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                  <text>Council okays motor vehicle tax

"WINTER WHEAT-'
OIL LAMP
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HEIGHT ·

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33.0cm

BY KATIE CROW
Residents of Pomeroy Vill&lt;~ge will
be payirig an additional $5 for
vehicle licenses as a result ofmotor
vehicle l3x legtsh1tion approved by
Pomeroy Council Monooy night
The ordinance was.approved as an
, emergency measure with councilman Rod Karr · voting · in the
negative.
Karr said he Voted no· because
Pomeroy does not have a load limit
on village streets. He atso felt a city
tax would be ~lllore fair than the
vehicle tax. ·
The issue was brought up by Betty
Baronlck, council woman, who
reported that at :the· present time,
Potneroy has 2,50i vehicles which

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at y
BYCHARLENEHOEFUCH
Dan Morris, director of instruction
a'nd curriculum, was named
assistant superintendent of the
Meigs Local School District Mond&lt;IY.
night.
The appontment followed an holll'long executive session with County .
Superintendent Robert Bowen.
Morris was assistant super!&amp; .
tendent was given authority on a
limited basis to asswne the respon$ibilities of the superintendent in the
absence of David L. GLeason, con·
fined to Cleveland Clinic where he
underwent surgery last week.
The board also took similar action
empowering the assistant treasurer
to take over the duties of treasurer
Jane Wagner in cases of necessity.
Vote 9~ the measures was
unanimous.
At the request of Supt. Gleason,

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NILSON'S REG. tn.H

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Presldellt Cart~r speaks at a White House
• .Coqfeieoee M.ollday 011 U.S. coal exports. L!llteiliDg
.are Pb!Wppe
Julleulle, · aod Albert Vtaill, both of the French Technical Association
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1

WASIUNGTON (AP)
The
Senate voted approval Monday night
of a compromise version of the last
bill of the 96th Congress, a stopgap
spending measure to keep the
federal government running into

""'!

YOUR

·I

C!HOIQ

Preliminary figures show gain
WASIUNGTON-:- Preliminary figures from the U.S. Bureau of the
Census show that Ohio's population has increased slightly less than 1
percent over the past 10 years.
The bureau places the state's population at 10,758,421, up 100,998
from 1970. This year's total is subject to possible revision before a
final, official total is announced early next year.

aa~
NELSON!$ RIEG.
11.87

'
.
AKRON, Ohio - 'Terry Lea King pleaded guilty Monday to a
reduced charge of conspiracy in the slaying of !nillionaire Constantine
R. "Dean" Milo and also turned state's witness.
. Mrs.' King, 3.2, a former Akron go-go ooncer, was to have gone on
trial Tuesd8y on a more serious charge of complicity to commit
aggravated murder. She was indicted Oct. 27.
The conspiracy charge carries with it a possible 7-to-25-year prtson
term,, acCording to Surrunit County Common Pleas Judge Frank J.
Bayer', wh~ was to preside at the trial.

Utility bill applications' availabl~
COLUMBUS, Ohio- Applications are being mailed for a federally
funded program to help low-income Ohioans pay their home utility
bills.
.
James A. Duerk, state development director, said Monday that aJ}pUcation forms for the Home Energy Assistance Program are being
mailed to low-income reside~tts. Forms also may be obtained at state,
county and local goveniment offices, along with local community action organizati.ons.
The program provides funds for 21 percent to 63. percent of par·
ticipants' winter heating bills. The amount of benefiis is based on inC9ffie, family size, type of heating and location in the state.
The application deadline is Feb. 28, 191!1.

.'•

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A great auto acceaaoryll
Uses 4 AA P!lnlight batteries
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,PUf IIIPPI.

A~thorities

probe woman's death

'f9LEOO, Ohio- The Lucas County co~oner's office ts probing the
asphyxiation death of a 79-year-Old Toledo worruln.
·
·
Helen B. Ritzenthaler died Saturday night at St. Vincent Hoapit!ll in
. Toledo after a ·tracheal tube became disconnected from a respirator
three' different times, aaid Coroner Harry Mignerey. The respirator
was being used to provide Iristhing assiStance, he aald.
'
The disconnection should have set off an a~rm on the machine, birt
· did P.ot In two instances, Mlgnerey sald. Mrs. Ritzenthaler was.found .
deail after the third discoQnectlon, when the alarm did not sound, he
salll.

WeAther
&lt;

.

Partial clearing tonight. Lows near 20. Pprtly cloudy Wednesd&lt;ly.
1f1c11! in the mid-308. 9Jiance of jlrecipitatlon 20 percent tonight and
liN!' zero percent Wednesday. Northerly tQ northeasterly winds 111-15
mph tonight.
' EFI 1dedOiitoF-ut- ThurSdaythroughSaturday:Fairlind
mDd throulh the period. Highs in the upper 40s and 50s Thursday and
In the 001 and low 801 Friday and Saturday. Lows in the 20s Thursd&lt;ly
and in the 3011 Friday and Saturday.
.

residents of the district would have 29. At that time, a temporary BJl"
to approve a three mill tax levy. The propriations resolution will be adOJl"
approval would not mean any ad- ted ·and guidelines will be set for
ditional taxes for the residentS of the evaluation of the superintendent,
district while providing a cutback in · assistant superintendent and other
money sent to the state and thus personneL The organizational
providing the district with more meeting was set for 7: 30 p.m. on
money.
Jan.l
'
·
Frank did comment, however,
During the opening of the meeting,
that people should realize taxes will board member Robert Snowden
be increased through evaluation, but apologized for a near altercation
stressed that the three mill tax which occurred at the last board
measure would not increase taxes.
meeting. Treasurer Jane Wagner
The county auditor advised the ;· described the financial condition of
board on the necessary procedure to the district as "getting tight."
follow noting that permission from
Mrs. Wagner said this is the first ·
the state would have to be obtained time since the district was organized
before any action could be initiated. that bills had to be held over. She
Action Delayed
said the 1981 evaluation will be up.
After some discussion, it was Mrs. Wagner also reported three
agreed to postpone consideration of vocational classes are not being fun·
ihe resolution of intent until a ded by the state due to decreased
speeial meeting scheduled for Dec .

senators present focused action on
the House, whose reaction was ·
unknown.
In a related tactical manuever,
the Senate also sent to the House a
more costly companion ap·
propriations measure containing
hundreds of minions of dollars in pet
projects designed to satisfy individual senators.
'fhe House was,free to choose between the two versions. But the socalled Christmas tree version of the
spending bill was expected to lose in
the House, although all predictions
were chancy in a legislative standoff
. which has ·_ run far longer than
predicted.
The Senate actions Monday were
similar to votes taken by the House
Saturday night wben the principal
issue in the congressional con·

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I

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trontation centered on a · proposed
pay raise for members of the House
and Senate.
Congressional leaders generally
agreed that a prOposed $10,00()-plus
congressional pay raise was dead.
But negotiators continued to
wrangle over other amendments to
the spending bill, of which the pay
raise is only a part.
·
Still at ·issue were dozens of
Jnlscellaneous so-called Christmas
tree items the Senate stuck like or·
naments on the appropriations
measure, which has been bouncing
back and forth between the House
and Senate for several days.
The latest effort to permit ad·
journment of the ' lame duck
Congress called for stripping the bill
of all controversial items, a step that
presumably would permit swift

passage by the Senate and House.
The impasse developed when the
House went on record in favor of a
pay raise. The Senate rejected that,
but insisted on the millions of dollars
for pet projects for individual
senators.
As the night wore on, tempers
flared in both houses. Some senators
slumped in their seats, while others
were awakened and summoned
from home to provide the iil·vote
quonun needed to permit a roll call
vote.
Se1): Pete Domenici, R·N.M., said
the Senate surrendered too much in
negotiations with the House.
"I think we got a whopping bad
deal," Domenici said shortly before
the final vote about 5:10 a.m. EST
ended one of the toughest legislative
impasses of the past several years.

Leaders .check tax hike support.e rs

Pleads ghllty to lessor ch~ge

AUTI' VISOR.
liKE UP
I IIIII

_j

Hoping to Dreak a sustained
deadlock with the House and end a
prolonged lame-duck session, the
Senate ended several hours of
private negotiations by adopting a
"barebones" multi-billion dollar
spending bill.
"I·hope the House will accept \hat
(bill) so the measure can go to the
president, the agencies can continue
operating after midnight and the
House and the Senate can adjourn,"
said Senate Majority Leader Robert
'
Byrd, D-W.Va.
The voice vot~ with a mere 20

SELF STICK 1111

Meigs County · Auditor Howard
Frank met with the board to discuss
the district's bond retirement. ,
Frank traced the indebtedness from
1966 when the Meigs Local School
District contracted with the State
Board . of Education for over $2
milion to construct the Meigs High
School. He reported that $688,186.65
has been repaid.
Auditor Frank explained a
procedure of repayment in which
less repayment money can be sent to
the state for the retirement of bonds.
The state would be permitted to ke-ep
about three mills of the four mill
bond ~tirement money. This would
mean $245,000 would come to Meigs
Local resulting •in a savings for the
district of over $1 million during the
payback period..
Continuing, Frank said if the slate
would approve such a plan, then

Senate okays stopgap spending bill
1!181.

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Morris given promotion

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BLOOD PRESSURE KIT

building ts condemned and must be
demolished, council must have the
funds to pay for the l!ecessary work.
He also added that if the owner fails
to cooperate, the amount of the cost
may be put on the ·owners tax
duplicate. Anderson .was given· the
go-ahead ·to proceed with the
· proje&lt;;l. ·
. Council also gave thtee necessary
readings to an ordinance.to increase
the wages of the water meter reader
from $2.94 and liour to $3.10 retroac·
live to Dec. I.
Larry Wehrung, councilman,
reported complaints had been
received concerning cable TV receJ}tion. Wehrung requested that Dick
(Continued on page 12)

enttne

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio Tuesday, December 16, 1980

NELSON'S REG.

; QIECK MATE;.

and (4) Survey of the park property.
Council voted to purchase the
Girolami property for $7,500 and of·
ficially requested . the village
solicitor, Fred W. Crow, take
possession of lands of unknown
origin.
John Anderson, councilman,
reported he had talked with the
village solicitor concerning the
restoring or tearing down of old
properties Utat are hazarado.us to
the health and well being of residents.
Anderson said the first step.was to
appoint a legally qualified building
inspector to condeinn or restore-cer"
tain buildings in the village. Secondly, Anderson pointed out that if a

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vo1. 11, No.172
Copyrighted 1980

$7.99

Buckeye Hills JWgional DeveloP. pany.
Mrs. Jane Walton, clerk, rePorted
ment had not been submitted,
Reed
Will had informed her that all
therefore denying the village any
had been checked and
hydrants
hope of obtaining the proposed grant
{
lubricated.
'•
for the senior high building .
CRITERIA
NEEDED
Young said Pomeroy's apHarold Brown, cauncilinan, read a
plication, due to an over sight,. was
letter
from David Retser and David
left in the lUes at Buckeye Hills.
Bassett,
architects, concerning
Young indlcated Pomeroy would not
progress
on
the mini,park developbe receiving any federal funding fo~
ment.
thts ftscal year and that it will be
The architects listed !our items
necessary to walt until the next funwhich needed to be finalized in order
ding period.
Young also reported he had at- to proceed with a grant application.
tended a meilting of the Board of They included: (I) Purchase o( the
Public Affairs and Mt the board was Guido Girolami property located on
in "good shape" financially. Young Butternut Ave. ,(2) Use of property
did ask for,a maintenance ref)ort on belonging to Historical Society, &lt;a)
Properties of unknoWn ownership,
all hydrants from the water com·

e

.NILSON'S RIG. Mt."

'•llrclln Cage
•Windmill
·
•Plano
•Gramaphone

require.license plates. ·
Tlie additional $5 will increase the
income for the village itt the amount
. of $12,505. It was stressed that
. money from the $5 tax will be used to
repair and pave the streets within
the village. The.new tax goes into ef- ·
feet next month.
(;ouncil, in other business, agreed
to free the parking meters ffoin
WednesdBy, Dec. 17, through Wed·
nesd8y, Dec. 24. Council asked that
persons employed in Pomeroy be
espeCially conSiderate and not park
at the free meters; but to continue
parking where they normally do.
Bill Young, councilman, an·
nounced the winterzation grant submitted by th&lt; : ;e .-. through

'

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Senate about $250 million in taxes and about
leaders of both parties counted the same amount of new cuts.
From five to eight Democrats, the
heads tod&lt;ly to see if there was sufficient support for a tax hike informal polling indicated, might
requested by Gov. James A. Rhodes agree but only if the Republican
to wipe out a state $496 million backers included those senators who
will be up for re-election in 1982.
budget deficit.
There are eight Republicans up
Majority Democrats went into
for
re-election in 1982, and
caucus shortly after the Senate conDemocrats
said they do not want
vened, and Republicans indicated
those
senators
to use the tax break
· they would do so later in the day.
as
a
campaign
weapon
against their
Various infonnal polls indicated
that a shaky coalition of about eight candiootes.
'It thus appeared evident that it
Democrats and nine Republicans
would take alot of concessions to put
~ht be put together for the 17
votes needed to approve the tax the coalition together and
Democrats said there was a chance
hike.
But there were strong conditions for it to all fall apart.
Gov. James A. Rh.odes proposed
being attached by those willing to
support the increase, said Sen. Paul · $395 million in tax increases to the
Legislature on Monooy, marking the
E. Pfeifer, R·Bucyrus, said.
first
time the four-term GOP gover- ·
He predicted no more than three of
oor
-c
has
advocated· openly an in·
four Republicans would go along
crease
in
state
taxes.
unless the governor's propos81 for
The
spotlight
turned immediately
·~ million in temporary taxes and
to
the
Senate,
where Republicans
an additional f101 Jn!Uion in spenand
Democrats
said they would
ding cuts is given a better mix.
"I think It would hitve to lie more caucus tod&lt;ly to determine how
much support exists for Rhodes'
, cuts and less taxes," Pfeifer said.
He IndiCated the makeup should be plan.

The package would be combined
with $101 million in spending cuts to
OVJ!rcome a state budget deficit that
Rhodes now lists at $496 million.
Senate President Oliver Ocasek,
!).Akron, said he wanied to know by
tod&lt;ly if 17 members of his 33.-person
. cbamber favored the tax hike.
"It (the tax increase) either goes,

or that's the end of it," he said.
"There's no use horsing around."
Ocasek, who withheld his personal
opinion about the plan pending the
caucus, said he was not optimistic.
"I have never been optimistic about
getting 17 votes for a tax proposal at
anytime," he said.

Southern board offers
,A reward of ·ftiOO is· being offered
by the Southern Local Board of
Education for Information leading to
the arrest or conviction of person or
pei'SOilll breaking into the Southern
High School on Dec. 5.
Meeting rue.ctay night, the Board
took that action along with hiring
four substitute. teachers and a
regular bUll driver. Added to the
substitute Ust wete Joseph Myers,
Nick Linscott, Donald Eichil!ger and'
James Wright. Ernest Spencer was
employed as a bus driver.

'•

During the meeUng the Board aJ}-

proved the procedures for
evaluation of the administrators,
principals and head teachers, along,
with the job descriptions. Also ap- :
proved was a ~t of authorized staff
for ae&lt;:ess to students records. The
Board also reinstated the students
personalooy.mroactlvetoSept 1.
The . financial statements,
minutes, bill and activity fun&lt;l re!~fr·
ts were all approved. The meeting
recessed until7 p.m. on Dec. 29.

RHODES DELIVERS BUDGET SPEECH•- Obio Govenaor Jllllel
A. Rhodes !iddrall!l 8 jolat letiiOII fJl tbe Illite lec~Jialllni In Colambu
Mooday as Seute president O~ver Ocaselt, left,,aod HOUle speaker V,er1181 Riffe Usten. (AP Laserpboto).

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Commentary

The Daily Sentinel
Page,-

LA .(Rams) Cowboys, 38-14

2

I

ANAHEIM, Calif, (AP)- The I.lls
Angeles Rams, displaying productlve passing by Vince Ferragamo
and strong running by Jewerl
Thomas, gave the DaU811 Cowboys a
taste Monday night of what my lie
ahead for thell\. should the 1\!ams
meet again in the National FootbaU
League playoffs.
·
The Rams whipped the Cowboys
38-14 at Anaheim Stadium to assure
themselves of an NFC playoff berth
as a wild card team. The Cowboys
. had qualified earlier. They most
likely they will square off as wild
card teams in the opening round of
the playoffs.
·
Five of their last nine meetings
have been playoff games, with
Dallas holding a 3-2 edge, but the
Rams were 21-19 winners tast year.
Ferragamo, still suffering from
bruised ribs he received a week ago
against Buffalo, hit touchdown
passes of 40 yards to Billy Waddy, 34
to Preston Dennard and I to Victor
IDcks.
All told, he completed 15 of 25
throws for 275 yards, with no in-

.[

:Losing one's economic
point of reference
When the prime rate hits 20 per- moving CPI is so volatile now that
cent you begin to 'lose your per- its rise in just one month sometimes
spective as. well as your shirt. You exceed the changes for entire years
know that 20 percent is high, but how ·. during the early 1960s. In fact, so
high? Would you believe it was 2per- swiftly do prices change today that
cent in 1949?
few people can say what a can o!
Losing one's economic reference beans "should" cost.
point is conunon today, because
They find it difficult also to relate
most of the usual measurements of to the size of federal budgets
economic health are bouncing deficits, to increases in retail sales,
around like a dinghy in a squall.
to declines in productivity, to the low
It took 17 years, until1966, for the rate of savings ... maybe even to
prime rate to reach 5 percent. But in their own paychecks.
less than 8 months this year that
For the sake of perspective, consame measure of borrowing costs sider this: In fiscal1974 the fedenil
fell from 20 percent to under 11 and budget deficit was $4.7 billion, but in
then back to.20 percent.
fiscall980 ft was $59 billion, and the
Where it will go from here is really combined deficits since 1974, ina matter of guesswork. There are cluding the anticipated deficit for
some who foresee 30 percent, and fiscal1981, will exceed $300 billion.
others who say the rate is now close
Such contrasts give some into its top.
dication of direction, and probably
Whichever way it moves, you may serve as navigation guides of a sort.
be certain that nobody for a very But now hear this: All those big
long while will have any idea of budget numbers are to some extert
where the prime rate "should" be.
distorted by inflation. And for rough
More familiar, but equally con- calculations, the CPI is a measure of
fusing these days, is the consumer the distortion.
price index, a measurement that
Those budget figures ·include a lot
from 1959 through 1965 never rose as of inflation. The dollar used to
much as 2 percent in a year. Even in measure deficits today is not the
1967 it rose only 3.4 percent.
dollar used to · measure deficits
That latter year is important, yesterday. Its like measuring the
because it is the base year for deter- depth of the snow with a 12-inch foot
mining relative prices. For most . one day and a 11)-inch foot the next.
purposes you can pick any year, say
And the same distortions apply to
its prices equal 100, and then the level of retail sales, to the
measure future changes from it.
measurement of gross national
Since the federal government product, and of course to the nation's
chooses to use 1967, we are able to income. Your paycheck proves that
calculate that prices today are at an when you take it to the store.
all-time level of 254.1, or that they
No wonder at all that people feel
were in October. That is, according adrift in unchartered waters. All the
to federal officials,, retail prices buoys have lost their anchors and
today are about 2 and a-half times the landmarks have faded into the
what they were in 1967.
mists. And we sit here lost, wonNevertheless, the once · slow- dering when the fog will lift.

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The Toyotas and Datsuns have landed
By Don Graff
·of total German sales during the finds itself at a disadvantage in the sununa'ted all over the place.
Japanese cars to the right, period. In Britain, imports were up confrontation with the Japanese who Renault is acquiring a 20 percent InJapanese cars to the left and down 15.5 percent and the Japanese s!iare have, as "Europe" observes, "the terest in Volvo of Sweden and the
on the docks more coming off the of the market hit 12.3 percent. right product at the right time, at the two, with Peugeot ol France, are
boats by the hour. ·
(Figures courtesy of the American right price and just about joint owners ol a new bigh
Imports up 24.6 percent during the edition of "Europe," the Conununity everywhere."
technology eitgine plant. Renault
firsth alf of 1980 with .panicky magazine.)
The twofold European response to has also acquired a major Interest In
domestic automakers pressing for
· Why? The Europeans, unlike the challenge is instructive. A American Motors. Italy's Flat is
Detroit, have a long tradition of holding operation American committe! to a multi-billion-dollar Inrestrictions.
Yes indeedy, the crisis sounds building the smaller, fuel-efficient automakers would dearly like to tegration of Itallari, Spanish, Polish
familiar. Only in this instance we cars that are the wave of the present copy discourages imports. France and Brazilian facilities.. The
are not discussing _ Detroit's the Japanese are so successfully . and ltilly are holding the tightest JaJI!lOOse challengers are allo Indesperate · battle against the riding. But Europe also has a line, with the first setting a limit of 3 volved, with . British Leyland and
Japanese onslaught but the almost tradition of fragmented, jealously percent of the total French market Honda plannlhg a joint British
identical plight of Wester Europe's national enterprises and of govern- and Italy mandating a ceiling of operation and Alfa R~ and
· auto industryu.
. ment intervention that may start out 2,200 wehicles annually. Britain Nissan parties to a simllar Itllllan-The Toyotas and Datsuns have with the best of intentions to aid limitS imports to 11 percent of the based partnership.
also landed at Bremen - and Liver- troubled manufacturers but more of- home market. West Gennany,
The Europeans are alao updating
pool and Le Havre and Genoa. ten than not ends up preserving ob- which has·had no restrictions, is un- their assembly lines, Introducing the
Japanese exports to the nine- solete operations that can't make it der ineiel!sing pressure to join its robot technology that Clllltrlbutel so
member European Economic ·com- , on their own in a competitive neighbors.
heavily to Japanese efficiency. With
munity, after a somewhat later market.
The more importalit self-help ef- colisequent reduction in the labOC
start, have ·been climbing as rapidly
Britain being the most painful fort is in another area, however. The force. The future industry will be
as to the United States.
case in point. World-famous MG, a European producers are making teclmology intensive, but offer far
While the Community-wide welfare case for years, earlier this strenuous efforts to break out of fewer jobs.
_
figures are impressive enough, for year joined the lengthening list of their self-created self-containment,
The purpose of the Europeans is
some illdividual countries they are, closed plants. The British industry, expanding and internationalizing survival, not to give J.essona. But
from the local point of view, horren- once number twe, is no longer a real operations. They have realized, such are there to lie dra:wn.
dous. Japanese sales during the contender in wotld markets.
again in the words of "Europe," that
Meanwhile, back in the United
year's first half were up 43.3 perc~nt
As a consequenc~ of the piecework "not only are small cars beautiful, · States, there are Japanese can to
in West Germany. Japanese nature and uneconomic structure of but bigger companies are better."
the right, Japanese cars to the left
vehicles accounted for 15.5 percent much of the European industry, it
Multi-national deals are being con- and down on the_docks ...

"""'

Tis the seaso:n to scream about ·SS
"NEW RIGHT! NEW RIGHT! That's all we pver
hear these days. What about the OLD right!? "

Today in history. ..
. ..

..

Today is Tuesday, Dec. 16, the
351st day of 1980. There are 15 days
left in the year.
Today' s highlight in history :
On Dec. 16, 1773, the " Boston Tea
Party" occurred as American
colonists protesting taxes disguised
themselves as Indians, boarded a
British ship in Boston harbor and
dumped 342 chests of tea overboard.
On this date :
In 1770, the German composer,
Ludwig van Beethoven, was born.
In 1916, Gregory Rasputin, the
monk who wielded powerful influence over Russia's imperial
family, was assassinated .
In 1944, a German attack began
the "Battle of the Bulge" in the Ar-

-'..
..

dennes area of Belgium during
World War II.
,
In 1964, Sen. Edward Kennedy of
Massachusetts waiked out of a
Boston hospital where he'd spent six
months after breaking his back in an
airplane crash.
Ten years ago: Six people were
killed in rioting over price increases
in Poland.
Five years ago: Sara Jane
Moore's plea of guilty to charges of
attempting to assassinate President
Gerald Ford was accepted in federal
court.
One year ago: Tehran radio calle~
the desposed shah's departure from
the United States to Panama a victory for Iran.

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Oblo
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DEVOTED TO 111E INTEREST OF THE MEICS.MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETI'
PubUIIIer

PATWJDTEHEAD

BOBHOEFUCH

A11btut Pablilber/Coatroller

•

Gcoenl Mllu.1er

DALE ROTIIGEB, JR.
NtWIEdJtor

..'.

'•

__

A MEMBER of The AIH&lt;Iale&lt;l Preto, IDiaad Dally Prao
Americaa Newapoper PubllJIIen Allo&lt;la~...
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1ZJTE111 OF OPINION an "'lcomed. Tiley olloaltl be 1eo1 IliaD lit w-loq. AU
lollen 110 IUbjeet lo Nlllq IDCI IOUI bo '&amp;IIDed wiiiiiiiiiO,- IDII le. . .
- · No . .lped letlln w1D be poibllllled, Collen l1lould be ID load lute,addrilolq

.._ ...

. .

By William Stelf
It's the season for a lot of
screaming about Social Security.
For example:
- On Jan. I the employee's and
employer's payroll tax rises from
6.13 percent to 6.65 percent; the
maximum amount of yearly earnings subject to the tax rises from
$25,900 to $29,700.
- A columnist writes "the Social
Security retirement trust fund will
be bankrupt by 1982"; a similar inr
pression is conveyed by a new report
of the Joint Economic Committee of
Congress.
- The President's Commission on
Pension Policy asks· that the
retirement age for full Social
Security benefits be · raised
gradually to 68 by the year 2012, an
idea endorsed by President-elect
Ronald Reagan's Social Security
task force.
- The task force also proposes
phasing out extra benefits received
by non-working spouses, changing
the initial benefit formula, cutting
living-cost increases and ending the
"retirement test" so retirees can

work without losing any Social changes in benefit fonnula and pany collects interest-earnings
Security income.
living-cost raises, spouses' benefits premiums for 30 or 40 y1!81'11, then
In short, we're being subject to a - will get a most cautious overhaul starts payhing you or your survivors
barrage of undigested facts and from Congress, and some may not an BMuity or lump swn. Social
rumors that can scare many people be touched.
Security is a pay-:as-you-go system,
counting on Social Security. Let me
Congressional caution is typified With nearly 100 milllorl active
offer a little balance and a mild by a bill President Carter signed into workers paying $153 bUlloo yearly to
suggestion to Reagan.
law in October. It ''reallocates" . 35 millloil folks who, for one reason
First, the balance:
money to Social Security's or another, aren't working. •
- Social Security is not going retirement and survivors fund from
That's what the Jan. llncrease Ia
bankrupt, Congress and the its disability fund for 19110 and 1981. all about. In the worst case, the ru111e
president's branch of the govern- This me'ans more has been coming will cost a fellow who earns ~.900
ment won't let it go bankrupt. In the into the disability fund than was in 19110 and $29,700 in 1981 about f400.
system'S 45 years 'congress and suc- being paid out, while the reverse Note that he's. getting a wage Incessive presidents have shifted -its was true of the retirement fund. All crease of $3,800 from 19110 to 1981, so
direction dozens of times to make that money, and Medicare funding, the $400 lsn't too much of a hardship.
sure it has enough money. The new comes from the place marked
chaps will do the same. Bet on it.
• "FICA (Federal Insurance ConMy suggestion to Reagan:
- Thirty years from now there'll
tribution Act) on your paycheck.
Stand up on TV and uplaln wllat
be more jobs for older workers, and
Tht reason for "allocation" was Social Security ls, how It operates
older workers' health will be better inflation. When retirees got a, 14 per- and wl)at you are going to do to
than that of people now in their 608 cent living-cost increase in mid-1980, make It run better. The presidentor 70s. Older workers in the year Social Security had to pay out $16 elect has bright people on hla task
2010 will live longer. So it makes sen- billion instead of the $8 billion it had force. But neither they ncir the
se to raise the retirement age a figured on. Bui not as many were people in Congress wbQ understand
couple of years. But none of that af- disabled as had been forecast, the system, Ilk"- Reps. J. J. Pickle,
fects workers now in their 40s, 50s or leaving extra money in the disability I).Tex., or Barbara Conable, R-N.
608.
fund.
Y., or Sen. Ruaae1l Long. D-I..., can
- The nuts and bolts of Social
These funds are not trust funds, In undertake the role of nati~ uSecurity policy - retirement test, the sense that an insurance com- plainer. That's the pn!sldent'a job.
'

The battle l)gainst infant formula

The Daily Sentinel

GOING DOWN- l.GII Allgeles Rams left end Jack YoliJJgblood (.85)
grabs Dallas Cowboys quarterback Danny White (11) to bring him down
for a loas In the first half at Anaheim Stadium Moaday night, ( AP Lase!'
photo).

By Robert Walters
WASHINGTON (NEA) - Insensitive U. S. diplomats and an intransigent Swiss corporation are un·
dermining a United Nations effort !O I
abolish worldwide abuses in the
promoting,
advertising and
marketing of infant formula.
·At issue are the aggressive, uncontrolled and - often misleading
sal~s techniques of an infantformula industry whose gross annual revenues now approach $2
billion,
Approximat~ly half of those sales
are made in the Third World nations
of Africa, Asia and Latin America,
where sanitation levels and consumer awareness often are
abysmally low while poverty and
illiteracy can be exceptionaUy high.
In those countries, there are an
estimated 1~ 'llillioo CUM eveiJ

year of infant malnutrition, disease poration does distribute cal)dy bars, warded Its recommendations to the
and death due to Improperly ,tea ~.;offee here under ItS own World Health Aaaembly, which boldl
sterilized bottles, inability to follow lllime 811 well 811 Stouffer frozen BMualiiiMtinp. .
printed instructions 'for formula use foods, Beringer Brothers wine, Ub"Chances ol our lettin&amp; thl
and simUar causes.
by, McNeill and Libby canned foods desired ~es are virtually iiro,"
· In many cases, company-IJIIid and scores of other consumer Items. the delegatloo at the
lut
"milk nurses," ' free samples
After years of protests about In- May warned f~ ol·
~buted by health professiQilals
dustry marketing practices from . flclala In a cable that u1ct tbere and hard-sell advertising induce the church, consumt!r and citizen "ablolutely no llllppOI't" 111111111
parents of newborns to abandon groups, the World Health . other nau-· clelepUCD 111c1 tw
breast feeding, only to discover that Organization and UNICEF, both "our tacUc Ia interpretl!d a a dmea
they're irrevocably committed to United Nations organlzaUons, con- to delay .. ogrl!lll ... (and)-to protect
buying an expensive product that's vened a 1979 Geneva meeting on the multinatl~ COl pondiCD." .
Inferior to mothers' nillk.
IBsue.
·
Although a number of U.S. conr
NeStle, which accounts for apThe pi-opOelld . code, to .. paflles --' including American Home pl'Oiimately half of all lndultry sldered qaln It lllld .,_... Wtrld
Products, Abbott Laboratories and sales, said prior to the meetiJ18 that Health Allembly, dOil ,........ a
Bristol-Myers - sell infant formula It "fully supports the WHO.UNICEF . shitt.ln empbula away 1hm 1 1111&amp;around the globe, the dominant finn conference and wD1 abide ·by any datory inlemltloall code of (OM ....
is the Nestle Alimentana Co., baaed Wllfonn (marketing) gulde1inee that for JII'G!IIGtiD8 Infant "'--a lD
In Vevey,,Switzerland.
· the conference propGIIII ..."
favor ol 1 .......,., code db
Nestle doesn't sell fonnula in this
The COIIfelfJIIC8 endoned a lleril!l NlltrttltiCD and llllcUIIM be4 -.lj:
country, bjlt the multinational cor- of sweeping ~· then foe- mlybylndlvldualgovaml

meeunc

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Kentucky
retain top spots

NEW YORK (AP)- PePaul, Kentucky and UCLA maintained their
stranglehold on: the top three spots in
The Associated Press college
basketball poll Tuesday as defending national champion Louisville a surprising victor over then No.4
Maryland last week - returned to
.the Top 20 despite its 1-3 record.
DePaul, S-0, claimed the No.I ·
position for the third consecutive
week, collecting 32 first-place votes
and ,1.150 points from a nationwide
panel of sports writers and. broadcasters. But the Blue Demons, who
posted easy victories over Northern
Illinois an&lt;,! Texas last week, do not
have much breathing room.
Preseasqn favorite Kentucky, M, is
just 12 points back after getting 23
first-place votes.
And the Wildcats are gaining
moJI,lentum.
·

i~

•"

dressed to his new wife, his ex-wife,
his two children and Snodgrass was
found In a nearby briefcase.

.'

"'

"' Meigsmatmen
.,··:
.. finish fifth
'~

TRIMBLE .._ The Meigs
"" Marauder grapPlers competed in
·~
the Trimble Wrestling Tournament
over the weekend and took home a
fifth place fb\ish, led by Troy Bauer,
s... who was the lone champion. The
t.J, tournament was filled with quality
t: matches.
-:i;
Of·the teams participating Water••· fonl 'emerged the champion with
·~ · · 178.5 points, Fairfield Union 134.5,
"~ Nelsonville-York 124.5~ Trimble
-:-: 118.5, Meigs 102.5, New Lexington 78,
·" ·Amanda 68.5, and Vinton County sill.
•
TroY put forth a great effort for
•;!C
the Marauders, winn\ng two matches by pins OVEtr Aaron Docie of
Trimble and Joe Uuffman of New
Lexington. In the championship
final, Bauer won easily over chuck
Huston of F!lirfield Uulon.
Other place finishers for M~lga
s!' were Scott Harrlaon placing fourth
u . at 98, Brill King fourth at 1115, Brian
"Bauer tourth at 138, Doug Neece
·· ~(i' .· fourth
at 1M, Scott Hartinger third
.
" .. at 1•12, Mike Willford third at 126,
:.. and Brian King at 132.
·
-M.
Otb'er Melga wrestlers parI£
Uclpeting ivere Mike Jacbon who
~.r. won one match, Steve Carson who
1s· wu defeated by eventual cbamplon
'Y.l
Kern, Bill Powell who was defeated
;,. . by Ule nanner-up In hla clala, and
BNCe Brickle&amp; who wu also
defeated by the runner-up In hla
.g~
dlvillon.
'
In . W~rfonl'~ Tom Kern wu named
a , tbe JllOil outstanding wrestler of the
-4$ ~- Kern ousted Brian King In
l'.1u tlle.COIIIOiatlon bucket.
IIi
Mll&amp;l will travel to O..pealle
dll. · thla Slturda.Y for a 12 t-.n tour·1 btlll ' nament. Wrestling stanut lla.m.

SNOW BITER®retreads
at economy prices!

Including Fed. Tax
No Trade'lli Needed

Dallas defensive end Harvey Martin said only, "We were all just
mixed up tonight. Ferragamo had a
great night, but we contributed to it.
He has a great offensive line, but we
were not playing defense. We just
made too many mistakes."
Quarterback Danny White, who
completed nine of 23 passes for 147
yards with three interceptions and
three sacks, said, "We really played
badly. It was a team effort to get
beat like that. They took it to us
early and we never got back into it.
"When we meet them in two
weeks, it will be a different story.
We didn't practice well during the
week. We should have expected

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Last week; DePaul held a 32-20 first-place vote advantage over Kentucky in the poll and a 24-point
margin, Two weeks ago, t)le poll
gave the Blue Demons a 36-15
margin in No.I ballots and 1,171
points to 1,065 for the Wildcats .
UCLA, W following a triumph
over Pepperdine, was third, being
tabbed No.I on two ballots and
receiving 1,039 points.
Oregon State, S-0, and Virginia, 50, each moved up a slot and took
overtheNo.4and5positions, respeclively. ~ Beavers got one No.I
vote and 988 points, while the
Cavaliers, who grabbed the final
No.I ballot,amassed963points.
Notre Dame jumped three spots
and took over the No.6 position with
693 points following its upset victory
over then-seventh-ranked Indiana.

TRADED - San Diego pitcher
Randy Jones was traded to the
New York MeiB Moaday for pitcher John Pacella and utlllty
player Jose Moreno. (AP Lase!'
photo).

GIVE THE GIFT
THAT WILL LAST ON
AFTER CHRISTMAS.

,--:.._----------1

"I don't want to live with my
lifelong (unintelligible) of driving
everything away, with making
myself and other(s) miserable. I
just don't enjoy life anymore. I must
have a right to end It," the note said.
SnOdgrass, a business associate of
Gregg for the pas&amp; 8¥.. years, said
that while Grelg was highly
energetic, he also had been concerned with his health following the
accident in Paris last June 10. Gregg
was driving to the track to qualify
for the 24 HoUrs of LeMans when he
swerved into a ditch to avoid a car
that had pulled in front of him.

'~ head.
A .38-caliber gun was under ·r-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1
his left leg and a suicide note ad-

r.\·
..,

·

this."

:; . Race~ G~gg suicide victim
.•
PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla.
"' (AP) - A business associate lf
., Peter Gregg, the all-time leading
winner ·on the International Motor
1'
Sports Association GT . cham" pionship circuit, believes Gregg took
his own life because he was despon~ dent over an accident that kept him
... off the traek. ·
!~
The associate, Bob Snodgrass,
says ·the veteran sports car driver,
who was found dead Monday on a
northwest Florida beach, never fully
recovered from the effects of the accident.
Gregg, 40, was found shot in the

-

terceptions.
·
Ferragamo said his ribs hurt him,
but his offensive line saw to it that
Dallas defenders made a minimum
of meaningful contact.
"Jackie Slater and Doug France
(the offensive tackles) did a fantaslic job protecting. me, ••
F'erragamo said. "Nobody reaUy
touched me aU night. Not direct,
anyway.
''Thoma§ was fantastic. He adds a
great additional dimension to our offense."
The 5-foot-10, 223-pound speedster
fr,om San Jose State showed great
acceleration in piling up 147 yards on
16 carries.

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Pomeroy,O ..

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�_,

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Pa

The

p

Sentinel

Ohio

, pecember16, 1980

Gregg, man of pleasant surprises ·
CINCINNATI (AP) ~ Forrest
Gregg, lhe new coach whose tough
reputation had the Cincinnati
Bengals quivering before the
season, has turned out to be a man of
pleasant surprises.
" I don't know thl\,l I' ve
mellowed," Gregg smiled Monday
after his team had won its third
straight game. The team is now S-9
and appears to have turned the corner after two 4-12 seasons although
they have no hope for the National
Football League playoffs.
"I don't see that I'm different now
than before. But maybe I have structured things a little more to t~e
needs of individuals," he said after
calling off Monday.' s practice
because of the snow. The. Bengals
beat the Bears at Chicago 17-14 Sunday in overtime.
Greg admits that discretion was
not his long suit when he coached in
Cleveland. He said he used to chew
out individual players during team
meetings. Now he has individual
conferences with them.

"We had a player this season who
had a string of games that I wasn't
too happy with and he wasn't either.
I brought him into my office and told
him personaUy. I don't know
whether it was a lack of confidence
on his part or what, but I thought after we had our talk. you could see a
change in him," Gregg said.
Gregg was hired to 'straighten out
a team that had a reputation as a
quitter and believes he has done the
trick.
"I didn't know how they were
going to react to discipline. I didn't
know how much effort this team
would give. This has been a big plus.
"I think our players believe in
what we're doing and there's no quit
in them. They play hard for 60
minutes. A lot of times in the past
eight weeks, they could have tossed
in the sponge. But they didn't. I
would hope that any team I coached
wouldn't quit, but that's to their
credit, not to mine," he said.

· ·I I'S OUR 15th

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Santa George
inks Winfield

NEW YORK (AP ) - Yankee
Stadium may not be the Bronx Zoo
any more but New York City is still a
lion's den, The source lor that information is Reggie Jackson , who
was on hand Monday for the end of
Dave Winfield's cross-country
baseball odyssey.
" I'm sure we'll talk and rap about
how to deal with the city," Jackson
said shortly after Winfield became
the richest free agent in baseball
history, signing with the New York r----------------------.,..----1
Yankees lor a reported 8-10 years at
something approaching $1.5 million
a year, yet insisting he could have
had mere from other teams .
"It's a lion's den," Jackson said of
New York City. " It's the greatest
place to play, but also the most difficult. It can be Disneyland or it can
be hell."
The 29-year-old Winfield, who opted lor free agency alter starring
with the San Diego Padres for eight
frustrating seasons, is used to the
latter atmosphere. He was roundly
booed in San Diego last season after
announcing his intentions.
" I'm not worried about that," he
said. "After what I went through my
final year with the Padres, I think I
can handle justaboul'an)1hi'ng. I enThe Perfect Gift
joyed the time I spent in San Diego,
but now I am anxious to see how 1
perform with the motivation of
playing for a championship contender."
For that reason, Winfield S&lt;~id he
chose the Y.ankees over remaining
in the National League with the
crosstown New York Mets, who
staggered home fifth in the NL East
after three consecutive last-plac~
finishes.
During Winfield's eight-year
career ·in San Diego, the Yankees
14-KARAT
won four American League East
Division titles, three pennants and
two world championships while·the
Padres finished as high as fourth
only twice.

BODY
CHAIN
by~

GOlD
CHAIN

'25

J OINS UC STAFF

CINCINNATI (AP) - New
University of Cincinnati football
Coach Mike Gottfried has appointed
three of his former aides at Murray
State University to his staff.
They are Ron Zoo, 26, a former
Miami Univer.sity player, defensive
secondary; Tom Walsh, 30, quarterbacks, and Tonunie Liggins, 28, a
former Cincinnati . star, running
backs.
Gottfried said he would announce
the remaining five assistants during
the Christmas holidays.

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TEA -

ROYAL (:REST VIT. D
or2%·
lf2 GALLON

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APPLES
~:r.~::.~·r.- ::;."'::
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SALE 11U5 •

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Plus Tax &amp;

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Ut.t~

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umbo Roll Pa r Towels
FRESH PRODUCE

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BRAUtiSCHWEIGER...... lb. 79 BOI.OGNA (Piece)
SUPERIOR FRANKIE$ ···· lb . 99~ Store Sliced BOILED HAM ••••lb. '2.39
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•

By WID Grimsley
AP Correspoodeot

9-ll chops

PORK LOIN •••••••••••••••• J~- 1

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"
~·

Today's

SIGNS WITH YANKEES Dave Winfield, the most expensive free agent in baseball
history, signed Monday with the
New York Yankees. The Yankees
outbid the New York Mets lor the
slugging outfielder. Winfield has
a career batting average of .284.
(AP Laserphoto) .

WE WILL CLOSE DECEMBER 24 AT 6 P.M•

•

..'

SANTA

l

Leave it to George Steinbrenner. Steinbrenner pleaded innocent to the
The man has classic timing.
charge of spreading the econo!Jiic
Ten days before Christmas, the pneumonia.
New York Yankee owner played
" It's not George Steinbrenner's
Santa Claus. One week to the day af- money," he said, sounding oh so sinter Commissioner Bowie Kuhn war- cere. "It's the people of New York's
ned about the siege of free agent- money. The fans, ... 2.6 million of
created "economic pnewnonia" them last year. They enabled us to
plaguing baseball.~ Steinbrenner sign Winfield.
,
gave Dave Winfield all but the Bronx
"People talk about my desire to
side of the Triborough Bridge to win, but you should add two words to
autograph a Yankee contract.
that- 'for New York."'
Ho, ho, ho! .
Right about there, you'd expect to
Not to worry, Bowie. Steinbrenner hear Frank Sinatra's recording of
assured all listeners that Winfield " New York, New York" in the
would not be the highest paid player background. It's a shame George
in baseball.
didn't think of it.
"Oh no, n he said. "I'm sure Dave
For the signing of Winf1eld, SteinParker and possibly a few others brenner paraded out the some of
make more. "
Yankees' best names. Willie RanBut that's not what they were dolph, Reggie Jackson and Rick
saying in other corners of the room.
· Cerone showed up for the
There was testimony, for exam- coronation. So did Yogi Berra and a
ple, from Dick Moss, an expert wit- couple of the scalps that hang from ·
ness. Moss serves as Winfield's at- Steinbrenner's belt.
torney and sat in on most of the talks
At one table sat former manager
with Steinbrenner. He also Dick Howser, who was in town for a
negotiated the $1 million a year free
Yankee organizational meeting. He
agent contract for Nolan Ryan with
is a scouting supervisor now after
the Houston Astros last winter.
resigning as pilot a couple of weeks
"I called Nolan last night and told ago. His resignation was not unexhim the pressure's off," said Moss.
pected and it was graciously ac"He's not No.1 anymore. "
cepted by Steintirenner, who alter
But who would be so crass as to
all, would never force a man to
discuss money at an historic
manage the Yankees against his
moment like this ? Certainly not Win- will.
fie ld.
Also on hand was Mike Ferraro,
"There are market values for
once the Yankees' third base coach
anything," he said. "In San Diego, I
until Steinbrenner found a better
had a different value. It's like apassigrunent lor him. He was seated
praising a precious stone. This is my
on the first base side of the room.
value in New York. I plan to conHowser and Ferraro are the
tribute on the field and off."
ghosts of seasons past. Winfield is
Certainly not Steinbrenner.
the ghost of seasons future. If Tiny
But there were some noseybodies
Tim .. . or Bowie Kuhn ... had been
in the audience who insisted on linaround, he might have said, "God
ding out about dollars and cents.
bless us, one and all."

The DailY Sentinei-Page'-5

•

...••

BE THE BEST

The low point of the season was the
loSs to the Miami Dolphins in the last
minute of P111Y. He had the opportunity to break a few players but,
instead, installed an intramural
volleyball league.
"That was a real biow to us. I
didn't think that was a time to belittle or berate anybody. It was a time
to show some compassion," Gregg
said.
But that doesn't mean the imposing Texan with the withering
glare has turned soft. '
"I don't think you can worry about
being liked.· You have to do what's
best!or the team.
'
·
. " I try to treat everybody the
same. regardless of the position they
play or their role on the football
team. Rules are for everybody, not
changeable as the situation dictates.
" But maybe I've recognized that
there are some times when you have
to have some counseling of individuals," Gregg said.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'

992-2635

...

'12'·

'

'

'

$100

SUPER MARKET - OPEN DAILY 9 TO 10 P.M.
SUNDAY 9 TO 10
We

Federal Food Stamps...: We ~eserve The Right To Umit Quantities
"'

•

,,

�,•

Page-8-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

ASTRO
GRAPH

Around Metgs County
PLAY TO BE
PRESENTED
A Christmas play will be held at
, the Calvary Bible Church, County
Road 25 between Flatwoods Road
and Chester Sunday, 7:30p.m. There
.wilJ be recitations by the children,
and a play by the teens and adults.
Pastor Pastor Alan Blackwood invites tile public to attend.

CHRISTMAS PROGRAM

SET
Annual Christmas program of the
Morning Star United Methodist
Chw:ch will be held at 7:30p.m. Sun·
day at the church. The Rev. Floren·
ce Smith extends· a welcome to the
public.
FREE CLOTIIING DAY
The Gallia-Meigs Cornn'lunity Ac·
tion Agency will hold its free
clothing day for low income persons
Thursday, bee. 18, from 9 a.m. until
noon. The agency's clothing bank is
now located in the old high school
bl,lilding in Cheshire.

Ohio

LET'S PU'r THIS
SURVEILLANCE PHOTO
IN WITH FIVE OR
SIX OTHeR$, . AND
SEE IF WILLIE
WHEELER CAN
PIC"\' IT OUT.

Dec:emlbtr 17, lJIO
Many new friends are likely to enter your.
life Uilil coming year. Chances are you wiU
be very .popular with :several groups which
have totally unrelated interests.

NEW ARRIVAL
Mr. and Mrs. William M. Weaver,
the former Betsy White, Middleport,
are announcing the birth of their
third child, a son, Anthony Joseph,
Dec. I, The infant weighed eight
pounds, 12 ounces and was 21 inches
long.
Maternal grandparents are Mrs.
Margaret E . White and the late Earl ·
W. White, Jackson, and tbe paternal
grandparents are Mrs. Wilda
Brinker and the late Chester M.
Weaver, New Haven, W. Va. Mr. and
Mrs. Weaver have another son, Bill,
and a daughter, Christina.

THIS IS HIM!

THIS IS THE GUY~

EVENING
8:00

(I) BACKYARD

1&gt;6

THE MOEIS.T ER ?AGS FROM

JU"'T STAY RIG~T THERe, PAL,
VIHIL.E 1 6eT MV OTHER 1\RM

J;;ASY'5 .P.OlJNDtiOLlSE PUNCH. E:ASY SRA&amp;S HIM BY THE HAIR -

AND L.EG FREE~

II

the most of it in both areas.

Becll.UR

willin&amp; than others

. BORN~Eit

IIBY, Tllmi, ::Sf&gt;.re I

IJOI' BAD, OR81e,

HQW '{'COl f.) I'?

LEO IJilly el-Aug. %21 Y()U'te just a trifle
mGre popular today than other members of

NAME OMITTED
CHRISTMAS PARTY
your peer gup. Circumstances could unfold
NEW FLAG - The Gallia·Melgs Fraternal Or\ler
The name of Tedd Wiles was unin·
tenbach, flnit trustee of the Fraternal Order of Pollee,
WEDNESDAY
so as to show you the value of being liked.
of
Pollee
has
received
a
new
Dag
from
Congressmau
tentionally
omitted
from
the
Harry
Lyons, new Jl'e&amp;ldent; and Ray Manley,
The annual Christmas party of the
VIRGO (Aug. !l&amp;pt. !2) Finishing that
which
yOu
start
will
give
you
an
enonnou.s
Miller.
The
Daj:,
which
bas
Down
over
the
Clarence
secretary-treasurer.
Pomeroy
Elementary
School
honor
Middleport Ama leur Gardeners will
sense Qf achievement today. Try it. You'll
Capitol, Is displayed here by, left to right, Steve' liarsee exactly what I mean.
be held at 8 p.m. Wednesday at the roll listing .
home of Mrs. Harry Moore, South , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . . : . ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.:__~-------Second Ave., Middleport. Mrs. Ed·
die Burkett and Miss Kathryn Hysell
will be co-hostesses, and con·
tributing hostesses will be Mrs.
Pearl Reynolds and Mrs. Nina
Bland. There will be a gift exchange
following the judging of the Christ·
mas wrappings.

~t.l'T uPJ~•.- --:--.k

Foster ech'o then and now

ffi

FAMOUS
BRANDS
GIFT.S

SA V~ ············~3,540

••

•

rr--;;;;;;;;;;iMERRY CHRISTMAS II

DALE HILL.
FORD TRACTOR

1\IND OF SUGPICIOUG,
ISN'T IT? I'LL BET
YOU'RE THIHRIN6 I
IIIGIIT HAVE DONE IT.

6-GOGH NO,

I· 1'0 NEVER
THIHK ATHIN6
L-UI{E l!IAT..

HO? l'iELl ··YOU
~16HT MOT THIHK

ll·,BUT YOO'D BE
WROII6.

!'---,·~

we have poinsettias to
gladden Christmas hearts. So
make us you r headquarters
tor eve ry bloomin' need ! Call
o r stop in today. ChristmaS is
gelling close r.

.

The annual Christmas party of the
FORD 3600 DIESEL 40 HP
•
Pomeroy United Methodist Women
!
was held at the home of the Rev . and
1
Mrs. Robert McGee.
The buffet dinner was served to 23
members seated at!f;mall tables in
the dining and living rooms of the
00
home. Grace was by the Rev. Robert
McGee.
OFFER ENDS DEC. 31, 1980
•
Mrs. McGee presided at the
business meeting with Mrs.
Elizabeth Cutler thanking the couple
for having the gro'up there lor the
dinner meeting. Thanks were extended by Mrs. McGee to Mrs. Ted
Downie, unable to be present, for a
Christmas arrangement.
992·2668
Pomeroy, OH.
Members turned in the monev
from their Christmas socks which
Advanced scanners by BearcatO&lt;'
they had filled during the year. The
~~•e you where__the action ia.
offering will go to the Otterbein
Home. A report on the recent West
Ohio Conference of the UMW held in
Springfield was given by Mrs.
McGee who noted that she had been
~elected to serve communion. She
said she especially enjoyed the
'p rogram by the jazz pianist.
Mrs. McGee noted that she will be
having a \fleeting with the new of·
fleers soon. They will be installed on
Dec. 2ll during the regular church
service. Mrs. Ada Warner had
charge of the collection for the least
coin program. A report showed that
76 shut-in visits had been made. Mrs.
McGee spoke of the New Response
See our w1de var1ety of
and told of its helpfulness in the lives
LeSabre models now with
of members.
standard
3.8 liter V-6, or
Mrs. Virginia Edwards, Mrs.
available
5
.7 l1ter diesel V-8 .
Thelma Dill and Mrs. j':velyn Lucke
A'Mlrd AIXlut Engines These Buieks ille eQuipped with GM·Ixlitt engines
were the program leaders and used
p10duced by various divisions. See yoUJ dea1e1 tor details.
"Preparation for Celebration" as
.the theme . Mrs. Evelyn Lucke read
'
a meditation "'Tis Christmas. "
Candles were lighted in an advent
wreath with the meaning of each
.candle being explained. As those at·
W See: Jimmy Deem, J.D. Story or Bill
tending repeated verses of the ad·
Nelson
vent song, the purple and rose an·
"TWolnOneStm"
Ph.992·2174
•
dies were lighted, the first symbolizing hope or prophecy opening
W. 2nd Ave.
Midd I eport, Oh.
. the period of the waiting of the birth ~·~;-~·~·~~~~~~-~-~~·-~lil:~~~~~~~~if~~
of Christ, the second symbolizing
. preparation for the corning of Christ,
' the third joy at the coming of Christ,
the fourth symbolizing the love for .
the world in the coming of Christ.
· Mrs. Dill read scriptures and
,meditations preceding the lighting
of the candles, and the group sang
appropriate carols. Mter repeating
the fifth verses of the Advent song,
white candles were lighted · to
·celebrate the presence of the Christ
Wt. 2% tbs.
with us today. The Christmas prayer
was by Mrs. Lucke:
Mrs. Mb&lt;iee distributed gifts to
HOOR ' cAil,.n swr,.,.
those present. They were small
crosses attached to cards on which
the poem, " The Cross in My Pocket"
·was written. The· group enjoyed an
25 " diagonal COLOR TV/25YM~iSM
exchange of hwnorous gifts. Prayer
EARLY AMERICAN STYliNG ... the warmth and charm
partners were revealed and new
ol Earty American cabine try. Maple ftnlsh on
tlarCfw'OOd so~ds , wood composition board and
ones selected. The meeting closed
simulated wood accents
with prayer.

BRIDGE

6IJT M'i t.l/&gt;.M~

Y' KliEI'l ABOOT
IT? I'IHY OIVH'T
Y' TELL ME'?!

RETAIL .................... sl3 725.00
SALE PRICE •••••••••••••• S}QI185.00

', ALLEYOOP
I'VE GOT

THE REAL. MUNDA

YDU BET! AND&gt;GET

HAVE )()U POPPED

RIGHT HERE, JIMMY
.JOE! I WANT YOU TO

THIS ... SHE'S FROM

'fORE CORK, GOOD

~NCH

THE STONE ACE!

MEET HER!

BUDDY? ,

.....RIS1'
PLENTY OF FREE PARKING

352 E. Main St., Pomeroy, OH ,

Ph. 992-2644
or992·6290

'

CHRISTMAS SPICIAL.

Better miles.
Let us show you.

v

That's enough cards,
dear! Let's look at a
picture

Shall we lool4 at;
the cute little

No. Gretchen!
doqs, or. . Not that oner

book!

'

i

i
i
i
i

Furniture &amp; Jewelry
•

., WINNIE

dependence.

'

SMITH NELSON MOTORS

Lowest Prices You'll Find This Year

~=~:u~i~~antl

* BERKLINE

SSQ TO $75 OFf ·
·

w
w
w

1
1 h~
~
I
I
I
i
I
w
w

I)

II
POMEROY LANDMARK
II

5EEIN '.'

:oo rn • m m a rn ""' "" ...

: NOW, IF I CAN JUST FIND
ME A GOOD WIGGLER

~
~

=.=,;,:
.

JIAKER
FURNI.TURE

•

MIDDLEPORT, OH.

!f.~t~¥111¥1S::!ifj:;jt~t~~""'~"'""'...... s:x••~--~•AIIIIi•••PIIO · ·· ·n-iia~.:o~•~:&gt;::o~::.illlllil._t•lr.l••--

'

0:30 ({) (!2) w
TOO CLOSE FOR
COMFORT
9:45 II) TBS EVENING NEWS
10:00 (I) U ffi THE STEVE ALLEN
COMEDY HOUR
GJ MOYIE ·(ADVENTURE) "•\&gt;
"OiamondsAr8Forever' 1 1971
(I) /U) 8 HART TO HART Tho
Harts' Christmas spirits are spiked
with equal parts of burglary, may·
hem and murder when they go undercover to expose a dangerous
ind usl ri.al espio nag e plot in the irt oy
company. (60 mlns.)
CII SOUNDSTAGE 'Goorge Bon·
son, Chat Atkins and Earl Klugh'
(Ciosed·Captioned;U.S.A.)
(eO
mlna.)
.
NEWS
10:28
NEWS UPDATE
10:30
FAITH 20
@ EXTENSIONS
10:58 (I) NEWS UPDATE ,... ""' ...
11
NEWS
·
TODAY IN BIBLe PROPHECY
NIGHT GALLERY
MONTY PYTHON'S FLYING
CIRCUS
DICK CAVETT SHOW
11 :28
NEWSUPDATE
11:30
Dffi THE TONIGHT SHOW
Guests: Johnny Mathis, Erma Bornbeck. (60 mine.)
.
(I) ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
([)MOVIE ·(DRAM_A) ·~I&gt; "Nin•
HOUri to R1m1" 1863
([) C!li
ABC NEWS
NIGHTL.INE
eCIJCBSLATEMOVIE 'THEDAIN
CURSE' 1978 Stars: James
Coburn. Hector Elizondo.
CIJ ABC CAPTIONED NEWS
(!I) MOVIE -{COMEDY) 00 1&gt; "DIY

00

: BARNEY

•k!:::l

Pomeroy, Oh,

'•

UPTHI5 6UY

•

a

-

RetJ~

Prices '8.00 to.122.00

40% OFF

ALL'AMITY PRODUCTs .

IT WAS PROBA6LI{
AN ''IN" JOKE

.VILLAGE PHARMACY
I

Ave.

Ph. 992:6669
Middleport, Ohio

...
.-\

Z8 Plexus
cover
29 Alias Barney 23 Belgiwn
Miller
river
30 Uncorrupted
32 Brown kiwi
33Cryof
discovery
36 Calaveras
County
celebrity
41 "Tempest"
sprite
tZ Rent out
43 Kingly
·44 Cut sbort
DOWN
I One's being
2Row
3CaUit4 Corded
fabric

33 City in 39 Shade
Romania
of green
34 Leg wear 40 Marshland

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

~Popular

newspaper

name
DAILY CRYPTOQUO'l'E- Here's how to work it:
AXl'DLIIAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW

.

Oae letter simply stands for another. In tbis Simple A ls
uaec1 for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Slnsle !etten,
apo~tropbes, the leneth and formation of the words are all
hlnb. Each day the eode letters are different.
CBYPI'OQUOTES

Thll Fleh C.n• Out" 1H7

Fashionable Gifts For Him or.Her

PH. 992·2181

I

GIVE U5 A
CHANCE '10 SIZE

.o(II·MITY.·

i

•

IT'LL

i· ,
i
RUTLAND fURNITURE
.i. .~s~o:o~E~~·M~a:~in~I!WIIWII:.&lt;IIIK!il:llil:lm~P~o~m~e:~r~oy~,~O~H: 1·r.i._j~~-.~~~~~~~=•~D~A~;v~E~.!G:~R~A~T,~E~Jij.:R~u.:tl:a1n:d~;·~o~~h~i~~o;..j

•,I
•

540 E. Main

OKAY; OKAY.

WENDY(5 BEEN

·

w
i

DISCOUNTED '125
.FOR· CHRISTMAS

: 'MAY!?&gt; I: ')OU'R~ RIGHT,
RUSS. PERHAPS A VISIT
HOME: 15 Jti.5T
WHAT I NEED I

(Ciosed-

Caption~U. S. A .) (eO mins.)

AN17 IT SURE

~

~

•s

~Mf~~tl"

7 GASOUNE ALLEY

i
i

INGEL'S

II

I

helpful today work· or careerwise. Thf: par·

UMW hosts
holiday fare

r

I I J'I )

to lake calclllated risks today, you could
come up a winner wtille they're still contemplating on the sidelines.
TAURUS (Aprli.May Z:O) Asituation you
were dubious about shoudl wGI'k cut to your
liking today. l...Bdy Luck will have a hand In
getting matters back oo course.
1
GEM[NI (May !!.JUDe ZO) If you 're unat·
ladled, an OP.portun!ty may present itself
today that will i!]ive you a chance to spend t
time with someone to whom you're at·
traded .
CANCER (Juue21-July %21 A friend you've
made in the business wGrld could be very

CONCERT TONIGHT
The Southern High School choir
and band will present a Christmas
concert Tuesday (tonight) at 7:30
p.m. in the high school auditorium.

UU
CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS ·
({)ABC NEWS
CIJ STUDIO SEE
Gil OVER EASY
WHAI A MOU5E
8:30 (I) U ffi NBC NEWS
NOT DO
SHOUL.D
(I)
20TH
CENTURY
WHEN 'THERE'5 'THS
.
GUIDELINES
SOUND OFA
II) BOB "'EWHART SHOW
(I) FACE THE MUSIC
CA'T'5 P'AW5.
I1J CIJ ®l CBS NEWS
CIJ WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
Now arrange the cirCled letters to
Gil FEELINGS
form the surprise answer. as sug··
(i}l8 ABC NEWS
gested by thB abo"ve cartoon .
8 :58 (J) NEWS UPDATE
7:00 CD U PM MAGAZINE
(J)
GERALD . DERSTINE
Print answer here: [
PRESENTS
(l) ALLIN THE FAMILY
(Answers tomorrow )
(I)/U)G) FAMILY FEUD
Jumblos
PIETY
MOUSY
QUENCH
MELODY
Yesterday's
CD TV HONOR SOCIETY
Answer : Might pop on an evening like thisIIJCIJ TICTACDOUGH
THE QUESTiON
CIJ ·@
MACNEIL·LEHRER
REPORT
'
®J NEWS
7:30 (I) U BULLSEYti
(J) FAITH THAT LIVES
ill CHRISTMAS ON ICE Taped in
Europe, HBO's exclusive special
features 'Europe on Ice', the
world's greatest ice revue, in a
spectacular
skaling
extravaganza.
(l) NBA BASKETBALL Atlanta
Hawks vs New Jersey Nets
(I) Q@ JOKER'S WILD
ner and when you are · not
CD HOLLYWOOD SQUARES
trying to win the trick your·
CII (jj) DICK CAVETT SHOW
®J MATCH GAME
self. This echo is still used on
QJ FACE THE MUSIC
NORTH
12 ·16-80
many occasions by modern
7:58
NEWS UPDATE .
• 7 54 2
players but should not be lol ·
8:00
U ffi 80BHOPECHRISTMAS
• 613 2
lowed blindly .
SPECIAL Bob Hope celebrates the
+6
This Foster hand shows how
holidays with his 2.,.th annual
tK8'42
the Foster echo works
Christmas special, a' musical ·
perfectly . The bidding would
WEST
EAST
comedy spectacular w ith guest
probably be the same today .
stars Loni Anderson, Larry Gatlin,
+J98
+10 6 3
since South has a standard
and the Associated Press All • J 10 9 7
5
America fOotball team . (60 mins.)
three-notrump opening .
+AKQ83
• J 10 2
(J) ORAL. ROBERTS
In Foster's article. East fol ·
.10 9 5
• 763
CIJ/U)QJ HAPPYDAYSChrletmas
lowed
with the deuce to the
SOUTH
at the Cunninghams for the gang is
opening
lead and declarer just
tAKQ
in jeopardy when a snow storm
cashed
three top diamonds,
.AKQ
strands
and
scatters
the
.vhereupon
South claimed the
celebrants.
• 975 4
st I 0 tricks.
·
IIJIJ)@ WHITE SHADOW Coach
. +AQJ
If
East
had
played
the
I
0
as
Ken Reeves is perplexed, ember·
Vulnerable ; Both
a Foster ·echo, West would
rassed and tou ched when a hast of
have known that he held the
sports end entertainment celebri ·
Dealer: South
ties show up to pay the ir last re ·
jack and led a low diamond.
West North East South
spects at a memorial fund raising
·The defense would then take
3NT
dinner held in his honor. Guest
the first five tricks.
Pass
Pass
Pass
stars: Elgin Baylor, Red Auerbach,
A modern expert would not
Sparky Anderson. Jimmie Walker .
use
the' Foster echo here.
(§_0 mins .)
Instead
, he would simply play ·
CIJ(jj) NOVA 'The Safety Faclor'
the
jack
to guaranty posses·
Opening
lead:tK
This program on air safety follows a
sion of the 10. In modern
trip with the pilot and craw of a Laker
expert play you always signal
Airways OC-1 0 as it 'trave'ls from
with the htghest card you can
, London to Los Angles. (Closed ·
Captioned;U.S.A.) (60 mins .)
spare and obviously you can 't
8:30 (J) GOOD NEWS
spare the jack if you don 't
By Oswald Jacoby
GJMOYIE~COMEDY)'" "Fr•nch
hold the 10.
and Alan Sontag
Poatcarda" 1979
Conversely, the 10 play
CIJ/U)QJ LA VERNEANDSHIRLEY
would~ a qome-on but would
The
Foster
echo
goes
back
.Laverne and Shirley take a job ·
to whist You simply play definitely den y possession of
wrapp ing gifts at a department
your second-best card when the jack.
store, and Lnerne geta tipay on
French candies that happen to be
following to a suit led by part· (NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)
filled with rum .
8:58 (I) NEWS UPDATE
9:00 (I) IJ ffi DEAN MARTIN'S
CHRISTMAS SPECIAL 1980Doon
Martin welcomesBeverly Sills, Mel
Till is, Erik Estrada and Andy Glbb in
a Yuletide special featuring clas sical1 country and pop music . (BO
min a.)
(]) 700CLUB
({) /U) G) THREE'S COMPANY
When Chrissy can't return to pay·
by THOMAS JOSEPH
her share of the rent , Jack, Janet,
Larry and Furleyeach come up with
ACROSS
6 Sired
their ideal temporary roommate
1 Break ground 7 Electric only to have the decision swept out
of their h•ands by the arr ival of
6 Brute
8 "All the Things
Chrissy 's cute and ctumay cousin
11 Sea duck
You -"
Cino;!L
lZ
Supernatural
9
Offense
IIJW®J CBS TUESDAY NIGHT
"
MOVIE 'BiindedByThoLighl' 1980
13 Tin Lizzie
10 Tiffin item
Stars: Kristy McNichol, James Vin ·
15
Saute
14 De Bergerac
cent McNichol. TheMcNicholsplay
David and Gail Bowers, teenage
16 Startling
feature
children in a IB!fliiY suddenly torn
.,
17 Tom
yell
from its comfortable middle-class
Yesterday's ,USwer
17 Presidential
or Shirley
existence when David renounces
24
Roast
: 35 Gray-bearded
home , parents and the world to folnominees
18 Fatuous
low a quasi-religious cult. (2 hrs.)
Fr
.
36 Jolt
:12 Director
19 Unfeeling
(I)(jj) BODYINQUESTION 'Heads
27 Cheat
37 English
Guthrie
20 Gaelic
and Tails ' Many bodily function a
can be carried out in the absence of
Z5 Irish· river Zl "Now I've
29 British
river
a brain, and Dr. Jonathan Miller ex26
All
together
everything!
"
symbol
38
Russian
plains how the lower nervous
system has a large measure of in·
27 Bogus
:12 Canvas
31 Vibrato
plane

IOURSEAh
I I I
IREPUPAj

. CAPTAIN EASY

{F~ .

I Marcb Zl·Aprll ltl

(J

I I I

20- March Z:O) There is opPQrt.Unity about you today, both finandally
and statu.swise. It's likely that you'll make
ARIES

"Mup-

l!!l Movie" 1979

CAPRICORN IDe&lt;. zt. Jau. IJI That
whic'h you attempt tQ do todlt,y you will do
well. Others will not be envious of your accomr,llshments, because yoo'll find ways to
invo ve them.
'
AQUARIUS IJaa. ZO.Fe~ 191 Friends
mean a lot to you, a3 you do to them. One Qf
the reasoru YDU have .!ld many is bec.Hwre, il.!l
yo u tlemo·~trate today, you are loyal.

you're more positive and

(])UCZJDCil@i(Ui Gi NEWS

ill MOVIE ~COMEDY) "

Graph. Mail .$1 for each to Astro-Graph1 lklx
489, Radio City Station, N. Y. 10019. IJe sure
to specify birth date.

NAME OMITTED
Unintentionally omitted from a
listing ri Pomeroy Elementary
School stude~ts on the honor roll
were Rachel Roush with all A's and
Barbie Anderson in the first grade,
and Leight Estridge, second grade.

by HennAmold and Bob Lee

DEC. 16, 1080

today. Others are willing to follow you
because you inspire them by setting the
proper ell8tnp\e. Find out more of what lies
ahead for you in the year following your bir-thday by sendinas for your copy d Astro-

PISCES

.f}jlij~ j'e}'i} ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAllE

~ ~ ~~ ~

•

SAGI1TARIUS (Nov. !3-Dec. !1) Your
leadership quaUtie:s are very pronounced

ti cular contact won't mind being used. •

SPURRED
MODERNIZATION
Large-scale Italian, German and
Spanish immigration in the de&lt;;ades
after 1880 spurred modernization .in
Argentina, making it lhe must
prosperou~ ,
educated and in·
dustrialized of the major Latin
Ameri "'" ·

Television
•
•
VIewmg

11:50 ([) C!li. TUESDAY MOVIE OF
t!:tEWEEK
12:00 ill MOYIE ·(DRAMA) "I&gt; "And
.llllll!:!.for AI" 1878
12:30 CIJDlLJ TOMORROWHoat:Tom
Snyl:ter. Guests: Ted Koppel, Marvin Hamliah. (90 min a.)
12:58~ SPORTS REPORT
1:00
OLD TIME GOSPEL HOUR
2:00
WORLDYI!W
NEWS
®ll BELIEVE ·
2:10 CD 11 Zomblae" William Joyce.
Heather Hewitt. (No Other lnlorma·
lion Available)

YS

y

QYVGXA

DCMUYTZX,
JMUXCTXA

Y
FO

SCXAXCYZN

PM

DHTYVG

QMHIA

GRUX

R
YP

DGYiMVMDGXCV .-,
PGX

JC~RP

NUMBER IONE
'OF ANY CIVllJZED SOCIETY IS THIS: lET- PEOPIAt BE
DIFFERENT.-DAVID GRAYSON

Yesterday's Cryploqllote: OOMMANDMENT

Cl 1110 Kintl ,..,_ Syndlooto, Inc;.

.'

�Page-1G-The Daily Sentinel

Decen1ber16,1980

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

e-11

Polly's Pointers.

Night light jQr shoes neede.d
By PoUy Cramer
tile towel and let It stand al1oot five
Special correspoodeut
minutes. The heaviest soU wipes
DEAR POlLY - What can be away quickly. I used to work for an
done to prevent what looks like hour on each door and used scouring
mildew that appears on shoes kept In pads and several cleaners before
a regular clothes closet? I . do not getting them clean. Now after 10
know what causes it and it can be · minutes tile doors are clean and
easilY wiped off. - M.B.
back In place.- MARJORIE
DEAR POLLY - I clean mirrors
DEAR M.B. with
rubbing alcohol. l"uhome on a
Try keeping a
paper
towel and wipe tile dirt off
light on in your
quickly
and tlley lOOk as good as
closet. It can be a
when cleaned with special .glass
low voltage bulb
cleaner.- FWRENCE
but do be sure it
DEAR POlLY - To elimlnllte
does not touch
static build-up · from a e~~rpet,
clothes
or
especially a nylon one, mix a quart
anything that
of cheap fabric softener In two
coUld get too hot.
g&amp;Uons of ·water and spray ·it on tile
- ·POLLY
Cramer
carpet
heavlly enough that It Is
DEAR POlLY ~ To clean my
n~ceably
'Yet. Allo~ to dry and you
fireplace glass doors easilY I Jay tile
wiU
not
have
any static for three to
doors fist, place a paper towel over
six
months,
~pending
on how often
tile stained part, pour ammonia on

HEART MONITOR CONTRWUTION
The
Meigs County Jaycees made a $200 contribution to the
Middleport Fire Department on the heart monitor to be

Public Notice

Public Notice

purchased for the emergeucy vehicle. Here Mitchell
Meadows, Jaycees treasurer, presents the check to Joe
Powell, a member of the Ftre Departmeut.
'

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS
COURT,
P~OBATE DIVISION
MIIIGS COUNTY, OHIO
IN THE MATTER OF SET·
TLEMENT OF AC ·
Christmas at cottage
COUNTS,
PROBATE
COURT, MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
holiday party theme ,
Accounts and vouchers of
the following named .
fiduciaries have been filed
"Christmas at the Cottage" was in the Probate Court, Meigs
the theme of the annual Chrisbnas County, Ohio for approval
and settlement:
party of the Chester Garden Club
CASE NO. 23047 Final
held at the cottage of Mrs. Horace · Account of Freeland s.
Norris, Executor of the
l';arr. Mrs. William Buckley and Esta le of Mett ie M.
Mrs. Wyatt Chadwell were C()- Benedum, Deceased
CASE NO. 22390 Final
hostesses for the meeting.
Account of Edison Hob·
· Mrs. Dale Machir had devotions stetter, executor of the
of John M. Will,
using a reading, "Six Charming Estate
Deceased
CASE · NO. 22720 Final
Myths of Christmas" by Mary Ann
Account of Drexel Lam·
New-brighton. There was a gift bert; Executor of the
wrapping contest judged by Mrs. Estate of Ethel Di lcher,
.
Horner Holter, Mrs. Purley Karr, Deceased
CASE NO . 22830 Final
Mrs. Depver Holter with prizes Account of Darlene E.
Executrix of the
going to Mrs. Leonard Erwin, first, Kreuger,
Estate of Ira Ivan Wolfe,
Deceased
and Mrs. Crystal Rayburn, second.
CASE NO. 23139 Final·
The door prize was won by Mrs. Account of Herman Will ,
James Andrews. Mrs. Purley Karr, Administrator of the
Estate of Cora Will ,
an honorary member, Mrs. Denver Deceased.
CASE NO. 20199 Eleven·
Holter, a guest, and 22 members atth and Fina l Account of
tended the holiday party.
Paul D. Sturgeon, Guardian of Paul W . Sturgeon, a
Minor.

Happy Haroesters meet

CASE NO. 20524 Final
Account of Fred c. Crow,
Jr., Administrator of the
Estate of Maud S. Crow,

Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Johnson ·

Couple ·to celebrate
silver anniversary

POTLUCK DINNER
TIIURSDAY
:rile Rock Springs Better Health
Club will have a potluck dinner at
noon Thursday at the Rock Springs
Church. Members are to take their
own table service. There will be an
exchange of secret pal gifts and grab
bag gifts which will be judged for
wrapping. Members are also to take
candy, fruit and cookies for shut-in
. trays to be prepared and delivered
during the afternoon.

ASK TOWED
A marriage license was issued to
Bruce David Bumgardner, 21, Middleport, and Cynthia Kay Thompson, 19, Pomeroy.

Methodist Church in Westllela, N.
Y., the couple have a daughter, Sandra, at home.
'
Friends and relatives are cordially invited to attend the open
house celebration which begins at 2
p.m.

Middleport plans
lighting contest
Again this year Middleport village
will have a Christmas lighting contest sponsored by the Middleport
Amateur Gardeners and the Middleport Garden Club.
The categories will be door or. window and over-aU religious or nonreligious. Prizes wiU be awarded in
two places iri each category.
The judging will take place Friday
evening beginning at 6:30 p.m. No
advance registration is required but
reside11ts are urged to have their
decorations lighted by that time.
Out-of-town judges will take a tour of
the town and then wiD return to tile
home of Mrs. Walter Crooks for a
social time and the announcing of
the winners.
P.\STMATRONS MEET
The Past Matrons of Evangeline
Chapter, Order of the Eastern Star
will be held at 6 p.m. Friday evening
at the home of Mrs. Katie Anthony.
There will be a gift exchange.

•

&lt;

•

only.

t Prizes: turkey &amp; cash. Off
· • hand &amp; bench shooting.

Lon and Found
Lost, WalKer coon hound in
the vicinity of Horse Cave,
carmel Church area. If
found call992-5776.

38900 SR 7
Reedsville,
Ohio 45772

Over 3 years. experience In

business. Will buy complete estates.. Also take

consignments.

Ossle's

Auction

Hovse,

~:~~~~

Help Wanted
GET VALUABLE training
11

census, we now have
openings for full and part

time positions on day shift
but will consider other shifts. Competitlve salary, ex·

and

Healing Fuel, 1 &amp; 2 Ex·
celslor Oil Company.
Phone 1·614-992-2205. :

WANT

AD

ll.
.L
- -_
-=
-_- 12.
_
_._
_

13.u ________
15.- - - - - 16. _ _..;__ __

FRIQAY,

-

'

I

DEC. 19th-7:00 ·P.M.
Mail This Coupon with Remittance
· The Daily Sentinel '
.
Box l29
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

'----------------·-·-··-·-·:..-..;

AUCTIONEERS:
•
KENNETH MAIN &amp; RICK PtARSON

216 E. -Second Stre~i

. REALTY
742-2003 .
Georges. Hobstetter Jr.
Broker

Phone
H 614 l -992·3325
NICE
COUNTRY
HOME - Peaceful 3

bedroom

home

with

modern bath, central

heating, large eat· in kit·

chen,

f1i:sant , WV Phone 675-

H.

fiJII

basement,

.space. $32,500 furnished

View home ·on nice cor ·

9 ACRES IN TOWN -

Live in downstairs, rent
upstair s.
Ask i ng

Near sewer and city
water. Overlook ing the
beautiful Ohio River.

$29,000 .00

with

10%

down at 10% interest.

Go Western!

Good home site for only
$15,000. . .
MODERN HOME WITH
PANORAMIC VIEW -

4 year old split level 7
room home . Has nice
· fami l y room and J
bedrooms . Woadburner
in the basement. Was

$50.000 . Reduced to
$37,500 lor quick sale.
CHANCE - for you to

own income property.
Can be four aPartments
with some Changes . On 3

acres of land . Only
545,000. T. P. water.
10ACRES - on124west
with L.C.

water

Wi ll make a
farm

line.

dandy

f or

only

Housing
Headquarters

54_ __cM
= is,c'-'
.M
=
e~
rc'-'-h"'a"n:_e
is"'
e­

Firewood for sa le, Mixed

types of wood . $35.00 per
pick·up load. Del ivered,
will StiiCk · fo r Senior
Citizens. 843·.4951 or 8.43·

$

Nice 4 room house with

NEW

t:

Loet1MIF9Und
7-YaniSIII
t-~lclala

&amp; AIH:tiOn

t-W.-tol!u&gt;

· •EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

51-Houletlokl Goods
5l-c•~ TV, •adlel!qulpmtnt
U-AftttQu"
54-Mite. Marc:hl,dlu
'S !--IIIIkllnt Suppllet
St-flett tor Sale

lt-H.tll'wenltcl .
12-Situlttd }Wentacl
1J-:-Inturancl
14-aiiiiHit Tralnlnt
15-ScMtltlnstrUCtlon

u-

tt FARM

•I'INANCIA·L

•1-Farm lqulllft'ltnt
62- Wanftftoluy ·
72-Trudl• for Salt

SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

Mt1lnnt

63-Livasttck

· 64-Hay &amp; Gr•ln

65-SHCI &amp; Ff"llllar·

.

•TRANSPORTATION •
,,_....,tos
fOr,.,.
n - vant&amp;4W.o .
74--Motlrcyelll
u- At.ttorart•

~

77-Auto ••pair

eSERVICES

17-RNiton

Wtni•Ad Aclvtrtl~lng
Dtld/lnes
·1: Jflr."U.n•ny·
UNeMII~

1.

ttrMeftda'

..

..

11-HomelmiM"GYemantl
12-Piumlt4nt •••nvatlnt
. 11-E)Ieavattnt

....
........'·"

ltllyt
IUyt

""·

IK-fllrfftr Cllftr fiGwtn

c ......
1.1S
I.N
2.1~

UJ

.

t• lftttHJ'Y, Carf of ThaM\.aiHI Oltltuary: 6 c:enh par ..,.., JJ.IO
MIMMIIfll, Cull In Nwlnct.

-·

YM, NY IOIU.. Print N1me,
AdcltW, ,lip, Plltllft Numbtt.
Catch on lo the craft boom! Send
for our NEW 1981 NEEDLECRAFT
CATALOG. Over l72 designs, 3.
free patterns inside. $1.00

uz-QiiH Orililllls
UI-Adclllllcl QIHII
1JO.S.... fllhlons-Sizts ll-56
129-QIIdi 't' (Ill Tllftllttt
12U..... Plldlworl Quills
121~ 't' DIMMI

'

Cath

NIHitcqft lltpL
·Dally SentlDel

U3-fllhloa Home Quiltin1

Rates .and Other Information

...,

Nice BtOttb

ALL CRAFT 11001$••$1.75 11Ch

IM-•Iectrlcal
I Aafrlttrlllart
11--Gantral Haullntt
M-M.tt·••r
17- Uphol•,.rv

15 Wenls 11M' Under

, Conal compliments with cud- ·
dly, colorful Western jackels.
Rugged , fringed . spo1ty1
Crochet His and Her jackets in 2
colors of synthetic worsted . Weat
them with jeans. everything. Pattern 7509 Men 's S1res 36-42;
Misses B-14 included.
·$1,75 for each pattern. Add 501
each pattern for first-class air·
mail a_nd handling. Send to:

8Gx l&amp;l, Old Chelsoa Sla., New

&amp; Accauorln

M--IUIIMII IUII4ilftll
U-l.oti&amp;Acr..t•
M-RNI II.... W1ntH

MIMII .......... _. Yard sa••re•c:c.,.__.., wltttulll wttlt
· ...... U . . . . . .,.. ,., Ht Urtylftl .,_ ......... 1ft C•re ... The

-

4

good condition . JUSTI
$16,000.
NEW LISTING - Year

· eMERCHANDISE

.

Lt~TING

125-PIIIIIItlllls
124-EIIr Gifts '.•' o,.._ts

IZ3-Stltcll 'n' Plldl Quilts
122·$1uft 'R' P1ft Qoilts
121-PUiow SHw-01&amp;
119-EIIr M vi F1on CtOChot
11&amp;-tllftr Fifty Qui"'
115-&amp;lr M olllltlllle CtOChtt
11U.Oplttt Gift look

round comfort in all
elect'rlc, 2 pedroom
home on approximately
.1 acre land , JUST!

$16,200.
APPROVED
FOR
FEDERAL HOUSING
LOAN - NEW CON·
3
STRUCTION
bedrooms, living room.
kitchen, utility , and

garoge .
Electric
baseboard heat. JUST!
$39,900.
LOOK
EASTERN
DISTRICT - 3 bedroom
home on approxiMatt:IY
1 acre land. Fireplace,

equipped kitchen . Country Living. All for jusf
$28,000.
LIKE THE \INUSUAL?,
Th is 3 bedroom home of·
fers you unusual style of
construction, slate roof,
lan:~e roomS on approx·
imately a;. acre land.

$29,500.
MOBILE HOME ANO 1
ACRE LOT - 1973 ux70 Kirkwood, 3
bedrooms, 2 baths,
equipped kitchen, elec·
tric heat, air condition -

ing . $18,500.
. REALTOR

-QII"'
'

Motorcycles

74

Ca ll949-2649.
61 __ ~a_!l_!!~q_u_pm e n__
t _

Also

Gravely . Just overhauled ,
new tir,ps, electric start, hi ·

will

sell farm ;

Long

20

Hollow

992·3129 Qr ~2 - 5914.

Mobile Homes
for Rent

One

Pomerby, Oh. 992-2975.

$50.00, Frigidaire 32 • 28;

62
wanted to Buy
CHIP WOOD. Poles max .

one CCftCh, 6 foot long for

10 x 55 two bedroom

63

Livestock

Cal l Karen Griffith, 992- "'--~--"-'="-'=""'--2 year old QUarter Pony,
5782.

mobile
Racine. 992 ··

Fl REWOOD $35. a truck

very
gentle .
Conte st
prospect Call Karen Grif-

1975 two bedroom trailer. load, $60. a cord. All har· fith, 992 -5782.
dwood, split, &amp; deli vered.
In the Country Mobile 843-4831 or 843-4734.
r raespananee
Home Park . $175.00 per
month, SlOO.OO deposi t. No
pets. SerioUS calls on ly.
ow at
71
Autos lor Sale
Phone 247-3942.
Pomeroy
1971 2 door Monte Carlo,
excellent conQitlon located

fur·

1 US6!d Holpo1n1
Refrigerator
Sl1S .OO
NewBikesAsLowAs
S1Q6 ,'1S
Hotpoinl Mlcrow.-.v e- Oven
Reg. 1374
S 3 ~4
1.u sed Refrigerator
'H S

Comtor'!
Mealers,

locl!ted south of

Glow Kero se ne
Economv (28·086JI .

Reg . S1J9.t .~ ·

Q,.,_

Nowsn•HS

POMEROY

~LANDMARK

Apartment

UWIO- ·

automati c, bucket seats,
350 V-B, p.s., disc brakes,
am-tape slereo. After 5

p.m. 992 -2967.

MGB white black top 1976
am-fm,_8 track, bes t offer.

992-2470 after 6. Nova, 1974,
4 door, V-8, radials, casset·

te, green-white top, $1.800
or best offer . 664 ·.4493 after

6.

lor Rent
3 AND 4 RM furnished ·ap·
ts. Phone 992·5434.

s~6===P;e:ts:l;:o:r~S:a:le==~ 11973 GRAND

Furnished apartments, 992·

HOOF HOLLOW : Horses
and ponies and rlding

2566 .

Everyth i ng
imaginable in horse ~uip·

E. Main st .

Pomeroy

3129, 992·5914, or· l-304·882· lessons .

ment . Blankets,. belts,
boots, etc. English and

Large 2 bedroom furnished
apartment. $200. per rnonth Western . Ruth Reeves
plus utilities. 8·3 weekdays. (614) 698-3290.
992 -5545 or after 7, 949·2216.
THE MEIGS County
Humane Society pets of the
Unfurnished one bedroom week are : Several adult
apartment for rent. Ren· cats, 5 black &amp; tan puppies,
black labrador, black Irish
setter ,
coll ie
type,

ters assistance available

fori senior citizens. Contact
VI lage Manor Apartments shepherd type, black &amp;
tan; house broke medium
at 992·7787.
size dog ready to be loved,
lovable mixed breed. 992··
Apt. for rent, 3 rooms &amp; · 6260.
bath. 992·5908.
PUREBRED · English
Shepherd puppies. Stock
and watch dogs. Phone 247·
2161.

46
Space for Rent
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Roufe 33, North of
Pomeroy . Large lots. Call
992-7479.

2 AKC re&lt;1istered poodle

pups. 1 black male for $125.
1 chocolate female lor $100.
TRAILER spaces for rent. 9 weeks old. Call ·anytime
Southern Valley Mobile at 992-7102.
·
Home Park, Cheshire, Oh.
992·3954.
1, 8 month old male,
'
registered Blue Tick &amp;
Blue Tick pups, 8 weeks
old . 949-2545.
5Z
CB,TV, Radio

... ......
..................
~

Equipment

BROWNING (lase CB, 2 AKC Registered Collie puppies. Tri -colored . Will be
&amp; ready by Christ·
mas, 6 weeks old Dec. 23 .
$50. 985·3567.

piece transm ltter, · and
receiver, e&gt;&lt;tra crystals,

weaned

works good. 3a.-773·5013.

Henry E . Cleland, Jr.

992·6191
ASSOCIATES
Jean Trussell 949-2660
Roger &amp; Dottie Turner
992·5692
OFFICE 992 2259

-··
m

WHITE German Shephard
pup. Nice Christmas gift .
1992·5302.
AKC· registered poodle
pups. Line bred, 2 male, 1
toy , 1 miniature. Will hold
for· Christmas. 992·2967 af ter 5.
I

.

81

-'-

Home
lmpr_
ovements

GENE 'S

CARPET

CLEA NING. Deep stream
clean puts nu·look back in
your carpet, highly recom·
mended, reasonable rates,
Scotchguard.
Free
estimates . Gene Smith, ca ll

now 992-6309 or 742-2211.

diameter 10" on larg est
3. BEDROOM trailer in $10.00. 992-5694 at 152 But- end.
$12 p-er ton . Bundled
Southern Valley Mobile ternut Avenue, Pomeroy.
slab. $10 per ton. Delivered
Home Park, Cheshire , Oh .
Ohio Pal let co .. Rt. 2,
992 -3954. Wi II accept NEW Potts-Longhorn Show to
Pomeroy 992-2689.
ch ildren.
Saddles, the perfect Chris.t·
mas gift. Very reasonable.

blue.

Servjces

lo range, 30" mower . $900.

1· 5 h.p . Snapper rider, 26"

coppertonw
refrigerator for $75.00,
frig idaire 5 x 28 ; one electric · stove coppertone for

color

---~~~~

Service, 204 Condo r St. ,

3 bedroom ~urnished house.

·~·_,_,

Autos for Sale

71

puppies for sa le. $75. 1·304- $1.200 ..247-2761.
882·2683.

ced yard . $175. per month MACHINE Shop eq ui p- cut hand start. S400. 1·8 h.p.
plus • deposit. Children ac · ment &amp; machinist tools. Gravely rider , 30" cut,
ele ctr ic ! start . $800 .
cepted. 992-6384.
614-678-2166.
Gravely Tractor Sales &amp;

53
A II
n ques
AT T E NT I 0 N :
( I M·
PORT ANT TO YOU) Will
pay cash or certified check
for antiques and collec·.
tlbles or entire estates.
Nothing too large. Also,
110.11
I
lilt-Sew + lilt
tillltind} .
guns, pocket ·watches and
1~111111
.
coin collections. Call 61~102..
[,!~~~~-~·~•:•~·:.~,!767·3167 or 557-3411 .
101-QIIt W:c.llectiall I

Jlflr=-

1975 Granada, 78,000 miles.

I have two lots &amp; two vaults
in Meigs Memor ial Gar·
dens for sale, real cheap

ween 9·4.

bedtcooms, 2 story house
in Southern Distri ct. In·
terior needs redeco·
rating - exterior is in

56
Pets for Sale
AKC registered PeKingese

1978 KAWASAKI KZ 650

acres on
Road.

Unfurnished . 3 bedroom

44-Ap..~rtmtnt ~Rent

ROUSH

for $600.00. Phone 992·5927. 1 6.6 h.p. walk behind

Middleport, 992·3874.

trailer,

Ph. 992·2772
11 -19·1 mo.

motor cyc le,

FURNISHED 4 room &amp;
bath, adults only, no pets .

trailer,

•

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

2815.

garage for rent. 992-2502 .

5858 .

INSlJv·nl.AITI&amp;ON
I Y
Aluminum Siding
•Insulation
• Storm Ooors
• Storm Windows
• Replacement
Windows
Free Estimate
James Keesee

CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes - extensive remodeling
• Electrical work
• Roofing work
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992 -7583
12·4-1 mo .

Call Howard
949-2862
949-2160
1·22-lfc

S125. plus utilities s:
deposit. 992-7479.

45-FRoom•
4f-SPICt for Rent
'47-WantHtoRtnt
.._equipment tor Rtnt

·
B
742-232

EXCAVATING

Free Estimates

Phone 448·3821 or 448·2555.

home nea r

Ph. 992·6263
Anytime
11-16·1 mo.

PULLINS

Reasonable Prices

homes offered for rent,

1 bedroom

eRENTALS

Ha(IIII'WAIIt

L WHITESEL

All work guaranteed .

three bedroom s, large kit·
chen, dining room, I iv ing
room, family room, one &amp;
one half baths, basement,
.garage with storage cen·
ter, gas heat, central air ,

42

12 Park St.
Middleport, Oh.

}2-8-} mO.

new or repair guHers
and downspouts, gutter' :
cleaning and painting ..

ni s ~ed .

41-Houtn lor Rent
42--MoDUe Homtt
tor R1111t

4-GIYHWIY

PH.

Landmark

• ANNOUNCEMENTS

&amp; Repal"r

· FIXED,
WE CAN DO ITI.

3 bedroom house with feri ·

or will talk .

HEATING

10-7·tfc

IF YOU NEED IT

ROOFING
All types of roof work,

T . P. water and garden

LANO CONTRACT Large Two Story River

INFORMATION

.•R•wtnl GWtriM minimum 11 wor41111 4 cents perwonl ,., ~y.
,... ruMI"' atMr tMn c:e~~HCutlve cllyt will lit c:M,..... at tM 1 day

'

General

I-Card of TIMnkt
2-ln Memoriam
J-An'*'"Cttntnh

...y.

''

v~~~L~-~:t 13
T
ROBSTETTER
Real Estate

AND

~F~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~t;;;;;;;;;;;

One of Middleport's f inest

my home. 992·7274 after 5.

Bul"ldl"ng

Rt. 3, Box 54
Racine.Oh.
Pli. 614·843·2591
6-15-llc

2nd X Viand Street, Point

44

.., ....

· MASON FIR.E HALL
MASON·, WEST VIRGINIA!

Headquarters

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

s:t-Parms twlata

I

in

992·5682

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Middleport. 992-6637 bet-

at - Hem" forialt~
12-MoiWit-Ham••

TOOL AUCTION

bookkeeping

or Write Dally Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St., Pomero'f, -0., 45769

$er\'ICH

3------4.- - - - - r - -

1973 Crown Haven , 14 x 65,
three bedjooms, new carpet. 1971 Cameron, 14 X 64,
two bedrooms, new carpet.
1972 Champion, 12 x 60, two
bedrooms, new carpet. 1976
Cameron, '12 x 60, two
bedrooms, all electric. 1971
Skyline , 12sx 6), two
bedrooms, bath &amp; 11,, new
carpet . 1970 PMC ,

'Trailer lot for sale, $5,000.
Reeta!s
IN - Modular home lot on Route
can - 7, three bedroom farm celled?
Lost
your house located on RoUte 7.
41
Houses for Rent
operator's license? Phone
992-2571.
992-2143.
TWO BEDROOM un ·
-===:::=::=;::======
furnished house , also two
ii
wanted to Do
bedroom furnished &amp; one
·=-- --'-===='-Real Estaze- General
bedroom furnished apart·
Furnace repairs, electrical
ments. Call after 6 p.m.
work, plumbing, mobi le
992-2288,
Housing
home or residence. 992 ·
business

PLUMBING

-Auto and Truck
Repair
-Transmission
R
·
epa.r
Hrs.: Mon.· Fri .
9 A.M.-5:30P.M.

Sizes
"From 30x30"
SMALL
Ut'lity B "ld'
I
Ul mgs
Sizes from 4X6 to 12X40

AUTOMOBILE
SURANCE been

PHONE 992-2156
I

Mobile Homes
lor Sale

Insurance

$11,000.

'
eREAL
ESTATE

2. _ _ _ _ __

1~

small

11-ProfHIIOftll

1. _ _ _ _ __J

dry. Reasonable. 992·6022.

For personal intervie.,· contact John c. Hall TOLL
FREE al 1·800-762-5903 or CALL COLLECT
H13-323-5S21, Monday through Friday, between
8:30a.m.- 4:30p.m., or write Olan Mils, Box 300,
Springfield, OH 45501, ATTN : John Hall.
E.O.E.M/F

o,.rtunlty
1J-MeNy t• LOI,

I

b~droor'n

2 acres. John Sheets, 3112
:r:.l~s south of Middleport,

GARAGE

~==~P~om~e~ro~y~,~O~h~.=~~=========j~=~:;:;;;;;;;~~
f
ALL STEEL
AL JROM M J&amp;l BLOWN
Farm Buildings

never carpet.
12 x 60, two
lived in, 32 bedroom, \renled
B Xbedrooms,
S Sales, Inew
ric.,
VACANCY , adult foster Mason,
care, board, room, laun·

If you need 10 earn $1S,OOO plus per year, this may be
for you. $17.5.00 per week while iJ1 t.·ain.ing with
motel eKpe"nses, car allowance and corp. benefits.

at-

l Announcement
J For Rent

12 Situations Wanted
WILL Do small business
bookk~eping at home .
Have relerences. 992·7274 31
Homes for Sale
after 5 p.m.
1o ROOM brick, 3 baths, w.
, acre; 6 rooms, 2 baths, 1112
Will do sewing ~ acres; 6 rooms basement,
alterations. 949·2145.
bath, 2 mobile homes;

helpful.

~ af·

'

~::;;:=~=.:==.:=:;:=r----------1

ner lol, in Middleport.

Experience in cosmetic, V!welr')t'retail sales such
as_
: Avon, Tupperware, Sara Coventry (etc.)

ternoon during December

or at Pomeroy Library. 1
again.
.
'
It .broke our hearts to lose
him,
~
DEER Cut &amp; wrapped • at
But he dld not go alone,
Maple Wood Lake between
For part of us went with Syracuse &amp; Racine, Oh.
him,
·
$25. per head. $5 additic&gt;)lal'
The day God called hinl for sklnni~g .
. ,
home.
Sa~ly missed by wile &amp;
sons, Iva Pearl, Stirling, &amp; NEW sandwich at' McCiures Dairy. Isle In MidSamuel.
dleport. Ham &amp; cheese' on
IN MEMORY of Dorsel 1 rye &amp;. chicken 1 pattie,
RIebei who left us 3 years Italian sub.
ago. Dec. 16, 1977. ·
Sadly missed by wife, Starting January 5, 1981
Dorotha. Children: Louella Bailey's Bargain Store in
Jean, Louise, John, &amp; Middleport
will be open
families.
three days a week, Monday, Friday , Saturday
from 9·5. Closed Tuesday,
WEdnesday, &amp; Thursday.

WOMEN

32

1:r-16

only).

ev~ry

Sunday

AND

Olan Mills, The Nation•s · Studio has immediate
.openings. We are looking for sharp, aggressive,
career-mindedlndividu-.ls ov.er 25 or mature. Must
be able to travel S1f2 days per week (home weekends

for sale for Christmas ' at
Friday

MEN

vesligate.

~

Heaven,

""·Inc.

motivated staff? Pomeroy
Health Care Ce~ter has the
ads
answer for you. Due to 5858.c1assified
achieving near maximum Wanted to do : small

If you want an opportunity that comes rarely in a
perSon's lifetime then you owe it to yourself to in·

~

If we -could have him back

OLDER House on 87'x156'
lot behind Burger Ch€1.
Please cal l992·3458. •

Middleport, Oh .992·6370.

life Insurance and
disabil ity Policy at no cost
to the employee, and

Museum

Np Sunday calls .

Auction

&amp;very Frldoy night, 7 p.m.

cellent working conditions,

Radio, TV
&amp;CII.,.Ir
lt-We•tiHI To Do

,

com

resident care with a highly

The world would seem like Meigs

NICE two bedroom country

NICE TWO bedroom house
with lhree car garage in
Racine . $33,00.00. 949-2801.

appr~isals,

shifts? Feel the need to
develop your ideas in

And free from care &amp; pain,

7. 992-7741. .

plete auctl.oneer service.

also ·do

some great gifts as a Sen·

AMNTION:

past Memory Gardens s . R.

KAUFPS

ROGER HYSELL'S

CARPENTER
SERVICES"
-Addons and
remodeling
-Roofing and gutter
work
-Concrete wqrk
- Plumbing.and
electrical work
!Free Estimates&gt;
V C YOUNG II
• •
992-6215or992-7314

10x27 sundeck. First house

basement, $13,900.00. 949·
2801 . No Sunday calls.

as a young business person
and earn good money plus

KET
D. ED
ETT
BARBER
Ml DDLEPORT,
992-3476.

"YOUNGS

total electnc, carpeted, 2
ca r garage, basement,

watches, chains, diamonds
so on. Copper brass and
batteries, antique Items,

6

•• '·"·'" '-" ·• . r.• ''

Schoo l District
Boston ,
Treasurer

7 ROOM HOME. 2112 acres,

f ireplace, . woodburner,

&amp;

tobBuyd: classr ihn gs,
1 g an s, any 1 1ng
Giveaway
IOK,coins,
14K, or
18K
Slamped,
Si)ver
pocket
NORWEGIAN Elk Hound· gold.
watches.
call
Joe
Clark
at
german shepard puppies. 6 992·2054 at Clark's Jewelry
__. !11llles, 3 females, free to Store, Pomeroy, Ohio45769
good home. 949·2-461.

- • ' ' • ••••• • • "'"""' ' o -&lt; o or

Board of
Education of
Eastern Local

ditioning. Call 985 3814 or
992·2571

home. Vinyl siding, full

call: Nancy Van Meter,
R.N.. Director of Nursing,
Pomeroy Health Care Center, 614·992·6606 ..

9. _ _ _ _ __

I

Shade River Rd.
loaders

Business Services

Beautiful three bedroo;,
ranch brick 11ome in Baum
Addition, &lt;"1 Pomeroy, Ohio.
Gas heat, central air c()n·

USED FURNITURE. Gold

hospitalization insurance
available. Come visit us or

10..,.--_ _ _ __

I.

·~ Chester on

. .,.Munle

Homes for Sale

&amp; silver, class rings, pocket

challenging and rewarding
work? Tired of rotating

5. _ _ _ _ __

CHRISTMAS SEASON
Large Selection ol
POINSETIIAS
FROM '1.00 TO '10.00
p Christrr&lt;&gt;&gt;
Cactus t
el-ianging Baskets
• Hou ~c Pl.mts
I
HUBBARD'S GREENHoUSE
I
&lt;. vr-&gt;cu,e, 011.
992 5716
:I
Opcn,Mon. -S.ll. 9 to~
I
Sun. 1 to s
I

• l~farm .~ 6 miles south of

Public Notice

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

...

Etherea

RNs and LPNS, looking for

I
I I J wanted
I I r For Sale

.. ---_ ,...,

Announcing

31

--

th€ eligibility list at 992·
2156 or 992-2157.

2
In Memoriam
I PAY highest
si Iter
In loving memory of possible for gold
Stirling W. Rayburn, who coins, rings, jewelry, e)c_
passed away four years Contact Ed Burkett Barber
:;
ago today, December 16, Shop, Middleport.
1976.
Dear Husband &amp; Father :
Your hands we cannot SHOOTING MATCH ~ at
Corn Hollow in Rutl&lt;i!'d .
touch,
Every Sunday Slarlif19\ at
But God will give
Proceeds ~
- ng
message, to the one we noon.
donated 10 the Boy s ut
miss so much.
Dear God, please take this Troop 249. 12 gauge lac ry
chokegunonlyl
~
mesSl!lge,
To our loving ·husband &amp;
fllther up above,
RACINE GUN SHoi;h,
And tell him how much we Racine Gun Club, ell,fry
miss him,
Friday night starting. at
A)ld give him all our love.
7:30 p.m. Factory cllJke
He bid no one a l-ast guns only . .,
._.
farewell, he said goodbye
to none,
YOUR deer lr&lt;&gt;j!hY
The Heavenly gates just HAVE
Mounted.
Birchfieli,.s .
opened up,
And ·a loving voice said, East on 124 at Rutland . 7422178.
'Come'.
Although his soul is now, at
MEIGS HISTORY Books
rest,

by Larry Wright

Auction

tlnel route carrier. Phone
us right away and get on

I
I

I

-~

·:. Holiday Make-up . . Ms.
. Loreal Wilson, Etherea
Beauty Shop, Racine,
,.- 1Thurs., Dec;. 18, for your
; • personal skin care analysrs
&amp;make·up.
' ·· ---~--....,.~. ·, GUN SHOOT Sunday Dec.
-' 21 atl p.m. allzaac Walton

ters pertaining to me
execution of the trust, not
less than five days prior to
the date set for l'teanng.
Robert E. Buck
JUDGE
Common Pleas Court,
Probate Division,
(1 2) 16 , ,";;c"igs County, Ohio

Phone ________________

I

~{ ·- - - - - - - - , - -

Any person Interested
may file written exceptions
to said accounts or to mat·

Curb Inflation.
Pay Cash for
Classlfieds and
Savell I

I
I
I
I
I
I

consiopments.

KIT 'N' CARLYLE TM

Middleport will be closed every Friday night, 7 p.m.
Auction House
· December 29 to January 5, Ossie's
Middleport, Oh.992-6370. '
1981.

1

The Happy Harvesters Class of the
Trinity Church in Pomeroy enjoyed
(12) 9, 16, 23, 3tc
a 4 )5.m. turkey dinner recently at
Crow's Steak HoQSe. Following the
dinner, the members returned to the ----------~~~----------~
church for their Chrisbnas party.
The program was under the direction of Genevieve Meinhart, with the
meeting being opened by prayer by
Mrs. Caryl Cook. Mrs. Meinhart
gave the readings, "I Saw Christmas/' "A Prayer for You All,' ' and
"A Little Boy Named Pedro." Enna
.
Smith read "The Origin of 'Silent
I
Night'," and Edna Slusher read
Write your own ad and order by mail with this I
"The Man Who Kept Christmas."
coupon. Cancel your ad by phone when you get I
1
results. Money not .refundable.
Gay Perrin recited "0 Little Town of
Bethlehem" and gave the closing
prayer. The group sang "Silent
Name ____________~---Night," "Joy to the World," and "0
Little Town of Bethlehem." Mrs.
Address-----------Slusher accompanied the group on
the piano.
~
A Christmas tree decorated the
social room of the church, while the
table carried out the Christmas
CIRCLE
theme. A gift exchange was held,
with punch and cookies being served
AD WANTED
afterwards.
6
10
3
Attending the gathering were
Genevieve Meinhart, Erma Smith,
Neva Sayfried, Edith Laning, Lillie
l:lauck, SteUa Kloes, Wilma Terrell,
Ruth Massar, Ada Holter, Caryl
Cook, Edna Slusher, Eva Dessaur, ,
and one guest, Gay Perrin.
1

BIG BEND PARTY
SATURDAY
The Big Bend Citizens Band Radio
Club will have its annual Chrisbnas
dinner party at 1 p.m. Sunday at the
Rock Springs Grange hail. Those attending are to take a covered dish .
and thejr Olfll table service. Meat'
. and drink will be furnished by the
club. There wiD be a $5 gift exchange
and each parent is to take a gift for
their children. Santa will arrive ~t
2:30 p.m. The party Is for members
of the club and their guests.

, ,Baileys Bargain Store In

said Court on the 14th day
of January, 1981. at which
time said accounts wflt be
considered and continued ·
from day to day until
finally disposed of. :

E Ioise

Deceased
Unless exceptions are
filed thereto, said accounts
wi II be tor hearinq before

SANTA'SCOMING
Plans have been completed for a
visit from Santa at the Rutland
Elementary School, 10 a.m. to 12:30
p.m. Saturday by the Rutland PTO.
Pictures of children with Santa will
be taken for $1.50 and there will be a
gift table of stocking stuffers with
items selling from 35 cents to 50 cents. Admission to see Santa is 50 cents
per child. There "ill also be a craft
table with items.starting at 10 cents.

•

· Small investment, large '·
returns, Sentinel Want Ad~_

r

Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd Johnson will
celebrate their 25th wedding anniversary on Sunday, Dec. 21, with
an open house at their 927 Hysell St.,
Middleport, residence.
Married on Dec. IB, 1955 at a

tile carpet Is vacuwn!!d. •
. ,
The carpet In my retail store looks ·
alinMt new and I have been usiqg
this on.it for five days, after trying
au kinds of expell!llve eoinmercial
anti-static &lt;solutioll!l with limited
success. - OO'IS
DEAR POlLY - Our 1&amp;-ye&amp;Nild
daughter babysits and to keep track
of her babysitting jobs, she ~s her
own calendar by tile telephone so she '
can teU at a glance if she.is free at a
certain time. Also, if ~ is not at
home anyone who·answers the phQne
can teU If she is free and tile caller's
name is written In pencil In tile
space. In the back of tile calendar
she keeps .tile name and telephone
numbers of the people she baby~its
for. She also makes a note of ·tile
· time so if she Is sitting for someone
In tile daytime she knows she is fre .
for a llight job. -SUE

3
Announcements ·
9
HOMEMADE . Chill soup.
New feature at McClure's USED FURNITURE. Gold
Dairy Isle In Middleport. 10 &amp; silver, class rings, pocket
pet. discount ·for Golden watches, chains, diamonds
&amp; so . .Copper brass and
Buckeye Members.
I
antique items,
do appraisals, com·
.. FAYE'S Gift Shop In ,Mid·
auc;:tioneer service,
• dleporl will be open frQm
30 vears experience In
· .['12-5 until c~rislmas.
ness. Will buy com·
plete estates. Also take

WI L L do handyman work
in your home. Furniture
repa ir in my shop . · Jim

Bentz, 4th St ., Syr~cuse .
E KCavating

83

J

&amp;

F BACKHOE SER-

VICE li scensed &amp; bonded ,
septi c tank installation,
water &amp; gas lines. Ex·
cav ating work &amp; transit

layout . 992·7201.

Dozer &amp; ditcher work, land
clear ing, wa ter lines, gas
lines, grate wo r k. Charlie

Hatf ield. 742-28 19.

84

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

SEW ING

MACHINE

Re pa irs,
se rvice,
all
makesl
992 ·2284.
The
F abric Shop, Pom eroy .
Authorized Singer Sales
and Service . We sharpen
Sc issors .

ELWOOD

BOWERS

REPAIR Sweepers,
toaster s, irons, all small
applian ce s. Lawn mower.

Next to State 1-j,lghway
PRIX . 2 dr .. Garage on Route 7, 985·
am·fm , bucket sea ts, runs 3825.
good. $400. or best offer.
304-773-5013.
APPLIANCE SERVICE :
a II makes washer, drye r s,

1975 Lincoln Continental ,

range s,

dishwashers ,

low disposals, water tank s. Call
mileage ,
reasonably Ken Young at 985·3561. 28
years experience. Also will
pri ced. 992-2502.
sell parts you fix:
NICE Christmas present.
General Hauling
1976 Chevette, good clean 85
condition.
New tires, AGRI -LIME Spreaqing,
sharp. $1.895. 304-882 2466 limestone and fill dirt
anytime.
fully

equipped ,

hauling . Leo Morrf's, 742·

1971 MONTE CARLO, 350
V-8,
automat ic,
disc
brakes,
am - tape ,

aluminum wheels. 992-2967
after 5.

2455.

TRASH
Syracuse ,

Flatwoods

HAULING,
Rock

Springs,

Rd . 992·5715.

lawrence Manley Jr.

~-=========:.L=========
They'll Do It Every Time
71(£ EAR Sl'f'CIALIST
lfflOS'E K/tJS ARE
~FANS ----

�.Page-12- The Daily Se ntin e l

December 16, 1980 :

Pom eroy-Middle port, Ohio

.

Depu'ties probe wreck.

Colonel Sanders Dead A t 90,
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP ) Harland Sanders, the white-haired,
white-suited Kentucky colonel who
parlayed sales ability and a secret
~ipe into a fried chicken empire,
died today at Jewish Hospita l in
Louisville. He was 90.
Sa nders, internationally known as
the founder and symbol of the Kentucky Fried Chicken fast food fran·
chise, died at 7: 40 a.m. EST, according to company spokesman
John Cox.
Cox had no other details, except to
say that Sanders' wife, Claudia, had
been advised of the death.
Sanders had been in the hospital
since Nov. 7, suffering from
leukemia and pneumonia.
·
He first took his chicken franchise
on the road when he was 64, an age
when m a ny people consider
retirement: He was still working for
Kentucky Fried Chicken at age 89
whe~ doctors diagnosed acute
leukemia in June 1980.
"It's just one more thing we've got
to conquer," he said when told of the
disease. " I've overcome a lot of

things in my life."
He was hospitalized repea tedly for
other ailments in the months that
followed the diagnosis. In Sei&gt;'
tember doctors said the cancer was
in remission.
Sanders, who wore his signature
white suit a nd string tie even while
relaxing, learned to cook at age 5. "[
cooked like Mom did , and later when

Meigs board
enrollment.
The board questioned the loss of
funding in the vocational program
and Morris explained that !he
decrease in students is in the areas
of cosmetology, business office
education and drafting and i~ par·
tially caused by the decrease in
students coming in from other
districts.
Morris also reiterated that college
preparatory students cannot be in·
volved in classes defin ed a
vocational, even though some, par·
ticularly interested in architecture,
cannot even take drafting or . other
courses which might be helpfu l to
them.
The condition of district school
buses was again discussed. Morris
noted five buses have been pulled
from service as the result of another
inspection and that 25 regular buses
are running 27 routes. There are no
spares. He said, however, that

assurance has been made that three
new buses will be arriving before
Jan . I.
Mrs. Minnie Thornton asked that
for the safety of the entire district all
of the buses be checked over the
holiday period.
Marvin Dodrill was named a sulr
stitute custodian effective Dec. 15
and added to the substitute teacher
list were Donald Eichinger, Ellis
English, J r., Nick Linscott, Joseph
Myers, James Wright and William
Young. The resignation of Mary Lou
Hawkains as Bradbury custodian
was accepted. She is now serving in
an aide position.
The board agreed to renew the
contract with E. G. Babbert Inc., for
inspections of the high school
sewage treatment plant and set May
19 as the cortunencement dale next
spring.

I went into the restaurant business, I
just kept on doing it the same·way,"
he one said.
. In .his later years, he traveled
some 250,000 miles annually on
promotional tours for Kentucky
Fried Chicken, earning over $200,000
yearly. "Work keeps you young," he
once said, "gold or fishing isn 't as
much fun as working."
Born Sept. 9, 1890, on a farm in
Henryville, Ind., Sanders dropped
out of school in the sixth grade, later
working as a streetcar conductor, a
railroad fir eman and insurance
salesman. He lied about his age at
16, volunteering for duty with the
U.S. Army in Cuba , and later ran a
steamboat ferry on the Ohio River.

I

In 1930, Sanders settled in Corbin
Ky., and built · a motel and
restaurant. There, he developed a
process for quick-cooked chicken
that became· the '"finger lickin'
good" Kentucky Fried Chicken.
In the early 1930s, he was commissioned a colonel by the governor
- an honorary tiUe often bestowed
on Kentuckians. He adopted his
white suit fulltime , Sanders's
daughter Mildred Ruggles said, after a TV host told him the garb gave
him a look to match his tiUe. ·
The chicken recipe With its 11 herbs and spices is still secret, although
Sanders has said the ingredients
"can be found on just about any
housewife's shelf."

Helen Leifheit, a former Pomeroy
resident, died Monday night in a
Columbus Nursing Home. Funeral
arrangements and other details will
be announced later by Ewing
Funeral Home.

.

.

request.
•
Charles Legar, Pomeroy Fire
Chief, submitted the department's
annual report. Legar said a total of
75 calls were made in 1980 dowh 20
calls from last year.
Legar informed council that the
fire department was in good shape
and needed QOly one and one-half inch hose. 'Losses caused by fires, in
·and out of town, totaled $104,015 according to Legar.
Newell of PoinTView Cable be asked
to attend the next regular meeting.
Karr r.eported that sewer project
bids will be advertised on Dec. 28
and will be opened onJan. l5, 1981.
Donnie Ward of the street depart·
ment requested a load of limestone
be placed on Liberty Lane. He also
asked for a b ar and chain for the
chain saw. Council approved tbe
requests.
Jane Walton, clerk, read a report
from the budget commission which
showed the village would receive
38.1!0 percent of local government
funds or a total of$17,460.
A letter was rea d from Halliday
an d Sheets, attorneys from
Gallipolis, regarding $56 due former
Police Chief Charles McKinney.
It was noted that McKinney had
failed to turn in his uniforms
provided by the village. The matter
was referred to the solicitor. Council
earlier voted not to pay the $56.
Harry Evans, financia l consultan!, suggested that $40,000 in
treasury bills maturing soon be
placed in money markets.
Evans submitted a statement
showing the village had made
$13,257.65 in . inters! the past nine
months. Evans was paid $2,6li8.53 by
the village .
Mayor Clarence Andrews sulr
mitted his report for the month of
November showing receipts in the
amount of $1,291.50.
It was disclosed that Edith Sisson,
dispatcher for the village, had asked
• for additional vacation time and
tenure. Council took no action on the

Ruth Buffington, Pomeroy, died
Monday night at Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
l;i'uneral arrangements and other
details will ill! annolmced later by
the Ewing Funeral Horne.

The Meigs Medical Emergency
Service headquarters reported four
calls for assistance answered Mon-

Three people cited in separate
traffic accidents investigated Mon·
day by the Gallia-Meigs Post of the
Ohio Highway Patrol.
The patrol said Sammy W. Brown,
26, Pomeroy, and Fannie M. Durst,
64, Portland, were both southbound
on Meigs CR 25 at 10:30 a.m. when
Durst attempted to pass Brown's car
and, collided when Brown turned left.
No damage was reported to
Brown's car and minor to the Durst
auto. Brown was cited by the patrol
for left of c.enter.
The patrol investigated another
two-car crash in Meigs County early
Monday night.
Troopers said Hugh Bearhs, 64,
Pomeroy, was northbound on SR 7 at
6 p.m. wllen he attempted to make a
left turn, missed the turn and
collided wjth a southbound vehicle
driven by Ronald E. Grate, 29,
Rutland.
Minor damage was reported to
both cars and Bearhs was cited for
failure to yield while turning left.
Troopers said Karl Paulsen, 17,
Gallipolis, was attempting toltnake a
left turn from u.s. 35 in Gallia County at 6:55 p.m. when his car was
struck in the rea r by another car

.ELECTRONIC
HEARING TESTS

JHURSDAY

DEC. 18, 1980

9 AM ·ro 12 NOON

Will Be Given By
Mr. H. W. Mattingly

BELTONE Consultant
.
Who Will Be At:
MEIGS INN, P.OMEROY,OHIO

Anvone who ha s trouble hearing Is welcome to have a hearing test us·
lng modern.electronic equipment to determine If his loss Is one which
. may be helped. Some of the causes of hearing loss will be expla ined
and di agrams of how the eor works will be shown·.
We Also Service and Repair All Makes of Hearing Aids
Batte, ies and Supplies l'or All-Makes For Sale
IF YOU CANNOT COME IN -

•

Pomeroy, Oh.

Gallipolis; Ohio

COKE
SPRITE ·
OR TAB

. I.

, ~·

WEST'B~D (o)

Self-Buttering
Corn Popper
• Corn butters itself while it

pops!
• 4 quart cover flips over lor
use as a serving bowl.
• Electric base shuts itself

2 LITER BOfiLE

$1Q99

REG.

•p•

VALUE OF $450.00

SPECTACULAR
DIAMOND PENDANT DRAWING
QUANTITIES ARE LIMITED ON SOM E I r EtJIS
SO ···· BETTER NURRY !'

MOORE'S HAS A LARGE SELECTION OF
CHRISTMAS GIFTS AI1D DECORATIONS

w'(c:,, . s\f.£.S,

Moore's·American HardWare

.
~,_tr;
TOoLs, ~~~';~

I
I

For Meigs County, Ohio

992·6687

I

STICK-ON
CHRISTMAS
PACKAGE BOWS

124W. MainStreet ·
Pomeroy, OHio
Phone: 992· 2848
There's Someting for Everyone
At Moore's

r·----E.:-iEiiEi:Ds·--l

HEARl NG TESTS SET

214 Main St.

446-9800

•
..
.
•'

'
' '

I ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~'

No Purchase Nessary

6 STYLE ASSORTMENT OF
·
SELf STICK CHRisTMAS TAGS ••••• 49'PG.

INSURANCE SERVICE

.

RIVERSIDE VW
195 Upper River Rd.

•

''

.

. LET US SHOW YOU HOW

driven by Philip H. Wetherholt, 37,
RioGrande.
·
Paulsen's car was· demolished and
moderate damage done to the
Wetherholt auto. Wetherholt was
cited for assured clear distance.
The patrol said two ,Peer were
killed in separate accidents in Meigs
County Monday.
Arza Barnett Jr., 30, Huntington,
W.Va., was northbound on SR 7 at
10:30 a.m. , and Jack R. Coleman, 43,
Middleport, was southbound on 7 at
6:40p.m. when their cars struck and
killed the deer; cauSing moderate
damage to both cars.

'

REUTER-BROGAN

IN FUEL COSTS ALONE In The Next 12 Months
$2,805 Over Three Years T ime.

•

Patrol cites three people
in separate Monday wrecks

144 PIECE ASSORTMENT OF SELF STICK
CHRISTMAS TAGS SHOULD READ

.

'935

00

off wnen corn Is popped.

FRUTH'S CIRCULAR
IN TODA Y'S PAPER

Doe ~ your automobile insurance cost
you melT) every year? Maybe it doesn't
have to . If you're a good driver, talk to
us before you r insurance anniversary
date. You may start savi ng money!

•

•

NOW 21 PERCENT
At 6:57a.m. the Pomeroy unit
NEW YORK (AP) - , Morgan day.
took Jessie Van Inwagen from But- ~
Guaranty Trust Co., the nation's fif- ternut Ave.to Veterans MemoriaL
th-largest cormnercial bank, tod'ay At 10 :47 am. John Artrip was taken
raised dts prime lending rate to a from Butternut Ave. to Veterans
record 21 percent.
Memorial Hospital.
The increase, from the 20 percent
Robin Hess was taken from her
prime rate set just last week, comes leading Creek Road home to Holzer
amid further increases in banks' Medical Center at 12:40 p.m. by the .
cost of acquiring funds and adds fur- Middleport squad which also took '
ther pressure to the economy, which NeWe Perry from the office of Dr.
many economists think will slide in- James Conde to Veterans Memorial
to another recession.
Hospital at 11 :39 a.m.

TO

'

FRUTH
PHARMACY

WE CAN SAVE YOU AS MUCH AS

Emergency
squad runs

CORRECTION:

With

CHRYSLER CORDOBA AND
MERCURY COUGAR OWNERS

DIES - Col. Harlalld Sanders,
internationally !mown as the
founder and symbol• of the Ke..,
tucky Fried Cblcteo fast food
restaurant, died Tuesday at a
Louisville, Ky., hospital. He was
90. (AP Laserphoto).

Ruth Buffington

Council...
IContinued from page I)

·•

•

I

Area Deaths

Helen Leifheit

· The Meigs County Sheriff's Department Is Investigating a single car
accident that occurred Monday afternoon on SR 681.
Guy J . Walker, 24, Grand J unction, Colo., was traveling east when
he was crowded off the roadway by
an oncoming vehicle. The Walker
vehicle went off the highway on the
right and into a deep ditch. The
driver was not injured. There was
heavy damage to the vehicle.
·
J ohn Sexton, Rt. 1, Langsville,
toild the sherifrs department Mon·
day the he had taken from his
residence batteri~ and junk copper.
The incident Is under lnvesUgaUon. ·

..

MEETSWEDNE!IDAY
.
The Middleport Uterary Club 1rill: :
meet Wednesday l!t the home · of::
Mrs. Bernard Fultz, 2 p.m. ·Mr&amp; · :
Evelyn Proffitt will read the Chrlst7::
mas story. Mrs. Betty Dean, ; ·
Chesier Garden Club member, wU1 H:
give a demonstration on making ; :
Chrlstmall Dower arrangements.
Club members are to take a gift.
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted: Nellie Perry, Long·
Bottom; Lena Hatfield, RuUand;:
John Artrip, Pomeroy; Archie Rife,:
Coalton ; Jessie Van Inwagen,Pomeroy.
;
Discharged: Otha Karr, Iva Car-.·
penter, Oscar Imboden, and Lorena·
Ault.
.·

CALL FOR A HOME APPOINTMENT .
PHONE "2·3629

OPEN TONIGHT TILL a:Oo

&amp;iiJii;im .

I

. .

II

I

Save lime and money on haircuts and trims.
Perfect for Dad 's in-between touch-ups, crew and
butch cuts for the youngsters. Trims bangs or
bobs- ideal for women's short hair styles.
Convenient On/Off switch. Motor power
. adjustment. Set includes barber-style scissors,
comb, coars~ "butch" attachment, tube of clipper
oil ij[ld clean~ng brush.

I
I.

I1
II

NC1 · 5
Whil e They Las t

$3 99

~'#ORTHERN

20 PAGE
PHOTO
ALBUM

4 WAY LIGHTED

MAKE-UP MIRROR
• 4 · light setti ngs · natural,
day, office and evening .
. • Cracked ice le nses wi1h
new , exclusive, easy to replace bulbs .
• U p- front on -off switch .

10 SHEETS
REG.

mirro rs:

regular

REG.
1
26.95

• U L Lis ted.

I
II

I

LADY .SCHICK
"QUICK CURLS"
STYLING WAND

•

and magnilying .

:W

I
I

·'

·• 2 swivel

I

11
II

59~

\ 1

CLIPMASTER ELECTRIC HAIR CLIPPER SET ·

1
1

BAG
OF 20

CLOSEOUT OF A RIAL 'J2"' VALUff

I]
....

Special '129~ SET
OTHER GIFT SUGGESTIONS FROM THE
HOUSEWARES DEPT. ON 1ST FLOOR
Coffee Maker
·
• G.E.Halr Dryers
• Juicers· Ice Crushers
• Clalrol Hair Setters · . ·
• Electric Fry Pans
• G.E.Curllnd Irons
sunbeam Toasters
• Water Pic ShoWer Massagers
eG.E.WaffleMakers
• Boby Bath Scales
Sunbeam Food Processors
• Presto Pressure C&lt;iOkers
• West Bend Corn Poppers
• Prosto Pressure Canners
• Chicago Cutlery Knives · .
• Schrade Pocket Knives
• Corning Bakeware
• Redl')'lon Clothes Hompers
Correlle Dit hes
. _ e And Many More

•
•

•
•

ALL NATIONALLY KNOWN BRANDS

Santa Claus wil.l be In the store Tuesday, Wednesday
and Thursday ·_,~L!Iht~ from 6 to 7:30. .
.

L!!-!J!t!il.P§..!!..~g(EROY

FRUTH PHARMACY
. "THE EVERYTHING STORE"

' . .•.
101 SIXT H AVE. , . , . .
2SOI 'JAC KSON AVE.
' HUNTINGTON, W: VA, . '
POINT PLE ASANT, W. VA.

======-

All STORES
OPEN 7 DAYS
A WEEK!
PARKING

I
I

I

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