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Pomeroy

·Emergency squad runs

Gallipolis woman hurt in accident
day afternoon .
Jocelyn A. Zerkle, 16•. Syracuse,
was southbound on CR 35 at S:10
p.m. when her car failed to negotiate
a curve, went orr the right side of the
road and overturned: ·The car was demolished, ·but
Zerkle was not injured and no
citations were issued.

A Gallipolis woman was injured in
a on«H!ar accident in Meigs County
Monday, according to the GalliaMeigs Post of the Ohio Highway
Patrol . .
The patrol said Debbie Abbutt was
a passenger in a car driven by John
W. Lehew, 25, Rt. 1, Gallipolis,
which was westbound on Orange
Twp. Rd. 59 at lO:SOa.m.
Lehew then reportedly lost control
of his car on ice, went off the right
side of the road and collided with an
embankment, causing moderate
damage.
Abbutt was injured and taken to
Holzer Medical Center by private
vehicle. where she was treated and
released for cuts and bruises.
The patrol investigated another
tw&lt;&gt;-Car crash in Meigs County Mon-

i

IIIII

PROCJ,AMATION - Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews sigus a
proclamation announcing the observance of ReligioiiS Emphasis Week,
Feb. 1-8 and Four Chaplains Day, Feb. 1, as James Gilmore, chaplain rl.
Drew Webster Post 39, American Legion, looks on. Foor Chaplains Day
will be observed by the post at 10:30 a.m. on Feb. 1 at the Laurel CWf
Free Methodist Church with the Rev. Floyd Shook, pastor, speaking. The
day is in tribute to four service chaplains who calmly issued their life
belts to American serviceman aboard the troop transport when it was torpedoed on Feb. 3, 1943. Their arms around one another's shoulders the
four chaplains, heads bowed in prayer, went down with the ship.

I

Area deaths

Story E. Blake

Funeral services for Story E.
Blake, 59, who died at his residence
iri Coolville, have been set for II a.m.
Thursday at the White Funeral
Home with the Rev. Eldon Blake of·
ficiating.
Mr. Blake was born on May 23,
1921, a son of the late William Sher·
· man and Nora Buchanan Blake. He
was employed in various plants in
the area. · He was a veterans of

Now

to

BLOOD APPEAL ASKED
An appeal for replacement
blood for Mrs. Janet Korn, who
remains critically ill in the
Cleveland Clinic, has been
issued. Over the weekend Mrs.
Korn received 71 pints of plasma,
platelets and blood.
Residents may give blOOd in
Mrs. Korn's name at the next
visit of the Red Cross Bloodmobile here.
Cards may be sent to Mrs. Korn
at 3N34, Cleveland Clinic, P. 0.
Box 982. Cleveland, Ohio, 44106.

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGES JAN. 26
Qarence Baier, Florence Barnhouse. Mrs. Roy Canterbury and
son, Jere Clark, Jeffrey Qarke,
Robert Crow, Oma Curry. Walter
Evans, Rita Hayes, Donald Hermann, John Johnson II, William
Miller, Mary Montgomery, Patricia
Riegel, Robert Robbins, Beverly
Snider, Mary Sparks, Kimberly
Spurlock, Cheryl Stollings, Mrs.
Thomas Weaver and.daughter
BffiTilS
Mr. and Mrs. James Miller,
daughter, Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Whetstone Sr., daughter,
Wellston.

I

World War II.
Surviving are two sisters, Sadie
Cubbison, Coolville, and Gladys
Riggleman, Parkersburg; a
brother, Glen of Reedsville, and a
number of nieces and nephews. Two
brothers, a sister and his parents
preceded him in death.
Friends may call at the funeral
horne anytime after noon on Wednesday. Burial will be in the Eden
Cemetery at Reedsville.

Montgomery from Pomeroy Health
care Center to Veterans Memorial
Hospital and treated Doris Miller on
the scene, E; Main St., at 10:12 p.m.
The Middleport Unit at 11:51 p.m.
took Unda Darst to Veterans
Memorial.

Local emergency units answered
four calls Monday according to the
report of the Meigs 'Emergency
Medical Services. At 10:10 a.m., the
Tuppers Plains Unit took George
Sirruns from Route 681 East to
O'Bleness Hospital, Athens; at 6:19 .---~------.--.=~==­
p.m. the Pomeroy Unit took Ruth
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted-Jenny A~. Reedsville; Valerie LaBonte, Long Bottorn; Sherri Jewell, Cheshire; Paul
Cesto, Columbus; Kenneth Imboden, Middleport;
Thomas
Morrisey, Long Bottom.
Discharged-JoAnn Clark, Maude
Bailey, Theresa Becker, William
Morris, Agnes Coleman, Edith
Searles, Opal Capehart, Vada Cald·
well.

..... IP" SPUW.

••
•

13" PIZZA ••

Your choi&lt;t of any
-

toppiftt.

I $2.50

I

Rtf.$4.0oll
I ..,. Ooly
5,6 &amp; 7

Ja n .

:Gtno's:
•••••••
•

All LOCA liONS

•

ELBERFELD$
BED BLANKETS

SALE

SUPER
SAVINGS

e

ANT1QUESTAKEN
The unoccupied house owned by
Addie Pu!Uns, Lakewood Road,
township road 85, was broken into
last week and antiques were taken
according to the sheriff's department.
Antiques taken were china cubbard. dishes, chifforobe, chest of
drawers and cedar chest. Entry was
gained through a kitchen window.
Anyone in the area that may
remember seeing any suspicious
Yehicles are ased to contact the
sheriff's department.

I

At last--hostages go.home
By JAMESGERSTENZANG .
Assoelated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) .- And today
they really go home.
Their 444 days of bondage in Iran
are more than a week behind them,
their decompression period is over,
the official welcome in the nation's
capital is a warm remembrance,
and the 52 freed Americans are
finally heading home.
Washington embraced the
hostages Tuesday and President
Reagan threw open the White House
to them and their families in a
display
termed "absolutely
staggering" by L. Bruce Laingen.
The air of jubilation at the White
House was tempered by a stern warning from Reagan that any
terrorists ever again daring to seize
American captives would face
"swift and effective retribution."
Today, after most of them spent
the night at a suburban Arlington,
Va., hotel, the hostage beroes were

dispersing to cities and small towns was admitted Tuesday night to an·
around the country.
Arlington hospital suffering from
They anticipated at least 30 days' · pneumonia, severe bronchitis and . ·
vacation, although some expressed exhaustion. He was listed in fair con·
Interest in returning to work sooner.
dition.
"Where's my next post?" asked
With 6,000 guests spread out on the
Katherine Koob, one of ·the two White House South Lawn, and a
women held in captivity for the en- nationwide television audience wat·
tire 444 days, as soon as she arrived ching live coverage, Reagan capped
in Washington.
the freed Americans' first week of
"If I had my choice, I'd report liberty Tuesday, saying:
back to duty tomorrow," said
".Your freedom and your inMarine Sgt. John D. McKeel, Tl, of dividual dignity are much
' cherished. In the representation of
Balch Springs, Texas.
Although most of the former this nation you will be accorded
hostages remained at the hotel, John every means or· protection that
E. Graves returned home to subur- America can muster.
ban Reston, Va., where neigh"Let terrorists be aware that
borhood children gave him a can- when the rules of international
dlellght welcome Tuesday night. ''I behavior are violated; our policy will
can't believe I'm here, but I am," be. one cl. swift and effective
said Graves, 53, a senior foreign ser- retribution.
"We hear it said that we live in an
vice inspector.
The homecoming will wait a little era of limits to our power," Reagan
longer yet for Robert Ode, at 6S the added. "Well let it Also be unoldest of the fonner hostages. He
(Continued on page 121

Call for

observance

SAlE

REDUCED

Middleport,

ACTION SOUGIIT
A petiton of the trustees of the U.
B. Church, Letart Falls, to sell and
convey real estate to Don R. Hill and
Mary E. Hili was filed in Meigs
County Corrunon Pleas.Court.
Cynthia Marie Blackwell,
Pomeroy; filed suit for divorce
against Stever J. aiackwell,
Pomeroy.

The Meigs County Corrunissioners
are calling for a county wide observance on Thursday to honor the
return of the 52 hostages.
The following resolution was
passed Tuesday calling for the ob-

20%

Our remaining stock of blankets including thermals ·
sheet blankets · electric blankets and others. Good
selection of sizes and colors.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

servance.

U)uple negi1tiates finding
RICHMOND, Va. - A Richmond husband and wife who found
$300,000 in small bills stuffed in their attic insulation have placed the
money in escrow while negotiating with the house's fonner owner.
Mr. and ·Mrs·. Robert E. Comet bought the house from the widow of
Emmett J. Morgan, a bondsman who died in 19'18 and left an estate
valued at more than $2 million. He did not leave a will.

Slate No. %%3X
CONSOLIDATED REPORT o~· CONDITION

The Farmers Bank &amp;
Savings Con:'pany

State.

of Pomeroy, Ohio a~d Foreign aod DomesUe Subsidiaries, al the elose of
business December 31, 11!80, a slate banklllg fnslitulioo orgaalzcd aod
operating under the bao.klng laws of this Slate aod a member of the Federal
Reserve System. Published io accordance with a call made by the Slate Bank·
log Authorilles aod by the Federal Reserve Bank of this District.
ASSETS
Cash and due from depository iru,titutions ... : . . ... . ... . . . . . .... 2,608,000.00
U.S. Treasury securities . . ... .. . .. . ... .. , ... .... . . .. . ........ 4,893,000.00
Obligations of U.S. Government
·
agencies and corporations . ... . ... . .. ... .. .. ...........•.... 2,520,000.00
Obligations of States and political subdivisions
in the United States . . .. . .... . .. . . ...... . . .. . . . . . . . .... . . ... 2,764,000.00
Federal Reserve stock and corporate stock .. . ........... . . . ....... 30,000.00
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
under agreements to resell . . . ...... . ........ .. .............. 900,000.00
a. Loans, Total (excluding unearned
income) .... . .............. . . . ........ .. ..... ." 14,104.,000.00
b. Les8 : allowance for possible loan losses .......... . ... $140,000.00
c. Loans, net ... .. ............ . .. . ... . ..... . ...... . ...... . .. 13.964.000.00
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and
other assets representing bank premises . . . . . . ... . . , .. .•. .. . ... 352,000.00
Other assets . . . . . . . ..... . . . .. .... . .. . . ... ... ... . . . .......... , 276.0!!Q.OO
TOTAL ASSETS . ... .. ... . ... . ......... .. .. . ..... . ... . . . .. . . 28,307,000.00

.choice
gas last, too.

EQUITY CAPITAL
Common stock :
a. No. shares authorized 16,000
b. No. shares outstanding 16,000 . . . . .. ... ... .. .. (par value!
400,000.00
Surplus ..... . ............. . .. . .... . ... .. .. ...... .. . ... . ...... 600,000.00
Undivided profits . .......... . ..... . . : . .. . .. .... . ...... . . ... .. 1,013,000.00
TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL . .. ... . . . •. . . ... . ... ... .... ... .. ... .. 2,013,000.0
TOTALLIABIUTIESAND
__
EQUITY CAPITAL .. .. .. .. . ................ .. ........ .... 28,307,000.00
MEMORANDA
Amounts outstanding as of report date:
b. Time certificates of deposit in denomination
of $100,000 or more .... . ...... ... . . .. . .. .. . . . .. . ., ........ SOO,OOO.OO
Average for 30 calendar days (or calen&lt;l!'r month)
ending with report date:
a. cash and due from depository institutions ........ . ... . . ... . . . 2,4-42,000.00
b. Federal funds sold and securities purchased
under agreements to resell . ...... .. .. . .... . . . ........... " .. 1,168,000.00
c. Total loans . . .. ... . ... . ...... ..... .. ... . ... . ..• , ......... 14,138,000.00
d. Time certificates of deposits in denominations
of $100,000 or more . .. .... . . . ... . .......... . ..... . ........ . .. 500,000.00
e. Total deposits ................... ·.............. ., ••....... 25,698,000.00
h. Total assets ..... . .. .. ...... , .•. . .. . ... . ... , . . ..... ... . .. 28,939,000.00

Quaker State is America's first
choice for helping cars last. And
as if that's not enough. now Quaker
State helps gas last, too.
Try Quaker Stale Super Blend
_ ·.
lOW-30 Deluxe lOW-40 or Sterlmg Motor Otis . .
Now all.three br;md s give you gas-saving efficiency for extra miles per
gallon at no extra cosr.

I, Roger W. Hysell, Cashier, of the above-named bank do hereby d!l&lt;'lare
that this report of condition is true to the best of my knowledge and belief.
Roger W. Hysell

State
last.
helps

We, the ~ndersigned directors, attest the correctness of this report of condition "and declare that it has been examined by us and to the best of our
knowledge and belief is true and correct.
THEODORE T. REED, JR.
RICHARD C. FOLLROD - Director•
FRED W. CROW, JR.
I

enttne

Vol. 28, No. 201
Copyrighted 1981

SIMPLICITY
PAlTERN

THE SEWING
CENTER

•

at

All
KNITS
20% OFF

UABILmES
Demand deposits of individuals,
.
partnerships and corporations , . . . . . . ....................... 5,713,000.00
Time and savings deposits of Individuals,
.
partnerships. and corporations . ........... . ....... .. ...... . 19,320,000.00
Deposits of United States Government ...........•. ... .... .. ....... 17,000.00
Deposits of States and political subdivisions
in the United States .. ......... . ................ . ... . . . ... . .. . 520,000.00
Certified and officers' checks ............... . ......... ......... . 255,000.00
a. Total Deposits ... ........ .. ......... . .... .. ...... . . ... .. . 25,825,000.00
(I) Total demand deposits ............... .. ........ 6,505,000.00
(2) Total time and savings deposits .......... . ..... 19,320.00Q,OO
other liabilities , .... ......... .. . . . . ...... .. ... .. . . ... .. . ... . .. 469,000.00
TOTAL LIABIUTIES (excluding subordinated notes
'
and debentures) ............ .. . .. . . . . . .... ... . ... .. .. .. ... 26.294.Q90.00

I.

•

January 27, 1781

Middleport, Ohio

1

Earthquakes jost California
LOS ANGELES - No injuries or damage were reported when a pair
of earthquakes jostled california, Officials said.

A slight earthquake registering 3.1 on the Richter Scale rwnbled
through the area south of Culver City on Tuesday night, about six
hours after the 2:10 p.m. PST quake of 4.0 that struck 30 miles
southeast of San Jose, officials said.
'!'he Richter scale is a measure Of ground motion. A quake
measuring 4.0 on the scale can do moderate damage in a populated
area, while a quake of 3.5 is capable of slight damage.

Hard drugs make way to inmates
'•

UMA, Ohio - The head of Lima State Hospital says heroin. opiwn
and other hard drugs are making their way to some inmates and ern-'
ployees.
Superintendent Ronald Hubbard told a citizens advisory panel
Tuesday that the drugs and liquor are getting past the gates.
"On some days, vodka and Sprite is the drink of the day," he said.
Thooe caught with the s~bstances will be prosecuted, he said.

School board fires 14 teachers
CINCINNATI - .A suburban school ooard has fired 14 striking
teachers, effective at the end or the school year, and told others to
report to work by Friday or also lace dismissals.
•
.
Dennis Roberge, a consultant with the Ohio Education Association,
said action by the Mariemont Board of Education on Tuesday night
would be challenged in C&lt;Jurt.
The Madeira District Education Association struck the 1,38!&gt;-sludent
system, covering the communities of Mariemont, Terrace Park and
Fairfax, on Monday. Classes have been held since then by substitutes
and parents.

.

Sick out contines in Steubenv"ille

"Be it resolved that the Meigs
County Corrunissioners do hereby of·
ficially designate Thursday, Jan. 29.
1981 as a day of Thanksgiving in
Meigs County in honor of the sale
return of the 52 American hostages.
"Be it further resolved that all
businessestablishments and private
homes are urged to display the
American flag on this date, and
requests that all churches in every
conununity ring their church bells at
12 n&lt;Hln.
" And be it further resolved that
each and every citizen of Meigs
County pause for one minute at noon
on this date for a moment of silent
prayer.
"The commissioners hope that
everyone, no rna tter wha I they are
doing or where they are, stop and
join in the observance."

Commission
opens bids

.

Bid• for additional space to at'comodate the county welfare department department were opened when
the county conunissioners met in
regular session Tuesday.
Bids were received from the
village of Pomeroy to rel).\ space at
the !onner Pomeroy Seriior High
Building and from Jay Hall Jr., to
rent space in a building on North
Second Ave., in Middleport. The bids
were tabled for additional study.
The commissioners signed and approved the final project budget and
contract docwnents ror submission

to the State Oepartmewnt of Mental
Retardation
Developmental
Disabilities for the construction of
the Meigs County Mental Retar·
1 Continued on page 12)

WITHOUT FLAGS - Since American flags normally placed throughout tho business section of
Pomeroy by the .Pomeroy-Middleport Lions Club were
at the dry cleaners Tuesday when Mayor Clarence Andrews had asked lor a flag display in tribute to the 52
former hostages, some business people such as Joe
Clark of Clark's Jewelry Store became resourceful.
Many months ago, Drew Webster Post 39. American

Legion, had distributed small American ·flags for
display by busineiis hyuses to display as a remem- ·
braoce to the hostages. Tuesday, Clark placed the
small flag oo a parking metet In !root of his business
establishment io tribute to the hostages being honor¢
in Washington, D. C. Bells tolled In the community at 12
noon .

Church ·tof~:ghens position
in current contract talks
WILLIAMSON , W.Va. (AP ) United Mine Workers President Sam
Church has toughened his position
regarding lhe possibility of a strike
by the union should negotiators fail
to present a new contract before the
current agreement expires.
In an address Tuesday to southern
West Virginia local union officials,

Church said he would not seek an extension u! the current contract if
UMW members fail to ratify a new
agreement by March 27. the day the
current 3-year-old contract ends.

Union representatives and
.negotiators for the Bituminous Coal
Operators Association last week
opened serious contract talks in
Washington, D.C. The next round of
bargaining is scheduled for
Tuesday.
Both sides have agreed to a March
15 settlement deadline, Church said,
to give the union 12 days in which to
c'Onduct a ratification vote.
II the unio!l membership rejects or
fails to approve a woposed contract
by the end of the current agreement,

Church predicted the union would
strike.
A Ill-day strike by the UMW
during 1977·78 contract negotiations
virtually halted the nation's coal
production . .
Last sununer, Church said he
would consider asking the union's
governing board to extend the
current contract if union and industry officials had failed to agree
on a new package by March 27.
That idea was criticized by many
(Continued on page 12)

STEUBENVILLE, Ohio - aty officials met behind closed doors
early today in an attempt to end a sickout by nearly all of its JSO
. municipal workers.
It was not immediately known whether any decisions were made.
Members of City Council called the closed door session at about 9: 30'
p.m. Tuesday, two hours alter its meeting had begun. Tl)e move drew
protests from many attending the meeting.

550 people feared drowned
JAKARTA, Indonesia - Military ships and aircraft searched Wed·
nesday for !i50 people missing and feared drowned when a burning Indonesian ship sank in the stormy Java Sea. Authorities said only 20
bodies had been spotted in the rough waves.
A-spokesman for the search and rescue teams aboard 13 ships and
five aircraft from the Indonesian navy and air force said crews also
sighted empty life vests from the ship and some of the 60 rubber
dinghies air-dropped into the stonny waters the day before. All were
empty, he said.
Agovernment spokesman said 566 people, including crew members,
were rescued from a total of 1,1:MI on board the stricken Tampomas 2
wMn it sank Tuesday.

Ohio lottery winner
CLEVEl.AND - The winning number is selected Tuesday night in
the Ohio Lottery's daily game "The Number" was 486.

Weather

•

Partly cloudy tonight. Lows near 20. Mostly sunny Thursday. Highs
in the low 30s. ChallCe of precipitation 10 percent tonight and near 1.ero
percent Thursday. WindS westerly to northwesterly 1().20 mph toni~ht .
Extended Ohio Forecaot- Friday throughSunday:F~irlhnJUgh the
period. Highs in the mid-20s to mid-30s Friday and S!Jturday and in the
30s Sunday. Lows 1().20 Friday and S!Jturday and in the mirl··lccns to •
the mid-20s Sunday.

FINE AND PERFORMING ARTS BUILDING- Thla oo.w structure
will be dedirated on th~ campu• of Rio Graode ColleKe-Commualty
College on Sunduy, Ft•b. 8. Ceremooles wf)l start 11 2 p.m. Wayne P.
Lawstin, Uhin Arts Couodl's executive director, wlll be the keynote

•

~·

.

speaker. A plano concert wlll be presented by Marl Cbristlue Epling.
Following afternoon loon and refreshments, the Ohio State Ualvenlty
Jazz Ensem~le will perform at 7:30p.m.

�,
21, 1981

Commentary

'

A precede":t for Mr. Reag~
President Reagan, on the day he
·
t ed , faced a probl em
was maugura
·
1
as near y mso1ubl e ( one hopes ) as
· his
an" he will come upon durmg
•
'd
T
ha
t
prest ency o ve s opped ea r·
· order t o cons1'der
ter's game· m
ha ges of Foul would have been anc r

dition that a certain script be
followed ·
Accordingly ' on December
. 17,
1968
General
Woodward
delivered
· •
to the North Korean negotiator a
statement relevant passages of
which read, " The Pueblo .was not

.· William F. Buckley Jr.
ti-climactic in a sense few
Americans could have unders tood,
let alone one whose early career
dealt with the imperatives of sound
theater.
So: they are back. Forget for a
moment the money. We have
''promised'' not ''again'' to interfere
with Iranian affairs. And ·we have
promised to require everyone in the
United States who ever had any
knowledge of where the shah or
members of his family invested
their money to r elate such
knowledge to the U.S. Government ;
which government " promises" to
freeze those assets, pending a determination by the relevant court as to
proper ownership of them. That's
qwte a number. A legacy of th~ Carter administration.
A.requirement of Reagan's?
Consider a relevant historical
precedent. On January 25, 1968, Nor·
th Korean gunboats seized an
American naval vessel, the Pueblo,
charging that it had trespassed onto
North Korean waters. We knew that
this was not the case, becaues the
boat's own logs were confirmed by
radar fixes which documented that
the Pueblo was in international
waters, several miles from North
Korean territorial waters.
But we all know that Captain
Bucher and his son were taken, tor·
tured, imprisoned, and that the Nor·
th Koreans demanded first an in·
demnity ,in addition to an apology,
finally merely an apology.
In the closing, tense days during
the end of the Lyndon Johnson ad·
ministration, Johnson 's deter·
mination to free the American
sailors was nearly as obsessive as
Carter's to free the 1\ostages. He instructed our negotiator, Gen. Gilbert
Woodward, to advise the . North
Koreans that he, President Johnson,
would "apologize" but only on con·

engaged in iUegal activity ... There
is no convincing evidence that the
ship at any time intruded in the
territorial waters claimed by North
Korea, and we (cannot) apologize
for action' we could not believe IOQk
place." The statement went on,
''The document which I am going to
sign was prepared by the North .
~oreans and is at variance with the
above position, but my signature
will not and cannot alter the facts. I
will sign the document to free the
crew and only to free the crew."
Two days later, the North Korean
government accepted the statement,
though a more accurate way to say it
is that the government agreed to
ignore the statement. This the
Koreans corrununica ted by announcing that the " apology" could
be signed on December 22, following
which the prisoners would be
released. General Woodward signed
the statement, and we got our 1968
hostages back. The North Koreans
had a piece of paper.
What does it mean , exactly, that
we will not interfere in the affairs of
Iran? Suppose that a government
even nuttier than the ayatollah's
were to take power in Iran "'"'l' a
government, let us say, as devotedly
lunatic as Pol Pot's, which was bent
on undiscovering the wheel . Suppose
such a government announced that
Iran would cease to bring oil out of
the ground. Or suppose that the'
Iranians decided to declare, and
wage, a war against Israel, perha~
uniting in that enterprise with its
sometime enemy Iraq , and
threatening a terminal in·
flammation in the Persian Gulf.
Would we decline from " in·
terfering " in Iranian affairs ?
And imagine the consequences of
running down and sequestering the
assets of the shah's family . The
meaning of any such activity td men

Urban policy agenda
for the eighties
(Fifth in series)
In urban policy, the President's Commission for a National Agenda for
the ~ighties notes that over the last several decades, demographic and
economic forces have transformed urban America dramatically. The
report points out that while manufacturing and allied jobs in the central
city have decreased, cities in the Eighties will likely see an increase in
the number of managerial, financial and professional occupations and
their allied occupations. According to the report :
"Older industrial cities will continue to be national and regional centers
performing important commercial, service, financial, governmental,
and cultural functions. "
However, according to the report, this deconcentration has left behind
segments of the population which risk permanent exclusion from the
American economy and society.
According to the report, Federal policies that are "place-oriented"
have often been ineffective in eliminating " the distress of 'pockets of
poverty' among 'pockets of plenty."' The Commission concludes that, in
an era of limited resources, people most effected by urban policy-rather
than distressed places-should be the primary recipients of · Federal
assistance.
In te.r ms of long-range policy, the Commission urges the Federal government to accept the reality of deconcentration trends and target aid to individual's residing in distressed areas rather than any particular city or
region.
The report notes the Federal government often has been an inefficient
and inflexible administrator of grant-in-aid programs to communities.
There are now over 500 such programs, totalling $88 billion .
In education, the Commission observes " public schools are failing to
provide the qwHity education desired by the American public" and
. cautions " continued failure by the public schools to perform their
· traditional role adequately, together with emerging needs of the 1980's,
may have disastrous consequences for the nation. "
Civil rights, the hwnan service area where the federal government has
the clearest and most compelling responsibility, remains an unfinished
• agenda. The Commission makes clear that all the problems addressed in
the social agenda have a more adverse impact on minorities and families
headed by women than on any other Americans.
· Next: The Political Agenda.

The Daily Sentinel ·
111 c.art Str.el
Pomeroy, Oblo
. . . . .tl51
DEVOTED TO THE ~EST OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

A~

&amp;!m19
~v

-.-.,.....,.c:::j,...,

~ .....

ROBERT L. WINGETI
Pabllaher

BOBHOEFUCH

PAT WHITEHEAD
Aallltot hbUIIIeriCfJ:IIIroller

Geaenl M11u1er

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
Nta·• EcUtor

_...,.....,.

A MEMBER of Tlle AHocLICed Prts1, lalaad Dadf Plw1 Auedadoa aDd &amp;be
AIDtrlcU Ntw~..per PubJlllter1 .tuocladoa.

LE1TBIJI OF OPINION.,.,..-.,, They ttltaold Ito Ina .... • wanll leq. AD

.,. llllje&lt;l 1o edlllq ..t ,.., Ito olptcl wtdl aome, 10tl telt,.,_
- · No-lpotllellonwtD Ito pablJIIItd. L&lt;n.ro oltoald be liM IItie, - • I l l

.....

in power m South Amenca, m
Afnca,. in the Middle
East, hwould
rf
· be
st
eleclrtc.
Powe
ul
men
w
o
mve
.
.
. d
thetr
. money m Amertca
· B o us
boa cer·
· ll
1
tam economic serv1ce.
u
a
· 1' 't · 1 vet a·
they . have an · tmp be
JCJ m eres f m
helpmg Amenca . secure, or
reasons however selfiSh. Our VIew of
it should be the same as Swit·
zerland's: money deposited here by
a foreigner as his unless it is
established by non-ex-post facto
laws (our Constitution protects
Americans against ex post facto
laws ) that it was stolen by that
foreigner. It belongs to him - even
if he was so reckless as to befriend
the United States while he was in
power.
President Reagan , without
bothering even to renounce that part
of the agreement, can simply ignore
it. All it takes is a single directive to
the Justice Department. We can
then turn our imagination to the
question not of what does the shah
owe the ayatollah, but what does the
ayatollah owe to ~2 American
citizens.

OW. HIPS.heol Bubll&gt;ol

, . . . , •• ltelaltl
Aknlo Hobin lot, CutiGo1 Tlinlly l'l
Almtn Kenmore 78, . Akron Manchester

Almtn Sprinl&lt;. 16, NOI'donltt S4
Aleundtr 6f; Welllton 5I
. Ar!Jnglon II, Corey 16

STORE HOURS:

Aahtlbull ~. Riverside 48

Mon.-·Sat. 8 am·lO pm

Ashlttbula Ediewood 1!, Cotmooul N
Ashtabula Hafbor 83, JUd.laon 61
Aultlntown-FI(ch f7, FarreU, Pa., 50
a.dl:er 15, lABrae 82
Barberton 71, Akron St. V..st. M 7U
~1111 110, lloalllvtU. .,
aNver EI,Mm 71, Olk Hill &amp;9
-

Otlnel

12. lillole

Hll. 50

Belpro II, Nelt&lt;miJJe.Yorl&lt; &lt;:1
8erimhln! 11, Bloomfield 13
~·ld 12. Pullnd Seminary 42
B.-yo II, Clu'ohop 1111. l!ll

THEY COME. RUSHING IN BETWEEN 1-\ALV€'3 ANP
'SIGNAL. CLIPPING, 1-\0Lt&gt;ING AN9 PE~'50NA L FOUL"·

'

'

Bn&gt;OIMile it, Nallonol TroU 50
Budleye N. sa, cacuz fl7
Buclltyt S. 81, Jeftel'BOO Union 63
Buckeye Trail N, Newcomeutown 44
Cambricll:e 68, Marietta 6:1
Campbell·Merrwrlal
It,
Peteraburtj
Spring. &amp;7
.
Canton McKinley 74, Cantoo GlenOU 43
Cttrdlnttl Slril&lt;h ll, 81. Wl!lldelln &lt;I
Carliale 11, Tnmton ~ood $3
C.milltoo 58, Minerva ti5
Ologoln Flllll U, Bedford 19
Cin. Christian M, Cin. Seven Hills 58
On. McNichulas 58, Cln. Turpln 52
On. St. Bernard 51, FeUclty 31
Cln. Western Hilla 515, Cin. LaSalle 19
Cleve. Glenville 81, Cleve. South 6.2
Cleve. Hta. 12, Garfield Hta. 7G

Sunday 10 am-10 pm

298 SECOND ST.
!»QMEROY,
0.
....
PRICES EFFECTIVE lHRU SATURDAY, JANUARY 31, 1981

Oeve. Mlnhall M, Cle\'e. Unco~W. 5I
Cleve. St. Joeeph ee, Cleve. W. Tech II
Cleve. Unlveraky 71, Gllmour t1
Cleve. Westaide 11, Howland C'hriat. fit
Col. East Sf, Col. Centennial fll
Col. Unden-McKinley II , Col. Bftchcruft 5I
COl. Northland 88, Col. Brookhaven 53,

•

20'f

Cui. Soulh 65, Cot. Hllrtley M
Cui. Wehrle tn, Col. Hamilton Twp. 66,

step in that direction, a freeze on
federal hiring to replace Jimmy
Carter's order permitting govern·
ment agencies to fill one of every
two vacancies.
But the new administration conceded the impact of that order is not
clear. "The net reduction in federal
civilian employment as a result of
the order cannot be- predicted with
confidence at this time," the White
House said.
Reagan's order said there could be
exemptions to the hiring freeze " in
rare and unusual circumstances"
for the delivery of essential services .
Government officials . - even
RepubUcan government offjcials tend to consider all their services
essential, all their circumstances
rare and unusual.

That is one of the reasons change
comes slowly for even the most
determined of adrninistrators.
But Reagan vowed from the steps
of the Capitol that change there will
be. " We must act today in erder to
preserve tomorrow, " he said. "And
let ihere be no misunderstanding we are going to act beginning
today."
He came close to declaring the
economic emergency some of his ad·
visers had suggested during the
transition, calling the situation a
crisis, an "affliction of the greatest
proportions. "
His cures are tax reduction, the
easing of federal regulations, a
government that spends within its

means.
"On these principles, " he said,
1
'there will be no compromise.' '

20'f

Col. West ro, lancaUr 64
Col. Westland f3, Col. Franklin Htl. 5S
Cul wnbla 66, Keystone 59

have responded to these reports with
a public-relations counterattack
ever since it all began back in 1964,
this time had some almost-kind wor·
ds. A spokesman for the Tobacco In·
stitute ·found the latest edition
"more moderate in tone." More, the

induStry indicates willingness to
work with the surgeon general
toward finding a means of being
more specific about additives
without risking those trade secrets.
There may be 'the opportunity for
a compromise here. Perhaps instead

In this decade our country will
face problems more grim than at
any time since it was founded . The
National and International
situations will be tremendous.
However, to help our own country
there are many things that can be
done.
One bright light in a world of
darkness is the election of con·
servative Ronald Wilson Reagan to
the Presidency. We must remember
that the Bible and the U. S. Constitution are Conservative as were
the Founding Fathers of our coun·
try. The cause of MOST of the
problems today lie in the fact that
our country has shifted from a Con·
servative nation to a predominately
Liberal one. We are at present a No.
2 World Power- our economy is in
chaos ...:. our courts; from the top to
the bottom, are so Libe;al that they
p~otect the guilty instead of the in·
nocent.
I could cite other problems, but I
am sure I have listed enough so that
anyone can get the picture .
History has shown us that liberals
and others have slowly moved into
positions of power and over the
years have seriously eroded the U.
S. Constitution and all guideli~es for
conservative law and justice.
If our nation is to survive, we must
return to the ideals laid down by the
Bible, the U.S. Constitution and the
founding fathers of our country.
We must remove from political office all elected or appointed officials
who are not guided by these ideals.
Having a Conservative gov\mvnent
is in the best interest of the people
and the nation . Remember, all that
is necessary for evil to triumph is for
good men and women to do nothing .
-Harry W. Hill, 1-614-191.{1681.

Chicken Thighs.~.79~

Gen.VI 17, AJI&gt;Iabttla Sl. John 31

Reagan focused it on problems at
home, the economy prime among
them. His message to the world was
one of restraint, from a president the
campaigning Carter had said might
risk war.
He said he would negotiate,
sacrifice, but never surrender for
peace.
"When action is required to
preserve our national security, we
will act," the president said.

Glenn e7, Crooksville M
Grove City 7~.. WetterviUe S. 65
Hamlltun te, Sprlna:. Nurth 89
HaM"llon II), Oxford Tlllawanda $9
Hawken 7!, Beachwood 83
.
Hlllaburn 71, M11con Elstem M
Huron 71, Clyde 5I
lndJan Val. S. 71, Guernsey Catb. 31
.!&lt;fl•raoo ll, Chardon 17
Kalida 94, Convuy Crutvlew ~
Kent RooMvell • . Ravervw 15
Lake RldM:e 50, Hudson W. Rnerve 49
Lakewood $1, Valley FOI)!e 40
l.ai.l!woud St. Edward 81 , Cleve . Hayes

"Little

l.isboo &amp;5, l..telonla 64

Lc&gt;raln Suuthview

room where the beautiful COQks
prepare the fioest food, cooked to
periection, bless them for the good
·
job they are doing.
I cannot say enough good words
for this health care center. I thank
each one for being so good to my
wonderful wife. God bless her heart,
she is grateful too. Sometimes I wonder where all these good people
come from . They are super.
Well, I am not so young myself,
but I am looking forward to the time
I can get in . If you have anyone who
needs this kind of care, the center is
the answer. To me it is just one big
family . I don't know how to close or
whether I want to. Well, with a big
heart full of love for all of you, may I
remain,
Sincerely your friend, Clell Wood,
Syracuse , Ohio.

Marysville 72, Fairbanks U
Medlru~ 77. Ouverleaf 6$
MediiUII Buckeye 118, Independence 64
Mentor n. w. Gt.aut~• $3
Milrurd Christ. 51, Ctn. Emmanuel 50,
OT
Millbury t...kr 53; BowlinH Green 42
Miller 82, N. Gallia 48
Milton-Union 71, Newton .0

Mlntral R~e 79, Sout.h.Jni(ton 61
Mogadon! M, Watt'rloo ~
Mootpelier 61, Hllltup eo
Newark U, Coshocton 39
Newbury &amp;6, Fairport Hardinfi 54
New C111tll': Pa . 113, Vuung. Ursuline 47
Newton Fa!b 69, Curtiand Lakeview 44
Nllt!S McKinley 64, Girard 46
N. O.ltimore 18, McComb &amp;4

MONTALO AND

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Featured
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The Daily Sentinel
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BU~KET

Otto\'llle 51, Colwnbu.s Grove ·49
Peebla 57, Westem Lltham $4
Pt'rryaburg M, Anthony Wayne 3:1
Ports. Oay H1 Lucasville Val. 41
RJcbmund HLI. 8'1, Lulher1n E. S4
Riverview 'PI, Philo 62
Rootstown &amp;4, Ravellf\8. SE 82
R01eerans 80, Canal W1nchetter 67
Roulord 62, Sylvania Southview 47
Sandy Valley &amp;4. E. Canton $1
Sebrins McKlnley &amp;I , Elef"Kholl Sprinx .

'•

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W1eners ........... :~~.

01\lu Deaf &amp;f, Zlnet. Chrbtian 80
Oltlllted F'allll 52, Elyrta W. 54!

Today in history. ..
One year ago : lslarmc toretgn ministers meeting in Pakistan passed a
resolution condemning Soviet military intervention in Afghanistan.
Today's birthday : Actor Alan Aida is 45 .
Thought for today : The luck of having talent isn't enough; you must
also have a talent for luck - French composer Hector Berlioz (lii03-I869).

Hams................. ~~·.. .
•

eo.

Elyria Sot
Luwellville 71, Lunbtown 42
Maplewood M, Farmington 47

of all the additives data, the surgeon
general and smoking public should
be willing to start with just a small
part of it - say a thousandth, more
or less.
What's the real story on that
shellac 1

$}59

E·Z CARVE BONELESS
FRENCH CITY

Miami ~ . Wayneaville 41
L«k.liolnd 41, Cln . Cuuntry ~y' 38
l..ot:an Elm 57, Tuys Valley t2
Lt&gt;raln King 56, 81'\lJ\Swick U

•

· way they worked.
I found that the people who run the
center are wonderiul, in being so
wonderiul in the ways they are
always ready to help. I think that I
have never seen a nicer group of
people, always with a big smi le and
hello, how are you'
May God bless all the nurses for
the good work they are doing. They
are really nih. I want to say a good
word for the kids that watch over the
old people, waiting on them hand
and !dot. May God bless them .
May f say a word about the old
people? God bless their hearts , they
have bome the burden in the heat of
the day, working hard all their life.
Now since they have come to the
center, they have a nice room and a
clean bed with all the care they
could wish for .
A wonderiul big spotless dining

Fryers .................

J """"'
115
Ga.,...llvUie
ll, Woodridg&lt; SO

Letters to editor------Very conservative

5

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L!·• . .· ·

GRADE AWHOLE ·
'

Contlnent.al 73, Pandora~ilboa S
Cuyahotla Falls 6'1, Akrun Firestone $4
Day. Jerterson 63, Dey . Patterson 12
Otty. Klaor 100, Illy. Chrl.slian II.
Oa.y. Meadowdale 61, Day. Wayne 5.1
Deer Park 69, Bat.avi11 .0
• Dublin n, Col. Watterson 62·
E. Cleveland SNiw 70, Nonn~ndy 6&amp; OT
E. Cllntctll 66, BlonclleOter I&amp;
E. Uverpool 711, O.k Glen, W.Va. 38
E. Pak!stlne eo, W. Branch 5I OT
Eaton 71, Middletown Macllaon 17
Frlllklln 17, Illy. CttfN&gt;U 16
Franklin Furnace Gn!l!n 8'1, lrunlon St.

He wove in some campaign applause lines. "Government is not the
's olution; government is the
problem," he said. He said he wants
to make government work, "stand
by our side, not ride on our back."
It was not an addreSll of ringing
new phrases, but a swrunation of the
conservative Reagan creed.

Smokers: do you like your shellac?

By Don Graff
How do you like your shellac'
Filtered or not? Extra longs?
Lights? Possibly with a touch of
menthol'
If you are a smoker, it's too late to
gag. You very likely have been absorbing regular dosages, according
to the scant evidence available in the
U. S. surgeon general's recent
report to Congress on the nation's
smoking habit. .
This latest in the series focuses on
low-tar and low-nicotine cigarettes,
which have proliferated in recent
years as tobacco companies seek to
hold customers who have become
sensitized to the bad news about
smoking and health. The "lows"
now account for about a third of the
$17 billion (yes, that's billion) a year
cigarette market.
The
report
cautiously
acknowledges that switching to
brands with a tar-yield
measurement of 15 milligrams or
less per cigarette can reduce the
risk of lung cancer. Not, how:•ve if
the smoker compensates for the
milder smoke by lighting up more
frequently or inhaling more deeply.
There is no evidence of any less
risk of heart problems and lung
disorders other than cancer, such as
emphysema. II may be that the car·
bon monoxide, which is not directly
related to tar content, absorbed in
the process of smoking is the
primary contributor in the case of
the former. Cigarettes claim more
Uves from heart disease than from
the more widely publicized lung cancer.
Neither is it clear whether there is
any benefit to smoking low-tar, lownicotine cigarettes during pregnancy. Smoking has been indicted by
earlier research as a contributor to
miscarriages, birth defects and
other problems.
There is a possibility, however,
that whatever health gains may
result from reduction of tar and
nicotine are offset by the additives
used to disguise the consequent loss
of flavor in a cigarette. These include common substances such as
caramel and - if you have been
following closely, you don 't have to
guess it - shellac. There are others
less .t:orrunon. But even the surgeon
general doesn 't know for sure how
many of these there are and to what
extent they are being used.
And the cigarette rnakers so far
aren't telling. They classify the in·
fonnation as trade secrets, which
existing law cannot compel them to
disclose.
They have coughed up lists
totaling well in excess of a thousand
substances that may go into a
cigarette but without specifying
precisely which in what brands and
in what amounts.
.
Those same makers, who usually

16

,.

And now, for a tempered approach
WASHINGTON (AP) In
business suit instead of lonna!
dress, President Reagan had given
The Speech before, from a hundred
and more platfonns, on the path to
the White House.
But as a campaigner, he often had
suggested he would get quick results
in his efforts to prune govenunent,
balance the budget, slow inflation.
In his inaugural address, those
pledges were tempered a bt,
perhaps by the magnitude of tOO
federal bulwark before him. He said
it will take more than days, weelis or
montiiS to deal with the nation's
economic ills. He said progress will
be measured in inches and feet, not
miles, as he sets about trying to curb
the powers of the federal government.
His first step as president was a

TheDa

High School
Scores.•.

Januarv 28, 1981
The Daily Sentinel

DON'T ?ANIC -W~ GET A BUNCH OF THEM EVER'-1'
YEAR ABOUT TH\'3 TIME. -THEY'RE. SUPER BOWL
t=ANta WHO JUST GOT THEIR 104-0S "·

Ohio

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M1racle Wh1p... !2.~

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KRAFT

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$28'9

Velveeta Cheese....

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Appreciates center

FLAVORITE

I just want to· say a few words
about the Pomeroy Health Care Center.
I· was really torn up when I had to
send my wife there not knowi ng
what kind of care she would receive .
The first Sunday I went to see her,
they were having services in the
dining room, and I was so glad that
the patients could still hear the word
of God. Then I began to watch the

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•

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�Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

~-------------------------------------~P~o~m~e~r!o!v=:~~id~d~l~e~p~o~rt~,~O~h~i~o~------------------------------------------------~J~a:n~u~a~r~y~2~8~,JI~98!!1

ped Massachusetts~.

In winning (or the fifth time in its
last six starts, 'Louisville connected
on 28 o£ 49 shots from the floor.
"That is what you have to have, "
said Coach Denny Cnun. "The
problem is we haven't been consistent. We would play well but shoot
badly and couldn't get the parts
together."
The Cardinals took command of
the game with a 13--4 burst early·in
the second half - they shot 61.5 per-

By quarters :

cent after the intennission -to open basket one minute into overtime and
a 49-33 bulge. Smith had help from added a pair of free throws a minute
Jerry, Eaves, who accounted for 19 ·later.
King was Maryland's high scorer
points on 9-of-13 accuracy.
"My touch is corning back just as with 23 points and Manning added Hi
the team as a whole is shooting bet- while Pitt' got 17 apiece from Sam
Clancy, Dwayne Wallace and Lenny
ter," Eaves said.
Notre Dame had no trouble with McMillian.
'"We came back and won: That's
Cornell as John Paxson scored 15
points, Tracy Jackson added 14 by one thing we did good tonight, " said
making seven consecutive shots and Maryland Coach Lefty Driesell, who
Kelly Tripucka had 13. The Irish· noted his team was fortunate that
trailed 10-6 before the Jackson• Pitt missed some crucial free throws
Paxson show spa rked a 12-2 burst in the closing minutes. "We fouled
right and they missed them,!' ·he
with four points apiece.
"We played without intensity said. "We were just lucky. If they
early in the game," said Notre had made them. we'd have lost. It
Dame Coach Digger Phelps, who · was our night; it wasn't theirs."
Ed Rains scored four of his 18
cleared his bench in the second half.
"They hit some shots and we didn't' points on late free throws to help
do the right things defensively in- South Alabanla turn back Jacksonville in a Sun Belt Conference game.
side.''
Cornell's Tom Miller thought the After trailing by as many as 11 poirr
Irish could have named the score.
ts, Jacksonville pulled within one
"I think Digger backed off on us a early in the second half but four
little bit and I appreciate that," he points by Tony Hafley gave South
said. "We're not a very talented Alabama some breathing room.
team. I think our kids will learn
Mike Mc~ay and Chuck .Aieksinas
something in playing a team like
scored 18 points apiece to lead Corr
this."
· necticut over Massachusetts. The
Albert King and Greg Manning winners broke a 24-24 tie by scori.1g
rescued Maryland in regulation time 15 consecutive points late in the first
and Buck Williams, held to seven
half, with McKay getting eight of
points in the first 40 minutes, hit six them.
in overtime to propel the Terrapins
Elsewhere, Gene Banks' 18 points
led Duke over Rutgers 53-51, Tulane
past Pitt.
Maryland trailed 62-55 with 2:56 shaded Cincinnati 65-60 in a Metro
left but King hit a bank shot and a Conference game behind Joe
three-point play and Manning's
Holston's 17 points, Western
baseline drive tied the score with
Carolina squandered a 14-point lead
I: 27 to go. Williams put the
before overcoming TennesseeTerrapins ahead to stay with a
Chattanooga 76-70 in Southern Conference action

Ohio Sportlight

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP J - Lars
Ekstrom is blunt.
The foreign exchange student
from Finland said he's attending
Wi)mington High School purely to
improve his basket bali skills.
John FergUson, the Wilmington
College coach, helped Ekstrom
come to the United States for one
year after conducting clinics in
Finland two summers ago.
Ekstrom, a 6-foot-5 junior center,
is adapting to American prep
basketball well. He 'averages 11.7
points and 7 rebounds for
Wilmington.
Around Ohio : Struthers, Ohio's
second-ranked Class AA power,
never finished its victory over West
Branch. The losing players walked
off the floor with 14 seconds left
following a scuffle that led to the
ejection of tw·o players.
Incidentally, twins Garry and
LarrY Robbins, have the same point
totals of 2a5, an average of 18.6, for
Struthers.
Fairfield Union's game at Canal
Winchester was postponed when the
mother of one Fairfield Union player
and the father of another were killed
in'an auto collision.
Mount Blanchard Riverdale held
the ball nearly six minutes for the
last shot against Arlington, but it
didn't work. Riverdale muffed the
try for a tie at 23-23. Instead,
Arlington won 24-21.
Dave Jones, a 6-2 senior guard
from Jewett.SCio, leads the New
Philadelphia area in1 scoring with
29.6 points per game. Jack Van
Reeth has coached two different
times at West Holmes for a com-

bined record of 159-28. He's 14-0 this
season. West Holmes has won 21
straight regular season games.
Balance? The Southeastern Ohio
League 's four games were decided
by a combined 11 ~oints Friday .
Wellston's 67~1 decision over Logan
was the largest margin. Two of the
contests went overtime.
Mark Wilson has become the fourth player in Licking Valley history to
surpass 1,000 points with 1,037.
Williamsport Westfall set a school
record of 99 points against Ashv.ille
Teays Valley. The old mark was 94
points reached three times.
Akron Bucthel missed alii! of its
shots in the third quarter in a 39-23
loss to Akron Firestone. Napoleon 's
regular season winning streak has
reached 50 games. Perrysburg owns
30 regular season tnUlllphs in a row,
Olmsted Falls starts two brothers
Frank and Bob Sylvester, and tw~
sisters, Joanne and Dianne Ineman
on its varsity basketball teams:
Mansfield Senior's 58-54 victory at
Mansfield Madison ended Madison's
211-game home winning streak.
Mike Kaido, a 6-foot senior guard,
broke Zanesville's single game
scoring record with 41 points against
Marietta.
Bill Ross watched two tearrunates
who played for him on Glenford's
1948 Class B state tournament team. ·
"They're bo~h better coaches than
they were as players," Ross said of
mentors JohnSteadman of Mayfield
and Harold "Doc" Daughterly of
Eulcid.
Mayfield beat Euclid in the last
few seconds.

HONORED GUESTS - Oakland Raiders qual"
terback Jim Plunkett, left, and wide receiver Bob
Chandler enjoy the response from fans as they are in-

TORONTO (AP) - They're
calling it a contract to beat all contracts when matched against what
other Canadian professional teams
have paid their athletes~ but. big
John Mayberry wants its contents
kept secret.
The Toronto Blue Jays announced
Tuesday they had signed the
slugging first baseman to a fouryear, multi-million dollar deal,
"which, on an annual basis. will

make him the highest paid athlete
ever to play for a team in Canada."
On a request from Mayberry, the
American League baseball team
refused to divulge the amount involved, although it's been the policy
this year for the Blue Jays to reveal
salary terms of all major league
players' contracts.
Speculation is ihat the deal
amounts to $3.2 rnillion-with bonuses
included, or about $800,000 a year.
Blue Jays president Peter Bavasi,
asked how Mayberry's contract
ranked with other players on
Ca nadian-~?ased professional teams,
said : ''We checked it out. On an arr
nual basis, no one is close."
Mayberry, 30, hit a club-record 30
home runs in 1980 and drove in 82
runs. He was eligible to become a
free agent at the end of the 1981

DR. CHHIBBER's OFFICE will open
FEBRUARY 2, 1981
for appointments call
675-5511

13 7 10 16-46
9 18 16 19--62

Buy Sentinel classifieds

JOHN A. WADE, M.D., INC.
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

27.

Southern's · hall court trap and
press, combined with the always
sticky defense held Eastern to just
six field goals (6 of 241 in the el'tire
second half.

BOB
EVANS

ALL VARIETIES

$1!~

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College
scores
EAST

Boston Sl. 71 , Fram!n~Mm St. ~
CautiJIUI I I, St. Franc11, Pa. n
Cunnecticut 91, Massachusetts 64

Duke Sl, Rulgers ~I
fairfield 74 , Vale 62

~

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KRISPY
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Mayberry was an AL All-8tar with
Kansas City Royals in1973 and 1974.
He had a career high 34 homers and
106 RBI with the Royals in 1975.

The Jones Boys

Fordham 61, Culwnbia 53
lona 1D8, Sacred He.rt 83
Morylond 69, PIUaburgh IWi, OT
SOIJ11I .
Ark .·LitUo Rock 71, Purtland St. 66
LouUvllle 71. Providence 55
S.Alablma S:., JacluonvUie 48
TltfVlaRe St. ll. ~"\oridl A&gt;: M 79
Tulane 85, Oncim1111i $0
Vil'linll St. &amp;3, Hlmpton lnst. M
W.C.rollna 76, TtM.-Owttlnqa 70

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Washburn 7~, Emporia St. $1
Wheaton 7), C..rthat~c S3
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FARW=

Colorado Coli. 57, Weshem St. s.t
Orel!fOO Tttb 80, N!Kte O.me. Ca lif. 115
Pacific l..u~nm 113, CuncunJ.Ia M
Wyomln~

71, Nev.-Lu

Vet(as 66

TUetdly's Sportl TraDU('tiou
BASEBALL

lr.l,.J.11i~:
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BOSTON RED SOX- Announc«i that
Camey lAnsford, third Daseman: Gary
Allt!n.son, c1tcher, and Bruce Hltrst, Bob

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SUPER DOUBLE COUPON
Presen t ll\ 1s coupon along w1th t~ nv one man~.~ta c ­
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Coupons nrthose ot other reta llu r ~ .1nct not to exceed
the v•tue of the ilcm . limit on e double coupon per
manulacturer'i coupon .

~n;

Coupon ,Expires Feb. 1.1981

Ojeda and Mike Smlthllon, pitchers, have
..:reed &amp;o contract.s for the 19111 season.
TORON1'0 BLUE JAYS-Signed John
Mayberry, first butrnar1 , tu a four-year
cvntrtiCl.

h.hrtr1 Q

SiJPU,tl ,('lv J ol f !&gt;Uti
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Hell.o, NURSE.

Pu•nnw11 tl1tl 11,1 n
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PRICES GOOD TODAY THRU SUNDAY, FEB. 1, 1981

Pomerov, Ohio

" Decora ted Cakes for
All Occasions"

N. lnd

HEAD

GALLIPOLIS AND POMEROY STORES

DIAMOND SAVINGS

CAROUSEL CONFECTIONERY
317

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{ .~~\hJI«•tl '&gt;·

Office Hours by Appointment Only

LETTUCE

Announces the opening of his
Point Pleasant, W.Va. oHice of

Located in the Professional Building at
2513 Jackson Avenue

Score by quarters:

North Gallia
Mil ler

troduced during a victory celebration Tue..tay In
Oakland. The rainy celebration honored the team for
their Super Bowl wtn over Phlladlepbla. (AP Lao.,...
photo) .
.

r------------L------------

tf,l!.Ju•.•\P

Shriver 2·3·8; Queen 0·2·2; Roberts

0·1·1; Pavne2·3·7. Totals 17-12-46.

Mayberry jo.i ns baseball's
multi millionaire players

East Meigs-The Southern TorSouthern again outscored the host
nadoettes stonned to a hard-fought Eagles in the last round, despite a
SG-37 victory over rival Eastern here gallant effort by the losers.
Southern hit 24 of 52 from the floor
Thursday evening in an important
· SVAC girl 's basketball contest.
for 46 percent, but only managed 2 of
Southern now owns a perfect 12.{) 14 from the line for 14 percent.
slate and HJ mark in loop play, while Eastern hit 16 of 50 from the fi eld for
Eastern drops to 11-3 overall and 5-2 32 percent and hit 5 of 15 from the
within the league
line for 33 percent.
Mel Weese, one of the area's
Southern won the battle of the
leading scorers, again led the boards 38-2iled by Cindy Evans with
Southern attack with 21 points and a 13, Della J ohnson with 10 a nd Laren
flawless floor game. Senior team- Wolfe had 8. Southern collected 18
mate Tammy Smith had another steals, ~ assists, conunitted 11 turgood outing with tO points, Laren novers, and 15 personal .fouls.
Wolfe, seven, Della J ohnson, six, Eastern was whistled for 17 team
Tonja Salser, four and Cindy Evans fouls .
with two.
Coach Enslen's Tornadoes will
The Eagles were led byTammy meet Hannan Trace this Thursday
Hudson, who netted 20 points, Sarah evening at Southern. The game was
Goebel with II and Cassie Sheets originally scheduled to be played at
with six.
Hannan Trace, but was rescheduled
Eastern took the upper hand early for the Southern hardwood.
in the game as they jUlllped to a 11-3
Southern (50) - Weese 10·1·21 ;
first period lead. Southern reboun- Salser 2·0 4; Eva ns 1 · 0 ~ 2 ; Johnson 3·
ded in the next canto behind good 0·6; SmithS ~ o~ 1 oandWo lf e3 17 .
Ea~tern (37) Hu dson .8· 4·20 ;
team defense and an 18 point of- Shee ts 3 ~0 · 6 ; Goebe l 5 1 11.
fensive effort that gave them a 26-21
By quarters :
Eastern
11 10 6 1D-37
lead at the intermission.
Southern
8 18 10 14- 50
Southern unveiled its secret ,.----------.,....-l
weapon in the third period, a tight
half court trap that put a hitch in the
CAKE DECORATING
Eastern attack. The visiting TorClasses Starting Soon
nadoettes outscored the hosts 10-6 in
Ca II for Details
that canto and led at the buzzer, 36-

Bu ot:Jie A1t "..,,_,,,.

Totals 24-14-62.
NORTH GALLlA (46) - Black ~
burn 8 ~ 1-17 ; Dee I O ~ J ~ J ; Lee 4~ 0 · 8;

•Mufflers •Brakes
•Shocks •&amp; More

B. A. Chhibber, M.D ..

PEDIATRICS
and
INTERNAL MEDICINE

The Dailv Sentinel-Pa e--7

ort, Ohio

FUU SERVICE-SERVICE CENTER

'

'

9 u 12 15-50
10 9 12 11- 42

Kyger Creek
Hannan, W.Va.

Tomadoettes whip Eaglettes
'l

Pomeroy-~lddle

Pirates, Highlanders beaten; KC Wins

Louisville trounces
Providence, 71-55
By Associated Press
Now that the Louisville Cardinals
have regained their shooting eye
perhaps they can start to see
daylight at the end of the tunnel.
College basketball's defending
national champions finally put it all
together Tuesda~ night, shooting 57
percent - their season average was
only 46 percent - in trouncing
Providence 71-55 at Louisville. The
victory still left them under the .500
markat7-3.
"If we can just shoot and be
relaxed we will be a good team,"
said 6-fooHi forward Derek Smith,
who led the Cardinals with 24 points,
12 rebounds and four assists.
Louisville isn't thinking T"1' o"•enty thoughts just yet but four ra••Ked
teams were in action and all won ,
although No. 14 Maryland had to
come from seven points behind in
the final three minutes before
egding Pittsburgh 6!1-661n overtime.
Meanwhile, eighth-ranked Notre
Dame crushed Cornell ~7, No. 16
South Alabama downed Jacksonville
5!)..48 and No. 20 Connecticut whip-

Januar 28, 1981

~ui,e~
~atqJ~

HARTLEY'S SHOES, INC.
Middle of Upper Block, Pomeroy , Oh.
Store Hours : 9-5 Each Dav
Open Fridav Night ti118: 00 p.m .

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It's full of hpe that you and your family can 111e
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most of the ideM won't COI!t you a ~nt. They tak~
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m energy 118e .
And you can't beat the price. The booklet is free.
So ask for a copy: "The Everyday Energy Saver's
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takes •• a phone cal or visit to .)"our Columbia
office-and a desire to save.

~MEII~GAS
Still your best ene'W value.
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!'ag-8--The Daily Sentinel

Sports briefs
·&amp;-seed Brian Teacher 7-li, ~. 6-2;
Mel Purcell defeated No. ll)·seed
Johan Kriek of South Africa 6-2, 6-1;
and No. 2-seed Harold Solomon
downed Jay Lapidus 6-3, 6-3.
In other matches, South African
Bernie Mitton upset fourth-seeded
Eliot TeUscher 6-4, 6-7 , 7.,'i; Victor
Amaya defeated Marty Riessen ~.
7-li, 7-li; Raul Ramirez of Mexico

TENNIS

PIDLADELPillA (AP) - Defending champion Jimmy Connors
reached the third round of the
$2!i0,000 U.S. Pro Indoor Tennis
championship by beating Peter
Feigl of Austria H, U, 6-4 at the
Spectrum.
In other matches, Francisco Gonzalez of Puerto Rico eliminated No.

· January_28, 1981

Middleport. Ohio
Sweden 6-2, 6-3; Wendy Turnbull
beat Lucia Romanov of Romania 64, 2-li, 7.,'i; Sylvia Hanika of West
Germany beat Paula Smith H , 6-1,
6-4; Wendy White topped Ji&gt;anne
Russell 6-1, 7-li; Pam Shriver beat
Betsy Nagelsen 6-2, 6-2 and Kathy
Jordan downed Mary Lou Piatek 6-4,
&lt;Hi, 6-2.
In first-round matches, Leslie
Allen beat Deborah Jevans of Great
Brittan 6-3, 7.,'i; Sylvia Hanika of
West Germany beat Paula Smith H ,
6-1, 6-4; Heidi Eisterlehner of East

beat Russell Simpson d. New
Zealand 6-3, 6-4; Sandy Mayer
defeated Pat DuPre 7~. ~. 6-4, and
Pascal Portes of France defeated
Andrew Patti.son&amp;-2, 6-3.
CHICAGO (AP) Martina
Navratilova defeated Claudia Kohde
of West Gennany f&gt;-7, ~ . IHl in
second-round action at the $200,000
Avon women 1S tournament.
In other second-round matches,
Andrea J~eger heat Anne White 6-2,
6-2; Hana Madlikova of
Czechoslovakia beat Nina Bohm of

28, 1981

.--------A\.ITHORIZED CATALOG

Gennany beat Laura Dupont 6-4, 63; Peanut Louie swept past Sue
Saliba of Australia 6-3, 6-3; Kathy
Horvath defeated Trey Lewis U, 76, 7-6; Yvona Brzakova of
Czechoslovakia downed Bonnie
Gadusck 6-3, 6-2; and Anne Smith
defeated Diane DesforG-4, 6-2.

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LAKE BUENA VISTA, Fla. (AP)-

Doug Ford and Fred Hawkins shot a
2-under-par 70s to share the lead in
the PG A Quarter Century Championship.

By Bob Hoeflich

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Mildred Shuster. Dorot hy Douglas procedure is being done only in Swit·
~nd Willa Maude Coates · were in zerland, Germany, New York. San
Francisco and Cincinnati.
L&lt;~nnrstcr Saturday for a luau and
t•cunlon or the "~-: nl'outc 11 Hawct ihm
Cards may be sent to George at
· L&lt;&gt;ur· group of Oc5426 Fox Road, Cincinnati, 43239.
tober 1900.
There's going to be a "rock and
.! ' They had M"real
roll jamboree" at the Pomeroy
• food, enjoye d
Health Care Genter on Valentine's
r~ miuiscing, saw
Day. The residents will rock in their
slides and picrocking chairs and roU in their
• lures taken by
wheelchairs for pledges made to the
• their
fel low
Heart Association.
- trnvelcrs . and
: learn ed about
Charlene
Young people of the community
• plans for other trips.
The reunion wsa held at the are being asked to " adopt" a grandmother or a grandfather for a day,
- ~ Olivedale Senior Citizens Center
go out and solicit pledges from
and
~·llescribed as an elega nt facility with
businesses and individuals. The ac'":Spacious grounds, donated by a
tivity will take place from 2 to p.m.
:Jirominenl La itcaster couple.
._ Gerald Shuster, also on that trip to on Valentine's Day with an open
... Haw11ii lust fall, bypassed the house being held at the same time
with tours and refreshments.
:; rmmlon this year.

IMIAISY

113 SIZE CAliFORNIA

What with the nice weather. I
should ha ve to tell you tu keep
srniling?

'·

Mandarin .11 ·oa .
01•1111 ... Coft

$329

$129
'·FUSH
APPIAK£0
1~ p•1e .... ....... l -Inch
PI•

th en.

Ull rriII ... •·••·
Je,
....

Sw1ss Cheese ........ lb .
Smoked Sausage ... lb . $1 99

lAKED
$13.9 fllSH
Kaiser Rolls ........ ~i.~:

Wisconsin
Russet Potatoes

9

.

Meigs Auditor Howard Frank ad·
vises that if anyone has had their
real estate taxes tripled, then they
really have had a tax break from the
past three to six years due to errors
which might have been made back

Attend luau in Lancaster

HILLCitUl

M...schino

.
$399
Fried Chicken . Box
NATU:AL

was used on the

;community Corner

H vea ..... , ••

8 Pieces

BIG EYE . SliCED OR BY THE PIECE

n ~1g

TOUR BANK - The junior buslnl!lls lralnlng class of Mrs. Carol
Crow, Meigs High School, were given a tour and told of banking

State amends dog bite rule
to include observation .time
Selin) J . Blazewicz, M.D.,
health commissioner of Meigs
County, tiJ!iay announced that the
state ru1e concerning dog an~ cat
• bi~es has been amended to
require veterinary observation
and reporting to local hea lth
departments.
The amended rule requires in
all cases of a dog or cat biting a
person tha l the animal he
quarantined by the pwner or in a
pound or kennel for 10 days, and
unde r a veterif\arian's super-

vision. The veterinarian must observe the animal at least twice,
once at the beginning and once at
the end of the 10 days, for symptoms of rabies. The veterinarian
then reports the conclusions to
the health conunissioners.
Any 'biting animal not already

,.

Ia... .

..,_en .. ...

---

!&lt;"rom Cincinnati comes good word
', about GMrge Shiveler, Jr. who
rt•ccntly underwent a new type of
heart surgery for a blocked artery

1

110 YAlUI

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v.llll
Wlftn .. ... 'l:;

---

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rutl . , . .. . Con

O&amp;C

OnloaliiiM~·

KIOOH QUA.TIH

992~.

"' citllcd a n '' angioplasty ." He's now

ICIOOII

To•ato

Terry Stotts at the Health Care
Center is the person to contact about
the fund raiser and her address is

59c
69

Corn
011 ... ,.i,,:
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convalescing at home.
Tht&gt; surger·y took place at Christ
:. Hospital. George is the fourth person
ttl have the procedure done in Cincinnati. and the doctor who per·funned the surgery studied in Swlt"ztrland. Angioplasty is a procedure
where all wnrk is done inside the arl,ry of the heart and does nut
-r&lt;:quire opening the chest. Mrs.
Shlveler, the former Martha Myer·s
of Pomeroy. advises thai lhe

REVIVAL TO BE HELD
A revival will be held at the
Syracuse Church of the Nazarene
beginning Wednesday through Feti.
I, at 7 p.m. nightly. Evangelist ts the
Rev. Don Bock.
On Friday and Saturday Raymard
Martin will be the featured vocalist.
Pastor is the Rev. James Kittle.

properly vaccinated against
rabies must be before it is
released. Veterinarian fees are
the expense of the pet owner.
An animal whose owner is
unknown will be killed after three
days and the head submitted to
the Ohio Department of Health
Laboratory for rabies
examination.
Under old rules, the animal
was confined by the owner for a
minimum 10 days until the hea lth
corrunissioner determined that it
did not have rabies.
According to Dr. Blazewicz; the
amendments will assure the
greatest protection to the public
against rabies and will place
mroe responsibility for pers on
owners.

Group makes donations to recent fire victims
Donations to the Mik e Powell
family whose home was destroyed
by fire recently and to the International Endowment Fund were
made by the Xi Garruna Mu Chapter
of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority at a
meeting Tuesday night at the
Columbia Gas Co. office.
Money in the Endowment fund
goes toward cancer research, cystic
fibrosis research, schooLs for the
deaf, the Midwest Heart Institute,
the Children's Hospital in Tpronto.
Plans were made for Founder's
Day to be observed April 30 at the
Sportsman Inn in Athens.
A report was given on the Mothers
March of Dimes which was conducted in Middleport. Sunday a
skating party was held for about 50
members and their families at the
Skate-a-Way Rink.
The cultural report on reading was
given by Susan Baer, Charlotte Hanning, a nd Phyllis Bennett . Refres hments were served by Lynn Shuler
and Phyllis Bennett.
Next meeting will be held Tuesdar

SiinJerel/a stresses

'

a• !!

American

... ....

AVONDAlE

AVAilAIU ONLY IN
STOlES WITH
.OELI DE~TS .
HOT FOODS
AVAILAILE 11rom
TIL 7pm

till

pruno t&lt;&gt;again bring emphasis on the
hostages.
Sunday school services were
opened by the ringing of the church
:bell 52 times. Mrs. Thelma Hysell
led the singing of "America " and a
'few moments of silent prayer wel'e
'f••llowed by prayer· by the minister,
HoU Uuckillghtml , t.o fo nclud., the
St'rvi Cl' .

rretllll .. . "•·

89c

KR()GU FROZEN

b)

Co4lntry Onn ·

p..,

c~ttage

......

1•·tU .

GOlD CIUT

KROGER

Kroger Rolls ............ .'~k;~· .
I
$119
•
.
2-lb.
Easy D1nner ...... ....... Pkg.

99

...

ll·oa.

UOGU

Flake
Coconut ..

BROWN 'N' SERVE

Flavor
Ice Cream

C

AYONDAU

1

-~b $599

32

AVONOALf. MACAIIO NI 0 1

16·· 19·lB . AI/G . WHOLE

Paper
Ctn.

$ 00

•roger Coffee ...... ca~

$

,..

IO·cn

12·0Z.

Wieners ..... .... ... .. . Pkg..
• . d .Baeon ..... .. .. Pkg
1-tb.
.
511ce

(Z· PAK " D" ..., .. OR "AA" SIZE OR I·PAK 9•1/0lT
E,VEREADY E~ERGIZER

.

Coffee ....

•' . I
1

FROZEN •·-6·LB . AVG .. U.S.D.A .
INSPECTED. YOUNG

1/ACPAK

Inatant

Round Roast ... ..... .. ..

59

Fryer Parts ...... .. lb .

UOGI:I

U.S. GO\I'T. GRADED CHOICE . BONELESS
BOTTOM

·----··--··········C
INSPECTED

J

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. Can

1

COIPOI ~0 Ill 1•1 H Ul JU ll 1911
SIIIIJfCT ro .tii'I.TtULl sun 1 LOCAL IAJU

ML~~F~ds . u.s D.A

$ 39

Middleport responded beautifuiiy
John Terrell, Mulberry Heights,
to the call for special recognition of Pomeroy, phoned that he " has
the 52 former hostages on Tuesday.
robins." That's supposedly a sign of
Members ·or Feeney-Bennett Post spring. However, John also recalls
128, American Legion, had ·the that last year when he announced
business section lined with flags
robins at his home, a good-sized
early Tuesday morning and church snow storm followed.
bells sounded at noon quite effectively.
The name of Jerry Cline was not
Pomeroy had a little problem. The included in the list of parents fixing
flags which are normally put out on the gymnasium floor at Harrison-·
holidays by the Pomeroy-Middleport ville Elementary School recently.
Lions Club were at the dry cleaners Jerry gave up several evenings to
and the town was practically work on the project.
flagless as a result. Some bells did
toll at noon.
CTM/1 and Mrs. Dennis Hawk are
Incidentally, in case you didn 't
in to visit their folks and other
know, among those bells you heard relatives and friends until sometime
in Pomeroy Tuesday was the aged in February, after having spent the
courthouse bell, sounded for the first past three years in Blue Hawaii.
time since the early 1000s.
Their parents are Mr. and Mrs.
Hinging that bell is nt easy. There Marion (Hammer ) Hawk and Mr.
· is no rope into the courthouse on it and Mrs. Chester Wells. They
anymore since the ceilings were missed the seasons in Hawaii gut
closell in remodeling processes. To otherwise found the three years
rin~ the bell Tuesday, Howard
quite enjoyable.
Frank, county auditor· and a VietUpon completion of their leave,
nam veteran, had to climb a 22-foot . they will go to the Naval Security
ladder to the back of the courthouse, Group Activity Northwest at
walk across the roof of the court- Chesapeake, Va .
house. climb over a ledge and over a
second ledge to the bell tower. Frank
John Anderosn, vice president,
used the aged wooden wheel atand Jim Frecker, president, of the
tached to the bell to ring it. It was Pomeroy Chamber of Conunerce
not easy . Thanks. Howard. there . are certainly dedicated ·;nembers of
were r111rny young people who had that group. The two Pomeroy
never heard the courthouse bell
businessmen not only get the chore
befor·e.
of pulling up the Christmas
decorations but the chore of taking
AppreCiate the note from Marlene them down. There are no funds with
Kuhn. a member of the Tuppers which to follow any other plan so
Plains Church of Christ.
they donate their tlrne and energy to
ln part. she says. "I wanted to tell the Christmas decoration project.
you that our church doesn't have a
bell anymore but has an amplifier
Again - we need to locate the
system and we weren 't able to use it ~ ' lost."
on Sunday as it had been stolen . But
Pomeroy Attorney J. B. O'Brien
a fellow member, Dervl Well did wants to locate the heirs of William ·
hang a yellow ribbon or; the church Rowland and/or David Rowland,
Ql&gt;lf.
who owned 30 acres of land in Olive
"Thanks to ou r sheriff, we did get Township, near the Athens County
the amplifier back but not in time to line and about three miles from
usc ea rlier Sund~y. As I was writing Reedsville. It is believed that David
\his note to tell you of our tribute to Howland was a son of William
the former hoslct gcs, I heard music Rowland and lived on the property.
cuming from the church . Deryl and
lf you can help, please conta ct
his minister, Vince Waters, took the O'Brien.
lime SundHy afternoon to connect
the system ami pia'ycd chimes and
Cong ratulations to Betty Reed,
olhc r music as our tribute to the Middleport. who after having reared
returning Americans.··
her family has gone back to school.
Betty is in the Tri-County Vocational
And -- at the Hutland Church of School. post secondary adult
Christ on Sunday, there was an o ~
vocational program, at Nelsonville
servancc honoring the return of the studying office occupations.
52 hostages.
In order to get the training Betty Is
The front doo rs of the chur·ch were driving 400 miles a week starting
decor·aLed with la r·ge bows of yellow classes at mid-afternoon each day
ribbon and a white sign with red let- and not getting through until late at
,, tcrs. rea&lt;ling: " Hcd l A!tter Day," night.
" Welcome. Hostages, Back to the
And do you know what? She made
U.S.A." The sign was circled wi th a "B" or better in all of her classes
-rnimaturc American flags . An to he named to the dean's list for the
a rTan~cnl cnl of yel low roses flanked
fall session.

daily nutritious food
The importance of eati ng three
meals of basic foods with all the
nutrients in .the 1,000 calorie diet
was stressed at this week's meetings
of Slinderella.
'Meeting Monday night at 7:30p.m.
at the Riverboat Room of the
Diamond Savings and Loan Co. the
class took in 13 new members. Judy
Laudennilt lost the most weight and
Rhonda Roush was the runner-up.
Meetings of the class will be on
Tuesday nights at 6:30 p.m. from
now on.
At the Tuesday morning Mason
class five new members were taken
in and there was a tie for the most
weight lost between Evelyn Me-·
Daniel and Virginia Johnson. Runner-up was Vicky Cottrell.
Robin Barton lost the most weight
at the Chester class held at the fire
house. Diana Deeter was the runner
up and three new members were
welcomed. Jo Ann Newsome is lecturer.
SEABmD RICHNESS
TEESSIDE, England (AP)
Britain, the western boundary of the
North Sea, has 24 species of seabirds
nesting regularly on its shores.
Norway, the northeastern boulldary, has 21 regular breeders. This
richness of seabirds found on the
North Sea and surrounding
coastlines is due to Its unique
geosraphical position.
Fleldfores, starling a nd song
thrushes can he seen passing over
the North Sea.
Two unconunon birds that can be
seen en route to and from their Arctic breeding grounds are the shore
lark and snow bunting.

at the home of Jane Bourne with Linda Riffle as c&lt;&gt;-hostess.

procedures at the Farmen Bau and Savillgl Co., Tueoday
Roger
Hysell, cashier. .JiyseU Is sbown brlefiDg 24 of the 51 students who participated In the activity. Behind Hysell is Mn. Crow.

UMW sponsQrs food pantry '
Participation in a food pantry
sponsored by Meigs Ministries to he
used to help th011e in need because of
fire or other disaster was discussed'
by the Alfred United Methodist
Women at a meeting held Tuesday
night at the home of Mrs. Clara
Follrod.
Mrs. Thelma Henderson, missions
secretary, reported on the new
project and also reported on a
Korean , family who became
Christians after being helped by
missionaries. A report was given on
Christmas gifts given to John
Taylor, Glenda Russ and Joe Poole
all in service, and Helen Woode and
Alma Jane Pullins, shutins.
Letters frcm Emma Lou Finch
and Kate Rodehaver were read and
a card was signed for Mrs. Woode.
Martha Elliott read a thank you card
from Laura Schleman, a prayer
calendar member, to whom the
UMW had sent a birthday card in
November. Nellie Parker chose
Elaine Landis of Kentucky for the
prayer calendar this-month and the
group signed a card for her. A total
of 13 shutin visits were reported
during the meeting which opened
with prayer by Thelma Henderson
and group singing of "America, the

.,

Beautiful". Florence Ann Spenced
was at the piano. Guests for the '
meeting were Sara Caldwell and ~
Gertrude Robinson.
:
Mrs. Spencer had the program on :
prayer and self-denial opening with
prayer and group singing of " Teach '
Met to Pray." After reading the :
world and national UMW budget, l
she led a prayer passage contest J
using scripture from Job, Isaiah,'
Psalms, Matthew , John,
Thesalonians, Timothy, Hebrews ,'
Peter and James. The women all ·
read passages from " Make the ' .
Methodists Love the Baptists"::.:;
relating to two small churches
illinois who entered a partnershup to'&lt;~
keep their churches going with in- ,
spiring and hwnorous results. ·
~
Gertrude Robinson read a '"
definition of prayer which said, in . •
part, "Prayer is to the soul what !!
breath is to the body." The Lord's 1
Prayer was given in unison.
l
Mrs. Follrod and Nina Robinson ,..
served refreslunents to those named ,.
'"
and Ossie Mae Follrod, Janet '"
Moore, Janice Pullins, Annie Thorn- ;
pson and Ada Grace Windland. Next •
meeting will be on Feb. 17 at the ..,
home of Mrs. Follrod with Mrs. .; ~
Robinson to have the program.
. ~

in:•""

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•

•

THE REPORT OF CONDITION OF
Consolidating domestic subsidiaries of the

'

'

RACINE HOME NATIONAL BANK
i:~

the ~tate ~f Ohio, at the close of business on December 31, 1981 published in response to
call made b) Com ptroller of the Currency, under title 12, United States Code, Section !61.
Charter nwnber 9815

•
•

National Bank Region Number 4

Statement of Resources a nd Liabilities
Thousands
Cash and due from deposi tory institutions ................................... 838,000.00
U.S. Treasury securities . .. ..... .... . ... . : ....... . .. : . •••... . ... . ....... 1,416,000.00
¥
Obligations of States and political
subdiviswns in the United States ... ... .. . ........ ........ , ...... .... ... 1,043,000.00
All other securities ..... .. ............... . .. .... ... . .. ..... . ... .. ... . .. . ... 8,000.00
Fedet·a t funds sold and securities purchased
under agreements to resell .............. . ........ . . . ..... ....... .. . ..... 800,000.00
Luans, Total (excluding unearned incmne) . .......... . ... .. ... 9,317,000.00
Less: Allowance for possible loan losses ... . ..... . ....... , ...... 126,000.00
Loans, Net ... . .... ..... . ........... . ..... .. ..... .. ...... .. ........... 9,191,000.00
Bank premises. furniture and fixtures. and
other assets representing bank premises ... . ... ... ........ .. .. . .. .... ..... .. 116,000.00
All other assets .. .. ..... ... . . ..... , ........ . .•. . . .. .. .... .... . , . , ....... . . 13,000.00
_ ___,f- TOTAL ASSETS ... . .. . .................. . .... . .. .. ... . ... ... .. ..... .. 13,395,000.00
Dema nd deposits of individuals,
2,492,000.00
prtnshps., a nd corps.
•
Time and savings deposits of individuals,
9.163,000.00
prtnshps., and corps.
Deposits of United States Government .......... . ..............•. . .......... 201,000.00
Deposits of States and politica l
subdivisions in the United States ...... : . . ..... . ............... .. ... , . . ... 2116,000.00
Certified and officers· checks .... . : . .... . .. ........... . .................... 57,000.00
Total Deposits . ... .. .. ....... .... ... .. . .. ..... ... , . ....... . . . ....... .. 12,199,000.00
Total demand deposits .... .. , .......... . .......... .. ....... 3,003.QOO 00
Total'lirne and savings deposits ... .. . . ............... . ...... 9,196,000 00
• - - - l - TOTAL LIABILITIES (excluding subordinated notes and debentures)
12rl99 1000.00
,_ _.
a. No. shared authorized 5,000( parvalue )
--1- C
b. No. shares outstanding 5.000 (par value) ....... . ... . . .......... .. ... .. . . 125,000.00
- t- Surplus ......... . .... . ... . ... , .. . ... .. ......... .• ......• . ..... .. ........ 125,000.00
:l j£ Undivided profits and reserve for contingenci es
and other capita l reserves .. .. ..... . ....... ... , .•..... . . ... . .. .. ........ 946,000.00
() C
Ill U
TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL ........... ... ......... . . . ..... ."...... . ... . .. 1,196,000.00
TOTALLIABIL!TIESANDEQUITYCAPITAL .. .. . ........... , .... ...... 13,395,000.00 - - - ·
Amounts outstanding as of report date:
TUne certi fica tes of deposit in dcnorninations
of $100,000 or more ..... ......... ...... ....... . ... . .... .... ........ . . . .. 200,000.00
Q
Average for 30 calendar days (or calendar month ) ending with report date:
Tota l deposits ................... . ....................... . . .. ...... . . 12r0231000.()0

.

·---+-

c

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c

Ill:

0
2::
1M
:::E

I, John T. Wolfe, Presid~nt, of the above-named bank do
hereby declare that this Report of Condition is true and correct to the best of my knowledge and belief.
John T. Wolfe
January 21, 1981
We, the undersigned directors attest the correctness of this statement of resources and
· liabilities. We declare that it has been examined by us, and to the best of our knowledge and
belief is true and correct.
·
Carroll R. Norris
Elirl Cross
Freeland S. Norris

I.

�- _____ _______
_:___

1: Page-16-The Daily Sentinel

PHCC residents to rock and roll
Res.idents· of the Pomeroy Health
: Care Center will be " rocking ·and
: rolling" for the benefit of the Meigs
• County Heart Association on Feb. 14
from 2 to 4 p.m.
The nursing home is also holding
an open house tluit day to which the
public is invited. Guided tours will
be available and refreshments will
be served.
The main event of the day will involve the nursing home residents
rocking in rocking chairs and rolling

in wheel. chairs for money they can
raise in the fight aginst heart
disease and stroke. Some of the
residents will also walk for funds
pledged.
The rock and roll jamboree is a ·
fund raising effort between the nursing home residents and the young
people of the community. Children
in the community who would like to
" adopt" a grandmother or grand·
father for the day are needed in the
project. They would go out and
solicit funds for the time which the

nursing home resident participates
in the rock and roll jamboree.
Seventy-five percent of the money
raised will be used in the Bend area
for public and . professional
education and community service
· programs. The other 25 percent will
be used at the national level for
research.
For more tnfonnation on how to
help with the special project,
residents are invited to contact
Terry Stotts at the Pomeroy Health
Care Center, 99UGOO.
I

'

Friendly
Circle hears
of 23rd Psalm

Dr. Banks

Humorist to speak in
Rio Grande tonight
RIO GRANDE - Dr. Murray
His program "What to do until the
Banks, noted psychologist and Psychiattist Comes," is the second
, , humorist, will speak at Rio Grande most given talk in the world and be
~.. College and Conununity College as
has given it to clubs, colleges, conpart of their continuing Artist and ventions, and stages over 5,000
Lecturer Series "Stardates."
times.
Dr. Banks is described as a "one
The lecture will be given in the
man monopoly" due to his style of new Fine and Performing Arts Cen·
blending good psychology and men· • ter located on the campus of Rio
tal health with hilarious en· Grande College on January 28 at 2
tertainment. His program is so p.m.
Tickets are $5 per person. College
,.- unique and entertaining that he has
, been invited to appear on stages and students are admitted free with
television in virtually every English student I. D.
, speaking country in the world .

'

I •

. Helen Help Us

.·

. . Hate for ex-wife may
curdle new marriage
•

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••
••

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. -. ::

BY HELEN BOITEL
LONELY AND DEPRESSED
Special colTt!tipondenl
DEARLANDD:
DEAR HELEN:
Seeing yourself as a "plain Jane
My husband's ex-wife got the who wouldn't get a second look
house, the car, furniture and over unless she puts out," you naturally
$700 per month in (temporary 1 broadcast that image to men, who
alimony and (permanent) child sup- just as naturally try what's expected
port. He got $7,000 worth of debts. of them.
His wife finished college on his
Make the most of your looks, work
money and now he's stuck for $250 a on self-confidence, "think at·
month for his bratty kid. It's tractive, " I and most of all, stop
breaking us !
selling yourself cheap.
I think his 11-year-old son is ef·
Males really are drawn to good
femirulte, ugly, strange and spoiled. personalities. It takes a while
I begrudge every second my ·longer, that's all. - H.
husband spends with this vile (and I mean that description DEAR HELEN:
I love my husband, but I've fallen
literally!). He picks him up after
school for half an hour about once a .in love with a charming, nt&gt;-good,
week and I seethe every time he's handsome bum. He brags about
late from work, suspecting he's en· cheating on his wife ; he uses me
tertaining the little monster. I've of· only when a better prospect isn't
ten wishes the kid dead. I won't available; he's selfish and
allow him in my house!
egotistical, and I know he doesn't
I helped pay off my husband's care about me . But I'm hooked.
marriage debts; and I've had to
To save face, I imply to him that
have artificial insemination for our · this is just a fling, and our en·
children because his ex insisted on a counters are sex-only, no in·
vasectomy after their kid was burn.
volvement.
You can guess, we've bad many
If only it were so!
fights over this hated brat My
What do you do when you know
husband says I'm sick, I say he's
you're a stupid fool but - CAN'T
still feeling guilty over leaving him.
STOP
Counseling didn't help. Friends and
DEAR C.S. :
family say I'm wrong. What do you
... You project to the lonely time
say?-CAUFORNIASPLIT
DEARC.S.:
.
You're wrong! And if you don't
conq!lfr this jealous hatred {which
I'd guess is equally divided between
son and mother l, you too wUI
become an ex. Why jeopardize a
marriage for a mere · half-hour a
week?
Try another counselor, and this
time, admit that you, mOre than
your husband, need help! - R
DEAR HELEN:
Why do men look only to physical
beauty, and never beyond to the real
person?
I'm a plain Jane and wouldn't get
a second look unless I was willing to
putout.
Aren't there any male~~ that like a
woman for what she is, not what she
looks like; and aren't all hand~? -

I

Mrs. Dorothy Woodard presented
the program on the 23rd Psalm at
the Tuesday night meeting of Frien·
dly Circle, Trinity Church,
Pomeroy.
She gave a meditation on the
Psalm recited in unison by the mem·
hers, along with a study of each
petition. The devotions included a
New Year's thought based on
Genesis I along with silent prayer
and gratitude for the freed hostages
and a closing prayer by M1 s.
Woodard.
Mrs. Donald Hauck, president,
conducted the business meeting at
which time plans were made for the
program to be presented at the annual Ash Wednesday quiet hour. A
report on holiday remembrances
was made and thank you notes from
Mrs. Frances Reibel and Mrs. Mane
Dailey were noted. Orders for
baskets are being taken. Prayer
closed the meeting which was
preceded by a covered dish supper.
Miss Elizabeth Fick assisted by
Mrs. Hauck had charge of
arrangements.

Social calendar
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT Lions
Club meeting, l2 noon Wednesday at
Meigs Inn.
AMERICAN LEGION AND
AUXIIJARY, Feeney-Bennett Post
128, Middleport, 7:30p.m. meetings
at the hall. Dinner for legionnaires
and Auxiliary members at6 :30 p.m.
TIIURSDAY
REVIVAL now in progress
through 1, at the Syracuse Church of
the Nazarene at 7 p.m. nightly.
Evangelist is the Rev. Don Bock.
Raynard Martin will be featured
vocalist on Friday and Saturday.
THE LADIES AUXIIJARY of
the Middleport Fire Department will
meet in special session Wednesday,
Feb. 4, at 7:30p.m. at the fire halL
All members are asked to attend.
ONION REMEDY
Capt James Cook applied the
onion remedy in the 18th century for
scurvy on his voyages to the remote
areas of the Pacific. At one point, he ·
ordered each man in his crew to eat .
20 pounds of onions, followed by 10
pounds two days later.
ahead when your husband discovers
the affair and leaves.
See yourself as another notch on a
n~goodnik's belt and let pride knock
some sense into your skull.- R
Got a problem? An adult subject
for discussion? YOu can talk it over
in her column if you write to Helen
Bottel, care of this newspaper.

ASTRO
GRAPH
JID.lllry zt, 1981

You' veleameda lot from put erperiences
and 1fs not hkely you' ll repeat old m istakes
this (.'Qming yesr. That which lies on the

1\\lrllon looks bright and hopeful.
AQUARIUS U1a. ~Feb. 191 Sometimes
we try verr twn:l to ~et ~umething , then after
we obtain 1t we reahtt! 1t wa5n't worth the ef·
fort. This may be !rue llf what you pursue
. today. Romance, travel, luck, resoun•es ,
pcmsible pttfalls and career for the corning

monlt\s are all dist..'USSed in ynur A!ltroGraph which begins wilh your blrthday . Mail
$1 for each to Astri.).{J~aph, Box 489, RJidio
Clty Sl.aUlm, N. Y. l(XH9. B~ sure t o Spl'Cify
birth date.

PISCES (Feb. !•Mareh 201 Nunnally
you're 1:1 very generous and giving ~rst'l n ,
but t ud~y you n"ll:ly be hesilllnt tu share with
othert; ~s much as they are willing t o share
with you.

ARIES (March Zl·Aprtl 19) You know how

annuyed you feel when uthers rlismpt your
plans, so keep this in 1nlnd today and yt•u
won't try to rea rrange the now tlf events fur
tht!m.

TAURUS \Aprtl %0-Ma)' !'81 In si tuations
today where a team effort is r equired, It's
going hi be up to you to get enough mornt!n·
twn ~uing to s~·eepassoclat~?S along.
GEMINI I May !1-Juat %G) Be Oe~tib lc
!'tl!lctrdlllg your work ha~its tll!hly . You m ~y
find it n~ssarr to revase y1,1ur method~ 111
order to improve productivity.
CANCER IJunt Zl·JUI)I ·!21 F' or eaful
nM!a sures will nut work if you hupe 111 get
othel'll to do your bidding today. Use your
.sma rts to show them your suggestiotl!l arl:!
for the1r own good.
LEO (Jiliy 23-AuJ. tzJ Try to find a middle
ground on iss ues today where you and your
mate hold opposing \'iew!!l . If each ls
prepared to' bend a bit, you 'll come up with
the rig ht solution.
VIRGO l Aug. 23-St!pt. !%) Your dfort.~ will
not ~o unrewaNed today, but you might
have to work a heck of a lot harder for what
you want U~e~n you firs t thought.
LIBRA f~pt. !l-Oft. Zll In financh:ll or
t'U!runcrcial dealings tud.lly you ure likely to
display both your bnlliance 11.nd your lnt.&gt;pt·
ness. It's a toss--up which w11! emerge the vit'tor.
SCORPIO \ Oet. %4-Nov . !21 An incident
may occur today to give you justification to
ft.~! an~ry . However, because you 're bt!U!er
tl\an wfuit transpires, you'll f or give and
furgct.
SAGmARIUS !Nov. Zl-Dff. Z21 Urr
tilaracteristically, you t'iluld be 11 bit of 11
ncgetive thinker today and it nught take
friends to pt~int out opportumttes wht!r~ you
see nunc.
CAPRICORN IDee. 22-Jan. IYl You should
btl pretty good atiH'h\e\•ing yuur go.al!l l t.IW-iy,
but you may not winuny populanty contest
in Ule process. Strive to do both .

Garden club
sees films
Two films , ··Garden of God" ,
showing the nowers and trees of the
Holy Land, and "DeGarden•·
showing how to redesign a garden
and the methods of accomplishing a
pleasing result, were shown by Mrs.
Ida Murphy at the Tuesday night
meeting of the Fernwood Garden
Club held at the Zion Church of
Christ
Mrs. Thelma Giles presided at the
meeting which opened . with the
members repeating the club collect
in unison. Devotions by Mrs. Mar·
jorie Purtell were entitled "A New
Year For You" using "The Seasons
of the Soul" by Helen Steiner Rice
and thoughts about the new life
using scripture from Revelations 20.
Each member gave a New Year's
resolution made concerning her garden or nower garden. Officers '
reports were given and Mrs. Jan
Knapp gave each member her 198().
81 membership card.
Mrs. Suzanne Warner served
refreshments to those named and
Mrs. Evelyn Thoma, Mrs. Kathryn
Johnson, and Mrs. Helen Johnson.
Next nieeting will held on Feb. 17 at
the home of Mrs. Murphy with a
program on birds.

.

Jilnuary 28,1981

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.

idd

Polly's Pointers

Blood stains stick .sw:e ·· .tie~
By Polly cramer
Special correspoadeol
DEAR POLLy - Will you tell me
how to remove blood stains from
clothes, sheets
and pillowcases?
I have used aJJ
those things on
the market and i
cannot get them
out - HELEN
DEAR HELEN
- Old blood stains
are very hard to
Cramer
remove, sometimes practically impossible. When such stains appear,
soak them in cold water as soon as
you can. If stains remain, soak in
lukewann water, again as soon as
you can, for 30 minutes or longer. II
spots still linger, rub detergent into
them and launder, using bleach, if
safe for the fabric. - POLLY
DEAR POLLY - Du;ing these
days of infu\tion, we are all trying to
save on everything we can. Before
putting a roll of toilet paper on the
holder, crease it (Yes, squeeze it!)
As the paper is pulled, it will go
"thwnp-thump" and keep the roll
from going on continuously. This
will serve as a reminder not to waste
paper. - MRS. R.A.S .
DEAR POLLY - Every alabaster
owner knows one cannot use water
to clean it. But why not that old sta n·

dby, baking soda?
enough,
alabaster dove I used 11 "'! came "'t ·
nearly white. I tested 1! first on ~~
underneath side of the dove to ~~
it worked, and used a &amp;LIG~
damp, old toothbrush for a brqk
brushing. I do hope this works lis
well for others. - ROSEMARY ~
DEAR POLLY' - My husbal!d
uses a large, old puroe as a tool
holder in the trunk of the car whl!n
taking ·~ trip. He always knows jQst
where his tools are if needed.
I cut dean, old nylons and pantyhose mto different . lengths, flU
them w1th cedar shavmgs a~d th~n
tie both ends. I keep l;hem m su1t·
cases, dothes, closets and drawers
for a mce, clean smell. In case you
are .wondenng where to get the
shavmgs, I bought rrune at a
discount store, where they are
packaged for pets. - HA2$L
DEAR POLLY - Put a sn;au con·
tainer of ground coffee m your
refnger~tor or any place you want
to get nd of odors. This has ev~n
worked hke a charm when put IR
cars that have been submerged m
water.- MRS. J. T.
. Polly w11l send you one of her
Signed thank-you newspaper coull?n
clippers 1f she uses your fa.vonte
Pointer, Peeye or Probl~m m her
colurruL Write POLLy S POIN·
TERS in care of this newspaper.

New Wheel Seals

Inspect _ calipers ,
levels

,

.,
49

hoses,

Check Rear Brakes
Pactc Front WHeel Bearing s

fluid

'I''I&lt;NOW• Ml~.!l WAII!RIOI&lt;.'l'M HelNNIN' T'6!TTH!
MI!~A&amp;. THAT 'I'OU'RI!
A Y...Y TOU5H l.ADV
T' WORk FOR I

NOW WHAn ne ~u;;nD IIRONCl'
AND 61&lt;1t.INED MU~!S.-. BUT OFFHAND
I DON'T RfCAI.l. EVER Dll.IVIIJ' A
TEAM OF HU61&lt;1E6-l

eQOP! KE!P

THAT C~EARI.Y
11&lt;1 1!\IIJD AND
Wf'l.l. ISET
A~ONG

l

FlAil!!

I~Ha&lt;

FtXf&lt; c:eJoR ... ~
IT IS I JUST PLAI\J

Shocks ·
E)Chausts

·

f

f

... "Close Encounter• Of Tl'!l
Third Kind" 1980

bear."
Today's part score hand
was
played by expert Terry
1· 28-8l
NORTH
Gibson
in a rubber bridge
+A6S
game in McKinney, Tex. Only
•as
. a simple little part score, but
• Q7 3 2
a real gem.
• 10 9 61
Terry passed as dealer,
EAST
WEST
tailed to overcall at bis firsL.
+Q9 8 2
+J 10 71
chance to do so and finally
.KQ 103
72
decided to take his life in his
t K9 5
t AJ 8
hands and come in with three
+A 7
+Q3
clubs. Everyone passed and
the real danger was behind
SOUTH
him.
+K3
Now it was up to him to
• A~~
make his contract. He won the
tJ06 4
second heart and ruffed· a
+KJS52
heart Next came the 10 of
Vulnerable: East-West
clubs from dummy.
Dealer: South
East played low and Terry
went up with his king. Now he
Nortb East
South
WHI
was ready to really try for his
Pass
contract
Pass
Pass
He did not play a second ·
Pass
3+
Pass
trump. That would lead to
Pass Pass
sure defeat Instead, he
played king and ace of spades
Opening lead:•2 ·
and ruffed a spade. Now he
led that second trump and
East was in with the ace:
East had to lead a diamond.
A heart or spade would allow
Jiy Oswald Jacoby
Terry to ruff in dummy and
aad A1aa Sontag
cbuck a diamond . .So the five
Tei quote from Grey's of diamonds was led and Tel'·
Elegy, "Full many a gem of ry made a diamond trick and
purest ray serene, the dark a 60-point part score.
un!athomed caves of ocean (NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.I

B:OO

!

.'

CIJ D C!J REAL PEOPLE

(I)

.,

'

''
i

iil ENERGY AND THE WAY WE
l.IYE·PARTV.
CIJWUJ EIGHT IS ENOUGH David

~
1•2.8

t

..
I

end Janet's marr iage becomes
stra ined when hls construction firm
is hiied torestorean oldtheatre and
she is retalned by a development
company intent upon demolishing
the structure. (60 mins .) (Closed ·
Cae!l_oned ; U.S.A.)

Racine, Oh.

CENTER
.
&amp; AUTO PARTS
Andy &amp; Betty Porter

.J9

lllliJ®l ENOSOIIice rEnos Sir ate
is framed by a clever stick -up artist
and becomes the target lor a lady
'head hunter.' (80 mins.)

TRA This program, taped in perfor·
mance on February 16, 1980, features the acclaimed Swedish
soprano Brig,it Nilsson in the title
role of Richard Strauss ' one act
operatic interpretation of the etas - ·
sic Sophocles drama. Joining Miss
Nilsson in the leading ro les are
Leonie Rysanek as ChryLolhemls,
Mignon Dunn as Klytaemnestra,
Donald Mcllltyre as Oreal and
Robert Nagy as Aegisth .(2 hrs.

0~

j

Starters

1

ALI.CREATURESGREATANO

@

SMALL 'FairMeansendFowt' Sieg fried, with economy in mind, ac·
quires a flock of guinea fowl. (60
mins .)

Tools.

G

BRIDGE

DICK CAVETT SHOW

SIGHTS AND SOUNDS OF
UFE
(!) MOVIE ·ISCIENCE·FICTIONI

7:58

Fram Fitters · Gates Products •

'il. '\,
V

Jumble Book No. 15; containing 110 puzzles, Is evallable tor $1.75 poMpeld
!rom Jumble, clo this MWiptpet', BoJC 3-4, Norwood N.J. 07848. Include your
name, address, zip code and mtke chKitl p1yabie to Newsptp.rbookl.

~100.000NAMETHATTUNE

®l

Meehan:~~~.~~~~

~ 1 RE
WAU(IN' IN

VESSJR!

R\!J-~~····

TALLaJTTON

NOW, BROTHER.1

&lt;,

8:30 (}) JOHN WESI.EY WHITE
8:58 (I) CBN UPDATE NEwS
9:00 (l) II C!J DlFF'RENT STROKES
(I) 700 Cl.UB
iil COI.LEGE BASKETBAl-l.

Florida vs Vanderbilt
(l] MOVIE ·(DRAMA)""" "Con·
dominium" Part II. 1980
·
8 (l] ®l CBS WED!IESDAY

949·1150

NIGHT MOVIE 'Thornwell' ,1981
Stars: Glynn Turman, Vincenl
Gardenia .

mance on February 16, 1980, lea·
tures the acclaimed Swedish
soprano Brig it Nilsson in the title
role of Richard Strauss' one eel
operatic interpretation of the etas·

NEWSPAPER CARRIER NEEDED
IN THE TOWN OF CLIFTON.
Call Immediately

Rufus.
JOel,

sicSophoclesdrama .JoiningMias
Nilsson i n the leading roles are
Leonie Rysanek as Chrysothemls,

You loolt. Ii lt.e a

Mionon Dunn as Klytaemnestra,

stronq

Donald Mcintyre as Orest and
Robert Nagy as Aegisth.(2 hrs.

4ouno man!

WGI TAXIThecabbiesslmply

·seP·
here.'

Melba,
have

adore life at the ge.reoe as long as
Lstkakeepslhetn supplied with his

orandma·s cookies, bul Jim's dis·

earning taste buds reveal that the
goodies c ontain something more
potent !ban the usus Ioatmes I.

40U

met m4
mother?

9 , 30

oompetiliO(I between Bla ir and

675-1333

ANNOUNCEMENT
Meigs Salon 710, Eight and Forty ,
will meet at 7:30 Thursday evening
at the home of Mrs. Mary Martin.

{lJU W THEFACTSOFLIFEThe

another girl at Eaallsnd School

becomes so intense that it has very
serious consequences .
WGI SDAPCheslert~ndshlspool·
house affair with Ann ie going tess

than swimmingly alter his vaunled
~wess takes a comical dive.
10:00 w IJ rn QUINCY A beoutllul
HA5 THIB GIRL WHO
CLAIM B TO BE lOJR ~GHTER
A5KED FOR AN YTHIN6 ... A\ADE

MY UNREASONABlE

BUT MAYBE

woman ac:;cused of murder almost
turns out to be Quincy's undoing,
when he fall a in love with her and ,

ONL'I YOU AND

CON5UELO /S

')OUR HUSBAND
BIL1.'5 DAUGHTER . CAN DEaDE
SHOULDN 'T WE I THAT, WINNI E .
HER THE BENEFIT IT'5 A IHOI?A£
OF THE. DOUJ3T? QU ESTION, NO T
A

oblivious to the indications that
she's using him, sets out to prove
her innocence . (60 mlns.)

{j)

Sll.VER WINGS AND SAN·

women who braved not only
physical dangers and hardships
but also formidable prejudice to
serve their country . The program
interweaves 1940's newsreels and
Air Force tum with recent footage
from Congressional hearings, a

AU WINTER MERCHANDISE

1h PRICE

tong -delayed recognition cer·
emony and a nostalgic WASP reun ·

ion. {!lO mlna .)
(!%)m VEGAS Binzer desperately
searches for money to meet the

w. 2nd Pomeroy, Oh.
r~;;;;;;~~~;;~;;~~;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~

10 Protagonist
11 Comfort

12 Region
13 Nebraska

DOWN
l Chevy
" of comedy
Z Wading bird

river

3

Boxing bout

14 Dombey's
site
relative
t Blue grass
Se
15 norita 's
genus
wtcle
5 "Man From
16 Newman fl' lm U.N.C.L.E ."
17 Chann;
6 Palm leaf
fascinate
7 Plasterwork
19 Iranian
stripping
cash unit
8 Set in motion
20 Question·
9 Prodded
.
·
nalre info
11 Steepl,e
21 Being (Sp. I 15 Neronian
22 Ghana

"Btoodllne 11 1977
10:58 (}) CBN~PDAT!NEWS
11
CJJ
®J

:oc· m u

rn a rn

wm

NEWS
(I) JEWISH YO ICE
® TBSEVENINGNEWS
MDRECAMBE AND WISE
OUTER LIMITS
11:26
c;_BN UPDATE NEWS
11 :30 (f] U COI.l.EOE BASKEJBALL
(}) ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
CIJ (j}l · OJ
ABC NEWS
NlGHTLINE
(!) THE TONIGHT SHOW Guest

FLEECE LINED SNOW BOOTS

hast : David Lette r man . Guests :
Aretha Fra'n kl ln, Dick Enberg, Pete
Berbutti. (60 mins.)

AND SLUSH MOLDS.

0 ()) CBS LATE MOVIE 'THE

I DON'T Tf.liNK THE•(RE

SWISS CONSPIRACY' 1978 Siers:

David Janssen, Ray Milla11d .

GOING TO WORK

{j)

12:00

ABC CAPTION~D NEWS

®l MOVIE ·(COMEDY)"' "Rot
Rae•" 1960

®

,

substance

34 Indian

Klink

servant

24 Electoral 25 Twinge
27 Pine Tree
State

37 Publication (sl. I
38 Before

Summoned

26

Nocturnal
animal

27 Scottish
name prefix

2ll She (Fr.!

Patriotic
sqnR
33 Sanskrit
29

sch()()l
34

Russian
J'et

35 It foUows

· t ·
pnn emps

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

AXYDLBAAXIt
LONGFELLOW

One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters.
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letlcrs are dil!erent.

CRYPTOQUOTES
WB

LBDS

WB

BWMSUL

N8 UY, -

NBUY

HXZ

S RSZ

T PZ

0 SZA XDGZ · T .

OS

T P Z;

HXZ

OS

T X G. U V S L L

Yesterday's Cryploquote: I BELIEVE SATISFACI'ION WITH;YOUR WORK IS IN DIRECI' RATIO WITH YOUR
CONTRIBUTION.-CHARLES F. KEITERING

MOVIE '·(DRAMA) "

''Spen~•r'l Mountain'' 11ii163

lOJ(j}l GI!.OVE BOAT .. POLICE
WOMAN Lovft Boat··'Thia Busl ·
ness 01 Love' A call girl seeking a
new lite lindatr~elove, but a former
client threatens to ruin it all.

CHAPMAN 15 SHOES

with effort
31 Anesth eti c
· 32 Full of

seaport
25

Kentucky vs Mississippi State

WOMEN'S FASHION BOOTS

SALE CONTINUES ON MANY OTHER STYLES
THROUGHOUT THE STORE

18 French
river
19 Respon d
22 Nail polish
remover
23 Blimp or

I·

~

ALL 30% OFF

,
Answer
30 Hurl

Yesterday's

m

LET'S SEE·· I GOT
ONIONS I CELERY,
SALT AN' PEPPER·,
BAY LEAF, PARSLEY,
THYME AN'·-UH ·-

THIS WEEKEND ONLY

"Next to Elberfelds In Pomerov"

verse
42 Ghostly

$50,000 pricelaghungonDanTan· 38 Kind of band
na 'elite when the leg·men 'a former · 38 Sunk fence
partners in c r i me finally c at c h up
39 Disprove
with him . (60 mins.)
t0:2E·
CBN UPDATE NEWS
40 Small
10:30
MAX MORRIS
1
d
MOYIE ·I SUSPENSE) '"
sa aman er

BARNEY
I'LL SURPRISE PAW
TONIGHT WITH SOME
OF MY BODACIOUS
CATFISH .SOUP--

1 Fellow
5 Goose

Women Air Force Service Pilots of

WorldWarlltellsolthe 1,000young

Continuing Clearance

111

by 1H0Mf'S JOSEPH
ACROSS
41 Mournful

TIAGO BLUE The story ol the

ONE '

J

~

t;'8Hi{M"tr.:

LIVE FROM THE MET: El.EK·
TRA This program. taped in perf or·

NOTICE

FOR THE PT. PLEASANT REGISTER

,

1.

@

We comet'
set a spel II

QUOTA BALLET INLAID

Answer: That summer rep tacementJ-AUTUMN

CII LIVE FROM THE MET: £LEK·

Batteries

I Jumbles. HUMID

(Answers lomorrowl

Desperation bid locked up.

a.D~A'(.

Anti·Freeze · Ignition Parts 1
Wagner Brak es · Alternators · l

}1£ND £E

Yesleldays

XI I I I X r

(j}/ GJ FACE THE MUSIC
(I) CBN UPDATE NEWS

BI~~Y+~

~:;..'L ~Ya&lt;SAI&lt;Y~

{j)@

eve~ w~=·

Prlntii11SWerhere: " [

'National League of Cities'

I I U!-1, H,A.V"' SO\-IE.THif.l0 QJ ~R .
I'LL PICK IT llf' rl'=---~-....-1

I.Af7T

· Now arrange the circled·letters to
form the surprise answer, as suggesled by the above cartoon.

C1J 0 (l] JOKER'S wll.D
CIJ HOLI.YWOOD SQUARES

(S118U/ RilES/ Co~1
A~
Walker

rJ r

ABCN~WS

ITWA~THEE'
WO~D' THE'
1"'1-AYW~IG&gt;HT

0

I I I

6:58
~BN UPDATE NEWS
7:00 IIJIJ PM MAGAZINE
Cil SEND FORTH YOUR SPIRIT
@ ALl. IN THE FAMII. Y
(j)(j}IQ) FAMII.YFEUD
(!) Wtl.D KINGDOM
Q(l] TICTACDOUGH
1IJ @
MACNEII.·LEHRER
REPORT
®l NEWS
7:30 C1J U BUI.l.SEYE
(I) AT HOME WITH THE BIBLE
([) TED TURiiER'S ADDRESS

•
tPADZOOKS ~ DID "'1

GJ

J

NALLEF

Downs and Frank Blair .

· CAPI'AINEASY

r

I I

6,30 CIJ 1J C!J NBC NEWS
. (I) 30 MINUTES wiTH FATHER
MANNING
CIJ BOB NEWHART SHOW
[J) FA~ THE MUSIC
8 CIJ ®l CBS NEWS
{j) Wil.D WILD WORLD DF
ANIMALS
l.ll.IAS, YOGA AND YOU

-Sale

Monroe

l
I (IJ

LAVIT

EVENING
8:00 ltfiJ{t) Q(i)(JDiiUj. f'IEWS
(I) BIBLE BOWL
CIJ CAROl. BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
C1J ABC NEWS
{j) 3·2·1 CONTACT
@ OII'ER EASY Hosteo Huoh

Mrs. Myron Miller had the least coin
offering. The program was a skit
" In My Face" presented by Mrs.
Frances Anderson, Mrs. .Harry
Moore and Mrs. David Cumnungs.
Mrs. Paul Haptonstall presided at
the meeting and served as c&lt;&gt;hostess with Mrs. Cununing~ for a
desert course served to the members.

. . . . . . ., . . .

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

JAN. 28, 11181

FRONT DISC BRAKE SPECIAL
Includes: Disc Pads
I both front wheel s)

'ftJI~N}ID'ft ~THATSCRAMBLEDWORDQAIIE
~ ~ ~~·
by tjenri Amoldond Bob l.H

Television
•
•
VIewmg

SOME BODY'S
SHOOTING AT
THE STAGE!

Tablecloth project underway by group
A work session to make new
tablecloths was set for Feb. 12 st the
church when Group 2 of the Mid·
dleport First United Presbyterian
Church met Tuesday evening at the
church.
Mrs. Dwight Wallace was the
devotional leader and read an article by Norman Vincent Peale.

The DailY

Ohio

GAMES PUZZLE
Newest electronic games pU2zle -'who's got ·enough money to buy all
.the batteries needed?
.\

�.

Pa_ge-12-The Daily Sentinel

police estimate - lined the former
hostages' route to the White House
from Andrews Air · Force Base,
where they flew after a tw&lt;Hiay rest
period with their families at West
Point, N.Y. On their way from the
White House to their hotel, they stopped at the State Department for
another rousing welcome.
Government workers emptied out
of. office buildings along Pennsylvania Avenue, sidewalks were a
sea of yellow ribbons, and a huge
American flag hung over the avenue
in an archway formed by the ladders
of two fire trucks.
"We knew we would get a big
reception, but I don't think any of us
was really prepared for how won-

Area deaths
Anthony Ciaverella
Staff Sgt. Anthony L. Ciavarella,
40, Petersburg, Va., formerly of
Clark County, died Monday at
Walter Ree d Hospital in
Washington, D. C.
Sgt. Ciavarella had been in failing
health for three years. He was born
in Springfield on March 7, 1940, the
son of Louis and Louise Ciavarella.
He served in the Korean conflict, the
Vietnam war and in European coun-

Mayor's court
Three defendants forfeited bonds,
one was fined and another was given
a jail sentence in the court of Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
Tuesday night.
Forfeiting were Michael R.
Stewart, . Cheshire, and Ricky A.
Layne, Buckhannon, W. Va., $350
each posted on charges· of driving
while intoxica ted; Ga ry W.
Yoakum , Buckhannon, $150, consw)ling beer in a motor vehicle.
~ined $10 and costs for driving
without a license was Dale Herman,
Middleport, and Pat Mahaffey, Vinton, was sentenced to 10 days in jail
on a petty theft charge.
Five defendants forfeited bonds in
the court of Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews Tuesday night.
They include Steven Nease,
Minersville, $27, posted on a
speeding charge; Rita Vining,
Rutland, $50, running a red light ;
Harold Person, Portland, $.10, loud
muffler ; Charles Boyles, Middleport, $100, public intoxication,
and Earl DeWeese, Mason, $32,
speeding.
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted-Irvin Miller, Pomeroy ;
Edna Triplett, Pomeroy; Sherwood
Meredith, Pomeroy; Eugia Johnson,
Middleport; Ruth Ann Mulford ,
Pomeroy ; Charles Price, Long Bottom ; Mark Burson, Shade; Belva
Miller, Middleport.
Discharged-Kenneth Imboden,
Betty Spaun, Ethel Hoback, Rosella
Secoy, Naomi Ritchie , Nicholas
Bostic.
FILE'; SUIT

tries before retiring after 25 years of
service.
Besides his wife and three sons, he
is survived by his mother, Mrs.
Louise Eshelman of Pomeroy; his
stepfather, Russell; a half brother,
Ralph Edward, and a sister, Nancy
Elan ton.
The body is at the J . R. Morriss
Funeral Home in Petersburg, with
military rites to be held at 3 p.m.
Friday in the Arlington National
Cemetery, Washington, D. C.

Church.

.

derful it was," said Steven M.
Lauterbach, 29, of Dayton, Ohio,
who was an administrative officer at
the embassy. "It just stunned us. "
" The American people would

Isabelle A. Kolk aka Evedelle A.
Kolk, Karl A. Kolk, Jr. to Joe P.
McKenzie, Rosella Marie McKenzie,
Parcel, Meigs.
Emily Michelle Morrison to Joe P.
McKenzie, Rosezella Marie McKen·
zie, Parcel, Meigs.
Regina M. Eichman, Alan Eichman to Joe P. McKenzie, Rosezella
M. McKenzie, P~rcel, Meigs.
Henry K. Morrison to Joe P.
McKenzie, Rosezella Marie McKenzie, Parcel, Meigs.
James J . Proffitt, Clyde J.

never forget us or turn on us, " said

politial officer William J . Daugherty. "The Iranians tried to tell us they
would, but we dido 't believe it."
In addition to the 52 .freed last
week, Reagan invited to the
ceremony Richard Queen, the
hostage 'released last sunnmer
because of iUneSl! ; 13 hostages who
gained their freedom earlier; family
members; relatives of the eight men
killed in the aborted corrunando raid
last April; the surviving members of
the raidihg party ; six other
Americans who escaped Iran with
the help of Canadian officials; and
government and congressional
leaders.
"This closes the chapter for us,"
said the father of one of the men who
died in the rescue raid. .
The events .of the day left Reagan
teary-eyed, jus~ as his meeting with
the former hostages' families di&lt;l
Sunday and as a report on the treatment of the hostages in Tehran did
Monday.
Reagan's voice broke with
emotion at one point when he was
talking to the former hostages inside
the White House.
As the president and first lady
Nancy Reagan watched them arrive
at the White House in commuter
buses, "they both started to tear up
there and Mrs. Reagan went to get

Francill D. Morrison, Betty Lou '' ·
Morlan, eta!, to First Federal
Savings and Loan Association, Par- Morrison to Joe P. McKenzie, ,,~.
Roaezella
Marie McKenzie.• Parcel, .·•••.·
cels, Orange.
.
Muriel Bradford, Wallace to Neda Me1gs.
~ ...
Lewis H. Morrison, Louise . ·
J . Clemson, 5 acres, Orange.
. Standard Oil Co. to Dennis E. Morrison to Joe P. McKenzie ".
Saelens, Carla D. SaeleruJ, Lots, · Rosezella Marie McKerlzle, Parcel, . ·•
Pomeroy.
Meigs.
" ·
Shirley M. Lonjl to William, M. ' ''
· Robert T. Dye, Wenona D. Dye,
,,
Ella 0 . Butts, Jinunie Butts to Ruth Long, 2.5 acres, Lebanon.
Shirley M. Long to Forrest R. i '' •
Sond, Parcel, Columbia. ·
Mary Alice Morrison to Joe P. Teaford, Launa J . Teaford, 2.5 ~~
McKenzie, Rosezella Marie McKen- acres, Lebanon.
.......
zie, Parcel, Meigs.

~mail

investment,
large
.
returns, Se:n tinel Want Ads
Offers will be received.

Deed Recoras.
Sale of said real estate
'tlas authorized bY Or·
dinance ad,opted January
12, 1981. The village reser.ves the r i ~ht to reject any
and all b1ds. The sa le i s
pursuant to section 721.03
of the .Ohio Revised Code.

yellow bOxer pup. Male.
m -3996.

111 14, 21, 28, t 3) 4, II , Sic

'

the high school in Cheshire,

Ohio on Co. Rd . 20.

Two &amp; one hlllf yellr olc;t

3___.A~n'!'n~o~u'!'nc':.'e!!m!!.e~n.!.'t~S.:_·_

Emergency runs

one of the

Raci,e Volunteer FIre
Department sponsors a
shot gun &amp; rifle match
everv Sat. night 6 :30 p.m.
at their b\Jildlhg In Bashart.

SMOOT I NG

shot guns only . Open sights

ches, class rings, Wedding

Ta&gt;e service, federal, state,

silver. Call J . A. Wllmsley,
7.42·:2331 . Treasure Chest
Coin Shop, Athens, OH . 592· .•

MATCH

at

EMOTIONAL MOMENT- Former hostage Bruce Lalagen apJN:an
to flgbt' back lean at the podium with President Ronald Rea1an daring
ceremonies for the freed hostages at the WWte House Tuesday. Laingen
was the charge d'affaires at the U.S. Embassy in Iran. (AP Laserphoto).

VENUS
Venus is covered with a dense,
white, cloudy atmosphere that conceals whatever is below it. This
same cloud reflects sunlight so ef·
ficiently that . when Venus is
favorably situated, it is the third
br)ghtest object in the sky, exceeded
1&gt;nly by the sun and the moon .

22 r ille.

quarterly laxes done by
Eblin, 41000 Laurel Cllfl

&amp;

appointment. See Wanda

Road,

·pomeroy,

Ohio

45769. 992·2272.
APPLES :

Go lden

delicious, SJ .7.5 per buschel .

Other ••rletles al $4.00 per
buschel &amp; up . Fllzpatrick
Orchard, State Route 689.
Phone 669·3785.

6

10

1hese cash rates
include discount

6. _ _ _ _ __

7----...,---8.
_ _ _ _ __
9. _ _ _ _ __

10.:_
-_
' -_
-_
-11 .·_
_-_ 12. _ _ _ _ __

I

·I
I
I
I

I
II
l

________

,.13.- - - - - 15.16,
______

I

dleport area . 992·6309 .

13
Insurance
AUTDMOBI LE'
SURANCE been
celled? Losl

commercial rentals, two
apartments . LaSalle Motor

Inn In Mlddleporl. 992·9917.

IN ·
can-

lor Re~t

For rent :

two bedroom

work,

One child

accepted.

Brown ' s

' •.

Break Freel.

l'jlll do penellng, ceiling,
fr()or tile, plumbing . Free
estimates . Fred Miller at

t

~2 - 6338 .

7- YordS.It

,.,_ WontM M ltent

t-Piolbll&lt; Slit
&amp; Auc:tlon

u-•qul,mtt~t

9-Wonkd to Buy
e EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

VIRGIL B. SR .~ 1 • 1 1 0 ~&lt;'
~ 16 e,. Second StrPet

nome in Portland . Have

references . Call8ol3·4801.

Phone
1-( 614 )-992-3325

tor Rent

11 - lltuar.dWMf.cl
ll-lnsurtftU
14- luslntu Tnlnlnl
lJ--SdtOOII ltntriiCIIOfl
,,._
J11cUo. TV

Soi-MIIC. MOfCftlftlllll

ijeth.

2 acres . John Sheets, 31h

.'

~lies

••. 1.

soulh ol Middleport,

12- Trllt:IIIIIN' ....
tJ-Liwtttoca
44- Hay &amp; •rain
U-IHCI &amp; .. ortmror

7, three bedroom farm ·
house Joceted on Route 7.
992-2571 .

. ,,_..,_,.....,,.,.

e TRANSPORTATION

Beautiful

7J-Vattti4W.D .
J4-Mtfere'(Cit1

Autt filarh

Gas heat, central air con·

IAcatWI"
n-AIIIftR ...Ir

dltlonlng . Call 985·3814 or
992·2571 .

eSEIIVICES

four year old house on 3

11- Htmt llftlf"Vt""""
12-r-Ptum_.lt I IICIVttlllt
1)-lllUVatl...
M-llectrlctl

acres. 7 rooms, 1 &amp; one half

~oth, nice location, Roule
t Racine. 949·2706.

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

11-G...,al Haul!. .

Nice house on 2 &amp; one hoi!
•eros on s R 7 between
Memory Gerdens &amp; stote

.,.._., ,H , .....,

17-U(IMMIItery

garage.

Priced

spectlon. 992-7741.

on

In·

3··=====

ISWenhtrUndor

....

Cattl

..'·"
•••

ld.,.
d.,.
'Cl.,.
1 dty
l

I1
1
I
I

.

In.,,,.,.,, Cerlll of ThaM• eMI Oltltuer., 1 t co•tt ,.,

.

sew lh•s super·sensational dress
m sweater kn. ts, Silky crepe.
••loU! lor lillie money. NO waosl

seam, lnlls. liltong p1oblems.
Pnnled Patlern 481 t. Hall
S11es 1011. 111;, 14 \\ , 161!.
1811. 10 1&gt;\. S•1e 14 \1 (bus! 37)
takes I 1, yards 60-onch labnc.
$2.00 lor uch potllm. Md 50(
llr IICh Pllltm llr ~ISI-cllss
airmail MOd hlfttllinl- Sond to:
Aln!Adams
1 ~I

CIMrM

1.21 •

'·"

J.U

UJ

.won,

u .lt ,',

minimuM . C. .llln t•WII,U .

MM!It HeMt Ulo• IM YaNI uttt lriiC"'tH tftty witt\ cl• Wlttl 1
onltr. 2J Ctnt cMrtt fet Ml ctrrylnt lei Nil,..._ In Ctrt tf TM
Sonllnol.
t.l

~our &amp; one half acres In Ihe
Southern Local-- School
li)lstrlct, lwo bedroom,
tialh, Jiving room, kltc~en,
~ot &amp; cold water, drilled
\fell: Loceted on Manuel
Read. 949·2301.
I

~OR

f,

Sole or rent. Ap·

oximately 3.4 acres with l

droom modular home In
ortland, Ohio area .. 9

miles

from

~ridge .

&amp;73·527Q,

Ravenswood

Call efter 5 p.m.

The Daily Sentinel ·
243 W.t 17 SL, 11tw Yorli, NY
101)11. ~ritlt NAIIE, ADDRESS
llr, Sill, Mid STYLE NUMBU:
We streamlined lhe sewong Jo
save you t1me so you can save
money! Send now (or NEW 1961
SPR ING-SUMMER PATTERN CATALOG. 100 slyles, free pattern
c~n . ($2 Value). CataiO(, SI
Quilb .. ... $1.75
. . QuiltiliJ .$1.75
IJO.S.......Stz• 31-56 .$1.75
129-Quid/Eay TrlftS!tn . $1.75

hJ!.td

SMALL

Utility Buildings
Sizes from 4x61o 12tt,40

Septic Tanks

P&amp;S BUilDINGS

Roush Lane
Cheshire, Oh.

Rf. 3, Box 54
Racine, Oh.

Ph. 367-7S60

H&amp;R BODY SHOP

••• • •

Ph. 614-143-2S91

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

Body Repair - Insurance

Work- Collision Repair.
Expert painling, body
work, pinstriping.., &amp;
vinyl tops.
Free Estl mat es
Call9 92-3421
Kingsbury Rd., 2 mi.
westeo. Rd. 18 ·
Pomeroy,Oh.45769
Domeslic, Japanese &amp;
European Cars &amp;
Trucws.

• New Homes • ex·

te

·

d I'

nsJve remo e ong
• Electrical work
• Roofing work
12 Years
E
.
xperoence
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583

ROGER HYSELl'S
GARAGE
-Auto and Truck
Repair
- Transmission
Repair
Hrs. : Mon.·Fri.

,9 A.M.·S:JO P.M.
992-5682

4

~~=====1·=1=·:1:m:o:.~~=:;~~;;1~·2;2~-l~.m~o~-~~~~;;;;1~0-~7~-t~fc~
Carousel

.

fiARVEST

tvU-n-E
HOUSE
~rt

Confectionery
m N. 2nd Ave.
Middleporl
Order your docoraled

Bobcal loader. mu•t &gt;ell

· ~.
Pomeroy, Oh.

cakes for all occasions:

Open

Birthdays, Annlversaries,
Weddings,
Showers, elc. ·
"Beginner
cake
Decorating Classes"
starting soon. Please
note, we wil be closed on

saturday Only
4 P.M. to 11 P.M.
FreeColfee&amp;Tea
Free Food
Live Music

Mondays during
month of January .

the

J&amp; D
AUTOMATIC
TRANSMISSIONS
REPAIR &amp; SERVICE
ON MOST CARS

Reg . Price S325.00

Spec. Price $225.00
Plus Ta• &amp; Fluid
109 Spring Ave.
Pome:roy,
Oh.

Ph. 992-5l43
1·22·1 mo.

12·31 ·1 mo .

1·11·1 mo.

POMEROY,O.
992-2259
PEACE IN THE COUNTRY - 23 beaUiifuJ
acres wi th stream timber land, building
site and some til lable.
Utilities
available .

$18,000.
WORK IN

January Inventory Sale

RAVENS·

Bobcal

WOOD? Live near the
new bridge In this neat 5
bedroom home with
enclosed rear porch,
basement, forced air
heat on a nice lot . Owner
willing to help finance .

$32.000.
ALSO NEAR

meer

Jy remodeled . $45,000.
MIDOLEPORT - 3
bedroom house on large
lot - aluminum siding,
full basement, n Fce kit·

'

"'

1980 Pontiac Pheonlx, 2

Park mobile home on

approx. 1 acre lot. 2

V.C. YOUNG II

ty. 992·2849.

fireplace,

equipped
kitchen .
$16,500.
REALTOR
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.

992-6215 or 992-7314

Sliver Pontiac LeMans

2 door sport coupe. 992·

after 5.

1974 MAZDA RX4,
auometlc, olr, em-lm. good
tires, runs good. Will trade
for small pickup ol equal
•alueor$750. 992·7841 .
Trucks lor Sale
CHEVY Truck '12 /on, 1970.
Good cond. $695. firm. 667-

72

Pomeroy, Oh.

r

~iiiii~~~1
11

Home
Improvements

baths,

fireplace, brick exterior, plenty of shrubbery . Can
assume at 10% . Owner leaving, says sell. $39,900 .

Free
reasonable

estimated,
rates, scot-

chquord. 992·6309 or 742·
2211.

standard, two flew tires, all

RACINE AREA - 3 BR 's, large lilllng room , 8ISO
fam ily room, storage bldg ., carport. Pri ce cut,

carpeted Inside, runs good. Dozer work. Smell lobs a
$1095.00. 742·2211 , elter 5 specialty. 742-2753.
phone 742·2201 .
84
Electrical
7.4
Motorcycles

$36,000.

1978 KAWASAKI KZ 650

COUNTRY HOME - 37 acres, 3 or 4 BR's. Located
close toRt . 7. Ask ing $40,000.

Call 949·2649.

GOOD COUNTRY LIVING - Country hom e, large

7l

Lot set up for trail er . Asking $4 ,800,

liv ing room, kifchen and den . includes 3 BR ' s, laun ·
dry area, and outside bu ild ing for storage &amp; car .

Asking under $30.000.
CALL US TO SUY OR SELL
Nancy Jaspers - Associate

PH . 8~3-2075

Yd.
&amp; Up
casn-n· Carr
1nstalled
1
Buy Now &amp; SaveS2-S6 Per Yard.
25 rolls carpet in stock to pick from.
Regular backed carpet installed free,
with pad.
Drive A Little- Save A Lot

&amp; R efriger.atlon

motorcycle,

color

blue.

Baatsond
Motors for Sale
1979 ~tarcralt elumlnum V·
hull open bow, 80 hp Mer·
cury outboard, canopy &amp;

ELWOOD
REPAIR -

BOWERS
Sweepers,

toasters, irons, all small
appllllnces. Lawn mower.

Next lo Slate Highway
Garage on Route 7. 985·
3825.

Eleclrlcal service for all
·wiring needs, ser•Jce coils,
around condition . Boat like esllmotes. Call Miller Elec·
new. $3,700.00. 992-2849.
trlc at742-319S or 9'12·7680.
trailer

\

In

excellent

fill

ElfiCtrJcol
Relrlger•llon
APPLIANCE SERVICE : SEWING MACHINE
all makes washer. dryers, Repairs, service, all
ranges,
dishwashers, makesl 992·2284.
The
disposals, waler tanks. Call Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Ken Young al 985·3561. 28 Aulhorlzed Singer Sales
years experience. Also will and service. We sharpen
Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

sell paris you fix.
D X M Electrical Con·
traclors. Resldenllal, com·
merclol, &amp; Industrial
wiring, Ser•Jce calls. Free
estlmotes. Coil collecl 388·

14

&amp;

Scissors.

I-,S:.......___,G,e"'n"'er'-!I~I~H!!a~ul~ln'!lgL_

AI'S Trash service. Box 65 ,
Portlond, Ohio. Bol3·•9 12,
We have entire Meigs
Gene's Carpet Cleaning, 976.4
co t $5 00
deep stream eKiractlon. I ,.;:;:;;;;;
. :;:;;:;:;;;:::;:;;:;:;;;::;::;,l,;;;;u;n;y;.;;;;.;;;;m;on;;;lh;;;l~y;;;.;;;;;;;;,

1977 Ford pickup truck 3-4 .,13:......._--=Ec::Xc:oC,_IV"'I"t.!.'ln!llf!_ _
ton. 1978 Mercury Cougar.
Bolh In excellenl condlllon. J &amp; F BACKHOE SER·
Phone 992·7644.
\liCE llscensed &amp; bonded,
septic tank Jnslollatlon,
woler &amp; gas lines. Ex·
Vons&amp;4W.D.
covatlng work &amp; lranslt
1971 Che•y •on. 6 cylinder. Jayoul. 992·7201 .

CENTRAL REALTY
1'/ 2

$499&amp; U

84

electrical work
(Free Estimates)

$6,.400.00, new car warran-

Sq..
Yd

SHAG
Re7
$15.95
$ 99 Sq.

Main St.

-Plumbing and

conditioning, •m·fm rad io,
33 mpg , 2,000 miles,

$995

1

2 Rolls
Rubber Back

RUTLAND
FURNITURE
'
742-2211

- Addonsand
remOdeling
-Roofing and gutttr
work
-concrete work

door, frontwheei drive, air

home. $11 ,200.
IN TOWN - 1972 Holly

3 BR, hardwood lloors,

Reg. '8"

CARPENl!R
SERVICb"

Autos for Silfe

71

prox . 13 acres that
would be an e)(cellent
place · for your new

992·l692
OF.FICE 992-22l9

hp,

100

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

chen. $26,900.
BUILD ING SITE - Ap·

ASSOCIATES

trencher;

62
Wanted to Buy
CHIP WOOD . Poles max .
diameter
10"tonon. Bundled
largest ~;==~;;;;~===~
end. $12 p·er
slob. $10 per ton. Dell•ered
lo Ohio Po llet Co., Rt. 2,
Pomeroy m -2689.

heatolalor

Jean Trussell949· 2660
Roger &amp; Dottie Turner

witch

model T600 crawler. 1·614·
457·3139.

THE

992-6191

Ditch

KITCHEN CARPET
CARPET . With Padding

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

trencher J20 18 hp, Ver·

firepla ce. House recent·

bedrooms,

loader,

slyle

hydrostatic .

bridge! 5 country acres
w i th .f bedroom house,

bath ,

•

Cash 'n' Carry

Real Estale - General

RACINE -

Sizes
"From 30X30"

~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;~~~~~~~~~;:;;;:;;:;;~6;·;15;-t~fc~~

inch to 24 Inch wide, 6 feet
deep. Vermeer 1-600 100
horsepower. 1·457·3139.

Housing
Headquarters

LETART -

992-7544

SJ,soo.oo. 1·457·3139. Oozer,

''""" Dopl

IJICh woN tvtr "" mlnlmllm IS Wtrllt lit COfltiiNf' ..... ,., .. , . (l
Adt runnlnt ottltr ttltn conttclltlvtflv• will . . cNrtH •'"" lfty

,....

Break lree from h18h pnces -

Farm Buildings

County Cerlilled

down
call for Information

sfructlonn or field file . 12

· A . LOCAL REAL TOR
CAN BEST SHOW AND
SELL YOUR PROPER·
TY. CALL 992-3325,
992·3876.
I

thrte bedroom

ionch brick home In Baum
Addlllon. Pomeroy. Ohio.

Water Line Hook-ups

5%

Case 850, 6 way blade, 2300
hours. Backhoe Case sao
1973, 1400 hours, Mas&gt;ey
. Ferguson, 300 crawler
loader, 1977, 400 hours per·
lect. Calll·873-3008 or 1·8734996 . Trencher con·

your new home on
trai ler. Water and elec ·
tri c available .

¥odular home lot on Route

Rates and Other Information

35.

10 ACRES - Nice bOt·
tom land on Rl . 124 lor

troller Jot lor sole, ss.ooo.

t2-WutM te lkly

..

33. _ _ _ _ _ __

2 mobile homes;

lived in, 2 bedroom. rented

tt-JIIerm ltvi..,.Otlt

IorMOMIIY

acres near the coal
m ines on 12 ...
SMALL - 2 car garage
with 2 bedroom apart ·
ment over on· level lot .
Bath, carpeting, natural '
gas furnace·· and city
water . Only $16,000.

Mason , 3 bedroom never

e FARM SUPPLJI!S
8 LJVI!STOCK

l :DP:M. UM
1IN ... SINN._-

and drilled well on 1'12

acr e; 6 rooms, 2 baths, 1112
acres; 6 rooms basement,

'M-ftth , ... hit

Woni·Ad Advortlslng
Dtadllnos

your trailer or home .
Septic tank, electricity

Homes lor Sole
111 ROOM brick, 3 balhS, 1'1•

Sl-lulllllftt sv,uts

,t

NEW LAND - Clear il

yourself or let the wild
life roam . Natural gas,
water . and electricity
available.

31

u-c'a, Tv, ••••• ••••amtnt

14- IVIII'Inl IYIICIIntl
lJ-I.otl I Aer..
Jt-lttellttt... WalttH
31- helton

River with all c i ty
ut iliti es available and
l evel lot.

NEW LOCATION - . For

Sl-AIIIItiiUOI

11-

lype home on the Ohio

Pomeroy, Oh. 992-6226

,, _ Http wantM

l2- Molllltf4tm"
ror 1110 .
JJ-fttrms ,., hit

Proltlslonol

Nel!Cil E . Carsey, Agent

Sl -tfoueiMkl GtiMI

u - Hom•• tor 1a1o

NEw --. 2 bedroom tog

Services

eMERCNANDISE

e REAL ESTATE

EAFORDm

Water·Sewer,.Eiectric
Gas Line,.Ditches

Convenlional Loans-

qpzer with
way blade,
cheap.
(4) 6Bobc•l
style
1830 case unlloaders,
hydrostatic. Call 1 · 614·457 ~
3139 or 1·873·8963.

Phone 142-3092

~

TRENaiiNG
SERVICE

5% on balance.

model 2010. (3) John Deere
310 loader backhoes. Ill
case 580 loader backhoe.
t1l Case 850 dozer with 6
way blade. 11) Massey

front property w i th
many possibilities. Has
rental Income. Owner
will take land contract .
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.
Phone742·3171
Velma Nicinsky, Assoc.

pay cash or certified check

ousing
Headquarters

'

.

· 3% on SlS,OOO ·

John Deere crawfer loader

is approx. SO'xlOO'. ON ·
LY $20.500.00.
APARTMENT
BU ILO JNG R l•er

for antiques and collec ·
tibles or entire estates.
Nothing too large. Also,

Real Est•••- Gener•J

res idence. 992·

lor Ill: tnt

44-A,.rtmtt~t

4J-,III:Mml
4t--SINU fer • HI

dleport. 3 bedrooms,
aluminum siding, gas
forc ed air furnace . Lot

coin collections. Call 6U·

Will do bobyslltlng In my

eRENTALS

Sycamore 51. in Mid·

Antiques

767·3167 or 557·3411.

.......

&amp;.ASSOC.

no money down
Federal Housing-

61
Farm Equlpmenl
Ditch Witch trenchers (3),
R-65 diesels. (3J small. 1

guns. pocket walches and

NATIONWIDE IN ·
oURANCE
.

J-HIItPY Adl
._LOll liM! Povncl

S3

Reeves

10% to 20%. Discount
On En·t ire Stock
1-25-1 mo.

VA loans -

- ····-··..... . . .
- - · .J

on

~========::.~ATTENTION
: (IM ·
PORTANT TO YOU) Will

5858.

23

home

Trailer

~

'-Gi'IIIWI¥

'

No

plumbing, mobile

or

frame

Ruth

JIM CLIFFORO
Rt. 2 Pomeroy
Ph. 992-72012

Mortgage Bankers
992-7544

(614) 698-J:m.

Sells tor $41,000.00.
NEW LISTING - Large

F'ark, Route 33, North of

...........
.... .
....
. ...............

bools. etc.
Englishbells,
and
ment.
Blankets,
Western .

Brand new home, be it's
first owner. The total
electric, 3 bedroom
home is situated on nice
size tot in Rutland
Village. FHA approved .

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Pomeroy. Large Jots . Call
992·7479.

Imaginable in horse equip·

Ph. 667-641S

r,~~~~~~~~-~5~-l~m~.~o-~~;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;~
ALL STEEL
CUNNINGHAM REESE ..J.......J ~

and ponies lind riding
lessons.
Everything

ONLY $2,800.00! !
NEW LISTING

Space for Rent

46

E•·

IIPAIIb -~­
a..,.. wopo IJo-.

Now ""' IWh

Reedsville, OH.

&amp; ponds

cleared.

HOOF HOLLOW : Horses

cellent trailer tot in Har·
risonvil le. ApProx . :~;,.
ac re with water tap.

1 bedroom furnished apart·
ment, wall to wall car·
peting, redecorated, low

mobile home, utllltles paid.

Wanted to Do

home

NEW LISTING -

4 room lurnlshed apart·
ment. Adulls only, 992·2676.

992·3954.

Mobile Homes

Firewood lor sale. Har·

parts store &amp; pick up a free
dwood.load
spilldelivered.
&amp; del ivered.
992·
catalog . AI Kingsbury $30.00
5240
Home
Sa
les
Park
&amp;
Ac44
Apartment
cessories. Rt 12.4 Miner.
for Rent
sville, Oh. 992-5587 .
THREE Quarter bed, com·
3 AND 4 RM lurnished applete. $50. Firm. 667·3085.
IS. Phone 992·5434.
Rea I Estale- General
CIDER. Fresh Sweet elder
Unfurnished one bedroom
avo liable at Fltzpalrlck Or·
apartment for rent. Ren·
chord, State Rt . 689. 669·
HOBSTETTER REALTY 3785.
ters assistance available
for senior citizens. Contact
OFFICE 742-2003
Village Manor Apartments
George S. Hobs tetter Jr.
~
Pets lor Sole
at 992·7787.
Broker

Furnl!ce repairs, electrical

992~2156

..,. ....,

NEED Items lor your
Mobile Home? VISit our

Southern Vallev Mobile
Home Park, Cheshire, Oh.

42

lruck, stone-coal, etc.

General home repair &amp;
carpenter work. Springs

985·3961 .

TRAILER spaces lor rent.

on l y .

your
operator's license? Phone

U-MOINit Nomoi

sorvlctl

L----------~~----------~
,

Business Buildings
Hotel-lounge with lhree

LIIIONI

ANN'S CAKE
DECORATING
.SUPPLIES

water-gas·

sewer lines, certilied

several putters availllble .

information cal l 992·2720 or uti lilies. $174. monlh .· 9'12·
949·2264.
2362 •Iter 4.
34

NIW l llllcl

10 lb. ChocolaTe

septic systems, dump

de• eloped

GOLF CLUIIS:

WIN

Backhoe, snow plowing,

Golf clubs, 2 woods, 51rons,
bog, &amp; head covers. Also

perS&lt;ln, room &amp; bOard. drunks or pels. John ll
HouseholdGoods
Laundry, reasonable. 992· Sheets, 3 one hall miles "- '--======south of MiddlePort on Rt . Huge refrigerator in fair
6022 .
1. ,
condition . $30.00. Con be
seen at 400 Lasley Street in
WILL babysit in my home
weekdays. Day shill, Mid· 2 bedroom trailer . Adults Pomeroy .

41 - HDUIH hlr It HI

l&amp;lslnou
OoPOrtvnlly
11- Monoy to Lun
2l- lltrDftllictn81

I

.

watches. Call Joe Clark at
m -2()5,j et Clerk's Jewelry ' ·
Store, Pomeroy. Ohio 45769

ms. Hats, shirts, and pants.
If ordered before Feb. 18.
Custom Print, 240 E. Main, " ! mighl belie\le you 're lnno·
Pomeroy. m -2462.
cent of these petly ·thert charge ~r ,

25 . - - - - - 26 . - - - - - 27 .- - - - - 28. _ _ _ _ __
29.-_
- '_
-30.
_-_
__31 , _ _ _ _ _ __
32._ _ _ _ __

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

gold. Silver coins, pocket

II

e FINANCIAL

2• . _ _ _ _ _ __

•------5. _ _ _ _ __

Have vacancy for elderly

EARLY BIRD Special. 10

21-

17._ _ _ _ _ __
18._ _ _ _ _ __
19 . _ _ _ _ _ __
20. _ _ _ _ __
21. _ _ _ _ _ __
22 . _ _ _ _ __
23. _ _ _ _ __

1
.- '_
--_- 2. _
_
_
3. _ _ _ __

Wenled lo Buy : clessrlngs,
wedding bonds, anything
stomped, lOK, 14K, or 1BK

percent off all team unlfor·

I Cl R.,.lr
1t-Wtnlt41 To Do

check lhe proper box

) Announ cement
&gt; For Rent

6462.

992·21.().

eANNOUNCEMENTS

it you descr ibe lully , -+~d•:.Y!f~:!f::..:-=f::..:.:;

I 1 For Sale

Write D.B. Dick, Pres ..
Soulhweslern Petroleum,
Box 789, Ft . Worth , Tx.
76101.
Sltuollons Wonlod
WILL do hot~se keeping &amp;
cooking lor an elderly per·
son. AIS&lt;l Jive ln. Dorolhy
wo_rth . 992·7226.

-CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

give pr ice. The Sentinel
reserves the right to
classify, edit or reject
any ad . Your ad wil l be
put i n the proper
ctasifi c ation if you ' ll
below

can work without super·
vision for Texas oil co. In
Pomeroy area . We train.

estimete . 1-614·667·3031 or
1·6H·667·3248.

! - Cord or Tttonlll
1- ln Mtmorlom
l - .t.nnCM~ncoments

J&amp;F
ENTERPRISES'

--·

KWB

1·28· 1 mo.

"'

excavation,

THE
KOUNTRY

Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph. 992, 2772

.- Cei" L• u"d rltl
,. IU nli&gt;l "'""rtlll
,... ,..,~, Houu Ow"trl .
_, Mob!l t Hom t P"h

1\\1,.._

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

AD WANTED

I

1- 11 Horse POVflr Rldl'\g .
Mower
1- Good Trtiler Approved Wood
burner Sto'le with blower
1- Good G.a 5 R.an1e
1- Good HotpointWuher
1- tf ' GE TV
1- • cu. If. Motpeint

dly.

12

Experienced tree trim·
m i ng
&amp;
removal.
Reasonable Insured rates.
Call anytime for free

PHONE

CIRCLE
3

URGENTLY
NEEO
Dependable . person who

elnsulation

• sform Doors

• Storm Wi'ndows
• Replacement
Windows

Rufrlt;~erator

Pomeroy , Ohio. For more

Vinyl &amp; '
Aluminum Sidi_n g

ALL MAkiS

All ot tne aba~e llemt In e~t:­
nllent condition . Ai,l .are· priced
,., stll Immediately . see u1 ID-

us rlghl eway and get on
VIKING Troller.
lhe eligibility Jlsl ol 992· 1975
12K65.
Exc. cond. under
21St! or 992·2157.
pinning Included. $6,000.
247·3942.
Babysitter needed In lhe
Racine area, for one school 1969 PMC 3 bedroom
age child &amp; one Infant. Call troller . 12x60. 992·395-4.
after 5:30p.m. al9•9·2624.
The real estate of ~ouls A.
WANTED : People to sell DeLuz, twenly·two
wllh Iorge Holly Park
A•on. 742·235-4 or 742·2755.
mobile home, In Lebanon
Townshlop, near Portland,
PART TIME assistant ac· will be offered for sale to
tlvlties director Interest~
lhe highest bidder, cash on
in elderly people and high day of sale, on Saturday,
morals a mu!t. Prefer
January 31, 1981 at 10 :00
someone With plano and or
, .m. at the ofllce of
musical ability. Call Terry 0' Brien &amp; 0 ' Brien, 100 &amp;
Sfouts, M·F, 8·4:30 at 992- one Nllf CO\Jrt Street,

INSIJLATION

SERVICE

P.ltTS AND llltYICI

business. Will buy com·
plete estates. Osby Marlin
General Store. Mlddleporl,
Oh. 992·6370.

bands, diamonds. Gold or

,:=========-JLi:r~you~r~et~um~ed:::m~v~":·:·~'"~ _..,...

Phon•------------------F'rint one word in each
space below . Each initial or group of figures
counts as a word. Count
name and address or
phone number if used .
You ' ll get better results Words

OLD COINS, pockel wei·,····

WANT AD INFORMAnON

KEN'S AI'PI.IAII((

915--3561

watches, chains, diamonds
on. Copper· brass and
batteries, antique Items,
also do appraisals, com·
plete auctioneer service.
over 30 yeors e•perlence In

Park. 992·3324.

Address----------------

License tag reminder
Sarah Gibbs, deputy registrar of
motor vehicles in Meigs County, announces that car owners whose last
names start with A or B have until
Saturday noon, Jan . 31, to drive their
cars with old stickers.
Beginning Monday, Feb. 2, owners
whose last names start with C or D
can obtain their new stickers.
The license bureau is located on
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, in the former Gibbs Grocery building. To obtain licenses, car owners should take
their title and registration to the
registrar's office.

I

Faclory choke 12 gyage

~~:;,;;,;~:;;;;,;,;;,::;r.:=::;;;:;;;;;;;.;:::-r;::::::::::=::;:;:::::~
J&amp;l -BLOWN
For Fi&gt;t.l hrviu

&amp; so

.;

I PAY highest prices
possible tor gold and silver .
coins, rings, jewelry, etc. 1
Contact Ed Burken Barber
Shop. Middleport.

Nam•------------------

I . 1 Wanled

Found on

- - - - - - - - - ' ••
LIST In Chester. Ridenour ,,.
Rd . 6 month old female It : ·
Blue Tic . Reward . Cell
collect 367·0.. 78. Jack Lee. •.r •
9
wanted to Buy
.~ ......
"'

Write your own ad and order by mail w ith this
coupon. Cancel your ad by phone When you ge1
results. Money not refundable .

I

WANTEO TO BUY :
GOLD,
SJ LV E R,
PLATINUM, STERLING·
COINS, RINGS,JEWELR- House lor sale: lhree
Y, MISC . ITEMS. AB· bedroom for $7 ,500 .00.
SOLUTE
MARKET Located on Welchtown
PRICE GUARANTED. EO Road In Mlners•llle, Ohio.
BURKETT
BARBER m -575-4.
SHOP, MIDDLEPORT,
OH 10 992-3476.
32
Mobile Homes
USED FURNITURE . Gold
for Sale •
&amp; sll•er, clus rings, pocket

6606.
1

Announcements

3

Curb Inflation.
Pay.Cash for
Classlfleds and
Savell I

misdemeanors. according to
Prosecutor Fred Crow Ill.
The charges were brought against
J ohn N. Peters of Jackson and Eula
Marie Thomas and Billie . Marie.
Houk, both of The Plains, who were
charged following a raid at a
pyramid promotion meeting in Middleport in September, 1980.
Upon receiving the pleas, Judge
John C. Bacon fined each defendant
$100 and sentenced each to six months in jail. The jail terms were
suspended.
Houk , Thomas and Peters were indicted by the Meigs County grand
jury in December, and have also
been named in a civil lawsuit filed in
Athens County by the Ohio attorney
general's office.
Michael Likavec of Athens,
Houk's attorney, said Tuesday '1ft·
tlement in the case has been offered,
which may entail $100 fines for each
defendant and agreement not to participate in any further schemes.
Also named in the civil suit with
Houk, Thomas and Peters were
Roger and Nancy Cox of The Plains
and Russ Tippet of Malta.

peklnese, '· "·

Male

chest. 992
·3760.
I~=~=====.:==-r=========i Condor
Street.

shall keep it,

Trio fined in ·pyramid case

Lost 11nd Found

small reddish -brown long 11
hair, white slrak on face &amp; •

"'"~"'"''"

best.
Corn Hollow in Rulland .
dation Training Center and Sadly
missed by oau9hter- Every Sunday starting at
Workshop to be built in the village of in· taw and Grandchildren .
noon.
P.roceeds being
donated to the Boy Scout
Syracuse.
,
Troop 249. 12 gauge factory
The conunissioners extended the 3._--.:A,n.,n.,_,o,_,u.,_,n-"ce~m
=
en.,_,t~
s ~- ' I
choke
gun only!
deadline for the pilrphase of dog tags MEIGS MUSEUM open by
frtm Jan. 20 to Jan. 30. This will appointment January·Mar· RACINE GUN SHOOT,
way.
allow residents to purchase dog tags ch. 992·2264. 992·2802, 992- Racine Gun Club, every
" I feel the BC04 and the UMWA
2360 or 992·2639. Histories Friday night starting at
during this period without a penalty. for
sale
Pomeroy · 7:30 p.m. factory choke
are putting a cOncerted effort
Phil Roberts, county engineer, Middleport Libraries.
guns only .
together. I don't think the coal commet with the commissioners to
panies can afford a strike either. "
discuss various highway depart- Gun Shoot : every Sunday YOUR PIANO . Too
at 1 p.m. at Rutland valuable to neglect, expert
ment operations.
American Leoion In a fur ·
TO MARRY
Attending were Henry Wells, naco heated building. Fac· tuning &amp; and repair . Lane
Daniels, 742·2951 or 992·
president, Richard Jones and Dave lory choked guns only .
2082.
Marriage licenses were issued to Koblentz, commissioners, and Mary
Roy Barber, Jr.', 43, Reedsville, and Hobstetter, clerk.
Put a cold nose in'your life.
tax service, federal
Call the Meigs Counly &amp;Income
Florence Mildred Griggs, 40, Reedstate. Wallace Russell
Humane Society at 992· Bradbury, call992·7228.
PORKOPOLIS
sville; Michael Glenn Smith, 16, Rt.
6260.
12, Pomeroy, and Cindy Renee
Cincinnati processed so many . !..- _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ,,.: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ..,,
Smith, 16, Rt. I , Middleport; Rex hogs in the early 1600s that it was
Lee Roy, 24, Racine, and Daphane called " Porkopolis."
I.
Gail Hunter, 19, Radne.
I

Three people cha rged with
. promoting a pyramid scheme in
Meigs County pleaded no contest in
common pleas court Tuesday.
In a negotiated settlement
charges against the three wer~
re du ced from feloni es to

one house on

rlghl past the church on
Little Kyger Road, beSide

Found:

Business, Services

Firewood, $35 .00 a truck
load, S60.00.a cord. All her·
dwood, split, &amp; dell•ered.
843-4831 or BoiJ-4734.
1

tinel route carrier. Phone '

adult lemale col. See Ray

Garlinger

IN LOVING MEMORY of
Mabie Pettit, who passed
away Jan. 28 , 1976 .
Deep in the heart lies a pic·
ture, of a loved one laid to
rest.
in memories frame we

" I think we've got plenty of time to
negotiate," he said Tuesday.
Ancie Casey, another local union
leader, said that preliminary contract talks went smoothly and he expects the final talks to flow the same

Misc. Merchonlse
Firewood for sole, Mixed
types of wood . $35 .00 per
plck·up load.. oellvered,
will stack lor Senior
Citizens. 8ol3·4951 or 8ol3·
2815.
54

by Larry Wrlltht

1970 PARKWOOO custom
Mobile Home. 12x60 un·
and earn good money plus lurnlshed. 2 bedroom, 1
some great gifts as a Sen· bath, luel oil heal. 992·3823.

white cat, one grey tiger

Middleporl.

Because she wa s

n60.

KIT 'N' CARLYLE""

Help wanted
GET VAI,.UABI.E training
as a young business perS&lt;ln

Ohio. The Village acquired
title to sa id rea l estate by
deed recorded In Volume

. . ... ... . ......

(Continued from page 1)

antiques,

elc. complete households.
Write M. 0 . Miller, Rl. 4,
Pomeroy, OHl or call 992·

ariyday alter 5:00 a.m. at
949·2343.

270, page 703r Meigs county

Commission

boxes,(ars

Homes for Sale

For sale: older home on
large lot behind Burger
Chef In Pomeroy. Call bet·
hours of 7-10 p.m.
l992-7l:..Jl
- - - - - : - - - - -HAVE'S REALTY
Charles M. Hayes, Broker
"'eocll E. Carsey, Branch
Mgr,
Pomeroy, Oh.992·2403

11

Two female yellow &amp; while
kttens, three monlhs old.
AIS&lt;l female adult yellow &amp;

2!..___.21'!'nco:M!!o!!m!!.o'!'r'-'-ia'!'m!!!.. __

ice

31

POMEROY
~ . LANDMARK
992-2181

Real estate situated at
the corner of Garfield and
South Th ird Avenue in the

'
-'" " .

rings, Jewelry, sliver
dollars, sterling, etc .. wood

one year old, female . Call

real "'State, to-wit :

ol

old , furniture, desks, gold

Three beagle puppies, two
&amp; one half month old, two
lemales &amp; one mate. Very
cute. AIS&lt;l one beagle dog,

untllll :00 O'C lock A .M . on
the 23rd day of February,
1981 , ar the Mayor' s office,
237 Race Street, for the sale
of the following described

Village

,.

'

r
Wonlod to Buy
IRON AND BRASS BEDS,

4

NOTICE OF
SALE'

his ~orrunents were a mistake."

•'

•"

.

Public Notice

•

A suit for money in the amount of
$704.83 was Jiled in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court by Capital
Savings and Loan Co., Pomeroy,
again s t Charl es Newhouse ,
Pomeroy and Anita J . Newhouse ,
Gallipolis.
A foreclosure suit 'I"BS filed by Four calls were answered by local
AsSociates Financial Services Co. ; emergency units on Tuesday, the
of Parkersburg, against Lee Layne , Meigs Emergency Medical Service
Racine, Anna Marie Lyne, Racine, reports.
Racine Home National Bank and
At 6:43p.m., the Middleport Unit
George M. Collins as county took Keith McCarthy from his Midtreasurer.
dleport residence · to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. The Pomeroy
KING COTTON
Unit at 5:16a.m. took Irvin Miller,
Mississippi 's economy, long based Pomeroy, to Veterans Memorial ;
on oite crop, " King Cotton, 11 has Jean Fife, Spring Ave., to Vete ran~
become balanced and diversifi@d, Memorial at 8 p.m. and .Barbara
thanks to the promotion of industry, Betzing, Osborne St., to Veterans
other crops, tourism and federal in- Memorial at 10:58 p.m.
stallations.

f

J t'\J I

r-----------------------"""'l____..___. . .______ ..

press secretary James S. Brady
• said.
The president gave each of the 52
(Continued from page 1)
just-freed Americans and Queen a
union members, who noted their miniature U.S. flag in a rosewood
traditional ·'no contract, no work"
box , accompanied by a card he
position.
signed Tuesday morning in the Oval
ManuelOjeda,alocal unionleader Office. He said each would be given
who criticized Church's earlier conone of the 53 flags that flew behind
ciliatory statements, said T\iesday them oo the White House South
that "Sam has realized that some of
Lawn.

remains 'optimistic.

..

'.

some more tissues," White House

Churcha lso said last summer that
he thought a contract could be
reached without a strike. He

Ohio

Property Trans-f ers----__..;.._ . :·

At last. ~ . - - - - - - - - - - - (Continued from page I)
derstood there are limits to our
patience.'! .
Laingen, the charge d'affaires at
the U.S. Embassy in Tehran when it
was overrun by an Islamic mob Nov.
4, 1979, replied : "Our flight to
freedom is now complete."
" Mr. President, I give you.... 53 ·
Americans who will always have a
love affair with this country and who
join you in a prayer of thansgiving
for the way in which this crisis has
strengthened the spirit and resilience and strength that is the mark of a
truly 'free country," Laingensaid.
Thousands ut&gt;on thousands of
people - 250,0Q0 by one Washington

January 28, 1981

Pomeroy-MiddleporT, Ohio

r

�Gasoli~e

January 28, 1981

ort, Ohio

Pomero

Pa e-14-The Daily Sentinel

prices could go up sharply

WASHINGTON CAP) - American. gradual decontrol program started
motorists can expect to pay even by fonner President Carter in June
more at the gasoline pump in the 1979. That program already has
next few days as a result of removed price controls on about 75
President Reagan's first major percent of domestic crude oil.
Reagan pledged during the cameconomic decision.
,
Reagan is making good on a cam- paign to speed the process, saying
paign promise to remove im- oil companies had been shackled by
mediately the remaining price and price controls for nine years and
higher prices would spur faster
allocation controls on petroleum.
Angry consumer groups charged domestic production.
Consumer groups attacked the
gasoline and heating oil prices could
rise by 8 to 12 cents per gallon over decision even before it was anthe next few weeks as a result of the nounced, charging Reagan's action
decision, but administration of- awarded oil companies an "unacficials said the increase would be ceptable windfall. "
" It's nothing more than picking
more like 3 to 5 cents over the next
the pockets of consumers to further
two months .
While Reagan's decision was not bloat oil company profits," said
expected to be announced until mid· · Ellen Berman. executive djrector of
day, congressional and Energy the Conswner Energy Council of
· Department sources who had seen America .
Sen. Howard Metzenbaum, Dthe executive order said it will im·
mediately decontrol crude oil, Ohio, and Rep. Toby .Moffett, Dgasoline and propane - the only Conn., two congressional opponenU;
petroleum products which remain of decontrol, pledged to try to block
Reagan's action .
under price controls.
If Reagan had not acted, the price
Metzenbawn charged decontrol
controls would have phased out over could lead to gasoline prices. of $2
the next eight m?nths under a per gallon by the end of the year and

give the oil companies a $170 billion
windfall on their current reserves.
Most ~nergy analysts, however,
said the economic impact would not
be anywhere near that great.
Private and congressional experts
said inullediate decontrol probably
will mean conswners will pay an extra $10 billion for petroleum products over the next eight months. Of
that amount, ·the government will
recoup f/ billion through the " wind·
fall profits" and other taxes, oil
companies will get $2' billion an\1
state and local goverrunents will
realize.$1 billion in added revenues.

r-------------4

~·~~~~~
••
•

W WhitelJVestinghouse

13"rhoiuPIZZA
·•
of any •

Your
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ALL LOCATIONS

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r------------....JI.--------------1

Tight budget forces big cutbacks
COLUMBUS - Due to tight state
funding and sharp dropoffs in
gasoline tax revenues, the Ohio
Department of Transportation is
considering .a series of cutbacks and
cost-saving measures, according to
DavidL. Weir,ODOTdirector.
"Revenue from the gas and axle
mile tax for fiscal year 1981 Is expected to be less than 1973, the year
of the Arab oil embargo," Weir
stated in release today.
Planned economy measures in.clude:
~consolidation of some 12 district
and administrative functions .

- Bringing all of ODOT's right-of·
way ·acquisitions functions to the
central office from regional offices.
- Making a detailed study of
payroll and overhead cost savings
from aliandoning one, or ·more, of
the 12 district offices by July l. ·
- Reducing by July I, 1982, employment levels to sufficiently reach
a total payroll savings equivalent to
8-16 lulltime employes.
-Delaying filling present vacan·
cies ·for district .deputy director or
administrative assistants.
-stopping state financial participation where not legally required

HARDWARE NEEDS?
*increase personal
moisture to dry air.

by

adding

at y

' 29, No. 202
Vol.
Copyrighted

*reduce damage to furniture.,
FROM
ONLY

'8900

Mechanic St. Warehouse- Pomeroy

ELBERFELDS WAREHOUSE

tar and there was no citation.
Michael R. Meadows, 28, Bidwell,
was westbound on U.S. 35 at 8:05
p.m. when his car struck and killed a
deer, causing slight damage ,
·'
troopers said.
The patrol reported Clovis Bailey,
51 , Thurman, was eastbound on U.S.
35 at 9:52 a.m. whet1 her car also
collided with a deer. The deer ran on
;md slight da mage was listed to her.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Bowing
under the same economic pressure
that helped bring down Jimmy Carter, the Reagan administration is
asking Congress "with great regret"
to raise the national debt limit close
to the $1 trillion mark.
Treasury Secretary Donald T.
Regan said Wednesday the national
debt probably will surpass the !ega l
limit of $935.1 billion by mid·
February and it "has !Jecome imperative" that the ceiling be raised
to $985 billion.
As of last Monday, the national
debt stood at $931.8 billion.
Conservative Republicans in
Congress, including Reagan ad·
ministration Budget Director David
Stockman, a former representative
from Michigan, were highly critical
of the Carter administration 's
periodic requests for increases in

ca r.

RUTLAND
DEPARTMENT
STORE

"You can write checks:'

Phone 742-2100

Effective thru Saturday, January 31st
SERIOUS CHAT - Cfnrhuiall Rede president and general
maaager Dick Wagner 1 left, a rontroverslal figure since taking com·
maad of !be team's operation three years ago from Bob Howsam,
cllleusees this year's team wllb Jim Vennarf, Pomeroy, longtime
Reds' seoul. Wagner, ool one to hide from crtllclsm, luis ~o publicly
scMJtlol%ed lor his !allure to retain veteran players Pete Rose and Joe
Morgaa, !be firing of popular maaager Sparky Anderson aad his
· failure to make major off-season trades, See story and more pictures
pilge 3.

Homemade

''You earn interest:'

I

Eckrich

PICKLE &amp; PIMENTO LOAF.• ~~}l.89
Eckrich

JUMBO BOLOGNA ••••••• ~ •••••:~· sl.69

Combating ·terrori~m
tops foreign policy

'1 lb. French City

SLICED BACON ••••.••••••••• !'.k.~.•.sl.49
DAIRY
1 lb. Parkay

MARGARINE

LB.

PRODUCE
3lb. Winesap

81 ~

CHEESE

LB.
Box

APPLES .. ••••~:~. 79'
3 lb. Bag Yellow

ONIONS •••••••••• 95•

112 lb. Kraft Velveela

99~

6 oz. Red

Bag
9'
RADISHES ••• ••• 21 3

FROZEN

CARIBOU CATFISH •••••••••• ~~~ •• s1.99
4 oz. Holmes

(Lift· lop Can)

2/9f

SARDINES
IN
OIL
•••••••••••••
10112 oz. Campbell's
·cHICKEN VEGETABLE SOUP. 2/81~
20 oz. Del Monte

CRUSHED PINEAPPLE ••••••••••• 7f
21 oz. van camp

PORK-N-BEANS •••••••••••••• 21s1.09
32 oz. Kraft Miracle Whip
$
Jar 1 69
SALAD DRESSING;.............. •
14 oz. Del Monte

DELMONTE KETCHUP••••••• 2/s1.29
10 oz. Instant

Jar

•

Everybody 's talking about
Central Trust's new Interest
Account. At last, there
really is a checking account
that pays inte_rest.' No gimmicks, no automatic trans·
fers, just 51Mr,, interest,
compounded daily, on the
money you keep in checking.

You can gel your ched&lt;ing
without servire charges, too.

MAXWELL HOUSE COFFEE .••• s4.8~
7112

,

FACIAL TISSUES •• ;••••••••••••~~: 8~

'(

..........................

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

THE
CENTRAL TRUST

Better Banking Service. That's The Central Idea.

MACARONI &amp;CHEESE •••••••• 2/7r
200ct.Kieenex .

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 falls 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,

COMPANY

'

MEMBE R: FDIC

keep pace ,.;ith inflation, Weir said.
A bond issue will also be beneficial.
When asked if public reaction to
any increases will be negative, Weir
noted in the release "the public is
becoming more aware that services
costmore.
,
"People are finally starting to
say we are going to have to raise our
gasoline tax to pay for fixing our
roads," he said. "Many of the state's
media hilve indicated their support.
for such a move, I believe the time is
right to provide additional revenue
to Ohio's ailing highway program."

.-

en tine

Reagan bows
to pressure,
•
razses debt

*good for house plants

PICKENS HARDWARE

HAM SALAD .••••·•.••••••.• ,•.••LB.~·.. $139
·

terstate maintenance, state park
highways · or metropolitan park
roads .
There will also be 50-70 percent
cutbacks in traffic signal and
lighting funds, ditch cleaning and
slide repair, bridge repair, highway
maintenance equipment and office
and lighting equipment.
Weir Sllid there are three alter·
natives to gain funding: general
revenue fund assistance, highway
bond sales or an Increase in highway
use taxes.
An ip1111ediate increase in' the
gasoline tax will be necessary to

', ./'1l

2 Sections, 12 pages 1.5 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio Thursday, January 29, 1981

1981

No one hurt in wrecks
No injuries were reported in three
Gallia County traffic accidents in·
vestigated Tuesday by the GalliaMeigs Post of the Ohio Highway
Patrol.
The patrol said Ronald A. Miller,
34, Patriot, was northbound on
Greenfield Twp. Rd. 29 (Pickeri:,
Rd.) at 2:45p.m. when he lost control of his car, went off the right s1de
ofthe road and into a ditch.
Sligh! damage was reported to hi s

•

•

struction programs.''
Cutbacks have forced delays in
hundreds of projects local officials
have requested for years, Weir ad·
ded.
Although the 1982~ biennium
budget was prepared several months ago, Weir noted adjustments are
necessary because of new figures on
revenue collection released this
month.
Co"!lequenlly, ODOT will have no
funds available for new construction
or reconStruction projects, bridge
painting, guardrail replacement,
reimbursement for cities and in-

*reduce static electricity

VALUE
TOO!
W. VA.

comfort

in highway improvement projects
falling under local government
jurisdiction.
- Reinstating a hiring freeze.
- Requesting deadline waivers on
federal requirements, such as
making existing ODOT buildings accessible to the handicapped by July
I, 1982.
"I have an answer to our
problems," Weir said, "but unfortunately .the answer is money-money for operating the department
at a level where the public continues
to be served and money to restore
ODOT's . construction and recon-

e

PROTECT YOUR HOME AND · FURNISHINGS FROM DAMAGE CAUSED BY
TOO MUCH DRY AIR DURING WINTER.

WE
HAVE
IT!

HOSPITAL .'\E\YS
Simpson, Allison Smith, Christy
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
· Smith, Sherry Smith, Nickhole
DISCHARGES JAN. 21
Frances Boring, Ma ry Lou Bra dy, Spears, Carol Turners, George Van
Lila Brown, William Brown, Mrs. Matre, Eleanore Weaver, Mrs.
George Buskirk and son, Jewell Cur· William Wickline and daughter,
nutte, Mary Dameron, Vivian Mildred Ziegler.
BffiTHS .
Fellure, Bette Foster, Alka George,
Mr. and Mrs. Harold King Jr.,
Mrs. Clinton Gillespie Jr. and
daughter, Brett Grey, James Hall , daughter, Wellston; Mr. and Mrs.
Elmore Leach, Charles Littler , Dor· Roge r Price , daughter, Pt.
sey McGuire. Jjge Shields, Pennv Pleasant.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
CONSOLE HUMIDIFIERS

WASHINGTON (AP) - Secretary
of State Alexander Haig, sounding a
hard tine in his public debut as a
diplomat, says combating in·
ternatlonal terrorism rather than
promoting human rights will be the
top foreign policy concern of the
Reagan administration.
Interwoven with that declaration
Wednesday was a charge that the
Soviet Union's policies "foster, support and expand" internatibnal
terrorism and a warning that the
United States will take that into ac·
· count in its overall dealings with the
Soviets.
"International terrorism will take
the place of hwnan rights in our con·
cern because it is the ultimate abuse
of hwnan rights," Haig said. "It's
time that II be addressed with better
clarity and greater effectiveness by
western nations and the United
States as well."
In his first news c'Onference as
secretary of alate, the ·fonner fourstar general put the Soviet Union
clearly on notice thai any progress
toward annB limitation agreements
will be llnnlY linked to all Soviet ac·
tivlty throughout the world.
He said
terrorism
is
"hemorrhaging around the world"
and the Soviets have been little help
in dealing with it. .·
"I think it is clear that we ha\'IQ,an
unprecedented, at least in character
and scope, risk-laking mode on the
part of the Soviet Union, not just in
thls hemisphere but in Africa as
well," he said. "It Is a subject which
will be high on the priority of our
national security and foreign policy
agenda.
"An additional subject related in·
tlmately to this in the conduct of
Soviet activity - in terms of
training, Iundin~ and equippillg · Is

the debt ceiling.
But in a statement distributed to
reporters, Regan said, "Conditions
of the economy and government
commitments that we have
inherited leave us no choice in this
matter."
Since Congress approved the
present limit last year, high in·
flalion, high interest rates and
various other economic conditions
"have touched off a virtual ex·
plosion in federal borrowing,"
Regan said.
In other economic new~ Wed·
nesday: - The Commerce Depart·
ment reported that a big increase in
oil imports led to a $1.3 billion worsening in the nation's merchandise
foreign trade deficit in December.
Tlie deficit for all of 198(], however ,
was down almost $5 billion from the
$37.2 billion of 1979.

OSHA halts investigation
The Charleston Region of the Oc·
cupational Safety and Health Ad·
ministration (OSHA) temporarily
halted Wednesday its investigation
into the explosion and flash fire at
Foote Mineral Co.'s Graham Plant
near New Haven Jan. 23.
The investigation was postpone~
due to closure of the firm's shipping
department for the funeral of
Charles Freeman Johnson, 50, Clif·

ton, who died Saturday f•·om severe
burns suffered in the accident.
Leroy James, Mason, was also injured in the accident and remains in
critical condition at University
Hospital 's Burn Center in Colwnbus.
According to a plant spokesman ,
the investigation reswned today,
and is expected to contlude
sometime next week with a conference meeting bet ween OSHA and
Foote officials.

..
..

international terrorism.''
Haig noted that President Reagan
has stated repeatedly the United
States wlll not contemplate .
nitiflcation of arms control
agreements "exclusive of con·
sideration of the conduct and ac·
tivities of the Soviet Union outside
the sphere of arms control."
" That's the shorthand lor
linkage," Haig said.
At the same time, Haig said the
Reagan administration has not
scrapped the Carter ad·
ministration's quiet policy of
abiding by the tenns of SALT II even
though the arms agreement was not
r-atified.
.
He said the new administration is
reviewing· the question, adding : " I
would hope that in the meantime the
Soviets would do nothing to exacer·
bate the kind of mutual restraint
that both sides should pursue."
Haig expressed "utmost concern"
over continued "exploitation of the
Cuban proxy~ · to ac11teve Soviet ob- .
jectives in the third world and said
the recent incursion of Ubyan troop!
into Chad is a "grave turn of even·

ts.''
On other topics Haig said: - He
welcomes an inititive by President
Giscard D'Estaing of France to hold
an international conference in an at· •
tempt to eff~t the withdrawal of
Soviet troops from Afghanistan.
- "The United States government
will fulfill its obligations In accordance with both intern~~tionallalf
and the accepted nonns of domesti!'
legal practice" in carrying out the
HOSTAGE VIGIL ENDS - Returned hostage Michael Metrloko
complex Mgreements that led to the
blow• out a vigil candle resting on a shrllle outelde the SS. Cyrlls &amp;
freeing of the 52 •\merlcan hustages
Melhodlus Eastern Rile Calbolle Chu.reh Wedoesday atternooo In hs
from Iran. He said the government
home Iowa of Olyphant, Pa. Metrtoko's pilreoltlllt the candle months
wants to be sure the Iranians also
ago, aad vowed to keep II burning until their son was releast'll. The
will abide by the financial
church's pastor, Msgr. Stepht•n Hryouck,ls holdfog the candle's wind
obligatim1~ they a~reed to .
shield. (AP Laserphoto I

WASHING TON - The Reagan administration, still suspicious of
Iran, will not deliver more than $450 million in U.S. mllitary equipment purchased by the government of the late shah, Secretary of State
Alexander M. Haig says
Although Iran's revolutionary government has not requested
delivery of the equipment, Haig made it clear Wednesday that the
United States had no intention of honoring that purchase agreement
even if Iran asks for the goods and will not enter into any future contracts for military equipment with Iran.
Haig said the United States might try to sell the military equipment
-mostly spare parts for U.S.·built jet fighters, tanks, helicopters and
other weapons - elsewhere and reimburse Iran for the cash value of
the parts.

South Point facility frozen
COLUMBUS, Ohio - U.S. Agriculture Secretary John Block has
frozen 15 federal loan glllll'antees for gasohol plants across·the nation,
including one that would have started construction on a South Point
facility.
The government approved a $32 million loan guarantee in October
for the Ohio project, to be built jointly by the Ohio Farm Bureau,
Ashland Oil Co. and Publicker Industries. The three obtained bank
loans based on the guarantees.
The Lawrence County plant is to produce 60 million gallons of grain
alcohol a year, which will be mixed with g~oline to produce gasohol.

Break-ins pickup during sickout
.STEUBENVILLE, Ohio - City officials met early
today with leaders of nearly 350 municipal workers to
resolve a widespread sickout as numerous break-ins,
assaults and an anned robbery were reported.
Employees of this Ohio River city of nearly 30,000 are
seeking a 15 percent pay increase, which the city says it
cannot afford because of an estimated $41,000 budget
deficit this year. They have been working without a contract since.Dec. 15.
The sickout began with police officers Friday,
spreading to firefighters on Saturday and nearly all nonuniformed workers Monday.
.
.
·

Demonstrate against both sides-·
CINCINNATI- Some 200 high school students walked out of class to
demonstrate against both sides as a strike by teachers in suburban
Mariemont School District entered its thlrd day .
The student walkout Wednesday followed the dismissal of 14 untenured striking teachers by the board of education and the threat to
fire more Friday if the Mariemont District Educlltion Association
does not return to work.
Among those striking were the football and basktball coaches. Football Coach Tom Crosby, without tenure, was fired. And two basketball
games were canceled.

Investigate emergency landing
PONTIAC, Mich. - The Federal Aviation Admlnistra~n
Investigating the emergency landing of a small plane which left etx
people with minor injuries, Pontiac police reported.
The plane's five Michigllfl passengers and pilot Richard Hilt, of .
Columbus, Oljio, suffered minor cuts and bruises in the accident which
occurred at 11:10 a .m. Wednesday in an Oakland County field, according to Lt. John Bridgewater of the Pontiac police.

m

Daily lottery winner .
CLEVELAND - The winning nwnber selected Wednesday night in
the Ohio Lottery's daily game " The Number" was 243.

Government tries to stop strikes
WARSAW, Poland- Both the government and moderate leaders of
Poland's Independent labor movement sought today to stem a growing
rash of wildcat strikes taking millions of workers from their jobs and
raising new fears of Soviet intervention.
The government sent a negotiating delegation to one major center of
labor unrest, the the southeastern city of Rzeszow, where some 300
peasants anll workers have been occupying the official trade union's
fanner headquarters since Jan. 3 demanding talks on the' delay in
granting a charter to an independent fanners' union and other
grievances.

Weather
Mostly clear tonight. LoWll ll&gt;-20. Sunny ·Fiiday. Highs near 30. Chance of precipitation near zero percent tonight and Friday. Winds northerly to northwesterly S-10 mph tonight.
Exteaded Ohio Forecaot- Saturday through Monday: FairSatur·
day and a chance of rain or snow Sunday and Monday. Highs In the 30s
Saturday and Monday and in the 40s Sunday. Lows near 20 Saturday
and in the upper 20s to the mid·30sSunday and Monday.

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