<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="14458" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/14458?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-11T00:06:23+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="45565">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/458eb50da09722eb199b71e06f9b4fd6.pdf</src>
      <authentication>eb9f940610d81e07e5b51a34c171ec98</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45136">
                  <text>-

.

~· ...#

••....__

'

.-

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

$-e.$-e:$~~
"'·~'\i

• l.. .thelltouncl Laundry loSktt
• 12 Qt. OiOfnciM Dlllh PCII'I
• 11 Qt. Hecn.y Duty Poll
• 11 Qt. Diamond Wastebasket '
_., .

~

.i/

.,

...'.::....
,..,
"' ... .,.,_CIDIT.-A,.
a.IMM

............ a .......

.,._ ...

~

ft'IIIICAII

·'5"

• • 1111 . . .

N0.332

"7''

• Heavy Duty
• With lid
• Metal Lock
Lid Handles

.....,....... "·"

OVALWAm
IIAIICIY
11QT.

~- ·

IIIULAR.

...

.....

'

..

.

II'

...59°
.,.........·

Ill

-~

..

IILIIPil

11c cue

&lt;

IlLII Pill

"

'

89•

99'
..._..
....,...

79'

49~
•

POWWOW
'
.

LARRY WEHRUNG

nuu 1111
.,. cr.

.,59
•• o:z.

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

'

S2

WASHINGTON (AP) _ With only
two weeks left in.office, the Carter
administration finds itself deprived
of its direct link to the top U.S.
dl 1 mat in Iran and in the dark as
. t/t~e whereabouts of any of the 52
·
h ta
Amencan os ges.
The dministration's slim hopes
for a b~akthrough centered on the

•

o:z.

$125

• Menthol
• lemon Lime

.

'(),,J~Ia·
SFEQAII
AUNNUM

SNOW~

·UCJI•utgN
·Dulable

tSIWIM't . . . ,,.,

.

49e
eactr-

EL
SNOW
·SHOVEL

I

•

illi~
'3"
................

~
$131

'4"

tC'Gifi-.M.tt

VIVA

Order \ __.4;rl*•

cof!L~ts

"'""

.........
.
STUsfY·
.I
.

R TOWELS

&amp;a·

iii

WITH THIS COUPON
From Print Slzea 2'1," x 3'!."
thru 3 •;," x 5" and Ail Size inltont Prints

Offerlxplrea
..... 21, , ..,
NILSON'S AND NANCAIIOW'I
NILSON'S AND NANCAIIOW'I

l'or--.
.
l'
o
rol-.
No---Ono.
PRUTONil•

$"'8--$ '

no ,vote cast,.
NO ACTION TAKEN
Mayor Clarence Andrews submille{! two applications for police
chief, one from Harry Lyons,
presently acting chief, and the other
from Thomas Werry.
CoWJcil failed to lake any action .
on the two applications and referred
the matter to the safety committee.
Mayor Andrews said he felt council had waited long enough to make a
permanent appointment.
Wehrung suggested a continuous
right turn on red be made at the light
at the approach on the PomeroyMason Bridge corning up SR 7 from
Middleport.
Brown asked if the street cleaning
program was still in effect. Mayor
Andrews reported tl)at the streets
are cleaned of debris each morning .
Brown also mentioned that the
chamber had accomplished its part
in helping defray costs when the
village freed the meters with the
paving of the railraod tracks on
Main Street.
Jane Walton, clerk, ~eported that
the electric bill for the Christmas

Ughts, on the parking lots only, co&gt;1
the village $200.
Dick Newell, manager of PoinT·
View Cable, met with council to
discuss complaints received con·
cerning poor reception from channel
six and 10.
Newell said channel six and .10
were not intended for use in the tri·
state area in the beginning due to the
long distance.
He said those two channels have
always been a problem and would be
a problem since there is not much
they can do about the situation: He
added ~hat atmospheric conditions
and interference of other stations
also cause poor reception.
Newell explained that channel five
comes in well due to the fact that it
comes from a satellite. He also noted
that other satellitl! stations are
available but Ohio residents want to
receive Ohio news .
Newell also stated possibly in the
future channel six will be replaced
by · another station. He added,
however, that a survey of the area
will be made before any changes are
(Continued on page 8)

daily meetings Algerian intermediari~s .have been holding With
Iranian offtctals on the latest U.S.
proposals.
But until this past weekend, the
administration at least had been
able to maintain penodic telephone
,
contact with L. Bruce Lamgen, the
U.S. charge d'alfairs in Tehran, and

two ~ther Americans wh~ had been
confmed . to the !raman Foretgn
M1mstry m Tehran.
. .
That channel of corrunumcattons
now has been broken With the transfer of I.aingen, political ~fficer Vic·
tor Tomseth and secunty officer
Michael Howland to a secret
location where some of the other

captivesar~being held.

.
Saturdays transfe';.. of Lamgen
and ht~ colleagues Tollow~d a
curtous mctdenl II d~ys earher m
which a group of Iramans turned up
at the Foreign Mm1stry on D~c . 23
and mfonned the three Ame1tcans
·
f
d
.
they were bemg trans erre to a nell
location .

Losses set at $32,500 in three fires

s.....

•R~.

2/99•

BOOT PARKER

(CSACW)

IARIASOL
SHAVI CRIAM

By Katie Crow
Pomeroy Council Monday night
during a lenghty session elected
Larry WehrWig its president and
Fred Crow, Jr., was retained as
solicitor. Council also rehired Jack
Krautter as foreman of the street
department.
Council unable to pass the annual
appropiation ordinance for 1981
made a temporary appropiation of
$13,000.
The first reading of the annual appropriation ordinance was approved
with Harold Brown voting no. Brown
said the appropri~tion did not include any funds for the mini park
development.
.Council added an additional $6,500
for the park development and attempted to give the appropriation
ordinance its second and third
readings under emergency
measures. However, the attempt
failed as Wehrung voted no. In order
to pass an ordinance under
emergency measures, council must
have the approval of five members.
Since only five members were
present the readings failed with the

Direct contact broken with lranirins

-u .. -..w

JOY LIQUID

4

•

• 10" Hl;h
• 12141 Wide
• 5'A.H Deep

l'OCMCHOICI
•na1rs-.. .....
•

TIDE

cUJT\Stances."
The GOP gained 33 seats in last
November's elections and
Republicans hope to take control of
the House in 1982 .
Nonetheless, under O'Neill's
leadership, the Democrats beat
back an attempt by Republicans dn
Monday to get more voting power on
two key conunittees, Ways and
Means and Rules. •

Wehrung chosen as council president

im ION'S 110••, ...

PIGI

Taking note of the increasingly
conservative tone of both Houses,
O'Neill said: "Being elected .every
two years, •we are acutely aware of
the desires of the people. We intend
to adapt to the changed cir-

1 Section, B pages 15 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio Tuesday, January 6, 1981

Copyrighted 1981

YOUR CHOICI

• =-- -B,IC IIIUII

go to work on the new president's
plan for th~ economy, which the
majority leader said would be
worked out in advance with
congressional leaders and fonnally
proposed to _,Congress by early
February.
The newly elected Congress' fi~t
session Monday was marked by
good-humored ceremony in the
Republican-controlled Senate and
some bitter partisan quarreling in
the House.
On the House side, Rep. Thomas
P. O'Neill's re-election ~· speaker
on a party·line vote reflected the
continued Democratic control of
that chamber.

en tine

at y

·•

$211

Some Democrats have said they
want to examine Haig's role as for·
mer President Richard M. Nixon 's
chief of staff during the days before
Nixon was forced from office
because of the Watergate scandals
of the early 1970s.
But Sen. Sam Nunn of Georgia, a
respected Democratic member of
the Senate Armed Services Committee, called. Monday for Halg's
confirmation.
"For those who are insatiably
curious about the Nixon era and
Watergate, there are plenty of books
they can buy," Nunnsaid.
It was not clear how much fuss
would be stirred either by Haig'c

oonnection to Watergate or by his ·
career as a four-star Army general
who headed the military forces of ·
the North Atlantic . Treaty
Organization. ·
Senate Minority Leader Robert
Byrd said he has detected no c:On·
certed Democratic campaign to
delay or kill the Haig nomination.
Howard H. Baker Jr., the new
Senate majority leader, said he expects the various Senate committees
will approve all of Reagan's
nominees by Jan. 20, Inauguration
Day, and that the full Senate will
confirm them shortly afterward.
Baker said fast action on Reagan's
nominees would permit Congress to

•

Vol.ll, No. 185

,....

--·-......

..

,•

'. WASHINGTON (AP)- C¥ning·
day niceties out of the way, the 97th
Congress is gettirig down to the
business of takthg•a close look at the
people Ronald Reagan wants to run
hisadministratlon.
·
Co~inna.tion hearings in the
newly Republlcan-cmtrolled Senate
were scheduled today for Cabinet
nominees Richard Schweiker for the
Department of Health and Hwnan
Services, Caspar Weinberger for
Defense, Malcolm Baldrige for Com·
merce, John R. Block for
Agriculture and Donald T. Regan for
Treasury.
Also, the Hotllle and Senate were
meetirig jointly today to carry out "J.
constitutional requirement that they

IIEEI STIR ERELIPES

Iesil-"Val' Bath and Boudoir

___v,__......--

Ami

•

t"•tifJ• Reagan's 'l!ictory by cer, J .tog the Electoral College vote
results.
Most of tnday's confirmation
hearings were expected to be
marked by a lack of fireworks, if not
friendly questioning.
.
' However, Block was likely to he
· questioned closely about his avowed
opposition to the Soviet grain embargo and to the food stamp
program, which is administered by
the Agriculture Department he
hopes to head.
· Hearings on Reagan's nomination
of Alexander Haig to be secretary of
state, his touchiest appoinlqlent, are
to begin Friday before the Senate
Foreign Relations Committee.

I

.
CLOTHIS
HAMPIII
MQT.

.

Congress checks Reagan's people

~

Damages were estimated at $5,000 went to the Meredith residence in
as the result of a fire which struck the Flatwoods area where there was
the Max Drenner home on Union a nue fire. It had burned itself out
when the department arrived and
Terrace at 3:02p.m. Monday.
·
Pomeroy Fire Chief Charles there was little damage.
AlB :27 p.m., the department went
Legar said that heat tapes on water
pipes apparently shorted out in the to the Bill Moore residence on Spring
area of the bathroom. The fire Ave,, where pipe froma ·woodburner
. damaged the floor and the interior had caught the side of the home on
and exterior wall, a section about fire. Damages were set at about
two feet wide, to the ceiling .of the . $500.
Meanwhile. loss was e•timated at
house. There is insurance.
The Pomeroy fire department has $28,000 as the result of a fire which
gutted the Norman Mills residence
answered six call.s in five days . At
in Letart Falls late Sunday night.
12:33 p.m. Monday, the department

There was no insurance accordjn!( to

Racine fire. department officials.

Southern board organizes
Sue Grueser was named new
president of the Southern Local
School District Board of Education
which met Monday night for its
organizational session.
Don Smith was named vice
president for 1981. Mrs. Grueser
replaces Mrs. Shirley Johnson as
president of the board.
The group voted to meet the
second Tuesday of each month at 7

p.m. except in January when the
meeting will be held on Jan. 19. It
was agreed to continue membership
in the Ohio School Boards Assn.
Uability insurance was purchased
for board' uiembers and performance bonds for the board and
for tlie treasurer, Nancy Carnahan.
Other board members are .Dennie
Evans and Charels Pyles.

Bridge users
•
•
g~ven warnmg
RAVENSWOOD, W.Va. (AP) . The state Department of Highways
says you can't cross its bridge at
Ravenswood when you come to it.
Peeved that workers in both West
Virginia and Ohio are crossing the
unfinished $17 million span over the
Ohio River, the DOH has issued a
warning that people will find ~hem­
selves without insurance coverage if
an accident should take place while
their on the bridge.
...
· But the warning has done little to
stop some people.
Residents near the bridge say they
have seen workers park their cars ·
'on one side of the river, walk across
the bridge and catch rides to work on
the other side.
Some people, observers say, have
walked across the bridge to see how
work was progressing on the other
side.
Ramps to both sides of bridge
have been blocked.
The nearest bridge in either dlrec·
tlon is 30 miles off, and some people
can save 100 miles on a roundtrip by
using the bridge.
Workers preparing the bridge
pulled out in December after
pouring a conqrete floor. Officials
say it should be be completed a'nd
opened to traffic in late swruner or
early fall.

I

Big hanks following smaller ones
NEW YORK - Banks nationwide are cutting their prime lending
rates, but there is a new twist: trend-setting big banks are following
the lead of smaller banks.
The drop in the prime rate came amid reports of a decline in the
nation's money supply, an indicator that some believe could indicate a
slowing of inflation.
And at least one economist predicts the prtme rate will fall as low as
II percent by summer from a peak of 21.5 percent in mid·December.

Five firms up wholesale prices
Wholesale gasoline price increases by Exxon Corp. and four other
United States refiners may be felt at the pwnps almost irrunediately,
according to published reports.
The New York Daily News reported tnday that five firms had upped
wholesale gas prices by 1 to 3 cents a gallon.
Besides Exxon- the nation's large,;! refiner - companies raising ·
prices are Sun Oil Co., Getty Oil Co., Atlantic Richfield Co. and
Diamond Shamrock Corp.
.
In Los Angeles, ARCO spokesman Raymond Parr said the company's increase to its dealers would be 2 to 3 cents a gallon, due
primarily to increasing costs of domestic crude oil.

Second phase hegins peacefully
The second phase of re~istration for the military draft began
peacefully in Ohio Monday with a only few protesters on the march in
front of registration looations .
Under . a draft registration plan initiated by !7esident Carter in
December 1979, young men who were born in 1962 and who will turn 19
this year are required to register through Saturday for the draft.
The first such 'registration was last July. After this week, males will
be required to register within 30 days after they turn 18.

Attorneys seek change of venue
EATON, Ohio - Attorneys for a 17-year-old Preble County youth
charged with killing his mother, a brother and two sister~ in September are seeking a change of venue motion.
Creach pleaded innocent last week to four counts of aggravated
murder. He is to be tried as an adult at his trial, which is set for Feb. 4.
The bodies of Chris Ann Creach, 39, and her children, Robert, II ,
Kathryn Marie, 9, and Rachel Rebecca, 4, were found Sept. 24 at the
family's home in Eldorado. They had been shot to death, officials said,

Ohio burley market resumes
RIPLEY, Ohio - The Ohio Burley Tobacco Market reswned Mon. day where it left off Dec. 18, with the average price at $166 per hundred
pounds.
Sales on Monday totaled 506,804 pounds for $841,307.66. The market
is to continue through the end of January.

Brun becomes federal :inarshal
CINCINNATI- Joseph L. Brun, Columbus, has been appointed in·
terim lJ .S. Marshal for Southern Ohio, replacing Roy Allen Smith, who
resighed Sunday.
Smith. 34. was appointed by President Carter. Smith said he h11s
become the administrator for Richland County Sheriff Richard Petty,
in Mansfield.
Brun, 49, a native of Dayton, was appointed Monday by U.S. District
Court Judge Carl Rubin.

Kentucky had safest year
·FRANKFORT. Ky. - A state police report shows that 1980 was the
safest year on Kentucky highways since 1974.
According to figures released Monday, 818 people died in traffic ac·
cidents during·the past year - the fewest number of deaths reported
since 1974 when the fatality toll dropped to a'12-year low of 795.
State police officials said the 1980 figure is considered significant
because it represents the biggest decline in what has been a general
trend toward more fatalities. ,

Weather

MEt.'TS niB LEADERSHIP - Aleuncler Halg,
aecretary of state-deaipate, !ell, &amp;hakeR hands with
Seuate Majority.Leader Howard Baker of Tennesaee tn
Washington Monday. From left arc. Halg: Former
Sen. Jacob Javils of. New York; Sen. Charles Percy

who Is chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. The Senate Foreign Relations Committee Ia ex·
peeled to take up Halg's nomination on Friday. (AP
Lascrphuto).

·~

Windy with snow early tonight and flurries late tonight. Lows 1:&gt;-20.
Cloudy and windy with a chance of flurries Wednesday. Highs in the
lower 20s, lowering to the teens in the afternoon. Chance of
precipitation near 100 percent tonight and 50 percent Wednesday. Win·
d:; northwesterly 2().30 mph tonight.
·
Extended Forecast
Thursday through Saturday:
Fair and cold through the period. Hlghs15-Z5 Thursday and Friday
and hi the teens Saturday. LoWli at ulght 5 below zero to 5 abave zero
early Thursday.and Saturday and 5-15 early Friday.

�Commentary

The Dailv Sentinet-Page-3

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

January 6, 1981

Lynn, Fisk
seek ·freedom·

. January 6, 1981
The Daily sentinel
Page-

Cars, TVs make
silver linings?

BOSTON (AP ) - CA!Uielder Fred Red Sox that under baseball's 1980
Lynn and catcher Carlton Fisk could basic agreement, both Lynil and
become free agents this year if an Fisk were eligible to arbitrate their .
arbitrator decides the Boston Red 1981 salaries, and, if the Red SoX
Sox sent out their option-year con- failed to agree to the arbitration,
tractS two days too late.
both automatically . would become
Mar\rin Miller, director of the free agents.
Players Association, informed the
Lyrm .and Fisk are two of only four
- Red Sox Monday that he has filed a . players in the major leagues who
grievance seeking immediate free- 1sjgned under the 1976 agreement,'
agent status for both players and the four are the last ever \0 have
because the club failed to mail them an option year. ·
contracts before the Dec. 20
When asked why the club even
deadline.
mailed out contracts to Lynn and
Haywood Sullivan, Red Sox vice Fisk if it thought it already had valid
-president and general manager, pacts with the pair, Sullivan said., "I
said, " It is our position that we have can 't say anything because I don'i
binding contracts with Fred Lynn · want to jeopardize my defense. We'll
and Carlton Fisk."
see what happens in litigation."
Last week, Miller infnomed the

While many Republicans were still blaming President Carter and the
. 96th Congress for the nation's economic wiles, Rep. William E. Dannemeyer, R-Calif., told constituents in a year-end newsletter he saw
"silver ltnings" in the dark clouds.
"In fact, he wrote, "Americans own more cars and more TV sets per
1,000 people than in any other nation on earth."

Congressi~ilal

agenda
packed 'with ·recesses

With control of the Senate and more clout in the House, Republicans in
the new Congress are making it clear they don't plan to put in too many
hours. At least not right away.
·
Even before Congress convened. Monday, it had a crowded agenda for
1981 - of recesses.
After meeting for a few days this week, Congress will recess until after
President-elect Ronald Reagan's inauguration on Jan. 20.
Then, after barely a week's work , comes the year's first big recess: the
Feb. 7-15 Lincoln's Birthday break.
After that, there's the Easter recess from April 11-20, a Memorial Day
recess from May 23 to June 1 and a Fourth of July break from June 26 to

Miami upsets ·Dayton

-~
e
That will get Congress ready for its five-week summer recess between
July 31 and Sept. 9.
The new Senate majority leader, Howard H. Baker Jr., R-Tenn., also
bas said he plans to restore normal ~t~ working hours in the Senate instead of some of the marathon and iate-l)ight sessions his predecessor,
Democratic leader Robert C. Byrd of West Virginia; seemed to favor.
Baker also has decided to end the majority leader's Saturday news conference, a tradition begun a decade ago by Democrat Mike Mansfield of
Montana and expanded by Byrd into a major weekend production.
After all; Baker explains, who wants to work on Saturday if he doesn't
have to?
·
Byrd, for one. The West Virginian has indicated he still may hold the
Saturday sessions, despite his reduced leadership status.
&lt;&gt;

A last newsletter
.Rep. John W. Wydler, R-N.Y., who did not seek re-election in 1980 after
18 years in .the House, figured out he had sent 900 different newsletters to
his constitutents during his tenure.
How did he report that? In a newsletter - his last.

I would like to express my apThe club has held one successful
preciation to Ted Reed, President of ~g program this season at the
the Fanners Bank in Pomeroy and Meigs High School gym and expects
the members of the Board of Direc- to hold a second program at the ·
tors for providing new training quar- school on Jan. 24.
ters for the Meigs Jaycees Boxing
The program has been very sucClub.
cessful through the supervision of
The building owned by the bank, Roger Stewart, Harold Willis
now located on West Main Street in James Acre, Brian Conde and many
Pomeroy, provides better conditions other interested persons. ' These
for training than the old senior high supervisors appreciate the bank's
school building used by the club consideration to the boxing
program.
prior to this boxing season.
The club provides trainin8 for interested boxers eight to 25 years of
As juvenil~..Officer, I especially apage, who come from all areas of preciate Mr. Reed and the bank's
Meigs County. All youths are assistance with this youth project as
welcome to work out with the club · well as others that the bank has
that are Willing to follow three sfrn- assisted me with in the past.
ple rules, . . "no smoking," ''no
Thank you. - Carl R.' Hysell,
alcohol,''.and ''no profanity.''
Meigs County Juvenile Officer.

Th_e Daily Sentinel
..
,_,.,.,Dido
IIHtHIM

liiC-II!n&lt;l
DEVJITED TO THE JNTERE8T OF TilE MEIGS-MASON AJIEA

...

ROBERTL. WINGETI
hloiJoloer

BOB HOEFLICH
GeMniMufiH

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
NftiEdlllr

A MEMBER ol Tloo ..._lalool p,_, lal011ol llloOy ..,_ ..._loU.. IIIII lloe
U11rte., Newt,..., Pablllben A.a~KIIdta.

-

be""-..

UI'ITUIOF OPINION are
no,_..
wonla ..... All
- oabJotl to adlllllllllll IIIUI olpaol wllll - · oololml uo1 tolopiMM
· Nt ........ lollmoioDibepoa.u.oi.Le.- ..Wbelalooollaoto,"""' 1 olq
)

The lamest ducks of all
eleetion, Acre-Gome.t would not
By Robert J. Wagman
WASHINGTON (NEA) ~ A have set foot in the nation's capital.
strange, little-noticed incident at That is because he is part of a rightArlington National Cemetery recen- wing military government that has
tly illustrated one of the sharpest been strongly criticized by the
problems facing the U. S. govern- outgoing president since it seized
ment during the presidential tran- power in a coup earlier this year.
But Acre-Gomez had come not to
sition.
It was early aftemoqn when three visit the Carter State Department
long limousines pulled up in front of . but to meet with foreign-policy adthe Tomb of the Unknown Soldier. visers to Ronald Reagan and with
Out stepped a group_ Of Spanish- conserVative congressmen who all!
speaking men, including a television close to the . incoming adcrew. Ignoring a' guard's order to rninistraiton . Acre-Comez knew
halt, one of them laid a wreath at the they would give him a friendlier
foot of the tomb as the cameras reception than would the lame ducks
rolled. The men then jumped back at Foggy Bottom.
into their cars.and drove off.
Acre-Gomi!Z met chiefly with John
The wreath was laid by Col. Luis
AcrKJomez, interior minister of Carbaugh, who i.s emerging as a
Bolivia. He went to ArUngfon to major foreign-policy adviser to the
record the event · for Bolivian president-elect. As the top foreigntelevision, although he had been policy aide to arch-conservative
directly ordered by the State Del!Br- Sen. Jesse Helms, R-N .C., the ~
tment to stay away from the year-old Carbaugh has been a
leading opponent of the Carter adnational shrine.
His defiance - in fact, his entire mintstraiton on the Panama Canal
visit to Washington - showed how treaties and on its efforts to promote
little attention many governments black rule in Rhodesia, now Zimare now paying to. the Carter ad- babwe.
Though only one of 15 members rl
ministraiton.
Had Jimmy Carter won re- Reagan 's foreign-policy transition

team, Carbaugh has claimed foc government of Bolivia wants to
himself several areas that were key hear. In contrast, officials of Carto Carter's foreign policy and on ter's State Department have acwhich Carbaugh has long fought the cused the regime of nwnei'OWI
outgoing president. These include hwnan-rights violations and of inAfrica, Latin America and bwnan volvement by some of its key memrights, the last being perhaps the bers in the• country's flourishing
most important issue to the Carter drug trade .
State Department.
Reagan has ordered his transition
Afterward, Acre-Gomez reported
team not to speak on foreign-policy that he was "well-received" by Carmatters, but State Department sour- baugh - who, he aMerted,
ces report that Carbaugh has lefllit- "deplored" the treatment that
tle doubt of where he stands in his Bolivia has received from the Carter
.administration.
areas of special interest.
He believes, for example, that the
Is it any wonder that moet obUnited States should try to bring servers are c,aUing Carter's foreignabout political change in South policy staffers the lamest of all the
Africa only through cooperative per- lame ducks in government? State
suasion of the white minority gover- Department bureaucrats, eipectlng
nment. He has said that while the a IIMklegree shift in many basic
United States should promote policies, are simply marking time
human rights around the world, " it until the new administraon takes
has to be kept in the proper per- over.
spective."
With the growing tensions in
Poland, the Middle East and the
And he has stressed that the Persian Gull, \his situation worries
United States must end its in- many foreign-policy professionaLs.
volvement with leftists in Latin But they can do little more than hQpe
America and support anti- that the troubled world will survive
communist regimes.
unUI Jan. 20 without a major blowThis is exactly what the military up.

COLUMBUS, Ohio ('AP) - Some from normal government
He said he cannot be specific until in the area of education "that don't
lawmakers are saying Ohio should operations, so that that the nest egg department heads are heard from. have anything to do w_lth basic
~ut aside a nest egg to avoid future
could not be easily used by the He did say there are some programs education."
fmancaal criSeS.
'
bureaucrats.
Sen. Thomas A. Van Meter, RHe suggests requiring that the
Ashland, who espouses the idea,
governor declare a fiscal emergencalls for a ramy day fund of S per- cy, or that the Legislature agreed by
cent or 10 percent of the general an extraordinary majority , maybe
the raid had been approved at a
WASHINGTON (AP) - Hoddlng
revenue fund.
tw~thirds, before the money could Carter III may well have written the
meeting to which he had not been inF1ve percent of the state's 197~ be spent.
epitaph for President Carter's
vited.
.
1981 budget would have been about
Van Meter's proposal is not exac- foreign policy . when he said the
President-elect IWnaid Reagan
$500 million. That would have been
tly new, because until recently, the bureaucrati c. fight between
and his top advisers, dismayed by
JUSt about enough to meet the state usually started out a'new bien- Zbignlew Brzezinski and the State
the furor surrounding Brzezinakl,
current budget deficit which . nium with a cash balance which ser- Department produced a "Tower of
say the situation will be different In
required a temporary hike in sales ved as a nest egg of sorts.
the new administration. The
Babel" that had many voices purand other taxes last month.
porting to speak for the U.S. govern- national security adviser's status
In July 1979, when the current
With the tax increase, which is to
will be downgraded, they say, with
ment.
self-&lt;lesiruct at the end of the budget was adopted, state fiscal exHodding Carter, chief spokesman
the secretary of state's office pven
current fiscal year June 30, along perts projected a cash balance at the for State when Cyrus R. Vance was
primacy in advising, and perha..
with more than $100 million in spen- end of the biennium of $270 million.
secretary, calls the national security
more important, speaking for the
When the recession hit, revenues adviser a "rat terrier" and writes in
ding cuts, the state is supposed to
president in foreign affairs.
start the 1981-1983 biermium July 1 plwnmeted to the point that the cash the February Lsaue of Playboy that
In a recent interview with the New
balance not only was exhausted, but the president should have told him to
with its books in balance.
York Times, Vance said, " It Ls rl
Van Meter says it would not be was more than $500 million short of "shut up."
fundamental importance that there
possible to start off with a 5 perc-ent preventing a deficit.
It is the latest and perhaps the
be only two spokesmen for the
Van Meter, who iB president pro loudest shot yet fired in the
stt aside , but that the Legislature
government on matten relating to
could begin to build the surplus this tem of the Senate which convened bureaucratic war that has been ' foreign policy: the president of the
year by putting I percent or perhaps today Wider Republican control, going on betwee11 the State Depart- United States and secretary of
also has some ideas about budget ment and the National Security state." Though he did not refer to
2 percent into the fund .
He said he will reconunend that cuts to bring Ohio's fiscal house into Council, now headed by Brzezilllkl, Brzezinski by name, Vance clearl)t
the special account be Insulated ~rder.
since the NSC was elevated from ob- had him In mind when be said, "any
scurity in the Nixon administration other arrangement leads to confusion ."
by Henry A. Kiuinger.
Vance's successor; Edmund S.
The council, formed after World
War ·U, iB the White House Muakie, has also refilled to crttldle
organization responsible for Brzezinski by name.
United Nations Ambassador
gathering and channeling . inteUlgence and foreign policy in· Donald F. McHenry, on the other
hand, referred directly to Bnlllinlki
WASillNGTON (AP) - Despite a when members of the post-World formation to the prelldent.
The ltiht between the NSC and when he said recentl:r, "A pei'IOII
large increaSe In Social Security
taxes to be paid thia year by workers War II " baby boom" begin retiring. • State reached its peak lalt spring who has the Job of coordinator,
Effective Thursday, Social when vance quit as Heret.ary in the which l would perceive (the NSC
and their employers, the Social
Security system iB still facing money Security taxes went up. from 6.13 "wakeofthefaUedattempttofreethe director's) position to be, would do
well to coordinate and leave the
problems and there are repjlrta that percent to 6.65 percent and the - 52 American hostages in Iran.
Brzezinski recommended the public role of foreign policy to the
cuts are being considered in maximum amount oo which the
taxeaareraisedjumpedton9,700.
rnilltary million be mounted and secretary ~ state and to the
' benefits.
Most of the money proble111B are . The increases were ordered by Vance oppoeec1 it. c.n.r chose Br- president. "
Brzezinski hlmaelf has publicly
long-range and experts say that Congress three years IIIlO to cover zeiinlkl's view, and the soft-spoken
major deficits won't occur, if they do short-term money problems of the Vance submitted" his letter of said little about the bureaucratic
resignation after discovering that battles.
at ali, untif early in the next century, system.

Conference game. lt marked the first conference game of the year for
both teams.

SV AC standings
SVAC STANDINGS
ALL G AMES
TEAM
W L

eliminate him. Mr. Cooke is going to
hire the coach."
Allen coached the Redskins from
1971 until his firing at the end of the
1977 season.
According to today's editions of
The Washington Post, two men are
reportedly at the top of Beathard's
list - John Robinson. coach at the
University of Southern California,
and former Oakland Raider Coach
John Madden.
And, the newspaper said, a list of
highly regarded NFL assistants includes J oe Gibbs, offensive coordinator for San Diego; Dan Reeves,
offensive coordinator for the Dallas
Cowboys; Tom Bass, defensive coo rdinator at Tampa Bay; Dick Coury,
the Philadelphia Eagles' wide
receiver coach; George Perles. the
Pittsburgh Steeler's defensive coordinator; and Marty Schottenheimer.
the Cleveland Browns' defensive
coordinator.

P

OP

Eastern
southern
Hannan Trace

6 2 579 466
6 1 449 350
5 3 500 487

Kyge r Creek
South weste rn

3 5 457 487
2 4 299 313

North Ga ll i a

o

TEAM

gets axe

Hartley's Shoes, Pomeroy, OH.

7

367

48 2

P

OP

SVAC ONLY
W L

East er n
Sou thern
H annan Trace
Sou thweste r n

3
3
2
1

Kyger Creek

0 3 142 203

North Ga ll i a

o 186
o 175
1 205
2 145

FOR THE MEN

119
134
189
JJS

o 3 136 206
Tonigh1 's
s ch e dul e:
H annan Tr ace at Gu ya n V al ley;

Wahama at North Ga ll ia; sou thern
at Point Pleasant and Southweste rn

fOR THE LADIES

FLORSHEIM
JARMAN.

EASY STREET
JOYCE
MYERS

HUSH PUPPIES

HANDBAGS

FASHION
BOOTS
Values To $50.00
Sale Prices $}2-'30

Values To $70.00

at Ha nn an, W . Va .

Friday's games:
Eastern at Hannan Trace ; Kyger
Creek at Sou th ern and Southwestern

Sale Prices

at Nor th Ga ll i a .

Saturd a y' s

sc h edul e:

So ut h-

weste rn at Wa hama .

SHOES DISPLAYED FOR EASY SELECTION
.All SALES FINAL - VISA-SAVE $$$

BASKETBALL
NEWYORK (AP) - Bernard King
of the Golden State Wa rriors, who
scored 112 points in three games last
week, including 50 against the
Philadelphia 76ers, 'was named the
National Basketball Association's
Player of the Week for the period ending Sunday, Jan. 4.

HARTLEY'S SHOES ~~~cd~~~~~~~~;.o.
SHOP EARLY FOR GOOD SELECTION
NEW SPRING SHOES ARRIVING DAILY

:::::::.•.

DAILY9-9
SAT. 9-6
SUN . 1-6

.....

The Saving Place sM
'

AUTO CENTER
..---wed. Thru Sat. SaleComputer lalance Wheels,

WEEKEND AT
MEIGS INN

Carter on Carter

Entertainment
Friday &amp; Saturday
"·
~

'

,,
-,_

''"'lJIIIti~~~L
~

~~\ ·

·s P

•

.

C. GRo

'~oM Up

All
LEGAL
-

P~"IC••ssuRo

'

BEVERAGES
SERVED
.

2 for•7j

Mud/Snow

2Q%0FF

Blackwall Tires
. Bia s-ply construction, self-cl eaning tread
design, engin ee red for city and country .

.

.

MOUNTING INCLUDED, NO TRADE·IN REQUIRED

$

Our Reg. 66.88 With Exchange

n

Despite increase SS
remains in trouble

"~
~~
~...__. . ~=·-·

-

Par~ee

"

Expresses thanks

webe
....,....... ...

wouldn't that be

By The Associated Press
In other Ohio basketbaii action
Miami senior guard Al Watkins Monday night, Akron fell to Western
racked up 23 points and praise from Kentucky ~2 in an Ohio Valley
both coaches qs the Redskins
claimed an 86-83 upset basketbaii
victory over Dayton.
"Watkins played very weii. He hit
some big shots going down the
wire," Miami Coach Darrell Hedric
WASHINGTON (AP ) - Bobby
said following Monday night's nonBeathard
, the general manager of
conference match.
the
Washington
Redskins, was to fly
' "He' (Walkins ) was fantastic. He
to
the
West
Coast
today to begin the
missed his last shot, but he just went
search
for
a
replacement
for Jack
out 1-1 and beat us, " sa id Dayton
Pardee,
who
was
fired
Monday
as
Coach Don Donoher.
·
the
team's
head
coach.
Dayton jumped out to a 50-40 lead
Beathard indicated he probably
jn the first half on the strength of its
would
look for a successor to Pardee
offensive rebounding. The Fty'e rs
among
the ranks of assistant
outrebounded Miami 22-11 in the fircoaches
in the National Football
st period.
League,
but
would not rule out the
· But in the second half; the Flyers
possibility
of
a return by former
.'received a technical foul when
coach
George
Allen.
junior guard Sean McNally was
Redskins owner Jack Kent Cooke,
caiied for dunking the ball during
who
fi red the 44-year-old Pardee,
warmups. Watkins missed the
said
nothing about a _possible
technical , but led Miami on a 1&amp;-6
replacement.
spree in the next 6:30 minutes which
Beathard sa id that if the choice
spelled the difference in the game.
came
down to an assistant in the
"We could have folded at halftime,
professional
ranks or a college
'but we didn't," Hedric said.
coach,
he
most
likely would go wi th
Roos evelt Chapman, Paul
the
man
from
the
NFL.
Hawkins and Mike Kanieski scored
The
general
manager
said he did
16 points apiece for the Redskins,
not
intend
to
talk
to
Ali
en on this
now !i-5. Tony Lehman earned 13
trip,
but
''
it's
not
up
to me to
points for Dayton, which felrto ~3.

A .rainy.. day fund for -Ohio's future

Letters to· editor

..

"Who, me? Listen, I applied the grease to begin with ·
conflict of interest?"

$ ANNUAL SHOE SALE $

Blacks' gym In Point Pleasant. Team members are, left to right, Joe Bob
Hemsley, Tommy Roseberry, Allen Pape, Terry McNickle. Back row Richard Wolfe, Paul Cardone, Jay Rees, Dale Teaford, Robert Brown,
Owayne Curfman, and Kent Wolle.

PLAYS POINT TONIGHT :.__ Southern, defending champion of tbe
Southern Valley Athletic Conference, will meet non-league opponent AAA ·
Point Pleasant1hls evening. Varsity action begins at 7:30p.m. In the Big

"Our lest'' 60·month

,.,o,.,. "dlllllm•"'

free. Ma ny cars, trucks. •.,..... w'"'"'Y
. '
'"
Ma1n,c:c::mce

Limited (OWnershiP Dura·
lion) Warranty . wor,on t. . d

SERIIICES INCLUDE:

•

I .R.place front brake pads
2.1 ru• rot on

On Sole Thru Jon. 31

S.lnsp.ct callp•rt

5

.f.Retlll hydraulic syst•m
S.lllepack Inner and owt• r
MOring•
i .R•ploc• hont gr•a•• ••ah
7.ln1pect mrnter cyllnd•r
l .ln•p•ct r•or Unlngl for
w•ar (adcUtlonal co1t If
palrl on rear bralce1 are
n••lfltd)

r•·

a&amp;lof1g o•yo u own you r c ar .
D• to ll • ln ll ot e .

45

Sole Price

$19

Disc lrake Special
Front end only to r
many American c ars.
Addition al ports. servic es
ne&amp;ded will be ot OJt lro c harge.

$13

.

·THE MEIGS INN
Phone 992-3629

...
...

Each

Installed on Sale nuu Jan. 31

Pomeroy, Oh.

You must toe 21 or accompanied
by par11nt or le~al guardian.

~· ·

'Our Best' shock Is eng ineered and de'
. signed tor c ars with radial. bias or'ld
belted tires. Sizes to tit many h.mericon
cars. Save now.

LIM!te41 IOwne,.hlp Dure ·

tlon) W•rr•"'Y · Worron111d
a • la n 11 0 1 yav own your car

D1ra lh In tTor• .

185 Upper River Road, Gallipolis
'

�.

~y ,c -4-The

January 6, 1981

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Daily Sentinel

1981

Middleport·scbool presents costume play
Gro'f!P carries
··.out ·holi~ay projects
· A variety of Christmas projects meluding remembrances of veterans ,
retarded children residents of nursing homes, th~ infin:nary and
children's home, were carried out by
the American Legion, Feeney-!
Bennett Post !28, Middleport, and its
Auxiliary.
Mrs. Geraldine Parsons, Mrs. Etta Will, Mrs. Erma Hendricks, Mrs.
Martha Hanel, Mrs. Sonja Wayland,
Mrs. Peggy Caton, Mrs. Mary Clark,
and Mrs. Sonia Parsons went to
Chillicothe for the party there taking
with them 175 loot bags for the
veterans and several dozen cookies,
along with Christmas card notepads
made by the junior Auxiliary members. .
.
Ninety-three loot bags .were taken ·
to the Pomeroy Health Care Center,
60 ~o the Arca&lt;!ia Nursing Home, II

·
A costumed Christmas musical
program was presented by the
students of the Middleport
Elementary School in the Meigs
Junior High School auditorium
before a standing room crowd
only.
Mrs. Maurita Miller, music
teacher, directed the program
1 wi th assistance
from the
teachers The third grade opened
·
the program
with "The Twelve
Gifts of Christmas." The third
and fourth grade · students
assisted the first grade clas5es in
doing " 'Twas the NiP"ht Rofn ...,

to the Meigs County Infmnary, and
50 to the Meigs Community Class for
retarded children and adults.
Bushels of fruit were delivered by
Alllert Roush , Mrs. Geraldme Parsons, and C. Albert Tyree to the
Pomeroy Health Care Center, Arcadia , and the Children 's Home at
Gallipolis. Fred Hanel and Bob
Gilmore delivered the loot bags.
Over 300 treats and apples were
given out by Santa at the hall on
Christmas Eve. The Christmas card
note pads made by the juniors were
inclu~ed in all of the loot bags, and
several dozen cookies and candy
canes were taken to the Meigs Community Class.
The Auxiliary also ~~nt several
thousand cancelled stamps to Sister
l.&lt;lraunt at Mount Carmel Hospital
for use in missionary work.

··
..
::

Mr. and Mrs. Wilber Parker en- following with them.
tertained at two family gatherings
On Sunday, December 28, the
during the holiday season.
of Pearl and Addie
descendants
On Sunday, December 21 , they
Staneart
Parker
were guests at a
hosted a dinner for the descendants
family
dinner.
Willis
Parker asked
of Gurney and Florence Atkinson
the
blessing.
Others
present were
Michael. Gary Michael asked the
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Herbert
Parker, Mr.
blessing. Others present were
and
Mrs.
Marion
Parker,
Homer
Samuel and Louise Michael, Mrs.
Parker,
Suzy
and
Jay
Carpenter,
Gary Michael , Matthew, Kimberly,
and Todd, Mr. and Mrs. Roger Mrs. Howa rd Parker, April and
Leifheit, Dorothy and Michael, all of Aaron, all local ; Mr. and Mrs.
Howard Kay Parker · and Howi e,
Meigs County. .
Morgan
City, Louisiana ; Mr. and
The bouse was decorated in a
Mrs.
Robert
Parker, Bobby and
Christmas motif with a Nativity
Kelly,
Marietta
: T/Sgt. and Mrs.
scene, a lighted tree and a card
Joseph
Poole
and
Will, Wrightdisplay. The main table was cenPatterson
AFB
;
Rodney,
Brenda,
tered with the white and gold arand
Brian
Parker,
Parkersburg,
W.
chways used at Gurney's and
Va
.
Florence's 50th wedding an. During the holidays, the Parkers
niversary.
After the meal the children en- talked to their sons '- Edward at
Everett, Wash., and Eric at Redjoyed a gift exchange.
The Parkers' daughter and mond , Ore. Eric is recovering from
family , Martha, Joe, and Will Poole surgery which is a result of his
spent Christmas and the weekend serious accident in March 1979.

GRAPH
' JaDUU)' 7, 1981
You ~:iS the trt mendou:; drive needed to
accompti.!l"h big things this coming yea r. tr you
are rt!atly for nwre rel!puns ibi!i~ies, accepting
t~ prublcn\S a~ well tiS the benefits, Yl&gt;ll'll sue-- •

CB club makes· bers
donations
handled communications at the

Annually the Citizens Band Radio
Club, Inc. carries out a program of
assistance to needy children and
families of the community at Christmas time.
This year the club provided gifts
for the six children at the Gallia
County Children's Home, donated 16
books to the children at Veterans
Memorial Hospital, gave four fruit
trays and six fruit baskets to needy
families~ and provided gifts for 16
needy children.
Other activities of the club during
the year have jncluded a safety
break at the Route 33 roadside parks
on Decoration Day weekend and a
coffee break at the Rock Springs
fairgrounds on May 4. During the
year the club has assisted several
· · families _who lost their homes in
fires, participated in several
parades, purchased a baton and paid
, . for lessons for a child, donated to six
ball teams, sponsored two girl scout
troops , sponsored a car in the
demolition derby at the Meigs County Fair, donated to the Jerry Lewis
telethon, the heart fund, the bike-athon. Again this year the dub mem-

The Daily Sentinel
!USPS 145--1
ADI .. IalonofMultlmedla, loc.

Published every aftemooo except Sunday,
Mooday lllrOuilh Friday, Ill Court Streel, by
tbe Ohio Valley Publishinj Company Multimedll, Inc., Pomeroy, Ohio 45789,
m.-21:.. Second clau postage paid at

Pomeroy, Ohlo.

Mtmbor: lbo AIIO&lt;Iatod Prou, Inland Dally ~ Auodatkln and U. Amertc1n

Nnwpeper PubUJhen Auoclation, NaUolll.l
Advertratna: Repre•ent1tlve , Landini
AIIOcllta, 3101 Eudid Ave ., Cleveland,

Ohlo,lllli.

--··

P08TMASTER: Send • - to TIM! Dolly ·
Senllnll, Ill COOrtSt., Pomeroy, Ohlo~TY .

IUIIICRIPTION !lATEII
BJ Carrier or Mo&amp;or Route
Ontwttk ....... .. ....... ...... .... 11.00
One Month ........ .. .....
. ..... !4.40
One Yoar ....................... , . 112.111
SINGLE COPY
PRJCI!I

Dall.Y .. .. .. .. .. . .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 15 Coni&amp;

SUboorlbon not dulrtnl to poy tho comer
may rom!! in odvii1Ct direct to lbo Dalil'
StnUntl m 1 3, 6 or 12 month bull. Credit,
wtU bt clvenearrler uch month.
No 1ublc:r1pUou by maU permitted In towna
wbtrthorntcarrleuervict ll avaUable.

MAJLIIJMCRIPI10NI
OllloudWHI Vtrpdl

SMonth . .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. llo.&amp;O
Slzmonth ................ ...... . 111.10
I Ytar .... .. .. ...... .......... .. 133.00
•
11110101- Olllo
udWotiVtrpalo

s Month ..... , .................... 111.00
'Month ... ... ....... .. ........... 110.00
1 Yur ....... .... ...... .......... 131.00

Meigs County fair, and held a bake
sale to assist Kathy Park~r, local
girl scout selected for Whirlwind in
'80, a special girl scout pr ogram held
in New Jersey.
The club is now open for new
members. Meetings held at the
Rock Springs Grange hall are held
the second Tuesday and last Friday
of each month. Dues by members
are payable at the last meeting in
Januar-y. Applications for membership can be secured from any officer. Clarence Jordan, president:
Etta Will, vice president: Shirley
Gibbs. secretary: and Betty Wilson ,
treasurer.
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT
PERSONALS
Mr. and Mrs. Kenny Roush and
son, Jason, recently visited in Pin·
sun Fork, Ky. with her uncle and
aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Tackett.
• Christmas guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Blackston were Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Kane, Heather and Emily ,
Marietta : Mr. and Mrs. William
Grueser, Mr. and Mrs. Bruce
Blackston, Bob Blac kston ,
Pomeroy. Heather and Emily
remained for an eKtended visit with
their gra ndparents.
Mr. and Mrs. John Lyons and Mrs.
Bernard Schram have returned
from Pontiac, Mich. where they
were the holiday guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Tom Lyons, Tonya and Kim .
Eddie Miller who makes his home
with his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
John Lyons, spent Christmas with
his fathe r, Edward Miller at Clifton,
W.Va .
Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Wold, the former Brenda Edwards, ol New
Orleans, and Mr. and Mrs. Pat Edwards, Richmond, Va. spent the
holiday in Middleport with their
parents, Mr. and Mrs . Thomas Edwards.
'Mr. and Mrs. Everett Bachner had
as holiday g~ests , Mr .. and Mrs.
Donald Brown, Chris, Stacey and
Theresa, Columbus : Mr . and Mrs.
Ronald Thompson , Sam and Beth,
New Haven, W. Va. ; Miss Mary
Schaaf, Columbus, and Eli ' Ellis,
Illinois.
Mt. and Mrs. Virgil parsons, Kim
and Lois, enjoyed a pre-Christmas
dinner with- Mr. and Mrs. Jerry
Eads and family , Rutland. Other
guests of the Eads were · Mr. and
Mrs.
Parsons and children.

. 22-Jan. 19) The chances of
'your
"""'CAPRICO
· RN tOe('
being fulfilled today are cxm nbl tilm ~

L't: llent becau:ie you are not afraid to pay the
llt!t:essary dues It htke)! to gel ahead. Romance,
tntvel, luck, re~our ces, ~i blc pitfalls und
t'Hrt.'t'r fur the cumin!;! munth.s a rc all discussed
m your AstnXIraph , which be~lns with your birthday . Mail $1 for ead l lo ~ t ru-Graph , Bux 489,
Rallio City Station, N. Y. 10019. Be sure to specify
birth date.

AQUA RIUS tJan. !0-Feb. 11) P ast expcdent.•e
jj.i\les )'w strvn ~: takN.illl.rge ~tbilities
• •d

tOOal

A surprise miscellaneous shower
was given for Sgt. and Mrs. Keith
Craig of Jacksonville, Fla., at the
home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Grady Craig on Friday evening at
Letart Falls.
Games were played with Unda
and Carol O'Brien as leaders. Attending were . Larry and Phyllis
O'Brien, Florence and Bob Adams,
Mrs. Pearl Norris , Mrs. Jan Norris
and daughter, Tracy, Mr. and Mrs.
Bob Lorenz and daughters, Lynn
and Autumn of Charleston, S. C.,

Mike Goldsberry, Mrs. Etta Richards of New Haven, Mrs: Agnes Roush
of Mason, Mrs. Julia Norris, Sgt.
and Mrs. Keith Norris.
Sending gifts were Mrs. Charles
Cartwright of Clifton, W. Va. , and
Mrs. Grady Craig, Sr. of Athens,
Ala., Keith's grandmother.
Refreshments were served. The
couple received many gifts.
·
Sgt. Nor~is has spent four years in
the United States Marine Corps. He
received his basic training at Camp
Pendleton, San Diego, Calif. He

you'll not 1\esit.il.te to~ them. Becau.se o th is,

your destiny will rtnulin In your own hands.
PISCES (f eb. 20-Marcb !D) Tu function yuur
best tOOay . you ha.ve tu be left to yoo r own
devices. Howeve r, this should nut neces:;a rily
m~::an you won't con!iull uthen; when necessa ry,
I\RI£$ lMarch t1-Aprlii9J Acquaint.ll nces will
00 tl!lpof'Ulni to your cause t0&lt;4ty, i m~ s mu ch as
t~~· can ht'lp you sun out your thoughUi and
as::~l:;t you at arriving ut sound t.'O nclusiuns.
TA URUS (April ro.11.1ay !0) Set yOur
p layt h i~ aside fur the time being und devote
Yvur effort:; tu protl udivc pursu.i t..s today. Mud:
canbt tu:complished if )'1'10 asse rt )'uun;el f.
GEMINI tM•Y 2l·JuotZOI You helve the verve
tO SWII)' other S to your Wll)' Of thinking today.
Don't WilSie it on tri vitJ . &amp; II 'em sumethintt; imJl',!ri.Ml.

~

CANCER tJutK' !!-July !2 ) Set out to try to
gain tht-l'O nfltlent.~ of som!!()ne wh u can pull lht
rittht strin~::~ for }' QU to help you get somet hing
you wanl. They're re\'tptive today.
L EO tJuly !3-Aug. tt l It i~:m' t likely you'll be
!l hy about !l latin~ yuur po!litwn tuday, but the
rea.sun yuu 'II sun~ in yuur cause is that yuu
cumbtne Doth lol(lC und uptinUsm in your pre;entatiun .
\'IRGO tA aK. %3-St:pt. 2%1 Don't let that ed ra
c:ner~y tuday J;JU to waste. There are lllrger~t han­
i:l\'era~c: rewards a\'Hilab\e if you ex tend the
naodt.'d efforu.
LIBRA j S~:p t. t1-&lt;kl . U ! It will be ha rd to keep
}U U orrl'enter st.G~e lodcl)' . Your natural leader.ship qu tlli lit~ imPtll yuu tu tttk e charge. Others
won't mmd ;_ in fac t, thi!y' \1 welcume this.
SCORPIO tOct. U-Nijv. H ) Ctltlncest~re it'll bt
impu:s..'Siblc tu Si t tdh' by today and do nothinl(
at:xlu t the ineq uities yuu sao. Your !It ron.: sense of
jwtice mak'e:1 yuu 11c\ to eliminate them. ·
SAGmARIUS !Nov. tJ.D« . Zl l This is the
day to lil(hten the Itt'S with a recent acquainltli'IL"t' . Take the mi li ~tlive to st rength~n the
rele~tions h i p. You won't be sorr)'.

Lori Crow

'

nativity Scene singing "Away In
the Manger." There was a
processional of the children from
the rear ol the auditorium each
carrying a flashlight "candle"
and singing "Silent Night."
Santamadeasurprisevisitand
gave each child in the program 8
candy cane. Children in the
audience were also presented
candy canes, all provided by the
teachers ·During internnission
· principal, presented•
John Arnott,
Mrs. MlllerwithaChristmascorsage.

..
"
·.
many:,Iahe Carr, 0 ChriStmas
Tree..
representmg Scandinavia :. Kathy. ~?mas and
Sha~~n Coates.. Deck the
Ha~ repre~~?ting Englsnd;
Lon Wayland,. We W~~ You a
Merry. Christmas,
the
~etherlamjs ; Amy Luckeya:.:
Here Comes Santa Cl .
rep.res~~tmg MeXIco, a~d Ells~
Meier, The Child of Chi'IStmas.
The gr oup then
, sang "0 Come All
YeFaithful.
ed .
The. program ,conclud . With
the kindergarten presentin~ the

Contributions to ACS total
$10,280 for 1979-BO year
The annual report of the Meigs
County Unit, American Cancer
Society, showed total contributions
for the J!J79.80 year of $10,280.
Expenditures for the same period,
Sept. I, 1979 through Aug. 31, 1900,
were $10,413, according to the
report. The expenditures included
public education, $1 , 323 :
professional education, $636; patient .
service, $6,126; conununity services, $320; fund raising,
and
management and general, $l ,201.
The report shows that 593 adults
and 2,567 youths were reached

$807;

FRIDA¥ l SATIMOA¥
MIWJ'I.Ift SALE

recruited out of HuntsvUle, Ala. for
some time before leaving for ove'seas to Okinawa. While there, he
visited Korea, Taiwin, Japan and
the Philippines.
Sgt. Norris and Mrs. Norris were
recently married at Jacksonville,
Fla. and spent the Thanksgiving
holidays at his parents' home in
Letart Falls.

through public education programs,
that services of some form were
provided to a total of 92 patients, and
that 190 news releases were rr.ade by
the office. A total of 398 volunteers
were used in the program during the
past year.
The 196().61 officers are Joan Anderson, president; Jeanie Witherell,
vice president ; April Smith,
-secretary; Erma Smith, treasurer:
Wibna Mansfield, M.D., medical advisor, and Delores Frank, executive
director .

WARNING ISSUED
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews warned today that persQns
caught dumping raw garbage in the
city trash barrels will be fined $1110
for the first offense and $250 and 30
days in jail for the second offense.

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Crow entertained recently with a party
honoring their granddaughter, Lori
Crow, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Crow, Zanesville, on her eighth birthday.
Attending the party besides her
parents, brother, Robby, and grandparents were Mr. and Mrs. James
Crow and Meredith, Pomeroy : Donna Morrison, Fort Lauderdale, Fla.;
Debbie Gilkey and Jodi, Lancaster ;
Carol Crow, Danielle and Clayton,
Pomeroy; Sharon Russell , Sherry
and Mark, Pomeroy; Kathy Fry,
Wendy and Stacie, Syracuse ; Cheryl
Pape, Robin Stout, and Ruth
Holman, Syracuse. A Holly Hobby
theme was carried out.
o Mr. and Mrs. Bob Crow returned
to Zanesville leaving their d!'ughter,
Lori, for a several days' visit with
her grandparents. The family returned New Year's Day for family dinner at the Robert Crow home with
Mr. and Mrs. James Crow and
Meredith joining them.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Crow were

BUNKOS
woven blankets. Your
choice of solid colors.

Matching pHiow cases. Stock up now at th is

Slight
Irregu lars .
Save now!

·

'2"

PILLOW CASES

WtiiAIV UIIII'E s.w

~

Non -allergenic,
Odortess, dust proof, sanitary , 100 % foam pillow .
Washable . Stripe cover.

Fruit ol the loom all cotton
wilh tailored corner. Guaranteed to fit affer washing .

''r
FULL

'8"

QUEEN

'I]"
IAMIAIY IIHIITE S.W

HERMAN GRATE

size roll

POLVESTER QUILT

sAns

PILLOWS

FORMS

Blend of foam and urethane
non-allergenic , dust tree, san!~
ta ry and odorless .

Urettlane loam, odorless, dustless , washable 14" rouhd or
square pillow forms . Read y to

'3~~H
WtUAJY UHm S.W:

cdver .

.$

JMUAIY UHIIIf SALE

IANWV UIIIIJE SAL£
3

/.o~-INCH

'FURR QUEEN'
BATHROOM

WIDE

SPECIAL PURCHASE!

FANCY PRINTED

RUFFLED &amp; FLAT

RUGS

LAC~

·FLANN~L~n~

T·RIM

25f

Mill length assortment of
quality printed flannelelle. Ideal for gowns and
pajamas.

YARD

IIIIIT£ SALE

UIIIIU SALE

Nyl on-polyester sculptured
style .
Non -s kid
back.
Assort ed si zes and colors.

100% cotton, the f iber that
breaths . Handles l ike cloth .
Qu ilts )freely . Washable.

s

Machine wash. .

OFF
EGULAR '
PRICE

Pomerov

WIIAIV IlliTE SALE

'I•

100% COTION
STRIPED PILLOW

TO 1 YAim

PIECE GOOD

....---~.

.
]5
~

..,.:;:::::::;_:....

ASSORTED 45"

POLYESTER

PRINTED DRESS

DOU81.£HNrtS

FABRICS

w~lte Slr;pe pll lo~

100%coftonblue&amp;

licki ng

EACH

Cottons and blends In small and
medium patterns. Cut from full
bolts. Regular $1 .29 to $1 .59 .

60 '' wide potyestar doubleknit

fabrics

In

assorted

solid

colors and

patterns.

Save

now!

]7
WtiAA¥ 111m SALE
o/.o~-INCH

WIDE WHITE
NON-ROLL

-

32 lncheo

-~59
II

MUSLIN

White three-quarter
inch wide elastic.
Non· roll feature .

f

YARD

yARD

wtae .

48-INCH WIDE QUALITY
UNBLEACHED

~LASTIC

TICKING

Ru.NANTS

Assorted col ors and
patterns In 1f2 to 1
yard lengths . Save l

60-INCH WIDE

EACH

WIUAIV UHII1l SAU
ASSORTED

RECAPS &amp; NEW TIRES

Paper Towels .

14" ROUND OR
SQUARE PILLOW

yar~ .

REUTER-BROGAN
INSURANCE SERVICE

Good Supply Of

HI~Dri

Save now!

Three quarter in c h
wid e, as sorted nyl on
lace trim . Regular 49'

~~~~--,&lt;b&gt;------o&lt;&gt;ll

JdiAIY HH SALE

IN ·STOCK

ST. MARY 'S AUTOMATIC

·ALL $1ZES .

- -'ELECTRIC

•

8LANH~TS

We do:

MEIGS TIRE CENTER, INC.

TOW£LS
Special! ~.Kimberly-Clark large

'COMFORT FOAM'
EXTRA FLUFFY

T he choice ol experts . Seam less, washable, uniform thick ~
ness. No stretching or tearing .

SH~~TING

Mason, W.Va .

FMC Computerized Wheel
· Balancing
FMC Computerized Wheel
Alignment

KIMBERLY -CLARK
HI-ORI PAPER

JAIIAAY llHIITE SALE .

81x96" MT. MIST

COTION-POL VESTER
'PRISCILLA' QUILTING

8:30 to 5: 00, Thursday till12 noon

1. 773·5592

' 'I

WtiAIY UHim SAU:

'·Ulllft SALE

88tG ~·

OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT ONLY

'

KING

-----,. -Jd-U_AJY_II_Hm
__
SA_LE_ _ _ ,,,

992-6687 or 992·Sq9

..

'10''

'

.l· Mo~y~!s2~ed~~a~~d~!H!!ay

12!'EA · KING
'fr.'EA
·

Kimberly-Clark fou l roll
package of Hl-Drl Bath- •
room Tissue . Buy now
and save.

Ask us to quote on your HOME, LIFE,
BUSINESS or other Insurance programs.

214 Main St.

.

1

nssu~

PILLOWS

COU~RS

'13"EA. .

•QUEEN

BATHROOM

SHREDDED FOAM

MAnRBS

As an independent insurance agency we can
help you find the best price/protection com ·
bination for your insurance dollars.

FOR THE BEST DEALS IN THE TRISTATE AREA

'8"EA.

110..

FOUR ROLL PACKAGE HI-DRI

'CROWN ROYAL' LARGE

ZIPPERED

LET'S TALK VALUE

"'""l

'7''

Ulllft SAL£

JANUIV UIHIIE S.W:

THEN COMPARE

~·SON s;uRNITURE

ANCHOR BAND STYLE
TWIN ...
FULL ...
FITTED WITH 12" SKIRT

FULL

PAIR

FOAM

Insurance

Little or· no shrinkage. Extra long wearing .

Machine wash and dry .

TWIN

Large oag of shredded loam .
Use lor pl! lows . dolls and toy s,
cha ir seats ,
upholstery
or
packing .

r-p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;!;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,

Gold Star polyester filled, supersonic
quilling cotton and polyester oovering.

Sparta 72 " x90" lull
bed
size
needle-

LARGE ONE POUND
BAG· SHREDDED

Christmas dinner guests at the home
of their son, James, and his family .
Others attending were Mr5. Dot
Neutzling, Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs.
Marvin Roush , Bethany and
Bridget, New Haven, and Mr. and
Mrs .. James Thomas and Amber,
Syracuse.

MAnRBS PAD
AND COU£R

NEEOLEWOVEN

Dan River permanent press white !heels .
l'win or lu ll size In flat or fitted styles .

ARRIVES FOR DUTY
First Sergeant Thomas M. Kimes,
son of Mr . and Mrs. Kenneth K.
Kimes of Hartford, W. Va., has
arrived for duty at Fort Knox, Ky.
Sergeant Kimes, a first sergeant,
· · was previously assigned at Dulmen,
West Germany.

COMPLETES TRAINING ..
Private Michael S. Baller, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Orum S. Baker of
Route 2, Point Pleasant, W. Va .,
recently completed One Station Unit
Training (OSUT I at the U. S. Army
Infantry School, Fort Benning, Ga.

·SOL!D COLOR

WHIT~ SH~as
low , low prrcel

'GOLD STAR' SUPERSONIC
QUIL TEO COMBINATION

72 x 90-INCH FULL SIZE 'SPARTA'

FAMOUS "DAN RIVER"
PERMANENT PRESS
TWIN OR FULL SIZE

Lori Crow honoree of party
'

The Daily Sentinel-

"

Craigs honorees of surprise shower .

ASTRO

\ ·.' Family gatherings noted

·
Christmas." •
·
The first .grade classes sang
"Santa Claus IS Commg to
Town.:• There was a Christmas
medley by ..th~. second gra~e
which mcluded Ftve of Santa s
Reindeer," "Christmas Tree,"
" Frosty, the Snowman," and .
"UpontheHousetop."
,
The kindergarten classes did
· "Nothin'' for Christmas," The
fourth graders presente,d
" Christmas Around the World
with Sean Gibbs domg " White
Christmas" repreR•"t;"" " ""-

Ohio

Twin

. .}
./'('

comfortable light-weight
for home wood cutting

or

full

siz e

Single control. U.L
appro11ed . Blue, gold

~r champagne. .

smooth cutting , deluxe 35cc light-weight with
patented "VIOe -less" engine mounting svstem. aa·
lustable automatic oiling and comfortably grouped
controls.

OUR SALE!

THURSOA¥, FamA¥ l SATURDAY

FRUIT OF THE LOOM

FURNITURE

THROUJS
VSiY attractl't'e chair throws
mad e of ! turdy textured mater~
lal.
T hree sizes . Assorted
colors .

'5"EA.
'8"EA

b0"x70" "

.-J-"1 .1'2"99

~EACH

POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO

70"x90" ''
70"x 120"

606 E. Main
Ph. 992-2094
Pomeory, Oh.
Front end alignment $11.50 most passenger cars.
81 1k!' Service

l

'·

So· many uses for this
sturdy , first qual ity
H)() %

cotlon Iabrie.

5'). ~ARD

�Sentinel

Po

1981 ~

Ohio

idd

TeleVision

ERE'S NO WAY YOU
CAN SAVE HIMHE'S DEAD BY NOW.''

•

•

)}j'jj}f.\.ft fi}~ ~THAT SCRAMBLED WOAD GAll!'
~ ~ ~~ ~
byHenri ArnoldandBoblee

.,
'"

i

1I1m Shatner. Hoata: Hugtt Down a
and
Frank
Blair. (Cioaed·

~ •w

U.S.A.) (80mlno.)
8:30 ·
NICNEWS
CENTURY
· 20TH
GUIDI!UNES
(])MOVIE ~CARTOON) ' ' ' "Dol
And The Kangaroo"

I

BOB NEWHART SHOW
F ACJ THE MUSIC
CIHlll CBS NEWS
WILQ WILD WORLD 01'
ANIMALS
FEI!UNGS
• AICNI!WS
11:58
NI!WS UPDATE
7:00 . • Pll MAGAZINE
GERALD DERSnNI!
..
PRESENTS
ALI,lN THE FAMILY
(jJ). FAMILY FEUD
lLTAN HITCHOCK SHOW
Cll nc TAC DOUGH
Cfll
MACNEIL-LEHRER
7:30

Tfl~~.

.

I
I .
I

Now arrange the cirCled leners t_o
form the surprlse answer. as sug·
gested by the 11bove c11rtodn

,

.I

Yes terdays

(Answers tomorrow)

. Answer : What there was plenty of at the sewmg

circle - NEEDLING
JumbM 8a)k No. 18, containing 110 puu!n, II IVIIIIbfe IOf $1.75 pMtplld
from Jumble, c/o this Mwsp.tper. BoJ. 34, Ncwwood. N.J. 07144. Include YOUf
namt, address, zip code and matle checks p1yable to Newspapetbooks.

• ()) JOKER'S WILQ
!!QLLYWOOD SQUARES
(Ill DICK CAVETT SHOW
MATCH GAME
FACE ntl! MUSIC
7:58
NEWSUPDATE
8:00
e&lt;1lLOBOLol&gt;orocelvealho
'lehee ' or Oepury Perklna and

NORTH
1-6-81
• A 52
9KIOH 3
• Q6 2
•As

begin a en inveetigaUon that leada

him to 1 group of attrac~ve nur111
at a euppoaedly legitimate
hoepttal·-but that's only the beginning. (80 mlna .)
.

ill ORAL -EATS

(])MOYIE.o(DRAMAJ•••

ANNIE

,

510PPE0 1 ..

Brkf. .

preParation for a romantk: reunion
wllh the b11uty who jilted him 20
aara before .
!Ill WMTE SHADOW
Baeketball takeaa backieatwhen
CoachReeveale offered S 1,000 to
appear In etlre commercleland hi a
team become• the 'Shower cl
Power' group to out a record. (80
minU ,

CAN NEVE~ DO
¥1HAT'5 NECESSARY.

MUST BE

11

MR .,._..., .. 1111111
II);~. HAPPY DAYS Tho gang
holpaAiollmdowo andohapoupln

SURE.! 'liAS IN NO
01\HGER. YOUR I(IND

··~ll'IIE
REALIZES THAT
SKIP SMITH

WEST

EAST

.J1096
9J6
tA8 7
.K7 32

• rn

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

rn&lt;ID

NOVA 'Doctoro ol Nlgorlo'

NOVA examinee the work of the
dootore of Nigeria, who combine
traditiona l herbal medicine end
weatern orttlodo• prac11cea In an
effort to solve the probleme of
health huarda cauaad by lower
atandarda of hygiene and aanlte·

.KB!
9872
t95
.J10954
SOUTH
.QH
9AQ5
tKJI04 3

.Q.

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
West

Nortti

Soulb

East

tt
Pass,
Pass
Pass

19
l NT

Pass

1 NT

Pass

Pass

Opening lead:+J

tlon . (Cioled·Captlontd ; U.S.A.)
8:30

GOT A. SHOT 1\T A. GRANT

mine . )

~

GQOO NEWS

~LA VERNEAND SHIRLI!Y
Shirley fe ll a in love with 1 doctor

who aaye he'a divorcing t'tla wife··•
woman that Ia a dead ringer for
Shirley.

·

8:58 illtqWI_UPDATE
8:00 (I) • CIJ FLAMINGO ROAD
Honeymoonere Fielding and Conatance Cart't'fe are kidnapped and
held for a mittlon-dollar ranaom,
when a drug dealer Intent upon ven·
oeance puniahee doublecroaeing
Sheriff Tilua Semple . Start:
Howard Duff, Morgan Fairchild .
~emiere: 2 hra.)

(ti 3fi'U~I'S COMPANY
GASOLINE ALLEY

[s this

what

goes

o

What do

No monel! crossed
this table. dear .. .
onl4 love!

b~

Janet leama Cindy' abollia alklna
'lor favore above and beyond htr
aecretarlal dutlee and convlncea
hartoprcteat. (Cioaed·Captioned;

ILS.A.)

• ffi (Ia) CBS TUESDAY NIGHT
MOVIE 'Word 01 Honor' 1861
Starl: Kart Malden, Rue McCian·

!h•n.

.

liJ Cfll MYSTEAYI 'Or. Jekyll and

on

Mr . Hyde ' Part I. Robert louie
Stevenaon ' a nineteenth century
horror atory leada oft 'Uyltery'a'
IICOnd IIIIOft, whiCh l)rllentl
Vincent Price a a eeriethoat . lnpart
I, Dr. JakyU'a boldt~~:perlmenlato
ieolata the good from tt'te evil within
a single pereonallty auccted
beyond hla wlldeat e~~:pectatlona .

while

!'mat
wor!t,?

(Cioood·Captlonld: U.S .A.) (80

.

.,"

min•,)

0:30 rn(jJ)• TOOCI.OBI!FDACOIJ.
FORT Henry and hla bOll hi VI I
dismayed couple of theatre·gOir'l
dragged tram their aeata, then ac·
cuaa them of aleailngSara'apurae
and ualng her tick eta, 111 ot whict't
ultl in 1 lobby brawl.

I I&gt;

WINNIE
l.COK )clJN:" LeD'&gt; I DON" ".NOW

IVHO '0U ARE ~N D WH "-T '.:JU'&lt;.
GAME IS BUT IM NOT
VOUI( FA'Tl-IEIC 1

YOU DON 'T

T-i l!'&gt; 1::'&gt;
501\EONE$
IDE-\ OF A

liKE MES'

10

YOU I?ON'T

WIINT ME?

JOkE ...

I r'ONT
1'41NK 17·\1?
VIE"- NT

t :(l
10:00

JU5T

ffi

1111 EVENING NEWS

MOVII~ROMANC!)'"

'!'!!n§_R

.. _

OUt" 1880

(l)(jJ)~ HART TO HART

mAT ' '

rn

SOUNDSTAQE 'Monhollen

Tranafer' (Cioaed-Captloned; U.·
S.A.)(I!O min a.)

10:48

NEW I
NEWS UPDATE
FAITH 20
EXTENSIONS
LOVEAMI!AICANITYLI

:~:

~~ 'tbD~TECIJ IJal (jJ) •

10,28
10:30

J H ,.; ... ~.:.I·
. &lt;,; ....... ,

I

NI!WS
TODAY IN BIILI! PROPHICY
NIGHT GALLERY
MONTY PYTHON'S FLYING

~ ,,,

I

BARNEY

TATER'S
JACK-IN-TH~BOX
SHORE IS ''UP-TOWN,"
PAW

~ CAVETTIIIOW
E~SUPDAtE

11:28
11:30

WHAT IN
THUNDER
ARE YOU

.CIJ THE TONIGHT SHOW
eet: Peter O'Toole. (80 mina.)

MR . JACK'S GOT

M

ROSS BAGLI!Y SHOW
MOYIE ~MUSICAL..ORAIIAI

HIS OWN CONDO

••• "Young Men Wltlt a Horn"

?1fG[ffJ

TALKIN'

•
AIC NEWS
NIGHTUNE
eiiJ CBS LATE IIOVII! 'LOU
GRA~T: Murder' Ster1: Ed Aaner,

ABOUT,

MAW?

Robert Walden. A woman Ia killed in
the ghetto and nobody carea, IK·
capt tor reporter B!llla Newman .

(Repeal) 'RIDI"G TALL' 1875
Start: Andrew Pine, GllmerMcCCH·
mick . Arodeo rider hitch" up with
a young, hlp New York girl.
epeal)
·

i

AIC CAPTIONED NEWS
MOYIE · (DRAMA) • "'1'1
"Prima Of Mill Je.n Brodie"

1!180

PEANUTS

The kidnappers had "Help'" he cried.
taken him to a little
town called Abeyance.

.

"I'm being held
in Abeyance!''

12:00 ()) MOVIE ·(HORROR) "1'1
~mlty_dlle Horror" 1070
(.1) [ffJ. TUESDAY MOVIE OF

By ~wald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

rn•m TOMORROW Guoole:

MatllynChamberl, Trevor Howard,
Maureen McGovern. (Repeat: 80
)

l

12:58
1:00

...

~

SPORTS REPORT
OLD TIMI! GOIP!L HOUR
Ul
MOVIE ·(COMEDY) 00 1'1 "In
Like Fllnl" 111117
.
2:00 (]) WORLDVIIIW

The vH1a9e reserves the
right to re1ect any or all

bids and to waive any In·

Mavor
Village of
Middleport

honor

ing

honors

Today's hand cam e up in a
regional championship in San
Diego. Unfortunately for
Wes t. his opponent knew he

-~ --------

:ABMIIIIRJIHIItE
-·" --------

using · Journalist leads

was

against · suit

were known of
si nce the 1930s, most Journal·
contracts.

ist ideas were r elativelv new.

and took advantage of it. The
auction was fa st. Although
South might have raised
hearts at his first opportunity,
he was playing dupficate and
notrump scores more than
hearts.
The opening lead was the
jack of spades. Normally,
mosl players lead the jack
against notrump when they
hold either no higher honor or
when it is the top of an lnteri·
or sequence, ie., K J 10 or A J
10. If the opponents had been
playing standard leads, South
might duck the ope ning lead
around to his queen. He would
feel quite unlucky when East "
produc e d the king and
switched to the club jack,
trapping the. quee n . When the
opponents gained the lead
with the diamond ace they
would run th eir c lu bs and
defeat the contract.
Our declarer didn't a llow
this scenariO. His opponents

--~-----

--

..

. ~~r~ ~f rn·~k~
THE F.amily of Ollie M .
Gotschall would like to
thank the.i r manv friends
and relatives tor all tl"le kin·
dness shown us during our

recent

berea~Wement .

Would
like to thank
especiallY the membt
the Middleport Un ited

tecostal Church for all
food they prepared ,
sent ln . Also a spec
fhantc. you to ReveranCI
William Knittel for of ·
tic iatlng at the services.
A.nd for his special prayers
for our fam ily. Also a
special thank you to Rita
Arnold for the songs and
music.
Husband·
Victor,
daughters; Kaye Smith,
Janet Grimes and Juanita
Clark . Also sisters; Ethel
Pr iddy and Dolly Cleland .· ·

You'll
tr.lct 1t down
much taster

to have East win •the first
Irick and shift to the really
dangerous club suit. So he
rose with the ace , knocked out

WI t/1

a

WANT AD

the ace of diamonds and
wound up with J I easy tricks. ,
jNE WSPAPI::H ENTERPRISE: ASSN )

Racine Gun Club, every
Friday night start·i ng a·t
7: 30 p .m . Factory choke
guns only .

·. - - - · HAVE YOUR dee r trophy
mounted .
Birchf ie- ld 's .
East on 124 a·t Ru t land. 742·

2178.
DEER Cut &amp; wrapped at
Maple Wood Lake betw een
Syracuse &amp; Ra Ci ne 1 Oh .
525. per head . 55 additional

1

.. -

!-~st~a~d F_o~n~ - ~

6.

Phone l-614-992· 2205.
YOUR

PIANO .

Too

valuable to neglec t , experl
tuni ng &amp; and repair . Lane
Daniels, 742·2951 or 992·

2082.

Tax service, federal. stat e,
&amp; quarterly taxes done by
appointment. See Wanda
Eblin , 41000 Laurel Cl ill
Road. Pomeroy , Ohio

call992·7228 .

.

.

Giveaway

4

Puppies to gOod home .
Father throughbred l r"ish
Se tte r puppies are in
t~ll ige nr
&amp; beau ti full y

ear . Missing i n th e Racine

6022 .

NoSutiday cai ls.

Basnan Road

phMe numller il used .

ney . Reward .
Dailey , 949 ·2048.

For Sale
Announcement
For Rent

3. _ _ _ __

I Desert . ,
compa.nion
2 Ellistlng
3 Longed lor

4. _ _ _ _ __

s._ _ _ _ __
6. _ _ _ _ __

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

work

It:

9. _ _ _ _ __

10. _ _ _ _ __
11. _ _ _ _ __

. AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFEl-LOW

One leller almply atands fnr another. In lhis umple A lo
u sed lor I he three I.'s, X for the two O's, ~ lc Si ngle letters,

12.= = = = =
13.
14.- -- - - -

apo•trophes,, the length and ronnatinn of the words are all
hlots. Each day the cqde letters are d,llforenl.

TN

s.so
7. $0

I

19.oo I

110.0~

1
I
I
I
17 . _ _ _ _ __
I
16 .- - - - - - - I
I
19 . _
I
20._:
21. _ _ _ _ _ __
I
n. _______ I

====

_wa~t~d to B_uy

I RON AND BRASS BEDS.

992·21A3 .

old furniture , d esks, gold
rings ,
iewelry , silv e r
dollars, sterling, et c., wood
,ice boxes,i ars ant iq0e·s,
etc . Complete households.
Write M. 0 . Mille r , Rt.' 4,

18

9

DE

2• . ~·-----25.- - - - - 26.- - - - - 27 .- - - . , - - - - - ,
28 . _ _ _ _ _.

29 .-_
-_
-_
30
._ _
_
_
31. _ _ _ _ _ __
32 . _ _ _ _ _ __
33 ._ _ _ _ __
34 ._ _ _ _ _ __

stamped, fOK , 14K , or 18K
gold . Silver coi ns , poc ket
watches . Ca ll Joe Clark at
992· 2054 at Clark 's Jewelry
Sfore, Pomeroy , Ohto 4576q

&amp; silver, class rings, pocket
watches, chains, d iamonds
&amp; so on . Copper brass and
batteries, antique items,
also do appraisals, com
piete auct ioneer service.
Over 30 years experience in
business . Wil l b uy com
p lete estares . M iddleport,

Oh . 992 6370 .

Help Wanted

disability policy a1 no cost
to the ·employee. and
hospitalization
insurance
i) Vailable . Come visi t us or
c al l : Nanc'i Van M eter ,
R . N .• Di rector ot Nursing ,
Po meroy Health Care Cen ·

re r , 614-992-6606.
Ladv-" or girl to live in. 992

2686.
BABYSITT E R tor 2 small
pre-school c hildren . Man ··
day thru Friday from 8 :00
a .m . to 3 p .m . Most
preferably in Middleport or
PomeroY area , Must have

relerences. 992 7395 or 992
32•2 .
,

tr·avel

35 ._.:__ _ __

TEXAS

involved .

T.~.

OIL

Co.

needs

Dick, Pr es.. South
P.? tro leu m ,

Worth Tx . 76101.

I·
I

Ap ·

mature person tor short
trips
surrounding
Pome r oy .
Co nt ac t
customers. we tra in. Writ e

FXXE •
:
!
•
'

position

Mail This Coupon with Re-mitrance
The Dally Sentinel
Bo• 729
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

. .

.

,

~--------------- r ------~
'

'

•

Ft .

·

Musicians want ed ~ . l ea d
gui tari 3 TS .
rhythm
guitarists ~
drumme r lor
r "C k band . .Contac t Ga ry

. •

•a l9~23~2 7 .

· -

~

--

_

--

--

~

-

-

.

Housing
Headquarters

-Transmission

R

Racine, Oh .

·

eparr
Hrs.: Mon.· Fri.
9 A.M.· S: 30 P.M.

12 Park St.
Middleport, Oh .
Ph . 992·6263

992 -5682

Anytime

..___

bedrooms . new carpet. 1976
ca me ron, 12 x 60, two

Saturday Only
4 P.M. to 11 P.M .

bedrooms, all electric. 1971
Skyline , llsx 61 , tw o
bedrooms, bath &amp; • :~, new

x

Via nd Street, Point

Has

70 acres with good
fen ces and on Rt . 33
Nor th . 2 houses, 2
bedroom mobile home,
all minerals ( l eased),
some ni ce timber. and
clean pastures.

On

INVEST
YOUR
DOLLARS NOW FOR
YOUR
CHILDREN
LATER . AT THE RATE
OF INFLATION WHAT
WILL
LAND
BE
WORTH IN tO YEARS?

Housing
Headquarters
R !a~ Estat~ :- G~neral

Rl!niats= ~ ::-- ------~ ~ ~

41

House s fo'r Rent

NICE

floor . Could have lull
basement if fi ni shed .
ON LY $19,500 .00.
ONE · BLOCK 'DEEP is how to descr ibe this
large lot that has a pi c·
tur esque setti ng in Mid
dleport, 1•12 story with
unique dormers. full
basement, plu s• a rental
unit fo r ex tra income .

REDUCED $51 ,500.00.
A I;IUGH
FAMILY
ROOM - With a prelty
f ir eplace, 3 BR, bi g· liv ·
ing room. 61 2 acres of
ground . This just starts
to describe th is .n ice

nome .
A STEAL'
$39,900.00 .
ASSUMABLE 9'' %
LOAN ...., m akes this
almost new r an ch type
home doUbly attractive.--a wood burner m a kes it
eco n o mi c al ,
and
3
bedrooms make it just
right tor a ta,mily , EX
C~LLENT

BUY

AT

. $34,900.00 .
LARGE ROOMS - And
ther e are six of th em . A
nice
w ooQ
b urnin g
f ire pl ace, fu ll base
rnent, and a fro nt sit11ng
por c h . Fresh ly painted
and is a bargain at

$17 ,500.00 .
REALTOR
Henry E . Cleland, Jr .
ASSOCIATES

Roger &amp; Dotti e Turner

992-5692
Jec1 n Tru ssell 949•2660

OFFICE 992· 2259

12·31 · 1 mo .

Building .&amp; Repai' ::
IF YOU NEED IT
FIXED,
WE CAN DO IT!

PH. 742-2328
12·8·1 mo.

Mobile Homes
for Rent

~u_ilding Suppl!e~
G U ARA N TEED
Roof

ss

5858 .
Two bedroom mobil e home
at Br own ' s Tra iler Park .

992·3324.

992 7479.

Pomeroy . $150.00

T RAILER spaces for rent .
South ern Valley Mobile
Home Pa r k, Cheshire, Oh.

992

Three bedroom trail er in
Sou the rn Valley Mobile
Home Park , ·cheshire ,
Ohio. 992· 3954 will acce pt 2
c hildr en .
44

- - ---·------

,3 AND 4 RM lu rn is hed ap
ts . Phone 992 5434.
Furnished apartments , 992 ·

312'1 . 992·5914, or 1·304·882
2566 .
Unfurni shed one bedroom
apottr tm en t· f or rt&gt;nt . Ren ·
ters assistance available
to r senior c itizens . Conta ct
Villag e Manor Apartments

Anfiques

pa y cash Or ce rt ified check
for antiques and collec
ti bles o r entire est ates.
No th ing too la rge . A lso,
guns, pocket watches and
coi n co ll ections. Ca ll 614·

6260.
Misl::: . Merchanise

54

2815.
FIREWOOD 535. a tru ck

FURNISHED 4 roo m &amp;
ba th, adults only, no pets.
Middleport, 992·3874 .
Apartm ent with river view .
$175 .00 per month, sma II
deposit required . Rooms
to r r en t · with Kitchen
pri v Hedges. S60.00 a month .

Really ,

.

Pomeroy . $150.00. Three
lor

fr dile r
~ 1 5 0 . 00 .

62

bo x spr ings . 5100. 742·2957 .

near

electrical work

(FreeEs1imalesl

V•C• YOUNG · II

992·6215 or 992-7314

5240.
Horse trail er , 2 horses,
pa i nt
mare,
other

71

Autos for Sale

1974 For d Torin o,
6
passenge r ,
four
do or
wagon , 351 Cleveland 2
barrel. aut omatic , power
stee rin g, power br akes ,
65,000 miles in ex cel len t
condition . 5 11 95.00. Ph one

3269 or 992·5006.

DISCOUNT

Motorcycles
-~---~

1978 KAWASAKI
motorcyctej

-

~

KZ 650 .·'

co lor

blue-.

~·

Call949:2649.

------~

=
=o:o ter'lkEL :---:: :;
'"'"---- ---- - , --..,•
-

-· -

-

- · -

-

-

-

-

.P

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

. )

.

81

Home
~ ~pro~e_m_e~ts­

GE NEi 'S
CARPET
CLEI\N ING . Dee p stream

clea n put s nu · look back If'
you r carpet, highly recomm ended, reasonable rates.
· scotchguard .
Free
estima tes. Gene Srnith,.ca\i
now 992·6309 or 7 42 ·2211 . •
--·-~'---~---

-·--

f

wo-;t,

WILL do handvman
(n your home . _F urnifur(l · .
repair in my shop. Jim ·.
Bentz, 4th St ., Syracuse. 1 :
- ~-· ..
--- 4··.

Clean!n~,; :

Gene's Car;et
·
dee p st rea m extract!~ .:
Fr ee
estimated.,
r eason able · rates. scot:·,

chquard. 992-6309 or 742,
2211 .

--·-------

-'-----~-

83
_E !' c_a~a'i~g _ . .
J &amp; .F BACKHOE SEii·
VICE liscensed &amp; bond~
sep ti c tank installation~
water &amp; gas I ines. Ex -.
cava ting work &amp; transif
lavo ut. 992·7201 .
~

.

--··c- .

-

84 · · · - Eltciri(clt · · ·
&amp; Refr!g~r!H. !o~ _

R epairs ,

lnakesl

MACHINe
aU (
992· 228•. The
service,

Fabric Shop,
Pomeroy ,
Authorized Singer Sal-.
and Serv ice. We shar~
Scissors.
·
•

3825.

B ea utiful
handm ade
c locks, wall &amp; table top,
ceda r &amp; cy press: contact
Philip Bea rhs or may be
seen at the Leonard Ba ss
res idence on St. Rt. 124 in
Syracuse. Four available &amp;
tak ing orders. Phon e 992·

Hay tor sa te. $1.00 per bale.

Wanted to Buy

.- --

"

74

CHIP wobo . Pol es max .
-j
diameter 10" on la rges t , ELWOOD
BOWER~
end. $12 p· er t-an. Bundled REPAIR Sweepersi
slab . $10 per ton De liver ed toasters, irons , all sma1 .
to Oh iO Pa llet Co ., Rt . 2, appl tances. Lawn mower,1
Pomeroy 992·2689.
Nex t to Sta t e Highwa\1)
Garage on Route 7j '185 #~·

Firewood tor sale . Har·
dwood , spl iT &amp; delivered .
$25 . load delivered : 992·

A~Pu,;: NCE

__,_ --. .iSE~VICE ~

a l l makes wash er , dryers..•
ranges , dishwashers / · .
d isposals, water tanks . Calf· : •

Ken Young at 985·356'1 ,

21! • •

yea r s experie nce. Also will ·:
sell parts you fi x.
.• •

742·2734.

85
AGRI ·LIME

1977 Chevette in good c on

limestone and fill dirt \
hauling. Leo Morris, 7112· :

dillon . $2100 .00. 965 4256 .

2455.

Spreading ; .·

....

L..----------!.-·--_-_:-:;;_~_-_..,.·-':'-~- ~t ·

"

KIT 'N' CARLYLE,... by Larry Wright,.

pric es
on
fu rn iture .
Reuphol ste r i ng . J an . &amp;
Feb. ,
1991.
Mowr ey's
Uphol stery . Pt . Pl e as~nt ,

W.Va . I 304 675· 4154.

·I c~·r.
I boN'T.

ow at
Pomeroy
Landmark
Ga,

H~ng c

U~ ed . WEtng!!rlllor
U ~l.'d

XL 11 Cllo1m So~w
11" S&lt;~w
Com tort G low k ·'!'O&amp;en n

"AVE
A

, SUO .GO
SIH .lO
\lU .OQ

u ~e&lt;t

Two bedroom apar tme nt i n
bed room

=
:&amp;i.lV6toEI&lt;~
~
----.-----

USED Kroebler bed room

742

Unfurnished apartment s
for rent in the Pomeroy
M id(:l leport area, 992 75 11
or 991 6130.

'

- ;.:amsliliPiles ':

su ite, ful l size mattress,

SPEC IA L

ba th. 9Y2 5906 .

-Plumbing and

SE WING

load, $60 . a co rd . A l l har·
dwood , split , &amp; delivered.

Apt. for r en t, 3 rooms &amp;

Hob steller
2003 .

YOUR Humane Socie t y
992·6260 min iature coll ie
fema le, mal e coll ie, english
setter , male, 3 snoopy
types. fem ale, Shephard
type 1 female, male beagle
type including mi xed breed
f emale, seve r al k ittens,
one adult .

Fi rewood f or sale, Mixed
types ot wood. $35.00 per
pi ck up load. De livered,
will stac k for Se nior
Citizens . 843 4951 or 843·

386 6592.

IAC.ENSE'. ·

n~ . oo

tte~t en,

Economy 08 DIU ),
, Now\ 119 .91
Neg . IIU .U

C\?n_

POMEROY '

~LANDMARK

LUI. . . . . . .

E. Mr1in St.

Pom eroy

One

bedrcJ m apa rtm en T i n
Pan 1croyof or S 125.00. Off ice
spa ce at 107 Sycamore
SrreeL POm eroy, $125.00 .
Cel li Cle-l a nd ~ealty at 992
'--~

T HE
MEIGS
Cou nt y
Huma ne Society pets ot th e
week itre : Sever al adult
cats, 5 black &amp; tan puppi es,
b lack labrador, blac k tri sh
se t te r ,
c olli e
typ e,
shepherd type, bl ack &amp;
ta n; house broke medium
size dog ready to be lo"e d,
lovable mixed bree d. 992·

AT T'~ N T I 0 N :
I IM ·
PORTANT TO YOU) Will

at992 7767 .

n&gt;9

(6141 696 :3290.

-

registere d Appa losa. lwo
years old. 1977 Chevy 4 x 4.
992·5449.

Apartment
tor Rent

m ines

HOOF HOLLOW : Horses
and ponies a nd riding
lessons . • Everything
im ag inab lE:' in horse equ ip·
m ent . Blankets, be irs,
boots, etc English and
W estern . Ruth Reeves

643 ·4831 Ot B43-4734.

Phone

Pets lor Sale

56

767 3167 or 557 ·3411 .

Two bedroom mobi'le home
adults only . Deposit &amp;
reference
re quir e d .
Utilifies pai d . Two miles
out on sr . rt . 143 . 992·3647 .

of

products . Coatings and
pro.ducts for all roof types,
pavement se alers and sup
p lies, m asonary , wall &amp;
floor coati ngs &amp; sea lers.
metal &amp; wood prese r ·
va ti ves,
&amp;
i ndus tri al
cleaners tor dealers, con
tr acto r s &amp;
private
businesses. 992 7603 after 5
p .m .

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, Nor th of
Pomer oy . Large lots. Ca ll

53

10 x 55 ~wo bedroom mobile
ho m e nea r Racine. 992·

- Concretewor

I1-==========:!.J~=========+===P:om=er:o:y:':O:h:·==~

l iving room , dining room ,
fam i l y room . 1~ baths, ho t
wa ter heilt . 992 2918 .
42

- Roofing and guner
work
k

11 ·20·3 mo pd.

3 bedroom home. 992-3954.

Midd leport .
5858.

bedrooms, kitchen · din·
ing area , all on one

smalljobs .
Ph.
_
992 2478

46

Th ree bedroom mo b i l e
home approxi m ately fi ve
mil es from
Pom eroy ·

3

LiveMusic

1971 Hill cr es t m ob i le hom e,

month. 247·39 42.

YEARS OLD -

Large or

9927791.

1h

POMEfi,OY,O.
992·2259

Free Food

home . 773 5156 .

1975 two bed room mobile
hom e for r ent, partially
furn ished in excellent con ·
ditlon . Loca ted in ttle Coun
ty M ob ile HOm e Park , nOr ·

-

Hourly Contract

12 x 60 mobil e home with· 45
Furnished Rooms
natural gas . Close to
Three
sl eepi ng rooms , con·
mines. $6,000 .00 . Phone 742 ·
struc tion workers only,
2146.
pr i vate
entrance,
r efri geration. te levis ion ,
1972 Wi ndsor 12 x 60 mobile coffee mak er . Cali afte r 4,

seen a t Kingsbury Road ,
the first trai ler

TOO~

• Dozers
• Backhoes

Free Coffee &amp; Tea

ca rp et.
19 70 PMC .
12 x 60, lwo bedrooms. new
carpet. B x S Sa les. Inc ..

$30,000.
NICE LAYING -

MINERALS

AL TROMM ·.

- Addons and
remodeling

Open

$4,500 .00. 742·3080 or ca n be

Over

Ph. 614-843-2591
6· 15-tfc

12·17·1 mo.

10· 7-tfc

two bedrooms, new ca rpe t.
1972 Champion, 12 x 60, two

Reas onable 3 bed room
home iwth large shade
trees . Na rural gas and
ci ty water. On 1 acre
just ou1 of town. Want
30 acr es of good bu ilding
sites. R ight on old Rt. 33
with T . P . water li ne.
BARGAIN - 5 roo m s,
bath, natura l gas, ci t y
ater , and ch i mney for
woodburn e r .
Only
$12,000 . Can you beat
this?

,

, .

Pleasant.
WV Phone 675·
4424
.

6

Rt.3, Box54

rr=:HA:::
· ;:R;V:ES:::;T;:==tfi~=P:U:U.=I:N:S==j==;.. Y~OU~N~G~s;==: . :
1973 crown Haven. 14 x 65 ,
COfFEE HOUSE
CARPENTER
three bed iooms, new car ·
EXCAVATING
SERVICES"
pet . 1971 cameron,
x 64 ,
Pomeroy, Oh.

2nd

Phone
1- (614) · 992 -3325

P&amp;S BUilDINGS

Ph. 992 -7583

14

Real Estate- General

•

Sizes lrom 4X610 12x40

Greg Roush

KAUfPS
PWMBING
'
AND
HEATING

-Auto and Truck

Must sei l house of ·5 rooms .
nice bt g garden area,
$8,000 .00 or best off er . Ca II

~~;;;:~:~~.

Utility Buildings

k

12·4-lmo.

ROGER HYSEU.'S
GARAGE

ba th . n ice loca llon, Re ule
2. Ra cine. 949·2706 .

::3· 3269

ON 3 STATE RTS . Wanted to Buy : c lass r ings,
wedding b~ nds , anything

pli ca tions available at
s.en1or Citizens Cen ter ,
Mulb err v
H eig hts ,
Pomeroy.

UXLTKSPHTE :

SOAHKK VTF . - KHKKHDE GMl,XG
Yealerdoty'a Cryptoquole: TilE SUN DOES N&lt;IT SHINE FOR A
FEW TREES AND FLOWERS, BUT FOR TilE WIDE
WORW'SJOY.-H.W.BEECHER

can ·

L os 1

Wanted to Do

6-162 .

available
for
hea lth
program at Meigs coun ty
Senior Citizens Center .
P er son must have neailh
edu ca tion al background or
experience In health f ield .
Person mu!o t be able to
relat e to elderlv . Some

"·------

DKRDMG

been

yo ur
opera t or •s I'•cense.• Phone

ches. c lass ring s, wedd i ng
bands, diamonds. Gold or
silver . Call J . A . Wam sley ,
742· 23Jt. Treasure Chest
Coin Shop, Athens, OH . 592 ·

we Stern

ADG

IN.

I'

00 1ng wor

SMALL

•
~~========j~==~~~~==j~=====~~=~

Four year ol d house on 3
acres, 7 rooms, l &amp; one half

In surance

SURANCE

PART T IME

.23·- - - - - -

1.1.- - - - - -

CRYPTOQUOTES

13

ce lled ?

RN s and LPNs , l ooking to r
challenging a nd rewarding
work ? Tired o f rot ating
shifts? F eel the need to
develop your
ideas in
resident ca r e with a hi gh lY
motivated staff? Pomeroy
H ealth Care Center ha s the
answer for you. Due to
achieving near maximum
cens us. we now have
openings for full and part
time positions on day shift
but wi II co nsider other shit
ts. Competitive sal ary , ex
eel tent work ing c ond itions,
l i f e ' insuran ce
and

These cash rates
include di scount

2. _ _ _ _ __

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here'• how to

lollSI.lO $3 .7!

R

"From lOx30"

12Years.
E)( perience

Repair

--.-- - - -

A UT 0 M 0 BILE

· 2t56 or 992-2157.

10

6

3

any ad. Your ad will be
put in the proper
clnltication if you ' II to 35 $l . ~ $4 .50

1. _ _ _ _ __

DZXUHID

Richard

GET VALUABLE tra in 1ng
as a o;oung busin ess person
and ·ea rn good money piu s
sOme great gifts as a Sen
tine! roure ca rri er . Phone
us right away and get on
me eligibility list at 992 ·

You'll get better results words
1
it you d escr ibe fully j --+~d!
Y4-!!!:~::.~F!:.j
give price. The Sentinel
reserves the r ight to

••Boss' '
DOWN

HE

area . An

swers to the name of Bar·

11

AD WANTED

·---·-·---~ - - - .

Racine. $33,00.00 . 949-2801.

BUILDING LOT -

CIRCLE

$13 ,900 ."00. 949 ·
2801. No Sunday calls.

laundry . Reasonable. 992

Lincoln Hill. Water anct .
sewage available .

Phon•----------

- - -. - 992-2571
NICE rwobedrool)1
country
home.
Vinyl . siding,
lull

terrier, While teet . Split lel1

USED FURNITURE . Gold

Income tax service, federa l
&amp; stare. Wallace Russel l,

99l · 7S44

NICE TWO bed room house
with three car garage in

OLD COINS. pocke1 wat·

Ra cine Volunteer F ire
Departm en t sponsors a
shot gun &amp; rifle match
every Sat. night 6 :30p.m .
at the ir building in Bashan .
Fac tory ct'.oke l2 guage
shot guns on ly. Open sights
22 rifl e.

d itioning. call 985·3814 or

FOSTER care in my home,
elderly only , rootn board,

WANTED
TO
BUY :
GOLD .
S I LVE R ,
PLATINUM, STERLING ·
COINS, RING S.JE WELR ·
Y, MISC . ITEMS . AB
SOLUTE
MARKET
PRICE GUARANTED. ED
BURKETT . BARBER
SHOP, MIDDLEPO R T,
OH 10 ~2 · 3476 .

Heat ing Fu el. I &amp; 2 E x·
ceisior Oil
Company .

e

5% on ba lance.
Conventional Loa nss%
down
Call lor 1ntormat1on

Lost : dog w ith black with
brown face , male fox

12·5 unti l Christmas .

Achlr••·--------

Wanted

.

5858 .

Nom•·-------------------

below

a_· n~e~

Pomeroy , OHI o r call 992-

.

ad

check. the proper bo x

-

7761! .

.--- -

-----·

Wr ite your own
and ord er by mai l with this
coupon. Cancel your ad by phone when you get
results . Money not refundable .

c lanlly. edit or reject

-

FAY E'S Gift Shop in Mid·
dleport w ill be open f rom

Pay Cash for
Claulfledi and
Savell· I

Pr int one word In each
space below . Each in ·
ifi al or oroup ot tioures
counts as a word . Count
name and address or

12 .. s)tUa-.fiO. n~ w.-

Furnace repairs, el ectr ica l
work, plumbing , mobile
home or r esidence . . 992

for skinning .

• New Homes· extensive remodeling
• E lectrica I work

no money down
Federal Housinq -

Beautifu l three bedroom
ranch br ick hom e in Baum
Addition, Pom er oy, Ohio .
Gas heaf. ce n.t ra l air con·

~======:::===~====":::;::::;::::;::==·~ basement,

1

4 Old
I Escapade
French coin
6 Where the
5 Pell8ioner
Republican
I Comedian
Party began
Dan
1 Man's.name
I Linda
Lavin role
8 Buddy
12 Be eloquent
9 Pirate's
13 Chopin piece
catcher
.
10 Fifi's "nose"
Ye~terd•y 's Answer
15 "Prima"
donna
14 Auatrian
27lran 's
34 Tharp's
l&amp; Mountain
"capita I "
chemist
concern
in Crete
28 Drury 's
19 Dash
35 Wound up
17 Guided
" Advise and 38 Adjuit,
%8 Carried
18 Subscription
off the palm
as a clock
word
%1 Count noses 30 Low
39 Prior
Z3 .. _ the
22 Rwnanian
voice
prefix
ramparts . II coin
40 Man's
32 Timing
24 Ore deposit U Sole
nickilame
device
%5 Peerless
%5 Residue
41 Ritual words
33 Make
Z3 Terry
:!6 Card game
42 Bos
Sothem novel
29 Besmirch
30 - vivant
31 Religious one
l3 Creator
or Artie
36 Sibilant
37 Swtlamp
result
38 Bat of an eye
43 Decay
44 For the 45 High voice
4&amp; Political

~.

"'liS
{(1,EtJE4;TR
,
1 {·- ·

----------------------Curb Inflation.

ACROSS

OUTZTPHTE

SHOOT,

,

marked . 949·2023 .

by THOMAS ·JOSEPH

PAX

GUN

4.1769 . 992·2272.

and he knew where the king of
s~ades was going to s how up.
His spade queen was gomg to
keep and he co uld not afford

~"IW'Dt~

1o

donated to the Boy Scout
Troop 249. 12 gauge factory
choke gun onlY!

Mortgage Bankers
992·7544
VA Joans 3%onn5,0DO

Contact Ed Burkel! Barber
Shop, Middleport.

formalities In bids.

· were using Journalist leads

In the mid 1960s, a group of
experts
formulated
a
"system " of opening leads
they called Journalist.
Althou~h some of these, such
as lead1ng the lower of touch·

THE W!!k ' Superdome ' t878
Stara: Da'lid Jan11en.Oonna MUla.

12:30

For fu nther information

1116, 13, 2tc

e

992·2571.

I PAY h ig hes t prii:es
possibl e for 9old and Silver
co insj rings, jewelry, etc.

RACINE

·l,!:::========;-~=~=======~j;:========~
ALL STEEL
CUNNINGHAM
ROUSH
farm IJuildinp
CONSTRUCTION
&amp; ASSOC.
)izes

Tra iler lot for sa le, $5,000.
Modular hom e lot on Route
7, · three bedroom fa rm·
house located on Route 7.

~n_n~u!'c~~~n~s

Corn
Hollow MATCH
in Rull~nd.
al
SHOOTING
Every
Sunday
startj
ng
at
noon,
Proceeds b~lng

Fred Hottman,

high~r

.

PUBLIC NOTICE
BIds will be received un ·
Iii Jan. 22. 1981 at 3 P .M. at
lne Mayor's ofllce, 237
Race St., Middleport, Ohio
tor the following Item:
I billing machine for . the
Wllt&amp;r and sewage depart ·
ment .

BRIDGE
Jack denies

l

- -- - - - - - - - -

oflice all -614-99?·5571 . ·

FAITHTHATUVI!S
NBA BASKETBALL Atlanta

ATJENTIOI

'

contact the 'Jillage water

':'~.
• BULLSEYE

bath, 2 mobile homes;
acres; 6 3rooms
ba sement,
Mason,
bedroom
never
lived in , 2 bedroom, rented
2 acres. John Sheets, 3117
m i l~s south of MiddleRPrt,
Rl . l.

GET

relect any or all !&gt;Ids sub ·
milled.
(1)4,6,9

Jumbles
: ELUDE. GIVEN
· MODEST . IMPUGN
·
.
.

Hawke va PhOenhc Sun1

M15S IC.IC€ROOWf.l ..

10 ROOM brick, J bathsj Fl-4

panv reserves tl'le right to

~ ~ 'J&gt;~b}l~ ~o!·~· ~ ~ ~

Business Services

tar~a~e __

acre : 6 rooms, 2 baths, 11/:l

the rlghllo bid at this sale
and to wilhdraw the abov~
vehicle P!'lor to the sale,
Further, The Farm&amp;rs
Ban~- and Savl"!!s com ·

I (J
Answer here: TH~{ IXXJ[IIII)
'
tTENSOL

H:o~ ~s

31

......
..

-----------------;...

---- -----------

PUBLIC NOTICI!i
Notice Is hereby given
thai on Saturday, January
lOth, 1981, at 10 :00 A.M. a
public sale will be held at
lOS
Union Avenue ,
Pomeroy, 'Ohio, to sell for
c ash the follow i ng •
collaleral, lo·wll :
1973 Ford Plekup Serial
No. F10ALR869'14
The Farmers Bank and

Savings
Company .
Pomeroy.J . O~io, reserves

P.1i.OO..J.d:

l 1&lt;/.:D\).J

The Daily Sentinei-Page-l

- --'
, _;o 3Ui11Estate~ "'"

·-· ------··

8:00 ~. ClJ. CJJ (ID)(JI). • NEWS
BACKYARD
·
CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
ABCNI!WS
PROGRAM UNANNOUNCED
OVI!R EASY Gueot: Actor Wit·

~

I&lt;

Ohio

~

I!YENING

RANCH .. .

Pomerov~Middleport,

· -Piib'lic N"oiico ·

JAN. 8, 11181

JbLIE BLAIR
ACCOMPANIES
EASY BACK TO
THE D- &amp;AR

6, 1981

Small investment, large, returns, Sentinel Want Ads

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
onelener to each square, 10 form
four ord1nary words.

VIeWing

CAPTAIN EASY

Januar

56

Pets tor Sale

PUR EBRE D
E n g li s h
Shepherd pupp ies. Stock
and wat ch dogs. Phon e 141 ·

2161.

..
I

t

I

�,

Oh'

January 6, 1981

~~~~e~B~!T~h!e1D~a~i~IYWS~e~n~t~in~e~I~------------------------------------·1P~o~m~er~o~y~~~~i~df~~~e~p~o~rt~,~~~~o------------------------~------------~------------~~~~~~

Wehnmg ••.

Area deaths
' Marjorie Lewis .
Mrs. William (Marjorie) Lewis,
55, rl 670 High Road, North
Pickerington, Ohio died Thursday in
a Pickerington Hospital following a
short illness.
Mrs. Lewis was born on June 9,
1925. She was employed by Western
Electric for 18 years.
She is survived by her husband,
William Lewis, formerly of
SO~thside, W. Va., one son, William
Lewis, Jr., and daughter, Mrs.
Melody Wyckoff and four grandchildren.
Funeral services were held on
Monday at Spence Funeral Home,
canal Winchester with the Rev.
George Allton officiating. Burial
was in Violet Cemetery.
Area relatives calling at the
funeral home were Mrs. Catherina
Smith Landon, Mason, Mrs. Alva
(Velma) Luckeydoo, Letart; W. Va .,
and Nelson Reynolds, Long Bottom.

Cynthia C. Gohring
Cynthia Cathrene Gohring, Park
St., Middleport, died Sunday
evening at Veterans Memorial
Hospital following an extended
illness.
Mrs. Gohring was born in Mason
County, a daughter of the late
Alexander and Lavernia Jividen
Boles. She was a member of the Middlep&lt;irt Church of Christ
Besides her parents, she was
preceded in de~th by her husband,
Harry, and three sisters.
Surviving are five sons, Harry A.
Bailey, James Bailey, Paul Bailey,
all of Columbus; Richard Bailey and
Robert Bailey, both of Akron; a
daughter, Lavernia Mae Romine,
Columbus; a brother, Earl Boles of
Cincinnati; two sisters, Mary West,
canal Winchester, and Kathrene

(Continued from page 1)
made. He also commented that
possibly channel four · will be .
Reese, Bayesville ; 14 grand·
utilized.
children, and 10 greatHe asked that persons having
grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held at 1 problems please call the number
listed in the telephone dirJ)Ctory. He
p.m. Wednesday at the RawlingsCoats-Blower Funeral Home with also added that they have 24 hout anMr. Robert Melton officiating. swering service available.
Paul Gerard, on behalf of the ·
Burial will be in the AddisonReynolds Cemetery. Friends may Meigs County Jaycees, met with
call at the funeral home from 7 to 9 council in regard to plans they have
made for the annual Big Bend
this evening.
Regatta that will.be held June 25, 26 ,
Tl , and28.
Howard G. Welch
Gerard asked permission for the
Howard G. Welch, 94, Lancaster, Jaycees to sponsor the event and to
formerly of the Albany area, died stage the carnival on the upper
Saturday night at the Fairfield . parking lot. Council agreed as long
Hospital in Lancaster.
·as there was no damage to the lot.
Mr. Welch was born at SnowVille,
·Gerard said the Jaycees have
a son of the late Sryon and Elizabeth proposed to hold the annual parade
Brickles Welch. He was a former in Pomeroy . only. The parade has
member of the Redman Lodge.
always marched from Middleport fo
Besides his parents, he was Pomeroy.
preceded in death by two wives,
Gerard said t~e long walk is to difMildred Dean Welch and Ethel Hud- ficult for marching grou11.s not to
nall Welch, two sons, Clement and mention the hardship it tylaces on
Charles, and 11 brothers and sisters.
cars and trucks.
Surviving are two daughters, Mrs.
He observed that tht. ;.arade will
Paul (Ella) Schneider, Lancaster, form behind the former junior high
and Mrs. Charles (Ella) Gilkey,
buildi•,· · Jnd that cars also may be
Grove City ; a step-son, Albert Price
parked-behind the former school.
of Chicago; a sister, Mrs. Earold
Gerard aLso asked pennission to
Dean, Pagetowv; three granqplace permanent signs at each enchildren, seven great-grandchildren
trance of the village advertising the
and one great-great-grandson.
Regatta. This too was approved.
Funeral services will be held at 2 Gerard will meet again with council
p.m. Wednesday at the Bigonyin February.
Jordan Funeral Home in Albany
Mayor AJldrews read the report of
with the Rev. Ray Price officiating.
acting Police Chief Harry Lyons
Burial will be in the Wells Cemetery.
which showed the department made
Friends may call at the funeral
41 arrests, issued 990 parking
home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
tickets, collected $1,723.50 from the
Tuesday.
'
parking meters and drove 4,831
miles.
THURSDAY SESSION

Preceptor Beta Beta Sorority will
meet Thursday, Jan. 8, at 7:45p.m.
at the Diamond Savings and Loan,
former Athens County Savings and
Loan.

happenings.~.

Meigs County
'

Given sentence
Robert L. Nelson was sentenced to
a term of not less than six months
nor more than five years when he
appeared before Judge John C.
'Bacon, in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court, Monday on a bill of information.
Nelson along with Burl Coleman,
Billy Ray Nelson and Gary Jordan,
all charged with breaking and entering of the Richard Huffman
residence, Portland, on Saturday,
Jan. 3, appeared before Judge
Bacon one bills of information.
Nelson, Coleman and Jordan were
released on
$1,000 personal
recognizance bonds until a presentence investigation report is completed.
Robert L. Nelson, who was sentenced had a prior theft conviction.
· Breaking and entering is a felony ci
the fourth degree with a possible
penalty of not less than six months
nor more than five years in prison
and a fine of up to $2,500.

.

OPENJAN.U

Real estate tax books in Meigs
County will open on Jan. 12 and.close
on Feb. 13, Meigs County Treasurer
George Collins announced today.
ASK TOWED
A marri~ge license was iSsued to
Terry Lee Brewer, 34, Portland, .and
Ressie Annette Shaffer, 20, Racine.

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted--Shirley
Johnson,
Racine; Gertrude Young, Mason;
Mary Diehl, Rutland; Leona Hubbard, Syracuse; Bernard Ralrden, .
Hartford;.Vada Caldwell, Pomeroy;
Grace Gardner, Rutland.
Discharged-Franklin Molden,
Joan Hetzer, Helen Lochary, carne
Metheny, Bernice Brown.

•

r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,

ELBE.RFELDS
SALE
BLANKETS
entire stock included.
Full • Twin and Queen bed

sizes. Solids ~ Pafferns. Ex·
cellentquality.

SALE PRICES

Emergency squad runs

Local Units made three runs on
Monday, the Meigs Emergency
Medical Service reports. At 1:10 I ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!
·p.m., the Pomeroy Squad took Tarn- 1my Cline, Welshtown Hill, to Holzer
Medical Center. At 10:31 a.m., the
Pomeroy Unit took Mary Diehl of
Harrisonville to Veterans Memorial
and at 7:03 p.m., the Rutland Unit
took Grace Gardner, Main St.
Rutland, to Veterans Memorial.

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

MOUTHWASH

4JC

u ••.

TRAC II
RAZOI

3: 51

69C

.... $J .ot

IIAIITSIU

- BABY

OXYDOL
111DIIIIf

SHAJA!tOO

5 89

Savings
..
DSAVINGS.

1

u ••.

Reo . 89'

PEAIUT
BIUlTLE

!)hAnk..

••• New Services.
•

Rf9 . $1.12UGU

81 SPAIH...
EI..
II

ii

SAIICE

. ..69C · . ~~~.7te
Reg . Sl .SO

SHANK
AFTII SHAVE IALM

$239
4-ot.

-.... '

I

'

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

UNBELIEVABLE PRICES!

Sfl VING~· A.R E GREAT
ON EVERYDAY NEEDS!

Aog . 54.91

SHOWER
CADDY

• I

$359

'

-·

Reg U 39

------------------------------------------------------------

""~~ . ... Gil lim

""" " .. ,.IISIII'S

New

'

CEPACOL

. .AY
STARCH

Athens
is now

------------------------

Rev . SU14

Reg . $1 .09

'

FRUTH'S
--------------

SEEKS DIVORCE

In Meigs County Common Pleas
Court Penni Clark, Pomeroy filed
,suit for divorce against Mark Allan
' MEETS WEDNESDAY
Clark, Pomeroy.
The Board of Trustees of the
Letta A. Spencer, was appointed
Meigs Musewn will meet Wed- court reporter for Common Pleas
nesday at 7 p.m. at the musewn.
Court of Meigs County.

YTEI
SIIIARESI
TAllO$ .-L----..::IAMPOIIS
..wlMPIOVID
"tfl~"-· ·· · $189
.....$159
DIODOIAW1'

COUPON PRICES
IN EFFECT
JAN. 8th '11181
THRU
JAN. 18th 11181
OR UNTIL
ON HAND QUANTITIES
ARE SOLD

SAVE
UP TO

ALL STORES
OPEN
7 DAYS
A WEEK
FOR YOUR
SHOPPING
CONVENIENCE
FREE
PARKING!

, 40' 1

!~~

Pay-by-Phone/NOll

.

and
card.
No mi mum balance.
No service charges.

COOL MIST
VAPORIZERS
10 IO H H r

( ,lp.!fl l ~

Wc q n • ''

.... '17"

.

Reo 69
LUOIM'SMftmiCH.

co•H

IUI'tl

... .

Reg. $2.99
OPIJI Ml&amp;ml

'

CHIMNEY
..
~ ...
I ·•''. . . CLEANER
1"

ol

~

.sp

:•

12 Hr. Clpacily

,.,, '12"
Aeg $1 19

M
\ 1

PLAsnc
PAIL

79C

Reg . 10'

G

SUMMERS
EYE

UJ

~~ li
' ,· 1 ~

.....
....

OISI'OIUU DOUCII

Ot'Nerkl

4,S·ol.

Reg Sl 59

SUPER MAll
Mil
ASSOITED SAlTED

.

Reg . S1.25

CLAIROL
~ .CLAIRMIST

r~S'"

ri:i )BISCUITS .~ .:~~.:·-,·-,-0
{,~_.

.

1.1·0&amp; .

99°

h·~ .

•·•··

ICE
REM

DIAMOND S't.!INGS
AND LOAN CONPANV

89~

HUGGIES

Rea. 'J.9 1

NOW

DIAPERS

Formerly Athens County Savings and Loan

216 W. Main St.
Pomeroy, OH.

I

For your convenience we will have
extended hours during the month of. January.

•

Phone 992-6655

MON. THRU FRI.: 8 A.M. to 8 P.M.
SATURDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.

.

•

FRUTH
PHARMACY

71' 1

'

2501 Jack son Ave.
Poi nt Pleasant • .W. Va.

'

364 Jackson Pike

Gallipolis,

Ohio

. 101 Sixth Ave
Huntington, W. Va .

120 W. Second St.
Wellston, Ohio

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="106">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2672">
                <text>01. January</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="45138">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="45137">
              <text>January 6, 1981</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="951">
      <name>boles</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="7435">
      <name>gohring</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="54">
      <name>lewis</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1681">
      <name>welch</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
