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                  <text>Reagan goes public with program

,·

.,

•

WINTHROP
FIRS! 5TAR

r

6EE.

I W16H I
MAY...

TONI~HT. ..

W~HINGTON (APJ - President Reagan is going
pubbc m defense of his economic recovery program as
more and more slate and local officia~ say they support)lis goals but worry about how he wants to achieve
them.
Reagan's appearance today before the National
League of Citiel! was his first formal speech since·announcmg his lax and budget-cutting program to a joint
sessiOn of Congress Feb. 18.
.
The urban leaders, at the annual Congressional-City
Conference, gave qualified support to Reagan's
program Sunday, endorsing "enthusiastically" the
president's objectives but issuing a list of reservations.
They said they could go along with eliminating a
thirdof the 300,000 public service jobs Reagan wants to
tenrunate, but they.urged him to reconsider proposed I

cuts in urban redevelopment aid.
The city officials' reservations were much the same
as voiced last week by the National Governors'
Association - feal- that reduced federal grants will
pass along a burden which state and local tax bases
cannot absorb, a demand for plenty of time to make adjustments, and a ·call lor close cons~tion as exact
cuts are determined.
"There are ... some reductions In prograrni or
changes in tax policy that we believe will haye drastic
impacts on local governments and cannot be absorbed
by cites without severe repercussions at this time," the
league's directors said in a statement read by the
group's president, Mayor William H. Hudnut Ill of Indianapolis.
Hudnut, a Republican and Reagan supporter. said

e
WHY CCN'T)O..l
c:KJ FLY A KITE~

I W15H I

Mlqt;T. ..

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at y

it were turned off here in Washington."
Indianapolis also bas a renewal project under the Urban Development Action Grant program which Hudnut
says is worth $70 million, including matching private
investment. Reagan initially earmarked UDAG for
dismantling, although the administration now is reconsidering that proposal.
"We would jllst simply looe that" if UDAG dies, HUdnut said, "and probably not pick it up by increasing the
local tax rate. There's a great reluctance to raise
taxes.''
The governors were told las.t week that their share of
the revenue-sharing program is probably gone for
gOOd, and Reagan hinted that the entire program may
faD. It now provides $4.6 billion a year to local govern.
ment.

en tine
2 Sections, 12 Pages

Voi .29, No. m
Copyrighted 1981

NE\.IE:R M..Jt.J&lt;E ,A
W15H CNAl.AfjJ
5
A6~N
L.UM I N':ILlS-DtAr....

local governments are going to have to grin and bear
less help from Washington.
.
" We basically are supportive of (Reagan's)
initiatives because we think that the times require bold
action," Hudnut sai4.
Nevertheless,' the city officials fear the result could.
be empty holes where new buildings were planned,
unemployment without adequate relief and higher
laxes or bonds to defer the cost to future generations.
Hudnut said Indianapolis, for example, is in the midst of a building program dependent on a $3 million
grant from the Economic Development Ad·
ministration, which Reagan wants to abolish.
"We have a hole . in the ground. We're pouring
cement. We're building a building," HUdnutsaid. "And
I don't know where that $3 million would come from if

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, March 2,1981

A Multimedia Inc.

15 Cents

Newspape~

ToDAY · .

'.

WRISTWATO-i.

••.-IN THEW
,.,,.

Hunger strike enters second day

Priscilla's Po

BELFAST, Northern Ireland - An imprisoned leader of the Irish
Republican Army, Bobby Sands, is in the second day of a new hunger
strike demanding the status of political prisoners for IRA guerrilias
behind bars.
Sands, serving 14 years in the Maze prison near Belfast for
possessing fireanns, is expected to be joined in coming weeks by other
IRA prisoners.
Sands and six other IRA prisoners in the Maze fasted for 53 days last
year.

by Ed Sullivan

,

Voters to decide levy's fate

I 'M
ON A
DIET.'

WOULD YOU LIKE
SOME TOAST AND
STRAWBERRY JAA ~

WESTERVILLE, Ohio - Voters go to the polls Tuesday to decide
the late of a 13-mill school levy tax increase.
.
Without the new tax money, Westerville schools face a $2.3 million
deficit by the end of the year, according to :;chool officials. That would
force school officials to obtain a state loan by the end of the year.
The ievy would raise $4.3 million to maintain the current level of funding, officials said.

Rhodes seeks more federal help

PILES 0' TILE-Piles of pipe such as these above dot the landscape In Racine where work is progressing on lhe Racln.,.Syracuse sewage
system. Laying the pipe is Ontario Pipeline, Inc., Pittsford, N. Y.

Hearings begin •Wednesday
•
••
on re,tzrement znvestments
SURE.

EMILY'"

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Hearings begin in the House Wednesday on a measure that may lead
to huge investments by the state
retirement systems in commercial,
industrial and residenti~lloans.
Rep. Thomas Fries, D-Dayton,
says his bili could free "billions of
dollars for economic deyelopment. 1
!innly believe that Ohio money
should be invested and remain in
Ohio. One of the advantages would

be a domino effect stimulating the
entire economy."
The big outlay of funds - roughly
$13 biUion-$15 billion - Fries and
others have in mind belongs to the
teachers, school employees, public
employees, and other smaller
retirement systems which currently
invest in bOnds and securities mostly
outside slate.
Under his plan, the systems would
be required to earmark a portion of

their investmenL• for Ohio development loans such as industry and
housing.
Gov. James A. Rhodes has endorsed the concept, but unlike Fries,
has come out for legislation in which
the investments would be voluntary
on the part of retirement system
directors .
Fries has said he is amenable to
changes in his bill, and wants to
work with Sen. Stanley J . Aronoff,

R-Cincinnati, who is expected to introduce the Rhodes proposal this
week.
The Dayton lawmaker said he
plans to meet with Aronoff Tuesday,
when the Senate and House return
from weekend recess.
Most of this week 's legislative activity wili occur in committees
which so far this session have
readied only a handful of bilis for
floor action.

Cutbacks would affect several area projects

© 11MI111y NEA, ...... TM Aog. U.S. ,.., I

TM 0\1.

APF'~PI21ATIO~S

CO/o!Mml,
Hi ~1t lloJG 'IIOOM

"Vf'JU'LL BE HAPPY TO

I

THII BilLION WHEN I

T!LL YOU THAT THE ROCKET NOT ONlY WOR~8. BUT
WE'LOST GENERAL WILCOX IN SPACE LAST WEEK!"

"IT SOUNDS LIKE YOU LEFT THE WATER
RUNNING SOMEWHERE AT HOME!"

"HUA~Y UP, MARVINIIT'S ALMOST TIME,~ CHURCH AND

YOU STILL HAVE TO TAKE THE ~APS Mf TH! CAll!!"

"THIS IS MY SON, BAUCEI HE'LL Be STARTINO AT THI
BOTIOM AND WORKING HIS WAY UP...FOR AFEW OAYSI" ·

Implementation of cutbacks in the
Appalachian Regional Commission
(ARC) would lead locally to the looc
of millions of dollars in government
support for area projects-including
the sewage line project in Rio Grande and the construction of the
Student and Community Center nt
Rio Grande College-according to a
report issued today by the ARC.
David Stockffian, Director of the
Office of Management and Budget,
has included within his "black book"
a proposal calling for the inunediatc
termination of the ARC and all of its
programs except bighways-the
highway program would be transferred to the Department of Transportation.
The Stockman proposal would
rescind ARC non-highway [981 appropriations and d~ny nM-highway
appropriations for 1!982. The ARC
would go out of existence this spring

or sununer.

Locally, ARC funding of the
following projects would be
eliminated by the Reagan Ad·
ministration's proposed cutbacks:
- Rio Grande Renovation andReRouting of Village Sewer Lines,
$180.000
- Rio Grande College Student and
Community Center, Phase Ill,
$.110,000.
- Human Resoijrces Student Ser·
vice Center, Buckeye Hills Joint
Vocational School, $350,000.
- Gallia-Meigs Comprehensive
Child Development Program,
$134,200.
- Southeastern Ohio Comprehensive Placement Program serving ten counties, Tri-county JVS,
Nelsonville, Athens County, $275,00()_.
The OMB rescission for fiscal year
1981 would eliminate $7.4 million In

ARC funds for 56 projects in the Appalachian area of Ohio. The projects
which would be dropped and their
impact (according to today's ARC
report) Include:
- Five community development
projects. including three water
projects serving over 9,200 people
and two sewage line projects which
will correct serious health hazards,
permit construction of 110 housing
unils, and prevent the clooing of Rio
Grande College. (The village's
sewage system currently operates
at over-capacity)
- Twelve health projects including : five primary care projects
serving 26,000 people; two projects
:imed at reducing infant mortality
assisting 25() women; and one
project at Ohio University to train
approximately
125
physical
therapists.

- Seven projects lor $892,000 in
ARC funds to assist fanners and
other residents in Appalachian Ohio.
One project would provide technical
assistance to farmers in six
southeastern Ohio counties.
I

ARC programs serve a to\ljl
regional population of 20 million in
the Appalachian areas of 13 states.
ARC's Area Development Prograrrui
encompass a wide range Of activities, including : health services,
rural clinics, child development,
education, sewer, 'water and other
community facilities, housing ,
energy and support of local development districts.
ARC non-highway activities also
include financial and technical support to local development districts
and research activities ·related
directly to its development
programs.

COLUMBUS, Ohio- Gov. James Rhodes said Sunday he would call
for more federal help for the auto industry when he meets with
President Reagan in Washington this week.
"One out of very six jobs in America is related to the auto industry,"
Rhodt!s oail;l,-\'lf ·specific action is not tak.en inunediately to help the
auto industry. every community n Ohio will suffer devastating consequences."
.
Rhodes a~d seven other governors from major auto producing
states will meet with Reagan Friday at the White House.

Brewery fire definitely arson
TRENTON, Ohio - Fire investigators say a weekend fire at the site of
the $400-million Miller Brewing Co. plant being built in Butler County
was deliberately set.
The fire early Saturday caused $30,000 to $40,000 damage to a suDcontractor's trailer, according to Fire Chief Merle Rhodes of the
Madison Township Volunteer Fire Department.

-Financial help still coming
ATLANTA - Pennies from Illinois schoolchildren, fat checks from
New York corporations and even a $1,400 pledge from a former Ku
Klux Klansman are going a long way toward covering the $200,000 a
month it costs to investigate the deaths and disappearances of 21 black
children.
The special police task force investigation into the deaths of !9
children and the disappearances of two others over the past 19 months
has cost Atlanta more than $1 million through February and is expected.

Weather
Clearing tonight. Lows around 2(). Sunny Tuesday. Highs near 411.
Chance of precipitation 10 percent tonight and near zero percent
Tuesday. Winds northwesterly I0 mph or less tonight.
\

Edeoded Ohio Foreeast- Wednesday through Friday :Mostly fair
Wednesday. A chance of showers or snow flurries Thursday and
Friday. Highs in mid-30s to mid-40s Wednesday and in the 40s Thursday and Friday. Lows in the 20s.

Two die, blimp damaged by winter storm
By The Associated Press
A skier died after an avalanche
buried him on Mount Baldy, a boy
was swept down a storm channel
and gusty winds damaged the
GOOdyear Blimp, authorities reported, as a storm dropped up to two inches of rain and two feet of snow on
California.
While the rest of the nation ex·
perlenced scattered snow and rain,
California, southern Utah and portions of western Arizona were hard
hit by rain and snow showers and
wind squalls. A number of homes
near Lake Elsinore were damaged
by flooding.
Rains spread across the Texas

Panhandle and eastern Colorado to
Kansas and northern Oklahoma on
SWlday, while light showers fell
along the central and eastern Gulf
Coast and into the south Atlantic
slates. Rain turned to snow flurries
in the Great Lakes region and at
higher elevations.
Showers were expected to continue today throughout the West, but
a National Weather Service
spokesrnan in California said the
worst of the storm had passed by
Sunday night.
Elsewhere, scattered snow was
forecast for the Great Lakes region
and Upper Ohio Valley, extending to
the inland portions of the northern

Atlantic states.
Bozidar Govorcin, 31, of San
Pedro, Calif., died after being buried
under six to eight feet of warm, wet
snow in an avalanche on Mount
Baldy. His brother, skiing with him,
also was trapped In the snQw but not
seriously injured.
Gene Celmer, II, of Valinda,
Calif., was washed about four miles
down a storm channel, almost into
the San Jose River, before he was
rescued Sunday. He was listed in
slable condition with extensive cuts
and bruises at a West Covina
hospital.
In the Lakeland Village area near
Lake Elsinore, scene of one Of lut

fall's destructive brushflres, 10
homes had their carpets soaked and
30 other homes suffered landscape
damage when a wall of debris in an
overlooking canyon collapsed.
Heavy snow stranded a group of
girl scouts near Big lines in eastern
Los Angeles County and a group of
boy scounts in San Gabriel Canyon.
All were safe Sunday .
And south of Los Angeles in Carson, gusty winds lifted 1the GOOdyear
Blimp into the air and smashed it to
the ground at its terminal Sunday.
causing an estimated $800,000
damage. A GOOdyear employee said
it would take eight weeks to repair a
30-foot tear in the 192-foot airship.·

·'

SPIRIT SHOWING-The spirit of Southern High School basketball laos
is quite evident in Racine VIllage and aloug the entrances to to the town.
Fans have posted 'numerous supportive signs on utility poles and trees for
the Southern team whlcb has moved Into district competition at
Chillicothe.

..1

�~

Commentary
ACAPULCO - Without naming
names, a member of the personal
staff of the penultimate president of
Mexico came to me during the grim·
mest days of President Echeverria,
to explain to me
Mexican
realities." This was in the last
period of Echeveria's presidency,
and I had written to comment on the
motion of the Mexicar'l representative in the United Nations to expel
Spain from that discrimination body
in·retaliation against General Fran·
co's brutal execution of five
terrorists convicted for murder.
Soon after this expression of Mr.
Echeverria 'So involvement in
mankind, he junketed around the
world in a iarcwell tour 1his term
would end the succeeding yea r) and
paused extensively, and ardently, in
Cuba, where he spoke more ef·
fusively about Fidel Castro than
ever Romeo did about Juliet.
The probability. on a scale of one
to 10, is approximately five that the
day they met, Castro had executed
five poets before breakfas t for the
0

Ill Court Strttl
Pomeroy . Oh io
' 61""99t·2 l5fi
DE.VOTED TO THE iNn : RESTOF T HE M E IGS. MA~N AH. EA

ROBERTL. WINGETI
Pu bliS her

BOB HOEFLICH

PAT WHITEHEAD

(ri&gt;nrral Managt-r

Publishrr/C(mlroller

Mexico, most conspicuously the .
inexcusable landing of our Mari1!es
in Vera Cruz ~ 1914 (Woodrow
Wilson was practicing to make the
world safe for democracy) - Ill .
years after General Scott marched
into Mexico City - entitles the
thoughtless to a presumptive
suspicion of American motives. But
Mr. Reagan is in a position persuasively to remind the Mexican
people that in the past generation
the United States !las walked away
from over one dozen countries after
occupying them in war; while the

Soviet Union

abandoned only

Austria.

El Salvador, the more so given
Lopez-Portilla's explicit support of
the revolutionaries, becomes the
testing ground for President
Reagan. If we win that one, defined
as devising a policy which will per·
suade Castro that shipping anns to
the revolutionaries involves an exertion he cannot afford, a risk he can·
not take - we wiU have finally
slowed the lesion In Central America
imd in the Caribbean basin. The effect of this, following on the rejec-

Marxist-&lt;lorninated nation south of
the border, but feels that he has to
protect himself _against implicit
collusion in anti-Communist en·
terprise, then by publicly a(&gt;'
plauding Castro l1e is doing the tac·
tically correct thing, even at
possible risk to his immortal soul.
But I suspect it goes beyond this. ·
h Mexico, since the days of Lazaro
Carvenas, a mystique has prevailed
among the intellectually fashionable
that the United States, the colossus
of the North-, is the enemy. Our
historical performance in the case of

A i\ll•: l'tiB E R of Tlu&gt; Associa lcd

Prt~ss,

Am r rlran Nt&gt;Yt'spapN P\lblisht&gt;rs Assoda tion .

Inla nd llaih·

Pr~s

Associa tion a nd lht'

Energy research program would be abolished

·

I.ETTERS OF OP INION an= IH'iromed. Ttlry shoul d~ lt'SS thaa 300 wnrds \onJ: . All
letters are sub jt'rt to l·dlti.ng and must 1M.- sign\'d "ith namt', address and tt'leph \)Dt'
number. No uru;i gnt-d leiter.. ...ill bto publishr d. Lt'ttt' ·~ should bt' in good taslt·. oddrr!i!iiDg
issut's, nul pt-rstma ll tles.

Rhodes pushes PUCO
Gov. James A. Rhodes has spurred the Public Utilities Corrunission of
J Ohio into investigating why more Ohio natural gas can't be produced and
burned in the state.
Rhodes is upset by what he calls a 113 percent increase in natural gas
prices.
Earlier this month, the govern or wrote a letter to PUCO Chairman
William S. Newcomb, saying Ohio gas cost an average of $.1.79 per 1,000
cubic feet in 1979. Rhodes compared his Ohio price to the cost of Canadian
natural gas at $4.94 per 1,000 cubic feet at the border, Mexican gas for
$4.82 and synthetic natural gas prod uced at $5.
But there may not be as much diffrence as Rhodes thinks, according to
Carol McBurney, a spokeswoman fo r Columbia Gas of Ohio. The utility
pays $4.76 per 1,000 cubic feet for Ohio a nd other gas produced in the A(&gt;'
palachian region. The Columbia price is less, but at least in the same
range as Canadian and Mexican prices, Ms. McBurney said.
"I don 't know where the governor gets his fi gures," she said. .
According to Rhodes, Ohioans burned about 870 billion cubic feet of
natural gas in 1980, with about 15 percent of that amount, 134 billion cubic •
feet, produced in the state.
Details of the PUCO investigation won't be available until next week,
and results won't be released until summer. said PUCO spokesman Ray
Ratchford.
The Ohio Oil and Gas Association praised the governor's concern when
his letter was released. But Kirk Jordan, the association's executive
secretary, said Ohio gas production can be increased only a few percentage points. He said he couldn't confirm Rhodes' price figures.
In 1980, about 3,000 wells were drilled in Ohio for both. oil and gas.
Another 546 would have been drilled if producers had not had to pay $68
million in federal e.cess profits taxes, Jordan said. Histori cally, in·
dependent producers reinvest 105 percent of money taken from existing
&gt;yells m dnllmg new wells, he said.
There are times in wanner weather when utilities stop buying Ohio gas
because of low use, Jordan said. But the gas now from southwestern
states is not stopped since the utilities have long-term contracts to pay for
set amounts annually, whether or not they use the gas, he said.
Rhodes did not provide figures for gas produced in the Southwest and
Louisiana.

Dayton Power ' Light Co. spokeswoman Susan Metzler said the utility
paid an average of $2'.53 per 1,000 cubic feet for gas puchased outside the
system, possibly including some Ohio gas and gas from other sources.
DP' L buys directly from one Ohio well, the only one in its se;..ice
area, Ms. Metzler said. The rest of its gas comes from Columbia and
other companies.
Columbia produced and bought 39 billion cubic feet from 7,000 Ohio
wells in .1979 and 40.1 billion cubic feet from 8,033 wells in 1980, Ms. Me·
Burney said. The company also plans slight increases in Appalachian gas
purchases, she said.

Today in history. .

•

Today is Monday, March 2, the 6lst day of l98l. There are 304 days left
in the year.
·
Today's h1ghlight in history :
On March 2_. 1776, Arner·ican Marines fought their firs t battle, capturing
a Brrtish fort m the Bahamas during the Revolutionary War.
On this date:
' In 1836, Texas proclaimed independence from Mexico.
In 1937, oil was nationalized in Mexico.
In 1956, France recognized the independence of Morocco.
In 1978, Rhodesian Prime Minister Ian Smith and three black leaders
a~ounced agreement on an interim government that would place 'the
natron under black majority rule by year's end.
,
Ten years ago:.Leftists in Uruguay released an American government
agncultural specralrst who had been abducted the previous August.
Five years ago: Jinuny Carter won the Democratic presidential
primary election in Vennont.
One year ago: Fonner President Gerald Ford made himself available
for the Republican Party presidential nomination calling Ronald Reagan
utooconservative."
'
Today's birthdays: Actress Jennifer Jones is 62. Television producer
Desi Arnaz is 64.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A ter-University Energy Research
fledgling energy research program Council, established by the General
which uses the scientific resources Assembly in 19'17 to provide more ef·
of Ohio's public universities would fectlve energy-related planning,
be abolished under the budget Gov. conservation, research and developJames A. Rhodes·sent to the General ment.
Assembly.
It received abOut $1.7 million in
But backers of the work are ready state funds during the current fiscal
to appeal for continued funding biennium to finance research
before legislative committees con- projects by scientists, eng~n¥n and
sidering Rhodes' $21).8 billion,
at Ohio's 12 state«ssisted
budget proposed for the two years universities.
starting July 1.
• Roughly half the money was ear"We believe enough in what we've marked for 17 projects at seven Jn.
done .. .to put a case together to take stitutions which are looking for ways
to the legislature and others to show to increase the use of Ohio's abunwe have a solid program," said dant high-sulfur coal. Demand for
Robert E. Bailey, director of the the fuel has dec~ in recent years
program for energy research at because its pollutant content has
Ohio State University.
made burning difficult under clean
Bailey is a member of the Ohio In- air standards.

othen

Letter to the editor
Supports heavers
· lam on the side of the beavers.
From the days when Daniel Boone
cut the wilderness road the wild life
of America has been subjected to
slaughter. On the Great Plains the
buffalo wer:e killed sometimes for
nothing but their tongue sometimes for their hides. The carcasses were left to rot.
A great deal of enjoyment can be
had from associating with and from
watching wild animals. I don't see
the owls, hawks, the squirrels, the
quail. the rabbits, etc. It seems that
every year there are more people

poking around with a gun wanting to
·shoot anything that moves. Yes, I
know there are true sportsmen and
true hunters. But some of them are
not. One day. I went through our
woods and saw dead bird after dead
.bird with bullet holes in them yellow birds, blue birds, all kinds of
little birds.
A landowner should have the right
to enjoy his property in his own individual way. He pays the taxes on
it. It is just as reasonable to want to
enjoy your fields and woods in the
way you want to as for some poacher
to want to have the front room of his
house off limits to ·me. - Gayle
Price, Portland, Ohio.

The rest of the money was
distributed by the council for a
variety of Other energy-related
projects, ranging from a solar
assisted and wind powered heal
pump for homes to a network for
a~~Sessing Ohio's solar energy

federal and private sponsorship In
the past would continue to do 110. But
he and Jlailey said the council has
fostered a coordinated program
among the universities working on
specific energy problems confronting Ohio. "This has made It
resources.
possible to keep us from duplicating
The Ohio Board of Regents has activities," Dalley said.
recommended that another ~
in adclltlon, it )las helped provide
rni!Uon be spent on the~ over training lor graduate students Jn.
the next two yean. But the Rhodes valved in the research. "Aif of our
budget eliminates all funding for It.
research Is being conducted In
" It's just one of thoee activities In cooperation with students," Tepe
the higher education budget that's said.
discretionary In nature," said Ttm
Membership on the council conMurphy, a senior analyst for the Of. sists of the chairman ol the board of
fice of Budget and Management. He regents, the regents chancellor, the
said the recommendation to discon- director of the Ohio Department of
tinue funding reflected the tight Energy, and representatives of the
budget situation.
universities.
"There were a lot ol programs in
It is charged, among other things,
the higher education budget we with advlalng the department on
would have lilted to fund," Murphy current and proposed university
said, "but we can't afford them. "
energy reseafCb projects.
Coal-related projects financed
Meanwhile, the chairman of the
through the council have been adHouse Energy and Environment
ministered by the Ohio Coal Resear· Committee says new state fundi to
ch Laboratories Association, Inc., · continue practical research Into exan organization created for that pur- panded uses of Ohio coal may be obpose.
tained, although regents' In·
Frank R. Tepe, Jr.,a University of volvement In the program might
Cincinnati assistant dean who is the end.
association's cha!nnan, said the
He referred to a Senate bill which,
new program had already started to if passed, would lmpoee a :&amp;Xeniaproduce results.
per-ton tax on coal burned In the
"We are seeing some short-term state. The U2-17 rni!Uon ralaed by
benefits. But it takes several yean the tax would be spent for coal
to fully develClp and appreciate the research.
results !1. It," Tepe sald. "We've got
Rep. Thomaa .P. Gllmartln, (}.
to continue to expand that Youngstown, sa14 some coal reaearknowledge.
ch now underway should be conTepe sald Individual universities tinued.
which had conducted research under

Pave now, pay late_r______no_n-,--G_ra.:..:;_ff
Apologies for introducing the subject in this fashion!, but the good
news is that American fanners
should have the capability of
meeting the food needs of this coun·
try plus rising demand from abroad
with ease through the end of this cen·
tury.
The bad news - ah, yes, that
always follows - is that that
capability may v~ry likely be lost if
the United States does not cease
diverting irreplaceable cropland to
other uses.
This is the message of a recent
exhaustive federal study, released
as the National Agricultural Lands
Study, and a follow-up conference of

agricultural eKperts in Chicago.
Featured speakers included two
public figures with more than
passing interest and expertise in the
subject - Cecil D. Andrus of Idaho
·and Robert Bergland of Minnesota,
secretaries of interior an4
agriculture, respectively, during the
Carter administration.
Andrus in particular put the
problem in sobering perspective.
With 413 million acres of cropland
currently in production and the
potential of adding another 127
million, he noted, the nation would
appear to be in the fortunate position
of being able not only to sustain but
to increase food output In the

decQd~

lmmediately ahead.
But before counting future bumper harvests, we must consider
other usage demands on much of
this same land. For one, there is the
search for energy, which is either
tearing up farmland to get at fosslle
fuel resources beneath it or drawing
heavily on scarce water for
processing and transportation.
The energy quest at least has an
element of justification - economic
emergency - that cannot be
claimed by an even greater consumer of land. That Is development
for non-agricultural purposes highways, housing, commercial and
industrtal complexes spreadina far·

ther and farther into the co~tryslde
around often decaying older cities.
Continued unchecked, the process
is rapidly advancing the . date al
which American agriculture will
face the prospect of switching from
land-reserve to land-shortaae statua
and of having to resori to expensive
technological' remedies to sustain
agricultural productiOn.
Il's a 'pave now, pay later'
philosophy," Andrus notes, not
unlike the mismanagement of
re90urces that created the energy
crisis and one "our children shan
most assuredly pay for."
11

'

'

-·

G-allia's Sarah Evans .shares MVP;
-·vanArsdalen 'Coach-of-the-Year'

bl

Jl,

onora e
Mention

Second

Team

SEOAL

New Lexington ousts
•

DALE ROTHGEB. JR.
Nl'~· s Editor

Riggs

Meigs girls, 50-35

order to spare Mexico a second

The Daily Sentinel

A s~~ ta n l

but highly cosmopolitan gentleman
explained to me: " Here's how it
works in Mexico. The president is as
anti-Communist as you are. But
there are two ways of dealing with
the Mexican left. Either you mount a
genocidal campaign ag~inst them,
in which cases - although we would
win it, all right - you'd have civil
wa r. Or else you appease them - by
an appropriate rhetoric, and here or
there a n ostentatious expropriation
of this or that fore1gn property,
prefera bly American, and a swipe or
two aga inst the U.S. in the United
Nations."
Echeverria certainly did that, but
he made the mistake not only of
voting against the United States in
the U. N, but of voting against
Israel, and about 48 hours after
doing that, suddenly the tourist
business in Mexico came to an absolute standstill, at which point
Echeverria decided to fine tune his
anti-America nism : to be anti·
American, but not anti American
J ews. If we assume that Lopez·
Portillogenuinely desires the United
States to intervene in El Salvador in

Kristen

Andrea

Understanding Lopez-Portillol.L::_c·______:__.__Wi_ul_iam_F._Bu_ck_Ier--;J~.
crime of insufficient servility to
Castro, let alone for killing innocent
civilians, like the Spanish terrorists.
But Echeverria was unmoved by all
this: just ask, now. his successor
Lopez· Portillo, president of Mex ico,
who reiterates his devotion to Fidel
Castro in direct response to the
Reagan administration's professed
detennination to do something about )
the flow of Cuban anns into El .
Salvador with the aim of spawning
vel another Soviet satellite in the
Caribbean area.
Lopez-Portilla, in signing a sugar
treaty with Cuba, spoke of Cuba as
of all countries in Latin Amema th;
one "most dear" to the preside~tial
heart. He enjoined the intermediary
to ·'give my embrace to my com·
mander and a very fraternal salute
to the people of Cuba." The
president did not extend his
greelings to those people of Cuba
who, rather than give their embrace
to their commander, set out on
canoes to start a fresh life in Miami.
So anyway, this rela ti v~ly young

t

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-2- The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio
Monday, Mar ch 2,1981

tion of Michael Manley, ln Jamaica,
will not have the least effect on
Lopez Portillo - and on his succe..or. And if I were President
Reagan, 1 probably would not forego
the opportunity, at their scheduled
meeting in April, of saying
something on the order of, " Mr.
President, as a president myself,
I'm a new boy. Could you explain to
me how one goes about admiring
justice and freedom and dlgnlty and
also admiring Fidel Castro?" Which
is at least one good reason why I am
not president.

I

Team and Nancy Evans, Honorable
MenUon.
Meigs girls honored were Andrea
Riggs, Second Team and Kristen Anderson, Honorable Mention.
Gallipolis and Athens sh8red the
1~1 conference championship
with ldentlcal13-l records.
Evans led the league in scoring
with 293 points ln 14 loop games
(20.9) IVhlle Triplet was second with
262 pOints In 13 games (20.1).

Sarah Evans, Gallipolis, was
named Co-Most Valuable Player and
Athens.' Jamie VanArsdalen was
selected Coach of the Year during
Sunday's AII.SOutheastern Ohio
League meeting, conducted by the
girts coaches at Jackson.
Lauren Triplett shared MVP
honors with Evans.
Eighteen girls were named to the
1981).81 All·League "Dream Team,"
including Gallipolis' Sarah Evans,
First Team; Shirl Stoney, l*r"""

11188-81 SEOAL AIL-LEAGUE
GIRLS TEAM
FintTeam
Player- Sebool
Sarah Evans, Gallipolis
Lauren Triplett, Ironton
Kim Kellar, Logan
Jaki Copeland, Waverly
Lori VIckers, Wellston

Ht. Yr. Poo.
1&gt;-1 11 c
5-8 12 F
6-3 12 t
5-8 12 F
5-10 12 c

•
Second Team

ATHENS - New Lexington out·
scored Meigs, 14-2 in the second
periOd Saturday night enroute to a
5().35 victory in the Class AA Secti onal Tournament championship
game.
Meigs ends the season with a
respectable 12·11 mark, while New
Lexington, 17.,';, advances to the
Class AA District at Athens High
School next Saturday at 3 p.m.
against Ironton (14-7) in the lower
bracket finals . The winner will advance to regional play along with
winner of a I p.m. upper bracket
finals between Gallipolis and
Waverly.
New Lexinjllon, a member of the
Muskingum Valley League, thwarted Meigs' chances of making
the tournament an au-southeastern
Ohio Athletic League district.
Lorie Lacey had 19 markers, while
tearrunate Shelly Stalter nelled 17 to
lea d the Panthers past the
Marauders. Meigs was led by An·
drea Riggs with 14 points and Kristin
Anderson with eight markers.
In the fi rst periOd both clubs put
together great efforts as the
adrenalin started to flow , resulting
in a J().IO deadlock at the end of the
period.
What was seerningly developing
into a great game , turned into disappointment in the second quarter for
the Marauders. The Marauders ran
head on into a late winter cold front.
while the Panthers clawed away at
the score board to outscore the local
gals 14-2 and held on to a 24'12lead at
the intermission.
Coach Ron Logan, who praised his
team for a great season said,
" Ballhandling mistakes and costly
turnovers led to our downfall. We

had 28 turnovers, compared to New
Lexington's four. That made a big
difference." Several second period
turnovers re9ulted in Panther scores
and allowed them to gain momentum throllghout the stanza.
Throughout the temainder of the
game, Meigs played fairly even with
its opponent, but still trailed 3~22
going into the· final round. Meigs
scored the first four points of the
final quarter to pull within 13 points,
before Lorie Lacey finally put New
Lexington on the board with 6:04
remaining. The PanthfrS then
scored six of the ned seven points to
regain a 20 point advantage and put
the game out of reach. The Panthers
won the game and the championship, 5().35, although the Meigs
girls made a gallant comeback at·
tempt.
Meigs hit 14 of 42 from the field for
33 percent and hit seven of 19 from
the line for 36 percent. N. I.. hit 19 of
47 from the field for 4lJ percent, while
connecting on 12 of 20 from the line
for 60 percent.
The winners won the battle of the
boards 31).20 led by Lacey's II , while
Laura Srni~h had seven for Meigs.
Meigs had 28 turnovers and 16 fouls,
compared to New Lexington's four
rniscues and 17 personal fouls.

Player - School
Angela Mollica, Athens
Pam Lee, Athens
Shirl Stoney, Gallipolis
Rose Stiffler, Jackson
Andrea Riggs, Meigs

HI. Yr. Pos.
5-6 10 G
5-3 11 G
f&gt;.6 12 G
f&gt;.6 12 c
5-9 12 c
Hooorable Mention

Scbool- Player
Athens, Krls Kroner
Gallipolis, Nancy Evans
Ironton, Lisa Bryant
Jackson, Cindy Dorsey
Logan, Sheryl Hawk
Meigs, Kristen Andw-son
Waverly, Brenda Rled
Wellston, Kim Mullens

Ht. Yr.P08.
10 5-9 c
10 5-10 F
12 5-7 F
10 f&gt;.6 F
12 f&gt;.6 F
11 5-9 G
10 5-9 F
II 5-10 F

Team

Final Varsity
W L

P

13· 1
13· 1
8·5
6·8
5·9
4· 10
3· 10

871
813
676
547
606
6()7
547

577

2-10 390

542

Athens
Gallipol is

Ironton

M ei gs

Logan

Wellston
Waverly

Jackson

Reserves

Riggs, M
MOllica , A

OP
623
563
642
640
774

W L
12 2.

Kun kl er 0·3·3; sralter· 7-3· 17 ;
Lacey 8·3· 19; Wo llenburg 1· 24 ; Ma r
t y Moone y 1· 1·3; J orge nsen 1·0·2:
Vigu e 0 0 0; Nash 1·0·2 and Sullivan

Logan
Ironton
Waverly
Meigs

0-0·0. Tot a Is lt-12· 52.
Meigs (lS) Ander5on 4·0·8 ;
Ol ive r 0·2·2; King 1·0·2; Smith 1· 1·3;

Wellston
Gallipolis
Jac kson

10 14 15 11 - 50

Me igs

10

2 10 13- 35

Shiffler, J
Evans, G
Stoney, G
Lee, A

76·54
90 29
78· 13
69·27
66 26
62·27

206
209
169
165
158
151

15 .8
14.9
14 .1
11.8
11.3
10.8

690

Athens

Score by quarJers:

l1

3

10 3
5 6
5 8

5 9
. • 10
0 11

'
Top Individual Scoring
Player- School
Fg Ft Tp· Avg.
Evans, G'
123·47 293 20.9
Triplelt, I
117·28 262 20. I
Kellar, L
109·24 242 17.3
Vickers, W
86·57 229 16.4

TRACK
UNCOLN, Neb. (AP ) - Nebraska
sprinter Merlene Otley shattered
her own world record in the 300-yard
dash to lead the Cornhuskers to victory in the Big Eight Women's In·
door Track and Field Cham·
pionships.
Otley blazed the 300 in 33.11 seconds, shaving .01 of a second off her
former world mark, and had a hand
in four of Nebraska's six first-place
finislles.
·

\

.

the young Whirlwinds. Kevin Curf·
man and Tony Riffle added 5 points
each, Wade Connelly netted 4, and
Paul Harris 2.
Point was led in scoring by John
Oshel with a game high 24 points,
followed by Brad Minton, Mike
Kaufler, and Corky Brown all with
two each, while Nick Harden added
one. Donnie Jones was credited with
playing a fine noor game.
Southern hit the bottom of the well
in the first half as they could not con·
nect from the field, going for 10.
Point Pleasant built up a 6-1 first
period lead, then went on to lead .1~
at the half. The Southern drought

allowed the Tornadoes to hit only
two ol 10 the second round, giving
Southern a 10 percent field goal per·
centage in the first half.
Trailing by 13 going into the third
canto, Southern had its work cut out,
but accepted the challenge and
made a complete reversal. The little
Tornadoes got warmed up to hit 60
percent the second half, going 12 for
20 from the floor . Coach Hensler
said, " It was like two entirely dif·
fercnt teams" comparing his club's
first and second half performances.
Southern trailed 27·19 goingdown
the stretch, but continued its

Tomcats win cage tournament
into the second period, Trimble
again lit up the fireworks to take
another six point lead.
The young Tornadoes then took a
one point advantage in the waning
seconds, only to !lave Trimble make
a last second shot to lead 1~18 at the
half.
After several lead changes In the
third round, both teams played even
by scoring 12 each with Trimble
maintaining its one point lead, 31·30.
Trimble's trap defense caused many
costly Southern mistakes, allowing
the guests to build up a five point
lead and coast in for the win, 41·34.
Morrison was the garve's leading
scorer with 16, Campbell added nlne,
and Davis pitched in eight for the
AUTO RACING
champions. Scott Wickline led the
ROCKINGHAM, N.C. (AP)
Tornadoes with 12, Todd Adaffi'l.
Darrell Waltrip, who took the lead eight, Jarrell seven, and Cleland
with just three laPB to go, edged Cale seven.
Yarborough by 5.3. seconds In win·
In the consolation game, Meigs
nign the Carolina 500 Grand
National stock car race.
Waltrip's Buick averaged 114.594
mph and earned $20,655.
Richard Petty finished third
followed by Neil Bonnett.
If you are planning a vacation, or need
R~KINGHAM, N.C. (AP) assistance with the care of your loved one,
Dave Marcis, driving a Pontiac Ven·
why not permit a skilled facility provide this
lura, ran away from the field In win·
service in the warmest environment? The
ning the Coca Cola 200 late model
sportsman auto race.
Pomeroy Health Care Center offers the best
Marcls averaged 98.816 mph, winof adequate care as you would wish.
ning first-place money of f7 ,850.
Telephone 992·6606.
Harry Gant was second, while J.D .
McDuffie was third.

RACINE- The Trimble Tomcats
won the Southern Seventh Grade In·
vitational Tournament cham·
pionship recently with a hard-fought
41·34 win over Southern. Trimble en·
ded its season with a 1+0 record to
remain undefeated on the season.
Trimble jumped to a. quick 4-0
lead, looking for another victory
early In the evening, but Southern
charged right back with determined
play and stingy defense to lock the
score at 6-6.
With the score deadlocked going

Sports briefs....

WE CARE

•

"Warm-up"
SPECIAL

•

Baked Lasagna Dinner
served with golden brown
Italian hun. Re 9 . sHsONLY 1 1.95

comeback and slid into victory lane
with a 32-31 win.
Southern hit )4 of 41 overall (36
pet.) and hit four of II from the line.'
The winners bad 32 rebounds led by
Teaford's II , Riffle's seven, and
Hill's five, while conunitting 20 turnovers. Point Pleasant hit 12 of 30
from the field for 40 pet., and seven
r.IJ1 fr&lt;&gt;m the line for 58 pel.

TO GO ONLY
3 Days Only

Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday
March 2 · 3 · 4
Dlnde
limn

.-----_;_--------1-------------------,;______

I

defeated Shade 45 to 34 to claim third
place honors in the Southern tournament. Meigs jumped to a lf&gt;.6 lead
In the fil'!lt quarter and Increased its
lead to 12 at the half, 26-14. Shade
made several comebacks during the
last half as they outscor'ed Meigs by
one in the third period, then playing
even the last round. The hustling
Meigs boys held on for the t5-34 win.
Mike .Chancey ripped the nets for
17 points to lead all scorers, Chris
Shank sank 11, while Malloy led
Shade with 13 followed by Radcliffe's eight.
Individual trophies were presented to each Trimble player along
with the team's championship first
place trophy. Southern received the
second place trophy, Meigs the third
place trophy, and Shade fourth place
honors. A cheerleading trophy was
won by the Southern Junior High
Cheerleadlng squad.

Winter

The&lt;e cold winter da y&lt; and n ight&lt; ore o great time to
worm up with a del iciou&lt; Gin o '&lt; Bak ed La&lt;og no Din ner
... &lt;a hot and good to&lt;ti ng ..

Southern frosh capture tourney
P OINT
PLEASANT - Th e
Southern Tornado freshman basket·
ball team. following in the footsteps
of its varsity counterparts, captured
a grueling 32-31 barnburner over
host Pt. Pleasant to emerge as
champions of the Point ·Pleasant
Rotary Freslunan Basketball Tour·
nament here Saturday evening.
Southern, trailing at the half by 13
points, made a great comeback to
score the impressive come-from·
behind win. Southern, now 13·1,
r·eceived a trophy for the cham·
pionship win.
Big DeMIS Teaford paved the way
to victory by canning 16 points for

.

Final girls standings, scoring

Team

New Lex

.

MVP-Tte

Box score

Drehe l 3·0·6: Crooks 0·0·0 ; Ri ggs 5·4·
14 : Debord 0·0·0; Dillard 0·0·0.
Totals 14· 7·35 .

Reds' ·notes

Sarah Evans, Gallipolis
Lauren Tripplett, Ironton
Coorcb of Year
Jamie Van Arsdalen
Athens

New Lexington ( SQ) - Mooney 0·0·

O;

Logan's Kim Kellar was fourth in 151.
scoring with 242 points, followell by
Sarah Evans, 6-1 junior, center,
Lori Vickers, Wellston, with 229 and shot 58 percent from the fleld in 14 .
'Andrea Riggs, Meigs, with 206 In 13 · league games (123-210) and 75 per·
cent from the foul line (47~) . She
games.
Angela Mollica, Athens, was sixth collected 216 rebounds (15.4 ·
with 209, followed by Jackson's Rose average).
Shiffler with 169; Nancy Evans,
Shirl Stoney, 5-7 senior guard, shot ·
Gallipolis, 165 ; Shi.rl Stoney, 42 percent from the field and 60.5 ·
Gallipolis, 158.and Pam Lee, Athens, percent from the foul line. She had 72 ·
rebounds, and led the Blue Angels in
assists and steals with 25 in each ' ·
department.
Nancy Evans, 5-10 sophomore for- ·
ward,
shot 49 percent from the field
TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - With the late
and
77
percent from the foul line. She ·
arrival of pitcher Jose Brito, the
collected
142 rebounds, and was :
Reds have their full compliment of
credited
with
24 steals.
18 pitchers and six catchers in
Senior
members
of the "Dream '
spring training camp.
Team"
will
hattie
the
Ohio Valley ·
Brito, a minor league pitcher,
Conference
AIJ.Stars
at
I~ on ·
missed Friday's first workout for
March
23,
at
6
p.m.
batterymen, but made the two
weekend sessions.
Among the 24 players In camp are
'.
three nonroster players - pitchers
Sheldon Burnside and Joe ~errigan,
and catcher Greg Mahlberg.
.
Burnside was called up to the Reds
for three weeks last summer1 but
sperft the remainder of the year with
Indianapolis.
Kerrigan, 'll , has three years of
major league experience with Montreal and Baltimore. Mahlberg, 29,
spent most of his eight years in
professional basebaU
in the Texas
.
·Rangers' farm system.

Nobody knows

. · more about
Homeowner Loans
than City Loati.
~ .OOfl't

have to tell you about
the high cost of living these days. But
price; aren't all that's going up. The
value of your house Is, too. In fact, it's
worth far more today than ever before.
At City loan, we can ~lp you
tum that increasing \"Jlue inti' the
money you need to meet major
wants or needs. Like a coUege
education. Or remodeling the
house. Or to make·a SIRial
dream come true. With a
Homeowner !Dan of up to
$50,000 or more.
When it comes to !&lt;living a big
money problem, Ohio (X!Ople
know where to tum. Th City !Dan. Because nobody
knows you- and your needs- like we do.

CJTYLO'\N

COMPANY

t2S E. Maln St. • 99 2·21 71

@
LENDER

·,
'

�Monday, March 2,1981
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla . iAP l
- What becomes of Mr. October in
March?
This was a riddle that upset the
bra'ss of the never moribund New
York Yankees team and titillated
rather than irritated the playero as
they began their first full week of
spring training without superstar
Reggie Ja ckson.
"Frankly, I am upset, disappointed, hurt more than angry,"
fwned Yankee boss George Steinbrenner. "It's time Reggie learned
he is not bigger than the Yankees."
George flew out of town im. mediately after Sunday 's
Jacksonless workout and left an invisible note to his $3-million property who is playing out the last year of
a five-year contract : Don't call me;
I'll call you.
"The last guy I want to sit down
and deal with now is Reggie
Jackson," the o;.ner said.
DIRK DRIVES- Kentucky Guard Dirk Minniefield (10) drives In
towards the basket during Louisiana State's 73-71 Southeastern Conference loss to Ken tuck)' in Lexington Sunday, I AP Laserphoto),

Kentucky upsets
Louisiana State

MARATHON

TOKYO lAP) - Rodolfo Gomez of
Mexico overcame a blistered foot to
win the Tokyo Marathon in two
hours, 11 minutes. ·
' Sweden's Tommy Persson,
finishing 400 meters behind, was
second in 2:12:07, followed by
American Randy Thomas in 2:12 :31.
Finishing fourth was Benji Durden
• oftheUnitedStatesin2:13 :07.

Steinbrenner had flown into this been allowed a two-day delay in
Yankee training headquarters for a reaching CBmp with the rest of the
dual purpose - to announce the regulars, called from california
signing of an old football coaching Saturday to say he would be late.
" I told him I wanted him here,"
buddy, Lou Saban, as president of
the Yankess, and to talk to Reggie Michael said.
Prior to praCtice Sunday, Reggie
about a new contract.
called
again and informed Michael
He succeeded in the first
•
he
definitely
couldn't make it on
Jackson's abaence left him personally mortified in the second.
time.
" I don't know where he was
Gene Michael, the new Yankee
calling
from," the Yankees' rookie
ma11a~er . said Jackson, who h;id
skipper said. " I tOld him he should
be here. I told him he'd better talk to
George."

Tape will remain
on Braves' helmets
WEST PALM BEACH. Fla. (AP)
- The green swatch of tape on the
Atlanta Braves' batting helmets will
remain until the cases of the 21 slain
or missing children in Atlanta are
solved, according to a spokesman
for the National League club.
The players also will do 3~second
taped commentaries, to be
distributed to Atlallta-area radio
stations, pleading with the killer or
killers to give himself up, said
Braves spokesman Wayne Minshew.
Ldt-handed reliever Larry Bradford, who attended Clark· College in
Atlanta, thought of placing the oneinch strip of tape on the helmets and
was joined in the gesture on Sunday
by the re~~ of the squad . '

ROAST

ina\

ANNOUNCING
THE OPENING OF

THE OFFICES OF

STORY &amp; STORY
AnORNEYS AT LAW

s 89

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WITH ADDITIONAL PURCHASE:

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ADDITIONAL PURCHASES

MAXWELL HOUSE INSTANT

$

Can

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MAXWELL HOUSE
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• 12 ·oz. Whole Kernel Corn
• 14' •· oz . Cream Style Corn

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SHORTENING-~. ~~·$}49 ~.,-:{PEARS~~,~:

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Ohio,45115.

19··

BLADE CUT

U_SDA CHOICE
FULL CUT

WIENERS

The Beavers also came from
behind Friday night to beat Southern
California 73-&lt;i4. ,
" I'd have to say this is my best
team at Oregon State," added
Miller, who is in his lith season.
"We should be in good shape for the
playoffs because we've used a lot of
people this year and our players are
pretty well rested."
Steve Johnson, the Beavers' 6foot-10 center: rested some Sunday
with foul problems but still scored 26
points. His two free throws 3t
minutes into the second half put
Oregon Slal!e on top to stay 48-47 and
contributed to a 17-3 spurt.
The 61-year-old Miller received
some more good news Sunday when
the U.S. Basketball Writers
Association voted him Coach of the
Year.
Kentucky closed out its regular
season by preventing LSU from
becoming the first team in 23 years
to go through its Southeastern Conference slate without a blemish.
Four Wildcats scored II points
apiece - Dirk Minniefield, Chuck
Verderber, !VIelvin Turpin and Sam
Bowie - to offset a 24-point effort by
LSU's Howard Carter while Minniefield also thrilled a packed house
of 24 ,000 at Kentucky's Rupp Arena
· with his floor leadership and hallhandling.
" I'm proud of this team and of the
crowd," Coach Joe B. Hall said after
the Wildcats turned back a series of
rallies by LSU , which never led in
the game.

Representative ,

USDA CHOICE

OPEN 7 DAYS
8 AM TILlO PM
CORNER .OF LOCUST
&amp; PEARL ST.
MIDDLEPORT, OH.

Jackson attempted to contact
Steinbrenner but couldn't reach
him.
Steinbrenner estimates the truancy will cost Reggie $2,500 a day in
prorat\!{1 pay from his contract and
bonus clauses in addition to the
$1,000:a-day routine penalty,
Last year Reggie was two days
late and fined $2,000. He said he
would tack on another $1,000 for
charity if the Yankees would match
it. The Yankees did and a New York
boys' athletic program received

.BEEF SALE••

• •

Where Friendliness &amp; Savings Go Hand in Hand

By Associated Press
First, the nation's longest winning
streak came to an end ... and then it
didn't.
In a Super Sunday of college
basketball action, second-ranked
Louisiana State had its 26-game winning streak ended by :'lo.9 Kentucky
73-71.
That put the pressure squarely on
No.l-rated Oregon State and the un·
beaten Beavers, erasing a 6-point
halftime deficit for the second road
game ina row, overtook No. l3 UCLA
82-76, boosting their record to 25-{1
and remaining the only team in the
country without a setback.
" One by one we're accomplishing
all the goals we set for ourselves,"
Coach Ralph Miller said after
Oregon State clinched at least a tie
for its second consecutive Pacific-10
title. "And it's the first time we've
swept UCLA and USC since 1956."

Advertising

B·EEF SALE.

Vaughan's

As usual, Reggie missing from ca'mp

The Daily Senlinei-Page-7

Pomeroy-Middle ort, Ohio

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�Monday, March 2,1981

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Name to be chosen for artists

Tribute
The following poem was written by Gail Evans Arnott,
daughter of the late Jim Evans,
who was killed recently in a river
accident as he rowed to his work
at the Kaiser Alwninwn Corp. , at
RavenswOOd, W. Va.

#!#&lt;
Nicole Davidson

Sherry Burke

Local children have birthdays
Nicole Dawn Davidson, daughter
of Bill and Karen Davidson, Racine,
recently celebrated her first birthday with a pa rty at her home.
A Holly Hobbie cake was served
with ice cream, potato chips and pi zza to Ben, Mike, Richie and Larry
Davidson, Mr. and Mrs . Allan
Davidson, Todd and Lois, Mr. and
Mrs. David Herdman, Kelly, Davie
and Johnny. She received cards and
gilts. A party was also held for
Nichole at the home of her grandparents. Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Rhodes.

Sherry Lynn Burke celebrated her
second birthday recently with a party at the home of her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Jerry Burke.
Cake, ice crearn and punch were

served. Attending were Sherry's
sisters, Lisa and Tricia Burke, Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Burke, Lori , Scott
and Randy, and Sherry's grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Warren Van
Meter and Mr. and Mrs . Robert
Burke.

ASTRO
GRAPH
rt1ourh l. 1981
Joint l't'n\urt&gt;s could pron~ especiall~·

l&gt;eneflcLal th1s &lt;.'Ortung

~· ear,

bOth ftnam:La !i)'
f«l n real scnsr of

and 1n that 1·ou 1~10uld
at:luevemcn( Se-ek out winnt'r.s and tr)· to put
a deal togt&gt;lher.
PJSCF.S ( Feb.

~Marrh

ZO ) Greater

~

portumt1es for gams arl' hkely to open for
\'OU toda\' from channel~ you seldom Ulp, mStead u( thrOugh your tr;~ual sources. Use

both. AQnlHnct' , travel. finances. luck and

ptlSSLblt&gt; pitfalls are aU discussl:'d m your

A!Hro-Graph. Mail $1 for t&gt;ach to Aslro.
Graph~ P. 0. BolC .ml, Holdio C1ty Station,
Ne~

IN WHO'S WHO - The 1981
edltion of "Who's Who in Music"
will carry the name of one
student from Meigs High School
who has been selected as being
among the country's most out·
standing high school music
students. She is Linda Eason,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Eason, Rt. 3 Pomeroy. Miss
Eason, a seoJor at Meigs High
School, has served as field commander for the band during the
last two years in addition to
playing various musical in·
stnunents. The head of the
school's nominating committee
and the annual directory have included Miss Eason, based on her
music· ability, academic
achievement, service to the com-

munity,

leadership in

tracurricuJar

activities

exand

future potential.

York ; N. Y. HXH9. Be suretosped ry bi r·
th date.
ARI ES j March 21-April I! ) lnvo!vemer1ts
~· ou have today with persons whO have
pnlvew to be lucky for you prevtou.s ly should
work out equally as well now . Prt&gt;s.s onward .
TA URUS I April ZO..May 201 There is a ('(Jn·
s llit."rablc amount of OIJ[l0r1umty around you
today. wurk ur c11 r~rwi se . It could l'Orne
thr Qu~h co nta c t..~ who have ''Ins' · wtlh bljol

wheels.
GEMINI !May 21-Juur 2'01 Pa rli.CJ pale m
acti\·itlt'S tlllli:iy whkh chalten~o:~ you buth
m~n la l l~· tllld physically . You' ll perfonn well
e~nd you may even outshme one who usua lly
gets the bEtter of you.

CANC ER (Juor !I·July 221

Cha n~in~

ron-

ditiorl.'S O\'er whkh we hem: no control often
put us at il disad\' &lt;tnl&lt;t ~ e . Huwever, this.
shouldn 't be true for you t oda~·.
LEO fJuly 23--A u ~:. 22) You' re ve r y good at
debutin~ todHy and ) 'OU may have an ~
portunity to exercise this ~ kt ll. You are
espedlllly adept l11 Sl' llin ~ others 011 big

.

tdeas.
VIRGO IAug. 'll-Se pl 221 E!..'Oilorruc condttiOM should start impM·inl!: l or you as of
today. Be alert and cxcmlineall propQSitlon.s
..,·hkh could add to your income and r~su ur-

Baby arrives
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Knapp, Columbus, the form~r Susie Craig, an; nounce the birth of their first child, a
· son, William Douglas Knapp II, Decc
10 at the Riverside Hospital, Colum- bus. The infant weighed live pounds
_ and was 19 inches long. Maternal
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
James Craig, Buffalo, W. Va. , and
!I!• foster grandmother is Emogene
Holstein, Syracuse. Paternal grandmother is Im oge ne Knapp,
Syracuse.

Temporary otflcers were elected
at an infonnal business meeting of
the area art usociation held Monday night at Meigs High School.
Elected were Juanita Lodwick,
president; Delores Long, vice
president; Janet Koblentz,
secretary; and Don Salmons,"
treasurer-publicity chalnnan.
It was decided Jack H. Slavin will
be considered as "artist in -residence" for the group, Named to the
board of directors were Harold and
Becky Circle, Rhojean McClure,
Slavin, and Mrs. Lodwick.
Business matters were set for the
first Thursday of each month at
which time dues of 40 cents will be
collected per penon. Mrs. Lodwick

spreads its magic wonder across
the land.
Til the dewdrOps of early morning spring [reshen all the blades
of grass, and restore the life, that
once a season ago, started to die.
Rowing on til you catch the
time that you let pass you by.
The time that escaped your
grasp a~d went by unrecognized.
Then rowing bnck on the
memories of things forgotten, yet
not
Forgotten, just stored away in
yet another time.

Helen Help Us

Not ready for steady
BY HELEN AND SUE BOTTEL
and got the wrong idea of what kind
Special correspondents
of girl I am. I've never mel her, so I
can't explain.
DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
I've been going with Phil for a
Now she won'tlet Jeff see me any
more. I love him very much. What
year and really like him a whole lot
but now I'm not sure. His fire is still
can I do? - DEBBY, Age 15
going strong but I'm afraid mine is
DEAR DEBBY:
almost out.
You never once mentioned how
He hasn't done anythin'k to make
Jeff feels ·about you. If he really
me change. He's a great person. But
cares, he'd arrange a meeting so
I can't stop loving it when other guys
that Mother and Girlfriend could
flirt or talk to me. This makes me . learn to accept each other.
feel guilty especially when I think
One letter shouldn't cause a total
how it would be to date them.
cut off.- unless it was one whooperWhat do you do when you like one do of a letter!
boy best (I think) but still enjoy flirWhich leads to a general rule :
ting?- THE GUILTY ONE
Never write what isn't fit reading for
DEARG.O.:
a parent or friend . Saying it is safer!
Several things in your letter in- - HELEN
dicate you aren't ready yet for an ex·
NOTE FROM SUE : Could Jeff be
elusive relationship. When "the fire
using his mother as an alib_l? If your
is a~nost out," it can't be rekindled . letter came on so strong it scared
with guilt.
him, well, an ultimatwn from Mama
Tell Phil how you feel but suggest is a good excuse, you know. Sign me
a ·slow-down rather than a definite - Just Guessing.
break-up. Perhaps he may also
welcome a chance to play the field. DEARHELENANDSUE :
- HELEN
One man treats me like a lady: he
opens doors for me, seats me £irs!,
G.O.:
things like that. The other guy is the
This may not apply to you, but it's type where if there's only one chair',
something many young people ddn't he'll sit on it, leaving me standing.
understand : ''Love" doesn't mean
Which should I choose?- F.N.F.
cutting yourself off from ' all contact DEARF:
with others of the opposite sex. It's
Whichever has most of all those
normal for an outgoing person to en~ other good attributes you didn't
joy " flirting around talking." You'll mention. Traditional manners could
probably do it all your life, but that's hide many flaws, while lack of them
no indication you'll be untrue to your might only prove Guy No. 2 takes
man.
women's equality talk seriously. Don 'I try changing your per· HELEN AND SUE
sonality to su it a possessive
boyfriend ( if such Phil is). Look in(GOT A PROBLEM? Or a subject
stead for one who understands your for discussion, two-generation style?
frien'dly nature. - SUE
Direct your questions to either Sue
or Helen Batte! - or both, if you
DEAR RAP:
want a combination mother·
I like a guy named Jeff. One day I daughter answer - in care of this
wrote him a letter. His Mom read it newspaper. )

'""LIBRA ts.&gt;pt. tJ..(kL :ZJJ Fnends ~·t il find
you espee1ally pleasan t to be around toda y.
Vou 'r e ~ood compttny and you'll know h o~o~~· to
generate mutuall y advant.ageOuli situa tions .
SCORPIO I Ot-t . 24-N!tv. !l! Try to wrap up
matters which )' OU deem to be persona II)' lmpoi"Ulnl either toda y or tomorrow . The
aspects tend to fa vor you where t~ bottom
line isconcemt.'d.
SAGITTARIUS 1N ov . 23- 0 ee. 211
SOmeth i n~ you·ve been hoptn!! for but have
~e n unable to brinK &lt;Jbout could take a turn
for the better tOOay. Don't ~ive up )'OU r
dream.
CAPRICORN !Df't'. t2-Jan. 19J You could
be luckier than usual tOday in two areas. One
relates to your finanres. the other to you r
reputation. Direct your ener~ies and intdlt'('t toward them .
AQUARIUS !Jan. 20-F'eb . 19) Success is
likely today in situations wh1 ch you personally manage. Not only arc you assertl\'c,
you arealsowise in the way you do things.

Explorer Post
asks members
Infant Knapp

ROWING
Rowing across time, closing
the gap between confusion and
comprehension.
Rowing til the stars are shining
brightly in the sky.
Til the moon reaches down and

The Explorer Post 230 Boy Scouts
of America sponsored by the Meigs
County Sheriff's Department is
presently conducting a membership
drive.
Students ages 14 to 21 are eligible
to join. The Explorer Post meet!;
every Thursday at 7 p.m. at the
sheriff's offi ce.
Projects and special activities of
the group will depend upon the nurnber of members and desires of the
group.
If interested in joining, attend the
next meeting.
TO MEET TONIGHT
Parents of safety patrol boys and
girls and other interested persons
are invited to attend a m~eting at 7
p.m. tonight at the Pomeroy
Elementary School. The annual
saf

Skating party successful
A skating party was held recently
for the children, nursery through
sixth grade, of the Middleport First
Baptist Church at the Skate-a-Way
Rink near Chester.
Attending were Mrs. Sarah Johnson, Bobby, Sherry and Willie, Mr.
and Mrs. Dan Riggs and David, Mrs.
Debbie Fink and Jennifer, Mrs.
Marilyn Williams and Holly , Mrs.
Vickie Russell, Angie and Ray, Mr.
and Mrs. Mark Davis and Todd,
Mrs . Nancy Anderson, Jamie and
Todd, Mr. and Mrs. Carroll Cleland
WINE , CHEESEPARTYSET
The Meigs Unit of the American
Cancer Society is sponsoring a wine
and cheese tasting party at the
Meigs Inn Sunday as a special fund
raising proje.ct. Regrets to the invitations are to be telephoned to
Mrs. Clyde Ingels by Tuesday. The
unit will sponsor a dance o? March 5.
This year the unit will not be asking
for special gifts. At the wine and
cheese tasting party there will be a
style show and music by Armand
Turley at the organ.

and Dodie, Mrs. Judy Cowan, Ryan
and Sam, Mrs. Mary Brewer and
Marybeth, Mr. and Mrs. Dan White,
Adam and Eric, Mr. and Mrs. Pat
Hill, Jerrod and Sam, Mrs. Pat
Thomas and Clifford, Mrs. Sue Metzger, Amy and Shelly, Mrs. Betty Jo
Lieving, Teresa and Jenni£er, Mrs .
Helen Bodimer, Clarence Boyles,
Damon and Jeff Burke, Van Klein ,
Michael and Michelle Frash, Susan
and Chuckie Pullins, Tabby Phillips,
Tracy Hupp, James Eads, and
Becky Hof£man.

SUEDE CLOTH

:.~ow98c

will host the March 5 meeting at her
h0u1e near Chester.
It was alsO decided committees
needed to promote group activities
should include telephone, travel and
tour and membership. Suggestions
for~ name tor the group were made
and will be voted on later.
Don Saimons will present an application for registry In the Hocking
valley Art Council. A program of artists 1n the schools and art Instruction In the area elementary
schools was discussed.
A critique session was held concerning perspective in a still life.
Workshops will be scheduled aCn
cording to areas of interest. Members were asked to take another per·
son interested In art to the next
meeting.

ONLY'1 39

Yd .

SPECIAL MEETING, Chapter 80
R.A.M., 7:30p.m. Monday. Work in
mark masters and past masters
·
degree.
SPECIAL MEETING of Eastern
Local Boal'd of Education, 7 p.m.
Monday to discuss negotiations.
MIDDLEPORT Garden Club, 7:30
p.m. Monday at the home of Mrs.
Dorothy Morris, South Second Ave.;
Middleport.
MEIGS LOCAL Band Boosters
Monday at 7:30 p.m. at the high
school. Parents of junior hand membersalsowelcome.

79~d.

CAPTAIN EASY
~--. .. , E!ll.'A!&gt;T THE LUCK!
M'l FLAtH&lt; 15-

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LIGHTS A MAN'5 OLD INDIAN POPSKULL!

EMPTYl

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7c58
8:00

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ANNIE
.. THERE 60 Oil.
SUE'S 61LL5 AND TH'
COPIES 01' HER
I'ATIEHTS' MEDICARE

-- BUT WHOCOOLO BE
PAYING THEGE BILLS
IF I r ISN'T TH'
"6RAY AVEHGER" ?

CLAIMs ...

·ALL
60TA
CLUE AS TO l'il\0
THE "GKAY AVEN6ERfl
MIGHT _
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50 HOWWILL
THAT KEEP UG
FROII BEIN(i
INVESTIGATED?...

HOLD ON, LIXIR!
THAT'S MY
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NOW

j

I])

' L ' Eiisir d ' Amore' This two -act
· opera by Gaetano Doniz:ettl is pre ·
sented live from the stage of the
Metropolitan Opera House. ln the
leading roles are Judith .Blegen as
Adina and Luciano Pavarolti as
Nemorlno. (2 hrs., 30mlne.)

8:30 (}) NEW BIBLE BA,LE SHOW
1:58 (]] CBN UPDATE NI!WS
V:OO ® 8 C1J MONDAYNIGHTATTHE

~t

~-;

cal 700CLUB

.

({)G})m OYNASTYBtake's grow ·
ing pa'ranoie and sense of betrayal
c oncerning Matthew and Walter '9
mysterious benefacto r explodes
i nto a bruta l physical attack when
he discovers Krys tle has been tek ing birth control pille; and Matthew's b loody brawl with the perso'n
who real ly wre cked his rig leads to
e head-On emolional collision wilh
Bla ke and new marital problems
w ith Claudia . (2 hrs.)

;::"¥;~

,. _

-:&gt;-:.

Ill I]) ®l M.A.S.H. Hawkeye, lhe

GASOLINE ALLEY

perennial prankster . is ostracized
by hi s 4077th cohorts, who are ot~
tended by his p rac tical jokes on
Charles Winchester .

Please, Lii!
Don't excite
her!

She said

somethinq!

11:30 llJ IJl ®J HOUSE CALLS Aman

c laiming t o be from various QO\I&amp;rn menta I agenc1es de!ic ends on Ken sington Hospital and insisf son seeing one of Dr _Michael 's seriously ill
~tienla .

10:00 l!J MOVIE •(SCI£NCE·FICT10N)

10:28 (]) CBN UPDATE NEWS
10:30 ( 3) RISE AND BE HEALED
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(J) NON·FICTION TELEVISION
'CrysiBI City : The Brown Out'

(j]) NEWS

WI NNIE
A\AN'r YfO.R:: r1E, DlrN T

I HAVE VAGUE
RECOLLECTION 51 OF

k.NOW WHO HE \\ ~ 5 . ..

WANDER!N6 Ak'OU&gt;ID

SO 'ICU E'&lt;E
WI \IV£ .J \ .;' 5 iL-::.~ c:; \ ,.uEIC
A80U7 8 /LL S
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4NP 4 ~ NESIA.

FOR

SOuTH AAIERICA,
-.,..~__...,.
BUT MY MIND
19 CLOUDY.

u.s.

10:58 (]) CBN UPDATE NEWS
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(J) FESTIVAL OF PRAISE
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11:28 ffi CBN UPDATE NEWS
11:30 rn e m THE TONIGHT SHOW

em

IT'S LIKE WAKING
UP f'RO.'\ A DRE.&lt;\M

AND Tl&lt;) lNG TO
REMEM13ER

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Guest host : MertinMull .Guest : Ma c
De vis. (60 mins.)

TO.'

BARNEY

! lOWEEZY JJ

NORTH

Chmplon '' 1g"g

Lobo" 1170
(J) ll2J CD FANTASY

I GOT SOME

ISLAND A

troubied married c ouple return 10
their high school dave in hopes of
rec apturing the period when they
fell in love; and a soldier of fortune Ia
in for a terrifyingadventurewhenhe
tries lo find the fabled fountain of
l!luth. (Repeat ; 70mins.)

JUICY' GOSSIP
FOR YOU 1!

TO·COAST Guests: Tony Martin.
L eo Sayer. (90 mtns.)

12:58 (1) CBN SPORTS REPORT
I :00 (}) D. JAMES KENNEDY
1c10 (t ) CAROL BURNETT AND

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11) HBO SNEAK PREVIEW :
MARCH Jerry Stiller and Anne
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m o vies . spo rts an d spe cials on
HBO in Mar c h.

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2:28 m CBN SPORTS REPORT
2:30 13) ROSSBAGLEV SHOW
3:55 1"!1 MOVIE ·(MYSTERY)

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second diamond and is down

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one when West produces the
ace and two more hearts."

SOUTH
+KJ94

Oswald: ''We don 1t want any

• A82
• K J 10

+AJJ

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
West

North

East

South

Pass

3 NT

Pass

!' NT
Pass

Pass

By Oswald Jacoby
aDd AlaD Sontag
Oswald: "North and South
have 29 high-card points

readers explaining tbat South
can start on diamonds and
still make the hand if he plays
West for all the missing high
cards. That is the sort of play
that is only made when all
four hands are seen. Let's see
the safest way to play for
three no trump.
Alan: "Duck the first heart.
Win the second and take an
immediate club finesse . West
clears the hearts. Now South
cashes four spades and the
ace and king of clubs.
Dummy's fourtli club is good
and South has his ninth trick."
Oswald: " If. clubs don't
break, South will still come to
nine tricks if East holds the
diamond ace."
!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)

~",.,
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
12 Equal
I Bartok
DOWN
5 Caligula 's
I Shoulder
tongue
10 German song 2 Down from ·
II Knee slapper a duck
t2 Italian
3 Shelf
river
4 Jewish
t3 Sagacious
month
14 Humiliate
5 Poor risk
16 Tape color 6 Holder of
17 Before
an LL.B.
t8 Cocktail
7 Bermuda's
20 Wee bird
major
21 S. Afr. foK
industry
22 Dutch island 8 High-strung
near
9 Less affluent
Venezuela 11 Assailed
25 Clocking
15 Bowfin

Yesterday's Answer
19 Australian
marsupial
20 Ski lift
22 Punished
by fine
23 Setback
24 Futile
25 CUrrent
27 German city

29 Binding
substance
30 Accwnulate
31 Unchallenged
32 Measuring
apparatus
35 Stride
37 Vietnamese
holiday

device

26 Arizona
river
of miss

36 Low I.Q .

person
38 Binge
39 Jewish
ascetic
10 Fish-.,ating
bird
U Villa - .
at Tivoli
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work it :
AXVDLBAAXR
ts L 0 N G F E L L 0 W
One letter simply .stands for another . In thls sample A is

used for the three I.'s, X for the lwo O's, etc. Sln&amp;le letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of lhc words are all
hints. Each day thr code }('tters are different.

CRVPTOQUOTES

FRIENDS Guest. Neil Se dAka.

PEANUTS

ARE 'r'OV 7

Alan: "The optimist wins
the first bear! in dummy to
lead a diamond and finesse his
ten. West tak~ his queen and
clears the heart suit. The
optimist ducks the second
heart, wins the third, leads a

+K 8 4 2

12:30 11) 1J ('f) TOMORROW COAST·

SNOOPY? WHERE

notrump home."

.K 5

WEST

28 Turned
inside
out
30 Spade
33 Elec.
unit
31 Grapple

12:00 C!J MOVIE ·(WESTERN)'" "Rio

CLOTHES HUNG UP

'500 pr.

3-2- 81

between them with two
stoppers in every suit, but
only a man who plays with
utmos&lt; safety will bring three

+A Q 10 '
• 9843

Singer" 1V53

ctl ABC CAPTIONED NEWS
@ MOVIE -(DRAMA) "'I&gt; "The

WHEN YOU GiT YORE
Yd.

'

(fJ ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
(l-) MOVIE ·(DRAMA) • •• " Juz:

M .E : Gone But Not Forgotten'
Stars: Jac k Klugman , Garry Walb erg . Joan Van Ark guest slars as
Bert Phillips , a newspaper editor
who help a Quincy solve the mysteri ous slaying o f an eccentric billion·
11re .
(Repeal)
'THE
NEW
AVENGER S : K Is For Kill' Part II
Stars : Patr ic k Ma c nee. J oa nna
Lumley. (Repeat)

Dale Kautz
Rt. 3, Pomeory, Oh.
Ph. 614-985-3831

· DEKALB" tS a reo•stered brand name Numbers des 1gn1tt
hybndt

Cautious play plan pays
p

27 Partner

I1J ll2J Ill
ABC NEWS
NIGHTLINE
llJil) CBS LATE MOVIE 'QUINCY

Call your DEKALB dealer today.

Save 5% when . you pay for
. your seed by March 28

A female accesso ry men f ight l or A "PURSE"

MOVIES 'The Acorn People ' 1981
Stars : Ted Bessell . Cloris Leach man.

joined byl;luests Mich8e!Jsckson .
the J oflr'ey Bal let, Quincy Jones ,
and special guest larry Hagman .
(60 mins .)

New Spring lqpiH Sportswear Has Arrived
EACH ITEM PRICED AT

l.llJ LIVE FROM THE MET

{Answers tomorrow)
PAGODA

SALUTE

BRIDGE

co p shoots Th orp and turns the
c ommunity into a veritable time
bomb . (60 mine .

'3"Ya.

Values to 518.00 NOW

Car and motorcycle darede\liltry by
a Japanese stunt team , a re\loluHonary new method using atomic
radiatiOn to keep food fresh , and a
medica I breakthrough that ens b Ie s
a patient's own blood to be rec y·
clad a11d returned lohisbod')' during
sur~rL(60 mins .)

PROXY

I I I I )

Jumble Book No. 15; containing 110 puzzles, Ia 1nllable tor $1 .75 postpeid
from Jumble, c1o this new1pe~t', Bo11 $4, Norwood. N.J. 07648. 1ncludt your
neme, addre11, lip a;lde and make chtcki paylble to Ntwapapefboob.

OllJll!lJ THIE WHITE SHADOW A

YIELDPLUS ftOitl DEKALB.

XL·72b

I Answer :

IIJIHJ III THAT'S INCREOIBLE

•• 'Ia "Black Hole" 1879
•
Cl)@) diana Diana Ross is

Consistent yielding
hybrid stands strong,
fights stunl. Big yields plus disease
resistance for your toughest growing
conditions .

Saturday's

'" "Ok·

D

The yields you want,
the total performance
youneed.
·

Jumbles : .UNCLE

,

(l) MOVI£ '(MUSICAL)
lahoma" 11611

rI

Print answer hera:

(}) AMERICAN CATHOLIC
l!J MOVIE ~DRAMA)" "My Brl~

-------------.•
'"o"

em

husbands when they announce, al
the same lime, that each is
pregnant -- bul Caroiine "eta eome
sha lle ri ng new s following a
medica! ex amination . (60 mins .)
(Ciosed ·Caplioned; U.S.A.)

STATE
AUTOMOBILE
MUTUAL
INSURANCE
COMPANY

•oa"&lt;&gt;"

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

daughter LaUra bring joy to their

Insurance Package ·
For You

NAMI:

BOB NEWHART SHOW
C1J FACE THE MUSIC
llJ I]) ®J CBS NEWS
CIJ WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
l.llJ HISTORY OF SPACE FLIGHT
II) ABC NEWS
(]] CBN UPDATE NEWS
C2J IJ PM MAGAZINE
(]] NORMAN VINCENT PEALE
I]J ALL IN THE FAMILY
11Jll2JCD FAMILYFEUD
CIJ NASHVILLE ON THE ROAD
Ill I]) TIC TAC DOUGH
I]) (j])
MACNEIL·LEHRER
REPORT
®J NEWS
(})8 BULLSEYE
(}) WORDS OF HOPE
I]J SANFORD AND SON
11) llJ I]) JOKER'S WILD
CIJ®l HOLLYWOOD SQUARES
CIJ(j]) DICK CAVETT SHOW
em 111 FACE THE MUSIC •
(}) CBN UPDATE NEWS
(!J 8 Cll UTTLEHOUSEONTHE
PRAIRIE Caroline lngalle and her

•

Gerald Rood &amp; Son
Rt. 2, Letart, w. Va.
Ph. 304-882-3144

''Anlmalymplca' '

(l)

He;~'-5 Wl'5HI~

Cf' ll-U7

I NUSIGE I (]

•(]) MOVIE -{ANIMATED)··~

7:30

!

I
I
I
I
I
·Jj

~,,.,.,.

I BASUQ

6:30 CIJ IJ (l) NBC NEWS
(}) THE DOOR

FIRE!

ATOI&gt;GT!

PIN It 1111 me more about tho
SERIES ONE Business Polley.
I

,.. ,.,c""..,.
...........
..__''..""" ' ... ..

(Cioaed-Captiooed; U .S.A.)

Ml*- A ~r-:--~""1
WVCC: WITH

•

t
tJ I J

[ REWAY

Dancer and c horeographer Agn es

L.~'-5

Represenl&gt;ng

by Henri Arnold and Bob Lee

DeMille . Host : Hugh Down s .

~l.lOIJ(bH

a

•

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

(}) RAINBOW FACTORY
(l)
CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
I]) AaCNEWS
(J) 3·2·1 CONTACT
® OVER EASY 'Stroke' Gue-st :

....

BORN LOSER

Do ou own or operaTe ii
sniall or medium -size
retail store, office, apartment Jr church?
Then- you may qualify
for State Auto Mutual's
SERIES ONE Business
Pol icy .. .
moclern -astomorrow package plan
that combines an array of
broad property and liabili ty coverages required to
safeguard your opera ttons. All for a '!/fM".y attrac·
live, affordable premium .
Let us explain the
superior
features
of
SERIES ONE ... the short
time we spend together ,
could prove interesting
and re.warding to you .
Just give us a call or
mail the handy coupon.
DALE C. WARNER
INSURANCE
102 w. Main 9f2·214l Pomeroy, 0 .

ftf1\J~~ft \'iEl THATBCRAMIILEDWORDGAME

~ ~ ~ &lt;.!l~

{l) IJ (!j ilJ i])®Jem iD NEWS

60" Wide Reg. $5.98

Yd.

e~: SLACKS &amp; JEANS

BENEATH THE 016NIGTY
OF THE

Television
•
•
vtewmg
EVENING

nasiwn.

Social calendar
MONDAY

1s

1 c00

POLYESTER &amp; BLENDS WOOL &amp; POLVESTER

., ..

F IT
PERFES~ION FER
A 1-AOY • TAINT
A FIT PERFESSION
FER ANY PLENTY!

6:5B

New officers were elected at the
recent meeting of the Young Adult
Class of the Asbury United
Methodist Church held in the
Syracuse Elementary School gymElected were Ken Buckley,
president; Richard Friend, vice
president; Linda Frtend, secretary,
and Linda Fields, treasurer. Dennis
Moore presided at the meeting
durtng which time is was decided to
start a nursery for the young
children during church services.
Two adults will be in attendance
each Sunday. Kathy and Dennis
Moore will have charge of the March
15meetlng.
Refreshments wen! served and
games were played. Attending were
Russ .and Hope Moore, the Rev.
Stanley and Nancy Merrifield, Buffi,
Todd and Marcy, Dennis and Cathy
Moore, Amy, Andrea and Jarrod,
Richard and Linda Fields, Michelle,
Eddie and Jennifer, Jack and Judy
Williams, Tucker, Ryan and Jane
Am, Kenny and Jeannie Buckley,
Tammi and Tyson, Larry and Linda
Fields, Andy and Kevin, and Randy
Dudding.

SHOW BIZNESS

TAINT A

r---------------~

70" Wide

Values to $2.98

DICK TRACY

i~M~e~m~be~rs~a~r~e~t~o~w~e;ar~w~~hite=·===~~-=-=-~-::-:::·•=·=·r~IOlla::~·::•:-~

CHRISTIAN FEU..OWSHIP
REPORTED
A Christian fellowship dinner was
held at thehome o£ Mrs. Agens
Mowery Tuesday. Prayer and
singing highlight~ the evening
following a dinner. Attending were
Mr. and mrs. Ed Voss and Tony, Mr.
and Mrs. Waid Hayman, Mr. and
Mrs. Carl_ Loomis, Mrs. Cheryl
Knight and Mrs. Mowery and
daughters, JoAnn and Judy and
children.

PIECE GOODS SALE

Adult Class
of Asbury
Church meets

TUESDAy
SUTION TOWNSHIP Trustees
meeting, 8 p.m. Tuesday at Syracuse Municipal Building.
CHARTER DRAPED in memory
of Mabel Van Meter when Chester
Council 323, Daughters of Amertca,
meets at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday.

r---------------------------1

100% POLVESTER

March 2,1981

A B 1 ' Q
AS J Q Z

~-

N p p

GUFNMLU

y B J T B Q Q U I

z

B MJ

QOU

·X B J P A

ZBM

ONCU
"

Q B

F P U N I

TPNLLUL .

NIBIZ.

Yesterday'• Cryptoquote: EXTREMES MEET AND THERE IS
NO BETTER EXAMPLE THAN THE HAUGHTINESS OF
HUMIUTY. - RALPH WALDO EMERSON

�Pag~10-The

Da1ly Sent•nel

Pubhc Notice

~ ubllc

Not•ce

Commtsstoners. '" the tr of
ftce located m the Cour
thouse Pomeroy1 .Qhlo, un
ttl 12 noon on March 10
1981 and WI II be opened
and redd aloud at 2 00 P M
other
for the followtng building
The report, released last week, lS
lease Each b•d to meet the
For example, the report sa1d tac ond•t•ons
and
bemg ctrculated among members of fiabon has stunulated purchases of
speclftcat•ons as follows
Congress, lobbymg groups and such things as large, more complex
Office bUilding to house
the Metgs Counfy Welfare
others mvolved m des1gmng general farm machinery 'That dnves up
Appllcat1ons will be Department 3,000 square
econorruc and farm legtslattOn th1s production coots, wljich m turn llh rece•ved by the un feet mm•mum total space
2 500 square feet
at the off•ce of
year
creases pressures for higher com- dersigned
the Board of Me1gs County mm1mum office space
The report noted that mflat10n also modity support:;
Comm1sstoners , Pomeroy, conststmg of a m ll'umum ol
Ohto unt11 12 noon on the 15 rooms toilet facilit ieS
has mcreased the wealth of those
' Operators may buy larger eqwp- Wh
day of March 1981 . for men and women, and a1
who own land and other farm assets ment and buildings sooner if they ex- and opened and read aloud least 15 park1ng spaces for'
because land pr1ce changes have pect pnce mcreases," the report at 2 30 PM on March 24, automObiles
Rental requ1red for satd
1981, from any f.nanc1al 1n
kept pace wtth both mflalton and m· sa1d
and
related
st1tut1on legally ehg1ble bu1ld1ng
wh1ch may des1re to subm1t fac111ties should be broken
creases m real farm earrungs
' Inflation often leads to con a written apP.IIcat.on to be down for a 1 year, 2 year,
fltcts, " the report sa1d "For m~ publ•co:depos•tory of the Ac and s year baSIS All b•ds
and tntenm deposits of should •ndlcate the rental
stance, legislators often try to ass1st tive
Public Monevs of sa 1d necessary for the b1dder to
clientele groups m copmg w1th m- Board as prov•ded by the prov1de rna1ntenance for
Unlform Depos1tory Act, the exter~or and mtenor of
flatJOn on the one hand and try to Sect1on
135 01 et seq of the the bU IId•nq and the rental
requ~red
1f the main
Revised Code of Ohto
stop tnfll!IJOn on the other
Said
appl!cal•on
shall
be tenance Is provided by the
'"The f1rst ObJective may lead to made In conform1ty wtfh unders1gned
The Board of County
higher commodity pnce supports, the followtng resolutiOn
CommtSSJOners
may
passmg
February
2~ 1981
larger food stamp benefits and
'BE IT RESOLVeD !hal require addtt•onal contract
easier credit aval!ab!ltly for far- the estimated aggregate prOIJIS•ons w•th the sue
max1mum amounts of cessful btdder 1ncludmg
mers
public funds subtect to the but not ltm1ted to the nght
control of sa1d Board to be ot the opt1on to cancel fhe
ACTIVE depos tts at any lease 1f necessary
The front of the envelope
time durmg the period of
deS1gnat1on
tS
Three enclosmg the b1d must be
Seated Bid
Million F tve Hundred marked
Department
Thousand
Dollars Welfare
(S3 500 000 00) and the Butld1n9 Bidder to fur
probable
max1mum n•sh the1r own form
The Board of County
amount
of
INTERIM
depos1ts IS Two million CommiSsioners may ac
F tve Hundred Thousand cept the lowest btd, or
(12 ,500,000 00)
select the best b1d for the
BE
IT
FURTHE tntended purpose, and
RESOLVED, thai bids be reserve the nght to retect
rece•ved unttl 12 noon on any or all b1dS, and or any
lhe 241h day of March 1981 part thereof
MEIGS COUNTY
and that not1ce to all Banks
COMMISSIONERS
1n sa1d county and such
MARY HOB STETTER
other Banks as may be
Suppose that you couldn't read about Adult Baste EducatiOn at your necessary be gtven
CLERK
as prov1ded by (2) 23 !31 2 2!c
this column Suppose , too, that you libranes Pat Neece (an ABE pubilcat•on
taw Sa1d Board of County
couldn t read the note your child graduate) and Lucy Amsbary can Commlsstoners reserves
PubliC Nottce
the n9ht to retect any or all
brought home from school, the teach people to read even 1f the bidS
NOTICE TO

pay for tt That can crowd out of the
market a less-endowed farmer who
wants to expand a margmal holding

NOTICE FO~
APPLICATION
UNDER THE
UNIFORM
DEPOSITORY
ACT OFFICE
OF THE COUNTY
TREASURER
MEIGS COUNTY
POMEROY, OHIO
45769

At the same tune, though, the
report satd mflat10n and efforts to
deal with 11 may be feedmg off each

Shoppers had good
news last month
By Assoctated Press
Grocery btlls have more than
doubled m the past e1ght years, but
February brought good ne"s to
shoppers m the form of the biggest
monthly drop smce late m 1976, an
Associated Press market basket survey shows
The AP drew up a random ltst of
food and non-food products and
pnced the 1tems at one supermarket
m each of 13 ctties on March I, 1973
Prices have been rechecked on or
about the start of each succeedmg
month The ltst or1gmally mcluded
15 ttems, but chocolate ch1p cooktes
were dropped when the manufac-turer discontinued the package s1ze
used m the survey
The latest pnce check showed
-The average markethasket total
was 109 percent higher at the start of
this March than 1t was when the survey began m March 197~
- The market basket btl! dropped
dunng February at the checkltst
store m 10 cllles, down an average of
3 percent, and rose m three ctltes, up
an average of 3 4 percent Overall.
the average marketbasket btll went
down !If.! percent last month The
drop was the biggest smce a I 8 per·
cent dechne m October 1976
-February's decreases were due
mamly to drops m the prtce of sugar
and eggs Sugar went down at the
checkhst store m nme c1!1es and
eggs m 10 c1hes Sugar pnces have
been . mmg smce early last year
because demand lor sugar 1s expected to exceed productiOn m the
current crop year Recent dechnes
m consurnpbon have caused drops m
the pnce of raw sugar on the world
market and the decreases were
reflected at the supennarket last
month
The outlook for egg pnces 1s less
clear ProductiOn was cut by the
&lt;j.rought which k1lled more than 7
nuU10n chtckens last year and continued low supphes could boost
pncesagam
-Orange JUICe pnces went up at
the checklist store m e1ght of the
e1hes surveyed by the AP The mcreases reflect nses m wholesale
prtces which followed the January
cold snap that damaged the c1trus
crop m Flortda which prov1des
almost all the nahan's orange JUice
- February's drop m marketbasket bills followed an mcrease of
only tw&lt;&gt;-tenths of a percent m
January. meanmg that grocery
prtces today are lower than they
were at the start of the year The
stluatlOn ts expected to change,
bowever The U S Department of
Agnculture Is pred1ctmg that food
pnces alone will nse 10 percent to 15
percent this year
The AP did not we1gh survey
results according to populatiOn denstly or m terms of what percent of a
farruly's grocery outlay each 1tem
~epresents Standard brands and
Sizes or comparable subshtutes
were used The 1tems on the AP
checkhst were chopped chuck, centeP cut pork chops frozen orange
]u;ce concentrate, coffee, paper
lowels, butter, Grade-A medtum
white eggs creamy peanut butter,
laundr) detergent fabnc softener,
tomato sauce mtlk , frankfurters
•nd granul ated sugar The Cll!es
checked were Albuquerque, N M ,
Atlanta, Boston, Chicago, Dallas,
Detr01t, Los Angeles, M1am1 New
York, Philadelphia, Provtdence,
R I , Salt Lake Ctty and Seattle
REVIVAL SLATED
MIDDLEPORT-A revtval Will
take place at the Mt Monah Baptist
Church, Main and Fourth, Middleport, Monday through Friday
Speaker on Monday evenmg w1ll
be the Rev Calvm Mmms, pastor
on Tuesday, the Rev Vance Watson
of Mount Ca rnwl Cl\urch, Btrlwcll
Wednesday, the Rev Wtlham Kmg
Umon Church at Btdwell, Thursday,
the Rev Jerry Sims, Bidwell, and
Qll Fnday, tbe Rev James Bradshaw, Colwnbua Special mus1c w1ll
be presented mghtly Servtces will
begm at 7 30 each evemng

Your

Libraries

message m a very offtclal·lOQkmg
envelope, the directions on a bottle
of medicme, a Job applicabon form,
or the caption under a p1cture of
your brother
On March 3, Johnny Cash Will star
m The Pride of Jesse Hallam, ' the
story of an adult man who could not
read Jesse, a wtdower, moves from
rural Kentucky to Cmcmnab so his
daughter can get medical care It's
gomg to be ' a fme, new life ' - until
he fmds that he cannot cope because
he cannot read
Jesse IS very lucky He gets a JOb
His boss urged him to learn to read
Jesse tnes a reading class and fmds
failure Fortunately his boss's
daughter knows the Lauback
Uteracy System - and Jesse lS on
the road to reading
I hope everyone w11l make the effort to see " The Pnde of Jesse
Hallam " When you do, you w11l un·
derstand why your libranes would
like your help If you know someone
who cannot read - or &gt;Onneone who
cannaot read well - tell that person

people have never been able to learn
before They may not use the same
system as Jesse Hallam (because
some folks do better w1th other
ways)- oot they have taught people
to read, and they 'd like to teach
many more
The Middleport Public Ubrary
Adult Bas1c Education center will
also have a spec1al guest on Thur
sday, March 5 Dr Sherr1 Toothaker
(and I hope I spelled that correctly)
will be offenng everyone ass1stance
m plannmg what they'd hke to do
With the rest of the1r lives Sherr1 lS
expenenced m career counseling
and takes great pleasure m helpmg
people dectde which of life s posstble
roads are nght for them
This career counselmg w11l start
at 12 30 p m on March 5 at Mid·
dleport Public Ubrary It's a free
program sponsored by your
libranes, Adult Basic Educatton
and R1o Grande Communtty College
Come see what life has to offer you
(Stop by the used book sale while
you're there')

I

Ohl11 H S Glrhi S.lkett.ll
Satllnby I Kelu.ltl

Olllio H

McAulc)

Cm

Pnnceton 46

Oeve
Cleve

48

Cin

Sycamort ~3

Mt

Healthy «1

Clt've Glen\tlle 44 Cleve Btsumont 37
Col M1rnm 7t Col Ea!tt.rnoor 52
Col Non.hland 6J COl West 'll
COl Wattcr:~on 63 Col Linden M~.:Km l ey
J2
Day Patterson i3 Day Meadowdal e 22
Day Stebbuts tJ PiQWI 23
Defil:lnce ~2. Bowhnw Green 33
E Cleveland SN!w 36 Cleve Ha) UJ
Fa lnnont W S4 Day Wnght ~2
Fmdla} 60 Fremont Ro:;s J.4
Gahanna 71 Pickennl$-ton 38
W orthm~ on

s &amp;rs Baskdball

Class AAA Tournameotl
Akrun Cen-How 87 Cuya~a fall!; 48
AAron Garfield 67 Marhngton ~2
Cm Pnncdon 6S Mlddh,,.town 64
Cleve Kennedy 66 Cleve G)enVIIIc 64
Cle\e Marshall 104 N Royalton $S
Col Central 50 Col West oW
011 Northland 75 Re}noldsburg 51
Cui WheLstorle 65 Westerville N 52
Euclid 69 Chardon 62

Adams M Bedford 37
E Tf(h 56 C.1eve Kennedy ~2

Grove Ctty 56

41

~
l.ernon Mooroe ~3
Lancaster 53 l.o11an tl
I.A:Jutsvtlle 5S Massillon Perry :;1
MlamJ Trace .&gt;8 Athens 52
Muuru:;bur~ 52
W Carrollton 41

Hamtlton

Groveport 49 WhJteh.Hil

&amp;4

&lt;Adt fltlls 3S Cm Northwest 32
South 64 Day Wayne 6J WT
Trotwood 62 Spnng (ireenon 58 20T
Upper Arlml!ton 62 Delaware 40
Spring

Welltcrvllle S 67 ReynoldSitJrl! 46
Wooster 50 Canton McKmley 41
Xcma ~~ Troy »

~

ffilluml 86 Cui Franklin Hts 61
Massillon Jackson 61 Akron Sprin~ ~
Mayfteld Sl MadLSOn 4S
Middletown 69 Ctn Prtn ceton 65
Oak Hills 64 Mt Healthy SJ
Panna Normandy 70 Cleve W Tech

Revere 70 Copley 69 OT
Solon 88 Cleve E Tech 76
Upper Arltngtoo 73 Grove City 56
Wallunz~
Memunal
70
Col
Wulnut

Rl~t!

Mtlford 43 Cln Our Lady Of Ang~ls 3J
Newark 69 Grovep;~rt 47
New Ph.U.adelphla 61 Zane:m ll~ 4(1

46

Clau AA Tournaments
Akron Hoban 60 /.oudon vllle :'19
Aurora 57 Gilmour ~2
Bedford Chane! 3S Chagrtn fal l:! 31
Bedey ~ Col Wetu le 42
Brooklyn 59 Keystone 46
Cm McNtcholas 49 Hllmson 47
Col Independence 65 Col St ChariL'!J

5ll
Cul Watterson 57 Gramil le 56
Day Cham Jul 57 Valley Vtew 50
El~m 64 Mt G1le~td S9
F&lt;tJrleli.'i 70 Norwa)ine 63

London 86

ClasaAATOUJ'Dimcall
A:!htabula ~ Cortland Lakevtew 44
&amp;dger 59 Ashtabula Harbor 29
Bellevue S9 Sandusky Mari!CaretLI 6a
Canfield ~3 Campbell Memor~al Z5
Clltyrnont ~ Rtd.tlewood 45
Clear ForK: 40 Bucyrus 29
Huron 60 Sandusky Perkms 34
Key!ltooe :'t4 ElynH W 51
Lorain Cath 65 Avon ~
Napolcoo 36 Wauseon 34
New l..exmgton 50 Metgs 35
P'.mldtnll ~L Bryan 35
Pl'tersburg Spnn11 53 Struthers 40
Rtvcr Vt ew ~ l)Qver 39
Upper &amp;mdusk} S4 Ontario 33

Cla11 A Toumameate

Bluffton

:13

AruJH 77 S CIIHrleslon SE 38

Antwerp 41, Uncolnv1ew 31
Arcbbold 76 Edon 28
Bea1l11vtlle 46 W'JOdsf1rld ll
Canal

Winchester

~7

Lanuvt.er

Fisher

~

..

Cur,ah(l~a

Hts 50 Black Rtver 43
De phos St Julm 72 [):lphos Jefferson

E Kn()X 64 Denville 28
E~erton 86 Stryker 3'1
Fostoria St Wendelln 32

don 19
Holgate 31

Petli~vJJie

Hopewelli»U

15

Kaluh1 70 fort Jtmnlngs 47
l .t h11 111l 5.! • Jack ~l.l ll (enter 48
Mapletuu :i8 (,or tin C..1~:uvw: w i9
Mtllor Cit) 46 Ottovllle 42

New umdun )4, Collms W R~ rve 39
New R1e11el 41 Elmwood tG
Newark C.th 71 Liberty Umon 49
Northrnor 18 Ji'airbi!WJ 42
Rll!:lll 8Z Mechllnicabur.c 50
Sprmg

C.thollc 54

Tiffin Calvert 37

Falrt.wn 17

M~tdtsun

Plains t3
Mt.&gt;dma Hl ~ hland 60 Columbia 51
Mmerva &amp;.1 Lowsvallc Aqumu :.4
Olentan~y 3:i Buckeye Val 32
PKmesvtlle Harvey 65 Kenston 61
Pe1ersbur~ Sprmg 57 Ravenrw SE
Port Omton 59 Oregon Clay 57
Rl\ler YII!W 59 Morgan 57
Wellston 74, McClam ~ 7
Westfall 83 Grandview 60

TERIM depostts of Public
Money wtll be made March
24 1981, for a per•od of t1me

prov1ded by lhe County

Treasurer commencing on
the f1rst day of Apr~ I. 1981
App11cat10ns should be
sealed and endorsed ' Ap
pltcation
under
the
Un1form DepOSitOry Act

MEIGS COUNTY
COMMISSIONERS
MARY HOBSTETTER
CLERK
(31 2 9 16 23 41c

Pubhc Not1ce

NOTICE
OFFICE SPACE
FOR MEIGS
COUNTY WELFARE
DEPT

In accordance w•th Sec
han J07 86 at the Oh o
Rev•sed Code sealed bids
w111 be recetved by the
Me1 gs County Board of

Beaver Eutern 60

~

62

Umweratly

M

!Jetvl! ~

New Ptuladelphta H

$5

Buffalo
Hudsun

Duver fl

3

·-------

5
6

7 _ _ _ _ __

a _ _ _ _ __
9 _ _ _ _ _ __

10

M

fN Y 1

w

Re

appointment January Mar

ch 992 226.&lt;, 992 2802, 992
2360 or 992 2639 H.slorles

WOMAN'S d1amond rmg
992 5786

for
sale
Pomeroy
Middleport L•braries

IRON AND BRASS BEDS

Pula bold nose In your life
Call fhe Meigs Counly

Old furniture, desks gold
r1ngs, lewetry, Sliver
dollars sterling, etc Wood
1ce boxes, 1ars antiques
etc complete households

at 992

t

LOCI&lt; SMITH
Serv1ce,
Master l&lt;eytng , Com

blnallons

Bonded

New Haven W

882 2079

followmg persons
were, on the dales shown,
~ppolnted to admrn1ster the
follow•ng
decedents•
estates pendmg in the
Meigs County Probate
Court
F1duc•ary s Name, Ad

Pomeroy, OH

Call

(21 23 (31 2 9 31c
,.
t
_,,,

...................... .
0 01 I

p

0 '

•••

'

'

!he eltglblllly Its! at 992
2156or992 2157

LADY or girl to !lYe In 992

2686
S18S 00 to S.SOO weeki-; dotng

matllno work
No ex
penence requ~red
AP

APPLES golden delicious
$J 75 per bushel
Other
vanetles at S41 00 per bushel

and up Fllzpalrlck Or
chard, 51 R1 689 Phone
669 3785

after

1- C,rct ol Thenlu
1- 111 MemCN',em

4 J- HOYU110r Mtnt
41 - Motlllt Hom••
lor Rtfll
44 - Atttrlmefltlor Rtnl

u-

pay 614 992 3283 after 10
am
VETERANS' IF YOU CAN
SPARE l9 DAYS A YEAR
IT COULD BE WORTH
OVER $1,500 TO YOU
PLUS FREE TUITION
ASSISTANCE TO ANY
WEST
VIRGINIA
COLLEGE OR AC
CREDITED BUSINESS
OR TRADE SCHOOL
CONTINUE
YOUR
RETIREMENT BENEFI
TS HELP YOUR COM
MUNITY IN TIMES OF
EMERGENCY
THE
NATIONAL
GUARD
NEEDS
YOUR EX
PERIENCE GOOD PAY
GOOD BENEFITS FOR
bETAILS CALL SSG
0 NEAL AT (30H75l9501

,,

I
I,

&amp; Cl "-IN''
11- VIUnlltCI To Do

eFINANClAL
11 -

14111ntu
Qslportunilr

n - Mon•v to LOIIn
U - Prottulon•t
S.nh:;11

.

e REAL ESTATE
Jl - Homll for hill
32- Moblltfiomll

Won! Ad Advorllslng
o..dlinta
2

SO~

'The Oa•IY Sent inel. 111

eMEACHANDlSE

Court

M Dtll'l"

12 """ Uhlrt~
lorMcmRY

Street.

tl - HoYIIhold G90'11
~l - CI TV Redio l!qu tpmtnl

Ohio &lt;.1769

n - AnlictUtt
'4 - Mist Mtrt:htndlll

12

u - lultctlnt lw••ll11
sr-Pttttor 11111

Pomeroy

Sttu•tions W•nted

TREE

TRIMMING and
9~9 2129 or 992

removal

eFARMSUPPLlES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

60«1

•t - F•r"'l~tVI''"'"'

Work In daytime helptng

62 - Wanttd to I\IY

742 2288

eTRANSPIIRTATION

HAVE

Vacancy

board,

laundry

1

7! - Autos tclr hie
n - v•n•&amp;4W D
74- MoltrC,(III
&amp;

Rutland

Pomeroy Middleport area

l4 - H•r &amp; Or•ln
u- Sttd a. lllertlluer

1s-

people

~lderty

12 - Trudulor Salt
U-l.•~IIIO(It

lorhle
JJ- Farr1u lor 1111
14 - luttriUI lvlleflrttt
U -- Lott &amp; Acr••••
l6- ltulltlilll Wanltl
l1 - •ullon

23 . _ _ _ _ _ __
24 _ _ _ _ _ __
25 _ _ _ _ _ __
26. _ _ _ _ _ __
27
28 . _ _ _ _ _ __
29 _ _ _ _ _ __
30 _ _ _ _ _ __
31 _ _ _ _ _ __
32 _ _ _ _ __

Car utlesman
Send
resume to Bax 179H c o

•s- t:qYIItr.,.l'lt ror Rfftl

hello TV

Room ,
tor

1he

elderly 992 6022

,Auto,,,,.

lnsuronce
IIUTOMOBILE
SURANCE been
13

Acuuorln

17- At.tlo Rt!Nir

IN
can•

celled?
Lost
your
operator' s license? Phone

eSERVICE$

;1&gt;92 21&lt;3

11 - Homtlm,rovtmtlltt
11-Piurtl,lllf I I ICiiVtllllf

I
1

Furnace repairs. electrical

work,

17-U-Ittry
1

plumbing,

home or

mobile

residence

992

' .5858

Rates and Other I nformatjon

35 _ _ _ _ _ _ 1
,:

I
I
I

!,I

1
BOM 729
I,1
, _______________________ J
I

.'" '",,....

c....
hillY
UIYI

J dtys
• dtrt

,"'
'"

Clllrlf
111

•

rllt

~ 3"1,.---~Homes for Sale

11'1 memory Ciirtl tl l nllllt\ tnd O.. ltutry 1 untt ,., wtrf tiM
WJinlmvm Celfl lrt ICIYtnet

I ThrH bedroom and balh

,

Motllt Htma 111ft lfMI Y~rd ttltt lrttCUtlltel on I y wlftl Cll" wlttl

~••r JS c.nt CMirtt t.r 1111 Ctrrylnt 101 NJ.tmttr Ill (trt

kiiiiMI

tt TM

~

i upstairs.

! one
1

four rooms and
half bath down Full

basement,

new

• : garage 992 714&lt;1

' -·

cupet

-

AfEW WIXKS, ~ow
Do Yoo Li~ It-It
ARRAN6fMfi'\T 7

Bedford TownshiP
and
Flatwoods Area
$5 00 Per Month
Weekly Ptckup

~CXJ Cl\N

SfAY

(4

Mower
!- Good HOipOillf Wa stier

1- Ucu

Mobtle Homes

1973 Crown
forHaven
Sale 14 x 65
three bed1ooms new car
pet 1971 Cameron 14 x 64
two bedrooms, new carpet

1972 Champ10n, 12 x 60 lwo
new carpet
12 x 60,
all electnc
12sx 61
bath &amp; lf:~

~~=~~~~====r==========1
JS
Lots &amp; Acreage
TRAILER LOT tor sale,
$4 000 oo 992 2571

1976
two
1971 Acreage One acre and one
two half of ground located bet
new ween old Rt 33 and new Rt
carpel
1970 PMC 33 fac tng the Me1gs
12 x 60, two bedrooms, new Fatrgrounds 54000 00 992
2571
carpet B x S Sales, Inc
2nd x V1and Street, Point
Pleasant WV Phone 675 SEVERAL cho•ce bu1ldtng
4424
lots Eastern D1str1ct Tup
pers Plams Chester water
1969 PMC 3 bedroom Owner will help fmance
992 5869
tra•ler 12X60 992 3954
Real Estate

1975 VlK lNG Mob ile Home

Hol1sing
Headqu;~rters

t~~~L~~:Lli
:216 E Second Stl"eet

Phone
I (614) 9?2 3325
NEAR TOWN -

and

&amp;

L Gene rill

HOBSTETTER REALTY
OFFICE 742 2003
George 5 Hobstetter Jr
Broker

41

Houses for Rent

For sale or rent 280 South

71h Slreel, Middleport five

Ap

$20 000 00
POMEROY - Large 2
story home W1fh wrap
around porch Full base
ment off slreel park.1 ng

Asking $26 500 00
NICE
STA~TE~

HOME g\l S forced
Has ni ce
garden or

2 bedrooms
atr furnace
space for a
trailer Sells

foronty$2150000
Cheryl Lemley. Assoc
Phone 742 3111
Velma N1cmslcy Assoc
Phone 741 3092

Wrap Into Fashion!

NICE

Prinlt•d Puttt•rn

61

Farm Equ1pment

trenchers

ts Phone 992 543a
Unfurnished one bedroom
apartment for rent Ren
ters ass1stance avatlable
for sen1or C1f1zens Contact
V1llage Manor Apartments

Hay &amp; Gram

64

Good hay targo,bales good

KEN SOLES

Platns 667 3405
Four room apartment for
rent 992 5908

245-9113

Two bedroom furntshed
apartment W1th uttlttJeS

7•J1_ _!:.A~u'.':lo~s~f~o»:.r;S~al~e~_

f1ce space for rent Uttlit•es
pa 1d S100 00 per month
Call Cleland Realty at 992

1980 TransAm Spectal
EdtfJOn Power wtndows
am fm radto 8 tra ck tape
Sell tor
Low mtleage
amount owed 949 2793

2259
Apartment
for
rent
utll1t1es pa1d One child ac
cepted
No pets
John
Sheets 3 and one half m1les
south of M•ddleport on
Route 7

KAUFPS
PLUMBING
AND
HEATING

1978 Ford F1esta front
wheel dnve 35 mpg ex
cell ent cond1t1on $3200 00

992 5170
1976

Plymoulh

Vaiore

949 2860

Four room apartment fur
ntshed or unfurn1shed
Phone 992 3092 or afler 5
phone 992 3762

1976
A
C Pont
p s1ac
stereo butlf
low mtleage

Pnx
pGrand
b
am
fm
tn C B very

45

1974 Chevrolet Maltbu
class1c
pawer steenng,
power brakes aar con
dlt tontng au1tomat•c No
rust A 1 cond ttlon $950 00

ROOFING

Free Estimates
Reasonable Pnces
Call Howard
949 2862

4 speed

S20 000
NEW LISTING - New

Construction - 5 room
home wilh over an acre
land 3 bedrooms utili
ty, attached garage
electric B B
heat.

diShwasher S37 500
NEW LISTING -

A

home to be proud of 1 5
roam home on aver 1
acre Fully insulilted,

Heney E Cleland Jr
991 6191
Dothe&amp; Roger Turner
991 S6fl
Jean Trussellt49 2660

OFFICE 9911259

73
t97B

Vans &amp; 4 W D
CJ5 Jeep, new
eKhaust good fires good
cond AskIng S3 800 992
2859 or 992 2912

Mealla.JHIISIE?

r.., ./In.... -!l.t.. -~
Wrap tnlo tbe cutvy llat1e1y ol
pnncess lines all the waw - sew
lhts m one or two coiOIS (even

mo1e sltmmtng) S1de gathe&lt;ed
smooth f•onl back
PJtnted Pattern

4~37

1'11111n Dopt

The Datly Sentmel
243 West 17 Sl Now lor\, NY
10011 Pnnt NAill, AOOIESS,
liP, SIZE, tnd SlllE NUMBER

pay cash or cert1fled check
for anttques and col1ec
ttbles or entire ~states
Nothing too large Also
guns. pocket watches and
com collect•ons Call 614

davs

2876 after 6 P m or 992

14':__ - _Molorcyctes
1977 Sporlster
$2 500 949 2293

767 3167 or 557 3411

XLCH

SPRING CARPET SALE
Cash 'n' Carry

We Slleamltned !he sewtng lo
save you ttme so you can save

moner' Send now lo1 NEW 1981
SPRING SUMMER PATTERN CAl
ALOG I 00 Sl)les flee patlern
couPOn ($2 Value) Calal~t. $1
134-14 quiU Qlllls
.$1 75
UJ.rllllictn llamt Qulllinll $1 75
130-Swt~ttn-Sim ll-5( $1 75
129-Quici/lny T11nsftrs $1 75

KITCHEN
CARPET

CARPET
ITH PADDIN

f:rom

From

Reg liS H

12.95 &amp; up

$]99 Sq

1

Installed

SHAG

Yd

Cash n Carry

Buy Now &amp; Save $2 ·$6 Per Yard
25 rolls carpet tn stock to ptek from
Regular backed carpet mstalled free.
With

Call742 3195
or 992 7680
28

can 992 J421

ltc

pad.

REESE
TRENCHING
SERVICE

Water Sewer E lectnc
Gas Lme Dttches
water L1ne Hook ups
sep11c Tanks
County Certified
Roush Lane
Cheshire Oh

Ph 367 7560

1

loans no monev down
Federal Hous1ng 3% on S25 ooo
5% on balance
ConventJonal Loans5%
down
Call lor Information

THE DABBLE SHOP
NOW OPEN
Mon Wed 10 00 9 00

992 7544

Tues Fn Sat

10 00 5 00

Closed Thursdays
Stop '" and see our I me
of plastercratt You can
emov maktnq your q1tts
and help frght 1nflaflon
Located next to Dale
Htll Ford Tractor m
Pomeroy

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes· ex·
tens1ve remodeling
• E lectnca 1 work
• Rooftng work
12 years
Expenence
Greg Roush
Ph. 992·7583

2 23 1 mo

THE
KOUNTRY

r-1!}

~~~~

'n~
, Sc•~~~~~~:d
I \
G•m~

.i:J.
!!, -,.

2 23 I mo

J L.BlOWN
INSULATION

NGS
CARPENTER
SERVICES"

) horl

S JH~CI• I 11~

RUTLAND FURNITURE

Ma•n St

742·2211

~~~----------~~~\

•

• G&lt;&gt; I Luso n l F or AI A ~J•'
IN~ &lt;&gt; J
"r lor -. le IGp qu.,lt y
• hoes DrilrHI ~~m e l Or

remodeling
-Roof1ng and gutter
work
-Concrete work
-Plumbing and

•
•
•
•

electrocatwork

n11

V.C. YOUNG II

992 6115 or 991 7ll4

ALL STEEL
81

Res1dent1al &amp; L1ght
Commerctal Elcctncal
S"oehes
Quality Products
Reasonable Pnces

'

College Rd
Syracuse

2 23 1 mo

Utility Buildings

.

&amp; Refrigeration

SEWING

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Repairs

makesl

Rt 3, BoM 54
Racme, Oh

Ph 614 8431591
6 15

tfc

L===========~

992 6190or949 2614
82

-:::=--=-=----

Ptumb1ng

Healtll!!__
WATER
WELLS
&amp;

pump sales and serv1ce
Tom

LeWIS

Drtlling

Seasonal dtscount on pum
ps 1 304 895 3802 or 1 304
895 3641

83

E)CcavatmL _

COMPLETE

sever

tn

stallatlon &amp; backhoe ser
vtce for Rac1ne Syracuse
sewer district Dozer work

If needed 949 2293
Dozer work Small JObs a

specially 742 2753

Electr1cat

Btl

S•res from 4JC' to 12K40

pentry work , tncludmg
paneling, cedmgs repaars
etc
Experienced
w th
references Phone 992 3941

Oh

Ph 992 3804

SMALL

992 6309 or 742

W1ll do carpenter work and
mtenor or exlertor patn
tmg Free esttmates CALL

JOYCE ELECTRICAL
SUPPLIES

S•res
"From
30Ml0"

Free
esl•mated
reasonable rales. SCOI

chquard
2211

n9 Good!.

ELECTRICAL
SUPPLIES

J

Farm BUl"I'dings

Home
Improvements

S ~ort

ln!iulatron
Storm Doors
Storm W.ndows
Replacement
Windows

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

(Free Est•mates)

bo~n ~ nd

1;\NOWHING Wor lt II k ~~ hUnllhQ ur
1 lih ~~~ hoot ~ Ats o Pro s n v qgll c.u•• l
Je•m l .1nd ID1111.,..!11hgr •
Wr • to g c• 'y • compl~l~ li ne of Bro wn

Vmyl &amp;
Alummum S1dmg

- Addonsand

Domestt c and commerctal,

Dnve A Little- Save A lot

lfc

rbJI

t&lt;mgsbury Rd
1 m1
west Co Rd 18
Pomeroy,Oh 45769
Domestic, Japanese &amp;
European
cars &amp;
Trucks
2 15 1 mo

WILL DO ALL kinds ol car

2 Rolls
Rubber Back

lnslalled

Let George Mtller check
your present electncal
system
~
Res1denttal
&amp; Commerc1al

S218lii~P~o~mie~r~oy~,~o~hii~ir~~~~~§~~=~

Rutland Furniture Carpet Shop

7.99 &amp; up

For all of your wtr
mg needs.

Gr een• Now Ope n

150 v a power steering ,
power brakes good l.res
$900 00 or besl offer 992

ATTENTION
(IM
PORTANT TO YOUI Wtll

1

992· 3795

•P~nng&amp;Ch•P~ng

1976 Ford van Econolme.

Ant1ques

·A• 'I I

MillER ELECTRIC
SERVICE

Body Repa~r Insurance
work ColliSIOn Repa1r
Expert parntmg, body
work, pmstrtplng &amp;
vmyl tops..
Free Esflmates

;::::======-==~====i=~===~====~ deep
Gene sstream
carpet e•tradton
Cleaning,
M1sses ~

dnt Ad1111s

REALTOR

wanted to Rent

53

."

Wtll con

1976 Chevy p1ckup truck .
w111 sell or 1rade for van or
equal value 992 7453

----

home wtth electric heat,
I1V1ng room
dtntng
rooms Over 1 acre land
10 mtnutes 1o town

good cond1tlon

o1l R•t u F or

stder trade S3 500 985 4395

work1ng couple destres
house to rent 1n Pomeroy
Gallipolis area RefereJt
ces 992 6090 eventngs

$37,500
SMALL PRICE - BIG
VALUE - 2 bedroom

3

24

992 3954

S11es 8 10 12 14 16 18 S11e
12 (bus! 34) lakes 2 718 1a1ds
45 tn ch fabnc
$2.00 for tKh pattttn Add SOC
for taeh pattttn tor ltr&gt;ltlns
11rm•l and lutndltn1 Stnd to

heat

949 2160

Trucks lor Sale

1971 FORD dump truck 1n

TRAILER spaces for rent
Southern Valley Mobile
Home Park, Cheshtre, Oh

4537

S ~tc c

VA

All types of roof work
new 0t repa1r gutters
and downspouts gutter
cleanmg and pamtmg
All work guaranteed

Pomeroy Large lots Call

72

•Jot o iW~I ~r hn O. I

992 7544

H. L WRITESEL

rally wheels

985 4124

Space for Rent

• Dl• pvo • ls
• 0 s hw • l hl't $

•R~ng u

r~=========~i======~~~~j

new pa!nltob 992 1715

FurntshedRooms

•O r~ us

..- Coon L•undr es
.... R ~ nla Proper! 115
..- Apt Hou•@ own~n
..- Mob If Hom' f&gt; • rk&gt;

CUNNINGHAM
&amp;.ASSOC.
Mortgage Bankers

12 Park St.
Middleport, Oh.
Ph. 992 6263
Anytime
3 2 1 mo

wagon, a1r cond t1ontng
etc very n1ce $1500 00
Glen Btssell at 949 2801 or

992 7479

SIZES 8-18

19 lfc

2

pa td $200 00 per monlh ot

COUNTRY MOBILE Home 1969 Camara 454
Park Roule 33 Norlh ol $1500 00 247 3861

I

ALL MAKES
•Wa •hen

H&amp;R BODY SHOP

Free Esttmates

plac e to load $1 00 per
bale Cole Stables Tuppers

at 992 7787

S13 000
NEW LISTING - Close

PARTS AND SIRVICE

Pomeory, Oh

DENNEY
CHAIN LINK
FENCE

5685

47

985-3561

:==========~==========~

Backhoe
atta chments
Days phone 614.:143 9751 tn
evenmgs phone 614 592

992 2055

older home needs some
help, but wtll be a good
bet for the future
located on a large ap
prox
240x l40 lot
3
bedrooms d•ntng room
large front porch and
workshop
ONLYt

Fer Fu15 e rw lu •

2 1 2 rna

118 hp) M422 112 hpl

Room and board for a
respe ctable wor~tng man

POMEROY, 0
992·2259
NEW LISTING - Han
dyman s spec•al th1s

Call Ken Young

reconditioned
trenchers I
R$65(65hp) R40(40hpiiV 30 and 1300 (30 h p I J 20

3 AND 4 RM furntshed ap

46

APPLIANCE SERVICE

H&amp;R BLOCK OFFICE LOCATION
618 E Matn

Apartment
for Rent

Keep Tl'l s Ad lor F\1 ure Rt le r enu

'

Payrolls, proftt and loss state1;11ents, all
federa 1and state forms.

5122

D1t chw1tch
44

10 7 lie

•BUSINESSES
•FARMS
•PARTNERSHIPS
•CORPORATIONS

PICKING up a ptano 10
your area
Take over
payments
Cali cred1t
manager collect as 1 592

Three room eff1c1ency
apartment $65 00 per week
or $250 00 per month wtth
all ut1l 1t1es pa1d 992 3092 or
after 5 phone 992 3762

Housing ,
Headquarters

$250 00 247

304 882 2405

992

Mon Fr1

2\1.3 1 ~ pd

BOOKKEEPING SERVICE

5212

Rac10e area

I 68J

TRI-COUNTY

Ravenswood bridge Call
after 5 p m al 1 304 273

Home

Hrs

9AM5l0PM
992·5682

Howard Sp1net p1ano
$500 00 Good cond1t1on 1

12x60 2 bedroom MObJle

Repa•~

Pomeroy

slug barrel
2575

proximately 34 acres Wtth
three bedroom modular
home m Portland, Oh10
area Nme mtles from the

-Auto and Truck
Repa.r
-Transmission

PH. 992-7119

992 2181

Flat top G1bson guttar w1th
electnc p•ckup and case for
$350 00 Rem1ngton Wmg
Master mOdel H70 pUmp
gun TC Tr ap wtth extra

Mob1le Homes
tor Rent

•

•S•dmg •1nsulat1on •Rooftng •Storm Wm·
dows • Concrete Work • SeptiC Systems
•Backhoe •Dump Truck- •Remodeling
•New
construction
•Guttenng
&amp;
Downspouts

MUSICal
Instruments

57

acres
mtnerals
old
house and two barns
ACREAGE - 42 acres
on Stiver R 1dge Road 2
ctsterns septtc svstem
barn and garag e Some
f1mber and spnng fed
pasture Good buy at

1 Only New 0•1 Slove Clo5eoul
sa ve
IISC 00
All ol the e~bove !ems 1n e•

Aller 5 phone 992 7143

42

ROGER HYSEll'S
GARAGE

$19 95

40625 St.

Two bedroom
mobile
home
completely fur
n1shed Deposit requ~red
Adults preferred 992 2749

Sells for $5S,OOO 00

Hulers

1;: Ma1n 51

House tor rent 4 rooms
and bath nice and clean
DepOSit requared 992 3090

1

CONSTRUCTION

Relrlger•lur

51!11 a tew new Kerosene

LNIDIIWMl

room and bath,
full
basement wrth double lot

5858

$21 500 00
Now only
$19 000 00
LOTS OF LAND - 188

II Hotpc11nl

""
POMEROY
&amp;JLANDMARK

REDUCED - 7 2 acres
w1 th 2 bedroom home 2
sept 1c systems and 2
water taps Located on
Hvsel l Run Road Was

45

In and convement Thts
home features a ntce 11v
109 room and d1ing
room basement wtth
gar age and 2 bedrooms

Rt 1 Stde H1ll Rd
Rutland, Of)

DAVID BRICKLES

celle11t cond•llon All are pnctd
to ie!l Jmmedialeh See u ~ lo

FOR SALE or renl

NOW IS THE TIME TO
CALL A REAL TOR TO
SELL YOUR PROPER
TY TRY 992 3l25 or
992 3176

$16.200

,(\va1lable

LED MORRIS
2 9 lie

1- 25 GE TV

RESTFUL

All Models

or 992 7443

Road 992 6283

bedrooms,
Cameron ,
bedrooms
Skylme ,
bedrooms

SO"- 20· JO'H. P.
HA 60"-25·60 H P .
60"-45·80 H.P.

Bags L1mtt Per Week)

Three bedroom ranch style
home S1tt1ng on one and one
half acres of ground One
m•le out on Hysell Run

32

ARD
AVA TORS

HART'S
TRASH HAULING

eiO AHEAD
AA'D tJNNCK
I'VE t:ro bED

\

I

PHONE 992 7802

ASSOCIATES

liiiCh word ovtr lht mlll lmllm II wordtlt ~unit aer word"',..,.
ACit rvnnlnt othtr """ cortttcwtlvt t11r1 will be chlr.- 1t liM !day

17 or 992 2528 after 5

CARt..# , 1-IDW ii-1AT
'loo ''/8 8t£N HERE

ms 992 7741

room balh and ullllty

~ Will do paneling ceiling
' floor tile, plumbing Free
( esllmalts Fred Miller al
I 992 63:18

Business Services

10 hp 36 Inch Phone 992

home on

bedroms utll•ty Also 2
garages Really n1 ce

IWonted to Do

; 11

•

two and one half acres
Prtvate sett1ng on St Rt 7
by Memory Gardens Ter

electric B B

U- l~~ot:IVilflftl

14-lltetrl&lt;ill
I lttfrlflrtlltn

u-o""''' Haullnt
k-M H ...air

ATTRACTIVE

by Larry Wright
R1d10g mower. 1980 Sears

992

Modern 3 bedroom
home has dtnmg w1th
sl1dmg glass door to
patto Garage, sfatnless
stnk 1 full baths and
large yard '" a ntce set
tlng

and do ltgh!

truck &amp; tools Exper•enced
only Steady work &amp; good

4t- Sputlor "'"'
• 7- Wenltd to It en!

Help w11 ntecl
111\/alltCI WilntM
tnlurlnu
lullneu Tr•lnlnt

blocks from schOQI
3d43

bookkeeping Matl resume
to 100 Un1on Avenue
Pomeroy Ohto .t5769

SIDING oppl!calors W1lh

•r-F•oonu

AUC:IIOII

modern kitchen
liv1no
room , dinmg room, office,
full basement, new heat
system wtth central a~r,
unattached garage, 2

NEW LISTING -

type, lite

Wanted lo Buy

T1red of penny p tnchmg??
Housewives arid mothers CHIP WOOD Poles max
change spare t1me Into US$ diameter 141
on largest
Flex ible hours excellent end $12 SOper lon Bundled
earnings free wardrobe stab
S10 SO per ton
Two evemngs a week For Oel1vered to Ohio Pallet
more lnforml!ltlon Cl!lll 992 Co, Rock Spnngs Rd ,
:W&lt;l or 669 &lt;.135
Pomeroy 992 2689

eRENTALS

bath

Ladv to work m general ln
surance
agency
Ex
per.ence preferred, but not
necessary Must be able to

Attracttve part time work
for
well
groomed
hQmemakers who Jove
pretty faShtons and want to
keep up on current styles
Average $10 00 per hour
plus free wardrobe for
those who qual•to;
Management opportumty
open For free lnfomatton
please phone 992 39411 or

7261

eANNOUNCEMENTS

2

acres
t n Rutland
TownshiP brtars brush
Leadmg Creek water
electnc and mtnerals

NY 11&lt;18

Lost
Blonde
cocker
span1e1 near the Five Pain
ts Flatwoods area
992

9

BEDROPM.

669 635

Circle Sales. P 0

SOX 224 0, RIChmond Hill,

Losl•nd Found

6

3

schools 3 bedrooms
stucco ctty water bath
natural gas furnace .;tnd
about one acre with
young trees
HANDYMAN - 2 level
Jots and old 7 room
house on land contract
Ctty water electnc and
natural gas
FAMILY HOME - 5
bedrooms new bath 2
furna ces
carpet1ng
pane11n g and many
other n 1ce new fhtngs
Large yard basement
and sun porch

PLY

To g1ve away to good home
adorable, cuddly puppies,
father IS a border collte,
mother 1S a medium size
757~

992 2571 or I 687 6429

In eKcellent con
underp10n1ng m
eluded $5500 00 247 39d2

and earn good money plus
some great gifts as a Sen
tlnel route earner Phone
us nght away and get on

Gtveaway

dog Call 992
5p m

Beauttful three bedroom
ranch brick home m Baum
Addltton, Pomeroy, Oh•o
Gas heat, central a1r Call

12&gt;&lt;65
d•t•on

as a young bus.ness person

Bollom Ohio, 230ol8

11- ltrtooltlnltructlon

11

Or

•
GET VALUABLE lra,mng

PO•ntment
Decedent s
Name and Address and EVANGELINE Chapter
Case Number are l•sted
Rummage sale al Mid
Lou•se Thompson 547
Mason1c Temple
Main 51 Mlddlep&lt;&gt;r! Oh10 dleporf
and Dorotha Neutzllng, March 3 • S 9 3
Pomeroy,
L10coln H•ll
Ohto Co Admtn1stratnces, Reduce safe and fast with
1 18 81
Olive l sa bella GoBese Tablets and E Vap
w,nebrenner, 693 South "'w ater pills at Nelson Drug
Second. Middleport Ohio, Store
23317
J B 0 Brien. 10011:1 Court
Street Pomeroy Oh10 Ad Apples, potl!ltoes, russet,
m1n1strator 2 9 81 Ronald
Harbour Rt 4 Pomeroy Kenneabec 18 cents per
pound, fresh country eggs,
Ohto23343
Blaine S Milhoan Rl 1 69 cents dozen Burson s
Markel, US 33, Norlh of
Long
Bottom
Oh10
Executor 2 10 81 Glennte Pomeroy
S Mtlhoan, R o Long
Paul E Kloes R 0
Mtnersvllle, Ohto, Ad
m 1n•strator.
2 17 81
Thomas C
Edwards
Mmersv111e, Ohto, 23346

KIT 'N' CARLYLE '"

Homes tor Sale

Real Es.t1te- General

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

I
I
I
I

415769

call992 7760

Va (304)

Factory outlet for
children s clothtno and the
Jeans exchange both
commg soon to the Water
melon Patch, New Haven,
W~st Vtrgmla

dress and Tille. Dale of Ap

31

Wrlle MD Miller Rt 4

The

,, _
n IJU-

Pomeroy, Oh1o 45769

MEIGS MUSEUM open by

PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
NOTICii OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY

eEMPLOYMENT
SliRVICES

Mall ThiS Coupon w1th Remtttance
The Datly Sentmel

General Store, Middleport
Oh 992 6370

22 nfll!

Public Nohce

&amp;

1
5-- 16 _
_-__
___

&amp; silver. class r.ngs, POcket
watches, chains, diamonds
&amp; so on Copper brass and
bl!ltteries, ant1que Items,
also do appraisals, com
plete auctioneer serv ice
Over JO years experience '"
business Will buy com
plefe estl!ltes Osby Martin

shot guns onlv Open sights

Humane Society

9- WantHtoBu)'

12
13 _ _ _ _ _ __
14

USED FURNITURE Gold

every Sal nigh! 6 30 p m
at their building In Bashan
Factory choke 12 guage

6260

, _ .,ilrd hit
•- Putlll&lt; Sill•

33. _ _ _ _ _ __

Too

Racine Volunteer Fire
Department sponsors a
shot gun 1!. rifle match

12123 &lt;312 2tc

•- LOIIilnCI Jlound

3. _ _ _ _ _ __

PlANO

2082

8 17 7J

S- HIIH' A.1

11 _ _ _ _ _ __

YOUR

watches Call Joe Clark at
992 2054 al Clark's Jewelry
Store, Pomeroy, OhtO &lt;.1769

or Wr.te Daily Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St., Pomero-,., 0., 45769

ta

Herilage 60 M•rtelta Cbrist

Kbkl f Pa I Pre11

U

67

stamped, 10K, 141&lt;, or 18K

gold Stiver coins pocket

PHONE 992-2156

2'-~---22 _ _ _ _ _ __

' - ---'--- -2

Fl!lctory choke

valuable to neglect, expert
tuning &amp; and repair Lane
daniels 742 2'151 or 992

DAVIDL WEIR
DIRECTOR

4- 0ivtilwty

17 _ _ _ _ _ _
18
19
20

7 30 p m
guns only

Wanted to Buy class nngs,
wedding bands, anyth1ng

WANT AD INFORMATION

1 Phone _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___

These cash rates
InClUde diSCOUnt

Athens, OH 594 4221

RACINE GUN SHOOT,
Racine Gun Club, every
Frtday nigh! starling at

Plans and spec tficattons
are on ftle tn the Depart
ment of Transportatton and
the offtce of the 01strict
D~uty D•rector
The Director reserves
the r~ght to reJect anv and
all btds

Address _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Prmt one word 10 each
space below Each m
ttlal or group of ftgures
counts as a wor d Count
name and add ress or
phone number tf used
You II get better results
1f you descnbe fully
g•ve pnce The sentinel
reserves the r1ght to
class•ty, edtt or re 1ect
any ad Your ad Will be
put 1n the proper
ctas tflcatton 1f vou tl
check lhe proper bo x
below

ches. class rings, wedd1ng
bands, diamonds Gold or
sliver Call J A Wamsley ,
Treasure Chest Coin Shop,

Conlacl Ed Burkel! Barber
Shop, Middleport

Ohio Revised Code

Name----------

S

Rcrular Stoa11oa
Cardinal 62, P)'rr'Uihuung VIti
N1chollJ ~ ~

sealed proposals will be
recetved at the offtce of the
Dtrector of the Oh1o Oepar
tment of Transportation
Columbus Oh10, until10 00
AM Ohio Standard Ttme
Tuesday March 17, 1981 ,
for 1rnprovennents•n
Adams Athens Brown
Gallta, Hockmg Jackson,
Lawrence Metgs, Morgan.
Noble, Scioto, Vmton and
Washangton Count1es Ohio
on vanous locations by ap
p trmg
retroflec t onzed
po vester compound for
center ltnes
The Ohto Department of
transporTalton
hereby
noltfies all b1dders that ''
Wtll afftrmat1vely insure
that tn any contract en
tered 1nto pursuant to th1s
adverttsement , m1nonty
bus1ness enterpr•ses Will be
afforded full opportun1t-; to
subm•f b1ds tn response to
t)lts mvltalton and w111 not

OLD COINS. pocket wal

coins, rings, jewelry, etc

"The date set tor corn
plettc,m of th1s work shall be
set forth In the btdd•ng
proposal '
Each btdder shall be
required to file with htS btd
a certified check or
cashiers check for an
amount equal to f1ve per
cent of his bid, but In no
event more than fifty
thousand dollars, or a bond
for ten per cent of h1s b1d,
payable to the Otrector
Bidders must apply, on
the proper forms. for
qualification at least ten
days pnor to the date set
for openrno btdS '" ac
cordance with Chepter S525

Rev

Announcements

1 PAY highest prices ,
possible lor gold and sliver

!he bid proposal '"

Wnte your own ad and order by mall With thiS
coupon Cancel your ad by phone w tt en you get
results Money not refundable

Wanted
For Sa le
Announcem ent
For Rent

57
Mechanlt-.burg 61 Triad 50
Middletown F'enwldc 70 Ge~XMetnwn 67
Millersport 75 Ucktng Hts. 116
New M~~iml lt2 Clinton-Ma~! l! 1~
Nt!wark Oath 5Z1 NortJunor ~I
N Umon 79 New Albany 8J
Pamt Val 71 Whiteoak 69
f\Jrtl Clay 62, l..athi,m Web!ter w
Richmond Dale 52 Adt!rm 38
Ripley 6(] &amp;t.avla 57
Southington 8S Jac k~on Milton 55
Sprll1g Cllll Qlu: 70 W ltlwrt y-&amp; lt.'ln 55
S11 1 .:1 bur~ 7.1 f,&lt;tr tw.ty 59
Tn \ lll:!.l(t' 5!.1 hm V Jllp S $II
WnHt~~\ lllt Ill
F raukhu M, u JC 5!l
W1nJhHm 7G Mltpl cwuud 61

Cleve

UNIT PRICE
CONTRACT
PMS OOOS ( 190)

Curb Inflation,
Pay Cash for
Classlfleds and
Savell I

.a

Web:ltcr 4:1
Buckeye N 64 Buckeye W 51
Canal Wmchester 89 OhiO lkuf 4a
Covington 54 Ansonw 43
Cu y aho~a HU 81
Black RM r ~2
Fort l.or.~~nue 75 Huu.stun 13
Greenvte\oli 48 Arcanwn H
J1ukson Center 74 S Chct rlt!sltm SE
Johnstown Northridge &amp;3 Centerburg
l.akeland 44 Jewett.SCJO 43
le~nca!lter F'lsber ~ Liberty Umon
IA!Iunan 70 Anm1 53
M.11.con Euter11 84 Cln Country Dtl y

Cleve

Contract Sales
Legal Copy
No 81 79

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

Cla11 A Toumameate

ConUnenl.al 69 Hilltop 53

MonroevJIIe :MI

Tinora 62 ottawa Hills 31
WaynesrttlltJ..Goshen 79 Hardin N

March 24 1981 , for a per.od
of TWO YEARS com
mencmg on the f~rst day of
Apr.l 1981 Awards of IN

CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbus, Oh1o,
February ll, 1981

3

Public Not1ce
be discnmlnated against
on the grounds of race,
color( or nattonal ongm tn
cons derat•on
for
an
award
M lnamum wage rates
for thtS pr1ect have been
predeterm•ned as required
by law and are set torth n

J - Ann~X~numenh

Hanulton Badin li3 MasOn 42
l..tckmg Val 5J Heath 37

Ado 11

depostts of Publtc Moneys
sub1ect to the control of
sa•d Board Wtll be made on

S.turd.ly 11 Resu!IA

Class AAA Toarnameoll
Centerville .W Ketlerml;! Alter 39
Cin Colenln :i6 Forest Park 36
Cm

Awards ol !he ACTIVE

I

Tournament results

9
Wonted lo Buy
WANTED TO BUY
GOLD,
SILVER
PLATINUM, STERLING
COINS, RlNGS,JEWELR
Y, MISC ITEMS AB
SOLUTE
MARKET
PRICE GUARANTED ED
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP, MIDDLEPORT,
OHI0992 3476

Small investment, large
returns, Sentinel Want Ads

Inflation increases
land owners' wealth
WASHINGTON (AP) - InflatiOn
has led to mcreased concentratton of
land and resources among weelthy
and high-mcome groups, a new
Agnculture Department report
says
"Those people wtth assets and
related mcome who are not depen·
dent on the mcome generated by the
land bemg purchased can btd more
successfully" than others, the report
says
In other words, a wealthy fanner
can b1d up the pnce of a farm,
knowmg he does not have to rely on
earnmgs from the addiltonalland to

March 2,

Monday, March 2,1911

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohto

MACHINE
servtce

992 228•

all

The

Fabnc Shop
Pomeroy
Authortzed Smger Sales
and Serv1ce We sharpen
SCISSOrS

ELWOOD
REPAIR

BOWERS
Sweepers

toasters, arons, all small
app l tances Lawn mower
Next to State Htghwav
Garage on Route 7 ..as

3825
8S

General Haulmg

J&amp;C Santtat1on Serv1ce
Trash p1ckup ava•lable m

VIllage ol Middleport
Phone 992 5016 or 992 7597
anyttme

�-----MEETS TONIGtrr
Meigs Salon 110, Eight·and Forty,
will meet this evening at 7:30p.m. at
the home of Eileen Searles, Middleport. Julia Hysell is the con-

Name Bike-a-thon leaders
William J. Kirwen, Director of
Development at St. Jude Children's
Research Hospital has announced
the following individuals in Meigs
county have agreed to chair the 1981
Bike-A-Thon in their communities.
Mrs. Sharon Duncan, Pomeroy ;
David Kevin Snodgrass, Racine ;
Mrs. Marlene Putnam, Reedsville ;
Mrs. Shelia Jones, Rutland, and
Mrs. Chris Jacks, Syracuse. They
will each run separate rides .this
spring to benefit the international

recognized hospital.
St. Jude Children's Research
Hospital , founded by entertainer
Danny Thomas is non-sectarian,
non-discriminatory, and provides
treatment free to all patients.
At St. Jude Children's Research
Hospital, doctors alld scientists are
probing the mysteries of
catastrophic illnesses of children.
Daily they seek not only better treat·
ment. but the cause, cure, and
ultimately the .- prevention of these

terrible killers.
Already, new findings and the ex·
port ,of that knowledge to doctors
and hospitals the world over have
brought it international acclaim.
Thanks to St. Jude Children's
Research Hospijal children once
considered hopeless now have a better chance to live.
Funds raised in the Bike-A-Thons
this spring will assure the continuation of the work at St. Jude
Children's Research Hospital.

Meigs County .~appenings.
Deputies check
minor accidents

FORCLOSURE ACfiON
A foreclosure suit was filed by
Jackson Production Credit Assn.,
Gallipolis, against Kenneth Wilt and
Doris Will, Minersville, et al.
·
Filing for divorce were Daniel R.
Roush, Portland, against Christine
Francis Roush, Portland; Cheryl A.
lmboderi, Rt. 1, Middleport, against
Ernest E. Imboden, II ,.Syracuse.
· Violet L. Neff, Middleport, filed
for alimony and seperation against
JackS. Neff, Middleport.

A single car accident was in·
vestigated by the Meigs County
Sheriff's Department Saturday afternoon.
According to the report filed Sun·
day, Gay Gibson,. 19, Pontomac,
Maryland, she was traveling north
on SR 143 in Colwnbia Township
when she met an oncoming vehicle
that was on the centerline. Gibson
GRANGE MEETING
slowed down and apparently swerMeigs County Pomona Grange
ved, lost control and went over an will meet March 6, at Bp.m. at the
embankment. Her vehicle came !o a the Rock Spriugs Grange Hall.
stop landing on its top.
Racine Grange will provide refreshThere was no contact between the ments. All members are urged to at·
two vehicles and no injuries were tend.
reported.
Roger Dent, Rl. I, Cheshire,
RU~GE,BAKESALE
reported that his wife's 1972 car was
A rummage and bake sale will be
taken from a parking lot at the Can- • held Thursday, March 5, beginning
dlelight Inn, SR. 7 below Hobson. at
at 9 a.m. in the Long Bottom Comapproximately 2:30a.m. Sunday.
Middleport Police located the
vehicle at 3: II a.m. on Mill Street in
Middleport. The incident is under investigation.
Bob Filch, DeWilts Run Road,
notified the sheriffs office that
Frank Jones
sometime .Saturday or early Sunday

PLAN BASEBALL SEASON
There will be a meeting of the
Minersville-Syracuse Baseball
Assn. at 7 p.m. Tuesday at the
Syracuse Fire Station. Anyone in-

ELBERFELD$ WAREHOUSE
GET READY FOR SPRING
WITH NEW

CARPET AND VINYL FLOOR COVERING
Bright, sparkling colors in rugged
hard-wearing carpet that will stand

munity Building sponsored by the
Long Bottom Community
Association.

up beautifully under hard use.
Dining Room and Kitchen Carpet,

PLANNING SESSION
A planning session will be held this
evening at 7 p.m. at Pomeroy
Elementary School for the annual
trip for the safety patrol. All parents
and interested persons are invited to
attend.

Bedroom, Hallway, Stairs and Living
Room &lt;.:arpet, Porch and Patio Turf.
Speedy Delivery

CARDS SHOWER ASKED
Birthday cards are requested for
Goldie Cremeans. a resident of the
Pomeroy Health Care Center, who
will be 82 years old on March 6. Her
address is 36759 Rock Springs Rd.,
.Pomeroy.

qnd Installation
Available

GYPSIES
Gypsies have supplied the
hac'kground music for much of
Hungarian history since the 15th
century. Gypsy melodies helped
recruit the army and for centuries
violinists led troops into battle.

Durable vinyl linoleum by Armstrong and Congoleum features
"No wax" beauty for a carefree
shine. Excellent stock of patterns in 12ft. and 9ft. widths.

Area deaths

morning an unknown vehicle ran onto his law causing slight damage .
VETEii.ANS MEMORIAL
Saturday Admissions-Cindy Priddy, Middleport; Debora Carl,
Belpre; Johr Dill, Middleport.
Saturday
Discharges·-Waid
Smith. Glen Hudson, Dorothy
Hysell, Hilah Jones, Joan Johnston,
Helen Holt, Betty McKnight.
Sunday
Admissions--Lillian
Schenkle, Pomeroy; Ruby Nickles,
New Haven; Mildred Nash, Middleport.
,
'
Sunday
Dis c harges--Mark
Michael, Wilbur Hanning.

Frank Leu Jones, 74, a former RL
1, Shade, Ohio resident, died in
Raulinson Hospital," Okwechobwee.
Fla ., Saturday afternoon.
He was born in Burlingham, Ohio,
son of the late Fred L. and Rhoda
William Jones. He attended Shade
High School. Mr. Jones was a retired
rural milk carrier. He also drive a
school bus for Shade High School
and was a farmer.
He was a member of the Shade
Grange. Woodman of Burlingham,
and served on the Bedford Twp.

school board in Meigs County.
He is survived by his wife, Victoria Winters Jones, of Rio Grande;
one daughter, Mrs. Roger {Helen )
Kasler, The Plains ; four sons:
FrankLee, Florida ; FredE .. iTed) .
Belpre; Larry , Parma; and Richard

ELBERFELDS WAREHOUSE ON MECHANIC ST.

I~~~~~~~~~~~::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

YOUR BUGGY
RUNS FOR
LESS
HERE!

lfl•"' to

We R-rv•

For Typographical

Ooen M-S, 9-7

Enors

5th &amp; Pearl,

1% LB.

20 CT.

TASTEE TREET

LANDMARK
WIENERS

BOLOGNA

'229
MORTON HOUSE SLICED MEATS

BEEF &amp; GRAVY
PORK &amp; GRAVY

12%

99e

SWEET

FLOUR
25 LB.

oz. SALISBURY STEAK

Vlaslc 32 oz.

HI-RISE

ind1vrduat Ret1remen t f\ r.COLmt s are sav1ngs cefldiCtc s. c~nd as
such, a subs tant1al 1n terest penattv ~~ requu ed tor Cilrly w!!h
drawat

PICKLES

$419

200 CT.

'139

9e

Bank
Member FDIC

Your Community Owned Bank

TURKEY
5 LB.
SUNFLOWER

CORN $119
MEAL

oz.

BOUNTY
DERMASAGE TOWELS
32

'139
2 LB.

SHEDOS'
SPREAD

79e
ROU

99e
RADISHES

39eHEAD

33e LB.

Middleport, Ohio, Tuesda

1S Cents

h 3 1981

r ..

Form-group to focus
on inadequate dams
PITTSBURGH {AP) - Predicting
a near-doubling of industrial traffic
on the Ohio River by the year 2000,
governors of four coal states called
for the refurbishing of the locks and
dams that are the key to the waterway.
The river and its larger tributaries
carry most of the region's coal and
other industrial goOds like sand,
gravel, crushed rock. chemicals and
gasoline.
"Because coal can make up for so
much of the present use of oil, we
simply have to have an adequate
river transpoltation system," said
West Virginia Gov. Jay Rockefeller.
Rockefeller was joined at a news
conference Monday by Govs. Dick
Thornburgh of Pennsylvania and
James Rhodes of Ohio. ,\rthur
Nicholson represented Gov. John
Brown of Kentucky.
The officials announced formation
of an agency to focus attention on
what they termed the "wholly
inadequate" state of the river's
locks aljd dams.
The board of the Association for
the 1 Development of Interstate
Navigability on the Allegheny,
Monongahela, and Ohio (DINAMO)
will be chaired by Pittsburgh
Pirates president Dan Galbreath .
According to figures prepared by

the fledgling . organization, com~
mercial transportation on the entire
Ohio River system is projected to in·
crease from its present level of 240
million tons per year to 400 million
tons per year by the beginning of the
next century.
The woeful state of the locks would
also cause problems to a proposed
coal liquefadion plant in northern
West Virginia. Within a decade, the
plant would use about 11 million tons
of coal annually, at least half of
which would move bY, barge.
" There are 500,000 jobs in this
four-state prea that are dependent
on those locks and dams. They are
integral to · the economy of this ·
region," said Rockefeller.
Galbreath. who is also on the
board of Pittsburgh's Chamber of
Commerce, said the main purpose of
DINAMO will be to inform the
government and the public of the
need for concerted adion on the
problem.
"'Basically we're concerned with
employment of the people. We
believe we can have new industry
and gel present to expand" if the
lock system is refurbished, Rhodes
said.
The officials pointe\! to the crumbling, corroded state of many of the
(Continued on page 14)

ToDAY

••• IN THE WO LD

Earthquake jolts San Francisco
SAN FRANCISCO - An earthquake jolted people awake throughout
the San Francisco Bay area at about2:45 a .m. PST today. ,T bere were
no inunediate reports of injuries.
•
State officials said they had no irrunedlate estimate of the quake's
intensity or how widely it was felt.

NEW ORLEANS - A million partygoers greeted Fat Tuesday today
wlth costwned revelry and plenty of spi_ril as the Mardi Gras festival
ended with the traditionally ornate parades that foreshadow an Ash
Wednesday hangover of headaches and littered streets.
Twenty-three of the fonner American hostages in Iran were in town
for the festivities and a French Quarter hotel balcony was reserved so
that nine ex-hostage Marines could watch today's parades above the
throng.

Rockefeller has tw regrets
NEW YORK - David Rockefeller, who helped persuade the Carter
administration to admit the shah of Iran into the United States for
medical treatnnent, says he has no regrets about his role.
The action by Rockefeller and former Secretary of State Henry
Kissinger has been cited as a reason for the seizure of American
hostages in Iran in November 1979.
The shah left the United States after his treatment, ultimately
traveling to Egypt, where he died.

Microwave radiation death cause
.

\

NEW YORK - A telephone company supervisor who worked with
'IV , relay equipment at the Empire State Building was killed by
prolonged exposbre to microwave radiation, the state Workers' Corn·
pensation Board has ruled.
The decision affinned the fi(st official finding that long-term ex·
posure to microwaves can cause death, laywers and a spokesman for
the bOard said.
1
Samuel Yannon of Staten Island, an employee of New York
Telephone Co., died of " abnormal, premature aging," according to
Dr. Milton Zaret, a radiation specialist and professor at New York
University Medical School who testified on behalf of Yannon's widow
at the compensaiion board hearing.

Man wins $2.5 million action
ClEVELAND - A Cuyahoga County Common pleas court jury has
granted Craig Kroon Van Diest of tleveland $2.5 million in his
negligence suit against the Cleveland Electric Illwninating Co.
Kroon Van Dies!, 25, is paralyzed from the waist down from an accident June 7, 1975. The jury of five women and three men returned its
finding after deliberating about 80 minutes Monday.
Facts in the case revealed that the plaintiff fell 30 feet from a
citizens band radio tower when an antenha he was helping to install at
a friend's house came into contact with a 4,600-volt power line owned
byCEI.

Weather
Increasing cloudlnes.s tonight. Lows in the low 30s. Rain likely Wed-.
nesday. Highs ln the low 50s. Chance of precipitation 10 percent tonight
and 80 percent Wednesday. Winds variable less than 10 mph tonight.

.

"'

,

WANT RIVERS IMPROVED - AI a press conference Monday
Governors of four states aDDounced the formation of an organization
called GINAMO to focus attention on repairing locks and dams on the UJ&gt;"
per Ohio River. From right to left they are: Dick Thornburgh of Pen-

-

osylvaola, Jay Rockefeller ol West Vlrglola,
board chlalrn~an
Dan Galbreath, Ohio governor James Rhodes and Arthur Nlebolaon
representing Kentucky governor John Brown. The conference was held at :
the Duquesne Club in Pittsburgh. I AP Laserphoto (See AP Wlrestory •.

Pomeroy Council grants pay increase

ClEVELAND - The winning number selected Monday night in the
Ohio Lottery's daily game "The Number" is 826.
The lottery reported earnings of $443,024 from the wagering on the
drawing. Lottery officials said sales prior to the drawing totaled
$970,335, and holders of winning tickets are entitled to share ~27 ,311.

LEnUCE

2 Sections, 14 Pages

.A Multimedia Inc . Newspa

Governors push locks' improvements

Ohio winning lottery number

Farmers
,

Pomeroy

23 ex-hostages attend Mardi Gras

Urnlt Qu,.tlfl••

Plan now for · your re•
ttrement. Open an
Individual Retirement
Account at the
Farmers Bank.

Voi.29,No. 222
Copyrighted 1981

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

of Florida and 13 grandchildren. One
sister apd two brothers preceded ~
him in death.
Funeral services will be held 1
p.m. Tuesday in the Jagers and Sons
Funeral Home, Athens, with Rev.
David Holdren officiating.
Burial will be in Burlingham
Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m . Monday.

en tine

at

e

having sons and daughters playing
this year are asked to be present. If
enough interested parents do not at·
tend there wiU not be a baseball

~~tin~·b~ut~in~g~h~o~ste~ss~.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;o;;~te~r~es~ted~l~·n~~~~a~n~d~a~ll~pa;;re~n~ts;;~pr~o;gr;a~m~this;·;y~e~a~r;.;;;;;;;;;;;;~

•

•

Monda , March 2,1981

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page--12-The DailY Sentinel

Exleoded Ohio Foreeaat- Thursday through Saturday: A chance of
rain or snow Thursday and again Saturday. Fair Friday. Highs In the
~- Lows from the mld-208 to mld-3011.
.

.

.

employes.
Given more than a five .percent in·
crease were Don Ward, who was
named assistant street superintendent and cemetery supervisor,
Reed Will and Wes Manley. Ward
was increased from $3.25 and hour to
$4; Will from $4.28 to $5, and Manley
from $3.57 to $4.

By KATIE CROW
A five percent increase in wages
was granted all employes of
Pomeroy Village, e.cept patrolmen,
during a meeting of Pomeroy Coun·
cil Monday night.
Granted· raises were dispatchers,
meter man, secretary, street.
ce~etery and water department

The pay increases will cost the
village an additional $7,792.80. Betty
Baronick said council would have
liked to have brought everyone up to
the minimum wage, but the village
is not in any financial position to do
so at the present time.
In other matters, council by a 5-1
vote agreed to borrow $25,000 to ad-

vance construction on the senior
high building. Rod Karr voted no.
The former senior high school
building was given to the village for
the swn of $1 by the Meigs Local
Board of Education. Plans are to
convert the structure into a city
building for the village.
(Continued on page 14)

.

50,000.miners plan -protest march
spokesman, said artiners from West
Virginia nd nine other states were
planning the trip to Washington,
D.C., for a noon rally.
Several union . leaders are
scheduled to speak during Monday's
rally, Callen said in a telephone interview from his Washington office.
Congressional leaders and some
governors have been invited to the
rally. he said.
The miners plan to march to the
White House after the rally. Callen

By The Associated Press
Some 50,000 coal miners from 10
states are planning to take part in a
planned United Mine Workers
protest over federal budget cuts af·
feeling the black lung program, ac·
C(lrding to officials.
Union President Sam Church
asked coal miners to join in a tw~
day walkout on March 9-10 to honor
the miners who have been forced
from their jobs because of the cri(&gt;"
piing disease.
Eldon Callen, the union's chief

said. Plans for Tuesday were ncX
firm, he said.
Miners in West Virginia, Ohio,
Pennsylvania, Virginia, Alabama,
Mississippi, Colorado, Montana,
Wyoming and Utah were planning to
travel to the Capitol, Callen said.
Black lung is a respiratory dilaease
caused by frequent inhalation of coal
dust.
Joe Davidson, an International
Executive Board member from
Beckley, .... Va.-hased District 29,

ODOT .will .
close 124
•

for repairs
The Ohio Department of Transportation announces that State
Route 124 in Athens County will be
closed for repair on Wednesday and
Thursday, this week, between 8 a .m.
and3p.m.
The section of road to be closed is
located east of Hockingport and west
of the Washington County line. All
traffic between Hockingport and,Little Hocking is requested to use the
detour State Route 1~ and .u. S.
Route SO.

•

APPROVE FUNDING
State Senator Oakley C. Collins
today aDDounc-'1 controlling board
approval of fundi to Improve the
water supply system In Coolville,
Athens County.
lbe loan funds, totaUng $15,500,
will be used to llelp pay for the
preparation of a preliminary plan
for additions to the existing sy~tem.
The monies come from the
Emergency VIllage Capital Improvement Rolllry Fund eslabllshed
In the.pas1111ge of last year's budget.
The village of Coolville will repay
thla Interest free loan to the slllle In
leu lhlla lZ years, Sen. Collins
reports.
PROBETIIEFI"
The Meigs County Sheriff's Department is investigalll'll! a breaking
and entering of Hawk's Pennzoll
sometitne alter midnight.
Entry was gained through a rear
l(l'indow. Taken were aeveral cartons
ol cigarettes, Sllllll IDlOIIIIt ol
l: ebanleandac:~lftll; I

"
I

CANCER DRIV£ - n - three yOilJIIIfen ltave
raised over $11'7 for tile Melga Cluapter of the American
Cancer Society In the acbool"send a moose to college"
program. Monday altemooo, their efforts were rewardt.'l1 by Jeanette Lawrence, Racine, In charge of the
program for the SGutllern LOcal School Dlllrfct. Mn.
Ulwreace preaei!IMl tile trio wltb
IIIII cerllfkalel lor bela&amp; •
Ia tbe dlatrlet. ......... from

••ldrtl

said he expects to have "six to
eight" buses from his southern West
Virginia district heading to the
memorial.
Arrangements were being worked
out to have buses stop at variowi
points in District 29 on Monday for
miners who want to participate ln
the protest, Davidson said.
Fairmont, W.Va. -based Dll&amp;rict 31
will have about "400" miners at the
demonstration, district preeidert
Burdette Crowe said.

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