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Area deaths
Edward Wayne Wolfe
Edward Wayne Wolfe, 72, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy, ·died Sunday at his
residence.
; Mr. Wolfe was preceded in death
by his parents, Wil)iam and Lucinda
POoler Wolfe, one daughter, Mona
June and one sister Nina Robinson. ·
Mr. Willie was a member of the
Mt. Hermon United Brethren Church.
·
, . He is survived by his wile, Gladys
Wolfe; son and daughter-in-law,
Hubert and Judy Wolfe, Pomeroy;
daughter, Sandy Keney, Pomeroy;
two brothers, Glenroy Wolfe,
Cleveland, and Alfred Wolfe,
Pomeroy; two·sisters, Ella Spencer
and Edna Stalder both of Pomeroy;
three g~andchildren, William Keith
Wolfe and Lee and Alesha Keney,
and several nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be held Wed·
nesday at I p.m. at the Ewing
Funeral Home with Rev. Robert
Sanders and Rev. James Leach officiating. Burial will be in MI. Her·
mon Cemetery. Friends may call at
the funeral home this evening from 7
to 9 and Tuesday from 7 to 9. The
family request in lieu of flowers
donations be made to the cancer
fund.

Anna Davis Grim
Aruia Davis Grim, 94, Middleport,
died Sunday afternoon at Veterans
Memorial Hospital following an ex·
tended il!Iiess.
Mrs. Grim was born July 4, 1886 to ·
the late Edmond and Sarah Smith
Davis. She was also prceded in death
by her husband, Victor Grim in !967.
Mrs. Davis was the last member of a
large family. She was a member of
the Middleport First Baptist Church.
She is survived by two daughters
and sons-in-law, Alice and Russell
(Bros) Mills, Middleport and Jane
and Robert Sever, North Canton;
one son and daughter-in-law, Paul
and Esta Grim, New Boston; nine
'grandchildren, 17 great grandchildren and two great great gbrandchildren.
. Funeral services will be held Wed·
nesday at 11 a.m. at the Rawlings·Coats-Blower Funeral Home with
the Rev. Mark McClung officiating.
Burial will be in Riverview
Cemetery. Friend!; may call at the
· funeral home from Tuesday from 2
to4and7to9.

Robert F. Gordon
Robet F. Gordon, 67, of Rt. 1,
Cheshire, died at 5 p.m. Seturday in
Holzer Medical Center. He had been
in failing health for the past four
years.
Born May 17, 1913, in Cheshire
Twp., Gallia County, son of the late
Baker and Mabel Hawley Gordon,

Monday, February 16, 1981

Pomeroy Mlddleport,,Ohio

DailY Sentinel

Blood appeal .for Kingsbury man

·1.
.J

An appeal was issued today for
he was a retired fanner and pipefit·
blood
for Stephen Eugene Smith, 24,
ter.
Kingsbury,
who has used 42 pints of
He belonged to the following
blood
to
date
during his recent con·
organizations: United Association of
Pipefitters Union, No. 521, Hun·
tington, W. Va.; The Aladdin Temple of the Shrine; the Gallipolis
Shrine Club; the OHio Valley Commandery, the Bosworth Council, and
the Royal Archmasons, all of
Pomeroy; Siloam Lodge No. 456 of POMEROY-six runs were made by
Cheshire; and was secretary of the local emergency uits Friday and
Gallia County Fol\hunters Saturday morning ~ Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service repor·
Association.
.
.
He married Esther Baker, who ted.
· survives, on July 17, 1937, in
At. 12:39 a.m. the Pomeroy unit
went to Brown's Trailer Court for
Pomeroy.
Also surviving are a son, James, Sylvia Deicher who was taken to
of Rt. I, Cheshire; a grandson and Veterans Memorial Hospital; at
granddaughter; a brother, Emory of 11:46 a.m. the Pomeroy squad tran·
Rt. I, Cheshire; four sisters, Mrs. sported Mona Farra and Ward
Vesta Ham of Gallipolis, Janet Gor- Sayre, injured in an auto accident, to
don of Cheshire, Mrs. Belva Miller of Veterans Memorial Hospital; at
Dayton, and Mrs. Delores Moore of 11:54 .a.m. Daisy and Henry Sayre,
also injured in an auto accident,
London.
A sister preceded him in death.
were taken to Veterans Memorial
Funeral services will be held at 2 Hospital; Mona Farra and Daisy
p.m. Tuesday in the Waugh·Halley· Seyre were taken in the transfer
Wood Funeral Home, with the Rev. vehicle to Holzer Medical Center; at
'Daphne Resch officiating. Burial 8:45 a.m. Tuppers Plains unit Iran·
will be in Gravel Hill Cemetery.
sported Maude Seals to St. Joseph
Friends may call at Jhe funeral Hospital; at 10:18 a.m. the Syracuse
home from 2-4 and 7·9 p.m. today . unit took Opal Cummings to
Masonic services will be held in the Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Saturday at 6:50a.m. the Tuppers
funeral home at8 p.m. today.
Plains unit took Sam Bias, SR 181,
Reedsville, to St. Joseph Hospital.
Maude Mae Seals

the intensive care unit. He is
married to the former Becky
Houdashelt of Pomeroy and is the
son of Mr. and Mrs. Gene Smith and
the son.in.law of Mr.'and Mrs. Gene
Houdashelt.
Residents are asked to give in his

finement to Holzer Medical Center.
Smith is seriously ill at the
Gallipolis hospital and is confined to

:1\leigs County happenings ••
Emergency runs

name when the next American Red
Cross Bloodmobile visits the Meil!ll
Senior Citizens Center from 1:30 to 6
p.m. on Wednesday, Feb. 25. Those
doing so are to inform the clerical
help of the unit that they were giving
in Smith's 011me.

Budget, inflation biggest items
•
In Reagan's .congressional speech
WASlllNGTON (AP) - President
Reagan, disdaining any "cutesy
acronym" to symbolize his assault
on the !Uition's economic woes, will
use "straight talk"· in his televised
address to Congress to call for immediate action on cutting taxes, the
budget and goverrunent regulation,
. his chief spokesman says.
"We have no choice," press
secretary James Brady said Monday as Reagan and his aides com·
pleted a " page by page,llne by line"
review of the speech ln the White
House library. "We have to deal
with inflation. He is saying the

TUESDAY SESSION
Group 2 of the First United
Presbyterian Church will meet at
7:30p.m., Tuesday at the home of
Mrs. Carl Horky, Middleport, with
Mrs. Thomas Rue as c~hostess. The
'program for the evening will be a
religious play with Mrs. Harley
Brown in charge of devotions.
TO MEET TUESDAY
CHESTER - Chester Council323,
Daughters of America will meet
Tuesday at 7:30p.m. There will be
initiation and a silent auction by the
Good of the Order committee.

Patrol cites

-A tw~part tax document consystem will work if we let it work."
taining
specifics of his proposed cuts
The speech, to be delivered at 9
in
individual
income taxes and acp.m. EST Wednesday; will be the
,
cejerated
depreciation
schedules in·
centerpiece of a six-part package
tended
to
reduce
business
taxes. The
detailing Reagan's economic
New
York
Times
report~
today the
program of tax reductions and ap.
administration
will
propose
that
proximately $50 billion in budget
high-income
Americans
ln.
cuts.
divlduals
earning
at
least
$42,500
·
The president's package alsp will
·
and
couples
earning
at
least
$60,000
contain:
·
- His actual budget message - receive less than the full 30 per·
revising the Carter administration's cent tax cut .being considered for
fiscal 1982 spending proposal of most taxpayers over three years.
-A 12-to lf&gt;.page fact sheet.
$739.3 billion.
-Proposals to revise government
- A written message to Congress
regulations.
expanding on points in the speech.

•

Saunders, 79, was westbound on
Springfield Twp. Rd. 22 at 4:30p.m.
when he reportedly failed to make a
turn at the intersection with CR 10.
Seunders' car then slid across the
road and collided with a fence,
causing slight !lamage to the auto.
He was injured, but not treated, and
the patrol cited Saunders for DWI
and no operator's license.
The patrol also investigated two
car-deer accidents in the area over
the weekend.
Troopers said Jeffrey D. Jones,16,
Reedsville, waseastboundonSR681
in Meigs County at 1:30 a.m. Saturday when his car struck and killed a ,
deer, causing slight damage to his
car and no injury.
Ruby Vaughan, 43, Middleport,
was eastbound on U.S. 35 in Jackson
County at 9:30p.m. Saturday when
her ca r collided with a deer . The
deer was not found afterward,
troopers said. Slight damage was
reported to Vaughan's car and there

See Our New Selection
Voi.29,No. 21S
Copyrighted 1981

MEN'S
KNIT
SHIRTS

Maude Mae Seals, 87, Tuppers
Eight emergency calls were anPlains, died Saturday at St. Joseph swered by local units over the
Hospital, Parkersburg.
weekend, the Meigs Emergency
Mrs. Seals was hom Nov. 17, 1893 Medical Services reports.
the daughter of the late Peter and
On Saturday at 9:02 p.m., the
Edna Osborne Dorst. She was also Pomeroy Unit took Eula Welker,
New styles arriving
dailY .
Famous
preceded in death by her husband, Laurel St., to Veterans Memorial
m akes
!ike Van
Davis Seals, one ·son, two brothers, Hospital; the Rutland Unit at 4:12
Heusen · Wrangler · \
three sisters and one great gran- p.m. took Iva Stewart, Main St. to
Campus . In sizes S
dson.
Holzer Medical Center; the Tuppers
(306), M ( 38·40) , L
Mrs. Seals was a member of the Plains Unit at 6:.50 a.m. took Sam
(42 · 44 )
and
XL
SimpSon Methodist Church, Belville, Bias from Route 681 to St. Joseph
(46·48). Short sleeve
solids
patterns .
W. Va. , She lived in Belville for 54 Hospital in Parkersburg and at 10:22
Make you r selections
years prior to moving to Tuppers a.m., the Middleport Unit took
ear ly .
Plains 13 years ago.
Raymond Napper, Bailey Run Road
She is survived by three to Veterans Memorial.
daughters, Mrs. Perry (Sylvia) Cur·
On Sunday at 3:17 p.m., the
tis, Reedsville; Mrs. William (Vera)
Unit treated Sendy Evans
Thompson, Elizabeth, W. Va., and Syracuse
at ber home on Third St.; the
Mrs. James (Helen) Beck, Kent;
UnitCollege
at 9:25p.m.,
Sam ..~w~a~s~no~·:
·n~ju~ry~.-----·~-J~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Rutland
two sons, Glenn of Kent and Eugene Beller
from
Ave. to took
Veterans
of Akron; one brother, Frank Dorst, Memorial; the Tuppers Plains Unit
Long Bottom and one sister, Cora at 11 :56 a.m. took Paul Andrews
Emrick, Lancaster.
from his home to Veterans
Funeral services will he held Memorial, and the Middleport Unit
Tuesday at 2 p.m. at the White at 10:56 p.m., took Frances Hawkins
Funeral Home, Coolville, with the from 10 Libery Ave., to Holzer
Rev. Roy Deeter officiating. Burial Medical Center.
will be in Sand Hill Cemetery, Long
Bottom. Friends may call at the
CAR STRIKES POLE
funeral home at anytime.
LB.
Pomeroy Police report that a car
driven by Gregory Davis, Syracuse,
MEETSAT6P.M.
struck a utility pole on W. Main St.,
The Southern Local Board of at 2:40 a.m. Police said Davis went
Education will meet this evening at 6 right to avoid a collision with a car
19 per roll
p.m. rather than 7 p.m. as was which had stopped in front of his
reported.
vehicle.

ELBERFELDS. IN POMEROY

GROUND BEEF

'139

ECKRICH SAUSAGE

J
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INSTANT

18

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DELTA

QUAKER OATS
REG~~R &amp;

4 ROLLS
CARNATION

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Rich Chocolate

'1

2% MILK

8

COCOA ,

'

79~

BATH TISSUE

15 '12 OZ. WHITNEY

MIX

GAL

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139

BISCUITS

6/'1

2 LB. SHEDD'S
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CELERY

BANANAS

WJUTE PLAINS, N.Y. -Jean Harris, former headmistress of an
exclusive school for girls, a woman of silk and pearls, loved Dr. Herman Tarnower for It years. Today a jury was beginning deliberQtions
on whether his death at her banda was murder or an accident born of
her suicidal depression.
·
A string of witnesse~ - society matrons, educators, school
colleagues and students - testified about her character and the
emotional tunnoll she was in.
The three-month trial, marked both by high-societY drama and by
complicated medical testimony, reached its climax Monday with five
hours of impassioned closing arguments.

Suspect faces court arraignment

8 OZ. BALLARD

VALLEY BELL

.It's so convenient
__to_bank by _maiL

79c

~~

Deliberations begin in Harris case

COFFEE-

49c BUNCH

!..AS VEGAS, Nev.- A Las Vegas Hilton busboy was going to court
today for arraignment on charges of murder and arson stenuning
from a fire at the hOtel that left eight -people dead imd 192 others in.
jured last week.
Police alleged Philip Bruce Cline acknowledged starting the !Ire,
contending it was an ·accident that occurred when a marijuana
cigarette he lleld touched against curtains in an eighth-floor elevator
lobby.
The Feb. 10 blaze quickly spread up 21 stories to the top of the 3()..
story hotel, the largeat in the United States.

Services held for fire victims
DUBUN, Ireland - Oturches throughout the Irish Republic held
services today on a n~tional day of mournjng for the 44 victims of last
Saturday's Dublin disco fire.
The services coinCided with the first funerals of the young people
who died In the Valentine's Day tragedy at the Stardust cabaret, the
worst fire ln Dublln's history. Thirteen of the dead have still not been
Identified. The Injured were 130.

Ohio lottery winning nuinher
CLEVELAND- The wiMing selected Monday night in the Ohio Lot·
tery's daily game "The Number" was: lm. The lottery reported earnings of f546,3!8 .50 from the money wagered. Lottery officials said
sales were 18tS,540.50. Holders of winning tickets are entitled to share
$299,222.

Weather

Farmers
Bank·
Your Community Owned Bank

Mernber fDIC

CHERRY
PIES

TV

DINNERS

79~

15 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Patrol cites
two drivers

!

. ~
. ~·"

oz.

1 Section, 12 Pages

Next to the restroom area would . EDA winterization grant totaling ,
be two furnaces which would be in $75,200. It bas been estimated that
two zones, one to heat the an additional $75,000 to $100,000 will
auditorium and the other to heat the be needed to complete rehabilitation
office rooms. The furnace to the of the bUilding. Application for a
auditorium would only be turned on loan for the additional funds has
when in use.
been made by Kim Shields, grant
Aramp on the hack of the building consultant, through FHA. .
- o··
would, be constructed for the han·
Also included in the rehabilitation
dicapped. Basset also explained that is insUlation, new insulated roof, and
an elevator shaft could also be dry wall.
placed on the first floor. Basset said
Basset said two contracts will be
if an elevator is required, It would necessary when the job goes for
cost approximately $-15,000. Basset bids, one for EDA work and one for
is to find out first if the elevator Is alterations.
required before completing the
Councll will be able to borrow the
plans.
necessary funds through FHA at 5
The second floor will house the of. percent interest.
flee of the mayor, the clerk's office
The most important Issue . at the
and office of the secretary.
moment is completing the plans by
Bas&amp;et explained that most of the the . !liSt day of Feb., Baslet ex·
windows will have to replaced . plalned.
Those not replaced Ifill need to be
SUGGESTS WAGE INCREASE
repaired and painted. Another fur·
Larry Wehrung, councilman,
nace will also be on the second floor. suggested council grant a wage in·
Council has approval an 80 percent
(Continued on page 12)

By KATIE CROW
Athens Architect David Basset
Monday night outlined plans for the
conversion of the former Pomeroy
Senior High School to a city hall
building at a meeting of Pomeroy
Council.
Basset presented blueprints of the
building and explained that the
auditorium on tbe first floor would
remain an auditorim. He added that
the walls in the auditoriwn portion
were in good condition and the only
work necessary would be electric
work and painting.
One of the former classrooms on
the lower floor will be converted into
a council chamber.
One of the two large restrooms
would be converted into a room for
the water department and the boys'
restroom Into two restrooms.
The· two remaining rooms on the
first floor would be used as room
for the police department and the
other an office for the chief of police.

oz.

16

Mter the speech, Reagan will
withdraw from tb€ fray as Cabinet
officials and David A. Stockman,
director of the Office of
Management and Budget, begin
trying to sell the president's
proposals to the public ancl
Congress.
;Vter speaking to the news
executives Thursday morning, and
possibly meeting with congressional
leaders that same morning for the'
second time in two days, Reagan
will leave for a four-day visit at his
ranch near Santa Barbara, Calif.

Architect outlines
b~ding conversion

SUPERIOR FRANKIE$
22 oz.

serious times. It is a serious mission.
·The descriptive title of this will be as
straight as the straight talk" of the
speech, the press secretary said.
He said Reagan, attempting to
correct "some misapprehension,"
wi)l promise "equal treatment ·for
business subsidies as well as other
government programs. "
·
This would appear to be aimed at
alleviating fears that the president
will seek to stem government spen·
. ding increases by cutting social
programs without reducing government aid for business.

entine

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, February '17, 1981

, •1

12

at

e

ELBERFELD$

(Continued from page I)
The pa·"trol said Heber Marshall

•

"This will be the information base
from which we begin the offensive,"
Brady said, He outllned a multi·
front approach that will have )op administration officials appearing on
television news programs and 125
ellecutives of major newspapers
from acros!i the country visiting the
White House to be briefed 'by. the
president.
Brady said the speech will focus ·
on the budget and tax cuts, the need
for a stabilized monetary policy and
the regulatory revisions.
Reagan "has rejected the thought
of a cutesy acronym. These are

Considerable cloudlneas and Mftliance of showers tonight and Wednesday. Lows tonight near 50. Highs Wednesday near 60. Chance of
rain 30 percent tonight and Wedneaday. Southwesterly winds less than
10 mph tonight.
Exleuded Ohio Foreea1t- Thuraday through Seturday: Achance of
showers Thursday and again Saturday. Fair Friday, Highs in the 50s
Thursday and Seturday and In the upper 50a to upper 601 Friday, Lows
from the upper 30s to low tOs Thursday morning and mostlY In the toe
Friday and Saturday.

Two persons were cited in
separate traffic accidents in·
vestigated by the Gallia·Meigs Post
of the Ohio Highway Patrol Monday.
· Tiie patrol said a car driven by
Robert E. Rober1.'! Jr., 59, Gallipolis,
was northbound on SR 7 in Gallia
County a~ 11:20 a.m. when his car
collided with another vehicle driven
by Henry P. Cook, 41, Gallipolis.
Moderate damage was reported to
PRESIDENT'S DAY- American flago drooped In to be doing a better than normal day on Monday, of·
both car~ and Cook was cited for
the drtallng rain Monday as the commullity observed flees of the county courthouse were clooed, there wao
failure to yield.
President'• Day. Although buslneos houses 11ppeared. no mall delivery, and hanks and other office• were
closed for the oboervance.
Troopers said autos driven by
James R. Mlller, 28, Rio Grande,
and Presion M. Jordan, 18, Thurman, were both eastbound on U.S. 35
in Gallia County at 9:25 a.m. when
Miller's car stopped for a left turn.
According to the report, Jordan
was unable to stop and collided with
the rear of the Miller auto, causing
slight damage to the Mlller. vehicle
and severe to Jordan's car.
Several area residents are named, collection suits we intend to impress anything about it."
Jordan was cited for assured clear
According to information supplied
among 501 defendants, in suits upon these defaulters that the
distance, troopers said.
through
the Department of Justice,
federal
government
is
indeed
The patrol investigated a two-car brought today against 'former
112
former
Rio Grande College
serious
about
repayment.
All
others
crash in Gallia County Monday mor- college and university students
students
are
curl'e!ltly
In default (for
must
realize
that
they
will
either
charged with defaulting on federal
ning.
a
total
of
$107,265)
on
their NDSL
repay
their
loans
or
suffer
the
conVehicles driven by Edward J . student loans, according to a
payments.
The
default
rate at Rio
sequences,''
Cissell
said
today.
Schott, 44, Waterford, and Chris A. statement released by the United
i3rande,
according
to
the
U.S. At·
In
announcing
the
suits,
the
U.S.
Capehart, 17, Middleport, were both States Attorney for the Southern
torney,
is
19.88
.
Attorney
.
expressed
alarm
at
the
southbound on SR 7 at 11:35 a.m. District ofOhio.
A total of 1,112 former Ohio
"These cases total $663,868.46 and number of defaulted loans and the
when both cars attempted to pass
University
students (for a total of
are based on defaulted student high default rate of the National
another vehicle.
$953,453)
are
currently in default.
Direct
Student
Loan
Program,
.(NDCapehart's auto then went off the loans, Insured by .the U.S. Depart·
The
O.U.
default
rate is 17.44.
left side of the road, colliding with a ment of Education under the SL) which is administered by
"
The
NDSL
Program ad·
fence, the report said, causing Federal Insured Student Loan colleges ... "particularly ln the ministered by the colleges in the
Program, and Veterans Ad· Southern District of Ohio.''
moderate damage.
Cissell was harshly critical of the Southern District of Ohio has a
ministration
assistance allowance.
Troopers said a car driven by
institutions administering the default rate of 20.04 percent," Cissell
Harold R. Bush, 44, Gallipolis, was The defendants ln these cases have
concluded, "The amount in default
backing Into the Gallipolis cl(f resisted and ignored collection ef· programs.
"In response to the request of this in this district for this one program
building parking lot at 11:30 a.m. forts by the lenders and have
office in 1979 th!lt the colleges and is $23.6 million and actually exceeds
received
at
least
one
demand
letter
and collided with a parked vehicle
universities begin more aggressive by 76 percent the amount taken in all
owned by Charles E. Moody, 2t, from this office. Judgments now are
collection procedures, one college bank robberies in the United States
being
sought
against
them
as
a
last
Rodney.
administrator responded, 'it wasnl last year."
resort,"
U.S.
Attorney
James
C.
Moderate damage was reported to
part of the image of a college to be
Moody's car and slight to the Bush Cissell charges.
hounding students. It's kind of like a
Area
residents
(along
with
auto.
father dunning his son."' he said.
monetary
judgment
sought)
named
The patrol Investigated a palr of
Cissell added, "In my opinion this
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
two-car crashes in Meigs County in the suits Include: Ronald E. Huff.
attitude has been a major con· reminds the public that bids will be
man,
Gallipolis,
($1,0t0.02);
Robert
Monday.
tributing factor to the outrageous taken for sale of the village lot at
Wayne S. King, 19, Nashport, was M. Payne, Jackson, ($890.15); Bendefaults of student loans. College ad· Garfield and South Third Ave. WlW 4
nie
J.
Wright,
Pomeroy,
($910.90);
eaatbound on U.S. 33 at 7:30 a.m.
ministrators and many others p.m. Monday, Feb, 23.
'
when a westbound auto apparently Gilbert K. Smith, Pomeroy, ($631);
responsible
lor
coliecting
these
All
bids
received
will
be
con- .
went left of center and collided, Bennett D. Roush. Belpre ($655.20);
loans
are
concerned
about
their
sidered
at
the
regular
meeting
Moncausing slight damage to King's Edgar B. Richardson, Coalton 'images' rather than their responday, Feb. 23, at 7:30p.m.
auto. The westbound car continued ($1,552); William Mannering, sibilities, and as a result former
Bids on the property may be left at
Jackson, ($1,323); and, Albert D.
on, the report said.
the
Mayor's office any lilne prior to
Neal,
Wellston,
($1,433.60).
students
believe
that
if
they
ignore
The patrol !lBid Ralph E. Parker,
the bid deadline.
"By
filing
a
large
nwnber
of
repayment
demands
no
one
will
do
(Continued on page 12)

Government cracks down ·
on student default cases

Public reminder

�,T uesday, F=ebruary 17, 1981

Commentary ·
Once a year the United Nations all that it was motivated by the imAs is cllStomary at such scholarly
sponsors a conference ()! the "non- perialistic appetites of the Viet- conferences the principals give out
governmental
organizations" namese backed by the Soviet em- copies of their papers ahead of time
associated with the UN, and the pire, it at least had the benefit of so that the discussants can appear
theme of last year's was "the arms liberating Cambodia from the better prepared. To Mr. iagoria's
race and the human race." Invited sadisticfanaticismmPoiPot.
astonishment several of the UN
to speak at the panel discussion adsponsors telephoned him in some
dressing itself to "factors propelling
Anyway Professor Zagoria, in hi~ alarm. Wouldn't he please revise his
the arms race" was, among others, systematic marmer, divided his talk paper, to " tone down" his criticisms
' Donald S. Zagoria, professor of in~ on the arms race in three paris. In of the Soviet Union? Specifically,
ternational relations to Hunter the first, he described the generic would he kindly remove tbe referenCollege. Mr. Zagoria is a scholar of situation: two superpowers, dif- ce to the Soviet invasion of
moderate disposition. He struggles ferently motivated, struggle for Mghanistan?
Now any reader of Mr. Zagoria's
f 'thfullvt
d rsta dth po itions superiority. In the second, he listed
oun e He
n is, emoreover,
s
· f
cn'tic1'sm of the SoVI'et uru·on would
ofalour"'"'
adversaries.
those distinctive responsi b'li
I ties or
something of a formalist in the mat- the arms race of the United States, conclude that toning down his
ter of foreign intervention, as wit- and then of the Soviet Union. In the criticism would be on the nature of
ness his sturdy disapproval of the third, he gave his recommendations deflating a flat tire. Don't get me
Vietnam invasion of Cambodia. For for future action.
wrong, Mr. Zagoria is a man of firm
·~---...:..------------------, and principled convictions. But his is
the muted way. The offensive
paragraph, in its entirety, read,
"The increasing use by the Soviet
Union
()! armed force is one of the
Ill CGurt S-1
Pomuoyt Obio
most disturbing and destabilizing
114-IK-1151
, elements in contemporary inDEVOTED TO mE INTEREST OF 11IE MEIGS-MABON AREA
ternational relations. There are now
more than 8$,000 troops in
' Mghanistan. There are more than
200,000 Vietnamese troops in Cambodia and the Soviet Union is supROBERT L. WINGE1T
porting and supplying those troops.
PUbltlber
In both cases, the invading armies
removed existing governments and
BOB HOEFLICH
PAT WHITEHEAD
replaced them with client governGeneral Maucer
Aali1tabtPublll.ber/eoot:r.Uer
ments that have yet to be recognized
by more than a handful of countries.
DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
In both cases the invasions were conNew1 Eclltor
demned by overwhelming
' majorities of the countries represenA MEMBER of Tltt Aucdo~ted Pml, IDlaad Daily Preu A1aociatt011 •ad the
ted in the United Nations General
Amtricu Nnapepcr PabUsben Auoclltloa.
Assembly." Elsewhere Mr. Zagoria
LI!TI'ERS OF OPINION on wei...Ded. 'l1lcy oiHoold b&lt; leu lllu 3M wonll !Gq. AD
criticized
the "erratic" policies the
lel1en on oabjecl to ediUo( ... IDUI b&lt; olped wltll ....., - . , . ud ldepae
DIIDber. No . .iped letters will bt Pllbllaltftl. Ldten1ltoGkl be Ill Cood C.ste, acldrtlaiq
U. S. has followed since the war and
lultel, DOt prenoaaUtles.
called for a greater U. S. flexibility
in understanding different regimes.
Now when the UN issued the official report of the conference, Jo and

Marauder gals whip Logan

Pag-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Qhlo
Tuesday, February 17, 1911

ROCK SPRINGS - The Meigs
Marauden girls Monday scored a
comeback win over the Logan Chieftains, 36-34 on an Andrea Riggs'
Jump sbot that swished through the
net at the closing buzzer. Melgll is
now 10-10 overall and 6-8 in the
SEOAL after the win in the make-up

race~-----=-Wi.:.....::.il='ia~m:..._F._.B_uc_k__;ler:;.._J-:-r.

The arms race and the human

bebold, all critical references to the tributed to the ill-advised actions ol
Soviet Union by Zagoria had been lif- one or two UN employees. Now I am
ted. Zagoria wrote a heated letter of convinced ... there lies a deliberate
protest to Secretary General Kurt policy."
In reply be got what one might call
Waldheim. "I believe that this
form
letter G-3. It was signed by Mr.
· distortion of my speech by the UN
·
HasuslB
Akashi, undersecretary
Department of Public Infqnnation
general
for
public Information. It
W&amp;B deliberate ..." He referred to
consisted
of
high praise for
earlier attempts to dilute his
Zagoria's
speech,
a statem.ent on the
.message: "I considered the action
necessity
for
making
abndgments,
at the time an outrageous inand
an
appeal
to
the
logic
of going
terference of my rights to freedom
directly
to
the
recommendations
of
of expression, rights which I had
always assumed that the United Za~oria.
Nations championed. But I thouglt
Professor Zagoria was not
that such pressure could be at- mollified, and he can. hardly be

blamed. Here Ia one for Mn. Jeane
l(lrkpatrick· to look lnto. It's bad
enough at the UN itself, where
American representatives are more
often than not muzzled by their own .
government . But Independent
scholars, invited to speak their minds at functions of the UN, shouldn't
a) be told in advance what they
should say; and then b) be subjected
to censorship. An appropriate act of
atonement would be for Mr.
Waldheim and Mr. Akaahl to send
out a transcript of Mr. Zagorla's enUre speech to the maillng list of the
conference.

eontest.

Andrea Riggs led the winners with
a game high 20 points, and Kristin
Andenon had seven points. Kim
Keller led Logan with 17 markers,
Yock Emerson had seven, and
SherylHawksix.
the
. first hall
Mel·gs led thronahout
-

N£,11. €:M @FOI{f 'HCIRI1\ ~-~Lf...,._

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-

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The Daily Sentinel

Inside the new
White House

WASHINGTON (NEA) - Scarcely had the new White House sWf taken
office than the back rooms of the capital began buzzing with the opinion that
it was doomed to structural failUre.
President Reagan set up his White House sWf along dual lines in an attempt to separate operational and policy functions. His two key aides are
Edwin Meese, counselor to the president, and Jim Baker, White House chief
ofsWf.
Meese is to coordinate the policy-formulation functions of the Cabinet
and the White House. In effect, all Cabinet officers are to report to him as are
the White House domesti~ and foreign-policy staffs, headed respectively by
Marlin Anderson and Richard Allen.
Baker is responsible for the daily functioning of the White House. That
includes its relations with Congress, the press and state and local governments. He will also direct the political side of the Reagan administration.
Many longtime observers of official Washington question whether White
House duties can be divided so strictly along policy and operational lines. As
they see it, Reagan has essentially put two men in charge of the White House
- a situation that has often bred conflict in past administrations.
Meese and Baker insists that this will not happen in the Reagan White
House .. Meese says that he is charge of ideas, and Baker says that he is in
charge of keeping the machine running.smoothly.
The two intend to meet together at the beginning of each day; later, they
will meet jointly with the president. This, they say, will integrate policy with
operation and politics. But even some members()! the White House staff are
not sure it will be as easy as all that.
Then there is the crucial issue of personalities. Neither Meese nor Baker
is without critics within the Reagan staff.
WASHING'MN (AP) - PresidenMeese is said to be able, bright- and overachieving, frequently taking ts and congressional leaders come
on more tHan he can handle. Those whose tenure with Reagan goes back to and go, political parties gain and
his days as governor say that Meese had this problem in Sacramento. Many lose power. But one thing in
blame him for the disarray in the presidential transition. Neither Anderson Washington remains the same: Sen. '
nor Allen is reporlediy very happy about having his work channeled through William Proxmire on the "genocide
Meese.
treaty."
Baker is a rising star who joined Reagan only after having run Gerald
The Wisconsin Democrat has been
Ford's presidential campaign in 1976 and George Bush's in 1980. Baker is upbraiding the Senate almost every
distrusted by many of the hardliners among Reagan's staff and outside sup- day for 13 years for failing to ratify
porters although he is probably more responsible than anyone else for the World War II -era document.
Reagan's general-election victory and although he has the full confidence of
" It is certainly a matter of great
the president. (He also has the confidence of the firstlady, which is said to be shame for many Americans," Proxabnost as important.)
mire said in one of the more recent
Eight presidential assistants report to Baker - on paper, at least. of his tholi.sands of short speeches Among them is Michael Deaver, whose title is deputy chief of staff and .. ·harangues, actually - on the subassistant to the president. Deaver is closer to Reagan than anyone else in the ject.
White House. His responsibility for scheduling gives him c-ontrol over who
"Year after year goes by and we
. will- and who will not - see the president.
Deaver occupies the office nearest to the Oval Office and has direct access to Reagan. Reagan's personal secretary, Helene von Dammn, reports
to Deaver.
Deaver's importance is illustrated by the fact that he, Meese and Baker
WASHINGTON (AP) ·- The
had lunch with the president on his first full day in office. Deaver is to take
part in the early-morning coordination meetingll with Meese and Baker as nation's top spy, William Casey,
emerged from the White House two
well as in the later sessions with Reagan.
Then there is Lyn Nofzinger, a longtime Reagan aide who joined the daysafterRonaldReaganmovedln,
White House staff as political director. Although technically he reports to looked around, walked up the
Baker, Nofzinger has told friends that he would not have taken the job unless driveway, re-entered the building by
another doorway, came hack out,
he had been guaranteed direct access to the president.
The mere presence of Deaver and Nofsinger has already undermined . andlookedaroundsomemore.
"Can'tfinl)your car?" called outa
Baker's authority.
· Extraordinary cooperation among these chief aides will be necessary if reporter.
"Yes," replied the director of centhe White House structure is 'to work smoothly. Right now, all say there will
tral intelligence, who continued to
be no problem.
But old Washington hands know how often White House staffs can break wander about.
Presumably, he found his trandown into petty bickering - especially when it comes time to place the
sportation,
because he disappeared
blame for errors. These observers are most skeptical about the ability of the
soon
afterward.
Reagan White House to function well as it is currently organized.

•

win,36-34.

Meigs hit' 13 of 38 for 32 percent
from the field and 10 of 18 from the
line for 55 percent. Logan hit 10m 31
field goals for 33 percent and hit 58
percent from the line.
Logan won the battle of the boards
34-17. Kim Keller led with 11, while
Andrea Riggs had seven for Meigs.
Meigs had 20 turnovers and 19 team
fouls, while Logan had 29 and 14
respectively. .
Logan won the reserve contest 2212.
Vermillan
ledfive
Logan
with eight,
while
Horton had
for Meigs,
and
Buffington had four.
Box score, ·
Logan 134) - Emerson 1-5-7; Har·
!lev 02·2; Keller 7·3·17; Hawk 1· 4-6 ;

May Hl-2 . Totals 10.14·34.
·
Meigs (36) - Anderson 3+ 7; King
0· 1·1; Drehet 1·1·3; Crooks 1·1-2;
Riggs 8·4-20 ; Smith O·J·J ; Oliver !HI·
O; DeBord O·Q-0; Dillard O·Q-0. Totals

...••.

,.:

••
-·
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-·~

'

13-ZQ-36.

Score by quarters:
Logan
Meigs

6 12 21 34
7 16 20 36

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

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PIZZA DDUIII
DftUUII

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.one topping.
•
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Sta-'- Me-~-y
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·'

and
h!!ld aThe
1&amp;-12
in·.
termla8ion.
Big lead
Bendat
galsthedropr.
ped off the pace in the third round
and were behind as much as six
pointsthroughoutthefinalround.
I.
Au LOCATIONS
•
With under a minute left to play,
•
and Meigs trailing, Kristin Anderson . - - - - - - - - - - - - - L . - - - - - - " " ; ; ; ;;;;;; ___..;.·..:.·_
grabbed a rebound and put in back
up for the three point play. This
locked the score at 34-34.
Mter a foul was whtslled on a
Meigs player, Logan missed the
front en1 of a one and one, while·
Above Ground and In Ground
Meigs grablled the rebound and held
Greatly Reduced for
on for the last shot. This set the stage

I.I-••

NEWI

John Cremeeas, Brian Whaley, Mike Ed-rd•, Randy
Murray, Mike MD!er IUid Tony Jewell. tbey are
coacbed by Mike Childs. Scott Wolfe photo.

Swimming Pools
QUICK SALE!

SVAC championship on line Friday
Two games are scheduled this 9record.
evening and a full slate of activity
The championship of the SV AC
will be played Friday night in the will be decided the final weekend of
Southern Valley Athletic Con- the league season Friday night when
ference.
the defending champion Southern
Tonight, Kyger Creek hosts Tornadoes travel to Eastern.
Walton and Hannan Trace travels to Earlier this season, Coach Carl
Hannan, W.Wa., in non-league en- Wolfe's team snap the Eagles wincounters.
ning streak on their court. Southern,
At Cheshire, Cooch Keith Carter's meanwhile, suffered a one point loss
Bobcats seek their sixth victory this to Hannan Trace thus throwing the
season against a team they defeated league title on the line.
earlier this month. All five KC wins
In other Friday games, Hannan
have come against West Virginia · Trace and Southwestern will battie
schools.
for the third spot league while on the
Hannan Trace will be out to snap' other end of the ·stick, Kyger Creek
back Into the win colWlUI following hopes !o avoid the basement against
last Friday's eight point loss at the one league victory North Gallta
Eastern. Overall, Coech Mike Pirates. That win, ol course, came
Jenkins' improved Wildcats own a~ against the Bobcats. In that contest,

i

timistlc, but more realistic too.
A tax cut still seems inevitable,
but the effective date· may be
delayed until later this year. GNP is
still expected to grow more than 5.
percent next year, but that's down
from 7.5 percent. Inflation is projected at about 6 percent by late 1982 instead of 4.3 per cent.
Having had time to feed Reagan's
projections into computers,
economic analysts were becoming
increasingly critical. Few of them
could produce numbers as rosy as
those expected by the Reagan team,
and they were beginning to say so
with growing assurance.
An acerbic comment by Gardner
Ackley, former chairman of the
Council of Economic Advisers under
President Lyndon Johnson, gives a
sense of what was to come unless
Reagan more · clearly expressed
himself.

In a univer.dty publication, the nation's economic proble1118. Faith
professor stated that "One feels the in the president can go a long way to
absence of any coherent economic restore economic stability, and
policy, or even any cob!!rent con- Reagan knows lt and relies on it.
Selling that notion to Congress,
ception of a policy, that holds
which
must examine his programs,
promise of leading liS back to
is
another
matter. Inspiration counstability, prosperity, and progress."
ts
with
voters,
but It isn't something
Instead, he said, "ideas and recomCongress
can
measure
in deciding to
mendations appear unclear, conapprove
or
oppose
Reagan
tradictory, and often confused."
proposals.
That critics are sounding off does
And so the economics of the elecnot mean, of course, that they are
tion
may give way tomorrow to the
more correct than Reagan. Ackley
economics
of reality, but not by so
made his own miscalculations in the
1960s, and some of his fellow critics much that the president doesn't
trace the begirmings of today's in- remain far more optimistic than
flation all the way back to the belief . mom private sector forecasters.
What the nation and Congress are
that the country could afford both a
Vietnam war and a Great Society likely to bear Is something less
visionary and more down to esrth, a
program.
What the critics cannot measure bit of a compromise, a concession to
- and unfortunately for him, what the political realities, a recognition
Reagan cannot document - is the of what is possible.
role of leadership in overcoming the

have had this treaty pending longer
than any other treaty in tlie history
of the Senate," he added.
Proxmire usually makes the
SPf~!Ches - which run anywhere
from one to five minutes - to an
almost empty chamber.
"He speaks virtually every day
the Senate's in session. The only
times he missed have been short,
perfunctory sessions when the
Senate was in and out before he had
a chance to get to the floor," said
longtime Proxmire aide Howard
Shuman.
The treaty makes plBMed murder
of an entire people by a goverment
an international crime. It has been

ratified by virtually every major
nation except the United States.
Even though the treaty has been
supported by almost every president
in the past few decades, including
Ronald Reagan, it has never
reached the Senate floor.
The treaty, a reaction to Hitler's
Germany, is opposed in the United
States by the political far-right. And
until recently the American Bar
Association was dubious about the
legal ramifications. ·'
Still, World War II is long past and
there hasn't exacUy been a fiiSb to
take up the treaty at this late date.
Now, though, Proxmire may be
gettin~ some h!!lp in his one-man

·•
'

TheCIAchiefwasreplacedonthe
driveway by Walter F. Mondale, the
former vice president, who left the
White House on foot, strolling
toward Pennsylvania Avenue after
reporting on his and former
President Carter's trip to
Wiesbaden, West Germany.
VisitOrs are coming and going at a
rapid pace these days as Ronald
Reagan moves to. put his mark
quickly on his White House and his
administration.
From ·the first fortnight, a lew impresslons emerge: When compared

\ '
with the Carter White House, there
are more trumpets and tears. The
speeches are shorter. Three-piece
sultsarein,formen. And
for women? Well, there aren't
many women in the Reagan White
House.
The heraldic trumpets, and truJn.
peteers, out ()! public view during
the past four years, are back in a
prominent position on the first-floor
balcony overlooking the expansive
South Lawn whenever foreign
vlsltorsorotherdlgnitarlesarrlve.
Carter fought back tears on a few
occasions, most notably in Plains,

BLOOMINGTON, Minn. (AP) The Minnesota Twins signed shortstop Roy Smalley to a four-year,
multimillion dollar contract Monday, the same day he was to have
gone to arbitration for a ruling on his
contract.
Smalley, who could have become a
free agent in 1982, was seeking a one,
year pact worth $400,000, while the
Twins were ()!fering $350,000. Instead, the 23-year old veteran
agreed to a guaranteed contract for
an estimated $2.4 million ending in
1984.
"I'm very happy and I feel my
talents and interest in the
organization have been fairly compensated," said Smalley, who appeared at a press conference with
his wife, Chris, and six-month old
son, Jeffrey. "I have no ego hangups
about being the highest-paid shortstop, or the highest paid anything.
"The point was, where did I want
to play? Where did I want to tive? I
love this area; this is where I want to

i•

·,

fo

campaign to ratify the treaty.
Sen. Howard Baker, R-Tenn., the
new Senate majority leader, reportedly has promised to take up the
treaty If Proxrnire can reasonally ,
assure him of the needed 67 votes for
ratification.
"We're absolutely sure we can get
it. We canvassed the Senate,"
Shuman said, predicting Proxmlre
would be able to line up at least 70 ,.
firm votes for the treaty.

raise my son.''

Smalley joined the Twins in 1976
as part of the trade which sent Bert
Blyleven to Texas. Since then, he
has blossomed into one of the finest
defensive shortstops in baseball and
a productive swltcb-hltter with good
!lOWer.
In 19'19, he hit .271 with 24 home
runs and 95 runs batted in and was
the American League's starting

Republic11ns called upon to make ..
speeches during the recent
congressional recess had an offer of .
help from the Republican Study ,
Committee.

,...---------, ,...---------, ,...---------, 1
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weu. &gt;a~~ )t1/.I\IS
ANY PtA/IS M4/IIIJI¥iE? r llOfiT
50 /KXI/5
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THAT )WIG
I SHOI.I/.0 NJOIII, 70 7!1.1. 'rOll
UWP ~7H/3R
MAN OF
&amp; A1tl4llii ~ TRt/1H, f..tE NEV·
fl)R 35 Ye4RS
YOI/RS,
OF?
611. SUM TO fiET
I
!£AR?
AhJI/N() 7D TALKI

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\

shorstop in the Ali.Star Game. Last
year, saddled with Injuries which
limited him to 133 games, he hit.278
with 12 homers and 65 RBI.
The long-term signing was the
second in the last month by the
Twins, who have broken from their
longtime tradi,tion of few, if any,
multiyear contracts. Earlier, catcher Butch Wynegar also signed a
multiyear contract and Twins Vice
President Clark Griffith reiterated
that this was the club's promise to
the state that it intends to become
competitive with the rest of the
league.
"It is rare in this industry to conclude a contract not only with a very
fine athlete, but also with an exceptional human being," said Griffith, speaking for his father, owner
Calvin Griffith, who is in Orlando,
Fla., preparing for spring training.
''Our signing of Roy Smalley, to go
along with our recent long-term contract with catcher Butch Wynegar,
is an Indication of our commitment
to this community. I'm extremely
happy for the community, for the
baseball team and for the
Smalleys."
The item which almost led
Smalley and the Twins to the arbitration table was a a nl).trade ·
provision In his contract, which the
Twins were not willing to include.
Smalley admitted that he waived
this demand in Ol'der to sign with .

-l

For three days in a row, Reagan
let the tears flow when be was getling news about the holltages returningfromlran.
~

The West Wing, old by a~
ministration standards - lt was
built In i902 :.... baa developed leaks.
Not leaks of the news lOri, but leaks
of the dripping water 10rt.
During a downpour last week, a
pollee guard uaed two buckets to catch a steady drip from the roof about

1
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TIEIR fM3JollJS I'U.
II6E 7MSIN6 &amp;T.

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Minnesota and that he couldn't
blame the Twins.

"! had to prepare for it, but
neither of us wanted to go through
it,'' said Smalley of arbitration.

test ~li play Oak Hill on Wednesday, Feb. 25.
Championship of that sectional is ·
slated March 1.
According to statistics kept
through Feb. 7, Southern's Dale
Teaford continues to be one ()! the
area's top scorers.
In the SVAC, Teaford leads the
way with an 18 plus average. Teammate Kent Wolfe is second with a 16
plus average. Rounding out the top
10 are Gene Cole, Eastern, 15.3; ·
David Sands, Kyger Creek, 15.1;
Greg Webb, Hannan Trace, 14.9;
Dale Newberry, Southwestern, 14.8 ;
Craig Chapman, Hannan Trace, 12.8
; Mike Bissell, Eastern, 12 points;
Bill Blackburn, North Gallia, 11.3
and Tim Dill, Eastern,I0.4.

SVAC standings
ALL GAMES
TEAM
W L P OP
Southern
16 3 1271 1017
Eastern
14 5 1109 962
Hannan Trace
9 9 908 816
Southwestern
8 10 1089 1035
KygerCreek
5 11 847 868
North Gallia
4 13 917 1117
Southern SVAC OI'!L6Y 1 613 470
Eastern
8 1 527 426
Hannan Trace
5 4 SS8 561
Southwestern .
5 4 533 S06
North Gall Ia
1 8 464 614
K~% ;_re~·k~sschedul~: 9 419 477
Tuesday - Walton at Kyger Creek
and Hannan Trace at Hannan, W.
VaFrlday - Southern at Eastern;
Southwestern at Hannan Trace and
Saturday - Kyger Creek at
Wahama.

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r-

Ga., on Election Day when be
realized he was not going to be re- .,
elected.

Cooch Paul Pettit's Pirates rallied
from a 16 point deficit to win in the
final seconds.
·
Saturday night, . Kygtl' Creek
visits Waharna in a make-up contest
postponed earlier because of ·inclement weather.
Class A Sectional Tournament
play begins Monday, Feb. 23 at
Melgll High School.
North Gailla and Southwestern
will meet in the first contest at 7
p.m. while Kyger Creek plays
Southern In the second game that
evening. Winner of the Southwestern-North Gallta game plays
Eastern. The championship will be
held on Friday, February 27.
!:Iannan Trace will play Symmes
Valley at 6:30 p.m. Feb. 23 atlronton
High School. The winner Of that con-

Poor Twins sign Smalley
to $2.4 million contract

White House visitors.J.--_...____I_n_.w._as~h'_·ngro_n '.

Today is Tuesday, Feb. 17, the 48th day of 1981. There are 317 days left
in the year.
Today' s highlight in history:
On Feb. 17, 1964, the Supreme Court ruled that congressional districts
in each state must be roughly equal in population.
On this date:
In 1621, Miles Standish was made military captain of the pilgrim coluny
at Plymouth, f4us.
In 1813, Prullsla declared war against France.
In 1934, Belgium's King Albert I was killed while mountain climbing.
In 1962, the United States sent envoys to Paris to urge the NATO allies
to reduce or cutoff trade with Cuba .

for the final play with under 10
seconds remaining.
The ball went to Riggs and as time
diminished on the clock, her shot hit
nothing but net to give the locals the

Two games set tonight

Proxmire still pushes treaty ratification

Today·in· history. •.

-

MARAUDER RESERVES - Memben of the
Meigs Maraud~r boys' cage team thJs season are, (no
order given) Rick Edwards, Greg Taylor, Mark
Friend, Rick Chancey, John Smith, Roger Kovalchik,

Economic politics, reality different
·NEW YORK (AP) - The
economics of politi~s and the
economics ()! reality are different
things, and Presidert Reagan,
Congress and the American peOple
will soon Jearn how big the differences are.
A candidate's economics can include faith, hope, promises, visions
and the lil&lt;e, whicjl, if they are communicated well, can induce a
listener to sllSpend critical judgment
and vote for the candidate.
The economics of reality, which ·
emerge soon after the election, are
measured by more sober criteria,
harder judgn\ents and a better sense
of what is possible or acceptable·
within a period of time ..
Reagan is to reveal the latter Wednesday, and it's no secret he has
scaled down his own expectations
about taxes, inflation and gross ·
national product. He is still ~

The Daily Sentinel -Pag-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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.'

''The phone compa~y
combined our four phone
systems into one. It meant

· big savings for us •• :•

-PhD Bowmaa, Vice Pre•ideat, Waterloo Coal Co., Oak BW
When is a coal company not .a coal
company?
When it's also into trucking, farming and mine supply.
They're all parts of the Bowman family businesses , each with
its own phone system. But they
outgrew these systems, and
asked the General Telephone
Communications Consultant for
help. We suggested a GTD120C computer-controlled system.
"Without Communications Consultant Esther Klinebriel , we wouldn't have
known what was available to save us time !!nd
money," said Mr. Bowman. "Our new phone system handles calls for
all four companies. Yet each gets its own phope bills for account,ng
purposes. The night-answer featu re IS very
. important. Now we get after-hours calls at
home - these are almost always very 1m. portant calls."
Our Communications Consultants
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...

�,Tuesday, February 17,1981

Pomerox

The Daily ,sentinel -Page-s

Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, February 17, 1981

Attorneys· feel Smith's innocent

P.a-ar-4-The Daily sentinel

Louisville clinches title
On Jan. 3, Louisville had won just
two of its nine games, and the Car·
dinals were off to the worst start
ever for a defending national
coUegiate basketball champion.
Monday night, however, the Cardinals avenged their only loss in
their past 14 games, clinched the
reguJar-selson title of the Metro
Conference and took a gtant leap
toward earning a return beith in the
1981 NCAA playoffs despite a 1$-8
record. .
Poncho Wright came off the bench
and scored 22 points to help the Car·
dinals to a 95-65 victory over the
Memphis State Tigers, who beat
Louisville~ in overtime 011 Jan.
22. Since then, however, Coach Denny Crum's Cards have won nine in a
row.
The NCAA does not guarantee a
tournament berth to the regularseason champion of any conference
lhsl has a postseason playoff, but
the Cardinals' 9-1 conference· mark
will be hard to overlook.
Memphis State led 14-5 after the
first five minutes, but Louisville
then outscored the Tigers 17-4 to
take the lead lor good. Jerry Eaves
added 17 pints for the Cardinals, and
Johnie Gipson topped Memphis
Statewith17.

NEW YORK (AP)- Two lawyers
said they met for 90 minutes in Los
Angeles Monday with missing
boxing promoter Harold J. Smith
and said he was innocent in connection with an alleged ~1.3 embezzlement from a Wells Fargo bank
in California.
According to stories in Tuesday's
editions of both the New York Daily
News and the New York Times, one
of the lawyers, Robert Rains of
Cleveland, said that Smith has done
nothing "illegal, improper or im-

streak to 28 games with its rout ol
ference game to I..ouilliana Tech, 77- Georgia Tech. Jeff Lamp scored 19
71.
David Brown scored six points in points, 7-fool-4 center Ralph Sampson added 15 and the two keyed a
the second overtime, including four 36-5 burst in the first half that got the
free thro.,. in the Iast·25 seconds, to
off to a l'UIII1ing start.
boost Tulsa over Wichita State for Cavaliers
The victory gave Virginia a 12-0
the second time this season.
Regulation ended in a 56-58 lie, ACC record, 2:1-11 overall.
Virginia scored 14 points in a row
and the first overtime was tied 6U2
to
lead 18-6 before going on the 36-5
at the buzzer. Wichita State led 71-70 ·
run that gave the Cavaliers a 411-15
when Brown started his string of
free throws. Mark Anderson led halftime lead.
Notre Dame fought back from
Tulsa with 17 points, and Antoine
several
deficits, the Iastat47-42 with
Carr had 25 for Wichita State.
t0:25to
go, an~ won the game In the
Dave Sinunons scored 20 points,
final
15
seconds from the foul line.
and Louisiana Tech rode an early 15point lead to victory over Lamar,
which dropped to :111-3 and &amp;-I in the
conference. Louisiana Tech led 1!1-4
after nine minutes were gone in the
game. Lamar cut the lead to live
points midway in the second half
before Tech ran off to a 58-44 lea4
with7:27toplay.
Mike OUiver paced Lamar with 29
points.
· "We are disappointed, and it is a
disappoinbnentfor our conference,"
Lamar Coach Pat Foster said. "I do
think the ranking added a little
pressure, but I don't mean to take
anything away from Louisiana
Tech."
Virginia extended the nation's

moral." , .,.
The News quoted Rains and Albert
Sheppard of Los Angeles as saying
that Smith might not surface
publicly for a week or two. They said
Smith had retained them to
represent him in a lawsuit filed by
Wells Fargo naming him as adefen-

r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

In games involving ranked teams, ~lo:n~g:es~t~ma~j~or::_~co~U~e=g~e~WI:·:nru:·~ng~~~~~~~~~~~~~
a pair of newcomers to the poU - r
14th-ranked Wichita State and No. 19
Lamar - were upset; top-ranked
SHOP
Virginia
clinched at least a tie for
to
r.
wblte
jeneys)
Louisville's
Lancasten
Gordon,
BIRD'S.EYE VIEW- Watc..mg the ball saO into
the Atlantic Coast Conference
lbe basket during Monday olgbt's Mempbls Stare- Rodoey McCray and Cbarles Jones. Hanii'McDoweU of
regular season title with an 83-42 vicMemphis
State
(top)
looks
on
as
Dennl!;
lsbeU
of
MemLouisville Metro Conference basketbaU game were: (I
tory over Georgia Tech, and lithFOR THE BEST DEALS IN THE TRISTATE AREA
phis State Is under tbe basket. (AP Laserpboto).
ranked Notre Dame struggled to a •
. 57-55 victory over Fairiield.
Wichita State, wblch made its first
Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday &amp; Saturday
appearance this season in The
8:30 to 5:00, ~hursday till12 noon
second loss in 18 games, bowing to Associated Press poD on Feb. 2, lost
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Canton was a distant second with 184 points.
OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT ONLY
There was one major change in Cincinnati St. Xavier ~1 Friday, to Missouri Valley Conference rival
McKinley, Willard and Kinsman
Tulsa
7
4-72
in
double
overtime.
and
tumbled
from
sixth
to
11th
in
the
rankings
this
week.
Badger kept their records unMason, w. va.
HERMAN GRATE
.
Lamar, which debuted · in the poD
Napoleon, I~. moved from fourth ClassAAA.
defeated and lead The Associated
In Class AA, Hillsboro was fifth, lhst was released earlier in the
Press' Ohio boys high school basket- to third in Class AA, replacing
Circleville
Logan Elm seventh, evening, lost a Southiand Con- ~----------------------Millersburg
West
Hohnes.
West
ball rankings lor the seventh
Navarre
Fairless
eighth, PorHohnes
lost
to
Navarre
Fairless
and
straight week.
tsmouth
ninth
and
New
Matamoras
twnbled
to
sixth
this
week.
McKinley's Bulldogs routed lorFrontier
lOth.
In
Class
AAA,
Canton
South
mer state tournament champion
In Class A, Covington retained the
Columbus East 1~ Saturday. to retained the third position with
No.
3 spot, followed by Maria Stein
Chillicothe
fourth,
Dayton
Roth
fifboost their record to 1~. The
Marion
in fourth, Old Washington
th,
Coiwnbus
Brookhaven
sixth,
Bulldogs earned 288 points for the
Buckeye
· Trail filth, Zanesville
Steubenville
seventh,
Kettering
Class AAA lead. Hamnton, also 1~.
Rosecrans
sixth, Peebles seventh,
Alter
eighth,
Mansfield
Senior
ninth
retained the No. 2. ranking with 231
Kalida
eighth,
McDonald ninth and
and
Akron
Central-Rower
lOth.
points.
Coach Ron Logan's Meigs
Jewett-&amp;io
lOth.
Willard, with 18 straight victories
Marauder
girls basketball · team
Jewett-Scio, a Harrison County
this winter, was No. 1 in Class AA · Mansfield Senior, which has been
scored
a
4+31
victory over Alexanschool with a 15-3 record, made its
again with 24:i points, 30 more than beaten · twice in 18 games, moved
der
Monday
night.
first appearance of the season in the
runner-up Struthers,!~.
from 14th to the Top Ten for the first
Andrea Riggs led the way with 20
Top Ten.
Astatewide panel of sports writers time this winter. The Tyge!'S ended
points while Kristen Anderson had
and broadcasters again voted the Findlay's ~game home court win12.
High school ratings
top spot in Class A to Badger with. ning streak~ in overtime Friday.
Theiss led Alexander with 12 poin246 points. Columbus Academy, 1~.
Cincinnati Elder suffered its
COLUMBUS, Ohio ( AP ) Here's how
ts.
• statewide panel of sports write~ and
Meigs hit29 percent from the floor~----------------------~
broad~asters ranks Ohio high school boys
basketball teams thi5 week ror The A,sso.
With 14 of 49 shots while Alexander 1
ciated Press with 10 points for (lest to I
sank 12 of 44 attempts for 27 percent.
point for loth :
CLASSAAA
The Marauders also had a good
I, Canton McKinley, 19-0, 268 point,.
•
\
night at the foul circles connecting
2. Hamilton, 19--&amp;, 231.
3, Canton South, 19-1, 179.
on 16 of 23 tries. Meigs collected 38
4, Chillicothe, ·~. 170.
rebounds led by Anderson's 10.
5, Dayton Roth, 13-1, 113.
6, Columbus Brookhaven, 16-1, 97.
Meigs, 11-10, will play Saturday in
7, Steubenville, 17·1, ~.
·
the
Class AA Sectional at Athens
•
8, Kettering Alter, 15-2, 79.
•
9, Mansfield Senior, 16-2, 66.
against Belpre. During the season,
10, Akron Central·Hower, 16-2, S9.
AAA all-state running back from
: COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) the two teams split on their home
Other schools receiving 10 or more
t Michigan's victory over Ohio State Cincirutati Forest Park, was the first poinb
: 11, Cincinnati Elder 50. 12, Clevecourts.
land Adams 31. 13, Newark 'lT. 14, Young~
&gt;and its Rose Bowl triumph over Ohioan to announce for Michigan.
BoK score :
South 26. 15, Atheru! 2:0. 16, MayHeaded for Notre Dame are 1&gt;-2, stown
, Washington is paying football
Alexander (ll) - Theiss 5·2·12 ;
field 19. 17, Mansfield Malabar 14. 18.
Lewellyn 4·0·8; Wallace H ·6; Lowry
' recruiting dividends for the 21:;..pound running back Chrts Smith Cleveland Marshall 13.
CLASSAA
1· 1·3; Hawk 1·0·2. Totalsl2·7-31.
of Cincinnati LaSaUe; 6-5, 23:&gt;-pound
,: Wolverines in Ohio this winter.
I, Willard, liHI, 24S.
Meigs (441 - . Riggs 6·8·2C ; An·
2, Struthers, 19-4, 215,
: An Associated Press survey Mon- center Tom Doerger of LaSalle; .G-4,
derson 3·6· 12 ; Crooks 2·2·6; Ol iver I·
3, NapoleQn, 19-&lt;1, 181.
Call Reuter-Brogcin, a leader
0·2: King 1·0·2 and .orahel 1·0·2.
• dat, two days before the national 240-pound linebacker Mike Golic r:i.
4, HiU..boro, liHI. 146.
Totals
14·
16·44
.
in this area for 30 years.
5, El).'ria Catholic, 18-i. 135.
• signing dale, shows that Michigan Cleveland St. Joseph, and
By quarters:
6, Millersburg West Holmes, 17-1, 119.
'• has verbal commibnents from five linebacker Mike Lane, a 1&gt;-2, 200Representing the nation's leading In·
Alexander
8 9 15 31
7, Circleville Logan Elm, 17·1. 99.
8, Navarre Fairless, 1~2. 93.
Meigs
12163744
~ Ohioans, one more than Notre Dame pouild linebacker from Cincinnati
surance
Company for all types of in9, Portsmouth, 1~3. 54.
~ and two more than Ohio Staie.
Moeller.
10, New Matamoru Frontie r . 17-:!:; 32.
surance.
Other schools receivin" 10 or more
~ Agreeing to attend Michigan were
Golic, a first team Class AAA All·
: Jl, Johnstown Mooroe 30. 12,
: 1&gt;-foot-1, 21:;..pound tackle AI Sincich Ohioan, is the brother of current point.a
Youngsto~ Rayen Z9. 13, Warren Kenne-REUTIR-BROGAN
. 14. Dresden Tri·Valley 22. 15, Del·
• of Cleveland St. Joseph; 1&gt;-1, 216- Notre Dame defensive tackle Greg
Sl. John':! 19. 18, Orrville 18 17
The Top Twenty team~ in The AMoci·
: pound linebacker Phil Lewandowski. Golic and former Notre Dame and
. ANCE SERVICE Pomeroy,
214 Main St.
lenburg 17. 18, New Lebanon Otxh!
IN SUR
Ohio
attd Press college bulr.etba\1 poll, with
: of Solon; &amp;-6, 226-pound tight end current New England Patriots · 16. 19 (lie). Columbus St. Charles Cle\le-- fint-place
\lott! in parentheses, this sea992-6681
land
Benedictine
and
War~ens\IUie
son's records and total points. P\linll
) Eric Kallus of Cincinnati Colerain, linebacker Mike Golic.
HeiwhU II .
based on 2Q.1g..J~t7-I6-l~t4-tl-12·11·10.1-3,. and 6-5, ~pound Mike Odioso, an
Jim Lachey, a &amp;-6, 253-pound ofcuss•
7~2-t:
1. Kinsman Badger, 18-0, 246 poinL1.
1,184
1. Virginia( ~) ·
fensive tackle from St. Henry, and
~ offensive tackle from Cincinnati St.
z. Colwnbus Academy, IS-O, ll·t
1,130
2t-&lt;l
10regonSt. (l41
•~ XaVIer.
.
Rory Graves, a &amp;-6, 276-pound of3, Covin)!lton. 19-0, 176.
22-i
l DePaul
4. Maria Stein Marion, 17-0, 145.
·~~~
• Sincich and Kattus both were first fensive tackle and first team Class
4. Loulalana St . ( llil·l
5, Old Wa:lhington Eluckeye Trail, 17-1,
947
21·2
~ . Wakeromt
: team selections on the AP's Class AAA All-Georgia player, have tJI.
IIJil
l UCLA
6, ZHnesville Rosecran.s, 17-1, 117.
1~
7!5
~ AAA All.Qhio squad.
7. ArizOnaSt.
chosen Ohio State.
7, Peebles, t!Hl . 116.
693
t&amp;-4
l TeMessee
~ Brian Mercer, a first team Class
Also committed to the Buckeyes
8, KKiidH.. 17·1. 66.
21·2
64S
I. Utah
9, McDonald, 17·2, 56.
Ill
18-4
10, Kentucky
are 6-3, 24:&gt;-pound Class AAA All·
10, Jl!welt.SCio. 15-3, 4S.
691
18-4
11. Notre Dame
Ohio
center
John
Lucente
of
OttEr schools receiving 10 or more
$7~
J----------------------~
174
12. Jowa
poilU: 11, Sebrin~~: +4. 12, Racine South549
11&gt;&lt;1
Youngstown Mooney; 6-5, 2M-pound . ern
\3, North Carolina
4ll. 13, New Washington Buckeye Cen, ..2
~
14. Wichita St.
Dave Crecelius of Ashland; 6-4, 22:&gt;- tral 38. 14, Strasburg 31. IS, Galt.! Mills
,.• The Daily Sentinel
J.l7
IS-S
li. lllinob
~- 16, Gnadenhutten Indian Val:143
pound defensive tackle Spencer Hawken
16. Indiana
'
(VIPSI-1
ley Sooth 2-4. 17. CinciMilli Swnmit Counm
10-S
17.
Brigham
Yountt
,.
A DIYIIMII'tl MIJIIBiedia, lae.
NelmB from Atlanta, and &amp;-foot, 22:&gt;- try Day 11. 15. Cortland Maplewood 1&amp;.
113
10-S
18. Michigan
19, Greenwich South Central 14. 20, Jack·
:11-2
pound linebacker Ken Snead of SOil
19. t.mar
Publisll&lt;d every oftemoon excop&lt; Sunday,
Center 12. 11 , Mechanicsburg 10,
71
18-7
~. Mal'l'iand
Monday throoWI Friclay, l1l Court Stree~ by
Plano, Texas.
the Ohio Valley Publlshln8 Company •
Also verbaUy agreeing were:
., Multimedia, lnc., Pomeroy, Ohio 451t8,
.. ift.2111. Secood clua paotace paid at
-scott Barrows, Marietta tight
,.. Pomeroy, Ohio.
end, 6-4, 248,to West Virginia.
Member: The .u.octated Prou,lnlaJid Oa~
-Craig Weiss, Dover's Class AAA
t. ty Prtss .u.octaUon ond the An\erican aU-state
offensive tackle, 6-S, 256, to
Newopoper PubllaheraAaaoclaUon, National
~ Advertising
Reprel'entatlve, Landin8
Youngstown State.
Aaaociatea, 3101 Euclid Ave., aeveland,
-Tom Richey, two-way Mentor
Ohlo,4Slli.
·
Pomeroy, Ohio
tackle, 6-S, 235, to Kentucky.
• · POSTMASTER: Send address to The O.Uy ·
THURSDAY, FEB. 19
-Tony Czach, Parma Padua
;': Sentlnel. Ill Cow1 St., Pomeroy, Ohio 4570.
9 A.M. to 12 Noon
linebacker, 6-1,:00, to Kentucky.
When H&amp;R Block prepares your taxes,
•
SUBSCRlPTION RATES
-Simas
Kijauskas,
Parma
Padua
By Carrier or MoW R•te
not only do you get all the bcnefil5 of our
onelfftk .......... ................ ll.OO
center, &amp;-2, 215, to Ohio University.
extensive .tax knowledgt, you al'IO get ~
One Month ......................... 11.10
-Doug Williams, Moeller's Class
One Year ......... . .........•.... . J$2.80
benr61
of being able 10 dtduc't our low fee
Will Be Given By
SINGLE COPY
AAA All-state offensive tackle, S-7,
for
preparing
your taxc:s on next yelll''s return
PRICES
H. W. Mattingly
'~ Doily ..........................
'255, to Kentucky.
II Cent~
if you itemize. So the amwer Is TRUE.

Indians hope policy helps Manning
BAlLANTINE CRASHES - Bob Ballantine of
Ellicott City, Md. goes end over. end after bittiDg the
waD coming out of ~ 4 at the Daytona International

Speedway Monday whOe running tbe Daytona Sportsman 300. Ballantine's condition Is not known but he
was listed as conscious when taken to tbe hospital. (AP
Laserpboto),

MASON FURNITURE

MASON FURNITURE

Three cage teams still unbeaten

Moodily' 1 College Ba1ketba:ll Scorea
EAST
American U. 85, Drexel 74

· Boston U. 81, C. W. Pc&gt;:!t 67
Canisius 9'2, Robert Moi'Ti:J 65
Fairleigh Dickinson 75, Maine 74
Fordham 69, Wagner 52
Geor~e WashingtOn 84, Navy 79
Prov~dence 73, St.John':s 57
· Rutgers 90, Long Island U. 72

St.Jooeph'•· Pa. 74, Lehigh ~7
Temple 77. Bucknell 59
Towson St. 84. Howard U. 61
U.S. lnt'l 91, St.Francis, Pa. 85
W.Chtster St. 83, Delaware St. 76
W,Connectlcut 89, W.New En~land 79
W . VIq~ini.a Tech 77, W . Ylr~inla ·St. 72
SOUTH
Delta St. 89. N.Alabama 84
E .Tennessee St. 70. The Citadel 66, OT
Florida St. 00, Virginia Tech 76
Jl!ck:tuwill e St . 73, Troy St. 88
LouisiKml T~ch n. Lamar 71

Meigs victory

~

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MoodiJ'1 Spor1l Traui~Uou
BASI!&gt;IAU.
Americ:ul.u...

CIIICAGO WIIITE · SOX-Si8ned Lamar
JohnsoR, first bueman, and Todd Cruz,
shortstop, to cOntracta for the ISIII aea·

.....M I N N E S 0 T A
Smalley,

tract.

TWINS- Signed Roy
llhqrt.stop, to a four.)'""" con-

MEIGS INN, POMEROY, OHIO
. Anyone who has trouble hearing Is welcome to have a hearing test us·
tng modern electronic equipment to determine If his loss Is one wnicn
may be helped. Some of the causes of hearing toss will be explained
and diagrams of how the ear works will be shown.
·

We Also Service and Repair

All Makes of HHr ;ng Aids.
Batteries and Supplies For All M•kes For Sale.

NaU-iLu...

NEW
YORK
METS--Named
CJeon
Jones a general minor league lnatnu:1or

oo hittlnl(, oulfleld play and baoerunntnc.
ST.
LOUIS
CAROINALS-Pun:hued
Rafael Santana, shortstOp, from the New
York. Yankees ' on a condlllonal basis.

Louisville 95, Mer.nphis Sl. 65

HELP ARRIVFS- Worke.-. go Inside tbe car ·of
driver Bob llallQiine to pall him out after he crashed
cllllliDc out of tbe foartb tum during the Daytona Spol"
lllllbl 310 today. The race had been raloed out oo

r

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Ph. 992-3795
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Appointments Available

Saturday causing the Washington btrtbday race.
Ballantine's condition is not known at Ibis time
altbougb be was reported conscious when taken to a
local hospital. (AP Laserphoto1.

Victory ends
Irwin's slump

Today's

Sports World

THANPI
l'OUI

•
• •
m
recnnting
too

CLEVELAND (AP) - The
management of the Cleveland Indians say their get-tough policy with
outfielder Rick Manning is only intended to make him a better player.
"We have tried everything with
Rick. We have tried putting our arms around him in an understanding
way. We tried kissing his rear. Now
we're going to pat him in the rear
again. This time we're using a hot
poker," said Gabe Paul, president of
the American League team.
Manning was fined $500 by the
club for not appearing at a sports
media banquet last week in
Cleveland at which he was to receive

a "Good Guy" award.
The 28-year-old centerfielder hit
.234 last year which brought much
media criticism. He never spoke out
angrily and the same media voted
him a good sport award. Manning
was reported to be in Tucson, Ariz.,
preparing for spring training and
declined to fly north for the banquet.
Manning has appealed the fine and
his agent, Ed Keating, sald all
material concerning the fine has
been sent to the Major League
Baseball Players Association. "II
the fine had been $100 or $200, we
would have quietly paid it, but $500 is
a hefty sum," Keating said.

College results

Riggs paces

.Michigan beats OSU

proble!DB ar.e related to our f21.3
dant in the alleged embezzlement.
million
fraud case," said bank
Smith, chairman of Muhammad
spokesman
George Caulfield. But,
All Professional Sports Inc., has
as
a
matter
of
routine, the two cases
been missing for three weeka,
will
be
examined
to see if there is
although he reportediy has made
any
connection,
he
said.
phone calls to associates and
According to the News, Smith,
newsmen describing a bizarre flight
thrOugh
his lawyers, claimed that
from gunmen and an aUeged kidevery
month
amounts ranging from
naping of his young son.
$550,000
to
t995,000
were funneled
Smith was to have promoted a
major boxing card at New York's thrOugh one of his bank accounts,
Madison llquare Garden on Feb. 23, Harold J. Smith Productions,
including three championship bouts. without his knowledge.
They said the money never
The show has since been canceled.
Meanwhile, Wells Fargo, which showed up on bank statements and
has already suspended one branch said Smith was making a routine
manager in connection with the em- check on his balances when it was
bezzlement suit, relieved the disclosed· that f21.3 was · funneled
Hollywood branch manager of his . througl! his account that way.
"It is obviously a computer crime
duties while it probes $3.5 million in
loans approved there, a bank that must involve the very highest
officials of Wells Fargo," Sheppard
spokesman said.
"We do not think the loan said.

By WW Grimlley
AP Cormpondent
Despite all the dour language from
the chiefs on both sides in baseball,
here's a bel - based as much on gut
instincts as cold reasoning - !hal
"Play baH!" will be the harbinger of
spring as usual this season.
No strike. No lockout. There will
be considerable haggling. Each side
will give a little. They may even go
down to the final hour, as before.
Each side will claim a victory. Then
they '11 stoke the bat racks and get
the show on the road.
·
Nobody wants a stoppage, particularly the players. They've never
had it so good.
Marvin Miller, executive director
of the Players Association, is an
, astute, sensible man. He has grub' bed out gains for the players that
I transcend the imagination. He is not
: vindictive. Our prediction is that he
~ wiD let the owners stew In their own
: juice a while and then take the cour' se that Is to the players' advantage.
; Across the table, Ray Grebey,
, negotiator for the owners, represenl ts an internally fractured clientele
, - a hard core of young owners who
• don't want to make waves, con• servative hardliners who keep losing
: battles. Atough guy, he is pressed to
: squeeze out all he can get.
• But the key lies with'the players.
The Basic Agreement, signed last
, May, makes them the most
: properous and secure p·ractitioners
,; in pro team sports.
• A baseball survey (questioned, In·
: cidentally by Miller) proJects that
I the average salary of a baUplayer
will be more than $170,000 in 1981.

i

~~
••

Player allowances for spring
training have been increased to
$363.50 a week for spring training
and $37 .51HI-day meal money plus
first~lass air travel and hotel accornodations for all road games
during the season. This is figured to
be a 12.7 percent cost-of-living boost.
The baseball pension fund is one of
the country 's most enviable, in and
out of sports. It is funded to the tune
of $15.5 million a year with funds
from television revenue, the All.Star
Game and the World Series.
The benefits escalate with
seniority. In other words, baseball
says, Carl Yastrzemski, a 26-year
man, is entitled to a yearly pension
of $57,888 if he waits untU he's 65 to
take it. A lll·year player can get
$17,856 at the age of 50.
This Is only part of the good life
baseball players have Inherited,
thanks to free agency and the astute
generalship of Marvin Miller.
Salaries are mind-boggling .
Happy, well-paid ball players

Sports briefs ...

AUTO RACING
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (AP) : David Pea.-.on clung to · a narrow
• lead in the final 10 laps to win the
: •108,000 Sportsman 300 late-model
: spol't8 car race by a car length over
; Rusty Wallace.
• Pearson picked up $15,115 for his
: victory, while Wallace earned
X $8,1165. Neil Bonnett, who won $8,165,
• was third.
' Pearson, driving a Pontiac Yen·
~

This compares with an average
salary of $149,000 last season.
Grebey contends that overall
salaries have gone up 230 per cent
since 1976 (the advent of free agency) and 457 percent since 1971.
The new four-year agreement,
signed wit~ 'the compensation issue
not entirely resolved, provides that
the minimwn player salary this
year will be $32,500 ($7 ,500 more
than that in the National Football
League and National Hockey
League ).

HONOLl)LU (AP) - The recordsetting victory in the Hawaiian Open
Golf Tournament finally wrote an
end to an agonizing , deeply
frustrating slump that began for
Rale Irwin 19 months ago and a half
a world away . '
Inl979, Irwin won his second U.S.
Open championship and had the lead
going into the final round of the
British Open at Royal LythamSt.Ann' s in England. He was
shooting for a rare double, the titles
in the world's two most important
national championships and what he
called " my own little niche in
history."
Irwin, a methodical player, a grinder who keeps it in the fairways and
on the greens, was paired in the last
round with Spain's Seve Ballesteros,
one of the world's most spectacular
perlonners.
Irwin kept hitting it just off line,
just etlough off line to get in deep
rough. Ballesteros hit it, literally, 50
to 100 yards off line. But he kept
coming up with the good lies. From
impossible places, even parking
lots, he kept making pars and birdies.
'
The world watched in fascination
as Ballesteros won that title with one
of the great escape acts of all time.
Irwin watched in total frustration .
"I didn't play well for a year and a
half after that," he said. "All last
year. I didn't win. I didn't really
have a 'Chance to win. I wasn't
playing well. I wasn't !hinking well.
I didn't have my mind on my
business. I was wanting to go home
aU the lime.
"I was completely frustrated."
Over the winter, Irwin made an
examination of his priorities. "I had
to decide where I was going," he
said. "It wasn't that I was thinking
of quitting the game immediately.
But I know that I'll have to quit
sometime and I was wondering
when that time might be."

I

lura, turned the trt-oval course at an
average speed of 129.419 mph.

But this year the gritty competitor
came
out with the detenoination and
LA QUINTA, Calif. (AP) - Fifthdedication
that has made him one of
seeded Roscoe Tanner rallied for a
the
world's
most respected per1&gt;-7 , 6-2, 6-4 victory over Tom
fanners.
Gullikson in the opening round of the
His comeback was capped with his
$175,000 Grand Marnier-ATP Tennis
12th
American victory in the
Games.
·
Hawaiian
Open, a victory that was
In other matches, eighth-seeded
garnished
by a tournament scoring
Brian Gottfried defeated Thierry
record
of
23
under par.
Tuiasne of France 6-4, 6-2 ·
TENNIS

Nicholls St. 67. Ar'k.·Uttl e Rock ::16
N . C. Wilm.i~ o n S7, Ea:it Carolina 5S
Samford 81, Mercer 60
Southern U. 711 , Teus Southern 17
SW Louisiana 72:. McNeese St. 69

Tn.&lt;hattanooga 90, VMI 68
Te!lilessee St. 86, MWI. Valley 75
Virginia 83, Georgia Tech 42
Winstol'l-Sa lem 91, Shaw 75

~

MIDWFSr

Bradley 59, S.lllinois 36
Cleveland St. 94, Youngstown St. 63
Drake Ill, N.Mexico St. 69
Drury 107, Marymoont 911
E.llllnois 118, Ky. Wesleyan 62
Hastings 117, ConCt~rdia, Neb. 106
Illinois St. ~. Valparaiso 38
Moorhead St. 00, Ma)'\1\Ue St. 68
Notre Dame ~7, Falrlield fl5
Oral Roberts 82 , Butler 77
St.Xav\er 70, lll...Chlcag9 69
Tulsa 74 , Wichita St. 72, 20T
.SOUTHWEST
Pan American 75, New Orleans 65

PBnlu!.ndle St. 95, Santa Fe 76
Sam HoU!lton St. 64, E.Tens St , 35
Texas A&amp;J 74 , Angelo St. 61
Texas-Arlington

66, Arkansas St.
FAR WEST

E.Oregon 76, George Fox 68

Paul, meanwhile, is· not happy
with Manning and said the veteran
may bave a tough time winning his
job in spring training.
"We're not going to go with a .234
hitter in center : A .234 hitter does not
deserve a permanent job. Manning
has to go to spring training to work
hard and win a job," he said.
Competition for the centerfield job
may be waged among four players:
Manning, Miguel Dilone, Larry Littleton and rookie Von Hayes.
Paul said Manning conned him
last spring and he hopes the $500 fine
and needling will make the outfielder respond. "He told me he was
in great shape and showed up in
spring training (last year) with this
huge rear end. We tried to discuss
these things with him. Rick talks a
good game, but you can't talk your
way in this game. You have to play
hard," Paul said.

S4

....

~~~~~~,

t

t
: HUMANE SOCIID t
SALEI

t lHRIFT SHOP
t

t
t

: FILL-A-BAG

:

t
t

FEB. 18-21

t
I

'

MIDDlEPORT, OH.

:

$} 00

Seattle 74, Simon Fraser 73

S.Colorado 70, Denver $7
Wa!.hlngton St. 9, Stanford 58

&amp;.~~~~~~~~

,,t&amp;&amp;JE l(iJO@' waz &amp;&amp; ''&amp;$#. &amp;Y.J~L GJN~,
THREE
DAY

SPECIALS

FEBRUA. RY

~~~~i

STARTS
THURSDAY

FEB.l9ltl

Solid Color Terry

lATH

TOUJ~LS

11-Quart Assorted

PLASTIC PAILS

Mt. Mist Cotton

QUILT BATTS

MIIID
• • /,uti

t;W'lrl'

J

�Tuesday.February17,1981

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-8-The Daily Sentinel

Emphasis for 1981 on remembering OES has Heart month recognition
shut-ins by UMW of Pomeroy
Goals for 1981 with emphasiS on
remembering shut-ins were set at
a recent meeting of the United
Methodist Women of the
Pomeroy Church.
The goals will include remembering the birthdays of shut·ins,
the sunshine box project, shut-in
visits, Bible study and making
chrismons. A Day Apart will be
observed and emphasis will be on
membership to encourage more
women to participate in the ·
program of the UMW. It was
noted that during the past two
months members have made 105
sick and shut-in calls.
Mrs. Robert McGee advised
that she had prepared sunshine
boxes for Gertrude Mitchell and
Grace CampbelL
"Reach Out and Reach One in
. 1981" is the UMW slogan. Mrs.
·Dorothy Downie, vice president,
noted that the purpose of the
UMW is awareness of missions.
She distributed new program
· books and also gave cards to the
various officers outlining the
duties of their respective offices .
Mrs. Thelma Dill noted that the
County Council of Ministries is
encouraging more participation
in the Food Coop. She said that
there should be at least 100 mem·
bers in order to achieve better
and faster service. There is a !so a
·need for additional volw1teers to
~sack the food orders and for large
grocery bags.
An invitation was read fr om the
Trinity Church women inviting

members to aitend the aMual
Lenten breakfast and quiet hour
on March 4. Ten reservations will
be sent from the UMW. It was
also reported that tentative plans
are being made to hold combined
Lenten services in Pomeroy.
Mrs. McGee advised that she
had received a newsletter an·
nouncing four workshops to be ·
held this year by the UMW, the
first to be on March 11 at Belpre.
The offering of the least coin \Vas
taken by Mrs. Ada Warner, and a
letter was read from Mrs:
Margaret Newman who is now
residing in Athens.
Letters of appreciation for
remembrance during recent
bereavements were read from
the Downie family membrs and
the Robert F. Morris family. A
former district superintendent
also sent a letter expressing the
family's gratitude for prayers
and interest shown during their
son's illness and reporting of his
continual improvement.
Mrs . Maxine Goeglein,
program resource chairman,
requested that each member
report to her the number and
names of books read in 1980 to be
included in her district con·
ference report. Members were
urged to read the " Response"
plus four books each year. Mrs.
McGee encouraged members to
read " Raspberry Kingdom" by
Elizabeth J effers .
Mrs. Bernice Carpenter had
the program, "Love Made Visible

Honor roll announced

The third six weeks grading periud honor ron
fer the Harrisonville Elementary School has
been announced . Students making a "B" or
a~we in all their classes and named to the roll
were ;
first ~ra de- Bobby Vanee, Andy Vance.
Second grade - Gina Arnett. Tina Arnett, Jen- .

n\' Barrett, Barbara Donohue, Dianna Mccielland, Amanda Molden. Aaron Sheets, Mazie
Wyatt.
ThinJ l!j rade - Rodney Butcher. Kelly
Hamilton, Denny Kennedy . Debbi l! Six, Linda
Wyant.
Fourth grade - Chnstina Bass, Wesley
Howard, Janet Pyett, Kared Sheets, Kevin
Stanler . Richard Vance.
Fifth grad.! Scott Oberh lllzer, &amp;'Ott
Williams. Sh1rlena Six. Donna Sergent
SL-::th grade - Jeer Arnold, Marty Cline, Joe
Haddox, Willy Molden.
Douglas A. Behnke, Principal or the Rutland
Elementary School, has announced the htlnor
roll of the third six weeks gradint~ period.

Students making a " B" or above in all their su)).
je&lt;:lS and named to the rot! wert! ;
Grade 1 - J DCinda Ferguson, Amy Herald,

Vincent Broderick

Birthday celebrated

DaMy McDonald, Frank McGhee, Tammy Jo
Miller, Kevin Musser, Miranda Nicholson, Tim·
my Peterson, Jotmny Rose, Dennis Searles,
Phillip Smith. JBlllie Sn«&lt;.grass. Marjorita
'I)'onun, Larry Vance.

Grade 2 - Angie Elliott, Mike Fink, Carolyn
Fltchp.attick, April Gro\'er, Tommy JenniJ18S,
James Kingery, Tracy Lcark, Ryan Lemley,
Derek Miller, Eric Peterson, Ronnie Riggs, Danny Robinson, Kevin Taylor, JOOi Tillis, Stephanie
Walker.

POMEROY - VIncent Broderick
celebrated his first birthday, Jan. 26
Grade 3- Lisa Darst, Billy Doczi. Kim Eblin,
with two parties at the home of his
Lee"a Johnson, Terra Schoonover, Natalie
parents , Frank and Linda
Tronun, Eric Walk er, Kelley Wood.
Grade f ·- MicheUe Adams, Chad Carson,
Broderick.
Scott Edmonds, Shawn fetty, Barbara Fowler.
The first party was on Jan. 24. At·
Rhonda Gomez. Amber Hankla. OaYid Herald,
tending were his grandmother, Em· Stacy Hysell, Tracy Hysell, Tracy Michael, Martha Nelson, Melissa Pettl'}l, Pam Smith, J . R.
rna Broderick, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Walker ,Sabrina Wilson .
Pullins, Mr. and Mrs. Martin · Gr~tdt'! 5 - Michael Bartrwn. Cathy Bles:slng,
MandJ Fry, Patricia Mc.(i~ . Lisa Miller, John
Broderick, Fern Morris, Matthew Sisson, P. J. Smallwood, JoeTillls.
Grade 6 - Mandl Black, Paul BMckles, Paul
Morris, James and Jamie
Daile)', Reijina Eblin, David Hai!Jiy, Lclri
Broderick,
Mary Showalter,
Herald, J&lt;met Hysell. Susie Lambert, Michelle
Peterson, Ruth Porter. Lisa Searles, Tony
Christina Grueser and Tim
Stwemaker, DeM)' Welsh.
.Showalter.
Prim. EMR I - Mike Barrett, Pt:ggy Es.tep,
'Marty Hutten, Joel Porter.
.
On Sunday Vincent was honored
Int. EMR - Kim Barrett. Walter Haggy,
with a family diMer. Attending
Christine Hysell , Nicky McKnight, Chuck
Stanley.
were Mr. and Mrs. Sam Scott, Becky
LD I - Missy Gardner, Angie McDonald,
and Michele, Mr. and Mrs. Steven
Vau..:han Mtlchell, Wayne Runyon, Cindy Smith,
Beth Swearingen.
Lane and Kelli, Mr. and Mrs. Greg
LD II - Bobby ~mbert, Ro~rtSpears .
~ Lane, Elizabeth and Brian, Scherry
The honor roll for the third si.J: weeks ijradlng
: Lane, Mr. and Mrs. Randall Russell,
period at the Pomeroy Elementary School has
been announced. Students making a "8 " or
' Stephanie, Shea and Todd, Mr. and
above in all thefr classes and lllmed to the roll
: Mrs. Gene Snowden, Robin, Gina were:
Grade 1. Mrs. Ohlinger - Joey McElroy,
I andKrisSnowden,RayWolford, Mr. ~Rachael
Roush, Micah Bunch, Jenny EklJch,
and Mrs. Norman Weyersrniller, his John Harrison, Jeremy Heck, Melissa Neutz.ling,
Pettit. Jonathan Sargent, Jacob Smith,
1· grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Cindy
Jody Smlth~ Keith Smith.
. Lane and his great-grandmother,
Grade I, Mrs. Thomas - Barbara Anderson ,
Ju.lie Buck, Kyle Shaeffer, April Tannehill ,
i Mrs. Ardath Lane.
Joohua Bartels, J ohn Haggy, Stephanie Haggy,
: At both parties Winnie-the-Pooh Tanuny Kletn. Jerry Stone.
Grade 2. Mr.&gt;. Bl.a~ttnar - Scutt Brinker,
:; cake, ice cream, mints, and punch Raehael
Eklich, Kim Ewing, Robbie Fields, Tim
~were served.
Hall, Eric Heck, Erie Hayes, Chris Neece, Lisa
PierCf!, Lori Pierce, Stacey Shank', Michael Van
Sending gifts were Mr. and Mrs.
Meter, Seth Wehrung, Jenni Werry.
Roger Spencer, Debra Spencer, Ad·
Grade 2, Mrs. Diehl - Emily Johnson , Brian
Kovalchik, Shane Phillips, Nlkki Shaffer, Kelly
die Brown, Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Smith,
Sean Walton, Tedd Wiles, Jason Wright.
Mansoliloo, Cynthia and Nick Mills,
Grade 3, Mr3. YOWlg - CbriB Alkirt, John An: Dorothy Kinney, Lucille Leifheit, der.~Qn, Nancy Baker, Dennis Boothe, Gretta Rlf·
,SeanBrHiey .
I Mr. and Mrs. Gail Shrimplin and f\eGrade
l, Mrs . Whitt - Cary Betzlng, Carl
Bourne, Jenny Buck, Hank Cleland, Becky Pear·
l Wendy, Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Darst, son,
JDey Roush, Todd Smith, Shelly Triplett.
[ KeithandGinger.
.
Tara Wolfe, Jenny Newman.

r·

r

·Laurel Cliff

Women meet
Studies in the book, " What Happens When Women Pray"
highlighted the recent ll)eetings of
the Laurel Cliff Women's
Missionary Fellowship International
,
held at the church.
At the all4ly meetings members
enjoyed sack lunches and then made
bandages for missions. Esta Wise
•and Carman Evans are in chrge of
the Missionary Tiding members ·in
memoriam.
Next meeting will be held on mar·
ch 3 at the church with the lith chapter of the book to be studied and
World Day of Prayer to be observed.
Mrs. Doris Shook had the closing
prayer. Others attending the
meetings ·have been Shirley
Meadows, Brenda Haggy, Janilee
Johnson, DoMa Gilmore, Janice
Haggy, Karen Stanley, Iva Powell,
Jean Wright, and Aru1 Mash.

Primary EMR, Mrs. Sebert - Jeannie Anns,
Ruth Walsh, Jesse Morris, Barbara Coleman,
Mary Morton, Chuck Cunninsham.
Grade t Mrs. Gibbs - Beth Ewing, Melissa
Woods. Scott Barton; Nirole BWlch, Totld
Powell , Heather WOilds.
Grade 4, Mrs. Fisher - Jeffrey McElroy,
Monica Turner, Terry Fields.
Grade 5, Mrs. Hysell - Dena Manley, Deanna
Henderson, Kim Harrun, Dreama Bentz. ·
Grade 5, Miss Tate - Tosha O'Neil, Klmberly
Calvert, Usa Newman.
Grade 6, Mrs. Korn - JeMifer Couch, Huey
Eason, Cheryl' Roush, Jennifer Swartz, Orlan
Tannehill.

Grade 6, Miss Triplett, Rex Hau:y. Darcie
Hysell, Susan King, Colena Mowery, Steve
Musaer,Scott Powell.
Intermediate ERM, Mrs. Chantty - Danny

Carl, CathyLaudennllt.

The honor roll. for the third six weeb &amp;radlns
period at the Middleport Elementary School has
been .aMounced. Students ITlllking a " 8" or

above ln aU their subjects and named to the Ust

were:

First 1iade - Love Batey, Emily Brown,
Sharla
r. Stacey Duncan, Anlela Goody,
Kim HaM s, Nikki Meier, Tabitfw Phillips,
Usa Poulin, Amy Starls, Steven Wood, Tricia
Baer, Jo, rank Blake, Benny Bryant, Dodle
Cleland, Ryan Cowan, Heather Davenport, Tant
Gerlach. Jeri Hawley, Darin Lot~an, L. J. Mitch,
Jacinda Mullen, Butch Pow~ll , John R ~:· nolds ,
Mike Reynolds, Mary Bety Stein, Christina
Weaver, Robby Wyatt.
Second grade - l,ee Cadle, Lorie Falls,
Michelle Fnud1, Suaan Houchillll, Jamey Uttle,
Missy Nellon, Amanda Rowh, Stephanie
Whaley, Catlna Wolfe, Jason Smith, Joseph
Sn1llh, Durel l! Wolfe, Erbt El ias, Jeff Pcuvel)',
Shelly Pull ins. Ken Van M~ttrc . Pam.HaKI(Y. Kris

in Our Continuing Story and the
Command to Love." She noted
that Christians consider Jesus'
command to love as the cor·
nerstone upon which every
aspect of his teaching rests. Yet
the word "love" seldom appears
in the works of Jesus; she said.
The two settings where the coni·
mand to love appears are in the
'sermon on the mount where the
command is to love one's enemy,
and in conversation with the
scribe who was seeking to test
Jesus with his command then
being to love one's neighbor.
There was a general discussion
on who a neighbor is, whom we
would help, and whom would we
expect to help us. The group sang
" Love Divine" and Mrs. Ruth
Barnitz read scripture from Luke
10 regarding the Good
Samaritan. Mrs. Clara Thomas
read a story, "Modem Day
Samaritans" and there was a
dialogue, " Lord, I Want to be a
Christian" given by Mrs. Car·
penter and Mrs. Downie. Em·
phasis was on how we can be
Christians and what we have to
give up in order to do so with it
being pointed out that many do
not want to give up comfort and
security to be a Christian .
Mrs. Carpenter bad prayer to
close the program, and refreshments were served by Mrs. Faye
Wildermuth and Mrs. Virginia
Edwards from tables decorated
in the valentine motif.

The. observance of Heart Month
and the recognition of past matrons
and patrons highlighted the Tuesday
night meeting of Harrisonville Chapter 251i, Order of the Eastern Star,
held at the Masonic Temple in
Harrisonville.
Mrs. Lois Pauley, Grand Chapter
committee member for the Heart
Fund, District 25, was presented and
given a red carnation corsage by the
worthy matron, Joan Kaldore.
Following the meeting, the chapter
staged a bake sale in the dining
room with the proceeds going to the
Heart Fund.
Mrs. Kaldore and Chester King,
worthy patron, presided at the
meeting. Past matrons presented
were DoMa NelsOn, Gracie Wilson,
Betty Bishop, Joan Kaldore, Pauline
Atkins, Stella Atkins, Ruth
Erlewine, Mrs. Pauley and Marjorie
Rice. Past patrons introduced were
Harold Rice, Norman Will, Don

Wilson, Cll$rles King, and Kaldore.
Pro tern officers for the meeting
were Nonnan Will, chaplain, Harold
Rice, marshall, Mrs. Nelson, Ruth,
BrendaKeMedy, Martha, and Stella
Stkins, conductress. Registration
was by Charles King, pinons by
Kaldore, and Don Wilson and Will
served as pages.
Golda Reed, chainnan of cancer
research, aMOWlced that items are
to be collected by the members to
raise money for the meeting to be
held in Columbus, Sept. 19. At the
next regular meeting, two trustees
.are to be elected and all members
are requested to be at the meeting.
Also at the next meeting a kitchen
shower will be held with towels,
paper items, stainless forks and
cleaning supplies being needed. A
layette shower will be held for Bren·
da KeMedy Feb. 18 at the Masonic
Temple and all her friends are in:
vited to attend.

Television
•
•
VIewmg

,.
..
....
~.

Reported ill and send cards were' ~:

Clara Wllliams, at home: Gal~. ::
Lynch, hospitalized; Pearl l.Jttle at ;·
the Pomeroy Health Care Center, ,.
and Adrian French, at a con- ::
valescent home in Athens.
-~;
A memorial 5ervlce was held fat ::
Grace Turner with Chester King,_';;
reading a poem followed by slleiii,:O: ;
prayer. The chapter had already ~ .
been draped for Mrs. Mary Diehl ~ :
who w over 100 years old.
••
I nvitations were read from •:
Euphemi8 Chapter at Amesville,
March 13: Marietta, Mardi 23 &lt;
Evangeline Chapter, March ~·
Harrisonville inspection will be held
on May 14. A visitation from the wor·,
thy grand matron, Mary J, Guy, was.
aMounced for Sept. 8. Harrisonville'
Chapter will host thti Roberta Circle
'
meeting on Aug. 20.
Refreshments were served by'
Stella Atkins, Gloria Riggs, Sharon
Jewell, Ruby Diehl, and Pauline
Atkins.

8:oo rneCDemCDIID&gt;e News
(]) BACKYARD
())
CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
()) AICN!WS
()) 3-2·1 CONTACT
liD OnR EASY Guoot: Harmonlco
vlrtuoeo larry .Adler. Hoete: Hugh
Down a and Frank Blair. (Cioaed·

'Love' theme of February meeting
''Love" was the theme of the
February meeting of the Bertha M.
Sayre Missionary Society of the
Racine Baptist Church preceded by
a diMer hosted by the Ruth Circle,
A Valentine motif was carried out
in the table decorations with favors,
candies, and sachet hearts made by
Mrs. Martha Lou Beegle.
Mrs. Beegle, president, opened the
meeting with devotions using
"Love" as her theme. The group
sang " Love Lifted Me" with Lillian
Hayman at the piano. Scripture was
taken from Psa~ns 51 and Leviticus

9, verse 18. Readings included
1
'Create in Me a New Heart," HHe
Loves You" and "Speak Words of
Love" followed by prayer.
During the business meeting a let·
ter was read from Mitchell l.Jnquist,
Ohio Baptist scholarship student,
th8nking the group for a Christmas
gift. Also read was a letter from the
Holzer Medical Center in appreciation for Christmas tray
favors, and one from the white cross
chairman regarding the society's
contributions. It was reported that
five boxes had been sent to Thialand.

Chadwell. Kelly Johnaon, Geoff Coia~r. Yan
Klein, TrHcy Ellis. Tammy Holle)'.
Third graMe - Tonya Brown. Mary Dyer,
Leah Duni~!:s, Ml.s.!lyFife, Jennifer McKinley ,
Shannon Newsome, Cheryl Stevena, Pam Zirkle,
Orlan Broome, Betay Bryant, StePhanie Crow ,
Jimmy Durst, Amy Epplt, Ryan flarper, Heath
RJctunond, Bobby Wil)ebrenner, Stacy Tyree.
Fourth grade - Scott Nelgler, Laurie
Wltaland, Elise Meier, Se11n Gibbs. Lesley Carr.
Penni Jcffer:;:, Amy l .m;keyd1 H.l.

Several donations including one
for $1,150 from the Modern Woodmen of America, Coolville, were
acknowledged at the Thursday night
meeting of the Meigs Association for
Retarded Citizens held at the Meigs
Community School.
' Pat Carson presided at the
meeting and reported on proceeds
from a household products party at
$57.60, along with the donation of a
piano and dishwasher by Mr. and
Mrs. H. W. Lodwick of Chester, and
a refrigerator from Baker Furniture.
It was also reported that a citizens
band radio had been donated by
Radio Shack for one of the buses
through the efforts of Meigs React
Team. II was noted that the radio is
needed due to the condition of one of
the students riding on the bus.
Plans were made to purchase a
used washer and a dryer, along with
a shower stall to be installed at the
schooL These items will be used for
teaching daily living skills. Also
needed are bath towels, wash cloths
and blankets along with cleaning
rags. Before spring a lawnmower
will be needed.
It was reported that the $100
raised from the workshop Christmas
bazaar will be saved toward the pur·
chase an AMIFM stereo radio for
the workshop.
A jigsaw, drill press and other
equipment is needed for the
sheltered ·adult workshop at the
school and plans were discussed for
obtaining it. It was noted that plans
are progressing lor the new school
which is expected to be completed in
the spring of 1982.
The hikebike wsa set for May 2
with Carol Layh, chainnan. A
parent group has been organized at
the school.

BY HELEN BO'ITEL
Special correspondent
DEAR HELEN :
I've been going with Delia for
almost three years. 1 used to sleep
over at her house, but not since her
10.yeaMld daughter came to live
with her. The girl insists on sleeping
with her mother. Our sex life has
disappeared.
This kid is so spoiled that anything
she wants, her mother gives her.
How do you train a near-teenager to
stay in her own bed?- P. A.
DEAR P.:
Maybe Delia is using her daughter
as an excuse. If she really wanted to
sleep with you, she'd find a way. H.

DEAR HELEN:
We've been married five years
and my wife has added 10 Inches
around the waist, and elsewhere!
She was never long on brains. I know
now that I married her for her looks
and terrific build, but all I've got
presently is a dumb, fat nag.
Could I sue for divorce on grounds
of deceptive packaging? - GYP·
PED
DEAR GYPPED:
In your n~&gt;-fault state, all you need
for divorce is agreement to split.
Could be your wife is as anxious for
this as you are. Why not ask her? -

H.
DEAR HELEN :
Nine months ago I met my gentleman and since then we have spent
most of our time together. I
gradually stopped calling my friends and I gave up my small in·
dependent business so I could be
with him more.

LAnR •. I\
HUSKY ~TIR!I
AND GROWLS
Ai A IVAI"'T
NOISe •• AND
THE SCENT OF
A PROWLINI9
INTI'UDI!R!

Named to the nominating coffi.
mittee were Phyllis Bailey, Naomi
Stohllrt, Helen Simpson, Gretta Simpson.
Barbara Gheen presented tlje
program, "Love is." Scripture was
read from I Cor. 13 by Floren~
Adams and the members sang
"Love Divine, All Love Excelli!lg"
with readings by several members

trlloqutam and their wlaecracklng
aldekicka with Jay Johnaon, AI
earth~. Wlllietyktr and Leater.

()) AU IN THE FAMILY
(J)!D&gt;e FAMILYFEUO
CD STAN HITCHOCK IIIOW
0()) TICTACDOUGH
()) liD
IIIACNEIL-li!HRER
REPORT
CD! NEWS
7:30
BUUSI!Y!
CIJ FAITH THAT UVES
(J) liANFORD AND(J)eCIJ JOKER'S WILD
CD HOLLYWOOD IOUARU
())liD DICK CAVETT SHOW
CD! lilATCH QAIIIE
ID&gt;. FACE THE MUSIC
7:58 (]) CBNUPDATENEWS
8:00 (l)eCDLOIOLoboandPoachoo

Q.U..~

11-l A-

IDIOI.l'T

11N.-F HOOR...
I '5WJ'Jl-D

We'bl,
DID I~

(1).

~

,A:5L.t:e.P ·
B'{

and a discussion on 1 'What is Love?''
Singing of "More Love to Thee"
and prayer by Grella Simpson·
closed the program. Love gift of·
ferings of $2011 were dedicated by
Mrs. Gretta Simpson.
,,

poaeaahulbandandwUetonabthe
blackmailera who are ualng lnfor·
mation learned at a fancy marriage
counaellngandHxtherapycllnlcto
put a bite on their victlma. (80
mina.)
.

ANNIE

-1 W()I'TSE 60tf
L~, A/tilE~ I'll:

UM ~ THAT I'IOI'i'T
~AK.E Tll' TlME
ARR AH6EP FOft A
'ltltJ'KE OO'IE Sffio\
TUTOR FO!t YOO
IY'.Y SltOIITER ,
I'IHILE I'M GOtiE .. ~,_.., "DADOY".'••

HI! YOO'RE AHHIE, ARE!i'T

rM Ott StJe CttOOR6! DR.
ASKED ME TO SEE IF YOU
HEEDED AHYTitiHG !

'iiELL, SHOIILD TltERf BE
AHYTHIH€1, COHTACT ME!

(]) ORAL ROBERTS
ffi MOVIE -(COMEDY) •• "Start·
~ O•er" 111711
W MOYIE ·CWESTERN) ••10
"Br•~ac:loa" Ulll
(J){jl). HAPPY DAYS II' a Jenny

ER-AS FAit
A$ I'll

!SUSPECT WE
C~CERHEO, Ttl'
TEHD TO FRIGHTeN FEEUH'S MUTUAL!
DR. LI~IR!

Picca.l o'a dream come tr~ta when
ehe and the Fonz are accidentally
married.

• ()) CD!

I've always been an active,
productive person and enjoy my independence, but now I've startf4,
feeling anxious and insecure. I fton'~
want to live my life scared and
hiding from the world. What should I
do? - NOT SE'M'UNG FOR THIS
DEAR NOT :
You've concealed more than you
reveal.
If your genUeman friend Insists
that you spend every moment with
him, forsaking friends and business,
then dump him now before you have
a nervous breakdown.
·
But if you've withdrawn from the
world because you yourself think
this is what love demands, start
rethinking fast or you'll surely Jose
him'
After the first year (maybe even
the first month) most relationships
can't survive total togetherness. -

H.

Captioned: U.S.A.)
8:30 rneCD IIIICHEws
(]) 20th C!NTURV GUIDI!UN!S
()) BOB Nl!WHART IIIOW
(J) FACE THI! MUSIC
G ())CD! CBS NEWS
(I)
WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
liD LILIAS; YOGA AND YOU
AICNEWS
8:58 (]) kBNUPDATEN!WS
7:00 (l)e PM MAGAZINE
(])
. GERALD
DER8l1NE
PRESENTS
ffi BL!)CKHEADI 'The Fourth An·
· nual Adult Ventriloquism end
Comedy Show' Marlette Hartley
l'loata theee maatera of wen·

IDle

BORN LOSER

Helen Help Us
Oral cancer Modern
Daughter don't 'low no
ore common Woodsmen
to smokers
make dona t1.ons sleeping round there

What do pipe, cigarette and
cigar smokers all have in com·
mon other than the wie of tobac·
co? The American Cancer
Society wants the public to know
that these people have a higher
risk of developing oral cancers of
the mouth, Ups, tongue and
salivary glands than do persons
who do not smoke at all. The
death rate from mouth cancer is
now rated about four times
higher for cigarette smokers than
for non-smokers.
"Nearly 1,300 Ollioans will
develop oral cancer in 1981
which, if detected early enough,
had a good chance of being
cured," said S. Michael, public
information chainnan of the
Meigs County Unit of the
·American Cancer Society. "More
than half of all oral cancer
patients are alive five years after
trealment," he added, " but
people must be alert to the sign&amp;
and symptoms of oral cancer and
report any abnormalities to their
doctor immediately," Michael
said.
·
The most common sign of ora I
cancer is a sore that does not heal
and bleeds rather easily, Other
signs and symptoms may be a
lwnp or thickening, a whitish pat·
ch, a sore throat, difficulty in
chewing or swallowing food or
the sensation of something being
in the throat. "The American
Cancer Society urges you to see
yuour doctor if any of these signs
persist," Michael stated.
Although the exact cause of
oral cancer is not known, there
are certain contributing factors
to its development. In adltlon to
smoking, poor oral hygiene and
chronic irritation such as caused
by jagged teeth, and ill-fitting
dentures may contribute to the
development of oral cancers. The
combination of smoking and
heavy drinking of alcohol also increases the risk of oral cancers.
The role of the dentist is important in the early detection of
oral cancers. The dentist has the
opportunity through regular
checkups to ·detect abnonnal
tissue chances and is in a good
position to detect oral cancers in
their early stages.
"Early detection by the
general public and the medical
profession· is the first step to successful tretment of oral cancers.
Not smoking and having regular
medical checkups are a person's
responsibilities for his or her own
health," Michael said.
For assistance in giving up
smoking o~ receiving a "Facts on
Oral Cancer" pamphlet, contact
the Meigs County Unit of the
American Cancer Society at the
old Children's Home OQ Mulberty
Hts. or call992·7531.

AND ~UPDI!'NL'&gt;' A ..TONI!·COPtiiP
SNOWMLL PLIE!O FPtOM TliE
SURROUNDING 'TREI!~l •

THAT'S lilY LINI! A

twelve-year old boy who Ia the director and anchorman of hi a own
televlaion new a show, a man who
repaira the cracka in.famed Mt.
Ruahmore,andaprofe~aionalplck·

pocke- are jul!it three of the people
with unuaual occupatlona. (80
mine .)
NOVAiooka at the reality of murder
through the eyea ot people whoae
job it Ia to daal with death, fOfenalc
aclentlata and law enforcement
profenlonala. Alao featured Ia a
dlacuaalon of the motlwea and con·
dltlona which create thla nation' a
climate of murder. (Cioaed·

AILEYOOP
RIDICULOUS! NONE
OF 'fi.IIS .JUNK IS
MORE 'fi.IAN 1'nl
YEARS OLD!

.. .THE'I'R£ CRUDE AND IUFOIIMED... 08V10USLY THE ~I&lt;
OF INCOMPETENT AMATEU~
LAC!&lt; lNG ARl1ST1C FL.AJ R AND
CUL'TURJI.L BII,Cl&lt;GROUND!

Coplloned; U.S.A.) (80 mlno.)
•.
(}!) IAITFOIIWARD
·
8:30 (]) GOOD NEWS
(J)!D&gt;eUVERNEANDSIItRLEY
Laverne haa trouble when ehe bor·
row&amp; Lenny and Squiggy'a lea
cream truck tor a date with her boy·
friend and It gete etolen.

liD BIUTII

8:58 (]) CIN UPDATE NEWS
11:00 (l)eCD 11.1 AND THE IEAIIOront
arreata the lady truckera on a
trumpedupchargeand8Jarrangea
for them to challenge the prlaon
guardaetagameotfootballlnordef
to win their freedom. (60 mlna.)

' GASOUNE ALLEY

"

(l) 700CLUI
()) ID&gt; •
THAI!I!'S COMPANY
Three 'ecompanybutrour'aacrowd
when R•lph Furley movealn with
Jack. Janet and Cindy after tha
roommateecomplalntatothebulld·
ing owner coat Ralph hie job and
apartment.
(Cioaed·Captloned;

Birth announced
RAMSBURG

U.S.A.)

0 ()) CD!

CIS TUESOAY NIGHT
MOVIE 'Thin leo' ) 9ll t Sloro: Kale
Jackson, Gerard Prandargaat.

())liD MYITERYI'Rumpoloolthe
Bailey : The Man of God' Rumpole
detenda en elderly vicar who hal
been caughl red·handed leaviAQ 1
department atorewlth three unpur·
chased aport ahlrta(wlthcollara)ln
hlaahopplngbag. 'Thetroublewtth
vlcare,' remarks Rumpole, 'Ia that
they make the moat terrlb'l e wtt·
neeaee .' (Cioaed· Captloned; U. ·

..WINNIE

S.Alt80mlno.)
11:30 (J)Cllle TOOCLOII!,ORCOfll.

are

FORT Jurydutyandatlahtdeadllna
for hi a cartoon atrip cauae a aleap·
lese night and great confueionwhen
Henry mlatakea written evidence
111 en Invitation tor 1 romentic tryet
with an attractlwe fellow iuror.

10:00 (l)eCD FUMINGOROADAngry

Polly's Pointers

and wlndlctl~eatter dlaco~erlng her
hueband, Field klaalnoLaneBallou
at.the elactlon pany, Conatance
a eta toprevantlanefrom a HeAding
en elegant recepUon··but her plan
backflreaandcauaeaFieldtorHct
bitterly and Sam Curtlato defy her.
@mine.)

Storing wedding dress

Potluck Sunday

By Polly Cnmer
many prefer blue tissue.
Special comepoadeat
Do not pull a tight cleaner's bag
DEAR POLLY- I want to pack down over the dress. If a bag Ls used
A potluck ham and chicken wnner
my daughter's wedding gown ao that it must be loose and always wrap in
with all the tirrnmings was held Sun·
light and dirt will
plastic like cleaner's bags not In
day at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
not get to it. The
plastic wrap. The box must be com-·
Russell Roush, Racine, in honor of . cleaners charge
pletely sealed - every corner l•
their three children, Cindy, David
so much for this
Never store in a damp basement or
and Edward Roush, who were
service so I wontoo-hot attic. Some people suggest
celebrating birthdays,
der i( ynu could
opening such a box once every year
Gifts', inoney and cards were
tell me' how to do
or so and then Jetting the dress hang;
received by each. A cake was
this. I read
to air for a day and when it is '
somewhere that
presented to them by their rriother,
repacked the creases will be in dlf·,
pe&lt;iple do do this
Cramer
Bernice Roush, and Bessie Parsons
ferent places. Hope these
themselves but I cannot remember suggestions will be of some help to
decorated with white icing with
where or how. I would appreciate you and others with the same.
"Happy Birthday Cindy, David and
such
help.- BETIE
problem.-POLLY
..
Edward" written ln green, circled
DEAR
BETIE - A very ex·
DEAR POLLY - The following:
with green leaves and red roses,
which was served with ice cream pensive dress merits the cost that Pointer came from a lady who is in.
professionalll charge for this ser· chrge of old costumes and clothes.,
during the afternoon.
vice.
The fabrlc will have something When storing clothes, especially
Those attending were Mr. and
to do with Ita lasting quallties white ones, wrap in a white, unMrs. Russell Roush, Cindy, David
some age better than others. ,starched sheet or acid free tissue
and Edward Roush, Mr. and Mrs.
Perhaps the ship where the dress
Dorsa Parsons, Mr. and Mrs. Her· was purchased will give you a big paper. Store clothes in a drawer or
bert Roush, Mr. and Mrs. Roger thick cardboard box, such as dreSBes cardboard box and keep away from
Roush and children Kimberly and are shaped in to them, so It wlll not wOOd, or wood stains that might
cause yellowing. Take out once a
Jennifer, Mr. and Mrs. Dana Lewis be crowded when packed. The dress year and hang and air for one day,
and Isaac Lewis or Clifton.
must be perfectly clean so do check When re-wrapping make new folds
Other~ attending were Mr. and
for spots and stains. Loosely fold so there will not be pennanent
Mrs. Ronald Russell and children, tissue paper and put in the sleeves creases. They can be put in phistic
Mandy and Michael, Mr. and Mrs. and between the front and back of bags before storlng in a box but not
Eddie Hupp and son, Jeremy.
the dress so as to have as few before wrapping in sheet or acid free
creases and folds as J)OISible and tissue paper.- JANE

ffi MOVIE -(COMEDY) •••

"Up 1ft

Smoke" 1878

BARNEY

JOGHAID!J

10:28
10:30

DID 'K&gt;U WRITE
. THAT?

10:51
11:00

11:28
11:30

byHonrtAmoldonciBobLH

UOICf.- thou fo&lt;lr Jumbles,
one 1- to each oqua,., to fO&lt;m
fo&lt;lr ordinary wonlo.

I KLANF
I r)

IBORBEJ
t
II ! I J
IAPTECK±
I I r ]

(J) Til!_EVENING NEWS
(J)!D&gt;e HARTTOHAII'T
C1J SOUNDSTAGE 'ABBA In Con·
cart' (Cioaed·Captloned; U.S.A.)
l80mlno.)
liD NEWS
(I) CBNUPDATENEWS
(])FAITH 20
(Ill TWILIGHTZOIIE
(]) CINUPDATENI!WI
(l) e (J) CD G ()) ®&gt; ID&gt;
NIWS
(]) TODAY IN BIBLE PROPHECY
(J) NIGHT GALLERY
,
()) IIORECAMI! AND WISE
(]) CBNUI'DATENEWS
( l ) . CD THE TONIGHT 8110W

e

•

i't

HOW TO ~ENEW
'r'OUFI: AC:QUAiNTAIIIC.E

· WITH A"-1 OLD

.

FL.AME.

Now arrange the clrcted letters to
fqrm the surprise answer, as sug·
gesled by the above cartoon.

r I I I XI I I ) IT

Print answer 111118:

(Answers tomorrow)

YeSielday's l Jumbles : OCCUR MOGUL Fl,IMSY EXHORT
·
Answer : What underground travelers are sometlmt;~s
called-ROOTS
'
Jumble Book No. 18, contllnlng 110 puzzln, Ia •~•llabM lor 11.75 postplkl
lrom Jumble, do thla niWiplper; Box 34, Norwood, N.J. 07848. IACiucle yow
nam., 111:kWJu. .zip code •00 m~~ke ct.ckl peo)'llb6e to N.wep~perboaka.

BRIDGE

'

I

Adventurous bidding pays
NORTH

2·17 ·81

.Q984
.K982

tA

.AK96
WEST

EAST

• J 10 ~ 3

.K76

.J76

•10 I
t K Q9 2

t10 ~ 43

.JIJ
SOUTH

.10 8 7

.AQ~J

• J 8 76
·Q~2

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South

,.

w..t
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

l,..

North

East

South

3+

Pass

3 NT

Pass
Pass

a•

•

enough for Slavenhorg to bid .:
the slam which was not a very ; ·
good one, although almost ,
unbeatable with clubs break· •
ing 3·3 and other suits behav·
ing fairly well.
Kreyns won the diamond ;
lead with dummy's ace and ·
played ace , and deuce of ,
spades. West. played the 10
and Kreyns went up with the
queen to lose East's king. A
diamond came back and was ·

.A!

Pass

Opening Jead :•K

()) NOVA 'The Sclance ol Murder'

•

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Ramsburg,
Pomeroy, are aMouncing the blrth
of their second child, a son, Ryan
Ray, born on Feb. 10, at the Holzer
Medical Center. The infant weighed
six pounds 13 ounces and was 20 in·
ches in length.
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Homer Hysell, Pomeroy,
and paternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Harold Ramsburg, Mid·
dleport. Great-grandparents
Ethel Mace, Charleston, W, Va. and
Cynthia Cardwell, Vinton.
Mr. and Mrs. Ramsburg are also
the parents of a daughter, Melissl!,
age 16 months.

~ ~ ~~·

I•:"*'.,.__,_,
K ) _.,... . CJ
.

!V!NING

O[&lt;AV•• THe MID· WATCH IS
'(OURS. I!A!IV! ,., THINK '(C)U
f'IE!L UP TO IT AI'TIR THAT'
. ,CLOUT ON THI! HEAD.

~THAT SCRAIIIILED WORD GAME

DIADE '

,!1.17, 1881

,,

l}fJ!)N} fi)i)

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag
Here is another Kreyns-Sla·
venhorg hand . As you can see
from the bidding, they open
lour·card majors. Kreyns
made quite a bid when he
went past game and that was

ruffed. Then came two rounds
of trumps ending in·the South
hand, a diamond ruff in dum·
my and a spade ruff in his
hand, followed by the play of
the last trump.
At this point dummy held
four clubs and a spade. West's
last five cards were the' high
diamond, the high spade and
three clubs. If he had held
four clubs originally, he would
have already been squeezed
out of club protection. As It
was, he just came down to two
clubs.
•
The last spade went from
dummy. Now if East held four
clubs and the high diamond,
he would have been squeezed.
or course, the clubs were 3·
3 all the time and everyone
else made the slam, although
quite a few pairs had failed to
bid it.
jNEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)

~~,.~.,,
by THOMAS JOSEPH
DOWN

ACROSS

1 Avatar

I Navarro

of Vishnu
zFrom the begin·
5 Moroccan
nlng (Lat.)
city
3 School
10 DweWng
subject
IZ Habituate
4 Fruit drink
13 Prototype 5 Make
14 Bishop's cap payment
15 Where (It.) I Black cuckoo
IS Here,
7 Breakfast
23 Not yours
staples .
25 M.G.M .
in France
18 Make Cluny 8 Placement
fUm great
19 And not
in order
28 - Blake
20 Gemstone 9 Seesaw
27 Actress,
2! Wool fiber II Draw forth
Meryl 24 Sandarac 17 "Silent-"
28 Spaniard's
tree
%1 Woman's name gold

30 Ara~
chieftain
32 Papal vell
33 Gennan river
38 Cassius '(historian)
40 Spanish
, queen

25Close
Z1 U.S.S.R. lake
%7 Gather
in folds
Arab
sultanate

Z9Tile
Actor,
Tony-

Coiffure
gadget
My (Fr. )
Before
Have a caus·
tic effect
French
painter

Unearthly
Point of view
RichardSonof Jacob

DAILY ·CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
AXYDLBA"'XR

II

LONGFELL~W

.

One letter oimply atands lor another. In thio sample A 11
used for lhe three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letlera,
apostrophes, the length and !ormation ol the wordo are all
hints. Each day the code letters are dlll'erent.

CIIYPTOQUOTES

Gueet: Dollv Parton. (80 mine.)

(]) ROM BAGLEY SHOW
~MOVIE -(SUSPENSE)" "Tom

VEE

TSYHRK

XN

HJD

RLJADS;

C&amp;Mtatn" 1118
12:00 ()) ID&gt;. TUESOAY MOYI! 0'
ffi MOVII! -(COMEDY)"' "How
To Beat The HtgiiCootOIU¥1f111"
11180
(J)
MOVIE
•(BIOGRAPHICAL•DRAIIA) ••
"Too Much Too SOon" 1811
()) ID&gt; •
ABC NeWS
NIGIITLINE
0 ()) Clll LAT! MOVI! 'LOU
GRANT : Mob' Sloro: Ed Aoner,

"

, rEANUTS
~

~E~ Bl6 BROHIER, I'M

MAKING OUR LLINCHES ...
WHAT KIND OF SANDWICH
WOOLD

..''

LIKE?

WHAT I'D REALL'i LIKE, OF
COURSE, IF VOU DON'T MIND.
WOULD BE ROAST BEEF W!Tf.l
LETTUCE AHD MAVONNA15E ..
MA'(f'.E A LITTLE MUSTARD...

PEANUT BUTTER

IT 15

~

I

RobertWalden .LouandRoaalthlnk
•hey hiVe a tumbled upon a blgatory
wl'len they aea anold·tlma mobeter
at a poah resort , but they hawa 1
hard time putting II together.

(Repeoi)'BIGI.10' t973Storo:Ber·
nle Caeey, Bo Sveneon.

YN

VEE

GJIKGKHD

XN

HJD

QJLAYLO . - KEEKH
REYNRJA
Yesterday'sCryploquote: WHEN A LEARNED MAN ERRS HE
MAKEs A LEARNED ERROR.-ARAB PROVERB

LOAN TO INDIA
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Government of India
has received a loan c( $35 million from the International Development Association.
The money will be used to construct some 350 miles
c( all-weather roads in the Indian state of Bihar. 'nle
project will help local farmers to get their produce to
the market and it Ls expected to benefit some 2 million
people.

�Pag~--oo-The

Daily Sentinel

Call to prayer,
self-denial service part
of Chester UMW fa.re
Mrs. Bertha Smith and Mrs. Betty
Roush assisted by Mrs. Kathryn
Windon presented the call to prayer

GRAPH
februry 11, ...
You are llltdy to be IIIISleo' lhll coming
year with pr&lt;&gt;je&lt;:U you'vo alreOdy .torlod to
ci!v@lop, rather than thole that a:o off on new
........... SeeWnplhr&lt;lu&amp;hlO«mppett....
AQUARIUS (Ju. a-F&amp; ltl Before iJn.
pu.lsively cHvinc into ~ ~ype of
v~
lure loday,lnvtolipll evtQthlng ully. You
lllll be Roinol elf the diving boanl at the
allallow end tt the pool. Find out more tt
whit liM abNd tor you in the year follow1Dg
)'OIIr birlhday by oendlntl lor yOOII' copy ol
AM&gt;&lt;lraph. Mall 11 for eoch 1o AsiJ-o.
Graph. Box 4M, Radio City Stillion, N. V.
10018. Be sure to spectfy birth date.
PISCES IF.._ ·· - •1 MaJdng iJn.
portant dect.,lona under prea:n1.re is
I001I!thintl )'tll should avoid todily . Don't be
pulhed into a comer where you have to come
up withaquJcll: "yes'' or ''no."
ARm! (Ilardi U·April It) Unl.,. you
mUntain a J'1!111101l1bly U,hlschedule today,
you're Ukely to let manen overlap and
caue yoaraelfrunnoceuary fnl.strltiona. Be

ners

joint

Money management offered

SAGmARJUS -,N... - · ztl 1lmlnll
iJ very importaDt today. You. mU.st be careful
not to plllh loo hanl when you obouldn'~ or
fail to plllh hanl"""''lh when you obould.
CAPRICORN (Dec! • .Z:Wu. II) For your
own peace Of mind 11 may be wiae today to
•void penooa who llw•ya challenge your
idf!as or opinions. Det.t.ea coWd eully but
up.

Mr. and Mrs. Terry Knight and
son, Steve, of Caledonia were
recent weekend visitors of his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Chester
Knight, Legion Terrace. While
here the birthdays of Mrs. Terry
Knight 8Jlll Chester Knight were
observed with a family dinner
party. Mr. and Mrs. BUI Matlack
joined the Knights. Mr. and Mrs.
Dick Knight and family rl. Antioch, Ill. telephoned their
congratulations.

plans activities

Builders meet

Public Notice

PUBLIC HEARING
NOTICE

at the Meigs County Court

Courtroom, Court House,
Pomeroy, Ohio for the pur·

Re : Re·evaluatlon of AOR ·
pose of exi!lmlnlng the con·
TA Pomeroy Route.
Notice is hereby given tinuance of Meigs County
that a public hearing has as part of a five· county COf'1 ·
participating
been set for Thursday~ sortium

March 19, 1981 at7:00 p.m. under Section 18 of the Sur·

WANT AD INFORMATION

... .

or Write Daily Sentinel Clessifled Dept.
111 Court St. , Pomerov, 0 ., 45769

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

Health Review

Body has weapons to fight germs
materials from entering the lungs.
Since active viruses work within
If, however, the virus does not get the patient's own cells ills difficult
a foothold In some of the body's to selectively kill the virus without
cells, the inflammatory responae Is also damaging the host cells. This
not the only weapon the body has problem bas not yet been overcome
left. Special protelno called an- and there Is currently no specific
tibodies and/or special white blood medication available which wiU
cells called lymphocytes are speed recovery from this aliment.
broilgbt to the battlefront. These Hopefully, with continued research,
react with the virus - In what iS a. simple and inexpensive preverlcalled the body's inunune response tative meana will be found to deal
- to neutralize and to prepare it for with the conunon cold.
elimination from the body. After the
(Editor's note: Although Dr. ..
Invader has been properly dealt with stockmal cannot respond personally
end the symptoms have subsided, to !etten from readers, he will anspecial "memory" celiB remain. swer questions of general interest in
These celiB are capeble of reacting the "Family Medicine" colwnn. If
with the specific virus In a more you have a medi&lt;!al question which
rapid manner If ilnd when the person you feel would be of interest to other
Is again exposed to the same virus.
readers, please write to: Dr. Robert
The "memory" response Is what Is G. Stoclunal, College of Osteopathic
generally considered the inunune or Medicine, Ohio University, Athens,
protective response.
Ohio 45701 .)
QUESTION : Since people
regularly get over colds, why can't
TO MEET THURSDAY
doctors find a cure for the common
RACINE
- A meeting of parents
cold?
of
the
eighth
grade students inANSWER: Generally speaking it
terested
In
money-meklng
proJects
is possible to produce inununlty to
has
l}een
set for
for
the
annual
trip,
viruses through the uae of vaccines.
ThursdaY
night
at
7
p.m.
at
the
Unfortunately there are at present
Southern
Junior
High
School.
about 100 different lmown varieties
(serotypes) of common cold viruses Questions concerning. the meeting
may be directed to Unda Holter, 94~
(rhinovlruses). An effective vaccine
would have to Include all of theee 23211 or J:o Ann Cripe, 94&amp;.2376.
serotypes, since It is known that Immunity against one type does not
protect againat the 99 other
BOYD RECUPERATING
varieties. Thls complexity creates a
David Boys is recovering from
technical problem In vaccine back surgery at St. Mary's Hospital
production, 88 well as an 1ncreaae In in Huntington, W. Va . Cards may be
sentto Room 323 W.
cost that 18 presently prohibitive.

l

eANNOUNCEMENTS

eRENTALS

1- c.,.a ot T"•""'
J- ln Memort•m
J- Annovnctmonb
4- Gi.-eaw•y
1- HOjllp'fAdl
l-l.ost •nd Found
r-Y• rel Salt
t-Publlc Solo
&amp; Auction
9- WantedtoBuM

41-HOUut for Ill ant
U- Me..lt Homtt
tor lent

U-FIMI'III
46---S!Nct for ltni

.u - w.ntftl to ....,
4f-lttulltffttnt for lllottt

eMERCHANDISE

eEMPLOY ENT
SERVICES

,, _ Htl' wanted

11 - HOIIttMidOoodl
n - ca, rv,!fHI• ••u111mtnt
U--Antl.vtl

12---lltu•tHI WafltfHI

M-Mitc:. Mtr,IMinOIIO

1)- lntvranco
111---IUiinon Tr•lnlnt
11-Sctloolslnttruction
Rodlo, T~
It a I!AIIl••lr
1._W8fltiNII TO 00

,., ....

11-luildlrlf su,uos
,._~.

e FARM SUPPLIES
I LIVESTOCK

.,U- ,,,
.....,,,,,,.,.,
WaftfW It l•'f

e FINANCIAL

, - O,.orh.lnlty
IIWtlntu

11- Trud•ltof'
U - I.IVHMCtl

hie

64--Hey a Ortll'l
n - SHCI&amp; '•rtiiiJIIf'

'U- Monov to l.o.n
n - Proftsslon•l
l&lt;triJICOI

eTRANSPOIIITATION

,,_Aut.. ,., lilt

eREAL ESTATE

,1- VInll 4 W.O.

11- H.mtt tor lalot
11- ""-lti .. -Hame•
terhlo
U- IJ•rms tor S.IO
14- a~o~lil'lnl luUdlnts
U- Loh 1 Acr••t•
t:stat• Wal'lteo
JJ-tt .. non

,._ Met•cyd"

,,_

AUJOI'Ir11

1

1 AccniOI'Itt
P7- AutoAoNir

J6-••••

.SERVICES
••- Htmt tmjllrt¥tlfttfttt
1:1---Jttum~,.. 1 I •c•vatlnt

Wont-Ad Ad•erllslnv
Dtodllnls

11-l~• ·ntint

M-lltCtrictl

&amp;llltfrl..,... l.,.

l;lO Jt.M. Dlll'f
12 Noon llfllrUY
torMond•v

IS-0Mtr81141UIIItt
M-M.H. 1.,.1,

Retes and Other lnformet!on
lJWOnlllrUnftr
ICilY
2doys
Jell VI
U8VI

2.11,

CtMlrtt

I.U

'·"
1.21

••
minimum 11wlt4til • conll .,, weN,., ..,.,
1.71

llch word ovor tht
Ad1 runnint DIIMr ftl8n CetlltcUIIIIIe tlll'l

,.,..

......

cua

WIIIN

CNt... at rtM 1..y

.

In mtmorv . C•rtl ef ·, "'"II" eM Oltltulr\' : 1 cottll ,., ..,.,.., U...
"11"1""'"'· C"" l~t ••w•flct.
MHUe Homl 18ilt lnd Y.utl Ulll IU ocu,tM an1y wltfl c•s• wl•
Md•r. 1J Cefll Cl'll'fl fOf' ldl UrryUit aoc Nt~mk, I" C•r• If T...
lll'ltiAtl ,

~

WIN

:.::::

CARPOOU
SERVICES"

10 lb. Chocolate

'ANN'S CAKE
_DE(:ORAnNG
· _SUP~JIES

-

-Adllalls lnd
.ram...llftl
-Rooflftl and tulter

.

trHJ-1114
011.

THE
KOUNTRY·
KWB

·-·

oM.. W•IWTIIMII

Wanted
For Sale
Announcem.ent

17 . _ _ _ _ _ __

16. _ _ _ _ __
19. _ _ _ _ _ __
20. _ _ _ _ _ __

------

'•

·:
,•

MEETSWEDNESDAY
The Syracuse Third Wednesday :.
. Homemakers Club will meet Wed- •·
nesday at 10 a.m. at the Syracuse
Munldpal Building. Potluck lunch "
will be served at noon.

.

coins, r ings, jewelry, etc ..

Contact Ed Bur~ett Barber
Shop. Middleport.

JoiA.l.

RACINE GUN SHOOT,
Gun Club, every
Friday night starling at
7:30 p.m. Factory choke

face Transportation Act of

as a young business person
and earn good money plus
some greet gifts as a Sen·
tine I route carrier. Phone
us r ight away and get on

Too

valuable to neglect, expert
tuning &amp; and repair. Lane
Daniels, 742·2951 or 9'12·

21182.

Recine

Fire
s~nsors
a

1978 and the Ohio Depart· Department
ments of Transportation
gun a. r fie match
Ohio Mo.. Transportation shot
every
. night 6:30 p.m .
Grant Program. As a part at theirSal
bUilding In Bashon.
of this grant program
Factory
12 guage
transportation ser'ilce IS shot guns choke
only.
Open
sights
provided by the Ap· 22 rUle.
palechlan Ohio Regional
Transit Assoc iation IAOR·
TA) from Pomeroy to Tax service, federal. stat~
Athens (round lrlp) twice &amp; quarterly taxes done b '
daUy Monday through Frl· appointment. See Wanda
Eblin, 41000 Laurel Cliff
day .
At the hearing the City of Road, Pomeroy, Ohio
Athens will afford the op· 45769. 9'/2-2272.
portonlty for Interested
persons or agencies to be .MEIGS MUSEUM open by
heard with respect to the appointment January -Mar· ,..
social. environmental and ch. 9'12·2264, 9'12·2802, 9'12·
economic aspects.
23t&gt;O or 992·2639. Histories
Deborah Roach for sale Pomeroy ·
Executive Director, Middleport Libraries.
L
AORTA
(2) 17,24
.
NOW DOING hauling,
moving jobs, pa inting
houses Inside or out.
Ba$em~nt , attic cleaning,
2
tnMtmorlom
also carpet cleaning, yard
IN MEMORY of Florene work, etc. Phone 992·J8,19,
Finnicum who passed A!lk for Velma and leave
away two vears ago, name and number and we
February 15, 1979.
will return the call. Free
Your gentle face and estimates In Meigs County
patient smile,
area.
With sadness we recall.
You had • kindly word for LOCKSMITH
Serv ice,
each,
Master
Keylna,
com·
And died beioved by all.
Bonded. Cell :
The voice Is mute and blnations,
New Haven, w. Va. (:104)
stilled thellearl,
Thallovtd us well end true. 882·2079.
Ah, bitter was the trail to
part,
From one so good as you.
You are nat forgotten loved
Wanltd to Bu~
one,
Wanted to Buy : class rings,
Nor will you ever be.
As long as life and memory · wedding bands, anything
stamped, lOK, UK , or !81(
last,
gold. Silver coins, pocket
We will remember thee .
we miss vou now. our hear- watches. Call Joe Clark at
992·2054 at Clark' s JeWelry
ts an~ sore,
As lime goes by we miss Store, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
you more,
Your loving smile, your

gentle Ieee.
No one can fill your vacant
place.
Sadly missed bY family .

Announcem1111t1
Put a cold nose In your life.
Cali !he Meigs County
Humene Soc Iely at "2·
'2110.

Racine. Phone 949•2706.
ATTRACTIVE home on

two and one·half acres.
Priv-ate setting on St. Rt. 7
by Memory Gardens. Ter·

lhe eligibility list at 9'12·
21S6or 9'12·2157 .

Volunteer

..

...

.-

USED FURNITURE. Gold
a. Sliver, class rings, pockel

watches, chains, diamonds
&amp; 10 .on. Copper brass end

bal!erles. antique Items• ..
also do appraisals, com·
plete auctioneer · service . .,

Over lO veers experience in ·
business. Will buy com·
plelt estates. Osby Marlin
General Store. Middleport,
Oh. 9'12-6370.

SALE : Seven room

double Insulated ranch
styl'e hom e, total electric
wood burner in famuY
room, gas available. 3
bedrooms,
H':t baths ,
reasonably priced on thee
level acres one mile from

11
Help Wonted
GET IIALsUABLE training

guns only .

PIANO .

Mobile Homes
tor Sole
1973 Crown Haven, 14 x ciS,
lllree bedlooms, new car·
pel. 1971 Cameron, 14 x 64,
two bedrooms. new carpet.
1972 Champion, 12 x 60, two
bedrooms, new carpel. 1976

Village Manor Apartments
at992·7787.
HALF of a

double. 2

bedroom completely fur·

1)1S. 992·7741.

WAN TE D: People to sell
Avon . 742'2354 or 742·2755.

hom~

for

rent,

utilities

paid . Johl] Sheets, 3'12
miles south of MlddloP?rl
on Rt . 7.

,._or
'

11-Good HotJMIInt WIIMr

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

J-25" G.l TV '
1-lt eu. H. H'etitelftf

All et ltll laOVI IMfrll ifl til•
celltnt cMdltiolt. All art ,lcti
te Hll lmlllltdlattty . ... us ,..

......

26116.

NURSING, RN , LPN ,
simil ar medical train ing,
to complete Paramed ica l

Newly constructed one
bedroom house. Needs

paint

Exa minations for the Insurance companies In

Pomeroy .

Arrange

Part

own

E•·
ap ·

plication and complete In ·

formation malt one page
resume to LlfeData, 200 E.
Sunshine, Springfield, Mo .

and women nave separate

baths, private rooms and

available .

Prices to 111 Income. 9'12·
6022.

home or residence. 992·

51511.

•

Will do paneling, ceiling, .
floor tile, plumbing. Free ·
Hllmaln. Fred Miller at
9'12-11331.

remove

lrom

site.

windows,

large foyer,

bu_lll·ln

china

ca binet are some of the
outstanding features of

EaN n dlnlng.-:--room, _men

11
wanltd to Do
Furnace repairs, electrical
WOrk, plumbing, mobile

small

~nd

board, room and laundry .

13
Insurance
IN ·
AUTOMOBILE
SURANCE been ca n·
ce lled? Lost your
operator's license? Phone 992·2!.13.

Has

$9,000.00.
FRENCH DOORS, bay

I2 SIIUIIions Wonled
HAVE VACANCY for
el derly persons who need

TREE TRIMMING and
removal . 949·212'1 or 992 ·
6040.

uti lities.

older home to fix up or

6580.4 ,

sem l· private#

and

wlfh large garage .
$19,000.00.
NEW LISTING - Ap·
prox. 50'x!OO' lot in Mid·
dleporl , wllh all

lime .

schedule .

Tra ining provided.
cell en! pay . For

Inside

carpeting. 1'12 acre lot

1

this H bedroom home
In town. want to see?
$33,000.00. YOUR OWN FRUIT
ORCHARD In !he back
yard . Several trees. 4
bedrooms In this 7 room
house on Rl. 124. 2 cor
garage. 520,500.00.
REDUCED! SOUTH ·
ERN DISTRICT Almosl 1h ilcre lot with 4
bedroom house. Bath,
utility . Large carport!
$16,000.00.
APPROX. 5 ACRES OF
VACANT LANDI Utll·
ltles
available .
$10,000.00.
REALTOR
Henry E. Clolond, Jr,
HH!fl
ASSOCIATES
Dollie I Rover Turner
HNn2
Jeon Tru11ell 94,·2660
OFFICE HH259

:&amp;·m.:

European

t

Phone
1-( 614 J:992-:1325

World Book EncvciOptcllas
- Limited number, 1910
edllton sets. Save $100.00.
$15.00 per month. Ellzobelh
COffman. 949-2592.
ONE HORSil trailer and
two horses ; one paint more
and one roglstertd Ap.
paloosa. ~ - 5449.

fHt A6u B...•fll

NEW - 2 bedrooms,
both, loll, knotty pine
kitchen, elec. baseboard
heat and level lot on !he

Go out inlo the sprini sunshine
in this wondeoluljacket.
The warm hua o ,this IKitet is
. welcome anytime. Ctocllet of
river .
LARGE- 1620 sq. fl. of · synthetic worsted. It has slim·
min&amp; ..rtie~l lines, show! collor
floor space. 8 rooms, ~
witto !CIIIops. Potl!rn 7368:
bedrooms, 2 full baths,
Sires 38-40; 42-44 included.
gas furnace with wood
burner, birch kitchen,
$2.00 !01 each pattern. Add 501
full
basement,
eiiCh ))litton f01 liost-class air·
carpeting, 2 porches and
mail snd handlina. Sttlci 11:
dbl. g~~rage.
Mlct.....3&lt;17
FIREPLACE AND
tlttdltcrlftllepl
DEN - Very nice 2
bedroom home with
The Deily Sentinel
perma ·stone
siding,
Furnace, bath, new kit·
loa 11.1, 01' Clllllu Sta., lllw
c lll!n. detached glf!'age
Ylft, If 10111 Prilll liN,
and 31ots·.
...,.., Zip, Pllllnl IMIIIIItl.
TRAILER LOT - Dn
Catch i&gt;n to the crsft boom! Send
, Rt. 124 near coal mine .
foo ouo N£W 1981 N££0L£CRAFT
Drilled well, septic
CATALOG. Over 111 desi1ns, 3
tank, eleclrlc and 1.6&lt;1
flee patterns inside. SI.OO
acres of nearly level
AU.
tfWT IIOOIIS. .$1.1S tiCII
land. Only S6,500.
134-14 Qotldo llldil• Qttllll
GARAGE APT. - Nice·
IU.f..lon ...... Qttlltin1
ly carpeted 2 bedrooms,
IJZ.CIMift Orialull
balh, gas furance, dbl.
131-Md I llicfl QttYII
· garage, all In good
IJO.Swtltlr,._Sial.li-S&amp;
shape. Close to stores,
lzt.Qoolcl 'n' (ISJ Trwlln
school and pool. Onl~
121-(...,. Plltbott Qttllll
$1,,000,
127-AIIfiiM ••• Dlllill
U2 ACRES - Near
tOIYn on Rt. 7. Four
15TMfiJ Cllflr F1owsn
125-PIIIi Qttllll
.
room frame home with
cistern watu, 2
UJ.PIIilw~
bedrooms, half bath and
IIU..Chtt witll
front porch for )us!
11 Hill M tl IM.sptint
512,000.
114-Callplttl AllfiiM
NEW LISTING - 14
112-Prlll . . .
acres ncar Forked Run
Ill-lily M II Hlirpltt Croclttl
Lake. · Minerals and
1141·11 Jllfr ....
wildlife. 512,000. ·
1111-flllllltl ltlac.107·1llllllll Stwill
106-flllllotl Fllllilll
1/ousinq
104-llllllotl ....,
103-15 ()ollll fer Todlr
H t !iJllctr 1.1r ter-.;

s.-

&amp;

2·15·1mo.

SEASONED

REESE ;. ,

PWMBING
AND
IIAnNG
__

TRENQtiNG
SERVICE
Wolt,...Sewor-Ettelrlc
Ols Llne-DIIchn
wotor Line Hook·ups
StPilcTinks
County Certified
Rouoh Lant
cMshlre,Oh.
Ph.

'2

Park S t '
Middleport, Oh.
Ph. 992-6263
a tl
..ny me
2·)·1 mO: 1,

,.,_7560

INSULATION
VInyl&amp;'
Aluminum Siding
elnsulation

. • Slor m Doors

· • Storm Window s
• Replacement

Windows
Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph. 992·2772
1·28·1

.
" I

"I

HARVEST gold stove lnd
refrlgeretor. 992·51!8.
-:::==;;::;,:::;:::::;::::::;==
5i
Pels 11r s 11o
A I( C R E G I ST E R E D
cocker spaniel puppin.
Born 1-5·81, 1100.00 Include
worming
end first shots.
992 _7543 _
PUT a cold nose In vour
future. Cell the Meigs
County Humane Society ol

-~

"

.

OONSTRUCTION
• New Homes - ex-

tensive remodeling
• E lectrica I work
• Roofing work
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583
1·22 1 mo.

·-.

ALL STEEL

...,.......

'
Farm .Buildings

I'ADAI'

'EXCAVAnNG

. ~E

-Auto end Truck
Repair
- Trensmlssion
lllepalr
Hrs.: Mon.-Fr1.
9A.M.-5:H P.M.

e ·Dozers
• Backhoes
Hourly Cvntract
L1rge or
smllljobs
'
Ph. 992•2471
11-20·3 mo. pd.

992·5682
10·7-lfc

SMALL

Utility Buildings
• BUilD
P&amp;S
INGS
RI.LB~H

Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614-843-2591
6·15_-tfc

J~

·

Til-"OUNTY

ENTERPRISES i

'•

BOOKKEEPING SERVICE ·.
...
.'

•PARTNERSHIPS
•CORPORATIONS

.•

...
.'

Payrolls, profit and loss state(l'lents, all
ftderal and state forms.

H&amp;R BLOCK OFFICE LOCATION
All IYtlll Of reet werR,

611

E. Meln

Pomeorv, Oh.

...;

·•

992-3795

new ar ,.pair 1Uttt,S 1

ond -nspouts, IUiter
c!aonlftl •net pelnllnl.
All work IUirontttd.
P:rtt Esllmolts
Roasonoblt Pr!cts
Clli HOWird
f&lt;lfo2U2

f4f.2!60

.

1971 PLYMOUTH Rood
Runner, 318, air con·
dltlonlng, power steering.
In excellent condition. Also
1964 Dodge Polua, 311.
Phone 949·2171.

..
:
' --

r,~~=::;::::===~~=======-~t;:::::::;:::~§~~

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

Aulol for Silt
1975 BUICK
Limited,
loaded, new !Ires, no rust in
A·l condition. 992·3288.

.'

Sizes from 4x6 to 12,;40

•FMMS

71

..

SIIeS
"From 30x30"

•BUSINESSES

n
Wonted to lu~
CHIP WOOD. Poln mox;
diameter 10" on !orgest
end. S12 p·er ton. Bundled
slab. $10 per lOri. Dtllverod
to Ohio Pallet Co., Rl. 2,
Pomeroy 9'/2·:MI9.

. . . . ..

ROUSH

FIR!WOOO~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;:;~~~~~======~~~~
r PUWNS
ROG.E· R HYSEU.'S".

15020:..
- ... Ie. S30.00. Phone 992·

GOOD FARMALL
With SIX
plow, 4 fool
wheel tralle~.
Pagevllle, l1t&gt;O.UII.
6716.

7368

.

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·''
FireWOOd, $35.00 a truck
load, $110.00 1 cord. All her·
dWOOd, spill, &amp; delivtrtd.
143·431 or 843·473&lt;1.

5122.

iRGILB.
. 216 E. Second S!r"t

C1rs

TrUCkS.

Form lq~lpment
PICKif\IG up 1 plano In
your area . Take over
. payments. Coli credit
manager collocl ·es 1-592·

H t!adqu; 1rte r:;

POMEROY,O •
992-2259
NEW LISTING
CLOSE IN - off bypass.

ss.oo

'

Ho11sJi1g

LADY or glrllo live ln. '1'12·

Btdford Township
1nd
Flatwoods Area
Per Month
WHkly Pickup

__
- ,....
. .... .

Gener11

.. ;
&gt;J

lecly Repelr • lnsuronce
wortc - ·Collision Rtp.air.
..,., Pllfttlnt. body
work, plnstrlplnv I
vinyl lops.
P:rtt Estlm•tos
Coli 992-3421
Klntsbury Rd., 2 mi.
wnl Co. Rd. II.
I'om troy ,Oh. 45169
Domntlc, Jo)Hneso I

(4111S Lim !I Ptr WHit)
PHON I ttt-1102
orHH.WJ
2·13·1 mo:

. ..

NI; W HAVEN United
Methodist Church Is
seeki ng parl·tlme Director
of Music. Conla~l Or.
James Loc~harl (3041 882·
3136 or Reverend John
Campbell at (lOoi) 882·2624.

TRASH HAULING

~-

Real Estate

- I

HART'S
.

.

.1-Gtod Tralltr a,..,.w.. WMd
aurMr Sttvt with IHow.r
1- GNdhll•ntl

THREE
BEDROOM
mobilehome on Story Run
Road . 367·7811 .
1975 Two ('ledroom mobile
home . Partially furnished
located In the country
Mobile Home Park. $150.00
per month. 247·3942.

..

Hz-7544

992·,2110.
Three type,
AIISk!an
Spitz, Doberman
St.
Bernard type, Labrador
type, American Foxhound,
Chesapeake
Bay
·Retriever, Collie type, Ben·
11 type end terrier type.

TWO BEDROOM mobile

ltlnlshln_L

down
Call for Information

ters assistance available

for senior citizens. Contact

Ctoo)lat.

~~

Unfurnished one bedroom
apartment for rent, Ren ~

I

Racine

YOUR

32

I!IIPAIIt

Ill ...... LlntilliMIP, W"chlllllntt

"'on bo!once.
convtntlonll Loans-

Apertment
for Rent
3 AND 4 RM furnished apts. Phone992·5434.

nlshed. Available lsi of
month; 992·2749.
cameron, 12 • 60, two
bedroomo, 111 electric. 1971
27.========
Skyline, 12sx 'L two Four room apartment for
1 s.
6.
28.
I 729. _ _ _ _ __
bedrooms, bath &amp; 113, new rent. 9'12·5908.
carpel. 1970 PMC,
I 8.
30. _ _ _ _ __
12 • 110. two bedrooms, new 2 BEDROOM apartment n
I 9.
3t. _ _ _ _ __
carpet. 8 x .s Sales, Inc •• Middleport. No children. 11 10 .
32. _ _ _ _ _ __
2nd x Viand Street, Point :JOH82·2.56ol.
I 11 .
33._ _ _ _ _ __
Pleasant, wv Phone 675·
&gt;IA24.
I 12.
34. _ _ _ _ _ __
THREE ROOM and bath
I 13.
35. _ _ _ _ _ __
upstairs apartment In
1969 PMC 3 bedroom Pomeroy. 992·5621 .
1 14. - - - - - - tro ller. 12xol0. 9'12·3'154.
1
45
Furnished Rooms
1 15.- - - - - - 1 16 . _ _ _ _ _ __
1975 Ill KING Mobile Home, Sleeping rooms for rent on
12xcl5 In excellent con· Main Street In Mason.
I
ditlon,
underpinning In· Cooking facllllies, table.
I
$40.00 per week . Phone 1·
eluded. $~.00 . 247·3942.
304:773·5651 .
I
Mail This Coupon with Remittance
The Daily Sentinel
35
Lob I Acreage
4'
S)Hco for Ron!
1
Box 729
TRAILER LOT for sate, COUNTRY MOBILE Home
1
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
' $.4,000.00. 9'12·2571 .
Park, Route 33, "North of
Pomeroy. Laroe lots. Call
~----------------------9'/2·7479.
9
Wonted to Bu ~
W-ANTED TO BUY :
41
Houses for Renl
TRAILER spaces for rent.
G0 L 0 •
S I LV E R' 3,-1- --,-;H-:c
om
= e:cf;:c
; :I:-;te::-- FOUR BEDROOM brick Southern Valley Mobile
5 o:cS
PLATINUM, STERLING ·
r
home In Middleport. No Home Park, Cheshire, Oh.
COINS, RINGS ,JEWELR ·
Y. MISC. ITEMS. AB · FOR SALE : seven room pets. References and 992·3954.
MARKET double insulated ranch deposit required . 9'12·3457. !-===•====~
SOLUTE
PRICE GUARANTED. ED style hoff1e, total electric,
BURKETT
BARBER reasonabiV pric~ on three sox ROOM house on Nye
SHOP, MIDDLEPORT, level acres one mile from Avenue . 367·7811.
Racine . Phone 949·2706.
OHI0992·3416.
3 BEDROOM, 2 bath, 4i;;2=:::::M
;T.:o;::
bl~le?:H~o==m
=es:==
OLD COINS, pocket wat· modern kitchen, llvlno
for Rent
&lt;hes. ·class rings, wedding room, dining o'b9m, office,
bands, diamonds. Gold or
lull ~asement, new Ileal Mobile homes lor rent, fur·
si lver . Call J . A. Wamsley,
system w ith central air, · nlshed , very nice. Call 992·
Treasure Chest Coin Shop, unattached garage, 2 7479.
Alhen5, OH . 594·4221 .
blocks from school. 9'12·
FO~

"

Addition, Pomeroy, Ohio.
Gas heat, central air. Call
992-2571 or 1-687·642'1 .

.'

LIUONI

· n. on $25,000

44

Smart Crochet!

3
Announcemtftts
I PAY highest prices
possible for gold and sliver

II

·-·-~-

Beautiful three bedroom
ranch brick home In Baum

"1

Mill. lllld

VAtoans- .
no mont¥ down
Ftdorol Houslnt-

. . . . . .llltt

21.
22 . _ _ _ _ __
t.~
. -----23. _ _ _ _ __
2.
2&lt; - ----~-3.
25. _ _ _ _ _ __
26. _ _ _ _ _ __
4.

•

...'

mWJas:

For Rent

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•:
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YOUNG II

Misc. Morchon111
Firewood for sale, Mlxtd
types of wood. S35.00 per
plck·up load. Delivered,
will slack for .Senior
Citizens. 843·495! or 1143·
2115.

"•

1/
,_
RetdSVtlle, OH.
Ph ...H48S
.
10% to 20%. Discou'nr- · ..,{
On Entire Stock
1·25·1 mo.

-c:wrete wen.
-Piuml!lneand
eltclrlcol-ro
( l'ree lsllmatetl

S4

Phon•------------

.

Public Notice

3

..

Anllguts
ATTENTION :
(IN\·
PORTANT TO YOU) Will
pay cosh or cerllflod chock
for antiques end colloc·
tlbles or tnl!ro ntatet.
Nothing too large. Also,
guns, pocket watchH and
coin collections. Cell 614·
767·3167 or 557·:1411 .

Name---------Addntu ________________

..

nJESDAY
CHESTER COUNCIL 323 ,
Daughters-of America Tuesday 7:30
p.m. Initiation and sUent auction
will be held.
SAUSBURY PTO, Tuesdioy, 7:30
p.m. at the school. Fathers Night
~ be observed. Andy Lyle, game
protector, will be the guest speaker.
Refreslunents will be served.
MIDDLEPORT LODGE 363
F&amp;AM 7 p.m. Work in master mason
degree. All masons are invited to attend.

'

11- U,MIIttry

~.:~

·.

53

~·

~

___

1

results . Money not refundable.

...,.'.

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&amp;t-AlNf'tniltflt ,., .tftl

...

·B usiness ·Services

....
.

" II 's a grut Invention 1 .. It wilt
revolutlonitt roulette !''

PHONE 992-2156

41
Wonted fo IIOftl
WORKING COUPLE wllll
one chjld would llktlo rent
nice house In th country.
Vorv clean, responsible
and have references .
Phone "2·5126 offer 6 p.m. ·

..

J{~r
--

gl,,~

!

.

LAFF- A- DAY

Public Notice

by Larry Wright

II

Pay Cash for
Classlfleds and
Savelll

Women In Colonial America." She
said that emancipation of women
began wben a group led by Sarah
'
bale banded together to get a
!·,.
monwnent to commemorate the bat·
,.
tie of Bunker Hill.
Mrs. Clotlne Blackwood of · ,.
Harrisonville was a guest. Refresbments Were served by Mrs. Skinner,
Mrs. Mark Grueser, Mrs. George
'·'
Skinner, and Mrs. Thoren.Cotterill.

WEDNESDAY
SYRACUsE Third Wednesday
Club Wednesday at 10 a.m. at
Syracuse Municipal Bulldlng.
Potluck at noon.

HOLD PARTY 1UESDAY
Brownies of Troop 1220,
Salillbury, held a party Tuesday
night at the Salisbury Elementary School. Sharline Mash led In
the pledge to the flag, and Leslie
Lyons In the promise. The
Brownies mede valentines for
their parents, and then bed a
valentine ex~hange foUowed by
cookies end candy.

KIT 'N' CARLYLE '"

Write- your own ad and order by mall with th is
coupon. Canctl vour ad by phone when you get

~

guests.
Mrs. Lochary presented the
Jli'08r&amp;lll on the "American Minute

Small mvestment, large
returns, Sentinel Want Ads

'1

By Robert G. Stectmal,
D.O.,Pb.D.
Aulallml Proftuor of
Family Medlcille
Olllo UDivenlty College
of o.teo.,.tblc Medleille
QUESTION: When I get a cold or
the flu how do the germs make me
sick?
ANSWER: The common cold and
flu are caused by particular viruses.
These viral germs (classified as
obligate intracellular parasites)
must invade the cells of the body and
lake over the machinery of those
celiB in order to llve. Thls takeover Is
responsible for the symptoms that
are experienced by the patient. 111vaded and Injured cells release certain of their contents which In turn
triggen reactions such as the body's
lnfiemmatory response. The runny
llOlle, stuffiness, throat discomfort of
the cold, as well as the fever and
general achy feeling of the flu, are
the symptoms that result from this
chain of events.
QUESTION: How does my body
fight Ulnesa so that I recover?
ANsWER: The body's defense
against viral invasions Includes the
barrier provided by the .skin and
mucus membranes. There are also
respiratory secretions containing
aubstances which Inactivate viruses.
These bathe the airways and tend to
wash viruses out of the lungs. Tills
cleansing action Is assisted by
special ceUs (cllleted epithelium)
which physically sweep materials
out of the lungs. The cough reflex
also hel(lll to clear or prevent

:

•

Fire victims to be honorees
of shower at Penningtons

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I

Social Calendar

WEEKEND VISITORS

Rutland PTO

I

History Book and a copy of
Washiugton's Woods for the
Netlonal DAR Ubrlll'y.
Memben were reminded to I!IVF•
commemorative postage stamps
and Campoou soup labels for the Indian scboola supported by the DAR.
It was announced that the April. .
meeting will be held at the Meigs lru\ 0
with members of Col. Charles Lewis~~·
Chapter of Point Pleasant to be

'

The Meigs County Extension of· Financial Future.
lice will offer a money management
You will be able to take advantage
home study course.
of having your budget enalyzed by a
computer.
The course includes six lessons 1. What's Important?; 2. Where Are
The charge for the course Is f3.
You F,lnancially? ; 3. Planned Spen- Send money along with name and
ding Yields Results?; t How to · addreaa to Meigs County Extension
stretch the Famlly Dollar; 5. How to
Office, Box32, Pomeroy, Ohio45789.
Use Credit; 6. Protection For Your Send this infonnatlon hy February
:ll.
Lessons will be mailed weekly
beginning the first week of March.

today, Thltis .... time to be DeJiectful.
SCORPIO jOel u.No". ZZ) Try not to be
100 demandlo1a tt foiendl today and, by the
same token, don't put yourself in a poeitlon
where tbty coulcluk too mucb of you.

Several activities were planned
during the Monday night meeting of
the Rutland Pl'O held at the school.
John Miller, new president, conducted the meeting assisted by the
other new officers, Donna Jenkins,
The Community Builders Club and Maxine Whitehead, treasurer. vice president; Mona Johnson,
met with Mr. and' Mrs, Warren Mr. and Mrs. Harlls Frank and Mr. secretary; and Janet Miller
•
Pickens of Reedsville for the and Mrs. Roy -Hannum became new treasurer.
January meeting with business members.
A valentine party was set for
Refreshments were served to Mr. Friday evening, 7 to 9 p.m. with a 50
session conducted by President
Walter Brown.
and Mrs. Ronald Osborne, Mr. end cent admission charge. There will be
Dues were paid and the following Mrs. Walter Brown, Mr. and Mrs. a movie, refresbmenl.s,·llBIJli!S, and
officers elected ~ Ronald osborne Harliss Frank, and Mr. and Mrs. disco dancipg and families with
president; Ernest Whitehead, vi~ Roy Hannum. Nellt meeting will be children at the school are invited t 0
p~dent; Ella Osborne, secretary;
with Mr. and Mrs. Denver Weber.
attend. The PTO will have on sale at
the party the Rutland Elementary
SchOol bats for $2.50 each.
Nell1 month, Father's, Night will
be observed with fathers to count
five points toward the rOom banner
and cash award. A mwie has been
secured for Merch a and will be
shown at the school in the afternoon
A walk-in shower will be held shirts size 6, pants 4 to 5, dresses 4 to and the evening. Open to the public
Thursday, Feb. 29, for Mr. and Mrs. 5, shoes size 8, coat flo 5; boys, shir. there will be a edmiasion charge
Mike Hannon, Rutland, and family.
ts size 8, pants a, shoes 2 to 2~. coat 8 for the Walt Disney show.
Discussed at the meet,i/lg was the
. The family lost all their to 10; ladies, shirts size medium,
possessions as a result of a fire Sun- pants ~11).11-12, dresses 11 to 12, new playground equipnjent and the
day.
shoes 7 to 712, coat 11 to 12; men, five new cafeteria tables purchued
The sh6wer will be held at the shirts 17\!o, pants ~. shoes 13 E, by the PTO. Mrs. Ann Webster's
home of Tom and Pam Pennington, Cjllt56.
third gracle won the room'count. The
Salem st., Rutland. Clothing and
Persons wishing to donate may Lord's :Prayer and pledge QPelled
household Items are needed.
call 742-2006 between noon and I the meeting. Refreshments were
served.
Clothing sizes needed are girls, : p.m.

Cotr~:mu'IJ:ity

waa read by Mrs. Patrick Locbary
and Mrs. Mary Morris.
Mrs. Gene Yost, regent, end Mrs.
IAchary, chaplain, had the opening
rllual. Mrs. Yost read the . - g e
from the national magazine
dedicated to Februery as American
History Month.
The national defenae report given
by Mrs. Emerson Jones was a view
of the Soviet Union from the. standpoint of a fonner ambaasador,
Malcobn Toom. She noted that
Toom's opinion Is tha( the Rwosians
still heve 88 their main goal laking
over the world. She 111id that his contention Is that the Russian&amp; cannot
be dealt with from the American
point of view.
Mrs. Yost and Mrs. Roger
Luckeydoo will attend the state DAR
conference to be held in Akron this
spring. Mrs. Robert .Milley reported
that she bad received word from the
National Society that they .will accept a copy of the Meigs County

The Good Cithenship Award wJn.
were announced at the Fridey
meeting of Return Jonethan Me)jp
Chapter of the Daughters of the
American Revolution held at the
home of Mrs. Arthur Skinner.
They are April Parlier .of Eastern
High School, Angela Houchina of
Meigs High School, and Charlotte
Pickens of Southern High School.
The three seniors will be guests at
the annual ~rter Day luncheon of
the Chapter to be held on Mercb 13 at
Trinity Church in Pomeroy.
The three girls were the high
scorers In the DAR te9ting program
on goverru'nent and historY in their
respective high schools. Their test
scores will now be placed in corn- ·
petition with other winners for state
'
awards.
~ memorial tribute was given to
the late Miss Nancy Reed, a member of the chapter since 1949. Written
by Mrs. Roberta O'Brien the tribute

.-..,.,..,w

The Reedsville U.M.W. met in the center was also read. Twenty shut-in
church basement for its February calls were made and round robin
meeting with Mrs. Marlene Putman &lt;!ards were signed for several frienand Mrs. Violet Satterfield as ds. Games were played and prizes
hostesses. Devotions consisting of awarded.
scripture readings were conducted
Refreshments using the Valentine
by Mrs. Dolly Reed.
theme were served to Mrs. Virginia
Closing prayer was by Mrs. Put- Walton, Susie Cowdery, Mrs. Erika
man. Mrs. Reed, president COrl- Boring, Mrs. M8l'y Alice Bise, Mrs.
ducted the business meeting. Dues Mamie Buckley, Mrs. Lorraine
were paid and the week of Prayer Wigal, Mrs. Reed and Angie, Mrs.
and Self-Denial offering was taken. Verna Rose, Mrs. Sandy Roberts,
A thank-you letter was received Mrs. Lillian Pickens, and Mrs.
from the Pomeroy Health Care Cerl- Vivian Humphrey. Door prize was
ter for gifts given them at Chrisi· given to Mrs. Humphrey. Nell1
mas. A letter from Mrs. Frances meeting will be with Mrs. Roberts.
Reed who purchased the gifts for the

------------·
--· :r-------.
Curb·lnflatfon. I

DAR announces Good
·Citizenship A ward winners

AsTRo
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Clarice Allen. Mrs. Roush gave a
reading "A Chlld Has a Sense of
Wonder"- followed hy reading " A
and self-denial program, "Of Such is Chlld is Loving" by Mrs. Windon.
the Kingdom," at the February
Prayer cards ani! offering en- ·
meeting of the Chester United velOpe.s were distributed to all memMethodil!t Women.
bers as Mrs. Smith explained that
The leaders explained that the Ser- one-half of the offering this yell!' will
vice focuses on the offering ob, be used within the United States and
jectlve, "Chlldren: Advocacy and the other half in other countries on
Ministry." The program opening projects which advocate for and
with singing of the hymn, "Sweet minister to children. The program
Hour of Prayer" accompanied by closed with Mrs. Allen playing the
~ IAprll•Mooy Ill Don't &amp;amble
oo ChiJwl or people today you know Uttle
Mrs. Clarice Allen at the piano. hymil, "Jesus Loves Me" followed
about. There's a (IGIIiblllty you mlRhl bad
Scripture from Colossians and hy Mrs. Smith.
the WTUlC harte m:t COlt younelf mtfney or
prd&gt;lems.
Ephesians was read and prayer was
Mrs. Ruth Karr presided at the
Gli:MINI (llily 11-.lue Ill Tbb is one of.
given by Mrs. Smith.
thoae day1 when it's wt. to have as fe"
business meeting with officeql'
"""" In the nr. .. (IGIIible . Spreadlni , .....
Mrs. ,Roush prepared a collage reports being approved. A local
lelf too tbJn COUld eause yoo to leave many
representing the children of the church leadership workshop was anprojeda Wlllnlahed.
CANCER (Jue 11-.lody 12) You'd better
world with the theme, "Of Such is nounced and a report on the lighting
nave the facta to bact you up today If you
the Kingdom." She explored some of for the sanctuary fund was given.
feel the 11111• 'to . _ a s!r0f1R ~inlon
111&gt;ou1 .....wna: What y o u - wtU not
the thoughts Jesus may have bad as Two folding tables have been purboa...,o.dusoopol.
,
he held and blessed the little · chased by the UMW for use in the
LEO (Jalr z:t.w ..., ae
m
llnancial 8lld l~ loday. If
children.
fellowship room.
you enter the r...,. blindly, Uiln'aa chanct
Mrs. Windon ·read prayer by
you may come oat on the ahort end.
There were 24 sick and shut-in
VIRGO )Aq, D) You may not
children laken from the book visits reported for January. Nellt
hiVe as JTWCh Ctlltrol OYer a matter that'11
" Chlldren's Letters to God." The meeting will be March 5 at the chur~ importanluyou~t you had
todly. Be prepared to comprOmiae • bit to
group enjoyed "Go Tell It On the ch.
ln1&gt;rov• their pooition.
Mountain" played and sung by Mr.!.
LlllllA ISopl. I:J.O&lt;L 1:11 The .......,uon
lo set 11ft atlerldlng to '"'JIO!IIlbllltiell Is
IIOI1lOIIIin( )'011 mighl have lo conlend with

Reedsville UMW·hears readings

Yuesdey, Fepruary H, 1981 . ~·T

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

50"-20-30'H. P.
60"-25-60 H. P.
60"-45·80 H.P,

N ·tfc

All Models
Avalloble
LEO MORRIS
Rl, T.Side Hill Rd .
Rutland, 0~ .

Mlu.ER y,g,
SERVICE

For 111 of your wirlnt ntecls.

~~~====~§§~~~~§§:::::::::=~2~-9~-H~c~ ..

DAVID BRICKLE$

CONSTRUCTION
•

I

1977 Cutlass Supremo
Cell 742-31 u
Brougham, black wllll red
or 992·7110
plnstrlplng, red velour In·
terlor, brand now
2·1·tfc
Goodyear rolltd whitt Itt·
ter GT rodlols. L.OICitd
wllh equipment. Being IOid J1,~_...;T:,:r_,u,ck:!s,_,lo=.,r:::11::1.!.1_,_
by Crenson Pralf. Call'992· 1971 FORD dump truck. in
3093 after 5::10 p.m.
!!OOd condition. Will con·
Sidor trodt. S3500.00. H.S·
1977. Montt Carlo, cruise 43'15.
control, lilt wheel, em·fm
tape deck, air conditioning,
for S3150.00. Phone 992· 74
Mororcrcres
19711L.AZ!R, 22,000 mlln,
7054.
norusl.992•2!71.
72
Truckllor Silt
!971 OODGI! fOur whH!
drlvt. I fool bed In !!OOd
condition. ho!OO.OO. AIIO ,;;1 --~HU'o::':m~e=---1974 Seoul, 6 cylinder, two
wheel drive, 11215.00. 992·
lmproVImlllts
6323.
Gtne' s C1rpel CIHnlng;deep stroem oxtrlctlon.
Ollimlled,
1975 CHEVROLET pickup Frtt
truck with topper In tX· rtotonablt rotts. scot·
ctllent condlllon. t1100.00. ctlquerd. 992·6309 or 742·
2211 .
Coll949·2537.

eSidlngelnsulatlon •Roofing •Storm Windows • Concrete Work • Septic Systems
eBickhoe •Dump Truck- •Remodeli n g
•New construction •Guttering &amp;
Downspouts

.,•

PH. 992-7 1 19
406~S.St.

681

2-13·1 i'roo. pd.

Ir~~~~~~~~~~nu~~G~a~n~e~ro~t~H~a
~u~u~n9~~~
J&amp;C Sanitation . Service.
SEWING MACHINE
Rtpolrs, strvlce. all
mokesl 992·2214. The
Fobrlc Shop, Pomeroy.
AulhOriZtd Singer Sales
lnd Service. We sharpen
Scl110rs.
ILWOOD
·BOWERS
RIPAIR Swt'J)ers,
IOIIItrs, Irons, ell small
oppllances. Lawn mower .
f\lext lo Slate Highway
Goroge on Route 7. 915,
3125 .

Trash pickup available In
Village of Middleport.
Phone 9'12·5016 or 992·7597
anytime.
·
NOW DOING ha uling ,
moving jobs, painting

&lt;
,
•
,

houses Ins ide or out , •
basement·att lc
cleani ng, t
also carpet cleaning, yard ~.

work, etc. 992·38&gt;19. Ask for

Velma end leave name and ·no. Will return call. Free ;

estimates In Meigs Co. ·

�Tuesda , Februar 17, 1981

---::.-Architect•.• - - -

THE HOST IN MANILA- Pope John Palllll bolds up tbt bost during
bls first celebration of tbe mass at Manila Cathedral Tnesday afternoon
In tbe capital of tbe Pblllpplnes. Tbe service came during the pontHrs
busy first day of a six day visit to tbe Pbllipplnes. Later be'll go to Guam
and Japan. (APWirephoto).

Area deaths
Mabel L. VanMeter

I

VanMeter, Valparaiso, Ind., and
Raymond and Edna VanMeter,
Youngstown; daughter and son-inlaw, Laura Mae and Tom Nice,
Pomeroy; one daughter, Opal
Eichinger, Chester; two brothers,
Raymond of Columbus, and Eldon of
Racine; 16 grandchildren, 21 great
grandchildren, four great great
grandchildren and several nieces
and nephews.

Mabel Louise VanMeter, 91,
Chester, died Monday at Pomeroy
Health Care Center.
Mrs. VanMeter was preceded in
death by her parents, John and
Elizabeth Weber Kraeuter; her
husband, Jed VanMeter; two sonsin-law, Eddie Hartung and Henry
Eichinger.
Mrs. VanMeter was a member of
the Chester Methodist Church;
United Methodist Women Society;
charter member of Daughters of
America, Lodge 323; Past Coun·
cilors Club, 323, and honoray mem·
ber of the Varsity E. Club at Eastern
High School.
She is survived by two sons and
daughters-in-law, ~ichard and Pat

Funeral atservices
held
Thursday
I p.m. at will
EwingbeChapel
with the Rev. Richard Thomas and
the Rev. Carl Hicks officiating.
Burial will be in Pine Grove
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
funeral home after 7 p.m. this
evening. Daughters of America,
Lodge 323 will hold services at the
funeral home Wednesday at 7 p.m.

(Continued from page 1)
crease of five percent to all city.em·
ployes which met with some opposition.
Harold Brown, councilman, contended that the lower salaried employes wollld receive less money
than those in the higher bracket. He
suggested that the lower salaried
employes be given more of a raise or
give everyone a 10 percent across
the board increase.
. It was pointed out by Betty
Baronick, council woman, that coun·
. cil could not afford to give a 10 per·
cent increase.
Baronick and Wehrung suggested
thBt a five percent raise be given
now to all employes and in six months, council will check the situation
and perhaps by the end of the six
months period, another five pereent
could be given.
Brown also suggested that em·
ployes . not receiving federal
minimum wage payments, (there
are seven) that their wages be in·
creased to the minimum wage then
consider wage increases for all em·
ployes.
The matter was· referred to the
finance Committee which will meet
on the issue this week.
A letter wa:i read by Jane Walton,
clerk, from Fred Crow, village
solicitor, con~rning. whether council wishes to advertise for bids for
repair to one of the water w~lls in
Syracuse or rather ·council declare
an emergency and not go with the
formal bidding requirements .
Council agreed to advertise the job
lor bids.
Council is also looking into the
possibility of installing gas tanks at
the senior high building. Mayor
Clarence Andrews said he had con·
tacted Ashland Bulk Plant and they
· will install the tank without charge
as long as gas is purchased from

them. It was agri:Cd to pursue the
project.
Mayor Andrews reported bids for
the extension of the sewage project
from the Kroger Store to Keres Run
will be opened at noon&lt;Jn March 5.
Council approved the transfer of a
liquor licel!SI;, from Margaret E.
Ohlinger, dba Court street Grill,
Pomeroy, to Leon McKnight, dba
Court Street Grill, Pomeroy.
The Mayor's report for the month
of January, showing receipts in the
amount of$2,427.50, was approved.
The Chief of Police report for the
last iwo weeks showed that the
department made 30 arrests, in·
vestigated 21 accidents, received 175
calls, and drove 2,634 mlles,

SEEKS DIVORCE
Kimali Jean Hysell, Middleport,
!iledsuitfor divorce in Meigs County
Common Pleas against Randy
Joseph Hysell, Rt. 1, Rutland.
'J'he marriage of Julie Smith and
James Carter Smith w~sdissoived.

new Spring and Sum-

mer selections.
Maxi bags - feather
leather · cotton · Banji
bags - eyeleg design

terry and macrame.
SprIng pink
bel ge
· yellow · pink · wh ite ·
brown - black .

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

THREE SQUAD RUNS
Three emergency calls were an·
swered by local units Monday, the
Meigs Emergency Medical Service
rep&lt;&gt;rts.
.
At 9:25 p.m. Monday, the Mid·
dleport Unit took Wilbur Hanning,
Middleport, to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; the Rutland Unit at I :45
p.m., took Anthony Ward from
Meigs Mine 2 to Holzer Medical Cen·
ter, and at 7:18p.m., the Syracuse
Unit took Tammy Kline from
Weishtown Hill to Holzer Medical
Center.

~p
'

'

'•

r

~

'

PLA&amp;,.IC

GENERIC BRAND

CAT
FOO D

'DRY CAT
FOOD

CLOTH.S
LINI

•..$169

$ 69

'

CONSTRUCTION UNDERWAY- Work on tbe sewage system for
the villages of Syracuse and Radne got underway Monday. Digging and
laying of lines started near the upper corporation limits of the village of
Syracuse. Employes of Ontario Pipeline, lac., Pittsford, N. Y., were

, Rou.

Rou. Rot. S2.49

THE STDR OISAV

UNDER BED
STORAGE

19

1

15\1

1

toug hest moot popular c ha1n saws m the wo rld That s because

6 INCHES

c

FABRIC

tl s one upsta rt that alwa ys st.uts up As an o p h on )'O u ca n get

PLASTIC
I
I DUST PAN

a no- matni enance, never ou t ol adJustment btgh volt&lt;Jge
Elect ronLc lgn1hon 3ystem lor even laster tl ari ·Ups

STIHL"'
Get it while we've got 1t from :

POMEROY HOME &amp;' AUTO

Mix-up forces crash landing

SORINER
SHilTS

59c

'llle.....w\ ............. Cka......

SANTA ANA, Calif. - An apparent mix-up in runway instructions
may have caused the crash landing that injured 34 people aboard a
twin-engine Air California jetliner, officials say.
The accident at John Wayne Airport occurred late Tnesday as the
pilot of the Boeing 737 tried to avert a collision with another Air
California jet that was rolling toward takeoff, officials said.
The pilot of Flight 336, which was currying 104 passengers and a
crew of five from San Jose, tried to pull the craft up in an effort to
avert a crash, witnesses said·.

.... 6 c

Rltg. Ret. S4 55

GERITOL
TABLETS

606 E. Main
Ph. 992-2094
Pomeory, OH.
Front End Alignment-$12.50 Most Passenger Cars
Brake Service

·~.~~~· $255

_j~========================~

Midshipman faces court-marial
A•o. AaL u .ts

ANNAPOUS, Md. - The first court-martial of a U.S. Naval
Academy midshipman in 53 years will get back under way Friday
following a recess so prosecutors can study a defense motion seeking
to suppress some evidence.
.
Midshipman Michael R. Olmstead is charged with culpable
negligence, or involuntary manslaughter. in the May 11 death of
classmate Scott D. Thomas of Statesboro. Ga.
The two were returning from liberty when a car driven by Olmstead,
a 21 year-old senior from Haddon Heights, N.J., went out of control on
the academy grounds, struck a tree and roiled o~er, officials say.

NQIIM,t, . or COl.OII ll'ltAUO

Remains critical

WEEKEND AT MEIGS INN
Salad Bar, 8 oz. New York Strip
Vegetable, Balled Potato,
Soft Drink, Coffee or Tea

SPECIAL---~,....,.

$7

25

• PIZZA RAD •
• Your choice ol any.
•

one topping .

95 ••

.Reg. $1.35 ·
Starts Monday

I

I Doyo Ooly

I

=6ilitts=
•••••••
•

AU IOCAfiONS

Reg . Ret. S3.07
ALI(A ·SEL TZEA

RIGHT
GUARD
STICK DEODOR.-NT

PLUS COLD
MEDICINE

Plus Tax \

Entertainment
Friday &amp;Saturday

DETROIT - General Motors Corp. and Ford Motor Co. have joined
the price war started by struggling Chrysler Corp., and some analysts
say Chrysler could get caught in the crossfire.
GM said Tuesday it would give either $500 or $700 to buyers of selected models which account lor about hall the company's sales volwne.
The offer is good until March 19.
An hour later, Ford annoinced it would give buyers a rebate of 10
percent of the base price on certain models until March 21. The models
for which rebates will be offered accounilor 56 percent of Ford's sales.

LAVENDER OR JASMINE

. ..•I"

1

•

'.,,~

ALL LEGAL
BEVERAGES
SERVED

REG.RET.8e&lt;

ti'vi

ClEVELAND- An autopsy was started Tuesday on a decomposed
body tentatively identified as that of a Cleveland girl missing since October.
.
The body, found in an abandoned house 10 blocks from her west side
home, was believed to be that of Tammy Seals, 14, the Cuyahoga Coun·
ty coroner said.
Robert Seals, 17, the girl's brother, made the identification after
examining the clothing found on the body, said Dr. Samuel C. Gerber.
The coroner said the girl's mother, Helen Gillis, was too upset to make
the identification but later confirmed her son's report.

REG . RET . S1.78

-

" ·.....1, .

:~~·~·. .71° r
r
I
, , - ..-

Autopsy taken on girl's body

Q!l.,,,.~~ eLADLAHI

~- r·~ HIARTS

REG. RET. $2.32
AEGULAR , EXlRA IOOV

SILKIINCI
SHAMIIOO

II

auiii'flau
09

Ohio winning lottery number

·.·i~ :.· 'I

CLEVELAND - The winning nwnber selected Tuesday night In the
Ohio Lottery's daily game "The Nwnber" was: 497. The lottery reported earnings of $668,124.50 from the money wagered on the game. Lottery officials said sales were $829,629.50. Holders of winning tickets
are entitled to share $161,505.

REG. RET. 12.21
REGULAR , HT~A BODY

SILKIINCI
CONIHTIH•

,. •1• l~.~..-,,. ._•1_•_

THE MEIGS INN
Phone 992·3629

Ford, GM now giving rebates

.,.:.~. $189

. c :; :

RsPI

Reg . Aet. St 115
REGULAR or LIME

Pomeroy, Oh.

Weather
Showers likely tonight. Lows in the upper 40s. Cloudy with a chance
of showers Thursday. Continued mild. Highs Thursday In the mid-508 .
Chance of showers 60 percent tonight and 50 percent Thursday. Winds
westerly about 10 mph tonight.

REO. RET.II'

••nun
HIA.'IS

You must be 21 or accompanied
by parent or legal guardian.

,Extended Forecast- Friday through Sunday: Fair Friday and
again Sunday. Chance of rain Saturday. Highs in th~ 50s to low 60s
Friday and Saturday and In th~ mld-108 to mid-50s Sunday. Lows tn the
30s Friday ~orning, in the 40s Saturday and In the 30s again early Sun·
day.

DUTTON DRUG CO.

•

!NO ,\\/1

Mlllf111 f'OIII

tllt

laying the fort:ed main line Tuesday. The coet of laying the linea between .
and In the two villages Is $3,246,600. Tbe bid for the construction ol tbe
treatment plant went to Conti Plumbing aad beating Inc., Lowellville,
Oblo, In the amount of $1,t96,497. Total cost of tbe project, which has been
In the planning stages lor 12 years, is $5,400.000.

Reagan feels 'we must act'

R-v. Rei . S1 .3t
COAfi:UOATEO
CEDAR-LOOK

T he St Lhl ' OI SA V wtl h tis A nti VLbral ton sys tem Li one ol the

------FRIDAY

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A mills on all industrial, commercial,
billion-dollar pacbge of income tax mineral, public utility and tangible
increases and property tax reduc· personal property.
lions was offered by a Senate
Imposition of the income tax
Republican leader Tuesday as an would offset $860 million in real
answer to Ohio's school funding estate tax relief proposed for
problems.
agricultural and residential proper·
Sen. Thomas A. Van Meter, R· ty owners. The plan would also
Ashland, said his proposal would repeal all local school-operating tax
produce an additional $720 million millage on agricultural and residenannually in state and loc!ll revenue tial property.
for primary and secondary
In addition, the Senate president :
education if implemented starting pro tern's proposal wollid repeal12.5
July I, 1982.
percent in property tax rollbacks
It would end Ohio's reliance on the . previously approved by the
property tax for funding school Legislature and the homestead tax
district operations. In the future, exemption granted qualified elderly
funding would come from personal property owners.
income tax.
"We think this program offers tax
"I think that we have to look very relief, a shift in the tax structure,
closely at trying to make a strong stabllzes taxes and · solves the
departure from what we have done problem as well," Van Meter told a
in the past," Van Meter told a news news conference.
conference.
He acknowledged that while the
In order to be implemented, the plan offers tax relief for property
plan outlined · by the Senate owners, it gives no such break to
president pro tern would need an OK renters faced with the income tax
by the General Assembly and voter hike. He said that problem and
approval of a constitutional amend· others could be addressed during
ment.
legislative hearings on the measure.
His proposal calls for a I percent,
Van Meter said all revenue collecflat•rate increase in the state's per· ted under the income tax part of the
sonal income tax over and above the package would be returned to the
current graduated income tax. In district from which it came.
addition, it would impose a Although local school districts would
statewide uniform tax levy of 30
(Continued on page 16)
I

MEETING CHANGED
The Bradbury PTA will meet Feb.
26, rather than Feb. 19 as was
schedllied.

A Gallipolis Ferry man injured
Monday morning when an explosion
ripped through the side of a gasoline
barge dry-docked for repairs at M
and G Transport remained in
critical condition this morning in the
intensive care unit of. University
Hospil!ll in Columbus.
Delbert Williams, 25, and five
other Mand G workers .were injured
when a spark ignited gasoline
vapors inside the barge. The exploSion reportedly occurred while
welding operations were being conducted on the vessel.
Wililams was transported to
Holzer Medical Center where he ·
received preliminary treatment for
third degree burns to the face, eyes
and lungs. He was later transported
to University Hospital, where he is
currently being treated in that
hospital's neuro-trauma intensive
care unit.
The other five M and ·a workers
were treated and released at HMC
for various degrees of burns, con·
tusions and abrasions.
.A flash fire accompanied the early
morning explosion, which shook the
contents of homes across the river
and more than a mile from the site.
on the Ohio side. The explosion tore
through a 50-foot section of the
barge, peeling the one-half inch
metal siding below and over the top
of the vessel.

lS Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

I

WOMEN'S
HANDBAGS

(Continued from page 1)
26, Pomeroy, was westbound on
Salem Twp. Rd. 328 at 3:30 p.m.
when he met an eastbound auto.
driven by Osie D. .Roland, 47,
Ewington, on a narrow road.
Parker then stopped to avoid
coUision with Roland's auto, the
report said. Roland's car slid partly
sideways and collided with Parker,
causing slight damage to both.

2 sections, 16 Pages

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, February 18, 1981

Bill offers
.
?
?
?
sol utzons . ...

5TIHL

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted-Edna Pickens, Racine;
Earl Griffith, Gallipolis; Amanda
Jewell, Rutland; Carol Dailey, Portland; Jeffrey Gilland, Racine;
Corrine Ferrell, Gallipolis ; Joyce
Jewell, Langsville; Wilbur Hanning,
Middleport; Hollie Green,
Pomeroy; Agnes Weeks, Pomeroy.
Discharged-William Barnhart,
Raymond Napper, Alta Murray,
Callie Metheny, Julian Hoffman.
___________

Vol.2t,No. 216

Copyrighted 1'981

NEW SPRING STYLES &amp; COLORS

Stop in the woriten' s accessories department 2nd floor and see our

..~

en tine

a.t

e

21. Pomeroy; Mark Edward Prof.
!itt, 18, Rt. I, Racine, and Rhonda
Kay Barnhart,l7, Pomeroy.

ELBERFELD$

r-;:===============::=======:::;-1

· HOSPITAL 'EWS

1

Marriage li~nses were issued to
Kenneth Duane Koehler, 19,
Pomeroy, and Rhond!l Kay Hager,

Patrol cites

Meigs County happenings
PUBLIC CARD PARTY
Grace Episcopal Church Women
will hold a public card party at 1
p.m. Thursday at the parish house in
Pomeroy. There will be door and
table prizes. Admission is $3 a person.

SEEKUCENSE

!

WASHINGTON (AP)- President tonight's speech is said to reflect the
Reagan, striving to convince the intensity of that effort.
nation there is an urgent need to
"He strongly says we really don't
overhaul the economy, will tell have a choice between doing
Congress and the American people something and not doing something
tonight "the time for waiting and about the economy," said the senior
hoping has passed."
White House official, speaking with
"If we do not act now, the the understanding that he would not
economy will get worse, " a senior be identified by name. "If there are
aide to the president said Reagan alternatives, let's hear them. But we
wtli tell a joint session of Congress in ' do not have the luxury of choosing
a nationally televised address.
notto act."
A detailed, written message
One source said Reagan will
propose $8 billion in budget cuts this listing specific budget cut proposals,
year and $41 billion next year. another giving details of tax recomAnother said the 1982 cuts would mendations, and a third document
on proposed revision of government
total $44 billion.
Either way, the 1982 budget cuts regulations will accompany the 9
would be close to the expected $44.2 p.m. EST speech.
However, not all of the 80 specific
billion that the companion tax cut
recommendations would cost the spending cuts Reagan reportedly
treasury.
has settled on are expected to be
Those proposals would reduce the outlined in tonight's speech.
federal income tax of a typical
Thirteen hours after the address,
family of lour with a $20,000 income Reagan leaves lor a four"((ay visit to
by more than $1,000 over the next 3t his ranch near Santa Barbara,
Calif., handing to his Cabinet and
years.
The Reagan approach - so-called economic advisers the initial task of
"supply side" economics - is to selling the program to Congress, the
couple tax cuts with spending cuts in public and to the hundreds of special
an attempt to reduce inflation and interest groups who will feel the imspur economic growth at the same pact of the president's budget·
cutting decisions .
time .
However, Reagan was kicking off
The need to come to grips with an
array of economic proble1ns has that campaign today with a private
been the central theme of Reagan's briefing for . Republican and
first 29 days in office and the tone of DernQ!!ratic leaders from Congress.

Later, his top economic advisers
scheduled a serie~ of briefings for
reporters to explain the program.
The campaign picks up steam
Thursday and over the weekend with
a variety of ·appearances by administration oflicia~ on television
news programs.
Although Reagan has been careful
to avoid calling for national sacrifice
+ an approach that his advisers
think helped doom Carter's
economic proposals + he told a
group of visitors representing con·
servative political groups Tuesday
that "if misery loves company, then
everybody is going to love
everybody else."
That reflects the administration's
CtJntention that the program will
reach across the board to have an
impact on everyone.
The administration's spokesmen
and others involved in preparing the
program have maintained that the
neediest people in the country will
have a "social safety net" under
them to make sure they have shelter
and food.
Trying to head off early criticism

as pressure mounted, the ad· .
ministration announced last week
that spending for seven major social
assistance programs, including the
basic Social Securiiy retirement
program, would not be cut. The cost ·
of those seven programs was put at ·
$210 billion.
Among other things, sources said
Reagan would propose reducing
federal spending by f/.7 billion by
recommending user fees on water·
ways, Coast Guard and other ac·
tivities, and by cutting certain "non·
budget items."
They said Reagan would propose
chopping about $1 billion from the
government's support program for
the d.airy industry. He also repor·
tedly will recommend applying cost·
of-living adjustments to the pay of
federal workers once a year instead
of the current two times.
In addition, there was a plan to
eliminate the centerpiece of the Carter urban aid program, the Urban
Development Action Grants, which
would, under the former ad·
ministration's 1982 spending pian, · ·
contribute $875 million to promote
growih iri the cities.

Solution found
for re-location
of waterlines
Art Jones, district director of FHA
and Jack Crisp of the Leading Creek
Conservancy Oistrict Tuesday
meeting with Meigs County's com·
missioners discussed re-location of
appro~imately 300 feet of waterline
running parallel to the proposed access road from Union Ave., to the
Multi-Purpose Health Center.
Crisp Slli!l. the cost for re-locating
the line wouldbC $15.320. Jones said
FHA would advance 75 percent of
the amount.
Crisp reported that l.eadlng Creek
could put up the other 25 percent if it
could be designated as in kind ser·
vices such as labor, supplies and
equipment. Jones agreed that this

was a possibility. It was agreed to
proceed along these lines.
County Engineer, Phil Roberts,
along with John Hankla, discussed a
right-of-way on SR 7 in SaHsbury
Township.
Conunissioners feel that a letter
from the county prosecutor and one
from the Divsion 10 director must be
submitted before they could grant a
right -of-way.
Commissioners discussed the
possible uses ol $60,000 in available
federal secondary highway funds to
Meigs County on a 75 to 25 percent
grant basis. The county .engineer
will look into the situation.

. '..

SHARPENS SPEECH - President Ronald Reagan and bls speecb
writer, Ken Khachlglan, work In the library at the White House Tuesday
on his economic speech wblcb will be delivered to congress aDd the nation
toalghl. Reagan Is expected to outline his budget cuts and ways to slow Inflation.

Settlement pending in hospital suit
An agreement Ill pending In the
court actions of Dr. Nonnan
Ehlinger against Veterans
Memorial Hospital, Attoney CharleS
Knight, who represents the hospital
locally, said today.
Knight reportet! Dr. Ehlinger,
through his attorney Gary Green·
wold, Colwnbus, h:Js withdrawn "

motion for a temporary restraining
order aginst the hospital. He will
not have staff privileges until the
pending agreement Is resolved,
Knigh\ said.
Last week, Dr. Ehlinger filed a
five million dollar lawsuit against
the hospital in the Meigs County
Common Pleas Court along with a

request for a temporary restraining District Court stating this his due .
order.
process rights were violated when · : ;
Dr. Ehlinger charged that there he was dismissed from the hospital. . · •
was a breach of contract in that by- Named defendants in that action . · ;
laws of the hospital were not were the hospital, Lewis D. Telle, · :'
followed when he was immediately the hospital's chief ' of staff, and · ··
suspended from the hospital staff on Walter Scott Lucas, the hospital's :
Feb. 6. Earlier Dr. Ehlinger filed a administrator.
·~ 1
15 million dollar action in the U. S.

.,

... .
~

I

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