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                  <text>President sets hostage deadline
By 'I'IIe .U..Cialed Prell

WIN
''

k Cav_aUi

p

eo~ 1

I'M e{-01~ TO HAVt= A 1.0r

CANT WAIT Tll-L Tl-IE

WINTER E;ND5 AND

rro

Iran's Parliament waa presented
with two -cency ,blllB today
aimed at aolvlng the U.S. hostage
criala by Jan. 18, four days before
the Inauguration of Prelldent-elect
RGnald Reagan, who baa warned he
will conduct hostage Ialka with a
ucleanllate.''
"If we do not reacb a result by
Jan. 18 It Is not clesr how the
negotlatlona will continue with the

OF FUN NSX'T 5UMM~,

BUMMER A\5i"AIN.

new incoming administration,"
Iran's top hostage negotiator, Behzad Nabsvl, said iii presenting the
legislation.

Pre.!ldent Carter baa set Jan. 16 aa between Iran and the United Stat..
i'•• deadline by which a hostage
The IM!COild bill uks the Majlla to
•Jl eement must be reached if the , natioiW!ze the wealth of the late
terms are to be put into effect before shah and his relatives, Nabsviaald,
Reagan Is inaugurated Jan. 20.
Reagan said Sunday he will start
on the hostage Ialka with a clean
slate If Carter failll to get an
agreement. "I stlll hope and pray
the president will succeed in what he
has been trying to do. If not, then we
have to start," Reagan said.
Nahavi said the first emergency
bill asks the Parliament, or Majllil,
to approve a third-party arbitrator
to settle financial and legal claims

Vol. 21, No. 189
Copyrightecl1911

a move that would make It easier for
the United States to return the
shah's assets to Iran.
After Nahavi announced the
legislation, tiM! MajUs went Into
closed session. A vote is scheduled
on the two biDs Tuesday.
Another , Iranian hostage
negotiator, Ahmad Az(zl, said
earlier that the Iranian governme~
has accepted the "commitment" offered by the ·United States for the

. Pomero')' Mlddieport, Ohio Monday, January 12, 1981

.. . AND \VIN 1l1E ~E RIBBON AT
iHECOUNTY FAIR FOR 6POW1Na-

THE

&amp;~EST

release of the 52 American captives.
bllllon deposit demanded for the
"We have accepled the com- hostages.
mitment the United States is making
"The Iranian government has acbefore the government of Algeria," cepted Algerisn proposals asking
Ahmad Azizl told a Western reporter the United States for international
in Tehran.
guarantees· instead of placing a
"Evel')'thing will be clearer deposit with the Algerisn bank,"
tomorrow," he added.
Azizl was quoted as saying.
Algerian sources in the Irantan
·He said Iran would respond forcapital said on Sunday they believed ..mally to the Algerian initiative
a breakthrough In the negotiations today or Tuesday.
was near after the Tehran
Azlzl did not elaborate on the
newspaper Enghelab Islaml said guarantees, wbich would replace the
Azlzi told It in an Interview his $14-billlon deposit in Algeria that
government would accept U.S. Irim has demanded to gua~.~ntee
"guarantees" Instead of the $24 payment of Iranian assets frozen in

Electric plants stockpile
coal for possible .strike

F?l..JMPKIN ...

by Ed Sullivan

Po
OH. THA

O&lt;AY·-- I'l.L

GUTI'ED-The OllH!ory frame residence of the
Michael Powell Family on Railroad St. in Middleport
was gutted by fire of undetermined origin SWlday afternoon. Middleport Fire Chief Jeff Darst said three
rooms of the home were gutted and that damages were
heavy to the rest of the home as the result of smoke and

HANG IT UP.'

water damage. No one was at home at the time of the
fire which, Chief Darst said, apparently started In the
kitchen. The house was owned by Jay Hall, Cheshire.
The Powell family lost all of its belongings-on which
there was no Insurance- in the fire. The structure was
Insured. A monetary figure on the loss had not been set
' today.

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

Mother held in childrens' deaths

I ~
MEAN 10 PICK
AT STUART' 6UT HE HAS A
TERRIBLE TIME WITH THE
SIMPLEST 11-IINGS .'

EAST ST. LOUIS, Ill. - The mother of 11 children who died in a
hOil8e fire as they slept unat,tended had often left her children alone
and said they were "too bad for anyone else to watch," a neighbor
says.
Virginia Williams, 28, was held in the city jail while pollee investigated ' the blaze, which broke out early Sunday morning and
roared through the brick house. No charges were filed.
U. Norman Stevens of the llre 'department said a space heater in a
downstairs living room was to blame for the fire.

Chief won't hack down
c ........,... ....

lilt. I NOff.

)

NEWPORT, Ky. - Police Chief William Henley, supported by his
men In a tw~shift slckout, says he will not bsck down from his
decision to demote Capt. Joyce Hannon.
Saturday, three of the live commissioners objected to Henley's
rep~ovlng Capt. Hannon as commander of the Criminal Investigation
Division and assigning her to the payroll. Capt. Hannon had been
promoted to the post by the same 3-2 majority in October.
Commissioner A.J. "Tony" Warndorf told Henley at a special
meeting Saturday that his action may have violated a law. Warndorf
also said there had been reports of misconduct among officers Wlder
Henley's command.

,F inancial struggle tests patience

"CIU' Moet.~ li If~ OF DROTIVE
WORKMANSHIP, OIM tMDuar DOESN'T lo!AVI.THE
B!JILT·IN OBSOLISCENCI WE PLNMDI'1.

WASIDNGTON - The struggle to save Chrysler Corp. from
' bankruptcy is testing the patience of workers and suppllers as the
government bargains over Its conditions for S400 million more in loan
guarantees.
The key Issue in talks resuming today after four days of negotiations
at Chrysler's Mich!gan headquarters is the company's proposed $600
million wage freeze.
Treasury Secretary G. William Miller also reportedly wants
assurances the United Auto Workers union will not try to regain parity
with the other Big Three automakers all at once when the current contract expires in September 1962.

Heavy fighting breaks out
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador - Heavy fighting broke out here and
1n other parts of this violence-torn Central American nation after leftist guerrillas launched what they said was their "final offensive"
against the U.S.-backed government. Reports indicated the fighting
left at leaat 50 people dead by Sunday.
Delplte guerrtlla claims, government forces appeared In firm control of both the capital and Santa Ana, the CoWltry's second largest
city, about 4li miles to the west.

Weather
Cloudy with a chance of snow tonight ilnd Tuesday. 'Lows tonight
near 20. Highs Tuesday In lower 30s. Chance of snow 40 percent tonight
and 30 percent Tuesday. Winds southwesterly around 10 mph tonight.
EXTENDED FORECAST

TIKI,_,..,

"TIK
THI DCK.LM Ul
ii•T w.4AT llWAI TWO WIIICI AG01 01

"LIT'I NOT 00 OVINQMI), !IMYL~III WI DON'T
CAM THAT~ AIOUT l'ltlkiiN Gi~ULI"

J

1 Section, 8 pages 15 Cents
A Multim~-~~ Inc. Newspaper

,,

DIILES BOTTOM, Ohio (AP) -

Pristilla~s

the United States and a $10 billion
deposit demanded to Insure return of
the late Shah Mohammad Reza
Pahisvi's fortune to Iran.
Sources close to the A!gerisn intermediaries in Tehran said they
were optimistic about a
breakthrough In the 436-day-old
hostage crisis, but the Algerisn
delegation in the Iranian capital
declined comment on how the talks
to free the 52 American captives
were going.
U.S. officials in Washington said
they had not been notified by Iran
(Continued on page_8)

WedDeldiY tbrGa&amp;b Friday:
.
Acballce aiiBOW Tllunday 8Jid IDOW fturrlea northeast Friday·
Otbenrlae l•ir. Hlghllrom the mki-ZIII to aear 30 aortb to the mld-301
-tb. Lows Ia tbe teeu.

.

Seven die
on
Ohio
.
highways
By The Asaoclated Preas
One pedestrian and two people
whose cars tangled with a truck and
a train were among seven victims of
fatal traffic accidents across Ohio
during the weekend, the Highway
Patrol said.
The patrol counted the traffic
deaths from 6 p.m. Friday until midnight SundaY,
The dead:
SUNDAY
CINCINNATI
James
B~ckingham, 41, of Milford, In a onecar accident on a Hamilton CoWlty
road.
'
HAMILTON - Glenn R. Seiser, 8,
of Hamilton, a passenger In a twocar accident on U.S. 'J:/ In Butler
COWl()'.
.
XENIA - Besale Rose, 80, of
Columbus, in a car-truck accident on
Ohio 351n Greene County.
WEST UNION - Dorothy Brad-.
ford, 49, of West Union, a pedestrian
struck by a car on Ohio 41 In Adams
CoWJty.
SATIJRDAY
JACKSON - Gary A. Barnhart, 30,
of Oak Hill, In a two-car accident on
U,S. 35 in Jackson County.
GERMANTOWN - Lisa G.
Thomas, 22, of Middletown, when
her car collided with a train on a
Germantown village street.
FRIDAY NIGHT
BATAVIA- Larry R. Berry, 32, of
Bethel,ln a one-car accident on Ohio
1251n Clermont County.

Chemical cargo
no longer threat
!!OINT PlEASANT, W.Va. (AP)
- The toxic chemical cargo of a eoton railroad tank car that had
derailed just n.orth of here no longer
poses a threat to the area, officials
say.
"Everything's bsck to normal,'' a
spokesman for the Mason CoWltY
Sheriff's Department said Sunday.
Chessie repair crews managed to
place the car that had leaked hack
onto the tracks Saturday afternoon,
said sheriff's dispatcher R.W. Elias.
The car was moved to nearby Pantasote Co., a chemical plant, to have
Its load of highly volatile vinyl
chloride unloaded, he said. ,
The tanker was one of several
Chessie System freight cars that
derailed early Thursday. It wasn't'
until Friday evening that wcirk
CJ'llWS, using a specially designed
plug, managed to seal the leaking
car.

three years, miners want to restore

Electric companies throughout Ohio contract provisions that were dropare stockpiling coal at major plants ped in 1978 that linked wages to
to prepare for a possible strike of the changes in the Consumer Price InUnited Mine Workers in March.
dex.
Power companies say a 60-to 100.
Members, who now make about
day supply of coal will be available , $80 a d}ly, also want to·e!iminate the
by late March.
$211811"eductible on medical coverage
The current three-year contract and would .like to seen an Imexpires March 27, and rank-and-file provement of the benefits package
union members say they are not that would include dental coverage,
happy with the tenns.
more vacation time and protection
"These guys know what they want
against coal companies that suband they'll fightfor it," said Edward contract work to non-union mine •
Bell, president of United Mine operators.
Workers District 8, which includes
"I don't think what we're asking is
about 18,000 miners and retired too much, considering what we
miners In Ohio and northern West lost," Bell, said. "Since 1978, the
Virginia.
mines have been working steady,
Bell said In addition to about a 35 strikes have been eliminated for the
percent pay increase over the next most part and profits and production

have been up "
It was dur\ng the winter of 1978
that miners walked picket lines for
109 days before they· settled for a
three-year wage pact that called for
a 39 percent pay raise.
The lengthy dispute restricted the
flow of fuel to coal-fired electricpower plants and forced the state to
Impose emergency conservation
measures. It was during the atrlke
that Gov. James A. Rhodes ordered
the state Highway Patrol to escort
coal trucks to power plants.
"It's hard t&lt;\ say now whether or
not there'll be a strike," said Bell.
" If Sam Church is ' close to
agreement on March 'J:/ when the
current contract expires, It's up to
the membership if they keep on
working."

'

Haig appointment all but certain
WASHINGTON (APJ - Alexan- soon as President~lect Ronald
der M. Halg Jr. is virtually assured Reagan is Inaugurated Jan. 20.
quick confirmation as secretary of
While Senate Majority Leader
state under a Senate compromise Howard H. Baker noted there "is no
that also threatens to keep way you can undo a confirmation, " '
Watergate smoldering after he 1:1 the Democrats presumably would
try to force Haig's resignation If the
sworn ln .
Under the compromise, Sen. tapes turned up proof of illegal conCharles Percy, R-Ill., Issued a subpoena Sunday rllght for logs and the
index to 100 hours of taped conversations between Hail!, and thenPresident Richard M. N~on in mid1973.
JACKSON- ARt. 3, Oak Hill man
Percy ,. issued the subpoena as died in a two-car crash on U.S. 35 in
chairman of the Senate Foreign Jackson County early Saturday morRelations Committee conducting ning.
hearings on Haig's confirmation.
Dead Is Gary A. Barnhart, 30, the
Haig was to be hack at the witness Jackson Post of the Ohio Highway
table today for the third day of Patrol said.
hearings. The committee also called
According to the report, Barnhart
national archivist Robert M. Warner
was eastbound on 35 six miles west
to ~y on prospects for obtaining
of Jackson at I :40 a.m. Troopers
thetapes.
·
said he was in the westbound lane
Senate confirmation hearings also
when he met a vehicle driven by
were beginning today on two other Forrest E. Wood, 52, Jackson.
Cabinet nominations, New Jersey
construction exeeutive Raymond
Donovan as labor secretary and former South Carolina Gov. James B.
Edwards as energy secretary.
Republicans on the Foreign
Relations Committee agreed to subpoena the Index so the committee
can detennlne whether any of the
tapes themselves are relevant to
Halg's suitability for the top State
Department job. In return,
Democrats agreed not to delay his
confirmation hearings.
The deal cleared the way for Haig
to be confinned by the Senate as

duct.
The tapes, covering May 4 to July
18, 1973, include a June 4 conversation in which Halg; as White
House chief of staff in the climactic
days of Watergate, advised 'Nixon he
could answer questions by saying
"you just can't recall" details.

Oak Hill man wreck victim
Wood swerved to the left to avoid
collision and Barnhart's car turned
east, colliding head-on with the
Wood vehicle.
Barnhart was killed Instantly, &lt;uf·
ferlng from a crushed chest and
fractured legs, according to Charles
Gaskill, Jackson County coroner.
Apassenger in Barnhart'·s car was •
seriously injured and taken to a
Columbus hospital. The patrol
declined to release the passenger's
name.

OSP cites
Meigs man
after wreck
A Meigs County man was cited by
the Gallia-Meigs Post of the Ohio
Highway Patrol following a two-car
accident In Chester Twp. Saturday.
Troopers said Roberta I. Jeffers,
44, Rt. I, Minersville, was westbound on Meigs CR 32 at 12:20 p.m.
when an eastbound car driven by
Joseph G. Stout, 18, Rt. I, Long Bottom, went left of center and
sideswiped Jeffers' car, causing
slight damage to both vehicles.
There were no Injuries and Stout
was cited for hit-skip and left of center.
No Injuries were reported in a onecar crash In Gallia County Investigated by the patrol Sunday.
According to the report, Homer D.
Crwaford, 21, Rt. I, Jackson, was
southbound on CR57 (Old U.S. 35) at
2·a.m. when his car lost control on a
snowy curve and collided with a fence, causing slight damage. No
citation was Issued.

LAST miP TO THE RANCH- Prealdeat-elect,Roaald Reaiu 8lld ,
his wife Nancy greet reporters at Santa MoDica Airport Sqday after
ctOIIDg down tbelr ranch. Reagan witb hll abeepskla coat oa biB aleeve,
seemed ready for tbe cold eutem weatller u he llallbed some lut
minute cltorett before headlag to Washlactan Wednelday. 'lAP Laaerpboto).

·~

�Pa ge-2-The Daily Sentinel

January 12, 1981

Pomeroy-MiddlePOrt, Ohio
~

Gallipolis wins, in tie for first place
Visiting Gallipolis seored the first
10 points in the thin! period to break

up a close game at Rock Springs
Satunlay night and the result was a
51-34 Blue Devil hanlwood victory
over Meigs in a Southeastern Ohio
League makeup contest.
Coach Gordon Fisher's Marauders
played the Gallians on even tenns
the first half. It was 11-8 after one
period. Meigs, after holding a 1~
advantage early in the second quarter, trailed 21-18 during the halftime
intermission.
Coach Jim Osborne's lads built up
a 31-18 advantage at the 4:41 mark in
the third stanza behind Rick Martin.
Todd Nibert a·na Kent Price goals.
GAHS led 3!1-24 going into the final
period.
Both coaches cleared their benches in the final period after the Blue

Devils built up a 51-29 advantage.
The triumph lifted Gallipolis into a
first place tie with Athens in the conference standings with a 6-1 record.
The Blue Devils upped their season
record to 9-2.
Three Blue Devils finished in
double figures in scoring, led by Phil
King's18 markers. Todd Nibert and
Kent Price each had 10.
Gallipolis connected on 22 ol 5S
field goal attempts for ·42 percent.
The Gallians were seven of H at the
foul line for 50 percent. GAHS had 32
rebounds, nine by Price. Gallipolis
bad 17 turnovers and 15 assists, six
by Tim Skidmore. Tbe' Blue Devils
had 18 steals, five by Price.
Steve Ohlinger ·paced the
Marauders with nine points. Jeff
Wayland and Bob Ashley each had
seven.

Meigs connected on 15 ol 43 field
goal attempts for 3S percent. The
Marauders were four ol nine at the
foul line for 44 percent. Meigs had 24
rebounda, nine by Ohlinger. MHS
bad 22 turnovers.
Gallipolis will host Wellston
Friday and play at Waverly Saturday. Meigs will play at Jacltson
Friday and host Ironton Satunlay.
Box score:

halftime.
Gibbs again bad seven field goals
for 14 points in the third quarter
before returning for the remainder
of the game. Wahama lead 59-48
going into the final minutes of the
thin! quarter.
Wabama got an additional seven
points in the final stanza, but by
then, the game bad been decided.
Gibbs finished with 33 points while
Barnitz had 22.
Sophomore guanl Darren Gilland,
moved up from the jwlior ranks,
proved his worth by contributing
seven points.
Newberry with 19 led the South·westem scoring while Todd Baker
netted II.
Wabama meets Kyger Creek
Tuesday. Southwestern travels to
Hannan Trace for a league match

'

.

PORK LOIN SALE I

%PORK
SALE DATES JAIIUARY 12-17, 1981 LOIN ............-.... !!...~..
PORK LOIN HALf
•
49
l.()llt •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~; .••• ~
OPEN DAILY FROM
I AM TILL .10 PNI

QUANTITY NIOHTI
NIIIRYID

Score by quarters:

B 13 18 12-Sl
8 10 6 IQ--34

CENTER CUT

.

.

Friday.
Box scores:

· .

7; Burleson 2·4·8; Russell 2·0·4;
Newberry 8·3·19; Baker 5·1 · 11 ;
Sterrett 1·2-4; Forgey 1·0·2; Stewart
0·0·0; Miller 0·0·0; Lewis 0·0·0.
Totals ZZ-11-55.

JEFF WAYLAND (15) lOGb lulde for teammate
darlag Saturday's SEOAL makeup game wllh
Ga!BpoUa In the Larry Morrlsoo gym at Rock Spriags.

UNKS
12

ALL GRINDS

Dre:~e l ·

SEOAL RESEA\IES
TEAM
W L P OP
Gallipolis
6 1 291 207
Ironton
5 2 258 236
Logan
5 2 233 198
Jackson
4 3 292 277
Waverly
4 3 289 249
Athens
3 4 293 315
Wellston
1 6 2.54 319
Meigs
o 7 228 337
T'OTALS
Z1 Zl Z138 Zlll

71, Boston U. 63

KRAFT

1 CHEESE 7

DINNER

Alatt.ma 74, Mis.sisaippi 41
Dlvtcllon liM, Mlrshall ' 76

E.Kentudy 15, MWTay St. '16
Floridl 63, Auburn :51
Florida St. Ill, Baptist 60
Furman 75, VMI 13
James Madison 92, Richmond 13
Kentucky 41, Ttnneuee 47
Louisiana st. 11. Mi.ssbaippi St. 69 ~
Maryland 94, Duke 79
Mercer 71 , Atk.-Uttle Rocl ~7
Mor.head St. 1111. A..U. P..y 1$
N.Carolina St. 93 , Georgia T!eh 61
P1n American 12, Ea.st Carolina 67
St.Jooeph's 44. Jacbonville 42
S.Aiobomo 74, Georgia St. 54
S.Floricla 7$, Siena t6

Chillicothe at Lancaster
Friday's games:

M

CHIPS

RED

4

89~

BOZ.

3 ., - -

RADISHES
JUMBO FLORIDA

NAVEL ORANGES .......5FoR $} OO

$100

FOR

.

RID or
113 Size
GOlD
DWCIOUS ·

APPLES

~~~~-

KETCHUP

1 ;~

!. ;; 8

LARGE

44

VEOETABLES

MONARCH

o 1 3-oz . French Style Green Beano
o 1 4 1-J-oz. Cream Style Corn
• 1 2 -oz . Whole Kernel Corn
FRESHLIKE

OHLINGER GETS TWO- Melgo' Steve Oblinger (43) slipped Iukie
for a layup lo this aclfoo photo durtq Saturday's GAHS-Mefp makeup
game at Rock Sprlngo. ObllDger led the Marauders' attack with nine poln!B and nine rebotmdll. GAllS woo, 51-:U. On right Is Gallla'o Keat Prfee
(25). LooldDg oo at rtghtlo Meigs' Bob Ashley (41~ .

VEGETABLES ......................l

Can

Cona

79~

• 1 8-oz . Veg-AII Ml•ed Vegetobie• • 141-&gt;·oz. Sweet Peao
• 14\'a· oz . Peal 8c Carrots • 12\'a ·oz . Cut Spinach

Hungry Eagles advance to Super Bowl
PfULADELPfUA (AP)- There Is slashed his way 4~ yards to a toucllno logical eliJ)lanation for It, but the down.
Philadelphia Eagles are on their
"The play was designed to go
waytotheSuperBowl.
through left guard and tackle," he
Thank you, WUbertMontgomery.
said. "I cut it back to the right and I
In a season pockmarked with had a great hole. It's the kind of play
disabling injuries that sat him down you read on the run. The quar.for all or part ol{!Oven games, Mon- terback gives you the beU deep
tgomery erased the memories of all enough to make your move. My firS
the aches and pafull Sunday.
thought was to cut it beck.''
He slashed his way to 194 yanla
Tackle Stan Walters knew right
and led the Eagles to a 211-7 National then and there that Montgomery
Football Conference cbampfonahlp was headed for a special day.
victoryovertheDallaaCowboya.
"He made a !Kklegree cut tiack," .
Here were the Eagles, brufled aod said Walters, "not 45 the way he had
bettered, playing for the cham- been. With his knee Injury and Ilia
piOMhlp for the first tbne against leg not stable, be couldn't make his
the playoff-toughened Dallas full cut. Today, he did."
Cowboys. Philadelphia bad looked
Walters recalled a play taat week
ragged a week ago agafnat weak- against the Vlldngs. "I wu blocking
sister Mfnneaota. Dallaa looked for Wilbert. He cut behind me, but he
brilliant against tough Atlanta.
only cut tli. He ran right Into me and
The Cowboys were favored and it the man I was blocking and we aD
!leeJiled no one belleved In the went down. That didn't happen
Eagles- acept themlelvea.
today."
All weelllong, Coach Dick Venneu
Montgomery, who later ripped off
~ coocem about the mental
56 yanla with an almoat Identical
condition ol his team. He ufd he play, said his runs Sunday were a
could not read ft. But on Saturday, throwback to his college days at
he thought beuw a brelkthrough.
AblleneChNtlan.
"I thought taat night you could
'"l'hat's the kind of cutting,
sense an air of confidence that we slaahfng ruimer I was in college," he
could win," uld VenneU. "Today, I said. "That was my style-ol running
felt that the 1quad jlllt knew It could In college. I was more ol a cutting,
win. And when you have that kind of slashing runner there. But my first
confidence and bellef ... "
year In the NFL, I wu aq acared of
The confidence got a big booat Dick Vermeil because he was so
earlv. On Philadelphia's second play demanding and be didn't belleve In
from scrimmage, Montaomery my kind of fancy running.

16-oz.

SUGAR

St .

Vanderbilt 70, Georgia :»
VirNlnla 63, North Carolina 57
Wait Foreat 73, Clemson 71
W.Carolina 13. E.Te,.,._ St. ll1
W.Kentucky «i, Tenn . Tech 51
William • Mary 51, VIrginia T«h 43

ONARCH BART

HALVES

o 1 3 -oz . Cut Green leans

Tenneaaee St. 18, Florida AXM 59

0~ 99~

MONARCH
SHORTNING

FRESH LIKE

S.Mlaalsslool II, Bbcayne 1111

Scuthem ·o. 11(1, Grambq 83
Stetson 'lW, Buffalo St. 50
Ttnn.--Chlttanooca 118, Appalachian

QUALITY

··~T°Cs '1

StPeter's 75, Army 65
Vermont 71, Middlebury 16, OT
Vlllanova 89, Syracuse m
West Virginia 11, Geo. Wuhlngton 71
800'111

Gallipolls40Melgs31 (makeup)
Tuesdily's games:
Washington CHat Miami Trace
Pt. Pleasant at Milton

F()R

CUCUMBERS or
BELl
PEPPERS

PEPSI or DIET PEPSI

St.Bonaventure 91, St.M.ichael's. Vt. to
St.John's &amp;1, Provi ~ &amp;.'1

Saturday's result:

CORN

32

oz.

.WE STRIVE

CARR()TS .......... 3t-LB.$} 00
REG:, BAR - B-QUE or
DIP SIZE

George MMsoo 116, Catholic U. 84
Georgetown 57, Boston Coll. ~
Hanard 90, Mlnhattan IJ ·
Hcistn 74, Bucknell U , OT
Howard U. 1.1, S.Carolinl St. 70
Larayette Tl, Kutztown St. 56
Lehigh 10, Colxat.e M
M.uuchUHtll is, Bentley 78
New ~ a, Derbnouth 60
Penn 1'0, flrown 57
Penn St. 61 , Rider 58
Princeton 118, Y1le 510
Rhode Island N, South CarolinB It
Rutgers It, Pitt 58

GallipoliS 51 Meigs 34Cmakeup)

i

12

'149

WHITE
POTATOES 20 1.8.

PRUNE JUICE ........ Bo·,~~·~ 89c

.

WiENEiS'9

U. S. DOMESTIC

Can

SUNSWEET

TAVERN

CENTER-SUCE HAM ..............~~· ..'1.89
TENDER BOILED HAM .......... JfL'2.49

VEGETABLES

49

Lb.$

EAST
Canlsl"' 11. 1.o saue 79
Coontct.lcut S7, Setoo Hall fo1
Cornell 84, Rochester ~

Saturday's resuit :

Jackson at Logan
Gallipolis at Waverly
Wellston at Athens
Ironton at Meigs
Circleville at Portsmouth
Wheelersburg at Fairland

BNLS.

AND

Lb.
Bag

COFFEE

GAllS defeoders are Phil King, loll, (Zl)
Price, (%5~, right.- Breoda WUsoo photos.

College

SEOAL 1/AASITY
TEAM
W L P OP
Gallipolis
6 1 373 321
Athens
6 1 459 375
Waverly
4 3 428 400
Logan
4 3 381 390
Ironton
3 4 372 372
Wellston
3 4 402 414
Jackson
2 S 388 451
Meigs
0 7 353 433
TOTALS
21 Zl 3156 3156

Saturday's pmes:

POLISH SAUSAGE-..... -.......... ..I:!J: .. 99'

SKINLESS or REG.

MAXWELL HOUSE

results. ..

Wellston i!.t.6'611ipolis
Meigs at 1"ackson
Waverly at Ironton
Athensat Logan
Washington CH at Greenfield
Wheelersburg at Northwesl
Parkersburg south at Pt. Pleasant
Westerville North at Chillicothe

BACON .........!~.~~.~~ 09

FARM FRESH
FRUITS

Cage standings

_..._

~

PIG

17 20 22 7-66
13 14 11 11-55

ALL GAMES
TEAM
W L P OP
10 0 566 460
ChHiicothe
Gallipolis
9 2 596 508
Athens
9 2 733 629
Porlsmouth
9 2 811 675
Wheelersburg
8 2 64.5 560
Logan
7 5 116 70S
Wellston
7 5 759 727
waverly
6 670 660
Washington CH
3 5 385 510
Ironton
4 7 576 590
Jackson
3 8 639 732
Meigs
2 8 506 563
Pt. Pleasanl
0 7 3« 464

19

SUPERIOR

Score by quarters:

Wahama
Southwestern

SUPER
SLicED

69

LOIN END

Southwestern (5.5)- Sizemore 3 - 1 ~

••AI

Ln'S ,.' "" .

SPARE RIBS ..~~·... .
$}29
PORK ROAST••~;... . .,._'ll.....

Wahama (66) Gibbs 14·5·33;
Barn ill 9-4·22; Fowler 0·0·0; Gray 1·
0·2; Weaver 0·0·0; Ingels 1·0·2;
Gi ll and 3·1 · 7 r Slsk 0·0·0. Totals Zl-1066.

Wheelersburg s.tlronton 52
Wellston 75 Trimble 73
Portsmouth 76 Jackson 60

w

,

$}29

COUNTRY STYLE

Saturday's results :
Logan 92 Marietta 66

U.YAJW TD - Eagles' WObert Moatgomery (Ill IUH of( oa a U.
yard touchdown run Ia ftnt period of S111Dy'1 NP'C dlulpiOIIIIIlp pme
agafullt the Dallas Cowboy• at Pllllldelphfa. Moatcilmery rubed for 1H
yardsln26attempts In lhe Eagles' ~7 wlunlJJcefforl. (AP Luerpbolo).

1

PORK CHOPS.........~·.....1
.

s

SETS CAREER IDGH- Larry (Rainbow) Gibbs, (Z3), defiDltely b8d
one of his best games ever Saturday night as Wahama defeated Southern
team by 11&amp;-55 margin. The wiD saapped a two-game 1081DI similE for
Wahama behind a J:!..pofnt effort by Glbbo wbo bad a career blgb before a
home crowd. Also pictured from Soulhweatern Is Todd Baker (Ml).

Middleport, Ohio

fiiiNDLIIST SIRVICI IN TOWN
IIOOIST. BARGAINS IN TOWN

Wahama defeats Highlanders
MASON - Career scoring highs
for Wahama' s Larry Gibbs and &amp;ott
Barnitz snapped a tw~ame losing
skid for the white Falcons here with
a 66-55 victory over Southwestern.
The Falcons are now 4-3 overall,
while Southwestern is 4-5 overall and
2-1 in theSVAC.
Southwestern opened strong in the
first quarter With a 11Hl lead before
Wahama even got to the boards.
However, 11 points dumped in by
Gibbs soon narrowed the lead and by
the end of the quarter the game was
in Wabama's favor,17-13.
Barnitz and Southwestern's Dale
Newberry each dueled for the
highest scoring honors on the second
canto. Barnitz received ~eavy sui&gt;'
port from his team to push the score
to 26-14 in the opening minutes,
leadiqg the Falcons to a 37-27 lead by

VAUGHAN'S

SUPER MARKETS

GALLIPOLIS !511 - Martln3·0·6;
Nibert 4-2·10; Price 4·2·10; Skidmore
2·0·4; King 8·2·18; Gillespie Q-0·0;
Glenn 1·1·3; Roberts 0·0·0; Dailey O·
0·0; Bergdoll 0·0-(). TOTALS Zl-7·51.
MEIGS (34) - Ohlinger 4-1-9 ;
wayland 3·1·7; Smith l ·D-2; Ashley 3·
1·7; Miller 1·0·2; Swann 0·0·0; Ken·
nedy 3·0·6; Dodson 0·0·0; Scott 0·0·0;
MurrayO· l ·l. TOTALS 15-4-34.
Gallipolis
Meigs

The Daily Sentinei-Pa e-3

BATHROOM TISSUE~

.COnOIELLE·...t,'·;·-';·1}..,_j.
~
I \

'!•' "

--

WHITE OR ASSORTED COLORS
LIQUID

DAWN

,,

ct.
Pkg.

.

32 ,01 .
• , •••• , , • , ••••••••••••••••••••••• , , • , •• Bottle

s15,

\.

. HEm

8-oz.
Tube

TRASH BAGS .......... -................... -~~--~:. 99~
SOFT PLY
.
• JUMBO 59~
PAPER lr()W~~ ................•.~~..

BLUE BONNET

MARGARINE ri~.~- 59c
CARDINAL
FRESH LOWFAT

BANQUET

BREAD
- ' ;'I-- .·

\. ·~ :. ~ : ':j..~
)~)
,._.,..,.,,

LARGE

200~

LOAVES

8

BUFFET SUPPER.

TURKEY. SALISBURY STEAK,
BEEF 8c NOODLE. CHICKEN 8c NOt ·LE.
CHICKEN 8c DUMPLING.
OR SPAGHETTI 8c MEATBALLS

~,._.,.

MONARCH PINK
AU. SMILES -It II aU amllea In the Eafliea beacb area late In Suoday'• NFC dlampf001hlp game aplolt the DaJJu Cowboyt at
Pblladelpl!fa. C•cb Dick Vermen, quarterbldt Roll Jawenkl (7} uc1
Joe l'llarclk were •1110111 !be m01t happy fellOWB wbDe tile Blnll were
beatlDg lhe Cowboys,
AP La1erpbolo).

•7. (

i

NATURAL

ICE CREAM .... Yac?n~~-s2°'

�January 12, 1911

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-4-;T:,he_Da_ily Sent_inel

Januar 12, ~~_1_ ~

Blue hnps post
ninth cage win

"Our offense did the job in the first
half and gave us a nice cushion,"
linebacker Ted Hendricks said after

'

face it; a c•tcb like that la Jlllt
luck."
.
Plunk tt
t to the
Luck or not,
e wen
·
sideline shaking lia bead. " I
:::::~: ~~e ~o~r indication for
Dan Fouts' first pus 011 San
Diego's first play was no leu eli*
trifying _ 55 yards to Ron Smith to
the Oakland :IJI. Four playa later the .
baU was on the 14. Then Lester .
had lnte,........., 13
Hliyes, who
...,_..
'
regular-season passes and four
more in the previous two playoff

A slide preaentatlon on flowe~
arrangements In historical
WUiiamlburg was given by Mrs.
Thereon Johnaon at the Friday
rneetinl of Return Jonathan Meigs
Chapter ol the Daughters of the
American Revolution held at the
Meigs Inn.
The slides featured seaaonal
flowers with emphasis on natursl
arrangement. Vegetables and fruits
were Included In the fall dlap!i.y,
while dried flowers were used In the
winter IIITIIJiientents. Tilt! slides, ·
purchased by Mrs. Paul Elch, past
regent, have been placed In the
Pomeroy Lllnry for use and enjyment of other organl!atlons.
Mrs. Gene VOlt, regent, and Mrs.
Patrick Lochary, chaplain, opened
the meetlniln rituallatic fonn . Mrs.
Yost read the president general's

the Raiders blew out to a 7a-7 lead,
· held on for a 3t-27 victory and rolled
into the Super Bowl against
Philadelphia.
For the most part, it was Plunkett
who gave them that cushion. The
Raiders' 21·point burst tied the
record for the most points by one
team in an AFC title game (act1111Uy
·
It matched what San Diego did to
Boston in the 1963 American Foot·
ball League championship ). _::-g:::am=-.e_s:.;,g:_ot_N_o._s._ _ _ _ __
Plunkett threw touchdown passes
covering · 65 yards to Raymond
Chester.on a deflection and 21 yards
to Kenny King and, in between, ran S
yards for another score when the
Chargers covered his receivers.
The first pass of the game went to
King. It traveled 5 yards to the
Ol&gt;kland 40, ricocheted off his hands
for 10 yards to Chester at midfield
and was carried the. rest of the way
to the end zone by the surprised
Oakland tight end.
"I couldn't see the ball when it got

A "June In January" design
demonstratlonlltdng dried, live, and
artificial plant materials was
presented by Mrs. Pat Holter at the
Wednesday nigJt meeting of the
Cheater Garden Club held at the
home of Mrs. Buel Ridenour.
Mrs . Holter made five
arrangements, one ualng a piece of
driftwood with a gray round con-tainer on a piece of slate with cornhusk rooes and red mums. Another
featured bittersweet, cattails and
other natural materiaL\1 in an orange
container on a wood baae, while the
third was a design using feathers,
cornhullt roaes, curved reed In a
J!lOdern sandstone container,
Another arrangement of modern

CARIBBEAN

"T1'rtlilel

United Methodlat pastors of Meigs
County rec:ently held_. covered dish
dinner as a farewell gathering for
the Rev. and Mrs. James COrbitt and
famtly who will be leaving Meigs
COunty Jan. 15 for a new assignment
at Stoutsville.
The Rev. Mr. Corbitt has served
the Enterpr!Be, Rock Springs, and
Flatwoods UniMethoclist Churches
since June,l978.
The farewell gathering was hosted
by the Rev . Mark Flynn at the Dorcas parSonage near Racine.
The group enjoyed a dinner
prepared by the county minl.!ters
and their wives . . Grace was by the
Rev. Mr. Corbitt, aod foUowing the
meal the pariah director, Rev.
Richard Thomas, presented a picture and fareweU card to the Corbitt
famtly on behalf of the Meigs

POII'I1IAI'I'ER:
lo 'll&gt;lllolly .
SriMI,III
Court- St., Punon&gt;r,
Cl&gt;lo41!11.
llll.auPrlON KATII:II

c:w-lly~--........-............... ... .1.01
C:W- .. .......... . ... .... ..... lUI
C:WYMr ...... ... .. . .. . .... .. . .. - IU-11
. liNGLE COPY

PIUCEI
Dolly .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. II Conlo

not doltrllri 1o 1111 tbo CIITior
IIIII' IWIIIt In ldv1110t dlrtct lo '1111 DollY
-.oi
on 1_
I, I or_
U month
wtllbo ....
_ bull. Cndlt
llolllbo&lt;rlpti• b)" moll pormlttod I a -

IIIIIIOIIINoOW.

A rolltlng antenn1

beams microwave
energy directly 11
food In 1 uniform,
rotating p11tem.

... WIIIViqlolo

lllalllb " ' "" " ........ .. .... .. . 111.00
lllanlb .. . " .. ...... ... " ........ 111.00
IYar .... ....... ..... ........... ....00

Win-t er
"Warm-up"
SPECIAL

design was in a tall green
modem container and used fern and
plumes. A giant pink and white
amaryllis bloom, peeled grape vine,
and a phlladendrum leaf were used
in the fifth arrangement made by
Mrs. »olter.
Contributing hostes~~es for the
meeting were Mrs. Oris Frederick
aod Mrs. Woodrow Mora. Members
reaponded to roll call by naming
their happiest New Year. Mrs.
Richard Barton presided at the
meetin3 during which time It was
noted that a gift bad been given to
the Pomeroy Library In memory of
Mrs. Mary Genhelmer, mother of
Mrs. Betty Lou Dean, and Mrs.
Mary -Cox, mother of Mrs. Edna
ma!!S

Delicious pizza bread
with _your choice of I topping
REG. $1.35
On· these co ld wrnter da y,s and
nights, worm up with o steam ing hot Gino 's pizz cr breod __ _
only
pizza sauce, Provolone cheese and your favorite topping on a 9" Italian bun . Choose pepperoni , sausage,
mushrooms, olives, banana peppers , onoon s or green
peppers.

.95

Cooperative Parish in appreciation
for their faithfulness and dfldlcatlon
to the Chriatlan work here. Best
wishes were extended by thOIJe at·
tending to the Corbitts and the
evening concluded with singing of
"Blest Be The Tie That Binds" and
prayer by the Rev. Carl Hicks.
Attending were the Rev. Mr. and
Mrs. Corbitt aod children, Kay,
Gall, Shelly and Mark, the Rev. and
Mrs. Stanley Merrifield and
children, Todd and Duffy, the Rev.
and Mrs. David Harris and son,
Nathan, the Rev. and Mrs. Robert
Mt&lt;;ee, the Rev. and Mrs. Carl
Hicks, the Rev. and Mrs. Richard
Thomas, the Rev. and Mrs. Robert
Robinson, the Rev. Florence Smith,
the Rev. and Mrs. Donald Flynn and
family, Charleston, w_Va., and the
host minl.!ter, the Rev. Mark Flynn.

Gino'a

tiiMSgain'.

s. D. --·- 4.80 1.70 24.00 .10 .40 .10 ,20 1.00
Eutern LocalS. D. --.4.30 1.70 21.00 .10 .40 .10 .20 1.00

CHESTER

Eutern Local 8. D. __ : UO 2.60 21.00 .10 -40 .10 -20 1.00
Moip Local S. D. ---· UO 2.50 24.00 .10 .40 .10 .20 1.00

COLUMBIA

s. D. -- ----

4.30 8.70

50.00

~ggts

'

BUY NOW - PAY WITH YOUR INCOME TAX RETURN

Local S. D. ••• UO 2-70 21.00 .10 .40 .10 . .20 1.00
Southern LocalS. D. __ 4.30 2.70 24.00 .10 .40 .10 .20 1.00
LETART
Southern Loc&amp;l s. D. __ 4.30 8.20 24.00 .10 -40 .10 .20 1.00
Eutern Local

B. D. •••

1

Melgo Loral S. )). ____ 4.30 2.80 24.00
Rutland Vlllnge -- - - - - 4.30 1.00 24.00
SALEM
Melli• Loeal S. D. ____ UO 1. 70 24.00
SALISBURY
Melr• Local S. D. ____ 1.80 1.70 24.00
Middleport Villa11• ____ U O .20 24-00
Pomeroy Vlllare ~--· -· UO
.20 24.00

INGELS FURNITURE &amp; JEWELRY
7HI 7WO IN ONI $101fl

MIDDLEPORT, 01110

1.00 80.60 .044632 .OS835V

.10 .40 .10 .20 1.00
.10 .40 .10 .20 1.00

1.00 88.40 .08'7915 .081741
6.60 1.00 87.60 .094062 .054900

.10 .40 .10 .20 1.00

1.00 82.80 .031457 .025187

.10 .40 .10 .20 1.00
.10 .40 .10 .20 1.00
.10 .40 .10 .20 1.00

1.00 32.80 .031457 .0251 87
8.20 1.00 87.60 .074879 .069694
5.80 1-00 87.10 .074244 .061096

UO 2,40 24.00 .10 .40 ,10 .20 1.00

1.00 33.50 .o41225 .035217

Southern Local 8. D. __ UO 2.10 24.00 .10 .40 .10 .20 1.00
.60 24.00 .10 .40 .10 .20 1.00
Roclne Vlllore ------ - 4.80
Syrocuoe Vlllore ···--- UO .60 24.00 .10 .40 .10 .20 LOO

1.00 33.20 .034794 .027278
10.10 1.00 41.80 .130701 .080995
5.80 1.00 :17.00 .o717 0~ .052844

SCIPIO
Melga l&lt;&gt;cal S. D.··--

SUTTON

SUTTON

Mel11o Loeal S. ))_

---~-

4.30 2.10 24.00 .10

.40

.10 .20 1.00

1-00 83.20 ,034794 .027273

lteal Estate taxes which have no t been paid 11.t tlhe close of each collection carry a penalty of ten
per cen t. T:n:e~ may be paid nt t he offi ce of th e county treaaurer or by mail. Please bring your
last tf\ '{ receipt and jf you pay by mail be sure t o locate your property by taxing di stri ct and enclose ~tAmped aelf add ressed envelope.
Alway ~ c :·min!'&lt; your tax receipt to see that it covers all your property. Office Hours 8:30A .M.

to 4 :SO P.M., Monday thru Frldoy, Cloaed on Saturday,

GEORGE M. COLLINS, !lleig• Co. Tr.. ,_

TAX BOOKS CLOSE FEB. 13,1981
Public Notice

Public Notice

NOTICE BY
MEIGS COUNTY
COMMISSIONERS
REQUESTING
OFFICE SPACE .
FOR THE MEIGS
COUNTY WELFARE
DEPARTMENT
ANNEX

flee , located In the Court:
house, Pomeroy, Ohio, un·

Ill NOON on Januarv 27.

1980 and read aloud for the

toll owing building lease.
Each bid to meet the con·
dltions and specifications

astollows :

Olflce building to house
the Meigs Counlv Welfare
lion 307.86 of the Oh.lo Department Annex, 3,200
Revised Code, sealed bids square feet m inimum total
will be received by the space ;
Me igs, County Boord of
Consisting of a minimum

commissioners, in thei i of·

Tll12,19,26!2l2,4tc
---;;=-:--,:---~-- _:J

Public Notice

In accordance with Sec·

Public Notice

for men and women, lind at
marked " Seated Bid,"
least 5 parking spaces for · " Welfare
Departme n t
automob iles.
Building Annex ". Bidder to
Renta l required for said furnish their own b id form .
building and re lated
The Board of Count ~
facilities should be broken Comm issioners may ac·
down for a 2 year basis. All cept th e lowest bid, or
bids should indicate the
select 1he best bid tor the
rental neces!oary for the
intended purpose, and
- bidder to provide main- reserve the right to reiec1
tenance for t he exterior
any or all bids, and or any
and interior of the building .
part thereof.
The Board of county
M eigs County

of 1.4 off i ces, toilet facilities

Commissioners
may
require additional contract

Comm issioners

Marv Hobstetter,

provisions with the sue·

r----------~~--~-----~i

GRADUATES - Law•eMlchael Foreman, 1GB ol Mr. IDd
Mrs. Lawteace Fore1111111, 1
graduate ol WlbaiU High
School, ~r&amp;daaled cam laude
from· tile Weet VtrpDII Jllllltute
ol Teebaology wltb a ••llelor of
science Ill elecbical eqlaeerlllc
recenUy. He la 1 member ol tile

1 .Curb Inflation. ~
'!
Pay Cash for
i:
· Classlfleds and liI
Savell r
,,I,
Write your own ad and order by mail with this

Ell!' Kapp Na
En&amp;Jneerial aad tile lEE Fraternltlee. He wu leleeted to be J.
eluded In " Wbo't Wbo Amonc
Sladenll In American Unlver-

'Nome ___________

but not limited to, the r ight

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

•:

Ii
li
1:

WANT AD INFORMAnON

PHONE 992-2156
or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 court St.. Pomeroy, o., 45769

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

-------I,,

Addreu;..
·

Phone __________________ I

to

Print one word in each

space below. Eoch In·
lllal or group ol figures
coun" as a word. Count
11

1

name an&lt;t address or

phone number If used . -

I.
I·

li
CIRCLE
I
AD WANTED I•
11
3
10 1,

•

1 You'll get better resu lts Words

diV diVI diYI doysl
• If you descr ibe fullv ,
give price. The Sentinel lo16 $1.00 $2.00 S4.00 $7.00
- reserves the right to
classify, edit or reject
I
any od. Your od will_be lo25 sdo Sl.7S 5.50 n.oo I
put In rhe proper
claslflcatlon II you ' ll lolS $2.50 $4.50 7.50 ~10.~
check the proper box
1:
below
These cash rates
Include dlscounl
I

l

) Wonted
) For Sale

______

s6-__----_____
3. _ _ _ _ __

II

FORTUNE
Mr. and Mrs. Robin D. Fortune,
Racine,
are annm'nd the birth of
1 daughter, December 23, at the
Holaer Medical Calter. The seven
pouod nine ounce Infant has been
named Amber Nicole.
Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Paul E. Wolfe, Racine, and
Mafgaret and Jim Fortune.
.Great-grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Robert M. Parsonl, Racine;
Mrs. Myrtle Foster, Glendale, Ky.;
and Mr. and Mrs. Roy D. Fortune,
Tennessee.

Clerk

Approved :

of the option to cancel the· FredW. Crow. lll
tease, if necessary .
The front of the envelope {1 ) 12, 19,2tc
enclos ing lhe bid 11\USI be

I

slllee and .Collegee." Foremaa la
married
the former Karen
Price and lbey have two 10111,
Selll and Bryant. He to DOW employed by Columbia Gas In
Cbarleetoa, W. V1.
'

Birth announced

cesstul bidder. Including

coupon. Concel vour ad by phone when vou get
results. Money not refundable .
I'

P~

Tau Beta

u...

H•''IPIIIIIIdtllepcri, Wll bII ted wbel&amp;lle Melli CGIIJd7 PI Dll"er ud
lllllalelllloeleiJ mec s-laJ llhe,_ a&amp; 1111 Melp ...._, •
Haa''IPI, left, ll' pletared belli&amp; ........ a etpJ If &amp;Ill Melp c-ty
Hlll&amp;wy 11oa11 by~· E. Blel:eelee, prllldea&amp; Ill &amp;Ill MOiety, ud Marpn!l
l'llrlllr, .mary. Tbe two Hned u co-ellalrmft Ill &amp;lie pabllealla&amp;
; . Mill Hwltfw _, tile Alllerleu HlltorJ CGDiell willller 11 Melp lflCb
' • lldlooJ wMn • Ia I Millar aad lip; 01 Stell &amp;Ill RbeoJ It bJiber left!
leldltllleid II oWo Ulllvenll)'.

suo -044764 .037336

1.00 30.80 .048773 .042382

Eastern Local 8. D• ••• • .4.80 2-50 21.00 .10 .40 .10 .20" 1.00

f

Mr. ad Mn. 81eve

1.00

4.80 2.70 21.00 .10 .40 .10 .20 1.00

ORANGE

1

.

a-• ....._ .,

1.00 30.80 .051987 -049116
1.00 38.80 .046682 .044104

OLIVE

~ II
:I
I
j ~

HONORED ..,. Allie

1.00 40.20 .267767 .240559

RUTLAiiD

$649.95

AMANA
REBATE

,10 .40 .10 .20 1.00 2. 5Q

E&amp;atem

.,

$699.95
50.00

26.90

1.00 30.80 .045906 .037946
1.00 33.60

LEBAiiON

2. _ _ __ __

RR·10RANGE
PRICE
DISCOUNT

1.00 82.80 .031457 .025187
1.00 29.80 .094624 .027582

Meln Local

._

•• •f" MOWA V !. O V (N

"Your Home Is Where Our Heart Is"

BEDFORD

) Foo Rent

,4..,•. 'I'OOCB_MATJC II'" /~ut.aA:-a-1114-4~

992-2635

AND CORPORATIONS

) Announcement

See a demon~tratlon today of the energy saving, time saving

Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday
January 12-13-14

Madel RR·1DA

L._____!AU.~alOK~IN!!.G~ACC~
· :E~SSOR~IES~lh~P~
-RICE~--..--._1j

3 DAYS ONLY

SCHOOL DISTRICTS

Wood.
Mrs. Richard Koblentz presented
the SUllllh!ne gift to Mrs. Smith,
mother of Mrs. Richard Barton.
Snips of wisdom were given by Mrs.
Curtis King who commented on the
Wandering Jew plant which she said
Is also called the traveling sailor.
She noted that it comes In many different colors and needs to be fed once a month on half-strength plant
food and miated dally. To propagate,
cuttings can be broken off and
placed in water.
The thought for the New Year was
given in devotions by Mrs. Mae
Mora. Mrs. Barbara Knight won the
door prize.

: ; Stewardahip in the Pomeroy come Is used primarily tor tne sup· ; \Seventh-day Adventist Church port of the clergy and missionaries.
: · 'helped boost the denomination's The second tenth goes for capital
!M"Id budget for 1981 to 142 million· needs, admlnlatratlve requiremen· dollars, reports Bob Ulfscomb, local ts , the operation of the
denomination's health and
elder.
t1le new budget for this year was educational facilities as well as its
evangelistic outreach.
approved 11 the deiiOIIlinltlon's AnLipscomb says, "We don'taltempt
nual CouncU in Washington, D. C. It
earmarked weD over $118 mlll1on of to teU our members what they must
the church's Income for overseas give. We are more concerned with
mlaslon programs - nearly half of their spiritual health than their
financial investment in the church.
: the total bud&amp;et, Llpecon!b said.
. . In ancient times, Upltomb states, When their llJilritual health is good,
we have discovered that their finan:: the lanelilel brought double tithe .and IIOnlellmea more -and placed It cial commitment la ~ter. We conIn the ooffen of their desert church. sider stewartahip to 1M! more than •
'The Seventy-day Adventist Church the proper handling of money. We
fgllOWII the same practice, The first belleve It involves a person's time,
'' tenth of an Individual member's In- his talent and personal commit·

• Cooks by time or cooks to temperature. Even holds at
temperature to tenderize economy cuts ol meat
• Awide range ol Cookmatici,MI power levels because
different food s cook best at diHerenl speeds.
• 700 watts ol cooking power at "lull power:·
• Advanced _memory. Remembers to: delrost. hold,
start cookirl'j by time, then cook to lemperature at
the same or a different Cookmatic setting_
• Even remembers the time ol day.
• Automatic start lirne.
• Separate timer you can use anytime.

•

Alexander

:· Pomeroy Adventists boost church budget

A,.,."' ~DMATIC II..

TOWNSHIPS

Rev. and Mrs. Corbitt
say farewell greetings

=

- arl11111 \'lrlllll
, _ .. .. .. .... ... "' .. .... .... "0.10
. . month .................... -... 117.10
I y., . . .. .. .... ... ...... ... . .... IIllO

ID parouaa.. of La..-, I, Georp M. CoiiiM, rr..urv of Mtlp CoaaiY, Ohio, ID COIIPU&amp;aee wllb rtv·
loed Code No. 328-08 of State of Ohio, do hereby Jive notice of tht Rot• of Tautl011 for the Tu
Yar of 1980. Rot• ••..-.!Ia clollaro 111d ceDto on each line thou...,d dollora ta• ..luallon.

recetJt Chester Garden Club fore
•

.,

Rates of Taxation for 1980

the late Nancy Reed.
It was announced that the mombershlp papers on Ann l{orten Hale
have arrived. Mrs. Ed Foater and
Mrs. James Brewington were
named tellers for voting on new
members.
The money fnxn the cookie sale in
December will be contributed to the
Kate Duncan Smith aod the Tanr
massee SchooL\1 mpported by the
DAR. Plans were made to invite
members of the .CoL Charles Lewis
Chapter at Point Pleasant to the
April meeting.
Mrs. Ashley thanked members for
. remembrances during her recent
bereavement. Hostesaes were Mrs.
Ashley, Mrs. Richard Henderson,
-Mrs. Clinton Fisher, Mrs. Irving
Karr, and Mrs. Lawrence Smith.

]une in January ' design uses dried,
live and artificial plant materials in '

Rio Grande defeats Urbana

A rotating shower of power that cooks
more evenly and cooks most foods laster
th-an ever before!

meuage on the promise ol the New
Year, Mrs. Yost read the president
general's message on the promlae ol
the New Year, Mrs. Emerson Jones,
national . defense chairman,
diaciiiBed the need for a return to
·JIIeiiSUn!S of internal security. She
spoke of the problem facing schooL\1
trying to educate children who do
not speak the Engllsh lang1111ge. AlsO
111aciJssed was the DAR's resolution
calling for adequate national defense program and for a program
geared for keeping militants in this
country under control.
It was noted that the state conlerence scbeduled to be held in
Columbus, Mareh 10.12, has been
changed to Akron. Mrs. Robert
Aahley was named as an alternate to
.the Continental Congress replacing

1

.~t~o~K~e~nn~y~,~b:ut~i~tc~a~r~om~ed~u~p~an:!d~in~'"}~~~~~~~~~~~~ •

Hostover
Meigs
held an 111-17
lead
Gallipolis'
SEO halftime
league- !1\Y hands," said Chester. "Let's
leading reserves at Rock Springs
.
Saturday night before bowing to-31
to the Blue Imps of Coach Rick VanFREE TRAVEL SHOW
CHARGER FUMBLE - Sao Diego Cbarger Mlll:e •"!'ond quarter in San Diego Sunday. o8kianct Raiders
Matre.
Geae Upshaw (63) recovered lhe football. (AP Lasel'
Thomas (ZZ) fumbles lhe football as be's grabbed by
Coach Mick Childs' crew, 0.7 in
Thursd•Y· J1nuary 15,7:30 p.m .
photo).
Oakland Raiders Joba Matuszak (72) during lhe
Dlllmond savings 11nd Loan
league play and 2-8 on the year, led
1().8 after one period.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Gallipolis outscored the home
team 13-3 in the third canto to break
up a clooe game. t1le Blue Imps are
!f-2 overall and 6-1 in conference
play.
turnovers.
Coach Bob Cawley's Blue Knights
Coach John Lawhorn's Rio GranLEARN DETAILS ABOUT A
Jamie Lane paced the Gallians
Tuesday, Rio will play another
de COllege Redmen pulled away in dropped to 8-7 overaU and 2·1 inside
MOC tilt at Mt. Vernon NB2Brene with 11 points and six rebounds.
the final five minutes of action to the league.
College. Saturday, Rio is at Ohio Lynn Sheets and Mike Edelmann
After holding a 39-illi halftime lead,
hand visiting Urbana College a !01).
'
83 Mid-Ohio Conference setback at the Redmen graduaUy built up a 1()- Dominican. Next home game Is Jan. each bad 10 inarkers.
Mike Edwards had eight points for
. point advantage, but the visitors 20, against the Malone Pioneers.
4'Jte College Saturday night
PUBLIC INVITED
the losers, Randy Murray seven.
The triumph left Rio Grande with wouldn't fold. Clutch free throw
'
In
Saturday's
girls·
contest,
Rio
Box score:
an 8-9 season record. Inside the shooting in the final minutes of play
OTA 0134
Grande defeated Cedarville, 6:&gt;56.
BLUE IMPS {40) - Madison 1-1-3;
MOC, the Redmen upped their mark assured the Redmen of the triumph.
Bob Evans Farms Family Night Skidmore 1·H ; Sheets 4·2-10; Lane
to2-L
~- GALLIPOLIS
; Edelmann4-2-10. TOTALS 14-_
'
will
be observed at Lyne Center on 4-3-11
Five Redmen finished in double
12-40.
MEIGS RESERVES {31) figures in scoring. Kev Castleman Saturday, Jan. 31, when Walsh
AAA TRAio'EL
J\geN:y
Murrav z.J-7; R. Edwa.rds 3-0-6;
College
invades
Rio
Grande
for
an
_
had
18;-Watson
McDonald
18,
Tom
The Daily Sentinel
AGENCIES
SERVE
Kovalchick 1-0-2; M. Edwards 3-2-8;
Dorsey 17, Vince Wollenberg 13 and MOC encounter.
BOTH
MEMBERS
AND
Chancey
2·0·.4;
Cremeans
2·0·4
;
fUSP!il...l
'
f46-0699
Tavlor 0-0-0. TOTALS 13-S-31.
A DI•W.. tiMilltimtdla, IDt.
Vince Phelps 12.
THE TRAVELING PUBLIC
ScnrR bv au.:.rtars :
Saturday's box:
Carlos Roberts paced the losers
GallipoliS ' 8'
8 9 13 1D-A0
URBANA {831 - Pinkenbine2·2-6; Meigs ' B' '
with 19 points. Mike Rengert and
:='u.r:=~~~
10
8 3 ID--31
tht Ohio Valley l'llblJII1In( c..-n. ·
Flunov 8·1·17: Rengert6·3· 15 ; Currie
Lonnell Currie each had 15.
MlltiiDidia, Inc., .Pomtroy, ONo· t5'11t,
5-5-15; Huff 2-0-4; Roberts 7-5-19;
Rio Grande connected on 41 of 79 Tav ler 2-1-5; Oraher O·QrC; Andres 0ID-IIM. ollll ....... pold 1t
i'wDII;or. Oblo.
field goal attempts for 51.8 percent. 2-2. TOTALS 32-19-83. _
RIO GRANDE {1001 - Phelps 3-6The Redmen were !8 of 23 at the foul
- · 'll&gt;IAIICI&lt;Ialld
~Inland
Doi12 ; Dorsey 6·5·17; Penrod 2-0·4; Mc AIICI&lt;IatiGa .....
tbo Amlrlcao
line for 78.2 percent.
Publllbln ~on, Natknl
DQnald 8-2-18; Castleman 9·0· 18;
llll Rtprtlllltltl.., _La~n1
The Redmen picked off 46 reboun- Wollenberg 6-1-l!J ; Hairston 4-1-9;
- · 1101 E11CIId Avo., CloYtllllf.
ds, 13 by McDonald. Rio had 14 Burson 0-0·0; Acord 1-0·2; Maisch 1·
Cl&gt;lo,tllll.
Julze 1-J-5_TOY.ALS 41-18·100.
assists, seven by Phelps, and had 19 0·2;
Halftime score : R i ol~, Urbana36 .

....... ---~~·-··
IWLIIVBICaiPmlNI

The Daily S_~ntinei- PaiJ_e-5

Small
investment,
large
Historical Williamsburg subject
.
returns, Sentinel Want Ads
of DAR slide presentation

Raiders defeat Chargers;
• trip to Super Bowl -·
wzn
SAN DIEGO (AP) - It was, for
. the mOll! part, the defense which got
Jim Plunkett and the rest of the
Oakland Raiders as far as the
American Conference championship
game.
So perhaps it was fitting that
Plunkett took the opportunity early
Sunday to say to the defense:
"Thanks, glJYS. Take a break."
For a moment, It seemed as
though they were taking Plunkett at
his word, relaxing a bit too much. .
For a moment, it seemed that for
every bolt of Ughtnin8 thrown at San
Diego, the Chargers would throw
one back.
But if the Oakland defense bends a
lot, it rarely breaks. And after an Instant of agoilizing miscalculation, it
settled down, bent here and there,
gave up points here and there - and
held together.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

· -- - - - - 7 . .:..
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U-AIJolrfmtntfDr Rtnt
.S- FR ..ml
a..-s..-ce tor ll:tt~t
' t7-WutH to RtiU
•t- Ectulpmtnt for I tnt

5-HafflAIII

6-LOII IIKI Pound

7- YaniSate
._Pullltllll
\A"ctl!"' 1

9-Wan~e~~. to Buy

eMERCHANDISE

e EMPLOYME'NT
SERVICES

.JI - HoutWICI GOOCII

S2- CI;.,TV, Radio lctwlpment
.U- AntJque.
~-MISC . Mlt"Ctltnclltl
Ss--lwl141nt tuNtltl
S6-Ptt1. ftW Sate

•'- ""' wentecl

12- lteuatec~w•nt.ct

1)- lnlurence
••- lullntu Trelnlnl
u - scfMitlllnt1ructton
' 16R141Uo, TV
&amp;CIR.,.Ir
lt-Winttcl To 00

eFAAMSUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK
,,_ ,,,m lctutpmtnt
61-WentH to lu't

eFINANCIAL

n - TnKb for hit

21-

IUIInlll
o,omn lry
22- MOMy to I..Nn

6l-1..1Ytltocll
64- Hn &amp; Grein
u - SltM &amp; Pltf'lll'ber

U - Preltlllonel
Wvtcta

eTRANSPORTATION

,

eREAL ESTATE

7 1-AufOt, tor S.le
7l-Vtnl &amp; 4 W.O.

Jl- Hef\111 fer Sete ~

,.,.....

74--Mt*cvctll

l2-MGIMII&lt;HOmll

U-

A.,.OP1r11

&amp;Acuuortes
17- Auto R.,.lr

l l-Perm• for •••
.M-euslntlllutlcllnt•
Jf- Lots a AcrNtl
,._RNIIIItte WantM

e SERVICE$

11- Mtlltwt.

Wlni·Ad Advertising
Deodllnel
21" P.M. Deily
11 Noon SaturO~

fl '

torMOfleev

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1

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J-Annoto~rtetmenb

+-01WHWiy

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30 __ _ _ _ _ _

1

2-tn M1111ortam

1

. 10._ _ _ _ _ _

u __ _ _ _ _ _

eRENTALS
t l- HOUitl h)r Rlftt
U-Mo~Jill HOII"I
tor Rtnt

11 - Hemetmprovtmtnfl

~
~

eANNOUNCEMENTS
I - Card of TMM:1

11,

a IICCIWIIInt

U- l~cnetlnt

n- ott~eref H••ll~t~

M-M. H . RtpAir

17- Upholstery

RatesebctOther Information

.

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lSWOnllorUnder

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Ctlh

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Alh tUIIAlnt Otlltr lllln COI111CUII¥t dtyl Will bl Clllrted If fftl 1 . . ¥

I'

Mail This coupon with Remittance
The Daily Sentinel
Box 72t
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
·

1:1- ~IWmlililll

IM-IIe&lt;lriCII
I Rtfrlllrtlltn

1.
I'

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,_

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'"'·
hi memory , Cerd at Tllanll• eno OOituar¥ ! 'unt1 .,., wont, ll.OO
minimum . Cllfl In aciVIIK:I.
Mobil I Home nln llld Y:.nllllll lfl ICCIJitCI 0111\' 'll'ittl Clllt with
enltr . U tlflt cMr,. fer ••• cerrylnt lo• N11m1Nr fn Cere el The
Sentinel.

·-

I

�'

ltll
Ohto

Rac ine
Card of Thanks
THE Family of Ollie M.
Gotschall would like to

V&lt;&gt;lunteer

DICK~cy

.· Business Services

F

Department sponsors a
shot gun &amp; r ifle match

every Sat. night 6:30 p.m .
at their building in Bashan.
thank their many friends I F actorv choke 12 guage
and relatives for all the kin· shot guns only . Open sights

Television
•
•
y.tewmg

SPECII=ICALLV,
A LANDLORD
CAN COLL-ECT

SOME STATES ARE
NEW LEGISLATION
THE ARSON

RePLACEMENT
C .O ST OF A

dness shown us during our 1 22 rifle .

recent

Would

be r eavement .

like

to

thank

especiallY the members of
the Middleport United Pen·
tecostal Church for all the
food they prepared and
sent ih . Also a special
· thank you to Reverand
William Knittel for officiating at the services.
And for his special prayers
for our family. Also a
special thank you to Rita
Arnold for the songs and

music.

Husband
V i ctor ,
daughters; Kaye Smith,
Janet Grimes and Juanita

Clark . Also sisters; Ethel
Priddy and Dolly Cleland.

42
Tax service, federal , state,
II. quarterly taxes done by

Mobile Homes

JAN.12, INI

for Rent

10 x 55 two bedroom mobile
home nur Racine. 992·

appoint ment. See Wanda
Eblin, 41000 Laurel Cliff
Road, Pomeroy, Ohio

Pomeroy, Oli.
Open
saturday Only
4 P.M. to 11 P.M.
. Free Coffee &amp; Tea
Free Food
Live Music

5858.

45769. 992·2272.
Two bedroom mobile home
at Brown's Trailer Park.

!ncome tax service, federal
&amp; ·slate. wa II ace Russell
Bradbur y, call992-7228.

4

'192·3324.

GiVeaway

o:ao rn • C1.l eCilt~a&gt;CIIle News
CIJ
C1J

RAINIOW 'FACTORY
CAROL IURNI!TT
FRII!NOI
Cll ABC HI!WI
Cll 3-Z·I CONTACT
(fi) OYI!R I!ASY Gunt: Sammy·

Cahn, one of ehow bualneaa' moal
auccaaetullyrielata . Hoata: Hugh·
Downa and Frank Blair. (Cioaed·

I I I J
INARTOMI

Captlonod; U.S.A.)
1 :30 ClleCll NICNI!WS
· Cll THE DOOR
BOB NI!WHART SHOW
FACt! THI! MUSIC
Cll (!§) CIS N!WS
WILD WILD WORLD OF

12·31-1 mo.

LOST :Sma ll te rrier, ma l_e,
housedog . F ive months old.

I

Black . 992-5891.

Now arrange lhe circled lattart to
form the aurprlae answer, ae aug-'
geslod by the above cartoon .

AIIIMA~I

(fi) HISTORY OF IPACI! FUOHT
CIIJe AIC NI!WS
8:11 ~ NI!WIUPDATI!
7:00
• PMMAGAZlN£ 1
NORMAN VINCENT PI!ALE
C1J ALL IN THI! FAMLY
CllCIIJe FAMILY FEUD
ClJ NABHVILU ON THE ROAD
.(I) TlCTAC DOUGH
.
(I) (fi)
MACNEIL-LI!IIIII!R
RI!PORT
1BJ NEWS
7:30 ()). IULLII!YE
Cll WORDS OF HOPE
(l) EMI!RALD CUPOYIINAITICI

OKAif, OKAY-- SO
HE'!&gt; ORDERIII/8 VOU
TOCALL f11M PRONTO..
WHICH M!-AtJ6 THE
DECISION ill ~OW

UP TO

in more ways than you thought possible!
Whether you're interested in spending a couple years
in Europe, earning good money in your spare time, learning
a skill or whatever, the Army has something that will appeal
to you.
·
•
.
And now you can get all the information you need about
Active Anny programs or Reserve Army programs in one .
place.
Take a few minutes soon to talk over the many opportunities available for you. Call your local Army recruiter
(Active or Reserve) at 44&amp;-3343.

Announcements

3

I

PAY

highest

prices

FOUND : While-brown dog,
may be setter. 992·5550,

possible for gold and silver
coins, rings, iewelry, etc .
Contact Ed Burkett Barber

area lower Middlepor1.

Shop, Middleport.

9

SHOOTING

MATCf1

at

Corn Hollow in Rutland .
Every Sunday starting fit
noon.
Proceeds beinQ
donated to the Boy Scout

TrooP 249 . 12 gauge factory
choke gun only!

RACINE

GUN

Sf100T,

Racine Gun Club, every
Friday night star'ting at
7:30 p.m . Factory choke
guns only.

DEER cut &amp; wrapped at
Maple Wood Lake between
Syracuse &amp; Racine, Oh .
$25. per head. SS additional
for skinning.

FAYE'S Gift Shop in Mid·

Wanted to Buy

IRON ANO BRASS BEDS,
old furniture, desks, gold
r i ngs , jewelro; , si lver
dollars ~ sterl ing, etc ., wood
ice boxes, jars antiques,

771JJ.

WANTED TO r BUY :
GOLD , .
S I LVER ,
PLATINUM, STERLING·
COINS. · RINGS,JEWELR·
Y. MISC . ITEMS. AB·
SOLUTE
MARKET
PRICE GUARANTED . ED
BURKETT
BARBER
Sf10P , MIDDLEPORT ,
OH I 0 992·3476.

dleport will be open from
12·5 until Christmas.

YOUR

742·2331.

Too

valuable to neglect, expert
tuning &amp; and repair. Lane
Daniels, 742·2951 c:x 992·

2082.

si lver. Call J . A . Wamsleo; ,
Treasure Chest
Coin Shop, Athens, OH . 592·

r..62 .

Wanted to Buy : class r ings,
wedding bands, ano;thing
PUbliC Notice

stamped, 10K, 14K , or 18K

NOTICE OF
PUBLIC SALE

watches. Call Joe Clark at
992·2054 at ClarK's Jewelry

Notice Is hereby given
that on Tuesday, January

Store, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

20, 1981 at 10 :00 A.M. a

public sale will be held at
the offices of The Central
Trust co., NA of Mid·

USED FURNITURE . Gold

gold. Silver coins, pocket

dleport, Ohio to sell fo r

-:as h the
following '
:olleratal to wit :

1 1978 Dodge 2 Dr. Ser .
No. XS22K8R238SS6. The
Central Trust Co .. NA Mid·

dleport, Ohio reserves the
right to bid at this sale.
(1)

&amp; silver, class ring's, pocket
watches, chain~ . diamonds
&amp; so on . Copper1 Qrass and
batteries, antiqu~ items,
also do appraisals, com·
plete auctioneer service.
Over 30 years exPerience in
business. Will buy com·
plete estates. Middleport,

Oh. '192-6370.

9, 11, 12, 3tc

Good used exerc ise bike.

Call after S p.m . at992-701S.

Public Notice

The Board of Trustees of
Lebanon Township, Meigs
Counto;, Ohio will receive
bids until 5 o'clock p.m . on

11

HeJp wanted

GET VALUABLE tra ining
as a young business person

Shirley Johnson! Route 1.

and earn good money plus

the home of township clerk

Portland, Ohio or a used
truck.
The truck should have

some great gifts as a Sen·
tinel route carrier. Phone
us right away and get on
the el igibility list at 992·

not less than a 17,500 rear

axle and 7500 front axle.

2156 or 992· 2157.

Ten foot dump bed, '100 x 20
tires and be in gOOd con·

dition.

reserves the right to re ject
any or all bids.

Musicians ' wanted; lead
gu i tar i sts,
rhythm
guitarists, drummer for
rock band . Contact Gary

Trustees, Lebanon Town·

F ife at 992·3627.

The Board of Trustees
By order of the Board of
Johnson,

Be paid
Public; Notice

good money

Please take notice that

'

on April 10, 1972. by
Volume 58, page 19 of the

Meigs County Lease Recor·
ds, Meigs countv, Ohio,
emmett
Heiney
and

Gladys Heiney, husband

and wife executed an oil
and gas lease to the Atlan·
tic International Oil Cor·
poration to the following

NEACIL E. CARSEY
AGENT

Countv

Recorder's Office .
Said lease being forfeited

Homes for Sale

31

10 ROOM br ick, 3 baths, 1'1•
ac r e; 6 rooms, 2 bafhs, llh
acres ; 6 rooms basement,
bath , 2 mobile homes ;
Mason, 3 bedroom never
l ived In, 2 bedroom, rented
2 acres. John Sheets, 3112
miles south of M iddleport,

are ' no producing oil and
gas wells on said premises.

Further, please take
nollce that the lessor. Em·
melt Heiney and Gladys

medical and dental
cover.l!lge, 30 days annual
vacation
and
liberal
educat i on
assistance.
For more information

Heiney, husband and wife,

G~nerous

full

Intend to file for record an
affidavit of torfellure with

without obligation, call

ternollonal Oil Corporation
does not have said lease

your
local
Army
recruiter and learn
abou t how you~ choice
of training can be
guaranteed In writing .
Your call today could

the Meigs County Recor·
der~s Office if Atlantic In·

released of record within 30

days of this publication.
Patrick H. O'Brien
Attorney tor
Emmett and Gladys
Heiney
(lJ 12, lie

mean a bright future
tomorrow. Call 992·7113
or Call446·3343.

Unfurnished apartmentSI
tor rent In the Pomeroy·
Middleport area. 992·7511
or 992·6130.

304·927· 1568.

Two bedroom apartment
for

rent,

adults

only .

Deposit required. R Eferen·

Seven room double in·
sulated ranch style home,

ces required . 992·,36..17. Two

total electric wood burner

m lies out on 143.

in the family room, gas
available.
Reasonably
priced. Three level acres In
Racine . 9.49· 2706.

32

Mobile Homes

tor Sale

1 bedroom apartment
uTilities paid. John Sheets,
3'h miles south Middleport,
Rt. 7. .
4S

Furnished Rooms

1973 Crown Haven, 14 x 65,
three bedjooms, new car· Three sleeping rooms, con·
pet. 1971 Cameron, 14 x (,..(,. -s tructlon workers only,
two bedrooms, new carpet. private
entrance,
1972 Champion. 12 x 60, two refrigeration, television,

Ph. 992-2478
ll·:Z0.3 mo. Pd.

nn

~~

--:~~~L~.
I ~t6 ~:U3
Phon I!
1-(614)-992·3325
NEW PRICE - Fur·
nished 3 bedroom home

no money down

Convention•! LOIIns-

5%

HTS .
bath,

fur·

nace, fu ll basement,
n i ce remodeled kitchen,
carpeting, and some
storm windows. Only

$16,500.
SYRACUSE
Moderate 2 bedroom
home near

pool

and

ballpark .
Central
healing, basement, 2
porches, and large extra

lot on 2 streets.
INCOME -- 2 business
buildings with good
write·off.

LIST NOW AND GET
YOUR
APPRECIA ·
TION FROM YOUR
HOME. CALL 992·3J2S
or 992-3176.

Housing
Headquarters

39

down

Call for lnform•tlon

ein Syracuse equipped
with range, hood, and
ref . Insulated. 50x100 fl.
101. $24,'100.00.
2 ACRES -- And a 2
bedroom rancn home
wihl range, ref. and
woodburner .
Block
garage. $24,'100.00. ·
PRICE
On
this 4 R'EDUCED
bedroom home
on approx. 1 acre lot.
Enclosed porch, storage
building. Near mines.
$13,500.00.
.
REALTOR
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
• 99H1,1
Roger &amp; Oottle Turner
'92·U92
Jean Trussefi949·2UO .
OFFICE 99H25t

A

[B

c.tch on to the cr1ft boom! Send
fa&lt; out NEW 1981 NEEDLECRMT
CATALOG. 0'111 172 desi&amp;ns, 3
free
inside. $1.00
M1
. . .$. .$1.75 _.,
134-14 Cilia IIICIIIM Qlltll
llU.._ 111111 Q111t11c
132.QIIII ~
allicl Qlilll
1"'........_
.....,,_11
..
. , . . _•,
_ _ _ ..
.....
l2f.GIIcl'rl Ellr ,.....,.
121f..... Paldlwak Qlllll
127.._,. 'rlllillll

=ns
lll.,

~~=~~,...

124-ll!lr

"*"j:t
't' .,I

1 II

=

I2Uti&amp;tl
IU-SIIfl '1''"Pill

992-75-44

Space tor Rent

FOR

56"

IINI!r Altai .... Cllcllol
IIH!Iflr f1llr
liS&amp;~ ... "
Cllcltal
IIV...... .

m-............ .

115-11111111 Clllllal
•·
u •u
102.._ Q11t1
L....--------'1 101-Qiillllil Ct 1 1C. . I

.

$.,.

WH~ii'S

ALL lH'

LOOI&lt;s Lll(l; lH'
-..oMEN MIG&gt;lT BE

FUSS a.'ER THERE,
a:lOO I!IJDP'V!'

56

Poh tor Sale

72

female,

one adult.

aever11

kittens,

-~'

- .... ..
,

ClJ

GASO!JNE ALLEY

Frtt

Grandma ccm't
help you!

Hi' I'm home!
Have a qood da4?

10:00 DCIJ(JI) LOUORANTTh•horror
of everydaw crime Ia brought home
to the city room in a lhock'"o way
when one of the Tribune' a own
t:,!POrteralaraped. (00 mlna.)

r-

.....

WINNIE

lU DEADLYWTNDIOFWARTNo
frightening documentary tracea

13ACK TO

the hlatory of chemica l warfare.
from ByunUna timaa to the pre·
sent, and includea 1 loch at three
victlma of modern man'a moat
diabolical method of annihilation.

estlm•ted,

~mine.)

NEWS
IO:tO (I) TBIIYIN-NI!WB
10:30 (fi) OUTI!R~TB
11:00 ()) • Cll ClJ • (I) (II) Clll •
NI!WI
Cll FESTIVAL OF PRAIII!
'
(l) MOYIE -(COIIIOY) 00 "Nortll
Dollao Forty" 1g7g
Cll MORI!CAMIE AND Will!
11:10 Cll NIGHT GALLERY
11:28 (]) NI!WSUPDATI!
II :30 ()) • ClJ THI! TONIGHT IIHOW
(Jl)

l!rcnotlnt

Jl&amp; F BACKHOE SER ·
V CE llscanHd &amp; bonded,
Hptic tank lnstollallon, ,
water &amp; g1s tines. Ex·
CIVatlng work &amp; tronolt
lo\iout. 992-7:101 .

'Beat of Caraon' Queata: Angle
Olckln•on, Ethel Marmen. (Repeat:

eo mine .)
CIJ ROll IAQL!Y 1H0W

BARNEY

ONCE UPON A
TIME·-UH --

WAIT

A SECONT,

' ABC NI!WS
Cll CIIJ •
NIOHTLINE
eCil CIS LATI!MOYII! 'OUINCY:

TWICE UPON
A TIME--

TATER, WHILE
I GO STIR MY
BEANS

Touch Of Death' A mertlalarta eJC·
per1 euddenly dlae wttnout appar·
ent raaaon.and Sam, whole a rala·
tlve of tha dead men, lnelete thet
Quincy nol parlorm an eutopew .

EL.WOOD • BOWERS
RI!I!AIR Sweepers,
tonltrl. Irons, all am111
•ppllantoa. ~own mower.
Next to State H ltiPIWIV
Gtr._ on Route 7, ,.,.

(Repeat) 'THE NEW AVENGERS:
Medium Aara' Stare: Patrick Mac·
nee, Jo1nne Lumley. (Repeat)

3125.

I

1977 Cllovttte In IIOOd con:
dftlon.12100.00. 915·4256.
1975 PIYmoutll Rood RUfl·
nor, 311 2 barril,
1utomat1c1 powe~ steering,
briKH. 11200.00.949-

r.:."

11U••

1975 Cllovy lmpelo cullOm,
2 doar, axe. c - . no rust
II.ClO. Moytag wringer
· Wllllor, like new, 1200.
9a~ POMEROY Homtllhr chain saw, comPI"'-IY rebuilt, 20,1n. bor ,...,
!!JW.LANDMARI&lt;
chalh. 1175. exc . c -· 992·
. . 7675.
.
.
Pomeroy
E. Moln St.

".. '"'·"

.APP~IANCE

u

Cll AIC CAPTlOIIIO NI!WS
(!§) MOVIE -(TITLI! UNAIINOUNCI!O)
11:40 C1J MOYIE -(AD VENTURI!)
"-QI-ttauona"l811
11:00 CllCfllePANTAIYIIUNDMr.

••l!o

SERVICE:
all makn washer, dryers,
r1nge1, d'llhwtlhtn,
diiPGMlt. w1ter tanka. Coil
Ken Young II MJ-Wl. 21
yNra ,o xperlenca. Also will
1111 pertl you fix.
Gllllf'll Houllnt

.AGRI · L.IME $prtadlng,
llmoatn and fill dirt
heullng. Leo Morris. 7~2-'

2455.

Alan: "It took a lot of effort
on my part to explain wby be
should have refused that diamond finesse. He said that I
had taught him to finesse and
that if East had held both
minor suit kings, failure to
take the diamond finesse
would have coot him a trick."
Oswald: "Like the mountain
climber who climbed the
mountain because It was
there. He took the fineooe

Soalb

t+
4+

Pus

By Oswald Jaeoby
ud Alaa Soatag

because it was ther'e."

Alan: "I was playing with a
pupil recently. He sat South,
ducked the lint heart but won
the contlnuaUon. Then he proceeded to take and Jose the

Alan: "Exact!{. I finally
showed him tha taking the
diamond finesse could cosl
hiih 720 points while reCusing
1t could never cost him more
than I 00 points."

trump finesse."

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

CBN TI!LETHON

SA Joyce Oavldaon Suaaklnd nar·
ratu thla look Into the world of
Mother Ter111 or Ca lcutta , who In
t979 gained world wide attention
lor her work with tha abandoned,
the social outuata and the dying of

reuonoble roles, scot·
ollquord. 992·6309 or 742·

U

Pass

make his contract."

Openbig lead:YQ

1-----TI::--11

Ro1rk1 playa hoet lo 1 men who
wante to betheluckleat gambler In
the world end 1 young woman who
want• to be 1 ramCMJt torch alnger
like her grendmother. (Repeat; 70
mint]

__l_ _ __:___:_J._Ja!!!;:~~~~~~

L
PEANUTS

IN CASE OF ILLNESS

OR ACCIDE~T, NOTIFY:
NAME - -ST~ EET

Walla Traaft Hauling, Oliva
&amp; Oronge Township. .Approved by commfMI-ra;
tiiConHd by tho hHIIh
dtPI"'I'""t. 91.5·3511.

__

--

tt,.,~

WI1AT'S AN ''APT "
MARCIE? DONi TELL ME!
I'LL. BET IT MEANS1''ARE
'(OU THE KIND WHO'S
APT TO 6ST SICK ? "

I'LL

PUT DOWN

A BIG''NO~p

12:30
· 12:11
1:00

w·(l]

TOIIORIIOW
IIPOATB REPORT
O.JAMEIIII-DY
ON LOCATION 'Tho Flflh An·

nual Young Comtdla!'lt snow'
There'll beleugha galore •• Amer·
lca'e notttlt youlftg talent• make
their bide tor stardom on HBO'ele·
teet 'On Location'. Hoat: C1rl
Reiner.

1:10 l!lle NEWII
'2:00 (J) TRANSFORMI!O
ffiNEWI
(jpl III!LIIYI!

•.,

llr THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS

(f)(fi)WOIILDOFMOTHI!RTI!RI!-

11n.

·-••'

Pus

whlle he'e gone.

uretchen, come
back here r

I

.Autos tor Salt

p,,.

learn thet economic conditione ere.
suchtnettneywm have to continua
serving on night emeroancwduUee,
which playa hawoc with an lmpor·
tent date Chartay hae with Ann .

Electrlcof
, &amp; Rotr...,otlon
•
SEIWING
MACHINE
Ro,olrs,
ttrvlco. oil
mokts1 992·2214 . Tho
Fatlrle ShOP. PomeroY.
Authorized Sl,_ Saloa
and ~ Sorvl.:.. We Sharpen
Sci--.

71

s+

.(I) (II) M.A.I.H. ColonoiPottor
hae to leave for aweekonbuelneaa
andplaCJeathepompouaWalorWin·
chester In charge or the 4077th

221l .

.. .
--·__... ...... ....
....
. .

Pua

2 redial mud &amp; snow tires,
mounted on 14 ln . - I s .
Will fit most full sized For·
dt or Cftryslers. $80. 992·

0

Used King wood
stove with blower.
915-3511.

'!Itt·""·"

tAQ
+QH

Eul

lndlabyaoceptlngthaNoba/Ptact
Prize in the llama ot 'the poorlat of
I he JLOOf' . (eo mlna.)
8:30 e w (!§) HOUII! CALLI Daopha
obJectlona. Kenalnoton'a doctore

YOUR Humane Society
992·6260 miniature collie
temale, mole collie, english 1"1- - --;H:;co::m
=-a=-- -setter, mole, 3 snoopy
1
h
types, tamale, sneptlord
mprovemon
typo, ftmalo, mate beagle ~one's Carpet Claonlng,
type Including mixed breed ' liMP stream 8l&lt;traction.

'7680.

CMIIwtO ... Ker..MM...... •ceMIIIY ( . . .J

•u2

Norlll

2 steel bolted redial studClad.,_ tires. Mounted on
- I s , 70X15. ·2 wheels,
71XlS. 992·3061.

w

Now Polaroid one
camera wit~ strobe
carrying case. 1«1.00. 992·

"'"''

t9854
+712
SOUTH
tJI0874

+Ku

Stephanie' 1980Stars:Tony0rlen·
do, Peter Gravea.

Auto Ports ·
&amp;Accessorloa

76

Alan: "Ril!ht. East cashed
the king of Ttearts and led a
diamond. My pupil finessed
and the defenae had four
tricks and a plus score. Later
on he drew trumps, took the
club finesse and made the rest '
of the tricks."
Oswald: "He had too much
strength. Without the queen of
diamonds be would have gone
r~bt up with the ace. Then
wtth the club finesse workin&amp;
he would have been able to
discard hill losing diamond on
dummy's rourth club and

1· 12·81

tu
•Kus

.QJIO
tKJUZ

WOII

g :oo (J)eClJMONDAYNIGHTATTHI!
MOVIES 'Throo Hundred Mlloo ror

Trucks lor Sa to

HOOF HOLLOW : Horses 1974 Chevy Suburban . 'I•
end ponln ond riding ton. '15-4173.
lessons .
Everything
Imaginable In horse equipmont. Blankets, belts, 74
Motorcytln
booiS, ttc. EngliSh end
1971 KAWASAKI KZ 650
Western . Ruth Reeves motorcycle, color blue.
(6141698-32'10.
Call949-2649.

Split Mll9fl0d II r . - for
sale. 135.00 delivered. 2.0·
3972 or 247·2575.

.........
c..,"",...,..,,.,..,.... .

WEST

+as

lU® GR!ATPERFORMAIICI!II:
GANCI! IN AMI!RICA.'Two Duolo'

when he tccldentally flnda out
Susan Ia maklng$3,000morethan
he Ia ror doingthe aame atart' writing
Job, but cooffontlng hla bo. . Hoi·
ataln adda to hla fruatratlon.

M

Lmdm.u I&lt;

wrong."

NORTH
tAQ92
.764
tto 7
t A J 10 S
EAST

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South •

8:30 ffiMDYII!-(WI!STI!RII-COIII!DY)
••• %1 "UW.IIg Mu" 1870
DCililll LADII!I'MAN Alon lollvld

RE\OLTING/

RUTlAND JURNITURE

~

Now ;tt

Oswald: "So far, so good. I
can also see where he went

awlnglflg beat, 111'111 towln the big
Mlaa Rodeo Daya tttla, aha ac·
9Mirea a baby and a new llflltyle.

through the worka or two choreo·
graphera In two nry different
modes. Natalia Markarova and
Mikhail Baryahnikov perform Jer·
ome Robblna' romantic 'Other
Danc11~ andHeatharWatta andlb
Anderson dance to the mualc of
Charleelvea in Pater Martine' 'C.il·
clum Light Night'. (110 mlno.)

:W.EYOOP

Good selectlon-roll.end remnants S3.99 up
Drive A LiHie- save A Lot

PUREBRED
EngliSh
Shepherd puppies. Stock
end watch dolls. Phone 247·
2161 .

So4
MISC. MerclllniH
Firewood lor sale, Mixed
typos of wood. $35.00 per
pick-up load. Delivered,
will stack for Senior
Citizens. 843·ol951 or 843·
211S.

Ponu•roy

Pupil learns numbers game

The pu de deux ia explored

Sq.

Installed

THE
MEIGS
County
Humane Society peh of tne ,
week are : Several adult
,coh, 5 black &amp; tan pUppies,
block labrador, black Irish
setter,
collie
type,
snepherd type, block &amp;
ten1 house broke medium
size dog ready to be loved,
lovable mixed breed. 992·
6260.

Antiques

U... XL 12CMtftMw

126CIIdlel YM

Fat!!-

Reg. $15.95

·;r--&amp;up_

f"''-

_ '"'Prtlt . _
on this 2 bedroom hous
w.-."' :a,1om.
............

~~ HAVE &amp;EEN DOllE

Rubber Back

SQ15Sq_ yd.

Rq.'P

ATTENTION:
(IM ·
PORTANT TO Y.OUJ Will
pay cash or certified check
for antiques end collac·
llbles or entire ntates.
Nothing too large. Also,
guns, pocket watcheS and
coin collections. Call 614·
767·3167 or 557·3411.

~~~c~'i;~ o~~li

BRIDGE

U.S.A.)
(]) ADVENT It
C1J MDVII! -(COIII!DY-DRAMAJ
••• "Sterile CUckoo" 1MI
CIJCIIle MONDAYNtGHTMOYII!

I'D

CARPET W"dh ·Paddinl' I SHAG
· Installed

Federlf Housing3% on S25,DOO
5% on belonca.

53

The Dally Sentinel'
II. IU, OW CIMiail . ; ...

At()

2 Rolls

CARPET

... ' .......
' . . ....
.......
.-.

Doubl1 bri&amp;h~ doubl1 warm!
Knit this set Ia&lt; now, sprina.
Bri&amp;ht buds ot color decorate
bolh the squar•neched
and ardicon. Knit set o tc!Jiic
wO&lt;Stod in 3 CDiors ,. toSJ SMd
st~ch. Plltlln 7•41: direction~
· '10 · c1 .._.
~zes •· on u..,..
12.00 fa&lt; NCh pattern. Add 501
each pattern lor first-cl1ss l irm1il and handlin' SIIMI Ill:
Allee flrllb
J .t .,
~llllhulft " -~'

SECOtl&gt;

n - tu $1.75 paotpo1o1
from Jumble, r:io thle niWIPII*:_~ 31. NDfWood, N.J. 011&amp;1. t~ yow
and ..."!' ....... pay- lo .._~

'Dvnuty' 1980 Stare: John
Forythe,linda Evana.

VA loans-

BRANCH MANAGER

NEW LISTING -- IN
Town - One floor plan,
3 bedroom house with
central· air, full lulse·
ment, forced air heat.
carpeted; patio with
sl iding doors. $21,500.00.
NEW LISTING -- 2
bedroom bargain, s
room house with range,
ref . Gas heat. In town
and only $11,000.00.
OWNER WOULD CONSIDER LAND CONTRACT -- On this 4
bedroom home with ap·
prox. 13 acres near

..~NNIE'S
SAV'ICit TURNS
OUT TO BE"'

AHOTHER

992-7544

TRAI~ER spaces tor rent.
Southern Valley Moolle
.)'lome Park, Cheshire. Oh.
992·395-4.

Pomeroy, Ohio
992-2403

N~NO-BUT

.

Jumbfo- No. tS; oantolnlng 110

eCililiJ PLOJuolooFio loolhor

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy. Large lots. Call
992·7479.

CHARLES M. HAYES
BROKER
NEACIL E. CARSE1

1G-7·tfc

OISGUST

PRAIRIE Nellie and her huaband,
Percival , are thrilled about the
Imminent birth of their flrat
child · ·unt II hlaparentllrrivalnWAI·
nut Grove and get IntO a roarinO ar·
oumant wl1h Mra . Olea on about the
child' a re'llaloua upbringing. (80
mine .)
(Cioaea·Capttoned:

Mortgage Bankers

..

REALTY

(f)eCil JOKI!R'IWILD
CD(!§) HOLLYWOOD IOUARES
Cll (fi) DICK CAVITT SHOW
Cllle FAct! THI! MUSIC
7:58 CIJ NI!WB UPDATI!
8:00 CIJeCll LITTLI!HOUII! ONTHI!

, ANNIE

992-5682

Rutland

Ul'1ftlll

&amp;
. . """"""

adlan women gymnaata.

C1J t.\I!I'ORD AND -

-Auto and Truck
Repair
-Transmission
Repair
Hrt.: Mon.-Fri.
9 A.M.·S:30 P.M.

~~~~~~~==~~===:::===r=-~=:::::::::::::::::=:=:-=
CtJ...JNi-uau·

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

Headquarters

bedrooms,

benef its,lncluding

field .

House with 6 acres in
Chester, Ohio. Consider
land
contract with
reasonable down payment.
Otto Star Route, Box 58,
Spencer, West Virginia . 1·

Housing

Large long lor with rear
entrance .
Has
3

lease and further that there

Hourly Contract
Large or
small lobs.

bath, 992·5908.

-Ia
.
.
. . . -zip-

Answer: What she felt for what t hey dlscussed-

lookattheflneatAmertcanandCan·

I

I}.;( I I )..[IJ"

. ·
(Answers tomorrow)
SaiUrdlly'ol Jumbles: TUNED .GUISE ACCESS DIVERT
.

'The Making of a Champion' CCNer·
age olthle ellle competition Ia fea·
lured with a behlnd·tha·acanee

GARAGE

-~!aport

Ordor your decoroted
cokes tor oil occos!OIIS:
Blrthdoys, Anni.v or·
urlts,
Woddlns.
Showers, otc.
.
"Beginner
Coke
Dacorollng Clossos"
stortlng soon. PINH
nohr, we wll be closed on
Mondoys during 1110
mOIIIII of Jonuo1rY11· 1 mo
· ·
·

• Dozers
eBackhoes

Apt. for rent, 3 rooms &amp;

Real Estote-Gtnerol

LINCOLN

for nonpayment of rentals
due under the terms of said

Village Manor Apartments ·
at 992· 7787.

ROGER HYSBl'S

Carousel ,
Confectionery
317 N. 2nd Ave.

PUWNS
EXCAVAnNG

Unfurnished one bedroom
ap.l!lrtment for rent. Ren·
ters assistance available
for senior citizens._Contact

house located on Route 7.
992·2571.

open,ings in

some other Interesting

Nice house On 2 &amp; ,one. half
acres on SR 7 between
Memory Gardens &amp; state
garage. Priced on in·
spection. 992 · 7~41.

Furnished apartments, 992·
3129, 992·5914. or 1·30-4-882·
2566.

HAYES

home with all util i ties.
Needs some fixing, but
might sell on land con·
tra ct, or good offer.

Find out If You can
qualifY for training in
one of these fields or in

Four year old house on 3
acres, 7 rooms, 1 &amp; one half
bath, nice location, Route
2, Rac ine. 949·2106 .

IH HW A~ 1..11&lt;&amp;
HIS, I'D $1~ ..:ru5r
/&gt;S(ia:x:Jl

5Tll..L OOT IT!

Knit .Sweater Set

for only $30,000.
NEW PRICE - ·7 room

Transportation
Administration
Personnel
Mechanics
Food service

Racine. S33,00.00. 949·2801 .
No Sunday calls.

ROUSH

Real Estate

OH r lHAI SIIJA.n.A 1

with three car garage in

bedrooms, new
coffee maker. Call alter 4, ~~========ct
Cameron.
12 carpet.
x .SO, 1976
two 992·7791.
bedrooms, all electric. 1971
SkyHne , 12sx 6). two ROOMtorenttogenlleman
bedrooms, bath &amp; 113, new or lady. 992·2644Syracuse.
Pomeroy, Ohio
carpet .
1970
PMC , I,::::::::::::::::::::::::::..J
992-2403/~f2·6 226
12 x 60, two bedrooms, new 1•
carpet. B X S Sales, Inc.,
11------..:.____H 2nd X Viand Street, Point
• New Homes - ex;·
Pleasant, WV Phone 675·
18
Wanted to Do
«24.
tensive remodeling
• Electrical work
Furnace repa irs, electrical
work. plumbing, rnobi le 1971 H illcrest mobile home,
• Roofing work
home or residence. 992· S4,SOO.OO. 742·3080 or can be
12 Years
see•~ at K ingsbury Road,
5858.
the first trailer.
Experience
Greg Roush
Will do panel ing, ce'iling,
floor tile, plumbing . Free
Ph • 992 - 7583
estimates. Fred M iller at
Real Estate- General
12·4·1
992·6338 .

valuable skill
Law enforcement

described property:
Being in section 2.4, Town
4, Range 11, being more
fully described In Volume
172, page 225 of the Deed

'

NATIONWIDE
INSURANCE

with new bath, good cen·
tral heating, eat·in kit·
chen, full basement and
large lof in the country

to learn a

NOTICE
FOR BIDS

Meigs

y o ur
c e l led ?
Lo st
operator' S license? Phone

E. Second Street

12. lie

Records,

AUTOMOBILE
IN ·
SURAN CE been • can ·

Trailer lot.for sa le, $5,000,
Modular t1ome lot on Route
7, three bedroom farm ·

the 26th of January 1981 at

{1)

Insurance

Rt . 1.

NOTICE
FOR BIDS

. ship1 Shirley
Cler..

13

etc . Complete households. 992 ·2143. .
Write M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy , OHl or cal l 992·

Ot..D COl NS, pocket wat·
c hes, clllss rings, wedding
bands, diamonds. Go ld or

PIA.NO .

Housekeeper
wanted ,
preferably to live in. Room
&amp; board, good wages,
pleasant workin g con ·
ditions . 992·7226.

BORN~R

fit. J, lox 54
Recine, 011.
Ph. 614-t43·2"1
6·15-IIC·

NICE TWO bedroom house

YOUoli~YI

Pmt.,.werhers;"(

DOWN

I Ferry

I Acute

landing

ZCrowbar

5 Flower
3 Muslbn .
leaf
10 Idol
I Candidate
11 French
5 Cerebral
director
I Compose
I
13 Grandtype anew
Yeslenlay'o
Alllwer
perental
7 Word with
It Sagacious
eater or hill Z! Dessert wine
30 Tawtt
15 Sunaet hue
8 Meaaage
Z3 Bogart film
31 Nimble
11 Allegiance
bea'rer
Zl High Arab
3% Wash
17 Routine
1 Nominal
office
33 Benefactor
18 Right here- 1! Call it quits Z5 Small bird
38 Malay
ZO Asian river tf Nwnerical !&amp; One and only
glbboo
!1 Hold It!
suffix
Z8 Showed
38 ConireuSeckel, e.g. 11 Late restauitself, as
man
%3 American
rateur
daybreak
(abbr.)
saint
2t A "Maltese
Falcon" actor b:--+-+---+-

aecree

zz

27 Swedish wine

measure

hr+-+--1-

2t Jwte beetle
ZIHebrew

measure
31 Clarion

.blaBI
31 Altar (It.)
35 Lambkin's
parent
31 Uquor
37 Coat style
38 Resowtd
It Carefree

11 Other
1% Went astray
13 One of "The
Avengen"

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

A X 1( D L· B A A X R
LONGFELLOW

One letter simply atands for another. In this aomple A Ia
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Slnele !etten,
opoatrophea, the length and fonnatlon of the worda are all
hlnto. Each day the code letren are different.

CRYI'TOCIUOTES
LYAV

ICO'PA

MCJAUYBV· W
OS

-

VCMAM

EGLEIM

B U 'M

EV X

cz

CPMCV

c 0 u.

XCLV

UDPVM

DMOEGGI

I CD P

UYA

ZPBAVXM.

•

LAGGAM

l Y•lerdlly's

Ccyptllqaote: ONE CAN ENDURE SORROW
[ = B U T IT TAKES TWO TO BE GLAO.-E.LBE~T HUB-

(
I'

J

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Meigs

L~cal

In the event of bad weather the
Meigs Local School DiStrict ' will
carry out the following procedure:
Plan A - All buses will be running

Squads kept busy

HUNT FOR GUERRILLAS- Salvadora!l soldiers·search buses and
cars at a cbeckpolut lu San Salvador, Suuday. The government claimed
form control of the Central American national after weekend fighting lu
which at least 100 people were ldlled lu ba11les between government
troo!lfl and leftist guerrillas. (AP Laserphoto).

Begin loses .majority
leaving the prime minister with 58
seats at most in the !:!().member
Knesset and dependent for survival
on a handful of independent parties,
Hurvitz' resignation was the sixth
defection from Begin's Cabinet since
it took power in June 1977. It was the
first Israeli government not headed
by the Labor' Party since Israel
became a state in 1948.

January 12, 1911

one hour later than nonnal. Bus
drivers will contact WMPO Radio of
any route changes or any areas that
they will be unable to pick up students. AU announcements will be caUed
into the radio station by 6:30a.m. or
as close to that time as possible. AU
students will be delivered home at
the normal times. Any student not
riding the bus to school must ride
home some way other than the bus.
Plan B-All buses will be running
two hours later than usual. For
elU111lple: If your child is nortnally
picked up at 7:15a.m., he wiU be
picked up around 9:15a.m. All other
· ...mstructfons under Plan A are also in
effect.
Plan C- All buses will be running

three hours later than usual. AU

Man hurt in wreck

A free how-to guide
for the frugal
Not only does the Columbia Gas "Everyday Energy Saverll Gwde" make great reading, it makes
great eenae. Especially if you're out to save money.
It's full of tips that you and your family can 1188
evel')'day to help make your home more energy
effictent. Which IS good to know. And even better,
lll08t of the ideas won't cost you a cent. ·They take
?nly a·lillie extra care, but can lead to real savinp
m energy 1188.
· And you can't beat the price. The booklet is ftw.
So lll!k for.a copy: "The Everyday Energy Saver\J
Guide,, available
frQm Columbia Gaa. All it
takl!8 11 a phone cal or visit to )'our Columbia
office-and a desire to save.

miD •

'

.

Meigs District may
retain bond monies

Do you own or Operate i
small or medlum·slze
retail store, office, apart·
mentor church?
Then- you may qualify
tor State Auto Mutual's .
SERIES ONE Business
Polley ... a modern·astomorrow package plan
that combines an array Of
broad property and llablll·
ty coverages required to
safeguard your opera·
tions. All for a ·'fl«,y attrac·
five, affordable premium.
Let us explain the
superior features of
SERIES ONE ... the short
time we spend together
could prove . lnteresfl!lg ' l
and rewarding to you .
Just give us a call or
mall the handy coupon.
'

_.... _..., ________ _

onlr

AUTOMOBILE
MUTUAL ,
INSURANCE
COMPANY

- PI•••• tell me more ollout tile
SERIES ONE

lluslness P•llcy.

I

1-:;,:::::::::::=::::::::-1I

A

~
dJLUMBI~ GAS .

NAME

I
I
P~ONE
I
--.~---..........-..----J

ADORES"

Still your best ene'lY value.
And we want to keep 1t that wrzy.

..__

January Clearance

Karen Sue Boggess, 16, daughter
of Charles and Evelyn Boggess, Rt.
I, MJnersviUe, has been mialing
from her home since Thursday, Jan.
8.
She left home last Thursday between 6:30 p.m. and 7 p.m. on her
way to a meeting of the Explorers
Post at the office of the sheriffs
department. The meeting was not
held that evening, according to the .
sheriff's department.
She is five feet and weighs approximately ·oo pounds. She was
wearing a red jacket and blue jeans.
If anyone has any infonnation as to
her whereabouts they are asked to
contact the sheriff's office 992-3371
or~.
'

Meigs County Court receipts for
the year 1980 totaled $96,949.40.
There were I, 762 criminal cases
filed; 80 civil cases; 174 small claim
civil case~; collected in small claims
judgments $6,800.94 which is included in the total.
R,ecelpts were distributed as
foUows1 fines and costs to state,
$30,720.lt; reparatiollll Rotary fWtd
to state, $4,632; sheriff's fees,
$2,494.14; finea and costa to county,
general lund, $27,864; law library
lut\'M' 1,892.83; auto license and gas

0

WOMEN'S

WINTER SLEEPWEAR
LONG AND SHORT STYLES IN GOWNS, ROBES, PAJAMAS
AND NIGHTSHIRTS. JUNIORS. MISSES &amp; HALF SIZES.

Reg. SS.OO ooooooooo. oo•• Clearance Sale
. '5.59
Reg. s12.00 .••• •oo••• Cearance S. SS.39
Reg. s18.00 •••••••••••• Clearance Sale s12.59
Reg. s26.00o o•••••••••• Clearance .Sale s18.19
Reg. '33.()()••••••• o••••• Cieanllce Sale s23.09

fwftl,485.26.

0 ••

Farmers

ternoon.

.,

Bank ~.
Member FDIC

Your Community Owned Bank.
I

•

Meigs County hit
by three inch snow
Area motorists were confronted
this morulng by the heaviest snow
fall of the winter, approximately
three inches. The white stuff made
hazardous driving conditions
throughout the trl-county area
According to the Gallia-Meigs
Post State Highway Patrol, major
highways were snow covered and
slippery while secondary routes
were dangerous in most areas.
All schools in Meigs County were
out due to the winter stonn.

incurred by the Meigs-Board of Elections in preparing baUots and that
type thing.
Auditor Frank urgE!U earlier action on permission from the State
Department of Education, but
Niehoff said that would not be
possible since the state wants to
know for sure that the bond issue is
to be placed before the elctors.
Frank also said the nine year bond
issue which would raise the $500,000
for local use with no additional taxes
is "a great opportunity for Meigs
Local' '.
Niehoff, upon questioning, said the
service charge for his firm's in·
volvement in the issue would be $1.75
for each $1,000 of the bond issue. If
the issue would not be approved by
voters, the firm would get only "out
of pocket" expenses involved, about
$100, he said.
By voting on the measure at c ..cr
the primary or the general election
of 1981, the district could be sell the
$500,000 worth of bonds immediately
after the election if the measure
were approved, Niehoff said. He
assured the hoard that the necessary
(Continued on page 12)

Gallia lawmen prol,e alleged murder
By LARRY EWING

KAREN SUE BOGGESS

issue which would go only until the
payoff period in 1990 and would
provide the half million doll~rs.
The board agreed to study the
matter further and probably wiU
take action at the Feb. 9 meeting
which would give it lime to process
the necessary resolution towards
putting one issue or the other before
the voters at the June election.
Meigs CoWJty Auditor Howard
Frank and Prosecuting Attorney
Frederick Crow Ill met with the
board last night.
During the discussion, it was
brought out that the board would
have to certify the bond issue to the
county auditor at least 110 days
before an election and to the board of
elections at least 90 days before an
election. Then the State Department
of Education !Vould be contacted for
permission to place the issue before
voters and retain the funds locally.
Niehoff said h~ would anticipate
no problem with the State Depart·
ment on the matter and pointed out
that the board could cancel the election up to one &lt;lay before the elecllon
if problems arose. The board would
be responsible only for any expense

A Gallia County woman was killed
last night-the apparent victim of a
blow, or blows, with a sharp, heavy
instrument that struck the face ,
neck and upper chest.
Dead Is Lucinda E. Richards, 52,
Patriot Star Route. Authorities
speculate the instrument of death
was an ax, hatchet, or meat-cleaver.
The murder weapon was not found
at the scene.
Galli a County Sheriff's Department investigators were cailed to
the scene on Taylor Rd., just off SR
T/5, at 5:02p.m. They were notified
of the death by · Alma Woods, the
owner of the mobile home in which
Richards resided with Woods' son,
Charlie Miller, 52.
Co-habitant MiUer was questioned
by investigators throughout the
night and was being held this IDorDing in coMecilon with the aUeged
homicide. No charges bad been filed
as of this morning.
Upon their arrival at the scene,
Gallia deputies discovered Miller
leaning over the body. Woods and
her husband, J. Hollis Woods, both of
Northup-Patriot Rd., told officers
that they, along with her son, bad
discovered the body when they
arrived at the trailer shortly before$
p.m.
Miller, they said, had come to
their home, located approximately
one mile from the murder scene, on
foot and bad requested a ride to his
mobile home residence.

Richards was pronounced dead at
the scene by Gailia County Coroner
Dr. Donald R. Warehime at approximately 6 p.m. Dr. Warehime
told investigators the death bad apparently occurred four-to-five hours
prior to the time orpronouncement.
Sheriff James M. Montgomery
and investigators from his depart·
ment, along with Prosecuting At·
torney Joseph L. Cain, examined the
scene and, were joined by In·
vestigator Herman Henry of the
Bureau of Criminal Investigation
(Btl), London, 0 ., who arrived at
the Taylor Road residence at 8:30
p.m.
The bod)' was fOWJd in the living
room of the trailer, lying face-up,
just inside the entrance door. A pair
of blood soaked trousers were lying
on the floor near the victim.
Bloody fingerprints and palmprints were discovered thrQughout
the trailel'-011 walls, furniture, COWl·
ter and table tops. A bed located in a
rear bedroom was saturated with
·

the substance. The wash basin in the
bathrO&lt;m was filled with bloody
water. A pile of blood-drenched
clothing lay on a living room chair.
The body was removed from the
scene late Monday and was awaiting
transport today to Columbus for an
autopsy scheduled at 1 p.m. in
Franklin CoWJty.
Miller was taken into custody and
transported to the Gailia County Jail .
for questioning in connection with
the alleged homicide. He was transferred at 5:30 a.m., today, to the

Meigs County Ja11, where he is being
held In "protecilve custody" , according to the Galli&amp; department's
booking records.
Housing in the Meigs facUlty was
necessitated due to the incapacitycaused by last Thursday's cour·
thouse fire-of the Gallia jail to hold
Inmates.
Sheriff Department plans to search the area surrounding the murder
scene, Taylor Rd., SR T/5, and Northup-Patriot Road were delayed due
to the heavy overnight snow fall.

Weather
Mostly cloudy with a chance of snow flurries tonight and Wednesday. Lows tonight 2().25. Highs Wednesday~. Chance of snow 30
percent tonight and Wednesday. Winds westerly to southwesterly 5-10
mph tonight.
EXTENDED FORECAST
Thursday through Saturday:
A~bance of snow Thursday and agaiD Salllrday. A chance of snow
Rurrieo northeast Friday. Hlgho from lbe mld-208 north to mld-30o
south Thursday and Friday and lu the 3011 Salllrday. Ovemlgbtlo"" ba
the teens to near 20.

Wells new commission president
Henry Wells was elected president
of the board of Meigs County CommialiOilllrs and David Koblentz was
named vice president at the annual
organllationa1 meeting Monday aft

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

&gt;11:11!

GOOD SAMARITAN-Jimmy Hawley was out Tuesday morninglof.
feting his services, free of charge, to those wanting their sidewalks
, cleared of snow that hit the area overnight. The unexpected two inch
sndwfaU forced the cl011ing of all schools in the county .

Minersville girl missing

With a NOW Account
at the Farmers Bank,
•
you .can earn Interest
on your checking
account.

District has a 23 year payment con·
. By BOB HOEFLICH
The Meigs Local School District tract with the state department for
can in all probability retain $500,000 the construcllon of the Meigs High
in bond retirement funds for use School and that contract will expire
in 1990.
within the district in 1962.
According to Niehoff, the district
This was a part of the report of H.
is
paying the state department four
C. Niehoff, representing a Cincinnati
mills
in bjxes while in all probability
bonding finn at a meeting of the
it
would
only have to pay apdistrict's board of education Monday
proltimately
one and one-half mills.
night.
Through
placing
bond issue before
The plan for acting to retain the
funds now paid to the State Depart· voters, the district could retain apment of Education was first brought prol&lt;inu\tely two and one-half mills
before the board two months by which would give the district oneSupt. David L. Gleason. Since that miillon doUars for the remainder of
time, the board has bad the matter the payoff period, 1990, Niehoff said.
This would mean absolutely no ad·
under study.
No action came at last night's ditional or continued taxes for
meeting, but it was indicated action residents of the district. However,
should be taken at the nen regular · Niehoff said the district could also
raise one million dollars by placing a
meeting on Feb. 9.
Niehoff said that 25 school distric- bond issue before voters which
ts in Ohio have used the plan. The would provide for voters to pay for
State Department of Education 20 years. They would pay the four
must approve such plans. Thus far, mills for nine years and an ad·
none of the district. requesting ditional tax-considerably less than
retention of bond retirement funds four mills-for the remaining II
under circumstances aimllar to the years of the issue.
Board Member Robert Snowden
Meigs Local District, have been tur·
said lie thought the district stands a
ned down by the state.
Niehoff said the Meigs Local good chance of passing the bond

a

102 w. Moln 992· 2143 Pomoroy, 0 .
Re presenting
STATE
·

.:··

project.
The mayor also reported he bad
filed an application with HUD for a
$2,269,300 grant for conununity
development over the nelrt three
years. Funds, if granted, would be
used for housing, streets, new water
lines and various other im·
provements.
Three fire contracts were accepted, Cheshire Township, $4 ,~
with $3,500 being designated for the
new truck ptrchase; Salisbury
Township, $1100 ; and Cheshire
Village, $2800 with $1500 being
designated for the new truck purchase.
Clerk Jon Buck reported that
Ashland Oil In December Increased
all grades of gasoline by three cents
(Continued on page 12)

1 Section 1 12 pages 1.5 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspape~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio Tuesday, January 13, 1981

Insurance Package ·
For You

·~~
.

council acllon was tabled until the
next meeting pending investigation
of the other bids by Mayor Hoffman . .
Mayor Hoffman appointed Councilman Carl Horky to continue
representing cOWJcil on the Mid·
dleport Planning Commission, and
inchcoMecil~n.
reappointed Edison. Baker for
another five year term.
DISCUSS BIDS
Bids on the marina west sewer
Council authorized Floyd Brown
project were discUBSed with Mayor · Associates, Ltd. to proceed with the
Hoffman reporting that while the engineering work for 1500 feet of
HoUy Brothers Construcllon co. bad eight inch waterline and apthe low bid it did not designate the prmdately 650 feet of storm drain
type of sewer pipe to be used as relocation on Powell Street from
requested in the bid specifications
Page Street to the corporation line.
The solicitor ruled that the bid ~ Cost for the engineering report
defecilve and it would not 00 ap- would be $16,430.
propilatetoaward the contract.
Mayor Hoffman reported there is
Fultz suggested consideration of between $85,000 and $100,000 from
the second and third lowest bids, b~t HUD available for used on the

at y
Vol. 21, No. 190

DALE C. WARNER
INSURANCE

Board or Public Affairs, council
g(IVe a first reading to an ordinance
·changing ~wer tap fees· in the
village. The sewer will provide for a
charge of $125 for a four inch connecilon (no change), $400 for a six In·
ch COIUlectlon and $600 for an eight

~

Court receipts
total $96,949

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

!

trudt •

$24,591; cemetery, $17,~; fire byMaryE.Hartinger1bomas.
equipment, $14,301; swlmnilng pool,
Marvin Kelly was re-elected
$18,224; fire truck, $31,8118; Planninl( president of CoWJcil and llemard
Commission, ~; street ma!JI. Fultz was retained as solicitor at a
teJWice, $70,087; street levy (resur- salary of $4,000, an Increase of
facmg), $17 ,82'1; revenue sharing, $1,000.
$18,997.39; HUD, $379,882.39; bond
Mayor Fred Hoffman noted that
retirement, $20,~; lianltary sewer, Fultz donated $2,745 of his last
$198,392: sanitary sewer escrow, year'ssalarybacktothevillage.
$188,392, water, $157,024; water
At the request of Bobby.Gilmore,
tank, $145,969.24; and water meter appearing before Cquncil on behalf
deposl~, $10,491. . •
of the American Leglon of Feeney·
A third reading was .gtven to a pay Bennett Post 128, Middleport, counordinance which provtdes for a five ell by unanimous vote agreed to free
percent increase across the boa.rd the parking meters for handicapped
for employes plus additional m· persons who bear an insignia of their
creasesforlengthofservice.
handicap on their license plates.
Council also gave a third reading Gilmore noted thai the program is
to an qrdinance authorizing the sale nationally being S()onsored by the
of the lot at the corner of Garfield American Legion.
and South Third given to the viilage_
On reconunendation from the

Copyrighted 1911

(Conlinued from page 1)
that the demand for $24 billion bad
been dropped and they could provide
no confinnation of Azizi's statments.
The chief U.S. negotiator, Deputy
Secretary of Slate Warren M.
Christopher, extended his stay ·in
Algiers at least WJtil today and
reported that "serious problems still
remain" in the talks.
"What the problem has boiled
down to is a continuing exchange of
questions and answers on
mechanical issues," said one U.S.
official in Washington.

0

da ddleport VU!age Council Monight ad~ted an appropriation
on calling for expenditures
~ 8,103.31 in 1981.
fund ropr\ationa Included, general
-:;98;1.~; street lights, $1~\000;
,
,ry, 16,720; fire equipment,
13 960 ~pool,$17,808; fire
mlssl~n $211,~, Planning . Corn$6'1&amp;00· • ~. street mallltenance,
$!7 : street levy (resurfacing),
627 revenue sharing, $14,~.92;
$6 454).$379,882.39; bond retirement,
• . • sanitary sewer, $188,360;
~ltary sewer escrow, $125,000;
wa er, $135,600; water meter
~its,$3,000.
~ry-over balances and
ted ~lpts for 1961 are
general fund, $209,548; street IIJ!hts

'

President

0

~YCIIARLENEHOEFLICH

Bradbury Elementary, 2:30p.m.;
HarrisonvUie Elementary, 3: SO
p.m.; Middleport Elementary, 3:30
p.m. ; Pomeroy Elementary, 2:46
p.m.; Rutland Elementary, 3:30
p.m.; Salem Center Elementary,
3:30 p.m.; S8llabury Elementary,
3:25 p.m.; Meigs Junior High
School, 3: 10 p.m.; Meigs 111gb
School, 3:15p.m. ·

other instructions under Plans A and
B will be in effect.
In the event bad weather arrives
after school is In session, it may be
necessary to dismiss school early. U
your child must go to a place other
than his/her nonnal delivery point,
please advise the school by letter or
J&gt;hone. We will make every effort to
allow children to caU home if ilme
pennits. lfwebavetodisrnlssschool , - - - - - - - - - -..-early, we wiU caU the radio station
and teU them how many hours early
the district wiU be dismissing. For
elU!JIIPle: "The Meigs Local School
District wiU disniiss two hours early
today." Your schools' normal
dismissal times are as foUows:

Meigs County Emergency Squads
were busy over the weekend according to the report of the county
emergency medical services.
At5:17 p.m.Sautrda_y, theRutiand
unit transported Chris Diehl to the
Holzer Medical Center and on SWJ·
day at 1!:42 that unit took, Ray
Brown from his home to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. The Racine unit
at 5:28 p.m. Sunday took orville
Jarrell of Apple Grove to Veterans
Memorial. The Pomeroy unit on r-----------~~----------~--1
Saturday at ll :03 a.m. took Herbert
Moore, Wright St., to Veterans
Memorial Hospital and at Ji :58 a.m.
took Paul Burns, Locust St., to that
same hospital. At 1:38 p.m., Satur·
day, the Pomeroy unit took James
Fugate, E. Main St., to Veterans
Memorial and at 3:55 p.m. took
Roger Randolph, Darwin, to Hol2er
Medical Center.
On Sunday, the Pomeroy unit took
Audra Arnold, Spring Ave., to
Pleasant Valley Hospital at 9:39
a .m. and at 8 p.m. took Grover Klein
of Naylors Run to Veterans
Memorial.
Saturday at 2:02 p.m., the Middleport unit treated Beulah Hayes at
her home on Mill St., and at 7:29
p.m. Sunday treated Shorty .
Brookover at his Middleport
residence. The Middleport unit at
8:25 p.m. Sunday took John Dill
from Middleport · to Veterans
Memorial.

JERUSALEM (AP ) - Prime
MiniSter Menachem Begin held a
special Cabinet meeting today to explore prospects for an early election
after losing his major ity in
Parliament.
The newspaper Maariv reported
Begin's advisers would urge the
adoption of legislation dissolving the
Knesset, Israel's parliament, and
advancing the November election of
a new legislature to June.
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Begin would remain the chief of a
Gregory G~ther, Rt. I, Long Bot·
Saturday
Admissions··Stella
caretaker administration pntil the
Adkins,
Tuppers
Plains
;
Herbert
tom,
was treated and released at
· new Knesset met and approved a
Moore,
Pomeroy
;
Barbara
Musser,
Veterans
Memorial Hospital
new government.
Pomeroy;
Paul
Burns,
Pomeroy;
following
a
single
car accident SunThe opposition Labor Party, which
Pomeroy.
day
at
3:30a.m.
the
Meigs County
James
Fugate,
is favored to win the election, said it
Saturday
Discharges-Mary
HeJ&gt;o
Sheriff's
Department
reported.
would introduce the legislation if the
dricks, George Molden, · Shirley
Ginther was traveling east on SR
government didn't.
Johnson,
Rita
Eblin,
Grover
Klein.
248
when he attempted to turn onto
"The last curtain will almost cerSunday
Admissions-John
Dill,
Oak
Hill Road. He hit an icy spot
tainly come down today, " said
causing
Middleport
;
Lewis
Smith,
Midthe car to go off the highMaariv.
dleport;
Teresa
Hunt,
Racine;
way.
The
car rolled over apThe crisis for Begin's 3'h-yearo&lt;&gt;ld
Michael
Hewett,
Portland;
Pauline
proximately
loW' times landing its
coalition government came to a
·
Derenberger,
Pomeroy;
May
Bird,
top.
The
vehicle
was demolished.
head Sunday when Finance Minister
Pomeroy.
Roger
D.Brown,
Rt. 4, Pomeroy,
Yigael Hurvitz quit after the Cabinet
SWJday
Discharges-Russell
Corr,
informed
the
sheriff's
depa'rtment
rejected his demand that it postpone
that
Alvin
Barnett,
Eileen
Smith,
the
wiper
and
wiper
anns and
indefinitely pay raises for the
WiUiam
Blythe,
Charles
Jones.
radio
1\Dtenna
were
damaged
on his
nation's 56,000 teachers.
car
while
he
was
at
an
auction
SaturInstead, the Cabinet voted 11-2 for
CLOSEDnJESDAY
day eveing at Pageville.
a compromise accepting the
Th
e
Farmers
Home
Ad·
Jeff Moore, Cheshire, reportt!li
teachers' demands in principle but
ministration
office
in
Pomeroy
will
that
sometime Saturday his mailbox
postponing the payment of higher
be
dosed
all
day
Tuesday
due
to
an
was
damaged.
salaries. ·The increases, recommended by a goverrunent com· out of town meeting.
JURY BEING SEATED
mission, would raise the monthly
JUDGMENT SOUGHT
Jurors were being seated this morsalary of a teacher with nine years'
A suit in the amount of $24,916.02 ning in the shooting case of the State
experience from $480 lo $546. The
bas
been filed in Meigs County Com· of Ohio versus Harold . Darnell,
average Israeli's wage is about $630.
mon
Pleas Court by Racine Home Harrisonville. Darnell is charged as
Hurvitz' argued the raises would
National
Bank against Thomas L.
a result of a shooting July 9, 1980 inspur .9ther grbups to demand pay inFitch
and
Sonya R. Fitch, RD, Por· volving Harold Hudnall, of Harrison.creases that would fuel a new in·
ville.
flationary spiral at a time when he tland, Viola V. Long and George
was trying to curb the inflation rate, Collins as treasurer of Meigs Counwhich hit a world record of 131 per· ty.
Janet Bryant, Langsville, filed
NAME OMITI'ED
cent last year.
suit
for divorce against Joseph
Unintentionally omitted from the
Hurvitz, whose resignation takes
effect Tuesday, said the other two Bryant, LangsviUe, and Julie Smith, Dean's Honor RoU and Dean's Merit
Knes5et members from the Rafi Syracuse, and James Carter Smith, Ust for the fall quarter at Rio GranParty would bolt Begin's coalition, Portland, filed for dissolution of de was Rebecca Edwards, Long Bot·
marriage.
tom.

Middleport council adopts appropriation

issues bad weather plan

1bird member of the board II
Richard Jones. Jones served tbe
put two years as board president.
In other buslneu, Mary HOO.
stetter was named clerk and Charles
Hyaell was appointed as dog warden. Everett Holmes was named ·
Apiary lnlpector.
County Court appolnimenta in-

eluded Elizabeth Hobetetter, clerk, Yvonne Young, Doris Ewing, Ben·
and Donna Boyd and Linda Bentz, and Maxine Philson and Marilyn
deputy clerks. Jim ComeU was • Spencer.
Chosen to the public Assistance
named cualodlan of the courthouse
and John Stahl waa named janitor.
Examining Committee were Henry
. Named to the Community Im- WeUs, Robert Buck and Howard
provement Corporation were Henry Frank.
Wells, Bernard Fultz, Howard
The board also approved bonds for
Frank, Katie Crow, E. F. Robinson, J . J . Proffitt, sheriff, Larry Spencer,
clerk of courts, Philip Roberta, counand Vernon Weber.
N~ to the T. B. Board of
ty engineer, and Dr. R. R. Pickens,
Trusleell were Orion Roush, Vernon county coroner.
Weber, Barbara Knight, Mike
Commissioners will meet each
Struble, Quack RlfRe, Jane Brown, Tuesday of the month beginnl!lg at 2
Mrs. Dwight Wallace, JoaM May, p.m. andeach·evening il6:3tp.m.

.

NEW OFFICERS - Henry Wells waa elected
presldent of the board of Melga Couty CoiiUDinioners
and David Koblentz was named vice president at the
orpalaatlonal meeting held Monday afternoon. The ·

'

lblnl member II IUcbard Jones who flu served as
pmldellt lbe put two·yean. Mary Hobltetter - • ar
poillted clerk. Pfclllred, 1-r, are Henry WeUa, Ma·
Hobstetler, David Koblentz and Richard Joaes.
•

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