<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="17365" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/17365?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-04T01:03:54+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="50516">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/f1ad30a0974b22ce7ccbaef4804a0e44.pdf</src>
      <authentication>b81791b7c99437fc43072fb2c3b0e526</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="55346">
                  <text>Oil ministers seek· unity,. hikes
."'~
I

I

by Dick Caval 1.1
I WAeJU5r''THlNKlNq-Aeour

FRE!CKLEO.,. ~l-Ee
ARE: '\leRi JN1ERE6Tl~.

'

Asked about the picture, Iraqi Oil Minister Tayeh
Abdul Karim told a ~r, "We think it would be
11111re appropriate to expo~e the pictures of the victims
of tlie Iranian re&amp;~me.••
Sul)arto sald be hoped the OPEC meeting "could
produce fresh wind for mutwlhnderstanding, frater·
nal relationa and cl011e hannimy amongst ita mem·

BAU, Indonesia (AP) -The 13-nation OPEC oil C&amp;f'o
tel met today In a bid· to re1tore "•t llut a facade Ot
unity" despite ~ 85-day-old war between two of ita
members, Iran and Iraq. ~ all producera _.., also
~to mate plaDs for.
round of price bikes.
Opening the flm Dllljor QPEC meeting Iince tbe
Pwlian Gulf war erupted Sept. 22, Indonesia's
Prellldent SllhaJio appealed to Iran and Iraq "to leek
the belt conceivable 10lutlon to their confllct u soon u

new

bera."
The delegates from Iran and Iraq, confronting each
other on thlllldylllc palm-dotted tourist island, showed
no outward response to Suharto's plea,
Tbelr conflict bas cut off a combined total of 4 mllllon
barrels a day In oil· exports and spurred disarray
ainong other members ol the Organization ol
PetroleUin Exporting Countries,

pollible."
. In a quiet ~ Iran'• delegaUon placed a large
black..aucHrhlte pbotograph of Iranian Oil Minllter
Mobammed Jawad Beqlllr Tunguyen, who baa been
taken prlaoner In the war, in the seat be 'llllllld bave oc-

/~

cupied. .

! -

.

.

''We must be vigilant that this OPEC meeting does
not become an arena which weakens"the unity and integrity of our. organization," Suharto said. "We are
obliged to restrain ourselves and to act calmly."
The challe~ge tM:fore OPEC is "to restore unity,"
Venezuelan Oil Minister Hwnberto Calderon Berti said
Sunday, on the eve of the meeting. "We are going to
avoid any points which can lead to confrontation. I
don'l believe the problems we have had will last
forever. ! am optimistic."
OPEC protocol experts took the unusual step of
separating Iran and Iraq, whose delegates
traditionally were seated side-by..ide in the alphabetic
·
arrangement of past meetings. ·
Iran was expected to use the meeting to repeat its

•

Iraq claims Tunguyen · Is a pris9Der of war and
refused to hand him over at the Ball meetin8 ·despite
the urging of some OPEC members who 11111111ested
such a step could improve the chances for peace.
Because of the war, there was speculation that the
OPEC members might not be able to get together.on a
new formula for oij price$. But the Venezuelan
minister predicted they would try again to achieve tOO
unified pricing pOlicy that eluded them at their
meeting last September in Vienna.

•

at y

e

demand for the return of Iranian Oil Mlniater Mllbam&gt;
med Jawad Bequlr Tunguyen, who was captured by
Iraqi troops in late October near the Iranian oil
refinery center of Ahadan.

enttne

'Vol. 21, No. 171

15 Cents

1910

.ReJ~g~Jn plans relatively quiet. week

..

Priscilla's Pop
HAZEL.'
WHAT .

·HAPPENED
TONW
T·SHIFrr?

NOTHING,
DEAR"'

TMA.TS ONE'

0: CARLYLE$
SHIRTS.

by Ed Sulllva
NEVER

INVE5riGATE
THEUWHY"
CF THING$.'

'

IT SEEMS
10 ee AN

INBORN
TRAIT,..

1..00 ANGELES - Ronald Reagan Is spending lhla week in relative
isolation while a coast awa)C his allies are working to complete the
·
president-elect's Cabinet.
Reagan stili must fill seven of ~ 15 Cabinet-level positions, including secretary of state: Alduaaid Sunday that further selections
would not be announced before Tuesday .
Rea~an, who returned from a six-day trip east on Saturday, has a
very light schedule for thlll week, with lllQSt of his tlnie to be spent
alone with his wife, Nancy, at their Pacific Palls.!ldes hoine.

Th~

die when robbers open fire

1..00 ANGELES - Two anited robbers ordered 11 restaurant employees and customers to line up inside a meat·freezer on Sunday and
then opened fire, killing three people and wounding six others,
authorities said.
Two employees at Bob's Big Boy Restaurant apparently escaped injury, but authorities said they were 11118ure how they avoided being
harmed.
.
Pollee said the gwurien, both carrying shotguns, entered the
·restaurant just before illr 3 a.m. clOIJing time. They said the robbers
emptied the cash register and safe, lined up the victlins in the meat
freezer, robbed thein, then started shooting.

Firm settles bac~ par _fatle

BLAMES AMERICA - Ira ulan President Abothassan Baol-Sadr,
second ·from right, tells a news conference In Tehran Monday that lbe

United States Is to blame for the delay to freeing the American bo&amp;tages.
This jlboto was supplied by Paris, the official Iranian news ag~ncy. AI

Iranian .leader blames ·delay on

.

WAsHINGTON - Scberlng Corp., ,~ o( ~ f\lfllll)e
hlue-rollar workers to lower-paying jobs, baa agreed to pat $185,000 in
badt pay for 407 women and to spend t&amp;OO,OOO for Incentive pay, af·
flrmative action, training, . co~llng and recruiting, the Labor
DepiHment says.·
The agreement armo!lllced Sunday is the department's third sex
dlscrllnlnaijon settlement with a major drug C01J1111111Y.In the past two
years. Hoffmann.LaRoche Inc. of Nutley, N.J., and Merck &amp; Co. of
Rahwtiy, N.J., last yeat agreed to spend more than $4 million in back
pay, incentives and jobs programs.
·

BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP)
Iranian President Abolhassan BaniSadr today blamed the Unlted.States
f.o r the delay in freeing the 52
American ~ostages and said
Washington must· be prepared to
return every penny of Iranian
wealth before the standoff can be
resolved.
"The Majlis (Parliament) has

Men must get involved, too .
Bruce Stokes, a senior researcher at Worldwatch Institute and
author of the study released during tl¥l weekend, sald birth control
programs and sex education often are oriented toward women;
resulting In men having a ponr understanding of reproduction and contraception.
"Despite the ~act that conceiving a child always Involves two people,
soctety often lgi)Ores the Interest men have In planning their
,
families," he said.

Lennon tributes
By Tbe Associated Press
John Lennon's message to the
world was one of peace, says one of
thousands of Ohioans who with countleas ·others on botli sides of the
Atlantic paid a final tribute to the
former Beatie.
An estimated 1,200 people
gathered Sunday on the main plaza
of the Ohio Statehouse to conduct a
silent vigil.
During the 10-minute Interlude of
silence, beginning at 2 p.m., some
stood In circles, clasping hands with
heada bowed toward Lennon's
photograpli on the ground.

Bitter teacher strike continues
HAMILTON, Ohio - The Hamilton teachers strike entered a fifth
week today after. intensive vreekend bargaining failed to settle bltle!'
disagreement over a new contract.
.
The Hamilton Classroom Teachers Association rejected a new contract proposal Sunday from the board of education, saying It offered
~dian the current contract.
.
AI Bruno, &amp;~~istant superintendent of Hamilton schools, said the
school board offered a 10.5 percent increale In beae salary. Bruno said
the board also waa willing to drop Ita contempt of court ~
agalast 40 teacben and Include a non-reprisal clause In the conlract.
'

Baby dies after Caesarian birth

D,\ILAS -:_1An Infant girl delivered by Caes&amp;rian ~on Brter her
mother waa liiiOt in the chest died three dayl after birth, sald officials
at Baylor University Medical Center. ·
• '
The 5-pOwld, 14-ounce girl wu delivered Wednesday, less than an
' bour before her mother, Cln,dY Whiddon, 22, underwent surgery to .
remove a .32-callber slug from her chest Mrs. Whlddolt waa eight
montbll pregnant.
.
'
·.
Police said Mrs. Whlddllli's lleJll4ther fired the~ at the cllmax·of
a family argwnent. Mrs. Whiddon Was reported In llerious condiUon at '
tile medical center.
.
.
The baby died at noon Saturday, said a bolpital spokesman,

.ln.

Man shot after Lennon tribute
NEW .YORK- A Dllln waa wounded by
Central Park on
Sunday In wbat pollee ll1d wu a dnig-related argument that came
. lMI than bour after a 'flgll for lllaln fot iDi1t Beetle Jlllln Lennon. .
Leonard ~ 30, C!l tile llrom, wu alTeited on cbarga o! at-

te!Dpted murder and -ult In the lnckllnt that took place behind the
bandlhell wbare tile Lennon fanlt.._s ptbencl.
· Police said ClarkeJl,~ ~~eying to sell mirljuana to people,
leavinl tile Lennon
ance
Wllnlmen tried to cbue blm
away. An IJ'I1IIIIG IWIIlted and p41lice llld Clarte later claimed be
fired at ODe of the men fearing he Wfluld be attadlt!d.

"'*'

- Weather
()cculonal rain or -

continuing tonighll..owl tllnlght In the low :

301. Putly cloudy 811!1 cold -ru.lay. Blgblin the mld.301. Chance of

·preclpltattcm eo pe1 te~&amp; tonllbt and • percent Tuesday. Winda ...,.. :
'

tonillhi

thheasterly to northerly ltHO mpb
By Tile Aaoelated Preu.
'

.
•Wedae1day &amp;IJnMiib Frtdly:

'

' '

'

... ....... the perled. " W81'llliJII taW wltlt ....... ia .......
Wulllnday ad latbe.load'IIRI Tim ..,ad Friday. ~Iaiit
. . Wedllellllay aad In tile 3011 Tlnlndly .... Friday.
'

asked for the ~eturil of our money
and if there is any obstacle it is in the
answer that America gives," BaniSadr told fl news conference for
foreign reporters in Tehran. "The
principle reason for the delay lies in
the hands of those who hold real
power In theUnited States."
He did not elaborate, but said any
U.S. decision to withhold a portion of

Ohioans join

WASHINGTON - A new study says the success of birth control
programa may depend on lnvolying men In family planning.

an

right is a Mr. Nobarl, chief of Iran's Central Bank. Otben, froUI left:
Gen. Falahi, deputy bead of (ran's Joint Staff; Fonner lranlau deputy to
lbe United Nations Farbaug; and Bani-Sadr, (AJ&gt; Laserpboto).

.

Several others stretched a banner
across the steps of the Statehouse
with the words from a Beatie song,
" ... and in the end, the love you take
is eq~l to the love you make,"

Iranian assets "clearly l¥ii': not lead
to a solution."
Bani-Sadr was commenting on the
delay in Iran's response to the latest
U.S. clarification gf the four con·
ditjons proposed for release of the 52
hostages, held now for more than 13
months. He said the fault for the
delay rests with the United States
for failing to state in clear terrru; its
acceptance of the demands adopted
Nov. 2 by the Parliament.
" Of course, I am not speaking only
of the money that was stolen by the
Shah and his · relatives. I am
speaking also of the money tbt
belongs to the Iranian goverrunent
and is in the U.S. banks or the banks
that are under U.S. control."
Iran has demanded the return of
the wealth of the late Shah Moham-

.

U~

S.

mid .Reza P~vl 8nd his Jm.
mediate family, withdrawal of pending U.S. lawsuits against lran,

release of more than $8 billion in
Iranian assets fi'O',I:en in U.S. banks
and a U.S. pledge of non·
interference in Iranian affairs.
Tbe U.S. government is reported
to have explained the legal obstacles
to its fulfllllng the first two demands
but reportedly said the other ivro
conditions could be met without dlf.
ficulty.
Last week, Executive Affairs
Minister 3ehzad Nabavi, chief of the
government conunlssion studylngo
the hostage issue, publicly rejected
the U.S. position that the U.S. courts
muyh 2 Oxl68p8st decide wbo is entitled to the shah's holdings in the
United States.

.

'

Following the silence, the crowd
lit small candles and clapped and
sang to LennQn's "Give Peace A
Chance,"

•

j

"I believe in giving peace a chance," said Rob CUrtln,21, of suburban
Columbus. "Lermon W!l§ part of my
life, and his message to'the world is

peace."

·

'

Patrol cites pair·
'
following mishaps
Two persons were cited in a series left of center.
of weekend accidents Investigated
No Injuries were reported when a
by the Gallla·Meigs Post of the Ohio car driven by Stephen E. Mullins, 18,
Highway Patrol.
Gallipolis, ran off the leit side of the
.The patrol sai~ Roger L. Ken- road on a curve on SR 588 in Gallia
drick, rt, Franklinville, N. C., was County at 1:50 a.m. Sunday,
westbound on U.S. ~ at 1:45 p.m.
The patrol said mullins' c;ar came
Sunday when he attempted to pass back ont.o the road, out of control,
another westbound vehicle driven by and collided with three mailboxes
Beth A. Taylor, 22, Gallipolis.
before ~topping. Moderate damage
At ~ same time Taylor at· was listed to his car and no citations
tempted to make a.left turn into Cir· were issued .
. cleAve., andeolllded with the side of
'
Two deer were killed In separate
Kendrick's vehicle, causing severe
car-deer accidents In Meigs County
~e to IJ'aylor's car and
over the weekend.
moderate to the Kendrick auto,
Troopers said Gladys J . Cross, 33,
There. were no injuries and Ken·
drlck wu cited by the patrol for im· Langsville, was southbound on CR 76
near Pomeroy at 10: 10 p.m. Satur·
proper paaslng.
• Troopell'uid Joseph F. Ca:lvert, day when the collision occurred,
·17, Gallipolis, was northbound on causing moderate damage to ber
Roush Rd., In Gallia County at 11 :20 car.
Gary L. Durst, 34, Reedsville, was
. a.m. Saturday when his car went left
northbnund
on .:;H 7 at 1:15 a.m. Sunol center and collided with " south·
da~
when
his
car struck and killed il
bound vehicle driven by' Raymond
deer,
causing
moder,,t.e damag~ l.o
A. Dotson, sO, !luntin~t&lt;m, W, Vn .
1
MOOer~t(: Um1 w~~· 1,\' i·nnoriPtl r" ,his cllr, There were no injuries ailrl
no citations issued,
both carfl ltnd Calv~n "'b., .... ~ ... u. w•

.

,•

.I

TRIBUTE TO JOHN LENNON -Two baaen are.......,.. . . .
tbe tribute concert to the late John Lemtou Ia Uverpeol, .....I(. .
day. Later, violence erlapted from lbe crewd &amp;athered ,.._ rec* ....
stopped playing Beatlea tuues alld •witehed to other m-. At ltiR •
people. maiuly teeDBge glrla who became byBterlcal or ,.,...., wire •
. jurl.cl in the mel~. (AP Lallerphotol.
'
·

'.t

..

,•

.

-.
~-

�•
December 15, 1980

Commentary·
'

•

the DillY

.

Senti~~~: 2· .

ByScottWolfe
Meigs tight defense. O~ger, the Marauders widened their lead · with a 27 point winning margin at
67-40.
.
STEWART - Coach Gordon · Miller, and Ashley paced Meigs the to51·28toend the third period.
Meigs
netted
25 of 68 from the field
Fisher's Meigs Marauders scored second period to a 34-19 halftime
The final stanza saw the winners
their first victory of the season 67-40 1ead .
put the Lancers away with an for 37 per~d sank
. 17 of 27 for 63
the foul line. Federal·
over Federal Hocking's Lancers . In the third canto, Meigs looked awesome drive that literally tired percent f
of 48 from the noor
here Saturday night. The win lifted stronger than ever and received the dragging hosts. Meigs coasted in Hocking
for
29
pe
t
and
netted 12 of 27
Meigs to H on the season.
good supporl from its strong bench.
Steve Ohlinger and Mike Miller
from the fo line.
Meigs won the battle of the glass,
led a well balanced scoring attack
with 13 and 10 points respectively.
3&amp;-29, led by Ohlinger who grabbed
12. Roger Fore and Doug Pars0111
With one minute gone In the opening quarter Miller connect on a short
had five for Federal-Hocking.
Meigs committed 16 miscues and
jumper within the lane to put M~igs
on top 2-G. With offensive output
conunited 26 fouls while Federal·
· scarce In the opening minutes, the
Hocking had 29 turnovers and 22
fouls.
Lancers held a 6-2 lead midway
Reserve· coach Mick Childs enthrough the period,
joyed his initial victory of the season
At the 3:53 marl\ Ohlinger had a
with a credible perfonnance over
successful ll~ln and was fouled on
Federal Hocking, 52-27.
the play. Ohlinger's foul sbot went
The young Marauders overcame
wide, but a Kevin Smith tip-in tied
the first hall jitters to rack up a 31·21
the score at~ .
halftime lead, then eoasted in for the
Federal Hocl9ng regained a 9-8
convincing win.
lead before Meigs opened up a lead it
Randy Murray led Meigs with 18
never relinquished oif field goals by
points.
Rick Chancey also enjoyed a
Bob Ashley and Smith. After both
good night with 16 points. Dave Parclubs got off to a slow star!, Meigs
sons led the Lancers with nine
forCed Federal Hocking into some
points.
costly turnovers with a fuU court
MEIGS (67) - Wayland, 3-1-7;
press to iake a 16-11 advantage .a t
Miller, 3-4-10; Ohl,inger, 5·3·15;
the initial buzzer.
Ashley, 3·1-7; Judge, 0·4·4; Kennedy,
In the second period Meigs took
2·2-6; Smith, 2·0·4; Dotson, 1-o-2;
Tony Scot.t, 3·0·6; Swann, 0·0·0; Mur·
conunand with a pressure defense
ray 1·2-4; Roger Kovalchik 2·0·4.
and a good team effort. A spirited
.
Totals
25·17·67.
Meigs squad forced the opposing
FEDERAL HOCKING (40)- Bar·
nhart 1·0·2; Bennett 0·0·0; Fisher
Lancers to commit turnover after
CORNER
SHOT'Tony
Scott
(32),
Meigs
forward,
fires
a
long
cor2·0·4;
Fore 1·0·2; Ed Gillan 0·0·0;
turnover, which in turn sparked the
Glass 0·5·5; Goins 2-0·4; Kennedy
ner
shot
as~ Federal Hocking players, Roger Fore (42), Doug Par·
Meigs offensive unit.
0·0·0; Parsons 1·1·3; Smith 2·5·9;
Two consecutive five second sons (22) and Rober! Brown (44) look on. Using a well-balanced fl90r at·
Tabler 2·1·3; Williams 3·0·6. Totals
14-12-40.
counts on inbounds plays highlighted tack, Meigs came home with its first victory this season.

Border feud
SPRINGFIELD, IlL (AP) - Time
you lived In Metropollil,
IlL, along the Oblo River, you knew
for sure you were an IJllnoi8an.
Times change.
The u.s. Supreme Cowt and the
Illinoia attorney general say you
might actually live In Kentucky.
Surprised? There's more.
Since becoming a state in 1792,
Kentucky defined Its northern bor·
der with Oblo, lllinois and Indiana as
the northern shore of the Ohio River
-meaning aU the river's water was1
Kentucky;s.
But the Ohio River - without consulting anyone - 8hifted course In
188 years. And the U.S. Supreme .
COUrt ruled this year in a case
brought by Ohio that Kentucky's
northern border now is the same line
as in !792.
So lllinois Attorney General
Tryone Falmer announced Thursday
that part of the.Ohio River belongs to
lllinois + oot Kent11cky.
Indiana and Ohio already have
made similar claims, but legal
aquabbling continues over putting
the court's ruling into effect.
AU this, of course, has Kentucky
officiais a bit flustered. They used to
think they knew where their state
began and ended.
Deputy Kentucky Attorney
General Bob Chenoweth said the
border dispute stems from the legal
description of Kentucky's northern
boWJdary when it became a state in
1792.
•
At that time, he said, the boundary
was set as the northern "low-water
mark," or shore)ine, of the Ohio
River. In other cases where a river
separates states, such as the

was wben

MlssiMippi River, the river's middle
i.s the legal border, he said.
Chenoweth said the Oblo River's
shoreline has moved a liWe in SClmC
sections since 1'192, especially in
recent years with locks and dams
built by the u.s. Anny .Corps of
Engineers.
"The very practical and legal
problem i.s bow do you define the
low-water marl&lt; of 1792," he said
from FMmktort, Ky. "Our contention i.s that defining (it) i.s practically, if not totally, impossible."
More than just a hwnorous
struggle i.s involved in the dispute,
said Chenoweth and Sanford Martin,
spokesman for the lllinois Conservation Department .· Untold
amounts of barge fees, fishing and
boating license fees and other taxes
are at stake, they said.
"We are working now .. . to see
how much money we are talking

abOut in this,'' Chenoweth said.
Don RamseU, spokesman for
lllinois' attorney general, proposed
this Solution to the border dispute:
"Somebody is going to have to ge
some tall, rubber hip boots and some
history books and dive in."
Chenoweth said Kentucky believes
it's wrong for the U.S. Supreme
Court to set Kentucky's border at the
1792 line, before the Ohio River's
shiftings.
According to Chenoweth, Ramsell
and Martin, some dry land in
southern lllinois, Indiana and Ohio
probably technically belongs to Kentucky. That's because the Ohio
River's shoreline bas shifted southward in some places and northward
in others, they said.

ll~h

•

Plea bargaining regulation sought in Ohio
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A MC:.
Donald man whose son was killed in
a 1978 traffic accident says be will
continue to seek paliSage of a law
regulating the practice of plea
bargaining in Ohio's courts.
Frank Simeon, a high school
teacher, said the emotional .scars of
his son's death that sparked his interest in the matter are no longer the
driving force behind his campaign.
They have given way to the stories
of other crime victims and their
relatives who have told him about
what they believe a.re abuses of plea
·,
bargaining.
Plea bargaining is the practice in
which charges against a defendant
in a criminal case are dismissed or
reduced in exchange for a guilty or
no contest plea to a lesser offense.
"It's unfair to the victim. The vic-

tim has no rights," Suneon says. He
says the victim invol~ should at
least be advised tbat the p~ting
attorney is engaged in . such
negotiations.
·
Plea bargaining or negotiation is
not regulated by statute. But the
Ohio Rules of Criminal Procedure
require that the ·undetlying
agreement on which a negotiated .
plea in a felony case Is based be
placed on the record in open colirt at_
the time the plea i.s accepted.
Simeon says Ohio's law should be
changed to require that a crime victim be infonned by the prosecutor
that plea bargaining talks are under
way.
He is backing a bill, sponsored by,
. Rep. Joseph P. Williams, [).Niles,
that would require, among other
things, ,that the victim be informed

Will Reagan

m~e

nee. 15, the

Five years ago: Secretary of State
Henry Kissinger was awarded the
gold medal for distinguished native
left in the year.
: Today's highlight in history:
sons by his hometown of Firth, West
· On Dec. 15, 1791, the first 10 amen- Gennany.
One year ago: The deposed Shah
dments to the U.S. Constitutionthe Bill of Rights - went into effect of Iran flew from the United States
to exile in Panama.
:with ratification by Virginia.
Thought for today: The strongest
· On this date:
: In 1890, the Sioux Indian chief Sit· man upan earth is he who stands
:ting Bull was shot and killed in South . alone - Henrik Ibsen, Norwegian
:Dakota after a battle · with U.S. playwright (1828-1006).
• troops.
: In 1948, a U.S. grand jury indicted
:former State Department official
Alger Hiss on perjury charges.
HONEYMOON
· Jn 1961. former Nazi Adolf EichWILL END
mann was sentenced to death in
The
incoming
administration's
:Jerusalem.
honeymoon
with
Congress
will end
. : Ten years ago : A Soviet
when
the
treasury's
billing
catches
-spacecraft began sending back
up
with
the
cooing.
: :messages from the planet Venus.

:350th day of 1980. There are 16 days

..........,, Olllo
llMIIollll
DEVOTED TOniE INTEIQ:Br OF 111EMEIG8oMA!ION AREA
0

~~ r"T'1....0L....,...,......_.,.,....
~v

........

. ROBERT L. WINGE'IT \

..'
'!

BOB HOEFLICH

--....

DALE RO'I1fGEB, JR.

•I

N1W11!4ltor

-.No.....,..._wiD ..

- . .........Ilks.

- -· _· -L~-- -- - --

\
'

,

I 'l'IIq -lie Ito!.- • 1o11o AD
bo.,... wllll ...... .........
(IIh'loW
bobofaodlula, ..........
.
,

LIII'I'rEIII or OPINJON . . nk
....... oUJoel .. ..._ ... -

Lelton_.. )

0

~

.

NEW YORK (AP) - Since the publicly-held companies a few
stock mark!!\ often plays SeesaW weeksaftertheNewYear?
with interest rates, it has landed
For one thing, to get a ·better
with a disturbing bump several notion of where their company is
times in recent days, shaking the headed during one of the bwnpiest
wits and confidence of investors. ·
times ever for business, a time when
And, since the priJhe rate - they some companl~ are going to get
call it the crime rate around Broad thrown right off the seesaw.
and Wall Streets- seems destined
Drexel Bumllam Lambert, a
to lurch !Ugher over the next few brokerage house which, you might
weeks, investors large and smaU are say, has a vested interest in the
worried abdllt bumps to come.
market, bas issued perhaps the simWith so much on their minds, plest guide to reading a report.
therefore, why should investors
In scrutlnzing a report, it says, Inmake a New Year's resolution to vestors should seek to identfy the
finally read what is probabl)' the factors underlying past operating '
most prolifically produced but least trends and those likely to provide for
read of all stock market literature? . future grotrth. It offers a checklist of
Why, that Is, should the investor eight items:
.
read the corpofllte annual report, 50
1. . The forthrightness of
million copies of which will begin management In evaluating past sue-·
flooding the mallil from about 15,000 ceases and disappointments. "Are ,

the shortfalis being constanUy attributed to external ~!Vents? Are the
good Yet\1'8 chiefly attributed to the
mailagerlal pi'OWell8 of company of.
ficials?"
·.
2. The objectives being set fOI'
future earnings growth and return
on investment. Such objectives often.
are contslned In the cbief'
executive's letter.
3. The deps being taken to achieve!
these goals, such u plans for new
products, marketing pro£rams ·and
cap!tal additions.
4. The pi ospect.l for 'J'eallzing ,
these goals. d"How rapidly are the :
company'sllll!l'kets,expanding? ww I
the company ~ve to widen Ill share,
of the market to achieve Its growth
target? How does the company compete? What might be the company'I
responae to lost lll81'kf ~?

BY ASSociATED PRF38
~ou can itemize In one year and still
Nobody likes to think about taxes~ .get the full advantage &lt;i the stan- especially during the holidays. dard deduction in the next year. You·
But a IIWe thought and smne simple have to lllltlmate some eiJieiiSes and
actions between now and the start of plan ahead, but the effort coald save
.•
the year could cut your 1980 income money.
tax bill.
Here' I how It works:
Timing i.s a major factor in easing
Suppoae you and your spouae ex·
the burdeit and the key question in- pect your 1911 deductions to total
volved Ia whether you itemize dedu&lt;:· '$3,200 and you estimate that your'
,lions.
1981 deductlona - the ones for the
' The standard deduction - called return you'll file In 1112 - · will be
the zero lncket amount - II f2,300 ,about the aame. That's a total of
fOI' slng!e people and $3,400 for f8,400 In deductlona. You would ap.
married couples. ·If YO)II' deductions pear fA) be better off laking the stanfor things like medical expenses, dard amount each year and letlln&amp;
state and local taxes and illterest
f!I,UI worth ol dedUcti0111.
pense are more than the standard
Suppose, honver, thai
'can
amount, it pays to itemize.
shift some of 1981'11!!'lllmlteddeduo- ·
There i.s more to making the tions to 1911. Perblpl, for ........
decialon than simple addition, you can pay a medtcalllltlfar..,llt
•however. You IIIIIY be able to lpeed the end or December IDitead or the
up or slnw ctn\vn your :-;pending _.;,. bo&gt;~innin~ of January. Perhaps you

ex-

A MDOIBII ol 1'llo -lotod Prwl, lalaad Dolly Prloo .UooclalloiJ ood doe

ila1i-JI!IWI(11pll'-"-i~IIGII.

Lehman said there Is a tendencyj
~oitg some pi'05eC1Itori! to overJ ·
indict. "That Is, . .they charge .
someone with multiple offenses, or'
the most serious poaalble offeRle,~
knowing there ~ a likelihood that tJiei
person will plead guilty to a lesser:
included offense ... knowing that on;
tr!.l!! the fa4'! will only justify thal"

much difference·?

.

111Coorl81root

PATWifiTEHE..\D

;

0

In the second period, Southern's
supporting cast saw action and bat·
Ued even with Synunes Valley as
both clubs netted 21 points. A ragged
perfonnance sent both clubs to the
charity stripe for an abundance of
free throw activity. Southern led at
the half 43-28.
In the third period, Teaford went
to the long jumper to net \5 of
Souther's 19 points, outscoring tbe
entire Viking team who mustered
only 14.
Dwayne Curfman enjoyed a good
night, coming off the bench to sink
nine points overall. Southern led ·6242.
In the final go-round, another
surge by Teafoi:d lifted Southern to
an a)Vesome 'J:I point .quarter over
the floWJderlng Vikings. The hosts
coasted in for the easy 119-55 win.
Southern hit 39 of 55 from the floor
for 55 percent, led by Teaford'with 11
of 18 from the floor for 61 percent.
The locals hit 29 of 45 from the line
for 66 percent.
Symm~s Valley managed 17 of 45
from the field and 21 of 35 from the
line for 31 percent and 60 perceit

'

-7'-

8. The likely trend in 811'111nga. II
the growth rate llcrtrln&amp; or ·ac- .
celerating? Were there aily liDIIBUal
CA\IBes behind a Iudden -year'
lfiUl1 or plwJge in timings power?

.

,,

.,

MERCERVILLE_ Coach Connee
. Enslen's Southern Tornado girli
· · another impressive victory
·scored
over the Hannan Trace Wildcats,
113-39, to record its fourth straight
win.
For the fourth game in a row the
Tornadoes have scored over 60
points in a game in which every
teammembersawactionandcon·
tributedtothewin. .

JUST OPENED

H&amp;R BODY SHOP

.

40498 Kingsbury Rd.

4'12
ENJOYS GREAT NIGHT - Dale Teaford (42), Southern's senior
center, had one of the best nights of his high school career Saturday
against 8)'11111le8 Valley. Teaford ripped the cords for 31 points, 251n the
second half. In this Scott Wolfe photo, Teaford shoot8 over Synimes
' Valley defender Jeff Saunders (44). Getting ready for a reboWJd II the
Tornades' Robert Brown (44).
WRESTLING
NAGOYA, Japan (AP) - CJuis iJ
Campbell, the U.S. collegiall! and
national champion, won the 181
pouncMiivlslon 10ld medal with a 3-G
record in the 111110 Super Champion
freestyle wrestling match. .

miles
north of
Pomerov on 33 ceo. Rd.
18).

992-3421 or
992-5436

eight, while Brinager added seven.
Todd Robtn&amp;on and Rodney Bur·
cham collected eight apiece to lead
Symmes Valley.
Southern travels to · Symmes
Valley for an important SVAC game
on Friday.
southern (89) - Teaford 1H ·31;
R. Wolfe 0·3·3; Cardone 2·2·6; Brown
2·0·4; Rees 3·2·8; Kent Wolfe 5· 7·17;
Roseberry 3-J.I ; McNickle J·N ;
Curfman 3·3·9; Hemsley 0·0·0. Totals
30
t:~~es valley (SS) _ Burcham
1·0·2; Crawford 0·3·3; Herr all 3·14·
20; Miller 7-3·17 ; Saunders 3+7 ;
Cooper 0·0·0; Wiseman 1·0·2; Gene
Meyers 1·0·8; Patterson 0·0·0.
Shepherd 1·0·2; WalshO·O·O; WhiteD·
0·0. Totals 17·2J.SS.
By quarters:
Southern
22 21 19 27-,-89
s. Valley •
7 21 .14 13--55

Honor Tressel
a

,,

Th
EAST MEIGS e Eastern game of the young season Eastel'l!
Eagles girls basketball squad kept fell to Southwestern 37 ·2fl.
M. Nlda led the winning South;
on the winning track by defeating
western
club with 17 points, T. M~
SVAC foe North Gallia, 41-30. The
Neal
adiled
six, S. Patrick two, and
win boosted Eastern's record to 3-1
D.
CLine
two.
overalland:!-ilintheSVAC.
coach Sue Thompson's Eagles
Lea Ann Gaul led the Eagles with
10
points, Angie Spencer added
were led by juniors Sarah Goebel
and Cassie Sheets with 12 and 10 eight, Melinda Mankin six, and Lori
points respectively. Also credited Hudson two points.
Spencer and Mankin led in reboWJ·
with playing a good game were
Laura Eichinger with nine points ding with 11, and Gaul had five.
and Tammy Hudson with eight Brenda Bentz and Beth Berkhimer
were credited with playing a good
markers.
game.
Although the Eagles were very
cold from the floor, shooting 21 per· .-----------~
cent, the Eagles capitalized from the A!l!l:¥!1!1:¥l&lt;l!iii::&lt;!!!O&lt;III::&lt;I!Cl{'£C:Il!CUIOI'llil
foul line for a 73 percent, hitting 13 of 11
11
18 · •.
II!
w
The Eastel'll girls collected 32 I(
rebounds with Sarah Goebel again W
I
·
111
111
leading the way with 13.
I(
·
I(
Tana George led the North Gallia WBy the Racine E mergencyl
attackwithl2pointsandLisaFuller ~Squad starting sun., Nov.\t
added 10.
II!JO. th at the Racine Squad \I!

CHRISTMAS TREES

fOR SALE

I(
f.l
II! Building.
.
II!
I(
f.l
II!
Mon. · Fn. . 6 p.m. t o 9 p.m. II!

Iu

Sat . 1 p.m. to 8 p.m.
to 6 p m
1
5
un. p.m.
. .

WEEKEND
AT
·MEIGS

INN
(No Specials During Holiday Season)

ENTERTAINMENT
WED., THURS., FRI., &amp; SAT.
NIGHTS

9 til,
AU.LE;AL

PLAIN and
FANCY ·
3 PIECE PWS VOCAL
DEC: 17-20

BEVERAGES SOLD
You must be 21

or accompanied by parents or lega l guardian .

THE MEIGS INN

\

;

Eastern girls
post third win

u

"111
~

~~p~io;n;Da;yt;o;n.~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~";IIOI;;IAII;;P;;IAII;;13:11;Bil;;!A:!;;;so::&gt;:;!!M;;l'l';;i

Ja~nese.

The Americana, wbo boycotted the
; MOIICOW Olympics, ulso won the 106• pound, 115-pound, and 163-pound'
titles

WAY UP THERE - Mike Miller goes high in the air for a jumper
over the extended arms of Federal Hocking guard David Glass (12) .
Meigs defeated the Lancers to win its first game this season.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
Despite baWe with cancer, Ohio
Football Coach of the Year Lee
Tressel says be will be back in the
sJiring serving as the Baldwin·
Wallace athletic director.
"i'll be back. Oh, yes," Tressel,
55, said upon learning of his selectionas Ohio's top coach for a record
thirdtlme. Tresselalsowonthepoll
conducted by the Columbus Dispat·
chinl96landl977.
His fellow Ohio coaches accorded .
. a good eff ort, Coac h Pam
Despite
Tressel 23 fl. the 31 first-place
votes. Douthitt's Eastern Junior High Girls
Fi
. ck Ca
ve went to runnerup Ri
rter fell to defeat twice. In the second
of NCAA Division m national cham-

Campbell beat Bulgaria's IsmaU
Abllov, gold medalist at the 1980
MOIICOW Olympic Games, and two

"*

I

Tornado gals
beat Wildcats

Dellawinners
Johnsonwith
and Laren
led
the
eight Wolle
rebounds
apiece.
Melanie Weese paced the winners
with 15 points. Tammy Smith added
14, Tonja Salser 8, Cindy Evans and
El&amp;ine Smith, 6, and Renee Smith, 5.
Della Johnson, Teresa Holstein,
Laren Wolle and Jenny Bently had
two each.
Hannan Trace hit 17 of 42 from the
field for 40 percent and hit 5 of 11 for .
45 percent from the field.
Nichols led Hannan Trace with 15,
K. Stitt had 13, Putney, 6, c.
Meadows, 2, C. Stitt, 2, and J. Harrison,!.
Southern travels tAl Southwestern
Thursday.

.7. The atructure · of the
Dlllllllgement teem. Ill it e11 •"ally :
a one-man allow, or are Jitronc
Dlllllllgers to be fltr•nA tbrougbout the

'team?

respectively.
Southern collected 32 caroms to
Symmes' 29 .. Teaford cleared the
glass with 12 caroms and Symmes
Valley's Saunders had seven.
Southern committed 28 fouls, 18
turnovers, had 11 assists, and 12
steals. Kent Wolfe had six steals for
the winners. Symmes Valley committed 33 fouls, 30 turnovers, and
three assists.
Howie Caldwell's liWe Tornadoes
managed a 35-29 win over the young
Vikings. Rusty CWnmins and Scott
Frederick led the winners with

Southern
24 of 50 from the field
· 48hit
foraruce
percentand---"
.... tA!5 of 23
from the foul line. The Tornadoes
.
COllected 38 rebounds' 13 steals' SIX
assists, and committed 16 turnovers.

5. The changing character of the .
enterprise. Is the company
' maturlllg? Is cycllcallty of the ;
business Increasing 01' decreulng?
Are the OIICfopi'Opriel products of '
the copany turning into commodity· .
type items?
6. The ccmpany'a capttiJ ~.
Will Internal cub Dow.be IUftlclent
wprovide for both IJI'UWih objeclhes
and a bigher level of divldenda?

Simple .actions could slice tax: bill

The Daily Sentinel

AlliltaltP ''1 • rr/Cwlr ...

courts.

By Scot! Wolfe
RACINE - The Southern Tornadoes coasted to an ~. foul
plagued contest over Symnies
Valley's Vikings here Saturday
evening. The non-league affair
boosted the Tornadoes to a perfect 40slate.S ... ,esdroppedto04.
',!'he "dyuarnic duo" of Dale "Tor·
nado" Teaford and talented
playmaker Kent Wolle again set the
stage for Southern's offensive
production, exploding for 31 and l7
points respective. The pair's efforts
contrasted, however, as Wolle rip.
ped the nets the first half for all of
his 17 markers while Teaford
roasted the bucket for 25 second half
markers.
They have been the only Tornadoes to reach double figures this
seaosn.
·
The Tornadoes got off to a rolling
start at 11·2 as Kent Wolle canned
Southern's first eight points before
Symmes Valley recovered from the
initial shock. The Tornadoes con·
~ued to drub the helpless Vikings
until they opened up a 22-7 first
,period lead.

The crime rate·-eh, prime rate--continues up

:Today in h.i story. •.

0'

of ·the contents of the plea bargali:I

WASillNGTON (AP) - With cy and the lame-duck 96th Congress. of Tennessee, who will become strate that his aclminlstraqon will
Ronald Reagan alld his conservative Fighting inflation had ~en priof\ty Senate majority leader with depart dramatically from thilt of his
Republican allies poised to take over over jobs and stitnulating the • Reagan's blessing.
predecessor.
.
a large chunk of the federal govern· economy, and · sbarJ) increases in
After aU, it was' Baker who tor·
He'll keep his proodse and sign an
ment, the big question is: Will many . defense spending replaced Carter's pedoed one of Reagan's favorite executive order freezing federal
Americans notice much difference?
calls for cuts in the Pentagon (:auses when the senator lent crucial hiring. He'll call on Congress to
The personalities, the style, the
budget.
$U]lllllrt to Carter'a push for a~ enact tax cuts, increase defense
rhetoric of official Washington will
And many of the more militant proval of the Panama Canal spending and review fedfioal
change markedly. But when it . conservatives already are accusing treaties. · Equally disturbing to ·the regulations. He'd like to abollab the
comes to substance, change doesn't Reagan of being a closet moderate, hard-Une conservatives is the num- Energy and Education departments.
come easily in Washington, as Jim- a political pragmat!Bt ready to com- ber of Republican moderates in · The new Rpbllcan majority in
my Carter discovered.
promise conservative principles. posi~lon1 of Influence around the Senate will applaud the Incoming
In the view of many Democrats, a They bitterly resent the president· Reagan.
president and Plunge into the job of
conservative trend already was un· elect's willingness to support and
When Reagan takes office Jan. 20, giving him what he wants - and :
der way within the Carter presiden· work with Sen. Howard H. Baker Jr. he will no doubt be ready to demon- even a little bit more.

" Knock It off with the 'lost youth end. fading
ideals' bit end let's go roller sks~ng. "

Today is Monday,

Southern rips SV Vikings

which the defendant would enter a
no contest plea to one of five counti
of vehicular homicide in return for
which the state would dlsmlM the
other four eow1ts and a traffic
citation for assured clear diBtani:e. ,
Rep. Harry . J. LeiDnan, 1). ,
Cleveland, the retiring chalnnan of
the judiciary panel, says regulation
of the plea bargaining process coald'
tie the hands of prosecutors and the.
1

recommendation. In addition, ~.
victim would have to be notified·of
the time and place at which th&lt;:.
recommendation would be~'
Williams' measure was In·
traduced in June, relatively late in
· the life of the 113th General AsSembly. It did not emerge from the biiBY
House Judiciary Corrunittee.
"I'm in the process of getting as
much support as I can," Simeon said
in a recent interview. "What I'm
fearful of is they'll just keep pushing
the bill to one side."
His involvement stems from the
Aug. 25, 1978, traffic accident on the
Ohio Turnpike near Toledo in which
his son, Frank Jr., and four other
persons were killed.
Simeon said negotiations in the
case led to an agreement under

•

Marauders dump Lancers ·f or first victory

_P av-

.

The Daily Sentinei- Page-3

Pomerof- Middlcport, Ohio

\.

Phone 992-3629 ·
\

Pomeroy,O..

�'

Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeru, · i• ull&lt;llcpo r l,

December 15, 1980

Uluo

Rockets zap Detroit;
post fourth victory

.

BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
Nichols said. But it was an old hand we~e idle Saturday,
Toledo's defending Mid-American - S.foot-7 senior Knuckles - who
In other major Ohio college action
Conference basketball champions did in Detroit with 26 points. That Saturdsy, DaytOn suffered its first
hardly seem to miss Dick Miller and matched hill career high.
!oils in six games, 85-84 against 18th:
Jim Swaney, ·a pair of all-league
"Knuckles has improved 400 per- ranked Michigan, Cincinnati tQOk a
choices last winter.
cent," Detroit Coach Willie Mc- 63-48 tumble at Temple, and Akro"
defeated Muskingum 64-li6 in two
"Sure, we lost some . great Carter said.
players," said Coach Bob Nichols af.
It was a rough hight for the an- · overtimes.
ter the ~ Rockets bopped Detroit ticipated ' Mid-American title conOhio State, eighth-ranked
lrl-&lt;ill Saturday night.
nationally, had Saturday off. The 2-1
tenders.
"But we've got two things going
'l'op-rated Northern Illinois took a Buckeyes return Tuesday night
for us : Harvey Knuckles and Jay 73-69 loss from rival Southern against invading South Alabama af,
Lehman are excellent leaders and Illinois. Bowling Green, expected to ter a week of taking final
we've got better speed and be the Huskies' strongest cham- examinations.
quickness than we've had in the pionship threat, fell at Morehead
Richard Montague and Mike
Kanieski pumped in 19 point,s apiece
past," said the coach of the only .un- State 75-70.
beaten Mid-American team in nonBall State, selected to finish third, for Dayton, which battled back from
a 12-point deficit to tie t1!e score at
conference tuneups this season.
usei! a solid defense and scoring
In light of Nichols' comments, it . balance led by AI Gooden and Ray ~against Michigan. Mike McGee
may be time to re-evaluate the McCallum to clobber Indiana State had 'J:l points for the S-O Wolverines.
Walton McCullough scored all 15
Rockets, picked to finish fourth in a 76-60.
points
in hill second haU, leading 5-0
pre-season poll. No one has ·come
Elsewhere Saturday, Miami
closer than 19 points of Toledo.
Temple
past Cincinnati, now 2-3.
knocked off Xavier 74-73 on George
Akron
hit
65.5 percent of its shots afTheir other triumphs came by 25, Sweigert's two free throws with two
34 and 42 points, ranking the Rockets seconds left, Western Michigan ter halftime and outscored
No. 1nationally in margin of victory. finished third in the Bayou Classic Muskingum 13-4 in the second overNichols has emptied his bench of 13 by beating VirginiB Military ~. time to post its first victory in five
players in all four routs.
Ohio University fell in overtiffie at games.
"I'm pleased with our young Youngstown State 93-85 and Central
In the Hoosier-Buckeye Conpeople and the 'fact we're getting a Michigan edged llofstra, 77-75.
ference, Wilmington beat Earlham
lot of playing time for them ,"
Eastern Michigan and Kent State 75-70, Defiance nudged Manchester
78-76, Findlay feU at Hanover 87-li9,

·'

..

Not
For TJPO&amp;Iaphical
'
.Respon$ible
- Enols
"

TAVERN HAMS
•

..

-

Ml-ota VlkiDcs

llnebacker Matt Blair, left, 1'11111 off the field with bead
colicb Bud Grant after their ~m scored a touchdown
with no time remaining to beat the Clevelalld BroWIII

win gave the Vltluga the Ceatral Dlvllllon cbamplonslllp and brought a rearly seen smile to the face ol .
Coach Grant. (AP Luerpboto.

Rashad's reception beats Browns
BLOOMINGTON, Minn. (AP) Vikings' receiver Ahmad Rashad,
who caught a 46-yard, last-ditch pass
from Tommy Kramer as time expired to give Minnesota a 23-23 vic·
tory Sunday, vaulted hill team to the

NFC Central Division championship
and into the National. Football
League playoffs for the 11th time in
the last 13 years.
"If you just keep plugging away,
sometimes good things happen to

An instant later, Cole stole the ball
and drove in for a layup with three

Eastern conunitted 15 team fouls,
10 turnovers, collected.17 assists and
won the battle of the boards 30-26.
Wigal had five assists while COle had
seven rebounds. Johnny Roberts led
Miller with nine caroms, while his
club had 23 turnovers, and 14 fouls.
Eastern dropped the reserve tilt
28-27 in dramatic fashion to set stage
for the varsity contest. Mark
Spencer led the winners with 12,
while John Riebel had eight.
The box score:

.

.i

and

I

•

I

Orders I"or

!

Chrisbnas
Pies,
Dinner Rolls,

I
I Cakes, Cookies, ~~
I Etc. at the •
1 POMEROY PASTRY

i

SHOP - .

216 Main

1

Pomeroy, Oh.

. "2·2971
We Acceot Food Stamps

L . . . . . . . . . . . .! *. .

P06TMABTER: Send add!wo 1o n,. Dolly ·
SenUnel, Ill Court 81., POmeiO)I, Ohlo4171t.

.

M--

ltJBICRIPTION RATa
CUrler
or
Ono-B)'
.......
.. ......
.. ... ...... 11.110
. Ono Monti! ....... .. ................ 14.40
: One Year· .... . .... .. .... ,, ........ 111.10
liNGLE COPY .
PIIICU
Dolly ..... ........... """ .. " 11 Clr\11
Bubocrtban D&lt;lt doalrlna lo ..Y tho carrier
moy rMill In advanoe dlro&lt;t 1o The Dolly
-.ei on a I, I or 11 montll - · CNdlt
will bt liven carrier each milnlll.

. . II'IIIVIrltlio

lllonlh ............... .. ......... II 1.11

I Mantll ........ ... .... ....... .... !lUll
I Year .... .'....... . .... .... ...... ...10 ·

l

ball."
Both teams are S-9.
Bear quarterback _\Tince Evans
Willi coming off an 18-for-22, 31_
6-yard
perfonnance against Green Bay,
and Gregg said Cincinnati was

I
-

Na-F-~
- c - t......
II' L
10 $
g
I
7

T Pd. PFPA .

0 .flll'l :1112 147
II .IIIII 40.1 1111
0 .133 w !Ill
o .111 m !!i
11 .210 111 m

8
7
I

3 12
c..tn1
10 5
10 5
I I

N.Y.Jtla

::

~ -=

0 .IIIII ISS !11'1
· t · 0 .4011 Dl •

1010.~111:111 '

I

y-~

·

.........
~

-

12 I
II S
5 , ID

I '10

4 II

N.Y.Gianlll

~

I

I

I

7

I' ' Ig

5

I

W001

Milwaukee
Indiana
Atlanta

g:.,~

Detroit
SanAnlonlo
BOUlton
IJiab
KanouCity
Dorwer
Dollu '

,_

f

D
D
D
0
II

.100
•711
.313
.313
.JI'I

lli7 117
4011 141
Ill · 119
130 .•
Dl 112

D
D
0
I
I

.100
.133
.4011
.317
.31'1

!01 • ·

0 .1111
D .Ia
0 .100
0 .111'1

z-AIIanlo
12 I
1A1 o\nfllal
I I
..............
8 I
N. . ~
· ,I II
z-dlnd&gt;od clvii!IMI t111e

110 •

1111 !Ill
Ill 1!7
. . 11'1

• Ill
1111 ..
lfll !11'1

. . 441

tr:..,~a.­

"""*""",_,.,_

Enllond ~= I
-- ·D,
·Greell 8oJ ID
-.11
U, C11¥ 11
Now Orlooao U, Now Yorll .lela

!ID

'

=
=
_..... ,-..
N

· - ot Loa

N
.

I

Plftlbargh
. ~

DIDII
.....,Doe. D

.....
II

8fn

tiiei!O, (n)

,....... 2 7 'A.edl...

-·--···
NnYorll

11"'!~......

,,

-,

-~
WLMOJI

PC , ?piN

'\

•

. za

4

a

It U
14 . 11
II , 21

l'ldllcli I
23 Ill
18 IIi
It 17
13 11
:II

.1!11

-

.48'1

.ut

.!fl'l
.115

.7$1

.lin
.511
....
.401
.. .

.I'll -

.m

.113
...
.344

Mi
Ill
1411
)71\

99~ COO~ _
WHIP

.·PIE SHELLS

DAIRY SAVINGS .

• •

;, VALLEY .BID

lh GAL

;.-BUllER MILK

99~

PARKAY
MARGARINE
89~
•

BONUS BUYS IN No. 303 CANS
OtTHESf DEL HAVEN PRODUCTS.

Utab ot N.,. York
New J.,_, at Atlanta
PhilodeJphlo at Indiana
011cqo · II Wllillnllon
San AntGnio at n.IIu
Kanou City at Donvor
Loo Aqel.. at Sen Diego

51\

7
Ill
11~

=-~ded

TEXAS

1JoL

J.,ey

~i

Riehle'

Steve Flndl, Ken Clay,

an W111J10dl[ed IUDOWII al cub to the
Mapners r.r Rldt lbleycult,

S..We

New Yort JCIO, Dltroft M
w-....,
114, indllno 101
City Ill, Dollu 107

~

'
catctw,

~

"--'- -

ST. LOUIS CAJIDIN.Q.S-Signed Da ..
nll Poner, catcher, to a Ove-year ,,c:on.

.

'

- ~ .

1

•

'

BROWN ·
-N-

SERVE
ROLLS

'

KRAUT • KIDNEY BEANS No. 300 •

RGIJerto,
· LlrTY
llld Mario
Mendcu,
In-

Bobcats capt~re

SUI Anlonlo 147, - - 123
1111. Ollcqo 115
HOUlton tO, Goldeo Stole 17

. PEAS • CORN, WK' and Crm Style •
·..... .._
.
CUT GREEN BEANS AND. FRENCH STYLE •
SLICED and WHOLE BEETS • APPLESAUCE •
'

Don Gleaton IUid llrlaa Allanl,
plloborl: a pllytr 1o be named tater, and

12

.

~

·- w-=.w.Truoadtoa

2
I
91\
Ill\

'

- .......i.....--·

Fa..Chekv'

.,•• Goma
No ,.,... ICbedalod

I

.. ...,

·~.-

4 ..

'l'lleldiJ'• Gamel

.45a

BIRDS--EYE 8 OZ.

Miln'*- 115, Sen Anlonlo •
uo
Portland Ill; Soli Dleio If; S,.llle II

·. Clevelond
"'·~ uz. Milwaukee m
110, Utab IDS

'

MRS. SMITH'S 17 OZ.

l'lllllclelphlo Ill, New Jeney 107

'
'

'

.

I-LB.

DoMINO SUGAR

UGHT BMMN &amp; .
CONFECTIONERS

89~

· . 5-lb. MAR111A WHITE .
· · PLAILor SELf RlSE

w.va.

Pactln!! the attack for Coach
Keltb carter's Bobcatl Were Terry

It....._

o\lfcOIII
...
2I,., ..

17
11
11

4 II

13

t)',

Now Yorll Jill II MiliDj &lt;

:_ _

14
. 14
11

.1111

.!11'1

'219

PUMPKIN PIE

-)"•Gamet
Lol Angeles 122, Golden State 113

-

41\
tO
II
1211
14

.sat

MRS~ SMITH'S 46 OZ.

Prlee

......,,_.

......
t'...'/"!:"'~
a&amp;Jil&amp;'G

II 12
-~­
14 18

.•584
.4lt

FROZEN FOODS

Kyger Creek pGI5ted Its flrat vic- . strlpee.
Kyger Creek held a 48-36 rebountory of the year Saturday night witb
.
~
edge with
anc1 Moles
811 113-49 romp over Elk Valley\
ting
elcht
each.
Chriatlan School of Kanawha Coun-

·. Dallll ot iAI o\111111, (D)

'

·-Cool-

.7'11

Bananas

15/'1 00 6/'1 29

Ken
Riley picking off a pass in addition to
Breeden's three.
Breeden's two interceptions in the
first haU. led to touchdowns - Pete
Johnson scoring on a 1-yilrd run and
ThomJli!Oil throwing a 7-yard scoring
strike to Isaac Curtis for a 14-0
Bengal lead.
The Bears cut the lead to 14-7 late
in the, second qual'tel: when Alan
Page recovered a Thompson fwnble
in the end zl)lle, and tied it midway in
the fourth on a - 1&amp;-play, 65-yard
touchdown drive capped by Roland
Harper's 1-yardscoring plunge.
Johnson led all rushers with 1M
yards on 28 carries. Chicago's
Walter Payton, who entered the
game the National Conference's
leading rusher, wa8 held to 78 yards
on 18 carries.
The touchdown catch was Curtis'
300th 'career reception, and the fwnble recovery for a touchdown was
the third. of Page's career, tying an
NFL record shared by eight others.
And Breeden's three interceptions
tied a club record and gave him
seven for the year.

I

_,..a-

M

9
13
II
II
211
21 ..

angennes

initial ·victory

Jll!!ledalptM If, 81. !.ado I
. . 8oa ,.,..,...,. 10
Clocbmll 11, O*oF 11, ar
Miami II. lloiiiDin 14
Ookllnd
Ill, ,-. _ llo7
u 14
Dalr&lt;lll 11,

_ . . . . . 11. 81.
Clmllild ot Qn I U
0... tloJ . II Dolratt

.

:14
11
II
II
II
g

l!a-y'a&lt;loDI

Now

,D*apot~
, ·D ie. Jl

c-ot Dtvto""'

Tangelos

•

•
fourth intercep~on of the day -

. .

II, Now Yorll Glantl U
8oa Dlap II, loollle 14

we
OHIO

511\IINGS ·

.

geared to stop him.
"Evans can run, and be can also
throw," Gregg said. "We knew we
had to put pressure on him."
''I think the biggest thing was putt1ng press~ on the quarterback,"
said ·Breeden. "He couldn't really
have any time to throw. He couldn't
get hill rhythm, and in passing that's
important. Our defensive line put
great pressure on Evans." .
''They were very aggressive on
defense," Evans agreed. "I got off to
a bad start and couldn't get in the
groove."
.
,
After winning the coin toss in overtime, Cincinnati drove from its own
28 to the Chicago 10 belore Breech
booted his field goal. Bengal quarterback Jack Thompeon, starting in
place of the injured Ken Anderson,
completed passes of 22 yards to Pat •
McJnally and 25 to Dan Ross 1rt the
drive.
'
Chlcago had a chance to win in the
fourth quarter. With Ume running
out, thii Bears drove to the Cln·cinnati 18 before Breeden intercepted hill third Evans pass to
force the overtime. It was Evans'

0 -~ !12 110

-~Cwha

•Save Amerlca·a ·Valuable Energy

OL

FRANKIES .........................99~

w,tDnmc

take overtime victory

7811.417:1151011
7 I D .417DIIflfl
4 II 0 .JI'I I'll Ill

'

SUPERIOR 12

For the record.

10. $

MAn.I~ONI

Slamonlh ....... :.. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 11.10
I Y•r .. ................. .. .. . ... t3$.00
llatao- Oldo

CJUCAGO (AP) - Louis Breeden
Willi in the right place at the right
time- all day loog.
Tbe Ctiaclnnati cornerback intercepted three passes Sunday - ·
two of which led to touchdowns and
another that halted a Chicago Bear
drive in the end zone with nine
seconds remalnlr!g in regulation
play - as the Bengals beat' the
I Beani 17·14ln overtime.
.
The winning !Xlints came 4:23 into
the overtime o~ a 28-yard Jim
Breech field goal. It Willi the second
week in a row that a Breech field
goal had 'WOII a game. Hls 21-yard
ldck with 12 seconds remaining gave
the BenplB a 34-33 victory over
, Baltimore on Dec. 7.
"
"It was a cood win," said Bengal
coach Forrest Gregg. "We're not
going anywhere except horne for
Cluistmall, but I think our guys are
starting to feel they can play foot-

s

No tubocrlpUona by mell ..nnlttodln 1own1
wllere horril Clrritr.Mrviet Ia IYIUiblt,
Ohio alii ll'ftl Virpda
! Monti! ..................... .. .. , 110.10

as Bengals

LB.

SLAB
BACON

·Breeden has three interceptions

Bl1ltmore

energy. Even~acting as.a hedge against the
. . . anticipated rising cost of heating fuels.
Since the add-on heat pump
.uses less energy when It operates
it's the best way we know of to lower
your winter heating bill.
· If you think It's about time you
and the add-on electric heat pump
got together, send in the coupon for
the whole, detailed story. You'll find
It very Interesting reading.
.

..'.-_ , . '{

TWO IN A RoW - Clnmu•U Beagallldcker Jim ldclted the
field goal witb less thaD. a mlmlle
Breed! (lt) Is IM*ted onto tbe llhoulclen of bls team- · left Jut week,acabut the ColiB. ClucbmaU won iD over- - after ldeJdu&amp; tbe pme-'lliDDIDg field Coal iD Ume 17·14. (AP Luerpboto).
overtime Slmday aplalt the Bean iD Cbluco. Breeeb

W001

If you heat your home with a furnace;
regardlf!!SS of its fuel type, send In the
coupon above.
In return, we'll send you our free
SAVE* booklet It tells all about the
best partner your furnace could ever
have, the add-on electric heat pump.
Combined with your existing .
furnace, an add-on heat pump will help
•heat your home, often letting your
furnace rest. Conserving fuel Saving

r·

2

SLICED

STEAK

/.5..

NlwEncland

Membo" The Alloclatod Prou, Inland DalProu Aaaoclatlon and tho ArnlriCIJ1
,Ne,.._r l'llbllabon -.tton, NatiOilll

AdvertlaJn1 Repre•entltlve, Landini
. Aaoct.tu, 3101 !:ucUd Avt., Cll'ftlancf,
Ohlo,41111.

.
~,..

Bulfelo

, iy

r;~:-;::~,

I

·'

'

seconds remaining to give Eastern a
25-23 halftime advantage. Cole
tallied 12 points the first half and
played a very important role in the
Eastern comback.
Early in the third period, it ~p­
peared as though the canto was all
EASTERN (53) : Ritchie 1·0·2;
EAstern's as the Eagles built a Long
1 ·0~2 ;
Gene Cole 11 ·1·23 ;
seven point lead.
Ma t hews 0·2·2; Wigal 2·0·4; Greg
In the fourth period, both clubs Cole 1·0·2; Bissell 3·0·6; Sprague
01114·2·10. Totals23· 7·53.
were conservative, but Miller 0·2-2;
MILLER (50)- Roberts5+16; K.
resumed its turn on the merry-go- , Imler 3·0·6; J. Imle r 2·0·4; Burgess
round. The hosts outscored the 3·0·6; Luning 8· 4-20. Totals 21 -8-50.
Bv quarters :
Eagles 12-4 the final period and Eastern
16 9 '17 4 7- 53
stayed in the game via successful, Mil ler
16 7 1l 12 4- 50
but risky, outside shooting.
With the score locked at 46-46 r--- - - - - - - - --l
Eastern gained control with three
The Duily Sentinel
minutes, stalled it to the 1:13 mark
and called time. Then the Eagles
!USPS 115-. . 1
A Dhilloo al Maltim&lt;dJo , ID&lt;.
wound the clock down to nine
seconds and again called time.
Published evtry .aftem~ ez«Pt Sunday,
Monday thrOIIIIIIFrtdoy, 111 Court Street, by
Eastern was looking for last second
the Ohio Volley Pub11ahlnc Company heroics from Tim Dill, but hill shot
Multtmedl.a, Inc., Pomeroy, Ohio- 4070,
ln-21118. 5econcl olau pootqe Plid al
caromed off the rim and sent the
PomerllY, Ohio.
.

.~.
.

,.

you," Rashad said.
The last-second play stunned the
Browns, who had seemed to have the .
game well in hand. Now, Cleveland
must beat Cincinnati next week to
clinch the AFC Central Division
title.
''The nice thing about football is
that ·u will ail be forgotten next
week," Brian Sipe said. "I fully intend to win the last game of the
season and be the division champs.
After we win the next game, this
game will prove to be irrelevant.' •
Other Browns echoed those sentiments.
"Personally, I am strong enough
to accept what happened and come
back and win next week," said .
receiver Reggie Rucker.
·
"We are going to get even, not
mad," added guard Henry Sbep-

Ask us
.1he ADD-·o N
Iec'trl·c

•

ROUND $ 09

srEAK

LB.

CUBE

a

Eastern hit 23 of 71 from the field
for 32 percent and 7 of 15 fouls for 50
percent. Miller hit 21 of 46 for a
respectable 46 percent and sank 8 of
11 from the line.

.
1

STEAK

!8-23 on a bobbled pus caught by Abmad RalbatL Tbe

• ., ••.liB.

$ 99 TOP

ROUND

LAST SECOND

LB.

HALl

.

Open M..f 9 ti 7; Sal 9 til 8
5TH &amp;
OH.

game into overtime.
In the extension period, Miller
.controlled the tip. Johnny Roberts
put them on top 48-46. Then Gene
pani
.
.'
Cole hit in the clutch to knot the
Kramer,
who
completed
38
of
49
,.
score at 48-411.
passes
for
456
yards
and
four
touchAfter a Miller foul Eastern's Mike
downs, threw the ball· up for grabS "
Bissell came through with a short
near the goal line. The ball was tip- ' '
jumper to put the Eagles on top,
ped
in a crowd, and plOpped Into the
50-48. Jay Luning retaliated seconds
left
hand
of llashad, who backed the
later and again knotted the score
final
yard
Into the end zone past the
and the pressure became more instunned
Cleveland
defenders.
tense.
Rashad, wbo missed practice the
· With I :03 left, Miller called its last
entire .week with bad leg, caught
time out to go for ·the last shot.
nioe passes, . including a 12-yard
Rodney Burgess got caught for
scoring pas. with I :35 to play. But it
traveling with 36 seconds to go.
provides a screen agalust two Vltlug playen. WoUe
SHARP-sHOOTING SOUTHPAW- Kent WoUe,
was his dramatic, one-handed grab
E'astern got the ball and called. time
had 17 poiDts duriDg the noo-league coates!. Southern
414) goes np for • loftbanded jump shot against Symof
the tip which touched off pan- , .
with 22 seconds. The Eagles ran the
captnred ita fourth straight ~ry, IINS.
mes Valley Saturday night. Teammate Dale Teaford
demonium
at Metropolitan Stadiwn.
clock down to 10 seconds and called
time setting the stage for along base ~----;----------~-=::---:::----------------~...:,...---------,---line jumper by senior Gene Cole that
swished through the ·net. Miller called a time out which it did noi have
and was given a technical foul. Cole

=~!~ving.Easternahard-fougtt

.,79

, WHOLE..

Eagles take
dramatic win

The fast paced game was played
in spurts as Eastern took its turn tying the score at 12-12, while two
minutes remained in the first period.
After a see-saw battle both clubs
ended the canto at lS-16.
As the second period began, Miller
again took its turn in the offensive
race. The Falcons hit a potent hot
streak that built up a 23-16lead.
At that point Eastern went nearly
five minutes without a scor~. Then
at the 2:07 mark the Eagles awoke.
Eastern took charge and rallied to
, tie the score at 23-23, when Brett
Mathews hit both ends of a one-andone.

.

SPECIALS DEC. 15-20
'

ByScoUWoUe
HEMLOCK - The red-hot
Eastern Eagles pulled off a
dramatic 53-50 overtime ·victory
over Miller's Falcons here Saturday
evening on a last second jump shot
by Gene Cole who scored 23 points on
the night.
Eastern remained undefeated at
5-0, whle Miller dropped to 1-li.
Miller raced to a 4-0 lead after con. trolling the opening tip and taking
advantage of a miscue. At the 6:52
mark, Eastern broke into the scoring : column at 4-2 before Miller
erupted for _eight straight points to
build up a 12-4 lead.

"

Tbe Bobldttena of coach Galj'
Mintcll won tlie res ve contest, 51·'
a. Brent Love IDd J. o. 81'8dbury:
led tbe wtnnerntth 20 85ld 1$ polntai
hiiijlit-tlvely. fWl 8ild Pence paced;
ElkVa!JeywithllpotntaeaclL
KJger Creek 1·2 goes tb Eultern
. Frldly and wtllllliiit Hannan, W, Va.

Porter with 211 polnt.IIDd D:lvld Sands c!nmpecl In 11. 11m Price, 6-2
junior center, adc!ed 17 nwten.
Porter, Pries 8lld Sanda bad aloe
polntl each daring the Bobcats' fl
point flnt quarter. Sanda al.lo added
11 ch:rlnc the KC fllllrib AllU
Saturday_
D:lvtc! Col: and Tim Wllllama led
Elk Valley (491 - Cox H ·13; Tuc·
Elk Valley with 13 polnta each. Mike.
cl
3-2·1; White 5-0.10; Williams 5-3·
' White had 10 polnta and 12 rebounda.
53; Reveal 2-o-4 and Slentt o-1-1 .
Mite Tucci, the team's bigb IICIII'ing Totals19- 11-49.
Kyger CriH!k (U) - Porter 10·5·
guard held to elcht polntl by .
25; Helms 3·0·6; Sands 5·9-19; Price
KC'I Jeff :nolel.
I
B-1-17; . Weug~ 1-0-2; Layne 1· 0·2 ;
· Aeeorc!lng to tbe c~ Kyger Moles ~-0-8 ; Stroud 0·0-1&gt;; Martin 2·0·
Totals ·
34 · 25 '
. Creek llllk 34 of 72 Door shots and 16 ~ .
13•
. of 28 at the foul circles.
By quarters:
.. Elk Valley bit 19 of ~~~ f, ''''l fit«
11 11 10 17--49
E ll-.. V.111t~Y
field and 11 of 18 _from tbe cuarlfY •(. r .. .....
77 19 10 77 · '•"

.FLOUR

Kraft
Marsh.

99'
7oz.

.STUFFEP

.,,.

.DINNER

9
lnVI.a.

.

69t

VIVA '
TOWE.LS

79t·

1

.'I

CHERRY
PIE
FILLING

99'

�.,..._...

·V

Easte.
r
n
·Star
meets·
·
_
, Presbyterian Church,
at Masonic .Temple
plans potiuck fare
Middleport ~irst

NATIVITY DECORATIONS are a lrad.Woo at
many area ~burcbes, and an outstandlllg elUilllple of
these Is thls Christmas mural hung at the First Baptist
Church of Middleport, located on the corner of SIIth

Bild Palmer Streets. Drawn and painted by Mrs; Cathy
Riggs and Mrs. VIolet Campbell, church members, tbe
scene measures eight by 16 feet and 16 Jlgbted for
evening viewing.

Past Councilors hold annual dinner
Margaret Tuttle, Letha Wood, Ada
Neutzling, Leda Mae Kraeuter ,

The annual Christmas supper of
the Past Councilors' Club of Chester

and .Jean

Go ldie Frederick,
Frederick.

HARVEST BRAND
SEMI-BONELESS

Cart\ina\

Installation plans were completed will be a ~ ~ter ao tllat tbe of;
wben Harrisonville Chapter 255, ()r.. ficers can atteM the school.
der of the Eastern Star, met recently
Mrs. Betty Blshop, president of
1
at the Masonic Temple.
the put matrona club, llllllOUIIC:ed
Mrs. Janice DeBord, worthy ~t .tbe ChriJtmaa diJiner will be
matron, and Dallas DeBord, worthy beld at Shoney's In Point Pleuant,
patron, presided at the session and Dec. 16 at 8:30p.m. Tbe party and
thBilked their officers for assistance gift exchange will loUow at the home
1 during the past year'presentlng each
o1. Mrs. Bernice WIM. Members
one with a gift of appreciation.
· SIU1G "Silent Night" to cloae tlie .
Mrs. Lois Pauley then extended meeting.SandWiches, candles, cake,
appreciation to the couple for ser- chips, punch and coffee were served
ving in the East this ye~~r. PrO;tem by Mr. and Mrs. DeBord from tables
officers were Mrs .. Pauley, ,Stailley decoratedlntbeChriatmasmotlf. ·
Kaldore, and Doug Bishop. A!Wr the
flag presentation there was group
singing of America, the Beautiful. A Visits in Toledo
tl'.:mk you· note was read from Brenda Kennedy for the planter she
Mrs. Richard Jacks, Langsville,
received while hospitalized. Invitations were read to Relnersville, spent the Jl!ISI week In Toledo,
Mount Olive, and Mount Moriah. viBJtlng ber children and grandCorrespondence was also read from children, Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Beach
the· worthy grand matron and the . and Joey, and their new baby, Shan. deputy grand matron.
non Renee, and Mr. and Mrs. Elmer
The sunshine fund was taken by Sigman ana Tammy.
TOUJIOUSE COOKIES
Miss Ruby Diehl and a school of In··
Yes, Gwendolyn, you might caU structiog was announced for Jan. 23
Stgman is recovering from a
tbe girl&amp; mamdog the turnpike at,Morgan High School.
broken foot which he received whilP
collection booths " tollhouse
Tbe associate matron announced working for Conrail.
cooipes."
that the regular Jan1111ry meeting

Plans for a potluck supper at the
annual congregational meeting of
the Middleport First 'United
PresbYterisn Church in January
were made when the Women's
Association met Thursday night at
. the church.
Mrs. Guy ·Harper presided at the
meeting which opened with group
singing of carols. · Mrs. Eve~
Bachner accompanied at the piano.
The president read a Christmas
selection entitled "Qifb" by Maxine
Montgomeroy. The prayer for
missionaries was given by Mrs.
Dwight WaUace. Get·well cards
were signed for Vivielll)e Wadden.
The programs for the evening was
preSented by Group 2 With Mrs. Carl
Horky in charge. Several read from
"The Other Wise •Man" by Henry
Van Dyke. Refreshments were ser·
vedbyGroupl .

'RIINDUEST~IJVLCI.

$ 39

IIGOiST

IN TOWN · .
IN TOWN

Lb.

'

' DAILY FROM'
. OPEN
I AM TILL,10 P* ·

QUANTITY RIR•tT~f

REii!RVED

,, 5
CAIIIIED HAMS ..3,g~ 6
$

$WIFT

CANNED HAM •••••••••

SAUS DATU DECEMBER
.
15-20, 1980
.r--1
II "
1
I
I
I
I
I
I
1

----r-- fhllllJI'B."";.m-- .. ;I BUTTERBAlL
I
TURKEYS'
....................................
•
W DFF ! W OFF~~: !
•
FRANKS
BOLOGNA : ARMOUR GRA.DE "A''
ECKRICH

I
I

•LL MUT AIGULAR OR JUMBO
ALL IUF OA JUMBO IUF
Llmll 101.1t with ce~upun
on• coupOol ptor f•mily
00-00-00

Ill' flrr
it~

I

I
I

.

coupe~n

Umlt lour with
on• coupon per l•mitv

·L

00·00·00

1

1ap,.. 1212oteo

.

SAUSAGE
Umlt lou• wlt~ ce~upon
one toupo~~ ~ t•mil¥

---------------- ---------------Good •• C•rdin.-1

Rov••

llu. II-•

Good It C• rdtMI lllo¥•1 Blu1 Sto,.,

L'

·

FARM FRESH POTATOES ••• .1.~~.~.. ~.1••
. FRUITS
TENDER GREEN
AND
VEGETABLES CELERY ••••••••• !.'!.~!. 69~

GRAPES

'

IS
REC

DELMONTE

.

THANA
CHECKI
ACCOU •

'

:
J
CRI&amp;CO

e16-oz . Whole Kernel

PURE VEGETAtsLE SHORTENING

.I

LIMIT 2
30·0Z. ·
Can

Lb.

can

e17-oz. Cream Styl e

$199 ' .

Wlth coupon
With coupon and 11 0.00 purchasa excludir

-

~~0 sTOREs • cARDIN Al roo o sTotu s

t:eupon ittm,

&lt;i

~-

PILLSBURY ALL PURPOSE·

·

79

C"ICKEN BROTH .....................~ ...............c~:Z- 39c
lARGE

TROPICANA

ORANGE
JUICE .

I

tn

C AR00D·43-07
INAL ~~~

CARDINAL

.

WHITE BREAD..................... 3 ~:~~:~ ,9~

79

G W LIGHT BROWN OR POWDERED

Lb

SUGAR ................................... 2
. :~';

1-LB. •1.09
2-LB.

Frosty Acres

Frozen

scon VIVA ,

ORANGE JUICE

16 oz. 89~

., _
.

Jumbo
Roll

'

'

REGULAR OR SUGAR
FREE
Garvin's

conAGE

1

$
CHEESE ••••• ; ••••••••
24 Ol. ctn.

29

1

7-UP
HILLANDALE
QIIADE
A •.
.
.

·JUMBO ' EGGS

BANK ONE,. -

,.J.

checking better

Member FDIC

at

COOL·

•

'

P.S. BANK ONE even has a way for business
customers to earn interest on their excess balances.

·"All run(:IS IH!gln ea.1n1n9 1n1erest one nusmess da y afler aepoSII
""There 15 a $.15 Cll Brge l or oll lransac11onsln e ~ Cf!'$5 o! 40 pef month ,
All f)10ney IS 1to p1 1 ~ !he st1~1 ng9 tlie(:OIJOI ot 1M CHECKING TWO piEI;n.
and lhe checking acmunl camas a zero balance When you l'lflle 11
check, the money IS autornat!Ca'ly transferred Irom the sav10ga aCcount
to the check!119 acooiJnl! and the romaOOor ol the eavlng:s account
balance conhriue' tOetlff'l da1ly 1nte1est

BIRDS EVE

WHITE &amp; ASSORTED OR · DECORATED

If your balance falls below
you'll pay a $5.00
charge for that month, but you'll still earn daily interest
on every dollar you have in the plan. If you subtract
the interest from this monthly fee, you'll still have one·
of the most inexpensive checking accounts available.

Qrtrs.

•

'·~---- ---------~I
· -- ·~--·~--

99~

8·0Z.
Bowl
LLOYD J .. HARRISS

PUMPKIN ·

OR

TAB
COKE

~::,~}29
Plus deposi't

PIE.................

26-oz .
Pkg.

$1 09

DORITOS
CHIPS •••••••••••n

89~
. 7 Ol.

.

~

.
II'ANQUET BEEF, CHICKEN OR TURKEY

°

•

POT PIES .....3 :k::.$1 0
VELVEl ULDEjllllLE

A'LL VARIETIES

•

!lANK ONE OF POMEROY, NA
Po111eroy • Rutland' • Tuppers Plains
Member FDIC

s1 49

WALNUlS

~;~~·$119

WRITE

~

":!!l!!l!lltl.m::il:
~
l~l

FOLGER'S INSTANT

COFFEE. 10 OL '3
UPTON
TEA BAGS·

~

~

hpi r•• 12/20 / 80

COFFE£1-LB. CAN '2 39

!3¥.

18 '1:-0l .

~
9 ~

• t C•rdin t l Rov•t Blue S!or..

ALL GRINDS

(

2 $·1'

-

Boxes

MAXWELL HOUSE

STOVE TOP STUFFING ........................... a••
COLLEGE IN.N

.CAKE MIX

lll'lotSI

~-oz.

CHICkEN , CORN BREAD OR PORK

Xlj•liJ jllteJ:I

PILLSBURY PLUS ASSOR TED VARlETIES

": ~:~~~:o~~:r c,:u:,~;

s~rt~

Pomeroy, 0.

_.:.:.--- ~

FRUI·T

. COR

.

Earn daily interest on all your money in the bankand still write checks.* Keep a minimum balance of
$1,000 and you pay no monthly fees or charges.**

•"",..,..,.,~- - - -- - ,I',
NAM E

..

69~

MONARCH

WRITE CHECKS AND

_______.....,..,'·

I , PHON&lt;

Don't Forget, We Custom
lufld l'rult Baskets

99~ .

per lb. 3

INTEREST PLAN

,

_

per lb.

OCEAN SPRAY

..

_

.

SLICED ·

00-00·00

•""":•• 12ttollo

YAMS

j

_

LB.

,SOUTHERN

Do you own or operate J
small or medium -size
retail store, office, apart·
mentor church?
Then - you may qual ify
for State Auto Mutual 's
SERIES ONE Business
Policy .. . a modern-as·
tomorrow package plan
that combines an array of
broad property 11nd liabili ·
ty cover ages required to
safeguard your opera ·
tions. All for a ·Vef.y attrac·
tive, affordable prem ium .
Let us exp lain the
superior features
of
SERIES ONE ... the short
time we spend together 1
could prove interesting
and rewarding to you .
Just give us a call or .
.mail the handy coupon.
DALE C. WARNER
INSURANCE

~·

PER $179

CARDINAL EXTRA FANCY

KIELBASA OR BEEF

I
1

HAMS·

Lb.

ECKRICH SMOKED . POLSKA ,

u.s..N0.1

•

10-14 LB .
AVERAGE

Pkg

I
I
00-00·00

BASTED

1

;

10-a.. :
Pkg.

I
I
I

--r . .
Ill OFF.

I

.
Umll lour with touPon
on1 c(IO,Ipon ~~ f•m ilw

SUPERIOR
BNLS. TAVERN OR
E·Z CARVE

:

I
I.

..

9'9c

Lb

I
I

ECKRICH REG . OR THICK

.l lorn

:

-----Qieckins is better at BANK ON E.

'9 CiiOOKHROiST

VALUABLE cOUPON

I

1
I

49

.

SWIFT 10-14 LB . AVE RAGE

:SMOK-y -LINKS:

Insurance Package
For You

I

$1099

Oscar Mayer 3-lb. Jubilee

DIAMOND

w . Main 992-2143

~:~

I'

!ECKRICH REGULAR. MAPLE OR BEEFt

BUSINESS POLICY

1ll2

SMALL SELECT 11 to 14 LBS.

SUPER MARKETS

r----------------------------------------------------:--

Council323, Daughters of America,
was held recently at Crow's Steak
House.
Following the supper members
returned to the lodge hall for a
Christmas party and business
meeting.
Mrs. lnzy Newell read the Christmas story with scripture from St.
Luke 2. The Lord's Prayer and the
pledge to the flag were given in
unison. In response to roll call members told of one thing they wanted
for Christmas with several asking
for good health, happiness, and the
release of the 11ostages.
A Christmas program was presented by Betty Roush and Pauline
Ridenour with Christmas readings
by Em\a Cleland, Opal Hollon,
Leona Hensley and Ada Morris.
Members were given candy canes
and a gift exchange was held.
Games were ·palyed with prizes
going to the winners.
Members sang "Happy Birthday"
to Mae Spencer. She was presented
gifts and car&lt;ls. It was noted that
Mabel Van Meter had been taken
from the Holzer Medical Center to
the Pomeroy Health Care Center.
Salads, cookies, candies and punch were served by Mrs. Cleland and
Mrs. Hollon from a table' covered
with a Christmas cloth. The holiday
napkins were tied with ribbons and
bells. Laura Mae Nice won the door
prize. Others attending were Ada
Bissell, Mae McPeek, Mary
Showalter, Mary Hayes, Dorothy
Myers, Ethel Orr, Mary K. Holter,
Thelma White, Charlotte Grant, ·

Ohio

Pom

December 15, 1910

Pom eroy- Middleport, Ohio

Page--6-The Da ily Sentinel

ICE
CREAM .. ......."'······

~-Ool .

Ctn.

.,••

�.

,

'.

• fl)ecember 15, 1980

The Daily Sentinel

I.

Katie 's Korner

Around.Meigs :county

·1970 grads plan get-together
Red Cross Bloodmobile will be at the
Plans are UJ~derway to have a Meigs County Senior Citizens Center
" get-together" for the 1970 Mooday, Dec. 22, from 1:3op.m. ~m­
til6p.m.
graduates of Meigs High School.
Vernon Nease, blood program
The event will be staged Dec. 'rT at
.
chairman,
said that blood Is badly
the Meigs Inn at 8 p.m. The class
needed
and
new donors are
WBB UIU!ble to hold the traditional
especially
needed.
class rewlion so in order not to miss
At the last two visits 100 Wlits were
a visit, tbe event was planned.
Those wishing to attend or need received. Nease hopes that the quota
additional infonnatton are asked to of 100 will again be reached.
call Betty Krawsczyn at 94~2503 or
.
I would be remiss if I failed to
P!llll Crow at 985-13.'19. After 10 years
mention the attractively decorated
lt will seem like old times.
window at Francis Florist, bst
Up Antiquity way, Clarence Main St., Pomeroy. It will be wlll'th
Hayman, Jr., brought down his first your time and efort to stop and view
deer the first day of the season. the beautiful dJsplay. The wind0w1is
Clarence Hayman, Sr., also bagged fantastic.
a deer later in the week.
·
Clarence, the first week of season
Woodrow Hendrix, Syracuse, is a
in West Virginia, brougl)t down a 12 patient at the Veterans Adpoint . buck. Good hunting, gen- ministration Hospital, Huntington,
ward 222. Cards may be sent to him
tlemen.
in care of the hospita1.
Speaking of deer seasoo quite a
Glenn and· Rachel Cundiff,
.few failed to stick to the ruies and
were found in violation. A good hun- Syracuse, Friday celebrated their '
ter is a fair hunter
don't you 45th wedding anniversary with a dinner at Craw's Family Restaurant.
agree?
Congratulations to a fine ocuple. Oh,
A reminder that the AmP.ricAn yes, havemanymore.

The Chester 'United Methodlllt
Churdl has scheduled Ita annual
ChriBimu program for Monday,
Dec. 22, at 7:30 p.m. The young
adults will host a reception following
the prqgram.

By Katie Crow

County Council on
Ministries discusses
1981 budget, program
A holiday program and the 1981
budget were among the items on the
agenda when the Meigs United
Methodist County Council on
Ministries met at the Forest Run
United Methodist Church. Rev.
Richard Thomas opened the
meeting with the singing of carols,
accompanied by Mrs. Joan Robinson at the organ. Prayer was offered
by Rev. Thomas.
Mr~.
Fay Sauer, Council
president, was in charge of the
business session. The 1981 working
budget for the Cooperative Parish
was approved, along with askings
for the participating churches. Rev.
Thomas presented the report for the
nominating committee, which was
also approved. Rev. Robert Robinson reported for the Social Concerns
Conunittee, which recently completed a series of three seminars on
social problems in Meigs County.
Rev. David Harris reported on the
recent Advent Carol Sing at
Syracuse, which was also a success.

The January meeting will include
the installation of officers and fur.
ther planning for 1981. A list of dates
and meeting places were also approved. These are : Jan. 12,
Pomeroy U. M. Church; Feb. 9,
Rutland U. M. Church; March 9, Apple ~~e U. M. Church; April13,
Mltfersville U. M. Church; May 11,
Joppa U. M. Church; and June 11,
Racin&amp;-Wesleyan U. M. Church,
(now under consiruction.) All County Council meetings are 7:30p.m.
Rev. Robert Robinson was in
· charge of the music, along with his
wife, Mrs. Joan Robinson, who
played several selections on the
organ, and the synthesJzer. Mrs.
Bonnie Thomas sang a special selection. Following group singing, Rev.
and Mrs. Robert McGee had charge
of the entertainment. The group enjoyed refreshments in the church
basement prepared by the Forest
Run, Salem Center, an&lt;fRutland U.
M. Churches.

Missionary Circle entertains
with 'Christmas
Around the World'
The Ruth Missionary Circle of the
Racine Baptist Church entertained
the women of the church with
"Christmas Around the World."
Eleven different kinds of bread
and cake .were made from recipes of
different countries. Martha Lou
Beegle presided at the meeting
which she opened with a reading,
"Jesus is the Bread of Life."
Christmas carols were sung by the
group. Mrs. Beegle commented on
Chriatmas customs noting that
bread is an important food to all
people. She concluded with prayer.
The bread of Gennany was made
by Emma Adams, Italy by Gamet
. Ervine, Japan by Naomi Stobart,
Mexico by Beulah Autherson,
Poland by Mary Kay Yost, Sweden
by Barbara Gheen, Spain by Nondus
Hendricks, Greece by Doris Hensler; Denmark by Mrs. Gheen and

Mexican com bread by Marie
Walker. Each of the women baking
breads gave a reading concerning
the customs of the country.
Several customs were noted including the one from the Virginia
negroes where gifts were hidden under a sheet until all were up on
Christmas morning. It was noted
that Jesus was born in Bethlehem
which means house of bread, that
Christ broke bread with His
disciples, and that breaking bread is
a fellowship together which was
carried out in the New Testament
times.
The fellowhsip room was
decorated with candles and the
bread was served by candlelight.
Lillian Hayman played a medley of
Christmas music preceding the
meal.

'Sweetheart in the Spare'
identification made--Steinbauer
Identification of the "Sweetheart
in the Spare," a picture In the
December issue of Life magazine,
bas bene made. She is Carol Stein. bauer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. ,
Reed Steinbauer who resided on
: Breezy Heights in Pomeroy.
Bob Crow, son of the late Dr. and
Mrs. Thomas Crow, remembers
Carol and the car since at that time
the Crow family was residing with

CHRJSTMAS&lt;PJWGRAM

Mrs. Manning Webster, mother of
the late Mrs. Crow, on Breezy
Heights. The picture was taken between the properties of Helen Mees
and the Stelnbauers.
Charlotte Mees Evans advlaea
that Carol's name Is now Adams and
she resides in Columbus. The picture
kol in Life magazine vta her lister·
In-law, Mary Yowitl Steinbauer,
as.•O&lt;'iate editor.

Santa arrives early!

UM CHURCH PROGRAM

KNOW OUR TORCH 15
IN HERE 50MEPI..ACE-

--

Brownies honorees of ceremony
with investiture, rededication.
The Investiture and Rededication
of the Salisbury Brownie Troop 1220
was held November 25 at the Enterprise United Methodist Church.
The candlelight ceremony wsa
preceded by the Pledge of Allegiance led by Brownies Tract Bartels,
Amy Brothers, and Amy Wa~. The
troop then sang "America."
Three large candles were lit each
representing a part of the Girl Scout
PrOmise. Mrs. Janet Simpson,
leader, invested Julie Brwnfield,
Mindy Carson, Mandy Eblin,
Heather Goins, Lenora Lyons, Leslie
Lyons, Sharline Mash, Kewana
Singer, Kristen Slawter, and Shelly
Smith, first year Brownies .
Rededicating their Girl Scout
Promise and Laws were second and
third year Brownies, Traci Bartels,
Melanie Beegle, Amy Brothers,
Tracy Eblin, Lori Hayes, Kristin
King, Marsha King, Amy Rouse,
Amy Warth, and Stacy Young. Ten
smaller candles were then lighted as

Crafts fair next
summer in .Mason
MASON.- The first annual spring
Mason County Arts and Craft Fair is
being planned to be held May 15, 1ti
and 17, 1981 at the West Virginia
National Guard Armory near Point
Pleasant.
Applications are being forwarded
to all interested local artisans and
craftspersons for reservation of
booth space. Reserves booths will
total ~ spaces, with applications
being accepted through January,
1981.
The new arts. and crafts fair is
being sponsored by the Point
Pleasant-Mason County Chamber Of
Commerce to help promote this
area's own artisans and craftsmen.
However, those out-of-the-area crafts that are not duplicated by local
persons will also be accepted. Contact the Point Pleasant-Mason County Chamber of Commerce, P. 0. Box
45, Point Pleasant, W. Va. 25550 for
applications and infonnation.

Mr.

~

CAPTAIN EASY

'

OKAY, "MACHO MA'-1''! '/' WANT.ME
: T'!J;.TRAic;HT5N Y5R N05'5 WITH
THI'7 GUN-· 'IOU GOT IT!

EA'7Y HAS

FRE':ED H l5
LEFT HAND
'ANP LEe; ll&gt;Y
5AWIN(!JTHI!
ROPE: ON A
!!!HARP EM!;
UNDER THe

SEAT! AND
eEFORE THii

.;--~1 MOIISTEIWW

PI!OTOL·WHIP
HIM-

BORN LOSER

(])MOVIE -(DRAMA) ••• 11 Gr••
teat Story Ever Told" 1965
(I) MOVIE ·(COMEDY) ••• y,
"P~J!.WIIInlk"1951

. ANNIE

·'

({)ll2JUI EMMETOTTER'SJUG·
BAND CHRISTMAS A new cast of

.

muppets never before .seen on
television, with the Internationally
acclaimed Kermit lending hie ata·
t11re to the proceedingS as h oa !,

r-----------

ftom his dad's garage dreaming of
becoming a country music star and

everyone suffers when he moves

Social
Calendar

into Flo's storeroom to practice for

his new career.
l])(jj) GREAT PERFORMANCES:
DANCE

members of the New York Clly Bal·
let. Featured artists include Mak·

hall

..~

SYRACUSE - Santa will arrive a
The Long Bottom United little early in the Big Berid area·this . The meditation and program were
Methodist Church announces its · year. He will be at the SyraCUie Fire given by Mrs. Joseph Cook. She read
·
""-- 2 ·..:..Jlnnlnn 'the Chriltmall story from the book Gl
Christmas program to be held SWIStation Saturday,"""'· 1, -..u•-oe Ma'tthe · nd '"The G1t. " from
day, Dec. 21, at 7 p.m. A fellowt~hip t 1 p.m. Those with last-minute
w~ a .
hour Is planne&lt;j following the Christmas wishes are urged tu come Unity magazme, to close the
out.
meett o~ .
program.

u.,

I

Baryahnikov,

nlA'T'S 1\1-lY I Ct.t.L£11!
I'VE GOT A SURPRISIO

FOR YOU BOYS!

d·o·g!

.&amp;W£'20%

IN

WEEKS.'

Fish Sandwich

.BARNEY

.

p/IW PIIW PIIW
-ON YOUR FEET! plf'IJ.PIIW

This Burger Check entHies you to 20% off any

L.lmllonochockpor

1

pure-.Olllroicplnoo:

Nolvolid whln1o_d_opply.
Goodot:

.

'

WRh BURGER CHECKS.

WHAT'S
ALL 'THAT
RACKET

ABOUT?

SUPPERTIME, PAW -I CAME OUT TO

CHEER

VOU UP

-TIME TO EAT.
·-·

""'· ,,,,.

························1·1·1
&amp;WE: 20%
'

~BUROE~CHECKS.

.'

. ·- ·

1

NO, f.IE WA5N T
A 61RD!

••flllla you to 20% oft ,any

This Burger Check
oUhala sandwlc:hes:
Top She!"

lilg lhe~

Fleh Slnclwloh
Super ~he~ .Chlcktn ClubN
,

.... ____ ....,. _...._A_PL,........
1.111111 ... ..-porpurcNM.OIIIr......, 111$.11,1,_

Good at: ••

•1111snn'

I

Now arrange. the circled leners to
form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.

Print answer here: THE

KI I XXr I I )
(Answers tomorrow)

Saturday's

I Jumbles : FLOUR.

EMBER TYPIST AFLOAT
Answer : How those passengers who had been
seasick felt when they disembarkedBETIER " OFF"

Jumble Boote No. 15; containing 110 puzzies, lsav1ilable f or 11 .75 poltpiMI

from Jumble, Qo this newal)lper, Bolli 34, Norwood, N.J. 07848. lnctudl your
name, adclreu, zip cOde and make chedts payable to Newspa~ .

BRIDGE
Bridge through the years
NORTH

12 · 1 ~ · 8 0

. • J 10 5

.KQ
tt0 9432
+ A K 10

WEST

EAST

+AK4 3

+Q9 6 2

.10763 2
t QB

.AJ8 54

t6

+11

• 8 52

SOUTH

.9

• 87
tAK J75

+ QJ9 6 3

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North
West

Pass
Pass

North
I NT

••

East
Pass

South

Pass

Pass

Jt

Opening lead:•K

By O.wald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

who tried to learn contract,
and did write on it."
Alan: "Can you explain
North's 13-poinl notrump?"
Oswald : "Foster opened
notrump any time he had an
opening bid and no biddable
suit. A biddable suit had to
have at least king-jack at its
head. Actually, Foster sat
East. "
Alan: "Modern bidding
mi ght get South to three
notrump on the sequence one
diamond -thr ee diamondsthree notrump. East would be
on lead and probably open his
fourth-best heart and declarer
would make live odd"
Oswald: 'Til quote !rom
Foster: 'Part ner led the king
of spades and I started an
echo and a warning by playing
the nine. He played the ace. I
played the six. He blithely led
a third spade. South ruffed,
drew trumps, ran his clubs to
discard dummy's king and
queen of hearts ;md made his
game' Foster felt that he was
· marked with the deuce since
it had not appeared so East
should have led a heart."
Alan : "I guess declarer wa s

not .allowed to false card
when he held the deuce. Incidentally, a modern defender
would play 6·9 whereupon his
partner jusl might find the

Oswald: "In looking over
1931 Bridge Worlds, I find an
article by Robert P. Foster
who .was 78 io that year. He
was the oldest of the Whist·
auction bridge autho rities

heart shift."
jNEWSP AP ER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)

tiNtA ".at

See if 40u can spell
cat, c-a-t. .. or doq,

THIS WEEK FROM BURGER CHEF

Super She!" Chicken Club"'
.. .

IDOYLEMj

family. Gueatataralnclude,lllusion- 1- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - let Doug Henning, ieeekaterPeggy r
Flemming, and Greg Evigan . (60
mins.)
CIJ 70Q_CLUB
IIJ(jf)UJ MONDAY NIGHT FOOT·
BALL ABC Sports will provide live
covera·g eofthe Dallas Cowboys at
the Loa Angeles Rams.
D ())@) M.A.S.H. The 40771h by THOMAS JOSEPH
wagesatwo·lrontChriatmaa, host·
ACROSS
DOWN
ing Korefln orphans at a panx in the
mess tent while tending a senously
1 Davenport
1 Hackneyed
wounded soldier ·in the opetating

room .

Fish Sandwich

J I K

and ,

Suzanne Farrell. (90 min a.)
8:30 CIJ 0 CZJ THE LITTLE RASCALS
CHRISTMAS SPECIAL Spanky
and Porky mistakenly think they
heard Mom order electric trains for
them for Christmas, but when she
'learns ol tha mix-up sha sacrifices
lo make them happy . (Repee&lt;)
eCil®&gt; LADIES' MAN
8 :58 (I) NEWS UPDATE
9 :00 CIJO(!) THE OSMOND FAMILY
CHRISTMAS An hour of traditional
holiday pageantry starring ~arie
Osmond and the entire Osmond

ll:30

· of these sandwiches:
Top She!" Big Shef" '

fHUNQEj

Patricia

McBride, Peter Martins

RACINE - A ChrQtmas concert
will be presented by the Southern

A temperance fihn and w•nperance leaflets will be Offered. at
Meigs Hilh School in the near
future, the group decided, and a con- •
tribution·w,as sent to Loren Bishop.
r:··: to.aid him in his work.

. AMERICA

Balanchine are performed by

I HAVEN'T BEEN
ABLE m COME UP
WITH A &amp;TORY IDEA

The opening hymn was "Joy to the
World," with prayer following by
Mrs. William L. Smith.

IN

'Choreography by Balaochine '
Part IV. Fiveballetmaeterpiecesby

Now pla4 with
4our nice blocks for
a while!

20%

I I K J

star in a humorous story of a woodian d Chriatma s that is short on cash
!23Lt !2{1Q.Qn lo\le. (80 mins.)
U liJ illll FLO R811dy runs away

for tomorrow night

.

(!) MOVIE -(MUSICAL)"' " High
Society" 1856
(])
CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
ABC NEWS
STUDIO SEE
QVEREASY
6 :30 ill DcrJ NBC NEWS
(I) THE DOOR
(J). BOB NEWHART SHOW
(I) FACE THE MUSIC
Ill ()) ®) CBS NEWS
(j) WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
iH) HISTORY OF SPACE FLIGHT
· . 1!2). ABC NEWS
6 :58 C1J NEW~ UPDATE
7:00 CDe PMitAGAZINE
(I) NORMAN VINCENT PEALE
(J) ALL IN THE FAMILY
Cl)(jf)ID FAMILY FEUD .
(!) BILLY GRAHAM CHRISTMAS
SPEJ;IAL
II()) TIC TAC DOUGH
([) (fi)
MACNEIL-LEHRER
REPORT
I@ NEWS
7:30 CDD BULLSEYE
(I) WORDS OF HOPE
(J) SANFORD AND SON
(I) Cl CIJ JOKER'S WILD
I]) (fi) DICK CAVETT SHOW
I@ HOLLYWOOD SQUARES
1!2)01 FACE THE MUSIC
7:58 CIJ NEWS UPDATE
8:00 CIJ 0 (!) THE BERENSTAIN
UARS' CHRISTMAS TREE The
two Young bears , Sister and
Brother. acoompany Papa Bear on
hie search for the perfect Christ·
ina a tree and along the way they
encounter aome heartwarming
moments with the wildlife in the
woods . (Repeat)
(I) ROCK CHURCH

.

The Pomeroy Women's Christian
Temperance Unioo had Its annual
Christmas dlmer recently at the
home of Mrs. Robert Warner. Grace'
was given by Mrs. Joseph Cook, with
a short busineM meeting being conducted by Mrs. Alan H!Uilpton.

t

TYPIE

ClJU CZJ B CIJfiOj(l2JGJ NEWS

Church:

Temperance Union meets

Unscramble these four Jumbles,

one letter to each square, to form /it;~~

lour ordinary words:

(I) RAINBOW FACTORY

VINTON- Gathering at the home
of Mr.~ Mrs. alfford Mlgbt, V!Jt
.ton,
for a 'lbanbglvlng dinner nn
Mr and u - ..., _ _ _ Ul..... an1f1

•
........ .,....,...,., ....,....
David, Vinton; Mr. and Mrs. ~
Johnson Sharon Brandon, and Andie, ~roy;
and Mrs. Angelo
McDaniel, Michael, and Raney,
West Columbia,. W. Va.; Mr. and
CHRISTMAS EVE
Mrs. Donald
and Ponnle,
COMMUNION
Rutland; . Mr. and Mrs. Ted
Silent COIIUIIUnion will be·· ob- Mathenl!y, Jeremy and Matthew,
served at the Chester United Ewtngton; Mr. am ·Mrs. Rlct
Methodist Church on Christmas Eve. M~y, Rickie, and Latlsha, VIJI.
from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. Persons are ton.
invited to attend the service for any
Absent trom the gathering was
length of time.
Robert Johnson, who Is serving with
the Army and wprt'Jielltiy staUoned
suNDAY GUEST
at Fort Carson, Colorado..
Mrs.. Amanda Murray was ·the
Sunday guest of C. E. Babcoclt, Ml~
dleport.
Club holds electiOn .

High School choir and band Tuesday
evening at 7:30. To be held in the
Southern High auditorium, the concert iS free to public admission.
Audience participation in familiar 1
Christmas carols will be led by the .
Jwlior High School glee club. The
choirs will be under the direction o1
·Mrs. Lee Lee, and the band will be
directed by Joseph Maleslck.
Everyone is invited to attend.

byHenriAmoldandBobLM

EVENING
6:00

NOTICE OF
The Women's Fellowship of the
MEETING CHANGE
United Faith Church held Its elf!Ct!O!l
·During December only claases of of officers for the coming year ·at a ·
Slinderella on Tuesday and Thur- recent meeting. Elected were Kathy
sday evenings will meet. Mrs. Rita McDaniel, president; Garcia.
Mrs. Jennifer Warth, co-leader,
Arnold waa the member losing the Adams, vice preeldent; Thebna
read the Girl Scout Laws.
moat weight at the Tuesday nlglt Cundiff, secretary; .and Helen Hill,
Marsha King recited the poem Middleport class with Carolyn Van · treasurer.
"Part of Being a Girl." In closing, Meter and Alan Jeffers as runnersThe rum meeting will be held
the Brownies sang. "Whone'er You up. At the Thursday night Chester Thursday at 10 a,m. at the home of
Make a Promise," "Make New class, Pauline Ridenour !oat the Ruby Drake, where the group will
Friends," and "Taps." They were most weight and Macel Barton was make fruit baskets to be dlatributed
accompanied on the piano by Chris numer-up. She WBB also given her 20 among the needy.
pound ribbon and certificate and acRouse.
Anyone interested in studying the .
Refreshments were seFVed to . cepted into the slim and trim main- scriptures and having fellowship iB
Brownies and their guests. Those at-. tenance program for having reached urged to attend the meetings, which
tending were Mrs. Chris Rouse, Mrs. her gOB!. A· new member WBB ac- are held at 10 a.m. each Thursday
Linda Young, Mrs. Reta Eblin and cepted Into each class.
morning at the United Faith
Tammy, Mrs. Virginia Wears, Mrs.
Jan Eblin, Mrs. Diane Bartels, Mr.
PJWGRAM sATURDAY
and Mrs. Mike Brothers and Bill,
The St. Paul's United· Methodist
Mrs. Janice Mash and Chuckle, Mrs. Church, Tuppers Plains, will hold Its
Ann Mash, Miss Susie Mash, Mrs.
Carol Lyons and Christopher and
Michelle, Ml'. and Mrs. Mike
Branham, Mrs. Martha King, Mr.
and Mrs. Kenneth Hayes and
Darren, Mr. and Mrs. Ben Slawter,
Mrs. Judy King, Mrs. Barbara
Beagle and Davie, Mrs. Karen
Goina, Mrs. Rev a Simms, Mr. and
tuESDAY
1
Mrs. Charles Werry, MisS Faith
POMEROY
LODGE
164
F&amp;AM
!
Dickens, Mrs. Janet Stmpson,
Tuesday
7.:30
p.m.
All
master
'
V~lerie, Joan and Teresa, Mrs. Jenmasons
Invited.
ny Warth and Mr. and Mrs. Don
Brwnfleld.

Christmas concert set
.

•
VIewmg

l}flj}N}ji}1} ~ THATSCRAMBLEDWORDGAIIE
~ ~ ~~l.!?h

.... _

v•

TROOP l2ZO MEMBERS- Froat row, J.r, Lori Hayeo, Amy Warth,
Stacy YOIIIIg, Tracy Eblla; aec:oad row, KriBtiD Slawter, Shelly Smllb,
Heather GoiaJ, Lenora Lyou, Tracl Bartels; tblrd row, Amy BoWie,
Julie B111!1lfleld, MIDdy Sue ~non, Maady Eblla, LesUe,Ly~, SlwiiDe
Mash; four1b row, Amy Brotbers, Melaale Beegle, Krlstla Klag, Manila
Klllg, KewBDB Slager.

•

G0T HIM!

Gather for Thanksgiving

The Alfred United Methodist Chur.
..,............
ch 18 planning a "'a "'u"a" program
for all ages on Tuesday, Dec. 23, at
·7:30p.m.
'

SUNDAY

1'/

~

Television

r

81Uluill ChriBtmu prll8riJil Wwday at 7:30 p.m. Everyone w
welcome. ·

ANNUAL PROGRAM
MONDAY

The Daily Sentinei-Page-9

Pomeror-Middleport, O;,h;;,io;;,.----------

5 Hunting hound Z Window

.

D Cll I@

HOUSE CALLS It's
Christmas Eve at Kensington Ho·
spiial when Charley and Ann learn
an invited U.S.O. troupe will not be
able to put on a show for the pa·
tients, so the Staff decides to do its
·own show.
I])
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Marshall va Morehead
(fi) DIVINEMADNESSJulleHarris
narrates a look at the lives and
works of two of the performing art a
moat dedi cated professionals,
Portia Manarield and Charlotte
Perry. ln 1912 these women found ·
ed the Perry·Manafleld Dance
Ce mp .a creative mecca tor sam aol
America's
moat
aucceesful
dancers.
10:00 CIJ 0 (!) ICE FOLLIES AND
HOLIDAY ON ICE SPECIAL Hoot
· Tony Randall welcomes for":ler
Olympic and world champion
akater Peggy F Iami reg to th ia glitter·
ing spectacular, featuring skating
talent from the' two moat fame us Ice
revues in the world . (60 mine .)
• Cll BILLY GRAHAM CHRIST·
MAS SPECIAL
IBl LOUGRANTRoosl'soverbear·
ing manner angers a black reporter
working with him on a difficult story
about the aurprlsing communityre·
aponae to a ghetto killing . (60
mine.)
®NEWS
10:15 (]) TBSEVENING NEWS
10:28 ()J NEWS UPDATE
10:30 ()J RISE AND BE HEALED
OPEN MIND
.
10:58
NEWSjlPI!_ATE
11:00
.(!).CI)(}D) NEWS

I

I

FESTIVAL of PRAISE
DICK CAVETT SHOW
11:15
NIGHTGALLERY
11·28
NI!WS UPDATE
11:30
• (!) THE TONIGHT SHOW
Gueat hoat : Joan Rivers . Guest.
Bob Hope. (80 mlno.)
()J ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
(]) STANDING ROOM ONLY:
PARIS CABARE'T French follies
delightfully blend burlesque and
exotic danca. numbers. Host: Joel
Gra:t._
ewca&amp;LATEMOVIE 'OUINCY:
Death Casta A Vote' A young labor
leader's death Ia termed a suicide,
but the man's father and girlfriend
convlncaQujncytolook further into
the cue. (Repaot) 'THE NEW
AVENGERS: Gnawo' Two people In
the Minlatry or Agriculture, exper·
lmentlng wlih radioactive material,
growt'o matots the aiza of footballs
and eara of com six-feet tong .

l

epeal)

ABC CAPTIONED NEWS
MOV/1! ·(WESTERN) *l'a
'.'l,egend01Cuotor"11167
11:45 Cil MOVIE -(COMEDY-DRAMA)

CU~·~~l;,';aGiory" 1e&amp;a

12:15

1IJ

G'f •

NIGHTLINE

ABC

NEWS

style

11 Trampled
12 Of the eye

3 Glad to do it!
13 English river 4 Soft drink
5 Monotonous
14 Release
by deed ·
6 Combat

15 Lamb cut
16 Sibling
17 Hutch
18 Evening
news time
20 Clump of ivy
21 Flavor
22 This way
23 Patois
24 Sporting
event .
25 Beach wear
26 Hand lotion

pilots
7 Amount
8 Forget
9 Depose
gradually
10 Drifts
16 Shipped
19Bam
topper

Yesterday's Answer
22 Rossini hero 29 Gamut
Z3 Chest
30 Tolerated

of drawers 32 Dutch colonist
24 Manhandle 35 Noun-forming
25 Filed
suffix

26 Ownership 36 Sparks

marks

or B...tty

27 "I love"
28 Stationery

items
31 Dallas
campus
(abbr.)
32 Dance,
in Fran~e
33 Foot wiper
34 Witch's brew
~6 Naughty
deed
37 Worked
on copy
38 Therefore
39 Blocks
40 Used henna

1

1

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

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter simply standi for another. In this sample A It
used for the three L's, X for the tw.o O's, etc. Single 1etten,
apostrophes the length and formatiOn o( the words 1111 all
hints. Each doy 1he code !etten are dilferent.
CRYPTOQUOTES

GIRRNVBRZVL
IW
MJ
KZ

NVT

VQRKZA

GMOMEMDZB

LPMJ:

EZL

BMWWZAZVL . - BNOMB

[v z

JIGMZLT
UZlUEZ
SANTJIV

Yestenjay'• Cryp!GqDote: DISCOuRAGEMENT SERVES NO
POSSIBlE Pl.JRP&lt;11E; IT IS SIMPLY THE DESPAIR OF ·
WOUNDED SELF-LOVE.-FENELON

�Page-1o-The Daily Sentinel

what your concept of agricultural
markets and policy really 1s. It i.s Wlderstandable, if not excusable, when
members of Congress from commodity-growing regions come trotting In with dog-eared claliiiS and
lame justificatloCIS for special
dispensatiOCIS that will force the taxpayer to absorb the predJctable risks
Inherent m any line of business activity, mcluding farming.
"But I would certainly hope that
the USDA could exercise some semblance of leadership by occasionally
these sell-servmg,
resisting
parochial claims and assertirtg at
least a minimum regard for the
general public mterest and for the
fact that temporary supply,
demand, pnce, cost and profit fluctuations are a normal part of the
market system and are by no means
umque to agncultural commodities. "
- " 1118 about time that the department stop playmg nursema1d to the
proliferating array of cry-baby commodity groups In this country ' '
Stockman went on to say 1! "is bad
enough" for the government to subsidize farmers who have suffered
losses from drought, floods and
other natural disasters
" But the prmc1ple implicit m your
potato rescue IS that producers must
be mdenmified for nature's acts of
lieneflclence and bounty as well! "
he wrote

Stockman sa1d 1t was his VIew that
"we are long overdue m burymg the
four-decade-old, Depression-bred
myths about dirt-poor yeoman illeqwpped to cope with the uncertamties of the domestic and international marketplace."
"Agriculture ts now a highly
capitalized, fully commerc1alline of
busmess," he said
"If farm &lt;Jperators think that they
can do better for themselves with
b1g spreads, huge machinery mvestments and scientific fannmg
practices than with a !()-acre plot, a
mule and last year's Farmer's
Almanac, then let them start
assunnng the obligations of commercial businessmen - cash-flow
management, asset structure optimization, market-onented croppmg patterns and futures market
hedging "
Stockman continued· "I fully
realize that apologists for the
current farm policy will argue that
the transition to a commercial
agriculture policy must be gradual
m order to avoid undue dislocations,
meqwties and so on.
"But your recent bail-out amounts
to a full-scale charge to the rear.
" Indeed, your department's
supme capitulation m this potato
caper makes the best argument yet
for congressiOnal enactment of a
'cold-turkey' policy for American
agnculture."

Congressional pay hike bill dies
WASIDNGTON (AP ) - The man
who Will lead House Republicans m
the new Congress says a proposed
$10,000 plus congressiOnal pay raise
IS dead If Rep. Robert H. Michel IS
nght, the lame-duck 96th Congress
may reach a comprorruse on the senSitive ISSUe 10 time to keep a large
chunk of the federal government
from gomg broke at rrudmght
The 17 percent pay raise, which
would hike the salary of a member
of Congress from $60,662 to $70,900
and raiSe the salaries of 34,000 toplevel government employees, 1s attached to an omrubus spending b1ll.
Unless that b1ll1s passed by nndrught, the State, Justice, Commerce,
Treasury and Health and Human
ServiCes departments will lose the1r
autho~1ty to spend money, as Will
most mdependent federal agenc1es
And w1thout the power to spend,
Rep Janue L Whitten, D-M1ss.,
warned over the weekend, " they Will
have to close VIrtually every
bwlding" 10 Washington
Desp1te meetmg for about 12 hours

Saturday, Congress rec~ed until
today after fa1ling to agree on the
pay raiSe proposal.
But MIChel, mterv1ewed on ABC's
" Issues and Answers" Sunday, sa1d
the pay raiSC had become "a dead
ISSUe, there's no question about it,"
mdicating a compronnse could be
reached easily
The Illinois congressman IS on a
House-Senate conference committee
that arranged to take up the pay
ra1se d1spute agam today.
D1scussmg his predicbon that the
pay ra1se would be dropped from the
b1ll, Michel sa1d Sunday: "I'm gomg
to be a conferee and that's exactly
what's going to happen "
In complex parliamentary
maneuvenng Saturday, the House
and Senate tossed the stopgap spending package back and forth, With
the House approving the pay raise
and the Senate scuttling 11.
The House finally agreed to
remove the pay ra1se from the b1ll if
the Senate would agree to drop
scores of pet projects 1ts members

AEP puts lab

.,

at Coolville
LANCASTER - The Alnencan
Electric Power Serv1ce CorporatiOn's Fuel Supply Department
has announced the location of a centralized coal analysis laboratory at
Coolville.
The operation Will occupy a
building at the mtersec!Jon of U S
ROute 50 and State Route 7. The
bwlding IS being leased to AEP by F.
L. Morehead, Parkersburg land
developer, who purchased the
facility m 1977
It had been unoccupied smce 1975
when Nashua Photo purchased Best
Photo
Gerald Blackmore, executive vice
president - fuel supply for AEP, sa1d
modification of the ex1stmg facility
has commenced. Imtial staffmg will
be approximately 15 with the
majonty of those employees coming
from the existing temporary
laboratory located at the company's
Southern Ohio Coal Company office
near Albany. Blackmore sa1d the
new lab will serve the company's
seven rrunlng diviSions m Ohio and
West Virgmia. In addition to

HOSPITAL :\EWS

..

analyzmg coal samples, the facility
Will mclude an oil sampling unit and
a water quality lab which will
greatiy expand the company's
laboratory capability.
He emphasized the Coolville
facility is central to AEP's coal
nnrung operations and will place the
lab Within a three-hour drive of all
their eastern mining properties. He
pointed out that, "day-t~y testing
of coal samples Will continue at our
on-s1te mme labs while more com·
prehens1ve and detailed analytical
work will be processed at the centralized operation."

END MARRIAGES

Mamages dissolved were Danny
Eldon Morris, Pomeroy, and Carla
Sue Morris, Carla Sue was restored
to her maiden name of Carla Sue
Teaford; Ricky Joe MoiTIS and Cindy Mae Morris; Ruby M. Mossman
and Earl B. Mossman, and Christy
Diann Rose and Ralph E. Rose, Sr.
Judy Kay Farley was granted a
divorce from Roger Dale Farley.

Nine lives taken in weekend wrecks
By Tbe Associated Press
Oh1o had a relatively safe
weekend on the streets and roads,
with nine traffic deaths recorded by
the Highway Patrol. The toll included a !&amp;-year-old Chillicothe boy
who was the victim of a hit-skip
driver.
'The patrol counts traffic deaths
from 6 p.m . Friday until nndnight
Sunday.
'The dead :
SUNDAY
LONDON- Ellzabeth M Thurston,
35, of Columbus, m a one-car acCident on U S 42 10 Mad1son County
NEW PHILADELPHIA - Alexan·
der J. Hudson, 26, of Cleveland
Heights, In a one-car accident on
Ohio 39m Carroll County
TOLEDO - Brad A Brooks, 24 m
a tw!H:ar acc1denton a c1ly str•ct

had attached as amendments to the
·
spending package
Michel added that the next
Congress, in which Repubhcans will
control the Senate and gam strength
In the House, must reconsider a pay
raiSe or Pres1dent-elect Ronald
Reagan's "administratiOn IS gomg
to have senous problems" attracting capable top-level workers.
Reagan supports the pay hike.
Meanwhile, as the Congress was
meeting Saturday, President Carter
vetoed a measure appropriating fun·
dS for the Justice Department
because lawmakers added an amendment bamng the department from
going to court to seek busing as a
means of desegregating schools.
Carter sa1d the busmg amendment
was unconstitutional and the House
did not even try to override the veto
because 1t apparently would have
been sustamed.
And money for the department
already had been prOvided form the
stopgap spending b1ll, which was
shorn of the anti-busing prov1s1on.

SATURDAit
GRANVILLE- Natalie Krenek, 17,
of Johnstown, In a (W()oCar accident
on Ohio371n Ucking County.
CONNEAUT - David Neal, 18, of
Kingsville, In a one-car accident on
Ohio 53lin Ashtabula County.
GAWPOLIS - Danny Roberts,
:j2, of Gallipolls, In a tw().Car acCident on Ohio 160 m Gallia County.
FRIDAY
CIDWCOTHE - Ronald Rister
Jr., 16, of mrtllicothe, m a hit-andnm accident on Oh10 159 m Ross
County
DA YTON - Robert Eichenlaub,
29, of Trotwood, m a tw().Car accident on a county road m Montgomery County
MANS~'IELD -- V1rg1l H1nlon, 61,
of Man&gt;fwl~ . 10 " hvll-car accident
!Jn Ohl tl W rn 1' rd '
r ' oun!y

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Saturday admiss10ns-Otho Karr,
Middieport; Vena Marcinko, MinerSVIlle; Denrus Hartley, Pomeroy.
DIScharged Deanna Van Meter,
Harold Abbott, Ricky Yost, Jessie
Wood, Bernice Grueser, Lottie
Fruth, Riley McClelland.
Sunday AdrnJsswns-Goldia Wolfe,
Long Bottom; Lorena Ault, Middleport; Bessie Rudisell, Pomeroy.
Disharged: Shirley Kauff, Phyllis
Hendricks, Grace Swaun, and
James Nelson.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGES DEC. 12
Bonnie Allen, Joyce Boothe,
Bessie Boden, FranciS ColliCIS,
Marilyn Caldwell, Shirley Gibbs,
Grace Glover, Don Kinnisoh,
Elizabeth Landers, Ferde Loftis,
James Middleton, Elizabeth Dee!,
Golden Newsome, Michael
Oesterreicher, Ann Romaine,
William Strickland, Emma Swon,
Bnan Tackett, Brett Tilley, Dale
Van Sickle, Mrs Charles Ward and
son, Mrs William Weaver and son,
Lowell Weaver

Small . investment, large
returns, Sentinel Want Ads
-

-----------Nohce
- - -Pubhc
------

PUbhc Notace

NOTICE ON
FILING OF
INVENTORY
AND
APPRAISEMENT

Pearl Street, thence south

county, court of Common
Pleas, Probate OIVISIOft

wrthm 3 feet of a builcmg

along Pearl Street. 17 feet
to the rns1de of a curb on
the south sode of the droveway ; thence at roght angles
to the nght 69 Jeel following
The State of Oh•o, Meigs the
ins•de of sard curb, to

t.iOil, Letart: Mr •Jtl!
• , ,., ~.; ~ qr \ hb

a

storage

sons

of Lot No 52 to the place of

Restdence are losted
Howard L. Searls, Route
1. Midd leport, Ohio 45760
You are hereby notofled

Exceptrng and reserving
unto the former grantors,

f
deceased

of way to be used tn com
mon wrth the Grantees,
their he1rs and assigns,
upon a dnveway about 12
feet 1n w1dth runn.ng from

of the aforementioned per

Name of Decedent and

that the Inventory and Ap·
rarsement of the estate of
he
aforementloned,

late of said Coun·
ty, were to led on thos court.
Said Inventory and Ap

praisement will be for
hearmg before this Court

on the 5th day: of January,
1981 , all 30 o clock PM.
Any person deslrong to

frl e exceptions thereto
must file them at lesst five
days prior to the date set
for hearing

Goven under my hand
and seal of saod Courti this
12th day of December 980.
Robert E Buck
Judge
By Carolyn G Thomas
Deputy Clerk
&lt;12 1 15, 22, 2tc
Public Not1ce

FOR SALE
Louis A DeLuz real

estate w1th

large

Holly

Park mob ole home Woll be
sold at auctoon al the office
of O' Br&gt;en &amp; 0 ' Broen, At
torneys at Law, 1001/:z Court
Street, Pomeroy, Oh10 at

10 00 am
Saturday,
December 20, 1980 For fur
ther onformatoon call 992
2720
Appraosal Value S26,500.
I 121 12. 14, 15
PUbliC NOtiCE

NOTICE OF SAL F.
By vtrtue of an Order of
Sa le ossued out of the Com

mon Pleas Court of Meigs
County, Oh1o, m the case of

Dorothy L Young, Mid

dl eport, Oh1o, Platntlff,
aga1nst Kenneth McFann,

el al . Defendants, upon a

1udgment therem ren
dered, bemg Case No 17551
10 satd Court, I will offer

for sa le, at the front door of
th e
Courthouse
1n
Pomeroy, Meogs County,
Ohoo, on the lOth day of
January , 1981 , at 10 00
o'clock AM, the follow&gt;ng

lands and tenements, to
Wi t
Bemg all of L ot No 52 m
Lower Pomeroy, now 10
corporated mto and a part

of the Vollage at M•d
dleport, Meogs County,
Dhoo , and that part of Lot

building, thence at nght

west corner of Lot No 52 ,

thence along the south I me
beginnin~ --

Thomas Russell Runyan
and Olive Runyan, their
he1 rs and ass1gns, a r1ght

Pearl Street along the
southerly Stde of the above
described real estate, and
back a dostance of 69 feet
Netther the grantors nor
grantees, nor anyone
cla1mmg under them, shall
1n any manner obstruct any

portoon

of

the

saod

dnveway, or In anv man
ner prevent the free and
unobstructed use of the

Public Noloce
of 6" service sewer. 3550
ltneal feet of I' sewer pipe,
85 ltneal teet of 6" sewer In
casing pipe, 1&lt;10 loneal feet

.

Publoc Notice
nlsh a Contract
formance

Per

and

Bond

WANT AD WAY

. .... .,.,..........
.. .

a

- " ' , ,'

Payment Bond as provoded
for below
(AI A Contract Performance Bond in -en
amount equal to 100% of
the esllmated cost of the

of 8" sewer in cas1ng p1pe ;
175 Imeal feetafB" sewer 1n
bored hole; a sewage IIIII
stat1on , manholes, and all
work conditioned, among
appurtenances

The proposed work under
thos Contra~t consosts of the
construct1on
of ap·
ptoxomately 1425 lineal ret

THE FAMILY of Ernest
Cullums would like to eK
press !heir sincere thanks
~ the friends and relatives
that helped In any way dur·
ing the hospitalization and
death of our hustand and
father A special thanks to
our minister, Roger Wat
son Sara, Terry, Don and
Ginger.

other thongs that the Con
tractor will perform the
work

upon

the

prorect tS $246,000.00.
Copies of Drawings,
Speclfocallons and Contract documents may be
obtained or examined at

the offoce of the ' Mayor,
VIllage Hall , Moddleport,
Ohio 45760 and at the offoce

of
Floyd
Browne
Assoc1ates, Llm1ted1 Consultmg Engmeers
Plan ·
ner-s, 181 South Ma1n
Street, Manon, Oh10 43302

terms

proposed, within the time

A twenty-love dollar
IS25.oo&gt; deposit wtll ~e
requ•red tor each set of

amount eQual to ftve per

cent (5%1 of his bid
II the bod os accepted. the

3
Announcements
I PAY highest prices
possible for gold and sliver
coins, rings, tewelrv. elc.
Contact Ed Burkett Barber
ShoP, Middleport.

and all Sub·conlractors for
labor performed and
materoals furnished In con·

nect1on with the project 1n

valved .
Each bidder must onsure
that all employees and ap·
pltcants for employment
are

not

SHOOTING MATCH "at
Corn Hollow In Rutland.
Every Sunday starting at
noon.
Proceeds being
donated to the Boy Scout
Troop 2A9 12 gauge factory
choke gun only I

dtscriminated

against because of race,
color, religion, sex, or
national orogon.
Allention of the Bidder os
dorected to the specoal con·
struchon

RACINE GUN SHOOT,
Racine Gun Club, every
Friday night starting at
7: 30 p. m Fac~ry choke
guns only.

m·

regulations

eluded here•n relatove to
special requirements for

procurement of labor, the

special tnfarmation g1ven

on the lnformalton to B1d·
ders, to the Special
Requorements tor wage

GUN SHOOT: Saturday
evening starting at 6:30
p m. Sponsored by the
Racine Volunteer Fire
Department, at building In
Bashan. Factory choke
, gunsonly

rates, the hours of em

ployment as ascertained
and determoned by the
Department of lndustroal
Relat&gt;ons and provoded for
on the laws of the State of
Ohoo

HAVE YOUR deer trophy
mounted. Birchfield's.
East on 1U at Rutland 742·
2178.

The Owner reserves the

roghl to re1ect any or all

bids and to wa1ve any in·

formalities tn blddong.
THE VILLAGE OF
MIOOLEPORT,OHIO

MEIGS HISTORY BOOks
for 5ale for Christmas at
Meigs Museum every
Friday and Sunday at·
ternoon during December
oral Pomeroy Library

Fred Hoffman, Mayor

Oec I, 8, 15,22

The personal property successful bidder shall en
appra1sed
at
$16,041 00 The real estate fer into a contract and fur
was
appraised
at
$69,300 00
was

DEER Cut &amp; wrapped at
Maple Wood Lake between
Syracuse &amp; Racine, Oh
$25 per head S5 additional
for sk.)nnlng.

Terms of sale Cash

James J Proffitt
Sheriff of
Me1gs County
112) 8, 15, 22, ltc
PUbltC Notoce
PUBLIC NOTICE
Sealed proposals Woll be
rece&gt;ved by the Village of
Mtddleport, Me1gs County,
Oh&gt;o, on lhe office of the
Mayor , Vollage Hall, Mid
dleport, Ohoo, unlol 2 30
, p M , Dec 30, 1980, and
then publocly opened and

NEW sandwich at Me
Clures Dairy Isle In Mid·
dleport. Ham &amp; cheese on
rye &amp; chicken pattie,
Italian sub.
HOMEMADE Chill soup.
New feature at McClure's
Oalry Isle In Middleport. 10
pet discount for Golden
Buckeye Members.

read a loud for the con
structlon of

MARINA WEST SEWERS
LIFT STATION
AND FORCE MAIN
CONTRACT NO.4

FAYE'S Gift Shop on Mid·
dleport will be open from
12-5 until Christmas.
Heating Fuel, 1 &amp; 2 EK·
celslor 011 company.
Phone 1·6U·992·2205

~---~,-----------------·
I

c~rb Inflation.

!;

Pay Cash for
Classifieds and
Savell!

II
II,
I·

RACINE Gun Club special
meeting Thurs Oec 18
Election of officers for
1981

o..

•ANNOUNCEMENTS

Phone----------------~1
I.

1-Card of Thanks
2- ln Mltmoriam
)-Ann®ncements

I
1
I
I

2t. _ _ _ _ __

II•
zs.
I ,
26
I
21 _ _ _ _ _ _ 1
I
28

5·---'----7. _ _ _ _ __

a.______
9. _ _ _ _ _ __

10._ _ _ _ __
11 ·. ,_
. ._
-_
- -_
-_11.
_-_

13.14 ._ ______

I
I

15·.-_
-_16
____:_
_

I

•MERCHANDISE
11-HIMIIHftald 0011111
12-Cf~TV,

U--AftttqUH

12-Sttuattcl.lnt.cl

l:t-lnsurtact

$4--MI&amp;c. MerchlndiM
SJ-I•Iktlnl Supplies

14-lutlnns Tralnlnt

st-Petl IGr Sale

16RHio,TV
&amp;CBRIIPiir

'
'•F"RM
SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

11-Winltcl To Do

30
31
32

~!

35

I

II
· 'dol Th1s Coupon with Remittance
The Daily Sentinel
Box 729
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

I' '
I'
1
1,
I

.........,..'*'
M-lltCtrlcM

••

11-Gtlltral Haulint
M-M.H . .....Ir

..•

11-ll-I

IS Wol"'h or Uncllr

1.11

6hyl

c.....
t.JJ

'·"
I.U
Ul

•ach wordov.rthe minimum IS Wtrllllls 4 cents.., Wanll ,., -.:.
Aft I'UMIIII MIMr IMn QIIHCUtlft dlys will 1111 CUr... It tM 1 . . .

rete.

"

In IMII!ery, C..rtlot ........... IMI Oblt¥1ry1 6 COftts lllf' wenl, UM
.............. c...... Mvuct.

-·

fireplace,

car

I
1 ...,. IS
cerry.,.. . . N••• •• c.,. er
~----------------------~ ~~~~--------------.-~~--~--~~~~·~
MMiat HMttNM_. YaM ..... •r•~•lrwl•cua . . .
ctRt dNt,.. fir ...

chen, full basement,
T P water and garden
space $32,500 furnished
or woll talk
9 ACRES IN TOWNNear sewer and c1ty

water overlooking the
beautiful

room home

$50.000
Reduced
$37,5oolor quick sale

CHANCE - for

Ia

YOU

to

own Income property.

Can be four apartments
with some changes On 3

acres of land. Only
T P water
10 ACRES- on 124 west
with L.C water iihe
Wtll make a dandy

$45,000

32
Mobile Hom's
_ _ _ _,f"o,_r"'Sa"'l"'e-~1973 Crown Haven, 14 x 65,
three bedjooms. new car
pet. 1971 Cameron, 14 K64,
two bedrooms, new carpet.
1972 Champion, 12 K60, two
bedrooms. new carpet. 1976
cameron, 12 x 60, two
bedrooms, all electric. 1971
Skyline, 12sx 6), two
bedrooms. bath &amp; '1•, new
carpet. 1970 PMC,
12 x 6JJ, two bedrooms, new
carpet. B x S Sales, Inc ,
2nd x Vtand Street, Point
Pleasant, WV Phone 675
4424.

REGISTERED NURSES

Has nice

in the basemerft. Was

'

census, we now have
openings for full and part
llme ppsotlons on dav shift
but will consider other shit·
ts. Competitive salary, ex·
cellent working conditions,
life Insurance and
disability policy at no cost
ta the employee, and
hospitalization Insurance
available. come visit us or
call. Nancy Van Meter,
R.N, Director of Nursing,
Pomeroy Heallh Care Cen
ter, 61~· 992 · 6606 .

River

family room and 3
bedrooms Woodburner

basement,

NICE two bedroom country
home Vinyl siding, full
basement, $13,900.00 949
2801. No Sunday calls.

answer for vou. Due to
achieving near maximum

Ohio

Good home Stte for only
$15,000
MODERN HOME WITH
PANORAMIC Ill EW 4 year old spit! level 7

10K27 sundeck. First house
past Memory Gardens 5 R
7 992-7741.

RNs and LF'Ns. looking tor
challenging and rewarding
work? Tired of 0 rotatlng
shifts? Feel the need to
develop vour Ideas 1n
resident care with a hfghly
motivated stall? Pomeroy
Health Care ~enter has the

with

heating, large eat 1n kit·

woodburner,

garage,

home

modern bath. central

total electric, carpeted, 2

lntensnte Care Un1f

small

$11,000.

MoboleHomes

farm

for

Furnished apartments, 992
3129, 992 5914, or 1 304 882

2~

Real Estate

ccu IS pre erred
Excellent Benefits

REALTY

Geo. s. Habstetter, Jr

Salary

Phone 742·2003
BRICK HOME 3
bedroom, 2 baths. large
lovong room woth lovely
stone fireplace, equip
Ped kotchen, tyu base·

Ph.

Situations Wanted
WILL Do small business
bookkeeping at home.
Have references 992·7274
alter 5p.m

ing

Will d9 sewing
alterations 949 2145.

Tilt

person's fllttlme then you olve it
vestigate.

~

6 acres

bedroom home, ltvlng
room, sunporch, dining

room, modern kitchen,
bath, basement, garage

and several bldgs.
$35,000
ACREAGE - 7.2 acres
with 2 bedroom home on
Hysell Run Road, extra
water tap &amp; septic lank
Only $19,000.
POMEROY - Union
Ave., large 3 bedroom
home, living room, kit·
chen. full basement,
garage on large lot Ask
ong S26,500.
RUTLAND - Nice 2
story home, 4 bedrooms,
llvong room, dining
room, equipped kitchen,
carport, SIOI'age bldgs.
Asking $38,000.
,
Chervl Lemley, Assoc.
Ph. 742·3171
Velma Nicinsky, Assoc.
Ph. 742-3092

&amp;

yourself to in-

1

LOOK
EASTERN
DISTRICT - 3 bedroom
home on approximately
1 acre land. Fireplace,
equipped kllchen Country Living All for ius!
$28,000.
LIKE THE UNUSUAL?,
This 3 bedroom home of·
fers you unusual style of
construction, slate roof,

large rooms on approKimately

ROISTmER

REALn

Experoence on cosmetic, 1ewe1ry-retall sales such
Avon, Tupperware, Sara Coventry (etc.)
halptvl.

as:

742-2003
ueorge s. Hobstetter Jr.'

If you n - to earn su,ooo plus per year, tilts may be
for you. SI7J.OO per week while in tra1ning w1th
motet exptmses, car allowance and corp. benefits.

Broker

3,4

acre land

$29,500.
MOBILE HOME AND I
ACRE LOT - 1973
f4x70 Kirkwood, 3
bedrooms. 2 baths,
equipPed kitchen, elec
trlc heal, air condition·
lng $18,500
REALTOR
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
992-·191

Rul Estate- General

Olan Mills. The Nation's Studio has immldlale
openings. We are looking for sharp, aggrenlve,
career-mlndedondivoduals over 25 or mature . Must
be able to travel 51,'1 d1ys per week (home weekends
only),

ASSOCIATES
Jean Trussell 9'19·2660

Roger &amp; Dottle Turner
992·5692

A"-W

Live 1n down!itatrs, rent

upstaors.
Asking
t29 000 00 with 10%
:IO\' '

"

-! 1 - ~,

tn!crcst

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSUlATION
Vinyl &amp;

I

Aluminum Siding
el nsu lation

• Storm Doors
• Storm Wtndows
• Replacement

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

PH. 742-2328

Rt. 3, Box 54
Racine, Oh

Ph. 614·843·2591
6 15 lie

12-8·1 mo.

H. L WRITESEL
ROOFING

PUlliNS
EXCAVATING

All types of roof work,
new or repa1r gu"ers
and downspouts, gutter
cleaning and patnt1ng ..
All work guaranteed

• Dozers
• Backhoes
Hourly Contract
Large or
sma111obs.
Ph. 992·2478
11203mopd

Free Estimates

Windows

Reasonable Pr.ces
Call Howard
949·2862
949-2160
1 221fc

Free ,Estimate
James Keesee
Ph. 992·2772
11-19·1 mo

~~==:;~~~;;,~~t;~~~~~~~~~======~~~~~

Home Park, Chesh1re, Oh

992 3954.

L.::==~=====:...J

.... . . . . . . . . .

receiver, extra

RUTlAND FURNITURE CARPET SHOP
DECEMBER CARPET SALE
KITCHEN CARPET 4 Rolls
CARPET With Padding RegSHAG
. $15 95
1nstalled

crystals,

for

8.99 For'99

RUTLAND FURNITURE

GRAVE Blankets. 949 2493
or 992 7320

Pels lor Sale
HOOF HOLLOW . Horses
and ponies and rodlng
lessons.
Everything
Imaginable In horse equop·
ment. Blankets. bells,
boots, etc English and
Western Rulh Reeves
(614! 698 3290
54

41

Houses for Rent

FURNISHED 1 4 room 8.
bath, adulh only, no pets.
Middleport, 992-3814

61

Farm Equipment

I 6 6 h p walk behind
One
coppertonw Gravely Just overhauled,
refrigerator for $75 00,
tires, electric start, hi·
frigidaire 5 x 28; one elec- new
lo range, 30" mower. S900
tric stove coppertone for H h.p Snapper rider, 26"
S50.oo, Frlgodalre 32 x 28; cut hand start S400 I 8 h p
one couch, 6 foot long for Gravely nder, 30" cut,
S10.oo. 992-5694 at 152 But- electrlct start
$800
ternut A venue, Pomeroy
Gravely Tractor Sales &amp;

service, 204 Condor Sf,
Pomeroy, Oh 992-2975

ow at

Pomeroy
Landmarl&lt;
ttotpo~nt

EASV' EASV• Crochetlhos lacy
hve ly poncho to go places
It s a cape 11 s a poncho-s1de
labs do the tnck C10chet ot of
worsted·we1ght synlhetoc on alter
natmg lacy and sohd rows Pat
leon 7060 Mosses Sozes 8·18
on eluded
$1 75 fot each patlern 1\dd 501
eaoh patteon too totSI·class llr·
maol and hand lmg Send to:
Alictllloob
Nlllltc!lft Dtpt.
DaUy Sentloel
•-."...._
•
...
16.!, Old c.~~~ .. ""'
York, NT lOIIl. Print N1111,
Add..., Zip, Plllllm N•mlltr.
Catch on to the craft boom' Send
lor our NEW 1981 NEEDLECRAFT
C.,TALOG Over 172 desoens, 3
free pattetnl tnsode $1 00
W. CIAFT 11001$. .$1.75 eKh
IJHIIIIIIIIIIM Qlllltin1
U2.QIIII 0Ni1*

m-'111 •llicll 1111111

IJO.SW.WF..._S.ll-56
l~lcl 'a' fllr TrMIM
I~ l'lkllital Qllii!S

127""- ••• 11111111
IM-l'llriflr Crlflr F1oiNn
125-Ptlll Qlllll
1Z4-lllr Qlfls ••• a.-Is
I~ 'i' Plldl Qlllls
122-51111 'n' Ptfl Qlllb

s.117-fllr All IUIIdllpDinl
114-Cirll!lilll Afllllll ...
112-Prizt AltllMs
107-1111111 S..lna
105-1111111 Cllldrtt

ID3-Qullls foo TCMIIJ's L~ti"l
111-QIIill llooii·Collodion I

1175 oo
Slot''

M lcrowiYt Oven

Reg S374
1 UsN Relrlger•lor

comfort
He•ters,

'W..,_

UH
$17$

Glow Kerosene
Economv Ul 01631

Ret 1139 9S

NowS129 U

POMEROY

~LANDMARK
uuOi~r.;;........
E. Maon Sl

Pomeroy

FOUR 15X10 gray painted
spoke wheels and five 11K15
t1res, to f1t Ford or .1eep

$140 00 . 949 2181

5'n__....,2P~e~t~s!.!fo~r..!s:!!a!!le:.__

-

THE MEIGS &lt;;ounly
Humane Society pets1of the
week are: S~veral adult
cats, 5 black &amp; tan puppies,
black labrador, black Irish
setter,

collie

s_
7~6--~A~u7to-P~a~r~t_
&amp; Accessoroes

5, l5x6, 6 bolt stock wheelS
and hub caps, ftls G , 4
wheel dr $65 949 21 81 or
949 2631

serv1ees
Home
Improvements

GENE ' S
CARPET
CLEANING Oeep stream
clean puts nu look back

10

your carpet, hoghly recom

mended, reasonable rates,

Scotchguard

Free

est1mates Gene Sm 1th, call

now 992-6309 or 742 2211
WILL do handyman wor k
1n your home Furn tture
repa1r 10 my shop J1m

Bentz, 4th 51 , Syracuse

Excavat1ng
83
Wanted to Buy
J
&amp;
F
BACKHOE SER
CHIP WOOD Poles max
diameter 10" on largest VICE loscensed &amp; bonded,
end $12 p-er ton Bundled sept1c tank 1nstallat1on,
slab. SlO per ton Delivered water &amp; oas l1nes Ex
to Ohio Pallet Co , Rt 2, cavatlng work &amp; transit
layout. 992 7201.
Pomeroy 992-2689.
62

1 Used Hatpolnl

Atfngenfor
New Btkel As Low AS

74
Motorcycles
1978 KAWASAKI KZ 650
motorcycle. color blue
ca 11 949·2649

81

MACHINE Shop equip
mont &amp; machinist tools.

61&lt; 678-2166

742-2211

MAIN ST.

corn collections Call 614·
767 3167 or 557 3411

types of wood. S35.oo per
p&gt;ck·up load Delivered,
woll stack for Senior
Cilizens 843 4951 or 8432815

Installed

Installed

DRIVE ALITTLE- SAI1E A LOT

tlbles , or entire estates
Nothing
too watches
large Also,
guns,
pocket
and

Firewood for sate, Mixed

$}295

&amp; Up

Good selection roll end remnants $3 .99 up

antiques and collec

Misc. Merchanlse

$995

Sq. Yd .

53
Antoques
ATTENTION
liM
PORTANT TO YOU) Will
pay cash or certified check

54

111-N~ Qllilll
115-fllr All " tipple Coethtl

V1ew home• on nice cor

ner lot, In Middleport.

Sl•es from 4x6to 12K40

t=========:;l;::==:;:=====:::;t=~======
1.----------,

46
Space lor Rent
TRAILER spaces for rent
Southern Valley Mobile

1\UNdllt will

1

LAND CONTRACT ..!..
Large Two Story River

For personal lntorvoew contact John c. Hall TOLL
FREE at l-100·7·2 5f03 or CALL COLLECT
'I-S13·32J-"21, Monday through Froday, betwpon
I:H a. m. -4:30p.m., or write Olan Mol•. Bo• 300,
Springfield, OH 45501, ATTN. John H•ll
E.O f MT

•

1 acre land. JUST!
$16,200
APPROVJOD
FOR
FEDERAL HOUSING
LOAN - NEW CONSTRUCTION
3
bedrooms, living room,
kitchen, ulllily, and
garage.
Electroc
baseboard heat JUST!
$39,900.

with nice remodeled 3

General welding &amp; cutting,
quality work, competitive
rates, portable. F'phone
992·2535.

IF YOU NEED IT
FIXED,
WE CAN DO IT!

utility Buildings

works good. 304 773 5013.

round comfort in ali
electrtc, 2 bedroom
home on approx•mately

stocked. Call tor showCHESTER -

SMALL

Village Manor Apartments
at992 7787

good conditoon JUST'
$16,000
'
NEW LISTING - Year

ment w1th
stone
f.replace, on lOIJ2 acres
with l'h acre pond,

12

. Building &amp; Repair

S1zes
"From 30x30"

12ParkSt.
Middleport, Oh.
Ph. 992·6263
Anyt•me
!1 16-1 mo

for senior citizens Contact

in Southern 01str~ct In·
tenor needs redecoratmg - exterior is In

Realtor

ex

Farm Buildings

PWMBING
AND
HEATING

52
CB,TV, Radio
_ __,E"'q"~"'lp~m,_e,n,.,tc___
BROWNING Base CB, 2
ptece transmitter. and

POMEROY,O.
99f.2259
NEW LISTING - 4
bedrOOI)1S, 2 story house

M.-5-30 PM

992-S682

AKC Regostered poodle
pups. 2 small m•nlature
1 have two lots &amp; two vaults and
1 toy 1 female, apncot
on Meogs Memoroal Gar- 1 loght
chocolate brown
dens for sale, real cheap male, 1 dark chocolate
tor S600.oo Phone 992 5927. brown male. After 5 p m
Also wtll sell farm, 20 992·296.7
acres on Long Hollow
Road

HOBSTETIER

Pens1on Plan, , Long
Term Disability, Has

V.C. YOUNG II

\
Unfurnished one bedroom
apartment for rent Ren·
ters assistance avaolable

Real Estate- General

Full Tome, 11 to 7 nurse,

9A

~~=========1~2=4~1~m~o~~~~~P~o~m~e~r~o~y~,O~h·~==~i::::::::::::::10:7::tf:;c '
ALL STEEL
KAUFPS
AL TROMM

• • • • .I..J

General

Hrs. : Mon. Fn .

electr1cal work

992·621Sor992-7314

.............. ..... .

only

- Auto and Truck
Repa1r
- Transmission
Repair

(Free Estimate•&gt;

UNFURNISHED apts in ~46
SpaceforRent
Middleport &amp; Pomeroy. COUNTRY MOBILE Home
992 7511 or 992 6130
Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy Large lots Call
Large 2 bedroom furnoshed m7479
apartment $200 per month
plus utilities 8 3 weekdays.
,, ,
992·5545 or after 7, 949·2216

Zip Up a Poncho!

I'

remodeling
-Roofing and gutter
work
-Concrete work
-Piumb,ng and

Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992 "7583

3 ANO 4 RM turnoshed ap
ts Phone 992·5434

Housing
Headquarters

w1th experJence 1n ICU ,

If vou wan! an opportunity that comes rarely In a

ll-II!;(IYiffftl

'"
••'·"•

bedroom

7 ROOM HOME. 2112 acres,

ATTENTION: MEN AND WOMEN

12-,lumiNRe &amp; I'I;UVIftltl

""'"

Phone
1-(614)-992-3325
NICE
COUNTRY
HOME - Peaceful 3

Beautiful three bedroom
ranch brock home on Baum
Addition, Pomeroy, Ohio
Gas heal, central air con
dltionlng Call 985 3814 or
992 2571.

Help Wanted
GET VALUABLE training
as a voung business person
and earn good money plus
some great gifts •s a Sen
tlnel route. carrier Phone
us right away and oet on
the eligibility list at 992·
2156or992 2157.

•u:RVICES

Rates ;;;IRtOtlWI&gt; Information

_ 216 E. Second Street

Old stock certlflcales from bath, 2 mobile homes,
companies no longer In Mason, J bedroom never
business. 1 614 992 5017.
lived In, 2 bedroom, rented
2 acres. John Sheets, 3'12
Wanted to Buy class rings, miles south of Moddleporl,
wedding bands, anything Rt. 1.
stamped, lOK, 14K, or 18K
gold Sliver coins, pocket Tratler lot tor sale, fs,ooo.
watches. Call Joe Clark at Modular
lot on Route
992·2054 at Clark's Jewelry 7, three home
bedroom
farm·
Store, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 house located on Route
7.
992 2571 .

OH.

tensive remodeling
• Electrical work
e R ooftng work
12 Years

Tv~~~L~.~~tJ3· ~::~~:nt

acre, 6 rooms, 2 baths, llh
acres, 6 rooms basement,

21

I

I,

I

AutoParts

" 11-AU'- ..... lr

2 HT.M Dauy
1t NoonlaturAy
torM .... 't

....
I I ' !::::

42

WANTED TO BUY :
forRenttrailer In
3 BEDROOM
GOLO,
SILVER,
Southern Valley Mobile
PLATINUM, STERLING
COINS, RINGS,JEWELR·
Home Park, Cheshore, Oh.
9~2 3954
Woll accept
Y, MISC. ITEMS. ABchildren
SOLUTE
MARKET
F'RICE GUARANTEO. ED
BAR 8 ER 1 - - - - - - - - - - . . , . . . - - - - - - - - . . ; . - j l O x 55 two bedroom mobile
BURKETT
home near Racone 992
SHOP, MIOOLEPORT,
OHI0992 3~76
5858
18
Wanted to Do
31
Homes lor Sale
OLO COINS, pocket wat1975 two bedroom trailer,
ches, class rings, wedding NEED New celi&gt;ngs or wall NICE TWO bedroorn house excellent cond1t1on located
bands, diamonds Gold or paneled or new floorong? with three car garage in In the Country Mobile
sliver. Call J. A. Wamsley, Reasonable rates Call Racine. $33,oo.oo. 949 2801. Home Park $175 oo per
No Sunday calls
742·2331. Treasure Chest 992 2759.
month, SIOO oo deposit No
Colo Shop, Athens, OH. 592pets Serious calls only
6462
OLDER House on 87'Kl56' Phone 247 3942.
lot behind Burger Chef
USED FURNITURE. Gold Furnace repairs, electrical Please call992 34511.
&amp;sliver, class rings, pocket work, plumbing, mobile
watches. chains, diamonds home or residence 992·
1 bedroom
trailer, fur·
nlshed.
$125 piusutilotles&amp;
ads
&amp; so on Copper brass and 5858.classlfled
General
Real
Estan
Wanted
to
do
small
deposit
992
7479
batteries, antique Items,
also do appraisals, com· business bookkeepong In
- -- - - - - - - - - - - - - ,
plete auctioneer service. my home 992 7274 after 5
Housing
Unfurn.shed 3 bedroom
Over 3 years experience in
Real EState
trailer, located south of
business. Will buv com
Headquarters
Middleport 992 6637 bet·
plete estates Also take
ween9 4
consignments. Auction
every Friday night, 7 p.m. 3~1'-......2H~o!!!m~es~f!.!o~r.:S~a!!le:.__
ossoe's Auction House, 10 ROOM brick, 3 baths, 1'1•
44
Middleport, Oh 99:1-6370

eroy,

.,

Nice 4 room house with
garage for rent 992 2502

&amp;.t.ccn...-•

want-Ad Advertising
Deadlines

II' I

business Will buY com
plete estates. Also take
consignments. Auction
every Friday night, 7 p m
ossle's Auction House,
Middleport, Oh 992 6370

614-992·2104.

11-Homalm~N"DVemtf'ltl

II·
1
I'

7I-AUhtt fOr lala
71-Yans&amp;4W.D.
74-Motlrcyclfl

l:t-~arms fer 'Sat•
14-IIU..MII luiiCUrtll
u-Lih I AcrNfl
16-R•IIstateW.flttcl
11-Jtlllten

29 __ _ _ _ _ _ ,

Over 30 years experience In

•

::====::=::::j;::==::~:~-:-:-:::-:::;:r;:========:',
ROUSH
"YOUNGS
ROGER HYSEll'S
CARPENTER
CON~UCTION
SERVICES"
~IR
GARAGE
• New Homes - ex - Addons and

ter, gas heat, central atr,
Phone «8 3821 or «8·2555

13
Insurance
AUTOMOBILE
IN·
,.SURANCE been can·
Lost your
LOST: Black and tan male celled? license?
F'hone
dog In Pomeroy or Mid· operatOI''S
992-2143.
dleport area. 992 7698.

.TRANSPORTATION
n-

USED FURNITURE Gold
&amp;sliver, class rings, pocket
watches, chains, diamonds
&amp; so on. Copper brass and
batteries. anllque Items.
also do appraisals, com·
plete auctioneer service

potallzatlon

'

992 2288
One of Middleport's fooest
homes offered tor rent,
lhree bedrooms, large kotchen,
din ing room, uv!ng
room~ family room, one &amp;
one half baths, basement,
garage with storage cen

LOST
Norwegian
Elkhound. Picked up in the
Rutland area by Miller
Grocery S~re. 742 2147.

u-stte1 &amp; ,r,...nhtr

. ,....,

ments Call after 6 p m

716JJ

GUNS HOOT Sllonsored
by the Racine Volunteer
Fire Department, Satur
day evening 6:30 at the
11uildlng In Bashan
Shotgun and rifle shootmg
matches lo be held
Shotgun factory choke only
ana 22 rifle open sights on
IV
Lost and Found
Lost, Walker coon hound In
the vicinity of Horse cove,
Carmel Church area. If
found call m-5776.

"-Trv&lt;:lls r.r Sate
61-LIYHtock
66-Hay &amp; Gnln •I ~

11-H"'" for Sale:
J2-MOfNJtttom•s

bedroom furnished apart

11

B uszness
• • servzces
•

TWO BEDROOM unfurnished
house, also
two 1'
bedroom furnished
&amp; one

dollars, sterling, etc .. wood
ice boxes.tars antiques,
etc. complete households.
Write M 0 Miller, Rt 4,
Pomeroy, OHl or call 992·

peri nee
Contacl:
Teresa Callons, RN
VETERANS MEMOR·
IAL HOSPITAL, Pam·

61-Wantecl to luv

eREALESTATE

'

silver

Baileys Bargain Store In
Middleport will be closed
December 29 to January 5,
1981 .

6

61_,arm lqulpmenl

21-OttPorfunlty
"'''""'
22-Moaey to LMn
U-l'ntfnsionlll
S.rvkn

1

Radio lflulpment

I1-Ht1Pw1 nttcl

e FINANCIAL

23. _ _ _ _ _ _
24.

1.

1
1
I

t-P'ytfUc Sal•

15-lchoolslnstructlon

3. _ _ _ _ __

6. _ _ _ _ __

4._S,.ce for Rft'lt
'47-Wanttclto Rtnt
41-lq~~tiPmtnt for R..,l

eEMPLOYMENT
SI&gt;RVICES

22,, _ _ _ _ _ _

4. _ _ _ _ __

i-Lolt 1nc1 Found

9--Waated to Bur . •

1 _ _ _ _ __

1

45-FRooms

&amp;AuctiCifl

I
I
I
I
•~
I
18
I
19
I
20.
I
21 _ _ _ _ _ _ 1

Wanted
For Sale
Announcement
For Renl

41.4itt~Ht for Renl

lorRent _A
...,_Aparlmltnt•r•ttlt

7-Yanlhlt

1
I phone number '' used
1
3
6
10 1
results Words
I
I You'll getd beller
dav do s days days
I of you escro be fu II y, -+~:!..f-=.l~~'-=f~,
give price The Sentinel

eRENTALS

4~/ltHomes

4-GiYUWIY
J-Happy Adl

lewelry,

commensurate wtfh

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

I

I
)
)
I

Starling January 5, 1981
Bailey's Bargain Store In
Middleport will be open
three days a week, Mon·
day, Friday, Saturday
from 9·5. Closed Tuesday,
WEdnesday, &amp;ThurSday.

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

Name-------------------1
Address _____________.;......_ II

rings,

The Dail Sentinei- Page--11

41 _~
H~o~us~e~s..!:fo!!.!r!..!R~en"!'!t__

They'll Do It Every Time

IRON AND BRASS BEOS,
old furniture. desks, gold

lmmedoate Openong

PHONE 992-2156

I•

These cash rates
anclude d1scount

Racine Gun club dues for
1981 payable now Must be
paid by Jan. 1, 1981.

WANT AD INFORMATION,

wnte your own ad and order by ma11 with th1s I
coupon Cancel your ad by phone when you get I
results Money nat refundable.
I

I· Pnnt one word m each
I space below Each on
1hal or group of f1gures
I counts
as a word Count
I name and address or

'

Card of Thanks

1

of 6" serv1ce ~ewer; 3'25 prescnbed, in accordance
l1neal feet of 8'' sewer pipe;
110 line• I feet of 8" sewer an' woth the plans and
casong pipe; 45 loneal feel, specificat1ons
of I" sewer 1n bored hole, a - I B&gt; A Payment Bond lo&gt;
sewel"age lift station;
manholes; and all ap. an amount equal to 1(.'10%
purtenances.
of the est1mated cost oTtile
The est1mated con - work conditooned tor the
struction cost for thas payment by the Contractor

same by all partoes entotled Oraw1ngs, Spec1f1cations
to use the same .
•
Contract documents
Oeed Reference . Volume and
235, Page 199, Metgs : oun taken from the above of
flees, the full amount of
ty Deed Records
Also, all stock 1n trade whtch w•ll be refunded
and tangible equipment upon return of same with1 n
and persona I property thtrty 130) days after the
S&gt;tuated '" and abO\It the b1d opening The successful
bus1ness known as Young's bidder may retatn h1s
M~rket,
located m the Drawmgs for further use,
Vollage of Middleport, and
hos deposit refunded
Oh&gt;o. The security Interest
Checks shall be made
of the vendor on the per
sonal property shall also be payable to the V•llage of
evodenced by a Security Middleport, Ohio
Agreement covering both
Each bidder shall be
the personal property sub required to f1le wtth h1s bid
1ect to thos agreement plus a certlfted Check.,
any after acqutred rroper
tv and 1nventory, 1 bemg Cashier's Check or
1ntended that th1s shall Proposal Bond tor ant
mean equtpment. fixtures
and mventory of mer
chand1se

EVERYBODY
Shops the

The proposed work under
No 51 '" sa1d village,
described as follows this Contract consists of the
of
ap Begmmng at the southeast constructton
corner of Lot No 52 on proKomately 1060 loneal feet

I
I
DEC.l3
I
Sarah AdkiCIS, Harold Anderson, t
Elmer Belue, Mrs. Stephen Carter t

i\1 1'• O''IHH

as

angles to the left 7 feet;
thence at right angles to
the roght 51 teet to the west ·
lone of Lot No. 51; !hence
along the west line of Lot
No . 51, 24 feet to the south

nyson Shephard, daughter, southwestern

iVlacKnJl;l.t

known

To the EKecutor or Ad·
m1nlstralor of the estale, to
such of the following as are
residents of the State of
Oh io, vi z - the surviving
spouse. lhe next of kin, the
beneflclaroes under the
woll ; and to the attorney or
attorneys represenllng any

I reserves the right to
I classoty, edit or reject
I any ad Your ad will be
&lt;
I put in the proper
Bmms
1
claslflcatlon •f you'll
Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Alli.son, son,
check the proper box
Pl. Pleasant; Mr. and Mrs. Ten- ll below

and daughter, Homer Circle, John
Cox, charles Exline, Virginia Hill,
Robert Hites, Hazel Jornitan, Vernon Keels, Susan Kelley, Amanda
Little, Minerva Livmgston, Harry
Pugh, Dora Queen, Barbara Roush,
Mrs. Darrell Sayre and daughter,
Mary Stapleton, George Starcher,
Stollie Stowers, Loren Sutton, Nora
Townsend, Orville Wiseman, Edith
Withers, Mrs. David Wright and
daughter.
DEC. It
Tammi Angell, Mary Boster,
Mary Campbell, Oscar Collings,
Gladys Davis, Tracie Drain, Darrell
Fellure, Martha Frye, Marvin Gardner, Mrs. Ken HarriS and son, Mrs.
Rick Kelly and deughter , Cheryl
Leach, INel Mayn,trd, Gary M1Uer,
Evelyn 1\0Jthgeb, Randle Sunpson,
f' ranciSSpn• '' · Jesse Wood
BIRTHS
Mr. and Mrs Rrwcr Alfred, son,
!W v~nswuod ; Mr. and Mrs. Zach•ry

Pomero -Mirldlcport, Ohoo

! •~--~W~•~n~t~ed~~~~~u~yL-__

Reagan's budget watcher
skeptical of new programs
WASIDNGTON (AP) - The man
President-elect Ronald Reagan has
chosen to be his chief ljudget watcher and federal pennypincher can
be expected to be highly skeptical of
new or larger subs1dies to fanners
Reagan announced last week his
norrunation of Rep. David A. Stockman, R-Mich., considered at age 3'J
one of the brightest young members
of Congress.
Stockman IS a leading advocate of
"supply-side" econonncs, which
calls for the use of tax cut.• to spur
mvestment, raiSe productip ty and
employment and redllce1ntlation.
He also, as outlined m a letter two
years ago, can be a stem cntic of
federal farm programs and what he
called " cry -baby commodity
groups" that keep asking for government help.
Stockman's comments were lll·
eluded lll a letter Dec. 28, 1978, to
Agnculture Secretary Bob
Bergland, m which the congressman
expressed "my unabated outrage"
at a recent Agnculture Department
deciSion to prop up the price of Idaho
potatoes
" After you spread the taxpayers'
and consumers' gravy on the
Russets, where Will you stop next '
Broccoli ? Thrrups' Peppemunt' "
he wrote
Other comments from Stockman's
letter mcluded
-" I'm begmrung to wonder JUS!

-

December 15, 1980_

December 15, 1980

Pomeroy - Moddleporl , Ohio

type,

shepherd type, black &amp;
tan; hous. broke medium
soze dog ready ~ be laved;
lovable mixed breed m ·
626JJ.

........... , ........ .
. ..... . '""' • , _. ..... .n.•

Dozer &amp; dttcher work, land
clear.ng, water ltnes, gas
lines, grate work Char11e

Halfoeld 742 2819
71
Autos for Sale
1976 Honda four speed,
good condition 42,000 84
Electrocal
m 11 e s ,
r a d 1a 1 t i r e s
_c_&amp;,_,R,e!!fr-"ig.,e,_r_,a!!t'"'oen ___
S2,450.oo. Phone 742 2211 SEWING MACH INE
before5 &amp; 742 2201 after 5
Repairs , service, ali
makesl 992 2284 The
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
1971 2 door Monte Carlo, Aulhomed Singer Sales
automatic, bucket seats. and Service. We sharpen
350 V·8, p s, disc brakes, Scissors
am·tape stereo. After 5
p.m 992· 2967
ELWOOD
BOWERS
REF'AIR Sweepers,
toasters, Irons., all small
MGB white black top 1976! appliances Lawn mower
am fm, 8 track, best offer. NeKt to State Highway
992·2470 after 6. Nova, 197~. Garage on Route 7, 985·
3825.
~dOOr. v a, radials, cass.l·
te, green·whlte top, $1,800
or best offer. 664 4493 after APPLIANCE SERVICE
6.
all makes washer, dryers,

PUREBRED English
Shepherd puppies Stock 1975 lfranada, 78,000 miles
and watch dogs. Phone 247- $1,200. 247·2761
2161.
1973 GRANO PRIX 2 dr.,
2 AKC registered poodle am lm, bucket s.ats, runs
pups 1 black male for $125. good. S400 01' best offer.
1 chocolate' female for Sloo.: 304-773 5013
9 weeks old Call anytime
at 992-7102
1975 Lincoln Continental,
fully equipped, low
mileage,
reasonably
1, 8 month old male, ' priced. 992·2502
registered Blue Tlck &amp;
Blue Tick pups, 8 weeks
1971 MONTE CARLO. Best
old 949· 2545
offer over S250 00 992 2542

ranges,

dishwashers,

disposals, wale• tanks. j:ali
Ken Young at 985 3561 28
years experience Also wtll
sell parts YOU I IX
15
General Hauling
AGRI LIME Sprea•
limestone and loll
hauling Leo """rrls
~455.

TRASH

•

HAULI NG ,

SyracCJse, Rock Sp r in~~s
FIa !woodS Rd . 992

Lawrence Manley Jr

�,Page---12

'_December 15, 1910

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The DailY sentinel

to: The

P~meroy

Senttn•·l

Legislators Jace budget cuts, new taxes

COLUMBUS, Ohio, (AP) - ~he
Legislature fi!ces the . prospect of
dealing with calis by Gov. James A.
Rhodes for both state tax increases
and a budget cut.
Rhodes is to make the recommendstions on how the state should
deal with a severe economic crunch
during a joint session of state
representatives and senators today
at4p.m.
Traditionally,Rhodeshasopposed
increasing state taxes. But a $500

have ~teadily been climbing during
the last two decades.
Although the average Ohioan's annual income rose 320 percerit in the
20 years from fiscal year 1969, the
amount of state taxes he paid jumped 582.4 percent, according to the
department.
In other words, the average
Ohioan paid $74 of his 1959 income in
statetaxes.Twentyyearslater,that
per-capita state tax total had increased to $431.

miUi!ndeficit'IJytheendofthe(iscal
year, June 30, 1981, llUIY leave him
little choice.
State law prohibits ending the
yearwithadeficit._
Sources say a 5 percent cut in the
state. budget, along with the 8 percent cut already in effect, would
save more than $200 million. A onecent increase in the sales tax would
raisemorethan$200million.
AcheckwiththeOhioDepartment
of Taxation reveals that state taxes

Statehouse sources indicated that
Rhodes may .favor a series of ternporary tax increases to deal with the
state's financial dilemma.
The governor mllY seek, in addition to a higher sales tax, hikes in
the rate of taxes on cigarettes and
corporate franchises.
Budget cut proposals would be
aimed at keeping layoffs to a
minimum, especially in programs
which provide direct services to
people and education, a source said.

But the program could coot 'as
~ny as 5,000 state employees thetr
JObs.

,

chemical phthalic anbydride was being carried In ooe
of the 13 cars that jumped the track. Officials
evacuated a small. area around the scene 8Dd closed
several roads through tbe area. (AP Laserpltoto).
three sisters, Mrs. Sandra Sue Little
Middleport; Mrs. Dorothy German,
Newark and Mrs. Shirley Smith,
Rutland; several aunts, uncles,
neices, nephews, and cousins.
Funeral serices will be held WedPomeroy; four ;'te)&gt;"sons, Roger nesday at 1 p.m. at the Walker
Bolen, Londonderry; Max Bolen, Funeral Home, Rutland, wt' th the
Pataskala; Harold Bolen, colum- Rev. o. H. Cart officiating . •Burt'al
bus, and Jac k Bol en, De_.
Mer; a will be in Mhes cemetery. Friends
sister-in-law, Mrs. C. E. (Bessie)
th f
may ca 11 a1 e - uneral home
Stout, Albany, several grand- anytime after 2 p.m. on Tuesdsy unchildren and great grandchildren.
til hour of service. The family will
Funeral services will be held Wed- receive friends Tuesdsy from 2 to 4
nesdsy at 1 p.m. at the Jagers and
d7t 9
Sons Funeral Home, AthenS with the an
.p.m.
Rev. Willard Love officiating. Burial Salem A. Yates
will be in Alexander Cemetery.
Salem A. Yates, 60 , Racine, died
Friends may call at the funeral Saturday morning at Veterans
home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9Tuesday..
Memorial Hospital.
R 0 b ert L.• Dugan
Mr. Yates was preceded in death
by his parents, three brothers, and
Robert L. Dugan, 44, .Rt. I, his wife, Louise Fuller Yates.
Rutland, died suddenly at Veterans
He is survived bYthree duaghters,
Memorial Hospital Sunday morning. Joy.ce Ann Bla~k, Huntington; SamMr. Dugan was born in Coshocton, mie R. Doering, Worthington, and
June 29, 1936 to the late Joseph P. Sharon Critsinger, Shadey Valley,
AndG
B km D
Tenn.·, three brothers, James E~
race ee an ugan.
uMr. Dugan was a construction ward Yates, Hialeah, Fla.; Trwnan
worker most Qf his life and was a Yates, Valdosta, Ga. and C. H.
member of the Fratxrnal Order of Yates, Barboursville, W. Va.
Eagles.
Funeral services will be held
·
He is surivied by two sons, Bailey Tuesday at IOa.m. at Ewing Chapel.
Joe (Buddy) Dugan and Ronnie Lee Burial will be in Mound Hill

PROBE TRAILER B&amp;E t
The Meigs County Sheriff's Deparbnent is investigaling the breaking
and entering of a trailer in Olive
Township believed to be owned by
Phillip Ridenour, RD, Coolville. Nd
other information on the incident
was available.
The department reported that the
chain saw 'taken from the Keith
Molden residence, Rt. 1, Rutland, op
Sunday, Dec. 7, was recovered Sunday afternoon.

TOXIC SPILL - A Monroe, Oblo fireman steps
over a broken
lie on as an Oblo EPA inspector
looks o~er chemicals spilled ;when a train derailed In a
sparsely populated area near Monroe Sunilay. The

rnil

~-_A_r_e_a-D-ea__
th_s______,l
W. D. Kelton II

h ld this
·
F unera I serv1ces were e
·
f
Will'
D
'd
monung or
tam av• KeIt on
II, 78, who died in Holzer Medical
.
center Sa turday mormng.
Mr. Kelton was a retired railroad
worker for the Chessie system with
56 years service .
He had been in failing health the
past few months.
Mr. Kelton resided near Eureka.
He was born May 10, 1902, at Gadsden, Ala., son of the late William D.
Keltoo I and Mary Ellen Thomason
Kelton.
He married Edith Mae Frazier.
She preceded him in death in 1976 ·
One son and one daughter
preceded him in death - William
David Kelton Ill and Juanita Kelton
Hodell.
. t
F our broth ers and t w0 SIS ers survive : Austin Kelton, Gallipolis ;
Aaron Kelton, Virginia; Frarik,
Texas; Thomas, Florida; Inez and
MarJ'orie, bothofFiorida.
Three brothers and two sisters
preceded him in death. 0Five grandchi Id r e n and t w
greatgrandchildren survive. He was a
member of the Modern Woodmen of
America Lodge.
Funeral services were tinder the
direction of Willis Funeral Home.
Rev. A. H. MacKenZie and Rev .
Monte Sheets officiated. Burial was
in Reynolds Cemetery.
Frien&lt;\s may make contributions
to the St. Peter's Episcopal Church
building fund.
Pallbearers were Davin. Tim,
Michael Kelton; Catherine Hodell
Servaites, Charles K. Hodell and
Austin Kelton.

Otto 0. Hoffman
Otto L. Hoffman, 79, Jackson, formerly of Middleport, died Saturday
eveningatHolzerMedicaiCenter.
Mr. Hoffman was a retired
superintendent of the D. T. I. Car
Shops in Jackson; a 50 year member
of the Masonic bodies and a member
of the Middleport Church of Christ.
He is survived by his wife, Mary
Hem Hoffman; two sisters, one
brother and several nephews.
Funeral services will be held
Tuesday at 11 a.m. at Eisnaugle
Funeral Home with the Rev. Nathan
Thomas officiating. Burial will be in
Gravel Hill Cemetery. Friends may
call at the funeral home at 4 p.m.

~rQthers,CharlesE.andGeorgeL.

Mr.Stout was born in Vinton County, he attended Waterloo Town.!!bip
Schools and had been a farmer in l.l.e
Dexter-Albany area.
Mrs. Bernard (Loretta) Allen, Rt. I,
Albany aoct Mrs. Paul Dale IMary
tUen) Jagers, Boca Raton; three

The Middleport Child Con.
servation League will meet Thursday at 6:30 p.m. at the Meigs Ipn.
Following the dinner a gift exchange

Democrati~ntrolledSenate.

· And the governor may face
problemsingettlngmembersofhis
own party to support tax increases. .
Sen. John Kasick, R-Colwnbus,

will be held at the home of Susie
Soulsby. Devotions will tie given by

I
1
I!

~--.G
.....oad t~ December ~1, 1980

I·

1

'

SPECIAL PIICISI

FRIGIDAIRE
~
REFRIGERAlORS .1
DISIMASHERS
MICRO-WAVE OVENS

I
I.
I
I
I
W
I
II All V«)()D TABI ES II
I
I
I SALE $299 I

While Quantlhs .last.
Quontlty rlghti res•rved
.
W• are not r•sponslble for typogrophlcal •rrora.
Sorry,.No dealers.

SETOF3

J Our Reg; 129 Each

\THE

~

5

runs~ HOOVER SALE ·(I .
W ·C~l FBRITY Ill

1

I

Klein was taken from his Naylor's
Run home to Pleasant Valley
Hospital; at 7:58a.m. Craig Venoy
tak f
his h
Ro te 7
was en rom
orne on u
p
· 1
omeroy to Veterans Memona
H
'tal
23
Mrs
Bess!
1
4
, osp1 ; a : p.m. '
·
e
Rudisell was taken from her Legion
Terrace home to Veterans· JL...orial

I

I!!

II

l11!!l

I

58

I
II
K
Ill!

CONVERTIBLE
UPRIGHT

K

I

I(

K
I!!

AND 3 IN 1
IN POMEROY

NII.JON'SIIG. eu.M

=

•

!

CELEBRI'JY IV

W
II.

1
I
CUSTOM
VACUUM CLEANER · I
.'

•

NILSON'IIIO. n.77

I.

I

$219

WITH POWER MOWER 1
N07711::
.I ~

,.

·

~AKER_

I;I•
II:

II

fURNITURE

I
I OPEN EVENING$ TIL !
1 8 TIL CHRISTMAS III
W

WILL CLQSE

I(

AT 10 P.M.
TUESDAY' DEC.
16'1.
.
'UI

I
Iw
11

Ill

"WindSooB- By Prince Mau:habelli.Girlsthatwearitareun•
~-Men that aloe it
are~. ·
-.

I

CLOSING 5:00P.M.
' CHRISTMAS EVE

I
I

·
FREE PARKING

WHILE YOU SHOP
.

I

-

MONOPOLY.
~

ELBERFELDS

•

l .,

I

The I98I's are here.

II
And tele, tool
• Normail22 mm f/8) ana telephoto
(44 mm f/B IIens
• Sensalite rlash, automatic on-off, built -in
• Red and green r ady-lights in Viewfinder
• Built-in cover/handle •
• Full 3-Year W.arranty

IS ~aking .

new car loans. ·
We.will not be opett for business
. Dece~r26,1980

Farmers·

Bank

'

Mon.. Tues., Wed,. Thurs. Nlgltts 6:00-1:30
·

'

•

YOU TAKE THE PICTURE.
THE CAMERA TAKES CARE OF THE FLASH.

.

.

'

I

~~li!Wli!WII!IWI!IIll~II!IW-ta•SIII!IW•f.II!IW!I!WII!IW•••

••

.

"

The Farfners Bank

See otJr complete line of Kodak cameras and camera
accessories - Plus Kodak film in all sizes and flash
equipment. Be ready for picture taking at Christmas
t i me, ·

!II ·

YOUR CHOICI

II AITI FREEZE
'

I

I

.,••

NILSON'S BG. $7.M

1GALLON

.

I
I

. MM

'5~9

I1

·

~LIQN'JUO.

'

I(

I
I

v

•a••

..

I

~

'•

'

New
KODAK
TELE-EKTRALITE
600 Camera
With

11

~

III .
I
I

OPEN TIL 8:00 P.M.

i

•

.

K
I!!

tl! - - - - - - - - " " " : " -

·1

'23

•

11 .

II!

'68

tl!

.••

•

1

.

11

~

1
1

$

I!!

••

II

VACUUM CL£ANE.R

K

•

1II!

AIR RIDE

.I
i

&lt;

1

r-;==========~====~~~~~~~~--~~-=-=-~-=-=-=-~-;;-~~~~

'

b11ys; Mrs. Jim (Donna ) Nebo·

1CHRJS..MA$ I
1
·
I
1

The Meigs Medical Emergency
Service headquarters reported answering .nine calls for assistance I
over the weekend.
At 6:23 a.m. Saturday morning, 1
the transfer squad took Mrs. Marie
Watson from her home on Wetzgal
st., Pomeroy, to Veterans Memorial ~
Hospital. At 9:02 a.m. Amos Cross 11
was taken from his home on Wilvents Road, ftutland, to Veterans I
Memorial Hospital and at 12:27 a.m.
th t
f
d took lndl St
e rans er squa
. a one
from Mam' St to the Galllpolls tl!
'
"'
Developmental center.
I
On Sulxlay at 12:14 am.. Grover II!

with the Rev, Dewey King and the
Rev. Amos Tillis officiating. Burial
will be in Chester cemetery. Friends
maycallatthefuneralhomeafter7
p.m. todsy.

.
~~ith~;t~~~an, M;j~keri~~:~~ ~~ ELBERFELDS I·N PO'MEROY

Mrs. Ketth (l.ots ) Weaver, Colurn·

Emergency squad

member and attend the Senior
Citizens Center,
FuneralserviceswillbeheldWednesday ·at 1 p.m. at Ewing Chapel

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

.

Sale Starts Today

I J

DAIRY ISLE

Dugan both of Rt. 1, Rutland; one Cemetery, Gallipolis. Friend may
daughter, Pattie Kay Dugan, Rt. 1, call at the funeral home at anytime.
Rutland ; six brothers, Lowell Bobb, C
W U
Jr., Chillicothe; Harold Dugan,
urtis 0 . e
Hebron; Uoyd Dugan, Rutland;
Curtis, Wolfe, 76, Chester, died
La rry Dugan p omeroy, and Darrell Sunday at Veterans Memon'al
and Richard Dugan both of Racine; Hospital.
,...------....:__ _ _ ___:._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _--1

~

~..Jem-for

not v....,

w

N•;::-,-,=0.1•1.·

Mr. Wolfe was preceded in death
K
H
Ml:m
II!
by his parents, oward and Estells Hospital, a by the Pomeroy squad.l
K
Reefer Wolfe and one infant
At 9:31p.m. Bob Dugan was trandaughter.
ferred from North J&lt;ourth St., Mid- I
He is ljurvived by his wife, Goldia dleport to Veterans Memor~al 1
Wolfe; two sons, Uoyd of Akron and Hospital by the Middleport squad as I
Howard of Belpre; three dsughters, was Mrs. Lorena Ault of ~ South Ill!
·Mrs. Marlene Thompson, Colum- First St., Middleport.
i"'
bus; Mrs. Donna VBriMeter, Grand- r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiii1
ville and Mrs. Nora Hartman,
Chester; nine grandchildren, and
~.
fivMe greaWtlfgrandchildrentir.ed od
0
8 re
e wasfarmer.
IN ·MIDD.LEPORT
and r.livestock
He privasucea
I

°

i~:~ ~~·~~.:......,. I1
Fla., foflllerly of Albany-Dexter
area died Sunday afternoon at Boca
Raton Community Hospital.
Mr.Stout was preceded in death by
his parents, John R. and Alverda
Tedrow Stout; his two wives, Esta
and Winnie, two infant brothers, two

MEETS THURSDAY

~

Whether Rhodes can'summon the ' one.
legislative support n~ed to ap- ,........... . . - - - - - - - - prove such a. program 1B uncertain.· , .. • •· ,
w
It's believed that enough votes could
,,..
1
be rounded up in the House, but
there could be problems in the ,

Jurors were being seated this mor- JanetDuffy. .
ning in Meigs County Conunon Pleas
Court in the case of the State of Ohio
SE~DIVOR~
versus Vickie Lynn Rose, 24, Rt. 1,
A sult for divorce was filed . in
Dexter.
Meigs County Conunon Pleas Court,
Rose is being charged with
four marriages were dissolved and
aggrevated arson, a ftlony of the fir- one divorce was granted.
st degree, for having ·allegediy set
Janet Marie Hatfield, Rutland,
fire to the home of her father, Benny 'filed suit for divorce against Charles
Rose, Rt.l, Dexter, county road 4, in Raymond Hatfield, Rutland. ·
January of this year.
MEETTUFSDAY
Middleport Lodge 363 F&amp;AM will
meet Tuesday, Dec. 16, at 7 p.m.
Work in E. A. degree. All members
are urged to attend.

......,....e that
· ..._.......

Meigs County happenings. •
Jury trial underway

:~l~saldhedCN!Illl~tblnka

I,

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="214">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2804">
                <text>12. December</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="55348">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="55347">
              <text>December 15, 1980</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="312">
      <name>dugan</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="265">
      <name>hoffman</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2740">
      <name>kelton</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="713">
      <name>stout</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="14">
      <name>wolfe</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1168">
      <name>yates</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
