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                  <text>!''¥'~ 12

Pomeroy

The Daily Sentinel

•

Middleport, Ohio

January 7; 1981

..·.·

'\

Reagan· more optimistic than advisors
may not be able to keep his campaign promise to balance the federal
budget by 1983. It might be possible
a year later, he said.
The incoming president, asked
about Regan's .assessment, told
reporters as he left a diniter Tuesday
night, " Maybe we can surprise him.
We're sure going to try."
Regan said the budget could be
Ql!lanced Jiefore 1984 only if
Congress made " more serious cuts"
in the budget. " It's going to take a
lot of courage," he said.
Republican sources said Reagan's
economic advisers planned to
present the president-elect with a
partial Ust of possible pl'Qgram cuts
and a warning that even deeper-

majority-party power by the
WASHINGTON
(AP)
Reagan-led conservative tide last
President-elect Ronald Reagan,
November.
.
starting work in earnest with his top
Edwin·
Meese
Ill,
who will be a
advisers on a program to steady the
COI!flSelor
to Reagan,
Cabinet-level
sputtering economy, sounds more
said
today's
economic
session
was
optimistic than his candidate to head
·
the
first
of
seven
or
eight
meetings
the Treasury Depariment about
scheduled for Reagan's top staff betchances to balance the federal
. ween now and the inauguration Jan.
budget by 1983.
20.
Reagan planned to meet with his
" We' re going to cover the whole
top economic advisers today to
works," Meese said.
begin looking for 'places to cut
Treasury Secretary-designate
federal spending and to review t)le
Donald T. Regan said Tuesday the
economy in general.
economic outlook for 1981' "is not
The Republican president-elect
bright. "
.
also was resuming his courtship
Testifying at a Senate Finance
with Congress at a Capitol Hill luncheon reserved mostl y for · Committee hearing on his
nomination, Regan aiso said Reagan
Democratic stnators swept from

Resume work .on death penalty

SHRINE PRESIDENT - Walter M. Grueser, Pomeroy, has been
named 1981 president of the Twin City Shrine Club in Meigs County.

Gallia board.

• •

been fluctuating within the past
year, and with an estimated bond
issue life of 22 years, the bonds
would probably sell at 8 or 8.5 percent interest, although the rate could
be as high as 10 percent.
" It's sort of anyone's guess,"
Niehoff said. " It's unrealistic and
unfair for the school district to
assume a 10 percent interest rate.' '
Supt. Gary Toothaker recommended the board accept the most
conservative interest rate at 8.5 percent, placing the millage at over
three mills.
J .E. (Dick ) Cremeens, board
president. noted the issue would be
more attractive to voters if it were
possibly , below three mills, and
Niehoff granted the possibility the
rate could drop between now and
April.
" This is the package we want,"
board member Fred Deei said. " If it
comes out to 3.4 or 3.5 mills, it means
we have to work ail the harder to sell
it to the voters. I feel we don't have
much choice on it. 1 ' •

(Continued from page 1 l
members the language used on the
ballot must conform with their cam·
paign descriptions of what the issue
promises voters. Otherwise, he warnl!d, questions · from the state
auditor's office might arise.
Hiram Van Buren, of the Columbus architectural firm of Van Buren
and Firestone, reviewed the cost
estimates on the buildings with the
board.
The Southwestern project, which
would replace facilities at Cadmus
and Centerville, is estimated at
$2,749,000; Vinton . Elementary,
$2,766,000; Bidwell-Porter Elemen,
tary, $2,973,000; Hannan Trace
Elementary, $2,872,000; Addaville
Elementary, $268,000 ; total improvements at Addaville and
Cheshire-Kyger
Elementary,
$953,000; and professional costs and
contingency, $180,000. The total is
set at $12,581,000.
Niehoff explained to the board interest rates in the bond market have

Meigs County happenings ••
EMERGENCY RUNS
The Rutland Emergency Unit answered two calls on Tuesday. The
unit took James Daye from his home
\ on Point Rock Road to Holzer
Medical Center and Riley Me. Clelland from his home to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
POSTPONED
The baton classes of Mrs. Judy
Riggs scheduled tonight at Royal
Oak Park have been postponed.

Mayor's Court
Four defendants were lined and a
fifth forfeited bond in the court of
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
Tuesday night. .
Fined $225 and costs each and
given three day jail sentences on
charges of driving while intoxicated
were Von S. Stewart, New Haven,
and Mickey Oiler, Pomeroy. Oiler
was also fined $50 and costs for
driving while under suspension and
$200 and costs, fleeing a police of·
ficer . Others fined were Steven
Kocher, Route 1, Middleport, $IOO
and costs, disorderly manner and
$100 and costs, possession of
marijuana, and Blaine Qualls, Route
1, Middleport, $100 and costs,
leaving the scene of an accident, and
$100 and costs, operating_ a motor
vehicle without regard for safety.
reckless operation charge was DanForfeiting
$150 bond posted
ny HiU, Forta Lauderdale,
Fla. on a
Six defendants forfeited bonds',
five others were fined and two others
were placed on probation in the
court of Pomeroy Mayor Clarence
Andrews Tuesday night.
Forfeiting bonds were John
Tiemeyer, Athens, expired plates,
$50; Steven Heiwick, Parkersburg,
$36, speeding; Christopher Circle,
Racine, $30, speeding; Jeffrey
Ohlinger, Pomeroy, $350, driving
while intoxicated; Mickey Smith,
·· Rio Grande, $30, speeding, Marion
Runyon, Athens, $30, failure to yield
the right of way.
Fined were Raymond .Pullins, Jr.,
Baltimore, $350 and costs and three
days in jail, driving while in·
toxicated; Jeffrey Wickersham,
Racine, $30 and co8ts, speeding;
Ricky Pridemore, Rutland, $50 and
costs, driving while under suspension, and $350 and costs, driving
while Intoxicated ; Ricky Clark,
Pomeroy, .~ and costs, driving
while under suspension; Rhonda
WilBon, Middleport, $200 and costs,
aasult; Randy Randolph, Pomeroy,
assault, six months probation;
Ricky' Smith, Middleport, menacing
threats, six months probation.

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted--Charles Cockcroft,
Mason ; Sally Litchfield, New
Haven ; Ian Massar, Reedsville;
Mary Hendricks, Syracuse; Grover
Klein, Pomeroy ; Alvin Barnett,
Po m e r oy; Kenneth Pay.n e,
Pomeroy; James Meadows, Portland ; Riley McClelland, Rutland;
Luanne Friend. Reedsville; Hazel
Ferrell, Middleport.
Discharged--Leona Hubba rd,
Wilbur Hanning, Waiter Haggy,
Sally Litchfield, Charles Cock croft.

thinks the biU Is needed .io combat
increasing crime such as service
station and convenience store rob- .
beries where slayings occur.
"This is an issue that is very important and very vital to the people
of thisstate," he said.
One major amendment inserted
by the Hamilton County attorney
would make the death penalty applicable in so-called felony murders,
or those .which occur in the commission of another crime, such as
robbery or rape.
His bill features a lw.,.trial
procedure to answer concerns of
those who feel the law must provide
defendants with due process - a
clear requirement of the Supreme
Court.
At the first trial, a judge and
missing firefighters were not immediately released. The two rescued
firefighters were identified as John
Hullum and Louis Guarante.
Hullum's sister was at the scene
when he was rescued. When she saw
her brother, Marsha Sealey cried
repeatedly ~ " That's my brother. Oh,
thank God."

thwarted since that time, in part due
to opposition from Democratic
senators on philosophical grounds.
Republicans took 111-15 control of
the Senate in the Nov. 4 elections,
and P!eifer announced the start &lt;i
hearings this week on the first day of
the 1981 session. The House approved a bill at the last session, and
presumably stands ready . to act
again when the bill gets through the
Senate.
Sen. Richard H. Finan, R·
Cincinnati, is chief sponsor of the

new

measure, which

consists

basically of the old House version,
plus some strengthening amendments he tried to insert last year in
the Senate.
Finan told the committee he

Ir-----------------:...------.1
A rea d ea th s
Mary &amp;ott Diehl ·

Mary Rose Genheimer

Mary Scott Diehl, 103, Harrisonville, probably Meigs County's
oldest resident, died Tuesday
evening at Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Mrs. Diehl was a daughter of the
late Thomas.and Alwil~a Woodyard
Scott. She was also preceded in
death by her husband, Rush; a
brother, John Scott, and three
sisters, Jennie Gorsuch, Lillian
Jewell and Clara Carl.
Surviving are two daughters, Mrs.
Eugene (Stella ) Atkins, Rutland,
and Miss Ruby Diehl, Rutland ; a
foster son and daughter-in-law,
Felix and Mildred Alkire, Pomeroy ;
grandchildren, Gordon and Mary
Atkins, Mrs. David (Gloria) Riggs,
Roger and Charledene Atkins,. Mrs.
Ronnie (Marilyn ) Wilt, Mrs. Don
(Shirley) Stanley, fourteen greatgrandchildren and several nieces
and nephews.
Mrs. Diehl was a member of the
Zion Church of Christ and was a 80
year member of the Harrisonville
Order of Eastern Star.
Funeral services will be held at
I: 30 p.m. Friday at the Ewing
Funeral·Home with the Rev. Robert
Purtell and the Rev. Ernest
Strickland offidiating, Burial will be
in the Wells Cemetery. Friends may
call at the funeral home anytime after 7 this evening. Eastern Star rites
will be held at 7:30 this evening.

Mrs. Mary Rose Genheimer, 80,
died Tuesday evening at her home in
Chester.
Mrs. Genheimer was a daughter of
the late Lewis and Abbie Moore
Rose. She was also preceded in
death by six brothers, Ernest,
Harlowe, Harry, Virgil, Lawrenc ce
and Norman Rose ; a daughter,
Hilda Marie Koblentl and a son-inlaw, Earl Dean.

ASK TOWED
Marriage licenses were issued to
Henry Junior Wer.ry, 62. Pomeroy,
and Jaret Martin Williams, 55,
Pomeroy ; Walter Edward Morrison.
46, Rt. I, Racine, and Martha Ann
Clark, 38, Middleport; Jeffrey [)on ...---,..---Friend. 25, Rt. I, Long Bottom , and
Dawn Rochelle Roush,IB, Letart, W.
Va.
MEETING CALLED OFF

.

.

Yol.11, No. 117

Copyrighted \911

'1

ASK TOWED
A marriage license was issued to
James Mason Smith, 21, Rt. I,
Racine, and Diana LaVonne Neece,
22, Rt. 4, Pomeroy.

Surviving are her husband,
George C. Genheimer, a daughter,
Mrs. Earl (Betty Lou) Dean, Route
3, Pomeroy ; five grandchildren,
Richard Koblentz, Mrs . Gary
(Patricia) Wolfe, Mrs. Dale (Jen·
nifer) Machir, Mrs. Tenry (Melanie )
Stethem, and Mrs. Johnny (Denise)
Payne ; four sisters-in-law. Mll'e
RoSe, Evelyn Rose, May Holter, and
Verna Rose, nine g reatgrandchildren and several nieces
and nephews .
Funeral services will be held at 2 ,
p.m . Thursday at the Ewing Funeral
Home with the Rev. Richard
Thomas and the Rev. Carl Hicks officiating. Burial will be in the
Chester Cemetery. Friends.may caU
at the funeral home anytime.

Create a gift. Write your own
special something on a Speidet.
ld~ntif i cation Brace let yoor
names, initials, a message that
only you could say to only him .
Over 40 stvtes for men and
women . In yellow, white or
popular dual tone. From $7 .95.
Let Speidel sav it for you-in a
way
you ' ll both al ways
rem em ber .

Teachers f'll:ay appeal d_ecision
HAMILTON, Ohio - The Hamilton Classroom Teachers Association
says it may appeal a decision in which 39 strikers were fined for contempt of court and given an option of writing compositions in lieu of
half the money.
James Kirkland, attorney for the teachers, said they could appeal or
take up a collection from the 466-member union to pay the fines, which
total '14,958. None were sentenced to jail.
Judge John R. Moser of Butler County Common Pleas Court convicted 39 strikers of violating his back-to-work order issued during the
five-week walkout that ended in a contract agreement during the
Christmas holidays.

~· ~
'O'Jet~elers

111 E. ·MIIn, Pomeroy

Dropping criminal investigation
,,

WASIUNO:TON - The government i! dropping Its criminal investigation of a trip by Ramsey Clark and nine other Americans to
Iran but no decision has been made on whether to seek criminal
penalties, says Attorney General Benjamin R Civiletti.
The trip by Clark and the others last spring went against a travel
ban issued by President carter after American diplomats in Iran were
taken hostage.
·
At the time of the trip, Clark, a former attorney general, said he
went to try to speed release of the hostages. In Iran, the 10 visitors par·
tlclpated In an international conference on alleged U.S, crimes against
the Iranian people under the regime of the late shah.

French City

SMOKED'CALLA HAMS •••••••• ~~~.9~
French City Taster's

CASING BOLOGNA••••••• 2

1.99

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SLICED BACON ••••••••••••••••~~-. $1.49
Homemade

HAM SALAD •••••••••••••••••••• ~~~ 51.39
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: ~~~::._:~-~ ~
~~~ ~fi}l~:l

" ' " .,. . . .. •.•

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•'

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.. '

Weather
Partly cloudy tonight. Lows in the mid-teens. Mostly cloudy Frictay.
Highs ~. Chance of snow 20 percent tonight and Friday. Winds
southwes,t erly 1().15 mph tonight.

Ezteaded Oblo Fortc1st- Saturday through Monday :FairSaturday aod Sunday and a chance of snow Monday. Gradually wanning
through the period. Highs lG-20 Saturday and in tbe l)lid-20s to the mid30s by Monday. Lows zero to 10 above Saturday and in the teens by '
M~

.

.

• ~·

DISCUSSES DERAIU'tiENT - George Plants; left, chief deputy

of tbe Muon County sheriff's department, aad Lou Della Mea, right,
coaaervallon officer for tbe West Vlrglnla Department of Natural

Resourees, dlllcusl plaos for possible evacuation procedures following
a train deraill!lent this moroiDg near the Panasote Plan~ north of
Point Pleasant. Homes In the Immediate area and Point Pleasant
Junior High School were evacuated.

Gallia officials ·put on alert

Derailment orces
•
evacuatzon o homes
The early morning derailment of a
train carrying toxic chemicals in
Mason County led to the evacuation
of homes and the closure of a school
located near the accident ; and, put
Gallia County officiais on alert as
potentially hazardous gas drifted
toward the Gavin and Kyger Creek
Power Plants.
At 6:48 a .m ., a Chessie System
train derailed, overturning four

tanker cars near the Panasote Plant
in West Virginia, allowing the vinyl
chloride gas carried In at least one of
the cars to escape. The train was
reportedly enroute to Huntington
southbound from Parkersburg.
Panasote officials, although
refusing to coinment extensively on
the incident, denied the train was in
anyway connected with their
facility.
A Panasote spokesman told
.

West Virginia reporters the train
had not been scheduled to stop at
their plant.
Officials in Mason County im·
mediately evaucated · an area en·
compassing a half-mile zone around
the accident site. Included in the
evacuation area was the Pt.
Pleasant Junior ll.S. and Lock Lane,
a housing development located
behind the Panasote plant.

base of the neck, apparently at
close range with a small calibre
weapon.
Four Ripley men , including
Danny Randolph, Paul Ray Steele,
Roy Steele, and James Steele, were
indicted with the Nov. 20 death of
David Phillip Cave, 31, London,
Ohio. All four were also indicted
with the malicious wounding of
Walter M. Denecca Jr. , Letart.
The Cave death and Denecca
wounding resulted from ' a fight,
outomoblle accident and high speed
chase on Rt. 2, near Mt. Alto on
Nov. 20.

D!!necca was reportedly stabbed
in a fight between seven persons in ,
two cars at the 87 Drive Inn on Rt.
87. Denecca drove towards P9int
Plersant with tbe other car in
pursuit. Denecca allegedly could
drive no longer and Cave took his
place, and according to pollee
reports was run off the road by a
veillcle driven by Ran·dolph. Cave
wa$ crltlcaUy ibjured and died later
at Cabell-Huntington Hospital.
Ricky Allen Thomas was indicted
for armed robbery and malicious
assault in an October, 1980 incident.
He allegedly stole $18 from Henry

Other residents, including those of
a trailer court, were advised to be
prepared to move if the situation so
demanded.
Water wells serving Pl. Pleasant,
located near the derailment, were
shut~own although there was no immediate fear that the gas could filter
into the city's water supply.
At 10:30 a.m., the Pl. Pleasant
(Continue(on page 8)

Grand. jury returns five murder indictments
A Mason County grand jury has
returned murder indictments against five Individuals.
Dexter Mayes, Chesapeake, was
indicted for murder in the October IS
slaying of John D. WIIIIIllley, Huntington, a former resident of Point
Pleasant.
Wamsley was found by a delivery
man near the old Mal Moore Farm
off W.Va. Rt. 2, below Crab Creek at
9:30a.m. on Wednesday, Oct. 15. An
autopsy report stated I'(iunsley had
been shot four times, three times in
the back of the ~ead and once in the

McDaniel and struck him with a
tire Iron.
A malicious wounding indictment
was filed against Roger Dale
Martin in the Aug. 1980 shooting and
wounding of Frankie Marlin.
other Indictments Included ones
against Frederick Nibert for the
Sept. 1980 brellking and entering of
the NCO Club at the National Guard
Armory with the intent to commit
larceny ; . and Deanna Louise
Stewart for false pretenses and .
grand larceny In a MarCh 1980 in·
cident concerning the lease of a
vehicle from Two Rivers Ford.

PRODUCE

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10 lb. Idaho Baking

·

MARGARINE.~~~:.

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POTATOES .....~~.~ .'2.59
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GRAPEFRUIT. .~-~?..'1.29

1 lb. Kraft

CHEESE
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-~ - '

I

'
JACKSON, Ohio - A 62-yeaMlld woman who spent several months
living in a car with about 20 dogs while waiting for her utilities to be
turned back on has moved in with a n~ighbor.
.
· Lela Sheward,. who moved out of her home last summer after her
utlllties were cut off, previously had turned down offers of finding
another place to stay.
While living in the car, she had been protected from the cold by war·
mth from the dogs. She had refused to part with the animals.
Jac~on Count~ Sheriff Charles Hunter said the woman rejected efforts to move her to a nursing home.

Effective thru Saturday, January 10th

Velveeta

.

Woman moves in with neighbor

Phone 742-2100

1 lb. Kraft Parkay

The Meigs County Pioneer and
Historical Society Trustees meeting
scheduled for this evening has been
postponed until Sunday at 2 p.m. at
the Museum.
EARLY DISMISSAL
Schools of the Meigs Local and
Eastern Local Districts dismissed
several hours early Tuesday as snow
fell in the county and predictions
were for more snow along with icy

15 Cents

flee.

STORE

Quarters

pages

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

COLUMBUS, Ohio - Ohio's capital city has recorded its second and
third bank robberies of 1981, both occurring at offices operated by
Bank One of Co!Uil)bus.
The fint holdup took place at about 8:30a.m. Wednesday at a downtown office, where a gurunan made off with an undetermined amount .
of money.
An hour later, a man armed with two han&lt;!guns walked into a West
Side branch and ordered employees to fill a plastic garbage bag with
money. He then abducted the manager, Steve SeUers.
Sellers, who was not hal'1!led, said he drove the car to a housing
project leas than a half mile away. The gunman then jumped out and
racl!d thi-ough the area.
.
The cl\y'~ first bank robbery of 1981 also occurred at a Bank One of-

c:~

RUTLAND
DEPARTMENT

- - - - - - - - - - --------:-i

•

u,

,...-------------4------------

Mrs. Genheimer was a former
school teacher and a member of the
Chester United Methodist Church.
She was a seventh degree grange
member.

1 section, 12

. Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio Thursday, January 8, 1981

Robbers hit two Columbus banks

If you've gall he words
· to say, let Spe1del
say t~em for you.

/

COLUMBUS, Ohio (APJ - A
recent nationwide increase in
killings, including that of former
Beatie John Lennon, may have
given more impetus to a bill
restoring Ohio's death penalty.
"
The Senate Judiciary Committee
started hearings on it Tuesday, and
Chairman Paul P!eifer, R-Bucyrus,
alluded to the spate of murders
across the country.
. " The considerable amount of
publicity on this increase in kiliings
demonstrates that our decision to
give this bill top priority was a
correct one," Pf'eifet said.
Ohio's old capital punishment law
was declared unconstitutional by the
U.S. Supreme Court in 1978, and efforts to enact a new one have been

and pOlitically tougher - reductions ·
than originally considered may be
needed to balance the budget by
1983.
One source said the Ust, which will
be revi.sed ·a s pOlltical reperc118Sions
are taken into account, includes virtuallY every area of federal spending except defense.
An analysis prepared by the
Senate
Budget
Committee's
Republican staff says Reagan's
proposed income tax cuts - totaling
· 30 percent over three years - and
his pledge to increase defenae .spending would boost budget deficits to
between $60 billion and '100 billion in
the next two fiscal years.

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••

'

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---~-

TAKES TO TilE STREETS- Ray Tryalltook his loboiJian to the
tralflc-bare 11ree11 of Pomeroy Friday mornlag.

·•'

TRIES Out SKIS - Mel11sa Tyree was delighted with the lint
real enowfall of wlnler 111111 school dlsmislllll. Sbe took the mornl113 to
1ry out ber Cbrislmas ebOe lkii dowit iiie aidewilkolCoui1Sti'eeT iilPomeroy.
'
\

-~'SIIOVEIJNG SNOW ~ James Stewart wae- one- of many -mer--

chants out sbovellng snow from the sidewalks,

ol . -

·- ·---- ---&lt;----

'',,

�'

''

'

Commentary

.,'

January 8, 1981
The Daily sentinel

2·· .

January 8, 1981

Tile Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Lock, stock and
bookbinder

~·

Lock, stock and bookbinder, the Senate is ln Republican custody for two
years and quite probably longer.
Last time that happened, Jimmy Carter was in the Navy, Ronald
Reagan was in the movies, and Harry S. Truman wa~ moving out of the .
White House.
First, Truman sent a final State of the Union message to Congress, and
in it confinned that the United States had indeed developed the hydrogen
bomb.
Whim that 83rd Congress convened, 28 years ago, Republicans had
tenuous control of both Senate and House. They gained it in Dwight D.
Eisenhower's"presidentiallandslide, and lost it two years later.
This time, they insist, the pattern will be different. "The momentum is
ours," says Bill Brock, the outgoing Republican national chainnan.
AJ; the new Senate held its ceremonial opening session on Monday ,
Democratic leader Robert C. Byrd, the majority boss until then, joked
that the Republican side of the aisle look.ed bloated to him.
It would, after years in which the Democratic side was the crowded
one. At one point, the Bemocrats held 68 of the 100 seats and had to
squeeze in extra desks, narrowing the aisles to do it.
They've got plenty of room now, with 47 desks left.
There are 53 Republican senators; there haven't been that many in 50
years.
The duration of the Republican lease certainly will depend on what ha~
pens, in the Reagan administration and at the Capitol. Majority Leader
Howard H. Baker Jr. said Reagan will be .sending Congress his economic
program early next month. That is likely to be the key issue - if
Republicans really can curb inflation and keep the economy perking at
the same time, political rewards surely will follow.
The president's party usually hils trouble in off-year elections, and that
will mak&amp; it difficult for the GOP to carve into the 51-seat margin by
which Democrats control the House.
The Republican numbers are promising on the Senate side. The terms
. of 20 Democrats expire at the end of this Congress, along with that of independent Sen. Harry F. Byrd Jr., who has voted with them on Senate
control since he left the party.
Only 12 Republican seats will be at stake. .
That means that to reclaim the Senate, the Democrats would have to
win 25 of 33 contests in 1982. That would take a reverse landslide, in a time
of conservative revival. It isn't likely.
•
Not untill984 will the Democrats have more Senate seats to gain than to
risk; there will be 19GOP terms expiring then, 14 Democratic.

BEATING 11IE SYSTEM
... ALMOST
On the other hand, don't count the
Soviet citizen out when it comes to
ingenuity in dealing with the
deficiencies of his own system.
Another wire report informs that
an effective way to 'get around
chronic shortages in a household
staple has developed. It somewhat
resembles a capitalist mail-order
business.
Rather than stand in endless lines
at shops - often only to find upon
reaching the head that the supply
has given out - the Soviet consumer
has taken to registering in advance.
A form similar to a postcard is filled
out and when the store receives
fresh supplies, the card is 1)18iled to

•
•
•
•
•

Suits could corrupt census

'

ON ACLEAR I)AY ...
Second Thoughts on. Headlines
Department:
Yamani sees oil'rising to $50.
(From the New__j'ork Times,
reporting the Saudi ,\rabian oil
minister's views on'· whilt the Industrial countries can expect'
following OPEC's latest 10 percent
increase in oil prices. )
So what's the big deal about 20/20
vision when you draw up the eye
chart yourself?

9

Pomcror, Ohio ·
llHft.IIM
DEVOTED T0111E fNTE!U!ST OF mE MEIGS-MASON AREA

....

~

~v

PobiiAer

BOB HOEFLICH

ANIItut PlbUIIter/Ce~troller

'

.

By Robert Walters
(Second of two related columns)
WASHINGTON (NEAl '-- A
federal program with a long and
distinguished tradition of impartiality, integrity and objectivity
is in danger of being corrupted by
the parochial demands of assorted
ethnic groups and local politicians.
The government programis the
decennial census of population. The
1980 enumeration currently is the
target of at least two dozen legal
challenges initiated by ' those who
fea r that the results will deprive
them of future federal benefits.
Even the Census Bureau admits
that the population count produces
imprecise results, but mere mortals
probably can't come much closer to
perfection when attempting to
enumerate more than 200 million
. people who can be · irascible, un·
predictable and uncooperative when
asked personal questions.
But the solution does not lie in
compounding the problems. The adjustments sought by the challengers
are likely to produce additional
short-tenn distortions in the 1980
results and could lead to irrevocable
long·term corruption of the census

system itself.
Most of the complaints are coming
from entirely predictable sources the Eastern and Midwestern cities,
counties and states that suffered
major population losses during the
past decade as their fonner residents migrated to the Sunbelt.
Of the 10 cities that have filed civil
suits disputing census procedures,
only three - Denver, Atlanta and
Miami - are in the South or West.
The others are Philadelphia, New
York , Detroit, Baltimore, Cin·
cinnati, St. Louis and Newark.
In many of those cases and in
other lawsuits, the challengers base
much of theit'case upon allegations
that the Census Bureau failed to
full y count Hispanics, blacks and
members of other minority group.
Some blunt analysis is in order
here : It's no secret that residents of
the nation's racial ghettos hilve been
known to purposely ignore the doorbell if they fear the person seeking
admit\ance is "the man" - an official carrying a judicial su bpoena,
search warrant, overdue bill, court
order or other form of unwelcome
news.

As a result, it's

Gaenl Mllll'lltr

DALE RO'IHGEB, JR.
Newt Editor
A MEMBER of Tile .W..Ialod Pres~ ....... DoUy Pmo A11odotioa .... lile
Ame~Ntwllpiper ~1'1 Alloelltloa.

IEITDII OF OPINION oro wtleomed. They tboald be 1001 IUIIOI wonlo 1.... AU
lttlln are •bJtct 10 tdldq _. ID.IIt be 1lped wldl ..-e, addrot aDd telepbooe
-·NO •lpodlotlm wQI be pobillbetl. Lelton llloold be II 1aoo1 lule, ooldnoola&amp;
. ....., . . ,....Udell.

.

NOW~699

har~

to take
seriously the belated complaints
about "undercounts" of people who
were, literally or figuratively,
hiding under the bed when they had
an opportunity to be included in the
population count.
Even if the Census Bureau at·
tempted to satisfy those demands.
the statistical and demographic
techniques required to make lite
necessary revisions are of
questionable efficacy because they
are at the very frontier of the state of
the ari.
Responding to shaky asSumptions
and speculative estimates by resorting to synthetic adjustments and ar·
tificial revisions will not necessarily
produce more accurate totals.
Indeed, there is a good chance thilt
such an -approach would un·
necesSarily distort the f inal coun~
the Census Bureau notes in offering
two compelling arguments :
- " Regardless of the adjustment
procedure used, there is currently
no adequate methodology for
measuring the quality of the ad·
justed figures ."
" No currently available ad·

juStment procedure will provide
more accurate numbers than the actual counts for all units of government. "
The politica l " ripple effect" also
poses problems." ·-If the Census
Bureau meets the d.emands of
Massachusetts and New York, both
of which have filed civil suits, can
Michigan and New Jersey be left
·behind? If changes are made in the
counts of blacks and Hispanics, how
many other groups will make selfserving demands for their own ad·
justments?
·
Adjustments also will lead to at
least two conflicting sets of "official" population figures. Those different sets of data will contain internal inconsistencies and will' be in· •
compatible with earlier unadjusted
decennial censuses.

pires.

Some of the worst problems con·
cern the teams of experts that form
the backbone of Reaga n's transition
effort. These transition teams- one
of which has been assigned to each
federal department and agency are supposed to perform quick but
in-depth studies of issues and personnel that will provide the new ad·
ministration with enough knowledge
to "hit the ground running" when it
takes office.
,
The mission of the transition
teams is to draw up action plans for
the incoming Reagan officials. 13ut
the comP,Osition of the teams and the
orders that they have received cast
doubt upon how objective their agendas will be.
Transition personnel are not
bound by government conflict-of·
interest information for the benefit
not of the incoming president but of
the employers to whom they will
return alter the transition. This has
done little to foster cooperation bel·
ween the transition teams and the

outgoing Carterites.
For example, a battle between
Assistant Secretary Carol Tucker
Foreman and Reagan's agriculture
team has cast a pall over the Iran·
sition at the Department of
Agriculture.
Among the first documents
requested by that team were option
papers on cases pending before the
department's Food Safety and
Quality Service. The Reagan people
were especially interested in those
concerning department strategy in
upcom ing . litigation over the
labeling of pork products.
II just so hilppens that a prominent
member of the team is Donald van
Houweling, a lobbyist for .the
National Park Producers Council.
Neediess to say, his organization
would very much like to know the
government's strategy in the porklabeling case. So far , Mrs. Foreman
has resisted requests to turn over
the documents.
This is not a lone ellllmple. Similar
confrontations have occurred at
departments and agencies all over
town.
The energy team, for instance, is
filled with employees of energy com·
panles and energy lobbying groups.
Among its first requests was for a
list of potential enforcement cases
under consideration by the Energy
Department.
Several members of the transition
team at the. Food and Drug Ad·
ministration work lor drug companies. They have requested con:

fidential internal documents about
proposed actions against certain
drugs.
Even without these conflicts of interest, however, the transition
teams might be hard pressed to
produce objective reports for the
new administration.
" II is made very clear to you from
the first day that you are being sent
into the agency to find fat, to Find
what is wrong, to recommend cuts,"
says the leader of a transition team
at a small department. " When the
transition people brief you, it is
made clear that they want to hear
everything negative.
"It is assumed that there is
tremendous waste in every depart·

'

By Julian Bond
ATlANTA (NEA )- On the third
Tuesday in January, my children
and their schoolmates will remain at
home, their schools closed.
Most Atlanta ·city employees will
not report for work that day. City
Hall will not open.
Atlanta is one of several communities in the United States that
have declared Jan, 15 a holiday.
That is . the day on which Michael
Luther .King - later called Martin

Luther King Jr. -

w.~s

born here In

' 1929.

Because this man who led the 20th
century's most successful mass
movement of American blacks so
altered and improved the lives of so
many, a national movement has
arisen to make the date a national
holiday.
His assassination in 1968 left the
civil rights movement without the
single leadership so many followers
seem to require. In too many

/-Diamond

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complementary method of
King is also attracting support.

The Most
Comfortable
Savings In Town.

Gibson

&amp;

ment, that the people in charge are
incompetent, that the work being
done is either unnecessary or against the public interest.
" Most of the team leaders are
hoping for long·term jobs with the
new administration, They know that
their chances will depend upon how
well their reports are received.
"God help the transition team that
determines that some department is
harodling a mission that is vital to the
republic, that it is understaffed, that
its leadership is competent and that,
given inflation, it is badly under·
budgeted. Any such report would be
rejected out of hand. Objectivity is
not an attribute much in demand
during this transition."

others who cursed King In life,
such as South Carolina's Seo. Strom
Thurmond and Georgia's defeated
Sen. Herman Talmadge, have found
It easy- and attractive to the black
voters King enfranchised - to endorse a national holiday as com·
memoratlon of the slain leader's life
work .
But while I the movement a

~ ....

,-·. I

20-40%

MARKED DOWN

American minds, the many figures
who have aspired to direct black
America cannpt hope to fill the
vacuwn created by King's death.
The new majority leader of the
United States Senate, Howard Baker
of Tennessee, supports the
movement to have Congress declare
. King's birth anniversary a national
holiday, as does the outgoing
'president, -Jimmy Carter. Cartel"-credits his victory in 1976 to King's
voter registration efforts.

.,
The ROMA • M250
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All SEIKO WATCHES

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Early American
stylin g Wood and
simulated wood
products in M apl e
finish Concea le d
cas te rs. Tone Con trol.

--

~/' ~

'
Finally, there are the long-range
problems. If the current challenges
are successful, the independence of
the Census Bureau will have been
compromised through political
pressure and legal maneuvering,
thereby diminishing public confidence in the process during future
decades.

styl1n g Woo d

and s tmutated wood
oroducts m Anttoue Oak
Fintsl1 Co ncea tecl
caste rs Ton e Con tro l

syste~

Transition team riddled with conflicts
By Robert J . Wagman
WASHING'mN (NEA) - Public
statements to the contrary, the
presidential transition is not running
smoothly.
It is not only that President-elect
Ronald
Reagan 's
transition
organization has almost overnight
become a bureaucracy composed of
layer upon layer of officials,
regulations and paperwork. Or that
many transition staffers seem bent
upon building their personal em·

!~========r--lr__.;Modern

King: movement toward a national holiday

ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
PAT WHITEHEAD

'

'

TV SETS

The Daily Sentinel
~lb

.

Electronic Power Sentry Vottag&amp; R&amp;gulator
One-Knob VHF and UHF Channel Selector
Digital True-Lock Picture Hold
Automatic Fine-tuning Control
Illuminated Channel Numbers

ZENITH

GREEN CHRISTMAS
PREFERRED
Meanwhile, back home the holiday
season has also brought fresh
evidence of American ingenuity,
executive class.
Employees of Southwest Airlines
who had never received a Christmas
bonus got one this year- a recor·
ding of their company president
singing "White Christmas." As that
individual sees it, the personalized
remembrance is just the ticket to
boost morale of the Dallag..based
operation. But employee spokesmen
think otherwise, suggesting cash
would be preferable. Even if no
more than the cost of the record,
that would at least permit an individual to invest in a composition
and artist of his own preference.
Apparentiy willing to meet the objection half way, the president offers
to give the cost of the pressing - 80
cents - for every record sent back.
Anonymously, it assumed.

~m~ ~ -.-.~o;;::j,.,.

·l\l.'tf

each at one LOW PRICE '

the eager consumer who rushes in to
pick up his reserve\~ order.
The item is toilet tissue, the
erratic suppy of which has led to
hoarding in the past. But that, it is
reported, has become almost a thing
of the past thanks to the card
system, which would very likely be
extended to other essential items but
for the development of a new
problem.
A shortage of postcards. But don't
count...

111 CCIIU1 Street

"

YOUR
CHOICE!
3 beautiful styles...

Briefly noted
ByDooGraff
It's not easy finding anything to
smile about in the simrnj!ring Pol~h
revolution, but a wire dispatch tur·
ned up with a light moment the other
day.
The successful - to date movement.to establish independent
unions has created an instant
business. It is in posters - and but·
tons and T·shirts and calendars and,
who knoV(s, maybe eventually bum·
per stickers. And it is thriving.
All these items extol the new non·
government union, Solidarity,
featuring its name in bold red script
on white background - Poland's
national colors. They are, it was
reported, seen everywhere, even on
employees of state enterprises.
It is reminiscent of the spin-off
from the anti-war, antiestablishment agitation in the
United States of the 1960s that aP::
pears to have become a pennanent
part of the national pop culture.
"Only in America" might have once have been said of that particular
phenomenon, but now it's also a case
of "even in Poland."
Unfortunately, however, probably
still "never in the Soviet Union."

.'

1

.~9,.92·2635

- ._

ALL

STONE
RINGS

Two-lri-One
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Opals, Lindes, Cameos, Pearls, Tiger Eyes,
Black Onyx, .Birthstones.

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ewer
MIDDLEPORT. 0.

'

�'
January 8,1981

Pomer.oy-Middleport, Ohio

· Page--4-The Daily Sentinel

Houston's Campbell
top offensive player
unhappy with his contract and he give hiln more rest next season by
feels he has· to make a stand for his diversifying the Oiler offense.
Campbell rushed over 100 yards
family. If so.me people get upset, he
per
game 10 times during the season
hopes they understand."
and
have 200-plus yards in lowCampbell, who would talk to Tbe
games,
an NFL record. Campbell's
Associated Press only about his
373
rushes
also established a league
play, not his contract dispute, said
standard.
his limits as a rwmer depended on
The former Reisman TrOphy winhis teammates.
ner's
rushing exploits were made
"I don't start out each season to
more
outstanding
by the fact Campgain more yards than I did the year
bell
missed
one
full
game and partS
before," Campbell said. "Mor.e than
of
three
others
with
a
groin injury.
anything else, what I do depends on
the people I play with. As far as the
record goes, it's something that just
happens one day if God is willing."
Campbell said intends to work
hard during the offseason )lecause
SOCCER
"I think there is more 1in me that
MONTEVlDEO (AP) - Goals by
hasn't been used yet. I don't think
I've peaked yet. I've got more to Junior and Toninho Cerezo triggered
a remarkable second-half comebac!&lt;
give."
Stewart's attempts to renegotiate as Br!!Zil rallied to defeat West Germany 4-1 to qualify for the Gold Cup
feud or air our wash in the press/' Campbell's contract were made
finals against Uruguay.
easier
by
his
client's
1980
perStewart said of the contract
formance.
Campbell
rushed
a
near: stalemate. "It's hard for the fellow
record 1,934 yards to win the
~ : making $15,000 or $18,000 per year
;: and paying $12 to see an Oiler game National Football League rushing
" to understand that Earl wants more. title for the third straight year.
After running 1,450 yards and 1,697
:: We understand and respect that."
yards
in his first two pro seasons,
.: Stewart said Campbell, who wants
By Associated Press
Campbell
came within 70 yards ri
' • a $1 million per year salary over six
TolJ&gt;do,
Miami, Western
breaking
O.J.
Simpson's
single
':. years, is only trying to protect his
Michigan,
Northern
Illinois and Jlall
season
rushing
record
of
2,003,
set
in
:: family.
all
walked
off with MidState
1973.
:; "Running backs in the National
American
Conference
basketball
Campbell
declined
conunent
on
:- Football League have a short career
victories
Wednesday
in
the
opening
new
Oiler
Coach
Ed
Biles'
plan
to
.: span," Stewart said. "Earl has been .
of league play for all teams.
Senior forward Harvey Knuckles
'.
scored 24 points as defending conference champion Toledo gained a
76-64 win at Kent State.
"There was no strategy involved.
We just came up with some key
baskets when we lu!d the bad spell,"
said Toledo Coach Bobby Nichols.
Toledo, now 1).2, saw a second half
lead drop from 18 points to 9 before
catching fire again.
Kent $late Coach Ed Douma said
his team sent Toledo to the foul line
too often· and also allowed the
Rockets to out-rebound his Golden
'
Flashes, now 2-9. "Their front line
took ours away. We played hard and
with a lot of intensity, but we didn't
do what we had to do to win the game

Eastern Eagle varsity.

January 8, 1981

.

.

points.
./
Ohio State, which for the last two
years has lo!d the Big Ten until the
final week .of the season, 11·5-3 but all
three losses have been team1 rated
in the top 20 at one time or another
this season. The Buckeyes have won
three straight, whipping Bowling
Green 88-70 in their last outlni, and
Coach Eldon Miller Is confident his
team is ready for conference play.
"I think we are an Improving team
and that ts very important at this
stage," said Miller, Whose team
plays at PW"due on Saturday. "~
non-confer~nce schedule w!l!"

.
..
..

- rebound."

In Oxford, the Miami .Redskins

'

PGA tour

.

,.

.•

RlckLoug
5-10, Seulor F

Tim Dill

6-3JunlorC

•

.

'•

'

.

OFFENSIVE PLAYER OF TilE YEAR- Earl Campbell of the
Houston Oilers, whose near-record 1,934 yards brought him his third
NaUonal Football League rushing Ulle In his three pro seasons, was
named Wednesday as The Associated Press Offensive Player of the
Year. (AP LaserpbotoJ

. ·-----------

..'.
•

.'
'•

The Daily Sentinel
IUSI'S IU.NIII
A Dh llloa of Mut~. IDe.
Publiahed every afternoon e.1cept SIUlday,
MGIIdoytllrooJih Friday,111 CourtStroet, by

the Ohio Valley Publlshini Company ·
Mulllmodla. Inc.. Pomeroy, Ohio 41781,
m-tlle. Secmd clue poeta1e Plid at
Pomeroy, Ohio.
-Member' , . Auoc:!lted Pnu, Inland o.~

• , ly Pnu AllocloUon and tho American

...•

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Newapaper Publllhen AIIOclaUon, NoUonal
AclvirtliiRI Repreaentatlvt, Llndlna
Atloda\111, SlOl Euclid Ave., Cleveland,
Ohlo.lllli.

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Sanllnel.lll Court St., Pomeroy, Ohlo4178t.

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HOCKEY
LOS ANGELES (AP)

Los
Angeles center Marcel Dionne
became the 13th player iri National
Hockey League history to log 1,000
or more career points when he
scored in the second period or the
Kings' &gt;3 victory over the HartfordWhalers.
Dionne, who now has 412 career
goals, got his 999th point with an
assist to Dave Taylor in the first
period against Hartford, then
reached 1,000 when he scored on a
!().footer past Whaler goalie John
Garrett at 10:35 ofthe second period.
In 740 games Dionne reached the
milestone in the shortest amount of
time.

Michigan beat Central Michigan 7&gt;
'60.

'

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BOWLING
ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP) - 'Tom
Baker, averaging 238 pins per game,
·shot out to a 27-pin lead in the
opening six-game set of the $125,000
Miller High Life Classic.
Baker rolled a 280 game and had ·a
763 for his last three games en route
to a 1,430 tQtai that gave him a 27-pin
advantage over Steve Martin; who
averaged 233 and had games of 279
and 259 in the competition at
Anaheim Brunswick Wonderbowl.

--The game marked the debut for
sophomore guar.d Walker D.

mixed raves

couple of times, before the long, long
schedules winds down to a close in
Florida at the end of October.
Between now and then, the Tour
will cross lbe countrY a half-dozen
times, make side trips into Canada
and Hawaii, and distribute about $14
million in prize money.
Even with that record amount of
cash up for grabs, it's difficult to get
started for some.
"It's funny in a way," said D.A.

Weibring, one ri , the game's
older, as your family grows, as your emerging young playeJ:S. "It's kind
position in the game changes, it of hard to get started. It's hard to
becomes more and more difficult to leave home. You're looking forward
leave home."
· to the tour, but still it's a wrench to
Many of the younger players, as leave home."
well as some of the less-well"You feel like you need a couple of
established older ones, will get home weeks to ease into it," said Barry
only infrequently, maybe only a Jaeckel.
,------------------------selves," Irwin said, "but as you get

MlkeBIB8eU
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Arizona State and Cincinnati (a 69-04
victory), allowing Olson· to give his
top !Oplayers extensive floor time. ·
Claulc.
"I like the fact we've had· an op"After our lOIS to Arizona State, portunity to develop some depth,"
we made aome changes, simplified he said. "We've been able to give owthe offense to a great extent," Miller . younger people a lot of playing time.
said. "'I11at has really helped and I I think ow- players are ready for the
think It Ia one of the maJor reasons Big Ten."
we are improving. I am perticularly
With Olsoq substituting freely,

._•_m'-''-'·0 .

E. M•t" ,_ _
._
...
_._...
_._"_'"_ _

U you're confused by all the
ramifications of bigtime boxing,
wait until you get a loap of one of the
low- world title fights at Madison
Square Garden Feb. 23.
It's enough to blow your mind.
There's this guy Eddie Mustafa
Muhammad. He is the light
heavyweight champion of the world,
according to the WBA. Then there's
' this Matthew Saad Muhljnunad.
He's the world light heavyweight
champion, too, WBC version.
"Meet my manager, Bilal
Muhammad - the best," Saad
Muhammad .told a Garden news conference Wednesday. "Meet my
manager, Ben Muhammad," said
Mustafa, who acknowledged he had
a siSter named Salilah Muhanunad.
The bankroller for the all-star
show next month is an organization
called MAPS which, translated,
comes out "Muhammad Ali
Professional Sports, Inc."
Got it straight? Nothing to it.
Muhammad fights Muhammad
with each having a Muhanunad In

•6··

MANY OTHER VALUES IN STORE

heritage house

,_.J
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All SVAC teams
... Weather permitting, three league
• contests are on tap Friday night in
th!l Southern Valley Athletic Con; ference. Returning to league en, counters following several non-

•

.. . . _~ MIDDLEPORT

•

SOIJthwestern
• North Gall Ia

3

A

1 7

317 353
06 55()

score.

.

JOINStJCSTAFF
CINCINNATI (AP) - Former
runnlngbaek Joy Bonds lias been
hired as an assillant by new University of ClncinliaU football Coach
Mike OGitfrlend, the school announced today.
Gottfriec! said Bonds wt11 coach
the defensive elida and a new "wide
tackle six" defenaive alignment.
Bonds, 21, led Cincinnati in
rushing with 567 yards as a senior in
1975 and was seleded the team's
Most Valubable Player.

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At the foul line Meigs was 8 of 17
for 47 percent and was 18 of 39 from
the field for 39 percenl Meigs
collected 35 rebounds as a team led
by Anderson will!. 12 , committed 26
personal fouls and had 23 tw-novers.
Wellston was 18 and 36 from the foul
line for 50 percent and had IS personal fouls.
Wellston took the reserve contes~
27-22 in a hard fought battle. Potts,
Oths, and Fannin shared top scoring
honors for Wellston with 8. each.
Pauls Horton led the Meigs team
with 7points.
Meigs plays the Logan Chieftons
Thursday at Logan .

Meigs overcanle a 13-11 first quarter deficit and went on lead 26-18 at
the balf. After both team1 played
even in the third period, Meigs held
on to take the~ win.
Andrea Riggs led Meigs In scoring
with a game high of Zl points.
Kristin Anderson al!o had a good
game adding 12 to the Marauders

.

'·

-$~t~~K

Just dial949-2210
•

SEAOL.

.•

•,

} •.

r•jl{rol(~'~~t """.

1be Meigs Marauders rolled to an
impressive 4lh'l8 Yictory over the
Welllton Golden Rockets girls' high
school bulletball la8t night. Meigs
is now &amp;-4 overall and 3-3 in the

~

DEKALB, Ill. (AP)
Allen
Rayborn tossed in 23 points and took
14 rebounds Wednesday night to lead
Northern Illinois to a 60-44 comefro~behind victQry over Ohio
University in the opening game of
their Mid-American Conference
college basketball season.
Ohio University jwnped off to a 6-G
lead, and Northern lagged most,,r
the first half before finally taking
the lead~,t!3-22, with l:08left.
The Huskies then edged Ohio 25-24
at halftime. Ohio took the lead
briefly at the start of the second half

~~~1/(t

TO
r"117~f&gt;.~po;:u~n:;d;;c:ha;m::p;:i:;Qil8;::;hi;:p:;.:::;:::;::::;~;:-::;:-::;:::-::~:":-::_;:_;::;;_;::;_:::::;_;:;_;-1 .,._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..,.

,a

·oF SHOES

---

SVAC STANDINGS
ALL GAMES
TEAM
W L P OP
eastern
2 579 ~66
southern
V 1 518 ~02
Honnon Trace
s u 5~9 5A8
Kygerc.reek _. __3_j_4~ A87

fP~

Marau_d er gals post .victory

the corner and another Muhammad
among the relatives, not to
mention the Muhammad (MAPS)
which is paying the freight.
Also certain to be sitting at
ringside and taking a polite bow will
be the biggest Muhammad of all,
Mullanunad Ali himself, who has no
investment in the enterprise but who
collects around $150,000 per appearance.
The two fighting Muhammads
shared center stage with WBA
welterweight champ Thomas (Hll
Man ) Hearns and,Gerry ~ooney, the
Long Island heavyweight hope, at
the friendly little introductory brunch in the Garden's Hall of Fame
Room.
It was obvious neither enjoyed lhe
indenlity factor of a noisier Muhammad - Muhammad Ali.
Mustafa finally showed and
photographers scampered to get pic-:
tures of the two light heavyweight
titleholders, Musllm brothers,
snlilhig at each other and comparing
each other's threads.
'
Both are former street toughs who
adopted the Islamic faith. And their
shared religion has led to some
animoolty between. them. Mustafa
was angry after hearing that Saad
had said he was not a good Muslim,
but that seems to have been
smO(Jfuedover.
Saad Muhanunad was born Mat-

lOth in row

SIMON'S
PICK·A·PAIR

tht streteh keyed lhe Tar Heel
triumph. Wood wound • .with a
~leading 22 po1nls, while Albert
King scored 21 for Maryland.
Ralph Sampson 8COftd 24 points
and Jeff Lamp had 17 to lead
Vlrglnla over North Carolina State.
The victory was Virginia's second In

~ tting

Bobcats lose

RUBBER
FOOTWEAR

AI Wood's second-half shooting

thew Franklin. Mustafa Muhanunad
began his career as Eddie Gregory.
They are a pair of journeyman
conference battles are pacesetters fig' hters who grubbed their way to
' Southern and Eastern.
Southern,defendingSVACcbamp, the top of lheir division and now
will host Kyger Creek while Eastern. have arrived at a Icollision cpurse
travels to Hannan Trace.
aimed at solidifying the fractured

Going
into those
:• has
an overall
8-2 games,
record Eastern
and 3-0
: slate in the league while Southern is
7-1, 3-0 against loop opponents. ·
' In Friday's other league tilt,
• Southwestern visits North Gallla.
Saturday night, the Highlanders
play at Wahama.

tops Tar Heels

in our league," leads Ohio Slate with·
a 17.5 scoring average. Sophomore
foward Clark Kellogg, who alao has
been used al guard, La averaging 16.5
points per game and leads tl)e Big
T_en in rebounding with a 12.3 mark.

the ACC this season withnut a loss ds hit fow- straight 18-footers at the
and Improved its overall record to start of the second half as Clemson
10-0. The Cavaliers have won 15 bolted to an .18-point lead and
straight games going back to last coasted past Georgia Tech.
season, the nation's longest winning
Elsewhere in coUege basketball,
streak for a coUege basketball team. Chuck Barnett's 24 points led
"Quite obviously, Ralph Sampson Oklahoma over Stephen F. Austin . with a jwnper by Kirk Lelunan, but
the Huskies' Shawn Thrower conwas the difference," said North 88-55; Ronald Jackson scored 26 to nected on a baseline drivmg' layup to
Carolina State Coach Ji!D Valvano. pace Southern Mississippi over
"He's just a great basketball player. Marquette 84-72; Randy Wright led a f"jpp;u;;;tN;;;orthe:;;;;:;;;;rn;ahe:;;;;a;d;fo;r;g;ood;;.;;;;~
If you wanted to start a pro or l)alanced Oklahoma State attack
coUege franchise today, Sampson is with 19 points as the Cowboys beat
YOUR HEADQUARTERS
the starting point. He is the most New Orleans 94-70; Darrell Walker
valuable player in the world in that and U.S. Reed teamed for 44 points
FOR
aspect."
to lead Arkansas over AlaskaThe balanced. scoring of Sam Anchorage 92-58 and John Goode
Bowie, Fred Cowan and Dirk Min- scored a game-high 15 points, inniefield helped Kentucky 1 beat eluding a free throw with no time 011
Aubw-n, Kentucky led by five points the clock, as VMI defeated East Tenat 511-53 with 7:18 remaining, then neseeState43-42. -o
pulled away from the Tigers with
Also, Dan Callandrillo's 22 points
solid defense and deadly free thniw · powered Seton Hall over Providence
shooting.
66-52; Funnan defeated The Citadel
Cowan sCored 17 points, Bowie 15 75-65 as Mel Danie) scored a careerPomero , OH •
and Minniefield 13 for the Wildcats.
high 34 points:
"We ahnostlost it at one point, but ...-----...l•i-·-+------1------------bullding the lead back is a good sign
this team La growing up," said
Bowie, referring to the stage Where
.Auburn had trimmed the Wildcats'
lead to five points.
·
Clutch second-half shooting by
Jim Johnstone and Danny Young led
Wake Forest past Appalachian
State. The Mountaineers remained
close to Wake Forest throughout the
flrst half by using a deliberate offense.
But then· Johnstone took charge,
pow-ing in nine of Wake Forest's first 16 points ~the second half. As Appalachian started collapsing oo
Johnstone, Yo\(Dg began hittjng.
Young and Johnstone both wound up
with 12 points.
Super sub Willie Sirruns tossed in
16 points and LSU's stingy defense
forced repeated turnovers as the
Tigers scored their loth straight victory With their conquest of VanCvtL
.r
derbilt.
Howa~ Wood scored 29 points, in·
cluding 17 free throws, to lead Tennessee over Mississippi. Chris Dod-

and some clutch free throws down

Sports World

see action Friday

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Mewt . lhru S.t. • 1• •-m. tot p.m.

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ding, 18-game Big Ten schedule.
iowa has been tested only by

54.

Wednesday. (AP Laser-

By wm Grtmlley
AP Correepoadeat

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LOST BALL- Uulverslty of Vlrglola's Ralph Sampeon loose~~ the
baD as he goes up for a layup as North Carolina Slate's Chuck Nevitt
(52) tries to block the shol durlq first half acUon of the UVa.·N.C.

college basketball game In
photo)
·

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Like Miller, Olson l!elieves his

DrleseU was not surpl'iaed that
North Carolina went to Its patented
fOUI'-COI'IIft'S oftense, illl Great
Equalizer, early" the second half.
· "'lie's (Smlth'a) done tluot a lot in
the past," Drleaell said.
In other actloll lnwlvlng the
nation's ranked b!ams, No. 3
Virginia blat North Carolina Slate
83-55; No. 4 Kentucky stopped
Auburn 'IN6; No. 6 Wake Fore!l
tripped Appa!achlanState63-42; No .
9 Loll1atana Slate whipped Vand4;.rbUt 77-41; No. 13 Tennessee turned back MisslBslppt 73-88 and No. 20
Clemson outscored Georgia Tech &amp;&gt;

Casey Kasem

Iowa has developed a balance
scoring attack. Although the
Hawkeyes are second in the league
in scoring, averaging 86 points per
_game, .they have only two players
among the Big Ten's top 25 scorers. 1
Senior forward V,ince Brookins is
averaging 16,1 points per game an4
junior guaro Kenny Arnold, who has
proven to be a capable replacetnen!
for the departed Ronnie Lester, has
a 12.1 average. Nine different
players have scored in double
figures at least once.
Center Herb Williams, called by
Olson the "mqst dominate big man

teani is well prepared for the grin-

us.,,

RUBBER FOOtWEAR
20% OFF REG. PRICE

~

Ohio State's 1 - have been to
Kentucky (7~) and Arizona State
(71-58) 011 the 1'1111ld and to South
Alabama (7UI) at home. Arizona
Slate hlmded Iowa its only lOIS,
beatlni lbe Hawkeyes 11&amp;-111 In the
flnala of the Sun Devils'x fiesta

happy with the way we played the

Iait three games."

._ck

WOMEN'S &amp; CHILDREN'S

I
I
I
I
I

race."

By Auodlled~
The Maryland Terapplns are
rated No. 8 in tht country, but it's
tough to pull rank In the Atlantic
Cpast Conference - especially on
the other team's cow-t.
In few other leagues does the
homecourt advantage ~ as
much. And North Carolina, rated
No. 18 in America, had it Wednesday
night.
"1bls game was extremely important rvr our young tqm," said
North Carolina Coach Dian Smith.
from
"They've got everybody
the team that beat us last year and
we're mi8Sing five of our top seven.
nus has to help ua." .
Maryland COICh Lefty Driesell, u
expected, was ·not too happy with his
lAm's perfonnance.
"We bad been down In the first
half then we went from eJ&amp;ht up to
two down in 30 III!CO!Idl, it seems
llke," he said. "Then we got in a lot
of foul trouble and that rully hurt

fl;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

Dolly .. ....................... , IIConll

=

~

81NGLECOPV

Sports briefs •••

earned their first conference win Russell, the high school All-America
with a 67.02 victory over Bowling from Pontiac Central who IranGreen.
sferred to Western Michigan from
"The game was more important to Houston. He scored 10 points, had
us than Bowling Green because you nine assists and five rebounds.
have to win at home. It's nice to beat
Sophomore guard Melvin
the -team picked to win the con- McLaughlin scored 14 points for the
ference," said Miami coach Darrell Chippewas.
Hedrick.
The victory gave the Broncos a &amp;-5
Marcus Watkins, with 14 points, season record and 1.0 in the league.
hit a layup and fow- free throws in &gt; Centralis7-4and().linMACplay.
the final minutes to give Miami, 6-5,
In Illinois, Allen Ray horn tossed in
the win. The Redskins, helped by 23 points and t09k 14 rebounds to
Bowling Green's 37 percent · lead Northern Illinois to A 6().44
shooting,led by 10 at the half, 33-23.
come-from-behind victory over Ohio
Bowling Green, a preseason University.
favorite to win the conference, is ().1
The Huskies edged Ohio 25-24 at
and 5-6 on the season, a record which halftime. Ohio took the lead briefly
prompted Falcons coach John at the start of the second half. Then
Weinert to wonder what had hap- ' the Huskies· · Shawn Thrower conpened to his team's killer instinct.
nected on a baseline driving layup to
In Kalamazoo, Mich., senior fpr- put Northern ahead for good. .
ward Melvin Maxwell scored a .
The game put Northern at 5-5
career high 23 points as Western overall. Ohio dropped to ().10 overall.

dra~s

TUCSON, Ariz. (APJ- The start
of the PGA Tour's !().month road
show produced widely mixed
emotions among the touring proo
competing in the $300,000 Joe
Garagioia-Tucson Open.
"It seems to get harder to leave
home every year," said Hale Irwin,
a two-time U.S. Open champion,
before teeing off today in the first
round of the tournament that kicks
off a 43-event schedule.
"It's the life we chose for our-

Jerlnltely help 111 during the Big Ten

M~ryland

·Toledo defeats Kent State

..

Middleport, Ohio

Buckeyes open Big 10 pl~y . at Iowa
tonight
.

• •

By CHUCK SCHOFFNER
'AP Sporll Writer
' lOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) - Ohlo
State's Buckeyes, hoping this will be
the year they finally win the elusive
Big Ten Cli!lference basket!)aU tlUe,
Oj)eQ. league warfare with a rugged
tw~ame road trip that . starts
torlight with 11th-rated Iowa.
,
The Hawkeyes of Coach Lute
Olson, who guided his team to a fourth-place NCAA finish last season,
are off to an 6-1 start and have been
ahnost untouchable at home. Ol~ton's
crew'has won its five games at Iowa
Fieldhouse by an average of 33.6

HOUSTON (AP) - Earl Campbell's agent Witt Stewart worries
that his client's public image will be
Painted as that of a spoiled and
greedy pro foptball player in his
· current contract dispute with the
· Houston Oilers.
.
· But there was nothing tarnished
about Campbell's image in the
voting for The As$ociated Press Of. · fensive Player of the Year. Camp. bell was the runaway winner, earning votes from 43 of the 84 ballots
' cast by a nationwide panel of sports
' writers and sportscasters.
Cleveland quarterback Brian Sipe
was a distant second, polling 26
votes. San Diego quarterback Dan
' Fouts got seven votes and Charger
receiver John Jefferson had six. No
· other player got more · than two
votes.
' · "We didn't want to have a family

The Daily Sentinel-Page---:.

.

Pomertv

Visa
M/C
Layawav
342 second Ave .
Gallipolis ,

'GRIAT

SAVINO$
(
I

•

�January; a, 1911

Pomerby-Midd leport, Ohio

; Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

January 8, 1911

College classes here

··Mason (burch of Christ
has new pastor--Conger
Eugene L. Conger is the new
pastor of th~ Mason. Church of
Christ.
.
.
Moving to Mason from Sandyville,
W. Va.; the minister assumed the
new pastorate on Jan. 1. Mr. Conger
has served as a minister of the
gospel for the past '1:1 years. Duririg
that period of time he has preached
for 140 congregations with his Ia&amp;
pastorate being at the Sandyville
Church for 13 months. He concluded
his work there on Nov. 30. Prior to
that he was the pastor of the Rockport Church for seven years.
.
Mr. Conger, born in Parkersburg,
son of the late Mr. nd Mrs. Dale
' Conger, .Sr., graduated from tbe
Parkersburg High School. He was

employed for a number of years by
the Kauffman-Lattin)er Co., a
whol~sale drug f_irm in Parkersburg, .. .
and also worked at the Franklin and
Son Funeral Chapel before moving
from Parkersburg.
During his years in the ministry,
he has done extensive writing of
various kinds, Some radio work, and.
has held gospel meetings.
The Mason Church of Christ meets
at 6 Miller St., with worship at 11
a.m. and 7 p.m. on Sundays. Bible.
study is at 10 a.m. on Sundays and 7 ·
p.m. on Wednesdays .. Mr. Conger
resides in the parsonage next to the
church building and can be reached
·
at 773-.1104.

'

A new class of the Pomeroy Church of Christ was organized Monday
night at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Alkire.
Called the "Koiniineia Class", the
group wiU meet on the first Monday
of each month. Officers elected were
Dano King, president; Craig Venoy,

,

'

'

EXTRA SAVINGS.
ON MEN'S &amp; WOMEN'S
WEARING APPAREL

,. Eugene C,onger

' Class organizes

By Dlaae 8. Eberll
many other foods to make difMelp Co. Exteoaioa
ferent dishes. •
A1eat, Home Eeoa.
Store ground beef in the
GOODBYE TO EFNEP
refrigerator for only I to ~days.
.U It December ~1, 19110, the
Handle. meat as little as
Ellpanded Food and Nutrition
possible and only after washing
Education Progr•m wu dl!conyourhands.
.
·
lirlued..ln Meigs County due to
Cook meat quickly and only tmrediJtributlon It Federal funds.
W the pink color haS disappeared
Arulie Moon ~d Myrtle Clark,
for a safe and juicy serving.
our nutrition aades who worked
Qulell Tamale Casserole
on thla program, also provided
I 7-ounce package cornbread
this weekly newspaper column
stuffing mix
"Food for 'ThoUght." Without th~
~ stick margarine ( Yc cup)
services It Annie and Myrtle we
I~ cups water
wiU be Wllble to COIIIInue the
I pound ground beef
frequent home visits that were a
2 medium onions, ohoWect
distinct feature of the EFNEP
Yc cup green pepper
program. However, the Meigs
Yc cup chopped celery or
County Cooperative Extension
zuchlnnl, If desired
Service wiU continue to try other
I 16 ounce can whole kemel
waya to maintain conta~ with . oorn, drained .
low-Income families who need
2 tablespoons chili powder
our educational assistance. A1l a
I cup gr11ted cheese
part of our efforts, the "Food for
116-ounce can tomatoes
'Thought" weekly article will be
Make cornbread stuffing mix
continued. If you have questions
using the margarine.and water.
or would llke help with some of Let stand until moisture is abyour family living concerns,
sorbed. Brown ground beef in a
please contact me at 99U696.
large skillet. Add chopped onions;
green pepper, celery, and cook
We regretfully say goodbye to
Annie and Myrtle and wish them
until tender. Drain off excess
the best in whatever the •future
11ripplngs. Add undrained
holds for them.
tomatoes, drained coni, cheese,
JlliiWlry Tlpo for Tbe
and chili powder. Place mixture
Clever Homemaker
in a :!-quart baking dish. Top
evenly with stuffing. Press down
Ground beef is a good source of
protein, Iron ·and some of the B
lightly with back of spoon. Bake
vitamins.
uncovered 30 minuts at 400
degree F.
Each family member should
MENU - Quick tamale
eat 2 serVings from the meat
group every day.
casserole, tangy carrot salad, hot
bread and spread, appJe crisp,
Ground beef can be ~pared
for a special meal or a casual dinmilk, coffee or tea.
ner. lt can be combined with

vice president; Anna Davidson,
secretary; Charledene Adkins,
treasurer and Naomi Ohlinger, news
reporter.
A photograph of the new class was
taken for the scrapbook. Craig
Venoy had the closing prayer.
Refreshments were served to those
named above and Joan King, Judy
Grogan and the minister-teacher,
Neil Proudfoot.

BAHR CLOTHIERS

0

•'
PLAN MARCH- Mothers will march for the March of Dimes bil'
th defects program In Meigs County Sunday. Mts. Joanne Williams,
center, presents march packets to left, Mrs. Tonya Davis, represeDtlng O)lio Eta Phi Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, and right, Mrs.
Debbie Flnlaw, representing Xi Gamma Mu Chapter of Beta Sigma
PhJ. Tbe two sorodty chapters will play an active role in ihe drive
. whJcb kicks off Sunday.

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' Meigs County mothers will march
from house to house Sunday afternoon and throughout the month of
January fpr the March of Dimes
with funds collected to be used in
fighting birth defects.
Many mothers and helpers have
volunteered to conduct the march.
In Rutland, the Friendly Gardeners,
led by Judy Snowden, will conduct
the mothers' march. In Pomeroy
and Syracuse, inembers of the Ohio
Eta Phi Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority will collect from house to
house while Xi Gam'ma Mu Chapter
of the sorority will march in Middleport and Bradbury:
Jo Anne Smith is again in charge
of the drive in Tuppers Plains and
Jane Ann Karr will head the drive in
the Baum addition. Melanie
Stethem, Susie Karr and Karla
Chevalier will be in charge in the
Chester area with Brenda Bailey
and Melanie. Bailey collecting in the

~

70 attend party
! at ltlurel church
Approximately 70 attended the' annual New Year's psrty of the Laurel
Cliff Free Methodist Church held
Saturday night at the Senior Citizens
Center, Pomeroy.
•
The group enjoyed a potluck dinner, singing, a recitation by the
pastor, the Rev. Floyd Shook, and
fellowship. Attending were the Rev.
Mr. and Mrs. Shook, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Foster and children, Betty
DIU, Mr. and Mrs. Dick Folmer and
: family, Kathy Scarberry and
; daughter, Susan Tracy and son,
• Jerry Mowery, Otto and Amber
: Lohn, Uoyd and Jean Wright, Mrs.
: Jennilea . Johnson, Mr. and Mrs.
·: James Giimore.
Mr: and Mrs. Steve Eblin and
: , Becky, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Barton
: and family, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest
and family, Mrs. Bertha
••• •HaggyParker, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Robson,
; .Mrs. Genevieve Ward, Mrs. Della
; Curtis, Mrs. Ruby Frick, Mr. and
; ~- Mike Wright and children, Mr.
• and Mrs. Jack Stanley and children,
; Mr. and Mrs. Larry Clark and
; children, Mr. and Mrs. John An' derson, Mr. and Mrs. Randy Hawley
: and children, Mr. and Mrs. Clifford
: Jacobs, Mrs. Iva Powell and several
; residents of the Meigs County in:
;
;.
•

on Sunday

Five Points and Crow addition.
areas. Susie Pullins will head the
march in Salisbury and the Rock
Springs area while Becky Mallory is
in charge in the Racine area.
· Anyone who is not visited by a
marching mother and would like to
contribute to the March of Dimes
may do so by making a contribution
to Joanne Williams and at the Farmers Bank and Savings Co. in
Pomeroy . Mrs. Williams - is
treasurer of the local chapter and
handles all of the Meigs County contributions.
Nearly half of the money collected
in Meigs County is used for health
care scholarships for local students
and to help educate people in ways to
prevent birth defects. The rest of the
funds collected are. sent to the
national level where they are used to
finance medical research dealing
with birth defects.

18

TBURSDAY
ROCK SPRINGS Grange, cancelled.
ELEANOR CIRCLE, Heath
United Methodist Church, 7:30 p.m.
Thursday at the church.
FRIDAV
RETURN JONATHAN Meigs
Chapter, Daughters of the American
Revolution, I : 30 · Friday afternoon,
Meigs Inn. Mrs. Thereon Johnson to
show slides on flowers of Williamsburg. Silent auction cancelled.
Hostesses, Mrs. Robert Ashley, Mrs.
Clinton Fisher, Mrs. Irvin Karr, Jr.,
Mrs. Richard Henderson and Mrs.
Lawrence Smith.
MARY SHRINE 37, White Shrine
of Jerusalem, ceremonial meeting
Friday, 8 p.m. at the Pomeroy
Masonic Temple. Dues payable.

... _- - _

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

..... ,..... l _ . .............
.......
,.. ,,""
..,....
...-..

. . ... ... . .
~

........_.

Functional; Fun and
Educational, Too!

$399

~~~e~;:;ll~:eth~n~~~y~:; ~.iooos~reSe:~o~.~~~rveeo~~~

Board of Comrnls41oners for. the James. 'The money was an interestlong-sought Meigs COunty school fll' lree loan from the Emergency
thementallyhandicapped.
Village Capital Improvement
.Jan. 30- The home of Mr. and Rotary Fund, administered by the
Mrs. Nonnan .Doidge, Lincoln HIU · .QhJo Environmental Protection
Road, was extensively damaged by Agency.
fire. Estimated loss was set at more
Feb. II - Middleport Village
than $35,000.
Council met with investor Harry
Evans to outline investment of inacFEBRUARY
live village funds.
.
Feb. 12 - Flaring tempers and
Feb. 4- The Larry Fields family,,
Minersville, escaped their burning public participation marked a fivehome unharmed, but heavy - bour- session of the Meigs Local
damages were caused to the proper- · Board of Education. The issue of
ty by an early morning blaze.
penalties for student drinking was a
Feb. 5 - Meigs County Board of highly explosive one.
Comml.ssioners armounced cutbacks
Feb. 18 - A resolution providing
In spendln¥ were necessary if the. for levying a char~~ for bus~esses
Meigs County LandfiU were to and residents receiVIng specaal seroperate throughout 1!81.
vices from the Pomeroy Police
Feb. 7 -Grant applications, to be . Department was passed by
forwarded to the EPA, were signed Pomeroy Village Council.
at a combined meeting of the
Feb. 19- Plans for an access road
Syracuse-Racine Regional District, from Union Avenue to the new multiand Syracuse, Racine, and Rutland purpose building on Mulberry
councUs.
Heights in Pomeroy were presented
Feb. 8 - Rutland Mayor John L. . to Meigs County Commissioners.

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SALE '5• to su•
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MEN'S JE

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Social Calendar

POMEROY - A workshop on
phise and worship will be conducted by Barbara Sheridan, vice
president of leadership training on.
the Southeastem OhJo Area Aglow
Boarld and a member of the local
Pomeroy Chapter of Aglow, at Thur. sday's meeting.
Ms. Sherfdan recently conducted
the workshop at the Enrichment
Seminar held in Columbus.
The meeting will be held Thursday
at the Meigs Inn. Doors will openat6
p.m., dinner will be served at 7 p.m.
· and Ms. Sheridan will speak at 8

7444; Gloria Johnson, 742-2442; ' Hoback, 94~2325 or BiiJJe J. DaWson,
Jackie Zirkle, 992-5859; · Joyce 304-773-9123.

OTHER STYLES

•

~Mothers ' March

The Daily Sentinei-Page--7

p.m. Reservations are to be made by
Tuesday with Sarah Winters, 446-

Workshop

F~od for .Thought

student with a good overview of. the
books of the New Testament.
'The course is for college efelllt,
but it is also open to thoee who woiil4
rather audit tho! clus. Regiltratloo
is now open and will be clOIIed u of
Jim. )5. There will be a $10
registration fee: Othe~ .additional
charges are for college credit $11,
for auditing $20, texts will average
$10to$12.
Interested parties should caD m.
3074 after9 a.m. for further detaiL!.

"I

Marietta Bible College and
Calvary Bible Church Is BMOUDclng
evening classes wiU be held in Meigs
County beginning Jan. 20.
Three hous of college credit will be
offered for those completing New
Testament SurV'ey. This course wiU
be offered on Tuesday evenings at
the Calvary Bible Church !run 7-10
p.m. The course wiU begin with the
historical background of the New
Testament, follow the ministries of
Christ and of Paul, and provide tbe

.

•

Pomel"oy-Middleport, Ohio

;

~~~~u..~

VALUES TO

19.99

5

.

$1295

MR. LEGGS .
.

. .

Gilts Corduroy
Pants, Sweaters,
Thermal Underwear,
Long Sleeve Tops.
REDUCED FOR CLEARANCE

.

BARGAINS

DDLEPORT-DEP-t.-STORE-.
-.

.
;

0

.'

�•
January a. 1981

P·omefoy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-S- The DailY Sentinel

Racine council will honor·Lyonsl .Woman
Racine Village Council, meeting in
regular session Monday night,
agreed to hold a dinner honoriqg
Alfred Lyons in the near future.
Lyons retired as the police office
of the village on Dec. 311, after 311
years service. He will also be
.presented a pli1que.
·
· LindseY Lyons of the ChesterTuppers Plains Water District met
with council and several interested
residents to discuss water meters.
There was a lengthy discussion on
whether to install meters in Racine
with a decision set for the next
regular meeting.

George Graham of Ohio Power Co.
completed necessary papers for the
electric energy needed by the Board
of Public Affair. A first reading was
given an ordinance for the annexation of the Randy pyles property and a second reading to an ordinance which will increase' the
water rate and the cost .of trash·,
pickup service.
. Council decided that the owners of
old cars living about the community
will be given 10 days to remove them
or they will be hauled away at the
owners expense. A water wol'ks

Area deaths
Helen Maier
Helen Meier, Mt. Vernon, Ohio,
former Pomeroy resident for many
years, died Jan. 2 at MI. Vernon
following a short illness.
She was a daughter of the late
Roiese West and the widow of the late
Willard (Bill) Meier.
Surviving are a son and four
sisters, Mrs. Raymond (Ada) Hoce,
Pomeroy; Mrs. Howard ( Ruth)
Thivener, Gallipolis; Mrs. Vernon
(Edith) Doer, Lancaster, and Mrs.
Kenneth (Bernice) Frost of Mt. Vernon.
Services and burial were at Mt.
Vernon.

Stella M. Ehersbach

I

George B. and Anuinda Stiles
Howell. He was also preceded in
death by his wife, Eelia Hanning
Howell, two infant daughters, and
two sisters, Bertha Williams and
Una Bolin.
Mr. Howett was a member of the
Seventh Day Adventist Church. He
was retired from the Western and
Southern Insurance Co. and was an
active rnember of the Meigs County
Senior Citizens Organization.
Surviving are two daughters, Donna Story, Fort Myers, · Fla., and
Mildred Knopp, Dayton; a sister,
Vena Whaley, Route 3, Pomeroy;
four grandchild1'en and sever.a l
nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be held,at 10
a'.m. Friday at the Ewing Funeral
Home with burial to be in the
Burlingham Cemetery. Friends may
call at the funeral home anytime.

Miss Stella M. Ebersbach, 95,
Laurel St., Pomeroy, died Thursday
morning at Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Miss Ebersbach was a daughter of
(Continued from page 1)
the late Henry and Elizabeth
Police Department advised city
Meager Ebersbach. Besides her
residents that the situation should be
parents, she was preceded in death
cleared by noon today.
by three sisters and a brother. She
Gallia County deputies and the
was a member of the Sacred Heart
Ohio State Highway Patrol stood by
Church in Pomeroy.
in Cheshire as the Envirorunental
Funeral services will he held at 10
Protection Agency advised that
a.m. Saturday at the Sacred Heart
fumes from the chemical spiU had
Church with the Rev. Father Paul
fanned into clouds that could float
Welton officiating. Burial will he in
· across the Ohio River toward the
BeechGrove C~metery. Rosary serGavin and Kyger Creek Power Planvices will be held at 7:311 p.m. Friday
ts.
at the Ewing Funeral Home. FrienThe E.P.A. notified Gallia officials
ds may call at the funeral home
at approximately 10:311 a.m. that the
from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Friday.
stillness of the wifld appeared to
have confined the cloud near the acHo~eU
cident.
As a precautionary measure,
Dana D. Howell, 90, Darwin, died
residents living in and near the
Monday night at Veterans Memoi'ial
Gallia villages of Cheshire and AdHospital.
Mr. Howell was a son of the late dison were advised that all open
!lames should be extinquished.
An early morning fire-reportedly
that of tires being burnt iiT Cheshirewas spotted by the highway patrol
and immediately extinquished by
Gallia officers.
The Eastern Local School District
The Portsmouth Docking Com. Board of Education approved the at·
pany, located just south of Addison
· tendance of members, Roger Gaul,
along the Ohio River, was advised
. Dorsel Larkins and Supt. Richard
that all welding should be discon: Roberts to the Ohio School Boards
tinued until the fumes cleared.
· Conference in Columbus Feb. 6 and 7
At 10 a.m., the Gallia County
: at a meeting held Tuesday night.
Sheriff's Department was advised
: The board accepted the bid of City
by the E.P.A. that the situation ap; Ice and Fuel on oil; Standard Oil on
peared to be under control.
-' motor oil. The resignation of Mrs. · According to the E .P .A., the com. Linda Fitch as librarian at Tuppers
bustible zone from the toxic spill
; Plains was accepted and the board
should be limited to an immediate
; named Barbara Mathews as a sul&gt;area of some 2,000 feet around the
stitute teacher. Nick Leonard was
accident.
hired as a substitute bus driver.

hurt in
• h ap
traff•IC miS

budget of $26,640 was approved and
a $42,542 budget for the town for the
year.
·
.
Conunittees were named for the
A woman WB!I injtlfed In a tw&lt;&gt;&lt;:ar
year and include Harry Willford,
accident in Gallia County inAlbert HU~ Clarence Bradford,
vestigated Wednesday night.
finance : Jeanette Lawrence, Earl
The Gallia·Meigs Post of the Ohio
Cleland and Ben liletrel, street.
· Highway Patrol said William J.
Albert Hill was elected council
. Moeller, ·51, Gallipolis, WB!I backing
president for 1981 and Charles Shain
down a hill on Bulaville-Porter Rd.
was named marshall.
at 5:45p.m. when he collided with. a
l\T
•.
northbound vehicle driven by Jef-·
1
frey L. Halley, 25, Gallipolis.
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence AnAccording to the report, Halley atdrews Monday night · named the
tempted to brake on ice but lost control of his car, causing slight
foUowing committees for 1981.
The first named wiU serve as
damage to both cars.
A passenger in Moeller's car, Nanchairman.
Building committee, Harold · cy L. Moeller, 311, Gallipolis, was injured in the mishap and taken to
Brown, William Young, and John
Holzer Medical Center by the Gallia
Anderson; finance committee, Betty
Baronick, Larry Wehrung, and John
EMS, where she was treated and
released for a bruise to the forehead.
Anderson; ordinance committee,
Halley was cited by the patrol for
Rodney Karr, Harold Brown, and
William Young; street committee,
no operator's license.
Larry Wehrung, Rodney Karr and
The patrol reported injuries in a
Betty Baronick; safety committee,
twe&gt;&lt;:ar craah In Meigs County .later
John Anderson, Betty Baronick, and
Wednesday nigh(.
Larry Wehrung; utility committee,
Troopers said a car driven by Ran·
William Young, Rodney Karr and
dy A. Zasterny, 20, Mason, was
Harold Brown ; p;~rk committee,
southbound on jdlnersville Rd. at S
William Young, Harold Brown, and
p.m. lost control on a curve and
collided with a parked auto owned
Rodney Karr.

•
•
VIewmg

.

by Charles E . Grueser, 62, Miner-

JAN. 8,1881

sville.
Zasterny's car was demolished
and Gruesel"s car moderately
damaged. Two ~ngers in the'
Zasterny auto--Julie A. Flagg, 16, ·
Minersville, and Scott A. Chapman,
!8, Mason-were injured but refused
treatment.
Zasterny was cited by the patrol
forDWI.
Troopers probed another lw&lt;&gt;&lt;:ar
collision in Meigs County 'Wednesday morning.
Raymond L. Oliver, 39, Raciile,
was westbound on CR 30 at 10:10
a.m. when.he met an eastflound.auto
driven by Juanita Wilkinson, 42,
Middleport, on a curve and
sideswiped.
Slight damage was reported to
both cars and Wilkinson was cited
for left of center.

'lame commzttees

SEEK DIVORCE
Reba E. Board, Pomeroy, filed
suit for divorce In Meigs County
Corrunon Pleas Court against Burley
A. Board, Crooksville.

EVENING
0:00

11/0N'T. YA EVEN
TR'I T'FIND OUT

FROM THAT

''UGH" l

NEW PRESIDENT - Rex
Sbenefield, Rl. I, Langsville, bas

Dennis Clark ·of Pomeroy, rather
than Ricky Clark, was fined $50 and
. costs in the court of Pomeroy Mayor
Clarence Andrews Tuesday night on
. a charge of driving while under

susoension.
LETrER WRITER
A Jetter to the editor appearing in
Monday's edition of The Daily Sentinel in reference to draft
registration was written by Ernie
Davis and not 'l:rna Davis as was
printed due to typographical errors.
ANOTHER SURVIVOR
An additional survivor of Mrs.
Mary Genhelmer, who died Tuesday
evening at her home in Chester, is a
son-in-law, David Koblentz. Mt's.
. Genheimer was a member of the
Morning Star United Methodist
Church.

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been elected 1!181 president ollbe
Melgll Couuty Farm Bureau
Federation. Shenefield bas been
active In dairy and beef caUle
limning bls entire !He and bas
been
active
In many
orgaolzallons In addition to the
Farm Bureau. Tom Hamm,
Minersville, was named new vl&lt;e
president; Sylvia Midkiff, Rl. 3,
Pomeroy, secretary, and Jack W.
Carsey, Middleport, treasurer.

'3.99

Grain

PERCALE PRINTED

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Now arfange the· circled leners to
fonn 1he surprise answer. as sug·
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I I

An-. . AN [

t XXI

1'£'\'E ALMOST ARRIVEO AT
00t DESTIHIITIOII, PAL,..
WAR61JCRS IS AT AMEDICAL
COMPLEX NEARBY...

Jumt&gt;es: FAVOR BAGGY PLOWED BABOON
Answer: What the trawler's crew said their work
was-A DRAG

Jumble Book No. 18, co•nalnlng 110 puzzles. Ia aw.Uabl•lor S1 .75 poltplkl
from Jumble, cfo lhla nawapaper, Boi 34, NDIWood, N.J. 07648. lndude your
name, llddreaa, zip code and make checks .payable to NawspaPI'fbook•·

BRIDGE
Studied defense wins out
hearts. Or South might well
have bid three notrump over
North's three spades. If so,
there would be no . article .
North would play ie three

pay S3 .9t.

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$266

To 15.99
1

Every pair gon . 8 10
V ank
lnd
Countryside bnnd•.

Weist sires" to 42 .
10

OR

en. and

..

· WINNIE

I

·WELL ISN'T ANYONE 6 01NG 1()

61ZEET /VIE (&gt;.FTEIZ "' HARD DA'&gt;'
,,T TH E: OFFICE ?

ll 01 .

weights .

TWIN BED

01

BROADLOOM

000\llt

10 .... """

tAR PET
REMNANTS

i4

SIZe

X 36

CARPET RUNNERS .
24"X70"
· Runners. al;;;.t 6 II . tong . $}99

$} 00

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from

carpeh .

Broad

Regular

loom

·,:I .T't.

TWM'dy dlt1tgns.

--'"

·

.

BARNEY

'

Made with panl!t seat for
better Ill, Beige t:olor . F ils.
up to &amp;0" hlp or to 1•0 tbs.

SLEEPWEAI

30(1/_10

TO HIS PLACE TODAY FER SOME

GOURMET COOKIN'

Ecru

bottoms. Part wool or lhtrmel

Retgut•r 1tod•.
·

4 PC. - DIESSll

SCARP &amp;

DOILY SIT

DURABLE SILITE

NYLON
SPATULA
White Or ilrown

11:28
11:30

·SILK
ROSES
While They lui
BOX OF I DOZEN

dl~
BOX

$-1_88

THE SECOND PROBLEM,
MA'AM? 'fE5, MA'AM ...

AT THE

ws

w rn e

IDl e

JOHN ANKERBERG SHOW
ON LOCATION 'Tho Fifth Annual Young Comedl1n1 Sl'low'
There'll be laughs galore 11 Amtr·
Ice'• hotteet young talent• malte
their bide tor atardom on HBO'ala·
teat 'On locatloo'. Hoat: Carl
Rtlfler.
()) MONTY PYTHON'S FLYING

ONE DOZEN
LONG STEM

....

IDle

ffi

REGULA'R '3.99 .

Reel tops. Griv or
Velvet to 13.19.

OC SNUFFY INVITED ME OVER

SAVE NOWI

MENS HEAVY
lOOT SOCKS
tube styles

77~.

. OFf
REGULAR
PRICE

1 IDl, •

NEWS UPDATE
700 CLUB
BARNEY MILLER
Dtetrlch ahoota a robbery auapact
1r1d Ia ao upaet that ne threatens to
rea ion tor per~onat reaaona ollnte·
11![1\',_{Cioood·Coptloned: U.S.A.)
W ()) ilDl IIAGNUII, P.I. A weekend of teneion and turmoil culmif1 atea In terrorism with drastic re·
!lj!Jte for Magnum. (80 mine.)
W &lt;Ill SNEAK PREVIEWS In o
apeclal yetr-end program, co·
hoata Gene Slakeland Roger Ebert
chooaethelrtentavorltetllmaofthe
year, which include 'The Bluea
Brothers', 'Raging Bull', 'Being
There'. 'Coal Miner' a Daughter'
and 'O~Inary People' .
8:30 ())(jJ)W IT'SALIVINGNoncyond
her pen icing waltreaeea put an outragaoua schema into operation
when they dlacover that the hotel
below the restaurant ia on tire .
()) GOOD NEIGHBORS
&lt;llJTHISOLDHOUSEHoaiBobVIIa
dlaculaea plana tor renovating the
Barn unit. (Cioaed-Captloned;
S.A.)
1o:oo
2o-2o
()) IJDl KNOTS LANDING Gory
Ewing, an A.A. aponaor lor alcohol ic Earl Trant, linda himself in
tha position of staving the whole
flight with Earl'a passionate wile,
Judy, a1 they aeerch for Ear~. (60
mine.)
Cll MASTERPIECE TIIEATRE
'Danger UXB' Episode L 'Dead
Man'aShoee'Baeedonthereal·llfe
Incident a of a bomb dlapoaalaquad
during the Londoo blitz, Eplaodel
preeenta Brian Aah, a young man
poeted to a bomb dlapoeal com ·
pan~ haetlly anambled to combat
a new and terrible menace·· unex·
bombs .
(Cioaed·
ploded
pl/onod: U.S.A.) (flO mlno.)
NEWS
10:21.
NEWSUPDATE
10:30
NORMAN VINCENT PEALE
OUR BROTIIER'S KEEPER
10:45
TIS !V!NINQ NEWS
10:18
NE'IH! UPDATE
11 :oo
•
CIJ ®J

0:00

-·

~

WEST
• J 92

maybe five odd .
As a matter of fact the
game was duplicate and two
North declarers did pla~ in
notrump and collect 11 trtcks.
At all other tables South
played in four spades.
The defense started with
the jack of diamonds lead.
East took his ace and king.
Some East players continued
with a third diamond since
ther knew that west could
ruf . This made things easy
for South. He just disca rded
his deuce of clubs and claimed
the balance after West ruffed .
At a few tables East
stopped to think . South had
bid spades and hearts as if he
had a lot of cards in those two
suits . He had also produced
t~o diamonds. It was quite
likely that he would hold ju•t
a singleton in clubs. So the
thinking Easts played the ace
of clubs before leading the
third diamond and no matter
what South did he would have
to lose a .trump trick, his contract and most of the match

EAST

••

"J
tJ3

"10812
tAK9612
+A 9

5

+J8654!

•

SOUTH
+AQ10153
"AQ43

+14

+2

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North

,. ,. ,.3"

West

Nortb

East

Pass

l NT

Pass

Pass
Pass

3+

South

t+

Pass

Pass

Pass

-

Opening lead:+J

By Oswald Jac0 by
and Alan Sontag
I

If North had been a hand
hog he might have bid three
notrump over Soulh's three

..

'

points.I

(Nt.:WSPAPI'.:R

to: Nn.:HI'HI~t:

ASSN 1

/~oy' .

8:18

SIZE 19X33
BRA IDEO RUGS
Regular '1.29

GROUP 2

FITS FULL

•-

·--.

.

WASHABLE :

72190

Actual vatv.s to S\0.99. Includes llrst
q.Jallty aM run of m il l grades Solid t olors

.;

BRAIDED RUGS

Now! -

wuhabl~

I

REVERSIBLE

Prices

In Effec:t

'51 .,~~~~~ .~''"'·

~

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s·o~

REDUCED

Slg

and Th iele

WARM KNIT TOBOGGANS
KNIT CAPS

solldl .

$}17

AND

ALi. OTHER

and ·

AN' Oo; BALDY HEP.E
MUST BE OSCAR!

Irregular~ ol Sl.J9 'o'o'llue

·£11tire Sloe' On Sale!

97~

TERRY

11n1~Y

KNEEJIUOCKS

•M1de In U.S.A.

ACRYLIC PRINTED

Good weigh I lrom 11

notrump and make four or

• Q 10 8

+K Q 101

e&lt;J'
l(ia, THEWALTONSHomo
from the war In Europe, Jaaon Ia on
leave at home before he' a to be
lhlpped out to the Pacific front, but
meanwhile, hlelovelntereat, Toni
Hazelton, hae a question about
their future to take up with him. (60
mlno.l
(I) NEXT QU!STION
® UP AND COlliNG 'A Lillie
. Romance'
Part II . (Closed·
' mplloned: U.S .A.)
8:30
DR. JACK VAN IIIPE
MOYIE -(FANTASY) 0 "
"Pete'• Oregon'' 1877
(() NBA BASKETBALL Allanta
Hawk• va Milwaukee Buckl
(()(jJ). BOSOM BUDDIES Kip Ia
thrilled when he finally takea tha
beautiful S()nny out on the town--an
evening with roommate Henry and
hie punk-rook blind date that's rid·
died by Incredible dlsaatera.
()) U.S. CHRONICLES
® SITCOM 'The Adventures of
Garry MarehaU' In a revealing
behind the acar1ea look, this
documentary explores the world of
Garry K. Marshall. producer of such
hit ahowe a a 'Mark and Mindy',
'Happy Oaya' and 'laverne and

,:,.Bt

NORTH
+K8 4
"K 9 6

~
.. HE'S ltECUPCRATIM6 FROII SOME
YIOUHO at OTiiER, 90 HE'LL I5E
EASY PICKIH6S. I'M AFRAID 1
OCtPT HEED YOli aNY~lllR ~
AHHIE "'

I I I ):

(Answers tomorrow)

THE NFL

MISSIONARIES IN ACTION
NIG!JT GALLERY
1)2). MORK AND MINDY Mork
exploraa the earthly frontlera of
fear when an inaurance ea Ieeman' 1
acare tactlca and Exldor'a asauraf1CI that the world Ia endiflg
prompthlmtoaealhimaelflnaplaatic eurvlval bo)l ··vowlng never to

Southern Mill .

GIIILS'-MISSIS'

PRICE

EBERSBACH ·HARDWARE
~---·-

6 Each

40 ~Eg~[AR
'

[]

e

Thirsty Terry Towels In 8 w ild
colors. II perfect . you would

·$922

Acrylic Solids

ON SALE!

PRICES STARTING AT s2625

A&lt;'FJ:EEME~T

REGULAR '12.99 .

Quality Tic king .

RUG KITS

JUST' IN TIME FOR THE SEASON I

OUR LITT~E DI~­

Size T02 X9o

21x15xl•.

NOW

ALL SIZES

YOU AND Mo HAD

SANFORD AND SON
·
OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY
BASKETBALL
HOLLYWOOD SOI!AR!S
()) JOKER'S WILD
&lt;llJ DICK CAVEn SHOW
MATCH GAllE
• FACE THE MUSIC
7:18
NEWSUPDATE
8:00
THURSDAY NIGHT AT
THE MOVIES 'Goldonglrl' 1980
Stara: Susan Anton, JameaCoburn.

KING SIZE
BLANKETS

HBREBOARD

N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH.
Ph. 992-7161

SLEDS

SHfR/Ff UL~5 ME
THEIR CAR TUR~ED
UP HUNDRED!&gt; UH
MILE5 FROM WHERE

WITH 'EM!

BATH TOWEL
RIOT

r-;:===========j
IN STc;:&gt;CK

NEWS
BACKYARD
MOVIE -(NO INFORIIA'tiON
~VAIUBLE) •• "StorleaFrom A
~rn·o Trunk"
·
·
•
W
CAROL BURNEn AND
FRIENDS
ABCNEWS
STUDIO SEE
.
"
OYER EASY Gueal:
Comedienne and singer Kaye Bal·
lard . Hosts: Hugh Down a and Frank
Blair. (Ciooa~·Coptlonad: U.S.A.)
0:30 ~e(l) NBC NEWS
'
PAUL AND IlONA
BOB NEWHART SHOW
FA«&lt;!! THE MUSIC
.
())IJD) CBS NEWS
.
WILD WILD WORLD OF
AN ..ALS
®MAGGIEANDTIIEBEAUTIFUL
MAC!IINE
.ABC NEWS
8:58
NEWS UPDATE
7:00
PIIIIAGAZ/NE
COllE TO THE WATER
ALL IN THE FAMILY
FAMILY FEUD
BACKSTAGE AT THE GRAND
EOPRY
()) TIC TAC DOUGH
&lt;llJ
IIACNEIL-l.EHRER

i

S~LE

POINT PLEASANT OR MASON

OSBA delegates
given approval

FINED $5o&amp; COSTS

!~DIAN

.

~-CD-CIJiDJIDI.

ern

Dana D.

WINTER
TIRES

SHO~E! HE COMe
RID IN' !NTA S/~Vff&lt;.
CREEK 1-JEXT 0AY-15UT WHEN l A$T
HIM A&amp;OUT 'Eo\1, HE
JEST MUMIJ~fD

ME-D /CINE- MAN t

Deraihnent•••

Bus insurance was purchased
from Cogeshall.Simmons Insurance
and the board I'Oted to continue the
. drivers education multi-media center. The next regular meeting will be
Feb. 18 at 7 p.m.

Television

&amp; . IS BEING

~jLACKBOARD...

IN FRONT OF THE WHOLE
CLASS ...SECOND rKut"-t~~ ..l

FOR THE ~IRST TIME
IN Ml{ LIFE. I BELIEVE
IN SCHOOL PRAI{ER!

l

g~c':c

CAVETT SHQW
'
!tEWSUPDATE
• (I) TH!TONIOHT BilOW
RQt8 BAGLEY SHOW
(Ill •
ABC NEWS
NIGHTL..I
e&lt;IJ CBSL.ATEIIOVIE 'THEJEF·
FERSONS : Tho Wadding' Slora :
l1abel Sanford, Sherm•n Heme ley.
George war111 to throw • gala
aecondweddlng,butwhenltc.ll(nea
to taking the vow the ae&lt;::ond t ime
arourd. Louise beglne to have
aome aecond thoughte. (R8peat)
'McMILLAN AND WIFE: Oownoh/lt
to Danger' Stare; rock Hudaon,
~18n Saint Jamea. {Repeat)

iA!MOVIE"(COMEDY) 00 "A Flu
!n..Hor E•r" 18e8
11:45 W IID.VIE ·I!I!O.liJ!APHY] ·~

"Act One" 1M3

~-16by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
39 Turned left,
I Spanish room
as a horse
5 Cinderella's 40 European
. slipper
river
material
DOWN
10 Gullet .
I Disney
II Arrange
pooch
beforehand
ZSir Bars'
12 Starch
gear
(comb. form) 3 Stand
13 Rent payer
no nonsense
14 " - Squad"
4 P.iercing
15 New Guinea
tool
5 Say "hi!"
town
16 - tree
6 Grassy
ground
.ed)
17~ertaking 7 Take over
19 Elaine8 Absorption
20 Subside
9 Wept gad21 League,
ding about
old style
22 Marriage
notice
24 Stood up to
25 Grafted (her.) lc-+--+-26 Late Italian
statesman
27 Belgian

.

Yesterday's Aaswer
II Remember
24 Links cry
the face
26 Paired off
15 Camera
28 - in
feature
(collapsed)
18 Miss Marple
29 Carried
21 Zhivago's
30 Modify
love
35 Mining
22 Rough; surly
find
23 Lobster's
36 P .I.
feeler
peasant

-

I

'

,.
,.

commune
·28 Mexican
expletive
31 Caddoan
Indian
32 Devoured
33 Soft (mus.)
34 Smitten
36 Pastry treat
37 Trapped
38Actress
Meara

•'

1- B

DAILY CRYPTOQU.OTE- Here's how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR
Is L 0 N G F . E L L 0 W
One Jett&lt;rr simply •tands for another. In this sample A is
used lor the three L's, X for the two O's , etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code l•tters are different.
CRYPTOQUOTES
JUW
QP

KNSPJ
WFWS

ABTT

DNTJ

X WJ

YBHM

RP
NV

IN P J

NA

KUWV

KW

N QS

N K V

SWPNQSHWP.- MRV
UQYYBSZ
Yeslerdaf's Cryptoquole: FEW OF US UNDERSTAND WHAT
BIG.JOBA.IJ-ITLEJOB CAN-BE.-CHANNINO POLI.OCK~--

,,.
I,

�•

a. 1981

Ja11uar 8,1981

Page-10-The Dai_
l Sentinel

Public Notice

Assistant
secretary
.
still controversial
.

: . WASHINGTON (AP) - Carol
: Tucker Foreman, who some critics
: charge personifies a desertion of far. mers by the Agriculture· Depart: ment in favor of consumers, is

:
:
·
:
:

.

remaining controversial to the end
of her days in office.
.
.Ms. Foreman, who was named
assistant secretary of agriculture
for food and consumer services four
years ago, was unveiling a new 32. page government booklet today
: called "IdeasforBetterEating."
. About 100,000 copies have been
· printed at an estimated cost of
: $26,600, officials said.
' Tile booklet includes "menu
; suggestions and recipes to help
· Americans make better use of the
: dietary guidelines" published by the
: government a year ago.
; Those guidelines, although not .
· recommending a ban on any par: ticular food item, stirred con: troveries over their validity, including conflicts among some experts over the relationship between
heart disease and cholesterol.
Questions also have been raised in
Congress and elsewhere about
whether the goverrunent should
recommend what people should eat.
At Tuesday's Senate Agriculture
Committee hearing on John R.
Block's nomination to be agriculture
secretary, Block said he thought
people "are pretty good at figuring
out what to eat and what they should
eat for themselves" so long as
poisonous foods are kept off the
market.
, Block also triggered laughter
when he mentioned hogs in the same
context of human eating habits.
"You can provide protein and
grain to a hog and he'll balance his
ration," Block observed. ''He'll eat
about the right amount of protein to
go along with the grain. He won't

Announcement!

41- - ~oU'SeS fo7Rent-

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

01.1~

overeat on the grain. And people
surely are as smart as a hog.''
Ms. Foreman and her ' boss,
outgoing Agriculture Secretary Bob
Bergland, have insisted the department has a primary dual role of
catering to consumers as well as farmers. Thus, they have maintained, a
variety of non-farm functions such
as food safety, nutrition and health
have gained importance the past few
years .

But many farmers and some of
their groups have faulted Bergland
for what they perceive has been a
neglect of pure agricultural matters
in favor of "conswnerism."
Block ba~ .. said he recognizes the
importance of conswners but also
has said repeatedly - as he did at
his Senate confirmation hearing that he intends to be a strong
spokesman for farmers and that improving the profitability pf
agricultue " has to be priority No. !. "
WASHINGTON
( AP)
Legislation has been introduced in
the House to increase the amount of
money spent by the Department of
Agriculture on agricultural research, extension and teaching.
Rep . William Wampler, the
ranking Republican on the House
AgricultUre Committee, introduced
the legislation Tuesday.
"Congress must take the lead ... to
insure that American farmers, ranchers, and the food and fiber industries of our country have the
scientific technology ... to provide a
bountiful and safe food supply at
reasonable costs for our own people
and the ever-increasing demands of
an exploding world population;· the
Virginia Republican said.• in a
statement on the bill.
Among other things, the measure
would set up a position of assistant

Reedsville News Notes

.

Mrs. Jeff Foster and family at
Belpre.
·
Spending Thanksgiving with Mrs.
Virginia Walton and Susie Cowdery
were Mr. and Mrs. John Calaway
and family of Marion and Mr. and ·
Mrs. Gary La11don and family of
Union.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Buckley were
Thanksgiving dinner guests of Mr.
and Mrs. E. M. Riddle at Parkersburg, W. Va.
Juli Whitehead spent a few days
with Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Frydman
and Sarah at Highland Park, Ill.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Henderson
and family of Portland were
Thanksgiving dinner guests of Mr.
and Mrs. John Henderson and
family.
Spending Thanksgiving with Mrs.
Vema Rose were Mr. and Mrs. Dana
Van Meter a11d family of Belpre and
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J. Rose of
Akron,
Mr. and Mrs. Warren Pickens, Mr.
and Mrs. Ernest Whitehead, and Mr.
and Mrs. Denver Weber and Mark
were Thanksgivi11g dinner guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Meredith at
Beverly.
Mrs. Verna Rose spent Wednesday with Mr. and Mrs. Garrett
Reed, at Coolville.
Visiting at the William Balderson
home Thanksgiving day were Mr.
and Mrs. Bill Dietz of Colwnbus,
Mrs. Hazel Balderson of Vienna, W.
Va., and Mrs. Kathryn Dietz and
Bob Day of Belpre.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Whaley and
Kenny of Long Bottom were
Thanksgiving dinner guests at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Chester Mundry and Lori.
r
Mrs. Sarah Roberts of Canton
spent a week with Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Roberts and family.
- Mrs, L. Balderson

for skinn ing.

TAI&lt;C IT
!EASY·.. I'LL
~Et.P lt:&gt;U ·.. I

FAYE'S Gill Shop in Mid,
dleport will be open from
12·5·untll Christmas.

NIce level floor plan tor the

~NOW

Reasonable. Call ~~2· 7314 .
~2---Mobile Home.~

for Rent

----~--=---

10 x 55 two bedroom mobile
home near Racine. 992·
5858 .

TI-lE

flflo\lLICH
FIRST·Ait:&gt;.

Two bedroom mobile home
at Brown ' s Trailer Park .

•'

secretary of agMculture for research, extension and teacrung.
WASHINGTON (AP) - . The
Agriculture Dep:irtruent says China
has canceled orders for about 300,000
metric tons of U.S. wheat so far this
week.
•
But officials said Wednesday the
cancellations probably were for
logistical reasons and did not signify
any withdrawal by the Chinese from
the American market.
The cancellations were repOrted to
the department by pMvate exporting
companies and included 100,000
metMc tons Wednesday and 200,000
Tuesday.
That left China's orders for U.S.
wheat at slightly less than 8. 7 million
metric tons for the 1980-81 wheat
marketing year that will end May 31.
China has ordered 750,QOO metric
tons for delivery in 1981-82.
A metric ton is about 2,205 pounds
and, in the case of wheat, is equal to
36.7 bushels.
China also has bought for 1980-81
delivery 470,000 metric tons of com,
304,600 of metric tons of soybeans,
24,600 metric tons of soybean oil and
1,373,600 bales of cotton, the department said.

MASON AND AREA
PERSONALS
Mr. and Mrs. Curtis McDaniel
visited on Friday and Saturday with
their daughter and son-in-law, Mr.
and Mrs. Stan Sawtders and family
in Columbus. Visiting on Friday
were the M;cDaniels' other daughter
and family, Mr. and Mrs. James
Loyd ands~ns of Nashport, Oh.
Mr. and Mrs. Sherman Ford
visited Friday and Saturday with
their daughter and son-in-law, Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Day, Pickerington.
Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Landon
Smith during the holidays were Mr.
and Mrs. Nelson Reynolds, Jay and
Jill, Mr. and Mrs. Norman
ReynQ!ds, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Reynolds, Keith, Kelly and Kendra,
Mr. and Mrs. Scott Soldean and son,
John,Mrs.
Mr. Fred
and Mrs.
Cecil
Mr.
and
Tripp,
Mr.Smith,
and Mrs.
Carroll Shinn, Mrs. Alva Luckeydoo,
Mr. and Mrs. Revna King, Sr., and
Mrs. Joyce Carson.
Miss Dorothy Blake, Pt. Pleasant,
spent several days visiting her
mother, Mrs. Wilma Blake.
Visitors of Mr. and Mrs. John
Robert Roach and sons during the
holidays were Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Wolie and s~n, Timmy, Letart,
and David Roach, New Haven.
Mrs. Clara Williams, Margaret
Fox and Luella VanMeter visited
recently with Miss Katie Oliver, a
patient at Pleasant Valley Nursing
Home.
Mrs. Mollie Fox has returned to
her home in Clifton after visiting Mr.
and Mrs. Johnny Forshee at Barberton, Oh. for several days . .
Mr. and Mrs. John Sisson and
daughters, Miriam, marcia, Mary
Alice and Melanie entertained with a
New Year's party at their home in
Mason. Attending were Mr. and
Mrs. Jack Troy and three ·sons,
Angie Head, all of Mason; Mr. and
Mrs. Junior Fry, Don Roush, all of
New Haven.
Mr. and Mrs. PatMck Ryan and
son, James Ryan of Roanoke, Va.
visited their parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Edward Ryan dl!ring the holidays.
New Year's guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Danny Kearns, Melissa and Scott,
were Mr. and Mrs. Denver Blake,
Dawn and Jac.kie, Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas Keams, Carl and Tina.
Mrs. Ethel Rayburn was taken to
Pleasant Valley Hospital on Saturday evening and was placed in intensive care.

Business Services

elderly with -room &amp; board.

ME:'THOO ...

ROUSH

ALL STEEL

ROGER HYSEll'S
GARAGE

Farm Buildings

CONSTRUCTION

Stzes
"From l0x38"

992·3324.

-Auto and Truck
Repair
- Tran'smission
Repair

SMALL

Hrs.: Mon.-Fri.

9A.M.·5:30 P.M.
992-5682

HARVEST

Al TROMM
Would the person who
mistakenly took my tan &amp;
cream colored all weather
coat &amp; rust colored lsatone
gloves at the New Years
Eve dance at Royal Oak

Park please contact Mrs.
Dale Kautz . ~85· 3831.
9- -

· -·you
. -----can sit all

" I(

BEFORE DINNER - Presldent-ele&lt;!t Ronald
Reagan Is flanked by two of bls cabinet designees at
the Blair House In Washington Wednesday where
Reagan hosted a dinner for his cabinet designees and

their wives. F.·om Jell are, Casper Weinberger,
secretary of DeleiJl!e-designate; Reagan; and former
Penru;ylvanla senator Richard Scbweicker, se&lt;!retary
of Health and Human Services-designate. (AP Laserphoto)

Reagan seeks more ideas
WASHINGTON (AP)
President-elect Ronald Reagan,
faced with economic forecasts far
gloomier than he had expected, wanls his staff to bring him more ideas
for slashing federal spending and
reviving the slumping economy.
Reagan was told by advisers Wednesday that he will inheMt a budget
deficit approaching $60 billion for
fiscal year 1981, far more than he
had expected, and that federal spending is up $4:i billion over levels
projected last June.
The economy ha s " been
deteriorating very badly and i think
it's a very serious situation,"
Reagan told reporters as he left a
reception for transition workers
Wednesday night,

Reagan was returning to Los
Angeles today after his first
business meeting with .his Cabinet
nominees . He will return to
Washington next Wednesday to
await the inauguration Jan. 20.
The president-elect met with his
strategists for more than two hours
Wednesday to review the state of the
econo~~nd look at possible ways
to cut spending. ·• A whole raft of
things" were examined, a .source
said.
These included such entitlement
programs as unemployment insurance and trade adjustment
assistance, student loans, foOd stam,
ps, Medicaid, highway and bridge
programs and even Social Security.

the source added.
Treasury Secretary-designate
Donald Regan ·d the presidentelect found his rst comprehensive
bMefing by his ew economic advisers ''very inte esting.''

" He wanted
ore information
from us and ins cted us to come
back with alte lives
which we will be do··...'5-l!T"
several weeks," Regan said.
David Stockman, Reagan's budget
director-designate, said the
economic prospects are "far worse
today than we thought even in October." He said the job of bringing
federal spending under control "is
going to be even greater than we expected."

r-;;;;;,;;;;;,;;,;;,;;;;,;;,;;,;;,;;,;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;,;;,;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

SEMI-ANNUAL
CLEARANCE SALE
A sale of quality men's apparel that you cannot afford to
miss. come in early while our selection is at its best.
Listed here are just a few of the fantastic savings
awaiting you ..
ENTIRE STOCK

HART SCHAFFNER &amp;MARX
JOHNNY CARSON PALM BEACH •
SEWELl SUITS
s1oo SUITS ............•...•.....•.•.•...•..••• •ao
1
155 SUITS ....................... .......... '12C

-

175 SUITS .... ...... ....................... '131
1
195 SUITS ................. ............... '1Ct
1

21 0 SUITS ...... ................ ......... '157 .

1

285 SUITS ................................ '213

1

SPORT COATS REDUCED 25%
Dress Shirts Reduced.,. ........................... 20%
Topcoats · All Weather Coats Reduced.....••... 25%
·Dress Slacks Reduced .............20% to 25%
Outerwear ·(leather Coats included) Reduced •.,.25%

SUITS &amp;

SPORlCOATS
~ PRICE

...

day in a

swamp"Waiting to shoot a duck,
why li it yoU can ' t wail ten
minutes for your dinner ~ "

~nsedli!ilUY ­

1
Card of Than~-­
THE ' Family of Ollie M.
Gotscholl would like to

thank their many friends
and relatives for a II the kin·
dness shown us during our
recent
bereavement.

Would like to thank
especially the members of
the MiddlePOrt United Pen·
tecostal Church for all the

food !hey ·prepared and
sent ln. Also a special

thank you to ijeverand
William Knittel for of·
ticiating at the services.
And for his special pravers
for our family . Also a

special !hank you to Rita
Arnold for the songs and

music.
Husband
Victor,
daughters ; Kaye Smith,
Janet Gr imes and Juanita
Clark. Also sisters; Ethel

Priddy and Dolly Cleland.
3__

-= A~!.U..!!~T~i_S

1

PAY

highest

==

prices

possible tor gold and silver

coins, rings, jewelry , etc.
Contact Ed Burkett Barber

, Shop, Middleport.
, SHOOT! NG

MATCH at

· Corn Hollow in Rutland.
Every Sunday starting at
noon .
Proceeds being
• donated to the Boy Scout

rings,
jewelry, silver
dollars, sterling, etc., wood
ice boxes,jars antiques,
etc. Complete households.
Write M . D . Miller, Rt . 4,
Pomeroy, OH1 or call 992·

WANTED TO BUY c
GOLD,
SILVER,
PLATINUM. STERLING·
COINS, RINGS,JEWELR ·
Y, MISC. ITEMS. AB
SOLUTE
MARKET
PRICE GUARANTED. ED
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP, MIDDLEPORT.
OH 10 992·3476.
OLD COINS, pocket wat·
ches, class rings, wedding
bands, diamonds. Gold or
silver . Call J. A. Wamsley,

Wanted to Buy : class rings,
wedding bands, anything

slamped, 10K , 14K, or 18K

gold. Silver coins, pocket

watches. Call Joe Clark at

991·20.54 at Clark' s Jewelry
Store, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

USED FURNITURE . Gold

silver, class rings, pocket
watches, chains, diamonds
&amp; so on. Copper brass and
batteries, cmtique items,
also do appraisals, com·
plete aucti'oneer service.
Over 30 years eKperience in
business . Will buy com·
plete estates. Middleport,

Oh . 992·6370.

Wanted to buy : good used
exercise Pike . Cal l after 5

W2·2015 . •

Troop 24~. 12 gauge factory
GUN

HAVE YOUR deer trophy
B irchfield 's.

East on 124 at Rutland. 742·
2178.
Healing Fuel, 1 &amp; 2 Ex ·
Oil

Company .

Phone 1·61H92·2205.

YOUR

PIANO .

Too

valullble to neglect, expert
tuning &amp; tmd repair . Lane

Daniels, 742·2951 "'
2082.

•m·

Ra clntt Volunteer Fire
Department sponsors a
,shot gun &amp; ·rille match
every Sat . night 6:30 p.m.

at their building in Bashan.
Factory choke 12 guage
shot ouns only . Open sights

22 rille.

.

Tax oervlce. federal. stale,
&amp; qu.,..ly t.. es done by
appalntmenr. see wanda
Eblin. 41000 Laurel Cl iff
Road, pomeroy, Ohio
4576~ . 992·2272.
Income tax service, federel
&amp;t state. Wallace Russell,

call m ' 7Zl8.

work? Tired of rotating
shifts? Feel the nee~to
develop your ideas in
resident care with a highly
motivated staff? Pomeroy
Health Care Center has the
answer for You. OtJe to
achieving near maKimum
censtJs, we now have
openings for full and part
time positions on day sh ift
but will consider other shit·
ts. Competitive salary, ex·
Cellent working conditions,
life i 'n surance and
disability policy af no cost
to the em plov·ee, and
hospitalization insurance
available. Come visif us or
call: Nancy Van Meter,
R.N., Director of Nursing,
Pomeroy Health Care Cen·

rer ..614-992·6606.'

BABYSITTER for 2 small

pre·school children. Mon·
day thru Friday from 8:00
a.m . to 3 p.m. Most
preferably in Middleport or
Pomeroy area . Must have
referenCes . 992 ·7395 or 992·

3242 .

REGISTERED NURSES
Immediate Openi!1g
Intensive Care Unit
Full Time, ll to 7 nurse,
with experience in ICU,
CCU is preferred.
Excell'ent Benefits :
Pension Plan, Long
Term
Disability ,
Hospitalizati on . Salary
commensurate w ith e&gt;&lt;
perience.
Contact :
Teresa Collins, RN
Veterans Merrorial
Hospital
Pomeroy, OH .
13

_ l_!tsurance

AUTOMOBILE
SURANCE been

guns only ,

,-----------c-c----

~92 ·

12s. 6),

IN
can ·

Lost
your
TEXAS OIL Co. needs c elled?
mature person for short operator' s license? Phone
trips
surrouhding 992·2143.
Pome.roy .
Contact
customers. We train. Write

T.R . Di ck. Pres .. Soulh·

wt"stern

Petroleum ,

Worth, T• . 76101.

Ff.

Musicians wanted ; lead
guitarists ,
rhythm
guitarists, drummer tor
rock band . Contact Gary

Fife at W2·3627.

----~--

Wanted :
mature
in ·
dlv idual, male or female
living in or near Pomeroy
&amp; surrounding area to
represent a 75 year old

18

WanTed to Do

Furnace repairs, electrical
work , plumbing , mobile
home or residen ce. 992·

5858.
Will do paneling, ce iling,
floor tile, plumbing . Free
estimates . Fred Miller at

acre; 6 rooms, 2 balhs, Ph
acres; 6 room s basement,
bath, 2 mobile homes ;
Mason, 3 bedroom never
lived in, 2 bedroom , rented
2 acres. John Sheets, J lf2
miles south of Middleport,

e•·

stating qualltlcatlons to:
D.L. Voahees. District

Manager , box 120, Athens,

Ohio, 45701 . Call 1·592·2073
between the hours of 8:30·
4:30 weekdays
terview.

for

2146.

1971-;ti llcrest mobile home,

Unfurnished one bedroom
apartment for rent. Ren·
Ters assistance available
for senior citizens. Contact
Vitlage Manor ApartmentS

at 992·7787.

$4,500.00. 742·3080 or ca n be

seen at Kingsbury Road ,
the first trailer .

Apt. for rent, 3 rooms &amp;

Real Estate - General

FURNISHED 4 room &amp;.
bath, adults only, no pets.
Middleport, 992·3874.

Housing
Headquarters

T

IRGtL B. SR .·I " '

bath. 9~2· 5908 .

Apartment with river view.
$175 .00 per month, small
deposit required. Rooms
for rent with kitchen
priviledges. ~60 . 00 a month.
Hobstet ter Real ty, 742·

2003.

16 E. Second Street

1-(614)-992 -3325

ON l STATE RTS . Reasonable . 3 bedroom
home iwth large shade
trees . Natural gas and
ci ty · wiltcr. On 1 acre
lust out of town . Want

S30,000.
NICE LAYING - over
JO acres of good bu ilding
sites . Right on old R1. 33
with T .P. wat er I me.
BARGAIN --. 5 r ooms,
bath , natural gas, cily
ater, and chimney for
woodburncr .. Only
Sl2,000. Clln you beat
th is?

Middleport area . 992·7511
or 992-6130 .

Two bedroom apartment in

Pomeroy . $150.00. Three

bejroom
trailer near
mines for $1.50.00. One
bedroom apartment in

Trailer lot for sale, ss.ooo .
Modular home lot on Route
7, three bedroom farm
house loc;:ated on Route 7.

992·2571.

Beautiful three bedroom
ran ch brick home in Baum
Addition, Pome·roy, Ohio.
Gas heat, ce ntral air con·
ditioning . Call 985·3814 or

992·2571.

in·

Racine . $33,00.00. 949·2801.

Four year Old house on J
acres, 7 rooms, 1 &amp; one half
bath, nice location, Route

2, Racine . ~49 · 2706 .

Must sell house of 5 rooms.

nice

'

big

garden

area,

$8,000.00 or best otter. Call
5~3· 326~ after 6.

*Ladies' levi's Bendover Reg. 125.QQ.••.•....•. '21.50
*Ladies' levi's Corduroy &amp;
Fashion Jeans Reduced .......................... ~0%

Nice house on 2 &amp; one half·

acres on SR 7 between
Memory Gardens &amp; state
garage. Priced on in·

B~ILDING

·•
.....

IIIII'- ••

~~2-7S44

Pomeroy, Oh.

.

--------·-·- --__ _

5~ __ 2!.!.~ ~ ~C!Je

and ponies and riding
lessons .
Everything
imaginable in hor se equip·
ment . Blankets, belts,
boots, etc. English and
VJestern . Rut h Reev es
(61.4) 6~:J 329f1.
.

B~o~i -=.

Three sleeping rooms, con·
struction workers only ,
private
entrance,
refrigeration , television ,
coffee maker . Call after 4,

THE

MEIGS

C ount y

'!1?1~1·

r~re· c: ev :- .. '1 1 ~du lt
,1 15, ;; 1 nrr ~ K. ·~i n rol t ·,
•. iJc k ' ~lbr&lt;~ t'",
'.,~.
,::. ·
&lt;;e tler,
,..
~ ., .. ~

- ~- =.=-c--=-=

~ __ ._S_pa_c ~ l~r_R.!I!'

COUNTRY MbBI LE H•

___

54

bi.?K"'

,,.,

Antisue~

Misc. Merchani se

2815,

7199

fntA&amp;t '8~

Is how to describe tt1is
large lot that has a pic ·
turesqtJe setting In Mid ·
dleport. 11h story wlth
un ique dormers , full
basement, plus a rental
unit for extra income.

He 'll app1eciate lh1 s handsome
jacket lor 1ts hand·knillm1y.
Truly one of a kmd just l1ke
h1m ' K01! from !he 1ibbed collar

to Ohio Pallet Co .. Rl. 2.
Pomerqy 992·2689 .

Nttdlecra" Oepl • 1 •
The Daily Sentinel
S.. 163, Old Chelsea Sla., New
Yo&lt;\, NY 10113. Print Name,
Address, lip, Pa~etn Numbe1.
Catch on to lhe c181i boom' Send
101 OUI NEW 1981 NHDL£CRAFT
CATALOG . Ove1 171 des1gns. 3

home doublY attractiv e.

a wood bUrner makes It
econom leal , and 3
bedrooms make if rust
right tor a family . E&gt;:

!ree p111 1ems·1ns1de $1.00

AT

$34,~00 .00 .

LARGE ROOMS - And

there are six of them . A
nice
wood burn i ng
fireplace. full base
ment, and a front sitting

porch. Freshly painted
is a bargain at

$17,500.00.
REALTOR
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
ASSOCIATES
OFFI~E ~92-2259

m
IUAITOjj

All CRAfT BOOKS .. $1.15 uch
134-14 Quick Mothioe QUills
tlJ.Fasluon Home Quiltinl
llZ·Quilt O.itinals
tli-Add 1 Block QIJIIts
130-Swultr FasloiarJs.Sizes 311-56
IZ!I-Quick 'n' [asy Transfers
1211-£nftla9l Patchlllllk Quills
121-Af&amp;flam 'n' Doilies
126-Thrifty Crafty Flowers
IZS·Ptlal Quilts
121-Pillow 'Sitow-otts,
llB·CnJChet wilh S&lt;fulles
117-hst Art of Needlepoint
114-Complolo Alehw
112-Ptize Af&amp;hans
111-[asy Art of Hahpin CrJ!'hot
110.16 Jifty Rup
·
108-lnsllnt llltllllll
IOI·Insllnt S.win&amp;
106-lnstant Fasllion
104-lnsllnt Money
103-15 Quilts lor Today

Home

t"!.p~ov~me,~ncc
tsc__

WILL do handyman work
in your home . Furniture
repair in my shop. Jim
Bentz, 4th St., Syracuse.

DISCOUNT

Gene's Carpet Cleaning,
deep stream extraction .
Free
estimated,
reasonable rates, scotchquard. 991·6309 or 742·

2211.
-

83
J

--- -

-.---~-

Exc_avati~g-

-·

&amp; F BA CK HOE SER·
VICE llscensed &amp; bonded,

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

=

1977 Chevette in good con·
dition. $2100.00. 985·4256.
]977

Datsun 6210

hat·

mpg. 992·5523.

~~-~----

power brakes. 11200.00. 949·
24~4 .

84

Electrical
_ ~ ~efr_i_ger~ti!J.!!. _

SEWING
Repairs,

MACHINE
service,

mak es1 992· 2284.

Fabric Shop,
Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales
and Service. We sharpen
Scissors.

ELWpOD
REPAIR -

motorcycle,

.

c(jlor

blue .

Call949·2649.

BOWERS
Sweepers,

toas ters, irons, aU small
appliances. Lawn mower.

Nexl to State Highway
Garage on Route 7, ~BS ·
3825. '

= ~~t~r5iCies= =_
1978 KAWASAK I ~z 650 APP.LIANCE

74 ~ ~

all

The

,

SERVICE:

all makes washer, dryers,
ranges , dishwashers,
disposals, water tanks. Call

Ken Young at 985·3561 , 28

years experience. AlSo will
sell parts you f ix.
·

---ss-·----_ .Q!.n~r_!!.!l~~i.!!.L...._

Home

__ ,!_O]_p!_O.'!~m~~t ~ __

AGRI ·LIME Spreading,
GENE ' S
CARPET limestone and fill dirt
CLEANING. Deep stream hauling. Leo Morris, 742 ·

clean puts nu·look back in 2455.
your carpet, higt'IIY recom ·
mended, reasonable rates, We.lls Trash Hauling, Olive
Scotchguard.
Free &amp;. Orange Township. Ap·
estimates. Gene Smith, ca ll proved by commissioners;
now 992·6309 or 742·2211 .
liscensed by the he~lth

Full size bed complete with
brass plated headboard &amp;
department. ~85 · 3518.
sealy box springs &amp; mat·
tress I ike new condition . ~---------L;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.

m01l and handling. Send to:

LOAN makes this
almost new ranch type

~ ==-~u.!_o~l~r)_!~ -=

81

Feb. , 1981. Mowrey's
Upholstery , Pt. Pleasant.
W.Va . 1·304-675·4154.

Allu BIOOks

9'•&gt;%

81

-

1975 Plymouth Road Run·
n er, 3 1S 2 barr e l ,
automat ic, poWer steering,

prices on furniture.
Reupholstering . Jan . &amp;

each patter n fm fust·class an.

STEAL

~~=::::;::;::;=.::;~1~~=

layout . 992·7201.

843·4831 or 843·47 34.

SPECIAL

sleeves. Use synt~el1t wo1sted.
Palle1n 7199 Men's SIZes 38-44
mcluded .
$2.00 f01 each pattem Add 501

fireplace, 3 BR , 1big li\1 ·
ing room, 61h .;,:cres of
ground. This just starts
to describe this nice

and

CHIP WOOD. Pul es max.

diameter 10" on largest
end . $12 p·er ton . Bundled
slab. $10 pe r ton . Del ivered

chback, good cond ition . 34

3269 or 992·5006.

down aU '" one p1ece, mcludmg

REDUCED $51.5ll0.00.
A HUGH FAMILY
ROOM - With a pretty

BUY

·

FIREWOOD $35. a truck

Beautiful
handmade
clocks, wall &amp; table top,
cedar &amp; cypress ; contact
Philip Bearhs or may be
seen at the Leonard Bass
residence on St . Rt. 124 in
Syracuse. Four available &amp;
taking orders. Phone 992·

3

basement if finished.
ONLY Sl9,500.00.
ONE BLOCK DEEP -

CELLENT

62 -~ ::::waiitec!tQsu¥ ·

-- -------

years old. 1977 Chevy 4 x 4.
992·5449.

A

I

::o~lllffi_i'.E::
&amp; liVSl®R

-

Firewood for sale, I.Aixed
types of wood $35 .00 per
pick ·up load . De1tv :- ··9d,
will stack for Ser,1or
Citizens. 843·4951 or 84:J·

bedrooms, kitchen · din·
ing area, all on one
floor . Could have full

Water·Sewer · E lectric
Gas Line-Ditches
waterLineHook-ups
• Septic Tank·s
County Certified
Roush Lane
Cheshire, Oh.
Ph. 367 -7560

H'J m .~ne Society pets of th e

~92 · 7791,

load , $60. a cord . All har ·
dwood, split, &amp; delivered .

6 YEARS OLD -

REESE r/gU
TRENCHING
SERVICE

HOOF HOLLOW : Horses

3 AND 4 RM furnished ap·
Ts. Phone 992·5434 . ·

· 767·3167 or 557·3411.

Housing
Headquarters

House · with

Spencer, West Virginia. I·
304-927' 1568.

V.C. YOUNG II

992·6215 or 992-7314

tor Rent

pay cash or ce rtified c l ~ w~ k
for antiques and Lu 'lr~c ·
tibles or entire e;t ai ~s.
Nothing too large. Also,
guns, pocket watc .es anG
coin colle ctions. ( all 6l4·

991·5692

reasonable down payment.
Olio Star Route, Bo• 58,

headqUIJ'ten Wednesday. Stepp quoted the trouble,!
aulomater'stop llnall!:e as uylng.~'judgmmt day" .lL
close at band. ( AP Luerpholo)

electrical work
( Fl'lee Estimates)

--------:.=.t·-·--Apartment

ATTENTION c tl~\ ·
POR TANT TO YOU I w ; II

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

Jean Tnsseii949·2UO

in

- Plumbing and

44

53 ~

Lincoln · ·oLo'at.er and
sewage S ~ .. ou le.

Roger&amp;' Dottie Turner

Chester, Ohio. consider
land coni racr wl th

992-7544
VA loansno money down
Federal Housing ..:.... ·
3% on $2.5,000
5% on bala!'lce.
Conventional Loans5%
down
Call for Information

2161.

LOT - On

spection. 992·7741.

6 acres

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

Knit in One Piece

70 acres with good
fenc es and on Rl 33
North . 2 hou ses, 2
bedroom mobile home,
all m inera ls (leased),
some ni ce timber, and
clea n pastures.

ASSUMABLE

No Sunday ca lls.

-Addonsand
remodeling
- Roofing and gutter
work
-Concrete work

Ml NE RALS TOO - Has

home .

NICE TWO bedroom house
i
three car garage In

CUNNINGHAM .
&amp; ASSOC.
Mortgage Bankers

e, m ed ium
L..
Park, Reule 33, No ,., ,.,t st1erherd
ta, ·,; house fyfi
bruke
Pomeroy . Large lot ~ ( ,:, 11 size dog re ady to bt:: .oved ,
space at 107 Sycc;~more
lovable r:1ixed breti!'d . 992
St reet , POmeroy, $125.00. 992 7 47~ .
1 6260.
Call Cleland Realty al 992
225 ~ .
TRAILER spaces for r• ·nt.
1·· ,;;::.._..::~:.::;::::::::::::;~ Southern Valley Mo! .lc PUREBRED
Engl is h
I•
Home Park, Cheshire Oh. Shepherd puppies. Stoc~
W2 ·3954.
and watch dogs. Phor.e 247

$39,900.00.

* Ladies' Levi's Straight Legs Reg. 126.00 Now '22.50

"YOUNGS
CARPENTER
SERVICES"

PULliNS
EXCAVATING

Pomeroy fo r $125.00. OHice

10 ROOM bri ck, 3 baths, 111•

Rl . 1.

12-31-1 mo.

''

45- - ~Ul"ls~~

Unfurnished apartments
for rent in The Pomeroy·

Phone

H.£'~~s .!_oi_ S::t!!

17 ,000 in the first year . Ex·
cellent potential for in·
creased earnings &amp; ad·
vancement. Appli ca nts
must have lnituative ,
mature judgement, &amp; sales
ab ility . However, no ex ·
perlence necessary . We of·
ter a complete train ing
program,
guaranteed
salary, expense allowance,
bonuses, &amp; commissions.
Fringe bcnefitrs include,
group Insurance, employee
&amp;

12 x 60 mobile home with
natural gas. Close to
mines. $6,000.00 . Phone 742·

-'

Furnished apartments, 992·

3129, ~~2 · 5914, or 1·304·882·
2566.'

Horse tra iler , 1 horses: 1
paint
mare,
other
registered Appalosa, two

31

disability benefits,

4424.

12-8·1 mo.

44
Apartment
____f.!tr_R~I!L_ ___

992·6338.

established life&amp;. health in·
surance company . Up to

cellcnt retirement benefits.
Management training also
available . Write letters

PH. 742-2328

two

12 &gt;&lt; 60 , two bedrooms, new
carpet . 8 X S Sales, Inc.,
2nd X Viand Street, Point
Pleasant, WV Phone 675·

Pomeroy, Oli.
Open
Saturday Only
4 P.M. to 1I P.M.
Free Coffee &amp; Tea
Free Food
Live Music

IF YOU NEED 11
FIXED,
WE CAN DO IT!'

three bedjooms, new car·
pet. 1971 Cameron, 14 x 64, · Three bedroom trailer in
two bedrooms, new carpet. Southern Valley Mobile
1972 Champion, 12 x 6.0, two Home Park, Cheshire,
be~rooms, new carpet. 1976
Ohio. 992 ·3954 will accept 2
Cameron, 12 . x 60, two children.
b~Qrooms, all electric. 1971

Skyline.

SHOOT,

7' 30 p.m. Factory choke

celslor

the eligibility list at
2156 or992·2157 .

Ph. 614 ~ 9~2 · 2104

Racine · Gun Club, every
Friday night starting at

' motJnted .

and earn good money plus
some great gifts as a Sen·
tine! route carrier . Phone
us right away and get on

COt"FEE HOUSE

Building &amp;

1_1_ _1:1'!!P_Wa~nt,.e,..d____
- - - -- ~':._5_!!!_ ..._ __
GET VALUABLE training
1973
Crown Haven, 14 x 65,
as a young business person

742·2331. Treasure Chest
Coin Shop, Athens, OH . 591· Lady or girl to live in . 992·
2686.
6462.

choke9unonly!

RACINE

n---MObile Homes--

•RON AND BRASS BEDS, RNs and LPNS, looking tor bedrooms. bath &amp; 1/J, new
old furniture. desks, gold challenging and rewarding carper. 1970 PMC,

7760.

Sweaters Reduced ..••......•...•••... : ............ 20%
Ladies' Wear Reduced .. ····· :.. ··· ;····· .. ·•· .. ··• 25%
(Not all Levi Mdse. See note below;
Dress Hats &amp; N~ckwear Reduced .... •··•·.. ··· • 25%
Sport Shirts Reduced········ ··· ····- .............. 25%
Men's levi's Casual Slacks
(Polyester or corduroy) Reduced ..... ; .20%
Samsonite Luggage Reduced····-:·1..••....•...•.30%
All Men's Jogging Suits Reduced •••...•....•••. 50%
Florsheim &amp;Levi's For Feet Shoes Reduced ·..•• 20%

GROUP OF MEN'S

JUDGMENT DAY AT HAND - United Auto
- -Worken' Pr.esldeat Douglas A_ Fruer loob oo ~u
Marc Stepp, vice president of the uoloo llllllwen a
question during a news conference at Chrysler C.orp. 's

-----~--

LOCAL 00· ',

600&lt;'&amp;1&lt;, WIJY ISN'r
HG C&lt;IT HEL.PING 01.~
LA"Ie5 TO CROSS
THE STREET ?

'

'

COMMUNIT'r' BUILDERS
·cLUB
The C.B.C.'s met with Ronald and
Ella Osborne for their November
meeting. Plans were made to eat out
for the next meeting which will be
January 2. Refreshments were served to guests, Delores and Harliss
Frank, Marilyn and Roy Hannum
and .members, Pauline and Donald
Myers, Margaret and Walter Brown,
Grace and Denver Weber, Maxine
and Ernest Whitehead, and Lillian
and Warren Pickens.
NEWS NOTES
Thanksgiving guests at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Brown were
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Cowdery and
family of Knoxville, Tenn. , Miss
Naomi Pickens of The Plains, and
David Brown from Ohio Stale
University, Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Dave Weber spent
Thanksgiving with her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Vaughn Taylor at Dayton.
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Wilson were
Thanksgiving dinner guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Congrove at
Zanesville.
Mrs. Walter Brown is a patient at
University Hospital, Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Garth Smith visited
with Mr. and Mrs. Howard Young
for the Thanksgiving holiday.
Chester Mundry Sr. is a patient in
Veterans Hospital at Huntington, W.
Va.
Thanksgiving dinner guests of Mr.
and Mrs. William Congrove were
Miss Forrest Kibble and Mr. and
Mrs. Roger Chaney and Angela.
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Smith, Mark
and Jodi, and Mr. and Mrs. John
Smith spent Thanksgiving Day with
Mr. and Mrs. John Burns and family
atLogan.
.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Bise and Mrs.
Mabel Hetzer were Thanksgiving
dinner guests at the home of Mr. ami

3

.

Phone 992·6115. $125.00.

SpliT seasoned firewood tor

sale. $35.00 delivered . 247·
3972 or 247·2575.

ow at
Pomeroy
Landmark
Gas tun11
used HEirlger.ator
usedXllJChalnSaw

used ll" saw

suo.oo
SIH .oo
IIU .OO

iU .oo

com tori Glow K er«11ene
He3tl!n , Economy (11·DU31.
Reg . ~139 . 95
NOW i1H .9J

Q,.._ POMER~Y

...e. - .

~LANDMARK
Main St.

Pomeroy

YOUR Humane Society
992·6260 miniature collie
fefT!ale, male collie, english

setter, male, 3 snoopy
types. female, Shephard
type, female, male beagle

type Including mixed breed

female. several
one adult .

kittens,

Wow 1.I THINK I MAY
H/\'/t. ACC.I DENfA t..t..Y
KNIT"Tt:D M~SHF A
~Wt:ATER ~

i

'I·

e
h
n
~

'e
8

e
e

e
g
0

I

)

'

�..

Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

.

o o

• o '

•

J

I

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

JANUARY
CLEA"ANCE

JANUARY
CLEARANCE

JANUARY

JR. JACKETS
.and COATS

-

WOMEN'S

CLEARANCE SALE

COATS
Our entire stock of mas a~d
'

SPECIAL CLEARANCE SALE PRICES ON ALL THREE
FLOORS

ALL SALES FINAL

MISSES SIZES by bradley, Devon, Tnssi &amp; Douglas
Marc .
EXTRA SIZES by Lady Devon and Trissi's Woman .
Reg. $32.00 ... Sale $24.00
Reg.S40.0D ... Sale$30.00
Reg. $49.00 ... Sale $36.75

...

JUNIOR SPORTSWEAR

JR. SWEATERS

Blazers, Slacks, Tops and Skim

V-NECKS, TURn£ NECKS, VESTS
REG. $11.00
REG. $15.00
REG . $21.00
REG . $29.00
REG. $33.00

REG. $5.00 .. . ... ~ .. ,,... , . • ..... ..... ... SALE $3.75
REG. $12.00 .... . . . ..................... SALE 59.00
REG . $18.00 ............. , .. . .......... SALE $13.50
REG. $27.00 ........................... SALE $20.25
REG.$31.00 ........... ._ .............. SALE$23.25

.................... .. . ..... SALE $8.25
, .... ....... .......... ..... SALE $11.25
........................... SALE $15.75
................ , .......... SALE $21.75
........................ . .. SALE $24.75

JANUARY CLEARANCE

JANUARY CLEARANCE

JANUARY t"UARANCE

PRE-TEEN SPORTSWEAR

CHI'LDREN'S SLEEPWEAR

BOYS' SHIRTS

SWEATERS, SKIRTS, SLACKS, BLAZERS and BLOUSES

Thermal knits, flannel and brushed tricot gowns, footed paiamas,
robes and sleepers.
Little boys and girls sizes.
' '

Sizes 8 to 20. All shirts are included - flannels· velo~rs ·
knits . Good selection.

REG.$5.00 ............................. Sj!.LE$3.50 ...
SALE S5 60
:::::::::::::::::::
: :: SALEs8 :4o
REG.$17.00 .... . ...................... SALE$11.90
REG . $22.00 ................. ... ......... SALE 515 .40

REG.$7.95 ..... ... . .. ...... ... : .. SALE$5.55

R.EG. $12.00
REG ' $15. ' 00
REG. $21.00
REG.$26.00
REG. $30.00

.. , ................. SALE $9.00
SALE$11.25
.. .... . .. .. .. .. .. .. .

: .. . ............... SALE $1 5.75
.......... ......... , SALE$1 9.50
. , . , ............... SALE $22.50

=~~: ~~2~~ 0· ::

~ :::

::·!sS

REG. $8.9 5 .. · .... ·. · ·. · · · · · · · · · ~:t~
REG.$10. 95.... ................
,
REG. $14.95 ......... , •••....•. SALE $10.45

~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~----;-----~~~~~--~
;
JANUARY CLEARANCE
JANUARY CLfARANCE
JANUARY CLfARANCE

MEN'S DRESS COATS and
ALL WEATHER COATS

CHILDREN'S JEANS &amp; PANTS

Fur tri~med dress coats and all weathl!r coats with zipout liners. Sizes 36 to 50 .
REG. $64.95 ... , ..... , .... ... ..... . . ... SALE $42.20
REG. $69.95 ... .. . . . .. ...... . .. , ....... SALE $45.40
REG. $74.95 , ........ , .. , .............. SALE $48.70

Children's jea ns, corduroys and knit pants in sizes 6 to
24 months, 2 to 4, 4 to 6x and 7 to 1,4 .

JANUA~Y

N ~tw~orn

one piece out-

to 24 mos .• 2 to 4, 4 to 7.

REG. $6.00 ........ : .................... SALE $4.49
REG. $9.00 ...... .. ... . ... , .. , .. , .... . .. SALE $6.79
REG. $13.00 .... , .... . ... . . ... .. ... .. ... , SALE $9.79
REG.$17.00 . ... ...... .... ............. SALE$12.79
REG. $21.00 ........ , .. , ... . ..... . , .... SALE $15.79

REG. $4.50 ................... .. ..... . .. 5ALE .S3.39
REG $7.00 .............. . ........... . ; . SALE $5.29
REG. $9.00 ::-............ ... .. . .... .. •... SALE $6.79
REG. $13.00 . : ............ .... ..... , ... . SALE $~ . 79
REG.$17 .00 ..... ... ...... .. . . , ... ..... SALES12.79

$13.00 Van
515.00 van
$16.00 Van
517.00 van

REGULARLY '2.95 to '8.95.

JANUARY CLEARANCE

Shirts
l\!lirts
Sflil(ts
Shirts

KNIT ACCESSORIES
Gloves, Mittens, Scarfs, Hats and Sets.
SALE $2.49
SALE $3.&lt;l'l
SALE $4.59
SALE 56.29
SALE $8.39

GOOD STYLES AND COLORS

1f2 .PRICE

I

Men's $9.95 Flannel Shirts .
Men's 514 .95 Flannel Shirts
Men's515 .95 Flannel Shirts
Men's $16.95 Flannel Shirts
Men's 518.95 Flannel Shirts

, .....• , .•. , ......• . S6.96
. .. ........ , ....... $10.46
................... 511.1~
..•.• , •...•.•...... $11.16
.... .... .. ..•...• , • $13.26

Elderly couple hound over

CLEARANCE

Entire stock Including Iwesterns · velours - knits · flannels· cotton

polyester blends. Sizes S. M, L, XL.

MEN'SS10.95SHI!TS
MEN'sS14.9SSHIKTS
MEN's $18.95 SHIIhS
MEN's 524.95 SHIIhS

... . ...... , ............. $7.15
.................. . . .. ... $9.70
............ .... , ... , ... 512.30
, ........... .. .......... $16.20

JA

•

BOYS' WINTER JACKETS

BEUEFI;&gt;NTAINE, Ohio - An autopsy was to be conducted today for
a Lakeview man, wanted in Alien County on felony charges, who was
shot and killed while being apprehended in nearby Logan County.
Craig D. Carpenter, :IS, was shot Thursday when a Logan County
deputy sheriff and a township policeman tried to arrest him. The
fl!llllell of the Officers were withheld pending completion of an internal
investigation of the shooting.
The incident occurred after the sheriff's office received a routine
call about a car, occupied by Carpenter, stranded along Ohio 235 near
Indian Lake. In a computer check, the two officers answering the call
learned that Carpenter was wanted in Allen County on charges of
breaking and enterins and grand theft.

MEN'S WINTER JACKETS
.
.

Boys sizes B to 20. Good style and color selection . This
sale also includes boys' lined vests.

MEN'S 515.95 SWEATERS
MEN'S $19.95 SWEATERS
MEN'S $22.95 SWEATERS
MEN'S $24.95 SWEATERS

BOY$$21.95JACKETS
BOYS $29.95 JACK!=TS
BOYS 539.95 JACKETS
BOYS 559.95 JACKETS

MEN'S$29.95JACKETS
MEN'S $39.95 JACKETS
MEN'SS49.95JACKETS
MEN'S $59.95 JACKETS
MEN's $69.95 JACKETS

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

Autopsy being taken on body

CLIARANCI

Sizes s, M, L, XL . Cardigans · vests · sl;povers. All of
our men's sweaters included .
·
$11 .10
513.90
$16.00
$19.20

OOLUMBUS, Ohio - An elderly couple accused of selling drugs to
supplement their Social Security Income has been bound over to a
Franklin County grand jury,
Luther Beaver, 73, was charged with aggravated drug trafficking,
said the county sheriff's department: His wife Audrey, 62, was
charged with aggravated drug trafficking and complicity to
aggravated drug trafficking.
A request by defense attorney Donald AleliBnder to waive a
preliminary hearing for the couple, set for Thursday, was granted.

MEN'S SPORT SHIRTS

36 to 48 . cor~urovs. down and polyester filled lockets,
P.V.C.'s, ny lons. Goqd style and sizes. Selection of lined vests in·
el uded .

.. ... ...............
....................
........... ...... .. .
.................. ·..

KEANSBURG, N.J, - A,pre-dawn fire roared through a three-story,
brick nursing home in this central New Jersey corrununity today.
Authorities said two people were dead, at least13 were injured and 35
pe&lt;Jple were Wl8CCOunted for.
The Beach View Rest Home, on Raritan Bay about 30 miles south of
Newark, housed 114 elderly patients, police said.
The fire, which erupted at 3:57 a.m. EST, was still "burning like
blazes" two hours later, said Detective James G. Beatty Jr.
Among the injured were II patients and two firefighters, authorities
said. They were taken to area hospitals.

men's

Wrangler ·. Mr . Leggs and ElY Brands . Regulars · tails · big
sizes. Plaid s and solid colors.

JANUARY CLEARANCf

MEN'S SWEATERS

Two die in nursing home fire

MEN'S FlANNR WORK SHIRTS

JA~UARY

99e PAIR
JANUARY CLEARANCE

1

JANUARY CLEARANCf

Sizes 27 to 38 waist. Lengths 30 to 36 . Solid colors. Not
every size in every color .

FAMOUS SPRINGFOOT QUALITY.

SALT LAKE CITY - Engineers worked today to find the cause of a
vast power failure that rut 1.., million residents of Utah, idaho and
Wyoming and left pe&lt;Jple dangling from ski lifts, awaiting rescue in
elevators and maneuvering in traffic snarled by blacked-out signals.
II was one of the most widespread outages in U.S. history.
The enUre stale of Utah lost electricity from lunchtime to suppertime Thursday. Some 27,000 people in five Wyoming counties also
lost power for up to 45 minutes, and a few communities in southeastern
Idaho also were affected. LighL'I flickerod in eastern Nevada, but
stayed on .

REGULARLY 3.95 TO 12.95
1

............... .. ..... $9.10
..................... $10.50
.. .. .. .. .. . .. .. .. .. .. $11.20
..................... $11.90

CORDUROY JEANS

MEN'S SIZES 9 to 15 - BOYS 7 to 11

Engineers check outage cause

MEN'S • BOYS' DRESS GLOVES

MEN'S '19.95

s1 39 TUBE SOCKS

taken

•

JANUARY CLEARANCf

MEN'S ANO BOYS'

"We're asking for any assistance
we can get right now," Niday said.
"We're looking for mo~ile homesdouble wide and triple wide - to put
in a large parking lot here. We'd like
to keep all of our offices located as
close as we can.
''The city has offered the use of the
municipal court for the juvenile and
common pleas sections," Niday
said. "And we've 'had a lot of offers
from our neighbors."

COURTHOUSE BURNS- Shorify after lhlB photo was
Thill"
llday algbt, the roof of lhe Gallla CoUDCy courthouse caved In after fire
gutted the s&lt;c,ond and third ,...... rillhe 101 yeal'&lt;lld slruclure. The blaze,
which is believed to have started in the seeood floor furnace, was reported at t:tO p.m. and brought under control by fire units from GaUlpolls,

JANUARY CLfARANCi

Dresses,
bib overalls,
christening dresses, jumpers, knit outf its and ohe piece
·outfits.
·
Sizes Newborn to 24 mos ., 2 to 4, 4 to 6x, 7 to t4.
REG. $8.00 ....... . .. , .... ... ... . .. . , ... SALE $5.99
REG . $11.00 ............................ SALE $8.29
REG Sl6.00 ............. . .... '. . .. . .. , .. SALE $11.99
REG. 519.00 ... ........................ SALE $14.29
REG . 524 .00 .... ... .................... SALE 517.99
. . . . . ..... ... . ... . ...... .. SAL
29

JANUARY CLEARANCE

flees. The new offices were added on
in 1962 to the courthouse, which was
built in 1879.
Thirteen prisoners housed in the
basement of the anne:.: were moved
to other county jails as a precaution.
"It's not a total loss - but it's
close," said Northl!P.
Firefighters remained at the
scene into the morning.
"I'm looking out the door right
now to see if it's still b~ing," Bush
said at 8 a.m. Friday.
Paul Niday, Gallia county commissioner, said, "I'm IX'etty optimistic about not losing too many
records ." Niday said many
docwnents, such as birth cer·
tificates ·and immunization records,
were carried out, and that most
probate and juvenile court records
were saved because they were in a
vault.

REG . $12.95 TO $15.95 .. . ................ SALE $8.37
REG.$17 .95 T0$19.95 .................. SALE$11.37
REG.S21.95TOS24.95 .................. SALE$14.37

IRLS~
pantsuits, vel

WOMEN'S

REG. $3.50 .......... .. . . ... . .. . ... .. ...
REG. $5.00 ..... .. .. . , ... , • . .... ... . .•..
REG. $6.50 .. , .............. . ..... ......
REg. $9.00 . ............. ...............
REG. $12.00 ....................... . ....

Heusen
Heusen
Heusen
Heusen

\GALLIPOIJS, Ohio AP- Damage
1.1 estimated at $1 milliooin a foUl"
alarm. "rolling inferno" that swept
through the Gallja County Courthouse · on Thursday night,
destroying the second and third
floors.
The fire, which was reported at
9:40 p.m. by a resident who lives
near the three-story brick building,
took firefighters 2\lr ho~ to bring
under control and the rest of the
night to finish off.
"It was . an inferno," . Gallipolis
. Fire Chief Jim Northup said. " The
first people in said It was rolling at
them ..
. .
'
Northup said the fire was the worst in Gallipolis in three years. .
Eighty-eigli firefighters from
four different units battled the blaze
in subfreezing temperatures. Bat·
talloo Chief Ray Bush said three
firemen suffered minor injuries
when a ceiling coUapsed on them.
Firemen said a furnace on the
second noor appeared to have
overheated and sparked the blaze.
'!'he fire then spread to the thirdfloor attic, destroying county records and police evidence. The. rest of
the building sustained severe water
damage, firemen said.
Steel doors between the old
building and a new annex kept the
fire from spreading to the new of-

Sizes 27 to 42 waist plus extra sizes 44 to 50. Solids and
· patterns. Most are all100% polyesters.

Neck sizes 14'12 to 17. Sleeve lengths 32 to 35 inches.
Solids and patterns.

S, M, L and XL SIZES - GOOD SELECTION.

jackets ·

Loss set at
$1 million

MEN'S DRESS SLACKS

VAN HEUSEN DRESS SHIRTS

WINTER CAPS • HATS

Fire damages Gallia .Courthouse

JANUARY CLEARANCE

JANUARY CLEARANCE

MEN'S

overalls ·

For example.:._ Reg. $58.99 insulated coveralls $50.14.
Every
item similari.Y reduced.

CLfARANCE

Flannel shirts, knit tops, blouses, shirts, sweaters, vests
and blazers.

JANUARY CLEARAnoLr

· bib

SAVE 15%

LimE BOYS' and GIRLS' WINTER TOPS

LITTLE BOYS' OUTFITS
Sizes

WORK CLOTHES

REG. $6.00 .... ........ .. , ..... . ...... .. SALE $4.49
REG . $9.00 ........... . ... .. ... ....... , .. SALE $6.79
REG .. $13.00 ... , .. .. .. ..... .......... .. .. SA!-E $9.79
REG . $15.00 .......... , ... . ... ......... SALE $11 .29

JANUARY CLfARANCE

Kn it outfits, corduroy outf its, bib overa ll s, velou r s and
fits .

CARHARTT BRaNN DUCK
;~;~~· ~6fe~:::~ 1 f;,i~~~· 9 ;.;~·s~l~~~~~~ 11 '

$15.36
520.96
$27.96
$41.96

Sizes

......... ......... ·....
....... . ..............
....... , , .' ............
......................
......................

$20.96
$27.96
$34.96
$41.96
$41.96

JANUARY CLEARANCE

JUNIOR DRESSES
Beautiful winter fashions by Lucy Jr .,
Jean Leslie Juniors, Vicky Vaughan
and Mustard Seed .

OPEN SATURDAY
. TILL ,5:00

P.M.

Elberfelds I Pomeroy
,

1 ·s ection, 10 pages 15 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Mie!dleport, Ohio Fri9ay, January _¥, 1981

"

JANUARY CLIARANCE

JANUARY CLEARANCE

WOMEN'S SPORTSWEAR

.

',•.

SAVE 25%

OPEN FRIDAY TIL 8 PM

JANUARY CLEARANCE

'

half. size wats is at clennce
pnces.

NO EXCHANGES

OR REFUNDS

REDUCED 25%

Vol. 21, No. 1M
Copyrlghled 1981
I

BEGINS FRIDAY, JANUARY 9, AT 9:30 AM

Wool looks, Ski Jackets,
Car Coats, Dress Coats,
Quilted Styles and All Weather Coats.

Reg. $11.00 .... Sale 58.25
Reg .$17.00 ... Sale$12.75
Reg . $24.00 ... Sale 518.00

.

Weather

WOMEN'S DRESSES

Mostly cloudy, windy and cold tonight and Saturday ~~:ith a cbance of
snow nurrles. Lows tonight 3-10. Hlgha Saturday 13-~. Chance of snow
30 percent tonighl and Saturday. Winds northwesterly 13-25 mph
tonight.

Misses and h!llf size dresses by
Puritan, Tony Todd, Happenings and
F lutterbye.

I~

EJ:tended Ohio Forecast- Sunday through Tuesday: Fair Sunday
and Monday and a chance of.snow Tuesday. Highs Sun.lay in the upper
teens .and 208 and in the 20s and low 30s Monday and Tuesday. LoWll
Sunday zero to 10 above and in the teens and low 20s Monday and
Tuesday.
I~

~ Syracuse
ByKATIECROW
Syracuse. Village Council Thursday night in a lengthy session
reelected Kathryn Crow its
president, retained Frank W. Porter
as solicitor and adopted a budget for
. 1981 totaling $104,1100.
Included in the total amount is the
general fund budget of $19,%0.
The appropriation resolution
provides funds for all viliage ex·
penses and expenditures to be in·
curred during the fiscal year.
Meeting with council concering
the budget for the Board of Public
Affairs were members Buddy Cun·
diff and Aaron Sayre.
Fund accounts included in the 1981
appropriation were: security for
persons and property, $9 ,000; leisure
time activities, parks and
playgrounds, $22,000; street con·
struction, maintenance and rej,air
fund, $13,000 ; state rughway, $800;
electric power service, $5,000; water
system operations, $29,600; revenue
sharing, $5,000; emergency squad,
$1,000, grand total $i04,850.
Daye Jenkins, on behalf of the
Meigs County Jaycees, presented
four banking boards, complete with
hoops and nets to council.
It was pointed out by Jack
Williams that the Meigs County
Jaycees have gone beyond the call of
duty in supporting numerous
programs throughout the county.
He added that the Jaycees strive
to serve all of Meigs County rather
than just one area.
Council extended its thanks to the

Point Pleasant, Mlddlepori, Rio Grande and the GaiUpoUs Developmental Center around 11:30 p.m. Prisoners In the couaty jaU were
evacuated to the Gallipolis city buldllng and taken to jails In surrounding
counUes by the Ohio Highway Patrol. Four persono were Injured In the
fire, Including three GalUpoU. firemen.

council approves '81 budget
Jaycees and corrunended them for
their excellent work in the past and
what they plan to do in the future.
Jenkins noted the organization appreciates the support jt has been
given throughout the past and noted

specilicaliy the boxing program. He
also welcomed new members to the
Jaycees. He added that the Jaycees
appreciate the Syracuse Park and
its use during the summer mort~.
Also meetin~ with council was

Gene Imboden, fire chief. Imboden
extended tlis thanks for the support
given the department the past year.
Imboden told council that his depart·
ment does not want the use of the old
(Continued on page 10)
'

.
~

BANKING BOARDS DONATED-Four banking
boards, complete with hoops and nets were presented
to Syra~e Village Council Thursday night by the

Meigs County Jaycees. Making the presentation was
Dave Jenkins, left, to Mayor Eber Pickens.

Toxic gas continues to seep from tanker
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. (AP)
- Toxic vinyl chloride gas continued
to seep from a derailed tank car
early today after cleanup crews
were sent home overnight by
authorities who feared artificial
· lighting would set off an e11ploeion.
The highly volatile vapors hegan
leaking from a ~ton railroad tank
car Thursday following a five-car
derailment. Mason County officials
said there were no injuries, but four
!ann families were evacuated as a
precaution.
The city• s well system was shut
down as a precaution against groun·
dwater contamination, and some
4,000 students were sent home from
classes because no water was

available.
A special chemical cleanup crew
»Orked until dark T'••trsday at·
tempting to put,.a plug in the Chessie
Syste"" tnnk car that was spilling
the vinyl chloride, according to State
Police Cpl. K.R. Becket!. The crews
then were sent home for the night.
" If you move in any type of artificial lighting, you're asking for
trouble," Beckett said Thursday.
"You've got a problem with sparks.
It could explode."
Six state troopers and sheriff's
deputies stood g1111rd along a half·
mile blockade during the night, h~
said.
" It's vaporized, and the con·
loentration of the funws Is not that

great," Beckett said. "It 's just
leaking from a 2-inch valve."
The derailment occurred in a
rural area about a quarter of a mile
from a deep well that supplies Point
·Pleasant's drinking water.
"I've been assured by health officials that there's been no ground
·contamination," said Mayor John
Musgrave, who·shut down the well
after the derailment but reopened it
later Thursday. "The only danger is
a remote chance of an ex;ploslon. ''
Two years ago, another
derailment or a Chessie System
train spilled chemicals that permanently contaminated several
wells the city was using for its water
supply. The railroad later purchased

the well on the C.C. Lewis fann, and
donated it to the city.
"This isn't the same situation we
had two years ago," said Musgrave,
who in the past has criticized the
railroad because o£ derailments in
the area.
Meanwhile, Chessie spokesman
Willis Cook said a special clean-Up
crew from PPG Industries, a New
Martinsville company that makes
vinyl chloride, had arrived on the
scene am\. was assisted by a Chessle
work crew in attempting to plug the
leaking tanker.
The vinyl chloride, used in the
manufacture of plastics, was being
transported from Parkersburg to
Huntington in liquid fonn, he said.

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