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~ SOUP STARTER

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WHEAT NUTS

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•

HUll'S
SliCK PICK

•

enttne
1 Section, 10 pages

Vol.29, No. 205
Copyrighted 1911

UCtnK .

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday. February 3, 1981

I

....

tax .distri utron·

•Chocolate
•Vanilla
•Bona no
•Butterscotch

Just odd water
end fresh meat.
•Beef Vqetabl•
•Chicken Noodle

~

.

YOUR
CHOICE

l9°

(
NILSON'S RIG. n.1t

PENROSE

ROY IL TOOL ASSORT

workshop, family room .

89°

PLANTERS SNACKS
CHIIZ.

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CURL~

'•

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FAITHFUL - Mn. Nora Mills, Middleport senior citizen, despite
any klDd of weather, hot, cold, rainy or whatever, takes her two dogs on a
dally coutllllloaal. Mrs. Mills contendJllhat the walks are not only good .
lor the dogs but for her too. She has good health and has even mlased out
on lhe flu. She Is one of the few who Is braving the cold weather unless abo
solutely necessary. ·

·t
MANYMORI

s Oa.

•Y• Oa.

1V. Oz,

YOUR
CHOICf

DOLLAR DIY
SIVIIGS

YOUR CHOICE

69C
NILSON'S RIG. H '

$200

_

WIT 'N DRY
MIASURING CUP
No nMd to dry cup when changln~ from
liquid to dry measure.
U•• wet then turn ewer to uH dry side.
Metric

measure

or

ounce &amp; cup

Feels castration would curb rapes

meaaure.

•Three

MEMPHIS, Tenn. - Police Director E. Winslow Chapman, whOBe
city had the nation's highest rape rate last year, thinks rapists should
be castrated. But he said Monday he doubted his idea would catch on
because the United States is nol "ready for mulllation.' '
Chapman, wlio is Memphis' equivalent of police chief, drew a~
plause for his remarks from about 150 people attending an "anticrime" meeting Sundl!y sponsored by the Vollintine-Evergreen Community Association. The meeting was held at a Presbyterian church.
Memphis, with a population of 667,000, led the nation in per capita
rapes last year with a record 788, up from 704 in 1979.

HEa~y

Duty (II

Oz .)

Mugs

•Attractive lex·
tured Finish

• Unbreakable ·

GM loses $763 million

Top
Rock
Dishwasher Safe

IIIIITURE
FRIIEI PICTURES

JOY LIQUID

VACUUM CLEAIER BIBS

Dlthwather
Safe

•Fits
Hoover
Eureka
GE
Many More

P210

22 Oz.

SINK MAID OIIOANIZIR
•Puts order In underalnk cabln9t' for kit·

chen &amp; bathrooms.
•Hold&amp; scouring pads . brush.. , soap,
aponge1 , deantert.

NILSON'S IIG.

$1.17

•Asst . styles of pictures
and frames, gold finish
frame size 4"x5".

$129

•

YOURCHOICI

MUCH

49~

MORI

NILION'I 110. W

IEU.'IIIEL 11.11

·LE ' IRID.SYSTE 'IE
A Decorative Space laving Ortanlzer

•

•The SyaMm conslatl al grkll for hanging poll, pon1, cooking utensils, etc.
... Companion ttoroe- aheiYft In 1tondord and Iorge sites for storing conned
goods, jor1, tplcet, toys. tools, knkk knocks, etc .. •.
•Easy to lnttoll horizontally or .,.,.,icolly on wolls, behind doort, In kitchen,

LARGE OODEI' CLOTHES
DRYER

STANDARD IIZI

.,49

NILION'I ItO.

ta.tt

NRION'I - · n.n

•Completely Auembl•d
•Feldt Flat for Storage
•Provldet 27" of Drying SPoce

'249

,

'.

NILION'I

'

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.

~ Nel~n's Drug Stores And Nancarrow's PharJnacy·
·}J~~

from the gasoline tax have gone to ·
county govenunents since 19'17.
"We've been able to pay the coun·
ties about $35,000 per county per
month and $1,200 per township per
month," said Onnond Knippenberg,
information officer for Ferguson.
"In part, this was due to some
carryover from previous years."
He said the township fund had
carryover from 1979 to 1980. "We ad·
(Continued on page 10)

Ga.rwood completes rebuttal

'

~
(\

Fired teachers sue board
MARIEMONT, Ohio - Teachers fired for walking off the job have
sued the Mariemont Board of Education in an effort to get their old
jobs back.
Attorney James R. kirkland of Dayton filed suit Monday in
Hamilton County Conunon Pleas Court on behalf oi 13 unlenured
teachers fired last Tuesdl!y. He plans to file an additional action in a
few days on behalf of 37 teachers whose pennanent contracts were
axed Frldl!y.
The board dismissed the teachers, who walked off the job last Mon·
dl!y, after they defied an order to return by Fridl!y,

ByKATIECROW
I£ all goes well the former
Pomeroy Senior High Building will
become Pomeroy's City Hall
Building.
Kim Shields, grant consultant, in·
fanned Pomeroy Council Monday
night that a grant from EDA totaling
$75,200 for rehabilitation of the
senior high building has beeh approved.
Shields said council must enter in·
to an agreement with EDA Wed- ·
nesday of this week in order to obtain the grant money.
Shields reported the architect had
estimated it will cost $11,000 for in·
solation and dry wall; $11,600 lor a
new insulated roof; $29,000 for
new windows and door; $800 for
weather stripping ; $30,000 for a
heating system and architect fees of
$9,900, making a total of $92,300.
The difference between the ex·
penses and the amount of the grant
is $17,100. To pay hack the dif·
ference, it would cost the village $91
a month over a 40 year period. If

council would borrow $50,000 from
· FHA, it would cost lhe village $241 a
month over a 40 year period. Shields
said FHA requires general
obligation bonds.
Shields reported he has made application through FHA for a $100,000
loan if needed.
Larry Wehrung said if the $50,000
figure mentioned would not cover
the necessary repair, council should
consider borrowing a n addition
$25,000 to complete the project.
Council voted unanimously to
have the mayor enter into an
agreement with EDA. Once deter·
' nlinalion is made on the amount of

money needed · to complete the
project, the mayur will sign an
agreement with FHA.
Shields fell the project should be
well under way by swruner.
The senior high building wa s
deeded to the village of Pomeroy by
the Meigs Local Board of Education
for the swn of $1 approximately four
years ago.
SIGN PROCLAMATION

Dr. Craig Matthews was pres~n­
ted a proclamation on National
Children's Dental Health Month to
be observed during Februa ry. The
proclamation was signed by Mayor
Andrews.
Council, in other business, passed
an ordinance adopting the annual
appropriation totaling $628,060,
Meeting with council was Robert
Bowles concerning the condition of
Pleasant Ridge. Bowles explained
thai the road needs to be blackto~
ped.
Council agreed to place limestone
on the road until weather permits
placing blacktop in the area.
A report of Police Chief Harry
J-yons was read by Mayor Andrews.
It showed the department, during
January made 46 arrests, issued 960
parking (ickels, received 317 calls,
collected $1,661 from parking meters
and fines and drove 4,956 miles.
DISCUSS LEASE
John Anderson told council it was
conside(ing submitting a bid to lease
a portion of the senior high building

to the Meigs Courity Welfare Depart~
ment.
Anderson explained that sini'O the
senior high building is being
repaired partially with grant money
the welfare department would only
be required to·pay $104 a month for
as much as 3,200 square feet. Anderson did not feel renting to the
welfare department would be a
profitable move since it is limited in
the amount of money to be paid. An·
derson recorrunend that council not
sub1nit a bid to rent space to the
welfare department.
Steve Hartenbach, meterman,
asked council to purchase domes
and springs for the Parking meters.
Council agreed to purchase 100
domes at $3.15 each and 50 springs at
50 cents each.
II was reported that water was on
the highway in front of Logan
Monwnent Co. M11yor Andrews
stated that he had met with of.
!icials of the Meigs County Soil Con·
servation Service in regard ·to the
problem.

Icy pavement creates havoc on. roads
The return of winter Monday morning created havoc for early morning travelers as the Gallia·Meigs
Post of the Ohio Highway Patrol investigated a nwnber of accidenl1;,
one resulting in injury for a Bidwell
wo1nan .

The patrol said Lillian Welch, 57,
was eastbound on U.S. 35 in Gallia
County at 7:30 a .m. when she lost
control of her car on an icy road and
collided with a guard rail.
Moderate damage was reported to
her car and Welch was injured, but
not inunediately treated.
Troopers said BruL'e Waugh, 19,
Crown City, was eastbound on Gallia
CR 15 at 11 a.m. when he lost contr.ol
of his car on ice, went oli the right
side of the road and collided with a
barn, causing severe damage to his
car and no injuries.
According to lhe report, James F.
Chandler, 4jl, Gallipolis, was nor·
thbound on SR 325 in Gallia County
at 6:40a.m. when he lost control of
his car on an icy road and collided
with a guard rail, cau.sin~ slight
damage.
The patrol also mvestigatcd a
three-car accident on SR 7 early
Monday.
Troopers said cars driven by Rodney E. Spires, 43, Cheshire, and
Mary Schawnann, 31, Gallipolis,
were southbound at 7:30 a.m. when

. •. ' l'

damage.
theY stopped for traffic and were
The patrol said Helen Roberts, 41, ·
struck in the rear by a car driven by
Bidwell, was northbound on Second
James E. Conde, 43, Pomeroy.
The report said slight damage was Street in Bidwell at 3:10p.m. when
done tothe Conde and Schawnann she swerved to avoid another nor·
autos and moderate to Spires' auto.
The patrol again went to SR 7 in
Gallia County at 8 a.m. to in·
vesligale a twtJ-Car crash.
According to the report, Roy 0 .
Zinunerman, 68, Proctorville, was
northbound when his car slid on ice
and collided with a parked vehicle
Jimmie Franklin Evans, 46,
driven by Nelson Morehead, Point
Racine, died early Monday morning
Pleasant, causing slight damage to
when the rowboat in which he was
Morehead' s car.
traveling across the Ohio River to
Troopers said a car driven by
get to his employment at Kaiser
Theodore P. Hayes, 26l Athens. was
Alwninwn Corp., Ravenswood, was
southbound on Rutland Twp. Rd. 41 struck by a barge.
in Meigs County at 10 a.m. Monday
Len Jones and Brady Stephens,
when his car slid left of center and
Jackson County, W. Va. , sheriff's
collided with lhe front of a nor·
deputies, said that the barge was one
thbound car driven by Steve A. of several attached the the Harlee
Gillespie, 25, Point Pleasant.
Branch, Jr.
Slight damage was reported to
According to the report, capt.
bolhcars.
Glenn Gifford of the boaI saw Evans
The patrol investigated two Gallia
rowing across the river in the path of
County acCidenl,; later in the day.
the boat and barges. He signaled and
According to the repnrt, Teddy W. attempted to back up the boat.
· Adams, 19, Gallipolis, was nor- However, a Barge struck Mr. Evans'
thbound on SR 160 at 2:05p.m. when · boat. The accident occurred at about
he braked for a car coming from a 7 a.m . and the boat crew recovered
private d1iveway .driven by Leland the body at about 7:20a.m.
E. Brown, 68, Middleport.
The body was taken to the Kaiser
Adams' car then slid off. the road Alwninwn Corp. dock after the·ac·
and into a ditch, causing moderate cident which occurred about one-

thbound vehicle and collided with a
parked car owned by Harold L. Kir·
by, 46, Jackson, causing moderate .
damage to both cars.

Ohio River accident
kills Meigs ·resident
qWjrter of a mile above the plant.
The Ravenswood Police Department
had received a call on the rivet' accident at about 8: 1S a.m. and that
department notified the sheriff's
department at Ripley with deputies
arriving at the scene at about 8:41
a .m.
The body was taken to the medical
examiner's office in Charleston, W.
va., before being released to the.
Ewing Funeral Home in Pomeroy
which is in charge of arrangements.

Two districts out
Schools of the Meigs and Southern ,
Local School Districts were clOl!ed
today due to icy roads and cold
weather which prevailed in the aree
this morning.
Eastern i..oolll
District Schools, bowever, were
open.

j
'

Ohio lottery winner
CLEVELAND - The winning number selected Mondl!y night in the
Ohio Lottery's daily game "The Number" was 507.

I

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v~ ~~~

~

••

LAIOIIIZI

NIUON'I - ·

'

~

child's room, worltshop, hc&gt;bby rcom, bath, or pantry.

WILL &amp;RIDS STORliE SHELVES

DETROIT - General Motors Corp., producer of 23 percent of the
world's motor vehicles, has lost mon~y lor the first year since it was
making $800 Chevrolets. And the nation's other automakers are expected to do even worse.
The No. 1 automaker o~ Monday showed a loss of $763 million, or
$2.65a,share, for all of 1980. Not since 1921 had GM reported a loss.
However, GM made money in the last three months of 1980, reporting on Monday earnings of $62 million, or 21 cents a share, for the
Iourth quarter.
GM is the first automaker to report 1980 results. Other companies
plan to report next week or later.

CAMP LEJEUNE, N.C. - Was Marine Pfc. Robert Garwood a .
"54llflsh opportunist" who knowingly collaborated with his Viet·
namese captors, forsaking his fellow American prisoners?
Or was the emotionally unstable young Marine driven to insanity in
jungle captivity, not comprehending that he was doing wrong?
Those questions will be answered by a live-man Marine jury at the
conclusion of final argwnents In the court-martial of the 34-year-old
· Marine, who spent 14 years in Vietnam.
The defense was completing its rebuttal today.

c~~~:. $100

b.

and $1,200 respectively in the mon· year 1981,'' Weir said, ''revenues are
thly tax distributions for the past down an additional '6.32 percent from
the same period in i980." •
five years.
He said he wrote county auditors a
He raised the question of when
warning that they may "soon share declining collections will show up in
in a $10 million loss of revenue." He the distributions to local govern·
said he wrote State Auditor Thomas ments. He cautioned county officials
E. Ferguson and the county auditors that they should nol base a!Jticipated
that declining gasoline tax collec· revenue on historic distribution.
A spokesman in Ferguson's office
tions over the past 19 months means
$41 million in lost revenue.
. said Weir's letter had not been
"In the first five months of fiscal received but that equal payments

Old Pomeroy" High Building
will become new city .hall

'

I

NILSON'S RIO.

NILSON'S REG.

CORN CHIPS

Zfp

I

•Kitchen , child ' s room . clouts .

CHIIZ BALLS

I

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STORliE Ill

. 5 Oa.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - State
Transportation Director David L.
Weir may have found a leak in the
state's fuel tax collections. Or is his
report Mondl!y on distributions of
tax fundl! another volley in a campaign for higher gasoline taxes?
Weir said that despite a constant
decline over the past 19 months in
gasoline tax collections, some county and township officials report
receiving fixed amounts of $35,000

~~ .

YOUR CHOICI

HOT SAUSAGE

.

.

Weather
Partly cloudy and cold tonight. Lows ().6, Partly sunny Wednesday.
Highs aroWld 20. Chance of snow. 20 percent tonight and 10 percent
Wednesday. Westerly winds I0-1S mph tonight.
•
. Extended,Ohio Forecatil- Thursday throughSaturday:FairThursday. Highs in the upper 208 to upper 30s. Lows10-15. Wanner Friday
and Saturday with a chance of showers or snow Ourries. Highs in the
mid-30s to mid-408. Lows in the 208.

-'

-·

WINDOW DISPLA V - In oblcrvance of Nstioual &amp;:outing month Pomeroy Boy Scout Troop 2t9 has a display In the window ol Davll II.
surancc, Court Sl., Pomeroy.

"""

�Cqmmentary
Reagan~s

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, OhJo
llf..tn-llM

DEVOTED TO 'I1IE INTEREST OF 11lE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~lb

~._-.- •......_c:::l.....

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Ploblllber

BOBHOEFUCH

AlllltaDthblllberiC.OtroUer

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
Newe EdJCor
A MEMBER ol Tbe Auoclakd Pftt1, lalnd Dail)' Prell A11od1UGG a.:! tbt
Amer~cu;New~paperPwbUibenANotilttoD.

LETI'ERS OF OPINION ore wel&lt;tmed. Tbey lll&lt;oolol be ieulloiiiM wonb IOOC· All
lrllen ""' oob!e&lt;l to edHiq ud mUI be oJped wltb - · - . ouod te~
.-,.No . .lpod lelten wiD lie poblloloed. Letlero olooald be Ia Jood taote, , - . ,

--~~.

In World War II, FOR set up a pendlture now overstrains America
"production czar." The idea was to , more than govenunent expenditure .
vest in a single agency the power to ' And please, let poor cqrysler die."
Well, the president can't tell
allocate priorities. We were fighting
1
Congress
when to adjourn. But he
a war, and these pricirities had to be
can
present
to Congress an arnlaid down and observed.
bitioUll
program
aimed at ln~ing
It is time to set up another czar,
U.
S.
productivity
- the first goal,
this one charged with tracking down
cut
high
marginal
tax rates,
regulations of all kinds - fiscal,
elimina\e
capital
gains
taxes,
freeze
regulatory, bur~alicratic · - and
and
roll
back
envirorunental
restricpackaging them up for euthanasia at
the hands of the president or the tions. Disband "other regulators,
Congress, according as is ap- down to the stock exc~e censors
propriate under the law. The who say that the la~ge of new
Economist, using language better Issue prospectuses nlust be mainly
suited to a country whose tradi~ ons devoted to scaring investors off,;'
are imperial, pennits itself to say, Return restriction-responsibility for
"The Reagan administration should the envirorunent to the states: "The
also send Congress on long holidays states which prefer to stay Sierraso that it breeds less legislation. It like will then Jose all the investments
should recognize that mandated ex- and jobs." An exciting agenda.

'fA.~~AK

.

Back burner
retaliation
Although former hostage Malcolm Kalp would like to send B-52 bombers to repay Iran for its actions, President Reagan says the United
States isn't after revenge.
·"I don't think revenge is worthy of us," Reagan said at his news con- '
ference Thursday. And there was just the slightest hint of an olive branch
being held outto the Iranians. ·
"Any country would want to help another if they really showed an intent to have a government that would abide by international law," he
saW.
1
In fact, it seems clear that the whole idea of retaliatiOn against Iran has
been put on the back burner by the new administration.
Asked about possible retaliation at his news conference Wednesday,
Secretary of State Alexander M. Haig said the question is premature. indicating much depends on how lr~n acts in the future.
· ·
He noted Iran is still holding three U.S. citizens- including free-lance
journalist Cynthia Dwyer - and that there are "a host of other incurred
obligations" Iran is supposed to fulfill, including those w1der the hostage
release agreements.
Haig also seemed to be saying the United States will live up to its fulure
cornmit.ments in the hostage release agreement if the Iranians uphold
their end of the bargain.
The U.S. message to Iran seems clear: Oo now what you have said you
would do and account for the remaining Americans in your custody, and
there will be no further retaliation.
Under the agreements, the Iranians had to do more than just free the
hostages. They also are supposed to maintain a minimwn of $500 million
in an account that will be used to settle U.S. claims against Iran .
Haig did say the United States won 't sell any military .equipment to
Iran, but there was less to this than meets the eye.
,f
For one thing, Iran has not requested any U.S. military equipment, not
even the $457 million in equipment., it bought and paid for before the
hostage crisis. And U.S. allies, most hhom cut off military aid to Iran
during the crisis, are free to resume military aid.
The emerging Reagan policy toward Iran see1ns to be approximating
that of the Carter administration, which is that the United States doesn't
want to do anything to open oil-rich Iran to greater Soviet influence.
The one small comfort to the administrations of both Carter and now
Reagan during all of the turmoil in Iran is that the regime of Ayatollah
Ruhollah Khomeini has been a~nost as ardently anti-soviet as it has been
anti-American.
·

Berry's World--,-·--.

NEW YORK (AP) -These are indisputably tough times in housing toll!lh for builders, tough lor
realtors, tough for people who would
like to buy a home.
But some of the doolll-and·gloom
crowd's forecasts of a severe drop in
horne prices have yet to come true.
Mortgage rates hovering around
the 15 percent level have cast a
decided pall over the market. Sales
of new one-family homes dropped 3.4
percent in December, the Co!llmerce Department reported late
l~st week, and stood 4.6. percent
below their pace of a year before.
Still, prices kept rising. The
median price tag on a new home
stood at $67,900, compared with
$61,500 in December 1979.
The story is much the same with

existing homes. Since late 1978,
when used homes were changing
hands at an annual rate of about 4
million, activity in the market has
been in a deep slwnp, hitting a low of
less than 2.5 million for a while last
year.
Even so, the chart of existinghome prices has kept on rising with
barely ~ wriggle. At about e65,000,
the median price of a used house has
doubled in less than seven years.
The explanation for this feat, as
provided by economists at Goldman,
Sachs &amp; Co,: "As rising mortgage
interest rates reduce the affordabl!ity of homes,' sellers are
taking their houses out of the market
if possible rather than selling them
at 'bargain' rates. Thus prices of

Meigs scored an impressive 50-21
win over Trimble, winning nine of
the 13 pelght classes from that
school, and went on to defeat Vinton
County 63-12 to emerge overall
champion of the triangular match:
Against Vinton County, Meigs
scored pins in every weight class ex- cept 185 and heavyweight divisions.

Many participants in the housing
market
are working up new types of
shrinks.''
financing
to get around the mor·
In theory, this can't go on forever.
(gage
squeeze.
II is estimated, for
At some point, the pressures on the
example,
that
more than half of
market should presumably start to
home
resales
In
California during
push prices downward, or at least
November
were
done
by assuming ·
slow their upward progress.
existing
loans.
Some~ people say there are signs
Demand seems to be high. The
that this may already be happening.
National
Association of Home
Edward Yardeni, economist at E.F.
Builders
figures
that more than 2
Hutton, points to California -the armillion
new
housing
units must be
chetypical hot housing rnarket of the
built
each
year
in
the
1980s to keep
1970s.
up
with
demand.
Last
year,
less than
From November 1979 to Novern1.3
million
units
were
started.
ber 1980, he notes, the median price
Using such data, it can be argued
reported by the California
that
if mortgage rates ever do come
Association of Realtors rose II perdown
by even a lew percentage poincent. Only a few months before, the
ts,
there
could be a new upward exannual appreciation rate was run-·
plosion
in
housing prices.
ning close _to 30 percent.
homes actually sold rise as activity

The Meigs' grapplers will travel to
Warren Local Friday and to South
Point Fell. 12. The local matmen will
then return home as they will host
the SEOAL Tournament pn
February 21. Following the league
tournament, Meigs' season will continue with the sectional tourney on
February 21, and the district meet
on March 7. Both tournaments will
be held at Belpre High School.
'

The Ohio State Wrestling Charnpionships will be on march 13 and 14
~t St. John Arena in Columbus.
Following are the results of the
triangular match (Name, weight
class, and how won are listed) :
Troy Bauer, 119, pinned.
Doug Neece, 15, pinned .
Mike Jackson, 167, pinned .
Scott Harrison, 98. decision.
Scott Hartinger, 112, decision .

Reagan began his term with an extraordinary stroke of good fortune
when the American hostages were
freed from Iran on Inauguration
Day. For a week, the nation
celebrated, and Reagan used the
White House ceremony to warn
terrorists they would face "swift and
effective retribution" in the future.
At his first news conference,
Reagan dealt with the 'concern that
plagued him during the presidential
campaign - that he might be
''trigger happy.''
Now that the hostages are free,
would the United States exact
revenge for their long ordeal?
Reagan was the voice of restraint.
"I don't think revenge is worthy of
us." he said. · ·

Brian King , 132, decision .

8111 Powell, 175, decision .
. Brill K ing, lOS, decision.
Brian Bauer, 138. dec i slon. ·
Steve Carson. u.s, decision .
Steve Herald, HWT • I decision .

Restrained toward Iran, Reagan
had tough language for the Soviets.
In their drive for what he called a
"one world socialist or corrununist
state," Reagan said the Soviet
leaders " reserye unto themselves
the right to conunit any crime, to lie, ·
to cheat."
Those were unusually harsh words
for an American president.
But they were only words, and talk
alone won't be enough as Reagan
tries to put Into action his pledge to
cut the federal budget.
The signals from the new administration are that the budget cuts
will be deeper than anyone ex·
peeled.
Budget Director David Stockman
told Congress the administration ex-

"/ hear Rich Litrte does me better than I do
myself. "

Today in. history. • •
Today is Tuesday, Feb. 3, the :Uth day of 1981. There are 331 days left in
theyear.
,
Today's highlight in'history :
On Feb. 3, 1917, the United States broke diplomatic relations with Germany after the Germans announced a policy of un restricted submarine
warfare during World War 1.
On this date:
.
In 11111, the Territory of Illinois was created.
In 1894, the first steel sailing ship, the Oirigo, was launched 'at Bath,
Maine.
r

t

tax revenllt! ''pools.''

"The program I have proposed
would even .out the major dif·
lerences in corrune~cial, industrial
and agricultural property tax wealth
from !li:hool district to school
district," Pfeifer said.
The county revenue pools would
exclude residential property I.MJ

revenues.
Using funds from the pool in combination with each district's state
subsidies, Pfeifer prop~es to
guarantee each district, regardless
of tax wealth, $1,700 per pupil.
However, each would have to levy
at least 25 equalized mills (those actually collected after applying cer·
tain reduction factors) of property
tax for operating purpo~~es . Districts
which levied between 20 and 25 mills .
would be reduced $68 per pupil for
each mill below 25.
"There should be no difference In
the educational opportunities
provided for school children who
happen to live in poor school districts and those children living in
dlstrlcta that have major indiL•trial
developm~ls," the sefl8tor said.
Pfeifer concedes that his plan
probably would not set well with
distrlcta which have major factories

••

SVAC teams face busy schedules
A full slate · of action beginning
with three games tonight is featured
this
week
in the Southern Valley
Athetic
Conference.

In tonight's non-league en·
counters, Southwestern goes up
against unbeaten Eastern of Pike
County, Hannan Trace visits Hannan, W.Va., and Wahama is at North
Gallla.
Kyger Creek postponed earUer
due to bad weat.her travels to Walton
Wednesday evening.
All teams return to league war
Friday night when Eastern, tied
with Southern for ·first place visits
Kyger Creek; Southern hosts Southwestern and Hannan Trace goes to
North Gallia_
Saturday night, Fort Frye visits
Eastern and Nelsonville-York plays
at Southern.

Gallia; Eastern at Kyger Creek and
Southwestern at Southern.

WH 74.00
WH 81.00

215/75R15
15

Saturday - Fort Frye at Eastern

and Nelsonville-York at Southern .

r-r;;:~~;;:;~;;;;;;~;;;;;;~;;~:;;:::::::::::;~

overhaul

A78-13
878-13
C78-14
E78-14
F78-14
G78-14
H78-14
560-15
600-15
G78-15
15

We11 install front hrak~ pads, riew frn.ntl
and brake hardware; rebuild cal:ipe1rs.l
resurface rotors. repack front wheel hP;or-1
in~s. inspect master cylinder and "--'-""
lntJscs. bleed system and add new fluid
road test the car.

26.00
28.10
30.95
32.75
34.40
35.50
37.20
31.40
33.15
36.60

1.50
1.61
1.68
1.75
2.14
2.28
2.52
1.61
1.69
2.36'

MEIGS TIRE CENTER, INC.

I'OMEROY HOME &amp;AUTO
6IU E. Main
Ph. 992·2094
Pomeroy OH
Front End Alignment $12.Sb Most Passenger cars
'
·
Brake Service

SVAC STANDINGS
ALL GAMES
TEAM
W L P
Southern
12 3 975

Eastern
Honhon Trace

12 3 854.
7 8 86t

Southwestern

6

8 797

Kyger Creek
4 9 693
North Gallia
4 11 782
5\/AC ONLY
Southern
6 1 442
Eastern
6 ' 1 395
Hannan Trace
4 3 , 416
Southwestern
4 3 390
North Gallia
1 5 339
Kyger Creek
o 7 328

346
322
417

327
450
424

Put Your
Lave On
the Line...

Tell thRt speciRI someone-with '

Walton.
Friday -

Hannan Trace at North

SHOP

MASON FURNITURE

peels to reconunend cutting more
than $20 billion from the $663 billion
federal budget lor the current fiscal
year.
If those recorrunendations prove
feasible, the budget battle could end
up an interesting exercise in how to
deal with Inflated public ex·
pectalions - a problem that tor·
mented Jimmy Carter from !he'
early days of his presidency.
The proposed budget cuts may run
into a firestorm in C'lngress
generated by the constituency
groups that would end up the big
losers. Since his election last Nov. 4,
Reagan has been cultivating
congressional leaders of both parties
in hopes of winning support for hls
program.

SAY "I LOVE YOU" Wlnt A
$1.00 SENTINEL VALENTINE .AD.

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MASON FURNITURE

Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday &amp; Saturday
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773-5592

(Urn~

Mason, W.Va.

16 Words-Sizes Illustrated Below)

Ann . . .

To Mom and Dad ...

After 14 wonderful
years of marriage, I'm
still head·over·heels in
love with you!

We couldn ' t have picked
a nicer pair ot parents in
the world! .Have a Hap·
py Valentine's Day!
'
M1ke and sue

To My Wife,

Walter Z.

,---------------------------------------------

!

County revenue
pools proposed
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
Crawford County lawmaker says
Ohio's school funding problems can
be greatly alleviated without increasing stale or local taxes.
To solve the whole problem, says
Sen. • Paul E. Pfeifer, R·Bucyrus,
" it's going to take more dollari"
But a plan he is pUllhing in the
Senate would mean " a ~iant step
towardthatend,"hesaid. ~
··
The key element of Pfeifer's plan
is the evening of tax wealth among
school districts in each county with
the creation of countywide property

Back row, left le right, Jobu. Riebel, Roger BIBBell,
Dave Gaul, ~roo Jewett, Kevin Brooks, and Coach
Tim SlmJMIOD.

This week's games:
Tonight Southwestern at
Eas1ern Pike; Hannan Trace at
Hannan, W. Va ., and Wahama at
North Gallia .
Wednesday - Kyger Creek at

Mike Willford 126, decision .

Visual, verbal imagery opens Reagan's term
WASIUNGTON (AP) - Ronald
Reagan's presidency began with a
rush of visual and verbal imagery.
There was the new president in
command, meeting with his Cabinet,
welcoming the freed hostages to the
White House, balding his first news
conference. And there was the new
president reallinning the nation's
military might while displaying
restraint.
The opening scenes were
generally well received.
Now, though, comes the action,
the budget hattie that may be the first test of the credibility of Reakan 's
'script for solving the_ nation's
problems - and how well he is persuading the public he is fighting the
good fight against inflation.

INDIANAPOLIS
Heidenwere
andatlive
of the which
other
skater
Eric Heiden,(AP)
who - setSpeed
five finalists
the banquet,
"·
Olympic records while winning live was held here lor the third congold medals In the .1980 Winter Olyrn- secutive year.
pies, received the U.S. Amateur
•
AU LOCAriON5
•
Athletic Union's prestigious Sullivan
•
Award Monday night as the nation's r----------:-----iL..-:t-----==:..::..:=oulstanding amateur athlete.
The 22-year-old Heiden, who had
been a finalist for the honor in 1978
finished first in voting by more tha~
2,000 people nationwide. Vote totals
were not announced.
NO
COSTSI
The 10 finalists·had been selected
by the AAU in December. Voters
were asked to consider demonstrations of leadership, character
Bl!d sportsmanship in addition to
athletic ability while vPting for their .
three top choices.
The award; which is named in
.memory o£ · Jame5 E. Sullivan, the
founder and a past president of the
AAU, was presented sy former Indiana State University gymnast
Kurt Thomas, who won the award
185/80R13 BL 61.00
. last year.
195/75R14 BL 63.00
The announcement of Heiden's
185/75R13 WH 58 .00 .
selection was made at the annual
WH, 62.00
185/75R14
Sullivan Award banquet in a
WH 70.00
205/75R14
ballroom filled with l,ooO people at
225/75R14
WH 75.00
the Indianapolis Convention Center.

WE SBl WHAT'WE ADVBmSEI

1\0CK SPRINGS - The Meigs
High School wresWng team which
returned to the'mats again, recently
scored runaway victories over Trimble and Vinton County.

Housing industry sees ·tough times

~ $1.95 I
I
:a·~llO~s=··

HIDDEN

Meigs grapplers win meet

-

--

•• s~ttffi
.•..
•... sus
•
I I I -

EASTERN RF.'IERVFS- Member~ of tbe Eastern
. Eagle reserve team are, left te rlgbl, front row, Mllr.e
Whlllatch, Bryce Buckley, Brlaa Collins, Mark Gaddis.

AJI

.

PAT WHI1:EHEAD

budget with which a few conpolemic that peaked with t)lat wonservatives
(myself included) are
derful sentence about the American
completely in sympathy. Try to
family of the future finding itself in a
cerise-colored, fin-tailed convertible
remember these basic figures: The
U..s. is the home of five percent of
picnicking alongside the banks of a
the world's population. It produces
fetid Jake being eaten by mosquitoes
and breathing carcinogenic air - or . 22 percent of the gross world product
(compared to 39 percent in 1950).
something of the sort.
America .uses 49 percent of the
There soon began a revolt against
world's gasoline, i.e., over twice
technology and enterprise, the
what its productivity would suggest
paradoxical reshlt of which is that
it earned. This is beeaUlle we tax
there is less and less money around
gasoline at approximately one-tenth
- that marvelous residue that perthe ·rate that our allies do. The only
mits the amenities of life - to give
thing one remembers about John
us that liberty of action without
Anderson gladly is that he favored a
which we..are slowly presiding over
5(k:ent tax on a gallon of gasoline,
America 's pauperi~tlon. In the last
with revenues directly remitted in
three decades, Americans' annual
reduced taxes.
average productivity has be lower
What is the priority, then, for
by 3 to 5 percent than West GerPresident Reagan?
many's and Japan's, for reasons not
much more complicated than that
regulation has become king over
here, while over there - in countries
that, e.g., have no capital gains tax
whatever - productivity is encouraged.
Who, 20 years ago, would have
guessed the full nature of the plight
~~G~~~
of Detroit? Because Japan's plant is
six-to-seven years yol!llger (the
M~l&lt;e ~~1
result of investment and tax policies ·
that keep plants modern), Toyota
can make nine engines per employee-day vs. Ford's two. Because
Toyota's warehouses are
automated, Toyota can carry a onehour in-plan! inventory while Ford
carries three weeks'.
Thirty years ago, you could envision the New England Thurway
and proceed to begin building it a
year later. Today if you want to
begin a nuclear power plant you 'II
need to wait approximately 14 years
before you can expect it to begin
operating. If during tbe interval you
will be paying 20 percent interest on
the money you borrow, the cost is well, out of sight.
The Economist has one recoinmendation for Mr. Carter's farewell

IPWS'II

Heiden receives
Sullivan Award

The Daily Sentinel

pligh"'---_______________m_ill_ia_m_R_.B_u_ck_ley_Jr.

From 1870 to 1950 the productivity
Mr. Peter Peterson of Lelunan
·
of
the Unites States rose at an
Brothers has a graphic way with
figures, and it is not surprising un· average annual rate of 1.8 percent.
der the circwnstances that London's By contrast, Britain's ;-ose by 1.2
Economist, itself very much at percent; Germany's by 1.1 percent;
home in the field, should lean on Japan's by 1 percent. " This hare 0.6Peterson for vivid imagery. For in· 0.8 percent annual lead, comstance, in the recent. treat.ment of pounded over 80 years, brought the
the problems facing President United · States up from log-cabin
Reagan, The Economist gives a slave-trader to the economic and
single example of the involution of political leadership of the world."
America's values during U1e past
But beginning shortly after 1950,
decade or two : " New York ahs been
reducing the guards on its twl}- and at-ce!erating greatly during the
murders-a-month subways because decades of the 'Gas and '70s, the
of an inflation increased-by clean air United · States discovered Other
regulations designed to save people Values. There are, of course, other
from one more cough every 3,300 values, and John Kenneth Galbraith,
in his seminal book, " The Affluent
years."
Society," reminded us of ttiese in a
To hack up a ways.

tl:ffii!:l
'q:lv

Tuesday, February 3, 1981

r

Medicare ·a·
payments made by
persons receiving
Social Security benefits
are deductible.

l

0 True

o False

for older persons on a fixed income,
H&amp; R Hhx:k has the right :ut&gt;'o/t'f w this and
&lt;~her &lt;JUt-stlons regarding spc:dallaX t'l'l'\liL~ and
dt-ductlons for those !aXpayers.
. If you lu:mize, the answc:r is TRUE.
Hct'aUSC lht'1'C payments are simply withheld
li'om hencM l.'~ks during !he: year, they are
oftt'll overlooked at tax time.

WE'LL
618 E. Main

MAKE THE TAX LAWS WORK FOR YOU

, Pomeroy, Oh .
Ph ..992-3795

H&amp;R BLOCK:·2nd&amp;
Brown St.
Mason, w. va.
THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

O~n9

A. M. ·6 P.M. Weokd•V•• 9,S§af,
Appointment Available .

Ph. 773-9128

WRITE YOUR MESSAGE BEUM AND BRING IT
OR MAIL IT Wlnt 11·00 BY FEBRUARY 12TH TO THE
DAILY SENTINEL, P.O. BOX 729, POMEROY, OHIO
16 WORDS $1.00-CASH Wlnt ORDER

I
1
I

II
II

1.

1 s.
1 9.
:

13.

!

I
II
II

2.
6.

3.

4.

1.

10.
14.

u.

s.

'
I
I

12.
16.

1.
:

15.

~------~-------------------------------------~
PHONE 992·2156
1-

THE DAILY. SENTINEL

�Page-6-The

Pomeroy

Daily Sentinel

Tuesda

Tuesday, February 3, 1981

Middleport. Ohio

February

1981

DICK TRACY

Cook wins Crosby Open Golf .To_u rney

TORNADO COACHES - Southern, uu upset wiuuer over
Southeastern of Ross Couuly last Saturday night, continues to produce
winning basketball seasons under the leadership Of coaches Howie Caldwell, left, the reserve mentor and Carl Wo~, right, former Racine
athlete. Wolle and Kyger Creek's Keith Carter are the dean of coaches n
theSVAC.

PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. (AP) His .expessioniess face never
betrayed it, but young John Cook admitted " I was choking a little on
·those last few holes, trying to get in
the playoff" for the title in one uf
golf's more confused, confusing but
nevertheless spectacular events.
And when it was over, after he'd
watched poker·faced while his
amateur partner actor Jim Gamer
had engaged in a shoving match
with a over-boisterous spectator.
Then such names as Jack Nicklaus
and Tom Watson had shot them·
selves out of it, gritty Ben Crenshaw
had blown sole control of the lead
and two.-tilne U.S. Open champion
Hale Irwin had failed on a short,
playoff putt that would have won it.
After aU that, it was the 23-year·
old Cook who emerged the winner of
the first f&gt;.rnan sudden-death playoff
in modern golf hlstory.
De&gt;-pite the interruption of the
Garner incident late on sunny af·
te~noon, despite his attack of nerves
over the final holes of regulation. the

a

Southern 11th in Class A
COLUMBUS, Ohio ( AP) - Canton
McKinley and Canton South won't be
playing for just bragging rights in
their own city &amp;!turday night.
Ohio's No. I ranking in Class AAA
prep boys basketball will be on the
line, too.
McKinley ' s Bulldogs, the
statewide Associated Press poll
leader all five of its weeks this
season, and South, now ranked fourth in Class AAA, will match IHI
records in their shootout, providing
they win Friday night.
McKinley must get by Cleveland
St. Joseph and South must handle
Canton Tim1&lt;en Friday to set up the
. pairing of undefeateds.
Celina is the only team to heat
seventlrranked Dayton Roth this
winter.
·
Badger, the Cla!&gt;S A leader and 140 like Willard, earned 30S points.

High school ratings
COI~UMBUS,

Ohio

f AP I

H(f"e ' :~

-

how

a ~t.atew'ldt! panel ti sports wr1ters and
brtli:ldcaslers ranks Ohio hi)(h school bvy:i
ba.skt!Lball learns this week for Tilt&gt; As.s ~
ciltted Ptft:t with 10 points ror (ir.il tu
Olll:'

poinl. ror lOth :
CLA.SSAAA

I, Canton McKinley. 16-0, 320 puints
2, Ham!ltoo, Ir..G, 2&lt;12..
3, Kettering Alter. 14-1, 216 .
4, Canton Sooth, 16-0 Ht9.

s,

Olillil'Othe, 14-0, rh.
6, CincinnaU Elder, lt-1, 119.
7, Dayton Roth, 1J.l. 100.
8, Culwnbus Broot.haven 1 13-1, 102.
• 9, Steuben\lille, lJ-1 , 69.
. 10, Akron Centn&amp;J-Hower, 13-2. 64 .
Other ::~ehools rect!ivi nlo( 10 ur more
pointa : 11, YoungstQWn South 49. 12,
Ma01&gt;field Malabar 31. 13, Clt'veland
'Adan"l:&gt; fl . 14, Clevehmd St. Joseph 26. 1~
:we1, Mansfield Senior and Findlay 25. 17,
Athtns 18. 18, Cleveland Marshall 15. 19,
Coplt!y 13. 20, Franklin 11. 21 l lie l, May·
field cmd Cleveland St. lgnatiws 10.

Coiwnbus Academy retained second
.with 238 poipts and Covington held
unto third with '07.
Chillicothe was fifth in Class AAA
with Cincinnati Elder sixth, Roth
seventh, Columbus Brookhaven
eighth, Steubenville ninth and Akron
Centrai-Hower loth.
In Class AA. Elyria Catholic
remained in fourth with Napoleon
fifth, Hillsboro sixth, Navarre
Fairless seventh, Circleville Logan
Elm eighth, .Youngstown Raven nin-

th and Portsmouth lOth.
In Class A, Old Washington
Buckeye Trail was fourth again.
Maria Stein Marion,fifth, zanesville
Ro!leC(ans sixth, Kalida seventh,
McDonald eighth, Peebles ninth and
Beaver Eastern lOth and Racine
Southern, lith.
Peebles, 15-0, was the only
newcomer among the Top Tens. The
Adams County school used a 7!-63
victory uver Eastern to move from
14th a week ago.

Eastern young gals post easy victory
EAST MEIGS - Coa~h Pam
Douthitt's Eastem Junior high girls
posted its seventh win of the year
recently with a 42-12 win over·
Southern. Eastern is now 7-2 on the
year.
Angie Spencer a~d Lea Ann Gaul
shared top scoring honors with a
game high 13 points each. Amy
Young added six, Tammy Valaway
four, Beth Berkhimer four, and
Melinda Mankin two for the Eagles.
Southern was led by Alana Lyons
with eight points, Judy Narris with
t~. Kelly Clark one, and ·Tonya
Cununins one.
Eastern jwnped to an early 7-2
lead in the first period, then after
o.utscoring the visitors 14-1 in the
secolld period, led 21--3 at the intennission.
In the quarter the hosts shut out
the visitors 11-&lt;l, then battled near·
even the last round to post the 42-12

from
four. 10 feet and Irwin scored from
Both parred the par-5 second, with
Irwin missing a +footer than would
have won it.
" I got in my own way," the
·veteran said.
" Cook deserved to win it."
And win it he did on the next hole.
Irwin missed the green and bogeyed.
Cook had it four feet from the flag
.for a birdie, but rniased. He had
about an IS-inch putt to win it and
calmly dropped the ball in the cup
for a $40,500 first prize and the first
victory of bls twt&gt;-year pro career.
It was a dramatic windup to a
much·troubled event that was
rained out for two day•, eventually

was cut from 72 ' holes to S4 and
finished a day l~te on six holes
spread over three courses spaced
along aboutfive miles of picturesque
beauty on the, Monterey Peninsula
coast.
Watson, golf's leading perfonner
over the past four years, led much of
the last day and once had a threeshot margin. But Watson, making
his first start of the season, threeputted three times and hit one in the
water over his last nine holes, which

12.120

'I

CLASS A
I, Kiru.man Badger, lt-0, 304 pumt..o; .
2., ColwnbWI Ac11demy , Is-G. !38.

Covin~on. 17.(1, 'JZl.
4, Old Washington Budu~ye Tnnl, 14-1.

3,

182.
1
5, M.lria Stein Mariun. 1~. 167.
1
6. Zcme:ivllle Rost'('nms, 15-l. 149.
7, Ktdidu. 14-L M.
8, McDonald , IJ.-2, 81.
9, Peebles, l:HI, 61
10, Beav~r Eastern, 14-1, 47.
Other schools' ret.'t! ivmlo( 10 llr murc
: p«JinLS: 11, Rll.cine
38, t2. S.br·
' Ill!( 37. IJ,
Sttuthcalltern
t

35.

Nt!W

Centr11l
O.y 21.

34.

...

~'"':~b•c~ and

Ma:
.nd
I I.

The Daily Senti

=

tUliPS I - )
A Dlwilklll aiiiiiiUmftUa, t..

Publlllood ov•ry IIIJernooo

&amp;onday,

~~~:~~ q::;.~

Mllltlmldla, Ine., Pomeroy, Qhto· -tl'fll,
lii)J.JIII. 8o&lt;Gnd clul JICIIIqe paid at
Pomeroy, Ohlo.

Pnu.ti

_ , Tile Alloclated
DollY PrW AlaoclaUoa and tile American
N - Pui&gt;Uahan-.ou .National

Adnrtraln&amp; Repr•••ntattve
--.~a~. 1101

Ohio.IIlli.

wn_::f

EucUd Ave., Clnt

PQITMABTER: Send 1 - to Tile llollj' ·

Sontlnat,lll OouttSL, Pomo1'11)',10hlo41781.

IIJIJICIUPTION llA.

Oroo-17":'rrio'~.~IIGr~1~ ...11.110

0roo Month ..... . ...... .. ....... .... lUI

OrooYaar .........................
111.11
IINGU:COPY
PIUCI:I

0114' " " " " " ' " " " •" " ' " ' 11 Conta
SUbocrlban nol doalrlni to PlY tho carrier
may JWDII tn advinctt dlml lo Tho DollY
Sontlnat on a I, I or 11 month bulL

will ba tPvlllcarrlar oocb month.

Cndlt

Noaobaaiplloao by mall panniJtod In 1o1m1
..._. honia carrtor...tco ta avallablo.
MAO.IWICIIIPTJONI

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EllS

HE GOT KII.I.I!P
IN AN OIL f'IE!.P
ACCIDiiNT•• 5Hii
IILMI!P WARRICK
&amp;XPLORATtONat!

BORN LOSER

I

The Tup Twenty te11.ms in Trn! Associ·
ated Pre!&gt;tl cull e~l.! bal&gt;ketbllll poU, , with
fi r~1-plat.'t! vol~ lfl parentheses, lhiJ Season's M.'OI'ds otnd tubll poinla. Puinl:i
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9. Nutre Dame
I I North Dlrulin~o~
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IJ . Maryland
14, Mlchil!llll
l::t. JtJWII
16. UrighMm Youn~
17. Indiana
II. Illinois

19. Wlch!taSl.
20. Suuth Allllwln~

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, FOR NEWSPAPER CARRIER

AlLEYOOP
I'M AFRAID \OUR SUI!.JECTS ARE HAVING
SI!COND 'IHOUGI-ITS A!JOUT THE DEAL
I M~ WI~ COP'S FRIEIIIDS!

ROLAIDS

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DAILY SENTINEL

ANTACID TAILnt

AEOUL.M Of ~I!MIIINT

....SJ19

c

oz.

R-o. llltl. 12.41

ICE
I RIP

Spencer and Mankin each had II
rebounds, Lori Hudson five, Beth

.,.._SJ29

ERA

~

LAUNDRY
DETERGENT

: GAS01JNE ALLEY

•3••

~

TODDLER 12' 1

~

PRICE
COWBOY HATS
~

PRICE

LADIES'
FAMOUS
BRANDS
SPORTS.
WEAR
lhPRICE

CALDECORT
CREAM
.. WINNIE

·~·SJ59

~
PRICE

CUHFREE

TEA

, FABRIC SOFTENER

Kmu

t~~ SJEET~'
'~

3&amp;-ct.

I.
Rt11 . ..... II 1111'

F-LE
FADDI,E

REG. 14.50 TO 15.00

ANGEL TREDS

c

'2"

c omedy · variety p rogram dealing
with people in unique and · or amus·
1ngoccupations.Host : Bob Barker.
(Premiere ; 60 mins. )
( 9 ) NOVA 'The Big IF' Known as IF .
interferon is thought to be a cure tor
c an c er by so me do c tors . 'No11a'
se ar che s t o r th e answers about
th1s new ' wonde r drug ' in this most
co mplete lilm on int erferon ever to
ap pear on Ameri c an television .
(C losed -Captioned ; U .S .A.) (60
mms .)

S:30 I 3 I GOOD NEWS
16 l[t2J8LAVERNEANDSHIRLEY
Wh en Laverne !ails 10 l ove she
1eac hes ne w heights, finding her·
!i ell ptH c hed dangerously on a
l ed ge of a building , trying to con·
v mce So nny t o c hange his mind
ab out their future together.
111)
CROSS COUNTRY SKI
SCHOOL
S:58 13 1 CBN UPDATE NEWS
9 :00 12 10 [ 7) BJANDTHEBEARBJand
tw o of his l o ve ly lady truckers put
the11 lives on th e line when they
co me up o n s ome c ompromising
pho tographs use d in a blackmail
s c heme
supp orled
by the
d iabolical Rutherford T . Grant. (60
mins.)
13 1 700CLUB
( 4 1MOVIE -(WESTERN) ••• "Big

[i2J UJ

THREE'S COMPANY

0 18)(100 CBS TUESDAY NIGHT
MOVIE ' Who Is Killing The Great
Ch a t s Of Europe ?' t 978 Stars:
George Segal_, Jaqueline Bisset. A
las t·foo d fran chi ser and his e~e: ·
w1fe . one o f the world's top cooks .
are thro wn together with crazy re·
suits when th ey are c aught up i n a
scneso l murder s, all 1nv otvingmas ·
t er chefs . (2 hrs .)
I 9 )( 11) MYSTERYI 'Mali c eAioreth·
ought ·Part III .Or .Bic kle ighde c ides
1oho st a 1ea parly o fhisown, a party
that he int e nd s will prove fatal to
so me o-1 hi s gues ts . (Closed·
Capt1on ed : U.S.A.) (60 mins.)
9:30 l 6 )[i 2)UJ TOOCLOSEFORCOM·
FORT A mid lif e r omanti c fl ing is
thrown at H e nry wh e n a stunning
lady aruves m town to c elebrate her
new·lound singl e freedom , and he
w&lt;tges bailie with his conscience .
9:45 I S I TBS EVENING NEWS
10:00 12 11111 l FLAMINGO ROAD Angry
and frustrated by p ressures thrust
on him by h1s pol iti c al ba ckers , and
urowingmore indillerent toward h is
ambit ious wil e , Cons t ance . Field ·
mg Carlyl e show s up at a politic at
fi..i lly under th e inf luen c e of alcohol.
(60mins .)
16 1 [12) UJ
HART TO HART
Juno than 's pos e a s a h 1t manto un·
rav el a murder plo t sets ofl explo·
s1ve ac ti on at a costume ball when
Jennifer 1"s kidnapped . and Jonath·
an sc hem es with a gregarious Max,
wh o's m drag , to save her life. (60
rmns)
r91
I REMEMBER HARLEM
· 1o ward Fr eed om . 1940· 1965'
to•a nun e ~ Harlem 's politics ot pro·
.11: :;,1 a nd it s p olitic al leaders , 1he
ull ecls of W orld W ar II, and th e
c ommuflll:{s SOcial growth mto the
t 96CI' s . (60 mins.)

Aeg,,..._II.,.H

I ,

llJ [IJI!ID THAT' S MY LINE A

Jane l tell s he r visit ing parents that
s he and Ja c k a re n e wlyweds to
c alm her father 's raging ulcer.

R-a. A•lalll1.17

SIMPLICITY
PAnERNS

• BARNEY

•

1t NEWS

LADIES'
MEN'S
DRESSES
JEANS

IQ:28 31 CBN UPDATE NEWS
10:30 13 1 FAITH 20
141 HBO SNEAK PAEVIEWo FEBRUARY J e rr y S till e r and Anne
Mear a lughhght th e up coming
rn uvr e s . sports a11d sp ec ials on
HBO m February
11 1 TWILIGHT ZONE
10:45 S LOVE AMERICAN STYLE
10o58 ' 3 CBN UPDATE NEWS
l ' oOO 2 0 ' 6 " 7 0 18 11101It~ ID

..., . ...... 11.71
~~~~ -

RelailiUI

IIAIIDIIAI
TRASH CAN LIN£RS

SCHKI

IUPIR II
TWIN lllADf: CltRTRIOQES
WI TH ~REf: ftAZOft

NEWS
J TODAY IN BIBLE PROPHECY

&lt;

''"" $179

,'tJ · OA~

r; •'.

PRICE

J

~ . IHT

WI HAVI A LARGIIIUCTION Of

SOWHAT"PO

RUSSEL STOVER VALENTINE CANDY

THEV KNOW?

ltop In end . . .hter Por •27• lo• of C.ndy To
(~ I

'U5 Cilldl P•at. h

MOVIE · oSCIENCE·FICTION)
u
· · Mounrake~ " 1979
5 NIGHT GALLERY
9 MORECAMBE AND WISE
I I 28 3 CBN UPOATE NEWS
II 30 2 0
7 THE TONIGHT SHOW
l l•r" t lr tht l try (:,, r :-;1) 11 Ouest Rbd

TOl..D OFF
WHEN ON /"T".

t)

Now arrange the cir:ded letter s to
form the surprise answe r: as sl.'g·
gested by the abowe car1oo n .

I Month ... ......... .. .. ..... .. .. .. 111.00

lYNr .. , .. .. ............ ... .. ..... 00

"

J -j

(Answers tomorrow)
Jumbles: CRANK

Yesterday's

I Answer:

VISTA

MUSTER

CHUBBY

What a married bridge player might have to
learn how to do - TAKE IT

ON

TH E SHI N

Jumble Boot No. 11, eontalnlr.g 110 puzzl", Is available for sus postpald
tr'DIR Jumble, clo this,....._!*, Box 34, Norwood, N.J . 07&amp;411. Include your
nanw. addreu, zip code .nd fNikll checta payabte to Nawspaperbootl1.

BRIDGE
Fine Olympiad pairs play
Ivan Erdos who

won the

mixed pairs with Mary Jane
Farell to help bring the Unit ·
ed States the best na tional
result.
Sitting South. he decipcd to
try three notrutnp, after Mrs.
Farell bid three c ubs. He won

NORTH

+A tO 4

••

• QJ9

+AJI75!

WEST

EAST

+Q876

• 932

the heart lead since there was
no reason to hold up , Jed his

9QJI083
ti06

9K9765

oueen of clubs and rose wi th

t AK 74

dummy 's ace to drop the sin-

+96

+K

.gleton king .
This wasn't too difficult a
play. East had opened one
heart and rebid. West had Jed
the queen of that suit and I he
odds in· favor of East hold ong

SOltTH
KJ 5
9A2

+

t8 53 2

+Q 10 I J

the king had to he tremen-

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: East
West

z•

Pass

Norlh

a+

Pass

dous. Of course, it didn't have

to be a singleton, in whtch

East

1•

a•

Pass

South

Pass

aNT

case Ivan was doomed to
defeat.
.
Ivan ran off aII the clubs. ·
East discarded two spades
along the way and Ivan wou nd

up by finessing against West's
queen of spades to gather in
an overtrick ror a couple of

Opening lead:•Q

extra match points .

To show the caliber of play

in that tournament six other
declarers
De srousseau~

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag
We have. been looking over
the book of 1966 World Olympiad pairs . It is sad to see how

many of the players have died
in just those 14 years . One was

(France) J . Jal'oby (U .S.) Coll ings (Britain) \Veil (Mexi&lt;" l
Versluis (Holland) and Portu ·
gal (U .S.) also dropped that
singleton king though they
were not all in notrump.
iNb:WS PAI'I&lt;:H t·: N'rE HI'HISl-: 1\.SSN ,

6tuM~eaf
by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
42 Shuck
I Study
DOWN
5 Discolors
I
School
10 Author,
session
Carlo Send
back
2
11 Business
3
Spanish
contact
province
12 In the group
4
Before
day
13 "EI - Grande"
or
night
14 Yellow ocher
5 Apartment
15 Favorite
6
French river
!8 Indo-Chinese
7
Orate
17 Radio
8 Add to
interference
9 Used as
19 Chopin's
a support
lover
II
1346 battle
28Gelid
15
Type
size
21 Peak (Sp.)
22 Sports
building
25 The tender
gender
28 Chuck
Barris need
27 Through
28 ViDa d'- ,

Yesterday's ADSwer
30 French
19 Big spender
river
22 Etemal
31 Scope
:!3 Flower bud
32 Laud
Z4 String
34 Quote
around
37 Smoker
Z5 Tobacco (sl.)
orsleeper
27 Babble
38 Vigor
18 Trace

at Tivoli
29 Be pensioned
33 - Alcindor
34 Knave
35 Author
Rohmer
38 Bring out
38 Cooped up
39 Legislative
body
40 Therefore
n Cubic
measure

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work

19~6

It~

AXYDLBAAXR
'
· II LONGFELLOW
One letter simply stands for ~nother . In this sample A I~
used lor the three L's, X lo&lt; the two O's, etc. Single letters;
apottrophes. the length and formation of the worols are ah
hints. Each day the code tellers are different.
CRYPTOQUOTES
QXOV
AQOIY

NA
NA

EMV

PMMH

UMI

VXd

EMV

PMMH

UMI

vxq•'

FJ3B . - YO -I WDA
ODIBRNDA
;
Yesterday's Cryptoquole : DON'T JOIN A 1JNE UNLESS YOU
KNOW WHAT IS AT THE END OF lT.-GERALD CHALLIS ;

J ROSS BAGlEY SHOW
5 MOVIE ·11JRAMA1••r:! " Seron·

6
12
UJ
ABC NEWS
NIUHfLINE
(l) B CBS LATE MOVIE ' LO U
!J li/\N I t ~ ve il O r1l ~ ta r s . Ed
t, · ' •
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(I XI I

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'

'(01.) COUl..D C:.ST

Prlntanswerhere: THE

~htmare .

Jake" 1971

$ 09

DAYTIME 18"• or

·-·

I VICADE
. I I I __

f 5 l N8A BASKETBALL Atlanta
Hawks vs Ph iladelphia '76ers
I 6 10Ul JOKER'S WILD
17 1 HOLLYWOOD SQUARES
19 1111! DICK CAVETT SHOW
1101 MATCH GAME
1121UJ FACE THE MUSIC
7:58 13 ) CBNUPDATENEWS
8 :00 12 10(1) LOBO She rill Lobo and
Bird ie are assigned to a c company
a c onvi cted mobster to Sen Ooer1·
I on on a jtJmbo jel, bul il's anylhin!jl
but a smooth flight when they dis·
co ver a time bomb, a hit man and a
hiJacker aboard . (60 m ins .)
I 3 1 ORAL ROBERTS
16 1112JID HAPPY DAYS Fonzie's
flu · le11ered imagination transports
th e entire gang into an o utrageous·
bizarre
and
horrifying
ly

16 I

VASELIIE
INTEISIVE CARE
LOTION

LADIES'
AND
CHILDREN'S
COATS

...

111) FASTFORWA~D

A-a. A•t. 11.13

IN THE AREA OF THE
JONES BOYS .
IN MII)DLEPORT

AND SAVEl

L
i

ALKA·

OWN

.I
!

338
282
217

13-4

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sounds of this It ashy superstarlnan
elec trifying performan c e of hie
smasht1ita.
·
I S ) ALLIN THE FAMILY
18 J(i2JID FAMILY FEUD
t 7 1 STAN HITCHOCK SHOW
D IU TIC TACDOUGH
191 ~ll
MACNEIL·LEHRER
REPORT
QQ) NEWS
7 :30 m U BULLSEYE
13 1 FAITH THAT LIVES

Aeg . Aet. S2.t3

SEW YOUR

6:00 12 10 17l fll l sl [ ij)i!:iJ UJ NEWS
I. 3 l BACKYARD.
14 ) A COUNTRY COYOTE GOES
HOLLYWOOD
t5l
CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
16 1 ABC NEWS
19 ) 3-2·1 CONTACT
!111 OVER EASY Ho st s : Hugh
Downs and Frank Blair .
6:30 1210 CTJ NBC NEWS
I 3 J 20th CENTURY GUIDELINES
I 5 1 BOB NEWHART SHOW
16 i FACE THE MUSIC
O IBH',W CBS NEWS
I 9)
WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
1111 LILIAS, YOGA AND YOU
11~1D ABC NEWS
6:58 131 CBN UPDATE NEWS
7:00 I 2i Q PM MAGAZINE
I 3)
GERALD
DERSTINE
- PRESENTS
141 ELTON JOHN PLAYS CEN-

;
I

3. DePaul
4. Louiailna St. t1 f
$. A rizon~t St.

:";.:L.,co:::.!,-~·

TRAL PARK Rock with the popular

3, Millersburg W~1

Delpho!s Sl. Jutm and Port Clin un I I. Z2
aiel , Kenton and Well!!ville 10. I

~""""'-,

.
PRIVATE

College top 20

IH

•

EVENING

.'I

I. V i r~o~lni~t. 13$ I
2. Ore~tonSt . / 261

I I I TI

FEB. 3, 1981

.--he_:_pl_a~yed-in_40_a-tS-p~y~g-ia_ss_m_·_n_._j~~~~~~~~~~~-

'
€LASSAA
: 1, Willard, tt-(1, 298.
, 2. SLrulheni, 16-&lt;t, ts.s.

Huln~s. 1~ . ?.38.
4, Elyria Catholic , 15-41, WS.
5, Napoleon, \5-41, 178.
•fi, Hillsboro, 14:-0, 120.
,
7, Navarre Fairless, 14--1 . 1011.
8, Clrtlevllle Logan Elm, 13-1, 89.
9, Youngstown Hayen, 13-3, 55.
10, Portsrnoulh , ll--3, 37.
other schOOiti 1'\'Cei\ling 10 . ur more
points : 11 , Williamsport Westf11l1 30. 12,
New Lebanon Dixie 23 . 13, Wartn Kennedy 21. 14 Hie), New Matcunor11 Frontier,
Dresden Tri-V111ley , Cleveland
nedictme
11nd Culwnbus St. Chllrle:i 18. 18 1tiel,
Wheelersburg ard Toronto
ttie l .

B.U. TIFFIL'?

j

10. Tenne~

Berkhimer, Sherry Ritchie each
three. Gallaway two, Gaul two, and
Rhonda Phillips, Amy Young, and
Brenda Bentz each one for the
Eagles.

win.

23-year-old Cook regained his com·
posure when the five men trooped to
the first tee at Pebble Beach.
" I felt very comfortable in the
playoff," Cook said. "I relax by hit·
ting,~balls. So after I'd finished at
Spyglass, I just hit some baliB and I
felt fine in the playoff.
•'The key was the drive (down the
1niddle) on the first playoff hole. After thatl was fine."
Barney Thompsoo, Bob Clampett
and Crenshaw dropped out on that
first extra hole when Cook birdied

Television
•
•
VIeWing

WHO WAS HIS
VITAMIN, OR

NICE TiliNG
One ni ce thing about goin~ bald is
that the day will come when you can
walk into a barber shop and drive
the tonsorial artiste crazy by asking
to have your hair styled.

�Page-8-The Daily Sentinel

Pom·eroy-Mkldleport, Ohio

Three local bo

Help your child retain good teeth
NATIONAL CHILDREN'S
DENTAL'HEALTH MONTH will
be observed throughout the
• nation during February 1981. As
part of the observance, the Daily
Sentinel in cooptJration with the
Rehwinkol Dental Society, today
hegins a series of articles on facts
, ·you should know about dental
health.
My two sons are very active
youngsters. I worry about tbe
possibiUty that they mi2ht lose

their teeth in accidents. Is there jl
aoythlng I can do if this bappeos?
· II a child should lose a tooth in
an Jlccident, there is hope for
saving the tooth. Dentists say
there is a good chance of saving
the tooth if it is put back in its
original socket as soon as
possible, Time is the most important element in detenninlng
whether the tooth will be successfully replanted or if resoi'J&gt;tion - dlssolvin~ of root fibers-

Tuesday, February

:''

will occur. Research has shown
that when 11 tooth is replaced in
the socket within half an hour,
there is excellent chance of success.
Dentist recommend that a
knocked-out tooth he retained in
the mouth petween the teeth and
lower cheek while the patient is
heing rushed to the dentist. If this
is not possible, put the tooth in a
wet cloth or glass of water, ~ut do
not try to clean it.

1'2

A party honoring Matthew Joseph
Bradford on his second birthday was
hel~ recenlly at the home of his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Keith Brad·
ford, Route 3, Racine. Gifts were
presented to the honored guest and
refreshments of cake, ice cream,
potato chips and Kool-Aid were served.
Attending were 'his parents and
grandpareniB, Mrs. Vendia Knight
·and Mr. and Mrs. Gail Bradford.
Others there were Linda Watson,
Anthony Bradford, Tammy Bradford, Neale Knight, Cindy Lee, Mr.
and Mrs. Terry Proffitt, Jamie;
Chris and Brianne,- Mike Jeffers and
Brandy Wilson. Sending gifts was
Matthew's great-grandmother, Mrs.
Lottie Bradford.

Babies arrive

Hysell, Mr. and Mrs. Roger Wilford,
and Mr. and Mrs. Gary Norris and
Kendra.

7J.It 7V
~

71/Ey'I?JE

WAT'CIItNe ...

soruwEY
CHAN(;C
CHAN~LS

Oil TVRN
17 Of'l' p

NOPE!

[ Mr. and Mrs. Harold Smith of
, Route I, Middleport, are announcing
the engagement and approaching
marriage of their daughter, Cindy
l Renee to Michael GleM Smith, son
!of Mrs. Ruth M. Smith and the tate
l Lewis J. Smith, Pomeroy.
1
The bride-elect is a student at
Meigs High School. Her fiance is e~
l ployed at the Ellis Sohio Station in
1Middleport.

I
I

The open church wedding will take
place on Feb. 16 at 6:30 p.m. at the
Independence HoliJli!'IS Church on
Pearl St., Middleport. The Rev.
Odell Manley will perfonn the
ceremony. A reception honoring the
coup!~ will be held following the
wedding at the honie ol the bride's
parents, Rutland St., Route I, Middleport .

[Polly's Pointers

. ~uede costly to keep
I

'

•

By Polly Cramer

under gannents begin to look dingy,
j
Special Carrel~
I use tea to dye them a nice, heige
L DEAR POLLY- Would you tell culor. Use enOuaiJ water to cover the
ine boW to clean a rust-colored, gannents, place a fllllllly-.lze tea
suede jacket, as
bag in a large pot, brill!l the water to
cleaners want far
a boil and let simmer for a few
'too much to do it.!
minutes. Remove.the tea bag and let
would certainly
the water cool, as you would not
appreciate any
'want to put garments into boiling
advice from you
water. Put the gannents in the
or the readers. warm tea and let them stand until
MRS.M.M.
they are a shade darker than
DEARMRS.M.
desired. They "will he lighter when
M. - There is a
Cramer
dry. - JEANEITE
spray-on soil remover for suedes,
Polly's Note: I would stir them
but the ideal and safest way is to every so often, so the color Ia evenly
have a coat, while it is rather new • distributed.
anyway, cleaned by professionals.
Polly will send Y1JU one of her
Ordinarily, a sponge will remove
signed ~-you
coupon
any dust and loose dirt. A suede clippers
f she . - your favorite
brush will help around the sleeve Pointer,
ve or Problem in her
.edges. Always wear a scarf to colwnn. y.'rite POLLY'S POINprotect the neckline of such a coat. TERS in care of this newspaper.
Never store in a plastic bag ami
•don't use regular cleaning fluids.
'When I bought a suede coat, I was
told that every two years was often
:enough to have it cleaned. Suede is
1tlESDAV
~o smart and pretty, but keep in
POMEROY
CHAPTER 186, Order
mind that its .upkeep costs more than
of
the
Eutem
Star, 7:4fi p.m.
;that of otherlabrics. - POLLY
Tuesday
at
the
Masonle
Temple.
I ,DEAR POLLY - I want to tell
EASTERN
Band
Boolten,
7:;tO
Ann Y. that when I put bay leaves in
p.m.
-r..da)'
in
band
room
of
hilh
my eanistera t~ keep the bugs away ·
sehoul.
·
1tie them in nylon net. Then
can be easily lifted out when flour is
SUTI'ON TOWNSHIP Trustees
~ohe used.- ROBERTA
meeting, 8 p.m. Tuesday in the
I DEAR POLLY - An e&lt;eellent
SyracUBe Municipal Building.
l.ay to keep eye glasses and their
SOUTHERN LOCAL Junior High
;frames sparkling clean is to wash
Athletic
Boosters will meet at 7:30
(hem in sudsy water and dry with a
p.m.
this
evening at the juniur high
:Cleap towel. This is especially imbuilding.
)!Ortant for the new plastic lenses
WEDNESDAY
ihat are more ~asily scraiched when
l"fped dry with a paper product. POMEROY I.OOOE 184 F&amp;AM
'
Wlldnelldl)' 7::io p ,m , All rp~~ster
~LEN
j, ~.&amp;,'R POLLY, - ~~. synthetic masollli are Invited.

MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas E. Lynch, the former
Christi Hess, The Plains, are announcing the birth of their first
child, a son, born on Saturday, Dec.
20, at the O'Bieness Memorial
Hospital, Athens.
The infant has been named Tomas
Joshua. He weighed seven pounds,
11 ounces and was 20 inches long.
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Arthur Hess, Middleport;
and maternal great-greatgrandmother is Blanche Gilkey,
Middleport. Paternal grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J. Lynch
of Northville, Mich.
OESTOMEET
Evangeline Chapter 172, Order of
the Eastern Star, will meet at 7:30
Thursday night at the Middleport
Masonic Temple. Members are
asked to take baked items for a sale,
the proceeds ol which will he given
to the Heart Fund Officers are to

eANNOUNCEMENTS
J-AIIIMIUIIC:efftff'tt

4-0iWM1IINIY
J-HII'ItY Aft

4...,__AIMf'fmtnlfCM' I

'

YOUR
P I ANO.
Too
valuable to neglect, expert
, tuning &amp; ~nd repair. Lane
' Daniels, 742-2951 or 9922082.
Racine Volunteer Fire
Department sponsors a
shot gun &amp; rifle match
every Sat. night 6: 30p.m .
at their bu ilding In Bashan,
Factory choke 12 guage
shot guns onlv . Open sights
22 rifle ,

1 space

.._l,ultment for .... ,

Auction

U-WantedtoBuy

.I

I

eMERCHANDISE

e EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
11..... Htla w1 ntld

t 1-Hovs.-tcll OctOdl

U-CI, TY, Redlo Equipment
U - AntlcUitt
14-MIIc:. MercMndlst
n-llllldlnt su,.les
s.-Petslor lilt

12- Siluiiltd Wlnle4

tl- truuranu
14- ludnnl Tnlning
li-SC:I\OOili!UirUCtlon

16Radio, T'V
&amp; Cl AtPflr

e FA liM SUPPLtES
&amp; LIVESTOCK
•1 -, trlfllt~ulpmtl'lt

•2 - WtntH to lwy
72-lruc:lll for Slit

Rac ine. Ohio45771

..

~ftlty

I

IHYICH

JI-AUfOt""' ....

lt-HMttl ' - l t..

JJ-Ve•• &amp; 4 W.O.
14-Mofer('f'CIH
1JAuto l"erh

U - MMIIeoHomn
lor :hit

IAueuorln
n - •uta•t.,.lr

ll-P:.t,.I'IIIOr hit

J4--lwslntttlllllcllnll
lS- Loh &amp; AcrttH
Jt-ltttl Elltlt Wtnttcl
J1- Rtattors

4. _ _ _ _ __

eSERVtCES

5. _ _ _ _ __
6, _ _ _ _ __

11-Htffttlmproootmtn~

Wont -Ad Advertl&amp;lng
Deadlines
' 2: :i:Q t» .M, 0.-11y
12 NOOft hturt..,
lor McttMMy

1.

12--Ptumbl.,. I lhct'f.tllnl
U- l~~oetooltlnt

7. _ _ _ _ __

lo4- 11Ktrlul
&amp; Mttrl,.retlon

8. _ _ _ _ __

U-Gtl'ltrtl Htullnt
M-M.H. R...Ir

9 . _ ___,__ __

I1- Uptte41twy

10. _ _ _ _ __
11. _ _ _ _ __
12. _ _ _ _ __
13, _ _ _ _ __

Ritts end Other Inlormetion
15 Words or Utuler

Cash

1 Clay

1.10

2diYI
Jdtyl

l.to

.a.,,

1.10
UO

Chlr"
1.15

1~ . · ---.,.--1
5
-_
-_
-_
-16. _
_._
_ -

'---

Insurance

AUTOMOBILE
IN ·
SURANCE
been &lt;an celled?
Lost
your
operator 's l icense? Phone
992 ·2143 ,
18

Wanted to Do

Furnace repairs, electrical
work. plumbing. mobile
home or residence . 1 992·
5858.
•

MEIGS MUSEUM open by

35.

Trailer lot lor sale, $5,1100 .
Modular home lot on Route
7, three bedroom farmhouse located on Route 7.
992·2571.

ousiny
Headquarters

t~~~L~-~~t Ji
_

: LOG Cabin Gilt &amp; Supply
' Shop will reopen Feb. 5.
' :f11ill hove gitts for
....averyday &amp; special oc ·
: casions. Many supplies at
, tow prices. Open Thurs.,
Fri .. &amp; Sat. 10:00 to 3:00.

1t

down
much raster
with a

WANT AD
~

___ Giveaway_

i BIRD DOG . Mixed Ir ish
~ Setter &amp; ,Brittllny spaniel.
I 985-42~2 .

'

I·
1
I

l
,I

I
.I

, .I

' I
'. I

...----------..--~-------...;·

'

Wonted to Buy

i

OLD COl NS, pocket wat
class rings, wedding
I Dands, diamonds. Gold or
sliver . Coli J. A. Wamsley,
! 7~2· 2331. Treasure Chest
; Coin Shop, Athens, OH , 592 ·
: 6-462.

·r ches.

----, -

WANTED
TO
BUY :
GOLD,
SILVER.
PLATINUM, STERLING
COINS, RINGS,JEWELR
Y, MISC . ITEMS. AB ·
SOLUTE
MARKET
PRICE GUARANTED. ED
r BURI(ETT
BARBER
j SHOP, MIDDLEPORT,
.,; OH10t92 · 3~76 .

8-18

6'1../i..- -1/.1-s
Couldn 't be EASIER- 1usl two
ma~n parts lor !hiS slim shaprng
with the new Slllt shoulder
pleats. Sl!tch 1! up no~ 1n Clepe,

dac10n blend. neat
1

Mobile Homes
for Sale

FIREWOOD for sale.
Seasoned, hardwood, split
a. delivered . S30. load . 992·
5240.

1973 Crown Haven, 14 x 65,
three bedjooms. new cllr- Maternity Clot'hes now one
pet . 1971 Cameron, l4 x 64, half price . Watermelon
two bedrooms, new carpet. Patch , New Haven, West
1972 Champion, 12 x 60, two Virg inia . 882-3410.
l?fdrooms, new &lt;arpet. 1976
Cameron, 12 x 60, •wo
bedrooms, all electric. 1971 Firewood for sate. Frank
Skyline, 12s&gt;&lt; 6), two Cleland, Racine, Ohio.
bedrooms, bath &amp; 'll, new Phone .949· 2071.
carpet.
1970
PMC.
12 x 60, two bedrooms, new
carpet. 8 x 5 Sales, Inc.,
2nd x Viand Street, Point
Pleasant. wv Phore 675·

~nits

Pnnted Pattern 4625 MJSses

Slles 8. 10. 12, 14 . 16. 18. Slle
12 (bus! 34) la~es 21·r yards
60·mch labnc

·

uc• pdtem. A4ti S04
fit ucll pot11rn fit fint-claa

$Z.OI ftl

alrtllll 1011

lllodtin~o

Attnt
~-·
,_,. Dopl.

Send to:
·I ' l I

The Da,ily Sentinel ·

Z4.l w.t 17 Sl lltw Ylll, NY
10011. l'riftt NlME ADDHSS,
ZIP, SIZE, 101 mt( NUMIE~.
We slleamlmed the sewmg lo
save you l1me so you can save
money' Send now lor NlW 1981
SPRING-SUMMER PAITERN CAT·
~tOG . I 00 slyles, hee palle~n
coupon. ($2 Volue). C.tol'\ S1

134-14 Oto~ Qollll . . . . . 1.75

13J.flllllltl """'~ . 11.75
130-Swuten.SIJW 31-5( $1.75
IZS.Qoidlbrr '''""'" ·$1.75

SUPPLIES
Reedsville, OH .
Ph. 667·648$

10% to 20%
J

Phone
ON RT . 33 - 5 room
block home with city
water , nat. gas, 3
bedrooms. bath, cellar
and front porch on one
shadv acre . Priced nice,
too.
LAND CONTRACT - 7
rooms and bath on level
lot. Space for trailer and
al l utilities.
RENOVATED - Large
10 room home with lots
of
remodeling .
5
'bedrooms for a family,
large yard, new bllth,
new furnace, basement,
and
fireplace .
Ali
utilities. ·
SOMETHING NICE - 8
rooms. 2 lovely baths,
lots of c iosets, back
porch 12x26 with sliding
glass door from dining,
garage, carpeting and
large lot , 1n A· l condi·
t ion at a price of only
$43,500.
Happy New Moon Day
Tammy,
HAVING SOLD MANY
HOMES WE
NOW
NEED YOURS . WANT
TO
SELL?
CALL
99H325 or 992-3876 .

NEW LISTING
EASTERN DISTRICT
- 2-3 bedroom house
with full basement on
approx. v.. acre lot
Force.d air gas furnace,
aluminum
siding,
T.P.C. water . In good
condition.
JUST !
$14,500.
NEW LISTING
SOUTHERN DISTRICT
- A furnished 5 room
house with 3 car garage
an lower
leve l, 2
bedrooms, gas heat.
$33,000.
NEW LISTING
CLOSE TO TOWN I - 3
bedroom house on ap·
prox. 11!2 acre level lot.
Garage and Iaroe metal
storage building, large
garden space. $25,000.
LARGE FAMILY? This
10 room
home in
Ellstern District has .t
bedrooms. l'h baths,
full basement, carport,
and above ground swim·
ming pool , on a'pprox. 2
acres land . Should be
approved by FHA or
VA . $41.500.
6 ACRES MINI FARM
Barn, pony shed,
chicken house, Shed,
and fruit cellar. garden
space, fencing, nice
yard, wood burner plus
a 3· bedroom totally
remodeled
home,
carpeting, new wiring,
new plumbing , Allin ex·
cellent condition . QN ·
L Y 1 $28,500. F lnanclng
available.
REALTOR
Henry li. Cletond, Jr.
991-6191
ASSOCIATES
Roger &amp; Dol tie Turner
991-5692
J('iln Trussell949-2660
OFFICE 992· 2259

Discount
On Entire Stock
1-25·1 mo.

J&amp;F
ENTERPRISES

GOI1 QIJIS:
fllw ' lilld ./..
LIIIONI
HPAIII
~""""""
NIW Gril&lt; U.lfi a..,l'- lilltl&gt;l Chul'

Cillo"'
FAST SERVICE

~ - ~L~n~
PHONI 614-915-3961

Backhoe, snow plowing,
excavation, water ~ gas­
sewer lines, certified
septic systems, dump
trllck, stone·coal, etc. ,
General home repair &amp; ·
carpenter work. Springs
de•eloped &amp; ponds
cleilred.
JIM CLIFFORD
Rt. 2 Pomeroy
Ph. 992-7?01
1· 25· I o

Body Repair~ Insurance
Work~ Collision Repair.

Expert painting, body
work, pinstriping. &amp;
vinyl tops .
Fr.ee Estimates
Call 992·3421
Kingsbury Rd.. 2 mi.
west Co. Rd. 18.
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769
Domestic, Japanese &amp;
European
Cars &amp;
Trucks.
1-14· 1 mo .

Farm Buililinas
.iizes
"From 30xJO"
SMALL

Utility Buildinp
Siz~s

from 4X6 to 12x40

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt. 3, Box S4 .
Racine, Oh ,
Ph. 614·843-2591
6· 15-lfc

.. .

.

H&amp;R BODY

ALL STEEL

CUNNtNGHAM
&amp; AS$00.'
Mortgage Bankers

. 992-7544
VA loansno money down
Federal Housing----3% on 525,000
5% on balance.
Conventional LoansS%
down ·
ca 11 for tntormation
992-7544

Carousel ·
Confectionery
111 N. 2nd A,ve.
Middleport ·
Order your decorated
cakes for all occasions:
Birthdays,
Anniversaries,
Weddings,
Showers, etc.
"Beginner
Cake
Decorating Classes"
starting ·soon, Please
· note, we wil be closed on
Monda'ys during the
month of January.
1·11·1 mo.

~~24 .

LAFF-A-DAY

·----1----

1970 PARKWOOD custom
Mobi ie Home. 12x60 un·
furnished . 2 bedroom, 1
bath, fuel oil heat . 992 ·3823.
1969 PMC 3 bedroom
trailer. 12&gt;c60. 992-3954.

Items in u celllnl condlllon. All lrt priced
to 'ell +mmediately . See us to-

~LANDMARK
:;.-;;;;oiiiH, .
992-2 I 81

Business !':Jil~i~ _

Hatel·lounge with three
commercilll rentals, two
apartments . LaSalle Motor
Inn In Middleport . 992·9917 _

------·----Mobile Homes
tor Rent

-------- ·--

·-·-·

Three bedroom furnished
trailer,
available im ·
mediately . Must have
deposit &amp;
referen ces.
$200 .00 a monlh plus
util i ties. Phone 992-5511
anytl me after 3.

POMEROY

"YOUNGS
Get a p~ppy from your
Humane Society . 992·6260 .
All puppies, Shephard
types, husky types, bull dog
types, collie type, adult;
doberman type, Benj i ty'*,
a beautiful intelligent
american domestic type,
shots, wormed, Also coon
hound type.

2 bedroom trail er . Atlults
on l y. Brown ' s Trailer
Park . 992 ·3324 .

Call Ken Young

Farm E uipment

IIARH AND SI.VICI
ALL MAkll

-----

Unfurnished one bedroom
apartment for rent. Renters assistance available
for senior citizens. Contact
Village Manor Apartments
at992·7787 .
1 bedroom furnished apart·
ment, wall to wall car·
peting, redecorated, low
util i ties. S174. month. 992·
2362 alter~ .

'

Three bedroom furnished
apartment_ Phone 992-3129
or 992·5914 or 1·304-882·2566.

71

Autos fOr Sale

1980 Pontiac Pheonix, 2
door, frontwheel drive, air
conditioning, am·fm radio,
33 mpg, 2.000 miles.
$6,400.00. new car warran ty . 992·2849.
1972 Camara. 307 V·8
automatic . Good cond , 992·
2987 ,
1975 · NOVA Hatchback .
Good cond. 742· 2421 .
1977 Plymouth Fury. Sale
or take over payments. For
more information call 742·
3040 .
.
1975. Olds Della 88 Royale,
air conditioning, am-fm
tape
player,
power
steering, power brakes,
new paint job. 992-2S28 at·
ter 5.

For rent : two bedroom
Trucks for Sale
apartment with utillti~s 72
paid. No pets or drunks. 1968 Ford three fourths ton
John Sheets, three and one truck , heavy duty with flat
hall miles soulh of M id· bed, gooa . shape.$350.00
dleporton Route7 .
tirm . 985·4351.

__

45

74

-~--

S·leeping rooms for rent on
Ma in. Street in Mason.
Cooking facilities, table.
SAO .OO per week . Phone I ·

1980 suzuki GS 750 L, win·
djammer, saddle bags,
luggage rack with case, ali
vetter equipment, 700 miles
paid 53900.00 new must sell
lor $3500.00. 992· 7~03.

30~ · 773 · 5651.
~··-

-· for R en('-:_
_siia.-ce

···~-

46 - -

COUNTRY MOB ILl'; Home
Park , Rou1 e 33, North of
Pomeroy . LMgc lots. Call

75

991 7479,

-

-

----

Boats and
Motors for Sale

1979 Star'cr.a f1 aluminum V
hUll open bow, 80 hi) Mer·
cvry outboard, canopy &amp;
trailer In e&gt;eellent all
around condition. Boa I like
new . 53 .700.00. 992·2849.

TRAILER spaces lor rent.
Southern ValleY Mobi le
Home Park. Cheshire, Oh.
9112·3954

. •.

ltU

" 51H!C•II 111111 f:11r "

,, Ctln lauMrlll

,, 1tu111 "'rooertltt
,.. /lpl , Houn Ownt"
... Mo~l1t Hnm t Plrlll

-·

•BUSINESSES
•FARMS
•PARTNERSHIPS
•CORPORATIONS

' 1'1 1 f~

Payrolls, profit and loss statements, all
federal and state forms •
78

camping

16 foot rag a long camper,
self contained, sleeps 6.
992·5556.

H&amp;R BLOCK OFFICE LOCATION
618

E. Main

Pomeory, Oh.

81

INSULATION

Home
Improvements

Gene' s Carpet Cleaning,
deep stream extraction.
Free
estimated,
reasonable rates, scotchquard, 992·6309 or 7 42·
2211 .

83

Exc~viltlng

J &amp; F BACKHOE SER VICE l iscensed &amp; bonded,
septic tank installation,
water &amp; gas lines. ~)( ­
cavatlng work &amp; transit
layout. 992·1201 .

--------

Dozer work . Small jobs a
specialty . 742·2753 . ·

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

SEWING
MACHINE
Repairs ,
service,
ail
makes! 992 ·2284 . • The
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
Authorized Singer Sales
and Service. We sharpen
Scissors.
ELWOOD
130WERS
REPAIR Sweepers;
toasters, irons, all small
appliance s. L~wn mowe,r .
Nex t to S!&lt;lfe Hig l1wa y
Garl.ge on

3825.

Route 7,

9B5

__ .. ______ I

Electrici'l service for all
wiring needs, ser:vice calls,
est imate! . Call Miller E lee ·
tric at 742 3195 or 992 ·7680 .

992-3795
2·1·2mo.

ROUSH

StF*/IEtS

Motorcycles

1978 KAWASAKI KZ 650
motorcycle, color blue .
Call949·2649.

·----

--· -·Furnished
-- -Rooms
-~-

~tp• l• l"9 Sine•

84

Four room apartment for
rent. 992 ·5908 .

. .. ___ .

• Dhttnill'
• Dhhwulltn
•HntWiltlrllnlll

----~
Equipme~n~t_____

HALF of a double. 2
bedroom completely fur ·
nished , Availabl e 1st of
month. 992·2749 .
Four room with bath apart·
ment in Middlepo..-t, fur ·
nish·ed
recently
redecorated &amp; refurnished .
Utilities paid . Phone 992·
2676 .

Wanted to Buy

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

BOOKKEEPING SERVICE

- ~561

tWililltrl
t Drvtrl

TRI.COUNTY

SER~ICE

arm supplies
&amp; th•estdtlc

CHIP WOOD . Po les max .
diameter 10" on largest
end. 512 p-er ton . Bundled
Slab. $10 per ton. Delivered
to Oh io Pallet co .. Rt. 2.
Pomeroy 992·2689.
·

J AND 4 RM furnished ap·
ts. Phone 992·543• .

12 P11rk St.
Middleport, Oh.
'ph, 992-6263
Anytime
2-1·1 ma,

Kn 11 ThiiA~h~rF""'r• A•'"•"u

tR.ntn

Apartment
for Rent

Ph. 992-2478
11-20·3 mo. pd.

HEATING

~~~~P~o~m~e~ro~y~,~O~h~.;;~~t=======~'=±~========~

She ton farm hav wagon.
62

Spec. Price 5225.00
Plus Tax &amp; Fluid
109 Spring Ave.
Pomeroy,
· Oh .
Ph. 992·5543
1·22 ·I mo.

AND

• Back hoes
Hourly Contract
Large or
small jobs.

-Plumbing and
electrical work
!Free Estimates)

APPLIANCE
t

61

__r.~~rete work

AUTOMATIC
TRANSMISSIONS .
REPAIR &amp; SERVICE

KAUFF'S .
fWMBING

• Dozers

v.c. YOUNG II

sat ·

2 bedroom mobile home
furnished . Availabl e im·
mediately . No pets or
children . Deposit. 992 -2749.

-Addonsand
remodellne
·- Roofing and guner

992·6215 or 992·7114

guitar,
8 pc. set
GUt LD S360.
MarkAlso
111 - classical
of drums. Call 304·675·1513
after 5 wk . days, ail day

10·7-tlc

PUlliNS
EXCAVATING

CARP£Nl}:R
SERVICES"

Musical
Instruments

S7

992-5682

' 'He wlnls to be a iirem.an, but I
was hopini he'd take up acting
andbecomePreaident!'' '

J&amp;D

ON MOST CARS
Reg. Price 5325.00

day .

(\7,.._

"
~-~------'------

42

-Auto and Tru.ck
Repair
-Transmission
Repair
Hrs.: ft1on.~Fri.
9 A.M.-5:30P.M.

All ot tnt .lbove

----·---- --- -----

-;-.

GARAGE
•

Relri11erator

1971
Glenwood
12x60
trailer. 2 Qedroom, new
stove &amp;: refrigerator, gas
furnace . On rented lot in
M iddleport. $6,000, 992 ·
2987.

34

ROGER HYSEU'S

I

1- 11 Hone Power Rldlnt
Mower
1- Goocl Triiiler Apprtvecl WOOd
Burner Stoooe with blower
1- GoOO Gu R•n11e
1- GOOCI HotJI(Iint w.asner
l - 2S"GE TV
I
1- 16cu , lt. 1-totpol"t

1- ( 614) -992-3325

POMEROY,O.

• SHOOTING
MATCH :
' Rutland Ameri can Legion
; every Sunday at 1:00. Big
.. -prizes &amp; games. Factory
; choke gun's only .

tract

J:Z

CIDER. Fre-sh Sweet cider
available a.t Fitzpatrick Orchard, State Rt . 689 . 669·
3785.

16 E. Second Street

. 992-2259

You' II

HOUSE &amp; 6 ac~es in
Chester township _· 4ast on
right at toot of t'lill in
Chester. Will consider
land
contract, Can be 1 seen
anytime till Tuesday .
Clayton Schartiger. '

44

--

'

DECORA.TING

KWB

Call alter 5, 992-7501.

' EARLY BIRD Special, 10
• percent off all team unitor• ms . Hats, shirts, and pants ~
• If ordered before Feb . 18.
: Custom Print, 240 E . Main ,
~ Pomeroy . 992·2462 .

31 . _ _ _ _ __
33.
34.

Homes for Sale

ll

Mobile homes for rent, fur
nished, very ni ce . Call 9927479.

.•

'
,__

FOR S11le or rent. Ap-'
proximately 34 acres with 3
bedroom modular home in
Portland, Ohio area. 9 Firewood, $35 .00 a truck
miles from Ravenswood toad, $60.00 a cord . All harbridge. Call alter ~ p.m. l(ivvood, split, &amp; delivered.
613·5212. .
1 or 843· 473~.

-+-

•

29 ._
. -_
-_
-_
-30.
_
_-.-

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

c"''"

13

· -~-

' I
I
I
I

,_....tMomt 111ft IMI Y~rf llltl lrtiCU-"" tnl'f' WlttlcasflwiHII .
fer M1 ""''"' lo• Hum,.,. I• care Of TM

Have room, board, laundry
for
elderly
only_
Reasonable. 992-6022.

•APPLES :
Golden
: delicious, S3 .75 per buschel.
• Other varieties at S.t.OO per
, buschel &amp; up. Fitzpatrick
. Orchard. Stote Route 689 .
• Phone 669·3785 .

27 .. -_ 28
____
_

Itch word over ttlt minimum'' worclsls 4 nflts per word !Nf'daiy.
Ads runnlngettltr thin conttcu!lvt dt\1'1 wilt o. ctltrttd at tftt I dt'f'
rtlt .

...e.r.
II Clftt
llfttiHI,

WANTED : Items for con·
signment for all \Jpcoming
hol idays &amp; everyday. Call
985·&lt;327 or 985·3951.

--------

I

26. _ _ _ _ _ __

' -"

.

WILL babysit In my home
weekdays_ Day shift, Middleport area. 992-6309.

10 lb. Chocolate

ANN'S CAKE

. Water-Sewer-Electric
Gas Line-Ditches ·
Water line Hook ~ ui;)S
Septic Tanks
Countv Certified
Roush Lane
Cheshire, Oh.
Ph. 367·7560
1-7-tlc

II

the Meigs County
1 Call
' Humane Socletv at 992·
) 6260.

'2~
25.· ------_ _ _ _ __

2. U
Ul

In m.n.or11, C1rll of Thank' tnct Obihu•r'f' : • cen11 per wot'tl, n .oe
minimum. Clltlll'lollvt•&lt;t .

~

l!___!_ituations Wanted

WIN

REESE ·~

THE
KOUNTRV

Beautiful three bedroom
ranch brick home in Baum
Addition. Pomeroy, Ohio.
Gas heat, central air con·
.ditlonlng. Call 985·3814 or
Girl 18 or 19 vears ·old to 992·2571.
live in . 992·2686 .
Nice house on 2 &amp; one half
acres on SR 7 b(!-tween
WANTE 0 for television : Memory Gardens &amp; state
asststant to magician . garage. Priced on in·
Write Dr . Bloch. the ~pec1ion. 992·7741 .
Mag ici an, 920 East 6th
Street, New York , NY
Real E st•te- General
111009 .

SIZES

n.

DISCOUNT
furniture .
ReiJDhiolsteriino. Jon. &amp;
Mowrey'
I

i Put a cold nose in your life.

1, _ _ _ _ __

2. _ _ _ _ __

GET VALUABLE training
as a young business person
and earn good money pius
some great Qitts as a Sen tinel route carrier . Phone
us right l!wav and get on
the eligibility liSt at 992 ·
2156 or 992·2157 .

Business Services
TRENDUNG
SERVICE

Will do paneling, ceiling,
floor tile, plumbing . Free
estimateS. Fred M iller at
992-6338

•

19 . _- - - - - - 20.
_ _ _ __
21. _ _ _ _ _ __
22 . _ _ _ _ __
23 . _ _ _ _ __

3. _ _ _ _ __

USED FURNITURE . Gold
&amp; silver, class rings, pocket
watches, chains, diamonds
&amp; so on , Copper brass· and
baHeries. antique items,
also do appraisals, com·
Plete auctioneer service,
Over 30 years experience In
business. WI 11 buy com·
plete estates. Osby Martin
General Store, Middleport,
Oh . 992 ·6370.

• ch. 992 · 226~. 992 ·2802, 992·
• 2360 or 992·2639. Histories
,for
sate
Pomeroy ·
• Middleport Libraries .

17. _ _ _ _ _ __
18. _ _ _ _ __

eTIIANSPOIITATION

eREAL !STATE

Wanted to Buy : class r ings,
wedding , bands, anything
stamped, 10K, 1~K. or 18K
gold. Silver coins, pocket
watches. Call Joe Clark at
992·2054 at Clark's Jewelry
Store, Pomeroy, Ohlo45769

! appointment January-Mar·

wanted
For Sale
Announcement
For Rent

•t-IM &amp; fl'trfllltH

1160.

'" Income tax service, federal
• &amp; state. Wallace Russell
•, Bradbury , call992-7228 .

AD WANTED

•l-Livntocll
M-Hiy &amp; Orlln

ATTENTION :
tiM ·
PORTANT TO YOU) Will
PliV cash or certified &lt;heck
tor antiques and collec tibles or entire estates.
Nothing too large. Also.
pocket Watches and
Call 614·
or 557·3411.

I RON AND BRASS BEDS.
old furn i ture. desks, gold
rings,
fewelry, silver
dollars, sterling, etc., wood
Ice boxes,jars antiques,
etc. Complete households .
Write M . D. MJIIer, Rt. ~ •
Pomerov, OHl or call 992·

Just' 2 Main ·Parts!

SO)( 176

CIRCLE
below. Each ' In·
itlal or group of figures
counts as a word, Count
name an&lt;t address or
I
phone number II used.
3
6
1• 1.
You ' ll get beller results Words
if you descr ibe fu 11 y, --4.Cd~a:2y:.j-!d:lio:C.sj.:da=.!y.;s~da::,:Y~I,I
give ·price . The Sentinel
reserves the right to
S&lt;.oo S1· 00
classifv , edit or reject
any ad . Your ad will be
put in the proper
clasiticat!on If vou'll
check the proper box
below
1 hese cash rates
include discount

.......,,.Ct terlttnt
u - wantM,.. Rtnt

Antiques

Wonted to Buy

Tax service, feder c) I. state, 1_ _:
--.:-;,:::-::·:·.·:.
· ::::.::::::.~
&amp; quarterly taxes done by ~
appointment . See Wanda
Eblin, •1000 Laurel Cliff
Road , Pomeroy, Ohio
45769,. 992-,2272.

Phone~·----------------Print one word ih each

Mit

U-flllooms

12- Monty fo Loen

..

RACINE GUN SHOOT,
Racine Gun Club, every
, Friday night starting at
7:30 p .m . Factory choke
.guns only .

Addre•----------------

e RENTALS
42-MMill Ho"'tl
for Rtttt

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

•

1 PAY highest pt"ices
•possible for gold and silver
~ ,oins, rings, iewelry,_etc.
Contact Ed Burkett Barber
S_hop, Middleport.

Write your own ad and order by mall with this
coupon . Cancel your ad by phone when you 0~ 1
results. Money not refundable.

41-l'tGLIIII lOt ll:tflt

eFtNANCIAL
u- IIYstut•

•

AnENTIOI

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

!beY

...,.

GET

Name _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,

I - Card of Tltlltllll
2- ln Mtmori•m

9

WANTED : People to sell
Avon. 742·2354 or 7~2 2755 .

Curb Inflation.
Pay Cash for
Claulfleds and
Savell I.

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

lt-Wutn To Da

AWARDED SCHOLARSHIPAmy Souders, a 111118 graduate of
Soutbeni High School, has been
awarded the Charles Marcinllo
Nunlog Fund Scholarship by the
Meigs 778, Forty and Eight,
American Legion. Tht• scholarship io for $300 with $100 to he
tnntnled eRb year for thrte
yean. Mltl Soaden attenrla Rio
Graade Comtnnlty Colll!lle.

Publit Notice

assembled and prior 1o
delivery comply with all
school
qlstrlct
specifications, all safet~
regulations and current
Ohio Minimum Standards
tor School Bus Con struction of the Depart·
ment of Education adopted
by and wiTh the consent of
the Director of Highway
Safety pursuant to Section
4511.76 of the Revised Code
and all other pertinent
provisions
of
law .
Specifica tions and In structions to bidders are on
f ile in the office of the
Treasurer, Racine, Ohio.
By Order of the
Board of Educa tion
Nancy Cltrnahan,
Treasurer
Southern Local
scnoo1 District

PHONE 992-2156

&amp;

Social calendar

Public Notice

PUBLIC NOTICE
TO : BIDDERS
SUBJECT: Purcnase of
School Bus
FOR : The Board of the
Southern Local School
District. Box 176, Racine,
Ohio, 45771
Sealed proposals will be
received by the Board of
Education of the Southern
Loca l School Distr ic t of
Racine, Ohio at the
treasurer ' s ottice until
12 :00 o'c lock noon on
February 12. 1981 and at
that
opened
by
the
treasurer of said board as
provided by law for one ( 1)
65 pltssenger school bus,
acc ording to speclfitations
of said Board of 'i;ducatlon.
separate
and
In ·
dependent bids will be
recei ved with respect to the
chassis and body type and
will state that the bus when

WANT AD INFORMATION

7-- Ya~l•t•

'"""ljiiper

Mr. and Mrs
entertained at their home recently
with a party in celebration of the
second birthday of their son, Billy
Mark.
A Star Wars theme' was carried
out in the decorations ol the cake,
plates, cups and napkins. Ice creani,
potato chips, punch and coffee were
served with the cake.
The guest list included Susie, his
aister, Mildred Broob, his maternal
grandmother, Kathleen Francia, his
paternal grandmother, Mr. and Mrs.
David Reed and Stacie, Mr. lind
Mrs. Edward Sloter, Julie and Jeffrey, Miss Jan Brooks, Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Brooks and sons, Mr. and
Mrs. Uoyd Brooks and family, Mr.
and Mrs. W. A. Gibbs, George Fra~
cis, Jamie Warner and Gall Neal. ~
Sending cards and gifts were
Freda Duffy, paternal great·
grandmother, Mr. and fMs, Mark
Duerr, Mr. and folrs. Vic Hannahs,
Mr. and Mrs. Garrett Watkins,
Jamie and Paul Erwin.

~-----~----~----------~~,

1-~uiJIICSift

ANNOUNCEMENT
The Meigs Association for Retarded Citizens will meet.at 7:30 Thursday night at the Meigs Community
School in the old Pomeroy Junior,
High School buildill!l. •

.
Bill Francia

( I) 23 , 29 ; 12) 3, 9

t-Lotlend P-.nd

wear atreet dresses.

In loving memory of our in fant daughter, Jody Lyn
McCllrty who passed away
five years ago toda~:.
February 3, 1976.
.Oh, my little darling, how 1
love you,
·
In a way not known befo're.
But our Father up in
,heaven.
·
Loves you just • little
more.
My heart ond soul depend
on God,
And I shall wait and pray.
Until some day darling,
You're in mv arms to stay . .
1Sadly missed by parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Joesph Me·
Carty, grandparents, Mrs .
Ruth M . Smith and MrS .
,plga McCarty . JOdy Lyn
also h!!s a brother, Keith
Allen.

Small investment, large
returns, Sentinel Want Ads
'IHCHIMILY
KNOCKS

Announce engagement

In Memoriarp

r--------------------------------------

They'll Do It Every Time

Cindy Smith

BiUy Francis

Matthew Bradford

Mr. and Mrs. Howard (Buddy) Er·
vin, Jr., Racine, recently entertained with a party honoring their
heart tags and carrying pledge son, Howard Raymond Ervin Ill (B.
sheets and each will he working for J , l, on his third birthday.
A Burt and Ernie cake baked and
one of the residents - sort of "adopt
a grandmother or grandfather" decorated by his aunt, Mrs. Sandy
theme. They will he asking you to · Needs, was served with· homemade
pledge so much money for each ice cream, potato chips and punch.
minute their adopted grand~arent Gifts were presented to. the honored
either rocks or rolls.
·
guest.
Please open your heart when these Attending besides his parents and
young people come knocking on your sister, Sara Beth, wre his granddoor - or go to the Porneruy Health parents, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Er·
Care Center on Saturday, Feb. 14. vin, Mrs. Frances Carleton, Mr. and
Not only would you he making the Mrs. Jim Carleton, Mrs. Mike
residents of the center happy by Carleton, Chris, Jason, Seth, and
your visit, but remember aU Deidra, Mr. and Mrs. David Sheets,
proceeds go to the Heart Association ' Mandl and Betsy, Mrs. Jeff Needs,
- ·it fights for YOUR life.
Mrs. Rhonda Dailey and son, Shawn,
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Hubbard, Jaimey
and Kellie, Mr. and Mrs. Herb Ervin, Teresa Ervin,
Ron Wilson, Tammy Ervin, Steve
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Edward Fitch, and Mrs. David Harris and
Millhone of Rio Grande are an- Nathan.
nouncing the birth of a son, Jonathan
Sending cards and gifts were Miss

Edward,
on Jan. I at the Holzer
Medical Center.
The infant weighed eight pounds,
five ounces and was 21 inches long.
Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Millhope of Tuppers Plains and
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Barnhill of Tuppers Plains. Mr. and Mrs. Russell
Mollahan and Mrs. Violet Millhone
ol Tuppers Plains are paternal
great-grandparents.

Cord ol Thanks

wish ' to express my sin·
"'ere thanks and ap ·
preclatlon to all ·my friends
•;.nd neighbors lor the many
'-prayers and cards re-ceived
: lvhlle 1 was a patient at
•l'leasant Volley Hospital. 1
:;wish to extend my sincere
thanks to the doctors, n!Jr·
ses, the Reverend James
J&lt;ittle and the Reverend
j;tanley Merrifield. May
f&gt;od richly bless each and
everyone. Bernard Coole

1

•1

celebrate

~

::t

Pomeroy care center residents to rock and roll'

··~· ' '
:~'"t

........ ..
'.
.......

_,. " ' "'""'

-..

Howard Ervin
By Ma~ioo C. Crawford
This "Rock-a-thon" will take
Meigs County
place between 2 p.m. and 4 p.m. and
Heart Branch
also those who 'would like may tour
Terry Stotts, activities director of the facility, as it will he an open
the Pomeroy Health Care Center on house. Refreshments are heing serRock Springs Road, has put out a ved and they hope to have encall for help and cooperation.
tertairuuent in the dining room.
On February 14, the residents Anyone who can assist the Care Cen. approximately 97 - will give a ter along this line- will certainly he
helping hand to the annual Heart appreciated. They can use a piano
·Fund Drive. In their rocking chairs player, violinist or something along
and wheel cha;rs they will "Rock 'n that line. A piano is available. If inRoll " for as many minutes as you terested, please call Terry at 992.
will donate money for each of those 6606.
minutes. Wheel chairs will roll and
Also on Feb. 14 and at the same
rocking chairs (heing donated by time,' the . Meigs and Easlern
local furniture stores) will. rock with cheerleaders along with a volunteer
residents of the Health Care Center group of nine little boys, will he canin the driver's seat.
vassing the neighborhoods wearing

3,1981

J

Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum Sidin
el nsulation
• Storm Doors
• Storm Windows
• Replacement
Windows f
Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph. 992-2772
_ _ mo.
1 28 1

CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes - ~K­
tensive remodeling
• Electrical work
• Roofing work
12 Years
EKperience
Greg Roush

Ph. 992-7583
1·22 ·1 mo.

1-~~~~~~~======~1:::::::::::::::::~
KIT .'N' CARLYlE '"

by Lany Wright

�Tuesda , Ft~bruar 3,1981

Meigs County to share in funding
Ohio tlalley Area Libraries librarytoisolatedandruralresiden·
"Our book budge!$ for both book(OVAL) will receive $362,169 in state 1$ who are unable to visit main mobile units have been curtailed for
funds and $319,851 in federal libraries, branches, lind book· 1981 because of the lack of federal
(L,S.C.A. TiUe I) funds during 1981 · mobiles. OVAL "ltpects to distribute dollars in Ohio, but we will attempt
to continue essential library ser· more than 114,000 book catalogs to to make the best use of the materials
vices to residents of 10 southeastern . area residents during 1981. " With an ,..-w_e_alr_ea_dy_o_wn_.'_' _.....;._ __
Ohio counties, according to OVAL annual circulation of more than
dire&lt;!tor Linda Harfst.
220,000 books, we believe our Mail·A·
---.During 1981, OVAL will deposit a Book program is the largest in the
, . - "'CT'O: ~ ~total of about 3,700 new books in country," Mrs. Harfstconunented.
•
laked
•
member public libraries in Athens,
Residents in Athens, Lawrence,
•
S.,.pag-lhe..,tfl
•
Hocking, .i'ackson, Lawrence, Meigs; Pike and Ross Counties will
Meigs, 'Pickaway, Pike, Ross , receive a total of 1,685 hours of book·
•
Rot. SUS
•
Scioto, and Vinton Counties. mobile service, as well. "OVAL's
~... $1 .95
Libraries in eight of these counties two bookmobiles reaches nearly
.J hy• 0o11
will also receive direct gran!$ of 37,000 area residents in 1980 who
money to enable them to meet were geographically isolated or
operating expenses during !981. otherwise unable to use libraries.
"Libraries 'in the OVAL counties we expectto continue this service in
•
AU lOCAIIONS
•
receive 100 percent of the local in· 1981 in cooperation with our member
tangibles tax, the tax which supporbl libraries," Mrs. Harfstcontinued.
~~ • • • ••
Ohio public libr~ries. However, in- r------------.L._!.---------come from this tax does not provide
adequate support for public libraries
in southeastem Ohio.
In OVAL's 10 counties, public
libraries receive less than hall of the
JUST ARRIVED
state average per capita income for
libraries. OVAL exists to insure that
local residenbl have access to the
services they need, even though
local library budgets are small,"
Mrs. Harfst explained.
Through OVAL, local residents
will have access to books and other
materials in libraries state and
nation-wide. OVAL will contract
with Alden Library at Ohio Univer·
sity-Athens to search the Alden
DESERTED - Even though schools were residents apparenlly stayed by the fire: This Is South
Library collection, collection of
dismissed Monday due to bad weather and high water, Second Ave., In Mlddiepot(. at mid-afternoon on Monlibraries
within the region, and the
day.
streets In the communities were mostly deserted as
OCLC computerized. data base, for
books area residents need but which
are not located in local collections.
When the Alden Library staff
locates need~ I ateriais, they are
New officers were elected at the ds have been classified in the district senior calf class, born Sept. I to Nov. shipped vis UPS to the local library
recent meeting of the · District Six in 1981. They are owned by Merrill ao, 19110, with no junior or senior get where the request was made. OVAL
Holstein Association held at the Car· Carter, Northup; David Mills, of sires class. Plans were made to will also provide 16 rnm films and 35
nun filmstrips to library users
michael Farm near Gallipolis.
Crown City; John Pratt, South notify all county fair officials.
Elected were Leland Parker, Point; Olarles and John CarAlso discussed we're plans for during 1981 by a contract with the
president; Roy Holter, vice michael, Gallipolis; and Roy Holter another district shown in 1981 with a State Library of Ohio. Catalogs
president; Donnie Milburn, second and Sons, Pomeroy.
district 'picnic to be held in June, . listing the films are available in all
OVAL member libraries.
'
vice president; Loralee Car michael,
Mills announced seven new r'nern- Dairy Month.
Direct services to library users
secretary-treasurer.
berships in Gallia County for 1981.
.will
continue with federal funds in
David Mills is the District 6 dire" There were a total of. 32 herds in
Patty Parker will represent
tor to the state association. Four District 6 in 1980. It was noted that District 6 in the Holstein queen con- 1981. OVAL's Mail·A·Book service,
in cooperotion with local public
voting delegates appointed to the the National Holstein Friesian has test to be held at the state con·
libraries, extends the traditional
state convention were Parker, changed the show classes as follows : vention. Next meeting will be on
book lending service of the public
Holter, Bill Kautz and John Car·
Junior heifer calf, born after Feb. March 19 at the Diamond Savings
michael.
L
28, 1981 ; intermediate calf. born be- and Loan Co. Riverboat Room in
22" Weekender, 24" 26" and 28" Pullman, 29"
It was noted that seven dairy her- tween Dec. 1, 1980 and Feb. 28, 1981 ; Pomeroy.
Overseas and 41" Garment Carrier. Totes, and
.,
(Continued from page I)
Cosmetic Cases. Good selection of styles for
iusted township payments in
men an.d women in burgundy, canvas, tweed,
January of 1979 and gave the!D
br.own and blue colors. Many with brief cases
$2,400 for one payrnment and then II
to match.
Charles F. Keeder, 18, Pomeroy and investigator Gary Wolle.
payments at the $1,200 level," be
iloth
were
lodged
in
jail
over
the
Also Just Received
and Clifford W. Longenette, 19,
said.
Reedsville were apprehended in con- weekend.
Oleg"Cassini totes and briefcases.
I
The two appeared before Judge
nection with nwneruus thefts at the
Meigs County Emergency Medical John G1 Bacon, Meigs County Com- ·
Service office Jan. 26 through Jan. moo Pleas Court, on bills of in·
31, the Meigs County . Sheriff's fonnation. Judge Bacon released
Luggage Dept.- 2nd Floor
them pending pre-sentence inDepartment reported today.
1
Longenette was employed at the vestigations.
Deputies investigated a breaking
EMS office at the time of his arrest.
Keeder and Longenette were and entering at the Richards E.
arrested by Sheriff James Proffitt Collins residence, Point Rock Rd.,

I

I

:61•bniis=

ELBERFELD$

BIG SHIPMENT OF LUGGAGE BY

IRWAY INDU5TRIESN~

R
BA

ONE
STOP
SHOPPING

........ .

.'' ·
~

\

.

~

ONE
STOP
SHOPPING

JOY

Parker .heads Holstein association

BOLT·

DISHWASHING
. DETERGENT
22 oz.
Reg. s1 19

PAPER TOWELS ':

89e

Two Pack
Reg. sp9

89e

_FEBR

Weir•••

Reedsville men enter.. guilty pleas

r

TAX TIME IS HERE!

Md.; Darla t;vans and Jessica
Evans, both at home; a stepJohn R. Villars, 67, Route 1, Long daughter, Cathy Matthews, Racine;
. Bottom, died unexpectly at . his his parents, Johnnie and Thelma
residence on Monday.
Evans, Racine; a niece, Vicki
He was born in West Virginia and Damron, Racine, and a nephew,
was a fannerfor most of his life.
Meredith Settle, Oak Hill.
He is survived by his wife, Bonnie;
He was a member of the Syracuse
a daughter, Geraldine Miller, Long Missions Church. A sister preceded
Bottom; two stepsons, Jinuny , him in death .
Buchanan, at home, and Danny St.
l'uneral services will be held at II
Clair, at home; a stepdaughter, Jen- a.m. Thursday at the Ewing Funeral
riifer St. Clair, and another stepson, Home with the Rev.Jimmie F.
Bill Matheny, Stewart. Also sur· Evans, II officiating. Burial will be
viving are lJ grandchildren, two in the Gilmore Cemetery.
great-grandchildren, a brother and
Friends may call at the funeral
five sisters. A brother preceded him home anytime after 7 this evening.
in death.
TRUSTEES TO MEET
Funeral services will be held at I
The
Bedford Township Trustees
p.m. Thursday at the White Funeral
have
organized
for the new business
Home in Coolville. Friends may call
year.
at the funeral home anytime after 12
Charles Williarns is the reelected
noon Wednesday.
president and Nonnan Wood is the
vice president. Stanford Stockton
James Evans
has been named fire prevention of·
ficer.
Jimmy Franklin .Evans, Miner·
The trustees will meet at 6 p.m. on
sville, killed in an accident Monday
the
first Saturday of each month at
on the Ohio River near the Kaiser
the
home
of the clerk.
Alwninum Plant is survived by his
wife, Tessie; five sons, Jlnunie F.
MEETING CHANGED
A meeting of the Southem Local
Evans, II, Pomeroy; Johnnie, Vim,
Tim and Jeff, all at home; a stepson, District Junior High Athletic
Billy Wallace, Baltimore, Md.; four Boosters has been changed from this
daughters, Gail Arnott, Harrisqn- evening until tomorrow evening at
ville;· Sharon Beavers, Baltimore, the junior high school.

A movie, " Prophecy of Doomed
America" will be shown at 7 p.m.
Thursday at , the Midway Cornmunity Church located un County
Road 10 in the Langsville area. The
pastor, A. A. Hughes, invites the
public.

OXYDOL
L·AUNDRY
DET.ERGENT

A meeting of the parents of fifth
and sixth grade students at Pomeroy
Elementary scheduled for this
evening has been cancelled and will
be rescheduled.
MONEY SOUGHT
A suit in the amowrt of $14,553.40
was f.iled in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by the Racine Home
National Bank against Gary A. and
Betty J. McClelland.
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted--Kenneth Braun,
Pomeroy ; Charles Neulzling,
Langsville; . Lenora McKnight,
Pomeroy; Louise .Myers, Pomeroy;
Patrick Soulllby, Middleport; 'Roy
Frecker, Minersville; Mary Jane
Howell, Pomeroy.
Discharged-Dorothy Greene, Clif·
ford Rockhold, Beverly Danner,
Leonard Gilmore.

ARE YOU FULLY
COVERED?

Automobile Accidents
~-.........
can be expensive- and if you're not
fully insured it can mean financial
disaster. We invite you to bring in your
' policy for a free, no
obligation, professional
evaluation.

REUTER-BROGAN
INSURANCE
SERVICE

10 lb. 11 oz.

Vegetable, Garlic Bread,
Gil$ of Wine, Soft Drink,
Coffee or Tea

SMUCKER$ 3 LB. GRAPE JELLY
OR STRAWBERRY JAM 2 LB.
Your Choice

$529

less Smucker Refund
Your Cost Only

SPECIAI.-......_..,&lt;"'1/r~

Salad 'Bar, All the Spaghetti You Can Eat,

MEETINGS CANCELLED
The meeting of TOPS OH570,
Pomeroy, s~heduled for this evening
has been cancelled.

V ALENTI'NES DAY
IS FEBRUARY 14th.

Not responsible for prin'ting errors.
We f@$erve the right to limit quantities

(Not cWa llable in Wellsto, store )

WEEKEND AT MEIGS INN
------FRIDAY

REMEMBER

XEROX COPIES

Area deaths

John R. Villars

PRICES IN EFFECT
FEB. 3rd THRU FEB. 15th

$725

BAND • AID BRAND
Plus Tax

Entertainm·ent
Friday &amp;Satu

WHITE CLOUD
BATHROOM

PLASTIC OR
SHEER STRIPS

TISSUE

'

Box of 70

4 Roll Pack

''

All lEGAL

FRU.T H PHARMACY
...
"THE EVERYTHING STORE"

111 SIXTH AVE.
HUNTINGTON, W.VA.

BEVERAGES

SERVED

THE MEIGS INN
Phone 992·3629

Pomeroy, Oh.

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

99e

25tl JACKSON AilE.
POINT PLEASANT, W.VA.

120 W. 2nd ST.
WELLSTON, OHIO

' ' ,

UHACKSON PIKE

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

·'

.

";, .. '

'

' I

•

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