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Januar 15,1981 •

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Town folk show respect_
to child abuse victim
'

.

:&gt;-year~ld

Victim's
(Continued from page I l
the. next day, at his request, on
"protective . custody." He was
~leased from custody Tuesday
evening.
Emergency medical service parmel were called to the home of
Milier's parents, J . Hollis arid Alma
Woods, Northup-Patriot Rd., Wednesday afternoon upon a report that
he had taken an overdose of an undetermined substance.
Miller was transported to HMC
ruid was admitted to the intensive
care unit for treatment of medical
complications caused by the consumption of paint thiMer.
: In related matters, sheriff's
department personnel
were
sheduled today to continue their
search of the area surrounding the
death scene for the weapon used in
the alleged homicide.

Smith heads trustees
Grant Smith was elected president
of the Olive Township Board of
Trustees when it met for its
orga_nizational session at the fire
house in Reedsville.
Francis Andrews was named vice
)iremdent. The third member of the
lio8rd is Dohrman Reed, Ada Bissell
is the clerk.
Regular meetings were set for the
fb:ld Saturday of each month, 7:30
P·!D: during the summer months and
ft::liO p.m. in the winter months until
the time change occurs. Meetings
will be held at the fire station.
MEETS SUNDAY
The Meigs County Genealogical
Society will meet at 2 p.m. Sunday at
tbe Meigs Museum, Mulberry Ave.,
Pomeroy. Mrs. Mildred Chapman
·Gillbs, Hartford, W. Va., will be
jln!sent to speak about her book
.dealing with the Hartford Com.munity. In case ri inclement
,~a!her the Sunday meeting will be
- ~celled with the next regular
-meeting to be held on Feb. 15.

relu•ed to claim the boy, so
townspeople donated the cofffn, burial plot and
gravestone. (AP Laserphoto)

Man found not guilty
A jury of five women and seven
men returned a verdict of not guilty
in the case of the State of Ohio versus Harold Darnell, Harrisonville.
Darnell was charged as a result of
a shooting July 9, involving Harold
Hudnall of Harrisonville.
Serving on the jury were Roberta
H. Wilson, ~rles H. Cobb, Ray
Riggs, Gordon Winebrenner, Terri
Smith, Lloyd Blackwood, Jane Wise,
Renee Richard, Martha M. Dudding,
Roy A. Holter, Don Beegle, and Cash
Bahr.

Residents with A &amp; B
initials must get
licenses this month
Residents with initials A and B
must obtain stickes for their license
plates by Feb. 1, Sarah Gibbs, Meigs
County Motor Vehicle Deputy
Registrar said today.
Those people are to take their
registrations and titles with them to
purchase stickers.
·
Forms which non-commercial
trailer owners must sigo to receive
the refund for 1980 are available at
the local deputy registrar office.
Qualified residents have until Dec.
31, this year, to submit their applications.
The local license bureau office is
located in the former Gibbs Grocery
building, Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy,
and is open on Friday evenings from
5:30 to 7 p.m .to accommodate the
public with extra hours and on
Saturdays between 9 a.m. and 12
noon.

HOLZERMEDlCALCENTER
DISCHARGES JAN. 14
Cloye Bird, William Blankenship·,
Bernice Calloway, Ora CArlisle, Orville Casto, Margaret Castor, Brandon Darst, Aaron Dupre, Robert
Frank, Kimberly George, Robin
Hess, Brian Hibinger, Beverly
Hogge, Judy Johnson, Roger John·
son Sr., Anna Kinder, Gary Kinnison, Charles Martin, Maranda
MacKenzie, Maria Mees, Ethel
Milam, Harold Notter, James
Palkovic, Stephen Pearson, Connie
Rollins, Hilda Riddle, Betty Ridge, ..-------------~
Harold Saunders, Pauline Sprout,
WINTER CLEARANCE
Mrs John Travis and son. Paul Van
SALE CONTINUES
Maire, Tinya Welsh, Noretta
Wheeler, Tia Yost, Pam Young,
PRICES REDUCED
Jackie Zimltlennan Jr.
20% TO 50%
BIRTH
Mr . and · Mrs. Herbert Matheny,
son, Leon.

WINTER TEMPS
Winter temperatures in Antarctica can drop as low as -127
degrees f .

I

By The Associated Prest
The United States and Iran rushed toward completion today of an agreement to free the 52 American
hostages .and both sides signaled that a breakthrough
in the 14-month hostage crisis could be near.
Iran's chief hostage negotiator, Behzad Nabavi, said
there is " no obstacle in resolving the issue" .and informed Washington sources said the United States and
Iran were near completion of an agreement to e•-

..f'p~
~J.L

t+f/#1/:

/11/o/(fYI

Just dial949-2210
We will be glaci to provide information
about LOANS. SAVINGS. CHECKS
and any other banking service.

Horpe

Nat1onal

Pomeroy, Oh.

JRD ST., RACINE, OH.
Member FDIC

Blame hotel fire on arsonis
WHITE PLAINS, N. Y. ..,. The Stouffer's Inn fire that killed 25
business execullves Dec. 4 was started by an arsonist who poured " an
accelerant" on a third-floor corridor, authorities said Thursday.
Westchester District Attorney Carl Vergari, who made the announcement, would not conunent on possible suspects in the case or
whether he expects an arrest.
Vergari would not identify the liquid accelerant he said was
poured on a 3&amp;-square-foot area outside meeting rooms in the hotel's
conference center. "It was indeed a volatile liquid on the degree .of
flarrunability of high-octane gasoline," he said.

Troops drive guerrillas out
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador - Goverrunent troops drove leftwing guerrillas out of a provincial capital Thursday after five days of
fighting and the ruling junta declared its forces have regained " total
control" of the country.
The government said the guerrillas who had seized San Francisco
Gotera fled into the mountains and the leftists' offensive had been
crushed.

Attorneys meet with judge
CAMP LEJEUNE, N. C. - Attorneys in the court-martial of
Marine Pic. Roll!!rt Garwood met in closed session with a military
judge Thursday after the defense objected to the judge's remarks
·
suggesting that Garwood should testify.
Lawyers for Garwood, who is charged with desertion and
collaboration with the enemy in Vietnam, were granted the four-hour
closed session with the judge, Col. R. E. Switzer, over prosecutors' objections.
As court began Thursday morning, chief defense lawyer John
Lowe entered into evidence copies of the interview as published in
area newspapers.

GREATER REDUCTIONS ON MANY ITEMS
---ALL SALES FINAL---

Reg. $4.00 .......
Reg. $6.00 ... __ ..
Reg. sn.oo . . . . . .
Reg. $15.00 ......

Sale $2.59
Sale$3.89
Sale$7.19
Sale$9.79

JANUARY CLEARANCE

GIRLS' DRESSES
Dresses, pantsuits, velours,
overalls, ·jumpers, outfits.

1/2

PRICE
WOMEN'S

Winter Sportswear
Regular and extra sizel. in
quality winter sportsw~ar.

MEN'S AND YOUNG MEN'S

TOBOGGANS
One size fits all. Assorted
colors and prints.

'

r

While They
Last

JANUARY CLIARANCE

JR. SPORTSWEAR
BlAZERS, SlACKS, TOPS AND
SKIRTS

1h PRICE
CLEARANCE SALE
PRICES ON
-JR. COATS
-MEN'S DRESS COATS
-WOMEN'S SWEATERS
-CARHARTT WORK CLOntES
-CHILDREN'S SLEEPWEAR
-WOMEN'S COATS
-MEN'S SWEATERS
-JR. DRESSES
-MEN'S WINTER COATS
-WOMEN'S DRESSES
-WOMEN'S KNIT ACCESSORIES
-MEN'S FLANNEL SHIRTS
-MEN'S DRESS SlACKS
-CHILDREN'S COATS
-CHILDREN'S PANTS
-MEN'S DRESS SHIRTS
-JR. SWEATERS
-BOYS' COATS
-WOMEN'S WINTER SLEEPWEAR

NEW DELHI, India - Indian authorities Thursday arrested more
than 600 people, mostly members of opposition parties, in the westcentral state of Maharashtra during protests against an increase in
-bus fares, the United News of India said.
The demonstrators blockaded bus terminals and squatted in front
' of the government~wned vehicles, UNI said. The action was launched
by the Bharatiya Janata Party of former eKternal affairs minister A.
B. Vajpayee, the Congress Party and left-wing organizations.

JANUARY CLEARANCE

Weather
Windy, scattered snow llurries. High near 20, low near 10. Partly
cloudy Saturday. High near 20.

JR. TOPS

Extended Forecast- Today through Tuesday : Mostly fair. Highs
in upper 20s and lower 30s. Sunday wanning to the mid 40s to mid 50s.
Lows in the teens Sunday and in the 20s Monday and Tuesday. ·

REMAINING STOCK Of WARM
AND FASHIONABLE KNIT TOPS

h PRICE

1

.-

BOYS' SWEATPANTS

.,..,,.!... ""II! I"' h

REG. $9.95

TERRY CLOTH .............. SALE 14.99
FLEECE ll NED ....... .. .... SALE '5.49

..••

101nnrml

•

REG. $10 .95

'

"II

-...... . .

JANUARY C&amp;.EARANCI

MEN'S

SWEATSHIRTS
- Zip front and pullover styles
- Fleece lined
- Assorted colors
Select Group - Limited Quantity

·~

112 PRICE
MEN'S A"D BOYS'

..

WINTER PAJAMAS

15 Ce1us

•

,,

.-.. ~ ,.t..

~

~

\

. ' ~

111E WORK CONTINUES - Workmen malle !Mir way through
Thllrlday'l snow In WashlllltOD with a load of folding chain as
preparallona coatiaue for Tuetday'1 hlauiJUral cenmonlet for PretldentelMt Rquld Reagan. The aweariiii-ID wiU be outside the west !root of the ·
C&amp;pllol, shown Ia backcrouad. (AP Laserpholo).
·
'•

the compromise.
U.S. District Judge Nauman Scott
on Thursday said he would dismiss
contempt charges against them and
give the girls credit for their school
work. In exchange, the girls must, ...
transfer to Jones Street Junior High
School after the semester ends next
Friday.
And state District Judge Richard
Lee must stop interfering In
desegregation plans, Scott said.
"The ruling he handed down ... was
just like a dictator," charged James
M. Nalley, guardian for two of the
girls. "It exemplifies what federal
judges are for."
"I d.on't like anybody telling me
what to do," Scott said. "The people
who protest are not being
unreaspnable in their reaction." But
he added that "I'm not going to let
this school system be sacrificed to
thls (busing) argument. "
He said Buckeye students had
been " called upon because the
Buckeye area had never contributed" previously to an integrated, parish-wide school
system.
"My mission, regardless of whose
feelings I hurt, is to keep white and
black students in this system as
much as I can.

ATLANTA (AP) - Widespread
outbreaks of influenza have been
reported in nine states this winter,
and 17 states - including Ohio have reported regional outbreaks,
according to new figures released
today by the national Centers for
Disease Control.
The number of states reporting
widespread outbreaks increased by
five during the week ending Jan. 10.
There were 11 more states reporting
regional outbreaks.
Widespread outbreaks are defined
by the CDC as those occurring in
counties with more than 50 percent
of a state's population. Regional out·
breaks are those occurring in counties with less than SO percent of the
population.
The CDC said deaths due to
pneumonia and influenza in the 121

cities it surveys were elevated above
th.e expected number of deaths last
week for the fifth consecutive week.
Widespread outbreaks were reported in Massachusetts, Rhode Island,
NewYork, North Dakota, North
Carolina, Tennessee, Colorado, Utah
and Alaska .•
States reporting regional outbreaks included New Hampshire ,
Connecticut, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Indiana , Illinois, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Iowa, Missouri, South
Dakota, Nebraska, Alabama,
Mississippi, Arkansas, Texas and
Montana.
The predominant strain of influenza virus this season is called A·
Bangkok. Flu symptoms include
fever, chills, headache, dry cough,
soreness and aching in the back and
limbs.

BOSTON (AP) - Thousands of
Massachusetts students received an
unexpected holiday today as all gasheated schools closed to save dwin·
dling supplies of fuel. Meanwhile, a
platoon of utility inspectors fanned
. out to make sure businesses lower
their thermostats.
Gov. Edward King, in ordering the
schools closed, said Thursday that
voluntary conservation of gas
wasn't working and that depleted
supplies were bringing the state to
the brink of an industrial shutdown.
Some school systems, including
Boston's, aMounced a complete
shutdown regardless of the type of
fuel used .
An estimated 143,000 pupils, including 65,000 In Boston, were on en·
forced holiday from 300 schools. The
state did not have precise figures on
the nwnber of students or schools affected .

King also · ordered commercial
custmners of Boston Gas Co., tbe
state's largest gas utility, to lower
thermostats to 55. Residential conservation is voluntary, and King
asked that thermostats be set at 63 .
Boston Gas, under the supervision
of the Public Utilities Department,
is responsible for compliance inspections and has assigned 40 people
to monitor commercial customers.
The school shutdown is designed to
save about 4 miUion cubic feet of
gas, about 1 percent of recent dally
consumption, according to Energy
Secret;lry Joseph Fitzpatrick. He
said closing schools was preferabl~
to shutting down industry to save
gas while avoiding a drastic
·economic impact.
James O'CoMors, a Boston. Gas
Co. vice president, said he hoped th~
school closing• would spur others to
conserve more .

Appeal made for Reedsville

OUR REMAINING STOCK

MANY OTHER WINTER FASHIONS

BUCKEYE, La. (AP) - A minor
fire caused considerable smoke
damage at all-white Buckeye High
School just hours after a state judge
who had · defied a federal
desegregation order agreed to a
compromise allowing three white
girls to finish the semester there, officials said.
.
The state fire marshall was asked
to investigate the cause of the blaze,
which broke out in a shop at the rear
of the school shortly before midnight. The fire, reported by a passerby, was doused in minutes but
caused extensive smoke damage, officials said.
School Principal Charles Waite
said he did not believe the fire had
anything to do with the dispute between a state and federal judge that
Thursday prompted blacks and
whites to heckle each other outside a
courthouse as the two judges
reached a cornprmnise.
The case involved three white
girls who sought to attend Buckeye
rather than a predominantly black
school. Before the fire, Waite said he
would re-enroll Michelle Laborde,
Lynda McNeal and Ramona Carbo
today. But Waite and the girls'
parents, guardians and lawyers said
they were confused and dismayed by

Dwindling supplies
force school closing

JANUARY CLEARANCE

lf2 PRICE
1h PRICE
ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
~MANY,

1 Section , 10 pages

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

26 states have
flu .o utbreaks.

ore than 600 under arrest

Li.ttle boys' and girls' tops, shirts,
sweaters and flannel shirts.

entine

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio Friday, January 16-, 1981

, ~It"~·

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

112 PRICl

PRESIDENT ~ Marvin Kelly
was re-~lected nrcsidcnt of Middleport VIUase .CouncU at the
Moodily Dlgbt m~. This wUI
be Kelly's slxtb year as Council
president•

a1 y

· - had no conunent on the negotiations and was
meeting in the White House with his foreigft 110Hcy
aides.
: · ·
Nabavi, outlining the Iranian position, said " only the
real willingness of Washington can bring decisive
results today '' and the leader of Friday prayers in
Tehran also Indicated a breakthrough was at hand: ' .
The Air Force jet carryin~ William T. Lake, deputy ·.
(Continued on page 10)
·

Fire hits school
after compromise

Ella Fugate

squad runs

•

. ftlll(e-

KIDDIE SHOPPE

CHILDREN'S
WINTER ..TOPS

specialists were to meet immediately with Warren M.
Christopher, head of the U.S. negotiating team.
In Washington, Vice President Walter Mondale told
CBS News, "we're trying to do things in hours that
would take months otherwise." But Mondale cautioned
that there was no agreement yet and said: "We've had
our hearts broken before and I think we'd better keep
our expectations under control."
President (:arter - who leaves office next Tuesday

Vol. 21, No. 193

I

.Fire losses on calls answered by driven a total of 17,130.3 miles
the Middleport Fire Department in during the year.
1980 amounted to $153,750, Fire Chief
• JeU Darst reports.
.
· The department last year answered a total of 609 calls, 116 being
fire and rescue runs and 493
emergency calls.
"Among the fires 33 were structures, 17 vehicles, 19 rescue, 18 ser·
Vice, six brush-trash, five hazardous
collditions, and one false alann.
Of the total losses , $67,350 was in
f(res in the village; $74,150 resulting
ill fires outside of the village and
' $12,250 in vehicle fires.
.... The department worked a total of
1187.9 man hours with an average of
13 .men per call. All vehicles were

change the hostages for frozen Iranian asseta.
A U.S. Air Force jet with British and American
bankers on board arrived in Algeria in an attempt to ,
work out-the complicated financial arrangements with
a U.S. negotiating team that has been consulting with
Algerian g&lt;&gt;-betweens in Algiers.
There appeared to be about 10 to 12 people in the
group. They were met by U.S. Embassy officials who
said there would be no statements. The financial

Copyrighted 1981

Bank

111 W. 2nd

.

e

r------------------------.

Fire losses total $153,750

; . T)lree calls were answered by
• local units We(jnesday, the Meigs
Emergency Medical Services repor·
ts. At 10:54 p.m., the Middleport
·u ntt went to the Flea Bag for James
tl.'Parsons, Long Bottom, who had
been shot in the le-g. He was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
'AI 8:50p.m., the . Syracuse Unit
went to Thlrd St., Racine, the scene
Of ·a fire . She was treated on the
scene. At II: 12, the Syracuse Unit
Went to the Third St., fire scene for
tlris Hubbard, a firemen, for smoke
illhalation.
He was taken to
. Veterans Memorial Hospital.

~~A;l;an;';s;fa;th;e;r;w;a;s;ln;Ca;;li;.fjjjorn;iijia;.;B;oth;iij;iijbodliiiiyiii.liiiiiiiliiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij

: 'Area Deaths :

Sybil Ebersbach, Pomeroy,
received word of the death of her
aunt, Ella Fugate, 98, at Ypsilanti,
Michigan, Wednesday night.
Mrs. Fugate is survived by two
sons, Ray and Harold of Ypsilanti
and one sister, Mrs. Orville Rader,
Columbus.
Funeral services will be held at
.
the
Wagner-Davis Funeral Home in
_
SEEKS DIVORCE
Ypsilanti.
Alice Faye Curtis, Long Bottom,
filed suit for divorce in Meigs County
VETERANS MEMORIAL
~on Pleas Court against Larry
Admitted-Brady
Knapp, New
Curtis, Long Bottom.
Haven;
Oris
Hubbard,
Syracuse.
Kay Reed filed for support under
Discharged-Barbara
Musser,
the Reciprocal Agreement Act
·
Ruth
Bailey,
Ina
Massar,
Ross
Kent,
a'gainst Richards D. Reed.
Michael Hewitt, Mae Bird.
CLOSED MONDAY
SEEK DIVORCE
The Pomeroy Courthouse will
Ruth Dailey, Rutland, filed suit for
close Monday in obserance of Martin
i,Aither King Day Judge John C. divorce in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court against Ronald Dailey,
Bacon aMounced today.
Rt. 1, Portland.

E~ergen~y

Alan child,
Maddenun's
around
eyes. He died a battered
claimed by his parents, but 300 townspeople attended his funeral and
wreaths sent by strangers were
·signed " from one who cares."
He was buried with his teddy bear
Wednesday in a donated coffin. ')'he
Rev. Michael Chase told mourners
the boy was "in.a home of goodne~
'and love which he didn't have here."
But at the same time, Chase said,
Alan's death should serve as a
reminder that "child abuse does
extst in this conununity and cannot
go ignored."
The quiet kindergartner's body
was found Sunday at his home after
an anonymous tip to police. His
mother and her boyfriend were
charged with murder in~s death .
After relatives refused to take
custody of the boy's body, residents
donated a small blue coffin, a
funeral plot and grave marker.
Police acted as pallbearers.
"These people, they didn't know
him," said Rod Cookson, funeral
director. "But they sent flowers and
came to the funeral so that the little
fellow didn't go out of this world
without a friend." ,
The boy's mother, Pam Berg, 24,.
and a boyfriend, James Crain, 2fi,

he a~d a grandfather in Gales~w;g ;
refused to take custody of the childs ·.

were held in the Adains County Jail
and did not attend the funeral.

QUINCY, Ill. (AP) - Mlrtician's
makeup couldn' t hide the bruises

· LITl1.E BOY BURIED _ Policemen served as
. pallbearers Wednesday at the funeral of :&gt;-year-old
Alan Madden, the sby kindergarten student beaten to

ostage

The two story frame home of Martha and Bill Durst near Reedsville
was destroyed by fire last Sunday a!. ternoon.
· Mr. and Mrs. Durst had gone nearby to chop wood when the fire started which was believed to have been
electrical in origin. The family !oat
all of its clothing, furnishings and
personal belonl{ings. The touple is
presm ttly st11 ying with~ her jJIIrenl:i,

~ouple

Mr. and Mrs. Richard Coleman.
Anyone wishing to help may call the
Coleman home, 992-3376 or Mary
Bryant, a sister of Mrs. Durst, at
992-2870.
The home had been extensively
remodeled two or three months ago.
The Olive Township Fire Department responded. However, the fire
was completely out of control when
the department arrived.

ORIENTATION - Sonja Denise HIU, a senior at Southern Hlgli
School, wUI represent Meigs County at the Ohio Jualor Miss Scholarship
Program to be held Jan. ~24 at the Memorial Theater in Mount Vernon.
Miss Hill, daughter of Dennie HOl, Racine, and Sandra Baer, Minersville,
was selected Meigs County Junior Miss late last year. She is shown with a
program official recently when she attended an orientation session held
at Mount Vernon. Senion from 28 counties will be taking part in the state
eveat in which $10,1100 in cash tuition scholarships and more than $48,000
in college graated scholarships wUI be awarded by Ohio Junior Miss, Inc.
Conteslants are judged on youth fitness, 15 percent; poise and appearance, 15 percent; creative and performing arts, 20 percent;
scholastic achievement, 15 percent, and personal judges Interview; 35
percent.

Two hurt in seven
traffic accidents
A Gallipolis woman was injured in

a one-car crash on Mitchell Rd. in
Gallla County Thursday morning.
The Gallia-Meigs Post of the Ohio
Highway Patrol reported Marilyn K.
Skidmore, 35, was northbound when
she met a southbound vehicle at a
bridge and applied her brakes.
Her car then lost control, went off
the right side of the road and
collided with the bridge, causing
moderate damage to her car,
troopers said.
Skidmore was taken to Holzer
Medical Center liy the Gallia EMS,
where she was treated and rt!leased
for a back injury.
,
The patrol reported another accident which ended in injury for a
Gallipolis woman.
According to the report, Keith A.
McCarty, 23, Gallipolis, was southbound on SR 7 in Gallia County at
6:55 p.m. Thursday when a car
driven by Augustus M. Steele, 81,
Gallipolis, pulled from a private
driveway and collided.
The crash forced McCarty's car to
go off the right side of the road and
collide with a power pole and gas
meter, causing moderate damage.
Jessie L. McCarty, 22 , a passenger
in the McCarty vehicle, was injured
but not treated. Steele's car suffered
slight damage and he was cited by
the patrol for failure to yield.
Troopers were also kept busy investigating some two-car accidents
on Gallia County roads Thursday.
The patrol said Donald R. Martin,
21, Cheshire, was eastbound on SR
S54at 3:15p.m. when his car collided
on curve with a westbound car
driven by Woodrow T. Zwilling, 68,
Syracuse; causing mod erate
damage to Martin's car and slight to

'·

the Zwilling auto.
Troopers said Omar E. Baker, 49,
Wellston, was eastbound on CR·4 at
4:15 p.m. when his car slid left of
center on a curve and collided with a
car driven by Kevin A. Enunert, 18,
Thunnan, causing slight damage to
both vehicles.
According to the patrol, Freddie
L. Helms, 21, Cheshire, was ,soutbbound on CR25at 4:15p.m. whep his
car skid left of ceriter .on a curve. ·
A northbound auto driven. by
Michael R. Coughenour, 25, ·
Gallipolis, saw Helms' car skla and
went off the road into a ditch to avoid
collision. However, Helms' car 'stiU
collided with the Cougllerlour ·
vehicle, causing severe daril;lg:e to .
Helms' car and moderate to .' .'
Coughenour's car. ·
. ..
There were no injuries and Helma ··
was cited for failure to yield half ot
the roadway .
: . · . ·.. · ·. ·
No injuries w~re reported in .a .:."·: ·
minor three-car crash in. Meigs· ·, ..,
County Thursday afternoon..
'
Troopers said Linda C. Stof/a~t~ 37;·. ·..·
Middleport, was (iarked on SR..l24 at . · ·
3:45p.m. apd started her ~a.i\ .Which·: ·.:
shifted into drive instead·of reverse, :
forcing her vehicle ' to · strike . a.
parked car owned by Michael'· ·A- ·
Tillis, 22, Rutland.
·
·: ' .
The collision also forced .Tillis' car
into an auto own·ed by ·Kenpeth.A.
Davis, 59, Rutland, causinr: ~light
damage to Tillis' car. Stobart was
cited for improper starting .
The patrol reported Ralph 0. McMillin, 23, Vinton, was not iojtired
when his car struck and killed a deer
on SR 325 in Gallia County at 6 p.m.
Thursday, causing slight damage to
his car .

,,

�January '16, 1981

Commentary

January 16, 1981
The D&lt;!iiY sentinel

ert1\

· Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Eastern, Soutil:~fft ...
big game in SVAC&lt;: ...

Meigs .Marauder cage team

~~91'1«.-19£Qi'w. N.E.R.~\

.

"UI.M€

:R,.eagan appears
:j-ovial, relaxed
stallion as a gift from the president
of Mexico.
dilys before he moves into the White
At the same time, Carter, if not
House, Ronald Reagan is sampling
avoiding the public eye, took no
the ·perquisites of the presidency
pains to step into focus during a lowwithollt the burdens. And in contrast
key
visit to Plains.
to a bowed Jinuny Carter, Reagan
Despite the best efforts of
almost unaware of the weight
Reagan's press aides to shield him,
aboUt to descend on him.
he
stopped often to chat with reporAS be prepared to move east this
week; living amidst packing boxes in ters who were more interested in
rooms emptied of furniture headed Iran and Cabinet confilmation
for the White House family quarters, hearings than in haircuts and horReagan appeared jovial and ses.
Before he flew to his ranch near
rela?(ed.
Santa Barbara, Calif., Reagan
"He's been ... very relaxed, very asked press aide Joe Holmes
whether he should talk to the reporconFident about what he's doing not intimidated by what's coining," ters gathered near the Marine Corps
said one aide who has been working helicopter awaiting him. No, Holmes
closely with Reagan on his inaugural said, "they'll understand."
When Reagan arrived in Califoraddreu.
Reagan's time, at least in public, nia a week ago, after a Washington
has been spent in chores and visit, Holmes f.irst sought to perceremonial activities. He said that suade him to ignore tj)e reporters
while he has been briefed on the Car- seeking his attention. But Holmes
ter administration's negotiations to relented and later recalled that
frfie the American hostages in Iran, Reagan " beamed lik·e I said, 'You
he has not been involved in those · can go out and play."'
At the other end of the country,
talkS:'
Ollring his final pre-inaugural Carter was not playing. He was very
period in California, photographers quietly going about personal
had a chance to show him at a preparations lor his life as a former
variety of activities: entering a bar- president, checking out office space,
bei-shop, working at home on his going through his attic - getting
inliDgural address with a sheaf of ready, in the words of brother Billy,
handwritten pages scattered about for the job " of living the rest of his
his desk, accepting an Arabian life."

~

LOS ANGELES (AP) '- In the

fiJi'

Tonight a full slate of basketball
action is scheduled for our high
schools including a big SVAC game
between Southern and Eastern.
In all games, Southern leads a list
of Southeastern Ohio schools with a
.889 winning percentage while
Eastern Is tied for second with an
.818 winning percentage.
Southern, currently ranked lOth in
the state, owns a 8-1 mark and has
scored '579 total points to their opponents' 450. Eaatern has netted 628
points for a 9-2 record and has given
up only 510 points in 11 games. .
Both schools are equally prepared
for tonight's contest as they rounded
out a good week of practice last
evening.
Both Carl Wolfe of Southern and
Coach Dennis Eichinger of Eastern
have named a probable starting five
for the big game.
Eastern will be led by senior
sharp-shooter Gane Cole, who h_as

\

·•

seems

B

~ ~~

Tony Scott
I-7,SeolorC

planning.

· . Traditionally, hospital officials
hair)!. jletermined what kind of services they should offer, based on
~ir. professional orientation and
their . perceptions of the commUnity's needs, Galvagni wrote.
Tiie marketing approach goes to
the"c&lt;insumer to find out what he or
she·wants and what the hospital is
best able to provide in a competitive
environment, he said.
: !lferketers of hospital services
ask: Under what conditions wiJJ the
ctistomer buy our service? How
many customers can we expect under-certain conditions' Can we expect sufficient customers to justify
the·effort?
j~is change in planning
pJ:IIlosophy stems from changing attitudes both from the general public
and "private industry which spends
milliOns of dollars on health insuiarice for its employees, Galvagni
said. ·
;"the cost o( medical benefits now
threatens the very profitability of

"Someday it will all be yours."

Business brawl exposes corporate takeover

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP )
Another big business brawl is exposing Ohio's corporate takeover
law to the elements of public
some of the larger industries in this scrutiny.
nation," he said. " It is becoming
The present exposure comes in the
very clear that major industry will fight by CPE Acquisitions Corp.,
have stronger voice in how care is which was created under the
organized and delivered. We can ex- Canadian Pacific, Ltd., corporate
pect to see industry promoting more umbrella for one purpose: to acquire
competition among providers."
Hobart Corp., of Troy.
Galvagni says the situation has
That old and respected son of
become so bad that it is possible that Ohio's business community started
private industry will develop and in 1897 making food processing
operate its own health care facilties. equipment and in 1918 began adding
The general public may no longer the KitchenAid line oi home apbe convinced that technological pliances. ,
sophistication and increased inWhile exposure hasn't hurt . the
tensity of c~re have anything to do law, it reminds the public that Ohio
with increased life expectancy.
is a fertile ground for corporate
acquisitions. And a frequent referee
"There is growing acceptance of . to such fights says it is industrial
the notion that the hope lor im- acumen - and not the law - that
provement in health care status lies makes Ohio one of the busiest corin controlling environmental and porate battle grounds for expansion.
cultural factors," Galvagni said.
Nodine Miller, a deputy com"Many believe that the answers will missioner for securities at the Ohio
be fotind in behaviors'! change, not Department of Commerce, says big
merely through teclmological im- business frequently sends its smart
provements in the delivery system." money to Ohio to soothe its growing
Galvagni, who is vice president of pains. She attributes this to the numthe division of planning and ber of profitable companies in Ohio
management services of Norton- which she feels are undervalued in
Children's Hospitals, in Louisville, the marketplace.
Ky. , says many hospitals are ·
" We've probably dealt with more
responding to market demands. He takeovers than any other state,"
said birthing rooms, ambulatory Mrs. Miller explained. "There are a
surgery' patient advocate number of significant companies
programs, nutrition and fitness cen- here that make Ohio firms prime
ters and family heath centers are all targets for cornpani~s interested in
examples of efforts to respond to acquisitions. "
customer preferences.
She said the division has considered 31 takeover situations since
the law was enacted in 1969. "That is
31 stock accumulation or stock
solicitation, non-negotiated merger
situations that were reviewed by the
division,' she said. 'The agency does
not get involved in amicable

·e~rry's World

mergers.

The Hobart-C PE case, she said, is
the 19th case riled by an off~ ring
firm . They usually involve disputed
acquisitions.

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"See you around, John/ Now, there's a relllly

• . big flake. "

shareowners can make a reasonable
detennination of whether to sell
their stock in the target company to
the offering firm.
Since it was enacted in 1969, 37
states have developed laws with
similar aims.
"It provides that if you are going
to take over an Ohio company you
have to file with the Ohio Division cl.
Securities and make a series of
disclosures," Mrs. Miller explained.
"The division has to determine if ·
you have provided enough in·
formation so that target
shareholders can make a reasonable
decision."
It also permits the securities office

to convene a hearing of its own
volition if it feels there i.r a use. The
target comP.,ny can also request a
hearing .
In some cases, she said, disclosure
is sufficient to Satisfy the division.
Where it is determined a hearing is
needed, the matter becomes an adversary proceeding with documents,
witness testimony and other evidence offered for division consideration.
In the Hobart case, after CPE
made the required filing, Mrs.
Miller's office was unable to find a
good reason not to convene a
hearing, a logic in the takeover law
which states that if no hearing Is
conducted there has to be good
reason. Hobart then challenged
CPE 's offer, saying It had not complied with disclosure rules.
When Copperweld was a target of
!mete! in 197&amp;, steelworkers marched on Copperweld headquarters at
Pittsburgh to signify a fear of losing
their jobs. lmetel won in court and in
the marketplace and since then Copperweld's steel facility continues aa
a viable part of the greater Warren
community.
In 1977, Babcock and Wilcox Co., a
heavy equipment manufacturer
with signficant holdings at Barberton and Alliance, Ohio, was the
target of United Technologies, a
multi-faceted corporation headquar-

tered in Connecticut UT made
several increasingly higher tender ,
offers for B&amp;W stock and fought
B&amp;W in several federal courts and
before the Ohio securities division.
The furor attracted wide attention, prompting McDermott, an
international energy and shipping
business, to enter the bidding and
eventually win.
In 1978, Occidental Petroleum
Corp. of Los Angeles made an unsolicited offer for Mead Corp., a
paper and forest produds firm, for a
tax free stock exchange computed to
be a· $1 billion deal. Mead resisted
andsuedinfederalcourt.
The U.S. Justice Department and
the Securities and Exchange Commission got into the act over Meap's
allegations that Occidental violated
federal antitrust and securities
laws. Four months after advancing
the offer, Occldenbll withdrew it and
Mead continues as an independent
corporation.
In 1979, Amca Corp., a corporate
grandson of Canadian Pacific Ltd.,
bid for controlling stock in Warner &amp;
Swazey, a Cleveland firm which
makes precision grinding equipment. That developed into a bidding
.war with the Bendix Corp., and Bendix won.
Thus Hobart becomes the second
target firm of Canadian Pacific Enterprises (U.S.),Inc., a holding firm
imder the Canadian Pacific Ltd.,
umbrella. Robert Theis, president'«
the' U.S. subsidiary, plainly
acknowledges that Hobart is a very ·
attractive industry in the nation's
business community. While he
denies any knowledge of Amca 's efforts to buy Warner x- Swazey he
does say his holding corporation 13
interested in adding an Ohio
manufacturing industry to its portfolio. He described this as a core
area, a figure off speech he applied
to describe other investments In real
estate, mining and minerals Industries, oil and gas, agriculture,
forest produds and Iron and steel.

Tonight, Meigs' Marauders begin
second round play ip the SEOAL .
basketball standings. Meigs is 2-.!1
overall and has yet to win a game in
loop play despite coming close on
several occasions. Meigs js M
within the league. The maroon and
gold Maraude.rs will be on the road
against Jackson tonight, then return
home to host Ironton Saturday.
In the initial outing lor Meigs this
season, the Marauders were beaten
by Jackson, 57-52. With fewer turnovers and a good offensive outing,
things could be different this time
around. Jackson is 3-8 overall and 251n the league.
.
Coach Gordon Fisher said, "Some
tenns can win when one player has a
bot hand, but our whole team has to
bave a good outing." No two players

Mike Miller
5-11, Senior G

BOYSOVERALlSTANDINGS .
(Varsity, as of Jan . 10)

TEAM

W L P
8 1 579

Southern

Ale•ander
Athens
eastern

Gallipolis
Nelsonville York
Trimble
Wellston
Logan
Wahama
Hannan Trace

warren

Waverly
Southwestern

VInton county
Belpre
Ironton

Kyger Creek
Jackson

Meigs

Miller
North Gallia
Point Pleasant
Federal Hocking

WASHINGTON (AP ) - President promised that there will be no
Carter's farewell budget is written . erosion in those benefits.
Carter came to office saying he
in sand, soon to be washed over by
would balance the federal budget by
the incoming Republican tide.
It is subject to the will of a con- tht; end of his first term - which turservative Congress and of Ronald ned out to be his last - but found it
Reagan. They won't buy Carter's impossible. Reagan has promised
priorities, and the defeated even more rapid strides toward a
president doesn't expect that they balanced budget, but he and his
people already are hinting that it
will. The voters decided that.
In part, the message· Carter has may take them a while.
The Carter budget projects a $27.5
sent io Congress continues the cambillion
deficit.
paign he lost. It disputes Reagan
That
leads direc;tly into one of his
policies on such issues as taxes, the
disputes
with his successor. "High
roots of inflation and defense spen.Inflation
cannot
be attributed solely
ding.
to
government
spending," Carter
But it is no mo1·e than Carter's last
said.
"The
g1
owth
in budget outlays
word, for the debate is over, and the
baa
been
more
the result of
Reagan administration is at hand.
Carter's $739 billion budget is up economic factors than the cause of
$76.6 billion over the current year, them."
Reagan argued coast to coast that
and there are some targets for the
kind of cuts Reagan and the government causes inflation, and
Republicans in Congress have been that government can end it. He said
promising. But the old ad- the first step is to rein in speqding.
ministration also confronts the new That's what Carter' s budget
with a warning, noting that more challenges him to do.
Two likely spots for Republican
than $55 billion of the increase is due
to the high cost of programs that prw1ing: foreign aid and governcontinue automatically, many of ment jobs programs. Carter adthem entitling people to payments vocates both.
The Carter budget proposes a $23.3
from the government. One of these is
Social S&lt;!curity , and Reagan has billion increase in defense spending.

"There will be advocates of higher
defense levels, but after careful
review I do not believe that higher
spending would add significantly to
our national security," Carter said.
One of those advocates is Ronald
Reagan . Given his campaign

promises on the subject, he almost
has to find a way to Invest more in
defense than the president he is succeeding.
And Ronald Reagan's is the voice
that counts, beginning at high noon
l)ext Tuesday.

The Daily Sentinel

.

IIIC..tltnel
,_,.,,oa~o

OP

450
9 2 779 640
9 2 733 629
9 2 628 510
9 2 596 508
7 2 556 474

7 4 744 602
7 5 159 727
7 5 716 705
4 3 420 369
5 5 593 597
5 5 585 592
5 6 670 660
4 5 506 458
4 '6 585 607
3 5 448 m
4 7 576 590
3 6 505 548
3 8 639 732'
2 8 506 563
2 9 652 780
1 8 490 624
0 7 344 464
0 9 341 566

SEOAL STANDINGS
(Varsity)

TEAM
Athens
Gallipolis

waverly
L011an

Wellston

W L P OP
6. I 459 375
6 I 373 321
4 3 428 400
4 3 381 390
3 4 402 414
3 4 372

Ironton

371

2 5 388 451
0 7 353 433

Jackson
Meigs

SVAC STANDINGS
IVarsllyl
TEAM

southern
Eastern
ttenn1tn Trace

Kyger creek
Norlh Gall Ia

W

L

597 ( 101

Ha nnan Tra ce

660
727
IJJ7
548

Waverly

p

OP

4 0 236 182

4 0 235
2 2 249

163

)38

219 212
0 4 190 264
0 4 190 280
2 2

Wellston
Vinton County
Kyger Creek
Federal Hocking

566

Point Pleasant

464
732
624
780

Jac kson

North Galli a

Miller

(111
1121
1101
191
191
Ill
1111
191
1111

ByHAL·BOCK
Associated Press
NEW YORK - Bob Gibson, one of
the premier pitchers of his time, is
the newest members of the baseball
Hall of Fame.
His election was announced Thursday by the Baseball Writers
ASsociation of America .
Gib5on was an overwhelming
choice in his first year of eligibility,
named on :m of the 401 ballots cast
by veteran members of the BBWAA.
No other candidate came close to the
301 votes - or 75 percent - required
for election.
·
Former Dodger pitcher Don
Drysdale finished second with 243

59 .7

60.0
60
.6

60.7
60.9
62.9
66 .3
66 .5

69 .3
70 9

RACINE - The Southern Tornadoettes whirled up a storm Thursday evening and blew away the
hustling and previously high flying
Eastern Eagles by a 58-44 score.
Southern is now peliect at I !HI and is
currently leading the SV AC race at
CLEVELAND (APJ - Former IHI.
fireballing pitcher Bob Feller, who
Eastern drops to 7-2 overall and
six times won more tbali 20 games
retains a stronghold for title conwith the Cleveland Indians, has ac- tention with a 4-1 SV AC record.
Southern and Eastern were
cepted a job with the American
League club's front office.
ranked number one and two defenFeller, 62, peliormed for the In- sively in the area, allowing an
dians for 18 seasons between 1936 average of less than 30 points per
and 1956, compiling a 266-162 record game.
and 3.25 earned run average.
Offense, however, not defense
He 'll be working in public seemed to be the name of the game
relations and ticket sales and Thursday night as Southern swept to
assisting the Indians' pitching staff a lf&gt;-10 first quarter lead behind Cinat spring training in Tucson, Ariz., dy Evans' effort.
the club said Thursday.
Evans ripped the nets from the
"I've been on the fringes of corner at a torrid pace and emerged
baseball for a few years," Feller as the game's leading scorer with 19
said, noting that he has averaged 90 points. Evans canned eight of 11
to 95 appearances a year at minor . field goals for 73 percent. She was
league parks across the country. He aiso a factor in the hattie of the boar·
has also coached professional ds, collecting live rebounds. Tammy
baseball in Japan.
Smith canned four of six from the
Phil Seghi , Indians genera] · field for a super 10 point effort as did
1nanager, emphasized that Feller Tonja Salser in a playmaking role
will not be replacing Dave Duncan for the Tornadoes.
as the team's pitching coach.
Sarah Goebel and Tammy Hudson
"I don 't want to be a pitching tamed up for excellent 17 point percoach," Feller said. " I think too formances to share top scoring
many pitchers are overcoached. I'm honors for their club. Cassie Sheets
a strict believer In hard work, added eight.
throwing a lot and not babying yourBoth teams played dead even the
self. And I don't want to step on second period. Both netted 16 points
anybody'stoes."
apiece against a combination of

~~

NOTICE

· · · by

·

1 per
ng the Commis-

sion for the proper subscription
form .

David M. Polk

Commission Secretary

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

· 0 True ·0 False
'

,._

ROBERT L. WINGETI

. .,'· . ··.'.' :··.:,:i'.:'.': . ', :··.'

·.. ,: ' .

WE'LL MAKE THE fAX LAWS WORK FOR YOU

. . .the Bird Feed Specialists

DALE R0'111GEB, JR.

180 Mulbeny Aw.

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992-2115

..

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SUGAR RUN MILLS

NIWI-

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.nw,:

You should always
file the same tax form
the IRS sends you
In the mall.

~~ ......_.._......,,....._c:::l,_

. : ..

Southern repeatedly split the Eagle
press and often drove in for the easy
two point play. The Tornadoettes led
at intermission1 31-26.
The third period provided much
excitement for the large crowd on
hand. After bOth clubs exchanged
buckets Southern hit. a torrid warm
front and tallied eight unanswered
points on the scoreboard before
Eastern could get hack in the
groove. At the buzzer Southern
opened up a 49-37 lead, then coasted
in for the 58-44 win.
Coach Connee Enslen had nothing
but praise for the fine performance
of her girls. Her club hit 26 of 58 from
the floor for 45 percent, while connecting on six of 13 from the foul
line.
Coach Sue Thompson's Eagles hit
16 of 54 from the field and sank 12 of
22 from the foul line lor f&gt;5 percent.
Eastern was whistled for 15 per- .
sonals.
·
Eastern won the battle of the boar-.· ·
ds, 35-29, led by Hudson and &lt;;loebel. . :
Della Johnson grabbed 12 rebound!i · ·
for the winners, Tammy Smith
seven, Evans five, Laren Wolfe four,
and Debie Micluiel two.
Southern collected 16 steals, five
assists, and 19 fouis committing only
three miscues.

.

.

Musial, Bob Feller, Jackie RoJ;IiQ~ :
son, Sandy Koufax, Ernie Banks, ,
Willie Mays, Warren Spahn a,lll\ ~ .
Mickey Mantle.
. , ,•
"That didn't affect me until! saw :
the guys who made it in their first '
year,'' Gibson said. "That's s~ ,,
pretty fast company."
, ,:
Gibson, of course, was a pretty .
fast pitcher. he won 251 games irr,i \ : ,
seasons with the St. Louis Cardioal8 , :
with a career 2.91 earned
average and 3,117 strikeouts. Only_· ,
three other men in baseball history : ·
- Walter Johnson, Gaylord Pucy .
and Nolan Ryan - have struck·oot l
more than 3,000 batters in thelt · ·
careers.
Five times, Gibson won 20 or mo(e
games in a season and his best year : '
from a won-lost standpoint was l970 ;
when he was 23-7. But his most over: ·.
powering season and the one: h,e ·'
remembered best is 1968,
the year' he' t· •
.
posted a 22-9 record and set a recQI'&lt;t . ;
with a 1.12 earned run average .
, ' ·. •
"I can't remember having a b:{d' . ·
start that season," he said. "I did' :
everything right. Everything' . '{ ' '
threw was knee-high and on the cor- ·
ner .It was a once-in-a-lifetime year. : '
· · '
I cherish that season. "
Pitchers were dominating t.~ ,
game at that time and baseba)l : ·
decided to lower the mound and '
alter the strike zone to compensate.
Gibson chuckled over that devel(/lr : .
ment.
·

Your financial circumsl;mc~ ·(;!tingc: , ft()m yt:~ :, .
to year. The form ·Jit;'u .~ lli$t.:ye'.ll'_'might .. -:
not lx the right rorm tlu~ yeu; H&amp;;R,.Biocl&lt; &lt;.-anbelp
you determine which Js ·rh&lt;':bc!lt, {Orlti.'tcHliie. ·
The answer is FAlSE, smce t!ie ·i.RS 'Can't imOw'
or tax related change~ Whlth nilght have ,.
occurred in your situation last year.

--....

0

WILD BIRD SEED HEADQUARTERS

the period for a 3~281ead.
In the second half, Kellogg, whose
previous high game as a collegian
was 23 points, scored 2ti - many of
them slam dunks .
Kellogg was 18-out-of-28 from the
floor in the highest one-game
scoring total for a buckeye since the
school record 49 set by Gary Bradds

BOBHOEFUCH

•

-------------_;;~~~~_:a~n~d~z~on~e:_:d~e~fe!:!ns~es!:.·i

DEVOTED T0111E JN11!IlUT OF THE MEI08-IIWION AREA

~v

-

Joining Wolfe at guard will be· , ;
Terry McNickle. McNickle owns: a... .;
2.5 average, but contributes mosijy.. · •
with his defensive efforts. Robert ·.
Brown will take on the forwant·-' •
center position, while the other for- · :
ward starting role Is up for grabS., ·
Dwayne Curfman, Jay Rees, . . ,
Richard Wolfe, and Tom Roseberi-)i. . :
will flU in atthat position.
, . ~
That crew carries a 3.7; 4.88; 6.~; . ~ ,
and 6.1 mark respectively. BroW!) ,
has been the single dominating fac- ·
tor on the boards for the Tornadoes.
Ga!Jif! time is 8 p.m. with the reserve .
contestsetfor6:30p.m.
·. : ,•

I"'

Kellogg paces Buckeye win
COLUMBUS - Clark Kellogg
scored a career-high 42 points Thursday night as Ohio State pulled away
In the second half for an easy 81-69
Big Ten victory over Northwestern .
Kellogg, a 6-foot-7 sophomore forward, scored 16 points in the first
half as the Buckeyes rallied late in

votes - 58 short of election. The late
Gil Hodges, another former
Dodgers, was third with 241.
Slugger Harmon Killebrew, fifth
on the all-time home run list with 573
and another first-year candidate,
finished fourth with 239, one more
than relief ace Hoyt Wilhelm. Juan
Marichal, a pitching contemporary
of Gibson's and another first-year
candidate, had 233. None of the other
33 candidates received more than
200votes.
Gibson became the 11th man elected to the Cooperstown shrine in his
first year of eligibility, sharing that
singular distinction with AI Kaline,
Ted Williams, Stan Musical, Bob

Southern girls
defeat Eastern

Feller accepts
Cleveland job

TEAMS RANKEO
OFFENSIVELY
TEAM
PIS. IGI Avg.
Alexander
779 111 1 70.8
Tr i mbl e
744 (11 ) 67.6
Athens
733 11 1 66.7
Southern
&gt;19 191 64.3
Wellston
759 12 ) 63.3
NelSonville-York
556 191 61.8
Waverly
670 111 1 60.9
Wohama
420 17 1 60.0
Logan ,
716 (12 1 59.7
Hannan Trace
593 1101 59.3
652 1111 59.3
Miller
Vinton Counly
585 (101 58.5
warren
585 I 101 58.5
Jackson
639 (111 58.1
E as te rn
628 (11 ) 57.1
Southwestern
S06 (9 ) 56.2
Kyger Creek
505 191 56.1
Belpre
448 181 56 .0
North Gall ia
490 191 54.4
Gallipoli s
596 (111 54.2
Ironton
576 1111 52.4
Mei gs
506 1111 50.6
Point Pleasant
34-t (7) 49.1
Federal Hocking
341 (91 37.9
DEFENSIVELY
TEAM
Pts. IGI Avg.
Gall ipOlis
500 1111 46.2
510 ( 111 46.4
Eas tern
Soumern
450 191 50 ·0
458 191
Southwes tern
Wahama ·
369 171 ~:~
Nelsonville · York
474 191 52.7
Ironton
590 1111 53 -6
Belpre
432 181
602 1111 ~!:~
T rimbl e
Meigs
563 1101 56.3
629 (111 57 .2
Athens
Al exande r
640 1111
Logan
705 I121 ~: :~
592 1101 59 .2
Warren

dime.-.;;;.!

ter, can shoot from every
He has a sparkling 19.33 average per
game.
Wolfe, a junlor-playmaking guard,
owns a respectable 12.9 points pergame shooting eye, although he• o(ten contributes more with his serro-• .
sational JIIISSing.

Gibson new hall of fame member·:;

ween points scored and given up
have been able to put it all together
on any given night, but in the nea'r shows that Meigs has been in every
. ball game.
future things may change.
Saturday night at home Meigs will
At one time or &lt;~nother it seems
like every Marauder has had a great challe~ge Ironton's Tigers in
another SEOAL game. Ironton
night from the floor.
Kevin Smith, who has had several downed Meigs 53-51 on a last second
20 point nights, leads the way with a shot in their first meeting. Meigs,
10 point ·scoring average. Steve who shot a very hot 61 percent from
Ohlinger closely follows with a 9.6 the field that evening, still lost.
Ironton is 4-7 overall and ~ in the
average per game, Jeff Wayland a
6.9 mark, and Mike Miller a 6.6 league standings. Ironton has
mark. Bob Ashley has responded averaged 52.2 points per team and
Meigs 50.6 so this game should be a
with a 6.1average .
Ohlinger has been a dominating harnburner .
Coach Mick Childs' reserves will ·
factor underneath lor the Meigs
team , responding with over 7.5 open up both evenings at 6:30p.m.
The younger Marauders have been
rebounds lor the Marauders.
s
howing vast improvement
As a team, Meigs has scored 506
throughout
the course of the year.
points to their opponents 563 in 10
Varsity
tilts
are scheduled lor an 8
games. This n11rrow margin' betp.m. tip off.

Area cage standings

Southwe!tern

0

.

Major firms which have been involved in takeover disputes in Ohio
in recent years include Copperweld,
a Pennsylvania firm with a major
steel mill at Warren ; Babcock x
Wilcox of Bar berton; Mead Corp., of
Dayton, and Warner and Swazey of
Cleveland, aU of which preceded the
Hobart fight.
Copperweld was sold to lmetel of
France after a bitter federal court
li~ht in Pennsylvania. B&amp;W fought
acquisition efforts by United
Technologies of Connecticut until J .
Ray McDermott, a New Orleans
holding firm, became interested and
ended up as successful bidder for
B&amp;W.
Mead successfully fought a
takeover move by Occidental
Petroleum Co., of Los Angeles, in a
deal some financiers valued at $1
billion. The fight by Warner &amp;
Swazey, which makes precision
grinding equipment, against being
taken over by Amca Corp., another
Canadian Pacific enterprise, attracted wide attention.
It attracted the attention of the
Bendix Corp., which got into a bidding war with Amca for Warner and
Swazey.
10
Bendix won.
Mrs. Miller is presiding over
hearings into the effort by CPJ:;
Acquisitions, a subordinate of
Canada's biggest private enterprise,
to gain control of Hobart through a
solicitation to buy its stock from
shareholders.
If tradition continues, she said,
Hobart will lose its autonomy, but
not necessarily to CPE.
" Nearly every time that attention
is focused on a company, somebody
will get it ," she explained.
"Sometimes the offeror gets it;,
sometimes a white knight comes
riding in and gets it. "
Ohio was one of the first states in
the nation to write a corporate
takeover law. It requires that an offering company disclose enough information about itself so that

Carter's last budget will be wasted effort ·

•

Roger Kovalchik
· 5-10, Jurilor G

Meigs travels to Jackson
in second round opener

Planners must change, too
CINCINNATI (AP) - Changing
public attitudes toward health care
are dictating a need for change in attitud~· by hospital planners, a Kentucltyhospital official says.
iq ~n article ·published in PHI
·Magazine, a magazine for health
planning published in Cincinnati,
Wllli8111 Galvagni advocates a
marlieting approach to hospital

l55

had three successive 20 point nights,
and has hit double figures every
game this year.
The forward is averaging 17.9
points per game for the hustling
Eagles. Joining Cole at forward will
be Mike Bissell . with a nine point
average and a 'Zl point outing under
his belt.
·Greg Wigal and Brett Mathews
will run the offense at guards. Wigal
owns a 4.3 scoring average and
Mathews a 2.3 lll!lrk. Tim Dill,
Eastern's big man and two year letterman, weighs in at center. DiU has
two 30 point games and has a double
figure average of 12.9 points per
game.
Cole and Dill have dominated the
boards for the Eagles, although
Bissell and Paul Sprague have had
good nights underneath.
Southern is expected to be led by
Dale Teaford and Kent Wolfe.
Teaford, Southern's hot-handed cen-

~

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0

�. ;~:··_, .•

Januar 16, 1911

Pomeroy-Middle ort, Ohio

. Page-4 The Daily Sentinel

,. (:apt. Russell--What his Constitutional rights mean to him
,

~pt.

Karl R. Russell, son of Mr.
ana tlrs. Kenneth Russell, Route 2,
Rat:i~e, has submitted the prize winrung $SaY on the topic, "My Constii'lti9nal Rights and What They
Meaq to Me."
e.i~i. Russell wrote the es5ay as
one ·of 15 students, among whom
were:representatives of the mining
in&lt;IIJCrY, the U. S. Marines, the
Depitrtment of Welfare and the Mine
Saf&lt;ly:and Health Administration in
Charleston, W. Va. His essay was
'lhfl : !lest submitted among those
ta~'a course under Wayle L. Max·
well;.an instructor at the National
Mif&gt;e:Health and Safety Arademy.
ijlsessay reads:
: _What My Coostitutlonal
·. • Rights Mean to Me
Qh; God, somebody just asked me.
to • write down what my constiiutlonal rights mean to me. My
first lbought was to recall what the
BIIIAJfRights says. I can't believe it,
he~ ·I am a Marine and I can't
remember those rights. I have even
sworn to protect and defend them

with my life and I cannot remember
all of them. Well,.it's to the library to
refresh my memory.
I'm here in the library and there
are so many books, Wait a minute,
why are there so many?
It's because each American has
the freedom to write his or her
thoughts down without being afraid.
I see some travel magazines and begin thinking. Do you know, you
and I can travel anywhere in the
states with only a traffic light to stop
U.s? · I can even leave the country,
with the proper papers, any time I
choose.
My Constitution provides for
business competition. On the surface
this doesn 'I seem like much, but
think. Without competition my wife
could not shop. Shopping is an activity she enjoys and if the Constitution did not provide for free
commerce she could only stand in
line for scarce products tnat would
be much lower in quality.
The first right I recall is the right
to free speech. If my speech were

(pmmunity Corner
-.

'

~ Evelyn

Lewis is 91!

for my enjoyment. But most of all
the news would be tainted and censored. With censored news I coUld
not make Intelligent decisions about
voting my choice or striking the best
bargain when I make a large purchase.
The freedom of assembly allows
me to join any organlz'ation I desire.
I can form groups with people that
share my common thoughts and
have my same needs. These group~~
can influence my · government
throUgh more than jUBI one person.
If freedom of assembly was denied
me my voice would not be heard. I
also have the right to drop out and be
alone. This is not my choice, but at
least my Constitution allows me a
choice.
I have.the right to bear anns and
protect my family from hann.
Officials cannot run rough shod
over me and search my home jUBI
because they dislike me ot want to
profit from my goods. In many countries government officials may take
what they want from me and it's

restricted would not my thoughts be
restricted too? How many movies
have I enjoyed? If we did not have
this freedom, how could I have enjoyed John Wayne and Burt
Reynolds, not to mention Bo Derek
and Sally Fields.
I can express my own ideas
without fear and I can yell and
scream just to get things off my
chest. My only restriction is that I do
not endanger the health and safety
of others. For example, I cannot yell
" fire" in a crowded auditori\lfll

because many people could be trampled in a stampede.
Freedom of the press goes handin-hand with my freedom of speech.
This freedom lets me share the
thoughts of others and gives me
more information on which to make
decisions.
. If freedom of press was denied me
could! even own a Bible? Would I be
able to read stories to my children?
If I could, would those stories be censored? Entertaining reading such as
political comics should be available

On Dean's List
Twenty-four Meigs Countians
have been named to the dean's
list for the !aU quarter at Hocking
Technical College, Nelsonville.
Making perfect four point
averaoes for the quarter were
~
Jeffrey·
Couch, Constan.ce Karschnik, Sherrie Starcher, Susan
J. Tattle, "all of Pomeroy, and
Susan L. Tillis, Rutland.
Making a point average of
three point or better to be named
to the ·ust were Lita L. Young,
Toppers Plains; John V. Stewart,
Middleport; Sandra J. Hamilton,
Minersville; Raymond Andrews,
Mitchell D. Chapman, James R.
Couch, Ronald Cullums, Tina D.
Duffy, Thomas E. Hawley, Tim
Ray Hood, Katie K. Miller, Mark
S. Moore, Gloria Reynolds,
Donald Snyder, Nan C. White,
Timothy Wyant, Clara E. Wyant
and Kenneth Wyant, all of
Pomeroy.

Later, he was chosen In a survey of
MarineS to attend Palomar College
at San Marcos, Calif.
After graduation, Russell was aent
to officers candidate school at Quanto, va., and was cornml.uloned a
second lieutenant. He was then
stationed at Camp LeJeune, N. C.,
and spent three months with
N.A.T.O. forces in Europe and then
a year on duty in Okinawa. Returning from there he attended the
University of North Carolina
graduating in June, 1980, with a B.A.
Degree in business administration. .
He was then sent to Charleston, W~
va., where his office is located on
McCorkle Ave. He is chief aecutlve
officer over recruiting in four slates,
Ohio, West Virginia, Kentucky and
Virginia.
Capt. Russell is married to the former Linda Lou Smith, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Roy 0. Smith, Rock
SpringJ Road. The Russells are the
parents of two children, Melilllla
Lynn, 10, and Kenneth Roy, 8. They
reside in their new home at Scott's
Depot, W.Va.

legal.
If I do error and violate the law I
mUBt be lnfonned of the law I broke
and have a speedy trial . ThiS keeps
me from rotting in jail awaiting a
verdict.
Taking all these constitutional
rights and trying to Sllllllll8rize
them is not difficult for me. What
they ultimately mean is r have a
right to fail. l(v thoughts, speech
and actions are not dictated to me by
govenvnent officials. They are
mine. Mine to create. Mine to enjoy.
Mine to share. If they are wrong I
can blame only myself. I can then
take positive stepa to correct those
failures and succeed.
Capt. Russell graduated from
Southern High School, Racine, in
1966 and attended M.A.T.A. College
in Columbus for 10 months. He
enlisted in the Marine Corps in May,
1967. After finishing his basic
training at Camp Pendleton, San
Diego, Calif., he spent 13 months at
DaNang, Vietnam. Returning to the
states, his duties were then at the
Pentagon in Washington, D. C.

Watch that snow,· watch your heart
HEART BRANCH OFFERS
WINTER ADVICE
Snow warnings are being issued
by the Me;os County Heart Branch ·
..,
·
Shove l;no
- ... snow from walks and
driveways is· strenuous exercise, so
take special · precautions before
tackling the task, the heart branch
warns.
" Middle-aged men are frequent
targets of snow shoveling-related
heart attacks, but extra care should
be taken by anyone with a history of
heart disease," warns Dr. James
Witherell, President of the heart
branch. "These people shouldn't lift
a shovel until they have their doctors' approval.
"Proceed with caution when
clearing snow even if you have no
symptoms of heart disease. Take

lead to chilling; too much clothing
could lead to overheating; don't
smoke or drink before shoveling.
Smoking constricts blood vessels,
and alcohol may give a false lift and
lead to overexertion; remember,.
wet snow is heavier than dry snow;
share the chore. Divide,work amons
family members and friends.
Snow shoveling, if done properly,
doesn't have to be a dangerous undertaking. For more information on
the risk factors of heart attack, contact the Meigs County Heart Branch
at P. 0 . Box 1110, Pomeroy, Oh. 45769.

should avoid shoveling snow if
possible. If you must shovel, do it
slowly and rest often; shovel before
eating or at least two hoUrs afterward. Always avoid undue exer·
lion after meals; dOll'! make your
anns do all the work. Use all your
muscles, including back and leg
muscles; wear warm but lightweight clothing. Underdressing may

being missed DY s'omeone making a
right turn on red. His near-miss last
week prompted him to ask us to
remind drivers of the law.
The law requires that motorists
making right turns on red must
STOP and yield to traffic moving on
the green light before moving into
the intersection.
Drivers who are handicapped
enough to qualify for the license
RIO GRADUATION
plate insignia will have free parking
REMINDER
from now on in Middleport.
Va.
RIO
GRANDE,
Ohlo - The
Monday night Middleport Village
Evelyn enjoys
deadilae for thole atudeots who
good health and
Cbarl!oe
Council "freed" all meters in the
wlab to .apply for spring
remains active in the Evangeline village to the handicapped. The
gradutl011
II March 11. For fur.
parking
meter
attendants
will
idenChilpter, Order·of the Eastern Star
tber taformalioa regardlag '
of which she has been a member for tify the cars by the license plate inand,Q~
the past 66 years . . She not only signia.
gradlllltl011 appUcalloa, eoalact
While there are others who qualify .
frequent rest periods and quit as
regularly attends the chapter
lbe
Office
of
Aclmluloaa
aad
soon as you fee1 ti red ," says Dr.
POIMfar
meetings, but also goes to many of besides some area veterans, it was
R~orda at !4~5!53, u:teDJioa
the
American
Le~ion
who
proposed
Witherell.
the out-ilf-town Star activities.
281.
the free meters for the handicapped
He offers the following tips for
Millard Vono\Wter
TO MEET MONDAY
safe shoveling, based on advice from
And speaking of birthdays, did you to Council. We understand it's being
The Meigs County Churches of the heart branch: Check with your
rem11111ber to send a card to Mrs. done on many communities as a way
Ada ..Root who was 102 Thursday' of making businesses more ac- Christ Men's Fellowship will meet at doctor first If you are out of shape,
For the past several years Mrs. Root cessible to the handicapped.
the Bradford Church of Christ Mon- overweight or have a history rJ. 'j;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;liilliliij
day at 7:30p.m.
heart disease ; elderly people or 1
bas been at the Pinecrest Nursing
On Wednesday, Albert (Red) and
those unused to strenuous activity
H~e
in Gallipolis. Currently,
hllWe-'er, she is a patient at the Esther Keaton will be celebrating .--------,--------------------l
their 20th wedding anniversary. Our
H&lt;ilzer
. Medical Center, Room 425.
.
By Charlene Hoeflich
Ufestyle writer
MMdleport' s Evelyn Lewis
celebrated her 91st · birthday
Toe;s&lt;ll!Y and the day was marked
with visits from
frieii~s, cards,
gift);·
and
teiM!one calls,
one Jr,om her son,
Charles,
in
Charleston, W.

· inD~

Fbwtr-

NOTICf
.EFFECRVE MONDAY, JAN. 19, 1981 ·

co~gratulations.

· FJiul Nease is just one of many
inQtorists and pedestrians wlio have
· haJ£ the experience of narrowly

:;.The Daily Sentinel

.'

:•

!USPS 115-. . 1
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Albl1lhed every aftmloon eacept Sunday,
M~throoihFrlday,l11 CowtStree~

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Youth group delivers

NEW CIFICE HOURS FOR

.fruit baskets recently

DR. JAMES P; OONDE

REEDSVILLE--Fruit baskets
were delivered to the sick and
elderly of the community when the
youth people of the Reedsville
United Methodist Church held a
holiday party.
The young people exchanged gifts
and enjoyed refreshments. The Sunday school class presented wedding
shower gifts to Mrs. Pat Souls by and
a layette gift to Mrs. John Douglas.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs. John
Douglas, Mr. and Mrs. Mila
Douglas, Mr. and Mrs. Randall
Coulson, Joy and Kay, Mr. and Mrs.
Steve Reed and Angie, Mr. and Mrs.
Gary Walker, Mrs. Jim Cowdery,
Mrs. Don Putman, Mr. and Mrs.
Hugh Martin and Michael, Barb
Henderson, Kay ·Balderson, Mrs.
Pat Soulsby, Mrs. Rosemary Young,
Alison Cauthorn, Darlene Barton,
Greg Wigal, Rick Putman, and Scott
Chevalier.

531 JACKSON PIKE ·Rl .36NORTH

· PMM 440-4524

January 16, 1981

~tuu•IU.f\111! 'JIIR L'l\.es . r!I11~10MASE t\ALIARO

IA.to:O.Mf~llill J[~ N

A~·ICINt'iriNAI~tfllfiiPiliSf-SINC nt:l£1.!£

.....,""I"" ({D•Mf. l#'lll.l

By Ga1le Price ·
Portlud Arell Hllloriu
Dwing the years 1881 and 1883, life
lnterlocltinc the young people of our
area with the Tuppers Plains
Seminary makes revealing aa well
as sometimes hwnorous reading.
The foHowing are a few Items from
recorda and wrilinga of thoae Urnes:
A schoof teacher named Nettle
from her Chester, Ohio school wrote
'"l'hlals noon and the young ones by
making 110 much noise I hardly know
whether I BID standing on my head
or feet. How are you getting along
with the brata?" (She was addressing another teacher).
From .Chester, a prospective
teacher writes, "! was at the
examination
(teacher's
eumlnaUon). There were over 60
there. Were only eight,that I knew Addle Kelton, Sue Osborn, Rosa
Middlesw811h, Anna Dean, Tacie
McBride, Joe Smith, Jaky Dean, and
Joe Windon the old redhead."
From Fayal, Ohio (this was a
poetoffice not far from Long Bottom) a substitute teacher writes
about his experience. "Miss
Williams returned last evening. I
was not sorry either but had succeeded in getting them pretty weU in
hand before she came back. Two lit- '
Ue incidenta occurred In my school
here to mar my pleasure. One of the
boys jwnped out the window one day
and I jwnped out after him. I chased
him around all over Long Bottom
before I caught him. Didn't I look
dignified? The other was a little
more serious. I made one of the boys
stand on the floor one day and his
mother was going to shoot me for it.
She came over to the school house
but I distlncUy told her r was
teaching that day and she went·
l)ome." (In later life this teacher
became jmportant in Meigs County
banking circles.)
·
A Mr. Hosom had just completed
some courses at The Plains
.Academy and wrote thiS flowery and
senUmer'al little note from the
PhilUps h vuse, Nelsonville. " I lnOI!t
devouUy wish that the links of friendship forged while at the old T. P .8.
(Tuppers Plains Seminary) may
never rust. I expect to get up a class
at Utile Hockil'll! in writing If I can
make it pay. Weli, I will never forget
the Urnes spent at The Plains during
the 11 weeks."
Most of the young people whose
lives centered around The Plains

J - ' J 11,1111
fillY be found thia coming

"'f

A second
year to aupp&amp;ement yow- income. It'a likely
to develop u • iplnooff fnm aomethina: In

wticll you~ al~ Involved.
CAPRIOOR.N (Dec. ZWU. 11) Even
thoqh cowortltn may be • btt '*-"'-· thal'l
no 1'11100 for you 10 follow thil aample.
Take Dride in your woril. Find out wt.t Uea

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MODERN SUPPLY

..

,.

Seminary written about here were
mostly 16 to 20 years old and their
SOCial life was an Important Item
with them as with an young people.
These are some typical entries.
"I had more fun Toesday night
than you could shake a sUck at, at
Mr. Parker's. They danced from 7
till nearly one o'clock; then passed
plates of candy. There were 12 boys
and seven girls there. I danced
every set but two. Flora got the
bouquet for being the best looking
girl."
In those days glng to see a favorite
girl friend by a young swain often involved traveling on shank's mare
and slaying all night with her
family. This note comes from a
young fellow who' had traveled from ·
Long Bottom to Portland to see his
girl." Well; I got home Monday, but
it took me nearly all day. I wandered
around through those hills and
nearly got back to your house two or
three !lines. At last I came to the top
of a hill from which I could see the
Long Bottom Seminary. I thought
then I would soon be home but my
hopes were soon blasted. I started
down a lim but did not go far till I
came to an old man working on the
hillside. I asked him if I could get
through thai way to Long Bottom.
He greeted me with these words,
"How the h-1 are you going to get
over that water?" And sure enough
on looking down below me I beheld
the back water in Long Run about 20
feet deep. Well, I had to follow that
creek (and there wasn't the least
sign of a path) utnll I could find a
place shallow enough to cross."
From Chester, this little
paragraph gives a vivid glimpse of
the times. "Last night there was a
sing at the ohurcb. Five of us girls
stayed from school as the church is
only a few steps from the
schoolhouse, You bet I had a jolly
time. My "juicy" was there and he
took me upon the horse behind him.
They made considerable fun of us
but it happened to be the ones that
were obliged to walk."
In a letter to a student at The
Plains Semiruiry a girl by the name
of Nettle recorded this information.
"Warren Buck and Flora Walkins
married. I had the pleasure of seeing
the bride. She was dressed in white
and had a veil as long as-, well, it
reached to the horse's tall on which
she was riding."

GEMINI (May ll..J._ •• You're very

p&gt;pular lrithyourpoa&lt;a....., today. but you
lhoWd stW be careful how you conduct )'ouraelf 10eiaUy. Don't Rive one who ia a trtne

jealoua ttum to carry tales.

CANCI!K IJ-II.JU, Ill YOil c:oWd ex·

peri...,. ...... minor but fnaalrotlnc delly

today, yet eventually everything should

wtd out to your Itkin&amp;. Don't I.e U,ht of o~
. Jedlvet.
LEO IJlly ZS.Aq. lll An opportunity ITI.IY
ariM todly:i~you a chance to improve
our relltl
llflth a friend whom you

if~':Y"'lotely.

fee1hubeen

Mrs. Bernard Coooley, the state
representative for the Auxiliary,
held the party with each veteran
being presented a large box of gifts
and a new dollar bill in a Christmas
folder. Money for the refreshments

,')·! ·~\1'1

. . . ~ . ~\-

¥~~'~ "'"'

Your ...
e
,.,..,,\
Libraries

By EHea BeU,
Melp COllll&amp;y Ubrarlan
On the way home the other
evening, my sinuses aching, my
fingers cold inside my gloves, I
got to thinking about the fact that
I was depressed and wondering
why. Now, I realize that aching
sinuses and cold fingers might be
contributing factors in my
depression; but I decided that the
weather was the real culprit. And
one of the best ways of coping
with bad weather, so I've heard,
is to remind yourself that it won't
last forever.
Well, the opposite of all this
cold and snow and no-grow is
spring and sunnmer. And nothing
makes me think of spring and
summer more than contemplating the seed catalogs and
gardening books and figuring out
what tasty treats I want growing
In the garden. Now it just so happens that Ruth Powers has a
collection of seed catalogs at Middleport Public Ubrary that she's
willing to share. She also happens
to have a few good gardening
books on the shelf over there
right now.
For example, there are two
books by former Middleport
resident, Jamie Jobb - "My
Garden. Companion" and "The
Complete Book of Community
Gardening." "My Garden Companion" helps you decide where
to locate the garden, what to
plant in it, when to plant, how to
get the best soil, how to get help
in the garden - and how to do
without it, how to plant, how to
get a start on next year's plants,
what bugs to expect and. what to
do about them, and when to pick
what you've grown. ''The Complete Book of Community Gar:
dening" covers some of the same
territory - with different words
and pictures; but it Is designetf
for those of you who want to try
sharlrig a garden with friends or
relatives or neighbors. And if
you've ever tried cooperative
gardening, you'll realize that it's

L
I

R
A
R

~~.....,.·

-

seldom as ,simple as It seems
when you first think of it.
When you're reading those seed
catalogs, you may want to have
"The Seelh'itarter's Handbook"
by Nancy Bubel at your side. It
tells how to grow 59 different
fruits and vegetables from seed
- your own or Burpee's. (Or any
other company's) . Subjects
covered include germination,
transplanting, insect And other
animal attacks, other garden
problems, and saving seeds to
use next year. "How to Grow
Vegetables and Fruita by the
Organic Method" by J. I. Rodale
and the staff of "Organic Gardening and Fanning Magazine"
should be helpful even If you
believe In gardening with
chemicals - and is almost a
must if you don't. Chapter 5, on
controlling Insects and diseases,
tells how to use bugs to catch
bugs, how to grow your own insecticides, how to use birds to get
rid of insects, and much more.
If you're like me, you figured
.that any insect in the garden was
a " bad" insect and should be
killed irrun~ately. ObvioUB!y,
after reading about UBing bugs to
kill1bugs, you figures that maybe
some of the bugs should be left
alone. But which ones, right?
Aha! For that you need
"Rodale's Color Handbook rJ.
Garden Insects" by Anna Carr.
In addition to really beautiful
color photos (of bugs!), you get
information on where the insect
lives, what it eats, what insect
likes to eat it, and what other
natural ways there are of getting
rid of it. (Nowhere did I see
"Stomp It," but J guess Ms. Carr
took that one for granted.) This
book includes the "good" bugs,
too; that should help you decide
what to do with the next bug you
see - because you sure can't go
on whether the bug is pretty or
not!
There are lots more gardening
books at your libraries. So come
on in and borrow your share.

Polly's Pointers

Moldy cheese problem

Uoe lt.
VIRGO IAq.
II) Some oeUcloubto C&lt;lllld ln1o your lhlnklnt! today
ard lead Y!Nlobelieve you're not cap~ble of

duiftl ~ wtuch, in rullty, you ue.
tenore them.

tJIIItA (SejO. ZS.OC:l !3) 'l'llo IIIWI and

shortcomll\&amp;1 of penotll with -.,ton you're
inVOlved will be Vtl"' 'bvf
to you today,

but you won't call them to l.htlr attention.
Smar1movt!
SCORPIO JOeL 14-No\', 12) In order to
what you. want today it ml)' be necesaary to
first cast a little bread upon the waters. Give
so th.t!t you lflll)' receive.
u.omurus (Nev. U.Dft. tt) It Ltn't
neceaury to prove yourtelf tOday, 10 lf
auottates havt • better way of doinR thin!~~
than )'UU do, follow their lud.

•et

-

Juniors of the Amencan Legion
Auxiliary, Drew Webster Post 39,
provided gifta and treats for the
veterans at the Athens Mental
Health Center for a Christmas par-

were provided by the Pomeroy
juRlors.
In other activities for the juniors
and seniors of the local Auxiliary,
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Davis delivered
Christmas glfta to the Arcadia Nursing Home at Coolville. Each
veteran there was given a new dollar
bill in a Christmas folder by the
juniors, and a fruit cale and large
andy bar by the seniors.

By Polly Cramer
By eorrespoacleal
DEAR POLLY - Please tell me
how to keep cheese from molding.
Thank you.- MRS. J .s.
DEAR MRS.
J .S.- Be sure the
cheese Is well
wrapped. After a
packsge has been
oi&gt;ened, wrap it in
foil or a clean
cloth dampened
with vinegar, then
put
in
the
Cramer
refrigerator. Mold can be scraped
off cheese and the remainder eaten.
If the cheese has gotten very hard,
grate it and use In cooked ·sauces or
casseroles. - POLLY
DEAR POLLY - Before cutting a
meringue pie, I always wet the knife
in either cold or hot water so it will
cut the pie clean as a whistle, with no
menngue sticking to the knife. JENNIE
DEAR 1\EADERS - A reader
called to say she felt it was unwise to
use plastic bags as boots over ohe' s
.shoes when it Is slippery, since a
friend of hers fell when doing this. POLLY

DEAR POLLY - Did you ever
buy a jlaund or two of cold cuts and
then find the meat gets a bit dry
around the edges in just a day or so?
I solved this problem by dividing the
meat in quarter-pound (or le!ls)
packages, 1"1'apping them in a good
plastic wrap and popping them In
the freezer. I find most cold cuts
freeze well. I take out what I need
and my daughter has deli·fresh san·
dwiches to take to scbool. Also, she
can have a different sandwich every
day, depending on the number of
slices in each package. - BERNADE'ITE
DEAR POLLY - I pack my
husband's lunch a day ahead, saving
time in the morning. I put his san·
dwiches in plastic sandwich boxes
and stick them in the freezer. This
way his lunch is always fresh . This
works well in summer and winter.
He likes egg salad sandwiches best;
they freeze and thaw nicely.
r mark my three children's shoe
sizes on the inside of their shoes with
a permanent marking pen, since. r
find the manufacturer's printing
usually wears off quickly. This saves
guessing sizes when another
youngster is growing into the same
of shoes.- CINDY

'112111 Per Month

120" Per Month

1

. 36MONTHS

Miss Cross turns six
A party In celebration of the sixth
birthday of Jennifer Rae Cross was
held recenUy at the home of her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Randy Cross,
Syracuse.
A Wonder Woman theme was
carried out ill the cake decoratiOilB.
The cake was served with Ice cream,
chips, nuta and Kool-Aid.
Attending were her grandparents,
Mr. and Mrs. Olin Knapp and Mr.
and Mrs. Ben Spears, Frank, Jo
Ann, Terry and Rodney Newiome,
Diana, Angie, and Mandy Mills,
Duane and Donna Knapp, Valerie
Connally, Tamera Hayman, Klnr
berly Jenkins, Mark Allen, John
Bentley, Cindy, Robin and Denny
Foley, Heather and Scott McPhail,
and Judy
and Scott Alles.
. , ........ ... ,...... ,..
~

Social calendar
SUNDAY
MEIGS GENEALOGICAL Society
meeting, 2 p.m. Sunday at the Meigs
Museum, Butternut Ave., Pomeroy.
Mildred Chapman Gibbs will speak
on her book about the Hartford, W.
Va., community. In case of in·
clement weather, the meeting will
be cancelled and the next session
held at the same location at the
sanie hour on Feb. 15.

jennifer Cross
GRADEL ASSIGNED
Airman Robert D. Gradel, son of ;
Russel J. Gradel of 8200 South
Western Blvd., Dallas; and Jeanne
E. Gradel of 7534 Greenfield
Terrace, Chester, has been assigned
to Sheppsrd Air Force Base, Teims,
after completing·· Alr Force basic

Slinderella reopens

Slinderella Diet classes have all
reopened with the new year with the
Mason class being held at 10:30 a.m. training.
at St. Joseph Catholic Church on
The airman will now receive&lt;!.
Tuesdays, the Pomeroy class at 7:30 specialized instruction in the .airp.m. in the Riverboat Room, craft maintenance field.
Diamond Savings, Tuesdays, and
the Chester class at the firehouse in r------------Chester at 7:30 p.m. on Thursdays.
Emphasis, according to Jo Ann
Ne...ome, lecturer, is on basic
..
flu flit'
..
nutrition, exercising, sensible
eating, and feilo,..hip as a means to
FRIDAY thru JAN. 29
weight reduction.
Eight new members were
welcomed at the Toesday night
Pomeroy class with Carolyn Van
losing the most weight, and Debbie
Fink and Rhonda Roush tying for
. runher-up. Conilie Rankin lost the
most weight at the Chester Class and
runner-up was Maxine Jordan.

. COI.O"\' · ,

ADMISSION PRICES "
Beginning Friday, Jan. 16 ·
Adu liS • . , •..• . •. • • $3.00 ·
Children .... .. . ... . $1.50 '
( 11 and under)

IUNT FOR HOMEMAKERS

Hint for homemakers: (lift fruitcakes made wonderful doorstops,
and last indefinitely.

SIMMONS ·OLDS.-CADIUAC INC.
MEANS A GREAT DEAL
FOR YOU
1979 CHEV. 1h TON 4x4
4 speed, P.S., P . B.• Air cond., special wheels and tires •.

new spare, cab lights, mirrors, R.S. Bumper, radio,
tutone paint, LOW MILEAGE, low mileage, one owner ..

•629500 :
1980 OLDS 98 REGENCY SEDAN
DEMO. Loade.d with all options.

BIG SAVINGS

1978 Ol.DS ROYALE SEDAN
Loaded with all options. Clean throughout. Local owner.

•
.. ·..
....
.·
Loaded with all options. This price is $500 under average '
..
retail

1978 OLDS 98 REGENCY CPE.

·,

ONLY

1980 AMC SPIRIT CPE.
9,000 Miles. If you want a 1980 model priced billoYi '
average retail, this is aogood buy .

ONLY
If You Love To Drive A Chrysler, we Have ··:·&gt;.&lt;''
Two In Stock.
·· · ·

1977 CHRY. NEWPORT CPE. ··········'·~i§oo,]
1978 CHRY. CORDOBA CPE. ••••••••• ~ .

1978 MERCURY MARQUIS..........air ~;;;d '2395
4 Or .. auto., p,s.
· 112951
1974 FORD M"A'V£RICI ······•···········
1974 POJW£ L£MANS .:~r~·::!~{t!~!~t. '1195

1973 CAD. DEVILU SEDAN ........................ .-;:.~. 1.&lt;,,!) .: 11 ~
1974 OLDS CUTlASS SUPREME SEDAN.... ..... :.·.·~~;~

1972 VOLJ(SW'~
Al'EN
·
Rebuilt motor
!i11tft1:
T~
1976 FORD GRANADA GHIA..~~:~a~~~k:~::.s25$5
1976 CHEV. CAPRICE ClASSIC !.u!1:!~~~'!":.s2295

1975 OLDS CUTlASS SUPREME CPE.. ............ :~;~· ,t;Gii' l

•••••••••••••••••••••••

1
1977 PONnAC GP CPE.' ....... ....................
. ~. : .~·-.:~ .371111:

1976 CHEV. CAPRICE WAGON ..................:.'.:,,.';?

al' TEMPEST
Good Condition. l"'ftt:
1964 PONn~
••••••••••••••••• ;£~
1975 FORD F150 PICKUP•• ;~.o.~·:;!n.d::~. 11495
· ~ c yl. , short bed, standard. s0ft1:
1973 CHM PICKUP.••••••••••••&amp;••••••••• -v~
SlJBIJRBANAuto., p .b .. p.s., gOOd cond.$1895
1974 I'I..IM
~
................. .

.

SIMMONS OLDS.-CADILLAC . INC~ ·
You'll Lllce Our Quality Way Of.
Doing 8uslne11
See or Phone: Pete Burris, Marvin Keebaugh
. Mike Anderson or George Harris

399 w. Main
992-2164
Pomeroy, 0.
THE STORE WITH "ALL KINDS OF STUFF"- FOR
PErS, STABLES, LARGE &amp; SMALL ANIMALS,
LAWNS AND GARDENS.

i

,,....

ALA treats veterans

'

l'lft75•
36MONTHS
"JIV
1978 FAIRMONT wAI'nN
.6Option.
cy1 ., air, aulo. tranl., Squire
ftiN
$4300.00
Trade-In $1000.00
SALE
~'lftftll
PRICE "OJJfN--

.,_o•

t&lt;l"'

4BMONTHS

SALE
PRICE

SEED • SUET CAKES
SUNFLOWER SEED
CRACKED CORN

of your picture.

ty.

SALE
SJ995111
PRICE

$4075.00
Tri!de-ln S1000.00

buaineoo lllllllndo have pn:vlwaly
proven wnlr\1 may try to manlll! Mmethln1

tor yw today. It'• bnt to keep lhU ,_rty out

212 Per Month

1979 PINTO 3 DR.

Friends..•

-rdo ••

More 1

1980 T·BIRD

·u

A411JARIU81Ju. .. , .... lll v ... bolno
IOri&amp;l mood tcldly and want to Itt out and
clmlllll, but wfOil find yoonellln Ule c;om.
pany cl shaDow peoplt they coWd lake tbe
eda• ott your fun.
flllt'llll (Feb.
In buolll&lt;ll or
cornrnerdal altuUona YQU tend to be rather
1
lady today, but perhapi oot ln the way you
maJ fll'lt anUdp1l.l. Pa.y lt toe..
AlliES (Mardi ti•Aprtl II) A miaw&gt;
dentanllinC coWd an. today betWftn you
and IIOmtCIIM olwhom you'reqlite fond. The
reuon II ll)l to be rather trfvtal, 10 !1\lke

amondl-y.
TAURIJs (Aprti ..Mir •1 An aiiiOdate

1979 T-BIRD llMN LANDAU
Loaded, All Power, trade, leather
1979 LID 4 DR

When The

36MONTHS

$7000.00
Trade-In 51000.00
SALE
~tWa
PRICE ·uuuv-·

'

Tuppers Plains Seminary &amp;
youth equals humorous tales

oheocf Ill Ule yur followtnc your lirlllclay by
oendln&amp; for your CGPY o1 AaWGrooh. Moll

USED CARS

The Daily Sentinet~ Pag~~ •"

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

ASTROGRAPH

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

POPCORN SALE UNDERWAY
A popcorn sale is being held by the
Rutland Junior Girl Scout Troop
1292. Meeting this week at the
Rutland Baptist Church, the popcorn
was distributed to the girls. Pam
Smith led in the pledge·and promise.
.Refreshments were served.

BAIKJAIN MATINEES ON SAT &amp; SUN
ALl SEATS JUST S 1.50
ADMISSION EVERY TUESDAY St.50

. . &lt;,:·. '·'...

Save our RC, RC·lOO, Nehi, Upper 10, Diet Rite
.and Dad's Root Beer bottle caps for charity.

"

Ph. 992-6614

Pomeroy, OH.
Unti16:00
Til 5:

�Ohio

idd

blo study, 7 P m
TE•
JUBILEE CHRISTIAN CEN
Goorgo'o Crook Rood . Rov. C J Lomlr,.

Attend

pastor · John Fellure , superintendent.
Ch"rch achool , 9·30 a.m ; morning wor . •

: NEWS

hlp 10 30 ovonlng oorvlco, 7 p.m. lib!.

StuciY rhur~ .• 7 p.!ft. Closs• for all agel .

This Sunday

TRlNITY CHURCH , Rev, W. H. Perrin,
pastor Roy Mayer' , Sunday school t upt
Chu rch School 9 15 a m · wo...d·up sar·

MAIK

vice, 10 30 am Choir rehearsal, Tuesday .: 7 30 p m. under dtrechon of Allee

PI!&gt;MER OY

CHURCH

OF

THE

vice, Wednesday 7 30p m.
GRACE EPISCOPAl CHURCH

~

...__

Chttttr
Ph tiS .ll'C

MEIGS TIRE
CENTER, INC.

Morning prayer and sermon on all other

Sundays of the month Church School
and nunery core provtded Coffee hour
'" the Parish Holl•mmechote ly followmg

HEllEn

IAIEIY

lollontl

John F Fultz, Mgr
Ph "22101
Pomeroy

the '•rvlce

POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIST , 212 W
Mom St Ne1l Proudfoot, pastor , B1ble
schd'pl 9 30 a m
mornmg worsh1p,
10 30 am , Youth meetings, 6 30 p m
evening worsh1p, 7 30 Wednesday rught
prayer meettng and B1ble study , 7 30

..

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY

pm

We Fi ll Oodors'

THE SALVATION Aff.MY llS Butternut
Ave . Pomeroy Envoy and Mrs Ray Win
mg off1cers m charge Sunday -holiness
meeting 10 a m Sunday School 10 30
a m Su nday school leader, YPSM , Elo•se
Adams 7 30 p m solvat•on meetmg,
vt:Jrious speakers and musiC spec1als
Ttiursday - 10 am to 2 p m Lod•es
Home league all women •nv•ted 7 30
p m prayer meetmg and B1ble study
Rev Noel Hermon teacher

SOUTHERN

'fA
-..............
-IIIIo•
CirrYOvt
IH I. Milo

~
Rn R11t1

day :Of each month, and combmed wtfh
morning prayer on the thtrd Sunday

BURLINGTON

PIZZA SltACIC

~~ -

Sf Rt 7

WESTSIDE

CHURCH

In th e a n nal ~ ol ~.ulm~ tht•t e h1n ~ been le"

Gorl ~

DE XTER

BIBLE

Insurant,

~RAHAM

UNITED

m

nMn ~ de stgn

ol

214 E Mlln
5130 PomtroY

pt)Wt'r

SONS STURE

METHODIST

Preq,chmg 9 30 a m f1rst and second
Suridoys of each month. tturd and fourth
SUI)dO'f.S each month, worship serv ice at
7 30 p m. Wednesdov even1ngs at 7 30
Prayer and 81ble Study

lhey wcu•

Grecer6ts Geftet'll MtrdwMIIII
ReciMMf·2JH

WISt'

BAPTIST

FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH , Bo1ley
Run Rood Rev Emmett Rowson pastor
Handley Dunn supt Sunday !chool 10
a m Sunday evemng serv•ce 7 3lJ Bible
teach1ng 7 30 p m Thursday

MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION . Lawrence Manley
pa,tor , Mrs Russel! Young Sunday
School Supt Sunday School 9 30 .a m
Evenmg worsh 1p
7 30
W&amp;dnesdoy
prciyer meeting 7 30 p m

CHURCH

OF

GOD

Roc~ne - Rev, James Satterfield pastor

Mornmg worsh1p , 9' 45 o m , Sunday
school 10 .es o m , evenmg worsh1p 7
TueSday . 7 30 p m . lad1es prayer
meeting, Wadnesdo'JI 7 30 p m YPE

' MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST, Corner
Me
d4ng, Su"doy school 9 l5' om Randy
S~xth bnd Palmer, the Rev . Mark

Hayes, Sunday. SChool sUpenntendent
R•gg$ asst. supt. Morn1ng Worsh 1p 1
10 15 -om. Youth meetmg 7 30 p m
WednesctQ~ , mcludlng wee tots. eager
k»&amp;to1ers tunior ostroncruts and tun•or
ar'ltl-.semor h1gli S.YF cho.r pro(ftce 8 3¢
!),.m , Wednesdoy P.rayer meet•ng and 81 ·
bl8'$tudy, Wednesdo~ . 7:30 :0 m
CHURCH OF CH~ISr lil•ddlep\&gt;rl 5ih'
ond Main BOb Melton minister Stott
ossodo+e .mln l$fer • • B•b)e
spUsman
Sc:hool 9 30 o m . morn1hg worsh 1p,
10 30 o m evemng serv1ce 7 00 p m
Wed.nesday Btble Study and youth group
'meetings 7 00 p m

opn

MIDDLEPOJH

CHURCH

OF

THE

NAZARENE Rev J1m Broome
pasto r
Btll Whtte" Sunday school supt, Sunday
achool. 9 30 C m ~ -morning worsh1p .
10 30 a m 1 Sunday· evangelist ic
meeti ng, 7 00 p .rn Preyer meet1ng
Wednesday ,
7
p m

UNITED PRESBYTERIAN MiNISTRY OF
MEIGS COUNTY 1 Ow1ght l

Zov1tt., dlrec-

IQf,
1 HARRISONVILLE PRESBYTERIAN Rev
fmest Stncklm, pastor, Sunday church
, school , 9 30 atm , Mrs Homer Lee
supt • morning~ wora.hip 10 30
1
MIDOLEPO~i~ Sundew .s~hool 1 9 :)Q
' am ,, Rtdiord V.t;n,Jgha(1 , Supt~ Morning
: worsh1p, I 0 30

1

!
•

SYRACUSE '

FIRST

! PRESBYTERIAN Church

UNITED

Worsh ip serv1ce

9 30 o m. Sunday School 10 30 a m Mrs

1
1

Sampson Hall supt
RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOO Randall
'9ofley pastor. Sunday school , 10 o m
~Qdoy worsh1p II a m . Ch1ldren s
! .(hwrch, 11 a m Sunday evenmg ser
; Vi at, 7 30 p m , Wednesday even 1n9
,. yfxmg lodtes oux1l1a ry 6 p m Wednes
1 day fomtly worsh1p 7 30 p m
:
HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH , Noor
1 long Bottom Edsel Hart pastor Sundoy
~ school 10 o m
Church 7 30 p m
prayer meet1ng 7 30 p m Thur5day
1

.
l

I
I

I',IIDDLEPORT

PENTE~OSTAL

Thlfd

Ave the Rev. w,lham Knittel potlor
Thomes Kelly , sunday ~hool S1,1pt Sun
doy school 10 o ~m Classes for all ages ,
tfvefllng servlce 7 30
s.bla ~ tudy
Wednesday 1 30 p m : youth servtc.es
Fndoy , 7 lOp m .

MIDDLEPORT FREEWill BAPTISt , Cor
11er Ash and Plum Rolph Butcher,
~Jtor Saturday evenmg serv1ce , 7 30
p'.m 1Sunday School , to 30om,

MEIGS
COOPERATIVE PARISH
METHODISTCHURCH
Richard W Thomas , Director
POMEROY ClUSTER
Rev Robert McGee
.. , POMEROY Sunday School 9 15 a m
Wonh•p 11er1.1ice 10 30 am
Chotr
;reteearsal Wednesday 7 p m Rev
Robert McGH, pastor ,~
ENTUPRISE, Worship 9 o .m Church
'School10 a m

'ROCK SPRINGS , Sunday School9 IS o
Worsh1p servi Ce, 10 .?.- m

rfi

..trt'

I 5-9

s put Ius

Church &amp; Olftu Suppl• es

-

.....

t1co1.-..o

RIDENOUR SUPPLY

CLOTHING HOUSE

1

FURNITURE &amp; HARDWARE
Hol'f'tllte Saws

KERMIT' S KORNER
Pomeroy Oh•o

FLATWOODS Church School 10om
Worsh1p 11 o m

Attend The
Church of
Your Choice
This

MIDDLEPORT CLUSTER
HEATH ChuJCh School 9 30 a m Wor ship 10 30 o m UMYF 6 p m Robert
Robmson Pastor
RUTlAND Church School 9 30 a m
Worsh1p 10 30 o m
SALEM CENTER, Worsh •p 9 o m
Church School 9 45 a m

SYRACUSE CLUSTER
Rev Stanley Mernfled Mini ster
FOREST RUN Worshp 9 o m Chu rch
School tO a m
MINERSVIllE Church S&lt;hool 9 o m
Worsh1p 10 am
ASBURY Chu rc h School 9 50 a m
Worsh1p I I a m 8 1ble Study 7 30 p m
Thursday UMW fiSt Tuesday

SOUTHERN CLUSTER
Rev Oov1d Horns
Rev Mark Flynn
Rev Florer.t .,. ~ m1th
H1lton Wo lfe
BETHANY
(Dorcas ) Worship 9 30
am Church Scllool 10 30 om B•ble
study Thursday, 7 30 p m
CARMEL Worshtp second ond fourth
Sundays at I 0 4.5 o m Sundov School
second and fourth Sundov s 9 30 a m
Worsh1p and Sunday School at Sutton
Un1ted MethodiSt Church on ftrst and
th 1rd Sunday s 81ble study together each
Wednesday of 7 30 p m Fom1ly mght
dinner together each th 1rd Thur sday at

630
APPL E GROVE Sunday School 9 30
o m Worsh1p 7 30 p m 1sf and JrJ Sun
days Prayer meet1ng Wednesday 7 30
p m Fellowsh1p supper first Saturday 6
p m UMW2ndTuesdoy7 JOp m
EAST LETART Chruch School 9 a m
Worship serv1ce 10om Preyer meeting
7 30 p m Wednesday UMW second
Tuesday 7 30 p m
~A C INE WESlEYAN - Sunday school
10 a m worsh1p 11 am Cholf' pract•ce ,
Thursday B p m
LETART FAllSWorsh1p serv1ce q
a m Church School 10 a m
MORNING STAR Worsh1p 9 30 o m
Church School 10 30 am
MORSE CHAPEL . Church School 9 30
o m. Worsh1p II a m
PORTLAND Sundoy School 6 30 p m
henmg Worsh1p
7 30 p m
Youth
Meehng 1 Tuesday 7 30 p m B1ble Study
Thur$doy 7 30 p m
SUTTON Sunday School f1rst and thlf'd
Sundays 9 30 o m , worsh1p l ~ rst and
thud Sunday$ 10 45 o m Worsh1p and
Sunday School
at Cormel Umted
Method1st Church on second and lourth
Sundays B1ble study together each
Wednesday 7 30 p m Famdy mght dm
ner logether each tturd Thursday at 6 30

pm
Rev R1chord W Thomas
Duane Sydenstncker Sr
John W Douglas
Charles Domtgon
JOPPA Worsh1p q 00 a m Church
SchooiiO OOa m
CHESTER Worsh1p 9 a m
Church
Sehool 10 o m Ctlo1r Rehearsal 7 p m
Th.undoys B•ble Study Thursday s
730p m
LONG BOTTOM Sunday School at 9 30
a m Even1ng Worsh1p at 7 30 p m
Thursday B1ble Study 7 30 p m
REEDSVIllE Sunday School 9 30 o m
Mornmg Worsh•p 10 30 am Elftnmg
Worsf'tp
7 30 p m 81ble Study
Wednesdays at 7 30 p m
ALFRED , Sunday School ot 9 45 a m
Mormng Worsh•p ot 11 om Youth 6 30
p m Sundays Wednesday N1ght Prayer
Meeting 7 30 p m
Sl PAUl, (Tuppers Ploms) Sunday
School 9 00 a m Morning Worsh1p at
10 00 am B1ble Study 7 30 p m lues

day
SOUTH BETHEL (S•Iver R1dge) Sunday
School 9 00 o m Morning Woshlp 10 00
a m Wednesday d1ble Stud)! , 7 30 p m

KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST

Oliver

Sunday school

HOBSON CHRISTIAN IJNION

BEARWAllOW RIDGE CHURCH OF
CHRIST Duone Worden . mm1ster B•ble
doss 9 30 a m , morning worsh1p , 10 30
a m
evemng worsh tp
6 30 p m
Wednesday B1ble study 6 .30 p m

NEW

STIVERSVIllE

COMMUNITY
Sunday Schoo l ser\IICe 9 45

Church
o m
Worsh1 p
serv1ca
10 30
EvangeliS tiC Serv •ce 7 30 p m Wednes ·
day Prayer meet1ng 7 30

ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST Pomeroy
Homsonvdle Rd Ro bert Purtell pastor
B1l l M cElroy Sunday school supt Sunday
sc hool 9 30 o m mormng worsh1p and
commun1on 10 30a m Sundo)l worship
se rvice 7 p m Wednesday evenmg
prayer me eting and B1ble study 7 p m

ST JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH

Pme

Grove The Rev W1 l hom Middlesworth
Pastor Church serv1ces 9 30 a m Sun
day School 10 30 o m
BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST Jerry
P1 ngley , poster Sunday school Y 30
a m
mormng worsh1p 10 30 a m
Wednesday evenmg sf!'rv~ee 7 30
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST Rev Earl Shuler,
po sto r Sunday sc hool 9 30 a m , Chur ch
serv1ce 7 p m
youth mee llng 6
p m Tuesday B1ble Study 7 p m

RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE
Rev John A Coffman pastor Martha
Wolfe Cho~rmon ol the Boord of Chri s
t1an L1fe Sunday School 9 30 o m mor
mng worsh1p 10,30, Sunday evemng
worship 7 30 p m Pray er meet ing
Wednesday 7 30 p m

RACINE FIRST BAPTIST Don l Walker
Pas tor Robert Sm1th Sunday school
supl , Sunday school 9 30om , morning
worship , 10 -40 o m
Sunday evemng
worsh1p 7 30 Wednesday evenmg 81ble
study 7 30
DANVIllE WESLEYAN Rev R D
Brown pastor Sundoy S&lt;hool 9 30
o m mo rnmg wor6h1p 10 45 youth ser
viCe 6 45 p m even•ng worship 7 30
p m
proyer and pro•se , Wedne sday
730p m
Sll VER RUN FREE BAPTIST Rev Mar
vm Mork1n pastor, Steve l1ttle Sunday
sc hool supt Sunday school 10 o m
mormng worship 11 om Sunday e ven Ing worsh1p . 7 30 Prayer meeti ng and
B1ble study , Thursday 7 30 p m youth
serv1ce 6 p m Sunday

CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP CHURCH 383
N 2nd A ve , Middleport Pastor Bob
Hollms Sunday serv11: es 10 OOo m and
7 p m Tuesday and Fnday serviCes 7 00

pm
HOU SE OF PRAYER AND PRAISE
l1berty A ve . Pomeroy Serv1ces Sunday
3 00 p m fflday 7 30 p m Tuesday 7 30

pm
CHESTER CHURCH OF GOD Rev R E

NORTHEAST CLUSTER

Swain Su~nntendent
9 30 every week

am
leonard G1lmore , first elder
evemng serv1ce 7 30 p m We dnesd ay
prayer meet•ng , 7 30 p m

Rev

Ke1th Eblin , pa!lito r Sunday Sc: hool q :10

Rob~nson pastor Sundoy school 9 30
am worsh1p serv1ce , 11 om , eve ntng
serviCe 7 00 youth serv1ce Wednes day 7 OOpm

lANGSVIllE

CHRISTIAN

CHURCH,

Robert E Muuer pastor Sunday school
9 30 o m Paul Musser supl morning
worstilp , 10 30 Sunday evening ser.,.ice
7 00 m •d week serv1ce Wednesday, 7

pm
SYRACUSE

CHURCH

OF

THE

NAZARENE Rev James B K1ttle pastor
Norman Pre sley
Sunday
School
Superinte11dent
Sunday school 9 30
am
morning worsh1p 10 .eS o m
evongf'hsllc serviCe 7 p m Prayer and
Pro1se Wednesday, 7 p m . youth
meetmg , 7 p m

EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN CHRIST
Elden R Bloke pastor Sundoy SchooiiO
a .m Robert Reed , supt , Morni ng ser
mon II a m
Sunday night serv ices
Christian Endeavor 7 30 p m . SOng ser
VICO
8, p m , Preoch1ng 8· 30 p m
M1dweek Prayer meeting Wednesday , 7
p m Alvm Reed loy laoct.r

Suporlnlondont. Sunday School and morning worship, 9 30 a m Sunday ...,.,tng
service. 7 p.m. Youth meeting ond Bible
study Wodnooday. 7 p m .
UNITED FAITH CHURCH - Roula 7 on
Pomeroy bypon. Rev. Robert Smith , Sr .,

YES HI SKIHDOIILY
ATTACK ~HEN THEY
~' ~ PERCEIVE

NORTH

VIIICIL 8.

FRENCH'S

SUNOCO

SERVIIl

CENTERS
212 W PMin

[H

TtMOID SR.

........
,
'"m .ms

-

lo

I "' '

"

of Your Choice
This Sunday

HO~

ARE Y' FEEUN',

SANDY? STI LL A.--""""''

l£AI(rf5S ..

&amp;IT

WOOZY?

HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN, Roger
Watson pqstor Mildred Z•egler Sunday
sc hool supt Mornmg worsh1p 9 30 o m ,
Sundoyschool 10 30 om even1ng ser VICe 7 3()
MT UNION BAPTIST, Joe Sayre, Sun
day School
Supenntenent.
Sunday
school 9 45 a m evening worship , 1 30
• p m Prayer meeting 7 :JJ p m Wednes

day
TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF CHRIST
V• rt cen t Waters , pastor Howard llolr
Colwell superintendent Sunday School ,
9 30 o ,m morn1ng church 10,30 am
Sunday evenmg service 7 30 Wednesday B1ble Study 7 30 p m

St , Mason , W Va Eugene l Conger ,
pastor Sunday Bible Study 10 o m . Wor ship 11 am and 7 p m. 81ble Study
Wednesdoy 7 p m . Vocal mus1c

LIFE SCIENCE CHURCH -

12 North

Third St , Chesl11re. Independent , fun
domental tervkes . Sunday evenins 7 30
p m Pastor Rev Dr . Robert Persons

MASON ASSEMBLY OF GOD Duddlf19
lane , Moson , W Vo Rev. Ronnie I
Rose Pastor. Sundoy School '45 am .
Morning Worship 11 o m fv.nlnu S.r·
vice 7 3Q p.m Wednetday Women s
Ministries 9 a m (mHtlng and prayer ,
Prover and llble Study 7 p m

CHESTER CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE .
Rev Herbert Grote pastor Frank Riffle
sup! Sunday School , 9 30 am Wonl11p
serviCe 11 a m and 7 30 p m Prayer
m eehng Wednesday . 7 30 p m

a m , James Hu~M supt , evening servi ce 7 30 p m Wednetdoy evening
prayer meeting 7 30 p.m Youth prayer
service each Tuesday

CLIFF

FREE

METHODIST

FAIRVIEW IIBLE CHURCH, Lotort W.

CHURCH Rev Floyd F Shook, poster ,
D1rector of Christ1on
Lloyd Wnght
Education Sunday School, 9 30 a m
Morn•ng Worsh1p , 10 J0 o m , Choir
Practice Sunday 6 30 p m . Evening
Worship 7 30 p m Wednesday Prover
and Btble Study , 7 30 p m

Vo • Rt 1, Mark Irwin pastor Worship
services t ·30 a m · Sunday school 11
a .m , evening worship, 7 30 p m Tues day cottov- prayer meeting and Bible
study, tlO am
Worship service

DE XTER CHURCH OF CHRIST , Charles

Wodnoodav, 7 30 p.m
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH, now localod
on Pomeroy Pike. County Rood 2~ near

Ru uell Sr m1n1ster Ad; Macomber ,
supt Sunday school 9 30 o m , wonhlp
$ervtce 10 30om Bible Study Tuesday,
730p m

Flatwooda. Rev Slockwood. postor Ser vices on Sundoy al 10·30 am . and 7 30

REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS
CHRIST OF LAnER DAY SAINTS,

INDEPENDENT HOLINESS CHURCH ,
INC . - Poorl 51 , Middleport Rov
0 '0.11 Manley pastor, Arthur lorr Sun ·

Port land Aocme Rood W1lham Rousf't
pastor , Phyllis Stobort Sundov School
Supl Sunday School , 9 30om .. Morning
worship 10 30 a ,m , Sunday even1ng
serv1ce 7 p m Wednesday ev~1ng
prayer serv1ces , 7 30 p m
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST Rev Earl St1uler ,
pastor Worsh1p service 9 30 o m Sun day scl1ool , 10 30om B1ble Study and
pray er servtce Thursday 7 30 p .m .

CARLETON CHURCH Klngobury Rood.
Gory King pastor Sunday school , 9 X)
a m Rolph Carl super1ntendent even
.ng worsh•p 7 30 p m Prayer m"tlng
Wednesday 7 30 p m

LONG

BOnOM

CHRISTIAN ,

Tom

R•chason , poster, Wotloca Damewood ,
Sunday School Su~rlntendent Wonhlp
serv1ce at 9 a m Bible School lOa m

HYSEll RUN HOLINESS CHURCH, Sun -

day

School at 9 00 a .m. wonhlp ser !
vlca!l o.t 10 30 o m Pastor Rev . Tt1eron
Durham Thursday services at 7·30 p m
w1th Rev Okey Cart

FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION ot Bald
Knob located on County Road 31 Rev
lawrence Gluesencamp poster. Rev.
Roger
W•llford . on11tont pastor
Preaching servt&lt;:es , Sunday 7 30 p .m ,
prayer meeting Wednesday , 7 30 p.m ,
Gary Griffith leader Youth groups , 1
Sunday eve1ng 6 JO p m with Roger and
Violet Willford os leachrs Communion
ser\I ICes l1rst Sundoy eoch month.
WHITES CHAPEL Coolville AD Rev 1
Roy Deeter pastor . Sunday school 9 :xJ
om won hlp service 10 30 a m . Bible
study and prayer serv•ca, Wednesday

7 30pm
RUTrAND CHURCH OF CHRIST , Bob
Buckmgham pastor H..-b Elliott Sun day !lchool a.upt Sunday school , fil ·30
am , morning worship ond comunlan ,
1030om

RUTLAND BIBLE METHODIST CHURCH ,
Amos Tillis . pastor, Donny T•llls, Sunday

School Supt Sunday School 9 30 a m ,
fo llowed by morning worship Sunday
evemng service
7 00 p m. Prayer
meeting Wednesday , 7 00 p m

RUTLAND

CHURCH

OF

THE

NAZARENE , Rev Lloyd 0 Grimm, Jr ,
pastor Sundoy school , 9 30 a.m. wor ·
ship service 10 30 o m Broadcast live
over WMPO young .,.ople 1 service , 7
p m Evangelistic Mrvic•. 7 30 p m
Wednesday service, 7 30 p m

CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST. locotod ol

FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST, Cornor of

Rut land Of' New l imo Rood next to
Forest A cr e Pork Rev Ray Rouse
pastor , Robart Musser Sunday School
su pt Sunday school , 10 30 a f1"' , worship
7 30 p m B1ble Study Wedne sday 7 lO
p m Saturday '''9.,' proy P.r ~O t VIr(l ! 10

Second and Anderson Mason. Pastor
Frank Lowther. Sunday school . '45
a m • worship service, 11 a m and 7·30
p m Weekly Bible Study, Wednesday ,
7J30p m

MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST, Mlllor

p m with Sunday ochool. 9 30 o m Blblo
study , Wednesday 730p m

day school su,.rlntendent
Sunday
school , 9 30 am : evening worship , 1 30
p m Prayer and pral•• serv1ce Wednes -

day , 7 30p m
RUTLAND APOSTOliC CHURCH OF
JESUS CHRIST Elder Jomoo Mlllor Blblo
study, Wodnoodoy , 7 30 p m, Sunday
Sc~l. 10 a .m Sunday night tervlce ,
7 30p m.
POMEROY WESLEYAN HOLINESS Horrl10nvllle Jitood, Dewey K1ng , pastor ,
Honry Eblin Jr .. Sunday School Supl,
Suodoy School ' 30 o m , Morning Wor sl1ip 11 a m .. Sunday everung service,

7 30 m PravO&lt; Mooting Thursday, 7.30
pm
SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF GOD Not Pentecostal, Rev . George Oller,
pastor . Worship servic:e Sunday , 9 45
a .m • Sunday school . 11 am , worship
service, 7 30 p m Thursday praver

.-otlng 7 30 p m .
MT HERMON United Brethren in
Chrlot ChUI'ch. Rov , RGM&lt;f Sondoro ,
pastor, Don Will, loy 1..-r. Localod In
T•xos Community oft CR 12 Sunday
school, 9 30 a .m .. Momlf19 wonhlp '"'
vice , 10 45 a.m : evening preochlng tervice second and fourth Sundctys , 730
p m . Chrlttktn EndectvOf', first and third

Sundav• . 7 30 p m Wodnotday pravor
mooting and llblo study, 7.30 p.m
JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES, 37319 Stoto
Route 124 (One mile eost of Rutland)

Sunday: Biblo locluro 9 30 a. m .. Wol·
10·20 a m , Tundoy 1 liblo 111udy , 7 30 p m .: Thursday
Thoocrallc School, 7 30 p.m : Sorvlco
M-ting , 8 20 p m
RUTLAND FMEEWilliAPTIST Church Or. Jomoo A. Bruhl, pottor , Sunday
cl1tower study

Sunday ev.,lng service
7·00. Wodnoodoy proyor "'"""G." 7 00
p.m.
CHURCH OF GOD of Proohocv. locolod

Khool , 10o.m ,

hltf'tway

on tho 0 J White Road oil
160
Sunday School 10 a .m Superlntondont
John lovodoy First Wodnetdoy night of
month C'MA servkes , second W.dnft
day WMI mooli"t, thin! through filth
youth ..,..leo. c;..go Croyl•. pcntor,
HOI'E BAPTIST CHAPEL - 570 Grant
St .. Middleport: Sunday School, 10 a. m ..
moml"9 -•hlp, 11 a. m. -lng war·
ship, 7 p. m. Wednoodoy O¥enlng llblo
atudy and pr- mMftng, 7 p. m. I&gt;J.
llllotod with Southern lloptfal

eon-.

tlon.
' I·A~D

BETHEL

Unltod

Mathodlot

MA'I'IIE IT LOOI&lt;S TI&lt;I'.T
WAY n'GU1!IM-Y IIOV,

Churc~. Rev. Charles Oomlgan poe tor.
Sunday School, 9·30 a m , Worship S.r·

BUT TAl&lt;£ """" w:JRD

FOR

vlco, 10·45 a .m .. Sunday llblo Study ,
7 00 p m. Weclnudoy prayer MHtlng ,.
730pm
' BURliNGHAM SOUTHERN BAPTIST
CHURCH . Route I, Shode . Pottor Don
llcx:k .A.HIIIated with Southern loptlst
C011vonllon , Sunday school, 1 30 p m :
Sunday worship 2 30 p m Thuraday
avonlng llblo study, 7 p.m
PENTECOSTAL ASSEMIILY, Raclno ,
ltoutel24 William Hobock pastor. Sun ·
day school . 10om., Sundoy evening Mr ·
vke , 6·30 p. m Wednesday Hnlng • •·

IT ....

vice, 7.

CARPENTER BAPTIST , Rov Fr. . lond

Oh,no! Mustn't ,
touch those r

Gretchen

be
lost
With·
out

CHUIICtf 'Of' cmiSTEugen• Uttaruuoad, ,....,; Harry Hen·
l!rlcka, suporln,.,.,t. llundey set-f.
9 ·30 o m : """"'"' --.,., 10:30o m :
ovonlng woralllp , } p.m. Wecluoodoy II·

Meigs
Property
Transfers
Pamella M. Kelly, Affidavit, Mid·
dleport.
Jo Lynn WUes to John WUes,

.
\\ I"JN IE SUPPCSE

Jaspers, Parcels,

H4C' Ti-lfR-E:!:r&lt;..1
W O"'l-lERS
~lf'TfR::- l I

;)

ANDf
rr.( J.~1 I

e oo

...
6 30

"

ke~Js'

FEELIN&amp;S TO &gt;lARD ME ?

FATH!:R

I I H..JNESTD' DON 'T
ifNOW /31LL I CCULDN T
13LAME YOU FOR ANY-

1\iiNNl =

WHAT WORRIES ME 15
WHE1!1E R YOU STARTEI7

oc l OU TH•NK ITS P.:JSSI BLE ?

T HING YOU DID WHILE
YOU HAD AMNESIA!

12). (7) NBC NEWS
"

F ACJ!: THE MUSIC
1!1 18 )(tO) CBS NEWS
HI
WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
111 1 LILIAS 'tOGA AND YOU
(12)
ABC NIEWS
6 !58 I ~ I NEWS UPOATf
1 0(/ 12 1.
PM MAGAZINE
3 1THE STORY
4 ) INSIDE THE NFL Holt s len
Da w1on IU'Id N•c k Buonlcontlale
bnck AI they b!flnd 9Ctlon h1gl\
hghta wtlh e.o;pert comman uny and
p1ud1chona to r 1981 .s Sup11r Bowl
cootenclers
!5 1 ALLIN THE FAMILY
I t llt2)8t FAMILYF~UO
71POP: GOES THE COUNTRY
O t l TICTAC DOUGH
!tt•

REPORT

MACNEIL ·L~HRER

'

&lt;f Ol NEWS

t 30 l 21D BULLII!YIE
t 3 1 THE LESSON
r 5 ) SANFORD AND SON
l l l lll (l ) JOKIEA'SWtLO
11)1 JO\ HOLLYWOOD SQUARES
f t \ {111 DICK CAVETT SHOW
, 121 81 FACE THE MUSIC
7 58 3) NEWS UPDATE
800 218 111 HARPEAVALLEY PTA
S!ulln Johnson Is to,aed ott the
sctmut taumvill cornmrtt ee tor at
tegudly ca• ry•ng oo w!lh the mayo1,
but sho yuts tlven by glvtnQ away
snm1Jiell ul moonglow m11keup t o
m e wonten o f lint PTA Star ll
B11rlJAIB Edun Otto1ge Gobel
(Prem1era)
1311NTOUCH
H I MOlliE -jSUSPENSEl ,.,.
· BloOdline ' 1Q77
15 1MOYIE ·(HORROR) ''1 'Stan·
!e)'
'
1972:

Olat.' Parcel, SUtton.
Vlllqe of SJI'ICIIlle to S)'J'ICIIIeRaclne Recional Sewer Dial, .0074
ICI'e, S)'riiCIIIe.
711~11.

Four Euements.
NlclloiM R. lhle, Diana I. Ihle to
Paul E. Wolfe, Leola M. Wolfe, I
ICI'e, SUtton.
Bumle Rou, Slmanla Rolli to,
Royal Pet. Prop. Inc., ~nt,
Bedford.

BAIIII"'R

II)

r~OfEr.HQ!&lt;,

,,

IIJ1 1110) THE INCR!DIBL!.ttULK

.
..

•I

/"lin ~, \::

MORE THAN ONE
FAM ILY IN \OUR
TRAVELS?

I MEAN TH~i \1\IH IL E I HAD -\MNE5 14
I ST,RTEc:" ~ M:""HE R.
1="41\\ IL'-' II\
..:O L O \~(!&lt;r .O..?

d~]'u) ·

EVENING
72 1e f t l 0 11 lttO) fU) f8 NEwS
l 3 1 STUFF
f 41 ' DAVf CROCKETT AT THE
ALAMO Fe as Pa rke• t nJ:J Buddy
Ebsen stAI In th•s nr •es •boul a
rugged Tennouee beckwpoda
mo nwhoble z.ed t~lla•l ot c· ~ •hzatlon
ltuough savage lnd•nn territory and
~s tab!lshod the l nd1an s rlgtlta 1n
Alllf!I!Cil
~1
CAROL. BURNETT AND
FRII!NOS
I ABCNEWS
f I I 3 2: t CONl'ACT
ftl l OVER EASV Gum11 Actor M ar
trn Sheen
stru of the film
Ap ocalypse Now Hosts Hugh
Downs and Frnnk Blatr (Closed
Cop!IOnttd U S A )

I t

S)'I'IIC~M-Raclne Regional Sewer

am

1

m

acre, SuUon.

the populatlaa nwy 10,.,. -~~~
1 11u1a rw appartloh •
o1
membln ol the . . . 0( RtJ 11111latiltiiiiDGIII the .....

press

on the

-,aeM ,

II

Charlee Thcmu Chapman, Barbara Ann Chapman to S)'J'ICUie
Racine Regional Sewer Olat., .0143

s.
ror1 u.
- o1

You

FOR. ALL .:-r-

3 GOODNEWS
S BOD NEWHART SHOW

Dial., Parcel. Sutton.

n.

HON WOULD TI-1,AT
i\°FECT /JS \OUR

A tofltw e'tnhtdden mbno)lpuls 8•n
of r 'l' th•crou hAir I ol two 11a1a ot
dtlftpm l\ to croOk a , qunA ((:'0
mi1111J
I I \ nl 1WASHI'fOlON .'fWf:IK riN
REVIEW
1121• a!Nsott
\'''"'
a 30 j 2 18 {7} I~NF9R~tteving crtect
wol lfm MO long noont~be l• evelhlm
wl'lltt•f".•od H.luAUyi'IAanm• ldhllllrl

tii!Rclo. and by the lime they teallze
he s nol tOk•ng 11 s almost ~ oo

(71 BARBARAMANDAELL
AND THE MANDREll SISTERS
Torughl a guest w•ll be Tennel!ll~ee
Ernie Fo1d (80 m1n s}

lt~ I C

rellt2)CJI'MA BIG GIRL NOW To
t () U(H noll o telllst h equeatlon01 an a

tuces alter her beat lrlend'a hua
hAnd throws a heavy pas s al her
I I 1fl 1) WALL$TREETWEEKHost
LOUI SRulo.oysar
858 l 31NJW6UPDATE
g 00 I 210 (71 NERO WOLFE When
Nero Wolfe s asa1s tan1 Arch1e
f'JI'I 3•11vOIYed tnll lnend sdeall\,lhe
uwest•gA hon keeps leading to the
v1c t•m s wile ond old college
loeods Stars Wllltem Co nred
(Prtt rnlete 60mms )
3'1 CBNTELETHON
t \ lt2l CD FRIDAY NIGHT MOVIE
D•ary Of A Tee nage H1tchhlker
1979 Stnrs D•c k Von Pallen Cl\er
lttne Tilt on Teenagehllchhlklng
rmd !Is oll ert !l aglc ertdtnga are ert
plored thr ough the dram a otaevt~ral
voung u• rls wh oae peer •group
pr t!SS wti Band tam•lv- conlh ctaprod
th em to h1t ch r1d ee that expoae
them lo phY 91CBI asuull ( 2 tue )

1!1 [11110) THE DUKES OF HAZ·
ZARO II a Dulle ¥s Ouka ea Bo end
Luke compete 8Q81nst each other
ond Rosco to try and win the J 0
Hogg Fhat Annual Haru1d Derby
(60 mms)
f t ) [11) HARO CHOIC!S Human
E1tpenman1s P11ce ot Knowledlf!e
Th e nghts and wellareol human
suDje r. ls uaed 1n ACII!ntltlc Rxper
lmenls are lhe focus ol th1s pro
vram (60mtns)
1000 t 2) G t7) NI!ICMAGA.ZINEWITH
DAVID BRtNKLEV
t 41 I MOVIE ·(COMEDY ) u ' tforftl
C 8 fiU Forty 1i 7 Q
S I TBS EVENING NEWS
I:J(IIli111'I DALLASJ A sallractlon
h&gt; Lu ~; y • tutur e staler In law Is at
mcs l enough lo dtverl hla lnten hon
of ge tt ing Bobby slob u 1\ead ol
Ewmg 0 •1 b.-t he Ia qu1clo. to capl·
ll\1!1 tJ on hta br oth or s rash action
(Jlt I of 11 lwo pa ri episode 80
mtns )
t i J MOVIE -(DRAMA I •• ~

"A
Oellc:ate Balan c e '
ttl NEWS
10 30 {ttl MASTERPIECE THIEATRE
Oange1 UXB Ep•aodell Brian con
tronhn bomb wedged •nlhewall of
n burntng butld1ng and 11 re
pnm11nde d by k1s tenter othcer for
hta re clllean handling ol the t ask
(Ciollttd Ct~ phoned, U SA ) (60
mma)

II 00 I l l .

/1)[ 1) . . [ I '.~~~~·

NEWS
l , J DAN GRIFFIN
I 5 l Nil A IA.!HU!TBALL Atlanta
ltawka vtGotden Slate Warr!ore
tt 28 13I NfWS UPOATf
1.1' 30 2 G 7 1 THI! TONIGHT SHOW
Clufl at T on~ J=landall (60 mlna )
3 1 RO~SIA.GLfrSHOW

fRIDAYS
llJ I l l CBSLATf MOYif lHE
DA RKEA SlOE 01- TERROR IQ79
·, ~ AI!I lllltlllrl Foretttr l,drlenn~
IJ.ubonu
101MOYIE (HORROR) n ~ " Th•
Smcerori 1967
1 1(121.

I l l 700CLUB
I&amp;] FOOfBALL SATURDAY ON

12 00 i 41MOYtE-(AOMANCf)•• " When
Time Rln Out' 1080
1 t IMOVIE · (SUSPENSI!:·DRAMA)
••
Straight On Till Morning"

TBS

ll lt12J III THE lOVE BOAT
tll (11 (tQ} WKRP IN CINCINNATI

1V73
12 30 [ 2 1 G

Arthur Ca 11 11on Is honored but very
r~ er voua About g1ving the keynote
Address at th e Annual Ohio Broad
caa1er9 Dinner, 90 Andy auggests
he practice hrs t by deii&gt;Jerlng tl to
the stall
Itt ) ODYSSEY Nl11 SIDr y ot a
IKunu Woman ' From 111m apann1ng
26 years w•th lhe IKIHI\1 Bushmen
John Mar shaall hes produced an
mltmale por~r••t ot one woman and
a va n1ahmg way ol Ill• (Closed
Ceplloned U SA ) (60mm• )
8 30 II (I ) (ff) THE TIM CONWAY

( 7)
THE MIDNIQHT
SPECIAL HOSI la rry H1gm•n

Gues ts Bett eMidte r Rod StewArt
Geo•g e Bume T11ny11 Tuckflr (90

m•nl)

12 40

rl ) SOLID GOLD Co Mall Glen
Campbell 01onneWarw1ck Gold
record wmners perform the ir 1\lt
son~

U2l .MOYIE ·(HORAOAI • Yt 'N•
'crom•ncy" UUl
12 58 (3) SPORTS REPORT
1 00 !J l JIMMY SWAGGART
110lMOVIE ·(UYSTERYI' ..... rta' '

SIIOW

·~ll!

lt ) SUPERSTAR P ..Oflll!.

1 10 Gal• NEWS
1 15 (11 MOYIE ·(ADVENTURE) • 'rll
• Atteck Of The Moore" 1860

9 00 (4)WOALDCHAWION8HtPBOJl·
lNG HAGLER TITLE DEFENSE
Middleweight boxlnoenamplon ot
Ihe WOI' ldMllrvlnHI Qlardetend Ill hi I
IIIIAaga•nallhe numberoneranked
Ven•zuet•n co ntender Futcenglo
Obelmet•u
( S) THELOYI! BOATAwornangam
bll rls tracked downby a man torh8r
dGbla and a g.rl a psreRls muet
decide wheth•r to re~estlhe I ruth
aboul her heelll\ when ehe tattsln
lo&gt;Je w1~ h a man Guutatara L.lu
Hartmen UaureenMcCorm1ck (60

2 00 [ ~l · NE\11111

( 3 ) 30 MINUU$ WITH FATHER

MANNtNG
( &lt;1 l MOVI!-iDRAMA)''• "City On
Fire" 1$78

m

2 28
SPORTS REPORT
2 30 t Sl R0888AGLEYSHOW

3 00 (l) MOVIE-(AOYENTUREI'' 'Cobr• " 1M8
3. 58 ( $) SPORTS REPORT

&lt;100 f 3l 700CL.U8
5 00 ( 5 ) MA YI!AICK
5 30 ( S) PHIL ARMS PRIESENT$
5 58 ( S) SPORTS REPORT

[ I ) PRISONER
(1f) !CTORY GARDEN
6 30 11] 8 (1) NICNEWS
( I ) PROGRAM UNANNOUNCED
Q [I) CONCERN
t10) CBS NEWS
(il l T.. SOLOHOUSEOemOIIIhlng
IS nearly complet e and hOlt Bob
V•Ia ahow 11 us some ott h 11 problem a
he hU unco vered (Closed
Captioned US A)
' 700 121GDANCEFIVER
~ 3 l BLACK WOOD BAOTH£RS
(6 )
CHAMPIONSHIP
WRESTLING
(I )G ( • ) HE!HAWOueata Mick
oyG11tey Johnn)ILee, MIIIIonDoller
Band (60 m•n•}
t 7 J L.AWAENCE WELt&lt; SHOW
! S1 MUPPET SHOW
no1BUGS BUNNY
ftl l ONCE UPON A CLASSIC 'Mill
on 11\e Floss TuA1\ er 1\&amp;a• stroke
11nd !he household !lema 11re auc
I!OOI"d I O 1epa y dtibh (Cioaed
Captioned U SA)
(t fl.SOL.IDGOLDCo- t1(1ala Glen
Campbe ll D•o rne Wa rwick Gold
1eco •d W!fli!UIH 1J8rfonn their hit
son~

7 30 j ~ ] - !IOUPMAN
13 ) THE LUNDSTROM!
l 4 1 MOYIE ·(CART00NI''' jA
Boy Named Charll• Brown"

,..,e

' i CL•S,~IC COUNTRf
1101 FRONT PAGE
111 1
CROSS COUNTRY
SCttOOL

gear grmdmg high·
!lpeedchase man 16 wheelaem lto
11 gang ol t ruck hija ckers (60
m1n s )
f l l MOVtE ·(DRA ..A)•••'flp ''M•ry
OtScotland' 193fl
fl1) LAWMAKERS
(f}J Qt COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Alabama vs Kenwcky
9 30 ( 3) THE LESSON
11t) SNEAK PREVIEWS In a aptu:lal
year end program co hoSIS Genii
S1sk el and ~ o ge r Eberl choo'hil
the1r len ta'iorltel•lma ot ttle year
whlch•nctude'TI\eflluesBrothera
Reg•no Bull Bemg There Coal
Minor s Oeughler and Ord1nary
Peo£!.e'
1000 ( 2) . l1j HILL STREET BLUES
Captam Furlllo mu s~ try Io arreno• a
t ruce among warring teen -age
ga nga to anaure aecunly during a
pres•dent•allact tlndmgvlailto the
~eclnct (60 m1ne)
f 3) ROCK CHURCH
(8 ) FANTASY ISLAND A mother·
to be with only 1 shor111me to live
dreams ol seeing he1 child grow up,
but la ces a greet ahock when
Roarke grants her wish Guest
stan Eve Plumb Donny Moat (60
n11na.)

Sill

ft ft\Jru} ~'\l

~

gl\'8

l Man ILa! I
5 Oregon city
10 Buck heroine
II Bogart f1lm
IZ Ubertme

311 French City
DOWN
1 lsraeh

13 Poseidon's

dance

2 Palm leaf
3 Declare
oneself
4 T1e - on

son

5 Noted

11 Sailor's

Yeslerday'a ADawer
puppeteer
%5 Dutch cbet:SO
f Sty serpent 11 Bequest
rec1p1ent
Z9 Paper SIZe
atmosphere 7 Vattcan31 F1renze's•
16 Dutch
Italian pact 19 B1nd1ng
matenal
r1ver
'
commune
8 Eating away
11 Fragrance 9 Horseman's U Nelson Eddy 3% Pilcher .
ftlm (19311)
Nolan
11 Subj. using
art
34 Prepare
logarithms II Accwnulate ~ !raman's
ancestor
silage
!0 "- But
151'ype 1
zc Uncover
u - Tillis
the Brive''
collection

assent
!5 London

D m®J SECRET&amp;O~MIOUINO

HEIGHTS Guy Mllhngton '• •cheme
to mher~t the I amity tortune le
Jeopardi zed wh en htl alater vlalts
1\omeand appears lobe recovering
trom her ment al d11ordera (80
mms )

('r)
WALKING TALL Sherltt
Pueaer a eon 1111 threatened by his
tell ow studen ts atter he help a his
lather to try to rid the town of drug
pushers wh o are tl ood1ng the

6 00 I I JG .tfl®J NEWS
( ' ) QODHASTHEANSWER

ACROSS

an llnhkely 19om ol 1e11m atera when
I hey

~ t ,(

loy THOMAS JOSErH

0 Lll rm1 FftiEI!BIE AND Tttf
BEAN Freeb•e and the Bean mike

m1n a )

JAN 17, 1181

l!/1,.,.

!!.Choolswlth angelduet Stars Bo
Svenao n (Premlt!Ut 60 mlna )

800 12 1.

Evening television listings

S)'I'IICIIIe-Riclne Regional Sewer

Corwtltutle~~ JII'VYidld

pump I

''--'-•~
- - " '"'1;\-~
' ~ / 1t\?
) bY:: f11~

Eugene G. Long, Viola Long to
Shirley M. Long, 4 acrea, Lebanon.
Dale E. Hart, Kathryn Hart to

APPOft'I10MIINT
ciMf ~ '""' tbe

~

)

Lebanon.

Ira Eblin, Hope Eblin to S)'J'ICUie
Racine Regional Sewer DilL, 100
acre Lot 2111, S)'I'IICIIlle.
Emeat A. Wingett, Mulne Spencer Wingett to ll)'niCUH Racine
Regional Sewer Dill, .IIIII acre, Sutton.
Gears• Nelgler, Beulali Nelgler to

TI-iAT GIRL li:'&lt;16HT SUPPOSE
I AM .. Er.:.

[ ...HC'USHT )QU C .:H.::'r&lt;.E- ..:N '2UR
CH.;.:..:.;L4TE \fiCuS=-E \V~EN
CON5UEL~ 5-l,!,:' 5,..E
-~--

"

Trana. Corp., Agree. Ease.,

J.

qamblinqr

WINNIE

Artmlr J. Kencllll, Dahn T. Kendall to TeiT)' E. Whaley, Harold 0 .
Whaley, Frederick 0. Whaley, Parcel, Scipio.
Thcmu Earl Manuel to WUbert
McClain, Pareela, Letart.
JOflel)h H. Kaull, dec. ata J. H.
Kaull, dec. to Kathryn bull, now
dec., Ruby Kallll, Alf. for trana.,
Cbeeter.
Ruby Kautz to Dale ~1111, Allee J .
Kautz, Int. In Mlnerala, Cbeeter.
Vlllcent La Comb to Jf1'/ La Comb,
.1475 acre, Olive.
Denver L. Rice and Colwnbla Gaa
of Ohio, Inc., Colwnlllll Gu Trllllll.,
Corp., Acree· Eue., Bedford.
Mlcbael C. Culter and Colwnbla
Gu of Ohio Inc., Colwnbia Gaa

Nancy

Grandma
will

her

Dlvon:e Dlcree Entry, Meigl.

Sallabury.
Goldie M. Davia, dec to Karl B.
Davia, Cert. ol trans., RutWtd
Eugene G. Long, Viola Long,
Shirley M. Long to Corbett 0. Cleek,

Wecan·t

nave her

will

TIST , Donald R Korr 1 Sr , pastor Friday
evening service 7 30 p. m • Sunday
school , tOo m

HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION, Tho Rov William
Campbell, pallor Sunday School , 9 30

lAUREl

ALLEY OOP

day Sct-1 9 •30 o m Morning Worahlp,
10 30 o .m Pr~er Service , alternate
Sundays
NEASE SETTLEMENT FREE Will BAP -

Ill N 2nd
Pom..-oy tn "'1 Milici__. ttl l45 ~

pm

Nylo

Norris , pa1tor Don Cheadle Supt Sun ·

Btuwn's
&amp;
Equipment

.~

Rov

nis pastor. Mrs Elvin Bumgardner,
supt Sunday school 9 .30 a m • worship
servk:e, !0:45a .m

th-2J11 "-"'•• .,

G•F7~

NEW YORK

POSSISI.V PAINT!

h

MT MOttiAH IIAPTIST - Fourth ond
Main St., Middleport. Rov . Colvin Min-

282

Mulberry Ave , Pomeroy , Rev W1lhom
R -Newman . pastor Hers.,el McClure
Sunday school supenntendent Sunday
sthool. 9 30 0 m , morn1ng worship
10 30 evenmg worship
7 30 p m
Ml~week prayer serv•ce 7 30 p m
MIDWAY COMMUNITY CHURCH Oex
ter~ Rd
Rd
langsville, Rev A A
Hughes Pastor Sunday School 10 am
Serv1ces on Tuesday Thursday and Sun
doy ,7 30pm

MT . MORIAH

d.t)

2028-1'!

Sttturday
Tlius

WISt•
wet k hq!UISw1t h

,md ..,k1lh:d , hkcwtsc. "hose
the \\Or~ lnp of G1KI .tnd whose

· RUTLAND FIRST BArTIST CHURCH-

SOUTHERN

Tlw v

5 12 /4

/3 24-JJ

Pout•r to ( hrl~t1.n1 use

He•Qhts Rood Pomeroy Pastor , Albert
D•t'''· Sabbath School Supenntendent
Rlto White Sabbath School Saturday
off.tnoon at 2 00 w 1th Worsh•p Serv1ce
folki'w1ng at 3 15

FIRST

.1hout 1

:md :;k1lled '\nw ne.ms

whn dl:' stgm•&lt;l tilt' 'r hppPr

SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST. Mulberry

Stster Horm!'lt Worner Supt Sundoy
morn10g worshtp
School 9 30 o m
10 45 am
lHE HILAND CHAPEl George Casto
poster Sunday School 9 30 o m even
ing worsh1p 7 30 Thursday even.ng
prayer serv1ce 7 30 p m
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST
Dav1d
Mdnn , mm1ster , W1ll1am Watson Sunday
sc6ool supt Sunday school 9 30 a m
morn1ng worship 10 30om

IS

Monday
-\ct.t

Thur-.rdav Fndav
II C onnth1ans Calatwru Roriu.ru
lS 14-21
5/ll-H
5 16 Zl

p11f 11 tu tht• lws t

Vl lll

Th.tt ~ \\ h.tt rch).!: IOn

Ch

MI.._... Ills. c.

Wflirltsduy

Tn• th.1t lurmu l.1 fi1r nt~n d.1v '" tn~ Tin.
USt'

) t:rt' IFIIQ,I

Tuetdny
Acts

Stmdny

C.ud IMs provtded Wt.• dt•stgn tht.•

J)lmt•rcomt's frnm C.uJ

FEV&amp;FlEP IMA~I/o/ATION CAI.J

MOUNT Olive Community
urc •
lowrencelush, pastor . Max Folmer,~Sr.

P. J. PMUY,

asm

uaf t .md m.1c hmcn to put th em to use

WAID CROSS

7.30 p.m.

Bord•n . pastor
Cornelius lunch,
superintendent Sunday school
9.30
a m., second ond fourth Sundays worship service ot 2 30 p.m.

m.tkmg: fu ll t"st

b tt arn dtfferent "ht·'O we emplm slt&gt;.u u
t•lt"t· tnetl ~ or ,tt o n11c power~ Tlw .. e .lrt' sou f'(t' S

SeMces

CHURCH Rev Rolph Sm1th pastor Sun do¥ school 9 JO a m
Mrs Worl ey
Franc1s superintendent Preochmg ser
viCes f1rst &amp; ttmd Sundays follow•ng Sun
day School

tnd

usc of tl You dun t h,t ve to rount lht~ s.uls or
studv tlu-' n~lll~ to knO\\ th.1t

Reuter-810pn

CHRISTIAN

JXJ\\ e r

OT'HER~

ONE 01' TilE MOST -ITCH/Ntl
f'IMIWl CHAitMf!g YOUIO.

am Sunday evttningservlce, 7·30 p.m.:
midweek prayer service Wednesday ,

FOUST RUN BAPTIST -

But \dl.lt was the1r formul.l for stl('(t'ss ')

OF

P ';RINITY Chrlollan Auombly, Coolvlllo
_ Gllbort Sponcor poolor. Sunday
school. 9:30 a .m , morning worship , 11

FIRST OF Al.l. - HERE'S A
PlA~E Tl CKET-· ON A FI.IBHT
TAKING OFF TOMORROW
~~N~ l

Railroad StrHt, M010n Pastor Rev
Richard Jordon. Mornlne woral1ip 9:30
om., Sundar Sc:hool 10 30 am Prayer
mHtiOQ W4Kin ..day, 7·30 p m

pnwt'r

CHR.ST 200 W Mom St 992 5235 Vocal
muiiC Sunday worsh1p 10 o m , 81ble
study , 11 om worsh1p 6 p m Wednes
day B1ble study , 7 p m

OLD

'"'""

to s url&gt;•t~s the d tpper She plt Pd tlw st.'H'Il
n•.1s .md lu• I1X'd a IW\\ n.ltlon becotnt• .1 \\o rld

BAPTIST

~PHI WHAT' I
QUIT~ ALL RI8HT;
AAV! TO T~ll VOUt ~AlSO. HE ANP ~
!i'lf;'/ IS Hle HLY HAVE NO S&amp;CFlETS
CONFIDENTIAL!
•ROM EACH

lng service 7. Wedfleldoy evening WOI·

ohlp, 7 p.m.: Vlollollon, Thursday, 6 :30

ship 7 30 Wodnoodav nlf't pr..,.r aorvk:e: 7:30 p .m Wom.n s Fellawahlp,
Thursday, 9.30 a. m,
FAITH BAPTIST Church, Mooon, m"t
at Unit~ Steel Worker• Union Hall,

.. u """'· -·"""'

DESIGnED FDR POWER

Sunday morning worship, 10 a m ; even·

pastor; Rellf James Cundiff. asslatont
pastor. SUnday School 9 30 am .. morn·
lng worthlp. 10 30 a m .. evening wor-

PAT HILL FORD, INC.

Pr•scrip:tlons
" 1 nss
Pom•rov

CHAPEl Route I , Shade Bi bl e school 7
p m Thursday worsh•p serv•ce 8 p m

POMEROY

Sorvk:olil o ·I"·
p I D
SACRED HEART • Rov Fothor au
,
992 :2125. Sotur.
day ov.;,lng Mon . 7,30, Sunday,_,, 8
ond 10 o.m.. Confettlort , Saturday
7-7 ·30 p m.
-~
VICTOtiY BAPTIST - 525 N ••N 5t ..
Middleport JomH E K-oo. poator,
Welton pastor Phone

RIGGS USED CARS, INC.

326 E

Mou) St , Pomeroy The Rev Robert B
Groves re ctor Sunday serv1 ces at 10 30
am ' Holy Communion on the f1rst Sun ·

'j;'..,

This Sunday

NAtARENE Corner Unton and Mulberry ,
Rev . Clyde V Henderson pastor Sun
day school q 30 o m Glen McClung
supt ~ morn ing worshtp , 10 30 am
even ing serv1ce 7 30, mid week ser

~STOlE

M~dlaplllt

of Your Choice

Neoae

Nursery provided fcir worstllp servlcM .
ST PAUl. LUTHERAN CHURCH, Corn•r
of S amore and Sec~d Sts . Pomeroy.
Tho
William MlddiHwarth , Pastor
Sunday School ot 9 45 a .m. and Church

%1 Subside

!3 Torn apart
!3 Chinese
d)'IUisty
Zl Medical
measure
2S Claslly guy
26 Abstract
being
%7 European

nver
Make lace
%9 Proper
30 Attention
33 Exhilarated
35 Pamter

%II

~ ntAT SCRAMIII.ED WORD GAME

'!P ~~ !!!

byHenriAmoldlnciBotlLH

Unscrambtt these tour Jumbles
one tetter to tach square 10 torm
toor ordinary WOICIS

Cassatt
31 Movie house
37 Spirlllamp
38 First name
m Mass.

I I

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
AX\'DLBAAXB

r ]

I. r J I

II

One lett~r simply stands for another In this nmple A is
used for the three I.. s. X for the two O's, etc Smgle letters
apostrophes, the len gth nnd rormation of the "ords
hmta Each day the rode leltcrs are dUferent

JUIN ER!_t-....--.

'

J,DNGI'ELLOW

. I

\NOOVYCt
I KJ )

CRVPTOQUOTES

Now srr1nge lhfl clrcled letters to
torrn the surprlaa antwer IS sug
gested by the abovt cartoon

Prtnranawerhare:

' Yesterdays I umDles

are. a'l

[I] I I I I )
(Answers tomorrow)

J

FELON

CHAMP LAXITY BLEACH

A.nswl!lr

Could be a movie - or ciMma - lacking In
vitali ty - ANEMIC

s

LRRX

DVHMRJ
SJX

MBRHKBVAAVH

IWR

WRDVM

WSM

s

LRRX

RBWVH

EM

s

TVTRHK
DVRDAV

WSFVJ B. - EHI"f.J
M
ZRUU
Yesterday 's Cryptoquote· EACH YEAR, ONE VICIOUS HABIT
ROOTED OUT IN 'fJMJo: OUGHT TO MAKE EVEN THE
WOR.S r MI\N GOOD - BEN r-RANKI.IN
ii) t!MI l&lt;my ~tllu•n

5Jndottll

II"'C

�Pag&amp;-;8-The Daily Sentinel

_January 16, 1981

Pomeroy-Middleport, Oh1o

\

·. .Attorney General designate won't hesitate With advice
WASHINGTON (AP) - William
French Smith, declaring the
Amencan people would be " hfs first
client" as attorney general, says he
would not hes1tate to g1ve tough adVIce to his longtime friend Ronald
Reagan.
For more !han seven hours Thursday, Srmth cautiOusly and
sometimes vaguely answered
questions from members of the
Senate Judiciary Conuruttee. The
panel was expected to approve his
nomination today.
Smith was pressed by a number of
committee members on whether his
1l&gt;-year association wtth Reagan as

his personal lawyer would make 11

difficult to give the president-elect
harcMo-take advice
Asa man who knows Reagan well,
Smith sa1d there IS a " much greater
and more reahstic posstbility" of his
giVIng Reagan advtce to make tough
deciSIOns than someone who is less decision ''
fanullar wtth the prestdent perAt other confirmation hearmgs
Thursday · - The Senate Fore1gn
sonally
The 1111lltona1re Califorrua lawyer. Relations Conumttee voted ll&gt;-2 to
said that as attorney general, the recommend Senate confirmation of
nation's f1rst lawyer, servmg the · Alexander M. Haig to be secretary
American people would be his of state
- The foretgn relatiOns commtttee
pnr.nary respons1bthty.
In addilton to being the lawyer on a 16-0 vote also approved the
representing the Amencan people,

'80 news'·•highliglits·
June 15 - E . F Robinson and
Franklin Hepp were honored for
long years of sernce wtth the
Pomeroy Ftre Department
June 16- Several teachers of the
Meigs Local School. Distnct including the musical Hunts resigned.
June 17 - 180 seniors graduated
from Metgs High School. Buddy
Moore was hired as head football
coach and teacher at Eastern High
sChool.
.rune 18 - A banquet kicked off the
Dave Diles Celebrity ClaSSIC Golf
Toutnament.
June 23 - Everyone buckled down
to the stagmg of the annual Big Bend
Re~,:atta Weekend.
June 24 - Pomeroy Council voted
100 percent support of new Police
Chief Charles McKinney.
June 25 - A Carleton College
Scholarship
Committee
was
establiShed in Syracuse.
June 27 - Philip Roberts was
named Me1gs County Engmeer,
Donald Wolfe, Rac10e, a busmess
and off1ce education tnstructor for 47
yeats, retired.
June 28 - Kathie Quivey was
&lt;;rowned Btg Bend Regatta Queen.
· June 29 - Frog activtties and the
observance of Hentage Sunday
Wrapped up Regatta Weekend .
JULY
July 1 - Extensive preparatiOns
were underway for the w1derung and
resurfacing of Page St. m Mtddleport.
Tomato crops in the
. July 2
~tart bottoms were about ready for
~hippmg, one of the best crops m
years.
July 3 - Meigs welcomed a new
and the only vetermanan, Dr Davtd
Krawsczyn.
July 4 - July 4th was obsetved in
ftle county With Racme's Ftre
Department stagmg a good parade
10 that community.
July 5- Restdents took to boaUng
on the Ohio River m an attempt to
combat a heat wave.
Pomeroy Council
,Ju)y 7
scheduled a speCial session to

discuss the status of the town's
police department.
July 8 - A severe ram and hail
storm struck Metgs County, trees
were downed and roofs blown from
homes.
July 9 - StofJIIS continued in the
county with floods and ftres
resulting.
,
July 10 - Pomeroy's popular
Wayne Swisher died unexpectedly.
July 12 - Painting and a new
walkway project were completed at
the Hobson bridge.
July H - Page St. in Middleport
was completely tom up as water
lines were moved in readiness for a
major street Improvement.
July 16 - LoUIS DeLuz (who later
died) was coUecting signatures on
petitions hoping to get an improved
road near the Ravenswood bridge.
July 19 - A $6,000 tractor W83
stolen from the Temple Cemetery m
Columbta Township.
July 21 - RegiStration for the armed forces was underway at post offtces. Pomeroy Counctl approved mcreases m cemetery fees
July 2?. - Extenstve exterior
remodeling was , taking place at
Crow's Steak House.
July 23 - Dr. Johnny Brewer
1010ed the staff at Veterans
Memonal Hospital
July 24 - Nine breaking and entermg incidents were solved wtth the
arrest of a Pomeroy juverule
July 26 - Kim Warner was a warded a four year scholarship to Rio
Grande College
July 28 Metgs County's
Regional Planmng Comllllssion
requested letters be sent to Columbus urg10g road unprovement near
the Ravenswood Bridge.
July 29 Me1gs County's
populaUon rose 17.2 percent from
1970 to 1980 according to census
f1gures .
Middleport
firemen
rece1ved a new fire truck.
July 31 - The Juruor Urut of the
Ladies Auxiliary, Drew Webster
Post 39, Amencan Legion, won top
honors lor Americanism in Ohio

Carpenter Personals
Murl Galaway and Dale Dye spent
Thanksgiving Day With her son-inlaw and daughter, Mr and Mrs.
Leon Woodrum and family members
in McArthur.
Guests of Mrs. Dale Stansbury
d,urjng the holiday weekend were
these family members, Mr and
Mrs. Larry Stansbury and sons,
Reynoldsburg; Mrs. Teresa Schmidt
and daughters from Pennsylvama
and Mr. and Mrs. Clair Dale Sta0:
sbury, Groveport Recent guests of
Mrs. Stansbury were other family
members, Mr. and Mrs Charles
Fdley, Pomeroy, and Mr. and Mrs.
Floyd Cleland, Rutland.
Mr. and Mrs. LeWIS Snuth consulted his doctor 10 Columbus one
day last week W1lltam Stout drove
for them.
Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Devme,
COlwnbus, spent Wednesday mght
and Thursday bere wtth her parents,
Mr. and Mrs Dorsey Jordan, RICk
and~lph.

Mr. end Mrs. Reed Jeffers were
diMer guests on Thanksgtvmg Day
at t~e home of their granddaughter
and family, Mr. and Mrs. Larry Blrchfteld and children. Mr. and Mrs.
Lavern Jordan were also guests of
the Bll'Chllelds. The Jeffers then
were supper guests of their son and
daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Gene
Jeffers, Marco and Robert, where
other grandchildren, Mr and Mrs.
Michael Lawson and son, Racme
and Mr. and Mrs. Lester Jeffers,
Columbus, along with other fnends
were also guests. Mrs. Jelfrs, who
celebrated her birthday on Thursday, recetved telephone greetings
from their son, Lee Jeffers and
family in Califorma and thetr
daughter and fam1ly, Mr. and Mrs
John Dunham and children, New

Boston,IU.

: Mr.

and Mrs. Todd Bowersox
(Jane Renee WISeman) and Evan
Da1(1d W1seman, Uma, VISited with
their great-grandparents, Mr and
~- Earl Starkey On Thursday Mr.
and Mrs. Starkey attended a falll)ly
thanksgiving dinner at the home r1
(heir son-in-law and daugher, Mr.
'rid Mrs. Roy Wtseman, HarriSonVIlle. Others present mcluded Rev.
and- Mrs Dav1d Wiseman. Evan

nonunation of Georgetown Uruversity professor Jeane Kirkpatrick to
be U S. ambassador to the United
Nations.
- The Senate Labor and Human
Resources Conunittee postponed a
scheduled vote on New Jersey construction executive Raymond L.
Donovan to be labor secretary. Th~
panel asked for an FBI investigation
of unspecifted " new developments"

Smith said, "the attorney is also the
president's lawyer."
Asked whether he would go along
with a Reagan decision if he felt tt
would be detrtmental to the mterests
of the country, Srruth said, "I hope I
would be able to reverse the

DaVId and Owen Earl, and Mr. and

Mrs. Todd Bowersox, Lima ; and
Mrs. Margaret Pa~ns. Rutland
Afternoon callers were Mr and Mrs.
Larry Clark, Tamara, PeMy and
Wendy, Mtkddleport and Lola Clark,
HamsonVIlle
Guests for ThanksgiVIng at the
home of Mr and Mrs. Willlam
Cheadle mcluded Mr. and Mrs. Rex
Cheadie, Don, Kathy and Bradley,
loca, Linda HarriSon, Doris, Cindy,
Roger and Bill Rosa, and Joe Gerchy, Stoutsvtlle. •
Mella FISher returned to her home
near the William Cheadles on Sunday Sbe is Improved after spending
several days at O'Bleness Memonal
Hospital, Ahtens, wtth a heart
ailment
Mr and Mrs. Eddie Jordan and
Clay William are spending a few
days with her mother, Ora Cottrill,
near Pomt Rock, and visiting other
relatives in the area. The Jordans,
wlw have been in Fayette, Ala., are
being transferred to another
location.
Mr and Mrs William Miller and
fanuly spent Thanksgtving with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Glen
Gassaway, Powell.
Mr. and Mrs. Lewts Smith were
Thanksgiving dlnner· guests of Mr.
and Mrs. TomBrydandfamily.
Those visiting with Madge Dye
dunng the ThanksgiVIng weekend
were Lisa Dye, Ohio State University student, and Mr. and Mrs. Grant
Price and sons, Columbus; Dale Dye
and Mr. and Mrs. Thad Dye and
children,local.

Mr. and Mrs. Mends! Jordan entertained wtth a Thanksgtving Day
turkey dinner for lhetr family. Those
present were Mr. and Mrs Dwaine
Jordan, Bryan, Ke1th and Sarah
Faye, Trac1e Brown, Mr and Mrs.
Kenneth Crabtree, Ida Denison, and
Mr. add Mrs. Walter Jordan, {Oilhua
and Jeremy.
'Mr. and Mrs Larry Sanley and
Anna, Edison, spent Saturday night
and Sunday wtth her parenlll, Mr
and Mrs. Lewis Smtih

m Donovan's case

-The labor and human resources

News Notes_.

- -- -PUbliCNot.Ce---

---- - ------IN THE

COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
JOHN PICKENS , eta I.,
Plamtiffs,

·VS•

LILLIAN RHODES,etal.,
Defendants

No. 17,292
LEGAL NOTICE

Pursuant to an order of
sale Issued by the Court of
Common Pleas of Meigs

County, Ohoo, I w&gt;ll offer

for sale at publ ic auction on

the 28th day of February,
1981, at 10 00 O'c lock AM,
at the l ront door of the
Me•gs County Courthouse,
m the V illage of Pomeroy,

On•o,

Mr. and Mrs. LeWIS Pickett and
daughter, :rracy, were Mr and Mrs
Max Pickett of Xema ; Mr. and Mrs.
Randy Brown of Gallipolis; Mr. and
Mrs. Chari~ Michael and children,
Becky and Chuck.
Mrs. Owen Anderson received
word Saturday of the death of her
nephew, Clyde Parsons at Leon, W.
Va.
Mr. and Mrs Roger Roush and
daughters, Kimberly and Jennifer,
were dinner guests Sunday of Mr.
and Mrs. George Thaxton at Cottagev.Ue.
Dorsa Parsons received word Sunday of the death of his uncle, Herman Sayre, at Buckeye Lake. Mr.
and Mrs. Parsons, Mr. and Mrs.
Donald Barnette of Langsville attended funeral services Tuesday at
the Charles Boring Funeral Chapel
at Thornville.
Christmas Eve guests of Mr and
Mrs. Arnold Hupp were Mr. and
Mrs. Kenny Bass, Kendra and
Corrine of Clifton, Mr. and Mrs. Jtm
Hupp and sons, Junmy and Billy,
Mr. and Mrs. Rocky Hupp and son,
R. J., Mrs. Irene Hupp, Robert
Lawrence and Edward Rou.sh.
Weekend guests of the Hupp11 and
Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Hupp and son,
Jeremy, were Mr. and Mrs. Charles
(Bus) Hupp and daughters, Tina and
M1kk1 of Marengo.

the

fotlow•ng

descr~bed real estate, to
Wit
The followmg d..crlbed
real estate sttuate m the
Town·shtp of Lebanon, In
the County of Me1gs, and
State of Otuo Betng tn Sec
tton l.t, Townshtp 3, and
Range 11 of the Oh•o com
pany ' s
Purchase,
tn
Lebanon Townsh1p, Metgs
County, Oh to Begmning at
a potnt on the west ltne of
Section No 14 at the
southwest corner of the
R. W. Cornel l 38 acre
lot; thence north along
the section II ne 1270
feet , thence east 1294
feet , thence south 692 •
feet to the center of the
public road , thence
along the center of said
road south 36 degrees
30' w.. t 2.50 5 teet,
thence south 36 degrees
west 174 6 feet) thence
south JS degrees west
hXI feet , thence south 60
fet, thence west325 feet
to the place of begtnn·
tng, contamtng 34 s
acres
Terms of sale Cash m
hand on dav of sale for not
less than two thtrds of the
appratsed value to a,. sold
sUb1ect to the lten for real
f~~fte taxes for 1980 an~
The right is reserved to
rete-ct any and all.btds
The property ts ap
praised at s.t,ooo oo
James J Proffitt,
M
Shenff of
Ill 2.9. 16 ~31y~ County. Ohio

California clubl!, Smith said he does
not beUeve he Is in conflict with '
" being fully eommltted to enforcing
civil righlll statutes...
" I do not think we have reached a
point in thia country when membership in the aU-male clube, aUfemale clubs, the Boy Scoulll, Girl
Scoulll, aU-women colleges, all-male ''
colleges or the Davis Cup team ·
should be viewed as evidence of '
discriminatory attitudes," Smith

S81d.

,-.!!Lor:A!.!.F..!.F_:-::_;A
~--'0'-'A"-Y'----. 1
NOTICE TO
MOTOR 1/EHICLE
DEALERS
In accordance w•th sec
lion 307.86 ORC, sealed bids
W&gt;ll be received by the
Meigs Couni'V Board of
Commissioners, In their of
ftce, located 1n the Cour
thouse. Pomeroy, Oh•o, un
111 12 noon on Feb. 3, 1981
The bids woll be opened at
2 30 PM and read aloud
for the follow•no veh•cle as
"We have 1 love bate relation·
spec1f1ed ·
shap llove' her and she hates
SHERIFF'S CRUISER
1981 4 door sedan, full me "

[EJ

'-----------1

SIZe
307 c u in engme (or r
larger) V 8
Pubhc Nohce
Automat•c transmiss1on,
----- ---water cooled
1
Power steering &amp; power
LEGAl. NOTICE
brakes
Please take notice that
T•nted W•ndshleld
on April 10, 1972, by
1/olume 58, page 19 of the
A!r Condtttoner
Meigs County Lease Recor
Heater, defroster
ds, Meigs County, OhloJ
Antifreeze
Emmell
Heiney
ano
ll&gt;nYI seats
Gladys Ht~ney , husband
Rubber Floor Mats
and wife executed an oil
Heavy Duty Alternator
and gas lease to the Atlan
80amps
tic International 011 Cor·
Heavy outy Batterv·4000 porallon to !,he follow&gt;ng
described property
watts
Being In section 24, Town
Heavy Duty Radtator
R•nge 11, being more
Steel belled radial tires •.
fully descrtbMI In Volume
HR78x1S (or comparable)
172, page 225 of the Deed
Wheel Covers
Re&lt;;ords, Meigs County
Elec tnc Door Locks
Recorder's Office
Heavy duty suspension,
Said leooe being forfeited
for nonpayment of rentals
shocks
,
due under the terms of said
Lom1ted SliP Differential
lease and further that there
Gauge Package (oil , are
no producing oil and
temp • amps, etc )
gas wells on said premises
Left Hand Mtrror
Further, please take
White Top, Black Bot
nottce that the lessor, Em
tom
melt Heiney and Gladys
The front of the envelope Heiney, husband and wife,
enclosmg the bod must be 1ntend 1o file for record an
of forfetture with
marked " B 1d on Shertff's affidavit
th&lt;! Meigs County Recor·
cruiser" Btdder to furntsh der's
Office If Atlantic In·
their own bld form The ternatlonal 011 Corporation
Board of county com
does not have said lease
mtssloners mav accept the released of record within lO
lowest btd or select the best days of this publ•catlon
Patrick H O' Brien
bid for the Intended pur
Attorney for
pose, and reserve the right
Emmett and Gladys
to retect any or all btds.
Heiney
and or any part thereof
( I) 16
MEIGS COUNTY
COMMISSIONERS
MARY HOBSTETTER,
CLERK
.-PUb11CNo"itCe- -.
(1)16,23
--·------ --~-

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

Curb Inflation.
Pay Cash
for
.
C:laulfleds and
Savell I

Wnte your own ad and order by matl with this
coupon Cancel your ad by phone when you get
results Maney not refundable

Nam•------------------

Addreu _ _ _ _ _ _ __

I

Phan•~---------------1I

sen

Christmas Day diMer guests of

~ : : :w~~~~d;..: B_u y
•

Small investment, large
returtts, Sentiri'e l Want Ads

Apple Grove
By Mrs. Herbert Rous~
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Smith spent
New Year' s wtth Mr and Mrs Jerry
Johnson and family at Racme.
Mrs. Eula Wolfe VISited her Stster.
Mrs Fanrue Roush at Holzer
Medical Center Monday
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Hayman had
a party and ChriStmas gtft exchange
Saturday evenmg at lhetr home due
to the•r son, Ke•th Hayman, employed on the towboat Robert M
Kopper not bemg able to be home at
Christmas. Attendmg were Robert
and Ullie Hart, Beverly Cunmngham and children, Olev1a and
Zac, Bnce Hart, Beth !!art, Gene
and Unda Jewell and two children of
Letart, W. Va. Ke1th wtll be spending two weeks w1th his parents, Mr
and Mrs Gerald Hayman before
returnmg to his etnployment
Mr. and Mrs. Brent Manley and
son, Michael, spent the holidays w1th
her parents, Mr. and Mrs Robert
MorriS and Mmdy
MrS. Edith Manuel was returned
to her home Thursday from
Veterans Mernortal Hospttal.
Don and LoiS Bell attended a surpriSe birthday party for Clarence
Hill, g1ven by his wtfe, Sus1e Hill, at
thetr home at Rustle H1lls, Syracuse
Sunday.
,
Mr and Mrs Dana Lewts, Cltfton
and Mr and Mrs Herbert Roush
dined 10 Gallipolis Sunday 10 honor
of their wedding anmversanes.
Harry Hill and Herbert Roush attended a meebng at Rock Spr10gs
Grange Hall Saturday evening
Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Roush entertame4 Tuesday evemng 10 honor
of thetr daughter, Cortney, who was
celebrating her fourth btrthday Attending were grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. Dallas, Hill, Darrell and Jan
Hill and children, Tracy and Ryan,
Dean Hill and Dean, J r , Mr and
Mrs Marshall Roush and Joey, Mr
~nd Mrs Art H1ll .
VISiting Mr and Mrs. Elmer
Pickens and son. Juruny , ChriStmas
were Paul Meeks of Etna Greene,
Ind ., Mr and Mrs Chuck Arlderson
and children of Mason, Mrs. Clara
S1ruth of Colwnbus and Harold
Russell of Pomeroy.
Mrs Mildred Spe~cer spent New
Year's Day wtth Mr and Mrs Ernest Wtngett. On Chrtsbnas Day,
Mrs. Spencer, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest
Wmgett, Mrs Ann Coe and Mrs
Grace Kr1der all dined at the
Hobday Inn m GalhpoiiS.
Christmas Day guests of Mr. and
Mrs. David Sham and son, Jason,
were Mr and Mrs Charles Hysell,
Mrs. Charlene Lew1s and son, Trent,
of New Haven, Mr and Mrs Ralph
Sham, local
Mr and Mrs. David Shain and son,
Jason, Mr and Mrs Ralph Shain
were New Year's Day guests of Mrs
Garnet Ervme ad Racme.
Mr. and Mrs Don Bell spent New
Year's Day and weekend wtth Bruce
and Lorna Hart at Columbus. On
Saturday Mr. and Mrs.
were
dinner guests of Dr and Mrs. Earl
Grimm at Columbus

panel also quickly approved the
nomination of Terrel H. Bell, former
U S. education cornnussioner, to be
secretary of education.
Smith, a Harvard Law School
graduate who went west and joined
one of the largest and mOIIt
prestigious Los Angeles law ftnns,
was also questioned at length Thursday about his membership in two
pnvate all-male clubs In San FranCISCO and Los Angeles.
As a member of the Bohemian and

Pomeroy-Middleport, Oh1o

Print one word tn each
I
CIRCLE
space below . Each 1n
I
tttal or group of figures
counts as a word Count
AD WANTED I
name anct address or
I
phone number If uoed
1
l
"I
ords
You'll get better results W
daY diYS day I days I
if YOU deSCribe fully,
gtve pnce The Sentinel toll
$1.00 $2.00 $4.00 S7.00
reserves the nghr to t
classtfy, ed•t or relect
I
any ad Your ad wll be 1025 Jl.:lO S3.75 ~5.50 n.oo 1
put In the proper
clas/f/catlon of you' II "'u u.so $4.50 ~7.50 js10.~
c hec k the proper box
below
I
These cash rates
Include dtscount
I

•

l

I

Wanted
For Sale
Announcement
For Rent

t

11
1s
19._ _ _ _ __;_

32_
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10. _ _ _ _ _ __
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22
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251 . ----~--

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2
9 -_
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--_- 30 _
_
31 _ _ _ _ __
32. _ _ _ _ _ __

12." ' = = = = =
13.-

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33'·-_
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1_
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16
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35··- - - - - - -

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I

Mail This Coupon w1th Remittance
The Daily Sentinel

Box 729
. Pomeroy, Oh•o 45769

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

--

NOTICE TO
MOTOR VEHICLE
DEALERS
In accordance with SK
lion 307 86 ORC, sealed bids
will be rK:etved by the
Me&gt;gs County Board of
Commlsslon~rs. In their of
fice, located In the Cour
1hou5e, Pomeroy , Ohio
~69, until 12 noon on Feb
3, 1981 , the bids woll be
opened at 2 00 P M and
read aloud for the following
vehtcle Each bid to meet
the condit i ons and
specifications as follOW&gt;
Tractor
60 H P "Dieoel Englhe
Transm isSion (8) Speed,
Synchronlred
Manufacturer's Hydraul
lc Power Steering
Differential Lock
To be equipped with all
weather, fully enciMed,
ROPS Cab thai IS to InClude
heater ,
wtndshleld
defra!ter, and wtndshteld
w1per
Equ ipped with live
hydraulics (3 point hitch)
and live PTO Tire sizes:
7 50.16 6 ply (front) .
16 9x30 6 ply (rear)
Left rear tiro shall be
f1 lied at least 90 percentfull
wolh a solution containing
at least 5 lbs calcium
chloride per gallon of
water Two seb of wheel
weights ( 300 lbs. approx . l
shall be Installed on the left
rear wheel
Mower
Hydraulic drlvJtn 60"
rotary cutter which Shal]
be reversoble. Mast shall be
mounted to tractor frame
approximately midway
between front and rear
wheels on the right side
When extended In the
horizontal position over as·
fence or post Shall have a
rea~ of 17' from center of
~~-to the liP of a 5'
r
ssembly The mast
wl
e operated by
hydraulic lifting cylinders
and capable of pivoting 90
degrees forward and
locking Into position to per·
m it rotary cutter tooeprate
In front of tractor. A
breakaway asoembly shall
be part of mast and will
permit the entire mast and
arm assembly to pivot
rearward when cutter
assembly meets an ob·
structlon. The mast shall
automatically re-set to
moving
position
A
hydraulic
cylinder ,
powering a roller chain
shall permit the rotary
head assembly to rotate 110
degrees In relation to the
outer arm A hvdraullc
pump, front mounted, 2000
PSI , 19GPM thaliscapeble
ot being uSed with an open
center hydraulic control
valveassembiY
•
60 day Warrani'V
•
Hydraulic swing control

WANTED
TO
BUY
GOLD,
S IL liE R ,
PLATINUM, STE RLIN G
COI NS, RINGS,JEWELR
Y. MISC
ITEMS AB
SOL UTE
MARKET
PRICE GUARANTED ED
BURKETT
BARBE R
SHOP, M l DDL EPDR T.
OH I0 992 3A76
OLD COINS, pocket wat
c hes, class rings, wedd ing
bands, dtamonds Gold or
silver Call J A WamSley .
7A2 2331 Treasure Chest
Coin Shop, Athens, OH 592
6462

on mast
The front of the envelope
enciO!ong the bid must be
marked "Bid on Tractor &amp;
Mower" Bidder 10 furnish
the.r own bid form The
Board of County Com
missioners may accept the
lowest bid or oelect the best
bid for the 1ntendtd pur· ·
pose, and reoerve the right
to reject any or all bids,
and or any part thereof.
MEIGS COUNTY
COMMISSIONERS
MARY HOBSTETTER,
CLERK
(1) 16, 23

-- -

IRON AND BRASS BEOS,
old furn1ture, desks, gold
ri ngs, lewetry, sliver
dollars, ste rlt ng, etc • wood
tee boxes,Jars ant1ques.
etc Complete households
Wr ite M 0 Miller, Rt 4,
Pomeroy. OHl or ca ll 992
7760

Wanted to Buy c lass nngs,
wedding band s, anyth•ng
stamped, 10K , IAK , or 18K
gold Stiver cams, pocket
watches Call Joe Clark at
~2 2054 at Clark 's Jewelry
Store, Pomeroy, Ohoo45769

•

USED FURNITURE Gold
&amp; s liver. c lass nngs . pocke t

watc hes, c hains, dtamonds
&amp; so on Copper brass and
battenes, ant1que ttems
also do appratsais, co m
plete auctioneer serv tce
Over 30 years ex pene nce m
bus.ness Will buy co m
plete estates M•ddlepo rt,
Oh 992 6370

~ ~QBttMiftf.E "

- ----- - --- - 3

_ ~n.n~u!'c.e~~nt.s __

1 PAY

highest prices
posstbl~ for gold and silver
coins, rtngs, jewelry, etc
Contact Ed Burkett Barber '
Shop. Middleport.
SHOOTING MATCH at
Corn HolloW 1n Rutland
Everv Sunday starttno at
noon
Proceeds being
donated to the Boy Scout
Troop 249 12 ga~ge factory
choke gun only•

---·---

Gallta Coun ty Emergency
Medtcal Se rvt ce 1s seek mg
s tate ot Oh10 lt sccnsed
emergency
medt c al
techn•ctan paramedt c for
full ttme e mployrne nt An
equal opportunity em
player
To obtam ap
p~icatton write to Ga lli a
Co unty
Emergency
Mecltcal Serv• ce, 414 1 2
Second Avenue, Galltpolts,
OhtO 4.5631 orca l11 614 446
9628

RACINE GUN SHOOT ,
Racine Gun Club, every
Fr iday n~ght s.tarllng at
7 30 p m Fac torY. choke
guns only
DEER Cut &amp; wrapped at
Maple Wood Lake between
Syracuoe &amp; Racine, Oh
S25 per head S5 add•t&gt;onol
for skmntng
FAYE'S G&gt;ft Shop &gt;n Mod
d/eport woll be open from
12 5 unftl Christmu
YOUR
valuable
tunmo &amp;
oan1els,
2082

Help \'iant~d
GE T VA LUABLE lra 1n1ng
as a young bust ness person
and ellrn good money plus
some great g 1fts as a Sen
t lnel route ca rr re r Phone
u.s ri ght away and gel on
the eltgtb•hty ltst at 992
2]56or992 2157

II

--~~!o~~~

PIANO
To o '
to neglect, expert
and repair Lane
742 2951 ar m

1-IIWI care Unit
Full Time, 11 to 1 nune,
wllh t"'*'lence In ICU,
CCU IS IWeltt'rtd.
Excolltntltntfltt:
PtMion Pion, Lont
Term
Dlubll/ty,
HQipllallratlon. Salorv
commonturalt with u·

Rac•ne Volunteer Fire
Department sponsors a
shot gun &amp; nfle match
everv Sat ntght 6 30 p m :
at thetr bu •ldtng .n Bashan
Factory choke 12 guaoe
shot guns only Open Sights
22 nf/e

ptrltnet

tlllllct :

T.,... COllins, RN
Veltt'IM -01'111

'

N~~~t~~tal

Pomeroy, OH .
Ph. 611-ft1-11t4

Tax service, federal, state.
&amp; quarterly faxes done by .
appointment See Wanda
Eblin, 41000 Laurf'i Cltff
Road, Pomerov. Qnlo
&gt;15769 992 2272

------- ....
!·

&lt;

tANNOUNCEMENTS

tRENTALS
41 - Houllt lor Rent
42- Moblll Ho"'IS
ltr Rent
44- Ap•rtmenl for R tnt

·
':
,.

46-Spau lor Rent

' 1- Won&amp;ed to BU}' .,.;

tMERCHANDISE
.s t- HouutloldGoods
S2- CI, TV , Rtdlo Equipment
SJ-Andque•
S4- Miu Morchlnd ilt
u - eulldlngluppl to•
S6- Pett tor :1111

r•ntlil

14- lutlftiU Trllft lr\9
1t-Sct.lolt lnstructlorl
It.Hio, TV
&amp;CI ht~~lr
11--Wtnted To Oo

,.
,.

down

much faster
WIth a

WANT AD

'·

....
,·
....
,.
..

•

.~

i.osi- il;..d. FoUnd

L'ost Ladles eyeglasses :
Possibly at Salem Street, .
Rutland . 742·2561.

U- Money to Lotfl

U - Sttcll Ftrtllh.or

oTRANSPORTATION
71 - AUIOs tor Sill
73- VIftl &amp; 4 W D
74- Moltrc:yclol
75AUtoPtrfl
&amp; AC:UIIOf'lll

eREAL E5TATE
11- H-.•• ror Slit •

~
" ~

l1- MDIIII +lomn
tot Solo 1
n- tJ~rms ltr Sill
J4- luslntlt lulkllntl
IJ.- Lob It AC:rtlfl
16- llloel l1t1f1 Wontt4

77-Aulo R~tN~Ir

eSERIIICES

17- llloolton

11 - HomelmJrov•mentl

.,

Wont·Ad Adverllslng
DHdlines

.

12 - ~IU'"IIInl&amp;l:lUVIIIftf

U - I"CIYIIiflt

14- ltectrlcot
&amp; lllefrlteretlon

t jO Jt M D11lr
12 NMfl Sohrrtl't
fof'MCMMIIY

IJ- Oenerll H•wllnt
M-M H Ropolr

11- UIIMU...-y

Rates and Other I nformatlon

- - -. -

1S Word• or Under

Yord Sole

HOUSEHOLD
ITEMS
washer ,
dryer, etc ;
clothes, misc. Items for
sale Living room sale
January 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17
from 10 4 on Routt 7 to Flvt
Points ltfl on FlatwOOds
Road lhtn loft on Co, !ltd
25 Third trailer on left
PhOJie 992-7407

6-4- H•y I Gtlln

2J- ttroftUIOrlll
S.nlctl

'·

'

7

•

~

Lost, twomalerabbltdogs
whole with black spots No
collar Reward J C Chan :
cey, Racine, Ohio. 949 2320. '

U - L IVflTOd

Opporturtlf\1

'

L
- - - - - - . . . 1 '•'·

eusinen

21 -

;
r

•
;
•
•

Ca&amp;h
100
150

1111y
lti&amp;VI

uan

6Myt

Chlrfl
12S
, ..

110

~21

2 II

J 7S

IICt'l word over tile minimum 1S wordtll 4 cent11Mr word Plf' lily
Ail r 111 nnlnt other triM c:on1oc:uth,. d•v• will bll c:llor.-.:1 11 tho1 dl'f'

....

In"''"'"'' ' C•rcl .r Tt11M~ 1M Obltuory • nnh IMf' word , u M

miiiiMUnt

CalhiiiiCIVIft(l

M. .llt Home 11111 tiMI V.1 rlls111s lnou:optH only J.etll c1111 Wltll
tor • • urrvtnt lo• Number In Cere 01 Ttlo
ltrttlntl

.,....r 11 ctttt chtrll

~

12

Sttuatlons Wanted

WILL CARE lor elde r ly on
n1 ce one floor level, L pi an
home Room &amp;. board
Reasonable 992 7314
Room a. board for e lde rl y
La undry
tn c lud ed
Reasonable 992 6022

==R:e:ai=E~s=t=a=te:::G::en:e:r:a:l~ ~
r-

HAYES
REALTY

------:RMTI:SJilll!:' ::-

BROKER
NEACIL

E.

CARSE.'
31

Pomeroy, Oh1o
992-2403

'-- - -------..ll

H!)mes forSale

10 ROOM brt ck J oa ths, 114
acre , 6 roo ms, 2 baths. Jlh
acres , 6 rooms basemen1,

bath. 2 mob&gt;le homes,
Mason, 3 bedroom never
ltved tn , 2 bedroom, re nted
2 acres J ohn Shee ts, 31h
mllcs south ot Mtddleport,

60 Skyltne 985 4159
Lots &amp; Acreil ge

One half acre lolloca ted on
Bashan Road •n Ra e me
Nea r Route 124 Equtpped
3269
tor two trat ler hOOk up 992

t~~~L~~~m
E Second Street

Phone

1-(614) -992-3325
NEW PRICE Fur
ntshed J bedroom home
with new ba th, good ccn
lral hea t1ng ea t tn k1t
chen, full basem ent and
large lot In the country
for only $30,000
NEW PRICE - I roo m
home with all l.,l t tltt tes
Needs some fi xtng, but
might sell on la nd c on·
tract, or good offe r
LINCOLN HTS
La rge long lot with rear
e n t ranc e
H as 3
bedroom s. ba th, fur
nace, full basement,
n1ce remodeled kttchen,
carpeting, and some
storm windows On ly
$16,500
SYRACUSE
Modera te 2 bedroom
hom e near pool and
bal lpiHk
Ce ntral
neatlng, basement, 2
porches, anti large e&gt;&lt;tra
101 on 2 streets
INCOME - 2 bus1ness
buildings wilh good
write off
LIST NOW AND GET
YOUR
APPRECIA ·
TID" FROM YOUR
HOME . CALL 992 3315
or9U·H76

Ho11sing
Hearlctuarters

-- ----

==-

NICE 4 bedroom bnck
horne 1n Mtddleport No
pets Depos •t and reference
req u•re d 992 3457

Beaut1ful three bedroom
ranch brtck home 1n Baum
Addttton Pomeroy, Ohto
Gas heat, centra l a tr con
dtt tomng Ca ll 985 38 14 or
992 2571

One bedroom fu rn tshed
house tn Pomeroy Phone
992 2288 after 6

L_----------1
r
Jiffy-Crochet!

One

bedroom

Pomeroy
house
992
2288tnafter
6
42

tn,AeaB~
The ctJrved nbbed neck and
deep 31 mhole are leatured
JiffY CROCHEJ ol two s/rands
synthetiC woiSied used logelher
The patlern strtch '' very good
look1ng wery easy Wonderfully
w31m, a •eal ene•IY save• Pal·
ter n 1374 mes 36 46 mcluded
$2.00 for each paltern Add 501
each pattern lot lust class alf·
mail and hand ling Send to:
Allee BIOOU
NttdlKrolt tlopt

The Daily Sentmel
Btz 1&amp;3, Old Chelsea SIJ., New
'""· NY 10113. Pnnt N11111,
Address, Z1p, Paltsrn Number
Catch on to the craft boom' Send
lor ou1 NEW198 1 NEEOLECRAFT
CA 1ALOG Owe~ 172 des&gt;gns 3
free pat101ns 1011de Sl 00
All CRAfT BOOKS••$1.7~ uch
134·14 Qoitk lhchone Qollts
Ill hsll11111 illmt Qolllln&amp;
13Z.Qullt Orl&amp;inals
131 -Add I Block Qollls
130 SweallrFIIfllolls SlliSll 56
129-Qulck 'n' E., Transfen
12Hnnl.,. Patchwon Qo1lls
I21·Afp111s 'n' Dollies
126-T.nlty Cratt, Flowen
m Petal 9!lt11
124-Eay G1fts 'n' O•namtnll
123-Stltth '1' Pilch Quilts
122 SIIH 'n' PuH Qoilll
120-Crechtl lou• War•IObt
119-Eay All of Flow11 Ctochll
II&amp; Nifty Fifty Ou11ts
II 5·EISJ Art of lippit Crocllot

Mobile Homes
for Rent

1975 two bedroom mobtle
home for rent, part1ally
turntshed tn excellent con
dtt1on Loca ted in the Coun
ty Mobtle HOme Pa rk . nor
th ol Pomeroy $150 00
month 247 3942

IU-Coalptlll Gift liGol
lot-Sew + Knit i81Sk lisM incl)

105-tnsllnt Crochtl
102 liluse•m Qo•tts
I 01 Qoolt W ColtKiion 1

992-5682
10 7 tfc

Two bedroom apartment •n
Pomeroy , $150 00, three
bedroom tratler near Mtne
No 1, S150 00 . two bedroom
apartment 1n Middl eport,
$150 00 Oft tee space at 107
Sycamo re , Pomeroy ,
Sl25 00 Ca ll Cleland Rea lty
at992 2259
Space for Rent

COUNTRY 11/ J BILE Home
Park, Route JJ, North of
,Pomeroy Large lots Cal l
992 7479
TRAI LER spaces fo r rent
Southe rn Valley Mobtle
Home Park , Cheshire On
992 395A

__ _ .... _ _ _ _
::_ MBE!IliiHil5~
__
.
- _, -·
-~­

~-

CB,TV, R.1d1a
Eq1upment

RCA conso le 25 tnch color
te lev+o;lon. $.40 00 Needs
some repa tr, 992 5834 dft er
5

H&amp;R BODY SHOP

CARPENT~R

Body Repa~r · lnsuranCe
Work - Colhseon Repaar.
Expert p.aanttng, body
work , pmstnp1n9 &amp;
v•nyl tops
Free Estimates
Call992·3421
Kmgsbury Rd., 2 mi.
west Co . Rd. 18
Pomeroy, Oh. 4.5769
Oomeshc, Japanese &amp;
European cars ~
Trucks
1141mo•

-Add~!sRa~diCES"

TRENCHING
SERVICE

remodeling
- Roofing and gutter
work
-Concrete work
- Piumbtng and
electncal work
CFree Esttmates)

Water..,sewer-Eiectric
Gas L•ne·Ottches
water Line Hook-ups
Septic Tanks
county cert1fted

C~~~~~r~~~~Ph . a67 _7560

h

V.C. YOUNG II
992 6liS or 992 7314
Pomeroy, Oh

1 7 tfc

r~~~;~;;;~~~~==~~~~~=~t======::=::~
HARVEST
COFFEE HOUSE

Rutland Furniture Carpet Shop
January Inventory Sale
Rolls
KITQIEN CARPET Rub_2ber
Back
CARPET
W~h Padding
SHAG
Installed

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

Reg. 18'~~

fOR ~99

12 31 I mo

53

Good

Anltques

ATTENTION
l iM
PORTAN T TO YO U) W1ll
pay cash or certtfted c hec k
for anttques and c ol lec
ttbles or ent 1re es tates
Nothmg too la rge Also
guns, pocke t watches and
cot n coliect1 ons Ca ll 614
767 3167 or 557 3411
54

Mtsc.

Ftrewood for sa le, M1xed
types of wood S35 00 per
pt ck up load Oel tvered
wtll stack fo r Se n1 or
Ctttzens 843 495 1 or 843
2815

ow at
Pomeroy
landmark
GURi'lng &lt;!

5~w

"""
SUS 00

Yd . .
Cash-n-Carry

se lectiOn roll end remnants $3. 99 up
Dnve A Little - save A Lot

742-221 1

l1 ves tock

Three regiStere d polled
hereford bu ll cal ves
Gil ead blood lines $350 oo
each 742 2153

- ~i'tffi~f)&amp;'rfa~~ ~
71

Autos for Sa le

1975 CHEIIY Nova
c11bi!Ck: Gooct cond
2411

hat
742

1979 Ford Mus ta ng Cobra
Pa c kr~g e
Call Smi th
Ne lson Mot ors 992 217 4
1Y80 Chevrole T Ctlat ton
front whee l d1rvc Smt th
Ne lson992 ? ll d
1977 D odoe As pen • dr
992 217 1

Che~p

7'2

Truck s lhQ ;lle

197.1 Chevy Subnban
ton CJB5 4 17J

1978 KAWA SA KI KZ 650
mo rorcycle
co lor blue
Cal l 949 2MY

--

sEH-iice~ ~

J &amp; F BACKHOE SE R
VICE l1 scensed &amp; bonded,

septt c ta nk 1nstallat~on,
wa te r &amp; gas ltnes Ex
cava tmg work &amp; trans rt
layout 992 7201
Dozer work Small 1obs a
spec &gt;alfy 742 2753
.
84
Elec1rtcal
&amp; R efngera flon
SEW ING
MACHIN !"
Re patrs , servtce, St ir
makes 1 992 228 4
The.
F ab r tc Shop, Pomeroy
Authonzed St nger Sa les
a nd Serv •ce w e sharpen
SCISSOrS
...
EL WOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR
Sweepe[,&gt;•.
toasters. tra ns, all s mall
a pplt a nces Lawn mower- ·
Next to Sta te H1ghwav
Garage on Route 7, 985
3825
- .

1~

Motm cyc les

74

E xcav fl tmg

83

-

------

Home
I mprovem e11ts

Co-op Spa &lt;e H&lt;1a ter 30,000 btu
K ero~l!nl!

Installed

Mam St.

81

SIStOO

Co mlort G low

$995Sq. yd . Reg. $15.95 "
&amp; Up
$799 Sq.

RUTlAND FURNITURE
63

M er ch a n~ se

U!l!tl XL 11 C haln

be droom apartment
ut lltttes patd John Shee ts .
3'12 mtl es soutn Mtddl eport ,
Rt I
1

992-7544
VA loans no money down
Federal Houstng 3% on S25,000
S% on balance
Convent1onal LoansS%
doWn
Call for lnforma teon ·
992-7544

Hrs .. Mon . F rt
9 AM -5·30 P.M

~

Apt for re nt, 3 r ooms &amp;
bath 992 5908

5~

- Auto and Truck
Repair
- Transmission
Repair

"YOUNGS

S P EC IAL OISCOUNT
prtces on tu rntturc
Three bedroom tra iler •n Reupholstenng 'Ja n &amp;
Mowrey 's
Southe rn Valley Mob•le Fe b , 19e l
Home Park , CheShtre, Upholster y Pt Pl easa nt,
Oh1o 992 3954 wtll acc e ~t 2 W Va 1 304 675 4154
ch ildre n
SpltJ seasoned f1rcwood tor
sale $35 00 deltve red 247
Mob•le home for rent, tur 3972 or 247 2575
nt shed, Flatwoods area
Prefer workt ng coupl e No FIREWOOD lor sa le
ch1ldren $150 00 per month Seasoned hardwood S30
plus ut tllt• es Depos1t &amp; load, spl1t &amp; delivered 992
refere nces r equ1red 992 5240
5834 after 5
NEED tte ms for your
Mobtle Hom e') V1stt our
&lt;14
Ap.1rtment
parts stor e &amp; ptck up a free
tor Rent
ca ta log
At Ktngsbury
Home Sa les Park &amp; Ac
3 AND A RM fu r ms hed ap
ts Phone 992 5434
cessor1es Rt 124 M1 ne r
SVI II C, Oh 992 5587
Furmshed apar tmen ts, 992
3129, 992 5Y 14, or I 304 882
K 1n g
wood burn 1n g
hea te r, used s •x weeks
2566
Ca ll985 3368
Unfurn1she d one bedroom
TRUCK load apples Reds,
apartme nt for re nt Ren
Rome ' s,
te rs asststance available G old e n ' s,
Bur so n s
for sentor c tt tzens Contact W1n esaps
Vtllage Ma nor Apartments Market 12 m •les nortn of
P omeroy, U S 33
a l992 7787

Unfu rnt shed apartme nt s
for rent m the Pomeroy
Middlepo rt area 992 7511
or9Y16130

CUNNfNGHAM
&amp; ASSOC. '
Mortgage Banker~

ROGER HYSELl'S
GARAGE

Phone 11==========~

Two bedroom mobtl e home
at Browns Tra• ler Park
992 3324

46

11203mopd

r~=========~rr===;~~~~~~4~========~
REESE .J__j ~

tu rn tshed

Three be droo m mobt le
home appro&gt;&lt;tmately ftve
mtl es. fr om Pom e roy
Phone 992
M tdd le porr
5858

7374

BUILDINGS
Rt J, Box 54
Ract ne, Oh.
Ph 614·843 -2591
6 15 lie

317 N. 2nd Ave.
Mtddleport
Order your decorated
Cakes tor all occa s1ons.
Birthday s, Annever
sanes,
Weddtng s,
,Showers. etc
" Begtnner
Cake
Oecorattng Classes "
starhng soon. Please
note, we w1l be closed on
Monday s durtng tne
month of January
1 11 I mo

-

Trader lo t tor sale, S5,000
Modu la r home lot on Route
7, three bedroom far m
house loca ted on Route 7
YY 2 2571

NI CE fwo bedroom count ry
home V1n yl std1n g fu ll
basement Sl 3,900 oo 949
280 1 No Su nday ca ll s

P&amp;S

Carousel
confect•onery

-- --·--.
House.s lor ~ent

41

NEW LISTING - IN
Town - One floor plan,
J bedroom hou se wttn
centra l a•r, full base
ment, forced cur hea t,
carpeted, pat1o w tth
sltdtng doors $21,500 00
NEW LISTING 2
bedroom barga tn , 5
room house w1th range,
ref Gas heat In town
and only $11 ,000 00
OWNER WOULD CON
SIDER LAND CON ·
TRACT - On thiS 4
bedroom home wtth ap
pro• 13 acres near
Syracuse $39,900 00
MAKE AN OFFER On th is 2 bedroom hous
em Syracuse equtpped
wtth range, hood. and
ref Insu lated SOx100 tt
lol $24,900 00
2 ACRES - And a 2
bedroom ranch home
Wtht range, ref and
woodburner
Block
garage 524,900 00
PRICE REDUCED On th1 S 4 bedroom home
on appro x l ac r e lot
Enclosed porc h, s to rage
butldtng Ncar mtnes
$13,500 00
REALTOR
Henry E Cleland , J..992-6191
R'oge..- &amp; Oottte Turner
992-5692
Jean Trussell949 2660
OFFICE 992· 2259

_...._

::
- 'bi...d..:t.=
:n.~~

RI 1

POMEROY, 0 .
992-2259

Sn:es from 4x6 to 12X40

12171mo

~~~~~~A~~~e f2x~~st~~

---

• Dozers
• Backhoes
Hourly Contract
Large or
sma111obs.
Ph. 992·2478

-

turn1 s hed 2 bedroom, 1
ba th, fue l oil heat 992 3823
•
Ho:;e tr~;e; f-or_ s_a;-e -, 2- x
35

BRANCH MANAGER

Utility Buildings

tor Sale

two bedroom s, new carpet
1972 Champ ion , 12 x 60, two
13
In sura nce
bedrooms, new carpet 1976
AUTOMOBILE
IN
Cameron, 12 x 60, two
SUR A NCE been ca n bedrooms, a ll electrtc 1971
cel led?
Lost
your Skyltne, 12sx 6). two
operators lt cense? Phone bedrooms, bath &amp; lf3, new
ca rp e t
1970
PM C.
992 2143
12 x 60, two bedroom s, new
carpet B x 5 Sales, 1nc ,
HI
Wnnted to Do
2nd x Vtand Street, Pomt
Furna ce repa•rs, e lectnca l Pleasant, wv Phon e 675
wo r k, plum bmg, mobtle 4424
home or restdence 992
5H58
t9iiH-,1-Ic-r-es-t m
- ob;;-;-h_o_m_e
s4,500 oo 742 3o8o or can be
Wtll do paneltng, ce dtng, seen at K 1ngsbury Road.
fl oor t tle, plumb tng Free
'r_
a. ~r____ _
esttma tes Fred Mtller at th~f~s_'_
992 6338
00

,

Sizes
"From 30x30"
SMALL

Park St.
Middleport, Oh
Ph. 992-6263
Anytime

~ tc:X)llf ST ,

Res ponstble ma r r ted
woma n Wtll do babysttttng
1n my home 992 7438

CHARLES M. HAYES

•

•1 - F1rm laulpmtnt
U - Winttd to lur
n-Truc: .. llar Sole

eFtNANCIAL

Mob~~~o;~ ~

PUWNS
EXCAVATING ·

Farm Buildings

12

.lLI..

216

oFARM SUPPLIES
&amp;LIVESTOCK

32 - / -

ALL STEEL

PWMBING
AND
HfATING

one half
between
&amp; state
on '"

threeCrown
bed 1ooms,
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=C~H~I~C.AeO~~·~J 1973
Haven,new
14 xcar
65,
pet 1971 Cameron, 14 x 64,

Headquarters

41-Equlpment for Rent

,, _ Hot, wonted
12- itruoted

847

Housing

41- WintHIOIII!tnt

eEMPLOYMo:NT
SERVICES

~-

KAUFPS

Seven room doubl e •n
s ulated ranch sty le ho me,
tota l electr iC wood burner
tn the family room, gas
avatla b le
Re aso nab ly
prtced Three level acres m
Ractne 949 2706

~M COLEMAN,

AlB

1- ttullllc h~o
• \ Auction

r------··
1t

- ......

4 5- flll~mt

.., t-Lot.t ,,._ ~ound
' - l'lf'd 1111

,.

N1ce house on 2 &amp;
acres on SR 7
Memory Gardens
ga rage
Prtc ed
specflon 992 1741.

HOBSIEHER REALTY
Georges . Hobstetter Jr
Broker
Office 742-2001
RUTLAND - One floor ,
s tx room home on ntce
corner lot, garage Ask '
1ng 521 ,500 00
INVESTMENT PRO·
PERTY - Two story
bulldtng Salem St Make
n•ce coffee shop, rent
the up sta 1rs
Only
521,200 00
FARM 188 acres,
pasture &amp; woods, two
story farm house, 2
barns, m•enrals Only
555,000 00
HYSELL RUN ROA0 7 2 acres la nd wtth 2
bedroom home, also
ntce bulld tng S1te Wtth
septtc and water tap
Ask&gt;ng 519,000 00
SILliER RIDGE ROAD
- &lt;42 acres, wtth garage
&amp; barn Pasture and
some woods, approx 2
m iles fro m Eastern
Ht gh School
Ask.tng
$20,000 00
Velma Ntcins ky , Assoc
Phone 742 3092
Cheryl Lemley , Assoc
Phone 742 -3111

Business Services

Four year old house on 3
acres. 7 rooms, 1 &amp;. one half
bath. n• ce locat1on. Route
2, Rac tne 949 2706

General

1- C•rd ol Thanks
2- 111 Momotltm
J- Anncw , .. u.nh
4- GI•tt• .r r
t-HI . . Y Adl

ll- ln"o~rln(

tract

Real Estate

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

Gun Shoot every Sundav ; :
at 1 p m
at Rutland
American Leg•on In a fur
nace heated building F ac
lory choked guns only

..

PROGRAM PLANN ER
The planner shall be
respo ns•ble for needs
assessments and plannmg
act1v ttt es
relattve to
provtd•ng new and con
t1 nuous serv•ces for the
eco no mtcall y
dtsad
va ntaged Du ties mctude
but are not ltmt1ed to
researchmg and analyztng
S t ate and
F ede r al
legtslattOn, prepanng and
subm1lftng gra nt ap
plt ca ttons budge ts, ms ures
that Agency prog rams are
1n c omplt ance
w1th
9Utdehnes. prepares repor
ts and documents and other
ass1gned duttes
Som e
trave l
requtred
Qualtl tca tiO ns Good com
mun•calton
sk t ll s
knowledgeable of Soctal
Se rvt ce P rov1 ders, self
mottvated, B S
degree
r eq u t r ed
Ma s t ers
pre fer red Submtf an ap
pl tcation to the E xecu tt ve
O.rector, Gall1a · Me1gs
C A A , Box 272. Cheshore
OH
45620, or the Ohto
Burea u ot Employment
Serv1 ces not later than 1 23
81 E 0 E M F

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

&lt;

You 'II

Gall ta Metgs com
m unttv Actton Agenc•es
H ea~ Sta rt Ch1ld oevelop·
ment program has an
opentng for a home teacher
tn Me 1gs County Ap
Phcants must have an h1gh
scho ol . d 1ploma
or
equ•valent, possess a valid
dnVers liscense, &amp; ()INn a
dependable auto m obtle
Applicants WIth prevtOIJS
e)( pen e nce work mg wtth
ch •ldren wtll be g1ven
pnortty Those .ndtvtduats
1nterested m applymg for
the pos1t1on s hould co ntc;~ct
Barbara Gat re ll, program
secretary a t 992 6629 to
make a rrange me nts to ob
tatn employment ap
pll cat ton
Dead line tor
r~cel pt of appl•cat1on w111
be Fnday J a nuar y 23, 1981
Ga llta MetQS CAA ts an
eq ua l o pportun1ty em
pi oyer

NI CE TWO bedroom house
w•th th ree ca r garage m
Racone $33,00 00 949 2801
No Sunday ca ll s

The

PHONE 992-2156

MEIGS MUSEUM open bv "
appomtment January Mar ::
ch 992 2264, 992 2102, m ··
2360 or 992 2639 HtStorles
tor sa 1 e
Pomeroy
Midd leport L1brarles
~:

BAKER ' S Busy Bee
Ceramics w•ll open for
classes Jan 20 Hours 10
• m to 2 p m &amp; 7 p m to 10
p m we will permanen11y
close March 31 due to Air
Force transfer Laroe yard
sole 1n April Call 667 3252
Bustness will also b@ ~d
Paultne Baker

LADY or g trl to hve •n 992
2686

-

~

HO'!'ftS ! Or S_a~e .

31

WANT AD INFORMATION

Income tax servece, f!deral
&amp; state Wallace Russ.lt
,.
Bradbury, call992 1228

--

The Da11y Sentinei-Pa e-9

Gen&lt;.' s c.:~rpet Oeanmg,
deep stream ex traction
Free
es ttmated ,
reaso nabl e rates, scot
chqua rd 992 6309 or 742
22 11

APP LIANCE SERVICE
a ll makes washer, dryets,
rAn ges
dtshwashe•~s.
dtsposals, wa ter tanks Call
Ke n Young at 985 3561 ·2~
years e&gt;e penence Also WtH
sel l parts you ftx
--'--,--.-D x M Elecfr •cal Con
tractors Restdenhal, com
m er~ t .,L
8r lndustna~
W1ring. S~rvtce ca lls Fre~
est imates Call collect JB8 .
9764

..

..

U

•

G~ nerai ~H~~Img: ·~ · '

Al 's Trash Servtce Box 65,
Port lanQ, Oh/9 843 4912
We have en ttre Metgs
Count y S5 oo monlhly

ten Econom y (28 016lt
Reg Sll995
NowS1l995

~ en

1\7,.,_

--

POMEROY

~LANDMARK
E Matn St.

56

Pomerov

Pets for Sale

HOOF HOLLOW Horses
and pontes and nding
lesso ns
Everyth ing
tmagtnab le tn horse equ tp
m ent
Blank et s, belts,
boots, e tc Engltsh an d
Wes tern
Ruth Reeves
(614 / 698 3290
PUR E BRED
English
Shepherd pupp1es Stock
and walch dogs P hone 247
2161

62

~F'ahri siljpiiis ~
~ i.i.ivestoEk::

=

~anted

to Buy

CHIP WOO D Pol es ma x
dtameter 10 ' on larges t
end Sl2 p er ton Bund led
slab $1 0 per ton De li ve red
to Oh10 Pa/lel Co , Rt 2.
Pomeroy 992 2689

KIT 'N' CARLYLE '"

Larry Wright

�Where it goes
.,.. ... - - - .

+

~

,,

WASillNG TON (AP) - During
the 1940s, many top businessmen
took government jobs for a dollar a
year to help the war effort. They
don't do that (Oday, but the financial
sacrifice of federal service may
seem nearly as staggering to some .
·The_prospect of a $69,630 Cabinet
job may sound pretty good to the
average American. But Cabinet
posts don't go to average people and
many top managers in private
business command salaries well
above that level.
Example : Donald T. Regan, the
Wall Street executive nominated to
be secretary of the treasury, was
paid$502,96() in 1979.
Example: The National Journal
has estimated that Secret;lry of
State nominee Alexander Haig ear-

ned more than $500,000 last year and
that · William French Smith ,
nominated to be attorney general,
earned $300,000.
Example: Malcolm Baldrige,
nominated for secretary of commerce, had income of $343,431 in 1979

Nine defendants were fined and
seven others forfeited bonds in
Meigs County Court Wednesday.
Fined by Judge Patrick O'Brien
were Susan D. Ashenfelter, Belpre,
and Auston Newsome, Syracuse, $21
and costs each, .speed; Roberta
Johnson, $10 and costs, speed; Jef·
fery Smith, CO\llville, $25 and costs, ,

Evelyn Louise Riggs, 64, 122 Hull
St., Crooksville, died Thursday afternoon at Bethesda Hospital
following an extended illness.
Mrs. Riggs was born July 4, 1916 at
Rutland, the daughter of the late
Charles and Estella Walburn.
·
She is survived by her husband,
Lewis Herbert Riggs; two
(laughters, Mrs. Jerry (Brenda)
Baughman and Mrs. Edward (Donna) Renner, Zanesville; one son,
Jim L. Riggs, H!!ath, Ohio; three
sisters, Mrs. Eber (Doris) Lewis,
Mason, Ohio; Mrs. William (Lucille)
Cox and Mrs. Olie Finstead both of
Jacksonville, Fla.; four brothers,
Harry Walburn, Columbus, Lester
(Bus) Walburn, Pomeroy, and
Raymond and Eldon Walburn both
of Middleport; 13 grandchildren and
seven great grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held
Saturday at I p.m. at the Goebel
Funeral Home in Crooksville, with
the Rev. Arthur Long officiating.
Burial will be in the Crooksville
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
funeral home today from 2 to 4 and 7"
to 9. The family asks that con-

violation; Nonnan Leasure,

Marlin Rife

Plan concert

L

The Seventh-Day Adventist Church in Pomeroy will present the
Mount Vernon Academy Hand Bell
Choir of Mount Vernon at 3 p.m.
Saturday.
The choir is under the direction of
Ron Jensen and consists of 12 young
people who attend the Adventistoperated high school.
Miss Crystal Green, daughter of
Bob and Doris Green, Gallipolis, will
be featured flute soloist. The public
is invited. There is no admission
charge but a free will offering will be
taken to aid the young people in purchasing new equipment.
Albert Dittes, pastor of the host
church, reports that sabbath school
• •
'
Will be held at 2 p.m. precedmg the
concert.

Corporation
Income Taxes

Cir~

cleville, $150 and costs, restitution,
five days confinement, confinement
suspended, six months probation,
hit-skip, $'/5 and coSts, three days
corilinement, confinement suspended, six months probation, driving
Under suspension; Paul Brewer.
, Toronto, $23 and costs, speed; SandY
Clonch, Middleport, $100 and costs,
five days confinement, confinement
suspended, six months probation,
trespass; Raney Zasterny, Mason,
$150 and costs, three days confinement, license suspended 30 days,

Hostage
1Continued from page 1)
legal adviser for the State Department, stopped in London on the ~ay to Algiers to pick up bankers prepared
to deal with Iran's demand thaf$4 billion blocked in
U.S. branches overseas be transferred to the Central
Bank of Algeria.
The financial experts were not identified, but
Christopher Ross, U.S. Embassy deputy chief of
mission in Algiers, confirmed that "British and
American bankers" were on the plane.

VIKING HICKORY NUT
'
VIKING PROV. WHITE
VIKING FIRESIDE ELM
SUEDE BUR SAW CEDAR

20% OFF
WAS 114.79

SAL£ Sl()99

YOUR CHOICE OF
CELOTEX COSMOS
PlASTIC COATED

When you think of
Bible study aids,
think of the best-

CELING TILE .
12xl2

1h Price
REG. S2c NOW 22c
Or
2x4 Owens CQrning
Lay · in ·rerra
~eg . S2.68 N ''' :&gt;1.34

92 5C tw~t nu r :;,, ,.,.,,
Phll.trl(' lpt u.r. J&gt;.r 1.,1 07

,.¥~

r

!

MEN'S
JACKETS
Fine Selection of Styles
in Men's Winter Jackets
and Vests. Sizes 36-46.
Men's Dress Coats and
All Weather Coats In·
eluded .

AMERICAN FLAG BURNED - Irulu dem•

tbe labover al tiM .......,.

llratora, llalldlug OD the wall ol the United States EJII.
....Y In Tehran, burn an ~erlcan OaK 1bortly after

Nov. •· 1979. (AP Laerpbolo).

Many other special sale prices all over the store during
our big January Clearance Sale.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

l~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~::~::~~::::::~

1980 fires take three
lives, cause daEnages
totaling .$.5 million

NEW CARS

12% ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE
SAVE HUNDREDS OF OOUARS BEUM
CURRENT FINANCE RATES.
AT 18% ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE, YOUR SAVINGS
ON THIS VEHICLE WOULD BE $1,135.88.
HERE'S HOW IT WORI&lt;S

'81 T·BIRD

LIST PRICE
CASH PRICE
TOTAL DOWN PAYMENT

$8,365.00

AMOUNT FINANCED

$778fr1

ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE
FINANCE CHARGE

$9,118.110 .
585.110

GAUlPOUS- Three people died
and a total of $549,410 damage was
caused by fire during 1980, according to the Gallipolis Fire Department's year-&lt;!nd report.
The department reported two
·structures suffered the same dollar
amount of darnage-$50,000--in
separate incidents.
The first two fatalities occurred
when Melissa Fryre, 2, and her oneyear-old brother, Allen, died in a
mobile home fire on Lower River
Rd. on Jan. 31.
The third was recorded July 10
when the body of Stanley Spire$, 70,
was found In the ruins of a home at
16 Nell Ave. owned by Helen Spires.
The house suffered $50,000 damage
and the Nellie Lowkll residence at 14
NeU Ave. underwent S5,000 da~age.

Also damage in the blaze was the
home of Russell Wooten, 19 Neil Ave.
($2,000) ; a residence owned by Blanche Frazier and rented by Scott
Quillin at 18 Neil Ave .. ($4,000); and
another at 19 Neil Ave. tenanted by
R.R. Roush ($1,000).
Injured in fires throughout the
year were Mike Baird in a blaze at
Bunce Rd. on Feb. II; Dorothy
Milliron, 2028 Chatham Ave., in an
Oct. 27 rire; and Robert Donnally, a
Gallipolis fireman, while fighting a
conflagration at Tawney's Jewelers,
424 Second Ave., on Nov. 9.
The other structure which suf·
fered $50,000 damage was Long John
Silver's Restaurant at the Silver
Bridge Plaza Dec. 21. '
Other heavy losses reported
(Continued on page A3)

00 I 18'{, I
$2,053.92

PAYMENTS OF 204.87
1

$3,189.00

IIW !l!

N•''"

1,135.88
.
.I

LIST PRICt
CASH PRICE
DOWN PAYMENT
AMOUNT FINANCED

1 i·~ t : r

@]

fl •f f'll ' l h ' P , l) \1 &lt;, pl k ! l&lt;t1l i ! ' I1 0tl

' ' 'rll '" !I (!W 1111 lt rd • •&lt;: Ul l
lnd •· ."&lt; vn lr1ttH ' •·r h l •·d lr v C l 1 v ~'

h t •lH 'il' lhll l!

R ~r w lirr" .

AVAILABLE IN lWO
FORMATS - HARDBOARD
DELUXE OR SOFT COVER
ALSO

AVAILA~LE:

Dr. Barclay's superb companion volume, clarifying
the 60 key Greek words us·
ed in the New Testament.
New Testament worlds,
soft cover.

'192·2641

'228.54

5

'81 MUSTANG 3 DR.

• ·H IIJH ' Ill

lnDIIm mDIIallla ,.

ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE
FINANCf CHARGE
1
1,797.84
DEFERRED PAYME"T PRICE 19,122.84

$7,826.00
1
7,325.00
'515.00

SSBUF

Area ~eatb.s \ •••••••••••

ClassUled
.EdJtorial

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A-3-9
C·l-8

lllsert

I 18% I
1

2,792.10
'10,117.10
r

'200.04

SAVINGS OF '994.26
Offer applies to vehicles delivered on or
before Feb. 7, 1981.

a.BANVP CONTINUJ!lll- Olle wtel8fter tbe1111,.. 'lleu1p ol deliria
alllle eltlwllll olllle 0.1111 CGI!UJ ellllflbMue, llle alrudure llltlll beiDC
eu•'"" Aaarclllteet'a report lu!lell lo lhe COUDiy comm!lll-n laal
week _ . . . . tile walll ol lbe plied -.rtns be 1om down. (Larry
Ewlq pllolo).
tV

·b riefs

1

Bpard ready to negotiate
RAVENNA (AP) - The Ravenna school board says it is ready to
negotiate to end a 2-month-old teachers' strike, but it says the subject of
binding arbitration must be the first item discussed.
Last week, the teachers sent a telegram to the board saying they would
like to meet on the 39 minor issues, instead of the 10 major ones.
The teachers' major issues include binding arbitration, a 7 percent
salary Increase, a grievance procedure and a n&lt;&gt;-reprisal clause.
The system's 224 teachers struck Nov. 12, but 58 have returned to their
classrooms. The striking teachers are defying back-to-work and nopicketing orders, but no contempt of court charges have beim filed.

Ohio hostage families
reluctant to discuss
Hostage-taker paroled
14-month-old crisis
COLUMBUS (AP) - Families of
three Ohioans being held hosloge In
Iran kept abreast of ·new developments as White House officials
scrambled to end the 14-month
crisis. ·
"We don't know any more than
what is on the news," said Eugene
Lauterbach of Dayton, Ohio, father
of hostage Steven Lauterhach, on
Friday evening.
"We're watching and hoping- we
haven't been told anything by the
State Department," said his wile,
Margaret, from the couple's home.
" II will be a great ·thing for the
naUon" when ·the hostages return
home, she said. "II will make lis
whole again."
-·
The Lauterbacha, shortly after ·
arriving home from work, invited an
Associated Press newsman into
'their home to answer questions
about the hostage- situation after
White House officials hinted of an
Imminent release. But after
speaking for a few minutes, the
couple declined to comment further.
The Lauterbachs said they plan to
hold a news conference today to answer questions from the media.

Steven Lauterbach, 29, Is among
52 Americans in Iran who have been
held hostage since Nov. 4, 1979. He
had served as an administrative officer at the U.S. embassy in Tehran
before the takeover.
Meanwhile, in Minnesota, the
sister of Ohio hostage Joseph Hall
said Friday that optimism is running hlgh in herfamily.
"The ones (hostage families) I've
been in contact with are all hoping
and optimistic," said Hellen McLennan ol Cushing, Minn. "If they're
smart, (the Iranians) may want to
deal very quickly in freeing the
hostages.
"This Is our last. hope .. . this is
kind of a last line as far as I'm con-

cerned.''
The 31-yea..:Oid Hall is married to
Cherlynn Hall, whose parents, Mr.
and Mrs. James Boggs, live In
Elyria, Ohio. He had served as an
Army warrant officer in Tehran.
According to Boggs, his daughter
was in the Washington, D.C., area
onFriday.
"We're hopeful, that's all," Boggs
told The Associated Press late
(Continued on page A3)

Inaugural overview

PAYMENT SCHEDULE:
PAYMENTS OF 1179.33

Buc~eye

Inside todAy. ..

0

;::;:::

Tl w p1,.

~

REDUCED 30%

I 'SAVINGS OF

THE MIDDLEPORT BOOKSTORE
09 Mill Street

1

1
B-125at.
1
1
Closed sunday
·I
I international
New ideo .:
H_•r_••_ste_r -----~~=:'~.

JANUARY SALI

F o r " ' ''' ' l w o•nt v \'f' :H-:

TBE 'III'ESTIIJNSTER PRESS

8·5

1

ELBERFELDS

@_]

18-volume

Revised Edition

I pomeroy.
0. Ph. 992·2176 :l
Hour: Mon.-Fri.

PAYMENT SCHEDULE:

WILLIAM
BARCLAY'S

BmLE
w

l

DEFERRED PAYMENT PRICE . $10,418.92 $11,554.90

T

PANELING

Now In Progress

r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;!;;;-~===;;;;;;;;;:;;;:;

Algeria "s state radio, meanwhile, gave prominence
to a report - officially denied in·Washington - by the
French news agency, Agence France Presse, in
Tehran that an agreement had been reached, and that
only President Carter's approval was needed now.
Friday is the Moslem Sabbath and no official could
be reached for comment in Algiers. The Algerian Central Bank was closed. But since its governor, Seghir
Mpstefai, is a member of the Algerian intermediary
te~rns. that did not appear to be an obstacle.
Nabavi said there was no obstacle to resolving the
crisis in a brief interview with Iran's official Pars news
agency.

DAILY
....,.TUDY

I

1.

,,.,

..

MEIGS
EQUIPMENT COJ
f GoingOutofBusinessSale :l

accident involved; Brian Arms, 16,
Minersville, $35 and costs, left rJ.
center.

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

STARTS PROGRAM
The Pomeroy ·Health Care Center
is starting a Candy Striper
Program. All girls 14 and over interested in taking part may pick up
an application at the nursing home
receptionist's desk from 8 a.m. to
4:30p.m., Monday through Friday.
Anyone wifh questions may call
Terry Stotts, 992~ .

-

Contrl·b u u· ng c h arge
bn.ng.s J·a,·z sentence

Emergency
squad runs

$10,880, $2,882.39; general bond
retirement, no receipts , $5,562.50,
$16,245.56; sanitary sewer, $6,441.24,
$6,257.70, $16,580.48; sanitary sewer,
$6 ,441.24, $6,257.70, $16,580.48;
sanitary sewer escrow, no receipts,
no disbursements, $188,392.24;
water , $12,299.83;
$7,983.25;
$39,424.40; water meter deposits,
~. $200, $7,791.52 ;· water tank ,
$1 ,348.08, no disbursements ,
$130,969.24.
Receipts for the month totaled
$58,924.40 compared lo disbursements of $74,702.23.

TEHRAN (AP)- Iran demanded was ready to take ou.t the American Algerian doctorS who Iran Invited to
clarlflcaUon Saturday from the hostages upon concluding the final Tehran early Saturday to eXll!nfne
Unfted Slates of Its ~Jlan to end the agreement with the U.S. govern- · the hostages.
Pars said the checkups would
14-month hostage crisis by trading ment."
The
report
did
not
give
the
prevent
delays If the hostages were
blllioll8 ol dollars in frozen Iranian
location
of
the
Algerian
plane
which
freed
but
it was not known when the
assets for 52 American captives.
could
be
the
one
tbat
brought
six
(Continued
on page A3)
The chief Iranian hostage
negotiator, Behzad Nabavi, told
Iran's official news agency Pars
thai clarification "would be a great
help" In solving the crisis and that
Iran was "looking forward to an immediate reply" from the
. Americai
In Washington, the Carter dminlstraUon, "In a suspended s te
of walling and hope," put a
member team of niedlcal and adminfstraUve officials on alert,
hoping for a quick end to the crisis
that began wben Iranian militants
overran the U.S. Embassy in Tehrl.n
on Nov. 4, 1979.
T
Earlier, Nabavi had told a Tehran
news conference that the U.S. was
transferring only some of
billions of dollal'!i In aasets froze at
the outset of the hostage crisis.
There was no Immediate'commrnt
from American negotiators in
Algiers on the new Iranian requ st
for clarifications. Earlier, State
Department spokesman John Trattner said in Washington that it was
highly unlikely that an agreement
would be reached on Saturday to end
the holltages' 441-ilay ordeal.
Pars quoted Nabavi aa saying that
"If the U.S. government is really
concerned about the freedom of the
hostages one could be optimistic
about the eventual solution of the
GUARDED
Rev. Earl Lee, falher of Iranian bilstage,
stalemate."
:, , . . .· 1 ~ry Lee, 1oolll ~anewspaper beaclllae readiJIK, "H011tqe DeallmNabavi wu quoted u saying thai - " .....at" Ia froat bfa ~aa. Callforala bome Friday. Lee IIBI4, "1
"upon the request of the Iranian
am a believer bu~ 11111 also a seer and until! see lhem stop off the alrgovenunent an Algerian aircraft
plane ..." (AP l.,as , otcp.

Grants to States
and localities

_____________ ...,

,
James S. Eakins, 27, Middleport,
DWI.
Forfeiting bondli were Gordon R. was sentenced to six months in the
Matney, South Point, Rosalie I. Gon- county jail . by Meig:; County
zalez, Zanesville, and Ronald Juvenile Judge Robert E. Buck after
Beauer, Tampa, Fla., $40.50 each, appearing on charges of conspeed; Juanita Wilkinson, Mid- tributing to the unruliness of a
dleport, $35.50, failure to yield; Ken· minor.
Juvenile officer Carl R. Hysell, ofneth 0. Peoples, Wellston, $60.50,
failure to display valid use tag ficers of the sheriff's department
sticker; Frank Harrison, Jr., Ona. and Middleport Police Department
W. Va., $40.50, illegal passing ; arrested Eakins at his Race Street
Harry Thomas Peck, Cheshire, Apartment. At the sarrie time they
took into custody a 16 year old Meigs
$37.55, disorderly conduct.
County girl who was reported
missing. The girl had left home Jan.
Lottery winners
8. Eakins had permitted her to
remain in his apartment lor rive
Dally number: 974
days. The girl was released to the
Pyramid
custody of her parents.
Twodlglt-04
Contributing charges carry a six
Three dlglt- 718
months jail sentence and-or a $1,000
Fourdidll-3296
fine. In other court matters,
Jackpol-0471~
juveniles were fined on traffic
charges.
FUNDS DISTRIBUTED
Fined were Scott Litchfield, 16,
The ninth regular distribution of, New Haven, $50 and costs,
1980 lieense tax revenues has been operator's license restricted, OWl,
released by the Bureau of Motor
Vehicles, according to Gov. James
A. Rhodes . The allocation
distributed among Ohio's 88 counties
totaled $19,998,406.63. Meigs County
received $65,580.67.
Five emergency calls were an·
swered Thursday by local units, the
SATIJRDAY SERVICE
Meigs County Emergency Medical
Dan Hayman and the Country Services reports. They include
Hymntimers will be at the Ash St. Racine Unit, 10 :15 p.m. , Tammy
Freewill Baptist Church in Mid- Sable from Blind Hollow Road to
dleport at 7:30p.m. Saturday. The Veterans Memorial Hospital; Mid·
public is invited.
dleport Unit, 11:57 a.m., ·Bethel
. Grover from Cheshire to Veterans
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Memorial ; Pomeroy Unit, 10: II
Admitted-Martha Stewart, Mid- a.m., Denver Carman, Peach Fork
dleport; Teddi Smith, Racine ; Terry Road, to Holzer Medical Center;
Barnett, Vinton; Kathryn ·Metzger, Pomeroy, 8:35 p.m., Robert Van
Middleport ; Donald Lovett, Mid- Meter, Mechanic St. , to Pleasant
dleport.
Valley Hospital ; Tuppers Plains,
' Discharged--James Parsons, 11:11 p.m., Linda Tippie, Coolville,
Bethel Grover, Sarah Roush .
to Selby Hospital in Marietta.

Marlin Rile, 75, formerly rJ.
Cheshire, died Thursday evening at
his residence in Coalton.
Mr. Rife was born April14, 1905 in
Cheshire Township, a son of the late
Amos and Armilda Darst Rife. He
was also preceded in death by a
daughter, three sisters and a
brother.
Surviving are his wife, Ruby Garnet Rupe Rile, Coalton; a son,
Hurley W. Rife, Route 2, Wellston; a
daughter, Mrs. Charles (Viola
Helen ) Young, Route I , Cheshire; 17
grandchildren and several greatgrandchildren.
Mr. Rife attended the Old Kyger
Freewill Baptist Church. He was a
coal miner before his retirement.
Funeral services will be held at 2
p.m. Sunday ,at the Rawlings-CoatsBlower Funeral Home in Middleport
with the Rev. George Anido of·
ficiating. Burial will be in the Kyger
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
funeral home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9
p.m. Saturday.

.

42¢

45¢

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Hostage crisis continues;
Iran seeks clarification
.
.

Direct Benefit
Payments to
lndiYrduals

29¢

setting a body-drjpping trap with a
jaw-spread greater than four and
one-half inches; Regina Butcher,
Pomeroy, $10 and costs, no Mrking

Village funds total $456,120
Total of all Middleport Village funds as of Dec. 31 amounted to
$400,120.17, according to the monthly
report of Clerk-Treasurer Jon Buck.
Receipts·, disbursements and the
balance, respectively, of each of the
funds making up the grant total for
the month of December inc.lude:
general, $8,341.97, $29,449 .16,
$11,254.12; street lights, no receipts, .
$1,010.99, $11 ,591. 73; cemetery ,
$1,276.06, $1,072.14, $750.90; fire
equipment, $3,150, $585.93, $51.85;
fire truck, no receipts, $5,141.72,
$14,185.76; planning commission, no
receipts, $6.86, $264.98; street maintenance, $14,742.22, $6,510.08,
$2,586.48; street levy, no receipts.• no
disbursements, $4,627.28; revenue
sharing, no receipts, no disbursements, $4,997.39; HUD, $10,000.

Individual
Income Taxes

.I

tributions be made to the arthritis
foundation.

Social
Insurance
Receipts

11 Sections, 90 Paves 35 Cents

sunday, January 18, 1981

Middleport· Pomeroy-Ga II ~polis-_Polnt Pleasant

·.

Terminate 16 cases

Area deaths
Evelyn Louise Riggs

as chairman of Scovilllnc., a Connecticut-basE'&lt;~ manufacturing com·
pany.
People at those salary levels ol&gt;viously don't take government jobs
for the money and they probably are
well enough set to absorb the loss.

Vol. 14 No. Sl

Copyrighted 1910

•

ttdntt

tnttS

•
•

,,
••'
~

Fiscal Year 1982 Estimate

•

WASffiNGTON (AP) - Ronald
Reagan will take the oath as the 40th
president of the United States ai
noon Tuesday In an hour-long
ceremony capping the coslliest
ina!lglll'al pageantry In the nation's
history.
Four days of fesliviUes, beginning
with a fireworks display at the Uhcoln MemO..ial on Saturday and en·
ding Tuesday night with nine
ina!lglll'al balls, are elQ!Ilded to
push the cost to about S8 million nearly double the $4.6 million spent
by Jimmy Carter.
It will be a man formal ceremony
than carte~··· wl~ Reagan dreued
in a mornlnc coal, striped troulen
and gray Ue inatead of the bullneu
suit 'that f Carter wore for his
inauguration four years 110· The
military band will play "Hall to the

Chief," the musical fanfare that
Carter banned.
At 69, Reagan 'rill be the oldest
man ever sworn in. He also is the first divorced man elected president.
Reagan will be the first prealdent
to lake the oath on 'the ornate,
Romanesque steps on the West
Front of the Capitol, looking down on
the Mall with the Washington
Monument and Uncoln Memorial in
the distance.
The ceremony has been held on
the Capitol's East Front for the past
151 yean, but officials decided it
woufd be less expensive and more
convenient to change the site.
The official kickoff of ina!lglll'al
aetiviUea was a ceremony Saturday
at the Uncoln Memorial with what
wu billed as the largest fireworks
display in the city's history.

"

CLEVELAND (AP)- Aman who held a police captain and 17-year-old
girl hostage at a police station in 1977 has been paroled from prison and is
living In C!eveland, the Cleveland Press reported Friday.
Cory Moore's 45-hour siege drew national attention when he demanded
to talk to President Carter and ordered all white people to leave the earth
within a w,eek.
Moore released the teenage girl, Shelley Kiggans, about 12 hours after
his siege of the Warrensville Heights' police station but kept Capt. Leo
Keglovic hostage until he surrendered the morning of March 9.
In September 1977, a jury found Moore, an ex-Marine and Vietnam
veteran, guilty of kidnapping, extortion and aggravated robbery. He had
served three years and four days of a five-to-25 year sentence before he
was paroled.
Carter spoke briefly with Moore a few hours after the 1977 siege ended.

Employees .reinstated
COLUMBUS (AP) - Nine employees of the Ohio Veterans Home in
Sandusky, laid off because of state budget cuts, have been ordered reinstated by the state Personnel Board of Review.
The workers are members of the Ohio Civil Service Employees
Association, which filed appeals in their behalf.
OCSEA Executive 'Director Arthur L. Evans said Friday that the
board's acUon shoufd warn other government agepcies that the group
plans to study current and future layoffs and job abolishrnents.
"Every state agency engaging in such personnel activity can expect
OCSEA to Initiate im investigation of the individuals involved to be certain their rights are preserved and protected,'' Evans said.

Changes proposed in law
COLUMBUS (AP) - Changes in Ohio's Crime Victims Compensation
law ar~ being proposed in separate bills by Senate President Pro Tern
Thomas A. Van Meter and Attorney General William J. Brown.
Both measures are designed to close loopholes under which state
money can be awarded to people whose criminal activities contributed to
their injuries. ·
Van Meter said his bill stemmed from his 1980 court challenge to
Brown's approval of a $50,000 payment, in !wid money, to the widow rJ. an
apparent Cleveland gang leader killed in a car-bomb explosion.
"In essence, my bill merely spells out to the attorney general in un·
mistakable terms what he should already be doing under current law,"
Van Meter said.
Brown's proposal, which he said would prevent money being used to
"compensate hoodlwns," Is to be introduced when the General Assembly
reconvenes Feb. 3.

Extended forecast, state weather
High in the mid and upper 30s. Partly cloudY today. Low tonight around 20
but ~mperatures rising late tonight, The chance of preclpitation,IO percent.
Oblo Exteoded Forec81t- Monday through Wednesday:._ Generally fair
the period but a chance of rain or snow northeast Tuesday. Highs mostly in the 40s. Lows from the mid 2tlo to low 30&amp;,
throu~h

•I

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