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· Vol. 2i, No. 183
Copyrighted 1980

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1 Section, 10 pages 15 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper ·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio Friday, January 2, 1981

Iran receives
US money offer
'

met at Tehran Airport ,by represen~ presumably Algeria, and that Iran
By Tbe Associated Press
tatives of Prime Minister Moham· co!lld claim the funds once the
The Algerian intermediaries in the
hostage crisis arrived in Tehran mad Ali Rajai. _They refused to talk hostages are released.
President Carter · said the
today carrying the U.S. reply to
to reporters and wel'e·driven away
·
American
response contained
for a first roimd of talks with IraniQn
Iran'~ demandS for $24 billion. A
"reasonable
proposals"
and said, "I
officials directly concerned with the
leading Iranian clergyman said Iran
think
it
would
be
to
the
advantage
o(
hostages sei~ed 14 months ago.
should stop bargaining over the 52
the
Iranians
certainly
to
the
ad·
Informed Washington sources said
Americans and put them on trial like
any other criminals because they · the U.S. reply offers to deposit about vantage of the United States and the
are spies, not hostages.
I $12 billion of Iranian assets in an . hostages - iL they would accept
escrow account in a neutral·country, what we have proposed."
The three intermediaries '\Vere
However, Carter has ' little more
than two weeks left in his administration to settle the issue, and
most observers saw little chance of
the crisis · being resolved before
President-elect Ronald Reagan
takes office Jan. 20.
The Washington Post reported
today thst the U.S. response gives
Iran until Jan. 16 to accept the
proposals. The Post said official
source~ decribed the date "not as an
ultimatwn but 'simply a fact of
life'." The sources said Iranian acceptance by Jan. 16 would give the
Carter administration time to implement the proposals before going
out of office.
The Post said Carter does not want .
to leave negotiations "in an ambiguous state that limits the options
of his successor.''
The Iranian Parliament decided
two months ago the hostages would
· be freed if the U.S. government
returned the wealth of the late Shah
Mohanunad Reza Pahlavi, released
$8 billion in Iranian assets frozen in
VISITS .WAR FRONT - Iranian President Banl-Sadr, center,
U.S. banks, cancelled pending
tours trenches while visiting the war front near Ahwaz, Iran recently
lawsuits against Iran and pled.eed
as the war continues with Iraq. tAP Laserphoto)
not to interfere in Iran's affairs. 'l1

RETURNS TO IRAN - Ahmad Azlzl, left, special
aide to Iran's Prime Minister AU RaJI!I, not shown,
greets three members of the Algerian delegation as
they arrive In Tehran with the latest reply from the U.
S. In hostage negotiations Friday. Front to back are:

Rehda Malek, Algerian ambassador fo the U.S.; Abo
delk11 rim Gheraleb, Algerian ambassador to Tehran;
and Seghlr Mostefal, director of the Algerian Central
Bank. Man In back with bat Is unldenttlled. (AP Laserphoto)
·

Rowdy Bowl crowd welcomes. '81
OSP pro_bes fiery fatality
EUCUD, Ohio - The Ohio Highway Patrol is investigating a fiery
two-ear crash that has left a Euclid woman dead Thursday .and
hospitalized two men.
The patrol says Linda Patterson, 23, of Euclid died after tier car,
which was stopped in a high-speed lane on I-90, was struck from the
rear. A hospital spolsesman said Keneth Szako, 21, and Martin Ciccainelli, 24, were listed in fair condition at RlctunQnd General
Hospital.

Blue flu .h its police'ranks
FRANKUN, Ohio - A severe case of ·the blue flu has struck the
patrol ranks of the Franklin Police Department In Warren County.
Police Chief George Hamilton said Thursday the entire eight-man
patrol force has called in sick on the morning shift, apparently to
protest stalled wage talks with the city.
The city has maintained that budget considerations leave no money
for a pay raise in 1981 for the patrolmen. A beginning patrolman in
Franklin makes $14,400 under the current agreement.

Rubble yields another body
CLEVELAND - The body of a second victim has been found amid
the rubble of a west side apartment building leveled by a New Year's
Eve fire , leaving about 60 people homeless.
Cleveland fire department battalion chief Kenneth Shepherd said
Thursday there may be as many as eight more bodies beneath the rubble.
Tlie badly incinerated remains of the second victim were discovered
Thursday night and could not he identified as to age, sex or race, according to the Cuyahoga County coroner's office.

Ohioans get new taxes
COLUMBU1., Ohio - Happy New Year-! Your taxes went up yesterday.
.
The emergency tax package which Republican Gov. James A.
Rhodes asked and got from a Democratic legislature is now in effect.
Increases include :
- A 1 cent increase In the state sales tax to 5 cents per $1 of purchase;
- Application of the sales tax to cigarettes, which had been exempt;
- Higher taxes on beer, wine, utilities and corporations.
Rhodes asked for the hike, the first general tax increase in the state
In nine years, to help erase a growing state budget deficit which is expected to be about $500 million by the e(1d of the state's fiscal year June
30.

Weather
Cloudy with a chance of some periods of snow tonight and Saturday.
l.ows tonight In low to mid-20s. Highs Saturday In low to mid-30s In the
' forenoon , then temperatures falling during the afternoon. Chance of
sn~w 30 percent tonight and Saturday. Winds southwesterly . to
southerly around 10 mph ton.ight.
Extended Forecast
Sunday through Tuesday :
Very cold Sunday and Monday, then moderat1.1g Tuesday. Fair
through the period. Highs In teens Sunday, rising to the 30s Tuesday.
Lows zero to 10 below Sunday morning, rising to 10 to 15 by Tuesday
morning.

By Tbe Associated Press
Mwruners decked In glistening
sequins and fluttering plumes cavorted past 375,000 spectators in
Philadelphia and pollee in
Pasadena, CaUt., coped with the
rowdiest crowd ever at a Rose Bowl
parade as the nation bid farewell to
1980 and welcome to 1981.
While thousands sat glued to their
TV sets for the New Year's Day football glut, President Carter took in
the Sugar Bowl from the comfort of
· a suite.on the ~yard line at the New
Orleans Superdome.
President-elect Ronald Reagan
.issued a ·taped New Year's greeting
during the Rose Bowl parade.

He-called on Americans to "start people, including 60 on such felony
this first day of the fifth year of the . charges as drunken driving, robbery
third century of our country - all of
us together - realizing that we can
solve the problems confronting us as'
we've solved tbem for 20U 1 ~ars."
In St. Louis, Kathleen Blue, 23,
was.vying for the honor of having the
first baby of 1981. Her third son,
Shaun J&amp;Son Blue, was born 10
seconds after midnight on Thursday.
"The doctors and nurses kept
telling me to hold back" as midnight
·approached, Mrs. Blue said.
Tragedy also struck, as at least 31
people in nine states were killed in ..
New Year's Day fires .
Pasadena police arrested 350

and assault. The trouble was exacerbated by 7().degrce ' temperatures
which drew 1.35 million people to the
parade, police said. ·
"The warm weather makes people
not want to cuddle up and sleep with
people they like so they want to go
fight with those they don't like," said
Rocky McAlister, a police
spokesman. .
In Philadelphia, 18,000 Mummers
ushered in the new year on snowy
Broad Street with their 79th parade.
Costumed comics strutting to the
traditional "Oh Dem Golden Slippers" competed for part of the

$300,000 offered in prizes.
The fancy costumes of the marchers were estimated to have cost
more than $2 million.
In New York, more than 1,000 officers turried out to keep an eye on
Times Square celebrants. Only a
handful of arrests were reported, the
most serious involving a bottleswinging man who cut the fa«;e of an
officer who was trying to subdue
him.
Before the cheers and hornhonking, the lighted ball which
descends to make the New Year's
countdown was darkened for one
minuie in memory of the hostages in
Iran.

31 fire deaths rna': New Year's Day
By Tbe Associated Press
Authorities today were· investigating reports that a problem
with the 911 emergency telephone
system in New Brunswick, N.J.,
kept firefighters from responding
quickly to a blaze that killed four
children and three-adults. The victims were among 31 people who died
in fires In nine states on New Year's
Day.
In other major fires, a man, a
woman and three children were
killed in a mobile home fire in
' Kingsbury, N.Y, In Readfield,
Maine, a man and three boys died in
a fire blamed on a wood-burning

stove.
discovered huddled around a couch.
Sixteen-year-old Howard Foster
"Children this age would run to an
Jr., who lived next door to the gutted
adult. If they were a little older, they
three-story house in New Brunwould know to run out of the
building," Harkins said.
swick, said he tried three times to
In Readfield, Charlene Cain returcall the emergency number before
his mother got through.
ned from her job as a waitress at
Police Capt. George Seamon said about 2 a.m. Thursday to find her
he could think of no reason for the
one-story, wood-frame house on fire,
officials said.
delay and would investigate. Fire
She summoned firefighte_rs, but
Chief Leo Harkins said firefighters .
from a station house two· blocks they could not save her three sons
away were at the scene within one and a man who lived with the family.
All four victims apparently woke up
minute of the report and found
names shooting from the house.
and attempted to escape, but were
The bodies of five of the victims blocked by fire at both of the home's
doors,
said state fire investigator
a mother, her three children and her
Charles
Hopper.
nephew, ages I to 4 - were

FIRST BIRTII
Linda and Roy Vaughan, Langsville, are the proud parents of
the first baby born at Holzer Medical
Center In 1981. Bridget · Marte
Vaughan arrived at 1:46 a.m. New
Year's Day. Sbe weighed six pounds
and five ounces. Her father Is employed at southern Ohio Coal Com·
pany ..
The new arrival is welcomed by a
sister, Crystal. Grandparents are
Mr. .and Mrs. Rex Shenefield,
Laugsvllle, and Mr. and Mrs. Leo
Vaughan, Pomeroy.

Pomeroy woman
• •
accepts position
·
'Jane Snouffer, Pomeroy, Is the
new director of social services at the ·
Pomeroy Health Care Center.
A 1980 graduate of Rl'.' G!ande
College where she received a
bachelor of science degree with a
major In social work an~ a minor in
psychology, Mrs. Snouffer comes to
the Pomeroy Health Care Center
from the Washington County
·Welfare Department where she was
a social worker.
.
.,
She has varied experience In
social work having been the community · coordinator with the'
Teacher Corps In Meigs Local
Schools, a recruiter for the HeadStart Child Development program of
the Gallia-Meigs Conununity Action
Program, and Crisisline worker
w,lth the Gallia.Jackson-Melgs Community Mental Health Center.
A native of Southeastern, West
Virginia, Mrs. Snouffer has resided
In Pomeroy for the· past 20 years.
She and her husband, BtJl, alfUlated

with Midwest Steele Corp., have two
sons, Dana, of Malta,. and Gary' of
Pomeroy, and a daughter, Melody of
Pomeroy. They also have three
children. .
Mrs. Snouffer is a member ofthe
First Baptist Church in Pomeroy
where she serves as financial
secretary, assistant treasurer, and
teaches a 'kindergarten class. Her
special iritenists are in meeting new
people, reading, traveling, cooking
and working with ceramics.
In accepting the position at the .
Pomeroy Health Care Center, Mrs.
Snouffer spoke of pride in the facility
which she described as providing an
envirohnment of warmth, friendliness and expert care to its
residents, and pledged her assistan·
ce in support through a program of
social services.
Atea to' introduce Mrs. Snouffer to
the patients and the staff was held
Wednesday morning at the Center.

NEW DIRECTOR - Mrs. Jane Snouffer, director of soclalsel"
vices, Pomeroy Health Care Center.

�COmmentary

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JanuarY 2, 1981 ._
The oailv- sentinel
Page-

2·.

~astern, M~igs . will
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To heat the high
cost of wood
Many Americans are investing in four national forests, where tre&lt;:S
wood stoves and new fireplaces to . are scarce, are not open to free
beat the high cost of heating with oil, firewood. Northern California's
gas or electricity.
.
· forests are open.
But once you gel your stove or ' Jolui Coleman, district ranger for
fireplace you still have to buy wood. the northern part of Virginia's
That can get expei)Sive. A cord of George Washington National Forest,
:wood (8 feet long, 4 feet wide, 4 feet has much experience with people
high) costs at least $100 around . wanting free firewood. He says
Washington, D. C., and even mqre in many folks "labor under a great
misconception. They think the wood
other metropolitan areas.
Here's a way to beat the high cost is stacked at the roadside and all
of wood, if you don't livetoo far from they have to do is load it and take it
a national forest. Get it from the away."
Coleman, based at Edinburg, Va.,
forest, free.
less
than 100 miles from
There are lii4 national forests ,
Washington,
says getting free -wood
covering 183 million acres, in the
"requires
a
chain
saw, a truck lor
country. Back in 1973, during the firhauling
and
some
knowledge
to iden·
st oil crisis, the chief of the .U. S.
tify
what's
dead
and
not
dead."
He
Forest Service (part of the Departwarns
chain
saws
can
be
dangerous
ment of Agriculture ) opened the
forests til those who wanted free and adds that "most of the easy
wood. The response was almost im- wood is gone, so you have to nunl
mediate. In 1974 about 195,000 per- what you want and carry it."
sons took away 448 million board- Sometimes, he says, it may not be
' feet. (A board-foot is 12 inches long, economic to drive long distances lor
12. inches wide, an inch high.) The a small load of wood.
On the other hand, Coleman thinks
numbers have been rising ever sin"many
people consider woodce. In 1979 almost 700,000 persons
gathering
a form of re&lt;;realion." He
carted off 1.6 billion board-feet. ·
says
that
at
his for~l some areas of
The wood comes from downed or
living
trees
a~e
designated for "thin·
•
deadlrees.
ning"
for
$5
people
can go in and
But there are restrictions and excut
green
trees,
which
they can haul
ceptions, and)nu've got to do some
home
and
age.
·work. Diane O'Connor, of the Forest
Those who live close to national
.Service, points out that to get free
obviously, are in luck.
forests,
·firewood you have to:
But
you
may not know if you're
•· · ...: Gel in touch with your local
within
hailing
distance of a forest,
:district ranger's office lor a permit,
and
it
may
be
to
your advantage to
:in person, by phone or by maiL In a
drive
150
miles,
round-trip, and
·lew cases you may not even need a
spend
$13
on
gas
to
cut
and haul $100
:written penni\, just verbal perworth
of
free
wood.
You
can find out
; mission.
what
you
need
to
know
by
:
· - Restrict yourself to areas the
Looking
in
the
phone
book under
·district ranger designates.
U.
S.
Government
and
finding
U. S.
: - Limit your load to the amoUI)t
:the district manager says you can Forest Service listed under U. S.
·take, which may vary from forest to Agriculture Department. The Forest
Service employees can refer you to
:forest.
.
: - Agree not to sell any of the wood the nearest of the 600-plus district
rangers.
. commercially.
- Writing U. S. Forest Service,
.; Eleven states are without national
: forests. They are Connecticut, c/o U.S. Department of Agriculture,
· Delaware, Hawaii, Iowa, ·Kansas , P. 0. Box 2417, Washington, D. C.
Maryland, Massachusetts, New Jer· 20013, and asking for information ·
sey, New York, North Dakota and about the free firewood program and
Rhode Island: Southern California's for a list of national forests .

Statistical tidbits
WASHINGTON (AP ) - Even
though Congress quit for the year,
its statisticians remained in town
over the holidays and figured . And
figured.
One of the things they calculated
was that in !980, the Senate had been
in session !66 days, the House only
153.
.
.
Perhaps thinking that didn't sound
impressive enough for the House of
Representatives, House record·
keepers boiled their own tally down
further: 90! hours and seven
minutes in session.
.
Put another way, that's something
like a three-day, 17·hour work week
- although congressional ac-

countants didn 't exactly phrase it
that way.
Some other statistical tidbits :
- Of the 1,482 bills and resolutions
introduced in the Senate and 2,941 in
the House in 1980, 348 found their .
way into law.
-Proceedings on the floor of both
the House and the Senate in 1980
filled 29,297 pages of the
Congressional Record.
- The Senate in 1980 confirmed a
total of 69 ,806 of the 69,929
nominations submitted by President
Carter. All but 3,811 of those confirmed were nominations involving
military promotions.

Tothy in history.
Today is Friday, Jan. 2, the second
day of 1981. There are 363 days left in
the year.
Today's highlight in history :
On Jan. 2, 1942, the Philippine
capital of Manila was captured by
the Japanese during World War II.
On this date ;
In 1492, Spain captured Granada
from the Moors.
In 1788, Georgia became the fourth •
stale to ratify the United States Con·
slitution.
In 1900, the "Open Door" policy in
China was announced by Secretary
of State John Hay.
In !!M)O, Sen. John Kennedy of
Massachusetts announced his bid for

Th~

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the Democratic presidential
nomination.
Ten years ago: Sixty-six people
suffocated and were trampled to
death when a crowd barrier gave
way at a soccer match in Gll!sgow,
SCotland.
Five years ago: The Soviet Union
hardened its stand on emigration,
despite the 1975 Helsinki agreement
to permit freer movement of people.
and ideas in Europe.
One year ago: Heavy fighting was
reported between Soviet troops and
Afghan rebels, while the United
Stales reported growing support for
a United Nations debate on the
Soviet intervention.

Daily Sentinel

lll Ceurt Street
PG~Deroy, Obfo
114-IIWIM
. .DEVCYrED 1D 1111! INTEI\EST OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

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ROBERT L. WINGETT

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BOB HOEFLICH

AII..IUC rubu.J.er/C011Iroller

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
New~ FAIJlor

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Reagan and the-Mexican connection
By Don Graff
Ronald Reagan is not waiting to
take the oath of office before indulging in a little presidential neigh·
borliness.
Despite a post-election decision to
postpone formal contact with
foreign leaders until the
Inauguration, he is meeting
Mexican President Jose Lopez Por·
tillo in Juarez Jan. 5.
He could not make a more appropriate exception. Mexico and the
United Slates are bound by
geography and frequently painful
history in a relationship that has
neyer been easy and today is in dire
need of attention.
II is billed as a "courtesy call"
that will bring the two presidents
together for only an hour, long
enougll.for no more than start on
discuilion of the many subjects of
mutual interest to their two coun·
tries. But it is a start that badly
needs to be made and earnestly
followed up after Jan. 20.
Mexico, after long years as a dirt·
poor backwater, is a nation in Iran·
sition, en route to becomin~ both a

a

political and economic power in its
own right. Oil is part of the story, but
only part. The potential wealth that
has been discovered in recent years,
and is continuously being added to,
has not changed Mexico's policies,
only enabled the ·country to pursue ·
them more forcefully .
Basic to them all is the deter·
mination to remain as independent
Of the United States as possible and
to encourage similarly inclined
quarters throughout the Caribl)ean
and Central American region · in
which Mexico is an increasingly
assertive influence.
Mexico never fo llowed the
American lead in ostracizing Fidel
Castro and continues to maintain
warm relations with Cuba . On a
Havana visit in August, Lopez Por·
Iillo took public aim at U. S. treat·
ment of Guba, including the continuing economic boycott and reten·
tion of the Guantanamo naval base. ·
Mexico is a firm supporter of
liberal to leftist governments in Central America, including the Marxist
Sandinistas in Nicaragua, and an opponent of U. 'S.-connected rightist

regimes such as in Guatemala .
ministration.
This is an area likely to supply
Goodness knows Jinuny Carter
Reagan an~ Lopez Portillo with a tried hard enough to be a good neighgreat deal of , conversational bor. Perhaps that was part of the
materiaL The Mexicans are among problem. He made a personal effort
those taking alarm at reports the to put relations in a new and f'elaxed
Reagan administration intends to basis of equality, cooperation and
abandon its predecessor's emphasis mutual respect, beginning-early in
on hwnan rights as a detenninant in his tenn with highly publicized
U. S. policy and to ease the pressure reciprocal .presidential visits. Too
on Latin rightists.
well publicized when it came to such
Mexico is by no means a sudden painful incidents as Carter's making
discovery of the president-elect. public his experience with " Ma&amp;
Candidate Reagan made a cam· tezwna 's revenge." . ,
,
paign point of his proposed conThat was probably the lowest of a
tinental partnership, an economic series of low points in the four Carter
and political co-prosperity accord years. And there were no real highs
among the United States, Mexico to of!set them, moving a Mexico City
and Canada. The Mexicans - and. • political conunentator to remark
for that matter. the Canadians late in the U. S. presidential earnhave been very wary about buying paign that "the Carter adthe idea, however. They see it as a ministration has a death wish: to
marriage of conveni-ence - U. S. alienate Mexico."
convenience, with ace s to their
As a result, it may not be exactly a
energy resources as the real pur: case of Ronald Reagan's now having
pose.
nowhere to go but up in u. s.The Re~ ga n administration faces Mexican relations. But Jinuny Carnumerous obstacles in improving ter has certainly made the going in
relations with Mexico. But it has one that direction easier for just aQoul
important asset: the Carter ad- anyone else.

•!

_The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

January 2, 1981

Southern's defeluling Tornadoes -

.~ .

return .to cage wars
By SCOTI'WOLFE
Meigs cagers bealn a full weekend
ti basketball action rounding out
thia year's holiday season tonight.
Eastern and Meigs will ring In the
new year as they return to the hardwood on foreign grounds. Eastern
is at Coal Grove for a holiday tour: .
~nt. Meigs tritvels to Wellston to
play the Rocketa In an SEOAL match up. Eastern's opponent tonight Is
South Point.
Saturday evening, Eastern return.s to Coal Grove for the tournament
finals, Meigs lio6ts Wahama in a
growing rivalry, and SOuthern plays
atA!eunder.
Seet Seeeild WID
Coach Gordon Fisher's Meigs
Marauders travel to Wellston
tonight where the M8rauders hope to
pick up their second win. They
currenUy own a 1-5 mark.
Of the four l918e5 prior to a romp
by league-leading Athens, Meigs I08t
all by a total of 12 points.
Meigs has a tough defen.se. It is
ranked fourth in the entire· area
defensively. Offensively, however,
the Marauders have been ' IJI!·
predictable. Tbey own a 41.2 percent
field goal percentage, but haven't
·been consbtent.
In a loss to Ironton, Meigs shot a
sizzling 60 percent and still got beat,
but on two other outings connected
for only 25 percent.
The Marauders have been
averaging 52.3 points per game,
while giving up55,3 after six games.
Offensively, Meigs has shown
balance with a lot of good individual
talent. Kevin Smith is averaging 9.6
points per game, Steve Ohlinger 9.1,
Jeff Wayland 8.3, Bob As.hley 8.25,
Mike Miller 6.16, and Dave Kennedy
4 points per game.
~,&gt;: . Several Meigs cagers have been
hitting the boards well, but Steve
to have the upper
Ohlinger
hand in that category.
Coach Fisher's club opens the new
year against a Wellston Golden
Rocket squad that owns a :&gt;-4 mark
overall and a 2--3 SEOAL record.
Wellston was defeated by Waverly
~Saturday .
The Rockets are led by John Jef-

seems

fer.s and John Derrow, who conFor Southern thia will be the
sistently hit double figures. They are .bl8J;Iesl test of the year, at least at
backed by a young, but ·capable this point in the season. Southern has
group that alwa)'!l 8eeni to con1e bee!l averaging· 61 points per outing ·
through with a good game.
and allowing only47.2·per game:
Saturday night at Larry R.
The Tornados rely on the pressing
Monisoo gymnasiwn, Meigs will defense and great qulclmeas. Of•
face Wabama (3-1) .
fell81ve standouts are Dale Teaford
· EutemGame
and playmaking gwo.-d Ken Wolfe.
Tonight the Eastern Eagles wlU
Southern as a team is burning the
take to the court against South Point nets ·for a 51 percent shooting
at Coal Grove. Game time IS 7 p.m. average.
Jnunediately following this game,
Teaford has pulled the trigger for
Rock Hl1l will face Coal Grove in the a sparkling 2!.8 point avenige per
last first round 'k ame of the holiday game. Kent Wolfe follOws Teaford
tournament.
with an 11.8 average, while Tom
A ·consolation game · and , cham- Roseberry is next at 7.5 points per
pionship game will be played Satur- · game. The other sharp-llbootlng Torday between the same four teams nadoes are averaging Wider 5.5 poinwith action beginning at 7 p.m.
ts per game.
Tbe Eagles will face main test
Southern will face a big and strong
tonight against a Big South Point Spartan club Saturday, and will
ieam. South Point owns a 11-2 mark
against some very tough competition. Tuesday the South Point
Club defeated Vinson, W.Va. 116-52,
Eastern has a good defen.sive club
along with a potentially dangerous
By Tbe Anoclated Prell
offense. The Eagles are ranked
It
wasn't
the best Boston Celtic ofnwtiber one in the area on defense
allowing only 44 points per game. Of., fense - wlthen it didn't have to be,
the way the defense was playing.
fensively, the "Big Green Machine"
"Our defense saved us," unhas been averaging 61 poinla per
1
derscol-ed Coach Bill Jl'ltch.
game. , , . ·
Chris Ford was a big part of it
Ftorll the· field the Eagles have
Thursday
night, holding highconsistently hit 38 percent, canning
186 buckets in 486 attempts during powered Freeman Williams to just
six points as the CeiUcs beat the San
eight ball games.
Eastern has a great rebounding Diego Clippers ~ for their 12th
edge so far this year with the likes of straight National Basketball
·
Tlln DUI, Gene Cole, Mike Bissell, Association victory.
'I tried to deny him the ball and
and Big Paul Sprague underneath.
Three Eagles carry the bulk of the keep him from going to the middle,"
o!fensiv.e attack with Gene Cole sllid Ford ti his defensive work on
leading the way with 1~. 8 points per Willlams, who had been averaging
30 points over the Cllppers' most
game.
Tim Dill owns a 14.1 average, and recent nine games and 19.7 overall.
Mike Bis$ell maintains a double " I got a lot of help fl'Oill our big men.
figure average of 10 points per We have a lot of intimidators."
The CelUcs nalled down the game
game. Greg. Wigal weighs ·In next
on
Cedric Maxwell's three-point
with a 5.3 average to lead the
play
with seven seconds left.
Eastern supporting cast.
ODRoad, Too
"We played good enough to win "
The Southern Tornadoes hit the · said San Diego Coach Paul Silas. •:A
road again Saturday and travel to couple of plays here and there, and
Albany to face Bill Whaley's Alexan· we would have had it.' '
der Spartans. Alexander is 6-2, while
·In other NBA action, Portland
beat Denver 122-119 and Houston
Carl Wolfe's Club is IHJ.

a

JayRees
~.Jr.F

Joe_Bob He101Iey
W,Jr. G

· Paul Cardone
•

~.sr.G ·

have to work on defensive position.
So far this season Robert Brown has

been the rebounding ace for the
defending champion Tornadoes.

•

Boston wins ·l2th rn · row·
stopped Utah 117-103.
' With the Celtics trailing 80-&amp;'1,
Maxwell stole the ball with about 20
seconds to play. After Boston moved
downcourt, the 11-fooHl forward
made a layup and was fouled by Phil
Smith. Maxwell then_ converted the
free throw to give Boston an 8&amp;-85
lead.
..
Robert Parish\led the Celtics with

16 pointspaced
and ei)irt
rebounds.
Bryant
the Clippers
withJoea
season-high 22 points.
Trali Blazers 1%2, NuuetallB
Kelvin Ransey scored a careerhigh 29 points, including Portland's
last eight, tQ lead the Trail Blazers
over Denver.
Ransey also had nine assists ~
five rebot111ds in leading the Blazers
to their fifth straight victory and
14th in 15 games. The loss snapped
· Denver's season-high winning string
at two games.
The Nuggets' David Thompson
barely missed a three-point field
'goal try that would have tied the
game at the buzzer.
Rockellll17, Jazz 113
Rudy Tomjanovich scored 25 poin-

Howie Caldwell's. reserves .open
the evening al6:30 p:m.
MAKE EVALUATIONS
I make speculative evaluations of
my neighbors. You gossip.

Is and three other Houston players
combined for 64 as the Rockets
broke open a close game in ~ four·
th quarter to beat Utah.
In addition to Tomjanovich, Moses
Malone and Robert .Reid eaal\ scored
22 points and Calvin Murphy tossed
in 20, including 10 in the final quarter.

,..------------l~~~~~~==':":-$:7:2'::::1

r-----------------1
I
REWARD . I
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A reward of $500.00 is being off~red by the
Southern local Board of Education, for i·nformation that will lead to the arrest and conviction of the person or persons that broke into
the Southern local High School on the night .of
December 15, 1980.
Informant to contact The Sheriff Dept.

.

' ---------------

'.

.I

The case of the missing Task Force
After extensively examining both "working draft" of an initial report
ByRoberiJ. Wagman
WASHINGTON (NEA) - Labor laws early in the Carter ad- did leak out, however. That
Secretary-designate Ray Donovan ministration, the General Ac· docwnept suggests a number of .
will be a man with a mission when he counting Office flatly declared them changes - inclyding the elimination
" inflationary" because they of the " 30 percent rule," which per·
arrives here next month.
The New Jersey" builder will at- -'!'esulted in "federal and federally mils tqe Labor Department to
tempt something that conservatives assisted construction costing more decide that a certain wage rate
prevails even if only 30 percent of an
have bee.n urging for years: the than other contracts."
repeal of two federal laws that . The GAO attack on the laws area's workers earn that much or
require U. S. government and its caused a si&gt;lit within the Carter ad- more.
fn the two years since the task for·
contractors to pay sky-high wages . . ministraiton. The Office of Federal
Business groups and conservative Procurement Policy and the Office ce was established, the Carter ad·
ministration has been anything but
economists have long argued that no of Management and Budget wanted
two federal laws are more in- them modified; the Labor Depart· supportive of watering down DavisBacon. In fact, the Labor Depart·
flationary than the Davis-Bacon aq_d men I did not.
ment
last January announced a
the Service Contract Acts.
On
Oct.
6,
!978,
a
meeting
took
series
of
proposals to "strengthen"·
Under these laws, the Labor
place
at
White
House
to
resolve
the
both
the
Davis-Bacon
and the SerDepartment must determine the
dispute.
It
was
chaired
by
chief
in.
vice
Contra.
c
t
Acts.
Those
proposals.
highest prevailing wage in a given
flation
fighter
Robert
Strauss,
who
in
direct
oppostion
to the
seemed
geographic area. The federal gover·
later
headed
the
Carter
re-election
task
force
's
draft
report.
nrnent and 'its contractors then mlll!t
OMB insiders say they do not ex·pay wages at or above that level campaign. Those attending the
session
agreed
to
the
formation
of
an
pect
the tas~·force report to surface
even if people in that area will work
"
inter-agency
task
force
"
to
review
in the waning days of the
formally
for less.
,
both
laws
and
to
recommend
any
Carter
administration
despite
The Reagan Labor Departmer.t
changes
ii
found
neeessary.
repeated
queries
from
important
will begin its repeal effort by trying
But that task force appears to congressmen anq, apparently , from
to solve a mystery held over from
()ave
faded int9 the sunset without Reagan transition staffers.
the Carter administration. That
ever
having
issued a formal report.
The administration is arguing that
mystery could be litied "The Case of
What
is
being
called
a
final
there
is no ''report" oer se. The
the missing Task Force."

leaked dcx;urnent is being referred to
instead as an internal "working
paper" of " possible options." As
such, it does not have to be released .
However, Reagan transition staf·
fers have vowed to release the
report officially as soon as they
come to power. They say they will
use

its

recommendatioris

oooooo
...--........

~A !f~hll·Color

'

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'·-

Organized labor, meanwhile, has·
called 'the leaked report "a major
threat to Davis-Bacon" and has
vowed to fight to the end to prevent
the law from being changed.
With Republicans controlling the
~nate, the main fight on this issue
~ill occur in the House. It \!1 a battle
that the incoming labor secretary
·says he is determine(! to win.
Look f~r Davis-Bacon to become
one of the first big issues before the
new Congress.

The total could well shrink fur- and there is little chance that either
Motors, in return for a $150 million
ther, perhaps to four or six global Chrysler or American Motors wlil'beinvestment and $50 million in
giants, early ir. the 21st century represented on that list.
credits.
In the second round of that bailout,
Renault now has invested an ad· ditional $200 million. In return, Its
share of ownership will increase to
between 46.6 )lercent' and 49.9 percent. If Renault exercises all of the
warrants and options it holds, that
share could increas,e to 59 percent. .
Notwithstanding Renault's
graciousness in maintaining the
facade of an independent affillate,
there is no escaping the reality that
American Motors now is controlled
by a company in which the French
government owns 92 percent of all
outstanding stock.
The handwriting already is on the
wall for the entire industry: By the
turn of the century, there probably
will be no more than .a score - and
perhaps as few 'as a dozen multinational
corporations
" I 'm looking for somelhing in a. Rolls for under
dominating the production of autos
a hundred thou ·. ··
throughout the world.

&lt;

!he Whole

in

modifying Davis-Bacon as a fiflil
step toward its repeal.
The U. S. Chamber of Commerce,
a leading spokesman for business on
this issue, says it "could live with
Davfs-Bacon if the !ask-force
modif]\ations are lnplemented."

.Unlike Any Other Magazine In America Todaor

~) ch11;en w~~~~ read.
~or the flrst time, 3 'IO GET READY

American Motors bailed out by the French
By Robert Walters
WASHINGTON (NEA) - In the
besieged auto industry, where too
many of the jokes these days are of
the graveyard-humor variety, one of
the year's funnier lines goes like
this
The Chrysler·Corp. was rescued .:..
at least temporarily - by the U. S.
government, but the- American
Motors Corp. was bailed out by the
French govenunenl.
If that doesn't quite qualify as a
side-splitting rib tickler, perhaps it's
because this country's automakers
don't.liave much to laugh about any
more.
The most recent evidence of the industry's plight: 'In mid-December,
American Motors' stockholders
voted almost unanimously to make
France's Renault the principal
owner of their company, this
nation's !ourth largest auto
•manufacturer.
•
· Renault last year secured a 22.5
percent lntet'!!l!t in American

'

offers a magazine section for kids
who can't read a whole lot - at
least not a.lone. Now they can with
The Pinwheel Papers and Mom,
Dad, Grandpa, Grandma, or you, people
they love. It's their special section of their
own SundEcy newspaper,
It's got puzzles and games and pictures
and that's not a.ll. There's a big, illus~.~ted
book length story, too. The
"''j........
kindthatcostsalotto.buy.
And it's all right inside
.. .
The Pinwheel
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'·

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For young people
- who ca.n read and
are ·smart· and
t
want to · know JJ \
what the rea.l world, their
world, is a.ll about, The Now.
Show in 3 TO GET READY. It~s current
an_d with-it - for the Now generation.
What's in it? A brand new comic strip adventure series, ·short stories, riddles,
poetry, book reviews, photos, fac~s, figures.
It's funny a.nd fun. And inside this SundEcy's .
newspaper.

Comtng this Iunday in the
'·

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iunbq ~imtt· jentintl

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..
For the adults in
their lives.
For grown-ups,
parents, grandparents, teachers
and friends, who'
love children and want them to have fun
raading and learning, 3 TO GET READY includes Almanac. A section filled with expert advice and information on how adults
mm relate betterro the children in their lives.
There Jr.e article_s on nutrition, reviews of
books that children might like to read, consumex: tips and much more. It has aJ.l kinds
of good things for grown-ups to rea.d about
children that V{ill help children ro read, too.
All three sections in a sparkling, a.ll~new
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I
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1
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�•
Pa e-4

Tht Dail serrtinel

G~orgia,

Pomero

ort, Ohio

Alabama,.Michigan, Oklahoma win bowl games.

defeated Notre Dame in the Sugar Bowl Thursday in
New Orleans. Score was Georgia 17, Notre Dame 10.
( AP Laserphoto)

HAPPY GEORGIA BULLDOGS- Georgia's Her. " S&lt;hel Walker, center, Is hugged by teammates Joe
Happe, right, and Clarence Kay, left, after they

.

Januar 2, 1981

ort, Ohio

Oiler coach loses job

By Associated Press
II was a close game, just as most ·
of Georgia's 11 previous contests
had been this season. The conclusion
was the same - a Bulldog victory.
And the method was similar- Herschel Walker.
"This is the way we did it aU
year," said Geor-gia Coach Vince
Dooley after ·the Southeastern Conference champions completed a 1~
campaign - the only undefeat~d
record by a major college this
season - and pretty. much assured
themselves their first national
championship in 89 years of football
competition with a 11-10 Sugar Bowl
squeaker over seventh-ranked Notre
. Dame.
·
With Georgia's victory,thefesults
of the other New Year's Day bowls
became all but academic. No. 4
Oklahoma rallied in the final
minutes for a scintillating · 18-17
triumph over second-ranked Florida
State in the Orange Bowl; Alabama
outclassed No. 6 Baylor 30-2 in the
Cotton Bowl, and No_ 5 Michigan
stopped No. 16 Washington 2:Hi in
the Rose Bowl.
The top-rated Bulldogs rode a clut·
ch defense, some key Irish turnovers
and that wondrous freshman running back, Walker, to their New
Year's Day triumph and their first
perfect.season since !!!46.
'
Dooley had virtually the same
lineup as in !979, when Georgia was
6-5. The "Dawgs" were made complete by Walker.
The rookie tailback scored on runs
of I and 3 yasds, rushed for ISO yards
on 3e carries and was almost the entire Georgia offense since quarterback ~uck Belue completed only
one of 12 passes; that completion
came with 2:05 to play.
"I think Herschel showed he can
play with pain," said Dooley. "He
carried the ball with his right ann
the rest of the game. He didn't want
to take a chance of hurting his left."
The Irish hurt themselves in the
first hall and couldn't recover before
a Sugar Bowl record crowd of 77,895
that included President Carter. After Harry Oliver put Notre Dame
a hea d 3-0 with a 5G-yard field goal,
G
· •

~yard attempt.

RobinsOn's high kickoff then Ianded behind the Irish deep receivers
at .the Notre Dame 4 aj!d Georgia's ·
Dale Carver managed to nudge the
free ball to teammate Bob Kelly.
Two plays later, Walker soared into
the end zone.
·
Notre Dame, which ended up!l-2-1,
began the r second quarter with
another blunder when fullback John
Sweeney fumbled and Chris Welton
recovered for Georgia at the Irish
· 22. It took three plays for Walker to
score the decisive TD.
1
Notre Dame rallied in the second
half- its touchdown coming on Phil
Carter's !-yard run with S4 seconds
to play in the third quarter - but
defensive back Scott Woerner's two
inlerce!ltions helped stymie the
Irish, who outgained Georgia 328
total yards to 127 and 17-8 in first
downs.
"I'm proud of our team," said Dan
Devine, who was coaching his final
game at the Irish helm. "I don'llike
to lose and l don't want to take
anything away from Georgia."
It is 'unlikely anything will spoil
the Bulltlogs' national championship
hopes, which should·come to fruition
at 6:30 p.m. Saturday when The
Associated Press announces the
results of the final college foothllll
poll.
Oklahoma, !().2, stormed from
behind as J .C. Watts guided the
Sooners on a 78-yard drive, firing an
11-yard TD strike to Steve Rhodes
with only I :27 remaining. Watts then
hit a wide-open Forrest Valora with
a two-point conversion pass for the
winning points in their victory
against the Seminoles, 1().2.
"It was one of the most ·exciting
Orange Bowls ever," said Oklahoma
Coach Barry Switzer.
For once, Paul " Bear" Bryant
was able to enjoy a trip-to Dallas.
His Crimson Tide, the national
champions the past two years but
ranked only ninth with a !t-2 record
in the regular season~easi!y rolled
over error-plagued
lor. It was
the first Cotton Bowl victory !Dr a
Bryant-coached team since 1950.
Bryant said, "I'm just as tickled

Baylor, the Southwest Conference
titlist, niade things easy for
Alabama by turning the ball over
seven Urnes on three interceptiona
and four fumbles. The Bears, who
like Alabama wOund up IG-2,
managed only a first-quarter safetY
when Walter Lewis, the Tide's fresh. man quarterback, was dumped in
the end zone J&gt;y tackle· Tonuny
Tabor.
"Turnovers- that's the story in a
nutshell," Baylor Coach Grant Teall
said. The game marked the 22nd
straight bowl apgearance for
Alabama.
While Bryant's losing ways ended
in Dallas, Michigan Coach Bo
Schembechler was snapping a personal slide at the Rose Bowl. Schembechler was G-7 in postseason action,
including five losses at Pasadena,
Calif., before his Wolverines overwhelmed Washington.
"I have walked off this .field five
Urnes with my head- down," said
Schernbechler.
Don James, coach of !6th-ranked
Washington, who finished 9-3, added
of No. 5 Michigan, 1().2, "That was
one of the greatest defenses I have
seen. We had two opportunities to
score touchdowns but, let's face it,
wejustdidn't."

Tonight's games

Buffalo led the league in fewest yards allowed thrs season, permitting a
total of 4,101, a drop of almost 1,000
frolll the 1979 yield when the Bills
finished 14th in that important
category.
Eluffalo beat San i:Jiego 26-24

SATURDAY
Federal Hocking at Logan
Wahama at Meigs
Southern at Alexander ·.
Eastern at Coal Grove Tourney

I

How ·to ·choose snacks

~

By Myrtle Clark
they will stay fresh and will not
and Allllle Moon
spoil. Store perishable goodies in
EFNEP Nulrltloa Aides
the refrigerator. Non-perishable
Meigs Co. Cooperative
goodies should be stored in a
ExteDBlon Services
covered container. Soft cookies
Some suggested snacks from should be stored in a container
each of the basic four food groups with a tight fittiqg lld. Crisp
follow . These snacks help to cookies should be stored in a
provide protein, vitamins, and covered container with a loose
minerals as well as energy. They cover. Try this recipe for fruit
are less expensive than pur- cake . squares for a nutrition
chasing cookies, candy, ' 'pop", snack.
etc.
Food Group • Suggested
Recipe
Snacks: .
Fruit Cake Squares
Milk Group - White milk,
I 1-!r cup brown sugar (packed)
' ' cheese cubes, ice cream.
3eggs
Meat Group - Hard cooked
I 1-!r teaspoon vanilla
eggs, cottage cheese, cold cuts,
I 1-!r cup sifted enriched flour
luna fish, nuts, peanut butter.
'~'• teaspoon iodized salt
Vegetable-fruit Group · II&gt; teaspoon baking powder
Carrol strips, cabbage,
I cup chopped pecans
cauliflower. celery, green pepI cup chopped candied fruits
per, tOJ(18toes, turnip slicks, ap- • (pineapple, cherries, cand,ied
ples, banana~, grapes, oranges, orange peel or I cup raisins
peaches, pears, plums.
.,
or 1\-!r chopped dales (8 oz .)
'
Bread-Cereal Group
(dates are optiollll!)
Crac!o;ers, pretzels, whole wheat
Beat eggs. Add sugar gradually
rolls, homemade granola, and continue beating. Add vanilla
homemade cookies using peanut and fruits and nuts. Mix. Combutter, granola, molasses, bine flour, salt, and baking
cereals, dried fruits.
powder. Add and stir gently.
Purchasing holiday snacks ana Spread _mixture 'l'• inch thick in a
1
goodies can be expensive. It's shallow !3x9x2 inch greased
pan.
much better and more
Bake about30 minutes at 350 deg.
economical to make snacks that' F. Cool. Cut in squares. These
are nutritious rather than pur- chewy squares will keep well if
. chasing candy. After preparing stored in a covered container afthe holiday goodies, they must
ter cooling. Makes about 3 dozen
also be stored properly so that squares.

.
GOLF
PEBBLE BEACH. Calif. (AP)
Donna Caponi fired a 7-under-par 65
to become the first woman to lead a
major men's tournament when she
vaulted to a 2-stroke lead in the
Spalding Invitational Pro-Am event.
Caponi had eight birdies and one

_H_,a,..rv-ie

••

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Plbllahed every afternoon eacept Sunday,
MondayihrouahFrlday, lllCwrtS!roet, by
tile Ohlo VaTiey Publllhtn&amp; Company MlllumedJA, Inc.,· Pomeroy, Ohi2 48789,
IJII.IIM. Se&lt;ond cluo pootaae jjlrtd 1t
Punoroy, Ohio.

Maml&gt;or: Tho AIIO&lt;IIted Preu, lnlallll DalPr. AloodaUOil and tile American

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ReprenntaUve,

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Santlnal, Ill Court SJ., Pomeroy, Ohio 1111!1.
iiVIIICRIPTION IIATDI
B) Carrier or Motor llou.te

Ono .... ............. .. . .... .. .. .. 11.00
0no Molllh ... ......... ......... .... IHO
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lirllacrtbara not daa~lnc to pay the carrtar

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Christmas Day. Capt. Boring is a
pilot and an instructor at the Tyndall
Air Force Base. His wife is a kindergarten teacher in Calloway, Fla.
Mr. and Mrs. Riley are both students
a.t Ohio University where he is a
member of this year's graduating
class. Mr. and Mrs. Mills' daughter,
Mary, rs a nurse at the Mental
Health Center in Athens and attends
lasses at Ohio University.
unng the day, the Mills.
telephoned Mr. and Mrs . Dave Mills
in Arizona .

t&gt;cr:illl\.'1 f OU dt't'lll (0 !)c you.-.. must·

llllptJI1tlll l

t:tl lll&lt;I CCl'l

lllmultl pruvt• ' 'ery prtldUl'·

t1 ve. Y1m

upt.~uttl'

efrt!clln•ly uu Uwtr wavl...

r-lr llpJ)'.J rtunit ic~ inthc ~ c l&amp;rtllli.

LlhR" !Sept. %l-Of t. 231 Bec~tus': yuu hom: tlw

utu lity tu ~'t' vultll! 1n ideas ur il l!l ll~ '&gt;'' hl&lt;'h iJi hcrs
ttVCrlouk , )'UU HillY Chwcrly tic SUIIIC\hiUK
tu~;cthcr whit'h will KIVC }''Ill !'CdSOII tu l'ih'-Cr

h.lday.
SL'ORPIO lekt. Zt-·N11V. !%) Yuur fimmL'Iid
prosf't!t'ts 'ttrc l~l rtieu lar l )' Cr1L'tJUru~o:in.: :il this
time. Guim~ cuuld cumc tv YIIU thrnuJ&lt;It vt•ry
unw;uH I ~·hunncls . Keep 1111 t:unduil:::i upen .

Attention Dog Owners

SAOrn'ARIUS lNuv. 23-Drr. %1) Yuu r

Pomeroy~

'Breast
cancer not hopeless'.
,,

Middleport
pers.onals

says Meigs ACS

Mrs. Sherry Lind and
daughters, Debra and Heather,
Hanunond, Ind., and Mrs. Fannie
Lind, Huntington, W. Va. were
holiday visitors of Reino Lind. ·
Spending Christmas Day with
Mr. and Mrs. James Clatwcirthy
were Mr. and Mrs. Miclulel
Childs and Mrs. Margaret Clatworthy, Middleport, and Miss
Marcia Karr, Syracuse.
Mrs. Harold Ebersbach spent
Chrlstmas·with her daughter and
son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Tom
SUey, Matthew and Richard, and
the weekend in Columbus with
Mr. and Mrs. James Ebersbach
and. son, Brian. She returned
home Sunday.
Mrs. Evelyn l,.ewis has returned from a holiday visit wilh her
son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Lewis and family,
Charleston.
Mrs. Sadie Thuener, Syracuse ;
Alma Johnson, Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Leifheit, Enuna Jo and
Curt, Springfield; Mrs. William
Lehew, Ted, John, Billy and
Cheryl and Peggy Snyder were
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Harry
_Davis for a holiday dinner. On
Tuesday before Christmas, Mrs.
Johnson visited with Miss
Dorothy Leifheit at . Orient,
delivering Christmas presents to
· her.
New Year's guests of Mr. and
Mrs. William Radford were Mr.
and Mrs. Donald Pullins, Columbus; Deanna and Rot\ Reed and
children, Jeff and Alicia, Indianapolis, Ind. and Amy Toundaf, of Bethesda.
Spending Christmas with Mr.
and Mrs. Floyd Weber were her
daughter and son-in-law and
family, Mr. and Mrs. William
Strauss, Mahala, Steve and John
of Fleming. On Friday, Mr. and
Mrs. Dean Hill of Williamstown,
W.Va. visited with the Webers.
Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Lambert of
Middleport joined Mr. and Mrs.
Pete Elberfeld and son, Mike rl
Chester for Christmas dinner.
Mr. and Mrs . Don Erwin, Matt
and Amy, spent the holiday
weekend in Columbus with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Rollins
Wolfe, also visiting her brotherin-law and sister, Steve and Dei&gt;-

Uj)o

umlsm Hnd cnthu.'IIIISIII arc cusily. e~rou.~cd
today. This w111 have e~ dcsirublt• cMt.ul}·tk cffL'CI
upun your lricnds. Spreutl yoor ~ un.:ih l nc .

REDUCED 10%-50%

... ·--

NEW YEAR SPECIALS
1~

MERCURY
MARQUIS
••••••••••
:~~ ••.52495
.
..
'
VOLKSWAGEN •••••••••••••••••••••···~a
SODS
1966 FORD GAlAXIE 5()(J •••••••••••••••••
power '695
.

Rebui It motor

Automatic and

1974 ~ etnnUtSS •••••••••••••••••••• '1~

1978 FORD CONTRY SQUIRE.:::t:~~n::·;~~.'3295
1976 FORD GRANADA GHIA•• !o;~~s~;~k;~:~.'2595
1976 FORD GRANADA GHIA ••• ~~:~!~·.c::'..s2495
1976 CHEV• CAPRICE CLASSIC ••••••••••• '2295
Ful[y equipped

ALLOWANCE
FOR ANY OlD CAR, ·REGARDLESS OF
CONDITION. HUNDREDS MORE fOR LATE
MODEL TRADE-INS!

Push.. It

OFFER LIMITED TO BELOW LISTED VEHICLES.

YEAR END CLEARANCE
'80 GRANADA
6 cyl., auto. trans ., low
mileage, air, 12,000
miles~ or

1 year war·

rantv.
Price
Trade-In

$4,995.00
1,000.00

V-B, auto. trans ., air,
stereo radio, rallye
wheels, low mileage.
Price
Trade-in .

singing;
swinging and
everythitlgingl

---

TOWNSHIP

MEN'S &amp; LADIES' SWEATERS.

....

tv .
Price
Trade-in

$5,395.00
1,(100.00

•. THERMAL UNDERWEAR,
GLOVES &amp; HATS,
LONG SLEEVED TOPS,
AND MUCH MORE

RACINE DEPARTMENT STORE

M

F

.•••••'

.:;.
..'.....'
'.
....•
.'' ...' '
...' •

cyl., turtib., auto .
trans. , stereo, ti It
wheel , speed control.

4

·.Howard E. Frank
County

A~dltor

of Meigs .County

Licenoe ~US I be Obtained nol taler than Jon. 20, 1911 to I VOid paying penatty.,Atlor this dolt

penalty wtll be fl.OO for single tag •nd $5.00 for kennel license.

$8,200.00
$1,000.00

Price
Trade-in

•720000

'79 .f.l(JO

Ask us about our 12%
Annual ~ercentage Rate! ·

6 cyl., auto. trans.,
p .s., radio, bedllner.

Stop in and see Galland
'

I

P-arsons or Pat Hill, Gen. M.gr.
Price
Trade-in

'

'
'

You Pay

' l •

-.

.I:.
•••
1 ; •

SUNDAY MATINEE

f

1SHOWAT2P.M.
·\

s. ltd

$4,895.00
1,000.00

•389508

'81 T-BIRD
V-8, air, am -fm stereo,
int. decor and more.
Price
Trade-in

OR JUST GIVE US A CAj.L! /

992:2196

. $9,118.00
1,000.00

You Pay

'75 MERC.
MARQUIS

&gt;

'

'

Price
Trade-in
You Pay

NEW

'

DRESSES, ROBES, SLACKS,

6 cyl., auto. trans., air,
Squre, radio.

'80 FUlURA

You 'Pay

You Pay

;

COLOR

$4,995 .00
1,000.00

You Pay

V-B, auto. trans., air,
wire wheel covers, low
mileage ; ,12,000 miles
or 1 year warran·

'78 FAIRMONT
WAGON

'78 GRAND PRIX

'79 LTD

~-·----.,

meeting and Rita Arnold was runner-up.
At last week!s meeting of the .
Chester class, Betty Newell lost the
most weight. Class at the St.
Joseph's Catholic Church in Mason
will resume Jan. 6, !0:30p.m.

· 100000

You Pay

Male Dog $2 .00- Spayed Female Si .OO - Female $2 .00 - kennel Ucen s·e $10

ADDRESS

Mrs. Fink received her 50 pound
weight lossiebon and certificate at
the Tuesday · ht Slinderella Class
meet held i he Riverboat Room of
the Athens County Savings and Loan
Co. Ms. Fink and Carolyn Van Meter
lied for the most weight lost at the

r-=pa=rt=y=.==========-L----========::::::============~~

To obtain license by mail, til in and mall this form to HOWARD E. FRANk COUNTY
AUDITOR, Meig&gt; Cpunty, Pomeroy, Ohio.
·
.
'

OWNER'S NAME

Reqives loss' ribbon

joined the Reuter family for a

Enclose self -addressed stamped er.velope and pr~ce of license.

AU WINTER MERCHANDISE

Breast cancer is the number one SoCiety. . ·
disease concern of American women
The American Cancer Society's
but today there are effective s~e~M~ recent health checkup guidelines
that both women and their reconunend the monthly practice of
physicians can take to help control breast sell-i!xamination by women
the disease said S. Mi~hael, public of all ages. In additiop, the Society
infonnatiOI) chaiJ'llliln in the Meigs rec&lt;&gt;nunends a manunogrlll!l every
County Unit of the American Cancer year for asymptomatic women over
Society.
.
the age of 50 and a baseline mamNationwide more than 110,000 new mogram for those women between
cases of breast cancer are diagnosed the ages of 35 and 40. A mamaMuaUy and over 37,000 deaths oc- mogram is a low dose xray used in
cur. In Ohio alone, the figures are the detection of small breast can5,700 new cases and 1,900 deaths.
cers. ''Of course It woman is advised
"Early detection and prompt to cons!Jlt her physician when aptreatment have been found to be the plying these recommendatl0118 to
most important tools in guarding hersell," Michael added. ·
against breast cancer," Michael
said. "If you are a woman, spending
According to the American Cancer
five minutes each month could save · Society, breast cancer will strike
your life. The simple procedure ·one out of every 13 American women
known as breast sell-examination is with the greatest number of cases
·one of the !DOSt effective ways of fin- occurring among women over the
ding a breast cancer early, when it is , age of 50.
most curable," ~chael said.
· · "Thousands of women are alive
When · breast cancer is detected and well today after discovering
early in a localized state, flve:-year breast cancer," Michael said. "Cansurvival is about 85 percent ac- cer can be beaten and the living
cording to the Americar Cancer proof is aU around us."

hie Miller. The Erwin family
spent Christmas Day with his
mother, Mrs. Clarice Erwin, Middleport, and on Christmas Eve

· Mr. and Mrs. Richard Owen entertained Friday with a family party
in celebration of the birthdays rl
Mrs. Owen's sisters, Mr-s. Nancy
Cooper and Mrs. June Cantrell,
Gallipolis.
Others attending were Mr. and
Mrs. Jams Roller, Waldorf, Md.;
Mrs. Eva Hartley, Middleport;
Owen Cantrell and Mr. and Mrs. Bill .
Cantrell and three chldren,
Gallipolis, and Judy Owen, Point
Pleasant.
REACT TO MEET
Meigs County REACT will meet at
7:30 p.m. Friday at the fanner
senior citizens center, E . Main St.,
Pomeroy.

dit~~r

•

Entertain with party

tcn.-;th .
VIRGO iAug. u..&amp;pt. !21 Th l~ euuld bt.' tt l'tln'
lucky duy In sil uitliutt'i wl1it:h t't/Uitl add tu ymlr
rlnant:es Qr rL!!tmm:cs. KL'1!1l u sl111rp t!yt• 11edcd

Save our RC, RC -100, Nehi, Upper 10, Diet Rite
and Dad's Root Beer bottle caps for charity.

CHESTER, .OHIO

1

Landing

out.

· Mr. and Mrs. Robert Mills hosted
a family dinner party on Christmas.
Their guests included Mr. and Mrs.
Grant Boring, Reedsvil!e; Mr. and
Mrs. Raymond Fisher, Pomeroy ;
Capt and Mrs. Michael Boring,
Florrda;· Mrs. Nora Mills, Midd.leport, and Mr. and MrS. Jeff Riley,
Athens.
·
. Capt. and Mrs. Boring flew up

Lt; o (July 23-AuK. 22) lnvul vlllm:nt..s t11day
With

N~per Pllblllhen Aaocl&amp;Uon, NaUoq)

Allocialll, 3101 EucUd Ave., Cleveland;

Host family dinner

ASTROGRAPH

DEADLINE FOR PURCHASE OF 1981 DOG LICENSE IS JANUARY 20.TH. TWO DOLLAR
($2.00) PENALTY IF LICENSE IS PURCHASED AFTER THAT DATE. FOR YOUR CON·
i VENIENCE USE THIS HANDY APPLICATION BLANK AND MAIL TO THE COUNTY
1: AUDITOR AT THE COURT HO\JSE NOW. FEES ARE TWO OOLLARS 1$2 .001 FOR EACH
'I DOG, MALE OR FEMALE.

..

United Methodist Women and the
quilting group of the Minersville
United Methodist Church met recently at the church for a Christmas
potluck and gift exchange.
Later several members and the
Rev. 'Sianley Merrifield delivered·
fruit trays to shutins. Attending the
d.!Mer were the Rev. and Mrs.
Merrifield, !'YJrs. June Sayre, Mr.
and Mrs. Clifford Phillips, Mrs.
Hazel McCullum, and daughter ,
Mrs. Bob Harbrecht, Columbus,
Mrs. Gertrude Mitchell, Mrs. Fannie Phillips, Mrs . Stella Grueser,
Mrs. Helen Maag, Mrs. Ruby
Grueser, and Mrs. Mary Russell.

I

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

..

Minenville UMW meet

Food for Thoughtr

earlier in the season and their game
is one of two rematches this
weekend. In the other, Philadelphia
hopes it can handle Mi!lllesota as
easily.as it did in the season'ssecond
game when the Eagles drubljed the
Vikings 42-7.

business
as XV
thetakes
winding
pathturn
to
Super
Bowl
another
with Conference semifinal matchups
scheduled for this weekend.
Although it's highly unlikely that
Thursday, January 8. 7:30p.m .
any of the coaches involved in the
Columbus
&amp; Southern Electric Co.
four games Saturday and Sunday
Gallipolis.
Ohio
will meet the kind of fate Phillips
did, it's obvious that one-line
homilies just won't do in pro football
at this stage. The bo.ttom line is winning.
The Super Bowl-eligible field of 10
LEARN DETAILS ABOUT A
is down to eight and it will be cut in
half this weekend following the Conference semifinals. On Saturday,
Philadelphia hosts Minnesota in an
NFC game and Buffalo is at San
PUBLIC INVITED
Diego in the AFC. On Sunday, it will
OT A 0134
be Dallas at Atlanta in the NFC and
Oakland at Cleveland in the AFC.
There are interesting matchups in
~&lt;l!l/S&gt; GALLIPOLIS
all fbur contests.
Oakland's sack-happy Raiders
AAA TRAVEL
Agency
will be zeroing in on Cleveland's
AGENCIES SERVE
Brian Sipe, who joined a very ex, BOTH MEMBERS AND
'446·0699
clusive club when he passed for 4,132
THE TRAVELING PUBLIC
yards this season. The only other
4,0IJO.yard passers in NFL history
were Joe Namath and Dan Fouts.
The Bills, in the playoffs for the ~------------------------~
first time since 1974, are anxious to
meet the challenge of the Chargers.

Saturdays from 4 to 11 p.m. Tbe coffee house opened
last October 25, and is a non-profit location organized
by a group of ChrlstlaDB, who consider It their mlnistry
to the area.

t

Logan at Gallipolis
Meigs ar Wellston
Waverly at Athens
Jackson at Ironton
Pt, Pleasant at Parkersburg South
Eastern at Coal Grove Tourney
Miller at Nor1h Gallia

·
B
I
.
R ace t 0 SUper · ow
-C0 un t d0 wn c0 n tin u e ~ -~c_f~_;_;g_;_~ -sry.:.a_RH_~. .:y: ;:.:;_~. .:~. .: . .: . .:t:.:ru.·~.:. :~. .:~. .:~. .:t:.:.~-. .!:~: : : ~: ~: :hl: : :. .:.";_i_~run-~-thi-g-:h_!_:·_~o_as_na_~_~c_wha-ou_,~_d_. ~_a_g;_·~_.i~_h_~_~_i;_~_e_t~.,·n_~_~·_s~_·o.,.v_e_r
By Associated Press
Bum Phillips' Houston .Oilers got
whipped in last Sunday's ·National
Football League wild-card playoffs
and .now poor ol' Bum's out looking
fora new job.
That just shows you what can happen in this obviously serious

"AN OUTREACH to the people In the streets., .. an
alternative to the ban." The Harvest Coffee H111111e so
sll)'ll operator Mike Cremeans, Is just that. It offers
free food, coffee, and tea, and llv.e music, and Is open

Th.e Daily Sentinel-Page-S

V-8; / p.s., air, radio,
·. vinvl .roof aqd more .
Price
Trade-in
You

$2,095.00
1,000.00

Pa~ .

PAT HILL FORD, INC.

Oh.

�' \' J \ ' I

r
~ January

iddleport, Oho
'

A=-r•
-

EWS &amp; SONS SOHIO

NEWS

Ienke

Probobly
coming
down
with
something

. TRINITY CHURCH, Re• . W ' H P,flin ,

~so

POMEROY

CHURCH

OF

fHE •

of Your ·Choice

NAZARENE Carner Unton and Mulberry,
R•v. Clyde V Henderson , pastor. S'un·
day: school 9 30 om., Glen Mcdung,
supt. : morning wor$hlp , 10 30 a.m ;
•ven1ng servtce, 7 30 m1d-week service, Wednesday, 7 30 p m
GRACE EPISCOPAL CHURCH -

Thill Sunday

326 E

Main St Pomeroy The Rev . Robert B
Graves , rector Sunday serv~ees at 10 30
a .m Holy Communion on the first Sunday of each month, and combined with
morning prayer on the third Sul'lday.
Morning prayer and 5ermon on oil olher
Sundays of the month Church St~l
ond nursery care provrded Coffee hour
1n the Pansh Holt immediatelY followmg
theservtce

IEIGS nRE

SOUTHERN

OLD

DEXTER

BIBLE

Nursery prov1ded for worship services.
ST PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH, Corner
of Sy~ornor• and Second Sts ., Pomeroy

Face It today! Do something about It next week!
Choose 'r'OUR place of worship. And make atten·

• fft-6104

SACRED HEART, Rev Father Paul D.

Welton , pastor Phone 992-2825 Satur
dav, evemng Mass 7 J0 Sunday Mon. B

let lnw

and 10 am

Corry Out

H£111EI't
liM ElY

---.w.

P 0 BOX 102•

. .k. . . .

..

SWISIIEI I LOHSE

PHARMACY

PAT HILL FORO, INC.

Wt Fill Doctors'

PrtKrl,tientl

... s. Tlotnl. _..,. ..

ftt-tt55

PGflterey

ff'2 ·21t6

Monday
e Psalms

ing worship , I 0 .30 a m , evening wor
sh1p, 7 30 Wednesday night prayer ser·
vice 7 30 p m Women s Fellowship

Tu es day
o Luke

Thursday, 9 30o m
FAITH BAPTIST Churcl1 Mason meet
at Umted Steel Wor~rs Un1on Hall ,
Rotlrood Street , Maso
Pastor, Rev
Richard Jordon Morn1n worsh•p 9 30
a .m., Sunday School 1
a'" m Prayer
maetmg Wednesday 7 30 p m

16 1· 13

Wednesday
• Psalms
3 1 19·34

I f 3·6

Fnday
e Proverb s

2t• 1: Milln

tn-51)1 ,_,mero.,

•

WAID aoss
SOlS SIORE

UNITED
METHODIST ,
30 am . ftrst and second

Preachmg 9
Sundays of each month third and fourth
Sundays each month, worshtp servic~ at
7.30 p m Wednesday eventngs ot 7 30.
Prayer and Bible Study

FOREST RUN BAPTIST -

MiEIIT
N o - I M. Ce
.,c........... o

• Hebrews

Srices

CHRISTIAN

P. J. PAIJL£Y,

T hur; day

IIISUflll(e

114 W Mllin
mi· ISII .......,...,

Saturday

MT MORIAH BAPTIST -

VIRGIL B.
TENORD SR.

8 22-3 1

'"PtmtNy
tt2·U1:S

SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST , Mulberry

Sobbolh School

BURLINGHAM

Soturdoy

ScriplurH SeiiiiCtf&lt;l

afternoon at 2 00, wtth Worst·up Service
following ot 3 15

Tilt

Ctlur(tl &amp; Offtce Supplies

~

..,,.,.,oan &amp;tilt So.::oel~

Sister Homett Worner Sup! Sunday
School , 9 30 a m , morntng • ..Zarship
I0.•5o m
THE HILAND CHAPEL George Casto
pastor Sunday Sci-tool 9 30 o m even·
mg worshtp , 7 30 Thursday eventng
prayar servtce 7 30 p m
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST David
Mann, mln1ster; W1lilam Watson, Sunday
school supt Su nday school . 9 JO o.m
morning worsh1p 10 30 a m
FIRST

SOUTHERN

BAPTIST

day, 7 JOp m
FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH

Botloy

Run Rood Rev Emmett Rawson pOttuf
Handley Dunn, supt Sunday school 10
o.m Sunday evenmg serVICe 7 30,
teaching 7 30 p m Thursday
MIDDLE~ORT CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRI~TIAN UNION, lawrence Mont.,.
pastor Mrs Russe,ll Young S\lndot
:._SeMel Supt SundaY' School 9 3l'f a rtt
Eventng worstup 1 7·30, Wednes~y
prayer meeltng , 7 30 p m.

alw.

MORIAH

CHURCH

OF

GOl)

Rocme- Rev James Satterfteld , postor
Morn1ng worship 9 ... 5 o m , Sundoy
, school 10 &lt;1115 am eventng warstlip 1
Tuesday , 7 30 p m , lodtel pra.y~
•• meet1ng, Wednesdoy, 7 30 p m YPE.
MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST

Com.r

Sixth and Palmer tha Rev M~ 'Mit;.
Clu"!!, Sundoy school, 9 15 o m , Woncfy
Hoyes, Sunday SchNI , su~nn t~t
Dan Rtggs . ossl supt Morning Worsfiitt
10 15 am Youth
P-"'
Wednesday tncludtng wee tots , -...,
beavers , tuntor astronauts . and ~iOr
and senior high BYF; dlolr proctlee: t 30
p.m. Wednesday pro,., meetmg end fl
ble study, Wednesdcly, 7 30 p.m
CHURCH OF CHRIST, M'ddleport 5th
and Mom . 8ob Melton , miniSter Scott
Saltsman , assoc1ate mtntster 81bte
School 9 30 o. m , mornin_g worship
10 30 a m evening serv1ce, 7 DO J) m
Wednesday B1ble S1udy and youth group
meetings. 7 00 p m

"'"''"9· 730

MIDDLEPORT

CHURCH

OF

THl

NAZARENE , Rev. J1m Broome, pottar
Btll Wh1te. Sunday sc,.,ool supt Sunday
school 9 30 o m mormng worsh1p
10 30 a m , Sundey •vongellstic
meeting , 7 00 p m. Prayer meertng,
Wednesday
7
p m
UNITED PRESBYTERIAN MINIST.V

OF

MEIGS COUNTY Dw1ght l Zav1h:, dlrec
tor.
HARRISONVILLE PlltSBYHRIAN Re•

Ernest Stnckltn, pastor Sunday ~hurd1
school 9 30 a m Mrs HOmer LH
supt , mormng worship 10 30
MIDDLEPORT,

Sunday

school

9-:lO

o .m , Richard Vaughan , supt Morning
worship 10 30
SYRACUSE

FIR,ST

UNITED

PRESBYTERIAN 'hurch Worsh1p service
9 30 a m Sunday School 10 30 a m Mrs
Sampson Hall supf
RUTLAND CH URCH OF GOD Rondall

Bailey, pastor Sunday school , ' 10 a.m. ,
Sunday wbrsh1p II o m Children's
c,.,urch II a m , Sun4oy ever:~•ng service, 7 30 p m , Wednesday evening
young lad1es auxtliary 6 p m Wtdnn·
doy tomily worship , 7:30 p m
, •
HAZEL COMMUI&lt;IIlY CHURCH, -

LOnliJ Bottom, Edsel Hort pastor . ~
school., io am Church, 7 30 p tn.
· prayer meeting 7 30 p m Thursdoy.
MIDDLEPORT

PENTECOSTAL ,

Third

Ave the Rav William Knittel pastor
Thomas Kelly , Sunday Sct1ool Supt $un·
day school , 10 am . Classes for all ages
eveninliJ servtee 7 30 Bible study
Wednesday , 7 30 p.m , youth services
Friday , 7 30p.m.
MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST. Cor·

' n•r Ash and Plum: Ralph BUtch«,
, pastor Soturday eveni"g servlc•, 7:30
, p m ., Sunday
•

School 10 30a m ,

MEIGS
COOPERATIVE PAAISH
METHODIST CHURCH

Rlct-lard W Thomos, Director
POMEROY CLUSTER
Rev. Ro""'-McG-

Rev. Jomes Corbitt

, POMEROY, Sundav School 9 15 a m
Warship s•rvice lO 30 a m Cho~r
rehearsal. Wednesday, 7 p.m . Aev
Robert McGee poster
ENTERPRISE, Worohlp 9 a.m Churdl
SchooiiOo.m
ROCK SPRINGS, Sundoy School915 o

m Worship 1ervtce, 10 a. m

.,......."' 1

,;. ~~'

........ v
-

CLOTMING HOUSE .&lt; ~·~

FURNITURE &amp; HARDWARE
Homtltte S.ws

KERMIT' SKORNER. \

Pomeroy , Ohio

Attend The
Church of
Your Choice
This

FRENCH'S

SUNOCO

SERVICE
CENTERS

212W Mltn
Pomeror m "'2

~n's

~

Equipment

'

Wm

N . 1nd
,....SIO
_.m.,.sa

Owner
....... (6U)J4Jtp7J

FOurth ond

SOUTHERN

BAP~ IST

CHURCH Route 1, Shade Postpr Don
Block Afflltoted wilh Southern BopttSI
Con~enlion Sunday tc~l . 1 30 p m
Sunday worsh ip 2 30 p .m Thursday
e~rJ_tng Bible study, 7 p m
PENTECOSTAL .A.SSEMBL Y , Aactne
Route I 24 William Hobock pastor Sun
day school , lOam Sunday eventng ser
vice , 6 30 p m Wednesday eentng ser.
VICe 7
CARPENTER BAPTIST. Rev Freeland
Norru , pastor Don Cheodle, Sup! Sun.
day School 9 30 a m Morning Worsh ip
10 30 o m Prayer Ser-J ICe olternat•
Sundays
NEASE SETTLEMENT FREE WILL BAP

282

Mulberry Ave Pomeroy, Re... W1ll1om
R Newman roster Hershel McClure
Sunday schoo supertntendanr Sundoyschool , 9 30 a m morntng worsh•p
10 30. e"'ening worsh rp
7 30 p m
Midweek prayer sarvtce 7 30 p m
MIDWAY COMM UNITY CHURCH , O..x
. ter Rd., Rd , Langsville , Rev .A. A
Hughes Pastor Sunday School 10 am
S.rv1ces on Tuesday. ThurStJoy and Sun·

MT

M1dcUepor1

of Your Choice
This Sunday

"

GIFTS

RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH-

Nyle

Main St Mtddleport Rev Colvin Min
nts , pa1tor Mrs Elvm Bumgardner,
sup! Sunday school , 9 30 am worship
serviCe 10 45 a m
NORTH BETHEL Umted 'Methodist
Churcn, Rev Charles Domigon pastor
Sunday Schaal , 9 30 am Wonhtp Ser ·
vtce 10 45 a m Sunday Btble Study ,
7 00 p m Wednesday prayer meehng
7 30p m

3 27-35

• Proverbs

Re•

Borden
pastor
Cornelius Bunch.
sup4'rintendent Sunday school, 9·30
o m second and fourth Sundays war
stup serv ice at 2 30 p m

Heights Rood, Pomeroy Pastor , Albert
Ot1tet. Sobboth School Supenntendent.
Rlto White

lng service, 7, Wednesday evening war ·
ship 7 p m . V1SIIohon , Thursday 6 30
pm
TRINITY Chr1stion Assembly Coolville
G1lbert Spencer, pastor , Su11day
school , q 301 a m , morn.nt worship , 11
. a m Sunday evening service 7 30 p .m ,
m1dweek prayer service Wednesday
7 30p m
MOUNT Olive Commun•ty Church ,
Lawrence Bush, pastor, Maw: Folmer Sr
Superintendent . Sunday School and mor·
ntng worsh•p t 30 o m Sunday evening
tervice , 7 p m., Youth mHtmg ond Bible
study. Wednesday , 7 p.m
UNITED FAITH CHURCH - Roule 7 on
Pomeroy bypou Rev ~RObert Smith , St.,
pastor, Rev James Cundiff on•slont

pester Sunday School, 9·30 o.m , morn.

36 ' 2-10

Reulllr-lnlpn

•

VICTORY BAPTIST - 525 N 2nd St ,
Middleport James E. Keesee . pastor
Sund0y morning worship. 10 a.m • even

lliM'tteY

dance a regular habit And through a lltetlme of
worship end faith It r;::an be for your child .. , HIS
place of worship.

Confession, Saturday ,

7 -7 30 p m

111 I Mllft

PDMrltrOY

CHURCH , Rev Rolph Smtth pastor Sunday school , 9 30 am , Mrs . Worley
FranCIS superintendent Preochtng ser
vices f1rst &amp; th1rd Sundays following Su•·
day School .
' GRAHAM

PIZlA SHACK

CHARLOTTESVIUE VIAGIN!A 11$011

OF

~stor, John Fellure , aupenntendent.
Church school , 9·30 a m , morning worship , 10 30. evening service.. 7 p m Bible
Study Thun , 7 p m Classes for all ages.

Services 11 am. L

Ph. "2 2101

CHRIST 200 W Matn St 992 5235 Vocol
mustc Sunday worshtp 10 am . B1ble
study , 11 a m worship , 6 p m Wednes day Bible study, 7 p m

evening wQrsl-lip, 7 p.m . WedoMdoy 81·
blestudy , 7 p m.
·
JUBILEE CHRISTIAN CENTER George's Creek Rood . Rev . C J. LernJey,

The R...,. , William Middlesworth Pastor.
Sunday School at 9·.t5 a m and Church

Iiii i
KE ISTER A0Y£RTlSII'fG SERVICE

BAPTIST

WESTSIDE . CHURCH

Middlaplllt

COPV~IGHl

CHAPEL Route I Shode B1ble school , 7
p m Thursday worsh1p serv1ce 8 p m
POMEROY

'-ARK V" STORE

It Is a HESITATION; hesitating to stert our
child in Church School. hesltaelng to go wtth him
and worship God, hesitating to discuu at home tht
need for morllll and religious foundittion for the
whole family

CENTER, INC.

Main 51 Net! Proudfoot . pastor Btble
school, 9 30 am morntng warship
10.30 am. Youth meetings 6 30 p m .
evening worstup. 7 30. Wednesday nigtlt
prayer meeting ond Btble study . 7 30
p.m .
THE SALVATION ARMY, 115 Butternut
Ave ,, Pomeroy Envoy Q}'ld Mrs Roy Win
lng, off1cers 1n charge Sunday·hohneu
meetmg , 10 am , Sunday School , 10 30
a.m. Sunday school leader , YPSM , Elotse
Adoms. 7 30 p ~m salvotton meeting ,
various speakers and mvslc specials
Tt-lursday-10 a m to 2 p m Lodtes
Home League all women 1n111fed 7 30
p m prayer meetmg and Bible study .
Rev Noel H.,man teacher
BURLINGTON

Even • frown can wony Mother. And when he
has a fever - she elway1 feara the worttf
Did you know, Mother. that mon childh!!n f:.ll
Yictlm to tplrltual neglect than any of the crippling
dlsea~n we dread? It has wRcked the tond hopa
and bold. dre~ms of hundredt of thouNndt of pa~
rents.
Yet It Isn't a disease, at alii

,_,.F. Fwnt, MQr

. POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIST 212 W

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

LMVIt &amp; leldl S

This Sunday

pastor Roy Moyer, Sunday school swpt
Church School, 9 15 a..m ; worship ..,.
vice, 10.30 o.m Choir reheonol , Tues day , 7 30 p m under direction of Alice

t

1

Eugent~~ Underwood. pastor ; Harry Hen·
drlcks. super intendent Sunday te'hool.
q. 30 0 m . momlng wonh lp , 10:30 am ..

liST Donald R Korr Sr pastor Fndoy
evenmg serv1ce 7 30 p m
Sunday
school 10 a l'f1
FLATWOODS. Church School 10 am
Worship 11 a m
MIDDLEPORT CLUSTER

HEATH Church School 9 30 a m Wor
shtp 10 30 a m UMYF 6 p m Robert
Robinson , PoSfor
RUTlAND Ctlurcl1 School 9 30 a m
Worship 10 30 a . m ~ ~

SALEM C5Nlt( -)llorship
Church Schoal'f:45 a.Jft.
~CUSH:t.USTER

9

a m.

lUJH Woi)hp 9 o .m

l&lt;hooiiO o 1!1 "J

Church

_ ••

MIN£RSVn.ll, Chlit&lt;ll School 9 a m
Wott/&gt;ip I 0 d '".
•
ASBURY . rhurch . S&lt;ttool 9 50 a m
WOf'sh1p ll 0 ..,, lil!tle Study 7 30 p m

Thvnday. UMW f1st Tuesday
SOUTHERN CLUSTER

ltv Oovtd Hdrns

fte..,

8EARWALLOW

Mortt. Flynn

Aev. FJbrence Sm1th
Htlton Wotfe
IETHANY. (IIOites), Worshop 9 30
Chu~ $thoct 10 JO o m Bible
!illclv, Thu&lt;slldy 7· 3tp m

:o.m

.. :· CAW MEL , -Wor,hip second and lourth
S(,ndoys at lO 45 a ..... Sunday S&lt;hool

• Mdfnd ond fiia,!11t Somdays 9 30 o m
Mnt11p and Sundllw School ot Sutton
U'Nfid. Mif'hod1st ~rch on ftrst and
'third Svncfa,'f lible ttudy together each
Wednesday ~t 1 30 p m ' Famtly n1ght
cUnner toge!h-r each tturd Thursday at

RIDGE

CHURCH

OF

CHRIST , Duane Worden, mtntsfer Btble
class 9 30 o m morntng worsh ip 'tO 30
a.m
even1ng worsh1p , 6 30 p m
Wednesday B1ble study 6 30 p m
NEW

Rev StanJey Meff'ffled M1n1ster
• ' FORI:ST

Ketth Eblm , pastor Sunday School 9 30
a m
leonard G1lmore f1rst older ~
evenmg servtce 7 30 p m Wednesday
prayer meet mg. 7 30 p m

STIVERSVILLE

COMMUNITY

Church, Sunday School service 9 45
a m , Worshtp
servtce.
10 30
EvangeliStiC Servtce 7 JO p m Wttdnes ·
day Proyer meetmg 7 30
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST, Pomeroy ·
Homsonvllle Rd . Robert Purtell pastor ,
Btll McEl roy Sunday school sup! Sunday
schooJ, '9 30 a m mormng worstl ip and
communton, 10 30 a m Sunday wonhtp
serv1ce 7 p m Wednesday evenmg
prayer meettng and Btble study, 7 p m
ST JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH, Pine

Grove The Rev Wllltom M1ddlesworth
Pastor Church servtces 9 30 a m Sun :
'
day SchooilO JOa .m
BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST Jerry
Pingiev pastor Sunday school 9 30

o.m·.. morn1ng worsh1p , 10 30 om
Wednesday evemng serv1c8 7 30
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST Re~ Earl Shuler
pastor Sunday scMool 9 30 o m Church
service 7 p m , youth meeljng , 6
p m Tuesday 81ble Study 7 p m
RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE

Rev John A Coffman pastor Martha
Wolfe Cha1rman of the Boord of Chns
630.
APPLE GIIOVE Sotnday School 9 30
!ton Ltfe Sundoy School 9 30 am mar·'
Q m. Wonhl' 7 30 p m 1st ond 3rd Sun- ,
mng worshtp , 10 30 Sunday evening
days Prayer me8ting Wednesday 7 30
worsh ip, •7 30 p m Prayer meeting ,
p m Fello.nftip supf!Nf ltrst Saturday 6
Wednesday , 7 30 p m
p m UMW 2ncllu~ 30 p m
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST, Don l Woltcer ,
EAST LETART, Chruch School 9 o .m
Pastor Robert Sm1th, Sunday school
Worship service 10 am Prayer meet1ng
supt Sunday school 9 30 a m morning
7 30 p m Wednesday UMW sacond
worsh1p 10 40 om Sunday evening
Tuesday 7 JO p m
wors.h1p 7 30 Wednesday evenmg Btble
RACINE WliSlEYAH - Sunday school • study , 7 30
10 cr 111. wor;sh~ 1l • .m Chotr practice
DANVILLE WESLEYAN Rev R D
Brown po1tor Sunday School 9 30
Thursday , 8 ' m
l£T ART FAllS- Worshtp servtce 9
a m , rnorn1ng worship 10 •5. youth ser
o tn Churdl School 10 a m
vtce, 6 45 p m . even•ng worship 7 30
MORNINCo STAR Worsh1p 9 30 om
~ p m , prayer and protse . Wedne&amp;doy.
O.urch School to ;lO .......
730pm
•
MORSE CHA~EL. Church School 9 30
SIL~ER RUN FREE BAPTIST Re• Mor
am Wonhip11om
vtn Markin, pastor Steve little Sunday
PORTLAND 5unddy School 6 30 p m
school supt Sunday school , 10 am
Evening Worship, , 7 30 p m Youth
mornmg worsh1p 11 o m Sunday even
Mhting Trisday 7 3o p m Bible Sludy
lng worshtp 7 30 Prayer meetmg and
..,Thursday 1 !10 p m
Btble study Thursday 7 30 p m , youth
SUTTON, SUnday School ftrst ond th~rd
ser~lce 6 p m Sunday
Sundays 9 30 o. m., WOf3hip, ftrst and
CHR ISTIAN FELLOWSHIP CHURCH 38 3
third Sundays . 10 45 o m Worshtp and
N 2nd Ave M1ddleport Pastor , Bob
Sundoy School ot Carmel United
Holhns Sunday serv1ces, 10 00 o m and
MethodiSt Churc~ on •econd and fourth
7 p m Tuesday and Fnday servt(es 7 00
Sundays Bibfe study togelher each
pm
Wednesday, 730 p m. Family night dtn
HOUSE OF PRAYER AND PRAISE
ner tcgether HCh third Thwrsday of 6 30
Liberty Ave , POmeroy Pastor Ke ith
pm.
Adkins Serv tces Sunday 3 00 p m Frt·
NOt!THEASr CLUSTER
day7 30 p m Tuesday7 30 p m
RW:'I:khar!IW. Thomas
CHESTER CHURCH OF GOD Re • R E
~ 5yclonltrlcker , Sr
Rob1nsan poster Sunday school 9 30
J.... W. IOuvlos
a m worship serv1ce 11 a m . evemng
service 7 00 youth serv1ce Wednes
Chari" D!omigon
JOPPA, -ship 9 00 o m, Church
day 700pm
,
Schoo II 0 00 o m
LANGSVILLE
CHRISTIAN CHURCH
CHESTER, 1 War1htp 9 a.m. , · Church
Robert E. Muss..- , pastor Sunday school '
School 10 a.m Choir Aeheorsal 7 p m
9 30 a m , Paul Muuer , supt , morntng
Thundoys Sible Study . Thursdays
worshtp 10 30 Sunday evening service
1JOpm
7 .00, mtd · weetc sarv•ce, Wednesday 7
LONG BOTTOM, Sunday School al9 JO
pm .
om. Evening Worship at 7.30 p m.
SYRACUSE
CHURCH
OF
THE
Thursday libfe Study , 7 JO p .,
•
NAZARENE, Rev James 8 K1ttle , pastor ,
REEDSVILLE . Sunday School 9 30 o m ,
Norman Presley
Sunday School
Morning Worihlp 10:30 am . Evening
Supenntendent Sunday sctlool 9 30
Wbrshp 7 j() p 1m
Bible Study
am . morning wonhtp 10 43 om . ,
w.......~..,. r:JIIp_.tn.
evangelistiC serv1ce, 7 p m Prayer and
• ALFRED:'Sioflday SCI&gt;ool ot 9 •5 om
Praise Wednesday, 7 p m . routh
Morning Won1llp el 11 am Youlh 6.30
meeting 7 p m
p m. SUndafi. Wa '
Clay Night Prayer
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN CHRIST
Meeting, 7:i)p rrt. '
Elden R Bloke pastor. Sunday School 10
ST PAIA. :(to~ ·1'1olno). Sunday
o m . Robert Read , supl , Morning ser~
School 9 ·o6" Cr m ""'nlng Wonhlp at
mon 11 a m 1 Sunday ntght servlce1
1000 am Bible Study, 7 30 p m , Tues
Chrtstlan Endeavor, 7 30 p m,, Song ser
day.
•
vice 8 p m
Preachmg 8 30 p m
• SOUTH BETHEL (Sit•er Rldyo) Sundoy
Midweek Prayer meettng, Wednesday , 7
School 9 00 Cl m Morning Woship tO ·OO
p .m , Alvin Reed , l~y leader
o .m . Wodnesd!tf 81bl• Study, 7 30 p,m
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST Locotod al
, ICINO QIIIIQt Pf' CHRIST. Ollv.r
Rutland on Nftw limo Rood ne)(t to
iwelft,
iundoy school
Forest .A.cre Park Rev. Ray Rouse
pastor . Robert Musser. Sundby School
9.*l ..ery .......
supt Sunday schopl 10 30 a m , worship
CifRIS'ItAH UNION , Re•.

supiilll..,_..
!IOBS6H·

7 30 p r;n~1ble Study Wedne5day . 7 30
p m Satu rday n1ght prayer ser~t ce 7 30
pm

HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN Roger
Watson pastor Mildred Ztegler, Sunday
, school supt Mormng worshtp 9 30 o m
Sundayschool 10 30 a m , even1ng s.er
VI Ce 7 30
MT UNION BAPTIST Joe Sayre Sun
doy School Supertntenent
Sunday
school, 9 45 o m , &amp;vemng worsh1p , 7 30
p m Prayer meetmg 7 30 p m Wedne\
doy
TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF CHRIST

Vmcent Waters pastor Howord Blatr
Colwel l supennlendent Sunday School
9 30 o m morning church 10 JO om
Sunday even1ng serviCe 7 30 Wednes
day B1ble Study 7 30 p m
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE ,

Rev Herbert Grote pastor Fronk R1ffle
sup! Sunday School 9 30 o .m Worsh1p
servtce , 11 o m ..and 7 30 p m F'royer
meetmg Wednesday. 7 30 p m
LAUREL

CLIFF

FREE

METHODIST

CHURCH Rev Fklyd F Shook JJ9Sior
Lloyd Wnght 01rector: of Chr:stton
Education Sunday S&lt;hool 9 30 o m ,
Mormng Worsh1p 10 J0 a m , Chotr
Practice, Sunday 6 30 p m Even1ng
Worship , 7 30 p m Wednesdor Prayer
and Btble Study 7 30 p m .
•
DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST Charles
Russell , Sr , mtntster Fhck Macomber ,
$upt Sunday school 9 30 o m , worship
ser v1ce 10 30 am Bible Study Tuesday
7 30p m
REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS
CHRIST OF LATTER
DAY ~INTS

Portland Ractne Rood. Wtlltam Roush ,
pastor Phyllts Stobort Sunday School
Supt Sunday School 9 30 o.m Mornmg
worshtp , 10 30 om Sunday even1ng
service 7 p m Wednesday even1ng
prayer serv1ces 7 30 p m
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST Rev Earl Shu lar
pastor Worship serv1 ce 9 30 a .m Sunday school , 10 30 am B1ble Study and
prayer servtce Thursday 7 30 p m
CARLETON CHURCH K~ngsbury Rood
Gory K1ng , poster Sunday schooJ 9 30
am ~ Ralph Cod supenntendent even·
1ng worsMip , 7 30 p m Prayer&gt; meeting
Wednesday 7 30 p m
LONG

BOTTOM

CHRISTIAN ,

Tom

Rtchoson po1tor Walloce OQmewood
Sunday School Superintendent Worship
service ot 9 a m Bible School 10 a m
HYSE~UN HOLINESS CHURf.H, Sun·
day Sc
ot 9 30 o m . wor1h1p ser·

v1ces at
a m. Pastor Rev The{on
Durham Thursday servtces at 7 30 p m
w1th Rev Okey Cart
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION 01 Bold

Knob lo&lt;:ated on County Rood 31 Rev
lawrence Gluesencomp pastor Rev
Roger Wdltord , an1stant poster .
Preaching services. Sunday 7 po p m
prayer meeting, Wedne1doy 7)30 p m
Gory Gnfftth leader. Youth groupt ,
Sunday eveing , 6 30 p m with R~er and
VIolet Wtllford as leaders Communion
services first Sunday each month
WHITE S CHAPEL , Cot&gt;lv,tte RD

Ro•

Roy Deeter pastor Sunday school 9 30
a m worship service 10 30 a m Bible
study and prayer servtce Wednesday ,
7 30p m
RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST

Bob

Buckingham , pastor , Herb Elliott Sun day school supt Sunday school 9.30
a m mormng worsh ip and comunion
10 lOom
RUT.LAND BIBLE METHODIST CHURCH ,

Amos Ttl! is . pastor Danny TilliS . Sunday
School Supt Sunday Sc:hool , 9 30 o m ,
fallowed by morn ing worship Sunday
evening aervtce . 7.00 p m Prayer
meeting Wednesday 7 ·00 p m
RUTLAND
CHURCH
OF
THE
NAZARENE, Ro• Lloyd D Grimm , Jr ,

pastor Sunday sctlool 9 30 om wor·
sh ip service, 10 30 om. llroodcatt •live
over WMPO , young people's 1ervlce . 7
p m Evangelistic serviu . 7 30 p m .
Wedn•tldayservlce , 7 30 p.m

p m Weekly B1ble Study . Wednesday
7J0pm
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST, Miller

St Mason W Va Aunce Mid'i poster
Sunday Bible Study tO am , Worship 1i
am and 1 p m. Bible Study Wednesday
7 p m , Vocal m'u sic
LIFE SCIENCE CHURCH -

1:P' No•lh

Third St , Chesh.re Independent, fun
domental Hrvicel. Sunday evening 7 30
p m Postor Rev Dr~ Robert Persons
MASON ASSEMBLY OF GOD, Dudd'"g

lane Mo1on , W. Va Rev. Ronn1e B
Roae Pastor Sunday School 9 45 a .m
Morning Wllnhlp II a m Even1ng Servtce 1 30 p m Wednesday Women s
M~nistrles 9 a .m {m..tlng and prayer
Proy•r and Bible Study 7 p m
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION , Tho Rev. W,lllom
Campbell pastor Sunday School 9 30

om .. Jam•• Hughes , sup! , evening ser
vice. 7 30 p m . Wedneaday evemng
prayer m-ting, 7 30 p m Youth prayer
s.,...ice each Tuesday
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH , Lelo•t , W

Va Rt 1. Mark Irwin, pastor. WQrship
services , 9 30 a m ~ Sunday uhoo l, 11
o m eventng worship, 7 00 p .m Tues
day cottage prayer mHtlng and Blbl•
Worsh1p servtce
study , 9 30 o m
Wednesday , 7 30 p m
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH , now locolod

on Pomeroy Pike , Count'f Rood 25 near
Flatwoods . Re'&lt;l!. Blackwood, pastor Services on Sunday at 10 ·30 a.r;n and 7 30
p m with Sunday school. 9.30 a .m Btble
1tudy , Wedftesdoy . 7 30p m
INDEPENDENT HOI.INESS CHURCH ,
INC Poarl St
Middleport Ro•

0 Dell Manley pastor, Arthur Barr. Sun.
day school superintendent Sunday
school 9 30 a m , evtning worship 7 30
p m Prayer and praise service, W.dnes day , 7 JOp.m
RUTLAND APOSTOLIC CHURCH OF
JESUS CHRIST Elder Jam"os Miller. Bible

1tudy , Wednesday , 7 30 p m . Sunday
School , 10 a m Sunday nlgM service ,
730pm
POMEROY WESLEYAN HOI.IN£SS -

Harrisonville Rood , O.Wey King rostot
Henry Eblin Jr . Sunday Schoo Supt .
Sunday School9 30 o m Morning War .
shtp 11 a m ; Sunday evening serv1ct
7 30 m , Prayer Meeting, Thursday, 7 :JI
pm
,
SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF GOD -

Not Pente&lt;oatol , Rev G.orge Oiler ,
pastor Wonhlp service Sundoy, 9.45
•a m , Sunday school, 11 a m , worship
service, 7.30 p.m Thundoy prayer
meeting 7 30 p.m
· MT HERMON United Brethren in
Christ Chhurch ReY Robert Sanden ,
poatar Dan Will lay leader . Located In
Te•o• Community otf CR 82 Sunday
school , 9.30 a.m ; Morning worship ser
vice , 10 ·45 a.m .. evening preaching ser
vice second and fourth Sundays 7 30
p m., Chritlflan Endea\ICir, flrlf and third
Sundays, 7 30 p.m . Wednesday prayer
meeting and Bible study, 7.30 p.m

1'1eigs
Property
Transfers
D R RJce, dec. to Ora RJce, Cec11
W. ruce . Sr., Gene R. Rice, Gerald
RJ~e, aff for trans., Middleport.
Dennts I. Boothe, lnna Boothe to
Trustees of Southern Cluster No. 2,
Umted Methodist Church Parsonage, Parcels, Sutton.
Ernest S. Cullwns, dec. to Sara E
Cullums, cert. of trsns., Chester.
Harlan A. Ballsrd, Alta T. Ballard
to Carl Mason, Geneva Mason, Parcels, Lebanon.
MAN SENTENCED
Jack L. Goode, 39, Pomeroy, was
sentenced a tenn of six montllS to
five years In jail Monday by Judge
John C. Bacon, Meigs County common Pleas Court.
Goode entered a voluntary guilty
plea to a charge of 'gross sexual imposition In connection with a Dec. 23
incident in Pomeroy.
The charge mvolves sexual contact gained through threats of force
a fourth degree felony resulting in ~
jailtenn and $2,500 fine.
FolloWing Sentencing, Goode was
remanded to the county ja1lto serve
his tenn.
'
VETERANS MEMORIAL

Adrnitted-Goldie Lawson, Minersville; Harry Hayman, Pomeroy;
W1lbur Hannmg, Middleport; Anna
Powers, Huntington; Donna
Calaway, Coolville; Hilah Jones,
Middleport.
Discharged·· Venedia Knight,
Reginla Rice, Eva Shaffer,
Woodrow Kuhn, Irene Gilmore, Ollis
Boston.

JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES , 37319 Stato

Rout• 124 (One mile eo1t of Rutland)
Sunday , Bible lecture 9.30 a . m .. Wat ·
chtower 1tudy 10 20 a m Tueaday , Bl ·
ble study, 7 30 p m
Thursday ,
Theocratic School , 7.30 p .m, Service
Meeting, 8 20 p m
RUTLAND FREEWILL BAPTIST Church -

MEETS FRIDAY
Salisbury Township Trustees will

hold an orgllnizaUonal meeting, •
Ffiday at 7 p.m. at the home of the ,
clerk, Wanda Eblin.

Or

Jamea A. lruhl , pastor. Sunday
school , lOam , Sunday evening service,
7 00 Wednesdoy prayer mMting, 7·00
pm.
CHURCH OF GOD of Prophecy. locotod

ondieO J Whlt•Rdodoffhighway 160
Sunday School 10 a.l]"'. Superintendent
John Lovodoy, First Wodnosdoy night of

month CPMA services, ucond Wedn••·

day WMI

mMtlng, tlllrd through filth

yowth tervlce G.arge Croyl•. pat tor.
HOI'E BAPTIST CHAI'El - 570 Gronl
Sl., Middleport, Sunday School , 10 a m
morning WOrship, 11 o. m. evening wor
ship ,

7 p m. Wednesday evening llblo

FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST, Corne• of

tfUd'J' ond pro't'•r mNting, 7 p m. Af

S.Cond and ~nder1on . Mo1on Potter
Fronk Lowther Sunday school , 9 -45
am ., warship service 11 om . and 7 30

tltloted wltll Southern laptlot Con.on

tlon.
PAOFORD

CHURCH

OF

CHRIST-

FORFEIT BONDS

Four defendenta forfeited bond in
the COIIrt of Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews on charges-of speeding.
They are Roy Pierce, Route 2,
Racine; VIctor Coot, Pollieroy •
Timothy Dillon, lpng Bott.-n;
'l'llomu Gillian, Chestel'.

The

CANCEl J .ED C&gt;
Jan1111ry m~ of the Mid-

dleport Garden Club hu been cancelled.

2, 1981

The Daily Sentinei..:..Page-7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Helen Help Us

,.
. .

1

I

'

•

'

New Year's resolutions
are possible dreams
By HELEN AND SUE BOITEL

Special cormpoadeat

DEARHELENANDSUE:
Did you make any New Year's
resolutions~ U so, what were they~
-SNOOP
DEAR SNOOP:
My resolutions?
, P0118ible dream: I'll reorgaruze
• my files so that I can depend on
more than ESP to find tembly im-portant material I've "put away for
: ~ekeeping."
SlighUy impossible dream · I'll
beat my husband Bob at tennis - at
,least one out of each five games. -HELEN
~'SNOOP:

• And my b1ggest New Year's
resolution is I~ have the newest Peppers (that's my 1llllrried name)
,before February 8.- SUE
· P.S. U any of you have made
, unusual New Year's resolutions, let
us know, okay? They'll be published
,a bit late, but who cares' - HELEN
'AND SUE

,,

•

DEAR RAP ·
I developed agoraphobia about
,two ypers ago, and am being treated
- for it, but !still have a great dread of
•going out of the house (Agoraphobia
is a fear of open places.)
" It gets very boring, cooped up indoors with nothing to do. I'm a good
typist and am trained in off1ce work.
,• Could you tell me of some kind of
work I could do at home? - .c S.

AGE23
DEAR C..
Government employment sgencies sometimes have calls for
piecework typing to do at home. Also
a COW1!telor here might direct you to
telephone jobs, either m advertising
or research. ,_
Another idea: ask a friend to po:lt
your notice, "Manuscripts and tenn
papers typed, ._per page, call (your
nwnber)" on college bulletin boar. ds. or run such an ad in your local
paper.
Charge slighUy below the· gomg
price in your city becuse your clients
wil be required to deliver and pick
up their material.
Good luck! And may you soon be
out and around agam - HELEN
AND SUE
DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
This is to the office workers who
complained about a ro-worker's offensive body odor. I'm glad you
suggested it might be a medical
problem.
A friend finally , very embarrassed, told me I had a problem.
Since I also had a discharge, I went
to the doctor and he discovered a
vaginsl yeast infection. Had I let it
go It might have beocme much more
serious.
Daily baths don't always elininate
body odor.- KAREN
TO AIL OUR READERS - Happy New Year!- HELEN AND SUE

· Polly's Pointers
'"

EMITI'ING NEW YEAR STEAM - Steam ·rises from Monnt St.
Hele118 In southwestern W88blngton, over the Fremont Bridge In Pol'

Mi/4ew on plastic

By Polly Cramer
Special correspondent
DEAR POLLY - Mildew stains
appeared on my large plastic, flannel-backed tablecloth due to the
hwnldity of swnmer. I have not
washed 11 for fear
the mildew would
be permanently
set Is there a way
to remove it?
ADA
DEAR ADA
Cramer
Starns of any kind
should be removed as soon as
possible. The nuldew would have
wiped off with a sponge 1f1111\g out of
soap suds with a bit of ammonia ad·
ded . After such a long time I am not
.too sure.- POLLY
· DEAR POVLY - I fond a pound
can of boric ac1d compound wall keep
' 'a house free of cockroaches for a
' 'year. Just 'prinkle 11 m cracks, un·
der sinks and in any dark corners. ·'MRS. W G.N.
.: DEAR POLLY - I use baking
soda and w.ann water to clean
brushes and combs. Someone
suggested denture tablets, but not
all of us have them. Everyone has
baking soda and It ts much cheaper,
too. - ROSEMARY

M~on

I'

DEAR POLLY - When going to a
bridal shower as a fnend of the
groom's famly, I put one of my
name-and-address label son the g1fl
card rather than, sagnmg my name,
The new bride has the correct name
and address at hand when she writes
her thank-yhou notes.
When gomg O'! a picnic, put foods
in plastic containers such as those
whipped toppmg comes in, so they
can go on the trash barrel on the
grounds and there are no dirty
dishes to carry home. - EDNA
DEAR POLLY - To keep cottage
cheese from gelling rancid after
taking out what is ~ed put the lid
back on tightly, turn the carton upSide down on a flat sllfface (! use a
pie pan) and then refrigerate. I find
11 will keep for two weeks or more. PEGGY
DEAR POLLY - I save the lint
from my dryer and use 1t to stuff
toys. II works very well and I am
saved the cost of buying cotton to use
for this. -M.G
Polly will send you one of her
signed thank-you newspaper coupon
clippers if she uses your favor1te
Pomter, Peeve or Problem m her
colwnn. Wr~te POlLy;s POIN·
TERS m care of this newspaper.

News reported

Etta Ellis, Mr. and Mrs. Richard
By Alma Mart1ball
-Gilkey and Mark
SJpeclal correspondeD!
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Proffitt and
MASON - A potluck ChriStmas
·• dinner was held recently at the Nancy spent ChriStmas w1th theor
Riverside Club House m Mason, With daughter and son-m·law, Dr. and
• the following attending : Horace snd Mrs. Robert F. McBride and fsmtly
Dorothy Karr, Phil and Lois Kelly, of Michigan C1ty, md.
Bnan and Brenda Johnson, Chet snd.
HONORED ON BIRmDA Y
Ruth Campbell, John and Jean
Stewart, Chuck snd Nonna Stanley, , NEW HAVEN - Mrs. Bessie Kin·
Chester and Diane Pyatt, Jim and na1rd ci Gallipolts Ferry was
Eva Jean Roush, Eugene and honored on her 73rd birthday with a
Marilyn Weaver, Cathy Young, Bob dlru1er at the home of her daughter
and Dorothy Oliver, Bob Greene, and son-m·law, Mr and Mrs. AI AshRaldean Gibbs, Debbie MacKnight, worth, Jlrruny, Mark, Stacoe and
L!z MacKhnlght, Fred Srruth, Ty Pam in New Haven. The dinner was
Roush, Mitchell Roush, Denny and held on Dec. 21 and at this time the
I.Jbby Tulloh, Bob and Debb1e honoree also received Christmas
Miller, Mr. and Mrs. George Harris, presents, m addition to birthday•
., Gary and Mary Ro1!5h, Bob and presents.
Attending were Mr . .and Mrs.
· Louise Roush, John and Della BenRobert
Smith, Richard, Mike,
' tine, Phil and Mary Burton.
Charlie
and
Sandy; Larry Ferguson
' ' In addition to good food, the group
all
of
Hurricane,
W. Va., Racluiel
' enjoyed paymg games.
Frandsen, Nell and Karen, all of
VIenna, W. Va., Dav1d and Johnni
ATTEND DINNER
MASON - Several area couples Day, Parkersburg, Ora Klnnaard,
went to the Mountameer Dinner Galllpobs fery, AI and Johnny AshTheatre at Humcan recently and in- worth, Pt. Pleasant, the honoree,
cluded Mr and Mrs. · Charles Mrs Kinnaird, hosts, Mr. and Mrs.
Stanley; Mr. and Mrs. LJoyd Gray AI Ashworth and family.
all of Mason, Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Mallon and CWton Personals
,, Oliver, Poeroy, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Mrs. Helen Barker has returned
Dale Roush, New Haven, and Bob
home after spending a Chrlsbnas
· ', Greene, Hartford.
vacation with her grandsons, Robert
Barker, Mr and Mrs. Marvin
MASON PERSONALS
Mr. and Mrs ~rt Straight, Barker and family In CHarleston
She was ulso a guest on Christmas
", Christie and Robbie of Moundsville,
.. , VISited Mrs. Straight's grand· eve of Mr. and Mrs. H. Harris at
mother, Mrs. Matilda Noble during their home in Charleston. Also
present were Robert Bllrker, Mr.
the holidays.
Mr. Don Roush and son, Gary, of allii.Mrs. Marvin Barker and family.
Christmas eve guests of Mr. and
New Orleans, Mr. Roy Elmer, Clifton, visited on Sunday evening with Mrs. John Sheets and Chirs Grogan
Mrs. Matllda Noble, Mr. and Mrs.
were Mr. and Mrs. Charles Cartwright,
Mrs. U.urene Lewis, Randy
Stanley Harbour.
and Gregg, Theresa Smith and
HolidaY dinner guests of Mrs.
Clara Williams Included Mr. and
Donald Smith.
Mrs. Joe Scites' and family, Mrs.
Mrs. Donald Smith was pleasantly
Helen Williams, Mrs. Sarah Willis,
surprised on Christmas eve when

llaod Thursday afternoon. Geologists believe the steam comes !rum
lava benealb lbe new dome In lbe crater. (AP Laserpholo)

Officials expect record wheat crop
(AP) - If the
Agr1cultu
Department's farst
forecast las month of 1981 Winter
wheat productiOn is correct, farmers wall probably harvest another
record crop this year - gram that
will help replerush dwmdlmg world
and U S reserves .
It also looks as if fanners will go
all out to plant corn this year,
spurred by rising prices ' and
shrinkmg supplies.
But the wheal harvest is still six
months away ,' and the crop has to
get through the critical wmter months, when cold weather, lack of
moisture and wmd erosion are
major threats
And it Will be sprmg before farmers plant corn and soybeans, the
chief feed mgredlents for livestock
and poultry Corn, more than any
other gram, sets the pattern for
America's food production.
Corn also is the biggest item on the

U.S. farm export list, highly desired
as feed for livestock and poultry all
over the world
Earlier this week, the Agriculture
Department announced it will call in
pnce support loans made to fanners
who stored corn under the government's reserve program. Counting
some corn loans dilled in m late October, some 665 nullion busheLs were
affected as of Dec. 24.
Farmers have 90 days after get·
ling thear off1c1al notices from local
offoces of the AgriCultural
Slab1hzation and Conservation Service in which to pay off the loans or,
m the absence of repayment, turn
the grain over to the government.
However, producers are not
required to sell or otherwiSe dispose
of their gram. Some may do so proces lately have averaged around
$3 30 a bushel at the farm nationally ,
the highest in six years - while

several members of her family
visoted her at Pleasant Valley
Hospital, brmging gifts and a
ceramic Christmas tree Mina was
hospitalized with a back mjujry
Visiting were Theresa Smith, Randy
and Gregg Lewis, Sherry Hawkins,
Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Rickard
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Smith ate
ChriStmas dinner with his parents,

Mr. and Mrs. Harold Smith of Clifton. Mrs Smith was released from
Pleasant Valley Hospital on Christ·
mas Day
Christmas Day dinner guests of
Mr and Mrs. Charles Cartwright
were Laurene Lewis, Randy and
Gregg, Theresa Smith, Mr and Mrs.
John Sheets and Chris Grogan.

WAS~TON

Health Review
Moderation--key to drinking
By Robert G. Stockmal, D.O., Ph.D.
Asst. Prof. of Famlly Medicine
Ohio University College
of Osteopath!• Medicine
Question: With all of the holiday
gel·togethers this time of yesr, I
sometimes think I drink too much.
Can you tell me what 1s O.K and
how much is too much• '
Answer: There is, I am afriad, no
absolute easy answer WHile
drinking is acceptable in our society,
getting drunk is not. Persons who
drink are expected to do so in
moderallon and w1thout serious im·
painnent of their phyusicai and-or
mental functions. There is no excuse
for drunken driving nor for anUsoctal behavior such as physical or
verbal abuse.
Tbe body can metabolize just so
much alcohol per hour. Whjln this
rate IS exceeded alcohol builds up in
the body and Jroduces those
familiar effects. Tbe moderate
drinker must, therefore, learn to
control his intake, pacing 11 with the
rate of alcohol elinuuiiion.
Question: How fast does the body
gel rid of alcohol?
Answer It takes the average person about an hour to elimmale the
alcohol . In one-half to one ounce of
distilled liquor or six to 12 ounces of
beer. (Don't forget that the commonly used "jiggoer" is I \io ounces.)

This means that one to two hours are
required for the average drmk to be
detoxified. Keep an mind also that
alcohol needs no digesting and IS
rapidly taken mto the blood stream.
This can produce relatively sudden
and unexpected effects m the "once
a year'' social dr1nker.
If you feel you need more than one

drmk then stretch them out over
several hours allowing a mimmum
of an hour per standard drink.
Question What can the party host
do to encourage sensible use of
alcohol ? .
Answer: The host and hnostess
should feel a sense of re~ponsibility
to their guests. They must consider
how they would feel if one of the1r
guests were Involved in a serious or
fatal accident after drinking ex·
cessively at their party.
With this mmind they should have
non-alcoholic beverages available at
the party. Guests should not be per·
suaded to drink, nor ridiculed if they
choose not to. Coffee should be served during he last hour or so of the
party. This does not counteract the
alcohol, but It serves as a soverlngup period, as well as prov1dlng a
stimulant to offset ilrowsiness.
' Anyone who is obviously not able
to drink should be strongly encouraged to stay overnight, to take a
taxi or go home with s,omeone else.

others may dec1de to hold onto at for
a while.
. For some months, ever smce last
summer's drought decimated the
1980 corn crop, it has been apparent
that suppl_ies of feed gram will be extremely tight at least until the 1981
harvest becomes available and
probably much longer.
Thus, fanners who do have corn and many do not because of last
year's drought - are in good shape
as far as prices go.
According to current department
projections, corn prices at the fann
are expected to average $3 35 to
$3.75 a bushel over the markehQg
year that will end on Sept. 30. That
compares w1th $2.50 a bushel in 197980.

More important for producers,
corn demand seems to be so great
that prices probably Will holtl up
well even if there is a bwnper crop in
198t, although department experts
have made no offic1al pr1ce
forecasts for 1981-&amp;.
As department analysts see 11,
here 1s how the corn supply s1tuat10n
appears at the present time for the
current 1980-81 marketing year:
- On Oct. 1, 1980, there were about
I 6 billion bushels of corn on hand
from previOUS harvests, compared
with a "carry·m" of 1.29 b1lhon a
year ear her.
- ProductiOn m 1980 was about.
6.46 biUion bushels, down from the
record 1979 harvest of 7.76 billion
bushels.
Added together, the new harvest
and the carry·in provided~ supply of

about 8.06 billion bushels for the
current marketing year, compared
w1th 9.05 billion m 1979-80.
Meanwhile, the use of corn this
year is climbing to a projected 7.52
l)illlon bushels - nearly II billion
busheLs in excess of the U.S. crop 1n
1980.
That is expected to include around
4.92 billion bush..-ls used
domestically in 1984}.81 for feed,
food, seed and mduslrial purposes,
somewhat less than the 5 02 billion
busheLs conswned domestically last
year.
But exports, projected at a record
of 2.6 billwn bushels, are up sharply
from 2.43 billion bushels on 1979-80.
According to the analysts, all this
bookkeepmg points to about 544
nul110n bushels of corn left over in
the U.S. stockpile next Oct. I as a
carry-in when the new harvest .IS
ready.
'
It would be only about one-third of
the carry-m last Oct. 1 - the
~cushion" of 1.6 b1llion bushels that was avaalable m the current
marketmg year.
Put another way, 1f the 1981 corn
harvest turns out to match the
record of 7.76 billion bushels
produced In 1979, the total supply
would be around 8 3 blihon bushels.
A 1981~2 corn supply of 8.3 blllaon
bushels, comparatively, would only
be about 3 percent larger than this
season's reduced total supply of 8Jl6
billion bushels
That's one reason many fanners
will be boosting corn output this
year.

Fatal fires
cause concern
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Central Ohio chimney sweeps say their
business is booming in the aftennath
of holiday fires that killed 10 people
m Colwnbus and the nearby suburb
of Upper Arlington.
.
The Upper Arlington f1re killed
four children, a grandmother and an
aunt. Fire investigators said they
bebeve the fire was caused by
spatks and heating spilling from
,cracks m_the chimney. Those sparks
·may have Ignited a wooden floor
joist.
TO.Colwnbus fire killed four per
sons m a duplex m the city. But,
preliminary indications are that a
burning cigarette in a sofa caused
thatflre.
Chimney sweeps say December
and January are generally slow
times of the year for them, but since
the fires, many are having trouble
keeping up with demand.
"It's unreal,' ' saad Greg ' Power,
who wo~ks under the name of "Dr.
Soot.''
Power said he is getting d02ens of
calls a day - so many that he's
suspended chimney cleanings just to
handle inspections.

Another sweep, John Hammond of
Westervlile, says he will be spending
most of January trying to catch up
on cleaning requests
Fire departments generally
recorrunend chimney inspections once a year to check for soot bwldup
and cracks . .
Sweeps can tell if a chirrmey is
defective- by placing a candle that
lets off a dense smoke on the ledge
IRSIde the chimney.
A wet blanket i,s placed at the top
of the chimney. If the smoke leaks
back into the house, there are
openings somewhere along the way.
Private homes have proven most
deadly m Ohio durmg the past two
weeks.
AI least 28 persons died in Ohio
f1res m December, 23 VIctims in the
last two weeks.
The stale fore marshal's off1ce. can
take jur1sd(ct10n of hres m multi·
family dwellings and all corrunercaal
and publicly owned bwldings.
But, state off1c1als have little control over private homes. The1r only
recourse for fire prevention in
private one family dwellings is
voluntary education.

�}
Page-8

-

..,.

Pomeroy

The Daily Sentinel

Middleport, Ohio .

The Daily Sentinei-Pag-9 _

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

J _anuary _2, 191_1

•

Small investment, large returns,, _S entinel Want Ads:
fa=:=_ =~~ni.~~P!!. .:::.::: :

WANT AD INFORMATION

Furnace reP,airs, electrical
work, PlurTtbing. mobile
home or· residence. 992 ·

PHONE 446-2342

5858.

Real estate

-------- ----3_1____H~~~!~Sale__ _

Or Write Tribune Classified Dept.
825 ,.hird Ave,, Gallipolis, Ohici 45631

•ANNOUNCEMENTS

•RENTALS

,- cerd of Thinks
2-ln Memorilm
l-AAno"!ncements

41 - Houus for Rent .
42-Moblle !'tomes

4-GiVUWIY

44- Apartment for Rent

5-Heppy Adl
r-Lut•nd FoYnd

45-Furnistlld Rooms

lor Rent

47-Wentftl to Rent•
41-EQl!Utment for tlent

Siilt

Trailer lot for sale, $5,000.
Modular home lot on Route
7, three bedroom farm ·
houoe located on Route 7.
9'12·2571.
.

• Auction

9-Wanted W Buy

a EMPLOYMENT
SER-VICES

u-Http Went.ct
12-SitvetMI Went.ct
IJ-InSUr'IAC!
14-lusinen Tr•lning

ls-Schoolstnstrudlon
Radio, TV,
&amp; CB,·Aeplir
11-W!nt.ctTe Do

Goods
52- CI, TV, Radio Ectu~Mt
53- Antiques
54- Misc. Mercft.andise
U- ltuitd fnt Suppllt-1
~Pih for Salt

•

i- -- Announcements-~

. 61-Far'" Equipm'"'
62-Wantld to luy
72-Tr1.1ct.s for S.al1
6:J- Livestoct.
·
64-H.ay&amp;Gnln
65-Sted 1 Ferttttiir

•FINANCIAL
11- IUIIness
Opportunity
22-Money to LCll'
U--ProfessiOII•I

s.rvtc.s

1 PAY
~ssible

highest prices
tor gold and ~ilver
coins. rings, jewelry, etc .
Contact Ed Burkett Barbe'r
Sh9p, Middlepon .

11-Au!OIIor Sele
7l-Va ns&amp;4W.O.
14- Motorcnln
11Auto Parts

ll-Homn for Sate
l2-Mobile Homes
tor S.le
ll-Ftrnb for Slit
n·•lusinnsiSuildlnt•
U-LGh &amp; Acreage

LOST : Fema·le beagle ,
wearing blue suede collar.
Rut l and , Depot-Leadi ng
area . 742·2249 .

17- lt.uto RIJNir

Lost : Saturday, December
, 27, female brindli! boxer.
White paws &amp; chest.
Wearing name tag, ' Bran·
die' . Please ca ll378·6307 or
378·6202 if found or even
seen .

•SERVICES

Want-Ad Advertising
Deadlin~ J

Monday-2 :30Gn Saturdav
T~tf.av

tftnt Friday l : lO P.M.
lfMlf!ay Mtorept~bllcatiOfl
S!lndJV 2::10 P.M. Frldav

11 - Hamttmpravements
12- Piumbing &amp; EICil'ttaflnt
U-E •cavating
tA-Ete&lt;trit.al
&amp;lhtrlttrltion
U-~erel Hauling
u-M .H. Repair
U~ptlotstefy

9 __ =w_a'!.t~d_t~ Buv - IRON AND BRAS S BEDS ,
old · furn iture. desks, gold
rings,
jewelry , silver
dollars, sterling, etc., wood
ice boxes.jars antiques.,
etc. Complete households .
Write M . D . Miller, Rt . 4,
Pomeroy , OH\ or cal l 992·
7760 . .

Rates and Other Information
......•. , , , • , ...•......•.... One· da~

lns~ictn

. . ........ , .. , . ....... . , .. Thr..-cl•~ insertictn

. . . . . . . . . . . . . ....... , .... Sll ·d.ey insertion
(Averat;~e twonll per llnel
Yard Sate, ~~on . C1rd ot Ttl•nks •rt •c:cept.O only C••h In
Allvance. soc
lor •ds c:urylng lo .. Numben In care of
TrlbUnt.
TM PUbiiiMr reurves the rlthl to Mit or ~KI •ny Ms deemed
OOiKIIOflaL Tht Publllher will not be reuonstble tor more tl\a1l..o

.

incorrKI tnurtion.

__ Y~R!!i~ ~o!!~e~ __
LEGAL NOTICE
Please take noti ce that
on January 10, 1972 by
Volume 58. page 181 of the
Meigs County Lease R,ecor·
ds, Meigs County, Ohio,
Garrett H . Watkins and
Ruth W. Watkins, husband
and wife, exe~uted a please
to Hi lton I. Bever to the
following described proper·
ty:
Being in Section 24, Town
4, Range 11,· being more
fully described in Volume
248, page 425 of the Deed
R~cords,
Meigs County
Recorder's Office ;
That the Interest of
Hilton I . Bever was
assigned to Atlantic In·
ternational Oil Corp. This
lease was assigned to
Home~tead Minerals Corp.
on August 2, 1975 and recor·
ded in Volume 58, paQe 925
of the Lease Records 10 the
Meigs County Recorder's
Office .
Said lease being forfeited
for nonpayment of rentals
and royalties due under the
terms of said lease and fur·
ther that there are no
producing oil and gas wells
on said premtses.
Further , please t¢~ke
riot ice that the lessor,
Garrett H . Watkins and
Ruth W . Watkins, husband
and wife, intend to file for
record, an affidavit of for ·
feiture with the Meigs
County Recorder 's Office .if
Hillin I. Bever, Atlantic In·
ternational Oil Corp. and
Homestead Minerals Corp.
do not have said lease
released of record within
thirty days (301 of receipt
of th1s notice.
.
Patrick H. O'Brien
Attorney for
Garrett H. Watkins
and Ruth w. Watkins
·(1) 2, lie

=== }~b}i~f.!oli~e = =~
IN THE
COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
'
JOHN PICKENS, etal .,
Pla1nttffs,
·VS·

LILLIAN RHODES, eta I.,
Defendants.
·
No. 17,292
LEGAL NOTICE
Pursuant to an order of
sale issued by the Court of
Common Pleas of Meigs
County, Ohio, I will offer
for sate at pub I ic auction on
the 28th day of February,
1981, aiiO:OO O'clock A.M. ,
at the lronl door of the
Meigs County Courthouse,
in t_he Village of Pomeroy,
Oh1o,
the
following
described real estate. to·
Wit:
The following desdlbed
real estate situate in the
Township of Lebanon, in
the County of' Meigs, and
Stale of Ohio: Being in 5ec·
tion 14, Township 3. and
Range II of the Ohio Company's
Purchase.
in
Lebanon Township, Meigs
Cou"!fy, Ohio. Beginning at
a po1nt on the west line of
Section No. 14 al the
southwest corner of the
R. W. Cornell 38 acre
lot; thence norm along

•. __

Lost a!'d_F_p~n!i _

6

&amp; Atceuorles

~Re•l EsteteW1nled
U-Reel_ton

JOe lint
2kllnt
ncllne ...... .

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

•TRANSPORTATION

•REAL ESTATE

'·

•MERCHANDISE
51 - Ho~o:stfttld

• FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVE_STOCK

16-

'

EXCAVATING

_P~~i~ "!O_!i~e __

-.

the section line 1270
feet ; thence east 1294
feet ; thence south 692.4
feel lo the cenler of lhe
public road; thence
along the center of said
road south 36 degrees
30' west 250.5 feel ;
thence south 36 degrees
wesl 174.6 feet) !hence
south 35 degrees west
100 feet ; thence south 60
fet; thence west 325 feet
to the place of beginn·
ing, con ta i ning 34 ,5
acres.
Terms of sale ; Cash ' in
hand on day of sale for not
less than two-th irds of the
appra ised value to be sold
subject to the lien for real
estate taxes for 1980 and
198].

The right is reserved to
reiect any and all bids.
The property is appra ised at S-4,000.00.
James J . Proffitt,
Sheriff of
Meigs County, Ohio
n&gt; 2, 9, 16, Jtc
.·

SHOOTING MATCH al
Corn Hollow in Rutland .
Every Sunday starting at
Proceeds being
noon .
donated to the Boy Scout
Tr'JOp 249 . 12 gauge factory
choke gun only!
RACINE GUN SHOOT,
Racine Gun Club, every
Friday night starting at
7:30 p.m . Factory choke
guns only .
HAVE YOUR de.e r trophy
mounted .
Birchfield's .
East on 124 at Rutland. 7-42·
2178.

WANTED
TO
BUY :
GOLD ,
SILVER ,
PLATINUM, STERLING·
COINS . RINGS ,J EWELR
Y, MISC . ITEMS . AB ·
SOLUTE
MAR -KET
PRICE GUARANTED . ED
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP , MIDDLEPORT ,
OHIO 992·3476.
OLD COIN~ . poc ket wal
cffes. class rings, wedding
bands, diamonds. Gold or
silver . Call J . A. Wamsley,
742·2331. Treasure Chest
Coin Shop, Athens, OH . 5926462.
Wanted to Buy : class rings,
wedding bands, anything
slaml)ed, 10K , 14K. or 18K
gold . ' Silver coi ns, pocket
watches. Call Joe Clark at
992 · 2054 at Clark 's Jewelry
Store , Pomeroy , Ohio 45769

USED FURNITURE . Gold
&amp; silver , class rings, pocket
watches. chains. diamonds
&amp; so on . Coppe'r brass and
batteries, ant ique items,
also do appraisals, com ·
plete auctioneer service.
Over 30 years e)(perience in
business. Wi II buy com·
plete estates . Middleport .
Oh . 992-6370 .

~1

___

I:I~P_ V'!_ant!d_

GET VALUABLE tra ining
as a young business person
and earn good money plus
some great gifts as a Sen·
tinel route carrier . Phone
us right away and get on
fhe eligibility list at 992·
2156 or 992·2157 .
LADY or girl to live in. 992·
2686.

Beautiful three bedroom
ranch brick home in Baum
Addition, Pomeroy, Ohio.
Gas heat, central air con ·
11
Help Wanted
dilioning. Call 985-3814 or
RNs arid-LPN S, iooklng for , 9'12·2571.
challenging and rewardl n1J
work? T ired of rotating
NICE two bedroom country
shifts? Feel the need to
home. Vinyl siding, full
develop your ideas . in
basement, $13.900.00. 949·
resident care with a highly
2801. No Sunday calls .
motivated staff? Pomeroy
Health Care Cente~has the
answer tor you. Due to
NICE TWO bedroom house
achieving near maximum
with three car garage in
ce nsus, we ' now have
Racine. $33,00.00. 949·2801.
openings for full and part
No Sunday call~.
t i meposi lions on day shift"
buf'will consider·other shif·
Four year old house on l
ts. Competitive sa lary , ex·
ce llent working condi t ions.
bath,
nice location,
ROute
acres.7rooms,
l&amp;onehalf
life
insurance
and 2,
Ra cine . 949·2706.
disability policy at no cost
to t he employee, and
Mobile Homes
hospi talization insurance 32
ava i la~e . Come visit us or
. - - - _ 1~1'_5!1!_ - - - ca ll : ~ancy Van M eter.
1973 Crown Haven, 14 x 65.
R.N .. Director of Nursing,
three bedjooms, new car ·
Pomeroy Health Care Cen·
pet. 1971 Cameron, 14 • 6-ol,
ter, 614-992-6606.
two bedrooms. new carpet.
1972 Champion, 12 x 60, two
11
Situations w.1nied -,
bedrooms. new carpet. 1976
Cameron, 12 x 60 . two
FO"ST"ER c ale in my home, bedrooms, all electric. 1971
elderly on ly', room board, Skyline, 12sx 6), two
laundry . Reasonable . 992· bedrooms, bath &amp; 11J, new
6022.
carpel.
1970
PMC .
12 ·x 60 , two bedrooms, new
carpet. B x ~ S Sales, Inc. .
13
Insurance
2nd x Viand Street, Point
AUTOMOBILE
IN · Pleasant. wv Phone 675SURANCE
been
ca n- «24.
ce lled?
Lost
your
operator's li cehse? Phone
Rentals
992-2143 .

-----------

• Backhoes
Hourly Contract
La,rge or
sm~ll jobs.

REALTY

RUTLAND -• Lovely 2
story nome on nice lot.
Modern kitchen and
ni ce
carpet.
Vinyl
sid ing . Low utilities. On·
iy $38,000.00.
2 ACRES w it h 1979
Windsor home . The fur·
nished horne has micro·
wave
and central
stereo . Nice building
and orchard . Sells for
$29 ,500 .00 .
INVESTMENT
2
lovely homes on 10
acres . Live in one and
rent the ather. Both
homes in excellent con ·
dition. A real buy at
$87,500.00 lor . all of
this!!
,
LAND CONTRACT at
only 10% interest!!
L.3rge home in Mid·
dleport with lots of
possibilities. Sells for
$29,000.00 with only 10%
down.
LAND - 42 acres with 2
cisterns, garage end
barn . Some woods and
spring ted pastures.
Asking $20.000 .00.
188 ACRES
Old
house , 2 old barns,
m inerals and woods.
Located on Van Zandt
Road . Only $55,000.00.
Velma Nicinsky, Assoc .
Phone 742·3092
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc .
Phone 742·3171

42

--~------·-

..

--

10 x 55 two bedroom ··mobile
home near Racine . 992·

5858.
T\:VO bedroom mobile home
at Brown's Tra iler Park .
992·3324.
44 - ... -

Furnished apartments, 992·
3129, '1'12·5914, or 1-304-882·
2566 .
Unfurnished one bedroom
apartment for rent. - Ren·
ters assistance available
for senior citizens . contact
Village Manor Apartments
at 992· 7787 .
Apt . tor rent, 3 rooms &amp;
balh . 992 -5908:

FURN'ISHED 4 room 3.
bath, adults only, no pets.
Middleport". 992·3874 .
46 -- - s:Pac:e ior- Reilt- -

-

FAY~Gift, SMop in Mid·

dleport will be open from
12·5 until Christmas .

Heating Fuel. 1 &amp; 2 Ex··
celsior Oil
Compan~ .
Phone 1-614·992-2205.

Headquarters
POMEROY , O .

'

992-2259
YOUR
PIANO .
Too
valuable to neglect. expert
tun!ng &amp; and repair. Lane
Daniels, 742·2951 or 9922082.
GUN SHOOT Sunday Jan , 4
at I p .m . al lzaac Wallon
farm. 6 miles south of .
Chester on ShadeR iver Rd.
Muzzle loaers only . Prizes,
turkey, bacon 8. cash .
Racine Volunteer Fire
Department sponsors a
shot gun 8. r ifle match
every Sat. nighl 6 :30 p.m .
at their building in Bashan .
Factory choke 12 ·guage
shot guns only . Op~n sights
22 rill'

FOR A·LL YOUR

INSURANCE
....

NE~S
.

THE PROFESSIONALS
E-BUSINESS.LI

cr::~~~~. @ij
Serving Meigs Co. Since 1868 .
PHONE 992-2342
992-2690

NEW LISTING In
Town - 3 bedroom, 1
story home with full
basement .
Screened
porch, large entry, fore ·
ed air. gas heat. Large
lot . $27,000.00.
NEW LISTING - Mini
Farm with approx . 15
acres and two bedroom
home with range, patio.
Electr i c B. B. heat .
$2.,000.00.
NEW LISTING 3
bedroom home . l'h
baths on appro)( . 15
acres . House needs
some work. $19,500.00.
MIDDLEPORT
A
cozy 2 bedroom house ,
close lo. shopping. Hall
basement, . n l~e front
porch . Jus I $16,700.00 .
BUILDING SITE - Ap·
prox. 1 acre in Chester .
Utilities
at
site .
$6,000.00.
SYRACUSE
3
bedroom
hom'e on
100'XIOO' lot . House
recently
insulated .
Washer and dryer .
storage
building .
$26,900.00.
REALTOR
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
992-6191
ASSOCIATES
Je~n Trussell949·2660
Roger &amp; Dottle Turner:. 992· 5692
OFFICE 992·2259

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

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park. Route 33. North of
Pomeroy . Large lots . Call
992-7479 .

Housing

t~~~L~-~:t Ji

TRAILER spaces for ren t.
Southern Valley Mobile
Home Park, Chesh ire, Oh .
992-3954 .

_ 216 E . Second Slreet
Phone

s3: === ~·!F9~~ =~=

,H 614 &gt;:992·3325
NEW - On the river, 2
bedrooms. bath; Open
ca thedral . ceiling ,
· carpeting, storage and
natural outside wood
finish .
NEW LISTING - 12,;
·acre trailer lot with sep·
tic tank , drilled well,
Ohio Power on Rt . 12-4
near the coal mine. Only
$6,500.
LARGE Counlry
home of 10 rooms that a
family ought to enjoy . 3
acres of land for
pleasure, family .room,
natural gas heat and
drilled well.
COZY - Little easy to
heat 2 bedroom , 2 car ·
home. Natural gas fur ·
· nace, in town near
S19res. Only S16,000.
NEARLY NEW ~ Nice
neat J bedrooms, 2 fUll
baths.
d ining
with
sliding glass door to
back patio. Garage and
large cornar lot . Just
$43.500 .
LISTINGS NEEDED.
HAVE MORE BUYERS
l'HAN WE CAN FIND
HOMES FOR . CALL '
992-3325 or 992·3176.
1

Housiny
Headquarters

'

A TT ENTION :
liM ·
PORTANT TO YOU) Will
pa~ c ash or certified check
for anliques and collec·
tibles or entire estates.
Nothing too large. Also,
guns, pocket watches and
coin collections. Call 61,.·
767·3167 or 557·341 1.

~4 - = ~i~c~~~~~nis! =

H: L WRITESEL

Farm Buildings

CONSTRUCTION

ROOFING

SillS
"From 30JC30"
' SMALL

• New Homes - e)(tensive remodeling
• Electrical work
• Roofing work
12 Years
Experience
Gfeg Roush
Ph. 992-7583
_U-.. · 1 mo.

All types Ot roof work1
new or repair gutters
and downspouts, gu"er
cleaning and painting ..
All work guaranteed.

Utility Buildings
Rt. 3, Box 54
A• cine, Oh.
Ph. 614-143·2591
6· 15-llc

· 12 ·Park St.

Installed

MR. RUNT, ~EI&lt;E , !S
LOOKitJG FOR SCJME
ONElOS~I-IIM

AROUND MOO,

sg~q. Yd .

RUTLAND

Installed

WlNNIE

FURNIT~RE

. L'AD? T" l5 1:-

l. ._ I

992-5449.

/)'c-'.

11-f l ll...:'' '-.JU'r
3£:/E ~ C0/'1\E

742-2211

'·

·~

'

1 SU E5~
1T rEr- ENDS

'-',J

'OU LOOK
AT IT

HOlle ... RI GHT

Pomeroy

landmark

6) ==_'&lt;'!'•~I~&lt;! t~ Buy - -

IJJf.OO
JIU.IM

CHIP WOOD . Poles maK .
d iameter 10" on largest
end . $12 p·er ton . Bundled
slab. SlOper ton. Delivered
to Ohio Pallet Co., Rl . 2.
Pomeroy 992-2689 .

1\,J.to
s.tS .H
N~twBIIIttAILOWAt
JI06 .U
Hotpoint Mlcrowavt Ovtn
IU•
Aeg. lJH
Comfort Glow Ktrosent
Ht.attrl, Economy 121·fUJI ,
Aet . IUt.fJ
N-$ 1,.93

1 panspanan&amp;JE-.

~POMEROY

71 ___ ~u!o! f~r~ S~ l ~

,,., ,. LANDMARK
Pomeroy
E. Main St.

1974 FORD Comet, 1975
Datsun pickup. 742·2185 .

~:::: ~u}1cjji!it~'!Pi1E::

1967 FORD F· IOO. 949 ·2072.

GUARANTEED
Roof
products . Coatings and
products lor all roof types,
pavement sealers and sup·
plies, masonary, wall &amp;
floor coatings &amp; sealers,
meta I &amp; wood preser·
vatives,
&amp;
i ndustrial
. c leaners for dealers, con·
tractors &amp;
private
businesses. 992·7603 after 5
p .m .

1970 FORD 3. ton pickup
overload springs, good be
$495 . VICior Bahr, 3 miles
norlh ol Chester, 985-4240.
7-4 - .- - M~t~r~y_5 1~s-

l978 KAWASAKI KZ 650
motorcycle, col or blue .
Call949·2649.

HOOF HOLLOW : Horses
and ponies and riding
lessons ,
Everything
imaginable in horse equip·
men! . Blankets. bells,
boots. etc . English and
Western . Rutn Reeves
(614) 698· 3290 .

at - - - -

-Hoiiie ---

_ . .... .!_m_p!_o.:!e_!TI~'!!~- _

GENE'S
CARPET
CLEANING . Defp stream
Clean puts nu· look back In
your carpel, highly recom·
mended, reasonable r'ates,
Scofchguard .
Free
estimates. Gene Sm ith , ca ll
nbw 992 · 6~09 or 742·221 L

Hi5 ID EA OFA
JOKE , HE 5 MUCH
TOO Di6 TO
SPANK!

'\INUTE S!

Home
Improvements
WILL do handyman work
i n your home. Furnitur e
repair in my shop. Jim
Benn , 4th St.. Syracu&amp;e .
~3

-- ~tNM~td'

Excavating

J &amp; F BACKHOE SER
VICE liscensed &amp; bonded,
sep ti c tank instal lation,
water &amp; gas li nes. Ex
cavat lng work &amp; trans i t
layout . 992 7201.
84
~

CIJ (}J)

JAN. 2, 1MO

Electrical
. . &amp; f!_efrigeratlon

!.t_ch ova Miami.

3:30 (!)110VII! ~SUSPENSE) •• " P ..

·ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR
Sweepers,
toasters, irons. all small
appliances . Lawn mower .
Next to State Highway
Garage on Route 7, 985
3825 .

t.n_ck" 1818
5:00 (JJ MOVIf -(COMEDY) •• " Mup·
pet Mowle" 11ft

NEWS

8 :00
I TUFF

CAROL IUANI!Tt AND

SERV IC E :

F1111!NDS
ABCN!WS
ITUOIOSEE
OV!R EASY Ouett : Actor Vln·
cent Price. Ho111 : Hugtl Oownt and
Frank Blelr . (Cioeed ·Captloned;
.,A.)
&amp;,30
• Cll NICN£WS
IN HIS LABOR
Q"EA TEST SPORTS AIVALI
' The New Vork Oltnlt va lhl
Cleveland Browns ' Teke a look at
the rivalry that dominated 'The Gol·
olprofllaionallootbellll
c.o·~ ··· c _:_: l .. turltl notlalgle In·

I
m

all makes w~sher , dryers,
ranges , dishwashers
disposals. water tEtnk s. Cali

Ken Young at 985·3561. 28
years experience . Also will
sell parts you flx .
General Hauling

AGRI LIME Spreading ,
limestone and fill dirt
hauling . Leo Morris, 742
2455.
-

11 '00 (1) •

WASHIMGTON WEEK IN

~v_gw

AFTfRNOON
2·00 ())IT ANDINGROOMONL Y'Snow
·
Whlt . . ndlheSevtnDweriiLiveon
Stage' T1ped live at New York
Radio City Mu•ic Hall , this re·
cre 1 tlon ot the Olanty film c leulc
f•lurta thelovabl• dwarla, Snow
Wtii!J. and the hand1om1 prince.
l:OO .CIJ({I} PEACH BOWL Virginia

SEWING
MACHIN E
Repairs,
se r vice,
)) II
makes1
992 · 2284 . The
Fabric Shop , Pomeroy .
Authorized Singer Sa les
and Serv ice. We sha rpen
Scissors .

8S

8 ,00 W •

Evening television listings

I

==----

I ,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:::::::::.Jl;;;;;;;.....;;;;;;;;;;.·
~

AT ONCE-'

l HOPE 1H i5 I

81

APPLIANCE

_

BILL\ C,\LLED 'IND
5AID I SHOULD
COME fi;JN\f:

\lAKIN.:' -'N'
SENSE ~T ~ icl !
~U T ILL ~E
"/HERE iN -'1 FEW

\V~Y

QN W E

.. . I D:JN T KNOW .

31LL' ':lU'RE NOT

~\ E.LL

·j
[,_,'"
''-·';-

AWAV.'

Farm sqtp~tes=._
a Livi!S:M.ElE:='

(Ill. BENSON Benson Is hoapl·

@.etora...l.!umped. (Repeal)

Gl~l

' Divorced Diane is aurprl .. d wtlen
her deughter decldea to llvo wilt\
her l•ther, but not half u surprised
ae the born -egain playboy.
(!!oJ!!al)
(J)(JJ) WALL STREET WEEK 'Wall
Str.. t Week Year End Review·
at Loula Rukeynr.
8:88
!I.._EW.S UPDATE
0:00
• (!) NUMBER 01
1ootLUB
.
FRIDA 't NIGHT MOYlE
'Birth of the Beatie a' 1979 Stare :
Sta~hen Mackann•, Rod Culbert ·

l

e,ee

7,00

• (]) CIS LATE MOYIE ' THE
CHICt&lt;EN CHRONICLES' 1077
Slert : Steven Guttenberg , Phil
Silveri.
(Ill MOVIE -(MYSTERY) "

• " Biuebeard'l

•• '111

•lill••
12:30

ZAAD Luke and Bo heed Uncle
Jaue·a advice to be good neigh·
bOfl and run up toalnal aome I'IIW
Henard oUi.zene whoa&amp; need lor
help aaemabeyondthem , until Luke

"Lemora,

_
10:20

f

a

: A Sp•c•

U ETSHOW

•

~trTHE INCAI!DIBLf HULK

David Banner' aaatrch tor • c ure t o
lht me lady which turn1 him Into •

Musical
Instruments

•

monatrout crttture wh•never he
getl angry te\11 him ta New York
where til II wnebl• lo noldrtlla

trlnltormttlon after he o•t• .In·
valved In a Timet Squirt lklmmlng
ogluatlon. (Repeat : eo mine)

'

••..

the L•dv Dracull"

12:68 ~ SPORTS REPORT
1:00
!l!MMY SWAGGART
1· 11
• Nf.WS
1; 1&amp;

1,30
2'00

MOVII! · (ADVENTURE) •• lr'l
''WtrriOrafhrt" 1M2
il!il!IOVIE · (SCIENCE·FICTION)
•• ':.Cr. . plng Terror" 1864
(1) . NEWS
(]) 30 MINUTES WITH FATHER

2:1&amp;

~.. NINO
'
(]) MOYIE ·(HORROR)••• "Thl

!Ytcton" Hl7i

2:28 ~ SPORTS REPORT

1·30.

•3;10
.

mombo• oltho s .s .

SN!AK PREVIEW: JANUARY
10:28
HfWSUPDATE
10:30
RICHARD HOGUE
MASTERPIECE THEATRE
'Taatament of Youth ' Epleode V.
With World War I finally over, Vera
ret1,1rne1o 0Jtford where ahem~""
Wlnltrtd Holt by . Therett,e}' launch
Ultlr wrltlftQ ctreet~together and
rHtcomt lite-long friend a. (Cio1ed·
ption.ct: U.S.A.) (80 mint .)
10:4&amp;
LOVE AMERICAN RTVLE
10:&amp;8
Nf.WS UPDATE

~

I())

••'fr

TOMANDJEARYSHOW

TQ._MA_M_DJERAY

·

a1MEDYSHOW
IJFI_INTHE SPIAI.T

(JJ). FONZ AND THf: HAPPY
"clJGANG
OA-.
•
I.1DJ BUGS

&amp;·30
'

8 .58

1o':oo

m1NEfiSHOW
SURVIVAL

BU~NY·ROAO

&lt;IIJ.

~R~

_-

.,

•••!fl

()J MOVIE ·(MUSICAL) •••
·~triUMtPink'' 1831

10:2&amp; ClJ &lt;Ill •

JCHOOLHOUSE

;&amp;'lK ~ IN THE NEWS
WI!

~NtjJBAT

11:28

AFTERNOON
12:00

JONNYOUEST
RAINBOW FACTORY
ABCWUKEND SPECIAL
J9NNYOUEST
C1J FAT ALBERT SHOW

12:21

12:30

ACTIONNEWSFORKIDS

mllit:NEWS

ClJ DRAWING POWfR
BilLE BOWL
.
MOVIE ·(SPECTACULAR) •n
''Revenee of the Qladlatore''

11M&amp;
~ POINT OF VIEW
(JJ
TODAY
•
THE NFL

mn

I K)

JAN. 3 ,

t*

MORNING
BLACKWOOD BROTHERS
IT'S YOUR BUSINESS
SOCIETIES IN TRANSITION
6:30
• SATUROAY~EPORT
ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
!!EBOP
(JJ TV CLASSROOM
IT'S VO!m IUSINESS
KENTUCKY AFIELD
7:00 (
81G BLUE MARBLE
) V~OET ABLE SOUP
(J) PORKY ANO FR1ENOS
RMAEPORT
Kt08 ARIP!OPLE TOO
lUGS lUNNY
7,30
ROMPER ROOM
~-· TTERS Of LIFE
(J) QIQGL!SNORT MOfEL
U CHUCK WHITE REPORTS

1:00

I I I

IYORCApj
I I

2 Nose knows it
3 Give free

en

tickets to

River [n
A
t·
rgen ma

u show

12 Uke cordage ~ Tarzan
r\

y ~er~s
l d , A M~

po ra yer

13

5 }o~ amaus name 15 "Why was 25 Football
,

6 Scrap
l!magl·ne

l - '!'•
shoe item
18 Disfeature Z7 Monotonous
211.anded
Work

B Gua ranteed
9 Tear
II " Age of
Reason"
author

22 Confidence ZB Wipe out
man
29 Washer cycle
23 Go
34 Grazing
d
aboard
groun
%4 On deck 35 As, ian river

in comedy

in italy

20 Vetch seed

21 Mimic
a· b
:l:l liD

0

23 Emulated a

base stealer
1:-;;-t24 Pardon me !

t--f1:-:-t- +--t-

25 Smart

26 Nonsense!
Showiness
30 Mountain
(prefiX )

27

:U Cravat
fabrk
32 Tell's

bailiwick
33 "Heel"
region
of Italy
35 Natlon in
the news
36 Take

l,rl-- f-+-t-

. D 1\ILY CRYPTO(lUOTE - Here's how to.work It: ,

j
&amp;AID 'TO ATTRACT
Ai'TEN'TION IN
THI! NAVY.
Now arrange ttle Circled leners to
form the surprise answer, as sug·
gested by the above certoon.

XX r

(Answ8'rs tomorrow)

I

One letter simply stands for another, In this sample A II
three C's, X for 1he two O's. clc . Single letters.
11 postrophc!, the length nnd formatl?n of the words are all
hints. Each ~ay the code lcll crs are different.

u sed for the

CRVP'I'OQUO'I'ES

~nr an•wer here:'T I
" Yesterdays

AXVDI . BJ\AXR
LONGFt:LLOW

lo

ITHIRDE~
-1 I C · I

(I

i

5 - to ·1hurry i
Spok

38 Fear

81ba And Th• Seven Ser1c:ena

SPORTS REPORT

.,

I The
Penlatcu~h

wn~rage at
37 Minus

MOVIE ·(ADVI!!NTURE) u "A,I~

&amp;:58

DOWN

ssette

material

.(I)

ROSS BAGLEY SHOW

3:88 (:PORTS REPORT
4:00
YobC,::LUB
"·
&amp;:00
MA YERICK
5:30
PHIL ARMS PR!SEHTS

Ca

1

Limner
11:30
Wood
lllle PLASTICMAN·BABW' 14
COre
PLA~IUPEACOMEDY SHOW
15 Offer a price
•
DMK PACK
c k
11 :56 {I)
•
DEAR ALEX AND 16 rae poL
ANttiJ
17 Accord
11:5t
IN THE NEWS
19 Three,
IN THE NEWS
BACK'fAAD

~ft'jlN'f
~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
~
~~ ~
byHenrtArn~lnd8obLee

"!:!J

by THOMAS JOSEPH
A(ROSS
39So that 's it! .-.

10:M
.. THE NEWS
11:00
C1.) BATMAN AND THE 10
'
~PER SEVEN
11
STUFF
lB) •
HE~THCUFF AND

IARII:ETTOMARkET

"Z" 1M8

10.•28

"FUnJ!IIIn Berlin" 1887
(II) •
SCHOOLHOUSE

10'115 (JJ

RICHIE RICH-SCOOBY

MOYIE ·(SUSPENSE)

fili~~U~ARR

POPEYEHOUA

~DKf'APPYDOO&amp;HOW
(JJtllliNTHeNEWS
MANNA

~-Cll OAFFYDUCKSHOW
MOYIE ·(SUSPENSE) ••

TH(_f!OCK

li73

balievfla she hee at iullound her
mother, Lucy uks Mltch to m•rry
her and J.R. clo .. s rn on what he
lhinkal• hla brother' s reckl. .lrun· .
nlng gf Ewing Oil. (60 mina.)
(I) AMERICAN FILM TMEATRE
'The Man In the Gl..• Booth ' Mil·
imlll.n Schell end Lola Nelllelon
111 r in thl• myetery lnvol¥iftO I
weelthy New York bue lneumu
who It 1aur-vivor of Nazi conctntra·
tlon camps . He I• irof'l ll': tlly abduCt·
ed bylaraellegenta .-nd chtrge d

·~

THE MID

NIGHT

!.2_1\Q.L
(II) . . MOVIE · (HORROR) '

proapectlve parenu to cho ou
their child' a aex , and euminn the
quutlon ·of whether or not auch a
chOice ahould be m•de. (60

~wlthN";!;l 0

\,LJ

Sfi!CIAL

lng technotogitla. Ihat c ould allow

7:30

~

Cll MOVIE -(DRAMA)
Board·
IJ!.!IItl" 11i178
.
12:40 lJJ SOLID GOLD Co ·hoata. Gte,
Campbell, Dionne Warwick . Gold
re cord wi!Jnera perform their hit

Should the Choice Be Oura?' Thia
progremotlereaiook at the amen~ ·

·

!OJ~KLE
(I) fJID IN THE NEWS

MOVIE ·(WESTERN)
8 30 "M-•owk"
1058
-

Honey·

"Un••rlhly Streneer , _

(2)

hltaontoadeapereteplanotactiOI'I.
®Jlll"'l
[J)WJ HARD CHOICES 'Boy orGirl:

DALLASPtmlllaEwlng

Ten

" ISQ
moonl 1
ON)
12:00 CIJ MOVIE ·(SCIENCE·FICTI "

·
•~" Cl)lM}
THE DUKES OF HAZ·

eCIJ®J

8.;2•

(I) ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
,
C1IJ •
SCHOOLHOUSE
Cl) MOYIE ·CSCIENCE-FICTIONr 8 . 55 RO~
• ~ ''PhJntom Planet" 1VI2
!1! THE..NEWS
8. 58 •(J)CMl CD
Cl)(il) . FRIDAYS
, g:oo (I) •
FUNTSTONES

(tz.

mint,)

7:11

H_EW$UPDATE J
Cl) THE TONIGMT SMOW
Oue•t : Suaen Sarandon. (60
mint .)

OO U

11 ;3 0

t ·4S (() lJII__EYENING NeWS
10.:00 (1) . (!) RUN, -.MeAICA, RUN A
colorful, !un-tilled guide to the run ·
ntr'a world, including a took at the
mentetend phy slcataapect eo! run·
nlng. Heat: Bruce Jenh«L Among
the peraoneiiUes t•king p11rt11re
Ben Vereen, Rodney D1ngerllald .
Suun Anton, Pam Otwber , Fosler
Brook• . and Jimmie Walt.tH. (60

KIT 'N' CARLYLE TM by Larry W.rlght

(]) MOVIE -(COMEDY)" "MuptMo'41•" 1070
NIGHT GALLERY

11·28

NOW

10:30

GODZ1LLA-HONO

m

CIJlM} (f2l 18

(I) DAN GRIFFI,N

1allaed, and proves to be the moat
hllarloua p&amp;tlent ever, with t1
m.,eterlouadlte.,.e that has ell the

8:30 (JJ CUJ 1U I'M A BIG

Cll (l) •

W

KONGPHOOEYHOUA
EYERINCMASlNGFAITH
QILLIG~N'S ISLAND
())) •
SUPI!RFRIENDS
HO~
• C1J MIGHTY IIOUIE-HECKL£
ANO ~ECKLE
(() SESAME STREET
(JD) MIGHTY MOUS!·-HECKLE

NEWS

mina.)

-- - - ---

Lowery electric· organ .
Teeny .Genie; like new.
sm .oo. 992 · 20~

Not hiqh!
Gretchen can
count onl[J
to two
hundred!

$1295

MAIN ST .

ow At

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

THAT'S RIGHT; GOOD
BU0{1Y', AN' WE 1LL
PAY 'IOU A I~UN[l_E
T'BE OUR GUIOE!

GASOLINE ALLEY

DRIVE ALITTLE- SAVE A LOT

Firewood for sale, M ixed
types of wood . $35 .00 per
pick·up load . Delivered,
will stack for Senior
Citi zens. 8-43-4951 or 8-43·
2815.

_51

cc- '

12-8-1 mo.

FIREWOOD S35. a I ruck
load. S60. a cord. All har·
dwood, split, &amp;udelivered .
· PUREBRE'O .Enollsh
843·4831 or 843·4734.
Shepherd puppies. Stock '
and watch dogs. Phone 247·
USED Kroebler bedroom
2161.
suite. full size mattress,
box springs. S100. 742·2957 .
YOUR Humane Society
992·6260 miniature collie
Firewood tor sale. Har·
female, male collie. english
dwood, split a. delivered.
setter, male, . 3 snoopy
$25. load delivered . 992·
types, female, shephard
5240.
type, female. male beagle
type including mixed brf!ed
female, several klltens.
BEAUTIFUL handmade
one adult.
clocks, cedar &amp; cyprus.
~ontact Philli.P Bearhs or
may be seen at Leonard
SHIH ·TZU puppies for
Bass residence. Sl . Rt. 124.
sale,
8 weeks old .
Syracuse. ,. available.
Purebred,
but
not
Taking orders. '1'12·3269 or
regiSiered . 667·6143.
992-5006.
Horse trailer, 2 horses. 1
paint
mare,
other
registered Appalosa, two
years old 1977 Chevy ; K ...

f ... .;--- J

Good selection roll end remnants $3.99 up

Misc. Merch•nise ·

THE
MEIGS
County
Humane Sociely pels of the
week are : Several adult
cats, 5 black 3. tan puppies,
black labrador, black Irish
setter.
collie
type,
shepherd type, black &amp;
.tan; house broke medium
size doo ready to be loved,
lovable mixed breed. 992·
6260.

A CANOE
-c.o r•

PH. 742-2328

"&amp;Up
Installed

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

~~oJ'!! ~!]e__

THEIR OE5TIHATION •.

•

RUll.AND FURNITURE CARPET SHOP
DECEMBER CARPET SALE
KITCHEN CARPET 4 Rolls
CARPET With Padding RegSHAG
. $15.95

Open
Saturday Only
4 P.M. to 11 P.M.
Free Coffee &amp; Tea
Free Food
·
Live Music
Ph. 992-5295
12·31 ·1 mo.

__

J

BATTlESHIP 1\\IM (

WE CAN DO IT!

Middleport, Oh.
Ph. 992-6263
Anytime
12· 17· 1 mo.

10·7-tfc

S6

ROO IE 50 Fll( .• l T~NK
I CAN BE61H TO 6UE%

Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices
Call Howard
t49·2862
949·2160
1·22-lfc

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

992-5682

Gil Range
,
UsN lhlrlttr.ator
Uted XLII Ctl.ain S..w
Used 12'' hw

PlANNIN' TO VO?!
~E 'VE GOl: T' STOP HIM

S111P'5

~ON'T PART \'liTH AN ACRE OF IT !

... JUDG ING FRO~ THEIR

.. BUT HOW? FOR u;; T' C.O UP
A~AIN5T HIM Y«J~LO BE LIKE
~OIH' UP A6AIH5T A

OHGEE. GANDY! DID 'JA HEAR

WHO'S LYIH6? l LOVE THIS
COOifTRY.. AHD OtiCE WE TAKE OVER \'I E

Silos lronl4x6 to 12X40

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

S4

.. LOOK AT I KNOll HOW
1
THAT VIEW THI$ IS CIIE '100 FEEL ABOUT
OUR C()JNTR Y
HECK Of A &amp;AUliFUL
((](.. NlRY
GOT
SO IT'S NOUSE
HERE!
TO ME I

- THIS ROAD CURVES BACK
TO'IiARDS Tl!E MAIH H161iWAY...
THEY MLI5T BE HEAR IH6
.....""'!i THEIR OESTIHATIOH ...

~~==::~::~~======~~::::::::::::::::::::~~~==================~
KAUFPS
ROGER HYSEll'S
AL'TROMM
.PWMBING
GARAGE
Building &amp; Repair
AND
-Auto and Truck
IF YOU NEED IT
Repair
HEATING
-Transmission
FIXED,

-APirtmen.---=-

- - _f~r~_!'!! ---3 ~NO 4 RM furnished ap·
ts. Phone 992· S-434.

992· 7S44

ALL STEEL

ROUSH·

------- - - - - - Mobile Homes
for Rent

A CONCU%10':' l

~~I lor lnlorma~i~~n

l-

992-621Sor992-7314

.

Eight room house with 2
baths ,
forced
·air
heat ,available about the
second week of January .
Also sleeping rooms for
rent . 9-49 · 2666 tor in ·
formation .

Realtor
Phone 742·2003

992-754

vA loans no money down
Federal Housing 3% an s2s,o~o
S% on balance.
Conventional Loans-

MEDICINE MEN, AINOCHA "f

HEY--THAT 'S 1-JO
WAY t TAI(E 'E W\
TO A H05Pl fAL1
WE-'I.'t:- 60T
C Afl:5~

I~::::::::::::::::::~~==~P~o~m~er~o~y~,~o~n~·====·~!t==:::::::::~12~-~21~-~~~m~;

NICE 3 bedroom home.
li\ling room, dining room ,
family room. l'h baths, hot
WJter heat . 992·2918.

s. Ho6stetter. Jr .

YOU'VE HEERED TELL OF INJUN
BANANA NO~E. THEY
CALLED HIM--STI"OUT
COLO -- HE- MA'r' HAVE

Mortgage Bankers
·
4

V.C. YOUNG II

Ph. 992-2478
11 ·20·3 mo. pd.

'HARVEST
COF"".....
FEE HOUSE
41 =~ }i~~~IoL[eE:f =
Pomeroy, Oh .

Geo.

&amp;~

-Adclons and
remodeling
-Roofing ond uoiHer
, • work
-Concrete work
-Piumblngond
electrlcol work
(Free Esllmotes)

e Dozers

,...._Space tor thnt

7-Yird Sele

CUNNINGHAM

"YOUNGS
CARPENTIR
SERVICES"

PUWNS

10 ROOM brick, 3 baths, 11f•
acre; 6 roo~aths, l lf2
acres ; 6 rooms basement,
bath, 2 mobile homeS;
Mason, 3 bedroom never
·lived in, 2 bedroom, rented2 acres.- John Sheets, 3•12
m iles south ·of Middleport ,
Rl . 1.

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

1-P~rblic

Business Services

-

Jumbles WH EAT GRIPE REA LTY INLAND
Answer What do telephOnes do today?RING IN THE NEW YEAR

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REMEMBER THIS: THE
SMALLER 1liE DRINK TONIGHT, 1liE SMALLER 1liE
HEAD TOMORROW.-EDlTOR'S ADVICE
Veolerday's

Cryptqquote :

�..

I

Januar ,2 1981

Pomeroy--'-Middleport, Ohio

Pa e-lD-The Daily Sentinel

'

Tehran radio renews trial 'threats

Surprise--grocery bills ·
r~se 15 percent last year ·
By Associated Press
Boosted by drought and an intertUJtional taste for sugar, grocery
bills rose abnost 15 percent last year
- about l'h times raster than they
did in 1979, an Associated Press
marketbasket survey shows.
The AP survey of a random sample of items on supermarket shelves
also showed that prices rose much

more slowly during December than
they did during November, but the
good news is not expected to last.
The AP drew up a Ust of 15 commonly purchased food and non-food
products a11d checked the price at
one supermarket in each of 13 cities
on March I , 197~ . Prices have been
rechecked on or about the start of

BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) - In a
flurry of ·commentaries on the 52
American hoStages, Tehran Radio
said Saturday that it was "totally
Improbable" they would be freed
before President-elect Ronald
Reagan takes office Jan. 20 al)d that
the lsilu~ then "will remain as it is

each succeeding month. One item,
chocolate chip cookies, was dropped
!'
from·the list after the manufacturer .
discontinued the-package size . used . ·
in the survey. Among the findiogs of
the latest survey:
- The marketbasket bill increased
;:~
at the checklist store · in every city&gt;
during 1980, rising an average of 14.4
. percent. That compared with a 9.5
.
percent boosti~ !979.
- During December, the marketbasket bill increased at the checklist
store in nine cities - up an average
of 1.9 percent - and decreased in
four cities - down an average of 2.9
percent. Overall, the bill increased
by' an average of four-tenths of a percent. During November, the average
increase was 2.4 percent. ~
--sugar was to blame for mu&lt;:)J of
the increase in supermarket llills
during the year. Raw sugar prices
have surged because production has
left, and .Commerce Secretary Pb1lllp Klubnlct. Tbe
mE OFFICIAL TOTAL - Tbere are 2211,504,si5 of
not kept pace with · demand ·and
Commerfe Departmeot populaUoo clock reflecs the
us,
according to the !980 Census Bureau figures for the
retail prices have followed. The U.S.
total wblcb both Baraba and Klubolck noted was coaUnited States announced Tuesday lo Washlogtoo by
Department of Agriculture
troverslal. ( AP Laserpboto)
VIncent
P
.
Barabbas,
director
fo
the
Census
Bureau,
estimates the 1980 average retail
price of sugar at 37 cents a pound up 50 perc~nt from 1979 - and says
prices will rise further this year. The
AP survey showed the average price
of a five-pound sack of granulated
Philson, Syracuse, speeding, S30 and days confinement, 30 day license
Thirteen defendants paid fines and
sugar at the checklist store went
five forfeited .bonds in the Wed- costs ; Billy D. Gaines , Ironton, s_u'spension ; Thomas Burnside, Midfrom $1.42 at the start of 1980 to $2 .85
nesday session of Meigs Gounty speeding, $20 and costs; John A. dleport, non- support, pay due supat the end of December.
Court, presided ove r by Judge Williams, MinersVille, no operators port, 10 days col)finement suspen•
- Last summer's drought is exlicense, $75 and costs plus three days ded, one year probation.
pected to cause increases in meat
Patrick O'Brien.
Paying fines were Danny Ray confinement suspended; Karl W.
prices next year, because of higher
Forfeiting bonds were Robert
Roush, Letart W. Va., speeding, $20 · Meeks , Athens, speeding, $23 and
feed grain costs. The drought
and costs; Randall R. Reeves, costs; Wayne L. Adams, Route 4, Crawford, Fairfield ; Michael Pope,
· already has caused price increases
Pomeroy, speeding, $21 and costs; Chester; Michael Wheeler, MarietPomeroy, speeding, $21 and costs ;
on supermarket shelves; the
Ronald Laudermilt, Middleport, im- .Jeffrey L. Thornton, Racine, ta ; Eldis McMillan, Route 3,
December survey by the AP s)lowed
proper parking, $10 and costs ; Kevin speeding, $27 and costs; Loren . C. Racine; all speeding, all $40.50. John
the price of peanut butter was up at
L. Mayle, Route I, Amesville, unsafe WoUe, Route 3, Gallil&gt;oUs, driving A. Salser, Racine, driving while inthe checklist store in nine of the
cities checked. The drought heavily
vehicle, $5 and costs ; John R. • while intoxicated, $175 and costs, 3 toxicated, $360.50.
damaged the peanut crop and raw
peanut prices have more than
InVit~ ~itizens
doubled.
Free Christmas tree pickup will be
The AP did not try to weight the
those roads need to be improved, conducted in Middleport on Mo~y,
The Meigs County' Regional Plansur-vey results · according to
and what kind of improvement is J an. 5, according to Mayor Fred
ning Commission iMCRFC) invites
population density or in terms of
fl€eded (widening, straightening, reinterested citizens to identify the
Hoffman. Residents are asked to
what percentage of a family's actual
surfacing,
by-pass, new route, etc .)?
major road Improvement needs for
place their trees near the curb in
grocery outlay each item represenThe public is invited to attend this
Meigs County . This is the last of four
front of their homes and they will be
. ts.
n&lt;&gt;-eharge meeting that will last picked up by the village free of
public meetings.
The survey does not compare ace
The three main questions are about one hour starting at I :30 p.m. charge.
tual prices from city to city which major routes are most in need on Monday , Jan. 5 in the jury room
The mayor also reminded
saying, for example, that eggs cost
of improvement, what portions of of the Meigs County Court House.
businesses which have coinmore in one area than another. Com.
operated
amusement machines that
parisons are made only In terms of
DISTRIBUTE FUNDS
their
license
expired Dec. 31. UcenLottery
winners
percentages of increase or decrease
December gasoline excise tax
ses
may
be
purchased at the
- saying a particular item went up checks totaling $10,283,015 were
CLEVELAND (AP) - The win- mayor' s office Monday through
10 percent in one city and 6 percent distributed today by State Auditor · ·ning number drawn Thursday in the
Friday , 8a.m. to4 p.m .
in another.
.
·
Thomas E. Ferguson's office to Ohio · Ohio Lottery's daily game " The
The USDA marketbasket isSued counties, townships, cities and
Nwnber" was 529.
each month is . based on a complex
ADC FUNDS RECEIVpl
In the weekly " Pyramid" game,
.
villages.
· set of statistics. It is used to keep
State
Aud1tor Thomas E:
the winning nwnbers were ~ ; 468;
Ferguson said that each of the
track of changes in the proportion of stale's 88 counties received $35,000,
Ferguson's
office announced the
2107.
the food dollar received by the far- or $3,000,000 of the total, and thAt the
January
,
1981
distribution of
The lottery reported earnings of
mer, wholesaler and retailer and state's 1,319 townships received
$46,861,478
in
Aid
to Dependent
$313,175.50 on the daily game.
does not correspond to actual family '$1 ,200 each, of $1,582,800 of this
to
&amp;19,391
recipients In
Children
The earnings came on sales of
spending ,
Ohio's
88
counties.
$:j64,171. while holders of wtnnipg
distribution.
In Meigs County, 1,675 recipients
tickets are entitled to share a total of
received
a total of $137,339.
$250,995.50, lottery officials said.

Popula
change
sum mar

-··~ J ove reg1sters
• J ,.

·-

...

now.atanimpasse.' ' ·
. The official radio renewed threats
of hostage trials, saying they would
occur if the U.s. government failed
to meet Iran's terms in the mistaken
belief the conditions might be softened after Reagan took office. It accused both Reagan and President

0

population,)'hponents
·AlCOn

Area deaths
Wanda B. Kuntz
Wanda Bennett Kuntz, 56, former
Pomeroy resident, Parkers burg,
died Thursday at Camden-clark
Hospital in Parkersburg.
She was preceded in death by her
parents, Silas and Lera Bennett and
a brother, Ralph Bennett.
. Surviving are her hus band,
Albert; a daughter, Jerry Lynn
Johnson of Vienna, W. Va.; two sons,
Bill Motley, Galifornia, and John
MOtley, Columbus ; a granddaughter, four grandsons ; a
brother, Jon Bennett, Canton ; three
sisters, Eileen Snyder,' Middleport ;
Hope Eblin, Syracuse, al)d Marion
Jean Moore, Columbus.
Funeral services will be held at
the Kimes Funeral Home in Parkersburg with complete arrangements
to be announced later .

I

three sisters, Ruth Harrison ,
Philomena Harrison and Irene Galdwell, an infant son, James and
another son, Charles ; a daughter,
Mary Reed, and three brothers,
Wayne, Charles and Ernest.
Surviving are a daughter, Mrs.
Ralph (Sadie) Carl, Route 2,
Pomeroy ; six grandchildren, 21
gr eat-grandchildren, seven greatgreat-grandchildren and several
nieces and nephews.
Mr. Harrison was a member of the
Kyger Church and the Kyger
Knights of Pythias Lodge.
Funeral services will be held ~t 10
a .m. Monda'y at the Ewing Funeral
Home with the Rev. Gary H. King officiating. Burial will be in Gravel
Hill Cemetery. Friends may call at
the funeral home anytime after 7
·p.m, Saturday.

9 onald E. Kelly

Eugene Holter

-~

Donald E . Kelly, 50, Pomeroy
.Eugene Holter, 56, died Wed- businessman, 301 S. Sixth Ave. , Mid,
nesdl;!y . at his Racine Route I
dleport, died Wednesday at the
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
residepc~.
·
Born at 'Charleston, W. Va., Mr.
Precedep in death by his father,
CIHford'iiolter, he is survived by his Kelly was owner of the Pomeroy Ben
wife, Jlr1rytle Easterday Holter ; a Franklin Store: He served in the U.
son and daughter-in-law, Richard ·S. Marines during the Korean Conand Karen Holter, Reynoldsburg ; a flict He was a member of Delta Tau
daughter and Son-in-law, Tracy and Delta Fraternity and the Pomeroy
Marjorie Scrin)sher, Columbus ; two Gun Club .
grandsons, Brian and Shane Holter;
. Surviving are his wife, Pamella ·
two granddaughters, Lura and Carla McEldowney Kelly, 'Middleport ; a
Scrimsher; his'mother, Lena Holter , son , Richard A. Kelly, Toledo ; a
Route l, Raci~e; two sisters, Mrs. daughter , Viki Kelly Pollitt, HunRobert (June) ~ Ashley, Letart, and tington, W. Va.; p his parents,
Mrs.- Earl (G.eraldine ) Cross , Hubert A. and Elizabeth Whitmore
Racine; a brother, Larry Holter of Kelly, Ronceverte, W. Va. ; a
Pickerington, and several nieces brother, Phillip W, Kelly, Pomeroy ;
and nephews.
an aunt, and several nieces and
Mr. Holter was a veteran of World nephews.
War II and was a Ufe member of
Funeral arrangements are being
Racine American Legion Post W2. made py the Ewing Funeral Home.
He ~a·s a member of the Pomeroy In lieu of fiowers, the family
Masonic Lodge F \oi!AM.
requests that friends make a
Funeral services will be held at 2 donation of · the charity of their
p.m. Sunday al the Ewing Funeral choice.
Home with the Rev. Carl Hicks officiating. Burial will be in GreenVETERANS MEMORIAL
wood Cemetery. Masonic services
Wednesday admissions-Gladys
Will be held at 7:30 this evening. The Golden, Portland; MadeUne Pain-,._
family has requested that flowers be ter, Middleport ; Eloise Connelly,
omitted. Friends may call at the Reedsville.; Kimbe rly Burke,
funeral home anytime after 7 this Pomeroy. ·
Wednesday discharges--Paul
evening.
Stewart, Jack Horne , George
Greene, MaryGenhetmer .
Clyde R. Harrison
Thursday
admissions--Mrs.
Franklin Molden, Pomeroy, Tanya
Clyde Raymond Harrison, 92,
Meadows, Portland; Joanne Hatzer,
Route l, Middleport, died Thursday
Pomeroy ; Ruth Bailey, Pomeroy ;
at Veterans Memo~ial HospitaL
Wallace Reuter, Pomeroy. c __ _
Mr .Harrison was a son of the late
Thursday ' discharge--Tammy
Jacob and Rhoda Rupe .Harrison.
Bable.
He was also preceded in death by

to identify needs

Emergency sqruJCls ·busy

\lol . 14 No. 49
Copvrighted 1980

The Meigs County Emergency Holzer by the Pomeroy squad, and
Medical Service Headquarters · a t 4:02 p.m. the Middleport
reports a total of eighteen calls were emergency unit was called to 814
answered Wednesday, Thursday, Maple St. , where Keith McCotney
was treated on the scene.
and Friday morning.
AI 6:31, Eva Schaeffer, 5th St. ,
At 2:36 a.m. Wednesday, the
TO END MARRIAGE
Rutland squa~ transported John Racine, was taken by that village's
Judith Kay Hunter, Pomeroy, has
Welch from the Wilkesville Texaco ~uad to Pleasant Valley Hospital ,
station to Holzer Medical Center, and at 7:13p.m., the Pomeroy squad filed a suit for divorce the Meigs
a)ld at 3:49 a.m., the Pomeroy unit transported Grace Drake from her County Common Pleas Court againwas called to the scene of an auto ac- home at Route I, Pomeroy, to st Roy Roger Hunter, Mid&lt;!leport, on
cident near the Forest Run church. lf61zer. At 9:37 p.m., Kimberly ·grounds of gross neglect of duty and
One victim. Charles cantor, was Burke was taken from her Route 7 extreme cruelty.
taken to Veterans Memorial home to Veterans Memorial by the
HospitaL At 4:02 a.m., the Tuppers Pomeroy unit.
Thursday , two cails were a nPlains emergency squad took Unda
swered.
Trippie, ~oute I, Reedsville, to
The first was by the Middleport
Selby General Hospital.. The . Meigs
squad
at 3: 14 p.m., when Richard
transfer squad transported Charles
Fry
was
taken from ,32820 Bailey
cantor from Veterans Memorial to
Run
Road
to Veterans MemoriaL At
Holzer at 5:10a.m. and at 9:05, took
7:09
p.m.,
Monty Davis was tranPaul Stewart from Veterans
sported
by
the Pomeroy _unit from
Memorial Hospital to camden Clark
Village
Green Apartments {o
the
Hospital, Parkersburg, W. Va . The
Pleasant
Valley
Hospital, and a t
·
transfer squad made a third run at
11:02
p.m.,
the
Rutland
squad 'took
12:21 p,m,, taking Man' Genheimer
his
residence
on
Keith
Kingrey
from
from Veterans Memorial to· her
Noble
Summit
Road
to
Veterans
home in Chester.
The Racine squad took the late Memorial.
At 12 :29 a.m., 1he Racine squad
Eugene Holter from his home to
was
called to the home of Hazel
Ewing Funeral Home at 1:58 p.m.,
Wickline,
Hoback Road, where she
·a nd I!~ 2·p.m., the Rutland unit was
was
treated
on the scene . The Midcalled to M~igs Mine 2, from where
dleport
Emergency
Squad was
Joseph Swann was taken to Holzer
to
916
Park
St.
at
2 a.m . for
called
Medical Center.
who
was
taken to
Alwilda
Werner,
.uAt ' ~ 46 p.m., Homer Carmen was
Center.
Holzer
Medical
taken from his South 2nd St. home to

Extra Control Top

PANTYHOSE
•Sheer Support leg
•Reinforced Heel and Tow

SPECIAL
FOR YOUR WINTER LISTENING
ENJOYMENT WE HAVE A
GOOD SELECTidN OF
RECORDS AND TAPES '·
BY THE FINEST
CHRISTIAN PERFORMERS

MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE
992-1641

,o

2nd FLOOR

WASHINGTON (API - Males
born in 1962 must register for the
non-existent draft this week, though
they Qeed not give their Social
Security numbers and the status of
their registration is in doubt.
Those turning. 19 this year must
sign up at the nation's post offices,
joining nearly 4 million men born iri
1960 and 1961 who registered last ·
summer to begin forming-the pool of
youths eligible for a draft, should the
need for such a conscription arise.
The very act of registration,
meanwhile, may face ~:hallenges
I
both frOJJI the White House and the
Supreme Court.
The week of registration should
MEIGS' FIRST BABY - Meigs Couoty's flrsl baby of the new year
sign up nearly 2 million men if the !Ia
percent turnout experienced last
was born 1:48 a.m. Jao. 1, a girl to Uoda aod Roy Vaugbao, Langsville.
Bridget Marie will be welcomed home by one sister, Crystal, nged three.
July is repeated.
Her graodparenla are Mr. and Mrs. Rex Shenefield, Langsvllle, and Mrt&gt; .
Men bam in 1962 can sign up at
and Mrs. Leo vaughan, Pomeroy. The baby's father is employed by
post offices any day !lw,ring the
week. But they were urged, to avoid
Southern Oblo Coal Company. She weighed sill pounds, five ounces and
long lines, to register in this order:
was 19J,&gt; Inches long .
those horn in January through Mar. ch, Monday; April through June,
Tuesday; July through September,
Wednesday; and October through
December, Thursday. Friday and
Saturday would he makeup days for
people who couldn't get in earlier in
the week.
Following
the week-long
GALUPOLJS - Husband of the was ROTC third region chief of plans
registration, males will be required
former Maureen Stewart of at Fort Riley, Kansas .
to register within 30 days after they
The colonel and Maureen Stewart
Gautpoiis, Col. Malcolm K. Wallace
reach age 18.
was promoied to his present rank Wallace are the parents of four
Registration .was reswned last
Dec. I and will have duty as in- c hildren, Malcolm, twin daughters
surruner,
five years after the draft
spector general with the New Jersey - Renee and Roxann , and Derrick.
was ended after the twnultuous ·
The first three are students at the
NationaLGuard , Trenton.
protests of the Vietnam era.
Mrs. Maureen Wallace's parents University of Kansas.
President Carter requested the
are Mr. and Mrs. Marvin P . Stewart.
renewal of registration - though, it
108 Pine st., Gallipolis.
was emphatically stated, .not the
P rior to his promotion, Col.
draft itself - saying it would inWallace had 'served for a year as
lieutenant colo!\el in conunand of the
Fifth Battalion, First Basic Training
Brigade, Fort Jackson , S. C. He will
., relinquish the command Tuesday ,
MIDDLEPORT~Larry
Powell,
and take over his Nationa l Guard
Pomeroy businessman , was elected
duty some time after that.
president of the Meigs Local Board
Col. Wallace served in Germany
of Education Friday night when the
till 1963, and then he was infantry adboard held its organizational session
viser to the imperial Iranian army in
at the Meigs Junior .High in MidTehran, Iran, 19&amp;1~ . His year in
dleport.
Vietnam a s S-3 (specialist third
, Powell replaces Garol Pierce as
class ) • as with the First Battalion,
board president.
·37th Infantry, IOl st Airborne
· Named vice president for 1981 was
Dlvlsion, and also an assistant inRichard Vaughan , Middleport
spector general there.
businessman.
Other board memThe 42-year-oid soldier is a
bers are Robert Snowden, Pierce
CoL
BIRD COLONEL graduate of the Conunand and
and Dr . Keith Riggs who was not
Malcolm K. Wallace, son-In-law
General Staff Coilege and holds a
present for the organizational
of Mr. and Mrs. Marvin P .
master's degree in education from
Stewart, 108 Ph"' St., Gallipolis ,·
session.
Kansas State University , He has serThe board voted to continue its
was promoted to full Colonel on
ved as assistant professor 'of
membership in the Ohio School
Dec. I.
military science in California, and
Boards . Association and compensation for board members was
set at $40 for regular meetings. The
board set meeting times for 1981 and
Partly cloudy . Hi~h 15 to 20. Chance of snow 10 per~ent today .
these include January through MarOblo Extended Forecast ...:. Monday through Wednesday - Fair and not so ch, the second Monday of each moncold each day . Highs 10 to 20, Monday moderating to 20 \O ~ by Wednesday. th ; April through November, the
Lows near zero Monday ·warming to 10 to 20 by Wednesday·.
third Monday of each month, and
December, the second !(onday. All

,.

crease military preparedness and
send a signal to the Soviet Union after the Soviet march into
Afghanistan .
. President-&lt;!lect Ronald Reagan,
however, said during his election
campaign that · he opposed draft .
registration in peacetime and that
he doubted it actually would speed
up a draft.
Following Reagan's vi ctory,
Selective Service officials and
others quickly raised the question of
whether to go ahead with the
January signup in view of his campign statements. They received no
formal response from Reagan's
transition officials: and so are
proceeding With the program, which
was funded and approved by
Congress.
,
In a recent letter to Reagan, 83
members of Congress asked the
president-&lt;!lect to continue dr11ft
registration.
Deputy Draft Director Brayton
Harris 'lloted that unlike last . summer, the .agency can now show it
would save at least four weeks time
in an emergency draft because of
the large response to the earlier
signup.

Six traffic deaths
COLUMBUS, Ohio ( AP) - Six
people, including three pedestrians,
have been killed on Ohio highways
during the New Year's holiday
weekend, according to the Highway
,
Patrol.
The traffic death count began at 6
p.m. Wednesday and continues until midni ght Sunday.

Two 1\'leigs boards

.

Extended forecast, state weather

organi~

meetings will start at 7:30p.m.
Uability insurance for boat&lt;!
members was purchased as well as
bond for the president. Supt. David
Gleason was named as the agent to
apply for and receive state and
federal funds .
Meelin.g with the board Friday
night was Dan Morris, assistant
superintendent and Treasurer Jane
Wagner was also present.
AI Eastern, Roger Gaul was tHe~
ted board president and Dorsel
Larkins was chosen as . vicepresident.
Board meetings were set for the
third Wednesday of each month at 7
,
p.m .
Superintendent Richard Roberts
was designated as the district's purchasing agent. .
In other matters, the hoard approved temporary appropriations
for 1981 , renewed its membership
with the OSBA and its Uabilify insurance with that same
organiwtlon.

DEPT.

WINTER CLOTHING SALE
ALL WINTER CLOTHING FOR THE
ENTIRE F~MILY IS REI)UCED 20%
,
THIS WEEKENDI

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

BySALLYANNEHOLTZ
Tlmes-8eoUael writer
GAIJ.IPOLJS - Hope that ln.t'lation wou)d be brought under control in the coming year was the·
biggest concern expre&amp;'led by area
citizens in interviews conducted
Friday, the second day of the new
year.
".[ think our first priority has to be
whipping inflation," noted Marie
Crider, who lives in Gallipolis and
workli at Gallipolis Bu.slness CoUege
' as an admissions representative,
"Things are just so bad. Even with
both of us working (she and her
husband, Kent), I sometimes wonder i! we'll make 'it."
• Worry over survlylng the high
prices sur.e to come In th' next year
was the general theme ruimtng
'through the conversations Friday ,
Tammy Smith

Betty Smith

,.

'

GALLIA'S FIRST BABY ~ Gallla County's first baby of J98l ·was
born at 10:32 a.m. Jaouary I at Holzer Medical Center -t o Melaaie and Jeffrey Haatlu, Gallipolis. Tbe first baby Is a girl, Megao MarJe, wbose
grandpareola are Mr. and Mrs. Murray Haskins, Nelsooville, aod Mr.
and Mn. Roger Smith, also of Nelsonvllle. The baby weighed eight poun• ds, one ouoce aod was :!II lncbes long. Her brother Is Matthew, aged lhree.

Appropriations
are . appr~ved
GALLIPOIJS - A $7.194 million
Annual Appropriation Resolution for
!981 was passed Friday during a
special meeting of the Gallia County
Board of Commissioners. Included
in that amount is a $2.478 million
county general fund budget.
This
year's
appropriation
represents an increase of slightly
more than $300,000 over last year's
$6.632 million budget.
The Annual Appropriation's
Resolution provides funds for all
county expenses and expenditures to
be incurred during the fiscal year.
Major 'fund accounts included in
the 1981 appropriation are: M and R
(Maintenance and Repair) High-

lns~de

ways, $!.498 million; Public
Assistance , $1.013 million; 0 .0 .
Mcintyre Park District, $633,632;
169 Board of Mental Retardation,
$421,312 ; Sheriff 's Department, '
$388,375; Children's Services ,
$2!8,000; and, District Board of
Health, $155,300.
General Executive funds in the annual appropriation are: County
Commissioners, $11~,256; County
Auditor, $107,820; County Treasurer,
$75,950; Prosecutor's Office, $76,425 ;
Commom Pleas Court, $98,593;
Probate Court, $51,800; Domestic •
and . Juvenile Court, $60,500 ;
Coroner, $17,430; and, Board of
Elections, $102,000.

todJJ.y.

• •

Area deaths • .•...•.•.•.•••••••.• • ••.• . ••.•.•.•.•.• A-4.

Classified •.•• . •.••••.••••.•.•.••••.•..•••.•. •. • . D-2·7
Lifestyle ..• . ••..••.•••.• . •.•..•••.•.•.•.••.•.•. ~ B-1-7
Lc,cal .•. •...•• . .••..•• .• .•.•...• : . ~ . • • • • . . • . . • . • A-3-8

State-National •.• . •.•.•. : .• . ..•.••••.•.•........•.. D-1
Sports ..
~
c.-1:7
TV guide • . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . • . • . . • . . . . . Insert
I

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•••• •••••••••

••••••••••••••••••••••

Residents feel inflation first priority of _the_new year

•All Sizes

TOP GOSPEL ARTISTS

A Multimedia Inc . Ne~spaper

U. S. resumes registration

Malcolm Wallace
.n·o w·full colonel

SIMON'S
PICK-A-PAIR

'6.95
PLAYTEX

10 Sections, 90 Pages, 35 Cents

Sunday, _January 4, 1981

Pleasant

.

STORE·
WIDE
SALE·

IN

tntint

tmts

Middleport- Ponieroy- Gaiii_Poli~~ P,.!Iint

1T

.--------------1--------'------

ELBER

•

'....p
been pulled off the air.
'
An official at the state-nm radio in
Tel\ra,q, reached by telephone Saturday from Beirut, explained · the
seemingly conflicting themes by
saying the first two commentaries
aired before Algerian intermediaries delivered the latest
U.S. reply. The hardline commentary came after the reply was
received, he said. He did not cotnment on why the second com·
mentary was later repeated but ·
denied that its broadcast was interrupted.
·

broadcast Friday, Tehran Radio
praised the Carter administration
for its "calin tone" and said ·
Reagan's conunents were the ranlings of a "poUtical cowboy." The
second said the U.S. government
had accepted all Iranian terms and
suggeSt!!&lt;~ the crisis might soon be
resolved.
But a third commentary said
America was not prepar~ to take
steps to end the crisis . . .n. the
second commentary · was rebroadcast and monitors 'in Beirut
said both times it appeared to have

/

Tree pickup set

GET LICENSE
Roger Alan Holsinger, 18, Reedsville, and Cindy Lou Haggy, 18,
Pomeroy, have been given a
marriage license in the Meigs County Probate Court.

time was running out for solving the how he would handle the crisis after
crisis under his administration, con- taking office. Reagan could
tained in the latest U.S. reply to Iran presumably scrap the current
deUvered Friday by Algerian in:
negotiating process if agreement is
termediaries.
not reached by Inauguration Day.
U.S. officials in Washington said
"It does nnt make any difference
the reply also rejected Iran's ·whether the problem is solved
demand that $24 billion be deposited during the Garter-Democratic Party
in Algeria's Central Bank before the a~nlstration - · which · seems hostages are freed, but offered to totally Improbable - or during the
deposit about $12 billion to meet tenn of office of ·the next Ronald
Reagan-Republican Party governIran's 111oney demands.
Like other editorials over the past · ment," said me · cl. the com...
two days, the commentaries also mentaries .
reflected concern over Reagan and
In the first of three commentaries

unba

Court terminates 18 ~cases

MARKETBASDKET COMPARISON - This is th.e marketbasket
comparison chart for the month of December. I AP Laserphoto )

carter of not really-wanting freedom
J.or the hostages, who begin their
15th month in captivity Sunday.
The statements came in the latest
of a streem of commentaries on the
hostage crisis broadcast since
Friday by Iranian state radio, which
is controlled by the Islamic ' f(ln,damentalists who have consistently
maintained a hardline . position
against freeing the Americans and
have pressed for hostage trials.
The three commentaries Saturday
appeared in part to be a reply to
President Carter's statement that

•·j

,,

0'

Jimmy Howard

CbarUe Bostic

...

.
Marie Crider

.,'

\;I

\

.(

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