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12-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Nov. 19, 1980

•

e

Engineers recommend two-lock canal system at dam . .
'/

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. - A tw(}.
lack canal system to relieve river
traffic congestion at tl)e Ollllipolis
locks Is being recorrunended by the
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.
The corps' Huntington offi ce will
release In a few weeks a detailed
report of its $2 million study of
problems with the Gallipolis facility,
and has -sch~uled a public meeting
to discuss the study at Suite A in the
Huntington Civic Center at 7 p.m.
Dec. lB.
InanewsreleaseMonday, the cor-

ps said the plan, one of five drawn up
for the study, calls for the creation of
both a 1,20().foot and 600-foot lock in
a bypass canal, at a cost of $258
million.
"The district· engineer is of the
mind Plan B meets the interests of
river navigation and safety," according to Allan Elberfeld, chief of
the corps' navigation and economics
branch for this district.
The corps has been conducting
public meetings to get input from
area towing companies and citizens

on means of alleviating congestion suggest. Ii we move the project farat the Gallipolis IQCks, considered · ther down river, we' ll have people
the biggest hindrance to smooth asking us to move it P,.ck up again.
Youalwayshavethiskindo!tugand
Ohio river traffic.
Until the final meeting is held, Col. give."
Elberfeld !!aid the first problem
James Higman, district engineer,
will not make an official recom- identified by the corps are the locks
mendation to his superiors, Elber· themselves, built in 1937, which at
feld !!aid.
· · 600 feet, don't accommodate 1,000"He may be wrong, and he may be foot-and-over barges easily, taking
right," Elberfeld . !!aid of the -some vessels an hour·t~two hours
engineer's recoJTimendation. "On longer to pass through than mon:
·
.
the other hand, there will be some modem facilities.
Secondly,
the
locks
are
located
at
people who will oppoSe whatever we
a bend, he added, making navigation
more difficult, one reason why the
Gallipolis locks have the highest accident rate on the Ohio, Elberfeld
continued.
·
A March accidenlin which a barge

became stuck in the gate bottled up
traffic for hours, he added.
The corps have said a new lock ·
system will cost $10 mllllon more
than building a new dani; but has a
cost-benefit ratio of 4.1 pver the next
50 years.
In other words, esch dollar invested in a canal would return $4'in
benefits, while a $i investment in a
new dam would return only $3.80.
The plans drawn up by the corps
follow :
Plan A - Construction of a 1,20().
foot lock in a canal and
rehabiliiation of the present lock as
a standby. Cost is set at $2211.3
million, with an annual cost of $20
million and annual benefits · of $94
million.

Plan ~ - This is the corps reco~
mendat10n. A 1,200-footlock and SOO: •
foot lock in a bYJl88B canal.
..
Plan C;- Construction of a 1,20(); foot lock m a cana1, ~th a 800-foot ;
lock ~ddedlater. Cvst as$285 mlllion,.
and would call for the destruction of
· 532 acres of farmland in the a~ . .•
Thepresentlockwouldalso,bemam- .·
tained. D A
dam to be Joe ted
Plan . - new
a ••
three mil~ do~tream from the7
. present facility, With a cost of $248
million. The plan calls f~r two locks,
on the Ohio side of the nver, one at:
1,200 feet and the o_ther for 600 feet,
with a 23-foot lift similar .to the one,·
at the locks now.
.
.•
Plan El - Rehabilitation ?' . the
present locks, cost setat$91 million. : ·

VOL. XXI. NO. 155

Blame weather for five
area accidents Monday

on behalf of the auxiliary, made the presentations to,
front, 1 to r, Rosalie Story, Karen Walker, Kim
Ohlinger; back, I tor, Principal John Lisle, Ed Bartels,
Mrs. Dorothy Chaney and Mrs. Martha Hoover.
" Education in the 80's- Preparation for the Future"
is the theme of this year's observance.

Southern Local conferences set
Plans for an all day parent- ·
teachers conference on Jan. 30 were
made when the Southern Local
School District Board. of Education
met Monday night.
District buildings will be closed all
day for the conference and parents
will be advised as to the procedures
to follow in setting up a time to
discuss their children with the
respective teachers.
Board member Charles Pyles and
PUBUCAPOLOGY
Meigs Local School District Board
of Education Member, Robert
Snowden, Tuesday afternoon extended a public apology for unacceptable language which he said he
used at Monday night's board
meeting. The language was used
when lie and Dr. Riggs threatened
each other with physical violence.

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted- -Ruth Mulford,
Pomeroy; Linda Brunty, Minersville; Donna Will, Pomeroy; Minia
Givens, Portland; Arthur Spencer,
Pomeroy.
Discharged-Henry Carsey, Freda
Russell, Elizabeth Stover.

again, over an embankment and
overturned, the report noted.
·•
Moderate damage was done to the ' ~
car and Schott was cited for unsafe · 1•
vehicle.

Monday's heavy rain made local
roads a little difficult to traverse,
and kept the Gallia-Meigs Post of the
Ohio Highway Patrol busy investigating five accidents.
The patrol Sllid it went to SR 124,
west of Rutland, at 12:35 p.m. Monday to check a three-l!ar crash.
According to the report, Jean NUll, ·
50, Middleport, was westboll!'d on
SR 124 when her car slid left of center and collided head-on with an
eastbound car ·driven by Jeffrey D.
Grate, 25, Middleport.
The force of the collision pushed
Null's . car sideways into a parked
auto owned by Warren G. Black, 36,
Rutland.
Both Null and Grate were Injured
in the accident, and Null was taken
to Holzer Medical Center, where sbe
was admitted to the intensive care
unit for fractures of the left wrist
and ribs. She ·was reported in
satisfactory condition this morning.
Grate was transported to Veterans
Memorial Hospital, where he was
treated and released.

Remember far-away
friends and relattves ·
with thoughtful
Hallmark cards on
Thursday, Nov. 27.

administrators, Jim Adams, Bob
Ord and Bob Beegle .who had attended a recent seminar in Columbus on the evaluation of administrators led a dicussion on such
evaluations. A recessed session was
set for Dec. 3 at whicp time the
board will set up job descriptions
and evaluation procedures for all administrators of the district.
The board signed a one year con-

l?udget
coUld have cut

Hoffman announces

final pick-up dates

MR. RADFORD DIES

A. C. Radfot;!, formerly of
Pomeroy, died Sunday at his home
in Winfield, W. Va. He was the
brother of F,reda Hartinger,
Pomeroy. Services were held
Tuesday.

Thanksgiving.
Thanksgetting.
Thur~l hy,

. .. ,T ben yot'l may have
difficulty financing
all your (;hristmas

1her 27.

presents. A11oid thii ·
dilemma
'
. next )eat by
joining our Christmas
lub

at 7;30 p.m. Friday at 7:30p.m. at
'the home of Mrs. Clara AdamS,
Racine.

,I·

a colorful maple leal greeting care card. The
basket I!Selt Is prelty enough to be used all ~ear

long. To hold fruit, snacks or decOrative soal)sfor

your bath. come in or call to order one soon.

AUTHORI.ZED CATALOG
SALES MERCHANT

[Sears I

'. Phone 992· 2178
108

w. Main St.

Pomeroy, Oh.

OWNED AND OPERATED BY

Jack &amp; Judy Williams
Open: Mon. thru Wed. 9-5
Thur. 9-12, Fri. 9-5, hi. 9·2
Satisfaction Guaranteed
or Your Money Back

..

The Harvest Bouquet.

. ::;., : . :

II' S a fresh way to make someone's holiday very
special. A beautiful arrangement In the colors of
fall, set in a country bushel basket. II comes will\

The Harvester Bouquet for Thanksgiving,

it'll earn you many thanks.

"The Way America Sends Love"

YOU MAKE 49
·PROMPT PAYMENTS '
·WE MAKE
1HE50TH

INVF.ST
$1.00 ..... , , .
S2.00 ........
·$5.00 ....... ,
:$10,00 ........

.

1q1

Butternut Ave.

Pomeroy, OH.

majQr crodil card• and wlro floWers

Member F.[).(,c;.

Deposits Insured to SHIO;OOt.OO
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COLUMBUS, Ohio - A ColumbUs man who was caught in a trash
packer was listed in fair conditloo at Doctors' Hospital.
!four rescue teams used two steel-prying machines to free Byron
Hobne~~, m, Wednesday from a hydraullc joint In the trash packer.
His foot was wedged between the truck and the packer's hydraulic
gate.

Tax revenues down 1. 7 -percent
COLUMBUS, Ohio- Cllio Treasurer Gertrude'W. Donahey says tax
revenues Jor July through October were down·l.7 percent from a year
aj!O.

Her dlscloirure provided a~dltlonal evidence of the state's worse~
financial condltlon.
.
Ohio Budget D1re&lt;:tor William Kelp aald last week that decreaaing
tax revenues would result In a$403 million deficit by June 30, the end of
the ~year budgetary period. Severe spending cuts or lncreaaed
taxes would have to be lrnpoled to baWice the budget, he aald.

·CLEVELAND ~ With Thankaglving a week away IIOIDe people
have thought the CCl8tumed turkey parading around Public
Square was to remind folb ol the f.Uve holiday.
But tb1a blrd'l purpo111 wu decldely dlff.,-ent Wednelday. With a
buket o1 blltldlll and literature dra!)td over one wtng; the AmeriCan
c.- Society's "Cold Turkey" wu out trying to get amollera to kick
the habit.

mllht

Daily lotter.y winner

550.00
per week .. .. . .. . 5100.00
per week .. .. .. .. S25G.OO
per week .. .. .. . . SSOO.OO
per week • . • .. .. •

' mE
'CENTRAL TRUST
COMPANY
....

cu:vELAND '- The wlnnln&amp; number llieded Wednelday nlcbt In
the Ohio LOttery's dallY !11J111t ''Tbe Nwnber'' wu: 'Ill.

Weather foreCIJBt

·(

Variable clOIIdlnesi. with brllk windl toniiN IJid Friday. lAWI
upper a to low 101. lfllhlll'riiiJ to-11. 01111ce o1
•~ 10 pereent toniChland Frlclq. Wlndl 'ftlterly 1WS mph

tahlab&amp; In tile
...

~

tours of Robbins &amp; Myers and the James M. Gavin
Plants, Our House Musewn, the city 's art colony
Riverby, and the City Park in downtown Gallipolis.
Engineer Phil Roberts represented the Meigs County
Commission.
r

Sargus urged the Individual members of the association to draft letters in support of the program to
Ohio's Senators.
Bill Martin, of the Jackson County
Envlronrn.ental Committee, ad- .
dressed the association on the topic
of hazardous waste disposal.
Reacting to a recent Ohio
legislative hill that would establish a
"siting board" to approve hazardous
waste disposal facilities. Senate Bill
269 states In part as follows:
" ... Nor shall ~Y political sub• divlalon adopt or epforce any law,
ordinance, or regulation that in any
way alters, Impairs, or limits the
authority granted in the P,ennit
issuedbytheboard."
Martin told the assembly that the
decisions of the siting board could

thus override local control over the
placement and estl\bli.slunent of
waste dump locations.
An attempt to place a chemical
dwnp in Jackson County was foiled
by county and township zoning. Accordiog to Martin, SB 269 effectively
eliminates a county's rightto control
waste dispo!!al by that-or any other-method.
In an attempt to void the impact of
SB 269, the Jacksorl County Environmental Committee has
initiated a referendum petition for
an Amendment to the Ohio Constitution, Martin !!aid. .
That Amendment reads:
"Townships and counties through
their legislative authorities shall
have the power to regulate their land
use relating to hazardous waste

dispo!!al. This power shaU not be infringed or diminished by the
General Assembly. And statute
enacted by the General Assembly
which purports to Infringe or
diminish this power shall be void."
Wednesday 's Ga llia County
meeting of the association included
morning and afternoon tours of Robbins and Myers and the Gavin Plant,
visits to the city and riverfront park,
and a tour of Our House Museum
and Riverby.
Southeastern Ohio counties
represented Wednesday were
Athens, Belmont, Coshocton, Fairfield, Gallia, Guernsey, HoCking,
Jackson, Knox, Belmont, Meigs,
Mor gan, Musk ingham and
Washington.
(

Close friend may head Reag~n's CIA

Turkey emphasi%es rw smoking

r~~~~·~·~·~··~·~·~~~w;ee~k~-~·-~·~·~·~·~·~S~l,~OOt~.~oo~l
"THE FRI
K"

POMEROY FLOWER SHOP
Mrs. Mildred Van Meter

Each new
member
rec;eives
a 'free
Currier &amp; lves
Christmas .
Tree .

VISITS GALLIA COUNTY - Sixty county officials
representing 13 Soutbeastem Ohio counties attend the
Southeastern Association of County ·Conunis!iioners
and Engineers quarterly meeting Wednesday hosted
by Gallla CoWlty Commissioners. Activities Included

Gallia hosts commissioners' session

Man hurt in trash packer accident ,

BOOKFAm
A book fair will be staged at the
Racine Elemeniary School from
3:30 to 6 p.m. today. The fair which
features children's books is open to
the public.

MEE1:S FRIDAY
The TWin City Shrinettes will meet

~~·

State officials to be consulted

CHRISTMAS WORKSHOP

TOMORROW
A Christmas workshop will be held
by the Riverview Garden Club Thursday, 7:30p.m. at the home of Mrs.
Grace Weber. The workshop will be
conducted QY Nell Wilson and Ruth
Balderson.

(

Bomb squad investigates threat

Final leaf pickup is being made by
the Middleport street department
this week and Monday and Tuesday
of next week.
ResidentS are asked to rake leaves
along the curbs and they will be
picked ~p free of charge.
No pickups will be made after
Tuesday of next week.
Residents are also being reminded
by Mayor Hoffman that ordinances
prohibit the piling of trash in streets.
Violators will be cited to court.
Piling of rubbish in the streets
causes many catch basins and sewer
lines to be clogged.
The mayor !!aid the village Is not
in the trash hauling business and
residents should contact local
haulers for garbage and trash
removal.

FIFTEEN CENfS

.

.
accepted the suggelltlon of Rep. R-Qkla., said Wednesday.
Robert N. Giaimo, D-Conn.; chairSen. Bob Dole, R-Kan., agreed,
man of the House Budget Com- saying, "I'm not sure that wliat we
mittee, to "IIPllt the d!Herence."
do tbday Is all that signHican~. ''
It was such a hil8ty meeting that
Budget' debate fu the House was
House and Senate staff members acrimonious.
Were left to figure the detalla of the
Republicans pressed unimpact on the lncomlniJ Reagan ad- successfully for giving Reagan
mlnistration, especially the 2 per- authority to override congreasional
cent spending cuts House spending plana In the face of a
Democrata wanted to mandate.
Democratic proposal to Impose a 2
Staff members estimated the pereent cut In all areas except defenagreement leaves room for a 1981 se, leaving It to Reagan to figure out
tax cut of allout t35 billion to $40 hiiWtodoit. ·
billion.
In the ,6enate, debate was much
They said ~ cut.may be enacted · less contentloUB. '!'he major area of
next year, with business tax reduc- disagreement was leaving room for
tions ret;oactlve to Jari 1, and per- a tax cut, a provision that was adop.
&amp;Qnal income tax cuts taking effect tedona~vote.
·
Julyr.
Reagan bias made a tax reduction
The 19'74 Budg!!t Act, which the centerpiece of his economic
Congress adopted to regain the plans, and there Is general
budget control it felt had been lost to agreement in Congress that a cut is
the president, calls for pasaage of a likely in the first half of 1981.
binding budget rescilutlon by midSeptembe~. That timetable fell victim to ele¢1on-year polftlca, forcing
Congress to return for a lame-duck
se!aion.
·
Sixty county officials-But how · binding the .second
representing
13 soutbeaatem Ohio
resolution will be now is unclear.
counties-met
in Gallipolis Wed"We will have a third budget
nesday
as
Gallia
County hosted the
resolution," ~n. Henry L. Bellman,
quarterly meeting of the
Southeastem ABsoclatlon of County
Conunlsaloners and Engineers.
. During . that association's aftemoon business session, Belmont
County Coqunlaaloner A.J. Sargus
reported on the federal legislative
status of Federal ReVenue Sharing.
Sargus told the auembly a recent
nationwide march on Washington by
county COJbrniMioners In support of
' the progi-am was, " ...effective; but,
we haven't won the ballgame yet."
The revenue sharing bill recently
NEW YORK - A spray of machine gun fire ou181de two Greenwich
passed the House · and Is now
Vlllal!e gay bars has left two nien dead and six ~ded, and police
awaiting lame-duck consideration In
have charged a former transit policeman wbo had an ''Intense" dlsllke
the Senate.·
for bomoleltuala.
- 'lbe'former transit policeman. ~d. .Crumpley, 38, of Milnhattan,
had been cruising VIllage streets Wednesday llij!ht in a blue Csdlllac
belonging to bla father, a miniater, pollee said. Crumpley was dreslled
in a dark wool topcoat and a black, red-feathered fedora, police said.
Crunipley was charged with murder, attempted murder and illegal
WASHINGTON (AP) - As Inpo11-slon of a dangerous weapon.
.
fighting over prized Cabinet posts
bullcls, Ronald Reagan will begin
filling
hl.8 administration's top jobs
COLUMBUS, Ohio - The fire department's bomb squad was Intbla
weekend,
and hl.8 friend and
vestigating the threat of a bomb aboan! a TWA aircraft at Port Col!pDcampalgn
manager,
Willlam Casey,
bWIWednesdaynight.
.
"
'
Is
likely
to
be
picked
to
bead the CIA,
The plane, which was traveling from Washington D.C. to ChlcagJ,
source~~ clOie to the presidential
was diverted to Columbus after TWA officials learned of the b;Db
transition say.
threat through one of \he.alrline's offices, said a TWA official lit Port
Sources said Casey, t/1, who had
Columbus.
·
sonne
World Warn experience In inThe aircraft was removed to a remote part of the airpOrt, where It
teillgence,
faced virtually no opwas being checked by the bomb squad. Its paasengers were evacuated
position
as
CIA direCtor, although
in "a deplaning process, not an emergency procedure,'' the 'f!lA ofstiff competition continued for many
ficial said.
other Cabinet-level jobs.
Reagan, meeting With President
Carter
today for the first time since
COLUMBUS, Ohio - A member of the presldent-&lt;!lect's national
the
election,
plana to return Friday
campaign advisory coiiUillttee says top state officials will be conto
California,
where he Is expected
sUlted before any Ohioans are appointed to the new administration.
to
begin
making
final choices for his
· Peter Voss, who is serving as unoftlclal coordinator between Ohio
Cabinet.
The
selections,
however,
GOP headquarters and Ronald Reagan's conunittee, said Wednesday
are not expected to be announced for
that the names would be submltted to Gov. James A. Rhodes and Ohio
days.
several
GOP Chairman Earl T. Barnes before Ohioans are considered for top
Transltlon sources said William
positions.
·.
"&lt;:'
French Smith, Reagan's el-year-old

: WASHINGTON {AP) ~ 'lbe $632.4
billion, red-Ink budget bastlly aP.
proved by congreuional negotiators
baa room for a $40 billion tax cut but
leaves Wlclear the fate of &amp;CI'OS&amp;-tbe!loard spending cuts House
Democrats IOIIght to ~ on ·
Piesldent-elect Ronald Reagan.
The compromise, reached· two
mooths late for the fls;cal year that·
began Oct. 1; figures a $27.4 billion
deflclt ·- a drastic departure from
the $2DQ mllllon surplus _tentatively
targeted last June.
·
' The budget still was subject to ap.
proval of the full House alld Senate,
possibly today, but Republicans
already were talking about changing
It again early next year, when they
control· the Senate and have more
clout in the House.
The conferees met Immediately
after the Senate agreed Wednesday
by a 48-46 vote to a 19111 budget of
$833 billion, ·including a Republican
provlalon for a $39 billion tax cut
Jan.!.
.
On Tuesday, the House approved a
f631. 7 billion budget ceiling with a
$25 billion deficit.
Reaching a cOmpromise took less
than 90 minutes .as the negotiators

Charge alleged gay killer

EIJSERmM·
IN POMEROY .

enttne

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Red~in' k
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POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 19'80

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TEACHERS HONORED - Teachers of the
Salisbury School were selected to receive "an apple for
the teacher" from the Ladies Auxiliary of Drew Webster Post 39, American Legion, as a promotional gimmick for AmericanEducation Week, Nov. 1&amp;-22. On the
left, Mrs. Frankie Runnel, chairman of the observance

•

•.

•••• .._.t-SaturdaythroulhMonday:QoudJ.Satur-

diJ&gt;IIId llullda'y. Qluce olloboWWI McrndaJ. lflllilln the mi4HOato
mid 1018atlritf and l!lndaY, c:oGiiJIC,a liUle to the low . . and low 11011
MondaJ. ~ lOWIIn tile upper IGI to lowiGIIII'Iy Salll'day and
lntbeiGISundiYandMonday.

•

and Willlam Simon was considered
likely to return to his old job as
treasury secretary.
l Smith, Casey and Simon are
leadingfiguresinReagan's "kitchen
cabinet," 19 senior advisers who
drafted the list of top Cabinet candidates.
Sources said that while those three
positions seemed fairly firm, the
rest of the Cabinet selections still ap.
peared fluid, with competing candidates and pressure groups
jockeying for position. •
Several aides· close to the transition also noted that the list of candidates still could change and that
Reaganmightnotfollowitstrictly.
CaSey, fonner chairman of the
Securities and Exchange · Commission In the Nixoll.administration,
Is one of Reagan's ~losest political
friends and took over the presidentlal campaign after fanner manager
John Sears was fired last winter.
Casey worked during World War
personal lawyer, remained the clear
favorite to become attorney general, U for the Office of Strategic Ser-

vices, a forenmner of ilie CIA.
Although one source said he didn't ·
think "anyone would challenge
Casey" for the CIA post because of
his close relationship with Reagan,
most other Cabinet candidates
lacked that clear an advantage.
Sources said the struggle over who
will head the State Departm~nt was
primarily between Gen. Alexander
Haig, fonner NATO commander
and President Richard M. Nixon's
last chief of staff, and former
Treasury Secretary George Shultz.
Haig Is backed by more hard-line
elements within the Reagan camp
while ShultZ is considered more of a
moderate.
Sen. John Tower, R-Texas,
remained a prime contender for
defense secretary, sources said. But
one source said that choice ''was not
as solid a~ some of the others," while
another source !!aid Tower ''was in
the pack" of candidates.
Resgan met with Tower on Capitol
Hill on Wednesday, but Tower

refused corrunent on their talk.
Other names mentioned for the
Pentagon job Included Haig, former
. Treasury Secretary John Connally
and Texas Gov. William Clements.
Another battle was shaping up
over agriculture secretary. Sources
said John R. Block, Illinois'
agricultural director, and Clayton
Yeutter, chairman of the Chicago
Mercantile Exchange, were under
consideration for the post.
Block is supported by Sen. Bob
Dole, R-Kan ., who has said he would
object to Yeutter's appointment
because of his connection with the
Chicago exchange, one of the
nation's largest corrunodlty markets
with members representing many
major agribusiness companies.
Health Industry officials were
reportedly pusliing Sen. Richard s.
Schweiker, R·Pa., for secretary of
health and human services.
However, other sources said Robert
Carleson, California's welfare direc(Continued on page 10)

'

New bridges. to cut down travel time
· By MARniA BR'VSON HODEL
AsiOCialed PrHI Wrlier
CHARLESTON, W.Va. {AP) .1Some day, 118)' state officials, there
will be enough bridges spanning the
Ohio River that few residents will
have to travel more than a short
distance to cross the mighty river
that separates West VIrginia and
the Buckeye State.
Meanwhile, however, the unQOillpleted bridges have been the
source of squabllllng In Weal
Virginia and In Ohio, which 11 .
running short of money to build .
approaches to the bridges on ltl
side of the rlv!!f.
Delplte the- river's name, It II
o'Ulled by the state of West VIrginia '
to the low-water mark on the Ohio
aide. Therefore, the Mounta:ri State
II retiPOIIIlble for co!IIU'uctlon COils
on all brldgu cro.IJii It, sild WeBt
VIrginia Hllhways Department
1pojte1111111 Gaey Cbemenko. But
Ohio muat fllllnc:e all approach
rampe on Ita lllde, he aald, and
tbereln lla the problem.
tn recent yean, Welt Virginia .
baa completed four bridges 8CI'IIII
the Ohio- bltww; Pl PINaDt and
Kanaup; betwiWi Plrllersburg, W.
Va. and llelPn, Olllo; INtwwn St.
Maeya, W. Va.,lllld Newpot;, Ohio,;
and INtw- Cllll&amp;er, W. Va. ud
Ealt UW!'1JOOl, Oblo.
Still ~nder construction, 0....

resident. "There's nothing there."
nenko said, are bridges in East
According to Chernenko there
Huntington, Ravenswood, Moundhave · been nwnerous propoSals
sville, Wheeling,' and Weirton. But
made in Ohio to construct shop~ing
the Ohio Transportation De]l8rtcenters or a power plant in that
ment says It has no money for its
com field. But nothing has been
share of construction work on the
Wheeling bridge, which connects decided, he !!ald.
"The last I heard, the power plant
the West Virginia city to
was still In some stage of
Bridgeport, OhiO', or on the
discussion," he said.
Ravenswood bridge, which now
Chernenko !!aid he expects the
encls In an Ohio cornfield.
wlll be completed by midbridge
Ohio transportation de)l8rtment
1981,
or
shortly thereafter, at a cost
spokesman David Finley said state
just
under
$17 million.
can't afford to build the connections
"It's
estimated
to be done In the
for two of the five Ohio River ·
fall
of
'81,
but
we
should
be able to
bridges under construction. Funbeat
that,"
Chernenko
said.
ding for the other three now Wider
The Wh~llng-Brldgeport span is
construction was approved before
recent money crunches. "We're a much more complex structure
that will carry Interstate 470 across
absolutely flat broke,". he said.
The department, which relies on the Ohio. According to Chemenko,
a 7 cent per gallon gaaollne tax, bas the estimated cost of the project Is
been losing revenue for the last 17 $100 million, although about $48
months.
"Everything Is on Indefinite
hold," Finley said.
.,
Particularly the Ravenswood
A car driven by Herman L. Shane,
bridge, which hall been labeled "the
Rt.
2, Racine, was destroyed by fire
bridge to nowhere." On the West
the driver miraculously escaped
but
VIrginia side, the bridge rises oCt of
serious
injuries following an llca cluster of homes and businesses
cident
Ibis
morning on SR 124 in
on the ootsklrts oi Ravenswood.
MinersviUe.
When the apan touches down In
According to the report, Sbane
Ohio, however. It is ~n a one-lane
was driving a car owned by Dennis
Mraveled liX'al service road.
Grant,
Langsville east toward
"It just ends up In a comfield,''
Syracuse,
when he lost control, ran
said Tim Williams, an area

million of that will go to build an
interchange on the West Virginia
side.
"That will probably he the most
complex interchange in West
Virginia ' s interstate system,"
Chernenko !!ald.
According to Chernenko, only
concrete and finishing work r&amp;mains to be done on the I-470 bridge,
but he said that won't he completed
untll next summer.
"It's all work that can't be done
untU the weather warms up,'' he
said. "Once that happens, though,
they'll have no trouble."
Although it is an Interstate
bridge, Chernenko said tbe span,
will connect on the Ohio side only
with state Route 7, an older, twolane highway.
" It will just have a ramp and
{Continued on page 10)

Driver escapes burning car
off the right side of the highny In a
curve. The vehicle severed a
telephone pole. The car came to rest
on its top in a field .md Ignited.
The Syracuse Fire Department
was swrunoned. Shane m..,h"'d
abrasions, but was not immedlately
treated. He was cited to court on
charges of reckless operation.

'

�3-TIIeDaily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Nov..20, 1980

2-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Nov. 20, 1980

. ~TTA l'OR"r¥t01tnl

Opinions &amp;
Comments

HuLMe

~t.·~IE,JAIM.

Meigs coach
seeks better

N·E.A.ec

THE DAILY SENTINEL
CUSPS 145-,.. )
DEVOT~jl'O THE

INTEREiiT OF
MEIG&amp;MASON AREA
LA:Ue-n Ill opialoa are welcomed. 'ftley sbould br In• U..u :SOO word! loua. lor svbjcd lo '""uctaoa by tile edlter ) aad

mu1 ~ ~ siped wltll

tbt alpee'1 addrl!!ls. Namt'!s may bt&gt; withheld UJXIII

publltaUoG. Hewever, ea nquest, Dimes will be dllclosed. Letten should br In Rood taste, addreutac
penouuues.
Pubtw.t4 ·cl1Dy except S.Wday b)' The Ohio Valley Publlilllng Compauy- Multimedia, In c.,
lU c..rt St., POmeroy, Ohio45719. Bus loess Offlct Phoot 992- 2155. Editorial Phone 9!J2..2157.
Sec.- rlass posta1c paid at Pomeroy , Ohio.

'"""· DOt

new attitude. It hopes tO UBe to an ad· ·
vantage in bettering . last year's
record.
campaign in a ple-season pteview
Coach Fisher feels "defense" will
~ Aleunder Friday eveniilg
be the big key to a succqsful season.
1t Athena High School. Game time is His club has been working
1:30.
.
vigorously on a stingy defensive at·
Tile Marauders will debut Wlder . tack. Another key to. success is the
flnrt year head coach Gordon ability "to play good team ball" and
Filbter, who has served in the Meigs being more selective for a good per·
buketbail program as an assistant centage shot.
RIO GRANDE'S 198(HI1 BASKETBALL TEAM will battle Findlay
the past few years.
Coach Fisher also believes public
·. Saturday at 3 p.m. in Lyne Center. Members of this year's squad are , first
Coach Fisher has high hopes for support is a key to any team's sucrow, left to right: Head Coach John Lawhorn, Jolm Banks, Dan Felske,
bill Marauders this season, and looks . cess, especially the Marauders. "I
Richard Quisenberry, Vincent Phelps, co-captain, Scott Burson, Jeff
for a much improved season over would Uke to get the public inJut year.
terested in the program. The boys .
Gone from last year's squad are Cllll play good ball, they want to play
·
·
·
,
Todd Snowden, Cliff Kennedy, and
hall,ball,"
and he
I believe
Greg O'Br;ien. last year Meigs squad good
play good
said. they will
pairted a 2-19 record.
.
Coach Fisher openly admits this
· Meigs has one bright spot, nine let- year will be a challenge for him. The .
termen returning, including two- first year mentor feels the entire
RIO GRANDE - Youth vs. Lawhorn is also an alwnnus of the
year letterman Steve Ohlinger.
program will show improvement.
seasoned veterans will be the college, having graduated from Rio
"One of our biggest aasets is that
The first year mentor praised his challenge facing the Rio Grande in 1962.
Findlay College is a pre-season
· we have 11 kids on the team and ail four assistants for their hard work Redmen as they square Off against
ofthemcanplay. Weprantousealot and contributions. His assistants are powerful Findlay College here favorite to win the Hoosier Buckeye
Conference.
of kids. In fact, our bench will Mick Childs, reserves; Steve LoDes, Saturday, beginning at 3 p.m.
The Oilers are led by Senior Cenprobably W the difference in the Freshnien; Ron Drexler, eighth
Rio Grande not only has a high
majority of our games," Coach grade, and Bruce Wilson, seventh nwnber of freslunen players (five ter Bill Kolterman who averaged 18
Fisher said.
grade.
out of top . nine) but returning points per game last year. In fact ,
Besides depth, Meigs will sport a
In closing, Coach .Fisher said, veterans have been forced to adjust ail five starters are returning let·
"Our first four ball games will be It to the coaching style of new Head tennen.
Saturday's contest will be the
test." These games will mean a lot Coach Jolm Lawhorn .
s~ason
opener for both teams. Find·
as far as team attitude is concerned
Lawhorn is preparing for his first
lay
has
scrinunaged a(lainst Capitol,
and in gaining the support of Big
season at the helm of the Redmen
.
By Tbe Assocb;lted Press
Bend fans.
team and caiTies with him an im- a favorite to win the Ohio Capital
The Tcp Twenty teams in The Associ·
Meigs
opens
regular
season
play
pressive list of credentials: 1979-811 Conference, and handled CAP
ated Press college football poll, with first·
platce votes in. parentheses, scaS()n's
November
28 against Jackson at UPI AAA Ohio High School Coach of easily.
l"fCCfds and total Points. Points ba:led on
home. Eleven players are vying for the Year; a 2'13-99 record over 18
:.18-111-17·111-111-11·13·12·11· UHH·7·H+3 ,2·
1'
Rio Grande has scrirrunaged its
the five starting positions at this years of coaching ; a 1979-811 season
I~
1,306
-1. Georgia (55)
alumni
team, which consisted of All·
time. Below is a team roster and a mark of 23-1 at WarTen Western
1,188
2. Notre Dame (4)
&amp;&lt;&gt;-1
3. Florida Slale (3)
9-1-&lt;l
1,175
1980-81 schedule along with a Reserve High School which finished American Jimmy Noe and other out·
4. Nebra5ka (41
• 9-H)
1.173
preview schedule:
second in both the UPI and AP poils. standing players, and stayed close in
11-1-&lt;l
1,012
5. OhJu Sl.ilte
ByScoUWoUe

ROCK SPRINGS - The 198(HI1
Meigs Mar!iuders kick off their cage

Na._l advertbdq rtprne~~lallye , l.a•don Aut~t;late.M , 3101 EudiCI Ave.. Clevelllod, Ohio
• Ul15.
Tbe A11ocllted Press is exd115lvtly entitled to th~ use .for publlullon uf all news dispatches
credited te t•e aew1paper aad lil!lo the local news published herein.

Robtrt Wingett'
Robert HotOlc:h
Dale Rothceb. Jr.

l'llblloher

Gcaeral Mer. &amp;: City Edltclr
News Editor

~~:b.
~miSi!

~._..,...,..,.,...c::~,.,..

~v

Ohio editorial
.commentary
THE DAYTON DAILY NEWS - "With just one more
election, the Supreme Court of Ohio could become the
Brown Court of Ohio. Judge Clifford Brown was elected to
the state's highest court last week, the third of the court's
seven justices named Brown.
" Clifford, meet Paul and William. Paul and William,
meet Clifford.
''Thus continues one of Ohio's most durable political far·
ces -the inclination of the voters, l,ittle aware of Supreme
Court candidates, to favor the most familiar name. By
. . chance, Ohio political tradition has elevated the name
Brown.
" This year's Brown is qualified, a judge in the 6th
District Court . of Appeals. By virtually universal
agreement of the state's attorneys and jurists, however, he
is no match for Justice David Dowd, the incumbent voters
dumped last Tuesday. Justice Dowd, a fonner Stark County prosecutor and fonner appellate court judge., is widely
regarded as one of the best additions to the Supreme Court
in recent years.
" This absurd system of election by luck and name
recognition (even when it is a case of mistaken identity)
costs Ohio's appellate benches some of their most able
jurists and discourages many of the state's best legal
talenU from seeking a career in the judiciary.
"Reform is long overdue. The legislature clearly should
. push !I state constitutional reform that would reserve to
' \ voters the righf to remove appellate judges who had been
' appointed on merit.
" Most states have adopted that system or some similar
one. And Ohio had better hurry, before there is a majority
of Browns on the state Supr~me Court that could rule any
reform Unconstitutional."
THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH- " It is apparent some
Ohio legislators have simply missed the Election Day
message from the voters which cried out- l~ud and clear
- for less government and less taxes.
"Thus it is surprising that speculation has arisen in
some legislative circles concerning possible imposition of
a temporary sales tax increase to offset a projected state
budget deficit.
" While a tax hike is flat out against the wishes of the
electorate as expressed clearly on Nov. 4, let it also be said
there is no such thing as a temporary tax increase. The
original sales tax, now more than four decades old, was
also to have been a temporary levy.
"We realize the state is having financial problems
because of inflation and recession, but so is virtually every
family and every business in Ohio.
"So what have families and businesses done to counter
the problem? They have tightened their belts and cut back
spending.
"This, too, must be the route taken by state officials to
comply with the Ohio constitution that requires the budget
to be in balance."

Today in history.
Today is Thursday, Nov. 20, the
325th day of 1980. There are 41 days
left in the year.
Today' s highlight in history :
On Nov. 20, 1945, two d02en Nazi
leaders were put on trial before an
international war crimes tribunal at
Nuremberg, West Gennany.
On this date:
In 1616, Cardinal Richelieu
becomes the French minister of

....
'

••

state for foreign affairs and war.
In 1818, Simon Bolivar fonrtally
declared Venezuela's indepen~ence
from Spain.
In 1893, the U.S. Supreme Court
ruled that the Great Lakes and their
connecting waters were high seas. .
In 1947, Princess Elizabeth of
Britain married Lt. Philip Mowtt·
batten in a ceremony at West·
minster Abbey in London.

"Actuslly, I'm not here In B quest for self-fulfill·
mtlnt. I'm hoping to get Into comput11r crime. "

,.

Schafer, Vince Wollenburg, John Maisch, Kevin Purcell. Second rowEarl Thomas, assistant coach; Lawrence Hughes, manager; Tom Jutze,
Grant Greenwood, co-captain, Tom Dorsey, Jolm Dorsey, Tim Clark,
Rick Acord, Dan Liedtke, Phil Washington, Tom Mack, trainer, Curtis
Wooten, assistant coach.

.R edmen' oven at home Satu_rday

"Well it strikes me as a very odd location for a storm cellar."
I

.

To be disappointed yet another time

'

6. Pill

9-1-&lt;l
11-1-&lt;l
SH
7·2.0
11-2-0
11-1.0
7-1-1
9-1.(1
S!-0
9-1.0
11-2-&lt;l
8-2.(1
7-2-0

ll t;j h

7. Peh.. ute ·
8. Alabama
9. Oklahoma
· 10. Michigan
11. Baylor
12. So. California
13. Brigham Young

14. South Carolina
15. North Carolina
16. Wa!!hlngton
17. Mississfppi State
1~ UCLA

973
896
735 '
719

695
882

469

.m

436
347
346

m

141

124

"Both pres1UD8bly will need the
nioney, facing as they do the
prospect of WJemployment in a
couple of months," Hofbnan wrote
in announcing the I'I!Bulla.
To win the- $100 jackpOt, Hoffman
accurately predicted the Reagan
:andslide that aome have blamed for
helping knock his boss out of office.
While many Democrats were out
of a job, Rep. Dan Roatenkowski of

•I

in doing so, a third of th'e 14.9 million
smokers who participated according
to a Gallup COWJt.
For !lOme, that one day can be the
start of !IOIJlething more luting.
Such as tor actor Ed AlneJ', 1V's
"Lou Grant," who h,u not' llmoked
since aervlng u Smilkeout national
chalrinal! In 1978, repeatlitg In 19'19.
· Smokeout leadership COIDII from
the ranb, and thia year'I diiirrnan
Ia Natalie. Cule, 1 ~ell-dacrlbed
moderate amoter whole father; Nat
"King" :Cole, a heavy llllOiutr, died
of lung cancer In 1M&amp;.
Hla wu an indlVidflll tragldy In a
natloul crllla, the I.'Oiltinulng increue In the lung cancer rate. For
• yean, It wu primarily a male
problem. But In r.cent YMI'I the Incidence 8I'IIOni -.wn hu been
climbing, mOlt rapidly In )'OW!gw
••• llfOIIJIII.
Lung cancer has been U10d1ted
with 11111oklng since lntenalve research into the effect of tobacco 111e upon
health ballan. But ltudlee Indicate

• -M ike Miller
x-Brlan Swann
• -D&lt;!ve Kennedy
Roger Kovalchik
•·Chris~ udge
• ·Jeff Wayland
• -BritT Dodson
x ~ Kevin

Smith

x- Denotes lettermen.
Pomeroy Bo~ 1..-cs

NoTember U, ltlt

........., TriJtlkat.
Sludlap

-r.m

Pitt.

' Reuter- Brogan Ins.

60
54
54
32

~IM

JlmaGull •
Ro,o1 Crown Cola

llonnlni's nu...

30
3
Carolyn Baclu1er 11111;
lleblllenoley 184: Pat Canonl711.
llloh aeries - Corolyn Bachner 4!!1 ; S.Uy

~·.~·
llllllt lndlviOOalgame -

Whitlatch 4111; Marlene Wllaoo 478.

Team hi11h g1m1e- Meigs Inn 530.
Team high sertes - Reuter-Brogan Insurance
1407.

E.t!U.Y SUNDAY MIXED
BOWLING LEAGUE
N..-11, . .

Pttloll
64

14

GW Aul&lt;l Partl
lloJol Crown Cola
Powelll
MJrt.

51

411
35
24

s_.

TeomFour .
mGH SERIES -

(Men) Lllrt)' Dupn 573, Ray
Rmdt t4!, llo(nll Duoan 523: (WOII)On) Debbie
Haley W , Btl1l' Wllftlatch 515, Muine Dugon

...

.

mGH GAME - (Men) llomll Dugon 2111
l.orrY Dqonl91, Ray Rooch 112; (Women) o.t&gt;
blo Htmaley %11, Ball)/ Whitlatch 1110, Myrtle St.

Clair 193.

Yr. HI.
12 5·11
12 5·10,
12 5; 11
11 · 5·10
12 6·0
,12 6·1
12 5·9
12 H
12 6·7
11 6· 1'h
12 6· 1

116·2
11 5· 10
. 10 5·0
10 5·0
11 6·1
10 5-9
11 6·0
11 6·0
11 6·0
10 5·11
11 H
11 5·9
11 5·11

Meigs schedule .
PREVIEW SCHEDUL~
p.ni., Vinton vs . Federal

Hocking; 7:45 P·"'·• Trimble vs .

s--.

reply. He aays he'll decide by Dec. a,
the day Democrata orpnl&amp;e feir the
next year'alellion.
Meanwhile, Majority 1Aader Jim
Wright
was
dlacuulng
Roltenkowakl's ~ with rwporters the other day. Rep. Slm GO..
bona, J:&gt;.Fia.' who wu within earshot, llllddenly froze In Clpt attention.

RESERV.ES
John Cremeans
Mike Edwards
Rick Edwards
R lck Chancey
Brian Whaley
Greg Taylor
Frank Martin
Terry Adkins
Mike Mi ller
John Smith
Tom Chapman
Mark Friend
Tony Jew.ell

1

Roodl'•GunShttp

ELECTRIC HEATERS

By:

Logan; 8:30 P••"'·· ... ~igs vs. Alexan der; 9:15 p.m ., Athens vs . Nelson·
ville.
.
SCHEDULE
Nov. 28, Jackson ; Nov. 29, Nelson·
ville·York; Dec. 5, at ironton; Dec .
12, at Waverly; Dec . 13, at Feder a!
HOCking; Dec. 19, Athens ; Dec. 27 ,
Gallipol is:' Jan. 2, at Wellston; Jan.

3, Wahama; Jan. 9, at Logan; Jan.
16, at Jackson; Jan. 1.7, 1ronton;
Jan. 23, at Wa;verly ; Jan. 30, at
Alhens; Jan. 31, Federal Hocking ;
Feb. 6, at Gallipolis; Feb. 13,
Wellston; Feb. 14, at Wahama ; Feb.
20, Logan.
·

Edison

Name trophy after
PRICES START AT

SEO League fou_n der
.

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Effective with the current school · awarded by the SEOAL since the
year, the All.Sports Trophy in the 1971·72 season. In order for a sport to
Southeastern Ohio Athletic League be included, anea$t six of the eight
will be named in memory of the late league schools must participate.
W. E. (Bill) Thomas, who is Points are awarded on the basis of
recognized as the "Father of the the finish by each of the schools in
SEOAL."
competition or meets .
The action was taken by the
SOUTHEASTERN OHIO
league's Board of Control earlier
ATHLETIC L,EAGUE
this year. In previous years, since
W. E. (BILL) THOMAS
1956, the league has awarded a
ALL·SPORTS TIWPHY
191()-81 POINT TOTALS
traveling trophy in football and
another in boya' basketball carrying Athens · (AS OF NOV. 20)
25 1h
Thomas' name. These trophies have Logan
22 1h
21 1h
Gallipolis
been dropped.
201J:z
Jackson
Thomas, who died Aug. 1, 1956,
17 1h
Ironton
was a businessman, postmaster, Waverly
17'h
10
coach and newspaperman in Meigs
8
Wellston. It was at his s~tggestion Wellston
that representatives of nine schools
met at the fonner Rogan Hotel in
Wellston on March 7, 1925, to discuss
formation of a new league. Eight of
TURKEY SHOOT
the nine became charter members . A turkey shoot will be )teld Satur·
of the group , named the day, Nov. 22, at6 :30 p.m. at the gwt
Southeastern Ohio Athletic League, shoot building in Bashan sponsored
with many of them still league mem· by the Racine Fire Department
bers today.
Factory choke guns only will be
The all-sports trophy has been allowed.

Self Draining Gusset

Gibbons II the ~
Democrat on the W171 IIIII t illil
Convnlttee aflet. IIIIUikOwlld and he'd set the powerful etldlmlttee
cbalnnanshlp If Roltenkowakl
decides to be whip.
"I'm liliWr lnt«ttted Ill what
you are all talking about," GibbOIW
llild with. ahe.plsb lrin.
.

If you smoke and would rather not,-r-ead
By Don Graff
If you smoke, are happy that you
do and intend to keep right on
smoking, there's probably not much
to be gained by reading on.
Some of the statistics might shake ·
yo11 up a blt, but more likely not sin·
ce you've probably seen them or
some very . similar before. And
you're still smoking.
But if you do smoke an~- would
rather not, this Ia for you.
Rather, the fourth annual Great
American Slhokeout is for you and 48.6 million other Americans.
That is the rough total of IIIIIOketl - ·
nine out of every 10 - wliOwouldlike
to quit, responses to nwnerous sur·
. veys have Indicated.
They are naturals for the
Smokeout, since 1977 SJlOnaored by
the American Cancer Society on the
Thursday before Thank.lglving. Thla
year the date Is Nov. 20.
Participants are being asked to
give up smoking for just that one
dMy. Last year 5 million succeeded

Marauder roster

x· Tony Scott ·
Randy Murray ·
• -Steve Ohlinger

Local bowling

Friendly T•vem

Illlnols found himself with one too
many.
Rostenkowskl, now deputy
majority whip, can either take over
from BradelllU u whip - a key
leadership post - or 111111wne the
chalnnanahip of the House Ways
and Means Committee from
defeated Rep. AI Ullman, D.Qre.
Both jobe are .mong the most
powerful in Wuhlngton.
House Speaker 'l'homu P. O;NeW
Jr. hasll8id he will let ROIItenkOWikl
decide which of the two po1t1 to accept.
· But ROitenkowskl aeemi1 lo be
having a hard time making up hl.s
mind. Nearly every day liOmeOne
aaks him whether he's made Up hl.s
mind yet.
"Nope," has become hill standard

..-------------~---------­

.

Player

600

no
no

19. Florida

20. Texas

Job-hunting·instead of last ·hurr~s
fares miserably.
But when the results of hiB latest
effort - a pool for the 1980 preslden·
tial election - were posted, more
than a few eyebrows were .raised.
Tile winner was Hoffman himself.
Coming in second was another
Brademas aide, Judy Briggs.

member of the Findlay College team
will not see action, due to a severe
ankle sprain.
Lawhorn commented, " We can't
make young team mistakes against
a veteran team. We've irrlproved
daily through hard work and
dedication and are looking forward ·
to a solid performance."
Saturday's game will be played a1
Lyne Center.

College's top 20

cent of the Senate next year.
By Robert Walters
Even those members don't tell the full story becaWJe the wont-kept
WASHINGTON (NEA ) - Li.fe as a female politician during the past
secret of the campaign to increase female representation in politics 1.1 that
decade has become distressingly similar to the enduring episode in the
mapy of its leaders embrace a liberal philosophy and Identify themlelves
" Peanuts" comic strip in which Lucy promises to hold the football while
with the Dfmocratic Party.
Charlie Brown attempts a kick.
All five of the women new~ eleCted to Congress, however, are
Apparently oblivious to Lucy 's unbroken record of yanking the football
Republlcans. Some ire in the moderate-to-liberal category, but othei'll are
away at the last second, Charlie remains hopelessly optimistic abOut her inquite conservative.
tentions as he charges toward the ball- only to be disappointed yet ~nother
Mrs. Hawkins, for example, is on the "wrong" side of two major l.isi1el
time.
that have become a litmus test for many feminlllts; she II in favor of .mel).
Women seeking public office are the Charlie BroW!lS of modern
American politics - always certain that the next election will produce a
ding the Constitution to prohibit abortions but opposed to the Equal Rights
·
major breakthrough, invariably chagrined by the results yet convinced that • Amendment.
Leaders of feminist political or!lanlzatlona, notabiy the NatlDIUII
one more determined effort will somehow lead to their long-denied success,
Women's Political Caucus and the Women's Campaign FWld, had high bopes ·
Notwithstanding the recent. headlines proclaiming the election of a
this year for approximately a dozen other women, all of whom were defeated
"record nwnber" of women to seats in the House and Senate, this year's
campaign provided little relief from a tradition of perennial mortification.
at the poils.
The claim of a record-breaking total of female members of Congress is
That list included at least four Democrats In race!l where an "open"
House seat meant they didn't have to rwt against an incwnbent. They were
technically correct, _but a closer examination suggests that women don't
Karen Burstein and Mary Ann Krupsak in New York, Lynn Cutler lri Iowa
have much to cheer about.
and Polly Baca Barragan. Colorado.
Although all15 female incwnbents who sought re-election to the House
were successful, they will be joined next year by only four new women
legislators, bringing the total fo• that c,hainber to 19 ,- a figure that merely
Other WlSUcceaaf.I Democratic women Included Rep. Elizabeth Holtz.
ties the record set five years ago.
. man, J:&gt;.N.Y., who_gave up a house seat to seek election to the Senate, and ·:.
The new female House members are Bobbi Fiedler of California, Lynn
House candid!!les Kathleen O'Reilly of Michigan, Norma Bork of Callfornla ··
Martin of Illinois, Marge Roukema of New Jersey and Claudine Sclmeider of
and Jeanette Relbman of Pellllllylvania.
·
·
Rhode Island.
Nwnerous reasona are offered for their failure - their lnablllty to buck
The lone female incwnbent In the Senate, Republican Nancy Landon
this year's conservative tide, the lnaenaitlvlty of many men whq continue to
Kassebaum of Kansas, isn't required to seek re-election Wltll1984. She will · dominate the political process and the demands of a system that requires the ·
be joined next year, however, by Paula Hawkins, .a newly elected Florida
development of talent at the stste and local levels before producing l'llllulla 1n
contests for congressional seats.
Republican.
.
That's the. "record" - one more senator than currently and no tnore
But the growing nwnber of women who have become sophisticated pracHouse me111bers than in 1975. Women will comprise more than SO percent of titioners of the political art know that explanations and exc\L!ell are no suJ&gt;.
the nation's population but less than 5 percent of the House and only 2 per·
stitute for a substantial nwnber of victories.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Defeated
Democrats and their staffs might be
expected to spend the lame-duck
session pushing pet projects in
Congress in a last hurrah. But
they've been too busy job-hunting.
It has become the chief activity
and obsession on Capitol Hill, where
Republicans take over the Senate
and gain considerable hiring power
in the House in January.
Burt Hoffman, an aide to deposed
House Majority Whip John
Brademas, is among the soon-to-bejobless. But he claims he finds "a lit·
tie justice even in this election." •
Hoffman for years has . been
organizing · various election pools,
collecting money from fellow House
employees and from reporters. He
usually enters the pools himself and

a high scoring game, losing only by
six.
Starting for the Redmen will be
Vince Wollenburg and Co-Captain
Vincent Phelps at the guard
positions. Freshman Tim Clark will
start at the center post; forwards
will be Junior Co-Captain Grant
Greenwood, and Senior Tom Dorsey
or Freslunan Jolm Maish.
Freslunan Rick Accord, a former

harness

SIMON'S
PICK-A-PAIR
SHOES
100 E. Main
Pomeroy
992·3830

�.4-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy' 0., Thursday, Nov. ~. 1980

a.uditionsoa.ud1t1onsea.ud1t1ons•a.u.ditions

Veteran SWHS squad sho~ld challenge·
defending champion S~uthern cagers
Southwestern with five returning
lettenoen, good size and overall
team experience should be a major
threat tbill fall to dethrone the defending champion Soull!ern Tornadoes
intheSVAC.
Uoyd L. Myers, a veteran on the
basketball court, is returning a.s
bead mentor after a 10 year a.bsence.
Myers, principal 111 ~
Kyger Elementary, stepped down
from the eoaching ranks following
the 1968-69 season.
.
Durins five years as head coach,
his Hlghlanders were highly competitive, although an 1H record was
the best mark recorded.
However, Myers' clubs were
always ready at tournament time.
During his tenure, Southwestern
captured three Gallia County cage
titlell.
Prior to being head coach, Myers
served a.s a reserve and junior high
coach.
Returning lettermen include Scott
Russell, ~ senlor; Jay Burleson,~
senior; Todd Baker, &amp;-I senior center ; Dale Newberry, &amp;-2 senior forward and Wayne Sizemore, ~

senior guard-forward.
Baker and Newberry are the
team's best ·rebounders while
Burleston, Russell and Sizemore
have good outside shots and provide
the eitra ingredient, field leadel'-

shiP·

Others vying for starting berths
are Steve Forgey, &amp;-! junior; Scott
~wis, 5-10 junior; Tim Miller, 5-9
junior; Mike Sterrett, &amp;-1 senior
transfer student and Charles
St.,.art, 5-9· junior. Southwestern
posted a ~12 record last year.
" Our primary objective is to build
upon and continue the success of a
football program over into our
basketball program," Myers emphasized.

According to the coach, "We have
been practicing for two weeka- and
since that time, our boys have shown
considerable
Improvement .
However, we still need additional
time and work since all our boys
played football ...
Southwestern's main weaknesses
were listed as not enough
aggressiveness in some aspects of
defense and not enough patience on

offense. ,
On the reserve level, Myers and
his assistant, Jack· James~ are
trying to instill the importance of
dedication to the basketball
program and erase ihe concept that
the reserve game Is just a
prelbninary thing ~fore the varsity
contest.
·
Making up the reserve team will
be Forgey, Paul McNeal, 6-3
sophomore; Gafy Baker, 6..0
sophomore; DOn Carr, 5-8 and Ron

Southwestern schedule
Dec. 2
Dec. 5
Dec . 9
Dec. 12
Dec. 16
Dec . 19
Jan. 6
Jan. 9
Jan . 10
Jon. 16
Jon. 20
Jon. 23
Jan. 27

Chesapeake
Eastern (Meigs)
Symmes Valley

from the field and 42 percebt from
the four line. They committed 18 turnovers, 13 fouls, and collected 45
rebounds.
In the reserve contest Belpre
again topped Meigs 31-28 in another
close encounter.
·
Robin Buffington and Paula Horton led Meigs with ten points apiece.
Andrea Riggs of Meigs led all
scorers with 25 points, l&lt;fisten Anderson 8, and April King 6. Belpre's
Neueiroad led her squad with 22
points, while Hapney added 14.

Ohio Sportlight
By GEORGE S'tRoDE
AP_Sports Wrlier '

Carr, 5-8 sophomores; Troy Daniels,
5-8 freshmail; Rapdy Layton, 5-10
freslunan; David Nida, 5-8 freshrrian; Russell Saunders, 5-8 freshman and Roger Wells, 5-10 feslunan.
Coach James bas Instituted a
weight 'p rogram designed to
strengthen the legs aild shoulders of
the Highlander players. .
Southwestern opens its 19M-ll1
campaign against Chesapeake Dec.
2. Other non-league opponents include Symmes Valley, Hannan, W.
Va., Oak Hill, Wahama and Eastern
of Pike.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Ohio
State quarterback Art Schlichter
sa)'l be tblnlts about the .fleisman
Tl-ophy, but thai team goals are
more Important, starting with a victory Saturday over Michigan.
Tbe Big . Ten Conference C()o
leaden will settle . the conference
crown and aCcompanying Rose Bowl
berth for . the ninth straight time
before 87,000 In Ohio Stadium and
rniWons more watching via ABC-TV
(12:21i p.m. EST).
And the key figure, for MiChigan's
defenders and Ohio State's attack , .
will be Schlichter.
He rankB u a prime contender for
the Hel.sman Trophy as college football's outatandlng player tbill season
with South Carolina •s George
Rogers. PittSburgh's Hugh Green,
Purdue's Mark. Herrmann, Dave
Wilson of Illinois and Jim McMahon
of Brigham Young. - ·
,
Schlichter was the top Un·
dercluaman In the 1979 Reisman
balloting, finishing fourth behind
winner Charles White of ~uthern
California.
"Everyone that Is COIIsldered for
the Reisman has to think about it,''
the Buckeyes' junior said. "But I
don't sit home and dwell on it. My
main concern now Ia 'lrinnlng.
· "If we can beat Michigan and I
can perform the way I'm aupposed
.to, . the Individual goals and
achievements should take care of
themselves. I! I don't get them, I can
say we were 1~1. maybe 11·1 if we go
to the Role Bowl and win.
"If I can look back and say that,
I'll be satisfied."
Any convel'll8tion with Schlichter
Ia pierced with his team winning.
You look at his record and you understand why he brings It up so
much.
,Once he won the quarterbacking
JOb at Miami Trace High School 45
Ji'llles IIOUth of Columbus, Schlichter
g'Uided no loeen In 2¥.. years: His
~won 39 times and tied the other

.---------------~

At Kyge r Creek
At Oak Hill
· Southern
At Hannan, W. va ,
At North Gallia

,1\t Wahama

Ha!"'nan Trace

Jan. 30

Oak Hill
At Eastern !Meigs)
At Syrnmes VaiiE!y
Kyger Creek

Feb . 6
Feb. 10
Feb. 13
Feb. 17
Feb. 20

At Hannan Trace

Feb . 3

At Eastern ( PlkeJ
At Southern
Hannan, W. va .
North Gallia
Wahama

Marauder gals beaten
BELPRE - Despite Andrea
Riggs' 25 point effort, . the Meigs
Marauder Girls j3asketball squad
fell to Belpre 52-45 here Tuesday
evening.
Meigs played a good floor game,
but couldn't quite muster enough of.
fense the entire game to overcome
the Golden Eagles.
Meigs trailed 1U at the end of the
first canto, then slipped to 28-21
deficit at the conclusion of the half.
Meigs fighting back was in the
game right down to the wire as it
ralli~ to within three at the third
peri bi)ZZer.
·
! the final canto, however, Meigs
fell off and Belpre held on 52-45.
Belpre $hot 40 percent from the
field and 57 percernt from the
charity stripe. They also won the
rebounding battle 4S-45.
Meigs shot 38 percent ( ~for-&amp;l

5-:-TbeDalJySentinei, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. , Thursday, Nov. 20, 980

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'·

,.

By Quarters:

12 28 36 52
B 21 33 45
MEIGS (451 - K. Anderson 4·0·8,
A. King 3·0·6, A· Riggs 10·5·25, L.
Oliver 1·0·2, S. Drehei1 ·0·2, L. Smith
1·0·2. Totais20·5·4.5.
BELPRE !521 - Griffin 2·0·4,
Hapney 6·2·14. Muscare 2·2·6, ·
Nesse\road 9·4·22, De Yore 1·0·2,
W1ga\ 2-0 4. Totals 22-B-52 .
Belpre
Meigs

Is Bengal-Browns game a mismatch?
CINCINNATI (AP) - On paper,
the game Sunday between the 7-4
Cleveland Browns and the :!..!! Cincinnati Bengals appears a.s a gross

mismatch.
The Browns have. an explosive of·
fense; the Bengals bave scored the
fewest points In the league. The
Browns are in the middle of the hunt
for a playoff spot; the Bengals would
be content just to win a game.
· · But Browns Coach Sam Rutigliano
:said there's no such thing as an easy
·game · in the National Football
League anymore.
: "There are no laughers foc
:anybody," Rutigliano said, during a
\ :teleph9ne Interview Wednesday. "So
\ : e.ach week teams are virtually
.fighting for their lives."
Rutigliano said the Browns, dub:bed the "Kardlac Kids" by their
. championship-hungry
fans ,
. shouldn't 'bave trouble rebounding
:from their bitter, last-second loss
:Sunday in Pittsburgh.
"We've been involved In those
:situations before," he said. "We

were involved in a game with l)enver this year when we did
everything but win the game. We
came out and won our next five
straight.
"Our players realize the only important thing now is to put that
aside. It's gOing to be a tough football game, but I expect us to play
well."
There's another incentive for the
Browns not to take the Bengals too
llghUy - their past records. Even In
their worst years, the Bengals have
given the Browns headaches.
Last season, for instance, one of
the Benga!S' four victories was a 1&amp;12 season finale that killed
Cleveland's playoff hopes. The alltime series record between the two
clubs Is 10.10. ·
"When you play them, yo4 have to
recognize the lllOit important thing
- they are a talent-laden ball club,"
Rutigliano said.
"It's very obvious their defense Is
surfacing. They bave very fine
playen. .. Oftenltively, they've g&lt;t
an the tooll."

SUPER PLENAMI~
EXTRA STRENGTH.

THE HIGHER
HIGH POTENCY

FO C

®

,,

By AAoclated Preu
Billy Martin, the f1rebrand of the
Oakland A's, who · led an abnost
anonymous team to a remarkable
second-place
finish, wa.s rulmed
him?
American
League
Manager of the
"You look at theiriltatlstics and
Year
for
the
third
time by The
that's nice,'' he said. "But you've
Associated
Press
today.
·
got t.Qrealize you're not going to do
an
overwhelming
Martin
was
that at Ohio State. We're here to
throw ~25 times at the most choice in the balloting by_a nationbecause we 've got a good running at· wide panel of sports writers and
broa,dcasters, receiving 400¥.. votes
tack, too.
"I didn't come here eXpecting to to 108 for runnel'-up JIJil Frey, who
throw 35-40 times a game. I knew took the Kansas City Royals to the
that wasn't going to be. We strive for ' American i..eague pennant in 1\is fll'a balanced attack. I never had any st year on the job.
Dick Howser, who succeeded the
regrets coming to Ohio State - just
combative
Martin as manager of the
diBappointments."
New
York
Yankees and won the
One of those wa.s a 17.() home loss
East
Division
t!Ue in his rOokie year,
fu UCLA, a game that could have
third
with 20¥... Earl
finished
wrecked the Buckeyes' 1980 dreams
Weaver
of
the
Baltimore
Orioles was
of their third national t!Ue and first
with
10.
fourth
since in 13 seasons. They were
MartJn did ali amazlng job with
second nationally at the· time and
the A's, taking a team which
now rank fH.th.
"Maybe they thought It was the fi.t$hed In last place, 34 games
behind first place in 1979, to conRose Bowl to them," Schlichter said,
alluding to the Bruins' Pac-10 tention in 1910. Using virtually the
probation that prohlbits their bowl same club which had. lost 108 games
·&amp;&lt;:tlvity this season. "We didn't take the year before, Martin turned the
It as a big game at that point. Now, team around, flillJhing with an 83-79
gem,.
as you look back, It Is going to be our mark,l4 gamea behind the Royals In
the West Division race. The 29-game
He's 68-6-2 in six seasons of prep biggest game until Michigan! '
Schlichter has had the same trio of IJilprovement was one of the best
llld college quarterbacking. Only
hill collece freshman year wa.s a receivers, Doug Donley, Gary any team has ever enjoyed.
The A's are the fifth American
struggle; Ohi9 State went 7-4-1. Wllltams and Cal Murray, In pUing
Schlichter writes that off as a lear- up 3,314 yards and 28 touchdowns
passlng during the Ialit two seaslins.
qtng experience.
He
ranks his wide receivers, Donley
, "It waa a cue where we were in·
and
Williams, as the best tandem in
declalve m ·what we wanted to acc;omplilh offensively," he aaid. ·..we the nation.
"I'~ sure Donley ranks right up
jwnped back and forth fl:om pusing
to running. M. a fresiunan, it was there with the best flankers in
tough. It was a learning elqlerience. college today,'' Schlichter said of his
That was my adversity. It showed close friend. "I'm sure he will be a
whether I WBI tough enough to play top round draft choice with the proa.
The more we can get him the ball,
colle~~e football."
the more succesa!ul we can be as a
Indeed, be waa.
Schlichter threw 12 interceptions passing team."
Of Williams, his quarterbacking
In his first four college starts, lnrival
in high school, Schlichter said,
clllllin8 a school-record five in hiB
"He's
strong. He's big. He's quick.
Clebut agalnat Penn State, a 19-0
He
has
tremendous bands.••
defeat.
Murray was Schlichter's
T8ilhack
ID contrast, he's pitched just 13 inMANAGER OF 'l1IE YEARfavorite
target
a year ago.
terceptions In 22 games as a
Bmy MartiD, wbo took tbe luisophomore and junior. He's broken a
place OUiaDd A's to a aecoud·
place fbllab In tbe_ Amerlcau
Leape, wu the ovenrbelm.lug
cbolce of a aationwlde pa11el of
aportlwrlten aod breedcuten
, NEW YORK (AP) - Reggie preclated a low.key, easy-going
as Amerlcao League Maaa1er of
Jacbon has·one thing to say about manager. I told that to Steinbrenner."
tbeYear. (AP Laaerpboto)
~New York Yankees' managerial
situation: "I am just glad I am not ----------.,..----------~
Involved."
'
Vflry much involved are owner
George Steinbrenner, General
Manager Gene Michael and
Manqer Dick Howser. Although
Howaer guided the Yankees to 103
;victories and the American
League's Eut Division tiUe Iii hill
first aeuon u manager, his itatua
for nut ~ remilns in doubt,
with publilhed reports i:nslatlng that
Steinbrenner will dwnp him In favor
bf Michael.
·
"I Ull diatrelled over all the hub!Nb llld to-Gl made over the matter,
but it'a Wldetstandsble,'' Jackson
l.aid Wednelda)'. "First It's the city,
ilecond the Yankees and tlilrd the
owner. Nobodf Ia bigger In thill town
fXCILLINT SfLfCTION
'than the Yankees."
.iacboil caDed himself "a Howaer
man. Didl made 1101ne mistakea, but
he couldn't have made too III8J\j
by
Wilen we won 103 aamea and our
Jantzen, White Stab
dlvilion. .Sure there nre ttmea IILI
i. Al.bee
litrate&amp;Y maY have been qlieltloaed,
bat the ~ (In the club made coneeMtcm for lt. Tbey kneW that
•
Dick'• beu't and bead were in the
rllbt place...
\
&amp;~
Jadllan IPl the Yukeea
'tbs ldilll ol club wbO needed
An Arr1y Of Colora
lllllliCtr 1lkt How•.
"MOlt o1 the lleJ 11111.,. .,., ao,
PJillkt BOb Watlall, Tammy John
and mptlf,'' Mid Jaebon. "We ap.

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KIDDIE SHOPPE

Detroit, Tems, and New York twice.
He has been named AP Manager ci
the Year· twice before, in 1974 when
he led TelUIS to a second place finish
in the West, and in 1976 when he won
the pennant with the Yankees.
Martin went to Oakland just
before spring training and was the
main gate attraction for the A's in
the early part of the season.
He wali available after being fired
by the Vankees following a fight in
Bloomington, Minn.. hotel with a
marshmallow salesman Ialit Qc..
Iober. That waa the latest in a string
of off·the-fleld batUes for the
manager who carried on a celebated
runnlng feud with owner George
Steinbrenner during hiB two terms
with theYankees.
Perhaps his most famous war with
Steinbrenner came in 1978 when he
called both 1M Yankee owner and
sUperstar rtght fielder Reggie
Jackson ltan. "One's a born liar, the
other's convicted,'' the martager
said, referring to Steinbrenner's
conviction for illegal political campaign contributions. Within days, he
was gone, replaced by Bob Lemon.
Then, just as suddenly, Steinbrenner
announced that Martin would return
as Yankee manager in 1980, with
Lemon becoming general manager.
That scenario never developed.
Lemon took the Yanks to the 1978
world championship and wa.s named
AP Manager of the Year. But when
the team got off slowly In 1979, Steinbrenner brought Martin 'back for a
second tenn. The club staggered to a
fourth place finish - the lowest any
Martin-led club has ever finished and after the bar room fight, Steinbrenner fired the manager.

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PRESCRIPTIONS
Friendly Ser~tlcr
e: .u .. l .
Nltfllt t!l'

Michigan at 6.3 and Norm Granger due while Purdue Is tope in total ofof Iowa leads in kickoff returns with fense with 473.7 yards a game to
a 29.9 average.
461.4 for Ohio State and 411.2 for .
•.
Ray Stachowicz leads in punting Illinois.
With a 43.9 average. Don Bracken of
Ohio State leads in rushing defenMichigan is next at 41.0 followed by se, allowing but 108.3 yards a game
Reggie Roby of Iowa at 40.9 and Tom to 115.3 for Michigan followed-' by
Orosz of Ohio State at 40.7.
Minnesota at 119.5. Northwestern II ·
Ohio State and Michigan, who tops in PJSS defense, yielding only ·
meet for the champ!onship and Rose 122.3 yards per game to 149.7 for '
Bowl bid Saturday are dominant in Michigan.
team statistics.
Michigan Is tops in total defenae ·
Ohio State leads the league in by allowing 265.0 yards a gme to
rushing, is second to Purdue in total 286.0 for Ohio State with Minnesota '
offense and to)lli in scoring while third at 320.1.
Michigan in total defense and,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
scoring defense.
Ohlo State has averaged 42.3 poin·
ts a game in conference competition
while Michigan bas allowed its opponents pnly 8,7 points a game and
• bas a string of three straight
shutouts.
Ohio ~tate Is tops .in rushing,
averaging 290.9 yards a game.
Michigan is second at 25M with Min·
nesota third at 233.2.
Illinois look over the passing
from Purdue. llllqois is averaging
314.7 yards a game to 302.3 for Pur· 111 w. 2nd Pomeroy, Oh • .
League clubstints
MartinathasMlnne~ota,
managed, r _ _ _:__ _ _ _ _ _ __l~==========~
following

Martin chosen
Manager of Year

CHECK LIST
FOR THE

..

LETS 'YOU LAUGH
AT THE WEATHER

VITAMIN.

Phormo&lt;y

game.
The battle for pass rece1vmg
honors will go down the wire. Dave
,Young Qf Purdue leads with 43
receptions, one more than team·
mate Bar Burrell. Keith Chappelle
of Iowa is third with 41.
Vla.de Janakievskl of Ohio State is
the seortng and kick scoring leader
with 68 points and Rick Anderson of
Purdue Is seeond with 66.
Four players are tied for the lead
in pallS interceptions. They are Rick
Wltthus of Minnesota, Andy Cannavlno of Michigan and Vince
Skilllitgs and Ray Ellis of Ohio State.
Tim Wilbur of Indiana Is topa In
punt returns with a 6.7 average
followed by Norm BWTOWS of Ohio
State at 6.4 and AnthonY. Carter of

effic~ency

SANTA'S

--t....o......J

SWISHER lOH5t

takes lead in passing

CHICAGO . \ AP) - Ohjo State
quarterback Art SChlichter . has
taken over the lead in passing ef·
ficlency In the Big Ten while Dave
Wilaon of Illinois Is No. Un total offense.
Schlichter has a pass rating of
146.7 to 145.8 for Mark Hemnann of
Purdue. John Wangler of Michigan
Is next at 138.9 followed by WilBon at
121.8.
WiLton shot.,fo the top in total of·
fense with an average of 292.1 yards
a game while Hemnahn d'topped to
second with 276.4.
.
Calvin Murray of Ohio State has
ali but clinched the rushing title.
Murray Is averaging 125.4 yards a
game and Garry White of Mlnnellota
Is a distant second with 101.7 yards a

iR eggie not in contrf!versy _

'

FROM REXALL. THE VITAMIN MAKEil.

batch of Ohio State records. The
most significant one is the school's
career total yardage record of 5,589
yards, previously bo\ionging to tw()o
time Heisman winner Archie Grif·
fin.
.
Schlichter now has 5,917 total yar·
ds with more than a full season
remainlng.
.
"It's sofllething when you can put
your name up there with a guy like
Archie, a legend,'' he said. "If you
can do that, It's a great honor. It's
something I'll cherish thetest of my
life...
Schlichter has thrown only 16.5
passes in tlte Buckeyes' H season
this year. He's relld where Herr·
mann became major college foot·
btiu•s aiJ..tbne passing champion
with .Jllore ·than 9,000 yards. He per·
sonally saw Wtl.ton tlirow 69 times
for 621 yards, another major college
record, against the Buckeyes.
Does such accomplishments by
fellow Big Ten quarterbacks bother

SchJ:ich~er

IAHR
CLOTHIERS
H. 2ncl Ave:
Mldcileporet, Oh. ,
.,

THE MEIGS INN
Pomeroy,

0.

�. 7-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., ThUI'!!day, NOY. 00, 19110
5--The Daily Sentinel, Middl~port-Ponieroy , 0 ., ThUI'!!day, Nov. :&gt;AI,l9110

Food for Thought

Nov,..ber!I,IM8

lliils cuming year several sliWIIliOO! uver
~ which )'01111\IIY have llttle Nnlrul cuuid flO uff in
directiorw yOU didn't intend. Let them

Avoid holiday overeating
By Myrtle Clarll
and Amlle Moon
EFNEP NulriUiia Aides
Mel&amp;• CoUnty Cooperative
EllleDIIon Service ,
TIIINKING 11I1N

. ON THANKSGIVING
When we think of Thanksgiving .
Day, the first thought that comes to
mind IS the delicious turkey dinner
that Is Served in almost every home
In the United States~ It certainly is
easy to eat too much. How many
time~~ have you gotten up from the
hOliday 'table and wished that you
hadn'teaten.all thatfood?
Thanksgiving dinner can be planned to be satisfying and delicious,
but not so filling that everyone at the
table has to loosen their belts. For
family members in a weight reduction diet, holiday meals can be a real
problem. Below ~ two sample .
menus and the kilocalories or food
energy they supply. The first menu
Is a traditional hearty Thanksgiving
Feast. The second menu is for a
llgher meal that supplies fewer
kilocalories.
Tbanbglving Feui_

Routed Turkey and Dressing
Homemade Noodles and Gravy
Fresb Vegetable Reli8b
and Cranbei:Ty Sauce
Hot Muffins and Spread
Pumpkin Pie
Milk, Coffee or Tea
Food, and Kilocalories are 118ted
as follows : .
Roasted turkey (6 ounces), 320;
Dres.ging '!'&lt; cup), 175; Noodles ('!'&lt;

Adventists to
participate in
fund drive

\

Members of the Pomeroy Seventhday Adventist Church will be spending several manhours in volunteer
service between now and January 3
as the congregation participates in
the denomination's · '12nd Annual
World Service appeal - a community-and-church fund drive in
progress coast to coast.
The campaign, says Rita White,
communication secretary for the
local church, ~ designed to bring
help to mlllions· of persons to whom
life has not been as good as to most
of us in the Pomeroy area.
Funds received from the annual
appeal, White says, will be apportioned for both local and international use when the drive Is
over.
1
Local church members, she notes;
are acting as volunteer solicitors,
and in other capacities to help the
local congregation reach its $500
goal between now and January 3.
Members of the local
congregation, clearly identified and
authorized by the proper community
agency will be visiting pusiness and
residential areas during the next
several weeks in behaH of this World
Service Appeal.
I
According to White, the World Service Appeal both solicites funds to
aid millions of people in need
throughout the world, and at the
same time provides opportunity for
local church members to get better
acquainted with their neighbors.

'"""rlallu tn llwi&lt; own way. Everything will
wurtuultoyuuruUbnaletluud.
SCORPIO 10.1. !~NoY. !!I Your"""" w .,.
,...,. your tndepend&lt;nce il likely '" be quile
cup), 150; Gravy (~ cup), 100; Cran- · •""-8 Joday. v...·u ,_nl beina dictated 1o by
who w•nts to rearranc~ your sd'ledul~ .
be rry sauce (113 cup,,, 135 : Celery, anyone
Find""' more of whoo1ues wad for you 1n Ule
···"""""'·),
, ,_,_
copy
of .....-roplt.
MaUllbyfor
..ch lofor"'-"'&gt;
carrot
sticb,(2olive,
25; Hot67·muffin,
yoar followi"'l1•trr
birthday
&gt;ending
,uur
150·, Spread
_...,_..._
J: w•~
Gnaph. Box tet, Radio Cit)' Station, N. "i' . 10019.
pkin pie (1J6 of 9") 413• MiJk (1
Besun!IOip•cilyblrlhral•.
SAGmARilJS !Nov. U.Dec. !II Tackle your
"" Total' 1 ....:
Whoie cup )t 1uu.
• ,uw. ·
chores t.ilet!rfully today, even ~:ttough your work·
load
b apllo important.
be a lrlfltlorger. A J)I'Oiler allllude
-.. __'l'bblk
..._ori • Tldn
tsutremely

.a...

l.lllllla.&amp;&amp; ... -.IMDDer

CAPRICORN lOft. '!Wa 111 There ill a
chance you will be J\tlhr:ed b)' your spor·
tsnwnsttip qualities todly.Wheuier you wtn Gr
lose, do It wllh gra~.
AQUARIUS f J•a. 20-Feb. lfl Goa !a bnport,ant
to you today nUty not be qwdly 10 to yuur
&amp;s~octates. Don't be disappointed ~ th!!y don'.t
sha... your enthll!llum.
PISCES ~Feb. !1-M.reh !I) Vou can tjet along
with most people todat, with the posSible ex·

Routed Turkey aDd ~iDe

"'--"V
lable D-"·b
r n;~W e1e
I\C4&amp;It
Cnaberry S.ace
GneD Beaut
Hot RoD !llld s~A
... '""'" "--lard
Pum...-,
..

ARIES (Mart-h U· Aprll l'f You cUuld ex·
perlenee a trine more lllre!i.'! lhMn Wii.Wll-lodlly In
artal! whk•h !lfft.&gt;C'l your IIIK'llrhy, Keep l'OOI,

Av.,;dto.hoovinghnpublv•ly.
TAURUS IApdl !1-MilY.!el Pei'80JU&gt; not normally uppooed tu your id"'' r'"&gt;Jhl off" w&gt;ex·
pectedopposlllon h.t.y. Try to be und&lt;ral•ndlllll
and placll• 111etn, ratl&gt;!r lhoon rutne lh&lt;!lr
le&amp;thers.
GEMINI I May !1-J... ltl The ronJrul of
hoonds P"'"""IIY
of olhors "'-"'"''"you
t~y. collier lhon
lhi"lls
mayInbeyours.
in lhe
Stri't'~ lo make lhe best of bad situations.
CANCER IJU"' 11-July !!I"'"'""' !noon
Y""' JIH" loday cuuld lead you to d&lt;l somelhillll

were elected at the
organizatlonal meeting~ the DordlS Youth·' at the Bethany United .
Method.Jst Church.
Elected were Alan Criap,
REFUNDER8TOMEET
A ......-t~it.d c:i the Meip County
president; Tony Frederick, vice
.,__.,.
president ·, Juanita Frederick, RefwKiera Club will be beld at 7 thla
evening. at the Riverboat Room,
seCretary~ Mike Johns&lt;:ll, treasurer,
h
,,_._ County
and J
F
devotional Meigs Branc , A....,;,.
leader.
n
were ......

f

which may not necessarily serve your best ln-

""""'·
Be """"B·
Don'l
yield to lemplation.
LEO fJu.ly
z:J.-Aue.
Ul Tostrveyour
ambitions.

toda)l, be Yt&gt;ry ca reful you don't upset otfiers in
the pt""O«!I.'I. Consider their feelings ll8 well jjS
yoorown.
VIRGO fAq:. ~t. H) Define ,your o~ .
jec:tives c\urly today lind plan wise.ly how you
hope to achie ve them. A poor blueprint will lq)sel

,F.OR .THAT HOLI bAY A•RTY!.
p
'

PARTY PANTS

)"'Ur tbnet.able.

UBRA IScpl. %Hlcl '" Sle&lt;r clear &lt;&gt;! lndlvldua'·.., t~~·you
f~l to be arn.w~~&gt; ant or to.o
.,...
self-seek.J ng.
ir behavior will annoy you even

LONG .SKIRTS WllH
C().()RDINATING
ALSO

BANK ONE,.

. Several members of Meigs County photo book chairman; Mrs. Hazel Olapters for their work in fund
Salon 710, Eight and Forty, were in Elliott, Portsmouth, national raising, mentioning among others,
Columbus over the weekend for the memory book; Joy BoWIIIIIII, per- the Meigs Co\mty Salon which inreception honoring Mrs. Violet sonal secretaire for the nationale creased fund drive proceeds this
,
year by $1,000..
.,\ichholz of New Washington, the chapeau.
Speaker for the reception was a
Favon for tile reception were red
newlY Installed Eight and Forty La
representative of the Ohio Chapter heart can«!les. The theme thlll year
Chapeau Nationale.
· Held at the Ramada Inn Saturday of Cystic Fibrosis; who talked on the Is "Open Your Hearts to Children
night, several national officers, in- birth and death rates of cystic with Lung Disease." Presentations
cluding Mrs. Mary Russell of New fibrosis chlidren, the treatment of gifts and money were made to the
Mexico, Ia dem\ chapeau nationale, facilliies and the need for money. new nationale chapeau.
She commimd~ Eight and Forty
Adance followed the reception,
~. Kathr):n Kucera, New York, Ia
archivlste, nationale; and· Mrs. r-;:;:;::;::~::;:;:;::;::;;::;::;;::;;:;;:;;;::;::;:;:;:;;::;;:::;:::;::;::i
Helene Mardu, Connecticut, la.CO!l'·
clerge, nationale, brought greetings.
SHOP
· Nationale chapeau passe introduced were Mrs. Marie Smith,
Pennsylvania, and Mrs. Le118 Hunt,
FOR THE BEST DEALS IN THE TRISTATE AREA
Michigan. others introduced were
Mrs. Virginia Kates, Dlinols, Celltral Division chapeau; Betty Sauer,
Indlaria, past Central Division
Monday, Tuesd;~y, Wednesday, Friday &amp; Saturday
chapeau; and Mrs. Mary Martin,
8:30 to 5:'00, ~hursday till12 noon
Pomeroy, national constitution and

MASON FURNITURE

773-5592

Give Your Family The Joy of Music
All Year With a Complete
Hi-Fi System!

in our casuals

Save
$
$
SO
.
~~:ate
499
160
Reg.

659.80

SUEDE OR LEATHER

·s2599.
Casey K•sem
WMPO

•

heritage house

SATURDAYS
I til Noon

• Realistic STA-820 AMIFM Stereo Receiver
• Two Minimus ·-11 Die-Cast Metal Speakers, Each with Acoustically Aligned S"
Woofer, 2'/i' Horn-Loaded Tweeter
• LAB-270 Automatic Belt-Drive Turntable, Dust' Cover, $27.95-Value Realistic/
Shure R47EDT Magnetic Cartridge 31-2087. 40-2035. 42-2965

90 Minutes with
Fiedler and M~lntnv~r,il

. OF SHOES
Ohio

Sold Only at Radio Shack!

. Pom..O, • Rut11nd .• Tupper~ Plain\"

.----:..

JAMES RECOMMENDS
OUR SAlURDAl SPECIAL
PRIME ~IB OF BEEF,

•

2-Disc
LP Set

.•7••

•DRlSS Cool IN &amp;FECf •

DON'T FO~ET

SEAFOOD BUFFET

Cassette

599 699

SALAD AND POTATO

GUITARIST. SINGER Md lmRTAINER

as

seen

on

TV

• To Hang It Up, Just Pull! Down

CHIF'S COiNIR

...
.

49.95

KEN PALliA

and the

BANK ONE.

ET-100 by Radio Shack

39 8~g.

NOW APJ'IARI,NO.

.

This Christmas Give the
"Phone of Tomorrow"

Save20°/o

CHECKING TWO is

I .

C H!1RGE /l )MQST STORES1

you can walk
for miles and miles

The best we have to offer is the best thing thafs happened in banking
since the checking aCXX&gt;Unt was invented. It's called CHECKING TWO,
the interest plan. ~ has revolutionized check writing and saving for
thousands of BANK ONE customers all over Ohio. CHECKING TWO
is much better than the regular checking account. ~ pays you daily ·
interest on all your money in the bank" and you can still write checks. ff
you maintain a minimum balance of $100J, you pay no monthly fees or
charges."" ff your balance does fall below $~ OOJ, you'll still·eam interest
on every dollru: you have in the plan, even thOO;Jh we'll charge you a:
.$5.00 fee for that month. But the interest you earn will help offset that
fee ... gMng you one of the most economical checking plans arourxi.
CHEp&lt;.ING TWO can be profitable and economical, and it's mUch
better than a regular checking account: flsia matter of fact, we also have ·
a way for business
. customers
, to earn interest on their excess balances., I1

I

Mason, w. Va.

t-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1

plan

Member FDIC

HERMAN GRATE

I

the interest

BANK ONE OF POMEROY

PURSES
30% OFF

Act now, get a great. receiver with extra features
at huge 33% savin9.s! Easi ly drives two pairs of
speakers to room-fill ing volume. And two magnetic cartridge inputs let you use two turntables
·
- great .for prov id ing continuous mus ic at
Christmas and New Year parties or making
professional- type re cordings! 40 watts per chan- .
nel. minimum rms into 8 ohms from 20-20 ,000
Hz, with no more than 0.06% THO. Hurry buy now t #31-2087

OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT ONLY

by-laws.

Mrs. Hazel Elliott, departemental
chapeau passe, was mistress of
ceremonle~~ for the reception. Cochairmen for the eyent were Mrs.
Louise Talley, Columbus, and
Dorothy Brady, Manuta.
Others recognized were Mrs.
Ethel Van Fossen, Portsmouth,
national pfellS book chairman; Mrs.
Grace Shade, WillarQ, national

"All tunds begin earning Interest one business day alter depos11
· •rlierc IS a $.15 Charge fer all transachons 1n excess ot 40 per month,
All mOney 15 kepi In !he savings account of the CHECKING TWO pl l\"·
and the checki ng account carries a zero balance When you wrtte a
check. the money is automatically transferred trOm the savn1gs account
to ~tne checking account , ana the remamder of the savtngs account
balance con1in ues to ea(n daily interest

SlO - $12

MASON FURNITURE

l

'

20% OFF

Eight.&amp;: ·Forty members in Columbus

IF YOU'RE A
CHECKI
LD
OUR BESt

I

JEANS

p~~~~~J I

·-

profitable,
best

HART HOSPITALIZED
Gary Hart, Racine, son of Gilbert
and Audrey Hart, is a patient at St.
Marys Hospital, Huntington, W. Va.
His room number is 4010. Cards may
be sent to him in care of the hospital.

TWO'S CO.

• PLAID SKIRTS AIID
VELOUR lOPS

·' '

Contributions to the special gift
fund of the Meigs County Board for
the Mentally Retarded have been
used to purchase equipment and
.•upplles for the kitchen at the Meigs
Community School.
1
Making contributions were
Pauline Roush, Ethel Grueser, JOF
Class, Pomeroy United Methodist
Church, Evelyn Gaul, Mr. and Mrs.
·Fred Goeglein, Mr. and Mrs.
·William Grueser, the Adult Class of
the Rock Springs United Methodist
Sunday School ~ the Long Bottom
United Methodist Sunday School,
· Mr. and Mrs. Paul · Karr, . the
Syracuse United Meihodist Women,
Miss . Grace Campbell, Middleport
Church of Christ, Reva · Beach,
Allred United Methodist Women,
· Nina · Robinson, Farmers Bank,
· Rock. Springs Better Health Club,
Meii/s County Church Women
United, Asbury United Methodist
. Church, Rslph Werry, proceeds
from an Avon party and a Sarah
· Coventry party, Mabel Pickens, the
· Flatwoods United Methodist Chur. ch.

SPORTS
WEAR
25% OFF

VESTS

BLOUSES

.

THURSDAY
CENTRAL and executive committee of Meigs County Democrats
meeting, 7 p.m. Thursday, carpenters' hall, E. Main, Pomeroy.
FRIDAY
TWIN CITY Shrinettes meeting,
7: 30 p.m. Friday at home of Mrs.
Clara Adams, Rscine.
MEIGS MUSEUM, open 1 to 3
p.m. every Friday.
SATIJRDAY
TURKEY SHOOT Saturday 11
a.m. at Forked Run Gun Club spon.s"oced by Tri-County Lions Club,
Coolville. For additional information contact Dana FllUSs 667-

BAKE SALE FRIDAY
The Ladies Auxiliary of Eagles
2171 will have a bake sale Friday at
the former Martin Restaurant in
Middleport, 9 a.m. Women are asked
to have their baked goods there by
8:30a.m.

30% OFF

-------j

.---checkingisbetterat

· Social calendar

By Mallon C. Crawford
Renewal of insurance on society
adopted that this .necessary
Meiga County
operation Is able to be performed ... officen was discussed and a bond on
Hwnane Society
or veterinarians In BOrne areas per- the Humane Agent. was reviewed
MIDDLEPORT - Thursday form the surgery at much reduced and both will be turned over to the
evening members of the Meigs rates for hwnane socieUes because . appropriate inlur.ace companies.
County Humane Society held· their of them being non-profit, donationThe article In tiM! paper n!Cently
monthly meeting Under the direction run organizations. Minimum about two citizens who went to the
• of President Dorthea Fisher.
1 Group
doilatlons were raised at our local COlTIIlli!sioners with the complaint
Co-ordinates
.': After the secretary, Rita Lewis, kennel from $5 to '10 for puppies and about dogs not bejng licensed, was
read the minutes of the previous kittens because of additional 1m- next discussed. We discussed ·the
SWEATERS
p~~ting the treasurer, l!etty
mun!Zations being given now. All several times lhat we went as a
Corduroy &amp;
BlOUSES
, Baronick handed oilt the financial animals adopted from the Humane humane · organization to the corn- 6567.
Denim
NIGHlWEAR Values
: 14&amp;tus report to eachmemher, which Society facility have had aU bill the '""'missioners and suggexted that if that
to S22.9S
TOPS
TURKEY SHOOT Saturday 6:30
· Indicated - happy day - that we did rabies shot besides having been wor- particular law was enforced they p,m. lit gun shoot building in Bashan
NOW
; riOt go into the hole last month but med, groomed, .given a general woUld have the lunda to do what they sponsored by Rscine Fire. l)epart' &lt;*me out In the black. We had been
bealth check and held long enough to say they lack to do the job properly. ment. Factory choke guns oniy.
• worried because with so many yard obeerve their dlsposltion.
We hope that Mr. Hendricb and Mr.
1 Odd
All
.SHEARUNG
: aales, the Thrift Shoppe did not do as
Group
The Christmas bazaar was Wingett have some luck' In their
SERVICESSUNDAY
j
Suede leather
)VIlli as usual throughout the sum- discussed, which will take place complalnl
Services
will
be
held
at
7:30
p.m.
DRESSES
. Iller montha.
Friday and Saturday, December 6,
The fire that destroyed a home in each Sunday evening by the
~ : ,Next, and most interesting at "'ch with those wlahing · to contribute. Middleport was brought to the at- reorganized Life Science Church at
SKIRTS
~~~~
meeting, was the report of the ken- baked goods and other items asked · tention of the mernben at which the church on North Third St. in
. nel manager, Mary Ann Norman, to bring them to the Thrift Shuppe in time it was reported that the family
SUITS
Cheshire. Any. resident have any
-. who reported that most animals Middleport ThUI'!!day evening if lost several pets.
question about the reorganization of
40% &amp; 50%
· Were placed Into good homes with possible. Nonga Roberts spent many
Lastly on the agenda, ·Major E. the church Is asked to call the
the only euthanizations necessary hours making a beautiful quilt In Joyce Miller, president of the newly pastor, the Rev. Robert Persons at
dllf(ng the month being very sick shades of deep purple and brown and organized Humane group called 985-1174 . .
animals. Lack of pro~r lm- · tan which she has contributed.
CHOSO, gave a report ~ the last
!llunizations, primarily distemper,
The 11181 membership dri~e was meeting and encouraged all local r------------L---------~--------'----==:=-:-was the main reason for the suf- discussed and the method that would working members to attend their
fering and untimely deathS of the be used this year tO encourage old sessions because of the variety and
dogs and cats.
membel'!\ to rejoin and acquire new quality of expertise to be gained. She
Most Stores
This meeting, as has been the case
members. Dues, not having been offered transportation to encourage
Open Late
at all meetings of Meigs Counties raised in nine yearS, were increased most pfellent and that next meeting
Nights
humanitarians, the fact that we do from $5 to '10 per person - an will be In Lawrence County
not have the funds to spay and amount other Humane Society bran- sometime In March of '81.
'til Christmas
J)I!Uter all animals- was regretfully ches have charged from the beginThe next regular meeting of the
discussed once again. All Humane
ning. With the building of the mini ;Meigs County Humane Society will
Societies in more prosperous areas kennel, it is necessary for the ad- take place, at this writing, at Meigs
charge ~ough for each animal ditional.funds to operate. .
InnDec.llat 7:30p.m.

r~~~oOthey~ce~§oreman~~·
~~"""~-~~Sa~vinga§~and~~L~oOaJ~n,~W;·~M~•)~'I~Sl;,
my
Pomeroy.

r-

Community School
:receives supplies

RECEPTION SUNDAY
A public reception wi1 be held
from 11:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. Sunday at
the Spencer Funeral Home, Main
St., Belpre, honoring Charles R.
·Spencer, who will oblierve hls 90th
birthday on Nov. 25. Mr. Spencer is a
fonner resident of Meigs County and
· is a brother of Dwight Spencer, local
resident. Gifts are to be omitted.
Refreshments will be served.

Offic~rs

c&lt;lUid-rdownl'oorpotlell&lt;Undl~lerance.

_:"'~JII:::'""::.:u!_:•_::k:::rw::w·::lt-a:::l::..;
· C!oa=ra:.::ct::ers;:.::.of_::th::;:l•_::llk::_.:;;m.:;;o"'.:..:';::lta.:..:•"';::":.:.•'-·

Milk, Coffee or Tea

Food, and KilOcalories are listed
as follows :
Roasted Turkey (4 counces), 215;
Dressing ( ~ cup), 131; Cranberry
Sauce ( v. cup), 102; Small flll, 80;
Spread (1 teaspoon), 33; Green
beans (~ cup), 00; Pumpkin custard
(~cup), 175; Milk (I cup, skim), 90;
Celery and carrot sticb, 15. Tota~
861.
When planning Thanksgiving dinner, the hom~er should consider
the food energy ot kilocalorie needs
of the members ol her family: If
necell88ry, a ligl&gt;ter dinner can be
planned by serving small proteins
and substituting foods that supply
fewer kilocalories than the
traditional foods.

Youth elect officers

--ASTROGRAPH---

Animals. finding good homes, Meigs .
County Humane Society reports

Clark, and Kevin Clart. wUh advisors, Karen Johnlcil and Jo Ann
CriBp.

It's ali electronic - the usual harsh
bell is replaced by a pleasant
sounding tone. You also get AutoRedial of last number entered, pius
Univr:trsai Dial System . 43-2a.. wMo
43-285, brown

Experience the combined genius
of Arthur Fiedler and Mantovani11n
this cine-of-a-kind collection. 36 alitime favorites! A great gift! !10-2050,
51-1050,51-1052

.....
.,

.

Check ·Your Phone Book for the
A, DIVISION OF TANDY CORPORATIQN

ladle lllaek Store or Dealer Nearest You
PRICES MAY VARY AT INOIVIDUAL STORES

�: •.

9-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., '11lunday, Nov, 20, 19110
DICK '!'RACY
'

8- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., '11lunclay, Ncw. :110,1•

, 11\IN'l ID'il

Television

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~~~~ !A&gt;

by HennArnold andBob Lee

Unscrambte these four Jumbles,

one letter to each square. to form

•
•
VIewmg

lour ord inary words.

NOV. 20, 1!180
EVENING
6 :00

[}) e C!l O (jJ@j&lt;iaJ QI
llJ BACKYARD

NEWS

(!) MOVIE -(ROMANCE )

•• ~&gt;

" That Lucky Touch " 1975

C1l

CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
ll) ABC NEWS
[J)@ 3 -2· 1 CONTACT
' 8 :30 [}) l l (l) NBC NEWS
·(I) PAUL A.ND MONA
III BOB NEWHART SHOW
(I) FACE THE MUSIC
O il) (fOI CBS NEWS
00 MAINSTREAMING
[fi) DICK CAVETT SHOW
(J%) G} ABC NEWS
6:58 ,(]J NEWS UPDATE
7:00 CIJ II P,. MAGAZINE
.
"(]J COMETOTHEWATER
III ALLIN THE FAMILY
(lJ.(J%)01 FAMILY FEUD
(I) BACKSTAGE AT THE GRAND
OLEOPRY
D Cil TICTACDOUGH
11) MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT
®l NEWS
(ffi OVER EASY Gues1 : Jazz giant

CAPTAIN EASY

'lA

NOW WAIT

WHADPI\ VA MIMN ••

I'M MKIN'

INHAT I&lt;INDA BOUNT Y
1$ 5HE- OFFERIN ' ~

MUCH MO!.JEY THE'.
l.tW'f'5 WIL.I.IN' T :PAY
ME T'LET ?OME AI~ ·
THROUGH THI5
MAFIA DUDE;~

HOW

A

MINUTE~
L~T'$ NOT 6 ET
IDIOTIC ~

tJ

II I

HOW HE. i.OOK!iD
AFIER' AN

E X'TRAC::.'T JON. .
Now arrange the circled letters to·
form th e surpri.s e answer, as s~g ·
9e~ted by the abOve can oon .

"r I I I X)"

Print answer h~ra:

(Answ ers tomorrow)
v esterday"s

I

Jumbles: BUX OM

LINEN

ENSI GN

INFLUX

Answer: A liquid mixture produ ced by U.S. oil menAN " EMULSION "

lionel Hampton . Hosts: Hugh
Downs and Frank Blair. (Closed ·

BORN

7:30

'TH~ ill'TBR~T

.'

I&lt;A0-1
$BJI~'IO

Nick Buoniconti end-Len Dawson

PATC;W1H15
LC.\1&gt;-tJ 1'5 '111~

li.a_hts and e.xpert commentary.

SI3JI'Fl0

liJ SANFORD AND SON
(I) 0 CIJ JOKER'S WILD

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

(lJ HOLLYWOOD SQUARES

®

DICKCAVETTSHOW
MATCH GAME
[fi) MACNEIL·LEHRER REPORT
112)01 FACE THE MUSIC
7 :58 Cl) NEWS UPDATE
B:OO Cil II CD
DAFFY DUCK ' S
THANKs-FOR-GIVING SPECIAL
ill MISSIONARIES IN ACTION
ffi MOVIE·(COMEDY)"' "Papa's

AVAILN3/.-~ .

®l

t

Delicate Condition'' 1963

(j)(j%) CD MORK AND MINDY Mark
stirs up comical adventures with a
kindred spirit when he visits his pen
pal, a patient at the Happy Valley
Psychiatric Hospita l, believes his
story that he is the real Peter Pan
andhel~ him breakout .
0 (I) ®J THE WALTONS john
Walton is thrown injailafter he tries
to defendt'lisblack neighbor who is
accused of murdering a white man .
(Season-Premiere; 60 mins.) (Pt . I
of a two-part episode)

ANNIE
•.•MADA~E

TOZE HAS YEAH! YOUR OLD BUT•• THAT
I KHOW 5HE
CiONHA HAftl ME OVE~ PAL GI\IP SURE
L\1\.E HER! I MEAH• GHE HAD 1\E FOOLED
TO TH' JUVEHILE
~ASN'T ABWT TO
WAS STERH··BUT 1·· J.. FOR A~HILE TOO,
LIKED HER...
YOU'RE ~EU. AAA'l'
LET YOU WIHD Ll' IH
FROM
HER, BELIEVE ME!
THE SLAI~MER:.~NIE:I

III NEXT QUESTION

[fi) UP AND COMING ' Growing
P,ains' Marcus causes h1m"y con ·
flict when he seeks more freedom
and independen ce lrom his par· •
ants . (Closed -Captioned; U.S.A.)
8:30

1Jl8 THEBERENSTAINBEARS
MEET BIGPAW The famed Beren·

WOW! YOU ·

stain Bea rs come up against Big·
paw, famed in the Thanksg iving
legenda~a creature of doom . However, th·e childrenotthe Bearfamlly,
Sister and Brother, demonstrate
that some legends are not to be
believed.

SURE GOT

(]J DR. JACK VANIMPE

AILEYOOP
I HEAR 11 BEA.UTY
AND 'THE BE/&gt;oST"IS
MARvELOUS, ZELDA I

"THANK YOU, I-IAROLD!
WE'RE TERRIBLY EX·
CITED ABOUT IT!

BRIDGE

bring special guests, action high·

~AOJ

LOW6$T
&gt;

Captioned; U.S.A.)
BULLSEYE
(I) ZOLA LEVITT
iJl FOOTBALL: INSIDE THE NFL

CIJD

ill

. A SPIFFY
PlACE HERE,
MR. FLOYD/

MOVIE ·(SUSPENSE) ., ••

' 'Man With The Golden Gun ' '
1974

•

(l) (j%)0) ABC' S NFL FOOTBALL
SPECIAL ABC Sports Will provide

live coverage of the game between
the San Diego Chargets and the
Miami Dolphins.

11) ®

Early., claiiTier justified .•
to his jac k of trumps. Both
opponents followed and he
spread his hand to cl aim his
contract
NORTH
East looked it over careful• AQ63
ly and said , '' You me an you
ar e down one, don't you?"
"J 8
+Q6&gt;4 2
"Not at all ," replied the
.K9
Professor. " I have a cinch."
Then the Professor ted his
WEST
EAST
eigh t of clubs. Dummy's ' king
+9
"Q9653
'K1042 ·
lost to East's ace and a heart
+B
.KJ107
came back. The Prof took his
.Q76&gt;32
.AJI04
ace, ted a trump to dummy's
ace, ruffed t he nine of clubs
SOUTH
and led his seven of hearts .
• KJ1 0 87 5 4
It didn't matter which oppo'I A 7
nent look that trick . If West
• A 93
'won, he would have to lead a
heart or club to ~ive the Prof
Vulnerable: Both
a chance to get nd of .a losing
Dealer: East
diamond; if Ea st won, he
migh t cash his king of
North East
diamonds, but tha t would se t
t+
Pass
up dumm y's queen.
Pass
Pass Pass Pass
"Beautiful ," exclaimed the
student who was the North
player. "But, wouldn't · you
Opening lead:t8
have bee n set 'if West held a
second diamond '' "
"O[ • course," re plied the
Prof. "But if East held just
By O.wald Jacoby
three diamonds he would have
and Alan Sontag
had to have a five-card heart
The Professor won the first or club suit and would not
trick with the ace of diamonds have ope ned one dia mond."
over East's 10. Trick two went (NEWSPAP ER ENTERPRf.S E ASSN.)
11-20-80

•z

•s

FROM JUMPSTREET

'Black Music' in Theater and Film'
Host Oscar Brown, Jr. and featured
guest Pearl Bailey e.xplore the role
ot music by black Americans in the
evolution of theater and film .
(Closed-Captioned; U.S.A.)
8 :58 (]J NEWS UPDATE
9:00 CIJD THURSDAY NIGHT AT THE
MOVIES 'Skyward ' 1980 Store :

After spendinq
day lool&lt;.inq
all

'

Research establiShes low tar MERIT as proVen
taste alternative to high tar
·ng. ·

10:00

-·

Nationwide tests with thou~
sands of smokers continue to
confirm the MERIT break~
through in key areas of taste,
ease of switch and ability to
satisfy long term. ·
. Blind Taste Tests: In tests
where brand identity was con~
cealed, a significant majority of
smokers rated the taste of low
tar MERIT equal to-or better
than -le9.ding high tar brands.
Even cigarettes having twice ·
the tar!
C Ph il ip Morri• Inc. 1980 ••

Kings: 8 mg "tar:' 0.6 mg nicotine-lOO's Reg : 10 mg "tar:' 0.7 mg nicotine100's Men: 11 mg "1ar;' 0.8 mg nicotine av.per cigarette, FTC Report Dec:79

.'
'

'

the 95% of smokers stating a
preference, the MERIT low
tar/good taste combination
was favored 3 to 1 over high
tar leaders when tar levels
were revealed!
Long-Term Satisfa~tion: In
the latest survey of former
high tar smokers who have
switched to MERIT, 9 out of
10 reported they continue to
enjoy smoking, are glad they
switched, and report MERIT is
the best~tasting low tar .they've
ever tried.
MERIT is the proven alter~
native to ~igh tar smoking.
And you ·c an taste it.

.

'
IT WOKS LI KE A CLEAR-CUT
CASE OF AR50N TO ME,
13UT OUR INVE:'&gt;TIGA'TOR~
WILL HAVf: 10 MAKE
A ~EPORT ! ~...,~,

ARSON?

BUT WHY... ?
WHO .. . ? ??

10:28
10:30
'
10:58
11 :00

BARNEY

PAW--COME
TALK TO
JUGHAID .. HE

ZEBBY
WHO?

THE

REVENOOER'S
VOUNG·UN

SHAME ON vou I JUGHAID!!
-

WHUPPED THE
TAR OUT OF
LITTLE ZEB6Y

11 : 15
11 :28
11 :30

~-~
by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
6 Auction word
I Make one
1 Landed
tremble
8 Inkling
6 Lure
9 Shell treat
10 Sweater
11 Secluded
material
valley
Cil ® SNEAK PREVIEWS Crilics
11
Daughter
of
13
The
prophet
Gene Siskel and Rog~r EPert
review the recently released films
Rigoletto
Hosea · .
'Theldolmaker' 'Times Square' and
12 Dogface
17 Ensnare
' So'l9_ of the South'.
14 Smooth one's 18 Thimbleful
(J )(ll) THIS OLD HOUSE As the
insulation and plasterwork a(e
i9 Cenozoic, e .g.
feathers
completed, the kitchen windqws
15 Make trirnmng20 Bias
are trimmed and finished ..
16 Oasis sight
21 "September
(]) TBS EVENING NEWS
0 (I) @ KNOTS LANDING Sid 18 Senior's aim
in the -"
Feirgate is stunned when a teen age
22
Railroad
23
Manipulate
girl hitchfi iker, whom he thought he
through
24 Go astray
was rescuing from harassment.
goes to thepolice and accuses him
26 Carreras
25 " If I of attempted rape. (Season ·
offering
My Way "
Premiere) (Pt . I of a two -pan epi·
sode: 60 mine .) ·
27 Laos
III MASTERPIECE THEATRE
location
'Pride and Pre judice' Episode IV .
28
Island
Elizabeth finds the manner of Mr .
Darcy' s proposal insulting and un ·
east of Java .
worthy of a gent leman . (Closed· .
29
Threaten
Captioned; U.S.A.) (60 mins.)
31 Spanish lad
@NEWS
(I) NEWS UPDATE
33 Fuss
Cl) NORMAN VINCENT PEALE
36 Movie
®TOMORROW'S FAMILIES
Cl) NEWS UPDATE
scriptwriter
CIJ.CDOCIJ@(J%)0) NEWS 41 Do some
(I) JOHN ANKERBERG SHOW
of the work
iJl STANDING ROOM ONLY :
PARIS CABARET French follies
43 Nail aid
delightfullv blend burlesque and
44 Warhorse
exotic dance numbers . Host : Joel
45 Poet 's pond
Grey.
(]) NIGHT GALLERY
46 Transmits
III MONTY PYTHON'S FLYING
DOWN
CIRCUS
(jj) DICK CAVETT SHOW
1 Place to sit
CIJ@QI NEWS
2 Quirt
CAJ NI!WSUPDATE
3 Askew
(J) . [!) THE TONIGHT SHOW
Host : Johnny Carson. Guests: Chef
4 Routine
Atkins, Doc Watson , James Coco .
5
Sword-shaped
(6_0 mins.)
(I) ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
(]) MOVIE -(DRAMA\ • "I&gt; "Sor·
~•nt Ryker" 1Q68

PEANUTS

FER SONS: George Versus Wall
, Street'Stars:laabet Sanford, Sher·
man Hemsley . A mysterious mid·
night call awakens George and
after that nobody sleeps In the Jef·
tersons ' or Willis ' household .

•

. Ol 'ftlU cAN JUST

STAND IN ONE 5POT
HOPIN6 THAT TilE LOST
PERSON COMES BV..

0

I'LL 61VE HIM A&amp;00T
FIVE MORE MINUTES ~

00
00

· oo
0
0

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CJJ

ABC CAPTION_,D N£WS
"Situ.-

®J MOVIE ~COMEDY!"

tlon Hopelell But Not S.rloua"
11185
.
11:45 l (l 112) 8
ABC
NEWS
.
NIGHTLINE
12:00 (1') FOOTBALL; INSIDE THE NFL
Ni ck Buoniconti and Len Dawson

br•ng special guests, action high ·
lights and expert co mmentary.

II

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

Is

One letter simply stands lor another. In this sample A Ia
used lor the three L's, X for the two O's, ct&lt;. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the wordr are all
hints. Ea&lt;h day the rode letters are dilferent.

(Repeal) 'McMILLAN AND WIFE :

The Oeadly Inheritance ' Stars :
Rock Hudson. Susan Sa int James .
Mildred Natwick guest stars as '
Mac 's mother who arrives in I own
lor a friend's birthday .

Yesterday's Answer
29 Creep
, 35 " I 'm
30 Quagmire . Bubbling - "
32 " After 31 Being (Sp . .)
I'm Sorry" 38 Actress
33 AttentionBarbara
getter
38 Competed
34 Tille for
40 Aims
Christie
42 Earlier than

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work It:

tlJ(J) CBS LA T_,MOVIE 'THE JEF ·

•

••

M EN FOUND
71fl35t= INSIDE!

• DO YOU HAVE:
ANY IDEA WH AT
STARTED IT?

I

.

r:;ASOI./IYEI MY .

~f

the
country' a hottest recording artists.
performs in concert and offers
glimpses ofhislifeon the road with
its different people and varied
experiences . Guest stars: The
Commodores, Kim Carnes, Terrv
Bradshaw and members of the
Pittsburgh Stealers. (60 mins.)

9:30

..

Smoker Preference: Among

ICA Kenny Rogers, one

town ...

·'' '

•; WINNIE

Smoker Research Conclusive

(]J 700CLUB

I!J(I)®l KENNY ROGERS' AMER·

Jl~ll! ~

over

•

Belle Davis, Howard Hesseman .

"'"'"or across

CRYPTOQUOTES

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LRIZV :
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: WHEN DOWN lN '!HE MOlJTH,
REMEMBER JONAH. HE CAME OUT ALL
RIGHT.-mOMAS EDISON

BRATRZT

C)1980 King FM!turH S.,nctica1e, Inc .

�1.0-TbeDally Sentinel, Middleport·Pon.Jeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Nov: 20, 19110

•

Property tax revision bill
set for Senate floor vote

44

~~~~~~a

Until pa'.saage of the ballot issue, preparation of tax bills due to be
the tax credits were applied unifor- sent to property owners in Decfm. .
mly to all property classes. But ber and January, Hlnlg said. lila ·
backers of the pending bill said a assessmen't was shared by Robert J
change was needed Iince the value Kosydllr, counsel for the countJ
of residential and farm land had in- auditors' aasociation. ·
" Basically we're prepared to 1m- :
creased more quicldy than industrial and commerdal property. plement State Issue. l," Kosydar
As a result, some prOperty owners ' said. "Any .substantive changes for
received more tax relief than others. tax year 1~ will entail a two or
Rep. William E. Hlnig, the bill's three or possibly four-month delay." .
muef spo11110r, said county,. auditors
Sens. Paul R. Malia, R-Westlake,
· across Ohio have been w~ on and Jerome Stano, D-Parma, have
Implementation of the revised tax prepared amendments that would
~ystem In anticipation of the
Include all those counties which liJ)o
passage of :Issue 1 and the pending derwent property value updates In
bill.
recent years under the measure. ;
Critics
of the pending proposal have ;
"The auditors have geared to
basic Issue l using 1980 as the tax said it applies only to future reap- ,
year," the New Philadelphia · praisals as it's ~ow written.
Democrat said Wednesday.
·
An amendment affecting the base
VOLUNTEERS ASKED
year would force auditors into
Volunteers are' nee4ed to ~ .
recalculat)ons that . could delay
ticip!;lte In a swimming program for
students of the Meigs County School ,
for the Mentally Retar!led.
MISSIONARY TO SPEAK
The swimming progrBII\ take~ .
There will be a mi!lslonary place on Thursdays of each week •
speaker at the Pomeroy Wesleyan from 10 a .'m. to 3 p.m. Volunteens '
Cburch nwnctay evening, 7:30. will assist lh the pool with one per- ·
Merton Rundell, Guadamala, will be son. Those interested in helping are ·
the speaker and the Rev. Dewey asked to contact Carol Layh at 992(Continued from page 1)
King
Invites the public.
6025. '
tor when Reagan was governor, hsd
thelnsidetrack.
..-----------------~----HOIJIIE! Minority Leader John
Rhodes, R-Ariz., is a leading candidate to be Interior secretary, with
AN APPLE FOR . THE TEACHER - In ob- da Stockwell, teac~r. front, Mrs. Veda DaVis, left, and
the strong backing of Influential
servance of American EdUcation Week, the Junior Mrs. Pearl Knapp, right,. represented the Auxiliary In
members of Congress, sources said.
VW .. AMC · JEEP · RENAULT
American Legion AIIJ'illary of Drew Webster Post 39, the recognlUon of teachers, left to right, Glenda
However, Republican Gov. Jay S.
Pomeroy, presented apples to the teachers, aids ·and Lawson, Kate Jarrell, Bette Jean Krawsczyn, and
Hammond of Alaska was also said to
"The Dealer That Cares About Quality"
students at the Meigs Conununity School Wednesday Laura Frederiksen.
be on that list.
THANKSGIVING SPECIALS
afternoon. Here Jennifer Cross gives an apple to RhonWhile the Cabinet guessing heated
up, the pr\!Sldent-elect continued his
get-acquainted rounds Wednesday,
1977 CHEVY .
1978 FORD ·
1979 OLDS
dining with Republican allies on
CURASS
Capitol Hill and telling them "we
MAUBU
CLASSIC
PINTO
WAGO'
f
have a mandate not so much.... to
SUPREME
govern as a mandate to serve."
"The people of this country have
SJ55
$187
PER LB.
told us, all of us now, they want
PER LB.
rER LB.
something different. They want a
change. They want an America that
Cur&amp; weight 4245.
curb weight 2521.
Curb weight 3,206
Price $3~795
Price $3,895
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Gov. ployment, lnflation and an industrial but when the present adminstration serves them,' ' Reagan said.
Price$5 1!~
James A. Rhodes plans to meet with slump on the carter admlnistratlon creates high unemployment ... "
Reagan also met with eight of the
leaders of the General Assembly as - the same charges he leveled while
1980 MERCURY
Rhodes would not say whether he nine Supreme Court justices 1979 AMC
1977 FORD
aoon as possible to 90lve the state's campaigning in. the state for would call the General Assembly in- William Rehnquiat had a speaking
$400 million budget crunch.
CONCORD
President-elect Ronald Reagan.
to special session In December to engagement - and with Sen. EdXR-7
LTD 4 DOOR
Rhodes said Wednesday that a tax
ward
M.
Kennedy
,D-Mass.
"We didn't create unem- deal with the budget defecit. The
HATCHBACK
hike could be the answer, a move he
Kenned~, who ran unsuccessfully
ployment," the GOP governor said legislators expect to stay In session
$219
doesn't rellah. And he blamed the
for the Democratic presidential
at a news conference at Don ScoU through early next week.
S}!ill
· Carter Administration for putting Field. "We didn't create inflation or
PER LB.
PER LB.
"I can't say until I talk with the nomination, told reporters af·
PER LB.
Ohio's budget out of balance.
terward, "I do believe now that the
(unemployment in) Youngstown. leadership," he said.
Curb weight 3191
curb weight 4240
Curbweight2888
Minutes after returning to ColumAmerican people want cooperation
The current administration did this.
Price $6,9U
Price $2,895
During the news conference,
Price $4,595
bus from an 11-day trade mission to
and l came here today to express
"! underestimated (President) Rhodes predicted Ohio will see $500
China, Taiwan and Japan, Rhodes Carter and what he was going to do million in new business with about mine."
1979 PONTIAC
1977 FORD
was besieged · with questions about
Kennedy, who requested the
' 1977 DODGE
to this country. Yes, I campaigned eight Chinese companies In the next
how he'll deal with the budget
against higher taxes, but at that few years as a result of the trade ' meeting, said they discussed the
deficit. He blamed the 5tate's
GRAN PRIX L J . CWB WAGON
economy aDd the need to eliminate
time unemployment was about 5 mission.. The governor had led the
D-200 ~TON
economic woes, high unem·
government waste. He also said be.
percent. l have been against taxes, 33-member delegation to the central
Chinese citjes of Shanghi and Wuhan · expressed "full support" for
SJSZ
Reagan's efforts to reach a strategic
to develop trade agreements bet·
PER' LB
PER LB.
PER LB.
arms agreement with the Soviet
ween Ohio companies and Orient firUnion.
ms.
Curb weight 3215
Curb weight 4735 .
Curb weight 3805
Price 53,9U
Price $5,995
Price $2,795

·*' m~
-----:------l
·--------

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE'
Notice is hereby given
that on Saturday, Novem·
bllr 22nd, at 10 :00 A.M. a
public sate will be held at
105 Union Avenue ,
Pomeroy, Ohio, to seJI for
cash the following
collateral, to·wit :
'1975 Pontiac Lemans,
Serial No. 2F37M5A107439
1972 Fo&lt;d Serial No.
2A~2H310723
.
• The Farmers Bank and
Sllv.l ngs
Company,
Pomeroy, Ohio, reserves
the right to bid at this sale,
and to withdraw any of the

... .........
-·.'.'
.......... ....... .,.
'

Morris, principal, extended thanks
to the unnamed person who donated
blinds for the kitchen and lights for
the library. It was noted that a section of curtains from the stage had
been sent to the Fabric Shop for
repair.
Mrs. Carol Layh, administrative
assistant at the Meigs Conununity
SChool, was ·guest speaker. She
talked on the program for retarded
citizens and answered queations
from the group.
Devotions were given by the Rev.
Robert McGee of the Pomeroy
United Methodt5t Church. The third
graders led in the pledge to the flag
and presented several Thanksgiving
songs. The room count was won by
the third grade. It was rioted that
the P1'A baa 142 paid members to
date as compared to lllllastyear.
Door prizes were given out and
refreslunents served by the first
grade parents.

of town guests
attend 0 'Brien-Harris ·
vows, held October 11

ou~t

Peggy Lynn O'Brien, daughter of

Mr. and Mrs. James B. O'Brien,

Pomeroy, and Robert W. Harris m,
Ripley, W. Va., 80n of Mr. and Mrs.
Eugene M. Harril, Pleasant Hill,
Ca., were united 'in marriage at St.
Peter's Episcnpal Church,
Galllpolls, on Saturday, Oct.ll.
Among the out-of-tOW!J guests at
tending were Mr. and Mrs. Gordon
Harris, tfr. and Mrs. Robert Harris,
Mr. an&amp; Mrs. Steven Roby, Chriltl
and 'Robert, Mr. and Mrs. Ken
Harris and children, Nancy Harris,
George Westenneyer, ¥!'. and Mrs.
JOhn Mayer, all of Columbus.
Richard Hooterzole, Mr. and Mrs.
B. Leaberry, Mike Beckner, Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Dingman, Bonnie Edwards, Tim Deem, Donna Anderson, .
Becky Toppins, Susan and Dayton
Eilel, Brad .Sblttallm, Debbie
Nelion, Vernon Mclrton, Jr., all of
IJuntingtorl; Mr. lind Mrs. Richard
NoweU, Mr. ant! Mrs. John CUm'•

L -

berledge, Mr. and Mrs. Wayne
Balley, Mrs. Pauline Parsons, Hazel
Paf80ns, Ml!l'a Lee Roush, Mr. and
Mrs. Jinks Keffer, Mary Sayre, Kip
Price, Mr. and Mrs. Randall In. dov.ina, and Linda Ray' all of Ra~
swood, W. Va.
Jody Whitten, Cindy Mltaghiotti,
Mr. lind Mrs. Jolm Van Cline,
Ollrleston, ~· V~. ; Cindy Hoult,
Kenny Jones, Pittsburgh, Pa.; Mr.
and Mrs. Dennis Sizemore, Mr. and
Mrs. Dale. Brum, Mr. lind Mrs. Bob
Boone, Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Brooks,
Parlrersburl, W.Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
Albert Ingela, Coronado, Callf.; Mr.
and Mrs. William Brown, Joe COle,
Clinton, Ky. ; Dorothy and tim Gore,
Rutland; Debbie Nelaon, RAindy Erwin, Mike Harland, Paul Harless,
Huntington, W.Va.
'Mrs. Jeff Bo1111. Athena; Mrs.
Edith Reed, Athens; Vickl Bailey,
CeredO-Kenova; and Paul Henry,
Centerville.

.,

! Area Deaths !
I

I

Emmet S. King
Emmet S. King, 69, 3223 12th St.
Court East, Bradenton, Fla., died
Wednesday at Manatee Memorial
Hospital following an extended
illness.
Mr. King was originally from
Meigs County and spent his swn·
mers at a residence he maintained

here.
Surviving are his wife, Shirley; a
brother, Everett S. King, Peru, N.
Y., and a sister, Mrs. Helen Hawett,
Marion.
Family funeral services will he
held at the Brown Fqneral Home at
Bradenton and burial Will be held in
Pomeroy later.
Mr. King had moved from Peru,
·N.Y., to Florida about 12 years ago.
He was a member of the Masonic
Lodge 333 at Unionport, Ohio, and
the E1118 Lodge at KeesvUJe, N. Y.
He was a member of the Plwnbers
·
and Steamfitters Union.

Emergency squa~ runs
Six runs were made by local unita
on Wednesday, according to the
report ot the Meigs Emergency
Medical Service.
They include: Pomeroy, 3:40p.m.
to E:. Main St. for Joyce Williams,
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Tuppers Plalns,12:23 a .m.
for Willlam McGill, to CamdenClark Hospital, Parkersburg; 9:36
a.m., Rutland, for Lucille Jacks to
Holzer Medical Center; Rutland unit
for Carmel Rowe from Happy
Hollow Road to Veterans Memorial;
Racine, I: 11 p.m. for Mary Stotler,
to Camden- Clark; Racine, 10:07
p.m., for . Stanley Trusseli from
Bashan Road to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.

JURORS DON'T REPORT
Persons wbo were called for Jury
duty on Nov. 21, need not report as
the trial scheduled has been cancelled it was reported.
BOARD TO MEET
A special meeting of the Eastern
Local SChool District Board of
Education has been set for 7 p.m.
Thursday at the high school. ·

(Continued from page 1)
interchange down to Route 7," he
said. "That's it. Their end of the l·
470 work is on hold."
According to Finley, money was
allocated for Ohio's share of the
remaining three bri~ges now under
construction before the current
financial crunch occurred.
. Even though all funding Ia assured for those three bridges, the
WJlrk has not progressed as far as It
has on the' WheellngBridgeport and
Ravenswood projects.
.
Only piers have been constructed
on the Moundsville and Weirton
bridges, Chernenko said. And only
the substructure for an approach
ramp. has been completed on the
East Huntington bridge. Planning
still !las to be completed and contracts let before work can begin, he
sald.

Money action IDed
Pat Hill Ford, Middleport, nled
suit In the amount~ $4,181.88 against James R. ·and Marvel Quillen,
Middleport, In Meigs County Common Pleas Court.
John Arnott, Rt. 2, Racine, nled
suit for divorce against Jlnna Arnott, Pomeroy, as did Cinda Umbarger, Rt. 1, Shade, against Jobn
Umbarger, Rt. 1, Shade.
~Uing for dlsfolutlon of marriage
were Richard T. Yost, COOlville, and
Sharon L. Yost, Coolville; David
Mora, SR 7, Pomeroy, and Zarlda
Mora , SR 7, Pomeroy.

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted-Grace Price, Long Bottom; Jimmy King, MlnenviUe;
Cledlth King, Pomeroy; Helen
Pratar, Racine; Nancy Pulllna, Middleport; Joyce Wllilams, Pomeroy;
Karyn Divis, Middleport; Guy' Lee,
Pomeroy.
Discharged-Martha fry, Kenneth

Stewart, Barbara Karr, . Robert
Freed, Harold Brannon.

ASKTOWED
.
Marriage licelll!eS were lalued to
Everett Lonzo SaiiDdera, 85,
Gallipolis, and Loutae V. Dixon, 85,
iu. 2; Albany; George Glenn Gum,
Jr., :.on, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, and Jody Lee
Grueaer, li, Rt. 1, MlnersvUie.

leans, s1ac1c.s, dresses,

lingerie and more at the
Watermelon Patch, 5th St.,
Now Haven, W.va.
Dfer Slug shooting match,
SUndav. 1p.m. at the lzoak
Walton Farm.

•

7'1

APPL&amp;:S - Sweet Cider:
We itlll have plenty of ap·
pits. $4.00 per bushel and
up. Fitzpatrick Orchard,
Slate Route 689. Phone 66%~1
3715.

446-9800

PUBLIC AUCTI.ON

wedding

'

S'LUG and Buckshot
shooting match . Corn
~ollaw.
Rutland, Ohio.
everv Sunday 12. Noon.
Turkeysll Homsll

'

'

ANITQUE FURNITURE, GLASS, CHINA, OLD ITEMS,
.
MODERN FURNI~URE, ETC.

\

Selling the complete household furnishings of antique furniture, glass,
China, misc. old items, modern turnlture, etc., to senle the Estate of
Olive H. Calenllno, dec.

Glvelway
I'REE TO gOod home, !iour
tear~ old mole Lohsoa~so.

4

7~2-2236 .

ANTIQUE FURNITURE: Walnut stand w/whlte marble top, extra
nice, sm. c:arpet rocker, cherry stand w/carvlng, cherry Empire
chest, cherry stand w/corvlng, 3 walnut washstands 11 w/brass pulls),
oak serpentine dressing table w/mlrror, 2 walnut stand w/whlte
casters, oak rocker w/woven seat, osk rocker w/slat back, plank bot~ ~
'tom chairs. oak sewlng·rocker, Windsor style rocker, child's slat bllck '

Jewelry, Pomeroy, Ohio.

to town,

within

reason

please. Phone992·7720.

insurance

and

rocker, walnut st. chair, other misc. chairs, wicker chair, walnut

rocker, hat racks, (elly cupboard, ant. table w/drower, metal bath
t~b, old fireplace mantle, pictures and frames, treadle, sewing
ml!chlne, gas rejrlgerator, several misc. stands and chairs, etc.

Lost and Found
· ~OST: English red lick
coonhound In the Boshan·
. ·Morning Star area. 949·

c:all : Nancy Van Meter,

tland area. Male, answers
tp Spa,nky. 8&gt;43·2815.

GLASS, CHINA, AND MISC. OLD ITEMS: Hand pointed dishes and

plates, S:OUvenlr plates, old Fenton, 2 pes. Flo Blue, vases,, covered,
compotes, pressed glass, etc. Green stone pitcher (grape pattern),

sm. brass kenle, baO_t lack, flat Irons, oil lamps, 1ronstone pit·
cher/bowl set, .set ROgers Community silverware In chest, Seth
Thomas gingerbread clock, other mantle clock, Seth Thomas camel ·
bllck clock, Iron tea kettle, old wooden window shutters, lot misc. IJke
lanterns, wooden planes, com cuners and fobbers, rug beaters,
baskets. etc.. stone jarsand (ugs. etc.
·
MODERN I'URNITURE &amp; OTHER MISC., 2 pts. gold Early
American living room suite, like new, rust colored EA rocker, coffee/end tableo, RCA console TV, 2 pc. beige living room suite, several ·
overstuffed •"If vlnvl arm chairs and rockers, portable BiloW TV,
floor/table lamps, twin cherry cannon bllll bedroom suite, complete
w/2 chests/drawers (willet WildWOOd), 5 pc, maple dble bedroonl
SUite, COmplete (Wakefield), modern twin bed, complete, 3 pc, (193() ,•
period) bedroom suite, oamplete, cedar wardrobe, Sears dble dOOr
relrlgeartorlfrllzer, Norge gas range, like,_, chrome dinette w/~
chairs. Kenmore aut. washar like .-, Kenmpre aut. drver, utility,
cabinet w/roaster, goaalp benCh, "lefal wardrobe, Worm Morning aut.
gas heater, cedar chest, porteble -lng machine, utility cupboards,
s-ra. 11191 lot bedding, linens, spreads, throw rugs, crochet and
toney work, cushlons,ltc. Gone w!WII)d elec:. lamp, several Ions, mlr·
ron, elec:.eppllances,lat pans, dillieS, utensils. etc., costumt(.,.,.lry, ,
room size r11gs, luggage, lot l'lllsc. whetnota, lawn furniture, platform
:w:ales, tool boxes, garden, yard lnd hand tools. Wiler hose, rope, pipe
tmlngs, bolts. screws, nuts, etC., rotary lawn mower. Wheelbllrrow, ,.'
appl. 300glazed tilt and many ather mlsc. lttms not listed.
.·
•

Notlollll ·shown 11t1ort ilay Of sele. Lunch by Amnvllle Tellllt'lllli '
Clull. Terms- Ceillorcheck W/POSIIIYtiD day Of Mit. Not rtspon1t- '
blelor •ccldtnts.
ESTATE SALE- CASE N31819

ADM. 01' I!STATI!-Mr. R-rl Cllllltlne
.
ATTORNIY 11011 ESTATE-WIIlllm Lavtlll•
Auctl-r- IIIIJenn, Pllontt14-557·M11
...
PltOI"I!RTY POR IALI! IY. ADM. !IDII!RT CALINTINI!; 7 ..... '
modem he- w11 1181111. outllultillnt. INtrn . ,..,..... 111 ...... ltftl •
corner lot on Meln Slrllt, Amnvllle, Ohio.

1'

Ytrd Sale

Yard sate: Basl\an, Ohio
Inside empty houM et Or·
villi . Holter's reolclence.
follow Signs. November
20,21.12 from 9-5. Christ·
mtl decorations, coats,
lots of toys, clothing, misc.
915-421~.

YARD SALE: at Beahan,
Ohio In empty llouM beside
j:)rvllle Halter's. November
20, 21, 22 from H. Christ·
decorations, toys,
coats, clothing, misc.
FallOw signs Off lloute 7.

In••

te5-42U.

f'OACH AND YARD Sale,
llc:rotl from tht flrt station
ln WllkiiVIIIt, Oh. Frlda.y,
~av. 21 from H. Fur·
nlture, aPPII,Inctl. hide-a·
tlfd, dlthtl, pictures,
:tlathlng, etc.

··•---------------f

n.o.

.

acres; 6 rooms basement,

bath, 2 mobile homes;

Mason, 3 bedr'oom never

lived in, 2 bedroom, rented
2 acres. John Sheets, 3'1•
miles south at Middleport,
Rt. 1.
.

Trailer lot for sale, $5,000 .
Modular home lot on Route

Rentals

7, three bedroom fllr.m- ,.

house located on Route 7.
992-2571.

HOUSE, 1 rooms, on baih,
full basement, large lot
with river frontage. Aller 6
992·7284.

Houses for Rent

41

TWO

BEDROOM

un·

furnished house, also two

bedroom furnished

11o

one

bedroom furnished apart·

ments. Call alter 6 p.m.
992·2288.

Beautiful three bedroom
ranch brick home In Baum 42
Mobile Homes
Addition, Pomeroy, Ohio.
for Rent
Gas heat, central air con·
dltloning. Call 985·3814 or, MOBILE HOME, furnished
utilities paid, no pets or
992·2571 .
drunks. one kid accepted .
One bedroom apartment,
FOR SALE : Two acres, furnished, utilities paid .
seven rooms. never lived John Sheets, ~'12 miles
in, two bedroom apart·
of Middleport on
men!, large garage. Will south
take mobile home as part Route7 .
payment. John Sheets, 3'h
miles south of Middleport 44
Apartment
on Rt. 7.
for Rent

:==::;:;::;:;;:::::;:;======

Mobile Homes
lor Sale
1973 Crown Haven, 14 x 65,
three bedlooms, new cor·
pet. 1971 Cameron, U x 64,
two bedrooms. new carpet.
1972 Champion, 12 x 60, two

32

bedrooms, new carpet. 1976

12 x 60.,_ two bedrooms, new

commensurate

ot

Mise:. Merc:hanise

12x12 BLUE CARPET, lik'e
new red
for $80.00.
one·
half
carpet 12x10
for s8o.oo.
Four white spoke wheels,

Few Pattern Parts

week, all weekend! off, ell

potential. For personal
nterview send brief resume
to M.S. To\ilor, Route 1,
Box 2~7. Little Hocking, OH

WANTED: Managing
beauty operator with
following. Needed at once.
Call for appointment at9~9·
21566 .

URGENTL.Y need depen·
dable person who con work
without supervision for
Texas oil company in
Meigs area. We train.
Write K.S. Dick, Pres.,
southwestern Petroleum,
Box 789, Fort Worth, TX.
76101.
EXPERIENCED Phvslcal
Therapist. Write box G19 ~·
a Polril Pleasant Reg. 200
Main
St .
Giving
qualifications arid ex·
perltnco.
LADY FOR HOUsekllping
for a retired man. Paul
orr. 94'1·2.193 or 985·3586.

Printed Pattern

POMEROY,O.
992·2259

paid Holidays, pleasant
working conditions with a
chance to meet llo help the
public.
Qualified, In·
terested persons should
contact Mr. Frank Petrie;
Jr .. Deputy Health Com·

Insurance and retirement,
plus outstanding income

VIRGIL B. SR'. •
216 E. Second Street
Phone
1·( 614) ·992-3325
NEW LISTING - 46
acres of country, with

woods, small stream,
garden s~
·
i 2 acres
of bot.
· .J. New
barb wi•

.cnces.

B~rn,

outbuildings, and dug
well, for only $18,500.
NEW LOG TYPE - 2
bedroomr., bath, .natural

wood cabinets in kit·
chen, open loft for
storage, and located In

town on the Ohio River.
FIX·IT - $1,000 down

and balance like rent.
over 4 acres with woods

and old house.
WANT TO BUILD - We
con sell you a hOuse o'r

4500

house

on

4

lots

in

up or remove for trailer
site . City
ut il ities .
$4 ,000. .
.

------'

All work guaranteed.

u••"'•"'.,.-u ....... LAILr:t

Superior Siding

-Approx . 5 acres with 4

bedrooms, house com·
pletely
remodeled,
carpeted, equipped kit·
chen, basement. $4.5,000.
PEARL OF LITTLE .
PRICE IN MIDDLEPORT - This 3-~

bedroom

home

PWMBING

kitchen and

floors. ThiS"VOII
for I u91 $.45,000.
BUY NOW- COuld
give your family •

needs

some

HEA
. TING
12 Park St.
Middleport, Oh.
Ph. 992·6263
Anytime
1H6· 1 mo .

weekends,

tra~el!

Cape sleeves

*

llllt""•·

Allnt .....

Pllln o.,t.

·o.n}o Sea11liel
241 w.t 17 ~1 -~ew Y~ NY
11011. l'lillt !WI[, MIIMlSS,
ZlP, Sill, aM STYlE NIIIRI.

Ohio

I=========
11·19·1 mo.
Ph. 992·2772

power

dit ion . Under 10,000 miles.

$7,000.00. Phone 614·378·
6226.

car mount for $80.00. 985·
4214.
1976 CHRYSLER Cordoba.

8.

UTIL ITY TRUCK toolbox.
$50.00. 985·4214.

low m ileage, all power. 7422746 .

1977 CHEVETTE,
cond. 985·4256.

good

949· 2534 for ' Country Style

Subtle Hints.'

'

Experienced carpenters, .
aluminum, vinyl Sidif)g, In·
stalling,
ca binets,
panel ing , general car-

penter work. Phone 1·304·
1·304·773·5678.

882 ~ 20'/0or

orver

175

call446·3862, 51400.
74

Mot9rcycles

1978 KAWASAKI KZ 650
motorcycle,

color

Pomeroy

blue.

Repa irs,

service,

all

makes! 992 -2284 . The
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales
and Service. We sharpen
Scissors.

Call949·2649.

ELWOOD
80WERS
REPAIR Sweepers,
l!o~ts and
toasters. Irons. all small
Motors for Sale
appliances. Lawn mower.
Bass boat, Quachlto, blue&amp; Ne&gt;&lt;t to State Highwav
white, boat motor with Garage on Route 7, 985·
3825.
trailer. $4,000.00 . 992·2006 .
APPLIANCE

SERVICE:

all makes washer, dryers,
ral")ges , d is hWashers,

81

Home

disposa ls, water tanks. Call
Ken Young at 985·3561
before 9 a.m. or after 6
p.m.

Pets lor Sale
GENE'S
CAR~ET
HOOF HOLLOW : Horses CLEANING. Deep stream
and oonies and riding clean puts nu·look back in
General Hauling
lessons .
Everything your carpet, highly recom· 85
Imaginable in hOrse equip· mended, reasonable rates, AGRI ·LIME Spreading,
ment. Blankets, belts, Scotchguard .
Free
and 1111 dirt
boots, etc. English and estimates. Gene Smith. call llmeslone
haul ing. Leo Morris, 7~2·
Western. Ruth Reeves now 992·6309 or 742·2211.
24.55.
(614)698,3290.

'are cut in one wilh jacket pants
have elastic waist
Printed Pattem 4500: Misses
Sizes 8, 10, 12, 14, 16, 18, 20.
Size 12 . (bust 34) cipe-coal..
pants 3 318 yards 60·inch fab1lc.
11.75 .. ltdiiJI(IIm. Add
"' ltdl ....., "' flnt.m.
llfllllll ""
Sell~ tr.

ROONEY' DOWNING-BROKER

.
IO·Hfc

Improvement~

SEW·EASY {we know how busy
you are) PARTNERS l01 wo1k,

CALL BIU CHILDS 992·2342 ·

992·5682

Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding
elnsulation
estorm Doors
• Storm Windows
• Replacement
Windows
Free Estimate
James Keesee

Firewood for sale, Mixed
~
types of wood . $3 5.00 per 71
Autos lor Sale
Home
plck·up load. Delivered, 1974 Oldsmobile 98. all 81
1mprovem ents
will stack for Senior
· k
t
Citizens. 843-4951 .
power. Also P•C up opper .
5150.00. 949·2368.
Need
help
w i th .
Rearrangin·
CAKES decorated for all 1979 DIESEL Rabb it, redecorating?
g'? Picking out wallpaper, ·
occasions. 992·6342 or 992· deluxe model, 45 to 50 nipg. paint,
furn iture &amp; ac·
2583.
Silver grey, excellenf con· cessor ies? Call BeckY, af ·

E. Main St.

992-5692
OFFICE "2·2259

RT, 1 IAUM ADDITION - Still under
construction I Will be completed Nov. 15.
Watch for our Open House.
·
·

Hrs.: Mon.·Fri.
9 A.M.·5:3DP.M.

r~~~~~~~~~f~iiii~~~r
s.,e4c.__!M=is~c,_,.M
!-',._,
er_,c!-'ha,n"i"'se,__

. . . . POMEROY

Roger &amp; Dottie Turner

Hf!illh flhll t l.'rs

INSULATION
.

- AutQ and Truck
Repair
-Transmission
Repair
•·

~~~LANDMARK

work .

Housmy

J&amp;l BLOWN

GARAGE

AND

1 OOOd usea

Over 13 acres with 3

$11,200.
REAL TOll
Henry E. Cleland; Jr.
992·6191
ASSOCIATES
Jean Trussell 949-2640

T.P, watrr ~·What'
your ChOlCe?
.
PERMA STONE3 bedroom home
lots. garage.
Has fulls~::~~~~~
and

Call Howard
949·2862
949·2160 1 · 22 ~tfc

·====C~o~ll~~~==~· ==~· ~·~~~~"~'"~'m~"~'·~· ~
~~~~~~O~b~
KAUFPS
ROGER HYSEll'S 1.1~:::::;;:;::;;;~~

cond., 153 Burger Ave ., or

much to offer a family.
Nice kitchen with range,
dining room, full base·
men! on a large level lot
50'x200'.
Aluminum
siding. $26,900.
SIZE THIS ONE UPI
APPLE GROVE -

trailer site or acreage.

Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices

(614) 992-3213 Pomeroy, O~fo

com ·

Hotpolrit Microwa¥ 1 oven.
Ret. S42t
SJ£9
Hcmellle Super I Chain S~w
{2UOOOI
Rr:t . ltUS
Now s aus
{Pri ce lnctudl!s Frn carryirl!l
case)
Com fort Glow Kerosene
Ht•Jen, Economy 121-0IU },
Ret. SUt .tS
Now 511t .f5
Stahe· Bed . COilsler Wa t .on
(2!-1j$]) , R et. S.U .U N~w 542 .95

has

possible building sites
with road frontage and a
2 bedroom home that

·•

r.~~~.nt,arl

I

FOR ACTIVE LIVING

I ~IUriiiCI

IN can·

cleaning and painting.

1971 MAVERIC K, 6 cy lin· 8~3 ----"E-"xc'="a'-'v"'
at"'in,.gc..___
BALL UN I FORMS, four · i!er, standard. Must sell. J 8. F BACKHOE SER teen sets, tops, shorts, Apt. 209, Riverview Apts. VICE liscensed llo bonded,
S(leks. hats. 992·7396.
Middleport, Oh .
septic tank .installation, ·
wat~r &amp; gas lines. Ex·
cavatlng
work &amp; transit ·
WASHER AND ORYER; ~72~~T~r~uc~k~s~f"'or~S~a!!'le~­ layout. 992·7201.
$100.00 lor the pair. (:al l af·
1974 TOYOTA truck In good
ter 5 al949·2155.
shape. See or contact T .0 . OOZER work. Small lobs a _·
Stewart at 742·2421.
specialty . Dependa!Jie ser· .
vice. 742·2753 .
Vans
&amp;
4
W.D.
73
Now At
1973 CHEVY VAN · GUs tom 84
· Electrical
Pomeroy;
paint '
c arpeted and
_ __&lt;&amp;~R
~e"Cf!.'
ri'l!g!'er~a".'li'!.on
'!....__
panelled,
307.
3-spd.
Exc.
SEWING
MACHINE
landmark

Pomeroy. House to fix

12 Sltuilt!Gns wanted
WILL Do babysitting,
seven days a - k. m
5103.
AUTOMOBILI!
auRANCE ~een
celled?
Lost
OPerator's llctnse?
9+2·21&lt;13·.

All types of roof work.
new or repair guHers
and downspouts, gutter

TWO C. B.'s and power box.
car mount. $80.00. 985·4214.

NEW LISTING. - 13
acres of wooded land on
Forked Run Road .
Uti Iities
available .
$8,000.
NEW LISTING - 90
acres of wooded land
with mineral rights.
$27,000.
NEW LISTING- Small

WOMAN TO live In with
eldtriY gentleman. Paul s.
Starcher, Stlveravllle, Rt.
3, l'cil'tland, Oh. Box 162·B.
45770,

jj

sale .

ROOFING

. ~========~ Two
Util ity tool box for $50.00.
c.b. radios,
box

with

THE OHIO Farmer Com·
pany is looking for a sharp
aggressive individual to
service our ~ustomers n the
Meigs·Galllo area. Group

H. L WHITESEL

53
Antiques
ATTENTION:
liM ·
PORTANT TO YOU) Will
p&amp;y cosh or cerllfled check
tor antiques and collec·
tibles or entire estates,
Nothing too Iorge. Also,.
guns, pocket watches and
FRill
coin collections. Call 614· 6 Storm Windows or
767·3167 or 557·34H.
Poir Shutters with

Ford holes
one·half
ton truck,
five
for $85.00.
1978
F150 Ford Ranger White, V·
8, 2,400 miles In excellent
condition, $4,500.00. Cobra
radio 139 with side band
like new for $150.00. Phone
MIDDLEPORT : . Ground 992-5388.
floor ·a partment, three
bedrooms, living room and FEDERAL ELECTRONIC
kitchen, $225.00 per month. siren with 100 watt
security deposit. Upstairs spe~ker. $165 .00. 742·2236.
rooms for rent by month,
uo.oo per month plus 2 FULL BEDS with mat·
security depciSII. References required . Call Hob· dresser, 6 dining room
tress and springs, 1
stetter Realty at 742-2003.
chairs. 1 gas heater, 2400
.BTU, small couch, 1 con·
5 ROOM unfurniShed opar· sole radio. 992·7309.
tment. 992·S.C:Wor992·3129.
3 PIECE French Provln·
cia/living room suite, $150 .
Real Estate·-General
992-7866 after 5 p.m.

qualifiCations. Benefits•in·
elude a five 15) day work

Wanttll to lu'i .
~~
;liON AND JfiAiS IEDS,
lltd turnlturt, delks, gold
''' leWI!ry, sliver
lare, alwtlng, ttc., WOOd
box-.lera entlqun, ~- ~•".!!!! to Do
. comlllilt NuMIIOida. HIYI VICinCy In my homt
Ill M. D. Mllltr, fit. 4. tor tlderly ptrton. ltoom •
Pamerov. OHI or cell 992· bolrd, l•undry reaton•blo.
ffl·t022.

~

'192-7479 .

R.N. Director of Nursing, carpet. B x S Sales, Inc.,
Pomeroy Health Care Cen·
2nd x VIand Street, Point LO:::=======~
ter, 614·992·6606.
Pleasant, WV Phone 675·
FIREWOOD for
4424.
Phone 992·7567
The Meigs county Health
Deparlment Is now ac·
c·eptlng applications for' a
Qualified Dietician. Salarv

269~.

l-OST: Block ,and tan collie
between Racine · and Par·

Space for l!'nt
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy. Large lots. Call

Cameron, 12 x 60, two
disability policy at no cost bedrooms, all electric. 1971
to the employee, and Skyline, 12sx 6). two
hospitalization ln!lurance bedrooms. bath llo •;,, new
available. Come visit us or carpet. 1970 PMC,

457~2.

t

~

bands,

3860.

ESTATE SALE- CASE 131819
· SATURDAY, NOV. 22ati0:300'CLOCK A.M.
ON MAIN STREET- AMESVILLE, OHIO
Take St. Rl. 33 north out at Athens for 1 miles to St. Rt. 550- take St.
Rl. 550 for 11 miles to Amesville, Ohio.

.

rings,

NO
HUNTING
or
tftsgasslng day or night on
the Charles Yost, Ivan Will
or John Houdoshelt farms. ' missioner •at the Meigs
All violators will be County Heolth Department
ot the Multi · Purpose
prpsecuted.
Health Center.- Mulberry
Heights, Pomeroy, Ohio.
A&amp;SOLUTEL Y no. hunting Phone 992·6625.
or trespassing on my
property anytime. Charles
'
(l)uke) Spaun, Route 2, TAKING APPLICATIONS
for bar help. Phone 992·
Racine, Ohio 45771 .

Gallipolis, Ohio

CONSTRUCTION

anything stomped 10k, l~k.
181\; oold. Silver coins. 3~1_ __,H,_,o!!'m,_,e,s_,fo,r_,s,a,le,___
pocket watches. Call JQe 10 ROOM brick, 3 baths, 1'1•
Clark, 992·2054, Clark's acre ; 6 rooms, 2 baths, 1'h

life

MATERNITY
tops:
velour, flannel, turtle
neck, blouses, long 'sleeves,
short sleeve,s, maternity

PRIVATE rooms, cooking,
cable TV, $40. per week.
773-5651 .

WANTED TO BUY : Class

. ..

ALL OTHER MAKES AND MODELS
ARE PRICED ACCORDINGLY

Upper River Road

Roams
--- Furnished
--.---------

45

WANTED TO BUY :
SILVER,
GOLD,
PLATINUM, STERLING·
COINS, RINGS,JEWELR·
Y, MISC. ITEMS. AB·
SOI.UTE
MARKET
PRICE GUARANTED. ED
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP, MIDDLEPORT.
OH1099N476.

ROUSH

PUWNS
EXCAVATING

~---~--

3 - Announcements
I . PAY highest prices
pOIIS!ble for gold and silvern
!:~_.!H~ee!IIPt!..W=an!!'t"'ed~­
colns, rings, jeWelry, etc .
GET
VALUABLe tra ining
Cfmtoct Ed Burkett Barber
as a young business person
Shop, Middleport.
and earn good money plus
'
some great gifts as a Sen·
SI'IOOTING MATCH at tlnel route carrier. Phone
corn Hollow In Rutland. us right away and get on
E¥ery Sunday starting at the eligibility list at 992·
noon.
Proceed~
being 2156 or 992·2157.
donated to the Boy Scout
Ti'OOP 249. 12 gouge foctorv
RNs and LP.Ns. looking for
choke gun onlY I
challenging and rewarding
work? Tired of rotating
RACINE GUN SHOOT, shifts?
the need to
Racine Gun Club, every develop Feel
vour ·Ideas In
F•ldov night starting at resident care
with a highly
7~311 p.m. Factory choke
motivated
staff?
Pomeroy
guns only.
Health Care Center has the
anSwer for you. Due to
GUN SHOOT: Soturdav achieving near maximum
evening starting at 6:30 ~ensus, we now have
p.m. Sponsored bV the open ings for full and part
R~cine
Volunteer Fire time positions on day shill
Department, at building In but will cons ider other shlf·
Bilshon. Factory choke ts. competitive salarv. excellent worklng ·conditlons,
gunsonly.
·

68'

Assistance with several school
projects Including the purchase of
some recreational equipment and
the repair of playground swings was
taken on a project by the Pomeroy
PTA at a recent meeting beld at the
Pomeroy Elementary School.
Robert Barton presided at the
meeting during which time the PTA
voted to purchase basketballs and
mats, to order parts for the repair of
the swings, and to help pay the
initial costs of starting a school
newspaper. Barton extended thanks
to those who had assisted with the
,, fall camlval It was noted that
CluiBtmas wrapping paper is being
so111. with the money. to be turned
witll\n 30 days. Mrs. Annie Chapman gave a report on the October
I!Chool·board meeting.
The PTA voted to give each
teacher $10 for classroom supplies.
An additional amount will be given
to each teacher later.
Robert

2561&gt; .

above mentioned vehicles

COUGAR

New bridge

Furnished apartments, 992·

3129, 992·5914, or 1·304-882·

Jlrior to the sole. Further, Junk cars. radiators, bat·.
the· Farmers Bank ftnd teries. 7~2-3158 or 742·2619.
Savings companr reserves
the rightto re1ec any or all Gas circulating heater.
bids submitted. .
65,000 up. 992·3876.
111)19, 20, 21. 3tc
WANTEO . TO BUY :
Troller lot In Racine, close

89'

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

11· 10,

"'My divorce ctmeliii'Oiilh. I'm
a rree man 1';

RIVERSIDE

'PTA plans assistance
with school projects ·

·.-----~--

1",.

~
.~-~

Close friend

84'

..;

'1&lt; .. ~~ .~~~

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
major House-passed bill putting into
. effect a property tax revision plan
appfOved by Ohio voters is heading
. for a floor vote In the Senate.
· 'lbe measure would limit inflationsparked hikes In realestate tax bills
of residential property owners. It
emerged from the Senate Judiciary
Committee in nearly the same form
it cleared the Bouse.
But baCkers said an amendment to
be offered next week, expanding
coverage of ,the bill to counties In
which taxpayers already have felt
the sting of inflation, could delay the
nlailing of tax bills set to start nell
month.
The bill, authorized by voter approval of State Issue 1, scraps a
current state law applying tax
reductions to property undergoing
periodic reappraisals, It also adopts
a new tax credit formula, separating
all property Into two classes residential-agricultural and all
others such as commercial and industrial - for figuring reductions.

Rhodes seeks to resolve
state's big budget crunch

-40

.Business Services

3 ANO 4 RM furn;shed ap·
ts. Phone 992 5434.

LAFF- A · DAY
\

Apartment
for Rent

Whr put up wilh hilh pricesSlit dollars, 111 better quslity!
Send lor ou1 NEW FAll·WINTER
PATTERN CATALOG. 94 pallerns,
fiH Pllltrn Coupon (worth

$1.15). Clisloa. SI.OO. . .
uw••llllii•GIIW1.1s
l e t t . li-51~SI.75
·I
T1111ittft S1.75
11Z7· IJIIIaM''h' llllilltl, .. $1.75

lcl!..,

AKC registered toy poodle
pupp ies. Beginning week of
Thanksgiving. 992·2967 af·
ter 5.p.m.
THE MEIGS County
Humane Society pets of tt\e
week are : Russian blue

cats. tabbY cats. on~ black
and white cat,one labrador
puppy type, four black and
ton puppies, one black and
tan ad"lt, one shepherd

type, one miniature collie.
992-6260.
2 COON DOGS. 1 black and
tan, 2 yrs.old. 1 Walker ~
years old. 742 · 2176 ~

-............
....... ..
'

,,

.,.

62
CHIP WOOD. Poles max.
dlamerer 10" on largest
end. $\2 p·er ton . Bundled
slob. SIO per ton . Delivered
to Ohio Pallet Co .. Rl . 2,
Pomeroy 992·2689.

They'll Do It Every Time

�U....:111e Daily Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pomlroy, 0 ., Thursday, Nov. 20, 1980

ASCS ballots

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY·
SPECIAL SALE .PRICES

now in mail

CANCER

...

(

\

CANCER CHAT- Chuck Osburn, 1~1 Ohio Division Crusade
Committee Chainnan, chats with Opal Hollon, left, and Enna Cleland,
right, Cc&gt;-Chairpersons of Meigs County, at the recent American Cancer Society Crusade Training Conference held in Columbus.

FOR FRIDAY AND SATURDAY

David Fox, Executive Director of
the Meigs County Agricultural
Stabilization and Conservation Service, reports ballots have been
mailed to all producers on record to
vote for conununjty conunitteemen. ·
Any owner or operator of a fann in
Meigs County that did not receive a
ballot and wishes to vote should contact the ASCS offij:e oo the second
fioor of the Fanners Bank Building
or call them at~Ballots for the conununity committeemen must be returned to the
ASCS office by December I or postmarked.by that date to be counted.
Ballots will be counted in the ASCS
office on December.4 and the counting may be witnessed by any fu.
terested party. Any questions regarding the election will be decided by
the County ASC Committee.

OPEN FRIDAY 9:30 A.M. TO I P.M.
'
AND SATURDAY 9:30 A.M.10 5100 P.M.
'

BOYS' 110.95

HOODED SWEAT

sHIRTS
Zipper _. front coat
warm fleece
litling. Sizes small
16 · 8) ,
m.ed I um
110·12), large 114· 16),
eKtra large ( 18-20) .

~ style

Po l yester

S~LE

SALE

Dining Room Furniture
Make your Thanksgiving and Christmas din·
ner extra special with a new table and chairs or

hult h.

We haVe oak, pine and maple dining fur niture along witt\lqua lity meta l dinettes in many

designs.

Many colors, sizes and styles.

Coupon pick-up
dates announced

REDUCED 20%
TWO DAY SALE
VAN HEUSEN

Meigs CoWJty WIC program par·
ticipants who are to pick up December and January Coupons are to do.
so at the Meigs Health Department
as foliows between 9 a.m. to 11 a.m.
and 1 p.m. to 3p.m.
A thru C, Thursday (9 a.m. tillll
a.m. only), Nov. 20; D thru H,
Frlday (9 a.m. till 11 a.m. only),
Nov. 21; I thruM, Monday, Nov. 24 ;
N thru R, Tuesday (9 a.m. till 11
a.m. only), Nov. 25; S thru T, Wednesday, Nov. 26; Wthru Y, Friday (9
a.m. tillll a.m. only), Nov. 28:
The only make-up dBy is December 10.

SPLENDOR KNIT
and QIANA

SPORT SHIRTS
Big selection of solid

colors In sizes s, M, L
. and XL. Qulana Is
100% nylon - Splen ·
dor 100% polyester .
$15.00 SPLENDOR
KNITS
$11.45
$16.00 SPLENDOR
KNITS
$13 .15
$18.SOQIANA

CHILDREN'S

THERMAL UNDERWEAR
Machine washa~le · heavy knit.

Reg. $3.75
Reg. $4.00
Reg. S4.50
._.._., Reg. $6.00

Save on our entire stock of
misses and half sizes dresses.
Many fashionab le styles by
quality makers.
Misses Sizes 6 to 20
Half Sizes .1~'12 to 24'12
REG. $21.00
REG. $31.00
flEG. $39.00
REG. $48.00

..• . SALE S16.79
.••• SALE 124.79
.•• . SALE $31.19
• ••. SALE S31.39

¥EN'S
. '9.95
.

RANNEL

SHIRTS
Wrangler and Mr.
Leggs quality ·
shirts In s. M, L
and XL sizes. Col·
orful plaid pat· ·

standing indlviduala who have cqntributed to the success of projects and communities in Sout)leamem Ohio.
Paul Hayes, right, following Thursday~s SEORC Mrs~ ?reston accepted the plaque honoring her father,
banquet at Athens. Fultz presented plaques to 11 out· Jay Hall, Jr., of Cheshire, Meigs' Man of the Year.

ALL SMILES - Attorney Bernard ·Fultz, left,
Penny Hall Preston, center, and Dr.

c:tiata with Mrs.

terns, two button

thru pockets, full
tails. Save Friday
and Saturday .

•

Sale 52.99
Sale $3.19
Sale$3.59
Sale $4.79

Boys'· Rannel Shirts
Colorful plaids In sizes 8 to 18. Western flannel
shl rts included and qufllllned shl rts, also.

Boys $6.95 Flannel Shirts • , •.•. ,
Boys S8.9S.Fiannel Shirts . ......
Boys $9.95 Flannel Shirts , .••.• ,
Boys $10.95 Flannel Shirts .. . . . .

S5.89
$7.59
$8,49
$9.29

FULLER CUT JEANS
A little fuller cut for more comfortable
fit.

Bsaslc and fashion styles In denim
anci corduroy.
Sizes 32 to SO waist, lengfhs 30 to 36.
Entire stock on sale.

Men's $19.95 Jeans
Men's S21.95 Jeans
Men's $22 .95 Jeans
Men's $24.95 Jeans

.....
.....
...•.
...•.

$15.96
$17.56
$18.36
$19.96

SALE

GLOVES,
SCARFS,
HA'IS
MANY COLORS,
ST'(LES

SIZES

and

REG. $3.50 •.• ' ..•... .. •. .• •.•... SALE S2.10
REG S4 U
.................. SALE S3.ts
•

•

. : ::: • •• • ••••• • .••••••• SALE SS.SS

. ;·, •••• , • , , •• , , ••••. , • SALE $6.10

........_.......
carhartt

BROWN· DUCK
WORK CLOlltES
Anofller llllpment tuat recllved
lnllllleted cowrellt • bib
OYerllil. lined IICkllt lnd COlts.
lined -11, IIOOdl. RIIUier lnd
llllfrl 111ft,

SM£ PRICES

'

sinks in old mine

JEFFERSON ISLAND, La . .:_ Alt abandoned salt mine shaft 1,300
feet deep collapsed Thursday, draining a lake with an enonnous
whirlpool, sucking in an oil rtg and a tug boat and threatening to cave
in a small salt Island.
•
"We've ordered the island evacuated. There is the potential for the
Istand to cave in. We're not taking any chances," said Wayne Knack,
district manager of the federal Mine Safety and Health Administration Office in Dallas.
Offictala said no injuries were reported.

WASHINGTON ·A jouit conference committee has approved funding a coal gasification pilot plant in Noble County, Ohio.
The Noble County project was Ih competition with another
gaslflcaUon project in Dllnois.
.
.
Applegate said the conference committee voted Wednesday to put
an additional $42 million into the program for 1981 funding of both
projects. In addition to money already eannarked for the .program,
the Noble'County plan wW receive abou~$42 million.

Siamese twins show improvement
DAYTON, Ohio- Doctors are encouraged hy improvement in one of

two 1&gt;-montb-old Siamese twina who were separated a week ago, a
holpital spokesrilan says.
But clinical signs of life still are not eVident in the otl!er twin's brain,
said Phil Stoffan, spokesman of Chlldrens' Medical Center here, on
Thursday.
.
. •
. · Natalie and Valerie Waelder, daughters of a Piqua couple, were in
critical but stable condition Thursday. They were separated last
Friday, a few weeks ahead of schedule, aftn Valerie showed signs of
brain death.
I
.

FIFTEEN CENTS

An overflow crowd - the largest under- construction on the college
ever - was on hand Thursday night campus and two others are in the
for the annual awards banquet spon· planning stage.
Dr. Hayes also enacted a total
Sored by the Southeastern Ohio
~culum review with the college
Regional Council.
The dinner, held at Ohio Univer- faculty to eliminate non-productive
sity Inn, attracted business and programs and to add more relevant
community leaders from the programs.
A highly successful business
organization's 13 counties.
Two Gallla County men were e&gt;&lt;ecutive who owns the Jaymar
among the ,11 outstanding in- Coal Company and Jaymar Golf
dividuals recognized for their many Course, Jay Hall, Jr., keeps a very
·)ow profile.
contributions.
Hall is a civic minded individual
Dr. Paul C. Hayes, President of
Rio Grande College, was Gallla's who has shared his knowl~e.
Man of the Year while Jay Hall, Jr., equipment and wealth with his emCheshire industrialist, was honored ployes, his friends, communities and
family.
88 Meigs County man of the year.
Dr. Keith R. Brandeberry in·
Dr. Hayes came to Gallia County
in 19TI as president of the four year troduced Dr. Hayes while Bill Childs
liberal arts college and two-year Rio introduced Mrs. Penny Preston,
Grande Community College. Dr. Hall's daug~ter who received his
·
Hayes spearheaded a $5,800,000 plaque.
Attorney Bernard Fultz of
capital fund drive and since his
tenure be!lan, two new buildings are Pomeory presented honorees their

plaques.
Carl Dahlberg, SEORC secretary,
in the absence of President Bob
Evans, served as emcee.
·
Dahlberg read a special message
from Evans, who is recuperating at
his home west of Gallipolis following
a heart attack earlier this fall.
Dahlbert also singled out the accomplishments of the organization'~
highway committee, headed by
Athens Messenger Publisher Kenner
Bush. The committee has been instrumental in obtaining legislative
promises for more funding for the
Appalachian Highway.
Others honored were Edmong G.
Chapman, Jr., Jackson; Father
Michael Ellifritz, Wellston; · Bob
Will, Jr., McArthur; Ora E. Anderson, Athens; Charles R. Boring,
Thornville; Don Edwards, Irohton;
Frank Taylor, Portsmouth; Eugene
R. Edwards, Nelsonville; and Evans
S. Hand, Jr., Logan.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - An in- cocaine thai was 75 percent pure and
ternational drug·selllng ring, sold to stJb.dealers at prices ranging
described as the the largest narcotic fnm $1,700 to $2,500 an ounce. The
ring ever uncovered in Ohio, has street cocaine WliS cilt to 20 percent
been broken by federal agents and pure.
. Columbus narcotics detectives.
"Project Cnff Link," as the inAuthorities indicted 10 person8 vestigation was dubbed, began 13
Thui'sday, including six central months ago after Colwnbus nar·
Ohioans, in the operation that cotics officers received several tips
focused on the sale of marijuana and about a drug · operation . with a
cocaine.
"never ending" cocaine source that
· Pollee said the drug-selling ring was supplying Franklin County
distributed about · 110 pounds of residents.
cocaine ' and 4,000 pounds of
The drugs were bought in Florida
marijuana a month,~ over $3 hy Ohioans who then sold them to
million a month.
amaller dealers. The drugs also
Profits from the , large-scale found their way into West Virginia,
operation were invested 'in n'ight Iowa, KanSas City, Mo., New York
clubs, business and race horses, and Canada. Canadian money from
pollee said.
.
the sales was deposited in an uniden·
· The investigation revealed the tified Columbus bank, police said.
nal\Cotlcs operation received · The ring's activities have been

I

I

traced back to 1976. Police said the
Ohio connection developed when
Richard Marsico, '5I, d. Elyria
reportedly contacted dealers in
Miami.
Marsico allegedly bought drugs
from two Miamians, Hector Garcia,
36, a fonner useil car salesman and
Marlo Adamo, a businessman.
Adamo owns "The Great
Redeemer," a race horse which ran
in the 1979 Kentucky Derby.
,
Marsico then distributed the drugs
to Jeffrey Linkous, 33, of Westerville. Linkous, a carpenter and Marsico, .-ho owna nightclubs in Florida '
and Ohio, are childhood friends, according to police.
According to Potice, Linkous
delivered the cocaine and marijuana ·
to Columbus residents Donald Voss,
33, an WJemployed veteran, and

Diane Kelner, 30, an antique dealer.
Other involved are Terry
Freeman, 33,
dry-wall painter
from nearby Delaware, and Houston
restaurateur Winthrop Hong, who
also has a Dublin, (Ohio) address .
Two bodyguards for Marsico, David
Scott Caulderwood, '51, of Iowa City,
Iowa, and Raymond Ripley d.
Cleveland were also connected with
the ring.
Freeman and Ms. Kelner were
arrested Thursday. Authorities are
looking for the others indicted in the
case.
The 10 persons indicted were
charged with one count each of
distributing a controlled substance
and one count each of conspiracy to
violate drug laws. The two charges
carry penalties of up to 15 years in
prison and a $2,500 fine or both.

a

Outstanding farm families get certificates
Presentation of the outstanding Ronald Cowdery were given outfarm · family . certificates and standing fann family certificates.
The Goodyear Outstanding
Goodyear's Outstanding Cooperator
Cooperator
Award, went to Vlrgll
Award hlghllghted Thursday's an. nual meeting of the Metgs Soli and and Thomas Hamm. The Camahans
operate a 840 acre fann in Sutton
Water Conservation District.
James and Tony Carnahan and .Township. They milk 70 cows daily.

Cowdery operates a 103 acre
vegetable fann.
'The Hamm family operates a 205
acre fann and rent an addltional150
acres in Sutton Twp. They milk 84
cows with a rolling herd average in
October of 15,097 pounds of ml1k and

574 pounds of fat.
A trophy was presented to Meigs
High School FF A Soil judging team
consisting of BUI Holcomb, Bill
Dyer, Mike Goeglein, and Mark
Goeglein for being the high scoring
(Continued on page 8)

WASHINGTON - Avcnyecl racl.st Joseph Paul Franklin "has not
been eliminated 88 a possible suspect" in the shooting last May of civil
ri8hta lellder Vernon E, Jordan in Fort Wayne, Ind., fBI Director
WllllamH. Webster says.
Frai1klln, 30, Is being held in Salt Lake City after pleading innocent
to federal dvil rights charges stemming from the shooting of two
black joggers there last Aug. 20.
·
~~

WASHINGTON- Women are still paid lesa than men for the same
work despite a federal law designed tn bat' the practi~, says Health
Inc! Human Services Secretary Patricia R. Harrill.
"In almoflt every ll8t of circumltances, salaries for women are,
, _ tban thole ror men with comparable training and experience at
every age, eveq academic degree level, in eveq field and with every
tJpe ol employer," despite the Equal Pay Act; Mrs. Harris said Thur- ,
lday.

a.r tonight. Lows in the upper lllllll to low 3011. Sunny, windy and
nrmerSaturday. II!PI in tbe low tom!dal. Chance of precipitation
.-r 11111'0 pens! tonllht and Saturday. Winds westerly to nortbweatarly 1&gt;-10 ·~
. 11:•1
dOitlor-t- SwaCleylhroughTueaday:Varlable
ci'ldw wHb little ebanp in temPerabn tbn:ugh the period. Hl&amp;hl
·in the mid-till to mld-101. OVernight !OWl in the 3011.
I

j

'-

Fin eliilunates suspect Franklin

andSEIS

3RD ST., RACINE, OH.
Member FDIC

Oil rig,

Okay funds for Noble·County plant

2 Day Sale Prices on
quality junior dresses.
Sizes 3· 15

e

Agents bust international drug rzng
SALE PRICES

DRESS.SALE

~~Otl!t$k&amp;d~~
~finD BE THFirtltfUL

the president-elect's other appointments earlier t!1l.s week were
not.
.
He visited Capitol Hill Republican senators as well as
Democratic House Speaker Thomas
P. O'Neill Jr. Reagan received Sen.
Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass.,
visited the Teamsters union and the
Supreme Court. He hosted a dinner
Tuesday night for Washington's elite
and dined privately Thursday nigk
with columnist George Will,
Reagan also received his second
national security briefing Thursday
from CIA Director Stansfield Turner
and traveled to a government office
building to meet with a group of
early congressional supporters.

•

•JUNIOR

TAKE THE nME TO

An official joint communique
issued after the Schmidt-Carter conference said the two men discussed a
wide range of political, security and
economic issues and agreed to continue close consultation.
Schmidt has often been critical of
Carter administration policy,
especially regarding military
security. Just this past weekend he
said, "There is a new decisiveness in
the American nation; and that cer·
tainly will make itself felt in the new
Senate, the new House and obviously
in the new White House and
President Reagan."
While the meeting between Carter
and Reagan was traditional, some of

enttne

WOMEN'S
DRESSES

Reg. $19.00
SALE $15.19
Reg. $25.00
SALE $19.99
Reg. 531.00
SALE $24.79
Reg. 542.00
SALE 533.59

.

I

•

----·--·~~~~--------~-~~--·--·-1

AMID THE RUSH OF THIS
BUSY HOLIDAY SEASON

smoking Gennan leader said.

SEORC honors area leaders
during 12th annual- banquet

NYLONS
Sls.JS
$20.00 QfANA
NYLONS
' S16.SS

percent. Ohio Power said the cost
improvement has been due largely
to increased production at the
developing mines.
Ernst and Whinney reported to the
PUCO that Ohio Power's use of Ohioproduced coal "has been
reasonable," and also applied that
description to the company's af.
filiated mining costs.

made it a much easier time than it
would otherwise have been.''
Reagan, who will be inaugurated
Jan. 20, met later with West German
Chance.llor Helmut Schmidt,
breaking tradition hy scheduling the
get-acquainted session before for·
mally taking office. Reagan
declined to meet with laraeli Prime
Minister Menachem Begin when
Begin was in the United States last
wee!t.
Schmidt, who had visited Carter
earlier, declined substantive comment on what he and Reagan
discussed during their 50-minute
meeting.
"The governor with his own hands
opened my tobaeco box," the pipe-

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO FRIDAY 1 NOVEMBER 21.. 1S80

. VOL. XXL NO. 156

duty during winter months. A recent
attorney general's opinion held that
such action violated civil service
laws prohibiting transfer of employees outside thetr classifications.
Without dissent, representatives
also approved a bill that appropriates $90 million in federal fun·
ds for the newly created Home
Energy Assistance Program: No
state money is involved in the
federal program, which provides
heating bill subsidies to eligible
Ohioans from November through
March.

•J

A source said California Supreme
"We're very glad to have you
Court Justice Wllliim P. Clark, a here, " Carter told his successor as
Reagan appointee who served as the he and his wife, Rosalynn, greeted
fqnner Republican governor's first Reagan and his wife, Nancy, at the
chief of staff, now ill in the running South Portico of the White House. ''I
for attorney general. Until Thur- think you'lllike the place."
sday, that slot was thought likely to
Carter said the !Mkninute session
go to Wllltam French Smith, dealt with some of the problems
Reagan's personal lawyer, who was Reagan will inherit when he takes
said by other 1/(lW'ces still to be the . office. Untiil then, the two men
leading candidate.
agreed that Carter is in charge "in
Reagan was to talk with fonner the fullest sense of the word," the
President Gerald R. Ford and meet outgoing president said.
with ·his transition team before
Carter added that he expected to
departing today.
see Reagan often in the future. •
He capped his five-day stay here
Reagan said the man he defeated
with a White House conference in a landslide on Nov. 4 "has been
Thursday with President · Carter, most gracious and most
their first meetiilg since the election. cooperative ...and has certainly

e

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

Ohio Power's annual fuel ad- 1
mines.
justment clause hearing by the
Public Utilities Commission of Ohio
(PUCO) will begin Tuesday in Can·
ton. The audit, for the period July
1979-June 1980, was required prior to
that hearing.
The PUCO must decide whether or
not Ohio Power has properly
charged customers for fuel obtained
and used during the audit period,
then order any reconciliations that
may be needed.
Ernst and Whinney recommended
no major changes in Ohio Power's
fuel procurement practices. The
auditors said Ohio Power is
operating in such as manner "as to
;.oromote procurement of fuel and
purchased power at the best price."
They defined "best price" as in·
eluding quality and security of supply, vendor reliability and least
price.
Ohio Power President Charles A.,
Heller said the audit "simply confinns that we have·been saying all
along: that we are very detennined
to hold down our fuel costs and are
equally detennined to increase our
use of Ohio coal."
Among the audit findings:
- During the one-year period, ·
coal receipts at the company's
power plants in Ohio and West
Virginia totaled 21 million tons.
- The onty Ohio Power plant
ll8lng western coal, the Gavin Plant
in Gllllla County, received just over
three milliop tons - the minimum
allowed IIJider long-tenn contracts.
Gilvin abo received 3.8 million tons
•of Ohio coal; from the company's
. own undergroWJd mines in Meigs
and Vinton Counties.
- During the audit period, Ohio
Power initiated -two cohtracta with
independent Ohio coal producers, to
offset some Gavin Plant coal which
previously had come from western
suppliers.
- While coal from oon-company
sources has been lncfeasing in cost,
coal from the company's oWn mines
has been decreasing in cost. Ernst

WASHINGTON (AP )
President-elect Ronald Reagan, his
debut among the nation's ·power
broke,. over, ~ fiying home to
·Callfornil to begin choosing a
CablQet.
. Reagan ill expected to spend the
weekend reviewing a list of Cabinet
finalists prepen!d hy a group of old
frlends .00 trusted advisers.
A IIOUn:e close to the transition
said .Reagan will focus first on the
top Cabinet posts - Sta~. Defense,
Treasury and JustiCI! - Blong with
the Cabinet-level jobs of running the
CIA sod the Office of Management
and Budget.
'
Even as the weekend approached,
the Cab!net competition was lllill

cotton

2·DAY'5ALE

and Whinney said Ohio Power's own
surface mines are producing .cCOal
that costs less than surface mined
coal from non-affiliated companies.
- Since the previous annual audit,
the cost difference between Ohio
Power's affiliated underground
mined coal and non-affiliated underground coal has declined by 16

.

blends. Solid colors.

·Audit reveals promise being kept
Independent auditors have found
that Ohio Power Company is
keeping a promise to customers to
get its power plant coal at the best
possible price.
Auditors Ernst and Whinney also
say the company - largest user of
Ohio coal - continues .to burn more
Ohio coal and less western coal as
production rises at newer affiliated

_j

developing •.

Governor receives marijuana hill
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The 11 people were killed in a stampede
Ohio House has approved a bill that to get into a rock concert at Riverwould prohibit the selling of any front Coliseum in Cincinnati Dec. 3,
devices designed for the. use of 1979 . .
marijuana to juveniles.
Sen. Stanley J. Aronoff, R·
· · The measure was sent to Gov. Cincinnati, the bill's chief sponsor,
James A. Rhodes by a 92-1 vote Wed- plans to ask the upper chamber to
nesday before the House and Senate accept House changes which
adjourned until Monday.
generally give local pollee depart·
Lawmakers hope to wrap up ments more control ·over such evenbusiness for the year no tater than ts. Requirements in the bill, which
Tuesday, but the tame duck sel!Sion does not affect sports events, could
still has property tax relief and other be waived by local police if they .
problein bills to enact.
believe a concert or other event can
· The marijuana measure outlaws be conducted safely.
the sale of any paraphernalia, such
The House, by ~ vote, also apas waterpipes, designed for the use proved and returned to the Senate
of marijuana to youths under 18. with amendment3 a controversial
Violation of the statute, similar to bill seeking to crack down on
laws already passed in several troublemakers ~ Ohio's public
states, would be punishable by up to schools. The measure seeks to iden·
six months' imprisonment and a tify causes of student disruptions
possible U.OOO fine.
and requires school districts to.
The House also approved, 86-4, adopt and publicize discipline codes.
and returned to the Senate with
In other action, the House apamendments a bill to control crowds proved and sent the Senate a pair of
attending rock concerts and other .newly drafted bills to help Ohio's
live entertainment events held in· winter snow removal efforts and
doors.
fund a home heating subsidy
Rep. Harry J. Lehman, {). program for welfare and other
Beachwood, said the bill would ban families with incomes near the
festival, or unreserved, seating in poverly level.
crowds of at least 3,000. It also would
By a 7fl..l6 vote, the House forrequire a sufficient number of man- warded a proposal allowing the Ohio
ned entrances opened 60 to 90 Department of Transportation to
minutes before the start of an event, continue its practice of temporarily
he said.
re-assigning construction and mainThe proposal was introduced after tenance workers to snow removal

Cabinet selection Reagan's next project

OUTSTANDING-Outstanding fann family awarda of the ~eigs Soil
and Water Conaervatlon D!Jtri~ .Thursday night went to James Carnahan and 1011. Tciny, and Ronald Cowdery. ShoWn receiving the award
from the left are Tony Carnahan, James Carnahan and David Gloeckner,
a dlstrict supemaor, who IMde the presentation. Cowdery was oot
present.
·

GOODYEAR AWARD--The Goodyear Outltanding Cooperltor Award
at the annual Meigs Soli aJK1 Water ConservaUoa pjltrlct 11111quet at tile
multi-purpose building Thursday night went to Vlrgll and Tbomu
Hamm. Accepting the award from Goodyear repr e"taUve Bob Nh!ns,
left, Is Mrs.ThomasHamm. On the.rlllhtiiiMarkGGeglein wbo•• epi:eda
trophy on behalf of the Meigs High Future rannen ol America rar wiDo
ning tht. soil judging contest.
~· ·· -·- - -,~ -----------------...:...,.......

l

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