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                  <text>Ja_nuar 13, 1981

Pomeroy Middle ort, Ohio .

Page-12-The DailY· Sentinel

Deep freeze temperatures
. ""C'

~~..~eve~. !I~;_st~e..~, _. t

_.,..
... =

Gripped by a ferocious deep freeze
from the ice-clogged harbors of the
Northeast to the citrus groves of
Florida, cars by the thousands
refused to nm, )!eating systems went
on the blink and people yearning for
warm islands began plaguing travel
agents.
The national record low f,londay
was 43 (legrees below zero in Old

-'

AdditiQnal reque$lS
co~g fo~ funding

•

been biltlog the eulenl pert of the COWitry for the past
two weeks. (APLaaerpboto). "-.

Meigs County
happenings•••

Meigs district
(Continued from page 1)
papers for such an issue could be
completed at the Feb. 9 meeting and
could be in the hsnds of the auditor
by the no day prior election deadline
ofFeb.12.
HIRES TEACHER
In other matters, the board hired
Rebecca Ann Cotterill as a home
economics teacher at the Meigs
High School, effective at once, to
replace Mrs. Karen Goins who
resigned.
James Wright was employed as a.
driver's education teacher and
named to the substitute teachers list
were Mary Kessler, Barbara
Mathews, Warren Molden and Julia
Vaughan. Paulette Harrison was
llllllled as a Youth Employment
Training Program aide.
Asst. Supt. Den Morris who is also
acting superintendent in the absence
of David L. Gleason, said that the
program is federally fWJded and the
employment of Mrs. Harrison will
not cost the board any money. Tile .
board hired Lloyd Haggy and Joe
Wyne as custodians. Named as substitute custodians were Shawn Bel~
Paul McDaniel, Jr., and Michael
McDonald and Nicklois Leonard was
named a substitute bus driver.
Professional leave requests from
John Redovian, a guidance counselor, and Doug Hill, band director,

Middlepo~···
(Continued from page 1)
a gallon. Ice and snow control on
village streets was discussed. Councilman Jack Satterfield was
authorized to check on the price of
two new tires for the village grader.
~e mayor's report showed
recetpt:' of $5,419.
For msurance purposes, COWJcil
approved a list of full-time employes
presented by the mayor. .
A request by ~ohn DaVIdson for a
garbage collection penrut was postpaned.· ~vidaon will be asked to
present his request at a regular
meeting of Council.
The need for an evacuation plan
for the village was suggested by
Counclbnan Allen King who noted
the dangers of toxic chemical spills.
Horky noted that he hsd contacted
another . television cable company
1\'hich will be doing a study in the
area.

.
'
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
state Controlling Board was to heat
more requests from agency heads
today for shsres of an $8 million fund
created by the Legislature to
,prevent job layoffs.
But the problem faced by the
seven-member board, which began
pfoceedings Monday, was thst
reqll'eSts totaled more than what was
in the fund.
Meanwhile, other money-pinched
departments made a pitch for the
comparatively small balance about fl'l1,000 - left in the state's
ail-purposes emergency fund, earmarked for weather and other
calamities.
The board convened Monday un·
der Republican control, 4-3, for the
first time since 1973. But represen·
tatives of GOP Gov. James A.
Rhodes' administration didn't find
the atmosphere Improved.
The new GOP members asked
tough questions and voted against
some administration requests
without hesitation.
· Six legislators and a representative of Rhodes' office constitute
the board, which generally acts as a
spending watchdog for the
Legislature.
The panel earlier gave the Department of Mental Health $1.6 million of
the $8 million, reducing the fund to
$6.4 million, slightly less than Monday's batch of requests. But those
amounts requested from the all·
purposes emergency fund totaiecf
more than $3 million, or more than
four times as much as the fund's
current totar
On Monday, the board slashed
$366,GIIO - " from requests of the
Mental Health and Mental Retar·
dation pepartments, put another
agency off and denied a request
from the Public Defender Commission for more than $1 million
from the all-purposes fund .
Actioo on several other similar
requests was delayed until today.
Mental health had filed separate
requests for $1,384,615 and S500.000.

water blaueted the area. The mesq cold spell baa

. ICE COVERS BAY - ·Three tugboats pull as a
fourth puther a barge through the Ice-covered
Cbelapeake Bay near Kent Island. The bay took on lhe
appearance of an erratic Patchwork quilt, as the icy

munities hild record lows for the
date: Harrisburg, Pa., minus~; Indianapolis, minus 8; Roanoke, Va.,
5.
Early today, the temperature in
Jacksonville, Fla., dipped to a low of
19.
While the temperatures were
dropping, blisin~ss was booming at
travel agencies.
'

were approved. The salary schedule
••THEFT
PROBE
of James Carpenter was changed at
The Meigs County Sheriff's Deparhis request and the district's
treasurer was put on a salary tment is investigating the theft of a
schedule similar to that used in the stero, power booster and speakers
district for vocational teachers. The from a car parked at Meigs High
board accepted insurance payments School parking lot sometime Monof $il88.83 for damages to bus 22 in- day.
The car was owned by Gene Dodvolved in two accidents in October
and established a $500 school board son, Middlport, and driven by Britt
service fund tor use of members at- Dodson.
tending meetings.
Two fund transfers were approved
MCCLTOMEET
at the request of Treasurer Jane
The Middleport Child ConWagner and board also approved · servation League will meet Thurher request for an advance draw on sday at 7:30 p.J!I. at the home of Mrs.
real estate taxes amounting to 90 Helen Blackston. Mrs. Peggy Harris
percent of uie collection.
will hsve the devotions, and the
All board members except Dr. speali:er will be Mrs. Robert SchKeith Riggs were present for the moll. Janet Duffy and Ann Colburn
meeting along with Asst. Supt. will be hostesses.
Morris and Treasurer Wagner.
About 20 district patrons were also
VETERANS MEMORIAL
present for the session. Bills were
Admitted-Budd
Darst, Midapproved for payment and a report
dleport;
Harry
Reynolds,
Bidwell;
on various district flUids was presenRidlard
Werry,
Racine;
Joseph
ted by Mrs. Wagner.
Rowley, Middleport; Charles
Swisher, Pomeroy; Lula Clark,
Athens. ·
Discharged-Louis Smith, Gertrude Young, Daisy Sisaon, Teresa
Hunt, Kathryn Payne.
·. MASON - A new arts and crafts
fair is being sponsored by the Point
Pleasant-Mason County Chamber of
SQUAD RUN
Commerce to help promote this
The Rutland Emergency Squad
area's own artisans and craftsmen.
answered a call to Route 124 at 2: 17
The Mason County Arts and Crafts p.m. Monday' for Ed Burgman who
Fair is being planned for May 15, 16,
was taken to Vetel'llllB Memorial
and 17 at the West Virginia National Hospital.
Guard Armory near Point Pleasant.
Applications and information are
being forwarded to all interested
DEMOCRATS TO MEET
groups, organizations and artisans
The central and executive comfor the reservation of ~ booth mittees of the Meigs Democrats will
spaces. Craftsmen and artists from
meet Thunday at 7:30 p.m. at the
other areas will also be included af- Carpenters' Hall in Pomeroy.
ter January 31. The deadline for ap_ plications from all interested persons is February 28. Contact the
Chsmber of Corrunerce for information and forms at P. 0. Box~.
Point Pleasant, w. va. 2li550 or call
(304) 67$.1050.

Arts, crafts
fair in Mason

Meigs Local Elementary basketball
coaches, elementary principals and
other interested persona, Thursday,
8 p.m. at the Middleport Elementary
SchooL Schedules and other information will be released at that
time.

Your

choice- of

one topp;ng ,

I

Reg , $1 .35

I hp Ooly

:6i"tieis=

····-·
•

ALL LCCA TtONS

LEASING

._EQUIPMENT

. . . .TO BUSINESS, INDUSTRY.
.. . .AND THE PROFESSIONS

•

•

HEARINGS CONTINUE - General Alexander Halg who is
_President-elect Ronald Reagan's choice for Secretary of State starts his
third day of hearlqs before the Seoate Foreign Relations Committee
Monday on Capitol HUI. ( AP Laserphoto).

By KEVIN KELLY
Shift changes at Gallipolis
Developmental Center have a good
many of the affected employes
unhappy,
That was the message nearly 250
GDC personnel gave to State Rep.
Ron James (D-Proctorvilie) at a
paol&lt;ed meeting in the Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Co. conference room late Monday af·
ternoon.
The meeting with JaJnes was

called by employes to discuss
. scheduled chsnges in the day and
night shifts at the facility.
'
According to an employe
spokesman, James said he would
discuss the matter with Rudy
Magnone, director of the Ohio
Department of Mental Retardation,
and would report back to them at a
later date .
One of the problems in the shift
changes discussed with James concerns a work schedule callin~ for six

Salad Bar, 8 oz. New York Strip

Plus Tax

ALL OTHER PASTRIES
FRESH' DAILY

Entertainment
Friday &amp;Saturday

POMEROY
PAstRY SHOP
992-2971

WINTER COATS

Miller levels charges
WASHINGTON - Rep.- Clarence E. Miller, R-Ohio, says
Democratic members of the 97th Congress are working to thwart cost·
cutting programs of the Reagan administration.
Mliier, of Lancaster, said in a news release that Democ•·al~ in the
U.S. Ho11.!M1 are not making assignments to certain key conunittees in
proportion to the ratio of Democrats and Republicans elected to the
House.

BEVERAGES
SERVED

TIME FOR THE COLD WINTER WEATHER!

NEW YORK - The government of Iran filed suit in federal court
late Tuesday in an effort to trace the wealth of the late shah of Iran,
estimated at $35 billion, Iran 's U.S. lawyer said.
The attorney, Paul O'Dwyer, said the suit also sought punitive
damages of $36 billion and whatever else the courts deemed appropriate.
The suit named 65 persons, Iranian and Americ~n, including the
wife of Shah Mohanunad Reza Pahiavi, his sister Ashraf Pahlavi,
other relatives and the estate of the monarch who was overthrown in
early 1979.

MIAMI- For months, Florida has been enticing winter travelers
from the frigid North to come south with the pronuse that "When you
need it bad, we've got it good."
Now, even Floridians don'tltavc it so good.
A vicious cold wave thst has had most of the eastern United States
shivering since Christmas rolled into the Sunshine State this week.
Tuesday was the coldest January day on record in many cities,
ranging from 8 degrees at Tallahassee to 41 in Key West, with Miami
at a frigid 32.
Local beaches, usually Jiopulated with thousands of sun-starved
,tourists, are nearly deserted, save for wanniy dressed joggers and a
few hardly souls wearing e•u· muffs and wrapped in blankets in feeble
attempts to get a tan.

ALL LEGAL

CLEARANCE SALE PRICES JUST IN

lr'an files suit to trace wealth

Frigid temperatures hit Miami

CHILDREN'S

CLEARANCE SALE

'1&amp;-••••••••••••••••• ···'11,.
'21"••••••••••••••••••• '14"
'3()10•••••.•••••••••••••• '20"

THE MEIGS INN
Phone 992~3629

sr............. ~·-··•'26"

Pomeroy, Oh.

You must be 21 or accompanied
by parent or legal guardian.

'4r.......•.••••..•.•• '27"

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
J

highest interests of the United
States."

· - Housing · Secretary-designate
(Continued on page 12)

HA1G HEARING CONTINUES - Seeretary of State-designate
halg, testifies during the fourth day of his conflrmallon
hearings before the Senate Foreign RelaliciDS Committee In Washington
Tuesday. (APLaserpbolo) .
Al~nder

days of work and t~o days off. The
present schedule calls for eight days
of work, then two days off, followed
by seven days of work and then four
days off.
,_
Because of this system, the
spokesman said, employes get a
four-day weekend every three
weeks.
The spokesman said thr chsnges
basically affect those in direct client
care--275 hospital aides, 94 nursing

associates and therapeutic workers last month In the face of the state
and 41 hospital aide supervisors.
budget crisis, when an additional
Under the change, employes .. three percent funding cut to GDC
would be frozen into their shifts. A · was anticipated.
GDC Supt. Robert Zimmerman
new night shift, announced Dec. 9,
would run from 11 p.m. to 7 a.m. and said at the time the changes "would
will create problems for employes provide ·better continuity of
programming and reduced sick time
who also work as school bus drivers.
"A lot of people who aro •tuck on usage and absenteeism by providing
the 3to 11 (p.m.) shift won't be with job predictability."
The source noted employes
their kids," the spokesman noted.
The shift changes were announced received a letter from Zimmerman

on Jan. 7 informing them the
changes will go into effect soon.
Personnel Will receive a bid
pa~ket on Jan. 20, which allows
therns to bid for whichever cycle of
shifts they prefer to work. Selection
will be made on a seniority basis, the
spokesman explained.
"The upset is for people who have
worked up there for years and years,
and it's hsrd for them to accept,"
the spokesman said.

Gallia woman dies from shotgun blast

614/992·2133

WEEKEND AT MEIGS INN

WASHINGTON (AP) ""' AleKBn"I didn't do it then and I haven't
der M. Haig Jr. says Watergate was done it in 37 years of military sera stupid and illegal abuse of power vice, service to the country," said
but it is not for him to render moral · the retired four-star Army general
judgments against Richard Nixon or and iormer · NATO conunander.
Henry Kissinger.
"And I am somewhst surprised at
"I must leav~ that to others, to your persistence on this."
history and -to God," Haig told
But other senators took up Sarsenators Tuesday during con- banes' question of whether Haig
firmation hearings on his thought Watergate was moralix
nomination ·to be secretary of state.
wrong and Haig finally replied: "I
Haig denied any wrongdoing him- believe it was both illegal and
self in Watergate and said he has no stupid. I think if President Nixon
apology for the role he did play in were here, he would say it was
wiretapping, covert Chilean stupid."
operations and the Vietnam War
Meanwhile, two other Cabinet
nominations were to be voted on
bombing of Cambodia and Hanoi.
Haig made the statement after an today by the Senate Energy and
angry exchange oo Watergate Natural Resources Committee: forduring the Senate Foreign Relations mer South Carolina Gov. James B.
Edwards as energy secretary and
Committee hearings.
The committee· called him back James G. Watt as interior secretary.
The Senate Labor and ·Human
for a fifth day of hearings today and
scheduled a vote Thursday that Resources Conunittee plans to vote
almost certainly will clear Haig for Thursday on the nominations of
confirmation by the full Senate.
Terrel H. Bell as education
Haig's voice rose in anger as Sen. secretary and construction
PaulS. Sarbanes, D-Md., questioned executive Raymond Donovan as
him on each of the major Watergate labor secretary.
In confirmation hearings
issues and asked if he thought they
were morally wrong.
Tuesday: -ClA Director-designate
"I never willingly or consciously William J. Casey said covert
or unconsciously participated in an operations interfering in the internal
act I considered irrunoral or, above affairs of other countries should be
ail, illegal," Haig exploded.
undertaken only when "it is in the

..

GDC employes unhappy over shift ·freeze

BANK ONE OF POMEROY. NA

JANUARY CLIARANCI

.'

•

•

.-sANK ONE,. _

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

REG.

I

•
95
•

..-------'-------'-------.,.---"

RAISIN 'BREAD

216 E. Main

•

•

15 Cents

A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

Watergate ·continues
to plague Gen. ·Haig

requests for Florida in one day.
Florida, Florida, Florida · •everyone wants to go to Florida,"
said Tom Donnelly of Foley Tt:av~
Inc. in Harlford, Conn. "I'd say it 1
definitely the cold weather that~
making them do it."
.
,
But in Florida, sun-seeking Nol'therners donned eannuffs anjj
blankets as temperatures dip]ll!ll
below freezing. In Jacksonville, one
man was found frozen to death.
•
For citrus growers, the cold spell
was the worst in four years, ani!
growers' associations we~~e
monitoring weather data so thq
Could alert fan~~ers to turn on grove
heaters or wind machines lf the temperatures fell too low for too long. •
In New York City, where Mo.).
day's low rl 2 degrees lied the
record, Long Island Rail Road tralna
ran 30 minutes late and seven trains
were canceled. Conrail also canceled one train in each of ita three
divisions.
Gas lines froze in buses servlnc
· Pennsylvania's Natlcoke Area
School District, and classes were
cancelled. Students at a Birmingham, Ala., high school also got
the day off when a water pipe froze
in the heating system.
•
Schools for 15,000 children, as well
as many businesses, were closed in
[.()well, Mass., because jammed
pipeilnes prevented natural gas supplieS stored in Pennsylvania and
New York from being shjpped in.

• PIZZA BREADany.
•

2 Sections,12 pages

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio Wednesday, January 14,1981

r------------1--------------"7"__..:.._____......:.;.

TRY OUR FRESH

MEETING 'niURSDAY
There will be a meeting of all

. . .'
The larger amoWJt was approved af·
ter being carved to $1,034,615, and
action on the $500,000 allocation was
put off until today. Senate Finance
Chairman Stanley J. Aronoff, RCincinnati, a board member, indicated it would be approved.
Department officials told the
board thst all the requests are .
needed to prevent the layoff of more
than 300 employees.
Mental retardation requested $3.5
million but received $3,150,000.
In each instance, the board said
the agencies could appear again
Feb. 2 to try to better substantiate
their needs.
The Department of Rehsbilitation
and Correction requested f/50,000 .
from the special fund and another
$641,000 from the regular, ail·
purposes emergency flUid. But its
requests were deferred until Feb: 2
after agency spokesmen could not
convince the panel that the money
would be used to prevent layoffs.
Certain language in the requests
mentioned the reinstatement of
some programs.
The Legislature, which tried last
month to devise an austerity scheme
to help overcome a budget deficit of
nearly $700 million, said the $8
million only could be used to save
jobs. But it soon became obvious
that some agencies would try to get
flUids to replace those lost due to
spending cuts imposed by Rhodes.

Vol. 21 , No. 191

Copyrighted 1981

Weather
Mostly cloudy tonight and Thursday with a chance ,,f some snow.
Lows tonight around 20. Highs Thursday in upper 20s lu low 30s. Chance of snow 40 perce nt tonight and :10 pe rcent Thursday. Winds variable
$.10 mph tonight.
.i
Extended Forrcast Friday through SundRy:
Chance of •now flurrie• near Lake F;rle. Otherwise fair through the
period. Turning colder on the w""kend. Highs in the upper 20• and 30s
Friday and In the 20s and low :10s Saturday and Sunday. Lows In thr upper teens and low 20. Friday and 10-20 Saturday and
Sunday. _ _....J
_...::.:..:..::...:_

By LARRY EWING
Reader's advisory: the foliol\'lng
story contains graphic descriptions
some readers might find offensive.
Reader discretion is advised.
In whst hss been described by one
veteran investigator as the
"strangest development" he has
ever witnessed, it was learned
yesterday that the cause of death in
an alleged Monday homicide was not
blows from a shsrp, heavy objectsuch as an ax or hatchet-as
originally suspected; but rather,
death occurred as the result of a
single shotgun blast to the head.
On Monday afternoon, the body of
Ulcinda E. Richards, 52, Patrio
Star Route, was found inside h r

Taylor Road residence, just off SR
775,
At that time, authorities
speculated that deep gashes in the
face, neck and upper chest had been
caused by a blow, or blows, from a
sharp, heavy instrument.
Authorities speculated the instrument of death was an ax, hatchet or meat-cleaver.
Yesterday afternoon, the Gallia
County Sheriff's Department
recei&gt;1ed the prelimlnary results of
a autopsy conducted in Columbus.'
ose results indicate the cause of
eath was a single, point-blank, shot
to the head from a 12-gauge shotgun.
"Everyone involved in the initial
investigation-from the coroner to

Commissioners push
dog tag purchases
A crackdown will be made against Galiia County Courthouse.
area residents who fail to purchase
Jones also suggested that a condog tags it was disclosed at tact be made with the architect of
Tuesday's meeting of the Meigs the multi-purpose building to set up
a meeting to finalize the building of
County Commissioners.
Meeting with the commissioners the operation.
It was also reported'by Jones that
concerning the purchase of dog tags
was Howard Frank. Frank ex· the FHA papers are in order on the
piained that tags must be purchased access road from Union Ave., to the
by Jan. 20. Ali tags are $2. Persons · multi-purpose building. " It appears
purchasing tags after the Jan. 20 that finalization of the road would be
deadline will be penalized an ad· sometime in February." Jones corn·
ditional $2. Kennel licenses are $10 mented.
Also . meeting with the complus $5 if purchased after the
rnissioners was Philip Roberts,
deadline.
discussed
It was suggested by conunissioner county engineer, who
Richard Jones that a house to house county highway operatioos
Roberts reported the deed descripcarivass be made by the dog warden
throughout the year to see if residen· tion for the Carmel Cemetery lots in
Sutton Tonws11ip was now In the hanIs have purchased tags.
Henry Wells, commission ds of the prosecuting attorney.
Roberts presented specifications
president, suggested thst the dog
warden check various areas when he for a tractor mounted with a rotary
cutter which he requested be puris called.
It was stressed that licenses must chsscd for the highway department.
The corrunissioners ageed to
he purchased for dogs even though
they are confined to the home or lied authorize the clerk, Mary Hobstettcr
to advertise for bids for tn.e tractoron the owner's property.
Frank said it would be much bet- cutter as specified by the engineer
ter to hsve tags purchased at the as long as the specifications do not
present rate rather than increase eliminate anyone from bidding.
David Koblentz was named to the
the price of dog wgs.
'
P•·oject Advisory Council of the
It was SUKgested by Jones t1&gt; offer
assistance tn Galiia County Cnm· Gallia·Meigs Community Action
rn : s lont}r~ in light or tlw ln~s nr th•·
Agency.

the homicide specialist from the
Bureau of Criminal Investigation
(BCI)-believed the physical evidence indicated a weapon, such as a hatchet, was the cause of death," a
department spokesman said
Tuesday evening.
According to preliminary autopsy
infonnation, the shotgWJ blast
manifested itself in the form of deep,
clean wounds when gas press~re
from the point-blank shot built up inside the skull causing it to explode.
As described in the preliminary
autopsy report, the "explosion" split
the skull and facial tissue leaving
deep straight wounds to the head,
neck and upper chest.
"It was not like any shotgun
wound-or for that matter, any gun
wuund-I have ever seen,'' a sheriff's

investigator said.
Sheriff's office personnel combed
the area surrounding the Taylor

Road mobile home throughout the
early afternoon and evening yesterday seeking the weapon used in the
alleged homicide.
Deputies examined an outbuilding
at the residence and searched
through fields and a wooded area
near the the Taylor Road mobile
home.
In a related matter, Charlie
Miller, 52, who c~habited the trailer
with· Richards, was released from
custody Tuesday evening.
Miller had been questioned immediately following the discovery of
the death; and, was held throughout
the next day, at his request, on
"protective custody."
Sheriff's investigators were joined
this morning by Herman Henry of
the BCI, London, o.; as the investigation into the presumed
hornicide continues.

COOKIE CHAIRMEN - Pal Philson, left, Is the East Meigs cbail"
man, and Susie Stewart, the West Meigs chairman, for the annual. Girl
Scout cookie sale. Scouts will be taking orden from Jan. 30 1o Feb. 4, with ·
the cookies to be delivered from March 1$.!'1. As an Incentive for sales,
the scouts can win prizes, some of which •re abown here with tbe cookie
cholrman. For those not contacted by a girlaeonl, cookies can be ordered
from Mrs. P~lson, ~7539, or Mrs. Stewart, IIIIZ-332ll.

�Commentary

January 14, 1981
The Daily sentinel

South
•
lOth zn
Class A

~

As others see it
Here is some editorial conunent from Ohio newspapers in the past
week:

•
•
r

••
•

THE YOUNGSTOWN VIN-DICATOR- For decades, if not centuries,
hunters have worn dark clothes, brown or black. This made them less
conspicuous to the game, besides being durable and more resistant to dirt
or damage.
One result is tragically well known : Many a hunter, moving in distant
brush and wearing a brown jacket, pants and hat, has been mistaken for
game and brought down by a well-aimed shot from another sportsman.
The Ohio.Dj,vision of Wildlife, which exists to foster the life in Ohio's
woods and fields, is concerned too, about the men who stalk the animals.
It is about ready to recommend a law to require deer hunters to wear
orange garb.
Orange vests or other outerwear .have come into widespread use ·for
people who may be in danger from automotive traffic. Street worke~s,
construction crews and traffic patrolmen find they are much safer wtth
such garb, especially in the dark or under poor visibility .
Ohio sportsmen, who will hear about the division's proposal at a
statewide meeting Jap. 25, should welcome and support it.
THE TOLEDO BLADE. - The cutbacks that Agriculture Secretarydesignate John Block has suggested for the $1f&gt;.billion a year food stamp
program may seem harsh, especially at a time of substantial unemployment. But given the way the program 's costs and waste bave
skyrocketed in the last few years, he is is right on track.
On Dec. 31, shortly after Mr. Block said the program could stand to be
cut between 10 percent and 40 percent, it was announced that benefits
would rise by 11.5 percent in the new year. This escalation of costs, based
on soaring food prices, will directly raise benefits to 22 million persons
now receiving food stamps - rpughly one out of every 10 Americans- at
an annual cost of $1 billion annually. .
Ten years ago the program, which then cost about $1 billion, was instituted out of a humane desire to minimize malnutrition. A team of doctors that had traveled around the nation in the 1960s and found numerous
diet-&lt;leficiency diseases retraced their steps in the late 1970s and declared
that the " battle of hunger is being won daily."
That victory, however, has been pushed into the background as the
food-stamp program has grown like topsy. Although eligibility standards
were tightened in 1980, the fa i::t remains that food stamps, designed to aid
the poorest of Americans, are being dispensed to a much wider group
today.
A revitalized American economy would, of course, tend to reduce the
number of persons eligible for food stamps. But the Reagan administration should not wait for that moment; it should begin to scale
down this program's budget as soon as possible.

The vocabulary Qf the hostage· crisis
ByDooGraff
The Iranian hostage crisis may be
lacking a number of things - including rationality on the part of at
least one of the parties - but certainly not a vivid vocabulary.
''Barbarians," ' "criminals," '11tid-

Where's our stuf£? Yes, 1 wonder
Where all the American made stuff
went to. You kn ow what I mean.
Every time you go to the store or
shopping you look at where it's made
- at Japan, Hong Kong, Spain,
Taiwan. Yes, most of it comes from
overseas.
'
No wonder the American worker
is out .of work. They make
everything overseas.
Now, it's funny I've bought a lot of
stuff and most of it was made overseas. Now it's different in my home.
I only buy American made stuff just
to keep someone working here at
home . You hear people talk about

Reds' fan upset
As a Cincinnati Reds fan for more
than 20 years, I feel compelled to
write your ne~spaper regarding the
current management of the ball
club.
•
There is a petition drive underway
for those Reds fans who are
dissatisfied with Mr. Richard
Wagner's leadership.
Mr. Wagner's contention about
how tough it is to make a trade
doesn't wash any more. Other teams
have made significant trades to

PTO very thankful

By Robert Wagman
WASHINGTON (NEA)- Though
the department that Drew Lewis has
been nominated to head is hardly the
strengthen themselves, wh1le the
Reds' front office stands relatively . most important in town, the transpat. This ostrich-head-in-the-sand
portation secretary-designate is
being hailed by transition insiders as
approach must cease if the Reds
want to remain competitive in the
one of the most influential members
of the incoming Cabinet and as a
:-la tiona l Lea~ue West.
rising star of the Republican Party.
If you're a Gallia-Meigs area Reds
fan who is upset with the ·ball club's
At 49, Lewis is a :IG-year veteran of
management, write me and I will
Republican politics in Pennsylvania"
He emerged as a power in Ronald
personally deliver your thoughts to
the chairman of the board of the Reagan's campaign because he
Reds in Cincinnati . Please write : possessed something critical to vicCharles M. Rose, Athens, Ohio 45701 . tory that was in short supply among
the candidate's oldest and closest
aides: good connections throughout
the Northeast and the industrial
Midwest. Lewis ran the fall campaign in that region and is credited
to Neal While "ml Mr. H"ruld Norris
with Regan's success there.
in dismantling bo()k shelves and
Lewis heads his own
replacing them in our new library.
management-consulting firm, which
Last but npt least is the pride we
is headquartered near Philadelphia.
have fur our hardworking fifth and
He specializes in aiding compsni,•J
sixth graders in restoring old oak
in financial difficulty, often serving
desks to replace the, old broken

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomuey, OhJe
U4-lft.U51

DEVOTED T01HE INTEREST OF 11IE MEIGS-MASON ..mEA

,

~milt~ ~._.....,n-w.=·""'

q:,v

.

.

ROBERT L; WINGETf
PU-r

PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH

Alllllllll Publlaller/Colltroller

DALE ROTIIGEB, JR.
NN~

Editor

A MEMBER of The A11ocilkd Prell, lllllld Old)' Pml AIIOC!W!Uoa 1Dd tbe

~Ntwi..PII'hblkllenAtltN:Uoll.

LEn'EI8 OF OPINION lrt weltomed. ney tllould be leu tUII 110 woMb loDe. All
an nbjttt W tdJIIq ud mut be tlped wldl u~~~e, eddreu ud ttiepi!GM
.IUIIDber. NoWIIIpecllttten w:IU be pu~UIIIed. Lenensbould be Ia lotd 11ne, lclclm•IDI

"*"

....., ... _ ..uu,..

and assorted terrorists and political
·fugitives. Eldridge Cleaver was an
Algerian guest for a lengthy spell.
The Algerians also are among
OPEC's price hawks, pushing for
every doliar that can be wrung out of
the oil-consuming industrial nations.
With a record like that, no wonder
they . appear simpatico to the
Iranians. They are in a position to
talk reason and just may be able to
get the Iranians to listen.
But back to the impasse, this is far
from the first such the crisis-ridden
postwar world has seen. The Iranian
hostage situation invites comparison
with the Pueblo incident of 1!168, in
which Nort.1 Korea seized and held a
U.S. electronic intelligence ship and
its crew. Their release was secured
after months of similarly frustrating
lack of apparent progress in
negotiations.
Twenty years before that, an entire city was being held hostage.
Berlin. The crisis precipitated by the
Soviet land blockade of the divided

city appeared to have hardened into
a permanent superpower standoff
with neither side able to yield
without damaging loss of prestige or
to take any new action without risk
of war. Its resolution came suddenly, so far as the public was concerned, as a consequence of informed contacts between the
American and Soviet ambassadors
to the United Nations.
The point In both examplell is that
there is much more to crisis-ending
than the publicized maneuvertngs of
the antagonists, and ·that much may
be going on behind the scenes of
which the public is unaware. It may
not be too much to hope for
something of the sort in the present
situation.
Of course, in both the Pueblo and
Berlin crises the United States was
dealing with coldly rational If bitterly hostile opponents. Whereas in
Iran ...
But here are are, back to names
again.

Transportation designate labeled 'influential'

On behalf of the children. who attend Harrisonville Elementary
School we would llke to express our
thanks to Jerry Cline. Jerr,v Tillis,
Bob and Bobby Williams, Roland
Morris and David Riggs, also Principal Greg McCall fur rtplacing the
worn out floor in our gymnasium.
desks in their class rooms . These
Without them donating their time
children have worked very hard ,
and energy in doing this work, our · they have "bout half of the job comchildren would not have a pl ace to
pleted and they do neL'tJ volunteers
play during inclemeut wcC:Ilher or
to supervi~ them so they can get the
for gyrn classes.
job l'Oillpleted . - H"rrisonville
We also wish tu express our thanks
PTO, Prcslclcnt Helena Riggs.

A~

Not the least interesting aspect is
the developing role of the Algerians.
Selected initially by the Iranians as
ideologically compatible middlemen, they are taking their commission very seriously. If not - yet
- full-fledged mediators, they are
more than mere messengers. They
appear to be making some effort to
enlighten the Iranians oo the
realities of the American situation,
in particular on the power relationships among Congress and outgoing
and incoming presidents.

nappers," ''tyranny,'' ''savagery,''
"swindling" are a few of the choicer
terms heard in recent days. It is getting to the point where a program
may soon be necessary to tell
precisely who is calling whom what.
Under the circwnstances, it may
being out of ,;,ork but they buy be helpful to keep in mind that
It is not the sort of performance
foreign made products anyway . business about nam~alling being
harmless when you consider the that the Algerians' 'behavior until
That hurts us all the way around. All
I can say as a working American is , alternative, namely physical ex- very recently would have suggested
pression of hostility. In all the sound might be expected from them. After
look at where it's made and if it's not
U.S.A. , put it back on the shelf and fury, the emphasis, fortunately, wresting independence from France
is still on the fonner. That at least is in 1962, they took a stance as the
unless it says made in America by
something to be thankful for even radicals' radicals of the developing
an American worker.
We need this to keep our jobs. We . should the apparent impasse carry world. Algerian antipathy toward
through Jan. 20, and possibly well the West in general and the United
don't seem to be able to do much
States in particular was well
beyond.
'
about the gas but we can hurt the1n
There may well be, however, more publicized and expressed in a numin goods and things to keep our
to that impasse than is apparent on ber . of ways, including the
people working . So, America, let's
availability of haven for skyjackers
the surface.
keep Americans working.
Yours truly. - Floyd H. Cleland,
Box 223, Rutland, Ohio.

Letter to the Editor
Where's our stuff?

By GEORGE STRODE
AP Spons Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Canton
McKinley, Willard and kinsman
Badger all preserved their undefeated records to retain their
leads today in The Associated Press'
Ohio prep boys basketball ratings.
McKinley posted the most impressive niargin, leading runner-up
Akron Centrai-Hower by more than
100 points in Class AAA .
·McKinley, 11.0 after beating Canton Central Catholic 84-49 and
Cleveland Heights 90-75, earned 283
paints from a statewide panel of
i!pOrts writers and broadcasters.
Central-Hower, the defending big
achooi tournament champion, belted
Kent Roosvelt, but escaped Akron
Firestone 57-56 for a!).! record and
178 poll points.
Willard, li.O, whipped Norwalk 6647 in Its only assignment last week
1111d easily kept the No. I spot in
ClassAA.
The Crimson Flashes, a state tournament semifinalist last spring, earned 255 points to 207 for Struthers,
replacing Wellsville as the state's
No. 2 middle division power.
Wellsville dropped to third with 185
points.
Struthers used .a 64-42 beating of
Warren Kennedy, No. 7last week, to
grab the runner-up spot.
Zanesville Rosecrans, one of
Ohio's annual Class A powers,
closed ground on Badger in the race
for the small school lead. Badger,
with nine straight triumphs, has 238
points, 17 more than second-ranked
Rosecrans, also~.
Badger defeated VIenna Mathews
61-50 and Cortland Lakeview 64-47,
and Rosecrans handled Howard
East Knox n-43last week.
Dayton Roth , the state's highestscoring team this winter, moved into
the No. 3 spot in Class AAA, swapping places with Kettering Alter. C
incinnati Elder again was fifth with
Columbus Brookhaven sixth,
tlaJnilton seventh, Canton South
eighth , Chillicothe ninth and
Steubenville lOth.
·
In Class AA, Millersburg West
Holmes moved up one position to
fourth after beating Navarre
Fairless, the No. 4 power last week,
f6..53. Elyria Catholic was fifth in the
middle class, Circleville Logan Elm
sixth, Fairless seventh, Napoleon
eighth, Youngstown Ray~n ninth
and Portsmouth lOth.
Undefeated Napoleon, J().Q, and
Portsmouth, !).2 and the 1980 Class
AA tournament runner-up, were
making their first ToP. Ten appearances of this season.
The Class A ratings were the
stablest. The first siic teams,
Badger, Rosecrans, Columbus
Academy, Covington, Maria Stein
Marion and Richmond Dale
Southeastern, remained in the.same
order as last week. Old Washington
Buckeye Trail moved from ninth to
seventh, Kalida from a share of lOth
to eighth, McDonald from eighth to
ninth and Racine Southern had lOth
by itself this time.

\

as a board member or chief
executive officer while nursing them
back to financial health.
In politics, however, Lewis has
usually remained In the background.
·He ran all the congressional campaigns of Richard Schweiker, the
tw&lt;&gt;-term senator who is slated to
become secretary of health and
human services. Lewis's only try at
elective office was as an unsuccessful candidate for governor of
Pennsylvania in 197t
Perhaps surprisingly, much of
Lewis' recent political activity has
been decidedly anti-Reagan.
In 1976, he ran President Ford's
primary campaign in Pennsylvania.
At the Republican Convention in
Kansas City, he held the delegations
of Pennsylvania and several other
states behind Ford, thus.Jlelping to
thwart Reagan 's late drive for the
presidential nomination. Lewis
remained with Ford even after Schweiker, a close friend, became

Reagan's running mate.
When Reagan was assembling his
campaign staff early in 1980, he
remembered Lewis and asked him
to run his primary effort in Pennsylvania. Despite his moderate
leanings, Lewis agreed.
.~s

the Republican Convention approached, Lewis gained admission
to Reagan's inner circle. He strongly
urged the selection of George Bush
as the vice-president' a! · nominee.
During the fall campuign, he was
one of the leading advocates among
Reagan's close advisers of the headt&lt;&gt;-head debate with President Carter.
Reagan's grow ·na ·onfidence in,
Lewis was demon. !rat cd early in the
transition period when the Pennsylvania was placed in charge of
political clearances of all potential
appOintees. It was lewis who the
Republican governors sought out
when they gathered in Philadelphia
for · their post-election conference

High in the Slate River Valley
By Robert Wallen
(Flnt of two nlaled cohmlus)
CRESTED BUTIE, Colo. (NEA)
- There, are . countless ~r
magnificent valleys in the Rockies,
an area famed for its natural splendor. But few are as tranquil, unspoiled or graceful as the State
River Valley here. ·
There also ' are hundreds of enchanting small towns throughout the
region, but few can match the
special character of CrMted Butte,
where painstaking restoration ef·
forts have preserved both the utility
and tum-of-the-century charm of the
community's Victorian buildings.
One local organization
legitimately boasts that the town of
about 1,000 people and the valley
that atretches almost 30 mileo to the
south are among "the few places in
the West accessible to man but not
yet destroyed by him."
But those circumstances could
change drastically in the coming
years because Amax Inc., a
multinational corporation ,
specializing in the rxtraction and
pr ·1t&gt;t&gt;~sin~ of 1nint&gt;ral resources,

wants to build a massive mining and Historic District.
milling operation in the heart of the
But oniy one year later, geologists
Slate River Valley.
discovered an extraordinarily rich
· As a result, Crested Butte is on the and large molybdenum deposit inway to becoming a major bat- side Mount Enunons, one of two
'tleground in the rapidly intensifying peaks that tower about the town.
national debate that pits en- Estimates of ILl mail value range
vironmental concerns and human from $4 bilion to $8 billion.
values against developmental inAmax Mtimates that the deposit
terests and economic opportunities.
consists of at least1!16 mliJion tons of
Mining is not hew to the valley, but ore, averaging about 0.-14 percent
previous efforts (dating back to the molybdenum &lt;lsulflde. But that
IIIIIOs) to wrest coal, lead and zinc means that 99.56 percent of all the
from the earth were conducted on a ·material extracted from the mounfar more modest scale than Amax tain must be disposed of after
plans In its quest for molybdenum, processing.
·
known as " gray gold" because of Its
That requires the construction of
rarity and conunerclal value.
what the industry used to call a
The last of those earlier mines was "slime pit" but now euphemistically
abandoned in the early 1960s refers to as a "tailings pond" to hold
precisely the time when a the IM millions of toM of waste.
generation of young professionals In
To run the operation, Amax entheir 20s and 30s was fleeing the rat visloM a permanent work force of
race of the big cities in favor of an about 1,~ people, most of whom
alternative lifestyle.
•
would work In three shifts around
Hundreds of those refugees found the clock at the mine and mill. An
a haven here. After rehabiUtating additional 800 to 900 temporary conthe community, they succeeded in struction workers would be required
having all of Crested Butte 'officially duriug a four-year period In tbe middesi~nated In 1975 us a National
I 'WI•

with lists of friends and supporters
who they were puahing for administration posts. When many of
those office seekers get their jobs, it
will be lewis whci -receives the
politlcal!OUs.
Lew~ was also 011 hand when the
Reagan inner circle began debating
Cabinet apinlments. Reagan reportedly told the group th,at he had
already made up his mind on a few
nominations and that he wanted certain other individuals In the Cabinet
but would leave it up to his advisers
to decide upon their departments.
Lewis was in this second category.

REDS ' SELECTIONS
CINCINNATI !UP) - Three pitchers and an ouUielder were selected by the Cincinnati Heds in the first day of the baseball free agent
draft of young players.
Cincinnati picked righthanded pitcher Daniel Durest of Plover Wis., in
the first round Tuesday.
In the second round, the Reds took
outfielder Damon Farme~·, 18, of
Western Los Angeles Junior College.

So, while Lewis may not have high
visibility as transportation
secretary, he is expected by many
insiers to wield substantial influence
within the new administration. In
fact, he may well end up as its
leading moedate.
You can look for Drew Lewis to
emerge as a major figure In
Republican politics of the future .

Today
in history

The Duily Sentinel
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Today is Wednesday, Jan. 14, the
14th day of 1961. There are 351 days ·
left in the year.
Today' s highlight in history:
On Jan. If, 1784, the United States
ratified a peace treaty with
England, formally ending the War of
Independence,
On 'this date :
In 1809, England and Spain formed
an alllance against Napoleon
Bonaparte.
In 1914, Henry Ford's lim assembly line went into operation, greatly
reducing the time It took to produce

tillmbt" Tbo Allocloted Prell, Inland Dll·
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l'lftt'IPII* Publllhtrt AIIOCiatton, National
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a car.

In 11142, American forca under
Gen. Douglas MacArthur resisted
Japanese attacks on Bataan, Philippines.
In l969, 25 crewmen were llllled ·
when the world's blgge,et warahlp,
the U.S. carrier Enterprta, was ripped · by an expl011ion while on
maneuvers off Hawaii.

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MAIL 1\IIICIUPfJONI
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�January 14, 1981

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Page-4-The DailY Sentinel

Meigs Marauder cage team ,Rio Gr~de whips Cougars

\l

L

1 \ '-

.1
Randy Murray
6-1, Junior F

RIO

'

GRANDE

DePaul hack
•

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Thorne

2-(}4 ;

Negate

Ca.~ .
H aw e~

5- ~

1_2; Stevens 0 0•0 ; Gwinn 3' 1 7;_.
TOTALS 33 -14-80.
H&lt;! lftim e score - R io 41, MI. v er ·

H i nkle2 ~ 0 - 4 .

CJnd it's on. It has a elean. modern

i.
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'

'.

St. Louis was led by freshman
Willie Becton 's 24 points.
South Alabama's Ed Rains scored
31 points to !eat! the Jaguars over
North Carolina-Charlotte, their 13th
COnsecutive victory. Rains hit 14 of
19 field goal shots and three of five
rrom the foul line as South Alabama
improved its record to 14-1.
Phil Ward had 16 points and
Tyrone Stephens 10 for UNCC.

1·LB. PKG.

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ARGO PEAS •••••••
2/89'

SOLO FOAM CUPS ...........:~~·•. 69'
12's Carnation

with Marshmallow

INSTANT CHOCOlATE •••.•••••. s1.59

BATTER

.7&amp;
~~·

...

~

••

1

•3e••

WITM
TRADE
IN

38 MONTH GUARANTEE
NEVER NEEDS WATER

• ~~ Pu11 c~ c~• .

• ,,, .... to - 10" t'l

Under Normel DriYin o Conditione

SAVE 7.58 A EG. 16.153

AEO. UI

JELU) PUDDING .•••••.•••..•••• 2/79'

VEGETABLE BEEF
10 oz . Vienna

.

soup ..... 2/89'
·

.

4

HOT DOG SAUCE .•••••• ~ ........ 2/93

GENERIC

'

'

G&amp;J AUTO PARTS
POMEROY, OHIO

3/'1 09
GENERIC

MARGARINE

COFFEE CREAMER

3/'1

19

RC COLA

SALAD DRESSING

8-16 OZ. BTLS.

'119

I

144 W. SECON-D ST.

2/'1 09

CORN

GENERIC

CANNED MILK

5
.
LB .
99'
ORANGES•••••••••••••••••••••
.• PIARS ..•..•..•.•........•... 4/'1 00
3LB: .. 79e
.• APPLES...................
'
•'
~
3 BS
ONIONS
.....................
~ ..: 89 ~
•
GREEN PEPPERS ..•... 4/*1 00

RT. 33
MASON, WV

.......,.

1

FROZEN

HOURS:
.'

BROUGHTON

DAIRY

POT PIES .~~~::~~i~~~~~~~~k.e_r•• 3/*1 09 BROUGHTON
2% MILK •••••••••••••?:.~~~~ *1 79

39
2
CAULIFLOWER............... 65~ COn
AGE
CHEESE
.•.•
:.~!:*1
BROUGHTON
BIRoseYE
·
..
e CHOCOLATE DRINK.&lt;!!.L.'1"
LEAF SPINACH ...••••.•••... 45 BROUGHTON FRESH
'
.
99
FivE ALIVE
ORANGE JUICE .....'~·.~~;~
e
PARKAY ·
Quarter s 1 Lb. Pkg. 59C
FRUIT BEVERAGE .•..•..•.. 79' MA
NE •••••••••
• •••

ARY 11

2 Pack.Soflweve

TOILET TISSUE .••••••••••••• ::~~-•. 69c

GENERIC

BUNS.......~..~~~-

GENERIC
WHOLE KERNEL

19

v. Pound
2/79~

69~

'

1Sl/4 oz. Del Monte

10'12 oz. Campbell's

PANCAKE FLOUR

Storck Hot Dog &amp; Hamburger

/Ito Krispy Kreme
._, FILLED
' LB. DONUTS ......~.~~~·- 99~

GENERIC

GENERIC

19

89

Cut Green Beans

4/'1

PRODUCE

Group 7t ,
. . 141 .M t acfllt'l ..
Qroup 27 • 2" , , 141.H uafltn ..

NO. 1200

3 DRUMSTICKS
3 THIGHS
3, ~REASTS I

"
GENERIC

73~

Mtlnlentnc• FrH

BOOSTER
CABLES

J 31• oz. Pistachio Instant

CHUNK PINEAPPLE ~ •••••••. 2JS1.39

~·

M·3811

I ••••••••••••••

Storck Honey Wheat

ONLY

17

so Count 9 oz .

19

KETCHUP

57~

16 oz. Golden Isle

BREAD ......~..Q~. 2/99~
BREAD ........... ~~-~~.. 69~

BEEF STEW LB. •

2 LB.

ALL CLIMATE
MOTOR OIL

ggc

BON

•

VALVOLINE

CABBAGE 2lb. For 4gc

-.

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

SWEET PEAS

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

No wonder we're Nurilber One.

HOLSUM

99~

49~

GENERIC

I I

New

Bag

4/'1

l l ______ __ .__CoUP07i-- --- - ----- I

For all metals .. .

PRODUCE

1 lb. Teen Queen Quarters

12

- -•St.llon ·~ CIIIM 'WI

p i S•·~• ·"'" '• .._,,( ..,Uti
INI \&gt;o«&gt;111dOtl&lt;en -afta• ~"' '

Eckrich

PICKLE ·&amp; PIMENTO LOAF.~~~n.97

1'0 .... IUCI

I I ,,, ....... ._..

1-LB.

BEST OF FRYER

KIDNEY BEANS

I I
I I
I t
I

STORCK

BACON BREAD........ ~--~-~:. 3/'1 09

lb.

PORK-N-BEANS

I I .,,,........ ,~.. ·~·~~~~Jfl'WI.I ..... OI&gt;!:'! U'J'IOI)I'\l('l ...ll3TQNI'I•001,1""' "~'"' I I

B·AKERY

WILSON ·

49

GENERIC

i Cash Relu1d by Ma" Whon V.u Buy Two Jugs of PIIESTONH · l I

I

'229LB.

BONELESS CHUCK ROAST

GENERIC

i- :~~--~:=:~~-r~~;:~~~-~~: =:~~- ,

•

12 oz. 99~

ROUND STEAK

Chicken Breast•••••• •••L~; 99~
Chicken Legs •••••••••••~~·.89~
Pork Liver ..............~~·. 59~
Ground Chuck.•••••••• HI; •179

PICKENS HARDWARE

.-•••

CHEESE

lb.

COOK HAM

Whole Fryen •••••.•••••L~;.55~

•

$1.89

SLICED

.'239 LB.

Chicken Bologna •••••• ~.a9~

Pkg .

29

~

Fla.

12 oz. Kraft Single
Sliced Swis s

· ~~

.

'1"

. ,,.. . _..,,.,n_' ~

track again

;
;.

SAUSAGE

lb.

onwmmng

" Being on top is only important at
the end of the season ," said DePaul
forward Mark Aguirre . "At this
point, it · doesn't mean a thing.
Tonight, we were able to do almost
anything we wanted. And when we
come to play, we know we can do our
thing.' '
Aguirre did his "thing" , for one,
scoring 36 points as the Blue Demons
outclassed tbe Billikens.
"There is no way we could cornpete with them on a man-for-man
basis," said St. ·Louis Coach Ron
Ekker. "I don't think our kids were
in awe of therri, but we were up
against the best."
In other games involving the
nation's ranked tea ms, No. 13 South
Alabama defeated North Caroli naCharlotte ~3 and San Francisco
upset No. 7 Notre Dame 61Hl3 in
overtime.
DePaul, 14-1, grabbed a 46-29 halftime lead as Aguirre scored 19 points
and reserve Bernard Randolph added 10, During one stretcti, the Blue
Demons scored 20 straight points,
and in a seven-minute nurry outscored the Billikens 3()-5.
Aguirre has now amassed 1,877
points and is within 19 of the all-time
record held by former DePaul center Dave Corzine. Only a junior, he
has long surpassed one of the
greatest players in DePaul history
in George Mikan.

Rc_,

~()"~

Mesa, Ariz . Community College
klok lhat fits any deco&lt; Running up
s upplied a pair of outfielders for the
10 37 hours on 1.92 ~allons of kerou
...
u••,, .,.,....,.,,,..,
sene, it I ills easily With the handy
....... 1.......... . ...
first round of the regular phase with
_ ....,..
siphon pump that comes wtth every
the New York Mets picking Randy
model. With a Kero-Sun Portable
Milligan and Kansas City taking
Heater, like thi~ U.L. listed Rad1ant
teammate Richard Rizzo.
10 model. you can leave your ther·
mostat turned low and save money
Kevin Price and Kevin White, a
in the months ahead.
pair of right-handed pitchers, were
99.9"k luel-efficiency means odorpicked from Cos umn es River
less, smokeless operation. And il
College in Sacramento, Calif.
California took Price, making him
the fourth .choice in the regular
phase, and Los Angeles selected
White.
Fullerton Junior College produced
MASON W.VA.
three choices, right-handed pilche rs
Mel White and Thor Edgell, and!------------'--------~-------------~
shortstop Steve Kiefer .
White was picked by Sa n Francisco a nd Oakland went for Kiefer in
the regular phase . In the secondary
Prices Good Thru
phase, Seattle selected Edgell.
January 17, 1981
the draft continues today but no
more names will be made public.
Players selected must be contacted
by the teams within 15 days to begin
negotiations.

__ . . ,...
l .

Meat Manager: Jerry McDaniels

COUNTRY STYLE

t.,#'' t~~

needs no chimney. Battery-paNered
ignition svstem and automatic ahutoCf,device for extra safety. 9 models .
to choose from. See a demonslrellon
today.

The Radiant lO is convenient and
easy to operate-just press a lever

Store Manager: Bill Calllcaat

'MEATS

All it takes is a woman's.touch
to make a room feel warm.

1 2 4;

penter 0·0 0: McBride 2·3-7 ;

PH. 9,92-5..191

CHECK THESE
.BUDGET STRETCHERS

HOURS: MON •.SAT. 9 AM TO 9 PM
SUNDAY: 11 AM TO 7

. ..,'4--

ze 4·0·8. TOTALS 4S-9-99 .
.
MT. VERNON (80) - Ledyard 3·2·
B; Sesher 60·12; Cornely 9·3 21;

•

By Assll&lt;'iated Press
Derailed over the weekend,
DePaul is back on the track now.
" We learned more from the loss to
Old Dominion than from any other
game in the last two years," said
DePaul Coach Ray· Meyir TueSday
night after a 93-t7 decision over St.
Louis University. "While we were
No.I, we played not to lose. Now that
we are fourth, we have something to
shoot at."
The Blue Demons were ranked No.
I most of the college basketball
season until Saturday night, when
they were upset at horne 63-62 by an
unh•ralded Old Dominion team. As
a result of that shocker, they were
dropped to No.4 in the national polls.
But it didn't necessarily bother
Meyer's players.

INFLATION• • •BUY
. HIREI

WE RESERVE lHE RIGHT
.TO UMIT QUANnnES.

(99) - Phelps 1 0·

non 31.

La . and Delgado Junior College in
New Orleans. Wi\hin minutes after
they had picked him, the Cards announced the signing of McCulla, who
had been drafted by AUanta last
June.
Eleven pitchers were picked in the
first round of the regular draft and
15 more went in the opening round of
the secondary draft with Californians dominating the selection
process. After Rooney was drafted
No.I, the next 10 players taken in the
regular first round were all from
California.
Midway through the first round of
the regular phase, a pair of batterymates were selected from Long
Beach City College. They are catcher Terry Connack, chosen by
Atlanta , and right-handed pitcher
Brian Reams, taken by Pittsburgh.
Those two picks were separated only
by Minnesota's selection of righthanded pitcher Peter Kutsukos of
Seminole Junior College io Sanford,

~PEOPLE

2; Dorse y 6·0-12 ; Mc Donald 12 ·0·24;
Castl em an 10 - 1 21 .~ Woll enberg 7-0
14; Ac ord 2-3-7; P e nrod 1·1·3; Ha ir ·
ston 0-2-2; Burson 1 0 2; Qu isenberr y
0-0 0; Malsc hO· ll ; F e lske l -0·2; Juf -

Pitchers top draft list
NEW YORK lAP) - Baseball
people are fond of saying you can
never have too mucfi pitching and
they followed that fonnula in the
16th annual winter free agent draft
of amateur players.
Pitchers were the top priority in
the both the regular and secondar y
· · phases of Tuesday's draft and half of
the 52 first round selections in the
two sections were hurlers.
Included in that group was the
No.I regular phase pick, left-hander
Jim Rooney of Stony Point, N.Y. ,
who was selected by the Chicago
Cubs. Rooney, who was 20 on New
Year's Day, will graduate in June
from Morris Conununit~ College in
Dover, N.J .
St. Louis, with the top choice in the
secondary phase for players
previously drafted but unsigned,
picked catcher Harry McCulla,
another 20-year-old, from Houma ,
~·
-·

THE
BEEF

Box score:

Bob Ashley
&amp;-0, Junior G

Steve Ohlinger
6-1, SeniorF

Visiting Rio Grande jwnped off t o . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - - : - an 3-0 lead and never looked back
enroute to an easy 99-80 victory-over
the Mt. Vernon Nazarene Colle~e
Cougars Tuesday night.
Coach Johio Lawhorn's Redmen,
now 9-9 overall and 3-1 inside the
Mid-Ohio Conference, held a 76-49
advantage midway through the
second half. Rio led 41-31 during t~'
halftime intermission .
Mt. Vernon dropped to 4-11 overall
and 1-3 inside the conference.
Four Rio Grande players finished
in double figures in scoring, led by
Grant McDonald's 24 points. Kev
Castleman added 21, Vince Wollenburg 14 and Torn Dorsey 12.
Mark Comely led the losers with
21 points. Dan Hawes and Ironton's
Dave Sesher each had 12.

THRU SATURDAY, JANUARY 17th

Mon. thru Sat. -

'11 a.m. to ·7

• on Sun

�Page-6

The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy

-

Middleport, Ohio

r~ady

Nicklaus

for Bob Hope Classic

PALM SPRINGS, Calif. (AP) and the PGA.
The unique format calls for the
Jack Nicklaus, enthusiastically and
"But I didn't have the consistency limited field of 128 pros' to play one
optimistically seeking improvement . ('d like. I won two majors but I roundoneachoffourdesertcourses,
over one of his great years, opens his didn't· play very well in the other La Quinta, Indian Wells, Tamarisk
1981 pro golf season in the $304,500 two. There's always room for im· and Bennuda Dunes.
Bob Hope Desert Classic.
provement.
On each of the first four dliys
"I'm still interested. in playing
''I've worked some at home the they'll play with a different threegolr, excited about the competition," last few weeks and I'm looking for· man tea!ll of amateurs, including
political and sports figures and
said Nicklaus, a week away from his ward to the-season,,; Nickla.us said.
Although he hasn 't played com- show-business friends of the hM;
41st birthday and starting his 20th
professional season in the OO.hoie, :;.. petitively since early iasl fall, the who are competing in the pro-am
day event that began today.
Golden Bear, now1 the owner of i!', ~ tionoftheevent.
"Any time you win two majors, record 17 major p~oJessional title•.:.. ' Fonner President Gerald Ford,
it's a good year," Nicklaus said of was one of the priJll'e favontes for .. --.
his great comeback in the 1980
season in which he scored record- the
theprize
-game's
$50,000 offirst
that longe.st
goes to
the awinner
setting triumphs in the U.S. Open tournament.

who plays one rOUIId ~h with
Nicklaus, Lee Trevino, Tom Kite
and di.fending clwnpion Craie
Stadler, tops the amateur field
which aLto includes Speaker ol the
House Tip O'Neill.
Sports figures include George
Brett, Billy Martin, Pancho Gonzales and Johnny Bench. From the
entertainment field there are
Charley Pride, Telly Savalas, Jack
Lenunon, Gordon MacRae, Andy
Williams, Fred MacMurray, Robert
Goulet and Foster Brooks.

ri;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~;;;;;n

~======~====~

ANNUAL SHOE SALE
CONTINUES

1

r

for The Men

r:

HUNTER- Kenneth King, Middlepor~ pictnred, reports that there
are a number of ardent grouse hunters in Meigs Coonty and proves that it
is niCf to have a grouse around the house- at least the beautiful fan tails
which are valued by hunters in addition to the quality meat provided by
the game birds. King belongs to a club of grquse hunters who pool their
catches after the season - from October through February - for a
grouse feast King says grouse hunters are more rare than hunters of
other wildlife because of the challenge of grouse especially relating to the
speed with which they fly. Of three Species, Meigs County has one- the
ruffed grouse- King reports. King and other hun ten maintain records of
grouse hunting each season so ihat the Division of Wild We can keep track
of catches and other important data.

Cleveland selects pitchers
CLEVELAND (AP) The tabbed Todd Robert Wenberg, 211, a
Cleveland Indians went after pit· · right-hander from Sturgis, S.D. The
chers Tuesday in the opening rounds 6-fooH, 190-pounder attends
of baseball's winter free-agent draft. Waldorf Community College in
The American League club, selec- Forest City, Iowa.
ting 14th in the regular phase of the
The Indians also selected a pitcher
draft, took Stephen Hill Cushing in
in
the first round of the draft's seconthe first round. Cushing is a left·
dary
phase, picking John Rudy
handed pitcher for St. Leo's College
23. The right-hander lives
Tillema,
in San Antonio, Fla .. The 6-foot, 180in
San
Jose
, Ca lif. , where he attends
pounder resides in Revere, Mass.
San
Jose
State
College.
In the second round, the Indians

HUSH PUPPIES

EASY STREET
JOYCE
MYERS

Values to '70.00

Values To '50.00

JARMAN

SHOES DISPLAYED FOR EASY SELECTION,
AU SALES FINAL-VISA-SAVE!
'

HARTLEY'S ·' SHOES ~~~cd~~~~~:~:~. o.
j'"

UMW hosts prayer,.. self-denial service

A prayer and seif-&lt;ienial service
was conducted by Mrs. Nan Moore
at the Monday night meeting of the
United Methodist Women of the
Heath Church, Middleport.
Mrs. Moore noted that the money
will be used both at home and over·
seas in projects. She conunented on
the women's work in the church and

t~''

organization of the Women's
c 1 ·ty of Christian Service many
years ago by a minister's wife.
Hiehli2hts of the years from 1959 to
1981 from early minutes were given
by Mrs. James Criswell.
Mrs. Beulah Jones read the !~9th
Psalm and gave ways in which
women have gained their in-

Valentine ball slated Feb. 14
A valentine bali was planned for
Feb. 14 at the Royal Oak Park
recreation building when the
Preceptor Beta Beta Chapter of
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority met Thor·
sday night at the Riverboat Room of
the Diamond Savings.

as a new member. Prayer closed the
meeting and Mrs. Fultz and Mrs.
Emily Sprague 'served refreshments. Mrs. Ruth Euler and
Genevee Chesher were contributing
hostesses.

depeQdence. She noted how Jesus
gave women their place in society
and noted that women were the first
to get to the tomb of Jesus.
Mrs. Emma Clatworthy gave
devotions following a piano prelude
by Mrs. Joan Robinson. She read a
preface from the editor of the Upper
Room. Mrs. Robinson sang "One
Day at a Time" accompanying her·
self on the piano, and Mrs. Clat·
worthy concluded with an article on
theNewYearandaprayer.
Mrs. Jones
a part of her
program distributed discussion
questions. A litany on Jesus was
givenastheprayercirclefonned.
Mrs. Betty Fultz presided at the
business meeting during which time
a birthday card was signed from
Mrs. Beulah Hayes, 85, who has been

Your choice qf ony
.one topping .

I

I

95 •

Reg . $1.35

'
1 Do,.

Ool.,

OHice Hours by Appointment Only

.nft
.,•. ,3 &amp;, ,4:

=6i

05

CALL (614)-992 2104
•

•
•
ALL
LOCATIONS
.• • • • • •

Of

LEARN DETAILS ABOUT A

CARIBBEAN
PUBLIC IN\IITED
OTA 0134

_./@;

GALL. I POLIS

"'f'l'rtnel Agenqr

'

SHOP EARLY FOR GOOD SELECTION
NEW SPRING SHOES ARRIVING DAILY

AAA TRAIIEL
AGENCIES SIRIIE
BOTH MEMBERS AND
THE TRAVELING PUBLIC

446·0.69'1

··-. --

NU-MAID

USDA CHOICE

RED OAK
PANELING

"You can write checks:'

Matthew Sellers

BLADE
CUT

CHICKEN

JONES BOYS

HUNfS

2%

TOMATO
SAUCE

BANQUET

POT
,_ ..

JELLY
3-lB.
JAR

CHUCK ROAST

WE RESERVE
THE RIGHT
TO liMIT
QUANTITIES

STORES

1 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - + - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -·-·..--...------~--

MILK

PIES

$139

3aoz$} $1.

\

Matthew Sellers, son of Edward
and Angela Sellers, Pomeroy, observed his first birthd~y re~ently
with a party at his home .
Cake and icc cream were served
to his grandparents, Frank and Ida
Martin and Ada and Wayne Rowe,
his great-grandmother, Mrs. Fran·
res Martin; aunts, Margo Martin,
Mary Stover, Arlene Rowe, Sue
Sellers, and Debbie Sellers, uncles,
Frank and Steve Martin, and
cousins, Rasche! Rowe and Sherri
Stover, and Darla, Randy , and
Shawn Hawley, Chuck Newhouse.

PER SHEET

'

I

8 oz.
. CANS

GAU.ON

------------------!1 •••:,l t!JlifJ;!!J.::,JIJf'
THE JONES BOYS

•

~

tJ.

•

""':

"TASTEE"

HOT DOGS

2

12 OZ .
PKGS .

99~

3

With
Coupon

There will be a weekend meeting
of the Pomeroy Wesleyan Holiness
Church on Route 143, Harrisonville
Road, Thursday through Sunday,
7:30 p.m. each evening. The Rev.
Bill Tillis and Naomi Tillis will be
the speakers. Special music will be
provided each evening. The Rev.
Dewey Kin~ invites the public.

lfiWL, 79c per pkg . Without coupon
~,
Offer Expires
1·81

r...,..vilflili,~
~«·lii4·W~·'.'\
llt:J
;,...... .~ . ..:•'
~...L'

~

----------------------!i;iJ.f--~A!IJ!IfJ;l!J~,~~~-~~; ~

•

DOUBLE COUPON SAVINGS
THIS WEEK AT THE JONES BOYS!!! .
WE'LL DOUBLE THE VALUE ON AU
MANUFACTURER'S COUPONS WITH OUR

SUPER OOUBLE COUPON
Present thh couPOn along with any Ofle momufac·
turer' s ·•cenl5 011 " coupon and get double the HIY ·

lngs ill Jones Boys . Not to inc:ludt Jone s Bovs
Coupons or those of oUter retaile rs and not to e•c;(!ed
tn(! value at tne item . Limit one double coupon per
m.1nuto\c luror' s coupon

DOUBLE COUPON SAVINGS

Cou pon EM pires sun ., Jan . II, 1911
L1mit 2 Coupons Per cus tomer
Not Valid lor Cigl'lrctte5 or Free Coupons

The Interest Account even
offers you two ways to
eliminate checking service
charges. Just keep a mini -'
mum balance of $1,000
in your Interest Account. Jf
your balance falls below
$1.000, you'll pay a $5.00
service fee for that month.
!Jut you'll go right on earn·
ing interest, regardless of
your account balance. Or,

SUPER SALES
SUPER SEWING
SUPER SAVI
AT SIN.GER

simply keep $2,000 in a
regular Central Trust
sav ings acc01fnt, included
on your combined statement.
5~% interest. Service
charge free checking.
That's the lnterest Account.
Get one, and start getting
more from your money today.

THE
CENTRALTRUSf
COMPANY

Better Banking Service. That's The Central Idea:

CROWN

HAND
TOWELS

FOR

$5

2

FOR .

·I;

•

SUPER DOUBL£ COUPON

l 411 ~

~

turer'5 " Cents 011 " coupon and get double the savinvs at Jones Boys, Not to 1nclude Jol'les Bov s

~

the value of the item . Limit one double coupon per

•manufacturer' s coupon .

""J'
,'
~

R'·
f'l\l!fi"

1

:,,!,,11
,(...•'

Present tl\is coupon along with any 'one manu lacCoupons or those ol other retailers and not to exceed

~\l,

..

~

.. ,
~
·~-lffll

coupon Ellplres Sun., Jan. 11,1981
Limit :z Coupons Per cuuomer
Not Valid tor Cigarettes or Free CoupoM

';'utt

;$.l}

"]lii .

ALL

TERRY

BED
PILLOWS

JONES BOYS

~

SPECIAL GROUP
GOOD SIZE

ROYAL

THREAD

I

1\'\1"~

Not valid on Cigarettes or FREE Coupons!!
Each of the Two Coupons Plus Any
Manufacturer's COupon
Means Double Savings

SINGER

$100

FOR
With
Limit 3
Coupon
Offer Expires 1-18·81

Limit 2 Pkgs.

Weekend meeting set

You can [{ffl your check in[{
wilhou/ sen'ire charJ&lt;es, lrJo.

$1
5

7?wnc

Master Sellers
turns one

"You earn interest:'

Everybody's talking about
Centrall Trust's new Interest
Account. At last. there
really is a checking account
that pays interest. No gim ·
micks, no automatic trans·
fers. just 51~ % intere.sl,
compounded daily, on the
money you keep in chetkirg.

(304LA75-1244
.
,--

.

ther~l;lllllililililililill•~·lli.iEileiniaiMiajlin~~~~w~a~s~w~e~lc~o~m~ed~~~~~~~ii~~iiii~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

The danre
open will
to be
cOuple.
A totalMil
of 125betickets
sp!d and can be purchased from any
member of the chapter, or at Grow's
Steak House, K. and C. Jewelers,
Marguerite's Shoe Shop, or the New
York Clothi~g House.
Manning WebSter was speaker at
the meeting using as his topic "50
years of Law." Judge WebSter
talked about changes in the
profession and Pomeroy during
those iiO years.
Congratulations were extended by
the group to Janet Hill who was
recently married to Roger Theiss.
Mrs. Roberta O'Brien will send a
thank you note to Mrs. Grace Eich
for the brass angels which she
presented to each member at the
Christmas party. For the Jan. 22
~ee~ing Mrs. Elch will host a

GRAPE

$495

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

PIZZA BREAD ••

•
•

as

luncheon at the Meigs Inn. Members
re to make re.servations with either
Mrs. Teresa Swatzei or Mrs. Velma
Rue.
.
Refreshments were served ' by
Mrs. Betty Ohlinger and Mrs. Mary
Morris.

JOHN A. WADE, M.D., INC.
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

r--------------1

SMUCKER'S

1!8"x4'x8'

.

ROOT HOSPITALIZED
Mrs. Ada Root, a patient at the 425; Mrs. Root, long-time resident of
Hillcrest Nursing Home, is confined Middleport, wiU observe her 102nd
to the Holzer Medical Center, Room birthday on Thursday, Jan. 15.

... 11 .... ,.... ,, public with the cost being $12 a

for The l.odles

MRSHEIM

The Daily Sentinei-Page-7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

January 14, 1981

ELECTRIC
HEATERS

25%0Ff·

SPECIAL GROUP
DENIM

MODEL 2001

•

Spa ce agr sew1ng at pnces
you c an a!IOH1 ~-T~
Tronic ' Momory Machlne

WESTERN
SHIRTS
SIZES 32 to 38

72"x90"

SOLID aH.OR
POLYESTER

BLANKETS

PURCHASI

BABY
BUNTING
ONLY

'$5~

MEMBER: FDIC

' A r r,uh •O! rot' '
(_ 14!\•1 oil I 'l l
I

•l •rll l" ·'

rt lh••t;nrrJ•·r {

•,. ,.,\

ol'~'"ll 1 1\~il •· •I P I '"

SPECIAL

TWO PIECE
FANCY PRINT

ROCKER
SET

$59;

�Page- 8- The Daily Sentin!!l

January 14, 1981

PJm e roy-Middleport, Ohio
Juury 15, lflll
Ywr social schedule i." likely to be more active

to believe wNtt you havt' to say tuday,
su ::sell yuur ldews with c..'tll1f1dence. Display doubt
andyou'lllu..w your audlenct.
1
ARIES lMirth !1-Aprtlltl Yoor opportunities
for persunal galn look rct~SOIUibly good today. yet
what you get could have :Win..! unw&gt;u.al .!itrinK!IIIl·
tached. Keep an ~ye ~led fur hidden clauses.
TAURUS (Aprtl %1-May 20t Yotu· judgment
n!lolllrding matters affecting your futun is keen
tt.ldol:ly, but because yuur thooghu woo't be
aligned with an associate's you could begln to
doubt tht&gt;ir worth.
1J
GEMINI l MIIy ZJ..Jue •1 Benefits t"Otild
pr~pared

.Hum usual this cumin!!: year. Friendships will be
esll:l blish@d with persons of in(]uern.:e. but It
might prove wise not to mvolve them in your per-

sonct l ambitions.

ASTRO
GRAPH

CAPRICORN (Det. zt..Jaa. 1!1 When il comes
10 organidnl( Of takiflK charge uf sticky
situations tuday )'OU're qualified to handle the

not haw everyone's vote.
Runance, tntvel, luck, resources. I)0$3ible pit·

job. ye t you may

hill!: and Cl~rt•e r for the euming munths are all
dicsused in yuur Mtro-Graph wh.ich begins with
your birthday. Mail $1 for ellCh to Astro-Graph,
Bu~~:

('(lme today thr"C!Ugh a situation previously
established by a friend. U you 'n! ld in O{l
.something good, be sure to d1&gt; what's expt!cted ol

489, Radio City Statiun, N. '1 . 10019. Be sure

to specify birth dale.
AQUARIUS ~ Jan . !0-Feb. 1!1 This should be a
v~ry productive (1ay_and yotfre espectally good
at getting thing s fina lized. pro~·i dt.'&lt;lyou can keep
kibitzers out o£ your acL
PISCES I Feb. ~Mart'b !t] Othen; art

' ' tiU .

• CANCER l Juae ZI.Jiliy !!) Fortunately, YOl!
h.Hve Pllb who will lend you things wht!n )'Ou nl!ed
them , but l.Jto extra careful tOday lo take care of
anvthinw. vouhavetoborrow .

Ohio

LEO IJI&amp;Iy U.A~tt . ZZI TH:dui which can be wccwnplished 111·ith n:asooable time and effort will
~ dune well t~Xhi)' . ProjecUI rt!quirlnt~ tenacity ·
may nut beaa successful.
VIRGO ( A•l· !3-Sept. ZZ) r\mong your older
Hnti t~t! establis~ friend..! you wlll enjoy
pqJulimty and presllJie today .. However t"hls
may not hold lrue with newer ~cqualntance~ .
UBRA 1~. D-Od. 23) Befure rru~king any
major changes ttKiay. weil!:h ca~fully the pros
11rv.l cons. Be .ah.~olutely certain tt\4;! advantage!!
far el[ceed any shortt'Oillings.
SC'_ORPJO f(kt Zt-Nov, !Z) Study carefully the
possible errects of ll!:teements yoo enter int o
lu.Jay. H a~J ty cununi~nl,!j t."'OUld cau.se you later
regrel,!j.
SAGilTARfUS IN•v. 23-0«. !J1 8«o11we of
the help of uthers, you could reap materio~~l
benefits~ )" . When ~lt'Ofne.s lime to diVvy up,
be sure they re ret.."Or.(mzed or re w~:~rded .

NOTICE

Television
•
•
VIewmg

EFFECTIVE MONDAY, JAN. 19, 1981'
NEW OFfiCE HOURS FOR

DR. JAMES P; CONDE

' " ' " '"""'ov&gt; '·-~·

(ffi OVER EASY Guest: Acto r Hal
Linden, star of the TV series 'Barney Miller '. Hosts : Hugh Downs and
Frank Blair. (Closed -Ca ptioned;

I PRE:SUME THIS IS THI!

U.S.A)
6:30 (I) IJ CZ) NBC NEWS
CIJ 30 MINUTES WITH FATHER
MANNING
(!) DAVY CROCKETf: INDIAN

WHO SO

KINDl-Y

PERMITTED U!!

Acce~ TO THAT 50LD Mlt.ll:
ON HoR .~AN CHLAJ.ID l

FIGHTER Fess Parker and Buddy
EDsen star in this series about a
rugged Te nnessee. backwoods·
rna nwho blazed a tr e il or civilization
through savagelndilm territory an d
established the Indian's rights in
America .

IIJ BDB NEWHART SHOW

BORN LOSER
.td\feniNd

rtems

tS

rtqurrMl

to

'btJFe.&amp;.RSii 1~1-.1~~~ ~

01

rMdll'f' ayaQble lor s.le '" e.ci'I .Kroger Slore. e•cepl 11
speaficaty noted rn h ad tt ......, do rvn out of an adWfti.:J
lt8ITI . we """ off• '(Oll your cholc l! of a comi)BrilbN! 1t~ .
~ a... arl.lbl8, reftectrng lfle same Y Ytngt or a ramchtek
~ICh w•ll ff111Ue·you to pv1 c ~ the ~v&amp;rl !Md ilem at the
ldvertrMd pt•ce wtl"\rn lJ cNIYI

ftXJ!&lt;' 5TUP\D

Avondale
Peaches .

'-d Kroger Will repl.ace vour rtem wth lhe same Or ana or a
()f"

1-\MA,t .. ~,IN

1HA1 a..se....

L----...

YEllOW (liNGo

Every1hmg yO\.t bv't' 11 ~roger rs guar1n1eed lor you r IOt.ll
SlttSitchOrt rfllgllrdlea Ol f"f\anufitCtU I II'I II yOu •re not WitS

comparatMt bflnd

111~ ~ 0-\l,:{ a.JE'.DIFFG~ ... A
FISH~ SWIM\

llli!DII LIW ,.ICI

TOTAL SATISfACTION GU ARANTEE

rl"fund your p .. rct"l.lse prrce

tt

IN POMEROYANOGALLIPOL ISS TORES .

Con

"

~
,_,...

01

Con

Tomato
SoUCe

REGULAR OR CHUI PAK

Any Size Pkg. $139
Ground Beef .... lb .
U .S. GOV 'T GRADED CHOICE .
IEEF CHUCK BONELESS

~$1'! c
MEAT CASE

LIMIT 2 PKCS&lt;WITH COUPON
uc~~.~~:~~,o~~?~~~rE1'/~'i"I}1Y
SUIJIU ro lm(CIII! n•n 1 lOCAl run

I

I
I

1
I

Meat Wieners

u .s.D&lt;A . INSPECTED

Fryer Parts ..... . tb.
FROZEN ROYAL ROCK .
IO·LSS . ANDUP

Young Turkeys ...... tb.

VAC PAK

Kroger Coffee

VAC: PAK

Kroger
Meat Bologna ...... .. tb .
l~·lJ.ll .

ggc

AVG .

Fresh Hams ... &lt;...... ... ... lb.·$1
fROZEN ALASKAN LEGS
&amp; CLAWS

King Crab ... ..... ......... ...

lb .

$3

3

KROGER AMERICAN liGHT

·, C:.Cil
(Oo

1

Lowfat Cheese

. ;i.~~·

COUNTRY CLUI

'I, ·Go!

·

Ice Milk .. ... ... .. .

. Angel Food ,.· .• ,
Cake . . ,. .. ,

IS:WMA,-,

°

IC.IOGU WHIII

ctn. ·

&lt;

8:58

Ctnr.

fC"OGU

Pineapple
Juice

•• ·ot
Con

COlD CREST
1·1b
.. lag

IO •o1
• C Oli

CllJ

lk.k;~i'itl;~
Fresh

1-lb

$129

.

' lb.

FRESH lAMED

l · lnch
Pie

• IM SURE

Apple Pie ......... .
16·01 .
loaf
Wheat
Bread
$1

Mushrooms.cart~n

PRISH lAKED WHOLE

3
Cucumbers ......... For
FRESH

l
·Apples ............ . Bag
Rome Apples.

ggc

5
·lb.

llog

FLORIDA 110 SIZE TANGERINES OR

125 SIZE FLORIDA

Tangelos .... .. ....

$239

SJ

IS Far

LQ'T'

Smoked
Sausage

!I"

I HAVE ANCn&lt;ER
FA.I-II LY IN

WELL CO\J'T JU~\P

BY n&lt;E

TO C.:lNCLU SiONS.

CON5UELO

WHO 5A IO ANY ~ lNG ABOUT "'

FAMILY?

W"-~

00 '0U

OHk YES ,

THI TEEN
TO BE

HAVE ANY
BRO T11ER5
OR SISTER S?

EXACT! ,

COLOMBIA, ~1lllH

AMBRIC-\ !
11 ·01 .
Con

5349

sgc

UOGU

·-....na ...... '•·01.
Con

10:00 CII 8 11) QUINCYWhiloworkino

BARNEY

Tea

. ..

KIOOU

Worceatershlre
Sauce .: .... 111.

· 01 .

SaiH
....... !....

32·o•.

U"i'""WIIn.. , . . J•r

KIOCII

Oyater
"--k
,.,._ en ' ' 12·••·
...

9

J4
age
age
69c

~~;.. $

MARM RUSSEL COMEDY

SPECIAL Mark f:tusaell c ontinues
to display his unique form of poli·
tical wit end satire Jive from the
stage ot the Kather ine Cornell
Theatre on the campus the State
Univers ity of New York at Bulfalo .

liiiMI

INIIASSY

boyfriend Eddle arrives at Eastland
School and convinces her to run
away with him and get married.
(Conclusion)
ll1 l12l 0) SOAP Jessica's ba c k.
end I he Tate household i s plunged
into disarray as Valdez and his rag ·
tag crew of guerrillas invade the
premises, and Jodi e makes a
sobering confession to private eye
Maggie Chandler.

Cfl

Sweet
Potatoes . ·~::

IMIAISY

GENUINE IDAHO

RED DELICIOUS

ME "- L &lt;VE LL
ALL FEE L

Maraschino
Cherries ';::·

"

~!. $229
Potatoes ..... .. . Bag

A0 TER

A GOOD HOT

HlllCII!UT

MISSISSIPPI DELTA BLUES

9 :30 (})B CLJ THEFACTSOFLIFEJo' s
W INN IE EVEN A 6000
HOT ME "-L 15 NOT
GOING TO MAKE ME
ACCEPT THE IDE-'

AVONDAlE CUJ

$129

CBS WEDNESDAY

Taped live at the Mississ ippi Delta
Blues Festiva l at Freedom Village,
near Greenville. Mississippi, I h is
documentary presents the histor y
and devetolpm en t of blues on·
sta9_!1 . (60 mins.)

· WINNIE

Mandarin
Ol'fllltta ..

Luncheon Meat .&lt;.&lt;. lb .

May I have a few
minutes with Gretchen
alone?

Arn old gives th e building 's young
Puerto Ri can d oormen the hundred
dollars he 1"1as sa~o~e d to ' inv est' in a
race horse running at B elmont, but
when th e youflg marl admits he
didn 't have the heart tousethe mon·
ey . Mr. Drummond ia so impressed
tha t he offers to help . (Closed·
Captio ned ; U.S .A.)
(3) CBN TELETHON
(() (j}) G) TAXI Louie the di·
spatch er has the dubious honor of
bei ng selected by the boss '
reve nge· seek\ng wife to be her
c landestine lover.

NIGHT MOVIE 'Terror Among Us'
198 1 Stars : Don Mer ed ith , Sarah
Purcell .

AVONOAU

RUSSU COOMEO SALAMI , DUTCH LOAF ,
OR ALL MEAT BOLOGNA

NEWS UPDATE

llJ' llJ ®l

Fried Chicken.

$219

California
Cauliflower

Pear ·
Halves

This is all
m4 fault,

sgc
ggc
sgc
4gc

8 Pieces

PEhU

•••

Cl

READY TO EAT , WISH lONE

$115

llJ

9:00 r{) U ('/) DIFF'RENT STROKES

Mcrshmallow
l l ·OI.
Creme .. lor

IIVAILAII.E ONLY IN
STORES WITH
DELl DEPTS .
HOT FOODS
AVAILABlE 11om
TIL 7pm

T00th piS t e&lt;···&lt; ··
$139
S ampoo . .. .. &lt;.... 11·az.
a11.
Panty Hose ... &lt;.... Pair

SMALL

8:30 [lJ JOHN WESLEY WHITE

Coo

Marsh·
mallows

6. $ 09
~::~ 3 2$1
Cut Corn ..... ... ·

COMFORT STIIDE
NO · NON$ENSE

illl ALLCREATURESGREAT AND

Grapefruit 46
· ·01

99

24·01.

$119

();;~T;,~o
Juice........

7-oz.
Tube

~WI'GOTTA

PO SOMETHING!

9

$ 29

(3-PAK) FROZEN KROGER

CREST

I

1809 Dr. Ephra im McDowell , support ed by the courage and faith of
h is patient Jan e Todd Crawlord.
c ompl eted the first s ucce ssful
OYEHio tomy in th e U.S . and the
world . Thi s progr a m portrays the
c ourage and determination of both
do ct or an d pat ein t, and examines
the
philol'loph.ical
and
psycho logi ca l con si dera ti on o f
being a surgeofl. (90 min s .)

TH QUESTIQN

AVONDIIU

10-az.
Pkgs .

(9) EPHRAIM MCDOWELL'SKENTUCKY RIDE On Christmas Day

COUNTRY OIJIN

Kroger
Cottage Cheese
$149

ENOS Two ph ony

poli~H~men burglarize a mansion
right under t he noses of Enos and
Turk and the victim, a wealthy o il
and cattle baro n. wh o threatens· to
sue the ci ty tor a million dollars , (60
mins.) ,

(on

GOlO CRU1

IROWN 'N' SERVE

FROZEN KROGER PEAS . MI~ED
VEGET AILES OR
•

fll (j) ®J

U ·ol .

White
20·oz .
Bread .........
l¥1.
Kroger RoII s .............11Pke.-oz.
•

Nancy loses her job at a brokerage
firm wh en she a cc epts a modeling
assignment in a TV commercial,
1ha 1re quires her to wear a rave aling
costume . (60 mins.)

POl.U PAl&lt;

IN THE PIECE

KROGER

FACE TO FACE!

,2.

lmbauy
Coffee
Ice
Cream

}b .. $599
Can

LET'S&lt;;EE HOW GOOD YOU ARE

lb
loo

$149

&amp;gc

.. so YOU I'IIN THAT POINT! .. I'I')I'I

C[J HOLLYWOOD SQUARES
(j)il]) DICK CAVETT SHOW
llJII $100,000NAMETHATTUNE
li2J QI FACE THE MUSIC
7 :58 CIJ NEWS UPDATE
8:00 1])8 11) REAL PEOPLE
(]) SIGHTS AND SOUNOS OF
LIFE
(i) MOVIE ·(WESTERN)"" " Big
Jake" 1Q71
@ MOVIE ·(SUSPENSE) •• I&gt;
" The Klllert" 1964
@ G2J Ql EIGHT IS ENOUGH

5

19

$

a••••••••••••••••••
MLi~;;rs .

I DIDH'T TH IN K
WHAT 51\IP'S LIKE! AMYONE COUW
5NE'Ail ON ME THE
\'j~y YOU DID ...

CoHee.

Semi-Boneless
Smoked Hams

"Pot Roast ······ &lt;· ········
. $119
Pork Sausage ..... l-Ib
Roll
l-Ib.
Pkg .

I 01 ,
Con

Instant

14 · 17 ·18 . AYG .
WHOLE

$189
lb.

FISCHIR S JUMIO OR

••••

I&lt; ROGER

FISCHU&lt;S HOT OR MILD

Sgc
• • •

&lt;

(f) SANFORD AND SON
, (j) Q CIJ JOKER'S WILD

LOOKY WHAT I GOT OVER AT
MEU55Y'S BARN SALE, PAW ·A BODACIOUS

BENTWOOD
CHAIR!!

'(QiJ

BETTER
NOT SET

DOWN
ON IT - -

· -OR VOU'll HAVE
VOURSELF A
BODACIOUS
KIND UN' WOOD

CH

as a techn ical adlJiser Ofl a movle
based o n a famous ho mic ide.
Quincy becomes con~o~l nced that
the sociBily prominent woman con·
vlcted o~he slaylng is innocent end
the re el nwrderer i s on the l oose.
(60 mins .)

( 4 ) PRESTO CHANGO : IT'S
MAGIC A mAgi ca l look at the world
o t illusion with top·maglc lans pe rto rminc;;t amazing teats .
( 5) NBA BASKETBALL Atlanta
Hswka va San Diegt Clippers

•••.~.......

rJ rJ

1

tGLUEDE I

rr

J

Now ·arrange the circled letters to
fonn the surprise answer, as sug ·
gested by the above cartoon.

Answe!: KI
·s

vesterda

Y

I

II

(Answers tomorrow)
Jumbles: EMERY TWEAK CHISEL IMPORT
Answe r: Might be t he aut db iogra phy 's " theme " -

Jumble Book No. 15; contakllng 110 puzzles, ls available for $1.75 postpaid
from Jumble, clo this newspaper, Box 34, Norwood, N.J. 07648. Include your
name, .cidrNI, zlp code' and make chiCks payable to Newspaperbooks.

BRIDGE

cOl
IIG VAlUI

W..en &lt;.... ..•••...
Vanlllo

.

PEANUTS

'(OU NEED TO
CONDUCT A

KROGU

Tomoto
Paste ..
O&amp;C
Onion Rillga ~::
ICIOQU QUA.ITIII

59c

..,&amp;gc

earn 011
1•
MarQOrlne .. .,~,:

PERSONAL TIME
AUDIT, 5111.

'(OU NEED TO FIND OUT
WI-lEN '(OUR PEAK WORK
PERIODS ARE ...

ATIME AUDIT WOULD
1-lELP ~OU TO DETERMINE
flOW EACI-1 PORTION OF
'(OUR 171W 15 SPENT...

A TRIBUTE TO MARTIN

LUTHER KING, JR. Some of the
most destinguished black per·
formers in Ameu cajoin for ces with
th e Bullalo Philharmonic Orchestr a 10 A tn bute to th e c ivil right s
leader Juliu s Rud el will c ondu ct
and the prog rll m wlllteature ap·
pearan c es by . among o th ers,
Oscsr winnmg ao t •ess Cec ily
Tyson and te nor Ftnm.. oi s Cle m·
mona . (60 mlns)

I" ) NEWS
10,30 (11J OUTER LIMITS
11 :oo ' ~ l D {t/ Cf l 0 Ill M l
NEWS
l,tl JEWISH VOICE

( 4 ) MOVIE ~(DRAMA)''' " Bridge

AI RPmagen " 1969
MORECAMBE A. NO WISE

19I

1 t . 2B : 3 1 ~EWSUPOATE

'

G2l 61

"·~.

Sure thing game approach
and remarked , "On a good day
NORTH
• QJ 10

I would make a small slam.
Even on a ·fai r day .''

1· 14· 81

East who had been holding
bad cards replied, "Shut up
and play ."
If South had opened with

.KB
• K J 10 B 6
7 53

+
WEST
K 42
"QJ 1075

+

.98 7&gt;3&lt;

+71

• 932
+A Q2

• 962

two notrump , not the worst
overbid we have ever seen,

EAST

and North had overbid righ t
back at him and jumped to
six , South would have had an
automatic play al his disposaL
He would win the heart 1n his
own hand , lead the nine ol diamonds and le t it ride. II West
held Lhe queen South would

+81
SOUTH
+A6
"A6 4
• 9 53
+AKQJ 10

score four diamonds tricks
plus five clubs, two hearts and
one spade for his slam. ·

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
Wesl

Nortb

East

Soulb

Pass
Pass
Pass

I+

Pass

3 NT

Pass

2 NT
Pass

14

' Playing at three, South
looked around to find a sure
thing play lor his three
notrump, With everything
wrong he could come to nine
Lricks and he decided to settle
for the sure nine a nd leave the

overtricks for opti mi sts.
He won the first trick with
his ace ol hearts and played
the a ce and six of spades.
West took his king and set up
his hearts, bul dummy 's queen
ol spades became the ninth
trick .

Opening lead:•Q

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Son lag
South looked over dummy

(N f;:WSPAfi EH ENTEilPR ISE A~SN .)

l!i~!M·wK

by THOMAS JOSEPH
2 T.R .'s
ACROSS
I School subj.
first mate
5 Say with
3 Popular
difficulty
newspaper
9 Potpourri
name
10 Stimulate
4 Farmer's
13 Frost
implement
14 Mmor
5 Lead sulfide
6 Region
15 Expert
16 My (Lat.)
7 Maritime
call
17 Gob
8 Pimplelike
18 Minimize
elevation
20 The gwns
11 The 1'S" in
Zl Beverage
22 Fruit decay
S.W.A.K.
23 - mignon 12 Printing
26 Dutch city
gaffes
Z7 Over
16 Convene
again
211 - markee
29 Mrs.
McKinley
30 Empty
talk
34 Spanish
composer
35 Obtained
36 Before
37 Golfer
Palmer
39 Gloat
40 Looked
maliciously
U Opera
42 Disclaim
43 Whir!'
DOWN
I Ethical

Yesterday's Answer
19 Fret
22 Champagne's
descriptive
23 Saudi
Arabian king
24 Indian city
25 Scholarly
26 New recruit

28 Tacky
31 Eagle's nest
32 Muslim
decree
33 Kingly
35 Valley
38 Mining find &lt;
39 Exclude

DAILY CRYPTO(}UOTE- Here's how to work It:
A X V D I. B, A A X R
l.ONGFEI.LOW

Is

.One lett er simply stands for a nother. In

this

sa mple A. ia

US(' d for th e three I.'s , X for the tw o O's , etc. Single letters,

apostrophes, the length · and form ation of the wnrd! are all ·
hints . Each day the C'Ode lelters arc differ en~ .

CRVPTOQUOTES

(fJ®J mVEGA$WhenashOOI·OUI
in the desert turns a blackma il
sc h e me Into murder, the only
witness .. a
salty
old
pros pector··lays c lsim to a hot mii IJon and frames his old t rte nd Dan
Ta nna as the thief . {60 mins.)

J-r I XI I XXJ

THE ME

WOMAN Art exclusive documen tary that provides new insight into
the life of the legendary first lady.

01

UOGU

Pkg.

([) FACE THE MUSIC
fll l]) ®l CBS NEWS
ClJ WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
(i]) LILIAS, YOGA AND YOU
lftlll!l ABC NEWS
6:58 CIJ NEWS UPDATE
7:00 (}) IJ PM MAGAZINE
CIJ SEND FORTH YOUR SPIRIT
CIJ ALLIN THE FAMILY
l})li2J QI FAMILYFEUD
crJ WILD KINGDOM
fll l]) TIC TAC DOUGH
(I) @
MACNEIL-LEHRER
REPORT
(iQ) NEWS
7:30 (f) IJ BULLSEYE
(}) ATHOME WITH THE BIBLE
(!) LEGENDS: ELEANOR RDDAN
UNCOMMON
SEYELT:

AVONOA l l

Sweet
Peaa.. ..

(0f'VA1CHT 1911 fHE KROGER CO ITIMS AND PII([S
GOOD SUNOAY JAN . I I THIW ~MURDAV IAN 17 lUI

·"-- .

6:00 (2) 1J I1) 0 CIJ 1l~Hl21 Ql NEWS
aJ BIBLE BOWL
C!)
CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
I§) ABCNE\NS
·({) 3· 2· 1 CONTACT

AND

!heM

four ordinary words.

EVENING

CHARMING MI!!S CORY DEAN-

ol

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one tetter to each square. to form

JAN . 14, 1911r1

150 Mill St., Middleport, Ohio
· Will Be Mon.· Tues. · Thurs. 9 :00 A.M.-4 : 00P.M.
•'
Wed. &amp; Fri . 9:00A .M .· 2:00P.M.
CLOSED SATURDAY

CAPTAIN EASY

Exh

ft Jllfrul fe'l'il ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
r:!J ~ ~U;)!.!l l!l by Henri Arnold and Bob lee

SDPZ

X

YK

DMGDKC

I DH Z

UD.JSZU

D

J SDA

HQACXWZUZ\\1
HQAP ZAXZA HZ

DA

QUADYZAJ.

- QMXPZU
GZAWZMM
SQMYZC
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: IN GIVING PRESENTS, GIVE A
GIRL SOMETHING SHE CAN WEAR, AND A BOY
SOMETHING HE CAN EAT.- ED HOWE
POETRY AWARD
NEW YORK (AP)- Mona Van buyn has been awarded a $10,000 fellowship by the Ac-ademy or American

Poets.
Mi55 Van Duyn is the 4011) recipient of the award,
which is given at least once a year "lor distinguished
&lt;pqetic achievement." '
She is the author of five books of poetry.

�..

Philson, Ste.wart named as
girl scout cookie chairmen
Mrs. Pat Philson and Mrs. Susie
Stewart have been named the Meigs
County Girl Scout cookie chairman.
Mrs. Philson will serve the East
Meigs area, wllile Mrs. Stewart will
serve the West Meigs section.
Scouts will be taking order,s from
Jan. 30 at 4 p.m. through Feb. 14.
Cookies wtll be delivered from March 16-27.
The cookie sale is the main fundraiser for the Girl Scouts, and 20 cents of the cost of $1.50 per box remains'
in the troop treasury. A larger por·
tion of the sale price goes to the

Black Diamond Gtrl Scout Counctl
fm· general expenses, service to
tr oops.
and
equipping
and
r e novating established camps
within the CounciL The goal of the
Council is the sle of 743,000 boxes.
Suppher again this year is the Little Brownie Bake rs. Seven varieties
will be sold - samoas, forget-menots, s upennints, d&lt;rsidos. vanchos,
tagalongs, and trefotl. Pa)ment is
made when the cookies are
delivered .
Sale incentives being offered to
the scouts this year include posters
to color to all sellers. patches for all

bunting from Landmark,' Pomeroy ;

$3 gift certificate from The Fabric
Shop, Pomeroy; a $5 gift certificate
from the Kiddie Shoppe, Pomeroy ;
baby's first blocks from Moore's in
Pomeroy; a $10 gift certiftcate from
Powell's Super-Valu, Pomeory; a
free dmner for the parents at Grow's
Steak House, · Pomeroy; a pair of
baby shoes,
Hartley Shoes,
Pomeroy: a case of canned milk

from Kroger's in Pomeroy: a case of
baby foods from the Mark V Super
Market, Middleport; a $10 savings
ac~ount from the Mark V Super

Fire victims' shower asked
A miscellaneous shower for Mtke
and Kathy Powell and family who
lost all their possessions in a fire
Sunday, will be held Sunday at the
Middleport Fire Departmeut at 2
p.m.
The clothing sizes for the parents
and their five sons are as follows:
Mike Powell, pants, 38, any
length; shirt, extra large or 17-17 1·&gt;;
socks, 11-11; underwear, 38; coat. 48 ,
or extra large, and shoes, !l-9h.
Kathy Powell, pants, 18 or 38 stret-

.ch; tops,,large; coat, 40-42.
Joe, pants, 32-31; shtrt. 15-15"z ;

socks, 9-11; underwear, 32-34; coat,
32-24.
Btll. pants, 33-32; shirt, mediwn ;
socks, 11-11; underwear, 32-34; coat,
32-34; shoes,!().!!.
Steven, pants , 32-31; shirts,
mediwn. 15-15 1 ~ ; socks. HI; underwear, 32-34 ; coal, 32-34: shoes,
10.
'
Johnny, 32-31; shirt, mediwn, 1!&gt;151&gt;; socks, 11-11; underwear, 32-34;
coal, 34-35. Ronnie, pants, 16 husky ; shirt, 1618 boys: soc]~$, 10 boys; underwear.
16-18 boys ; coat, 16 boys ; shoes, 5-

receive patches.

Daniels hospitalized
Mrs. Harry L. Bailey has received
word that her sister, Mrs. Hugh
(Esther) Daniels, a former
Pomeroy resident, has be'en
hospitalized for eye surgery in
Miami, Fla.
Mrs. Daniels suffered a detached
retina and was hospitalized earlier
for treatment. She was returned
Saturday to her home following the
surgery -and is improving satisfactorily. The family moved recently
from Miami to Boynton-Beach, Fla .
Thetr address is 8701 Duchess Court,
,East, Boynton Beach, Fla. 33438.
HERE FRIDAY
A representative of the U. S.
Railroad Retirement Board will be
at Hobson Conrai! Yard office
'' Friday, Jarl. 16, from 12:15 p.m. until! :30 p.m.
Anyone wishing to transa ct
busine~,

have questions concerning

retirement, medicare, unemployment, or sickne;;s benefits may
meet with the representative.
SPECIAL S&amp;'lSION
Bedford Township Trustees will
meet in special session on Jan. 24 at
10 a.m. to appropriate funds for 1981.

'WIIiCli4RCB SHOCKS

I"~

Gr1ppvrs ss."s ca .
Supe.r 500's s 15 75 ea.
· A~r )hOlk ., Monroe
Max 1 Air 1~o p.s. t.
S6'i'.'il~

White S1ock la!tts

-111. (;
V .

Racine, Oh.

Pubhc Notice
PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS
COUNTY , OHIO
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
The following persons
were, on the dates shown,
appointed to administer th@
following
decedents r
es ta tes pendmg in the
Meios County P ro bate
Court :
Fiduc iary ' s Name, Ad·
dress and T •tie, Date of Ap·
pointm c nt ,
Decedents
Name and Address, and
Case Number are listed.
Ruth Schartiger , Ad ·
ministratrl x, Rt 1, Mid·
dleport , Oh 1o, 12·11 ·80,
Howard L. 'Searls, Rt . 1,
Middleport. Ohio 23.270 .
Minni e R . Wooten Ad·
ministratr ix, Rt. 3, Albany,
Ohio, 12 l.l-80, Anaerson
Wooten , Rt 3, Albany,
OhiO. 23.290.
Bobby Rathburn , Ad mini s trator , Rutland, Ohio,
12 IS-80, Terry Rathburn,
Rutland, Oh io, 23,293.
Bernard V. Fultz.
Executor, P 0 Box 723,
Pomeroy, Ohio, 11 ·24-80,
James F . Arnold, 625
Chestnut St ., Mldd (cport,
Ohio. 23.301.
Jean · Seidenabel,
ExecutriK , 500 Spring
Avenue. Pome roy, Ohio,
12·24, 80, John Duerr, R . o:
3, PomeroY. Ohio. 23.29 1.

WEDNESDJ\ Y
-

MIDDLEPORT

Lions Club regular meeting, noon
Wed
d
M · 1

nes ay,at e1gs nn.
DIU RS DAY
MIDDLEPORT CHILD

Passed 12 15·80
ATTEST :
Jane watton Cleek
APPROVED
Clarence Andrews
Mayor
( l l 7. 14. 2fc

_

Colburn.

or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St;, Pomeroy, 0., 45769

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX
•ANNOUNCEMENTS
I- Card of Th1nln

•RENTALS
41 - Housn tor Rent

2- ln Memoriam
J-A nnouncements

42-Mobill Homes

~ - GI\II!.WOIV

u - •Purmltnt for ·Rtnt

S- H•ppy Ads

•- lost •nd Found

4S-FM:ooms
u - s,utct tor Rent

1- Yard S•te

u - wanMd to Renl

for li!ent

1- Public Stir

4t- Equtpmenl for Rent

\Aut: lion

9- WYnted to 8U}'

•MERCHANDISE

•EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
11_ He1p w1 nt.O

'1 - HI)UUMDidGoocb
U - CB, TV RldiO EQUIJH1'U!A1

U - AMiques
S4- Mnc Merchandht
n - luildinl Suppl ies
u-Pels lor S•le

11- Sit111fed ranted

ll- lnsurlnU
••- Buslnus Trilm 1ng
U- Schoots 1n1truC'Ion
aRad io, TV
&amp; CB Re~ir

•FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

11- W•nled To Do

" - F•rm EQII•pm.ent

• FINANCIAL
11- euslntu
OppOrfUf11ty
n - Mon•v lo Lun
U- Proltulonat
Servo en

t1- W.nteG to Buy

11-

Tr~cu

tor Sele

•TRANSPORTATION

•REALESTATE
l! - Homt5 lor s.te ·

7i - A11to, tor S;~le

l1 - Mo .. lo •Hom"

15AUto Puts
&amp; Atuuortts

t 12) 31 1 (I) 7, 1.4. Jt c

7l- VInt.&amp;4W . D

71- Auto Re~lr

I

Con~

Want-Ad Advertising
Deadlines

?.Jo PM Da•lv

Noon Slturd~
lorMoncl•v

eSERVtCES
11 - Homelmprov•m•nr,
n-Ptumbm•&amp; E•uuttnt
ll-EIICh' 1 ""'
14- Eitttrlut
&amp; Rtlrlttrallon
ls-Gener•l H•ullnt
lt-M.H ••P•~r
17- Upholstery

'

°

Rates and Other Information
15WordurUndl!r
1 dilly
~dillys
11 •vs

c.,,.
1.00
1.so
1.10

u1y1

1.00

,

chart•

us
1 to

u
1n
2

El ernentary

basketball coaches, elementary
princip.tls, and others interested, 8

E•cnwordo'ltrthemin•mum!Swords !stcentiperwordperday ,
Ads rvMint other •nan constcuflve d1ys wilt be ch•rt~ at lnt 1d•v
""·
In ml!mory, Clrel of Tftlnll\ O!M Ooltu&lt;~r~ · . ctnl1 JMr word. uoo
minimum C•stllnldvan(• .

p.m. Thursday, Middleport Elementary School. Schedules and other in-

"'•"'""•m•"""""Y·
"""I""'"'"',.,•I••"""'"''"
Unl dNirU lor ads' urrylng So• Number In Clrl ol T!tl!

in Pmneroy.
MEIGS

LOCAL

H•n es,
Exec utr.x , 2893 Ne1 l Ave.,
Apt . 402C , Columbu s, Ohio,
11 3 80, Maud A. Gruescr,
M1nc rsville, Oheo, 23 ,2 73.
E

74- MOf. . C'fCIItl

lor Salt 1
ll- Farms lor .Salt
34- B•uinllss lvlkllngs
Jr-Loti&amp;A(r••••
l6- Rul Est lit Wlntta

11

PROBATE-COURT
· OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
The following persons
were, on the dates shown,
applnted to adminiSter the
following
decedents '
estates, pe nd ing in the
Me igs County P ro ba te
·Court :
F 1du.c1ary 's Name. Ad·
dress and Title, Date at Ap
pointment.
Decedent s
Narne and Address. and
case Number a re list ed.
Myrtle /\bles, ExecutriX,
Long Bottom, Oh10, 10 22
80, Corrent R. De Lur, Par
tl a nd, Ohio, 23,206
Myrtle Abies , Execu tr1x,
Long Borrom , Ohto, 10 22
80 , Louis A. l)eluz , Par
tland , Ohio, 23,205.
Doris
Thomas ,
Exec ufrix , Rutl a nd , Ohio,
11 5 80, E tn e l M . Ne lson ,
Rutland, Ohio, 23 738 .
Ches ter N . Ha d dox.
exec utor , 141 5 . E St.,
Dania , Flonda , 10 8 80,
Hermao W . Haddox, Mid ·
d leport, Ohio, 23,211.
Rowena Vauc;han , Ad ·
m inistraln x, Martin St ,
Pomeroy, Ohio, 12· 1 80 , E .
M Harrah, -48150 ST . Rt . {I) 7, 14 , 21 . 3tc
248 ; Long Bottom , Ohio,
13. 267 .
Jeanne

tl- liV.SfOCt.
~- H~y &amp; Orair.
U - Sud~ F~rll l iUr

17- Hullon

BUSY BEE CLASS, Middleport
l"irst BaptiSt Church, 7:30 p.m .
Thursday, horne of Mrs. Mary
Brewer.
DE MOCR A T
Centra I an d
Executive corrunittces. 7:30 Thursday evemnu at the Carpenters Hall

• . S nda
DedtCatZO n U ry

Public Notice

PHONE 992-2156

the speakt!r. Devotions by Peggy
J
ff
. H
Hams. ostesses. an~t Du y, Ann

Elected to Contmental Congress to
be held in Wa&gt;hington , D. C. April30
to May 4, wer• Mrs. Yost and Mrs .
Ingels as delegates ~nd Mrs. Ashley.
alternate.
The state conference is being held
in Akron this year due to the closing
of the Net I House in Columbus . .

.....,

WANT AD INFORMATION

servation LP.ague, 7:30 p .m. Thursday at the home of Helen
Blackston. Robert Schmoll will be

morris.

order l5
senun••·

Pui"lic Notice
ORDINANCE
NO . S16
An Ordinance to amend
Ordinance No, 379, Or ·
11nance No. 401 , Ordinance
No. 407, Ord1nance No. 431.
Ordinance No 440, Or
d inance No 451, Ordinance
No. 454, Ord ina nce No. 456,
Q(dinance No. -473, Ordlnance No 485, Ordinance
No. 501·, Ord ina nc e No. 511.
to fix salaries and wages of
othhel_oVill•ge ol Pomeroy ,
.
BE IT ORDAINED, as
follows , by the CounCil of
the Village of Pomeroy.
Oh1o, two·th1rds of all
m embe rs elected thereto
concu rr ing that Ordinance
No. 379, dated February 6,
1969 ; Ordinance No 401 ,
dated Jvne I, 1970 ; Or·
dl nan ce No. 407, dated
November 1, 1970; Or
d•nance No. 431. dated May
15, 1971, Ordinance No 440,
dated August 20, 1973 : Or·
di na nce No. 45 1, dated July
I, 1974; Ordinance No. 456,
dated February J. 1975. Or
dina nce No . 473 , dated June

- - -

.
----_,1n Memoriam
-

1. __

In tov•ng memory of Jack
Sharpna ck who passed
away January 13, l'il80.
;
Your memory Is a keep·
sake,
With whi&lt;:.h we will never
par f .
God has you in His keeping,
we nave you 1n our hea rts.
Sadly m1ssed by wife,
E ltzabeth, daughters, so ns,
&amp; grandchild r en

a

Mr. and Mrs. Dana Aldridge,
Mmersville, the former Connie Arnott, announce the birth of their first
child, a son, Erron Cain, born Dec. 2
at St. Joseph Hospital in Parkersburg. Erron l"eighed six pounds, two.
ounces and was 19 inches long.
Maternal grandparenlS are Mr. and
Mrs. Wtlliam Arnott, Racine, and
the paternal grandmother is Mrs.
Betty Curfman, Syracuse.

on

{si11/U/ T!llfS )sa~~
co sf

Monroe Shoctt:s · B.iffenes
Walker E'Rhausts · Starters
Anti· Freeze · Ignition Pilrls
W.1gner Brakes · A11ernr~tors
Frrtm Filters · GolTcs Products Tools.

CENTER

&amp; AUTO PARTS
Andy &amp; Bettv Porter

Mech.w;~~~r~~~:

.R.\JJ'c:

ma .

'.(:
·· , , t150

T aK service, federal, state,
&amp; quarterly taxes done by
appointment Se~ Wanda
Eblin, - ~1000 Laurel Clift
Ro~d.
Pomeroy , Ohio
4S769 , m nn

Income tax serv1ce, federal
state. Wallace Russell
Bradbury, call992 7228.

&amp;

MEIGS MUSEUM open by
appointment January ·Mar
ch . \1'12·2264, '1'12 2802, 992
2360 or 992 2639 Histories
for
sale
Pomeroy
Middleport Librar ies '

The

Gun Shoot : every Sundav
at I p.m . al Rut l•n d
Alflerican Legion m a tur
nace heated building . Fac
tory choked guns only ,
6

. -. -

Lost. and Found

Lost : two male rabbit dogs.
white with black spots. No
collar . Reward . J .C. Chan
cey, Racine. Ohio. 949 2320.

Yard Sale

HOUSEHOLD
items ,
wastier,
dryer ,
etc.,
clotnes, mtsc . items for
sate Living room sate.
Jan. u, ll, 14, 15. 10 4. R t 7
to S Points, left on Flat
woods Rd . then lell on Co.
Rd. 25. Jrd Trailer on lef t.
992·7¥17.
t

BUY 1ST PAIR% PRICE AND GO
THE 2ND PAIR FOR ONLY

'10qo
MANY OTHER SAVINGS FOR MEN,
WOMEN AND CHILDREN
THROUGHOU't THE STORE.

c·H APMAN'S SHOES
" Next t

&gt;

E lbcrtcld~ in p ,, mer .,y"

IRON AND BRASS BEDS,
old flH'nlture. des ks, gold
rings, lewelry, silver
dollars, sterling, etc., wood
' tee bOMes,jars antiques,
etc . Complete households.
Write M. D . Miller , Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, OH1 or call 992
7760.

HEARl NG TESTS SET
For Meigs County, Ohio

ELECTRONIC
HEARING TESTS

~ :wanted to Buv

lltURSDAY,
JANUARY 15, 1981
9 AM TO 12 NOON

Will Be Given By
Mr. H . W. Mattingly

BELTONE Consultant

Who Will Be At:
MEIGS INN, POMEROY, OHIO
Anyone who has troubl e hearing 1S welcome to have a hea r ing test us
ing modern electronic equipment to determme if his toss Is one which
may be helped . some ol the causes ol hearing loss wil l be explained
and diagrams of how the ear works wil l be shown .
We Also Scrv•ce and Repair All Makes of Hearing Aids
Batteries ilnd Supplie5 For All Makes For Sale
IF YOU CANNOT COME IN CAI. L FOR A HOMj' APPOINTMENT .
PHONE 992·3629

WANTED
TO
BUY :
GOLD,
SI~VER.
PLATINUM, STERLING·
COINS, R I NGS.JEWELR ·
Y, MISC. ITEMS . AB ·
SOLUTE
MARKET
PRICI! GVARANTED ED
BURI(ETT
BARBER
SHOP. MIDDLEPORT,
OHlOfH-3476
OLD COINS, pocket wat·
ches, clAss rings, weddmg
banctt. diamonds. Gold or
sllvo~• Call J . A. Wamsley ,
J.t2·2;uf. Treasure Chest
Coin SIIIJp, Athens, OH . SY1

642.

ft~l~ Y!a~t~d : :

""""-'=

LADY or girl to live 1n. 992·
2686.

F. S. ~~N.
50RWSSST·•

~GOH,N·

Someone tor phor)e sales. 1!=======::=~;::~~~~;::===::!-J
Two evenings per week. pPay on commission basis.
992·2156.
18
Wanted to Do

NATIONWIDE
•
INSURANCE
NEACIL E. CARSEY
AGENT
Poll!erov, Ohio
992-2403/9,82·6226

------------Real Estaze- General
- ,.-

---- --

~-

HOBSTETIER REALTY
GeorgeS. Hobstetter Jr.
Broker
Ofliee 741-2003

HAYES
REALTY

CHARLES M. HAYES
BROKER
NEACIL E. CARSll
BRANCH MANAGER

:R.ea
- - Esia1iE ~
Homes for Sale

10 ROOM bnck, 3 baths, 1''•
acre ; 6 rooms, 2 baths, 1112
acres; 6 rooms basement,
bath, 2 mobile homes ;
Mason, 3 Gedroom never
lived in, 2 bedroom, rented
2 acres . John Sheets, 3V2
,m11es south of Midd lepor t,
Rt . l.

-----------1

-

-

Real ESTate- General

-----

Pomeroy,Ohio
992-2403

Appealing Clown!

~-----

IL----------11

p

V Oh

omero •

Open

Housing
He;J(/quarters

KAUFPS
PWMBING
AND
HEATING

.

Saturday Only
4 P.M. to 11 P.M.
Free Coffee &amp; Tea
Free Food
Lt' ve Music

12 Park st.
Ml'ddleport, Oh.
Ph. 992·6263
Anytime
12·17· 1 mo.

12·31 ·1 mo.

~~=====l=- ==·=l=m~o=.j~=========i~========~
ALL STEEL

- - - -· --·------- -------

41

·-·--···- -

· · -Houses
- · - -for- Rent
--- -

Stzes
"From 30x30"
SMALL

Utility Buildings

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

Sizes from 4x6 to 12x40

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt. J, Box 54
Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614-143-2591
6·15-ttc

GA~E
-Auto and Truck
Repair
-Transmission
Repair
Hrs.: Mon.·Fri .
9 A.M.-5:30P.M.

One bedroom furnished
house 1n Pomeroy . Phone
992 ·2288 after'6.
One bedroom furnished
house 1n Pomeroy. Phone
992 ·2288 after 6.

---------

for R en1
42
Mobile Homes
10 )(55 two
home
5858.

b~d~~~ ;,~bile
near Rac1ne . 992·

CUNftiNGHAM
&amp; ASSOC.
Mortgage Bankers

ROGER HYSELL'S

NICE 4 bedroom brick
home in Middleport . No
pets. Deposit and reference
required . 992 3457.

10-7-tlc

REESE

shU

Rutland Furniture Carpet Shop

(i)

January Inventory Sale
2 Rolls
KITCHEN CARPET Rubber
Back
CARPET
With Padding
SHAG
Installed

TRENQIING
SERVICE

1975 two bedroom mobile
home for rent, part1al(y
furnished in excellent con
dition . Located in the Coun·
ty Mobile HOme Park, nor
th of Pomeroy . $150.00
month . 247 39-12.

Water·Sewer· Electric
Gas llne'·Ditches
Water Line Hook-ups
Septic Tanks r
County Certified
Roush Lane
Cheshire, Oh.
Ph. 367·7560

FOR

~~======~1-~~t~lc~i

V.C. YOUNG II

992-621S or 991-7314
Pomeroy, Oh.

S699

VIRGIL B. SR. •t

li t

tO"'

216 E . Second Street

Phone
1- (614)-992-3325
NEW PRICE - Fur ·
nished 3 bedroom hpme
with new b~th, goodcen·
fral heating, eal ·ln kit·
chen, full basement !!nd
large lot In the .country
for only $30,000 .
NEW PRICE - 7 room
home with all utill1ies .
Needs some fixing, bvt
might sell on land con·
tract, or good offer.
LINCOLN
HTS .
Large long lot with rear
entrance .
Has 3
bedrooms, bath , fur ·
nace , full basement,
n•ce remodeled kitchen,
carpeting, and some
storm windows. Only
$16,500.
SYRACUSE
Moderate 2 bedroom
home near pool and
ballpark.
Central
heating, basement. 2
porches, and large extra
lot on 2 streets.
INCOME - 2 business
build ings with good
wrlte·off .
LIST NOW AND GET
YOUR
APPR.ECIA ·
TION FROM YOUR
HOME. CALL 99l-JJI5
or 992-317~.

Housing
Headquarters

NEW LISTING - IN
Town - One floor plan,
3 bedroom ' house with
central air, full base·
ment, forced air hea1.
carpeted, patio with
sliding doors. S21 ,500.00
NEW LISTING - 2
bedroom bargain, S
room house wi1h range,
ref. Gas heat. In town
and only SII ,OOO .OO.
OWNER WOULD CON·
SIDER ~AND CONTRACT - On thiS 4
bedroom home with ap prox. 13 acres near
Syracuse. $39,900.00.
MAKE AN OFFER On this 2 bedroom hous
ein Syracuse equipped
with range. hood, and
ret . Insulated . SOx100 ft.
lot . 524,900.00.
I ACRES - And a 2
bedroom ranch home
wihf range, ref . and
woodburner .
Block
garage. S2•,900 .00.
PRICE REDUCED On fhls .c bedroom home
on approx I acre lot .
EncloSed porch, storage
building . Near m ines.
s13.500.00.
REALTOR
Henry E. Cletand, Jr.
992·6191
Roger &amp; Dottie Turner
992-5692
Jean Trusseii949-Z660
OFFICE 992·2259 .

.A

I]
. ..,0.

Real EUate- General
-------

~~------

CENTRAL REALTY
NEW LISTING - 1 Acre level lot, gas &amp; water lines
in front ot property . Close to schools, churches and
stores. Asking $6,.500.
NEW LISTING - Country Home on I acre lot.
Large living room , kitchen and den. Includes 3
bedrooms, laundry area, and outside build ing tor
storage and car. Asking under $30,000.
· "COMFORTABLE" 3 bedrooms, large living room,
atso family room, storag&lt;&gt; bldg. and large garage
space. Asking SJ7 ,000. Give us your offer .
THIS HOME has 3 BR •s with hardwood lloors, large
eat· in kitchen, built m cabinets, full basement, has
been 1aken good care of and waiting for new owner
to give it equal care. S39,000.

GOOd ~ exercise b1ke .
Call alter 5 p m &lt;11 992 7015 .

3 AND 4 RM furnished ap-

742-2211

Main St.
.

--

- -

.-

CH IP WOOD. Poles max.
d1ameter 10" on largest
end . Sl2 p·er ton Bund led
slab. $10 per ton. Del1vered
to Oh10 Pallet Co., Rt 2,
Pomeroy 992-2689 .

Misc. Merchcmise

54

&amp;

~ 3Hii5Pi'iaiian ~

-

- - - -

- -

--~-~-----

~

~

unturn1shed one bedroom
apartment for rent Ren· FIR-EWOOD $35. a lruck
ters asststance available load, s60. a cord . All har~
for senior Citizens . Contact dwood , sptit, &amp; delivered.
Village Manor Apartments 843· 4831 or 943·4734
at 991-7787.
SPECIAL DISCOUNT
Apt lor rent. 3 rooms &amp; pr ices on furniture.
Reupho lstenng . Jan. &amp;
b•th . 992·S908 .
Feb , 1981.
Mowr ev's
Upholstery , P1 . Pleasant ,
unlurn ished apartments W.Va . 1·304-675·4154.
for rent in the Pomeroy·
Middleport area . '1'/2 ·7511
Split seasoned firewood for
or992-6130.
sale. $35.00 delivered . 247 ·
3972 or 247 ·2575.
Two bedroom apartment
for rent, adutts only .
FIREWOOD for sale.
Deposit required. REferen· Seasoned,
hardwood, $30 .
ces required. 992·3647 . Two
load, split &amp; delivered. 992
miles out on 143
S240.

-------

126-ThriftJ Cr~ftJ nowtn

125-Petal ~ilts
124-E., Gtfts 'n' Ornomtnb
123-Siilth 'n' P1tch Quills
122-St~H '1' Puff Quilts

120-tiGC~It "~' w.......
llHIS) Art at Flower C1athtt

FiftJ Quilts
llH., A1t at liPJit Coochtt
IU.C.Oplttl Gilt look
109-Sosl + Klit (laic tiaut inc!)

115-llttr

105-lnstant Crochll
102-Mustum Qutlb
101-Quilt llool c.tlectioo I

-- ·-

---~

Furnished Rooms

-------·-·

Three sleeping rooms, con·
struction workers only,
priva1e
entrance,
refrigera1ion, television,
coffee maker . Call after .c,

ow at
Pomeroy
Landmark

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

TRAILER spaces tor_renf.
Southern Valley Mobl!e
Home Park, Chesh ire. Oh.
992·3954.

Gu R•"~
sno.oo
Co-op SPiiU Heatllr, 10.000 btu

'"' ,,

Und Xl 12 Cltaln Slw

1115.00

comlort Cl0" Kerosene
Economy C21-0,.3)
Reg. tm.u
NowllU ''

.t heaters,

!\?,.,.__,

-

POMEROY

~LANDMARK
E . Ma1n St.

51

CB,TV, Radio

Pomeroy

Equ~pm!n~

RCA console 25 inch color
television . $40.00. Needs
some repair. 992·5834 after
5

.
53

-----Anti~u.es

ATTENTION :
(IM ·
PORTANT TO YOU ) Will
pay cash or certified check
For Jntiques and collec
tibles or entire · esta1es.
Nothing too large. Also,
guns, pocket ·watches and
coi n collections. Call 614
767 3167 or 551-3411.

72

Trucks tor Sale

1974 Chevy Suburban
ton. 995·417 3.
--- -74
Motorcycle s

1~

1978 KAW ASAKI KZ 650
motorcyc le, color blue .
Caii949·164Y.
76

Auto Pc:HtS
&amp; Accessones

2 steel belted radial st ud
ded snow tires Mounted on
wheels, 70xl5. 2 wheels,
78xl5. 992-3061.

-----~

NEED items tor your
Mobile Home? Visit our
parts store &amp; pick up a tree
catalog. At Kingsbury
Home Sales Park &amp; Ac ·
cessories. R1 . 124 Miner ·
sville, Oh. 992-5587 .

99~ · 7791.

46
_Sp~c~ l?f R_e'!t
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park. Route 33. Norlh of
Pomeroy . Large lo1s . Call
992·7479.

1971 OLD$ . Cutl•ss . 742
2220.

56

-

-

.Pets
-... for .s~11e

HOOF HOLLOW : Horses
and ponies and ridin g
lesso ns .
Everything
1maginat.ole in horse equip·
men!. Blank e ts, belts,
boots, etc . English and
western . Ruth Reeves
(614) 699·3290 .
PUREBRED
English
Shepherd puppies Stock
and watch dogs Phone 247
2161.

Home
~mp~o~e_ments

Gene's Carpet Clear1mg,
deep stream e)(traction .
Free
es t imated,
reasonable rates , scot
chquard 992·6309 or 742 ·
2211 '

KIT 'N' CARLYLE'" .

Electrical
RetrigeriltJOn

SE W I NG
MACHINE
Repairs,
service,
all
makes1
992 · 2284. T he
Fabric 5hop, Pomeroy.
Authonzed Singer · Sale!'t
and Service We sharpen
SCISSOrS .

---------

ELWOOD

BOWERS
Sweepers,
toasters, iro ns, a II small ·
appliances. Lawn mower .
Next to State Highway
Garage on Route 7, 985·
3825.
REPAIR

APPL IA' NCE . SERVICE:
a ll makes washer, dryers,
ranges. dishwashers.
d1 sposa ts, water tanks Call
Ken Young at 985 3561. 28
years ox per1ence. Also will
sell parts vou fix .
0 x M E lectri ca I Contractors. Residential, commer ci al.
&amp; industrial
wiring. Se rvice ca lls . Free
esti mt9 tes. Call co llect 388 ·
9764 .

as
81

I

J &amp; F BACKHOE SER VICE lisce nsed 8. bonded ,
septic tank installation,
water &amp; gas lines . Ex
cavating work &amp; transit
layout. 992 7201 .
84

-------

45

EJtC_ava!•l!9 __ ,.

eJ

Wanted 1o Buy

62

Firewood tor sale, Mixed
Autos for Sc1te
types of wood. $35 .00 per 71
p
1ck-up
load
De
li
vered,
1975
CHEVY
Nova hal·
Furntshed aparTments, 992·
3129, 992 ·5914, or 1·304·992- will stack for Senior . chback . Good co nd. 742·
C1rizens. 843·4951 or 843· 2421.
2566.
2815.

GIVe a ch1ld hou•s and hoUIS of
happ' plaj w1th IhiS livelj clown.
Fun to make, costs so httlet
He's J6 1nch lall and flip-flops
mto lhe lunniesl PQS1I1ons on
flo01 01 bed Pallem 7452 : llans1!1 of head. leatul!s shoes: easlto-lollow dlrectmns ror clown.
$2.00 11!1 each pallem. Add 501
ea~h pattern for first-class Ill·
m01 l and handlmg S..4 to:
Alitt Brllob
htdltclllt Otpt.
- ·t
l he Daily Sentinel
Bo1 161, Old Chelstl Sta., New
Yon, NY 10113. P1lnt "''"'·
Add1oss, Zip, Potttm Nombor.
Catch on lo the craft boom' Send
lor our NEW 1981 NEEOLECRAfl
CAlALOG: Ovo1 172 desi1ns. 3
'"' pattems inSide. $1.00
All UAFT IOOlS .. $1.75 tiC~
134-14 quick M1chlnt Quilts
133-flllllDII lttN Quiltin1
132-QuiH Ori&amp;illlh
131-A,_ I llock Quilts
130-Sw•tor FMioo~Sim 31-56
129-Qulck 'n' E., T11Mhts
121-(.....,. Pltehwark Quilts
121-Afp•os 'n' Doilios

Sq.
.
Yd.
Cash-n-carry

RUTLAND FURNITURE

fS . Phone 992·5434.

1 bedroom apartment
utilities pa id. John Sheets,
3112 miles south Middleport,
Rt. 7.
'

$r/J

Installed

.

Apdrtmenr
for Rent

Reg. $15-95

yd.

&amp; Up

Good selection roll end remnants $3.99 up
Drive A Little- Save A Lot

"YOUNGS
CARPENTER
SERVICES"
-Addonsand
remodeling
-Roofing and gutter
work
-concrete work
· -Plumbing and
electrical work
(Free EstimateS)

S995sq.

Reg. 18"

7

Three bedroom trailer 10
southern Valley MObile
Home Park, CheShire,
Ohio. 992 3954 will accept 2
children .

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

~~========~~~========~t=========~

Two bedroom mobile home
at Brown's Trailer Park.
992·3324.

Three
bedroom mobile
home approximately
five
miles from PomeroyM iddleport . Phone 992 ·
5858 .

ROUSH .
CONSTRUCTION

992-7544
VA loansno money down
Federal Housing3% on S25,000
5% on balance .
Conventional Loans5%
down
Call tor lnforma1ion
992-7544

992-5682

(i)

44

EAFORDrH

Carousel
Confectionery
317 N. 2nd Ave:
Middleport
Order your decorated
cakes for all occasions :
Birthdays,
Ann1ver·
saries,
Weddings,
Showers, etc.
"Beginner
Cake
oecora1ing Classes"
s1arting soon. Please
note, we wit be closed on
Mondays during the
month of January.
1-11 I mo.

PUu.INS
EXCAVATING

Farm Buildings

~~~ B~ ~~

Mobile home tor rent, furnished, F la1woods area.
Prefer working couple. No
children. $150.00 per month
plus utilities. Deposit &amp;
references required 992·
5834 after 5

------------Real EstateGeneral
.., ______
------

CALL US TO BUY OR SELL
Nancv Ja$pers -- Associate
949·1654

·~

=- -=-

RUTLAND - One floor,
six room home on nice
Trailer lot for sate, 55,000
corner lot, garage Ask · ' Modular home lot on Route
mg $21,500.00 .
7, three bedroom farm1
house located on Route 7,
INVESTMENT PRO·
992 2571.
PERTY - Two story
build ing Salem St. Make
nice coffee shop, rent
Beautiful three bedroom
the
upstairs . Only
ranch brick home in Baum
$21,200.00.
Addition , Pomeroy, Oh1o.
FARM 188 acres,
Gas heat. central air con
pasture &amp;. woods, two
d itioning Call 985-3814 or
story farm house, 1
992 2571.
barns, rn1enra1s. Only
$55,000 00.
NICE two bedroom country
HYSELL RUN ROAD home . Vinyl s1d1ng, full
7.2 acres land with 1
baseme nt, $13,900.00 . 949
bedroom home, also
2801 No Sunday calls.
nice building site with
septic and water tap.
Asking S19,000 .00.
NICE TWO bedroom house
SILVER RIDGE ROAD
w1th three car garage in
- 42 acres. with garage
Racine S3J,OO.OO 949·2801.
&amp; barn . Pasture and
No Sunday calls.
some woods, approx. 2
miles from Eastern
Four year old house on J
High School
Asking
acres, 7 rciorns. 1 &amp; one half
$20,000 .00.
bath , ni ce locat1on. Route
Velma Nicinsky, Assoc.
2, Racine. 949 2706.
Phone 742·3092
1
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.
_ _P_ho_n_e_7_4_2-_3_17_1_ _..J,.
L.

~

bedrooms, all electric 1971
Skyline,
,
two
cameron, 12sx
12 x 6)60,
bedrooms. ba1h &amp; 113, new
carpet.
1970
PMC,
12 x 60, two bedrooms, new
carpet. B x s Sales, tnc.,
2nd x Viand Street, Point
Pleasant, wv Phone 6754424

Furnace repairs, elec1rical
work . plumbing , mobile , 1971 Hillcrest mobile home.
home or reside nce . 992 , $4,500.00. 742·3080 or can be
seen at Kingsbury Road •
S959.
the first trailer.
Will do paneling, ceiling,
floor t11e. plumbtng, Free 1970 PARKWOOD custom
estimates . Fred Mill er at Mobile Home. 12x60 un
furnished . 2 bedroom, 1
992 ·63J8 .
bath,luet oil heat. 992 3923.

31

QUIET COUNTRY HOME available. for only
$40,000. 37 plus acres. Ca~luow. this one won 't last.

--

HARVEST
COFFEE HOUSE

14

WantfttO Buy : class rin gs.
weddlllfl bands. anyth&gt;ng
Stampecl, 10K, UK, or 18K
gold. Sliver coins, pocket
watcheS. Call Joe Clark at
992·2054 at Clark's Jewelry
Store, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

..

H&amp;R BODY SHOP

GET VALUAB~E tra ining
as a young business person
and earn good money pillS
some grea1 gif1s as a Sen·
tlnel route carr1er. Phone
us righ1 away and get on
the ei1Qib11ity list at 992·
2156 or 992 ·2157.

t

Business Services

Seven room double in· l r - - - - - - - - - - .
sulated ranch style home,
total electric wood burner
in the familY Reasonably
room, gas
available.
Body Repair - Insurance
riced
.
Three
level
acres tn
Work - Collision Repair.
P
Racine . 949 ·2706
Expert painting, body
work, pinstriping &amp;
vinyl tops.
32.
Mobile Homes
Free Estimates
l~r_ Sale _ _ _
.Call992·3421
. 1973 crown Haven, u x 65 ,
Kingsbury Rd., 2 mi.
three bediooms. new car·
west Co. Rd. 18 ·
1971 c
14 64
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769
·
pet. bedrooms.
ameron,
x •
Domes 11c,
J apanese &amp;
two
new carpet.
1972 Champion. 12 x 60, two
European Cars &amp;
Trucks.
bedrooms, new carpet. 1976

roN'f 'I'OU

60 WITH V£~N .

~~-

lost : Ladles eyeglasses
Possibly at Salem Street,
Rutland . 742·2561.

CONTINUED CLEARANCE
WOMEN'S
CONNIE &amp; FOOTWORK$
DRESS SHOES

W~V'

TALK &lt;!&gt;II&lt;.L
TALK·"

208~ .

Homes tor Sale

housl!' on 2 &amp; one half
acres on - SR 7 between
Memory Gardens &amp; state
garage. Priced on inspection . 992·7741,

ANC&gt; l WANT 10

II __ .

The Daily Sentinei-Page--11

~~Nice

~

AUCTION

New arrivals

31

CHUMPI.~'I'? .AOO&gt;!O.

~

Public Sale

~fo:n~n:a~t~io~n~t~o~be~re~l~ea~s~ed~-_ _ _ _f.=============;======J--------------~-------J~========~

9
Wanted to Buy USED FURNITURE . Gold
&amp; s ilver, class rings, pocket
watches, cha1ns, diamonds
&amp; so on . Copper brass and
batteries, antique items.
also do appraisals, com ·
plete auctioneer service.
Over 30.years eKperience in
business . Will buy com ·
ple1e estates. Middleport,
Oh. 992 -6370.

----~-

Rac ine Volunteer F1re
Departfnent sponsors a
shot gun &amp; r1tle match
·every $at , n ig ht 6. 30 p m
at thetr l:lu lldtng in Bashan .
Factory choke 12 guage
shot guns only . Open Stghts
22 rifle.

ort, Ohio

P.1mero

The Gallia ·Me igs Com·
munity Action Agencies
Head Start Child Develop·
ment program has an
opening for a home teacher
in Meigs County . Ap
pllcants must have an high
school
diploma or
equivalent, possess a valid
dr ivers liscense, &amp; awn a
dependable automobile
-3
Announcements
Appl ica nts Wittl preVIOUS
----·--experience working with
I PAY highest prices children will
be given
possible for gOld and silver pr iority . Those individuals
coins, rings, tewelry, e1c. interes1ed m apply~ng lor
Contac1 Ed Burkett Barber the pos ition should co nta ct
Shop. Middleport.
Barbara Gatrell, program
secretary at 992 ·6629 to
SHOOTING MATCH al make arrangements to !Db
employment ap
Corn Hollow in Ru11and tain
- Every Sunday starring at plication . De~dline tor
noon.
Proceeds being receip1 of application w111
donated to 1he Boy Scou1 be Friday January 23 , 1981.
Troop 2.C9. 12 gauge fa c tory Gallia Meigs CAA is a n
choke gun only !
equal opporturuty em
player .
RACINE GUN SHOOT,
Racine Gun Club, every 12
Wan1ed
SituatiOns
- . . . .
Friday night starting at
7:30 p m Factory choke WILL CARE for elderly on
nice one floor levet, l plan
guns only .
home . Room &amp; board.
Reasonable . 99~ · 7314.
DEER Cut &amp; wrapped at
____
Maple Wood Lake between
Insurance
Syracuse &amp; Racine, Oh . 13
- -S25. per head . $5 additional AUTOMOBILE
IN
lor skinning .
SUR AN C E been ca n·
ce lled ?
lost
your
FAYE ' S Gift Shop m Mid operator' s li ce nse'&gt; Phone
dlepart will be open from 992· 2143.
12·5 until Chnstmas.
- - - Reat
EstateGeneral
YOUR
PIANO .
Too
valuablfP to neglect. expert
tuning &amp; and repair . Lane
Daniels, 74'2-2951 Of 992

&amp; Auction

p,,gevllle Auction
htH. been changed to
Rts. 143 &amp; so, 3 m•les
west pa ssed Albilny ,
OH .
NE W&amp; USED
MERCHANDISE
Sclturd.ly elf 7 : 00pm
Auct1oneer :
How.ud Beasetv
Not reSpon si ble for iiC·
ctdents .

14, 1981

In memorv of Elsie Haddox
who passed away January
14, 1976.
0 how we miss her, words
cannot tell,
Her brfllht, happy lace that
we loved so well .
God tool&lt; her home; It was
HIS Will,
But In our hearts she iS
With US StilL
Time may heal. but 1t
never can mend.
For our hearts w111 be
broken, until the end.
And of the load you helped
us carry,
Always patient, true, &amp;
k.1nd.
But everything shall be, for
God's will must be done,
What a beautiful memory
she lett behind.
Sadly missed by her
fam,ily,

:AO®IlllEemems~

----~----~

Clung
officiated
at
of
ts
urc.
e the
ev.dedication
ar
c- ~
the three-mnth-old infant Attending
were her grandparents. Mr. and
Mrs. J . C. Vallance and two nteces of
Mrs. Hays, Gina and Andrea Rutan,
Gallipolis. Unable to attend due to
tllness . were the paternal grandmother and great-grandmother,
Mrs. Jan Hays and Mrs. Marie Bur.dctte. Marietta .

}lEND SE
"

{11 14.2 1,28, {3) 4, 11 , 5tc

Social calendar

delegates, and elected alternal•s
were Mrs Robert Ashley, Mrs .
Emerson Jones, and Mrs. George

FRONT DISC BRAKE SPECIAL
1ncludes : Disc Pads
(both Iron! wheels) '4991
New Wheel Seals
'F'••••tone

Inspect calipers, hoses, fluid
levels
Check Rear Brakes
Pack Front WHeel Bearings

dinance No. 501, dated
February 19, 1979 ; and Or·
dinance No. Sll. dated
January 4, 1980, is hereby
amended to 1he extent that
Sectton 1, paragraph C Is,
.changed as follows :
Sec tion 1. That the
tollowin g scale of salllrle'
and wages for employees ,
the Village of Pome• oy,
Oh io, is he reby adoptedj!
RETROACTIVE AS 0
December 1, 1980.
A . Water Department'
and sewer oepartmen1
water Meter Reader,
S3. 10 per hour

1-;===============::::;:::::::::-::::-J

POMEROY

Amanda Jean Hays, da ug hter 0r
Mr. and Mrs. Randall Hays,
R tl d
d eli t d 10
·
·
u an • was e ca e
a service
Sunday at the Middleport First Bap111 k M
t l Ch
h Th R

6, 1976 ; Oi="d ini! nCf No~i8s,
dated January 1, 1978 ; Or·

NOTICE OF
SALE
Offers will be rece1ved
un1i1 11:00 O'C lock. A.M . on
the 23 rd day ot February ,
1981 , at The Mayor's off ice,
237 Race Street, tor the sale
of ti1e lo lfowing de~cribcd
real ~'&gt;State, to wit :
Real estate situaTed at
t he corner of Garfield and
South Third Avenue in the
Vi llag e of Middleport.
Ohio The Village a cquired
t1 11 e to said rea l estate by
deed record ed in Volumo?
270 . page 703, Meigs County
Deed Records .
Sale of said rea l es tate
was authorized by Or ·
dinance adopted J an uary
12, 1981. The village reser ·
ves the ri9ht to rej ect any
and &lt;1ll b1ds . The sale is
pursuant to Section 721 03
of the Ohio Revised Code .

Market, Middleport ; a $10 savings
account from the Racine Home 1
National Bank; a $5 gift certifiCate
from Village Pharma cy, Middleport; a pair of lady's slippers for
Mom at Marguerite's Shoe Store,
Pomeory; a $10 gift certificate from
Two's Company Dress Shop .
Pomeroy; a box of Luv's from
John's Gateway Supermarket. Middleport ; $5 gtft certificate from
Heritage House df Shoes in Middleport; a baby planter !rum !"rancis Florist mPomeroy; a $10 savmgs
. account at Bank One of Pomeroy
NA; three piece feeder set f1·01n K.
and C. Jewelers, Pomeroy; three
cases of baby food from Waid Cross
and Sons, Racine ; three boxes of
pampers from Sw1sher-Lohse Pharmacy in Pomeroy: a baby planter
from the Pomeroy Flower Shop,
Pomeroy; two Royal Crown
toboggans and two cases of Royal
Crown from Royal Crown Bottling
Co., Middleport ; two nurser sets
from Vaughan's Cardinal in Middleport; a package of Curity dtapers
from Stiffler's Store in Pomeroy and
a nite shirt plus a free shirt for Dad
from the Custom Print Shop and
Jeans-N-Things.

DAR state delegates announced
Delegates and alter~ates to the
state conference and national
congress of the Daughters of the
American RevolutiOn were elected
at a recent meeting of Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter, DAR, held
at the home of Mrs. Vernon Weber.
Elected to the state conference to
be held March 1().12 were Mrs. Gene
Yost, regent, Mrs. Clyde Ingels, vice
regent; and Mrs. Roger Luckeydoo,

-PUblic NotiCe- - -

Public No1•c e

r

.In- Memor1am
. -

2
in -·,ovinQ -m-emOrY Of Our
dear Dad &amp; Granddad,
Wode ~ooks, who passed
away three years ago
today, Jonuarv 14, 1978.
We dk! not know 1he pain or
hear a ·,lgh,
We only know YOti passed
away without a last good·
bye.
God gave us strength to
face It &amp; courage to bear
the blow.
And what It meant to loose
you, no one else knows .
Sadly missed by son &amp; wife,
Robert &amp; Elma Louks,
grandchildren, &amp; great
gronckhlldren .

returns, Sentinel ·Want Ads

girls selling, an unbreakable cookie
mug for 100 boxes sold, a yellow
vinyl beach tote bag for 200 boxes
sold, a yellow adjustable tennis/outdoor visor for 300 boxes sold,
a beach towel for 400 boxes sold, and
a "Cookie Champ" t-shirt for the
highest sellerin each area .
The local cookie chainnen have
set a goal of 100 boxes for each scout.
Brownies may sell only as a g roup
in booths or at troop meetings.
Brownie parents wis hing to support
their daughter's troop may sell and
reg iste red · adults wh o sell may

51'2.

Jan

14,1981 .

·s mall investment, large

Bridget Va-ughan winner of
New Year's first baby contest
Bridget Marie Vaughan, daughter
of Roy and Linda Vaughan of Langsville, is the winner of The Daily Sentinel's first baby ofthe new year contest.
Bridget weighing six pounds, five
ounces, was born at 1:46 a.m . on
Jan. 1 at the Holzer Medical Center.
As winner of the annual baby derby, Bridget and her parents will
receive a bottle of champagne from
the Pomeroy Wine Store; a free
meal for the couple at the Meigs Inn;
$10 in baby toiletries from Spencer's
Fas-Chek in Racine; a crib toy from
Western Auto, Middleport; a babv

Januar

Pamero'j'-Middlcport, Ohio

Page--10-The Daily Sentinel ·

General Hauling_

Well s Trash Haulmg, 011ve
Orange Township . Ap·
proved by commissioners,·
liscensed by the health
department . 'iltl5·3518 .

&amp;

AI'S Trash SerVICe. 80)( 65,
Portland, Ohio 843-4912 .
we have ent1re Meigs
County $5 00 monthly.

by Larry Wright

�January 14, 1911

l·' .1merov Middleport, Ohio

Page--12-The Daily Sentinel

Reagan bids farewell as private citizen
LOS ANGELES (AP )- After bidding a fond farewell to California as
a private citizen, Ronald Reagan is
heading east to wait out the final
days before the extra word gets lopped off his title as president-elect.
During a day of official goodbyes
Tuesday in his adopted hometown,
Reagan vowed to keep politics out of
the Oval Office and pledged anew to
start returning authority to local
government once he is sworn in as
president on Jan. 20.
And he promised to come west
frequently · during his presidency,
adding: "Soinetimes I won't even
pretend it's on business. I 'll just

11

career as a movie actor, was
making the flight to Washington
today aboard the large Air Force jet
conunonly called Air Force One.

Word has been received of the
death of Mabel E. Carman, 76, 4124
Groveport Road, Obetz. Formerly of
Meigs County, Mrs~Cannan was the
widow of Raymond F. Carman and
was also preceded in death by a son,
Lawrence. She attended the former
Coalport School in Pomeroy.
Surviving are a son and daughterin-law, Roland and Nancy Carman.
Obetz; 'a sister, Florence Williams,
California; three brothers, Denver
Lewis, Florida; Carl Lewis, Cincinnati, and Lawrence Lewis of
Colwnbus, and several grandchildren.
Funeral services were held Friday
at the Myers Funeral Home with the
Rev. Ma_urice Richardson officiating. Burial was in the Obetz
Cemetery.

Sallie Miller
Sallie Carrie Miller, 93, of Rt. 1,
Langsville, died Tuesday morning at
her residence.
Born March I , 1887, in Ash County,
N.C., daughter of the late John and
Susan Mash Severt. she spent most
of her life in the Waterloo area and
moved to Langsville in 1972. She was
the widow of the late Ellis Reeves .
Miller.
'
Surviving are three sons, Arthur

to

arrive

at

Washington's "'ndrews . Air ·Force
Base early this evening.
Deciding which of Reagan's
political friends would get to make
the special flight and which would
not was a delicate problem assigned
to Michael Deaver, who will be the
deputy chief of Reagan's White
·· House staff.
·

" This is a time of mixed emotions
for us as we watch the furniture go
out of our house," Reagan told
several hundred Southern California

John F. Brogan
John F. Brogan, 66, West Bloomfield, l\1ich., father oi Pomeroy
bill;inessman Larry Brogan, died
Tuesday at the St. Joseph Hospital in
Pontiac, Mich.
Mr. Brogan was an insurance
representative of the Automobile
Club of Michigan for 25 years. He attended the University of Michigan,
was a veteran of World War II and a
member of the Knights of Columbus
in Detroit.
Survlving are his wife. Isabelle;
three sons, Larry who operates the
Reuter-Bragan Insurance Agency in
Pomeroy, Torn and Kevin; three
daughters , Barhara Kelvans, Kathy
Craig and Mary Beth Philippart,
and a sister, Rosemary Ryan of Emmett, Mich.
The body will be at the Ted
C.Sullivan Funeral Home, 14230 W.
McNichols Road, Detroit, Mich .. until 9 p.m. Thursday. Funeral services will be held at 11 a.m. Friday
at the Our Lody of Mt. Carmel Church in Emmett. Mich., and burial will
be in the Our Lady of MI. Carmel
Cemetery.

• •

of Garden City, Kan., Carl of
Americus, Kan., and Bart of
(Continued from page I)
Waterloo; three daughters, Mrs. Samuel Pierce, the only black
Joncie Miller of Americus, Kan., nominated to Ronald Reagan's
Hazel Duncan of Emporia, Kan., Cabinet, said the Departmen.t of
and Nellie Myers of Langsville; 26 Housing and Urhan Development's
grandchildren, 2, ' great- budget might be cut by as much as
grandchildren and five great-great- 10 percent. He also . said some
1
grandchildren.
federal housing subsidies may be
Funeral services will be held at I eliminated.
p.m. in the McDaniel Crossroad
Church, with the Rev . R.D Brown
and the Rev. William Goodall ofCLASS CANCELLED
ficiating. Burial will bf in Flag
A
meeting
of the Willing Workers
Springs Cemetery. Friend£ may call
Class
scheduled
for Thursday
at the Phillips Funeral Home, Ironevening at the home of Mrs. Cordelia
Bentz has been cancelled.

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted-Agnes Coleman, Miner·
sville; Ava Greenlees, Pomeroy.
Discharged-Diana Boyd, Homer
Smith, Jr., Joyce Greene, Sharon
Bailey, Betty Caldwell, Rita Ml"Clelland, Susie Windon, Catherine
Grueser.

$41,869 collected
by mayor's offi~

Not too many years ago, receipts
totaling $1,000 a month for the office
of a small town mayor made a
notable occasion. However, times
43 EMERGENCY CALLS
have changed with inflation and an
Forty-three
calls - 38 emergenincrease in the services perfonned
•
cies
and
five
fire
and rescue- were
in the office of a community mayor.
answered
by
the
Middleport Fire
In 1980, total receipts for the office
Depar;tment
during
December, acof Middleport Mayor amounted to
cording
to
the
monthly
report of Fire
$41,869.24.
Chief
Jeff
Darst.
Of
the
38 emergenMaking up the total were; bonds
cy
calls,
30
were
in
town
and eight
forfeited, $23,041.50; fines.
of
town.
All
vehicles
were
driven
out
$!4,500.50; court costs, $1,788;
of
1,127.7
miles
during
the
a
total
parking permits, $515; accident
month.
reports, $65; zoning permits, SIS4;
trash hauling permits, $75; siding , - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1
permits, $40; merchant police,
CAKE DECORATING
$1,180; building permits, $1:10.24;
Classes Starting Soon
demolishing permits, $15; post perCall lor Derails
lnits, $150; sidewalk permits, $30;
pool permits, $25; rool pennits, $30;
remodeling permits, $211; peddler
CAROUSEL CONFECTIONERY
permits, $30; other miscellaneous
· pennits, $61.
:' Decorated Cakes for
All Occasions"
PH. 992-6342

ArreStS total 51

317 N. 2nd

Fifty-()ne arrests · were made by
the Middleport Police Department
in December, according to the monthly. report of Police Chief J. J .
Cremeans. Of the total number rl
arrests, 20 were on charges of
driving while intoxicated and II
were on disorderly manner charges.
There were five charged with
speeding and two each for driving
Wlder _suspension, open flask, spinmng t1res and fleein~ a police of-

Mayor's

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CLEVELAND (AP) - The winning nwnber selected Tuesday night
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IPGI ,-~ ~

•
up to the day Ronald Reagan takes
office.
. Secretary of State Edmund S.
Muskie :&lt;aid Wednesday that Friday
won't be the deadline after all for

Iran to reach an agreement with the
outgoing administration.
"The real deadline is the 20th, not
the 16th," Muskie said, referring to
Jan. 20, the date Reagan will be
inaugurated as president.
And President Carter, in his
farewell address to the nation Wednesday night, vowed to spend his last
days in office trying to bring the 52
hostages home.
"[ 'will continue as I have during
the past14 months to work and pray
for the lives and the well-being of the
American hostages held in Iran,"
' Carter said. "I can 'I predict yet
what will happen."
The State Department, after 14
months of refusing to characterize
prospects for a settlement, issued a
tacbed a snow plow he was EVERYWHERE, clearilig:
THE GOOD SAMARITAN- With all the snow and
COLUMBUS, Ohio- Most of Ohio's local governments, already faced _. _ guardedly optimistic statement
sidewalkll
and driveways and even making the streef a
Ice
of
the
week,
Clarence
Boyles
became
Middleport's
with serious financial problems, may haveQ.!' tighten their belts even
Wednesday for the secon~ day in a
little safer.
good
samaritan.
With
hfs
small
tractor
to
which
he
at•
more.
row.
William D. Keip, state budget and management director, mentioned
Muskie, in Augusta, Maine, when
major cuts in state subsidies to local governments Wednesday as part
asked about the status of
of a plan to deal with critical state money problems.
negotiations, said, "Oh, yes, there's
The state's Local Government Fund, which gets 31&gt; percent of all
been progress."
The fourth injury occurred in tempting to make a left turn ·when
Four people were injured in
receipts from the sales, income and corporate taxes, may be a target
MWlkie said the issue hinges on
Meigs
CoWJty' early Wednesday · the collision occurred, causing
separate
tra£fic
accidents
in
tho:
for elimination, he said.
whether the amount of Iranian
moderate damage to Roberts' ear
night.
area
Wednesday.
assets the United States can make
Kirnberly
E.
Wilt,
17,
Minersville,
and slight to the Simms auto. RoberThe Gallia-Meigs Post of the Ohio
tmmeqiately available to Iran is sufficient and "whether or not we· can . Highway Patrol reported three of was northbound on CR 34 at 6::ro ts was cited for assured clear distan·put in motio~ a procedure for the injuries were suffered in a head- p.m. when she met an unknown ce.
ROMULUS, Mich. - President-elect Ronald Reagan has agreed to
A man was cited in a one-car a~­
on coliision in Gallia CoWJty Wed- . vehicle southbound in the norclearing the remainder."
meet with governors from seven aut~producing states to discuss their
thbound
lane,
forcing
her
to
swerve
cident
in Gallia County Wednesdl!Y
nesday
afternoon.
plan to rehabilitate the' auto industry, Michigan Gov. William Milliken
Other officials have said if a
· night.
to
avoid
collision.
Troopers
said
John
L.
Murphy,
16,
says.
breakthrough is near on
James P. Lawson, 22, Kanaug8,
Will's car then lost control, went
Patriot, was northbound on CR 20 at
The governors' major concern is the preservation of jobs, Milliken
Inauguration Day, they assume
was eastbound on Georges Creek
off
the
left
side
of
the
road
and
over
a
4;40
p.m.
when
he
met
a
southbound
said. Aboull89,000 auto workers are on indefinite layoff nationally.
Reagan simply will pick up where
vehicle driven by Teresa L. Ross, 20, fence, causing moderate damage to Rd. at 6 p.m. when his car lost cooThe seven top state leaders met Wednesday at a suburhan Detroit
Carter left off. Reagan has said he
her car. Wilt was injured but not trot on a curve, went off the left side
Patriot,
on a hillcrest and collided.
hotel to polish their proposal before presenting It to federal officials. A
will review all options if he inh~rits
of the r.oad and struck an emtreated.
Both
cars
were
demolished
and
message from Reagan expressed interest in discussing the plan after
the crisis.
The patrol reported no injuries in bankment, demolishing the car.
both
drivers,
including
a
passenger
the inauguration Tuesday, Milliken said. No date was set for the
Lawson was not injured but was
in the Murphy vehicle, Jarpes F. a two-car crash in Gallia County
meeting.
cited by the patrol for no Ohio
Duty, 15, Patriot, were injured. Mur- early Wednesday afternoon.
According to the report, Lisa E. operator's license.
phy was not treated; but Ross and
Troopers said Eric M. Queen, 'J:T,
Duty were taken to Holzer Medical Roberts, 20, ·Proctorville, was norCenter by" the Gallia EMS, where thbound on SR 7 at 12;42 p.m. when Rio Grande, was not injured when
she collided with the rear of a stop- his car struck and killed a deer on
they were treated and released.
The shivering East Coast got a slight respite from icy temperatures
ped
vehicle driven by Melvin E. Sim- SR 325 at 9;05 p.m. Wednesday·.
Murphy
was
cited
by
the
patrol
for
today, but the three-day freeze that sent the mercury to new lows is
ms,
22, Crown City.
Slight damage was reported to hia
no
operator's
license.
driving up prices for seafood from ice-clogged fishing grounds and for
James D. Parsons, Long Bottom,
Troopers
said
Simms
was
atcar.
orange juice and vegetables from Florida.
was taken to Veterans Memorial
Three major orange juice processors annoWlced price Increases of
Hospital Wednesday night with a
75 cents to $3.3S per dozen six-()unce cans, a recoro high for congWJshot wound in the leg.
centrale, the Sentinel Star ofOrlando, Fla., reported today.
The Middleport Police DepartAfter painfully low readings that broke records in dozens of comment was called to a Walnut St. har
munities. temperatures rose early today into the 20s and :ros in much
A man questioned by the Gallia care unit of HMC at I: 20 p.m. yester- Road residence, just off SR SR 775.
· at 10:57 p.m. and found Parsons had
of the East. It was 18 degrees in Boston and 55 in Miami.
The details of an autopsy report
County
Sheriff's Department in con- day. He was transferred this morbeen shot in ihe leg. His alleged
released
Tuesday afternoon inning
to
a
regular
hospital
room.
nection
with
the
alleged
Monday
assailant had left. the bar imMiller
was
released
from
the
dicated
tha
f Richards died of a
homicide
of
an
area
woman
was
·
mediately following the shooting
custody
.X
the
Gallia
Sheriff's
single
shotgun
wound to the head. ·
listed
in
satisfactory
condition
at
police said.
Department
Tuesday
evening
after
The
instrwnent
of death w;~s not
Holzer
Medical
Center
this
morning,
Parsons was taken to the hospital
CLEVELAND- Ohio's U.S. senators, both Democrats, are in favor
being
questioned
in
connection
with
fouhd
at
the
scene.
he
is
being
treated
for
the
conwhere
by the Middleport Emergency
of confirming Secretary of State designate Alexander M. Haig Jr.
Miller had been questioned imSquad. He was admitted to the swnption of an undetermined quan- the Monday afternoon shotgun death
Haig underwent his fifth day of confinnation hearings Wednesday in
of
his
co-habitant
Lucinda
E.
mediately
following the discovery of
tity
of
paint
thlnner.
hospital and reported in satisfactory
Washington before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, of which ·
32.
Richards'
body
was
Richards,
the
death;
and, was held throughout
Charlie
Miller,
52,
Patriot
Star
condition today.
Glenn is a part.
found
inside
the
couples
Tavlor
•
Route,
was
admitted
to
the
intensive
(Continuecl on page 10)
The name of the man allegedly
A vote by the full Senate on Haig's confinnatlon is expected Thurshooting Parsons was not disclosed
sday.
by the MiddlepOrt Pollee. However,
In Washington, Glenn, a former Marine -Corp5 colonel, said about
it was reported by one source that he
Haig, a former four-star Army general, "f'm a bit prejudiced ... I
and Parsons have been friends.
share the view there can be life after a military career."
A Syracuse landmark ·was ex- Don Lisle, former owner, reports a was purchased by Virgil Teaford In
It was reported the police departThe committee is expected to vote today in favor of confirming
ment is continuing its search for the tensively damaged by fire Wed- family by the name of Mallory once 1962 and later was sold to the Arnold
Haig.
alleged assailant.
nesday night and a Syracuse owned the structure and operated a family who resided there at the time
of fire Wednesday night.
Meantime, residents of Grant St., fireman was overcome by smoke store.
The building was then sold to
A monetary loss has ncit been set.
and a part of Gravel Hill in Mid- while fighting the blaze.
The Syracuse Fire Department Loren Quillen for $1,800 which he Further investigation of the fire will
dleport were without water service
~ly cloudy with a chance of snow flurries tonight and Friday.
today. According to reports, a car· was called at 8;:10 p.m. to the Rita paid for in coins. The Quillens' had a be ·made today Gene Imboden, fire
Lows tonight ~25. Highs Friday 25-30. Chance of snow :ro percent
driven by the man who allegedly Arnold resid~nce, Third Street. The traveling family show. Quillen had a chief, reported.
tonight and 40 percent Friday. Winds northwesterly 1().15 mph tonight.
Ta)&lt;en to Veterans Memori11l
shot Parsons had struck a water fire, believed to have been caused by pool room in the structure and made
hlmdmade ci~ars.
Hospital for treatment of smoke following
the
defective
wiring,
started
in
the
kithydrant
immediately
Exteaded Ohio Forecast- Saturday through Monday ;Achance of
The building was purchased by inhalation was Oris Hubhard. Sixshooting. Water department chen and spread to the upstairs porsnow flurries near Lake Erie Saturday and Sunday and a chance of
Ked Lisle, the late father of Don teen firelighters an5wered the
were
on
the
scene
during
tion
of
the
two
story
frame
structure
workers
snow or rain throughout the state Monday. Gradually wannlng
Usle, in 1932 and the late Mr. Lisle alarm. They were assisted by the
the night and this morning to make believed to be over 100 years old.
through the period. Highs in the 20s Saturday, warming to the mict-:Jis
and Don operated a store in the front Middleport Fire Department.
necessary
repairs
for
restoring
serThe
front
of
the
structure
was
used
·to mid-lOs by Monday. Lowsf&gt;.IS Saturday and in the 20s by Monday.
for many years as a grocery store. portion for 30 years. The building
vice.

Expect more belt tightening

It adds up to atremendous
value m oo~nience.

' .
Its a superb quartz wQtch for near-perfect
l1mekeep1ng . w ilh an auto matic alarm
and a very advanced ca lculator.
• Tells hour m •nu les . second s. AM

WASHINGTON (AP) - The Carter adminlatratlon, encouraged that
a breakthrough may be imminent in
the long hostage stalemate, says it is
willing to negotiate with Iran riRht

Four hurt in area wrecks

PM

• Alarm w1 ll n ng w hen you won t
• Alarm ca n re·set au toma tically

Reagan to meet with auto govemors

• Ad ds subrroc rs. d 1vides . mul t1pl•es
• 8 d•g•l l lool•ng decimal
• Frg ure'l squa re rapt percen ts, po wers,

dtscounts
• Memory m cu 1tr y and mor e funct1o ns
• Twa·rone bracelet w1 1h sty lus

• Bvelt -tn tllumlnO i ton
• Water·res1stan t

Pulsar " Quartz. Always a beat beyond.
In technology. In value.

.....

91!9",...,~

,.

II; E . MAIN· ,OMEIIOY

·Freeze drives·up food pric~s

Police probe

bar shooting

Victim's co-habitant hospitalized

Ohio senators favor Haig

Fire damages Syracuse landmark

SAVINGS UP TO '550.00 ON QUALITY
BEDROOM SUITES BY NATIONALLY KNOWN
~---MANUFACTURERS

(Ill K! •Ill

·

1 Section, 10 pages 1sCents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Carter willing
t() negotiate
until inal.daY

PIZZA BRW •

- LANE - KEU.ER • YOUNG

HINKLE - WEBB - DMI - HEYWOOD • WAKEFIELD •
DIXIE • CAROLINA

Oscar's

enttne

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio Thursday, January IS, 1981

Copyrighted 198i

. - . , . . If" Sft'{. .
•

SUITES

1, ;11

One defendant was fined and four
IH l!illl-:.1
others forfeited bonds in the court of
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews
FOR RESERVATIONS. CALL 44b 'Hl l 0 DR ~-1b 'l'J4)
Tuesday night.
Thomas Scally, Mlddleport, was
fined $50 and costs on a charge of
failing to register a motor vehicle. 1-------------~-------'----Forfeiting bonds, all on speeding
w:nner o
ERICAN INDIAN MO!ION PICIURE AWAROSI
charges, were Jerry Owens,
Re!t 01rector ·Mnsl Promrsllllj ,\cirP&lt;s
Syracuse, - $29; Terry Reiber,
·Best Screenplay Aesl ,\rl 01r!'Cirrrn
· Racine, $28; Connie Yoak, Pomeroy,
$29, and Julie Gibbs, Racine, $29.
1

--HI-

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
JANUARY SALE
BEDROOM

ARMAND TURLEY

ON FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY fVlN

Oh.

Vol. 21, NO. 192

at

•

r--=========-

fI~~~~~~~~~~~~~6--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~iiiiiiiij

A suit for divorce and two
dissolutions have been filed in Meigs
MINOR MISHAP
County Conunon Pleas Court.
The Gallia-Meigs Post State High- ficer.
Judy C. Musser, Pomeroy, filed way Patrol investigated a one-car
There was one arrest each on a
suit for divorce against Charles A. crash in Meigs County Tuesday rnornwnber of other charges.
Musser, Gallipolis. Filing for ning .
One case was transferred to counAccording to the report, Lynette
dissolution of marriages were Norty court and chrges were dropped in
man Eugene Hawley, Middlepor~ Saunders, 47, Long Bottom, was
one case. The department inand Linda Sue Hawley, Middleport; westbound on SR 248 at 9 a.m. when
vestigated five traffic accidents
Coral D. Davis, Syracuse, and her car went off the right side of the
during the month and drove the
William Denver Davis, Jr., road on a curve and into a ditch,
police cruisers 4,699mi les.
Syracuse.
causing slight damage .
Granted divorces were Lena ,---'----------------------~
Adkins from Roger Lewis Adkins
and Betty J. McClelland from Gary
McClelland.
Marriages dissolved were Peggy
A. Wood and Earie L. Wood; Jan
AT THf PIANO &amp; OR(;AN
Roach and Randall W. Roach ;
David Pierce and Kathy Pierce ;
FOR YOUR DINING PU.ASURl ~~ IHf · ~t ·,: ~U()M
Sara Warner and Terry Warner;
Max L. Knopp and Sharon L. Knopp.

Middleport,

e

Sacramento office when be wu
governor of California and he left no
doubt he would keep a supply In the
White House.

MEETS TOi•IJGHT
The Racine Emergency Squad will
meet in special session at 7:3{) p.m.
tonight at the firehouse. Election c1
officers will be held and all members are asked to be present. Members are to take their pagers and
chargers to the meeting.

CORRECTION
It was erronously reported that
Gregory Ginther, Rt. I, Long Bot-

Couples end marriages

business leaders at a luncheon .
Tuesday.
He promised that "forever and
however long we're there (in
Washington), there will be no
decisions that will be based on
politicsoftheissue."
At the luncheon, and earlier at the
Los Angeles City Hall, Reagan was
laden
with
resolution•,
proclamations and gifts: a glass
ea~le and a glass jar filled with hia
favorite confection, jelly beans.
" You can tell a lot about a !ella's
character" by the way he eats jelly
beans, Reagan said. Some people
"pick out all of one color" while
others "just grab a handful."
Reagan kept jelly beans in his

was involved in a~ingle car accident
on Sunday.
Drive of the car was Bernadette
Schwendeman, 20, Rt. I , Lowell.
Ginther was a passenger in the
vehicle.

Karen Sue Boggess, 16, Rt. I,
Minersville, missing since Thursday, Jan. 8, has been found aod
returned to the home of her parents.
Boggess was found at the horne of
James Eakins, 'J:I, Middleport, the
Meigs County Sheriff's Deportment
reported.
Eakins is lodged in jail and
charges will be filed against him
totlay it was reported.

ton, from 6-9 p.m. Thursday-. The
body will lie in state an hour pnor to
the service.

Watergate.

were

IMe~_:~_:mty ~a!.',~~:.

Area deaths
Mabel E. Carman

Nancy,

President Carter dispatched the
plane - known officially by its tail
nwnber except when the president is
on board - to ferry Reagan on his
triwnphal coast-to-coast flight to
asswne the reins of government.
'

" Every big Republican leader in
California wants to ride hack to
Washington, " said Reagan
spokesman Joe Holmes.
The Reagans are keeping their
ranch near Santa Barhara, Calif.,
but they have put their home here on
the market. The five-bedroom ·
house, for which they are asking $1.9
million, has a spectacular view of
the Pacific Ocean from its hillside
perch in the exclusive community,

SchOQI children on Reagan's •lreet
in Pacific Palisade• were given the
da~ off today to see him off and the
president-elect's neighbors planned
a more personal sendoff than the formal activities of Tuesday.
The president-elect and his wife,

come here. n
I'Ve had a love affair with
California for a great many years,"
Reagan said.
Reagan, who came west nearly
half a century ago to carve out a

•

1895.00 .............. 4 pc, PINE ................. SALE ............. '1495.00

5

'1198.00 .............. 4 pc, PINE ................. SALE ............. '949.ll
sgga,QO ................ 4 pc. MAPLE .............. SALE.....
'79800
'998.00 ............... 4 pc, CHERRY.............. SALE ............ '798.00
'479.00................. 4 PC. PINE ................ SALE ............ 1349.00
$1098.00 .............. 4 pc. OAK................... SALE ............. '849.00
1479.00 .............. :.. 4 pc, MAPLE ................ SALE ............ '349.00
'995.00 ................ 4 pc. PINE ................. SALE ............. '795.00
51189.00.............. 4 pc. WALNUT ............. SAL£ ............. '689..
51095.00 ............... 4 pc. PINE ................. SALE ............. '849.00
•••• t • • •

Weather

..

'2249.00 ............... 4 pc.·CHERRY ............. SALE............. '1691.10
51979.00 ................ 4 pc. SOUD MAPLE..... SAL£ ............. ~148

. )1-f,'fN! t tfl lll 1
.I',

STARTS TOMORROW

FRII DILIVIRY- CRIDIT AVAILAJU

1jmlted fngagement

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

SPRING VALLEY Ill
J

years ald. Syracuse Firemen were called at 8:50p.m.
The fire is believed to have been caused by faulty
wiring.

SYRACUSE LANDMARK-The home of Rita Arnold
was extensively damaged by fire Wednesday night.
The two story frame struck is believed to be over 100

.J

STAND INSIDE CHARRED KITCHEN-{;ene Irn·
boden, Dave Smith and Eber. Pickens, 1-r, Syracuse
Firemen. stand lnsiM the charred kitchen of the Rita

Arnold home following a fire that caused extensive
damage Wednesday night.

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