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                  <text>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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Commentary
Reagan~ s
; In his recent press conference,
Mr. Reagan made several general
eomments about this and that, and
!he critics (I think especially of the
estimable Joseph Kraft) are beginOing to go to work. Mr. Reagan was
.quoted as sayin~ "Back in the turn
ef the century, the classic
economists used to explain ...
business slumps as every time
govenunent began ... increasing the
percentages of the earnings and the
gross national product of the people
thatit was taking."
· To this admittedly idiomatic
statement Mr. Kraft applied
ungenerous analysis. "The notion
that business downtowns are mainly
a function of excessive government
is sheer ideological twaddle. If that
view were correct, the United States
- where the federal share of the
GNP rose from 2.5 percent in 1929 to
23 percent in 1980 - muld have experienced· 50 years of depression.
West Germany - where about 50
percent of GNP passes through the
hands of government authorities would be an economic basket case."

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, February 18,1981

economi'CSa_________,. . ________Wz_zll_iam_F._·.B_u.......ck_ley_J~_.
Dear me. Well, tftwork:
1) The president's reference to
"business slumps" was obviously a
general reference to the· prevailing
economic mess, which is the more
common expression for what is
g_oing on. Mr. Reagan contends that
it is the result of excessive government spending, and he is quite
correct.
· 2) There are two ways in which to
measure government spending. One
is the simple question : How much
does the government spend?
Another is, How does it raise its
revenues•
On the question of low spending,
Mr. Kraft. might go back to 1944,
when the economist Professor Coii(l
Clark, the brilliant Australian then
teaching at Cambridge, COJTlpleted a
statistical study the burden of which
was that whenever a government
spends more than 25 percent of the
country's gross national product, the
rate at which the GNP grows is
reduced. So convincingly were Mr.
Clark's figures that he was publicly
applauded for them by Johr.

Maynard Keynes himself, who said
he found them convincing. Senator
Robert Taft, the nation's conservative leader, accepted the
figures as a guide for the United
States and, when running for the
professional nomination in 1948,
based his programs on the 25 per. cent ceiling. It does not follow that
you cease to grow if you spend more
than 25 percent. It follows that you
cease to grow as fast. In the past 10
years, our rate of growth reduced
from an average 2.8 percent per
year to less than 2 percent. During
that period, the rate of government

spending rose from (approximately)
JO percent to 40 percent. Mr. Kraft
conveniently forgets spending by
cities and states. I conveniently
remind him that taxes levied by New
York City and New York State, are,
dollar for dollar, indistinguishable,
as far as the taxpayer is concerned,
from taxes levied by. the federal
government. If you count in all
taxes, including transfer payments,
the United States is spending a
higher percentage of the GNP than
any country in Western Europe except Sweden and Denmark.
3) The other means of measuring

the effect of taxation on the economy

is, of course, the marginal tax rate.
That ill what Kemp-Roth is all about,
and Reagan has shown the acuitY to
penetrate this. Obviously if the incremental dollar, say after $20,000,
is taxed 100 percent, no one is going
to· exert himself to earn $21,000.
"Rates and revenues at the higher
portions of the Laffer Curve are inversely proportional" - is the ·
elegant way to put it, and how
George Gilder puts it - in the same
book ("Wealth and Poverty'') in
which he points out:
"Combining levies on property

with those on personal inCome and
business profits, United States
taxation from relatively progressive
sdurces amounted to 17.6 percent of
GNP in 1977, a 16 percent higher
share than Germany, 57 percent
higher than Italy, 70 percent higher
than Japan, and 90 percent higher
than France."
Harold Macmillan likes to recall
that between 1860 and 1900 the real
income of the average Englishman
doubled. Inflation was zero. That
was back in the days when the
people who taught Reagan
economics were born.

difficulties

WASIUNGTON (AP) - The Congressional Budget Office told a House
panel today that Social Security could ~ricounter difficulty in paying benefits
on time by the end of next year, and the system's main trust fund will run a
$63.5 billion deficit in the next five years.
·
Raymond C. Scheppach, deputy director of the CBO, says Congress could
remedy the short-term fiscal crisis by allowing the Old Age and Survivors
: Insurance trust fund to borrow from healthier Disability Insurance and
Hospital Insurance trust funds, or by raising the payroll tax, now at 6.65 percent, by 0.5 percent.
He testified as the House Ways and Means subcommittee on Social
Security began three days of hearings on the problems facing the system.
Rep. J.J. Pickle, D-Texas, the subcommittee chairman, said that the
major retirement fund "will run short of reserves to pay a month's benefits
sometime in 1982."
But Pickle added, "This is not an emergency. Nor is it the 12th hour."
He promised that the committee would seek to put Social Security on a
sound footing both for the 1980s and for the longer term when the pos~-World
War!! baby boOm reaches retirement in the next century and drains the
reserves anew.

"Social Security has never missed paying a dollar of benefits. That's
remarkable," said Pickle, adding that the public can be assured that despite
the "graveyard headlines on Social Security, the problems will be solved.
"We cannot continue "to subject the American people to uncertainties
about this program. The system must be protected whatever the future
holds," he said.
The CBO official testified that the old age fund will be down to$14 billion by
Sept. JO, 1982. That is only 4.7 percent of the benefit-" we will need to pay in
the following year, and the trust fund requires a balance of at least 91o 12
percent to get the checks out in time.

The Daily Sentinel
.Ill Court Stret!l
Pomeroy, Ohio
llt-992-!151
DEVOTED TO 111E INTEREST OF THE MEI~MASON AREA

pubiJ•ber

PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH

As.. IIIDt Publisher/Controller

General Mauger

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
Nt1r1 Editor
4 MEMBER of 1be A11oclatftl Pre11, lnlaOO Dally Prrs1
AmeriND Newap~per PllbUa.en A•aocl.aUoQ.
oi'

As~:oolafton

and tbe

LETJ'ERS OF OPINION In! wft('Omed. They should be leu tUa JD0 words 10111. AU
ldten 1ft lllbject 10 ec1Jdn1 IDd mut bf filmed wltb aame, a4Nrftl and &amp;elepboat
DIUIIber. No u.lped Je«en wlU be pubUibed. J..dlel'!l•h••llld be Ia 1oocl taste, ltddrn~lar
iullel, DOt prnouUtiH,

---~-------~---- -·

--- ·-

~~kuiring free agent catcher Carlton
IS • Reds president Dick Wagner
~'dWTuesday. .
e decided not to talk to him "
Wagner said. "We don't see, in the
make-up of our ballclub, where he
could
.......fit in."
.,.., Reds, facing an ultimatwn
from Johnny . Bench, had been
JM;lieve_ct to be mterested In talking
With FISk after the veteran catcher ·
won his dispute with the Boston Red
Soxoverthetimelinessofthisyear's
contract offer.
Bench had told the Reds he wanted
· to reduce his catching load by cat- -------~-----_:s~ig~n~·ed~Le~nn~y~Ran~dl~e.:_!a~32-~y~ea~r-o~ld!!!.__!f~ie~id~er~Jo~hn~Ca~st~in~o~cam~~e;,;o!!;!ut~a!.w!!!!in-!:....JDu~es~,~w~h~o.21IUS8~·
~ed~th~e:.._1~97~9~se~a~so~ni~~~~~~~~~~~~
Ching twice a week and playing r
another position on days he wasn't
behind the plate.
Wagner has said that the club
agreed to let Bench catch twi~e a
.
week, but it had not guaranteed him
a starting job at any other position.
"The Bench thing will handle itself,'' Wagner told writers at a final
Cincinnati press conference before
leaving for the National league
club's spring training headquarters
in Tampa. "This thing has gone on
and on and on, and sometimes these
things are blown out of proportion.''
LB.
In addition to Bench, the Reds
have catchers Joe Nolan and Mike
O'Berry with major league experience, and are developing Dave
•
Van Gorder and Steve Christmas in
•
FRESH
GROUND
HOURLY
their minor league system.
Wagner said the club still had
GALLIPOLIS AND POMEROY
about 10 unsigned players on its ~
•
•
man roster - "about where we ·
PRICES GOOD TllOAY THRU SU~DAY, FEBRUARY 22
•
usually are at this point" - but he
said preparation for arbitration with
four players had taken time t!Jat
JONES BOYS
SCOT
would have been allotted to comOR
pleting negotiations with other
KITCHEN
players.
ROYAL CREST
The Reds won their arbitration
case wit!\ center fielder Dave
Collins, and settled with infielder
Junior Kennedy the day before that
case was to be heard.
WHILE 1,000 BAGS
Outfielder-pinch hitter Mike Vail's
WHITE
case was heard Monday in Chicago,
LAST
and pitcher Paul Moskau's case was
heard Tuesday in New York.
5 LB. BAG
PLASTIC
••
When this season's contracts are
ail signed, the club will concentrate
GALLON
REGULAR 69'
on signing three veterans - Collins,
shortstop Dave Concepcion and outLIMIT 1 PER
fielder Ken Griffey - to long-term
REG. '1.39
agreements, Wagner said.
LUCKY
Each of those players would be
BETTY
LEAF
eligible to become free agents after
CROCKER
this season,
'I.''X50' VINYL :
:.
1WO PIECE
Meanwhile, the New York
•
·
TUFTED
Yankees, whose major need is a
•
right-handed starting pitcher, have
picked up a right-handed reliever.
The Yankees dipped into the free
8 VARIETIES
agent market again Tuesday, but
I

•
•
•••

GROUND BEEF

..•

., ~·

Take your pick Mondale or Kennedy?
WASIUNGTON (AP)- Thke your
piCk: The Committee for America's
Future or the Fund for a Democratic
Majority. Mondaie or Kennedy.
Should either man get where he
wants to go, his political action committee will wind up with a letterhead
as lustrous as that of Citizens for the
Republic.
That's Ronald Reagan's old outfit,
and it proudly lists the president of
the United States as founder and
chairman emeritus.
With presidential campaign spending strictly limited by federal law,
potential candidates these days take
the first, tentative step toward running by hanging out a shingle with
the name of a committee on it.
So former Vice President Waller

F. Mondale has set up the Committee for America's Future, and
Sen. Edward M. KeMedy is going to
establish the Fund for a Democratic
Majority.
There will be more committees
coming along, identified with other
potential entries in the contest for
the 1964 Democratic presidential
nomination.

Political action committees are
organizations created to raise
money and spend it in behalf of the
candidates of a party or, more often,
a cause.
Ali told, there are more than 2,000
political action committees identified with businesses, labor
organizations and other interest
groups. Federal campaign finance

laws give the multiple candidate
committees more leeway than campaign committees created for a
single candidate.
They can take contributions of up
to $5,000 and donate as much as
$5,000 to a candidate for the House or
the Senate. To qualify for the PAC
rules, a committee has to support at
least five candidates for federal office.
Individual committees are limited
to $1,000 contributions. So the combined support of political action
committees with similar goals can
be a pivotal factor in a congressional
campaign.
The political action committees
are a subject of controversy every
election year. would-be reformers

calling them the loophole through
wllich special interest money pours
into congressional campaigns.
So far, they have been a more effective vellicle for Republicans,
notably conservative Republicans,
than for Democrats.
The Democrats would like to
change that, and organizations identified with prospective cand.idatP.S
for the White House are a step in that
direction.
But that's coincidentaL The real
purpose of the PACs created for
potential candidates is to provide an
organization and a bankroll that will
enable them to travel; speak and
build up political credits with the
party's 1982 congressional and state
candidates.•

Rare event- median price of homes declines
NEW YORK (AP) - An event as
rare as the aurora borealis in St.
Louis occurred in December, it is
now revealed. The median price of
existing homes decllned. The decline
was substantial, amounting to
$1,300.
This really shouldn't be surprising, when you consider that
rising interest rates, rising taxes,
rising fire insurance premiums and
rising fuel bills have depressed the
interest of would-be buyers, who
also face the formidable challenge of
raising the big down payments

needed.

It is probably more surprising, in vestment may be losing some of its record set in 1978.
And, because the factors that
fact, that prices rose so regularly appeal. Not aU, no matter what the
against the pressure of such forecasters of a housing price collap- caused the decline are still boring
negative forces. But they had been se might . say, but enough to away at the market llke termites in
the main beam, further price and
rising, with very little interruption, discourage many wuuld-be owners.
Jack Carlson, executive vice sales declines in January and
for most of the plllll dozen years or
president and economist of the February won't astonish the
so.
But in December the supply- National Aassociation of Realtors, statisticians.
The Family Housing Bureau,
demand balance tipped, and the ' puts the blame mainly on high morhouse that sold for $64,300 in Novem- tgage interest rates which, he says, operated by the Chicago Title Insurance Company, found that
ber went for $63,000, about $6,500 compel sellers to ask lower prices.
Even at the lower prices, resales homebuyers last year spent almost
more than a year earlier but still not
enough to beat the rise in consumer fell in December to the lowest rate in one-third more of their income on
five years, totaling only 2.9 million · mortgage payments than buyers
prices.
In other words, the house as an in- units, a 22 percent one-year drop and during the mid-1970..
a million units below the sales

With a chop, chop · here~----=..:Art~B=uc=hw=al=..d
When David stockman, the head
of the Office of Management and
Budget, was a little boy, his father
gave him an ax. The next morning,
the lather went out ,in the backyard
and saw his favorite tree chopped
down.
He called his son and said,
"David, did you chop down this
cherrytree?" ·
David replied, ''Yes, Father, I did
it, and it's only the begiMing."
"You can't go around chopping ·
every cherry tree just because I
gave you an ax," David's father
said.
"Yes, I can. Uncle Ronnie says
·any time 1 see a cherry" tree I should
chop it down."
"But that isn't what Uncle Ronnie
told me. He said he wants the trees
cleared out, across the board."
"David, you have to Understand

something about cherry trees. Some it's very bad for others. Once you
David started swinging his ax and
cherry trees give off beautiful · sink your ax into the trunk, the singing "With a chop, chop here and
blossoms, but don't bear any fruit. If cherry tree will die."
a chop, chop there, ee yi ee yi oh."
you chop them down, you lose
"Well, we've got to get rid of the
A neighbor stopped by and said to
nothing. But other trees produce cherry trees, and this is the only way David's father, "That son of yours
cherries and we need them or we I know how to do it.''
swings a mean ax. What's he
"Do you realize that every tree in doing?"
won't have anything to eat."
·
Washington is a favorite of
"I'm not quite sure," the father
" ! don't have time to figure out somebody? They don't mind your
"I gave him this axand his Unsaid,
which are the good cherry trees and cutting down the other fellow's
cle
Ronnie
told him to chop down
which are the bad ones. Uncle Ron- cherry tree, but they're going to get
every
cherry
tree in Washington, exnie says he promised to cut all the awfully mad when they find out
cept
the
ones
around
the Pentagon."
cherry trees in Washington," except you're going to knock down theirs.''
not
going
to
chop down my
"He's
for those around the Pentagon. He
cherry
trees,
is
he?"
the neighbor
said under no conditona could I touch
"Uncle Ronnie knows that, and
asked.
them. Well,-b!lck to work."
he's willing to back me up if anyone
"He chopped down mine, and I'm
"Wait, David. Are you sure you gel.$ mad when I cut his tree. He
his
father."
·
know what you're doing•"
says he can't afford all the$e trees
''That's some kid you've got there.
Look, Father, I'm not chopping and the only way we can get our
down the entire cherry tree. I'm just yard in order is to known down as I wonder what he's doing to do when
lopping off the branches and part of many as we can, even if it means he grows up."
David's father said, "Your guesa
the trunk."
people are going to have to go
is as good aa mine."
"That's good for some trees, but without cherries."
SEt, 5f/t'5 fJtt/1 UVII.61A/flH
TH/5 ISih' R:l': 5f»&gt;f Til-E

ROBERT L. W!NGE'!T

following elbow surgery and spent
ner.
Armas' bidfor$500,000wasturned most of 1980 in the minors.
down in favor of the A's offer of r--------~---$210,000. Annas, 27, batted .277 last
season with 35 home runs and 109
RBis.
Castino, who led the Twins in ba~
ting, homers and RBI, was awarded
$2,10,000. The Twins had offered
$150,000, ~raise of $100,000.
The Bosto.n Red Sox signed second
baseman Dave Stapleton, who batted .321 as a rookie in 1980, along
with right-handed pitcher Mike
Howard, who has yet to pitch in the
majors.
.
I
1~1
.
""'"'
• PRIVAT[
&gt;:;', '-~;;
The Montreal Expos signed seven
Ens
'" ~ r.~.
players, including right-hander Hal

infielder who played for the Chicago
CubsinliMMl,toathree-yearcontract
and the Cubs signed free agent outfielder J~rry Morales and assigned
him to their Iowa farm club in the
AmericanAssociation.
Randle batted .276 and stole 19
bases for the Cubs and had a 21game hitting streak, longest in the
Nationai League. He spent spring
training last year with the Mariners
before being dealt to Chicago.
Morales, who played with the Cubs
from 1974-77 ,'batted .254 in 94 games
for the New York Mets last season.
Meanwllile, outfielder Tony Armas of Oaklimd lost his salary arbitration case while Minnesota in-

courrnY sTonEs

revenue from this source to keep pace with inflation .... J1

·ss fund faces

training camp. " We have a lot of oplions to look at now. It gives us a
chance to do some other ~gs.
There's always a possibility of Davis
being a starter, but that's not
necessarily the way we're going.
They could aU stay in the bullpen or
we could make a trade.''
The Yankees are known to covet
Rick Reuschel of the Chicago Cubs,
Montreal's Steve Rogers and one of
several Oakland right-banders.
Castro's overall record is 2f&gt;.23
with 44 saves. Last year, he was 2-4
with eight saves and a 2.79 earned
runaverage.
In other developments involving
free agents, the SeatUe Mariners

.,28

THE (TOLEDO) BLADE- "The budget and economic proposals unveiled
by Ohio's governor this week were vintage James Rhodes . He recommended
a budget of $20.5 billion for the two years beginning next July I and urged a
penny gasoline-tax increase to pay off a proposed $2 billion bond issue for
highway construction and maintenance.
"For the moment, we reserve conunent on the budget proposal.. ..
"But it is good to see Governor Rhodes coming out for a gasoline tax increase, even if it is hedged with his tried-and-true notion of putting to a
referendum the question of whether such a tax and bonding package should
be approved ....
"If there is any disappointment concerning the governor's highway construction financing proposal, it is that he has not asked for enough ....
"In fact, now is the time for legislators to show some initiative and pass a
gasoline tax based upon a percentage of gasoline prices, which would enable·

cording to the city's legal minds. Yet City Council has refused to act on that
opinion, leaving the door open a little wider lor distribution of the machines. ·
'"It's like I said before, we're not here to legislate morality,' said Councilman Rex Ingram ... . '! think this is a matter to be settled in ·court and
move that we table this.'
"What the councilman was really saying was, 'Gee, this is a messy
decision that council really would be better off avoiding. Let's let the judicial
branch of the government decide it for us.' Such courage.

this lime with a soft plop rather than
a loud splash. They signed 27·yearold Bill Castro, a six-year veteran of
the Milwaukee Brewers' bullpen, to
a two-year contract estimated at
$325,000.
The move may indirectly uncover
a right-handed starter to join lefties
. Ron Guidry, Tommy John, Rudy
May and Tom Underwood in the
rotation. The Yankees can bring
right-banders Ron Davis or Doug
Bird out of the bullpen or make a
trade.
"Now we have another righthanded arm, which we needed,''
Manager Gene Michael said at· the
team's Fort Lauderdale, Fla.,

CHUCK ROAST

Way others see It •••

THE WRAIN JOURNAL - "Poker machines are illegal in Lorain, ac-

. CINCINNATI (AP) - The Cinctnnati Reds, with five catchers on
their roster, are not interested in

USDA CHOICE

•

AKRON BEACON JOURNAL - "Ten states have passed legislation that
allows patients who are suffering from incurable illnesses to die with dignity
- without heroic medical measures to prolong their lives after they have
gone into irreversible comas.
"If a bill introduced in the Senate by Kenneth Cox, D-Barberton, is approved - and it should be- Ohio will join the list.
"Sen. Cox's proposal is similar to one he introduced last April but which
never got a floor vote. It is interesting to speculate what agony the family of
Edna Marie Leach might have been spared if such a law had been enacted
-last year.
"Her husband had to go to court in the first such legal test in Ohio to get
permission for doctors and the hospital to remove her from the artificial support systems that sustained her life long after she had slipped into a permanently vegetative state....
"The proposal has nothing to do with euthanasia, or s&lt;H:alled 'mercy
killings. ' It does not give anyone the right to take action to hasten the natural
process of dying in the case of a terminal illneSs.
"But it does prevent heroic measures to prolong life when that is not the
choice of the patient or the immediate family .... "

Cincinnati ·brass not interested in Fisk

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\t

Reds win
second case
CINCINNATI (AP) - The Cincinnati Reds have now won two
salary arbitration battles with
players and are awaiting the results
of a third.
On Tuesday, an arbitrator ruled
against outfielder Mike Vail and
said the Reds contract offer of
$175,000 was fair.
Vail, who came to the Reds in a
trade with the Chicago Cubs for Hector Cruz over the winter, had sought
$225,000.
Both sides presented cases Monday in Chicago before the arbitrator,
Theodore St. Antoine, a law
professor at the University of
Michigan.
Last week, the Reds fought and
won against centerfielder Dave
Collins' demand for $360,000. The
Reds had offered ~7,000, which
was a $100,000 raise from the
$167,000 Collins made during the 1980
season.
Collins had won an arbitration
case against Cincinnati prior to the
1980 season.
Vail, 29, spent three seasons with
Chicago, and was not expected to be
a regular with the Reds.
Vail was believed to have earned
$150,000 for the Cubs last season
where he batted .298.
Pitcher Paul Moskau's arbitration
case was argued Tuesday in New
York City. No decision in that case
was announced.
"Frankly, ! ·was a Iitle leery about
taking Mike to arbitration,'' said
Vail's agent, Steve Greenberg,
following -the hearing Monday.
"I was concerned that Mike's first
experience with the Reds was going
to be a negative one."
However, Greenberg said there
was no animosity at ·the closed
hearing.
The hearing was .not attended by
Reds President Dick Wagner, who
took part in Collins' hearing,
Colllns had said he would be interested to see if Wagner attended
the hearings of Vail and Moskau.
"It was a matter of trying to
distribute the work load," said
Wagner, who was at his desk back in
Cinci!Vlllti during the Vail hearing.
Wagner said he had no plans to attend the Moskau hearing either.

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�Page-6--,The Daily Sentinel

For the
·r ecord.•.
No_._...,..
C.m.pbellc.l~

Pabiell Dlvtalal

ll' L T GF GA I'll
N. Y. lslancien
~ 18 10 2S7
1'1111adtlphlo .
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Calgary
216 21 12 Z23
Walllllnl!t&lt;Jn
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N. Y.Ran~ra
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GffiLS' BASKETBALL SQUAD- MakJDc up the
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back, Mark Norman, James Keesee, Rick Wise, Chris
Sbank, Lee Powell, Brian Houdasheil, Parker Long,
and coach Bruce WDson.

Meigs Junior High are,. front, 1-r, Rhonda Haddox,
Sherr! Russell, Kim Eblin, Diana White, Julle Sisson,

Toronto

Cindy Sou!Jby, and Rbonda Neece; back, Greta Kennedy, Ruth Fry, Denise Stegall, Julle Pierce, Cathy
DeLong, Jolene Moodlspaugh, Trloa Reeves, krllltin
Bailey, and coach Gloria Alexander.

Ohio
Sportlight

ds in overtime," Baker sajd, "and
that we were going to have to box out
a lot better, and when we had to get
the rebounds, we did."
The game was knotted 5&amp;-56 af!er
regulation when Houston's David
Rose missed from 20 feet as time ran
out. The teams played deliberately
in the first two overtimes, each
scoring two points in those fiveminute periods.
Then, both team switched strategy
and scored 10 points in the third OT.
" It's great to win one like that,"
said TCU Coach Jim Killingsworth,
"but I know it has to be tough to lose
one like that too."
No ranked learns were in action
Tuesday but the SWC was busy.'
Aside from TCU and Arkansas' victories, Baylor edged Texas 84-82 and

Bobcats top Walton
for seventh victory

By George Strode
COLUMBUS ( A~) - Ohio high
schools are paying tournament entry fees for all sports this season to
spare the red ink for district boards
of control, state Commissioner Dick
Annstrong says.
The $25 entry fee for each girls and
boys basketball team is the first
such assessment for that sport in the
74 years of the governing Ohio High
School Athletic Association.
"Our (six) district boards are
having financial problems," Armstrong said Tuesday. "We
eliminated ail entry fees a year ago.
They weren't uniform anyway. We
thought we could give more money
back to the schools, but our larger
districts had $30,000 cut out of their
budgets.
" None of them finished in the red,
but some were dangerously close.
And we didn't want to increase
ticket prices for football or basketball."
The ticket prices, $3.50 for
regional and state basketball tournaments and $3.50 for all state football playoff games, have not been
raised since 1978, Armstrong said.
Basketball teams had been exempt from entry fees in the past, and
Annstrong presumes it was because
of the large revenues the sport
raises for the OHSAA.
"But our association wasn't as
large and didn't have as many
programs," he said. " All the entry
fee money goes to the district boards.''
Now, the ruling body for Ohio's 826
high schools conducts tournaments
in 21 sports, 12 of them for the boys.

The Daily Sentinel
IUSP!II-)

ADtvilloull!lltltimedia,IIK,
Published every afternoon except Sund.y,
Monday through Fridoy, Ill Court SlrHt, by
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Rice topped Southern Methodist 7().
62.
.
The Arkansas-Texas Ax M contest
wa• marred by two fights as four
Aggies starters fouled out. The
fights were between Arkansas' Scott
Hastings and AX M's Claude Riley
with 11:47 to play- Riley was ejected - and between the Razorbacks'
Darrell Walker and A&amp;'s Reggie
Roberts in the first haU . .
:'It was about as rugged a game as
I've seen in a long time," said
Arkansas Coach Eddie Sutton, .who
saw his team move to 111-8 overall
and J().3 in the league. "I'm very
proud of the way our team played.
We had to keep our poise throughout.
"It was a big victory for us and
puts the pressure'on Houston."
Hastings led Arkansas, which shot

59.5 percomt from the field, with 19
points.
Elsewhere, Duquesne nipped
Detroit 72-70 as Bruce Atkins had 22
points and 14 rebounds; Virginia
Commonwealth won its lith straight
game, a 7.().64 overtime victory over
Sun Belt rival South Florida; Kenny
Hall scored 21 points in leading Pennsylvania to a 67-152 victory over Big
Five rival La Salle', and South
Alabama's Ed Rains hit for 22 points
to lead the Jaguars, 21-4 overall and
9-3 in the league, to a 77-57 conquest
of Alabarna&lt;Binningham in another
Sun Belt game before a crowd of
10,549, South Alabama's largest
ever.
In a doubleheader at the Palestra
in Philadelphia·, Villanova upset Big
East rival Syracuse 83-78 and Penn
topped La Salle67-62.
Following the Villanova-Syracuse
game, former NBA great Dolph
Schayes, whose son Dan, the
Orangemen's center, fouled out with
3:44 left to play, charged referees
Ed Batogowski and Larry Hili.

It's a $2 million-plus annual
Kyger Creek jwnped into a 12-ll and four charity tosses. Sands
business.
lead in the first quarter then was for- finished the game with 21 points on
Critics wonder how the non-profit ced to weather a last quarter six baskets and nine free throws.
organization could have had $565,000 uprising in order to preserve a 59-50
Steve marks led Walton with 21
in certificates of deposit last April. non-conference victory over Walton
points while center LaiTy Huffman
Moreover, the OHSAA made $56-1,000 Tuesday night. Behind the hot dumped in 18.
from boys and girls basketball tour- shooting of junior guard David SanAccording to the charts, Walton
naments last spring.
ds, Coach Keith Carter's Bobcats
sank 21 of 78 floor attempts and eight
Annstrong said the association held a 12-ll advantage when timeout
of 19 at the foul lines. Kyger Creek
currently has $365,000 in certificates was called with 3:42 left in the initial won the game there hitting 19 of 32.
and needs that money to carry it stanza. When the quarter had ended,
The Bobcats' reserves won their
Effective thru
through the non-revenue months Kyger Creek held an 111-8 lead.
13th game of the season, 37-29 in the
from March to December.
The visiting Tigers outscored the
preliminary contest.
Eckrich
"We have to have it (the money in Bobcats 14-11 during the second
Brent Love led the way with 13
CDs) to finish the school year. We period to cut the count to ~20 at the points. Ron Martin, J. 0 . Bradbury
have no revenues from April to half.
.
and Roger Stroud had eight each.
December," said Armstrong, a forAgain, in the third canto, Walton Tim Seabolt paced Walton with 12 ·
mer Canton school o.fficial serving in prevailed by outscoring KC, 1&amp;-13 as points . .
his first season as commissioner.
Eckrich
Steve Marks began finding the range
Kyger Creek travels to North
"We're going to have $80,000 to from25 feet away.
Gallia Friday in the season's final
$100,000 fees in 10 cases we've been
Jeff Moles, sophomore forward, SVAC game. Saturday night, the
involved in since August. We kept KC rolling with an eight point ·
Bobcats go to Wahama and then face
budgeted $12,000 for it. I had to quarter. Walton kept creeping back
Southern in the Class A Sectional at
borrow $75,000 this year before the · into the contest until less than a Meigs on Monday. ,
Homemade
association got into football receipts. minute was remaining.
Box score:
I didn't have the money to pay the
At one time, KC saw its 14' point
Watton 150) - D. Marks 2·1·5; S.
bills,'' he said.
lead in the game dwindle to just two Marks 9·3·21 ; Seabolt 1·0·2; Huff·
Annstrong says the OHSAA loses points.
man a:2· 18; Lupardus 1· 1·3; James
0·1·1. Totals21·8·50.
a combined $100,000 on its spring
A crucial basket and foul shot by
DAIRY
Kyger Creek (59) -Sa nds 6·9·21 ;
sports tournaments.
freshman J . D. Bradbury with 40 Barr 0·1·1; Porter 1·2·4; Waugh 2·2·
It will spend a projected $385,000 seconds left provided the cushion 6; Motes 10·4'" ' Bradbury 1·1·3;
1 lb. Kraft Parkav
on the football playoffs, $395,000 on needed for the Bobcats' sixth victory Clark 0·0·0 and Helms 0·0·0. Totals
20-19·59.
boys and girls regional and state this season.
By quarters :
basketball tournaments, $291,000 for
6 14 16 14- 50
Moles was the game's leading Wa lton
18 11 IJ 17- 59
office salaries, $196,000 for office ex- scorer with 24 points on tO baskets Kyger Creek
penses and $122,000 for printing.
Ohio Colby Longhorn
Annstrong is projecting $2,193,269
in recepits to match the
association's 1980-81 budget.
· Playing a consistent floor game,
The White Falcons sank Tl of 56 atSouthwestern connected on 51 per- tempts for 48 percent. Both teams
cent of its shots Tuesday night collected 29 rebounds. Waharna took
Ice Atlantic
enroute to a 71H17 non-conference the reserve contest, 4!&gt;-41.
victory over visiting Wahama. The
Estel Lavender led the winners
victory gave the Highlanders a 9-!0 with 12 points while Don Vanmeter
season record.
had 11. Steve Forgey tossed in 1J for
Four Southwestern players hit Southwestern.
5 lb. Supreme
double figures as senior Dale
The Highlanders play Hannan
Newberry led the way with 24 points Trace Friday night in the final SY AC
on II baskets and two free throws. game for both teams.
103!• oz. Campbells
Jay Burleson had 12 points, Scott
Box score:
Russell
and
Todd
Baker,
11
apiece
The Meigs wrestling team split a
Wahama (67) - Gibbs 6·10·22;
triangular match recently going and Wayne Sizemore finished with Barn ita 5·1·11; Ingels 7-2·16; Gray 4·
0·8; Slsk 2·0·4; Kitchen 2·0·4; Roush
down to defeat against Athens, 57-16, 10.
16 oz. Lucky Leaf
1·0·2. Totals 27-13·67.
Wahama
was
led
by
Larry
Gibbs'
but made a strong comeback to take
Southwestern (76) - Sizemore S·O·
22 points. Gibbs again played an out- IO; Burleson 6·0·12 ; Newbery 11 ·2·
a 54-22 triumph over Fairland.
24 : Russell 3·5·11 ; Baker 4·3·11 and
standing
game.
·
The Marauders looked very imSterrett 4·0·8. Totallll-10·76.
Also
hitting
double
figures
were
15 oz. Chef-Boy-Ar-Dee
pressive in their win over Fairland
Bv Quarters:
and . should be able to keep the York Ingles with 16 points and Scott Wahama
11 18 18 21!-67
s . w.
18 17 16 25-76
momentum going into the SEOAL Barnitz added II.
Tournament this Saturday in Larry ~----'----------...------------'--1
200 Count
R. Morrison Gymnasium.
Wrestling has always been a suc:--~------,
cessful athletic progam at Meigs
10'12 oz.
High School and this year has been
no exception.
Mter a relatively slow start the
Marauders have developed well.
J oz. Armour
• Your choice of ony.
Meigs has the honor of hosting
.one topping . g5 •
Saturday's tournanament featuring
• Reg. $1.35
'
•
ail SEOAL schools.
~l:lr11 Monday
3 Ol.

f-li~BAiiiYi-l
CHHIBBER

Thur., Fri.
1 p.m. to 7 p.m. Wednesday
9 a.m . to 12 noon S.turday.

.I
lI
l

Call 675-5511

2513 Jackson Ave.

Profnsionai·

RUTLAN D
DEPARTMENT
STORE
Phone 742-2100
Saturday, February 21st

LOAF.~.~-. s1.39

PRODOCE
Red

MARGARINE·· o~~rters

GRAPES

LB.
••••••••••

701':1

JO Count Florida

CELERY••••••s.~~~~. 39'

CHEfS£ •••~~12.19 RADISHES 2 Packs 29'
6 oz. Red

Meigs hosts

FISH &amp; BATTER ••••••••••• ~ ••~~~. s1.59

I

• PIZZA BROD •

TICKETS SOW OUT
, · Tickets lo the Eaatern-Southern
basketbaU game Friday night at
Eastern are sold out it was reported
Ibis morniag.

Bag Limit 1.

GRANULATED SUGAR ...........s2.29

this Saturday

I

.....

Ooly

I

·=6inis=

•••••••
•

AU LOCATIONS

•

I

SAUl

: HUMANE SOCIETY I
I THRIFT SHOP
t

f
t
f
f
I

FILL-A·BAG
$}00

FEB. 18-21

t
1
f
I
I

L-~~E~~~~J

CREAM OF CHICKEN SOUP ·•·2/6'
APPLE SAUCE •••••••••• •••••• •••• 2/9!r
Can
BEEF RAVIOLI ····················~ 6'
B
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KLEENEX TISSUES ••••••••••:: •••• 8'

HILTON OYSTER STEW ••••• 2/S}.69
POTTED MEAT

W/Jc Off

•••••••••••••••••

REGULAR
JEUOS ••••••••••••••. 3/9'
16 oz. Idahoan
INSTANT POTATOES •••••••~~~ •••• 8'
.,

Phila~elphla

at Calgary

W L
5tl
41

I
!

P~L

GB

.m -

11

14

13
13

.174
.8Z3
.461

2¥.1
12
Ill;

4&lt;

.Z!IO

32~

Ceacral Dl\'lltea
45 17
13 :17

.5&amp;

sa

19
IS

31

It

Cleveland
Atlanta
Qetroit

11

"

Utah
Olllu

21

•

32
37
39

..

San Antonio

54

Denver
Dallas

41

22

32
32

21
23

39
37

I

.Oil
.434

101,1

~\It

54

Tllewlily'• G. mel

HOMEMADE .

ll'lt

161&gt;

.3!3

39

30
28

23
ll

.381
.)29

17
:Ja\i

.651
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-

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17

.3113
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18'11:
:11\1

101;
ll lf.

Cleveland 109, Detroit 108
l'l&gt;rtlond 114, Waahi"'!OO 104

. USDA CHOICE .

.

Round Steak......L~

$}99 Sandwich Spread.-••••

.

99~

L!·.

•••

BUCKET

Mllwaukl!e 114, Dallas 106
Boston 1211, San Anlllnld 116
Seattle 101. Utah Ill
Phoenb: 118, Golden St.a~ 109
Sin otego 121, Chicago 95
Los Ant!leles 96. New York 87
Wedandlly'1 GamH
Atlanta at Indiana
Ocn~land at New Jersey
Detroit at PtW.delpht.
Boston at K.,... tuy
Chicqo at Golden State
New York at SeatUe
'l'blnday'• Gamet
San Antonio at Cleveland
Phllldell)hla at Washington
Portland at Detroit
Howton at San Diego
Phoenix at Denver

$}59

Ground Chunk ...L!~..

10

14\\

.492
.393
.3!&gt;0
.231

.467

PacUic Dlvlll011
Kanus Cit)'
Huuston
U!ah

.

.726

We1tem Coalermu
Mictwnt Dlvllloa
' San Antonio
41 22
Kans~sCity
30 32
HOWl ton
2S 13
Denver
13 37

.

$229

Cube Steak ........~... .
FRENCH CITY

12 oz.

.wieners •••••••••••••••••
PKG.

Sports transactions
~N

HAM SALAD •••••••••••••••••••~~•• s1.39

SEOAL event

.
B
f(73% liA~ $}29
Groun d·. ee ......~... ·

Hartford at Plttsburt~h
Bllffalo at Montreal

·-·..._
BASEBALL

ROLL SAUSAGE ••••••••••:•••• !-.~-. s1.79

SWHS whips Wahama

4

OiiCOjjO

~!!~~~.!~~·.Ya.:.J

PICKLE &amp; PIMENTO

5tl
49

'l"'tttnd.y'• Glme.
NY Ransen at Detrvit

MliWIUkee
lndtallll

1

!•located at

L

110

St.LoWa 5, Qllgary Z
Quebec: 6, Colorado 3

Philadelphia
Booton
NewYprk
Washinl(lon
NewJfersey

For Appolntm ents
DR. CHHIBBER'S !
OFFICE
·· 1
In the
Building

75
61

Atlu.Uc Dlvb.klll

12 noon to 6, Mon., Tues.,

t

221 73
172 , 70

298 SECOND ST.
, POMEROY, 0.
PRICES EFFECTIVE.THRU SAT., FEB. 21, 1980

Natloalil Buk,tbaU A11oei11Uoa
F.a1kna Coafetea«

NOW ACCEPTING
NEW PATIENTS
Office Hours Are:

J

44
44

NY lslrinden 5
Philadelphia t, Pittsburgh 1

specializing In Pediatrics

1

W!nnioe~

a,

Toronto

1! And Internal Medicine
I

o,

Detroit

$II

WedDHday'1 Glate~
Toronto at NY Ringers
Chicago at Wuhlngt.on
WinniPI!!8 at Hartford
Colorado at Minnesota
Sl.Loul!l at Edmonton
Quebec ot La! Anceles
Boston all Vancouver

TCU takes big win over Cougars, 78-77
I

By Associated Press
left to give the Horned Frogs a 76-77
Guy Lewis was feeling secure. college basketball victory Tuesday
That's when his Houston Cougars night. The defeat dropped Houston,
got into trouble.
I~ overall and 9--4 in the conLewis' Southwest Conference ference, out of a tie for the SWC lead
ieaders were engaged in a titanic with Arkansas, which beat Texas
struggle against Texas Christian A&amp;Ms:Hil.
that had stretched to a fourth over·
"A silly turnover, after which they
time period. But the Cougars were scored, then a blocking foul on Clyde
up by five points with two minutes Drexler gave them two more poinleft in the fourth OT session.
ts," said Lewis. "But if anybody
"The fourth overtime is when we whipPed us, it was Baker."
should have won it," S..id Lewis.
Baker hit 24 points, but credited
"That's the only time l felt secure."
the forwards for keeping TCU in the
But TCU scored the next six pain· game.
ts, the decisive two on Jeff Baker's
"We knew their three big men
16-foot jwnp shot with two second were really going to crash the boar-

Que bee

Sunday 10 am-10 pm

82
61

m 24

21 10 It 2211 171
f1 17 " 212 1112
"' 22 10 223 204
:JO II 10 :133 286
Ill 281 13 211 24:i
n.e.dliy'• GaiDel

Buffalo

SEVENTH GRADE BASKETBALL SQUAD Making up the seventh grade basketball squad at
Meigs Junior High are frou~ l•r, Rodd Harrison, David
Warth, Eric Mitchell, Cbris Kennedy and Paul Duff;

200
130
2116
. 240
243

19 21 t ,
:=3 47
17 Zll ll 11:1 231411
15 II II 2lG 27, 45
.W.IDI DMaJ•

Detroit
Hartford

STORE HOURS:
Mon.·Sal8 am·10 pm

201 71
ITI 7!
21 ~ &amp;4
m ll
23l II

RED SOX -

AMount.'ed that

Dave SUpleton, Infielder, and Mike How·
ard. Dil&lt;ber. hod qmd to tenna.
Cl..EVELAND INDIANS Annoorad
thllt Karl Pagel, oLilfleldt!r, had al(reed to
terms on a one-year cootract.
NEW YORK YANKEES - Slg~ Bill
Cutro, pit~ht!r, to a two-year (.'On tract.
SEATrLE MARINERS - Sl,jned Lenny
lnfiel~r,

Randle,

lriCI.

to

a

three-year

con·

No-ll&lt;Mot

CHICAGO CUBS - Slicned Jerry M~
raJes uuUielder, and asai!lned him to
Iowa' of the American A.uociatlon.

MONTREAL EXPOS SiMned Hal
0\te:s, Rick Engle and Bob Jamet, pitcltent · Bob Pate aOO Pat Rooney, out·
f~tldtrs; Jerry Manuel, Infielder; and
Tom Wle.ChiWI, catc:htr.
P!TrSBURGH
Adalberto Orttz,

contract.

PIRATF.S

a~tcher,

Lettuce .............H.~~.3

Sl~ned

hl

a one-year

FOOTBALL

Natl...lf'..tllt.lll.eape
ClEVELAND BROWNS - Named

Tom

Pratt dfferwive line COich.
NEW YORK GIANTS - Announced the
rttl~~nt

lineman.

of

Vernon

Holland.

offe nsive

SAN DIEGO CHARGERS Nam&lt;cl
M.rv Bn1den sp«la l leaTIUJ coach. AllI'IOWiefld that Jackie Simpson, defensive
coordinator for llnebldlen,. re.'llgned t.&gt;
become the Seattll Seahawlu' drfensive
coordinator for 1\ntblcker~ .

2% MIlk ...... ~ ...~~O·N·~·

HOC!tEY

N.Uoul H~l:ey Lrape
ANGEl.&amp; KINGS -

LQi

Acquired

RJdt CNrtraw, defenseman, from the
Montreal Canadlena tor futu~ consider•·
Uona. Returned Roll Palmer, defenaeman,
to lndlaRMpOIIs of the Central llockey

.....NEW...

YORK ' RANGERS Re&lt;all&lt;d
Lant.-e Nethery, cent.er, (nm New llaven
of ~ American Hoclr:ey Lngue. RelW'tled G1ry Burna, left wlnl(, to New
Haven.

College
·. results
,.,.,.,-,collqe-.tlloUS&lt;om

By nt Aa10eia&amp;fd Pttu
F.AST
Colwntlla 41, Manhllt.n 44
Connecticut Tl, Seton Hall 70
Duq....... 72, Detroit 70
Noitheutem 72, Harvard ~
Penn 17, La Sa lie 52
St.Francl11, N.Y. 70, Cathollc U. 13

Vll ..nova

a, S)'riCUie 78

SOIJTil
Alcorn St. 116, S.Carollna St. 'M

Jacklon St. 100, Oramblln~St. 11
N.Caroll111 A6T 72, Cam II 13
N.C.Charlotte 81, Mtlrquet
~
StPaul 'a n, Norfolk St. •
S.MIIaiublol 111 NW Lout.tano 71
8INoo
JM:uoovllle $4, OT
Viralnia St. 12, Va . Unton 11

M;

IIO!JTHWIIIT

Arltonou ·~--,-_ .UZM II
14
SE Uzulalo111 !Ill
Ponhandle St. 71. Wayland Bapllol !Ill
Rice 'It, Soulhem Melh&lt;ldlat II

.c,

B..;.:f :.

Te011 Chriltian 11. Houaton 77, 40T

Teau Wetklyan \asr""wntern 76
FAll
Air Force 78, Portland St. 48
Cal Puly·l'llmona •• IAVtm&lt; 72
Ornl, W-lon 111 S.Uio Pacific 17
Wettem St. f2, ReMIS f4
J

$}&amp;g

DARI FRESH •

VALLEY FARMS GRADE A
JOAN OF ARC

Kidney Beans...r:'~ ••
400L

94

j

I

OlJP(JN

'

MAXWELL HOUSE

Lim ill Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires Feb. 21, 1981

(

DETERGENT
171

oz.

BOX

$} 29

.

Ice Cream ....... ~.~A!-•••

Pie ·Filling .......:

10
• ; ••

COFFEE
3 LB.
$699

Large Eggs...... ~~~.
BORDEN'S ELSIE .

THANK YOU CHERRY

l llUPON

'

$529

COLJPllN

I

CAM P.BELL'S
CttiCKEN NOODLE

SOUP
10.75 OL

4;sl

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires Feb. 21, 1981

24 oz.
JUG
Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer
Feb. 21, 1981

�Wednesday, February 18,1981

Cedarville nips Rio,
.91-90, in overtime

FINAL GAME - Vince Phelps {11, on right wllb
ball) finished his four year career as a Rlo Grande
Redmen Tuesday night. The sparkplug guard fouled
out wilb more than 13 minutes left to play. Cedarville

defenders are Curt Berger, (Z3, left) and Mark
Womack (43). Womack;s desperation shot atlbe huz·
zer downed Rio Grande, 91-90, in overtime.

OSU starts signing recruits today
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Ohio
State is expected to sign 22 to 24 high
school football recruits starting
today, and Coach Earl Bruce .says
the Buckeyes are only three or four
great prospects away from an outstanding class.
The Buckeyes already have verbal
cOJrunitments from 14 high school
players, seven of them from Ohio.
Michigan, another dominant force in
Big Ten Conference football , also
. has landed the same number of
. players from Ohio, according to an
Associated Press survey Tuesday.
Today is the first day high school
players can sign binding national
letters of intent with colleges.
Michigan, enjoying success in
Ohio after beating the Buckeyes last
fall and winning the Rose Bowl Jan.
I, lined up another AP first team
Class AAA Ohioan, 6-foot-4, 252pound offensive guard Mike Ham-

inerstein from Wapakoneta. Hammerstein chose the Wolverines over
Ohio State, UCLA and North
Carolina.
Also going to Michigan is 6-1, 215pound defensive tackle Bob
Tabachino from Youngstown
Chaney.
The latest In-state players to
select Ohio State are 6-4, 266-pound
offensive tackle Mark Krerowicz of
Toledo St. John and Centerville's
Gary Alders, a 6-2, 19:&gt;-pound quarterback who missed much of the 1980
season with an injury.
But the Buckeyes have come up
with three prized out-of-state performers, quarterbacks Walt Norley
of Philadelphia Germantown
Academy and Mike Tomczak of
Calumet City, Ill., Thornton Fractional North, and defensive tackle
Jolm Sullivan, 6-51&gt; and 240 pounds,
from Chicago St. Francis DeSales.

Norley, 6-4 and 208 pounds, chose
Ohio State over Georgia. Tomczak,
who threw for 2,159 yards and 21
touchdowns last fall, had considered
Michigan. Tomc:zak and Sullivan
were first team All-Illinois selections.
The Wolverines and Buckeyes are
the only champions in the Big Ten
since 1967.
Penn State, which beat the
Buckeyes in the Fiesta Bowl, also
grabbed first team Class A AU-Ohio
offensive tackle Jeff Brunie of
Sebring, 6-5 and 245 pounds.

Mark Womack's despenition shot
at the buzzer gave visiting Cedarville a 91-90 ov~rtime victory over
Rio Grande College at Lyne Center
Tuesday night.
It was a heartbreaking loss for
Coach John Lawhorn's Redmen;
who bowed out with a 16-12 regular
season slate and a I~ conference
record.
After ·a close first half, the Redmen trailed 42-40 during the halftime
intermission.
Rio kept battling the 1980-31 MidOhio Conference champions on even
temis early in the second half
despite the fact veterans Tom Dorsey and Vince Phelps were on the
sidelines. Both fouled out of the
game·with more than 13 minutes left
to play.
The score was 55-all when Dorsey
and Phelps departed. After falling
behing ~3 with 10 minutes to go,
Rio, with five freshmen in the
lineup, caught fire and shot out to a
7f&gt;.67 advantage with only 3: t9left in ,
the game.
The Yellow Jackets, however,
came storming back to outscore the
Redmen I~ during the final three
1ninutes of play. Tim Danube's goal
with 10 seconds len in regular play

tied the score at83-all.
Vlnce Wollenburg put Rio on top .
115-83 to open the overtime period.
Eric Mount'sgoal tied it at8Hll.
Rick Penrod's two charity tpases
and a'free throw by Tom Jutze (1 :01
left) put the home team on top, ~.
Curt Berger's goal with :50 left
reduced Rio's lead to one, 90-89.
, Scott Burson was fOuled with :~
left. Burson missed the front end of a
·one-and-one. Berger came down
with the rebound. Cedarville called
time with :14 left. Rio called time
before the Jackets could put the ball
inplay.
·
Richard Quisenberry was inserted
into the Rio lineup. He helped double
team ·Womack. The Yellow jacket
ace shot off balance, missed, and
Jutze came down with the rebound
with six seconds left. Jutze was
fouled lnunediately.
The 6-4 forward from Cincinnati
missed the front end of a one-andone. Mounts grabbed the rebound,
dribbled to mid-court, passed off to
Womack, and Womack let go at the
buzzer.
It was Rio's second one-point overtime loss to this year's league champions. Cedarville edged Rio 94-93 at
Cedarville on Jan. 24.

The victory left Cedarville with a
22'2 season record. The Yellow
Jackets concluded league play with
a 13-lmar;;.
Besides Mark Womack's 211 points,
Eric Mounts tossed in 20 and Greg
Greve 14 for the winners.
Tom J utze paced Rio's attack with
24 points. Acros added 21, Vince
Wollenburg !8, Rick Penrod 14 and
Tom Dorsey 11.
Rio Grande conneeted on 34 of 73
field goal attempts for 46.5 percent.
The Redmen were 22 of 31 at the foul
line for 70.9 percent. Rio had 49
rebounds,19 by Jutze.
Before fouling out, Vince Phelps
was credited with five assists,
raising his season's total to 2211.
Phelps is Rio's all-time assist
leade,r. The Redmen had 16 tur-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Apple Grove News Notes
By Mn. Herbert Holub
Mrs. Phyllis Young of Middleport
' silent Sunday with her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Gerald Hayman.
Don Bell was returned to his hOJne
Saturday alter spending three weeks
at Holter Medical Center due to
surgery. Visiting him were Andy
and. Nora Cross, John Hill, Bob
Morris, Don Richard Hill; Eugene
and Mona Ervin and children.
Mrs. Clara Powell is a medical

patient at Holzer Medical Center due
to pneumonia and complications.
Orville Jarrell is a medical patient
at St. Joseph Hospital.
.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Spencer a~td
daughter, Tracy, visited Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Bowers and Doug Barnett.e at Parkersburg Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs . . Herbel'! Roush
visited Mr. and Mrs. Dana'l.ewis at
Clifton Monday evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Roush, Mr.

91.

RIO GRANDE (901- Phelps 1·0·
2; Burson 0·0·0; Felske 0·0·0; Banks
0·0·0; Wollenburg 9·0· 18 : Maisch 0·0·
0; Penrod 2· 10· 14; Quisenberry 0·0·0:
Dorsey 4-3· 11; Acord 9·3· 21; Liedtke
0·0·0; Jutze 9·6· 2&lt;. TOTALS 34-22-90.
Halftime score - Cedarville 42,
Rio40.

tS
r"«tulfed 10 t.
retdity a...a•iablt for wle ,.., uch K•ogllf Sto•e. e•cept ..
~ r'C\ed l'l U. .0 " 'IW do n.JI1 OUI af _, ~.:I

Uc:l'l of theM idver1-.d •ltms

wn.n

rr.

ldvtn'*

llli!Dl!Lew PIICI

TOTAL SATISFACTION GUARANTEE
Evet"11h•ng

vou buy at

YELLOW CliNG

Kroget '' gua•antMd tor vour to-.1

Avondale
Peaches ... '~;:'~

uusfact!On ''9''~ ol manufac lur&amp;r If you are no\ wt•a'

tied, Kroger Will replace -.our 1tem w1th the wme bf111(1 or •
coml)rilllb6e br1nd or refund vOu• purct~M pr•ce

AVONDALE

Few are around to light the ·calldies on the cake, but this spring
marks the :!lith anniversary of one of
the most startling and misleading
baseball headlines in recent history:
"Brooklyn Dodgers Moving to Jer'
sey City."
Irving Rudd remembers it well.
He was the man designated by
owner Walter O'Malley to pitch
camp on the other side of the river
and make preparations for the first
. game April 19, 1936, two days after
the Ebbets Field opener.
"Everybody thought Mr. O'Malley
was planning on a pennanent move
there," the bouncy little publicist
recalls. "Actually he was just inserting a needle and hinting that the
Dodgers were in a moving mood.
"We played seven games at Jersey City's Roosevel! Stadium - the
only major league baseball ever
played in the state. After the 1957
season, both the Dodgers and Giants
went West. Ebbets Field was torn
down to make room for an apartment complex.
"Something died in all of us."
Rudd, the Dodgers' promotions
director at the time, was made
general manager of the Jersey City
venture, operating from the Hotel
Plaza on Journal Square',
"Since tickets hadll't been printed,
we only took mail orders and issued
certificates," Rudd said. "It was
hostile country. Jersey City had
been the home base of the Giants'
farm club.

POMEROY AND GALLI POLIS STORES.
WI RfSUV~ THE 111\GHT lQ liMIT QUANTITIES

NON(

SOLO 10 DU.lUS '

1~ · 17-LB.

KROGER COST CUTTER COUPON

AVG.

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40

JOHN A. WADE, M.D., INC.
VETERANS MEMORI~L HOSPITAL
EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST
OHice Hours by Appointment Only

or (304)-(»75-1244

$299

U .S. GOII'T GRADED CHOICE ,
IEEF CHUCK IONELESS

$169

Pot Roast ................ lb.

3

KROGER

•.j

lflhere·s one flme beyond all others
Y?U want YOl!r feet to be comfortable
If s when you're on the golf course.
You 'll wont to be sure you 've gol
Hush Puppies® Golf Shoes as a
partner. Comfortable enough to
walk the whole round . And
priced so low you 'll wish 11
were yoor score on the •
front nine.

HEARl NG TESTS SET

uocu

CrIIIII

Natural Flavor
Ice Cream

IROWN 'N' SERVE

PARKAY QUARTERS

4?9.LD CllST

Marsh-

ELECTRONIC
HEARING TESTS .

BELTONE Consultant Who Will Be At:
MEIGS INN, POMEROY, OHIO
Anyone who has trouble hearing is welcome to have a hearing test us·
lng modern electronic equipment to determine If his loss is one which
may be helped. Some of the causes of hearing loss will be explained
and diagrams of how the ear works will be shown.
Batteries and Supplies For All Makes For Sale.
IF YOU CANNOT COME INrALL THE HOTEL.cFOR A HOME -APPOINTMENT .
PHONE 9'Z·36211

AVONDALI

AVAILAII.E ONLY IN
STOlES WITH
DELl DEPT$.
HOTFOOOS
AVAilAILI Tlam
TIL 7pm

KROGER

Orange Juice . l~~~. $105
Toothpast e ... 4.6·ol
rube
Ko.n x
JO -Ct. $189
Mini Pads.... .. Bo•
AIM

~~: -~~-~~~~-~-.

3 $249

lb.

MILD

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PlAIN . SESAME OR POPPY SEED
FRESH lAKED

WINESAP

THOMPSON WHITE SEEDLESS

.

gc

DEll STYLE
JUMBO

FRESH

FlESH

KENT

RIDLIAF

DROMEDARY

HARREY'S
SHOES,
INC.
Mldd!e of Upper Block, Pomeroy·, Oh.
Store Hours: 9-5:00 Daily
Fri. Night tll8:00 p.m.

SLICED
TOORDER

$379
$149

79c

I ..... ••·••·
lltlves
"""

ggc
sgc
49c
HILLCilST

$299

Kroger
,.,
Mustord... 32·•··

89

Rome
5
Apples ...... ~~o
5 $139
-lb.
Sub Buns ............. 6-Ct.
AppIes .......... Bog
$169
Grapes .............. lb.
All Meat
Green Cabbage lb . 1
Bologna
1-lb $129
Mushrooms .. cart.;n
$189
$159
.
lb.
Asparagus ........ lb . .
2
$1
LeHuce ....... Bunch••

Jar

69

Cheddar Cheese .... lb.
C
Potato Salad ..... ... ... lb.
iiG Chicken .... ,..... lb. $1 59
AMERICAN OR MUSTARD '

.....

M.-aschino
Jar
Ch trrlII ... •·••·
AYOHDAU
M•darin ·01 .
0 rang11 ... 11Con

$1

SLICED OR BY THE PIECE .

NEWCIOP

Will Be Given By
H. W. Mattingly

,...

mallows .. ~~~

FROZEN KROGER SWEETENED
OR NATURAl (3-PAK )
1

Pkg .

32c

69.~

99

$

KRAFT

Grade A
Large Eggs

1.4 ·01 .

Mcnhmolow
13·01 .

LVI .

California
Navel ·Oranges

for

Avond•le 1-lb .
Spaghett1. .. "•·
ICIOGU
Instant ••...
Coffee .. ,.,
Flake
·coconut .

VISION EXAMINATIONS
HARD AND SOFT CONTACT LENSES

...,~~;"

AVONDALE MACARONI 01

GOLD CREST

White .
20-oz. $129
Bread ....... .
210-cn. $119
Kroger Biscuits ... Pkgs.
$129
Miracle Whip ......... . 32-oa.
Jar
2
$1
•
16-oa.
Margar1ne........ ..... .... Pkss.

Provides Such Services As

We Also Service and Repair All Ma"cs of Hea1 i:lg Aids.

CALL (614)-992-2104

U.S. GOV'T .. RADIO CHOiCE.
TAIL·lESS

1·Bone Steak .......... rb.

R. H. BILLMAN II, O.D.

•-.;,i.

23c

- 1~

Any Size Pkg. lb. $139
.Ground Beef ....

BEND MEA OPTOMEMETRIC CENTER

Rudd, now 63, a puckish man with
a bulbous nose, glib tongue and a
headful of ideas, didn't follow
O'Malley and the Dodgers to Los
Angeles. He stayed home to suffer
and vowed he's never go to another
Dodger game.
Once he became ill and went to his
doctor. "You're not sick, you're just
depressed because you miss your
team," the physician said. "! am
FLYING PASs- New York Knieks Campy Rull8ell (%1) J11181el by
treating hundreds of cases like your
Los Angeles !akers Kareem Abdul Jabhar (33) during lbe lint baH In Los
own."
Angeles Tuesday. Lakers lopped the New York Knlcks 9&amp;-87. (AP LaserHe admired O'Malley but never
photo).
forgave him. "Mr.O'Malley - I.-.:.....--'---------------------~
never called him Walter - was a
nice, avuncular fellow, the smartest
I've ever seen," he concedes. lf he
had been President, Russia would be
a farm club. But he was light with
the buck - deep pockets and short
Pomeroy, Ohio
anns.''
THURSDAY, FEB . 19
9 A.M. to 12 Noon

Avondale
Dinner ... ..7'1·...····

Can

REGULAR OR CHUB PAK

•••••••

992-2920

18:~.

•.• ,,

Avondale 5
· I~
I ......r o.i
Four
VAC ,AK
Embassy 2.
Coff11 . ... Con

COUNTRY STYlE

1..,. 1

OPEN M.-T.-W.·F . 9-S
CLOSED THUR.·SAT.·SUN.
113 Court St.
Pomeory, Oh.
Above Clark's Jewelry in Pomeroy

MACAIONI &amp; CHEESE

Sa UCI ......

ggc

HOT OR MILO

'

Tomato

Whole
·
Fresh Hams ....... lb.
5·7·11.
79
C
Smoked Picnics .~ ...... lb.
Gwaltney Sausage ~!~f
$1 09
Sliced Bacon ........... rb.

59~
. , ..
33f
.
'

KIOGEII

AVG. WHOLE

=&amp;~nets=

"I knew we were in trouble when
the mayor's kids showed up in
Yankee sweat shirts. When the
Dodgers took the field, they were
hissed and booed, especially Jackie
Robinson.
" Jackie yelled over to me: 'Hey,
Irv, is this your idea? You can give
this town back to the Indians and
politicians.' Despite raw, blustery
weather, we drew more than 12,000.
"We played six more games,
drawing 22,071 against the Cards
and packing 'em in for night games
with the Cubs, Reds and Pirates.
They called it 'O'Malley's Folly,' but
Mr. O'Malley had the last laugh."

Sweet
Peas .....

COJ'YRI~HT 1.. 1 THE MJIOGU CO IUM5 ANO PRICES
GOOO SUNDAY ~[I 15 TH"IIU SATURDAY HI 21 , 191\IN

and the 33-point victory margin was
Ce!Ucs 128, Bucks 118
the biggest since the team moved
Robert ·Parish scored a seasonwest from Buffalo prior to the 1978- high 40 points and Boston staved off
79 campaign.
a fourtiH!uarter San Antonio rally.
"We don't get too many like this. Larry Bird added 25 points for the
They're kind of nice to have," said Cellics, including a three-pointer
Coach Paul Silas.
with 36 seconds remaining after the
In other National Basketball Spurs had erased most of a 16-point
Association action, the Boston deficit. Boston's fast-breaking ofCeltics snapped the San Antonio fensive show offset a season-high 49Spurs' record 17-game borne win- point spree by San Antonio's George
ning streak 128-116, the Los Angeles Gervin.
Lakers ended the New York Knlcks'
eight-game winning streak 96-87, the
Phoenix SWlll downed the Golden
State Warriors 118-109, the . - - - - - - - - - - - Mllwaukee Bucks handed the Dallas
Mavericks their 14th consecutive
setback 114-106, the Seattle SuperSonics ' edged the, Utah Jazz 101-98,
the Portland Trall Blazers rallied to
beat the Washington Bullets 124-104
• Your choice of any.
and the Cleveland Cavaliers nipped
.one lopp;ng . 95 •
the Detroit Pistons IllS-1m!.
•Reg. _$1.35
• .
•
San Diego led Chicago all the way,
Starll Monday
scoring the first eight points and
0o1r
taking a 30-10 advantage after just
1012 minutes. Phil Smith also scored
22 points for the Clippers.
Artis Gllmore led the Bulls with
•
AU lOCATIONS
•
16, but the 7-foot-2 center had only
three rebounds.

I

By WW Grimaley
AP Correspondent

recent Sunday at Langsville.
Mrs. Marge Burri and Mrs. Betty
Wilson visited Mrs. Enna Wilson at
Pomeroy Care C011ter Thursday.
Recent weekend guests of Mr. and.
Mrs. Arnold Hupp and Mr. and Mrs.
Eddie Hupp and Jeremy were Mr.
and Mrs. Charles (Bus) Hupp and
daughters of Marengo. Spending
Friday evening with the Hupps were
Mr. and Mrs. Dorsa Parsons.
Mrs. Bertha Barnette spent Thur·
sday afternoon with Mrs. Martha
Anderson.

Item, W. WIH Offlf YOU YO\H ChDICI! af i Compatible illtn.
tvl.._.. rtllect•ng !he same !t.liiii"''f or 1 ti•J\Ctl«k
'lll'ht(;h 'Mil ent•t» vou to pu•chase the ld~o~erhMCI rtem"
pra Within Xl Nvs

.-.,. r

Sports World

Pomeroy Care Center, Pomeroy. He
would appreciate cards and letters.
Mrs. Betty Webb of West Jefferson, Mrs. Ethel Kaufman of
Colwnbus visited Mrs. Pearl Willis a
few days.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Russell· were
recent Sunday dinner guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Ronald Russell, Mandy
and Michael.
Tracy Norris spent Sunilay night
with Mandy Russell.
Mr. and Mrs. Dorsa Parsons
visited Donald and Mary Barnette a

Whole Fryers
Mixed Fryer Parts

••n••
SP£CIIIL-. • PIZZA BREAD •

Today's

Guests attending were Wayne and
Betty Wilson, Cheryl Wilson and Bill
Harris of POJDeroy, Ronald Wilson,
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Burri, Mr. and
Mrs. William Wickline and sons,
Scott and Kyle, and Mrs. Kathryn
Hunt.
. .Mr. and Mrs. Allen Mills and Bolr
by visited her father, Orville Jarrell,
at St. Joseph Hospital Saturday and
also visited Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Bowers at Parkersburg.
Liege Shields; a former Letart
Falls resident, is a patient at the

HOLLY FARMS . U.S.D.A. INS,PEC:TEt&gt;"~

ADVERTISED 11 EM POLICY

CEDARVILLE (911 -Green 0·2·
2; Hamlet 2· 1·5 ; Dixon 1·0·2; Greve
6·2·14; Berger 4·0·8; Mounts 7-6·20 :
Carr 3·0·6; Danube 1·N ; Womack
11 ·4·26; Pryor 1·2-4. TOTALS 36·1P·

and Mrs. Dana Lewis were visitors
at Gallipolis Sunday evening.
Arthur Wilson of Marietta: wBll a
dinner guest Wednesday of Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Burri.
A birthday dinner was held Sunday at the borne of Mrs. Kathryn
Hunt in honor of Mrs. Beverly
Wickline and ·Arthur Wilson of
Marietta whose birthdays were Feb.
5. Mr. Wilson was unable to attend
due to bad weather. A heart-shaped
cake was baked by Mrs. Marge
Burri and presented to Beverly.

The Daily Sentinei-Page-:9

RMS, U.. S.
INSPECTED GRADE A

novers.
Boxscore:

Clippers snap losing ways
with 128-95 win Tuesday
By The Associaled Press
For a change, the San Diego Clippers didn't miss Bill Walton.
With Joe Bryant scoring 10 of his
22 points in the first quarter, the
Clippers grabbed a big early lead
and went on to rout the Chicago
Bulls.126-95 Tuesday night. The Clippers not only snapped a four-game
losing streak, but the 128 points was
their largest output of the season

Wednesday,- February 18, 1981

ggc

ICIOGU

Umo

. . .ftl

r':SSY

8aa• .... .. 100-Ct.
... .

MIOGU

......

16·01.
(lin

s149

age
89c
·•···· 75c

Worcestershire
.
,.....

SaUCI

.. '"'' JJI .

IMIASSV

Salad

DrellIng...

ICIOGU

Oyster

,..•,,
,.,

..._.en .....
.._....

IIG VALUI

Y•llla
Wafers ....
KIOOIIt

..__,
r•

Tomoto

...

12·oa.

.....

I ...... C.n

O&amp;C

Onion llnvs ~=~
MIOGII QUAITIH

Com 011
•·•
Ma1911rine ... ...,:

59c
69C

1

�Wednesday, February 18, 1981

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-10 The Daily Sentinel

Sandra Fowler--poet--honoree
of American Biographical,
Institute in December

Check your blood pressure-before it 's ·too late. ' '
;;;;;:~·-..,..--......... ~~!')~·~

~...,...ttmiJ!l.it"'J~"'~ ·

~·It;;,~~~~~
.;

&lt;t f:I!'WQ tl~·K¢1!t

.:

'·

Have you had your blood pressure
checked recently?
Or are you waiting for a symptom
which never shows up in nine out of
ten persons who suffer hypertension?
Nita Wisniski, Mei@! County
Health Department's hypertension
nurse, reports that too often damage
has already occurred \O vital organs
- . the . heart, brain or kidneys before the high blood pressure is
de.tected.
February, being Heart Month, is
being used by the Health Department to create more public
awareness to the dangers of hypertension.
Health officials estimate the high
blood pressure is a factor in some
250,000 deaths in this country each
year.
.
In Meigs County free blood
pressure clinics are held
periodically and residents are
always welcome to visit the
Mulberry Heights offices in the new
multi-purpose building for a blood
pressure reading.
Recently Ms. Wisniski and personnel from the Hocking Technical
College's Community Health
Education Center checked pressure
for the miners of the Southern Ohio
Coal Co.'s Meigs Division. The
miners were screened one week, and
then those with elevated pressure
were re-screened the next week.
Miners who were still found to have
higher-than-nonnal readings in the
re-screening were then advised to
cons.ult their family physicians.
Of the 514 screened, !50 were
found to have elevated blood
pressure. For the re-screening only
49 miners returned. A total of 45
from both clinics were referred to
physicians.
As explained by Ms. Wisnisk~
hypertension can be treated.
"Staying away from excessive
salt, maintaining an ideal weight,

CHECKS BLOOD PRESSURE - Nita Wisnisld,
byperteaslon nurse for lhe Meigs County Health
Department, ~likes the blood pressure of oae of the 514

and regular exercise all help," the
nurse advised. She stressed the importance of follow-through on
medication prescribed by the per·
sonal physician as the most important element in blood pressure
control.

Senior Citizens Scenes ·

Cure for winter blues
By the Center Staff
elude a puppet show presented by
If you have the mid-winter " I'm Mrs. Donna Grate and friends from
tired of staying in the house blues,'; Rutland , games, and a square danyou may be interested in the ce. Be sure and bring a " homeFebruary activities at the Meigs made'' valentine to share.
·Senior Citizens Center.
On Tuesday, February 17 from 10
If you want to be "creative" this -a.m.· until 12 noon, Dave Boothe,
winter, why not take advantage of Jackson Area Extension Supervisor,
lhe Center's knitting and crocheting will be providing a workshop on
classes. Talented Irene Christy will Minor Household Appliances and
show you the correct "ins and om.;" Electrical Repairs.
of knitting each Tuesday begi~ning
Boothe will provide the expertise
at 10:30 a.m. and crocheting tips of how to complete minor repairs on
each Friday at IO: 30 a.m. Bring your various appliances and electrical
own yarn and needles and take ad- plugs, switches, outlets, and light
vantage of this class. Keep in mind sockets. Suggestions for proper use
that all craft classes and educational and care of appliances to avoid the
programs are open to all age groups need for repairs will also be
and we encourage Meigs County's provided.
younger citizens to take part.
This workshop is sponsored by the
Thursday, ·February 12, the first in Meigs County Extension Service.
a series of health education
The Center's monthly blood
programs will be held at II a.m. On pressure clinic will be held ThurFriday, February 13, the Center will sday, February 19 from 10 a.m. until
host a Valentine party beginning at 1 noon.
p.m. Activities for the afternoon inMISSIONARY SERVICE
TONIGHT
·Entertain with party
A special missionary service,

Mr. and Mrs. Harold Scarberry,
Riverview Drive, Middleport, entertained recently with a party
honoring their son, Harold Scarberry, Jr., on his second birthday.
Pink and blue streamers and
:balloons were featured in the
·decorations and the Mickey Mouse
cake was inscribed "2". Cake, chips,
and Kool-Aid were served.
Attending were John and Dorothy
· Bryan, Mickey and Heather Davis,
Jo, Jolm and Gene Fink, Bernard
·and Frances Scarberry and Arlene,
:Dian.e Boyd, Mr. and Mrs. Vincent
· Laudennilt and family.
Sending gifts were Mr. and Mrs.
Ronald Russell and family, Lorain,
-Lucille Murray, and Marcia and
· Angela Knaw.

earlier postponed due to inclement
weather, will be held tonight (Wednesday) at the Syracuse Church of
the Nazarene. Services will begin at
7 p.m. and will include vocal selections by the junior church children
and a skit by the young people.
There will be a mystery guest. Mrs.
Ora Bass has charge of the program
to which the public is invited by the
pastor, James Kittle.
MCCLTO MEET
The Middleport Child Conservation League will meet Thorsday at 7:30p.m. at the home of Mrs.
Susie Soulsby. Mrs. Peggy
Houdashelt will have devotions.
Mrs. Mary Powell will give a demonstration and hostesses will be Tonda
Seidenable and Jean Whobery.

This is one of a series of articles
on dental health published by the
Daily Sentinel, in cooperation
with the Rehwinkel Dental
Society, in observance of
National Children 's Dental
Health Month.
What is plaque ahd how does it
affect teeth?
Plaque is the primary villain in
dental disease. II is a sticky,
colorless film of bacteria that
continually forms on teeth. The

harm comes when plaque combines with sugars in foods to form
acid which attacks tooth enamel
arid causes decay. Plaque also attacks the gums, and when
allowed to accumulate, it is a
major cause of periodontal (gun)
disease. An individual can
protect his teeth and gums from
dental disease caused by plaque
by a regular routine of brushing
and flossing to thoroughly
remove plaque.

ASTROGRAPH
F~bruary

11ili!

It, !Jail

roost with too heavy a hand. Be tOlerant with
those who look to you for guidlnct.
CANCER IJut !l.JIIly !Z) Your se ~
sitivity ia showing today. You may behlve •
bit too temperamentally. Bt eapeclllly
careful in situations with euthorityflgwu.
LEO IJ ..y !Hq. !!I You're bulcolly
very generou.s, a fact wtlich is well known by
1 free!~ IWOCiate. He'll be looking fora
handout today.
VIRGO (A•I· !J.SrcpL tz l In rnakin11
jlldgrnenta today, don't permit anger over •
put e~:pertence to color your outlook.
l&gt;Kisions rllllde out o( spite could be harm-

~ming year a friend could COJ1'W

to
yoo with a rather uniqlle proposal and
11lthuugh it riUIY appea r too far-()ut at flni
~~: lanLY , it will bettouve yuu to take a closer
look . ll Lvuld be profitable.
· AQUARIUS I J... 21-Feb. I!) If your
budgri . has. been bent a bit out or shape
lately. 1t':. time to seek ways to trim the fat.
Unfortunately, yoo may do just the opposite
tod8y. Romance , travel, luck, resources,
possible pitfalls and career for the coming
months are all discussed in yuW' AstroGraph which Degins with your birthday. Mail
$1 for each to A.!ltro-G raph, Box 4IU Radio
City Station, N. Y. 10019. Be sure tu ~pecify

fw.

UBRA (Sept. ZJ.&lt;kl tl) Cbore.!! left till
the lut minute aren'tlikely to be performed
to ywr beat •bi.lities today. Keep ev~:ryt.hinK

birth date.
PISCES fFeb. ZO.Mireh 2tl Usually you

are \'ery considerate and cooperative.
Today, you may Jet your self-mterests reign
supreme and cause others to respond
similarly.
ARIES IMareh !l·April 111 Coworkcn
could be a trine more difncult to get along
wH.h today than u.sual. Be careful not to do
lhings to arouse their in rather than their
cooperation.
TAURUS IAprillt-Miy •1 You could ex·
pertence some pressure from your peer
group today and, if you yield, it may cause
you to do somet hin t~ which doesn't serve
)'QIU" best intemta.
GEMINI CMiy Zl.JUt 21 ) Those in your
char..:e may rebel today If you trv to rule the

WEEKEND REVIVAL
SLATEI)
Evangelist Michael Vance of
Columbus will conduct a weekend
revival Friday through Sunday at
the Midway Community Church in
Langsville. Services will begin at 7
p.m. each evening. The Rev. A. A.
Hughes, pastor of the church, invites
the public.

on schl!dule, toavtlid frw~tratiom .
SCORPIO IOrl U.Nov. D~ Your fri~:nds
will resent It today if you tak e it upoo yoursell to run the st.ow . l..et everyone put tn his
or her two cenl!l ' worth and there'll be no

hanl feeUnp.
s.wmARrus ~Nov . !3-DH. !11 To fulfiU
your ambitions today you may be templed to
wte methods which others might find of.
rtnUve. Behave like the &amp;ood guy you are .
CA.PRJCORN tllft. ZWaa 111 Don't uae
your k.nowlfdlle today to embarrass or put
«hen down. fnstead of appearins sapertor,
Wit whit yoo ~ to be helpful •nd con- ·
Jtructlve.

LOOMISES HOST MEETING
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Loomis hsoted a
feUowship meeting and dinner at
their Syracuse residence recently.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs. Sidney
Hayman, Mr. and Mrs. Carol
Knight, Mrs. Maggie Mowery and
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Wade
Ha yman. Next meet'mg will be with
M M
rs. owery ·

'jp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1
I

WEDNESDAY
SYRACUSE Third Wednesday
Club Wednesday at 10 a.m. at
Syracuse Municipal Building.
Potluck at noon. ·
MISSIONARY SERVICE Wednesday 7 p.m. at Syracuse Church of
the Nazarene.
TIIURSDAY
ADULT FELLOWSHIP Class at
Syracuse Church of the Nazarene
· Thursday at 7 p.m.
WILLING WORKERS Class of Enterprise United Methodist Church
Thursday at 7:30p.m. at the home of
Cordelia Bentz.
PUBLIC CARD party, 1 p.m.
Thursday by Grace Episcopal Church Women at parish home in
Pomeroy·. Door and table prizes, admission $3.
MIDDLEPORT CCL, 7:30 p.m.
Thursday at the home of Mrs. Susie
Soulsby. Peggy Houdashelt to have
devotions, Mary Powell to give
demonstration. Tonda Seidenable
and Jean Whobery to be hostesses.
ROCK SPRINGS GRANGE, 7:30
p.m. Thursday at the grange hall.
MAGNOUA CLUB, THursday,
7:30p.m. at the home of Mrs. Doris
Grueser. Miss Erna Jesse to have
devotions with Mrs. Katie Miller to
present the program.

Soup labels due Friday

Birthday party
honors Milhoan

At a recent meeting · of the · year. The textbook committee was
Syracuse PTO it was announced that discussed and a nominating comthe last day for turning in Campbell mittee was appointed. The third
soup labels will be Friday.
grade won the room count and the
It was noted that the merry-go- third grade mothers served refreshround has been ordered and should ments.
be installed before school is out this

The 54th birthday of Blaine
Milhoan was celebrated recently
with a party. A cake inscribed "HapPY Birthday" was served with ice.
cream, chips, dip, ham, macaroni
salad, and coffee.
Attending besides Mr. and Mrs.
Blaine Milhoan were Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Seidenable, Mr. and Mrs.
Albert Goeglein, Mr. and Mrs. Philip
Smith, Darlene Casto, Tracy Casto,
Mr. and Mrs. WiUiam Milhoan and
Amanda, Mr. and Mrs. Bruce
Myers, Mr. ,and Mrs. Terry Congo
and Tara , Mrs. Patty Pickens, Tony
Milhoan, and Mr. and Mrs. Mikel
Milhoan and April. Gifts and cards
were received by the honored guest.

Potluck dinner held
A potluck dinner in observance of
Valentine's Day was held at the
recent meeting of the Ladies
Auxiliary, Racine Fire Department,
at the fire house.
Debbie Lyons led in the pledge
with MBe Cleland giving the Lord's
Prayer. Others attending were Chris
Shain, Jean Lyons, Emma Lyons,
Betty Lyons, Aggie Boggess, Beulah
Autherson, and Jean Johnson who
also won the door prize.

FIRsrSTEI'
First step in preparing for gardening, for us: Hide the shovel, rake
and hoe.

Soup supper Saturday
The Racine PTO will hold a soup
supper Saturday night at the Racine
Elementary School. The menu wiU
include vegetable soup, cornbread
and beans, hot dogs, pie, coffee and
tea. Take-out service will be
available at 4 p.. with containers to
be furnished by the purchaser. Serving will begin in the cafeteria at the
school at 5 p.m. and will continue until6:30 p.m. Proceeds from the soup
supper will go toward upg radi~g the
playground equipmen~at the school.

AUTHORIZED CATALOG
SALES MERCHANT

[Sears I
Phone H2·2171
101 w. Main St.
Pomeroy, Oh.
OWNED AND OPERATED BY
Jack &amp; Judy Williams

FRIDAY
ADULT FELLOWSHIP Class will
bowl at Pomeroy Lanes Friday at 8
p.m.

Open: Mon. tllru Wed. 9-5
Thur. 9· 12, Fri. 9-5, Sat. 9·2
Sitlsfa(tion Guaranteed
or Your Money Back

TRUSTEES TO MEET
The Board of Trustees of the
Meigs County Libraries have
changed their regular rneetin@!
from the fourth Tuesday of each
month to the fourth Wednesday of
each month, at noon at the Meigs
Inn.

'--~--

· ~~
~8!!!!!!!tr!!!!!!id!!!!!!!eR! ! ! !it! ! ! !®e~jd
Children's Shoes
a parent can trust.
Onceyour child has learned lo walk. lhe need lor
Stride Rile®shoes is only jusl beginning. The bones
in his feet arestill soft and vulnerable. and they won'l
be fully developed until he reaches adulthood. While
your child is at the Siride Rile slage, he needslhe
special protection only Stride Ritecan g1ve. And since
Stride Riteleather shoes have thesharp styling and
fashionable colors every kid wanls. your chil d will
love wearing lhem. Keep your childin Sir ide Ritethe shoes lhat show youcare.

WE

A nita Calaway

HAVE
-IT!
VALUE

PICKENS HARDWARE
MASON, W. VA.

&amp;trldeRite·

CHAPMAN'S SHOES

New arrival
WATSON
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Watson are announcing the birth of their first
child, a son, Branden Lee, Sunday,
Feb. I at St. Ann's Hospital, Colwnbus. The infant weighed eight pounds, six ounces, and was 21 inches
long.
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. William lsiac, Columbus,
and paternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Leroy Watson, Minersville.
CONFINED TO
MESA HOSPITAL
John Lyons m, son of Mr. and
Mrs. 3o1m Lyons, Middleport, is confined to the Mesa Lutheran H.Spita~
Roorn 728, Mesa, Arizona 85201.
Lyons suffered severe injuries in a
motorcycle accident on Feb. 6 and
for the first week was in the intensive care unit of the hospital.

BOWLING PROMOTED
Marine Pic. Brian K. Bowling, son
of Belinda Johnson of P. 0. Box 211,
Racine, has been promoted to his
present rank while serving with 1st
Tank Battalion, Camp Pendleton;
Calif.
He joined the Marine Corps in
April, 1980.

Miss Calaway turns five

HARDWARE NEEDS?

TOOl

Beat of the Bend
Heart Sunday next week

Poet, Sandra Fowler of West
Columbia, W. Va. was recently informed by J . S. Thomson of The ·
American Biographical Institute of
her appointment as an Honorary
Member of The Editorial Advisory
Board of this publisher which has
been active in the field of "Who's
Who" since 1!167. This appointment
became effective on Dec. 1.
Fowler is proud to 1M! associated
with this organization which is
responsible for the publication of
such noted volumes of biographical
reference as: "Personalities Of The
South," "International Youth in
Achievernent," " The Directory Of
Distinguished Americans," " The
American Registry Series," " Community Leaders of America," " Personalities Of America," etc. Complimentary copies of all series are
Sandra Fowler
sent to the Ubrary of Congress in
Washington, D. C., all state
libraries; the Smithsonian Institution Ubfaries, U. S. Customs as : The President Of Malta, The
Court Ubraries, and the World President Of Sri Lanka, The Former
Trade Center Libraries, (San Fran- Governor Of Tamilnadu, West
cisco).
Virginia Governor, Jay Rockefeller,
Sandra Fowler is the Associate U. S. Senator, Robert C. Byrd, and J.
Editor of "Ocarina," an Indian jour- S. Thomson, Editor-in-Chief of The
nal dedicatd to the building of American Biographical Institute.
Fowler is the author of the book of
creative bridges of friendship betpoetry
entitled "In The Shape Of
ween all countries and cultures. The
staff of " Ocarina" is now cOm- Sun," which was published in Israel
pleting work on "The Album" which in 1973. It received a second printing
will feature the work of poets in in Israel in 1975. She is the daughter /
more than 50 countries speaking 300 of Mr: and Mrs. Okey D. Fowler of
languages. This volwne, when West Columbia. She teaches the
published in India, will contain tbe ·Young Adult Class of the Fairview
best wishes of such noted individuals Bible Church of Letart, W.Va .

miners screened at the Soulhern Ohio Coal Co. Ollhe
total cbeelted, 150 showed elevated blood pretlllll'e.

Social' Calendar

How plaque affects teeth _
IT'S FREE! - The Meigs County Health Department and the
Hocking Technical CoUege's Community Health Educallon Center held a
free blood pressure clinic for lhe Southern Ohio Coal Co. 's Meigs Division.

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

.,
,,

"Nextto E lberfelds In Pomeroy"

'

Anita Jane Calaway was recently
honored with a party in observance
of her filth birthday at the home of
her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Pullins, Alfred.
Refreshments of a clown cake,
mints, potato chips, ice cream, and
punch were served. The house
carried out the theme of Tom and
Jerry Cartoons. Garnes were played
with prizes going to Robbie
Callaway and Roberta Pullins.
Gifts were presented to Anita Jane
by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ernie
Calaway, Bill and Jane Pullins, Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Pullins, Mike and
~oberta , Alfred; her grandmother,
Annie Calaway, a great-uricle,
Harry CalaWIIY, Unda Boggs, Joann
Calaway, Robbie and Jerome, Route
I, Reedsville. Sending gifts were
Usa and Julie Hawk, Reedsville,
and Rob and Virginia Burke, Alfred.

IS MOVING TO
860 SECOND AVE.
NEXT TO CITY LOAN AS OF
FEB. 23, 1981.

COME AND SEE US IN OUR
NEW OFFICE
.

where he was confined 16 days as
the result of a nasty fall on the Ice
- desite heavily treaded boots
which should have kept him
upright. Bud will have to
recuperate for a couple of weeks
so hence the cancellation of the
meetings.

By Bob Hoeflich
Staff writer
It'$ heart month and the action
is rolling.
·
The annual
Heart Sunday solicitors will be
going door to door
- )"ill take place
Sunday.
On Saturday
night, .a public
. buffet-dance will
be held at Royal
Bob
Oak Park with dinner to be served at 7 and to be available
throughout the evening. Dancing
with mtisic by the Larry Keenan
orchestra out of Huntington will
begin at 8 p.m.
Tickets are $16 a couple - this
includes dinner and dancing and $10 a single. They may be
purchased at the New York
Clothing House, Gerald Powell,
Lois Thompson at Diamond
Savings and Loan, and Lois
Pauley, 992-2298 day-time or 9927133 nights. Proceeds will go to
the heart foundation .

Spelling bees are underway in
schools these days in
preparation for selecting the
school representatives to lake
part in the county-wide event.
The county bee will be held in the
Southern District this year on
MarchiO.
l~al

Supt. David Gleason advises
that Meigs · County Auditor
Howard Frank has prepared the ·
necessary papers for placing a
bond Issue before Meigs Local
School District voters in June.
The district's hoard of
education recently decided to
move ahead with the plan which,
if approved by the State Department of Education and voters,
will permit two and one-half mills
of present four mill taxes to be
kept in the Meigs Local District,
And along these lines, may I
pass on to you from the Meigs
rather than be sent to Columbus.
County Health Department the
The tax money being allowed to
early warning signs of a heart at- remain in the county would
amount to one million dollars
tack. Do read them - the life you
save may be your own. ·
over the nine year period involved plus providing money for
·Symptoms do vary but these
paying interest on bonds to be
are the usual warnings:,
I. Prolonged, oppressive pain
issued in conjunction with the
or unusual discomfort in the cen- · phin.
ter of the chest, behind the
An appeal has been Issued for
breastbone.
2. Pain may radiate to the
Stephen Smith when the
shoulder, arm, neck or jaw.
American Red Cross Blood3. The pain or discomfort is ofmobile visits the Meigs Senior
ten accompanied by, swearing. Citizens Center from I :30 p.m. to
6 p.m. on Feb. 25. Steve has used
Nausea, vomiting and shortness
over 42 pints of blood while con. of breath may also occur.
4. Sometimes these symptoms
fined to intensive care at the
Holzer Medical Center. Donors
subside and then return.
Minutes count when heart atshould Inform the clerical staff at
tack strikes. Act promptly. Calla
the bloodmobile that they wish to
doctor and describe the sympgive in Steve's name.
toms. If no doctor is available
Dear "Guess Who,"
then it's to the hospital emergency room, and quick!
Of course, I'll be your valentine . With such a box of candy
and such a provocative valentine,
Bud Wilson has announced that
how can I resist? And the fact
February meetings of the Meigs
County Democrat Central and
that anyone would want me for a
Executive Conunittees have been
valentine should be quite enough
to help all of the rest of our
cancelled.
Bud has been dismissed from
readers to keep smiling ...
Veterans Memorial Hospital

PLAN HEART SUNDAY- Members of the Meigs County Heart
Association are pictured laying plaDB for the observance of Heart Suuday
lhrougbout lhe county Ibis Sunday. Workers will go from doo,.to-door
coUectlng funds for the heart association. Pictured are front, Ito r, Millie
Midlillf, Marian Crawford, Nita Wisniski; back, Ito r, Nancy Hammond,
field consultant of !be Central Heart Association; Susan Oliver, Dr.
James Witherell, Rhonda Dally and Scott Lucas, Veterans Memorial
Hospital administrator.
,
, ,
conference. Also being prepared for :
.
the conferences are two bonks on :
energy· to be made by Anita and
Laura Smith and a history to be submitted by Linda Eason.
Since February is Americanism ·
month, the juniors will attend the
senior meeting on Feb. 24. At that
several donations were made meeting Mrs. Florence Richards, .
during a meeting of the Junior Eighth District Americanism chair" ·
American Legion Auxiliary of Drew man, will be the guest speaker. Mrs.
Webster Post 39, Pomeroy, held at Davis served chips, dip and punch ~
the home of Mrs. Harry Davis.
HAYES INJURED ·
The juniors donated to the March
Gene Hayes, son of Mr. and Mrs. of Dimes and to the Heart Fw\d.
They also made a donation to the A. W. Hayes, Middleport, was in- :
fund which will sponsor Dorothy ' jured Sunday when he slipped in the :
Leifheit at the special olympics this ' snow near his home at Pontiac, Ill. :
He is confined to a hospital in · ·
swmner.
Valentines were signed for Bloomington, Ill. and underwent :
·
Dorothy Leifheit, Orient, Bill Rov- surgery Sunday afternoon.
nak, Arcadia Nursing Home, and
LUCAS TO SING
Kira Counts, the mascot of the junior
Dave Lucas and the Watchmen :
unit.
Three books on Thailand, the Quartet will be at the Zion Church of ·
foreign relations country being Christ on Route 143 at 7 p.m. Satur- ·
studied this year were reviewed, and day. they are with Operation .
it was noted that a scrapbook is Evangelize at Chesapeake and are
being made by Kim Patterson to be heard on radio at 7:45a.m. each Sun- ·
·
entered at the Eighth District junior day . .

Legton auxtliary
COntn·'butes to
two Charin'es

WOOD STOVE SAU

DRUM

WOOD STOVE

$1J9'l

NAME OMITTED
The name of Vanessa Jay was
unintentionally omitted from the
Salisbury Elementary School honor
roll for the third six weeks grading
period. Miss Jay is a fourth grader.

KING.o.HEAT
~ode! N~

0

Re~~!.~s

Slue

WOOD_STOVE

ssg95

Feel Free to Use Our 2nd st. Entrance
124 W. Main
Ph. 992·2848
Pomeroy, Oh.

~===========::=;;:;
-· . ~
--- ~~~~

A NEW
SNYDER'S
COUPON
OFFER

SNYDER'S
OF
BERLIN
Continues to oHer
you two ways to savell
Clip these coupons and
treat yourself to
SNYDER'S OF BERLIN

Plain and Sour Cream;n
Onion Chips

Ask for SNYDER'S OF
BERLIN Chips,
Popcorn or Cheese
Curls at your
favorite retailer.
from the people
with the chips
In the Sliver
Baglf

�Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

1981
DICK TRACY

Southern Local revises lunch policy

'Round
Meigs
Local
By Supt. David L. Gleason
Last November, I introduced a
plan to the Meigs Local Board of
. Education which would prcvide the
school district with an additional one
million dollars ($1,000,000) in the
bond retirement fund. Though it took
until February 9 before it acted on
this proposal, the board has passed
resolutions which start the proce,..;
- a proce,..; which Will net the school
district $1,000,000 without raising the
taxes of any !a&lt;P3yer.
Howard Frank, Meigs County
Auditor, has testified to the board of
the soundness and accuracy of this
statement and the plan. The bottom
line is very simple - keep local
dollars for the local schools. The explanation . is much more difficult
because it involves several laws,
state approval, a bond issue placed
and passed on the ballot and a great
deal of work by the bonding attorney, school personnel and all who
support such a venture.
We are presently developing a
plan tohelp get this message across
to everyone. As soon as more in·
formation is available, I will let you
know.

Wednesdav, .F ebruary 11, 1981

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

children for kindergarten in May. In
order to be eligible for kindergarten,
the child must be five years of age
by September 30, 1981.
According to Ohio law, children
entering school are required to have
four or more immunizations of
diphtheria, pertussis, tetanus
(DPT) ; three or more im·
munizations of tri-valent oral polio
(TOPV) ; one measles vaccine, and
one rubella vaccine. The measles
and rubella are often combined and
called M.R. Sometimes the measles,
rubella , and mumpg vaccine are
combined and called M.M.R. A
tuberculin skin test is also required
within one year before starting to
school.

The Southern Local School
District has announced a revised
family-size income scale to deter·
mine eligibility for free and reduced·
price meals and free milk for
children unable to pay the full price
of meals and milk served under the
National School Lunch, School
Breakfast and Special Milk
Programs.
Public Law 96-499 passed by
Congress in December, 1980 makes
it necessary to redetermine those
children eligible for .free and
reduced-price benefits again this
school year.
Family Size: Parents, Children
and Others; Income Scale for Free
Meals and Free Milk; and Income
Scale for Reduced-Price Meals are
listed in that order:
I. $5,700, $8,350; 2. $7,220; $10,730;

Television
•
•
VIewmg

I TOLD YOU THIS
GIG WASN'T
RIGHT FO~ YOU,
DIDN'T r?

3. $8.750, $13,110; 4. $10,270, $15,490;
nection with the receipt of federal writing may be made to Robert E.
5. $11,800, $17,870; 6. $13,320, $20,250;
funds. School officials may, for Bowen, Box 684, Pomeroy, Ohio .
7. $14,850, $22,620; 8. $16,370,$25,000.
cause, verify the information in the 45769, 992..5592 for a hearing to apEach Additional Family Member +
application .
Deliberate peal the decision. The policy con$1,50, + $2,380.
misrepresentation of information tains an outline of the hearing
Children from families whOse in·
may subject the appiicant to procedure.
If a family member becomes
come is at or below the level shown . prosecution under applicable state
unemployed
or if family size·
are eligible for free or reduced-price
and criminal statutes.
changes,
the
family
should contact
meals or free milk.
In certain cases foster children
the
school
to
file
a
new
applications. •
Application forms are being sent are also eligible for these benefits. If
Such
changes
may
make the
to all homes in a letter· to parents. a family has foster children living
children
of
the
family
eligible
for
Additional copies are availllble at with them and wishes to apply for
reduced-price
meals
or
for
ad·
the principal's Office in each,school. such meals and milk for them, it
ditional benefits, such as free meals
The information provided on the ap- should contact the school.
and
milk , if the family income falls
Under the provisions of the policy.,
plication is confidential and will be
at
or
below the levels shown above.
submitted at any time during the the Local 'Superintendent will review ·
In
the
operation of child feeding
year , ·To discourage the possibility applications
and determine
no child will be
programs,
of misrepresentation, the ap- eligibility. If ·a parent is dissatisfied
discriminated
against because of
plication forms contain a statement with the ruling of the official, he or
race,
sex,
color
or
national origin.
above the space for signature cer· she may 'wish to discuss the decision
Each
school
and
the office of the
tifying that all information fur· with the determining official on an
Local
School
District has a
Southern
nished is true and correct. Ap- informal basis. If a formal appeal is
copy
of
the
complete
policy which
plications are being made in con- desired, a request either orally or in
may be reviewed by any jnterested
party.

DIDN

Guest: Actor Tom Bosley. Hoata:
Hugh Oowf]s and Frank Blair.
(CIOsed·Cap1ioned ; U.S.A.)

OH, OH~ VOl! VI: GOT

A LUMP THE.S.IZE OF

A GOOSE•EGG BACI&lt;
THE~E ~

...S0/1\I:THIN!;

11\UST' VI! ' HIT YOU!

11:30 m•m NBC NEWS ·
C1J 30 MINUTES WITH FATHER
MANNING
({) BOB NEWHART SHOW
C1J FACE THE MUSIC
tlJCIJilD) CBS NEWS
(I)
WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
® LILIAS, YOGA AND YOU
(IZJ tD ABC NEWS
8:58 Cll CBN UPDATE NEWS
7:00 (J)8 PM MAGAZINE
CIJ SEND FORTH YOUR SPIRIT
([)ALLIN THE FAMILY
CIJ C1ZJ tD FAMILY FEUD
CIJ WILD KINGDOM 'Pond AI Bro·
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MACNEIL·LEHREA
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®NEWS
7:30 m. BULLSEYE
CIJ AT HOME WITH THE BIBLE
(!) WORLD PRO SKIING Top

BORN LOSER

"

A. ~T\l Q= l&lt;rmUDIC.€ lt-111Jf
IUIJ.L STl&lt;fET ~AL.

([) NBA BASKETBALL Atlanta
Hawke velndiana Pacers

CIJDCI) JOKIER'S WILD
CIJ HOLLYWOOD SQUARES
Cll@ DICK CAVETT SHOW
ilDl $100.000 NAME THAT TUNE
(IZJ 8 FACE THE MUSIC
7:58 C1J CBN UPDATE NEWS
8:00 mUCIJ REALPEOPLETonlghl"o

'.

aegmentaincludealookatakiaalng
contest from Phoenbc, Arizona; a
profile oo a Wyoming man who get a
good gas mileage an hia motor·
powered roller akatea: and the
ato~y of an Atlantic; Cilywoman who
refused to sell herhouaeln order to
make way tor a gambling casino.
(80 mine.)

ANNIE

GURE, 8UT••

YOU'I\E A
DOCTOR ...
HOI'i Cl:U.D
I HELP YOU'?

(MDIII RilES/ c:S!

I Hoofs and Paws

WELL, ~OST OF iti PATIEHl!i ARE HEC~, 1
ELDERLY- YOU COULP HELP
CCtW
THEM 6ET A~UT. &amp;P.lH6
!XJ THAT
THEM THEIR MEOICAT/ON,
ALL RIGHT!
THAT K1Nt1 OF TtliN6 "·

~

1\

END

FROI'\ THE OFFICE OF
IMVEGTI6AT10t-l C1' THE DEPt
OF HEALTH AMD
HU~AM 5ERVICEG .•

Ohio on Fri. 20, Sat. 21, Sun. 22, 1981. These are new, used, trade-ins,

Now arNtnge the circled letters to
the surprise answer. as suggested by the above cartoon .

form

Prlntilnswerhere:

LIFE
(I) (IZJ m

I Jumt&gt;as: AIDED

YeSierday·s

LIVE FROM LINCOLN CENTER

'The New York Philharmonic, Zubln
Mehta Conducti(lg with Vladimir
Aahkenazy' Zubln Mehtalaadsthe
Philharmonic in W.N. Walker' a 'Kln
Praise ol Folly' and Richard
Strause ' 'Ein Heldenleben. Gueat
arlist Vladimir Aahkenazy per·

MOO\IIANS? HORRORS!
TNIFV SET CIVILIZATION
BAC1&lt;. T\1.0 THOUSAND
YEA.RSI

lormaBeethoven'aPianoConcerto
N0.
4 . (2hrs .)

(ll) ALLCREATURESGREATAND
SMALL 'Tricksoflhelrade' Jamee

Mebbe th' bes'
thin' is Hote
this here'n back
fth' dump'

What 40u
thinlt,,

Rufus?

meets a city vet and geta a taote ol
the high lite. (SO mine.)
8:30 C1J JOHN WESLEY WHITE
(!) MOVIE -(HORROR) "l'o "The
Legocy" 1878
8:58 Cll CBNUPDATENEWS
'o:OO mum DIFF'rentSTROKES
C1J 700CLUB
0 (I) ilDl CBS WEDNESDAY
NIGHT MOVIE 'Follen Angol' t98t
Staro: Melinda Dillon, Dana Hill.
® GREAT PERFORMANCES:
LIVE FROM LINCOLN CENTER
'TheNawVorkPhilharmonic,Zubln
Mehta Conducting with Vladimir

Aahkanazy'ZubinMehtaleodothe
Philharmonic in W.N. Walker's 'ton
Praise ot Folly' and Richard
Strauss' 'Ein Heldenleben. Gueat
artist Vladimir Ashkenazy per·
forma Beethoven· aPiano Concerto

No.4, (2 hro.).
0:30 mBillTHEFACTSOFLIFEJo
want a to share her pride at recelv·
ing a scholastic award with her
rather .but is afraid if she invitee him

flame - REKINDLE IT

Jumble Book No. 15; eontal(l!ng 110 puzzles, Is available lor S1.75 pottpllkl
from Jumble, cJo this newspaper, Bo• :W, Norwood, N.J. 07648. Include your
name, addreaa, lip code and make checks p~~yable to Newsru-perbooks.

BRIDGE
Weak contract badly done
2 ~ 18 ~ 81

NORTH

+J 3

+

K Q72
+A K 53
WEST

played badly and went down
two 'tricks. instead of just one,
at his slightly unsound game

EAST

+A 9 54

• 10 8 6 2

.QJI097

.K2

+.!

contract.

tl09654

+14

+Q 106

+ KQ7
• A 54
t A 83
• J 982

spades. Now Jim took his ace

of spades, last two hearts and
queen of clubs for down two.

Vulnerable : North-South
Dealer: South
East

North

I.

2+

PaS$

3NT

f' EI&lt; SUI TC ~SE

SYE

AND CLOTHES
4RE NOT IN

PROBABL'
HEARD U5

South

I+

Pass
Pass

2 NT
Pass

Pass

HER ROOM'

ARGU ING!

mlns.)
10:15 CIICHERINCONCERTCherloteo·
BARNEY

HEAR 50METHIN'
OUTSIDE, PAW!! I THIN~
IT'S A B·B·BEAR!!

10:28
10:30
10:46
10:58

GOON
BACK TO
SLEEP,

MAW --

unclaimed lay-aways and demonstrators that will be sold at Fabulous

OCBULLET

WILL RUN

Savings. Select from Baldwin, Wurlitzer, Lowrey, Conn, Hamn)ond and

HIM OFF

tured in her own dazzling nightclub
act, which features her hit aonga.

C1J CBN UPDATE NEWS
C1J MAX MORRIS

CIJLOVEAMERICANSTYLE
Cll CBN UPOATE NEWS
11:00 me (I) Cil a Cll ilDl (II) ID
NEWS
,
CIJ JEWISH VOICE
([&gt; NIGHT GALLERY
CIJ MORE CAM BE AND WISE
®OUTER LIMITS
11:28 C1J CBNUPDATENEWS
11:30 maCIJ THE TONIGHT SHOW

CIJ ROSS BAGLEY SHOW

PbANUTS

Aklna, Beatrice Straight.

him. Most North-South pairs
stopped at three clubs and
made it. but when you are
sure to be set, you should try
to get out for the minimum.
JNI!:WSPAPER BNTERPRISE ASSN./

~-~~i:~~~~~-;:---~ij~~-j~i~f
~
J
t,;il ~~ . . ~ t W
lay THOMAS JOSE'H
42 Take

ACROSS
I Argot
5 Give a
testimonial
11 Athena's
title
12 Rob or Carl
13 Quay

wnbrage at
43 Interpret
DOWN
!"Mr. Deeds"
director
2 Foreign
3 On the dole

14- College

4 Road
topping
5 Penny6 Minuscule

of Ky.

15 Gable in
" _ Dust"

Yesterday's Aaawer

19 "Blowout"
22 Rich source
23 Finagler
16 "The
7 Stannum
ElephAnt -" 8 Get on board 24 Like the bull
25 Appearances·
17 Umbrella
9 Set in
part
aseries
26 Director
10 Tripled
Fritz
18 Whoever
28
Bluish
purple
wants to
16 Insect

30 Unrelepting
31 Sir Francis
32 Old Greek
colony
33 Correct
38 Betake
oneself
39 Disfigure

mulberry
21 Consumed
22 Widow's _

26 Bordered

r.

Spouse
28 Truck
29 Marching

call

30 Sans 8 fu-

ture date
34 Before

35 Dress

36 Gypsy
37 Mont-8aint-

-(Fr. isl.)
39Simba's locks
40 Not broken

h+-t-1-+-+-

41 Slmilar

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE _Here's how to work it:
It

AXYDLB A AXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter simply stands for another. In this _sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation ·of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are dilferent.
·
CRYPTOQUOTES

Gueats: William Oemareat, Lae
Tre\llno, Pete Fountain. (60 mlna .)

(!) MOVIE -(DRAMA)"' "Dooth
Wlah'' ti74
CI&gt;MOVIE -(WESTERN)"' "luo·
!l_Mon" 1852
liJ (IZJ 18
ABC NEWS
NIGHTLINE
QCI) CBS LATE MOVIE 'KILLER
ON BOARD' 1977 Slaro: Claude

others.

Here we see a lu cky hand

for Fisher and Jacoby in th e
1966 Olympiad. Their luck
was helped by a good play on

'o--+-+r.

This program provides striking In·
sightintothecomple1&lt;.11feandtlmea
of one of the moat influential and
misunderstood Black men In Amer·
lcan history , Paul R0beaon . (60

•

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sonlag

27 June Carter's

mlns.)

OKA~

Not that down ' one would

'-r+-t-

Cil PROFILE OF PAUL ROBESON

nine tricks. He should have

tried diamonds first. Then
when he saw the bad diamond
breaR. he would have had no
play for his contract at all and
could have knocked out the
spade ace and settled for
have been a good score for

23 Lay away (sl.

CIJCIZJm VEGA$DonmeetOIIUb·

Declarer needed four clubs
and four diamonds too come to

down one.

deapitecourtrulesthatheianolto
his e.~tpertiae. quaationethe
val idity of evidence leading to a
mistrial . (60 mins.)

bornresistancewhenhe'shiredto
help a desperate young mother
re cently released from prison
who's being forced to poee •• •
teenage playgirl to ltJre men into a
vlcious extortion scheme. (60

I

Opening lead:•Q

20 Indian

lJ88

John's king of hearts held
trick one and Jim's nine trick

two. South won the third heart
and decided to try to drop the
queen of clubs. When it didn't
drop. South decided to tackle

SOU Til

West

the part of Dr. John Fisher,
who was careful to play his
king of hearts on Jim 's queen
at .trick one. Their score was
improve d when declarer

• 863

to the presentation Oeremonlea,
her classmates will ctlscover hie

dlaropulobla pool.
0:45 ([) TBS EVENING NEWS
tO:OO (})8CI) QUINCY Quincy oervao
on a jury in a homocide case and,

r

FLANK JOBBER PACKET

CIJ GREAT PERFORMANCES:

ALLEYOOP

I II I I

Answer : How to renew your acqua intance with an o'ld

ALOHA PARADISE

Debbie Reynolds atara as the managar of a lush resort hotel on the
Kana Coaet of Hawaii, and features
the entertainment worid'atop stare
in major guest roles, and stories
rich with love, romanceandadven·
lure . Gueaf stare: Lorna Greene,
Connie Stevens, Van Johnson,
Grant Goodeve , louis Jordan .
(Premiere; 2 hra.)

A"( I

(Answers tomorrow)

TtJrk become fugitives from theSecret Sen,icelna desperate attempt
to save Lt . Btoggi from a gang ot
counterteitera. (60 mtna.)

t4f::'~

will be at Ace Hardware. Middleport,

rI

I

C1J SIGHTS AND SOUNDS OF

.0~ R.\1.,. se~~~~~

GRAVES PIAIO I ORGAI CO.

50U[&gt;,}D5 LIKE
MU.SCULAP: EXE:I&lt;:CISE
ENC:.A6E't:' IN
A'T ~ISON.

QCI)ilD) ENOSOificeraEnooand

r~c=e~·:ra:n~g:e·~-----==1~~~:::~~~~~:::::::::::~::~::=~

Atruckload of Pianos &amp;

~E'RE

DR.

MARINE BATIERIES
By Gould

i

ITHRENEj

racers from 13 nations go head·
to· head in slalom and giant slalom
competition In Stowe, Vermont.

r~De~pa§rtm~e~n~to~f~H;e~a~lth~.~~;~~~~~~::::::~~~~~~

Property Transfers

r tJ'
"

I I

ken Branch'

WALL-TO-WAll
CLEARANCE

fRONT DISC BRAKI SPICIAL
..
49
"'"•teae

one letter lo each square to form
four ordinary words.
'

EVENING
11:00 rneCIJtJICI)(l))(IZJID NEWS
CIJ BllllE BOWL
([) CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
(I) ABC NEWS
(I) 3-2·1 CONTACT
® OVER EASY "Tne Wldowor'

(I) ,@

THE SEWING
CENTER

~THAT SCAAMBlEDWORD GAME
byHenriArnoldandBobLee

FU. 18,1881

Urge parents poison proof home

(5) Turn on a light when giving or you need to take the child to the
Dr. Selim J. Blazewicz, Health
taking medicine.
hospital or doctor's office, take the
Commissioner of the Meigs County
(6) Avoid taking medicine in front container with you. The physician
Health Department, in cooperation
of children, since youngsters tend to will need to know precisely what the
with the Accident Prevention and
imitate grown-upg.
label says.
Product Safety Unit of the .Ohio
(7) Refer to medicine as
Remember, most accidental
The required immunizations may Department of Health, strongly
STOP IN AND SAVE
"medicine" and not "candy. "
poisonings are preventable and
be obtained from your family urges that, for your child's sake,
(8) Clean out medicine cabinets Poison Prevention Week is every
physician or from the Meigs County follow these suggested guidelines to
periodically, and dispose of outdated week of the year. To learn more
Health Department. If your child poison proof your home and family:
medicine.
about pQisOn prevention, contact the
(I) Keep all household products
does not have all the required im(9) Use safety packaging properly
Meigs County Health Department of
munizations, you should obtain the and medicines out of reach of
- by closing the container securely the Accident Prevention and
immunizations for your child before youngsters, and, preferably, locked
after every use.
Product Safety Unit of the Otuo
Mill St.
Wliddle rt
kindergarten registration in May. up when not in use.
Your child must have the required · (2) Store internal medicines
the event
fir·
st Inthing
to doof ais poisoning,
read the the
label.
immunizations before entering separately from ocher household
Knowing what the product is will in·
products.
school.
(3) To store all products in their
dicate the correct first aid
It is getting the time of year when
procedures. Before administering
parents, who have hcildren who will
The Rutland PTO continues to original containers - never in cups
Includes: Disc Pads
,
any first aid that the label indicates,
Iboth front wheels)
be entering kindergarten this fall , work hard to improve the school or soft drink bottes.
On
New Wheel Seals
call a physician, poison control cen( 4) Read all labels before using a
need to start getting things in order. facilities . Recently a new mer~y-go­
,Sale
Inspect
calipers,
hOses,
fluid
ter or hospital emergency room. If
They need to get a birth certificate round was added to the playground product.
levels
and have an up-to-date im· and five new fold-up lunchroom
Check Rear Brakes
Pack Front WHeel Bearings
munization record for their child.
tables were purchased for the
The parents must present these cafeteria. Positive things continue to
~SHOCKS
two records when they re~ister their happen at Rutland.
Grtpper~ .,).65 ea .
Super SOO's S1S.7S ea.
Jerry C. Ward, dec' d. to Elizabeth of Way, Sutton.
' 'I/
Air Shocks Monroe
Melton, Ruth Alice Winchester, Bety
James C. Harris, Mildred E.
/.
/
IJJ
Maxi· Air 1so p.s.i.
As Seen in
Frances Fields, Marcella Ann Ward, Harris to Bobby G. Rupe, Barbara
~
569.~5
Kathryn Fay~ Fairrow, Jerry Ward, A. Rupe, .74 acre, Salisbury.
·aassmaster Magazine
While Stock L111sts
Jr., James Frederick Ward, George
Viola V. Long to Eugene G. Long,
H. Ward, Richard Allen Ward, Jlacres,Lebanon.
l"r]:t
Mecnanlconduty
Robert Eugene Ward, Cert. &lt;i.'
Jack B. Rood, Victoria Sue Rood
•n
POMEROY - While doing some are already givin~ up wearing wild
Trans., Middleport,
to Robert C. Burke, Virginia Irene
'il.. '),
·
CENTER
research for this week's article I furs. Only the future will reveal
EtheiDilcher,dec'd.(oEisiePrid· Burke, aka Virginia S. Burke, Parp
&amp;AUTO PARTS
,
-&lt;.
came across a piece of writing by whether the women of our age and
dy,
Edith
Lambert,
Cert.
of
Trans.
,
Racine,
Oh.
Andy
&amp;
Betty
Porter
949·2150
Devereaux Butcher that he thought time possess the. compassion, equal
10
should probably have been among to their mothers and .grandmothers Rutland.
Helen R. Slack, dec'd. to Pearle
the ten conunandments. to guide us who, by refusing to contribUte to
Willis,
Cert. of Trans., Letart
all in our dealings with the wild birds cruelty to beautiful plumed birds,
Village.
and mammals.
negated the demand for plumes, and
Virginia Hollon, ·Affidavit ,
It went like this : "The Lord thy
dictated a change in fashion.
P~meroy.
God hath placed upon the earth the
Today's women could, within a
Richard E. Titer, Anna Titer, to
wild creatures for thy pleasure to surprisingly short time, again dicRoyse
Drilling Co., Right of Way,
know. Thou shalt not molest them or tate to fashion, not by whim, but out
Lebanon.
dusturb their homes. Thou shalt of empathy and compassion, making
· Harold Evans to Royse Drilling
protect the forests and meadows and synthetic furs fashionable, and the
Co.,
Right of Way, Lebanon.
marshes of their dwelling places, furs from living creatures which
H. Whytsell, June WhytEugene
and thou shalt not pollute tlle waters have suffered in trapg outmoded,
sell
to
Royse
Drilling Co., Right of
that are theirs. Thou shalt hold their ·and unmarketable.
Way,
Lebanon.
lands violate against the enSo, folks, if you have not yet pur'
Dora thea A. Dunham to Harold R.
croachment of thy cities and thy chased a new coat and have a
Dunham,
Parcel, Scipio.
roads, and shall in all ways see that choice, why not make the choice be
Ora
Rice,
Edna Rice, Gerald Rice,
their needs are met, so that each in how it looks - not how much it
Mary
K.
Rice,
Gene R. Rice to Cecil
shall be able to perpetuate its own costs? After all, isn't that the most
W.
Rice,
Marilyn
Sue Rice, 10.61 sq.
kind, a11d none shall be ex- important reason for buying
rds
.,
Middleport.
terminated from the face of the ear- anything anyway? That difference :
James W. Ebersbach, · Lois I.
th.''
between - say $250 and over $3,000
Ebersbach
to James W. Ebersbach,
Is this nol'the perfect way to start - could be better spent elsewhere,
Lois
I.
Ebersbach,
2.30 acres,
my subject for today which is "furs couldn't it now• To strive to
Chester.
vs. synthetic?"
eliminate suffering and misery
John W. Frank to Shirley A.
I don't know how many of you among the wildings is an urgent
Roush,
Cert. of Trans., Chester.
readers know the President of the responsibility of thinking people
John
W. Frank to Jean L.
Meigs County Humane Society, everywhere. We are truly humane
Frederick,
Cert. of Trans. , Chester.
Dorathea Fisher, who lives up on when we practice the Golden Rule,
Harry
M.
Bolin to Charlotte Bolin,
Lincoln Hill in Pomeroy. Well, not alone toward our own kind, but•
Harry
M.
Bolin,
Lot, Middleport.
anyone who knows her knows her as toward all the beautiful and in·
Mayford
A.
Harris,
Wilma Harris
a very unusually dedicated teresting birds and marrunals with
to
Royse
Drilling
Co.
,
Right of Way,
humanitarian who is quite out· which we are sharing the earth.
Lebanon.
sPoken when it comes to animals ...
To all my dear friends who wear'
Monid Good, Donna Good to Royse
and it's not just talk, she owns six fur "!love you any way, but please,
Drilling
Co., Right of Way, Lebanon .
beautiful cats, all hers because of don't buy any more fur. Every pelt
Norman
McCain, Affidavit,
someone else's cruelty or neglect,
has caused such pain and suffering
Orange.
and one of the sweetest little dogs in and you are so far above that in
Eddie W. White, Betty J. White to
the world.
every way. ''
Joseph
L. Rife, William H. Rife,
Anyway, she bought a new coat
O.K., so olf the soap box and down ·
Ronald
S.
Rife, Larry E. Rife, Parrecently and everywhere she goes to the business at hand - we have
cels,
Salem.
people about drop their eyeballs and
some animals who wouldn't make
Martin L. Searls, Marilyn Sue
go into shock when she walks in very good coats, but they surely
Searls
to Jennings I. Jett, Carol E.
wearing a fur coat! One friend the would make darn good pets to
Jett,
Parcel,
Sutton.
other day quickly grabbed her and someone who is looking for one. We
James
Curtis,
dec. to Mabel Curpulled her aside where no one could
have cute little ones, handsome big
260 E. Mllin St., Chillicothe, Ohio
tis,
Aff.
for
Trans.,
Salisbury.
hear and said, "Dorothea, how can
ones, tuddly kittens and cats - but
Cecil L. Blackwood, Clotine L.
you do it?" spe loves it when people
call 992-6260 and ask for our Kennel
Blackwood
to Cecil L. Blackwood,
make this remark because she fires
Manager, she will tell you exactly
Clotine
L.
Blackwood, Parcels ,
back, "You see, you can't even tell
what we have- and maybe we have
Scipio.
the difference. This is a 'fake' fur
just the animal you've been wanting.
Orga~
Mina Mae Swisher, Affidavit, Sut·
and you cannot tell by looking at itBy calling, you save its very life.
ton.
so why do people go to the expense of
Lastly, thank you, school teachers
Charles Wayne Swisher to Mina
buying those others?" The coat
of Meigs County for showing such
• . really is a great looking one and ap- sincere interest in the character Mae Swisher, Cert. of Trans.,
.pomeroy.
pears to cost ten times more than
development of your children. Com·
W. Robert Bell and Columbia Gas
she paid for it.
passion isn't always taught at home
of
Ohio, Columbia Gas Trans. Corp.,
Some say that cruel trapping will
so we of the Humane Society and all
never end. Women, they say, will not animal lovers appreciate your in· Agree. Ease., Rutland.
Lillian H. Napper to Columbia Gas
give up wea1·iug furs as long as there
teres!. Other educators wishing our
of
Ohio, Columbia Gas Trans. Corp.,
are forbearers to be trapped. But
help, do call 992-7680. Pet owners:
Agree.
Ease., Sutton.
there are others who point to the
please tie up your dogs next
John
F . Colwell, Catherine Colwell
response of women to the near ex·
weekend so the heart canvassers
to
John
F. Colwell, Catherine
tinction of egrets and other birds in
don't have a heart attack on your
Colwell,
Parcels,
Salem.
the early part of this century. Plume
property.
SALE HOURS: 9-6 FRI. &amp; SAT. 12-6 SUN.
Robert
V.
King,
Lillian B. King to
. hunters catering to the millinery
Juanita M. Miller, Parcel, Rutland.
• · trade were killing these beautiful
lOCATION: ACE HARDWARE, 407 PEARL ST., MIDDLEPORT
Darrell Sellers, Wanda Sellers to
birds in our southern swamps during
LAND
TRANSFERS
James E. Diddle, Right of Way,
· the nesting season in order to take
Clarence
M.
Headley
to
Vera
A.
Lebanon.
TERMS: .DIRECT FACTORY ANANCING UP TO 60 MONTHS TO PAY
their nuptial plumes for women's
Weber, Norman 0. Weber, Parcel,
Charles R. Lawrence, Mary J .
hats. Kllling the adult birds meant
Orange.
Lawrence to James E. Diddle, Right
death for the young. When the
. DEliVERY: FREE DELIVERY ANYWHERE IN OHIO
of
Way, Lebanon.
women lt!lJrned the story, the
William
Capehart,
Helen
Ha.rold
·Sellers,
Ruth
Sellers
to
demand for egret feathers ended.
Capehart to Ohio Power Co., Ease., James E. Diddle, Right of Way,
With the increase in the produ0·
WARRANTY: ALL WARRANTIES BACKED AND SERVICED BY GRAVES PIANO AND
Pomeroy.
Lebanon.
lion of ranch raised furs, and the ad·
Charles E. Yost, Margaret Mae
Douglas Wickline, Inez Wickline,
vent of the beautiful synthetic furs
~~~AN CO., 260 E. MAIN, CHILLICOTHE, OHIO
Yost to Ohio Power Co., Ease., Sut· James D. Wickline, Shellia J .
such as Mrs. Ffsher wears, that are
Wickline to James E. Diddle, Right
now on the market, many women ton.

'fi'lt\iNf fii)'\1

~ ~ ~~ ..
Uns,cramble these lour Jumbles,

H

VDF V0 K

PAEEAT

F N A J

C A E
H

E NA
V T C G A

VDWJA.
CWDLKUHEN
Yesterday'sCryptoquote: ALL CHANGE IS NOT GROWTH ; AS
ALL MOVEMENT IS NOT FORWARD.-ELLEN GLASGOW

(I) ABC CAPTIONED NEWS

1316 BROTHER, '{OUR

SANDWICI-115 READ\'...
6UT l DON'T KNOW f.IOW
~OU'RE
TO CARR'( IT

'{OUR LUNCH BOX 15
6ROKEr.l AND WE'RE ALL .
OUT OF PAPER 6A65... ·

®MOVIE ·(DRAMA) ,.,. "The
Huatler" 1161

12:00 CIJ(IZJ 18 LOVE 80AT··POLICE
WOMAN Love Boat·· 'Super Mom'

An Insecure wife ieopardlzee her
relationship with her husband wRh
~er overdedication to their chll ·
dreo. PoliceWomen··'Nothlnglett
to Lose ' When the crime world
learnS that La RueCollinsil a police
snilch . gunmen are hired to kill her ,
but Papper goes onalranlichunt to
. find the desperate girl .,,., ,
(Repeat: 2 hrs .. tO min&amp;.)

'SKY-BREAKING'
GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. (AP) - Officials of the new
Am way Grand Plaza Hotel recently did a turnabout on
the conventional ground-breaking ceremony and held a
"sky-breaking."
A helicopter hovered 318 feet above· the ground
ceremonies, marking what will he the top of the planned 23-story structure when completed in May 1983.
It will be Michigan's tallest building west of Detroit
and east of Chicago.

�Page-14-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy

Wednesday, February 18, 1981

Middleport, Ohio

Meat buyers take notice--prices to go up
WASIUNGTON (AP) - A long,awai!ed up!um in ca!!le and hog
prices is in the works for this spring,
says the Agriculture Department.
One effect wtll be to boost retail
meat prices, which are "only
slightly" higher than they were last
fall, according to a new outlook
report released Tuesday.
"This spring, retail beef prices are
expected to increase sharply, rising
about 10 percent as beef supplies
decline," the report said. "However,
pork prices may rtse only slightly as
supplies·increase seasonally."
Supplies of red meat and poultry
in the first quarter are expected to
increase a bout 2 percent from a year
ago, including a 5 percent to 7 percent bulge in the beef supply.
Officials said there has been an increase in the slaughter of "nonfed"
cattle - those not produced 10
feedlots - and also a buildup of
"overfinished, heavyweight fed
steers and heifers."
That has resulted in "a hack log of
cattle, lower prtees and large
discounts on overweightfed beef." .
But the large total meat supply
wiU begin to decline soon and will
continue to drop in the second quarter, the report said.
" Large feeding losses have forced
both cattle feeders and hog
producers to cut production," it
said. "Feedlot placements declined
9 percent in the fourth quarter of
1900. The decline will be reflected 10
reduced spring marketings."
Also, the report said, when
pastures are ready for grazing this
spring the slaughter of nonfed cattle
IS expected to declme.
Production of broiler chickens is
expected to gain 2 percent from a

year earlier, not enough to offset
cutbacks in the second quarter for
beef and pork.
Thus, the total supply of red meat
and poultry in April-May is expected
to be 3 percent to 5 percent Jess than
a year ago.
The market price increases will
not be as large as department experts had forecast last November.
At that time, the glut of cattle and
other factors had not been foreseen,
and economists talked about an
average of $68 to $70 per 100 pounds
for Choice-grade steers in the fourth
quarter of 1900.
As' it turned out, steer prtces
averaged $66.51 in the fourth quarter.
Three months ago it looked like
steer prices in the first three months
of 1981 would average $71 to $74 per
100 pounds, and then go to $77 to $81
in the second quarter.
The new report, however, scaled
back the first quarter forecast to a
range of $63 to $65, and to $71 to $75
per 100 pounds m the second quarter.
Hog prices last November were
forecast about on target with the actual average of $40.44 per 100 pounds
in the fourth quarter, but the projections for 1981 were off by a wide
mark
Hog prices were forecast three
months ago at $48 to $51 per 100
pounds for the first quarter and at
$49 to $52 in the second. The new
forecasts are $43 to $45 and $43 to
$-IS, respectively.
" Livestock prices are expected to
rise during the first half of 1981," the
report said. " However, producers
are unhkely to cover costs (of
production ). "
Last year, Americans conswned a

record amount of red meat and director of the National Grange, is a
poultry, as measured on a per capita native of Medina County, Ohio.
basis, the report said. Small declines
WASHINGTON (AP) - Lard
in broiler and beef consumption
''were more than offset by increased production in the 1980-81 marketing
pork consumptiOn."
And, relatively speaking, meat
prices were among the few bargains
for consumers last year, with the
1980 retail meat index of prices
gammg only 2.9 percent, compared
to 8.6 percent for all food and 13.4
percent for the overall consumer
price index.

Small Investment, large
returns, Sentinel Want Ads

WASIUNGTON (AP) - Many of

the nation's most important farm
and commodity organizations are
recommending President Reagan
appoint Robert M. Frederick of the
Nattonal Grange to the U.S. International Trade Connnission.
Supporters of Frederick, in a Jetter to Reagan, included officials of
the: National Council of Farmer
Cooperative", American Soybean
Assoctation, National Association of
Wheat Growers, National Corn
Growers Association, Poultry and
Egg Institute of America, Uruted
Fresh Frutt and Vegetable
Assoctation, and California-Arizona
Citrus League.
Also, National Grange, National
Fanners Union, U.S. Feed Grains
Council, National · Brotler Council,
Tobacco Associates, International
Apple Institute and Grain Sorghum
Producers Association.
The grou!Jil wrote' Reagan that of
the four members· now on the commJssion " only one has such a substantial background of agricultural
experience" and that there should
be two such members.
Fredertck, currently legislative

Baking soda cleans jewelry
By PoUy Cramer
Special correspondent
DEAR POLLY - Please tell me
how to make a good solution for
cleaning jewelry.
- MRS.J.B.
DEAR MRS. J.
. B. - The makers
of baking soda
suggest
the
followmg: "To
remove tarnish
and stains from
,,
jewelry, sprinkle Cramer
baking soda on an old, damp toothbrush to polish rings, bracelets and
hard-to-reach crevices on pendants
and stick pins. Baking soda is gentle
and wiU not scratch surfaces." Of
course, this is followed by a clear·
water rinse and a drying wtth a lm·
!less, soft cloth. - POLLY
DEAR POLLY - With the snow
season here, I suggest that If one
gets stuck in the snow, one should
remove the floor mat from the car
and put it under the back wheels. I
find this works every time.
When bean soup has finished
cooking, I slice a big piece of soft
cheese in it and stir until it is melted.
I then simmer for about five more
minutes and find this eliminates that
bloated and gassy feeling one often
gets. I do this every time, as it really
works for us. -ELSIE

DEAR POLLY - To remove perspirallon marks from a garment, I
use a generous amount of fabric softener in a small amount of water
and put the arm pits of the ganneni
in this: I let soak for about half an
hour or longer, if need be. (Test first. )
Regarding a solutiOn a reader
suggested for removing grape stains
from a rug : There IS really no need
to go to all the bother. All one needs
to do is cover the stains with about
one-half mch of table salt, let dry
and then vacuum up. if stains are on
a tablecloth, use salt, let dry and
wash. Always be sure there is
enough salt to absorb the juice. M.L.R.
Polly's Note - Be sure to
carefully clean your vacuwn after
removing salt. )
DEAR POLLY - To Lavinia who
got a bug in her ear, I wOuld Ji'ke to
rec~mmend that if this happens
agam, shmmg a flashllght in the afflicted ear will attract the bug. It
will come to the source of the light
and, of course, out of the ear. It
works! -FERD
Polly will send you one of her
stgned thank-you newspaper coupon
clippers if she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in her
colwnn. Write POLLY'S POINTERS in care of this newspaper.

Chester News Notes
By Clarice Allen
The Ladles Auxiliary of the fire
department met Wednesday evening
at the firehouse. President Margaret
Christy opened the meeting with
"The Lord's Prayer," followed by
the Pledge to the Flag. Roli call was
· answered by each reading a comic
valentine. Minutes of the previous
meeting and the treasurer's report
were read. Money for cards and
ljues were turned in. Bills were paid.
Reports of connnittees were given.
Erma Cleland asked for the members to help her at the next meeting
to ready the envelopes for the
coming cancer drive. A get well card
was signed for Dorsel Miller,
president of the firemen, who is a
patient at the Holzer Medical Center. After the business meeting,
games were enjoyed and Margaret
served ice cream to Enna Cleland,
Charlotte Smith, Opal Wtckham,
Opal Hollon, Clarice Allen, Virginia
Lee, Dixie Beair and Pauline
Ridenour. Birthday gifts went \O
Clarice Allen and Pauline Ridenour.
Miss Suzannah Eichinger, Columbus, spent • week with Mrs. Opal
Eichinger and Laura Jean.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Bailey,
Pomeroy, visited his aunt, Mrs.
Letha Wood, ~turday evening.
Mrs. Opal Hollon spent a week
with her son, Gerald, and family in
Columbus.
Mrs. Milrl Ours and Mrs. Freda
Miller hjave both been returned to
their homes after several days' stay
in the Holzer Medical Center.
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Beal,
Pomeroy R.D., were recent visitors
of Mr. and Mrs. Kirk Chevalier and
Jessica.
Mrs. Opal Hollon spent a few days
in Parkersburg with her son, Ricky,
and family.
• Mrs. Pauiine Ridenour was

pleasantly surprised Saturday
evening at her home by a group of
friends and relatives. The event was
arranged by her grandson, Lowell
Ridenour, m honor of her. birthday.
A decorated cake and ice cream
were served to Mr. and Mrs, Oris
Frederick, Mr. and Mrs. John
Wickham, John Rtdenour and Jason
James Ridenour and John Leslie:
Beth Teaford, June Pullins and the
honoree, Mrs. Ridenour and Buel.
Mr, and Mrs. Erroll Conroy Jr.,
Akron, were weekend guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Erroll Conroy Sr. Joming
them on Saturday evening for dinner
were Mr. and Mrs. Val Reynolds and
Rosa Reynolds, Mtddleport.
Recent visitors of Mrs. Marcia
Keller have been Mr. and Mrs. Don
Williams, bavid and Deanne, and
Mrs. Debbie Grubba and sons, all of
Columbus.

Laurel Cliff
Attendance Sunday, Jan. 25, at the
Laurel Cliff Free Methodist was 85.
Choir members present were 10. A
duet was sung by Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Barton.
Mr. and Mrs. Lemy Lyons and
children, Rock Springs, attended
church services Sunday at the local
church.
Attendance at the Free Methodist
Church Feb. I was 85.
Mr. and Mrs. Errue Haggy and
children, Mtddleport, visited Sunday
wtth Mr. and Mrs. James Gilmore.
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Whitaker and
son visited over the weekend with
Rev. and Mrs. Floyd Shook.
Mr. and Mrs. Pearl Gilkey visited
Sunday with Mrs. Della Stahl.
The local Sunday School will have
its Sweetheart Banquet at the Senior
Citizens building Feb. 14 at 6:30p.m.

Fairview
News Notes
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Clarence and Inez Roy of Racine
vistted Mrs. Etha Warner Monday.
Eric Lawson of Syracuse spent the
weekend with his aunt, Wilda
Lawson.
Mrs. Nancy Russell and children,
Michael and Mandy, spent Saturday
with Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Hupp and
Jeremy, and Mr. and Mrs. Arnold
Hupp at Portland,
Visiting Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Anderson, Brenda and Lori, were Ted
and Bonme Wilford and daughters,
Usa and Ktm, of Portland, Connie
and Wallie Morris
Mrs. Russell Roush and son Ed
visited Mrs. Roberta Lewis Thursday at Chfton.
Eric Lawson of Syracuse spent a
weekend with his grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Lawson and his
aunt, Wilda Lawson. ·
Brenda Hunt spent a Friday and
Saturday mghts with Mr. and Mrs.
Russell Ro~sh while her sister
Tressa was hospitalized at Veterans
Memortal Hospital. Mandy and
Michael Russell and David Roush of
Manchester were also weekend
guests of the Roushes.
Sid and Denise Manuel of Long
Bottom spent a Sunday wtth Mr. and
Mrs. Joe Manuel and Tim.
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Roush were
dinner guests a recent Sunday of Mr.
and Mrs. Dana Lewis at Chiton.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Bush visited
Mr. and Mrs. 'Arnold Hupp a recent
Sunday.
David Roush of Manchester spent
a weekend with his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Russell Roush and also visited
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Lewis at Clifton.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Manuel, Sid and
Denise, Manuel and' Donita Talbott
vistted Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Hupp,
Mr, and Mrs. Eddie Hupp and
Jeremy Sunday,
Amanda Russell and Michael
Russell spent Thursday through
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Rtissell
Roush.
Edward Roush spent Sunday night
with Mr. and Mrs. Dana Lewis at
Cltfton.
Neighbors and friends of the community were sorry to Jose a good
citizen, Jimmie Evans, due to
drowning in the Ohio River at
Ravenswood Monday. He was an
employee of the Kaiser Aluminum
plant.
.
Lewis Ours and Robert Lewis are
both surgical patients at Holzer
Medical Center.
Davld Roush of Manchester, Mr.
and Mrs. Dana Lewis of Clifton
visited Mr. and Mrs. Russell Roush
recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Roush and
daughters, Kimberly and Jennifer,
spent Saturday evening wllh Mr.
and Mrs. Dana Lewis at Chfton.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Manuel and son
Tim, Mr. and Mrs. Danny Talbott
and children, Donete and Dave,
were New Year's Day guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Sid Manuel of Long Bottom.
David Roush of Manchester, Oh.,
spent the New Year's holidays with
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Russell
Roush. He also visited his sisters
and Mr. and Mrs. Dana Lewis at
Clifton and 'Mr. and Mts. Ronald
Russell and children.

They'll Do It Every Time

WANT AD INFORMAnON

9
Wanled lo Buy
by Larry Wright
KIT 'N' CARLYLE"'
WANTED TO BUY :
SILVER,
GOLD,
PLA'I'INUM, STERLING·
COINS, RINGS,JEWELR ·
I OON'I AAVf ltt8 HEART
Y, MISC. ITEMS. AB·
lo
WA~ HIM. WH'/ ~T WE:
SOLUTE
MARKET
PRICE GUARANTEO. ED
WAICJ\ A ~~ WHERE
BURKETT
BARBER
~V!:R.YDNS
,MOVE5 AK'OVND
SHOP, MIDDLEPORT ,
OH10992·3A76.
. A I-OH
ches, class .rings, wedding
bands, diamonds. Gold or
sii"Ver. Call J . A . Wamsley,

Treasure Chest Coin Shop,
Alhens, OH. 59~ · ~221.

2 Main Parts!

tor Rent

Business Services

3 AND~ RM furnished ap·
Is. Phone 992·5434.
BEDROOM apartment n
1ddleport. No children 1-

30~· 882 ·2566 .

.

WIN

THREE ROOM and balh

l" ~ stairs

"

OLD COl NS, pockel wal·

Apartment-

44

apartment

Pomeroy . 992·5621 .

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Roule J3. North of
Pomeroy. Large lots. Call
992·7479.

Wanted to Buy: class rings,
wedding bands, anything
stamped, 10K, 14K, or. 18K·
gold. Sliver coins, pocket
watches. Call Joe Clark at
992·2054 al Clark's Jewelry
Slore, Pomeroy, Ohlo-'5769

PHONE 992-2156

Southern Valley Mobile

Home Park, Cheshire, 011 .

eRENTALS

1-C•rd ol Th11nks

41 - Houus tor Atnt

2- ln Memon•m
3- Annovnnmrntl

41- Mobtle Hemtl

• - GIVUWII)I

u - Aputmtnt tor Rtnl

,_
•11-

41- FRoomt.

H.pp)IAdl
Lost•nd Found
Yird hie
Pvblt C Slllt

&amp;.ASSOC.

"THINK H&amp;'S liOlN(;
'!OMAKE IT--·

Mortgage Bankers
992-7544
1973 Crown Haven, 14 x 65,
three bediooms, new carpet. 1971 Cameron, 14 x 6-t,
two bedrooms, new carpet .
1972 Champion, 12 x 60, two
bedrooms, new carpet . 1976
Cameron, 12 x 60, two
bedrooms, all electric . 1971

Skyline. 12sx

4t- Spue lor Rent
t ' - Wanted to Rent
41- Equtpment tor Rent

&amp; Au chon

9- Wanted to Buy

eMERCHANDlSE

1, _ Help vunted
1l - 5nu•IR Willnlt&lt;l

st - Hovsehold Gooels
n - c a , TV , Radio Equi pment
u - Anllqves
s.t- MtSC MerrhuChll

eEMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
Tn•n•nt

P1.Az.A ~APT.,
HO A~S'TA 1

$ .C.

15-Schooh lnstructton

eFARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

•• -

Radto, T\1
&amp; CB Rtpll!r
\t- Win!" To Do

" - F•rm !qvl11ment
U - W.Jntwd Ia luy

eFlNANClAL

U - Lt..,ntocll
« - Hay &amp; Gro~ln
U - htcl &amp; Fertllill'f

OpDOrluntiV
H - Mone v to Lo•n
11 - ProleUtOnill

eTRANSPORTATION

e REAL ESTATE

71- AU!Of fOr hit
1J - Yo~ns64W . D

lt - Homts tor hiU
ll- Mobilt Homts

14- Mottrcyclu
15,Auto P'•rll
&amp; ACCI'UOfll'l
H - .&amp;uto a•p•tr

lor S.te
Jl- F•rml for S•t•
l4 - l~o~stntu lhhldln91
)~Lots &amp; Acn119•

U - lfe.. t Est•te wanttd

Mayor unlll 12 :00 o'clock

noon (local time) , March 5,
1981 , and then at satd office
publicly opened and read

e SERVICES

17- aeallors

11- Hometmpronments

Want-Ad Advertising
Deadlines

aloud.

11- Piumbint &amp; EltU'olattnt
ll- E"Citoiltlng

The work covered by the
plans and specifications lnclud~s the follo~mg ap·
prmomate quantities :

lot- Eiectric•t
&amp; Atfrlttratlon
IS- Gen.r•l Htt.~ l lnt

1 JO P M O.a tl y

n Noon S•turd-v

Conlracl

N - M .H, Re11•l r

tor Moncl•v

17- Upholtll'tY

Rates and Other Informat!on
lJ Wcrds or Uncll'r
I doly

2d•r•
Jdln

Cllh
100

Ch•rtt

1.10

'"

1.00
'"

ldolyl

l .U

"'
'"

E1c11 word,.,.,,'"' min imum 11 weirds Is 4 cents Nrwtti INI'clay .
Ads nu\ntnt other th•n nt,.tc~o~tl"• dlvs will be chtrtH tf the 1

,.,..

••Y'

In m•mory , Card ol ' n•nk\ •ncl ObltUtr'f • c:trttl ,., wortl, U .OO
mlnlmum

Village of Pomeroy
Municipal Building
Pomerov. OhtO 451"69
Sealed bi.Js tor the con struction of Wastewater
Collection System E)( tension will be received by
the Village of Pomeroy,
Ohio at the office of the

casn In AIYanu

" 80· 1"

Wastewater
Collection
System Extension
2, 100 l.f of 8" sewer pipe,
10 each manholes, 1,550 l.f
of 3" force matn, 2,100 l.f.
of 6" force main, and one
each sewage pump ing
station together
with
necessa r y appertaining
work.

Sent1ntl .

examined at the following
locat1ons :
Office of Ihe Mayor
Municipal Build ng
Pomeroy, Ohio 45T69

Wrt te your own ad and order by ma ll with rnis
coupon . Cancel your ad by phone w llen you get
results . Money not refundable

Na~e------------------

Address __________

Burgess

Niple,

&amp;

I DOCUMENTS mar be ob·
tained at the o ftce of
I Burgess &amp; Niple, Limited,

1 400 Berry's Run Road.
PAr-kPr~huro .

l !Telephone·

WV

'·------

4 . _ _ _ _ _ __

5 _ _ _ _ __
6. _ _ _ _ __
7. _ _ _ _ _ __

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

10. _ _ _ _ _ __

"·-----12. _ -_
_ _ _ __
13. _ _ _ _ _ __

14. _ _ _ _ _ __

Card of Thanks

WE WANT lo !hank all ol
our Meigs County fnends
for the lovely c ards and
flowers , vlstts to Columbus
to pay their respects and
other acts of kindnesses in

lhe dealh of Paul 's parents.

Madel i ne

ard

George

Simon, who died jus I lhree

weeks apart You have our
deepest appreciation .
Paul and Alli e Simon

.3 _ __!A~n'!'n.'.'o~u'!'n_.,ce~m
~
e.'.'
n !!
ts~I PAY highesl prices
possible for gold and silver
cotns. rings, jewelry, etc.
Contact Ed Burkett Barber
Shop, Middleport .

RACINE

GUN

30~·485·8541)

upon payment of $-40.00 per

ot' 0,-.;,, and
I W~icHwi'i.:l.'B~'I{i:"FuuJ
II D~~-ldbondpayablelothe
Village of Pomeroy in the
I cony"

SHOOT ,

Racine Gun Club, every
Friday night starting at

YOUR ' PIANO

Too

valuable to neglec t, expert
tuning &amp; and repair Lane
Dantels , 742-2951 or 992-

Attention of bidders is

observed and minimum
wage rates to be pa1d under
the contract Section J,

any and all bids, or to In·

crea$e or decrease or omit
any item or items and/ or to
award to the lowest and
best bidder. Each proposal
must contain the full name
of every person or com·
pany Interested in the
same.
By order of lhe Mayor ot

lhe VIllage of Pomeroy,
Ohio
!21 11, 18. 25, 31c .
These cash rates
tnclude discount

17. _ _ _ _ __
18._ _ _ _ _ __
19. _ _ _ _ _ __
20._ _ _ _ _ __
21. _ _ _ _ __
22 . _ _ _ _ __
23 . _ _ _ _ _ __
24 _ _ _ _ _ __
2
26-5 · - = = = =

27::~~~~~~~~

Racine Volunteer Ftre
Department sponsors a
shot gun &amp; r ifle match
every Sat night 6 ·30 p rn .
at their build1ng In Bashan .
Factory choke 12 guage
shot guns on ty. Open stghfs
22 rifle .

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE- -

1976 Ponliac Grand PriM
SJ 2K5726Pl94674
The Farmers Bank and

Savl.ngs
Company,
Pomero(. Ohio, reserves
the righ to bid at this sale,

·i~~~

15.- - - - - -16.--..,------Mail This Coupon with Remittance
The Daily Sentinel
Box 729
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

~-----------------------J

-/~ ..... ·-&lt;";t

' lj!o' ~ 1111 llll' ollu· 11111

IU('Uilll' IIHt UKt!fll "

lljoll'HI'!i

WANTED : People lo sell
__Avon. 742·2354 or 742·27 55.

-'5769. 992·2272

Middleport Libraries

NEW . HAVEN
James Lockhart

3136

or

882·

1 30~1

Reverend

John

Campbella11304) 882·2624.

LADY or girl to live in. 992-

2686.

RN,

LPN,

similar medical tratning,
to complete Paramedical
Examinations for the in·
surance compan1es in
Pomerov.
Part time
Arrange own schedule.
Training provided. fix ·
cellent pay . For ap ·
plication and complete in
format1on mail one page
resume to L1teData, 200 e.
Sunshine, Springfield, Mo

Society

12 Situations Wanled
HAVE VACANCY for
elderly persons who need
board, room and laundrv .
Eat-in dining room, men
and women have separate
baths, private rooms and
seml •private, available
Pnces to fit 1ncome 992-

TR£E

TRIMMING ond

removal .

6040.
13

9~9 - 2129

or 992·

DOl NG

AUTOMOBILE
SURANCE been

IN

can ·
celled?
Lost
your
operator's license? Phone

Wanled to Do

Furnace repairs, electrical
work, plumbing, mobile
home or residence 992-

S858.

41

Houses for Rent

FOUR BEDROOM brick
home in Middleport . No
pets . References
and

deposil requ,ed . 992-3457.
Avenue . 367 7811 .

Mobile Homes

Ask for Velma and leave
name and number and we
'Will return the call. Free
estimates m Meigs county
area .
LOCKSMITH"

Master

Service ,

Keying,

binations,

com ·

Bonded.

Call :

Will do paneling, ceiltng,

floor lile, plumbing. Free
992-6338.

2 bedroom trailer . Adults
only . Brown's Trailer

Park. 992·3j24.

THREE

BEDROOM

mobtlehome on Story Run

Road 367·7811 .

home Partially furnished
located in the Country
Mobile Home Park $150 .00

31

Trailer lot for sale, $5,000.
Modular home lot on Route
7, three bedroom farm ·

house loc•led on Roule 7
992·2571.

Gas heat, central air . Call
992·2571 or 1·6a7·6429.

GRACE Episcopal Church

modern kitchen, living
room, dinlno room, office,

INCOME

F-edera~

TAX

service.

and state . Wllllace·
Russell , Bradbury . Phone ·

992·7228.

You'l I
tract it down

For

Farms

and

Greenhouses , Portland,
Ohio ol8~3- 2698 or 8~3· 2693 .

-

4

unattached

garage ,

2

blocks from school. 992·
3~~3 .

FOR SALE . Seven room
double Insulated ranch
style home, totlll electric ,

WOOd burner In family

room, gas
·bedrooms ,

available . l
1 lf~
baths, ,

Giveaway

GIVE TO good home
small black and while pup·
py . 3 lo ~ monlhs old. Wor·
med and paper !rained.
992·5768.

.- Co on Lil\lllllr lu
.- lliMt•l Praper lofl
,.....,.,, Hltu 5t Owntn

..- Mobil• Home

P •r~s
I 1e

l~l;

BUY

Beauttful 2 story brtck
home, has 3 bedrooms,
l lh bath, living room accented
by
antique
chandelier, large kitchen and fam•IY room
comb. with ftreplace .

$26,500.00

Cheryl Lemley, Assoc .

742·Jl71

Velma Nicinsky, Assoc.

742·J092

Citizens. 843·4951 or
2815.
SPECIAL

8~3 -

DISCOUNT

prices on
furniture.
Reupholstering . Jan. &amp;
Feb ., 1981.
Mowrey's
Upholstery, Pt . Pleasant,

W va 1·304·675·4154.

Firewood, Sl5.00 a truck
load, $60 .00 a cord. All hardwood, split, &amp; delivered .

843·4831 or 843·4734.

world Book Encycloped ias
Limited number, 1980
edttton sets. Save SlOO .OO.

$15 00 per monlh. E lizabelh
Coffman, 949·2592.

Kingsbury Rd., 2 mi.

$2.00 for uch flllllm. Add 50C

REESE
TRENCHING
SERVICE

40

for uch pattern for flBI-ciiSI
airmail and hlndlinc. S..d lo:
Anne Adams
I .' 1
Pattern Dept.
The Daily Sentinel
243 West 17 Sl, Now Yan, NY
10011. Print NAME, ADDRESS,
ZIP, Silt, and SnLE NUMBER.
We streamlined lhe sewmg to
save you ttme so you can save
money' Send now for N£W 1981
SPRING SUMMER PAn£RN CATALOG 100 styles. free pattern
coupon . ($1 Value) Catai0(."$1.

SEASONED FIREWOOD
for sale. S30.00. Phone 992·
5240.

134-14 quitk Quiib ..... $1.75
133-FashlClll Homo Quillin&amp;.$1.75
llti-Swutors-Sias 31-56 .$1.75
129-Quidl/Eay Tllftlfm $1.75

paloosa. 992·5449.

HARVEST gold slove and

He.1dquarters

2 bedrooms,

71

Autos for Sale

gas furnace w1th wood
burner. birch kitchen,
full
basement ,
carpeting, 2 porches and
dbl garage

On

Rt. 12-4 near coal mine

Drilled well,

seplic

tank, electric and 1.66
acres of nearly level

land. Only $6,500.
GARAGE APT. - N1ce·
balh, gas furance, dbl.

garage, all in good
shape. Close to stores,
school and pool Only

$16,000.
1.62 ACRES -

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

Near

town on Rt. 7. Four
room frame home with
cistern
water .
2
parch

for

$12,000.
NEW LISTING -

just

14

acres near Forked Run
Lake . Minera ls and

1- 0ood Gu

Road

Pomerov,Oh. 45769
Domestic, Japanese &amp;
European Cars &amp;
Trucks .
2-15-lmo

toH

Water-Sewer-Electric
Gas Line-Ditches
Water L1ne Hook-ups
SeptiC Tanks
county Certified
Roush Lane
Cheshire, Oh.

Ph, 367·7560

&amp;

Aluminum Siding
elnsulation
• Storm Doors
• Storm Windows
• Replacement
Windows

Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph. 992-2772
1·28·1 mo

ROUSH
C9NSTRUCTION
• New Homes • ex tensive remodeling
• Electrical work
• Roofing work
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992·7583
1-22-1 mo .

ROGER HYSELl'S

GARAGE
-Auto and Truck
Repair
-Transmission
Repair
Hrs.: Mon.- Fri.

ALLSTEEL

KAUFPS
PWMBING
AND
HEATING
12 Park St.
Middleport, Oh.
Ph. 992-6263
Anytime
2-1-1 mo

PUlliNS
EXCAVAnNG
• Dozers
• Backhoes
Hourly Contract
Large or
small jobs.
Ph. 992· 2478
11·10·3 mo pd

J

Farm Buildings

J&amp;F
ENTERPRISES

Sizes
''From 301C30"

SMALL

Utility Buildings
Siz4!,s from 4JC6 to 12x40

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

9 A.M.·S:JO P.M.

~an9t!

1- 0ood Hotpalnt W.nher
1- U ' GE TV
1- t•cu If Hatpo1nt
Relnge rator
All at th e o~bo"'t 1tems In e•cellen! cond1!ron All Uli!' priced
to ~e ll lmmedlil11!111 Su ttli ta-

prox . 50' x100' lot in Mid-

!\?..,. _

wilh

all

util i ties . Has srna ll
older home to fi x up or
remo"Ve
from
site

windows, large toyer ~
and
bu i lt in
c hina
cab1ner are some of the
outstanding features of
this 3-4 bedroom home
in town . Want to see?

$33,000.00.
YOUR OWN FRUIT
ORCHARD in Ihe back
yard. Several trees. 4
bedrooms In this 7 room
house on Rt. 12~ . 2 car

garage. $20.500 00
REDUCED! SOUTH·
ERN DISTRICT

u,

Almost
acre lot w1th 4
bedroom house Bath
utility . L arge carport{

"'

..

POMEROY
~LANDMARK
;;.,;;;....
;;;
992·2181

72

Trucks for Sale

1977 DODGE four wheel
drive, 8 toot bed in good
condition . $2600.00. Also
1974 Scout, 6 cylinder, two

All types of roof work,
new or repair gu1ters
and downspouts, gutter
clcan.ng and pcun1mg.
All work gunranleed.

1975 CHEVROLET pickup

Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices
Call Howard

wheel drive, Sl275.00. 992·
6323.
truck w1th topper In ex

cellenl condition $1800.00.

949·2862
949·216ll

Cal l 9~9 · 2537 .

Pels lor Sale
REGISTERED

56
AKC
Cocker

Spaniel

puppies

Born 1·5-81 , $100.00 include

wormihg and first Shots

992-7543.

Moto~cycles

74

PU T a cold nose in your
future
Call the Meigs
County Humane Socletv at

992·6260. Three Alask•an

Spitz, Dobermtm tvpe, St
Bernard type, Labrador
type, American Foxhound,
Chesapeake
Bay

Retriever, Collielype, Ben

ii type and terrier type .

1978 BLAZER, 22,000 miles,
norusl. 992·2178.

-;::==:::;,;:;;:;;;;===
i6
Aulo Parts
&amp; Accessories

AVATORS

SEWING MACHINE
Repairs, service, all
makesl 992 -2284
The
Fabrtc Shop, Pomeroy .
Authorized Singer Sales
and Service. We sharpen
Scissors .

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

1979 NORRIS Craft bass
boat and lraller. 16 fool, 115
h.p. Evinrude, fully equip·
ped Like new. Phone 992·

3401.

$16,000.00.
APPROX. 5 ACRES OF
VACANT LANDI Util·

l tles

a vailable

$10,000 00.
REALTOR

Henry E. Cleland, Jr .

992-6191
ASSOCIATES

bedrooms. halt balh and

front

PHONE 992-1802
or 99H44J
2·13·1 mo.

1- 11
Hone Powtr Rktlng
Mower
1- Good Triiltr Approwtcl Wood
Bur ner Slowe w•lh blow•r

Newly constructed one
bedroom house . Needs
paint
inside and
carpeting Ph acre lot
with
ll!rge garage

$9,000.00.
FRENCH DOORS, bay

AND

(4 Bags Limit Per Week)

992-5682

dle pori.

~

floor space. 8 rooms,

PLYMOUTH

west Co. Rd. 18.

196~ Dodge
Polara, 318.
Phone 949·2171

$19.000.00.
NEW LISTING - Ap·

LARGE- 1620 sq. ft . of

Call992·3421

No wa1sl seam! Wrap and llelt.
Pnnled Patte10 4953 Wom en's SiZes are 34 (38-mch llust
With 40-lnCh hip), 36 (40 OUSt
42 hip), 38 (42 bust, 44 h1p),
(44 bust. 46 h1p); 42 (46 bust
48 hip), 44(48 bust, 50 hip), 4G
(50 bust 52 hip), 48 (52 bus!.
54 hlp); 50 (54 bust. 56 h1p).

two horses; one patnt mare
and one registered Ap-

ONE HORSE !railer and

Housing

Phone
1-(614)-992·3325

a..,., Wtlcllt Clllnl'

Bedford Township
and
Flatwoods Area
$5.00 Per Month
Weekly PickUP.

Cottle &amp; Roger Turner

992·5692

Jean Trussell949-2640

OFFICE 992·2259

wild lite. $12,000.

61

Farm Equipment

PICKING up a piano in
your area . Take over
payments . Call credit
manager collect as 1-592-

5122.

GOOD FARMALL traclor

81

Home
I m ravements

Gene' s Carpet Cleaning,
deep stream extrac1ion.
Free
estimated,
reasonable rates, scot-

chquard. 992·6309 or
221.1.

7~2 ·

with six foot snow blade,

NOW

DOING

hauling,

moving jobs, painting
houses inside or ou1,
basement·attic cleaning,
also carpet cleaning, yard

plow. ~ lool bush hog . Two WILL DO ALL kinds of car· work, elc . 992·3849. Ask for

wheel trailer . Gary Welch,

Housing
HP.ildquarters

Pagevllle, $1650 00. 698
6716

pentry work, including
paneling, ceilings, repairs,

elc . E•perlenced, with
references. Phone 992·3941 .

Velma and leave name and
no. W ill return call. Free
estimates In Meigs co .
area.

•Siding •Insulation •Roofing •Storm Windows • Concrete Work • Septic Systems
•Backhoe •Dump Truck - •Remodeling
•New construction •Guttering &amp;
Downspouts

PH. 992·7119

Real Estaie- General

reasonobly priced on lhee

level acres one mile from

Racine . Phone 9~9 · 2706 .

ATTRACTIVE

CENTRAL REALTY

home on

two and one·half acres .

Private selling on Sl. Rt. 7

by Memory Gardens Ter·

ms. 99~ - 77~1.

37 ACRES wllh small house
and garoge and born. St.
Rf.

3J8

near

pl•nl. 2~7 · 3072 .

aluminum

32

LETART -

Mobile Homes

- -...:.=:...=--for Sale

1969 PMC 3 bedroom
trailer . 12x60. 992·3954.

12x65

in • excellent

con·

dillon, underpinning in·
eluded. $5500.00. 247·3942.

Cash 'n' Carrv.

fir eplace, bri ck eKter 1or, plenty of shrubbery Can
assume at 10°6 . Owner IN IVIng, says se ll . 539,900.

RACINE AREA - J BR 'S, large living room. alSO
fami ly room , storage bldg., ca rport

Price Cut.

. _._. , _..

11
19 75

~

....

~ · ··

Autos for Sale
BUICK Llmiled.

loaded, new tires, no rust 1n

COUNTRY HOME - J7 acr es, J or
close to Rl 7 Asktng 540,000

&lt;1

BR 's. Loc ated

GOOD COUNTRY Ll\llNG - Country home, larqe
living room, kttchcn and den. 1 n c : :,;~c::; 3 BR 's, laun
dry arPa , flnd ouls1dc build :nq tM S loraq ~ &amp; cor

CALL

U~

ro BUY OR SELL

Nnncy Jaspers - Ao; soci., tc

PH . ~43 · 2075

2 Rolls
Rubber Back

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

RACINE - Lot set up tor lra•ler. Asking 54,800.

P,sklng und er SJO,OOO

1915 VIKING·Moblle Home,

Febnay lnveulory Sale

3 BR . hardwood floor s, ' "' balh s,

$36.000.

varieties,

prices. and ordering, call
Harris

full basement, new heal
system wllh central air,

Large 2 story home
located on Gravel Hill,
features living room
with fireplace , famtly
room, 4 bedrooms, kitchen, 2 baths, full basement, large lot

Firewood for sale, Mixed
types of wood. $35.00 per
p1ck up load. Delivered,
will stack for Senior

.'177

Tv~~~L~-~:.t J3

lltw G... un-h

Body Repair-Insurance
work - Collision Repair.
Expert painting, body
ytork, p1nstriplng &amp;
vmvl tops.
Free Estimates

Runner, 318, air conditioning, power steering,
in excellent condition. Also

ly carpeted 2 bedrooms,

Beautiful three bedroom
ranch brick home In Baum
Addition , Pomeroy, Ohio

garage S36,500 00.
MIDDLEPORT

$2,800.00
BARGAIN

GOII C:WIS:
Now l Uood
LIIIONI
IIPAI.. Clooolftc. lltinllhin'

992·7544

Misc. Merchanise

Reill Estate- General

TRAILER LOT -

3 BEDROOM , 2 bath,

Salad lunch, door table

Office742-2003

54

refngerator . 992-5818 .

FIREPLACE

Homes for Sale

S l ~~e iUJ

" SIIu l • l Ai!n For ·

HART'S
TRASH HAULING

Call for Information

767·3167 or S57·3411.

Real E5tate- General

per monlh. 247 3942.

DEN Very nice 2
bedroom home wifh
perma ·stone
siding
Furnace, bath, new kttchen, detached garage
and liots.

New Haven, w. va. (3041
882·2079.

Women card party . 1 p.m .

rent. 992· 5908

nice trailer lot , approx .
3~ acre with water tap.

tor Rent

THE
KOUNTRY
KWB

Nolhing too large. Also,

BUILDING SITE - Or

42

bedrooms. 2 full balhs,

hauling ,

work, elc. Phone 992 3849.

guns, ·pocket watches and
co1n collections. call 614-

Rentals

1' E. Second Street

Insurance

at 992-

moving jobs, pa i nting
houses Inside or out.
Basement. attic cleaning ,
also carpet cleaning, yard

Four room apartment for

monlh . 992·2749.

nice 3 bedroom ranch
home , living room,
)arge eat· in kitchen,
utt/11y room, single car

1915 Two Bedroom mobile

6580A .

Call lhe Me igs County
Humene

pay cash or certified check
for antiques and collec tibles or entire estates.

GeorgeS. Hobstetter Jr.
Broker

SIX ROOM house on Nye

NURSING ,

eDlsllwnll•n
eMI!Wtlfflolnkl

lteNirln•

down

5%

ATTENTION:
liM ·
PORTANT TO YOUI Will

bedroom compl etely fur- nished Available 1st of

35
Lois &amp; Acreage
TRAILER LOT for sale,
54.000.00. 992 2571.

United

estimates Fred Miller at

Put a cold nose in your life .

at 992·7787 .
HALF of a double . 2

NEW LISTING - Exira
Methodist
Church
Is
seeking part time Director
of Music . Contact Dr .

VA loansno money down
Federal Housing3% on 52!,000
S% on balance.
Conventional Loans-

Unfurnished one bedroom
apartment for rent: Ren ters assistance available
for senior citizens . contact
Viriage Manor Apartments

HOBSTEITER REALTY

bath. lofJ , knotty pine
tc,itchen, elec . baseboard
heat and leve l lot on th e
river .

squash .
I

lhe ellg•billly llsl al 992·
2156 or 992·2157.

11

with 8
28
bids
submitted.
29.
WANT AD
30.
(21 16, 28, 20, 31c
31. _ _ _ _ __
VEGETABLE PLANTS :
32._ _ _ _ _ __ !----------~ Tomoloe!, sweel pololoes,
strawberry, peppers, cab·
33. _ _ _ _ __
LAFF- A- DAY
boge, caulifloWer, broccoli,
34._ _ _ _ _ __
celery, head lettuce, egg
35. _ _ _ _ __
plant. cucumbers, melons,
l " " ~'"•'tl

.W24.

Eblin, 4HXXI Laurel Cliff
Road, Pomerov, Ohio

the Farmers Benk and
Savings Compan( reserves
. the right to rejec any or all

l

PMC ,

NEW -

and lo wllhdraw any of lhe
above mentioned vehicles
prior 10 the sale, Furlher,

_,_,
f ......
'""'

1970.

992·21.(],

appointment. See Wanda

that on Salurday&lt;february
izes Publi c invited to at·
21, 1981, al 'lO :w A.M. a ,:Jr
lend. Thursday, Feb. 19,
public sale. will be held at S3.00
per person. Localed
105
Union
Avenue,
Pomerov, Ohio, to sell for a1 parish house.

cash
the
following
collateral. to·wlt:

12 x 60, two bedrooms, new
carpel. B x S Sales, Inc.,
2nd X Viand Street , Point
Pleasant, WV Phone 675

carpet .

Tax serv ice. federal , state ,
&amp; quarterly taxes done by

Segregated Facility, Sec· 6260
tion 109 and Executive Order 11246.
NOW
The
estlm"ated con ·

struction cost is $200,000 as
of January 1, 1981.
The Vii age of Pomeroy
reserves the right to reject

GET VALUABLE training

6022

I amount of 5 percent of the
1 total amount ol the bid will MEIGS MUSEUM open by
be required. No bidder may appointment January· Mar·
I withdraw o bid wilhln 60 ch. 992 · 226~ . 992·2802. 992·
I days after the actual date 2360 or 992·2639. Histories
1 of the opening thereof .
for
st~le
Pomeroy I particularly called to l~e
1 reQuirements as to conditions of employment to be

two

bedrooms, bath &amp; lfJ , new

,

?t'tlnl

Notice is hereby given

2. _ _ _ _ __

.,

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

Burgess &amp; Nlple; Limlled 2082.
Berry's Run Road
Parkersburg, WV 26101

5085 Reed Road

Curb In f latlon•
Pay C~sh for
Classlfleds and
Save I I I

3 _ _ _ _ __

1

The
CONTRACT 7.30 p.m. Faclory choke
DOCUMENTS may be guns only .

Columbus, Ohio 43220
. - - - - - - - - - - - - · - - - - - - - - - . ; . . -1 Copies of the CONTRACT

Wanted
For Sate
Announ cement
For Rent

• •

~00

Mobllt Hom• ~tl•t •ntl Y.,rd talu art•Utfltecl o n l ~ wlttl ettttwlttt
Of'dtr 25 unt ctlartt lor ads urryl nl lu Numbt• In Ctrt of Tttt

Pnnt one word in each
space be low . Each inItia l or group of figures
counts as a wor d. Count
name and address or
phone number 1t used .
You ' ll get better results
1f you describe tully,
give price The Sentinel
reserves the rtght to
clas sify, edit or relect
any ad . Your ad w ill be
put In the proper
clasif1cation if you 'll
check the proper box
below

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

_,., ,

Public Nolice
ADVERTISEMENT
FOR BIDS

n - TruciU tor Sat•

auslneu

11-

MOWN,

MP·•

Sl-Butldtnt 5uppliel
n -- Pettlor hie

11-lnlurAnce

14- &amp;ultnnl

~t;
RQ)E~

6),

11
as a young business person
and earn good money plus
some great gifts as a Sen tinel route carrier. Phone
us right away and get on

.o;,,u, b

992 · 39~4 .

r&gt;::WT

lor Retu

•W.nlltrl

.II:.Aitl

• Dr~• • •

10% to 20%. Discount
On Entire Stock ·
1·25·1 mo.

TRAILER spaces for rent .

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

e ANNOUNCEMENTS

915-3561
PAI1S AND SIIVICI
ALL MAICIS

Ph. 6&amp;7·6485

CUNNtNGHAM

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

f'wf'ntSen lu

Reedsville, OH

r---~$ .... 1

Call Ken Young

ANN'S CAKE
DEj;ORATING
_
SUPPLIES

Space for Rent

46

APPLIANCE SERVICE

10 lb. Chocolate

in

HE'S GOT l.OGIIS

SfrYtCIS

Polly's Pointers

year is expected to decline to about occur as a resl,llt of reduced hog
1.2 billion pounds from 1.3 billion last slaughter, but part of !he reason is
season, says the Agriculture Depart- because of "relatively high corn
prices" which have meant less lard
ment.
Most of the decline is expected to per hog, a new report said Tuesday.

1981

A I cond lllon 992 3288 .

1977 Cutlass Supreme
Brougham, black wllh red
pinstriping, red velour interior,
brand
new

Goodyear raised white let·
1er GT radials. Loaded
wllh equipment. Being sold

by Crenson Pratt . Call 992 ·

3093 afler 5: 30p.m.

SHAG

Reg. 515.95
Sq.
Yd.
Casn· n·Carr
Buy Now &amp; Save $2-$6 Per Yard.
25 rolls carpet in stock to pick from.
Regular backed carpet installed free,
wit~ pad. ·
Drive A Little- Save A Lot

$799

RUTLAND FURNITURE
742-2211

Main St.

·'

BOOKKEEPING SERVICE
•BUSINESSES
•FARMS
•PARTNERSHIPS
•CORPORATIONS
Payrolls, profit and loss statements, all
federal and state forms.

H&amp;R BLOCK OFFICE LOCATION
618 E. Main

Pomeory, Oh.

992-3795
2·1·2mo.

�Sentinel

Pomeroy-Midd

MEET THURSDAY
The Meigs Coo1nty Corrunissioners
sday, at 10 a.m. to discuss jail alan·
will meet in
session on Thurdards.

Southern board
buys new bus

'

,_
I ii

Ohio

The Southern Local School
District Board or Education accepted bids for a new 6.&gt;-passenger
school bus when it met Monday
night.
The bid of the Gibson Co., Athens,
was accepted on the chassis and the
bid of Edwin Davis and Son,
Langsville, was accepted on the
body. Total costs for the bus will he

r

vention in Columbus March I(). II.
It was voted to purchase or video
tape recorder for the junior high
school with a part of the cost to be
paid by the Southeastern Ohio
Educational Television program.
Feb. 2, 3 and 12 were approved as
calamidy days. Bills were paid and
the financial and activity statements
were approved.

$27,723.36.

SHOCKED - Bernice Ann Durst, Middleport, was quite shGCked
Saturday moruing to find a car teetering on a tree stump hi front of her
borne on South Third Ave., Middleport. The car was parked across the
street from !he Durst home and had been left uoatt.,.,ded with the motor
running. The next thing everyone knew the car had crossed the street
coming to rest on the tree stomp.

The board added Susan M. Kohn
and Jeffrey Holter. to the substitute
teacher list ·and authorized Carla
Shuler, high school mathematics
teacher, to attend a comput.r rnn-

Attending were board members,
Sue Grueser, Don Smith, Shirley
Jolmsoh, Dennie Evans, and Charles
Pyles; Supt. Bob Ord and Treasurer
Nancy Carnahan.

ELBERFELD$.

I
I

new
t Smart
styles for .

.I

_t

t

at y .. en
tine
,,

e

.t

:.uNifORMs

•

-~""'"'", ~

Vo1.29 No. ll6
Copyrighted 1981

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, "'Mse'dny, February a; 1981

'Welfare program for rich'
term given Reagan package
.

.

WASHINGTON (AP} - Widely
divergent reaction of Ohio
congressmen to President Reagan's
economic program suggests the
president may have problems getting his package passed into law.
Rep. Mary Rose Onkar, [).()hio,
called the program unveiled by
Reagan Wednesday night "a welfare
program for the rich" and said she
would like to take the president up
on his challenge to find a better way
to make budget cuts.
"I can think of many alternatives," said Ms. Oakar. "I would
like to cut $40 billion out of the
budget, but not at the expense of the
poor and the elderly."
Sen. John Glenn, Mhio, predicted that "some of the package" will
get through Congress but added: ':I
would be very surprised if we got it
through in the exact same fonn. ••
Rep. John Ashbrook, R-Ohio,
predicted that conservative
Democrats would team up with
Republicans to push the president's
program through the House.
"I've been waiting for a long time
for something like this," said Ashbrook, of Johnstown, a conservative
spokesman in the House, after
· reviewing Reagan's program.

Meigs County happenings. .
ASK TOWED
Marriage licenses were issued to
Bruce Eugene Conde, 19, Pomeroy,
and Traci Ann Sayre, 17, Rt. I, Long
Bottom; Dewayne Edward Good, lB,
Rt. 2, Cheshire, and Theresa Bernice
Griffin, 19, Middleport.
CANCER SOCIETY MEETS
The Board of the American Cancer Society, Meigs County Unit, will
meet at 8 this evening at the EastWest dining room of Veterans
Memorial Hospital. A fibn narrated
by Kirk Douglas will be shown.

treasurer of Meigs County.
Mary Bates, Pomeroy, filed suit
for divorce against Ralph Bates,
Trenton, Mich.
THREE EMERGENCY CALLS
Three calls were answered
:ruesday by local emergency units,
the Meigs Emergency Medical Services reports.
At 3:17a.m., the Middleport Squad
took Sandy Bennett, Brownell Ave.,
to Veterans Memorial Hospital, and
at 2:40 p.m., the Middleport Unit
took Nahuma Tyree from tl)e fire
station to Veterans Memorial
Hospital. The Pomeroy Unit at 3:20
p.m. took Della Stahl from Willow
Creed Road to Pleasant Valley
Hospital.

FORECLOSURE ACTION
A foreclosure suit was filed in
Meigs County Common Pleas Court
by Associated Financial. Services,
Co., of Parkersburg, against Cecil
Dillon and Flossie Dillon, Tuppers
Plains, Creditthrift of America, ·
(Continued from page l) .
Belpre, and George Collins as be prohibited from relying on
property ·taxes for operating funds,
boards r:i education would be
HOSPITAL :\EWS
authorized to seek voter approval of
VETERANS MEMORIAL
increases in the income tax beyond
Admitted-8andra Bennett, Midthe 1 percent outlined in the
dleport ; Veneida Knight, Racine;
proposal.
Mildred Moore, Pomeroy; O'Dell
Blake, Middleport; Charles Smith,
Middleport; Opal Ohlinger, Middleport; Pamela Diddle, Racine ;
Sue Estep, Middleport.
Discharged--Martha Clon ch,
Kathy Robinson, Earl Griffith,
Veneida Knight, Patricia Day, June
Freed, Lou Brooks, Ella Wilson, Betty Bailey.

THE DAILY
SENTINEL

Bill•••

SENTINEL AVAILABLE

POMEROY

IN
'RMN.

Swisher &amp; Lohse
Nelson Drug
Powell's Grocery
~eacon

Sentinel Office
Krogers
Crow's
Jones Boys

LEASING
._EQUIPMENT

. . .TO BUSINESS. INDUSTRY,
- -AND THE PROFESSIONS

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGES FEB. 17
BANK ONE OF POMEROY. N.A
Dean Adkins, George Bapst Jr.,
Vicki Barry, Teresa Beaver,
614/992·2133
Thomas bush, Brenda Doolittle,
Rebecca Edwards, Angela Gibbs,
Blanche Gilkey, Mildred Howell 1-----------:-------------~
Charlene Ireland, Shannon Justice'
Joseph Kerns, Tammy Cline, Ma~
Layne; Mrs. Jerry Mahon and
daughter, Harvey McCormick,
Helen MacCumber, Carla Micahel
Linda Nibert, Thelma Oliver'
Gregory Pickens, Joe Rice, Sarah
Russ, Mildred Westlall, Jonathan
Wiseman, Ivan Zaddack.

SPECIAL OF THE WEEKI

FISH SQUARES .............•.. 69e

BffiTHS

Mr. and Mrs. Larry Fisher, son,
Oak Hill; Mr. and Mrs. Charles Harmon, daughter, Pt. Pleasant; Mr.
and Mrs. Stephen McKinniss son

Jackson.

'

WITH FRIES ................... •1 ~

'

Mayor's
Four defendants forfeited bonds in
the court of Middleport Mayor ·Fred
Hoffman
They were
Mark A.Tuesday
Venoy, night.
Pomeroy,
and
Robert N. Duty, Matheny, W. Va.,
$350 each, posted on charges ct
driving while intoxicated; Max E.
Hill, Racine, $29, and Jerry W. Abbott, Point Pleasant, $27, both on
speeding charges.
Three defendants were fined and
eight others . forfeited bondS in the
court of Pomeroy Mayor Clarence
Andrews Tuesday night.
Fined were Michael Pierce,
Rutland, $:ill and costs, disorderly
conduct; $200 and costs, petty theft,
and $2B9, failure to pay an old fine;
Ronald Coates, Pomeroy, $:ill and
costs, disturbing the peace, and Tim
Hysell, no address recorded, $:ill and
costs, disorderly conduct.
Forfeiting bonds were Diana
Tillis, Rutland, $:ill, failure to
register motor vehicle; Victoria
Slack, Middleport, $30, speeding;
Carl Hughes, Pomeroy, $50, no
operator's license; William Garcia,
Shirley, N.Y., $30,1eft of center, and
$50, no operator's license; Florence
Bumgarner, Letart, W. Va., $30,
. speeding; Mark Osborne, Buckhannon, W. Va., $30, left of center; Van
Willford, Middleport, $50, disorderly
conduct; Gregory Davis, Syracuse,
$:ill, no operator's license.

570

w. Main

PH. 992 ·2556

Pomeroy~

MIDDLEPORT
Mark v, Dutton Drug, Lazy Days Cafe
vaughan's Cardinal
Scotts Grocery, Cheshire
Vista, Les' Carryout, Mason Laundromat, Mason
Solo &amp; Amaco- New Haven; Fowler's Groc .. w. Colum

HOME DELIVERY

r~---====================---J~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
THE
CENTRAL TRUST
COMPANY

is INTERESTED in YOU!!

•' Decorated Cakes for
All Occ•sions"

Middleport, Oh.

COLUMBUS, Ohio - Gov . James A. Rhodes ~ys the federal government's unsound fiscal policies have led lo lhe largest number of
jobless,Ohioans.
·
The stale's unemployment level is now at 10.4 percent, representing
517,000 jobless Ohioans, mostly in aut(}orelated fields, Rhodes said.
"Ohio cannot stand another year of 20 percent interest rales, 15 percent inflation and a half a million ~nemployed , " he said Wednesday.
"The federal government must begin inunediately to develop a
program to reduce the trillion dollar debt that has produced these
disastrous economic conditions."

SHE recognizes and understands your banking needs.

Clear last trouble spots

When you walk through the doors at CENTRAL TRUST to do your
banking business, you are sure of PERSONALIZED service, provided

.

by COMPETENT and EXPERIENCED PEOPLE. You receive

· WARSAW , Poland - The last two trouble spots on Poland's labor
horizon cleared today when private fanners agreed to end their sevenweek sit-in in the southern city of Rzcszow and striking students in
Warsaw and other cities ended their protests.
.
The farmers, who lost the_ir bid for an Independent union, settled
early tod!ly for a compromise pledge of agricultural refonns aimed at
putting the private farmers - who own 68 i&gt;ercent of Poland 's farm
land and produce 78 percent of its food - on a par with state fanns.

INDIVIDUAL attention.

Winning Ohio lottery number

CENTRAL TRUST is conveniently located at the comer of Second

CLEVELAND- The winning nwnber selected Wednesday night in
the Ohio Lottery's dally game "The Number" was 645. The lottery
reported earnings of $451,914 from the money wagered on the game,
Lottery officials said sales were $002,629.50. Holders of winning tickets
are entitled to share $350,715.50.

many banking services.

Weather
Showers likely and mild tonight. Lows tonight in low to mid-lOs. Partly cloudy and continued mild Frh,lay with highs near 60. Probability of
precipitation 70 percent tonight and 10 percent Friday. Winds westerly
to northwesterly rr 10 mph toni~ht.

THAT'S THE CENTRAL IDEA

PH·. 992-6342

317 N. 2nd

LD

YOU have seen Lois at the Bank in Middleport for the past 22 years.

"·· LOIS McELHINNY handles a wide range of services and she's
interested in you.

MEMBER :.FDIC

ECONOMIC MESSAGE- President Ronald Reagan laughs as he
prepares to deliver his economic message to· a joint session of
Congress at the·Capitol Wednesday night. Vice Pres!dent George Bush
is at left; House Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill, )).Mass., is alright. (AP
Laserphoto I
'
.
Hall, D-Ohio, although he predicted
that the president will have trouble
over trade adjustment assistance
"and possibly food stamps."
"There is n9 question but that we
must get government spending under control," said Rep. John F.

Seiberling, D-Ohio, but he too indicated that congressmen will give
close scrutiny to the president's
priorities in budget cuts and. tax
cuts.
He said if Reagan 'is "really
(Continued on page 12)

Almost all of Reagan's proposals
require Congress' approval to take
effect, and that promises to be a
struggle that will preoccupy
Washington for the rest of the year.
The president's gamble is that the
1niddle class will agree that his
program will curtail inflation sharply and quickly and will be willing to
give up some of the benefits government bestows with the people's
taxes.
Everybody stands to lose from
some Reagan proposals. For example, postage would go up. more

rapidly if 'the government subsidy is
phased out, as Reagan suggests. The
subsidy pays 7 percent of the Postal
Service's costs.
Other cuts are very specifically
aimed. The Coast Guard, for example, wo.uld charge a fee on those it
resr.:ues.
And everyone who uses a boat,
from outboard to yacht, or big commercial vessel, would pay Coast
Guard fees for services rendered everything from maintaining buoys
to making safety insi&gt;ections. The

Transportation Department is to
spell out details in a few weeks.
Reagan's proposals mean that a
family sending a 'yolingster to
college on a government grant or a
low-interest loan may no longer
qualify. The administration wants to
revise loan and grant programs so
that $30,()()().a-year families will no
longer be eligible. Other families
will have to pay a bigger share of
college c.osts.
Dairymen would lose an increase
in price supports that otherwise
would go into place April!. Reagan

predicted that milk prices would fall
as a result, but he also indicated
some dairy farmers would go out of
business.
Travelers of all sorts would have
to pay more if the Reagan plans are
enacted. Bus and subway fares
would rise with the loss of mass transit subsidies. Reagan said those
fares have been kept artificially low
since the 1973-74 Arab oil embargo
and predicted that people would not
shift from mass transit to private
cars because of hjgher fares.

President, staff start sellin_g work

WINCHESTER , Ky. - George Washabaugh, 33, has been found
guilty by a Clark Circuit Court jury of being an accessory lo a 1979
murder.
The Fayette county resident was charged in connection with the
death of Benny Ray Grimes, whose body was found in December 1979
in Clark County.
The jury Wednesday recollUnended a sentence of 20 years in prison
for Washabaugh, plus five years on a conviction of second-degree
burglary. Sentencing is scheduled for Feb. 26.

Call For Information

CAROUSEL CONFECTIONERY

Millions of people are in that boat.
Everybody who pays taxes will gain
from Reagan's plan, but millions·
would lose more than they gain as a
result of the retrenchment the
president proposes for federal activities.
Reagan 's ideas would take
benefits from all sorts Of people the near poor and the very rich, but
especially from the middle class
whose votes put him in office.
His budget docwnent called the
middle class "an obvious focal
point" of budget cuts. .

Alleged accessory found guilty

Ave. and Race Street in Middleport. Do stop in and discover their

FREE CANDY CLASSES

WASHINGTON (API - U there's
· a person in America who owns cows
and rides the bus to town and takes
an outboard boat onto the lake for
recreation and sends his kid to
college, he gets hit on all sides by
Ronald Reagan's " national
recovery plan."
·
If he's a middle-income taxpayer,
he would lose a lot more in go.vernment benefits and subsidies than l1e
would gain in tax culs under lhe plan
President Reagan laid before
Cpngress and the nation Wednesday
night.

Policies cause unemployment

PHONE:

To Rep. Louis Stokes, D-Ohio, it
was "the same old story of the
government making the rich richer
and the poor poorer.
"I think the president clearly
signaled to the minorities, to the
poor and the disadvantaged that
they are in for some hard times."
Stpkes particularly criticized
proposed cutbacks in trade-- adjustment assistance lunda, child
nutrition and food stamp programs.
Rep. Don Pease, Mhio, was concerned that Reagan failed to say
how much of a deficit there will be in
next year's budget.
"I recently held a series of town
meetings, and people are still concerned about deficit spending, Ji~
they were last year," Pease said.
Pease, a member of the Ways and
Means Committee, which will
review the president's proposals,
said another thing he found missing
was a reference to loopholes in
present tax laws.
Pease guessed that Congress will
approve budget cuts "equal to what
the president asked, or come close to
equalling them."
"I believe the major portion of his
(Reagan's) package has a chance of
getting through," said Rep. Tony

Middle-income taxpayer hurt by proposal

••• IN THEW

The Daily Sentinel

OH.

"Located at the End of the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge"

ADDRESSES CONGRESS - President Rooald Reagan delivers

hla ecooomlc menage 1o a joint session of Congress at the Capitol

TODAY

FOR CONVENIENT

CALL TODAY

ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY

~

1r&lt;Z --

Wednesday night. The president outlines his package ol economic
proposals. ( AP Laserphoto I

FOR THE BEST
BUYS

._BANK ONE .._

"!l!l.

· AT FOLLOWING
LOCATIONS

2 Sections; 16 Pages 15 Cents
A MuUimedia Inc. Newspaper

E1teoded Ohio Foreca1t- Saturday through Monday :Mild wilt• "
chance or showers Saturday. High.• in 50s and lows in upper 30s to ' w
40s. Fair and cooler Sunday and Monday. Highs mostly in the
ond
lows In upper 20s and 30s.

,r

WASHING TON (API - President
Reagan and his top economic
strategists began today the tough
job of selling a multi-billion-dollar
1nix of tax and spending cuts to
Congress, where enthusiastic
Republicans already were hearing
from prominent Democratic critics.
Treasury Secretary Donald Regan
and Budget Director David A. Stockman both arranged to appear before
congressional committees today,
barely 12 hours after the president

recommended spending cuts of $41
billion for 1982 and tax cuts that
would be worth $1,500 over three
years to a middle-income family of
four.
Reagan, in office only 29 days ,
pronounced the government
"somewhat out of control." He said
his "program for economic
recovery" would balance the
budget, halve inflation and create 3
million new jobs by 1984.
"There is nothing wrong with

America that we can't fix," he said
in a nationally televised speech to a
joint session of Congress. "The
people are watching and waiting.
They don't demand miracles, but
they do expect us to act."
He proposed turning the nation
away from policies Of spending and
regulatory control that have held
sway since the New Deal and practically dared his doubters in
Congress to support him.
" Have they an alternative which

offers a greater chance?" he asked.
"And if they haven't, are they
suggesting we can continue on the
present course?"
But even Reagan's staunchest
supporters conceded the president
wouldn't get everything he wanted
from Congress, where Democrats
already were raising objections
about the size of the budget cuts and
the shape of the tax proposal.

Ten die in commuter bus collision
just like a piece ot paper being blown
by the wind."
The bus ended up on its side - its
engine still running, its . front
demolished, some passengers trapped . - in a foot of water in the
Chopowamsic Creek on the
sprawling Marine base here.
The passengers 'were screaming
but not panicky. Most of the people
that were alive were in shock,"

QUANTICO, Va. (AE'I - Skies
were clear and the roads were dry
when a commuter bus bound for the
Washington suburbs went sailing
over the side of a bridge, killing 10
people, and investigators say
they're baffled about what might
have caused the accident.
The one person who might have
• been able to help them, the bus
driver, Carl F. Earl of Stafford
County, Va., was killed.
''it's very mysterious," said
Trooper S.G . Gregg, who was investigating the accident along Interstate 95 that sent 14 people to area
hospitals.
Pollee · said early today they
believed the 10 killed and the 14 hurt
accOillnted for ail who were aboard
the D and J Transportation Co. bus
when it plunged down an 8().foot embankment and into a creek during
the evening rush bour Wednesday.
Many of the dead were government workers from Fredericksburg
and the surrounding counties, according to medical examiner Dr.
F.A. Phillips. The bus had come
from Washington.
He said some or the victims suffered fatal head injuries, while some
may have drowned In the creek.
According to State Police Sgt.
Paul Reardon, who was driving
behind the gray and white bus at the
time of the 5 p.m. accident, the bus
was bearing right from the left-hand
lane "and just kept on bearing."
"He just went airborne over the
side of the bridge," said Wayne
Richey, a truck driver who saw the
accident.
"All of a sudden he jusl kept going
to the right. .. right into the guardrail,
skinuned the guanlrail, hit the corner of thP bridge (over the creek l,

1

Richey said .
Traffic on the heavily traveled interstate was backed up for at least
two hours during rush hour as police
closed the southbound lanes.
The edge of the highway was turned into a temporary morgue as the
bodies were carried up the hill and
laid out in a row on stretchers,
covered with yellow sheets.
A large spotlight shown down the

FRANTIC EFFORT - Rescue workers swarm
over the wreckage of commuter bus that plunged off
Intentate 9$ near Quantico, Va,, Wednesday as they
remove bodies aod try to resrur Nurvlvors. At least 10
J

~

I-95 ravine as a huge yellow crane
lifted the crumpled bus from the
muddy creek onto the side of the
road beyond the guardrail.
The bodies were sent to Fairfax
and Richmond for autopsies today.
Thirteen of the injured were admitted
to
hospitals
in
Fredericksburg, Washington and
Woodbridge.

people were killed aod over 48 Injured when tbe bus
hurtled from the lote111tate down an 8().foot em-.
banlunent into a creek. (AP LaserphoiO)
' I

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