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                  <text>No new taxes in Ohio budget
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
Rhodes Administration took the
wraps off a precarioualy·balllnced
state budget today but It called for
no new taxes and an end on June 30
to the temporary tax hikes enacted
In December to cover a current
budjjet deficit.
The two-year spending plan
prop&lt;l'lell all funds spending In the
blennlwn starting July 1 of ~.5
bUllon, up 16.9 percentfrom the $17.5
billion appropriated for the 1979-1981
. budget period.
Expenditures from the state's
general fund would toll!! $12.7 ·
bUllon, also a 18.9 percent increase
from $10.9 bUllon in 19'19-1981.
The difference between the
general fund and all fund totals

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Efforts move into courtroom
PlllLADELPHIA - Efforts to end a strike by maintenance workers
and bus drivers that has kept ·225,000 Philadelphia chlldren out of
school moved into a courtroom TueedaY night, where a judge pressed
negotiators to reach an agreement.
Common Pleas Judge Stanley M. Greenberg met In his chambers
with representatives of the union and the board of education.
Earlier Tufsday, the school board had aMounced It would furlough
all employees without pay for the duration of the walkout.

47~.
CASCADE
SHWASHER
DETERGENT
65

oz.

$219

$100
FOR

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LIMITED QUANTITY!

SYLVANIA
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BAYER NON-ASPIRIN
PAIN
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Kidnapped girl found unharmed
" La . ..,. A 17-montb-old girl snatched from her home by a
ETAIRIE,
gwunan who stuffed her into a gilt-wrapped box was found unhurt af·
ter a man telephoned her anxious parents and said she was too Ptetty
to kiU, authorities say.
"He caUed and told us ...she was such a beautiful baby, otherwise he
would have wasted her," the toddler's father, Ron Hocwn, said late
Tuesday.
He and his wife found their daughter, Lori, sobbing and wandering
alone at the Lake Forest Shopping Center several hours after Hocum
made a televised appeal for her safe return.

GAllON JUG
Distilled
Water

ooor oonsolidates directors' jobs
I

COLUMBUS, Ohio - The Ohio Department of Transportation is consclidating the jobs o( some deputy district directors in an effort to save
money for the agency.
ODOT Director David L. Weir said Tuesday that three deputy directors have asswned duties in districts where openings created in recen!
months have not been filled. Each man will be in charge of 16 counties.
Max D. Morehead, deputy director of District I, will assume similar
duties in District 2 in northwestern Ohio. William Braylhaw, deputy
director of District 8, will take over District 91n southwestern Ohio.
Delbert L. Leistner, chief of District 7, will become deputy director
of District 6 in in central and west central Ohio.

Strike handicaps some students
Mariemont High School seniors seeking to enroll in college and
juniors applying for future scholarshipa are handicapped by the fact
that they ~idn't get their first semester grades before teachers struck
Jan. 28.
Since then, the school board has fired SO of the district's 9'1 teachers
as a result of the walkout. The Mariemont Education Association has
filed suit in Hamilton County Corrunon Pleas Court seeking reinstatement.

GOP leaders won't allow resolution
COLUMBUS, Ohio - Republicans who control the Ohio Senate have
refused to allow routine approval of a resolution honoring fonner
President Jinuny Carter for his successful end to the hostage crisis.

Instead, on a motion Tuesday by Senate President Pro Tern Thomas
A. Van Meter, R-Ashland, the resolution was sent to the rules committee for its consideration.
Senate Minority Leader Harry Meshel, D-Youngstown, ,offered the
proposal. He later said the Senate departed from normal procedure by
not allowing routine, voice vote approval of a member's
congratulatory resolution.

BOX .of 50

1'U9 ·VALUE

.

OUR USINE
BEGINS WITH
FilliNG YOUR
PRESCRI,PTIONS

•

FRUTH·PHARMACY
''THE EVERYTHING STORE"

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HUNTINGTON, W.VA. ·
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POINT PLEASANT, W.VA.
(

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2 Sections. 16 pages
Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, February 4, 1981

1981

.

FICTION AND NON-FICTION

DEWEY
DISTILLED
WATER

~
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Cop~ righted

HARDBACK AND
PAPERBACK

$399

en tine

Vol.l9, No. 206

BOOK
SALE

10°0 VALUE

at y

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BOX OF 200

I .

9 oz.
REG .
1
1.69

bienniwn, said it was "a less meat
Of the $1.8 billion in general fund 1982 for institutitional employees million, or 12.8 percent, from the
and more potatoes budget."
revenue growth, 47 percent would go only. These are workers in the current blenntwn. But he said "the
He said it was balanced only to welfare under the Rhodes · departments of mental health, men, level ri funding will not be aufflclmt
through reductions in the ·rate of · document.
tal retardation and developmental to maintain the current state share
state spending, reduced waste,
Kelp said the boost Is required to disabilities, rtehabllitation and of higher education costa. Higher
e)lmlnation of some minor agencies fund substantial increases In corrections, and the Ohio Youth student fees will result, but the euct
amount of the Increase will be
and what he caUed productivity lm· caseloads expected to result from
Commission.
"Other agencies wiU have to a~ decided by boarda of trustees after
provernent.
the recession which he predicted will
But he said the spending plan will be slow corning to an end.
sorb these costs,'' Keip said, leaving they detennlne their Individual lnprovide "the most basic needs of
"Apart from welfare, the general open a question of whether funds will stltuUonal b\l(lgets."
Referring to the $300 million Inthose families affected by the fund bu!lget increases by only 12.8 be available.
crease
for primary and secondary
Recipients
of
aid
to
dependent
·
recession."
percent in the next two years, su~ .
The proposal leaves intact the stantiaUy below anticipated In- children would get' an Increase of 5 education, Rhodes' budget chief said
state's contributions. to the Local flation. Alld this low rate of Increase percent In the second year of the "this Is less than bas been provided
Government Fund, which hsd been Is over actual current spending, af· . -bieMium, while . those receiving in recent years and less than w•r
threatened. earlier by a proposal to ter the budget reductions this year," general relief would gel a hike of 10 would hsve Uked."
But he said the admllnistration
percent under the governor's
nearly cut them in half. And it funds Keipsaid.
tried to minimize the Impact by'
for another two years the 10 percent
With regard to the state employee proposal.
property tax :rollback the state star- pay raise, Keip said the budget funKeip said state aid to higher eliminating - some mandated·
(Continued on page 16)
ted aUocating to the counties In 19'12.
education
was increased $236
ds a 10 percent hike starting In July .

FA.CI AL ·TISSUES

B&gt;••u

CREME SOAP
ON TAP

.·

reflect revenues received by the
state other than from taxes, such as
federal grants and fees charged for
state services.
Some of the important features of
the new budget include a 10 percent
state employee pay ralie but maybe
not for everyone and in any case not
until 1983,' the same in benefits for
welfare recipients starting July I,
1982, a shortfaU in higher education
funding which meims certain
student fee increases, and a hlke of
only, PlO million for primary and
secondary education, about the
boost It received In 19'79-1981.
· State Budget Director WUllam D.
Keip., referring to the recession
· which cut tax revenues and ereated
a deficit of nearly $700 million this

264JACKSON PIKE
GIILLIPOLIS,OHIO

Burley market will cose Thursday
OPEN 7 DAYS
A WEEK!

RIPLEY, Ohio -:- The Ohio Burley Tobacco Market announced it
will close for the season after sales Thursday, Feb. 5, but will handle
offerings made afterward.
·
·
A market spokesman said tobacco offered for sale after the closing
date will be purchased at the average $186 per hundred rate, depending on quality.
.
Sales continued to dip Tuesday. Growers sold 68,250 pounds for
$113,315.06 for a hundred pound average of $186.03.

Ohio lottery winner
CLEVELAND - The winning number drawn Tuesday night In the
Ohlo's lottery daily game "The Number" was 299. The lottery reported earnings of $1117,373 from the money wagered. Lottery officials
!Wild sales came to $784,564. Holders of winning tickets are entitled to
share$147,191.

Weather
Clear and cold tonight. Lows near zero. Sunny and not so cold Thur·
sday. Highs~. Chance of snow near zero percent tonight and Thursday.
EKieDded Ohio Foreca1t - Frldlly through Sunday:Chance of snow
flurries northeaat each day and fair over the remainder of the stale.
Highs in the 30s FridaY and Sunday and in the upper 308 to mid-40a
Saturday. Lows In the teena Friday and in the 20s Saturday and SUnday.

MEETS wrm MAYORS - President RoDBid Reagan meeta In tbe
Cabinet Room allhe White House Tuesday with a group of U. S. Mayon.
From lellare Mayan Margaret H.lnce of Phoeolx; Ariz.; William Hud- ·

oe~ W ollndlaaapolla, had.; Pete Wl!loa of San Diego, Calli.; Rea(IU;
Edward Kocb of New York'CIIy; Ttm Bradley of Lo11 Aqeles, caW., and
Richard Carver of Peoria, Dl. (AP Laserpboto),

Cuts may inflict economic suffering
WASffiNGTON (AP ) -Govern- to be the most painful political
ment officials on both ends of the process through which any of us will .
federal funnel - giving and ever go," Rep. James R. Jones, 1).
receiving - predict the deep budget Okla., said Tuesday as the House
cuts sought by President Reagan . Budget Corrunitlee he heads began
will Inflict political pain on Congress , studying its own list of potential
and economic suffering on program cutbacks.
At the White House, meanwhile,
Americans.
Among the targets reported under big-city mayors. received the bad
consideration by Reagan budget- news from Reagan about his plans
cutters are such politically popular for sharp reductions in urban aid.
programs as Social Security, food New.York Mayor Edward Koch said
stamps, child nutrition and the president promised '' those who
are truly in need will not be asked to
economic aid to fanners and cities.
suffer,
but all others, hopefully, will
"We begin what may well turn out
suffer equally."

Reagan, who must persuade a
reticent Congress to support the
reductions, was to meet with
congressional leaders in the Capitol
thls afternoon to discuss his
economic proposals.
The president also plans to make a
televised address to the nation Thur·
sday night to speD out his general
view of the economy's problems and
why llis proposed cures are
necessary to lower inflation and

unemployment and restore healthy
economic growth. He Is to submit a
package of tax cuts •. offsetting
budget reductions and regulatory
changes to Congress Feb. 18.
Getting O!ngress to enact the
budget cuts, however, will not be
easy, Jones said as the Budget Cornmittee reviewed 105 suggestionS
from congressional economists on
how to prune billions of doUais from
the budget.
'

Commission has busy session
One bid for a new tractor and
mower for the Meigs County Highway Department was rejected and
another tabled Tuesday following a
bid opening by the Meigs County
Commissioners.
Bids were received fr&lt;m R. L.
Parsons and Son Equipmewnt Co.,
of West Jefferson and Southeastern
Equip Co., GallipoUs.
Richard Jones made a motion to
reject the bid of R. l.. Parsons since
it did not meet specifications while
the bid of Southeastern Equipment
Co.,was tabled for additional study.
The motion was seconded by Dave
Koblentz.
Conunissloners, in other bid ac. tion, accepted the only bid received
for a new sheriff's cruiser from Pat
Hill Ford, Inc., totaling $8,035.
Bob Wingett, representing
Syracuse VIUage Council: presented
commissioners a copy of a
resolution passed by that council
which proposed that a two mile section of T-123 in Sutton Township be
transferred from the township to the
county.
Wingett said this was the only exit
road out of Syracuse during a flood
and tlult the road has excessive traffic during periods of noodlng.
Wingett also noted that the Sutton
Township Trustees had Indicated
· they were not able to maintain the
rnads during the periods of excessive traffic due to a shortage of
funds. ·

Conunissioners will review the
matter in detail upon receipt of a formal request from the trustees.
Also meeting with the board was
John Hankla who requested a rightof-way off SR 7 onto county owned
property In Salisbury Township ·in
order to construct a building for use
as a stereo store.
Hankla was instructed to provide
the county engineer with a plat and
drainage plan .The matter will also
be referred to the prosecutor.
Carlos Snowden and B. S. Dent,
residents of the Hartinger Addition
in Chester Township, requested
their road be designated as a township road.
It was suggested that the matter
be referred to the prosecuting at·
torney regarding procedures. ·They
were told to niake a lonna! request
with the Chel!ter Township Trustees.
The boards will take action following
the recorrunedation of the trustees.
Scott Lucas, administrator at
Veterans Memorial Hospital,
discussed parking problem:J and
traffic flow problems at the hospital.
The corrunissioners will meet later
with Lucas to see if corrective
measures can be found .
In other business, the commissioners declared Feb. 8 through
the 14 as Scout Anniversary week.
Attending were Henry Wells,
president, Jones and Koblentz, commissioners, Mary Hobstetter, clerk
and Martha Chambers.

FORMER SYRACUSE MAYOR HONORED-Herman LoodoD, oeated, :
honored by the memben of tile Syracllle Fire Departmeat wa• praea~ .
with a very attracUve plaque Tuesday Digbt. London served u mayor of the vUiage 18 and oae-baU yean, cOUDcil member 10 yean and 111811811er .:
\)1 Londoa Pool lor three yean. Tile illlcrlplion read "ID appreclallea of : ·
your many years of loyal and dedicated service to Syracue." Tbe pool Ia : .
Syracuse was named for Londoa 1bortly lifter II was buUI. LoodoD, 'IIIIo · :
tu.s been ill ill beallb lor aomeUme, waa vlllbly moved by tile preteD- : •
tatlon. London ataled that lie didn't earu lbe boaor by blmlelf. "I credit 1 ; :
lui of the accompll1bmenla to the flae aulllaDee pven me lhrollgbOD&amp; tile - ·
years I served aa mayor" Loodoa oblerved. Pictured with Londoa are, :
left, Bill Hubbard, athletic director for Syracuse Part, l'lho made tile •
preseataUoa, and Gene Imboden, Syracuse Fire Chief.
•

'

I

�.

Commentary

'
Wednesday, Februar.y 4, 1981

•

The Dally sentinel

T~etNo.l·-~de~ng
0·~---~---~--~~-m_~_t~K~~~~~~~k
in

WASffiNGTON - H a high moral The following year, mi.litary
tone ever is to be restored in ·this retirement benefits won the same
country, sexual promiscuity on treatment. A couple of cK!ter
programs were added in the '60s, but
Cspi(ol Hill will have to stop.
At the moment, 26 federal as recently as 19'10 the indexed
progral119 are uindexed," wh1c~ is to benefits constituted only 3 percent of
say, their benefits are linked direc- total budget outlays.
These programs have now gotten
tly to what used to be known as the
Cost of Living Index and now is completely out of hand. In the
known as the Consumer Price Index current fiscal year more than $200
(CPI). The system is itnposing a biUion wiU be paid out under the CPI
ruinous drain upon the 'Ireasury. It fonnula. By 1986, when the total
budget is expected to exceed one
cries out for review and revision.
The device of indexing is of fairly trillion dollars, indexed outlays- if
recent vintage. Prior to 1962, as a left unchanged - will come to an
White House report recently ex- estimated $3-13 billion.
Six of the 14 programs are indexed ·
plained, real benefit levels in federal
entitlement programs were not ad- semiannually. This is what the tax·
justed for inflation in any systematic payers have pro'l'ided for doublemaMer. Then an act · was passed dippers who have returned from
tying civil service retirement military or civilian employment in
benefits to the Cost of Living Index. the federal government. In March of

Way others see it: .

•

COLUMBUS DISPATCH- "Ohio Attorney General WiUiam J. Brqwn
was at least singed by recommending that a widow of a slain Cleveland
mobster be paid $50,000 under the state's critne victims .program. He contended he had no option under the law, which he now wants amended.
"His amendment, which will be introduced in the Ohio Senate, would
· prohibit mobsters, critninals or irunates and their families from
benefiting under the law.
"Brown said the way the law·wa.s written and interpreted by courts left
him no alternative but to recommend approval of the maximwn parrnent
of$50,000 to the widow.
"The proposed amendment would make a critne victim or his family
ineligible for payments if there would be good cause to believe the victim
was )nvolved in critninal activities, if he had a felony record or associated
with convicted critninals. Also; no jail or prison inmate would qualify under the program.
"Brown says his proposal would confine payments to law-abiding
citizens, which is as it should be. The law certainly was not designed to
reward families of mobsters.
"The Ohio General Assembly should promptly adopt the amendment."
LANCASTER EAGLE-GA-ZETI'E - "Late last year the state teTJ&gt;o
porarily raised some taxes - basically the one on sales - to prevent a
deficit and undoubtedly throw more people out of work. Unemployment Is
already a major problem and costly to state and federal coffers and to
communities relying on those wages and the taxes they provide. TeTJ&gt;o
porary imposition of taxes was better than the economic hardship ad·
ditional budget cuts threatened.
"No matter what they say in Columbus about letting these temporary
increases expire in mid-year, and even if they do, there's littie doubt the
legislative and executive branches are considering new taxes-for Ohioans
"Our public officials - locally, state-wise and federally - better wake
up, keep their promises or recognize the people can't continue paying
more of what they 'ain't got,' ...
"Yes, we could sanction temporary state tax hikes to forestall sudden,
unexpected sbortfalls otherwise requiring WJStudied, hasty cilts. Ad-vocacy of new ta•es for fut~ budget spending is something else.
"Raising taxes now will injure Jar more people down the road than
realistically looking ahead and making budget adjustments to prevent
permanent or even temporary tax increases until the entire economy
recovers.
"We'll promptly hear that citizens will be unhappy when, without increased revenues, government is forced to cut services. That's true, undoubtedly, but it's still what those citizens are saying. You don't have to
look any further than last Nov. 4th' selection results for proof."
GREENVIlLE ADVOCATE - " If s~e-issue amendments to the U.S.
Constitution are undesirable, what co.,.., can be taken in dealing with
controversial issues such as abortion an4 busin~?
" The Paily Advocate believes that a.mllre general amendment dealing
with judicial power holds the answer. The busing issue best illustrates the ·
point.
" We believe that busing creates more problems than it solves and that
it is in no way mandated by the Constitution. Many, perhaps most, share
this view.
"Rather, busing is a creation of the court system. Federal judges have
ordered school districts to draw up plans based on racial quotas. In some
cases, judges have drawn up their own plans where school distMcts
failed. ·
.
"Judges have, in effect, set themselves up as legislators. ThiS judicial
legislation does not allow public input in the legislative process, a must in
a democratic government.
"Many would like to have pointed out that pleas based on racial quotas
are hardly means to inspire people to forget racial barriers. Many would
like to point out that an expanded transportation requirement increases
costs and risks of school systems, hardly a way to itnprove their quality.

Leuer to editor
Dedicated teachers

Dear Editor:
One of the girls, Frances Evans
In 1929, yes, I remember, school
Cole,
died several yean ago. I don't
teachers were dedicated teachen.
know
where the other girls are. One
Mrs. Everett Tracy taught at the
of
the
boys was my soo, 1bomas
LAurel Cliff two room school, 30
Gene
Parker,
who oerved 28 years in
scholars, elgbt in the eighth grade.
service for hla country and retired
Mr. Tracy came back to the IChool
with the rank of muter se111eant.
~ every eveliDg for two weeks
The
otber boy was Robert Burdette
to prepare
dlildren for their
who
Ia
a member of the Meigs
eigbth grade IUIIIinatlon. They had
ty
Scllool
Board. These children
to go to the Central School in
walked
to
and
from school which
Pomeroy, a strange school and
was
six
miles
a
day.
- Mrs. Bertha
strange teachen. They aU p8S8ed
·
Parker,
Pomeroy,
Ohio.
for Pomeroy HJgh School.

u-

eoun:

The Daily Sentinel
lllCeOJ;tA-.

.._,Olio

llt-fli.IIW
DEYOTEDTO 1111: INTEIIE8TOP 'l1IE MEIGS-IIIASON Ali.EA

111b

B!m~

"!!V

ROBERT L. WINGETT
hbllobor

PAT WHITEHEAD

BOBHOEFUCH

Altlltu1 PUUtltttr/CoacroUer

Gneral Mau.aer

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
N"" EdJior
A MIIMBBR ol Tbo Auacloted ..,..,,, l.lloDII DooDy " - Auoelolloll ood 111e
Amerk:aN_,.,.,hbllobm .u...louoa.

LBTI1I1II or OPINION on ...- . T1oey lboold bo . _ -• - !toe· o111
lotion ....... ud - 1 • .•
will - · - ... _ .....
......,._
..-.......

-.No=-wlllllopo-~lbooWIIolal
-.
.......-·--

1977 they got an increase of 4.8 per-

trouble. The principle is fine.
But as the White House report
makes clear, a system that protects
federal beneficiaries raises equity
isSues for everybody else. Very little
private income is so protected.
Moreover, because the Consumer
Price Index overstates the 1mparlance of home ownership - as if
everybody bought a new house every
month at whatever the mortgage in-

cent, the following oCtober another
boost of 4.3 percent. In March of
1978, the raise was 2.4 percent, in OcIober another 4.9 percent. So it was
in 19'19 - an increase of 3.9 percent
in March, another boost of 6.9 percent in OCtober. Last year these
retirees bad increases of 6.0 perceJ1(
in the spring and 7. 7 percent in the
fall. They are now due for another
raise next month.
The effect or all this has been to ARMS LIMITATION
keep the. retired federal personnel . CERTAINLY II..II':IT
not merely .abreast of inflation but
well ahead of inflation. Since 1965,
the CPI has grown from a base of 100
to a level last !aU of 263.6. Put less J
mathematically, the market basket
that cost $10 in 1965 cost $26.36 in
1!180, But for the double dippers,
there has been a happier aspect:
Their indexed benefits have grown
to 286.8. They have stayed 23 points
ahead of the game.
The largest of the indexed
programs, ri course, is Social
Security. Automatic aMual increases, tied to the CPI, became effective in July of 1975. The retired
worker who was receiving monthly
benefits in 1975 of $153 was receiving
$179.90 last .swruner. In this same
peMod the CPI had increased in
roughly the same proportion.
Now, presumably everyone wants
to be fair to old ladies, retired
railway engineers, aging petty officers from the Coast Guard, and
miners · down with the black lung
disease. H the child nutrition
program were not linked in some E,~
fashion to the increasing cost of I-IIU,ME
~
food, the program would soon be in
foRt
9r~lll-'rwi.it&lt;l• ...•--

terests rates might be - the index
provides a distorted reflection of actual living costs.
In sum, the formula for computing
the government's chief index of
pMces ought to be revised. The six
semiaMual prngrams should be
brought.back to annual adjustments.
And some discretion should be
vested in the president to recommend adjustments at less than the
I

e:.uN CONiT1lC)L'?

1

whole change the CPI: Othenriae
the upward spiral of uncontrollable
federal outlays will climb out of
sight.
',
Obviously none of this has ,
anything to do with se1ual '
promiscuity on Capitol Hill, but this
problem of indexing is so Important
to any understanding of the budget
that perhaps a booked lead may be •
forgiven.

~l~~~~~~~

struse, has been offered lor gold's
decline
High .interest rates are one of ,the
first factors .mentioned: At the
moment, money-mark_e t Investments are ytelding constderably
more~~ the rate of inflation.
That s lffiportant, because one of
the principa~ arguments ~ gol~'s
favor IS thaltt serves as an mflation
hedge. Right now, however, an Iiivestor in the 33 percent income-tax
boose
·
bracket can c
among several
money-market mutual funds
yielding 18 percent or better.
The dollar, meanwhile, is strong
for a change against most foreign

things.' '

" May I hav~ a pretzel, please?" I
asked.
She handed me one wrapped in a
page from last month's Vogue
magazine, and accepted my 50 cents. "Don't get me wrong. I don't
have anything agalnat Adolfo. As a
matter of fact, I'll probably change
into one of his suits when I mov'e my
cal't ovtl' to Lafayette Park later
this afternoon."

"People do look a lot more pulled
together since the Reagans moved
into Washington," I said, as I ate my
pretzel.
"Oscar de Ia Renta Is supposed to
stop by and show me some fabMc for
a coat I'm having designed for when
l sell pretzels outside the F Street
Club."
"I likeOscar'sthings," I said.
"Myra .says she prefers Jimmy
Galanos, but I don't think he's right
for pretzels."
"What does Myra sell?"
"CsrnatioriS at 18th and Pennsylvania Avenue. She found her first Galanos gown at Goodwill Industries, and she's been loyal to him
ever since."
"Isn't keeping up with the
Reagans going to be quite e•·
pensive?" I asked her.
"I'll probably be cMtlclzed by
some of the other pushcart dealers,
but I think when you have money
you should spend It any way you
want to. It's been a long time since
we women have been pennltled to
dress up, and I'm going to make the
lllllllt ol it. "

'

N.Y. hlanders
Philadelphia
· C.Iglt')'

WLTGF GAPio
34138261 17376
30
22
It
19

Wullin3ton

N.Y, Rangers

14 8 201 1~2 81
20 11 II% 182 55
21 13 Ill 114 51
:1:1 ! 192 :ioo48

Sunday 10 am-10 pm

Sm~ Dlvllloll

St. Low.

31 12 9 Z30 Ill 71
21 16 18 201 llll 58

Vancouver
Olicago
E:dmonloo
Colorado
Winnipeg

Z2 2-4

298 SECOND ST.

7 ... 212 51

16 26 9 Uli 214 41
16 28 8 173 22040
6 36 10 162 244&gt;22
WalaCoufereoce

POMEROY, 0.

Nonia Dlflaloa
:n· 16 7 Z3$ 201 71

21 16
17 2e

PRICES EFFECTIVE ntRU SAT., FEB. 7 1981
I

6 119 161 82
8 1118 2.'!1 42

IS 218 11 tgt 247 41
14 '1:1 11 lt2 215 39

AdiiDU Olvtaloa
:1:1 10 18 103 1:18 •

Mlnneaola

2$ 14 12 18$ 161 62

Bootoo
Toronto
Qoleboc

a

23 20

17 27

tat

201

54

9 2f» 241 43
13 201 13 110 223 39
T\aeldly'a Games

Detroit 5, Tornnlo 3
NY blanders 8, f..os Angele! I
Edmonton 3, St.l.Auis 3, tie

· , Moatreal 5, Colorado 2

Wuhington 3, Vancouver 3, tie
Wedlltldly'a Gamet
NY Islanders 111 NV Rangera

Bo8ton at Hartford

• Minnesota Bl Qut"bec
Edmonton at Chicago
Pittabur(lh at WiMir_eg
•'
Tburadliy 1 Gam~ •
NY Rangen at Ba!ton
l..ol!l Angeles at Delroil
Minnesota 1t Montreal
Buffalo al Philadelphia
Torooto at St .Louis
• Wsshin!Jlon at Calgary

% Pork Loin ......~.~.l

NaU001IBuketNII Allot'la UoD

Center Cut Rib

Eaatera Collferen«
AUaat.lc Dlvl•loo

W

Boolon

New York

32
16

W.Hihlngton
New Jersey

15

v"'

l2
19
13

Atlllnla

Detroit

1 don't blame you," I said. "I
notice you're wearing a skirt. You
always used to wear pants in the
wintertime."
''Pants are out,'' Mary said. ••Particularly at lunch time. If Women's
Wear Daily took a picture of me in
pants, I'd never hear the end of it.
The important thing is for clothes to
match. Ruffles are replacing
sequins. That's why my sweater is
so ruffled."
"Who designed the Redskin wool
hatforyou?"
"Yves St. Laurent. He said he
wanted me to have something that
was not glitzy or show.off, and it's
perfect if you miss your hairdresser's appointment."
l decided to have another pretzel.
"l don't want to be critical," I
said, "but I notice you're still .
wearing crepe-soled boots."
"That was Halston's idea. He said
It was the best way of showing tile
Californians that we in the EllS!
have a laid-back look too, and we intend to stick with it."

developments as the full decontrol of
oil pMces economists warn that the
' . ind
rts
~ns=
mon:. ~uld
downrl ht nast
The; are, :~wever, other signs
that hopes are mounting for better
news later on. Stock prices of oil
com nies which soared for most of
have' recently been taking a
he .
:f.ng. ll . facio them It's und ttath ad bthislthat g in • tm 1
ers n a e
many ves en
advisers who have been advocates of
.
gold have turned cautious or just
plaiD negative on II.
Still~ some. diehard gold bugs are
standing thetr ground, among them

I!*J;

~;r~eD~~=~=~~:~~~~a~~
DOONESBURY

..

~ 7,.,

29

.473

19

41

.2611

:1)~

:t!
71

".723
.582

7.,

.5011

II

32

.~

IS

.352

17
20

.232

27

.,

35

20

HllU5too

.636

19

.463

-

15
15
13

"'
32
3:l

.455
.411
.3'71
.148

HI
12
It

20

8 ..

9\oi

2).,

Padflt Olvillta

Phoenix
Loe ftnweles

41
36

PortJarld

21
13
II

v

Golden St.Hte
San Dlet!!O
Stattle

$}79

Tastee Treat Chunk

Sen Antonio

Kansas City
Uiah
Denver
0.118.'1

.

29

Pork Chops ...,......~..

-

Wtttera CoDiertDM
Mld•e•l DlvUioa

16
18
:1:1
17
31

.719
.68'1

-

.519

11..,

.509

12

.4211

li

,4()4

161&gt;
171&gt;

3\1

Tllnday'• Gam"
New Yoril 101, San Oiel!o 91
Phlladelphi11 97, AUanl.a 93

Illdl.all8 1011, Milwaukee 99

USDA Choice Boneless

.

$

Chuck Roast....... ~;.l

79

Bucket ·

Kansas Ci t)' 121 , 0..1bu 100
Stan Antonio 102, Dt!troit 99

Howtoo I:JS, Denver 128, c.rr
PIH"tland 111 . Wu hln~on 104. OT

Cube Steak.........~~2

Wedlll'!lll.y'• Gamro.

Chicago tt l Cleveland
lA'I Anl(ele:t at ln&lt;Jhuw
San Diea~o 111 New Je~y
Bo8ton Nl PhilBdf':!phiH
Detrtllt Mt KIIOlllll City
O.lla:s at Howton
S.n Anlooio at Ot:nvcr
111Bh at Phoenix

.

Portland Ht Golden StJ4te
at &amp;!uttle

Wa:dU~ton

.

Bologna............. ~~. 7

29

$}59

Ground Chuc ... ~•.

TINrtday'tGame
&amp;!ton 111 Milwaukee
Oltlo Collcae Buket... ll
l'lwldliy'a RftuiCI

MHI-Ohlo Co...
Cedarv ille M, Mt. Vernun Nat. 87
Rio Grande 68. Urball.ll67
Walllh 71, Tiffinft!l
Hno~lrr-Burkeyr &lt;.:oaf,
Ande~n

69, F'lndlay 64

Wilmington II~. Mandle!tler 106
Pfftldeauf Coal.
Hiram711, Thlel70
,

O&amp;ht.rGamu
Cincinnati 78, IAlyola-Chicago 78
llllnuis St. 74, Oeveland Sl. S7
Kentucky St. Mi, WUberfurce 64

Local bowling
S&amp;aDdllll!l
Ttam

PC.. ·

Mei~s lnn
Jim 11 Gulf

43
26

at

Reuler-Br~an

llannlng 's Three
Ruy11l Crown
M!ke'!l Tr1o

2t
14
II

Lettuce.................

HIMh l nd i\llliUIII~":um e - l&gt;cbl H en.~ ley 202; Pal
Uir!IOCl 190: M.ilrl ene Wll.!!t.lll IIIII.
UiKh serh!s - Debt Hen!tley 547: Pwt Dirson
$37 ; Mwrh•neWIIsunSI6.
Tettm hlft!h I(KIIIt! - M elj.~s lnn51 9.
Tc1un high !ICrlt'li - Meil(:l llln 1615.
Pumeruy BwwllttiC 1.-eacue
Mhll'd I ..rap~
Jan. 28, 1181
Team

-2%

P&amp;a.
!1

7./de'o Spo&lt;1 Shop
Hradquar~n

t!

Toay 'tCarry Oul
SnUth-Nei1Ulll Mntnn
Nrlloo'• Dnaa

II

It
11

I..Aifti!Shnta
II
HIJh aerk!t - Hob llt!IUiley SU, llebl Hl'IJiey

Grade A Medium

533; Beb CouC'h $4!, Pat CanonU8.
Hl«h came - Bub Hcwlley %01, U..Uy 8milh
211 : John TyrH 111, Pat Carton aDd Mary PGf'lo
ter 1r1.

Ttamterit'l - Zldco'N Sport Shnp 1932.
Te.m J!lmt - Zlde'a Spurt Shup 731.
EARL. Y WElJNESDAV

MIXEIII,f:AGUE
Jan. tl,IHI
Tetm
Zlde'11 Sporl Shup

Pt.l .
22
2G
It
I
8

JltHquarten
Smlth-Nrl••n Mntnrw

Toll)'' I Carry Ollt
l.o... Shotll

Ndaoll'1 Oru.

4

HIKII M"tll"t - Latl")' Du~~:ao SN, Hdeo Phel,_:
WI; John Tyl'f!t'
C11rul)'n lbrhner and Reny
Smllhl!llll.
,

m.

Hlt~:h

gamt -

l.arry l)ul(a.n !II, Car1t11n

llactuM!r 11$: l..arry llul••l7, Hrleo PMip1l81.

Ttam terlcol -

Headquart~rt 2117.

Team lUll! - Hcadquarltn liZ.

Zesta

Crackers.............I!·. 5

IPW!I'IIII

•
•

I

laked

s!'!'~!f'

.... su~
~-: J$1.95
D.,. 0111,

•

•
•

I

:&amp;lblis:
•••••••
•

AU LOCAIIONS

•

Eggs ..................!?;.

$
39
Wtsk ..................'!.o;..
Uqu!d Detergent

2

( Ill II )( lt\1

•

$}&amp;g
Milk .... ··~·.... ~L···

Dari.fresh •

f:.rly Wrdnrttda)'

11

•
"He's Mght ," I sat'd. "The reano
reason for the Californians to shove
Gucci shoes down our throats."
· A man came by with hla hair·
brush. Mary introduced him to me
as JuUUB, 'her hairdresser. "He
always comes by right after the Jun.
ch hour to give me a comb-out. If It
weren't for darling Juliua, I don't
know when I'd find the time to sell
pretzehl."

.

Prt. GB
10
.818 10
.Ill
1
22 ' .593 l2'r'.!

Ceacnl DivilloD
39 15

MUwalikee
lodillnH
CNcago
Cleveland

· The hosta
f
currenctes.
ges are ree,
and so are Iran's deposits that were
froren in this country. .
'
Perhaps even more to the poml,
man~ anal~ts say, there 18 a
growmg feeling that the Uruted
States is . finally ready to do
whatever .IS ~ to WID the
hattie agatnst ~lion .
As the gold pnce floundered early
this week: many dealers ID the
market said Investors were looking
head ril t0 President Reagan's
a
~a Y
.
econonuc message this week.
Tangible evidence of any progress
a_gainst inflation isn't expected any
time soon. In fact, with such recent

L

45
43

Philadelphia

portunities to express his lack of en- out of law scllbol, so I'm happy as a
thusiasm for the entire Cabinet.
clam."
"They sar they want to hit the
"You're one of the few," Regan
ground running,'' Proxmire groused
replied.
to the Senate. " Instead of hitting the
Budget Director David Stockman,
ground running, they're going to hit one of two former congressmen with
the ground and lie there in a heap.''
Csbinet-level jobs in the new adSome of the Reagan people have ministration, wasn't spared any
fired their own shots.
Sen. Dale Bwnpers, D-Ark., tried criticism.
Sen. Ernest Hollings, 0-S.C.,
to draw Treasury Secretary Donald . noted mst week that Stockman had
Regan into a discussion of the
taken piide when he was in the
senator's own finances.
House in voting against raising the
DuMng a Senate AppropMations federal debt limit, which Reagan
Committee he_aring on the outlook
now wants increased $50 billion so
for the economy, Bumpers coTJ&gt;o
the government can continue
mented, "I pay more in taxes than I
borrowing to pay its bills.
ever dreamed I'd make when I g!t

"I didn't know you were into
fashion , Mary," I said.
"We all are," she replied. "Thank
heavens, we have somebody to set a
standard in the White House. Let's
hope the sidewalks of Washington
will not longer be filled with uncombed hairdos, messy gold chains
and raggedy jeans."

P1trtc11 Dlvllloa

&amp;lfalo

The fashion cap:it-.al__~Art~B=u=ch=wa~ld
WASmNGTON - You can say
what you will about the Reagan administration, but yot; can't deny it
has turned Washington into· the
fashion capital of the world. All it
took was a rich First Lady from
Cslifornia, ,and her richer Cslifornia
!Mends and suddenly this dusty,
peanut-farming, Amaretto-drinking
town turned into a land of lynx and
sable.
The new California "laid-back
look' ' has affected everyone.
I went to buy a hot pretzel the
other day from my favoMte stand on
K Street, when I noticed that Mary
had a new look. Her frayed sweater
had been patched all over with ultrasuede, her muffler was thrown back
across her shoulder, her wool Redskin hat was perched on top of her
head like a pillbox, and she was
wearing white gloves as she made
change.
&lt;~ Mary/' I $Bid, "you look absolutely smashing in that outfit."
" Bill Blass designed it for me,"
she said. "I adore his lunch-time

Ca.mpbeU C..,ert~

Hartlonf
Detroit

Reagan's cabinet members
•
l
l
recelVf ear y .essons
WAS.IIINGTON (AP) - f'resident
Reagan's Cabinet memberi are getting an early lesson in congressional
relations.
Lesson No. 1: Congress, especially
opposition Democrats, may be
demanding critics when jt comes to
judging the new administration and
its programs.
Take, for example, the
assessment of Sen. JosephBiden Jr.,
[).Del., , after Attorney General
William French Smith testified on
Capitol Hill: " He was devoid, almo.st
· totally devoid of an'• opinon on
anything at all."
And Sen. William f'roxmire, [).
Wis., hasn't missed, many ~

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

NatiGUI Hoc=ker Lrape

IAeAII{!eles
Montreal
Pit-.,h

World's gold bugs take severe test ·
r;:
=

NEW YORK (AP) - The gold
bugs of the world have undergone a
severetestoffaithlately.
Over the past 12 months the price
of gold has taken its sharpest drop in
six years - from a peak of $875 an
ounce in January 1!180 to under $500
early this week. Anyone wbo got a
gift of gold for Christmas has seen it
fall more than 20 percent in value
since.
That's an awful lot of turbulence
·
for an investment that is supposed to
be a haven from political and
economic.stonns.
A wide vaMety of explanations,
ranging from the simple to the at&gt;-

For the
record

CAMPBELL'S CHICKEN NOODU

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WI• OZ.
Ll MIT 4 PLEASE

4/$1

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer
Feb. 7, 1981

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THANK

YOU CHERRY

PIE FILLING
21

oz. 99~

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Good Only AI Powell's
Otter Ex
Feb. 7, 1981

_

j

NESRE'S

FlAVORITE

HOT COCOA MIX

SUGAR

12 CT.

99~

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
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Feb. 7, 1981

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Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires Feb. 7, 1981

�Wednesday,

Marina Cherkasova and SergliC
Sbahrai of the Soviet Union wert;
second In the pairs program, whJlt'
Christina Riegel and Andreas N!Bcb-;
witzofWestGennanyplaced third.::
TENNIS
rallied for a 6-7, 6-3, 6-4 victory over
HOCKEY
RICHMOND, Va. (AP) - Gene Kevin Curren; Ivan Lend! of
NEW YORK (AP) - Wayne Gm.:
Mayer breezed to a &amp;-1, &amp;-1 trlwnph Czechoslovakia routed Tim
zky of the Edmonton Oilers, wh8:
· over Pucal Portes ~ France while Gulllkaon ~. &amp;-2; and VInce Van
scored
10 goals and added 25 assist&amp;j
Jolut Sadri was a &amp;-2, 7-4 winner over Patten upset Brian Gottfried 7-5,6-2,
in
Jatwary,
was named the NHL's
Trey Waltke In the first round of the
.DETROIT (AP) - Top-seeded
•
Player
of
the
Month.
United Virginia Bank Clasalc.
Hana Mandlikova trounced fellow
Gretzky
edged
Chicago Black
In other action, Roecoe Tanner Czech Iva Budarova 6-1, &amp;-1 In the
Hawks
goalie
Tony
Esposito and
stored a 7-4, &amp;-3 trlwnph over Bruce second round of the Avon women's
New
York
Islanders
forward
Mike
Manson; Yannlck Noah of France tennis tournament In Detroit.
•
~----------------------------------------------------------~------------------------------------------------------Bossyrorthehonor.

.

MEIGS MARAUDER VARSITY players will seek
their fourth victory Friday nlgbt. Players are kneelillg,
1-r, Mike.Miller, Britt Dodson, Roger K;ovalcblk. Stan-

ding, Dove Keonedy, Randy Murray, Steve Oblinger,
Tony Scott, Bob Asbley, Cbrls Judge, Jeff Wayland.
Not present were kevlu Smllb and Brian Swann.

Watson opens champion defense
SAN DIEGO (AP) - Tom Watson,
after beginning his season with a
' solid perfonnanee which soured on
the final holes, opens defense of the
first of his many 1980 titles this week
in: the Wickes-Andy Williams San
Diego Open Golf Tournament.
"I didn't play that badly, but it
was a disappointing finish," Watson
said of Monday's windup in the
stonn-cdelayed Bing Crosby National
pt()-AJn.

He had the lead with nine holes to
go in the last round but stumbled to a
fat 40 on the homecoming side and
missed the five-man playoff by a
si~gle shot.
:"My putter went sour," Watson

said. He 3-putted three times on the
last nine holes and hit another shot
in the water.
" I was in the position I wanted to
be in," he continued, "but I didn 'I
pull away from the field. I fell back
to them ."
" I've just got to practice more,
work harder. There's a Jot of work to
do, " said Watson, a tw&lt;&gt;-time winner
of this $250,000 event that begins a
72-hole run Thursday on two courses
at the Torrey Pines Golf Club.
It is the first of seven titles defen·
ses this year for Watson, the leading
money-winner and Player of the
Year in each of the past four
seasons.

Wagner claims
Bench wanted
•
to renegotiate
'

. DAYTON, Ohio (AP)- Cincinnati
Reds President Dick Wagner says
his refusal to renegotiate Johnny
Rench's contract after the 1979
baseball seaBClll prompted Bench's
request to catch only twice a week
and to be given a chance to play
ahotherposiUon.
"John Bench wants a new contract," Wagner said Monday night
at·an Agonls Club meeting, despite
his normal reluctance to discuss
club business. "John will deny it
publicly, but he came to me 14 or 15

The Daily Sentinel
(USPSIU.. .I
A DhiiiOI of Multtmedii,IDC.

Publilbed every afternoon ucept Sunday,

Monday throuah Friday, 111 COW'! Street, by
the Ohlo Volley PubiWIJng Compony •
Multimedia, Inc., Pomeroy, Ohio o\578i,
liS-liM. Second etau pootago paid at

Pomeroy, Ohio.

Member: Tile AIIOclatld Prou.'lnlond Da~
Jy Prell AIIOclaUoo and the Amlliean
N'ewtp~per P\lblilhlrt Alloclltion,

National

Aclvertf•tna: Reprellntatlvt, Llndlna

A.lloclatel, !101 EueUd Ave., Clevtlaruf,
Ohio,4111~ .

POSTMASTER' Stnd addroai to Tile Dilly
Stntllltl, lll CourtSI.. Pomti'O)I, Ohio 4!17tl.
IUIIICIUPTION IIATEI
BJ Canter orMoteritoate
Onowttlt ............ ... ........... 11.00
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One Year .. ,,, ... .. . . . .........• '· . 162.10
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Subocriben not deairll1(l to pay tho carrtar
may nmll In advan,. dlroet to Tile DallY
SenUnel on a S, I or l2 month buil. crtcilt
will be pvon carrier each month.
Nooubocript!Oill by mall panllllled In towna
where homt canitr HI'Ylct ilavaillblt.
MAIL SUBICIIIP'I'IONI
C*lo utilieat Vlrllala
SMooth ........ .. .... .. .......... 110.10
Slam0111h ............ .. .......... 117.10
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months ago
renegotiate.

and

asked

to

" I've always liked these courses.
I've had good success on them. You
always feel a little better, a little
more confident returning to a course
where you've won before,'' he said.

Shofner leaves Browns
CLEVELAND (AP) - Jim Shof·
ner, the Cleveland Browns' quar·
terback coach the last three years,
has opted to join the Houston Oilers
as offensive coordinator.
Brian Sipe, statistically the best

He'll face a strong field in the
chase for the $&amp;1,000 first prize.
Heading the list are all the previous
winners this season - Johnny
Miller, Bruce Lietzke, Australiall
David G'raham and John Cook, the
fresh-faced youngster who won the
Tour's first five-man playoff in the
Crosby late Monday.

60 earlier In the season.
ce to quit out there.
"We mlsaecl a lot ol free throws
"In the flnt half, a couple ol
and
that W8ll the difference in the
times, we got our heads down.
game,"
said Texas Coach Abe
Carolina was kJcklng ua on the of·
Lemona.
"You can really cut out
fensive boards after we were turning
talking
about
anything else. We
the baU over. But In the secopd haH,
made
a
lot
ol
mental
errors and Oi1r
I got no complaints. We came out
shooting
was
terrible.
That about
and played jlist as hard as we
says
lt.
We
took
a
lot
ol
bad
shots in
could."
The game, the only
Involving the flrst half that were unac.
ranked teams Tuesday night, had countable.
"We just wore out," Lemona adeverything it In - Including a flglt
between North Carolina's AI Wood ded. "I reaUy don't know now
and VIrginia's Jeff Lamp. Pollee whether to let them off some or work ;
had to fJnally escort the teams off them harder."
Rob Wllllams acored 29 points and
the frenzied Chapel Hill court.
In the overtime period, Virglrda befuddled Southern Methodist with
got the tap and Lamp hit a shOrt his ball-handling wizardry to lead
jwnp shot giving Virginia its first · Houston to a 711-64 victory, Williams,
lead ol the game. The Cavaliers m:· the Southwe4t Cunference's leading
tended their lead to six points with scorer, got 16 of his game-high 29
points in the second haH when the
3: 08left and never lost it.
Ralph Sampson led Virglrda with Cougars pulled away from the
32 points and 13 rebounds while Muatangs.
Lamp had '21 points. Wood had a . - - - - - - - - game-high 33 points for the Tar
lfeel.l,
The Cavaliers kept their unbeaten
lllrealt allve, eKtending It to 19
•
lallttl
•
games this season and 24 In a row
dating to last year. It was only the
S~_!-!'1
secood time ever that Virginia has
beaten the Tar HeeiB In Carmichael
Audltorlwn. Thelasttlrnewas1973.
~ 1$1.95
Dar• 0o1r
Elsewhere, U.S. Reed led Arkansas with 18 points and had three
steals and four free throws In the
final franUc minutes as the Ruor...
backs avenged an earlier defeat by
•
AU lOCATIONS
•
.•
Texas in beating the Longboml 54·~
•
48. Texas had defeated Arkansas 82-

•

poelUona.
" I don't think you should call him
a utility player," Wagner said. "I
think you have to caU him a part:.
time player. You're trying to win,
and speed Is a big factdr in the game
now.
' "John. can pinch hit; John can fill
in at other posiUons. He'U get more
playing time than people think. John
can be happy, but it's up to~.''

•

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DAILY SENTINEL

'

•

I

'-~

j ; ·

IMMEDIATE OPENING

.!l'.

•

~

. ...

&gt;

pii!!UIII

ner for his development.
Shofner, 46, was a Browns top
draft choice from Texas Christian in
" I'm still kind of in a daze," the 23- 1958. He played in the Cleveland
year-old Cook said after acquiring defensive backfield until retiring in
the first pro title of Ills brief career.
1963.
He became the San Francisco
Other standouts in the field in· 49ers' defensive secondary coach in
elude J.C. Snead, a time-time 1967. Two years later, Shofnl!f ·
wihner here; D.A. Weibring, who became the 49ers' quarterback and
lost a playoff to Watson in this event receiver coach.
a year ago; Lon Hinkle; fonner
Shofner took TCU's head coaching
Masters and San Diego champion job in 1974 and held that post for
Fuzzy Zoeller, Andy Bean and Ray · three seasons. He then returned to
Floyd. .
.
. the 49ers'coaching staff in 1977 as
PortiOns of the fmal two rounds defensive backfield coach.
Saturday and Sunday Wlll be
Browns Coach Sam Rutigliano
telecast nationally by CBS.
named Shofner to his staff in 1978.
Shofner will join the staff of the
new Oilers coach, Ed Biles.

•
~
.,.

- Erika He&amp;'! of Switzerland won a
World Cup slalom event by a half·
secondoverDanielaZiniofltaly.
Hess's aggregate time was 1
minute 34.12 seconds, compared
with I :34.64 for Zini.
SKATING
INNSBRUCK;, Austria (AP) Soviet skaters Irina Vorobieva and
Igor Lisovski led the field in the
pairs short competition after a
smooth opening night perfonnance
at the European Figure Skating
Championships.

.,•

quarterback
in the
National
Football
·I -;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;!;:;;;;;;==;;;;;;;;;; •
League in 1980,
often
credited
Shof· ;-

~~'

Bonder downed Nina Bolun of
Sweden 7-4, 6-4; and Barbara Potter
defeatedKathyHorvath&amp;-1,6-4.
SKIING
SCHLADMING, Austria · (AP) Sweden's Ingemar sterunark won
the 59th World Cup race of his
career, beating Austrian Hans Eon
in the season's fifth giant slalom
race.
.
Stenmark had an overaU time of
2:34.80; while Enn had a total time
of 2:35.71.
ZWIESEL, West Gennany (AP)

one

''I~d~. · H~u¢aMw~·r------~;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~5~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

tract, that means the only good contract on the club iS one with a player
who had a bad year.' I said, 'John, if
we do that, it's open season (for
demandstorenegotiate).'"
Wagnersaidtjlatshortlyafterthat
discussion with Bench, the catcher
began a "publicity binge" to drill
home the idea that 1980 would be his
last season as a full-time catcher.
Bench, 33, hit 24 borne runs last
season, second to the Reds' George
Foster. His current contract,
believed to he worth $400,000 a year,
runsthrought982.
Wagner has said the Reds would
· honor Bench's request to catch a
limit~ number of games this season
but that Bench has been told there's
no guarantee he'll play another
position on days he doesn't catch.
Amid·speculaUon he might ask to
be traded or retire, Bench called a ·
press conference in November to announce that his future was U.:
terwoven with the Reds and Cin·
cinnati. He said he would go to
spring training with the intention of
winning an infield or outfield job.
" Anybody can go to spring
training and win a job," Wagner
said. "He can win a spot, but it's
pretty doubtful."
Bench has said he wouldn't be hapPY dividing his time between !lit·
ching and tWo or three ot-.·

In other matches, No.3 seed Pam
Shriver beat Sllerey Acker &amp;-1, 11-3;
No.7 seed Sue Barker of England
defeated I..ea ·Antonoplia &amp;-2, ~. 6-4;
Claudia Kohde, a 17-year-old West
Gennan ranked 67th In the world,
upset No.5 St1fd Regina Marslkova
of Czechoslovakla &amp;-I, 11-3; and
Virginia Ruzlcl, the No.4 seed from
Romania, escaped with a 6-4, 7-6 victory over Beth Norton.
Also, No.6 seed Mirna Jausovec of
Yugoslavia easily defeated Isabelle
VUiiger of Switzerland, &amp;-I, &amp;-1; Lisa

Sports briefs

Top ranked
Cavaliers
.
nip Tar Heels, so:.. 79
By Alloelllted Pftu
Despite his many years ol success
as a college basketball coach, North
Carolina's Dean Smith has often
been accused of going to his patented f~rners offense too often
and too early.
On Tuesday night, he might have
gone to it too late.
Winning by 16 points over Virginia
midway through the second half,
Smith opted to keep on moving, instead of slowing lt down, and it
might have cost him an SG-79 over·
time loss to the top-ranked
Cavaliers.
At least he thinks so.
" It was my mistake for not going
to the four corners earlier than we
did," he said. "We scored or got
fouled everytime we were in it."
The Cavaliers finaUy caught up
with the Tar Heels and sent the
game into overtime tied at 64. Then
they beat their tough AtlanUc Coast
Conference rivals, ranked lith in the
country, on a foul shot by reserve
Terry Gates with six seconds left.
"There's reaUy not too much I can
say," noted Virginia Coach Terry
Holland. "Our kids just refused to
Jose. They certainly had every chan-

The Daily Sentinei-Page-7~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

February 4, i981

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�The Dai

sentinel

~ednesday,Febru• }.·4~·~1~9~8~1------------------~------------------~P~o~m~e~r=o~v~M~id~d~l~e~p:o~rt~,~O~h~i:o------------------------------------~-----T~h:e~D~a~il~v~s~e~n~t~in:e~I~P~a:l!e~~t :
.

idd

Faust doesn't feel coaching
change is that different
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J . (AP)
- Gerry Faust, college football's
new Mr. Motivation, doeSil't think
it's such a big jump from Moeller
High School in Cincinnati to the
University of No\re Dame.
"I don't see any problem becauae'I
was in a unique high school
situation," says Faust, who COJ11'"
piled a magnificent 173-17-2. record
in 18 seasons at Moeller before being
tapped last November to succeed
Dan Devine at Notre Dame.
"My major adjustment will be
learning the ins and outs. It will take
me a· year to learn how the university operates. That's about the only
problem I see."
Faust will get some more insight
into college football's most pressure-

filled coaching job the first time he
loses a garne or doesn't win by a big
enough margin to satisfy Notre
Dame's nationwide horde of "alwnni"- both official and otherwise.
"I've already gotten letters from
people telling me I have to do this
and I have to do that," F'aust said
Tuesday at Giants Stadium, where
Notre Dame and Anny ennounced
they will play their 1983 game.
"You've got to realize you're not
going to satisfy everybody. This job
is of such magnitude that you can
only please some of \he people."
And whether he likes It or not,
Faust also is learning that Notre
Dame is not your routine college
coaching job. Everyone wants a
piece of your time and Faust will

turn' down many more invitations

than he accepts'.
"I could speak five times a day if I
wanted to," said the 4~year-&lt;&gt;ld
Faust, a vibrant sort who tries to sell
everyone he meets on Notre Dame's

ASTRO
GRAPH
F _ l , . .l
ThlJ eomlntl year can be a m1101 fnuUul- ~
you
""'Unueto""'
ldeu ._,;bly.
£ertlle
lmuin.ltion your
can Dl"'duce
a healthy Ywr
harveot_tlie_....,glvonllrnewgermlnale.
AQUARIUS IJOL . .roll. u; ldeu which
llllll'k ror fOil ml)' DOt net'ellllrtly do the Job for
anotlier . Mike aUowancea f..- peraonalfty dlf.
tolenla when '!vi1111 odvl"" tuday.
Romance, travel, luck,. rmources, pouible pit·
f~Ua 111111 career for the l'&lt;lllllntl 1110111111 .,. au

attributes, whether prospective
recruit or out-of-shape sports writer.
"Instead, I've had to cut back on a
lot of motivational speaking I do to
industry around the country.

f.......,'""

...

~.U:.,~~":::1 ".':h'~'~~:'

Box 419, Radio Clll' Stotloo, N. v. toots. Be,..,;

""" ,-·t

t•=~~~M. ....., UncertalntycooJd
u you bet!ln ., qll&lt;lllklll
IWillOlhJntt YOU.,..,.. only recenUy ol:uwn to be

right. Let r.•llerday'a lnalg!M toke procedo"""
wertoclay a.
A1I1Et! !Mardi !t·Aprttltl Move couu-y
and alowly tuday, test you bring Into
yoor cooftde""' or plano who'll "blat uaclly
whalyoudon'lwanttold.
TAURUS !April ..May •1 Yoor cha......, for
succaa are high todly, 10 long u roo stlclt to

Embezzlement
threatens match
I

Today's

Sports World

·1_

NEW YORK (AP) - One
manager claims to be optimistic,
Muhammad Ali is in the picture and
the plot thickened with the .possible
reappearance of the main promoter
of an important boxing show
threatened by charges of a $21.3
million bank embezzlement.
The latest twist occulTed Tuesday
night when a man who did not give
his identity or whereabouts called
Los Angeles sportscaster Bud
Furillo's radio talk - and whom
Furillo identified as Harold Smith and said he was innocent of the
charges and would return to Los
Anlieles shortly.
"I'm sure it was him (Smith ),"
Furillo said after the caller told him
the fraud could be much bigger than
121.3 million and said he received $12

t

.........,.

Bearcats

du~p

Loyola

-

~~~MANY

CHAPMAN'S
SHOES

FA1RYTALF3
Fairy tales for grown-ups: Usedcar spiels in the corrunercials on the
· '
late-late movie.

---

..._

__

bheoutU)'OU
don\ have clout!

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Meigs County Disaster Chalnnan
Mrs. Kenneth Harris , national chairmen.
Miss Smith also reported on
Charles Leger ouUined plans for for- security chairman, introduced
Mrs. Iva Powell reported on the eligibility lor Buckeye Girls' State
ming a County Dlllaster Commiasion Legar and called for the unit to
Chrisirnas party held at Chillicothe, and . noted that speak.e r at the
wbenhespokeatarecentllieetingof rememberthoseinmllitaryservlce, . and Mrs. Veda Davis reported on February meeling will be Mrs.
the Ladles Auxlllary of Drew Web- the place where national security junior activities and her visit to the Richards, d!Btrict Americanism
ster Poet 39, Pomeroy.
begins. Donations were made by the Arcadia Nursing Home at Chris
, t·
Legar noted that the new com- . unit to the USO and Radio Free mas. An invitation was read from
mission will consist of represen- Europe
the coinmittee sponsonng
· a recep•
~~.:-~-- ~~~--~~:~~.~~~tatives from fire departments,
Read at the meeting conducted by Uon for James Hampson, Eighth
emergency squada, police depart- Mrs. Pearl Knapp, pre~lidenl, were District comml!nder, and Mrs.
FELT WEATHERSTRIP. .. .... .. ......... .....1.~-~~:.
menu, the Meigs County Com- communications from Lorrene Snyder, Eighth Dilltrict president,
Mortite
missioners and other county of- Snyder, Eighth District president, on Feb. 28 at the Fairfield Post home
4
1 1
ficials. He reported that according for a donation to the Chillicothe bir- in Lancaster.
to the State Disaster Comlplssion's thtiay party, and from Dorthea
Plans were made to order 2,800
Tempest
plan, Meigs County has been Walsh for ditty bagsand other items
poppies to be sold by members of the
designated as the location for sent there by the junior members.
junior and senior unit on Poppy Day
realdenlll of Hamilton County In the
Americanism and children and in May. Miss Enna Smith reported
Jill.....
event a disaster should occur In thllt youth reports submitted by the unit ·on the pecan sale. Mrs. Knapp noted
county. A vote of thanks was given to were acknowledged by Florence that membership now stands at 115
I ann•
Ri harda d M ced p .
.
d22. .
Ph. 992-2848
Pomerov. Oh.
f~...,....=::·
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____________________

Jl--

Ohio
Sportlight

EASTERN COACHES- Dellllll El~blllger, left, former member of
the Eaotern va111lly squad, eutered biJ flnl year u bead coach laot IIIII.
Thus far, Eaotern lo eajoylq a fiDe .year wltb a 12-3 overall record. The
Eagles are aloo ID a flnt place de wltb Seutbem ID the SV AC with a &amp;-1
mart. AI right ill re~erve coach, Tim Slmp11011.

Disaster chairman outlines plans

ywr urlglnal game plan. Switching horaes in

million from the bank which he
__
thought was a credit line.
Smith is chairman of Muhammad
MARAUDER COACIUNG STAFF- Melgo' boys baoketball team lo
Ali Professional Sports, one of three
led tbill winter by first year meator Gordoa FiBber, left, aad Midi: Cblldo,
MAPS officials named In an emreserve coach.
'
bezzlement suit filed Monday by
Wells Fargo National Bank of ·
California.
But John Moos, an FBI spokesman
in Los Angeles, said Tuesday, "We
CHICAGO (AP) - Seniorforward pleton with 50 seconds remaining cut
have no watTant for Mr. Smith's
Doc Holden sank a clutch layup with the margin to one point before
arrest, and therefore we have no
desire to talk to Mr. Smith. Mr. eight seconds remaining, then hit Holden made his clutch basket and
By WW Grlllllley
one of two free throws Tuesday night free throw.
Smith
is free to travel wherever he
AP Corretpoadeat
io give Cincinna.ti a 711-76 wm over
The Ramblers, now 1~9, had not
chooses. Our investigation is mainly
Loyola of Chicago in college basket- lost since Jan . 13, when regulars
at the bank."
ball action.
Kevin Sprewer and Steve Parham
Ali appeared Tuesday at Madison
What snuffed out the fuse that led nection - with the group headed by
Holden,
who
.Jed
the
Bearcats
with
were ruled scholastically ineligible.
Square
Garden,
site
of
a
Feb.
23
the spark that exploded Muhammad a Los Angeles promoter named
21
points,
helped
snap
an
eight-game
boxing
show
that
is
rich
in
purses
Ali into a burst of celestial HaroldJ. Smith.
'
Loyola unbeaten skein as Cincinnati ,------~----­
and talent but it jeOpardy because of
fireworks?
"Do you feel that your image bas
ended
a twt&gt;-game losing streak.
the
Wells
Fargo
lawsuit.
The once bombastic, electrically- been hurt by being linked with this.
blew a Hl·point lead
Cincinnati
charged fist fighter who dominated organization?" Ali was asked
with
3:18
remaining
in the contest
heavyweight ranks and captivated Tuesday at a Madison Square Garopening
a
62-liO
advantage on
after
the peasants as well as pontiffs of den news conference.
the
shooting
of
Holden
.and Bopby
the world for most of two decades
"No, my image ain't hurt," Ali
Austin,
v!ho
finished
with
17 points.
has suddenly become subdued.
replied, almost ina!Jdibly. "Cause
But
Wayne
Sappieton
and
Darius
When he speaks, it is in a wQisper Nixon went had it don't mean the
Clemons
combined.
for
12
of
Loyola
's
ihat can hardly be heard in the front government went ·bad. The White
next
16
points,
tying
the
seore
at
68row. The wide-eyed boyish en- House stayed white.'
68 on Sappleton's soft jumper from
"But I ended up with power,
thusiasm is gone. The sparkle has
By
George
Strode
the key. The score ~as deadlocked
been dulled. The familiar people power. I am the only man
at 7~70 before Dave Kennedy
again
braggadocio is gone.
who can stop traffic on any street in
put
the
Bearcats ahead with an easy
At news conferences, which once the world. Whel) President Carter
layup.
COLUMBUS,
Ohio
(AP)
Stan
set of Kalida. Brown's basket with 10
resounded with his wild boasts and had trouble with Russia, he sent me
Mter Sappleton hit on one of two
Boroski hasn 't played for a loser in seconds left and his block with two
histrionics, he evinces little interest. to Mrica. I transcend boxing."
free
throws, Junior Johnson of·Cinfootball
or
basketball
at
Tiltonsville
He yawns. He pic~ his teeth. His
The words were the same but they
seconds to go saved the victory l o'r
cinnati
connected on a short jumper
Buckeye
South
this
school
year
eyes droop. Any minute you expect didn 'I have the old ring. They were
Leipsic, just 7-6 to Kalida's 14-1
and
Kennedy
made a key steal and
the
hard
way.
record.
him to fall fast asleep, sitting up · tired and old, just as Ali appeared to
raced
the
length
of the court to score
He
broke
a
leg
and
missed
the
ther'e in front of all those . be at age 39.
Willard, Ohio's No. 1 Class AA
and
give
Cincinnati
a 7!&gt;-71 bulge.
lone
football
loss
and
the
four
team's
microphones and camera lights with . ' The once magnificent champion,
club, will risk its 33-game home winBut
a
three-point
play by Sapbasketball
defeats.
reporters shooting questions at jowly but not jolly, announced that
ning streak against Class · AAA
Since
Boroski,
a
6-foot-2
forward
,
machine-gun pace.
he would never fight again but would
Lexington , 13-1, on Saturday.
returned to basketball, Buckeye Napoleon's unbeaten regular season
This is not the old Ali.
funnel his remaining energies into
PLAYEROFTHEWEEK •
South has won nine straight games. streak has reached 52 contests.
It was a mellower, more distant, promoting.
COLUMBUS,
Ohio (AP) - Melvin
He's averaging 17 points, and the
· more detached Ali who flew into
"I will own boxing," he vowed,
Franklin and Lebanon had idenMcLaughlin
of
Central Michigan,
team !~om Jefferson County is now tical scores after lour quarters and
NewYorkthisweektotradelriendly reaching deep into an aging pouch.
the
league's
leading
basketball
1~ .
barbs with ~year-&lt;&gt;ld Jack Dem- "I will be the greatest promoter in
the first overtime before Franklin scorer, who had 60 points in two
· )lsey at a benefit for retarded the world. I will take fighters to all
Around Ohio: Steubenville won a won their first meeting in the second
pair of games last week after Ed overtime. This time, Lebanon jwn- games last week, ·is the Midchildren and to try to explain away those far places I have been his association with a promotional Manila, Malasia, Zaire, Puerto Watts and Vince DiMichelle quit the ped to a 13-4 and won~. handling American Conference Player of the
Week.
c,'&lt;team for unexplained reasons. Franklin its first loss in 14 games
organization called MAPS (Muham- Rico. I won't have to put up my
The 6-foot, 15:&gt;-pound sophomore
'?...
mad Ali Professional Sports, Inc.). money. The countries will do it, $10 DiMicheile was averaging II points this winter.
guard from Grand R&lt;lpids, Mich. , hit
· MAPS is currently ensnared in a lliillion to promote tourism, also the as a starterforthe Big Red, 13-l.
Dayton Jefferson Coach John 34 points in a victory over Kent Slate
NEW
Kathy Detillion gives Beaver Watkins' stalled auto cost his team a
$21.3 million lawsuit filed by the networks.
and
added
26
in
a
loss
to
Ball
State.
Eastern two current 1,000-point • probable seed in the Dayton Class
Wells Fargo National Bank charging
"Thq owe me. I am still hot.
.SPRING SHOES
career scorers. Neil Leist reached AA District. Some observers believe McLaughlin hit 26 of to shots for 65
that the promotions company and Everylply's gotta reckon with me."
percent
shooting
in
the
two
starts.
that figure earlier in the boys' Jefferson, 10-6, wotlid have·been the
some of its officers had embezzled
You could look at the •omber Ali
NOW ARRIVING
the money from the bank.
and tell - the record was stuck. season. Jim Schock has reached 100 No. 2 seed behind New Lebanon
· Ali lent his name for a fee - and Much as he tried, he conldn 'I get the
career coaching victories in his 16th Dixie if Watkins hadn't'been an hour
CAKE DECORATING
game of his sixth season at Sparta late for the district meeting.
insists he has no other official con- jive going again.
Highland. Schock is 100.27.
Classes Starting Soon
Brecksville's 6-11 forward Scott
Call for Details
Coach Tom Souder of Lafayette Roth apparently is out for the season
Allen East beat his coaching father, with a broken foot bone. He verbally
AI Souder of Paudling, 62-52. Kenton has committed to attend the UniverCAROUSEL CONFECTIONERY
scored consecutive 6:Hl2 victories sity of Wisconsin. Brad Sellers
"Decorated Cakes lor
over, Delphos St. John and Ottawa Warrensville Heights' 6-11 center:
"Next to Elberfelds
AU Occasions"
Glandorf. Tom Brown, a 6-5 junior, has become interested in Cleveland
PH . 992· 6342
scored 25 points in Leipsic's 52-50 up- State after favoring Wisconsin.
317 N. lnd
Middleport, Oh.
in Porn eroy"

,

chairman. The junior members will :
participate in the program at that meetii'tg. Hostesses will be Mrll. :
Catherine Welsh, Mils Smith and :
Mrs. Davts.
Asalad course was served by Mrs. :
Pearl Knapp with Mrs. Dorothy :
Wells, a contributing hostess. ·

.'

midstrelllll rould ruin evel')'thjng.
GEMINI (May
•1 Having many good
ideu ud aU the enthWum in the world won't
to:et lhinp dune todly unless you di8cipline yOW'&gt;
aeU to flniah wta.t you bet~ in.
CANCER !JIM !l.JIII)' tl) 'l'hlilL sentimental

U.S.O.A. CHOIQ ·

you could let ~·· lOb story ca~J~e you to
desert your better Judgment and take a pmbJe

ROUND

you nunnally wouldn't. You m.y hive resret.a if
YUU do.

LEO jJaly tJ..Aq. U) JuaL when·you ahou.ld be
stlcklng to your I!:Wll, as you normall)l du, today
you COUld be swayed by »&gt;rneunt who IU!ly
doca1't Rive all the facts.
·
VIRGO (Aq. D&amp;pL !Z) Contlnue tu check
each ll!1d every di!UU as you wtln Mlong today
Don't let someone who wDllld ruah your Job hi~
his ur her way . Somelhlng important will be
overlool!.ed.
LIB1lA ISopL ZS.OCL IS) Avoid mWng
bw!if'll!ll with pleuure tOOay , t1 at all poaible.
Having a Kood time may cloud your reuoninl:
and you COUld agree to coetly C'OilC'ellior\11.
. SOORPIO HkL lf.Nft. I! I Yoo'd better stay
nght oo top of liOmethin« beifl8 hmtled for you
by another today, b«ause thb pe110n, think1nc
""lsd&lt;llnl!lijjhl, mayd&lt;Juacuy theoppoa!te.

•

STEAK

·1~.·
CDUKTnY·STORES

S.4.Grrf.4.RIU8 INov. a-Dec. Ill Be careful

.luday. Yuu are not too adept 'It kerp6nc aecreta
at thil tUne. With 1 minlmwn ul CUlling, nosey
penon L'UUid hne yuu spillillfil the beans.
CAPRICOilN (Dee. 22-JID. Ill Be satlafied
with a am11U profit today, rather than hold1ng out

GALLIPOLIS AND POMiROY STORE ONLY

PRICES GOOD tODAY lHRU SUNDAY, FEB. 8

bl!c11use you hear about a better deal. To expect
too much from WlCUlllrmed aJUI'Celi coo.ld prove

tube diMppolnlinl!l .

SUPIR SPICfAL

18" S1tEL

Kingsbury
News Notes
Recent guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Hornet; Bailey were Mr. and ·Mrs.
John Roberts, Chillicothe, Mr. and
Mrs. Roger Young and Wesley and
Yvette.
Recent guests of Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Brickles were Mr. and Mrs. Steve
Brickles and sons, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Hysell and family,
Maryland.
Recent guests of Mr. and Mrs.
John Walter Dean, James, Jeremy
and Sarah were Mr. and Mrs. Mac
Ward and sons, Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Well, Sr. and daughter, Mrs. Harold
Well, Jr., t.1r. and Mra. Roscoe Fife,
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Thorton and
family, making up the Gospel
singing group of the Soul Finders.
Other guests were Mr. and Mrs.
John A. Dean, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Markins and Mrs. Alma Wood,
Racine. A pizza party was enjoyed
followed by music and singing.
Recent guests of Mrs. Elizabeth
Murray were Mr. and Mrs. Dana
Murray and family . Also calling in
evening was Karen Murray, Sandyville, W. Va.
The community was shocked and
saddened by the death of Rev. John
Lewis, Junction City, Oh. The Rev.
Lanier was an evangelist who was a
regular revival minister at the
Carleton Cburch each year.
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Brickles and
son visited his mother, Mrs. Iona
Brickles and Bruce and Denise, alsO
Mr. and Mrs. Norman Wood ' and
family.
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Yoho had as
recent visitors Mr. and Mrs. Gene
Lake, Mason, W. Va. and Mr. and
Mrs. Bill Yoho and daughters. New
Haven, W. Va.
Kingsbury Missionary society of
Carleton Church had its Christmas
meeting at the home of Mrs. Karla
Chevalier. A Christmas dinner was
served at noon with grace offered by
Neva King. The devotional meeting
was opened by Virginia Dean
reading frolit Luke second chapter
followed by prayer. Several
readings were read by each member, a letter was read from the ·
missionary, Rev. John Jesburg, who
is home in Pennsylvania due to the
msjor heart surgery his wife underwent recently. The secretary's
and treasurer's reports were given
after which there was a gift exchange by all present, Mrs. Linda
Well and Heather Well, Mrs. Janeth
Beal, Mrs. Neva King, Mrs. Anita
Dean, James and Sarah, Mrs. Ruby
Burnside, Mrs. Elizabeth Murray,
Mrs. Karla Chevalier and Jessica,
Betsy Houdashelt, Mrs. Yvonne
Young and Yvette, Mrs. Maralene
Swartz and Jackolyn, Mrs. Virginia

Dean.
Holiday guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Marklns, Racine, were Mr.
and Mrs. Walter Terrell, Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Reid, Rodney and
David, Pataskala, Mrs. Virginia
Smith and son Joshua, Norfolk, Va.,
Mr. and Mrs. John Dean, Mr. and
Mrs. Bill Spaun and Shannon, Mr.
and Mrs. John Walter Dean, James,
Jeremy and Sarah, Pomeroy, Mr.
and Mrs. Bruce Ried, Charles and
Robert, Shade, Miss Juanita T~rreli,
Athens, Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Harria,
SyracUBe, Bllly Kendall, Lexlnl!ton.
Ky., Mrs. Alice Wood, Racine.

SNOW

FALTER'S
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SHOVELS

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Coupon E•plrel F=eb. I , 1911

Presenl tills coupon •lont with any one m•nufacturer· s " Cents Off" coupon and get doublt the sav·
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Coupon s or tl\ose ot other retalleno and not to e~ttceed

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Coupon Eaplres Feb. I, 1"1

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Each of the Two Coupons Plus Any
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�Page-10

~t.

Patrick 's Day
dance slated here

A Fifties-Sixties-St Patrick's Day
dance was planned for March 14 as a
special project to raise money for
school equipment and improvements during a recent meeting
· of the Middleport PTA.
The dance will be held in the Middleport Elementary School gymnasium frOm 8 p.m. to midnight with
Kenny Hysell, popular di•c jockey_
during the fifties and sixties, to spin
the recotds. A luncheon of teachers
and parents was held Thursday to
further plans for the dance and
tickets will be available soon.
Tickets will also be·sold at the door.
Martha Klein is ways and means
chairman for the PTA.
Principal John Arnott reported
that the Ubrary is about two weeks
from completion. The PTA approved the purchase of paint for the
room and also approved purchase of
a new typewriter from the proceeds
of the movie "Love Bug" shown
Saturday night at the schooL Arnott
also e~pressed the need for a
duplicating machine for the schooL
He commended the children for
their work on the Christmas
program, and noted that money will
be awarded to the children selling
the most nuts and also the read-athou wirmers.

Genealogical society meets,
discusses Masonbers.research
The secretary, ·Keith Aahley,

Bread supplies nutrients
BYDIANAS, EBERTS
EJ:IeuloD Agent
Home Ee011omks
BREADS FROM
DIFFERENT LANDS

Bread supplies food energy or
kilocalories, seveal of the B
vitamins, iron and protein.
Bread stales less quickly in a
bread box at room temperature
than in a refrigerator.
People in different countries
take pride in their ethnic recipes,
and breads are one of the most interesting foods to compare.
This table shows where some of
the breads we eat today were first baked.
BREADS FROM AROUND
'DIE WORLD
Bread and Localloa are Usted:
Bagels, IsraeL
Danish Pastry, Vienna.
French Bread, France.
Jule Kaga, Scandinavia.
Engliah Muffins, England.
Moravian Sugar Cake ,
CLechoslovakia.
Wrap fresh baked bread and
rolls after they have cooled and
remove as much air from the
package as possible. These tips
will help keep bread moist during
·
storage,

the egg whites until frothy before
starting to slowly add the granulated
sugar (about four tablespoons to
three egg whites ). Try adding just a
can never make a nice meringue to
tiny pinch of cream of tartar. When
go on a pie. I beat
putting the meringue on the pie, use
it with a fork, add
a spatula to bring it all the way to the
the sugar slowly
edges of the crust and then to make
· and still it will not
peaks and swirls on top.
stand in peaks. I
I also thinly coal the inside of a
use granulated
mold
with mayonnaise, so a gelatin
sugar, but maybe
mold comes out easily and perfectly.
I should use
If you prefer, a clear vegetable
powdered sugar?
salad oil could be used instead. Just
Can you help me?
Cramer
Also, I have trouble getting gelatin a bit of loosening at the top edges
to come out of a mold cleanly, even and there is no need to put it in warm
though I rinse the mold before W!!ter. Good luck!- POLLY
DEAR POLLY - I buy birthday
pouring it in. I put the mold in warm
water for a minute or so when I take and anniversary cards several monit out of the refrigerator, but it ths in advance, immediately address them and put the mailing date
seldom comes out perfect.
I am wondering if I can buy a book in the corner that will he covered
with the stamp. These are banded
with your hints and, if so, where can
together in the correct order for
I buy it?- JEAN
DEAR JEAN - Thanks for the fir- mailing, and each weekend I take
st part of your letter that is not prin- out those to be mailed the following
ted here, where you say the column week, add a personal note and
is getting more popular all the time. stamp. There is no more forgetting .
The one book of Pointers is now out This also works well for paying bills.
of print, but perhaps 'there will he - 'EDNA
Polly will send you one of her
another some day.
As to your meringue problem. signed thank-you newspaper coupon
Mine would never have peaks if I clippers if she uses your favorite
beat it with a fork, as I would never Pointe;, Peeve or Problem in her
keep at it long enough, If you have· column. Write POLLY'S POINan electric mixer, use it. Even a TERS in care of this newspaper.
hand beater will be a big help. li;;at
By Polly Cramer
Special correspondeD I
DEAR POLLY - Try as I will, I

~lpf&gt;-Cbewy lbgela
4'&gt;•' to C~ cupo .U.purpooe flour
Zpackages aellve dry yeast
I~ capo warm water
1 tablespoon salt
In a large mixing bowl combine ·
the yeast and II'. cups nour. Combine water and salt and add to the
dry mixture. Beat with an electric miXer for three minutes at
high speed. By hand, stir in
enough of the remaining flour to
make a moderately stiff dough. ·
Knead for eight to 10 minutes or
until smooth and elastic. Cover
for 15 minutes. Cut dough into 12
equal portions and shape into
ballll. Punch a hole In the center
of each ball with floured finger
and pull gently to enlarge the
hole. Cover and let rise for 20
minutes. Bring one gallon of
water to boiling lempenlture In a
large pot. Boil4 or 5 bagell at one
time for a total of 7 minutes, turning once. 'Drain and place on
greased baking sheet. Bake at 3'75
degrees F. for 30-35 minutes.
Makes 12 bagels. Serve bagels
with spread, jelly, peanut butter,
honey or cream cheese.
Menu - Beef Stew, Green
Salad, Chewy Bagels and Spread,
Fudge Brownies, Milk, and Coffee or Tea.

•" I

Mrs. Miller honoree of party
Mrs. Bonnie Miller of Middleport
was given a surprisebirthday party
Jan. 30 at her home hosted by her
daughter and son-in-law, Betty and
Charles Dill.
A birthday cake baked and
decorated by her granddaughter,
Cathy Scarberry, was served with

ice cream and soft drinks.
Others attending were Sid Taylor
and her· grandchildren and greatgran~~hildren , Sharon Folmer, Linda Fosler, Cathy Scarberry and Gortney, Roberta Dill and Tanya, A
nora] arrangement and other gifts
were presented to Mrs. Miller.

UMW visits care center
Visits to the Pomeroy Health Care
Center were discussed at the recent
meeting of the United Methodist
Women of the Racine Chlirch held in
the church annex ,
Several members reported on a
visit they had made recently with
patients and of plans for another
visit. Mrs. Etta Mae Hill presided at
the meeting with the program
"Called To Stewardahip" being
given by Alleyne Rees. Marlene
Fisher was at the piano for group
singing. All of the members took
part in an "energy audit."
The .mission report was given by
Mrs. Mabel Shiel,ds, and plans were
made for several members to aitend
a workshop and training session to
be held at The Plains on Feb. 24.
Thank you notes were received from
abut-ins who had received fruit
plates from the UMW at Christmas.
Program books for the year were

given out. Each Wednesday the
women will meet at the church to
work on projects. They are currently
sewing carpet rags for rugs to be.
sold at a bazaar.
Refrestunents were served by
Mrs. Hill.

Helen Help Us

If he has live-in lover,

Baby arrives

he 's ·probably off-limits
BY HELEN AND SUE HOTTEL
Special correspondents
DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
I am very attracted to this man
and he seems to like me but he's
never called me up.
You see, he has a live-in friend but
it seems more of a convenience
arrangement than a real love affair,
They share e.penses. Oh, yes, she's
female.
Would it be okay if I telephoned
him, inviting him to a party or
something•
SORT OF
UBERATED
Dear SOL:
...oniy if you also invite his live-in
friend. It's the polite thing fo do until
you know for sure they're merely
sharing an apartment and not their
lives. - HELEN
NOTE FROM SUE: But, of course, you can hope he shows up without
her.
DEAR RAP:
What do you think of people who
tear coupons or page~ from
magazines in doctors' offices, so
you're left wondering how an article
ended? - BURNED AGAIN
DEAR B.A. :
They need a large dose of thoughtfulness. Too bad no one ever intended a Consideration Pill. HELEN AND SUE
I

Beat of the Bent{

Mildred Chapman Gibbs was the
announced that it was not polllible
speaker at the recent meeting of the
for
anyone to borrow microfilm cenMeigs County Genealogical Society.
sus
recorda through the- Pomeroy
Her topic was her research done in
library.
Anyone who does so must
preparing the histories of Hartford
sign
a
form
taking responsibility for
and Mas011 City, W.va. She told that
them.
The
fllrrul
can then be viewed n
her main source was the state aron
the
microfilm
reader at the Meigs
chives in Charleston. This is the
Museum. Census recorda for 1800
location of the newspapers for-West
Virginia. The local newspapers through 1900 for any place in the
carried local colunms for each town. United States can be ordered.
The secretary also reported that
Ads by local businessmen in these
the
Ohio Historical Society now has .
old papers provided the basis for the
all old Meigs County papers on ' .;
business history. Gibbs mentioned
that it was common in those days for microfilm. Formerly a researcher
newspapers to copy from one had to work in the old papen1 direc- '·
tly, This was caiiSing a great deal of '
another. It was mentioned that
deterioration.
Copies of the
historians took many stories from
microfilm
can
be
purchased from , .
people who were not always totally
the
Ohio
Historical
Society.
accurate. Also, Anna Ledderer got
In the next month, the society will
information from a Mr. Crump who
be
issuing its own newlletter to all
was nearly deaf ·at the time.
its
members. It will be sent to all n.
Therefore, some of her accounts are
wbo
belonged Jut year, All who
not accurate since corrununication
have
not paid their dues will alao
was difficlilt between Mr. Crump
receive
a dues notification.
and her.
The
next
meeting will be held
Mrs. Gibbs mentioned Mason
FebrUary
15
at the Meigs mU!Jelllll.
County history is very inAI
this
time
there will be a work "
terconnected with Meigs County
session
to
copy
the quadrennial
history since a lot of travel occurred
enwneration.
All
members are ·•
between the two. Even Mrs. Gibbs
urged
to
attend
so
that
this can be
herself has Meigs County roots. Her
accomplished,
great-grandfather, Robert Carrunel,
named the current village of Racine
after the city of Racine, Wisconsin, Slinderella class meet
his fanner home.
·'
Label reading and its Importance
Society President June Ashley
read a copy of the minutes of the . to nutrition was the discussion tOpic .
Ohio Genealogical Society executive at last week's meeting of Slinderella 1,
board. The executive board of- classes.
Meeting Tuesday night at St.
ficially accepted the local society as
Joseph's
Catholic Church in Mason,
a chapter. The new county histories
four
new
members were welcomed
of Wood County, W, Va., and
into
the
group.
Shirley Tucker lost
Washington and Gallia Counties
the
most
weight
and Frances Oliver
were placed on display for the memwas the runner-up. Betty Dill and
Ann Lyons lost the most weight in "
the Pomeroy Class held Tuesday
evening with seven new Jllembers
being taken in, and at the Chester
class; Kathleen Bissell lost the most "
weight I nformalion on the classes
Jnay be obtained from Jo · Ann
Newsome, lecturer.
·

Polly's Pointers

Meringue needs help

Outside of being bossy and
opinionated, she seems okay. Should
I tell her I don't like this sort of
thing, or ami too- PICKY?
DEAR PICKY :
· Tell her! - SUE
DearP.:
But don't expect great changes in
a bossy, opinionated female. More
likely she'll start changing you. HELEN
DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
You said that amniocentesis could
tell the sex of your baby before it
was horn. If a couple want a boy and
it's a girl, wouldn't that be a great
temptation for an abortion? JAMES AND JOAN
DEARJAMESANDJOAN :
Only for very selfish, unfeeling
people! - SUE
DEARJAMESANDJOAN:
Amniocentesis is recommended
only to detect birth defects. It Isn't
performed on healthy young women
with no history of genetic problems
or threatened abnormalities in the
child.
I can't believe many couples
would opt for abortion rather than
have a baby of the "wrong" sex. As
I've said before, that's as terrible as
the ancient practice of killing
Chinese girl children at birth. HELEN

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinei-Page-11
'

Food for Thought

Mrs. Peggy Wood, secretary,
presided in the absence of the
president and vice president and
read a letter of resignation from
those two officers, Warren and
Kathy Perrine. It was noted that
they no longer have a child attending
the Middleport schooL By secret
ballot, Michael Gerlach was elected
president,. and Mrs. Shirley Smith
was elected first vice president.
Mrs. Betty Fairchild, district PTA
officer, installed the new officers.
An additional amount of $57.50 was
approved for basketball uniforms.
The PTA earlier approved an expenditure of $100. It was noted that
at the March meeting a vote will be .
taken by the membership on
whether to stay PTA or go PTO. Letters will be mailed to all members of
the unit advising of the vote on the
regular meeting night of March 16.
The meeting opened with a
moment of silent prayer for the
release of the hostages, and prayer
by Mrs. Martha Klein. The children
attending led in the pledge to the
nag. Treasurer Kay Logan reported
a balance of $861.99 following
payment of bills.
Mrs. Twila Childs' class won the
room count. Refreshments were
served by the executive committee.

Wednesday, February 4, 1981

WednesdiiY• February 4,1911

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Se11tinel

Frustrated doe in Pomeroy
BEATOF'niEBEND
ByBobHoeiUcb
Sealloel writer
A very frustrated doe deer
somehow got into the business
section
of
Pomeroy Tuesday
afternoon.
·
In turn, some of
the pedestrians on
the East Main St.
sidewalks became
frustrated as they
dodged to get out
of the way of the
Bob
fast-moving deer. At one point the
d':"r hit against a large plate glass
wmdow of a business establistunent.
Fortunately for the building owner
and the deer, the.glass didn't break.
.At last count, the deer was seen in
the area of the Meigs Theatre ap.parently heading back to the hills.
If it's roses you're thinking of for a
Valentine's Day remembrance, be
sure to check with your local norist
before you give up on the idea.
Bill Francis advises that the supply of roses is low at this time of the
year and the demand is high. It's
about this time of the year also that
the news stories on television start
reporting roses at about 60 bucks a
dozen, Locally, roses are much
lower than that, Bill reports, but
local sales are disco~raged due to
the high pri~e given on television. So
do check the local norists if roses
turn your sweetie on.

The Meigs County Fair Board
Monday night lined up the grandstand attractions for 1981.
Entertainment comes high and admilJSion to grandstand events these
days Is included in the general admission to the fair so it's becoming a
problem.
However, the board has worked
out a variety of presentations for the
1981 edition of the fair . On Tuesday
evening, the annual demolition derby will be held - and does that ever
pack 'em in! On Wednesda.Y
evening, Bruce Stone, who is actuaUy Bruce Stalnaker. formerly of
the Pomeroy area, will be en!efl.ailling along with the Harvest
Trio of Reedsville. Bruce has been a
p~essional singer for years and
ollly recently turned to gospel
music, He has made several well
r¢eived appearances at local churches over the past few months. You
sliould hear some of his recordings

- just great!
The board has booked Helen CorneliiiS who IISed to be termed with
Jim Ed Brown for Thursday night.
Preceding her appearance on the
same evening will be the "Young
Blades of Blue Grass." ·The Young
Blades are a trio and .are excellent,
according to the local word.
The grandstand attraction for
Friday evening will be the annual
horse pulling contest while on Saturday, the tractor pull will be the
feature of the evening, Last year,
the horse pulling and the tractor
pulling were both on Saturday, the
final fair day, and that didn't go too
welL The tractor pull, by the way, is
also great in bringing people out - a
huge crowd last year. The pony
pulling event has lieeh cancelled for
the 1981 fair.
A "different" kind of evening out
on the local level will be held on Feb.
21 at the recreational building of
Royal Oak Park. The event will be a
dinner-dance being held by the 22
Order of Eastern Star Chapters of
District 25 and is open to the public.
Dinner, a buffet, will be offered all
evening starting at 7 p.m. and
providing music for dancing will be
the Larry Keenan Quartette of
Morehead, Ky . Tickets have been
placed on sale at the New York
Clothing House, with Gerald Powell,
992-2622; Lois Pauley, 992-23!8 or
evenings, 992-7133; Lois Thompson,
Diamond Savings and Loan or 992~7 in the evenings. ·
Oh - by the way, th.e proceeds go
to the Heart Foundation.
I hope you caught Uonei Boggs'
letter dealing with the Aorta bus
being discontinued. Personally, I
thought it was hilarious and came
across with some good points. You
ought to do that more often, LioneL
We've been asked to remind you
that Rutland American Legion Post
4li7 is sponsoring a round and square
dance from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. every
Saturday night at the post home. Admission is $1.50 for adults and 75 cents for children. The proceeds, of
course, go to post projects.
Just think. In a couple of months you'll look out that window

and see flowers in bloom, A
thought on the miracle of the
seasons could help you to keep
stniling.

Frau Wenzel to speak tonight .
. On Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. the
Pomeroy United Methodist Church
will host Frau Gertrude Wenzel of
Weilhelm, Gennany, Frau Wenzel
and her late husband were instrumental in the ,early development
of Christian missionary work in New
Guinea. They began the lr
missionary work as German
Methodist missionaries six years
befo~e outbreak of World War I.
In 1llllli after 50 years, she returned
to New Guinea and opent four months visiting and speaki~ in places

where abe and her husband worked.
She is past her 88th birthday, but is
still a vlgoroiiS speaker. She is in the
midst of a coast to coast tour of the
United States. This tour has been
arranged by U. S. Anny chaplains
who have been captivated by her
zeal for missionil, while in Ge!Tllllny.
The person responsible for local
arrangements is the Rev. Mr. Ar~
thur Duhl who Is a retired U. s. Army chaplain and United Methodist
minister.
Everyone is welcome:

Celebrates fifth birthday
Micah Maiden, daughter of Debbie
Malden, celebrated her fifth blr.thday at the home of her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Bishop.
Gifts were presented to Micah and
a Holly Hobbie and Oscar the
Grouch cake were baked for her by
her cousin, Barbara McMahen.
Cake and ice cream were served
to Robbie and Jesse Eynon, Tamiko
and Mary Kay Deeter, Lanny and
Jenny Tyree, Harvey, Cathy and B.
J. Hoffner, Tracey and Jeff McMahon, Anna and Ryan McKinney
Roy, Mike and Yvonne Barreswilt:
and Mandi Roush.

Skating party held
A skating party wsa held recently
for Ken Vickers and Richie Clark in
honor of their 13th birthdays at the
New Haven Skating Rink, with their
parents, Mr. and Mrs, Kenneth
Vickers, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Clark
as hosts. Refrestunents were served.
Attending were Tonya Politano,
Laura Brewer, Carrie Harris, Todd
Gress, Jbn Hicks, Mitchell Roush,
Darin Marr, Daltll!l Bagley, Joe
Burris, Jimmy Wade, Pat Morrison,
Tom Baumgardner, M. K. Ohlinger,
Mike Wolfe, Myron Fields, Matthew
Thompson, Jerry Roush, Darrell
Mitchell; Matthew Dawson, Jackie
Paugh, Jeff Barnitz, Mrs. Robert
Brewer, Mr. and Mrs. Clark, Mr.
and Mrs, Vickers.

Micah Maiden
212,2011 CUBIC FEET
About 212,200 cubic feet of water a
second thunder over the Niagara
F'ails.

'Snowbound' arrangements
highlight arts council
Still-life arrangements depicting a hobby were displayed at
the recent meeting of the Shade
Valley Council of Floral Arts held
at the home of Mrs. Sheila Curtis,
"Snowbound" was the theme of
the arrangements Which aU included flowers as well as objects
telling the story of a hobby. In a
vote by the membership Mrs.
Janet Koblentz received first for
her dispaly using an old
fashioned sewing machine head,
fabric and pattern, with second
going to Mrs. Melanie Stethem
who used pink and blue yam,
crocheting needles, a basket, and
baby afghan.
Other exhibits were by Mrs.
Debbie Osborne, on photography
IISing a camera, pictures and
photo supplies; Mrs. Peggy
Crane, a still life on knitting using
.yarn, patterns and needles, and
by Mrs. Jennie Machir on music
IISing sheet music, a metronone,
and musical notes.
Slides of Ohio historical places
were abown and narrated by Mrs.
Stethem. ·The slides, secured
from the Ohio Association of Garden Cluba, included home of former presidents, Indian sites, and
marks left by first settlers.
Mrs. Jo Ann Francis was
welcomed as a new member. For
roll call, members named their
. newest addition to their indoor
garden, Maida Long gave a
prayer of thanksgiving for the
returned hostages.

A home flower show was planned for April 21. Plans were completed for the therapy program
for the special education classes
at the Chester school with Mrs.
Jackie Frost, Mrs. Stethem, and
Mrs, Koblentz to assist the
children In potting daffodil bulbs
for forced blooming.
Mrs. Machir held a discussion
on how to get arrangements and
horticulture' exhibits ready and to
a abow in one piece: She
suggested everyone study the
OAGC Exhibitors Handbook,
Pages 41 and 42 on conditioning
and abowing exhibition flowers.
She said thet it tens the Importance of hardening flowers ·
and how to do it.
Members gave suggestions on
how to safely transport
arrangements and specimens
some suggesting sandbags, canning jar divided cartons, wooden
crates, upside down cardboard
boxes with holes cut for potted
plants, and rolling tulipa In
newspaper, and then placing in
water to hold the stems straight.
Meeting next month will be at
the home of Mrs. Betty Dean,
"Heartfelt Greetings" will be
theme with members to take a
collage incorporating plant
material.
Refrestunents were served by
Donna Curtis, Angela Chapman,
and Larissa Long, all members of
the Utile Redbuds Junior Club.

r--------....,.----------------------------

F&amp;AMTOMEET
Harrisonville Lodge 411, F&amp;AM,
will hold ils regular meeting at 7:30
p.m. Saturday with work in the
Master Mason degree . All Master
Masons are Invited and refreshments will be served.

INVENT BEITER ,
MOUSETRAP
'
Jnvenla
better
mousetrap, and the
&amp;rirucruen~·---------------fellow ahead of you in line at the
wEDNESoAv
to take an article to read on the . patent office will have jsut nailed
SOUTHERN LOCAL School theme of a holiday in February or down rights to the same gizmo.
District Junior · High Athletic about health.
Boosters, 7:30 Wednesday evening
MEIGS ASSOCIATION For Retarat the junior high building,
ded Citizens, 7:iJO Thursday night at
POMEROY LODGE 164 F'&amp;AM the Meigs Couupunily School.
Wjl((nesday 7::!0 p.m. All master
EVANGELINE CHAPTER 172,
u~sons are invited.
Order of the Eastern Star, Thur·
fUBUC ·PANCAKE supJJ€r at sday, 7:30 p. m. at the Middleport
Racine Methodist Church annex 4 to Masonic Temple, Members to take
7 p.m. Wednesday served by men of baked items for a sale with proceeds
on these
u., church with proce-eds going Ill to go to the Heart Fund.
church building fund .
FRIDAY
i.ADJES AUXII.IARY o£. MidHAPPY HARVESTERS CLASS,
dleport Fire Department Wcd- Trinity Church, I :30 p.m. Friday, at
mlsday 7::10 p.m. al the fi re hai L All the church. Mrs. Caryl Cook to
ruernbers are urged to ctttcnd.
present the.program.
, 111URSDA Y
. '
SHOWING OF movie, " Prophecy
TRUSTEES TO MEET
of 'Doomed America," 7 p.m. ThurThe
Salisbury
Township Trustees
~Y at Midway Conununity Church,
will meet at 7 p.m. Friday at the
orr County Road 10 in Langsville
home of the clerk, Wanda Eblin,"
area; public invited.
LAUREL CLIFF BETTER Laurel Cliff Road.
HEALTH CLUB, 7:30 p.m. Thur·
JAYCEES TO MEET
sday, Riverboat Room of the
The
Meigs
County Jaycees will
Diamond County Savings and Loan
meet
at
7:30p.m.
Monday at its new
Co., Pomeroy, with Mrs. Jean
headquarters
over
the Elberfeld
Wright, Mrs. Delia Curtis and Mrs.
store.
Ruby Frick as hostesses. Members

•

ANCIENT METRQPOLIS
Singapore, the independent cityslate with a population of nearly two
million off the southern tip of
Malaysia, w.as a prosperous trade
center in the 13th century. It dwindled to a fishing village of about 250
inhabitants until Britain's Sir Slamford Raffles bought it from the
sultan of Johore in 1819 and revived
itasan International freeport,
.-------~__.:-----l

DOUBLE COUPON OFFER

•AIAUAS •IULIPS •TUIWIUIIS
•SIUI &amp; PERMANENT MUIIGEIIENTS

POMEROY
FLOWER ~HOP
......

PRIVAT£
EYES

.'- ~;:
~ ~ ~.,......~

DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
I took this girl out for the first time
last night. We had dinner at a nice
place. She ordered scallopini, and I
got steak and mushrooms. She took
one look and decided she liked my
food best. So she kept sampling,
leaning over my plate and taking
forkfuls of whatever wos closest.

"

,,

r-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;___________iil

--

BULUTIN-

•

I

TOPS
Juanita Lambert and Denise Lambert were welcomed as new members when the Rutl~nd TOPS OH
1456 Club met last wetjk.
Denise Lambert was queen for the
week having lost the most weight
and was presented a dollar and a ribbon. Marcia Barrett, leader, announced that area recognition day
and state recognition day will be observed on May I and 2 in Colwnbus.
Infonnalion on the club 1nay be obtained by calling 742-2171.

RE-OPENING

FOR THE SEASON
lHURSDAY, FEBRUARY 5TH
SPECIAl.

~

t·
BERMUDA STEAK $129~
69
: : .........;....$1 t
OF THE WEEK

THIS JUST IN:

Favorites from SNYDER'S OF BERLIN

- -·

Ask for SNYDER'S OF BERLIN Potato
Chips, Popcorn or Cheese Curls at
your favorite Grocer.

From the people with the

-A

ADOLPH'S

SAVE TIME AND MONEY\
WITH HOME DELIVERY.

DAIRY VALLEY

CALL NOW.

Ph. 992·2556
570 W. Main
Pomeroy, Oh.
•
"Located atthe end of the
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge"
-

THE DAILY SENTINEL
PH: 992-2156

•

•

•

'.

,.,

�Wednesday, February 4, 1981

Middleport, Ohio

Garwood case goes ·to jury
'.
I
I

"All five psychiatrists who
CAMP LEJEUNE, N.C. (AP) set an.v precedents for the Marine ·
testified
here agreed that Garwood
The court-martial of Marine Pfc. Corps.
.
was
credible
during
Robert Garwood - !be only trial to
"The code of conduct has a"'lew
examination .. ,(and that he) gave
involve alleged cOllaboration by a
bounce-back provi~ion that in fact
prisoner 'Of war in Vietnam - was allows soldiers to go ahead and do
vivid descriptions that were
historicaliy inaccurate in that they
going to the jury today for a decision something, to cooperate and then
differed from testimony of his fellow
on whether Garwood helped the Viet
bounce back," chief defense counsel
Cong or was driven insane by cal&gt;' John C. Lowe said Tuesday. "The
POWs," he said.
tivity .
Lowe said testimony showed Gar·
Department of Defense recognizes
Before the jurors began that things happen in POW camps."
wood carried rifles several times,
delibe'rations, military judge Col.
Lowe said torture and brain· yet Garwood could remember only
R.E. Switzer was to give his final in- washing drove Garwood mad during
one oceasion.
structions on the remaining two of 14 years of captivity.
"If he was not lying in his own
four original charges: collaboration
The prosecution based its case on testimony, and if we do believe the
with the enemy and maltreatment of the testimony of eight fellow cal&gt;' testimony of other POWs, then it
a fellow American prisoner of war.
becomes apparent to us as It was to
lives who portrayed Garwood as a
Garwood, 34, could face life im- survivor who put personal wellthe psychiatrists that Garwood was
prisonment if he is convicted.
mentally ill at the time in that l)e did
being ahead of other considerations.
Under military regulations, only
not know what he was doing," the
Bul Lowe said Garwood was
one vote need be taken during isolated early in his capture, suf- defense lawyer said.
deliberations, and four of the five
The government contended Garfered deprivation and saw
Marine officers on the jury must executions of Vietnamese prisoners,
wood made up the. stories he told
agree in order to return a guilty ver- ail of which drove him inSRne.
psychiatrists.
dict.
Garwood, an Indianapolis native,
was a teen-age jeep driver when he
was captured in 1965 near Da Nang.
He returned home in 19'19 after
David Huddleston, Affidavit, Sui- Jr., James Frederick Ward, George
ton.
·
H. Ward, Richard Allen Ward,
passing a note to a Finnish
businessman in Hanoi.
David L. Huddleston, Mary Ann Robert Eugene Ward, Aff. of Trans.,
Charges of desertion and verbally
Huddleston to David L. Huddleston, Middleport.
Mary Ann Huddleston, Lots &amp;-11,
abusing a fellow POW were
Irene E. Thornburg, dec. to Mar·
dismissed last week.
Sutton.
vin E . Thornburg, Cert. of Trans.,
The ll·week court-martial - the
Cecil L. Stacy to Beechel D.
Olive.
only one to involve alleged
Breeding , 2.75 acres, Salem.
James Hoyt to Royal Pet. Inc.,
collaboration by a POW in Vietnam
William T. Soulsby to June RU!ie
Ease., Bedford.
- Was widely regarded as a test of Soulsby, Parcels, Salisbury.
Paul Phillips, Diana Phillips to
Katherine Ward, dec' d., to Jerry
the U.S. military's code of ·conduct
Curtis Ward, Margaret A. Ward,
requiring captives to resist.
C. Ward, Elizabeth Melton, Ruth
Lots 4, 16, 17, 18, Scipio . .
It also relied heavily on testimony
Alice .Winchester, Betty Frances ,
Rosie Estep Jackson to Robert R..
Fields, Marcella Ann Ward,
of psychiatrists. Those for the
Jackson, Int. in I Acre, Olive.
prosecution argued Garwood was
Kathryn Faye Farrow, Jerry Ward,
sane and knew what he was doing , ~--'------"--------" ··-----------­
and those for the defense contended·
imprisonment pushed the young
man over the edge of insanity.
Includes: Disc Pads
Defense lawyers argued the case
91
(both front wheels)
On
was "one of a kind" and would not
New Wheel Seals

Television
•
•
VIewmg

HOW ABOUT
ANSWERING
A QUESTION
FIRST'?

TRIAL NEARS END - Marine Pic. Robert Gar- .
1\'ood,left, and Donna Long, right, leave the Judge Ad- VIetnam, wiD see the end of his lrlal Wednesday mor·
vocate building at Camp Lejeune, N. C., Tuesday as nlng as Judge Col. Robert E. Swiber is expected to
Garwood's court-martial recessed for the day. Gar· charge the jury. lAP Laserpholo).

FRONT DISC BRAKE SPECIAL
*49
'F1Peetone

Inspect calipers, hoses, fluid
levels
Check Rear Brakes
Pac Front WHeel Be.arings

Wildlife packets still available
&gt;.

Wildl ife packets, crown vetch, and
other ground cover plants, song bird
packets, and quantity bundles of
plants for spring planting are
available again this year from the
Meigs Soil and Water Conservation
District, Box 432, Pomeroy , 221 W.
Second Street, second Ooor of the
..' farmers · bank building to Meigs
County la~d owners.
The selection does not include
anything that would become a
nuisance, each should encourage
wildlife, control erosion or beautify
your area.
If you need a windbreak around
your property, a new ornamental
plant for your law, a future Christ·
mas tree growing in your own yard ,
some plants to attract birds to your
yard, a ground cover plant to hold
soil on a problem area, or a plant to
cover a shaded area, we have a
selection of plants that will provide
these needs at a minimal cost.
The seedlings will be in the first
year of April and you will be notified
when to pick them up. Wildlife
packets contain the followin g
varieties. It will not be possible to
substitute or make changes in the
assortment.

10, Wh1te Pin e, 5

10, Norway SprUe~ . 5
10, White Spruce, 5

10, Cot. Blue Spruce, 5
10, Canadian Hem lock , 5

5. Sweet Gum, 3
5, Black Wa lnut, 3
5, White Birch, 3

S. Douglas Fir, 3
Total 100 Total Seedlings. 52
SONG BIRD PACKET l$71
2 Silky Dogwood

2 E . Mounta in Ash
2 Elderberry
2 Chinese Chestnut
2 Fra2ier Fir
1 Norway Spruce

EVENINCl

0

6 '00 12 10 ill
(of I1C!J(W W NEWS
I 3 1 BIB!.,£ BOWL
( 4 ) MOVIE 'Nikki, Wild Dog 01 THE
North ' Part II. 1961
I Ol
CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
1, 1 ABC NEWS
I BI 3-2·1CONTACT
111) OVER EASY Hosts: Hugh

CAPTAIN EM.

Downs and Frank Blair.

HOW D'VA KIJOW
YOU'LL FINP THIS

6 ' 30

fME:'S TOO

IT'~ PllOI!ABLY
•TASHI!P !101111!·
WH!IlE- IN Till!
VALLEY ey

NOW!

10, Austrian Pine, 5
10, Red Pine, 5

Hemlock 25 for S5

Silky DQgwood 10 lor 55

-

E . Mountain Ash 10forS5

-

Bittersweet 10 for S5

-

White Spruce 10 tor$5
Co l. Blue Spruce 10 for SS

-

Elderberry 10 for S6
Manchu Cherry Hl for $6
Ch inese Chestnut 10 for $6
White Birch lOforS6
Douglas Fir lOforS6
Frazier Fir 10 for S6
Sweet Gum-10 for $3
Blac k Walnut 10 tor $3

2 Biner~weet
2 Douglas Fir
2 M anchu Cherry

' • ! •
I ' ~ '
' I .lo •
I, .lo,

.

'~

'

'·.'
' .

Air Shocks· Monroe
Maxi-Air lSO p.s.i.
S69.9S
While Stock Lasts

Name - please print

.

•

' I

Exhausts • Starters

Anti-Freeze - Ignition Parts
Wagner Brak es - Alternators
Fra m Filters · Gates Products Tool s.

Mechanicondutv
B·END · .SE R-v.
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Address

'"service
area .

Total orders ....... ~ •...

Mai I to : Meigs SCWD , So)( 432,
Pomeroy , Ohio 45769.

~

&amp;AUTO PARTS
Andy &amp; Betty Porter

Racine , Oh.

-

-

-

949· 2150

-

-

Tell that special sometme with

GASOUNE ALLEY

~ i~Searching for the cle~er way to say "I Love You?"
Our

Bob Woods and Marvin Taylor, 54:
and John Wickham and Russ Wells,
58.
Elected arson investigator was
John Wickham with Hobart Newell
as his assistant. Ed Beair and Bruce
A. Myers will be the cooks, and
named to the flower committee were
Bob Woods, Roy Christy and Bruce
D. Myers.
Roy Christy, Harold Newell,
Bruce D. Myers, Hoba rt Newell, and
Bob Woods were named to the board
of directors. During 1980, the department answered six structure fires,
s ix car wrecks, five grass fires, four
oxygen runs, and
eight
miscellaneous calls. Total miles for
the trucks during the year were 591.

plored and harvested.
Divers already routinely do repair
work on oil rigs standing in deep
water, but those operations seldom
take place at depths greater than 300
meters, or about 1,000 feet.
Scientists began increasing
pressure in the ball at 9:30 a.m.
Tuesday and at I p.m. passed the
660-meter mark set by a British
team last year. By 3 p.m., the divers
had reached 666.5 meters.
Bennett, at the F .G. Hall
Laboratory for Environmental
Res~arch, said the men reached the
maximwn pressure at 9:30 p.m.
Tuesday.

Th' drive bar
wu1 a mite
too lonq!

'let's tr4 'er

aq'in!

Happ.y

Valentine Ads will be published
a truly unusual way to
. procla1m your love and best wishes .

SAY ..1LOVE YOU" WITH A
$1.00 SENTINEL VALENTINE AD.
WINNIE

( Um ~ 16 Words- Sizes lll~rated Below)

WEL L, I

~~
.

Th'IN}( I'VE
FOl/N/7 IT/

.

To My Wile, Ann ...
After
14 wonderful
years of marriage. I'm
still head over ·heels in
love with you !
Walter Z .

To Mom and Dad . ..
We couldn't have picked
a nicer pa ir of parents in

the world! Have a Hap
py Valentine·~ Day!
M i ke and Sue

r--------------------------------------------1
WRITE YOUR MESSAGE BEUM AND BRING IT
:
1

OR MAIL IT WITH !u11 BY FEBRUARY 12TH TO THE
DAILY SENTINEl, P.O. BOX 729, POMEROY, OHIO
16 WORDS $1.00-CASH WITH ORDER

l
:
!'""'"'
I

1. _____ 2,

BARNEY

SHERIFF l!

SOME FELLER
JUST DROVE UP IN MY FRONT
YARD--SNATCHED ONE OF MY
CHICKEN5
SCRATCHED OFF 1!

----t

- - - - - 3 . --.,....--- 4.
5.----6.-----1·-----8.
:
9. - - - - 1 0 . - - - - - 1 1 . ~----12. _ _ _ _ II
t3.
14.
15.
1s.
~----------------~----------------I
.

WHAT
DID TH'

IT HAD A
RED COMB,

VARMINT
LOOK
KE?

RED WATTLES,
WHITE
FEATHERS
AN' &gt;nL'LC:"
FEETS !!

I

PHONE 992·2156

----------·

THE DAILY SENTINEL

PEANUTS

't'OU CHEATED ME ...
THERE'S ONL'{ ONE
CHOCOLATE CHIP IN
THIS .COOKIE ...

COOKIES

254
-~-

Oka4,Rufus'

Febru~rv 13, and offer you

. '
\::

I I t) t)
CYGERLr
1

rJ

1

tFLIEBE r

) (]

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

"K I I ) r I I I

Answerhere: THE

I

veslelday·s

WHAT'$ Tl-lAT 'r'OU'RE
EATING, CHARLIE BROWN ?

1 Tl-liNK IT'S A

CHOCOLATE G'f'P COOKIE

0 (Bl ti01 BUGSBUNNY'S YALEN·
TINE Aller he iS sh ot by o ne ol
Cupid's arrows, Bugs Bunny
decldestopithisawnmatchmaking
sktll s with Cupid ' s . (Repeat)
I 9 ) KITTY ' RETURN TO AUSCH·
WITZ Kitty Hart , a housew ife and
r adtographer now liv1ng in England,
!'! pent almost two years as a young
\,Jtrl as a prisoner m Auschwitz . This
mo 11i11g do cum ent re cords what
happened when she decided to
take her eon David to Auschwilz to
try t oe~t plaln to h1m th e lullhorr or ol
what she had seen and ex.per·
•enced. (90 mins .)
1111ALLCREATURESGREATAND
SMALL ·eeau ty of,theB east' Siegr ·
ned finds the right payment for ill
treatment when he trea t s a stallion
belonging to a scre~P merchant. (60
mms.)
8 ' 30 (3) JOHN WESLEY WHITE
0 ( 8 ) 110) SPECIAL MOYIE PRE·
SENTATION ' Crieis AI Cen tral
Htgh ' 1981 Stars: Joann e Wood ·
wa rd, Charles Durning.
8 ' 58 131 CBNUPDATENEWS
g,oo 1210 i?l DIFF'RENT STROKES
Amo td parti ci pates in a Yotuntary ·
mt er ·cullural bUsing pr ogram in a
l ong Island town , but the white
s uburbanites don 't ex.aclly wei·
come h101 w ith open arm s (Closed·
CaptiOned; U.S.A.)
13 1 700CLUB
I SI
COLlEGE BASKETBALL
LS.U. vs Vandt~rbilt
l o lr1~1 W TAXI
rt!' KITTY' ~ETURN TO AUSCHWITZ Kilty Hart, a housewife and
radiOgraPhe r now liYing in England.
spent almost two years as a young
~trl as a prls onermAus chwitz. This
mo "1ng doc ument reco.r ds what
happened when she decided to
take her son David to Auschwitz to
. t ry to ox. pl am t o him tile full t'! orror of
what she hod seen and e~~:per ·
1enced. (90 mins.)
9,30 12) 0 11'/ THE FACTS OF LIFE
Nat aile finds that a Iter herlirst date
slle'sbe comeverypoputar, biJtshe
doesn ' t know that it's because the
boy spread some very ra c y-· and
Yery untrue ··storiee ab out her.
/ 4 1MOVIE ·(COMEDY) ••• " How
To Beat The HlghCoaiOtLivlng "
1980
(8 l(12}m SOAPJodiefindshimself
d01ng be I ti e with a leroc1ous martial
nr ts expert m a valiant att ompt t o
resc ue baby Wendy fron'l a kung fu
l o•lress. while Bert. bent on aveng ·
tng Oanny sing/eh~nd edty, 1nvades
u gAthering ot organized crim e
mobsters .
19 1 GEORGE SHEARING AT THE
CARL VSLE Se11n an int 1ma1e cafe ,
Gt! orge Shearing and ba ssis tB rian
fori! perform n program of vintage
Sh~arl ng , mc luding sy ch fav ori te s
ns 'Thi3 Can' t Be l ove' , 'My Funny
Valenllne ·
and
' Lullaby
of
Birdland ·.
10'00 12 1. . 11'1 QUINCY
1 6 )(1210
VEGAS An e lab orete Illusion Is Dan's only chance at keep·
mg him sell and 1:1 wealthy defense
att orney lrom b ecoming the final
vl cttnl s 01 a deranged judge who ,
dtsgu1sed as Don Tanna , has been
UAGCuting und erworl d l igures that
110 sentenc ed to death In his own
kHnljjiHOO court . ( SOmms)
' 91
I REMEMBER HARLEM
·Toward a New Day · 1955- 1950'
t.:hllr!s Harlem 's decline, Its rebir1h
llll dttn couragmgdavetopment. the
1nt1uen c e ond steb11ily of its
c hur c h~s . anll pred lc ti0!1S tor the
future lrom severa l of •I s prominent
Cl!tlena . (60 mln s.)
10 ,28 13 1 CBNUPDATENEWS
10:30 · 3 t MAX MORRIS
1IIJ NEWS
10.58 131 ~NUPOATENEWS
1 LOO 21 . . ( 8 1( t l 8 181 (IO)I!:V W
NEWS
' ~ I JEWISH VOICE
5I TBS EVENING NEWS
9 1 MORECAMBE ANO WISE
II OUTER LIMITS
11 :25 3 l CBNUPDATENEWS
11 ,30 2 . . COLlEGE BASKETBALL
1\ublHII vs Uruvl! rSI1y ol Kentuck.y
l ROSS BAGLEY SHOW

r

(Answers tomorrow )

Jumbles: JOKER CHAFE PURITY AD'$CE
Answer : You could get told off when on itTHE pAR PET

Jul)"'bl• Book No. 15; containing 110 puzzte1,11 avalllbtelor $1.75 pottpllkl
from Jumble, clo this new1p1pe,, Box. 34, Norwood, N.J. 07648. Include your
name, add,.ll, zJp code and m1ke checks PIIY•blt to NtwiPIIperboolct.

BRID.GE
Percentage play ignored

.

NORTH
+KI Q9652

2+81

....

t A7 6

+ K QJ 6

WEST
+J7
'IAJ763
• J 10 4
+7 54

EAST
+Q4 3
'IQ\0952

t82
• 10 8 2

SOUTH
+A 8
'I K 8 4
tKQ953
+A 9 3

Vulnerable : Neither
Dealer: North
West
'North East
Pass
Pass
4t
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass ,5 NT Pass
Pass
Pass·
Pass

,.,.,

,,..

South
3t

7+

U.S.A.)

'4~

CENtER

Telephone No ..

1981 WILDLIFE PACKET
ORDER FORM
Large Pa c kets at Sl7
Small Packets at.S9
Song Bird pa c kets at $7
CrownVetch50for 12
English Ivy 50 for $10
Myrtle 50 lor S10
Pachysandra 50 for SlO
Winter Creeper 50 for $10 ·
White Pine 25 for $5
Red Pine 25 for ss
Austrian Pine 25 for $5
Scotch P ine 25 f or $5
t\lorway Spru ce 25 tor $5

...• Duke divers break record
DURHAM, N.C. (AP)- A team of
divers at Duke University, housed in
an 11-foot-diameter ball, broke the
world record for a simulated dive
Tuesday and a few hours later
reached a maximum pressure equal
to that felt at 686 meters under
water.
"We're very pleased with the per' .
formance tests of the past four
·;I . days," said Dr. Peter Bennett, test
director!or the 36-day project. "This
is easily a most successful and spectacular dive."
The team is trying to prove that
divers can work at almost half-mile
' "
depths, greatly expanding the area
of the ocean floor that can be ex-

NO. t£'S
HE'S
HIS HAIR. AN' D'IED IT
BLACH., l!lJT HIS
16 SIUP 51'UTH!!

{SI1/JII/
Walker

Put Your
Lov.e On
the Line ...

Total 20
Ground cover : SO crown vetch, 12 ; Myrtle , English Ivy , Pochysan·
d ra . Winter Creeper 50 for S10.
Seed l ings l isted in the above
packets may be ordered in quantity .
bundles as li sted be l ow. Pl e ase till
out th e foll owing order form and
se nd w i th your check or money or·
der made out to Meigs SWCD .
Deadline for ordering is Marcn 2,
1981.

Miller heads
Chester firemen
New officers were elected at the
recent meeting of the Chester Fire
Department.
Elected were Dorsel Miller,
president; Ed Beair, vice president;
Elmer Young, Jr., secretary; John
Wickline, treasurer; Bruce A.
Myers, public relations ; Roy
Christy, chief; Harold Newell, first
assistant chief; Bruce D. Myers,
second assistant chief; Larry
Cleland, captain; Larry Lee,
lieutenant for Truck 51; Pearl Ed·
wards, lieutenant for Truck 52; Kirk
Chevalier, lieutenant for Truck 54;
Bruce A. Myers, lieutenant for
Truck48.
Assis(ljnts on the trucks are Virgil
Taylor and Dorsal Miller, 51;· Bruce
D. Myers and, Leonard Myers, 52;

ANNIE

Monroe Shocks - Batteries

) )\

,•

BORN LOSE~

'Sale
T/lfS ~ · A I
cost

me m NBC NEWS

13 1 3D MINUTES WITH FATHER
MANNING
I 5 1 BOB NEW,HART SHOW
16 1 FACE THE MUSIC
· 0 l BJI@ CBS NEWS
18 1 WILD WILO WORLD DF
ANIMALS
111) LILIAS, YOGA AND YOU
1121W ·ABC NEWS
6'58 ( 3 1 CBNUPDATE NEWS
7'00 12 10 PM MAGAZINE
13 1 SENO FORTH YOUR SPIRIT
14 1 DAVY CROCKETT AT THE
ALA.,O Fes s Parker and Buddy
Ebsen st8r in I his series about a
rugged Tennessee backwoods·
manwho blazed a trailofciVilization
through savage Indian territory end
established the Indian 's rights in
America .
15 1 ALLIN THE FAMILY
(6 1(1i] C!) FAMILY FEUD
I 7 1 WILD KINGDOM
0 18 1 TICTACDOUGH
I Ol l11)
MACNEIL·LEHRER
REPORT
1101 NEWS
7,30 12) . . BULLSEYE
( 3 ) ATHOMEWITHTHEBIBLE
I SI SANFORD AND SON
I Bl liJ ( BI JOKER' S WILD
I i I HOLLYWOOD SQUARES
19 )1 111 DICK CAVETT SHOW
110) l100,000NAME THAT TUNE
I1VW FACE THE MUSIC
7,59 13) CBN UPDATE NEWS
8'00 1~ 1 0(7 ) REALPEOPLETon;g"l' s
segment includes a look at a soft ball game played in the snow and
hockey played under water ; a
profile of a female belly dancer in
Ch1cago and a male belly dancer in
Ca l1l orn1a : and a visit with a lady
who has ten alligato.r s for p ets . (60
mtns.l
I 3 I SIGHTS ANO SOUNDS DF
LIFE
I 4 ) DIANA 1\()SS The room comes
at1 ve wtth the sounds at Diana
Ross .
l SI ENERGY AND THE WAY WE
LIVE·PART Vt
r Bl~2)C!) EIGHTISENOUGHWhlle
Tom and Abby celebra te their fifth
wedding anniversary by getting
remarried, DaYid and Janet an ·
noun ce th at they are sepa rating
(60 mins.) (Closed-Ca ptioned:

CUNNING TO ·
8f CAUGHT'
WITH THE MAP-

1Mfii91! WOMAN
IJ.i H&amp;AP~19,;
VALLIY I

2 Canadian Hemlock

WILDLIFE PACKETS
Large Packet ( 517) , Variety,
Small Packet ($9) are listed :
10, Scotch Pine, 5

-

-

tomi

FEB. 4 , 1981

Property Transfers

"
wood, charged with collaborating with the enemy in

Unscramble these four Jurl1bfes
one kltter to each SQuare, to
four ordinary words.

Opening lead :• A

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag
Top score on a board at the
Olympiad mixed pairs was
128 match points. Only three
patrs reached the excellent
contract of seven diamonds.
Two made it for 127 and one·
half match points each. At t he
third table West opened the
ace of hearts. South ruffed in

dummy and led the ace of
diamonds.
West dropped the I 0!
The unfortunate declarer
communed with nature, gazed
at the ceiling; lit three ciga·
rettes, frnally decided that the
10 was a singleton and took an
imn1ediate finesse for the
jack. Down one for five match
points.
A really bad play . There
was no reason to go against
the percentage here and South
was properly punished .
Why did South get five
match points instead of a
zero? Because some players
got to six notrump and could
only come to II tricks.
So much for the play. The
bidding to seven diamonds is
very interesting. South's jump
to three diamonds is submimmum by most standards, but
it works perfectly here, North
raises to fom:: diamonds and
· now South abstains from
Blackwood and cue bids live
clubs.
North can now alford a live
heart cue bid of his own and
South makes the fine bid of
five spades.
North's five notrump is ~
multi-purpose attempt to
reach a grand slam. North
does not know if spades or
diamonds should be the final
contract. but he wants South
to bid seven in either suit in
which he happens to hold two
of the three top honors.
(N i::W SPAili!:H t&lt;:NTEHPHISE ASSN.)

~·"•r
by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
42 Camping
I Tete-a-tete
need

5 Animal

DOWN

10 Official
I Football
symbol
infraction
II Last place, 2 Hang ·
in baseball
suspended
jargon
3 Playing
12 Russian John marble
Yeslerday's Allswer
13 Be airborne 4 Cargo weight
14 Fair-haired 5 British
18 Dorothy's dog 27 Coura,ge
one
statesman 21 Venomous
Z9 "The Kid"
15 Soprano
6 Man's name
tooth
star
Tassinari
7 Greatly
22 Saracen
30 Rental
I&amp; Meat cut
concerned
leader
agreement
17 - to sender 8 Glut
23 Southern
31 Actress
19 - de tete
9 Tripled
sweet
Burstyn
20 Plzzaro's II "Maltese
21 Severe
3li Exploit
Falcon" role 25 Jong's " 37 Actor Beatty
gold
211.avish
15 Fit to drink
of Flying"
38 Foot wiper
reception
22 Ill will
25 Colorless
2&amp; Italian
river
27 Fowl being
2ll Anc. Roman
lang.

Z9Dog
32 Steirl
contents
33.Attention
31 Sprite
341 Repast
38 Rooster, bull
or gander
39 Make an
entry of
40 On a cruise
,II Wanting
DAILY

CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
AXVDLBAAXR
Ia

LONGFEI.LOW

One leller simply stands lor another. In lhio sample A ;1
used f.or lhe three L's, X lo~ lhe tw o O's. etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of lhe words are all
hints. Eoch day the code letters are different .
CRYPTQqUOTI!S
VQ
XPAQ

NG!'AT,
GKI

VQ

UGSYGRSW

VQ

NGVPSQ,

VQ

NDPWKIH

GDW

ATW·

A, TPKJH

PK

VQ

SPNW. - GOA
QEEKWQ
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: WHAT IS NOT GOOD FOR THE
SWARM fS NOT GOOD FOR THE BEE. - MARCU~
AURELIUS

�Page-14- Tile Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy

Insuffici~nt
WASIUNGTON (AP) - Vast
areas of the country are still short of
precipitation, raising fears about the
winter wheat crop and conditions for
planting corn and other crops this
spring.
The government said Tuesday
that winter wheat was "generally
rated fair to good in major production areas" during the week of Jan.
26-Feb. I, with snow reported in
some parts.
"Most precipitation came at the
end of the week in the fonll of snow .
in northern areas and rain in
southern areas," the Joint
Agricultural Weather Facility said.

rainfall raises fears about wheat crops

"Snow covered tbe Com Belt and
Plains states, extending down to the
middle of Kansas, Illinois, Indiana
and Ohio."
But many fields were "exposed
and vulnerable" to wind and freeze
damage prior to the snow, it said.
"Some areas of Montana, North
Dakota and Kansas were experiencing light to moderate amounIs of wind damage earlier in the
week," the report said. " Wann
weather continued to promote insect
activity in many fields in Kansas,
Okjahoma and the Higl) Plains of
Texas."
The winter wheat crop was plan-

led last fall and will be ready for
harvest beginning in May in
southern areas. It is the only major
grain crop for 1981 that has been
planted.
Corn, the biggest U.S. crop, will be
planted in the spring, along with
most other feed grains, other spring·
typewheat,cotton,soybeansandthe
remaining . crops for the 1981 barvest.
The facility, whi.ch is operated
jointly by the departments of Commerce and Agriculture, said warmer-than·usual weather last week
continued in the Com Belt and ex-

Reagan's cabinet debates
grain embargo situation
WASifiNGTON (AP) - President
Reagan's Cabinet is debating
whether to keep or lift the Soviet
grain embargo amid indications
there will be little effect either way ·
on American fanners .
The American Agriculture
Movement, meanwhile, is reminding Reagan of his campaign
promise to end the embargo.
A White House official, who asked
not to be identified, said a decision
today is doubtful because it "is so
tough."
"There's powerful symbolism on
both sides," he said.
Lifting the embargo would be a
gesture to fanners , but retaining or
expanding it " would also send a
strong signal internationally," he
explained. "Economically, it doesn't
make that much difference to farmers.''

Agriculture
Department
. economists say the !9BO decline in
grain prices can be blamed largely
on a glut of supplies from bumper
1979 crops, rather than the embargo.
Farm comm\)(lity prices may be
slightly lower because of the embargo, some government experts
say, and food prices probably have
not increased quite as much as they

otherwise would have.
When former President Carter announced the embargo Jan. 4, 19BO, in
retaliation for Soviet intervention in
Afganistan, he bad the support of
farm groups and their members.
The 'order blocked delivery of 17
million metric tons of U.S. com and
wheat, plus some soybeans and
other products, thai the Soviet Union
had been expected to take last year.
It exempted 8 million metric tons of
grain that were specified .under a
1975 a~reement calling for regular
purchases of U.S. com and wheat by
the Soviets.
To help offset the embargo's impact on farmers, the Carter administration spent about $3 billion to
buy or otherwise withhold from the
market all agricultural exports
denied the Soviets.
Within weeks, however. farm support began to crumble as grain
prices dropped. That slide occurred,
many believed, because Carter had
deprived producers of a lucrative
foreign market.
The 1980 farm-income figure of $24
billion - for all farm p~ucts represented a drop of more than 22
percent from 1979's $31 billion, but
Agriculture Department ernnomists

tended into the South where some
fanners began ~ring fields for
spring planting.
In a related report, the
Agriculture Department noted an
earlier statistic showing fanners
planted a record 63.9 millloo acrea of
winter wheat last fall and that
producers of spring"Pianted wheat
also may opt for "some increase" 1n
acreage.
"So far, moisture conditions 1n
some areas ha.ve not been
favorable," the department said.
"However, weather In coming months will detennlne final production."
Tbe weekly review by the Joint
Agricultural Weather Facility said
pastures going ln~o February were
"generally·rated poor to f&amp;ir across
the South" because of short
moisture supplies, forcing
·producers into the supplemental
feeding of livestock.
Looking at some of the situations
abroad, the report said further snow
helped provide additional protection
for parts of the winter grainbelt In
the western region of the Soviet
Union.
Snow covered moot of Eastern
Europe last week, but "conditions
for winter grain growth remain too
dry in northern Italy and much of
Spain," it said.

say the tailspin was due ffillinly to
leftover supplies from bumper 1979
harvests.
The department had ptedicled
weeks before Carter annoWJced the
embargo that !980 net farm income
would be down sharply, probably
about 20 percent, because of inflation.
Fanners' net income this year is
expected to rise just as sharply perhaps to a range of $27 billion to
$32 billion - because of higher
prices triggered by last fall's
drought-reduced harvests of grain,
oilseed and cotton and adjustments
in livestock production.
Last March 28, however, the
American Fann Bureau Federation
---Public Notice
asked for an '" immediate end" to the
NOTICE OF
embargo, contending not enough
SALE
was being done to offset its effects at
Offers will be received
home and suggesting it was having until 11 :00 O'Clock A.M . on
the 23rd day of February,
little impact on the Soviet Union.
1981 , at the Mavor' 5 office.
Department analysts dispute that 237 Ra ce Street, for the sale
at me follow ing described
assessment of the embargo's effect.
real "'State, to-wi t :
'"Certainly." they said, "the
Real estate situated at
the corner of Garfield and
suspension presented Soviet plan- South
Third Avenue in the
ners with a troublesome element, V i llag_e of Middleport,
. The Village acquireS)
and even cautious inferences Ohio
t itle to sa id real estate by
suggest that the impact has been deed re&lt;:orded in Volume
270, page 703i/ Meigs Countv
more than trivial.
Deed Recor s.

The week brought "adequate
rnolature lllpplles and moderate
temperatures" for cropr; ofeoybeen8
and com In Brull and Argentina,
two leedlnc competlton of U.S. farmers In world marllets, the report
said.
·WASHINGTON (AP) - Sclentilt.tr
will begin a project thla spring to
provide a commerdal supply of seed
for a bwlhy delert plant that many
authorities believe can help mate
the United States aelf-sufflcient In
natural rubber.
The plant, which II native to Dill'thcentral Mexico and southwest
Texas, Is called guayule (pronouneed wy.-lee). During World War U
It wu a source of natural rubber
when U.S. sources were cut off.
Anson R. Bertrand, dlnctor of
science and education In • the
Agriculture Department, said
Tuesday the prognun II aimed at
producing enough seed 110 large
acreages of guayule .can be
prodUced for cornmen:laJ produclion of natural rubber.
Seed· production will be centered
in Arlz908, California, New Mellieo
!llld Texas . where weather and
cllmate are suitable for guayule and
!¥here an estimated 5 mllllon acre~~
of land could support production, be
said.
.

--

Some 120 acres will be planted this
spring !llld !Ill additional 110 acres
next fall said Bertrand, who also is
chal~ of the Joint Commission
on Guayule Research and Commerelallzation.
Tbe jOint commission Includes the
departmenta of Agriculture, Commerceandlnlerior,andtheNational
Science Foundation, the Four Corners Regional Commission and the
Southwest Border Regional Commlasion.
Bertrand said, "Guayule's polenllal as a source of natural rubber
takes on new interest In the face of
rising prices for natural rubber and
for petroleum used in making synthetic rubber."
Tbe United States now imports aU
of ita natural rubber, with imports
amounting to more thhan ?60,000
metric tona in1979 at a cost of more
lban •157 million, he said.
WASHINGTON . (AP) - The
Agriculture Department's Foreign
Agricultural ·service ·says a
Japanese importer wants to buy
aninmal gallstones, hopefully di!"e(.'o
tJy from slaughter houses.
"Tbe gallstones are dried and
used for medicinal purposes in
Japan and China," the agency said
in !Ill "export brief" issued Tuesday.

·Long Bottom News Notes------Association meets the last Wednesday of every mOr)th in the Long
Bottom Community Building at .7
p.m.
na , Ohio. Also they were dinner
Callers at the Paul Hauber home
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas · have been Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Drake and Ann.
Hawk and Robbie of Pomeroy, Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Holter and . and Mrs. Lawrency Johnston and
farnily have been called on by Mrs. Jeremy of Portland, and Mrs.
Thomas Drake and Ann, Mr. and Jeanie Theiss of Vinton and her
Mrs. David G. Smith and Mr. and sister, Niki Dawn.
Mrs. Sleven Holter and family, all of
Anyone wishing to contribute
the Gahanna area.
items to this column may do so by
A birthday dinner was recently phoning ~ or writing to me at
held at the home of Mrs. Ernestine Box 7, Long Bottom.
Ha)man for her son and his family,
the Tom Haymans. Tom received
many nice gifts and cards.
Millard Ball of Long Bottom
recently celebrated his 7!st birthday
at his home. Visiting the Ball
residence over the holiday season
Attendance Sunday, Dec. 28, at the
were Mr. and Mrs. Donny Ball, Mr. Free Methodist Church was 69.
and Mrs. Harold Ball, Mr. and Mrs. Choir members present were seven.
Doug Ball and family , all from the Asolo was sung by Sharon Folmer.
Columbus area.
Pastor and Mrs. Floyd Shook
Mrs. Nellie Andrew is still visiled Christmas day with their
recuperating at her home after some daughter and son-in-law, Joseph
medical problems. We all wish Higgenbothan and daughter, Erin,
Nellie the best of luck during her Colwnbus. Mrs. Shook became ill
road back to recovery . Nellie is ac- and had to be brought home.
tive in many c lubs and
Greg Eblin and Miss Becky Eblin
organizations. Please try to drop her have been reported on sick list.
a card or a letter as I am sure she
Mr. and Mrs. Phill Wise, Belpre,
would be glad to hear from you.
attended Sunday morning services
Reminders: The local Senior at the local church.
Citizens Group will meet in the Long
Bottom Corrununity Building the
second and fourth Tuesdays of every
PRESERVES MEAT
month. On the fourth Tuesday a
Sausage making, which goes back
Blood Pressure Clinic is held from as far as recorded history ,
mid-morning till around noon. The originated as a means of preserving
Long Bottom Community meal.
By Melody Roherts
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Holter, Judy
and Mark, visited Mr. and Mrs.
Steven Holter and family of Gahan-

Announcements

3

I PAY highest prices
possible for gold and silver
coins, rings, jewelry, etc .

RACINE

GUN

................. ' '
00111

I

I t O"&gt;--.

SHOOT.

7:30 p.m. Factory chOke
YOUR

PIANO .

valuable to neglect, expert
tuning &amp; and repair. Lane

Ohio

11 rifle .

45769. 992·2272.

Income ta x service, federal

for

sale

Pomeroy -

Middleport Libraries.
Putt~

7761J.

spri"' rolla o.-..1. Y'"fre

cold nose in your life.

Call the Melos county
state. Wallace Russell Humane
Societv at 992Bradbury, call992·7128.
6161J.

&amp;

APPLES :

old furniture , desks, gold
rings,
lewelry,
si lver
dollars, sterling, etc. , wood
ice bOxes,jars antiques,
etc . Complete households.
Pomeroy, OHl or call

-.- . .--......,____ - -.......

BOI"8 Jo lind lui loU "oleo••
unRr thai snow .··

Daniels, 742·2951 or 992·

9
Wanted to Buy
IRON AND BRASS BEDS,

Write M. D. Miller, Rt. 4.

Too · ··Just doo Horpt Jbal when

Of•-, lOr'

Pomeroy ,

~

guns only .

ME IGS MUSEUM open by
Ta)( service, federal, state,
appointment January-Mar ·
&amp; quarterly taxes done bo; ch.
992·2264, 992·2802, 992·
appointment . See Wanda
1361J
or 992·1639. Histories
Eblin , .41000 Laurel Cl iff
Road,

~

Racine Gun Club, every
Friday night starting at

Sale of sa id real estate 20ll1.
was authorized by OrQinance adopted January Racine Volunteer Fire
1.2. 1981. The village reser· Department sponsors a
ves the r i11ht to reject any shot gun &amp; rifle match
and all b1ds . The sale is every Sat. night 6:30p.m .
pursuant to section 7'21 .03 at their building in eashan.
of the Ohio Revised Code.
Factory choke 12 ouooe
shot guns only . Open sights
(t) t4 . 1l , 18.1314, 11 . Sic
-

~. ·

Contact" Ed Bur ken Barber
Shop, Middleport.

Golden

delicious, SJ .7S per buschel .

Othef varieties at ~ . 00 per
buschel &amp; up. Fitzpatrick
Orchard. State Route 689.
f'hone 669-3785.
SHOOTING MATCH :
Rutland American Legion

every Sunday at 1:00. Big
prizes &amp; games. Factory

choke guns onlv .

m-

WANTED TO BUY :
GOLD ,
SILVER.
PLATINUM. STERLING·
COINS, RINGS,JEWELR ·
Y. MISC . ITEMS . AB·
MARKET
SOLUTE
PRICE GUARANTEO . ED
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP . MIDDLE PORT .
OHJ0992·3476.
OLD CO INS, pocket watches, class rings, wedding

e\lervday &amp;. special oc casions. Manv supplies at

low prices. Open Thurs.,
Fr i., &amp; Sal. 10:00 to 3:00.

741·2331. Treasure Chest
Coin Shop, Athens, OH . 5926461.

with brown and gray . Lost

Nam•----------~-------

Print one word in each
space below . Each in·
itial or group of figures
counts as a word ..Count

chains, diamonds
&amp; so on . Copper brass and
batteries, antique items.
also do appraisals, co m·
plete auctioneer service.
Over 30 years f)(perience in
business. Will buy com·
plete estates . Osby Martin
General Store, MiddlePOrt,

-----

name and address or

•

phone number if used .
tO
3
You ' ll get better results Words
if you descr ibe fully, --+..!IIA~V~~~:..:..:f::..:.:.;

give pr ice. The Sentinel

I
(
(
(

i - t• M.,urill~n

42- MoiMit Htmtl

4-0i'I.. Wty
1-Ht. .YAtll
t---Lot.ltMI POll,...
1- Tif'tlhle

Sl - HevHMirll 0 ...1

SI- C I , TV , lll.lt lt~u l pmtnt
II-Antt4vtt
14- MIIC . MtrCI\IIMII ..
~~•"'~'"' ~u,..u,,
st-flllttl,.,. hit

14-.Wlftttl Tr.. RMtt
lf----IC!Mtlllftttructltfl

,._

• .,._, Tv

-·

eFiNANCIAL

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

u- ... ,.,...,

t»- LI"'"*II

2._..,,...........,

6-4- H•y &amp; Oraln
u - SHCI &amp; '•rtUII.,

11-MeM,,.L... ..

..,...,,,"

pi-Autoa tet hit

1- H..,.ttt.rlttt

11--Vartl &amp;4 W.O.

..,,...

U--Motwcvcles
Aut. P•rtJ
&amp;Acc....,ltt

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

magician.

Magician,

920

East 6th

D.r. Bloch,

Street,

the

New York,

NY

10009.

OLAN Ml LLS ho• several
immediate

openings

telephone

for

~ppol ntm~nt

clerk!. No exp·e r'ience
necessary . We train. May
. worl( from ,9 __m _ to 1 p.m·.

or 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. Apply in
person to Jackie Carsey at
Brown's Trailer Pllrk,
M lnerS\Iille. Ohio ; on Mon -

day. February 9 between 9
a.m. and 12 noon or bet·
ween 5 and 6 p.m . Equal

Opportunity

Employer.

M/F .

Unfurnished one bedroom
apartment for rent. Reoh!rs assistance aV'ailable
for senior citizens. Contact

JJ-ItNitwl

Wont·Ad Advorllolng
Deadllnos
'T: MJI.ii. Dally
I.

.... M-.w

10·- - - - : - - 12. _ _ _ _ __
13,_ _ _ _ _ __
14. _ _ _ _ _ __

to do light delivery work .
OLAN provide
MILLS needs
people
Must
economical
transportation . Apply In
person to Jackie Carsey,
Brown's Trailer Park,
Minersville, Ohio on Monday , February 9 between 9

a.m. and 12 noon, and bet·
ween 5 and 6 p.m. Equal

Opportunity

Emplover.

MIF .

WANTED - Someone to

share their homes In
Gallia , Jackson , or Meigs
Counties, Reimbursement

of 5100·$300 per month. For
more Information, call Cln·

dy Sheffield ot 446-55011.
t2

Situations Wantld

WANTED : Items for con·

slgnment for all upcoming
holidays &amp; everyday. Call
985-.1327 or 985·3951.

Have room , board, laundry
for
elde r ly
only .
Reasonable. 991·6022.

WILL CARE lor elderly
man or woman in my
private home. Responsible.
Reasonable rates. GOOd ex·

667·3&lt;02,

work ,
p ·aneling ,
remodeling, pa inting, etc .
Also custOdian work. W2·

3 BR, hardwood lloors, 1112 baths,

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

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

ll-l~nlflftt

l~eiHIUIIItl

I3

eM,...

....

•,. IMtMtW,

c.,.. et

Cfttr"
I.U

'·"

J .U
UJ

u.,

TMM'.,.. Oltltuer., l 'ctt~h,., weNI, aue

~MHI. CIIIIIII . . VHC •

for Rent

Firewood for sale, Mixed

3 AND 4 RM furnished ap·
ts. Phone 992-5434,
Three bedroom furnished

COUNTRY HOME - 37 acres, 3 or .4 BR's, Located
close Jo Rt. 7. Asking $40,000.

For rent :
apartment

GOOD COUNTRY LIIIING

John Sheets, three and one

~ Country

home, large

l iving room, kitchen and den . includes 3 BR 's, laun dry area. and outside building tor storage &amp; car .
Asking under $30,000.

HOBStprtR REALTY

Housmg

OFFICE 742·2003

Headquarters

Georges. Hobstetter Jr.
Broker

E• ·

cell ent trailer lot in Har·
r isonvllle. Approx . J.:.
acre with ' water tap.

ONLY $1.800.00!!
NEW LISTING

Brand new home, be if' s
first owner. The total
electri c. J bedroom
home is situated on nice
size lot in Rutland

Village. FHA approved .
Sells lor $41 .000.00.
NEW LISTING - Large

f ra m e
h o me
on
Sycamore Sf. in Mid ·
dleport . J bedrooms,
alum inum siding, gas
for ced air furnace. Lot
is approx . SO'xiOO ' . ON-

LY $20,500.00.
APARTMENT
BUILDING - River

front property with
many possibil iti es. Has
r ental incom·e. Owner
will take land contract ,
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.
Phone 742-3171
Velma Nicinsky, Assoc .
Phone 7U-3C92 "

Softly Romantic

T~~~L~.~~t Ji
_ t 6 E. Second 5treet

Phone
1- ( 614 )-992-3325
ON RT. 33 - 5 room
block home wllh city

water, nat . oas , 3
bedrooms, bath, cellar
and front porch on one
shady acre . Priced nice,

too.
LAND CONTRACT - 7

rooms and bath on level
lot. Space for trailer and
~~ all utilities .

RENOVATED - Large

10 room ·home wifh lots
of
remodeling .
5
bedrooms for a family,
large yard, new bath,
new furna ce. basement,
and
flrepl ace .
All
utilities.·

SOMETHING NICE - 8
rooms, 2 lovely baths,
lots ot closets, back

porch 12x16 with sl iding

glass door from dining,
garage, . carpeting and
large tot. In A ·l condition at a price of only

, HAVING SOLD MANY
HOMES WE NOW
NEED YOURS . WANT
' TO SELL 7 CALL
+92·3325 or 9~2 -3876.

992·2143.

half miles south of Mid·
dleporl on Route 7.

Furnace repairs, electrical
work, plumbing, mobile
h'Ome or r es idence . 992·

Real Estate

General

991·6338.

--Tra iler lot for sale, $5,000.

NEW LISTING
EASTERN DISTRICT

Modular home lot on Route
7, three bedroom farm
house located on Route 7.
992 1571.

- 2·3 bed room house
with full basement on
approx. •~.. acre lot .
Forced air oas furnace,
aluminum
siding,

Homes for S•le

T.P.C. water. Jn good
c ondition . J UST!
$14.500.
NEW LtSTING
SOUTHERN DISTRICT.

ranch brick home In Baum
Addition, Pomeroy , Ohio.
Gas neat, central air con·
dltioning. Call 985 ·3Bl4 or

- A furnished S room
house with 3 car garage
on lower
level,
2
bedrooms, ga s heat .

9'11 2571 .

h~lf

Memorv Gardens &amp; state
garage , Priced on in·

$33.000.
NEW L,tSTING
CLOSE TO TOWN I - 3

32

bedroom house on ap·
pro)( . l'h acre le\lel lot .
Garage and large metal
storage building, large
garden space. S25,000 .

4769
8-20

•

M*lt ............... 'W'M'fMIM lriiCC.,........, Wlll'l C. .ftwltft

.....,, U Clftt dNrtt ,_ . . cerrylflt I•• NUMIMr Ill Cere •I TfM
ltfttlnet.

1969 PMC 3 bedroom
troller. l2•61J. 992·3954.

---------

1972 12•61J Windsor monile
home, $5500.00 . 7i Ht.!O or
773·5688.

i48Uiiiirn B~lldlngs­
HoteHounve

wilh three

commercial

rentals , two

apartments. LaSalle Motor
Inn In Middleport 9919917.

t.,A._ -/lJ.._,
Coolly cur\'ed nec~lm e , sl1 t
bow -tu:d slee ~ es
ll ;ued
skut- 1sn't th1s solt roma nttc
dress /u st what you 're rn the
mood or now . For c1epe. y0 1/e.

Pr10led Pallern 4769 M;sses
S•zes 8, 10, ·11. 14. 16. 18. 20.
S;ze Jllbu&amp;J J4)Jakes 3V. yaods
45·10Ch labile
$2.00 for uc:h potltm. ~d 5IK
lor lid! pottem for lllll·cl•
lirmall and ltondlln&amp;. Sind to:
Anne Uoms
~11tttn Dept.

'.

1 'l I

The Daily Sentinel ·
243 llat i7 Sl, Ntw Yor6, NY
10011. ,rlnt NAill£, AOORUS,
liP, SIZE. tnd STYLE IIUIIIIU.
We slreamlined the stwtni lo
save you t1me so you can sa~Je
money! Send now loo N£W 1981
SPRING·SUMM£R P~n£RN CAT·
ALOG 100 slyles. loee paJlern
coupon ($2 Value) CalaiO(, $1

1~1• Ololct Qoitb .. . .. su5
1:13-FIIIIIen """'I)Jitina.si.7S
130-Swutett·Sim Ja.SUI.IS
129-Quic./ (ISJ liiMiett .SUS

LARGE FAMILY? This

10 room
home
in
Eastern District has 4
bedrooms, l'h baths,
full basement, carPOrt,
and e~bove ground swim ming paol, on approx. 2

Fanil Buililings

KWB

Sizes
"From 30x30"

CUllS:

SMALL

lhw&amp;u.d
... Go'4lo.

~

0...., ...,.,

'

Siz~s

a..,.

45

.

,-.

Utility Bu1klmgs

I"!ONI
RIP AIRs Cloo!Jnt. lo!olohlnJ.

,.

...

KOUNTRY
G(lf

.-•..•

ALL STEEL

•

from 4x6 to 12x40

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

.'

vour

Items for

Visit our

parts store &amp; picK up a free

catalog .

At

Kingsburv
&amp;

Ac·

i:essories. 'Rt. · 124 Miner·

Furnished Rooms

svllle, Oh. 992-5587.

Sleeping rooms for rent on
Main Street in Mason.

Cooking facilities , table.
$40.00 per week . Phone 1·
304-773-5651 .
Space for Rent
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park , Route 33, North of
Pomeroy. Large Jots. Call
992-7479.
46

ROGER HYSEll'S
GARAGE

TRAILER sp.aces for rent.

Southern Valley Mobile
Home Park, Cheshire, Oh.
992·3954.

.... . .... .........
•

~ -·

.11 .0

....

.

~ .....

Maternity Clothes now one
half price. Watermelon
Patch, NeW Haven, West
Virginia . 882·3410 .

.. '
'.

.'

Anllques
ATTENTION :
JIM ·
PORTANT TO YOU) Will

53

·--

pay cash or certified check

for antiques and collec·
tlbles or

entire estates.

Nolhing too Iaroe. Also,

guns, pocket watches and

coin collections. Call 614·
767·3167 or 557-3411.
54

...... MisC. Merchanise

----

APPLIANCE SERVICE
57

F o r ~n ! hrwice

Musicat

91~561

1nstruments

PARTS AND IIIVtCI
ALl. MAKIS

Cl,eland , Racine.
Phone 949·2071.

Ohio. GUt LO Mar!( Ill - classical
guitar, S361J. Also 8 pc . set
of drums. Call 304-675·1513
Fl REWOOD for sale. alter 5 wk . days, all day
SJO.OO pickup load. Any Sat.
lengths . Call 667·3402

jackets, never been worn.

High quality, will sell
cheap. 992·3283.
l GUN

CABINET that

sides and shelves, mirror
back ; one copy pen water
bench; one copy dart.: pine
secretary desk ; one Grandfather clock, one oak hall
tree chair; one Ice box bar .-

eW U hff1

•C hP&lt;IU!1
•D il hWI1httn

eC ryer~

tA .Inges

tHotW a ..r'flnhl

l f--~~-j · · ·
ltl3

...........
.
--.'
····--·
'
'
···-&amp; El estaeN

anytime.

LADIES beautiful size 42,
44, 46 dresses, slacks.

..

Call Ken Young
Firewood for sale. Frank

solid walnut domino with

PMC ,

NEED

F=or"

..- Coi n

~

L~ ~ndr •n

..- llenUI PrOpfrtiU

..- Apl . Ht111e Ow11 ~n
., M~blle H ~ m e

P.1r ~1

66_,_ _,F~a,_.r_.,m~E~qu~l~p~m!!e'!!nl!.._
S.ix ton farm hay wagon.

TRI.COUNTY

Call after 5. 9'12-7501.

BOOKKEEPING SERVICE

Wanted to Buy
CHIP WOOD . Poles max.

62

•BUSINESSES
•FARMS
•PARTNERSHIPS
•CORPORAnONS

diameter 10" on largest
end. $12 p ·er ton . Bundled

slab. $10 per ton . Delivered
to Ohio Pallet Co .. Rt . 1,
Pomeroy 9'12·2689.

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

easel. one bread box,
several WOOd doll cradles ;
one cedar tot ch"est; two set

estimates. Fred Miller at

1970

.'

'-

two baby cradles; one

lloor tile. plUmbing. Free

1973 Crown Ha\len , 14 x 65,
three bedlooms, new car ·
pet. 1971 Cameron, 14 x 6-4,
two bedrooms, new carpet.

types of wood . S35.00 per
plck·up load. Delivered,
will stack fQr Senior
Citizens. 843·4951 or 843·
2815.

Home Sales Park

cabinet, 6 foot high, glass

Winted to Do

Misc. Merchlnise

Motiile Home?

holds six guns; one curio

Mobile Homes

2-4-ltc

10% to 20%. Discount
On Entire Stock
1·15·1 mo.

paid. No pets or drunks.

rent . 991·5908 .

~~~~~~~~~~~J~~~;~~i~~~
Re•l Estate- General

NEW LISTING -

Ph. 667-6485 .

two bedroom
with utilities

Four room apartment for

CALL US TO BUY OR SELL

IN ·
can ·

1970 PARKWOOD custom
Mobile Home. 12x61J un·
furnished . 2 bedroom. 1
bath, fuel oil heat . 991·3823.

IIChwiMI IVtr tfte minimum II worn 11-4 Clflh ,., _.,.. ,.,_,, ,
A411 ruMIIIt ....... Mwl C:M&amp;Kutlw . . .,, Wfll 1M
1t tM 1

,

S4

$36,000.

ce lled?
Lost
your
operator's license? Phone

II

A;Nrtment

apartment. Phone 992-3129
or 992-5914 or 1·304·882-2566.

Tammv .

AUTOMOBILE
SURANCE been

44

family room , storage bldg., carport. Price Cut,

Insurance

«24.

16-M.H. II.,..r·
11- U,.....twy

.....'·"..

949·2862
949·2t60

SUPP~IES
Re&amp;dsville, OH .

Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices
Call Howard

Lot set up for trailer . Asking $4.800.

RACINE AREA - 3 BR 's, large living room. also

",

..

All work guaranteed.

1676.

$43,500.
Happy New Moon Day

12 M 60, two bedrooms, new
carpet. B x S Sales, Inc .•
2nd x VIand Street, Point
Flleasant, wv Phone 615 ·

M-IIKtrkal
I hfrltMitlon

....

cleaning and painting.

tHE

6J•t.

carpet.

11-l"htnt~llt&amp; •• , ...... ,11.

c...

new or repair gutters
and downspouts, gutter

redecorated &amp; refurnished.

CENTRAL REALTY
LETART -

ANN'S CAKE
DECORATING ·

All types of rool work,

pets or Uti lilies paid. Phone 992·

No

WIN

10 lb. Chocolate

month. 991·2749.

PH . 8~3 - 2075

eSERVICIS

Retts and Other 1nformetlon
11 Weni&amp;N uncs.r
1411ey
2 ••.,.

I

nished. Available 1st of

Nancy Jaspers- As sociate

II - H._.. +m,.-.wemtntl

U-L.eta&amp;Ac:r....

11 . _ _ _ _' - - _

~---,.-------~..,.-------·---J.i

to

Write

bedrooms, new carpet. 1976
Cameron, 12 w 60, two
bedrooms, all electric. 1971
Skyline. t1sx 6) , rwo
bedrooms, bath &amp; Vl, new

11- Autoll,..lr

M-I1111MH 14HIIIiliftll

IINMflltNr,.,

STOP 111AT WRIGGLING! - Former Pretldeat Carter,left, loob oa. Tile Carlen 011 tllelr lleeOIId weekCarter autographs lbe tee shirt of elgbt.moniiHild of vacation aad plan to return to Plains, Ga., next SunJasoa Dalton of St. Thomas, Tuesday, as Rosalynn day. (AP Laserphotol.

aS:SiSt8nt

1972 Champion, 12 x MJ, two

n-

JJ-fllfMI fer lilt

8. _ _ _ _ __
9. _ _ _ _ __

Mail This Coupon with Remittance
The Daily Sentinel·
Bo•729
Pomeroy, Ohio 4S769

lm·

children. Deposit. 992·27.49.

lor Sale

eTRANSPORTATlON

eREAi.ISTATE

7. _ _ _ _ __

15.-_
-_
-_16. _ __

mediately.

Available

:

JAC•s ···

for Rent

Four room With bath apart-

spec11on. 99H7•t.

6t- Wut.f tt luy
n - Trudlsferhlt

2- ~le+lemft

4. _ _ _ _ __

Apartment

ment In Middleport, fur ·
recently
2 bedroom mobile home nlshed

WANTED for teleVISion:

Nice house on 2 &amp; one

,,_,.,m I !lUI'"' tnt

lt-WII'IMifTDOO

1
3. _ _ _ _ __

Park. 992-3324.

acres on SR 7 between

e FARM SUPPLI E5
&amp; LIVESTOCK

&amp;CII ...Ir

L
-:_
- -_
- _2.
_ -_
_

2 bedroom trailer. Adults
only . Brown 's Trailer

Beautiful three bedroom

eMERCHANDJSE

eEMPLOYMENT
SIRVICIS

CAMe,.

Girl 18 or 19 vears old to Ljiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiili
Jive in. 992·26!16.
I'

31

&amp;Avchtfl

t-llllllld to BIQ'

S4H"'"'···

the Wood Shed, on Broad·
way Street, Racine. Ohio.

46-l,.ct ,., ll:eftt
41- WantH tt lent
41-ltt•ltHMnf ,.,. • ..,,

t-'dtkltlt

A

MPPRJZI'S

MIOI'I.6.11E-PEOI'I.£ SEIIl7
~Tol~lll ·- 1

$200.00 a month plus Village Manor Apartments
utilities. Phone 9'11·5511 al992 ·7787.
anytime after 3.
HAL ft,. of a double. 2
bedroom completely fur·

furnished .

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

uSE£&gt; lOBE

walnot box; toys; cars and
trucks . All can be seen at

44--A. .rlmtnt for lltent

I )-lfl ..rMMI

) Wanted
) For Sate
) Announcement
) For Rent

44

for Rent

Will do paneling, ce iling,

,... ""''
.,_....,....

11- IIMtttl WtfltM

. These cash rates
inc lude discount

42

B us zness
.
.
' servzces

A-" .....lli$!NPIS JHl!&lt;f&gt;

.f.'f:,1'/t...,
r~-·-

CllAI:K&amp;IZ

5858.

eRENTALS
•1 - HOiiiM fOt .... ,

••-"•'w•'""

reserves the right to
classify , edit or reject
any ad. Your ad will be
put in th e proper
c lasification if you ' ll
checl( the proper bo)(

below

eANNOUNCEMENTS
1- CartlltfTMftlts
,_."'*NN«fl'letlfl

CIRCLE
AD WANTED

tine!. rQUte carrier. Phone
us right away and get on
the ellolbllity Jist at 9'12·
2t~ or 992·2157.

WANTED : light carpentr,v

we~tches ,

Mobile Homes

CLASSIPIED AD INDEX

Addrau _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Phone ___________________

some great gifts as a Sen·

the lumber. 949·2692.
USED FURNITURE . Gold

or Write Dally Sentinel Clessifled Dept.
111 CourtSt., Pomeroy, 0., 45769

.'·

as a young business person

and earn good money plus

perience. Call
Tuppers Plains.

985·3875.

Write your ow~ lad and order by mall with this
coupon . Cancel t,:our ad by phone when you get
results. Money not refundable .

GET VALUABLE training

WANTED : Laroe or small

&amp; silver, class rings, pocl(et

HOUSE;; FOR . RENT
lorhnl
Nye Avenue. SJ• rooms. MoiSile homes for rent, fur·
$200.00 per month plus nished, very nice. Call 992·
deposit. Phone367·7811 .
7479.

Three bedroom furnished
trailer , available lm ·
mediately . Must have
.deposit &amp; references.

sliver. Call J . A. Wamsley,

:..----------- ----------... i.r Lost oncl Found
Curb Inflation. I'I LOST : COCKAPOO. block
I on co. Rd . 25 near Chesrer. Oh. 992-6370.
Pay
·
Cash
for
I Phone
Laurel Cliff
I
I
Classlfleds and
WANTADIMFDRMAnON
News Notes
Savell I
PHONE 992-2156
6

wantl!dtoBuy:classrlngs,
wedding bands, anything
stamped, 10K, 14K, or 18K ·
gold. Silver coins, PQckel
watches . Call Joe Clark at
991·2054 at Clark's Jewelry
store, Pomeroy, Ohio 45/69

bands, diamonds. Gold or

building to tear down for

LOG Cabin Gilt &amp; Supply
Shop will r.,_., Feb. 5.
Will have glfh for

~~~~~~~1:~:;~~~~:-r:::~~~:::::r----~
~~~~~~~T.;;---~~:::::::::::::::::::::::::T:he::D:ai~::::::::::::: ·.,··.
wonlldtoBuy
41
H001seslorRont
42
MobileHomes
They'll Do It Every Time

t

Small investment, large
returns, Sentinel Want Ads

'

Dinner guests of Pearl Powell and
Casey German have been Mr. and
Mrs. Garth Smith, Reedsville, and
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Young of
Paden City,
Thanksgiving guests of Elmer and
Darlene Newell, Scott, Rex and
Jeanie Mae have been Mr. and .Mrs.
Keith Curtis, Katy and D. J . of
Charleston, W. Va. Also calling later
in the day were Mr. and Mrs. Hobart
Newell of Chester.
The Long Bottom Community
Association held an informal
. meeting Nov. 26. Presiding was Mrs.
Leona Hensley. Mrs. Mae McPeek
gave the Thanksgiving reading.
Mrs. Ernestine Hayman then gave
the treasurer's report and stated
that she had purchased two gold certificates at the Pomeroy National
Bank for the purpose of drawing a
good amount of interest to be used in
the building fund when they mature.
She also reported the recent bazaar
and bake sale were quite well considering tbe weather. Melody Roberts turned over a check for $52.68 she
had made from returning pop caps
to the Royal Crown Bottling Company. She was thanked for her efforts .
Mr. and Mrs. John Walter Dean,
Jeremy, James and Sarah had as
recent visitors, Mr. and Mrs. Walter
Terrell, Pataskala, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Searles of Cheshire, Mr. and
Mrs. John A. Dean, Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Markins, Racine, Mr. and ·
Mrs. Glenn Young and family, Bidwell, Mrs. Roger Swartz. and
daughters, Mrs. Sandy Mitch and
family, Wolf Pen.

Wednesday. February 4, 1981

Middleport, Ohio

71
Autos lor Sale
1980 Pontiac Pheonix, 1

•
•
•
•

S6,400.00, new car warren·

H&amp;R BLOCK OFFICE LOCAnON
6l8 E_ Main

,.

.

'

• •. .J

... ,

1·28 -1 mo.

door, trontwheel drive , air

tv. 992-2849.

Insulation
Storm Doors
Storm Windows
Replacement
Windows

Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph. 992-2772

Payrolls, profit and loss statements, all
federal and state forms.

conditioning. am-fm radio,
33 mpg , 1,000 miles,

Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding

ROUSH
-·
CONSTRUCTIOrt·

Pomeory, Oh .

'

1975 Olds Delta 88 Royale,

1- 0oodGuR.anp
1- Good Hotpolnt w.ishtr

air cond itioning, am-fm
tape
plaver,
power
steering, power brakes,

1- U " GETV

1- 16 Cu. II. Hat point
Rtlrtaerat~r

All ot the •boYtl 111m1 In

t11t

cellent condition. All are JJrlu-d

new pa int Job . 992·1528 after 5.

to " " immtrli.;nety . Ste us to-

12

dOiy.

'\?.. _

POMEROY

~LANDMARK
;;.MiiiOiiii
2 2 8

14
1980 Suzuki GS 750 L, win·
djammer,

saddle

bags,

luggage rack with case, all

vetter equipment, 700 miles

paid S3900.00 new must sell
for $3500.00. 992·7403.

Trucks for Sale

1968 Ford three fourths ton
Jruck, heavy duty with llat
bed, good shape.$350.00

l~===="==·='::'=~lt~lr~m~.~98~5~·4~3:51~·====~
E. Moin 51.

KIT 'N' CARLYlE,.

.

. •.

1- 11 Horu Powtr R"l"t
Mower
1- Good Tr•iltr Appro¥ed Wood
Burntr Sf0¥1 wittt tiiOWir

'

by Lany Wright

75

Boots and

Motors lor Sale

hull
open bow,aluminum
80 hp Mer·
1979 Starcraft
V·

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

MACHINE~~==;;=:==;;~.
SEWING
Repa irs,
service,
all r,
makesl 991 -2284. Th e
Fabric Shop, Pomerov.
Authorized , Singer Sales
and Service. We sharpen
Scissors.

.tH/

REESE
TRENCHING
SERVICE

..
' ..
,

..

...

....·-·
.

''

cury outboard. canopy &amp;
trailer in excellent all
around condition . Boat like

new. $3,700.00 . 9'12·2849.

acres Ja~d . Should be
approved by FHA or
VA . ~1.500 .
6 ACRES MINI FARM
Barn, pony
ch icken house,

shed,
shed,

and fruit cellar, garden
space,

fencing ,

nice

yard , wood burner plus
a 3 bedroom totally

remodeled
home ,
carpeting , new wiring,
new plumbing . All in ex·

ceJJent condition. ON LY I $18,500. F lnoncing
available.
REALTOR
Henry E . Cleland , Jr.
992-6191

ASSOCIATES
Roger &amp; Dottle Turner

81

[B
A(Alt O I I

Home
1mprovements

Gene' s Carpet Cleaning,
deep stream extraction.
Free
e stiml!ted ,
reasonable rates, scot-

chquard. 992-6309 or 742·
2211 .

992-5692

Jean Trussel1949-2660
OFFICE 992·2259

83

2 Rolls
Rubber Back

EmVijii19 -

J &amp; F BACKHOE SER·
VICE llscensed &amp; bonded.
septic tank installation.
water &amp; gas lines. Excavating .work &amp; trl!lnslt

layout. 991 720] .

SHAG

I

Re,S15.95

$ 99

Sq.
Yd.
Cash-n-Carr
Buy Now &amp; Save $2-$6 Per Yard .
25 rolls carpet in stock to pick from.
Regular backed carpet installed free,
with pad .
Drive A Lillie- Save A Lot

RUTLAND FURNITURE
'•

1

..-..

.'•

.•
·'·
•
...
.

• .t..

., ...
... ."'
...\

~

~

•'•

.

�wednesda , Februar. 4, 1981

Page-16-The Daily Sel)tinel

New administration would
employ
neutron
weapons
w

·Hunter in contention

Ashland patrolman
'Trooper of Year'
Trooper Dennis M. Hunter of the
Gallia-Meigs Post of the Ohio Highway Pa!rol was one of nine OSP personnel in contention for the trooper
of the year award Tuesday.
Troop.;r Stanley R Steiner of the
Ashland Post was announced as the
winner by Patrol Supt. Jack Walsh.
Hunter recently selected post
trooper of the year, was selected for
the competition based on outstanding service in 19110.
A graduate of Fairland High
School in Proctorville, Hunter joined
the patrol in Athens in !970 after sel'
ving in the U.S. Navy and com·
pleting .his education at Rio Grande
College. He joined the GaU1poiis
Post in 1972 and was elected post
trooper of the year in 1974 and 1975..
Hunter and his w1fe. Pat. hve on

Area

Rodney with their children Denise,
14, and Mat, 11.
In addition to Steiner's award,
Walsh annowiced the Blue Max
award for batlling auto theft went to ·
Trooper Monte L. McGowen of the
Swanton Post, and the proficiency
award for auto larceny investigation
went to Trooper Donald A. Cannan
of the Steubenvil)e Post.
The O.W. Merrell Meritorious Service award went to Trooper
TROOPER HUNTER
Frederick A. Raby of the Swanton
Post for his handling of three armed
felons who took two hostages in a
stolen vehicle on the Ohio Turnpike
on Aprii2S, 1980.
Local emergency units answered
The superintendent's trophy pistol
five
calls Tuesday, the Meigs
award went to Sgt. Arthur H.
Emergency
Medical Services ·
Williams of the Mansfield Post.
Headquarters reports.
At 11 :16 a.m., the Syracuse Unit
took Blythe Theiss to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; at 2:10p.m., the
Syracuse Unit took Mary Ryan,
MinersviUe, to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; the Rutland Unit at I :47
Cheshire; 12 grandchildren, one a.m. took Sam Kamento from Meigs
great-grandchild and several nieces Mine 2 to O'Bleness Hospital in
and nephews.
Athens; at II :32 p.m., the Tuppers
Funeral services will be held at II Plains Unit took Dorsel Miller from
a.m. Friday at the Rawlings-Coats- Chester to Holzer Medical Center,
Blower Funeral Home with the Rev. and at 2:22 p.m. the Pomeroy Unit
Harold Runyan officiating. Burial took Mabel Miller to Veterans
will be in the Story Boggess Memorial Hospital:
Cemetery at Gold Town, W. Va.
Friends may caU at• the funeral
home anytime after 10 a.m. Thursday. Graveside rites will be held at
MOBILE HOME ENTERED
1:30 p.in. Friday.
Meigs County sheriff's deputies
Tuesday investigated a breaking
and entering of the trailer home of
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted-Dorotha McKenzie, Ted Hayes, Horner Hill, early
Tuesday morning.
Pomeroy; Wilma Rizer, Syracuse;
Entry was gained by breaking
Bertha Dutton, Pomeroy; Benny
through
the front door. The residenGoodman, Langsville; Tame Ia
ce
was
ramsacked.
Nwnerous items
Bearhs, Pomeroy.
were
taken.
Anyone
having any inDischarged-Jenny Adams, Jean
Moore, Susanna Hubbard, Oval Did- formation concerning the incident is
asked to call the sheriff.
dle, John Henry and Otis Casto.

Charles F. Cook, 77, former
resident of Hemlock Grove in Meigs
County, died Tuesday at Fayette,
Arkansas.
A retired farmer, stone mason and
carpenter, Mr. Cook was born Mar·
ch 30, !903, a son of the late Hugh R
and Stella Blanche Cook.
·
Surviving are a son, William
Charles Cook, Pomeroy; two
daughters, Mrs. Roger (Connie)
Malone, Hamden, and Mrs. &lt;;harles
(Bonnie) Pratt, Radcliff; a brother,
Jerome Cook, Pomeroy, and six
grandchildren.
Besides his parents, he was
preceded in death by two brothers
and a sister.
Funeral services will be held at 2
p.m. Thursday at Shiloh, Ark.

\

(Continued from page! )
programs and giving school boards
more flexibility in the ways they
spend state subsidies.
One of the agency casualties appeared to be the Ohio Rail Transportation Authority although It was
transferred into the transportation
department rather than being .
abolished. But it is not a favorite of
the administration and its
operations may be effeclively curtailed.
The appropriation for the transportation department, which has
sUffered major revenue losses due to
declining gasoline sales, was listed
at $1.1 billion, down 0. i percentfrom
1979-1981.
Rhodes' budget does not mention
an increase in the gasoline tax to
help rejuvenate the department's
stymied construction program, as
some officials have advocated.
In a news release that accompanied the document, the administration said "the major issue
facing the department of transportation in the 1982-1983 biennium
is the need to adjust to declining
motor vehicle fuel·tax revenues.

Phone 742-2100
l:ttect1ve thru Saturday, February 7th
Eckrich Sweet

SMOKED HAM ••••••••••••.•• ~~~.$3.19
Eckrich

BAR-B-QUE LOAf.•••••••.•••• !-.~·. $2.79
Homemade

HAM SALAD •••••••••.••••••••••~~; $1.39
DAIRY

RODUCE

12 oz. Kraft Style

10 lb. Maine Eatinq

Sliced Sharp

POTATOES· ··········'2.19

~~~~Q:~:~$1.79
MARGARINE

s lb. Bag White

Bag

GRAPEFRUIT·······'1.29
30 Count Florida

Quarters 2 / $ 1 . 1 9

Bag

Bunch

CELERY ............... 49'

FROZEN
1 lb. Booth

Deibert A. Milam, 80, Pearl St.,
Middleport, died Tuesday at Holzer
Medical Center following a lingering
illness.
Mr. Milam was bom Sept. 6, 1900
in Jackson; W. Va., a son of the late
James and Jemina Anderson
Milam. He was also preceded in
death by two brothers, Kenneth and
Felt, and a sister, Esta Harper.
Mr. Milam before his retirement
was a machinist at the Marietta
Plant at Point Pleasant, W. Va,
Surviving are his wife, Ethel; two
daughters, Mrs. James (Edith)
Derrick, Ravenswood, W. Va., and
Mrs. Louise Johnson, Middleport;
two sons, Delbert H. (Jim) Milam,
Xenia, and Henry K. Milam,

ELBERFELD$ WAREHOUSE

,

PERCH FILEJS .••••••••••••••••~~~··'2.09

~

12' '• oz. Campbell's

Cream of Mushroom Soup
oz. Chicken ol the Sea
TUNA •••••••••••••••••••••••••~:~ •• s1.29
6' •

S'• oz . zest Bar

TOILET SOAP ••••~•• ••••••• • 2 Bars 9'

3 oi.

REGULAR
JELLOS ••••• ••• ••••• 3/s1.00
Roll Softweve
TOILET TISSUE············ •••••~~~·. 6'
2

Mayor's Court

derly
conduct
and while
Kim
Hayman,
Racine,charge,
$350, driving
intoxicated.

defense policies of the .Carter years.
On Monday, President Reagan
rejected Carter's long-stalled plan to
gradually Withdraw U.S. troops
from South Korea.
In 1978, Carter ordered producti~n
or the neutron warheads put olf mdefinitely and then authorized the
Energy ~partment to manufacture
~orne cr1tical elements m case a
decision was made later to deploy
the weapons.

RUTLAND
DEPARTMENT
STORE

No new

Delbert A. Milam

Three defendants were lined $225
and costs each and were given three
day jail sentences when they appeared in the court of Middleport
Mayor Fred Hoffman Tuesday night
on charges · of driving while intoxicated.
The trio includes Tony Manley,
Middleport; Stephen P. Hankla, Ci~o·
cinnati, and Paul H. Schuler,
Rutland.
Forfeiting bonds in the court
TuesdaynlghtwereLarryC.Porter,
Stockport, $:)0, posted on a di.sor-

shelved by Carter "cannot but cause
alarm at the prospects of world
peace and the easiRg of tension."
The new Pentagon chief said Cal'
ter's decision to defer deployment of
the enhanced radiation weapon was
wrong and caused consternation in
the governments of West Germany
and other European allies.
·
lt was the second time in as many
days the new administration had indicated it may dismantle the major

Emergency nms

death~

Charles F. Cook

ASIDNGTON (AP) - The
Rea an administration quickly
bre!king ranks with former
President Carter's military policies,
"very probably" will want to deploy
the neutron weapon in Europe,
Def
Secretary Caspar Weinbe ense
~~~:~~~r also said Tuesday the
Reagan administration would be
sympathetic to requests to station
u.s, troops in Israel, Egypt or any
other friendly country.
The neutron weapon statement
drew strong reaction from the Soviet
Union, where Radio Moscow said the
possibility of reviving the project

GET UP TO '75 00
INSTANT SAVINGS

14 " 2 oz.

HUNTS
TOMATOES··········· 2/$1.19
46 oz. Del Monte Unsweetened
PINEAPPLE JUICE ••••••••••~:~. $1.19

On Selected RCA Televisions
STOP IN OUR MECHANIC STREET
WAREHOUSE ··- SEE THE TELEVISIONS
AND GET THE DETAILSI

IN

...,, - -

17 oz . Del Monte

FRUIT
COCKTAIL ··············2/$1.39
4 Pack G. E . Regular Frosted
LIGHT BULBS 4(r Off Pack Ctn .

y

4

l~::::::~::~~~~~~~~~~~~~::::::!::::~~~~::::::::::::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

'

Two defendant. were fined and
five others forfeited bonds in the
court of Pomeroy Mayor Clarence
Andrews Tuesday night.
Fined were Christopher Taylor,
Pomeroy, $:iO and costs, running a
red light, and Kenneth ~aries,
Pomeroy, $30 and cost., speeding.
Forfeiting bonds were George
Collins, Reedsville, $29, posted on a
·si&gt;eedJng charge; Michael Proffitt,
Racine, $30, assured clear distance;
Keith Aeiker, Pomeroy, $100, public
intoxication; Resa Sawyer, Racine,
$31, speeding, and Judy Trainer,
· Wheelersburg, $31, speeding.

THE
CENTRAL TRUST
COMPANY

is INTERESTED in YOU!!
.,

LUIS McELHINNY handles a wide range ol' services and she's
interested in you.

e
Vol.29, No. 207
Copyrlghlecll?ll

MINISTER NAMED
The Rev. Charles Bush will officiate at funeral services for John
R. Villars, 67, Route 1, Long Bottom,
to be held at I p.m. Thursday at the
White Funeral Horne in Coolville. : .
Buriai will be in Mount Olive
Cemetery.

WASHINGTON (AP) - President
Reagan takes his case to the people
tonight to drive home his message
that sweeping budget and tax cuts
are necessary to avoid "economic
calamity."
Aides said the nationaUy broadcast address from the Oval Office, at
9 p.m. EST, would offer a broad view
of the economic dilenuna, rather
than specifics for paring government spending and individual tax
bills. The details will come in a
speech to Congress Feb. 18.
White House press secretary
James S. Brady said Reagan would
seek to reassure the nation that
everyone will be treated evenhandedly as he tries to cut spending

.Budget won't allow state
to keep inflationary pace . r:
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Gov.
James A. Rhodes has given the
General Assembly a proposed twl)o
year budget which, although larger
than before, will not aUow the state
to keep pace with inflation.
The spending plan, presented
Wednesday, anticipates total expenditures of $20.5 billion during the
fiscal biennium which beginl1 July I,
compared to almost $17.5 billion in
fiscal years 1980 and 1981.
But it is based on the predicted
performance of an uncertain
economy. William D. Kelp, Rhodell'
top budget expert, said revenue
estimates will have to be revised 'up or down - in April.
"Our revenue estimates reftect
our prediction of a stagnant
economy in early IIIII, followed by a
recovery in late 1981." Keio told a

neWI conference. "Calendar 1982
will be a recovery year but, of course, the range of expectations for this
recovery Is wide."
Spending In the general revenue
fund, the account from which most
direct state services are paid and
which iB lllOIIt sensitive to economic
ills, totals •12.7 billion, an increase
of 16.9 percent from the current,
budget.
'
''Even though spending is going up
17 percent, I think the taxpayer
ought to know that's less than the in·
nauon rate for the next two years,"
Keipsaid.
"Apart from welfare, the general
fund budget increases by only 12.8
percent for the next two years, substantially belol' anticipated inDation. And this low rate of increase

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- For the
second time in as many months,
Gov. James A. Rhodes has propoled
a tax increase to help recession-hit
Ohio recover from staggering unemployment and other economic ills.
But in his State of the Slate
message to the Legislature Wednesday, he called lor a propolled con·
stitutionai amendment letting the
people decide if they will pay a penny more a gallon in the gaaollne tax'
to finance a five-year, $2 billion road
and bridge improvement program.
Rhodes made a series of other
economic proposals in his speech to
a joint seilSion, claiming that if they
are all enacted, ~.ooo new johs will
be created to put Ohio on the road to
economic recovery.
His speech highllghted a busy
legislative day which began · when
Budget Director WiUiam D. Kelp
submitted to lawmakwel'll the governor's $20.5 billion, 1981·1983 budget
proposal, a lean document which
Rhodes said "mirrors the hard
times that all Ohioans face today."
In the only other significant
legislative activity Wednesday, the
Senate Judlciary Committee recommended passage ~ of a biU
restoring the death penalty in Ohio.
It will come to a vote before the full
Senate next Wednesday.
Rhodes conceded that his budget,
while nearly 17 percent more in
dollars than 1~1981, wiU not be
enough to keep up with inflation.

But it calls for no new general
revenue ,fund taxes, IU1d it wiU end
the temporary sales and other tax
hikes the Legislature approved, at
the governor's request, just before
Christmas, he stressed.
"Those taxes wiU be removed
June 30th, as pledged," Rhodes said.
He said the state's seven-cents-agalion gasoline tax, unchanged in 22
years, is the lowest in the Midwest.
Referring to the proposed bond
Issue, he said, "I personaUy favor
and would support such an approach
to meet our highway and construction needs and provide jobs."
Otherwise, in his 18-mlnute speech
the governor proposed prog1'81l1S to
help provide jobs in inner cities, including use of Uquor profits for that
purpose, and a constitutional amendment that would allow the state to
Issue revenue bonds to help provide
low interest housing loans.
Rhodes said he thinks the ad·
ministration of President Reagan
will correct federal fiscal poli~ies·

Syracuse Mayor Eber Pickens announced today his aP{IOintment of
members of councU and others to
various committees. .
Committees appointed, first
named tO aerve as chairman, were
street, Wllllam Guinther, Michael
l!truble, Mlck Ash, Katie Crow, Jack

Williams, and Troy Zwilling; finance, Jack Williams, Michael Struble,
Katie Crow; ordinance, Michael
Struble, William Guinther, Troy
Zwilling; safety, emergency and
fire, Troy Zwilling, Mick Ash,
William Guinther; planning and
development, WiUiam Guinther,
Mick ASh, Jack Williams, Robert
Wingett; recreation and scheduling,
Mick Allh, B!U Hubbard, William
Guinther, Jack Williams, news,
Katie Crow; London Pool, Robert
Wingett, Mayor Pickens, Mick Ash,
Katie Crow, Michael Struble and the
pool manager.

NEW "VILLAGE HALL - Tbe former Pomeroy
Senior Hlgb Sebool, bnllt ID 111&amp;, II to be tile "oew"
Pomti'Oy VUiage HaiL Tbe aeglecled 1truclure wu
deeded to Pomeroy 'illillce five yan •10 Ia AprD, this
year, for possibly developtq lato a vtllage balL
Pomeroy bas been given a f15,ZOO EDA ~t wbleb

. ,.

t.:ENTRAL TRUST is conveniently located at the corner of Second
A\'c, and Haec• Stl't'ct in Middleport. Do stop in and discover thdr

man) banking st•n ict•s.

CENTRAL IDEA
BIG VALENTINES - Melp CouaUau h11Vea't1dopted Vlllealllle
Dlly decoratlllg at their homel u IIIey have for other oeeu-. of th&amp;
year oo the home of Mr. IIIII Mn. Jolullllab IDd family ID MlcldJeport
Ia unusual with large valeaiiDtll deeontiDg froat wladows.

Two people were cited in three accidenls Investigated Wednesday by
the Gallia-Meigs Post or the Ohio
Highway Patrol.
The patrol said Ricky D. Sargent,
23, Vinton, was w,esthound on Gallla
CR 30 (Kemper Hollow Road) at 3: 20
p.m. when his car went left of center
and collided with an eastbound auto
driven by Hattie M. Nibert, 65,
Gallipolis.
Slight damage was reported to
Sargent's car and moderate to the
Nibert auto. Sargent was cited for
left of center.
Troopers said Gary M. Altier, 20,
Addison, was eastbound on Zuspan ·
Hollow Road in Meigs County at 3:10
p.m. when his car went left of center
on curve and collhled with a wust-

wtJl be used to reDO\'Bte tbe flnt two rioon of tbe
baiJdla&amp;. Tbe balldlq bu had few u.ea ID he -put
l1eftJ'8I yean bnt.bu been ued aannally for tbe haWJo
ted -.e fealarel ol tbe Melp Jaycees. The village
wtlllleek addltloaal nuovaUon fuDda from tbe FHA.

Rhodes
proposes
job plan
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Gov.
James A. Rhodes has prClpOI!ed a 12point program he says can create
250,1100 new jobs and briilg Ohio out
of its economic doldrwns.
He outlined the package Wednesday in his "State .of lhe.:!tate" liddress to a joint session of the Ohio
Legislature.
The proposals include:
-A $2 billion highway bond issue,
financed with a penny hike in the
gasoline tax, to penni! road and
bridge improvements while creating
new.jobs in highway construction industries.
-Passage o! legislation permitting use of billions of doUars in
state .pension reserves as seed
money for economic development
loans and loan guarantees.
-Legislation permitting set aside
of a portion or state liquor profits to
generate up to $1 billion to assist inner cities in attracting and retaining
business and industry.
- Special tax incentives to attract
and keep business in the inner cities.
"We will present an inner citieS
bill," Rhodes said.
-.A program, unspecified, "to
construct better prison faciUties
throughout Ohio."
-Construction of hazardous waste
and coal washing facilities. "We
have the money to do .this through
the Ohio Water Development
Authority." .
- An unspecified capital Improvements program, which woilld
be financed with debt service he said
was included in his new budget.
- Construction plans of the Ohio
Building Authority, apparently state
office buildings in various clUes,
wnong other projects "must com·
mence immediately."
-Direct loans and loan guarantees to help small businesses.
-Expansions of state parks in urban areas, development of water
resources, and incrreased efforts to
promote tourism .
- Approval of a constitutional
(Continued on page 10) -

Patrol cites two drivers

by (:OMPETENT and EXI,ERIENCED PEOPLE. You receive

,.

which caused the national recession.
"But we must be realistic. The
'federal government is slow to act ...
we must do something about unenr
ployrnent in Ohio. And we must do it
starting today," he told the
lawmakers.
Meanwhile, members of the
Senate Judiciary Committee
debated at length before voting on
the capital punishment bill. It would
replace an Ohio law which ruled unconstitutional by the U.S. Supreme
Court in 1978.
·
Judiciary Chairman Paul E.
Pfeifer, R-Bucyrus, said he thinks
the measure is "tough, clear cut,
and one that will be acceptable to the
people of Ohio." He and the other
four Republicans who voted for the
measure pointed to various polis
showing a majority of Ohioans in
favor restoring the death penalty.
Sen. Thomas F. Walsh, R-Canton,
the only Republican to vote against
the bill, argued against it on
philosophical grounds and said a Ia w
substituting life imprisonment.

Name committee members

banking business, you art~ sure of PE~SONALIZED service, provided ·

MEMBER : FD1C

is over actual current spending, after the major budget reductions this
year," he said.
The budget includes spendlng increases of 9 petc8llt for primary and
secondary education; IS. 7 percent
for higher education; 26.8 percent
for welfare; 16.6 percent for mental
health; and 15.8 percent for mental
retardation.
But it includes no funds for a state
employee pay raise this year and,
despite the higher welfare budget,
no increases in aid to dependent
children or general relief benefits
untiil983.
Keip said the 'r/ percent increase
in the welfare budget stems from a
large number of caseloads and
rising costs of medical and nursing
home care.

Gov. Rhodes proposes tax hike.

When you wnlk through the doors at CENTRAL TRUST to do your

I;&amp;

2 Sections, 12 pages IS cents
A Mulllmetlla Inc. News,...per

and taxes. "There won't be any one, fight economic problems.
two or three group~~ singled out,"
Reagan will take a different apand the thrust will be to "weed out proach, aides said.
the greedy to help the needy," Brady
"It is not a share-shortages, dosaid.
wltbout, the-glory-of-America-is-be,
The speech is Reagan's first effort hind-us speech," Brady said.
to build public pressure on Congress . Reagan spent Wednesday af·
to accept his proposals. He made a ternoon and part of the evening
highly unusual visit to Capitol Hill rewriting the speech,
Wednesday to . consult with
One source said David A. Stockcongressional leaders and, in man, director of the Office of
Brady's words, "grease the skids" Management and Budget; Treasury
for the coming economic program.
Secretary Donald Regan; Murray
The address comes four years and Weidenbaum, chainnan of Reagan's
three · days after JimlnY Carter, Council of Economic Advisers, and
wearing a cardigan sweater, Martin Anderson, the assistant to
delivered a "fireside chat" in which the president for policy develophe asked the nation to make a ment, each had an impact on the
sacrificial effort to save energy ·and speech.

SHE recognizes and understands your banking needs.

THAT'S THE

en tine

President. to reveal
budget cut proposal

YOU have seen lois at the Bank in Middleport for the past 22 years.

INDIVIDUAL attention.

a1 y

Pomeroy-,-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, February 5, 1981

. Mid week revival set
. A mid-week revival will be held at
· the Victory Baptist Church, North
Second Ave., Middleport, with the
Rev. Guy Lowther, national known
evangelist, as speaker.
The Rev. Mr. Lowther is president
of the Christian Evangelistic
Association, is a radio speaker and
serves as pastor of the Liberty Baptist Church, Parkersburg.
Services will be at 7 p.m. Thul'
sday, Friday and Saturday evenings
and at 10 a.m. on Sunda~. The Rev.
James Keesee, pastor, invites the
public.

•

hound auto driven by Fern L.
Daniels, 43, Middleport. ,
Moderate damage was reported to
both cars and Altier was cited for
left of center.
No injuries were reported in a twcr
car crash on the merging ramp from
U.S. 35 toSR 7 in Gallipolis late Wednesday afternoon.
According to the report, Linda M.
Henry, 33, Point Pleasant, was
driving down the ramp when she
collided with the rear of a car driven
by Jan W. Doolittle, 25, Gallipolis.
, Doolittle was , t3pped for traffic
when the collision occurred, the
report said. Moderate damage was
done to both cars and ther~ were no
citations.
·

Negotiations
- reach. standstill
.

'

ASHTABULA, Ohio - Negotiations between Ashtabula General
Hllllpital and striking nurses have returned to a standatill after the administration rejected a bid for binding arbitration to end a six-monthlong strike.
The next step is in the hands of a federal mediator: No further
sessions have been set up.
The Ohio Nurses Association, representing about 120 registered nurses at the hospital, made the proposal at a bargaining session last
Saturday. Floyd Farley, administrator of the private, non-profit
hospital, announced the rejection Wednesday.

Felon given permission to leave
COLUMBUS, Ohio - A Columbus man convicted in a $400;000 bank
fraud case has again been given pennission to leave the city with his
family.
U.S. District Judge John Holschuh granted Timothy L. Hooper permission Tuesday to be with his wife, Dorothy, who is to undergo
surgery in an Army hospilal.
Hooper was convicted of fraud last surruner after he claimed to be a
representative of British Leyland Ud., an English automaker that
Hooper said was planning a parts plant in Newark.
The scheme cost two Colilmbus banks $400,1100.

State has knotty money pr.oblem
· COLUMBUS, Ohio - State officials have a knotty problem in trying
to allot $8.4 million in federal outd.oor recreation fWlds for $18.3 million
worth of requests for the money.
There are never enough funds anyway, but a $3 lflillion drop in
federal spending wlll make it even tougher this year, said Roger Hubbell, chief of the Office of Outdoor Recreation Services for the Ohio
Department of Natural Resources.
.
He said Congress has slashed 1981 outdoor recreation grants to Ohio
by $3 miUion. The state will receive$8.4 million this year, compared to
$11.4 million in 1980.

Tax payments rising faster
WASIDNGTON- Arnertcans' tax payments are rising even faster
than the brlak pace of inftaUon, the Internal Revenue Service reported
W~y. •

That lnfom\ation - 8ll wtU ll8 news of the government's first half·
trillion-dollar collection year - waa released In an IRS annual report
which also includee a plea for congressionaf help in going after highstakes taJ: cheaters.
Gl'OIIS federal tax receipts for llacal1980 reached $519.4 biUion, a 12.8
percent increase over the previous year, ~ IRS reported.

Ohio daily lottery winner
CLEVELAND - The winning nwnber selected Wednesday night in
the Ohio Lottery's daily game "The Number" was 726.
The lottery reported earnings of $394,'r/4.50 from the wagering on
the drawing. LOttery officials said sales prior to the drawing totaled
f/56,38$, and holders of winning tickets are entitled to share
$362,110.50.

WPMher•

l

.

'

Cloudm, over todiS)It with thanee of sno:;v after midnight. Lows lli20: CloudJ with acattered snow fturrles Friday. Highs In 'the low to
nud-30s. Chance fi 8I10W 40 percent tonight and 50 percent Friday.
Winds southwesterly 10.15 mph tonight.
Exteaded Oblo Fereciut- Saturday through Monday :Snow or snow
flurries Saturday. Fair Sunday and Monday. Highs in the 30s Saturday
and upper 2011to low 30s Sunday and Monday. Lows in the teens early
Saturday, warmingtothe20searlyMonday.
o '

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