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                  <text>Hostages safe in American hallds
WIESBADEN, West Gennany
(AP) - The 52 former hostages, safe
in American hands at last and enjoying their first taste of freedom in
14\la months, settled into a U.S.
ml)ltary hospital today and made
their first telephone calls to families
iii the United States.
. "First of ali there was a very
heavy run on the telephones," said
State Department spokesman Jack
CaMon.
The Americans, SO men and two
women checked into the hospital at
dawn, aner their dramatic release
fro.m Iranian captivity and a
freedom flight to West Gennany via
Algeria.
Just after noon, some of ·the
hostages appeared on the balconies
of the hospital, bantering with
hospital personnel in the bright

sunlight. Orderlies tossed up a copy
of the military newspaper Stars and
Stripes to a group of four young men,
who autographed the newspaper and
threw it back down.
Two other men, wearing pajamas
and bathrobes, hopped over the
railings separating each room's
balcony, and joined the other four.
They waved when they noticed
photographers about 200 yards
away.
Elizabeth Ann Swift, who was a
political officer at the U.S. Embassy
in Tehran and one of the two women
in the group~ also came out to enjoy
the sparkling, crisp day and her new
freedom.
Asked how much notice they
received in Iran of their impending
freedom, CaMon told .reporters at a
briefing that he thought "some in-.

e
VJI . 71 , N J. l96
c .1 pyrighted 1981

4,550-mile flight from Tehran, with
stops in Athens and Algiers, and
telephone. calls to their joyful
families in the United States.
Many were exuberant or smiling.
All appeared to be in fair health or
better despite their 14;,-month ordeal at the hands of the Iranian
revolutionaries who seized the U.S.
Embassy in Tehran and its staff on
Nov. 4,1979.
They were expected to spend three
to five days of "decompression" after their 444 days in captivity, undergoing medical and pyschological
examinationS and ' resting, before
their return to the United States.
Hundreds of jubilant Americans
stationed in Germany gave the
heroes of the 14.,.month ordeal
twnultuous welcomes as two Air
Force hospital planes brought them

dividuals had little notice, as little as
15 to 20 minutes." Others, he l!Bid,
had several days , but he did not
elaborate.
Cannou said he knew of no fanner
captive who was suffering im·
mediate medical problems. He said
the returnees were free to leave the
hospital if they wish, but they were
advised that previous returnees
found an orientation period in
seclusion valuable.
He said the fonner hostages would
remain in the hospital for "perhap5
several days" for medical tests,
orientation, catching up on world
events through magazines,
newspapers and videotapes and
being debriefed by " a nwnber of
agencies of the goverrunent."
The 50 men and two women were
taken to their rooms after a 12-hour,

•

at

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to the Rhein-Main Air Base in
Frankfurt and two buses ferried
them 20 miles to the hospital at
Wiesbaden.
The Hesse state radio said police
received bomb threats against the
buses shortly before the Americans
left the airport. The police refused to
confirm or deny the report, but the
buses traveled with a large escort
and there was no interruption in the
trip.
Cyrus Vance, who was secretary
of state when the hostages were
taken on Nov . 4, 1979, and quit
because he opposed the unsuccessful
attempt to rescue them in April,
headed the greeters at the Frankfurt
airport and rode in the first bus to
the hospital.
Ex-President Carter was flying to
Germany today as President

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mE 10111 PRESIDENT- A beamW, Nancy Reagan watches as ber
hWJbaod Ronald is oworu In as presldenlallhe Capllol Tueoday. Nancy
held the Bible while betook lheoalh. fAP Laserphnlo). · ·

•

Reagan's speech draws praise
WASHING TON - Ohio congressmen of both political parties
praised Ronald Re,agan's first statement as president.
"I think he (Reagan ) in 15 minutes did a pretty good job of ad·
dressing in a general way the issues - what's really bothering the
country ... " said Rep. Douglas Applegate, 0-0hio. "Now, we
(Congress) have to get to work on the problems he was talking about."
The Steubenville Democrat said follpwing Tuesday's speech that he
would raise no obstacles to GOP administration programs "that would
thwart any conunon-sense approach to solving the problems. as long
as I feel they (solutions ) are l'&lt;!Uitable to rny district and the country."

What's in store for lran(an aliens
CINCINNATI - Now that the U.S. hostages have been released, two
Ohio attorneys are wondering how the government will untangle the
legal status of Iranian aliens.
ruchard J . Fleisher and Guy C. Guckenberger of Cincinnati, who
both represented a total of 85 Iranian aliens, said fonner President
Jirruny Carter's crackdown on the aliens failed as a political weapon .
Only one of their clients was deported.
''Unfortunately, as a political weapon , I d.on't think it had any effect
at ali, " Fleischer said Tuesday. " I see it hurting people whn had
legitimate business in this country, be it through relatives, business,
jobs, what have yuu."

More firm$ agree to -settlement
COVINGTON, Ky . - A federal judge has released names of firms
agreeing to a $2.5 million out-of-court settlement in connection with
the Beverly Hills Supper Club fire 3% years ago.
The settlement brings iu approximately $22 million the total
damages collected in the continuing litigation.
U.S. District Judge Carl Rubin listed the defendants' names
Tuesday. The latest defendants were part of a group or class of defendants which produce polyvinyl chloride wire insulation. They may or
may not have produced ,products used to build the Suuthgate club,
where 185 people died on May 28 , t977 .
1

Will mail ribbons to Iran.
LANCASTER, Ohio - Arlene Litzinger has plans for the yellow ribbons that she's pinned to a tree to acknowle&lt;jge the captivity of 52
Americans in Iran.
When announcement came Tuesday that the hostages had been
freed, Ms. Litzinger said she would remove the ribbons and rnailthem
to Iran.

Weather
Cloudy to11ight and Thursday. Lows in the lower 30s. Highs Thursday
near 40. Chance of precipitation 40 percent tonight and 20 percent
Thursday. Winds Usht and variable tonight.
Extended }"orecast
Friday llrrou1h Sunday:
Fair and mild through the period. Highs In upper 3h to ml&amp;40s
Friday and Salurday and In the mid-4011o low SO. Sunday. 0\lerui~ht
lowstn the 298 and low 308.

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en tine
2 Sectiins, 12 p.1gcs

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio Wednesday, January 21, i 9Bl

Emotion
sweeps
America

Reagan's special envoy to greet the
freed .Americans.' They were not
flown out of Tehran until 25 minutes
after Carter:s presidency ended
Tuesday and Reagan was
inaugurated, and one of Carter's
aides commented :
"Youcan'tcometoanyotherconelusion than that they deliberately
held the hostages until President
Carter left office - they did it on
purpose."
Air Force officials said Carter
would arrive at 8:30 p.m. - 2:30
p.m. EST - meet Rrivately with the
A.mericans, and give a speech at
Frankfurt airport before flying
home at 10:45 p.m. - ~:45 p.m. A
West German government
spokesman said Chancellor Helmut
Schmidt would join Carter in
greeting the Americans.

15 Cents

A Mulfim ediil Inc. Newspaper

•

WASIDNGTON (AP)- In one extraordinary hour, two emotions
sweep America: a sense of renewal
and an appreciation of freedom. It is
a new beginning and a clean end to
an ugly piece of business.
Ronald Reagan, 69, the oldest man
ever to take the presidency, the first
divorced man, the first professional . ·
actor in tltat office, succeeds a
drawn and gray Jimmy Carter.
And It fails t9 Reagan to announce
the news America wanted :
The hostages are free. The
hostages are airborne. The hostages
are on the way to Athens, Algiers,
Frankfurt - and home.
For America, this sunlit Tuesday
was a day of change and liberation.
Carter goes home, a tw~y stul&gt;ble of whiskers on his chin. He dances cheek-to-cheek with his
Rosalynn to the rhythm of a country
band on the streets of Plains.
Reagan takes the 35-word oath of
office, swearing to preserve, protect
and deiend the Constitution, and offers "this breed called Americans"
a speech of hope.
His inaugural address is vintage
Reagan : "We have every right to
dream heroic dreams," he says, and
pledges : " It Is not my Intention to do
away with government. It is rather
to make it work - ~Wrk with us, not
over us ; to stand by our side, not
ride on our back."
The celebration of freedom is born
with the iibe?ty flight, on their 444th
day of captivity in Iran, of the
hostages, 50 men and two women.
Seized by a band of Moslem
fanatics on Nov. 4, 1979, they had
been prisoners in an undeclared war
of wills that became Carter's obsession.
But, perhaps by deliberate
calculation of the Iranians, their
release is delayed until Carter had
surrendered the presidency to
Reagan.
So Reagan, dressed in a flashy
cutaway, gets the chance to lift a
glass of California wine at an
inaugural luncheon in the Capitol
and announce, "Some 30 minutes
ago, the planes bearing our
prisoners left Iranian airspace and
they're now free of Iran."
He offers this toast: "To all of ils
together, doing what we all know we
can do to make this country what it
should be, what it can be, what it
always has been."
Across America, church bells
peal.
Some 400,000 people line Pennsylvania Avenue for the inaugural
parade. Many of them hold transistor radios to their ears to keep up
with the hostage drama.
Reagan's gleaming limousine
proceeds down the avenue. Four
years ago, Jimmy Carter and
Rosa lynn, holding hands, walked.
Now the Carters ride to Andrews
Air Force Base for their
leavetaking. At the airport, the expresident encounters Anita
Schaefer, wlfe of a hustage, Col.
Thomas Shaefer.
Mrs. Shaefer : " I hupe that some
day you can meet my husband."
Carter : "I'll be ' with hlm
tomorrow in Gennany and I'll tel\
him you love him."·
Later, he tells reporters: " I had to
fight back the tears. "
Three thousand people await the
Carters at a military ·airport in
Macon, carved from the red Georgia
clay.

'·

BRACELETS OFF- Rev. Earl Lee and his wUe,
Hazel, parents of hostage Gary L.ee, hold up their
hoslage bracelet.• after happily laking them off in their.

.
'

Pasadena, CalH. home Tuesday. Mrs. Lee, "He's not a
hostage!" Later she added, "I don't think I could get
any higher - except when Gary hugs me." ( AP Laserphoto).
·

Two hurt in.Meigs mishap
Two people were injured in a twe&gt;car accident in Meigs County
Tuesday night.
The Gallia-Meigs Post of the Ohio
Highway Patrol reported Mlcha_el L.
Triplett, 19, Rt. 2, Pomeroy, turned
from SR 7 onto ·CR 75 at 8: 10 p.m.
when he lost control of his car and
collided with a stopped car driven by
Frances E. Byron, 65, Middleport.
The collision caused moderate
darnage to the Byron auto and minor
to Triplett's car. Both Byron and a
passenger, Catherine Byron, 65,
Middleport, were injured but not
treated. Triplett was cited for unsafe
vehicle.
Troopers also investigated

anotlrer twe&gt;-car crash in Meigs damage .
County Tuesday afternoon.
- No injuries were reported in a one- .
According to the report, Daniel E . car collision in Gallia County early :
Fussell, 29, Rt. 2, Loulsville, was today .
westbound on SR 124 near the Vinton
The patrol said James E.
County line and Ronald N. Hysell. McGuire, 24, was westbound on U.S.
25, Rt. 1, Middleport, was eastbound 35 at 12 : 10 a.m. when his car struck
at 4:05 p.m. · when both cars a large rock in the road, causing
sideswiped, causing minor damage.
rninor dan\age.
Orland S. Ervin, 46, Rt. 3, .
The patrol said Angela D. Jotmson, 17, Mason , was e~stbound on Wellston, was not injured when his
Meigs CR 34 at 2 p.rn . when her car car struck and killed a deer on SR 7
failed to negotiate a curve, went off in Gallia County at 8:50 a.m.
the road and collided with an em- Tuesday. His car suffered moderate
bankment, causing moderate damage.

Accepting
applications
The Gallia-Meigs Corrununity Action Agency (CAA) and the Senio~
Citizens Centers of Gallia and Meigs
Counties are accepting applications
for the Home Energy Assistance
Program lor low-income individuals
and families. The federally funded
program is administered through
the Ohio Department of Economic
and Coirununity Development.
Money from this program is solely
lor the purpose of helping to pay for
the rise in winter heating costs.
Benefits are dependent upon annual
income, household size, type of
heating used and where you live in
the state. Specia I emphasis will be
given to serVing the elderly,
disabled and young children.
Interested individuals may obtain
an application for the program from
the following offices : Meigs County
Courthouse, 992-5605; Gallipolis
C.A.A. office, 417 Second Avenue
(old Thaler-Ford Building), 446·4512,
ext. 63; Cheshire C.A.A. Office, 3677344, 992-M29; Gallia Senior Citizens
Center, 446-7000 ; and Meigs Senior
Citizens Center, 992-7886. Applications will be distributed belween 9 a.m. and 12 noon and from I
p.m. until 4 p.m .. Monday throu~h
Friday.

POMEROY'S POLICE CHIEF - Harry.Lyons, who has served wtth
lhe Pomeroy Police Department the last four and one-haU years and as
acting chief for the past fl•e month• was named Monday nJght as
Pomeroy Pollee Chief. Lyons and his wUe, Wanda and four children
reside in Racine.

�21

J

!Commentary

January 21, 1981
The DailY Sentinel

2

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BY SCO'IT WOLFE
ROCK SPRINGS - The Meigs

:iThe legislative· veto, much
~:i! less than meets the eye

·• WASIUNGTON - There was
iubilation over at Justice, and a few
· 'Losannas at the White House, when a
'11. S. Court of AppeaLs came down
; P,e other day against the legislative
: ~eto. You might have thought some
. :treat judicial landmark had been
· ~reeled. My own thought is that
:there is much less here than meets
· .lheeye.
•: I have written before about the
: Jegislative veto, and the reader
;.response has been a great ho-hum. It
'

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!·

But the Inunigration Act of 1976
c.ontains a provision authorizing
either house of Congress to overrule
such a detennination by the at·
torney general. For reasons not
disclosed by the record, the House
was cold to Chadha's plea. On Dec.
16, 1975, the House voted to exercise
its legislative veto by specifically
disapproving the attorney geo1eral's
decision. It is a fair presumption
that the House Judiciary Conunittee
felt that Chadha's prospective har-

]ames ]. Kilpatrick

· :ls not the sexiest subject on earth,
· ;even though it amounts to a
:.)larliamentary
contraceptive
; device, but it is important all the
; &amp;me. The principal purpose of the
•;legislative veto is to keep the
. :;executive branch from getting too
· ! &lt;big for its britches. Spokesmen for
-:the executive branch, you will
; ;correCtly surmise, are dead set
~'against it.

; : That is what happened the ot)ler
•:day. The story goes back to 1966,
:;when Jagdish Rai Chadha, a native
~ ·of Kenya of East Indian descent,
::lawfully entered the United States as
. • :a non-inunigrant student traveling
:;on a British passport. He received
: •his bachelor's and master's degrees,
~ : whereupon his student visa expired.
&lt;;In 1974, the Inunigration and
:·Naturalization Service routinely
; :issued an order directing him to
• :show cause why he should not be
: :deported.
~ · Chadha didn't want to be depor·
: :ted. He pleaded that he met the three
':criteria for a·n exception. He had (I )
:~ been in the U. S. for at least seven
; ·years, (2) was of demonstrably good
•' character and (3) would suffer "ex• treme hardship" if he were com·
~ pelled to return either to Kenya or to
; the United Kingdom. Persons of
'; East Indian descent were then being
• hooted out of Kenya· and were being
: roughed up in London. Accepting
;: Chadha's contentions, the attorney
;:_ general ruled that he should not be
deported.

t:

dship was not that extreme.
The controversy went to court.
Three weeks ago the Ninth Circuit,
in a long and tedious opinion by
Judge Anthony M. Kennedy, can·
celled the deportation proceedings
and ruled that Chadha may remain.
The act's legislative veto provision,
said the court, is an unconStitutional
encroachment by the Congress upon
the principle d separation of
powers.
Judge Kennedy had some hard
words for the House. It tuid "usur·
ped" the power• of tne executive
branch, trespassed upon the
executive domain, egregiously in-

terfered with the attorney general's
determination, and indeed had attempted a kind of "lawless rule."
The judge quoted extensively from
Jefferson, Madison and the authors
of the Federalist Papers.
On close examination, however, it
appears to me that the court's coldwater decision is narrowly limited.
this was a case involving individual
rights under the Immigration Act.
The Chadha case did not in any way
involve the validity of a legislative
veto of some agency's rule · or
regulation.
And that is what the fight is all
about. In recent years, the independent, executive agencies have
seized power - and have exercised
power - in ways far beyond their
statutory authority. Or at least, so
many members of Congress con-

·~ A national agenda
§for the eighties

tend. A typical battle developed last
year over trade rules promulgated
by the Federal Trade Commission.
How was the FTC to be restrained if
the FTC would exercise no selfrestraint! By the legislative veto!
Last year's FTC act, signed reluctantly by Mr. Carter, gives the
House and Senate 90 days in which to
disapprove any Trade Rule
Regulation the FTC propounds.
I myself see nothing bad or unconstitutional in this device. Such a
precautionary provision strikes me
as sound law and sound policy. The
legislative power is vested in
Congress, not in the executive agencies; and to the extent that the agen·
cies get out of hand,_Congress ought
to be able to calla halt without going
through the cumbersome business of
enacting an entire new law. The
Chadha case never touches this
isSue. In that regard, Judge Kennedy's edicts are interesting, but
surely not decisive.

The far-reaching impact of Chrysler's failure
By Robert J. Wagman
WASHINGTON ( NEA)
Chrysler officials are warning that
their company could go under this
spring unless it receives another
$400 million in federal loan guarantees. The decision on this second
bail-out will probably be left up to
the Reagan administration, whose
members are discovering just how
far-reaching the automake'r's
failure could be.
Not only would Chrysler's de1nise
throw hundreda of thousands of
Americans out of work and create
financial hardships for the whole
support industry that has grown up
around the company. It would aLso
wreck havoc in other areas of the
economy, not the least of which
could be the pensions of more than 30
million workers who have no connection with Chrysler.
The Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 authorized
the federal government to oversee
corporate pension plans and
established the Pension· Benefit
Guarantee Corp., a semi-public cor-

. :~~: (FIRSTINASER!ES)
:; :: The nation can no longer postpone difficult choices among a range of
~r · national policies and programs, according to the President's Commission
~; for a National Agenda for the Eighties.
.
•;. In its report, the commission also concludes the nation must accept the
l• .: reality that it cannot achieve all its national goals simultaneously and f~ce
~· honestly the trade-offs among econom1c, soc1al and mternabonal obeJec~ tives.
~ '"The task of the Eighties is to adjust to this new"reality and, where
!'• necessary, to alter our policies and adjust our institutions to take account of
:: it... Choosing an appropriate mix of policies to assist the needy, to invigorate
•: the economy, and to pursue other objectives while fairly distributing
:' necessary sacrifices will be a principal item on our agenda for the eighties."
•: Prospects of limited resources ih the coming decade, the Commission
br Nf.A. 1ne
•: notes, will require rethinking the means by which the nation achieves its
i: goals. "Answers to our dilemas, " the report states, "do not lie in such
:.! slogans as 'less goverrunent,' any more than they lie in automatic depen:
:": dence on federal solutiOns."
;:
The report, the first of its kind since the 'Goals for Americans' report com'; missioned by President Eisenhower, underscores the need for more rational
By Don Graff
: • methods of implementing government policy, reexamining roles of the
Now hear this ... And because
Federal, State, and local governments, and better utilizing the private sec- thousands of private individuals did
~ tor in meeting public needs. ·
hear and heed a call for assistance,
Z; "There are better and worse ways of spending any given level of money. Earth is going to continue to hear
:; Implementing programs differs from simply mandating the achievement of regularly from Mars for at least at
:· goals and starting the flow of funds ; concern for the proper design and ad- billonger than scheduied.
:; . ministration of programs makes an important diff~rence in meeting goals.
A check for $60,000 was delivered
•: . Government programs and market forces need not operate at cross pur- to space program officials in a quiet
:. poses: government is capable of using private markets to help achieve ceremony early in the new year at
;: public goals."
the Smithsonian Institution's Air
.r. The President's Commission for a National Agenda for the Eighties was and
Space Museum in Washington,
·~: established by President Carter on Oct. 24, 1979, to examine emerging public the first installment In what the
· ::': issues of lhe corning decade and to recommend to the President..,lect and organizers of the Viking Fund hope
·., Congress approaches to those issues.
will be an annual contribution of at
.: ;
The Commission sets out its major recommendations for long-range policy least $100,000. The pul'p05e will be to
: :- · in economic, social, political and international agendas.
· keep the robot landed on Mars in the
:;
Over the next several days, the Sentinel will present a series of articles in Viking I mission in the planetary inf. this space detailing the reconunendationsas presented by the Conunission. formation business.
There's no problem with the robot
itself.
It has been transmitting
~...;:.

poration whose relationship to
private pension plans is much like .
that of the Federal Deposit In·
surance Corp. to banks.
Tbe PBGC guarantees the vested
pension rights of workers and
retirees should their companies go
out of business. The corporation
currently "insures" some 8,000
private pension plans covering 30
million workers. Its operating funds
come not from the taxpayers but
from premiums paid by the pension
plans it insures; those premiums
now amount to $2.60 per covered employee per year.
The PBGC is working well. Each
month, benefit checks averaging
, $128 each are sent to 25,706 retirees
of the 527 failed companies whose
pension plans the corporation has so
far taken over. Money for these
payments comes from the
premiums and from income that the
PBGC receives from the invested
assets of the failed plans that it holds
in trusteeship.
But this bright picture could
change
if Chrysler goes out

-·

of business. In a worst-case
scenario, says PBGC Executive
Director Robert Nagle, the
automaker's failure could require
his corporation to asswne responsibility for as many as 13 different
Chrysler pension plans. Alter accounting for the assets of those
plans, the PBGC would be left with
an unfunded liability of about $1
billion.
Could PBGC survive? " We can
survive just about anything," says
Nagle. " But it obviously would not
be easy. Some forecasts we have put
together show that, assuming no
other large companies woulrl fail as
a. result of Chrysler's failure, we
could remain financially viable and
pay off the Chrysler liability by
raising our premiums to somewhere
in the neighborhood of $8 annually."
In effect, that would mean that
private industry would have to take
over Chrysler's pension obligations
through the payment of higher
premiums.
Some insiders qur ion the
political feasibility of such an increase, which would have to be approved by Congress. The adlninistrators of many pension plans
think the prerniwns are too high
already and would most likely oppose any increase. The politically
powerful Teamsters Union - which
has little love for the PBGC - could
be expected to fight the move tooth
and nail.
Some experts say that a Chrisler
failure would doom the PBGC even
with a sizable premium increase.
One of those holding this view is Jeffrey Hart, formerly the PBGC's No.
2 man and now head of the National
Association of Private Pension and
Welfare Plans, a lobbying

organizotion.
"A Chrysler failure would start a
clock rwming," says Hart. "The
PBGC could survive for a while on
the assets from the Chrysler plans,
from increased premlwns and from
the $100 million that the law allows
the PBGC to borrow frun the
Treasury.
"But even if there were no other
major failures associated with
Chrysler's - and I'm sure tllere
would be some- I don't see how the
PBGC could stay viable for longer
than about seven years."
Then, say insiders, either the
PBGC Itself would go under or the
taxpayers would have to assume the
major burden for its funding.
Neither option is very appealing.
All of this will weigh heavily on the
new administration as It debates fur·
ther aid to Chrysler. In fact, the
question may well come down to
whether it might be cheaper to give
Chrysler another half-billion dollars
in loan guarantees now than to
destroy the PBGC or to burden the
private sector or the taxpayers with
funding $1 billion in Chrysler's pen·
sian benefits.

DOONESBURV

Assistance to Martian messages .

r:

l
....:•. Today in history.
•.. .
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;

. Today Is Wednesday, Jan. 21, the
·21st day of 1981. There are 344 days
left in the year .
Today's highlight in history:
On Jan. 21, 1954, th~ first atomic
• submarine - t)le USS Nautilus was launched In the United States.
On this date:
In 1793, France's King Louis XVI"
.liVIIS beheaded.
.
~
· !if 1861, Jefferson Davis of
MlssJssippl resigned from the U.S.
Senate, 12 days after his state
aeceded from the Union.
;!
In 1924, Russian revolutionary
leader Vladimir llyich Lenin died at
theageofM.
0: ' In 1950, former State Department
; official Alger Hiss was found guilty
., of perjury by a federal jury in New
:S: York.
:b_;;c Ten years ago: In a surprise coup,

·3;
..

.......

..

J
..•.

.•
..
.

!1

;

• •

the 92nd Congress toppled Sen, Ed·
ward Kennedy as assistant majority
leader.
Five years ago: the supersonic
Concorde airliner W¥ put into service by Britain and France with
flights from London to Bahrain and
from Paris to Rio de Janeiro.
One year ago: In tbe first test of
the presidential campaign, George
Bush beat GOP front-runner Ronald
Reagan in the Iowa caucuses and
President Carter trounced fellow
Democrat Edward Kennedy.
Today's birthdays: Golfer Jack
Nicklaus is 41. Actor Telly Savalas is
57.
'
Thought for today: Let us be hapPY and live within our meons, even if
we have to borrow the money to do it
with. - ,u.s. revolutionary Commander Artemus Ward (1727-1600).

.diophotos and other information
back to Earth without a hitch since
planet-fall July 20, 1976. 'But in an
era of tightened budgets and dwin·
dling Interest in space, it appeared
early in 1980 that the receivers on
Earth might have to be turned off.
Funds had run out for the processing
of Viking's reports, now pouring
unevaluated into the computer
banks.
'
A distressing possibility, in the
view of some space-oriented private
individuals convinced the public
would not be getting full value from
the billion of its dollars expended in
getting Viking to Mars if the few
thousands necessary to continue
monitoring the probe could not be
scraped up.
Hence the Viking Fund, taking at

ILetter to editor I
Since Robert K. Zimmennan has
taken over· as superintendent of the
Gallipolis Development Center,
everything has been in a turmoil for
residents and employees, especially
the direct care staff.
Now he has really gone all out to
mak,e-life miserable for everyone involved in these changes.
People that have worked night
shift for many years, some as much
as 20 years-or mo_re, are being forced ·
on to day shifts and people on days
are being forced on to the night shift.
He (Zimmennan) is llJOVing shift
times ahead by one hour, making
everyone work frozen shifta and
changing the days off to six days on
and two off, with the days changing
every week for six weeks.
Many workers have built their
lives around this job. All these
chan~es th:ot ha .'c been instil!atw

Meigs gals
split games

its words a section of NASA's char·
ter from Congress providing for
private as well as government funding of space projects.
Viking has been transmitting on a
restricted schedule since last
·August, when its relay station In
Mars orbit ran out of gas - literally,
the steering compound that had kept
cameras and scanners pointed at the
Martian surface and antennas
trained at Earth having been
exhausted after four years. But the
surface robot is still good for
weather reports and occasional pictures for years to come, possibly
through the end of the century.
Providing funds continue to be
available to keep !be receivers
operating and to process data.

OMY. fflJI'/.e,
QUIUON 7HEi

SeT, P!Bistl

/

5C£11EON&amp;..

7AK&amp;ON&amp;.'

/

need extra car~uch things have
got to be considered.
This mtnute-tOorninute prograrnnung may work on a piece of equipment used in Industry, but with
hwnan beings It will never work .
This system is helping to break the
llack of this one-time strong country
and is eating away at the very weak
financial system ol the state of Ohio.
So, why make all of these drastic
changes with personnel and a
system that has worked for many,
many years, and go to a system that
will be costly to the state and the In·
dividual worker in tenns of finan-

ces?

Is It just so that management can
attempt to prove that all the highpaid positions in adrnintmation.
absolute
($16,000 and up) are
necessity at GDC? - Betty Spencer,
Palrlot. Ohio.

an

an impressive 46-38 win over the

Alexander Spartans.
Andrea Riggs recovered from an
ankle sprain to pour in a game 21
points and grab nine rebounds for
the winners. Following Riggs in the
Meigs' attack were Pam Crooks
with 10.
Barb Uewelyn and Lowery led
Alexander with 13 each.
Kristen Anderson, Shari Orehel,
Laura Smith, Melanie Dillard, Vicki
DeBord, and Lynne Oliver all were
credited with paying a good game by
co•ch Ron Logan.
. Meigs grabbed the early lead and
never looked back the entire distance as It raced to a 17·9 first period
.lead. The 17 point effort was one of
Meigs' biggest quarters of the
season ogainst a very good defen·
sive club.
Although the Spartans pulled with
six on several accounts they never
could get any closer and the hosts
led at the half 27-17.
'
After three quarters, Meigs led by
II at 37-26, but in the last round
Alexander kept pace and drew
closer via the foul line .
Meigs hit 18 of 50 for 36 percent
from the field and hit 11 of 20 from
the line for 55 percent. Alexander hit
12 of 53 from the field for 23 percen\
and monaged 14 of 32 from the line
for« percent.
Meigs had 25 rebounds led by
Riggs' nine, while Alexander had 34
led by Lowry's II.
· Meigs captured the reserve tilt 2412 led by Cindy Crooks' 10 points,
Susan Lightfoot's five, Poula
Swisher's four, Kris Snowden's
three and Mae Nakamoto's two.
Bartlett led the losers with fiv~ points. Meigs is now 5-7 on the reserve
level.
Box score:
Mell• - Anderson 244:

Kin~

2..._.:

D~hel l·

I-3; Cruuka ~10; Rj~, S.t-~1 ; Smith 2.().4;
DUI•rd Q-0.41 ; Oe8urd ()-0.0; Oliver G-0-0. TN IIII .....

A turmoil at GDC?

by rnanagernent are going to have a
detrimental Impact on their
everyday living.
There are workers with very
special reasons, such as child care,
part-time jobs, and health problems
that have taken the shift and time
that fits their lifestyle and still maintain a very good standard of living
for the clients that they serve at
GDC.
It appears that management
thinks that they are Operating an
assembly plant manufacturing a
product for market. We are still
dt&gt;aling with hwnan beings which
change from second to second.
Each job at GDC is different on
eve1y shift because you are dealing
with retarded individuals. For instance, you never know how mimy
messes that will have to be cleaned
up, ur how many 1nay be sick and

Marauder gals dropped a 5:&gt;-13
decision to Ironton's Tigers here
Tuesday evening. Meigs is now ~
overall and 4-5 in the SEOAL on the
girls' varsity level.
Lauren Triplet led. the winners
with 21 pointS, while Janet Walker
and Usa Bryant added II each to
boost the Tigers to victory. April
King led the Meigs gaLs with 13
ponits, and Andrea Riggs added 12.
Despite running head-on with an
early quarter cold front, Meigs was
close at the initial buzzer 1~.
The second round was devastating
for Meigs as the visitors ripped the
nets for 16 ·points and Meigs could
manage only five.
In the first half, Meigs was ice cold
from the floor only hitting four of·22
field goals. Also tliwarting the
Meigs' attack was the fact that they
could connect only twice out of 14
lay-up attempts. They trailed 2&amp;-11
at the half.
As both clubs broke away from the
halftime break, Meigs started to
make a comeback, but again fell
short at the buzzer, 46-21 .
The final round was slow, but conclusive as Meigs made a rim for the
Tigenl. The hosts scored 22 points
while holding its opponent to just 15.
Thirteen of those 15 points came
from the foul line and proved to be
the deciding factor.
Meigs fell short at the line as it
missed nwnerous bonus attempts on
the first try, thus not getting the
chance for the pay-off.
Meigs hit only 14 of 54 from the
field for 26 percent and 15 of 34 from
the line for 34 percent. Ironton hit 17
of 46 for 37 percent, and 21 of 33 from
the line for 63 percent.
Ironton won the rebounding battle
37-34 led by Triplet's 13, while An·
derson and Drehelled Meigs with 10
and eight respectively. Ironton had
IS turnovers and 28 fouls while
Meigs had 221niscues and 24 fouls.
Coach Bonnie Chapman's reserves dropped a very close 35-27
decision to the young Tigers. Mary
McMackin led the winners with 10, ·
while Meigs' .Paula Horton and Cindy Crooks added eight each.
Meigs travels to Waverly on Thur·
sday.
Monday night Meigs' girls scored

AleuMer ~JIJ - IJewelyn »t3; Cusey J.().
2: Thei:ll 2+4: l.uwry .1-7-13; l.i~hUrlb 0..1·1;
W11lla('f 1·1 ...1 and 1:1ubul).J.J. Tnt.III!-16-SI .
Scan: by t~arters :
Meig11
li' 10 II} 9- 46
Ah!~CMnder
9 8 9 12- JA
lroat.a Jill - RryHnl W.ll : ~'letcher 14-2; ,
Frazier~; Trlplel 14-21 : FittJI 0..2-%: Sweefley

1·2-4 : Jltt'ksoo24-4 : Wt~lk er 2-7·11 . To&amp;alt 17-tl·
II.
.
Mtlll Jtll - Anden~m 1-+41 ; KlnM 6-;J.\3 ;

Orehe11·2..t ; Cruulu :t.o-4; Rl~sa.&amp;.\2 ; Smith I·
0.2; Oliver 1..0.2. ToUlalt-JUJ•
Sntno by qUJ~rkrl :
lrontoo
10 16 14 15 - ~
Meigs
6 $ 10 12- 43

AC!KJV/

/

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........
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STORE HOURS:
Mon.·Sat. 8 am-10 pm

Sunday 10 am-10 pm

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, 0.
PRICES EFFECTIVE lHRU SATURDAY, JANUARY 24, 1981

USDA ARM

Chuck

.

$}49
Roast ....... ~B···

$} 79

USDA BONELESS

Chuck .Roast .......~·..
GRADE AWHOLE

Fryers.................. ~~ 59~
Chicken Breasts
or Drumsticks ••••.•••. ~.

Chicken Thi

S••••
LB.

RUSSET

.

$} 99

Potatoes ........... :8!~·...
1

DAR I-FRESH

·

2% Milk...........~.~ 1

.

ZESTA

Crackers •••••••••••••••
.

LB. BOX

5

HUNfS·PRIMA SALSA

Spaghetti Sauce~7
....

69

GRADE A MEDIUM

~~ ................... ~;.
4

Jeno's Pizza ..... .t~~;.
COUPON

CIJLJPON

MAXWELL HOUSE

GOLD MEDAL

INSTANT COFFEE
10 oz.
$399
JAR

FLOUR

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Otter E•plffl~ Jan . 24, 1981

;;;;!

5-LB.

BAG

sge

JOAN OF ARC

SWIFTNING
PRE CREAMED SHORTENING

42

KIDNEY BEANS
15.5 07.

oz.

limit1 Per Customer
Gnod Only At Powell's
Offer
·res Jan . 24, 1981

·!·

4/$1

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's

Oller Ex ires Jan. 24, 1981

�. Page-4

The Dai ly Sentinel

I'

1meroy

January 21, 1981

Middlep'lrt, Ohi &lt;&gt;

21 1981

I,

Ohi ~

WE . ARE NOW INDEPENDENTLY OWNED &amp; OPERATED

Meigs cage teams ·ready for weekend tilts
the Southwestern Highlanders for an stall the·opposing offense.
BY SCOTI WOLFE
Plays Pirates
All three area basketball teams important SVAC game. Eastern is
1
In
the
remainingFriday contest
now 1~3 overall and 4-1 in the
will return to the " cage wars ' this
Friday evening in boys' high school league, while Southwestern is S.S Southern hopes to travel victory
basketball action. Meigs will be on overall and 3-2 in loop play. Both are road to the home of the north Gallia
the road again at Waverly, Ji;astern in contention for the SV AC crown Pirates. After a big win against
hosts league foe Southwestern, and along with defendiog champ Eastern last Friday, Southern lost a
· heartbreaker to Trimble on SaturSouthern travels to North Gallia. Southern.
Eastern defeated· the Highlanders day, 54-53.
Saturday, Southern will host overSouthern, 9-2 overall, is unthe-river rival Wahama, while 52-16 earlier in the season at Patriot.
defeated
in the league at !Hl. League
Southwestern lost by only one point,
Meigs and Eastern are idle.
foe
North
Gallia is 2-8 overall and
Overall, Meigs is 2·10 on the year 43-42, to Southern. Last week
weighs
in
with
a 1-4 league mark.
and owns a ~9 league mark. The Southern downed Eastern 55-46 to
North
Gallia
has good size and
record is not all that impreSsive, but account for the losses in the league.
Coach
Paul
Petit's Pirates
speed.
Eastern
rebounded
with
an
imthe Marauders have been in several
are
just
now
starting
to take form
of their games. They have lost nine pressive win over a tough Waterford
and
may
play
an
important
role in
club
last
Saturday.
games by nine or less points, and
deciding
the
SVAC
championship.
is
led
by
senior
iorward
Eastern
four games by five qr less points.
Earlier in the season, Waverly Gene Cole, who has colleoted 233 · Southern, despite two. losses,
points in 13 games for a sparkling again is an offensive powerhouse led
defeated Meigs 61-54.
Last Saturday, in front of the 17.9 scoring average. Tim Dill also by senior Dale Teaford with 198 poinhometown crowd, Steve Ohlinger toes the mark with a total of 172 poin- ts in 11 outings, an 18 point scoring
became the second all-time leading . ts for a 13.2 scoring average. Cole average.
Southern play-maker Kent Wolfe
scorer in Marauder history with 531 and Dill also dominate the boards
has
tallied 151 points for a 13.7
high
flying
Eagles.
forthe
career points. Ohlinger has scored
scoring
average. Richand Wolfe also
Mike
Bissell
owns
an
eight
point
130 markers this season and owns a
has
had
several good outings inaverage,
Greg
Wig~
l
a
4.3
mark,
and
10.8 scoring average to lead \he
cluding
a
12 point effort against
Mathews
a
fine
defensive
Brett
Marauders.
Richard
owns a 6.7scoring
Trimble.
has
a
three
point
average.
player,
Following Ohlinger offensively
average,
fo
llowed
by Tom
Rick
Lon~,
Greg
Cole,
and
Paul
are Kevin Smith with 112 points and
·
Roseberry
and
Robert
with
five per
Sprague,
also
contribute
steady
pera 9.3 scoring average, Mike Miller
game,
and
Jay
Rees
with
a 4. 7
fonnances
for
the
Easterners.
7.6 points per game, Jeff Wayland
scoring
average.
The
sticky
Eastern
defense
will
7.3 points, and Bob Ashley with a 6.1
Saturday Southern faces the
have to keep an eye on 6-2 Dale
mark.
Newberry und erneath, sharp- Wahama White Falcons (:&gt;-3) in
Host Highlanders
In eastern Meigs County, Coach shooting Wayne Sizemore, 6-2 Todd another tough contest. Incidentally,
in order·to North Gallia posted one of its vicDennis Eichinger's Eagles will host Baker and Mike Sterrett
/ '•,
;

_Southern girls post 1Oth
victory without a loss
BY SCOTIWOLFE
RACINE - In girls' high schoo•
basketball action Coach Connee Enslen's Southern Tornadoes remained
in the ranks of the undefeated by
scoring an awesome 80-26 win over
the Trimble Tomcats Monday
evening. Southern is now 10-0 over
all and 5.Q in the SVAC.
Mel Weese led the winners with an
outstanding 26 point game, hitting 12
of 17 field goal attempts in ~he

Marauder mabnen
finish sixth
This past weekend the Meigs High
wrestlers plac~d sixth in a seven
team tournament.
Place finishers for the Marauders
were Brill King and Troy Bauer
placed second; Scott Harrison,
Brian King, Bill Powell, and Scott
Hartinger all placed fourth .
Although the wrestlers didn't fare
too well there was one hi gh point of
the day, Scott Harrison set a new
school record lor the fastest pin at
:08 seconds.
The grapplers host Gallipolis
Thursday evening at 7 p.m.

Eastern junior high
tops Southern team
I

RACINE - The Eastern Eagle
junior high girls basketball team
rolled to. a 33-10 win over the
Southern Tornadoes here recently.
Coach Pam Douthitt's Eagle gals
rolled to a !HI shut·out in the first
pe riod, then went on to open up 3 l7-4
lead at the half.
Both teams played even the third
period, scoring four points apiece
with the score at the buzzer 21-8. The
visiting Eagles then opened up a
fourth quarter attack and held un for
the J:J-.10 Win.
Lee Ann Gaul poured in 14 points,
Angie Spencer 10, Melinda mankin
six, and Beth Berkhimer three for
the Winners.
Tonya Cwrunins and Kelly Clark
paced Coach Brenda Johnson's Tornadoes with four points each, while
Alana Lyons hit for two points.
Angie Spencer led Eastern with 10
rebounds, Beth Berkhimer six,
Brenda Bentz four, Melinda Mankin
three, Rhonda Phillips two, and
Sherry Ritchie one.

Now he walks
the winds. of et.rnlly!

tories over the White Falcons on a
last secood shot.
Coach Mick Childs' little
Marauders, Tim Simpson's fighting
Eagles, and Howie Caldwell 's
hustling Tornadoes will kick off each
evening a\6: 30, while the respective
varsity clubs will take the Ooor for
an 8 p.m. contest.

·WINTER
ClEARANCE SALE
CONTINUES

·~~~----~~:....:=~~3:::::;;;;:::;:::~~

w.&amp;-21$8. Seccnd class poatage paid at

P&lt;&gt;meroy, Ohio.

c"'""''

Witsh mgllm
N.Y. R an~ t&gt;rs

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21 17 9 11&lt; 110 51
16 19 11 162 110 43

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Adams Dlvilliom
22 II II 163 129
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16 2:1 1 Ill 212

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Buff•lu " Quebec

Phi ladelphia at PitL'sbur~ h
St. LuuL'i at HartfunJ
Minlll'SOta llt W~:~shin~ton

Mun\rt!ctl at ChiCI:Ijj:o

55
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39·
1911 34

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KIDDIE SHOPPE
111

w. 2nd ·

OneYoar . .. ... .. , ..... .. ... .. . ,,. tiUI
SINGLE COPY
PRICEI
Dolly ..................... .. ... II C.,ll

IN RACINE, OHIO .

FWAIM IN'" SPECIAL-.

•
•

BAKED LASAGNA ••
Oiftner with

golden brown • • • S

.bl,lrt .. ..... SU5

I

TO GO ONLV

'"'""""

I

E&amp;liidSi
II. •AI'iii .1

GROUND CHUCK ........ .. LB. 'l59
99~

PORK SHOULDER

U.S. O.A. CHOICE

BEEF BUCKET STEAK .... LB'2 49
1 lb. Eckrich

ROLL SAUSAGE ••••••••••••••~~~. $1.89
CHEESE FRANKS.b.y.:~~~~c:... ~~;~ 51.89

U.S. O.A. CHOICE BONELESS

RUMP ROAST.............. !B. '1"

.~~ " GROUND

~

Homemade

HAM SALAD ••••••••••••••••••• ~~~.
DAIRY

5

1.39

0~

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1 lb. Blue Bonnet Quarters

89

10 lb. Maine Eating

MARGARINE .....~.~= Br POTATOES .... ~?~ 52.19
Ohio Longhorn Colby

CHEESE ....... .. ~.~ :. s2.19

"

ROUND
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PRODUCE

s lb. Bag Florida
ORANGES ..... ~~~- sug

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FROZEN

~~~·. 5

2.09

PERCH FILETS ••••••••••••••••
1S 3/ 8 Oz. Chef

99

I

CHEESE
PIZZA •••••••••••••••
JO V2 oz . Campbell's

1.33

46 oz. Stokely

ORANGE .JUICE ••••••••••••••~~~. sl.09

4 ROll PACK

IS

01.

PINTO BEANS

Tomato sauc e

SPAGHETTI .•••••••••• :~~.~:::~: ••• 2/69~
Armour

CORNED BEEF HASH ••••••••• ~.a:.. 99~

SUNBEAM

12CT,

SALAD OIL
24 OZ. BR.

GENERIC

KRISPY CREME

Cream of Potato
SOUP

MARGARINE
SPREAD

DONUTS

11!z LB.
BAG

1% DOZ.

2/8

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PORK-N-BEANS
CANS

$}19

PAPER
TOWELS

PEAS
CANS

LIMIT 1

BRAWNY

GE~ERIC

Pkg , 69~

•••••••••••••••••

99e

CAMPBELL'S

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TOILET SOAP. •••••••••••••••••••••2/99~

Filled Doriuts .......

GOLDEN ISLE

10LPKG.2/8

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WHOLE
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$119

6 PACK

MACARONI·

CHICKEN w/RICE SOUP. •••••• 2/69~

TOILET TISSUE ••••

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$}19

LIMIT 2

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8-16 OZ. BTLS.
LIMIT 2

~EnUCE ••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ·.49c:

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CELERY•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••. '69~

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CARROTS••••••••••••••••••• 3•fOR . , 00

lldiill

DOZ.

Glazed Donuts .....

CREAMEnES
ELBOW

ARMOUR TREET

FROZEN

PRODUCE

I

KRISPY KREME

LB.

BATH TISSUE

5
s.o.·••

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I
I
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BREAD .... ...~~.?.~:. 2/99~

Cake Donuts ......... 99c

GOLDEN ISLE

1 lb. Booth

2 Roll Pack Soft Weve

9600T J

HOLSUM

EGGS. .... ...... .7!.~:. s2.49 CARROTS .......... 2/59'

4
I

BREAD ........'..~~·. 3/'1 0,9

16 oz . .Cello Bag

3 Dozen Pack Small

SELECTION OF

1 Month .. .. ..................... .
Six month .... .. ... .. ....... , ..... 111.10
lY•r . .. .. ..... ... .. . . ..... .. .... 1111.00
"""'
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VlrJiall
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STORCK

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No ouboc:ripllolll by mall pormlltldin towno
wtw. horrie Ctn1er llr"Vtn Ia IYailabll.

BAKERY

ROUND

17 0

Suboerlben n~ dtllrlnc to poy tho carrilr
INY rtnUt ln advane~~ dlrtd to The Dally
Sentinel on • 3, I or 12 month buil. CNdLt
wUl bt &amp;lvtn ctrrtlr eaeh montiL

~"~

--···-

Pomerov, Oh.

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Onow..., .. .... .... ... ...... .. .... . •1.00
One Month .. .... ............ ...... f;.tO

The win marked the first time an
NY RanJ.:er.; at WinniPf:t::
1
Eastern junior high girls team has ;--v"_";_
'";_"':_
~r_•;_•_E;_"'-"-"";_
"'_'----..l...------------l
defeated Southern since the learns
were organized five years ago.
Coach Douthitt credited her girls
with a fine defensive game and a
good game from the line (fi ve of
~1110\8 I HIP TAPE
six). Eastern is now 4-2 on the year
AIIAiirJIIIII W•lflll ,_,.,,
and played Shade last night, oosting
...,_.,.,,,,.....d-el..
Southwestern at the high school on
Thursday.

U.S .O.A. CH.OICE

PORK ROAST. ............. LB.

14 3 4 01 . Franco-Americap

BUBaCI!I'rlON IIATQ
By C1n1er or Met« lt•tr

MAIL I~

. Boneless

BOSTON BUTT

01.

POSTMAS'I'ER: Send acldr.ato Tbt Doll¥ ·
S.ntlnel,lll CourtS!.. Pomei'I&gt;)',Ohlo 46781.

!Woood w.. t v~.-..

Oetruit ;

Turuntu 2, Vancouver 2, tie
Wfdlll'!lday's Games

31

U.S.D .A. CHOICE

TOP ROUND STEAK ..... .t.B. '2••

STEAK .... .................... La.'1 49

1: 2;

: ~~ ~

Boneless

FRYERS

16 oz .

Membe" The AIIOclatod ~ lnllnd DoJ.
Jy Prua AIIOcll~on and tho Amlrtean
New.paper Publlahera Auoclation, -Natlon.l
AdvertJainl Repreaentative, lAndini
Auoclatn, 31~1 Eucltd Avt., Cltwlarld,
Ol!lo,41lll.

. U.S. D.A. CHOICE

SIRLOIN TIP ROAST. ..... LB. '249

SECOND AIL TIME SCORER
- Steve Ohlinger, senior member of the Meigs Marauder cage
team, has become the school's
second all-time scorer with 531
career points. Ohlinger has
sC&lt;Jred 130 points this season and
owns a10.8 average.

TWO'S COMPANY

~h~~~~~~~~rs

.

SHOWTIME 7·9
SORRY, NO PASSES

1-9:

T c.F GA Pu

HECK THESE MEAT PECIAI.S

Gallipolis

446-4541

SIMON'S PICK-A-PAIR

J.

YOUR COST OF GROCERIES. SHOP
WITH US AND SAVE. IT'S THE
TOTAL THA·T COUNTS.

SPRING VALLEY Ill

YOUR RUBBER
FOOTWEAR
HEADQUARTERS

w

WE RESERVE lHE RIGHT
TO UMIT QUANnnES.

WE HAVE LOWERED

Now Showing- Limited Engagement

the line for .22 percent. The winners
Following the talented sophomore hit eight of 17 from the free throw
in scorin g were two other stripe.
classmates,. Tonja Salser and Cindy
Southern had a whopping 60
Evans, who played great games rebounds to Trimble's 25. Leading
with 15 and 10 points respectively. the way was Della Johnson with 17
Tanuny Smith pla yed a good floor rebounds, Cindy Evans with 11, and
game with 10 points, Laren Wolfe Laren Wolfe with eight. Southern
tossed in nine ~ Della ) ohnson four , had 15 turnovers ,. 10 steals, a nd
Elaine Smith four , and Michelle seven assists.
AI ,
J ohnson two.
Coach Kim Grueser~s reserves
Serina Morris led Trimble with 14 didn't hold anything back as .they
points, Kim Coffman added four, rolled to a 32-6 win over the young
Mary Rainey four. and Annette Ahle
Tomcats. Debbie Michael led with l2l~E:·:M::a::in::::::P:o:m:e:r:o~y:,O~h~.~
and Barb Jensen two each.
points.
Southern's Della Johnson conMary Bycofiski had all of Trim·
lrolled the opening tip and the hosts ble 's six poinls. Laren Wolfe and
quickly boarded the scoring merry- Debbie Michael had 10 rebounds
gt&gt;-round to open up an 18-6 fi rst each for the winners.
period lead. The hosts who hit 36 of
Box score:
69 from the field for a red-hot 52 perSoulhern 1801 - De ll a John son 2·0·
cent sailed into the second period to
score successive 18 point quarters. . _4: Weese 12·2 26 ; Salse~ 12· 2· 26 ;
,
. ..
'Evans 5·0· 10; Tammy Sm1fh 4-2- 10 ·
Southern s fleXIblhly and bench Ela ine Smith 2-0-• ; Wolle • ·
strength allowed several Tornadoes Johnson 0 2 2. Tolals 36-8·80.
GREAT VALUES AT
to see action, while at the same time
Tromblc. 1261 - Coffman 2·0·• ;
· · ·
t ·d h II
Marv Ramey 1·2 4 : Jensen 1·0-2;
mamtammg a orr1 s oo ng spree. Morris 7 0 14, and Ahi e 1·0·2. Tot.nl s
Southern led at the half 36-18.
12· 2· 26 .
Led by Weese, Smith, Evans and
Score b y quarters:
118 E. Main
Salser, Southern stunned th;ough .~~Y~~~~n
: ~ 2~=~~
Pomeroy
the third period fur 25 points to lead
59-22 at the end of that round. In the I
last round Laren Wolfe, who hit four
The Daily Scnlincl
or six from the field, and Cindy
Evans, who was fiVe of seven,
!USPS 14$-MI
A Dhilll011 of Multimedia, lot.
boosted the hosts to an impressive
80-26 victory.
Published every aftemoon except S\llklay,
Monday tltroufh Friday, Ill CCIIlr!Stree~ by
Trimble hit 12 of 44 from the field
the Ohio Valey Publlahing Company •
for 27 percent and two of nine from
Multimedia, Jnc., Pomeroy, Ohio 45'111,
Campbeii C•nl•«m
Patrick Oivl5itJ n

52 WEEKS
A-YEAR WE
SPECIALIZE
IN CUTS
OF BEEF

HOURSz MON.-SAT. 9 AM TO 9 PM
SUNDAY: 11 AM TO 7 PM

process.

'""'"' "'"''Y uague

THE BEEF PEOPLE

BANANAS••••••••••••••••• 3 LBS. '1 00
KALE ••••••••••••••••••• 10 Ol

SPINACH.... ••••••••• 8

DAIRY
I

BROUGHTON

ICE MILK .............~~.~~~. 89e
MORTON

BROUGHTON

..

$}59~

2% MILK ................~~~~~~..

·

TV DINNERS .........·..•...79e BUTTER............·..............!-~~~ ..s16•
MORTON
Fresh From Burdett's Farm
POT PIES ................... 39e LARGE EGGS ...................~~. 79e

Prices EHectlve Throueh Saturday, Januarv 24th

Store Hours: 9 a. m. to 9 p. m. Mon. thru Sal 11 a. m. to 7

m. on

WE ARE LOCATED AT. lHE CITY LIMITS OF
MIDDLEPORT &amp;POMEROY
,,

�'
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'

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TodJJy's

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CONFECTIONERY
"Decorated Cakes to~ ·
All occasions"
PH.Hl-6342
317 N. 2nd
Middleport, 011.

AI' Correapollde~l

-Anyof-=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;=j

iii

. *i&lt;.a,.

Eagle linebackers close
field," he said, motioning toward an
end zone. "It was a sweep, second
play of the game. Chuck Muncie was
carrying the ball. We were in a 3-4
defense (with three rushing linemen
and four linebackers) and I started
outside.
"My foot caught in the seam of the
turf and just then Conrad Dobler hit
me. I couldn't get my leg out of the
turf. I heard a pop, three times, the
kind you hear when you crack the
knuckles in your hand"
Bergey went down and on the
ground he watched the' tackle being

NEW ORLEANS (AP)- There is
a link between Philadelphia
linebackers Bill Bergey and John
Bunting that goes much deeper than
the full beards they wear or the fact
that they play side-by-side in the
Eagles' 3-4 defense.
It is the jagged scars that run
along their left knees, the souvenirs
of injuries that very nearly ended
their football careers.
On Sunday, Bergey and Bunting
will face the Oakland Raiders in
Super Bowl XV. It is the game that
pro football players wait a lifetime
to play but for these two Eagle
linebackers, it means so much more.
Bunting tore up his knee at New
England in October, 19'18. He spent
the next year rehabilitating it and.by
sheer detennination, he battled his
way back into the starting lineup by
the beginning of the !979 season.
Bunting was just getting iitc
customed to playing again when
lightning struck the Eagles'
linebacking corps again.
In the third game of the 1979
season, Philadelphia was playing
New Orleans in the Louisiana Super·
dome, where the Super Bowl game
will be played Sunday. Bergey will
never forget the game or what happened.
"It was down at that end of the

,·

By WW Grillllley

&gt;

j 'Laurel Cliff news

CAKE DECORATING _.
Classes Starting Soon
ca 11 tor Details

Sports World

Q)

...- !

I thought, 'But he carne 'back from
his knee and he's playing.' Bunting
was my guiding light. ''
Bergey said he had to learn to play
football all over again. "Sometimes
I'd fall down, like a child just learning to walk."
There was plenty of pain and
anguish on the road to recovery but
Bergey doesn't regret his sacrifice
one bit.
"I have cherished every moment

NEWORLEANS(AP)
Oakland's
young blades tempted to
sneak out this weekend for a taste of
raunchy Bourbon Street should take
heed.
" They have to go through ol' Tooz
first," says the Raiders' gargantuan
defensive end, John Matuszak.
"We're here to win a football game.
'Personally, I'm going to see there's
no funny business.''
Matuszak, an awesome 6-foot-3,
200-pound hulk of a man is. the selfappointed guardian of the Raiders'
morals heading into Sunday's Super
Bowl XV, against the Philadelphia
Eagles.
There is an irony in that.
Matuszak, who has been discarded
by four clubs and once felt
blacklisted, is renowned as formerly
one of the most notorious hell-

su
·

PER SAlf Of FABRICS

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50% Off .
ALL KNITS

20% OFF
SIMPUCITY
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Jjna/

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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;~•

raisers in the National Football
League.
" l have had enough parties for 20
people's lifetinles," he insists,
fingering a silver crucifix around his
neck. "Now L've grown up. I'll keep
our
young guys out of trouble - you
since I've been back," he said. " You
can
bank on that." .
get a whole new perspective once .
Matuszak,
who was picked up by
you've had to sit out for awhile."
the
Raiders
in
19'16 after four clubs
Bergey and Bunting play the left
made.
found
him
too
tough to handle, is
linebacker slots with Frank
' '
detennined
that
Oakland add a
'
" Bunting made the stop and it's LeMaster and Jerry Robinson on the
•'
ironic. We had the same injury, slit· right side in Philadelphia 3-4 defen- second Super Bowl title to the one
ch for stitch. On the play when I se. That places special respon- won in 1977.
"The nng I got from Super Bowl
went down, making the tackle gave sibilities on the up-front guys + All
Eleven
has made my left ann three
him the confidence he needed to Pro nose guard Charlie Johnson and
than my right," he
inches
longer
ends Carl Hairston and Dennis
know he could play again."
says.
"I
need
another
ring to make
Bergey limped to the sidelines Harrison.
my
right
arm
even:"
with ligament and cartilage
Matuszak's career has been a
damage. That night he underwent
Johnson's role is the most inone, marked by a loose-living
riotous
extensive surgery. At age 34, his teresting.
style,
brawls,
tiffs with the law and
career seemed in very real jeopar·
"My responsibility is to play the
with his bosses.
constant
feuds
dy.
run," he said. "I'm the running
A
Mid-Westerner
oui of Oak
" Never once did I think of not specialist. That's what they tell me.
Creek,
Wis.,
he
played
football for
coming back,'' he said. ''When I was If I do my job successfully, I come
Dan
Devine
at
Missouri
but left in
on the operating table and l realized . out of the lineup, because we force
PER SHEET
his
sophomore
year
after
b!!ating up
I had the same injury as John, I them to pass and they' ll bring in Ken .
another man.
thought to myself 'Oh no.' I knew Clarke or Claude Hwnphrey for
" The guy tried to take the dress off
what he had gone through. And then those downs."
the girl I was in love with," the Tooz
said. "I rearranged his face."
Matuszak transferred to Tampa,
which he said was then an "outlaw
school- they got everybody nobody
wanted. He earned All-America
drawing
the
lion's
share
of
the
golf's best drawing card.
status
and was the No.I pick in the
galleries,
the
favorite's
role
is
likely
And, although denied so long, the
1973
college
draft, going to the
to
fall
to
Johnny
Miller
or
Bruce
sliimned-down Palmer still holds
Houston
Oilers.
Uetzke, the winners of the first two
hopes lor another Tour victory.
" The mystery is still ·there, tournaments this year. Uetzke took ·, ----------"----'L-----------------------whether l CAN still win," said the Bob Hope title over the weekend
with a record score and Miller won
Palmer
the
Tucson Open that kicked off the
"!think I can.
1981
PGA Tour.
" I'm playing a littler better," said ·
Palmer, who last year won the r---------------1 I
. Oanadian PGA. "It's getting closer
I
all the time," he said in the
I
SWEETHEART
clubhouse locker room, and took a
I
Pink Llqulcl
slow and easy swing with an
I
imaginary club.
I DISHWASHING
" One of these days soon, you're
I
going to see a hot streak." he said.
LIQUID
BY CORONET
This week, perhaps?
I
QUICKIE
100
COUNT
.
" Probably not this week," he said
SAVE
I ( • ) 22 oz. Size
AUTOMATIC
and flashed · that famous, oftKLEENEX
·
REGULAR 79'
I f- photographed smile.
SPONGE
TISSUES
FOR$}
While 11 Lnts
"I don't think I'm quite ready yet.
ROLLS
MOP
SAVE
30'
~
"I need a little more age and exLimit 4 Bom
'9.99 Value
perience.''
While Palmer is a~nost certain of

RED OAK .
PANELING

,,

l/8"x4'x8'

$495

PHOENIX (AP)- The late entry
of legen&lt;lary Arnold Palmer added a
certain glitter to the already-strong
field assembled ior the $309,000
?hoenix Open golf tournament.
· "Why, yes," he said in response' to
a question as to whether there was
.. &gt;any specific reason he'd made the
last-minute decision to play in this
event that gets underway Thursday
on the 6,726 yard, par 71 Phoenix
CountrY Club course.
"The weather's too cold in
Florida," he said, the re£erence
•· being to his winter horne near Orlan·

DELTA
PAPER
TOWELS

do.
His decision, of course, was a
great boon to the local sponsors and
virtually assures them of a successful event. Although a nonwinner in the United States for eight
years and now a sometimes com·
petitor in the seniors events, the 51year-old Pabner still exerts a
magic, magnetic effect on the

r-,;;;;;~;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;:;:il

galleries.
Almost certainly the most-loved
player of all time, be still ranks as
the game's greatest gate attraction. .

r'

y

~?:'

SVAC box scores
Buffalo (48) - Atkinson 11·0·22 ;
Harris 2 · 1 · ~ ; Brown 4·2·10; Christy 5·
0·10; Tucker 0·1·1. Totals 22·4·48,
North Gallia {49)- Blackburn 6·3·
15; Shriver 2·o-4 ; Lee 5·0· 10; Queen
3·0·6; Deel 1·0·2; Payne 3·0-6 and
Roberts 3·0·6. Totals 22-3·49.
By quarters :
Buffalo
·
10 13 16 9- 48
N. Gallia
12 12 12 13- 49

f\f-1Ci2/T~

Jtl-tfp??0 .

with

Hannan Trace (4t) - Jones 16,
Webb B. Chapman 7. Petrie 6, Pack
4.
.
· St. Joseph (57) - Kinney 22. Cran·
ce lJ, Gagai 12, Holmes 6, Bokovitz
2, Waginger 2.
By quilrters :
Hannan Trace
10 8 11 12- 41
St . Joseph
11 12 12 22- Sl

NATURALIZER®
Navy &amp; Wine

OAK HILL (64! - McCoY 9·4·22 ;
Ounn3·0·6; Slone 3·2·8; Williams 8·3·
' 19; Kalinoskv 3·39. Totals a -12-64.
SOUTHWESTERN
(59)
Sizemore 2·0·4; Burleson 7·1·15;
Russell 3· 2·8; Newberry 7·2·16 ;

......

24·1 1-59.

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comfort features working for you I
·Fully padded insoles, a ·complete
size range, and step-softening, .
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your fashion investment.

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DC

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AGENCY, INC.

Serving Meivs Co. Sinh 1868
Phone 992·2342 or "t·2690

HARTLEY SHOES,

z

15 Feet free

I MENS PAJAMAS
I REGULAR '7.99

1,,.,,,
c;,...., ' ""
-lyle \ olids " r
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SAVE 50%

5 M L XL

SOLID COLOR TERRY

Percale Printed

BATH
: TOWELS

I

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lr reguli'lrs

trom

1&lt;1mOIJS Sou thern M i l l

~ILLOW
"

6 dl l

1erent so l id colon Thirsty
l err)' . Now at Big , Big
1.11vlngs

INC~

Middle of Upper Block, Pomeroy, Oh.
Store Hours: 9·5 Dally
Open Fri. Nighttil8:09 P.M.

CASES

Madl in U.S.A. 110 thread covnl . Full size
Pol)'ttter cotton ble nch . lrr~ulars h om
one ol iht foremost mills.

••

RfG. '1.39

20 Below
99' hlue

52~

swt allis

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Long

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1h

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6 F~r '1

t ar d lg t~n

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&lt;olef!vc Of' shorl sletvt tops In

$}68 PAIR

DY BARS
REG. 25'
00

WOMENS
SWEATERS
And TOPS
I nt1 rt: !! loc k.

Boa Of 150

COFFEE
FILTERS
REG. '1.79
200 Count

99~

Tile Daily sentinel

Ohi,

••

I Art interest group develops ·irt Meigs ·Marrin:ge announced

The Laurel Cliff Free Methodist
Church had an attendance SwiCiay of
1M with special music being presented by Larry Clark, Joeeph Hlggen·
botham of Colwnbus, and the Rev.
Floyd Shoot, paator.
Mr. and Mrs. J01eph Higgenbotham and daughter, Erin, Colwnbua were the weekend guests of her
parent&amp;, the Rev. arid Mr. Shook.
Brenda Haggy and children of
Middleport spent Sunday with her
parent&amp;, Mr. and Mrs. James
Gilmore.
Mr. and Mrs. Fare Countryman,
Johnstown, visited over the weekend
with Mr. and Mrs. Roy Howell.
Mr. and Mrs. Phil Wise of Belpre
attended services at the Laurel Cliff
Church and then vialted his parenta,
Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Wise, Chester.
Friends of the conununity have
received work that A. "Nip" Allen, a
former rUiderit now living In
Florida, Is recuperating from recent
surgery.

Eighteen persons interested in the of art. It was decided thai later as •·isher, Besste :;tivers, Barbara
development of fine arts in Meigs the group progresses, there will be Murray , Rachel Le Febre, Robert
County met Monday night in the art individual associations and Buck, Nancy Yoachim, and Debra
workshops whicll.willcater to the·ar- Hill.
room at Meigs High School.
Next meeting will be held Monday
Mrs. Rebecca Circle acted as tists' particula·r interest.
Juanita lieving gave a demon- at 7 p.m. in the Meigs art room.
chairman for the group and stressed
the need for self-expression whether stration on the proper materials to Those attending are encouraged to
it be art, writing, photography, use in painting ln ·watercolor. She take work projects with them . Slavin
displayed several paintings as she will be on hand to give assistance.
sculpturing or music.
Each person prese~t gave a brief explained the different techniques
-introduction of the particular media used.
SPECIAL SINGING
Attending were Jack Slavin,
of art or writing in which he or she is
There
will be special ·singing by
Interested and conunenled on how Robert Smith, Delores Long,
the
Soulfinders
at the Swlday night
the interest wu developed.
- Juanita Ludwig, Angela Chapman,
Ridge Freewill
service
at
the
Poplar
Don Salmons proposed that the Janet Koblentz, Tom Rose, Rebecca ·
E~eryone
is invited
Baptist
Church.
group organize a conununlty i'esour~ Circle, Don Salmons, Rhojean Mcto
attend.
ce to teach young people in the fields Clure, Elizabeth Stwnbo, Sarah

Janet E. Hill, Pomeroy, and
Roger G. Theiss, Racine, were
united in marriage at 7:30 p.m.
on Dec. 31 at the Forest Run
United Methodist Church. The
Rev. Stanley Merrifield performed the ceremony before a
Small group of close friends and
family . Attendants for the couple
were Mary and Gerald Powell,

MEETING CANCElLATION
A meeting of the Twin City
Shrinettes scheduled for Thursday
night has been cancelled.

ZESTA
SALTINE
CRACKERS

The . R~clt Springs United
Methodist Church hosted a farewell
party recenUy honoring the Rev.
and Mrs. James Corbitt and family
who are moving to Stoutsville where
uie Rev. Mr. Corbitt has accepted a
pastorate.
Following a potluck dinner, a gift
of money was presented to the
familY who have been in the cornm\lflity for more than four years.

~~59~

•

'
j

'

.

Pomeroy.
Others at the wedding were
Mrs. Marie Theiss, Beth Thomas
and Mark, Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Rupe and Bobby, Mr. and Mrs.
Clifford Hill, Max Hill, Jr., Mr.
and Mrs. Verne Ord, Jamie and
Kyle. Mr. and Mrs. Homer
Newell, Steven P. Nease and Cindy Park.
:1

....
;

;,

•••

'"'

..••...••.

ANNOUNCEMENT

'"

The Rock Sprmgs Grange will :~
meet at 7: 30 Thursday night at the ; .
' .
hall.
·~

I

'

...·-..

USDA
INSPECTED

WE RESERVE
THE RIGKT
10 UMIT
QUANTITIES

CDumtY STDilES

Woodsmen plan
family party

GALLIP-".' '-'" AND POMEROY STORES

Modern Woodmen of America,
Camp !0900, will meet for a famlly
&gt;arty at 6:30 p.m. Sattll'day at th
Coolville Senior Citize1111 hall. Sandwiches, ice cream and beverages
will be served by the Camp wlth
members to take cakes.
Recognition will be given to Diana
Lynn Pulli '&lt; on her graduation from
Ohio Univeo sity In November. She
was a modem Woodmen of America
schol!lrship student. Miss Pullins
received a ·bachelor of science
degree In computer science_.
Proceeds from the recent benefit
. supper will be presented at that time
to a representative of the Meigs
Community Clasll and workshop for
the mentally retarded.
At the pa~y there will be group
singing, games, contests, and
,drawings for door prizes.
'

Page-7

PRICES GOOiJ TODAY lHRU SUNDAY, JANUARY 25, 1981

TENDER

FRENCH CITY
BRAND

LEAF
TEABAGS
100
COUNT
PKG.

PICNICS

WIENERS

•179

(Milll79~

•• ~

•

GRADE A

SMOKED

::; FRESH EGGS ::::
111
~d

.....

'.~

:69~ m
•.

social calendar
WEDNESDAY
S~ECIAL

MEETING, Pomeroy
Chapter Ill, Royal Arch Masons, 7:30
p.m. Wednesday ; work in mark
)naster and past master degrees.

THURSDAY
. KITCHEN SHOWER for Spencer
·and Shirley Carpenter will be held
:Thursday at 7:30p.m. in the annex
:or the Racine United Methodist
;Church. The event Is being spon•sored by members of the church.
:The Spencers; home was recently
:damaged by fire. The public is in;vited to attend and gifts may be left
·in the church annex on Thursday.
: ROCK SPRINGS GRANGE, 7:30
Thursday night at the hall.
· LEND-A·HAND SOCIETY of
:Harrisonville will meet at the horne
:01 Mrs. Stella Atkins, Thursday, 7:30
p .m.

:Carmel news notes

FOR

WINDSHIELD
WASHER

....1

'

10 g.g¢

I.

..
Score by quarters:
·, Oak Hill
17 11 20 1Q--64
Southwestern
10 20 12 17- 59

79¢

JUMBO SIZE ROLL
SO feet Plus

'Reaular 't79

I
I
I
I
I

, , Baker 5· 4· 1-4 ; Sterrett 0·2-2. Totals

~·

HEAVY DUTY!
26 Gallon Size

'

-·

SARAN WRAP

PLASTIC TRASH BAGS

~LKIN'

NATURAL

2

s 39¢

&gt;mer~y-Middlep,~rt,

Host farewell party

Palmer late entry in tournament ·

.•.

I'

J_anuary 21,1981

Sentinel

: Florence Circle and Linda Pat' terson visited with Brent Patterson,
; a student at Rio Grande College,
: recently.
; Mr. and Mrs. Hayw8'rd Bissell of
· Keno spent Sunday afternoon wlth
: Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Circle.
' Junior Johruion and Ronnie John' son and son, Racine, were Sunday
· afternoon visitors of Arthur JohnI

son.

I

•"

AND

KNEE-HI

, Missy Van Meter ol Portland was
the overnight guest of Becky Lee
Thursday.
Mr. and Mrs. Glen Ables of Bald
' Knob were recent vlslt'ors of Mr. and
Mrs. Douglaa Circle
Mr. and Mrs. James Circle of New
Haven, W. Va. spent Sunday with
Mrs. Mary Circle.

REUNION APRIL I
Fred Winger, 3806 Trwnna Ave.,
Bakersfield, Calif. 93309, hu sent
out an appeal to fonner crew members and officers of the u.s.s. Fanning (DD386) to contact him if t~y
are Interested in a reunion April 3.
' Hll telephone nwnber is (1106) 8319487. The Fanning was a famed
, •Wortd War II destroyer.

SHOP

lADIES'
SHEER

SAVE

OR

ANKLE HI

MEN'S

SUPER BOWL SPECIAL
FROM Gl.._urTI

.STRIPE lOP

TUBE
SOCKS

5 COUNT
ATRA
BLADES

TRAC II BlADES
9 COUNT

F&amp;AM-TO MEET
The aMuall1111JM!Cllon of Pomeroy
Lod&amp;e 164, F&amp;AM, will be held at
7:30p.m. Friday. Work will be In the
• entered apprentice degree. All
MaaOill are Invited.

•

•11

$199
PKG.

MEN'S
12 OZ. DENIM

WRANGER
JEANS

9
TRAC II RAZOR

$7~!

'

�I'

Page-8-The DailY Sentinel

Racine Social Events
Hart of Elliott, Maine.
By Mrs. Francis Morris
Mr. and Mrs. Al~rt Hill visited on
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Hart of St.
Cloud, Floriaa .are guests of his Chrisbnas Oay· with their children,
brother, Mr. and Mrs. I..inley Hart. Mr. and Mrs. Bob Hill and Mr. and
They can1e for the funeral services · Mrs. Billy Hill, Racine, and Mr. and
of their father, Mr. Earl Hart. Mrs. WaidFoster, Marietta.
Spending overnight Wednesday
Others relatives coming from a
distance included Mr. and Mrs. and Christmas Day with Mr. and
Gerald Hart and family of Newark ; Mrs. Bob Hill were Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Willis and family Philip Hill and son, Robbie, o£
of Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Eldred Shsde; Mr. and Mrs. Pat Hill, Jerod

January 21, 1981

1merJy . Middlep·ort, Ohio

I'

I

Mrs. Margaret Houdashelt spent
Christmas with Mr. and Mrs. Ronald
Smith, Pomeroy Route, and spert
Saturday in Gallipolis with Mt. and
Mrs. Milton Houdashelt and New
Year's Day with Mr. and Mrs. Otto
Lohn In Pomeroy.
Mrs. Francis Morris spent two
days over Christmas with. her grandson, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Lake, Lori
and Sean, Athens, and a few days in
Columbus with Mr . and Mrs. Bob
Swift.

Uniontown.
Mrs. Kenneth Swart of Akron
~pent several days with Mrs. James
Swart and Mr. and Mrs. Alfred
Crow.
Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Hayman and
Jennifer of Pomeroy route spent
New Year's evening with Mr. and
Mrs. james Autherson.
Mr. and Mrs. Bud Simpson of
Seymour, Ind. spent a Friday and
Saturday with Mrs. Grella Simpson.
They were enrout.e to Florida.

Mrs. Judy Brace and children and
Mrs. Norrif Simms of Crown · City
visited Mrs. Mabel Brace Saturday.
Mr. I..inley Hart entered Holzer
Medical Center recently and underwent foot surgery.
Mrs. Gretta Simpson entered
Holzer Medical Center Jan. 16 for
surgery to straighten two fingers on
her right hand.
Mr. Henry Roush returned home
after spending Christmas with Mr.
and Mrs. John Fisher and family at

and Joe, Pomeory: Mr. and Mrs.
Jay Hill, Minersville; Mrs. Louise
Thompson, Middleport.
Mr. and Mrs. Billy Hill, Jr. and
son, Racine, Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Hill
of Plants, Mr. and Mrs. Tim Hil and
Jeremy, Racine, Mr. and Mrs. Chris
Hill of Shsdyside were Christmas
evening dinner guests of their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Billy Hill, Sr.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Birch spent two
days with Mr. and Mrs. Elza Birch
and Mrs. Emma Salser.

J&lt;muary 21,1981
DICK TRACY
I

SINCE YOUR WIFE DIED.
SON-IT'S TIME.

OFF IN CAL!iARY TO I"UY

SHE'S NOW ON HER WAY
UP THE 501./TH NAHANNI!
' THERE'S A BUSH PILOT
WAICIN6 IN YELLOW"
KNIFE TO FLY
YOU THERE'!

r WHAT LITTLE.·
CHORH I'M HERE'
T'SEE ABOUT A
JOINT OIL 'DEAL
WITH Mci&lt;EE'
INVUHRIES!

ARCTIC DUDS AND M.loE-T A WARR ICK
RE'PR~SENTATIVI! ...

IAYI Ul' TO 40% 0111
IOOI'IR COlT CUniRI
COIPAIED TO OTHERIU•DS• AT llROCER.

·-

10 OTMEIIUIDS AI£ STOCKED

ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY

of

rud""' •v81ltble
~

r'IOiad

..,.,,.,_,

1I&amp;IT\S 1$ leQUired 10 !)I
101' 's.&amp;'e rn &amp;ach ICr~r Stote e•cept •
,.. !hillel If ~ oo rvn 01.11 of ¥1 . , . . . . . , .

rtem , we INIH otter yOU .,.our ct'IO&lt;ce ot a c01"11perab'e rtem
~ 8v..a.bie. reflectrrog 11\e s.ame y.,..mQS or 1 11rnc"'«:k
wtltCh w.ll eonUe '(OU to ~r c ha&amp;e the &amp;d\oef11Md rtem •' !'he

ldYtlf'tiMd pnc.e oNrthrn XI dlvs,

TOTAL SATISFA CTION GU ARANTEE

VULOW (liNC

Avondale 2' ·01
Peaches ''"
Sweet
17 -oa
Peas .

E""""'t'UOQ yOu bvy II l(.rc&gt;ger IS ~ul t .lnteed too y~ t IOt.ll
utllfKIIO!"' reg~rctte. ot m.ar'lu!acture&lt; II rOu are 1'101 wtrs
'*I, Kr0981 Will teplac:e your otem ...,th 1he s.me brand Of •
eotnpWable bland Of refvnd .,.o.,.r P.,IC~iUf ptiCe

~VONOALf

COII'fi1GtoiT 1111 - THI UOC.U CO ITEMS AND 'lttCES
GOOOSU"'OAT JAN . II THIIIU SAlUitOAV JAN 2-t 1•111N
POMEROY AND GALLI POLIS STORES .

KROGER COST CUTTER COUPON

: o-~9J-:./
'

I

.,

1 (~~· ~
I

! :;~
I
I

12

DF

I

..

''"

FROZEN U.S .D.A. IN!iPE&lt;CTID
BRAND !·6·L8. AVG .

WlltUUVI THIIIGHT TO liMIT 0UANT111ES NONE SOLD
TO OULflit1 .

150

Gwaltney
Great Dogs

I
I

1
I

~~~c~!:g
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Ls.

lb.

59szs9C

Top Sirloin Steak ...... .lb.

~::79c
l
Ground Beef.. ...........
.I

LIMIT 3 POUNOS WITH COUPON
coul"'• ~ooo su• 1111 11 u r 1.n 11 1u 1

• '

SIIIJtcr TO .,.,.UtUtf SUH 11 tocu run

Instant
CoHee ..

o•n Str1p Steak .... ... .lb .

U .S. GOV 'T GRADED CHOICE BONELESS

sz 99

5
·lb
• lot

VA.C PAK

$
lb.

CoHee ..

139

Ice
Cream

Boston Butt
Pork Roast ..
5·7·LB. AVG . WHOLE

S.moked Picnics ..........
THORN APPU VALI.EV

Ctn.

'"

IN YOUR CAGE, YES. THIS OH! I'IELL .•.
COMPLEX I'IA5 FUNDED BY THEY MU6T
THE I'IAABIJCKS
BE TAIUH'
FOUHDATIOH.
6000 CARE 0' HIM
THEN ... AREN'T THEY,
AsP?·-

79c

''"

Angel Food ,...••
Coke ...... •••

FRESH BONE IN

SERVE 'N' SAVE SLICED
All VARIETIES

KROGER FROZEN

S]79

"'''" $119

COUNTIIIY OVlN

Paper

HERE IH THE
HOSPifAL '? 15
IT ALLOWED, ASP?

,OlAit PAIC

I
I

LOUIS RICH

10·or

59e
33e
18c

(~. $399

Embaur

••••••••••••••••••
Luncheon
·lb .
Meats ... ... .. lPkg
.
Turkey Franks '.... .l·lb.
Pkg .
2
·lb .
Fried Chicken .... Pkg .
b·oz.
Orange Juice .. 6 Cons

'""

KltOGU

:OV 'T GR~DED CHOICE lONE IN BEEF

REGULAR OR CHUB PAK
ANY SIZE PKG .

· LIMIT ONE COUPON PER FAMILY

l -a1

Sliced Bacon ......

1-lb.
Pkg.

1b.79c

• ALLEY OOf'

$119

LISS.E~ T'ME! !EStPES LETTI~'
WlLD WOME~ K~OW lllCACTI.Y WHERE WE

OOVV

DON'T '\'OU
GO GI:TTIN'

WELL, I, UH ,
l DUNNO .. .

ARE• .JUST WHAT DYOU FIGURE ON DOIN'
WIT&gt;&lt; THIS STUFF ONCE Y'5TEAL IT I'

46· 01

'""

ICIOCII WHif(

Grapefruit

$139

U · OI

' ""

(6·PAKj FROZEN KROGER

BROWN 'N' SERVE

:~::u~;s. ,.. ~·2 ~ ·3;:

KROGER

1

5 19

White Bread ....... ~~~~· $129
Miracle Whip. .... .... ~; $129
317
Kraft Dinners ....... :. /k9~' $1
2

Marshmallow
Cremt ..... 1l·oa
Jor

Kroger Fresh
Orange Juice

$

KRAFT

MACARONI

GASOLINE'AL!.EY

GOLD CIUT

99

Gal.
Ctn. ·

15
LOWEEZV
HOME?

GONE!!

NOPE--SHE'S

GOIN:GOIN~

JUICI ......

GOIN' ---

CLABBER FALLS

d ·OI .

&lt;•n

COLD CltUl

Manh • l ·lh
mallows ... •••
AYONOAU

AVAILAIU OHl V IN
STORISWITH
DELl DEPTS,
HOT fOODS
AVAILAIU llem

PINT RETURNABLE BOTTLES
·KROGER

!Natural Flavor
·Gal.
::Ice Cream .. •;,Ctn
.

$199

:KROGER

~(ollage Cheese .'li~::

79

C

1Agree Shclnpoo. Btl. $169
~Coffee Filters .. s~k~~· 39c
12·01.

Pepsi Cola
or Seven-Up

Pear
a -oa.
Halvtl . .. , Co11

UPAT

TIL 7pM

SAPiT;~;SWISHBONE

•• !!

Moroschino

Cherrit1

5399

White or
Yellow Corn ... ear
FIIISH

·

.

7
9
c
sz 29

BAKING

~~t

Potatoes ....... Ba9

2
Carrots .. .. ... .. . 8~9

C

69
Rome Apples .. ~~9 99 c
5 s139
fRESH

liED DELICIOUS

Apples ... ... .. .. &amp;!9
1

Uma
' 01 .
Belftl . ..... "Con

s

BARNEY

2
French Bread.. 't~:~·

IliAD AYAILAI&amp;.I ONlY Al "t'OUit IILVU IIIOGI &amp; POMIIOV

IMIAISV

Deli Style
Boiled Ham
Ill.

!!
2
TO OltDER

s.hMI
.._
I
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...... llg ... lo•
KIOGII

Oyater

r~k
~era

... .
.. u...

. .,... . ...

ItO VAlut

Vonllle
W--'

,

. " ·••·

KltOCII

Tollllto •.••
PoI t I .. .. .. Cen'

O&amp;C

Onion Rlnga ~:!

KIOGII OUAITIU

CemOII
Margorlne ..:..~:

SH ES TE LL 'IJ&amp;
TI1E: TRUTI1 2

'\1:: DON'T...
BUT IT /.S

P05B IP.&gt;L E !

mms .)

10:00 12l l ) ( 7) QUINCY A t"tHef and a
con•(Jct ed Na21 war c riminal smug gl e a fortune 111 pr ec ious gems
1hro ugh Lo s Ang eles airport in what
1:1 su pp ose d t o b e a 300-year -old
mummy, but Quin c y di sco vers that
th e· mummy" has only b ee n d ead tor
th ree week s (ijO mms)

.11) NEWS

Sweet
Potot oes .. ••.••
c•• ·

Swiss Cheese ... . .. .lb_S] 29
FRESH BAKED
APP Ie p•le.. ...... .. ..8-lnch
12 9
Pie
FIIISHUKED
$119

B UT SUPr CSE: SHE:S A ' "&lt;'A U::' ?
H0 \\1 DO WE KNO\V

EVENING
6 o00 12H0 17 10 18 \110H12J IO NEWS
• 3 BIBLE BOWL
I 5I
CAROL BURNETT ANil
FRIENDS
t 6 J ABC NEWS
19 1 3-2-1 ·CONTACT
f11l OVER _EASY Hosts : Hugh
Downs and Frank Bla ir .
6 o30 I 210 (f) NBC NEWS
.
13 1 30 MINUTES WITH FATHER
MANNING
I 5 1 BOB NEWHART SHOW
16 1 FACE THE MUSIC
0 18 1110) CBS NEWS
I9 I
WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
1111 LILIAS, YOGA AND YOU
112110 ABC NEWS
6 o58 ( Sl CBN UPDATE NEWS
7 o00 12 10 PM MAGAZINE
I 3 I SEND FORTH YOUR SPIRIT
15 1 ALLIN THE FAMILY
I 81112) CEl FAMILYFEUD
I 7 I WILD KINGDOM
0 18 1 TICTACDOUGH
I9
[11)
MACNEIL·LEHRER
REPORT
11&lt;!1 NEWS
7o30 1210 BULLSEYE
( 3 I AT HOME WITH THE BIBLE
( 4 1MOVIE -(CARTOON) ••• 1'A
Boy Named Chitrlie Brown"
1969
I 5 1 SANFORD AND SON
16 11\) ( 81 JOKER'S WILD
I 11 HOLLYWOOD SQUARES
! 9 )1 11) DICK CAVETT SHOW
1101 $100,000 NAME THAT TUN!
112110 FACE THE MUSIC
7 : 58 13 ) CBNUPOATENEWS
BoOO 1210 (7 ) REAL PEOPLE
3 I SIGHTS AND SOUNDS OF
LIFE
( 5 )MOVIE·(WESTERNJ••• ''Rare
Breed" 1966
I 6 }EIGHT IS ENOUGH Joa noie has
second thoughts about her career
as a television journalist and con·
siders marriage to one of her cow ork, er s, and Tommy be c omes Ni·
c ho las ' 'slave · lor a week to earn
11 cket s to a rock ca ncer! . (SO mins.)
(Ciosed·Captioned ; U .S .A.)
(!) ( 8 ) (10) ENOS Cat herine Bach
guest stars In her role asDe.isyOuke
when En asand Turk t akeona super ·
Internat ional jew elthi el known as
' The Cat' . (SO mins.)
l. 9l MAKING M. A.S .H. Narrated by
M ary Tyler Mo ore. thi s special
look s at what many c onsider to be
commer cial tel evi sio n's best an d
mos l successful entertainment
sen es, ·M . A. S H.", and seeks to
answer th e question most viewers
ask week after week : 'How do they ·
do it ?' (90 mins.)
11&gt;) ALLCREATURESGREATAND
SMALL ' Attendant Problems'
James and Siegl ri ed have a worryIng problem at lambing time . (60
mm s.)
112110 COLlEGE BASKETBALL
Penn State vs West Virgmia
University
Bo30 13 I JOHN WESLEY WHITE
8 :58 3) CBNUPOATENEWS
9 o00 1210 171DIFF 'RENTSTROKESin
, a school essay. Arnold depict s his
otdop11ve lather in such glowing
terms 1hat a lellow classmate and
taster ch ild asks him to have Mr .
Orummondadopthim, toe.( Ciosed·
C apt 1oned; U.S.A.)
I 31 CBN TELETHON
I 4 ) MOVIE ·(DRAMA) •• " Tin
Drum" 1979
16 ) TAXI The cabbies simply adore
111e at the garage as long es Latka
k eeps them su pplied with h is
grandma 's heavenly cookies, but
Jim 's discerning taste budB re¥eal
th at the goodies coni a in something
more potent ·than the usual
oa tmeai .
0 ( 8) l1ill CBS WEDNESDAY
NIGHT MOVIE 'Greased Lightning'
1977 Sta·r.s · Ri chard Pryor. Beau
Bndges. ,
•II' STALKING IMMORTALITY
Ttus do cument ary deals with the
c urrent app roaches be ing em·
p layed m the i"nve st 1gat ion of th e
phy Sio l ogy o f th e aging pro cess
and w11h I he future possibililies of
extendi ng the human lifespan. (60
mms.)
9 o30 121 0 Cll THE FACTS OF LIFE
·r ao lle l earns how gossip can hurt
!) eo pte whe n. to.tge t att enllon, she
spr eads" slmy th a 1Mrs . Ga rrett Is
an alc oholic .
18 1.SOAP
19 1 COUNTDOWN THE WHITE
HOUSEo REAGAN TRANSITiON
Th1 s pr ogram doc um ents the pre·
Sldefltial trans1ti on pe r iod, th e
Ca rt er-Reagan relatiOnsh ip and
olt e1s an e)(clus Jve interview with
President · eleot
Reagan.
(60

' 5I TBSEVENING NEW~ .
61112110 ABC NEWS CLOSEUP

.lWONOAU CUT

KIOGU

Broccoli ... ...... ..liunch
IDAHO RUSSET

•;::·

AVONOAU

Fried Chicken. Bo• s
99
P~rk BBQ ....... .... ... lb. 4

17 C

K NC \V 15 -&gt;, .::I RL SHOW ED
OUR H::'USE '!:STERr-\Y

Mandarin l ·o1 ,
0ranges " . !''"

SLICED OR IV THE PIECE
BIG EVE

IN THE HUSK FLORIDA

I

CL•\1 1\1'-12 your&lt; "O..THE: C.:
15 ~ Er&lt; F-\T,..Er&lt; T.:'C !

MlllCitUT

BYRON'S PULLED STVLE

'STAR

WINNIE
· A LL

DOWN TO

TH' AUCTION SALE IN

KltOGII

Pineapple
•

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69C

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~~~Nl
~ THAT SCRAMBLED WOIIO GAME
~ ~ ~~ ®
by Henri Arnotd and Bob Lee
Unscramble lhese lour Jumbles ,
one lener fo each square . to form
four ordin~ry words .

TAFUL

I. ........I_...I

, .,.,c"'&lt; ..., ,·- ~ · ~

~~~~y ~TOP!&gt;

E.tc'

TeleVision
e
e
VIewmg
JAN. 21 , 1981

CAPTAIN EASY

"fOI Sill Meftl COST

The Daily syntinei-Page--9

&gt;mcr.w - Middlcp ·lrl, Olli ·'

10o30 I 5I NBA BASKETBALL Atlanla
HHwks vs Los Angel es Lakers
! 9 ) PRESENTING KAREN AKERS
A 1e !;J\Jiar gu es t etn1 gh t club sinEur ·
npe a11d the Un1t ed St at es. th is mu ·
Sl CBI specia l pres ents th e
elega nce and style 0 1cabaret per ·
tmmer Karen Aker s
rtn OUTER liMITS
11 o00 I 21 0 ( 6) 171 0 l 8) 11QJ OV 10
NEWS
t 3 1 JEWISH VOICE
I 9 l MORECAMBE AND WISE
1 US 31 CBN UPDATE NEWS
t UO 1210 COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Un1v~r'S 1l y o f Florida vs Univ ersity
ot Ke11tucky
131 ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
&lt;I MOVIE ·iSCIENCE·FICTION)
••• " 2001 : I\ Space Odyuey "
1968
&lt;8 I 1121 10
ABC NEWS
NIGHTLINE
11 THETONIGHTSHOW 'BesiOI
Ca r5o n· Guest s Ptt l u Fountain.
Muui"e en St apleton. Or Jonathan
M1llor . (Re peRI 60 mtns.)
0 181 CBS LATE MOVIE
'SOME ONE ' S WAT CHING ME '
1978 S tlH S L £\ Urllr1 Hull oh, David
Bune y
9 ABC CAPTIOI&lt;ED NEWS
10 1 MOVIE · (SUSPENSE) •••
" DandylnAaPic " 1968
12o00 6 1&lt;t2110 LOVE BOAT ·-POLICE
WOMAN
12o3D 7 TOMORROW
t 2:45 S MOVIE · (ADVENTURE) n • t ) l
··zulu" 1964
&gt;2 o58 &lt;3 1 CBNSPORTSREPORT
1,00 3 REX HUM BARD
t.30 i 0 TOMORROW !JOINED IN
PROGRESS)
2.00 3 GUOD N~ WS

l 1

.• ,,.... . ,

r

J

I
'
A 5EA50NAL FRUIT
'YOU M I ~HT FIND
IN 60ME LONDON
MARKE:I6.

IDRENGEt .

I I I ) I

IDOOMIN I

Now arrange the circled leners to
form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon .

Printanswerhere:

..

"K XXI Xr ::
(Answers tomorrow) : '

I Jumbles

vesoerday·s

VIPER

LEECH

BEDBUG

DEVOUR

Answer : VVhat the photographer turned real estate

agenl ended up as - A "DEVELOPER "

Jumble Book No. 15; containing ~10 puulfls,. Is a¥ailable tor $1.75 postl)llld
from Jumble, Clo this newspaper, Bor 34, Norwood, N.J. 07648. Include your
nam•. address. zip eode and make checks payable to Newspaperbooks.

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Safe and sound slam play
NORTH

notrump. so North made no
eflort to explore grand slam
possibilities with his 12 points
and simply bid six.
West opened a diamond and
South saw that if East held the
club king there would be no
problems. Suppose West held
his majesty? Then South could
still make six by getting home ,
with two heart tricks before· &gt;:
going after clubs.
. ;.,
After that start he would·='
bring home the bacon if East'~
held four hearts to the ace '
West would not have a heari :-l
left to lead back to his part· ·.;
ner. Even if West held three
hearts he might not lead one. •
A smart West would, but it is •
remarkable how even the

1·21 ·81

+KH
"10 53
• A Q J 10

+J 9 8
WEST

EAST

+7532

• 98 6
'I'A987

"4 2
• 9862
+K 65

.543

+7 3 2
SOUTH
+AQ 10

'I'KQJ6
• K7
+A Q 10 4

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
West

Nortb

East

Pass
Pass

ti NT

Pass

Soutb
2NT
Pass

,.

world's greatest players mlss '::

plays Lhat arm chair quarterbacks would never overlook.
Anyway, SouLh 'rose with
dummy's ace and dropped his
king. Then he led the three of
hearts to his queen: went back
to dummy with a second, dia·
mond and led the five of
hearts . East ducked for a sec· ·
ond time and South was home.'
He entered dummy with a
spade, took and lost the dia·
mond finesse and had his 12

Opening lead:+2

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

~

•

~

"1
~

,:

.:·

tricks since West was fresh

North and South were playlog a 21· or 22-point two

out of hearts.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE .-\SSN.)

.

•.

61 cdoo'•

"*'

by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
I Hindu deity

DOWN
1 All wound

5 Semitic
up in
language
2 Wrongly
11 Popular
3 Either
old song
April
12 Land of the
or May
maple leaf
4 Rainbow
13 Batter for
5 Sore
a batter
6 Crawford
15 Quiet !
film
16 French
7 Ending
river
for claim
17 Highlander's 8 Facing
Mr. Seaver
headgear
18 Cut off,
9 Innovative
employee
as fleece
20 " - Dreamer"lO Streetcar
21 Meat cut
driver
22 Philippine
sumac
23 Fill to
overflowing
25 Portent
26 Oland
film role
27 Unfavorable
28 That man
29 Plowed field
32 Devilkin
33 Three, in Pisa
31 Greek clan
b+--1division
36 Dispensed
~!i'Verdi opera
10 Vase handle
41 Parlor
piece
12 Vegetable

Yesterday's Answer'
14 One man,
27 Tinker Bell~
many women creator
::
19 Buck heroine 30 "Lorna - " ·:..
22 Radames'
31 Mistreat
love
33 Melody
: ;·
23 'Bishop's robe :15 French state
24 Unrestrained 37 Emulated
25 Bombay garb
Muffet
26 Bells
38 Pat

:z:

DAILY CRYPTO(}UOTE- Here's how to work it:
A X Y D I. B A A X R

Is

I, 0 N G F E I. I. 0 W

i.:l

One lctler simply stands for another. In this sample A
used (or the three L's, X for the two O's, l'lr . Single letters"'f ..
apostrophes, the length and formillion of the words are att .~
hints. Each day the end~ lertcrs ..arc different.
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Yesterday 's Cryptoquote: A STRAIGHT LINE IS SHORTEST
IN MORAlS AS WELL AS IN GEOMETRY.-RACHEL

MORE FIZZ
WASHINGTON lAP) - Carbon dioxide, the same
ga£ that puts "fizz" in soda and is the end product of
breathing, is used as a propellant in some aerosol containers that deliver a close-range spray.
The propellant pushes the liquid out of the containers.

..

�oage-l u

_..

January 21,1981

;· ~~~ Da lly Sentinel

Adventists
turn in eaffiings
Investment funds represent extra
What private enterprise can do

Beat•••

was seen recently when members of
the Pomeroy Seventh-day Adventist
Church turned in their "Investment
earnings" for the year. The 23member congregation turned in a
total of $116.10.
Rita White, investment leader,
reported that the projects which
nwnbered 12, were begun early in
the year, when members decided on
ways in which they felt they could
raise an extra gift for Adventist
world missions. The proji'Cts varied
from saving pennies to selling garden produce.

Of the Bend
By Bob Hoe£J.ich
By Bob Hoenich

Sentinel writer
Well - Tuesday was quite a
day!
Not o~Iy were the hostages
freed but there was the elaborate
inauguratton activity · in
Washington, D. C. News agencies
must have spent a fortune in
trying to keep up with both events
for the public which was also
frustrated in trying to keep up
wtth both events.
Carol Dickey, 317 Elm St., Edmonds, Washington, 98020, is
seeking some help from some of
you genealogists. ·
She is seeking infonnation on
the descendants of Samuel B.
Brown and Harriett McKnight.
She has an 1832 Bible that once
belonged to the couple and will be
glad to share the famiily records
listed !herem with anyone who
wishes them .
If you have knowledge please
contact Ms. Dtckey.
Did you serve on the llSS Boice
CL 47 of World War II fame' Efforts are betng made to find excrew members, both sailors and
_ marines, who served a board the
shtp. Any of those serving are
asked to contat Phillip J . O'Donnell , 2917 Florence Ave .,
Waukegan, Ill. 60085.
So you're tough' Well , do theMeigs Jayces ever have
something for you!
At their boxing matches to be
held beginning at 7 p.m. Saturday
at the Meigs High School, the
Jaycees will stage a tough man
competition dunng intennission.
There are three weight classifcations for the competition, up to
lBO pounds, 180 to 220 and over
220. Such contests are popular in
cities these ·days. If you're in-

terested in taking part, contact
Roger Stewart at 992-387!\.
So - here's your chance to find
out just how tough you are. The
emergency unit nwnber, by tbe
way, is 992-0663 ... lotsa luck.
Wallace and Muriel Bradford
represented the Meigs County
Fair Board at the annual fair
managers convention lteld In
Columbus this month . Entertairunent fur. county fairs is
sky high, the Bradfords report so
at this potnt tn time the entertairunent for the 1981 Meigs
Fair has not been pinned down.
However, the board is expected
to wrap up the entertairunent at
its February meeting .
Incidentally, the Bradfords
report tltat the convention did not
appear to be as well attended as
those of previous years, a
situation. they felt, was due to the
economy or the bad weather.
Let's take that one more time.
Letters to the editor are
welcomed but they must carry a
signature. We receive quite a few
such letters - a good many of
them wltich even 'heap praise on
some individual or group, believe
it or not - wtthout a signature. I
mean signatures such as ' ' A good
taxpayer," "A loyal supporter"
of what-have-you, just won't do it.
And - by the way. it would be
well for you to include your phone
nwnber and address. We must
verify that you do exist even
though a letter to the edttor
carries a signature.
Doesn't it make your blood
boil ' For years you paid all of
that money at the box office to
see his filmS and you didn't even
get invited to the inauguration.
Well - maybe next time; meaQwhile, you keep smiling.

Health Review
Female bladder ailment ·common
ANSWER: In the absence of obstruction of urine stoppage (stasis)
tl is probable that most people will
recover without medical therapy.
However, to speed recovery and to
·relieve unpleasant symptoms, antibiotic or other appropriate.therapy
sltould be given. Unfortunately, any
FEMALE AILMENT
QUESTION: My husband says condition that results in inc.omplete
that women get bladder infections emptying of the bladder assures the
more often than men. Is that true? · recurrence of infection in spite of
ANSWER: Yes, it is true that therapy. The first consideration
urinary bladder infection is more then, sltould be to detennine what
conunon in women, but this is before makes infection of the bladder
the age of 45. After 45 the frequency possible. This is so corrective
of infection in males approaches and measures can be taken, thus preventing ultimate damage of those
then surpasses that in females .
Women seem more prone to in-. precious upstream organs, the kidfection because of the shortness of neys,
(Editor's Note: Dr. Stockmal can- .
the tube (urethra) that connects tbe
bladder to the outside. Its length is not answer correspondence peronly abOut 4 em (about 11'l inches) sonally, but letters witlt questions of
and it ends in an area teeming with general interest will be answered in
the column. Please address
nonnal bactertal nora similar to tlte
bacteria found in the nearby anus. questions to: Robert G. Stockmal,
D.O., Ph.D., College of Osteopathic
Bladder infection associated with
Medicine, Ohio University, Atltens,
sexual intercourse may be the result
of the introduction of these bacteria Ohio, 45701. )
into the urethra by physical trawna.
Certain other conditions that keep
the bladder from emptying, such as
LAUREL CLIFF CHURCH
damage to tlte urethra during childThe
Young Adult Class of the
birth (urethrocele), weakened
Laurel
Cliff
Free Methodist Church
vaginal walls that allow the bladder
met
Thursday
night at tlte Meigs
to drop (cystocele), blockage of the
County
Infirmary
for a Bible study
uretltra by strictures, stones, or
and
business
meeting.
even cancer can lead to bladder inMrs. Mildred Jacobs conducted
fection.
The problem in the male is related the Bible study and a quiz following
primarily to his prostate. This is a prayer )ed by Bob Barton and group
gland that surrounds the male singing. Refreslunents were served
urethra as it leaves the bladder. by Patty Barton and Darla Hawley.
Wben the prostate swells, as it so of- Others attending were Leona Mar·
ten does in tlte older male, it restric- tin, Frank and Ida Martin, Patty
ts the outnow of urine and prevents Barton, Betty Wills, Etta Mae Ellis,
the complete emptying of the blad- Josephine Mowery , Janice Haggy,
der. This retained urine favors the Brenda Haggy, the Rev. and Mrs.
Floyd Shook, Rick and Diane Ash,
growth of bacteria.
QUESTION : How do you Mike Wright, Randy and Darla
Hawley, and Jack and Karen
recognize bladder infect,ion?
ANSWER: Tlte classic complaints Stanley.
of bladder infection are frequency,
urgency and pain. Frequency means
that you have to void more often
than usual. It doesn't necessarily
mean tltere is more volunne since the
innamed bladder had a diminished
capacity and is more irritable.
Urgency means an immediate
desire or need to go. The need may
be so great the person cannot hold it
back and may accidentally lose control. The pain may be a burning
feeling in and around the pubic area
felt during or after voiding . in some,
the urine is obviously bloody. In
otlters it may be excessively cloudy.
Certain types of bacteria give the
urine an especially bad odor. It is
even possible . for bacteria to be
present in large numbers yet there
will be no symptoms.
QUESTION : What should you do
about bladder infet1ion?
By Robert G. Stockmal,
D.O., Ph.D.
Assistant Professor of
Family Medicine
Oblo University College
of Ollteepathlc Medicine
BLADDER INFECTION COMMON

Church classes meet

Holiday activities include visits
Holiday activities for the family of
Mrs. Mamie Stephenson included a
vtsit to Marietta for an observance
with her daughter and son-in-law,
Mr. and Mrs. James Farley and
sons, Ricky, Davy, 'Jamie and Joe,
and her son, Randy Snider.
Mrs. Stephenson and Jitruny
joined Mr. and Mrs. David J ohnson
and son, Jeremy at Mason for a
holiday celebration. (llhPr&lt; ·•t-

Alicia Walker ·

Miss Walker
celebrates
birthday

Juuary 22, 1181

sonwthint! QUit \! ~ooc:l 111 y1lur
~rasP. withou t fully ~:~ pptK' l&lt;&amp;tln~ all lltl
rarmficalhms. Lovk for an unusu1tl product
or item whic h Ciln be taken to U1e lllitrket·
IJ[Ht"t' .

AQUARIUS fJaa. ZO.F~b lSI The opmluns
of uthtn 11r11 ltnportant tud.Hy, but they
shou ld not be taken so se nu~ly that they

Bonnie E. Walker entertained
recently wtth a party tn celebratiOn
of the second birthday of her
daughter, Alicia M., at her home in
Grande Junction, Colo. Ms. Walker
IS ' a fonner Meigs County resident.
Several friends a nd relatives including Alicia 's grandmother, Mrs .
Eva Walker, also of Grande Junction and fonnerly of Tuppers Plains,
attended the party. Before moving
to Colorado, Ms. Walker worked for
several years at the Ohto Youth
Conunission in Athens.

Group plans
Easter fare

cause you tu act 8t!81n.SI yuur uwn beller
judgment. Ron"LiHl«. travei,Juc:ktresources.
pns.siblt&gt; pitfal ls and ca r~r for ht' t' Oimn~

moru hs are all

d l !&gt;t:USS~

in your Astro-

Graph whkh begms w1th your birthday. Mal l
$1 fnr each to 1\.stm-Graph, Bolt 48:9, R.tldio
C1ty Stat1on, N. \' . 10019. Be sure to :;pccl(y
bi11ht.latc
PISO:S tftb. Z6-Marth ZOI If your work
h.ab1ts are t&gt;rrat ll' today, lht' results ttre
likely to be smuklr. Don't do lhlllKS In fits

•

too !le lr-servin~ . others Will Jet you know •
qui ckly enough if you are.
VIRGO IAu&amp;. U-Sept.ZSI Nont1.11lly yOtJ'rl!!\
relty good at lteepmg coofldenUal tn-f'
unnatJon to yourst! l!, but today could be an •,
exception. You mi!(ht re\'i:al 30methln~e ,
that's besl kept secret
LIBRA t~pt !J.(kL til You're a very ,
generous pef'S()n, but be careful today what •
you lend wnd to whom. G1ve only If there is a :
re.11l need.
SCORPlO 1Od. z•N11v. %21 Be careful
today that you don't overreact and make an •
issue of something that ret~lly Isn't one Let '
your logic prevt~ll, Instead of yoor emotions ;

'"""
you're a very

ARIES I March U·Aprtl l!tl Basica lly

adve~turuu.s und daring per·
proper Clrcwnstances, these are
ronunelld!tble t raits. Today, huwever, you

son . Unda

1nay be te1npted to take unwise risks
TAURUS ( Aprtl !&amp;-Mar, !CII Rernor.~e could

later~ m 1f you make mportant decisions
too impul:i1vely tl.lday. Sta ll for time and a
1..' hance to lltudy what you' re getting lnto .
GF.MlNI (May 21-Juml!! !II ) K eep in nund
tuday thllt anything worth duinll is worth
doin~ well. T11sks given merely 11 lick and a
pn~mise may t\itve to be done U\ler.
CANCER (June !l·J•ly Itt Trtat your
~suun_"e1'1 and possessions w1lh prudence
!ind ~sped tude~y RI!Ckless or ex.tniYagant
bt!hltvior could put you behmd the I- ball.
LEO (July U-Aug. U ) Look oot for yoor in·
tcrest:s toda)', but tl")' to do S\.1 without bem,~~:

u~~e .

!Nov.

U·D~c.

UJ

Sometimes )UUr OOncht!s an! rather '
amazing and &amp;ccurat e, but th111 may not be :
Lhe case hxiliy . Signal~ frbm you r Intuition j
could coo lain a lot of static.
•

CAPRICORN Wet. !Z·Jn. ltl A well·

Curb Inflation.
P~y Cash for
Classlflads and
Savell I

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meanin,~~: frhmd who has t:.llused you surne

eumpliclltiOfl!l previously could create ri~
pies ags1n today ll )lOti penrUt him or htr to •
~et involved 1n yuur prlvt~ te uUalrs.
'

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~UJR~B~OiA~R~D~IN~G~H~OdU~S~EW~fhldw~lt~h~M~a~)o~r~;~~ Perhapscard,,
Thanks
vou sen
t a lovelv

Plans for an Easter bazaar were
discussed at the recent meeting of
the Willing Workers Missionary
Society of the Ftrst Church of God,
Syracuse.
At the February meeting members are to take craft tdeas so that
work can begin on the various items.
It was noted that the Cltristmas
bazaar was a financial success.
Ethel Hossler opened the meeting
with prayer and Jan Jenkins read
Romans 8, verses 1-6, with Virginia
Oiler reading the minutes of the
previous meeting. A white elephant
sale was held. Joy Clark had the
closing prayer and Lenora Jenkins,
Donna Koehler and Mrs. Jenkins
served refreshments .

Youth group has
swimming party
Sunday the Alfred Youth went to
the Parkersburg Boys Club for a
swimming party followed by a dinner. Sharon Henderson, Kevin
Brooks, and Dorothy Calaway
assistirg in driving the young
.people.
In the group were Brenda and
Crystal Reed, Usa and Trica Burke,
Lori Burke, Lee Ann Robinson,
Tammy, Missy and Adam Calaway,
Kevin, Jim, Bob and Debbie Brooks,
Usa Henderson, Brian Connolly and
the leaders, Uoyd and Ruth Brooks.
Several members of the Alfred
Angels 4-H Club acconnpanied the
Alfred Youth.
TYING YELWW RffiBONS
Residents and employees of tlte
Pomeroy Health Care Center spent
some time tying yellow ribbons Mon-

1

PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS
COUNTY , OHIO .
NOTICE OF
APPOJ NTME NT
OF FIDUCIARY
The fol lowing persons
were, on the dates shown ,
appomted to admi n •s ter t h,.
foflow •ng
d eceden•::.·
esta tes pend 1ng in th e
Me1gs County Proba te
Cou r t ·
Fiducia r y's Name, Ad
dress and Ti tl e, Date of Ap ·
pointment,
D ecede nt s
Name and Address. and
Case Num ber are l isted .
~':Jth
Sc ha r tt ger , Ad ·
mm•stratn x, Rt. I , M id·
meport, Oh1o, 12· 11 ·80,
Howard L Searls . Rt. 1,
Midd leport, Ohio 23.270
Minnie R. Wooten , Ad·
mi nistratn x, Rt. 3, A lban y,
Oh io, 12· 15·80. Anderson
Wooten, Rt . 3, Albany ,
Oh io, 23,290.
Bobby Rathbur~ . Ad·
m •ntstrator, Rutl and, Oh 10,
12· 15·80, Terry Rathburn,
Rutland, Ohio. 23,293
Bernard
V.
Fultz ,
Public N 1tice
Executor , P . 0 s ox 723 ,
Pomeroy , Oh io, 12 24 80.
James F. Arno l d, 625 l~!n~~~se adopted January
Chestnut St, M iddleport,
The village r eser ·
Ohio, 23,301 .
r iCJhf to reject any
J ean
Se tdenab e l.
II b1ds . The sale is
Executr1x , 500 Spring pursuant to Section 72 1 03
Avenue. Pomeroy, Ohio. of the Ohio Revised Code.
12·2.4, 80, J ohn OueH , R 0
3, Pomeroy, Ohio, 23.281.
I I) 14, 21. 28, ( J I 4, 11 , 5tc
(1) 7, 14, 21, Jtc

-A-

PubliC N ltiC £!

NOTICE OF
SALE
Otters will be rcc etv ed
until 11 :00 O' Cloc k A.M. on
the 23rd day of FebruMy ,
1981, at the May,or ·s oHic e.
237 Ra ce Street, tor the sa le
ol t he following described
real ~&gt;state , ro wi t ·
Rea l es tate situated at
the corner· of Garfield and
south Third Avenue i n t he
Village of Middle port ,
Ohio . The Villag e acquired
.title to said rea l estate by
deed recorded '" Volume
270, page 70J, Meigs County
Deed Records .
Sa le of sai d real estate
was authorized by Or ·

DAY

" Wtl at hurt me more than any thmg was I he jur y didn 't take

the decency to retire to the jur-y
room ! ' '

ca rd , or ·sat quietly In · a
chair. Perhaps you senr a
funeral spray , li so we sAw
11 th ere . Perhap s you spok e
the kindest words , As .lr"'y
.,...-.~-:;JI tn end could say ; Perhaps
you were nor th ere ar fill,
Just thought of us that day,
n,,,,. 11 ,..." Whatever you did to con
sol e our hearts, We thC? nk.
you so muc fl whatever the
part .
Th e fam i ly ot Mary A
Genhe1mer
3

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name and addre$S or
phone number if used .
6
1
3
to I
You'll get better results Words
daY days daYS days I
if you describe fullv.
give pr ice. The Sentinel
reserves the right to to" $1.00 52.00 54.00 57.00 :
classify, edit or re iect
any ad . Your ad will be t02l Sl.JO $3.75 5.50 S9.00 II
put in the proper
c lasificatlon if you ' ll toll U .lO $4.50 7.50 ~Ill. ~
c he&lt;: k the proper box
below
These cash rates
include d iscount

;,

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2. _ _ _ _ __

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to ____________
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12 . _ _ _ _ __

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IS.- - - - - 16. _ _ _ _ __

13.- - - - - -

SHOOTIN G MATCH at
Corn Hollow In Rutland .
Every Sunday starting- a t
noon .
Proceeds be ing
.
donated
to
the Boy Scout
2
In M emarir1m
Troop 249, 12 gauge factory
IN M EMORY of George ch oke gun onl y!
' ' Joe" Young, who pas sed
.
away 5 years ago, J an . 20 , RACINE G UN SHOOT .
1976 .
Racine C.un Ctub, every
Gone Me h is days of ear Fr iday night start ing · at
tht y pam
7: 30 p.m . Factory c noke
E ver hope you ' ll meet guns only .
again
Over- on the golden shore
Rctolcing that a ll pain i s FAYE 'S Gi ft Shop in Mi d
dleport Will be open from
o'er
G1ve trust his precious· 11 5 until Chnstmas
word .
Justice comes to one and YOUR
PI A NO
Too
all
va luable to neglect. expert
Old and young and gr eat tuning &amp; and r epair. L ane
and small
Dan iels, 742 2951 or 992
Ever heed our Savior 's c all 2082 .
Yearn for perf ec t peace
and JOY
Our Lord aids when tn1ngs Anyone hdving Cub Scout
or Soy Scou t un iforms or
itnnoy .
u seless th1ngs He will supplies to give away or
rrade plea se con tac t JoAnn
des troy
Note all b lessings on l ife' s· Newsome ttt 991 3382 in
Chester, Oh10
'
way
Glor if y our Lord eac h day .
·-:-Sad l y missed by wife El len. Pur a cold nose j n your life .
daug hters Patry Moore and Ca ll the Meigs Counrv
Do ttie Nelson and Gr and· H umane Socie ty at 992
c hildren.
6260

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day in anticipation of the return of ~r-::;;::;;::-:;;;~::;;::-::;;::-::;;;:-:~~;-:;;;;-:;;;;;:;;;~-:;;;;;:-=:;;;;~;;;;;;=-;
the 52 American hostages. Tlte rib- · I
'
bons were tied to the· posts and up
the walk outside the buildin g, and
some were pinned to lapels and worn
in the hair of the residents and employees.

PRICES

ANNOUNCEMENT
The Harrisonville Lend-a-Hand
Society will meet at the home of
Mrs. Stella Atkins at 7:30 p.m. on
Thursday.

REDUCED
I

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18 ._ _ _ _ _ __
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22. _ _ _ _ __
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FOR THE PT. PLEASANT REGISTER

•

IN THE TOWN OF CLIFTON.
Call Immediately

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675-1333

:.l: t

t
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REDUCTIONS OF AT LEAST '355 00 -,-- AS MUCH AS '1100"
"INTEREST RATES ARE FALLING AND SO ARE OUR PRICES"

:.

AT AnME WHEN MOST NEW CAR DEALERS ARE DECREASING THEIR INVENTORIES,
RIVERSIDE VW HAS INCREASE!) THEIR FEBRUARY• ALLOCATION BY 400% AND
:;
WE'RE PASSING THE SAVINGS ALONG TO OUR CUSTOM
14~ Upper R1vt?r Rd.

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NOW THRU JANUARY 31, 1981

H::S I Ut:

v u Ll\ :swAGE N
446-9800

·. I

'·, ~-----------~----------~
WANTED
TO
BUY :
Announcem ents
J

4

Ra c1ne Vo lu n1e er F 1r e
Oepanmenr spon sor s ,,
shot gun &amp; ri fl e match
eve r y Sa t. n1ght 6 : 3() p.m .
ar thetr buildmg m Bashan
Facror y c hok e 1 ~ guagc
shot guns on l y Open s1ghts
n n fl e.

rax serv 1ce, tederal , star e,
&amp; quarter!-;- ta)(eS dOnl' by

. • &lt;"~PPO • nt men t . See Wanda
,_. Eb lin , 41000 Laur- el Cliff
Road, Pom eroy , Oh1o
4)U.O 992 227'J

". · Ln ..:ome 1ttx servi ce, federal
,. ~ sta te . Wallace Russel l
... Bradbury , calf 99'1 7128 .

ME IGS MUS EUM open by
appoin tment Januar y MM
c h. 992 1264, 99'1 2802, 992
· 2360 or 991 2639. H •Sforics
sate
P ome r oy
· tor
· M1ddl eport Libra r. es.

c,

Gun Shoot

every Su nday
c1 1 1 p .m
ar Rutla nd
Am erican Leg ion ,n d l ur
•• nace hea ted bu il din g F c1c
tory c hoked guns on ly

IRO N ANO BRASS BEDS ,
~old furniture. desks, gold
r l ngs , 1ewelry , s Hv er
do.lfttrs, sterling, etc.. wood
tCC bOXCS,j arS
an fiQUeS ,
etc . Cornplete households
" Wr1te M . 0 . Miller . Rr . 4,
Pomeroy, OH I or ca ll 992
7760 .
USE D FURNITURE Go ld
nngs , pocket
Wn tc hes, cha 1ns, diamond s
• &amp; so on. Copper bra ss anCI
'''bdrtcr ies, anl •que item s,
also do appraisa l s, com
plc te auctioneer serv1 ce .
- - over 30 years e)(per iencc fn
OUs•ncss. Will buv com
ple te es tat es . Osbv Marl in
Gconeral Store, M• dd lepon,
Oh. 992 6370.
&amp; silver, cl ass

illI eStiie :.. General
George S. Hobstetter Jr-.
Broker
Office 742·2003

10% On All Gas Models
5% On All Diesel Models

Rl v t

Mail This Coupon with Remittance
The Daily Sentinel
Box 729
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

HOBST£1TER REALTY

ON ALL 1981 VOLKSWAGENS

RUTLAND - One floor ,
six room home on nice
corner l ot , garage . Ask ·
ing $21.500 .00.
INVESTMENT PRO·
PERTY - Two story
building Sa lem St. Make
nice coffee ! hop, rent
th e
upsta ir s . On ly
521 ,200.00 .
FARM 188 ac res,
pasture &amp; woods, two
story farm house, 2
barns, mlenrals . Only
S55.000.00 .
HYSE~L RUN ROAD 7.2 acle• land w ith 2
bedroom home , also
nice building site wtlh
septic and water tap.
1\Sklng $19,000.00.
SILVEN RIDGE ROAD
- •2 acres., with gar age
&amp; barn . Pasture and
some woods. approK . 2
Ea~ t cr n

,~~;;!~~.:
Asking
i!
Niclnsky, A ssoc.

Galhpott., Uluo
I

'THE CHEcKEr&lt;

UPL/NE ····

HASTA (jO FIND
l)&lt;J; c;uy WHO
I&lt;HOWS J'RUS ...

Atf ~s I"RRSABB.v
~""

·~

Phone 742· 3092
hcryt Lemley , Assoc .
Phone 742· JI7t

I'

GO LD ,
SI L VER ,
PLATINUM , STERLI NG
COI NS, RING S. JEWELR
Y. MI SC
IT EMS . AB
S OLU TE
MARKEr
PR ICE G UAR ANT ED E D
BWRKETT
BARBER
SHO P , MIDDLEPORT ,
OH 10 992 J416.

1-7--- &lt;[).

ousirrg
Headquarters

T~~~L~.~~l J3
16 E. Second Street

'

Phone

H 614 l -992· 3325
NEW LISTING - 5 Yr .
old ran ch . J bedr oOm s,
carpeting, nice equip
ped kil chen . 2 ful l baths,
ga r age and 1.2 acre
level lot S50,000 .
NEW LISTING - Good
large carpeted 8 room
trame
home n ea r
schoo ls. 2 baths, nat ural
gas fur nace w i th wood
burn i ng , a tr achmen 1,
full basement and 'l ca r
ga r age on large lor

m.ooo.

NEW LISTING - Ni ce
r enovated ~ bedroom
home wlfh natural gas
forced ai r fu rnace . L ots
of good carpe t ing, base
ment and 2 other b ldgs
Chain 11nk tence. Need
$31 ,000 .'
NEW LISTING 27
acres ot wild land , l ife,
tr ees and sm all strci'm
In Bedford Twnshp. for
only $6,500.
NEW LISTING - Small
2 bedroom fr ame home
"' on Rt. 7 near town with
spa ce tor a l arge
garoe n
wanr
just
$17,000
WE
HAV E
DIF ·
FE~ENT ·
PROPER ·
rt E ~
E VERY WEEK
FOR YOU TO BUY .
992· Jl25 or 992-3176 ,

Housing
Headquarters
' Weill Es t,l te -

Business Services
KAUFPS
CUNNINGHAM REESE lkl!/l
PLUMBING
. &amp; ASSOC.

N 1c E TWO bedroom house
with three car garage m
Racone. SJJ,OO .OO. 949 ·2801.
No Sunda y ca lls.

AND
HEATING

Four year o ld house on 3
acres, 7 rooms , 1 &amp; one half
bath, nice loca t ion. Rout e
2, Rac•ne. 949·2706.

SERVICE

992-7544
VA loans no money down
Federal Housing 3% on S2S.OOO
S%on balance.
Conventional Loans5%
down
Call for Jnformalo'on
992·7544

Middleport, Oh .
Ph. 992· 6263

Ni ceho useon2&amp;oneh~ l f

TRENQtiNG

Mortgage Bankers

12 Park St.

a c res on S R 7 betwee n
M emory Gardens &amp; State
ga rage. Pnced on in

Anytime
1·21 ·1 mo .

water· Sewer·Eiectric
Gas Line-Ditches
Water Line Hook-ups
septicHnks
county certified
RoushL~ne

Che h'
Dh
s •re, •
Ph. 367-7560 _ ·tfc
17

S~C.
f ! ~n:_9~2~~4~- ~- __ ~. _ Pr:::::;;;;;:::::
1rr=========~~=;:====~~~
Seven room double In·
"YOUNGS
sulated ranch styl e home,
total e lectric wood burne r
in the t am !ly roo m , gas
ava il ab le .
Reasonably
p r i ced. Three level acres in
Racine. 949·2706

•• :0: •

9

IN ·
OLD CO IN S, pocket wat· AUTOMOB I LE
been ca n
ches, class ri ngs, weddmg SURA NCE
Lo st
your
bands, d1amonds. Go ld or ce l led?
si lver . Cal l J A . Wam sley , oper ator 's li cense? Phone
741 233 1. Treas ure Chest 992 2143.
Coin Shop, Athens, OH 592·
6462 .
18
W~nt e d h1 O a
Wanted to Buy : class n ng s,
w edding bands, anyth ing Furnace repa i rs , electr ical
stamped, lOK , UK , or 18K work, plumbing, mobile
gold. Si lver coi ns, pocket home or residen ce. 992·
watc hes. Ca l l Joe Clark at 5858.
991 ·2054 at Clark's Jewel ry
Store, Pomeroy , Oh1o .45769 Wdl do p aneli ng, cei ling,
floor til e, plumbing. Free
est 1mates. Fred Miller at
992 6338 .

~~=,:~~
.
.

~·

11

CARPENTER
SERVICES"
-Addons and
remOdeling
-Roofing and gutter
work
-Concre1e work
-Plumbing and
electrical work
(Free Estimates)

Insurance

~

Re s ponsible
m arr~e d
wo m an will do babysitting
m my hom e 992·7438 .

Help Wo1nted

GET VALUAB L E training
as a young business perso n
and earn good money plu s
some g r eat gifts as a Sen
l inel route earn er ~hone
us nght away and get on
the eli gibility h sf ar 992·
21 56 or 992 2157.

Responsible
marr i ed
woman wil l babysi t m my
home,· any sh i fr. Ex ·
pen ence d 992 5555
Will do babySitting in my
horn e 1n Portla nd Have
r ef erences . Cal l 843 4801 .

Mus1 c1an s wa nted : L ea d
r-h-;-thmn
g u i t ar ist ,
gu 1tanst , Con1act Gary
File at 992 3627 or 992 ·2530

31
HGmes for Sale
Trai ler lof for sate, $5,000.
Modular home lor on Route
7, thr ee b edroom farm house loca ted on Rou te 7.
992 257 1

WIL L CARE for elder ly on
ni ce one f loor l eveL L plan
home. Room &amp; board .
Reasonable . 992 · 73 14.
Room &amp; board l or elderl y.
Laundry
in c luded ,
Reas onable 9~2 6022.

Beau tiful t hree b edroom
r anc h br 1ck home in Baum
Addit ion , Pomeroy, Ohi o.
Gas heat, cen tral a1 r con·
ditioning Ca ll 985 3814 or
992 257 1.

--------Real Estil1e- General
-----------..,-

NIC E two bedroom count ry
home. Viny l sid •ng, full
basemen t, $1 3,900.00. 949
280 1 No Sunday Cit li S.

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

POMEROY , O .
992- 2259
NEW LISTING - Ap
prox . 1 acre of ground
with a 12)(60 New Moon
M obi le Home , with an
e~: p a n do, and an ex tra
room . Garage and a
workshop. Ow ner wan ts
an off er. Appra .sed a t
$18, 500
A NICE BRICK RANCH
With lll:z ba ths, 3
bedrooms, rec. room,
new furnac e, f i r ep lace,
full basement , garage,
and a garden space. Ap
pro)( 1 acr e in town.
545,000 .
WOODED BUILDING
S ITE - 10 acres near
Me.gs Hi gh School. Gas,
wate r , and elec tric
availabl e. Asking $1 ,200
an acre.
CO MPLETELY
~EMODELED - Th1S6
room , 1112 itory frame
home has new wiring ,
new plumb i ng , new
ca rpet , new paneling,
new bath, new cabi net s
r1nd 6 acres of land .
JUST! $28,500.
4
ACRES AND A
MOBILE HOME - Has
3 bedroonis. covered
patio, and glass sliding
doors. ONLY! $9,~00 .
2 FIREPLACES - P lus
a family room , 4
bedrooms, ni ce hard ·
wood floors. new furnace, and almost 3 .. ac r e
lo t iri town . $27,000.
REALTOR
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
992· 6191
ASSOCIATES
Jc~n Trusse ll949 ·'2660
~ .1 gcr &amp; Donie Turner
992-5692
OFFI CE 99l ·llS9

Am
Gen eral

.CENTRAL REALTY
NEW LISTING - I Acre level lot, gas &amp; wate r tines
in front of property. Close to schools, churc hes and
$to res. Asking $6,500.
NEW LISTING - Country Home on 1 ocre Jot .
Large living room , kitchen and den . I ncludes 3
bedrooms. laundry area, and outside building for
storage and car. A.sklng under $30,000.

For sa le: older' home on
large lot behind Burger
Chef in Pomeroy Call b et·
ween th e hours ot 7·10 p .m .
992-7547 .

.

~~

32

.

~-~--

- ---- - -

Milbite H omes
. tor
. . Sale.

-.

three
bedjooms,
1973 Crown
Haven,new
14 xcar·
65,
p et . 1971 cameron, 1~ x 64,
two bedroo ms, new carp et .
1972 Champion, 12 x 60, two
bedroo m s, n ew carpet 1976
Cameron, 12 x 60, two
bedrooms, all elec tri c. 1~71
SkYline , 12sx 6) , two
bedrooms, bath &amp; 1/J, new
ca rp e t.
1970
PMC,
12 x 60, two bed rooms, new
ca rpet. B x s sa tes, tn c..
2nd x Viand Str eet, Point
:Ji:Sant,
P~one 675

In larger Sizes

1970 PARKWOOD cu stom
Mob1le Home . 12x60 un
furni shed . 2 bedroom, 1

b a th , tue t oi l heat 992-382J .

36

. .

-

42

Mobile H:-.rnes
f,)r h' enr

M obile home tor r ent, tur
nished, Flatwoods ttrea.
Prefer working couple. No
chi ldr en . $150 00 per m ont h
plus util 1t 1es. D eposit &amp;
re fer ences r eq ui red . 992
5834 after s.

Apartm en t
LJf h'ent

ts . Phone 992 54J4 .
Unfurnished one bedroom
apartm en t for rent. Ren·
ters dSSis tance availabl e
tor senior ci ttzens. Contact
V i llage Manor Apa rt ments
at 992-7787

2 bedroom f urni sned aparf
me nt. 2 m i tes oul R t . 143.
D epos•t &amp; r ef er ences
required Adults only 992
J647
2 bedroom apartment lor
r ent ln Middleport $200. a
month plus. utilities. 992
5545. 8 a .m .· l p.m .
46

. Space fllr Rent

COUNTRY MOBIL E Home
P a rk, Route 3J, NorTh ot
Pomeroy . ·Large loi s Call
992·7479.
T RA IL ER spaces tor re nt .
Sou thern Va ll ey M obi le
Home Park, Chesh•re, Oh .
991 3954

S2

33"-44'.

l.r-1/n-. -1/J..-s

CB ,"TV , t-lcldil
EQuipm ent

RCA consol e 25 1nch color
televis•on. $40.00. Needs
'§.Ome repair 991 ·583.4 ader
5.

New spnng sktrl s gl''le ~ou a d•f·

terent took every day olthe wetk1
One's a wrap, the other ts agen tle
flare, elasl!ctzed for comfort at all
!1 mes Both are beginner -ea sy,
Choose cotton polyeste1.
P11nted Pattern 4635 : Women's
WaiSt SIICS 33 . 35. 37. 39, 41 1r.

44 1nches. Ya~dages 1n pattem.
$2.00 lttr ooch poHtm. Add SOC
lot IICh Pllttm lot lust·cliSS
altmlll 11d handline. Stnd I~
Anlt Adams
1 :l 1
Pltlttn Dept.

" COMFORTABLE " 3 bedrooms, large Jiving room.
liiSO family room , storage bldg . and large garage
space . Asking $37,000. Give us your offer .

r ne DailY Sentinel

THIS HOME has 3 BR ' s wttn hordwood floors, Iorge
eal ·ln kitchen, built· In cabinets, full basement, has
been taken good care of and waiting tor new owner
to give It equat care. $39,000.

ZIP, SIZE, and SlUt NUIIIU.

QUIET COUNTRY HOME ava ilable tor only
$40,000. 37 plus acres. Cat• n-;,w , this one won ' t last.

S PRING· S UM~[R PATIERN CAl·
AlOG. 100 styles, free potlern

24l W•l 17 Sl, New YOJt, NY
10011. Ptlnl NAIIEL AOORESS,

We slteamhned the

sew~ng

to

save you t•me so you can save
money! Send now too NlW 1981

53

Antiqu es

ATTENTION :
(IM ·
PORTANT TO YOU) Will
pay cash or certi f1ed check
for antiques &lt;tnd c ollec·
ti bl es or entire es tates.
Notlling too l.arge. Also,
guns, pocket wat ches and
co in co l lect ions. Ca ll 614·
767 J167 or 557·3411 .
54

M isc. M !:!rchr\ nise

F •rewood for sal e, M i)(erl
types ot wood . $J5 .00 pe r
pick up l oad. DeiJvered ,
will stack tor Sen ior
Ci 1izens. 843·4951 or 8.43
2S 15 .

SPECIAL DISCOUNT
prices on furnitur e .
Reuphol s teri ng . Jan . &amp;
Feb..
198 1.
Mow rey's
Upholstery , Pt. Pl easant,
W.Va . 1·304 675 4154 .

coupon (S2 Volue). CatalO(. Sl
CALL U~ TO BUY OR SELL
Nancy Jaspers - Associate
949· 2654

ll4-14~ckQullts

...... Sl.75
133-fllltlan IbM Quillittt $1.7~
uo.s..alors·Sim :11-~( $1.7$
129·QulcVEasy ltllllfln .$1.75

HARVEST

COFFEE HOUSE
Pomeroy, Oh .
Open
Saturday Only
4 P.M. to 11 P.M.
Free ·coffee &amp; Tea
Free Food
Live Music

I

Carousel
Confectionery
317 N.lnd Ave.
Middleport
Order your decorated
cakes for all occasions :
Birthdavs.
Anniver ·

saries,

ROGER HYSEU.'S

GARAGE
-Auto and Truck
Repair
-Transmission
Repair
Hrs.: Mon.-Fri.
9 A.M.-5:30P.M.

Weddings ,

Showers, etc.
" Beginner
Cake
Decorating Classes"
starting soon. Please
note, we wil be closed on
Mondays dur.ng the
month'of January.
Ht · 1 mo.

992·5682
10· 7-tfc

-----~

3 A ND 4 RM furn ished ap·

4635

12 Park St.
Middleport, Oh.
Ph. 992-6263
Anytime
12·17·1 mo .

!--==========~~=========~~========::.

--

3 be droom Mobi l e Hom e
very nice &amp; completely fur
n1Shed. 2 ch ildren ac
ce ptable No pets , deposi t
requ.red. 992·7479 .

WAIST

Rt. 3, Box 54
Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614·843-2591
·
6·15-tf c

12·31 ·1 mo.

---

Hourly Contract
Large or
small jobs.
Ph. 992-2478
11 ·20·J mo . pd.

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Real Estilte
Wi!nted

~ :R~ ~

Body Repair - Insurance
Work· Collision Repair.
EKpert painting, body
work, pinstrlpin9- &amp;
vinyl tops.
Free Estimates
can 992-3421
Kingsbury Rd ., 2 mi.
west co. Rd. 18.
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769
Domestic, Japanese &amp;
European Cars
&amp;
Trucks.
1·14·1 mo.

Si~es from 4 • 610 12•40

·

Hotel -lounge wifh three
c ommercial rentals. two
apartments. LaS!llle Motor
Inn In Midd lepo rt . 992 9917

--

H&amp;R BODY SHOP

~~~~~~~===~+~~~~~~~~~~t==:;~~~~==~
ALL STEEL
KAUfPS
PUWNS
Farm BuiiCiings
BING
PWM
Si1e.s
EXCAVATING
" From lOxJO"
AND ·
· SMALL
eDozers
Utility Bu~dings
HEAJI NG
• Backhoes

House trail er f or sa te. 12 x
60 Sky line 985·.41 59 .

44

__./

V.C. YOUNG II

992-6215 or H2·7314
Pomeroy, Oh.

wv

1975 VIKING Trailer
12x65 . Exc . c ond under
pinning 1ncluded $6,000.
241·3942 .

l.ol.ltw;~ll.l-~ r-

Real Estate

The Daily Sentinei-Page-11

10 ROOM brick, 3 baths, 11 ..
acre; 6 rooms, 2 bafhs, 11f,
acres; 6 rooms baseme nt,
bath , 2 mobile homes ;
Mason, 3 bedroom never
lived ;n, 2 bedroom, rented
2 acres. John Sheets, Jlh
miles south ot Middleport,
Rt. I

12

I
I
I
,I
:1

Ann.1uncem cnts

1 PAY highest prices
possib le for gold and si tver
co ms, rings, tewel ry, etc.
Contac t Ed Burkett Barber
Shop, M iddl eport.

7H6~. FGP­

Ohi .1 .

HolmesllrSolte

)I

,I
1;1' 1 Phone·_ ----------------., I
, I Print one word In each
below. Each in·
CIRCLE
I sp.!ce
itial or group of f1gures
I counts as a word . Count AD WANTED

Small investment, large
return.s, Sentinel Want Ads r
.
Public Noti ce

They'll Do It Every Time ·

'
Addreu ______________
__

I

'

nuer~y-Middlep&lt;lrt,

Name _________________

· ~

.

I·'

Write vour own ad and order by m all with this
coupon . Cancel your ad bv phone when vou get
results. Money not refundable.

Wanted
For Sale
Announcement
For Rent

1

SAGI'M'ARlUS

.

•: I

r.

start.&gt;;. Orl!!ilnize your schedllle cmd ef·

----------....-----------·.

.I

:.t'

NEWSPAPER CARRIER NEEDED

.....

h~tve

L'OUld

TOPS Club 1287, Cheshire, hel4 a
holiday dinner party at Shoney'~ '!'
Point Pleasant recently. Mrs..Fredii
henderson, president, provide&amp; a
homemade candle which was won_;by
Sharon Wyatt ma drawing.
:
New contests have started lind
anyone Interested in joining the
group may call 992-7350 or 367-7~
for information. Attending ~
holiday dinner were Freda Henderson, Catherine Little, Edith ~~­
clner Barbara Roush, Manne
Stephenson, Helen Spears, and
'
Sharon Wyatt.

tending were Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Whittekind and sons, Daniel and
Shawn, Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Colmer
and sons, Billy and Timmy, and
granddaughter, Amber, Pomeroy ;·
TO MEET MONDAY
Mr. and Mrs. James Farley and
A
special
meeting of the Colum~ia
sons, Ricky , Davy, Jamie and Joe,
Township
Trustees
has been set f&lt;t 7
and Randy Snider, Marietta. The
p.m.
Monday
at
the Townsflip
fmaily had a buffet luncheon and exbuilding,
Gloria
Hutton,
clerk, ~id
changed gifts.
today.

ii ltd

It's pus.s•ble t ln.s t·ornin" y~-.r lh.Ht yuu

TOPS news reported

MONDAY VISITORS
Mrs. Valerie Radford *d
daughter, Brooke; Marietta, w~re
Monday visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
William Radford, Rock Springs. ·

ASTROGRAPH

.NOTICE

J

gifts to missions on the part of the
members, who contribute from their
earnings regularly in addition to
personal projects. Giving during the
last year has been to the tune of
more than 18 million dollars for
members in North America alone.
Total investment funds since the
program started~ years ago passed
the 56-million-dollar mark last year.
Such funds go to support the
denomination's program in 190 countries of the world. Adventists are
working currently in more than 581
languages and dialects worldwide.

'• 1nuary 21, 1981
.•.

Spl1t seasoned l 1rewood for
o;o•le 5.35.00 delivered. 7.47
J977 or 247 2575 .

54

MI SC. M erChrlni se

Rutland FumHure Carpet Shop
January Inventory Sale

NEED items for your
Mob1l e Home? V1S1f our
par ts stor e &amp; pick up a free
ca talog . A1 Kingsbury
H om e Sales Park &amp; Ac ·
cessor•es. Rr . 124 Minf;!r ·
sv 1tte. Oh. 992 5587.

KllatE.N
CARPET
Installed

TRUCK load a pples. Red' s,
Go ld en's,
Rome ' s, ,..
Wine sa p s.
Burson's
Market 12 mil es nor th of
Pomeroy, U . S. 33

CARPET
With Padding

Good

Fi rewood , $35.00 a truck
load, $60 .00 a cord . A l l har·
dwood , sp lit , &amp; delivered.
843 4831 or 843 4734 .

SHAG

sg95sq.
&amp;

yd.
Up

Reg. 18~
FOR ~99

Hide a· bed sola fo r $125 00
a lso fuzz bus fer for $100.00.
992 · 7467 or 742 3154 .

2 Rolls
Rubber Back

Reg. 515.95

S"f'J

Sq.
Yd.
Cash-n-Carry

Installed

selection roll end remnants $3 .99 up
Drive A Little- Save A Lot

RUTLAND FURNITURE
742·2211

Main St.
MODEL 70 Winchester,
Bolt actio w1th 6 power r ed·
t iel d scope. Cali ber 270.
S350. Gibson Gu 1tar with
buil t in elec tri c pick -up
w •th case. 2.47·2575.

ow at
Pomeroy
landmark

56

.

- -Pets
. for
- Sal e

PUREBRED
Eng li sh
Shepherd puppi es. Sto ck
and watch dogs. Phone 247
2161 .
-

~

M ~ t ~ rcycl_es_

74

1978 KAWASAKI KZ 650
motorcycle, color blue.
Ca tt 949·2649.

- -r.

~$~$!Wi$ [

: :&amp;'LE\IBRiel&lt;£ ::

Home

81

I "!P~ o.vem_e~ts

G.l ~

tfilnge
$UO.OO
C 1 np Sp.lCf! Hl!.1 1e r , JO, OOO b ill
' 169.tS
Used Xl l? Ch-'!11 S"w
$1IS.OO
c .1 m 1.1rT Glow k e r rJst ne
Ht .He r \ , E c nnnmv t 11 ·0116ll
~eg . \ 119.U
I G.Md t.' e p onnsed Col~ W o~ ngl'
1 Ci oli'KI Wepoun ~ l'd Holpnml
wet nge r o1 tnr

1:\7,._

--

62

wan1ed

t~

SIJ y

CHIP WOOD. Pole s m ax
d iameter 10 " on largesl
e nd. $12 P·er ton . Bundled
slab $10 per ton Delivered
to Ohi o Pall et Co., Rt. 2,
Pomeroy 992·1689 .

56

Pomeroy

Pets for S,ale

HOOF HOL LOW · Horses
and pon1 es and rld1ng
l esso n s
Everyth i ng
i magihable 10 horse equip
m enr
Blankets, belts,
boots , etc . E ngl 1Sh and
Wes tern . Ruth Reeves
1614) 698 J2 90.

· AutoS
tOr Sale · ·
. . . - . . . . .
1977 Ch evette in good con·
dition. 52100.00 985·4256.
71

-

73

v a .ns&amp;4W.
.
. D.
.

1979 Chevy C he yenne
Bl azer w i th low mi leage,
Jots of ext ras . 56,000 .00 .
Phone 992 ·.5170.

!-----------"'-----------1
KIT 'N' CARLYLE"'

_excavating

BJ

POMEROY

~LANDMARK
f:. Main St.

Gene' s Carpet Cleaning,
d eep s lream extract ion .
Fr ee
es timat e d,
reasonable rates. scot·
c hquard . 992-6309 or 742·
22 11

by larry Wrlghl

J &amp; F BACKHOE SER ·
VICE liscensed &amp; bonded,
sep11c tank installation,
wafer &amp; gas lines. Ex·
cava ting work &amp; trans1t
layout. 992·7201 .
Dozer work. Small lobs a
specialty . 742 ·2753 .

- ----·· - ---.

. .

. .

e lectric.al

84

&amp; Refng~r~t! ,ln

SEWING
MACHINE
Repairs.
serv i ce,
alt
makes1
992 ·2284 . The
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
Authorized Singer Sates
and Servtce. We sharpen
Sc issors.

.

-.

~

- - --- _

.

__,_

E LWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR
Sweepers,
roasters, irons, all small
appliances. Lawn mower .
Nex t to State Highway
Garage on Route 7, 985 ·
3825
APPLIANCE SERVICE:
all makes washer, d(yers,
ranges ,
dishwashers,
disposals, water tal"\kS. Call
Ken Young at 985·J561. 28
years expenen ce. Also w•ll
sell parts you f i)( .
0 x M Elecrncal Con ·
tra ctors . Residential, com ·
mercia!,
&amp;
i ndustrial
wiring. Se rvi ce calls. Free
esr. m ates. Call collect 388·
9764

. .

-.

.

-~·

--. ·- - .

G~ner~I .H~I.!_li!'l9. .

85

Al's T rash Service. Bo x 65,
Portland, Oh io. 843-4912.
We have ent 1re Meigs
Cou nly . $5.00 monthly .

~

'

�I ' •mer.1 y

?age-' .--- ·: ,,e Daily Sentinel

M~igs

County happenings

TO END MARRIAGES
A suit for divorce was filed in
Meigs County Corrunon Pleas Court
by Rose M. Deem, Racine, against
Charles H. Deem, Racine.
A suit for partition of real estate
was filed by George E~ner Sellers,
Long Bottom against William Edward Sellers, Elizabeth, 'W. Va., et
a!.

Marriages dissolved were Charles
H. Knight and Barbara M. Knight;
David Mora and Zarida Mora; Dennis Roush and Ethel Rebecca Roush,
and Ruth Carol Cottrill and James
Craig Cottrill.
·

Mayor's Court

YOUTH WELCOME
Hysell Run Holiness Church will
begin holding youth services Sunday, Jan. 25, from 7 to 7:30p.m. All
youth are welcome to attend.
SPECIAL SESSION
Shade River Lodge 453, F&amp;AM,
will hold a special meeting at 7:30
p.m. Thursday at the hall in Chester .
Work will be in the master mason
degree.
MEETS THURSDAY
The Bradbury PTA will meet at
7:30 p.m. Thursday at the school.
One of the reading classes will
present the program. All school
patrons are invited.

Four defendants forfeited bonds in
the court of Middleport Mayor Fred
SQUAD RUN
Hoffman Tuesday night. They are
The Rutland Emergency Unit at
Bruce Riffle. Long Bottom, $25, 10:24 a.m . Tuesday took James
posted on a charge of driving a · Spaulding from his home on the New
weaving course; Tarruny H . Davis, Lima Road to Holzer Medical CenMinersville, $25, assured clear ter.
distance ; David Case and Thomas
Hopper, no addresses listed, $50
each on disorderly manner charges.
Three defendants were fined and
eight others forfeited bonds in the
court of Pomeroy Mayor Clarence
Andrews Tuesday night.
Fined were Andy Laudermilt,
P.orneroy, $!i() and costs, disorderly .
conduct : Linda Freeman, Pomeroy,
$100 and costs and six months
probation, assault ; Tom Dorst,.
Pomeroy, $100 and costs, assault;
$200 and costs, assoult on a minor,
and $200 and costs and six months
probation, destruction of property.
Forfeiting bonds in Mayor An·
drews' Court Tuesday night were
Lester Taylor, Middleport, $30,
assured clear distance; Leonard
Cauthen, Mt. Morris, Michi gan, $29 ;
Eric Diddle, Middleport, $29; Jef·
frey Russell, Pomeroy, $30; Pamela
Garnes, Apple Grove, W. Va., $27 ,
all speeding ; Vince nt Stone ,
Pomeroy, Pomeroy, $25 speeding
and $25,fai!ure to appear ; Ruby
Young, Minersville, $30, assured
clear distance; Clifford J.ongenette,
Reedsville, $50, failure to register
motor vehicle ; $25 fa ilure to appear
in co'urL

Hospital
,

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted--William
Pickens,
Racine; Mary Lavendar, Syracuse;
Maxine Kesterson, Rutland;
William Morris, Pomeroy.
Discharged-Charles Price, Emily
Lawrence, Ava Greenlees, Liss
Hysell, Donald Lovett.

Middler· ~rt,

Watches, items iaken
The Meigs County Sheriff's Department is investigating a breaking
and . entering at Salem Center
Market that· occurred early this
morning.
Taken were watches, clothing and
automotive products. Entrance was
gained through the back door when a
lock was jinunled.
LOTI'ERY WINNER
CLEVELAND - The winning
nwnber drawn Tuesday ~ight in the
Ohio Lottery's daily game "The
Nwnber" was 742.
SPECIAL SESSION
Syracuse Village Council will
meet in special session Thursday at
7 p.m.

County highways commission topic
Philip Roberts county engineer
· h t he' commissiOners
· ·
'
met w1t
Tuesday to di!icuss county highway
operations.
It was decided that the engineer
and the conunlssioners would meet
Thursday at II a.m. to view a beaver
darn and bridge in Chester Township
and a problem with a pipe on Oak
Grove Road in Sutton Township.
Also meeting with the cOinmissioners was Bob Bailey,
emergency medical service coor·
dinator, who discussed vacation
ASK TOWED
Marriage licenses were issued to
Michael Arthur Bolin, 25, Mid·
dleport, and Kathy Eloise Matson,
25, Rt. I, Rutland ; · Freemari
Williams, 49, Racine, and Mildred
Leora Gillilan, 45; Racine.

time of the employes of his department ·
The corrunissioners reported they
will Instruct the dog warden to begin
checking for unlicensed dogs within
the next week.

.

Commissioners named Thereon
Johnson and Eleanor
Thomas &lt;:OWl.
ty me":'ber and me~r-at-large,
respectively, to. the Meigs County
Regional Pl8JUIIJ!II Commlsslon for
three year terms.

report

of

clerk-treasurer

Jane

Walton.
Receipts, disbursements and the
balance of ~ach fund during the
month, respective ly , include:
general, · $29,098.62, $15,461.98,
$16,132.40; revenue sharing, no
receipts, $8,195, $3,197.20 ; anti

Clark's Jewelry
medal distributor

2 Sections, 12 pages IS Cenh
A Multimedia Inc. New.seaper.

LEASING

. ._EQUIPMENT . .

. .TO BUSINESS, INDUSTRY.
- -AND THE PROFESSIONS .
BANK ONE OF POMEROY, NA

Welcome

614/992·2133

BACH
TO n.e

ELB.ERFELDS

®

U.S:A.

NEW SELECTION

CHAPMAN'S WINTER
CLEARANCE CONTINUES
MANY SlYLES FOR MEN, WOMEN, AND
CHILDREN THROUGHOUT THE STORE
AT GREAT SAVINGS
NEW SPRING SHOES
NOW ARRIVING

BATHROOM COORDINATES
PLUSH VELOUR ACCESSORIES
TO AcCENT THE BATH - MANY
DECORATOR COLORS.
RUGS-LIDS-TANK COVERS

RING THEM BElL'!- Meigs Sheriff James J. Prolllll (right)
urges churches to ring their bells, possibly at a designated hour, when
the 52 former hostages are returned to the United States as a gesture
of Americanism. Although Meigs residents indicated Interest in the
freeing of the former hostages Tuesday, there were few demonstrations of expression. Sheriff Proffitt Is pulling the finishing touches
on a welcome sign, bedecked with yellow rosettes, wblch he and Mrs.
Proffitt prepared for dlsplay In front of the sherilrs quarters in
Pomeroy. At left a window welcoming the hostages back ·to freedom is
one of the lew such demonstrations noted at homes In Meigs County
Wednesday. The window which features an American flag and 52 tiny
yellow bows is at the home of Rosella Secoy in Syracue.

see Home Furnishings-1st Floor

QtAPMAN'S SHOES
" Next t .) E tberteld s in Pomer.w ''

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Mr. and Mrs. Randal Chambless,
son, Gallipolis

Former hostages badly mistreated
"You can write checks:'

PLAINS, Ga. - Accusing Iran of "unbelievable acts of criminal
savagery," fanner President Carter· said today this 52 American
hostages were forced, "one by one," to run a gauntlet of jeers and
kicks before being pennitted to leave Iran for freedom .
Arriving horne after a dramatic dash to Wiesbaden, West Gennany,
to visit the hostages. the former president Said also that the ''sotemn
agreement" that won the hostages freedom is in the best interests of
the United States and should be kept because it involves the word of
honor of the United States.

Release brings hurst of patriotism

"You earn interest:'

You could tie your yellow ribbon on it.
The buoyant displays of red, white and blue. The si~ging of God
Bless America, the Battle Hymn of the Republic, America the
Beautiful. The tears in th,e eyes of a seaman.
The release of the 52 Americans kindled a burst of patriotism like a
thousand Fourth of July sparklers. And the sparklers haven 't been
doused yet.
Church hells pealed on Wednesday, sirens wailed, thousands knelt in
prayer, flags were raised to full-staff and yellow ribbons were affixed
to everything from coat lapels to oak trees.

Clark's Jewelry · ~hore, Gallipolis
and Pomeroy, has been appointed
the Official Inaugural Medal ,- -- - - - - - - - - - - !
distributor according to an announcement today, issued jointly by
AUTHORIZED CATALOG
the Presidential Inaugural ComSALES MERCHANT
mittee, 1981 and the Towle Silversmiths. Today, Ronald Reagan
became the 40th President of the
United States and the fi rst President
to receive an Official Inaugural
Phone 992-1178
Medal modeled from a life mask .
108 w. Main St.
Pomeroy, Oh.
The medal was designed by Utah
OWNED
AND OPERATED BY
sculptor, Edward J. Fraughton,
Jack &amp; Judy Williams
upon commission from the Official
Open ' Mon . thru Wed. 9-5
Thur. 9· 11, Fri . 9-5, Sat. 9·2
Inaugural Medal Committee, 1981
Satisfaction Guaranteed
and has been personally approved
~r Ynur Money Back
by Mr. and Mrs. Reagan.

Elderly man gets life sentence
AKRON, Ohio - TI1e jury didn't believe 88-year-old Cleon Ritter's
claim that senility produced two different versions of his wife's death.
As a result, Ritter was sentenced to life in prison after being convicted ofkilling her with a crowbar.
Ritter was being held in theSununlt County Jail on Wednesday after
· being sentenced to life In prl~~n for the aggravated murder of his 76year-old wife of three years, Edith.
An eight-man, four-woman jury returned the guilty verdict after
less than two hours of deliberation Tuesday. The defendant showed no
evident emotion when the jury's decision was announct-d.

Four die in truck-car collision

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

Everybody's talking about
Central Trust's new Interest
Account. At last, there
really is a checking account
that pays interest. No gimmicks, no automatic trans·
fers, just 5\4% interest,
-compounded daily, on the
money yo).l keep in checking.
Yrm mn get your check inf.[
withou/ se ruire tha rKeS, too.

or (304)-675-1244

The Interest Account even
offers you two ways to
eliminate checking service
charges. just keep a minimum balance of $1,000
in your Interest Account. If
your balance fall s below
$1,000, you'll pay a $5.00
service. fee for that month.
But you'll go right on earning interest, regardless of
your account balance. Or,

simply keep $2,000 in a
regular Central Trust
savings account, included
on your combined statement.
5\4% interest. Service
charge free checking.
That's the Interest Account. ·
Get one, and start getting
more from your money today.

THE
CENTRAL TRUST
COMPANY

Better Banking Service. That's The Central Idea.

Office Hours by Appointment Only

CALL (614)-992-2104

'

Brutality reports anger U. S.

BIRTH

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

en tine

VOl. 22, No. 191
, Copyrighted 1911

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGES JAN. 20
Verna Birchfield, Carolyn Fisher,
Tinnany Foster, Gary Hart, Vivian
Hughes, Bonnie Hunt, Timothy
Johnson, Clifton Jude, Jeanetta
Maynard, Thelma McClure, Betty
McConnick, Ivy McKeen, Clara McMannis, John Nance, Lester Parker
II, John Pendlwn, Carol Schartiger,
Shanna Smith, Arnold Snowden Jr.,
Gerald ' Sparks, Cheri Spaulding,
Trenda Welsh, Melvina Wicker,
Nancy Woods, Debora h Zuspan.

recesswn. no recetpts, no expenditures, $136.15: sewer,
$5.022.17; $4,917.115, $63,737.0ii; fire,
$2,224.23, $1,732 .57, $3,402.88;
cemetery, $550, $1 ,031.1!6, $9,683.62;
street, $5,064 .90, $3,1!69.13, $1,930.49;
state highway, $410,67, no expenditures, $4 .352.07; wale{.
$13,1155.07, $44,133.25, $44,900.98;
guaranty meter, $50. $5(), $6,894.08;
utility , $6,450 .29, $1 ,900 .68 ,
$31,016.50: parking meter, $883, no
ex penditures. $6,970.84; bond
retirement , $444 .85, $8,191.78,
$49,760.25: sewer bond repair and
improvement, no receipts, no expenditures , $4,734 .26; total
$228,115.71.

at

. .BANK ONE .. --..:..

Village funds total $228,115
Balanc&lt;&gt; in all Pomeroy Village
funds as of Dec. 3t, 1980 totaled
$228,115.71 according to the monthly

•

e

January 21, 1981

Ohi1

MEMBER : FDIC

CEUNA, Ohio - Four men were killed Wednesday night when a
pickup truck collided broadside with a car at a southern Me1·cer Coun·
ty highway intersection, sheriff's deputies said.
The victims were Identified as Ralph Wendel. 40, of Osgood, driver
of the truck; two passengers in his vehicle, Bernard Shultz, 32, of
Yorkshire and Kenneth Meyer, 36, of Minster, and the driver of the
auto, Elmer Tuente, 62, of Osgood.
The sheriff's department said the truck was traveling northbound on
U.S. 'n just north of the Darke County line when it smashed into the
side of the Tuente car a t the interSection of Huwer Road. The truck
flipped over and carne to rest on its top .

Commissioners lose appeal
CINCINNATI - Ohio county conunissioners elected in 1974 have
lost their second federal court bid to throw out a state law barring
them from pay raises while in office.
The 6th Circuit U.S . Court of Appeals rejected Wednesday the BJ&gt;'
peal .of an earlier federal court decision. The lower court had said
there was no basis for the commissioners' complaint.
The corrunlssloners said their federal equal protection rl~hts were
violated by an Ohio statute denying them the same pay as com·
missioners who took office after them.

Weather
Mostly cloudy through Friday. Highs Friday near 40. Lows tonight
near 30. Chance of precipitation IO ,perccnt tonight and Friday. Winds
westerly 1~15 mph tonig~t.
Extended Ohio Forecast- Saturday through Monday :Chance of
snow flurries extreme northeast Saturday and Sunday. Otherwise fair.
lli~hs in the ~Os to around 40 extreme south. Lows in the mld·tt&gt;ens to
low 20s.

WIESBADEN, West Gennany
(AP) - The freed American
hostages gave new ~eports today of
brutal treatment by their Iranian
captors beatihgs , mock
executions, grim games of Russian
roulette, death threats- and former
President Carter accused Iran of
''savagery against absolutely innocent hostages."
At the military hospital where the
50

men

and

two

wqmen

ace

recovering from their 14"&gt;-month ordeal, a State Department official
said, "it is clear we are continuing to
uncover evidence of serious
mistreatment of our people during
their captivity."
A member of the medical team
examining the Americans told The
Associated Press some of the
physical abuse "was not unlike that
which some of our boys got from the
North Vietnamese."
A group of the former hostages
emerged from the huspital today
and walked across the street for a
dental examination. They wore blue
pajamas or Air Force parkas and
many waved to well-wishers at the
hospital gate.
Following' an emotional lneeting
with the f01iner hostages Wednesday that left him visibly shaken,
Carter said the Iranians were guilty
of "despicable acts of barbarism."
On his return to Plains, Ga. today ,

Carter said that even as the hostages
boarded a freedom flight to leave
Ira n they were forced, " one by one,"
to run a gantlet of jeers and kicks ,
He said '' these are the acl~ of

Jack Cannon said iri Wiesbaden that
mistreatment included poor food,
solitary confinement and being blindfolded. "On a nwnber of occasions
a number of ·persons were
animals, almost."
threatened with loaded revolvers,"
But Carter said the "solemn he said.
agreement'' that won the hostages '
"On a nwnber of occasions some
release should be kept because it in- were threatened with death. Some
volves the word of honor of the were ordered to strip and lie on the
United States. The Reagan ad- floor and were threatened with
ministration has said it will examine death," cannon said.
the agreement "very closely" • Barry Rosen of Brooklyn, N.Y.,
before deciding whether to carry it chatting with reporters on the way to
out. ·
a dental examination, said the forState Department spokesman. mer hostages had "many stories to

tell" and that the agreement with
Iran should be reviewed.
Rosen was not specific about his
treatment as a captive, but said, "I
just feel that Iran is an outlaw coun·
try and it does deserve tremendous
criticism from the world.''
At a press briefing near the
hospital, Cannon said he had no
reports of specific injuries suffered
by the hostages and in reply to a
qucation added, "we have 110 .....,..rts
so far of sexual abuse." He said
some hostages were deprived of
sleep, "some were forced to stand in
(Continued on page 12)

Pleads guilty to abetting charge
Amanda Autherson, 18, Porf!eroy,
waiving a jury trial, entered a plea
of guilty to a charge of aiding and
abetting a jail break when she a(&gt;'
pea red in the ,Meigs County Common ·
Pleas Court Wednesday.
Autherson is charged with aiding
Richard Warnecke, 21, Pomeroy, in
his Dec. 18th escape from the UJ&gt;'
stairs section of the Meigs County
jail.
Miss Autherson and Warnecke
were apprehended in Lawrence
County , the same day at about 5 p.m.
She has been confined to the Meigs
County jail since being returned to .

Meigs County from Lawrence County on Dec. 19.
Following the hearing, Miss
Autherson was released on her own
recognizance pendi~g a presentence investigation.
Warnecke's jury trial is scheduled
for Jan. 26 in the conunon pleas
court. ·
Meantime, Meigs County sheriff's
deputies are investigating the
breaking and entering of a new
cabin on State Route 248 near Long
Bottom.
C harl~s Bissell, Route I, Long Bot-

tom, owner, reported that someone
had pried open the front door of the
cabin sometime after Saturday and
that a Rockwell saw is · missing.
Nothing else was taken.
Officers report that at about 6:10
p.m. Wednesday on County Road 36
at Chester, Donald R. Harris, 32,
Route 2, Coolville, was northbound
on the road in his pickup truck when'
a deer ran from a field and struck
the driver's side door and the bed incurring heavy damage to the truck.
The deer apparently survived the
collision and was not located near
the scene.

Demonstration protests shift changes
Bias said employes will continue Counci18 regional director, who was
By KEVIN KELL \'
Some 30 Gallipolis lleveloprnental attempts to peacefully change the
present at the demonstration,
Center personnel, unhappy with admini"tration's mind on the mat- disagreed and said the changes will
schedule changes and shift freezes ter, and are in the process of starting not help GDC save money .
at the center, marched peacefully a letter-writing campaign to deter·
"The forcing of straight frozen
for about an hour Wednesday af· rnlne which employes are for or shifts on employes will cause many
ternoon around the GDC ad· against the changes.
dedicated employes to quit, and
Employes are upset with tliree double work loads will lead to an in·
ministration building.
Purpose of the demonstration, an issues in the·changes announced by crease in sick leave . and conemploye spokesmim said, was to try Zhnrnennan in December: a six sequently more overtime to achieve
to convince GDC administration the days-on ' two days-off work proper resident care," he said.
majority of direct care personnel schedule; frozen shifts rather than
Haynes said resident care has imrotating shifts; and new shift hours.
are opposed to the changes.
proved greatly at GDC since
Personnel have said the changes rotating shifts hegan in 1948. The
'However, because the march was
held and due to a bomb scare which disrupt both their lives and those of only· time resident care was
emptied the administration building GDC clients. Some employes frozen threatened occurred when employes
for two hours, a meeting with ad· into a night shift say they will not be and clients were moved.
Ininistration on reschedUling hours able to see their faini!ies, and some
"There have been four such moves
work at other jobs when the day or of employes and residents from cot·
was cancelled.
· Jennings Bias, president of the night shift is.over.
tage to cottage. since 1978," Haynes
Zi1nrnennan said last week the noted. "Each time, the residen'ts
GDC chapter of Local 1775,
American Federation of State, Coun· changes were made because of tight have become disturbed at t'l" abrupt
ty and Municipal Employes (AFSC· state funding and will provide better changes and staff has had to spend
ME) , said union representatives · client care, a predictable staffing
were to have met with Mike Floc- situation in direct care woi'k
carl, labor relations designate, late statimls, and help to decrease overWednesday afternoon to get a time.
"With the free2ing of shifts, we
A Gallia County man was
decision from GDC administration
provide consistency of training, we hospitalized following a one-car acon possible changes in the hours.
The meeting was an extension of maintain our budget at its already cident on SR 588".Wednesday af·
one held Tuesday between the ad· low level, and continue the ternoon.
The Gallia-Meigs Post of the Ohio
ministration, union representatives, operation," he said.
Because of rotating schedules, in Highway Patrol said John R. Kerr,
and State Rep. Ron James ([)..
Proctorville) , in which Supt. Robert wrjch employes worked seven days· 46, Rt. 3, Gallipolis, was eastbound
Ztrrunennan said time was needed on and took four days off, the nurn· at 3:49p.m. when he lost control of
to consider benefits and costs of such ber of people in a work station would his car, went off the right side, and
vary from day to day, requiring per· . then came back onto the road, only
a change.
sonnel
from other stations to have to to drive off the right side and collide
Floccarl said this morning bid
packets for shift selection have been work in an understaffed station, he with a fence.
distributed and no rescheduling is llllid.
Heavy damage was reported to
Ffed Haynes, AFSCME's Ohio Kerr's car and he was taken to
being considered.

valuable prograrruning time in order to adapt the. residents to the
changes."
GDC . employes received bid
packets Tuesday to choose which
shift they prefer to work. Selection
will be based on seniority, and
should be announced Jan. 27,
Haynes said.
Zimmennan said last week the
changes were planned for a long
time prior to the announcement in
December, and were done "within
the boundaries" of the union contract.
The contract, which expired Dec.
I, has been voluntarily extended, he
added.
" There are quite a few upset
people here," Haynes said. "'I'hill is
the most upset I've ever seen them.
They've reached a point of
frustration."

Motorist. suffers broken leg
Holzer Medical Center by the Gallla
EMS, where he was admitted for a •
fractured leg and reported in stable
condition this morning.
Troopers also investigated a onecar crash In Meigs County late Wed·
nesday afternoon.
According to the report, Danny L.
Wniker, 24, Rutland, was southbound on Rutland Twp. Rd. 176 at ,
5:20p.m. when he lost control of his · ·
car which ran off the right side of the
road and into a ditch, causing minor
damage and no injuries.

.

'

.

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