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en tine

·FIFTEEN CENTS
I .

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Petrie appeals for license
-

An appeal to the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency.for a
license to continue operating the
Meigs Landfill in 1981 has been
issued by Franklin C. Petrie, Jr.,
Meigs County [lealth Commissioner.
Earlier Petrie had received a letter
advising that a 1981 soiid waste
disposal license shoul(l not be issued
for the operation of the landfill.
According to the communication,
Jerry ,K. Roberts, solid waste scientist, Office of Land Pollution Control
· in Logan, stated the present landfill
site is in violation of the Ohio
Revised Code.
According to Roberts, violations
listed were that the county com. missioners are operating a soiid
waste disposal facility without a permit to install or engineering plans
approved by the dir•rtnr: ther• is

MACH'S.

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IIIIIUIE IIIEIEI
120..

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JOWCJIOICI

'3"

I?PSCWI . . . M.tt .

FLOOR MATS·

•

11"5

Cowboys
•Pittsburgh Slftlers

"leachate" problem in evidence.
The dozer operator, Ralph VanCooney, has worked in coal stripping
and reclaiming strip mine land for
over 20 years. He is very
knowledgeable of compaction,
sealing and maintaining grade to
allow for the least amount of erosion
of completed cover. Most of the site
has been reseeded. There is no odor
or burning problems.
" I foun&lt;l no evidence of rats or
other vectors at my last inspection,"
Petrie states.
Concerning the charge of
operating a $Olid waste disposal
without a license, Petrie says the
site was issued a license to operate
in 19110; the move into the unlicensed
area took place since that time.
Petrie reports the health depart-

ment feels EPA should work with
the county commissioners to have
this area approved as a landfill site.
He a\so feels the county Is facing a
tremendous problem with filiancing
the sanitary landfill.
A levy to continue to operate the
green hox program and the landfill
was defeated in the recent election.
"We are expecting roadside litter
and open dumping to be a tremendous problem in coming months. H
the county landfill were to be closed,
then I feel that tbe situation would
become intolerable," Petrie said.
In conclusion, Petrie -reported
county commissioners are making
an honest effort to operate the landfill.in a satisfa,ctory manner and are
without funds to relocate the landfill
at this time.

,M iddleport shoppers get free parking

Camera Outfit

•18t'x28n

open dwnping and operation is
taking place without a solid waste
disposal license.
Petrie is appealing on the basis
that the landfill site l;leing used is
located beside land that was approved as a iarldfill. There are no
large open spaces between the licensed and unlicensed land. It is simply
a contini!Btion along the same hill,
Petrie points out.
Regardiilg the open dumping
violation, Petrie says open dumping
is listed only becau.Se the site has no
permit or plans.
"In actuality, the site is being
operated in a very good, clean manner. The road is being maintained,
there is very Iittle blowing trash or
debris and there is adequate cover
and compaction. There is no

-

KODAK· EKTRA 200

•Dol~

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lor 81_.. plciUfe-lllldng
• Fixed locus • Complele
with film end llipltaeh
• GreaiCMWawlth a little
price.

NllSOWI .... I1t.tt

FOOTBALL TEAM

FLYING SAUCERS
"Dallas

at

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO TUtSDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 19RO

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·"·"

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e

11TH II lOMAS

PRESIDENTIAL FARE - President-i!lect Ronald Reagan, left,
smiles approvingly at turkey presented to him at his Pacific Palisades
home in LoS Angeles Monday. At right is Roger Schrimp, one of the
representatives of the California Turkey Association, which presenteq
the bird to the Reagans. (AP Laserphoto).

&lt;:owbo7•

•Pittsburgh !:t••lw•

By Bob Hoeflich
Middleport shoppers will be given
traditional free parking in the
business section during the holiday
seasom as the result of action by
Middleport Village Council Monday
night.
At the request of Edison Baker,
representing the Middleport Chamber of Commerce and the Retail
Merchants Association, council
voted to "free" tlte parking meters
from Dec. 11 through Dec. 24. In
return for the courtesy, the business
conununity will give the village $300.
Clerk Jon Buck presented a letter
from Ashlaqd Oil Co.. announcing a

one cent per gallon increase on all
grades of gasoline as of Nov. 15.
Mayor.Fred Hoffman read a letter
from the U. S. Corps of Engineers
concerning tlredging at the Middleport Marina. The Corps indicated
the cost of dredging from the marina
to the river would be excessive and
that the community should develop
the marina into more of a park complex. The letter · told of corps
representatives visiting the marina
via boat on Oct. 23. It indicated that
the depth from the river to the
marina on Leading Creek is satisfactory for small craft.

Mayor Hoffman said he has con-'
ferred with Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews who gave Middleport
pennission to erect a larger sign at
the · Pomeroy-Mason bridge
prohibiting thru truck traffic from
traveling through Middleport.
Mayor Hoffman also reported the
village will be required to have a
pre-treatment sewage disposal plan
as related to industrial wastes by the
end of the year. He said that Floyd
G. Browne and Associates will do the
pian for between $1800 and $3500.
Council approved action on the
Browne firm doing the study. Mayor

Hoffman will take the proposal to
the Middleport Board of Public Affairs for approval. He Indicated he
did not think the study will be much
of a problem since the conununity.
does not have any notable amount of
industry.
A report on erosion in the area of
Main and South First Sts. in Middleport as prepared by the U. S. Cor·
ps of Engineers was given by Mayor
Hoffman. The corps indicated that
there are no structural problems: .
along the river at the area indicated.· The report pointed out that it does,
however, have a technical assisian(Continued on page 8)

Consumer pri~e
index up one percent
.

·...

LAMPS
•Pfttsburgh Steehirs
•Dallas Cowboys

IIIDOCHt/OUmoolt
PORIA. . LAMP

C~c~~~~- $14 99
~

NELSON'S RIG. 117.ft

15,000 from homes

'7"

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OLD SMOKEY

TRAIN SET -

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Fire kills\Delaware minister

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FMI.- ... •••• • .,..__.. d est:,.. __.

.

tno&lt;lo. Ap S .... ,._ I II lw . . IMW-

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

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11"PA.

MADEIRA FIGURINES

- •1&amp;~~

·-

.®

smeaen-.a1t.tt

Eac:t: time you ciUIIftll your unDOWII
....,.,y the COf!'tl lar'l 111 CloOII.tc Ill*
ad aounckllgnet wlcloiy or *leal.

Father, ntlrse deliver baby
(l)LUMBUS, Ohicl- Walter and Lois Lawson of suburban Westerville didn't make ittd,the hospital on time for the birth of.their son.
Instead, ~heir 7-poljnd, 13-ounce son - thhr third- was born early
.Monday on the entra~ce ramp from Interstate 270 onto Interstate 71.
Lawson1 35, flaggt!d, down a car for aid, which contained a nurse and
her daughter. The nUI'I!e helped in the dellvery, and her daughter sum-

~;~:;tme SR 124 bridge

PIKETON, Ohio - \ A 67-year·old bridge over the Scioto River,
unused since its closing in July 1975, is being demolished for scrap.
The one-lane span, ~hich o,nce carried Ohio 124 traffic between
Piketon and Jasper, w s sold to a sctap metal dealer for $500 under an
agreement that it be re oved within 90 days.

·Congressiru:Jn wants ·'Venue change ·

. •.

wASHINGTON - .\ former Ohio congressman is asking for a
change of. venue for hi~ trial on a federal charge' of using an oU c~
pany credit card in ~turn for accepting poiitical favors while 10

• Flashing lights and electronic-sounds
signal victor of each t!ftCOUiller
and wi!'lfler of gmne.
• Requires 1 "9-Volt" blt1ery, not ii'lelucMd.

$

I

DELAWARE, Ohio - A Delaware minister has been killed and his
infant son injured ih a fire at their home.
•
The Rev. Quincy \David Kincaid, 29, died of smoke inhalation Mon.
day, Said Delaware1County Coroner Stewart Russell. His son, John, 17
months, was hospitalized In critical condition.
Three other fsmily members escaped without injury from the early
morning blaze, whicl&gt; officials blamed on an el~rical problem.

od."-~-

• Classic type strategy gwne.
• Amazing computer gan:e.

Find seJlious fire code violations
LAS VEGAS, Nev.·- Evidence of serious fire code violations, in·
eluding holes cit in fire walls, was discovered in the charred MGM
Grand hotel as crews searched for more victims of the blaze that
claimed 84lives, )lfficials said.
· No additional bodies were found Monday after firefighters broke into sealed elevators and pumped six feet of water out of the rubblestrewn basement! said Deputy Fire Chief John Pat&gt;pageorge.
But the search uncovered such fire code violations as holes cut into
fire walls o.n the qasino's catwalk, or "Eye in the Sky," an area from
which observers ~an peer down at the casino floor below, said Fire
Chie~ Roy Parrish,
·

_
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--SooiWI
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THE G

. SAl'I-BERNAliiDINO, Calif.- Up to 15;0!l\t11'!9Rltt fled their homes
and businesses as six fires pushed by screaming 90 mph winds
ravaged thowlands of acrds of timberland and left more than 100
homes in blackened ruins, o(ficials said.
• .
Several mot\ntain conununities were threatened as the blazes
~ more \han 24,000 acres. Nearly 240 homes, many of them in
expensive area$, were damaged or destroyed, officials said.
One blaze wa~ headed "over the hill" north of this city into the San
Bernardino MQuntains toward several towns, and part of south
Crestline was \being evacuated early today, said Jinuny Jews,
spokesman for the San Bernardino Fire Department.

Congress.

I

Former Rep. Cbarl,es J. Carney, a 67-year-()ld Youngstown ·
Democrat who repres8lted Ohio's 19th District from 1970 to 1978, .
pleaded Innocent to the ~barge Monday in U.S. District Court.

II

•

I

Ohio lotteryi winner

.

·

I

ClEVELAND- The ~nning number selected Monday night in the
Ohio Lottery's daily game "The Nwnber" was 849.

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:_weat~er fo;ecast

Clear tonight. Sunny Wednesday. Highs in the low to mid-40s. Lows
In the low 20s. ~nee of precipitation near zero percent
tonight and Wednesday. Winds northerly 10.15 mph tonight

tonlRbt

NA

NELSO
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·- ---· ---- ·- --.---- .--- ·-

Rcie•leo:l Ohio Foreeaat- ThursdaJ through Saturday: Chance of
north, rain south Thursday and flurries mainly northeast

_.,

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~

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Friday. Fair Saturday. fJi~hs in the mid to upper 306 Thursday and in
the upper 30s tomid40s Fri~y and Saturday. Lows in the20s.
' '
.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Led liy pay, after seasonal adjustments, is
surging mortgage rates, conswner down 6 percent, the department
prices .in October · climbe\1 another said.
fuU percentage point for a 12.6 per· . The inflation report said about
cent compound annual rate, the three-fifths of October's price jump
govenunent said today.
was due to spiraiing housing costs,
October's 1.0 'percent increase in which increased 1.3 percent after
·• the em.wnetPrtpe.Jndel&lt; matched' • t!weemontbao!vlrtuaUynocbange.
• September's rise, the Lahar DepartFood prices, the big villain in
ment Said. For the first 10 months of recent months, rose by far less in
1980, Inflation at the consumer level October - 0.7 percent, compared
accelerated at a compound, with 1.6 percent in September. But
seasonally adjusted 12.2 percent an- that masks a strong upward trend
•
that will continue through the next
nual rate.
Last year's inflation rate was 13.3 six to nine months, said Labor
percent.
·Department economist Patrick
The persistent, double-digit in- Jackman.
The Agriculture Department
flation r~te helped to further erode a
worker's pay check in October. The predicted last week that Americans
Labor Department' reported that will pay 10 percent to 15 percent
real spendable earnings - after more for food in 1981, particularly
deducting Social Security and for beef, pork and poultry products.
federal income taxes - decreased
"Energy will be the real key to
0.6 percent.
whether inflation remains high or
Over the year, average take-home becomes intolerable," Jackman

said. "Nobody has a real hand on it
because it's more political than

economic.''
The Consumer Price Index in ()('.
tober stood at 253.9 before seasonal
adjustment. This means that a
marketbasket of goods and services
that cost $10!1 ill the 19117 base period

,.sold for $253.90 last month.
The index is 12.6 percent higher
than it was mOctober 1979.
Another troublesome inflation
signal was posted Monday when the
Federal Reserve Board reported
that the money supply category including cash in circulation and
checking deposits at collimercial
banks. grew $1.8 billion in the week
ended Nov. 12, from a revised $388.4
billion to a · seasonally adjusted
$390.2 billion.
And the board said the money sup-ply figure that also includes
checking-type deposits at other
financial institutions expanded $2.4

billion in the period, from a revised
$413.1 billion to a seasonally adjusted $415.5 billion.
In addition, the board also increased sharply its money supply
figures for the week ending Nov. 5.
"This strongly confirms the
posslblllty that (~111!0) ~oney supply
targets will be exceeded," said
David Jones, an analyst for Aubrey
G. Lanston &amp; Co. in New York.
"That is precisely why tbe Fed is
tightening aggressively in recent
weeks - out of fear the growing
money supply will lead to a renewal
of inflation," Jones added. "I think
we'll see the Fed going all out to cool
money growth rates for the rest of

the year."
And, in an apparent reaction to the

Federal Reserve's moneytightening moves, interest rates on
short-term Treasury securities clim·
bed Monday to their highest levels
since early April.

Spending cut Won't affect Rio now
BY KEVIN KELLY
"l dori't think it will adversely afAnother three percent state spen- fect us," Evans said. ''Our funding
ding cut won't inunediately affect comes through the conuniinity
Rio Grande College, according to a college, so for what the private
school official.
college receives, I don't think it will
But Dr. Clyde Evans, RGC make any difference."
provost, Said the college will have to
Current enrolhnent at RGC is set
find a way to finance the education at 957 in the community college and
of some 30 students who are over the 268 in the private college, a total of
state reimbursement ceiling.
1,225. Evans said there was an eight
In the past, the state bad no limit percent increase in enrollment this
in reimbursing costs of educating year, contrasting with the four-tostudents in two-year colleges who five percent increase noted over the
are entolled · on .a fulltime, past seven years.
equivalent basis with four-year institutions, Evans explained.
However, with inflation ·eating
away af the budget and state
revenue, a ceiling of 750 ~udents
was set .bY the state, he conlinued.
RGC current!; has 789 studentS
enrolled on a fuUtime basis in the
conununity college.
''Basically, in past years, the state
funded on fulllime equivalent
enrollement, with the number of •
' student hours divided by 15 hours
(·the accepted fuUtime basis),"
Evans noted .
"This past year each school was
given limitations from the state. We
have to •bsorb the cost of educating '·
those 39 students," he continued.
Aside from the ceUlng, Evans antiCiPates RGC will not suffer directly
from the latest budget cut announced by William Kelp, director of
the Ohio Office of Budget and
Management.This brings to a total
of six percent since the first bodget
cut was announced by ·Gov. James ·
A. Rhodes in the spring.

The college recently met its goal
of raising more than $4.9 million in
contributions to improve the ~allege
and its facilities, most of which,
Evans explained, is eannarked for
capital improvement and future
development.
"We have been working on some
buildings," he said. "The capital im·
provements bill bas not been ap-proved by the legislature, and that's
kind of holding things up."
A gloomy future for two-year .institutions like RGC was predicted

last week by Hal Roach, executive
director of the Ohio Technical and
Conununity College Association, a
Columbus-based lobby for 24 schools
throughout the state.
"Cuts in programs and personnel,
increases in tuition and Umitations
on enrolhnent-tbey're just some of
the alternatives we will be looking at
if another state budget cut becomes
necessary," Roach said in a news
release.
Roach said the accumulative six
(Continued on page 6)

NO PAPER '111URSDAY
· Tbe DaUy Senlblel will not be
ptloded Tllunday In order tbat
employe~

may. observe ThanksJiiving. Pnbllcatlon. n:sum~ as
usual Friday.

,''

NEIGHBORHiXJD DESTROYED - An entire
block of homes of Hill and "0" Sts. in north San BerlfllT!Iino was destroyed hy fh~ which swept' tf.rllugh

·~

Waterman Canyon with winds reachlni to,lOO
miles an hour. A,bout 150 homes were bwned.. (AP ·
Laserphoto) .

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•

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~The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Nov. 25, J91MJ
::. : 2-TheDailySentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday,
. . --- - Nov.
-· 25, 1980. .

Stingy Rams defense
.
tough in 27-7 Win

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Opinions &amp;
Comments

.....'

\'T 0URN~ ME UP

THAT NOSOQY TOLD
I

11-\EY PON'T .E.'JE,N ~reA'K

USTHATTHEV
WERE COMING /

·'

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OU~ LAN6UAG E • •. ANt&gt;
\'T LOO\&lt;~ L\I&lt;E THEV'~E...
• a • •

c·

;;.

THE DAILY SI!NTINEL
· iUII'SI-l
DEVOTED TO THE
INTERFSI'OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
·
LeUcn tf .,.._are wdcemed. Dey lbould be lfta tltaa 31G.wordlloq Ior aubjetl to rtdv.t"
tiM by tile eiiWr) ud IDUii be alped with tbt sfpft'a addreu- Namet lnl)' be witlllle'-lllpllll
..blbU... H.wenr, .. req.eat. lilmet will be disdOIC4. Letters should be la 10011 tute. ad-

NF?W ORLEANS (AP) - Wide short. The second foray into· Rams
recetver Preston Dennard scored territory came on an 88-yard kickoff
two touchdowns .and an inspired L&lt;wt return by Jimmy Rogers in the four~eles defense kept l"{ew Orleans th quarter that put the ball at the LA
at 1ts own end of the field for almost 15. Backup quarterback Bobby Scott
the entire National Football League then hit tight end Henry Childs with
game as the Rams rolled over ·the a I~yard · touchdown pass for the
winless New Orleans Saints Tl-7 only New Orlean.• score.
Monday night.
Both of Dennard's touchdowns
Rams defenders sacked New came in the second quarter, the first
Orleans quarterbacklj eight times ·on a 31-yard pass from rookie runfor a total Qf 63 yards and free safety ning back Mike Gtnnan and the
Nolan Cromwell intercepted two second on a IS-yard strike from
. Saints passes, both of which set up quarterback Vince Ferragamo.
field goals by Frank Corral.
A 1-yard dive by Elvis Peacock acNew Orleans got past midfield counted for the other LA score in the
only twice in the game, both times in nationally televised-game.
the second half.
Los Angeles raised its record to 7-4
The first penetration stalled at the and moved back within one game of
L&lt;wt Angeles :!(~.yard line in the third Atlanta in the NFC West. New
period and a field goal attempt was Orleans fell to().l2.

dnu=ll';""•
oolpo.....UU...
PQ
daDy tleepl S.tlll'da)' by Tbe Oblo Vi:lley PubliJbJQ Cclmpuy· MulUmedlll, IDe.,
111

St, PD~Detey, Obio457W. IM!Deu Office P bont9!2-!1M. EdUorial Pboa~ IH-Zl5i'.

'*-I,daN pGIIa&amp;epajd at Pomeroy, Oblo.

Nalaal INinrlkiD&amp; rcprueat.ltin, t..Ddoa Al•~~&amp;ea. 3181 Euclid Ave., Clevelaad. Ohio
.0115
•
•
~ Atsoclated Prftt It n~huinly eaUllrd to tl;lc IISC tor publlcaUoa_of aU lie:'" dllpr~kbtl
credited t.o tbe aewspapei aDd also the !()(al ne-ws published berelQ.
WI
Publllber
Robol1 ogdl
Robo11HoeRicb
G&lt;oe..VMJr.4.CityEdltor .
News Editor
Dale R~geb, Jr.

tb

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~v

THEY'RE AF 1ER
OUR JOBS I

Status ·of Ohio
legislation

.

.

Moeller's Faust
replaces ·D evine
at Notre ·n ame
'

Here is the status of legislation pending in the U3th Ohio
~eralAssernbly:

PROPERTY TAX REVISION - Implements State Issue
1 approved by voters Nov. 4, limiting increases in residential property tax bills caused solely by inflation. Passed
House, approved by Senate Judiciary Committee.
Awaiting Senate floor vote.
CONCERT CROWD CONTROL - Sets conditions for
handling large crowds at certain entertainment performances. Senate-passed bill approved by House, returned to Senate for concurrence in amendments:
SCHOOL DISCIPLINE _; Strengthens ability of schools
to deal with pupil discipline and absenteeism problems.
Senate-passed bill approved by House, returned to Senate
for concurrence in amendments.
NURSING HOMES - Strengthens nursing horne
regulation. Passed Senate; weakened version approved by
House Finance Committee. Awaiting House floor vote.
TRANSPORTATION - Allows transportation department to temporarily re-assign construction workers to
snow removal duty during winter months. Passed House,
pending in Senate.
WINTER HEATING BILLS - Appropriates $90 million
in federal funds for the new Horne Energy Assistance
Program. Designed to help qualified low-income Ohioans
pay their winter heating bills. Passed House, pending in
Senate.
PRODUCT LIABILITY - Restricts lawsuits against
.manufacturers and sellers of products resulting from
claims of negligence. Passed Senate, pending in Hou5e
Rules Committee.

ErrA

HULME f~ WO!Znl--'l'tt.BS~

Here are highlights of this week's activity in the 113th
Ohio General Assembly:
MONDAY: Senate floor session 1 p.m. ; House 1:30 p.m.
Senate Committees: Agriculture, Conservation and Environment (coal mine reclamation) ; Education and
Health (social workers, medical students).
House Committees: Local Government (county officials' salaries) ; Health and Retirement (medical
board) ; State Government (horse racing tax) ; Public
Utilities (utility rates); Commerce and Labor (building
accessibility).
TUESDAY : House and Senate sessions (starting times
not·set).
Senate Committees: Commerce and Labor (railroad
employees, employer self-insurers ); Ways and Means
(tax asessrnents) .
WEDNESDAY: Floor session.s and committee meetings
subject to the call of leaders.
.
·

Letters to editor
Dear Editor:
: : The person who abandoned that
little mother dog and her pups above
: Portland is a heartless wretch.
That little dog has better instincts
: than the people who threw her out.
· ·She begs and carries every scrap
: she can get to those ,helpless little
: dogs. Maybe you couldn't or just
: wouldn't do the hwnane thing and
· put them out of their misery.
: · There will be justice for you if not
. : In this world there will be in the next
-: one.
.
Probably the right person will not
: : read this letter but you can never
:: tell. - Gayle Price.

Th~ suffer
, ·.

•'

:1.
•

too!

Dear Editor:
About one week before the law
came in ... someone got my pet red
fox that i fed every night and morning ... early every morning it was
u8ually sitting like a dog ... waiting

for cat food and bread, etc. It came
right on the porch, ! talked to it like a
dog or cat.
She would carry bread up on. the
hill for her yoWlg (her mate did
come down). He's gone too!
I'm very sad. ! enjoyed feeding the
pet fox every night and morning.
Steel traps should be outlawed! A
human would not like to be in a trap
and suffer, perhaps for 12 hours, and
get knocked in the head and killed to
boot! Traps are inhuman! I won't
rest until they are outlawed!
Some people would skin their
mother or dad for a dollar. Money is
not everything! Those wild animals
want to live same as anyone else ...
If they don't bother us, why should
we bother them? .,. Some of my
friends trap ... But I don 1t approve,
that's for sure!
. I suffered hell and the grave with
cancer treatments ... Those poor
animals suffer the same tonnent in
steel traps! I thank you for your
tiJnt!.
John Mohler

Today in history.
Today Is Tuesday, Nov. 25, the
330th day of UNWJ. There are 38 days
left in the year.
Today'a highlight In blatOry:
· On Nov. 26, 1783, the British
. IMICU&amp;ted New York, their last
military pot!ltion In the United
States, during the Revolutionary

War.

On this date:
. • 1111758, during the French and In. diiD War, the British captured Fort
J

• •

Duquesne, currently known 111 Pit- .
tsburgh.
In 18113, Union troops captured
Mlslilllllliy Ridge, ending the Civil
Vfar battle of !Aoliiiut ~oilntaln in

Tennesaee.
In 1920, station WTAW· of College
Statioo, Texas, broadcut the fint ·
play-by-play delcrlptlon of a football ·
game. The game was between the
University of Texas and Teus
AXM.
J

CINCINNATI (AP ) - Gerry
Faust, the foghorn-voiced coach in
the rumpled cap, sweatsuit and
sneakers, has finally made official
the long-rumored move from
Moeller High School to Notre Dame.
Some fans already say · that
Moeller football will never be the
same.
"I've tuid other offers, but I
wouldn't leave Moeller except , for
one job," Faust said. "!like·the atmosphere at Moeller, and I guess it's
pretty much the . same at Notre
Dame."
'
That was a year ago at this time,
just before his team won the Ohio
big-school
c hampionship .
Everybody suspected that Coach
Dan Devine wouldn't stay at Notre
Dame much longer, and some alwnni already were touting Faust for the
job.
Faust probably cou,ld have had
several _college coaching jobs. He
just wasn't interested.
"!like the discipline and religious
orientation of Moeller," he said. " I
like working with kids."
Faust always led his players in
prayer, and it never sounded phony
or affected. Religion was a big and
: natural part of everything Faust did.
• He could tum away from a
walking· interview on the Moeller
campus to genuflect and say a short
prayer in .front of a statue of the
Virgin Mary and not 8eem maudlin.
He would scrawl "JMJ" - for
• Jesils, ~ry and Joseph- on the top
of every note he wrote, even a thahk
you to a sports writer for a cam- .
plimentary story about the Moeller
Crusaders.
He policed the Moeller grounds,
picking up scraps of paper. He once
directed Sunday morning traffic

The new Senate: a conservative
cadre
.

Capital at a glance

Heartless case

'

By Julian Bood
The most severe blow of the 1980
election is not the exchange of
Ronald Reagan's conservative certainties for Jimmy Carter's
moderate muddling. Rather, it is the
rise to p&lt;&gt;wer of some of the U. S.
Senate most reactionary members
that will occur in January when the
Republicans become the majority
party in that chamber. This is
especially frightening for black
Americans, fir it places in control of
the Senate a conservative cadre
whose voting records can be called
anti-black with little fear of contradiction.
,
Take, ·for example, Orrin Hatch of
Utah, who will become chainnan of
the Senate Labor and Hwnan
Resources Committee. Hatch is
described by " ~ Ahnanac;, of
American Politics" as "fervent' and
almost feverish" in his con·
servatism. He has already vowed to
abolish affirmative adion for
women and minorities.
Another beneficiary of the
Republican takeover of the Senate is
South Carolina's Strom Thwmond,
who will replace Edward Kennedy
as chainnan of the Judiciary Committee. Thwmond was elected
governor of the Palmetto State as a

rabit segregationist in I!KG. He was
the Dixiecrat candidate lor
president in 1948, a successful
Democratic write-in candidate lor
the U. S. Senate in 1954, a botn-again
Republican in 1964.
Thurmond pioneered the
·technique of voting like Scrooge in
Washington and a~ like Santa
Claus at home. His excellent 5er·
vices to his constituents have. caused
many to overlook his record of consistent opposition to all civil rights .
legislation. In 1978, the AFI.rCIO's
Committee on POlitical Education
gave Thunnond 10 points out of a
possible 100 on isSues important to
working people.
North Carolina's Jesse Helms will
become chairman of the Senate
Agriculture Committee, which has
jurisdiction over food s1am!J! and
other nutritiOn programs in addition
to agri-business. Helms is farthest
right of the new conunittee chair•
man and the least likely to cooperate
with moderates seeking to
strengthen social welfare programs.
Like Hatch and Thunnond, Helms
scores poorly on civil rights and
labor issues.
The party shift in the Senate gives
added clout to a IOO.year~ld
coalition of · Republicans and

Southern Democrats that has Rights Bill. And In 1968, Richard
already altered national priorilies Nixon - campaigning with Thurtoward spending more for the mond at his side - breathed new life
nation's defense and less for the into the. alliance with his SC)-CBlled
programs that make the tiatjon !•·"SWthernStrategy.''
Last year, the coalition had Its
defensible. The new Republican
way
in the Senate on almost every
senators will make the coalition
almost unbearable and threaten the vote concerning energy policy,
further erosion ol ·civil rights gains federal spending and racial
minorities. Among its victories were
won in the 1960s.
IncreaSed
military spending at the
. This conservative coalition dates
expense
of
social programs, protecback to the Compromise of 1877,
when the RepuPJican Senate and the tion of the tax-exempt status of
Democratic House corispired to segregated private schools and
make Republican Rutherford hayes weakening of sancti~ aga4Jst the
the winner over Democrat Samuel black-faced, white-power regime In
Tilden In the disputed 1876 presiden- Zimbabwe-Rhodesia.
The Southern Democratic donkey
tial election. In return for the
presidency, the Republicans and the Republican elephant jointly
promised to withdraw federal troops triumphed on 65 percent of all
Senate votes. Their success rate
from the occupied South, leaving the
newly freed slaves to the tender may approach 100 percent In the new
Republican Senate.
mercies of their fonner masters.
As a result, the white SoUth
The 1980 election shouid ~~erve as a
quickly won In the marble halls of
warning
to lilack Americans ·that the
Congress tile struggle for racial
new
conservative
majority - and
domination that it had lost on the
the
political
forces
that placed it in
bloody fields of the CIVil War.
power
must
be
challenged
at the
The conservative coalition was
ballot
box
in
1982
and
19114.
The
revived in the late 1950s in a vain attempt to block civil rights elevation of Hatch, Helms, Thur- '
mond and company Is a grave defeat
legislation; Thunnond - then a
Democrat - waged a filibuster of for racial progress in the United
record length against the 1967 Civil States.

Guess what--the '84 election has started
By Don Graff
includes some 20 names. The most
If you've been taking as a joke prominent come as no surprise, such
suggestions that the campaign for as Sen. Edward Kennedy of
the 1984 election has already started, Massachusetts. Or Sens. William
Pro:unlre of Wisconsin and Howard
you can stop laughing now.
It's not quite that bad, but almost. Metzenbaum of Ohio. Or Re'p.
Here we are, still knee deep in the Morris Udal of Arizona.
fallout of the most agoni2ingly
draWJHlut campaign in memory,
But others rajse a question as' to .
and some among us are already ·what, other than identification as f!.
gearing up for the next national Democrat, goes into the comvote, the 1982 congressional elec- mittee's definition of liberal. Sens.
Henry Jackson of Washington and
tions.
.
)
Buoyed by success m unseating a Robert Byrd of West Virginia are
nwnber of landmark Capitol Hill clearly out of place in such company
, liberals this time around, the by most definitions, including most
·National Conservative Political Ac- especially their own. And Sen.
tion Committee is gearing up now Daniel Moynihan of New.York would
for an even greater effort neirt time.
appear tD·qualify, if at all, only on
By its own reckoning, the com- groWlds of ~ highly liberal Jiermittee was instrumental in the sonal interpretation of the liberal
defeats of liberal candidates in 16 creed.
congressional races this year. It is
The Initial list Is subj@ct to 80111e
aiming to do as well or better in 1982. later , trlnuning, according to the
The tentative hit list, released by committee, and it would appear to
the committee's Washington office, offer ample opportunity .

To some extent, however, it could
. The National Conservative
Political Action Committee, which be coWJterproductive from the new
claims . ~~everal hWldred thOUBIIlld right's poil)t of view. Qnce
adherents, is only one of a nwnber of devastated liberals recover from the
simllilrly oriented groups active in shock of Nov. 4 sufficiently to anthe 1980 Cjllllpaign and collectively swer the questi!ln of what hit them,
labeled the "new right." But it they may be spurred by the
threatening exarnple to reorganize
acqul~ more visibility than most
their
ranks to better respond to the
in early drawing well-publicized
~tion on its own tel'lll.'l beads on six of the Senate's liberal
superstars, four of whom were national organization to achieve
sharply defined goals.
·defeated - Birch Bayh in Indiana,
Frank Church in Idaho, George
The 1980 election established that
McGovern in South Dakota and Jolm
a conservative tide Is in motion In
Culver in Iowa.
Much as most of us·might prefer to Americlin politics, but raised
put campaign politics aside for a questions as to how high it is likely to
time, there is nothing out of line with ' go and ho" long it may be expected
the conunittee's decision to get such to last. Also, how Important were
an early start. It Is a .free country various special-target conservative
and continuing Jiolitical activity has efforts to· Ronald Reagan's victory
a lot to do with keeping it that way. and to what extent did his national
And often enough in the past,
sweep contribute tolbelr ·
On current evl~ the new right
organized labor, civil rights groups
and others have gone after .key con- is doing ita best to make sure that we
will not have to walt loog for answer,
servatives.

...

.

"

when a traffic light failed at the intersection outside a Roman Catholic
church near Moeller.
His players were big and tough,
the equal of many small college
athletes. But they were expected to
be gentlemen and scholars.
·
"I. don't care if he's the greatest
player there is, he better never cuss,
he better never play dirty football,
and
if he
burps he better
say 'excuse
n
1
•
•
me," ' Faust once sauL
He knew he could never run such a
tight ship at most colleges. Until
Notre.. Dame called, he contented
himself at Moeller.
Faust was the second Ohio high
school coaching legend in his family.
He had played quarterback for the
Dayton high school coached by his
father, Gerard "Fuzzy" Faust Sr.,
and said his father was his coaching
example.
"My dad was the best football
coach I've ever seen," Faust said.
"Kids loved him. He's sort of my
idol."
Faust and his dad are still close.
Fuzzy accepted this year's state
championship trophy for Moeller.
With"a career record of 174-17-2,
Faust could have been an imperial
coach with wood-paneled office, carpeting and wet bar. Instead, the office he shared with his assistants
was loud, cramped and messy.
"I never hide anything from my
coaches. I believe in being in with
the.m," Faust said. Monday, the day
after Moeller had won its fifth state
championship in six years, he told
them he was leaving.
"Just before film time, he told us
he was on his way out," said
assistant coach Jim Higgins. "We
all knew what he meant."
~

I

.

Ferragamo finished with 14 completions In 23 pass attempts for 163
yards.
Seven of the Rams sacks came at
the expense of Sl!lnts starting quarterback Archie Manning, while Scott
was dropped once.
Manning, suffering through a
frustrating night, acCOWJted lor only
92 passing yards. He completed II of
26 attempts and threw both of Cromwell's interception. .
Jiffi YoWl!lblood and Mike Fanning got two sacks apiece for the
rampaging Rams' defense, while
Fred Dryer, L8rry Broob, Jack
YOWigblood and Joe Hilrris each got

one.
Cromwell's first interception
came on the second play of the third
quarter and put Los Angeles on the
New Orleans -43. The Rams took II
plays to set up a 22-yard field goal.by
()orral.
·
· The second interception came at
the Rams' 36 in the fourth quarter
and Cromwell returned it to the
Saints' 30. Corral kicked a 19-yard
field goal six plays later.
That field goal, capping the LA
scoring, came just six minutes after
Peacock's touchdown. That score
was ~~et Up when Lucious Smith
recovered a fwnbled pWlt at the
New Orleans I. Peacock took it in o
the second crack at the line.

RAMMED - Los Angeles ruruting back Wendell
Tyler (26) gets caught between New Orleans Saints

Leonard-Duran will fight tonight

wctics to win back the World Boxing
Council welterweight title when they
fight Tuesday night in the Super·
dome.
Duran, a 29-year-old street
brawler from Panama, won the title
on a Wlanimous but close decision
over Leonard on JWJe 20 at Montreal
in a fight that earned Leonard about
$10
million and Duran $1.5 million.
COOl
The rematch is even richer.
CINCINNATI (AP) - Mike Compo· Various figures have been reported,
ton was named minor league field but Mike Trainer, Leonard's atcoordinator Monday by the Cin- torney, said Duran is getting $8
DAYTON, Ollio (AP) - ueorge cinnati Reds to succeed Woody million and Leonard $7 million.
Brett of the Kansas City Royals has Woodward, who became the
In the first fight, Duran controlled
added another award to the growing National League baseball club's . the tempo, especially in the early
list of honors for his I91i0 baseball• assistant general · manager last rourtds , by bullfng Leonard to the
·
perfoanance. He's the 16th winner week.
ropes. It won't be that way this time,
Compton, 36, a fonner catcher, said Leonard, who is known for fanof the Hutch Award.
The award is in memory of Fred has been a manager in the Reds' cy footwork and blazing hand speed.
Hutchinson, manager of the Cin- minor league organization the last
"I justfound out I have a left jab,"
cinnati Reds, who died of cancer in three years. He managed said Leonard, who feels he didn't use
1964. He also managed the Detroit Philadelphia Phillie farm teams the his to jab to full advantage in Mon'l:lgers and St. Louis Cardinals after previous three years.
treal. " I'll just pace myself more
Compton's Waterbury, Conn., carefully this time."
a pitching career with the Tigers.
Presentation of the Hutch Award team won the Class AA Eastern
"I don't think he can do anything .
is made each year at the Dapper League last season.
more than he did in the first fight,"
Reds vice president Sheldon BenDan sports dinner in Pittsburgh. It
der
said ComptQp will oversee minor
will be held next year on Sunday,
league
field instruction in spring and
Feb. 8.
fall
programs
and work with yourtg
Brett's ~~election was announced
by Ritter Collett, sports editor of the players throughout the farm system
Dayton Journal Herald ·and during the summer.
secretary-treasurer of the Hutch
OR,LEANS (AP ) - Roberto
Duran promises to make Sugar Ray
Leonard " kiss the floor of the ring" .
while Leonard promises a change in
NEW

Reds narnP
Compton field
:Jinator

Brett wins
Hutch Award

Fund

Brett, who flirted with a .400

ba~

ling average until the final weeks of

the 1980 season, is the first Hutch
winner since Pete Rose in 1968 to
earn the award by overcoming adversity in the same season. Rose
won the National League batting
championship 12 years ago, despite
suffenng a broken thumb.
Overcoming such adversity iS one
of the criteria in the voting by major
league players and broadcasters.
Brett rm-&lt;1 45 regular season
games and-was on the disabled list
after suffering tom right ankle
ligaments June 9. He also was hampered by a bruised heel and tendonitis in his right hand In Sepo
tember, but managed to hit .390 and
drove in-US runs.

.[

die. .
- There's a lively interest among
scientiats about birds, and one of the
best ways to study birds Is to band

them.

.

The lab has pennanent recordll of
M mlllloo bird banda oo Ita compulers. More than a million birds are
banded each year. Last year alone,
1111,000 ballds were sent to the lib, ao
percent of them by hunters.
"'lbe recovery rata Is higher with
game blrda," says Jonbl. "But n
a1ao get bancjl frmllive blnll, from
blrda that hit wlndowl or were ldlled

can. Several thoul8lid blncll
come filin foreign eountrl•"
:Modenl bird binding bepn in

by

but'""

Denmark In • · A prlvlte pwp
lltlrted hire In 1909,
lagtd
In World War 1111, after the United·
States signed a Jl.llgratory bird
treaty with Cana~ and _!le!l~ In

1918, the agency that's now the U. S.
Fish and WUdllfe service took over.
jonkel says his lab Issues about
4,000 balldlng pennlts yearly; halt to
''master" · petmlttees ( uaually
college ornitboioPII), the other
half to pe.t 10111 who ant U1111111y
stodenta. Special nets 8lld trlpl are .
1IHd to catch the blnla, which 111111t
be handled with care. Banden mast
'fiait traps hourly Ill '*\k aan•t IOf- .
fer from apcliJIIA IIIII lnlll't tilled
· by pndatla.
Tbe blrdl are temoted, lclenltfttd,
'"*""~ far qe, 111 8lld ~
·condition, then fitted wltb almnJ!I!!D ,
baDdl and fnecL Saml lirdl,
uually WltetfOirl, Ire colCII'IIIII'ICed
. w1t1r plllllc: IIIC!k, willl11t ill lip,
Cit' l)llnlllllll . . . 10
ClaD Ill
1«011dled from 1 dlltance.
.
Seventeen , different Illes of
aluminum bands are Ulll!d, plus. a .

u.,

20-19-16-17·16-1 3-14-13-12-11·1 f).!hl.1-il·&lt;l-4-3 · 2·
I'
I. Georgia ( j!l )
IIHHI
1,311
2. Notre Dame (3)
1M).I
1,222
3. FloridaSiala(4)
9-1-&lt;l
1,200
4. Pllti!burgh
1,079
9-1-&lt;l
5. Perm State
9-1-&lt;l
9!10
6. Otlllhoma
11-2-&lt;l
940
1. Mlchl@an
9-2-&lt;l
902
B. Baylor
10,1-&lt;l
863
9. Alabama
11-2-&lt;l
784
10. Nebraska
!1-2-&lt;l
728
11. OhJo Stal~
!1-2-&lt;l
532
12. Brigham Young
l0-1-0
534
13. North Carolina
10.1-&lt;l
521
14. UCLA
6-2-&lt;l
502
15. Wuhlngton
9-2-&lt;l
480
16. MlsB!J.slppi Slate
9-2-&lt;l
378
17. Sa. C&amp;llfomia
7-2-1
282
18. Florida
7-2-&lt;l
213
8-;H)
19. South Carolina
85
8-;H)
20. So. Melhodbl
75

.
"

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TM

NOTRE . DAME PICKS FAUS1' - Gerry Faust, bead coach of
Moeller High School in Cincl,nnati, talks with his team before taking the
field Sunday for the- Division I state championship game agalnllt
· Muslllon High School. Faust was picked Monday to take over the head
coaching duties at Notre Dame. (AP Laserphoto).

·u

"

I

"
•

lleny writing paper llld, with the
band, Iaiii In thla lnfonnatlon:
I

- AU l11llllberllllld ~etten Ga the
band, IIIII the date,.,. r..lit.
I
- Tbe p~aw 1V11 faand It 1mn....l
IIIII dlnlcUaa fluD - · town,
~lllllltate).
\
'
...I How M foun4l •._ lllilld.(CII • · ·
dead •t~~aewu...;. .. .,. ttbat?). 1

••

•

I,n

..
...1
.'
. . ........... l.AIIII...,,
Pld 111111 ID a ••• I ipi, 11111111

tilt ... II.... ''llald .....
l.auni,MDiml.

Syraucse, Oh.
992·5776
Open Daily Mon .- Sat.
9 to 5

place votes in paren~ season'!!
record.! and total points. Points based on

WE ARE SELLING

bllld,

u. s. ,. and

HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE

The Top Tvrenty teams in The ABBoci·
ated Press college foptball poll, with first·

POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO
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J •

. few banda of special mela!J. Eacli
band has a serial nlllllber and bean:
the words: "AVISE BIRD BANDI
WRITE WASimJGTON, DC USA."·
That'a an addrela, 10 the band's fin.:
clerlmowlwlleretolaldll (Y11,It'1;
"A~"not 11 ADVISE. ")

said Duran. " If he does anything
more, I'll be ready for it."
The boxers are scheduled to start
mixing muscle and guile at 9 p.m.
COT before a crowd that a fight
publicist said will be between 45,000
and 50,000 and before fans at 345
closed-circuit television locations in
the United States and Canada. The
bout also is scheduled tq be televised
to about 60 foreign COWltries both on
a live and delayed basis.

College's Top 20

Bird banding: a peculiar fe~end function?.
By WOllam Slelf
Newspapers used to live this
"filler" item: The Arctic tern makes
the longest known migration flight of
any bird, nesting near the Arctic Circle arid wintering near Antarctica.
·How do they know? 'I'ho,y know
because Arctic terns have been banded and their routes have been
followed through recovered bands.
"They" are the federal government's Bird Banding Laboratory at
the Patuxent, Md. Wildlife ae.arcb
Center. George Jonkel heacjs the 33
. people who work there. '!bay may
' seem a peculiar federal function, lUItil you remember: .
- More than 2 million Americans
hWlt ducka, gee~~e, doves and other
birds yearly, a constituency
Congress wants to satisfy.
- So the government !Jas to .inow
all it can about how birds nvf and

Jim Kovach (52) and cornerback Ricky Ray on a short
run intheSuperdomeMonday night. (AP Laserphoto) .

Wildlife ........

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15

••

�4--The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Nov. 25, 19110

Jennifer· Lawrence recently'
celebrated her third birthday at her
Syracuse home: ~ Raggedy Ann
theme was carried out In the,party
hosted by her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
James Lawrence.
Gifts along with a Raggedy Ann ·
cake baked by her mother were
presented. to Jennifer. Cake, 'ice
cream and .punch were served.
others attending were Jason
Lawrence, brother of Jennifer, her
grandmother, Mrs. Iva Lawrence,
Bryan Lawrence, Mr. and Mrs.
Melvin Lawrence and Jeremy, Mr.
and Mrs. Joe J ohnso.J:I, and Mrs.
Julia Hysell.
Sending .gifts were her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. John Crooks,
Colwnbus, Patricia Crooks, !lnd
Morris ..

.

\

,..

'
i.

~

.. .'

.•

.I

.

'

NEW BUSINESS - Mrs. Becl&lt;y Anderson looks over some of the
books she will use in conducting her new home redecorating help
business.
·

New business offers
help with decorating .
Need help with . your Christmas " new look" planned for a particular
shopping or redecoration of your · room. She will pick up the color
preferences and other basic in·
home?
Perhaps, Becky Nease Anderson formation so that she can move
ahead with the particular project.
will have some answers for you in
The redecorating can be as exher Oe]N business.
tensive
as the home owrer would
To be operated out of the atlike
including
only one room or an
tractive Anderson home locateq on
entire
house.
the Forest Run Road, Mrs. Nease
Mrs. Anderson will locate and
hopes to provide help for people who
even
purchase the items needed for
are too busy to take time to track
the
redecorating.
However, any cardown decorating information and
pentry
work
necessary,
along with
materials or those who feel that they
wall
papering,
painting
and
so forth
would just like to pass on the responwill
be
the
responsibility
of
the
home
sibility to someone else.
owner.
Mrs.
Anderson
does
hop&lt;;:,
to
Mrs. Anderson will visit the homes
have
a
list
of
personnel
from
which
of clients at which time she will
she can recoirunend to perform
discuss with them thelf.ideas so that
these chores.
the redecoration processes will
With Christmas corning on, Mrs.
reflect the personalities of the ocAnderson
reports that her services
cupants of the home. She will record
·
will
also
include
personal shopping
oresent decorating items so that
for
residents.
~orne of those might be fit into the

Weight loss
groups report
POMEROY TOPS
A craft display will be a feature of
this week's meeting of TOPS OH 570,
Pomeroy. Meeting recently at the
Grange hall, Virginia Dean and Donna Smith were honored as the top
losers. Teresa Wood presided at the
meeting.
Plans were made for members 'to
take a craft item to the next
. meeting. The annual Christmas party was set for Dec. 23. At the AID observance, Maida Long was honored
as the best loser for 570, while Mary
Roush was runner-up.

I

SLINDERELLA CLASS
Debbie Fink received her 35 pound
ribbon at the "Tuesday night Sl!nderella class at Middleport.
At other classes of Slinderella,
Kim Hall and Candy Van Meter lost
the most weight in the Mason
evening class, Virginia Robie lost
the most weight lfl the Mason mar·
nine class, while Maxlne Jordan
~ved her 20-pound weight loss
rlllllon at the Chester class. Si.x new
.,_hers were welcomed at the
.OJ b class. ClaSses will continue
'lllraulh the holiday according tn J o
:AIInNWSOine, leclurer.

Blessings on Me. "
Quarterly birthdays were observed. The table for the honored
members was centered wiih a
deiiorated cake and gifts were at
each place. Mrs. Hayes gave
crocheted miniature red, white and
blue cups 11nd saucers filled with
candy to each one, alid Daisy Canter
gave crocheted miniature snowmen
to each person at the meeting. "HapPY Birthday" was SW)g.
Seated at the birthday table were
lnzy Newell, Thelma White, Eileen
Martin, Zelda Weber, Ada Neutzling, Ada Morris, Alta Ballard,lhle
Fae Kimes, Daisy Canter, and a
guest, Sandy White. Refreshments
were served by Thelma McMannis,
Nina Wlndie, Daisy Canter, and
Mrs. Kimes. Others there were
Letha Wood, Mary K. Holter,
Margaret Amberger, Marcia Keller ,
Carolyn Smith, Goldie Frederick,
Doris Grueser, and Dixie Beair.
,
TORRES GUEST SPEAKER
Mrs. Norma Torres of the Meigs
COWity Health Department . was
guest speaker at the recent meeting
of Epsilon Chapter of Alpha Dells
Kappa held in the Riverboat Room
of the Meig~ County Savings and
Loan Co., Pomeroy. Mrs. Torres
spoke on the various service
programs available through the
Health Department. A brief business
session was conducted by Mrs.
Susanne Wolfe and refreshments
were served.

EASTERN STAR TO MEET
Officers of Evangeline Chapter
172, Order of the Eastern Star, will
be installed Friday at 7:30 p.m. at
the Middleport Masonic Temple.
Members are to take acovered dish.

~

IN

'I .
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

~3 OFF

'IOU 50T ANY IDEA
HOW MANY HOM&amp;~I'!ii
WOUND UP IN 800T
Hl~l. 'CAIJ!OE THE;Y
FI66EREP I WOIJLON''t
. THROW LE'AD l

Unique· HBO
documentary
examinee the myatarloua eudden
explosion ·or the Hindanburgh air·
ship In 1937.

CIJ

I
Ia

~-:,:~=~~~~~

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5LB.

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CORONET DEL'

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4 ROLL
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Offer Expires Nov. 15,

•

The Jones· Boys' Su~r Coup

Pili

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atll.OREN'S

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~~~ CHEWABLE ASPIRIN

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lco:NT29C ~~
'

7:30

ANNIE

I
I

5HE'G GTILL ALIVE!
· THAT'S NOT 600D .1

IN YET?

ALLEYOOP

Pomer.oy

NICE DRIVING, REGGIE!

COFFEE-MA Tl

'179

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BOmE . .
CAN
1. Johnson Supermarket _ t ' lonnsan SuDIIIIIIU.
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Jack conaa stunning skier named
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Caplloned~ . S. A. )

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BUT I CAN'T HELP
BUT FEEL IT MIBHT
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WHO 5ET '!'HE FIRE 1

Coupons for cents or dollars off products,
rebates and redemptions are an excellent
reason to subscribe to The Daily Sentinel.
Even if you just clip a few a week,
chances are you will easily save the price of
your subscription, and more~ Home delivery
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outstanding values offered each ~ay in the
newspaper; it's also more convenient and
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(J) wu
LITTLE ~ORO
FAUNTLEROY The timeleaa story
tellaofl!ni!'IPOVerlshedyoungeter, ·.
Cedric Err oil, whO is swept from the
crowd•d tenement district of Heater Street In New York City's Lower
Eaat Side, where he had livad with
hia widowed American mother. to
the English eatate of hie grand·
father. the Earl ofDorincourt. Stare:
Alec Gulnneaa, Ricky Schroder. (2
hra.l_
(J)(ft) BOOYINOUESTION 'Native
Medicine' Or. Miller contra ate the
practice of modern medicine in a
tn)lcaltowr'!ln the north of England,
with the tradhlonal magicalayatam
ottheAzandetribeorcentraiAtrica.
(Cioaed·Captioned; U.S.A.) (60
mintJ
1:30 Cll&lt;llla TOO CLOSE FOR COliFORT The Rueh'e big anniverury
plana are interrupted by a claasmateofSara'awlthacraeyaenseot
humor who follow a her' home and
trlea to latch onto the fari\lly.
10:00 CIJ 8 (!) THE ALAN KING
THANKSGIVING SPECIAL 'Whel
Do We Hive To Ba Thankful ForO'
Comedian Alan King hoata this
apeclalln which he poke a tun at
aome of the major eventa and
peraonalltlea of 1980 In politics,
aport a and entertainment. Gueat
alar: A!!Qie Dickinson . (60 mine.)
(J)I)J). HART TO HARTStelanle
Poweraplaya a dual role a a Domin·
Ique Benton, the atolc wife of an

ANYTHING UNU&amp;UAL!
I 'LL 6 0 OVER EVERY
.S()(IARE INCH OF
THIS PLACE IF I
HAVE TO!

BARNEY

=

CARNATION :.· .·•
COWEi-MATI

·=~·

.,,.,.

TRV THESE PILLS ON TATER,
LOWEEZV·· THEV GOT A FLAVOR
ALL 'IOUN6·UN5 LOVE

arrogant mobater. and a a Jennifer

: .lohaa ~~tm•~t:;;

1Q-.30

KIS5? I DIDN'T
KISS ANI{8(XN..

.
4CANS . '1~
• GOOd only at. B•rr•a EXJt. lT-115-•

I

Yesterday's
·

(Answers tomorrow)

Jumbles: MINCE PATIO CAM PUS NEEDLE
Answer: What the fisherman ' s earn ings wereHIS " NET" INCOME

· Alternate approach found
NORTH

five or • even six diamonds

might be reached by ·some
players. Five' diamonds ·will'
s2
make.
•to 53
Nevertheless, you are in · '
WEST
EAST
three notrump. Your jack of · .....
• A Q lO 54
.9 8 6 2
spades wins the first trick
.942
•to 1 3
over East's eight, and you
. • 6'
+K 7 3
start
to look for nine tricks.
72
.K64
A successf ul diamond
SOUTH
finesse will put you in clover,
.KJ 3
but if East has the king be will
.QJ 65
return his partner's suit and
+QJ
the hand will collapse.
.AQ98
Can you get to game with
the diamond finesse a loser•
Vulnerable: Both
You are sure of ope spade,
Dealer: North
four hearts and two aces. Can
Weol · Nortb East
SoRib
you-find two more tricks out1+
Pass 3 NT
side the diamond suit?
Pass
Pass Pass
Look at the clubs. Go to
dumm~. Lead a club. Finesse
your mne. It loses .to the jack.
Maybe West leads a diamond.
Opening 'lead:+5
Rise with dummy's ace and
lead the 10 of clubs. Now you
have your eighth and ninth
tricks.
Suppose West held both
By Oswald Jacoby
king and jack of clubs? You
and Alan Son lag
would be sunk without a trace,
We are indebted to Arthur but you had 3-1 odds in your
Weinstein and the American favor . The diamond finesse
Bridge Teacher's Association was only even money.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN l
for today's hand.
.AK8
+A to 98

.J

.

~ww.d'
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
1 Soap frame bar 1 Emulate an
5 Called
ecdysiast
2Dothe
. on the11 Authentic
blackboard
1% Menacing
3 Summer
phrase
proo;!.ucts
13 Fwne
4 Coterie
14 Newton-John 5 Convincing
fUm
6 Old French
Yesterday's Anlwer
15 Follower
decree
19 "I Never 2'7 Songs,
· of an ism
7 Caddoan
Has
in Munich
16 Cover a bet
Indian
- Snow" 29 MoWitain
17 Grimalkin
8 Clift-Taylor 22 SoViet
ridge
18 Tiller
fi)m, with "A" news
30 Exasperating
of the soil
9 Tried out
agency
31 Twaddle
20 Private 10 Unsteady
23 Knight·
36 Tumbler's
21,Undiluted
16 European
errant
need
%% Stadiwn area
mining
24 Windflower 37 Greek
!3 Less rosy
region
Z5 Nag
nickname
Z5 Mother's Day

.

gift
%6 Shortly
%7 Hold out
29 Tennis call

29 Dirigible
32 Friend,
to Dulilas
33 Ascot

goods
:14 Make a
faux pas
35 Beyond help
37 Continent
38 Native
39 stunted

, creature
40Brooder

''

u English
theologian

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how .to work it: , .
AXYDLBAAXB
LONGFELLOW
One ·letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
used for the lhree L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day' the code letters are different.
II

FAI'TH 20

CBYPTOQUOTI!S
C

XSVVN

BSKI,i:

DZTT

KECP

YZQS

ZV

EYS

EYS

G ?'~··

MV' ZJ S PJ:CS:

.

ZH

tJa} (II}.

~•YifiiiiLI!I'ROP . .CY ·
~ MOMTY PYTHON'S FLYING

NUM

YUTQ

ZE

ATUKS

SVUMBY' .

EU NUMP SNS. - KCO.MST BPCHEUV
Yesterday's CrypiOqliOie: A MAN WHO IS NOT A FOOL cAN·
RID HIMSELF OF EVERY FOLLY EXCEPT•
VANITY.-ROUSSEAU
'

0

11:11
11:21

We aren't going to get into
any discussion of the bidding.
Three notrump is a fairly normal final contract, although

.,

ond outr11gaouo com leo.

I

I I I J :-:

BRIDGE

I

llTINIIONI

rI

Jumble Boote No.1•, containing 110puzzlas,lte"tlltbletorl1.76pottplld
from Jumble, clothls ntwapaper, Box 3-t, Norwood, N.J. 07648.1ncluda your
. ntme, 1ddrns, zll? codt tnd m•k• chtckl payable to Nawapaperbooka.

TIIIEVE-NIWS
NIWIUPOATE

~r.:: (!0!&gt;"~11&gt;

Now arrange the circled letters to
fonn the surprise answer, as suggasled by lhe above cartoon .

Print answer here:

Grey-·

JUST CALL ME

'' SU6AR LIPS"

I

'--'-'"""'"--'--..L..-'-.,1,.

STANDING IIOOM ONLY:
PARIS C•BAII!T A donllng ox·
trovoganzotrom P1t11dio Lolln, the
moat oclnlillollngnlght opot In Porle
ihe olzzllng
toctor. Joo4
octionwlthdoncoro, torcholngoro ,

t;;A,MI''II!::LL'S CHICI(EI

SOUP

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10:15
10:28

WA~iHE

FI:E6UL.'i' OF 'THE
HANDS E!JECOMI~G
T I&amp;H"T?

I.TEASET
V
'l. • I I
l

Hart, whole lite hanga In the
bolo nco when ohele kldnoppod by ·
ruthleaa blackmailer• who haYe
mloteken hor lor Dominique. (60
mlno.)
(J) SOUNDSTAGE 'Shel Silver·
otoln ond Dr. Hook' (Ciooad·
U.S.A.) (80 mine.)

The Daily Sentinel
I

rJ

.(I)

only

CLIP ·

I MAYGIB I

a

Arthur, Dick Van Dyke and Carl

'M:'RE GAINING ON 'EM!

•7•• I I

!LANFORD AND SON

Reiner will host this atar·studded
ap~clal featuring live comedy per·
formancea, classic TV comedy
acenea from thelut 30 years, and
reaction~ to them from many of the
ataralnvolved. (2 hra.)
CD ORAL ROBERTS
CIJ BASKETBALL Atlanta Hawk a
va Portla-nd Trail Blazers
Cl)(!l). HAPPY DAYS When Lori
Beth receives a long· dlata nee rna r·
riage proposal from Riehle eta·
tloned in Greenland by the Army ,
Marion atepe Into the apotlight on a
aob·atory television ehow to
!.f.Cure Lori Beth' a ticket.
U (J) ®) A CHARLIE BROWN
THANKSGIVING The alory, which '
Ia concocted around a rather novel
Jhankagivingmealaervedarounda
Ping-Pong table in Charlie Brown'&amp;
backyard, etarta when Peppermint
Patty Invites herself and ather little ·
nuta to.Charlie' a plica.'
()) (ft) NOVA 'The Water Crleia'
NOVA travels to the Ad irondack
Mountains. the Miaalaalppl River
and to Bedford, Maaaachuaetta, to
reveal growing concerns for future
of water supplies In the United
Slatea. (Cioaed·Captloned; U.·
S.A)(IIO mine.)
8:30 CIJ GOOD NEWS
(l)(!l).LAVERNEANDSHIRLEY
Laverne and Shirley get a rather
unsettling welcome to California in
the form of an earthquake while
they are recovering from the after·
shock of meeting their new
neiQ!lbora.
1m) THANKSGIVING IN THE
LAND OF OZ Dorolhy: Aynt Em and
Uncle Henry are preparing for
Thanksgiving when the mince pie
Aunt Em had placed on the window·
sill to coOl Ia snatched by a forlorn
man In a swallow-tailed coat. Dor·
othy pursues the .thief and Ia con·
l ronted by thelamillar old humbug,
ttie Wizard of Oz.
8:58 ~NEWS UPDATE
t:OO
700 CLUB
IIOVIE -(ORAliA) 0 1&gt; "Bill Bod

I

~

\0

8 Cll J('IKER' S WILD

I

I

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag
00

HOLLYWOOD SQUARES
·
DICK CAVETT SHOW
®l IIATCH GAllE
IIACNEIL-t..EHAER REPORT
FACE THE IIUSIC
7:58
NEW_l UPDATE
8:00
8 CD 30 YEARS OF TV
COMEDY'S GREATEST HITS Bea

FILL IT UP, CHECK THE OIL RI6HT OVER
~ND ... ER.,. HAVE THE
THERE ON
I-IORHIHIS PAPER5 COME THE RACK-

j

U.S.A)

BULLSEYE
FAITH THAT LIVES
(JJ IIOVIE ·(ROMANCE)

~

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.
.
t«(t

~8

aood·Captioned:

"That Lucky Touch" 1875

NEED 6ROCERIE5. RUH IH
AHO EfT SOME GAHDWICH STUFF~
COLD CUTS, BRE~D. MILK, AND
LOTS OF IT·l'lHILE I GET GOME
6AS!

I TRAFE
. I KI

Hugh Oowna anjj Frank Blair.

TI~~IT
LOCI®)

I

FLAVORITE

(J) TICTACOOUGH
. MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT
NEWS
1
® OYER EASY ' AfterWarl&lt; What?'
Guests: TV actress Fran Allison
and Or. Jamea Peterson . Hosts:

CQJFCil,JtJC;'€0

t:OLGER'S COFFEE .
1 DRIP, REG, E. PERK

·

BOB NEWHART SHO'W
FAC_E THE IIUSIC
(J) ®&gt; CBS NEWS
.WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
OICKCAVETTSHOW
ABC NEWS
.
6 :58
NEWS UPOATE
7:00 (1)8 PIIIIACIAZINE
CD
GERALO
OERSTINE
PRESENTS
·;
ALL IN THE F AIIILY

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Mason, W.Va.

~~ =...~

PIIOGRAII UNANNOUNCED
CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
ABCNEWS
iliJ ;!::2·1 CONTACT
1:30
8 {!) NBC NEWS
CD
20TH
CENTURY
GUIDELINES
(JJ FLASHBACK: THE HINDEN•
BURGH: SHIP OF DOOII Thie

PlAN

OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT ONLY

FRY PANS

ol

8 :00

rfii!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!i!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!

MASON FURNITURE

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EVENING

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When did
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11;;.1

0 0

...

NOV. 25, 11180

.

THE TRl STATE AREA

HERMAN GRATE

ol 0 I

.

F&amp;AMTOMEET
The ineeting of Middleport Lodge
363 F&amp;AM scheduled for this
evening has been cancelled. The
next regular meeting will be
Tuesday, Dec. 2.

Monday , IJ'uesday, Wednesday, Friday &amp; Saturday
8:30 toS :OO, ~hursday till12 noon
773· 5592

o

TO MEET ToNIGHT
OAPSE Chapter.17 will meet this
evening at 7:30 p.m. at Meigs Junior
High, Middleport All members are
urged to attend.

MASON FURNITURE
FOR THE BEST D.EALS

0 0 I

jennifer Lawrence

~~~~~~S~H~O~P~~~~·--~

ir.l

BAG
RUTLAND TOPS
Linda Bailey was the winner of the
"put the heat on thinness" contest
C&lt;)nducte&lt;) by TOPS OH 1456,
Rutland. She will have her club dues
paid for two months.
Kathy ·Marcum was the weekly
queen and was also welcomed as a
new member into the group. Runner-up was Beulah Wright. A dollar
w',as given to Ms. Marcum and a song
sWig in her honor.
·A new contest, ''decorate a Christrrias tree" was started and will contijme until Dec. 16.
•Plans for a special Christmas
rrieet!ng were made when TOPS OH
1466, Rutland, met recently. Mem~rs are to take a gift, either
homemade or purchased, for the
new contest. At the close of the contest on Dec. 19, one gift will be awar~ to the best loser in each of three
groups and the top loser of the club
Will receive gifts.
:Shorty Wright was the weekly top
lq!ier and was presented a ribbon
8lld a dollar and members sang in
l!er honor. Phyllis Clay was the win·
ner of the buddy board and will have
her dues paid for December.
Mrs. Wright led the group in exer·
cises. Games were played. Ellen
Rife and Gloria Oiler will have
charge of next week's program.

Recognition of the outgoing coun·
ell deputy, Mrs. Elizabeth Hayes,
and the newly commissioned
deputy, Mrs. Betty Roush
highllgjlted the recent meeting of
Chester Council 323, Daughters of
America, held at the hall.
The flag bearers escorted Mrs.
Hayes to the altar where Erma
Cleland read a poem to her and then
presented her with a red rosebud.
. Mrs. Hayes spoke briefly in appreciation of assistance given her as
deputy.
Mrs. Roush was then presented at
the altar with Mrs. Opal Hollon
reading a poem in her honor and
giving her a gi ft and red rosebud.
Margaret Tuttle and Julie Rose sang
"Congratulations on Your Commission as Deputy of Chester Council 323,:' an original song, and Mrs.
Roush responded with conunents of
appreciation.
·
Mrs. Dorothy Ritchie, disirict
deputy, thanked those who attended
Friendship Night. It was noted that
Mabel Van Meter is confined to the
Holzer Medical Center, and that
Virginia Newlun and Carolyn Holley
are ill at home. In observance of
Thanksgiving, Mrs. Tuttle and Miss
Rose sang "Thank You for all the

.

.

Television
..
VIewmg

Miss Lawrence turns three

Deputy recognition
.
highlights Council
meeting recently

r=CAVETTIHOW
IIIGHTGALLlRY
WIUPOATE

C)IIIOKino - S - . Inc:.

..

•

�•

7-TbeDally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Nov. 25; 1~

Costs will. climb
for U.S •.farmers .
.

OUT OF WORK - Employees ofthe MGM Hotel in
Las Vegas jam the Nevada unemployment office Monday to file for benefits in the wake of Friday's fire t hat

killed 84 people and will keep the hotel closed for seven

months. The hotel employed 4,500 people of which 3,000
are expected to file for unemployment. (AP Laserphoto ).
·

Circles plan holiday projects here
Holiday projects were planned at
the recent meetings of the Circles of
the B. H. Sanborn Missionary
Society of the Middleport First Baptist Church.
Meeting at the church for a brief
business meeting before going to the
Pomeroy Health Care Center, the
Electa Circle planned Thanksgiving
remembrances for shut-ins. They
were also reminded to take their
Christmas stocking offerings to the
Sanborn meeting on Dec. 2 with that
money to he .used for a specia 1
project.
It was noted that the regular
meeting of the Sanborn Society has
been changed from Monday to
Tuesday night due to the Christmas
parade in Middleport.
At the Health Care Center, each
resident was visited and presented a·
gift. Many then went to the dining
room where a hymn sing was held
with Mary Ann McClung at the

would like to coi:ne to Middleport for
piano. Going from the Circle were
a
visit.
Mrs. Brewer, Gwinnie White,
Plans were made for the Dec. 2
Elizabeth Searles, Golda Roush,
Rhoda Hall, Kathy Riggs, David Sanborn meeting at which time
Riggs, Texanna Well, Amber Well , breads from around the world wiU
he used for refreshments. The Circle
and Freda Hood.
Mitchell Linquist, the Baptist will have charge or' devotions. Mrs.
scholarship student, and Robert June Kloes conducted the meeting
Varnam, missionary, will be sent with Mrs. Janice Gibbs, hostess,
gifts of money for Christmas by the . giving devotions, "I Am Thankful
for My Many Blessings." Mrs.
Dorcas Circle of the Sanborn
Society. Meeting at the church, the Slavin conducted the love gift
circle also discussed Thanksgiving dedication using a Thanksgiving
remembrances for shut-ins and theme, and it ws noted that the white
made plans to send a gift to a cross quota had been-filled .
Mrs. Helen Bodimer presented the
resident at the Meigs County In·
program which was taken from the
fin:nary on her birthday.
Mrs. Elizabeth Slavin reported on book, "Worthy of God's Calling."
visit which she, Mrs. Clarabelle Mrs. Gibbs served refreshments to
Riley and Mrs. Sarah D. Owen made ·those named and Mrs. Freda Edwards, Mrs. Clara Mae Darst, Mrs.
to the infin:nary at Halloween time.
A letter was read by Rhoda Hall Katie Anthony, Mrs. Bernice Baker ,
from Glenda Rice, last year's Mrs. Pearl · Hoffman, Mrs . Roma
scholarship student, indicating she Hawkins and Mrs. Sarah Fowler.

.

Floral Arts Council hears program
on winter forcing by Ms. Thompson
foliage has turned green then the
.winter forcing by Mrs. Alice Thom- plants should be set in a sunny winpson highlighted the recent meeting dow. Blooms, she noted, shouid
of the Shade Valley Council of Floral come about in three or four weeks
Arts held at the home of Mrs . Maida after. the plants have been taken out
of the refrigerator. Mrs. Betty Dean
Long.
Mrs- Thompson listed crocus, daf- shared bulbs with the members.
For roll call members displayed
fodils; tulips, hyacin!hs as suitable
for forcing and suggestions picking an unusual seed pod or foliage and
the largest bulbs. She said a low pot then discussed it. Mrs. Elizabeth
or dish should he used and that one Roush was a guest at the meeting. A
inch of soil should be put in the bot- report was given on the therapy
tom and then the bulbs placed side progrwns with the special education
by side as close as possible. They classes at the Chester school. Mrs.
should then be covered with soil, Jennie Machir and Mrs. Betty Dean
watered, and put in a plastic bag. have had charge of the work in
She said they can then he set in the !llovember.
Club members made plans to atrefrigerator for six weeks or put outtend the birthday party honoring
side in a cold frame.
Mrs. Thompson said after the six Mrs. Irene Jackson, Nov. 25. Mrs.
weeks have passed then the plastic Jackson is an honorary member of
should be removed and the· pot the club.
Pat Holter presented the program
placed in a cool light spot. The soil
should be
moist and once the . on " The Workings of the Ohio
A program on preparing bulbs for

Mr. and Mrs. Guy Hill

Celebrate 50 years
NEW :. WEN· - Mr. and Mrs.
Guy Hill of New Haven celebrated
• lbeir 50th Wedding anniversary with
: 111 .apen house oo Oct. 12 at their ·
:
.
• : llarrled on Oct. 14, 1930 at ·
.Qllrk!stoo, W. Va., the couple have '
• ; lflV'I1 children, M;1ry po~rfer, Helen

:....

Phelps, West Colwnbia; Doris
Gillisp(e, Kathy Oldaker, New
Haven; Patty Smith, Point
Pl~asant: Homer Hill, Mason, and,
June Ohlinger, Springfield. · They
also have 28 grandchildren and 29
great-grandchildren.

Association

of

Garden

Clubs."

Flower arrangements on display
were orally judged by Mrs. Sheila
Taylor. " The Horn of Plenty" \j'as
the theme and incorporated one or
more candles to make suitable
arrangements for a Thanksgiving
table.
Mrs. Belly Dean won first, and
tying for second were Mrs. Pat
Holter, Mrs. Melanie Stethem, Mrs .
Taylor, and Mrs. Macbir.
The Dec. 15 meeting will he held at
7 p.m. at the home of Mrs. Carol Erwin. The potluck dinner will be at 7
p.m. and members are reminded to
take a Christmas craft along with
directions.
Refreshments were served.

Sou.u ·calendar
TIJESDAY
AMERICAN Association of
University Women, MiddleportPomeroy Area Branch, 7:30
Tuesday at the Meigs Inn. Helen
Smith to have the program. Silent
auction will be held.
WOMEN'S Auxiliary, Veterans
Memorial Hospital , monthly
meeting Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. in the
dining room.
OHIO Eta Phi Chapter, Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority, 7:30 p.m.
· Tuesday at the Meigs Inn.
AMERICAN Legion Auxiliary,
7:30 p.m. Tuesday at the Racine
'
Post 602 hall.
AMERICAN Legion Auxiliary,
Drew Webster Post 39, Pomeroy,
6:30p.m. potluck dinner, meeting at
7:30 p.m. Aily member of the unit
who has not been initiated is asked to.
attend since initiation will he held.
HARRISONVILLE Senior
Citizens, 7 p.m. Tuesday at the
townhouse. All members urged to at·
tend since new officers·wm be elected. Refreshments.
·
MEIGS AREA ·Holiness Assn,
Tuesday, 7:30p.m. at Chester ChUI'ch of the Nazarene with Rev. John
Coffman, speaking; public invited.
MIDDLEPORT Chamber of Commerce and Retail Merchants Assn.,
meeting at 7 p.JlL Tuesday at Columbia Gas of Ohio to sack candy and
complete Christmas parade plans.
WEDNESDAY
MIDQLEPORT
Union
Thanksgiving service,. 7:30 p.m:
Wednesday at · First United
. Presbyterian Chureh with Rev.
Mark McClung speaking and 'special
music.
·
· POMEROY • MIDDLEPORT
Lions Club meeting, noon Wednesday at Meil!f Inn.
.
FREE Clothing day 10 a.m. to 12
noon 'Wednesday at Salvation Army,
11~ Butternut Ave., Pvmeroy; area ,
residents in · need of rwthing
welcome.

: ~mall

investment, large
Business Services
returns, Sentinel Want ·Ads· ~U-NT :~~~;~~E~H~:~ r~=====-~==:::-rr====::=::~::~t:=::~:~:::::
KAUFPS
H. l WRilESEL
1 Custom

.

WASHINGTON (AP)- Farmers' · thjm the increase of about 20 percent
in 1980. n
costs for producing corn, wheat and
For exampler he said, the index of
other important crops will continue
to climb in 1981, but not at the rapid prices paid by fanners for tuels and
clip of this year, according tO energy is expected to in~rease about
22 percent next year, comparedto a
Agriculture Department analysts,
The department conducts com- 39 percent gain in 1980.
The department tises two basic
prehensive surveys and research on
a variety of productions costs, in- methods of measuring crop producchiding selected crops and livestock! tion costs - according io COSt$ per
Generally, costs have increased ·acre and costs per unit of harvest.
Other variations are by computing
substantially for all crops since 1978,
co.'!ts
by excluding land and by insays RohertE . Olson of the departcluding
them as a factlll'. Some
ment's Economics and Statistics
economists
say a more accurate picService. Aild those will go up again
ture is available by !lOt counting
next year.
"Per-acre production cost in· land costs, thereby concentrating
creases may be in the range of 10 to primarily on the out-of-pocket ex13 percent in.1981," Olson said at last penses. .
In 1980 and 1979, according to the
week's Agricultural Outlook Conference. "This is considerably !&lt;ss department's figures, the national
average cost of produciitg one acre

Spending•••

Group meet~
for inform
fellowship ·

park, ·Route 33, North of
~~";:i~.Y - Large tots. Call

of ~· not counting hmd, included:
· Whea~ $105.72 an acre this year
and $88'.89 in 19'19; com, $213.46 and '
$176.5-4; sorghwn, $141.59 and
$119.16; barley, $130.31 and $112.34;
oats, $102.87 and $84.96; soybeans,
$138.41 l!lld $11 MO; flaxseed, $82.76
and $68.«; cotton ~7. 1Ml and
$314. 79; peanuts, $525.41 and f424.53 ;
and rice $391.07 and $311.56.
In his report, Olson exiJiained that
the national average figures "hl"de
variations'.' and that the actual costs
"vary significantlY from fann to
farm, and · across states and

regions.''
"This variability among fanns Ia
attributable to such factorS as
climate, soil types and the varying
!p8ll8gerial skills of produCers," he
said.

Ail informal home fellowship
study on the Book of Revelation was
held by the Rev. William Newman,
pastor of The First Southern Baptist
Church, Pomeroy, at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Troy Z)villing of
Syracuse, Tuesday evening.
Refreshments were served
following the meeting attended by
Mrs. William Newman, Hershel MC:
Clure; Bill McClure, Bill Foley,
Woodrow Hendricks, Betty Foley,
Barbara Hendricks, Vicky Deem,
Becky Adkins, Cindy Fetty, Kristan
Bailey, Paulene Price, Pete Hendricks, Robert Hendricks, and Mike
Fetty.
I•

se, it will be a little light in some
areas, beCause of excessive rain
during certain periO(ls. But in all,
fanners will have more tobacco per
acre and it will bring a better price
thJm last year's crop did."
About 2 million pounds of burley·
were stored for sale at the Fanners'
and Union Warehouse in Ripley, an
Ohio River town, when the market
opened Monday inoriling. Workers ·
at the Independent Warehouse ex.
peel sales to begin there Wednesday.
Many farmers try to sell their
tobacco - a traditional money crop
- before Christmas. The market
traditionally continues until late
January or early February, depending on the weather and offerings.
In recent years, many fariners
!'.ave held off selling in hopes the
prices would climb after the first
few days of sales.
The Ohio crop is grown mainly
along the Ohio River, including Clermont, Brown, Admns and Scioto
counties. But · farmers ·from
Highland County and as far away as
Gallia County have gone to the
Ripley markets, too.

IN HONORARY SOCIETY
ATIIENS - Faith Ann Perrin, 213
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, is a member of Omicrort Delta . Kappa,. a
student leadership honorary at Ohio
University .
Membership in the honorary
requires the student to have participated in the twp or more extracurricular activities with a grade
point average of 3.0.
Ms. Perrin is a senior majoring in
the . pre-veterinary medicine
progr1jlll. She is the daughter of the
Rev. and Mrs. W. . H. Perrin,
Pomroy.

Ruth Circle hears report
tnt. ·utissionary"work
•Overseas mission work was reported on at the recent meeting of the
Ruth Missionary Circle of the ,
Racine Baptist Church held at the .
home of Mrs. Gamet Ervine.
Mrs. Nondus Hendricr.s, the white
cross chairman of the Bertha M.
Sayre Society, reported that she had
sent six boxes of .sweaters to
Thialand and two birthday boxes to
India to be used for the children of
missionaries.
A letter from Marlene Kidwell,
white cross state chainnan, was
read by Mrs. Marjorie Grimm, circle chainnan. It was voted to send ,
$10 to the scholarship .student:
Favors for the hospital will be made
as a. special holiday project. Get.well cards were signed by the mem-

•

bers for Dorothy Badgley and
Eleanor Robson. Phyllis Bailey
opened the meeting with a reading
entitled "In Everything Give •
Thanks" and Marjorie Grinun had
the prayer.
For the program presented by
Mary Kay Yost, a skit on Haiti
where the population is increasing,
the wages are low, and the living
conditions poor, was given by Barbara
Gheen, Nondus Hendricks'
.
Martha Lou Beegle and Doris Hensler. Mrs. Yost closed with prayer.
Refreshments were served by the
hostess. The Christmas meeting will
.be at the home of Mrs. Beegle with a
gift exchange. Members are to take
a · Chri.lltmas reading for the
program.

- ~RO-~-.;:~t-:d-:i~-~-~-0-; lis~i~OE:2GL~A~NC:E:S~~,---~~------~~;;b~y;~;I~IF~o~x

1

IN LOVING memory of my
s1erlin~. etc:, wood
dear Father and Grand· dollars,
ice
boxes,jars
antiques,
father, William Pooler, Sr. etc. Complete households.
wh.o passed aw•y Nov . 24, .Write M . D. M iller, Rt. 4,
1978. Your loving daughter Pomeroy, OHl or call 9~2·
Marilyn and Family.
7760.
Announcem~ts

3

coins, rings, jeWelry, etc .

47 ,, WantedloRent
WANTED
to Rent
: Garage .
In Mi~dleport,
preferably
the lower end. Phone 992·
2117 before 4:30 or 992·2528
alter 4:30. Also 1968 Olds
Cutlass tor sale.
-

I

IO&lt;

l~

... I UBI'&gt;I O.I

. t"
drama II ~tng.

___"Mrs. Wharton,

and earn good money plus

APPLES - Sweet Cider:
. ':f'le ~till have plenty of ap·
pies. $4.00 per bushel and
up. Fitzpatrick· Orchard,
·. State Route 689. Phone 669·
,3785.
.,. ------...,.--~

NO

HUNTING

or

trespassing day or night on

the Charles Yost, rvan Will
.or John Houdashell farms.
All violators will be
)lrosecute'!l.

tine! route carrier. Phone
us right away and get on

the eligibility list at 992·
21S6or992·2157.
u
., •. ,
•

"C

I

...

TWO

Priced to sell at $12,500.00.
742·3074.

3 Ben room · nome

bath and gar~ge in nice

area. 992·2502.

near

resident care with a highly
motivated stall? .Pomeroy

BY OWNER, 2 bedroom,

deposit. No pets. 992·5511.

your

ideas

in

have

liv ing room, .eat-in kitchen,
garage, large Utility room.
achieving near ma)(imum .On 2 acres. Tuppers Plains
census, we no.w have area. $29,000. 667·6455.
apeninQs for full and part.
time positions on day shift
32
Moi:Hie Homes

: ...-6SOLUTELY ~o hunting
or trespassing · on my
pr(lperty anytime. Charles
· CDukel Spaun, Route 2,
., ~a~ine, Ohlo45771.

but will consider other shit·

ts. Competitive salary, e)(·

cellent working conditions,
life

insurance

and

1973 Crown Haven, 14

6
Last and Found
'"A REWARD is offered for
, information or return of a

dog that disappeared Sat.

''afternoon

from

Bunker

.•' Hill. Pomeroy. She Is big
with short black hair,
brown markings, short
eors &amp; cropped toil. Con·
tact Kenneth Coli Ins at992·
,.}96.4afler 6 p.m.
. ,.
~ LOST: lntheHiddenLakes
~ are•, 2 walker hounds. 1..
" male, 1 female, Reward.
TWO SADDLE back
beagles lost In East Letart
area. Older dog has white
spot on eye, younger dog 11
mo. old Is shy. Name on
collar. If you see these d&lt;l!ls
plealll notify Dave or Bill
Fox at 247·25411.
LOST: ApP.f'oxlmately lQ
week old pig In .Mile Hill
area. 9-49·2545 or 949·2342.
;.. , .

W•nttd to Buy

to the employee, and
hospitalization insurance
available. Come visit us or
call: Nancy Van Meter,
R.N ., Director of. Nursing,
Pomeroy Health Care Cen-

ter, 614·992:6606.

two

TO BUY:
" GOLD,
SILVER,
'\ PLATINUM, STERLING·
::;::tOINS, RINGS,JEWELR·
' Y, MlSC.' ITEMS. AB·
Y SOLU.JE
MARKET
...;f'RIC:E GUARANTED, ED
l;tllUJitKEtT
BARBER
·&amp;HOP, MIDDLEPORT,
OHI0992-W6.

wat-

LO COINS/ pocket
l.p rings, Wliddlna
diamonds. Gold 011'
lvlr. Cell J. A. Wam,ley,
J.Q-2331. Tre•sure Cheat
1:0111 Shop, Athens, OH. 592·
''6462.

~
't•

x 6.&gt;,

44'

TEXAS
REFRINERY
CORP. needs mature per·
son now for straight com·
mission industrial sales in

Pomeroy area. Regardfes
of training, , write F.B.
Sears, Box 711, Fl. Worth,
Tx. 76101.

be&lt;lr&lt;&gt;om,s, new carpet. 1976
12 x 60, two
be&lt;lr.&lt;&gt;OJT11S, ~IJ ~lectric . 1971
12sx

32 .

r~asonable .

992·6022.

31
Homes lor Sale
10 ROOM brick, 3 baths,

l'l•

acres; 6 rooms basement,
bath, .2 mobile homes;

Mason, 3' bedroom never

lived in, 2 bedroom, rented
2 acres. John Sheets, 311&gt;
miles south of Middleport,
Rt. 1.

Trailer lot lor sale, $5,000.
Modular home lot on Route
7, tliree bedroom farmhouse located on Route 7.

992·2571.

.

HOUSE, 7 rooms, on bath,
full basement, large lot
with river frontage, After 6
992·721U.

-

.

· All new New Holland &amp;
Deutz at invOice prices.

·Team It Up!

bedroom. Available
December 1st. Phone, 992·
5511.

No pets.

t

POMEROY,O.
992'2259

SR .~ ! Ml OII

.

Phone
1-(614)-992-3325
LETART- GOOd warm
6 room all one floor
home . Nice ·modern kit·
chen, modern bath and
like new forced air fur·
nace. Excellent drilled
well. Asking only
$12,000.
POMEROY
All
utilities in a

~

room

house, and a set-up for a
trailer. 2 lots. Just
$5,200, what would you
give?
.
POMEROY HTS. - · 5
room frame home with
full basement, 3
bedr'Ooms,
bath.,
oorpetlng, ponellng ond
large lot. Some storm
windows &amp; doors, and
gas furnace. Asking .
$16,500. .
2 LOTS
Near
Pomeroy .Bridge.
Utilities oval Iable and
oot of all flOOds. Will
take.$3,500.
3 ACRS OF COUNTRY
..,. Large 10 room family
home. 6oth, drilled
well, natural gas heat,
wood cabinets In the kit·
chen and large family
room
with
new
fireplace. Gdod plaoe
tor the children. $39,500.
MIDDLEPORT
Here's something yoo
can afford to heat ond
buy. Has 2 bedrooms,
bath, nlct carpeting,
gas furnace, and 2 car
garage tor only 116,000.
You'll like this.
GIVE YOUR FAMILY
A NEW HOME FOR
CHRISTMAS. CALL

,..,..

'

Ho:'-"':r''
i If ',lli!Ju.:r r, 'I\
•

i

54

A tB.

PUU.INS

EXCAVATING

-Addons and

remodeling
-Roofing and gutter

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

(Free Estimates&gt;

V.C. YOUNG II

992!6215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy,
Livestock

63

78

Camping
equipment

BUS CAMPER , sleeps 6;

Schools color, marroon and

stove,

docked,

and

worm ed .

gold . Call 949·2110.

$24.00 each. Howard Cald·
well at 614-667·3493, Tup·

BEAUTIFUL
large
macrame table, small

pers Plains, Ohio .

pot

refrigerator .

hangers,

$275; heatwave fuel oil
Custom stove, exc . cond. $275 ;
Deluxe por1able dishwsher, Reese hitch with sway bars
harvest gold, cherry for- $100. 698·6372.
FRIGIDAIRE

mica top. Used very little.

$250.00. 992' 5163.

Traespertatjan-

GAS circulating heater,
"Warm Morning", 65,000

BTU $275 . 742·2068.
load, $60 a cord . All har·
dwood, split and .detivered .

23" CONSOLE televison
$120 . Record player in case

Pomeroy

ponies

lessons.

and

riding

Everything

imaginable in horse equip·

ment. 61ankets, belts,
bcots, etc. English · and
Western. Ruth Reeves
{614) 698·3290.

8-18

t.,-/1....., -1/.!.....s
. TWO main parts lor the l1the
jumper! Whip il up '"an etening,
then sew the 1est of the team.
Sleeveless jacket swings over
shirt. pants.
Printed Pattern 4892: M1sses
Sizes 8, 10, 12, 14, 16. 18. Size
12 (bust 34) jumper 2 yards 45inch fabric.
·

$1.15 ... ,....,., Ml

REGISTERED RED ·
BONE puppies. 843·3421 .
STUD SERVICE lor rab·
bits. 742·2276.

r arm suppoes
&amp; LiqestBEII

........ lhJt.dm

....... - ...... 51111111:

491

61
Farm Equipment
DOZER John Deer 350, 6·
way bf~de $7,500, case

::;~~~~~

$14,500, Bobcat loader
diesel $5,500, ditch witch

bllckhoe

loader

diesel

DP, SIZE, iH sm.£ IIUIII(l

trencher with trailer $4,500,

Wby put up witt1 hiCIJ prices- dollln. Ill better quality!
Send fllr eur NEW FM.I.-WINTER
PATIERN CATALOG. 94 Pltlems.
Free Pltlem
(worth

.•~

c-

Sl.15). Callllc. Sl.OO.

·~-l:.11.15
UlS.
1 I af 1 II. 1.75
1.75
117........ 'ft lllillll... 1.75,

·~~ r,..,..

GENE 'S
CARPET
CLEAN ING . Deep stream
cl ean pu ts nu look back in
your carpet, highly recommended , reasonable rates,
Scotchguard .
Free
estima tes. Gene Smith, call

good Need

1979 FORD LTD with low
mileage, air conditioning,

till

wheel.

949·25J4for ·country Styl e
black· with Subtle Hints.'

or ange stripe, factory
mags. Excellent condltion .
Phone 985-3828 evenings.

1978

PLYMOUTH

Salon,

air

h e lp
w i 1h
redecorating? Rea rrangi n·
g? P1ck.ing out wal lpaper,
paint, turn \1ure &amp; ac
cessories? Call Becky at

Fury

conditioning,

E)(perienced carpenters,
aluminum , v inyl siding, install i ng,
cabinets,
pane l ing , general carpenter work . Phone 1·304-

eight cylinder, four door. In 882·2090 or 1·304·773·5678.
A· l condition. Phone 985·
3900. . .

E)(cavating
1976 FORD · Granada, 8l
$2,250.00. Low mileage, ex· J &amp; F BACKHOE SER ·
cellent condition. Reason VICE liscensed &amp; bonded.
for selling, no longer drive. septic tank insta lla tio n,
Phone 992·5511.
water &amp; gas lines . E x·
cavating work &amp; tr ansit

'73 BUICK ELECTRA 225,
AM·FM tape player, PS,

layout. 992·7201 .

P B, automatic
rear
defroster, power seat and

DOZER work . Small jobs a
specialty. Dependa ble ser·
vice. )42·2753 .

trunk lid. 32,000 actual

miles, exc. cond: $1400. Call

742·2734.

1971 FORD Dump truck .

1974 AMC Matador, 6 cyl., 3
speed, 61,500 miles, $1,200
or best offer, 773·5236.

84

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

SEWif&gt;jG
Repairs,

makes1
Fabric

MACHINE
s-ervi ce,

992 ·2284 .
Shop,

· all

Th e

PomerOy .

Authorized Singer Sales
and Service. We sha rpen

73
Vans &amp; 4 W.O.
Scissors.
1973 CHEVY VAN · custom
paint, carpeted
and ELWOOD
panelled, 307, 3-spd. Exc. RE PAl R cond., 153 Burger Ave.,

call 446·3862. $1400.
74

Motorcycles

1978 KAWASAKI KZ 650

tlre·axle,trailer $1,600. Call
1-614·873· 3008 .

Wan!ed to Buy
CHIP WOOD. Poles' max.
diameter 10" on largest
end. $12 p-er ton. tlundled.
slab. S10 per ton . Delivered
to Ohio Pallet Co., Rt. 2,
Pomeroy 992·2689.

motorcycle,

BOWERS
Sweepers,

toasters. irons, all small
appl iances. Lawn mower.

,_.ext to State Highway
Garage on Route 7, 985·

3825.

color blue . APPLIANCE SERVICE :
Call
949·2649.
all makes washer, dryers,
THE MEIGS County ·
range_s , dishwashers ,
Humane Society pets of the
week are: Russian blue 1978 SUZUKI RM 370 dirt disposals, water tanks . Call
cats, tabby cats, one black bike, good condition. 742· Ken Young at 985·3561
before 9 a.m . or after 6
and white· cat,one labrador 2068.
p.m.
puppy type, f.our black and
tan puppies, one black and
Auto Parts
tan adult, one shepherd 76
85
General Hauling
&amp; Accessories
type, one miniature collie .
992·6260.
EIGHT FOO'f Wh ite AGRI ·LIME Spreading,
fiberglass topper for Ford, limestone and fill dirt
2 COON DOGS. 1 black and sliding glass; like new. hauling. Leo Morris, 742·
tan, 2 yrs.old. 1 ;'-/afker 4 $300.00. Phone 949-2631 .
2455.
years old. 742·217&amp;.

50$

"' ~

Home
Improvements

81

now 992-6309 or 742·2211.

Good cond. 949·2042.
POMEROY
LANDMARK

5 € F•.• I t:e.s:::=

Autos for Sale

71

1977 CHEVETTE,
cond. 985·4256.

FIREWOOD $35 a trucK

and

sink

and water tank, gas lights,
2 large cabinets, mu st be
tow ed. $500. 992-5260 .

wall 2 Di.JROC and Hampshire
of cross boars, 843· 2933.
cerami cS, chenille items,
ow l s,
grapes,
flower 1 GENTLE marte, 6 years
arrangements, fish, etc. old, willwork, $400 ; pony
Stop n across from the ·cart, harness, $125; 6 ton
Minersville Ball Park .
rubber tire farm wagon
ones,

56
Pets for Sale
HOOF HOLLOW: Horses

. - .,
Dally Seallllel

992-5682

KING SIZE handmade SIXTY POUND feeder
quilt in Meigs Local pigs, have had shots, tail

E. Main St.

--hlln....

Hrs. : Mon.-Fri.
9 A.M.-5:30P.M.

electrical work

Misc. Merchanise

•

"' -

-Auto and Truck
Repair .
-Transmission
Repair

r~;:::;;;;:;;;;;;;;:::r~==~~~;=;~=~~~==~~~==~

.

4892

.CJARAGE

CARPENTER
SERVICES"

Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph. 992·2772
11·19·1 mo.

Hotpoint Mi(rowave Oven,
Ret. S429
U69
Homt:lite Super 2 Chain Saw
(28-2000)
Re!ll. lt5.95
NowS16S.9S
(Price tncl~des Fret carr ying .
use)
Comfort Glow Kerosene
Heaters, Econcmy UI·OI6J,,
Ret. S139.tl
New 1129.95
Stake - Be_~
Coaster Wagon
(22-1652), Ret . S46.f5 Now$-4l.U
1 Good Used Dryer
S7.5

General

_ 16 E. Second Street .

Alum·1·num

-Plumbing and

---Now At;
Pomeroy
landmark

FOUR bedroom house. Call
992·5742 alter 5 p.m.

EAF9RD[B
1
VIRGil B.

,; AAA

Windows

Prefer

NEAT. AND NICE :- A
small one floor frame
home with one bee room,
dining room, sunporc~.
part l;lasement, and a
large block st&lt;;&gt;rage
building. Near the new
bridge. $15,000.
AN ACRE IN TOWNPlus a 12x65 Holly Park
mobile home that Is .
mostly furnished. Real ,
nice with new carpet
and set up, for wOOd
burner. ONLY! $16,500,
WRAP ' AROUND
PORCH - Makes this
home look Inviting, A
1V2 story frame tho! hos
4 bedrooms, 1'12 baths,
paved • perking for .4
cars, a~d an equipped
kitchen. very creon and
nicely decorated. :tuST! .
$35,000.
OlD Y,OU SAY BRICK?
- That Is what this
home has to off"' and o
whole lot more. Comes
with 3 bedrooms, 1112·
baths, big bosement,
wOOd burning fireplace,
•garage and a garden
spot. What more could
yoo ask tor? Coli today
to see. $45,000.
NOT ONE, llUT , TWO
FIREPLACES- Hard·
wood floors almost
everywhere Is one of the
nice things about this
l'h story frame home ·
with a full ba!l&lt;'ment,
famlll'
roo·m,
4
bedroo~•· and a big lot.
$27,000.
FARM .
WITH
MINERAL RIGHTS - .
Approximately 23 acr4!a
with on 8 room farm !
house. set up for a wood
burner. HOI a niCe kit·
chen, 5 be!lrooms, · 2
baths, .ond a full basement. Approximately ' l
acres are II liable an i
about B are tenu. ~

..,FR"'E_.E._:ESTJMATES

• Replacement

underpinning,

Housing
Headquarters

Ph. 614·949·2358
Evenings &amp; Weekends
10·9·tfc

&amp;

e x•

'JlPrienc"

work
-Concrete work

Size 54x60, $25. each. 985·
3915. .
.

blocks to level, with fuel oil
tank and stand. 992·3979.

Real Estate

Yea r

5

• Storm Doors
• Storm Windows

520. Afghans, one brown,
yelloW, other green, white.

2 BEDROOM Apt. car~el
throughout on 2nd floor. In
racine.

elnsulation

843·4831.

upstairs apartment. Three

Mobile Homes
for Sale

n1shed,

13
Insurance
AUTOMOBILE
IN·.
SU RANCE been can celled?
Lost your
operator's license? Phone
992·2143.
,

board, laundry

1 · 304~BB2 ·

jack ets.

"Your Needs
Are My Business"
Ph. 446·4741

Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding

married couples. 1·614·423·
1968 HOMETTE Mobile 8257 for appointment.
.Home, 2 bedroom, fully Available Dec. 1.
carpeted, partially !ur·

formation at 992·7314.

Have vacancy In my home

.

Hours M·S 8·5
992·5101
Ferguson 20
$2,000
John Deer A- Make·of·
fer
M.F. 285 With Cab$12,000

ONE downstairs and one

Viand Street, Point
nt, wv Phone 675·

woman, women, men or
couple. If, in·
terested ca II for more in-

lor elderly person. Room &amp;

2566.

· two '

A\,

two bedrooms, new
B x s Sates, Inc.,

elderly

wanted to o·o

Furnished apartments, 992-

3129, 992·5914, or

be&lt;lroorriS, bath &amp; 'h , new
. 1970 PMC,

12 Situations Wanted
HAVE VACANCY in our
home for elderly people,

1B

3 AN o 4 RM f4.rnlshed ap- .
ts. Phone 992·5434.

new carpet.
pion, 12 x 60, 1wo '

Fulton-Thompson
Tractor Sale$
Spring
Ave., Pomeroy

Ap,artment
for Rent

bedrooms~

LADY FOR Housekeeping
tor a · retired man. Paul
Orr, 949·2193 or 985·35U.

ad·ei 6 rooms, 2 baths, l1f2

~ WANT&amp;b

2461.

disability policy at no cost pet. 1971 Cameron, 14 x 64,

2666.

• APPROXIMATELY 5
week·old aeogle puppies.
.985·4184.

Five Points. $125.00 mon·
thly, $75.00 deposit. 949·

three bediooms, new car·

Call for appointment at 949·

... ,

trailer, three miles west of

tor Sale

following ." Needed at Qnce.

Giveaway •

INVENTORY .
REDUCTION SALE

TWO BE ORO OM furnished

..

tion of pers~;»nalized
Christmas gifts . And
Christma s stockings,
s h.rts , h a t s , and

hangings, purses, lots

and

Health Care Center has the

WOMAN TO live in with
elderly gentleman. Paul S.
Starcher, Sliversville, Rt.
3, Portland, Oh.· Box 162·B.
' NO HUNTING day or night . 45770.
·•on the Paul Sayre property,
Art Wolfe property and BRAKE MECHAN IC, must
Charles Wolfe property.
be qualified, salary based
on experience. Send com·
NOW OPEN for Christmas plete resume to Box 729·K
Season. Large selection of c ·o Dally Sentinel,
Poinsettias, from $1.00 to
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
$10.00. Christmas cactus,
hanging boskets, &amp; foil age ·
plants. Open dally 9·5, sun. lR.N;. l!Pf'l ~·or. CMA to work
li&amp;hor•..._ar.ticl!: Call 992·
1· 5. ·
Hubbord's M
~1 Monday -Friday 9·5.
, !Greenhouse, Syracuse. 992·
'
-·mn•n t.;. .'
~76.
widiiTED: Managing
beauty operator with

'4

references

12

INSULAJION
.

2583.

sale.

Sho. p

BLOWN

occasions. 992-6342 or 992-

acres. 992·7741.

P~int

·

""e orr er a wide selev

Call Howard
949·2862
949·2160
1·22-lfc

1

CAKES decorated for all

tress and springs, 1
dresser, 6 dining room
chairs, 1 gas heater, 2400
BTU, small couch, 1 con·

.

f~~~~~~~6~-~5~·t=tc~~~=~~~~~·~5~·1~m~o~.~p~d;:.~~~=:====~10~·~7·~1f~c~

Citizens. 843·49S1 or 843·
2815.

car garage, basement, 21J2

deve lop

Rt. 3, Box 54
Racine, Oh.
Ph
. 614·843·2591

pick-up load. Delivered,
wi II stack for Senior

shifts? Feel the need to

total electric, carpeted, 2

answer for you . Due to

Be paid
to learn
a valuable skill.
Military Police, · .A,d·
ministration, Food Ser·
vice, ' Mechanics. Good
~ · IM!nellts. Advancement
· opportunities. Must be
, 18·3~. high schOol
. graduate or high school
1
' sehior: Army Recruit·
lng · 992-7113 or 594-~3231
. collect.

Mapile Homes

42

Gardens .
wood burner,

FreeEstimates
Reasonable Prices

1n S ta II ed
Repaired

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Misc. Merchanise
54
Firewood for sate, Mixed
types of wood . $35.00 per

sole radio. 992·7309.
tor Rent
THREE
BEDROOM FIREWOOD lor
trailer. for rent, furnished. Phone 992'7567
$200.00 per month. Must

RNs and L,..Ns, looking ·for
challenging and rewarding
work? Tired Of rotating

. ' &lt;leaning and painting.
. ~ All work guar.anteed.

Sezes
"From30x30"
SMALL

coin collections. Call 614·
767·3167or557·3411 .

NICE 4 room Muse with 2 FULL BEDS with mat·

$39,500. Call weekdays 742·
2460.
Memory
.F ir,eplace,

un ·

and downspouts, guHer

Sizes fro"' 4x• to 12x40

Nothing
too watches
large. Also,
guns,
pocket
.and

roof work,

new or repair gutters
•

Utility Buildings

ArrENT 1 oN ,
{, M·
PORTANT TO YOU) Will
pay cash or certified check
for antiques and collec·
tibles or entire estates.

01

!'~~=~~~~~~~~~~~~:;~;=:=;~~===~====~
ALL STEEL
G•'"A
uucrs. . ROGER HYSEU.'S
Fann Buildings
. &amp; Sid"lng .

..

FEDERAL ELECTRONIC
ments. Call after 6 p.m.
992·2288.
speaker.with
$165.00.100
742·2236.
siren
watt

with

acreage, fencing
qnd .
several outbuildings. Many
extras. Owner relocating .

SPACIOUS ·home,

BEDROOM

furnished house, also two
bedroom furnished &amp; one
bedroom furnished apart·

ROOfiNG

All types

12 Park St.
Middleport, Oh .
Ph. 992-6263
Anytime
11 ·16·1mo.

Antiques

&amp; silver, class rings, pocket ~.,
.,;;;;.;;..;.;.;,;,;..;.;....;."'i::::::~;::;~:;::~::~
watches, chains, diamonds
GIJN SHOOT: Saturday &amp; ~o on . Copper brass and I 31
Homes for Sale
32
Mobile
Homes
for Sale
·,evening starting at 6 :30 batteries, antique items~
.p,m. Sponsored by the also ·do appraisals, com - Beautiful three bedroom 1974 HILLCREST trailer,
~,Rllcine Volunteer Fire plete auctioneer service.
ranch brick home in Baum
.. .oepartment, at building in ,Over 3 years experience in Addition, Pomeroy, Ohio. 12x52, two bedrooms. fur·
underpinning,
· ilashan. Factory choke business. Will buy com- Gas heat, central air con - nished ,
aw,.ning, air conditioning,
,,.guns only.
plete estates. Also take ditioning. Call 985·3814 or set
up on rental lot in Mid·
consignments.
Auction 992·2571.
dleporl.
992·2885.
·MATERNITY
tops : every Friday night/ 7 p.m.
J Velour,
flannel, turtle Ossie's Auction House,
COMFORTABLE three
Rentals
-.neck, blouse$, long sleeves, Middleport, Oh.99H370.
bedroom home with biith,
,.,short · sleeves, maternity
storm windows and doors.
·ie'a ns, slac~s. dresses,
Insulated, central heat,
~~lingerie and more at the
carport and garage on 41
Houses tor Rent
~ Watermelon Patch, Sth St.,
large lot. Low util ities .

some great gifts as a Sen·

1800

heat in Racine _ Available
December 1. HU-423·8257
for appointment.

smalL Check prkes before

11
Help Wanted
Deer Slug shooting m~tch, GET VALUABLE training
Sunday, 1p.m. ~t the lzaak as a young business person
n Walton Farm.

with

t&lt;lllet lacilitres, forced air

Also do appraising.
SHOOTING MATCH at sell.ing.
Osby . (Ossie) Martin. 992·
Corn H!&gt;llow in Rutland . 6370.
Every sunday starting at
noon.
Proceeds being
TO BUY: Class
donated to the Boy Scout WANIED
ring
f,
wedding·
bands,
" Troop 2~9. 12 gauge factory anything stamped 10k,
14k,
choke gun only!
18k, gold. Silver coins,
pocket watches. Call Joe
RACINE GUN SHOOT, Cla(k, 992·2054, Clark's
Racine Gun Club, every Jewelry, Pomeroy ~ Ohio.
Friday night starting at
7:30 p.m. Factory choke
USED FURNITURE. Gold
guns only.

=· .,_________ _

·;.

BUILDING

Contact Ed Surkett Barber
No Item too large or too
Shop, Middleport.

-New Haven, W.Va .

PWMBING
AND
·
HEAliNG

square foot floor space,

Gold, . si lver or foreign
coins or any gold or silver
Items. · Antique furniture,
glass or china, will pay top
dollar, or complete estates.

I PAY hi.ghest Prices
possible for gold and silver

·.

TRAILER spaces for rent.
Soothern Valley Mobile
Home Park, Chesh ire, Oh .
992·3954.

old furniture, desks, gold
rings, jewelry, silver

:;, 992·6260.

REME¥JlERING THE DEAD - BLihop Norman
McFarland leads .a procession of C&amp;tholle prleata
durmg memorial services in Las Vegas Monday !or the

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

5

Farmers hope for better prices.
The state's only burley tobacco
RIPLEY, Ohio (AP) ...,. Southern .
Ohio farmers are leafing through market opened Monday, .with two
their balance sheets this week warehouses and a third' eliPected to
hoping to break even on 1980's tobac- start business on Wednesday. ·
Last year's heavy rains took a toll
co crop following last year's beatin);(.
on Ohio's tobacco growers. Fanners
were unable to dry .it well, and what
was available was lighter in weight.
All a resuli, the price and volwne
(Continued from page 1)
fell. Only 7 million pounds were sold
percent cut is oilly part of the finan- · for $7.6 miillon in 19'19 througl) the
cial problem fa.cing two-year Ripley markets, compared to 12.5
colleges. "Double-digit inflation, the million pounds sold for more than
pressures of enrollment increases of $i6 miillon the previous year.
better than 10 percent, and state
Warehouse marketers called the
cash flow problems have already put 1979 crop the worst in the past
the pinch on us," he noted.
1
decade. But according to many, this
Roach said most tw()oyear cam- year's crop appears much better.
puses have been able to tighten their
''This year, it'.s a real good crop as
belts and absorb the first two cuts by far as quality goes," said Jay West
implementing hiring freezes, of Farmers' Warehouse. "It may be
enlarging class sizes, eliminating a little light, but that's good, for
equipment purchases and some smoking purposes. It's selling at a
maintenance, and in some cases, good price, too."
raising tuition.
Farmers earned $166 for a 100For example, during the sununer, pound average, up $21 from last
Hocking Technical College, Nelson- 8eason'sopening day.
ville, met the problem by cutting
"I think there will be a far better
over $100,000 from its 1980:31 budget. crop as far as the total nwnber of
Roach said state officials are now poUnds goes," West Sllid. "Of courprojecting a $350 miillon revenue .
shortfall, and if Rhodes is forced to
make additional budget pairing, the
cuts would be in the 16-to-20 percent SPECIAL SERVICE WEDNESDAY
range for the remainder of the year.
The Pomeroy United Methodist
"I think it is safe to say that if Church will hold a special
. another 16-t()-20 percent budget cut Thanksgiving Eve Service on Wedis tagged .to the six percent we hesday evening at 7 p.m. The service
already have, it will begin to affect will offer the congregation an 01&gt;'
the quality of education," he said.
portunity to tell the things for which
'' In a recession when the reven11es they are most thankful. The service
are simply not there, we all have to will also Include prayers, poems,
hurt a little," Roach noted. "But scripture, hymn singing and an anOhio's &amp;I state-assisted colleges and them by the choir. The community is
universities, which comprises only invited to attend. ,
14 percent of the total state budget,
The choir will rehearse the Christhave had to cough up nearly half rl mas Cantata, "God's Love Gift,"
the revenues the state has recovered immediately following the Thanksas a result of the two previous cuts.'' giving Service.

Fu! nts hed ·R~o!'"~ _

4S

�•

Meigs County happenings.
LOST DOG
Meigs County deputies were
notified Monday that a 11 month old
saddle back Beagle has been lost in
the East Letart area. The owner's
name is on the dog's collar.
Anyone having any information
are asked to call 247-2S48 or the
sheriff's office.

.

SQUAD CALLED
The Middleport Emergency Squad
was called to S. Third Ave., at 12:57
p.m. Monday for Homer Winebrenner who was taken to Holzer Medical
Center. The Rutland Unit at 6:46
a.m. went to Dexter for Worley
Davis who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

NEW. MEMBERS OF NATIONAL HONOR · Young, Sarah Goebel, Cassie Sheets, Sheryl Bush,
SOCIETY - Inducted into the National Honor Society Tammy Spencer, Lisa Collins; third row, John Beaver.
at Eastern High School Monday were first row J-r Rogie Gaul, Dave Gaul, Terry Snowden and Ed Werry.
Laura Eichinger, Beth Ritchie, Br~nda Rucker; Absent was Brian Collins.
second row, Carolyn Bowen, Alison Cawthorne, Kila

· JUDGMENT SOUGHT
Bank One of Pomeroy, N. A. has
filed suit in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court in the amount of
t.J,IS4.15 against United Security
.and Communications Inc., and Gale
and Ross f; . Hamrick, Bidwell.
Filing for divorce were Jp.nny L.
Adams, Tuppers Plains, against
David L. Adams, RP.edsville ; Philip
Owen Blackwood, Rt. 1, Rutland,
against youiza Kay Blac)!wood, New
Haven.
Filing for clil!solution of marriage
were Sherry Dawn Roush, Syracuse,
and John Michael Roush, Jr.,
Syracuse.

NOW AVAILABLE ...
New Bakeware items in

SPICE O'LIFE™ DESIGN

Pomeroy woman
hurt mmishap

M~~~!~~~g~

I

i

Area Deaths

FUNDS RECEIVED
State Auditor Thomas E.
Ferguson's office reported a total of
$21,714,482.15 in public assistance
and spec;ial activities payments'
were made in August to rrr Ohio
counties. Meigs Qounty's portion
was $62,420.16.

~,~~~~~L
~-~~j(.'

..

Buy your Corning

Bakeware by . the

piece or by !he
set. Ideal ' Christmas gift . for someone special.

......

~

""r,,lj::~,;Jif

Now you can get CORNING WARE bakec
ware in our very popular Spice O'Life design.
Add to your ·collection the 2:;i-qt. oblong
baking dish . the 2-Qt. loaf dish. the 13-inch
ope n roaster. the 1 y, · Qt. covered baking dish
and the B-inch square cake dish'

ELBERFELDS .IN POMEROY

. .BANK ONE ,. _

. . LEASING

~TO BUSINESS. INDUSTRY,

-AND THE PROFESSIONS

GAS
IS UP•••

Two FF A members
attend convention

I.

LEAF PICKUP
Anyone in Middleport having
leaves to be picked up is asked to
ed 992-li71L No further pickup of ·
lea¥118 will be made except fur those
ealllnll in.

.Box Spring and Mattress Sets, Twin or Full Size.

Reg. '229 per set
..

·

.SALE. ON FOR _A LIMITED TIME ONLY
l h kt" it fru m CeorgeGobel lirmru·s Posr ure Ill. It Pusa1r~' 11 11 and Posl\lrt' !
matt rt'SS sets prm ·i d ~ fi rmness where you nft"d it most.
Exduslvr Posture-FrAmes lt In e\'er:· Hemco Postu re S~ t gl\'e your

.

BUT YOU CAN SAVE
WITH
HOME DELIVERY.

hack s upport whcren·r you twist or tum.

·

The Daily Sentinel

en tine·

at

e

POMEROY-MIDDlEPORT.
OHIO W~ONESOAY, . NOVEMBER
26, 1980 .
.
. I

VOL XXI NO. 154

FIFTEEN CENTS

If

· Four die, fire destroys 257 homes
SAN BERNARDINO, Calif.- Afirestonn fed by erratic winds up.to
60 mph winds churned ac:oss the foothills of san Bernardino on
Tuesday, charring 257 homes and forcing thousanda to flee. Four
people died and about tOO were injured in what officials called the wor1
stfirelnthecity'shistory.
Acting Gov. Mike Curb declared a state of emergency in San Bernardino County, citing property damage estimates of$« million.

KENNER, La . - A gasoline trucker who allegedly tried to beat a
freight train to a railroad crossing has beefi coarged with negligent
. homicide after a collision and blast killed seven people, torched a
neighborhood bar and plunged parts of Kenner into darkness.
Flames shot 100 feet into the air and hundreds of people were forced
to flee their homes following the accident Tuesday night in this New
Orleans suburb . .
The truck driver, identified by police as Glendon R. Russey, 36, of
Baton Rouge, a driver for Mobil Corp., was booked on seven counts of
negligent homicide.
·

)fan given 45 year prison tenn
NEWARK, N.J. - A22-yeaHid man who shot off part of his finger
in a bank robbery - thus leaving police their prime clue - has been
sentenced to 45 years in prison.
· Robert Martin, of Newark, sentenced Tuesday by U.S. District
Judge Frll!lerick B. Lacey, shot off·the tip of his left index finger With a
shotgun while robbing $3,204 from Broad National Bank in North
Arlington In 197.8, authorities said. '

Daily lottery winner
CLEVELAND - The winning nwnber selected Tuesday night in the
Ohio Lottery's daily game "Tbe Number" was 858.

..

Westher .. ~I&gt;-

.• ,Wl\lter storm watch for l!lte .tonight ~ 'l'hui'Sday. Increasing
cloudiness tonight With sleet or snow developing late. tonlgbt and
changing to snow Thursday. Lows toniglit near 30. Highs THursday
near 4{), Chance of preCipitation 50 percent tonight and near too percent Thursday. Winda southelisterly 1G-15 mph tonight.
'

FriUy 1llrGulh SliDday

CbaQce of I1IOW fiimtea maiuly nortbeut Friday. Fair Saturday.

Chalice of sbowen SliDday. Warmla&amp; tbrolqb the peliod with hlitu iD
the 19" t0s Friday, rlliDII to the upper tOs to low 50s Slltunbly aDd SUDday. LOws iD the mid to apper ZOII Friday and In the 30s Saturday aud
Swlday.

Not litW)OIIe has a pilgrun moUier
Pl!n)eroy kindergarten
plftn\ I'~ a., food for \he turkey dill-

tD li:?I!I ·M

serve
· chi!~

dfll!t!ll

•ner· but Annie· Chajm!sn·
the only """ to come in CIJII(ume. The
children donned their homemade feather headbands and pilgrim hats for
the dinner which concluded their study of the holiday and its significance.

!More aftershocks hit Italy
NAPLES, Italy (AP) ~ More llftershocks. rocked the Naples•
Sorrento area of southern ·Italy
today as workers kept digging for
bodies and the chief of relief
operations said he was planning the
evacuation of thousands made
homeless by Europe's worst earthquake in 65 years.
The continuing tremors brought
down buildings that escaped the ear- ·
thquake Sunday night and
frightened hundreds of thousands of
survivors bivouacking In parks,

bulldmers or other equipment.
Fallen stones and collapsed
bridges blocked many roads, but an
Interior Ministry official said relief
teams had arrived at every community In the stricken region by
Tuesday evening.
The military command estimated
the death toll at 3,132. The parish
priest in Sant' Angelo dei Lombardi
said he believed I,500 corpses were
beneath the ruins there. Officials in
Laviano, 46 miles east of Salerno,
. predicted they might find 700 bodies

GAlliPOLIS, Ohio (AP) - A · said.
poblic hearing next month could
The southern Ohio facility aphelp ease traffic on the Ohio River parently Is the only lock left ·on the
near here, where barges are strung Ohio River with a 60().foot-long
out up to five miles because of the locking chamber. Others have 1,200~bled Gallipolis Locks and Dam.
foot main locks, little help to most
Tl)e main 60().foot lock has been river tows, built for accommodation
closed for several weeks for repair by larger locks.
of a gate, forcing river traffic to use
Because of their construction,
a &amp;foot auxllia.ry lock. As a result, most tows have to be separated to go
the nonn¥1 four-hour locking through the locks, located 15 miles
procedure now takes several hours south of Gallipolis. The jam is the
longer, depending on the size of the result.
tow.
Olj. Tuesday morn!Jig, 19 tows with
·The U.S. Anny Corps of EJ181neers . mote than 185 barges were' waiting
llljlecta to have the main lock back · to pass thtough upstream. Across
In operation ne~ week. even though the IQCks, 18 tows With 159 barges
•only a new !)'stem pennanently will waited to continue downstream
ease the problem. Tqat's expected to pe•sp, Delays were av~aging 96
cost hundreds of millions of doll8t8 ~lour!!. ai minutes - j11- 1 over four
and could be years away, the Co11JS daya. ·
'

under the rubble in their town.
The Interior Ministry said 2,400
bodies had been recovered and
200,000 people were homeless. It was
Europe's most deadly earthquake
since a 1915 quake killed 30,000
people in the Avezzano region of centralltaly.
"We will set up a well-organized
exodus for those who have survived
in the towns choked with thousands
of deaths, " said Giuseppe Zamberletti, who was put in charge of
relief operations on Monday.

Cargos being held up included
coal, petrolewn, chemicals, steel,
sand and gravel.
" They have to be caref!ll going into those locks," said Lt. Cmdr. Jack
Scarborough of the U.S. Coast Guard
station in Cincinnati. "A 1,20G-foot
tow has to go to the side of the river
to line his barges up with the Jocks,
and then he runs the risk of having
the tug caught in the river current.
It's tricky."
The small size of. the Jocks,
coupled with a bend in the river,
makes it one of the largest hindrances to smooth traffic on the Ohio
River system, said a corps
spokesman from Huntington, W.Va.
Some proposals for improving conditionS at the 43-year-old locks call
for a new channel or bypass canal to

OPEN FRIDAYS TILL 8:00

•

.
ByBobHoelllcb
For almOit the past 40 years, a
large lighted CI'OII8 has appeared as
though aupended from the Sky over
Pomeroy and the Big Bend area.
It is no longer there, but you can
help raise the CI'OII8 again if you'd

like.
1be first

Fufniture ,-&lt; Je_~. ,lry.
MIDDUPOII', O.

.

.C ross will light village .once .again

THE TWO-IN-ONE STORE

GALLON.

992-2156

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Despite several problems

DON'T WASTE ANOTHER
CALL TODAY
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Seven perish in truck-train crash
/

ce program for towns wishing to
Products that make life easier.
become involved in a bank protecarea;
two
sister•,
Mrs.
Esther
King,
Be
sure
to
see all the other Corning Ware Products in
tion project. The report by the corps
Grace Hayes Gabriel Columbus, and Mrs. Helen Nease
the housewares depart~ent on the 1st floor.
was done after a visit to the location.
Minersville Route I, and several
Council gave approval for the
Mrs. Grace Hayes Gabriel, 93, for- nieces and nephews. Besides her
Pomeroy-Middleport Lions Club to mer Meigs resident, died Monday at
parents she was preceded in death
place flag holders on some of the the Riverside Hospital in Columbus.
by her husband and three brothers
parking meters of the town and
Mrs. Gabriel was a daughter of the including Carson Hayes, Syracuse.
agreed to discontinue a contract late Charles and Mary Hallam
Funeral services will be held at 10 r~----------_J'-----~------'-'-'-~----:-----­
with Harry Evans, financial ad- Hayes, Racine. She is survived by
a.m.
Wednesday at the Rutherfordvisor, and to complete a new con· two sons, four daughters, several
Corbin Funeral Home in Wortract for technical assistance.
grandchildren
and greatCouncil authorized Mayor Hoff- grandchildren, all of the Columbus thington with burial to be in Milford
Center.
man to check with Solicitor Bernard
Fultz oon procedures to follow in
selling a lot at the corner of Garfield r-----------------------...J
and Third Sts. Council informally
agreed that the lot should be sold.
The .lot was given to Middleport
ViUage several years ago by the late
Mary Elizabeth Hartinger Thomas.
Council members were asked for
suggestions at last night's meeting
on possible uses for the lot before it
was informally agreed to investigate
the possibilities of selling it.
Mayor Hoffman said he will
present at the next regular meeting
BANK ONE OF POMEROY. NA
a salary schedule for employes of
614/992·2133'
the town for 1981.
Council aired complaints about
barking dogs, truck travel through t;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;:;;;;:;;;c;;;;~
the town and porch repairs at village
· haU.
Attending the meeting were
Mayor Hoffman, Clerk Jon Buck,
Councilmen Marvin KeUy, Carl
Horky, William Walters, Dewey
Horton, Jack Satterfield and Allen
King .

Two members of the Eastern
FFA, Jeff Newell and Ron Smith,
recently atlended . the National
Future Farmers Convention in Kansas City, Mo.
During the week, members had
the opportunity to associate with
other FFA members !rom all around
the U. S. There were members from
as far North as Alaska and as far
south as Panama.
Through the week the members
had the opportunity to hear speake~
such as ArHlnkletter, Hank Aaron,
Bob · Berglan, Secretary of
Agriculture, and many other great
speakers.
Also through the week the members had the opportunity to attend
numerous activities such as leadership workshops, the American Royal
Rodeo, public speaking contest, and
many others that were planned.
On the trip to and from the convention members visited such
historical places as Abraham Lincoln's home and tomb, Springfield,
ill., the home of Mark Twain in Hannibal, Mo., and the Gateway Arch in
St. Lo~is. The FFA thanked all those
supporting its rec~nt project.

I

.fBIQm.

ASK TOWED

A Pomeroy woman was injured in
one of three traffic accidents investigated Monday.
'!'he Gallia-Meigs Post of the Ohio
Highway Patrol said Terry G.
Evans, 30, was westbound on SR 143
in Meigs County at 6 p.m. when
Evans lost control of the car and
went off the right side of the road,
striking an embankment.
Slight damage was listed to the
car and Evans was injured, although '
not immediately treated.
The patrol also investigated two
car-deer accidents Monday.
Troopers said they went to Meigs
County following an accident at 6: 4{)
p.m. when a car driven by Arnold P.
Johnson, 23, Pomeroy, collided with
a deer on SR 7.
According to the report, the deer
was running across the road when
the mishap occurred. There was
slight damage to Johnson's car.
The patrol reported James V. Dobbins, 21, Vinton •. was northh\lund on .
Bill George Rd. m Gallia County at 7
p.m. when his car struck and killed a
deer, causing slight damage to his
car.

Have a

....... ERFELDS

CLOSED FRIDAY
All Middleport village offices will
be closed Thursday and Friday in
observance of the Thanksgiving
holiday.

Marcy Sexson, Melanie Root, Denise White, Ray
Werry, Tanunie Starcher, April Parker, Kathy Pooler,
and Pebbles Blake.

.

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admitted-Worley Davis, Dexter;
WUliam Haley, Rutland; Unda
Crites, Pomeroy.
Discharged-Dorothy Hartenbach,
Pamela Alley, George Dean, Earl
Snyder, Sarah Keedei; Pearl Uttle.

r----,---------------------""-

A marriage license was issued to
James A. Thomas; 19, Pomeroy, and
Donna Jean Williams,l7, Pomeroy.

SENIOR MEMBERS - Senior members of the
National Honor Society at Eastern High School are, 1-r,

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.,..,..,._

YOUR HOME IS WHERE OUR HEART 15.

CI'OIII

wu placed, on

8

temporary bails, on the property of
Mr. and Mrs. Nolan Shuster, Uncoln
Hill, just before Chri.ltmas, 1940.
lllade of wood, that first cross wa~
conatruc:ted by the Rev. Ralph
Kuether, then pastor of Trinity
Church, in his workahop at the parsona~e which wa1 located In what
are now thtllaw offices of Mr. and
Mrs. Chad&lt;•s Knight

Rey. Kuether BerVed what is now
known as Trinity Church from
January, Ul37, to Odober, 1946. He
wu an Idealist iD lhe aense that he
cherished and punued high and
,noj)le prinelplell. He wu also a
reallat, a very practl«* 11181!, as was
~ by Ida reedlaD to the 1937
fiood whidJ lnundlted Puo-oy just
after Ida arrival.
Htstlrelawortatllllehun:band
In the town woo 111m IIDmedlate
reaped IIICI the admiratlen at the

COIJllliiiiii1Y,

' '

He enjoyed woodworkiJii worklflll.with Ida llandll ~ IIIII iplllt
Mondays In hll shop. So - 'bt built
Lhat fil'llt crUIS.
1'o him t~ cr&lt;,;s was a symbol of

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faith. He fell that the greatest
strength of people lay in their
religious faith. Wanting tangible
evidence of that faith, he was inspired to build a cross which would
shineoverthearea.
AssiSting In the building of that first cross Willi Harold Sauer and the
late Olan Goodwin. The Ohio Power
Company put the first cross into
place and provided free electricity
for a few years.
Frank Carson, a cousin of Mrs.
Glenroy Ewing and the late Louis
Reibel; a Ufelong faithful worker In
the church, were . the criglnal
"keepers" of the cross. Later, Mn.
Nolan (Clara) Shuster accepted the
responsibility of lighting the cross.

In . those ' early years, it was
necessary that Mrs. Shuster go outside, regardlesS of the weather, to
turn on the lighta. Later, a switch
w!L'I placed inside ber home to make
herdedlcatedaerviceabiteasier.
So wen was the large cross
overlooking the villqe received,
that it lOIII Its temporary status. 1be
Federated Circle, later renamed
Trinity Circle, and the Busy Beflil
Sewlnl arele acc:epted the reiii)Cinstbllity of the eiectrlc billa. 'Ibe Clrcle IIIIer dllbulded, but the Busy
Bees continued faithful tp this

reiiJOIIIIbWty.
Dvrinl tile mlnlltry of the Rev.
Robert L. IIepa-, IMI-1110, It
(Contlnuedonpqe 11)

.

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