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                  <text>:Earthquake survivors resist move orders
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p

'*'I

·b Dick Cavalli'

I'VE
reN A L..Or
OF Dl# I J!NTIONO
IN M'l TIM&amp;.

I've HAD DE:.Te:NTI~ ~
TALKINc:t IN CLAee •.•

NAPLES, Italy (AP) - Fourteen more tremors an official outside Salerno.
jolted southern Italy during the night and ejirly today,
"Nobody really wants to go, because it would mean
but hun~ of earthquake surivors resisted govern- leaving ~ir towns, but the weather is ugly and maybe
. ment orders to move.
·
· · people don't know that it Isn't so nice living in a
One man killed himself rather than leave his dead trailer," Giuseppe ~berletti, the government's
sons. A deaf woman stayed in her shattered cellar special commissioner for the .earthquake zone, told
seven days, surviving on biscuita and tomato sauce.
Tl\e Associated Press. ·
·
'
The tremors were recorded by the Vesuvius ObTwo strong aftershocks jolted the quake area Sunservatory and the National Geodynamics Research day, arousing new fears among the survivors. But the
Council in Naples, but there was no immediate report only casualty reported· was a 6Z-year-old man who
of nei casualties.
.
rushed from his shaking house with two children and
Military officials sitid many of the homeless in tent
died of a heart attlick.
camps insulted soldiers and government workers as , . "Ninety-five percent of the people here still won't
they arrived with buses to transfer them to hotels being sleep in their houses becaua.e they have cracks and
requisitioned by the government.
.
might fall down in another quake," said Mario Di Feo
"Some sent their childnm running in all directions of Volturara, II village east of Naples.
just to create confusion and delay our operation," said

e
FOR iHROWIN&amp; FCOD
AROUND IN THE:
LUNCHROOM , ••

But Dr. Vicenzo Palumbo of Calabrltto said the
people "look with suspicion on the invitation to move to
hotels. They might accept going to live in other Italian
and European cities where there are other people from
their villages. They would feel less alone ,•'
.
With snow, sleet and sub-freezing temperatures
threatening the health of those in tent camps, Zamberletti's office announced that 12,000 beds were
available in resort hotels along the coasts.
The government said it would pay the hotels their
usual rates, pay for the food and other living expense~
of the refugees and get them out by April30, before the
start of the tourist season.
Interior Ministry officials said temporary housing
would be built.
The army estimates 265,000 people lost their homes

in the qwike Nov. 23 and that shelter must be provides
for 170,000 of these. About 65,000 are expected to go to
relatives or friends in northern Italy or foreign countries, and 30,000 are expected to remain in their towns .
and villages, getting by as best they can.
Mor.e than eight inches of snow had collected on the
rubble of some of the dev;~stated mountain villages by
Sunday afternoon, police said. Soldiers and firemen in
Sant' Angelo dei Lombardi and other towns still had
not recovered aU of the corpses buried in the rubble,
and the stench was considerable despite the cold.
The military conunand in Naples said 2,915 bodies
had been recovered, 1,574 people were missing and
7,fliYT were injured. It said no one was recovered alive
from the ruiru; Sunday, and rescue workers feared
most of the missing were '!_ejid.

•

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enttne

at

6UT THio 161HEI F=IRel
TIMf':I'VE:~
~TTENA~ ...

·- "

.

Check cause of mid air crash

/

Priscilla's Pop
NOTHING
EVER GETS

YOU rowN .' ·.

by Eel Sullivan.!
THE RE'STOF

"' ABO.JT THE:

DEPRE95EP"'

'MJRLD- Aa:l.JT
THE ECONOMY,
ABOUT THE
FUTU~ .'

US ARE
CONTI NUAL.I..Y

· THE GLOOM AND t:QJM

AFOUNIY US JUST SEEM
100 MUCH TO 6EAR .1

HILTON HEAD, S.C. - Investigators were trying to determine
today what caused two light planes to collide in flight Sunday, killing
all five aboard the aircraft.
.
The planes crashed Sunday near the Island Club resort complex,
barely mlssing some youths playing on nearby tennis courts.
One of the planes, which carried four people, was a six-passenger
Piper Cherokee, piloted by Thomas B. · Reynolds, 39, of Painesville
Township, Ohio. The other was an Aeronca Tri-Ghamp, piloted by
David Girimont, 28, of Hilton Head, who was alone In the piBne.

Five die in truck-car collision
ATGLEN, Pa. '-- Five people were killed and five were injured in a
crash Involving a pickup truck and a crowded station wagon near this
Olester County community over the holiday weekend, authorities
said.
.
.
.
The lruck, driven by Richard E. Ward, 19, West Grove, was headed
north on Pennsylvania 41 ahortly after 7 p.m. when it crossed into the
southbound lanes, striking the station wagon operated by Charles
Vogelsong Jr:, 65, of.Clearfield, pollee said.
Ward and Vogelsong were killed, along with three of Vogelsong's
grandchildren: Micah Patrick, 5 months, of Johnstown, Pa.; and
K!lren Barton, 10, and Jeff Barton, 8, both of Newark, Ohio, police
said.
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fo~ili

....

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WPI'Uptitm.. prohe. ~~

BUT lrQU ALWAY'S
CO\\E SMI Ll NEr

tHROUGH/

HOWro~

MANAGE lO
COP'E 50 WELL?

I MEAN
.!3E51[2ES

THAT.'

TRENTON, N.J. - State law eilforcement officials say they are in.vestigating possible corruption on the part of Department of Environmental Protection officials involved in the cleanup of hazardous
waste at the Chemical Control Corp. site in Elizabeth.
'
An Internal State Police report on the illegal dumping and a fire that
erupted in April during the cleanup was revealed Sunday in a report
by The Star-Ledger of Newark.

'Clean-cut' killer sought
POINT REYES STATION, Calif. -A "clean-cut" killer who stalks

women in remote parks and then psychologically tortures them before
ritualistic killings is being sought for questioning in seven unsolved
murders during the past )5 months, authorities said Sunday.
Marin County Sheriff AI Howenstein.said officials found a ''thread of
similarity" between four apparent homicide victims discovered in ·a
Northern Californili seashore park Saturday and the unsolved mur·
ders of three women on Mount Tamalpais hiking trails since fall1979.

Jenrette's wife may write article
CIDCAGO~ Rita Jenrette, whose husband was convicted in the Abscam scandal, might write an article for Playboy magazine about life
in Washington, a Playboy spokesman said Sunday.
Spokesman Dave Salyers said Mrs. Jenrette, wife oi Rep. John
Je',!l'l!tte, DS.C., WllB in Chicago recevtiy and attended one conference .
'lith Playboy editors.
"" Salyers said some portrait photographs were taken of the 30-yearold Mrs. Jenrette. But he said no contract was signed and as far as he
· knew there was no verbal agreement to do the story.

·Careless smqking major cause

AUTO

RJP~Il'S

•

DE~OIT (AP)- Careless cigarette smoking has been cited as the
cause of a fire that erupted at a group home for adults, killing five
el~rly men, authorities sitid.
·
The blaze brQke out about I a.m. Sunday at the Donahue Foster Care .
Home when bedding ignited after a resident lit a cigarette, officials
said. Seven of the home's 12 residents escaped, as did the supervisor
on .duty. One of the residenta got away by jwnping out a window, '
authorities said.
The five victims, ranging in age frtm 57 to 69, apparently died of
smoke inhalation, officials said.

•

''HOTICI HOW Ol;DIA P10P1.1 AJI8Ti.L. WlLLINQ
liND OOWN fO PIOI&lt; UP ALOUIY UTTI.I Dltar'

Ferry rescues 240 passengers
SEATTLE (AP)- A ferry has rescued about 240 passengers from
the cruiae !Ieamer Virginia V, which lost power, and ran aground in
Puget Sound, U.S. Coast Guard officials silld.
Offlciala said the 111&gt;-foot Virginia V, one of the Jut Puget Sound
stbllmers, WllB . on a chartered 9tUlBe Saturday night when a steam
valve blew and the ship lost power.
.
· Offlciala aald a ~tugboat towed the drifting Virginia Vto calm
waters. 1be ferry Walla Walla, hearinc a distress call, veered from it.!
~ l'1lll to the Virginia V, The rescue was completed early
Sun,lay.

Weather
'

Moetly cloudy with a cha!Jce of showers tonight. Lows Ill the upper
aftemoon~

·Chance of prec)pltatlon :.l percent tonight and Tuesday.
Soalhwesterly windii!G-Il mph tonight.
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· ll:lll ' ~ObloPoreeul- Wednel!d'lylhroughFrlday:Acbanceof
BilOW fluntes north Wednetlday. Sllowel'&gt; or snow flurrle~ Thursday.
Fllr Friday. Higbl from th£ 301 extreme north to the upper 4011 and 50s
lOUtH. Lowa 15 to 211 Wed~ay murnlng and rriicJ.:IOI tu mid-308 Thurlld8y and Friday.
/

second degree burns of the face, hands, chest and ankles while her
husband, Grant Williams is in fair condition with first and second degree
burns of the face a~d hands. They were first taken to the Holzer Medical
Center.

Explosion injures Cheshire couple
Mr.and Mrs. Grant Williams were
injured in an explosion at their
travel trailer, Fourth St., Cheshire,
about 4:40p.m. Sunday.
Middleport Fire Chief Jeff Darst
said apparently there was a leak in
the bottled gas in the trailer and the
gas collection exploded when Mrs.
Williams lit a cigaret lighter. Mrs.
Williams was blown out of the
trailer. Sides of the trailer were

blown away from the structure. The
trailer had been moved onto the lot
earlier Sp.nday.
The couple suffered burns about
the face and hands and other
possible injuries. They were taken to
Holzer Medical Center, Mrs.
Williams by a Gallia County
Emergency vehicle an!I.:Williams by
the Middleport Squad.
A fire resulting from the explosion

had burned itseif out when Mid·
dleport firemen arrived on the
scene.
Lodema Williams is listed critical
condition at Scioto Memorial
Hospital in Portsmouth where she
and her husband were taken
following treatment at the Holzer
Medical Center. Mr. Williams is in
fair condition.
In o~her Arfivitv

The Middleport and Vinton Fire
Departments answered a call to
Route 554, near Vinton, at 7:52p.m.
Sunday where a fire was 'reported at
the Harley Eblin residence, Route I,
Bidwell. Middleport Fire Chief Jeff
Darst said that an overheated chimney had caused paneling in the story
and a half frame home to catch fire.
The blaze was out when firemen
arrived and damages were not ex·
tensive.

Gallia County wrecks leave six hurt
Six people. were illjured in two treated.
traffic accidents In Gall)a County
The patrol cited Jones for failure
over the weekend.
to yield rikht of way and Gordon for
The Gallia-Meigs Post of the Ohio no operator's license.
Highway Patrol reported It went to
An early Saturday evening acCR I for a two-car wreck early Sun- . ci~nt is still under investigation,
day morning.
the patrol reported.
Troopers said Connie R. Jones,.18,
Henry Workman, 62, Waterloo,
Gallipolis, was eastbound at 2:45 was -westbound on SR 141 itt 6:08
a.m. when her car collided on a p.m. when his car collided head-on
hillcrest with a westbound car with an eastbound auto driven by
driven by Robert E. Gordon, 24, Douglas Bruce, 28, Kitts Hill.
Gallipolis.
Both cars were demolished and
Severe damage was done to both the drivers injured, along with a
cars, according to the repart. Jones passenger in Bruce's car; Donna K.
and an occupant in her car, ThereSa
Bruce, 18, Kitts Hill. They were
C. Greenlee, 22, Gallipolis, were In- taken to Holzer Medical Center by
jured.
.·
theGallia EMS.
Both were taken to Holzer Medical
Workman was admitted to the inCenter by a friend, where they were tensive care unit, suffering from
treated for cuts and bruises and chest injuries, where he was reporreleaseq.
ted in stable condi~on this morning.
. The patrol sitid Gordon ;was also
Douglas Bruce was admitted for
injured in the accident. but it was cuts and bruises, and was reported
not known this morning if he wa.s

k
Racine youth. hurt in wrec
.
.

~Mostly cloudy, windy and turning colder Tueaday with a chance of
llhowera or BROW flurries and temperatures falllng Into the 3011 by late

I

TWO CRITICALLY INJURED - A Chesl\ire couple has been transferred to Scioto Memorial Hospital in Portsmouth for treatment of burns
suffered in an exploslon at their mobile home Sunday afternoon in
Cheshire. Lodema Williams is listed In critical condition with first and

#

A Racilie youth was injured and skidded sideways Into a utility pole
the vehich! he was driving was breaking the pole in three places.
demolished dUring an accident
Smith sustained'&amp;compound fracFriday In the village of Syracuse.
lure to his left leg and a broken left
Chief of Police Milton Varian . arm. He was to Holzer Medical Cenreported tlllit Randy J. Slnith, ~8. ter by the Syracuse ER Unit and adwu traveling west on SR 124, across mitted.
·
from the post office, Friday at 11:45
Charges tnay be filf\J pending
p.m. Smith sahJ he lust ~or.trnl upon completitm of the investigation.
applying his '&gt;rak~s. His vehicle

in satisfactory condition this morning. Donna Bruce and a threeweek-old infant, Jason Bruce, were
treated and rele!ised.
An Albany woman was not injured
In a one-car crash in Meigs County
Saturday nfternoon.
The patrol said Sandra K. Kirk, 18,
was southbound on Scipio Twp. Rd.
53 at ,2:45 p.m. when her car went off
the right side of the road as she tried
to avoid potholes.
She lost control of the car, went
across the road an«! collided with a
tree, causing moderate damage, accOrding to the report.
A deer was killed in a collision
with a house being towed on U.S. 35
In Gallla County Saturday, troopers

said.
Dale A. Cornwell, 32, Cincinnati,
was eastbound at I : 50 p.m, when the
deer ran from the left side of the
road and hit the structure Cornwell
was towing, causing slight damage
to the house.
·
Troopers also reported Robert E.
Lowery, 19, Rio Grande, was eastbound on SR 588 in Gallia County at
8:20a.m. Saturday when he lost control of his car, went off the left side
of the road and knocked a fence
down.
Severe damage was done to
Lowery's car and he was not injured
In the mislllip. The patrol cited him
for failure to display valid
registration.

D Ufflplng
• COfflpuJln
1- • fs •
·
lncrease
.
Illegal dumping complainta are on
the increase since the removal of the
greenboxes,Meigssheriff'sdeputies
report.
The boxes were removed by the
Meigs county Commissioners
following the defeat of the landfill
operating levy in November.
Sherrif James Proffitt asks the
assistance .and cooperation of area
residents in helping curb the
problem. If any resident observes
ille~af durnp,ing the sheriif requests

tllat they attempt to obtain the llcense nwnber. description of tlie
vehicle, delcriptlon of the person
dumping 'and the time and location
an~notifyhisoffleeimmedlatiey.
The ~rtment Is investigation a
breaking and entering at the
Pomeroy Gun Club that OCCIJn'ed
sometlme between Friday evenlag
and Saturday afternoon. Entry
was made by breaking out a wiDdow
in the rear of t:le building. A repart
on what was taken was not
disclosed.

�.

.3-Tile Dally Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pomeroy,' O., Monday, Dec. I, 1980

Southern .cops first victory

Opinions &amp;
Comments

By Scott Wolfe
HEMLOCK ~ Southern's Tornadoes placed 10 men in the scoring
colwnn to make their season debut a
success 61-46 over Miller here Saturday evening.
In registering Jhe victory, Coach
Carl Wolfe' took a scene fi·om last ·
year's Teaford and play'rruiking
guard Kent Wolfe led the Tornadoes'
scoring attack with 14 and 10 points
respectively. Junior guard Tom
Roseberry also chipped in 10 points..
Miller drew first blood (ollowing
the opening tip on a shirt jumper by
Rodney Burgess. ~uthern's Kent
Wolfe qllickly tied the score on a 15
foot jumper, then after a Miller
miscue, he again .coMected ·from the
same location to put his team on top
to stay. ·
On several occasions Miller .~nllorl

~Li-- Olfi9R T~· ria
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TilE DAILY SENTINEL
!USPS lts-!110)

~ u~ 'tU?. ~

DEVOTED TO THE

INTEREST OF

tl

" i-

MEIGS-MASON AREA
Lctten of tpiaioa art: wtl~omed . Tbty sbollld M Ins tba 300 words loDg lor subjed tt reduedoo by tbt e4ttor) ud must be atped wltb lbe slpee'a address. Names may be wl&amp;bbeld upoa
p.blbtlea. Hewever, oo request. oamtti will be dlsclosed. lctten abould be 1a good &amp;ask:, ltd~. DOtp;nooaUtin.
Pabhilted dally eJ:Hpt Saturday by ne Olllo \ 'alley PubU.hlng Compaily• Multimedia, lac.,
liJ CoiiriS&amp;. i Po~roy, Oblo t.57Q. Bu.slllus Oflice Pbooe 99%- !15ti. Ed.Jlortal Pboae 992.-!157.
sec.l da11 po~tage paid at Pomeroy, Oblo.
N•loal alhertialDI rePI;ea:eatative, LaodoD A.ssodatts, 3101 Euclid "''e., Cleveland, Oble
14115.
.
The. Auoelated Press Is exclusively entitled m lhe u~:e for publlciltioo of aU oews d.lap8tcbet
ct'edtted to tile newspaper aQd ai.Bo the loc:al new11 published berttn .
Robert Wlqett
l'llbU.ber
.
·
Rebert HoeHieb
Geaerol Mp .• City Editor
Dale Rothgeb, Jr.
News Editor
.II~

~m~ ~L--r.~d·~
~v

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Reality: .the buck
has stopped
After more than a tlecade of failing to face up to inflation , Americans may have arrived at a critical turning
point. And it isn't so much a result of admonitions as of
recognizing reality.
.
The reality is that the buck has stopped.
It now appears that large nwnbers of people are learning, bitterly perhaps, the difference between the illusion
of economic progress and the reality of an economy stalled
in its tracks and even slipping back ..
Early in the life of inflation it can provide many advantages to certain groups : companies can report higher
sales without selling more goods, for example, and
workers may feel flush with cash.
The borrower too feels power over events, knowing that
repayments are made in cheaper dollars. And
homeowners may become ecstatic as they see the value of
their tract houses rising as fast as the price of gold.
The warnings begin, but aren't heeded. Everyone knows
that inflation might be bad for the country, trut the correction begins with the other guy. Meanwhile, inflation'
remains something to exploit, if you can.
The establishment admonitions grow harsh. Just a few
days ago Harold Williams, Securities and Exchange Commision head, urged patriotc Americans to conunit a once
"un-American" act: cut living standards.
The financial evangelists then arise, preaching repentance before the day of judgment, w.hich we are told will
mean chaos in the streets and a collapse of most prices except those of precious metals and food.
And the next stage? Well, it seems, it might already be
here. All the warnings and threats might have been
ignored, but there is no ignoring the evidence now presen·
ted to Americans : A decline in real earnings.
With inflation subtracted, the Labor Department an·
nounced, the earnings of families with at least one wage
earner fell4.2 percent during the past year. That dictates a
lower living standard:
.
.
Taxes, meanwhile, have been rising, since the Internal
Revenue Service insists illusion is reality. It persists in
elevating taxpayers into higher tax brackets - ::nd taxing
them on what they never earned. .
The Tax Foundation has the figures. "U.S. median
family income is higher than ever - $19,950 in 1980, compared to$9,750 a decade ago," it states. And then adds :
"However, after-tax income measured in constant 1970
dollars is lower than it was in any year of the last &lt;tecade $7,976 in 1980 compared to $8,412.in 1970."
Interest rates are rising too, and doing so with such
speed that all but the most essential loans are being ruled
out by would-be borrowers or would-be lenders. It is
becoming impossible to get money with which to live
beyond your income. And even when possible, it is unprofitable.

Today in history.
Today is Monday, Dec. 1, the 336th
day of 1980. There are 30 days left in
the year.
Today's highlight in history:
· On Dec. I, 1918; the Serbs, Croats
and Slovenes united , to form the
nation of Yugoslavia.
On this date:
In 1824, an American presidential
election was turned over to 'the
House of Representatives after a
deadlock developed among four candidates - John Quincy Adams, An-

@

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Inc:: .

·- Meigs' rally short,
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Buckeyes win 48-41
Reagan's management style: his first mis~e?
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"Let's get out or here/ Old Mount Stc Helens
could blow again, any time."

1

NEW YORK (AP) - Ronald
Reagan may have corrunitted a
serious blunder if he has already
committed himself to a chairman~f­
the-board style . for his administration, a management
authority says.
To be effective, management style
must precede structure, says
Eugene Jennings, who for decades
has - advised corporations and
managements.
"Style determines structure,"
said the Michigan State University
professor, warning that "he who
seeks success in structure will
sUrely find failure in §tyle." Structure, he said, cannot be "instituted."
As he. describes it, st)lle is the
primary one-on~ne tpanner of
relating to individ~l team mem-

'

hers. President Carter, he said, cen·
tralized decision-making, and
Reagan has indicated that he will
decentralize.
But, says Jennings, "Reagan
shouldn't promis~ in advance the
kind of management he is going to
deliver," because " until he finds his
gait he can't !Cnow how to handle the
reins ."

J enDings offers these corollaries
to his rule that style precedes struc, ture:
- It is more difficult to go from
decentralization to centralization of
authority than the reverse.
- Management decentralization
can come abput only after the team
has first learned to work together in
tight harness.

-Decentralization can work only would have had sheer chaos,"
,
when the chief . executive fully
Reagan 1 he says, has effectively ·
respects the team members, and stated his purposes - Wild military
knows from observation their strength, rally the economy, reduce ·
government, for example- wt may ·
strengths and weaknesses.
- Decentralization is no better have committed himself too stron~ ·
than the amount and reliability of in- , todec.entralization.
formation shared by and with the
"To get control of government,"
team.
'
he
said, "Reagan must have
Decentralization, says JeMnings,
dedicated,
politically active departis an invitation to subordinates to
ment
heads
who believe in his purgrab and hold power. It works only
when the chief has clearly pose and who make decisions that,
'
established a sense of purpose and are faithful to the cause."
The President-&lt;!lect, he said, may
communicated it.
have blundered if he has already .
J enDings believes President Car- .committed himself to a decen. ter failed to establish a clear sense tralized structure rather than
of purpose, and that_ "If he had remaining flexible and permitting a
delivered decision-making authority workable, compatible structure to
widely to department heads he evolve.

Jamaica reverses leftward drift in CA
Manley took office in 1972 pledging requirements.
Jamaica is virtually bankrupt,
By Don Graff
to correct matters to the primary
For Manley, who took office as a
deeply in debt to foreign institutions,
Those among us who may have
benefit
of
those
hurting
most,
the
unchampion
of the poor, the story or'
plagued
by
f9Qd
shortages
including
been particularly concerned by the
deremployed
poor.
Butthe
trend
has
the
election
was scrawled on a
·
even
such
basic
commodities
as
leftward drift of the Caribbean and
still
been
down,
accelerated
in·
part
Kingston
wall
during
the bitter elecsugar,
of
which
it
is
a
producer,
and
Central American nations im.
by
his
policies.
He
nationalized
lion
campaign.
"The
poor
ean't take
burdened with an unemployment
mediately to our south at last have
much
of
the
sugar
industry,
but
that
no
more."
He
lost
in
a
vote
that was
rate of more than 20 percent.
something to cheer about.
has
stuck
the
government
with
runthe
reverse
of
his
own
landslides
of
It took some work to.get the island
Jamaica has reversed the trend,
down
equipment
it
can't
afford
to
1972
and
1976.
Seaga's
Labor
Party
into this bind. Jamaica is small The voters of the English-speaking
renovate. And his pursuit of balds a better than twO-thirds
4,411 square miles, slighUy less than
island have turned against their
democratic
socialism has sent the majority in the 60-seat parliament.
Connecticut, with a population of
charismatic leader of the past eight
The · new government's relations
about 2 million - but not without middle · class fleeing , · shorting
years, Michael Manley, head of the
potential. In addition to sugar, the Jamaica on the technical and with the IMF are certain to be more
leftist People's National Party, and
managerial talent needed to restore cordial, and it can expect a sym..
basis of the economy throughout the
replaced him with the more con·
· pathetic hearing in Washington. But
colonial era, it has large deposits of the economy.
servative Edward Seaga of the
Struggling with a multiplying· overhauling the economy, even. with
bauxite, the raw stuff of aluminum,
Jamaica Labor PartY.
and is, in fact, the world's ,third foreign debt, much of it piled liP by ·Outside assistance, is not going to
It was a contest of considerable inlargest exporter. And it has all the the explosive rise in 'imported oil, come easily or quickly.
terest beyond the immediate CaribAnd It won't be made any easier
essentials
- beaches, scenery and and cut off by commercial banks to
bean neighborhood because of its
which
it
owed
abnost
half
a
billion
by
the election's legacy. Some too ·
clirriatefor
a
thriving
tourist
inideological significance.
.
dollars,
the
Manley
government
turpeople
have died in politically Iiidustry .
Manley has been a staunch friend
ned
to
the
International
Monetary
spired
violence
this year.
of Cuba's Fidel Castro and
Fund, which was.Willing to help with
prominent in the more radical wing
Things gradually came apart in
an .$180 million credit. But on the
Kingston is divided Into 8l'llled ,
of the Third World in international the years following independence
usual belt-tightenlng'IMF temw that partisan neighborhoods. And while
affairs. At home, he has preached a from Britain in 1962. Obsessed,
to Manley were incompatible with Manley may have lost the ~ecti!JP, ·
doctrine of " democratic socialism"
along with most other developing
democratic socialism.
he is still a hero, almost It ·CUlt ·
that wpula restructure Jamaican countries, with industrialization,
With friendly Cuba in no position figure, to a large part of the
society in the interests of the un- successive governments neglected
itself to aid with more t~¥m advice, population. And there is talk of
derprivileged majority.
agriculture. An attempt to control
Jama1ca has scraped through mst of poasible subversion of the new order
The real issues in Jamaica today, the world bauxite market on the pat·
this 1ear on a $50 million handout directed from Cuba.
'
however, are economic and to a con~ tern of OPEC and oil got nowhere.
Cheering for Jamaica may be a bit
siderable extent the :product of And racially tinged violence scared . from Libya and some assistance
from Venezuela in · meeting oil premature.
Manley's would-be reforms. off tourists.

•

By S~olt Wolfe
ROCK SPRINGS - Despite a
tbir&lt;Hiuarter comeback the Meigs
Marauders bowed to visiting Nejsonville-York Buckeyes, 48-41, here
Saturday evening. Meigs fell to ().2

within four points of the leader. The
Marauders' dramatic bid fell short
as tlie Buckeyes regrouped and held
onfora48-41 win.
Meigs had a frigid night from the
floor as they connected on only 15 of
.whileNYwentto~.
60 for 25 percent and II of 16 from the
·'
Led by Tom Taygart's 18 point ef- line good for a 69 percent.
fort, the Buckeyes opened up ·an
The N-Y Buckeyes zipped 21 of 43
eight point scoring attack before for a 49 percent and made 6 out of 17
• Meigs could break the scoring ice at tries from the free throw line for a 35'
., 3:4li mark in the first quarter.
percent.
After the Marauders got rolling ,
The hosts committed 21 tqrnovers,
' ! ' they played fairly even With the
17 fouls, and collected seven steals.
Buckeyes, but found themselves in The winners totalled 30 miscues, 15
the position of playing catch up, ad- ·personals, and had seven stel!IS.
ding to the pressures of an already
Unofficially N-Y won the battle of
cold night.
the boards 33-25. Mays and MacAlthough Meigs had trouble .fin- · Donald led the winners with nine
ding the basket, the determined apiece; while Kevin Smith led Meigs
Marauders did capitalize on Nelsdn- with six.
vllle-York turnovers, . 't urning
Mick Childs' reserves went down
several·of them into baskets. Meigs,. to de.feat 46-25 after struggling
however, still fell short U..12 at the through a disappointing first half
~ en!l of the initial period.
performance that netted the
In the second period, Meigs stayed Marauders onl,J seven points.
close, but couldn't quite get over the
Rick Chancey again led the young
hump. On several occasions the op- Marauders with 10 points, followed
portunity to draw closer came, only by Greg Taylor with five, John
· to end on a missed shot or violation.
Cremeans, Tony Jewell four each,
In the . meantime, the visitors and Rick Edwards t'f" points.
became a bit unraveled.
JeffAdamsiedthewinnerswithH
. :. In the third period, a regrouped · markers, while. Steve Carter added
· Marauder crew •:stormed out" of 10 and collected seven rebounds.
the starting gate quickly ·scoring a
bucket to pull within two. Moments Meigs' John Cremeans had five
.., later the Buckeyes connected to
travels to Ironton Friday
· regain a four point lead, but Meigs for the second SEOAL match.
• retaliated and tied the score at midBy Q'uarters :
.~ quarter, 24-24. Before the' quarter
MeigS
8 10 11 1 2-~1
.: , ended, Nelsonville went on a surge N·Y
12 10 14 12- 48
J• of Its own to lead 36-29 at the third Meigs (41) - Mike M i ller 1-2·4;
Dave Kennedy 1-2-4; Chris Judge 3:~· period buzzer.
0·6 ; Jeff w ayland 3·3·9; Britt Dodson
In the opening minutes of the final 1·0·2; Kent Sm ith 2·0·4; Steve
go-roWJd there wasn't much offense Ohlinger 3·2·8. Totals 1S· ll-41.
Nelsonville-York {48) R ick Davis
'"' produced by either club. In contrast 1·0·2;
Koon 1-2·4; Chris Me ·
• ; of the opening minutes, however, the DonaldDavid
4·0-8; Mark Pitts0-1·1; Brian
. • scoreboardcStarted to click with 1: 30 Mays ·s·O· IO; John Sc hentz 1·3·5;
left, a Meigs romeback pulled it Tom Taygart9·0· 1B. Total21-6·48.
.•

Brian spen ce r 3·0·6, Rodn ey .
Burgess 4+ 12, John Isler 2·59 , Ja y
L un ing 3·3·9, Br ian N\organ 0·0·0.
Total17· 12·46.
By Quarters :
Southern
· 23 16 12 11&gt;-01
M iller
12 14 13 7- 46

r----- -- -----'-

SOUTHERN - 61)- Cardone 0·0.'
0, Dwayne Curfm an 0-2-2, Terry McNi ckle 1·0·2, Dale Teaford 7·0·14,
Bryan Wolfe, 0·2·2, Robert Brown 13·5, Joe Bob Hemsley 0·0·0; Allen
Pape 0·2·2, Jay Rees 3-2·6, Tom
Roseberry 4:2· 10, Kent Wolfe 4·2· 10,
Richard Wolfe 2·2-6. Totals 22·17·61.
MILLER 14~)- Cur t Iml er 2·0·4,
Cu rl Nutter 1-0·2, Jon Roberts 2·0·4,

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BIG DANCE STEPS - · Buckeye Tom Taygart who dumped in 18
points and Stev~ Ohlinger (42) seem to be doing some new dance during
Saturday's 48-41 victory by Nelsonville-York over Meigs.

A·sk•US

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the ADD•OM

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'

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•

'

By Roberts Walters
DETROIT (NEA) - More than 20
years after the passage of a federal
law supposedly guaranieeing the
democratic rights of union mem- ,
hers, the government remains
unable or unwilling to assist those
seeking to refomi corrupt laoor
organizations.
"Don't rely on the government and especially . don't rely on the
Labor Department,'' advises · Dan
Siegel, a California attorney whose
clients include numerous insurgents
challenging unresponsive or insensitive union officials.
"In general, the government's
role bas been a negative one," says
Peter Camarata, co-chairman of a
labor group concentrating upon
reform of one of the nation's most
notorious unions, the International
Brotherhood of Teamsters.
Tholte views were echoed
repeatedly at the First National Conference on Union DemOcracy, held
here recently under the sponsorship
of ·the Association for Union
Democracy.
" YOu're just wasting your time

Labor Department,'' says Alaska attorney William Schendel.
"The law is a total and dismal
failure - and it's a failure because
of the Labor Department," adds
Washington, D. C., labor lawyer
JosephL. Raub Jr.
Even repesentatlves of the Labor
Department acknowled«e that they
often are unresponsive or ineffective
in enforcing the law. "The fact of the
matter is that action is awfully
sl9w," admits department , official
Fred Heitman.
He and others from the department offer the standard litany of
bureaucratic explanations and excuses - not enough money and personnel; too much office politics and
frequent jurisdictional disputes with '
other federal departments.
·
The law that was supposed to
bring an end to unio11 corruption ill
the Labor-Management Reporting
and DisclO!!ure Act of 1959, better
known as the Lantlrum{;riffin Act.
But the government has used the
statute to prosecute only the blataut
cases of maladministration and ,
corruption. Even In those cases, investigations have been initiated
reluctantly, then litigation drags on

for years.
"One reason the investigators
don't like to look at union books is
that they haven't been trained as accountants," says Dorts McLaughlin,
I!Uthor of a book on the 1969 law.
"They learn the job from llllother
guy who's been trained on the job.''
A more recent law - the Employee Retirement Income Security
Act of 1974, or ERISA- is supposed
to prevent pension fund theft, fraud .
and other abuses. But the LaboP
Department refuses to pursue :
j\llegations of criminal aCtivity. :
"The policy of the deparbnent' Is to
investigate only civil violations,"
admits James de Haan, a labor official.
.
Undoubtedly the most scandalous
recent development is the probe ~ '
the Teamsters' Central States Pen- ·
sion Fund by a special investigative
unit within the department. After
spending five years and almost $5.5
million on the task, the department
completed what La Vern Duffy, .
general counsel of the Senate Permanent Investigations Subcommittee, describes 88 "a very
limited investigation."
The· General Accounting Office

'

concluded that the probe wu "not .
effectively planned, coordluatad,

1111111118ed or carried out." New York,

'

'

labor lawyer Pllyllla' CUrott aays "It~
. was bungled, perhaps In-;
tentlonally." Evan an ln&amp;lmal
Labor Departmlllt enluatl011 wu
highly critical ~the bmstigatiOII.
· At the root ~ 111811f ~ .the
problema lies the inla'ent confllc:t
between lwo of the La~ ~
ment's moat fandamentll tub serving 88 advocate for tb81ntereats,.
of labor and inve•t11atln1:
wrongdoing within . labor:

organlziltlons. :

same

enforcement r•11 JOithl•fttee GU~M·
to be ablfted to'tbl J...ace o.......
ment, whlcb m1pt p10vlde tile ,
public with mon ra1t11 llld fewer

excuses.

., r

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· regardless of Its fuel type, send in the
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·
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SAVE* booklet. It tells all about the
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the whole, detailed story. You'll find
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furnace rest. Conserving fuel. Sav.ing

1

In contrast, the Commen:e Deputment Is charged with PI'ODIOIInl the ·
lnteresta of the buainB CGIIIIIUIIIty
. within the federal 80NiiWD611t,
while lnvestlgatiOII ind 1*!-lltiell
of corporate ant1-1ru1t vinl!!lkw 11
ll1llgned to the Jllltlce Depw tuwd.
That
dlv!s1011 ~ •athorltJ
1118/te&amp; senae .In the Iaber field. '11le
Labor Department'• law· ·

.

..

No reform for. corrupt labor organizations ·

bringing your cornpl•int to the
j'

I

J

p

• •

~• .PuJA A.
~ .......--..,...._.

~

lUGH JUMPER- Tom Rosenberry, f&gt;-9 guard for Southern, goes
high up for a jump shot over the outstretched hands of Miller defender
John Roberts -(22). Rosenberry had 10 points to help pace the Tornadoes
to a 61-46 opening season victory over the Falcons.

•

}

drew Jackson, William Crawford
and Henry Clay.
In 1878, the first telephone was in·
stalled in the White House.
In 1944, the World War II hattie for
the Saar basin in Germany began.
In 19M, the United States signed a
mutual security pact with
Natjonalist China.
Ten years ago: Luis Echeverria
Alvarez was sworn in as president of
Mexico.

1980 by NEA

I'

within .four points, but.Southern hit a
· In the third periOd detening chamhot streak in the waning minutes and pion Southern roared with momen·
tum as Coach Carl Wolfe substituted
opened up a .23-12lead.
The second period's tempo was freely. Every Tornado did his job as
much like the first. The action w"'l Southern seemingly overcame the
fast, but both clubs made a lot of first game jitters to lead 51-39 at the
careless mistakes.
third period buzzer.
The Tornadoes were playing
Early in the fourth period Teaford,
without the services of both Teaford who sat out over half the game due
and Wolfe, who were both sidelined to foul trouble, exited with five perwith three first quarter personal sonals. Southern slowed the ball
fouls each.
down and held on for the win despite
Midway through the canto scoring . a gallant effort by Miller.
was at a standstill until Bryan Wolfe
The winners hit 22 of 48 for 48 peranJ Richard Wolfe drew back to cent from the field and 17 of 27 from
back charging fouls and connected the charity stripe for 62 percent.
ml both ends of a bonus situation to Miller hit 17 of S4 from the field for 32
bring the faithful Southern crowd to percent while connecting on 12 of 2ll
its feet. This boosted Southern to a 13 from the foul line for 60 percent.
point lead which it held at the half,
Southern won the battle of the
39-26.
boards :Ja-30 led by Robert Brown's
· eight and Jay Rees, Richard Wolfe
with seven. Roberts led Miller with
nine caroms.
The Tornadoes had eight assists,
six steals, 13 turnovers and 24 team
fouls, while the hosts had six assists,
10 steals, 21 miscues, and 25 team
fouls.
Coach Howie Caldwell's Southern
reserves scored their initial victory
with a 44-31 win over Miller's
Falcons. Tyrone Brinager led the
winners with 10 points, Zane Beegle
9, Nick Bostick, 8, Chris Bostick 6,
Rusty Cummins 5, Terry Patterson
4, and Jotui Porter 2. Beegle led the
winners with eight caroms.
Miller was led by Mark Spencer's
12 points, while Jim Gill netted nine,
and Tom Gaitteneight.
Southern, now 1~. will host North
Gallia Friday to open up SVAC play.
Box score :

*save.Arnerica's Valuable Energy

•

· 'f.

..

. ~.
.
ro HOOP -l'felsonville York's Chrts McDonald (44) goes in .

il for .a layup qainst Meigs' Steve Ohlinger (42) during Saturday's 411-41
Buckeye victory over the Marauders. Another-Marauder defender shown
II tbla Don Dudding photo is Kevin Smith (i!O).
·

~

We give it our best.

OHIO POWER COMPANY
J

�·!&gt;-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Dec.1,. 19110 '

4-- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Dec. I, 1980

VAUGHAN'S
'

Browns take lead in American Conference
49ers 21, Patrlolll 17
28-24 loss to Baltimore by losing 21By Associated Press
Joe Montana threw three touchUle Cleveland Browns can rightly 17 to San Francisco. That left the 8-5
claim control of their own destiny Patriots one game back of the Bills, down passes, all after the 49ers had
intercepted Steve Grogan passes, tQ
now, but they can't help but benefit H
The San Diego Chargers movf"d a lead San Francisco to its second
from one of the most crucial
showdowns of the 1980 National half game ahead of Oakland in t~e straight victory.
Grogan was intercepted six times
Football League season Thursday AFC West with a 22-21 victory over
night when Houston plays host to the Philadelphia. The Chargers are now as the 49ers set a club record: Two of
9-4, and the 11-4 Raiders face a must the interceptions were by Ricky
Pittsburgh Steelers.
situation
when they host Denver Churchman and one was by Keena
The Browns unlocked a tie in the
Turner that killed a New England
tonight.
American Conference Central
late in the fourth quarter.
drive
Division Sunday by winning a ,J7-14 · The loss dropped the Eagles to 11-2
Colis 28, Btlla 24
thriller over the Oilers, whose Thur- and one game ahead of Dallas, a Sl-7
Curtis Dickey ran for two touchwinner over Seattle on Thursday, in
~day night confrontation with Pittsburgh should par.e the race to two the National Conference East. Min- downs, and Baltimore scored each of
nesota took advantage of Detroit's its four TDs after some sort of Bufteams.
·
.
"It was obviously a very big win 23-17 overtime loss to Chicago on falo iniscue. Dickey scored twice in
for ~." Browns quarterback Brian Thursday to move into a tie for the the second lull! after an i!lterception
Sipe said. "We are in control of our NFC Central lead with a 23-20 vic- and a recovered fumble.
tory over winless New Orleans.
Colts quarterback Greg Landry,
own destiny."
The NFC West race remained substituting for the· injured Bert
Pittsburgh's 23-10 victory over
Miwni left the Steelers and Oilers much the same with both division- Jones, threw for a score after a fum-'
tied for second in the division at 8-5, leading Atlanta, 1().3, and Los bled.punt-and he ran for another afwhile Cleveland moved in front by a Angeles, 9-4, on the winning side of ter Buffalo punter Greg Cater was
the ledger. Atlanta edged tackled on his own 8.
game at 9-4.
Chargers 22, Eagles Zl
Washington
10-6, and the Rams
Steelers Coach Chuck Noll said his
Dan
Fouts threw two scoring
whipped
the
New
York
Jets
~13
.
team still was on the road to
passes,
and
Rolf Bernischke kicked
Elsewhere,
it
was
St.
Louis
23,
the
recovery from a series of disabling
three
field
goals
as San Diego ended
New
York
Giants
7;
Cincinnati
20,
injuries to players like wide
Kansas
City
6,
and
Tampa
Bay
20,Philadelphi~
's
eight-game
winning
receivers Lynn Swann and John
streak.
Stallworth, running backs Rocky Green Bay 17.
Fouts had 342 yards passing and
Steelers 23, Dolphins 10
Bleier and Franco Harris, Jacks
1· Ham and Lambert and quarterback
Harris topped off his best game of went over the 300-yard mark for the
the season with a 9-yard touchdown sixth time this season, equaling for
Terry Bradshaw.
Fullback Cleo Miller ran for two run that ~ea led Pittsburgh's victory. the second straight year the NFL
short-yardage touchdowns to give Harris ran for 116 yards in the game record set by Joe Nan\ath.
Philadelphia rallied to within a
Cleveland a I~ lead in the second on 28 carries.
period. Don Cockroft's 25-yard field . Harris' touchdown capped a 98- point on an 11-yard scoring
goal in the third quarter provided yard drive that began as the
the Browns with their eventual win- Dolphins were threatening to take
the lead. Steelers cornerback Ron
ning margin.
Johnson
forced a fumble by
Houston had a chance to tie the
game in the fourth quarter, but Toni Dolphins running back Tony Nathan
National FootbaU Lzagu~
Fritsch missed a 38-yard field goal on the 1, and IS plays later, BradAmerlcau Coaference
shaw had guided Pittsburgh to
East
attempt when he scuffed his foot.
W L T Pet. PF PA
In the AFC East, New England paydirt.
9 • 0 .692 290 216
Buffalo
New Enj5iluuJ
failed to take
of Buffalo's
8 ' 0 .611 386 2110

I

· t ·both the f'~t quarter when Ken Anderson
nu!lif'I ed by pen all'1es agatns
teams
""
·
complained of dizziness. Anderson'a
3
Ralltll 38, Jellll
•yard strike had put Cincinnati
Vt'nce F erragamo threw four .ahead 7 ~.
touchdown passes, · and Elvis
.BuccaneeraZO,Plleken17
Vlklllgs 23, SaiDtll ZO
Peacock, who replaced the injured
Kevin House snared 8 Upped .JiliN
Minnesota jumped to a~ lead on Wendell Tyler in the first quarter, from Doug Willlams at the Green ;
scoring runs by Ted Brown and gained a personal high 152 yards for Bay !-yard line with leiS than
_ twO
Doug Paschal, a 17-yard TD pass by the Rams Tyler left
'th
•
· WI
a minutes to play, se++lftO
. up Tampa
Tommy Kramer and Rick Dan- dislocated elbow.
.~..,
meier's 28-yard field goal before
Tw ... F
•
·
Bay's winning touchdown.
o ~
erragamo s sconng
The pass from Bucs quarterback
having to hold off a furious New strikes were
· toW'lli
Mill
I e
er.
Doug Williams covered 44 yards, but
Orleans rally.
The Rams defense sacked' Jets
Archie • Manning threw three quarterback Richard Todd six times first it hit the harids of Green.Bay
second-half touchdowo ·passes for and Jn the third quarter held New safety Johnnie Gray before bounNew Orleans, but the Saints saw any y k t ·
ds tal ff
cing to House, who was brought
or . o nunus,.2 yar 1o · o ense.
down on the 1 by Steve Luke. Tampa
'
chance of their first victory e~ased
when Minnesota linebacker Matt
Cardinals 23, Giants 1'
Bay running back Johllny . Davis
Blair bloeked a 25-yard field goal atOttis Anderson rushed for 168 yar- scored on the next play, with I :58
tempt by Benny Ricardo.
ds and two touchdowns to pace St. left in the game.
FalcoDJIO, Redsklns 6
Louis past the Giants. Anderson, ....---_..:;__ _ _ _ _ __
Atlanta won a club-record seventh who came into the game with 955 • • • • • • • • • • • ,
straight and held the slipping Red- rushing yards on the year, went over I
skins to· Mark Moseley field goals of the 1,000-yard mark for the second ~
m
.
51 and 46 yards.
straight year.
-~
1
Steve Bartkowski threw a 14-yard
Neil O'Donoghue kicked three .11!
1
touchdown pass to Alfred Jenkins field goals for St. Louis.
I(
I
early in tile third quarter, and Tim
Bepgals20,Chlefs6
~By the Racine Emergency
Mazzetti kicked a23-yard field goal
Cincinnafi scored 13 points in tl)e JSquad .starting Sun., Nov.l
inthefourthquarterfortheFajcons. fourth quarter on Jack Thompson's 130th at the Racine Squadl
The loss was Washington's fifth · !-yard touchdown pass and a 57-yard
Building.
straight.
romp by Pete Johnson, a 250-pound ~ Mon .- Fri. 6 p.m. to 9 p.m . W
Moseley's last field goal came fullback, to break open a one-point . 11!
Sat. 1 p.m. t!J8 p.m.
I
with four minutes left in the game gameandputawayKansasCity.
I(
Sun. 1 p.m. to6 p.m.
after an apparent Redsltins touchThompson came off the bench in 18
II
down JliiSS of 24 yards from Mike
.
.~ •
r~:~~~------!11
Kruczek to Ricky Thomp5on was .-----''-----~---_.__ _ _ _ _.;..:.."'-- - - -

from Ron Jaworski to-Wilbert Montgornery with · 2:50 left, but the
Charuers picked up on first down
e
and ran out the clock after the
kickoff.

,...

7 6
6 7
3 lO
9

I

5

8 5
I '
Wet I

Pi ttsburgh

Cincinnati
San Diego
Oakland
Denver
Kansas City

0 .3011 169 238

9

I

0 .692 351 2S6

8
1

I
'

0 .667 211$ 246
0 .$83 241 242

6 7 0 .&amp;61:
4 9 0 .JOII
Na Uou.al Coafereoce
Eaol
II 2 0 .1116
Philadelphia
10 3 0 .769
Da lilu
I 9 0 .308
St. Louis
3 10 0 .231
N.Y.Giants
3 10 0 .231
WaRhington
Central

Seattle

Detroit

Minnesota
Chicago
Green Bay
Tampu Bay
Atlanlil
Lo:5 Angt!les
San F'ra nC'isco
New Orleans

234 %'13
239 335

323 164
316 233
2lll 219
192 3M
174 256

1 6
1 6

0 .538 260 231
0 .538 252 2$5

5
5

8
7

0 .385 215 'lZl
l .41.1 218 264

5

7

I

Wetl
10 3

·42:!

HALL'S BEN FRANKUM IN MIDDLEPORT
1$ NOW OPEN UNTIL 8:00 P;M·. DAILY
EXCEPT SUNDAYS UNTIL CHRISTMAS
EVE WHEN WE WIU CLOSE AT
5:00 P.M.

New Orleans at San Francisco

New York Giants at Seattle
Moaday.~.l

New England . at Miami, (n)

0 .538 2M 291
0 .462 209 2M
C .231 214 340

0 .692 290 244
0 .61$ 241 232
0 .615' 314 2,6S .

NOTICE TO CUSTOMERS

• •

DaU.S at Oakland
Denver at Karusaa City

•

WeeteDd Scorta'l'raDaactloDS
IIASXETIIALL

Central

8

Nati01a1l B11ketbell Auoclatlea
HOUSTON ROCKETS-signed Bill Willoughby, forward. Waived Lee J ohnson,
forward .
INDIANA
PACERS- Waived
Kenri)r
Natt, guard.

FOOTBALL
Natioaal F.ooU..U Leape
HOUSTON
OILERS- Activated

•
Tom

IT PAYS TO SHOP EARLY

Ht nderson, linebacker. Waived Charlie
Davis, guanl.
STEELERS- Signed
PITTSBURGH
Tom Moriarty, back. Placed Jon Kolb, of-

We have the biggest selection of merchandise in our 31 years in Middleport.

fensive tackle, on the injured reserve lbt.

HOCKEY
N1u.al Hodey Lape
WINNIPEG JETS-Sold BaiT)' Melrose,
defenseman, to lhe Toronto Maple Leafs

fa' an undisclosed sum. Recalled Barry
Legge, defenseman, and Markus Mattssori, goalie, frum the Tulsa O(lers of ' the
Central Hockey League.

RALL'S BEN FRANKLIN

0 .169 333 Z2S
0 .692 359 218

5 8
0 13

0 .385 259 321
0 JlXI 208 391

r---------------~----~~-----------------------------------------------

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KAHN'S ALL MEAT

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S
WIENER ••••·•••••••••••· ·
KAHr-.'S AI..,L MEAT SLICED $
BOLOGNA ••• ..1.3.~~-~~~~. 149

DA,CON
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LB." $1
~
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SMOKED SAUSAGE

gg
WHOLE
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AVERAGE

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AND

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5
HEAD LETTUCE • •••••• • ••• •••

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$259
POTATOES ················••• . .
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VALUES

129

BISCUITS..........4tu :~ 7!r
GARVIN'S
CHOCOLATE DRINK
Plastic $119
Gallon
VELVEETA

CATSUP

0

2

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CARDINAL HOMOGENIZED

$289

MILK ..............~-~,t~~~--sl 89

NEW
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BETTY CROCKER ASSORTED VARIETIES

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TOP Shef® Combo Only $2.96

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FRENCH FRIES ---------····· ....5

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T.-W.-Th.-Sat. 9 til S

BTL.

Can

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M. &amp; Fri. 9 til 8

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·

79~

CUT SPINACH .............................•...... 2 ~2XN~z. 79~
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44

Installed
over pad

'1499Sq. Yard

CANS

FRESH LIKE

lARGE

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Stain Pr11tection
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( S colors to choose from)

100 ANSO IV NYLON

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$

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16 oz .

MiXED VEGETABLES...................... 2

CHUNK STYLE

TEA BAGS .:.••..·.•.••.~.c.r; ..

SAXONY
SCULPTIJRED CARPET

J.

ge
5

Jar

"ASSORTED VARIETIES

3rd &amp; Olive

g~

HD.

Cans

• 13-oz. Cut Green Beans • 13-oz. French Cut Green Beans
• 14-oz. Cream Style Corn • 12-oz: Whole Kernel Corn

1 0-oz.

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'9"
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$149

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Reg . $15.99
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12 OZ.

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FRUITS

AXWELL HOUSE INSTANT

RUBBER BACK

Sq. Yd.
3 Colors to Choose Fr.om

69-~

$}19
BATTER DIP FISH •••

(BONELESS HAM PORTION LB. $1 .89)

I

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HB. PKG.

SEA STAR

Lb.

.

·

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1

5

LB.

SWifT

SAXONY SCULPTURED
CARPET

RUBBER BACK

lb .

KAHN'S NO SUGAR SLlCJn

•

MUST GO BEFORE WE MOVE TO
OUR NEW LOCATION JAN. 1.

RegularS21.99SALE

SPARERIBS..............................

),
1
WIENERS •.•,•• •. •• ••

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LEVEL LOOP CARPET

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Baltimore at Cincinnati
Uls Angeles at Buffalo
Mipnesota at Tampa Bay
New York. Jet:! at Cleveland
San Diego at Washington
Detroit al St.Louis
Green Bay at Chicago

· vtt

$169

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TOMATOES • ••~ • •••~ •••• • •••.. ·

'

Sunday's Games
.Pittsburgh 2J, Miami 10
St.Louis 2.1 , New Yort Giants 7
Atlanta 10. Washington 6
Ballimore 28, Buffalo 24
Cincinnati 20, KarlSIIS City 8
Mirmesota jil, New Orleans 20
Tampa Oaf 20, Green Bay 17
Cleveland 17, Ho11.1ton 14
San Fral),cisco 21, New England 17
Los Angeles 38, New York Jets 13

•

KAHN'S

Monday's Game
Denver at Oallland, (n)
. Thursday, Dee. t
Pittsburgh at Ho11.1ton, (n)
Suudliy, Det:. 1

TO
6-1 senior center,
did the expected Saturday night in pacing his teammates to a nonconference win over Miller. Although in serious foul trouble early,
Teaford scored 14 points to lead the Tornado offense. In this action shot,
Teaford fires over Miller defender, Jay Laning.

I AM TILL..10 PM

AEIERV!D

San Diego 22, Philadelphia 21

r

OPEN DAILY FROM

U.S. NO. 1

234 279

9 •

QUANTITY RIOHTtd

KAHN'S HILLSHIRE . -

For the record.

Cleveland
Houstmi

J

1

CENTER CUT RIB

fRIINDUIST SUVlCI IN TOWN
IIOGfST IAROAINS IN TOWN

fOR .SALE

1

Cara\na\
SUPER MARKETS

•

C!'IUAS TREES
QtRI.JJ
I·

r•••

Baltimore
Miam1
N.Y. Jcls

"._ ..

•., ...

•.

••
.• I

~~0 STORES • CARDINAl FOOD STORE S
1 ;t

•'

1! .•

..

Xtt•IIJ :;(•l:l

BETTY CROCKER ASSORTED FLAVORS

-

i RTS FROSTINGS
$11 9 ;
w
•

u

limll 11n1 witt. t oupon

on• tOUPOI'I Dtf llmoly

. 16 VJ- Ol.

Call

•

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~

"'

09217700 ' ::;;

00 11.07 \~~

�7-'J'Iw naUySentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Dec. 1,19e0

&amp;-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Dec. l, l!MKI

•PICK TRACY ·

Santa Claus is coming to town!
Through the efforts of Ohio E\11
Phi Chapter of Beta Sigma ~
Sorority, Santa willlle paying visits
to homes in fiye Meigs County com- .
munities.
Schedule for the visits is Dec. 15,
Syracuse/Racine; Dec. 17, Rutland;
Dec. 18, Middleport, and Dec. 19.

Pomeory. The visits start at 7 each
evening and are to be cOnfioed to the
corporation . limits of the towns.
There is a charge of $2 per family.
Those interested in a personal
visit from Santa are to complete the
following form and mail it to P. 0 .
Box312, Syracuse, Oh., 45779.

Santa Vlslto
Name .... . ..... . ......... . ..... . ..... ........... ...... . . .. .. .. ..
Address ....... . .. . . . .. . . . ... ~ · . . ... . . ........ • .. ..• • . ... ... ....
Phone ....... ... . .. . .. . .. . .. .. .... .. . . .. .. ... . .. .. ... . . .. ..... .

WHAT FOR?

A potluck. Tjumksgivil)g dinner
was enjoyed by .the Young Adult
Class of the Laurel Cliff Free
Methodist Church Thursllay evening
at the Meigs County Infirmary.
Robert Barton had the prayer and
during the bUsiness meeting new officers were elected. They are Sharon
Wright, president; Diane Ash, vice
presiden!; Darla Hawley, secretary,
and Patty Barton, treasurer.
At the regular December meeting,
a Christmas party will be held at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Mike Wright
with a gift exchange. Calendar
books and candles are for sale by the
class.
·
·
Attending were the Rev. and Mrs.

Master Russell turns seven

Michael Russell

I STOPPED THe

Floyd Shook, Mr: and Mrs. Clifford
Jacobs, Mr. and Mrs. Mik~ Wright,
Mr. and Mrs. Rick Ash, Mr. and
. Mrs. Randy hawley, Betty Wills,
Leona Martin, Etta Mae Ellis~
JosephMowery,Waynel.Alifheit.

FIF?E- WHY WAI-&lt;E

MOM
l-IeF? u

H.
DEAR HELEN:
All these sales pitches about how
you can save with insulation: up to

DEAR HELEN :
He was a living doll, so I moved in.
He changed overnight to a
chauvinist who expects slave labor
and bores me endlessly. Wh8t would
you call this? - DISILLUSIONED
DEAR DIS :
I'd call it "llo,:ing dull," and move
back to my own apartment. - H.

Honor roll noted
PORTLAND- Principal La rry Wolfe has announced the second sill week:s grading period
honor roll for the Port.land Elementary ~hool .
Making a grade of 'fB'' or abovt 'in aU their

to be listed on the ron were: .
F1rst Grade :- Joshua Codner, Glenda Holter,
Setond Grade - Mflanie Adams, JWlie
Beegle, Jayllon CodtJer, Terri Hill, Amy Wagner. ·
Third Grade - Rae Lynn Dailey, Nancr HWll,
J . J. LaWrence, Tanya Meadows, Jason Quillen,
Soertie Roush.

sub~ects

Fourth Grade - Dawn J ohnso~. Ryan Evans,

Becky Evans.

Fifth Grade - Donett.e Talbott, Dolly Hlll, Klm
Stobart.
Sixth G r ~de - Kim WiWord, Joyce Foreman,
Annette F1tch, Charlie Weddle, Karla Smith,
KrisSellers.
Learning Di,sab.- Michael Boso.
Special Educatio_
n - Angela RidlHrds.

ctUBENJOYS
HOLIDAY DINNER
Members of the Third Friday Club
enjoyed a Thanksgiving dinner at
Crow's and then went to the home of
Mrs. Clara Thomas for a meeting.
Georgia Watson presided with the
session opening with the Lord's
Prayer. Readings on Thanksgiving
were given by several lnembers.
The Christmas party will be held 'a t
the horne of Mrs. Bill Watson.
Prayer closed the meeting.

'

IF '&gt;'OUR HUIIICH ItS

~1 eHt CO"'&gt;'• X~!CI&lt;ON

•

·I

PLI!ASI! DO, ,HE!I!IFFI· 'L HAVE THIS
AWFUL Fe!!WJ&lt;!I THAT I.IVOR NO MAY

I&lt;6ETTeR ASK THE 5TATE

SEND MORE' OF HIS MOf!!&gt;-TERS

-IF HE DOES'•
EfASY AND THI!
!AUSTACHE KID

WI I. I. ee IN

THEF(E TO q,!T JUI.iE f!LAIR-'

- ,: fi:&gt;LICE T'CHECI&lt; OUT THE:
'51TUATION THfRE IN
SILVER CREEK!

OKAY. 1'1.1. RII&gt;J6 THE: STATe
POLICE f!ARRACI&lt;S. AT
PU!:f!LO ~IGHT NOW!

'Hosta:HughDowneandfrankBiair.
(Cioood·Coptlonod:U.S.A.)
NEws
CIJTHEDOOR ·
(I) BOB NEWHART SHOW
(I) FACE THE MUSIC
Ill (I)@&gt; CBS NEWS
())
WILD WILD WORLD OF

i:so rn • m NBc

DANI&gt;!:RI

ME l'lHEilE YOU FOUND
AGTORE OPEH AT THIG

HIGHT··

I

rn o PM

'f0U'VE60T T'LET FORGET IT!
ME PAY YOU FOR TH5E l'lHAT THEY
COST ME
CLOTHES -·ER -· AG
ISN'l i'IORTH
SOOH AS I'M A8l.f,
THAT 15·~
TALK!~ ASOOT..

town turn out at the Yellow Rose for
a beer drinking conlael that wins
FloatrlplortwotoOlaneyWortdand

the big question is, who'll go with
her.
(jj) HOT STUFF: RESTAURANTS
OF NEW ORLEANS Thia progrm
oftera a teat-paced tour of Amer·
ica'a moat original cuisine, com·

mine.)

~'7'~'4~ "·':t&lt;·,~·

affections.

f:3o

(jj) lAIIt! TREASURES

.
,
DCIJl1!1lHOUSECALLSAmuggOI'
is lurking in the dark comera of Ken·
alngton Hospital and all the woman

GASOLINE ALLEY

~raqe

fora
weel4
and see
how it
worle.s
out!.Ai\1H

·

4}.95

Wak e to buzzer dr radio' Btg 0 .9" hig h c lock di splay ca n
. bfl read fro m anyw here in the roo m . Cloc k features snooze
con trol an d slee p swit ch . Radi o has 3 ' .· " speaker. AFC
on FM . ea rphon e ra ck Hu rry and save S10 07 ' #12- 1520

Your mother has
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could loolt. after
Gretchen!

BUT, WINNIE 1 ELEMENTARY;

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soun d . #60-2157

BARNEY

ADaadMan'aTruth'Arookleottlcar
kills a burglar and the problem Ia
compounded when a television
newsman charges pollee brutallb . .
(Repeat) 'THE NEW AVENGERS:
Lion And The Unicorn' Stars: Patrick Macnae, Joannalumiey.
(Ia)
MOYIE
-(BIOGRAPHICAL-DRAMA) "II

"EI Greco" 1Me

NOW THAT PAW
AlN'r HERE TO

BOSS ME AROUND·-

I CAN CATCH
MVSELF A

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11:11 (I)
_" t _ NIGHTLIN!

ABC

PEWS

tJ.- (1)0crJTOMORROWHoet:Tom

LITTLE NAP

Snyder. Guests: JohnWallh, Gene
Shefll. (90mlno.)
12:311 (I)
CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIEND&amp;
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1:111 ®DNEWS
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A QIVI SIQN Q l TA'VOY CQRPQRAt: :, N

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

Alan: "West opened one of

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~:

"

..

Yesterday's Answer
24 Ceremony
25Edged
27 Garden plot
%9 Appear
to be
31 Each and all
33 One of
the Carters
M Singlehanded

35 Sicilian
sight
37 For each

38 Devon
river
39 Equipment
4() High

note

U Dover's
state

(abbr.)

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

problem
3Z Marsh
33Hew
•Fiery
UFeed the

-man
aBanllh
44 U.S. arctic
uplorer
45Auguat
I Preftlt

for cycle

zllaleball

tally
. 3 RainboW
shape

. 4 P.I. tree
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work It:

·

NEWI

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I:IQ &lt;IJ ROSSIAQL!Y 8HOW
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. ':CID ~ 700 CLUB
.:M
WORDS OF HOPI!

AXYDLBAAXa
r BLL0 W

L'O N G

One letter limply 1tands for another. In this sample A 1o
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Slncle letters.

apoltropbea, the lenctb and formation of the wordl are aU
hlnta. Each day tile cocle lollel'l are dllrerent.
can'TOQVOTBS

llle CfM!tn" 111611

UfJS-676 '

.

. 1:00

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DOWN

11:46 (1)1)1). NEWB

· 11118 &lt;IJ SPORTS REPORT

' :· ·, ·.• .-

a•

br THOMAS JOSEPH
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ACROSS
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DOOM This unique HBO documenI Silver cup,
1 YellowiBb
tary examinee the myeterioua, sud·
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7Glaring
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airship Jn 1937 .
11 Agricultural 8 Wild OI
(I) TBS EVENING NEWS
1 Uproar
0 (I) @&gt;. A COUijTRY CHRIST- 12Great
MAS Minnie Pearl plava hoateaa to
10
Florida
enthusiasm
Debby Boone, Glen Campbell, lorcounty
etta Lyonn , Tom Wopat , The Oak 1.3 Robert
14 Snare, bass
Blake film
- - -Ri'dQeBoya, TanyaTuckerandthelf
families at her unique Chrlatmaa 1.5 Spin a yam
or kettle
Part yo acrose the border tn Canada. '
11
Rough
file
11Cracker
(80mlno.)
17
JUst
this
(ll) NEWS
spread
1D:28 CIJ NEWS UPDATE
It FaultleM
10:30 CIJ RISE AND BE HEALED
18 Collar
!~National
(jj) OPEN MIND .
style
10:H CIJ NEWS UPDATE
song
11:00 CllBcrJDCillm NEWS
19
Parrot, e.g.
%!English
CIJ FESTIVAL OF PRAISE
Zlln
ruling name
C!JIIOVIE -(DRAMA) ••!&gt; "And
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c111'8 CIJ N!WSUPDATI!
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Guest host: David letterman .
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CIJ ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
(I) IIOVIE -(SUSPENSE) " '

I

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-

those weak two bids. When it
got around to Kyle he doubled.
North responded three hearts.
11-1-80
NORTH
Kyle had no intention of pass·
t86S
ing
below game and elected to
.J9 732
bid three notrump on the theo• 10 9 6 s
ry that North could still bid
tA
four
hearts if he felt like ii."
WEST
EAST
Oswald:
"West opened the
tK QJ 7 3 2
king of spades and Kyle elect. 10 8
.KQ·6
ed to take lhat first trick.
• 72
• J 8 j3
Then he cashed his top
.Q81
.109765
diamonds . West chucked a
SOUTH
spade on the third one. Then
t A 109
Kyle led a low heart. He was
• A 51
resigned to defeat if West held
tAKQ
either the king or queen. But
.KJ32
West played the eight, dummy
the mne and East the king.
Vulnerable: Neither
East cashed his diamond jack
Dealer: West
and led a club to dummy's
ace. The jack of hearts was
WHt
Nonb Eut
Sootb
led from dummy. East played
2t
Pass Pass Db!.
low and the jack held. Now
Pass
Pass 3NT
Kyle led a heart to his ace. He
Pass
Pass Pass
had seven tricks in and was
left with K J 3 of clubs and 10
of spades. Meanwhile, West
Opening lead:+K
had discarded down to two
spades and two clubs so Kyle
led his last spade. East took
two tricks. but had to lead up
to the king-jack of clubs to
By Oswald Jacuby
give
Kyle hts contract."
8Dd Alan Sontag
Alan: "The opposing North·
pair got to the superior
Oswald: "In looking over South
contract of four hearts, but
the Spingold hands I lind this their declarer found a really
r.l!al gem played by Xyle Lar· inferior line of. play to go
sen at an inferior lhree- down
one."

Yu.-.OfOurUYel" 1046
.
(jj) PICASSO: Exlllltlllon AT THE

Save 21%37~-!J

PTO PLANS FESTIVAL
The Rutland Elementary PTO has

-

on the etaff are potential vlcllma.

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em

8:30 Ill Cil
LADIES' MAN
B:H CIJ NEWS UPDATE
O:DO CIJBCDMONDAYNIGHTATTHE ·
MOVIES 'The Mira cl e Worker'
1980
CIJ 700CLUB
CillWID MONDAY NIGHT FOOTBALL ABC Sports will provide live
coverage of the Denver Broncoe.
and the Oakland Raiders .
D (I)@) M.A.S.H. Hot Lips com·
forte an It alia neold lerwhohaa been
jilted by hie girltriend,lthen finds
herself the object ol
his

at the

TOPS NEWS

ll2JI

plate with all the pepper and spice

. I could tr4 the job

Rutland TOPS OH 1456 Club
finalized plans for a Christmas party
at the Tuesday night meeting. Queen
for the week selected on the basis of
weight loss was Beullih Collier. She
was presented a dollar and the members sang in her honor.

-

Dec Iarer d azz Ies d efense

that you'd expect from the Creole
heritage of New Orleans . (60

A great Christmas buy on a speaker wi th great looks
and thrill ing sound . The long-throw 8" woofer is
acoustically linked to a tuned -port for deep, well-defined
bass . And its 2'/i' wide -dispersion tweeter !:Jives clear,
dramati c highs. Genuine walnut veneer. 22'1&gt; x13x8'/,"
d ee p . Give a pair for superb stereo! #40- 1987

Championship Football.

r I I I I X)

BRIDGE

11
•••
Loai:Ancl FoUIMI" 1178
(I) MOVIE -(ROMANCe-DRAIIA)
••• .. TIN'H Colnl tit lite Fountaln"1164
(I)
lilAT'S INcREDIBLE
11(1)
FLO The beat guulers in

··~UT

. CHARGE IT
/MOST STORES/

2

.gGsted DY the above canoon.

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

~,
VISA
·

5

Now arrange the circled letters to
form the surprise answer , as sug·

(Answers tomonow)
Jumbles : GLOAT HEDGE ABUSED CHERUB
Answer: When he applied for lhe job ol chiel
executioner. th i s is whal he wanled TO BE " HEAD"

em

II

.

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I I I

1
L-L~L_JL
. --~~-

Prlntanswerhere:

dell is thrilled and excited when he
regains hll eight toUowlng a head
injury, but Mary growa apprehen·
sive about the future ot their m,.,.
riage . (80
mine.) (Closed·
Captioned: U.S.A.)
CIJ ROCK CHURCH
C!lMOVIE-(ROMANCe-c:oMEDY)

OH, SURE- AN' IT 6EAT5

HOUR6 AFTER' 'TH\5.

MAGAZINE
CIJ NORMAN·YINCENTPEALE
Salulday·s
(I) AU IN THE FAMILY
CillWe FAMILY FEUD
(I) NASHVILLE ON THE ROAD
0 (1) TIC TAC DOUGH
Jumble Book No. 13. cont1lnlng 110 pwulea.ls IVIIIIble for $1.75 postp1ld
(I) (jj)
MACNEIL·LEHRER .
from Jumble,clothlsnewspa,.r, Box 34, NDfWood, N.J. 07648.1ncludl your
n1m1, 1ddr111, zip codllnd m1kl check• p1yab\e to Newaptiperbooks.
REPORT
®l NEWS
7 :30 (I) 0 BULLSEYE
CIJ WORDS OF HOPE
(I) SANFORD AND SON
(1)0(1) JOKER' S WILD
crJ
HOLLYWOOD SQUARES
()) . COLLEGE BASKETBALL ,
Marshall ve South Carolina
·
@ DICK CAVETT SHOW
ll2llll FACE THE MUSIC
.
r:aa
NEws uPDATE
8:DO CIJUcrJ LITTLE HOUlE ON THE ·

. sso
. ~~

BLIMEN

ONE AFI:FP:IVE5 TWO

~-=~~'=;-"....-f.:~~

I:Q Cl) NEWS UPDATE
7:00

a

-

lWa ABC NEWS

~

MC-2001 by'l'lealistlc ®

Save
5 10

A

1 _ _.1.._..L.~...l._...J_"'-.&lt;l"'---'

~r::~~CTIONSONRAILS

Most .Stores Open
Late Nights
'Til Christmas ·

Half Price!
High-Efficiency
High Performance
Speaker System·

.

"-,

f\,

~
~~E~~c:~~5r~of' Guool Mu· ·. ~~DT
aical comedy atar Belty Garret,. :
II B::.;:EI::.H_:;.;.IN=..t..-.;:~--;
~
I

• C/.PTAINEASY

PRAIRIE Blind teachtr Adam Ken·

OIDO ETA Pill CHAPTER, Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority, 7:30 Q.m.
Tuesday at the Meigs Inn.

HIGHEST MOUNTAIN
Mount Whitney, th~ highest mountain in the 48 coterminous U. S. .
states, is located in Sequoia National
.
Park, Calif.

'I·GREME
I v "\j.,A

oo

Chronomatic • -213 by Realistic

I v "1

'"--

FRIENDS
(I) ABC NEWS

11\Wt(S rc:1&lt;. ~Kit.l0 11-lt:.
~~W, M-1 W'(,. I'lL
~1/61&lt;:, ~ve~ FO~T '(Oll!

Got a problem? An adult subject
for discussion? You can talk it over
in her column if you write to Helen
Bottel, care of this newspaper.

completed plans for the Christmas
festival to be held from 4 to 8 p.m.
Saturday at the school.
Serving of beans, cornbread, hot
dogs, pop and coffee will start at 4.
There will be craft items, plants,
new games, grab bags, and a sweet
shop with homemade cakess,
cookies, pies and candies. Crowning
of ihe snowball royalty will take
place at 7 p.m. There will be door
priZ.s awarded every half hour. The
public is invited.

L•.L1. _,]
.

II" 111711
. (I)
CAROL IIURNI!TT AND

BORN LOSER

Sentinel Social Calendar
TUESDAY
SUTTON TOWNSHIP trustee
meeting 8 p.m. Tuesday at Syracuse
Municipal building.

four ordinary words .

CIJ RAINIIOWFACTOIIY
(!) MOYIE -(ORAliA) 0 " "Rockr

She wants to eat alone;
is it pride or phobia?
50 percent of hot and cold air loss
eliminated if you pack walls and
ceilings with plastic foam, 20 percent more savings when you install
"air stoppers" in your outside-wall
electrical outlets; an\1 another 20
percent when ' you use stripping
around your windows and sliding
glass doors. Double panes or thermal-laminated glass plllll special
curtains, tHey claim make your
house another 20 or 30 percent more
efficient, and special curtains, glass
fireplace screens, etc. give you a 15
percent advantage " at least."
Okay, if you put all this insulation
in at once, you'd be saving some 135
percent of hot and cold air loss, and
there's only 100 percent to play with.
So what happens then? MATHEMATICIAN
•
DEAR MATH:
Elemental : you run out of air, so
you expend energy to pwnp in a
fresh supply, or you open one of
those expensively insulated windows
before you suffocate.
Overinsulation is becoming a new
health hazard these days. - H.
P.S. And somehow even with 135
percent "saving," your gas and electric bills go up, and up, and up.
Doesn't seem fair.

one le_
tter to each square, to form

EVENING

LUNCHEON THtJRSDAY
A Farm Bureau women's holiday
affair will be beld at 1 p.m. Thursday at the Meigs Branch, Athens
County Savings and Loan Co., W.
Main St., Pomeroy.
There will be a covered dish luncheon and those attending are to
take a covered dish and a $2 gift exchange item. All Farm Bureau
women are invited.

fi;},-,

~ Unscramble these four Jumbles,

Mel Cil.crJ O Cil®H!Ji. NEWS

Helen Help Us

BY HELEN BO'ITEL
Special correspondent
DEAR HELEN :
I have this thing about not wanting
to eat when people are watching me.
Tlie reason: I've chewed in front of a
mirror and I look just simply
terrible ' Kind of like a cow chewing
her cud. My face gets all out of
shape.
I try very . hard to look like actresses who eat gracefully in films,
but I can't change.
If I r.1ust accept food in a group, I
put my hand in front of my mouth so
no one can see my ugliness.
Do you think I need psychiatry? SECRET EATER
DEARS.E.:
You could use a crash course in
seeing yourself as others see you which is a great deal less than you
think!
Believe me, people aren't avidly
wjtching you eat- they're too busy
sfuffing their faces, or talking, or
even worrying about their own aJ&gt;pearances. Most of us don't stare at
eaters (unless their table manners
are atrocious ) because we want the
same courtesy, aware that we
seldom look our best "at table."
To conquer self..::onsciousness,
discuss "appearance hang-ups"
with others. When you discover that
almost everyone worries over defects their friends don't see, chances
are you'll take your hand away from
your face. - H.
P .S. Those glamorous aotresses? I
suspect they don't really chew: they
just mouth their food on camera. -

,.,

Dt!C:. 1, 1..,

ad1elhaek

Michael Russell 'was honored
f!'CI!ntiy with a party in celebratioil
of his seventh birthday. Gifts were
presented to him.
.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Russell, Mr. and Mrs.
Russell Roush, grandparents; Mrs.
Bertha Russell, great-grandmother;
Earl Russell, Mr. and Mrs. Steve
Haggy, Stephanie and Brad; Mr.
arid Mrs. Dave Shain and Jason;
Peach, Tyson and Travis Mugrage;
Mr. and Mrs. Dorsey Parsons;· Mr.
,and Mrs. Herbert Roush, Mr. and
Mrs. Dana l.Alwis, Sharon and
Jeremy Hupp; Cindy, Dave and Ed
Roush.
Sending gifts were Ethel Clark,
great-grandmother; Don and
Carroll Russell, and Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Venoy and family.

~~~~
~ THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
~ ~ ~~ 01
byHonrlAmoldandBoblee

Television
viewing

'

; 3 :81

' I:A

ei!e!!!'Ji!Ji~-

Be ready to record holiday fun .
No limit -so buy now and save!
#44-602/603

.

SPOIITIREPORT

"PREPACKAGED"

Add to your·list of nonsense wor. ds: "Prepackaged." How does ORE
, pedlage somethl11g before it's in the
' conlalner?

lad1elhaek Store or Dealer Nearest You
PRICES MAV VARV AT INOfYIDUAL STOIIEI

(

••

OY

OG

·tRGOLM

YV

HTPYVAOPI

YJRA

YJL

GHOMOY

LNOT

RTDLMY

YV

ZLARYPML
ZLARYJ;'ML

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IRA.-

LOAGYLOA

Yetlterday'l ~: .GOD HAS TW(l DWELLINGS; ONE

IN HEAVEN, -AND TilE OTHER IN A MEEK AND
THANKFULHEART.-IZAAK WALTON
\

-

'

�..•

3-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Dec. 1, 19M

Alabaster alibi is asked

Polly's Pointers

,.
,.
'

By PoiiJ (..'ramer
s.-t.~ cemiJICIIIdeat

'DEAR POLLY - I lost the paper
that hld·the dlrectiDIIS for cleaning
alabNter and would like ve.ry much
to laloW what tbey w.re. - MRS.
S.J.S.
,,
DEAR MRS'.

I

S .J.S.

Alabaster Is a
natural stone
mined in Italy and
the infonnation I

looked like a dirty tan.
1worked on my inees for six hours
using a wu remover, a scraper,
steel wool and elbow lre&amp;'ll! and only

have Is frvm a
shop in IJaiY that
sells such produc-

They say "Never~ to direct
sunlight or ..a,ter. Sun causes fading
and water ·remoVe&amp; the finish and

'

'
'

cleaned a small area. I am 119 yean
old, ao this was a IDUICle stralnlng
job for me. I felt .there pWSt be an
eaaler way and fJnall¥ took a chanc:e
and pUt one cup of automatic dfsb..
washer detergent and balf a cup ol
ammonia In h8lf a pall of boUtng

Cramer

ts.

-

amoWJl of petroteUm jelly or soft
white wax 9r paraffin can be applied
. briskly and periodically." Many socalled alabaster figurines from Italy
. eue molded from a synthetlc com·poeitlon and can be llrliahed POLLY .
DEAR POll..Y - Not too long ago
we boulht an older boule and the .
white Urtoleum In the bathrOOm had
so much wu built up oo It that It

'

causes pennament ~e ..A small

Public Notice- .. --

'

.

water. Using III)' 1tr1n1 mop 1. . . .
11011111 of ·tbll bot mldure In a COI'IIIr

~

LEGAL NOTICE
Revenue Sharing Fund
ReporJ for Fiscal Year 1978
for Sutton Township Is
· available for public ln.. specllon at the residence of

of the belbroclmforlilltlnll. .'
1bl4 IOftened the old wu: Jm.

and I.· had a iJMmlnl
wblte floor In 1- u.n an bour.l did

ll)ediately

have to 111e the JICI'IIII!I' In tbe CCII"
nen and alOOI theedie Ill the. ~
way but the wu came lilt eully. I
rinled the floor well wlthdur nllr
after the cleaninll - I!DIIhed. Bt
sure to wear rubber 11oVa til'
Wl'in8in8 out tbe mop and do not •
oowoodfloors.-MRS. W.R.J.
PollY will III!Dd JGU ooe of her

newlliaPer·

1, Racine, Oti.
(12) 1,

c:::)

Middleport, Meigs county,

... Ohio, · in the office of the

Mayor, VIllage Hall, Mid·
dleport, Ohio, until 2:30
P.M., Dec. 30, '1980, and
then publicly opened and
read aloud for the con-

colwDn. Write POlLY'S POEIJ.
TERSin care ofthlslieWII*per.

TROOP
- Meigs County Girl
Scout Troop 1292 recently held an investiture ceremony
at the Rutland school where meetings are held weekly.
Taken into the troop during the investiture ceremony
were front, left to right, Tracy Hysell, Melissa Pettry
and Stacy Hysell, and second row, Sally McKnight,

MARINA WEST SEWERS
. LIFT STATION
AND FORCE MAIN
CONTRACT NO.4
The proPilSced work under
this Contract consists of the
construction.

PUbliC Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice
Public NOtice
. Neither the grantors nor at 992·3337.
NOTICE
NOTICE OF SALE
. grantees, nor anyone
The Administrator reser-'
'
' FOR SALE
By virtue of an Order of, claiming under them. shall
COUNTY·OWNEb
Sale Issued out of the Com· . In env manner obstruot any · x~ ~IJf bls~.t .:~r~nr ::.~1
mon Pleas Colirt of MeiQS j port1on of t,he said arecash.
1 REFUSE EQUIPMENT·
Pursuant to section
Countv. Ohio, In 11\e case Of driveway, or In any man·
Homer Baxter,
Dorothy L. Young, Mid· ner prevent the free and
Administrator 307.12 0. R. C. the Meigs
dleport, Ohio, Plaintiff, unobstructed use of the
pfthe Estate of county commissioners will
against Kenneth McFann, .same by all parties entitled '
Dillon Taylor, receive sealed bids until 12
ef al ., Defendants, upen a to use the same.
·
·1
Deceased Noon on Tuesclay, Decemjudgment therem ren· ' Deed Reference : VolumP. (11) 24, (12) 1, 2tc
' . ber 16, 1980, In the office of
dered, being Case No. 17551 235, Page 199, Meigs Coun·
. the Meigs county com·
in said Court, I will offer ty Deed Recoros :
Public Notice
missioners, ,located In tile
for sale, at the front door of
Also, all stock In trade
lhe
Courthouse
in and tangible equipment
Courthouse,
Pomeroy,
LEGAL NOTICE
Pomeroy, Meigs Countyl and personal property ·
Ohio, with bids to be
The Corps of Engineers opened at ~ : 00 PM and reM!
Ohio, on the .4th day o
sifuated In and about the
January 1981, at 10:00 · business known as Young's will hold a public meeting aloud, for the sale of the
o'clock A.M., the following ; Market, located In the on 18 December 1980 In tollowtng refuse equip·
lands and tenements, to· VIllage of· Middleport, Huntington, WV atthe Hun·
ment :
wit:
Ohio. The security Interest
Civic Center, Suite
Approx. 50 Metal Refuse .
Bel ng all of Lot No. 52 In Of ·the Vendor In the P'lr· tington
Lower Pomeroy, now In· sonal property shall also be A, at 7 p.m ., to discuss a Containers
corpqrated Into and a part evidence&lt;! by a security tentatively selected plan
One (11
1972
In·
of .the Village ot Mid· Agreement, covering both for 1mproving the ternatlonal Front Loa~lng
dteport, . Meigs county! the personal property sub· Gallipolis Locks and Dam Garbage Truck
Ohio, and that· part of Lo
ject ld thls agreement plus· in Gal11aCounty, Ohio, and
one (1)
1978 In·
No. 51 In said village, any after·acqulred proper· Mason county,
west
described as follows:
ty and .lnventoryc II being: Virg·lnia . Draft' ver~ins of ternailonal Front Loading
Garbage lruck
Beginning at the southeast Intended Ilia! tnls shan·
the
corner of t-ot No. 52 on mean equipment, ·fixtures: ttl&lt;f Main Report
·Said veh.lcles and conPearl Street; thence south and inventory · of mer· Environmental· . paCt tainers may be vieWed et
Statement are scheduled the Meigs County Sanitary
along Pearl Street, 17 feet chandise.
to the insi~e of a curb on
The personal property tor public release on 3 Landfill, . located one·hlll
the south side of me was
appraised
at December 1980. 'The report mile off Slate Route 1.0, In
driveway; thence at right' $16,041 .00. The real estate will be available tor public
angles to the riqht 69 feet was
appraised
at inspection at the Corps of Salisbury Township, bet·
ween the hours of 8:00AM
following t he lns1de of said· $69,300.00.
E;ngineers. Huntington and 5:00 PM, Monday
curb, to within 3 feet of a
Termsofsale: Cash.·
building known as a
·JamesJ . Proffitt District Library, the through Saturdoy.
storage building; thence at
Sheriff of Gallipolis Locks and Dam
Trucks and boxes to be
right angles to the left 7
·
Meigs County Office, and the offices of sold as · they are with no
feet ; thence at right angles (11) 24, (12) 1,8, ltc
the. Corps of Engineers In guarantees. Sal~ bids to be
to the right 51 feet to the
Pittsburgh, Cincinnati, and submitted In sealed en- ·
west line of t.ot No. 51;
Public Notice
Louisville. copies of this velope or envelopes
thence aiOng ·the west line
of Lot No. 51, 24 feet to the
NOTICE OF SALE
. report may be obtained bY ·marked, "Bid on 19n Gar·
5outhwestcorner•of Lof No.
In pur$uance of an order contacting : U. S. 'Army bage Truck" and/or "llld
Cor))$ of Engineers, Hun· on 1978 Garbage True-."
52; thence along the south'' of 11\e Probate ·court
·nne of t.ot No. 52 to the Meigs
county, Ohio,• tlngton District, ATTN : and/or"BidOil Refutoconplace of beginning. · · ...
Homer Baxt~r
Ad -' ORHPD·N, P. 0 .. Box 2127,
Excepting and reserving · mlnlstrator of the Estate of Huntington, West Virginia . talners."
unto the former grantOFs, Dillon Taylor, Deceased, 25121, telephone : (304) 529· I The Board of Meigs
County Commissioner$
Thomas Russell Runyan , will offer for sale on the 56115.
The official record of reserve the right to relect
and Olive Runyan, ·their ·lOth day of December, 1980,·
heirs and asslgns1 a right· · at 10:00 a.m:.:at the law of- the public meeting will be any or all bids, or any part
ot-way lei be usea In com· .. fices Of CRvW, CROW &amp; open tor both oral and writ· thereof.
mon with tne Grantees. PORTER, 196 West Second fen statements. To ei'lsure
Meigs county
their heirs and assigns, Street, Pomeroy, Ohio, all
an accurate record of the ·
Commlssionon
upon • driveway about 12 the persona I property meeting, all facts and
Mary Hobstener,
feet in width running from belonging to the late Dillon
statements, including those
'
Clet1t
Pearl Street along the Taylor . Information 100n·
southerly s ide of the above cerning personal pro;jerty presented orally, should be (12) 1,8,2tc .
described real estate, and of Dillon Taylor may be ob- submitted in writing either
back a distance of. 69 feet .. tained from Homer B;,.ter to the chairman at the time
of the public meeting, or E'VERYBOD~
~-----~-----....,-~---.------., mailed to the Huntington
_ 'I
I
1 District Office no later than
following the

Maraunda Nicholson, Amy Herald, Latisha Price,
Stephal)ie Walker, and Tracie Rictunond, and second
row, Judy Eblin, leader, Aprif Grove Joan Jennings,
Reva Laudennilt, and Angie Russell, with Chris
Bowers, assistant leader.

b fl
I Cur In atlon.

li ~~~~~

Pa_
y Cash. for
I
Claulfleds and
. Savelll

Copies of Draw!ngs,
Speclflcotions · and Con·
tract documents may be

"'

..
".
,

h.

~· •

flees, the lu II amount of
which will be refunded
· , upon return of same within

thirty (30) days after the
•, bid opening. The successful
;. bidder may retain his
0

"'
., , ,,
~·

..

Write your own ad and order by mail with this

coupon. Cancel your ad bY phone when you get
results. Money not refundable.

PHONE 992-2156

~\

Nam•-------------------1I

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

A d d r e u - - - - - - - - 1.

•
Phon•------~--1, ,

f

1I
I
I
I
10 1,

1 Prlni one word In each
1 space below. Eac.h In·

• ltlal or group of figures
~I counts as a word . count
I! name and address or
~

•
TOYS FOR TOTS- Members of Racine, Harrison-

tern Co., and Fairfield Processing Corp., makers of
Poly-fil. Pam Henderson, R.N., nursing supervisor for
Veterall8 Memorial, accepted the toys from Grange
members, left t~ right, Ruby Lambert, Bernice
Midkiff, both Star Grange; Elizabeth Jordan, Colwnbia; Anna Halliday, Star, and Ethel Grueser, RQck
. Springs.

ville, Ohio Valley, Hemlock, .Star, Rock Springs and
Colwnbia Granges made stuffed toys which they
presented Friday to Veterall8 Memorial Hospital. The
toys will be given to hospitalized children. The toys
were made by the Grange members as a part of the
National Grange contest sponsored by Simplicity Pat-

'

.

Ohio divorce rate counters -trend

Mary Smitli.of the deparbnent's
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - More
statistical analysis Wlit said Butter
career women and less baby-boom
County led the state with an 8.2
divorces are among theories spouted
divorce rate and Harrison CoWJty
. . by experts to explain the leveW,g off
· · · of Ohio's divorce rate in !979 - a
hid the lowest at 2.0.
.: .. statistic running coWJter to the
The statistics, compiled from
state corrunon pleas court abstracts,
· national trC~Jd.
show · that Franklin County
·:. : Carolyn Swift, director of preven·
. tlon services at Southwest Comregistered a 6.8 rate, Montgomery
munity Mental Health Center, said
COWJty 6.7, Lucas CoWJty 5.7,
Hamilton County 5.1 ahd Cur"""·
•· • the rate may be affected by war
: : babies, who balloon and ~te : Counly4...
' .-~
'
' ·'; statistics "like a swallowed rabbit
According to the department,
.., , going through a boa conatrlctor."
there ""re 59,548 diVOI'CI!S In Ohio In
Ms. Swift said the same war-baby 1979, COJIIPIIred 1\'lth 59,200 diVOI'Cel!
couples who mushrOOmed mlirrlage
for
rates in their teens may also bave ln:creased the divorce rate for the past
the ptatea;,M;.
said, Is t!lllt
couple of years. But as these couples more women ha. ve careers and ar~
., , move through the high-risk dlvor~:e
thlll! given life-style options + get, .years, she said, it may signal an end tlng married or stqy;ng single.
to the rising rate.
"Women are riot getting married
According to the state Department
just to get a meal ticket," she said,
_ of Health, Ohio's divorce rate in 1979 malting for marrtag~ based on a
' •Was 5.6 per 1,000 people, the same a~ greater number (If factors. ·• · ·• •
1978. The 1978 rate had jwnped ~ "Wotnen
ate ·
. , ' from a 1977 mark of5.4.
· widOWed · are waiting longer to

ln:'otbet- ~-'ble-,...,lanation
swiir

:· :1n

whclaredlvOrcedand
I

j

l

remarry aild are remarrying at a
reduced rate. They don't have to
remarry to survive," SM said.
Despite the steadying of the Ohio
divorce rate, the nwnber of divorces
nationally - 1.17 million in 1979 was 3.5 percent higher than for the
previous year, according to a report
by the. National Center for Health
Statistics.
·

I
I
·I
I

I
l

wu6.6'

eliding oiJI ,diVO!'U
yean In . t
11179, Unc)lanjjed, fi'OOI the 1*" I
before, the cen(ef !lllld. 'I'he median 1
age of divorce for husbands was 3:1, I

in

lor Famllles
Transition, said the
divorce rate has occasionally
leveled off, only to reswne its upward trend. "Statistics over the last
20 years indicate you can't predict a

1.
2.
3.
4.
5.

II
~

6.

7.
8.
9,
IL '
11 :

unc!etitanding of divotcell
probabl•' only c•lfltrlbu(es to their tn-·

·rrcase.

..

,,

35

•

•

.

'

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16-..... ferhtt

• e fllaRM SUPPLIES

&amp;LIV.STOCK

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.llijiAL£STATE
Jl-Htmn far Sele!
11-MMIIIe ..omn
M&lt;SI....
U-Farll'ls fer'\llt"
M-Iuslnaa lulkllltft
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,si!RVICBI
.,_"
..............
n-,......,
....._.

J4

···~ -

__ --·

want-Ad Aclvert111ng.
'
Oeedllnes
t : ....:~f. Gilly

I.

....

J'lttll cjdst

Jl-·
tlw77-A........

3J-ItNitOrl

,

·1· i ·
I ·
I '
I'

I

. . . . . . .y

..........
............
•

8tti111H.......

........"·"-"

...-v......... '

• .... ) '• '

·~·,

•' I

'

'

~·
.lcftw.Ni~twr ... MIRifMift1J ...... 4CMtt"'_...,.,,

MtnMAtftl ....... tMI 'Ft'Ol'lft .Yiwtfl M ....... M . . I -

:
.

·;J

Contract

Per -

formance Bon~ anl! a
Payment Bond as provided
toi below :
·
(A) A Controct Per·
,~

tormance

Bond

in

an

amount ·equal' to 100% of

., . the estimateo cost of the
work conditioned, · among

__,.cert~

i

' , ~·

•

Volunteer

PUWNS

Fire

EXCAVAnNG

APPLES - Sweet Cider :
We still have plenty of apples. 54.00. per bushel ond
up. Fitzpatrick Orchard,
Stele Route 689. Phone 669·
3785.
NO . HUNTING . or
trespassing day or night on
lhe Charles Yost, •lvim Will
or John Houdashelt farms.
All violators will be
prosecuted.

..

~

alit • .....,
.

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

...-..~--'
-loC..f!l-

HAVE .YOUR deer trophy
mounted .
Birchfield 's.
East on I.Uat Rutland. 742 .
2178.
SHOOTING

MATCH.

Rutland American Legion

every Sunday, 1:00. Big
prizes and games. Factory
chokes only .

11

Help Wanted

·- '--

- ' = " - " = = ' --

GET VALUABLE training
as a young business person
~nd

some great gifts as a sentinel route carrier. Phone
us right away and get on · l -=~~~~=~~::;:::­
the eligibility list at 992· 1-:R~ea~I=E~s:t•:t:e:::G:•:ne:r:a:l::;...l
2156or992·2157.
11
1

PICKING up piano In your
area . Responsible party

cellent working conditions,
life insurance
and

ABSOLUTE I. Y oo ·hunting
da~ or night on the Charles
S. 8ejler &amp; llilma Peterson
farms. Violators will ·be

disability policy at no cost
to the employee, and

prosecu1ed.

call:

hospitalization Insurance
available. Come rVIsit1US or

DEER
PROCESSING. Pomeroy Health Care Cen·
Jones Meat Packing ott 555 ter, 614·992·6606.
on Washington Co. 248, Lit·
tie Hock l'ng. 6U· 667·~133.
12 'Situations Wanted
MEIGS HISTORY Books HAVE VACANCY in our
for sale for Christma! at home for elderly peOple,
Museum

every

woman, women, men or
elderly couple. If In·

Friday and Sunday of·
ternoon during December, terested call tor more in ·
or at Pomeroy Library.
formation at 992· 7314.•
I WILL clean Qouse in area

dollars, sterlh1g, etc. , wood
ice boxes, i ars antiques,

•· work

upon

the

terms

proposed, within the lime
" ·. prescribed, iJ1 accordance
with lhe plans and
specifications.

watches, chains, diamonds
&amp; so on. Copper brass and
baneries, antique items,
also fido appraisals, com -

plete auctioneer service.
( Bl A Payment , Bond In• Over 30 years experience in
•n amount equal to 100% business. Will buy ~om ­
01 the estimated cost of the
plete estates. Also take

work conditioned for the

pay.rnent bY lhe contractor
and all Sub-contractors for'

labor

performed

and

"' materials furnished In con-

nection with the project in·
volved .
; ·
Each bidder must insure
'
that all employees ani! ap·
1 plicants for employment

(·
I

are

•

not

discriminated

against because of race,
color, religion, sex, or
national origin.

!
't

Attention of lhe Bidder Is
directed to the special con·
structlon

regulat ions

in·

•

eluded herein relative to

•

special requirements for

I

procurement of labor, the
special information given

In the Information to Bid·
ders, to the Special
Requirements for wage
roles, the hours of em·
ployment as

:.·
•
:.
r.

1•

~

~
~

,.

J

t[

.
•.

ascel'"t~ined

ond determined by the
Department of Industrial
Relations and provided for
in the laws of the State of
Ohio.'

The Owner reserves the

right to reject any or all

2
In Memoriam
IN LOVINGM~oryofour
dear mother who passed
away ~ven years ago
today, DeCember 1, 1973.
Gone but notforgotten .
For life Is eternal ·the good
Lordsald.
,
And Death -I• only a step-·
ping stone, tO' a beaullful j
life &amp; place we have never:
known so we do not think oil
our lovMI one 11 dead, bu~
only gone for a while .until
we can ell meet again In
HHven 10 beautiful end so
fair, 1110 Mother I lust'
went to uy a Happy Blr·
thday to you with J .. us the
Lord. Dec. loth.
very sadly missed by
daughter MrS. Helen Jet·
fersandfamlly .
3
A-ments
I PAY IIIIIIIISI price&amp;
possible for gelid and sliver
coins, rlntt. 1-ry, etc.
Cont.ct Ed BurkeH Barber
ShOp, Middleport.
SHOOTI"'G MATCH at
corn HolkiW tn Rutland.
• e-y SUndell atartlng at
nc11111·.
Prac:eeds being
aonated lc! the Boy Scout
TrOOP U9. 12 OIU!te factory
choke gun only!

NEW LISTING - Large
· room h orne, corner
s1x
Main St. &amp; Locust,
Rutland. Has extra lot
.33 acre

10· 7-Hc

ff2'2~l59

·-

'\.

35 acres WOOu
1an .
~S:,~· 00 · GROWI .NG
CHILDREN _ This lO
room modern home has
A bedrooms, llf2 baths,

S-eNeral storage bldgs.,
'th 17
A k'109

ped kitchen, screened
rear pore h,
new

742-3171

full

aluminum
siding·.
$26 900 00
' · ·
A REAL VALUE IN
TOWN I A 3 bedroom

home with a beautiful

kitchen and bath. Well
maintained with a rec.
room in basement, and
a bargain at $25,500 .00 .
SALEM CENTER- 4
bedroom home on ap-

Travel Trio

acres; 6 rooms basement,

Printed Pattern

10 ROOM brick, 3 baths; 1'1•
acre; 6 rooms, 2 baths, l'h
bath,

4899

·Firewood for sale, Mixed

types of wood. $35.00 ·per
pick·up

enclosed

newer- building in excellent condition w ith 2

wo•klng stations. Also
trailer hookup lot .
$24,900.00.
REALTOR
Henry E. Cleland, Jr. ·
992-6191
ASSOCIATES

Over 3 years ,experience in !

_

41

TWO BEDROOM un - .
furnished house, also two
bedroom furnished &amp; one

42

3 BEDROOM trailer in
Southern Valley Mobile
Home Park, Cheshire, Oh.
992·3954.
Will accept·

VIRGt La·. sR·. 111: AI t o~ ~

16 E. Second Street

Phone
1-(614)-992-3325

children.

1 valuaiDie skill •.
Mlllt.ry Pollee, Admlnlllrltllfl. flload service, MKIYnla. Good
benefits, Advlncement
opportunities. Must be
11·34, . hllll school
tr•duate Of .hllft schOol

lftfoi.

Arlllf Rlic:rulfo

lilt. "2-71 u or SM-GHI
colltcf
. ..

.

ITCH EN

'9.95

3 ROLL

CARPET

From ~4.99

A.nd Up

Blue Up
Gold
Rust
·; ash and

Padding
and
lnsta_lla,tio.n

Blue
Rust

•

Apricot

Installed
Reg. $15.95

Carr

DRIVE A LITTLE- SAVE A LOT

RUTLAND FURNITURE

JUST IN time for winter . 3
triple trac storm windows,

coated. 70,., high by 52 11•
wide. Cheap. 992 ·2802.

742-2211

MAIN ST .
t:Joets for Sa'e

56

'•

AKC registered poodle
WOOD &amp; COAL stoves, fur · SIX
males &amp; 3
puppies,
nace adapters &amp; flrplace 'chocolate3 black
females. Born
inserts. PrIces reduced
$100. or 20% whichever is .Oct. 10. 992·7102.
greater, from

now thrO

--·.. .. _--···
.... ...
.....·--.
-···
&amp; Llflestatil

Dec. 15. Outdoor Equip·
ment Sales, Jet. Rts. 7 &amp; 35,
Gallipolis, Ph . 446·3670.
6ft. green artificial Christ·

mas tree In good shape.
$15. 992·3726.
275 gallon fuel oil tank,
very good cond. $75. 949·
2225.

62

Wanted to Buy

Auto Parts

76

&amp; Accessories

4 CRAGER aluminum slot
wheels for Ford pickup
F100 or 150 series also for a
jeep .c-wheel drive or 2

wheel drive, 8.5x15 . Call
any time 667 ·6636.
78
·camping
Equipmen1

BUS CAMPER, sleeps 6 ;
stove,

Hotpoint Mlcrow•vt Oven,
...... J42f.
Hom•lltiSilper 2 Ch•l11

s:.w

refrigerator,

sink

and water tank, gas lights,
2
large cabinets, must be
CHIP WOOD. Poles max'
diameter 10" on largest towed. $500. 992·5260.
end. $12 p-er ton. Bundled
slab. $10 per ton . Delivered
servlees
to Ohio Pallet Co. , Rt. ·2. ·
Pomeroy 992·2689 .
Home
81
Improvements

2 DUROC and Hampshire
cross boars. 843·2933.
3/ 1 Semmental calf for bull
or club call. 949 ·2822.
'

GENE'S
CARPET
CLEANING. Deep stream
clean puts nu-look back in

your carpet, highly reconi·
1

mended, reasonable rates.

scotcnguard .

Free

estimates. Gene Smith, ca ll

now992·6309 or 742·2211.

sut' ~

n•toOtJ
Ret. ltUS

Nowi16US
(Price inCI!Idef Free urrylnt .

7~1----A
~
ut~o~s~fo~r~S~a~l:e.___ !

Cllt)

1974 AMC Matador, 6 cyl., 3•
speed, 61.500 miles. $1,200 1
or best offer , 773·5236.
'

Comfort.., Glow Keroune
Heaten, Econam'f UI~ J.
lilet.IJIJUS

NOWJI:zt.fS

St•ke· Btd touter Waton
(H-HS2J, Rtt. $46.fS Now ... US
I Gtocl Used Dryer
17i

,•

POMEROY
LANDMARK
Pomeroy

1974 TOYOTA . Good cond. 1
742·2421 .

•

1979 OLDS . Royale 88, 2
door, full power equip- ;
ment, AMIFM/c .b ., a.c ..
cruise control, till steering •
wheel, rear window!
defogger. seats genuine ;
leather, Landau roof, car· ·

NEED PARTS
FOR YOUR
MOBILE HOME
FURNACE?

•

Call 992·5587 .... We can
have them for you the
ne~t day if we get yoiJr
order by l :OOp.m .

KINGSBURY HOME
PARTS &amp;

ACCESSORIES

NEW HOME - Has 2
bedrooms, bath, kit·

44

chen, dining, living, and

3 AND 4 RM furnished ap·
Is. Phone 992·5.04.

56
&lt;"----'P'-'e"-t's-'-'
lo,_r_,S~
a_,
le'--

rnlne metallic , like new. 1
Actual mileage 9,200 . 985·
3913 or 378·6252.
I1 13
= - - -E
= x-=ca::cv"a"'t,
' "n_
'· g_ _

~urnlshed apartments, 992·

HOOF HOLLOW : Horses
and ponies and. riding

Cragers,

chen, breakfast nook,

Be paid
to learn

.

Firewood. 742·2508.

E. Main St.

enclosed front pqrch.
basement, new roof, and
large yard. Asking

1 ;-:.:=.::::::::::::.;::===~
11

Mobile Homes
for Rent

EAF9RDm;

•

'WOMAN -or girl to live ln.

· Houses for Rent

bedroom furnished apart·
ments. Call after 6 p.m .
992·2288.

loft for storage. A nice
home with river Iron·
tage.
MIDDLEPORT
Reasonable home with
family room with wood·
burning fireplace. 2
bedrooms plus nursery,
2 or 3 Block Sawmill. 992· . · equipped
kitchen, and
6035.
utility room. Nice oor·
ner lot. Only S16,500.
Golf Equipment, used sets.
NEW LISTING - Nice
Broken shafts; etc. 614·985·
home with 5 bedrooms,
3961 .
'
new bath, paneling,
carpeting, larpe kit·

'192-UM.

11·19·1 mo.

RUTlAND FURNITURE CARPET Sti)P
· NOVEMBER CARPET SALE

Exc.

N ow At
Pomeroy
lnndm&lt;u l&lt;

business. Wi II buy com· 1
plete estates. Also take
consignments. Auction
every Friday night, 7 p.m .
Ossle's · Auction ' House,
Middleport, Oh.992·6370.

, l:..:lc __..:H.::e:.:l.oP.=W:.:•:.:n,_,ted=-- -

Free Estimate
Jtmeskeesee
Ph. 992-2772

Livestock

Headquarters

t

I

Ph. 446·4741'
11 ·5·1 mo. p_o,

room table, 6 chairs, buffet

Jean Trusself

949·2660
OFFICE 992·2259

I

uvour Needs
Ate My Business"

·DUNCAN PHYFE dining

air

heat ,

.,AAA Aluminum

With

and china closet.
cond. 992·3728.

• Storm Windows
e Replacement
Windows

FRI£ ESTIMATES

FIREWOOD S35 a truck
load, 560 a cord. All hardwood, split and delivered.
843·4831 .

wide, 1 single pane white

992·5692

Housing

Jewelry, Pomeroy, Ohio.

Deliver~'!·

will stack for Sen1or
Citizens. 843·4951 or 843·
2815.

while coat 77'13 high by 302f.J

Roger &amp; Dottie Turner

garage, large utilitY room.
OLD COl NS, pocket wat· On 2 acres. Tuppers Plains
ches, class rings, wedding area. $29,000. 667·6455.
bands; diamonds. Gold or
sliver. Call J . A. Wamsley,
742·2331. Treasure · Chest
Coin Shop, Athens, OH . 592· · Real Estate- General
6462.
WANTED TO BUY: Class
rings, wedding bands,
anything stamped lOk, 14k,
18k, gold. Silv'( coins,
pocket watches. Call Joe
Clark,' 992·2054, Clark's

load.

elnsulation
· e Storm Doors

.

Misc. Merchanise

54

prox. 1 acre lot. Forced

porch. A good rental in·
1..!::;;=;:;:;::;;:;:==~
v
es I me M. .. J U S T
' ' $15,000.00.
OWN YOUR OWN
' BEAUTY SALON! A

Homes for sate

Rf. 3, Box 54
Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614·843·2591
6·15-tfc

c arpeted, wi1~edapp rodx .

basement, tully
carpeted,
garage ·
t on approx. 2
carpor,
acres of land for play,
and best of all, an above
ground pool I 541.500.00.
YOUJIIG MARRIED 'Start your future with
this 2 bedrooln home on
approx. 1 acre. Equip·

Cheryllemley.Assoc.

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding

perience

Sizes from 4x6 to 12x40

bedrooms. new buflt· in

for large family. Call for
I·
· app
FRONT
STREET _
Middleport . Nice cor·
ner lol with 2 story
home, 9 rooms, 2 baths,
live downstairs, rent the
. $29 000 oo
upstairS.
' · ·
RUTLAND - l.arge 4
bedroom home, garage,

choose · from .

Utiity Buildings

Bl.(MN

INSULAnON

Installed
· &amp;
Repaired
12, years
ex -

"From lOx30"
SMALL

burner.
ONLY
$16,500.00.
THAT
HOME
COUNTRY
_ IN
WithTHE
4 _5
room, 2 patios, tully

to

Sizes

and set up for wood

won't last long !
521 ,soo.oo.
EXCELLENT LOCA·
TION- Middleport Large level lot, With 4
bedroom home, 2 baths,

'

Farm Buildings

J&amp;L

Roofs, Gutters,
&amp; Siding ·

ALL STEEL

NEW LiSTiNG - AN
ACRE IN TOWN- Plus
a 12X65, Holly Park
mobile home that Is '
mostly · furnished. Real
nice with new carpet

kitchen, spacious living

ties

Anytime
11-16·1 mo.

POME.R OY, 0 .

inc luded.

-

'-'-- -'-'-==-===--

31

992-5682

living room, eat-in kitchen,

bids and to waive ·any in·

. . .. .

,B roker

Giveusacalltoday.
Velma Nicinsky, Assoc.
742-3092

2 mobile homes;
consignments.
Auction Mason, 3 bedroOm never
every Fr i ~ay night, 7 p.m. lived in, 2 bedroom, rented
Ossle's Auction House, 2 acres. John Sheets, J1J2
Middleport. Oh.992·6370.
miles soU#l ot Middleport.
Rt. 1.
WANTED
TO BUY : '
GOLD,
SILVER, Beautiful three bedroom
PLATINUM, STI!'RLING · ranch brick home in Baum
COINS, RINGS,JEWELR · Addition, · Pomeroy, Ohio.
Y, MISC. rTEMS. AB · Gas heat, central air con- 1
SOLUTE
MARKET ditioning. Call 985·3814 or ·
PRICE GUARANTED. ED 992·2571 .
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP, MIDDLEPORT,
BY OWNER, 2 bedroom,
OH10992·3476.

USED FURNITURE. Gold
formalities In bidding. ·
•
8&amp;
silver, clasS: rings, pocket
THE VILLAGE OF watches,
chains, diamonds ,
MIDDLEPORT,OHIO &amp;
so on . Copper brass and
Fred Hoffman, Mayor
batteries, antique items,
oec.1,8,15,22
also do appraisals, com·
plete auctioneer service.
' . ..... -, ............
' .
''. .
_.........

~

pond. Call tor showing. .
we have other proper-

'

IN ·
etc. Complete households. AUTOMOBILE
Write M. D. Miller, Rt. 4, SURANCE been can ·
Lost
yovr
Pomeroy, OH1 ,or call 992· celled?
operator's license? Phone
7760.
992·2143.

Georges. Hobstetter Jr.

garage. full basement.
Has l'h acre spring fed

Insurance

13

742-2003

WI 1'
acres. s
$52,000.00.
FARM - Very nice 10112
acres with lovely brick 3
bedroom home, 2 baths,

Wanted to Buy
of Middleport-Pomeroy .
IRON. AND BRASS BEDS, 992 ·3562 before noon or .af·
old furniture, desks, gold ter 5.
rings, jewelry, silver
'

9

.ROB_
STEnER
REALJY

nice
woodwork
throughout. Nice home

Nancy Van Meter,

R.N., Director of Nursing •

Meigs

12 Park St.
Middleport, Oh.
Ph. 992-6263

earn good mor1ey pi us l

other things thof..lh~ ~o~ · . USED FURNITURE. Gold
tractor will perform the &amp; silver, class rings, pocket

if

'=.·-----:.--·--... .
.11•,

,

,_r.,_J
.'. ' .. - •. j

Colli

J . ., ,

...

1
·~·
•

..
..."

.......
....

,...,,.

_,

r•te.

a

~T'Nelntwlalt

11- .........

Ill

•

)'

M-M61c. Meft* 'Is;
11-........ ........

.

P.omero.y , Olllo ~~7~
,,
--~-------- ... -.~ _______
O!._~...i.'..l.!.:..

~

1

.. · . :·

·- •.;: 'f "' ..

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

JI-M....... . . . .

•FINANCIAL

II

coupon with -~emiHance
The Dally Sentinel
. · ,. ·
lox 7Jf ··
·
.
1

eMERCH,NDISE

· "c••••r

1~, i1

Mail This

l · .·

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

.._

.
·41-WIRtM!ifiWeM

11-W..... TeDo

I '
1~

. ~:
. ~. ·

.,_........

~-Rent

12-SI1UI-,Ootod
1J-IItwranc
14-lustMH Tralftiftt
IJ-kMih lftltnldttn
ItI ..... TV

1 l·

.

tor .......

,,_Hetpw1 n'-l

11
1·
1·

~
. 31.

42-Mellltf """"

SERVICES

:

~: .

12 •
13
·
11
: .
16 ·

I
trendove.roneYear/'h~said.
1
Fetter .llllld IIOCiety a &amp;JIII8rent 1

growtna

21 .
22 .
23.
24.
25.
26.
27 ·

:t-~namentt

·-·· ,...,.....,.,.

P;:~~~'Lto'!;kuiNT

20. _ _ _ _ _ __

1

. 'I'he medlanduratlon.of marriages · 1

an~==29~ofthe~ter

19.

41-tt~MtM~W8Itlt

._Putlllc Sale
· 1 Auction

1
• -~ 1
.I
I

~~:·.

1-&lt;ard M TtMmllt

7-Yird Sele

I'
I

l Wanted . ) For Sal!!
.,
l Announcement ·
J For Rent

I &lt;
1. (
I (
1
1
I'

eRENTALS

4-0IYMWIY
' ~(IIttY Alii .
I-LOII IIlii ~ound

phone number if used .
·1
3
6
,1 You'll get better results Words
1 if you descrit!e fully, -+cla=.Y:_rd::a:.~.:::•l-'d"a"'-y-•1-da-'y-'-isl
give price. The Sentinel
I reserves the right to
I closslfy , edit or reject
,I any ad. Your ad will be
t put Jn the proper
1 claslflcatlon If y.o u'lf
check the proper bo)C
. I below
These Gash rates
I·
I
include discount
I

I

•ANNOUNCEMENTS

If the bid is accepted, the
successful bidder shall en-

ter into a contract and fvr·

•

or Write Dally Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 CourtSt, Pomero)O, 0., ~769

I
I

Check,

Cashier's
Check or
Proposal Bond for an
.• . amount equal to five per·
~ · cent (5%) of his bid.

WANT AD INFORMATION

I''
1

Drawings for further use,
and his deposit refunded.
Checks shall be made
payable to th~ Village of
Middleport, Ohio.
Each bidder shall be
required to file with his bid
a . Certified

. rif..

12 1 2 3
' ' ' '

'

GUN SHOOT: Saturday
even i n~ starting at 6: ~
p.m. Sponsored by the

RNs and LPNs; looking for
challenging and rewllrdlng
work? Tire.d of rotating.
may. take over low balance. shifts? Feel the need to
obtained or e~amined at
·
May•
b
seen
locally
.
Call
develop your ideas in
the office of the Mayor,
Village Hall,_ Middleport, collect credit mgr . 773 resident care with a highly
motivated st,aff? Pomeroy ,
Ohio 45760 and at the office 5128.
Health Care Center has the
of
Floyd
Browne
Associates, Limited, Con·
CHRISTMAS Bazaar, answer for yoU. Due to
suiting Engineers · Plan·
December 5 &amp; 6; Thrift i!ichievi"g near maximum
ners, 181 South Main
Shoppe, Middleport. Hand· census, we ' now have
Street, Marion, Oliio43302 .
made Items, crafts, baked openings for full and part
A twenty·five dollar
g.oods &amp; candy. Sponsored . llll)e positions on dey shift
($25.00) deposit . will ,.,
by Meigs Co. Humane but will consider other shit·
ts. Competitive salary, ex;
required for each set of
Society.

Or,:~wings,
Specifications
and Contract documents
,, taken from the above of·

Shops the

!:\

ap ,

appurtenances.

3'~
I'
wANT AD wi!
~~~·--~~~--------~~---,---~

l

of

proximately 1060 lineal teet
of 6" service sewer; 3550
linealte&lt;!ll Of 8' sewer pipe;
85 lineal feel of 6" sewer in
casi~g pipe; '14() lineal feet'
of 8" sewer in casing pipe;
17511neal feet of 8" sewer in
bored hole ; a sewage lilt
station; mannoles; and all

ot:

INVESTED - In a candielight ceremony Tuesday
after11oon at the Rutland Elemental')~ School, 10
Bro~11ies of Rutland Girl Scout Troop 1293 were invested. Parent. and guest:; attended the program and
refrestunents wer e served by the troop leaders. Invested,' left to ri~ht, front were Tanuny Miller,

river frontage. After 6

struction of

,.

Crystal Richmond, Pam· Smith~ Anna Stlircher, and
Amber Hankla. Leaders of the troop are Pat Hysell,
left, and Kay Frederick. Also invested but not present
for the picture were Missy Clay, Tracy Michael and
·
Ruth Porter.

with

992-7284.

,. received bV the Village of

Sm~ll investment, large
·returns, Sentinel Want Xds·

'

Business Services

HOUSE , 7 rooms, on bath ,
full basement, large lot

Department, at bullqlng ln .
Bashan. Factory chok~
guns only .

PUBLIC NOTICE
Sealed f!roposals will be

signed thank-JGU
clippers If she 111M your fa
Pointer, Peeve or Ptoblern In

lor s.~e------Homes
----.
---- ·

it - -

RACINE GUN SHOOT,
Rae I ne Gun club, every
Friday night starting at
7:30 p.m . Factory choke :
guns only.

Racine

lie

Public Notice

i.

.

Moore, Rt .

;: the. Clerk, Paul

--- -- - --- - - -

.
3
Announcemen1s
:i--- - - - - - -----

1::v~·TMENT-

Good

corner location that has
several rentals with ex·
,
cellent Income.
NEW LISTING
SYRACUSE - 3 nice
bedrooms, 2 full size
baths with showers, din·
lng · area· with glass
sllcllng door to the large
yard, .
electric
baseboard heat and
garage.

A

rea1

nice

place for just$43,500.
SELL NOW WHILE
'fOU CAN. MONEY 15
SCARCE AND HIGH.
CAI.L US AT nNUS or
"2-3176.

J129, 992·5914, or 1-304·882·
2566.
•
5 "ROOM unfurnished apt.
992·3129 or 992·5914.

WRAP INTO a smart coat with
rqlan sleeves that fit comlor- 45
Furnlsfted Rooms
tably over layers beneath! Com· PRIVATE rooms, cooking)
plete the outfit with ,pants and cabl.e · TV, 540. per week.
sew toppenersion, loo.
773,5651.
Printed Pattern 4899: Misses
S1zes 8, 10, 12, 14, 16, 18, 20 'I'
Space for Rent
Size 12 {bust 34! coat 3 5/8 ' COUNTRY MOBILE Home
)aidS 54-mch labnc.
Park, Route 33, Nortl1 of
· 11.75 fir acl1 ,....,.. AM 50$ Pomeroy. Large lots. Call
fir .... "' ~ 992-7479.
linllll ... ..._ SIMI II:
~--------TRAII.ER spaces for rent.
Valley Mobile
491 Southern
Home Park, Cheshire, Oh.
-, 992·3954.

..........
hlllra'6ao)- ~i - ~=-Zl1111ts117 SL, . .
10011. l'rittl flAil(,
ZIP, Sllf, - ' STYLl

Why put up wijh hilh prices-

- doll111, Ill better qualiiYI
Send lor our NEW FAll-WINTER
PATTERN CATALOG. 94 palltrns,
Free Pllltrn CotrPflll (worth
$1.75). C.talof, $1.00.
133-f....latt llllllt Ollltiltdl.75

HOII\111(/

I•·Sw.....Sbllli-Si~$1.75

12t-GIIclilaly T'*""".$1.75
127-A..... 'n' Doillts . . .$1.75

Ht·.idqu,u ters

\

Apartment
for Reni

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

53

'

,.

Anllquos

ATTENTION:
(IM ·
PORTANT TO YOU} Will
pay cash or certified check
lor antiques and collec·
tlbles or entire. estates.
Nothing too large. Also,
guns, pocket watches and,
.coin collections. Call 614·
767·3167or 551·3"1.
..

Rt. 124, Minersville, OH .

1971

CUTLASS . 350; 1 J &amp; F BACKHOE SER
Pioneer stereo, VICE llscensed &amp; bonded,
lessons .
Everything runs good. Body ~s septic tank installation,
Imaginable in horse equip- some work .
992·5911 . I water &amp; gas lines. Ex·
ment. Blankets, belts,
cavatlilg work &amp; transit
boots, etc. English and 1979 FORD LTO II With low layout. 992·7201 .
Western. Ruth Reeves -mileage, a.c ., 1111 wheel,
(614) 698·3290.
black with oraftge .s tripe,
Electrical
factory mags. Exc. cond.
1 Refrlgerotlon
THE ME I.GS
County Phone 985·3821 evenings,
SEWING
MACHINE
Humane Society pets of the
service, all ·
week are : Russian blue ' 1971 DODGE DEMON .i Repairs,
cats, tabby cats. one black S150. Can be fixed up or ' makesl 992·2284 . The
F abrlc Shop, Pomeroy .
and white cat,one labrador
Autnerlzed Singer Sales ·
puppy type, four black and; used tor parts. 949·2374.
•nd Service. we- shar;:ien
ton puppies, one block and
Sclss«s.
tan adult, one shepherc! 7l . Trucks for Slit
type, one miniature collie . 1970 C·10 '12 tOll Chevy·
992·62d0.
'
BOWERS
truck, 8ft. bed, wlfh racks•. ELWOOD
REPAIR Sweepers,
90"i
cond. $895. 667·3085.
llwtshirs, Irons, all small
AKC Registered poodle .
' appliances. Lawn mower.
pups. 2 small miniature·
1980 DODGE 150 Ad- 1 Next to State Highway
and 1 toy . 1female, apricot. venturer.
dOuble black. Gar- on Route 7, 9851 light chocolate brown
V-8 overdrive 382.5.
male, 1 dark chocolate . Small
automatic . 17 to 19 mpg.,
'brown male. After 5 p.m . air
&amp; power. NICE I 18,200.
~2- 2961 .
new. First 55,200. Firm . APPI..I ANCE SERVICE :
all m~kes washer, dryers,
992·5104 .
r11111H, dlshwnhers,
THE MEIGS County)
diSf*lls, water tanks. Cell
Humane Society pets of the, 1976 LUV Pickup. AM· Fm 81 Kerr · •Young at ' 985·3561
.week are: Several adult'. •track, a.c., topper, good , befn 9 a .m. or after '
cats, 5 black &amp; tan puppies, · 'tires. runs good . $2,600. 992· . p.m.
.
block labrador, black Irish ·6323.
setter,
collie
type,
. IS
General Haut'li ' ·
'Stlepherd type, black &amp;
tan ; house broke medium 74
Motorcycles
' Ji',GRI·LIME Spreadtrig1
size dog ready to be lovild. 1978 KAWASAKI KZ 650 lll)leli·)M , and fill dirt
lovable mixed breed. 992· . motorcycle, color blue. hauling. Leo Morris, 742·
6260. '
Call949·21•-19 .
2455.

,900.

-~-- -

,.

'

�•
10--The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Dec. 1, 1980

600 people attend
. Sunday open house ·

Book Ripley man on .murder charges·
Four Ripley men have been arrested and one has been charged
With murder and malacious wounding as a result of a fight and an
automobile accident during the ensuing high-speed chase.
The accident occured Thursday,
November 20 oriRt. 2 near Mt. Alto.
Danny W. Randolph, 21, was
charged with murder and malacious
wounding and Roy Steele, 26, Paul
Steele, 24, and James Steele, 20,
were each charged with aiding and
abetting in the murder and the
malacious wounding.' The murder

charge iB for the death .uf David
Cave, 31, London, Ohio, who was
critically injured in the crash and
died at 10:30 p.m. Saturday at
Cabell-Huntlngton Hospital. Randolph was -charged with malacic"s
wounding for allegedly stabbing
Walter Denecca, Letart.
According to Corporal K.R.
Beckett of the West Virginia State
Police, a fight broke out between at
least seven persons in two cars and
the occupants of Denecca's car at
the 67 Drive Inn on Rt. .87. Denecca '
was statibed in the throat and drove

-Area Deaths
Thomas J. Pickens
Thomas J . Pickens, 62, 107 Benton
Ave., Warner Robins, Ga., fanner
Racine resident, died recently at the
Medical Center of Central Georgia
in Macon after a brief illness.
Mr. Pickens was a native of
Racine and had lived at Warner
Robins for the past 25 years.
He was retired from civil service
at the Robins Air Force Base. He
was a member of the Bassmasters,
the Federal Retired Employes
Assn., and the Wesley Sunday School
Class of the First United Methodist
Churoh and was a member of that
church.
Surviving are his wife, Doria B.
Pickens, Warner Robins ; two sons,
Thomas Stephens Pickens of Fort
Oglethof!)e, and Gary Joe Pickens of
ChattanOQga, Tenn.; a brother, Jed
Pickens, Shelby, N. C., and three
grandchildren.
Burial was in Magnolia Parker
·Cemetery. The Rev. Ben Williams
and the Rev. Fred Carter officiated
at the services held at the First
United Methodist Church in Warner
Robins.

Opal iR. Van Meter
• Opal R. VanMeter, 62, 3012 McGuf. fy Road, Columbus, died at Doctors
Norih Hospital, Columbus, Saturday.
Mrs. VanMeter was preceded in
death by her parents, Cbarlies and
Addie May Randolph, two sisters
and three brothers.
She is survived by her husband,
Wilbur VanMeter; ooe daughter,
Bernita Stout, Mt. Vernon; one grallddaughter, Christina Opal Stout,
Columbus ; five sisters, Ca'rrie
Nickemyer, Athens; Dorothy Hess,
Woeste:; Pearl Randolph, Alfred;
Beatrice Bentz, Lancaster; Bernice
Meeks, Shade; one brother, Binas
Randolph, Huntington, and several
neices and nephews.
Funeral services will be held
Tuesday at I p.m. at Ewing Chapel
With Eugene Conger officiating.
Burial will be in Cherry Ridge
Cemetery .. Friends may call at the
funeral home after 7 p.m. this
evening.

Maud A. Grueser
Miss l)iaud A. Grueser, 91, Minersville, died Monday morning at the
Pomeroy Health Care Center.
Miss Grueser was a member of
Pomeroy Chapter 166, Order of
Eastern Star, and the Trinity Church in Pomeroy. She was a linotype
operator and had worked for a number of years for The Daily Tribune in
Pomeroy.
She was a daughter of the late
Leonard and Elizabeth Hughes
.Grueser. Besides her parents, she
was preceded in death by two
brothers, Leon and Grafton, · and
three sisters, Emma Hines, LoiB
Dean and Freda Grueser.
Surviving are a sister and bPotherin-law, Audrey and Charles Neff of
Mt. Prospect, lll. , and several nieces
and nephews.
Funeral services Will be held at 10
a.m. Wednesday at the Ewing
Funeral Home with the Rev. W. H.
Perrin officiating. Burial will be in
Minersville Hill Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral · home
anytime after 7this evening.

toward Point Pleasant on Rt. 2 with
the·other two cars in pursuit.
Denecca was unable to continue
driving and Cave took his place. The
car driven by Ran(jolph overtook
and_pulled beside the Cave vel\lcle
with both cars traveling at a hi~h
rate of speed, according to the police
report. The Randolph car struck the
other car and both· went out of control over an embankment.
Cave was Initially taken to Pleasant Valley Hospital and later
transfelTed to Cabell-Huntington
I'M

H

ON

'TIL CIIIUSTNAI

-TO FINP A WARM,

A LONG

JOURNEY ·THROU6H

COZY HOME FOR
CHRISTMAS ,I

THE 5NOW ANP ICE
ANI' BITTER Cow&gt;...

Of COUII.6E, IT ,MIGHT\/~
BEEN E'ASIE.R JUST TO

TAI&lt;E OUT A CLA6SIFIEP
AP ...

!

.

.

--

~~: ~~;',:l%~~~d,~~~·~~~i

Pleasant, Mrs. Jack (Edna) Bicsey,
Westerville, Ohio, and Miss Helen
Huffrruin, Mason; a grandmother,
Mrs. Henry Huffman, Hamlin; and
four neices.
Funeral services will held at II
a.m. Wednesday at the Crow-HIJSsell
Funeral Home in Point Pleasant
with the Rev. George Oiler officiating. Burtal will follow in Kirkland
Memorial Gardens. Friends may
call at the funeral home after 6 p.m.
uesday.

'Anthony J. Graber
Anthony J. Graber, 91, fonnerly of
Dayton and Pomeroy, died at the
home of his youngest daughter,
Teresa Marie Graber Funke at Huntsville, Ala.
Mr. Graber is survived by a sister,
Mrs. Barbsra McGinniB, 98, Huntington, W. Va.; three daughters,
Sister Grace, S. C. (Virginia
Graber) of the Dayton area; Mrs.
Robert Foster (Mary Catherine) of
Dayton ), and Mrs. Robert D.
(Teresa Marie) Funke of Huntsville,
Ala., 16 grandchildren and 5 greatgrandchildren.
A funeral mass was held at the Ar·
my Bicentennial Chapel at Redstone
Arsenal in Huntsville. Services were
then held in Dayton. The Mass of
Christian Burial was held at Corpus
Christi Church and burial in Calvary
Cemetery at Dayton.
Mr. Graber was preceded in death
by his· wife, Grace, on May 27, this
year. Following her death, Mr.
Graber went to Huntsville to reside
with his youngest daughter, Mrs.
Funke.
Mr. Graber worked at the WrightPatterson Field for several years
and was an elevator operator at
Good Samaritan Hospital in Dayton.
He was a member of the Knights &lt;i
Columbus in Pomeroy.
Earlier in his life, he was a Kroger
Store manager, manager of a state
liquor store, worked for Ball
Telephone Co. and a village clerk.
Friends may sent sympathy or
mass cards to Sister Grace Graber,
S.C., 4534 Parklawn Drive, Kettering, Ohio 45440.

Traffic accidents claim 20 lives
'

By The Associated Press
.
Ohio averaged one traffic death
every five hours during the long
Thanksgiving holiday weekend, the
Highway Patrol said.
Five double-fatality accidents
helPfd lift Ohio's highway toll to 20
for the 102-hour period. The patrol
counted the deaths from 6 p.m. Wednesday until midnight.Sunday.
The dead:
SUNDAY
ZANES\lLIE - Opal M. Hegan,
20, of Adamsville, in a one-car accident on Ohio 93 in Muskingum
County.
EATON - Uoyd F. McEldowney,
57, of Greenville, and Robert Hoffman, 36, of Versailles, in a two-car
.
accident o~ a Darke 'County road.
COLUMBUS - Brothers Larry E.
Norris, 23, and Joseph E. NorriB, 24,
both of Columbus, in a· dne-car accident on a city street.
AURORA - Clair Turnbaugh, 35,

Emergency S&lt;piad runs
Eight runs were made by local
emergency l!Dits over the weekend,
according to the report of the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Service.
SatUI'day's runs include Middleport, 6: Ol p.m., Everett Huffman
from Fourth St. to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Tuppers Plains,
6:08 p.m., Mary Genheimer,
Chester, to Veterans - Memorial
Hospital; Racine, 5:05p.m., Vivian
Jone.s from re81dence to Veterans
Memorial.; Pomeroy, 2:02 p.m.,
Ruth Buffington, home to, Veterans
Memorial; Syracuse, 11:54 p.m.,
Randy Smith from an accident on
·Route 124 to Veterans Memorial,
later transferred to Holzer Medical
Center. .
Sunday rims included Rutland,
7:46a.m., Anthony Ward, from Mine
2 to Holzer Medical C.enter;
Pomeroy, 12:14 p.m., Allen Young to
from Golf Course Road to Veterans
Memorial; Middlepol't, 4:41 p.m.,
Grant Williams from fire in
Cheshire to Holzer Medical Center.

ApproximatelY BOO per101111 at-.
tended the annual hOliday seuon"
open house of the Pomeroy Flower
ShopSunday.
•
.
Working In various capacities
during the affair were Melvin and ~
Nancy van Meter and 80118, Melvin, "
Jr., and Michael; • Charlolte1
Willford Jane Hams, Debbie
Grueser: Dlalie Mlller, Wanda '
Rizer, Albert Van Meter, Margaret
Eskew, Lori Faulkner and Mr. and
Mrs. Millard Van Meter:
!'
Re!reshmenlll were served and.
door prizes awarded . to Amy .
Luckeydoo, Middleport; · Paf
MO&amp;'Ulllln, Mason; Mrs. Herbert
Roush, Racine, and Phyllis Gilkey, .
I•
, .
Clifton.
LAST FALL CLASS
The last class of the fall series of
the Royal Oak Ballroom D'ance·
Class will be held Tuesday at 7:30·
p.m.
The Continuing Education
Ballroom Dance Class at Ohio :
University will be sPecial ~· A .
party will be held and potluck
refreshments served.
..
- TO INSTAILHFFICERS
Middleport Masonic Lodge 363, ~
F&amp;AM, will install officers · at. a
regular meeting to be held at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at the temple.

Is Coming
SALE STARTS ·TODAY

Good thru Dec. 7th. 1910
··

We

·KODAK ..

·I

VETERANSMEMORIAL
SatUI'day Admissions-Ruth Buffington, Pomeroy; Vivian· Jones,
Racine; Mary Genheimer, Chester;
Everett Huffman, Middleport.
Saturday Discharges-Kay Proffitt, Guy Lee, Clyde Jordan, Randall
Imboden, Jill Barker.
Sunday Admisslons-l..i.ndjl Smith,
Rutland; Robert Sawyers, Mason;
Diana Wheeler, Mason; Alma
Young, Pomeroy; Mary Snyder,
Pomeroy; Edna Baker, Racine;
Veneva Gillian, Pomeroy.
SUJillay Discharges--Grace Price,
Roberta Smith, Freda Davis, Vivian
Jones.

bose and tube are molded In riCh

ln..,..t Came'a . · ·

hrory

plaotlc. The

.

O.,r S,.C..I PriC. '$1"

.,_Colli ..............

L- leW• from K_..''S"

.· '26~

I·

f

SILVER
ICICLES

~ ~y·
·

To qualify, cameras or camera
outfits musl be purchased from
·~ November 11hrough
·
December31, 1980.
."'
... .

IOOOITIAN!K

·

J

'

~~

·~

. Stop Jn for
.
complete rebate details.

NIUON'S ,
RIG.7t'

, ·

WHITMAN'S SAMPLER .
8 FT. FOLD AWAY'

.IllS TREE

SIZES 2T-4T
I Lb • .·

$488

Green Scotch Pine
lra1nct-. 61 Tips

u.-;_•s•••u•

---

~msows --

'14"

.......... ..
,...,..=

lt'*i~. . . . . .
lhiiiW
KOCWt
.. _

.n. ......... .,.. __ .....,
''"

.

I

t ,.

~,.... '*"·
fi!Jfllill
-lad:ty.
t

~,:IAIIC .SAUCE

'

· NIUON'I MO. fll.ft

'28'

EKTRA 210

Camera Outfit

.,~
.NIUON'SRIG.... -.

.
CHOIQ
YOUR .

'

e

7

. IT~SNIW

. '"'• Oz.
A.,t. Plavors

7Ya Oz.

71
'11
• .w. ....

·'

Your choice of many styles
12" tlill
.

' "'-"

•

Hand painted

$1211.

Eu'jlll~ .,_.

· opei'atlon • CoveriiiMdle
tor ateldlei' 11!01-tllllng ·
• FloeS tocue • ~pllte

N~SftG,

"'"

with film ehdlllpfluh

• Great-. wHh a little
price.

•
Flaltering, face -framing ruffle;
decorative gill gripper closur~
and sleeve stitching.
.
Rich sapphire, jade, wine. and
ginger colors.

s, M, L and Short
and Long Sizes.
Also: XLandXXL

•

•

Be sure to see all the
other styJes and col- ,
ors women's robes .
Lingerie Dept• .
on 2nd Floor

•

HO~AYBAZAAR

The annual holiday bazaar will be
.•held Tuesday beginning at 9 a.m. at
Heath United Methodist Church in
Middleport. Lunch Will be served
from II a.m. to 1 p.m.

Farmers

Bank
Member FDIC

The Community Owned Bank
i

ELBERFELDS

JN
POMEROY

•Licorice

•Strawberry
.,. Oz•.
YOUiatOICI

'

MO ••lt.ft

NrliOft'IMO.fn.K .

•Spread on breod
. •Makes plna fast

...

'19"

N~S

'.

EF·BOY·IR·DEE
The Farmers Bank has many
different types of savings· plans, all
paying the highest interest allowed
by law.
Whether you are saving for some
special reason, or just saving for a
rainy day, the Farmers Bank can
help you with your savings goals.

ha•• a

., Is In modern oval design to fit
oorrow wi.ndQw sills.

shoot.
• Automatic •.motorized print
ejection. ,
,

TODDLER JEANS
REGULAR 18.50

tu~o

reollotlc wax·llk• drip. rhe baoe

• Fl~ed fOcus. just aim and

I

I

I•O&lt;Y Si"Gie Candle. The candle111
thlo ccioegory 11 10" high. Both

COLQRBURSt 50

·~
'
,
County.
of Aurora, in a two-car accidenr on a
CAfoiTON - Melvin R. Harig, 50,
city street.
Dennison,
in a cine-car accident on a
HAMILTON - Micheal A. Cecere,
county
road
in Stark County.
WORKERS NEEDED
39, of Hamilton, in a one-car acTIJURSDAY
All
Meigs
High School band paren- '
cident on a rural road in Butler
ATHENS
Mark
Facemyer,
21
,'
ts
who
have
not signed up to work in
County.
and
Marty
·
Facemyer,
18,
both
of
the
concession
stand during basket·"
SATURDAY Columbus,
while
crossing
U.S.
50
in
ball
season
are
asked to call992-6212,
CLEVELAND - Thomas A.
Yelenik, 27, of Panna, in a one-car Athens County.
~-~~~~-,-----~--,MANSFIELD - Donald E. Lucas,
accident on I-71 near Cleveland.
TROTWOOD- Paul V. Stone, 46, 33, Norih Birmingham, Ala., and
-g:¥~-------,
of Dayton, in a one-car ac-cident on a Connie L. Shepherd, 29, Cincinnati,
·1
Order Our .
1
in a car-truck accident on Interstate
city street.
71 at U.S. 30.
FRffiAY
Christmas
DEFIANCE
Emanual
L.
FINDLAY- Julia L. Saltz, 36, of
Findlay, in a two-car accident on I- Gomer, 76, and Dora Gomer, 73, ~ Specialties Early.
both of Wauseon, in a two-car crash 11 FRESH BAKED et ES
75 in Hancock County.
on
U.s. 24 ip Defiance County.
II CHRISTMAS COOKIES
FINDLAY- Karen Gutman,' 25,
BRYAN
- Bacil Dohn; 67, ·of I
of Berrien Springs, Mich., in a twoMINCED PIES
I;
car accident on U.S. 30 in Hancock Fayette, in a two-car crash U.S. 127
in Williams County near West Unity.
POMEROY PASTRY SHOP
CINCINNATI- Larry D. Flake,
I
2i6Main,
Porn.
992-29111.
25, of Kentucky, in a one-car ac- 1 · We Accept
Food. Stamps
1
cident on I-71 at Cincinnati.
HOSPITAL :\EWS
!l!ii:RR!!MRB:IIalalalali!!llll!lf'.

ore

While Quontltlft 'tcilt.
Ouontlty rlghtt ·r"erved
not re•pon•lblti for typogrophlcal error~.
SOrry, 'No ct.alers.

SINGLE CANDLE
WITH BULB

COLORIUIST CAMERA

,---~---------------------j

Everett Huffman Jr., 36, 159 S.
Fourth St., Middleport, Ohio,
fonnerly of Point Pleasant, died
Sunday afternoon at Veterans
Memorial Hospital, Pomeroy, .

OPEN HOUSE
Approximately 650 persons attended the annual Christmas open
house and customer appreciation
day at Francis Florist Sunday.
Door prizes werl awarded :o
Sarah Gibbs, Sam Curtis, Emmogene Holstein, Cressa Brown and
Anna Rice.

•

., 1'-"''-C~~
following a long illness.
Born Dec: 16, 1943, at Hamlin, he o
was the son of the late Everett Huff. "'~ •
man and Mrs. Linnie Plwn!ey Huffman, Mason, who survives.
; 1-~--:~..-----.
Mr. Huffman was a fanner
•
,
'
newspaper printer.
,,. ..I
...-:.. : - c ,..., br ... ,_,, !ftC
Other survivors are four sisters, l:::.::..---==....;::==~l.l!:===-----'~--------

•
Everett Huffman, Jr.

SEEK UCENSES
Marriage licen:leli were issued to
Terry Lee Combs, 21. Rt. 2, Racine,
and Bethany Sue Cox, 20, Rt. 2,
Racine; Don Michael King, !0,
Cleves, Ohio, and Judy Kay Jacks,
16, Rt. I, Rutland.

Hospital where he died of injuries
sustained in the car accident. Other
passengers were taken to PVH'
where they were treated and released. Denecca was also treated at
PVH and was in intensive care but
recovered and has since been released.
The incident was investigated by
State Police Trooper T.G. Yoho and
Corporal Beckett With assisstance
from Deputy J.M. Withers of the
Mason County Sheriff's Department.

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