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                  <text>Algerian ambassador meets with hostages
.
This, and the telecast of a short film after a failed U.S. rescue atte!Ylpt
of the meeting showing only a few of lastAprll
But repOrts on Algerian Amtoday that the Algerian.ambaslll!dor the hostages, had aroused some conto Ir1111 had met with all 52 of the, cern for the condition of the other 20 bassador Abdelll:arim Gheraieb's
· visit to the hostages, !Ddicated all 52
American hostages and found them or so Americans.
"looking quite healthy and well
The Algerians, who have been ac- hostages were in Tehran.
One report said the ambassador
nourished."
•
ting as ·intennediaries between
There were other reports he had . Tehran and the United States, saw met wiih aU 52 hostages ~ 49 of them
briefed them on the complex U.S.· the hostages in their "places of in one unnamed location - fnm 5
p.m. Thursday local time to 4:30
Iranian negotiations for thejr detention," Tehran Radio said.
release.
Three Americans are being held in a.m. today. An~r report said he
· Papal envoy to Iran Anibale the Foreign llfinistry and the described to them' the weeks of
Bugnini visited the hostages Christ- whereabouts of the other 49 has been negotiations that led to Iran's
mas morning and said they were in a closely guarded secret since the demand of $14 billi.on in cash, llSSets
'gOOd health and high spiirits but that Iranian captorS !!!lid they dispersed .and gold in exchange for their
he had .seen only 25 or 30 of them. tjle Americans around the country freedom.
By The Assoclal\!d Pre81i

The Iranian news agency saiG

~

they heard the -· - ·--:---

glorious tidings of Christ's birth,
the Wise Men set out seeking the Newborn ·King.
.

The .star led them to where He

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there they

and bestowed
rich
gifts upon Him.
.
.
/
.

i\t this lime_. of joy and exultation we express
our gratitude and hope you Will be blessed
HUiHEST AWA~ - Lie~tenant General James v. Hartinger,
USA_F, s?n of Mrs. Violet H;lrtlnger, Middleport, recently received the
Dlstmgw~bed Service Medal at a ceremony in the Pentagon, Washington,
D. C. He IS congratnlated by General David J. Jones, Chairman of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff. The medal is the highest peacetime award :__
ranking only behind the Air Force Cross and Medal of Honor. General
Hartinger distinguished himself as an Air Force Commander from June
30, 1975, to January 1, 1980. General Hartinger is now the Commander In
Chief of the North American Air Defense Command headquartered in
Colorado Springs, Colo.

•

Vol. 21. No. 179
Copyrighted 1980

three men were wearing T-shirts · zad Nabavi, in charge of It~n's
bearing the names of American hostage negotiations, said that if the
universities.
_..
United States was willing to propose
He reportedly held the meetings at some other kind of guarantee Iran
the request of both the United States might consider it. There was ~o inand Iran, and said he would convey dication of what kind of guarantee
· ·
letters from the Americans to their he meant.
Tehran Radio . said the United
families. Gheraieb was expected to
leave Tehran for Washington to States must either accept Iran's
report to U.S. offi~ials on the "logical" terms for their release or
'
hostage situation. According to watch them be tried as spies.
The papal envoy Bugnini, saw
Pars, he said he "gues~ed" the
United States would make its latest groups of the captives twice earlier
reply on the hostages "within three since their capture on Nov. 4, 1979,
days."
·
when Iranian militants overran the
According to another report, Beh· U.S. Embassy in Tehran.

•

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I

Pars said Gheraieb and Ben
Hossein of Algeria's Foreign
Ministry met with aU the hostages
and the ambassador said "All the
hostages were looking quite healthy
since they were living in very gOOd
conditions. They were wen
nourished. and were provided with
every facility,"
Gheraieb said the hostages could
speak freely but he had no comment
on their reaction to the news of the
negotiations, one report said.
Photographs released by Iran
showed the ambassador talking with
three unidentified hos\llges. The

1 Section 10 Pages 15 Cents
~Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middlepor.t , Ohio Friday, December 26, 1980
5

by the radi.ance of thai Holy Night.

l

Toledo Poles recall So~et tanks
TOLEDO, Ohio - Reading news reports of possl~e Soviet in· p
tervention in Polahd, Ted Nitkiewicz remembers when ~ian troops ~ ·
took the young Polish Army recruit prisoner 40 years ago.
"They packed us in boxcars, without fOOd, without water and shipped us to Siberia. We ate snow," said Nitkiewicz, now 62 .
. Nitkiewicz, co~~der of the Toledo Polish Anny Veterans post, Is
~e many of the c1ty s 70,000 residents of Polish descent - afraid of
another Soviet invasion of Poland. Some are especially fearful
.because th.ey survived the Sept. 17, 1939, Russian invasion and its af·
termath.
Like many of his countrymen once in Siberia, Nitkiewicz was forced
to work from daybreak until SW1Set1 usually logging. In the morning,
he ~ved one bowl of thin, foul-smelling fish or cabbage soup. At
ilight, it was the same, with a small piece of bread added. The bread's ·
· size depended on whether the Poles had met their work quota.
"Sometimes Uiere were worms (maggots) in the soup," Nitkiewicz
.said."We did not throw away the worms."

of you Chriet•••·

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Two men save 82 year-old from fire
JACKSON, Ohio - Heroics for Jlm Plummer, who saved the life of
his ailing 82-year'illd neighbor by polling him from hi.s burning home
on Christmas Day, ~ring a funny feeling.
·
·
''The-i'oofwu getting ready 18-go. In ~otheriive rriinuteS, he wOuld
have been gone," the :Ill-year-old grocery clerk said following Thur-·
sday morning's blaze in a rural area near this southern Ohio toWII.

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DIRECTORS

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Theodore T. Reed, Jr.
Thereon Johnson
Leslie F. Fultz
Richard C. Follrod
Ferman Moore
' Ben H. Ewing
Paul G . Eich
Fred R. Carsey
Fred W. Crow, Jr..

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"Was I scared? Sure," he said. "But 1 got such a funny feeling. He
sounded so helpless when I heard hlm yelling (inside his house).''
PlUIIll)ler had just finished unwrapping Christmas gifts with his wife
and S.yeaNld daughter at about 9:~ a.m. when he heard his dogs
barking and one of his neighbors, Frank Hatten, yelling outside.
The home of Plummer's next door neighbor, Albert Freeh, was in
flames.
·
·
"I thought maybe he (Freeh) had fallen asleep at his chair by his
fuel oil stove," Plumrlier said.
Some glass on Freeh's front door already was broken, according to
Plwmner. The two men shattered more of the pane and yelled for
Freeh. The elderly man answered. But although Freeh was able to
make it to the door- he has difficulty walking because of his knees...:..
he could not unlock it.
Plwruner and Hatten finally broke in the bottom half of the door
with a cement block and pulled the elderly man out. Soon afterward,
the house was gutted.
"He (Freeh) was burned all over his head and hands," Plwmner
said. "One of his·boots was even burned off." ,
·
.
The elderly man was taken to a nearby hospital, where he was
reported in serious but stable condition.

~~JOilMM~~MMllfillfiM~MMMM~

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OFFICERS

W Theodore T. Reed, Jr., Presid~nt
WThereon Johnson, Executive Vice President
WPaul E. Kloes, Vice President
W Roger W. Hysell, Cashier
WJon P. Karschnik, Ass't. Cashier
II! Evelyn G. lann!ng, Ass't. Cashier
Joanne Williams, Ass't. Cashier ·
u Ad"ie W. Norris, loan Officer

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Confectioners keep city in sweets
MIDDLETOWN, Ohio- Sock hops and doul;lle-straw sodas may not
be the rage anYJlloi'e, but the Revelos family has found that the confectionary business has never been sweeter.
Since a Greek 'lmmigrant named Jame!l. Revelos started his
business in 1909, the Elite Ice Cream and Candy shop has satisfied the
craving for sweets of at least three generations in this southwestern
OhiotoWII.
It's a booming business in 1980, having expanded to lour stores and a
franchi.se business in Springboro under management of Revelos'
children.
''The candy and ice cream business has grown for us, and franchise
shops fit into the picture," said George J. Revelos, son of the founder.
· ·"Tell me someone who hates ice cream or candy."
No one, as far as the Revelos' can detennine.

.
\Find may guilty of book scheme

CLEVELAND - U.S. District Judge John M. Manos is awaiting a
probation report before sentencing a. 37-year'illd Michigan man convicted of defrauding newspapers, the public and a bank with a mallorder book sclleme.
·
David G. Gifford of Troy, Mich., was convicted Wednesday of mail ·
fraud and ti1ree counts of interstate transportation of altered
securities.
. : ·
Gifford was 11rrested in September after trying to make a withdrawal from a Cleveland bank account. Government authorltie!l said
be had $2n(),OOO in altered money orders in hi.s possession. ·
The government said Gifford obtained $170,000 worth of advertising
in newspapers nationwide to sell a book· entitled "Power Poacher,"
although the book did not exist. The adve~ clalrGed the book ex·
plalned how coD!Iwners can deal with utiUcy companies.
•
The advertising, the government said, was paid for ~th bad checks.

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111

~ lois Burt

W ~ Gladys Joan vaughan

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5 Sue lightfoot

W6 J~nny Smith

W W Richard Stettler

W' •

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'EMPLOYEES

·

.

Ann a ·rowning
linda Mayer
Bruce Reed
Paul Reed
Donna Schmoll
Cheryl Wjlson
Christopher Yea.u ger

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·

I rls Payne
susie Abbott
Jean Werry
Charlene Thomas
Sharon Michael
George Hicks
Stanley Bass

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I

Weather

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Farmers ·
Bank

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'
r.lnoJdy with a chance of flurries this afternoon 111d tonight. Not as
cold tonight with a low near 20. Mostly cloudy Sa~y. A,hlgh In the
low 308. The chance of preclptatjon is 30 percent tonight and 10 percent
.Saturday.

Ollie EdeDded Forecul- For Sunday through tuesday - a chance .
of 1'1111 or snow Sunday and again around TUesday. Hlgha In the upper
l!lll and 4011 SUnday, and malnly In the 301! Monday and 1'18day. LOwa
IIIOit1y In the 2111.

. BURNED OUT- Ab!troed out sheD is aU that remaiD!I of the family
destroyed. In a C¥.'fslmas Day fire in Upper Arlington which

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claimed the lives of four children, their grandmother and their preguant
auni&lt;1AP,Laserphoto).~

..

Six die in Christmas blaze
UPPER ARliNGTON, Ohio (AP) from Akron in the early 1970s. .
- All of Dr. James Ferraro Sr.'s
The victims were identified as
family, six of whom died in a Christ- Carrolyn Ferraro, 76, Elizebeth
mas Day blaze, were extremely Ferraro, 13, Jeffrey Ferraro, 9,
close, says one of his colleagues.
Tommy Ferraro, 6, James Ferraro,
Dr. and Mrs. Ferraro lost all four 15, all of Upper Arlington; and
· of their children, as well as his Carrol Schoonover, 38, of Pit· .
mother and only sister, who was Is burgh.
pregnant, when fire erupted.near the
Neighbors didn't know much
fireplace of their 'suburban Colum- about the Ferraro's, who stayed to
bus home early Thursday morning. . themselves in the area of large
The couple was attending a Catholic homes and big trees in big yards.
midnight mass when the blaze oc- The family lived in a tw()sstory stone
curred.
house.
Before the fire; a small blaze bur"They .were very close. Four
energetic, gOod kids," said Dr. H. ned in the fireplace and presents
William Porterfield, one of surrounded a Christmas tree in the
Ferraro's partners in a plastic family room. Afterward, the room
surgery practice. The three boys was gutted, with smoke damage
were active in sports, the girl in throughout the house.
basketball and cheerleading.
Fire officials said the blaze stem"You really can't believe what !I med from the fireplace.
devastating situation this i~. for the · "Something may have popped out
family," said Porterfield, who had of the fireplace, we just don't know,"
last seen the Ferraro's on Tuesday. said Upper Arlington Fire Capt
He described them as a close-knit J ~rry Russom on Thursday night.
Italian clan that moved to Columbus "All we know is that it started in that

sister - was asleep in the basement
Fire Capt. Jobn Haney said a floor recreation room and was pulled to
beam too close to the chimney safety through a window. He was ·
ignited and fire raced through the taken to Riverside Methodist
Hospital in Columbus for treatment
family room:
Neighbor Richard Stone, who first of smoke i1ihalation and reported in
called firemen, said "a huge flame, good condition.
it just looked like a big bali," erupThe blaze was the second tragic
ted from the Ferraro's family room fire in less than a week in Ohio.
Early Sunday in Youngstown,
at about 1 a.m.
Haney said flames chased James overloaded electric ci rcuits caused a
Jr. from his bed downstairs before fire which killed eight people - a
he collapsed near a side door. The grandmother arid her seven grand·
children.
others received even less warning.
"Two boys were in a bedroom on
the second floor ," Haney said. "The
boys were (found) next to their beds.
They must have just stood up and
CHIMNEY FIRE
dropped. They didn't take a step.''
Eighteen
members of the Racine
Other bodies were found in secondFire
Department
and three trucks
floor bedrooms ood the hathroom.
answered
a
call
to
Portland at 11 :50
" This is the worst thing I've ever
p.m.
Thursday
for
a
chimney fire at
seen, " Haney said. " It's one way to
the
Harris
residence.
Damage was
spend Christmas. It's a damn
estlmated
at
only
between
$50 and
shame.".
t
$100. Firemen were on the scene,
The only survivor - Russell however , until 2:30a .m.
Schoonover, husband of Ferraro's
area. 11

Many children travel alone on holiday
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
Children often prove to be model
· flight passengers during the holiday
seBBOn, one of the busiest times for
yowtgsters traveling alone, say
some airline officials.
"Most children learn more than a
regUlar pa.Ssenger does' ' about what
goes on in an airplane, said Jill
Jones, supervisor of. flight at,·
tendants for Trans World Airlines in
St. Louis.
According to airline . representatives, more children travel alone
during the holiday season than any
other time of year except summer.
During the wanner months, many
youngsters are traveling to homes of
a divorced parent or visiting
relatives, they said.
Children are boarded first when ·
positble so they can meet the crew,
Mlll8 Jones said.
They also are infonned about the
attendants' duties, becoming
"aln!ost like part of the crew," she
said.
In one case, a child even hei!Jed
pus out .rter-dlnner mints, Miss
Jones said.
"We prob!lbly give more attention
to ~ UWe people that fly than the
IIi&amp; ones," she said.
Many Jlllrents often are ap-

prehensive about · seeing their
children off, hoping the youngsters
are not frightened, said Tom Hollins,
supervisor of airport services for
American Airlines at Po,rt Columbus. But the child usu I~ is "b!luncing up the steps and can't wait to
get on," he said.
Mo&amp; . wtaccompanied childr~n
aren't afraid of flying, Miss Jones
said. If the youngsters are upset, she
,said, it's usually because they're_
leaving a parent.
But such children soon " become
occupied.with what is going on," she
said, and usually prove to be the best
behaved youngsters on a flight.
. That's because· they "get to act
'big," said Paula Gerhold, an ac- •
cowtt manager for TWA sales in
Colwnbus.

Lottery winners
CLEVELAND (AP) - The win·
nlng numbers selected Thursday

night in the Ohio Lottery's weekly
"Pyramid" game are:

.u .
704

3695

There was no drawing in the daily ,
pme "The Number" because of the
a.istmas holiday.

YOUNG TRAVELERS - A YOIIIIIII&amp;el' dis at Fort Columbus during
the boUday aeasoa,
of the busiest tlmelol year for ~hlldren traveling
alone. Some alrllae officials, larludlu&amp; thale at the Collll!lbus, Ohio, airport, say children often prove to be model flfPt pusqgen.

•oe

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Commentary
111 Coort S-1
Pomeroy, Ohio
.
llf.ttt.-!114
DEVOTED TO 1111!: INTEJtEST QF 111E MEIGS-MASON AREA

PubUJher

BOBHOEFUCH
General MIKW,;er

DALE ROTHGF.B, JR.
Ne~

EdJtor

A MEMBER of The Aaaoc:llted Pret1, ~ad Dady Prft1 AIIOdatioll aDd the
Amez;tmu New, paper Publt~ben Auodatioa.
·

1

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I

-:-.,

.

By RobertJ. Wagman
together through his lifetime but apart thereafter. The Baheshti for- • are moving quickly to consolidate
WASHINGTON (NEAJ _ An in- ,._:tha;=:t_:th:e;:...:co:::.un=try:.::__::will.:
' ~ra:::p::.idl::.y_:f:::.al::.l_ces.:..:..:..:_re::po..:_rt.:..:..:edl::_y---sha_.:_re:_thi__:
's_o.:._ut::_loo_..::,k;..an_d:__th_e_ir..:po_liti_.cal_po:._w_e_r._ _ _ _ _
creasingly fictionalized . Iran is
heading for a violent civil war that
will most likely be triggered by the
death of the Ayatollah Ruhollah
Khomeini. So says a new U. S. intelligence estimate circulating at
high )evels here in Washington.
According to the estimate, Iran Is
rapidly, disintegrating into contending factions just ~o years after .
Khomeini's Islamic revolution. The
"
conflict is not twD'sided, but multiITE~S AND PRI.CES GOOD
sided, with each of many interest
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
groups unalterably opposed to one or
DECEMBER 26 &amp; 27
more of the others.
The intelligence analysts com!J!Ire
the Iran of today with the Lebanon of
,
~
two years ago. Tbey predict that the
ADVE RTI SED ITEM POLI CY
civil war will leave Iran, like
~ -.
E.ac h o t lhest&gt; .tdvert•se(J 11e rn s •!. • lt(l v•• f'(J 1u Lit!
...... ':.
Lebanon, in ruins after years of
read•l" ava•lable l or !MIIf! 1f'l fi&lt;! Ch l(, royt:• S t u+" '&gt;~ e • f elll d S
...~ rotl!d Wl thl'i .Jd f1 .....e 00 '\J'n Oul ot ;,n ~
fighting.
11em we Wi ll QHftf vo u vou • c no•ce ot ~ comCMrat:llf! •tefn
.'('. 1
Authority has become badly
~ n a\la tlab'e •efle&lt;hng lhe sarne SJ~ •· •~li o• d r.;tone,. heo,:k
,
wt1•ch w•ll en t•tle vO\.i 10 purd 'las.t! tttt: a che rt•~ •l en-• dl l htl
divided in Iran. Most power now
.l0Ver1•se(J pt•ce Wllhtn Il oavs
rests with the militant Shiite
mullahs, led by Chief Justice
TOTA L S ATIS FACTION GU AR AN TeE
Ayatollah Mohammed Beheshti, the
El.'ervt h •nQ vou bu ~ at lo. •C\je r •S l,jvd' d " ll't!IJ tor t O"' to ta l
so-c.alled " hanging judge of
sahstac t•on regard less o l m&lt;1nut ar t .. re r II "u" ..t tl ' n ut !odl•s

.

The U. S. world
• •
position --compare
WASHINGTON (AP )- For all the
nation's economic problems, it
might be well to remember tills
holiday· season that the United
States is still a country of bountiful
wealth.
And, as it is a season of gift-giving,
it also might be worthwhile to reflect
on how the United States shares its
wealth. Or whether it should share
at all.
The per capita income of the 226
million Americans topped· $10,000
this year, which constitutes wealth
of astr~nomical proportions
alongside the per capita income of
less than $220 in countries where J.l
billion people live.
And willie the U.S. auto industry is
in difficulty , and rising fuel and auto
prices have made car ownership
more expensive, the fact is that
Americans have more cars oer
capita than any other nation. There
is one car for every 1.9 Americans.
There is I for every 6 persons in
Japan, I for 25 in Mexico and 1 for
23,378 in China.
While the buying power of
Americans' income declined 5 percent bec~use of inflation in the last
12 months, and many Americans
have a tough time making ends
meet, most everybody gets enough
food. Cases of actual starvation are
so rare they make headlines.
By contrast. the World Bank
estimates that more than 300 million
children under :age 15 are
malnourished in the world's poor
nations, and more than 400 million
children suffer from serious disease.
Americans have long given some
aid . to the world's poor. But the
question of how much should be
given, and to whom, is especially

pertinent at tills time because the
new Reagan administration plans to
give careful scrutiny to U.S. aid efforts .
The need for help is growing,
especially in Africa , Southeast A,sia
and China, at the same time public
support for foreign aid is dwindling
in this country. The last Congress
failed to approve a Carter administration commibnent to give
$3.2 billion in development aid to the
world's poorest nations over a threeyear period through the World Bank.
The new Congress may approve at
least part of the funds. But some
members of Congress and several of
Reagan's advisers already hjlve
signaled that they ·would prefer to
give more aid directly to our friends
and less through institutions like the
World Bank, which sometimes give
it to countries that aren't as friendly ·
as they would like. The overall aid
effort will probably decrease.
U.S. generosity is often questioned
by others, however, because the
United States gives less in proportion to its wealth than any other
major irtdqstrial nation of the nonCommunist world.
In 1978, the last year for which
figures are complete, the United
States provided $2.07 biUion in aid to
nations where income didn't exceed _
$200 per' person per year. That was
more than any other nation.
However, as a share of wealth, it
amounted to just 0.1 percent of the
U.S. gross national product. Of the
17 wealthy industrial nations, only
Austria , Finland, Italy and New
Zealand did not exceed that share.
The U.S. share probably has
declined since 1978.

Americans saving
more than expected
NEW YORK (AP) - From Uncle
Sam's statistical gral&gt;-bag comes a
gem of a Christmas present:
Americans have been saving at a
better rate than thought, and they
have more savings in the accounts,
too.
All year, it seems, the savings rate
was measured a percentage point
. lower than it was. Al\d now, says
Courtenay Slater of the Commerce
Department, there are "more
savings to draw on" than thought.
Don 't argue. With so little good
economic news out of Washington,
you must accept what you get. And
this, it seems, is all you're getting
for Christmas. Don't, for instance,
ask these questions:
-After giving us coal in our
Chrisbnas stocking for the past
several years, couldn't some explanation be offered to help us get
over the shock tills year of receiving
a little diamond?
- Now that we have been told the
savings rate is only slightly below 6
percent, the norm, instead of under 5
percent, what should we do with all
the warnings a bout the
"dangerously low" rate of savings?
You know, the warnings
Americans were off on a spending
spree, that they had dumped the old
notions of thrift, that capital formation was endangered and that ihe
rebuilding of industry was
threatened?
Shall all those elaborate studies be
incenerated now that we have
revised the savings statistics back to
1968? That in August, for instance,
the rate was 6.1 prrcent; not 4.7?
No, Iorge! those questions. To pursue them might lead nowhere, or
else down a statistical maze. But
don'tforget the lessons.

The first lesson is that too much
faith is put iri numbers. For evidence, watch the stock, bond and· commodity markets convulse after the
money supply figures are released
and lurch again when revised.
Most of them are revised - the
price indices, sales figures, jobless
numbers, savings rates. Some are
also seasonally adjusted. Some are
weighted. Some figures bear little
resemblance to raw counts.

Tehran." These conservative clerics

are boldly trying to consolidate their
position by gaining complete control
of the Iranian political system.
The conservative clergy is being
challenged by groups on both right.
and left - the nationaljsts in the
provinces, the conununists in the
cities and the educated classes, who
opposed the shah but who have also
opposed the clergy's confiscation of
the wealth they acquired under him.
The largest such group is the
moderates led by President
Abolhassan Bani-Sadr.
United only by their opposition to
the Slllite mullahs, these factions
would fight just as bitterly against
one another as they would against
the clergy in any civil war. Several
have engaged .in armed clashes ir\
recent weeks, most of these confrontations have taken place in the
outlyin g prov.inces, where
nationalistic groups are seeking
more autonomy from Tehran.

•
'

'

I

•

..

So far, widening of the conflict has
been prevented only by the personal
intervention of Khomeini, who still
commands the respect of a majority
of Iranians and who has used both
anti-American sentiment and the
Iran-Iraq war to united various lactions.
'
However, the intelligence analysts
think that Khomeini's political
power is clearly on the wane. As
evidence, they note that many of the
ayatollah's longtime aides- clerics
and non-clerics who,fled with him into exile and returneil with him from ·
France to positions of power- have
recently been replaceil 'by mullahs
who remained in Iran to fight the
shah. The latter owe their allegiance
primarily in Behesti, not Khomeini.
The most widely publicized move
against a Khomeini loyalist has been
the prosecution for " insulting the
state" of former Foreign Minister
Sadegh Ghotbzadeh, Khomeini's
oldest and closest non-clerical aide.
In addition, Ibrahim Yazdi, who
resigned as Khomeini's first foreign
minister shortly after the taking of
the U. S. hostages, has been
replaced as editor of an influential
Tehran newspaper by a Beheshti
loyalist.
Sadegh Khalkhali, possibly the
cleric closest to Khomeini, has been
forced to resign as head of the
Islamic court, which has executed
more than I ,000 drug dealers. Even
Khomeini's son-in-law, Shahabeddln
Eshraghi, has been eased out of his
government job and replaced by an
arch-conservative.
The analysts predict that
Khomeini will be able to hold Iran

COPYRIGHT 1980 · THE KROGER CO HEMS AND PRICES
GOOD FRIDAY AND SATURDAY DECEMBER 26 I 27 . 1980
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DameandPennStateforthechance
to play for !ben-Buckeye Cooch
.Woody Hayes, even if it ha&lt;l to be as
a walk~n .
"My dad grew up with Coach
Hayes in Newcomerstown, Ohio.
They went to school together and
were really close," Atha said. "I

grew up watching 'The Woody
Hayes Show' on television. I wanted
to be 8 Buckeye for as long as 1 can
remember.
"One day during my senior year,
Coach Hayes called me an\1 asked
me if 1 wanted to play for him," ad·.ded Atha. "I was tickled to death. It

waswhatialwayswantedtodo."
As a freslunan, Atha made .siX of
nine field goal attempts. He kicked a
50-yarder his sophomore year.
"He's a valuable asset to us," said
Ohio State Coach Earle Bruce. "He
does everything asked of him and
then some."

Rams seek third ·straigh~ win over Cowboys

j

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21
8

said Atha. "I'm a better runner, I
think. Jle has a super ann and Is a
sure bet fQr the pros. But I think I
can play in the NFL, too. Alii need is
thechan~toprovemyself."
A high school standout in Worthlngtoo, Oh!Q, Atha turned his back
on schollll'shlp offers frcm Notre

in the school's Big Ten CQnference
history.
Tbe 5-11, ll!().poimd Atha is not his
team's field goal or extra point
kicker. Vlade Janakievski, a 23Y.ear~ld senior from Yugoslavia, is
and has gone on to set.school record•
in those departments.
''I knew from the beginning that I
~ just going-to be a backup. But
that didn't discourage me," Atha
By BRUCE UlWflT
pionship and Super Bowl. And Angeles , when Ferragamo's scoring hall guided the Raiders to nine vicsaid. "I was a walk~n with no ex·
AP Sports Writer
despite Ferragamo's long TD passes bombs of 40 yards to Waddy, and 34 tories in 11 games and back into the
pectations of e~er seeing tbe field.
Can Vince Ferragamo do it to of 32 yards to Wendell Tyler and 43 yards to Preston Dennard and a !- playoffs for the first tirhe in three
.Tbe fact that I earned Iii scholarship
Dallas a third time?
yards to Ron Smith, the Cowboys yard flip to Drew Hill propelled the years. They'll take on the visiting
was reward enough for me.~ ·
The poster-boy quarterback, a key (thanks to Staubach' s 2-yard scoring Rams to a 38-14 victory over the Houston Oilers in the American ConBut Atha was expected to see his.
share of action in l&lt;xlay's Fiesta to the Los Angeles Rams hopes in toss toJaySaldi) owned a l!&gt;-141ead. Cowboys and into Sunday's game ference wild-card game Sunday.'
And with the Rams in their own against them in Dallas.
"Fortunately, we had a quar- ·
Bowl when 11th-ranked Ohio State the National Conference wild-card
playoff game Sunday, hall heen territory in the closing minutes, the
Danny White, Staubach's suc- terback in the wings who was ready
met No. 10 Penn State.
Atha's primary duty is to kick off, looking good lately against the lead seemed secure . Then cessor, promised after tllat debacle and had prepared himself, and he
Ferragamo struck again. The that tlllngs would not be the same in did an outstanding job," said Coach
which he does so well that few teams Cowboys.
He threw three touchdown passes Rams' quarterback, who had the playoffs. "When we meet them To!Tl Flores.
· ever return one on Ohio State.
The game will also bring together
M Schlichter's understudy, Atba against them in each of their last two replaced injured Pat Haden in mid- in two weeks , it'll be a different
games.
season,
unloaded
a
50-yard
shocker
story," he said. And Cowboys defen- Earl Campbell and 1\le man who sat
played in all 11 games for the
The more memorable of the two, to Billy W.addy just 2:06 from the sive end .Harvey Martin noted, in his shadow a year ago. Campbell,
Buckeyes this year- completing 15
of 28 passes for 190 yards. He is con· perhaps, was the Dec. 30, 1979, NFC final gun. It shot down Dallas, "Ferragamo had a great night - oot the Oilers' 4ruJ!Er runner, gained · ·
vaulted the Rams into the con- we contributed to it."
1,934 yards this year to win his third
sidered one of the quickest players divisional playoff meeting in Dallas.
Uke Ferragamo a year ago (and rushing title in his three seasons in
on the Ohio State roster and showed It turned out to be Roger Staubach's ference title game (a ~ victory
over Tampa Bay), and finally into again early this year), Jim Plunkett the league. Kenny King, who rushed
that by averaging 5. 7 yards on 31 fareweU performance as Dallas'
quarterback.
the Super Bowl, where they finally of Oakland was . ready when the three times lor nine yard.l; in 1979
carries and five touchdoWIIB in 1980.
The Cowboys, of course, figured
fell to Pitisburgh 31-19.
Raiders' No. I quarterback went before being traded to Oakland,
One of the scores was a 63-yaril
they'd have Staubach calling the
More recently was the Dec. IS down with an injury. Since Dan rolled up 761 yards for the Raiders
run against Michigan State.
regul,ar-season game in Los Pastorini suffered a broken leg in this year.
"I think I could do the same things signals for him for another game or
the fifth game this season, Plunkett
Schlichter does If I had the chance," two ... say' in the C()nfPrPnf'~ ,..h~ma
,.-------:------------------------------:---------------'---------

On Christmas Day, the Bhie edged
the Gray 24-23 at Montgomery, Ala.
Followirig today's Fiesta Bowl,
there are three games scheduled for
Saturday +. the Liberty Bowl in
Memphis, Tenn., between Purdue
($-3) and Missouri (S-3), •the : Sun
Bowl in E1 Paso, Texas, between
17th-ranked Mississippi State (9-2)
and No. 8 Nebraska (!1-2), and at
night, the Hall of Fame Bowl in Birmingham, Ala., between Arkansas
(~)and Tulane (7-4) .
In the Blue-Gray game, the Blue
team got the winning touchdown in
the third quarter. Villanova's
Howard Long blocked a pwlt by the
Gray's Stan Talley of Texas
Christian and Colorado's Steve
• Doolittle recovered on the Gray !yard line. Indiana's Lonnie Johnson
bulled overto make it24-17.
JayVenutoofWake Forest passed
to Auburn's Byron Franklin in the
end zone to bring the Rebels within
ooe point in the final minute, but .
twice they failed on attempts at a
two-point conversi.on. Venuto threw
incomplete to Ken Toler of
Mississippi, but a pass interference
penalty gave the Gray team another
shot. This time Venuto's pass to
Marvin Harvey of Southern
Mississippi fell incomplete.
Loug was voted the game's most
valuable player for his blocked punt.
Missouri running back James
Wilder is aiming for a rare double in
the Uberty Bowl, having already
won tpost valuable player honors in
the 19'18 edition. He gained ll5 yards
in that game as Missouri beat
Louisiana State, and he remembers
it well.
"The whole team was fired up for
that game," said Wilder, now a
senior. "The line played well and the
backs played well. We just ran
straight at them, up and down the
field."
·
While Missouri figures to stick to
the ground, Purdue will be relying
on the passing COit;lblnation of quarterback Mark Hernnann land tight
end Dave Young.
1 •
Nebraska is rated a twotouchdown favorite over Mississippi
State in the Sun Bowl, even though
CQmhusker Coach Tom Osborne has
said he will not start Big Eight·
rushing leader Jarvis Redwine at II
.
back because of a poor game m
Nebraska's regular-season finale.
Redwine will play, but the start will
·go to either senior Craig ~ohnson or
sophomore Roger Craig. !
Nickle Hall, who passed for 2,039
yards and 21 touchd&lt;&gt;lfns, leads
Tulane against Arkansas 'in the Hall
of Fame Bowl. "He's a big-play kind
of kid,'' said Tulane's offensive coor·
dinator, Charles Davis. 1'He might
go aloog and miss three or four
passes,' then throw a 60-yard .touchdown PI'SS·"
' ·
Arkansalj CQach Lou Holtz is con·
cemed about Hall, a 6-foot-5 senior
who saw little action i until this
-season. "He's the best passer we've
' faced since Tonuny Kramer (now of
tbe Mihnesota Vikingli) was at
, . .Rice," he said.
'
.

Sprite, Tab or

,-------------'------'--'---------.,.-1

hall become the most prolific passer

Blue nips
Gray, 24-23

•

f.OO Kroge1 ,...,u replace vour o!e m "" '' h t tl~ s.amto tora n&lt;l or ct
com rable brand or •elu fld our "' '- h ~se " I.e

•o~
'~
.
, · r8J\

TEMPE, Ariz. (AP) - J1L,
Wliform nwnber is somewhat of a
misnomer.
Even though Ohio State's · Bob
Atha wears No. 1, he is not the
Buckeyes' starting quarterback
FeUow junior Art Schlichter is and

•

..,.

~·

Buckeyes ready for today's Fiesta Bowl

'

Page-

'

LETI'ERS OF OPINION are wekomed. Tbey 1bould be le•'• thaD 300 wordaloq. AU
)etten are tllbject lo edJUq Qd IDUit be alped with aame, addreu and teleplloae
a1lllber. No \lDIIped letters wDl be pubU.hed. Letten should be ID 1ood ta1ie, addretltq
l11un, out prrnoulltin.

The Dail:i Sentinel- Pagli-3

·

PRICES GOOD.
FRIDAY&amp;
•
SATURDAY.

ROBERT L. WINGETI'

Aulltut PubU.be~/CoatroUer

·

2'

Civil war in Iran .'inevitable', sources say

The Daily Sentinel

' PAT WHITEIIEi\D

December 26, 1980.
The Di!iiY Sen~lnel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

D"mb!r 26, 1980

Do&lt;emborll, ...
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December 26, 1980

Pa§:-4-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-M'iddle ort, Ohio

•

Choosing the Hall of Fame
Now that we've decided to put a
riew president in the White House,
we can settle down to an important·
winter election- the annual vote on
baseball's Hall of Fame.
A province of the Baseball
Writers' Association of America,
this traditionally is one of the most
significant "and at the same time
most controversial poll-taking en·
te\Jll'ises ill ~ports •. ,
The questions inevitably arise:·
How much of the vote is dictated by
the heart rather then the head? How
heavily are the scales weighted by a
player's "good guy" image - his
popljiarit~. as opposed • to !lllOther
playef:s ··unwpularity with the
press?
How objectively do the voters
follow the guidelines spelled out so
clearly in the ballot - "ability, in·
tegrity, sportsmanship, character,
contributiqn to , both team and
baseball?"

•

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Boston

32

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27

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23

13

.771
.639
.417
.324

Washington

21
12 25
Central Dh·lsioo
!:&gt;

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Indiana
Atlanta
~' •. Chiatgo
Oeveland

"

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11

15

16 &gt;I
16 &gt;I
12 "
10

Detroit

26

Westeru CoWereoce
Mld•·ellt Division
San Antonio
24 14

Kansas City
Utah
Houston
Denver
Dallas

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Calgary
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San Diego

17

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Montreal
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6 136 163 30

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Pok.htnd ua. Golden Sbite 114
Friday's Games
Chic1:1g1J at Cleveland. In~
Houston 1:11 Detroit. In)
Atlanta a.t New Jersey, (n)
Denver at Dall&lt;:~s, ( n )
Philadelphia at K::IIIS&lt;:IS Ci ty. (n)
G1Jlden Sl&lt;lte at Utah , (n )
ln di&lt;:~n&lt;l .&lt;~ t Los .o\n ~c:e l es. (n)
Poti.\and at Seattle, ( n l

Phoenix
Los Angeles

6

9

12 18

f'i'~Denix

71....

!9 1..~

17

Chic~:~ go

11 15 7 1&gt;1 118 "
10 16 8 121 141 28
Wednesd.ay'sGames
No games scheduled
Thursday's Games
No games scheduled

Friday'sG11mes
Pittsburgh at Hartford, (n)

New Vork Rang:ers at Washi ngton. (n)
Chicago ttl Buffalo. fn)
Minnesota at Winnipeg, (n)
Calgary at Colorado, {n)
Los Angeles al Vancouver, (n)

Cardinals over three decades ending helps.
ln 1959, was justifiably bitter i i l , - - , - - - - - ' - - - - - failing to make the Hall of Fame in
the 26-year . period following his .
retirement, thus dropping from the
current -rolls. He felt writers were
swayed by his sometimes crusty
personality rather than his performance. Some attribute the same
reason to the repeated slight . of
Maris.
Tiffs with the law or authority apparently are no deterrent to consideration.
Gates Brown, who set records as a
pinch-hitter, spent 22-months in an
••
Ohio reformatory for a breaking and
~tering charge in his youth. He paid
his dues and later helped the Detroit
Tigers win a World Series. Orlando
Gepeda was incarcerated nine mon1ths after marijuana was found in his
lnggage. Insisting on his innocence,
he later returned to baseball as a
coach. ·. Marichal once hit Dodger
catcher Jolm Roseboro with a
baseball bat, drawing a suspension,
a fine and a heavy lawsuit. All are on
the ballot.
You don't have to be perfect to get
A UNI'IERSAli!!'LEASE
into baseball's Hall of Fame, but it

{'
1.

•

...

For the living 'honorees, it is an
exhilarating experience - the
crowning glory of their careers to be
given a niche .in Cooperstown, N.Y.,
beside such immortals as Babe
Ruth, Ty Cobb, Walter Johnson, Joe
DiMaggio and Willie Mays.
For those who miss, it represents
bitter disappointment and
disillusionment, often total despair.
So here we go again - 300 to 400
baseball writers pouring over a
ballot of 39 names, 16 of them pitchers, 21 on the sheet for the first
time, others - such as Roger Maris,
who broke Babe Ruth's season home
run record - keeping their fingers
crossed as they face another time at
bat.
It's an imposing list - some
genuine stars, some on. the fringe of
stardom, others of moderate accomplishments for whom Cooperstown will remain an impossible
dream. It takes 75 percent of the 1-.:_:.....;:._::._:__:___;___;__:__;__;_.,:_.,:_.:.._;_;_:._:__:__;__ _ _ __
votes to be elected to the hall.
Automatically, the inclination is to
eKamine those players who barely
missed a year ago. They would be
Don Drysdale, the big Dodger pitcher who finished third behind the
1980 inductees, AI Kaline and Duke
Snider; the late Gil Hodges, fourth
for the second year in a row, and
relief ace Hoyt Wilheim.
The new freshman class is e'lemplary, headed by the durable liar·
mon Killebrew, who slanuned 573
home runs in a 22-year career; pitchers Bob Gibson and Juan .
Marichal and the late Thurman
q
Munson, the Yankee catcher who
died in the crash of his private plane
Aug. 2, 1979.
:·
Munson's name was put on the list
befqre the prescribed five-year wait
after retirement as a sentiments 1
gesture for which a precedent had
been set in the case of Roberto
Clemente.
Clemente, a Pittsburgh outfielder
with all the necessary credentials,
died in the crash of a mission of mercy plan~ on Jan. 1, l!n3. Two months
A PRESENTATION OF
later he was overwhelmingly elected
WORLD VISION
to the Hall of F11me, then inducted
posthumously at Cooperstown the
following August.
With
The baseball writers now seem inco-hosts:
clined to close the door on such
Carol Lawrence
departures from the five-year
Art Linkletter .
waiting period.
A strong sentimental aura has
built up around Hodges, who like
Snider was one of the colorful' 'Boys
of Summer" of the old Dodgers·and
later a popular manager of the world
champion Amazin' Mets. A nice
man, Hodges died of a heart attack
in the spring of 1972.
Enos "Country" Slaughter, who
was the Pete Rose of the St. Louis
"'

Pu'blilhed every afternoon except Sunday,
Mondoy throuih FMday, lll Cour1 Slre&lt;l. by
the Ohio Valll!y Pu.bllshln&amp; Company •
MIIIUmedia, Inc., Pomeroy, Ohio .,789,
IIIS-1118. Second clua pootqe pold at
Pomeroy, Ohio.

Member: Tilt Auoclated Prul, lnlancl Dally Prtoo AaaodaUon oncl the American
Nn"*Pa Publilben AlloclaUon, National
Advertf1ln1 Repreuntative, LlndlnJ
Auociltll, 3101 Eucl.ld Ave., Cltvelanel,

ahead to stay 103-102 with 5:17 left.
He followed with a driving layup and
Nate Archibald also scored on a
layup to give Boston a five-point
lead. The Knicks closed to 109-106 on
a stuff shot by Bill Cartwright, but
Bird scored on a short hook and
Cedric Maxwell and Archibald hit
two free throws apiece to c~inch the
victory.
"What you sa'l'l is what we see in
Boston every night - which is why
Boston sells out every ni~hl," Filch
said. "You can'tjust stop one guy on
this team. Everyone picks everyone
else up .
Maxwell, making eight of nine
[ield goal attempts, had 24 points,
while guards Archibald and Chris
Ford added 16 each. For New York,'
guard Ray Williams had 30 points
and a team-high 10 rebounds, while
Michael Ray Richardson added 23
points and Cartwright 22.

1.

CAPTURES TOURNAMENT
MADRID (AP) - Real Madr.Jd
won a three-day international tou?nament by beating Sirio of Sao
Paulo, Brazil, 96-93.

CAGERDIESAT24
· PHILADELPIDA (AP)- Former
Temple University basketball star
Tim Claxton, who was sidelined by a
heart problem when he tried to play
in the NBA, collapsed and died at the
age of24 .
Claxton, who was the eighth best
scorer in Temple history, was
waived by the Atlanta Hawks of the
NBA in October after a heart
problem made him \IiZZY in practice.

SINGLE COPY
PRICES

1

•••

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• •

To obtain license by mail, fil in and mail this form to HOWARD E. FRANK, COUNTY

AUDITOR, Meigs County, Pomeroy, Ohio.
'

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\

.

OWNER ' S NAME _~-- -- ---

_____.

.,

l·

TOWNSHIP.-- -~--- -- ---- ---~

OWN~RS · ..

1

Da1J¥ .............. ............ II Canto
S.-ro not dtllrtntl to pay the carrier
may ramlt In advanct dll'ld to The Dally
S..tlnol oo a s, eor 11 mooll! boau. er.dft

WE CAN SAVE YOU AS MUCH AS

No ..-tpUooa by moll pmntttod In towna
homocarriar Hn&gt;lco 1o avaUabla .

IN FUEL COSTS ALONE In The Next 12 Months
$1,767 Over Three Years Tinie.

Age
Yr, Mo.

·sex

.
Gray

COLOR .

Hair

'

M

F·

Brindle Tan

Yellow

wW ball\'lll earrlar oacll m01111I.

MAIL IUIIICRIPTIONS
01111 aad Wnt Vtrpla
IM- . .. , "" .... , "" .. , ...... 110.10
Ill moath ...... .. , ...... , ........ 117.10
I YMr .... .... ................... 131.110

.......,.,.

RIIIIO.-I*Io
'

IMmlli ............. ............ . 111.110
I Mmlli .......... .. .............. IJO,IIO
I YMr ............. , ...... , ...... 111.1111

i

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LET US SHbW YOU HOW

Howard E. Frank
I

RIVERSIDE VW
195 Upper River Rd.

446-9800

Gallipolis, Ohio

.

. County Auditor of Meigs County
License must be obtained not lofer thon Jon. 20, IMI toovDid PlYing penolfY. Alter 11111 daiJ
penalty will be $2.00 for single tag and $5.00 lor kennolllconso.

AQUARRIS (Jan. ZO..Feb. lt ) It's best that
you don't let an inept friend manage
something important for yoo today that iJ
beyond his or her scope. The resul l..'l cou1d be
Wldt!.sirabll! .

PISCES (Feb. ZO.Marcb !0) ln situations
today calling for team effort, bt s~ to
select a partner whose goab are in ham10ny
with yours omd who i!:i also assertive.
ARI~ !Marcb!l·AprUltl ShouldJourat"
tention stray from the tasks at han today,
your probabilities for making seriou.s
mistake.s are greatly increased. Daydream
away from the W()rkbench:
TAURUS (A.pri!ZG--May 20) Situation:~ of a
financially speculative nature must. be
thorotighly lnvesUg.ated tlXI..ay so that iJn..
portant details aren' t overlooked. Take time
to dig.
GEMINI (May Zl·Jwae Zl) Member-5 of
your family rngiht find your indecl.slon a
trine frustraUng today . Oodgtng issues in- '
stead of racing them isn't the answer.
CANCER (Juat Zl.July %2) NonnaUy

'\39fj
.$\69fj
\'/_()91Jl

'7..?Jt

Club, turned on the Christmas tree
lights for the first time.
Mr~. Ernest Whitehead, the
president of the Riverview Garden
Club welcomed everyone to this annual event which is sponsored by the
club. ' Mrs. Whitehead thanked au
who helped make the project a success jlnd·she wished everyone a safe
and happy holiday.
Treats were given to approximately ISO children by Santa
Claus, who arrived on the Olive
Township Fire Dept. truck.

A Christmas party for local
children was recently conducted by
the Meigs CoWity 4-HJunior Leadership Club. This activity was planned
to involve children whose families
have been contacted by the Ex-.
panded . Food and Nutrition
Educatipn Program of the Meigs
County Cooperative Extension Service.
4-H Junior Leaders who · par·tlclpated in the program included
Rogie Gaul, Route 3, Pomeroy, Ohio,
Mark Rice, Route I, ReedsvUle,
Ohio, Lisa CoUins, 402112 Success
Road, Reedsvllle, Ohio, April

Parker, 55405 S. R. 1, LOng llottom,
Ohio, and Carolyn Bowen, Route 3,
Pomeroy, Ohio.
The children were assisted in
creating various homemade Christmas decorations. They also had the
opportunity to prepare pizza and
boney milk halls for refreshments.
,The good nutritional value of th~se
foods was discussed, and each child
was presented a badge to remind
· him of the number of servings he
should eat from the four lood groups
each day.
A spe&lt;iial appearance by Santa
Claus concluded the activities.
'

jj~ Talking books come

Male 009$2.00 - Spayed FemaleS2.00- Female $2.00 - Kennel License $10

ADDRESS _ -----~..,-~- - ---··' ' .

TOYOTA CELICA

...:.
.:·:..
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...
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•••
.-,

•••

.. 0 . I

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Enclose self-addfes.sed stamAed envelope and Price of licens~.

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·=·
•••
•••

DEADLI.NE FOR PUI'!CHASE OF 1981 DOG LICENSE IS JANUARY 20TH. TWO DOLLAR
ISZ.OOJ PENALTY IF LICENSE IS PURCHASED AFTER THAT DATE. FOR YOUR CON·
VENIENCE USE THIS HANDY APPLICATION BLANK AND MAIL TO THE COUNTY
AUDITOR AT THE COURT HOUSE NOW. FEES ARE TWO DOLLARS ($2.001 FOR EACH
DOG, MALE OR FEMALE .

.,, .·,;

one·.... ...................... 11.00
oneMMIII .... , ., ... .; ....... "" .. 14.40
one Yoar ........... " ............ 112.10 ·

'

Attention Dog Owners

groups combined to do a novelty
nwnber, The Hokey Pokey, later
In the program. In pink roaring
twenties dresses, Angie Davis,
Wendy Fry, Tracie Hubbard,
Marci Merrifield, Debbie Mur-phy, Kristen Pape, Sarah Philson
and Terri Roush presented ·a
Charleston routine. The same ·
group returned later in the
program to do a buck dance.
Jenny Bentley, Kim Morrow
and Sherri Sisson presented two
jazz numbers and Ms. Lawrence
began the · Christmas theme
finale by dancing to "Winter
Wonderland," with the entire
student body presenting,a jazz
number with wrist jingle bells
and Santa making a surprise appearance to greet those attending
and distribute ti·eats.
The jazzercise classes of Ms.
Lawrence will resume on Jan. 6
with other daQce classes staJ:ting
on Jan. 7.

4-H leaders .sponsor party
'

In an earlier game, Cotonificio of
Badalona, Spain, beat Partizan of
Belgrade, Yugoslavia, 9:&gt;-90.

Dance in the Southern Junior
High School Auditorium on Dec.
17.
.
Christmas decorations were
used on the stage for the holiday
presentations of ~tudents which
opened with a top routine by
Tanuni Buckley, Roberta Caldwell, Stacey Fry, Kimberly
Jenkins, Michelle McCoy . and
Emily Shain to "Stars and
stripes Forever." ·The same
group later performed ·a tap
routine to "Me and My Shadow."
A•song and dance tap nwnber
was presented by JessiJia Coo- .
ner, Rochelle Jenkins, ·Jennifer
Lawrence, Andrea Moore and
Kendra Norris, "Me and My Teddy Bear" and Heather Harris, ·
Amy Krautter, Amy Moore,
.Courtney Roush and Rebecca
Winebrenner tapped to "Tip Toe
Through the Tulips." These two

Featured at the annual tree
lighting at the Reedsvllle Dam Park
10as a brass ensemble from the
Eastern High School Band, directed
by ~· Wilhelm. Several Christmas
selections were played by the group.
.Band members taking part were
Sharon Griffith, Juli Elberfeld,
Dilvld Young, Scott Dillon, Tim
Roberts and Jeff Shrivers.
Rev. Elden Blake gave the ' invocation and read the Christmas
story. Mrs. Donald futnam, the past
president of the Riverview Garden

.
SAl, DECEMBER 27 • WOWK-TV, CH 13',:

dale.

•

I

Tree lighting features
.brass band ensemble,

Sweeping you into
the hearts of children
around the world ...

Dectmber n ltll

There ia a slroog ctWiC'e that your
philosophical outlook wUI be altered conside rably this comini year. Fruh Ideas
fnom new friends will add to your wisdom
and expand your mental horizDnS.
.
CAPRICORN (De&lt;. 22-Jao.ltl Something
rnay be told to you today in the Htrlctest of
eunfidence , but you could tul ve diffic~ty
keepin_g t,he secret. Don't let the cat out of the
bag. Fmd out more of what 11esahead for you
ln the year following your birthday by Se~
din!!!: for your ropy of Ast.ro.(;raph. Mall $1
for each to Astro.Graph, Box48'9, ~dio City
StaUon, N. Y. 10019. lk sure to specify birth

: ::

Meigs County Schools have recen-

·. : •·:

Uy lleen certified for participation in

to Meigs

ac.hievement areas reaulting in a
severe cilscrepancy between ex::; the.Q'aJki,ng Birds Program for lear- peeled lev~ of achievement as.
• :• n1J11 disabled youngsters. A caa.ette predicted·by ability and actual level 1
::: talking book player baa been placed of achievement. Further, the
; • : in each W unit in tl1e county and academic difficulty cannot be at·
: :: liehoola, through the W teachers, tlibuted to sensory problems (exam•: • ate In the process of ordering taped pie: poor vision or hearing
: : : testboob that are curreiltly being problems), emotional problems or
•,• uHdintheirachool.
diaadvantages
background.
:;:
TldiJ Jirogram will be helpful for Teachersofyoungstersl¥!th"suspec- ~
::: ,Ilhtudents who are mainalreamed ted disabilities are referring '
• :. Into regular classes . These ehlldren for polll5ible services.
• , • )'OUill8tera have the Intellectual Parenti who think their chlld might
! :• ablllt,y to undentand the concepts qualify should contac:t their child's
! :: that are p..-nted In the clulroom teacher.
• , • bUt "'"'v laek the reading lki1Js to
It Ia mo pollible for each In•• ~
..~the lutbool~o rrtnt..&amp;.....
•• ,•
u,.._..,. ea~:- dlvlduaJ -'-...,..,Ia properly certified by
:• ...
': .---11111 alllllcHilpe the child
can
approprillte
IICbool llld medical
......__
utborltl
, •, follow along In the tutboot, umby a
ea to have the Procram
.::: llqlroYing ~ tdd1JJ 11 well u lll8de available to that youngater on
••• hnlnl aeademlc! eanteat matter an Individual basla at home. For ad•!• convtJad, uy ahcoo1 apokespeuons. dltlonal Informatlon contact
.,.
YOiqlten I~ Uleamlng Virllnla SirOn&amp; apedel educetl011
-:;:
•,• dllllpledereU..whllhaveaverage supervlaor, at the county office, 8tJ..
::; or above Intelligence bat have dlf- 3188.
~·: rlnlty In one or more llcademic
.,

'

•I

you're very pl'lc:tical and pracmatk but :
IAtday tlteae qualitiea could daort you and be
replaced by tmn!llliltlc or wlahfu.l thinkirul:
_ . ·

LEO IJ\Ily IJ.Aq. Zll Fntm time to tline ~
you tend to be lllll.Uen by eD"IVapnl Ullles
thlt cause you to ~pend whrialy. Thae [m... ,.
plllaes may ~~~:r toclly.
VIRGO CAq.
believe lR YOW'Ielf·a

ZZ) If you faU to ""'
your abillUea todly , · ~

a.uoclalel wW ..... It and bod olf fntm

'.
. Exclusive maker of the
Back Supporter, mattress

"'

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Supporting C8URII )'OU. ellpOUif.

LIBRA (Sept. !J.Oet. ZJ) Guari1 agalJIIt a
lendepcytoc:lay to &amp;nUclplte negative reaulta
before livinc thinp a fair trial. Extra effort •
will overCOII'le fear.
SCORPIO (OeL l+lllov. Zll Be Clreful to •
whom you talk regarding YOW' -~I'JOilal •
finances or bualneu affairs. Telltng too
much to~ wroog person could work apjft... .
at you .
SAGITI'ARitJS ~New. D-Dec. !U Much ;
can be acccw:ntilllhed today concemlne an
important COral, provided )'OU'A! w1lline tO
devote the proper effort E:~ertlon, not ease, "
Is the watchword.

WILL MEET

The Olive Township.Trustees will .
hold their regular end of the year .
meetllig at 6:30 p.m on Tuesday,
Dec. 30, in Reedsville.

~~--------------------------------------------------,
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8:00PM

• •

1'()8TMASTER: Sencl a&lt;ldreu to The Dally ·
SenUnel, 111 COurt St., Pomeroy, Ohio 4&amp;78&amp; .
IUIIIICRIPTION RATE!!

Family ilight was observed by

-

•·

----ASTROGRAPH--~

Barbg.ra lAwrence School
of Dance has family night
the Barbara Lawrence School of

..

Annual Chrlstmu program of the of the program, they aU sang "Away
First Southern Baptlst Church, In a Manger" in sign language for
Pomeroy W8ll held Sunday evening the deaf. Donna Spencer directed
with recliations choir selections and the adult portion of the program
telling the Christmas story using a
a fliMelgraph Presentation.
Under the direction of Janet Mat- flan.nelgraplt presentation with the
tbe'W!l and Belly Newman ·the choir singing "Child in a Manger",
children gave rectlatlons and then 'Glory Be to God on High", "Go Tell
presented wrapped !lifts around a . It Oil ~e Mountain", and "The_ First
manger scene. The recitations in- Noel.
Chmr members pareluded "Welcome ··Today" · by ticipating were '{elma Taylor, Bren·
KAtrina Turner· "Truth" by Eric da Newman, Janet Matthews,
Spencer; "Lo~e" by Laura Ri\~hilel Lefebre, Sadie Carr, Sylvia
· Allen;"Hcipel' bt USa Newman; .Zwilling, Bill Ne":"''ln, Hershel Mc"Faith''by Monica Turner; "Joy" Clure, T~oy Zwilling, an~ B_ob Mtlls
by Heidi Caruthers· "Time Again" With RhOJean McClure, puuust.
by Steve Caruthen: "Our Best" by
A~ the conclusion of the program,
Kathy AJkire·
Wishr' by the pastor led the congregation in
Heidi Caruthers; "Long Ago" by s~ging ''Silent Night" and an inLaura Allen; "What Gift" by USa Vltation was extended. A love ofNewman· "For All the World''' by fenng was presented to the Rev. Mr.
Jennifer Newman.
·
Newman and his family from the
To conclude the children's portion congregation. · Treats were
distributed to those attending.

"Christmas

'

ltiTCHEN BAND PERFORMS - Mule W&amp;jl ill the air at Ruiland
Elemenlary Seboolu,.tbe slu4en18 were trea,led to lite Seulor Citizen Klt.cben Band. The baud memben are part of a Seulor Cltlzea group lbal
meeiB at the Multimedia ceater In Pmeroy. They played Christmas ,ongs
for the studeul8 oa homemacje lnslnlments lbat lacladed a wash tub bass,
wood block&amp;,, tea keltle, SJIOODB aud other assorted kllcben Items. The 21
pleee baud was directed by ~ne Christy and accompauled on plano by
lluel Thompsoa. A few of the band memben bad graadcblldren and
nepbem _aad Dleces In the school. Memben are Gamet Ervine, Alicia
Womer, Bessie Stitt, Josepblne Smith, Audrey Swett, Alma Newtoa, Mae
Weber, Bertha RobiDBon, AUce Balser, NeWe Ruasell, Loretta Beegle,
Frances KIDg, Eagla Johnson, Kermit and Ruth McElroy, Dean and
Thora Blackwood, and Charles aad Esta Davis, director, Irene Chl'lsty,
accompanist, Huel1bomp~~on (not pictured) .

'

TWO HEARTWARMING ·
FAMILY SPECIALS

01Ilo.41111.

IJ Clrrter or Motor Routt

.''

c~

Bird play lea,ds to Celts victory

.
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H
II

Thursday's Games
Boston 117. New \'ork 108
Washingwn 11)9, New Jersey 9-1

Vancouver

Sports briefs.

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21
21

No !(ames scheduled

NEW YOR* (AP) -Larry Bird of (Cedric ) Maxwell who was open.
the Boston Celtics is learning to be a
"We held our composure in the
little selfish - and his coach, Bill end," Bird added. "We know who to
Fitch, couldn't be happier.
go to when the game is tight. I'm
"One area in which he has im- glad the coach calls plays for me. I
proved this year is that in a tight ball don't feel any eKtra responsibility or
game he feels he can take over," Fit- pressure in tight spots."
ch said of the 6-foot-9 forward who · The Knicks, on the other hand,
was the Nati onal Basketball seemed to lack direction down the
Association's Rookie of the Year hist stretch. Their running game bogged
season. "He looks to take charge down, several shots rolled off the
more, which is what we want. "
rim, and t,hat was all the edg~
That's exactly what Bird did Thur- Boston needed.
"I can't complain. It was a wellsday, taking matters into his own
played
game that could have gone
hands
in
the
second
half
to
carry
the
I
·Ceitics to their ninth consecutive either way, " said Knicks Coach Red
victory, 117-108 over the New York Holzman. "Boston is a fine team.
Knicks .
Down the end we didn't hit anything
In other NBA games Thursday and made some errors. The Celtics
night, Washington beat the New Jer- did what they were supposed to do
, sey Nets 109-94 ; Phoenix dumped and didn't make any errors. And
San Antonio 131-lii, and Portland Bird was very tough in the second
edged Golden State llf&gt;-114.
half."
Bird scored 20 of his 28 point!! in
Bird's baseline jumper put Boston
the second half, including four
straight Celtics baskets in the fourth
quarter when Boston outscored the
Knicks 22-15.
"In the last quarter, !felt it was up
'
' to me to make things happen," said
WINS CHALLENGE
Bird, who also tied his season high
ADELAIDE, Australia (AP)
by grabbing 20 rebounds. "The plays Vilas Gerulaitis scored a 7-5, 7-5 vicwe ran were set up for me. The first
tory over Paul McNamee of
' · few times I scored, then I passed to Australia in the $40,000 International ·
Chilllenge series.
Gerulaitis' triumph, however, was
The Daily Sentinel
all the Americas couid salvage in the
(USPS 11$-9101
series against the "Rest of the
A Dl.,illoD of Mllltlmec!Ja, IDe.
World," which won the challenge 4-

•,.

•• I

16
15

••

Wednesday ' s ·Gam~s

National Basketball Assodstion
Easteru ConJereoce
Atlantic Division

'

o

mas Day in Montgomery, Ala. (AP Laserphoto).

For the record.

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In 00 him durlog the Blue-Gray football game Clu•lst-

RUNNING GAME- Clifford Chapman of Central
State of Oklahoma (40) rushes for the Blues while the
Grays' Bubba Green of North CarolinsState (59) closes

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Holiday program Sunday
·-features jlannelgraph
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The Dail Sentinei-Pa

�•

Ohi

CHURCH

Complolo
Automoh\le
Str\IICt

N~WS

TRINITY CH~RCH, Rev. W H Pernn .

Rev Clyde V Henderson , pastor Sun

e

'$..FRANKUM'

l

Middttport, Ohto

of Y01,1r Choice

II Ulland, Ollro 4 57 7~

J

Wm

'Br it "

This Sunday.

Brown, Owner

Phon• (61'1

ru 1111

10 30 a m ,

evemng sen11Ce , 7 30:.,...w•d-week ser·
vtce Wednesday 7 30 ~ - m
GRACE EPISCOPAl CHURCH - 326 E
Mom St Pomeroy The Rev Robert B
Graves rec tor Sunday serv1ces at 10 30
om Holy Communion o n the f•rst Sun

day of eoch month , end comb.ned w1th
morn1ng prayer on the th1 rd Sun day
Mornmg prayer and sermon on all o tt-le r

Church Schoo l

and nur sery co re prov1ded Coffee hour

In the Ponsh Holl•mmed tol e ly lollow•rig
th e serv1ce

Church of

Jonn F Fuhz, Mgr
pn 99'2 -2101
Pom ...oy

•

HALl'S
BEN

SA1 ES •nd SERVICE

day school , 9 30 a m . Glen McClung

Sunday s of th e month

1

Atre11d The

Brown's Fire &amp; Saf1!t]
Equipment

doy 7 30 p m under dtrecticm of Al1ce
Nease
POMEROY
CHURCH
OF
THE
NAZARENE Corner Un•on and Mulberry

~
..

Locus.t a. 8Hch treet
m "'21 Mldd!!port

pastor , Roy Mayer . Sunday school supt
Church Schoo l, 9 15om .. worshtp ser¥ice 10 30 o r'n Chotr rehearsa l Tuea-

supt , morning worshtp ,

MEIGS TIRE
CENTER, INC.

EUIS &amp; SONS SOHIO

1980

~

POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIST 212 W
Ma1n St Ne1l Proudfoot poster B1ble
schoo l 9 30 a m , morn1ng wors h1p
10 30 am You th meetmgs , 6 30 p m ,
evenmg wors h1p 7 30 Wednesday n 1ght
prayer meet1ng an d B1ble study , 7 30

P. J.

RENCH'S
SUNOCO
SERVICE

P~ULEY,

AGENT
N•llonw1de Ins Co
of Columbus, 0
IIMW, Matn
'''2 2311 Pomeroy

m -ttt2

Luko
l$-11.32

Attend the Church
of Your Choice
This Sunday

510N 2nd

212W. IM'n

TIIOOI!Ijl

• VIRGIL B.

W•dn•odljl
EphotiDnl

TEAFORD SR.

3!14-21
Thurodoy

216 5 .. MCOnd
Plmeroy

Look&lt;

[B

m.ms

18.18-27

Friday

Look&lt;

19:1·10

~

Sot1udoy

pm
THE SALVATION ARMY 115 Butternut
A ve Pomeroy 'Envoy and Mrs Ra y Wl n
mg off1 cer!i 1n charge Sunday halmess
meellng 10 am Sunday School , 10 30
a m Sunday sc hool leader YPSM Elotse
Adams 7 30 p m
sal vallon meelln g
va n ous ' peek ers and muSIC ' pecto ls
Thu rsday - 10 am to 2 p m lod•es
Hom e l eague all women mvrted 7 30
p m prayer meet1ng and 81ble study
Rev N oe l Hermon teacher
BURliNGTON
SOU THERN BAPTI ST
CHAPEl Ro ute 1 Shade B1ble sc hoo l , 7
p m Thursday wors h1p serv1ce 8 p m
POMERO Y WESfSIDE CH URCH OF
CHRI ST 200 W Matn St 992 5235 Voca l
mustc Sunday worsh1p 10 om , B1b le
study 11 a m wor5h1p 6 p m Wednes
day 81bl e study 7 p-m
OlD DEX TE R BIBlE CH RISTIAN
CHURCH Rev Rolph Sm 1th pas tor Sun
day school 9 30 a m
M r s Worley
Fronc1s supenntendent Preochmg ser
v1 ces f1rst &amp; thlfd Sunday s followmg Sun
day Sc hoo l
GRAHAM
UNITED
METHODIST
Preo chmg 9·30 om f1 r s1 and secon d
Sunday s ol each month Hmd and four th
Sund ays each month wo rsh1p serviCe at
7 30 p m Wednesday evenmgs at 7 30
Prayer and B1 ble Study
SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST , Mulbe rry
He1ghts Rood Pomeroy Pastor A lbert
D•ff es Sab bath School Supermtende nt
R1ta Wh 1te Sabbath School Saturday
aft ernoon of 2 00 w 1th Wor sh1p Serv1ce
fo llowmg at 3 I 5
RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCHS•ster Harnett Worner Sup! Sunday
School 9 30 a m , morn•ng worsh1p
10 45 a m
THE HILAN D CHAPEl George Cas to
pas lor Sunday School 9 30 a m even
mg wor sh1p 7 30 Thursday e"' enmg
prayer serv 1ce 7 30 p m
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST
Da v 1d
Mann m1n1ster WJ II,am Watson Sunday
school sup t Sun day schoo l 9 30 a m
morn1ngwarsh1p 10 30om
FIR ST SO UTH ER N BAP TIST
282
Mulberry A"'e Pomeroy Re,.. Wdl1am
R Newman pa slo1 Her shel McClur e
Sunday school superml endent Sun day
school 9 30 a m
mormng worsh1p
10 30
even 1ng wor sh1p
7 30 p m
M1dweek prayer se rvtce 7 30 p m
MIDWAY COMMU NITY CHURCH De x
fer Rd
Rd
langsv 1\l e Rev A A
Hughes Pastor Sunday School 10 o m
Ser v•ces on Tu esday Thursday and Sun
day 7 30 p m
FAITH TAB ERNAClE CHURCH Bod ey
Run Rood Rev Emmett Rawson pas tor
Handley Dunn su p! Sunday school 10
a m Sunday evemng ser v1ce 7 30 B1bl e
t eoch1ng 7 30 p m Thur sday
MIDDlEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRI STIAN UNI ON Lawrence M anl ey
pastor Mr s Russell Young Sunda y
Schoo l Sup! Sunday Sc hool 9 30 a m
Evemng warsh•p
7 30
Wednesday
prayer meellng 7 30 p m
MT
MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD
Ra o ne - Re11 James Satte rf1 eld pastor
Morn1ng wor sh1p q 45 o m
Su nday
schoo l 10 45 o m evenmg worsh 1p 7
Tuesday
7 30 p m
lad1es prayer
meetmg Wednesday 7 30 p m YPE
MIDDLEPORT FIR ST BA PTI ST , Corn er
Sudh and Palmer the Rev Mark Me
Clu ng Sunday sc hoo l 9 15 o m Randy
Hay es Sun day Sc hoo l supe n ntendent
Don R1gg s osst su p! Mornmg Worsh1p
10 15 am Yout h mee t1ng 7 30 p m
Wednesday mcludmg wee tots ea ger
beavers 1un1or a stronaut s and lun 1or
and sen1or h1gh BYF cho tr prac tiCe 8 30
p m Wednesday prayer meet1ng and B1 ·
bl e study Wednesday 7 30 p m
CHURCH O F CHRIST M1ddl eport 5th
and Mom Bob Mehan mm• sfe r Scott
Saltsman
ossoc 1ate mm1 ster
B1bl e
Schoo l 9 30 a m
mormng worsh1p
10 30 o m even mg se rv 1ce , 7 00 p m
Wednesday Btble Study end youth group
mee t1ng s 7 00 p m
MIDDLEPORT
CHURCH
OF TH E
NAZARE NE Rev J1m Broome pa sto r ,
81!1 Wh1te Sunday sc hool su p! Sunday
schoo l 9 30 a m
morn 1ng worsh1p
10 30 o. m ,
Su nd ay
evangelis t iC
meet1ng , 7 00 p m Prayer meettng,
Wednesday
7
p m
UNITED PRE SBYTE RIAN MINISTRY OF
MEIGS COUNTY Dw1 ght L Zav1tz , d1rec ·
Jo'
HARRISONVILLE PR ESBYTERIAN Rev
Ernest Stmk hn past or Sunday church
sc ho ol q 30 a m
Mr s Homer l ee
supt mormng worsh 1p 10 30
q 30
M ID DLE PORT, Su nday sc hool
o m R1 chard Vaug han su pt M ormng
worship 10 30
SYRAC U SE
FIR ST
UNITED
PRE SBYTERIAN Churc h Worsh tp serv1ce
9 30 a m Sunday School 10 30 a m Mrs
Samp son Hall , supt
RUTlAND CHURCH OF GOD Rondoll
Bodey pastor Su nday sc hool , 10 am ,
Sunday worsh 1p , I I o m , , Childr en 's
church II o m
Sunday even1 ng ser
viCe , 7 30 p m
Wednesday evenmg
young lqd1es a ux 1hary 6 p m Wednes
day fom1ly worship , 7 30 p m
HAZEl COMMUN ITY CHURCH Near
l ong Bottom Edse l Hart pastor Sunday
Chu rch 7 30 p m
schoo l , 10 om
pray or meetmg 7 30 p m Thur sday
MIDDlEPORT PE NTECOSTAL
Th"d
Ave the Rev W• lham Knittel pastor
Thoma s Ke ll y Sunday Schoo l Sup t Sun
day sc hoo l I 0 o m Classes tor oil ages,
even1 ng serv1ce
7 30 B1ble study
Wednesday 7 30 p m yout h se rv~ees ,
Fnday 7 30 p m
MIDDLEPOR T FREEWill BAPTI ST Cor ·
ner A sh and Plum , Rolph Butche r ,
pasto r Sa tu rday evenmg serv1ce 7 30
p m , Sunday School 10 30 o m
MEIGS
COOPERATIVE PARI SH
METHODIST CHURCH
RIChard W Thomas , Director
POMEROY ClUSTER
Rev Robe rt M cG ee
Re11 James ~1 ft
POMEROY Sunday Schoo l--q 15 o m
Wor sh•p serv1ce
10 30 am
Cho~r
rehearsal , Wednesday 7 p m Rev
Robert M cGee , pastor
eNTERPRISE Warsh ip 9 D m Church
Schoof l Oam
ROCK SPRINGS Su nday School 9 15 o
m , Worshrp servic e 10 a m

~

CENTERS

P..tms

Pat Hill Ford, Inc.

119:88-97

- ' " s.-Thlrd, Mlddlopol'l

tt2-21K

PillA SHACK
Eat In or
carry Out
126 E. Mlln

of Your Choice
This Sunday

pomOt'Oy

The folks who lived tn the day of the hourglass
had a psychological advantage They could see lime

paSSing

RACINE
PLANING
MILl

of Your Choice

He
[auld
See

This Sunday

Time

Mill Work
Clblntt Mlklng
SyriCUH tf2·3971

passing

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY
We Fi U Doctors'
Prtscrlptlons
"2·2fSS

MARK VstoRE

•

And as eaCh fine gra1n Slipped through the neck.
of the glass a mans consctence would whiSper
w1th1n htm less lime left'

Mlddlepolt
4411Acolf
ft2·Ht~

When we look at a clock 1ts hands seem motion less Is that why mtll1ons put off the tmportant dectSions that ought to be made nght now?

Mlddloport

Whatever Its cause, procrastmat1on IS a disease
It lulls the senses tn to tndolence It wastes our energy
on tnvlal pur~Utts , whtle tmportant tasks rematn un done Espectalty tt attacks the soul tempting man to
behave that there will be plenty of ttme later to tend to
his spiritual needs

lltE DAILY
SENTINEL
Middleport·
Pomeroy,O.

Bull he cure Is simple
and Immediate J usl set
the alarm clock and beg in the New Year with worship
1n your church or syna gogue You II soon be factng
every tmportant task wl1h eagerness end courage
and faith '

Insurance

19SO Kestrr Adver11smg S1rv1ce
0 Box 8024 C hu t on~sVI I te Vlrg1n1a 22906

Services

"2

Attend The

Attend The Church
of Your Choice

Church of

This Sunday

Your Choice
This

214 E Mlln
5130 Pomeroy

FLATWOODS Church School 10 a m
Wo rsh1p 11 o m
MIDDlEPORT ClUSTE R
HEATH Church Sc hoo l q 30 a m War
sh1p 10 30 c m UMYF 6 p m Rober1
Robmson Pastor
RUTLAND Chur(h Sc hoo l 9 30 o m
Worsh1p 10 30 a m
SALEM CENTER
Worsh1p 9 a m
Church School 9 45 o m
SYRACUSE CLUSTER
Rev Stanley Mernl1ed M 1n1 sler
FOREST RUN Worshp 9 om Chur ch
Sc hoo/10 a m
MINERSVILLE Church School 9 o m
Wors h1p l Oa m
AS BURY Churc h School 9 50 o m
Wors h1p II a m B1ble Study 7 30 p m
Thur sday UMW f1 st Tue sda y
SOUTHERN ClUSTER
Rev Dav1d Ham s
Rev M ark Fly nn
Re\1 Fl o ren ce Sm1 th
H1lton Wolfe
BETHAN Y (Dorcas), Worshtp 9 30
a m Church Sc hool 10 30 o m B1ble
study Thursday 7 30 p m
CARMEL Wor sh1p seco nd ond four th
Sundays of 10 45 a m Sunday School
second and tourth Sundays 9 30 o m
Worsh 1p and Sunday School of Sutton
Umted MethodiSt Churc h on f~r s t end
thlfd Sundays B1 ble st udy togel her each
Wednesday ot 7 30 p m Fom 1ly n1ght
dinne r toget her each th. rd Thu rs day at
6 30
AP PLE GROVE Sundcy Schoo l 9 30
a m Wors h1p 7 30 p m I sf an d 3rd Sun
day s Prayer meetmg Wednesday 7 30
p m Fell owsh1p su pper hrst Saturday 6
p m UMW 2nd Tuesday 7 30 p m
EAS T lET ART Chru cn Schoo l 9 o m
Worsh1p serviCe 10 o m Praye r meehng
7 30 p m Wednesday UMW second
Tuesday 7 30 p m
RAC INE WE~lEYAN - Sunday school
10 a m worsh1p, 11 o m Cho1r proct1ce
Thursday 8 p m
lETART FAllSWorsh1p serviCe 9
a m Church School 10 a m
MORNING STAR Wor sh1p 9 30om ,
Church School I 0 30 a m
MORSE CHAPEl Chmh Schoo l 9 30
o m Worsh1p 11 a m
PORTLAND Sunday School 6 30 p m ,
Evenmg Worsh•p
7 30 p m Youth
Meetmg , Tues day 7 30 p m B1ble Study
Thursday 7 30 p m
SUTTON , Sunday School hrsl and th tr d
Sundays 9 30 o m wors h1p ftrst and
th1rd Su ndays 10 45 o m Worsh1p and
Sunday School at Carme l Un1ted
MethodiSt Ch urch on second and fourth
Sunday s. B1ble st udy together each
Wednesday 7 30 p m Fam1ly ntght dm
ner together each f h~rd Thursday at 6 30

pm
NORTHEAST ClUSTER
· Rev R ~eh crd W Thomas
Du ane Sydenstncker, Sr
John W Douglas
Cha rles Oom1gon
JOPPA Worsh1p 9 00 a m Church
Schoo / 10 OOa m
CHESTER Worsh1p 9 am
Church
Sc hoof 10om Cho1r Rehearsa l 7 p m
Thu rsday s B•bl e Study Thur ~ doy s

730pm
lONG BOTTOM Sundoy Sc~oo l ol 9 30
am Eve nmg Worst-up at 7 30 p m.
Thursday B1ble Study 7.30 p m
REEDSVIllE Sunday Schoo l 9 30 o m
Mornmg Worsh1p 10 30 o m Evemng
Wo rshp
7 30 p m
B1ble
Study
Wednesd ays at 7 30 p m
ALFRED Sunday School at 9 ~5 o .m
Mormng Worsh1p at I I o m Youth 6 30
p m Sundays Wednesday Ntght Prayer
Meet1ng 7 30 p m.
ST PAUL , (Tuppers Pfotns) Sunday
Schoo l 9 00 o m Morning Worship at
10 00 am B1bl e Study, 7 30 p m lues
doy
SOUTH BETHEl (Sllve' Rodge ) Sundoy
Schoo l 9 00 a m Marmng Wosh1p 10 00
om Wednesday B•ble Study 7.30 p m
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST , Olove'
Swam , Supertntendent Sunday school
9 30 every w eek
HOBSON CHRI STIAN UNION Rev,

Ke1th Eblin pas tor Sunday School 9 30
o m
Leon ard Gdmore flfst elder
even1ng serviCe 7 30 p m Wednesday
praye r meetmg 7 30 p m
BEARWALL OW RIDGE CHURCH OF
CHRIST, Duane Worden mm1ste r 81bfe
cl ass 9 30 o m morn1ng worsh1p 10 30
am
eventng worsh1p
6 30 p m
Wednesd ay B•bl e study b 30 p m
N EW STJVE RSVJ llE COMMUNITY
Church Sun day Sc hool ser viCe 9 45
Wors h1p
serviCe
10 30
o m
Evang el1sllc Se rviCe 7 30 p m Wed nes
day Pray er mee hng 7 30
ZION CHURCH OF 'CHRIST Pome roy
Hornsonvdle Rd Robqrt Purtell pas to r
B1ll McElroy Sunday sc hool sup! Sund ay
sc hool 9 30 o m morn1ng wor sh1p and
commun1 o n 10 30 a m Sunday wors h1p
serv1ce 7 p m Wednesd ay e11en mg
pr ayer meehng and B1ble sludy 7 p m
ST JOHN LUTHE RAN CH UR CH Ptne
G rove The Rev Wtll1om Middl esworth
Pas tor Church ser v1ces 9 30 a m Sun
day Sc hool 10 30 a m
BRADBUR Y CH URCH OF CHRIST Jerry
Ptng ley pa sto r Sunday school 9 30
a m
morn1ng worsh1p 10 30 a m
Wednesday evemn g serv1ce 7 30
AN TIQ UI TY BAPTIST, Rev Earl Shu ler
pas tor Sunday schoo l 9 30 a m Church
se rv 1ce
7 pm
yout h meetmg 6
p m fu esdoy B1bl e Study 7 p m
RA CINE CHURCH OF THE NAZARE NE
Rev John A Coffman pastor Mart~a
Wo ll e Cholfmon of the Boord ol ChfiS·
t 1on l1fe Sunday Sc hool 9 30 a m mar·
nmg wo rsh1p 10 30 Sunday e11e mng
warsh1p 7 30 p m Prayer meet 1ng
Wedn esday 7 30 p rn
RA CI NE FIRST BAPTI ST, Don L Wal k er
Pastor Robert Sm1th Sunday sc hoo l
su p! Sunday sc hoo l 9 30 a m mornmg
wor sh1p 10 40 o m
Sunday evenmg
wor shtp 7 30 Wednesday eventn g B1ble
study 7 30
DANVIllE WESLE YAN Rev R 0
Brown pa stor Sunday Sc hoo l 9 30
a m mornmg worsh1p 10 45, yout h se r
vrce 6 45 p m , evening worsh1p 7 30
pm
prayer a nd pra1se Wednesday
7 30 p m
SILVE R RUN FREE BAPTIST Rev Mar
v1 n Medon pastor Steve L1ttle Sunday
schoo l supt Sunday school 10 0 m
mormng wor ship 11 c m Sunday even·
1ng wors hip 7 30 Prayer meetmg and
B1bl e study Thursday 7 30 p m , youth
serviC e 6 p m Sunday
CHRISTIAN FEllOWSHIP CHURCH 3B3
N 2nd Av e. M iddl eport Pastor Bob
Hol lms Sunday serv1ces 10 OO a m and
7 p m 1 uesd oy and Fn day serv1ces 7 00

of Your Choice
This Sunday.

7 30 p m 8rble St udy Wednesday 7 30
p m Satu rday n tght prayer serviCe 7 30

pm
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN Roge&lt;
Wohon pastor M1ldred Z1egler Su nday
sc hool supt M o rntng worsh1p 9 30 o m
Sundoyschool 10 30 o m evenmg ser
VIC&amp; , 7 30
MT UNION BAPTIST Joe Sayre Sun
d ay Sc hool Supenntenent. Sunday
school 9 45 a m , evemng worsh1p 7 30
p m Prayer meetmg 7 30 p m Wednes
d oy
TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF CHRIST
V1ncent Waters pastor, Howard Blair
Colwell supe nntendent Sun day School
9 30 a m morn1ng church 10 30 o m
Sunday eve n1ng senlice 7 30 Wednes ·
day B1ble Study , 7 30 p m
CHESTER C HU~C H OF THE NA ZARENE
Rev Herbert Grote, pasto r Frank Riffle
su pt Sunday School 9 30 a m Worsh1p
se rviCe 11 a m and 7 30 p m Prayer
meellng Wednesday 7 30 p m
lAUR ~ l
CUFF FREE METHODIST
CHURCH Rev Floyd F Shook pastor
lloyd Wnght
Dlfector of Chn stton
Educo t1on Sunday S( hool 9 30 c m
Mornmg Worsh1p 10 30 o m , Cho1r
Evenmg
Prachce Su nday 6 30 p m
Wors h1p 7 30 p m Wednesday Prayer
a nd 81b le Study 7 30 p m
DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST Cho d es
Rus sel l Sr mmtsler R1ck Macomber
su p! Sunday sc hoo l , 9 30 o .m , worsh1p
ser v1ce 10 30 a m B1ble Study Tuesc:Jay
7 30 p m
REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESU S
CHRIST OF
lATTER DAV
SAINTS
Port land Rocme Rood W1lham Rou sh
pa sto r Phyl l1 s Stobart , Sunday School
Supt Sunday School , 9 30 a m .. Mornmg
wo rship , 10 30 om
Sunday evenmg
serv1ce 7 p m Wednesddy evemng
pra yer serv1ces 7 30 p m
BETHL EHEM BAPTIST Rev Ear l Sh uler
poster Worsh1p se rv1ce q 30 am Sun
day school , 10 30 a m B•ble Study and
prayer servi ce Thursday , 7 30 p m
CARLETON CHURCH , Kmgsbury Rood
Gary K1ng pas tor Sunday school , 9 30
a m , Rolph Carl , su perintendent, eve n
1ng worsh1p 7 30 p m Praye r meeting
We dnesday , 7 30 p m
lOf&gt;!G BOTTOM CHRISTIAN
Tom
R•chason , pastor , Wallace Damewood ,
Su nday School Supenntendent Worsh1p
serviCe at 9 am B1ble Schaoll O o.m
HYSEll RUN HOliNESS CHURCH Sun·
day Sc hoo l at 9 30 a m · worsh1p ser
v tces at 10 30 a m Pastor Re v The ron
Durham Thursday ser111Ces at 7 30 p m
w1 lh Rev Okey Cart
FREEDOM GOSPEl M ISSION ol Bold
Knob , locat ed on County Road 31. Re v
lawrence Gluesencamp , pastor , Rev
Roge r W•llford , oss1 stont pastor
Preochmg serv iCes , Sunday 7 30 p m ,
prayer meetmg , Wednesday , 7 30 p m ,
Gary Gnff1th leader Youth groups ,
Sunday evemg , 6 30 p m. w1th Roger and
VIolet .Willford as leaders Communion
ser11 ices f1rst Sunday eOch month.
WHITES CHAPEL , Coolv olle RD Rev
Roy Deeter, pasto r Sunday school 9 JO
o m , worsh1p se rv1ce 10 30 am Bible
study and prayer servu:e, Wednesday ,

pm
HOUSE OF PRAYER AND PRAISE
L1berty Ave
Pomeroy Pastor Ke1th
Adkms ServiCes Sunday 3 00 p m Fn
day 7 30 p m Tuesday 7 30 p m.
CHESTER CHURCH OF GOD . Rev R E
Robmson pastor Sunday schoo l, 9 30
a m , wo rsh1p servtce 11 a m eve ning
service 7 00 youth service Wednes
day , 700pm
LANGSVIllE CHRISTIAN CHURCH
Robert E Musser, pasto r Sunday sc:;hoo l
9 30 a m , Paul Musser su pt mo rnmg
wo rsh1p , 10 30 Sunday evenmg service
7 00 mid· week serv1ce , Wedn esday , 7 - 7-30 p.m
pm
RUTlAND CHURCH OF CHRIST, Bob
Bucking ham , poster , Herb Elliott Sun SYRACUSE
CHURCH
OF
THE
day school supt Syndoy school , 9:30
NAZARENE , Rev Jame s B Ktttle , pastor,
o m , mornmg worship and comunion
Norm an
Presley
Sunday
School
10 30o m
Superin te ndent
Sunday school 9 30
RUTlAND BIBlE METHODIST CHURCH .
om , mormng worship 10 45 a m
Amos T1llis pas lor, Donny Til lis , Sunday
evongehsflc sarv1ce, 7 p.m Prayer. and
School Supt Sunday School , 9 30 a m .
Pro1se Wed nesday
7 pm
youth
f o llowed by mornmg worship Sunday
meeting 7 p m
evemng serv1ce , 7 00 p.m
Prayer
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN CHRI ST.
meetirlg Wedne sday 7 00 p .m
Elden R Blok e , pastor Sunday School 10
RUTlAND
CHURCH
OF
THE
om , Robert Reed supt . Morn•ng ser·
NAZARENE Rev , Lloyd D Grimm , Jr ,
man 11 a m
Sunday n•ght se rviC es
pas tor Sunday scho"'ol , 9 30 a .m ; wor·
Chm t1 on Endeavor 7 30 p m Song ser
~hm 5erv1ce 10 30 a m Broadcast live
VIC9 , 8 p m : Preach; lng a 30 p m
over WM PO young peOp le's service 7
M1dweek Prayer meehng Wedn esday 7
p rn Eva,n gehstlc service 7 30 p m
p m , Alvin Reed , loy lead er
Wednesday ser11lce , 7 30 p m.
' CHURCH OP JESUS CH RIST loco led ol
FIR ST SOUTHERN BAPTIST Comer of
Rutland on New Lim o Rood ne)l t to
Seco11d and And er son, Mason , Pastor
Forest A cre !:ark . Re v Ray Rou se
Fr onk Lowther Sunday school 9 45
pa sto r Robert Musser , Sunday School
am worsh•p service 11 am. and 7 30
supt Su,doy sc hoo l , 10 30 am , worsh1p

AH'V~

~&amp;V&amp;I&lt;.

BEEN TOO PROUD
T' SACIC -~ HOOT

DESPERADO IF

p.m "l
~
TRINITY Christtan A ufWftblyr Cool..,ille
Gilbert Spencer, pcl$tor . Sunday
school, 9:30a.m. , morning worship, 11
a .m . SUnday evening service, 7:30p.m ..
midwHk prayer service Wednesday,
7 30p.m .
MOUNT Oliv• Community Church.
lawrence Bush, pastor , MoM Folmer , Sr
Superintendent Sunday School and mor·
nlng worship, 9 30 a .m. Sunday evenmg
serv1ce, 7 p m Youth meeting and 81b le
study, Wednesday , 7 p
UNITED FAITH CHURCH - Route 7 on
Pomeroy bypass. Rev Robert Sm1th, Sr.,
pastor, Rev. James Cund1ff, asststant
pastor. Sunday School, 9·30 om , mornIng worship 10.30 o. m .. evemng worlhlp, 7:30. W.clnesday night prayer
vlce, 7.30 p.m. Women 's Fellowshtp,
Thursday, 9 30 o m
FAITH BAPTIST Church . Mason , meet
at United Steel Workers Union Hall,
Railroad Street, Mason . Pastor, Rev.
Richard Jordon Morning worship 9 30
a .m ., Sunday School 10 30 a.m. Prayer
meeting Wednesday 7 30 p m
FOREST RUN BAPTIST Rev Nyle
Borden , pastor
Cornelius Bunch,
superintendent . Sundoy school, 9 30
a m ; second and fourth Sundays worship service at 2.30 p.m
MT MORIAH BAPTIST - Fourlh ond
Main St , Middleport Rev . Calvtn Min
.nis, pastor Mrs Elvin Bumgardner,
supt,. Sunday school , 9·30 a.m. , worsh1p
aervice, 10 .CS a m.
NORTH BETHEl United Methodlsl .
Church Rev Charles Domtgan, pastor
Sunday School, 9.30 am.; Worship Ser·
vice , 10 4S am ! Sunday Bible Study,
7:00 p .m , Wednesday prayer meeting,

•

'

m.

liP AND AT 'EM,
ANNIE ! WE HAVE
SCHEDUl.f TOKEEP.'

!111:1 CNI TEll?

11iOS&lt;- 8RilR

o•HIS
DIDN'T TELL
~UH tiOTHIII'!!

~ ms

,er-

--~~
',, .. .
..

:

...

~

-~

•

'THI\R ANV CHANCE SILLY BOY
AN' ME COULD LEASE Tf.~ET

'

l).IERE TIME ~HINE~

/loJoj' MOO SOUNDS
LIKE IT'S CHOCK
FUL.L.. OF 'EMJ

I THINK YOL.J'D ~A.VE

m

TA.LK TO IXJCTOI&lt;':
'M)NMUG A80UT "THAT,

MR R.UNT'

BURliNGHAM SOUTHERN BAPTIST
CHURCH , Route I , Shade. Paslor Don
Block. Affillot~ wtth Southern Baptist
Convention , Sunday school 1.30 p m ,
Sunday worsh1p, 2 30 p m Thursday
evening Bible study 7 p.m
PENTECOSTAl ASSEMBlY, Raco ne,
Route 1:2~. William Hoback, pastor Sun·
doy school , lOam : Sunday evening service , 6 30 p m Wednesday eening service , 7
&lt;:ARPENTER BAPTIST, Rev. Freeland
Norris, pastor Don Cheadle , Supt Sunday School, 9·30 a.m . Morning Worship,
10 30 am Prayer Service, alternate
SundQys
NEASE SETTlEMENT FREE Will BAP·
liST, Donald R. Karr , Sr. , pastor Friday
evening service, 7 30 p m , Sunday
school, 10 o m

Pomeroy

Reuter-Brogan

DICK TRACY

Eugene Underwood. paotar: Harry Hen·
drlcks, soperlntendent. Sunday Khool .
9·30 0 m , morning worship, 10:30 a.m.;
evening worship , 7 p m Wodnflday 81·
ble study 1 p m.
JUBILEE CHRISTIAN CENTER
George 's CrHk Road . Rev. C. J Lemley,
pastor, John Fellure , auperlntendent
Church ~ehool. 9·30 o.m ; morning wor·
sh ip, 10:30: evening ser.vice, 7 p.m. 81bJe
Study Th.oro .. 7 p .m . Clo1 ..•1or all OQ"
Nursery provided for worahlp aervlcet.
ST. PAUL lUTHERAN CHURCH, Corne'
of Sycamore and Second Sts., Pomeroy.
Jho Rov William Moddl..warth , Paotor
Sunday School ol 9 ~5 o.m . and Church
Services 11 a.m .
SACRED HEARl, Rev. Father Paul D
Welton , pastor. Phone 992-282.5. Sotur·
day ev.nlng Most, 7 30. Sunday Moss, 8
ond 10 a.m .; Confeaslon, Saturday
1·1 30p m.
VICTORY BAPTIST - 525 N 2nd St..
Middleport James E. Keesee, pastor
Sunday morning worship, 10 a m , even·
lngaervlce, 7, Wednesday evening war·
ohlp, 7 p.m.: Vlollai'lion, Thursday , 6 .30

7:l0pm.

Co p~ fl ght

~

The Dally Sentinei-Paqe-7

. Dtcember 26, 1980

p m Weekly Bible St\.ldy, Wednesday,
I.
7 30pm
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST. M;lle,
St , Mason , W Vo Aurlce MICk , pastor
Sunday Bible Study 10 am ; Wonhlp 11
a m and 7 p m B1ble Study WedfleSday
7 p m . Vocal music
liFE SCIENCE CHURCH 12 No,th
lh~rd St , Cheshire. Independent , fun·
domentol servic:;es. Sunday eventng 7 ·30
p m . Pastor Rev . Dr. Robert Persons.
MASON ASSEMBlY OF GOD , Dudding
Lon e, Mason , W Va Rev Ronnie B.
Rose Po:!lor Sunday Schoof 9 .CS a .m .,
Morn1ng Wonh1p 11 am . Evening Ser·
vtce 7 30 p m Wedn8sday Women's
M1mstnes 9 om. (meeting and prayer
Prayer and Bible Study 7 p m
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION The Rev Wllllom
Campbell , pastor. Sunday School , 9 .30
a m , James Hu~hes supt , evening ser1Jice, 7.30 p m. Wednesday evening
prayer meeting 7 30 p m Youth prayer
serviCe each Tuesday .
FAIRVIEW BIBlE CHURCH leta&lt;l W
Vo ., Rt 1, Mark lrwln 1 pastor. Worship
servtces 9 30 a .m., Sunday school, 11
a.m , CN&amp;n lng worship , 7:30 p m . Tues
day cottage prayer meetmg and Bible
study, 9 30 a .m . Worsh1p serviCe,
Wednesday . 1 30 p. m
' CAlVARY BIBlE CHURCH, now lcx:ated
on Pomeroy Pike , County Rood 25 , near
Flatwoods Re11 BlackWood, pastor Ser
vices on Sunday at 10.30 a .m. and 7 .30
p m with Sunday school , 9·30 a m. B1bie
study, Wednesday , 7 3Q p.m
INDEPENDENT HOliNESS CHURCH,
INC . Pearl St ., Mlddl-rt, Rev.
O'Dell Manley , poster , Arthur Barr, Sunday school supeflnt.endent
Sunday
sc hool, 9 30 o m . ; everilng worship, 7 30
p m . Prayer and praise service . Wednes ·
day, 730pm
RUTlAND APOSTOliC CHURCH OF
JESUS CHRIST. Elde' James Mill"' Bible
study, Wednesday , 7.30 p .m ., Sunday
School. 10 a m Sunday night service,

7 30p.m
POMEROY WESlEYAN HOliNESS Hornsonville Road , Dewey King , rastar,
Henry Eblin, Jr , Sundoy Schoo Supl
Sunday School 9:JO a. m ; Morning War
ship II a. m. Sunday evening service,
7 30 m Prayer Meeting, Thursday, 7:30
p .m .
SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF GOD Not Pentecostal. RtW . George Oiler,
pastor Worsh1p serviCe Sunday, 9 ·45
'am .. Sunday school , 11 am . worship
serviCe 7 30 p m. Thursday prayer
meeltng, 7.30 p .m .
MT HERMON United Brethren In
Chnst Chhurch. Rev . Robert Sanden,
pastor, Don Will , loy leoder. Located in
Tex as Community off CR 82. Sunday
school, 9 30 a m • Morning worship service , 10:45
evenlhg preGchlng ser·
vtce second and fourth Sundayt:, 7:30
p .m .;, Chrillta, Endeavor, flnt and th ird
Sundays, 7 30 p m. Wednesday prayer
meellng ond Bible lludy, 7 30p.m .
JEHOVAH S WITNESSES, 37319 Stole
Route 124 (Ono milo ooll of Rutland)
Sunday, Bible lecture 9 30 a. m Wol ·
chtower 1tudy, 10:20 a. m.; Tueaday , 81
ble study, 7.30 p m.: Thu,.doy ,
Th.acratlc SChool, 7:~ p.m ; Service
MHIIng 8.:10 p .m .
RUTlAND FREEWill BAPTIST Church Jomos A . Bruhl, poslo&lt;. Sunday
school, 10 a.m. ,,Sunday evening MNICe,
7:00: Wodnosday pra)jer mHIIng. 7.00

a.m. ,

o,

pm .
CHURCH Of GOO of Prophecy, located
on lhe 0 J While Rood oH highway 160
Sunday School 10 a .m . Superintendent
John lovoday Fl"l Wodnooday nlghl of
manlh CPMA ..,.left, MCond Wodnet·
day WMI mollflnv. third lhrough filth
youlh Mrvlco. George Croyle, paator.
HOPE 8APJIST CHAPEl - 570 G&lt;anl
St., Mlddl-rt, Sunday School, lOa. m :
morning worthlp , I 1 a m evening wor
ship, 7 p. m . Wodnooday ovonl"'l llblo
at\Xfy and pra.,.er m. .tlng, 7 p . m .'"Atflllatod with Southorn lapllot Convon
tlon.
BRADFORD CHURCH Of CHRIST-

watched

the card
qame, N1na.
o

Meigs
Property
Transfers
F. Berl Boggs, Ida May Boggs, .
Robert D. Boggs, Shirley L. Boggs to
Jan A. Parker, Donna L. Parker,
3.064 acres, Orange.
Wendel J. Frecker, Hattie Avice
Frecker to Glen R. Bissell, NaOIDI R.
Bissell, Lot, Racine.
Olive M. Parkinson, Affidavit,
RuUand.
Olive Parkinson to Sybil Eber·
sbach, Parcels, Rutland.
Sybil Ebersbach to Olive M.
Parkinson, Evelyn ~ Wyclnski,
Parcels, Rutland.
James J. Proffitt, Sheriff, to Ruby
A. James, eta!., Gordon Proffitt,
Parcel, Lebanon.
Charles Wesley Searles, Mary c.
Searles to Don C. Becker, Betzy T.
Becker, Lot 159, Middleport.
Mildred C. Morris, Affidavit,
Pomeroy.
I
Joe Elselstein, Mary Jane,
Eiselstein to Betty Dean, Parcels,
·Orange-Chester.
,
Larry L. Baker, Phyllis L. Baker, '
Harold E. Sizemore, Jane L.
' SizC!'flOre to John Mark Haggerty, '
Bonnie Ann Haggerty, 1.06 acres,

Chester.
Hugh A. Mitchell, MariaiU18 Mit·
chell to John E. Hankla, 1 acre,
Salisbury.
Rose Reynolds, Lois McElhinney,
Affidavit, Melga.
Maxine Braley N.m-., dec. to Opal
Kievit, dec., aka Opal Kievit, dec. to
Margaret Ann Ewen, Dorothy
Virglnla Holder, Cert. of Tr8118.,
Salisbury.
Rose Reynolds to Earl McKinley,
Parcel, Salisbury.
· Frank McGrothera,,. Mary Ann
McGrothers to f;arl, JeKinley, Par·
eel, Sallsbury.
.
Paul Reynolds, Jackl~ Reynolds to
Earl McKinley, Parcl!l, Sallsbury.
Gerald Rupe, Sara R. Rupe to
Earl McKinley, Parwi1 Sailsbury.
Paul Johnson, Roena Jobnaon to
Earl McKlnley, P.uCel,Sel!ebvy.
Myrtle Waters to Earl McKinley,
Parcel, Sailsbury. I
RuiMII G. Bailey, Belle Bailey to
Earl McKinley, PBrceJa, S.U!fbury.
Dorothy V. Holden, David E.
Holden to Earl McKia1eJ, S.ll'lbury.
Mlrpret ~ 1!;1N!I. R. G. E - to
Earl McKinley, Parcel, S.llshll')'.
Robert G. Pldrett, EloiM M.
Pickett to Robert G. P1cUtt, E1o11e
M. Plebu, Pan:ell, BeciGrd. .
Jill« Sue Fetty, Harley F. Fetty,
Jr. to HarleyT. Fetty, Jr., JlllltSue
FeU)', Parcel, Sutton.

wht\e Clovia 1S
awa4 wor~incj' at
4our qaraqe!

Little Gretchen
is amazinq'
Shuffles! Deals

'

, OO~H , MOM AND DAD.
1HANKO' FOR 1HIO'
RECORDER! I SURE
, CAN UBE IT I

I]) THE LUNDSTROIIS
(J) ONCE UPON A CLASSIC
Swlah of the Curtain' The Halford
chllelren sollc11 the Ball's help In
gettlngthelrparenta permlaalonto
plrttc!pate In e drama compe1111on.
uatng the eompelltlonto prove! hetr
&amp;bihtlea
~loaed·Captiof1ed U 5 A )

-· Evening televisi~n listings
' DEC. ae, 1llll0
3:00

tJ) eiiJ

PIEITA BQWL Penn

§late n Ohio Stale

" 3:30 ()) MOYI! -{MUSICAL) ••• " fld.,!lo'll!ORool" 1V71
4 .00 • ([J Ill CBS CHILDREN'S
MYSTERY THEATER 'The T'ee aure of Alpheua T Wlnterborn ' A
amall-tawn boy accldentelly un·
covere alltt otniyettfylf'llil clue ato a
hidden tr..a1.1re lett by the late AI·
pheuaT Wlnterbom,thetown 'ar4·
cheatclth:tn Stara .KelthMitchell ,
Oody Goodmen (flO min a )

,.
AND

.

'

I

.. .... .

.'

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•

divorced tather··WhO tell a her h ie
lnatlncte aay her new boytnend II
merrled (Repeat)
(J)IIlJWALUTREETWEEKHoot
Loula Rukeyaer
8:58 ~ !I_EWS UPDATE
V:OO
• (!) NUMBER 86
700CLU8
,
ON LOCATION 'The F11th An·
1
nual Young Comedtans Show '
Thitre' ll be laughs galore 11 Amer·
lea 's hotteat young talents make
thelrbldl tor stsrdom on HBO'ata·
teal 'On Location' Hoal. ~ Carl

1:60
2.00

I:A
7:00

Til IYefii!IQ ~ws

10:28

•waUPDATI

.

i

2.1t
2.28
2'30
3:58
4:00
4:05
5:30
5:58

C!JMOYII! ffHAIUERI••% "Fir·
•
... .. 1Q78
JJEUEVE
18 NIWI
SPORTIREPORT
ROIS BAGLEY SHOW
SPORTS REPORT
700CLU8
MOVIE ~BUSPENSE) '\1
aked Runntr" 1887
PHIL ARMS PRESENTS
8PORT8 REPORT

'"

ow

-=-=':--·.,..;;._._,.,..,..==- - ~e. CIJ til

8:00

NCHARDHOOUI!
MOYIE ·CNORRORI l oo 10

~ ''~
U

8:00

DEC 27 1HO

~"":fl1".c:tt:'~';'~·~~'niE, '~ " :" ' ,.

" 7:30

lt; ~

ffi

•wt

10: 11
10:30

MOYIE ~SCIENCE FICo
TION) •• "'Rtwange of the era ..
e" tiS&amp;
SPORTS REPORT
JJIIIIY8WAGGART
THECANDJDCANDIDCAIIER·
A Al1n F:11nt trsvele 111 o11er ttle
country to catch tnt~ unauapect1ng
In very precarloua aituet1one
(J) MOYIE ~HORROR) "\1 "IIY
BI.OfHIRunaCold" tees
(l)lt NEWS
(l) 30 MINUTES W1TH FATHER
~NN1NO

HIIQHTIRelationlhlpacrumble
d - ooJif.lotod hiQh ochool,oul-.
'1'10 Ill which the atudente spend •
rainy night In • Oapre aalon·era
ervl.. ·typecarflp &lt;&amp;qrnlna)

•

COlliNG
THE LOVE ' BOAT
Fllrtat1oua Doc pan lea when hla
beautlt~l former wife board• the
ship lnlprm tng him that they're
legally ttlll married (Repeat , eo
mlntl

"Bid

0. If

7:11
I:GO

10;M

11:00

___.........

" - nn&gt;uea-.IIO'M
Plreworkl erupt when e wewl1

apartl
COYef•
aQIIotaneofthemoetelltegymna•·
tica..,..IOitMyear Toptemale

'•JIIIIy CR-1: eo,..,. &gt;
LA-NC811RUC-

~I

33 Beetle

16 Plunder

Bailey's pal

19 Wall recess

36 Slower

.--.....-......-....-

of rude
22 Bag
23 Bleiillsh
25 Made mto
flllels
26 Lave
21 Pon.ry
28 To be (Lat
Z9 Texas

~ rJ2J •

ZOU. LEVITT

IliON FROM JAPAN
SATURDAY NIGHT

UVE

I

City

labbr I
33 Actress
Caldwell
34 G-ma~ I sl )
35 Placed
mrows
37 Gr..k

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to "ork
Is

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KII

Prlt!r answer,.,., " (

LIZAIITIWI CHIIIITIIA8

IOUOOOLDCo·hoata Glen
Campbetl, DIOftftl Warwick 'Ootd

-

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perfOrm -

!fOM6 T/flfl'-AND
• efl:l~ 8AOC:
'THE 15001:15 "!

CRYPTOQ\JOTES

Now arr1nge the clrcltd letters to
larm the surprise answer. u aug
gested by the llbovl cartoon

ELNM
UMM ,

I X X X I I I Y'
{Answet~IOrroOI I OW)

""

Yes lerday s

,,_, COUIHBAIIIITaALL
~enlttOit.y •• Notre Oarwe

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AXYDLBo\AXII
LONGFELLOW

One letter stmply ~tands for another In thts sample A Is
used f or th e three L's, X for the two O's, etc Smgle letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are 111
hints Each day tht&gt; code letters are dUI'erent

MAI&lt;E5 TJoiA'T

_.IHOW
IAIU llllUCa IHOW

11 :...

31 Turkish c1ty

one's word

20 Buymg place
( mus )
Berg's mus1c release
37 Unclose
20 Obstacle
6 Jacob's twm 23 Garb for
Joe College
(poet )
7 Got a sec?
21 Opposite

T88 EVENING NEWS

~~

5 Prason

\

AI DOWling, larbl Benton, Roy

··
-hootodo
aome flftC)
root
worlk
when ""
I)OVIIJm« clecldel ta ..,... ~bite
opinion Hd, lncoglllto, vlsUI •
r'QUitlwatertront bar attd alerts t

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member

27 Ligneous

:ro A t ta ck

sprmg
10 Broke

4 B.PO E

Jwnp "
18 Uke

FARCT

(JJ

••

11:30

(J)

25 Commanded

mountains

M'.
HIR HAW Guotta
T--.Wynetto, JlmmloR-•.
I

NEWS

caution

com
11 " - O'Clock

24 Recreatmn

reesta blish
9 Arise ,

command

Ulle In o - "'""cMintJ ovonta
IATUilDAY ON

..

(!J'J'~ (J) (!) •

2 Before (Fr )
3Show

or India
16 Old French

8 Help

32 Mll1lary

(J) 'OOTULI.

c!

IIBLING

Yesterday's Answer

actress,
- Johnson

matenal
15 Prmter's

ffi

11:00

Jl Roman or
Byzantme 39 TIJUana

5 Pelt; sp atter
laborer
11 Depravity
~0 Be con12 Be of the
llnge nt
U Sicilian
op1ruon
hot spot
13 Be de·
DOWN
pnved of
I BritiSh
14 Furmture

QODHAITHIANIWI!R
COIIIOI ' Who Spelkl for
Eerth?' Host Carl Sagan rev•ewa
the ma)of theme• CO\Ietad In 'Co a
moa' and ende with aome caution
about the future of
1
u

~lltcom,eteforthelrlesm 'l

'"

ACROSS
1 Garb for
Dracula

THE LESSON
SNEAK PREVIEWS Ca-noata
Gene Siskel and Roger Ebert
review tn• films ' Flash Gordon ' .
ir Crazy' and 'Popeye'
10:00
ROCK CHURCH
MOYIE -(ADVENTURE) ••
••Force_Of One" 117111
(J) IIJI. ABC NIEWS CLOSEUP
(])) MAnNEE ATTH! BtJOU 'Gung
Hoi Ranelolph Scott s1ara In this
exclleing true story ol1he Marina
raid on Makin le land during the
Second World War Selo ot ed
ahorta include Chapterll oft he aer·
181 'Don Wlnakiw of the Navy' (90

lt([J~ THEKENNIDYCENTER

a~~~~::~~~~~·:mo~n~t .... ..

~!

~

loy THOMAS JOSEPH

N!WS

'Gallleo' B•t In lhe•arly te'OO-·• r.
1:30
thllll the atory oltt\tl mathamettcs
leaohar whoae 'Coper~tlcsn '
Theory' (lha beUaf that the earth
rotatea dally on Ita txll and the
planet.a rewalvtl '-'orbHt arOund the

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12:58
1,00
t .30

1111.

B!l~

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nearly completed product , ma1da
and
out
(Closed CaptiOned,
US A)
8:00 (]) 700 CLUB
(]) MOVIE ~COIIEDY·DRAIIA)
... "Goodbye Girl"
1G77
(() HALL OF FAME BOWL Tulane
va Artcansb
([) WORLD LITERATURE CllU·
SADE 'Armagltddon Syndrome '
(!) SATURDAY NIGHT AT THE
MOVIES 'TI'Ie Lonellett Runne r'
1977 Start LanceKarwin, Micl\aal
l1n.d._o11..
IICimlWKRPINCINCJNNAnTo
provatohla atatfthat he really lathe
big guy 1n charge Arthur Carlson
comet up with what he modestly
calla the blggeat lhankaglvlng
season promotlonll glmm1ck the
world hu ever known (Repeat)
T'SROCK
B EAKING AWAY
UO
THE Till CONWAY

IOftQ!.:.

l,lJ
FRIDAY NIGHT MOVIE
From Ruaala With love' t 963
Sian· Sean Connery Robert
!;bow
~
DUKES
HAZ·
ZARD The Duke clan help a ayoung
woman reach the arm a of the man
aha lo\lea In apUe of the efforts of
ner taU,ar to ttop the wedding
epeat; 80 mint )
BILL MOYERS' JOU... AL
MASTERPIECE THEAT1!E
·r..tament of Youth' EplaodeiV
Vera Ia plunged Into the hell of 1
front·llne hoapltaland ualgnad to
nur,. wounded Germani Shala
t~an summoned beck lo London ,
whera the recetve~ yet a(lother
lhattenno
blow.
(Cioaad·
CJp.Jlon.Id U s ~ )(80 mint )
10:00 (D.(l) NBC MAGAZINE WITH

• ([) T1E

(]II FAONTPAQE
(fi)THISOLD HOUSEHoat Bob V1la
takea the viewers on a tour of tha

i1J1 18

~

'

..
..

SPECIAL
00 PAULSIMONINCONCEAT0ne
of pop mual,:: 'a greatest auper·
at era, p aut Simon pertorma a varle
tx._ol hi a smash hits
LIJ MOVIE-(HORRORI••• ''leteOf
the Dead" 1$45
12:40 (IJ SOLID GOLD Co·hoate Glen
Ca mpbell Dionne Warwick Gold
record wlnnera perform thelf htt

~HILW'"',(

HONORS THE PERFORMING
ARTS The lh1rd lnrlUII entertain·
mentoale at wh1ch the John F Ken
nadyCenterfarthePerformingArta
In Washington 0 C , will pa y tribute
to f1ve dllflngulahed Americ an
art1ata··leonard Bernateln, James
CagMy , Lynn Fontanne , Leontyne
Pnce tnd Agnes de Mille· for Ufe
time ach•eveme nt fr1the performmg
arta (2 hra)
())MOVIE •( SUSPENSE) ••• Ill
''SUspicion' ' 18&lt;4 1
CID THE REHEARSAL Th&amp;luxtaposltlon of moveme nt and ahapea hila
lhi&amp;J&amp;U: special wllh romance aa
the multl ·talentad choreographer
Giordano weaves a story Into a
rehe!![_Sal
9:30 (]) •
NBC WHITE PAPER:

Jumbles CLOVE GASSV INHALE FIGURE
Answer Whit tome loodllhOUICI be llten InSEASON

NW

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YNEEZ H

M LE

LC

DLZ

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CUEZ
LC
IUAF
JL1ZH
Yeslerda)''S Cryploquole : MAY ALL PEOPLES WELCOME ·
EACH OTHER AS BROTHERS, AND MAY THE PEACE.
THEY LONG FOR EVER FLOWER AN D REIGN AMONG:
THEM .-JOHN TWENTY-TIURD
~ tHO

'

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King F..rur .. svnaate Inc

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_Pagt&gt;-8-The Daily Sentinel

-

'
December 26, 1fN

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

,.

'

Deceased patriot leaves.
America $1 million gift
'

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ALL THEY NEED IS LOVE- Japanese admirers
of former Beatie John Lennon bow their beads in
respect lor the slain musician as they sit in a cold driz·

zle Wednesday afternoon during a memorial service in
Tokyo. More thaa 6,000 people attended the service.
IAP Laserphoto).

ALVIN, Texas (AP) .,.. Lee
Hamlin Edwards, who felt
privileged . io have been born an
American, never lost faith in his
country. And when he died, he ieft
the bulk of his fortune to the govern:
ment.
Shortly after the first of the 'year,
his attomeys will turn over about $1
million to the Federa) Reserve Bank
_in DaUas.
Edwards; who died at the age of
78, explained in his wiU that he was
making the bequest as a token of his
appreciation to the govenunent.
" ! count as pne of my highest
blessings the 'iact that I was
privileged to have been born in the
United States and . to have lived a
good life under/· the government of
such a country, ' Ed_wards wrote in
his wtU.
In the two yeilrs since his death,
attorneys have /been busy trying to
locate EdwardS' fortune + mostly
royalties, stocks, government bonds
and cash storeil in at least l7 different banks. And the lawyers say

.

theystillaren'tsurethey'vefoundit
aU.
.
Edwards' attorney, Wily Thomas
of ;f.ngleton, said the bachelor·also
~left some jewelry, an undetennlned
an\ount of ciiSh, his Alvin home and
.three cars to several friends.
Art Tribble, senior attorney for
the Federal Reserve Bank, said the
lnherita~ w!U be .used to pay off lnterest owed on various government
' llonds and treasury bills held In
'•texas.
" " ·• •
"It will have "the effect overaU of
reducing the poblio de~," he said.
The money, the will -stated, was to
be used "solely for the retirement in
, Texas of public debt obllgationa of
·_ !he,Ui11ted States owed by citizens
alid ~dents of the. state of Texas."
According to Thomas, Edwards
was an " unpretentious patriot" who
loved his country aDd his home
state.
That love began decadea ago when
EdwardS joined the Army at San Antonio after -a rift with his father, ·

HOSPITAL 'EWS
VETERANS MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL
Wednesday admission-Charles
Payne; Pomeroy.
Wednesday discharges-Leta
Coleman, Edward Stiles, John
Shain.
Thursday admissions--Walter
King, Pomeroy; Catherine Grueser,
Pomeroy.
Thursday discharge-Ella Wilson.

Pied Piper of Baltimore
leads kids in rodent wars
BALTIMORE lAP ) + Dr. Rat and
his Rat Squad, modern-day Pied
Pipers, are leading an army of
children in a war against rats.
The traveling troupe conducts two
shows a day in city schools, teaching
children the best way to eradicate
the r odents. And the troupe is
proving to officials here that there's
no business like show business for
helping fight the spread of rats in the
· inner city.
" Back in medieval days we had
miracle plays and they were so successful. ... It just shows miracle
plays are still . valuable," said
Charles Noon Jr., director of the
housing department's Neighborhood

Development Divis io n, who
suggested the program. "We had
been trying to get this message
across for years. It's a serious
message butit w.asn 't working." ·
Dr. Rat and his Rat 'Squad, the
creations of the Baltimore Theater
Project, have perfonned before
7,600 children and expect to reach
more than 50,000. Their SO-minute
play, with music, provides the first
exposure to thomter for many of the
youngsters.
Uke a miracle play, the story of
Dr. Rat and his struggle to rid the
city of rats is a simple on~. " It's
good and evil,'' sa id Noon.
Dr. Rat, played by Derek Neal,
wears a khaki unifonn with rat traps

as epaulets and sporis a widebrbruned bush hat on his head. He
looks something like a safari hunter.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
" We go in and hammer tiome the
DISCHARGES DEC. 24
message that when you take away
Lindburg
Arnold, Virginia
what rats eat and where they hide,
Bocook,
Mrs,
COdy
Boothe and son,
you can control the problem,'' said
Lisa
Bowman,
Joe
Calvert, Karen
founder and director Philip Arnoult.
Chattin,
James
Copley, Wilbw"You can really . mobilize a lot of
Crance, Charlotte Denny, Mrs.
kids.
"The play emphasizes that this is William Dray and daughter, Alice
Durst, Harold
a cormhunity problem,'' he added. Duncan,
"It's basicaUy about .kids taking Hamm, Ke eth Hartley, Mrs.
Eugene H
es and daughter,
responsibility for the problem."
Jason
Howar~
,
Melinda
Howell, Al&gt;The idea for the rat theater began
thur
HoYt,
M~s.
Charles
Hughes
and
last spring and the Theater Project's
daughter,
Trinka
Jewell,
)Jeatrice
company - s·ix actors, 'two
Kuhn, HAzel McCloud, Randy Mcmusicians and two technicians has been on the road since the begin- Mannis, Wesley Meek, Mrs. Paul
Milburn and daughter, Mrs. Terry
ning of the current school year.
Officials say the results of Dr. Molls and daughter, Nellie Parks,
Rat's trips to the schools have been Jeffrey Potter, Miranda Rawlins,
Ray Anna Rawlins, Dana Rayburn,
beyond_anYthing they imagined.
intoxicated, $360.00; ijenry Crabaia,
More, than 600 youngsters caUed a Henry Reibel, Heatl)er Ridgeway.
The Plains, speedJng, $40.00; John s~iai teleph&lt;ine line set up io field Gussie Rinesmith, Paul Samons,
Manley, Middleport, reckless
queries about rat prevention in the Robin Snyder, Mrs. Jermone
operation, $67.55 ; Genevieve G. Har- first month it was operating. And Thomas and son, Pam Thompson,
vey, Athens ; Joseph R. Crum, Cam- hundreds of others regularly write to Florence Trainer, Katherine Veith,
bridge; Karen A. Rajala, Albany ;
Dr. Rat reporting on their progress Melissa Wheeler, Ryan Wood, Ivna
Ernest K. Pritchard, Vienna; and
in picking up trash and making sure Zaddack.
John T. West, Zanesville, all on
CHRISTMAS DAY
that garbage is stored tightly in
ci1arges of speeding and all forChloe
Dickess,
Florence Biggens,
metal containers.
feiting $40.50.
Martha
Frye,
NeUie
Grover, Mrs.
· Bright red stickers promoting the
city's battle against nits, which a re Ralph Mayes and son, Melissa Nance, James Sparks, ,&lt;,nna Walker. '
passed out by the Rat Squad, are a
DfNNER DANCE.
BIRTH
A New Year's Eve dance and dinhot item among school children,
Mr. and Mrs, David Malone, son,
Noonsaid.
,
ner will be held at the Eli Denison
Post 467 Home at 9 p.m. Post mem"When · you go through neigh- Jackson.
bers are accepting donations now.
borhoods where.)\'e've be,en you see
There will also be a dance at the post ·those things plastered everyWhere,"
home tomorrow night.
Anyone · said Arnoult.
,
wishing any further infonnation
Dr. Rat has also come up against
may call 992-7087.
another famotis rat fighter of legend
- the Pied Piper of Hamlin , who acThe December State School Founcordi ng to tradition lured rats into
TO MEET
Subsidy payment of
dation
jumping into " river.
Chester Township Trustees will
$90,759,008.08
to 6!2 Ohio city, exemDr. Rat tells youngsters the Pied
meet at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at the
pted
village
an~
local school districPiper was a phony.
Chester Town Hall for the final
ts and 87 boa~ds of education was
"The Pied Piper was wrong,'' he
business meeting of the year.
reported today by State AuditoF
says. ''Rats can swim.''
Thomas E. Ferguson.
Meigs County's three local school
districts, foUO'Wing deductions for
retirement of employes received:a
total of $34$,879.72 with Eastern
Local receiVing ~ ,256.28; M:ei!lll
Local, $178,155.14, and Soothem ·
Local, $82,488.30. In addition, the
county board of education received a
direct allotment of $17,888.19.

!E
.·

10 fined in county court
Ten defendents paid fines and
eight forfeited bonds in the Wednesday session of Meigs County
Court, presided over by Judge
Patrick O'Brien.
Paying fines were Marion Easterday, Racine, on charges of parking a
vehi cle on a highway. $100 and
costs : William Gardner , Ga llipol is,
speeding, $20 and custs; Jose ph
Watkins, Middleport, failing to keep
exhaust in working condition, $5 and
costs; Audie McFarland, New
Haven, W. Va. , speeding, $22 and
costs; Anthony Corsi, Jr., Pomeroy,
speeding, $22 and costs; Danny
Morris, Langsville, failure to drive
on right half of roadway, $10 and
· cos ts; Kenn et h Lo ngstreth,
Langsville, speeding, $27 and costs;
Ed E. Wooliver, Glouster, speeding.
$22 and cost s: Mark Smi th,
Gallipolis, speeding, $21 and costs;
Hugh C. Bearhs, Route 2, Pomeroy,
failure to yield, $15 and costs.
Forfeiting bonds were Danny
Brown, Minersville, drivin~ while

Subsidy
received

.

.

described as a "no-nonsenH
Episcopalian," who dabbled in nNII
estate, construction and frUIC
se~.
;
Father and son \Vere reconciled !it:
ter 1935, when T.C. Edwards made'i
fortune from oil royalties. Mdllt ,?.
the estate comes from lhlilil!
. royalties, lorn of a real estate
that left the elder Edwards with 4lt ·
acres in the middle of Hastings 01J
Field.
..; :
The field was broqht into~
tloo in 1935 by Huntble Oil, nojt
Exxon, and Standard Oil of Incllan-.:
Young Edwards spent three t~ .
of duty with the Army, moet of it 1•
Fort Sam Houston in San Ant011111~
He .was buried . there In ~il
sergeant's uniform after II slmpl~
military funeral.
·
~, ,
"He believed in this counlry until ·
the day he died," Thomas said. "~
never forgot that the U.S. Army feif
him when he was hungry, put a~
over his head and gave him sorne
warm clothes," Thomas said..
-~
"

cJ4ii

Area .deaths
Earl Hart
Earl ~rt. 90, Racine, died Wednesday at Veterans Memorial
Hospital, Pomeroy.
Mr. Hart was precected in death by
his · parents, Linley and Jenny
(Oliver) Hart, his wife, Fannie
(Sayre) Hart, and two brothers,
Oscar and Stan(ey.
·
Surviving him are three
daughters, Mrs. Charles (Lorene)
Pyles, Racine; Mrs. _Jack (Patsy)
WiUis, Colwnbus; and Mrs. Don
(Joyce) Manuel, Racine; five sons,
Ronald, St . .Cloud, Fla.; Linley,
Racine; Eldred, of EUiott, Maine;

EMS runs
The Meigs Emergency Medical
Service Headquarters reporis that
area squads made a total of seven
runs over Wednesday and Thursday.
The Tuppers Plains emergency
unit transported Beulah Stewart,
Reedsville, to Camden Clark
' Hospital, Parkersburg, at 7:17a.m.
Wednesday, andatl0:59 a.m., the
Rutland squad took Robert Fo11 from
the scene of an auto accident § lillie
off Route 881 to O'Bienels Hospital,
Athens.
At 12:24 p.m., the Middleport unit
was called to the North 3rd Street
home of Charles Marshall, who was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital. Middleport answered a
second call at 8:07 p.m., transporting Edward Stiles from his
home at918South3rdSt. to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
The l?omeroy Emergency Squad
answered .a cal) WednCI!Iay at 8:59
p.m_, taking Walter White from liis
residence on Ebeneier street to
Veterana Memorial Hospital. ·
Thursday, two calls were reSponded to, the first at 2:48 p.m. The
·Pomeroy unit transported Daisy
Vance, Harrisonville, Ill Holzer
Medical Center, and at 5:45p.m., the
same squad took Catherine Grueser
from l)er home at Long Hollow to
Veterans Memorial.

Gilbert, Racine; and Robert, also~
Ra-cine; tw11, sistera, Nora Ball a'tiil
Lillie Hubbard, both of Middlepott;
a brother, Emery Hart, New Haveii,.
W. Va.; Zi grandchildren, !t
great+grandchildren, and sevefli}·
nieces and nephews.
· ·'·
Mr. Hart was a member of caP.
penters' Local 650 and IIMi Wilrldwi!le Church of God, Parkersburg: :.~
The funeral will be held Sunday'$
2 p.m. at the Ewing Chapel llf
Pomeroy, and burial WiU be at till!'
Graham Station Cemetery, Servi~
will be 'presided over by Tlril Snyder,.
and friends may caU at the fuileta!
home anytime.
:·

...-

Court backs

''

.PUCO~
"::-"'

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - -·A
Columbus-based utlli~y was not entitled to recover from-its cust~is
the non-fuel cost of purchased powt!t
during a United Mine Workers strtlie
in 1978, Ohio's Supreme Court ruled

Tuesday.

. ..... ' '
The decision upheld a ruling of the

Public Utilities Cornmi.ssiim of Ohio
which had been appealed to the high
court by Columbus &amp; Southern Oli•
Electric Co.
Records showed that on March 11.
1978, C&amp;SOE sought to recover f1
million from its customers througll'l(
temporary tariff, during art'·
emergency period triggered bi •
lack of coal to fuel Ohio's coal-fired
public utilities. '
:.
The Supreme Court detenninoid
that there was· no violation ol dol(
process, as c&amp;SOE contended.
; •
It said the PUOO, in ordering lhlt
utility to purchase energy ~:
from other sources to prevent cgr;:
!ailment or interruption of service; •
imposed no new or. addltlonlll:
obUgations on the ~ny buC,
rather reaffirmed e~ statutdrf,'
obligations,
,;

..
:·..
,.

'•

.
.
PARTYPLANNED
.
A New Year:s 'Eve Party will be
ad\llts, children under 12 free WHJt:
held December: 31 fnrn 8 p.m. to 12 parents. Everyone attendlllfi 11:
a.m. at the Senior Citizens Center
requested to take either cookies .,.;;
Pomeroy. Round and square c1aO:
sandwiches for refreshments. Tfl8:
clng will be held throughout the
party is open to the public,
~
evening, and admission_ will be $1for
&lt;'

•'•',.

w.,. .

".

r

~:.,~

r

••
,•
'I

'

.

COUNTY : MEIGS
PUBLIC NOTICE
The following documents
were received or prepared
bY The Ohio En ·
vrro nmental Protection
Agen~~ durinll the previous
week . -The effective dale of
each final action Is stated
The Issuance date of eacti
proposed action Is stated.
Anyone aggrieved or ad·
versely affected bY a final
action to Issue, deny, 1~?.~~
li\odlfy, revoke, or renew a
rmlt, license, or varia n· I d/;;~~~·,}ft~;
; or to approve or dlsap- Ii
· ove
Plans
and
specifications, may fi le an
26_. 28, 29, 3tc
appeal with The En·
'"'ronmental Board of
You 'I I
evlew, Suite 123b2«l Par·
tract
It down
ns Ave .. Collum us, Ohio
215, within thirty (30)
much faster
•vs of the effective date,
"i th a
.11.yrsuant to Ohio Revised
~bde Section 3745.o7, unless
WANT AD
•uch final action was
· ~eceded bY the same·· or
,,
'IIJbstantlally the . same
_, ' ·"'
·· dlflon,
propased
·
action.
In
ad·
===~~~~~§§::_
purSU!!f'll fo Section ;"3'.1il5.04 of The Revised 2,__ __,l_,n_cM,e!!m!!o~r_cia!!!m~-:f.ode,
notice shall
of the filing of In memory of my mother,
Tlie appeal
be filed
with tile Director of the Maude Kohl, who passed
hlo ·
Env ironmental away 15 veers ago today,

~Ohioroad
rotedlon
Agency,
361 E.
Street.
Columbus,
&gt;43216, wi 1hin three (3)

cays after the appeal is
'med with Tile · En ~ Ironmen t a I. Board ot
"Review.
All such final ac·
tlonsereso Identified. Such
-~sons may request an ad·
. icatlon hearrng before
- e Ohio EPA on a
!l!f'OPOsed attion to issue,
deny, modify, revoke, or
'f~new

a permit, license, or ·
•\lerlance;
or toplans
approveand
or
~is approve
speclflcaitons within thlr·
ty (30) dayso1the issuance
date.ORC3745.07doesnot
vide for . adjudication
eerlng requests or ap·
peals from orders, verified
compla-ints, or en ·
torcement compliance
schedule letters. Within 30
days of pu_bllcatlon Jn a
newspaper
1n the affected
fv,
~:-'o~ Y(1)an~tfri;rf 0 ~rfn:~
,c 9mments relating to ac ·
lllfons proposed actions,
~rifled comp laints, en·
'fl!rcement com -p liance
&amp;ehedu le letters or
1l'l"elimlnary staff deter·
.l'nlnattons on permits to in"'~II.; (2) request a public
regarding
m ee II ng

cernlng public meetings,

'W!fiudlcalion hearings,
. ~rifled complaints, and
'l'egulatlons, should be ad·
· 'lll'essed to The ""Legal
Records Section, Oh io
EPA, P. 0. Box 1049,
·columbus, Ohio 43216,
(614) 466·6037 . Unless .

••

•
,.

-

CHIUS1'MAB DINNER -

,.
'
Mlchael Grtffea, G1 rno

.Hea~ Ave., in New Yort, smo•es a clprette

,

.

ICB BOUND - 01 l]t W· II ]IN l,_ B. tf tk Dell::aw Rmr, Clalrt
KeilJI wdl wllll ... .-la ... )fil • .. .. . ... li ...... C 'i11 II lllere ac11tl?' 1 ,..,. . . l
-•-tt•l'MtfO•••n ·-•• 'Ia 1 a 11
Jasw'

e,Cklll ,_, 'JfiiJhwYorll.... lllt
... aed
GDtaf lllnparii!Mat. OrllrsAid 11u 11...;11Mp
wbalhuoald~arry. (AP Luerphot.).

aher

n

.

bavins a dinoer provided by an emergeecy relief _ag-

r

I
• •
--' I
s 11aJ- ua: ; f I

{

f

rta•••wrt..-er
.. ....,Tiw
lAP' 1ji11'11) •

....11a

H. L WHITESEL
ROOFING

woodburner,

garege,

basement,

10X27 sundeck. First house 1
Pl!SI Memory Garden s S.R. · All typeo of roof work,
7.992·7741.
new or repair guHers
and downspouts, gutter

cleaning and p•inting_
All work guaranteed.

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

Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices

Call Howard
949-2162
949-2160
1-22 -ttc

NICE TWO bedroom house

with three Cllr garage In

Racine. $33,00.00. 949·2801.
No Sunday calls.

posstbte for old and silver
coins, rings, ]ewelry, etc.
contact Ed Burkett Barber
Shop,Middlepart.

SHOOTING MATCH at
Corn
Rutland.
Every Hollow
Sunday instarting
at
noon.
Proceeds being
donated 10 the Boy Scout
T
roop 249 · 12 geugefactory
choke gun only!
·
RACINE GUN SHOO
T,
Racine Gun Club, every .
Friday night starting at
7:30 p.m. Factory· choke
g~nson 1y ,

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

'I'll."
.,.,.., bring you
• extra cash
'f.~ i

for
~·~·hnnplng

sprees

ALL STEEL

.ROUSH

·Farm Buildings
Sires

" From 3Cix30"

• New Homes • elltensive remodeling
Electrica I work
• Roofing work ·
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583
12·4·1 mo.

SMALL

e

Utility Bliidings ·
Sizes tram 4x6 to 12x40

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt. 3, Box 54
Racine, Oh .

Ph. '14-143-2591
6-15-ttc

r~~i~~~~~~l~§§~~~~E~~ three
bedtooms,
pet. 1971
Cameron,new
14 xcar·
64,
A
·. NO
· BRASS· BEDS '
old furn iture, desks, gold
rings, fewelry ' $liver
dollars, sterling, etc., wood
Ice boxes,jars antiques,
etc. Complete households .
Write M. D. Miller, Rt . ~.

Pomeroy, OH1 or call 992·
7760 ·
WANTED TO BUY :
GOLD ,
SILVER ,
PLATINUM, STERLING·
COINS, RINGS,JEWELR ·
MISC . ITEMS. AS ·
TE
MA ·R K ET
GUARANTED. ED
--:..,--ETT
BARBER

1 ,-,Hin~l2 ·~~i:r'''~c:.-ORT,

11
Help wanted
GET VALUABLE training
as a young business person
and earn good money plus
some great gifts as a Sentinel route cerrler. Phone

us right away and get on
the eligibility list at 992·
2156 or 992·2157.

RNs and LPNS, lOOking for
challenging and rewarding
work? Tired of rotating
shifts? Feel the need to
develop your ideas In
resident care With, a highly
motivated staff? Pomeroy
Health Care Center has the

l!nswer for you . Due to

achieving n'ar maximum
we now ha"'e
openings for: full and pilrt
time positions on day shift
but will consider other shlf·
census,

ts. Competitive salary, ex-

PHONE 992-2156
CLASSIFIED AD INDEX
eRENTALS
torRent --"'

7-Yirdllle

• 41-IQUipmtnttorRtftf

.

41 MERCHANDISE

, eEMPLOYMENT
SE-RVICES .,.

JI-HouHhold Ooois
52-CI\TV• Racllt lqulpm.nt
Jl-AntMtUtt
.
M-Mttc. MtrchiiiNIItt
ss-:-lullcflnti..,.IH
M-.-.ttfWJt ..

,, _Htlpw1 nted
1!-lltut,..W•ntMS

11--lnsur•nce
14--lu•lnns Tr•lnlnt
IJ-SchMII Instruction
,,. J6RHICI, TV
i
&amp;CI R.,.lr

I

62-Wtntt41 to ltY ·
72-Trvdl•• hit

Mlinfll •

o-Ll.,..teck

Opflortunlty
n-MontytoLMn
2)-Proffllional
Strvlctt "

,,__ .... &amp;

e REAL ESTATE

,.,_...... tor Salt

~PtrMiftr

'

'

.,...,llur

64-Hty I Grein 6f ""t.

eTRANSPORTATION

....

.....
J..........
.. .....y.

-.

'l :Jiil t".M. DtiiY"
It Nltfl ht\H"N'f

I.

'

~u)wa,..,., UnHr

centr.11l

heating,.

..... ....

c...

••
•••
,
•

on

and

drilled well.
SS,200. - Old 6 room
hOuse end trailer spot
with all utilities. 2 level
lots . .
A real buy,

garden,

R•tes •n~ ptller lnform•tlon
I .

considered ~

storm windOWS. city
utilities, large lot for a

W.nt-Ad Advtrtls n
O.dllnts
·

will be

nace, basement. some

...........

IAcceuorlts
J'7- Aut1R ... Ir

tit

992·2571.

42

Real Estate

General

Mobile Homes
for Rent
10 x 55 two bedroom mobile

home near

5858.

REALTY

Geo. s. Hobsleller, Jr.
Realtor

Phone 742-2003
BRICK HOME 3
bedroom. 2 baths, large
living room with lovely

stone fireplace, eq~ip ·
ped kitchen, full base'
ment with . stone

fireplace, on 101/4 acres
with Ph acre pond,
stocked. Call for show·

ing.
I
CHESTER - 6 acres
with nice remodeled 3
bedroom home, living
room, sunporch, dining
room, modern kitchen,
bath , basement, garage

and

several

bldgs.

$35,000.

I.

ACREAGE - 7.2 akres
with 2 bedroom home on

Hysell Run Road, extra
w~ter tap &amp; septic tank.
Onlv119,000.

POMEROY Union
Ave., large 3 bedrpom
home, living room,! kitchen, full baseiT)ent,
garage on large lot. Ask·

ing $26,500.
.
RUTLAND - Nice 2
story hom e, 4 bedrooms,
living room , dtrtng
room, equipped kitchen,
carpo"rt, storage btdgs.
Asking $38,000.
Cheryl Lemley, As,oc.
Ph. '742·3171

a.rreo
I.U

I .U
1.11

• • wen1 O'Hrthtmlftl"'um 11..,...11 4 ceatt ..,.WIH.., ..y ,

. . f'IHMiilll ....... IMn CllftHCUtln dlyt Will ... CIN,... It tilt I ...,.
rttt.

tncl Oltltutry t 6 CHH .... won!, U .M

pets.

or

children, all at a price
you can:afford .
LANO CONTRACT SSOO down. 10% interest,
and" ~DOIY $85.00 · per
month. ~.7 acres, 4 room
house, · and utll i ties
available. Peaceful .
$2,500 --'- WoOded loiS In
the coulltry with natural
gas, tlticlrlc, and water
ava~lble soon.
$.45, .1- Good perma
stone 11ome out of a 11
floods to 3 lots. Has 3
bedrooms. full base·
mont, garage, central
he.e t, J .pella, copper
piuiiiDklO, and new
beth. &amp;IIOrm devices .
WE AR. GETTING
THEM SOLO, FOR
BEST RESULTS CALL
US AT ft2.3U5 10R
tn-317~.

/JprJ',IIH/

It'

I

'•:&lt;'·

'

VA loans no money down
Federal Housing ::.....

12 Park St.
Middleport, on.
Ph. 992-6263
Anytime
12·17·1 mo.

3% on $2S,OOO

S% on balance.

Conven1ional Loans-

PH. 742·2328

5%
down
Call tor Information

12-8-1 mo.

99HS44

~=========i~=~~;:;~~~~~~==~=====~
44

' YOUNGS
CARPENTER
SERVICES"

Apartment
torRent

FURNISHED 4 room &amp;
bath, adults only, no pets.
Middlepart, 992 _3874.

45

ROGER HYSELL'S

GARAGE

-Addonsand
remodeling
' -Rooflngandgutter
work

Furnished Rooms

-Auto and Truck
Repair
- Transmission
Repair

-concrete work

-Plumbing and
electrlcalwork
1Free Estimates)

SLEEPING rooms or will
room &amp; boord Senior
Citizens. 949·2491.

Hrs.: Mon.-Fri .

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

V.C. YOUNG II

Sleeping rooms or wilt
room &amp; board Senior
Citizens. 949·2591.

992-5682

992-6115 or 992-7314
p omeroy, 0 h.

10·7-tfc

Racine. 992 -

Two bedroom mobile home
at Brown's Trailer Park .

992·3324.

46
Spa~e lor Rent
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy. Large lots. Call
992·7479.

Run.AND RJRNinJRE CARPET
DECEMBER CARPET SALE
KITCHEN CARPET 4 Rolls
SHAG
CARPET With Padding Reg.
$15.95

TRAILER spaces for rent .
Apartment
Southern Valley Mobile
for Rent
Home Park, Cheshire, Oh.
992·3954.
3 AND 4 RM furnished a pIs. Phone 992·5&lt;134.
Off~ e .space on Sycamore
ee t in downtown
Furnished apartment ~. 992· St
Po· eroy. All utilities paid.
3129, 992·5914, or 1·304-882- $125.00a
month. 992·2259.
2566.
44

I

DRIVE ALITTLE - SAVE A LOT

RUTLAND FURNITURE

at 992·7787.

II:=:::=======+==========

53 · ENTION
Antiques
Ai'l'
:
{IM · IPC!IliTANT TO YOU) Will

pay cash or certified check

for antiques and coliec·
llbles or entire estates.
Nq\hing too la rge. Also,
guns, pocket watches and
coin collections. Cell 614·
767·3167 or 557-3411.

'

54

62
Wanted to Buy
CHIP WOOD. Poles max .
diameter 10" on largest
end. $12 p·er ton. Bund led
slab. $10 per ton. Delivered
to Ohio Pallet Co., Rt. 2,
Pomeroy 992-2689.
·

will

stack

for

Senior

Ph. 742-3092

Citizens. 8&lt;13·4951 or 8&lt;13·
2815.

Real ~:&lt;state- Genj,ral

FIREWOOD $35 . a truck
load, $60. a cord. All har·
dw,ood, split, &amp;. delivered.
843·41131 or 843·4734.
Firewood

for

sale ,

reasonable
99~· 5n6 .

rates.

Phone

F i rewood

for

sale,

reasonable rates. Phone
N.EAR MEIGS HIGH
SCHOOL - There ;is a
wood burner that poes
with this 5 year old one
floor pia~ home . II has a .
full basement, a metal

. . ... ...·,.
..............
...................
~

Autos for Sale

71

1975 GRANADA, 6 cyl.
automatic,
a.c..
low
mileage . $2 ,300. Exc. cond .

992·7689.
1976 CHEVY

Nova , 6

cyl .automatlc, a.c. Asking

$1,900. 992·7341.

72

enough bri ck to

patio .

' for sale, 90 cents for
Hay

m~ke

a

$36,500.

NEAR MINE TWO Perfect tor a family.
Has 4 bedrooms, f•mlly
room, nice buJII·In
equipped kitchen.• Has
!Wo porches and • out·
buildings. $26,900.
REALTOR
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.

m-•1'1

ASSOCIATE~

·

Jean Trussell 949 2660
Roger &amp; Dottle T rner
H2-5692

~

. ".W

&amp; Refrigeration

SEWING

MACHINE
service,

992·2284.

all

The

with

overload

springs &amp; good bed. Good

ELWOOD
REPAIR -

BOWERS
sweepers,

condition . Vi ctor · Bahr, 3

tOasters, Irons, all small

motorcycle,

all makes washer, dryers,
r anges, dishwashers,
disposals, weter tanks. Call J

miles north of Chester. 985· appliances. Lawn mower.
Next to State Highway
4240 .
Garage on Route 7, 985·
3825.
74
Motorcycles
1978 KAWASAKI ~z 650 APPLIANCE SERVICE:
color

blue.

Ken Young at 985·3561. 28

years experience. Also will

sell parts you tlx.
11
UH
Glow Kerosene
Economv (21·016]) ,
...._,.,,_,.
NowS12t.95
· t

out·

A BUY I AT

Electrical

84

and Service . We sharpen
Sc issors.

Trucks for Sale

7.

available. ONLY $2,500.
TWO FIREPLACES A 1'12 story home with 3
bedrooms and .a family
room . It has new wiring
end the fUrnace is ju~t 4
is~

la yout. 992·7201.

1967 CAMERO. 350 4 speed, Fabri c Shop, Pomeroy.
am ·fm cassette. 992·2917.
Authorized Singer Sales

Call949-2649.

buildings and approx·
tmately 'h acre . JUST!
$16,000.
'
NEXT TO NATURE PORTLAND ~ Approx·
imately 56 acresl for
Pasture, Woods, 1 and
building sites. Abundant
wildlife. $23,900.
E~_STERN
SCHpOL
DISTRICT - Approx ·
lmal&lt;fiY 41/2 acres~nd a
2 bedroom home lth a
heatalator fireptac and ·
real nice kitchen. as a
lull basement 1 and

septic · tank installation ,
water &amp; gas lines. Ex·
cavating work &amp; transit

makes!

1970 Ford one half ton

truck load lots. No sunday
sales. 8&lt;13·2795 or 843·2781.

Excavating

Repa irs.

over an acre antt is

years old. There

in your home. Furniture
repa ir in my shop. Jim
Bentz, -4th St. , Syracuse.

J &amp; F BACKHOE ·SER ·
VICE liscensed &amp; bonded,

pickup

and firewood . $29,900.
BUILDING SITE I Rout~

WILL do handyman work

83

~

992·5n6.

storage building, and 2
acres, with a garclen

located on

Home
Improvements

11

M!sc . Merchanise

Firewood tor sale, Mixed
types of wood . $35.00 per
ptck·up load. Delivered,

Velma Nicinsky, A~soc .

742-2211

MAIN ST.

Apt for rent, 3 rooms &amp;

Printed Pattern

Installed

Good selection roll end remnants $3.99 up

Vi llage Manor Apartments

.The Romantic Suit!

$1rs

Sq. Yd.
&amp; Up
Installed

.99 For $fi99

Office· space on Sycamore
Unfurnished one bedroom Street
in · downtown
apartment for rent. Ren· Pomeroy. All utilities paid.
ters assistance ava ·table
for senior citiZens. Contact $125.00 a month. 9112,2259.

bath. 992·59Q8.

$995

Installed

Water and , electric are

right? 3 bedrooms, fur·

J'4-Mettrcyclll
7~

Phone
- 1:~_614)-992-3325

$16,500 -

71-Vtnt fo4 W.O.

)1 - Mot\tft

_ 1' E. Se&lt;ond Street

this 2 bedroom one floor.
frame home. Has bath,

61-~•r"' BCIUI,.tnl

eFINANCIAL
' 21 -

t~~~L~.~:.t Ji
$12,000 - or good offer

.

"eFARMSUPPLIES
&amp; LII.IESTOCK

It-Wanted To Do

bedroom furnished &amp; one

Trailer lot tor sale, SS.OOO. bedroom furnished apartModularhOmelotonRoute ments . Call after 6 p.m.
7, three bedroom farm · 992·2288.
house located on Route 7.

58S8 . classifled
ads
THAWING Water lines,
replace damaged copper
tubing or plastic lines.
Genera l plumbing. 667·6139
or 667-6150.
-------·. . -- Re•l Est•te Generjll

Headquarters

&amp; Awctlon

t-WIIIIIdlolluy

31
Homes for Sale
10R00Mbrlck,3beths, l'l• . . , - - - - - - - - acre;6rooms,2bathr. 1'h
acres; 6 roo:ns basement,
beth, 2 m.:.blle hOmes;
Mason, 3 bedroom never
lived in, 2 bedroom, rented
2 acres. John .Sheets, 3'12 4'-'1-~H,o::::u,se,_,s_,_fo,r__,R"-'e"n,_,_t_____,_
miles south of Middleport, TWO BEDROOM un·
Rt . 1:
furnished house, -also two

mobile

Housing

. 44-AIH!rtm.nt.,. R..Jt
U - FRMmt
~S!Hitt tor Rtnt
~ '•1-Wantecllo Rent

lf:!!··,..••••c Ule

2nd x Viand Street, Point
Pleasant, wv Phone 675·
4424
·

992-7544

IF YOU NEED IT
FIXED,
WE CAN DO IT!

carpet. B x s Sales, Inc.,

home or residence. 992·

41-HcMIHI kif' Ment
42-MobU~ HemH

••w

estate

Furnace repairs, electrical

or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 CourtSt., Pomeroy, Q., 45769

:")1-CINIIf ! hf"kl'
2-ln MtMotl1m
l-Announcemtnts
._:o,,~..
$-Hiptrt Ails
'-Loll 1ncl Found

Real

Wanted lo Do

work, plumbing,

Building &amp;

two bedrooms, new carpet.
1972 Champion, 12 x 60, two
•
bedrooms, new.carpet. 1976 ' ·
AUTOMOBIL' E
IN · Cameron,
12 x 60, two
SU RANCE been can· bed
celled? Lost your
rooms, all electric. 1971
operator's license? Phone beSkdyline , 12 s• 6),1 two
rooms, bath &amp; 13, new
992 -2143 · ·
c arpet . 1970 PMC ,
12 x 60, two bedrooms, new

2686.

18 ·

~~ ·••NNIOU'NCEMENTS

1973Crow_nHaven, l4x65,

KAUFPS
PWMBING
AND
HEAnNG

CUNNINGHAM
&amp;ASSOC.
Mortgage Bankers

AL TROMM

for Sale
t% · ~6

Lady or girl to live in. 992·

WANT AD INFORMAnON

i2___ Mobile Homes

~
-

cellent working conditions,
life lnsu ranee and
Wanted to Buy: class rings, disability POI.icy at no cost
wedding bands, anything to tho employee, and
stamped, 101&lt;;, UK, or 1BK hospitalization insurance
gold. Sliver coins, pock~t available. Come visit us or
watches. Call Joe Clark at call: Nancy Van Meter,
992-2054 at Clark' s Jewelry R.N ., Director of Nursing,
Store, Pomeroy, Ohi0&gt;15769 Pomeroy Health Care c;en·
ter, 614·992·6606.

.,._Classified Ads

•

••
••

3,__---'A"'n,n,_,o,u,n~ce!!m=en,_,ts~1 PAY h~hest prices

• 1

•

a

December
Leona
Kohl. 26. Daughter,

YOUR
PIANO. ToQ
valuable to neglect, expert
otherwise stated in par- tuning &amp; ;and repair. Lane
ticular notices, all other ·
communications including 1 Daniels, 742·2951 or 992·
comments on proposed ac- ' 2082.
!loris should be addressed
either to The Division ot '
Lostand Found
Aulhorlution &amp; Com·
ranee (Air) or Permit FOUN6 : Large black &amp;
' d ' Approval Section white tom cat. VicinitY of
-" aler), whichever IS all' Mulberry &amp; Heights. 992proprlate. at The Oh1o .
EPA, P. 0 . Box 1049, 5354.
J=olumbus, Ohio &lt;13216·.
Issuance of certification
,o•Ohio Department of OLD COINS, pocket wat·
ches.- class rings, wedding
Transportation · .
~ "''Rac.ne, OH, Effective
bands, diamonds. Gold or
~te 12/15/80
'
sll..,.r. q11 J . A. w~msley,
,.Pertains to .401 cer· 742·2331. Treasure Chest
.,..ication grant.
Coin Shop, Athens, OH . 5926462.
~~~) 26, lie

~

~.

cl!llr

.qther communications con·

H-ltllnllllvllcllnlt
3~L... IAc:rd. .
»-1"1 llttte Wtnrtd
. . 37-lt ..ltln,

J

fireplace ,

total electric, ca rpeted, 2

HAVE YOUR deer trophy USED FURNITURE. Gold
mounted . Birchfield's. &amp;. silver, class rings, pocket
East on 124 at Rutland . U2· watche!, chains, diamonds
2178.
&amp;. so on. Copper brass and
bafferles, antique items,
DEER Cut &amp; wrapped at a150 d0 appro 1sa Is • com·
Maple Wood Lake between plete . auctioneer service.
proposed actions or on syracuse &amp; Racine, Oh. Over 30 years experience In
-prelimtnary staff deter· $25. per head. $5 additional business. Will buy com·
"'IJ)inattons on permits to in- for skinning.
plete estates. Mlddiepart,
stall ; and/or (3) request
Oh. 992·6370.
notice of further actions or
.II[OCeedinQS. _All requests FAYE'S Gilt Shop In MidlOr ad!Ud1catron hearings dleport will be open from
'lnd public meetings, and 12·5 until Christmas.

ft,r Stlt=
H-Mitilte.,.omn
tar •••• \

I,

7 ROOM HOME . 2'12 acres,

-~

•

''

Business Services

ditioning. Call 985·3814 or
992-2571 ..

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

·••'
•

i''

Homes for Sale
Beautiful three bedroom
ranch brick home In Baum
Addition, Pomeroy, Ohio.

J1

Gas heat, central air con-

&amp;

~,.

..:•

by Larry Wright

l!

~

'

KIT 'N' CARLYLE TM

Home
Jmprovements

GENE'S
CARPET
CLEANING . Deep stream
clean puts nu·look back in

your carpet, highlY recom ·
mended, reasonable rates,
Pomeroy

Curvy jacket. Swirly slli1t. hilled blouse. Femininity is the

S6
Pets for Sale
HOOF HOLLOW : Horses

t~:so~~tes Ea:~ry~~d;'~~

newest fashion . romance is on
the rise. Combine velveteen and
taffela now lor a long or short

imaginable In horse equip·
ment. Blankets. belts,
bOOts, etc. English and
· western . ·Ruth Reeves
version or new sprina fabncs.
P1inted Pattern 4551: Misses 16W 698·3290.
Sizes 8, 10, 12, 14, 16, 18. See
pattern lor yardages.
THE MEIGS .County
$1.75 fir IICh tlllllm. Md SOC . Humane Society pets of the
week are: Several adult
... lldl ...... ... filst.cllla
cats, 5 black &amp; tan puppies,
lkl1lll . . i1M'II&amp; Sind II:
black llbrador, blat~ Irish
setter, collie type ,
shepherd type, black &amp;
tan; house broke medium
,..., Dlpt.
1 ~· 1
sl~e dog ready to be loved,
The Daily sentinel
lovable mixed breed. 992·
62110.
.
243 lltll17 ~LJ.!i" Y-. NY
11011. Print IIMIE. MJIIIESS,
PUREBRED English
ZIP, SIZE, ll1d sm£ 1111.1.
Shepherd puppies. Stock
Why
up wilh hi&amp;h pricesand watch dogs. Phone 247·
! , get bettl! quality!
2161 .
i&gt;in·rliN CATINILECWIG.F~~L-WINTER
S7
Muolc•l .
lnstrumenh

..........

Low:ery

electric

organ.

Teeny Genie; like new.
$.199.00, 992·20U.

Scotchguard .
Free
estimates. Gene Smith, call
now992·6309 or 742·2211 .

8S
General Hauling
AGRI ·LIME Spreading,
Iimestone and fill dirt
hauling. Leo Morris, 7&gt;422455

COAL , limestone, send a.
gravel, reasonable. Call
992·5510.

~----------------_!~~~~~~~;:~
They'll

Do

It Every Time

�...'
pesember 26, 195:
.,..
'

Pag-1G-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy

Middleport, Ohio
a

Health project advocates looking.for new fUnding
CLEVELAND (AP) ~ Despite
cancellation of a federal grant, advocates of a planned health care net·
work for the citY's ileedy neigh·
borhoods are opttmlstiQ that new
funding sources will be found.
Medical school adminiStrators at
the Case Western-Reserve Univer·
sity learned Tuesday that a $1.6
million federal grant which they had
counted on has been set aside by a
congressional conference com·
mittee.
Neighborhood groups had been
lobbying. for the medical school to
land one of five proposed medical
and dental offices. The Cleveland
Health Network project was
designed by the medical school to
provide health care to needy neighborhoods.
.
Philip Frieder, associate dean of
the medical school and responsible

OPENSATIJRDAY
The Meigs County Registrar of
Motor Vehicles office, ioc;ated in the
former Gibbs Grocery, Mulberry
Aile.,. Pomeroy, will be open lor
business about 9 a.m. to noon Saturday for residents needing license
plates after having been closed
Thursday and Friday for the
holiday.

PRESIDENT WITII TilE PRESENTS- Pesident Jimmy Carte~ and
First Lady Rosa lynn Carter leave the home of her mother, "Miss Allie"
Smith with a bag _of gifts during a Thursday Christmas Day visit in
Plains, Ga. The Carter family spent the Christmas holiday in tbelr
hometown of Plains.

lor the network's planning, said
physicians had been interviewed for
hiring and office sites had been sur·
veyed.
The Chicago regional office of the
.U.S. Department of Health and
Hwnan Services said Oct. 30 that the
project would be funded with the
grant. The medical school had ex·
peeled an initial installment of
$350,000.
"I'm an optimist enough to believe
it will still come, but not the day af·
ter tomorrow,' said Frieder, who
has worked on the project lor about
two years.
The grant cutoff surprised Dr.
Richard E. Behrman, dean of the
school, who said he received no prior
notice that the project's funding was
in jeopardy. The Oct. 30 funding announcement caused him to believe
the network was on solid ground, he
said.
"The real problem is that this
deprives the people of needed health
care," said Behrman, who is seeking
a review of the decision. "Those
people (federal administratorsin
Chicago) are so detached from the
needs of the community."
U.S. Reps. Mary Rose Oakar and

}

~~~~~;:;:;:;:;::;;;~;;;;;;;;;;::::;;;;:;:;;;;;~

I

ELBERFELD$

' ..

.'
.'
.•

..

.
J

.' '

.-------------&lt;

I

nation 's aider metropolitan areas.
" [n our view the moral a nd
material reso urces of g.overnment

would be better expended 10 planning for the future and helping
people to adjust to future im·
peratives in way• that deri ~e from
an understanding and acceptance of
change," the report said.
The panel urged programs to
assist older cities in coping with
fin ancial pressures, particula rly
welfare costs.
Transforming older cities. from

I

ANTI-SOVIET DEMONSTRATION - Tehran pollee and
revolutionary guards push back a crowd of angry demonstrators at the

.

'

REWARD

I

A reward of $500.00 is being offered by the
Southern Local Board of Education, for information that will lead to the arrest and con·
VICfion of the person or-persons that broke into
the Southern Local High School on the night of
December 1S, 1980.
Informant to contact Th Sh 'ff D
e erl
ep t

I
I
1
I
I
I
I

Afghan embassy In Tehran Saturday. The group protesting Soviet In·
terventlon In Afghanistan earlier attacked the Soviet embassy. (AP
Laserphoto).

Vol.

14

No. 48

Copyighted 1980

.

.J

10 Sections, 74 Pages 35 Cents

WASIDNGTON (AP)- A Reagan
transition task Ioree says most of the
remaining 1,547 miles of the planned
42,500-mile interstate . highway
system should not be constructed,
lfhe Washington Post reported
· Saturday.
·,, The newspaper said.the transition·
Pllnel indicated it favors limiting the
fl;equefley ~lrnment recalis of.
"- ape-.edly ·-tiirfl! ·automobil_.,
whlje ~going ~ ~- ~ ,
federal .hlel-tii1CliiOIIIY ltandards for
motor vehicles appear to be un·
necessary.
The Post said it obtained a copy of
a report prepa red by the task Ioree,
headed by Claude S. Brinegar, a former transportstion secrc'" "Y· The
group includes Drew Lewis,

.

Elberfelds ·In Pomeroy

NOT GE'ITING RICH - ~ppareotly operators of
gasoline 'statiow; In Pomeroy are not getting rich. This
station, operated by Jack Welker for eight years and
then several ye31'!1 by Lou Smith, is the third station on

Pomeroy's Malo St. to close in the past lew months.
The narrow margin of profit, difficulty in securing
capable help, high rents and long hours on the part of
the operator are given as reasons for closing of such

'Solidarity'
everywhere
in Poland

SAVE

ALL PRICES HAVE BEEN REDUCED
FOR THIS YEAR-END SALE! ! !

UPTO

•

SIMMONS OLDS-CADIUAC, INC.
Loaded Demo

1980 OLDS 98 Regency Sedan.......... '9895

1976 VW Dasher Cpe.••••••••••••••••••• s3695
11 ,000mi les, 6cy l. std. '4295
1979 CHEV• lJz ton C10•••••••••••••••••
1979 FORD LTD Cpe.••••••••••••••••••• s4795
1978 Olds 98 Regency Cpe. ••••••••••••• '4795
1978 CHRYS. Cordoba Cpe ••••••••••••••• s3695
,1977 PONTIAC GP CtJt! •• ~ ••••••••••••••• s3495

ON BEDROOM, LIVING.
ROOM,
.
.
DINING ROOM AND
.

OTHER SELECTED MERCHANDISE

1980 AMC Spir~ Cpe.••••••••••••• ~ ••••• '4395
1974 OLDS Cut. Sedan •••••••••••••••••. '995
1974 OLDS 98 Sedan ••·••••• •••••••••••. '995
1975 OLDS Cut. Sedar... •• •• ••••••••••• '795
1973 CADIUAC DeVille Sedan ••••••••••• s1295
1973 CADILlAC DeVille Sedan ••••••••••• '595

LARRY'S
'·

"

WAYSIDE FURNITURE
'

'

(

WARSAW , Poland (AP) - The
name of "Solidarity," the trade
union that has changed the face of
Poland, is emblazoned everywhere
in a country where the independent
union movement did not even exist
four months ago .
.
The Solidarity emblem, a jumble
of 'letters unde r a red and white
Polish nag, is proclaimed from ban·
ners on Warsaw buildings, village
bulletin boards and the backs of
country buses in' a show of un:
precedented popular ap)ieal.
It is printed across T-shirts and
' buttons worn by countleSs Poles.
The emblem appears on posters
advertising art auctions to raise
money for the independent union,
which the &lt;;ommunist government
agreed to let Polish workers set up
as a condition lor ending a crippling
surruner strike wave.
Now the name adorns advertisements lor an exhibit of photos
about the shipyard strikes in Gdan- ·
sk, headquarters lor the strike
movement.
'
Pias and posters are just hints of
~ soctal. force that i.s revising the
'
way
Poland ,runs itself' and handles
~· ·
1 ••
i~ huge ecQJlorhic problems.
Sll,EIISTILL SOARING - Americans held off for a whDe before ,
One change most visible to Poles
Cbrlltma but ID the end pve in 8lld illwldalt.'CI stores across the nation,
hu been more open reporting and
geaenlinll very 1ood !~vela of olalet1 ill most areas. Even after the holiday
discuSsion of the country's problems
Aletl are good ae aboppen Wke advantage of post.Cbrfatmas bargaiw;.
In newspapers and on television . .
Selae bu)' their cards early tao, !Ike tbls woman In New; York, ..vtng
Poll!ll joke of a countryman who
them ·~~rUle nest year. (AP Laaerpboto ).
returned from a long vacation after
· the changes were made and so was
afraid to listen to the new-style
~tate
reporting 01\ the evening news that
Moatly cloody, beCOIIilng windy and warmer with a high in the low 40s , The
he ~ in.a haUway outside the
clwlce of preclpitatiqn is 20 percent. ·
·
room containing his television, · ·
.
'
Announcllll 111M· the strikes were
OlilaBIIIEdld Foneut- For Monday through Wednesday - a chance of · oflleldy over on Aug. Sl, strike
IIIOW ftlll'l'ltllll U1e nortb Tuelday. Olberwllle, fair thro~ the period. Mild
luder Lech Walesa gave a hint of
on Monday. TuniiJII COlder Tuelday and Wednesday. Htghs in the 406 and his cllolce of a name for the new
low 11011 ~, cooling to the mlcl-111 to mid-30s.by Wednesday. I..ows in the unton by ustna the word "solid11rit1"
101 Mondf, fallinl to the upper teens and Ill by Wednesday.
(Cuntlnued on pa1e A3)

Extended ·forecast,

SIMMONS OLDS-CADILLAC, INC.
You'll Like Our Quality Way of Doing Business .
Phone 992-6614
Pomeroy

President-elect Ronald Reagan's
d foice to head the Transportation
Department. ·
The report asserted that federal
support of new mass-transit rail
systems "has been largely a wasted
effort" and that no new systems
should be started. However, the
panel did support funding "at a
-mode,st level" to upgrade
established subway and trolley
1!1~· ·

'.·.

l'

00 the Interstate highway system,
the task force said concluded that
" most of the remaining . 5 percent
should not be completed."
According to current government
figures, 96.4 percent of the planned
42,500 mile interstate system is open
to traffi c or under construction. The

govenunent has spent a total of $78.1
billion on the system since it was approved in 1956.
The Reagan task force report
noted that some sections of proposed
interstate highways running through
urban areas "are too expensive and
too disruptive to be worth building.."
On automobile recalls, the panel
silld "the frequency and 1JU18111tude
of I'IICIIIJ. ~Y have .,._r -ny
beyond • reMOIUible cosl-effectfve
'!Jnlll"ln the put four years and that
criteria for recalls "should be
examined promptly."
The wide-ranging report contended that " market forces" would
be sufficient to insure the construction of more fuel-efficient cars.

Midwest, East warm up Saturday

LE4,DERS CONVICTED
Twenty-two · Nazi leaders were
convicted of war crimes by the International ·Tribunal in Nuremberg
in !946.
·

A LOT OF USED CAR

A MtJitimedia Inc . N ews paper

Interstate system should
not ·be completed--panel

''•

LD YS

Fl

Sunday, December 28,1980

Middleport- Pomeroy- Ga ll~p~l is-Point Pleasant

surance program.

- Giving industry more nexibility
in meetin g environ mental
regulations.
- Economic policies aimed at
reducing government interference
with business, to foster' 'a climate in
which the private sector can move
toward greater rates of growth and
productivity."

fast later Saturday and the demonstration disbanded with no reports of
violence.
Reports from the Iranian capital
of Tehran said Afghan militants
scaled the walls of the Soviet Embassy there and tore down the Soviet
flag. Those who gained entrance to
the compound reportedly were par·
ticipants in a demonstration involving thousands in the streets outside the building. The reports said
the inv~ders were driven out of.the
compound by Islamic revolutionary
guards.
The Soviet news agency Tass '
denounced the attack as an
"outrageous provocation." It called
the demonstrators " thugs" and
"hooliga.ns" and said they inflicted
"considerable material damage" in
the embassy's reception hall,
Tass reported from the Afghan
capital of Kabul the opening of a conference of " the national and
(Continued on page A3)

tntint

tmes

manufacturing centers to ones
focused on services and consumption ." will require that their
'health' bedefinedatnew,andoflen,
)ower levels of population and em'
ployment,"itsaid.
According to the Post, other
proposals offered by the corrunission
included :
'
·
·
- A negative income tax to
llllll!llllll!llllll!-111111!111111!111111!111111!-llllll!llllll!llllll!llllll!llllll! ... _llllll!
replace the welfare sy~tem.
r--~---------------:-~-------L------,----~----,----------''-"-"--+!-:
- A voucher system enabling
people to purchase their own health
insurance, rather than creating a
comprehensive national health in-

I
I
II

ByBARRYSHLACHTER
Associated Press Writer
NEW DELHI, India (AP)
Afghan nationalists and their supporters Saturday marked the first
anniversary of a Soviet-hacked coup
in Afghanistan with anti.Soviet
demonstrations from India to Norway.
Afghan President Babrak Karma!, who came to power in that
coup, told a Kabul coruerence that
the continuing anti-communist
rebellion has seriously damaged his
nation's economy.
In New Delhi, about 250 Afghans,
some ca rr~i ng burning effigies .of
Soviet President Leonid I. Brezhnev,
marched on the Soviet Embassy
shouting " We kill Russians." They
joined some 80 of their countrymen
who began a hunger strike Friday to
protest the presence of an estimated
85,000 Soviet troops stationed in their
nation.
The hunger strikers ended their

•

fMEiGs -EQUiPPiEir-ool
l
I

r------------~----1

WASHI NGTON ( AP ) - The
Umted States should adopt an urban
· pohcy that not only accepts but actually . encourages the current
populatiOn sh1 ft from the Northeast
and Midwest to the Swl Belt region,
a presidential panel says. .
The Washmgton Post sa1d today
the recorrunenda t io~ ·was contained
in a new report drawn up by the
President's Commission for a
Nationa l Agenda fo r the Eighti es.
Th e co mmission's re por t
acknowledged that the new urban
policy it recommends could have
~ .~ trawnati c consequences" fOr Nor, thern cities.
However, it declared thai there ·
was "a fundamental problem" in
trying to slop the decline of the

.

'

KIMES ARRIVES
Going Out of Business Now 1
FOR DUTY
.1
Now In Progress
1
First Sergeant Thomas M. Kimes,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth K. 1Pomeroy, 0 . Ph. 992·2176
Kimes of Hartford, W. Va., has 1
I
·I
Hours: 8-S Mon.- Fri.
arrived for duty at Fort Knox, Ky.
8·12Sat.
I
Closed Sunday
I
Sergeant Kimes, a first sergeant, I
New Idea 1
was previously assigqed at Dulmen, ltnternational
West Germany.
~~~~~----~~2!~~~

Presidentilll panel urges
urban move to sunbelt states II

Demonstrations
mark anniversary

will try to find replacement fedel'!'l :
funding lor the project.
•• ~

Louis Stokes, both De_mocrats with
Cleveland constltuenctes, SBld they

GallipOlis

weather

t

·By MIKE SILVERMAN
Associated Press Writer
The Midwest and East warmed up
Saturday after record cold that contributed to at least 10 deaths. But
holiday travelers were hampered by
snow and free~ ing rain in the midAtlantic states, flooding In the Northwest and fog that shut airports in
California.
South Ca rolina got its first
snowstorm of the season as 4 inches

fell in the Charleston area Saturday,
snarling traffic on icy roads. Twenty
cars piled into each other on the
Cooper River Bridge in one ac·
cident, but n·o one wa s seriously injured.
Li ght snow fell over much of
so utheas tern and south-central
Virginia, and North Carolina 's central and southern coastal counties
were dusted with up to an inch of
snow.

In southeastern Georgia, sleei,
freezing rain and snow knocked
doWn trees and utility lines, cutting
off po&gt;ter to 4,000 Savannah Electric
x Power Co. customers during the
night. The Georgia state patrol said
one man died after his vehicle skidded on an icy bridge.
Around the nation, 293 people had
died in traffic accidents by, Saturday
afternoon since the start of the
(Continued on page A3)

Report heavy
fighting in
El
Salvador
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador

DOWN - Rick Sbaw of Gallla Academy, (rear) tackles Gable of
Logan In the preliminary ma1ch of the first GAllS lnvitaliooal wrestling
matcb beld at the high school gym Saturday. Complete results wlll appear 1n Monday's paper. See additional pictures on c-t. (Brenda Wilson
photo) .

·

Inside ·today. ..

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(AP) - Leftist guerrillas mounted a ·
major · attack in northern El
Salvador against troops loyal to the
ruling civilia n-rnilitary junta Saturday and heavy fighting was under .
way, a military source said.
"A large number of guerrillas"
and at least three soldiers were
killed in the fighting, said the army
source who asked anonymity ~
Government and official military ·
spokesmen refused to comment on
the report, which could not be con- ·
firmed independently because of a :
cut in communications with the
area:
An estimated 1,000 guerrillas are .
taking part in the attack in
Chalatenango, a province 400 miles
north of the Central American ·
capital, said the army source, who :
asked anonymity.
. The source said government rein- :
lorcements being rushed to the area :
included Infantry, planes and
helicopters. The source refused to
give details of the military
deployments.
"The attack can be considered one
of the strongest the leftists have
launched in that region and it could .
be an attempt by the Marxist· ·
Leninists to control a zone where ·
they can set up a revolutionary .
government," the source said.
Chlilatenango, a province of
jungle and hllis, i.s near the border
with Honduras, and the source Aid
the terrain " makes counterlnsurge!IC)' operations dllflcult:O• ·
The an111 hu been a hotbed of ·
guerrillll activity In recent months.
'

I

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