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                  <text>December

TOM SAYS•••
ONLY lWO DAYS LEFT OF OUR F.IRST·
TIME EVER SECOND ANNIVERSARY
DENT • SCRATCH • DEMO

LE
LISTENS TO DEMANDS - Four American
hostages beld In Iran listen to Abdelkarlm Gheraieb,
not pictured, Algerian ambassador to Iran, as be explains lhe latest deJllands from Iran for their release.
The photo was taken on Christmas Day and released

Saturday by Pars News Agency. From left ·are:
William Belk of Columbia, S. C.; Thomas Scbaefer of
Tacoma; Wash. ; Donald Hohman of West Sacramento,
Calif.; and John Graves of Reston, Va. lAP Laserphoto) .

.

Reagan's statement gets reaction
By The Associated Press
The speaker of Ira n's Pa rliament
reacted angrily today to Presidentelect Ronald Reagan's charge that
the American hostages were " kidnapped by barbarians," and the
Iranian official implied that the
United States was trying to swindle
Iran.
Reagan was asked by reporters in
Los Angeles Sunday if he could go
along with the latest Ira nian
proposal for a $9 tillion down
payment for the release of the 52
hostages, with the rest of the terms
to be negotiated.
" No," he replied. " I don't think

you pay ransom for people that have
been kidnapped by barbarians."
Hashemi Rafsanjani, the speaker
of Majlis, or Parliament , responded
to Reagan's corrunents from the
floor of the 223-seat assembly,
saying Iran was not worried about
confronting the United States.
" We are not scared of your
threats," he said.
··we want our money back and you
call it ransom/' Rafsanjani said.
The deposit of fi nancial guarantees
1s necessary to " prevent you from
swindling us .
" The world must know that according to our Islamic morality we

wanted to solve the hostage issue but
it is the U.S. which looks about for an
excuse.
"We will settl e accounts with
you," he said without elaboration.
Iran asked the United States
earlier this month to deposit $24
billion with the Algerian government as guarantees for assets Iran
wants returned. TodaY was the
hostages 422nd day of captivity.
Rafsanjani was interrupted three
times during the course of his
remarks by Majlis deputies shouting
" God is great!" and " Death to

Area deaths
Gladys G. Wilkins
Gladys Grueser Wilkins, 73, !:..ancaster, fonnerly of Pomeroy, died
Sunday in Lancaster.
Mrs. Wilkins was born and reared
in Pomeroy. She was a daughter of
the late William and Addie Bra dshaw Grueser. She was also
preceded in death by a brother in
August. William Grueser of
Pomeroy.
Surv iving are her husband,
Robert ; a brother-in-law and sist er,
Roll and and Helen Neutzling ,
Pomeroy; a sister-in-law . Mary
Grueser of Pomeroy. a nd several
nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be held at I
p.m. Tuesday at the Frank Smith
Funera l Home in Lancaster. Bunal
will also be at Lancaster.

Me:ags COunty
o

happemngS.
o

• •

Court ends marriages
Four marriages have been ended
in the Meigs County Corrunon Pleas
Court, presided over by Judge John
C. Bacon.
Vonderine Williams, Pomeroy,
has been granted a divorce from
Freeman Wi ll iams , also of
Pomeroy, on grounds of gross
neglect of duty and extreme crue lty.
Dissolution agreements were granted to Rhonda Stockwell, Rutland,
and James William Stockwell,
Springfield; and Sue Floyd and Lee
Floyd, both of Pomeroy.
A divorce .was granted to Delores
Hudson, Syracuse, from Dencil Hudson, Chillicothe, on grounds of gross
neglect of duty and extreme cruelty.
The plaintiff Wi!S awarded custody
the five children of the marriage.

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Saturday Admissions--Vene da
Knight, Racine ; Helen Lochary,
Pomeroy ; Eva Shaifer, Racine;
. Jack Horne, Rutland ; Irene
Gilmore, Pomeroy.
Saturday Discharges--J oseph
Vadish, Elizabeth Cleek, Betty Johnson, Goldie Lawson, Janice Nelson.
Sunday Admissions-John Shuler,
Pomeroy ; Clarence Taylor, Mason;
Mary Kay Hennessy, Denver, Colo.;
Woodrow Kuhn, Pomeroy .
Sunday Discharges-None.

Bad weather and a slumping economy apparently had at least one
beneficial effect this Christmas- keeping holiday traffic deaths we ll
' below expectations, the National Safety Council'says.
During the four-day Christmas holiday weekend, 493 people were
killed on the nation's · highways, according to an Associated Press
tally. The council said before the holiday began at 6 p.m." Wednesday
that 650 to 750 travelers could be killed by midnight Sunday.
Council statisticians said that during a four-day , non-holiday
weekend at this time of the ye~r, 670 traffic deaths might be expected.

Man faces child .a buse charges

ELBERFELDS
...
-1f''u'""'i:.

New Year
Cards
Hallmark New .Year

Eva j. Houdashelt
Eva Janet Houdashelt, 99, former
Minersville resident, died Sunday at
the Morn ing View Care Center at
Nmth Condit, Ohio.
She was preceded in death by her
parents. Albert and Louisa Adams
Houdashelt, and six brothers,
George. Thomas. Albert John,
J ames Ashley, Pearl and Clinton Arthur.
Surviving a re three nieces, four
nephews, l3 great nieces a nd
nephews, 12 great-great-nieces a nd
nephews and several cousins.
Miss Houdashelt was a member of
the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter
Day Saints and was a former member of the Glenwood Methodist Church. She was a descendant of
Revolutionary War ancestors and
was a member of the Meigs County
Pioneer and Historical Society .
Funeral services were held at II
a.m. today at the Ewing Funeral
Home in Pomeroy. Burial was in the
Gilmore Cemetery .

HE'LL

cards are the perfect
way to share a
special thank -you or
wish someone well
in the coming year.

ER

I.

RALEIGH, N.C. - A 7,year-old girl has told authorities her father
stabbed her in the head with a table fork and then locked her inside a
hot electric oven, according to police.
Detective G.H. Westbrook said the child, Dontressa Taylor, told officers Monday she beat on the oven .door with her. hands and head in a
vain attempt to escape.
Westbrook, who said the child also was hit over the head with a soft
drink bottle, reported the girl had stab wounds on her head and cuts
and third-degree liurns over most of hec body. She was in fair con·
·
dition at Wake Medical Center.

Court rejects latest Hughes will
CARSON CITY, Nev. - The Nevada Supreme ·Court, ending one of
the ·last remaining legal battles over Howard Hughes's fortune, has
rejected clai.qls that a " lost" will left his money to a Florida medical
institute.
··The court Monday foulill no proof that the eCC'"ntric· industrialist,
who died April 5, 1976, had written a will benefiting the Hughes
..
·
Medicallnstitute of Miami.
The court had been urged to let a jury decide whether Hughes left his
fortune- reportedly more than a half billion dollars - to the institute.

TELLI I

Chaos followed meddling
I

YOU'LL HAVE TO COME IN
AND SEE! I• I•

19SO H.:lllm;uk Care1s In c

ELBERFELDS
IN
POMEROY
~=::.:::.=-::.:__:.:.:.:._:_______j::::===========~

20%

TO

61%

SAVINGS. • • •

The Farmers Bank has many
di[ferent types o[ savings plans, all
paying the highes t interest all owed
by la w.
Whether you are saving for some
special reason, or just saving for a
rainy day , the Farmers Bank can
help you with your savings goals.

ClUCAGO- President Carter's national security adviser Zbigniew
Brzezinski, is a " second-rate thinker" whose meddling cre~ted chaos
in the administration, a former State Department aide says.
Hodding Carter m, who served as press secretary to former
Secretary _of State Cyrus Vance, also said the most harmful aspect of
the admmistratwn "was·the president's almost willful inconsistency."
And one of the big problems, Carter said, was the president's failure
to keep Brzezinski and others from dissenting from policy decisions
once formulated.
.
.

Ohio ~oUery winner
CLEVELAND - The winning number selected Monday night in the
Ohio Lottery's daily game " The Number" is 352.

Weather

.

'

15 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

In ·hostage crisis

Weather, economy help lower toll

America !''

I Section, 8 pages

Pomeroy- Midd ieport, Ohio Tuesday, December 30, 1980

NEW YORK - Americans will be paying an estimated 8 cents more
for every gallon of gasoline or heating oil due to another round of price
increases from "members of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting
Countries.
Libya, Indonesia and Venezuela, which together supply 8 P.rcent of
U.S. oil needs, on Monday announced price increases of as much as $4
a barrel.
The current round of increases was touched off Dec. 15 when Saudi
Arabia raised its oil price from ~ to $32 a barrel. OPEC, which
provides 26 percent of the oil used in the United States, decided a day
later to let iis 13 members raise prices an average of about 10 percent.
Analysts predict that the Jan. 1 increases by cartel members and
others could boost U.S. gasolhie and heating oil prices as much as 8
cents a gallon .

SALE

enttne

at

Vol. 21, No. 181

Copyrighted 1980

Gas prices going up again

T'S 0

•

•

e

•

••

Cloudy tonight. Lows in the mid-20s. Cloudy with a chance of snow
Wednesday. Highs in the mid-30s. Chance of precipitation 10 percent
tonight and 40 percent Wednesday. Winds southeasterly near 10 mph
, tonight.
Extended Ohio Forecast
Thursday through Saturday:
Snow ending on New Y~ar's Day. Fair Friday and Saturday, except
a chance of flurries near Lake Erie. Highs mostly In the 30s. Lows In
lhe mid-teens to mid-ZOs.

President reiterates
no payment message
WASfUNGTON lAP)- The Carter administration, vowing not to
pay a penny before all 52 hostages
are freed , is readying a formal reply
to Iran's latest blueprint for
rele;tsing its American captives,
Assistant Secretary of State
Harold H. Saunders, a key member
of the U.S. negotiating team, said
Monday night the message probably
wo~ld be turned over to Algerian gobetweens at a windup session of
talks here today.
Saunders refused to elaborate on
the U.S. response, although he indicated that no breakthrough is imminent in the eight-week-old, indirect negotiations with Iran.
Off(cials insisted Monday the
United States will not accede to
Iran's latest demand for $24 billion
in gu_arantees. .
" The word of the president of the
United States is the highest
authority that this country can offer ," State Department spokesman
John H. Trattner said. ·" We don't see
the need to offer additional guarantees beyond that. "
But another official, who asked not
to be identified , said the Tehran
regime could get several billion
dollars ·in assets immediately if the
hostages are released. _
The official said urifrozen Irania n
assets could be put into an escrow
account under a neutral country's
control. Iran would receive the
money s imultaneous with the.
freeing of the hostages, now in their
423rd day of captivity.
"However," he said, "they are no't
going to get a· penny until the
Americans are out ~ all 52 of them."
Iran is ins isting the money be
deposited in the Algerian Central
Bank as a guarantee t.hat. Irania n
asset'! held in western banks before
the U.S. Embassy takeover on Nov.

4, 1979, will be returned.
President Carter has called those
terms unreasonable and said they
are beyond his authority to implement.
Vice President Walter F . Mondale
said Monday he thought the Ira nians
might be marking time in hopes of
discovering where President-elect
Ronald Reagan stands on the issue.
Speaking with reporters in Vail,
Colo., where he ·was ski in ~ . Monrl•l•

said he does not foresee any quick
change in the situation.
. Reagan himself said Monday he
had no regrets about his characterization of the Iranian captors a
day earlier as " barbarians ." The
remark was denounced by the
spea ker of Iran's P arliament
Hashemi Rafsanjani.
'
"What have they got to be angry
about?" Reagan asked reporters in
Los Angeles. "They're the ones who

MORE HOSTAGE DISCUSSIO~S - Algerian Intermediaries enter the State Department in
Washington Monday with Deputy llecretary of State
Harold Saunders for ten hours of discussion on efforts

did the kidnapping."
The purpose of the Washington
talks with the Algerians is to try to
keep the negotiations alive, even
though ther e is little hope of
progress during the closing weeks of
the Carter administration.
" We will not abandon the process
that we have been engaging in to
secure the hostages' release," Trattner said . t'We will keep the
negotia ling channel open.''

to solve the hostage situation in Iran. From lelt are:
Algeria's ambassador to Iran, Abdelkarlm Gherieb;
Saunders ; Algeria's ambassador to the U. S., Redha
Malel; and cbalrman of lire Algerian Central Bank,
Segbir Mosteli. (AP Laserphotol .

Meigs hoard okays special program
The Meigs Local School District
will participate in a program for
training teachers to work with talented and gifted students.
This was decided Monday nigh,t
when the district's board of
education met in special session at
the Meigs Junior High School.
Asst. Supt. Dan Morris, setving in
the absence of David Gleason, said
he has been working with Ohio
Unive rsity and the Ohio Department
of Education on the program which
would provide a workshop for some
35 teachers of the district.
Teachers would learn about
programs and methods for talented
and gifted students during the
workshop sessions. Cost Qf the
program to the district will be $1350.
This is the first strong positive action taken in the district towards the
development of a program for the
talented and gifted a board
spokesman observed .
The board, at the request of
Treasurer Jane Wagner, approved
temporary appropriations which
will provide monies so that employes can be paid on Friday, the fir-

st pay day of the new year. The
board adopted a policy ahd
procedure for the evaluation of the
s uperintendent a nd a policy and
procedure policy for the evaluation
of principals, the assistant superintendent a nd other administrative
personnel. Evaluations must be
completed in January.
Asst. Supt. Morris was named to
evaluate the principals and assistant
principals while the board of
education, with the assistance of
Meigs Co unty Superintendent
Robert Bowen will evaluate Morris.
The Meigs Local Board will evalua te
Supt. Dav id Gleason who is unable to
be on the job due to recent major
surgery at the Cleveland Clinic.
Three board members present for
the meeting discussed a bond issue
which may be placed before Meigs
Local voters. It is reported that taxpayers of the district a re paying four
mills to the state on the high school
building while only about one-half
mill would be necessary. With the
permission of the state, the amount
being paid could be reduced to the
one-half mill with the balance being

kept in the district.
The bond issue would have to be
voted upon the residents of Meigs
Local District even though it would
not mean any increases in real
estate taxes . The measure wou ld
mean a considerable amount of ad·
ditionalmonies for the district.
The board took no acti on at last
night 's meeting beyond requesting
the Asst. Supt. Mo rris conta ct a Cin·
cinnati bonding finn to ask a

rep1·esentative of the firm to come to
Middleport and explain [urther the
details of the situation to the board.
The board adopted job desceptions
at last night's meeting for princ ipal s, secondary ; principal s,
elementary; assistant high school
principals, and the post of assistant
s uperintendent.
The board is scheduled to hold its
1981 organizational session F riday
night.

Evans.kills merger proposal
CHI CAGO iAP )- Beatrice Foods
Co., one of the nation 's largest diversifie d manufacturers of food and
related products , has decided aga inst a proposed merger with Bob
Evans Farms inc.
A Beatrice spokesman said Monday that the alleged refusal of
Robert L. Evans to sign confidentialit y, non-competi ng and
trade name agreements were factors in Beatrice's decision. He said
Evans was the only director of either
company to refuse to sign the

agreements.
The spokesman said the company
believed such agreements were
·'essential"' for completion of the
merger. Without such pacts , the
Evans name could conceivably be
used for a new, competing business,
according to the spokesman.
A merger agreement had been approved by the boards of both companies. Holders o[ 74 percent of Bob
Evans Farms' total outstanding
shares had approved the merger at a
Dec. 15 meeting , according to the
Beatrice spokesman.

SALE STARTS

MONDAY, DEC. 29
.AND ENDS
WEDNESDAY, DEC. 31
OPEN MONDAY TIL 8:00 PM

NEW YEAR'S WATCH
There will be a New Year's Eva
watch service at the Eagle Ridge
Community Church beginning at
7:30p.m. Wednesday. Dan Haymag
and the Hymntimers will provide the
music. Pastor Carl Hicks invites the
public.

MEETS FRIDAY
Mci~s County Pomona Grange
will meet Friday at the Rock Springs
Grange Hall with Star Grange to.serve refreslunents.

TUESDAY TIL 5: WEDNESDAY TIL 5

'

Fs

Farmers

Bank
.

Ill

I oll ' f

tl.lfi jf '

Mern llt'' FDIC

The Communitv Owned Bank
"

0

241 Third Ave.

WOJU( BEGUN - David Olioa, left, IIIII Bollby
'
• ~ones, ' emjlloyel . ol Eby c-tnaeton, Kent,
~allblaltea, pleee lojJ~tber pipe tllrqll ,r111e11
Jlmelte. fW w11 be lbot talo lhe abe...aed Panct
C.l Mille ... Ollhol'lle 81. Ill Pnmel'9y. Tbe pipe- a-

.,

leaded 4G feet Into tbe"mine abaft wltb llmeslone to be
llllol 18 feet 1o fW tbe Inside tbe tbe mille .. Tbe Peacock
Mille II tbe ftaal project of three oudl cllllfnp el abl!adoaed m1net lD Pomeroy by tbe Eby Co. It Is tbe only ·
lf&amp;e IB wldeh worten had lo actually enter tbe abl!adeled analo t'Omplete lhc 101 projeet. ·

·~

MUCH EQUIPMENT - Russ Eby, owner of Eby
CODBtructors, Kent, W•sh., is dwarfed by lhe large
amount of heavy equipment necessary to fill and seal
abandoned coal mlaes, This equipment Is being u~ed on

Osborne St. in Pomeroy this week to clloe tbe Peaeodt
Mines. After lhe mine Is filled wltb llmeslolle sbotta&amp;o ·
the mine shaft by tbe eqalpmeJU, a"five feet C!OIIi:relle
seal will be placed at tbe entrance. The Eby Co. bu
closed three such mlues In Pomeroy.

�December 30, 1980

Commentary

December 30, 1980
The Da;ry Sentinel
Pag~

2 Pitt rips Gamecocks

•

Human rights: msum

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) -

Rick 'l'rocano and Randy McMillan

much of the world.
· Examples are all too numerous·. In
the Soviet Union during the year " inmates of .. . penal institutions were
still being subjected to a regime of
chronic hunger, inadequate medical
care and difficult, often dangerous
compulsory labor."
The Soviets are also found guilty
of

~&lt; the

stole the thunder from Heisman
'l'rophy winner George Rogers ·as
third-ranked Pittsburgh crushed
No.18 South Carolina 37-9 in the
Gator BowJ'game Monday night.
Trocano scored one touchdown,
set up a field goal and combined with
McMillan on a 42-yard screen pass
for another score as the Panthers
capturejl· their seventh straight victory, completing an 11-1 campaign.
Rogers, who lost a pair of fumbles,
surpassed the !OO.yard mark for the
22nd consecutive game; but never
was a major factor . He had Jl3 yards on 27 &lt;jlrries, sitting out most of
the final qilarter when Carolina went
with rese(ves.
Defensive end Hugh Green, the
Lombar~ Award winner who was
second tO Rogers in the Heisman
voting, also was ' overshadowed by
hts ownteanunates as the Pitt defense set up two touchdowns with tur-

ment poticy in dealing with dissent"
in Argentina, Chile, El Salvador,
Guatemala , Uruguay and
Paraguay.
In Asia , Bangladesh is indicted for
holding poUtical prisoners for years
without trial, Vietnam (or herding
tens of thousands into " reeducation " camps.
All of above may come as no parll cular surprise. Right.s violations,
however, are far from limited to the
Communist regimes and the
politi cally underdeveloped Third
World. The problem, the report observes, cuts a.;ross national and
Ideological boundaries. The West
and it.s associates are not spared.
Israel is criticized for arrest and
conviction of 11 prisoners of conscience, the use of administrative
measures to physically restrict individuals without due process of law,
including detaining them without
trial, the lack of effective safeguards to ensure that the basic rights of
those in custody are protected."
West Gennany is cited for
isolation imposed upon people held
in connection with politi cally
motivated crimes, and Brita'in for
operating non-jury courts in Northern Ireland .

ments toward their own citizens in

arrest, trial, impr isonment

or forced detention Jn mental
hospitals of many dissenters." And
in the five years since the signing of
the Helsinki accords that supposedly
guaranteed certain basic rights to
even Soviet citizens, some 500 have
been jailed for political offenses.
Most of the Soviet East European
allies are similarly taken to task, the
East Germans and Romanians
specifically for jailwg people attempting to leave . the co11ntries
without perrnissJon.
In the Midest , Iran, understandably, receives special attention for, among ot her
re volutfon~ry pra ctices, "sentences
of dea th and Oogging .. . imposed
even when they were not required by
Islamic law." Iraq is charged wit h
mass arrests e:~nd " routine and
sys temati c torture of political
detainees." Similarly Syria, while
Iong-tenn detenti on without trial
cha racterizes the administration of
justice in Jordan , Saudi Arabia and,
in North Africa, Morocco and Libya .
Moving on to Latin America ,

When if comes to police brutality ,
Amnesty International finds it.s em:
pl oy against ethnic minorities is not
only widespread and severe, but "officially tolerated." In the United
States.
There is more, unfortunately all
· too much more. What it all says is
that despite centuries of efforts to
spread the ocncept of the rule of law
and wars fought partly in the cause
of preservin g and expanding human
freed om, ours is still not a world
where basic human righl-'i are
secure or even widely observed.
. The incoming American administration may, as advertised, deemphasize concern £or rights cts a
determining factor in U. S. policy
toward the rest of the world. But that
does not rnet:tn the transgression of

rights is going to be any less of a
reality and a problem throu ghout
"violati ons of hwnan rights seemed the world. And lhu.s for that adto be a pennan~nt fectturc of govern- mini stmtion.

novers.
Linebacker Sal Sunseri led the
defensive charge that kept Carolina,
8-4, in poor field position most of the

'

By Don Graff
You've heard it before - frequently . Those who won't learn from the
past all too often end up repeating it.
On the evidence, crisis-prine
Eastern Europe is on the brink of a
repetition .
The current crisis is, of course,
PQiand, simmering since midsummer with rebellion against its
socialist order. For almost as long,
the Soviet Union has been poised for
a preventive invasion.
It all sounds ominously like old
times - specifically, 1953 in East
Germany , 1956 in Hungary, 1968 in
Czec hoslovakia.
Those were events from which
there was much to be learned. They
demonstrated that the subject
peoples within the postwar Soviet
empire could never be completely
pacified, that Soviet hegemony had
no basis other than Soviet force.
They were also painfully object
lessons that the Soviets would not
hesitate to apply that force, no ma tter what the politi,cal and economic

And they taught the Soviets in particular another valuable lesson:
That rio matter how outraged the
reaction of the Wes[, the latter would
not move to retaUate in any
significant fashion so long as the
Soviets confined their police
operations to their own sphere of
postwar influence.
The West at the moment is exceedingly concerned about the
situation in Poland. But predictably,
it is expressing 'its concern through
ca refully imprecise warning
statements. And if past experjence
is evidence, it is not likely to do
much more whatever develops.
The West is far from alone in heing
concerned. Poland's East European
neighbors are even more so. Their
concern is not with statements but
with direct involvement in which,
should it come to the crunch, they
stand io lose almost as much as the
Poles.
Not so much Poland 's inunediate
neighbors to the south and west.
Czechsolovakia has been comatose
since brought to heel in 1968. And the
East Gennans ... Well, what can you

say except that when the Soviets say power depends upon continued
jwnp, the East Germans are Soviet hegemony in Eastern Europe.
prepared instantly to field an Olym- If that goes, they go too.s They also
pic team.
have learned lessons.
Hungary, however, is a very difIf it doesn 'I come to that, it will be
ferent matter. Since the devastation thanks to the Poles themselves.
of 1956, it has quietly but steadily . They have the choice of living under
transfonned itself into the most an authoritarian regime of local
liberal of the satellite societies. The composition or one, certainly far
Hungarians see themselves, and are harsher, installed by ihe Soviets.
widely seen, as the neighbors to be The Soviets have made very clear
influenced first and most powerful they they much prefer the fanner .
by the Polish experience. It could But preference will yield to
also share in Soviet suppression of necessity if the fine line between
tliat experience, if it comes to that.
ch;mges within the .present political
Then there is Rumania, which and social structure and a challenge
does not treat its homefolks any to the very existence of that strucmore generously than do the Soviets ture is crossed.
their own but which for some time
has heen getting away \Vith a cheeky
Unfortunately, the past provides
independence in foreir JOlicy. That no answer to precisely where that
·situation might not survive a Soviet line lies. Only that the location may
decision that the empire requires a be disastrously different as viewed
general shaking up.
from the satellites from Moscow.
Given such a decision, the
In the absence of that vital inHungarians, Rumanians and others, formation, the lessons from East
even though their sympathies might Europe's postwar past may 'be of lithe with the Poles, could he expected tle ·practical use. Even those who
to join a Soviet police action. The have learned them well may find no
regimes in Budapest, Bucharest and satisfactory alternative to repeating
Sofia know that their continuation in once again.

' 'You've go t a pretty good idea for a Sitcom
hwe, but it doesn 't undermine the moral fiber
of society enough .

Letters to editor
sacrifice,

God is with us
As the old year of 1980 draws to a
well deserved finale, let us be ever
thankful that our God sti ll rules and
reigns. Is your God dead ' Sorry.
Mine is a Living Lord who ever
keeps watch above His own. Inflation , high pri ces, high interest
rates - all these are still with us.
They didn 't develop overnight, and
it 's not likely they will disappear at
the wave of a bureaucratic wand.
No, it will require hard work,

dedication, and much

prayer before all our myriad
problems are resolved. Therefore,
let us tak e heart and march onward
with confidence that God is with us.
No other Friend promises to do as
much for us as He has. Let us lay
aside our grudges and our onery
dispositions and make 1981 the happiest year of our life. Take heart,
good friends, and let us march onward and upward to greater things
to come.
Your fri end, Amanda Bradley.

unions.

The union is the International
Brotherhood of Teamsters, the man
is Presser - and one of hts
specialties is the art of pyramiding
multiple salaries, allowances and
expense payments to maximize his
personal income.
In one recent, typically
prosperous year, Presser earned
$30,000 as a general organizer for the
Teamsters; $6,270 as vice president
of Joint Council 41, the Teamsters'
regional organization in northern
Ohio; and $82,300 as secretarytreasurer of Teamsters' Local 507' in
Cleveland.

as

At the same time, Presser was
being paid $12,000 annually as an
organizer fQr the Bartenders' union,
$19,500 as president of Bartenders'
Local 10 ·and $12,692 as financial
secretary of Bakers' union Local19.
Both of those locals are also based in
Cleveland.
The brief flap that followed
disclosure of Reagan's selecti~n of
Presser as. "special economic adviser". focused on Presser's alleged
ties to organized crime, but
docwnentiQg Such links invariably is

.

The Daily Sentinel
111 CourtSireet

Pomeroy rOhio
llf-992-!ISB
DEVOTED 1'0 mE fNTERF.ST OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERTL. WINGETT
Publiaber

PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH

A.11lltaat PublisherI Controller

"•.
'·

•'

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
New1EdUor

a difficult task.
It is much easier to build a case to
support the contention of PROD, a
group of reform-minded Teamsters,
that Presser has "abused his role as
a trade-union official" and has
treated funds collected from union
members "as (his) private treasure
chest."
In addition, Presser has served in
recent years as one of the leading
apologists for the Teamsters' Central States Pension Fund, an
organization whose fiscal Irresponsibility has become a decade-long
national scandal.
Brushing aside as insignificant the
fund's Joss of more than $100 million
in pension money supposedly earmarked for payment to retiring
Teamsters, Presser has organized
an elaborate propaganda operation
in defense of union officials accused
of abusing the pension fund.
One of the fund's trustees dur{ng
its most troubled period was
Presser's union mentor- his father,
William Presser, the object of assorted criminal Investigations
throughout the past two decades.

In one of those criminal cases,
William Presser was forced to temporarily.step down as a pension-fund
trustee following his plea of guilty to
charges of coercing employers into
buying advertisements in a teamsters publication.
He arranged, however, to have the
pension-fund post filled for the
duration of his probationary period
by his protege - his son, Jackie
Presser.
1
The Presser appointment isn'! the
first case of poor judgment on
Reagan's part in selectilljl advisers
during this transition period. Officials at the Defense and
Agriculture departments, 1for example, were required to deal with
Regan emissaries wh'o were
executives of ,!!Orporations dir~ctly
affected by those departments' activi"es. ·

" he said.

, As a candidate, Rea an never
displayed much concern t~~bout integrity in the gave.rnmenta'! prJlCeS8.
As president, he must eithel- become
sensitive to the issue or facelan early
loss &lt;i confidence in his administraiton.

.

Teenagers, the sub-minimum wage ,.
By William Steil
Half the nation's 8 million jobless
are 161o 24. Among white youths, the
jobless rate is 15 perceno; among
Hispani c youths, 22 percent: among
black youths, 40 percent. In some
cities, half the minority you(hsare
jobless.
One idea for sopping up this
. jobless pool is the sulrminirnum
wage ; teenagers would be paid
about two-thirds of the federal
rninirnwn wage.
· But before the incomin~ Reagan
administration and Congress rush
into a low-pay for minority. youths,
thus creatlnl an unclerclua akin to ,
Arab worken Ill Jl'nnce, OIJiht lo lalla a 1ao11 at an experltawut an wiMh the U. s, Labor
~t hal l!penl 1230 million

c.

over the last three years.
- It's called the Youth Incentive Entitlernent Pilot Projects Demonstration and was first sponsored by
congressional Republicans.
William Grinker, president of a
non-profit New York outfit called
Manpower Demonstration Research
Corp., explained that the experirnent tried to:
·
- Link schooling and guaranteed
johs for youths 16 to 19.
- Set standards in school work
and attendance that would keep
yout~ schoollonger, and so make
them more employable over the long
haul.
,
The basic lure in all this was job .
subsidies lei private and public emplayers. The lllblldl11 ran up ro 100
percent of the mlnlmwn wage,

though they tailed off as time went
by. From spring 1978 through .last
July, 81;000 youths from povertylevel families worked at these suJ&gt;.
sidized jobs.
Half the employers were in the
private for-profit sector, though,
only a quarter of the employed
youths worked for these businesses.
It turned out tlvit only one business
in five would take these youths- Jig
businesses didn't want !hem at all.
Only small flnns would take a chance on one or two at a time. Grinker
thinks this was advantageous,
because the youths got better supervision in small !inns. But thts also
makes one wonder just how well a
sulrminimwn wage would sop up
our pool of jobless youngsters.
Outside the private for-profit sec-

'

. '
were evenly

tor, the youths
split
among non-profit private groupe,
schools \lnd o~er public agencies.
The 81,000 youngsters were signed
up through ''prime sponsors" local or state agencies - from 17
sites. There were first seven big
prime sponsors, Baltimore, BOB!on
CinclrUiati, Denver, Detroit, tw~
SeatUe-area counties, a swatch of ·
southern Mississippi counties. These
seven enrolled the bulk of the 81,000.
Ten more sponsors, from
Philadelphia to Albuquerque, came
in later.
The· agencies, monitored by
Grjnker's outfit, dredged up jobs
and then recruited IS. ro 19-yllll'illdB
for the Jobs. The yOUibs lot parttime jobs in the school year, fulltime summer jobs.

1

41.

'

A 10-yard sack of Harper by Bill
Neill set the Gamecocks on their 6
from where a short punt set up a 35yard drive in three plays - the last
the 42-yard screen to MacMillan just
after Trocano was decked for a 10yard loss.
The Gamecocks added a m with
only 3:26 r~maining in the game on a
14-yard pass from reserve quarterback Gordon Beckham to Tim
Gillespie.
Trocano completed 10 of 21 passes
for 155 yards and also rushed for 41
yards on eight carries to lead the
Pitt attack. McMillan, working
mostly inside, had 59 yards on 13
carries.
The game was played before an
overflow record crowd of 72,297.

'

By Assodatcd Press
It was almost inevitable that
DePaul should feel some sort of a
letdown after that game with UCLA ,
and Coach Ray Meyer had that bitter taste of fear in his mouth ali day.
He suspected what was about to
happen, and it did.
It was testimonial to his hallclub
that the top-ranked Blue Demons
came away with a 72&lt;l7 victory over
Georgetown in the first round of the
Cabrillo Classic at San Diego Monday night.
The Blue Demons, now undefeated
in 10 games, hit just seven field goals
in the second half, center Terry
Cuinm.ings fouled oot with 13
minutes left in the game and
Georgetown held a 49-30 rebounding
edge.
"I thought we'd he nat and we
were. We were emotionally sky high
for UCLA. I was scared to death all
day," Meyer said.
"We stunk. Rebounding is all
desire, and we didn't have t~ desire
tonight," the DePaul coach said.
DePaul's largest lead was nine
paints, and the Blue Demons' lead
shrank to just three with 3:51 left in.
the game. But down the stretch,
DePaul sank 13 of 15 free throws, including two each by Skip Dillard and
Mark Aguirre, to hold on for the vic. tory.
"Free throws have heen the dill ference for us all year. " Meyer said.
Aguirre, who scored 24 points, said
the Blue Demons just couldn't get
· aroused for the Georgetown game
after Saturday's 93-77 drubbing of
UCLA. "We were too pumped up. It
1
drained us. We were emotionally let

Presser personifies everything that's wrong
By Robert Walters
WASHINGTON INEA) - If
President-elect Ronald Reagan isn't
satisfied with the $200,000 annual
salary prescribed by law for the job
he is about to assume, he can turn to
a newly acquired colleague for advice on how to double his earnings.
That man , Jackie Presser,
probably would suggest that Reagan
arrange to have himself appointed to
severa l additional government
positions - each of which would
provide a handsome paycheck for
the new president.
Such an arrangement 'would, of
·course, produce the spectacle of a
president 's possibly serving
simultaneously as a member of the
Interstate Commerce Commission,
ambassador to Luxembourg a!,cl
assistant secretary of conunerce.
That innovation may be disconcer·ting to some traditionalists, but
it's no more disturbing than having
an incoming president select as a
member of his transition team a
1nan who personifies just about
everything that's wrong with one of
. the nation's most corrupt labor

quarter field goal drive when Pitt
erupted for 17 points to put the game
on ice.
Less than 3\1! minutes after
Trout's 26-yard field goal gave the
Panthers a 20-3 lead, . Pitt . added
another score on McMillan's 3-yard
run five plays after Fedeli's ~yard
interception return to the. Carolina

Despite·letdown, DePaul
defeats Georgetown, 72-67

Those who won't learn from
the past end up
.

bloc and ·in its relations with the outside world.

' '&lt; •

itight. And the lllrnovers that
produced touchowns came when
Tom Flynn recovered a Rogers fumble at the Carolina 29 and after Steve
Fedeli's second interception of the
night set up a 41-yard scoring drive.
South Carolina's first score came
on Eddie Leopard's 39-yard field
goal in the second quarter. The
Gamecocks also threatened on a 52yard pass play' from quarterback
Garry Harper to Willie Scott, who
was knocked down at the Pitt 2 by
Lynn,Thomas as the first half ended.
Dave Trout kicked field goals of
36, 26 and 29 yards for the Panthers,
who also got a 3-yard TD run from
McMillan and a 3-yard scoring pass
from Dan Marino to Willie Collier.
Trocano!s touchdown came on a!yard keeper after only 4:03 had elapsed in the game. It came after
Rogers had fumbled on the first play
from scrirrunage to start the Panthers' rout.
Trocano hit on three passes for 28yards in that drive and also ran
twice f~r eight yards.
The Pitt QB had a 12-yard run anq
two passes for 27 yards in a third-

r

consequences within Lhe commun i~1

•roJ;

Southern's defending Tornadoes

for 37-9 bowl win

it's not encouraging
It does not make encouraging
reading.
Amnesty International has issued
its annual report on the state of
human rights throughout the world.
In 408 pages, the London-based
organization reviews the performance over the pastl2 months of
110 nations and finds almost all wanting .
Torture, detention without trial,
summary execution, persecution of
racial and religious minorities,
kangaroo courts, suppression of
political dissidence, police brutality
and other fonns of repression continue to be the rule rather than the
exception in the conducts of govern-

The Daily Sentinei-Pag·e -3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

·

~

KeniWoHe
5-10, Jr. G

Terry McNickle
5-lOSr. G

Dale Teaford
IH,Sr.F

Blue Demons still No. 1

By Associated Press
to 9!6 for the 11-0 Beavers, who
DePaul's Blue Demons easily held received the other first-place vote.
onto the top spot in The Associated
Oregon State heat Northwestern,
Press college basketball poll
90-70, Rhode Island, 103-55, and
released today, while Oregon State Oregon, 67-57, to win the Far West
moved from fourth to second with ' Classic at Portland, Ore:, this week .
three convincing victories in the Far
Last week, DePaul barely edged
West Classic.
Kentucky for the top spot, 1,110DePaul, 10-0 including a 93-77 vic- 1,097, but Kentucky lost 67&lt;ll to
tory over UCLA last Saturday, Notre Dame on Saturday · in
received 50 of the 51 first-place votes Louisville and dropped to fifth this
cast by a nationwide panel of sports week .
writers and broadcasters. The Blue
Notre Dame, 6-1, moved up to
Demons wound up with 1,019 poinl-'i fourth from eighth, and Virginia, IHl,
moved into the third spot, vacated
by UCLA. Virginia was fifth the
week before, but the Cavaliers beat
Th.o Top T,-enty te;,uru; ' in The AssociBaltimore !03-jj2 to move up two
!IICd Press college ba:; kctl&gt;u ll poll , Wllh
first:pJacl! votes in parentllcses, this seaspots. Virginia garnered 885 points
sun's n...&gt;('Ords cmd tuWI polnLo;. Pt1ints
in the poll, and Notre Dame drew
tw.sal on 20- 19- 18-1 7- 1 5- I :J- 14- 13-12- 11 - 1 0..~ -87-6-~3-2-1:
804. Kentucky , 6-1, had 787 points.
1. DePaul (50)
IJ&gt;&lt;l
1,019
Following Kentucky were North
Z. Ore~onS t.atc (J)
IHI
916
3. Virginia
IHJ
B8S
Carolina, ~I, with 694 points, UCLA,
&amp;.1
804
"- Nutre Dame
6-1, 691; Wake Forest, 11-0, 653 ;
~- K entucky
&amp;.1
767
6. North Cam! ina
~I
6!14
Maryland, 7-1, 567, and Louisiana
&amp;.1
691
7. UCLA
State, 7-1,515.
8. Wctke Forest
IHI
653
9. Maryland
H
567
North Carolina, 9-1 , held down the
515
10. Louisiana SUite
&amp;.1
No.
6 spot for . the second straight
1-1
11. Texas A&amp;M
48S
7~
12:. Michi gan
HI
week after a 71 &lt;l4 victory over
&amp;.1
434
IJ. AriZIJflOJ State
Rutg~rs and an 86-64 decision over
&amp;.1
393
14. IOW&lt;I

DePaul will face San Diego State nament; Cl~mson edged .15th-ranked
in the title game of.the Cabrillo tour- Indiana 58-57 in the semifinals of the
nament tonight.
Rainbow Classic; 17th-rated South
In other games involving Top 20 Alabama beat Navy 65-47; No. 18
teams, second-ranked Oregon State Tennessee clobbered Duke 9&lt;Hl9 for
defeated Oregon ·67-57 in the Far the Sugar Bowl . title, and 2othWest Classic title game; No. 6 North rank.ed Utah defeated Northwestern
Carolina downed Louisville 86-64 in 73.jj3 in the Far West Classic.
the Trojan Classic; ninth-ranked
Mark Radfotd scored 20 points
Maryland crushed Marshall 114&lt;!4, and help turn hack an Oregon rally
and No. 10 Louisiana State whipped that gave Oregon Slate its second
North Carolina-Wilmington 100-.68.
consecutive Far West tournament
In the Second Ten, lith-ranked championship.
·
Texas AXM was upset by Cal-Irvine
Oregon State led 4~33 with 9:43
91-74 in the KOA Classic; 13th- Left in the game, but high-scoring
ranked Arizona ·State downed New ' center Steve Johnson was on the
Orleans 75-63 in the consol_ation bench in foul trouble.
game of the Sugar Bowl to~rThe Ducks took advantage of his
74
15. Indianil
7-1
16. l!linui :~
absence to pull within seven, at 60'221
&amp;.1
17. S. Al.allllm.a
53, but Radfon! sank for straight
il-l
1&amp;9
18. Tenne&amp;iee
19. Brigham Yuung
free throws to get ihe Beavers out of
11
~1
20. Utah
trouble.
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP)
ArtUro Brown scored 21 points and
Boston University survived a furioll'l
rally by Xavier of Ohio to take a 9184 win Monday night in the opening
round of the Lobo Invitational
basketball tournament.
In the second game of the night,
h,ost New Mexico was matched
By GEORGE STRODE
against Southwest Conference memAP Sports Writer
per Texas Christian.
Boston University, 3-1, built up a
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Clark man.
23-point lead with 15:50 left in the
Kellogg
is making big promises for
, "I was disappointed last year,''
game. But Xavier, now 3-4, rallied
behind the play of guards of Anthony an Ohio State basketball team that is said Kellogg, used exclusively as a
just 3-3 going against invading West forward in 1979-&lt;10. "I thought I
Hicks and freshman Victor Fleming.
should have heen a little more
A five-point play following a Virginia tonight.
"How far can this team go? To the productive. At times, it was
tectmical on Boston Coach Rick
Pilino took Xavier to 7~75 with 3:50 mountaintop," he said. ~~ That's frustrating . I didn't think we were
Philadelphia (site of the national moving the ball on offense enough.
left.
Boston University converted eight tournament finals this year). Sure, We should have heen playing more
.free throws in the final' minutes to · we've lost three times. But we're up tempo."
better than that on paper.
Ohio State's deliberate attack ,
clinch the victory.
"We know what our problenns are. centered around all-conference
We have to he more patient with the guard Kelvin Ransey, produced a 21ball. We can correct our problems. 8 record, a runner-up spot in the Big
We'll he a heckuva ball club before Ten apd an NCAA Tournament berthe season is over."
th.
" But at times it seemed to he a litThe 6-foot-7 sophomore from
Cleveland relishes his new role in tle stagnant," Kellogg said. "A lot of
·the Ohio State offense. He has the times we'd he standing back and
freedom to move from the back- watching Kelvin. We just didn't
court, into the post or out on a wing. . reach out potential the way we
He plays point guard against ~one played last year.
"I figured the coaching staff
defenses. And he leads the
would see what had gone on and
Buckeyes' fast break.
.
"The type of basketball we're make the alternations to fit our perplaying now is fun for me," he said. sonnel. We've made those changes.
"We're playing up tempo. There's Now everybody's involved in our ofmore movement in our offense. fense."
Kellogg said he never considered
We're using pr.Ssure defenses.
We're' taking better advantage of transferring to another college.
"When I made a decision, I'm
our skills." Kellogg's start this
season supports his boast.
reluctant to change it," he said.
, His averages of 16.6 points and 13.0 "When things are going bad, I'm the
rebounds lead the Buckeyes. The type of person who likes to lay back
most heralded Ohio prep player two and roll with the tide ... things were
winters ago averaged just 11.8 points never to the point where I wanted to
and 7.8 rebounds as a college fresh- leave here."

College's top 20

Xavier beaten

..,

"''"
'"

Ohio Sportlight

lioo.:....-----------------

Louisville Monday night. Wake
Forest, 11-0, was idle last week and
dropped one spot to eighth to make
room for Notre Dame in the top five . ,
Maryla nd and t.'lU, both ~1,
remained in the same spot.
Maryland scored a 114-.'19 victory
over Marshall in its last game, and
LSU downed North CarolinaWilmington 100-68.
The Second Ten consisted of Texas
Ax M, 7-1, 485 points; Michigan, 7.(),
441 ; Arizona State, 8-1, 434; Iowa, 61, 393; Indiana, 7-4, 265; Illinois, 7-1,
224; South Alabama, ~1, 221; Tennessee, 8-1, 169; Brigham Young, 82, 154, and Utah, 9-1,77.
Last week it was Arizona State,
Texas AXM, Michigan, Iowa, Indiana, South Alabama, Arkansas,
Hlinois, Utah and BYU.
Arizona State dropped two notches
to 13th after losing 69-53 to Tennessee, which made its first appearance in the poll this season. Tennessee also heat Duke Monday night
9&lt;Hl9. Arkansas, wltich had been
17th, dropped out of the poll for the
first time this season by losing to
Kansas State, 47-46, in overtime.

Former all staters

to face each other
COLUMBUS, Ohio (API - Clark
Kellogg and Greg Jones, All-Ohio
prep stars two seasons ago, will he
on opposite sides tonight when Ohio
State entertains West Virginia in
college basketball.
Kellogg, the Class AAA Player of
the Year at Cleveland St. Joseph
High School, leads the 3-3 Buckeyes
in scoring and rebounding. The 6foot-7 soph omore forward is
averaging 16.6·points and 13 rebounds this season.
Jones, second team Class AA allstate for Youngstown Rayen High
School, has developed so well that he
directs the 5-2 Mountaineers' attack
and finds time to score 14.3 points,
best on the team ,
"Jones in the process of becoming
a very good point guard, '' Ohio State
Coach Eldon Miller said.
West Virginia also had a standout
guard, Lowes Moore, last season,
but apparently Jones has more help
this winter.
"Th.ey appear to be a more balanced team this year," Miller said.

Greg Nance. a 6-7 senior forward,
averages 13.6 poinl-'i and 10 rebounds
and fi-7 sophomore forward Russell
Todd 10 points.
·
Kellogg also has help from a pair
of double figure scorers. Herb
Williams, the Buckeyes' 6-10 center,
averages 16.6 points and 6-2 guard
Carter Scott 12.3.
Miller's hopes for his current team
were lifted with a 72-46 romp over
Princeton in their last game a week
ago.
"There's no question about it. Our
situation is a lot better right now. I
think we're growing as a team, as
we should be," he said.
West Virginia has not beaten Ohio
State in their seven-game series and
Gale Catlett, the Mountaineers'
coach, knows this will another tough
assignment.
"Ohio State is the best team,
physically, we've met so far," said
Catlett, whose squad has lost to
Virginia Tech and Marshall in overtime this season. "It will be a very,
very difficult game for us."

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'

LARG~T- 1'1111 10 point buck deer, a 300 pounder, Is reported as

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- Powell, Middleport, 15 years old, bagged the large deer, his first.

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�December 30, 1980

Page-q-The Daily Sentinel

oecember 30, 1980

Loughery, Nets end love affair
By Associated Ptess

NEW JERSEY NETS, PAST AND FUTURE
I MAYBE I - Julius Erving, second from left, Kevin
Loughery, second from right, and Roy Boe, right, are
names once associated with the New J ersey Nets. Boe
as owner, Loughery as coach and Erving as the
inimitable Dr. J . Since Loughery resigned last week

because of " philosophical differences" will! principal
owner Joe Taub. Bob MacKinnon has taken over as
coach of the Nets. Rumor has It that former New York
Knicks star and coach Willis Reed, left, wiD get a shot
at another NBA head coach job will! the Nets. (AP
Laserphoto ).

1981 may be big for boxing fans
An extravaganza m Madison
Square Garden Feb. 23 ; Larry
Holmes wants to make five title
defenses; Muhammad Ali probably
will fight in March ; ROberto Duran
could return to the ring wars. and
Sugar Ra y Leonard and Thomas
" Hit Man "' Hearns are headed for a
welterweight showdown.
The year 1981 promises to give
boxing fans a lot to cheer and cornplain about.
Gerry Cooney. the No. !-ranked
heavyweight by both the World
Boxing Association and World
Boxing Council , will headline the
Graden show. whic h also will feture
four ti tle figh ts. Cooney is expected
to clinch a title shot against WBA
champion Mike Weaver by sending
Ken Norton ba ck into retirement.
Reportedly Cooney-Weaver is set.
barring a n upset by Norton or a sui·prise loss by Weaver in a defense
against James ·· Quick" Tillis Feb.
21!.
A major money fight would be one
between the Weaver-Cooney winner,
expecially if it IS Cooney who would
be the first white heavywe ight
. champion since Ingemar Johansson

in 1959, against WBC champ Holmes
to unify the heavyweight title.
The 31-year-old Holmes. who has
indicated this could be his last year
in the ring, is expected to open his
1981 campaign with a warmup
against Trevor Berbick and follow
with defenses against Marty Monroe
and Leon Spmks and two other otr
ponents. Holmes would like one of
them to be Cooney. since he already
has beaten Weaver.
Berbick , a J amaican who lives in
Canada , got "into the Iitle picture by
handing John Tate his second
straight knocko ut defeat on the
Leona rd-Roberto Duran ca rd ,in
Montreal June 20.
Tate, who lost the WBA title on
15th round knockout by Weaver, will
fight fo r the first ti me si nce losing to
Berbick when he meets Harvey
Steichen Feb. 15 in Tate's hometown
of Knoxville , Tenn.
Apparently Ali feels he can 't end
his career with the on-the-stool loss
to Holmes and so is head ed for a
fight against European champion
.John L. Gardner. The fi ght has not
been signed but Ali says it's going to
happen.

Mickey Duff, the British promoter
who inanages Gardner, says Gardner has signed a letter of intent for
an Ali fi ght with Ha rold Smith,
president of Muhammad Ali
Professional Sports, Inc. Duff also
said he didn't want Ali to firht, but
that he has a responsibility to Gard-ner, so if Ali wants to fight it might
as well be against Gardner.

" This is his fight," says Smith,
acknowledging Ali wants to fight.
The promoter said possible fight
sites a re Puerto Rico, the Bahamas
·and Kingston, Jamaic~ . " It
definitely won't be in the United
States because the media in the
Unites States would be too hard On
Ali,"" said Smith.

Nallo WII Basketball Aslioclation
Eastern €nnference
Atlantic Di\·lslon

w

Phi\aclclphi:.J

L

6
8
13

33

New York

,.28

Washington
New Jerst!y

16
12

Pet.

'

.846
.778
.649
.432
.3118

21
'll

Cr:ntral Di\'ision
'll 11
21 11
18 Jl1
17
13 'll
10

Mllwaukel!
Indiana
Chica~:: u

Atlanta

.711
.553
.IH

,."

Cl~v~ilmd

Dt.&gt;t nlit

-

3\\
8
16
21

"

"

6
9
10

.on

.41.5
.405

.395
.333
.125
.800
.650
.526
.187

9

9 1~

11"

Jll "
6

11
J 21·:~

.174

13

.459

JJ lz

"'

.

A Dl ¥lsloa of Muldmed.ia, I.ac.

,

Air Fur re 48, Auburn 46, OT

Member : The Auociated PrW, Inland Dal·
ly Prua AuocLauon· ami the American
Newtp~per Publlahtn Allociatton, National

Thursday's Ga mt.'S
Ui»h • I lluwston

,,

Denver • I Portland
Bus tun
Sa n Die~u

N.Y. Islanders

23

7

8 169 119 r.4

Philadelphia
Calgary
Washington.
N.Y. Rtl nger.s

248
15 12

5 1429653
8 123 t2ll 38

12 lJ 10 136 129 34
12 19 5 128 148 29
1~1 24~ 1

'

Pomeroy, Oh.

You Mu st Be 21 or accompanied
by Paren1 or Legal Guardian.

ud W"t Vlrflalo
3 Month .... L •. .• •..•. •.•• . ••.•.• JU.OO

no.oo

Christmas ca rols were sung with the
singing led by Mrs. Sue Douglas and
Mrs. Vivian Hwnphrey playing the
piano.
Attending in adition to the above
named were Mrs. Mamie Bu.ckley,
Mrs. Violet Satterfield, Mrs. Verna
Rose, Mrs. Virginia Walton, Mrs.
Mary Alice Bise, Mrs. Dolly Reed,
Mrs. Lillian Picke ns, and Mrs . Ruth
Anne Balderson.
·

j

Births .and birthdays .

-

Sign•d

CHICAGO

BLACK

HAWKS -

PITTSBURGH

PENGUINS

-

\

Homemade

Trado!

Helen Help Us

HAM SALAD............ ~ ...... !-. s1.39
8
•·•

I.M.

Ken Solheim, left wing, to the Minncsulll
North SU:Irs fo r Glen Sharpley, rorward.

SEARCH FOR CURE - This retriever puppy is tile object of a crosscountry search for a cure for Christmas disease, a rare affliction that
resembles human hemophlllla. The dog, shown with veterinarian Paul
Newman of a pet hospital in Tustin, Ca., is being sent to a New York farm
retreat operated for hemophilliacs. 1AP Laserphoto)

OLD FASHION LOAF. ........~~;. s2.09

DAIRY

8l'
MARGARINE .. ~~-1 lb. Blue Bonnet
Quarters

Recalled

Nick Ricci, b'Olllie, from Binghamton or
the American Hockey League. Assigned
Rub Holland, goaUe, Clld Bennett • Wolf
deferu;eman. to Binghamton.
'

She asks right to die

PRODUCE
10 lb . Maine Eating
POTATOES ........ -~-~~- .'1.79
New

CABBAGE ••. ;........~~~ . 29'
HEAD LETTUCE .... ~~.~a 45'
6 oz. Red

--

2

39'

INSTANT COFFEE .......... ~.~::i$4.98
!

s lb. Martha White Self Rising

CORN MEAL ..................~~~.$1.49
'

TIDE DETERGENT..... ~ ..... ~~~:.$1.89
IS1f2 oz. Armour

Raxane Williams
Roxal)e Maria Williams,
daughter of Rocky and Terri
Williams, Hysell Run, Pomeroy, ·
was honored recently with a par-.
ty in celebration of her third bir.
thday. ''
A holiday theme was carrjed
out with the cakes being baked by
Roxane's mother and her _grand-mother, Mrs. Iris Williams. Attending were her grandfather,
Edwin Ash, Brenda Ash , Ronda
Ash, Roger Ketchwn, Ray and
Iris Williams, Richard, Pennee
and Courtnee Knapp, Mark and
Trudy Williams. Sending gifts
were Skip and Connee Enslin,
Roxane's grandmotller, Marth!l
Ash,
and
her
greatgrandmothers, Florence Baer
and Mable Winebrenner.

BEEF SLOPPY JOE ...........~::sl.19
ALl UNES
OF INSURANCE
SERVICE A
FACT loiOT A WORD

992-6687

1 Year •.... .... .. . •. ....•....... , 131.00

f;
--~---------

Mr. and Mrs. Larry Fisher,
Pomeroy, annotlllce the birth of
their first child, a son, Jeremiah
Joseph, born Dec. 8 atD'Bieness
Hospital, Athens. Mrs. Fisher is
the fanner Bambi Roush.
The infant weighed six pptlllds,
13 ounces and was 21 inches long.
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Norman Roush,
Charleston, W. Va.; and the
maternal great-grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs . Harold Roush and
Lawrence Beegle, Racine.
Paternal grandparents are
Mrs. Marlene Fisher, Racine ;
Mr. and Mrs. Johm Fisher,
Pomeroy. The paternal greatgrandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Herbert Shields, Racine, and the
paternal great-great-grandmother is Mrs. Bertha Robinson,
Racine .
·

~tinel Social Calendar

FACIAL TISSUES............... ~.o.x 894
..

46 oz. Del Monte

TOMATO JUICE ................. ::a.~.8f
PINTO BEANS ............. 2

214 Main ·
Pom eroy, OH.

Infant Fisher

200 Count White K Ieenel(

17 oz. Luck's

Rallo Oatil Ide Oblo

(

BRONCOS

Hipp , running back ; Cunr&lt;~d Rucker , li!!jhl
end ; .John Smith, 'wide r~t'i ver ; and Rick
Dennison, linebacker .
HOCKEY
NaUonaiHocteyLeague

FRIDAY thru THURSDAY - DEC 26 thru JAN 1

1 Y•r .. . , .,..... 1 • • • • • • . • • • • • • • • • aM.OO

---~-----

Phone 992-3629

The Reedsville United Methodist
Women delivered gifts, fruit baskets
and a cake to the patients at the
Counti Infirmary at Pomeroy on
Saturday a.fternoon. The cake was
baked and decorated by Mrs.
Marlene Putnam.
Mrs. Sandy Cowdery presented
the Christmas Story using a small
nativity scene. She was assisted by
Mrs. Pat Martin and Mrs. Putnam.

Eckrich

531 JACKSON PIKE ·Rt . 35 NORTH - Phone 446· 4524

SMooth ..... , ..... • ... , . ......... 110.10
Six month , .. .. .. .. . .... , ........ . 111.10

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

THE MEIGS INN

HAM &amp;CHEESE LOAF•.•••• ~~~. $2.39

Lus Angeles at MunlreHI
Ph iladelphi&lt;~ at Minnes ota
Toronto at St.Louis

BARGAIN MATINEES ON SAT &amp; SUN
ALL SEATS JUST. S 1.50
ADMISSION EVERY TUESDAY $1.50

MAILIUIICIUPTIONI
Olllo ud . . . Vlrlllla

eMoolh

SOLD

Lbs. For

99-

29 oz. Del Monte

PEACHES .......................:.~~., 89'
i

WEDNESDAY
A PU'!T-cHRJSTMAS AND NEW
YEAR'S EVE dinner will be held at
the Long Bottom Community
Building, sponsored by the Long Bottern eonununity Association. Pertlllll!l attending are asked to take a
t.llle service and a covered dish for
&amp;he potluck event. A $2 gift exchange
ittlll be conducted, will! ladies asked
·tiiJake i laily's gift, and gentlemen
l*ed to~e a gentk!man's gift.

A NEW YEAR'S EVE WATCH
SERVICE will be conducted at the
Eagle Ridge Community Church
Wednesday evening at7:30 p.m. Dan
Hayman and The Hymntimers will
be thti featured singers, and Pas!or
Carl Hicks invites the public.
FRIDAY
MEIGS POMONA GRANGE will
mee! Friday at the Rock Springs
Grange Rail at·8 p.m . Star Grange
will serve refreshments.
'

'

Brandi and Robert Reeves

Reeves children picture
accepted for publication
This picture of Brandi Nikcole and ,advertisers , agencies and publishers
Robert Reeves, Jr .. children of-Bob for viewing and selection for adand Margie Reeves. Chester . was vertising purposes.
Brandi and Robbie a re the grandaccepted for publication in the
children
o_f Roy and Mary Gill ilan of
HollywoodSpotlite Photo Magazine.
Chester
and
Dorothy Reeves, Wolfe
Pictures of children from every
Pen.
Mrs.
Ethel
J ohnson and Mr .
state a re sent into the magazine in
hopes of being accepted fo r and Mrs. Fred Tuckennan are the
great-gra ndparents.
publication. The magazine is sent to

Gloria Grahame relents
for 'Mr. Griffin and Me'

Reedsville UMW delivers
goods to Infirmary recently

10 oz. Folgers

AGIMT • •0111

'

THURS.-FRI.-SAT.

WELCH'S GRAPE JUICE .......... ~~~.99~

8UIIC'RIP'i10N RATE8

'.,

New York Rangers at ·Quebec
Coloradu at New York I:domde rs

DENVER

By Carrier or Motor Roate

No aubocrlptlono by mall permltled In t01m1
where home carrier III'Yict lla.-.U.ble.

ALL LEGAL
'
BEVERAGES

Eckrich

Th esday's Games

Natltmal Basketball Associatiua

One week ••. •. . 1 ••••••••••• •••• • • ••• 11.00
One Month ....... . ......... .... . ... 14 ..0
One Year . .............. .......... 152.10

Stnt1M1 on a 3, e or 12 month bult. Crtdlt
wUl be 11ven carrier eac:h month,

FROM
FREDRICKSTOWN

Monda)·'s Games

No game.!! scheduled

DETROIT PISTONS _ Placed
Bub
McAdoo, forward, on the injured list.
f-ooTBAlL
National Football Learue

They're singing,
swinging and
everythinging!

POSTMASTE:R : Send Mddre11 to The Daily ,
Sentinel, 111 Court St., Porn, roy, Ohio 4S769.

Sublcrtbert not dealrlna: to pay the carrier
may rtmlt In advance dlrect to The DMU~

GROUP

49 oz. Soap Powder

Advertfalnl Repreaentatlve, Landing
Anoclatea, 3101 Euclid Ave., Cleveland,
Ohio.IIIli.

II Cenla

3

FOX·
PC.

on Jan. 6, 1921. They are the parents
of four children, Lois Ann Gibbs and
Clyde Wayne Gibbs, Hartford ;
Harry W. Gibbs and Mrs. Andrew
(Nondis) Fields, New Haven, W. Va .
They have four grandchildren. and
three great-grandchildren.

St.Louis 3, Vancouver 2

BASKETBAlL

"'

Third Place

Tult'&lt;lo 60, Coumbia 64

q '\\'

Mr. and Mrs. Isaiah W. Gibbs of
Hartford, W. Va . will observe their
60th wedding anniversary on Jan. 6.
The Clluple will be honored with a
family dinner party on Sunday.
Isaiah Gibbs and the Ionner Helen
Ailemang were united in marria~e

Toronto 6, Chicago 3
Detroit 4, WinnipeM 3

BASEBAlL

J uSC]&gt;h'!i, P1:1 . 87. Buwlir1g Grl!en 86
New Mu:ir&gt;nTaurnament
Busltm U. 91 , Xavier 84
Sun Howl

San F1·andst:u 65, M i C~mi 00
Tu ledo Blade-Glass City TciUmament

·Welcome 1981
In Style

Christmas" will! Darcy Wolfe,
Aaron Sheets and Mary Roush
taking part, and th.en sang
" Away in a Manger." There was
a piano duet by Aaron a nd Jennifer Sheets.
· The Primary 3 children presented "Christmas Is" by Michael
Dellavalle, " I Love Christmas"
by Carrie Swisher; "Christmas
Poem" by Stephanie Crow and
Jennifer McKinley , and then
sang " 0 Hear the Bells" and
"Deck the Halls ."
Recitations by the junior class
included "The Best Gift" by Scott
Melton; "Christmas Problems "
by Sherry Cooper; "Led by a
Star" by Steve Musser; " Holy
Night in Bethlehem" by ~elly
Neff ; " I Like the Merry Season"
by Jeannie Terry; " Down from
Glory" by Paul Melton; " The
Story" by Kay Smith; and
'" Ready for Christmas" by Joey
Loving. Peter Brickles, and
Jared Sheets.
Chris Stewart gave the history
of '"Silent Night" after which the
congregation sang the carol. To
close the service Matt Erw in
gave " Why He Carne" and a
prayer.

Buffalo 5, Bustun 2
Mont real 5, New York Rangers 2
Philadelphi~ 2, Edmonton 1

American ~ague
CALJF'ORNJA ANGELS - Signed Juan
Beniquez, outrielder.
.
CLEVELAND INDIANS - Signed Pa t
Kelly, uutflc lder, to a tw"')'Cllr contract.

Wt'dnesda y's Games

239~

~

II 18 7 137 168 29
9. t9 7 114 140 25
Adams Divi sion
18 8 9 142 1118 45
1,.1 9 8 129 1116 42
13 17 5 141 156 Jt
12 16 ' 7 128 126 31
tO 17 8 125 147 28

Regular St•uson

St.

Publi.sht!d every afternoon except Sunday ,
Monday through Friday, Ul Court Street , by
the Ohio Valley Publlshing Company .
MuJ.Umedia, Inc., Pomeroy, Ohio 45789,
992-2156. Second class posta11e paid at

I

Minnesota
Tl)runto
Booton

(NO SPECIALS DURING HOLIDAY SEASON)

4 156 109 42
8 145 172 34

Clwrlc:;hm 49, Ohiu U. 42
Maryland Jn,·itatiunal

{USPS 145--9&amp;0 )

SINGLE COPY
PRICES
Dally ......... ... ·.. ..... " ... ..

Bufhl )ll

Couple to observe
60th anniversary

156 J21 50

\

Ohiu Cnllege Hasbtball
Monday Nlg hf ~ Rt! ~ ul ts

Sent in c I

Pomeroy, Oh.io.

HarUm'd
Detroit

9

19 JJ
13 15

Monda}'' s Sports Transactions

No games scheduled

Smythe Division

1.3

Mr. and Mrs. Isaiah Gibbs

"

Wales Coofertnce
Norrl!i Division

Los Angeles
M011 treal

WEEKEND AT
MEIGS INN

A children's Christmas
program of carols and recitations
was presented at tile Middleport
Church of Christ recently. The
program opene d with a
processional of the children to
" Joy to the World." The group
presen~ed "What Makes ChristJllas.''
.ReCitations included "Thank
You" by Stephanie See; "My
Gift" by Steven See ; "Jesus Was
Born on Christmas Day" by
Jared Siewart and Mica Maiden ;
"Little Baby Jesus" by Jason
Dellavalle; '"Angels Sang" by
Don Roush.
The toddlers class had two
songs, " I Would Like to be a
Christmas Tree" and " At Christmas" with Stephanie See, Steven
See, Jared Stewart, Don Roush,
Tyler Wolfe, Travis Grate , Adam
Sheets, Alison Gerlach, Bridget
Davis, Lisa Honaker, Chris Chapman, Cindy Stewart, and Jason
Dellavalle taking part.
A.Christmas play was presented by Linda Chapman, Tara
Gerlach and Charlotte Cooper of
the Primary I class with the
group sin gi ng " Bethl ehem
Lullaby." The Primary II
children presented u w ,:. H:we

Edmonton at Call:ary

Nati•mal H()Ci.ey Ltague ·
Ca mpbell Coofert'nce
PatrickDI"·tslon
W L TGFGAPli

The Uail y

12 18
' 820 · 6118 113
2 'l1 7 109 180 II

Washington at Vancouver

"'

PITI JUBILATES - Pittsburgh defensive and Hugh Green t99)
jubilates after U.South Carolina 's running hack George Rogers fumbled
the ball and it was recovered by defensive end Ricky Ja ckson 187) during
the fourth quarter of the Gator Bowl Monday night in Jacksonville. The
Panthers defeated the Gamecocks, 37-9. I AP Laserphoto) .

Colorado
Edmonton
Winnipeg

6 14 1 172 3&lt;1
6 125 117 3&lt;1

:,
•'
'

Sunday's Game11

a•.

Cle velaml 112, Dalla s 100
Tuesday's Gamt's
Dallas
Ne~ York
Detroit •I Atlanta
Milwaukee •I Washington
Seattle •1 S.n Antonio
Gulden State
Kanscts Ci ty
Ne.,,: J ersey a t Ch1cago
San Diegu. at Houston
l.us Angelt.-s ut Utah
Indial\il at Denver
Boston •I Phoenix
Philmleljlhla
Pt1rtla nd

St. l..ouis

9 149 126 43

12 20

Que~

Mouday'sG11mr

,~

17 11

Chic.&lt;~g o

Pitt.:;burgh .

.447
.JZ!i . 15
.263 17

WeslernConterence
Mlil west DivisioD
San Antonio
25 tl
Ktmsas City
I 7 23
Huustun
15
Ulll.h
15 1.3
Dcnvt!r
12 24
Dullus
5 35
P11ciJ ic Division
Phoenix
32
8
I.11s Angeles
Golden Slate
20 18
PortlunU
19 :JJ
SanOic~o
18 :JJ
17 :JJ
Seattle

,.

GH

Vancouver

Children's program
highlight of holiday
church celebration

r--------------------+ --

I

For the record•••
Bo~ton

~~

When you think of the Nets, thre
names spring to mind - Roy Boe,
Julius Erving and Kevin Loughery.
Boe is gone, having been forced to
sell the team several years ago to
avoid drowning in red ink. Erving is
gone , having been sold down the turnpike to Philadelphia for what now
seems like a paltry swn, $3 million.
And now Loughery is gone, too,
having resigned under pressure last
week because of " philosophical dif·
ferences •· with principal owner J oe
Taub.
It ~s hard to believe that when the
Nets permanent home arena in the
Meadowlands sports complex finally
opens next fall, Loughery will not be
striding in front of the Nets' bench
and ranting about ye! another injustice perpetrated by those whistletooting villains known as National
Basketball Association referees.
1
For so many years, Loughery w4
the entire Nets franchise . While Boe
hustled to stay ahead of his
creditors, Loughery kept the club
competitive - and more. When he
had some talent to work with, he won
championships. When the talent was
stripped away, he still kept the team
respectable.
In 712 years with the Nets, first on
Long Island a nd more recently in
New Jersey, the 40-year-old
Loughery earned a reputation as one
of the best bench coaches in the
business. He made effective use of
full-court tra ps a nd other zone-type
defenses years before IIIey caught
on with other pro coaches. He
always had the right matchups and
would take advantage of every little
edge he could to get the upper hand.
While most other coaches reacted,
Loughery acted. He made things
happen. If the Nets' players could
stay close for 46 minutes, Loughery
would somehow figure out a way to
win the game in the final two.
If Loughery had a problem , it was

tact - or lack r:l. · ~e. His
haranguing of referees had be&lt;)ome
tiresome , to the point where Taub instructed him to clean up his act. He
was never much for scouting reports
· a nd player evaluation fonns, but at
management's insistence he began
to pay more attention to them this
year. His treatinent of players who
fell from favor was crude- witness
the John Williamson fat !ann
travesty of a year ago, or Eddie Jordan's journey from starter to benchsitter to Los Angeles this season.
In a four-hour meeting with Taub
Dec. 19, the "philosOphical differences" were aired and Loughery

came away knowing he had no
assurance he'd still be tile Nets'
coach next fall . Ratller than wait
arotllld for the ax !o fall, he opted to
accept Ta~b's offer to buy oqt the
remaining 2~ years of"his contract.
With Lougliery out, Bob MacKinnon has taken over as coach of tile
Nets. But many believe that will not
last for long.
Willis Reed, the tremendously
popular fonner star and coach of tile
Knicks, is waiting in the •Wings,
working as a volunteer asliistant at
St. John's b~t just itchin~ to get
another shot a t an NBf.- head
coaching job.

The Daily Sentinel-Page-s

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

ByTOMJORY
Associated Press Writer
NEW YORK ( AP ) - Gloria
Grahame seldom appears in movies
made expressly for television. so
there must have been something
about ··Mr. Griffin and Me"" that appea led to the Oscar-winning actress .
"The writing," she says without
hesitation. "'I think if you've got a
good sCript, that' s the most important thing. !liked the scri[Jt. and
I thought it was a cute story."
Miss Graha1ne, who won an
Academy Award for her perfonnance in " The Bad and the
Beautiful"' 27 years ago, plays Mara
Emerson, a gla morous fil m star of
the 1940s who tries to find her director-husband, who vanished at the
height of her brief caree r.
Burgess Meredith plays Kenneth
Griffin in the hour-long syndicated
specia l to be broadcast in primetime by about 100 stations a cross the
country during the first week of
January.
Miss Grahame, like the character
she plays in " Mr. Griffin and Me," .
was most prominent on the screen in
the 1940s and "50s. In fact. segments
from some of her best-known films
a re used in the television movie to
illustrate leclures given by Mara
Emerson, whose career has been
reduced to touring the country
speaking to college audiences.
Miss Grahame ins ists , however.
the part was in no way
autobiographical. "! just enjoyed
playing it." she says. ··And I enjoyed
working wilh Burgess Meredith. "
Miss Grahame grew up in the
theater, and today devotes much of

tn control? - HOPEFUL
DEAR HOPEFUL:
The cervical cap is much smaller
than a diaphragm and fits snugly
over the cervix, preventing sperm
Christmas Day dinner guests of
from entering the uterus .. It can be Mr. a nd Mrs. Harold Davis , Minerworn for weeks at a time, and does sville, were their children and their
not require the use of spermicidal fam ilies, Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Davis
jelly as do diaphragms (urdess, a and Serena, Mr. and Mrs. Greg
woman wants to be doubly sure).
Davis and Ashli , Pomeroy : Mr. and
These devices have been widely Mrs. Mark Davis, Minersville ; Ms .
used in Europe for years but until Ressie Shaffer and Donald Wayne ,
quite recently were all but Racine, and Richard and Rachelle
unavailable in the United States. Lit- at home.
tle research has been done on their
Also visiting during the day were
effectiveness and perhaps for that Mr. and Mrs . Rollie Stewart, Lori
reason, the FDA has recommended and Doug , Minersville ; Mr. a nd
that they be banned.
Mrs. Rudy Stewart, Shannon and
Barbara Seaman, co-founder of Brett, Mrs. Doll Woods and Ronnie
the National. Women's Health Net- Hubbard , Middleport; and Mr. and
work, disagrees. She says the cap is Mrs. William R. Hayes, Sr., and Mr.
one of the safest, cheapest and most and Mrs . Steve Hayes, Metropolis,
convenient methods of birth control Ill.
.
in existence.
Joe Graedon, author of the bestTO MEET SATURDAY
selling "People's ' Phannacy-2,"
The adult fellowship will meet at
calls it "the unsung heroine in the the Heath United Methodist Church,
barrier contraceptive arsenal." He
Middleport, Saturday, 7:30 p.m.
describes " the Chicago Cap,"
with Davis Harris as the guest
developed by a dentist from the speaker. The meeting is open to all
University of Chicago: It's molded · young adults.
to exactly fit the woman's cervix
and can be worn for months because tetracycline class, given to babies
it has a one-way valve which per- and children during the tooth
.mits menstrual flow.
development years, can irreversibly
For further information, consult
stain permanent teetll? This usually
happens after long-term usage, but
your doctor, - H.
has been &lt;~,bserved following
P .S. For a fascinating book, try
repeated short-tenn Cllurses.
Joe Graedon's "People's PhannacyI especially liked the chapter
2"' ($5.95, paperback, Avon Books,
titled, "Gtaedon 's ,Grab Bag of Won95~ Eighth Ave., New York, N. Y.,
derfully Wacky Weirdness and
111019) .
Home Remedies." I think you will
In highly readable style, it tells
too. - H.
you all you ever wanted to know
If.
about drugs, listing their side efGot a problem ? An adult subject
fecllj1
interactions,
pOssible
banns
for
discussion? You can talk it over
DEAR HElEN:
. •
as well as helps. For example, did
in
ht!r
column if you write to Helen
Please teD me: what Is a cervical
you
know
that
antibiotics
of
the
Bottel, in care of this newspaper.
cap exactly and is it effecUve In blr-

BY HELEN BOTI'EL
Special correspondent
DEAR HELEN;
" Let Me Go," the MS victim who
wanted her right to die, opens a subject we don't like to face : Why force
people to stay in a world they no
longer want?
You and her friends say, " Oh no,
don't ask for a suicide pill or oblivion
shot ... use your fine mind ... get involved again ... " When she's immobilized and suffering?
She asks to die. Why not? Why
can't society agree with her and her
wishes? It's her life. They can murder babies with abortion, but they
keep pain-wracked, hopeless souls
alive. Where's tile justice?
At a medical convention recently,
doctors all nobly voted not to give
the "coup de grace" that would help
mentally functioning persons die. Instead they stick life-sustaining tubes
into them, no matter what their
wishes.
I say if a victim requests death,
that's not murder, it's mercy. To
keep him or her alive costs great
swns of money and great suffering
not only to him, but to his family.
Mercy kill!ng should be made legal
on demand.- WANTS JUSTICE
DEARW.J.:
I'm in favor of the " Death with
Dlcnity" proviso which asks that no
extra-ordinary means be' used to
keep terminllllY ill and incapacitated persons alive beyond
tllelr time, but ·1 can't rationalize
your fonn of mercy killing.
" On demand" could too easily
' become "on demand oi other persona who wish the vlctiin dej~d." -

·her time and energy to the sta ge.
" My mother, J ean Grahame . was
with the Royal Shakespeare Company, and later was a leading lady at
the Pasadena Playhouse in California,'' the actress recalls .
·' As a child , whenever I ca me
home from school, they"d be rehearsing scenes from "Romeo and Juliet"
or whatever. And !loved to go down
a t ni ght. I played a page in ' Merry .
Wives' as a ve r y littl e girl.··
Her own professional ca reer
began as an understudy in a road
show production of "Goodnight
Ladies."' Early in her career , she
was in five Broadway productions in
a year. " That doesn't point much to
the success of those pla ys,' '.,she :;ays
with a smile.
More recently she has starred in
Broadway prod uctions of ·'The Skin
of Our Teeth ,"" ""The World's Full of
~ir is"' and " Star Dust," as well as
dozens of other plays both in this
co~ntry a nd a broad.
Miss Grahame"s motion picture
credits include "It's a Wonderful
Life" with Jinuny Stewart in !946,
" In a Lonely Place" with Hwnphrey
Bogart in 1950, "Sudden Fear" with
Joan Crawford and " The Greatest
Show on Earth, " both in 1952, and
"'Oklahoma" a nd "The Big Heat,""
opposite Lee Marvin, both in 1953 .
She left for En gland severa l weeks
bl!fore broadcast of " Mr. Griffin and
Me'" to star in a stage production of
" Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?"
" Mr. Griffin and Me" is the fifth in
a series of dramatic specials
produced for Liberty Mutual In-

surance Co.

Brownies
report activities

Have Christmas guests

·I

Brownie Troop 125~ participated
in · several activities during the
holiday season. They made gifts for
tlleir families, . donations to the
Jaycee toy drive, participated in the
Middleport Christmas parade , and
caroled in the business section of
Middleport. The troop also had a
Christmas party .

Publi c Notice
OROINANCE
NO. IIOS-80
An Ordinanc e to i n crease
a pprop ria t ion s in. the

General .Fund and m the
Meter Deposi t Fund.
Be it or dained by th e
Coun c il of th e Village of
Mid dl e port as follows :
Sec . I . Tha t an additional
$100,000 be appropriated
for expenditures 111 the
Genera l Fund for 1980 .

Sec. 11. ThaI an add iti onal
$300
be ap propr ia ted
fo r
ex penditures fr om the Water

Meier Depos its Trust Fund
for 1980.
Sec. Ill . That this or ·
dinance is declared to be an

'

emerge_ncy _in that 1980 ap·
propr1attons
are

tnadeQuate and tunds are
a-vailable .
Sec. IV. This Ordinance

-shal t take effect and be in

force from and after Dec .

22, 1980

Passed the 22nd day of
December 1980 .
A !lest :

Jon Buck
Clerk
M. l . Kelly

President
of Council

112) 23, 30, 21C

'

�Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy

December

Middleport, Ohio

30, 1980

Ohio

Pom

Small investment, large returns, Sentinel ·w ant Ads
ME IGS Co. F ish &amp; Game
Club · will have regular
monthly meeting Jan . 3 at.7
p.m .
Ra c ine

Volunteer

Department

F i re

sponsors

a

shot gun &amp; rif le match
every Sat. night 6:30 p.m .
at their bu ildi ng in Bashan .

Factory c hoke 12 guage
shot guns on l y, Open sights
22 rifle.

I PAY hi ghest pr ices
possible for gold and silver

RACINE GUN SHOOT ,
Racine Gun Club, every
Friday night starting at

coins, rings, iewetry, etc.

Contact Ed Burkett Barber
Shop, M iddleport.

noon.

Proceeds

guns only .

being

WANT AD INFORMAnON

PHONE 992-2156

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

or Write Daily Senti.nel Classified Dept.
111 Court St,, Pomeroy, 0,, 45769

YOUR
PIANO .
Too
val uable to neglect, exper t
tuning &amp; and repair. Lane
Dan iels, 74n951 or 992·

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX
•RENTALS

t- C•ra ot Tttillnlts
2- ln Memoriam
)- Announcements
4- Gill'eolwilly
s- Happy Ads
•- Lost and Found
1- Ya rd So~te
I- Publi c S.ale
\Auction

41 - Housu fer Rent
42- MobHe Hames
lor Rent
44-Aputment fM Rent
4So--FRooms
4.-Spilct lor Rent

~ WantedtoBuy

2002 .
' GUN SHOOT Su nday Jan . 4
at 1 p.m . al tzaac Walton
farm , 6 miles south of
Chester on Shade Rivei Rd .
Muzzle loaers only . Pr izes,
turkey, bacon &amp; cash .
6

41- Winltd to lil: ent

4&amp;- EQuipment fer R: e, t

.

)1 - Heuu!hOICI Gooch
n - ca, TV , Rad io Equipment
n - Anttques
54- Misc . Merchandise
5s-8ui lctlng Suppl/11
u.- Peh fM S.le

1 t_ Metpwanted

U - Situattd wanted
1l- t n 1uro~ n u

14- Bu sineu Traini niJ

9

Radio, TV
&amp; CB Rtpai r

• FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

11- W•nted To Do

•t - Far m Equipme"t
n - wuttd to auy
12- Trucltt for sate

•FINANCIAL
21 -

ausiness
Opportu"lty
U- Money to Lean
Jl- Profl!ssional
SerW"iCel

U - livetfOCk
64- May &amp; Grain
n - seed &amp; Fertill'ler

•TRANSPORTATION

eREALESTATE

7!-Au tos lOr Silt

lt - Home s tor Sa l e~
l2- Moblle4iomes
tor Sale 'l

74- Motlrcyctes

n - voan' &amp; • w.o .
7S-

.t.utoParh

'

&amp; illlcunorin
77- Auto Repa ir

31- Farms tor hie

)4- 8usinen Bui ldl niJ !
3s-Lou &amp; Acruge
).._Real Estate Wanted
37- Reilltors

e SERVICES
11 - Home I mproW"ements

Want-Ad Advertising
Deildlines

lor Monday

Rates and Other Information
Cash

1 day s

Jcl•ys

•aavs

Ch•rue

1.00

1.15

!.SO
1.10

LtG
2.25

3.00

l .H

Ea(:hword o11er the minimum'' words h 4 cents per word poerd.ay.
Ads running other th•n consecutive day' will be cha rged at the 1 d•y
rate.
In memory, Ca rel ot Thank~ l nd Obituary : ' cents per word , S-3.00
minimum . Cish in advance .
Mobilf! Mom(! s11es and Y:trd 1ates .are .accepted only wlth ush with
order . 25 ce"t charge lor .ads urry ing Bo k Number In Care of The
SentineL

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

!

Curb Inflation.
lI Pay Cash for
II Classifieds
and
·
lI
Savell!
I
I
I

I

T ra iler lot for sa le, SS,OOO.
Modular home lot on Route
7, three bedroom fa r m ·
house loca ted on Route 7.
992·2571 .
Beautifu l t hr ee bedroom
ranch brick home in Baum
Addi tion, Pomeroy, Ohio.
Gas heat, centra l air con·
diti onlng . Call 985 ·3814 or
992·2571 .

WANTED
T O BUY :
GOL,D ,
SILVE R ,
PLATINUM, STE RLING ·
COINS , RIN GS,JEWELR ·
Y, MISC . ITEMS . AB·
SOL UTE
M A RKET
PRICE GUARANTE D. ED
BURKETT
BARBER
SHO P, MIDDLEPORT ,
DHI0992·3476.

USED FURNITURE. Gold
&amp; silver, cl ass ring s, pocket
watches, chai ns, diamonds
&amp; so on. Copper brass and
batteries, antique items ,
also do appra isa ls, com plete auctioneer service .
Over 30 ye ars exper ience in
business . Will buy com plete es tates . Middl eport ,
Oh . 992·6370 .

21(&gt; acres,

7 ROOM HOME .
fireplace , woodburner.
total electri c, carpeted, 2
car garage , basernent,
10x27 sundeck , First house
past Memory Gardens S."R.
7. 992·7741.

Name _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Phone ____________

II
lI
l

11

CIRCLE

AD WANTED

3. _ _ _ _ __

I
I
I

I
I
I
I

··------5. _ _ _ _ __
6 . _ _ _ _ __
7. _ _ _ _ __

8. _ _ _ _ __
9. _ _ _ _ __

1o. _ _ _ _ __
11 . _ _ _ _ __
12. _ _ _ _ __

I
I
.1l

13.- - - - - 14. _ _ _ _ __

I

16. _ _ _ _ _

I

22 . _ _ _ _ __
23. _ _ _ _ _ __
24. _ _ _ _ _ __
25 . _ _ _ _ _ __
26. _ _ _ _ _ __

1973 Crown Hav en, 14 x 65, ·
thr:ee bediooms , new car ·
pet . 1971 Ca meron, 14 x 64,
two bedroorns, new carpet.
1972 Champion, 12 x 60, two
bedrooms, new carpet. 1976
Cameron, 12 x 60, two
bedrooms, all electric. 1971
Sky line, 1 1~x 6), two
bedrooms, ba t h &amp; lfJ, new
ca rpet.
1970
P MC ,
12 x 60, two bedrooms, new
carpet . B x S Sa les, Inc.,
2nd x Viand Street, Point
Pleasant, WV Phone 6754424.

Quick and Easy!

HelpWanted

GET VALUABLE trainin g
as a young business person
and earn good money plus
some great gifts as a Sentinel route carrie r . Phone
us right away and get on
the eligibility list at 992·
2156 or 992·2157 .
RNS and L PNS, lOOking for
challenging and rew~rding
Work? Tired of rota ti ng
shif ts? Feel the need to
develop your ideas in
resid ent care with a highly
motiva ted staff? Pomeroy
Health Care Center has t he
answer for you . Due to
achieving near maximum
census, we now have
openings for full and part
time positions on day shift
but w i 11 consi der other shif·
ts. Competitive salary, eX·
cel lent working con di.tions,
lif e insurance
and
disability policy at no cosr
to the employee, and
hospitalization insurance
available. Come visit us or
call : Nancy Van Meter ,
R.N., Director of Nursing,
Pomeroy Health Care Cen·
ter, 614-992 ·6606.

27. - - - - - 28 · ----~29
. _ _ _ _ __
30. _ _ _ _ __

31 . ~-----

32. _ _ _ _ __
33. _ _ _ _ _ __
34. _ _ _ _ __
35 . _ _ _ _ __

15.------~

13

.

----

NICE T WO bedroom house
with three car garage in
Racine. S3J,OO.OO. 949·2801.
No Sunday callS.
·

nentals
41
TWO
BE DROOM
un ·
furnished house, also two
bedroom furnished &amp; one
bedroom furnished apartments. Call after 6 p.m.
992·2288.

Real Estate- General

Mail This Coupon with Remiffance
The Daily Sentinel
Box 729
Pomeroy, Ohio45769

~----------------------~
I

POMEROY,O .

992 · 2259
NEW LISTING In
Town - 3 bedroom , 1
story home with full
basement . Screened
porc h, larg e entry , for ced air gas heat. Large
lot . $27,000.00 .
NEW LISTING - Mini
Farm with approx. 15
acres and two bedroom
home w ith range, patio .
E lec tr ic B . B . heat . ·
$24,000 .00 .
NEW LISTING 3
bedroom home . 1112
baths on approx. 15
aC res. House needs
some work . $19,500.00.
MIDDLEPORT A
cozy 2 bedroom house,
close to shopping . Half
basement. nice front
porch. Just $16,700.00.
BUILDING SITE - Ap·
prox . 1 acre in Chester .
Ut i li ties
at
site .
$6,000 .00.
SYRACUSE
3
bedroo m
hom·e on
100'x 100' l ot . House
recently
ins ulated.
Washer and dryer .
building .
St orage
$26,900.00.
REALTOR
Henry E. Clela"dl Jr.
992-6191
ASSOCIATES
J ea n Trussell949-2660
Rog er- &amp; Dottie Turn er
992-5692
OFFICE 992-2259

16 E, Second Street
Phone

1- ( 614 H92-3325
'

. 12'h·24'h

61-1/.._ -1/.1-.J
Perfect lo1 a busy day. This
yoked skimme' gQI!s over you1
head lo keep you comlortable

and

looking attractive. Sew·

affordable in cotton, save$$$.
Printed Pattem 454 1: Half
S11es 11 ~. 14'h. 16'h. 18 1h. ·
1011, 111\. 14 11. Size 14'.1 (bust
37) ta kes 1 118 yards 60-inch.

*

$1.75 to. M&lt;h paltlll!, Add
to. uth palttm to. filii-elm
limllil111d hllldlint- Send to:
An11t Adams

- -- -

-------··-- ------

Mobile Homes
for Rent

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

5858.

Apartment
for Rent

44

Furnistied apartmentS, 992·
3129, 992-5914, or 1·:)04·882·

_

Furnace repa irs, electrical
work, plumbing, mobile
home or residence. 992·
5858 .c l.assified
ads
THAWING Water l ines,
rep lace damaged copper
tubing or plastic lines.
General plumbing. 667 ·6139
or667-6150.
•

NICE two bedroom country
home. Vinyl siding, full
basement, S1J,9QO.OO. U9·
2801. ~o Sunday ca lls.

42

Unfurnished one bedrooni
apartment for rent. Ren·
ters assistance available
for senior c itizens. Contact
Village Manor Apartments
at 992· 7787 .
Apt. f or rent, 3 roOms &amp;
bath. 992-5908 .
FURNISHED 4 room &amp;
bath, adults only, no pets.
'Middleport, 992·3874.

45

Furnished Rooms

Sleeping rooms or will
room &amp; board Senior
Citizens. 949·2591.
=-o---c=---· · - - - - ·

46

Space for Rent

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy . LargE! lots. Call
992-7479.
TRAILER spaces for rent.
Southern Valley Mobile
Home Park, Cheshire, Oh .
992·3954.
Office space on Sycamore
Street
in
downtown
Pomeroy. All utilities paid.
$125.00 a month. 992 ·2259.
Office space on Sycamore
St reet
in
downtown
Pomeroy . All util ities paid .
$125.00 amonth. 992·2259 ,.

The Daily Sentinel·
Z43 IIIII 17 St, Ntw Tart, RT
111011. Print NAM~L MIDKSS,
ZIP, Sll(, 111d 5nLt fiUIIIU,

'

SilO dollars, &amp;et belte1 quality'
Send for our NEW fAll·WINifR
PATTERN CATALOG. 94 patterns

fiee Pattern Couj)Ofl (worth

Sl.75). Catatoc. Sl.OO. .
UJ.fllllllllllllt Qllllldl.75
JlthwlltrS. 31-!1011.7!1
lzt.Qtit~ , ..... 1.75
IZ7·AfaNns 'n llllles .. .$1.75

f

·Antiques

ATTENTION :
{IM ·
PORTANT TO YOU) Will
pay cash or certified check
for antiques and collec ·
tibles or entir-e estates.
Nothing too large. Also,
, pocket watches and
n collections. Call 614·
767·3167 or 557·3411.

t~:a~L~-~~t Ji.

Wanted to Do

fl - ··:H~~~!or~a[i~-

Rt.l, Box 54
Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614-843·2591
6· 15-lfc

· SI~·6UN5- A WARNING CRY RIN65 OUT- ·!

BORN LOSER

•
0
0
0

0
0

LISTINGS NEEDED.
HAVE MORE BUYERS
THAN WE CAN FINO
HOMES FOR . CALL
"z.J32S or 992-3171,

Housiny

Headqttarters

..

.i

7:30

'
''

.

';

&lt;lJ8 C!J NBC NEWS

.
20TH
CENTURY
GUIDELINES
CIJ BOB NEWHART SHOW
CIJ FACE THE MUSIC
0 ())@) CBS NEWS
CIJ WILO WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
FEELINGS
OJ ABC NEWS
NEWS UPDATE
(l) 8 PM MAGAZINE
(I)
GERALD
OERSTINE
PRESENTS
I]) SNEAK PREVIEW : JANUARY
CIJ ALL IN THE FAMILY
CIJ tBJ OJ FA MIL V FEUO
C!J STAN HITCHOCK SHOW
0 ()) TICTACOOUGH
CIJ ill)
IIACNEfL·LEHRER
REPORT
tiD&gt; NEWS
&lt;lJ 8 BULLSEYE
(I) FAITH THAT LiVES
I]) GREATEST SPORTS RIVALS
'The New York Giants &gt;JS the
Cleveland Browns ' Take a look at
the riva lry that dominated ;The Gol-

.~.....__! ~.___· I

&lt;

ROGER HYSEll'S
GARAGE

54 ·

Misc. Merchanise

Firewood for sale, Ml)(ed
types of wood. S35.00 per
pick -up load. Delivered,
will stac k fOr senior
Citizens. 843 · ~951 or 843·
2815.

PWMBING
AND
HEAnNG

-Auto and Truck
Repair
-Transmission
Repair
Hrs.: Mon. · Fri.
9 A.M .·5: 30 P.M,

12 Park St.
Middleport, Oh.
Ph . 992-626~
Anytime
12· 17·1 mo.

992-5682
10·7-lfc '
72

NIIW BiUI AI LDW As
11N.U
Hot,oin.t Mlcrowa\'e Oven
Ret . U74
1314
Comfort GlOW KltOUft t
Heaters, Econ•mv 121·~),
Ret . II JUS
Now 112UJ'

9o,.,

POMEROY

~'LANDMARk
E , Main St.

POmeroy

ANNIE

TH-· THAT'S WHERE
601N', THEN'? TO
TRY TO FIND THIG ... Eft
~WARBUCiiS 6UI ?...

01, l KNO~ WHERE
HE IS- A MEDICAL
CENTER UP NORTH ...
f'--_,

'IIHRBOC~S

IS RECUPERATIH6 FROM AN
ILLNESS OR AN ACCIDENT OR
SOMETHING '" HE'LL BE A
SITTIH6 DUCK!

... THE ASHE SARE COLO, ..
BUT THE WIND HASN'T
SCAHEREO llH YET"
TrlEY CAN'T BE TOO FAR

IOLDBOY t

INGLEM

ss

Building Supplies

GUARANTEED
Roof
products . Coatings and
products for all roof types,
paiJement sealers and sup-

74

Prlntanswerhere: "[

1978 KAWASAKI KZ 650
motorcycle, color blue.
Call949 · 26~9 .

]~~~~~~~~~

plies. coatings
masonary,
wall &amp;
floor
&amp; sealers,
StF"IIees
metal &amp; wood preser·
vatives,
&amp;
indu.s trial 81
Home
cleaners for dealers, conImprovements
tractors
&amp;
private
businesses. 992·7603 after 5 GENE'S
CARPET
p.m .
'CLEANING. Deep strean:)
clean put~ nu· look back in
your carpet, highly recom ·
S6
Pels for Sale
mended, reasonable rates,
HOOF HOLLOW: Horses Scotchguard.
Free
and ponies · and riding estimates. Gene Smith, call
le ssons.
Everything now 992-6309 or 742·2211.
imaginable in hors·e equip·
men! . Blankets, bells, WILL do handyman work
boots, etc . Eng!ish and in your home . Furniture
Western . .R uth Reeves repair in my shop. Jim
{614) 698·3290.
Bentz, 4th St., Syracuse .
THE
MEIGS
County
Humane Socie ty pets of the
Week are : Severa l adult
cats, 5 bt"ack &amp; tan puppies,
black labrador , black Irish
setter,
cot lie
type ,
shepherd ·type, black &amp;
tan ; house broke medium
size dog ready to be loved,
lovable mixed breed. 992·
6260 .
PURE~RED

English
Shepherd puppies. Stock
and watch dogs. Phone 247·
2161,
Musical
Instruments

WHATEVER
FOR?

HE AND HIS BROTHER.
WANT 10 LE'ASE TH E'
TIME MACHINE !

IT WIT H U S !

Low·k·ey defense effective
NORTH
+K QJ
YK 8754

ope ned the king of clubs.
South t ook his ace and led a
heart. West ducked and
dummy's king won the trick .
A second heart went to West's
queen . He took one club and
led another club for South to
ruff.
· Now South gave West a
t rick with t he ace of hearts.
Th e defense had three tricks
i n, bu t tha t was all. South
c ould take hi s ace of
diamonds, play one trump and
make t he r es t of the (ricks on
a cross ruff . Toward t he end
E~st was underruffing each
trump.
At . the other table West
came up with a trump l ead.
South won in hiS hand and led
a hea rt. Now , West made the
bnlliant play of the queen .
Dummy 's king won and a second heart went 1o East's jack.
This gav e East a chance to a
second trump. South led his
l ast heart to establish two
heart tricks in. dummy. But

12-30·80

t 9
~6 53 2

WEST

EAST

'1 A Q 10
t K 10 8 3

• 8 51 2
., J 3
+J 7fi52
10 7

+3

+K QJ91

+

SUUTH
+ A 1U9 76
., 9 6 2

't A Q4
+AS
Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: West
Wes t

East

Sout h

t+
Pass

North

Pass
· 2'1

Pass
Pass

Obi.
.2+

Pass

4•

Pass

Pass

Pass
Opening lead :• K

since dummy was down to o.ne

University

8:30 (]) GOOD NEWS
8:58 (I) NEWS UPDATE
9:00 ill D ill TUESDAY NIGHT AT
THE MOVIES 'The Boys Ot Com·
· pany C' 1978 Stars : Andrew

trump and East still had two,
there was no way for South to
get th ose . heart tricks and he
wound up one down.
A quiet defense , bu t one of
th e nicest ol1~80 .

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag
Both South players in an
IMP match reached lour
spades. At one · table West

0 ()) 110J CBS TUESOAY NIGHT

I

I

{NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

'

MOVIE 'The Matinb Season ' 1980
Stars: Lucie Arnaz , Laurence Luck·
inbllt.
,
,

I

(I) ill) FRONTLINE Thisdocumen ·

Myson, Siim,
speaks vert.J
hiqhly of you,
sir!

J &amp; F BACKHOE SER ·
VICE liscensed 8. bonde·d,
s~pllc
tank Installation,
water &amp; gas lines. .E x C~vallng work &amp; transit
layout. 992· 7201 .
Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

SEWING
MACHINE
Repairs,
service,
all
makes1
992·2284 . The
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales
and Service . We sharpen
Scissors.
ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR
Sweepers,
toasters, irons, all small
appliances . Lawn mower.
Next to Slate Highway
Garage on Route 7, 985·
3825.
.

I An swer:

BRIDGE

Stevena,"Jamee Whitmore Jr.
(I) 700~LUB

'!c83~_ _,E
,_x~c~a._,v~a~t~in!l!g!.__

B4

... HE 'S FLYING I
TOMORROW TO VI&gt;;.CUS"I

Jumbles LOW LY HELLO INDOOR NI CETY
What kind of reception did the airconditioning salesman meet with when he
called on the Eskimos? - A CH ILLY ONE

Ye sterday's

D ())@J WHITESHADOWSal•mi
belts an opposing player in El bas ·
ketball free -for-all and is charged
with aggravated assBult, a charge
carrying a possible four-year pri ·
son sentence. (60 mine .)
Cililll NOVA 'lt'sAboutTime 'Oud ·
ley Moore•hosts this investigation
of time . Whet is time 0 When did it
begin, and when ·will it end 0
{Cioaed·Copliond; U.S.A.) (6P
minU
IBJUJ COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Ohio Stale vs West Virginia

~ALLEYOOP

XXXXX)"
(Answers tomorrow)

State va West Virgin ia

Motorcycles

Now arrange the circled leners to
form the surprise answer , as suggested by the above car1oon.

I tJ

I

Akins , Mills Watson. (Season·

Trucks for Sale

THE SOFI:TOF
NU15ANC.E; OL.D
~OCK5 C.AN 6E'.

I I I J

Premiere ; 60 mine.)
(I) ORAL ROBERTS
CIJ MOVIE ·{ORAMA) " ' "Greateet Story Ever Told'' t965
()) COLLEGE BASKETBALL Ohio

F ir ewood for sale. Har· 1970 FORD &amp; ton pickup·
dwood, split &amp; · delivered. overload springs, good ·be :
$25 . load d elivered . 992· $495. Victor Bahr, J miles
north of Chester, 985·4240.
5240.

L.....JI

12 · ,~

classic gridiron competition.
NBA BASKETBALL Allan! a
Hawks vs Detrojt Pistons
CiJ D ()) JOKER'S WILD
C!J HOLLYWOOD SQUARES
CIJ ill) DICK CAVEn SHOW
tiD&gt; MATCH GAME
OJ FACE THE MUSIC
7:58 ; NEWSUPDATE
8:00
D C!l LOBO Woman ·a mud
wrest ling in an Atlanta nightclub is
thed istractionthat is used by credit
card thie\lesas Sheriff loboartd his
deputies gel a messy introduction
to life in the city . Stars: Claude

AHEAD OF ME

.L&gt;o....&lt;r

' - - I

den Age' ofprofesSionatfootballas
HBO sports features nostalgic int ervlewsand fi Imel ip a the t re ere ate

1

KAUFPS

•

· WINNIE
~OY,

OF CDUIZ.SE. I 'M NOT
SURE HOW MANY
OF ll-IEM WOULD
MAKE GOOD

IF THIS HOUSE
COULD TALK IT
COULD TELL LOTO.
OF STORIEB I

APPLIANCE SERVICE:
all makes washer", dryers,
ranges , dishwashers ,
62
Wanted to Buy
disposalS, water tanks. Call
CHIP WOOD. Poles ma•. Ken Young at 985·3561. 28
diameter 10" on largest years e•perience, Also.will
end. S12 p ·er ton . Bundled sell parts you fix .
slab. $10 per ton. Delivered
to Ohio Pallet Co., Rt. 2,
85
General Hauling
Pomeroy 992· 2689.
AGRI · LIME Spreading, .
limestone and fill dirt
hauling. Leo Morris, 742·
2455,
.

NEW - On the river, 2
ft
Autos for Sale
bedrooms, bath, open
COAL , l imestone, sand 8.
1967
CAMERO,
350 4 speed, gravel, reasonable . . Call
ca thedral
cei ling ,
carpeting, storage and
FIREWOOD $35 . a truck am·fm cassette. 992·2917.
992·5510.
natural outside wood
1oad, $60. a cord . A II h a r • I .;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;..L;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;
finish .
dwood, split, 8. delivered . ~
NEW LISTING - 1'1.1
843·-1831 or 843· ~734.
&lt;
acre trailer lot w ith sep----~tic tank, drilled well,
Firewood for sa le,
Ohio Power on R t. 124
reasonable rates. Phone
near the coal m ine. Only
992·5776.
$6,500.
LARGE · Country
irew "o od for. sale,
home of 10 rooms !hal a
reasonable rates. Phone
family ought to en loy . 3
992-5776.
acres of land for
pleasure, fam ily room,
natural gas heat and
USED Kroebler bedroorn
drilled well .
suite, full size mattress,
cozy - Little easv to box springs. $100. 742·2957.
heat 2 bedroom, 2 car ·
home. Natural gas furnace, in town near
Now At
stores. Only $16,000.
PomP.roy
NEARLY NEW - Nice
neat 3 bedrooms, 2 full
Lmdmarl&lt;
baths , dining with
oe ....,...
'!H.•
sliding glass door to
UMCI Rttrl,watoer,
1121.10
back patio. Garage and
UHd Xl 12 Chtln Sew
SIIS.OO
large corner IQt .' Just
UHCI12" Saw
115.00

$~3,500 .

U.S.A.)

~ (I)

Free Estimates
Reasonilble Prices
Calf Howard
949-2862
949·2160
1·22·1fc

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

3 AND 4 RM turni sheq ap·
ts. Phone 992· 5434.

Housing
Headquarters

4541

8:30

FI&gt;L Hf!i' HAND ~EFO ~ DRAW IN'" HI!' OWN

H. L WRITESEL
ROOFING
All types of roof work,
new or rep•lr guners
itnd downspouts, gutter
cleaning and painting.
All work guaranteed.

NEWS

CIJ

NICE 3 bedroom home, Two bedroom mobil e home
livi ng room , din ing room, at Brown 's Trailer Park.
family room , 11h baths, hot 992·3324.
w ater heat. 992·2918 .

Real Estate- General

Why put up with high prices-

I

Utiity Buildings
Sizes from 4x6to 12X40

-ro

Hou ses for Rent

53

Insurance

.

Silas
"From 30x30"
SMAll

~loeed·Ceplioned ;

M THE:' MUSTACHE KID GIVE'.$ LIVORNO TIME-

6:68
7:00

Farm Buildings

Lowery electric organ .
Teeny Genie; like new.
$499 .00. 992·2044.

I
I
I

I
I
I
I
I

Hom es for Sa le

-·-----

I

no money down
Federal Housing -'3% on S25,000
5% on balance,
Conventional Loans5%
down
Call fOr Information
992-7544
12·21 ·1

ALL STEEL

57

AUTOMOBILE
IN ·
SURANCE
been can·
your
celled?
Lost
operator's I ice nse? Phorle
992·2143 .
18

992-6215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Oh,

• New Homes - ex ·
tensiv~ remodeling
• Electrical work
• Roofing work
12 Years
Experience
(;reg Roush
Ph , 992-7583
12·4·1 mo.

2566.

Print one word in each
space below. Eac h in·
I
itiat or group of figures
I
counts as a word . count
I
nam e and address or
1
phone number if used.
3
6
10 1
You ' ll get better results Words
1
if you descr ibe fu lly, --4.Cd~a:.!Y+!d!!:a~y.!s~d::•:.:Y..:S+d;;:•;;:Y:,:S;;I
give price. The Sentinel 1016 $l.OO u .oo $4 .00 $7.00
r eserves the righ t to
classify , edi t or r e ject
I'
any ad . Your ad wi ll be to 25 s1.30 $3 .75 5.50 S9.00 I
put in th e proper
_1
clasification if you' l l lolS Sl.SO S4 .50 7.50 510.011'
check the proper box
beloW
Th ese cash rates
LADY or girl to live in . 992 ·
in cl ude discount
2686.
Wanted
12
Situations wa.n ted
17. _ _ _ _ _ __
For Sa le
Announcement
18. _ _ _ _ __
FOSTE R care in my home,
For Rent
elderly only, room board,
19._ _ _ _ _ __
laund ry . Rea sonable . 992·
20 . _ _ _ _ __
6022.
21. _ _ _ _ _ __
1. _ _ _ _ __

1. _ _ _ _ __

---

Mobile Ham es
tor Sale

32

r

Wr ite your own ad and order by mail wi th th is
coupon . Canc-el your ad by phone when you get
results. Money not refundab le.

I
1 Address---~----1

Jl

10 ROOM brick, J baths, 1" •
acre; 6 rooms, 2 ba ths, 1'12
acres; 6 rooms basement,
bath, 2 mobile homes ;
Mason, 3 bedroom never
lived in, 2 bedroom. r ented
2 acres. John Sheets, 3'h
miles south of Middleport,
Rt. I.

Wanted to Buy

Wanted to Buy : class rings ,
wed ding bands, anythi ng
stamped , ,10K, 14K, or 18K
gold. Silver coins, pocket
watches. Cal l Joe Clark at
992-2054 at Clark's Jewelry
Store , Pomeroy, Oh io 45769

!SWords or Under
I day

Homes tor Sale

•I

V.C•.YOUNG II

l!~~~::::::::~~;:~~======~==~~~ CONSTRUCTION ·

Last and Found

OLD CO IN S, pocket wat·
ches, class rings, wedding
bands, d famonds . Gold or
si l ver . Call J . A . Wamsley,
742·2331. Treasure Chest
Coin Shop, Athens, OH . 592 ·
6462 .

I Refrigeration
1s-Genero11Hauling
8.._M .H. Rep.a ir
17- UphOiilery

1: 30 J&gt; .M . Da il y
12 Noon Satura.,

{Free Estimates)

ROUSH

12-- Piumblng &amp; E•UII'I!ing
ll-E;I,CIIII'IItl ng
84- Eiectriul

electrical work

992-7544
VA loans -

ffi ~~!!tmiiJ2ie

CAROL BURNEn ANO
FRIENDS
CIJ ABCN!WS
CIJ PROGRAM UNANNOUNCED
(fi) OVER EASY Gueit: Radio host
and Aut hor Studs Turkel. Hosts:
Hugh D&lt;'wna and Fran k Blair.

Mortgage Bankers

. - Addons and
remodeling
- Roofi"gand guher
work
- Concrete work
- Piumbing·and

12·8·1 mo.

Jl

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one Isner lo each square. to form
four ordinary words.

CIJ

CUNNINGHAM
&amp;ASSOC.

CARPENTER
SERVICES"

PH. 742-2328

I RON AND BRASS BEDS,
old furniture, desks, gold
rings,
j ewelry, silver
dollars. ster l ing, etc .; w.ood
ice boxes, jars an t iq ues,
et c. Complete households.
Wr ite M . D. Miller , Rl. 4,
Pomeroy , OH1 or ca ll 992 ·
7760.

Is-Schools Inst ruct ion

1.._

If YOU NEED IT.
FIXED,
WE CAN DO m

6:00

.

-

"YOUN~S

AL TROMM'
&amp;

FOUND : La rge black &amp;
wh ite tom ca t. Vicin ity of
Mulberr y &amp; Heights . 992·
5354.

•MERCHANDISE

• EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

WANT TO
KNOW IT$
· 71TU= ····

DEER CUI &amp; wrapped at
Maple Wood Lake between
Syracuse &amp; Rac;:ine, Oh .
$25. per head . $5 additiona l
for sk inning .
FAYE 'S Gill Shop in M id·
dleport w.i II be open from
12·5 until Christmas.

byHenriArnoldandBobLee

·

EVENING

AMJ~

HAVE YOUR deer trophy
mounted .
Birc hfield's.
East on 124 at Rutland . 742·
2178.

donated to the Boy Scout
Troop 249 . 12 gauge fac tory
choke gun only!

•ANNOUNCEMENTS

WE CAl&lt;
/il4t710

7 : 30 p.m. Factory c hoke

SHOOTING MATCH at
Corn Hollow in Rutland .
Every Sunday starting at

•
VIewmg

Business Services

4NICE
WNEON

'11\J~rut ID~ ~THAT SCRAMBLEDWORO GAME
~ ~ ~~ ®

!

•

Announcements

J

Announcements

Television

DOCUM ENTARIES ...

tary examines 11 years In Vietnam
through the eyes of combat cameramanNeiiOavia . using footage shot
by Davis and others, this program ,
asks you toview the horrors of combat I rom a frontline perspecti ve .
miml.)

9146
10:00

1E

TBS EVENING NEWS
W Q) ABC NEWS CLOS~pp
Cil SOUNOSTAGE ' Jour~ey '
(C ioaed·Captionad; U.S.A.) ( 60
mine.)

illJ NEWS
10:28 (I) NEWS UPOATE
10:30 (I) FAITH 20
ill) EXTENSIONS
10:58 (I) NEWS UPDATE
11:oo ill 8 &lt;Il C!J D ()) ®l W ..0
NEWS
(]) TOOAY IN BIBLE PROPHECY
CIJ NIGHT GALLERY
.(I) MONTY PYTHON'S FLYING
CIRCUS
ill) DICK CAVETT SHOW
11:28 (I) NEWSUPOATE
11:30 (1) 0 COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Univers ity of Kentu cky vs Universi!¥_of Maine
W ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
I]) MOVIE -(ORAMA) " ' "Bad
D•v At Black Rock" 1955
(1) MOVIE -(DRAMA) ••• 11 Sevtn
Doyaln MaC 1984
()) (j2) UJ
ABC NEWS
NIGHTLINE
•
C!J THE TONIGHT SHOW Guesrs
AngleO ickinson , Oom Delu ise. (60

~(1,

CBS LATE MOVIE 'LOU
GRANT : Hit ' St ars : Ed Asner ,
Robert Walden. Allyn Ann McLerie
guest stars as a mother obses~ed
with finding the hit-and-run dn-ver
who k illed her son. Rossi 's fighHng
instincts are aroused bythe human interest story and he hits an unaxpec1ed payoll. (Repeal) 'THE IM ·
POSTER ' I ~75 Stars: Ed Aaner.
Nancy Kelly.
(I) ABC CAPTIONE.Q NEW~
@) MOVIE -(ORAMA! " 1'.
11
Swlnu_ra' P•radltt"1985
11:50 (])IBJ UJ TUESDAY MOVIE OF
THE WEEK 'Moonrunnera ' 1976
Stare: Jemee Mitchum , _ Chr is

NOW 1 GOT

ENOUGH

MAYBE
FOUR

FIREWOOD

TO lAST
THREE
DA\r'S

Forbes.

12:30

NOrth, Paul Peterson . (Repeat; 90

2:00
.

I'M GLAD, SIR, AND THE
MORE 't'OU READ TilE
USE DOA;\8
1 ,Lc~E~5~E.5S ~~0UN'SU.LIKE
lt
THAT

2:02
2:28
2:30
3:18

50

NOTHING, SIR. ..

KEEP READING!

TOMORROW Gueota : Dav id

Letterman, Angela Cartwright, Jay

t2·58
1;00

'

C!J

•:OO

JWl'~~ORTS ~EPORT
CIJ• TOMORROW Clueoto:David

Letterman, A,ngela Cartwright, Jay
·North. Paul Peterson . (Repeat ; 90
mlna.)
·
OtD TIME GOSPEL HOUR
WORLDVIEW
MOVIE -{ORAMA) ••1&gt; "Sho"
11165
NEWS
UIELIEVE
.NEWS
SPORTS REPORT
ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
SPORTS REPORT
700CLUB
MOYlE -{ORAMA) "I&gt; "Hoi~

~

to"

5:30
5:18

~

JESUS IS THE ANSWER
SPORTS REPORT

~NtiiVJt~
by THOMAS JOSEPH

..

5 Place
for resting
10 Russien ci ty
11 Greet
12 Biblical
brother
13 Typewriter
part
14 Drench
15 Child of Loki
16 Openings
(anal. )
17 Without
originality
19 Fish story
20 Talon
21 T yke's toy
22 Jolly pennant
24 Bequest
recipi ent
21i Baseness
26 Decline
27 Man's
nickname
28 Employ
stratagem
31 Prepare to
do battle
32 Sign
33 Andy Gump's
mate
34 Held in
high
esteem
36 Intimation
37 With
sound
judgment

DAILY

expressed 1,500 miles, can .return to
their lofts within three d\IYS.

Yesterday 's Aoswer

cognizance

11 Bout

4 Building
section

15 Scion
18 Asiati c
wei ght
21 Ready to
be serv ed
22 Falling
back
23 Infested

5 Elect ion
eve event

6 Palm leaf
7 Delirious
8 Fruitless
9 On sure
ground

24 Cold and wet
26 Wordy
29 Sphere
of work
29 Subsequently
30 Rec ord
35 Zuider 36 Owl talk

0

k -+-l-

C RYPTOQUOTE -

.1•

Here's how to

'"'

work It :

AXVDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter simply stands for another. In this samPle A i1 , ·
used f or the three L 's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and forma ti on of the warda are all
hints. Each day the code l eiters are different .

.

..

CRVPTOQ~b'rES

. H W· X B T A R K Z N
KRZ
'CQT

FASTEST HOMING PIGEONS
The fastest homing pigeons air-

38 For the nonce
39 Wound up
40 E uropean
river
DOWN
1 Dean Martin
TV offering
2 Bower
3 Taking

ACROSS

I Debauche

UTN Z
ZG LQC

LQC

HE
QW

PTSF\

'' I Q N G

Q T K.

QW

XHOHGA,"

PBC

XBTARKZN

'~E

K R Z
CZ B N
-Z G V E . - K R Z
Z Y H K QN E
Yeslerday's CryploqMie: TO RECEIVE A PRESENT IN
RIGHT SPIRIT, EVEN WHEN YOU HAVE NONE TO GIVE IN
RETURN, IS TO GIVE ONE IN RETURN .-lEIGH
C 1110 IC),g Foo..._
Inc.

.

'i'HE

s -.

'

HUNT

.

�'
December 30, 1980

Judges will retu~ to classroom
be offered primarily at one or twoday regional seminars, so judges
won't have be away from home. ·

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Star· specia l knowledge of subjects of·
ting in 1981, all Ohio judges will be fered, Gilbert said.
heading back to the classroom for 20
It Is expected that the courses will
hours of continuing education each .
year.
The new rule, adopted by the Ohio
Supreme Court, also sets 10 hours as
the rninlmwn ann\131 requirement
for part-time justices.
The r ul e containing the
requirements, effective New Year's
Day, is aimed at keeping judges
abreast of changes in Ohio's statutes
and rules covering the state's cour-

r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,

ELBERFELD$

L
'

Five area residents express hope for '81

ts.
Coil H. Gilbert, the high court's
administrative director, said Man'
day that the program is ·consistent
with a national trend in which legal
and other professions want their
members apprised of changes
taking place in their areas of interest.
About seven other states already
have continuing education programs
for judges, Gilbert said. But it's still
'''in its infancy,'' he said.
The new rule provides that the
courses will be offered by the Ohio
Judicial College, established by the
Supreme Court to develop curricula
and conduct classes in major cities
across the state. Courses will be
taught by lawyers and judges with
WORK CREW - This ·live man work crew,
specially trained in the new techniques of the Eby Constructors, Kent, Wash., in filling and sealing abandoned mines is pictured at the Peacock Mine site on
Osborne St., Pomeroy, the third such mine closed by
the company in the village. The workers have installed
a metal drain pipe from the rear of the 70 foot deep
mine to the e"terior and today are shuofin•• H....,e..,t .-..,t•

fill into the mine shaft. Randy Lipscomb of the Federal
Bureau of Mines has been in Pomeroy during the
closing of the three mines to observe the new processes
and to ins pect the work. Eby workers pictured at the
entrance of the Peacock Mine are, I to r, Russ Eby,
owner; David Rohrer, David Olson, David Nielson and
Bobby Jones.

~

recorded 61 co unties. the year's
high, with jobless rates of 10 percent
ur. more.
In August. the Ohio Bureau of Employment Services said 42 counties
reported at least 10 percent jobless
rates. That number dropped to 37
counties in September and 24 in October.
Scioto County reported a 17.4 percent jobless rate in November - the
highest of any county in Ohio- with
5, 121 out of work . That's up from a
15.3 percent unemployment rate
thei·e the month before.
Tile Scioto County office of the

swte employment services bureau
blamed much of the increase there
to the closing or cutting back by
small businesses that had depended
on Empire Detroit Steel Corp.,
whi ch shut down earlier this year. A
slag company and two scrap meta l
dealers closed after losing sources of
supply at the steel milL And a small
minera ls finn lost out since it dealt
exclusively with the milL
The second highest jobless rate for
Novembe r - 16 percent - was
recorded in Mercer County. The
county had reported a 14.5 ·unemployment ra te in October.

Jannels
and
cot ton / polyester blend .
Good selection of styles
and colors in sizes S, M,
L&amp;XL.

REDUCED 20%

ELBER

IN POMEROY

Steven L. Story
Pomeroy Attorney
" My wlsb for the oew year
would be to bllve mflation
b~ougbt onder control. It Is my
feeliDg lbat the present hiDatiooary trend Is one of tbe
greatest threats to both our free
enterprise system aod tbe
democratic process.
" My second wisb would be for
the sale return of the hostages
from Iran."
·

._ ...

Caraina\
SUPER MARKETS

KateWelsb
Elberfeld Employee
"My bope ls lbat our government does sometbiDg about hlflation, and lbat aU people, young
and old, have a mucb better
world · to live ln. With enough
faith, we cao overcome some of
the things that seem to be upsetting our plans for the future."

Business session set
The Racine Village Board of
Public Affairs and Council will hold
i.ts reg ula r meeting Monday ,
January 5, at the village building.
The Board of Public Affairs will
meet at 6:30 p.m. foll owed by a council session at 7 p.m. All members are
urged to be there at 6:30p.m. since
Lindsey Lyons; representing the
Tuppers Plains-Chester water service will discuss water meters, cost
of installati on, amount of upkeep,
and other factors concerning the
water service.
The Board of Public Affairs is in
the proeess of deciding between
water meters and a flat monthly
rate for the village. Any interested
person can attend the open meeting.

Deadline nears for
1980 Ohio auto tags
Sarah Gibbs, Deputy Registrar,
reports car owners whcse last
names begin with W, X, Y or Z, have
today and Wednesday to drive on
their old red and white license
plates.
Beginning Friday, J an. 2, owners
whose last names begin with A or B
can obtain their new stickers for 198i
by bringing in title and registration.
New stickers must be purchased by
Feb. !.
•
The Meigs License Burea u is
located un Mulberry Avenue,
Pomeroy, in the former Gibbs
Grocery building.

.,

her car on a patch of ice, went off the
right side of the road and collided
across the road and was struck from
with a guard rail, causing moderate
the rear by a car driven by Roberta damage to her car, the patrol said.
J. Johnson, 20, Portland.
A minor two-car crash on U.S. 35
Accordm g to the report, Johnson was also investigated by the patrol
was unable to stop when the collision Munday night.
occurred . Moderate damage was
Troopers said Carolyn E. Fisher,
reported to both cars and Johnson 34, Patriot Star Route, was pulling
was cited loi· assured clear distance. out of a private drive when she
No injuries were listed in a one~car
collided with an eastbound autu·
accident in Gallia County Monday driven by David E. Clagg, 17, Rt. 2,
morning.
Patriot, causing moderate damage .
Nellie L. Dotson , 54, Rt. 3, to both cars. Fisher was cited for
Gallipolis, was eastbound on U.S. 35 failure to yield.
at 7:25a.m. when she lost control of
The patrol said Jinuny D. Steele,
39, Gallipolis, was not injured when
his car struck and killed a deer on
SR 160 at 6:15 p.m. Monday.
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Moderate damage was reported to
Monday Admissions-Lee Rudisi ll, his car.
·
Pomeroy; Pearl Little, Pomeroy;
Clyde Harrison, Pomeroy ; Charles
P~i ce, Long Bot\om; Alice Clark,
Emergency
M1ddleport; Roy Rutter, Pomeroy.
Monda y Disc harges--Willi am
Reeves, Archie Rife, John Artrip, squad runs
Anna Powers, Mary Deren berger,
The Meigs County Emergency
John Shuler, Mary Hennessy.
Medical Service reports six calls
were l!nswered by area emergency
WATCHSERV ICES
units Monday.
'
SLATED
was
at
7:32a.m.,
by the
The
first
A New Year's Eve watch night
Racine
squad,
which
.
transported
service will be held at the Pomeroy
Wesleyan Holiness Church, Route Charles Price from his residence on
143, Pomeroy . Service will begin at Bashan Road to Veterans Memorial
7:30 p.m. The Rev. Dewey King, Hospital. At 9:59 a. m.,' Racine answered a second call, for Amber
pastor, invites the public.
Bird, 3rd St., who was taken to
Pleasant Va lley Hospital. .The
Racine unit treated Michael Stobart
MEETJAN.8
Bricklayers Local 32 will meet at the fire station at 12:05 p.m.
Syracuse transported Charlie Lee
Th ursday, Jan. 8, rather than this
from Syracuse Park to Holzer
Th ursday, of New Year's Day. The
meeting will be held at the Meigs Medica l Cente r at 2:32p.m. , and at
5:51 p.m., the Middleport unit was
Inn , beginning at 8 p.m.
called to the office of Dr. R. R.
Pickens for Alice Clark, who was
MARRIAGE ENOS
taken to Veterans Memoria l. At
Richard T. Yost and Sharon L.
6:31,
Heather Davis was taken from
Yost, both of Coolvill e, have been
40
Riverside
Drive to Holzer Medical
granted a dissolution of marriage in
the Meigs County Common Pleas Center by the Middleport Emergency Squad.
Court.

Vol. 21 , No. 182
Copyrighted 1980

Pomeroy

SAND....

I

Leaders exchwge greetings .

·I

KAHN'S SPECIALS

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WASIDNGTON - President-elect Ronald Reagim exchanged New
Year's greetings with Soviet President Leonid Brezhnev, telling the
Russian leader he hopes 1981 will bring "peace for all peoples,"
Reagan's transition office said Tuesday.
Transition spokesman James Brady said Reagan received a Christmas Eve telegram from Brezhnev, who addressed Reagan as "Mr.
President," although the title does not become official until Re;~gan's
inauguration ·on Jan. 20.
Brady in\licated that Reagan may not fill all his Cabinet-level jobs
before the new year. Of 17 posts that will hold Cabinet rank in tile new
administration, Reagan has yet to announce his choice for two secretary of education and special trade representative.

Employee faces extortion charges
LIMA,, Ohio- A Lima City Hall employee has been charged with ex·
tortion in an alleged plot to blow up a local motel, officials say.
James Clemens, 43, a member of the Lima City Planning Department, was arrested Tuesday about three hours after the manager of
the J.,ima Ramada Inn received a letter thl-eatening to blow up the
facility if $3,500 wasn't paid, the Allen County sheriff's department
said.
The manager of the motel was instructed to go to a telephone booth
to await further instructions.

Missing plate responsible
COSHOCTON, Ohio - A missing inspection plate on a department
store boiler was responsible for a carbon monoxide leak that slightly
injured 16 people, fire officials say.
Officials said Tuesday that it did not appear that the inspection plate
was removed on purpose at O'Neil's department store. The store and
surroilnding businesses were evacuated Monday morning when 15 employees and a shopper were overcome by fumes. ·
·
The stores re-opened Tuesday after tests showed the air was safe.

.

2 Section s, 20 pages

during the past four years and order for it to become law.
"Those offices that will be affailure to pass this proposal would
fected
by this bill, beginning in 1981,
deny them a raise for at least
are
county
treasurer, recorder ,
another four years.
clerk
of
Courts,
sheriff, engineer,
"Eight years is too long to go
prosecutor
and
coroner.
without ~ raise ", Wells stated.
"1 support in principle the salary
Commissioner Jones who voted
against the measure ha~ the increases for the above mentioned
offices. One only need to review the
following conunent;'
" The Ohio Legislator&lt;:, recently eltistlng salary schedule of these
enacted House Bill 1122 which positions to see how inadequate the
provides for an Increase in salary · salary is compared with the amount
for public officials beginning in the of work and responsibility involved.
"Unfortunately, there is another
calendar year of 1981 and continuing
of this bill which states that
section
each year through 1984. One concounty
commissioners
will receive a
dition tied to the bill, however, man ·
seven
.percent
increase
in their
dates that local county boards of
salar
y
in
!983
and
1984.
commissioners must approve it on
'It is this section that I fi nd .comthe local level before Jan. 1, 1981 in

By a 2-1 vote, -Meigs County Commissioners approved increases for
county officials as 8et forth in House
Bi111122•Tuesday.
On the split vote, Commissioners
Henry Wells and Chester Wells
voted in favor of the increases while
Commissioner Richard Jones cast
the negative vote.
Chester Wells said he favored the
salary increases in order to have
qualified people in local government
to work for the taxpayers and to
-~ure them a decent salary since
most of the positions are fulltime.
~enry Wells said he feels officials
are deServing of the proposed raises.
He pointed out that those officials
·ha,ve not· had an increase in salary

Holley Brothers Construction Co.,
Rodney, was the apparent low bidder In Middleport's Marina West
sewer project.
The firm offered $246,297.25 in a
bid opening Tuesday, according to
Mayor Fred Hoffman.
Hoffl118n said all bida will be
reviewed and tabulated by the
village's engineering firm, Floyd
Browne AsSociates Ltd. Recommendation on the bid award will be
made after consultation with Mid·
diep&lt;Jrt's law director. ·
Award of the contract.is expected
,.

in January , he continued, with con·
struction slated to begin as soon as
possible.
Work proposed in the contract con·
sists of constructing approximately
1,425 lineal feet of six-inch sewer
pipe; 3,625 lineal feet of eight-inch
sewer pipe ; 110 lineal feet of eightinch sewer in casing pipe ; 45 lineal
feet of eight-inch sewer in bored
hole ; a sewerage lift station,
manholes, and all appurtenances.
When completed, sewer service
will be provided for residents of
lower Broadway, Elm, Page and
i/i

HAMILToN, Ohio ~ Striking teachers were to vote today on a tentative contract agreement that would end-their six-week walkout and
return cl81111e8 to nonnal on Monday.
NegotiatOrs for the Ha1)11ltoo Classroom Teachers AsSociation and
the school board reached agreement late TilesdaY on a contract.
-Teachers will decide tpday whether to accept the wage proposal.
Ten1111 of the agreement weren't released publicly.
- The agreement followed several hours of negotiaUona with a federal
mediator. School Board President Thomas Manring announced the
tentative agreement at a IICbool board meeting crowded with about 600
people.

..

TURKEYS ..................~~~... 69

4

"'111ow 70 percent tonight and fO percent Thursday. Winds variable 1).
10 ~ tonigbt.
.
EEl w '*- Foreeua...:. Friday Ulroulblalldlf:Fm but very
eGIII rriday iUid Saturday. Hlgbs in the teenlllld ... Linn ~lG . Conllrlued fm but wanner Swlday. Highs 31-36. Lowl Ill theleelll.

pletely unacceptable. In 1983 and
1984 I will be completing the final
two years of my term. In other wor·
ds, should I vote in the affirmative
on this proposal I would, in effect, be
voting to grant · myself a pay in·
crease for the fi nal two years of my
term.
"This legislation allows for no
alternatives. You must either accept
the whole package or none at all. I
sincerely believe the legislature
made a serious error by including
the county corrunissioners in the bill.
A board of county corrunissioners
should never have the power to
either establish their own salaries or
grant themselves an increase.
(Continued on page 20)

Rodney firm low bidder for project

'
Snow likely' lQnight, Lcws 30-35. 'Cloudy
with a chance of Ourries
Tllunday. Highs 3HO but tumlng colder~ the ~opn. Chance

U.S. GRADE A
18 to 20 LB. AVE.

15 Cents

A Multim edia In c. New spape r

Middleport, Ohio Wednesday, December 31 , 1980

Striking teachers to vote

Weather

'

OF-FICES TO CLOSE
All Middleport villa ge offices will
close at noon Wednesday, Dec. 31
and rel118in closed Thursday and
Friday for the New Year's holiday.

YEAR OFF RIGHT

WITH THESE

!

enttne

Commissioners award
•
Uf.ficialspa ~""1n·crease

1•4 at 5:JU p.m. wnen sne braked to
avoid co llision with a dog running

'ALL

Debbie Danner
Nursing Student
" My wish for the new year is
that our oatioo wHI continue to
have a hoPeful sptrlt and positive
attitude toward the future. There
will probably be many changes,
some better and some worse, but
with a UtUe cooperation, I think
we'll come out on top."

•

at y

OPEN DAILY FROM
8 AM TILL 10 PM

S't:ART YOUR N

Angela Houcbtns
Meigs Senior
"At the beginntug of 1981, I
wish everyone would look deep
Inside· hlmseU and ask himself,
' Am I happy? Is this &gt;\'hat I want
out of Ufe?' then, strive to cbllnge
or improve whatever be finds un·
·pleasant In his Ufe. If every per·
soo did this, then our society as a
whole would be improved and
happier, because each person as
a singular unit of ' that society
would be happier."

•

Wreck puts Meigs man in hospi
A Meigs County man was
hospitalized following a one-car
crash on a county road Monday morning.
The Gallia-Meigs Post of the Ohio
Highway Patrol reported Charles E.
Price, 55; Rt. I, Long Bottom, was
southbound on CR 28 at 7:30 a.m.
when his car went off the left side of
the road and collided with an embankment.
Minor damage was reported to his
ca r, but Price was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital by the Meigs
EMS, where he was admitted for
back injuries and reported in
sa tisfactory condition this morning.
The patrol also probed a two-car
crash in Meigs County late Monday
afternoon.
Troopers said Carrie Bearhs, 18,
Middleport, was east bound on SR

Rev. Mark McClung
"I bope that 198l will be .a year
of freedo~ ... freedom for the 62
Americans beld hostage by their
Iranian kidnappers, but also
freedom for the millions of
Americans at home beld hostage
by their· own fears, d"oubts, aod
greed. May 1981 be a year that we
Americall!l In Meigs County and
elsewhere remember that God
blls blessed America and lbal ·
there Is oo problem too large or
complicated lbat ooe 1111Uoo uu·
der God cannot solve.

FRIINDL/EST SERVI.CE IN TOWN
BIGGEST BARGAINS IN TOWN

QUANTITY RIGHTS~·
RESERVED

•

WP.s;tP.rn Styled Sport
Shirts from Wrangler. ,

VAUGHAN'S

Report reveals 32 Ohio counties
have double digit jobless figures
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - After
three months of improved employment in Ohio, the situation worsened when 32 counties reported
double-dig it jobless ,fig ures in
November.
The statewide unemployment rate
in November was 8.8 percent. compared to 7.1 percent nationally.
Unemployment in Ohio surpassed
the national rate for 10 of the first 11
months of 1980. In March, the state
was even With the nation, reporting
a 6.6 percent jobless rate.
January had the fewest nwnber of
counties - 10 - with double-digit
percentages in unemployment. July

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COtJliiTY omcw.s - Nllle eouty olftclala were live• GII,GII,If•
flee llef.-e
ierma Ia Oil by Judie Jolm c. Mellll, ct.....
,._ -n, far rf&amp;hl, 'l'l~y • - They !Mhlde Inuit, I ~ ''

•ect••--

l'illlldt O'llllw, eiiUty court Jodie; Dr. R. R. Plckeoa, c*'-1
= I •
n n dill; ......,. llllctr, clerk ol eourta; back, left ..
rfllll, IUelm-d , _ , e.-,
; PbUlp Roberts, cOUiltv ·

R•••-.

1

Railroad Sts.
According to the mayor, the
project is funded by the federal
goverrunent, made possible through
a $330,300 grant from the U.S.
Housing and Urban Development
Department's community block
grant program and $162,700 from the
Appalachian ~egional Corrunission.
Funda from these grants were also
used to supplement other federal
and state lunda in the reconstruction
of Page St., the mayor added.
Additional funds will be used to
construct an eight-inch water line on

Powell St. and solving storm
damage problems in the area, Hoff·
man said.
Other bidders in Tuesday's
O!Jening were:
Ontario Pipeline, Inc., Canal Winchester, $255,422.50 ; Oxner Construction Co . , New Carli sle,
$255,6:i2 ; L. R. Skelton and Co.,
Columbus , $288,682.50 ; Empire
Pipeline, Dayton , $295 ,301.40;
Cepital City Excavating Co., Columbus, $331,640; Prater Construction
Corp., Colwnbus, $366,124; Shelly
and Sands, Zanesville, $443,346.50.

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