Watergate cover-up, told ' the
president : "!just don't see how we

\
LIGIITED CANDY CANES have been placed on both sides of
Pomeroy' s Second Street. Tbe Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce Is
resP&lt;Jnsible for the attraclive Cbrlstmas decorations.

.09

Our Reg. 29.96

9.97

~
¢

Photo Box or AlbUm
''

NOW OPEN

!

19.96

Tall Table Lamps

¢

Holds 200 photos.
126112 or 110112,1.09

Wood column metal
base. 32 1/2 -34'/i.'

THE WIZARD
Pomeroy's New Game Room

'Fine Family Entertainment"

Located At
234 E. Main St.
Pomeroy, Oh.
OPEN MON.-SAT.
10 A.M. to 10 P . M.

L~~~~~~~~~~~~
'

.

Save0vers2

Saves2

Our Regular 16.97

Our Regular 7.96

Our Reg. 1

Men's Luxe Velour Shirts

14.50

5.96

Men's Flannel Shirts

Stretch Ta,.;;;,.;o,

Plush cotton/polyester with
fashion placket. Rich tones.

Cotton flannel w.ith acryli c
knit dickie. Plaid choice.

Head--to-tolil-'
knit in

w

ELBERFELDSw ·_

~

-~

.W
I
I

This year
Give Him

Hanes~

I·:
II

UNDERWIAR It

i
I

I
•

I
i

•w
It
i

--

It :

I
•
I

•

7.

.

~Wli!IIIJiiiii!&lt;::&lt;!IIIIJillllli!IIIJiiiii!!IWIIAII, .

w

Wreck leads
to law suit

Save

Sale Price

rp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiii

.----------------------'-----!

Three suits for money have been
filed in Meigs County"Cotmnon Pleas
Court all as results of car accidents.
Ronald L. Miller, Jr. and Doris I.
Miller, Racine, filed suit against
John R. Hoffman, Pomeroy, for in·
juries, damages and.loss of wages as
a result of an accident on Aug. 27,
1979 on Pomeroy's East Main Street.
Charles M. Matthews, Racine, a
passenger filed suit against Hoff·
man for injuries as a result of the
same accident.
Dean V. Hill, Rt. 2, Racine, filed
suint in the amount of $8,144 against
Marvin W. Satterfiled, Rt. I, Minersville, for injuries and damages as a
result of accident on April 12, 1979 ,
on SR 338 in Meigs County.
Filing for dissolution of marriage
were Peggy A. Wood, Middleport
and Earlie L. Wood, Middleport;
Dennis Roush, Polland, and Ethel
Rebecca Roush, Portland.
Anna Jones, Rt. I, Rutland, filed .
suit for divorce against John Paul
Jones, Gallipolis.

,,

\

VETERANS MEMOjtiAL
Admitted-James Priddy, Sr.,
Three runs were answered by
Rutland ; Naomi Jo_hnson, Pomlocal units Monday, the Meigs Coun· , neroy; Rhonda Hannahs, Minerty Emergency Medical Service sville; Earl Hart, Racine; Patricia
Headquarters reports. They include Spencer, Middleport; John Stevens,
Tuppers Plains, 1:18 p.m., Pam , Vinton ; Jessie Wood, Pomeroy.
Miller from residence to St. Joseph
Disc~,arged--Beverly
CunHospital in Parkersburg; Tuppers ningham, Angela Hatfield.
Plains, 2:57 p.m., Nancy Cole,
residence, to Veterans Memorial
Property transfers
Hospital, and Pomeroy, 4 :41 p.m.
Robert Van Meter, residence to
Leo R Story to Royal Pet Proper
·.
·
Pleasant Valley HospitaL
t1"es Inc Ease Bedford
•
·•
·•
·
Janealie Johnson to Royal Pet.
Properties, Inc., Ease ., Bedford CANCEU.ATION
Salisbury.
Preceptor Beta Beta Sorority will
Howard William Thoma, Evelyn
no•,meetonThursday, Dec .1!.
Thoma to Herald Oil and Gas Co.,
RightofWay,Salisbury .

•
•;

Save Over 5 2
Our Regular 7.97

5.93

Our Reg. 35.97

29.97

Art Work Anlm.a l Prints

On Jumbo Lounlile Pillow•

Big-as-life prints on
22x30" pillows . Cotton
print panel.

Chronograph Alarm
Chrome Case, 6
functions and chimes.

Sale Price

6.44

Charlie··· Cologne

.He r favo rite! By Rev . - oz.•
lon . pray. 11

"s·

"FI 0 /S

I

.

PerfOrmance proven light-weight
tor hon;te woodcutting
Rugged, smootn cutting llght·welght featuring counterbalanced 30cc engine with ball bearing construe·
tlon for added durabllltv and long life. ,

POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO
606 E. Main
Ph. 992-2094
Pomeroy,
Front end alignment-$11.50 most passenger cars
BRAKE SERVICE

Fornter
(Continued from page 1)
stepped out of a limousine after a
recording session and walked past
the Dakota's giant iron gale into the
archway.
According to authorities, Chapman had come to New York from
Hawaii about a week ago and had
been seen near the Dakota three
times in the past tHree days. As Len. non left his recording studio earlier
Monday, Chapman go t hi s
autograph, police said.
"Mr. Lennon?" police quoted him
as saying before he allegedly fired
five shots fr,om a .38-caliber pistol.
Lennon, with three wounds in his
chest, two in his left arm and two in
his back, stwnbled into an office and
crumpled to the floor.
" I'm sure he was dead when he
was shot," said Dr. Stephen Lynn.
" Extensive resuscitation efforts
were made and despite transfusions
and other methods he could not be
revived."
,Police, who found the gunman
. standing near the scene with his
!'lislol on the ground, were considering the shooting "just as important as the assassination of John
F. Kennedy," said Lt. John Schick .
Police initially referred to the
suspect as a " local screwball."
Lennon had only recently emerged
from five years away from Ule
musical scP.ne, during which he
cared for his son, cooked and kept
house.

j!

Emergency squad runs

The transition sources added,
however, that even though Haig appeared in serious trouble, problems
with other possible contenders for
the State Department post could still
lead to Reagan's appointing the former NATO commander and riding
out the expected storm on Capitol
HilL
And Reagan himself said Monday

Leader Robert C. Byrd said Haig's
Watergate ties would come under

BUYS

Meigs County happenings. •

can survive this one."

as he left Los Angeles on a trip East
that Haig's connection in the
Watergate affair was " having no effeet whatsoever on whatever I
decide " about offering Haig the
State Department job.
. Reagan was asked if Haig's past
made him less inclined to select
Hal·g "No no notatall "hesat'd
On.Saturday,
. , Senate.Democratic
.

The Saving Place '"

Our Reg. 2.96

Our Reg. 9.97

1.96

Miniature Lights

7.76

Acrylic: Gift Blank'ets

Crayola "' Kits or Desks

35-light indoor /outdoor. Clear,colored .

Nylon eyelet binding on
one end Cozy. 72x90" . ·

Art supplies in vinyl carryIng case or drawing desk.

Each

BUY YOUR CARPET

Our Reg. 2.57

9.7

1.681-Lb*

Deluxe Western Gun Set
2 guns with ho lster. hat

· vest, scarf. badge.

Cordial Cherries

Gi ft boxed. Milk o r
dark chocolate.
"Net WI.

...

I
~~

NOW FOR THE

il

l

.HOLIDAY SEASON

~

""""u""' Over 4 'Save0ver'2

'2

5

1.57

Gift Wrap"'Papers

24:88 9:97

7.77

1981 Auto Manual

7;97

Five 26" rolls in 5
designs. 50 sq . ft.

Electric, witr moving pendulum.

Ch_il ton • repair
bOOk. U.S.1974-1981.

qt .

Our Reg. 1. 97

Good·Selection at·

Sale Price

Great Savings

Anniversary Cloc:k

Steel Parts Cabinet
45 drawers .
Shop now. save.

Our Reg. 9.96

K mart" MERCHANDISE POLICY

Mini Cookware Set
6112 " griddle, 5/8·
saucepan ,

Our llrm lntenllon ts to hove eve ry advertised lie~ In $lock on our shelves. It an .od'o'eJIIsed Item Is nor ovoll ~ ble IOf
purchase due to 0-:"Y unforeseen reason , Kmart will Issue a Rotn Check on request l or the merchandise (one Item
or reasonable !amity q uantity) to b e purchased at the &amp;ate price wMneve r aiJoltob le or will sell you a comparable
Quality lle m at a c:omj:&gt;o robte reduction in price. Our policy Is to give our c ustomers satisfaction alwa ys.

GALLIPOLIS, .OHIO 185 UPPER RIVER RD.
•

Sale Price

10.88

Bathroom Scale

Vinyl tapestr y
cover. Easy-read .

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