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~·P~a~g~e~1~6~~T~h~e~D~a~i~ly~Se~n~t~i~n~ei~------------------------------------~P~o~m~e~r~o~y~M~id~d~l~e~p2or~t~,~O~h~io~--------------------------------------------~~D~es~e~m~b:e~r~10~,~1~9~f0;•

20.cases end
• Seven defendants forfeited bonds
and six O\hers were fine¢ in the court
of Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
Tuesday night. ·
Forfeiting bonds were Larry E.
Miller, Benton Harbor, Mich., $350;
Theodo~e .fisher, Pomeroy, $350,
and Mum E. Kocher, LaGrange,
Ind., $350, all of chargeS of driving
while intoxicated; Dick Herman
Middleport, $100, disorderly man:
ner; Douglas C. Cloyd, Dexter, $27 ;
Emma Moodispaugh, $29, James A.
Cundiff, Racine, $32, all on speeding
charges.
.

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· STOWER VEHICLE- This large piece of equipment with 500 feet
of pipe whlcb shoots fill material wm be used on three abandoned underground mine sites in Pomeroy starling this week. It belongs to the
Eby Constructors, Kent, Wash., which designs equipment suitable lor
such projects.

Area Deaths
Norma F. Johnson, Route 3,
Pomeroy, formerly of Gahanna,
died Tuesday night at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
She was a daughter of the late
Byron and Ella Mae Souder Painter ·
and was also preceded in death by
four brothers.
Surviving are her husband, Norman W. Johnson; four sisters, Dora
Swick, Colllinbus; Leona Weeks,
Elsie Evans, Mary Hilton, all of
Johnstown ; a brother, Paul Painter,
Utica.
She was a member of the Lorraine
Chapter, Order of Eastern Star,
Columbus; the Sacred Order &lt;i
Beaucaunt; the Sunflower Rebekah .
Lodge 599 at Gahanna, and the
Ladies Oriental Shrine of Columbus.
Funeral services will be held at 10·
a.m. Friday at the Ewing Funeral
Home with the Rev. William Mid·
dleswart officiating .. Burial will be

Vickie E. Moore
Vicki E. Moore, 27, 238 N. Burgess
Ave., Columbus, died Friday at
University Hospital in Columbus as
the result of injuries received when
she was struck by a car in Columbus.
Mrs. Moore had·been employed at
Rink's in Columbus for the past 12
years. She was a member of the St.
Mary Magdalene Catholic Church.
Surviving are her husband, Lynn;
children, Jason, Danielle and Justin,
all al home; her mother, Mrs.
Dorothy Hanger and father, Henry
B. Hanger, both of Columbus ; a
brother, James Henry Hanger, St.
Petersburg, Fla.; a sister, Sharon L.
Hanger, Colwnbus ; grandparents,
Mrs. Mary Harbrecht, Pomeroy,
and Mrs. Mabel Hanger of Columbus, and several nieces and
nephews.
Mrs. Jean Ridgway, an aunt, at·
tended the services which were held
at the Spears Funeral Home in
Colwnbus followed by mass at the

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report .... ..;.\ . . ·..·.· ·. .
Atht&gt;D5 Livestock Sa l ~ .
Alba ny, Ohio

Dec . 6, 1980

CAITLE P RICES :
feeder Steers : (Good a nd Choice ) 300-500 Jbs
67. 7&gt;T:.!)() ; 500-700 lbs. 52-65.50.
.
Feeder Heifers : (Good and Choice ) 300-500 lbs
53.75-9!J.25 ; ~700 !bs. 48 . ~-.
Feeder Bulls : (GOOI.i and Choice] 3IJ0..500 lbs
&amp;1.75-7$.50; 500-700 lhs. 54 . 50-64 . ~ .
.
Slaug hter Bulls : (Over 1,001\ bs.) 42 .W-48 .

Slaughter Cows: Utilities 38.50-44.75; Canners
and Cutters 25.51}42.50
Spri nger Cows : (8f the head ) 430-467 50
CowHnd CatfPairs: ( 8)· the unit ) ~
Vca l:s: (Choice' and Prime ) 57-76 .
·
Baby C&lt;:~lves : (By the h.efd J 50-12(1.

HOG PRICES ,

Hogs : (No. I, Burrows and Gills i 21[)-230 )!J,
40.:i0-46.35
.
.
Butcher Sow::; 28.:)0-39.

Butcher Boars 33-38.!JO.
Fet.'tl~r Pigs : ( By t he head ) 10-35.
SHEEP PRICES :
Feeder Lambs45-55 . 7~

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in Forest Lawn Cemetery, Col um~
bus. Friends may call at the funeral
home at anytime.

Norma F. Johnson

/

Meigs happenings

St. Mary Magdalene Church. Burial
was in Resurrection Cemetery at
Delaware.
NAME LEFT OUT
Omitted from the obituary of
Harold E. (Baldy) Hysell was a
daughter, Patricia Shill of Ashley.
He is also survjved by a number of
nieces and nephews.

SHOTGUN STOLEN
Jim Werry, RD, Racine, infonned
the sheriff's department that his
shotgun was taken sometime Saturday between 6:45 p.m. and 7:30 p.m.
from his car which was parked at
the Ron Holter residence. The theft
is being investigated by the Meigs
County Sheriff's Department.

i~

Fined were Thomas-E. Hoffner,
Middleport, $225 and costs and three
days in jjlil, driving while intoxicated ; Paul R. Pullins, Mid·
dleport, $225 and costs ·and three
days in jail, driving while in·
toxicated; Ray A. Stewart, Letart,
W. Va., $225 and costs, three days in
jail, driving 'while intoxicated;
Richard T. Friley, Pomeroy, $100
and costs, disorderly manner;

Mich8el R. Hubbard, Syracuse, $10
and costs, improper backing; Chuck .
Pullins, Pomeroy, $100 and costs,
assault.
Four defendants were fined and
three others forfeited bonds in the
court of Pomeroy Mayor Clarence
Andrews Tuesday night.
Fined were Gerald Pullins,.
Pomeroy, $50 and costs, traffic light
violation; Ronald Coates, Pomeroy,

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BREEZE THROUGH
CHRISTMAS
WITH EASE
.
NEXT YEAR.
OPEN A
CHRISTMAS CLUB
ACCOUNT NOW

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SEEKS DIVORCE
Gloria Diane · Rasmussen, Mid·
dleport, filed suit for divorce in
Meigs CountYCommon Pleas Court
against Phillip Rasmussen, Mid·
dleport.
VETERANS MEMORIAL
ADMISSIONS-Blanche Scragg,
Rutland; Bessie Rudisill, Pomeroy.
DISCHARGES-,·Rhonda Hannahs, Jerry Owens, Freda Russell.
OPENINGDELAYED
The opening of the taxbooks in
Meigs County has been delaye¢,
Meigs County Treasurer George
Collins announced today. The books
normally open on Dec. 20. This year
they will not open until after the first
oftheyear,Collinsreports.

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per week
per week
per week
per week
per week

WASHINGTO.N
(AP)
Presldenwlect Ronald Reag~, on
the verge of 81UlOunclng moat of his
choices for Cabinet posts, Is meeting
first with a group of civil rights
leaders, many of whom suppbrted
JimmY Carter for re-etectloo.
·

The roster for Reagan's meeting
today with members of the National
Black Leadership Fonun Included
Caretta Scott· King, widow of the
Rev. Marlin Luther King Jr.; Vernon. Jordan, president of the
National Ur~ League; Benjamin

RECEIVE;
.. .. • .. • sso:oo
, • , • • • . • $100.00
. • . . • . . • $250.00
.. . • • • .. $500.00
••••. ••• • SI,OOO.OO

FREE GIFT WHILE THEY LAST

BETIER BANKING SERVICE, 1HAT1HES
:.111E CENTRAL IDEA.
II
We w I not
b
f
e open or
business
Friday, D~cember 26

•

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CENJRAL
1RUSf
coM·PANY

~

SUPPORTED REAGAN- Presldi!Dkled Rould ReagaD meets
willl a group of black leaders at tbe Blair HOUle In Wublnglon wednesday wbo supported Ilia election bid. f1a left are, Steplumle Lee
MOler; Helen Evml; musidaD l.A!ooel Hamptoa; Reapll; Cleveland
pablllberW. 0. Waller; 8DdArtTeele. (!PLa~rphoto)

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MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

!k&lt;~ ~lj;O(l!::!~S.::O:S.::O:S.::O:li'OI:~li'OI:IIII¥5:¥11A11li'OI:S.::O:ro::¥1111--~---------..!

~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;,;;,;;;;;~~~~~~~~====~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
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E. LB~RFELDS WAREHOUSE

Miners ~~Bell new pres~~
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DIUES B()Tl'OM, Oblo - The outcoJnc preeldent of United Mine
Workers Dlstrtct 8 predicts his succt!81101' will have trouble uniting his
members.

GLEASON IN HOSPiTAL
Meigs Local School District Supt.
David L. Gleason underwent
surgery this morniQg at Cleveland
Clinic. Cards may be sent at him in
care of the 'Cleveland Clinic, 9500
Euclid Ave., &amp;-Hospital; Room 5S02, Cleveland, Ohio, 44106.

Incwnbent Jolm Guzek was ousted by Ed Bell, 42, of Colerain, Ohio,
In voting Tuesday by the 18,000-member District 6, wblch covers all pf ·
Ohio and four northern W~ VIrginia counties.
,
The defeat; by 9 vote margin rl. 3,84&amp;-2,2'14, symboliZed ~rustratlon
by miners over the nation's financial problems and high wtemployinent in the industry, tied to government regulations limiting the
use of hli!IHulfur Ohio coal, Guzek said.

GIFTS FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY

Fu.pdinl{ leads to major conference

*COLOR TELEVISIONS

WASHINGTON - Funding for a proposed bridge over the Ohio
River in Northeast Kentucky has led to a conference betwacket $21.25
J25,99 BEEn LKedtucty and federal highway officials.
In essence, federal officlal8 said that sum for the bridge linking
Greenup County ani! PortSmouth, Ohio, would be coWJted in Kentucky's $134 million federal road allocation for this fiscal year.
The current bridge linking Greenup County and Portsmouth is the
only crossing within 30 miles of Portsmouth.
Language in a C91'lgressional conference report of the budget bill
signed by President Carter last week authorized separate. fun.
dlnganket L of the U.S. Grant bridge and another bridge in Hun·
tington, W.Va. .
·

. Be an AngeL Give
Flowers fOr Christmas.

Ohioan files suit in lwtel jUe
CLEVELAND- A Lorain, Ohio, man haS filed a $2 mlllion lawsuit
against the owners of the MGM Grand hotel-casino in Las Vegas,
charging negligence on,their pari.'! led to a Nov. 21 fire that killed 84
persons.
Robert H. Sidler, owner of a bait and tackle shop in the northem
Ohio city, said in bia U.S. DIBtrlct Court suit filed Wednesday that he
lllffered physical, mental and illeemotional injuries, including smoke
Inhalation, physical and mental shock and severe emotional anguish.

Bndgesn~s~lat~~e
Whctt
\ \ .I Y t l l

il \\'tHILic rftd
m:tkc merry.

NEW ORLEANS - A sniper attack on a major MisSissippi River
bridge which left thousands of motorl.sta stranded for several hours
was the fourth such WIIIOlved lncldent ln five years, pollee said.
No one was injured and there were no arreats in the Wednesday attack, in which at least seven shots were fired at a pollee station on the
Greatar New Orleans MiBslsslppl River Bridge.•Authorities said the
&amp;Ul'JII8ll fired from a 12«ory building ln the nearby Fischer Housing
Project.
The shots were fired as evening rusb-hour traffic was trying to

Wid1 fr c&gt;h tl.,wer,. Sc·nd :1 h,,lid,y ammge men t.
,, .
0 ~ a frL·sh , grec n.p lan.t.
.
\\c L &lt;t l l dd t \ ·~r ;. m ~· w h L· r~ Ill rhts area rmd
&lt;tlmt 1-, r at1y\\·he n.· 111 th i..' W11rki

s., cume hy. An d pic k nut ; ume specia l fl owers.

mah· ~u m eu ne\ huliday
heaven ly.
*Grave Blankets &amp; Wreaths
*Christmas Arrangements, Live,
Permanent, Silk
*Door Wreaths
* swags
~
*Candles &amp; Candle Rings
*Poinsettias
*Potted Plants
*Terrariums

It's a sure wa y

.---------....
The winner of
this week's no
gill certificate
is Mrs. Lloyd
Moore,
Oak
Street, 20
Pomerov .

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POMEROY ,FLOWER SHOP
Mrs. Millard Van Meter
Ph. 992·2039
106 Butternut Ave.
or 992·5721
Pomeroy, Oh.
we accept all . majqr credit cards, and we

-

Surviving twin still improving·

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stop in and register tor the s2o.oo gift cer·
titicate to be given away each Saturday,
and a $50.00 certificate to be given away
on the 24th .

Wire II01Netrs

Cfl"'ll, .

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DAYTON, Ohio- Slim- twin Natalie Waelder Is Improving after
surgery Wedneaday to Implant a tube that will relieve pres~ure on her
brain, hospital offldala said.
Neurosurgeoo Di'; Phillip Minella performed the. ~minute
procedure al Children's Medical Center, said hoepital spokesman

\

\.U.,...-J__..,.-

Phlllp Stoffall.

. .
The tube, called a shunt, was removed Nov. 21 because at an infectioo from IIUl'gery to ~le ' the twlnl. Natalie'•~· Valerie,
died Nev. 21 fromcompllcationllniurgerypet~meda week before.

SANTA CLAUS WILL BE IN .THE STORE.
THURS. 6-7:30 P.M., FRI. 6-7:30 P.M., SAT. 6-7:30 P.M.
"

SHO~ UNTIL· 8:00P.M. MONDAY THRU SATURDAY

ELBERFELDS ·1N POMEROY
J

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ijooks, executive director of the
NAACP; the · Rev. l.A!on Sullivan;
head of a black self·help
orgiUiization; and Mayor Richard
HatcherofGary,J1)d.
One member of the forum who
campaigned most actively for the
president had not responded
~y night to the Invitation to
today s meeting. ~e Is the Rev.
Jet~~~e Jackson of Chicago, who .flew
with Carter aboard Air Force One in
the closing days of the campaign and
stood behind the president when
Carter conceded defeat.
No agenda for today's meeting
was 81Ulounced. However, none of
the president-elect's Cabinet picks,
as reported by aides and other infanned sources, is black, which ill
expected to·be a matter of some concern to members of the forum.
In other developments, Reagan,
prepared to announce at least half of
his Cabinet-level choices, Is turning
·, to a leader of Wall Street to fill his
administration's most important
economic post, sources report.
Reagan planned to name Donald
T. Regan, chainnan of Merrill Lyn·
ch ·and Co., as treasury secretary
and fW seven or more other top ad' rnlni!tration posts at a news conterence today, said sources working
on the president-elect's transition
lei!Jn,
Other key economic posts were ex·

~ to go to Repubican Rep.
David Stoclailan of ~an, who
would become budget director, and
Connectlcqt industrialist.. Malcolm
Baldrige, in tine to be eornmerce
secretary, the sources said.
Aides have been urging Reagan to
make his key .economic ap· pointrnenls early so they could begin
to map strategy for confronting infiation, rising interest rates, unemployrnent and the threat of a new
recession.
Reagan planned to announce other
Cabinet johs for several close
political associates and veteran
Nlllon administration officials. They
ipclude:
William French Smith for attomey general, Caspar Weinberger
for defense secretary, William
Casey for CIA director, retiring Sen.
Richard Schweiker for secretary rt
health and human services, and
Republican Party depoty chairman
Drew Lewis for transportation
secretary.
·
A mystery shrouded Reagan's
choice for secretary of ~te, the
only top Cabinet post that might go
unfilled today, the sources said.
Retired Gen. Alexander M. Haig
Jr., the last White House chief of
staff under Richard M. Nil!on, reemerged as the leading candidate.
Some sources said tbey believed he
'", (Continued on page 10) .

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GLAD TO SEE YOU - President-elect Ronald Reagan standi in
tbe doorway of hl8 Um0118lne to wave to a 8lllllll crowd across tbe
streetfrom Blair House In Washington Wednesday. Reagan's schedule
Thursday calls for a fun day of meeting at the government residence
across tbe street lrom the While House (AP Laserpboto)

Grant ,approval given for study

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2 sections, 12 pages 15 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newseac~ .

Civil rights leaders
nieeting with Reagan

YOU MAKE 49 PROMPT PAYMENTS
WE MAKE THE 50TH!
INVEST
$1.00 ........
$2.00 ..•.••..
$5.00 . . ...•. .
$10.00 ........
. $20.00 .• . , •.••.

en tine

Ppmeroy-Middleport, Ohio Thursday, December 11, 1980

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V.ol. 21, No.' 169
Sopyrltllted .1980

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ASK TOWED
Marriage licenses were issued to
Richard Morton Richmond, Jr., 22,
Rt. 4, Pomeroy, and Belinda Lee
Whittington, 18, Rt. 4, Pomeroy;
Kenneth Ryan Wilt, 21, Minersville,
and Kimberly Eileen Glass, 17, Middleport.

$200 and costs and 90 days in Jail,
petty theft; Earl Phelps; Middleport, $50, squealing tire~~, and
Charles Landers, Minersville, $50, •
traffic light violation.
·'
Forfeiting bonds were Charles "
Cox, McArthur, $350, drivin&amp; while
intoxicated; Irene Jackson, ,
Wellston, $30, failure to yield right of..
way; Delores Tryall, Nitro, $30, left ..
ofcenter.
:

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e

courtr~oms

village

. Mostly eiwdy tonight and Ftiday with' a chance of 1110Wlale toni&amp;ht,
changin8 to shoWenl Frida)'. 1mr1 tonlabt in the upper a . Highs
FridaY in the mld-401. Qlance of precipitation 30 percent tontcht and
FpdaY. Winds li8ht and variable tonight.

Exteuded Oltlo F~- Saturday through Monday: Chance of
flurries and cold Saturday. Fair Sunday and Mooday. ~ In
the low to mld-211111 nonh to low 301 south Saturday, rillnllnto the 301
statewide by Monday. Lows in the Leens and low 211111 Saturday and Sltnday and In the 211111 Monday.

Oho Valley Synthetic Fuel,s, , Pit·
tsburgh, Wednesday received a $3.9
million grant from the Department
of Energy to conduct a synthetic
fuels feasibility stuily. The year-long
effort points towards p088ible conf!truction of a multi-billlori dollar
syhnfuelscomplexinMasonCouJtfy.
&lt;»¥o ValleY s~-FUIIIB 1.tt a
joint venture init181:eil by consolidated Natural Gas Comjlllny,
Pittsburgh, with Standard oil Com-

pany of Ohio, Cleveland, as a par- G.as Supply , Corporation,
ticipating partner. Consolidated Clarksburg, West Virginia.
(CNG) and somo will contribute an
In all, less than 100 of over 1,000
additional $1.2 mlllion to the study, proposals originally submitted to
whi~h will fonn the basis of a DOE were deemed sufficiently
decision on whether t~ proceed with proinising to merit financial support
full-scale development.
as a means of promoting the
The feasibility study will deter- strategic growth of America's bud:
mine ~t;'•,.&amp;.ll'l rl. ~a qaynfuelslndqstry;..
·
plant on
on tJi Ohio River _near
This study al.!o wfll detelmlne
Point Pleasanl More than 8011 acres whether a unique combination of
have been optioned by Consolidated proven and available technologies -

Tax hike ·may come after
COLUMBUS, Oliio (AP) - Senate
leaders say they don't lbelieve the
lame duck Legi$ture will enact a
tax hike before Christmas to solve
the state budget crisis.
Gov. James A. Rhodes, who Is to
address a joint session of the Senate
and House on Monday, said earlier
this week that he thinks the dilemma
can be solved - with a tax hike ,
budget cuts or both- by Dec. 22.
But Senate Finance Chairman
Harry Meshel, 1).Youngstown, was
doubtful about such a timetable and
wondered how many lawmakers

would show up for the midDecember session.
"I think some of them have planned trips, and othep; already may be
away," he said Wednesday.
Among . majority Democrats
whom Meshel has spoken to in the
Senate, none have shown a desire to
boost taxes in the closing days of the
197&amp;-1981 session, he said. " I don't
think there any sentiment of that
sort in existenQ!l," he said.
Republicans will take 111-15 control
of the Senate in the new Legislature,
which convenes Jan. 5. Democrats

.Wells among t;ommissioners
challenging constitution
CINCINNATI (AP) - Meigs
County Commissioner Henry Wells
of Pomeroy Is l!lllOflg 42 Of Ohio's
past and preaent COWJty commlsBioners challenging Ohio's Constitution In an effort to obtain equal
pay for all such officeholders.
The 6th U.S. Clreuit Court of Ai&gt;'
peals took the challenge under submission Wednesday after hearing
oral argwnent.s chall!'fll!lng the
legality of the 1976law. ·
All lncwnbents when the statute
WBll approved by the Legislature,
the 42 commissioners said they were
paid $4,139 less 11\an commissioners
who took office in lff17. Such action,
defined within 1 aectlon of Article II
of the Ohio Co1111titut1on, is
discriminatory and violalel the 14th
Amendment of the 'u.S. Conatltutlon,
the officeholders said in their brief.
The defendanta, 42 put .Ill' present
Ohio county auditors, aald the Ohio
Conatltutloo forblda granting raises
to incumbent offlclab - even
!hough 10111e ~oners may be
paid more than others.
t1le IIIJil8l}lllemmed from a ruling
by 1 federal diltrlet jqe in Toledo,
who clilrJu-d the auditors' suit in
February lflt.
Toledo · attorney Nick Batt,
. I'I!IJI'.elltlna the defendants, said
Ohio law does not live countY
auditors tbe allthortty or money to
jlllY the clalma liapt by the in·
cumbent commlalonen.
·Attorlle)'l for the Blldltors, defendinl tbe 4 1111'11811 pay prOvision, said
·the COIIIItitutloo "precludes said of.
' ficehoidM' from o; .-;.,.. 1+ ··"" "'' , I

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influence or official action to have
the legislature increase his salary."
" It has long been recognized in
Ohio and numerous other jurisdictions that restrictive provisions
against in-term pay raises ... are in
the interest of good governmeQt and
founded on sound reasons of public
policy," the audito~' lawyers said.

coal.

This combination will offer
signUicant advantages in both
economic and envirorunental areas
and will conflr!n the desil'abllity of
guJiflng- """"·

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Appalachian area coal has been a
(Continued onpage 10)

Chri~~mas

think the GOP should bite the bullet
on the problem at that time.
If Rhodes does propose'&amp; tax hike,
with or without"cuts, Meshel said the
governor will have tQ answer a
series bf quesiions before be'lllook
at the plan. Those questions include
the types of cuts, the amount of
money available and the kind of tax.
Meshel, who is to become the
Senate minority leader on Jan. 5,
met Tuesday witb a dozen members
of the Senate Democratic Senate
caucus. They took no position on the
budget problems as a group, he said.
Senate President Oliver Ocasek,
!).Akron, did not attend Meshel's
caucus at Mohican State Park near
Mansfield. He later said, however,
that trying to cope with the state's
budget deficit - at least $353.7
million and reportedly growing " will be difficult to do, unless he
(Rhodes) makes a strong case for
it."
'
Other Democrats in both houses
have expressed similar views and
criticized Rhodes for being willing to
support higher taxes after
promising in his gubernatorial campaigns that he would not do so.

.SCHOLARSHIP -Tile Melgalllgll ~ Scbolar' ship team recently defeated Froatier Local, 1'10-110, In
a televiRioD compelltion but loal In Hantlngton to
Ka&lt;·eland. K~ ., in a suddf,ri death ovPrtlme Pt'rlod. 22&amp;-

theTexacoandBGC/Lurgislagging
gasifers can comrtlercially
produce pipelin~uality natural gas
and methanol from Appalachian

Rhodes " should be held to his
promise and stand upon his no new
taxes platform,': said Rep. Benny
Bonanno, D-C leveland . The
lawmaker has said the deficit should
be made up by ending tax breaks on
corporations.
Bonanno Usted business tax exemptions, such as the direct use exemption which businesses get from the
saies tax. If the exemptions were ended, the additional revenue would
total $354.8 million, he said.
M~anwhlle, Rhodes still is trying
to brace the general public for
drastic action by the state to balance
its budget by June 30, 1981, the end of
the fiscal year, as required by law.
He's ordered a meeting of cabinet
members Saturday morning In
Colwnb!IS, a public session at which
citizens can ask questions about the
budget crisis.
The meeting follows a series of
news conferences held last week and
this week during which state warned
of drastic public service cuts If
Rhodes would reduce state spending ,,
further. So far, be's cut the budget 6
percent and hinted at an additional
10 percent slash.

!11. Tile teUa w11· cw t 1e apia Ill ............ :
probably Ill Mardi. t1le ll'OIIP flld1ldel, I 10 r, Bart:
YOQII(!, advller; David Willtet, Lori Rape, Robert Bar-·
moa, llarlllra 'l'llomaa IIIII Fred Y-..
·

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Commentary

The Daily sentinel .
. Page-

2

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1Qcsem b!r 11 , 1910

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.and other things

Whatever happened to the waterbed? .
It became a "comfort flotation
system," according to a recent item
. on the business pages that also takes
care of the question of what's in a
change of name.
In this case big business. The fad
of the super-trendy back in the '60s
has found a respectable If not yet a
really . mass market. In 1979, the
squishy constructions accounted for
5 percent of U. S. sales of sleep-rest
producers for a total of $750 million.
Familiarity apparently has made
the beds acceptable to an ·increasingly broader public. That and
nwnerous teclmlcal improvements
over the years. The better lines now
come in twin to super-king sizes and
are equipped with air tubes to
prevent excess agitation, interior
heating elements, bacteria-foiling
water conditioners and more. Including, just in case, insurance to
' take care of any unpleasantness
resulting from leakage or overstressed floors.
It's a marketing success story that
raises .the question of where the
comfort flotation systeQl can go
from here, short of a deluxe model
filled with Perrier water.
And don't think Neiman-Marcus
may not be considering just that for
next Christmas' his-and-hers super
gift.
SMOKING OUT THE
GARDENING FACTS
Firt there are the plots. Some 34
million of them tended by backyard
gardeners.
They represent 43 percent of all
American households, according to
a recent Gallup count conducted for
Gardens-for-All. Largely urban,

they work an average of some 600
square f&lt;1t!t to produce a signllicant
share of family produce needs.
Then there are the pots. Another 8
million Americans are coaxing table
vegetables out of containers on
patios and balconies.
Plits and pots may be very smallscale farming, but ihdds up to big
money. Total output of the home
gardeners at current market values
is figured at some $15 billion annually.
All that without figuring in that
other well-established category of
d(}-it-yourself gardening "- the pot
plots:

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Final days of the

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oesday nlgbt Tbe Soi: got Rick MUter, center, Carney
LuaiDr!l, seeoad from right and Mad: Clear in lbe
trade. (AP Laserphotol

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the liberalS can be contested by Vice . White House and control of the
President Wal6lr F. Mondale, whose Senilte, it also lost four goverSenate record would have ·J)ut him norships and scores of legislative
far closer ideologically to Kennedy seats.
Bill Brock, the Republican chairthan to Jimmy Carter.
·
One name not being mentioned man who barely escaped being
among the conteslants for party · purged last summer by conservative
leadership is Jimmy Carter. The . zealots backing Reagan, emerged a
week alter his landslide defeat, Car· political hero because of his deterter told reporters he might keep a mination to rebuild the party from
low profile in party affairs after the grass roots up. Brock poured
leaving office. He said he had no money into local party organizations
recommendation for someone to that gave the (IDP its strongest base
succeed John C. White as since the 1920s.
Democratic Party chairman.
The choice of a.new party chairFor a generation, Congress has
.man will be the first test of strength ·been a Democratic Party preserve.
within the party, as well as the first Now Republicaris control the Senate
indication of how the Democrats and the question is whether they
hope to recover from their 1980 build on that or whether the.
defeat.
Democrats come J'O;lring back in
years~go .
Not only did the party lose the 1982 or 1984.
Kennedy's claim to leadership of

control, the ultimate victors usually
are the individuals who emerge as
the dominant figures in the party
regardless of their base.
'
Republicans are more inclined to
developing ideological bases along
with those rooted in elective office.
When former President Gerald
Ford left office in January 1977,
Ronald Reagan's claim to party
leadership was his standing as
leader of the party's conservative
wing rather than his service as
governor of California. ·
At this stage of maneuvering
among Democrats, Sen. Edward M.
Kennedy of Massachusetts looks like
the individual with the sort of
national following comparable to •
what Reagan had in the GOP four

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Because of the special challenge iJi
Reagan's tpromise to cut government, Jennings has beerl"studying
the federal bureaucracy in recent
weeks. He is impressed with its
power. f
"Reagan may blunder if he
follows advice to strike out immediately aganst the bureaucracy,"
said Jennings. "As formidable as
the power of the presidency is, it Is
no match for the intractable
bureaucracy."
In effect, said Jennings, the new
president will be an enemy among

I
DAU..I\S (AP) ~The American
: League flnally got into the act at the
• • winter baseball meetings when the
: California Angels and Boston Red
~~ Sox made a fiv&amp;-player deal which
: included,a swap of Alh'itar shottatop
: Rlclt Burleson and young third
: bueinanCarneyLanaford.
;:- 1be Angels acquired Burleson and
;; third baseman Butch Hobson from
:; Callfornl!l Wednesday night for Lan• sford, relief pitcher Mark Clear and
; outfielder Rick Miller.
;
1be Angels-Red Sox deal was the
; first major transaction made by
:. AmeriCllll League clubs at these
: weeldong meetings. In all, seven
~ trades have been completed in: volving 34 plllyen.
: · Another major action Wednesday
.. was the signing by the Houston
: . Astros ~ utility player Dave Rober~- ts for $1.3 million over nve years.
! · Meanwhile, American League
: club owners · gathered today for a
: meeting to consider a second a\..- ~ by Edward DeBartolo to pur:_! chase the Chicago White Sox for' $20
:: million.
:
DeBartolo, whole offer was ac:: cepted by the White Sox
~ stockholders, was turned ~Oct.

:---------__;-___,
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Reagan must identify bureaucratic power

Once President-elect Ronald
Reagan has put the pomp and
ceremony of the inauguration
behind him he must obtain a map
that identifies the power centers in
the Washington bureaucracy.
If he seeks to attack that
bureaucracy without first determining who holds that power, says
Eugene Jennings, his efforts to "get
government off our backs" will be
doomed from the start.
"The natives will win," said Jennings, a professor, author and adviser to members of the corporate
hierarchy.

'

~!!led Sox-Angels compiete
.. '
~five player transaction

The ritual Republican -power struggle

Dear Sir,
grow to his fullest potential. It is also
I wanted to make the time to ex- our job to help people in our county
press to you and the people of Meigs to further understand !be needs and
County our sincere thllnks. The in· potential of persons with · mental
terest and support that has been retards lion.
shown by the people of Meigs County
We thank you and your staff for
towards the Board of Mental Retar- helping UB to make this job easier.
dation has given us all renewed We invite each person to visit the
energy.
school and sheltered workshop at
The job of starting a new school our first annual Christmas bazaar
and sheltered workshop has not been and bake sale on today, December
easy but the progress that has been 11, from9a.m . to4p.m.
made is a product of the sincere efDuring this Christmas season we
forts of parents, friends, board would like to again extend the inmembers, and staff.
·vitation to all people in Meigs CounOur job is to provide an en- ty to visit our programs at their convironment and experiencs that will venience.
allow each person in our program to
Chris and Carol Layh

'

ANGEUI AND RED SOX MAKE TRADE - The
: ·."lloltaa Red Sox traded Butch Hoblo11, left, and Rick·
- : llarleloa, HCOIId frvm left, to CalUonala Allgels Wed'

NO SMALL PRINT
NECESSARY
Second Thoughts on Headlines
Department:
t
"Alcobol risks described as too
complex for coverage in bottle warning labels."
(From The Washington Post,
reporting federal authorities are
dubious of the effectiveness of warnings on liquor containers, similar to
those on cigarette packages,
because of the complexity of the information that would have to be·conveyed. A report to congressional
WASHINGTON (AP) - While
committees considering bills on the Republicans are busy putting
subject noted that re&lt;!eiit studies in- together a government, Democrats
dicate the ill effects of alcohol con- · are beginning to fight ovei- who will
swnption can include increased risk assume their battered party's
of various cancers, adverse effects leadership.
on the heart, risk to the fetus during
The power struggle is a ritual
pregnancies, damage to the ner- common to Republicans and
vious system, aggravation of Democrats ,whenev~r eitlier party
gastrointestinal diseases and loses control of the White House.
emotional disorders including
As always, it is between the goverdepression and suicidal impulses.)
· nors and the congressional wing,
What about just 8 skull and cross- each group con'sidering itseH
bones? That's simple enough and uniquely qualified to be the out-ofconveys an unmistakable message.
power voice.
Several governors are pushing
Gov. Bill Clinton of Arkansas, one of
the Democratic casualties on Nov. 4,
for the pariy chairmanship. The
congressional wing hasn't settled on
a candidate for the job.
·
But while the two wings ~ontest for

Expresses thanks

.,-iliii'iltill;illt. . .

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Letter to the editor
.

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Southern, Eastern frosh
capture second victories
•

the natives, "and whether it is Viet- continued, is obtain a map from the
nam, Afghanistan or the Rose Bowl, natives about who are the people occupying these centers - determine
the natives have the advantage."
An intelligent "immigrant," said who does and ~ho doesn't know how
Jennings, "would know that to tum to exercise power.
an organization around he must first
find and control the center of gravity
To seek to overwhelm the centers
in each department and agency."
of ~avity from the top, through ap"It is the middle managers. Here pomtments by Reagan, W\Juld fail,
lies the real power of government. said Jennings.
They are the ones wbo have the · He explained that "directions
corning down from on top, as from a
greatest competency about the law, Reagan appointee, may be offset by
policy, rules and regulations," he bureaucrats reaching out to their
said.
constitoencies, who have a vested inWhat·the lmmigrants must do, he terest In their survival."

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-1llini.tops.Missour:!
remaining,

"I thought our pressure defense in
the first seven or eight minutes of
the second half made the difference," Henson sai~.
The Tigers, now 4-2, were led by
Ricky Frazier's 17 points.
Center Buck Willlalll8 hit 12 of 13
shots and scored 25 points and guard
Greg Manning blt eight of eight for
18 to pace Maryland ~er Fairleigh
Dickinson, who got 'ZI from Ken
Webb.
The Terrapins, ~. were tied 21-21
before pulling away with 15 consecutive polntll In a 2:14 span midway through the first half and a 14-2
binge after lntennisaioo.

!"

Le6anon results

In Washington

lEBANON, Ohio (AP)- Catha's
Bret captured the fi,OOO featured
pace mile Wednesday night at
Lebanon and paid $3, $2.110 and $2.20.
Skipper Goolle placed, $5 and $3,
and MJijor Storm, third, $2-ll!'·

The case against Cotton Incorporated -

By Robert Walters
One Agriculture Department ln- $120,000 in refunds from the govern- year, the case has been handled by
WASIDNGTON (NEA) - After vestigatlon concluded that Cotton ment-administered promotion fund the Justice Department in
conduc\ing at 'least five in- Inc. may have improperly spent tn 1977 and 1978 - the two yearil in Washington. ·
vestigations during the past two more than $6 million for equipment, which it paid $120,000 to Wooters.
Attorneys there are understood to
years, the federal government is executive-travel and television comThe alleged scheme to circumvent be considering three options: filing a
moving toward resolution of a scan- mercials.
.federal Ia w initially wati in- civil suit for recovery of the entire $3
allowed the GOP takeover.
An outspoken critic of Cotton Inc., vestigated by the Agriculture million payment · to Cotton Inc.
Morgan can be philosphical, as dal involving an agricultural trade
Rep. Paul Findley, R-Ill., charges Department's agricultural filing a civil suit to recover ~
when he presents this novel theory association called Cotton Inc.
But one of th~ options reportedly ·that the' organization is guilty of "a · marketing service, was bucked to $120,000 or taking no action at all.
for why he was defeated :
under
consideration is abandonment decade of squandering public and the department's illflpector general
If the last approach is chosen, the
"I ran out of votes on election
of
a
case
that
typifies
the
seamless
(industry)
funds,"
devious
ac'govenunent
and
then
to
its
general
counsel.
will owe the pubUc an
night shortly before I obtained
web
that
too
often
links
government
counting
tricks
or
hide
where
the
,
The
U.
S.
Attorney
tn
Los
Angeles
of why it failed to ·
uplanatlon
enough to win the election," he exofficials
with
the
industries
whose
money
was
going,
gross
reportedly
presented
evidence
in
the
pursue a case riddled
aggressively
plains.
activities they're sqpposed to mismanagement and heavy-handed ·case to a federal grand jury but with conflicts of Interest on the parts
failed to secure any criminal in- of both industry and federal of·
Rep. George Danielson, 0-Callf., regulate.
tactics to silence critics.
was going on and on in one of the
Some background: Industry lobIn 1975, Congress included tn the - dictments. For most of the past ' flcials.
closing days of the session about a bying efforts produced a 1966 law AgricultUre qepartment'ti appet bill when a page came up and calling for establishment of the Cot- propriation act a provision stating 1
whispered something in his ear.
ton Board, devoted to cotton that If Cotton Inc. wanted the final $3 r--------------------.;...;-~
"I will conclude my statement promotion, research and product million installment In federal funds,
even though I have been asked to sit development.
no employee of the trade association
down," Danielson grumbled out
couldearnmorethanthesalarythen
loud. "I will not sit down."
The statute specified that funding paid to the secretary Or agriculture.
Apparently, somebody in the.,_ for those activities was to be
Thatfigurewas$82,250peryearHodse leadership had dispatched the provided through mandatory fees, but J. l'ukes Wooters Jr., president
page to urge Danielson to shorten his currently about $2 per bale, levied of Cotton Inc., was earning '121,2'15 ·
speech.
on cotton producers. All20 members annually, almost twice as much as
of the board were to be selected by the legally imposed celling.
In what was publicly touted as a
When President Carter signed a the Agriculture Department.
ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
But the Cotton Board . delegated "personal sacrifice," Wooters ac- ·
bill protecting millions of acres of
Alaskan wilderness, one spectator virtually all of its work - and the · cepted a drastic pay . cut so his
jumped up with a small pocket . money collected under govenunent :organization ostensibly could comBOB HOEFIJCH
supervision - to Cotton Inc., a ply with tile federal law.
camera to capture the scene.
a,.;...-._
But subsequent evidence reporBut it wasn't Carter that country private corporation that has
singing star John Denver was received more than $150 million tedly showed that the country's
DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
focusing on but Rep . .Morris K. from the check-off system since largest cotton producer, the Los
'Angeles-bssked J. G. Boswell co.,
Udall, D-Ariz., a sponsor of the bill 1967.
Cotton
Inc.
also
was
given
more
hired Wooters as a $80,000-per-year
champi9fled by envirunmentallsts.
than
$28.8
million
from
the
federal
"consultant" for two years, from
Denver, an environmental activist
treasury
between
1972
and
1976,
but
late
19'76 through late 19'18.
and amateur photographer, snapped
disclusure
ci
a
series
•
of
exThat
annual retainer was almost
his pictures as Udall got a standing
ovation in the East Room of the truvaga11t, if not improper, ex- identlcpl to the•slze of Wooter's pay
White 'iouse at the signing penditures led Cnn~rt-ss to halt thltl cut. In . addition, Findley says,
· practice.
Boswell requested and l'~ived
ceremony.
1

FLORENCE, Ky. (AP) -Aim To
Be In Paris, ridden by Antonio

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se.

Mike Collins led the winners with
14 points, Jimmy Newell eight, Tim
Probert seven, Troy Guthrie five,
and Robert Maison added four.
Marcum again had a good outing
for the yhoung pirates with 15 points
to lead all scorers. Pickens added
eight, McGuire four and Blackburn
two.
Eastern is now~ -

r------------

EAST MEIGS - The Eastern
freshmen of Coach Buddy Moore
defeated SVAC foe North Gallit3629, behind a good defensive effo in
the second half here this week. r
TheEaglesjwnpedtoanarrowl(}.
9 lead in the first period, then
faltered in the second canto to fall
behind 19-14 at the hall.
As in the initial outing, the Eagles
trailed ~23 at the third period buzzer.
rn the final round, the victorious
Eagles took a page from Cleveland's
"Kardiac Kids". The winners were

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f""!IIIIIIAIIIIO:OIIAII!IIII 1'&lt;0&lt; !llllliW l01Ulo;{!&amp;,

r-------------1---_:__________

WHO SAYS SO?
THE ·
U. S. GOVERNMENT
THE

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21

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.,.,_eot
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auu
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AXE
lnMI .,,,~ 11 ,
of

••nile

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TEST llltl " lilt ~too of oil "II" ... .
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lo ooe of IIItst lnbl tub, Auu

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No other Microwave Oven maoofacturer in the world
has earned this U.S. Government exemption.

MEN'S &amp; WOMEN'S

THE
SHOE BOX

Middleport, Ohio
Free Parking
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•

MOORE'S HAS A LARGE SELECTION OF
CHRISTMAS GIFT's AND DECORATIONS .

.

Moore's American Hardware
124 w. Main Street
Pomeroy, OHio
·
Phone: 992·2848

PM1 Gin WRAPPING

ERITE SHOES
Pomeroy, OH .
.i
·'

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Eliminates "Tumtallle". No motor required to
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RANGES AS LOW AS
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OPEN TILL 8 TILL CHRISTMAS

INGEl'S FURN. &amp;'JEWELRY

992-3639

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No Purchase N•ssary

' There's Som·eting for Everyone
At Moore's

I·

SHOPPE

"'""' ~it tilt door mf •• filii
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credited with an outstan.ding second
half noor game, especially on defen-

HIGH STYLE
BOOTS

The Daily Sentinei

"

Perrin four , Chris Burdette and
Evans two each.
Southern was six of 12 from the
line for 50 percent and Meigs three of
13 for 23 percent.
In Southern's opener against North Gallia, the Tornadoes won 32-25.
Wade CoMolly led Southern with
nine points, Dale Teaford 7, Tony
Deem and Jason Hill six, and Tony
Riffle four.
Marcwn led North Gallia with 12,
Lee Six, Pickens five and Blackburn
two points.
Coach Hensler's Tornadoes travel
to Eastern tonight.

Costa, ·slogged down a muddy home
stretch W:ednesday night to win .the
$5,500 featured eighth race at
Latonia 6y half a length.
Winning time for the mlle was
1 ' 40 -~ an~ the pa.yoff was $8, $3.80
and $4. Mickey J1ver was second,
$5.20 and $4, and the show horse,
Clear And Straight, $4.60.
The 9-7 double paid $115 with Sunny You're Late and Patarctic Prince. .Attendance was 2,839 and the
mutuelpooltotaled$387,183.

ASPEN

half and fell behind 68-47-with 8:53

The Daily .Sentinel

RACINE - Coach Bill Hensler's
Southern Torando freshmen basketball squad recently defeated Meigs,
48-31 for its second straight win. ·
For Soutll.ern, the victory didn't
come easy. The first period was very
close. Meigs led i&gt;-2 at this point.
In the second period, the two
Meigs county schools battled to a 1715 score with Southern ending up on
top.
The second half, especially the
third. quarter was·all Southern's. In
that period the · ~ers outscored
Meigs 19-2 to lead 36-17, then stayed
even with the Marauders the last
round to capture the 48-31 win, capturing its second win in a row. Meigs
fell to 3-2 on the season.
Kevin Curlman led the winners
with 14 points, Tony Deem pitched in
eight, while Dennis Teaford, Wade
Connolly and Corey McPhail each
•added six. Jason Hill and Paul
Harris also two points, and Tony Riffle four.
·
Meigs' Nick Riggs led all scorers
with 17 markers. Barr has six,

Latonia results

·
24,whenhefelltwovotesshortofthe
"Jthlnkthetradestrengthenso\!1'
10 necessary to get the franchise.
club, .. said Ralph Houk, the new Red
In the Angels-Red Sox trade, both Sox manager. "We have had 11 kid
clubs felt they had strengthenoo (Hoffman) playing third base who
themselves considerably.
ought to he at shortstop and thai's
"We bave obtained one of the where we'll play him," said Houk.
finest shortstops (Burleson) In "We got a ftne reliever in Clear and
baseball," said Angels' Manager Millercanbeafourthoutfielder."
Jim Fregosi.
1be Red Sox aren't through .
Burleson had .been •having dif- wheeling and dealing They'r~ still
ficulty negotiating his Salary with trying to trade outfielder Fred Lynn
Boston. He and Hobson will move who is in the last year of his coO:
right toto the California starting in- tract. The Los Angeles Dodgers and
field, whichfeaturesBobbyGrichat New York Mets appear the main
second and Rod Carew on first.
contenders for him.
Hobson lost his third base job at
Boston to rookie Glenn Hoffman last
1be Mets said they had made a
season after ell)leriencing elbow concrete proposal for the outfielder,
problems that required surgery. The but refused any details.
Red Sox plan to move Hoffman to his
Acquiring Lynn likely would help
original potiltion at shortstop the Mets in their quest to sign outreplacing BurleSon, giving the third fielder Dave Winfield, this year's
base job to Lansford.
'
most sought after free agent. WinLansford, 23, hit .261 with 15 home .field repOrtedly had narrowed his
runs and 110 RBI In 151 games last choice to the Mets and New York
season for the Angels. Clear, who . Yankees, but was waiting to see if
was ll-11 as a reliever, gives Boston the Mets strengthen themselves at
needed bullpen help.
this meeting.

96th Congress
WASIDNGTON (AP) - The
Democratic-controlled, lame-duck
96th Congress is having its last
hurrah, preparing to leave the
capital for the Republicans who will
arrive here in droves in January.
But before calling it quits for the
year, some Democrats are trying to
be philosophical about the big GOP
victory that delivered the Senate into Republican hands for the first
time since the rnid-1950s.
·
Mississippi's John Stennis·, who
may lose more power than any other
Democratic senator when the
Republicans take over, Says he'-s
seen it all before - one of the few
members of Congress who can make
such a claim.
Stennis was asked, "Senator,
you've been around a long time.
What will it be like when the
Republicans take over?"
Smiling, he recalled:
"Well, I was around bere the last
time they controlled the Senate,
when Eisenhower was presideht.
They refused to give me any office
space and put me and my desk out in
the hall for a while."
Stennis, whose term extends
through 1982, will likely receive better treatment this time around,
· • whereas Sen. Robert Morgan;" DN.C., would proballly take that desk
in the hall, gladly, if it were offered
him.
But it won't be. Morgan was one ol
the 12 Democrats whose defeat

I

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·What's in a name.
•

The Daily Sentinei~Page-S

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

TWO-IN-ONE STORE
106 N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Oh.

�•
\,

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Page-6 The Daily Sentinel

·Aro~nd

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Meigs County

NEW ARRIVAL
. Mr. and Mrs. Paul L. McDaniel,
Jr. of Middleport a!'l) aqnouncing the
birth of a son, Paul L. ~cDaniel m.
Born at Pleasant Valley Hospital on
Nov. 211, the- infant weighed eight
pounds, two ounces and was 22 inches long.
Grandparents are Mrs. Margaret
L. McDaniel and the late PaulL. McDaniel, Sr., Middleport; Mr. and
Mrs. Wesley Clark, Racine. Greatgrandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Ar·
thur ~r. Middleport and Mrs. Inez
Ash, Racine. The great-greatgrandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Roscoe Hollon, Cheilter, and Mrs.
Flora Anna Barr, Leon, W. Va.
, (l'he infant was welcomed home by
a sister, Michelle Dawn.

Miss Clonch has birthday

in the senior high auditorium. DireCting will be Lee lee, vocal music
supervisor, and Joeeph Malesick, in!!~rurnental supervisor.

CON(;ERTTUJ!;i;DAY
The Southern Higb School CIIPir
and Band will be presented in a Chlrstmas concert at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday

JAYCEES
PROGRAM UNDERWAY
The Meigs County Jaycfli'S are
running their annual Toys. for Tots
program again tbts year. Anyone
wishing to donate toys may drop
them off at Kroger's, Hartley Shoe
Store, or Mullen Insurance Agency.
For further information please _call
Bruce Reed 111 992-2370 or Mike
Mullen at 992-3453.

CHURCH GUEST SPEAKER
The Rev. Ralph Dean, Hlll)tington,
W. Va., will be the guest speaker at
the Zion Freewill Baptist Church,
Lower Plains, Athens; Sunday
beginning at 7::J() p.m. Special
singing will be provided by . the·
Beulah Quartet from Chesapeake.
The public is invited.

l' vmeroy-Middleport, O!Ho

pecember 11, 1980

Christm.as safety--.
a seasonal concern
'Tis the season to be cautious
'·

"Til the 8aaoa to be C.Utleua'/.
By Fruklla C. Petrie, Jr. 1

-checking is better at BANK

retiring or leaving the bouse.

Children are ·attracted to the
Depaty Healb CoiiUIIllaloaer · colorful holiday plants. Holly and
Tbe Meigs County Health mistletoe berries that are
Department hopes you will have.) · eated can cause vomiting and
a joyous Holiday Seaaon and with diar:rhea. Angel hair is sp)lll glass
tbts In mind, we would· like to which can cause severe skin
$Ire a few safety reminders.
irritationS.
This time of the year usually
Cbri.stmas is a time for giving,
. means celebraUOIIS, reunions, bllt l~'s give safety. Wben buying
. gift~! and we hope happy times.
toys tbts holiday seaaon, keep In
Some accidents are unique to mind the 'yoimgster's age, inthe Christmas seasilns, such as terests and skill level. Look for
those resulting from carelessness , quality design adn construction
in selecting, decorating and In all tOY,S. Make sure tbat all
safely maintaining Christmas directions or instructions are
trees. To reduce tbe fire hazard clear to you and to the child. Be a
from Christmas trees, select a label reader. Watch out for toys
fresh tree. To belp the tree ab- that have sharp edges, small parsorb moisture, make· a slanted t8 or sharp points. Avoid toyhs
cut across the base, then stand that produce extremely loud
the tree in water from tbe time noises tbat may damage hearing
you buy it until you dispose of it. and also those that propel objects
Water daily. Keep the tree away that could Injure eyes. Rememfroml'egistersoropen.flreplaces. ber, lor your child's safety,
Perhaps the most likely source examine your toy purchases.
of fire for a tree is the electric · When the excitement of unlights. Check all Christmas tree wrapping the gifts is over, never
lights for broke sockets, frayed burn the wrap, boxes or other
wires and loose· connections. paper producta In the fireplace.
When buying new setS, look lor Rather, have a big box bandy and
the Underwriter's Laboratory put aU discarded sltings, bows,
lilbel. Be sure ornaments and tin- etc.,. into it and discard apse! cannot come into contact with proprlately.
the lights; This could cause short
Let's all work together to make
circuits. Always be sure to tum it. Home Safe Home. as well as
off the ~ lightinll before Home Sweet Home.

ONE,

The Daily Sentinel
HONORCIRCLETOMEET

Food for Thought

techniques and meth()ds

.

By ; i~lyrue l:tark and Annie Muon
· EFNEP Nutrition Aides

Meigs County Cooperative
Exte111lon Service
Gifts From Your Kltcben
Homemad~ gifts are often the one,s
that are most enjoyed because the
friend or relative . knows the
homemaker has cared enough to
personally prepare his gifl 't's also
a good idea to give gift food because
the homemaker doesn't have to
spend, a lot of money or shop in a
crowded store. This Christmas, give
someone special a present with your
own personal touch. ·
Almost any food prepared at home
can be given as a Christnuis gift.
Much of the fun of making gift foods
is in selecting the wrappings.
•Sometimes the nicest gifts are
packaged in containers ot wrapping
that can be used after the food has
been eaten. Surprise a favorite
friend or relaive by wrapping a
homemade gtft in a kitchen utensil.
Think about ~ lavonte f~ d.
peoPle on. the gift list.and use a bttle
unagination. Below 1s ~ 11&lt;:1 M ,;It

MASON FURNITURE

MASON FURNITURE ·

~

•

·Sentinel SOCial Calendar
TIIVRSDAY
SHApE RIVER WDGE 453 open
installation of officers ThU!"Sd8.y at
7:30p.m.

There is a lack

of interest
under there
Save here, where your money
earns interest. Pick your plan :
REGULAR SAVINGS or CERTIF ·
· ICATES OF DEPOSIT.

•

-

1980 RENAULT
JOMPG
EPA Est.

Highway 1

499500

Brownie news reported
TROOPO 1220
.
Salisbury Troop 1220 Girl Scout
met· at the school and made Christmas stockings and cards. These
items will be presented to the
residents of the County Infirmary
before Christmas.
Plans wre made for another
Christmas project and a party.
Refreshments were served.

ALL

MD.
NEED IS

I

New teen club forms

TROOP1120
The Syracuse Brownie Troop 1120
held an investiture and rededication
service Dec. 4. Those girls receiving
Brownie pins were Tammy Buckley,
Amber Cumings, Christina Eynon,
Robin Foley, Stacey Fry, Michelle
McCoy, Buffy Merrifield, Kerrie
Mullen, Renee Russell.
Leaders of the troop, Mrs.
Margaret Pizzino and Mrs. Martha
Graves advised that the troop participated in both the Middleport and
. Pomeroy Christmas parades.

plan ·

New Year's Ball set

One way or the other,
TWO will pay you daily interest
on all your money in the bank.* You ·can keep your balance at
$1000 or more and pay no monthly fees or charges.** If your
balance falls below $1000, you'll still earn interest on every dollar
you have in the plan. Sure, we'll charge you a $5.00 fee for that
month, but if you subtract the interest you earn from the fee yoy,
pay, you'll still have one of the most economical checking plans
available. And we eveh have a way for business customers to /
earn interest on their excess balances.

•

.

'•

Spending a week withSyhlvia Carman,Long Hollow Road, during deer
season, were her 80118, Gary and
Ronald Cannan of ColumbWJ, grandsons, Ronald Carman, Jr.and
Dbnald Crman and a friend, all of
Colwnbus. Bruce ruid Dan Cannan, sons of
Mrs. Carman. who 8!11 students at
Bell and H~ College, Columbus,
spent the weekend with their
mother.

RIVERSIDE AMC.JEEP
RENAULT

BAHR CLOTHIERS
~--~-------------·---~-,

I

I
I

I

CHRIS~AS GIFTS FOR 'THE

LADIES, ON SALE NOW!
.SKI ftlo)

~ 'W\«

OFF

LU/0

1· tpTS m OFF ·
~

I1

G&lt;MNS &amp;.ROSES
20% OFF
HATS, GLOVES,
SCARVES 20% Off
Selected.Gro_!lp . _.

I DRESSES .4().50% OFF:
I

I

,

Selected Group

COORDINATED

I

i
;

·s~ 30% ~~
Selected Group ,

lOPS 40% OFF
1 Group

JEANS 'l(P12 OFF
· Sign Up For

·~pnn.
.&amp;.I
I-""';

~
I

~

Member FDIC

30%~F

I1

GIFT
CERnRCATES 1
Drawing 13th &amp; 20th ' W

WESTCLOl

NATURAL SPRAY COLOGNES

ALARM CLOCKS

$2&amp;9

30%' OFF

CHRISTMAS

CHRISTMAS
Gin WRAP

ONLY

.

Pomeroy • Rutland • Tuppen Plllns

Registration Deadline: · You m~,Jst register by Dec. 12, 1980 (Rio
Grande n\ervet the right to ca11cel the class in the event ot an
enrollment of less than 20 persons.&gt;

-·

. l MemberFDIC

By : American Greetings .
3 Rolls
Reg . S2.75

BAG OF 25

BANK ONE. .

· BANK,~O_....E·oF~ POMIROY.-_NA

;

BOWS.

To Register- Contact the office of Continuing Education at
·
Rio Grande College, Rio Grande, Ohio
'
, Phone 24S-S~53 Ext. 255

ONLY

69~

.PRICES
GOOD
THROUGH
SUNDAY

ONLY

5 lUI 5 HER LOHSE
Phar c"TlOC y
11..-.~tlll

MIC IIIttlltfl , II . l"h,
C~ ..l .. ltilflt, It, l"h .
lttRtllfHUR I"f.- 11. ~~M.n, !llrV h i, I ; OC • · '" !Of !II,"' •

lu"'•~ lt :Hto 111:10 u~! tot~ -"' ·
'llli(JII~TION $
I'M.
11'~1...,1, Strvl'•

,

II

m -"H

Il..I~M~:: __ \.~~~:~~;"__:,•-' -+-'

,..
,-1 '

REG. '4AO

TABU or AMBUSH
2.4 oz.
REG. '3.75

cost: S6() - Includes 30 hours of instruction at level of ability .
equ.i pment rental, s.ki lift tickets.

&lt;

' 1nterest one bUSifless day alter defX)SII
· Au tunas 1Jeg1n ezrn1ng
'*There IS a S 15 charge lor all transactiOns 1h excess of 40 per month.
Al1 monev 1S kept 1n" the sav1ngs account ot Ihe CHECKING TWO ptan .
and I he checktn(l actount cameS a zero balance. When you wr~le \1
check. the morev 1S automatically transferred from !he savtngs account
to the c hec~1 ng accou nt and tt1e remainder or !he s ~ v 1 ng s tH.:cowll
b&lt;ll a11Ce OQrlttnues to earn da11y 1ntmest

'-

CHOCOLATES
1 POUND

WHERE: LOGAN HIU.S SKI CENTER, LOGAN, Dtl.

'

WHITMAN'S SAMPLER .

LIGHTERS

SKI SCHOOL
.

ta

11

TWO'SPOMEROY
COMPANY
I
.
!
L
----------------------~

JAN. 7, 14, 21, 28 &amp; FEB. 4
TIME: 4 P.M. 10 10 P.M~

'

3RD ST., RACINE, OH.
Member FDIC

Gift Certificates- Lay-A-Ways

WHEit: FIVE CONSECUTIVE WEDN.ESDAYS

SIGN UP NOWI
CHECKING TWO is
much'better than a regular
checking account.

'

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

aDSING AT 5:00 p.m. QiRISJMAS EVE

~
Spend week with mother , I

the·interest

Plans have been finalized for the
.annual Pomeroy New Year's Ball
staged bY the Pomeroy Fire Depart·ment. The event will be held on Dec.
31 at the Pomeroy Elementary ·
School. Red Stewart's band will
provide tbe music. Only a limited
number of tickets are being sold. At
$15 a couple, they may be purchased
at the G. and J., the New York
Clothing House or from · any member.
WINNERS NAMED
Winners of gift certificates at the
Custom Print Shop which opened at
214 E. Main St., Pomeroy, recently,
wre Ruth Ann Bullard, Debbie
Chevalier and Marie Curd, all of
Pomeroy. No purchase was
necessary.

Meigs CoWity has a new .club for
Clu~, spon.sored by Alternatives, a Community
Mental Health Center Program. The
club is open to teens between the
ages of 12 and 18.
The next meeting of the
RecreatiOJI Club will be held at the
Meigs County SeniQr Citizens Cen- .
ter, Mulberry Heights in Pomeroy:
1bere will be 1a Christmas ArtsCrafts fair and refreshments.

teens, the Recreation

•

now' th...; Dec.
ll•t. J •rfi~lf. More on the w•y.

HOURS: 9:30 a.m. til 8:00 p.m•

Rutland TOPS OH 1456 will hold Its
Chri.ltmas party Dec. 16, .it was
decided when they met recently.
Members 8!11 to bring a covered
dish ariel a gift for a gift exchange.
Queen of the week was Freda
Davis and Kathy Marcwn was runner-up. The queen was presented a
dollar and song in her honor~

.

Deli'ver~ric•

I

TOPS news reported

•

LeCAR 40MPG

1

•

ANNUALPARTYPLANNED

.

The anual Christmas party of the :
Pomeroy Fire Department . and ·
Emergency Squad has been set for :
'
Dec. 20 at the Pomeroy Fire Statton.
food ideas.
Followin~ dinner at 6:30p.m., there
Foods to Give as Gifts
will be a dance.
Ginberbread boys and girls with ....-----------------~-----.....:.
names printed in white frosting inside a 2 cup glass measuring cup;
SHOP •
Drop. cookies wrapped on top of a
cookie sheet;
Fruit bars inside an outmeal, cornmeal or grits box wrapped in
FOR T HE BEST DEALS IN THE TRI ST·A TE AREA
· Christmas paper;
.
Individual pie ta~ ba~ed in
custard cups and covered with
Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday &amp; Saturday
plastic wrap and ribbon;
8:30 to 5:00, Thursday till12 noon
Bottle of homemade salad
dressing;
OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT ONLY
Jar of fruit or vegetables canned
HERMAN GRATE
773-5592
Mason, W.Va.
last summer;
Pe!!nut butter or chocolate fudge
in a square baking pan ;
~riiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.
. Popcorn balls in 8 large mixing I
1
oowl;
·
A loaf of fresh baked plain bread
covered with plastic wrap and gift
wrapped in a prettyu dish towel and
ribbon;
Braided yeast bread decorated
with icing and green and red gum
. . drops on glass serving plate.

literary Club discusses work

YOU
A BIG BALANCE
ONE OF THE

Page-7

The Honor Circle ol United
Methodist Church will meet .at the
home of Mrs. Vernon Weber at 7:30
p.m. Thursday. There will be a $3
gift exchange.

'·

Group hears of CPR
The Ohio EIA - PHI Chapter of
Beta Sigma Phi met December 2 at
at Meigs Inn. Santa visits were .
discussed and a schedule made.
Social chairperson, Vicki Ault,
reminded m~mbers of the dinner
and gift exchange Dec. 16 at Lois
Kelly's home. Members should meet
in the parking lot at 6: 15 p.m.
• • President Kathy Cummings advised
that members of the other local
sorority chapters are welcome to attend the couples Christmas party
·Dec. 20.
The cultural report was presented
by Jenny Smith, who introduced
. Roger Hysell, speaking on life
saving techniques for choking victims; he encouragted members to
take first aid and CPR courses.

December 11, 1980

I

$159
OPEN
EVERY NIGHT

nL
9:00

�Pom ~roy

Page-8- The Da i ty sentine l

Honor rolls
announced

Rusty Fls~ , P.~tul H.11rrili, Cu~y McPhail, x •

June Manuel, Unda Proffitt, Aliee Riffle, MiHsy

Hysell, MJchelle Petenoo, Ruth Porter, Lisa

Wolfe .
x - Denol~all A's,

Searles, Denny Welsh.
EMR 1- Joel Porter.

PRIMARY EMR II - Rickey Fraley, Clalt

Swan. Chuck WIM.
The Ru.U&amp;nd
Elementary School has aMounced the honor roll

ror the second sll weeks grading period. Students malting a "8" or above in all their grades
were:

GRADE I - JoCinda Ferguson, Amy Herald,
Danny McDonald, Tammy Jo Miller, Kevin
Musser, Miranda Nicholson, Johnny Rose, Denis
Searles, PbiWpSmith, Marjorita Tromm.

GRADE 2 - Rormea Davis, Amber Eblin.
Angie EUiott. Mike Flnk, Carolyn Fitchpoa.lrick,
April Grover, BW Hysell, Tomm.y Jennings; Jim

Debra :tleachem, Mindy Morris, Raeleen OUvcr,

Kingery, Tracee l.eark, Ryan Lemley, Tracy

Milam, Derek Miller, Erice peterson, Ronnie

Roush, x • Meunoa Sallpons, x • Rita Sloter, x
ElaineSmllt), I . Renee Smith, Randy 1Ucker, x •
o\nn Williams, Krystal Winebrenner, Mary
WinebreMer, x- Kent Wolfe, Jackie Zerkle.
1. •

StiWer, porothy Warner. x . l...llren Wulle, Tony

RUTUND El...!:MENTARY -

Kelly Pickimll.·' · .J :ll)' Raes, Debr1:1. Rose, Paul

Riggs, DaMy Robinson Kevin Taylor, Jodi
Tillis, SteDhanie Walker.
GRADE 3 - lb.&amp; Darst, Billy Docli, Kimberly

Eblin. Natalie Tromm, Mike Walls, Eric Walker,

Kathy Baker, Zane

•

INT. EMR - Kimlln'ett,DavyCoolin. Waller

Haggy , CHris Hysell, Nicky McKnight.
Ll) I - Vaughan Mitchell, Wayne Runyon, Cindy Smith.
•
.
lD II - Shane Smith, Robert Spean, B&lt;&gt;bby

Lambert.

.

GRADE · - Tosha O'NeU, Kimberly Calvert,

Drearna Benb, Kimberly Hamr"nt DeAnna Henderson, Dena Manley, Chriatooh&lt;r Smith.
GRADE 8 - S1101111 Kino. Steve Mu.soer, Rax

(ll) OVER EASY Guest : Soprano
and actreaa Kathryn Grayson .
H osta:HughDownsa ndFrankBialr.

HaggY,, Jennifer Swartz, Jennifer Couch, Huey.
Easoo, Cheryl Rousl&gt;.
.

HONOR ROU. - The honor roll for the second
weeks grading period at the Pomeroy
Elementary School has been announced. Student:! making a "8 11 or above in aU Qteir subJects

EMil, Primary - Rulh Walsh, Jeanie Arml,
Cliodes CwuUnglwil, Larry Davidson, Todd
Kenned)r, Bronson Laudennllt, Susan Manley,
Jesse MorTI..I, Mary Morton, Jen-y Reitmire,

GRADE ) - Michael Roush, Micah Bunch,
Jeremy Dean, John Harrison, Jeremy Heck,
Joey McElfoy, Melissa Neuttling, Keith Smith,

Barbara Coleman, Toni Rutter.

sill;

afld IUUlled to the roll were:

Julie Buck, April Tannehill, Kyle Shaeffer.
GRADE2 - Nikki Shaffer, Kelly Smith, Emily

four ordinary words.

EVENING
G:OO (1) 8 (!J CJ CI)@)(j2J e NEWS
Cil BACKYARD
Cil CAROL BURNETT ANO
FRIENDS .
CIJ ABC NEWS
Cll 3-2·1 CONTACT

ner.

THI! DOCTOR!&gt;
COIVI! HIM ANOTHSJl.
WEEK AT M05T! VOU
CAll CHE!CI&lt; ME OUTAND I'l.l. SI"N OV!:~
E:VERY CE"'T!

WIIAT l&lt;lfiii&gt;A .
IOUNTY V'OFFI!RIIJ'
ON THI~ MA,.IA

POU!CATl

(C iosed-Caplioned;U.S.A.)
8:30 CIJ it (I) NBC,NEWS
CIJ PAUL AND MONA
CIJ BILLYSMART'SHOUDAY C!R•
CUS Step right up tor the beat Big
Top extravaganza of many cirpua
tavoritefli :

CIJ BOB NEWHART SHOW

EMR. lntermedlale - Ricky Gibl&gt;a, Melissa

(j) FACET~ MUSIC

Perrine, Lori Price, Roonie Powell, Robin
Qualls, Cathy Laudmnll~ Chuclde Jacko.

D CIJ®l CBS NEWS

( XJ

I YEEND

6:58 (}) NEWS UPDATE
7:00 Cil 8 PM MAGAZINE
C1l COME TO THE WA 'I"ER
CIJ ALLIN THE FAMILY
CIJ(ji) QI FAIIILYFEUO
C1J BACKSTAGE AT THE GRANO
DLEOPRY
III CIJ TICTACDOUGH
CIJ (jj)
.· MACNEIL•LEHRER
REPORT
@I NEWS
7:30 [f) 8 BULLSEYE
(}) ZOLA LEVITT
C!J FOO'rBALL: INSIDE THE NFL
Cil SANFORD ANO SON
. Cil Ill JOKER'SWILD
C1J HOLLYWOOD SQUARES
(I) (jj) DICK CAVETT SHOW
@ MATCH GAME
&lt;Him FACE·THE MUSIC
7:58 (}) NEWS UPDATE
8:00 CI&gt; U ill GAMES PEOPLE PLAY

I

~TECHIC

IJ I

A H
SHE' D

THOUIO&gt;HT
GET
~tC:.H WORKINGFOR THI5.

Now arrange'

CJ I I 1)

WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
@ MAGGIEANDTHEBEAUTIFUL

·~

J

__ .,.

b
I KX
w ,:-""'-~-·

(I)

~~~~:c NEWS

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
byHenriArnoldandBobLet'

one letter to each SQuare, to form

DEC. 11, 11180
G!IADE &lt;- Nlrole BWICh, Belh Ewing, SonJa
Steele, Melissa Woods, Sheni Blllir, Carolyn
Elam, Terry Fields, Jeff MeEltoy, Moo.ica fur..

ft1filrut fi;}ft

~ ~ ~~ ~
Unacrambte thae four Jumbles,

•

VIeWUtg

R. Walker ,&amp;ibrifUI. Wilson.
GRADE ! - Michael Ba11nun, Cathy
Blessing, ManCU Fry, Patricia ~cG het, Lisa
Miller, David Pettry. JohnSis.son, Joe Tillis.
GRADE a- Mandi Black, Regina Eblin, Janet

tley, Jame~ BU3tl, Edward Coffman, Kevin-CurflllHn, Tooy Detm, x • l..ee DiU, Gre~ DuVttU,

bs Sonja Hill, Armintha Holter, I · Della JohnsuO, Roger Jones, Liz Knight, Bob U!t! , Terri
Manuel, Janet Middleswart, Mary Beth Obltz,
Charlotte Pickens, Becky Rhodes, Teresa Rice,
x • Mark Simpson, Mary Beth Sla\'in, Tanuny
Smith, Dan TalboU, Deanna White:. x. • Paula '
Wolfe Fortune, Melissa Yooker.
JUNIORS - Robert Brown, _Sam Buckley,
Missy Davis, x • Denise Deem, Tammy Ervin,
Kim Follrod, Joe Bob Hemsley, Stanley Holter,
Susan Jett. Phillip Kincaid, 1t - Jenny Manuel,

SOPHOMORES -

Hall. Shelia Hendiick.s, Janell HyseU, Stacey
Hy~ttll , Tracey HyseU, Tracey Michael, Martlla
N~OOn. M.althew Peterson, Me\Wa Pettry, Victoria Priddy, Jeanine Smallwod, Pam Smlth. J .

Tonj.H Salser, LoriSprouse •.x. · Mel Weese.
FltESHMEN - Sam Amburgey, Jenny Ben-

RACINE - The second· six weeks gradifw
period honor roll of Southern High School lwl
been aMounced by Princlpa I J11.1nes Adam.!i.
Making a grade of " 8 " or above ·In all tt)elr
sub}eclalobe listed on the roll were:
s!:NIORS - Crista Bet!gle, Bonnie Boso, x PeJoo' Bush. Paul Cardone. I - Steve Clrcle, Eddie-ntdfy, Sandy Evans. John Frank, Tina Gib-

Television

Kelley Wood , l.ft.H Juhnson .
GRADE 4 - Michelle Adams, Laun:1 Black,
(.'had Canons, Scot~ Edmonds, Shawn F~Uy,
Barbara Fowler, Abby Fry, Stacey Gibbs. Joe

Beegle, ChN Bostick, Nick Bostick, Tyrone
Bri~r. Brian Burkhamer, Phyllis Clark,
Rusty Cumm.lrw, Tum CUmmins, x · Cindy
Evans, An)[ie-Glt!rm. Pew G"reen. Bill Hannun,
Jim Hupp. x • Brut.-e Jullnsmt, Robert Kincaid,
Jkcky LH, 1 • Kim M.~tynard , x • Clair Murris.
Kim MurroW, John Porter, 1- Davict Sall1101'18,

The Daily Sentinei-Page--9

. . . ..w~~----~----------------------~-------2~~~~~~~~~0hio

December 11, 1980

M1ddl eporl, Oh •o

NEVE.~

the circled letters to

form the surprise answer. as sug·
gested by the above canoon.

~(XXXXXI)(TI IJ
(Answers tomorrow)

I

Yesterday's Jumbles: ABOVE IDIOM CATCHY MEDLEY
Answer : One must pay to get oul of 11-DEBT
'umble look No. t4, containing 1 10 puzzltt, Ia anllablllor 11 .75 poetpald
ftom.lumblt,clo thle newapaper, Box~. Norwood, N.J.07$48.1ncludeyour
ume, addre11,1ip codt and mat. ehtCkl pl'flblt to N•w•p•perbooks.

BRIDGE

a

CHRISTMAS
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instal lation. requires no rewl·ring, uses
exisling antenna. #12·1350

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Bike Radio fits handlebar. ,
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8:58 (}) NEWS l,lPDATE
9:00 (}) 700 CLUB
.
(j) (ji) m BARNEY MILLER An Air

a

~eart.

However, he soon

~~'Wd'
by THOMAS JOSEPH

Force veteran blames hia criminal
career on exposure to Agent
Orange, driving Wojo into an invea·
tiga tive frenzy , and Mrs. Brauer has
· her husband arrested agaln··thla
time for running naked through the
halls oJ their apartment building.

ACROSS
DOWN
I
· 1 u.s. air group Herring's
relative
4 Before jack
8 Bunker is one 2 Yorkshire
·river
10 Hosiery
(I) (jj)
SNEAK PREVIEWS . thread
3 Be ·attached ro
·co-hosts Gene Slskel and Roger
4 Grooved
IZ Opera
Ebertexamlneanencouragingnew
trend at the boKoffice •• filmaabout
5 Hard-hit
highlight
families . Included are scenes from 13 Let go
baseball
Yesterday 's Answer
' Ordinary People ', 'The Great
15
Having
teeth
6
Baseball·
Santini', and 'One· Trick Pony '.
19 Levying
27 Trimmed,
bat wood
9:30 Cil &lt;!2lllt IT'S A LIVING Lola' 17 City near
chance meeting with her high
as branches
,
a
fine
7
In
braids
Lima, Peru
school sweetheart prompts some
22
Vice
squad
's
29
Ballet
9 Pitches out,
advice from her cohorts. and 18 Dynamo
couldn't come at a better or worse Zli Steiger
movement
specialties
as a football
time because she's just had a big
30 Small hill
11 "La Sea Ia" 23 Grandi!~
Zl
French
!!..g_ht with her husband .
33 Bolanist Asa .
quent
cry
parent
t.iJ&lt;llJ
THIS OLD HOUSEHoal Bob
1'10/ 11-tl.? YEAR J!M 50
DO YOU WANT 10
Vila demonstrates how to lay a par· 22 Director
3~Marquis
24
Etiquette
14
Bold
one
MAKE YOUR U5UAL oAATEFUL 10 e&gt;E ALIVE
quet
kitchen
floor .
of infamy
16 Any minute 25 Author
Polanski
AND IN BU51NES~_!
CONTRIBUTION
(Cioa&amp;O·Cap1lonod;U.S.A.)
WANT 70 FOOT mE
fOR !7E:COAATION5
10:00 ill 8 (1) NUMBER 98 When a 25 Jewish
mysterious beauty, Usa Brendan ,
WHOLE 13/L.L.MYSELF/
••• AN OFFICf
feast
agrees to a date with Commander
PAR1Y ••• ?
26
Russian
Horace Batterson, sleuy Chick
Walden convinces him thai she' s
sea
an &amp;J&lt;· porno queen and provides
27
On
a
' evidence ' for a screening. Stars:
- (equal)
Christine Jones , Barney t.Aartin .
(Part II. of a three-part e pisode; 60 28 Tirolean
mins.)
city
C!JMOV!E-(COIIEDYJ" Yo " Prize
31 TV journal·
BJihter" 11179
W TBS EVENING NEWS
ist Rather
(ji)
2cHo
32
Court pr~
CIJ@) KNOTS LANDING The
seams in the Avery marriage begin
nouncements
tearing apart when Richard, ambl·
35 Intervene
lious and driven by sp ite o&gt;Jer Laur·
a 's promising real· astate career, 37 Ibsen's
quits hla job to accept an offer from
Mrs. Helmer
THAT'S TEl\1 GAMES
a high-powered lawyer. (60 mlns.)
38
Blot
out
Cil MASTERPIECE THEATRE
IN A ROW, WAU&gt;O··
39
Pleased
'Testament of Youth ' Episode II.
Roland' s vivid accou nls ofthetlght • 40 Kane's
VOU OWE ME FIFTY
ing in France Inspire Vera to
"'Rosebud"
become a wartime nurse. She aurCENT!!
vives the drudgery of her training 41 Caustic
and looks forward to a Chrlatmaa
solution
reun ion with Roland. (CiosedCoplionod;U.S.A.) (60 mino. )
(jj) NEWS
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work It :
10:28 (}) NEWS UPDATE
10:30 CIJ NORMAN VINCENT PEALE
, AXYDLBAAXR
It LONGFELLOW
~~$1itll
&lt;llJ TOMORROW'S FAMILIES
)r
10:58 (}) NEWS UPDATE
11 :oo m • m rn • Cll ®J (j}) •
One teller aim ply atanda for another. In this ·sample A Is
NEWS
. used for the three L's, X for lhe two O's, etc. Single letters,
(}) JOHN ANKERaERG SHOW
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
® NIGHT GALLERY
hints. Each day the code letters are dift'erent.
CIJ MONTY PYTHON'S FLYING
CIRCUS
CR.YPTOQUOTES
(jj) DICK CAVETT SHOW
11:28 (}) NEWS UPDATE
I WAs ~OPING 'THERE
60 AHEAD. AND
11:.30 [f) . (1) TH! TONIGHT SHOW
XBMXFB LAM QASTW QAYQ XFYTQU

am m

PAW RUN US OUT OF
THE HOUSE·· HE SAVS
HE DON'T WANT· NOBODY
UNDERfCl)()T

·WHILE HE'S

UP

For One or Two Playera

29~h

Reg. 38.95 Each
8latriM extrl

UJEU.:

EAT.. Wf.IAr ARE l(OU
WAITIN6 FOR?

WAS A SALAD BAR

Guests : Hodding Carter, Chlrlea
Nelson Reilly . (60mlna.)

(}) ROSS B-'GLEY SHOW
IIJ MOVIE ·(ORAliA) "Yo

FSWB

"Barbarian And

TMQSZBR

1858

CIJ(j}) at

The o..aha"

ABC NEWS
NIGHTLINE
GICIJ cas LATE MOVIE 'THEJEF·
FERSONS;

'

+ .9 8

tAKQ 1~87
EAST
WF.'!T
+976
+KQJ5
• KJ853
'II' A 10 9 7 2
tK6
+43

made up for his opening lead
by making a terri'fic play .
CIJ MISSIONARIES IN ACTION
Even with all four hands
® MOViE ·(SUSPENSE) '''
"NI_i!tt People" 1954
exposed it is hard to imagine
@WCD MORKAND MINDYMo1k
+92
4654
how West defeated the slam
getssocomicallycarriedawaywlth
after his lead.
SOUTH
pulling practical jokes that he sur·
Declarer roiled the heart in
+10
2
pri ses Mindy by assembling her
dummy and immediately took
•Q6 •
jeep in the ir living room right over
+AQJ I 07 5
a diamond finesse by passing
Mr. Bi ckley's apartment.
tJ 3
the nine. If West wins this
CIJ @I MAGNUM, P.l. A lun·
trick , declarer will win any
loving private·detec tive , living on a
Vulnerable:
Both
luJ&lt;urious Hitwaiian estate, boldly
return , draw trumps and easiDealer: North
takes on Navy h ig herups and
ly make the rest of the tricks.
becomes a target for killers when
w
..
t
Nortb Eaat Soutb
West knew that South had an
he tracks the cold blooded mur·
14
z+
excellent di amond suit
darers of his best fr iend. Stars :T Dm
4t
Pass
~
3+
because declarer had bid two
Selleck,
John
Hillerman .
6t
Pass
Pass
Pass
diamonds followed by four
(Premiere; 2 hra.)
Pass
diamonds. He realized his
(I) NEXT QUESTION
only hope of beating the slain
@ UP AND COMING 'Cheating .
would be a bold-faced swinCats' Valerie i8invltedto cheat In a
Opening lead:•~
competition tor a writers workshop
dle, but it had to be done
schQiarship.
quickly. Smoothly , West
(Ciosed-Captloned;U.S .A'.)
ducked the nine of diamonds.
8:30 Cil DR. JACK VAN !MPE
,
Who could blame poor
C!J MOVIE -{COMEDY) '" "Mup- . By O.wald Jacoby
South
for repeating the trump
aDd
Alan
Sonlag
i!J!I Movie" 11179
finesse? ·When West won his
(J){ji) ID BOSOM BUDDIES Kip
andHenry'afrlandehlpmaycometo
A very spirited auction in now unguarded king at trick
.,_
_.an.end.when l&lt;ip lnslata that.SOMY ·
aU !o~~r players partici- three, the _ defeiJSC quickly
live with them after her roommat•
pated culminated In an e:rcel· cuhed two heart tricb.Amy , ln a fit of anger, throwa her out
slam contract. Although (NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.}
lent
of their apartment.
CIJ(ll) FROMJUIIPSTREET 'Back
Influence in the Recording Industry'
This program compares trends In
the recording industry which have
influencedthecreationandmarket·
ing of music by Black Americ~ns .
(Closed·Captioned;U.S.A.)

21% Off! High-Performance,
Low-Priced System

Clarlnette~-91 by Realistic

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14% Reg. 69.95

21

85

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min. rms, 8 ohms, 20·20,000 .Hz, no more than 0.4% THO '
'
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A great byy pn a
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lWeeter gives clear
highs. #4()..1987

Reg. Separate
Items 279.85

• QGGD

. 12·11 -80

I.

50

as
seen
on TV

NORTH

+AB4 3

North-South have only 23
high-card points, six diamonds
is a good contract.
An original spade lead
would almost surely defeat
the slam because the diamond
finesse is wrong, but West led

a

5

Saves30

DBEBII
aGC£trll

.

&amp;Y 6UM, lHAT'G'OORIIEO
DECEtiT OF YUH! 6Wi5
iHAR'!i 5TILL !iOIIE
Yrut6HERS lfHO REFUSE
T' TAIIE 601ETIHH' FER
HOTHIH'!
.......,~~

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iting family gift
Put this year's most ex~ee _ Radio
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Tonight' s special preaentatioll in·
e ludes segments on a daringworld re co rd distance jump attempt ; a
m·artial arts demonstration; a cops
vs conslootball game; the finals of
the 'World ' s Toughest Bouncer
Competition' ; and the 'W orld Janl ·
tor Rodeo '. (2 hrs.)

Defense con job succeeds

f.
,(

QM

NB

QYFWBR

QAYQ

QABC

Q.M

AYIBT'Q

RMT ' Q

ZYVB

LAYQ CMD UYC. - PMAT
ZYTYRYC
Yesterday'• Ceyp!Oqaole: POOR RECEPTION IS ABOUT THE
ONLY WAY YOU CAN IMPROVE SOME TElEVISION
PROGRAMS.- FRANKUN P. JONES ·

,,

•

�IUl r

Pa e---lo-The Dail Sentin .• l

betll 910

Area Deaths

Patrol .investigates three accidents
.

by his parents, Edgar and Nellie McNaughton· Morris, his first wife,
·Marie and Of!e brother, Chester.
Mr. ·Mllrris was a retired employe
of the Ohio Power Compmany with
47 yeats of service.
He is survived by his wife, MIIIIMI
Morri4 ; two sons, Robert B. Morris
and Dan E. Morris both of Pomeroy;
one ste~son, Kenneth McCullough,
Pomeroy; five grandchildren, one
great grandson; two sisters, Allee
Robsbn, Middleport, and Ruth
Virginia Weber, Knoxville, Tenn. ,
and several neices and nephews.
Rosary services will be held
Friday at 7:30 p.m. at Ewing
Chapel. Funeral services will be
held Saturday- at 10 a .m. 11t the
Sacred Heart Clltholic_Church with
the Rev. Father Cronin officiating.
Burial will be in Wells Cemetery.
Friends may call at Ewing Funeral
Home after 6 p.m. today.

Clifford L. Holter
Clifford L. Holter, 76, Racine, died
W\!(lneaday evening at the Arcadia
Nursing Home.
Holter was
preceded In death by his patents,
Stanley and Molly (Mwnaw) Holter,
four !Wers, and one brother.
Survivors Include his wife, Leila
Holter, Racine; two daughters, Mrs.
Earl (Geraldine) Cross, Racine;
Mrs. Robert (June) Ashley, Racine ;
two SOIIB, Eugene, of Racine; and
Larry, of Pickerington; one brother,
Wilbur Holter, Akron; 13 grandchildren, eight great- grandchildren, and several nieces and
nephews.
Holter had retired after 20 years
with the state highway department
and was also a farmer.
Services will be held Saturday at 1
p.m. at the Ewing Chapel, with Rev.
Freeland Norris and Rev. Don
Walker officiating. . Interment will
follow In the Letart Falls Cemetary.
Friends may call' after 7 p.m. this
evening.

Donald Skaggs
Donald Skaggs, Cheshire, died
early Thursdl!y morning at the
Charleston General Hospital,
Charleston, W.Va . Funeral
arrangements will be announced at
a
later
date
by
Rawllngs+Coats+Blower Funeral
Home, Middleport.

Robert L. Morris
Robert F. (Polly) Morris, 73,
Pomeroy, died . this morning at
Veterans MemOrial Hospital.
Mr. Morris was preceded in death

Meigs County happenings.
Announce WIC coupon
pick-up schedules
Meigs Countians participating in
the WIC Program are to pick up
their January and February
coupons according to the schedule
below.
Those unable to make the appointed day are to pick them up at
Clie Meigs County Health Dertment
on Jim. 9 from 9 to 11 a.m.
A thro C - Friday (9-11 only ),
December 12.
D thro H - Monday (9-11 only),
Dec. IS.
I thru M - Tuesday (9-11 only),
Dec. 16.
N thro R - WedneSday (9-11, 1-3),
"Dec.l7.
S thro T - Thursday (9-11 only),
Dec. !8.
W thro Y - Friday (9-11 only),
Dec. l9.

••

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Wednesday admissions-Edward
. Stiles, Middleport; Shirley Kauff,
Rutland; Autumn Hysell, Pomeroy;
Pearl Reeves, Albany; Raymond
Justis, .Middleport; Riley McClella!'ld, Rutland ; Harold Abbott,
CoolVIlle; Herbert Farms, NeJso_n.
viUe.
Wednesday discharges-Vera
Stewart, Barbara Roush Neva
Grlnun, Icy Dailey, ~ Rohrbach, Betty Bayes.

Receive coal monies
MASON Checks totaling
$5,226,182.55 representing the fourth
qoarter of fiscal year 19110 coal
severance tax distributions in West
Virginia have been sent to counties
and municipalities throughout the
state.
Amounts sent to Mason County
and its communities include: county, $18,207.17; Hartford, $394.76;
Henderson, $371.54; Leon, $142.82;
Mason, $988.04; New Haven
$1,152.08; Poi)ltPleasant,$4,585.88. '

FEU,OWSHIP MEETING

The Mens Fellowship of the Meigs
County Churches of Christ will meet
at the Rutland Church Monday, Dec.
15, at 7:30 p. m; Scott Saltsman will
be the speaker.

.

ear

s-ma· II mvest~ent,
•·
·
·I ·
· arge :"·

~f1:~:=:::~:~

nearby resource base are enhanced

·

:a~~!f::~~~ll~:t~~

barge as well as over existing rail
lines. SignlficanUy, the area boasts
abundant water for the gasification
process as well as transportation.
If the study assesses the project as
conunerclally imd financiallY viable
and · envlrbnn!entally sound, construction can begin as early as 1984.
The project woald ultimately
create about 1,500 permanent
oprating jobs, 3,500 permanent
mining job!i, and, due to the phased
'production of synthetic fuel, 3,000
construction jobs over !().year
period.
Ohio Valley Synthetic Fuels will
be staffed by persormel from Consolidated and somo. Those indiViduals . who have extensive experience In energy production, environmental matters, and
marketing throughout the United
States will manage the project.
Foster Wheeler Energy Corporation will provide engineering
services for the study. Envirorunenl!ll assessments will be
performed by the NUS and Radian
Corporation.

Civil rights

--:--~----·-

Curb Inflation.
. .
Pay Cash for
Claulfleds and
Savalll

I
I

owner,

automatic ,

.

air, 318 V-8.
WAS $4395
NOW

'3895

1978 MERCURY
ZEPHY F7
6 cylinder, radials,
power steering, air
cond .

WAS S469S
NOW

'3895

1975 PLYMOutH
FURY BROUGHAM
SuP.,r Sharp. Black.
Act Now I
WAS$1195
NOW
'

•695

NOW

1978 CHEVY
NOVA
HATCHBACK
Rally

'2895

1978 FORD
PINTO
HATCHBACK

WAS $3995

'

Persons making applicatiOIIIIIIIIIt
give their name, addresS, number In
famlly, number of children and
phone number. H no prwne' .give
exact location of hbme.

'3595

1977 PLYMOUTH
votARE
4 door sedan, auto.

16. _ __:__~-

3695

1

WAS S37'S
NOW
' 2995

lU Uppe·r·Rivet Road

.

'

.'

.
'

Gallipolis, Ohio

1--c.rclof TMnk1
1-h• Metnortam

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

.,
.....
•s-••-·

.

---torRent

&amp;Aucftefl

.

eEMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

11-HIIp Walttld
11-SihfetM Wtntttl ,

11-tnawlnci
lt-luslnnl

-·..

eFINANt:IAL

12-WIIt.lteauy
72-trvc•a for S.lt
.,_LI'Ifttoc:tl
t4-Hiy &amp; Ora in •l ""I

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

!2--MMef tie LGan
U-P ......IICIMI
· lef'VIcH

71-V... &amp;tW.D.
1t Ms•crc•

11-.HomllfwSalt:
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...........

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11-Htme tm,..._,lmtnb

n"-lnlton

Wul·Ad Ad ..rtlslng
Deadlines

22.=~===

f:JI'Jr:M. Dally

24.=====
26.======

Mail This Coupon with RemiHan.ce
The Daily Sentinel
Box 729
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

......

......

14-IIKtrlul

further lnfor:mation ·

~~s:.~~~~~~~~t~~
ifetalls contact Edna

Scl10enleb, Administratrix
f.llhe
Estate of Mary Dora

LOST : Black &amp; tan coon
In Hemlock Grove
area. 992·37~8 .
dog.

Rates a1RI Dtber Information

....

C.lh
1.10
1.11
1.10

2days
ldays

I' .
I

....

.... .,!

C-·
1.~
1.~

2.11
_..,.,

"
&amp;acb wotdowrt:Mmlnlnntin ISWW4tlt4ctnfl,...wonl,... . .,

~-· ""'"'"' ·~ hn conHCUtiYt lint will bil eM~ at tt1e ,,.y·
ratt.
II' ·
.I
In IMiillery, C.rd Df TtNnll' IM Obltufry; 'ttnb ,., w«~n~, Q.M"
mlnkftum. Clatl In MYILIH:t. . .
·
I
I
Mtft+te Ho. . Mltl aM Vanillin art acce,MII•Iy wlttl au. Willi '
I
onllr. U cent Chtrtl,.,. Ml carrylftl ... NYMW 1ft C.... ef - ·~fl~.
·~ ·
I'
I' 1'-~-----.......--__,.~~-~..:..1

1
AIIIMIUnCtmtnts
3
Announcements •
1 3
NO
HUNTING
or
FAYE'S
Gift Shop In Mid·
1 trespassing day_or night on

I lite Charles Yost, Ivan Will dleport will be open frcifn
I or JOhn Houdashelt farms. 12-5 until Christmas.
All violators will be
Heating Fuel, 1 &amp; 2 EM;
prqsecuted.
celslor 011 Company.
~
HAVE YOUR deer lrophy Phorie J-614,992·2:105.
3
Announcements ·
mounted . · Birchfield's.
I PAY highest prices East on 124 at Rutland. 742· To be afraid of lite Llle
Science Church Is to •be
possible for gold and silver . 2178. .
.'
weak, narrow minded, &amp;
coins, rings, Jew~lry, etc.
afraid of the Bible.
Contact Ed Burkitt Barber
MEIGS HISTORY Books However, Intelligent leWI
Shop, Middleport.
for sale tor Christmas at headed, broad mindel!
Meigs Museum every people may like 11. Phone
SHOOTING MATCH at Friday and sunday af· 985-4174.
Corn Hollow In Rutland. ternooo during December
Every Sunday starting at or at Pomeroy J..lbrary.
RACINE Gun Club specliil
noon.
Proceeds being
mee!lng Thurs. Dec. 11.
donated to the Boy Scout
TroOp 2.f9. 12 gaUge factory DEER Cut &amp; wrapped at Election of officers for
tAl
Maple Wood Lake between 1981,
chokegunonly l ·
Syracuse &amp; RaciM, 011.
$25. per head. S5 additional Ratlne Gun club dues for
RACINE GU"! SHOOT, for lklnnlng.
1911 payable now. Must"!»
RaciM Gun Club, every
paid _bY Jan. 1, 1911.
,
Friday night llartlng at
NEW
sandwich
at
Me·
·
7:30 p.m. Factory choke
Clures Dairy llli In Mid·
guns only.
dleport. Ham -&amp; cheese on
rye' "&amp; chicken paHie,
GUN SHOOT: Saturday .- llalliln wb:
·
evening starting lit 6:30
p.m. SponSOred by · lite
Ratlne Volun"teer Fire HOMEMADE Chill · soup.
Department, '!II building In N- feature at McClure's RACINE Gun Club spec'-\
BaSh'!ln. Fac!Qry Choke Dairy Isle In Mlddl~. 10 meeting Thurs. Dec 11
pet. discount for Golden
guns only:
Elec!lon of offlcert' tot
Buckeye Membe~s.
1911.
.•

....,
-~

"'

:::;:;:;;;;::;========··;•';.'

CH'R·ISTMA·· s-·--· _
·.A·.UCT.. IO-N

•..
Ill'

·

~~t.~zw~:~t:~:tt
Pomeroy, Ohio, 992·2692.

·. THU~SDAY, DEt 'lllh, 7:00 P.M.

7,8,9,.10,. 11, 12,6lc ·

I" HARRISONVILE

.

&amp; tan dog.

Male coon dog . 992-7698.

~

~----------------------~
Public Notice ,
"NOTICE OF
PUILIC HEARING
The VIllage of Pomeroy
will hold the first community wide hearing of a
series of two hearing con·
cernlng a Community
·Development Block Grant
application on Wednesday,
December 17, 19BO at
Village Hall, E. 2nd Street,
Pomeroy, Ohloat7:30 p m
The Purpose of ihis
'li'H!IIng will be to discuss·
the u1e of Block Grant
Program Funds In !he
VIllage. At this meeting
citizen Input r.egardlng the
use of funds will be
sollclated. The VIllage·
must submit an appliCation
to the U. S. Department of
,aguslng and Urban
12 L~~~~menl by January

LOST : Black &amp; tan cooo
In Hemlock Grove
area. 992-3nl.

' J..OST Black

D-l!'cnan,..

••

29._ _ , . . - - - - I
30.
"I· .
31.
1

35.

12-Pivmw.te a •• ,, ..,....

N-M.H.R.,..r
17-u ...........

lorMoMav

25.

3.4.======

Lost and Found ,
Found: Brown &amp; while hun·
tlng dog. No collar or tags.
Found In the vicinity of
47159 Eagle Ridge Road.
Found .
during
, Thanksgiving weekend.
·:· 949·2160.

ls-Gtflfl'al HniMt

11Noonla~

27. _ _ _ _ __
;28.

DOG. 31h years old, been
, spade, house proken. GOOd
~ house dog . Pat! Poodle. AI·
ter 5, 992·2967.

J..OST: $100. reward for
Blue Tick coonhound.
Male, approMimate weight
80 lbs., In Beech Grove
area. Call 992·3938 after 5
p.m.

Au.. ~lrts
&amp;AccttNtlet
77-;Aute l ...lr
J~

lt-IUIIIMI' lullrdllltl
:It-Lots &amp; ~crutt

23.

Housing

dOll.

eTRANSPORTATION

)

L

'

• /

AutnQNEER: THUR~N MUSSER

...

,J

t;OS T: S100. . reward for
B"iue Tick coonhound.
Male, approximate weight
110 ibs_, In Beech Grove
area. Call 992·3938 after 5
p.m.
1.

.Yard Sale

. : MOVING SALE. Anllque
, fu~nlture &amp; glassware, plus
•. beds, chairs, waSher &amp;
- !fryer, refrigerator, clothes
&amp; many other Items. At 560
North Second St., Mid·
dleport. Oec. 11-12-13. 12
.'!00" 11116 p.m.

,,

,,

by Larry Wright

. I

Business Services

as. a young business person

and earn good money plus
some great gifts as a Sentinel route carrier. Phone
us right away and get on
the eligibility Jist at 992·
2156 or 992·2157.

vov·~ c;o cur~ !

Situations Wanted
WILL Do small business
bookkeeping at home .

\

t~R~~L~.~~tJ3,
_

16 E. Second Street

Phone
H614l-992-3325
'
RT. 33 ~ on bus line.
Has bath, 3 bedrooms.
nat. gas furnace, city
water, and near town.
One acre with pine
trees.

ACRES - Nice layIng on good hard road
that has T.P. water line,
well drained that would
make a nice farm or
development.
BARGAIN - 5 rooms
and bath, city water,
chimney for wood ·
~0

burner or natural gas.

Can be used for a
business, residence or
both. want iuS!$11,000.
BO ACRE FARM Prime location on four
lane road. All minerals.
2 houses,

barn, large

!"'l.

()(){M! OH, CAetiLE

PUWNS
EXCAVATING

companies no , longer In
)lllllnass. HIH91·50n .

'
'

.

Wanted to Buy: class rings,
Mddlng bal)dl, anything
wtemped, lOK, 14K, or IlK
~d. Sliver coins, pocket
· watches. Call Joe Clark at
"2·2054 at Clerk's J-lry
stare, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

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

I· "

13
Insurance
AUTOMOBII.E
IN ·
SURANCE 1 been can·
"celled?
Lost your
operator's license? Phone
992-21-43.
11

'.!.-~!.!!!~C!.'!..!!!'--­
Furnace repairs, electrical

r-----------,-----------1

Lawrence Manley Jr.

for Sale

- Addonsand
remodeling

- Roofing and gu"er
work

- Concrete work
- Plumbing and

electrical work
(Free Estimates)

V.C. YOUNG II

992-6215 or 992-7314

12·4· 1 mo.

P?meroy, Oh.

KAUFPS
PLUMBING
AND
HEATING

-Auto and Truck
Repair
-Transmission
Repair

ALL STEEL

'

Farm Buildings

r

Sizes '
" From 30xJO"

SMALL

Utility Buildings
Sizes from 4x6 to 12x40

Hrs.:. Mon.·Fri.
9 A.M.-5:30P.M.

1973 Crown Haven, 14 x 65, ..
53~·--~A,n,_,!_,iq.,u-"es!-__
wanted to do : small ' three
bediooms, new car- business bookkeeping In pet. 1971
Cameron, 14 x 64,
my home . 992·7274 after 5.
two bedrooms, new carpet.
1972 Champion, 12 x 60, two
bedrooms, new carpet. 1976
Reat estate

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Cameron, 12 x 60, two

acre; 6 rooms, 2 baths, 1112
acres; 6 rooms basement,

bath, 2 mobile· nomes;
Mason, 3 bedroom never

lived in, 2 bedroom, rented
2 atres. John Sheets, 3'h

' miles south of Middleport,
Rt. 1.

bedrooms, all electric. 1971
Skyline, _12sx 6), · two
bedrooms, bath &amp; 113, new
carpet. 1970 PMC.
12 x 60, two bedrooms, new
carpet. B x S Sales, Inc., 54
Misc. Merchanise
2nd x Viand Street, Point
Pleasant, WV Phone 675· Firewood for sale, Mixed
types of wood . $35.00 per
-1424.
pick-up load. · Delivered,
will

Trailer lot for sale, $5,000 .
Modular home lot on Route
Houses for Rent
7, three bedroom farm- 41
house located on Route 7. TWO
BEDROOM un992-2571.
furniShed house, also two
bedroom furnished &amp; one
EieautJful three bedroom bedroom furnished apart·
ranch brick home In Baum menls. Call after 6 p.l'l).
Addition, · Pomeroy, Ohio. 992·22811.

stack

for

Citizens. 843·4951
2615.

H. L WHITESEL

ROOFING
All types of roof work ,

new or repair guHers

and downspouts, gutter
cleaning and painting •
All work guaranteed.

senior
or

8-43-

GRAVE Blankets. 949-2493
or 992·7320.

Gas heat, central air con-

ditioning. Call 985-3814 or One of Middleport's finest
992-2571.
t'lomes offered for rent,
ttiree bedrooms, large kit· RCA Color TV, 25 inch
7 ROOM HOME . 21h acres, chen, dining room. living XJ..lOO. $125. 992·6259.
fireplace,
woodburner, room, family room, Qne &amp;
total electric, carpeted, 2 one half baths, basement.
car garage, basement, garage with storage cen·
Now at
10x27 sundeck. First house ter, gas heat central air,
past Memory Gardens s. R. Phone 448·3821 or 448·2555.
Pomernv
7. 992·7741 .
landmark
3 bedroom house, living
1
Reponeued
Hardwick De luxe
room,
dining
room,
family
NICE two bedroom country
Dryer . Here' s a good place
home. Vinyl siding, . full room. 1'12 bath, hot water Gas
to sa\le money .
basement, $13,900.00. 949· heat. 992-2918.
1 Used Hotpoint
2801 or will rent. No sunday
Relfl9erator
$175 .00
ikesAsLowAs
$106.95
calls.
NICE two ·bedroom fur- NewB
HotpointMicrowave Oven,
•

Pineapple Chlrm!

·-·-.

pups. 2 smalf miniature

10 x 55 two bedroom mobile and 1 toy. 1 female, apricot.
home near Racine. 992· 1 light chocolate brown
5858.
male, 1 dark chocolate
brown male . After 5 p.m .

2 bedroom mobile home, 992·2967.

RI!ALTOR
Henry I. Ctelond, Jr.
fft-61tl
ASSOCIATES
JHn Trusstl1 M'-2NO
Rov-r &amp; Dottle Turner
"2-5692
OFFICE 992-5192

• New Homes - eM·
tensive remodeling
• Electrical work
• Roofing work
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 9'P.I-758J

GARAGE

llo/1
work. plumbing, mobile
home or residence. 992·
5858 . classlfled
ads
Trash hauling, Syracuse,
Rocksprings, Flatwoods •3~2.---====:::--r
Road. Call 992·5715 [
MobileHomes

."YOUNGS
CARPENTER
SERVICES"

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

ROGE~ HYSEU.'S

wanted to Do

block building and 2
bedroom mobile home.
SMALL HOME - Has 2
nished house in Racine . Reg , $.129
SJ69
bedrooms, natural gas
S200
per
month.
949·2601.
Home Ute Super :I Chain Saws
NICE
TWO
bedroom
house
forced air furnace, bath,
(:ZB·:ZOOl Reg. $195.95 NowS lOS .9S
with three car garage' In No Sunday calls.
porches and large lot.
( Price Includes F ree carr'(ing
Racine.
$33,00.00.
949·2801.
case)
City water and good
No
Sunday
calls.
NIce 4 room house with Comfort Gl ow Kerose.ne
store close.
Heaters, Economy (:18·0863 ).
SAVE YOUR PROFITS 1-.:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;...j gar age for rent. 992· 2502.
Reg. Sll9.9S
NowS:l29 .9S
BY INVESTING AND
--.
WRITE 1'1' OFF, WANT
Nice ~ room house with Iii!.... _ POMEROY
IT SOJ..D, THEN TRY
garage for rent. ~· 2502.
aaJLAN~MARK
US AT 992-~325 or
992-3176.
E. Main St.
Pomeroy
FURNISHED 4 room &amp;
Housing
bath, adults only, no pets.
56
=-.__ _:_P..=e'-'
ts'-'f"'
or'--'S'-'a'-"le,___
Middleport, 992-3874.
Headquarters
HOOF HOJ..LOW: Horses
and ponies and riding
lessons .
Everything
42
Mobile Homes
imaginable in horse eq"uipfor Rent
ment . Blankets, belts,
3 BEDROOM trailer In boots, etc. English and
Southern Valley Mobile Western·. Ruth Reeves
Home Park, Cheshire, Oh . (614) 698·3290.
992·3954. Will accept
children.
AKC Registered poodle

1142 ,o!CIO.OO.

•

General welding &amp; culling,
quality work, competitive
rates, portable. Pphone
992-2535.

31
Homes for Sale
10 ROOM brick, 3 baths, l't•

Headquarters

NEW LISTING - This 8
9
wanted to Buy
room house has 4
bedrooms, family room,
USED FURNITURE. Gold
big living room, full
&amp; sliver, class rings, pocket
basement, nice cabinets
watches, chains, diamonds
In the kitchen, and built&amp;· so on. Copper brass and
In bool&lt; shelves. The
•blltterles, . antique Items,
woodwork Is original
al$0 do appraisals, com·
and It has french doors.
plele auctioneer service.
All for $33,000.00.
•ever 30 yearilaMperlence In
APPLES · PEACHES·
.business. Will buy com·
')tlete estates. Also take •GRAPES - right in
your own back yard
consignments. Auction
With this 1'12 story frame
every Friday night, 7 p.m.
home. Two bedrooms
,Qssle's Auction House,
down and 2 u~, dining
Middleport, Oh.992·6370.
room, utility room, and
many other nice
WANTED · TO BUY :
features. $20,500.00.
GOLD,
SIJ..VER,
LIBERTY
MOBILE
'PLATINUM, STERLING·
HOME
An
almost
.COINS, RINGS,JEWELR·
new 14x52 mObile home
"Y, MISC. ITEMS. AB·
with 2 bedrooms, under·
SOLUTE
MARKET
pinning, and a metal
.~ICE GUARANTEO. EP
storage
building. ' J..ot
BURKETT
BARBER
can be rented. $9,000.00.
,$;HOP, MIDDLEPORT,
A BRAND NEW
OH
10 992·3476.
HOUSE ~ Haven you
_, '
always wanted a new
OLD COINS, pocket wat·
nouse? This one is
ches, class rings, wedding
gorgeous. It has a big
:binds, diamondS. Gold or · living room with a nice
.$liver. Call J. A. Wamsley,
fireplace and glass
742·2331. Treasure Chell Sliding doors that open
Coin Shop, Athens, OH. 592·
onto a deck . Situated on
a 1'14 acre wooded lot
~!hat Is so peaceful and
QUiet. Call for more In·
· USED FURNITURE. Gold
&amp; sliver, class rings, pocket formation . 542,000.00.
watcheS. chains, dlainonds WOODED BUILDING
SITE- Approx. s acres
:&amp;.so on. Copper brass and
In Riggs Crest Manor. A
'llatterltl. antique Items,
]also do appralsall, com- beautiful place to buld a
home.
Utilities
•plete auctiOMer service.
available .
Asking
:OV•r 3 v11ars experience In $10,000.00.
ibUtlnass. Will bUY com·
MID~EI'ORT, A large
~late estates. Also take
1 large dining
,con11gnments. Auction kite
•very Friday nlgh!, 7 p,m; room, II basement, 2
!Onle's· Auction House, ' car e garage and 3
.Middleport, Oh.992·6370. · bedt'oolns are but a few
111 the 111111 qualities of
:----~---lhiUstory frame house. ·
:Golf EqUIPIMfll, used sets. Mu•t - thll one to
-Broken Shafts, etc. 61HI5· believe hOW nice. Just
)Jid 1tock certificates from

.,

KIT 'N' CARLYLE TM

Have references. 992-727,.

•·MEIGS Co. Fish &amp; Game l,.lc__ _,H"'-el,.p:..:W=an:!!t!:ced~­
t;:,lub Will have regular monthly meeting Sat. 13 at RNs and J..PNs, looking for
7 p.m. There Will be a deer challenging Dnd rewarding
feed &amp; refreshments to all work? 11red of rotating
shifts? Feel the need to
members.
develop your Ideas in
resident care with a highlY
motivated staff? Pomeroy
DISCOVER !he fun ~~ Health Care Center has the
creating beautiful ltand ansNer for you. Due to
painted linens with genuine achieving near maxi mum
Arte.x Decorator Paints. census, we noW have
Free lnsatructlon classes. openings for full and part
Allee S. .Nease. 614·985- time positions on day shill
•.3'142.
but will consider other shlf·
ts. Competitive salary, ex·
cellent working conditions,
SWEET SAVAGE. Now ap- life Insurance · and
- pearlng at lite Rock-N-R 10 disability pol icy at no cost
p.m.·2 a.m. Fri. &amp; Sat. to the employee, and
J..ocated -10 miles south Pl. hospitalization Insurance
available. Come visit us or
Pleasant on Rt. 2.
call : Nancy Van Meter,
R.N., Director of Nursing,
Pomeroy Health Care Cen·
DOG. 31h years old, been ler, 614·992-6606.
spade, house broken. GOOd
• hoUse dog. Part Poodle. AI·
Real Estaze ~ General
ter 5, 992·2967.
--

Jl-'lttt,., ....

ESTATE

11
" - - - 'H"'e"'lp,_Want,!d_ _ _
GET VALUABI.E training

12

~

LOST Black &amp; tan dog.
Male coon dog. 992-7698.

11-fll~ .... ..., ...1

11- ........

20
21.. _~---_ _ _ _ __

33.

-

e FllRM SUPPLIES
&amp;LIVESTOCK

It-WIRtH To 0.

17.._ _ _ _ __
18. _ _ _ _ __
_19. _ _ _ _ __

of

54-MIIc.MwidNndiH

I

&amp;CIIIt .... lr

~

Sl-HtvHMICIG ....

12-C':I:;.RHi.
1~¥"'"ent
»-An

.t
Wanted to Buy
IRON AND BRASS BEDS,
old furniture, (lesks, gold
rings, jewelry , sliver
dollars, sterling, etc ., wOOd
Ice boxes,tars antiques,
etc. Complete households.
Write M. D. Miller, R!. 4,
Pomeroy, OHI or call 9927760.

The Daily Sentinei-Page---11

after 5 p.m.

6

M-flltl fer ....

lltHio•." TV

e~EAL

I

eMERCHANDISE

ss-aut ..... S.,..ltt

Tralnl~t~

1J-ieftoelltnstruc»on
16-

...

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

Pom e roy-Middle ort, Oh io

;;Racine Gun club dues for
1911 payable now. Must be
paid by Jan. 1, 1981 .

'47-WantM .. R•t

1-;u.. kSIII

''·
I

:Zion FrH Will Baptist Chwrth
on Rt. 612 ' ' Lower PIJinl,
Alhtflt, SYrtdly, IJec. 14 at 7 :30
. p.m. · 5PtCIII slntlng by the
Bet~lah . Qurhtt, Chesapeallt, o .
. ltev. EOCIII Boyer, PllfOr.

AKC registered Irish Set·
1er, 8 years old, been
spade, eMc. with children.
Good watch dog. 7~2-2236 .

42-MM!It """"

f-Ht""' Aclt

._WIIIIIed k1 BIJII

·•

41-Hou. . r.rR•t

6-Lost Inti Found
7-YaniSelt

'

ll

446-9800

eRENTALS

l-AniMUIICtmlfth .
t-GIYMWIY

Print one word In each
1
1
space below. Each In-Itial or .group of figures
I
counts as a word. Count
I
name and address or
1
phone number If used.
1
3
6
10 1
You'll get better results Words
If you describe fully, -+=da:.:Y+=da=s~da;,;Y;..;S+da~y,;;sl
give price. The Sentinel
-•
$4.00 17.w ·
reserves the right to
classify, edit or reject
any ad. Your ad will be to 25 SUO u.n
put In . the proper
clasiflcatlon if you'll 103512.50 $4.50
check the proper box
below
These cash rates
Include discount

15. - - - - - -

eANNOUNCEMENTS

taloys•Decoratlona taPrult tafooll
·tafUI'ftJture •lverythl. . you will
n••d 'lor Ch."illaa•,..

blue vinyl top, air, 4

.NOW

'

--------1

(12)

Light blue with riavy air cond.

cyl. WAS 53995

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

brief

Stripe , air con d.

NOW

II

:i2.

'"

111 Court St., Pomero'l"&gt; o., 45769

I

Pho~e;;..·

For

4 cyllrider, auto., air

WAS $4295
NOW '3495

or Write DillY Sentinel Classified Dept."

I·

Friday, Dec. 12, is the deadline to contact the Mayor's office.
Mayor
make application to receive ChrtstClarence Andrews
t
Village of
rnas food basket from the Meigs
(l 2) ll, ltc Pomeroy, Ohio
County Jaycees.
•. ·
Those who wish to receive a
basket must send an application to
Meigs County Jaycees Boi 603"
1
PUbliC Notice
Pomeroy • Ohio 45769: A
l.EGAL NOTIC-E
I
PutiilcSale
statement as to why they should
&amp; &gt;. -1on
· J..arge thr'l'! bedroom
receive a food baSket mUBt be en- hOme In ·Pomeroy, ep· l;::=====~====::=:==::;;;
·.,;:u:;.,=.;:;::·
!raised for s2s,ooo.oo. 11
closed.

1978 FORD
PINTO

cond . Si&gt;&lt; cyli nder.

PHONE 992·2156 -

Addrell·~----~-1
I

14· -----~

WAS $3695

'3495

!·

Nam•----------l·I

IN HOSPITAL

· tires..

NOW

I

I•

"-------

WAS $3995

I·,

I'

~-

Basket deadline near

'

---=""'""!'-"""""""
WANT AD INFORMADON

Write your clwn ad a~ order by mall with this
coupon. cancel your ad by phone when you get I
results. Money not refundable.
I

3.======

4 door sedan, 6 318 V-8, long bed ,
engine, automatic.
cylinder
New
automatic, air .

'

...... - - - - - - - - : - - · !of"_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

'-------

lf4 TOrt TRUCK

·

re_turns, Sentinel Want Ads

(continued from page 1)
e,v entually would ·be named,
although there apparently had been
no decision.
Haig is potentially the most con&lt; l Wanted SEEKS $150,000
troversial
Cabinet
candidate.
His
( ) For Sale
Betty Reed, Middleport, filed suit
&lt;
l Announcement
In Meigs County Common Pleas . chances dimmed last weekend amid
( ) For Rent
Court ill the amount of $150,000 questions from Senate Democrats
about his Involvement In the
against Paul E. Rees, Gallipolis.
The suit is for injuries, loss of Watergate scandal. Senate
2. _ _ _ _ __
wages and medical expenses as a Republicans, however, rallied to his
support.
result of an accident on Jan. 9, 1980
Sen. Jesse Helms of North
on Sr. 7 in Meigs Couunty.
4. _ _..___ _-_
Carolina, an arch-conservative 1 5.
6.
_ _ _ _ __
RepubUcan who led lobbying on 1·
DEADLINE NEARS
7.
_
_ _ __
The deadline to leave Christmas IJaig's behalf, said Wednesday he
8.
_
_
_ _ __
gifts for the 15 men and four women phoned Nl:Aon over the weekend to
at Athens Mental Health Center is ask if anything on the former
9· ---~10.
____
president's still-unreleased White
Dec. IS.
House
tapes
would
embarrass
Halg.
Gifts may be left In a box at the office of Davis Insurance" comer of Helms said Nixon replied, " Not a
12. --'---"----Court and Second Streets, Pomeroy. thing."
13.- - - - - -

NOVA CONCOURS

RIY. Ill,., tk•w, Hvntlnttoll,
. W. Va., Willi» prur:ll4"1"' tht

a.m.

RIVERSIDE

4 Wheel dr ive. Local

.

i;

/

RAM CHARGER

Announcements

••

A two-car collbion ancl three deer nesday by the Gallla-Meig8 Post the
Minor -damage wu reported to onSR 71nGallla County at8:10a.m,
accidents were Investigated Wed- OJlio Highway Plltrol.
Jfudlon'• car and Allen wu dted for Wednesday caualng moderat~
.
damage.
· :
The patrol _said Clayton H. Allen, ~laneswlth!luteautlotl. ·
82, Cheater, and April Hudlon, rr,
Craig A. Hqhes; 11, South Point,
A car driven by Frederick Gobel,
Racine, were both northbound on SR was 1011thbound on SR 218 at 12::10 f7, Reedsville, IUffered ~~~~~~ ,
7 In Meigs County at 12:50 p.m.,
todlly when hla car went off the
damage when It ~ and killed •
following a third vehicle when Hud- right side .ol the road, JOlt .coatrol · deer on SR 7111 Melp County at 7:V
son attempted to pass.
and struck a uUllty trailer; callllng · p.m. the same day.
•.
(continued tram page 1)
heavy damage. Tbere were no InA
third
deer wuldlled when It ran
Hudson
went
into
the"IIUIIthbound
problem to engineers and scientists
Into the Pllth of a
driven by JGI!n
working on gasification processes lane and Wll alongside Allen's car jurtes and no dtationa illllued.
No injuries wre repatted when a E. J11111e1 Jr., 32, Oak H111, at 7:18
when
Allen
pulled
out
to
pus,
because of its tendency to cake
colliding with Hudson's ~-llr, car driVI!Ii by Rouclean $keen, 36, a.m. Wednesday oo u.s. 311, ~
during gasification.
Galllpolla, struck and killed a deer
heavydamag~tohlacar.
":
Also under consideration is a feed- b ODpel s said.
stock supply from the more than 600 ;--------------------~.;:__ _ _ _ _ _ __
mllllon tons of recoverable coal
....-..;
reserves acquired by CNG since 1968

Woodrow Hendrix, Syracuse is a . Emergency squad runs
MEETS MONDAY
patient at Veterans Administr'ation
The Southern Local Board of
Hospital, Huntington, ward 222. CarThe Meigs Emergency Medical
Education will meet Monday, Dec.
ds may be sent to him in care of the Headqoarters reports five calls
15, at 7:30p.m.
hospital.
were answered Wednesday by area
squads.
The first was at 7:42a.m. when the
Pomeroy Emergency unit · was
called to the Chester Road residence
of Simon Jones, who was transported to Holzer Medical Center.
The Syracuse squad was called to
·V.W . - AMC- JEEP- RENAULT
the B.A. Beauty Shop from which
Maxine Dugan was taken to
"The Dealer That Car.e s About Quality"
Veterans Memorial Hospital at 1:41
p.m.
SUPER HOLIDAY PRICES
At 5:16 p.m., Herbert Farms of
Nelsonville was transported to
1976 AMC 1977 PLYMOUTH
1977 OLDS
Veterans Memorial Hospital from
the
Middleport Ben Franklin stOre
CUTlASS
SPORTABOUt
ARROW GT
by the Middleport squad, and at 5:58
V·6 engine, gold with Station Wagon. Air · 4 cylinder automatic.
p.m.,the Pomeroy unit took Ben
conditioning, cruise. Air, Tilt wheel, rear
rallY wheels.
Eblin,
Union Avenue, to Veterans
local one owner.
defroster .
WAS $3495
Memorial Hospital. The Middleport
WAS $2695
'
WAS $3995
Emergency squad answered a final
NOW '2995
NOW '2295
NOW '3695
call at 8:33 p.m. to the residence o1.'
Blanche Gilkey, Head)y St., wbo was'
taken to Holzer Medical Center.
·
1977 DODGE
1977 CHEVY
1977 DoDGE
I ,

December 11, 1980

utilities paid, adults only,
deposit &amp; references
required. 992·3647.

Trucks for. Sale
1976 J..UV Pickup. AM·Fm 8
diameter 10" on largest track, a.c ., topper , good
end. $12 p-er ton. Bundled tires. runs good. $2.600. 992slab. $10 per ton. Delivered 6323.
to Ohio Pallet Co .. Rt . 2,
Pomeroy 992·2689.
73
Vans &amp; 4 W.D.
63
Livestock
1979 Jeep Wagoneer , 4
2, 8 month old calves, half wheel drive, fully equip·
ped. $7,500. 742·3117 after 5.
Hereford. 949·2179.

83

2, 8 month old calves, half

84

Wanted to Buy
CHIP WOOD. Poles max.

62

.

Hereford. 949·2179.

7105

&amp;,Aeu'B~
Add nostalgic charm to your
home with this lorely motif.
Crochet scarves, lablecloth,
bedspread, pillow lrom lhis basic
~ineapple hexagon . ll's 12\\ inches in diameter in mercerized
bedspre•d cotton; 9 inches in
No. 30. Pattern 7105: directions.
$1.75 for ...:h pattern. Add 501
each pallern for first-class ·airmail and hsndlin&amp;. Stlld Ill:

....

31"

llttflltcrlft O.,L
'
'Dany Sent!Dei
1&amp;3. 0141 ~ sia., N•
, .... IIY 10113. Prlnt lllmt,

e.

1 bedroom trailer, fur · 2 AKC registered poodle
&gt;nJshed. $125. plus utilities &amp; pups. 1 black male for $125_
1 chocolate female for SIOO.
depoSit. 992·7479.
9 weeks old. Call anytime
at 992-7102.
Unfurnished 3 bedroom
trailer, l. oc~ted south of
, Middleport. 992·6637 . bet· 2 AKC registered poodle
pups. 1 black male for $125.
ween 9-~.
1 chocolate female for SIOO.
9 weeks old. Call anytime
44
Apartment
at 992·7102.
for Rent
3 AND"4 RM furnished ap·
1, 8 m'onth old male,
ts. Phone 992-543.4.
registered Blue Tick &amp;
Furnished apartments, 992· Blue Tick pups. 8 weeks
3129, 992-5914, or 1·304-882· old , 949-2545 .

2566.

, UNFUR~ISH,ED ' apts. In
Mlna, Zip, Palin llullllltr. . Middleport &amp; Pomeroy.
992-7511 or 992·613().
Catch on to the craft boom! Send
for our NEW 1981 NEEDLECRAFT
61
Farm Equipment
CATALOG. Oter 172 desi1ns, 3 Three bedroom riverfront
free panerns inside. $1.00
. apartment lor $175.00 mori· 1 6.6 h.p. walk behind
"!h. Rooms for rent, $60.00 Gravely. Just overhauled,
Al.l. CIAF1' IOOIIS. .$1.75 Mdl
13UIIIilll llll1t Qllltlftl .
per month. small deposit new tires, electric start, hlrequired. Call HObstetter lo range, 30" mower. $900.
1·5 h.p. Snapper rider, 26"
Realty al742·2003,
cu! hand, start. $400. 1·8 h.p.

nu:.cz:-QIIIb

I»Suk F--..su.U-H
EIIJ ,,...
1~ ....-·Qiilts
127~ ·~ Dlilill
1ZS.11iilftJ Cnftr ,....
12t4Hl'~

125-hlll Qllllls

124-1111 81111 ·~ ~

UJ.Stitdl~l'
P*ll
122-SIIfl •• ""

IZI.P...
IIS.W, Ill II n.. Cndlel .

nu:
:-..";:~CI*I
nur.r:ix .

IONiw +hit
1..1111111

liMtild)

lOU • Qdts
181-Qdl tu• Cllllctiln I

Gravely rider, 30" cut,

electric! start. $800.
Large 2 bedroom furnl!lhed Gravely Tractor Sales &amp;
apartment. S200. per month . service, 204 Condor St.,
plus utilities. B-3 -kdays. Pomeroy, Oh. 992·2975. ,
992·55-45 or after 7, 9.f9·2214.
'·
1
6.6
h.p.
walk
behind
46
Space for Rent
Gravely. Just overhauled,
COUNTRY MOBIJ..E Home new 't ires, elec,t ric start, hi ·
Park, Route 33, North of. lo range, 30" mower. $900.
Pomeroy. Large lots. Call 1·5 h.p. Snapper rider, 26"
cut hand start. $400. 1-8 h.p.
992-7~79.
GravelY . rider, 30"

cut,

start. $800 .
TRAIJ..ER spaces for rent.' electric!
Gravely Tractor Sales &amp;
Southern Valley Mobile serv1ce
, 204 Condor St.,
Home Park, Cheshire, Oh. Pomeroy,
Oh. 992·2975.
992·39$4,

Motorcycles

motorcycle,

Call949·2649.

l,r anspertallen

1976

good

color

blue .

HOnda four

miles,

tires .

SEFwiEES

$2,450.00. Phone 742·2211
before 5 &amp; 742·2201 after 5.

layout. 992-7201 .

Dozer &amp; ditcher woi"k, lanc;l
water lines, gas
lineS, grate work. Charlie

G~earing ,

Hatfield. 742-2819.

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

SEW IN G
Repairs,

MACHINE

service,

makes! · 992-2284.

all

The

BOWERS

REPAIR sweepers,
toasters, irons, all small
appliances . Lawn mower.

Next to State Highway

81
1971 2 door Monte Carlo.
automatic, bucket seats.
350 V-8, p.s., disc brakes,
am -tape stereo. After 5
p.m. 992·2967.

water &amp; gas lines. Ex cavating work &amp; trans i1

ELWOOD

42.000

radial

J &amp; F BACKHOE SERVICE li scensed &amp; bonded,
septic t ank installation,

Scissors.

speed,

condition.

Excavating

Shop, Pomeroy .
1979 suzuki PE175 , very Fabric
Authorized Singer Sales
good cond. 992-5217 .
and Serv ice. We sharpen

Autos for Sale

71

Home

I m provemenfs

GENE'S
CARPET
CLEANING. Deep stream
clean puts nu·look back in
your carpet, highly recom·
mended, reasonabl e rates,

Garage on Route 7, 985·

3825.

APPLIANCE

SERVICE :

all makes washer, dryers,

ranges, dishwashers ~
disposals, water tanks. Call

Ken Young at 985·3561. 28
Free years
experience. Also will
sell parts you fix .
now 992·6309 or 742·2211 .

ScoJchguard.
1971 2 door Monte Carlo,
a"-'tom~tic ,

350 V-8,

bucket seats,

p.s., disc brakes,

am-tape stereo. After 5

p.m. 992·2967.

estimates. Gene Smith, ca ll

General Hauling
WILL do handyman work 85
in your home . Furniture AGRI ·J..IME Spreading ,
repair in my shop. J im limestone and fill dirt
Bentz, 4th St., Syracuse.
hau ling. Leo Morris, 742·

1972 Belaire . $300 .
Registered Blue Tick coon
hound . 5175. 350 Chevy
7263.

1 bedroom trailer, fur · PUREBRED English
nlshed. S125. plus ulllllles &amp; Shepherd puppies. Stock
and watch dogs. Phone 247depoSit. 992 - 7~79 .
2161.

74

1978 KAWASAKI KZ 650

motor &amp; automatic transmission. Before 3 p.m. 992·

1975 two bedroom trailer,
eMcellent condition located
In the Country Mobile
Home Park. $175.00 per
month, $100.00 deposit. No
pets. Serious calls only.
Phone 247-3942.

72

.

2455.
WILL do handyman work
in your home . Furniture
repair in my shop. Jim

Bentz. 4th St., Syracuse.

TRASH

HAULING,

Syracuse, Ro'ck Springs,

Flatwoods

Rd.

992-5715.

L awrence Manley Jr.

�1

December II, 1980

Page-12 Tile Daily Sentinel
I(

MEN'S WRANGLER '9.~

I
I
I
I

REG. •75.50

NATO warns:SovietS--keep out

FlANNEL SHIRTS
. Slzes ·S, M, Land XL . Col·
orful plal~s TiN!~ pockets ·
full shirt coats.

1WO DAYS ONLY - FRI., DEC. 12 &amp;SAT., DEC. 13
OPEN EVERY NIGHT UNTIL 8:00 P.M.

Sale Price

..

BRIJSSEI.$; Belgllllr\ (AP) - ~·
NATO foreign rnlnlsters; declaring ·
"Poland should be free to decide its
own future" warned today they
would react If the Soviet tfruon intervened In Poland, but did not
specify what their governments
would do.
'
Soviet Intervention would mean·
the end of East-West detente, they
sald.But it wa.~ generally accepted

.

•
"

.' -

$79fJ

TWO DAY SALE

KNIT
ACCESSORIES

*

HAlS - SCARFS •

MIMNS · GLOVES

PAJAMAS

·SETS

CHRISTMAS SALE

SALE $2.80
SALE $3.95
SAlE $5.20
SALE 56.80

-ALL LIVING ROOM SUITES ON SALE

-ALL CHAIRS ON SALE

W

•

THIN SCAN "POCKET'' SIZE ....... SALE $12911
BEARCAT II1... ....
· ••••8•Channels
t'AI I: $1'tftlll Yi
•••••·· ••••·'•~
L~- tl:!.

REG. 1 178~ BEARCAT FOUR-SIX .~.~~~:~~~~-~~~-"-~~~SALE

JUNIOR

SAVE! MEN'S LINED VESTS

(~~

,

.

M

1

..

every

SALE PRICES
.
' .

~./_,1

.~~

/'1
~

·

Appl!~ntees

CHILDREN'S

MEN'S AND BOYS' $1.39

SLEEPWEAR SALE

. TUBE .SOCKS

Men's 522.95 Vests
Sale $18.36
Men's $26.95 Vests
Sale S21.56

day wear or dress
up . Sizes 5 rhru 15.

...

14.

~

Reg. SS.OO ;, .... SALE $3.99 ~
Reg. S8.il0 ...... SALE $6.39 .
Reg. $14.00 .... SALE $11.19 .,.
Reg. S19.00, , ... SALE $15,19 ~

Save this weekend on warm
winter coats in misses and
half sizes . Fur lined coats,
dress length coats, short
sytles and quilted styles.
Reg. $41.00. , .••. Sale $32.80
Reg. $64.00 •.•••• Sale $51.20
Reg. $76.00 .•.••. S;.le $60.80
Reg. $92.00 .•.••. Sale $73.60

group of styles and colors.

BOYS' LINED VESlS
Very

popular for sc hool

and general wear ..Sizes 8 to
20 . Good selection.

BOYS $18.95 VESTS
SALE 516.15
BOYS $21.95 VESTS
SALE $18.75
BOYS $29.95 VESTS
SALE $25.45

CHILDREN'S

COATS AND
SNOWSUITS

BED BLANKETS

ALL SIZES - MACHINE
WASHABLE
(

,?..-'

CARHARTT BRCMN DUCK

MEN'S WRANGLER

WORK CLOTHES

S19fi DENIM JEANS

\{A.)
'

Sale pr ices on our entir e stock
insulated coveralls · l ined

jackets and

coats · bib

overa lls - lined dungarees · lin·
ed ~oods .

SALE FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
'

MEN'S WORK JACKETS
Our entire. stock m en's work
coats and jacketS. Sizes 36 to
50 . Denims and quilt lined
uniform jackets . Carhartt and

Blue Bell brands.

Quilt Lined
JACKET ...........
9~ Blanket Lined
T .....•........
.99 Blanket Lined
CKET ...... .....
.99 Blanket.Lined
COAT ........ : .....
nl!6.9'5Sherpa Lin~d
JAC KET .. .. ... . .

S19.95
$21.25

~- ..~
" ..., .
•
~ . :

WINTER JACKETS
Sizes 8 to 20. Good style:
and color selection.
Boys $29.95

JDETS
.. ; SAL£ ~.45
Boys $34.95 · _ · . _
._ '
JACKETS
... SAL£ '29.75
Boys $39.95 ·
JACKETS
.... SALf .'33.95·
Boys $59.95
JACKETS •. ~ .SAL£ SSCL95

.
,
@
~

.

BICYCLES

WINTUK
YARN

MEN'S
SHIRTS

'1'19, Skein

• V•n Heusen Dress Shirts
eM.,•s Knit Shirts

AT SPECIAL .SALE PRICES:

prepared.
•
Two other men also have been accused of participating in the

NEW YORK .{AP) - Jolm Len·
non's widow says the despafr over
her husband 's slaying is getting out
of hand, and she has urged rock fans
not to treat his death as "the end of

·alleged plot, in which a telephone caller said food had been poisoned in
threeoftheH.E.B. chain's six Wacoston;~~. ,

· Vandals cut down city's tree

an era."

.Ohio lottery l$Jler
ClEVELAND {AP) - The winnlng numbera selected ThUI'!Jday ·
night ln the Ohio Lottery's dally game "The Number" and Its weekly
"Pyramid" game are:

Jonathan Marks, a fonDer federal
prosecuter, was appointed in Adlerberg's place.
MeanWhile, fans contlltued to
mourn IMnon's death, maintaining
a Yl8ll oullkle the excllllive Dakota
apartment buildl.ng where Lennon
lived ln Manhattan. The rock star ·
, wa8 tditot jllllt outside the b!illdlng on
Monday night, just hoan after he
had ~ an liutot~rajlh ftlr Chapman.
· About 2G people held a memorial
service for Lenno.t, who '&lt;'tR •o. at
the Jlllnols ~tale Capitoi '"' 1'h~l·

Pyramid -15; 876; 4309

eMen's Velours

SANTA ClAUS WILL BE ..IN THE STORE .ON FRIDAY AND SATIJRDAY 6 TO .7:30 P.M. AND
MONDAY 6 lO 7:30 P~M . BRING YQU~ CHILDREN IN F~ A VISIT

Excellent s,lection-au sizes •

ElBERFELDS IN POM-EROY .

REDUCED 20%
•'

.

't,

BPC*esmanlbe Reagaa team hopes • the sba'pe Reagan wants, n~ lbat
David A. Slockman of Michigan as · will be respected in both Congress
during the campaign Reagan
budget dlrectfr, Reagan campaign and in financial circles.
promised at least a 2 percent cut,
manager William J. Casey as CIA
Stockman, who will inherit the job · "and I think there's no indication
director, retiring Sen. Richard S. of molding the federal budget into
that we will back offfrom that."
Schweiker R·Pa. as secretary of
Wernberger, who won the
health and h~n . services, Con'
nickname '.'Cap the Kni_fe" for his
necticut industrialist Malcolm
budget-cutting work m former
President Richard M. Nixon's a~
Baldrige as coiJUllerce secretary
and deputy Republican Party chairA suit in the amount of $6368.20 nurustratron, wa.s asked about his
man Drew Lewis as transportation plus 10 percent interest retroactive plans now for nahonal d~ense. .
secretary.
to March 18, has been filed in the
He refused to be specifrc but S8ld,
Regan, chairman of Merrill Lynch Meigs County CoiJUllon Pleas Court " I . support a strong . American
&amp;Co., the nation's largest brokerage WagaatiensrtDtihsteri~~~.:es !i~~~.~h=~Yr nulitary force wher~~er 1t ISm our
finn, joined Baldrige in labeling in·
best mterest to do so.
flationthe nation's"No.1problem."
J.B. O'Brien, 1001'. Court St.,
Reagan still must ~e seven
Both tax cuts and budget cuts are Pomeroy, is to claim payment for more Cabmet-level appomtees, and
needed to fight inflation and damages to real estate owned by va~10us sources ~Y · he will. move
stimulate productivity, said Regan, O'Brien, allegedly caused by the qurckly to nonunate Ha1g as
whose appointment• gives the breakage of a water line on the secretary of state- perhaps by this
Cabinet roster an economi~ property.
\V~kend.

Judgement SOught

sday.

Miss Ono has asked that 10
rrJnutes of silence be observed
worldwide at 2 p.m. Sunday to honor
Lennon's memory.
In Miami, WWWL program director Rick Peters said 10 Florida
stations would go off the air for the

vigil. Two Ohio rock music radio
stations, WWWN·FM in Cleveland
and WSAI·FM in Cincinnati, said
they would suspend broadcasting for
JOminutes.
Lennon's body was cremated in
suburban Hartsdale, N.Y., and his
ashes giyen to Miss Ono to be buried ·

privately at a secret place.
In a recent interview, LeMon said
he did not believe in worship of the
dead. He was also said to have an
aversion to the cult worship at the
·graves of such stars as Elvia
Presley.

' threats.

Tlle.Nlllr\ber - ~1

• WHtern Shirts
• Flannel Sport and
Western Shirts
• Von Heusen Qulanas _
Splendor KnitS anct
Su-s

Mechanic St. warehouse

·.Re.p,.. . . al.omtnrd~.

"So many things are happening ...
people are committing suicide. They
are sending me telegrams saying
this is the end of an era. I'm ~lly so \
concerned," Yoko Ono said Thursday.
Earlier this week, two people apparently despondent over Lennon's ..
death took their own lives.
Mark David Cbapman, who Is
cbarged with the shooting. death of
the internationally famous rock
star, was taken to court ln a bullet·
proof vest for a hearing TbUI'!Jday in
which hlB court-appoliiteil attorney
withdrew froin the case. A new
lawyer was appclnted.
.
Lawyer llerbert Adlerberg said
tile case was "becoming an
' al]lfttrosa," with his one'man pra~
tice interrupted by a flood of
telephone calla from joumaliBts and
the curious. Adlerberg denied reports that be had received death

UTrlETON, Colo. - This Denver suburb is looking for a new
Christmas tree. Someone made Off with the old one, lights and all.
Last week, the city planted a live evergreen ln a newly landscaped
traffic island. Electric outlets were .!ilstaUed and the tree was
decorated with lights.
,
But vandals chopped down the tree and hauled it away. The tree was
valued at $157.10 and the lights at $23.

•

RED HEART 1A9

support tax cut

Attorney withdraws from case

ROME - The Italian govenunent raised the price of premium
guollne 33 cents a gallon today to"·7'i to raise.money for the southern
areu devastated by an earthquake last month.
The price of regu1Br gaiOilne wu incre88ed 32 cents I! gallon to
" .so. The price of gasoline ln Italy has has risen 30 percent this year.

SAVEM

AU. RCA CONSOlfS

WACO, TeXlls - Two brothers have been arraigned on federal
charges ln conneCtion with telephone calls demanding $60,000 in cash
ln exchange for the location of grocery items supposedly laced with
strychnUne.
·
U.S. Magistrate Roy Rutland on Thursday set the bond of Steven
V~ Howard, 24, and David Wayne Howard, 21, at $100,000 on charges
of mterference with interstate COIJUllerce. Police Chief Larry Scott
said state charges of attempted theft of more than $10,000 were being

.Italian gas goes to. $3.77 a gallon

- 2'6" wheels- racing style
-only three to sell

$22.15
$22.7 5

. I)YS'

.I

1

Excel lent quality hand kni1tin9 yarn by coa t s and
· Clark - 31h ounce skei ns. Big coiQ_r se_
lection.

$16.95

MEN'S
FlANNEL

REG. 1123.95 MURRAY 10 SPEED

Basic styles in sizes 27 to 42
waist. Pre·washed No·fault
blue denim . Straight legs or
boot flare .

WASIUNGTON - 'Ibe Senate has rejected a move to give the 52
American hoSbjgeS ln Irjlll a special bonus that would have 81)10unted
. to about $40,000 per captive already.
Sen. Mark Hatfield, R.()re., said he proposed the $10Q.per-{jay bonus
as a " Cbrisbnas present" for the Americans when they are released.
They have been ~d ln captivity since Nov. 4,1979.
By a 44--'!6 vote, the Senate decided Thlll'1ldaY not to consider the
special bonus at this time. ·

Charge brothers in grocery case

' Sizes s, M. L and XL plus Ta ils M, L
and XL · Big Man 's sizes 18, 19, 20 and
Big Tails sizes 18, 19, 20.
E«ellent quality by Mr. Leggs and
Elv·.
$14.95 Flannels ............ $11.66
$15.95 Flannels ............ $12.46
$16.95 Flannels ............ $13.26
· $18.95 Flannels ............ 514.76

REDUCED 20%

Senate rejects hostage bonus

•

WORK
SHIRTS

This sale in,:ludes all of our blankets. Twin
and full bed sizes and king sizes. Solid colors .
patterns. Electric and flannel sheet blcmkets
are included .

.WASHINGTON (AP) - Ronald
Reagan's fli:st eight Cabinet choices
-all white, male and Republican - ·
are speaking up quickly ln favor of
the president-elect's plans to reduce
taxes, cut the federal budget and
,.strengthen national defense.
Still to come after presentation of
the first group Thursday: Reagan's
decision on a secretary of state, an
important foreign policy post that
retired Gen. Alexander Haig seems
increasingly likely to fill.
The first eight selections Included
New York financier Donald T.
Regan as treasury secretary ,
Reagan confidant Caspar Wein·
berger as defense secretary and his
personal lawyer, William French
Smith, as attorney general.
There were no surprises as

Pajamas, gowns, . robes
and blanket sleepers.
Sizes for infants thru size

Men's sizes 9 to 15 - Boys
sizes 7 to 11 ., While with col· ·
ored tops. Many school colors.
$pringfool quality .

F riday and Saturday .
zes B to 20.
Flannel shirts · knit shirts westerns - velours. A fine

,,

Carnival Crea tions matching sets
in assorted colors .
Also strapless .bras fealuring a
0
.
son •

1

Warm
and
fash ionable junior

on sale. Coat styles · vests
· and slipovers. Sizes S, M,
Land XL.

.(~1~
, ') LINGERIE SALE • ,~ ..

Denims - polyester .and down fil led
nylons. Sizes S, M , L , XL and XX L.

Reg. $16.00 ...... Sale $13.59
Reg. $21.00 . .. ... Sale $17.89
Reg. $28.00...... Sale S23.79
Reg . $36.00 ...... Sale $30.59

•295 · ,if/
..'

SALE PRICES
. START AT ONLY

s14900 i \ . · ·~ ~ u~sf~".;~~e.w~~~e~r"~~~~~
REG. 1299!1i BEARCAT 210.. !'.i.V.~?.".~~~~~~~.".~~:.SALE s23!JOO · • .. /,::c~ :~~::!: ~t::::::::: ~:t~:~:!~ ! / :
No crvstals needed.
REG . $5.00 ... ....... SALE $4.25
REG. s8.oo .......... SALE S6.ao • ,·
REG. '399'l BEARCAT 220... .
20Chan~:'!. SAL£ S]1fJ
. .
REG. $8.50 .......... SALe$7.25

COAT SALE

WILLIAM Caaey, left, wbo
Presldeat·eled Ronald
Re!lgan's choice to become
CIA director, &amp;alb wi&amp;h reporten Tbunday In Waablngton
with ni.en Reagan has
designated for Cabinet-level
JIOIIIB. From left are: Casey;
Rep. Da~ Stockman, R·
Mich., &amp;he choice for budget
director; Drew Lewis, selected to become Transportatloo
secrelary; WOllam French
~th, dealgDated for &amp;he po11t
of attoney general; Caspar
Weinberger, the selection for
Defense secretary; Donald T.
Regan, oamed for the pest of
Treasury secretary; and
Malcolm Baldrige, Reagan's
choice for Commerce
secretary. (AP Laserphota) .
.,

AI (of our men's sweaters •

~l&lt;l¥1':1::!"""~.-r;::l•lll:.llllllllllli:.II';'¥1111JJ;¥llllrl=!fl:&lt;lo:ll ~ ~

Men's $29 .95
Jackets •...••..•. Sale $24.50
Men's $39.95
Jack ets .......... Sale $32.70
Men 's $49.95
Jackets ••••••.•. Sale$40.90
Men's 569 .95
Jackets.......... Sale $57.30

coats for

2· 0ay Sale prices on our. entire stock · of a-track and
cassette pre-recorded tapes.

!•

Stock

SIZES 36 to 50

I secti on, 12 pag~s I SCents .
A Multi media 1nc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middl'e port, Ohio Friday, December 12,1980

The Reagan
Team ...

MEN'S
SWEATERS

S.T ADAPTER SCANNER,
4 CHANNELS

Entire

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REG. 19gm

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REG. 1149~

enttne
•

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BEARCAT SCANNERS

REG.

dependence."
Foreign ministers of the Nortb
Atlantic Alliance, winding up their
annual winter meeting today,
agreed that Soviet intervention·
could take varying forms, r8nglng
from a military strike to a regime of
repression by a pupPet govenunent
in Warsaw.
The ministers alse agreed that dlf·
(Continued on page 12)

!"

CHRISTMAS SALE

WINTER
JACKETS

used force In breach of the principles
of the U.N. charter and international
law.
"Detente has brought appreciable
benefits to East-West cooperation,"
their declaration went on. "But it
has been seriously damaged by
Soviet actions. It could not survive if
the Soviet Union were again to
violate the basic rights of any state,
its territorial integrity and in·

•

at

..

"'
•

-ALL GUN CABINETS ON SALE -ALL DESKS ON SALE

SALE MEN'S

review. At the same time genuine
S&lt;Jviet efforts to restore the confidence necessary will meet with a
ready response from the allies."
The coiJUllunique set the Polish
crisis against the background of the
year-old Soviet intervention in
Afgh;mistan and what was described
as Moscow's "continuing military
buildup.'' ,
The Soviets, the allies said, have

•

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and D. Coat
style top. Ad·
justable •grip·
per
boxer
waist bottoms.
Choose broad·
cloths or .!ian
nel.

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own future . . The allies respect the
principle. of non-Intervention and
strongly urge others to do likewise.
Any intervention would . fundamentally. alter the entire ln·
ternational situation.·The allies will
be compelled to react ln the manner
which the gravity of this development would require.
"Therefore the council will keep
the situation in close and contlnuol!S
I

Vol. 21, No. 110
, Copyrighted 1980

fURNITURE SPECIALS

'

Sale

.

·~

MEN'S

REG. $3.50
REG. $4.95
REG. $6..50
REG . $8.50

~

$1()95

at the meeting tha~ direct NATO
mllltar)' action would be undesirable
and probably touch of a world war.
A COIJUllunique issued by the
foreign ministers at the end of their
annual winter meeting Underscored
the "great concern" felt by the allies
at "the menace which hangs over
Poland."
The declaration said ln part:
"Poland should be free to decide its

I .

..
CHAPMAN BROUGifr BACK TO BELLEVUE maD appeared at Mmlllattan Criminal Court. QlapCorrectiOII offleera escort Mark David ChapmaD ceo- man, aceused ·of killlDI fermer BeaUe Jolul ~ Ia
ter wllh coat over head, Into the prison wa~ at New York Monday lllgllt, a..,ellftd 1D caur&amp; wttllldu•
~lli-&gt;11&lt;' kospi!111 in :-oew Yt·rk thuMday, after Chvp- torney-wbowlthdrewfremfllecaae. (APLuerpllotDJ •.

~

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