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Page-16~ The

Pomeroy

Daily Sentinel

Bugliosi says cult violence still present
ByK.EJVINKELLY
, ~e potenbal for .cults a~d_.their
"'"':e.rs t~;onurut .vt.olence IS v~.'Y
d•tlnltely a posstbthty, according
to the man who helped prosecute
cult leader Charles Manson some 10
years ago.
Vincent Bugliosi, the Los Angeles
prosecuting attorney who gained
national attention during Manson's
sensational trial, shared some
thoughts on the i~ue with a small
audience at Rio Grande College
Monday nighL
" The kids are still out there, under
the guidance of gurus, although
most of those are scoundrels out for
money," Bugliosi noted.
"But the potential is there." he

continued. "I think whal happened
with Manson a~d Jim Jones (of the
ill-fated People s Temple) are reaffinnations of what can happen when
people turn their minds over to a
man or a group-the madness is still
there."
The bulk of Bugliosi's talk was
given over tQ the details of Manson
and his followers, a conununal-type
group known as "the family" and
the severall969 murders they were
later convicted for . One of the victims was actreSS Sharon Tate.
Bugliosi said there were several
factors-which made the more than 30
members of his group follow Manson, including drugs, sex, national
unrest and rebellion against the

(Continued from page I)
company plans handled by private
insurers.
Until now, the pension issue, and
not the production schedules, had
been considered the chief obstacle to
a settlement.
· Gaston said the union negotiators

Pomeroy•••
. (Continued from page 1)
It was suggested that the village
go to a smaller vehicle, however.
Harry Lyons, police chief, suggestefl
the purchase of a similiar tYI&gt;e car
as the present vehicle . He said he
would not recommend a smaller
vehicle.
Anderson also asked council if it
wished to hire Harry Evans, financial advisor, on a full-time or part
time basis or merely as a consultant.
Mrs. Walton will contact Evans on
the cost of each. Whatever action
council takes will be effective April
I.

establishment, but he placed the problems,Bugliosisaid.
at the time. This is a far cry from and is stjll in prison in California.
major e~P.ha~is o~ what he termed
With an inherent ability to Manson, riding down a street, His cchorts in crime were also conM~riSOn s evil gem~.
.
donunate people, aided by drugs and picking victims at random and or- victed, but live in much better conHe had the abthty to discern an isolated lifestyle-not unlike the dering their murders in the most ditions now in prison than they did at
the infamous Spalm ranch, where
what people saw in him, and con- · factors which led to the !978 People's brutal way."
stantly wear many masks to be what Temple massacre in Guyana- ManManson, 46, was convicted in 1!171 the family hung out.
they saw," he noted.
son had almost full control over the
Manson, a Cincinnati native who majority of his followers.
.------------------------once spent some prison time in
During a question and answer
Chillicothe Correctio~al Institute, session, Bugliosi compared the
SHOP
passed himself off to his followers as enigmatic People's Temple leader,
the. second commg .or Jesus Jim Jones, to Manson, ·and noted
ChriSt-although tn reahty he was there were simiiarities but not
FOR THE BEST DEALS IN THE TRI STATF AREA
an "evil, very sophisticated con many.
'
man.
" He had the chariSma of a Charles
"I'm not sure I have the full an- Manson, " he said. " But Jones
swer--'I have a partial answer-to lacked the classic eviln~ss of ManMonday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday &amp; Saturday
the question, how did this little guy son. When he ordered to kill, his or'
8:30 to S: 00, ~hursday ti1112 noon
who wouldn't step on a flower, yet ders were given on tape, and it was
OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT ONLY
thought nothing of collUTlitting ran- obvious he was completely unhinged
dom murder, be able to control these
·~ason, w. Va, .
HERMAN GRATE
773-5592
people?" Bugliosi asked.
'·As far as !.could detennine, they
•
actually
thought
he
was
Christ,"
he
Two
suits
for
money
have
been
~========================:.
'd
filed in Meigs County Common Pleas I
sal .
Many of Manson's "family" were Court by Diamond Savings and
not the stereotypical flower children Loan, former Athens County
of the late 1960s, the prosecutor con- Savings and Loan.
tinued, but runaways from middleOne suit in the amount of $22,074.43
class, typically American homes was filed against Philip D. Moxley,
who fell under Manson's and Frances M. Moxley, Pomeroy
spell-something Bugliosi likened to and George Collins as treasurer and
the devotion shown to Adolf Hitler by another in the amount of $24,769.04
hisfollowers.
against James D. McDougal,
Rog. Rot. 12.31
Hitler was one of Manson's Pomeroy, Paul Simon, Pomeroy,
Rog . Rot 11.51
DOUBLE ACTION
political heroes-"a very tuned-in and George Collins as treasurer.
,._
....
CALOONITI
guy''-while the cult leader also
Marriages dissolved were Gary
~
DISHWASHER
used the music of the Beatles as Edwin Snouffer, and Vicki Sue
DITIAOINT
prophecy a racial war was the only Snouffer: Bonnie Freeman and
solution to the world's present Gary Freeman: Mi~e Capehart and
· ·:.··~.~ .~ ··
40
Patricia A. Capehart.

MASON FURNITURE ··

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

: Area Death
I

\en~dia

!
I

J\'1. Knight

Venedia M. Knight, 59, Rt. 1, Por!land, died Monday at Holzer
Medical Center.
Mrs. Knight was preceded in
death by her parents, Joseph and
Dessie Stewart Young and her
husband, Otis Knight.
She is survived by two daughters,
Unda Watson and Debi Bradford
both of Portland: five brothers,
George Young , Ashley, Ohio ; James
Young, Apple Grove; Tom Young,
Cheshire; Dallas Young,
Washington C.. H. , and Darrell
Young, Port Williams, Ohio, and
several nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be held
Thursday at 10 a.m. at the Bald
Knobs Church with the Rev. James
Cundiff officiating. Burial will be in
Letart Falls Cemetery. Friends may
call at Ewing Funeral home after 7
p.m. this evening.

BABY
r-WITONIS

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LIQUID
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DENTURE CLEANSER
TABLITS

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j

SHADES

Bill Young asked if bids for winterization of the former Pomeroy
Senior High have been advertised.
Mayor Andrews said bids were to
Visit Elberfelds Home Furnishings
be published March 14, however,
Department on the 1st Floor for A Comnothing has materalized as yet.
Larry Wchrung, councilman.
plete Selection of Window Shades for
reported he had been notified by
Your Home or Office. All Sizesand the
Paul Gerard, president of the Meigs
DEPUTIES
~ROBE
TiiEFT
County Jaycees. that the Jaycess
Best Colors.
The Meigs Cowity Sheriff's Deparare dropping proposed plans to hold
a carnival on the upper parking lot bnent is inves,tigating the theft of a
Ask to See Our Room Darkening Shades
log chain, battery charge r, hedge
during the Big Bend Regatta .
and the New Scalloped Styles.
Wehrung noted · that Gerard had trimmer. gasoline and a five pound
roll
of
cheese
from
the
Chester
Fire
received complaints from several of
We Will Cut Window Shades to Your
the merchants voicing thei r Department.
Measure, Free of Charge.
The incident occurred sometime
dissatisfaction in using the lot for the
between
Thursday
and
:'Ytondal'
carnival. The carnival will be held
THIS IS THE FINAL WEEK OF OUR
·
behind the junior high building as in night.
WALLPAPER SALE. SAVE 20% ON
the past.
CLARIFICATION
All WALLPAPER.
Council voted :;.1 not to give the
Donald
Roush,
Syracuse,
who
for·
Jaycess permission to sell beer bv
SALE END
AT MAR. 21
the cup on the parking lot. Bill feit ed $350 in the court of Pomeroy
Mayor Clarence Andrews recently
Young abstained.
on
a DWI charge, is not Donald
Betty Baronick, council woman,
Roush,
Snowball Hill , Syracuse.
said complaints are still being
received on the vandalism occurring r-----------__j--------------------------1
at the mini-park . .
Young suggested that the park be
properly lighted and patroled to cut
down on the vandalism.
Council voted to close the park at
dark. It was suggested that the park
was to be palroled and anyone found
loitering be asked to leave. It was indicated that an ordinance conl.i'olling loitering at the park will be
drawn up.
Harold Brown, councilman, asked
- - ....---FRIDAY SPECIAL--]Q~
about the progress on the cleaning of
village streets. Mayor Andrews
Salad Bar, Ham Steak,
reported new brooms had arrived
and cleaning will begin soon. It was
Vegetable, Potato, Soft Drink,
also reported that the sewers in the
village had been cleaned.
Plus Tax
Meeting with council was Phil
Harrison, president of the Little
League Association, Pomeroy Youth
Club, who sought financial support.
Council approved a $000 donation
for the program.
The mayor's report, showing
receipts in the amount of $!, 706, was
approved.
'
The police department for the past .
two weeks made 2li arrests, received
214 calls and drove 2,468 miles.
Council went on record commending those merchants who have
, cleaned the street in from of their
business establishments.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

,,,$129
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$149

t .... in
pack

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6-ol.

Entertainment
rfriday &amp; Saturday

Rag . .Ret $1 .12

SOFT
&amp;DRY

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6·01

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REG. RET . 76'

BAYER
ASPIRIN
FOR CHILDREN

iJ

2 Sections, 14 Pages

ri hied 1981

AE.G. RET . SIV ,I$

FLUORIGARD
DENTAL
RINSE
20'

GEORGIE
1400 WATT TURBO

ToDAY

•• ~I.N· THEW

Carson blasts Enquirer too
LOS ANGELES ~ Just hours after. entertainer Carol Burnett took
the witness stand to charge that a National Enquirer item about her
was "a pack oflies," comedian Jolmny Carson denounced an Enquirer
article about him as "scurrilous" and said the publication "stinks."
"I'm going to call the National Enquirer and the people who wrote
this 'liars,"' Carson said during Tuesday night's broadcast of the
"Tonight Show." He was referring to a cover story in the Enquirer
that said his third marriage was breaking up.

Alleged rape victim dies
CINCINNATI - Children's Hospital has reported that a J().year-old
boy who told police he was raped March 1 by a man wearing a white
medical coat has died of chronic lung disease.
The boy. who was considered a terminal patient when he said he was
sexually assaulted, died Monday afternoon, a spokesman said.
A 24-year-old University of Cincinnati medical student from Park ·
Hills, Ky., ls free on $2li,OOO bond in connection with the incident.

Sheriff's deputies suddenly sick
CHARDON, Ohio - Employees of the Geauga County Sheriff's
Department have been calling in sick, apparently protesting drastic
slashes in funding and personnel imposed by the county's commissioners, Sheriff James Todd said .
The sickout began Tuesday and includes the 16 deputies and eight
other employees, Tddd said.
Conunissloners voted Monday night to cut $38,000 from the departrnent's I981 budget and lay off 17 employes effective March 31.

Winning Ohio lottery number
CLEVELAND - The winning nwnber selected Tuesday night in the
Ohio Lottery 's daily game "The Nwnber" is 322.
The reported earnings of $472,258 from the wagering on the drawing.
Lottery officials said sales prior to the drawing totaled $1.009,497.00,
and h!&gt;lders of winning tickets are entitled to share ~7.239.00.

Weather
Cloudy tonight and Thursday with a chance of.snow flurries . Lows
tonight in the mid-20s. Highs Thursday J&gt;40. Chance of precipitation
30 percent tonight and Thursday. Winds northeasterly !().!5 mph
tonight.
Extended Ohio ForecastFriday through Sunday:
A chance of snow flurries Friday and Saturday and over the east
half Sunday, Highs In the low to mld-308 Friday and Saturday and In
the 30s north to low 40s south Sunday. Lows at night In the m1d-teeos to
low ZGs.

REAGAN GOES TO HILL - President Ronald ~agan went to
Capitol Hlll Tuesday seeking support for his bUdget cuts. From left are
House Minority Leader Robert H. Michel of illinois; President Reagan;

...,$149

$11 99

More intense wrangling was anticipated today with consideration of
cut.s in a variety of social service
payments - food stamps, Medicare,
Medicaid and Social Security - and
other popular programs surh as
housing assistance and urban mass
transportation payments.

WASHINGTON !AP) - With a
sympathetic Republican majority
providing the muscle, President
Reagan 's ·proposals for slashing
billions of dollars in fl&gt;deral spending are rolling through the Senale
Budget Conunittee with only minor
changes.

representative.
The sheriff also reported that he
received a check from Gallia County
fur housing prisoners. He said the
check would be placed into the county's general fund. Proffitt requested
it be certified and appropriated back
into his budget.
In other activities, Phil Roberts,
county engineer, made a verbal
reconunendation that the board accept Happy Hollow Raod (T-174N) in
Rutland Township and Syracuse
Flood Road (T-123) in Sutton Township as part of the county highway
system.
Roberts will submit a formal writ-

Meigs County sheriff's deputies
have agreed to become unionized .
This was the report given to the
Meigs County Board of Commissioners Tuesday by Sheriff
James J. Proffitt.
Proffitt also saidhe would be
meeting today with a union

Miners at the Southern Ohio Coal
Co. Raccoon Mine Nwnber 3 in Vinton County walked off their jobs
today to show their dissatisfaction
with the progress of contract
negotiations ..
The job action by 45o miners shortly after midnight at the Vinton
County mine was unauthorized,
UMW Local 1~7 Secretary Larry
Birchfield said. He said a meeting
would be held today with the miners
to urge them to return to their jobs.
Meanwhile, leaders of the United
Mine Workers District 6 in Ohio and
northern .West Virginia said
Tuesday that a strike seetrn
inevitable and that their members
will support a walkout on March 27
to press demands on three key
issues.
District 6 President Ed Bell said
today he knew of no other wildcat
walkouts within the district. point,"
said John Prout, District 6 vice
president, in a telephone interview
Tuesday night from district
headquarters in Dllles Bottom.
"They might settle the contract next
week, but because they've missed a
deadline, there will be a strike. We
just can't predict I1ow long it · wlll

CO ~IUJI!EII

!!EIA lt

Wlf!-1 COUf' O I.

OLD SPICI

MI~{·~ADS fi LOTiON
"

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-·~·~··~··~~~~~~-REG . flf.T 11 32

RENUZIT "'
SPRAy · cocoa·
AIR FRESHENER

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TIME RELEASE
CAPSULE
REDUCING PLAN

UI Y POWDI- 10 OH

. . 'I"

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

COCOA BUTTER

PERMATHENE-12

. .lNTI-PUSPIR.t.NT

Pomeroy, Oh.

ROYAL

REO . AET . 14 .41

RET U 12

RI.IIT
GUAIID
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But during Tuesday's 11-hour
work session, the panel's
Republican majority was able to
overcome any Democratic ~
position and the $12.5 billion in approved cuts exceeded the adtninistration's reconunendations in
some cases.

Sen. Pete V. Domenici, R-N.M.,
the conunittee chainnan, said
Congress is "going to have to make
all .the cuts the president proposed
($48.6 billion) and then some" to
meet his goal of balancing the
federal budget by 1984.
(Continued on page 14)

Meigs County sheriff's deputies join union

AEG RET . S3 JO

llf(,

Senate Majority Leader Howard Baker, Jr., of Te~essee; and Senator
Pete V. Domenicl, R-N. M., chairman of the Senate Budget Commltlee.
(AP Laserphoto). (See AP AAA wire story I.

Reagan's proposals roll through committee

HAIR DRYER
ll 00

OFF

THE MEIGS INN

IS Cents

A Multimedia Inc . Newspa er

ten reconunendation to be acted Township residents, requested a
upon by the commissioners at the bridge on T-37 near their home be
repaired.
next weekly meeting.
The commissioners said they
The board received a petition from
the congregation of Mt. Union Chur- would accompany the engineer to inch to have county road 10 from coun- spect the condition of the bridge.
Bill Lyons, Mary Annn Wymer
ty road 17 to the church blacktoped.
Commissioners forwarded the and Naoma Brinker, CETA,
representative , discussed the
peti,ion to the county engineer.
Commissioners and county payment of unemployment comengineer Roberts signed an pensation benefits for CETA em·
agreement with Colwnbia Gas ployes.
Attending were Henry Wells,
Corp., granting permission for the
gas company to install a two inch president, Richard Jones and Dave
gas pipeline under and across coun- Koblentz, cmrunissioners, Mary
Hobstetter, clerk and Martha Cham·
ty road 14 in Bedford Township.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Green, Salem bers.

Raccoon mine hit by walkout

REG RET SUJ

~EG

A new coal strike probably would
have much Jess imjlact on the
economy than the protracted
walkout of the winter of 19'17-78,
which precipitated mass layoffs and
some power cutbacks in the coaldependent Midwest.
Electric utilities, major purchasers of union-mined coal, are
believed to have a 90-day stockpile,
and the winter heating season ill .
nearing its end.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesda , March 18,1981

(] •:: ~.~' $279

RE G REI "

negotiators staying in Washington
would contact industry representatives to see if there was any
change in their position. The BCOA's
three-man negotating team,
however, went home.
There was no indication the
Reagan administration would in·
tercede in the bargaining, and UMW
officials maintained they didri 'I
want any involvement by the government.

le

en tine

at

FRAMES

----------~~~~~--_.-........,_
St 19

I

Co

Callen S8id there could be no extension of the March 'l:T contract
deadlioe but that a settlement
reached before then would mean a
short-lived strike.
Callen said there remained an
"outside chance" that the two sides
coWd return to the bargaining table,
and Church said a key core of union

... 43C

BEVERAGES
SERVED

)

Vo1.29,No. 233

miners.

•

e

Inevit

ratification by the 3~member
bargaining council and rank-and-file

tant to say what went wrong, union
negotiator Paul Gaston of Kentucky
said industry-sought changes in
work rules were the hangup.
The two sides also were far apart
on wages and benefits and industry
propo!181B for overhauling the pension plan.
UMW spokesman ,Eldon C8llen
said a strike at 12:01 a.m. EST on
March 'l1 is unavoidable, given ' the
union 's 10-day process for

•

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~EG .

I

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,.~1'2

Phone 992-3629

Reo . Ret. $4,12
or PO\NDEREO

Ill

RAGU
SPAGHITTI
SAUCI
PLAIN or WITI-1 MEA f

LEGAL NOTICE

ALL LEGAL

Rei. S 1.39

EA~ SP~ AY

CRANBIRRY
JUICI
COCKTAIL

MilANO
ILL
MEDICATED DISPOUBLE
DOUCHE

WEEKEND AT MEIGS INN

The Public Utilities Com·
mission of Ohio ha s set
for public hearing Case
No . 8H·E L- EFC , to
review !he fuel procure·
men! practices and poll ·
cies ol The Ohio Power
Company . the operation
of its Electric Fuel Com ponenl Clause, and related
matters . This hearing is
scheduled to begin at
t :00 p.m. on Monday .
March 23 . 1981 . at the
City Counc11 Chambers .
218 Cleveland Ave . s.w.
Canton. Ohio 44702 .
All interested pa rties will
be given an opportunity
to be heard·. Further 1ntor·
mation may be obtained
by contacting the Com·
mission .
THE PUBLIC UTILI TIES
CDMMISSION OF OHI O
By Dav1d M. Pol k.
Secretary

''lks Tuesday in the quest for their
· irst strike-free settlement since
!964.
UMW Presidert Sam Church
declared that the indll8try representatives were not interested in goodfaith bargaining, and he sent members of the uilion's bargaining council home. The BCOA countered that
it was willing to return to the
bargaining table for "serioll8" talks.
Although both sides were reluc-

k

WlS See money

also feel the industry's wage-andbenefits package •· is inadequate at
this time" but predicted that issue
would not be dealt with until there is
"some movement" on the issue of
production schedules.
"

WASHINGTON (AP) - A national
coal strlk~ appears inevitabl :
foUowing collapse of ccntract talks
between the induatry and the United
Mine Workers. But it may be much
shorter and less disruptive than the
record 111-ilay walkout three years
ago.
Negotiators for the 160,000member Wlion and the Bitwninous
Coal Operators Association, the indll8try bargaining agent, broke off

'MASON FURNITURE

S .

Talks reach

~oal strike sai

Tuesday. March 17,1911

Middleport, Ohio

-

MIIHliii'OI!I

OttiO

A NEW BROOM SWEEPS CLEAN- Roy Brunty,
an employee of the Pomeroy Street Department, tries
out our of tlw new brooms purchased by Pomeroy

______,,

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District 6 includes 15,000 miners in
42 h&gt;eals Ohio and northern West
Virginia. About 5,000 of those members are laid off, many because of
ft!deral air re~ulations l&gt;reventing

VIllage Council. The streets In the vlllage will be
rleaned soon by street employes. Following the
sweeping of the streets eounrll has htdkated that the
strcrL~ wlll be hosed down.
'

'

the burning of high sulfur coal.
Contract talks between the UMW
bargaining co uncil and the
Bituminous Coal Operators
Association broke down Tuesday ,
and UMW President Sam Church
sent the union's negotiators home .
The current pact for the nation's
160,000 United Mine Workers expires
March 'l:T. UMW officials had hoped
to end talks by early Tuesday to
allow 10 days for the ratification
process.
That deadline died, however, as
talks stalled over issues such as
elimination of the Arbitration
Review Board. The board 's
elimination was mandated at the
UMW's national convention In
December 1979.
" From what we understand, the
three ·issues that they're having
problems with are the Arbitration
Review Board, the leasing of coal
lands and the pension situation,"
Prout said. He had just spoken by
telephone with District 6 President
Ed Bell, a member of the bargaining
council. Bell was returning to Ohio
from Washington, D.C., Tuesday
night and was unavailable for comment.
Steve Kubic. safety officer for
Disti·ict 6, said the arbitration
review bOard is the appeals "court"
for rulings already affirmed by arbitrators In labor disputes.
· " When the eompanies appeal to

- -- ·--·---

the board, about 85 percent of the
rulings in favor of the miner or the
UMW are reversed," he said. 11 The
union definitely wants the board
eliminated."
Kubic said the union also is
fighting a BCOA propollal to allow
companies to lease coal reserves to
mining operators who won't honor
the UMW contract.
'' If you take a company like Consol (Consolidation Coal Co. of Pjttsburgh), you're talking about vast
coal reserves, " he said.
The BCOA proposal would allow
individual coal companies to set up
their own pension plans through
private insurers rather than under
the present multi-employer system. ,
"It (the pact) is just a
smokescreen so the companies can
get around the federal pensioo
laws," said Jim Russell of Scio, a
member of the District 6 executive
board. "If a little company goes out
of business, the miners would lose
their pensions entirely."
The union an&lt;l the coal industry
have not reached agreement without
a strike since 1964. Mines were shut
for a record lll days before the
present three-year pact was signed
in !978.
Recalling that lengthy ordeal,
major users of coal such as utilities
reportediy have stockpiled up to 90
days of the.ore.

..

·I

''

�Commentary

W'dliam F..Buckley Jr.

Say ·again?

i

Alfred North Whitehead is often
quoted as having observed that
historians learn most about any
culture by studying what it is that
that culture never got around · to
saying about itself. Because that is
what a culture takes for granted: the
inbuilt premises, the planted
axioms. The headline in the International Herald 'l'ribune splashed
across five columns in "U.S. Budget
Seen as Hurting the Poor, Aiding the
Rich." The story is from the
Washington Post service, and written by Robert Kaiser, a superb journalist who ought, really, to know bet• ter, though it is the point of this
. cautionary tale precisely that, with
' luminous exceptions people don't
·know better. 'l'hey look at Reagan's
' budget and say, as Kaiser does, "its
. most obvious effect would be to
redistribute income in the United
; States. Tbe money would go from
• poor to rich."
• The superstition is that to restore
: to somebody something that is his, is

to take something from somebody
else and give it back to him. Perhaps
Mr. Kaiser would have greeted Lin·
coin's Emimcipation Proclamation
with the headline: " President Lincoln Endorses Massive 'l'ax Break
for Black Poor." It appears to be impossible to get anyone to
acknowledge that if someone is
paying 70 percent of his, repeat his,
income to the government, and you
propose to reduce taxation from 70
percent to 63 percent, you are
"giving" that man something. What
you are doing, of course. is taking
less than ·what you were taking. If
you stop blowing cigarette smoke into the face of the man seated next to
you, you are not " giving" him clean
air, you are desisting in your
pollution of the air he breathes.
It os 30 years since. two scholars in
Chicago published their book, so
felicitously titled, " The Uneasy Case
for Progressive Income Taxation.''
Well, it is to say the least uneasy: it

Jhe Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Strttl
Pomrroy, Oblo
ilt-99!-ZlSi
DEVOTED TO 11{E INTEREST OF 'mE MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETI
pubU~her

PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH

- Asslsl.anl Publisber/Cllntrolll'r

General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.

violates the most fundamental rules
of equality WJder the law. The same
people who in behalf of women's
rights or minority rights will go
anywhere except Vietnam to fight
for equal pa'y for equal work are
quite prepared to make a woman or
a black pay twice as much as a white
male if thai woman or black goes out
and earns twice as much money by
working longer hours or by
cultivating special skills.
· So that at a philosophical level, the
story is illiterate. It is equally offensive, however, as a piece of
" news analysis," which is how the
editors presented it, at least in
Europe - in its failure to make the
dominant economic point, which is
that under existing economic
arrangements, i.e. the existing configuration of taxes, spending and
deficits,' we are running at an inflation rate of 13 percent and
achieving a zero growth rate. Inflation doesn't , noblesse oblige,
decline to afflice poor people. It is
entirely WJdiscriminating. But it is
poor people who suffer the most
because net decreases in their purchasing power deny them items
na-essary to physical, not merely
· psychic, comfort.
It requires a very hard commitment to the vocabulary of class
antagonism to suggest that a budget
primarily designed a) to fight inflation, and b ) to increase productivity, is a budget aptly described as
" Hurting . the Poor, Aiding the
Rich." Mr. Reagan has high hopes
that his program will slowly arrest

and finally reduce inflation to three
or four percent. It he can contrive
this, and also reswne economic
growth, he will have done mroe to
help poor peeple than tw"'thirds of
the social legislation on the books.
The writer Tom Bethell, for the
exercise of it, coWJted the cross
references over a period of one month, while watching the . nationally
televised news, to causes of inflation
when the subject was inflation. Tinne

after Iinne the best-informed men in
America commanding the greatest
research facilities would mention,
Oh, OPEC oil and corporate profits
as the punitive causes rX. inflation;
and hardly ever a) deficit financing,
b) lower productivity, c) increased
public spending, 3) high marginal
tax rates.
It is extremely difficult to get used
to pristine conceptualization. I suppose that if every day during the

past 20 years the editor of the
washington Post had begun his morning by giving Mr. Kaiser a hot foot,
and suddenly he stopped doing so,
Mr. Kaiser would instinctively write
a story crediting the editor with
stabilizing his body temperature.
Mr. Reagan really ought to devote
one entire speech to teaching
American journalists how to clinnb
out of the superstitions in which they
were inculcated at places like Yale.

DALE TEAFORD

A MEMBER 1M The Associated Ptt'"U, Inland Dail)' Press Association aod t~H­
Americao NeW!il)lper PubU.shers AssociaCjoo .
LE'ITERS OF OPINION arf' "·tlromed . Tbty sh0t1.ld bt lHs than 3DO w~rds ktag. All
ldkn; are subjl."{'t lo tdill.n&amp; and mu1t tw signed wl&amp;h oamf', ad4.rns aDd tt:lephoH
number. No IUUigoed letters will be publi s h~ . Ltnus should bt in xood l:l sCe, adclrtsslog
Issues, DCJt penuoalltin.
l

A penny saved is
a .penny ear:ped?
Few things more clearly demonstrate the tendency of economies to
change than when an old maxim , steeped in years. appears to lose its
validity. Such as " a penny saved is a penny eamed.' '
Were he alive today, for example, Ben Franklin might be confused too.
In his dedication to a conventional definition of thrift. he might lose his
money, his reputation and conceivably his good health as well.
Thrift today, that is, isn't what it used to be. as the depositor in aS and
a-half percent passbook savings account at a so-called thrift institution is
learning to his chagrin. Int•rest earned of 5 and a-half percent, minus
taxes, and minus inflation of 12 percent or so, equals eventual poverty.
And, as inflation continues, the old link between thrift and caution is
likely to remain strained if not broken.
Ordinarily cautious homeowners, the thrifty kind who once believed a
loan was something to he repaid as fast as possible, now covet their mortgages, knowing that a 7 percent loan i.s like money in the bank.
For those who made such loans , such as the thrift institutions- savings
banks and savings and loan associations - such loans pave the road to
the poorhouse. What they thought was thrift was waste instead.
Can the country so easily pass off the misfortune of those who did
believe there was a future to saving ' Can the lost assets of such people,
. who helped raise capital for investment in the factories that built the
:: economy, be dismissed as the grumblings of cranks'
: There i.s the matter of institutions. Can the thrift industry be allowed to
·: deteriorate as it has ' And if savings institutions become passe, who will
· : provide the money for home mortgages?
What happens to the economy in general if savings - the rate is once
.: more below S percent, lowest of all major industrial nations - becomes
:: insufficient to support needed ca pital investments.
·
_ Some answers already are evident. Growing companies, one answer to
:: innproving productivity, find it difficult to raise money at affordable
·. rates. Companies in basic industries forego expansion and improvement.
: Production efficiency deteriorates. And as a consequence, prices rise.
. Something even more perverse happens: The big bets are placed not on
• the health of the future economy but on its difficulties, on the hope of con: tinued high interest rates rather than a return to normal, on speculations
.. rather than investments in companies of substance.
The answer, according to some economists, lies in tax incentives to old
; fashioned thrift, the kind of thrift that involved living within incomes,
: paying off bills and saving small swns regularly.
; All such recommendations, however, depend on something else that
' seems. to be badly lacking : Faith in the future. With so many bets now
: placed on a continuation of inflation, that faith will be hard to restore.

.
''
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:
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in history.

• •

Today is Wednesday, March 18, the 77th day of 1981. There are 288 days
left in the year.
Today's highlight in history :
On March 18, 1913, Greece's King George I was assassinated in
Salonika.
On this date:
In 1937, more than 400 people, most of them children, were killed in a
gas explosion at a schoolin New London, Texas.
In 1962, the ceasefire in the Algerian war was signed by French and
Algerian rebel delegations in Evian-Les,Baine, France.
.
In 1970, Cambodia's Prince Norodom Sihanouk was deposed as chief of
state while on a visit to Moscow.
In 1978, the United States asked the U.N. Security Council to call for an
immediate withdrawal of Israeli forces from southern I.ebanon.
Ten years ago: Officials in Lima, Peru, reported that 400 to 600 people
had died in an avalanche in the mining city of Chungar.
Five years ago: It was disclosed that Britain's Princess Margaret and
Lord Snowdon would separate but not get a divorce. Eventually, they did
both.
One year ago: Democrat Jimmy Carter and Republican Ronald
Reagan won the Illinois presidential primaries to solidify their frontrunning p&lt;\sitions.
Today's birthday : Country music singer Charlie Pride is 43 years old.
Thought For Today : Customs may not be as wise as laws, but they are
always more popular - Benjamin Disraeli . English statesman 118Ct· ,
1881).

,.
f

ding by a total of more than $400
billion through 1981i.
The budget cuts proposed for next
year have provoked outcries from
backers of food stamps, the Legal
Services Corp., student IQans, public
service jobs and the Appalachian
Regional Commission - to name
just a few. These groups and many
more are taking their causes to
Capitol Hill to try to head Reagan 's
budget cutters off at the hearing
rooms.
It probably won't be dear for months just how many billions Congress
will agree to slash out of federal
spending.
By then, Reagan's budget cutters

will have their sights set on other
programs to " cut, squeeze and
trim" as Reagan liked to say when
he was govemor of California .
If Rea~an is to meet his goals,
some prog rams will have to be trimmed right out of existence.
Given Reagan's commitment to
increased defense spending, the odds are high that the programs to be
trinuned are all going to be nondefense areas - meaning social
programs and aid to local and state
governments. Even the vaunted
"safety net " programs Reagan
promised to . spare from cuts this
time might have to be slashed to
meet the future budget goals.

Trying to slash such programs
could make the fight over the
current reductions seem like a nursery school exercise. Just a
suggestion of a change . in Social
Security benefits brings thousands
of letters of outrage and send5
senators running for cover.
To give an idea of the magnitude
of the cuts to come, the projected
reductions for fiscal 1984 total 5.7
percent of the budget. That's just
about the same as the percentage of
the budget that would go to state and
local governments as grants.
Failure to accomplish the future
budget cuts could present Reagan
with extremely difficult choices.

that caused them over the past
decade or so to foresake troubled industrial cities : A lack of good,
secure, affordable housing within
easy conunuling distance.
Heretofore, many blue chip concerns sought to assist transferred
employes buy or sell houses, without
becoming involved either as longtenn lenders or as part"'wners. But
pressures are mounting.
Companies that ned New York for
Fairfield County, Conn., m part to be

closer to what they felt were better
housing conditions, now find soaring
pri ces are forcing rniddle managers
into hour-long corrunutes.
Competition for clerical workers
has become intense, especially since
the local supply. largely suburban
housewives returning to the labor
market, seems to be exhausted.
Real estate agent report many office
workers now must commute more
than 30 miles from New York.
Much of the pressure comes from

soaring housing prices, at least in
part a direct result of the inflow of
companies. Dadakis &amp; Co., a corporate real estate broker, says Fairfield is now headquarters for 47 companies in the Fortune magazine list
of the 1,000 largest.
" Housing has become a disadvantage," he says. "It's affordable
for top executives, but not for middle
managers." With gas prices rising,
he said, transportation has become a
serious impediment.

Opening up the airwaves"'-J.____R_o_be_rt_W4_a_lte_rs
WASHING TON ( NEA I - Who has
the right to buy commercial time on
television to promote candidates for
public office, solicit support for
assorted causes or advocate
positions on controversial issues
facing the nation'
Although never faully resolved,
that question has been fervently
argued in scores of cases brought
before the Federal Conununications
Corrunission and the federal courts
since the advent of commercial
television in the mid-1940s.
Throughout that debate, television
adverti.sing has been dominated by
what a former FCC comrrtissioner
once described as the marketers of
' ' tooth
whit ene rs , clothe s
brighteners, skin purifiers and sink
cleansers."
An FCC rfuling in a 1976 politicaladvertising dispute was characterized by one exasperated commissioner as ordering that a Chicago
station " shall not discriminate bel·
ween President Ford and Arrid Ex·
tra Dry."
But two new developments offer
the hope that lively debates over
public affairs may be given aq ex·
panded opportWlily to share time
~5~EP!:M
M~ MVENr:rJ&lt;T: ANo ro

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OR.

TO~

YO/ITO

Um~C CCMMITT#

ri/3AIVNG.

L L.

SVAC ALL DREAM TEAM
PLAYERS- SCHOOL
Dale Teaford, Southern
Dale Newberry, Southwestern
Kent WoUe, Southern
Gene Cole, Eastern
David Sands, Kyger Creek
Greg Webb, Hannan Trace
SECOND TEAM
Mike Bissell, Eastern
Tim Dill, Eastern
Jay Burleson, Southwestern
Todd Baker, Southwestern
Bill Blackburn, North Gallla
THffiDTEAM
Robert Brown, Southern
Keith Payne, North Gallia
Jeff Moles, Kyger Creek
Terry McNickle, Southern
Scott Russell, Southwestern

GREG WEBB

Farmer succeeds Brown at UCLA

Economy may force corporations in housing
NEW YORK (AP I - Sooner or
later the high cost of housing and
money may force employers in
boom economic areas into largescale financing of homes for
workers, providing a new twist in
the housing scene.
Corporate spokesmen generally
decry the likelihood, but indications
are mounting that they might be forced far q10re deeply into the housi ng
field than they have been.
Otherwise, some of them ma y
soon be facing the identica l situatior.

KENT WOLFE

DAVID SANDS

GENE COLE

Expect additional political furor
WASHINGTON (AP) - If you
think the political furor over the
spending cuts proposed by President
Reagan signals an epic battle, just
wait a year or so. There's a lot more
to come.
The $48.6 billion in reductions
proposed by Reagan for the coming
fisca l year are the first salvo of a
long war.
Reagan's budget projections ca ll
for additional, but as yet unspecified
reductions of $29.8 billion in fiscal
1983. $44.2 billion in 1984,$43.7 billion
in 1985 and $42.7 billion in 1986.
That would be on top of the effects
of the current proposed cuts. In all,
the Reagan plan would reduce spen-

DALE NEWBERRY

Dale Teaford, 6-2 senior member floor leader.
of the SV AC champion Southern TorAlso named to the first learn were
nadoes Tuesday night was selected Dale Newberry, 6-2 senior from
as the league's Most Valuable Southwestern; Kent Wolfe, 5-9 jWJior
Player during the annual meeting to. from Southern; Gene Cole, 6-1 senior
name the conference's all-stars.
from Eastern; David Sands, 6-1
During the past season, Teaford junioe from Kyger Creek and Greg
helped the Tornadoes capture their Webb, 5-11 junjor of Hannan Trace.
fifth straight SVAC championship
· The league's coaches also named
and fifth Class A Sectional Tour- a second and third team.
nament at Meigs High School. He
During a business session, a tenaveraged 19.6 points per game and tative date of April25 was set for the
was one of the team's best reboun- annual league banquet. The event
ders. In addition, Teaford was a will be held at the Buckeye Hills

Career Center beginning at 7 p.m,
John Lawhorn, Rio Grande College
basketball coach, will be the
featured speaker.
'
Tickets will be sold al$4.50 each. ,
It was also decided to hold a
special meeting Sunday at 7 p.m. at
Kyger Creek High School to revise
the league constitution. All coaches.
and interested principals are in~
vi ted .

with sales pitches for indigestion
remedies, pain relievers, deodorants, beer and laundry soap.
In the first case, the Supreme
Court recently heard oral arguments (and presumably will rule later
this year) on a legal complaint
initiated by the campaign committee supporting the 1981l reelection bid of fonner President Carter .
The Carter organization sought to
buy a hall-hour of commercial time ,
on ABC, CBS and NBC in December
1979 but was rebuffed by all three
television networks on the grounds
that the presidential campaign had
not "officially " begun. (The networks did not mention that it was
also to their financial benefit to
maintain their regular evening
schedules.)
The flimsiness of the networks'
argwnent is demonstrated by the
fact that in November 1979, one month before they rejected the Carter
request sa premature, all of the network news divisions dispatched
correspondents and crews to report
on presidential "straw votes" at
Democratic and Republican

liP£ ALL WN6

OH PlEa, fUIIAJ4/1!J 70 )UII(
THAN/&lt;; )W, lfSTIWM P.lfTH
SIJCJ( f/'1Tl!R£5TI

COi.JG/l£55 fi,Qt/.4'1
I

I

statewide conventions in Florida.
If the networks' arbitrary ruling in
the Carter case is allowed to stand, it
will provide an unwarranted
precedent giving them undue innuence over the timing of political
campaigns.
The FCC, the U. S. District Court
and the U. S. Court of Appeals all
have ruled against the networks in·
the case. Supreme Court reaffinnation of those decisions could
substantially reinforce the federal
law that grants politi.cal candidates
the right to "reasonable access" in
purchasing television advertising
time.
Tbe second development involves
the decision of the American Broadcasting Co. to conduct a one-year experiment in allowing the sale of time
for commercials advocating
positions on matters of public policy.
Tbe networks traditionally have
resisted taking such a step because
the FCC's "fairness doctrine"
require that when a broadcaster
presents one side of a public issue •. it
is obligated to afford a reasonable
opportunity for the presentation of
conflicting viewpoints on that issue.

LOS ANGELES I API - Larry
Fanner brings a solid basketbaU
background, heavily steeped in John
Wooden philosophy, and a di verting
sense of hwnor to his new job as
UCLA's basketball coach.
The first attribute may help him
bring a sense of continuity to the
J!Chool 's b&lt;lsketball program, and
the seeond might ease him over
rough spots that contributed to the
departure of his three immediate
predecessors.
Fanner, a 30-year-old former
Bruin star under Wooden and a
UCLA assistant for the past six
years, was named Tuesday to
replace Larry Brown as the learn's
coach.
"It's been a tough six years for
me," Fanner said at a news conference. " I had to get rid of three

coaches to gel the job. Now guys are
lining up for my old spot for the
sa me reason ."
Asked how long he thought it may
take for him to receive his first
criticism, he grinned and said:
·' What lime is it?"
Fanner said he's quite aware of
the pressure of coaching the Bruins,
who won 10 NCAA titles under
Wooden before the legendary coach
retired in 1975 .
" I like the challenge that people
expect UCLA to Win and I accept it
full well knowing what I have to do,"
Farmer said. "So much of the
tradition here at the school, I have
been a part of."
Brown , who left to become coach
of the National Basketball
Association's New Jersey Nets, held
the Bruin post for two years, as did

Gene Bartow and G:ary Cunningham
before him.
Those three all had winning records at UCLA - never failing to reach
20 victories in a season - but the
marks paled in comparison to the
Wooden string of championships.
" This is day one of what I hope is
not a tw"'year stint," said Fanner.
"I have been with the Bruin basketball program for 11 years and I intend to stay a lot longer."
He will try. to coach "like l-arry
Fanner," he said.
" My background is closely linked
to John Wooden, so my foundation is
r-ooted in Coach Wooden's style,"
Fanner explained. "The icing on the
cake is what I've learned from Gene
Bartow, Gary Cunningham and
Larry Brown while I served under
them ."

Regional semifinals against Boston
which beat lltlrranked
Wake Forest in another of the big upsets in the second round last
we ekend . No.9 Indiana fa ces
unrankcd Alabarna-Binningharn in
the other Mideast game at
Bloomington, Ind.
"This is the glamour of whal this
tournament is all about - for a team
that doesn't have a national
reputation to go out and do this,"
said Lynam. He was referring to his
nwn St. Joseph's learn but could
have been talking about any of the
other five unranked teams, including Boston College, still alive in
the tournament.
The state of Kansas boasts three of
Colle~e.

HT. YR.
6-2 12
6-2 12
;;..g 11
6-1 12
6-1 11
;;..11 11

6-1 11
6-4 11
6-1 12
6-0 12
6-1 12

6-3 11
;;..g 12

6-1 10
HO 12

•..............

:• DR. NORMAN J.
: EHUNGER, D.O.

••
••
•

Office Located On
Mulberry Heights
Pomeroy, Ohio

•••

OFFICE HOURS

••
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MON. &amp; TUES.

:

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9 to 11 and 1 to 5 :•
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WEDS.
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:9 to 11, 1 to 5, and 7 to !te
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FRI.
•• 9tollandlto5 ••••

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Two areas schedule r------------1----------....;.
6-0 12

Please Call For Appointment :•

baseball 's ign·ups
The sign-up dates for area youth
interested in the Salem Center swnmer baseball program has been set
for this week, March 16-March 21
from 11 :45 a.m. to 12:45 p.m. at
Salem Center School. A registration
fee of six dollars per person will he
required at the time of sign-up.
. The youth league sponsors
programs for tee ball, ages :Hi ;
minor league, 7-8; Pee Wee, ages 910: and little league, ages 11-12.
Anyone· with questions about the
program may call Ron Drexler at
Salem Center School.

Hawks must avoid living in past
By Associated Press
Now that St. Joseph 's has knocked
top-ranked DePaul out of the NCAA
basketball tournament, the Hawks'
biggest problem .might .be trying to
avood living in the past .
The Philadelphia team didn't lead
the whole second half against
DePaul in the NCAA Mideast
Regional until the final seconds,
when John Smith's unmolested
layup gave the Hawks a 4~ victory .
"The reality of the situation is that
there arc 16 learns left ," said Hawks
Coach Jim Lynam. "So we beat the
No.1 team. But we've got tu play
agair Friday ."
That game will be in the Mideast

,

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

1986-81

News Editor

~ Today

Southern's Teaford
captures MVP award

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy~Middleport, Ohio
lf:lednesday. March 18,1981

' Get a STOREC HECK ' by marl frOm DuPont. good tor any mercnanor se or casn
Jll our stores wrth proal ot pur chase ana an o!lr~ral apphca110n 1rom our orspr ay

'0Umt

LUCI'I'E .

Ceiling Palllt

The Middleport Youth League will
hold its final sign-up day on Saturday, March 21, from 10 a.m. to2 p.m.
at the Middleport City Hall.
Registration fee is $6 . For additional
infonnation, contact Kitty Cassell at
992-7873.

the unranked teams.
Kansas upset No.3 Arizona State
and Wichita State defeated 13thranked Iowa

I

L~TE .

Wall Paint

Sports transactions
Clinic set Saturday

Tll"day'aSponsTno&amp;a&lt;tio••
RASEBAIJ..
Amt&gt;ricao uagut&gt;

· The Eastern Ohio Quarter Horse
t\ssociation will sponsor a horse-

MILWAUKEE

CocHnuw~r.

10 a.m. at Meredith Manor School of

Horsemanship, Waverly, W.Va .
Th C Pr ogr am has been designed to

those
in ishunt
pleasure.interested
The program
open toseat
the

Swift,

I:klul!l

Ja nuc

Jones,

R~n~ Quinonc:s and GWI Quiros, pit£hers,
Hnd Bill ~--ule/' • catcher, tiJ .tbeir rninur
i~H K!lt! CIUilp or n!H~ijl(mncnt
BASKETBALL
National Ba.sketbllll Auodatloa
DENVE R NUGGETS- Acttva.led Ja mes
tl.Hy , furw11rd. Placed Cedrlck Hordges,

men's clinic Saturday beglnnirtg at

meet all levels of western riders and

BREWERS- Sent

Weldon

Mason,

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public at a fee of $3 per person ur admission is free to those holding
membership in the association.

THE DAILY
SENTINEL

Terrified of opening a Pandora's
box of claims upon their commercial
time - including likely demands
from those who insist they have the
right to respond but lack the money
to buy advertising time and
therefore should be given access at
no cost - the networks have
resolved the matter by simply not
allowing any " issue commercials"
to be broadcast.
In a 1970 FCC case, for example,
ABC claimed that " were we to open
the door" to such advertising, it
would be "reasonable to anticipate a
flood of such requests. ' '
One of the principal reasons for
the broadcasters' has on cigarette
commercials was an FCC ruling that
the "fairness doctrine" mandated
an equal opportunity for airing advertisements warning about the
health hazards of smoking.

SENTINEL AVAII,ABLE
AT FOLLOWING
LOCATIONS

FOR THE BEST
BUYS
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TOWN.

POMEROY
Swisher &amp; Lohse
Nelson Drug
Powell's Super Valu
Beacon
Sentinel Office
Krogers
CroW's Family Restaurant
Jones Boys
Veterans Memorial Hospital

MIDDLEPORT
Mark v, DuTton Drug, Lazy Days Cafe
vaughan 's cardinal

There are exceptional risks involved in ABC's experiment, but the
overriding consideration Is that
cited by the Supreme Court In an
earlier case involving newspaper
advertising - that debate on public
issues should . be "uninhibited,
robust 1and I wide open.

Scotts Grocery, Cheshire
Vista, Les' Carryout, Mason Laundromat, Mason
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PHONE:

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�Wednesday, March 18,1981

Pomeroy-Middl

Daily Sentinel

mission and the Raiders, headed by
Managing General Partner Al
· Davis, have sued the NFL because
the league refuses to . permit the
team to move to the Los Angeles site
vacated last year by the Los Angeles
Rams.
"I feel pretty good about it," Commissioner Pete Rozelle said of tile
court battle, but he made the
statement before Judge Pregerson's
latest ruling was announced.
" The judge's·denial of our motion
to change venue to a neutral site
reflects what appears to be a deter·
mination to keep the case in Los
Angeles regardless of obvious exposure to serious risks of unfairness," said a handout attributed
only to an NFL spokesman.
" We are obviously concerned
about going to trial in a very
jurisdiction whose citizen" have the
biggest $lake in the outcome."
The court of appeal is make a
decision within 10 days. If the appeal
b not accepted, the antitrust trial

Today's

Sports World
By WW Grtmsley
AP Correspoudent
Even heroes have heroes.
''You know who my hero is~ "
asked Steve Garvey during one of
those inevitable bull sessions that
mark baseball's spring training.
"It's Bjorn Borg. I admire him more
than any athlete l know."
The Ali.Star first baseman of the
Los Angeles Dodgers, awarded the
Clemente Trophy in St. Petersburg,
Fla., last week for his charity work,
was talking about all of the great
sports events he and other
ballplayers miss because of their
seven-month March-through-September grind.
"Take Wimbledon." he said. " !
would love to see Wimbledon. That's
where tennis started and, from the
way it looks on television, very little
has changed over the years.
"! have never seen a Kentucky
Derby, either, or an Indianapolis
500, World Cup soccer, a Masters or
U.S. Open golf tournament. They are
always in the hot months and I'm occupied~

"I've often thought, when l retire,
I would take time out and see all
those classics that I've read about
and watched on 1V - but I'll see
them up close.
·
"I want to see the sweat and hear
the horses snort in the paddocks, go
into Indy's Gasoline Alley and talk to
t(Je mechanics. Another thing 1
would like to see is the Henley
Regatta."
Now how could the son of a Tampa, Fla., bus driver and one who has
been around baseball all his life
cultivate an interest in a boat race
on the River Thames'
· "When I was doing the Olympic

series for television last year
more than 30 hours of it. " Garvey
said, "' the rowing events intrigued
me. The physical demands on the
oarsmen. They are superb athletes.
And that little coXJnan up front
giving orders.
.. But mainly Wimbledon, that I'd
really love. [ hope Borg is still winning when I get a chance to see it."'
Garvey may have a particular ad·
miration for Borg because he sees a
little of himself in the stolid, stOical
Swede who has wpn five Wimbledon
crowns in a row and today stands
astride the tennis world like a
Colossus.
The stocky. muscled Dodger
slugger has picked up so many
nicknames it's hard to keep count :
" Mr. Clean ... " Mr. Consistency ."
··The All-American Boy."
Hollywood handsome, spit and
polished mannered, quiet and noncontroversial. he does his work with
cold precision and dedication. He
never seems flustered. He never
throws a tantrum. Much in the
fashion of Borg, he · never makes
waves.
What he makes are statistics Hall of Fame statistics.
Garvey goes into the new season
with the longest consecutive playing
streak of any active player and sixth
best in lhe game's history - 835
games. He has appeared in 1,125 of
the last 1,134. He has had five 2()().hit
seasons, played in three World
Series and seven straight Ali.Star 1
games.
Like Borg, he is solid as a rock and
about as unflamboyant.

that had been scheduled to begin
next Monday would start about 1~
days after the decision is made.
Tex Schramm, President and
General Manager of the Dallas
Cowboys. heads the Competition
Committee that includes Don Shula
of Miami, Paul Brown of Cincinnati
and Eddie LeBaron of Atlanta .

NBA standings

·Chicago
Atlanta

Cleveland

Detruil
y~nAntunio
HOW! tun

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"DAt't"Y" DEAN DIES - Paul
"Daffy" Dean, a pilcblng star for
the St. L&lt;luis Cardinals In the
1930s aod brother of the late
Jerome " Dizzyn Dean, died
Tuesday morning In Springdale,
Arkansas, after suffering a
massive heart a !lack. He was 66.
He Is shown above In 1934, right,
and 1974, left. I AP Laserpboto) .

OHice Hours. by Appointment Only

CALL (614)-992-2104

or (304)4»75-1244

13 1':1

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Pork Chops....... ~ .. l

Allanlll al Boston

Indiana at Phlladt!lptua
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New York at Mi!wuukl't'
Denver at Kl!lll!WIS Cn y
0MiiHS Ht Utah
Lot; Angele~:~ at Phuenil
Ho!1Sion ut Golden State
Thunday'sGamt'll
Chic&lt;t1511 at Clevelw nd
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Nallunal HOfllt&gt;y l.eugu.Carnplwll Cunft·rrnce
Patrick Uh·l11lun

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25 31 12 282 295
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fi"'t two games," he said. " We told
our people all along that if they supported the team . we would get the
home court . Apparently, that wasn't
Boeheim expects Ertch Santifer, a
right."
Syracuse guard from Ann Arbor,
Mich., to be psyched to play against . - - - - - - - - - - - the team from his hometown ... I'm
sure it"s going to be on his ntind," he
AUTHORIZED CATALOG
said ... He knows all those people.
SALES MERCHANT
It'll be added incentive."

L T

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Pllt.'illurj~h 101 Vltti\'Uuvcr
Wfilnr~d.A)''" C:amt&gt;S

Phone "2-2l7l
108 w . Main St .
Pomeroy, Oh .
OWNED
OPERATED BY
JackAND
&amp; Judy Williims
Open , Mon. thru Wed. , .s
Thur . 9·12, Fri. 9-S, S•t. 9-2

,,

Bus tun
Qut&gt;~·

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or Your Monty liCk

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NY

H..!nl~t' rs
Wu s hm~1tll1

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l'umt' ro,· Htt"llnl( l.llLLt' S

.USDA Choice Bucket

Cube Steak.... ;....l!~~2

69

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CENTER CUT LOIN

$

FRESH PORK BUTT

$·119

79

Steaks or Roasts•..•• ~8; •••

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Carrots..........~-.~.4 fSI

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Ttanl hiKh •rrlt'!i - Rrutrr-RrujCIIn hl)i. 1451.

595

OARI-FRES~

Tut•sday Trlpll~·alt•
l~aa:ut•

M11ri'I'IIG. ISS I

WE REGRET ANY INCONVENIENCE

SLIIndlnl(!i

Tt'111t1

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S7

Mc1~ s

hm
.lim s l:ulf

OUR CUSTOMERS.

55

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47
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45
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lli tAh st•rtl'li
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Tt•am hiMh lo(filllc Ht•utt·t··Brt!t-(1111 520
Tt&gt;HIII hl~h ~cries Ueut cr· llrul!lll1 145ll

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block d1ol

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M•nhl, 1181
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You II kn o w 1h 1s dependable Pulsar Quartz
wOich •s the ••gh t cho•ce for you the
mom'''' ' you sl 1p •I on And you II be os ·
surcd every tnne you glan ce o1 11 Qua rtz
occurocy 111eons •e l• able on 11me pedon"l1o nce thor ve1ges on pe,fec t•on A nd you
never hove to wtnd 11 The bottenes
keep If' unn1n9 for up to two years Th ere 5
an ms tan r se tt1ng dqy do t&lt;? ca lendar 111
Eng l1sh and Spnn•sh. Plus the conven 1ence
o f a sweep second hand , lum1na.us d1al
and honds and If s woter·res•s tan t roo
Eos•ly od(l!Sfoble bracelet 111 wh1t~ or gold
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wolch you always wont~
Pulsar · Quartz. Always a beat beyond.
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lltgh )(Mille wumt•n
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Good income. All ages ac·
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~(J9'

'O'J..eler.s

Sunday Mind

R(tWIIDI( IA'UI(Ut'

CORBIN SEWING CENTER

..•

Arts and era us Dept.
200 N. Main
Corbin , Ky . 40701

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2% MII k..........G~~l~~

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NHL standings
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PhiiKdclphia
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$

CENTER CUT RIB

Wedoe~Jday '~G amfll

VISION EXAMINATIONS
HARD AND SOFT CONTACT LENSES

" Daffy" broke into the major
leagues in 1934, and pitched a n&lt;&gt;hitter against the Brooklyn Dodgers
that season - the only one in the
major leagues that year.

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL AUERGIST

.7111
.662
.526

~

PRICES EFFECTIVE lHROUGH SAT., MARCH 21

Kuston 112, Wa:shln~elun 91
l.us An@te!t:i 114, Ootllas 109
&amp;an Antoniu !H, Utah 86
Chlc&lt;tgu 116, Milwaukee 100
Denver 124 , Seatlle 112
Portland 127, San OicMIJ 112

Topping the list is Lee Trevino,
who won this event a year ago ln
rare, relatively calm conditions on
the 7,IJOO.yard, par 72 Sawgrass
links .
Other major favorites include
Tom Watson and Jack Nicklaus.
Watson, Player of the Year for the
past four seasons, has· finished
second and third in his last two starts here. Nicklaus, who last year added the U.S. Open and PGA to his
record collection r1 17 major
professional title", has won this tournament three times in its 7-year
history.
Jolmny Miller and Bruce Lietzke,
each a two-time winner this season,
top the list of 1981 titleholders

Provides Such Services As

Daffy Dt&gt;an die•"

JOHN A. WADE, M.D., INC.
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

~~'l

19

.

Tue1day'"Ga mf's

doesn' t seem like a tournament.
We're not goi ng anywhere. "

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - -1

MEN'S BLACK LEATHER OXFORDS
WAS INCORRECTLY ADVERTISED
AT '15.00. THE CORRECT PRICE
SHOULD HAVI READ '15.90

lfll,oz
2Jl'J

J6

~: drnunlun

IN OUR MARCH 17th MARCH
MONEY SAVERS ADVERTISEMENT

.427
.:147
.160

10

1'11

N~"· Vurk 114. lndilu\a 89
Cle\'t'land 122, Atlcmta 10?
Ncl'!' Jer~y 126, Ph(ladclphia !2CJ. OT

Mountaineers meet Minnesota in NIT battle

Meanwhile, West Virginia Coach
Gale Catlett is disappointed that his
team will have to play on the road.
The Mountaineers had a 19-1 record
at home this year and were ]·ust 3-7
in road games.
" [thought we'd be a lock to play at
hume after drawing 25,000 for our

IJ

. y-clinchetl divi.sJon tltlc
x-clinched p]ayofC berth

Heavy winds may favor Kite, Floyd .

By Associated Press
- served Boeheim of his team' s ga me
The way the Syracuse basketball with Michigan . " They like to run .
team was playing toward the end of We like to ru n. Any team that has
the year, things could only get bet· beaten teams like Arkansas, Kansas
ter.
and Indiana - teams that are still
And. actually. they have .
gomg in that uthe1· tournament Since finishing their wurst regular has gotto be good ."
season in a decade with a lf&gt;-1 1
Boeheirn's remark about the
record. the Orangemen have " Other" tournament was, of l'Ourse,
brightened considerably in playoff a reference to the NCAA playoffs .
competition. Jim Boehein(s tearn
He had previously expressed re,.ent·
ment that Syracuse wasn't invited
swept three games to win the Big
after winmng the Big East.
East tournament and has since won
twice in the National Invitation
The Wolverine" have had a season
Tournament .
much like the Orangemen . They fell
Thursday night. the Orangemen out or contention i ~ the Big Ten with
· seven of
hope to keep rolling against a Iate-season s Iwnp. 1osmg
Michigan in their $27 million Carrier their last eight games. But they have
Dome in one of two NIT quarterfinal since bounced back with two NIT
games. In the other, Minnesota hosts victories, including itn 8fl..68 rout of
West Virginia.
last Sunday
night.
Quarterfinal pla y continues Toledo
.. It seer""
s trange
playing here
Friday night. with South Alabama
this late." says Syracu"e center
playing at Tulsa and Duke visiting
Danny Schayes of the 26,000.seat
Purdue.
Dome . .. The season was over and
.. It's an excellent matchup." otr we're s till playing home ga me". It

II~

32

.4«)

Jl . "
JJ iJ

St!~tll l e

that Floyd and Kite fit that descripfrom the total purse of $440,000 , Kite
tion the best.
and Floyd have a shot at a big bonus,
" I'm playing the best golf of my which has been set up by the spon·
entire career," said the veteran
sors of the TPC, Dora! and InFloyd, a Conner Masters and PGA · verrary. [f Floyd is able to win a
champion. who collected the 13th "econd consecutive event, he'll get a
title of a l!&gt;·year PGA Tour career
bonus prize of $250,000. If Kite is able
last week.
to win, making it two out of three.
Kite. a winner two weeks ago and
he'll receive a $100,000 bonus.
only 2 strokes back last week.
Arrayed against them, however, is
echoed the same confidence going in
the strongest field of the year, a
to the Thursday start of the 72-hole
lineup that almost certainly will be
event.
the strongest assembled for any
Both Kite and Floyd have a little event in 1981. It includes all the 1981
extra incentive for· the annual cham· title winners, 141 of the top 143
pionship of golf's touring pros. a n money-winners of the last year and
event that is growing in prestige and the British Open champion.
importance each year
They ' re all here. No one is
In addition to the $72.000 first prize
missing.

.493

53 "

x·l..tlo!l Angelt!s
POrthmd
Gtllderl State

~~~~

351.;

"

26

x·Phoenix

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12 "
Paclltr Dlvlsl(tll

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, 0.

14

.6J2

30

Sunday 10 am-10 pm

16

2AI

J6

Denver
U&lt;oh
lmllas

TORNAOOE1TES - Southern's junior hlgb girls Heidi Cobb, Tonya Cummins, Theresa BlDg, Alau
basketball team members were, front row - Becky ' Lyons, Teresa Shuler, Lori Sampson, Mandy Hill, GIDa
Nance. Absent were Lisa Parsons and Jodie Harrto.
Van Meter, Lori Adams, Kelly Clark. Back row -

IUSPS Ia-IIt)

Member: The Associated Press, Inland Dai·

..

Kat\38, City

A Dhlll. . oiMulttmed.ia, lllc.

ly Press Association 'and the American

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Pet. GB
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Y·Milwaukt!t'
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The Daily Sentinel

the Ohio V•lley Publishif1H Company .
MultimedJa, Inc., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769,
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Pomeroy, Ohio.

AU..ti~ DMaklo

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Washington

OPEN M.·T. -W.· F. 9· 5
CLOSED THUR .·SAT. · SUN .
113 Court St:
Pomeory, Oh.
Above Clark's Jewelry in Pomeroy

Published every 11ftemoon except SWlda)·,
Monday through Friday,lll Court Street, by

F.u1el'll Coaft~Qtt

San Diego

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla .
!API ·- Nonnal conditions at
Sawgrass - that means howling
winds - should favor Tum Kite and
Ray Floyd in the rich Tournament
Players Championship.
'" Wind
e&lt;aggerate" you r
ntistakes," explained Floyd, fresh
from a successful defense of his title
in the Dora! Open Sunday in Miami.
·' It takes patience and experience
to play in the wind,., Floyd said.
.. The advantage. under difficult
conditions, alwas goes to the player
who is striking the ball the best. the
player who is hitting it most solidly.
the player who is hitting the shots
more purely.··
At the moment. it would appear

STORE HOURS:
Mon.-Sat. 8 am·10 pm

N•u..ial Buketball AIIOciaUua

New Jersey

They believe the NFC and AFC
championship games should not be
decided by weather conditions, such
as the freezing cold at Cleveland
when the Browns lost to the Oakland
Raiders 14-12 in a playoff game la st
January. In the AFL title game, the
Raiders played at San Diego, one of
the warm weather sites.
The committee proposal calls for a
"neutral " site in a warm climate,
meaning tha.t a non-NFL city would
be involved.

The Daily Sentinel-Page-S

For the
record...

Suit concern apparent at meeting
MAUl, Hawaii (AP) The
National Football League's concern
over the suit against it by the
Oakland Raiders and the Los
Angeles Colisewn Commission is apparent at the league's annual
meeting.
Attorney Patrick Lynch, who was
scheduled to talk to the owners
today, instead left abruptly and flew
to San Francisco to file an appeal of
a ruling that turned down an NFL
bid for a change of venue for the
trial.
U.S. District Judge Harry Pregerson issued the ruling Tuesday. The
league said it would appeal the
decision within 24 hours and off flew
Lynch, who's expected back to talk
to the owners Thursday.
While the league's Competitions
Committee was making suggestions
such as playing the conference
championship games at warm ,
neutral sites, interest remained with
the antitrust suit.
The Los Angeles Colisewn Com-

Ohio

169

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�Wednl!sday, March 18,1981

Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

Tole~o Libby, Columbus Hartley and Buckeye Trail favorites

'compensation still major
stumbling block in talks
LAKELAND, Fla. (AP I- Marvin
Miller, the executive director of the
Major League Baseball Players
Association, rejects the notion that
baseball owners are out to pin him
with a defeat.
"! don't think it's that personal,"
Miller said Tuesday, following a
closed-door meeting with the Detroit
Tigers at their spring headquarters.
"I think they want to give the
players a loss, That, I think, is more
likely and almost proven by what
has happened."
.
What haS' happened is that the
owners have spent a reported $35
. million for strike insurance through
• ,Uoyds of London in anticipation of a
player walkout May 29 .
, The stumbling block is com- pensation for clubs losing players
through the free-agent draft.
When the compensation matter
was tabled in the agrreement last
May, a committee of player and
management representatives was
set up to seek a solution, but the
study group wa s unable to solve the
'matter.
"Maybe the word ·compensation'
is getting in the way," Miller said.
-:. "We're not opposed to a club losing a

really quality player and getting
something in return - without
damaging the free agent .
(However). any proposal we make
that doesn't damage the free agent
isn 't good enough for them to accept,
and that's the crux of the problem,"
Miller added.
Miller said, as he has m311y times,
he hoped there wouldn't be a strike
but maintained that the issue is up to
the owners .
"l think the one thing that's happened in the coverage of this dispute
is that it has not been made clear to
the fans that the players have no
demands, " Miller said. " The
players have no proposals for improvement. The dispute is caused by
an owner demand to take back
rights players already have. f do not
think that has gotten across to the
fans.
··Last year both sides disagreed on
the issue of compensation and that's
why it was set aside until this year.
In putting aside this issue 1 compensation ), there were no commitments whatsoever on either side
as to what would come out of the
study co1runittee effort an~ the

negotiations to follow that.
"When Mr. (baseball commissioner Bowie I Kuhn says there
was a commitment - implied or
otherwise - he is terribly in error,
and I'm being as polite as I can."
Meanwhile, in exhibition baseball
Tuesday, the Chicago White Sox
edged Toronto H, Pittsburgh stopped Boston 4-1, Detroit defeat~
Houliton 11-3, Atlanta beat the Ne~
York Yankees IH, Los Angeles
whitewashed Texas 2-1l, Baltimore
downed Montreal S-3, the New York
Mets crushed Pittsburgh 11-4 ,
Oakland edged Milwaukee 3-1, the
Chicago Cubs needed 10 innings to
outlast Cleveland 2-1 and Ca lifornia
beat San Francisco f&gt;-3.
Seattle also split its squad, beating
San Diego 9-5 and routing Arizona
State 11-1.
Jim Morrison hit a first-inning
grand slam and doubled in a run in
the third to power the White Sox over
Toronto. Ken Macha homered for
the Blue Jays.
Burt Hooton and Fernando Valenzuela combined on a fivt&gt;-hitter to
give Los Angeles its victory over
Texas.

Vail, hot spring hitter
seeks starting position
TAMPA. Fla. (AP) - Mike Vail's
hitting usually blossoms in \he
springtime, so he can't understa nd
why his chances for a starting
position have always wilted by
opening day.
"If I keep having good springs,
,: -eventually someday it may work
;. ; out," sa id Vail. acquired by the Cill-: • clnnati Reds last December in a
: : : tradewiththeChicagoCubs.
;. _ The 29-year-old outfielder has
:: : customarily had exceptional springs
·: · at the plate, breaking the .400 mark
:: · last season. But when the season
:-: started, Vail was on the Cubs' bench
;:: fulfilling the familia r role of second
.; · string player.
.
::: '' You get caught up in it,' ' Vail
·: said Tuesday. " I've been able to do a
. - 'good job off the bench, so I've been
• relegated to' that role. I've been
type-cast into it and I would like to
get out of it."
·, With s lugger Dave Kingman injured last season, Vail played in 114

hasn't~omesoeasily.

games with the Cubs. WheQ the
season ended, he had a discuss&gt; on
with Cubs General Manager Bob
Kennedy . The Cubs envisioned Vai l
as a utility player; Vail asked to be
traded to a contending team, even if
it meant more time on the bench.
" There's no reason for me to sit on
the bench of a losing team," Vail
reasoned. Kennedy obliged by
dealing Vail to the Reds for Hector
Cruz.
The right-handed Vail has picked
up where he left off last spring, raP'
ping five hits in his first II at bats in
el&lt;hibition games with Cincinnati.
This year, though , Vail knows
there's little chance of cracking the
starting lineup unless one of the
Reds' front-line players is hurt.
" I'm just going about the business
of working hard and getting into
shape and putting out 100 percent.in
everything I do ,' ' Vail said.
His lifetime major league average
of .290 shows Vail can hit. Defense

" I've worked hard on my defense
my last four years," Vail said. "I
don't hke to make excuses. If given
the chance to play regularly, I think
I would improve."
Another year of major league experience would make _Vail eligible
for the free agent draft when his oneyear contract with Cincinnati expires.
"I have to remember my
situation. I'm getting older and I'll
have six years in the majors after
this year," he said.
" I like Cincinnati. I like the
people. It's a decision I'm going to
have to mak e I whether to become a
free agent l at the end of this
season."
Either way , Vail figures his best
option is to continue playing hard
and hoping.
" Everything I've gotten, I've had
to do on·my own," he said. "Nobody
has handed me anything."

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
ooes who should know·- the 12 competing coaches - predict Toledo
Libbey, Columbus Hartley and Old
Washington Buckeye Trail will be
the state tournament champions in
girls high school basketball this
season.
The annual Associated Press surnual girls playoffs may be the

Reggie

· '

Jackson bites the dust to avoid being hit by a wild pitch

.-

from Atlanta Braves pitcher AI Hrabosky in the sixth

inning of the Yankees/Braves game In Ft. Lauderdale
Tuesday. ( AP Laserphoto l

TAMPA, Fla. (AP I- Tpm Reich,
.. negotiating a long-term contract for
·' : outfielder Ken Griffey, said he has
• agreed on a timetable for
negotiations with Cincinnati Reds
. ' • President Dick Wagner.
· " It is fair to say that we are down
to a time period whether we are
, - going to make a deal or not," Reich
•:; said before a meeting with Wagner
;t~ Tuesda y night.
Griffey, rebounding from knee in-:· jury, batted .294 last season in 146

:l:

.i.•·

; : · games

and

was

named

most

l •; valuable play er in the 1980 All-Star
' ·r · Game.

"There's no question in my mind
but that they want to sign Ken Grif·
fey, " Reich said. ·' He has paid a
price. He took a short-tenn contract
last year because he was coming off
knee surgery."
INTERESTING ARTICLE
TAMPA, Fla. I APl - Cincinnati
Reds shortstop Dave Concepcion,
under contract through the 1981
season, had a newspaper clipping
taped to his locker Tuesday.
The clipping reported that the
California Angels had signed shortstop Rick Burle~on to a six-year,

'

His tw&lt;&gt;-year contract expi res at
the end of this season.

$4.2
million
contract
making
Burleson
the highest
paid, shortstop

Conc-.ij)Cion said he didn't know
who taped the story to his locker, but
admitted he was interested in its
contents.
When a reporter suggested that
Concepcion was worth as much as
Burleson, Concepcion responded ;
" You've got that right. "
REJECT OFFER
CINCINNATI lAP! - Ushers at
Riverfront Stadium have rejected a
wage proposal by the Cincinnati
Reds and have asked to be placed on
an hourly bases rather than a flat
per game rate .

,,. .

... i ·•

~~

The championship games are
Saturday with Class A at 11 a.m.,
Class AA at 3 p.m. and Class AAA at
7p.m.

CIIPO£D TO OTHER IUIIDS" AT KIOCEI.

'fOI IHl Mlfll COST ClmiS. 110 OTKliiUIIDS Ul STOCKED.
glove. A Scurry pitch got away from catcher Sieve
Nh'osla, Rubio Brooks batting, leading to the play. (AP
Laserphoto) .

MAZZILLI SCURRIES HOME - New York Mets
Lee Mazzllli slides home sale as Pittsburgh Pirates pitcher Rod Scurry turns and looks at the score, ball in

McNamara has smiling eyes
followi~g double triumphs
TAMPA, Fla. (AP ) _ ancinnati second when Duane Walker singled.
Reds Manager John McNamara ha'd took third on Mike O'Berry 's single
smiling Irish eyes after his. green- and scored when Ken Griffey hit into
clad pitching crew won two a fielder's choice.
e$ibition baseball games.
At St. Petersburg, Foster sparkc'&lt;i
Four Cincinnati pitchers, dressed a three-run second inning with a
in the club's traditional green-ondouble and Sam Mejias followed
white uniforms in honor of St. with a run-scoring single, Torn Foley
Patrick's Day, handcuffed the Min- · singled and the Reds scored on shornessota Twins on five hits, winning tstop Mike Ramsey's error.
3-0Tuesday.
Cin ci nnati starter Charlie
At the same time, the Reds second Liebrandt singled in another for a 3-0
team, powered by George F:oster's lead.
tw&lt;&gt;-run home run, took the St. Louis
Uebrandt gave up two unearned
Cardinals f&gt;-2at St. Peters berg.
rruns in the second inning when he
" At this stage, what we're pleased walked two Cardinals and Foley
about is the fact that they're 'j1~na;
· d;e;a; t;w;&lt;&gt;-;r;un;;;;;
er;ro;r;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
throwing strikes," said McNamara . 1
Another Irishman, Mike O'Berry,
ca ught the entir e game and
solidified his challenge for the Reds'
For All Occasions
third catching spot with two hi ts in
three times at bat.
But Johnny Bench, who wanL~ to
CAROUSEL CONFECTIONERY
catch only twice a week, stole the
show when he went out to play fi rst
Ph . 992-6342
base in the sixth inning. He was
317 N . 2nd
Middl e port

Decorated Cakes

errorless
putouts. and made two unassisted
"Like everythin g, it takes work.
You can't just walk in and make it
happen," Bench sa id.
McNamara sa id Bench will play
third base today against the Kansas
City Royals, and also would ca tch
during the exhibition season.
Dan Driessen doubled in two runs
in the first inning off Minnesota starter Roger Erickson, 0-l. drivin'g in
Ron Oester and Mike Vail. Mike
LaCoss scattered three hits over
three innings for the victory, his first
decision of the spring .
The Reds added a fina l run Ln the

·-

.....,_, ITE''em'MPOLICY
"

•••

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. 1APl
- Reggie Jackson is full nf sound
and fury these days .
" I'm a walking keg of dynamite,''
the New York Yankee outfielder
said Tuesday as he continu ed to
throw around sparks in his
celebra ted feud with team owner
George Steinbrenner.
" I can't hold in my feelings any
Jackson

fwned

in

~h Will entrfie y0u to py rl hone ''- advMrNd rltll ll 11

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want to tear this building down, but I
know he won 't come in here."
Jackson hopes to renegotiate his
contract which expires at the end of
the 1981 season. But Steinbrenner.
vividly upset when Jackson was
AWOL at the start of spring training,
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talked to the front office over a week
ago. The front office knows how I
feel. There's on ~,Y one way to solve it
- (but ) I won 't say what it is."

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••.
r r'

The Class AAA teams wait until
Friday night for their semifinals
with Shaw (2S-I) playing Patterson
(2fHJ) at 7 and Libbey (26-1) testing
Watterson (22-3) at 9.

The schoolgirl classic starts with
four games Thursday.
In the Class A semifinals, Edgerton (23-1) faces Buckeye Trail (22-3 )
at 2:3C p.m. and Anna (24-0) battles
Mapleton (25-ll) at 4:30p.m. In Class
AA, Hartley (21-4) draws Claymont _
(24-1) at 7;3C p.m. while Reading
(2fH!) is paired against Canton Celltral Catholic (23-3) at9:30 p.m.

.-

more,"

··:Reich, Reds set contract deadline

of last year's semifinalists, and one
.coach tapped Dayton Patterson.
In Class AA, Uhrichsville
Claymont was named oo four
ballots, Canton Central Catholic on
two and Cincinnati Reading on one.
Edgerton and ' Anna each were
picked three times in Class A. The
other small school vote went to ,
Ashland Mapleton.

SA VI UP '10 40% ON
SOOIItl. COS'I CU'I'II.I

sparks fly

#Ji •'

title choice to succeed Delphos
St. John.
Buckeye Trail, the 1979 champion
making its fourth straight semifinal
appearance, earned the Class A
favorite's tag by being selected five
times. Mansfield St. Peter, the 1980
king, did not qualicf .
In Class AAA, !hree coaches
picked Colwnbus Watterson, two
went for East Cleveland Shaw, one
AA

closest yet in St. John Arena on the
Ohio State University campus.
Alll2 semifinalists were named on
at least one ballot with Libbey, the
favorite to succeed Akron St. Vincent-St. Mary as the Class AAA
champion, selected six times by the
coaches.
Colwnbus Hartley, expected to
win its third state crown, was named
by five coaches to rank as the Class

vey, however, shows the slxth an-

Reggie makes

WilD PITCH DOWNS REGGIE

The Daily Sentinel-Page-7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

MEIGS TIRE CENTER. INC.

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1 8 1 98

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-..

Second Parent-Teacher conference
day slated Saturday, ·March 21

Talking (and listening) straight
across in their communica·
tions with their children.
The forces at work , on
parents are many. This mid·
life period of relative economic
success sometimes coincides

The Aal!lociated Press

Some years. ago there was a
whimsical, nostalgic book
about one man's recollections
of childhood, entitled
"Where'd you go? Out. What
did you do? Nothing."
Truth is, one of the things

short, sarcastic, accusatory .

They may feel interrupted, at
a time when they expected th/

nocent days. But the title of
the book says something
about parent·child com·

interruptions to be over.
marijuana scene where the
lines of communication to the

In a booklet,' " How to Talk
to Kids About Drugs." writ·
ten by Suzanne Fornaciari for
the Pacific Institute for
Research and Evaluation, the
point is made that the average
family with teen-agers spends
about 14\f• minutes a day in
parent-child communication. '
Of that, the researchers

lationships. Not much time.
It is also one of the reasons
parents are among the last to
know when their children
start using drugs like marijuana. They just haven "t

child are important. Although
concern exists about the drug
scene. "many parents hav·e

found that by the time they
discover their child uses mari·
juona, the youngster has been

tional crutch interfering with
schoolwork and soc.ial
development. "

parent take ten minutes of

each day to focus on the child.

pathetica lly to what the child

Ten minutes of watching,
listening, trying to figure aut

is feeling . rather than just

The booklet suggests that a

just who that flesh and blood
creature is. what he's think·
ing, what he does.
"Active listening is the key
communication,·· ·the

author explains. "It involves
hearing not only what a per·
son is saying, but what he or
she is feeling as welL It in·
valves listening patien tly
rather than thinking about
your next response .· It in ·
volves putting aside your own

responding to the word s.

With the dramatic and

struggled

to

make

begin to enjoy life without

ual marijuana use by today ·s
youngsters. s ome as young
as 11 . the casual .relation·
ship of parent and child t'an no

foots tep .
But en~er drugs into the
letting down .

longer remain casual. Young-

over yeL. Parents with that

sters entt!ring- adolescent;e or
in 1 it mu s t be heard. even if
t.hey are reluc ta nt to talk
about a lot of th ings .
This all co mes at a tough
time in life for parents. They

mind·set might find it dif·

steam up and you want to see out,
put a little dish detergent on a clean
dish cloth and wipe it over the win. dow. Later rinse and wipe the windows with clean cloths. Keep the one
with detergent on it to use for
something else. A good friend taught
me this and it works . -JEAN
Our thanks to the many readers
who sent in this same remedy . POLLY
DEAR POLLY - I live in a huge
high-rise ~ apartlllO!nt building and
have large balcony Windows that
used to look terrible when they
steamed up while I was cooking.
Now I use one of those defogging
mitts sold in automotive stores,
which are Used to wipe windshields .
The mitt has been infalliable and 1
do hope Mrs. W.A.S. tries one. - .
VALERIE
DEAR POLLY - I dust with a
new, cl~an, two-inch wide paint
brush. Jus! a flick of \he brush gets
all the dust out of little corners and
crevices. I first put bit of furniture
polish or lemon oil on the bristles
and do a better job in less time . MRS.REZ.
Polly will send you one of her
signed thank-you newspaper coupon
clippers if she uses your favorite
· Pointer. Peeve or Problem in her
colwnn. Write POLLY'S POINTERS in care of this newspaper.

:Genealogical society names delegates

•

have

worrying

Pencil marks ·in pockets

Kelley; Marks : Merritt ; Farley ;
Caster; Bobo; Green; Webb; David;
Westfall: Graham: Hurlow : Parry:
!hie: Fisher: Pullins and Sayre. Any
resident having information to share
on these families or who wishes to
correspond with others in reference
to the families listed should contact
Keith Ashley.
A notification was read on the forming -of the Rose Family
Association. Anyone who carries the .
name of Rose or is a descendant of
the Rose Family is asked to join .
Those interested should write, The
Rose Family Assn., 1474 Montelegra
Drive, San Jose, Calif., 95120.
Members of the society continued
their work on copying the quadrennial enumeration books of Meigs
County which contain a list of all
!leads of homes during the 1880s.
The next meeting of the society
was set for April 2ll due to the conflict with Easter Sunday on the
regularly scheduled meeting date. A
speaker will be present for the
meeting .

By Alma Marshall
Correspondent
Twenty·nine ladies from various
West Virginia Extension
Homemakers Clubs attended the
third Annual Women 's Day at the
Legislature recently . Eight of this
nwnber were from the Mason Extension Homemakers Club.
After touring the Capitol, the
group of over 1,200 women from
various organizations converged on
the Governor's Mansion and were
greeted by Governor and Mrs. John
D. Rockefeller IV . Sharon
Rockefeller supervised the
redecoration of many of the State
rooms. The cheerfulness of the
rooms as well as the hospitality of
Governor and Mrs Rockefeller made

says that parents can't run

economic gains through almost 20 years of marriage.
chHd·bearing and raising. In
terms of career and earning
power, they are at a peak. It 's
time to relax, they think . and
about

every

youth scene, and forget about
Th~

job isn 't

fi cu lt, even frusaroting to
ha ve to concern t hemselves
with the problems -of
adolescence. ·They may even
be impa tient and resentful.

•

away from the facts . "First.
they shouldn 'I treat it as a
capital offen se. It 's one of the
things that happen to children
in our society. The most im·

ponant thing is not to be
afraid to say, "hey, ~his is
what
1 think about
marijuana ... what about it? ' So

they should be direct, but
thev should not condemn.
Pa~ents must be ready and

willing to sit down and talk.
and they should. know. what
they 're talking about. They
have a re~ponsibHity to look
at what's bee n written about

children.'
NEXT:

19~ 1 .

Tht•

Pomp

MASON - The Mason Historical
Society at its meeting on Tuesday
decided to have its annual
Rhododendron Tea on Ma y 17 from 2
to 4 in the afternoon when the group·
met at the historic Lewis home on
Brown St.
Mrs. Delmar Alexander presented
the devotionals and Mrs. Cecil
Smith, the program :_ using a St.
Patrick's Day theme . Mrs . Lois Test
presided during the business
meeting.
Clean up day at the home was
scheduled for March 16 and 18.
Members were asked to participate.
It was brought out at the meeting
during which the president , Mrs.
Lois Test. pres1ded, the need of a
new large American Flag and a

A!sociated

and

Cir·

cumstance.

Darst infant
born at PVH
Mr. and Mrs. Danny Darst are announcing the birth of their second
child, a son, born on Feb. 14 at the
Pleasant Valley ·HospitaL The infant
has been named Christopher Doug ..
He weighed eight pounds and was 21
inches long .
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Eldon Vining of Rutland.
Paternal grandmother is Mrs . Bonnie Darst, Rutland, and the maternal great-grandmother is Mrs.
Goldie Graham, Rutland. Paternal
great-grandmother is Mrs . Gertrude
Stivers. Pomeroy. Mr. and Mrs .
Darst have another son, Corey
"Daniel, two.

-

West Virginia Flag. These are to be
used at the entrance to the historic ,
Virgil A. l.ewis home which has been
named to the National Register of •
Historic Places.
·•
· A luncheon followed the meeting .
The neKt meeting will be a dinner.
meeting on Aprilll at 5:30p.m. The;
Easter meditation will be given by..
the Rev . William Dawson of MasQil
United Methodist Church. For the
program everyone is asked to bring•
a favorite story. or poem about
Easter.
Attending were Mrs. Lois Test,.
Mrs. Lucille Swackhamer, Mrs.;·
Joyce Carson, Mrs. Bessie Ingels ..
Mrs. Delores Taylor, Mrs. Catherine
Smith. and Mrs. Evelyn Proffitt.

Infant Darst

A regular feature prepared by
lnake me more vulnerable to canthe American Cancer Society, to
cer?"
help save your life from cancer.
ANSWERlinc : It might.
QUESTION: " I am having dif- Studies have shown !hal the
ficulty swallowing. Does this
heavy and prolonged use of
mean I have CCUlCer?"
alcohol and cigarettes is imANSWERline: Not necessarily. plicated in throat, esophageal
But the condition is a warning
and bladder cancers.
ANSWERline : The Ocsignal that should not be ignored.
You whould see your physician so . cupational Safety and Health Act
that a proper diagnosis can be
of 1970 has as its purpose " .. . to
made. If a malignancy is present,
assure su far as possible every
the earlier it is diagnosed and
working man and woman in the
properly treated, the better the
nation safe and healthful working
chances are for your survivaL
conditions and to preserve our
QUESTION : " I'm a lowhwnan resources' ... " The law
income working man. Am I more
requires that employers provide
likely to get cancer than someone a workplace free from health and
who isn't so poor?"
safety hazards.
ANSWERline: We don't yet
QUESTION: "Do I need an anknow precisely what relationship
nual chest X ray or sputwn test
a person's lifestyle or place in
for the detection of lung cancer'"
society has to cancer, but we do
ANSWERline : No . These
know that the delivery and
procedures are no longer recomquality of health care and the
mended for routine checkups in
people without symptoms .
degree of eKposure to envirorunental conditions that may
Although they may help"to detect
cause cancer are Factors to be
some twnors earlier, there's no
considered. It is true that persons
proof that finding lung cancer in
in the lower soci&lt;&gt;-economic
this way has reduced overall
groups have above-average in- mortality. The American Cancer
cidence and death rates for all Society says the best program of '
fonns of cancer combined.
lung cancer prevention is quitting
QUESTION : "I smoke and en- smoking or not starting to smoke.
joy a few rounds of drinks when I · Call 992-7531 if you have any
get off from work. Does this
further questions.

DEAR HELEN :
I have a nine-year-old son from a
previous marriage . We take him on
vacation with us, and he visits
almost every weekend . My present
wife and I have two daughters, ages
two and four . They are being taught
responsibility and good citizenship.
with a lot of love. They enjoy helping
u.s at minor chores.
My son, however, is being used as
a crutch for his mother to lean on.
She lives with her pBrents and I'm
afraid they've all spoiled him into
becomin~
a mommy 's boy.
(Basically he's a good kid. l
Questions: Should we expect less
of Sonny than we do of our girls? Or
should he be required to make the
adjustment between very different
lifestyles, while staying with us? It
goes without saying that picking up
his toys, making his bed for him,
etc., is easier than retraining him.
but it doesn 't seem fair to the others.
Is there a happy medilnn' - DAD
WHO'S CON~'USED AN\) TRYING
DEAR DAD:
In this cas&lt;!, a happy mediuin
would be a cop-out. Sonny and your
daughters need . the same sort of
loving house rules, and if you
weaken, you're helping to spoil him.
I think that in time, he may even
enjoy his weekend and vacation
status as a responsible person,
rather than mommy 's little boy.
H.
.

Girl Scout cookies
coming this week
will

,.

'

h

•

Girl Scout cookies
delivered this week.

'"

Should visiting son get
equal treatment from dad? .
BY HELEN BOTTEL
Special correspondent

A skit about a European Nazarene
Bible College was presented by Mrs .
Judy Broome and son, Stan, at the
missionary meeting of !h.!' ~hurch of
the Nazarene of Middleport Wednesday night.
Mrs. Marjorie Taylor had scripture from I Kings concermng false
gods. Congregational singing included "Count Your Blessings," " It
Is Well With My Soul,'' and "I Will
Sing of My Redeemer ."

.

Helen Help Us

Cancer Answerline

Skit highlights fare

the ladies feel welcome.
The group of Homemakers froniMason County rested in the ' ·
sunroom. The cheerlulness of the"
room, with its white wicker ful" '
niture, the warm sunshine comint
through the windows, and the frien·
dltness of the hosts along with the
comfort of the seats made the trip toT
'
the capitol and mansiOn
a....'
memorable one. Prior to going to the •
capitol the first lady , Sharo1f
Rockefeller welcomed over 1,20Q
ladies a !tending.
Attending from the Mason Club
were Mrs . L.andon Smith, Mrs. Clara
Williams, Mrs. Laurene l.ewis, Mrs . ·
Sarah Spencer, Mrs. Joyce Carson,
Mrs. Lester Johnson , Mrs. Cecil
Smith and Mrs. John Marshall.

Historical Society meets

marijuana and to share that
information with their
Copyrighl
Pres:!! .

...
"'

So says the National Institute on Drug Abuse .,lts direc·
tor. Dr. William Pollio also

frightening incre11se in habit·

Polly's Pointers

, Mrs. June Ashley, president, and
Keith Ashley, secretary, were
. riamed delegates to the Ohio
Genealogical Society's aruma! convention on May 1-2 in Colwnbus
when the Meigs County
Genealogical Society met Sunday at
dle Meigs Musewn.
• Mrs. Margaret Parker was named
alternate to the state event. Anyone
interested in attending the con~ention should contact either
delegate concerning transportation
and convention costs.
. Plans were made for the society to
J118il its fjrst newsletter soon and
memllership cards will be mailed at
the same time. Plans are also being
made for the observance of Ohio
(fenealogical Week, April26-May 2.
· The society received a number of
letters for lnfom10tion on Meigs
families. These include Joseph and
Jtfargaret Haning Snowden; John
4lld Elizabeth Cook Frazier; James
Stanart : Joel and Rebecca Stanart;
$eniton and Sarah Spires; Cain and
~Iizabeth McMahon O'Neal; A.darn
and Sarah Catherine Hetzer Barber;

Extension Homemakers meet

to the point where the use of
marijuana has become an emo-

concerns for a while, and
focusing on the concerns of
the other.··
Then you can respond ern·

taken the time to notice.

Governor and Mrs. Rockefeller

smoking it for years - often

..

communicate with school people,
and to clarify any school related
problems that may have
developed. ·
Each child has been given a
brochure to take home which explains the scheduling procedure
for each building. Those not
receiving a brOchure, please call
the child's school before Saturday to arrange a conference.
Teachers will also be
telephoniflg many perents on
Saturday to discuss some particular problem or situation.

Several suggestions for parents
jnclude: Both parents should attend; be prepared to ask
questions; bring In any papers,
etc., to be discussed ; be on time
- try to follow the schedule that
has been set up; if more time is
needed ask about setting up an
additional conference: \hose
wanting more than one person
from the school in attendance,
call ahead of time : those needing
assistance, che,k with the principal upon enterinp the huilding .

'Have a Good Day ' tracts project
of Asbury UMW at recent meeting

All of this plays into the

munication . There isn 't any .

found, all but two minutes is
spent in such business l\S
"what's for dinner, and who 's
using the car." That leaves
two minutes for open com·
munir.ation and forming re-

f

with trouble in the marriage.
or with the pre-ordained decision of the mother to go to
work, or back to · work. When
parent·s communicate wiih
~heir youngsters, they may be

he did was lay down under a
tree and count his heartbeats.
Those were simpler, more in-

By Polly Cramer
Special correspondent
DEAR POLLY - How can I get
lead pencil marks out of the pockets
of my white
uniform? I .have
tried all kinds of
soap and bleach
but
nothing
works. - MRS. R.
DEAR MRS. R.
- Try working a
.\
heavy detergent
Cramer
solution into the
marks with your fingernails ur even
a dull knife, then add a few drops of
anunonia and work them in. As the
stain loosens, wash away with warm
water. That should do it.- POLLY
DEAR POLLY - I . have a
parakeet and have to clean seeds
and feathers off the floor every day,
or at least I did until! contrived the
following arrangement. I cut the
legs off an old pair of pantyhose,
sewed them up and slipped the top of
the hose over the bottom of the cage .
so it came about half way up. When I
lf&amp;nt to clean the cage I just slip the
hose off and shake it out. - RUTH
. DEAR POLLY - This is to answer
l'llrs. W.A.S., whose windows team
up when she cooks vegetables. When
I have this problem I set a fan in
frontofthewindow.- MRS. A. J. Z.
' DEAR POLLY - When windows

The second Parent-Teacher
Cmfeence Day for the Meigs
Local Scbools wiD be held on
Saturday, March 21, from 8:30
a.m. to3:30 p.m.
Jhls conference day is
arranged as a cooperative ventute with the Meigs Local
~chers and administration. It is
d"'lgned to provide parents wiih
aq: opportunity to discuss their
child's slfengths and weaknesses
in varous areas, to learn about
~ schools and curriculum, to

They frequently let that come

By JOHN BARBOUR

to

'

be

The cookies arrived here Monday
and scout.s are to pick them up from
either Mrs . Pat Philson or Mrs.
Susie Stewart.

DEAR HE! .EN:
You told 62-years-young "Not
Ready for the Scrapheap" to follow
her feelings are keeping her great
job while her husband retires.
Good! I agree that she should enjoy her career until she wants to
leave It
But when you added, "Your
marriage may not thrive under this
set-up," your sexist slereotypes tripped you.
A wife these days needn't be at

home just because her husband is ..
He can watch TV without her, and ·
have three squares a day by cooking
them himself, or he could rneetther
at work for mea ls out.
•
As for his missing sex in the afternoon . is his libido hooked to a
time clock? If he whipped up candlelight and wine dinne.rs for her.
he'd probably have more opportunities than he t'Ould handle.
only a littl e later in the day .
You should have pushed re ve rsal
of rooles as a happy solution. ~
KAREN
DEAR KAREN :
Your solution is Ideal: my comments were realisti c. When a man
wants hls wife's retirement so much
that he enlists his children's help in
persuading her, he won 't easily settle for the houschusband role. My
seKual stereotype could be wrong I hope it is' - but I still say this
couple's golden years may go to
brass whether or not "N RS" quits
work. Their aspirations simply
aren't compatible. - H.
My friend is an active pr&lt;&gt;-lifer,
and I respect her views, though
privately I feel that abortion is a personal choice .
However, she uses an IUD, and I
felt compelled to show her your commo!llt that a right-to-lifer fitted with •
ari IUD is like an SPCA marcher
wearing a fur coat: each tlrn,e the
device works the fertilized egg ,is
separated from the worn, I.e., ~n
abortion happens.
,
She got angry apd said this is not
the same: the egg isn't like a tw&lt;&gt;months-along fetus. aut If life h!ls
started, what difference whether it's
one day or 60 days old? The size.is
still miniscule. - LOGICAL
DEAR LOGICAL :
For logical people, small difference. For your friend, howeve,r,
lt'samatterofdegree.
.
Since I'm neither a pro-lifer nor ~n
abortion advocate, I'D leave It jlt

that. - H.

A project of distributing tracts entitled "Have a Good Day" was taken
on by the Asbury United Methodist
Women during a recent meeting at
the home of Mrs. Opal Kloes.
The tracts will be placed in
strategic places as well as being
handed out by the members. Fiftynine sick calls were reported . Officers' reports were given and Mrs.
Mary Cundiff had devotions on
"Salt." The missionary card for the

month was sent to Juneau, Alaska.
Several attended the Lenten break·
fast held at Trinity Church.
A workshop to be held at the
Rockland Church, Belpre, was announced, and plans were made for
the Easter breakfast. It was decided
the! the UMW will ask the young
adults to take care of the tables and
chairs. April harmon had the
program entitled "Telling Our

Story" and was ass1sted by Mrs.
Helen Teaford. Members related experiences of their years In the UMW.
"Footprints in the Sand'' was given
by Mrs. Opal Kloes to close the
meeting.
.
Refreshments in keeping with St.
Patrick's Day were served to those
named and Miss Marcia Karr, Mrs.
Margaret Eichinger, Mrs. Mary
Lisle, and Mrs. Christens Grinun.

Kramer. Blllle Is a freobman at Dalla• Unlventty and
his brother, Andy Is a junlor at Amarlilo Htgb School.
Evan Is a senlor at Plainview High School. All three
boys have been active In music and school activities as
well as Boy Scouts.

Social Calendar

In Who 's Who1

TfiURSDAY
ROCK SPRINGS Better Health
Club meeting scheduled for today,
·
cancelled.

Marcy Sexson, daughter of Jean •
Sexson, Route 3, Pomeroy, has been :

chosen for "Who's Who Among Outstanding High School Students.''

MIDDLEPORT Child Conservation League , 6:30 p.m. Thursday at the American Legion hall in
Pomeroy . There will be a potluck
dinner with husbands night to be oir
served. Clarice Kennedy will have
devotions.

RH ·factor problem may be prevented
By Robert G. Stockmal,
P.lanned delivery by caeserean secD.O., Ph.D.
tion .
Asslslant Professor of
QUESTION: Why is there usually
Family Medicine
no problem with the first child?
Ohio Unlverslty College
ANSWER : The mother usually
of Osteopathic Medicine
becomes sensitized to the Rh
QUESTION: My husband is Rh positive RBC when the child's blood
positive and I am Rh negative. We actually enters into her circulation.
are planning to start our family, but This does not usually occur during
are concerned about a possible the course of a nonnal pregnancy
problem we've read about which until the time of delivery when the
could result from our Rh difference. placenta is separating from the wall
Could you explain what this con- of the womb. This means that the firdition is?
st Rh positive child is born and gone
ANSWER : The problem you refer before the antibodies are formed . A
to is ca1led "Hemolytic Disease of subsequent Rh positive child,
The Newborn." It is a condition in however, will stimulate a memory
which the baby's red blood cells response, with antibodies being for(RBCs) heve a shortened life SpBn moo by the mother while the baby is
and a tendency to fall apart (lyse). still developing within the womb.
This produces a shortage of· RBCs
It is important to recognize the
(anemia) and an accwnulation of possibility of sensitization occurring
their breakdown products - both of as a result of an Rh positive fetus
which can be disastrous to the fetus. that was lost before tenn. This
The RBCs are more fragile than nor- would occur with a spontaneous or
mal because they are coated with induced abortion or tennimitlon of a
antibodies produced by the mother. tubal pregnancy. There is also a
l'heSe antibodies have crossed frum chance for the mixing of blood to octhe mother's circulation into the cur with premature bleeding during
baby's circulation while the baby is pregnancy or during special
developing within the mother's procedures such as amniocentesis.
QUESTION: Should we give up
womb.
When the mother is "sensitized" the idea of having more than one
(usually due to an earlier pregnan- child if our first is Rh positive?
cy) and her body produces these anANSWER: There is no reason for
tibodies, there is about a 30 percent you not to have as many children as
chance the baby will die. With you wish, since medical science has
aggressive medical management developed a way to prevent senthe death rate can be lowered to sitization from occurrmg in the first
about 10 percent. Such management place. The product is called "Hwnan
includes the. use of sophisticated anti Rho (D) inunune globulin ." It is
techniques like arrmiocentesis , in· given whenever there is a chance
teruterine transfusion and early that an unsensltized Rh negative

Food.for .Thought
beans, vegetable relishes and
milk .
Desserts can be nutritious if
you select recipes that are made
with foods that supply protein,
vitamins and minerals. Food
items such as fruils, vegetables,
nuts, whole grains, eggs and
dairy products can add nutrients
and good flavor at the same time.
Following arc suggestions of
desserts that taste good and add
to nutrient value of your diet :
Chocolate pudding - milk, eggs :
fruit salad - oranges, apples,
bananas: oatmeal cookies - . oatmeal, raisin, nut.s ; sweet potato
pie - &gt;Wee! potato, egg.
SWEET POTATO PIE
2 cups hot cooked sweet
potatoes, mashed
3 tablespoons rnargarine
cup marshmallows
'l.cupsugar
118 teaspoon cinnamon
i/8 teaspoon nutmeg
..., teaspoon vanilla
2eggs, beaten

'I•

~ocupmilk

1unbaked pie shell
Stir together hot sweet
potatoes, murgarine and marshmallows until melted. Add
sugar, spices and vanilla . Stir in
beaten eggs and milk und pour into unbaked pie shell. Bake at' 350
degrees F . lor 50 to 60 minutes or
until filling is finn.
Menu - Homemade vegetable
soup, cheese and cracker, fruit
salad, sweet potato pie, milk, and
coffee or tea.

woman might be exposed to the intennilting of Rh postive RBCs
(primarily from pregnancy but also
from transfusion). The product is
safe and effective and should be
used to prevent sensitization.
However, once you are sensitized
the product has no effect and the
sensitization cannot be reversed .
Talk with your family physician or
or she
give you
obstetrician.
more details Heand
can can
arrange
\O
have both you and your husband's
blood grouped and typed. He or she
is trained to better follow your
pregnancy if you may have sensitized and to insure that all of the
resources of modern medicine will
be available for the health and
safety of your child.

Basketball banquet set.

MEIGS COUNTY Democrats will
meet, 7:30 p.m. Thursday at Carpenters' Hall, E. Main St., with Torn
Hess, Ohio Attorney General's office, speaking: public invited.
MEIGS u~:; ·l' American Cancer
Society crusade kickoff meeting , 8
p.m. Thursday, at Veterans
Memurial Hospital with Paul Baxendale, crusade . director for Ohio
division, will be speaker: all volunteers urged to attend .

•t
•

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A senior of Eastern High Schoo~
Miss Sexson attends the distributive
education class at Meigs High
SchooL She is employed at Dutton !
Drugs in Middleport.
•

•

WJLI..ING WORKERS CLASS of
Enterprise United Methodist Church
Thursday at 7:30p.m. at the horne of
Dorothy Long .

Health Review

BY DIANA S. EBERTS
County Agent
Home Economics
DESSERT CAN BE
NUTRITIOUS
A dessert is usually a sweet
food thet is served as the last
course of a meaL Fruit, fruit
salad, gelatin, pudding , cake, pie
and ice ere are good examples of
dessert foods.
When serving a dessert ,
remember to select one that complements the entire meal .
Following is u list of gujdelines
for selecting desserts to serve
with meals.
GUIDELINES FOR
SERVING DESSERTS
Serve light, less filling dessert
with a heavy meal. If the dinner
meanu includes fried chicken,
mashed potatoes and gravy,
greens, roll with spread and milk
'you will probably want to choose
fruit for dessert.
A light meal may be finished
with a satisfying dessert. A dinner of soup, salad and milk is
nutritious but not too filling so
that a piece of banana cream pie
• will taste delicious.
Serve foods for dessert that are ·
'In season to save money and
make dinner a festive occasion .
'· Baked apples In the fall are inexpelllliveand tasty .
The color, texture, tem·
perature, shape and flavor ol the
deaaert food should be considered
when planning the entire meal.
'Serve frosty fresh peach sundaes
this sununer with hut dugs, baked

EAGLE SCOUTS- Three grandsollli of Mrs. W. 0.
Barnltz recently achieved the rank of Eagle Scout.
They are Andy and Billy Hoelscher (left), sollli of
Melvin and Billie Jean Baro!tz Hoelscher, and Evan
Kramer, son of Dr. Nicholas and Thanet Bamitz

A member of the National Honor '
Society for three years, she has been '
active iii DECA, student council
yearbook staff, BOE Club, FHA, and
chorus.
She is a member of the Mt. Her- :
mon United Methodist Church and 'l
her hobbies are reading and swim- '
'
'
nung.

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Marcy Sexson

j

Marietta College aid officer to speak here
MARIETTA
James L.
Stephens, director of financial aid at
Marietta College, will speak on the
topic of financial aid at the Meigs
High School Parent-Teacher Day
Saturday, March 21, acc9rding to
the high school guidance depart-

l

ment.
Stephens will speak at 10:30 a.m.
and will discuss student aid in
general terms. He will be available
later to talk with parents and students. The Parent-Teacher Day begins
at 9 a.m. and runs all day.

~-.~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiijiiijiiijiiijiiij~~

STARTS FRIDAY MORNING 9 · A.M.
2407 JACKSON AVE.

POINT PLEASANT, W.VA.

GOING OUT OF BUSINESS

The annual basketball banquet at
Eastern High School will be held
Monday, March 23, at 6 p.m. Tickets
are $5 each and may be purchased at
!he high school.

Willing Workers meet
,. .

The Willing Workers Class of Enterprise United Methodist Church
will meet Thursday, March 19, at
7:30 p.m. at the home of Dorothy
Long.

Hymn sing Saturday
The. Smith Sisters, the Heirs of
Chrtst and other local talent will be
featured at a hymn sing to be held at
1 p.m. Saturday at the United
Methodist Church in Cheshire.

ASTROGRAPH
Marrh 19, lhl
You Will lil'\'l'lop l:l n~w ~t of lllh!rt.'S\.!1 lh1s
L'\Jmm~ot Yl!l&amp;r . They could Wkc )'tlU uwuy
frum pcr1f~Jil..'i with whom yuu'n• been
us:tOCIHh:d In the pHSt , thuu ~h your new
. wuup of fncnds v.·1ll I.K' lhlnkin~t ;tlung
Similar lutes
PISfF..S 1fo't&gt;h. 2&amp;-Manh lti !1t111't let
other~ llpt!Mk for you ur 11\ilk\' impun&lt;~. lll
dt.'dl!IOI\S fur you tuday. Althoul(h their 10·
tcnltUn.s nu"hl be lo(uod, they may ntlt hundh!
nwtlcrs 11:1 )'llU would . Hunwnce , tnwcl ,
finant·t:s. luck 1111d ~1b lc pitful b ttrt.' u\1
dt~us.~nltn )'uur Astru-Gr11ph \l,'hich bc.KIIl!i
w1thyuur b1rthdt~y . Md tlll h•rcuch to A:rt ruGraJth , 1' . 0 . Hox &lt;159 . futtlltl City Stutiun.
New V11rk , N. V. 10019. ~sure lo sptdfy tur·
thdl!lt'.
AKIJo~ (Min'h 21-Aprll Ill In order 111 ~el
~rSI-11\'i tu t'\JIUC to yo ur Hid lodt~y you llll!{hl
bt- a hltlc lt)ll hberallll prurnisin!{ whal you
111tend to do for them in the future.
TAURUS iAprii!O-Miy to! Gourd tti(Hut~!
lcntlcncie:slodily tube tno pu:~:~t:s:ilve or cvc11
jt•alnus uf sunu.'\lne ilbuut whom yw ntn! u
lo(fl!Ht dt'MI. 0u lllllhinK you 'Jl!HII!r rcHrCl .
GEMINI 1M1y !1-Juae 211 Nunmllly
)'Ou'rc not cHsily dbcouru~ed. but today if
you eltpt!rlt'nt't' some selb1:u.:k!J you may want
tu tOMS In the htwt!l too curly .
CANC$R lJune 21-July Ul !Utlhcr tMn
tell it like it is tudily. yui1mt~y be lemptt:tl to
cm~llbth the truth il b!t. Unfortunatel y,
ynu're nul a !j:OOII .~ lory leller Hnd your lairS
l'\lUld t•omc ba~k 111 hlmnt yuu.
LF.•u !July 23-.Aua. 221 Thls mar not~ out•
of yuur OOlter days for n~Mn~l(lng your
~e&amp;'ilons ltlld rc,!!ources With wl:~dum .
C..arcle:tsnc:i/1 could huYc 11 hil(h prke Ull( .
VIRGO ! Au1. t3-.'k-pl. 2!1 T11.ke a rinn
,,u=nt ion 1111 lmptJrllnt i:J~~uell todt~)' ~ Un le:;s
your supporters know euclly wHen: YtlU
sblnd, yuu mi!(hl IUtvt• problr.m..'! l(rUlnto:
thtm tu b.ticlt you up.
I.IRRA I Sept. !MkL 231 Thbl i!lth!fimtely
nut 11 day tu try hl sweep yuur rt..'Sptlll·
llibililicu under the rug Thin~:~ left Ul\lll·
tenU...d Ctluld ca 1l.'tc you CYCil more ~e rwus
prublcu\:1 In the ncur fulurc .
Sl'ORPIO tOrt. !+-Nov. t%1 Have hi~th
hopes t~tay , but dmt't lake risky or foolish
moves in order tu tr y ltl 11ollvance tht• tunetable fur bringlnlo( them 1111u being
prcn\Mturely .
SAGm.uuus tNov. U·Ut!r. %11Yuur
proapcd~ fur sut·ces.~ arc only ra~r turllly.
Vou 're likely to t.tikr, thiii.ClJ fl.lr l!{rtUill-d
which yuur IJt:lter judl(ll11!11l caut ion YtlU
11houldn't
CAPRICORN O}et•. !l·Jn. Ill If ynu 1111.e
up :dlut4tii'Jil.ll ttlU haslil)' IOt.1fl)' there'll 11o
t'lwnt,.'tl y11u'll uverlootl: srnall, llut trnporlllnt,
lt.'4petl.a. Don1t re ly too heHvll)' on your first
reildlnft .
AQIJ.4.KIUS 1J1n. to-Feb . Ill Husit\C:i-'4
L'llnttitilliU ('UUld btl H tn0t lrll"ky (Ol" Yllll
today , espe~.'il:tlly if ytm'n• 111\'11111~1 In "'
situatlun shmlar !U lltte which wa~U• ' I tuu
lut•k y fu r ~'\Jll\11 thl~ IHt SI

SAVE
UPTO
ALL MERCHANDISE DRASTICALLY REDUCED!

WE'VE HAD MANY SALES EVENTS OVER THE PASt
32 YEARS OF SERVING YOU ••• BUT THIS SALE
WILL TOP THEM ALL BECAUSE IT IS OUR LAST!
•• BE HERE FRIDAY 9 A.M.

SELLING TO THE BAR_
E WALLS!
ALL STORE FIXTURES AND OFFICE EQUIPMENT IS FOR SALE
THIS INCLUDES MASON STORE, OUR WAREHOUSE AND
POINT PLEASANT STORE ··· WE'RE GOING TO SELL EVERY THING!
ALl. MF.HCHANDISE UA S HEF:N MOVED FHOM OUil MASON STOUF: AND OU!l WAREHOUSE TO THE ~!NT PI.F:ASANT
STUHF. - - FOB AOOINO OUT OF 8USINESS SAI .E TIIAT IS A ONCE A IJFETJME m~ FERING . NO PHONF. CAI.JS. NOTHING
HE1 .D BACK F'OH ANY ONE . WE MUST l.JQUI DA TF. 1\l.l . MO..IOiF:.AND F.QUIPMENT t'AST - - - SO VOU GET UN-HEARD OF
RF. DUCTIONS IT Al.l . r.OES, IN\ LU DINC. NF.W I .AWN FURNITURE . l l.01'HING. GIF'TS AND HOUSEWARES. WE SAY

r.OOOBVE WITH FAN1'A...1HIC IIUYS
YOU' Ll. BE SMART TO_ r .LAN AHEAD ~ND ,BU'r' NO_W FOR ~ 1XT YEAR . WE
r:UAHANH~F.
PHl CF:S Wll .l. NEVEU AE IDWF.H 1\1.1 . SAI .F.S f&gt; INA I.. NO llF.1URNS . NO EXCHAN GES .
TOM K. FISHER, PRES.
FtSHEH STORP.S lNC.

IF YOU LIKE BARGAINS • DON'T MISS THIS
STARTS FRIDAY MORNING 9 A.M.
BRING MONEY • •
YOU'LL BUYIII
VISA And Masle1 Cha1ge
Not Hon01ed F01 This Sale .
WEST VIRGINIA LICENSE
NUMBER 175
CLOSING OUT SALE

EXPIRES APRIL 19, 1981

2407 Jackson Ave.

Point Pleasant

'

'

�Wedne~day,

1981

li!CKTRACY

·BBC shifts emphasis from
public to pay television_
NEW YORK ( APl - The current
"Films from the BBC" retrospective at the Musewn of Modern Art
Wlderscores the contribution made
by Britain's publicly supported
broadcast system to American
television. Quite coincidentally, it
comes as the British Broadcasting
Corp. shifts its primary emphasis in
this country from public TV to the
pay variety.
The relaiiOnship between the BBC
and the Public Broadcasting Service
began nearly 15 years ago, with
productions like '!The Forsyte
Saga" and "The First Churchills,"
the premiere program in PBS' continuing " Masterpiece Theater" ·

c

series.

PROJECTS UNDERWAY - Students of Jim
Lawrence at Southern Junior High will be putting Ohio
Projects on display soon. Pictured left to right are
Richard GHbrtde - Wright Brothers plane; Ryan
Oliver - Rush Weaving; Mike Johnson - Covered

The BBC not long ago struck a 1~
year deal with RCTV, a newly formed pay-cable network run by Arthur Taylor, the fanner CBS
president. Under the new
arrangement, RCTV will have initial
access to the. entire BBC product aboui5,000 hours a year:

Bridge; Max Hill- Rufus Putnam hom~; Alana Lyons
- Fort Washington; Meliss~ Ihle - Ohio Flag; Kelly
Rizer - Great Serpent Mound ; and Seau GrueserNorthwest Territory.

•

''I think some people have
asswned we are opting out of our
commitment to PBS," said George
Howard, the BBC cbainnan, who
was in this country for the first time.
since taking the lofty position last
August. "That is riot true. They may
have to wait a little \onger now, but
they'll eventually get whatever they
want.
"Of course. there is quite a lot of
stuff in the pipeline," Howard said,
"and that won't be affected. And
there are rerw1s. We're just showing
now in England 'Elizabeth R. ·which
was made 10 years ago and shown
here, I think, in 1972. It's surprising
how good 'In looks, and it might be
ripe for rerun here."
In fact, PBS in recent years bas
taken only a fraction of the BBC
product for broadcast in this COWllry
+ aboul40 hours' worth, on average.
RCTV probably will use about 200
hours each year, and the rest will be
up for sale to PBS and others. In addillon, progoams distributed bv RC-

Grange banquet skl.ted
Plans for the annual Grange
banquet to be held April 24 at the
Salisbury Elementary School were
made when tlle Meigs County
Pomona Grange met Friday night at
the Rock Springs grange ball.
The banquet will be served at 7:15
p.m. with tickets at $3 for children

Racine
Social Events

,_
OHIO HISTORY PRJOECTS- Carol Cross- Ap., pie Dolls; Tonya Cummins- Ohio Capitol Buildings;
'' Lori Adams - Great Seal of Ohio; Theresa Bing Covered Wagon; Todd Adams - Fort Meigs; David

By Mrs. Francis Morris
Mrs . Beulah Bradford received
word of the death of her nephew,
William Brammer, Cleveland, Ohio.
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Turley, Mr.
and Mrs . Eddie Turley and Larry
Turley attended the fWleral services
of their cousin, Raymond Dent, at
St. Albans. W.Va.
,
Mrs. Edna Pickens has returned
home after being a patient at
Veterans Memorial Hospital and
spending a week with her son-in-law
and daughter. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Imboden at Middleport.
Mrs. Donna Jones of Mt. Vernon
spent a recent weekend with her
brother, Martin Wilco•en.
Mrs. Gladys Turley of Gallipolis
spent a weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Turley.
Mrs. Diana Wad s worth of
Philadelphia, Pa. spent two weeks
with her gra ndmother, Mrs. Edna
Pickens.

Duffy - Schoen bruno; Jeff Frank - Covered Bridge:
Charlie Boso - Great Seal of Ohio; Tony Frederick Peace Pipe; Tracy Cleland- Great Serpent Mound;
and Randy Beegle- Ohio Expansion.
.

The March meelmg of the Esther
Missionary Circle met Thursday af·
ternoon with Mrs. Mildred Hart,
hostess. at her home . Devotions by
Mrs. Dorothy Badgley opened the
•meeting . Topic was ''A Boy Answers
a Call for Men." Scripture was Matthew 9:37. Prayer was by Marjorie
Grinl!Tl. A business session was conducted by Mildred Hart, chairman.
Reports and announcements were
given. A program followed in charge
'of Mrs. Ora Hill . Readings by members incl.uded " Missionary
Paragraphs," ''Thelnnuence of One
Person," " History of Bacone
College:· The meeting closed with
" Blest Be the Tie" and The L&lt;lrd's
Prayer. Mrs. %art served refreshments to eight members. A card was
signed for Mrs. Grella Simpson who
is hospitalized at Holzer Medica l
Center.

Flag; Regioa Lee - Log Cabin; Lori Stewart- Apple

'

I

/. •

it¥'"

'

EVENrNG

'-:""~;'7.',~;.-_·.~

···---·-----·--------- . .. - - -'""'""'•n
:J:.Wl~!U "· ·.

FRIENDS
ABC NEWS
(I) 3~2·1 CONTACTProgramming

CIJ

may

CAPTAIN EASY
IN THAT RAVrNE, f!UH l,.,

DEAD TO TH&amp;
WOitLD~ ... l'Ll-

WAITl WE NOT GO
VET! ... MAltY TfLL YOU
SOMHHINGI

SURE LOOKS DArll&lt; AND
!ILEAl&lt; ENOUC.H!

NEV&amp;R HAVI! A
&amp;ETTeR CAAN C!!

'

I'D SURE LII&lt;G 10 .14lCAAJ Wl-1"-T IT iJ,W;
I '1t\OIJ(t.'I\T I ClRDER6D FFOM 11-IE:
FRE:IJC.H -51 DE OF -me IJall) ... __, :-

CIJ0(]) JOKER'SWrLD

l

1_100,000 NAME Tf!AT TUNE
OJ FACE THE MUSIC
7:58
CBNUPDATENEWS
8:00 (})DIIJREALPEOPLETonight'e

segment includes a look at
policemen drivi _
no In a demolition
derby; a profile of an English watch·
maker who powers everything from

"! """'"'""'

GOME! Ht 'S ASPRY (t~
DEVIL ! .

1.49

BUT

til' f

IN llME, HOWIWER,OLD PROBLEMS
AROSE 10 HAUNT OUR CIVILIZATION!

Has she
talked
since?

8 :45
10:00

Homemade

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

.CHEESE Pkg.~

1 79
•

10 lb. Maine Eating

POTATOES .... ~~-" '1.97
APPLES .......... ~.~P.. 7'1
16 oz. Ceilo

CARROTS ......~:w .... 29'

COUR9E ~OT.
T'G A 1!!16 PlACE
. AND 'AE H4.VE A

Of

LCi

o;:

10:28
10:30

YOU Co\N ,'IS IT WEND'
1\\ffl r'lE'R FRIENI7S,
5MOP &gt;OR ClOTHES

YOUNG

NCNSCNSE!

"!'OPLE ~ ORK I NG
THERE .

I Olr/V THE
PL.l.~ E. YOu

~-"-N

PICK .:'uT "'NYTHING
YOU WANT AND
CHAR5E IT

POMEROY PASTRY

SHOP
SPECIALIZES IN

DECORATED CAKES
if

•...:

If,

11
·~

FRESH BAKED GOODS
BAKED DAILY
POMEROY PASTRY SHOP

•

~~~a::--_:--.t~_.:----..,,,.z•••-"'!!a~-~--.
MORE U. S. . HISTORY PROJECTS - Julie
Houdashelt - Bottle Dolls; ScoU Schullz - Covered
Wagon; Darin Housh - Gold Sifltng; Lois Ihle - Ex-

pansion of U.S.; Greg Michael - Indian Clothing; Sandy Harden- Jamestown ; and J)ebbie Holter - Apple
Dolls.

History projects underway
again at Southern Jr. High

Every year the Ohio and U. S. History students of James
. Lawrence at Southern Junior High School make projects
~ ~ealing with their respective subjects. According to La wren. ·ce, there are many outstanding and creative ideas exhibited
· by the students, along' with time-consuming artistic
• creations. The students start planning the projects in Novem- ,
ber by writing reports and gathering backgrounr information about the project. Then the students begin making
their projects from any materials they have available. All of
the projects show high quality craftsmanship and display
qualities of many hours of hard work. In January the project
is completed with a class presentation. The projects pictured
. here will be on display at the Pomeroy Library Jor the next
!M!Veral weeks for the public to view.
'(

ALSO

216 E. Main
992 -2971
Food Stamps Accepted

TO ·\'E .'

Tasty Bird

CHICKEN LIVERS ••••••••••.••• ~~~: 9~

10:45
10: 58
11 :oo

6 Roll Pack Charm in

TOILET TISSUE .••••••••••••••••• sl.69
1o oz. 1nstant
NESCAFE COFFEE .••••••••• 1::...54.59
11oz. Del Monte

FRUIT COCKTAIL ••••••••••••• 21s1.29

10 YOU 5HUT TH'

I!OO&lt;)R TIGHT ON
WOODSHED?

GOODY·· I DOt\l'T WANT
NO WILD VARMINTS
GITTIN' IN THAR

&amp;

Racine, Ohio
New Phone 949-2894
Located Beside Carpenter's Pennzoil
We Have Auto Parn to Fit American &amp; Import Cars
COMPARE OUR PRICES!
THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL- TUNE -UPS
Conventional Ignition
Electronic Ignition
Tune-up Includes :
Tune-up Includes :
Points, plugs, condenser
plugs, fuel filter
·
adj
. carb., ck. PCV valve
adj. carb., ck . PCV valve
fuel
filter &amp; au• tiller
+air filter

•4995

Special Ends ,March 20, 1981
Mechanic.on Duty- We Honor Golden Buckeye Card
)

RED KIDNEY BEANS •••·••••••••• 6~
2 lb . Great Northern

DRIED BEANS ,...........•.•••.... 98~
46 oz. Size
Can
S} •09
PINEAPPLE JUICE ••••••••••••••
Pkg.

8 oz . Wind ex
'

GLASS CLEANER .••••••••••••••••••• 5~
3 lb. Golden Isle

VEGETABLE SHORTENING·~:~. s1.98
2 lb. Domino
BROWN SUGAR .••••••••••••• J:~;sl.39

automob iles to home appl iances
on lemon Juice; and a visit with a
70 -year -old female disco dancer.
(~0 mins.)
C1J SIGHTS AND SOUNDS OF
LIFE
CIJ(j2)11J THE GREATESTAMER·
!CAN HERO A comedy-adventure
series about a normal American
schoolteacher who becomes en·
dowedwllh superhuman powers .
Stars : William Kat!, Robert Culp.
(Eremiere: 2 hrs.)
UCil®l ENOS Enos and Turk don
fishing garb and gear in a wild . sea going underco'o'er allempt to lar~da
burglary ring that terrorizes a San
Peclro Marina . (60 min a.)
(I) LION IN WINTER Kalharine
Hepburn won herthirdOscarforher
role as Eleanor of Aquila ina in th is
, elegant domestic comedy abo~!
the private lives ol royalty 10
med ievaiEogland . Peter O'Toole
also stare aa Henry II.
l]j) AI.I.CIIEATURESGREATAND
SMALL ·ways and Means' James
decides that he would rather lace a
sa'o'age dog any day than make a
speech to the Derrowby Youth
Club.
JOHN WESLEY WHrTE
C_IN UPDATE NEWS
U IIJ DrFF'RENTSTROKES
C1J 700CLUB
(1) MOVIE -(DRAMA!"' "Border·
line " 1Q80
0 (]) 110J CBS WEDNESDAY
NIGHT MOVIE 'The Gambler ' 1980
Stars: l&lt;ennyAogers. Christine Bel lord .
(ll) ~'EST Sl BON
ffi U aJ THEFACTSOFLIFEOne
of Mrs. Garrell's sons visits East·
land and convinces Natalie that
she's a talented songwriter and
should leave school to pursue a
career.
@ BROKEN ARROW 'Can a Nu clear Weapons Accident Happen
Here?' This documentary presents
a startling investigat ive report on
the storage, testing, tranapona tion , health and safety risks ol nucl earweap ons in the San Francis co
area .
CIJ TBSEVENING NEWS
(})U aJ QUINCYOurncyac c•den tally learns that the usessination
of a government olflcial is plahned
and he races against time to thwart
the ru._ot . (60 min a.)
(lJ (!aJG) VEGAS Blinded bye bun gled ganotand-s!yle $hOOting, Dan
desperately undertakes a trustrat ·
10g struggle to overcome his han·
dicap and lind his assailants. (60
mins.)
NEWS
.Cll CBN UPDATE NEWS
ffi MA~ MORRIS
[() TOGETHER ... WITH LEO BUS·
CAGLIA Speaking before an
audience in Sacramento, Calilor·
nia, Dr. Leo Buscaglia urges his lis teners to move away from the cur·
rent vo~ue ot the 'me generat ion' ,
alid in to the tovmg reality of close
tie s with family . husbands and
wives. Chi ldren and grandparents.
His s1mple message: ·Together nessi9made in heaven, but must be
Bf!!CIJced on earth .'
l1J) OUTER UMITS
CIJ LOVE AMERrCAN STYLE
Cil CBN UPDATE NEWS

ffi

\llJ

rn e m m o rn rw ti21 1D

NEWS
JEWrSH VOICE
C!J THE CANDrDCANDIDCAMERA Alan Fun! travels all over the
country to catch the unsuspe cting
in \l&amp;ry p~ecanous situations.
ffi NIGHT GALLERY
11: 28 [JJ CBN UPDATE NEWS
11:30
THE TONIGHT SHOW
Guest. Jan Stephenson . (60
mms)
liJ ROSS BAGlEY SHOW
(1) f!BO SPORTS MAGAZrNE &gt;
FIRST EDITION The first edlt10n ot
HBO 's eJ~~cluSIV&amp; new sports show
premieres th1s month with a ca ndid
look ill baseba ll's wrnter tracling
seaaon
and
the
athletes m·adllertlsmg craze. plus super sjar prairie s, and more .
l $) MOVIE -(DRAMA) ••• '• "AI·
lockr'' 1856
()) 1121 OJ
ABC
NEWS
NIGHTLINE
0 (I) CBS LATE MOVrE
'ORACULAA .O ' 1972Siars . Chr~s ­
topher Lee, Peter Cushmg
l.tl ABC CAPTIONED NEWS

CD

30 oz. Joan ot Arc

"BEND
.SERV.
~~\;
CENTER
.
~~~
V
AUTO PARTS
""&lt;.

I I I

(j

t:IX

I

ITAPCER±

tRANLYX~
) I ( I I
D.-.LL-L...J;,....:L.,....L..J

Now arrange the c1rcled letters to
form the surpr1se answer. as sug·
gested by the above can.oon .

r xx x JaJ a,.,.....,~x~J

Answer hers:

(Answers tomorrow }

Yesterd~y' s

I

Jumbles

BOUND

WHEEL

BEWARE

FORCED

Answer : You might be in need of these inside facts

when you 're " high up " - THE LOWDOWN

BRIDGE

(jj)

Europe•n•" 1$79
(I) NBA BASKETBALL Atlanta
Hawke vs Boston Celtica

PICKLE &amp; PIMENTO LOAF.!-~;. 51.89

12 oz. Kratt American
Individual Sliced

SAYES

lo

(1) HOLLYWOOD SQUARES
l]j) OICK CAVETT SHOW

5

3 lb. Winesap or
Golden De'ticious

due

TIC TAC DOUGfl
MACNErL·LEHRER
REPORT
@)NEWS
7:30 CIJD BULLSEYE
.
(}) AT HOME WITH THE BIBLE
(])MOVIE -(DRAMA)"" " Tho

(I)

~

Quarters Limit of 4

four ordinary words.

0 ())

BORN LOSER

8 :30

MMGAR~NEn 2/99

Unscramble these tour Jumbfes,
one tetter tQ each square, to lorm

(D WILD KINGDOM 'Dance of the
Grebes' Pert I.

Eckrich 1 lb.

4

byHenriArnoldandBobLee

(I )(HJ Ill FAMILY FEUD

8:30
8:58
8:00

Eckrich

interrupted

(I) ~LrNTHEFAMILY

ll-lE DEMISE OF WAR . MANKIND TURNED TO BUILD ·
A NEW II.ORLD, AND DREAMS BECAME REALITIES!

••••••••••••••••

~ ~tHATSCAAMC ' r,,WORD GI\ME

~doing .

The Public Ulil1lies Com·
miss1on of Ohio has set
lor public hearing Case
No . 81 · 2·EL ·EFC . Jo
rev1ew lhe fue l procure·
men! practices and pol1·
cies of The Oh10 Power
Company , the operation
ol its Elec tric Fuel Com·
ponem Clause. and related
mailers . ThiS hearing IS
scheduled to oegm at
1 00 p.m. on Monday .
March 23 . 1981 . at the
C11y Counc11 Chambers .
21 8 Cleveland Ave . S W .
,Canton . Oh1o 44702
Allln.teresled par11es w111
be given an opporlunlly
to be heard . Funher mforma!lon may be oota1ned
by contactmg !he Com miSS IOn .
THE PUBLIC UTILIT IES
CO MM ISSION OF OHIO
By Dav1d M Polk .
Secrelary

Pkg.

be

l11l OV!R EASY 'UvinQ Together'
Guest : Attorney Harriet Pilpeland
Dr. Jamea Petereon . Host : Hugh
Downs.
(Closed -Captioned;
U.S.A.!
8 :30 (I) D IIJ NBC NEWS
.
(}) 30 MINUTES WITH FATHER
MANNING
(I) BOBNEWHARTSHOW
CIJ FA~ THE MUSIC
0 ()) 110) CBS NEWS
(I)
WrLD WILD WORLD OF
ANrMALS
l]j) UUAS, YOGA AND YOU
(j2J OJ ABC NEWS
8'58 CIJ C_BN UPDATE NEWS
7:00 CIJ• PM MAGAZrNE
(}) SEND FORTH YOUR SPIRrT

ALlEY ClOP

CHEESE FRANKS

ftllfiNI ID'il

~~~~ It

e,oo Cll ll ctlill (f){l§ilill CD News
CIJ BIBLE BOWL
CIJ CAROL BURNETT AND

LEGAL NOTICE

and $4 for adults.
The state sewing contest will be
judged at the May meeting . Stanford
Stockton gave the legislative report,
and Arthur Crabtree had the literary
program. Refreshments were ser.ved by Racine Grange. Rock Springs
will serve at the May meeting.

"&gt;

Television
•
•
VIewmg

'

TV will be available for later broad::
cast on commercial.or public TV. ~
The BBC, in thai context, is
looking for someone to syndicate its
programs in this country. Time-Life
Television, which bas distributed
BBC pr9grams in the United States
for years, is folding up shop in a mat·
ter of weeks.
The "Films from the BBC" show
at MOMA, arranged by the museum
and by Harvey Chertok, vice
president of Time-Life Television, ill
a fitting way to end the long relationship. Chertok helped set up two
previous tributes to the BBC - at
the Los Angeles County .Musewn in
the swruner of 1979, and at IIIII
American Film Institute . In
Washington in November of tbat
year.
The program includes a dozen
films from the sse. only four of
which - " Isadora," "Dellus: A
Summer Song," "On Giant's
Shoulders," and " A Hymn from '
Jim" - were broadcast previously
in this coWJtrv.

1

The Da i I Se,

f&gt;llarch 11,1981

CIJ IJ m

(l"Q'J MOVIE -(DRAMA) ••• "Buck

FROM WOODSTOCK? I
C'l DN'T EVEN KNOW HE
WAS GONE ...

''DEAR FRIEND OF FRIENDS,
AM ON MV WAv TO
SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO
TO SEE THE SWALLOWS
RETURN ... '

And The Preacher " 1972
12:00 l O)(f2J IIJ LOVE BOAT··POlrCE
STORY Love Boat 'Ages of Man '
Jul ie, 10 love w1th an o lde r pas senger. 15 '" turn th e o btect o l a
young t eenager's cr lJSh P ol ice
Story · w~t come lo th e Ga rd ens '
Joe Forres1e r not on ly help s quell a
ler11ly1nu 1,11tng w1u . blJI also helps
theperpet r atorstoa new way ot hie
(Rel!_!al 2 hrs . 19 m1ns )
12:30 2l U i h TOMORROW COAST·
TO-COAST

Top and bottom team play
By Oawald Jacoby
ond Alan Son lag ·
At both tables in a Swiss
team match the bidding was
identical. North's two-heart
call was a Jacoby transfer to
ask South to bid two spades.
After South complied. each
North jumped to game and
both Wests Of"'n~ the lour of
clubs to East s king.
At table one South took hi s
ace. played two rounds

or

trumps and led a low
diamond. West's nine held the
trick and he led the eight of
hearts. Dummy and East
played low and South took hi s
queen . Now he played ace and
another diamond. West was in

with the king and led a second
heart to give East two heart
tricks and 100 points plus.
At table two, South ducked
the first club. East led back a
diamond. South ducked . West
took his nine and led lhat
same eight of hearts to
South's queen. Now South
drew trumps, discarded a diamond on the ace of clubs and

played ace and another
diamond. The suit broke, so
after ruffing in dummy, South
came to his hand with a trump
and got to discard one of
dummy's hearts on the last
diamond to wind up with I0
tricks and 620 points.

NIJIITII
. AJ9B16

3· 18-81

• K 10 2

• 7 f) 4

+~

If

EAST

WEST

• B 6;

••

t KJ 9

t Q R3

• 32

• AJ 93

+QrOB42
+KJ913
SOtiTII

+ K Q Ill 5

., Qi l

• ~ 10' 2
+Ali

Vulnerable· Both
Dealer: Soulh

,.,.

West

North

Pass
Pass
Pass

F: ~;~.s t

South

Pass

2+

I'3!1S

Pass

I NT

Opening lead +4

South

number

one

was

unlucky. West had to be able
to win both di amond tricks

and East had to hold the heart.
jack, but the diamonds broke
3-3 and that gave South num·
her two an extra chance that
was the winner .
(NEWSI-'AI'I!;IIt•:NTI::":.BPHISJ:: ASSN. j

t!l~... ~-

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
41 Wilfrid
- White
I Slone chest
5 Muslim deity DOWN
10 Rhode
I Talkfests
Island's
2 Old Greek
colony
motto
11 Not fastened 3 Explaining
12 City
4 Thrice (mus. 1
of Manasseh 5 Lofty
Yesterduy's Answer
13 Original
6 Mota on film
7 Law !Fr. )
29 Superman
22 Old-tune
15 Sesame
on film
16 Old ~'r. shoot- 8 Practically
peruke
telling
ing match
23 Nouveau - 30 Tendency
9 Listen
17 English
24 Dislodge
:11 Subside
rlver
14 Tall
:t6 llunno se
16 Undersized 25 Arizona
I~ Cracker
river
knife
19 Quality
20 Gear tooth
of SOWld .
21 Verge 011
37 himmell
21 Lytton
heroine
22 Ruffian
23 Uke a cold
sufferer 's
nose
25 Substantial
26 American
playwright
27 Bookie's
concern
28 Greek letter
29 Egyptian city
32 Faucet word b,..+-l--33 Epoch
34 Eye
35 Eaten into
Ji Cruising
38 Debonair
39 Argot
40 Anesthetic
DAILY CRYPTO&lt;!UOTE - Here's how to work It:

AXY D L8 A AX R
Is

I.ONGFEI.l.O W

One leLter simply stands fu r ;m oth er. In th is Si'l mplc A II
used fnr thr Ul rCl' 1:s. X fnr I he twu O's. t'tc

:~postrophes, the lcn~th :md

fnrmati tHI o{ lht&gt;

~i n ~le

letters

words ar('-

ad

h lnt_y Earh da&gt;· the rude lett ers arc different

I'RVPTOQ UOTES

I Q YHH0 H
S Q .I D L 1:1
SQJIJI.I:I

HAH

S .I Q T IL

I H W0 H

W IJ T

HWK

II A II
II ,\ H

T Y U It
I! II Y Q ~·

H K H 1·: I II .! Y ll IJ

\' \l .I i . .1 IJ
X D F D Y G IJ
Yt•sterduy's Cryptoquute: YOU'VE 1:0'1' TO lXJ YOUH OWN
GROWING. NO MATTEH HOW TAl. I. YOUH l: HANIW I\THEI{
W.-\S.-1\NON
198 1 1\ &gt;f\~j f•'d\ 111 1: ~ ~ Vfll \11 11111 li11

TOURIST INCREASE
BASSETERRE, St. Kitts (AP) - The twO-island
state of St. Kitts and Nevis is preparing fo1· an expected
25 percent increase .in visitors this year, according to
Michael 0. Powell, minister of tvurism .

,.

�Pa9e-12- The Daily sentinel

Masses, celebrations mark St. Patrick's
•

By Associated Press ·
Cleveland paid tribute to St.
Patrick, the patron saint of Ireland,
and everyone else on March 17 with
a parade, Masses, a banquet and
counUess sponlaneous celebratioll'i
all over town.
The Lake Erie city Is noted for
free-spirited celebration each St.
Patrick 's Day, distinguishing it
from othe r Ohio cities where observances are less spectacular.
In Youngstown, the Irish waited
until dusk to march the third annual
Pete Gabriel St. Patrick's Day
Parade along downtown streets.
With high school bands and floats on
display, hundreds cheered. c()grand marshals were U.S. Rep. Lyie
Williams, R.()hio, and John P.
Brown, commander of the United
Veterans Council.
But the real fun Tuesday was in
Cleveland. Festivities began with a
lw()-hour parade through downtoWn
during the middle of the business
day. With a bit of Iris h luck, about an
inch of snow which fell overnight
disappeared by midday.
Thousands of people, many wrapped in green woolen caps and scar·
ves, braved sub-freezing tern·
peratures and whipping winds to
march in the l14th St. Patrick's D~y
parade. Tens of thousands mote
watched.
;
The parade, sponsored by 12 Irish,
American groups, featured 114 uni~

ANNIVERSARY mJSH WALK- Jay McMullen, left, his wife Mayor
Jane Bryne, center, and parade grand marobal Gen. Michael Healy (ret.).
lead the annual St. Patrick's Day parade In do11'1Jtown Chicago Tuesday.
McMullen and Byrne are celebrating their tltlrd wedding anniversary
today. They carry Irish shillelaghs In their right hands. ( AP Laserphoto).

Lawmakers must decide
COLUMBUS , Ohi o iA P l
lawmakers are trying to decide
whether the state's 1,320 townships
should have limited power to pass
some of their own laws.
Under the Ohio Constitution, these
local goverrunental units - com·
prised of unincorporated areas of
counties
must go to the
Legislature with even the simplest
of bills when they want and need
change. One township, for example .
required passage last year of a state
Jaw in order for it to rent its town·
ship hall.
Michael Cochran. lobbyist for the

Ohi o · Association of Towns hip
Trustees and Clerks , outlined the
problem Tuesday night at a meeting
of the House ~al Goverrunent
Committee. The panel is conducting
hearings on two similar proposals
which would give Ohio's townships,
where about 4 million of Ohio's 11
million citizens reside, blanket
authority to enact legislation.
In the case of one bill, sponsored
by Rep. John A. Bega la,. D-Kent,
residents of a township would have
to vote io give trustees Jegisla ti ve
authori ty before it could become a
fact.

from c1v1c groups, cluba, schools,
churches, businesses and labor
unions. Proud Irish foil\ marched,
children danced jigs and rode
unicycles, high school bands played
drums and bagpipes and a few
people rode atop a giant Irish coffee
mug.
" This is the best da y in
Cleveland," said Dennis J ones, 30. a
wa llpaper han~er dressed in a green
sa tin costume and plwned hat he vut
together at a Ma rdi Gras para de in
New Orleans.
The enthusiasm of parade wat·

chers generated good cheer Inside
restAurants and taverns, where
celebrants were considerably war·
mer. Many people drarlk beer along
the sidewalks and in Public Square.
Police on horseback controlled the
crowds lining the sidewalks. One
police offi cial said a city ordinance
banning the drirlking of a lcohol in
public is · not enforced on St.
Patrick's Day . " We 'd start a riot if

we tried to,'' he said.
Green ganneni.s, flowers and
trirlkets were everywhere.

BIDDERS

Seal ed bid s w i ll be
r eceived by the Boa rd of
Commi ssioner s of M eigs
Cou nty at Pom eroy , Ohio,
unfr l 2:00 P.M . on Thur s
daY. M arch 26 . 198 1 and
o pened
immediately
therea ft er for f urnishing
t he necessary l abor and
mater1als,
t ools .

In the reviewing stand &amp;IOilj!
Superior Avenue, the Rev. Ua!n
Kilt, pastor of St. Vincent de Paul
Roman Catholic Church In Etyr!a,
watched the parade as grimd ma.r·
shal. Kitt, who was bom In CoW\ty
Galway, Ireland, said he arrived In
the United Stales 37 years all"
Tuesday.

MEIGS COUNTY
TRAINING
CENTER AND
WORK SHOP
MR ·68 AND MR ·30l
SYRACUSE , OHIO

Cochran said the s tate association
supports that proposal, along with
another introduced by Rep. Richard
F. Maier, R·Massillon, " in con·
cept." But the group believes the
Legislature should restrict the types
oflocallaws that could be passed. 1
Most of Ohio's rural townshi~s,
about 1,100, do not want the
authority and are content to have
things tb!! way they are, according
to Cochran. The r est are mostly ur·
ban, with many having the same
type of problems as municipal corporations.

missioners .
Separate bi ds

OF COST are l is ted :
l. Gener a l , $625,095
2, Pl umbi ng, $96,985

accordin9 to the drawi n ~:Js
and spe c ifi catiOns on tile •n
Th e office ot the Meigs
County Board of Com

3. HVAC. $ 167,520

4. E lec tri cal, $1 23,435
5. Food Ser vi ce Equip
men t , $30,000
Copies of sai d d rawi ng s
ahd spec ifi cat ion s may be
ob t ai ned by p r i m e Didder s
fr o m E esl ey, L ee, Vargo &amp;

I
I C~ ss~dy Ar c hitects. Inc.,
I 326 FrOnt Street . Marietta ,
Oh io 45750, upon the deposit
~~. or
w iththe mof$50 .00inc•sh
check l o r each set of

Pay· Cash for

l

On Tuesday night, the Cleveil~Rd
Associated Irish-American Clubs
held Its annual ball, which featurtd
the coronation of Queen Deirdre, ,ii.J,
ancient queen of the Emerald Isle."" ·

Wri te your own ad and o rder by mall w1th tnis
coupon. Cance l your ad by phone 1/1.· en yo u ger
resul ts. Money noT re fundabl e

•'

1
1

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1
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&amp; Ave loon

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1 t _ Hflp W• '" e cf
· ll - 511v•ttcl W1 n te d

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These cash r ates
inc l ude discoun t

11 . 11 .
19.
20.
71.

--:-- - --

1:
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24 .

25 .
26.
5.
77 .
6.
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7. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ . 29.
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12.
13.
14 . - - -- - -- -

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14 - luuniU Trillon tng
I 5- Sctlools lnUructoon
Itll1d10, TV
&amp; CB Rlpilllr ·
11-Want~ To Db

eFINANCIAL
11 -

I!Wstneu
OIIPOrlunity
12- Mone., to L&lt;Nin
n - Proten1on•l
Se rYo CU

e REAL

eFARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK
• t- F•r'" Equipment
d - Wintt'd lo luw
n - Truc:tu tor bl!

n - Li,.estock
•4- Hiy &amp; Greon
U - Sted &amp; Fertolutr

I

eTRANSPORTATIDN i

l4 - llu stnnl 8U oldong\
H - l Oil &amp; Ac re.tg t
h - Qt-11 ESl.tlt W.t n lt d
H - Nullors

eSERVICES

ESTATE

J t- Homt t to r Sllfl
l1- Mobo1 1! Hom !!'
l or ~ l it
ll F'1 r m 1 tor S. le

Want· Ad Advertising
Deadlines

I
I

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n

M . O.t oiY
Noon hlvrdrr
tor MOndly

I t- Home lmpro... tmtnts
U - l"lumbmg I E.r; 1 v at ong
n - E,cl "' "'"l
1'- llectro c •l
I ltt!riltrlftOI'I
U - Oeneral Ht~ l int
a.-M H . •ep&amp;tr

11- UpftOIIftfY

'
f

Rates and Other Information

34 .- - - - - - - - - - -- 3S . - - - - - - - - -

15.- -------- - - 16 . - - -- - - - - - - - -

Mail Tnis Coupon with Remittance
The Daily sentinel
Box 729
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

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

I

Cult

I dl~

a,.,,

1.00

~.~,

,"'

us

..

1
) d·• ., ,

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A donkey basketball games will be
held at Eastern High School at 7:30
p.m. Saturday. Advance tickets
may be purchased from business office education students for $2 . The
price at the door will be $2.50.

weren' t Irish, that dldu't stop some, lneludlllg the
"O'Try'n to be Irish Gang" behind the Gallagher1&amp;
unit. (AP Laserpbotol.
. .,

I" mtmor y . C•rcl ol 1fn l" 1nd Obrl111r .,.
mtnomwm . CliP\'" ld¥i11r1U

t c tl'l!t ~ttr word , U to

o1"1~

,

__

"""!
I

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,_

In M emoriam

---·

4

--. Giveaway

SCRVIC£. WIL-t..
OEL IVE..R ;.\1 ~0..1.1 E' ·

ANY P E RSON

THREE.
PAYS IN THE
HOSPITAL ANV

HOA--1E wrrn m t:
BAB'f.. TH&amp;'f
SHOVLO HAVE
~~PT &gt;tlti '!HPEE
WEEKS , /~ '1t&gt;U

ASK ME ....

lf"OR~

Card of Thi!nk s

In Loving Memory of
John Albert Logan who
went hom e to be with
JeSL!S, tne elgh1een1h ot
March, 1980.
Tha t m an is a success
who has l ived w ell ,
la ughed of ten and
loved m uc h ;
Who has gai ned the
r espec t of i nte l ligent
men and fhe love of
c hildren
Who has fil led his ntche
and acco mplished his
t ask ;
Who leaves the world
beHer t han he f ound
It , w hether by a n im
pr oved popp y. a per
fee l pi ct ure or a
resc ued sou I;
Who nev er lack ed ap
pr eci a ti on of earth's
beaut y or fa iled to ex
pr essi l ;

WE WOULD like to e xpr ess
Who look ed fo r the be st
our th ank s to our many
in oth er s and ga ve 1h e
fr
iends
and
nei
ghbor
s
for
BID GUARANTY mee ting
bes t he had ..
lhei
r
heJ
p
dur
i
ng
the
1he r equ i rem ents o f Sect ion
we will alway s love
1 53 . 5&lt;~ of fh e Oh io Rev tscd
sick nes s a nd dea t h of
htm and alway s miss
Code .
Samuel Gibbs . Sp ec ia l
our John AI bertie - my
Bidder s ~hall note lhat fh anks
lor
the
food ,
the Pr eva i l ing Wage Ra tes f lo wers. ,
husband , his children's
eme r ge n cy
publ tshed by 111c Deparl
Daddy, and h i$ Father' s
. mcn t
ot
Indu s t r i al sq uads: H ol zer H osp ital
5on .
an
d
t
hei
r
sl
afl
,
Rev
.
Re l at ions r~re to be com
Lov e forE tern ity,
plied WIT h l hroug hOUT thiS Ric hard Th omas and the
Wile- Kathy
Walk er
F unera l Home .
protec t .
Ch.ldren ·John Mich~el
B1dder s shall a lso no fe Thariks for th e m .=. n y cards
Tamitha Elaine
that th e Rul es
a n d a nd l elep hone calls and
Father-Delmar Logan
Reyul al ion s on Equal E m · an ybody th a t helped in any
ployment Opportun i ty sha ll w a y.
be ma de a part of th •~ con
T he Fa mil y of Sa m uel Gib
trac t .
No bi dder ma y W1t hdraw bs, J r .
3
Announcements
hi s bid within six ty &lt; 60 ~
days after th e ac t ual da1e
Tir ed of penny pin c hing??
of th e open ing 1her eof .
Housewives and mothers,
If in the opi nion ot th e
Announcements
. change spa re tim e into SSSS
Owner and th e Direc tor of 3
F le x ible hours, excelle nt
th e Department of M enial
1
PAY
h
ighes
t·
pri
ces
R et a rda tion
or
his
ea rni ngs, fr ee wardrobe.
delega Ted reprcse nt attVt', possib le for gold and sil ver
Tw·o eve n ings a w eek . F or
l hc acc ep tance of the coi ns. r ings. jewel ry , etc . mo r e i n formtlfion c al l 9q-2
lowes t b id is not in th e best Conlac t Ed Bu r k ett Barber
3941 or 669 4535
i nter es t of all co ncerned, Shop, Mi ddleport .
th.e Own er m ay acc ept,
w tt h the conc urren ce of th e
Oec or a tecl ca kes f or il l I oc
RAC INE G UN SHO OT, c.ass1ons . Charac ter cak es.
D i rec tor or hts del eg.=.ted
re pr ese nt a t 1ve, a not her
Raci ne Gu n Cl ub, e\l ery sheet ca kes. and w ed ding
proposa l so open ed or
FridaY n ig ht start i ng at ca kes. Cal l 99? 634 2 or 99,2
r ejec t all proposa l s a nd ad
7 : 30 p .m . Factor y choke ?583.
ve r tise for other b 1d s The g uns onl y .
Own er with concurrence ot
me Direc tor Ot me Depa r t
THERE Will be a w&gt;id
m ent of M en ta l Retar
YO U R
PI A NO .
To o tJ,t[key sem inar at lzaak
dat ion r est.'r ves th e rlg ht to v a luable to neglect , e)(pert
waive any i nform a liti e~ . · tuning &amp; and repair . Lane ~lton farm , 5 miles south
llf Chester on Shade River
Daniels, 742 2951 or 992· Rd., Sat ., March 31 at 1
Appro-ved by Frede r ick W.
2082 .
Crow, Ill
p.m . All fundamentals of
Prosec util19 A Hor n ey
wild turkey hunting and
Date 12/ 10180
Ra c ine V o l un feer Fire habitat will be discussed
Departme
nt sponsors a plus mov ie and slides ot
(2) 2S. ( 31 4, II , 18 , 4tc
shot gun &amp; rifl e match wild lurkeys by Ohio Dept .
e ver y Sat . n ighl 6· 30 p.m . of Natural Resources .
al their b u d di ng In Ba shan .
F ac ror y c hoke 12 guage 4
Giveaway
s hot guns on ly . Open si ghts
22 rifl e .
F our puppies. Pa rt nor
w eg ia n elk hound . 9q2 398 1.

M E IGS MU SE UM o pen by
a ppotntmen r January M ar

ch. 992
2360 or

226~ . 992
99~ · 2639 .

2802, 992
Histories

for
s al e
Pomeroy ·
Mi ddlepor t Librari es.

One year ol d te mal e ger
man she phard . Very genlle

and good with c hildren .
Also three J&gt;Upples, part
husk~

and part germah
shephara. 9~9- 2417 .
·

who

h~ s

anyth ing to g ive away a'hd
does nor off er or attempt to
off er a n y other th i ng tOr
sa le m ay pl ace an ad in th i s
co lu m n.. There w i ll be no
charge to the ad vertiser . ,
·---,

6

Lost and Found
---

---

-

f

L os 1: man' s wdll et near the
Hei ner ' s br ead store in
Mid d l ~ po r t. Please return

to M ich a e l Roa c h , Box 6.t2 ,
Mason ,

West

Virgini a

25260 . C. D. D. No que stlom
aske d. Rew a rd .
Los I : yo ung red l ic k rl" CI Ic
coondog, Bailey R un Road
area John Koeh ler. 992
505~ .

LOS T near Porll and , '2
mtt le wa lker fox hound!.)
bOth b lac k , wh i te, ran 'i'n
color . If seen ca ll843 23 54.
j

"'

LOST : Fem ale w a lker 1 ~;,
yea r s. Na m e, Kathy with
col lar , Cherr y Ri dge ar ea .
Sat . ev ening. q92 :l666.
,
.

a

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

L a r ge farm
AUC TI ON
equ ip m ent auc t ion , Sat .,
M arch 21st. at Siders
Equ ipmen l Co. , on UJ. S.
H wy .
J5 ,
H e nd e rs o n,
W.VA ., cal l for detail s. 6 ~S ·
J440 Sa t. M ar ch 11st . 10
a.m .
AUC TION every Frida'y
nig ht 7 p .m . Ha rtford cOM·
munity Center . Hartf ord,
W.V a.
9

~anted to Buy

IRON AND BRA SS

·n.,

BED~ ·

Ol d f urnifure, desk s, gold
r i ngs,
jew e lry , Sily'r
d ollar s, sterling , e tc. WdOd
ice box;es, jar s, antique~ .
e l c . c.ompl cte householfti.
Wr ite : M .D . Mil l'er , Rt1ci4 ,
Pomer oy , OH
45769 . ·C!)r
C ~ l l Y92 7760 .
V\•.

New, used, and a nti que fur, .
n 1ture. No item t o 1arg~) 9r
to sm a ll. Wi ll buy one p i~~
or c ompl ete hou seholdS.
Martin 's General Store at

99 2 6370.

A ttrac t i ve pa rt ti me w ork
fo r
well
gr o o m ed
homemak er s who l ov e
pretty fashions and w ant to
Keep up on current styles.
A verage $10.00 per hov r
plus free war drob e _ for
th o se
who
QU a l i f y .
Manage m en1 opporrun i l y
open . For tree info ma ti on
please phone 99 2 J941 or

~

WANT E D : ~ peop le 10 se ll
Avon. Ca ll 7-4 2 2354 or 741
2755.

FRIENDLY

ON E large femal e puppy, 6
month s old, look s l ike , a
cr oss between terrier !" &amp;
co ll ie. Ver y gentle, gOOd
wa tc h dog. 843 ·31 H .
,q

THE WA'f IT'S GoiNCiJ
TUE CQ: 'S ANSWGRI"'&amp;

bring you
extra cash
for
shopping sprees

MOblll Mom• ltlu lnd T ,, rd sat11 •rtlretplecl
w1ll'l cltf'l
c~rtt lor ICh carryont lo• Num~ ... 1n Clrt 11 Ttl

order U C'tflf
Sent•ntl .

--

..

DENNEY
CHAIN LINK
FENCE

lHP
TILLER

HOM E

Toy

'. Pdrties now tn our 26th
,. year, tS ex pa nd i ng and ha s
ope nings for managerS &amp;
deal er s. Par! y Pl an ex
perience he lpfuL Gua ra n
l eed toys a nd g ifts . No c ash
mves1me nf , no c oll ec t ing,
deli\lering. Car &amp; phone
necessary . c a n coll{'c1,

Carol Oay 5 18 489 8395.
Some part tim e jobs in Pt .
Pleasan1 com e wtt h a
Sl.SOO bonu s ! Plus f ree
coll eg e tUit 1on! It you ar e
age ·n o r Olde r , a 1vnior or
senior in hig h school, or a
h i gh
sc hool
d i pl o ma
graduate, you m a y qual tf y
The We st V1rg in1 a Nat 1on a1
Guard is no ordinar y pa rt
l im e job ! Good pAy, g ood
bc neHts ! For det ails c all
SF C 0 ' Nea l 6'75·3950.
WANT E D
The fol lowi ng
music 1ans 10 f or m it rock
band L ead gu ita r , sec ond
guitar, organ or p iano
pl ayer , drumm er . 1ru m pe t
player', tenor sax . Mu st be
ab le to p l ay r ock and soul
mu sic . Int er ested peopl e
must have the i r own equ ip
m enf . Seriou s pa rr ies c all
I 304-675 22 10.

KEN SOLES
7 19·tf C

Rose H il l, att r ac t ive six
r oo m
tw use
wi th
a
ga rag e,
d e t ac h e d
work shop, fu ll basement .
1.1 2 acr es. $52,500. 1 614

32

~LANDMARK

1973 Crown Have n, 14 )( 65,
three bedj oom s. new ca r
pet . 1971 Came r on, 14 x 64 ,
two bed rooms, new ca r pel .
1972 Cha mpion , 12 x 60, two
bedrooms. new c arpet . 1976
Cam eron , 12 x 60, two
bed r oom s, all electric. 1971
Sk yl ine.
12sx 6),
two
bed r ooms, bath &amp; 1 J , new

1970

I ~==========:;:==:;;;:;::;:::::;:::;~
~

42

Mobi1eHomes
for Rent

,E nv e lop e
a ddr esse r s
nee ded! For tnform atlon
mall sell addres sed st am
ped enve lope to : 819 W
Summit, Durand, Ml 48429 .

LOOK lNG for wo m en who
would l i ke to beco m e a
Friendly Hom e Toy dea ler .

Please c all997 356 1.
We wil l do house c 1ea n1ng
Pomeroy , Middlepor1 a nd
Rufland a re a. F or
in
format ion call 992 3888 ask
for Mrs . E Ioise Pick ett .
12

Situaf'ions Wanted

work In daytim e he lpi ng
eld erly peopl e. Rutland
·Pomeroy M lddl eporf a r ea .

74 2 2288 .

Reasonable . 992-6~22.

Ap.U.tmenf
torRent
F ou r room apa r tment fo r
rent. 992·5908 .

992 3324.

Thr ee r oom a nd bath a par
tment in Pomeroy . 99 2

F or sa le or re nt: ap·
proximafely 34 acr es with
three bedroom modular
hom e i n Portl an d, Ohi o
ar ea . N ine m il es f r om the
Ravenswood b r idge. Ca l l
afte r 5 p .m , a t 1 304 27 3

562 1.

5272.

45

Apartment
tor Rent

Space for

R~ nt

CO UNTR Y MOBILE Ho me
Park . Route 33, North of
Pom er oy . L ar ge lois. Ca ll

992 7479.
Real Estate - General

DILLON
REAL ESTATE

Lots &amp; Acreage

TRA IL E R L O T for sa iC',

14,000.00. 992 2571.

~5 71.

SEVERA L choic e bull d tn g
lots, E astern Oi st ricr ,Tu p
pers Pl ai n s Chester wa ter .
Owne r w i l l help f 1n(1n cc .

992 5869 .

TR A I LE R spaces lor r ent .
So uth ern Vall ey Mob i le
Hom e Par k , Ch eshire, Oh .

.~

51

4 ACRES ot va cant land
on hardtop ro ad . Id ea l
building sile or trail er
lot .
2 ACRES on har dtop
road . Al l uliliti es. 1 mil e
fro m Midd lepor t .
'1 STORY dupl ex . C! ose
to sc hool s. shop p ing and

pool.
2 STORY

DUPLEX .

Close to sc hool s, shopp
i ng and pool.
ta ge with

2 acr es of

la nd, jus t off Rt. 7 .
Fav Manley
Branch Mgr.
· Phone 992·25913
Hou ses

to~

-

Real Estate - General

S1x r oo m llouse a n.d ba 1h
with uf tli fy room . C i1 y
water an d g as. $150.00 per
mon th w Hh S50 .00 de po st r
L oc ated on N ye Ave . Cal l

-

-

~~·~

p ~m .

T

SJ

AnTique s

ArTE N T I O N :
l iM
PO RTAN T TO YOUJ Will
pa y cash or ce rt il ied chec k
for an liq ues an d co llec
l ibl es or ent ire est ate s.
Noth ing too l arge. A l s o ~
gu ns, pocke t wa tches an d
co1 n coll ec tions . Ca ll 614
767 3167 or 557 3411

I.

Phone
1· (614) ·9?2-3325
LISTING

-

r oom house on level lot .
Ba th. nat gas F .A . tur
nace, wood ca bt nets 1n
k i tc hen, and gar age.

On ly 1 18,500 .
NICE VIEW
9 ac r es
in P om ero y w it h vi{l w of
the r ive r . H as a ll ci ty
u til i fles.

HUNTING

LAND

Good toca l ion tor hunt
ing ca bi n Wi1h 14 acres.
L ot s ot 9am e and as
close to Forked Ru n
L ak e as possib le.

ACRES

AL.L

MINERALS
Le ased
w i th good w el ls dr i lled
with i n one mile. Good
f en ces a nd se v e ral ·
build i n gs .
Be df ord
Townshi p .

HARDWOOD FLOORS

TRAILER

LOT

19 71

1J

MINI FARM - W ith ap
pro x . 15 acre an d a 2
bedroom hom e with
range a nd carpet ing .
Elect ri c
b aseb oar d

4763
SIZES
34·50

t..,.fh,_ -/l,t..

_j

Patle10 4763 Wom-

en's S11es are 34 (38 -~nch busl
Wilh 40-lnCh hiPI. 36 (40-buSI.
41 h•p). 38 (41 busl , 44 h1p), 40
(44 busJ. 46 h•pl. 41(46 bust.
48 hiPI. 44 (48 busl. 50 hip). 46
(50 busJ. 51 h1p1. 48 151 bust.
54 h1pJ, 50 (54 bus J. 56 hiPI
$2.00 IDr uc:h pofftln. ~d SOC
for uch pattern tor fi!St·clns

al1mail and handlin1. Send to:
Anne Adams
1 '\ 1

$Jo.OOO

243 Wei t7 St, N•w Yort, NY
10011. Ptint NAM£, MJORESS,

1l

Insurance

AUTOMOBIL E
SURAN CE
bcon

IN
c an

" c elle(1 !
Lo;&gt;st
your
·•· 6peral or 's li cense? Phone

992 2143 .

GOOO C OUNI~'fl!VIN G
(ni Hil ry llmll l ' !Molt'
lt VtiHj t OQill , k. 1h llt'l1 oUH.I [ it' Jl IJ' \ lufh' &lt;, l 13R '&gt;, 1,'\ Utl
dry rll Pol , ,l rll l I! U' " • lo • ll\Hil t ll\q I •• • 'o l !ll •" -11 ' ,ol. 1 .tr

'· "i
CALL US TO BUY OR SELL
N.lncy Jd!!.pers -- Assoc1ate
PH . 843 ·2075
Virginia Hayman - A ssoc1are
9Hl 4197

A &lt;, kll\(1 li! H i l ' l

~.I;'

.~

,,:·

'JO~ CQndor Sl

Utility Buildings
Sizes from 4x6 to 12x40

P&amp;~

WI!' ~erv • tc wl1c1 I we ~ l' ll ~
~ m.lfJ Eog me\- Ou r SpecoJ it '(

r• ~
'.

::;,If J
-·,_

THE

j'·

1
: \'"

·

.

BUIWINGS

R:t . l, BOX 54
Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614·843·2591

Pom ornv. 01'1 .
m~
J)lmo

J&amp;F
ENTERPRISES

KOUNTRY
KLUB

Suu 1 Complla
C ~ ~\ l o o

0h

•
•
•
e

•Sha r i C.•m~

~ p .. •~l!l l '

&lt; •
~ -

• l'u ll .nq &amp;

C ~ o pp •fl ~

Now Opt•n

'o'l~ alh• o 1~1 ''' ' ~ · 1aiJ 4 ~ dl o1 ~ 00011 '"'"
' h O~ ' 8• '' "" n.•mc• • · ~~
Wo• ~

8 POW JOIN G
MIIOI\

hok on q

nun 1•nq ao

ji.I \C Pill ~nu 01111
la om .o l """ lu&lt;i ll •"~ ' """\
I"Mo~ (l

UW~I .

615 1fc

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

Backhoe
Excavating
Septic System s
Water, Sewer &amp; Gas
Lines
Licensed &amp; Bonded

DUMP TRUCK
Ph . 992· 7201
3 5 ! mo.

w"ter· Sewer· E lectr ic
Gils Line-Ditches
water Line Hook ·ups
SeptiC Tank 5
county Certifted
Rou sh Lane
Che shire , Oh .

fh• ~

l( "•ep

F ree Es l•mates
Ke.l son ,l bl e P riC l'~
Call HowMd
949' 2ll6 2
949-:l160
'l J ti c

/let l or Fulur e

R ~ l erenc e

v e.

PACQUAL£

APPLIANCE SERVICE
Call Ken Young

ELECTRICAL CO.

98S· JS61
PAll

r5

AND SE Jt VI CE
A l l M AKE S

t O• s po ~ ol l)
• OnhwoHtle r\
• Hoi Woller. r .1 nk \
R t p ilo ron~ Son ct lt 5J

• Or~ ers
• RJng e~

' Sptt li'll "' "' 'e ~ For ·
,, c 01n La undr. e~
· Rc nt.tl P roperl o e~
· Apt . House Own tn
,. Mob• le Home Park i

p ic kup ,

• Heat. Pumps
• E lec tr ic Heating
&amp; Wiring
Industr ial. Commerci al
and Res iden tia l

JOYCE ELECTRICAL
SUPPLIES
Colleg e Rd .
Sy r a cu se,
Oh .
Ph . 992· 3804
2 LJ 1 mo.

GAL!IA
REFRIGERATION
INC.
R he em. Amana
&amp; Carrier

AIR CONDITIONERS
&amp; HEAT PUMPS

Ph. Pomeroy
614 ·992·7038

"

$300.00 .

Patltrn Dtpl.

ZIP,

Sill, and Sllll NUMBER.

We Slled 111l1ned lhe sewmH to
save yOtJ llllu~ So ~ou can Sd~e

monev• Send now 101 NEW 1981
SPRING-SU MMER PAITE RN CAl·
ALOG I00 sl yles. hoe pat1e11t
cdupon i$1 ValueJ Calalo(. SI
134-14 quic' Quilts . sus
133-fafiiCOIItomtQuiltift&amp;.$1.75
llO.Swtaltn-Silos ll-56 .$1.75
129·Quic"[ISJ lllnsftn .St.7S

CUNNINGHAM
&amp;ASSOC.
Mortgage Bankers

Vans&amp;4W. D.

4133.

81

P~&gt;nled

cl &lt;)!il' hJ Rt I A-::,k11lq '!14 0,000

GM C

197 6 Ford 4 x 4 W1lh pow er
sTeenng . power brak es,
lots of e)( tra s. $2600.00. 985

Cool aH flows lhtL ,my lines

1 ow I I)W ' • Llll~ tl i.' LI

11 1r1m

I~==~~===~~=~;=========~t======~=· ~=;

'frucks for Sale

220 I alte r S.

•
•
•
•
••
•
•• •

H enry E . Cleland , Jr .

,1\.. rL' "'

cu llen

S~le

1~ 7 8 Chevy v an , si x cylin
der, power steerin g, power
brak es, ai r co nd.ition ing .
tour new fires, good con
d ition . good gas milea ge.
Lots ot ex tras. Phone 742
22 11 daily befo re S or 742

•

OF

Lot St'f up t or 1rili1Cr ASk tiH.! ~·1.1!00

SMALL

Ph . 61 4-992· 7038

3· 11 1 mo .

3 11 1 mo.

Phone 985 4395 .

The Daily Sentinel

tile siding. 992 2759.

Autos for

a ut omat ic.

$)9,500 .00 .
.
REAL TOR

J/

HAY for sa te .. 90 tru ck loa d
lots. No Sunday sa les. 843

1975 Fo r d Gr ana d a in ex
ce1 1e nt con d i t ion . P llo ne

·

l ( IAf.lf
j B R , 11drd WOUi..t 11001 .... t ' . t )rl jtl~
lt rcp l ,h c, IJ ( !Cii. ex ter iOr . plent y ot .:.llruiJIJcrv Crtn
..t ssu me r1 1 ltJ 4 o Own er ICfw •nCI . S iiY~ Stl l SJY .•,.IOO

Sizes
"From JOK30"

&amp; \C II pr o.

Y A ~OO- Ho wheel mowe r ~

1 Woi \ h ('n

bedroom hom eon a p
pr ox . 1 acre lot in coun
try . Close to t he min es.
Nee d a sm al l d own pay

CENTRAL REALTY

Br v~ l'l

r H om

cond . 992 5170 .

119 ,500.00.
OWNER WILL HELP
FINANCE T his 3

Real Estate - General

Farm Buildings

&amp;
pro .

~e ll

m ers

3 11 1 mo . pd.

1978 FO RD Fies ta. F ron t
w hee l dr iv e. 35 m .p .g. Good

J be drooms, kilchen,
d in i ng ar ea. al l on one
fl oor . Could h ave fu 11
ba se ment i t fi nished .

Housing
HeadquartP.r&lt;::

COUN I f.l't' HOMt:.

Sfi Hl -

PH . 992 ·7887
992·2606
992· 7861

G"·~n~

1976
Pl y mouth V a lore
wa gon, air condit ioning ,
e tc , ve ry n ice . $1500 .00 .
Glen B issell at 949·280 1 or
94Y '2 860 .

WACIN f.. A K E A
J BR ' s , ti lrt l l' IIVi lll l 1'00111 &lt;IISO
f ilrnlly r0011l , ':l f U r rl CI~ bl dq , ,,Hpor t P t' l l l ' Cu t,

REPAIR o r r emode l!hg
Work, floor s, doors, w a ll
paneling, ceil ing or floor

Darrell Brewer

-

Hay &amp; Grain

64

11

OFFICE 992· 22l9

Pu~h

""' ~""' ' "'q G0&lt;1&lt;h

991 J288.

Jean Tru ssel1949·2660

&amp;

A rLAS - r oll tn
WE EO E A TE R - e r v ~h tu lle r &amp;
tnmml{n

'II• '' "" Cd "V ,\ &lt;Of11 PI " I C l•n•• ol II III"'"

g ara ge . ~2 4 ,9 00 . 00 .
JUST SIX YEARS OLD

WANT TO KNOW THE
VALUE OF
YOUR
PROPERTY? ASKING
FOR AN APPRAISAL.
WANT TO SELL? ASK
US . CALU92 ·3!76.

P"' ~ h

ALL STEEL

mowen, rod onq l r J c lon.

1 7 tt c

99HI9t
ASSOCIATES
Dottie &amp; Roger Turner
99l ·l692

V.C. YOUNG II
992 ·6215 or 992· 7314
Pomeroy , Oh .

mow P.n .
SN AP PE R -

• small Carpenter Jobs

-

32 42 .

be tl•nct

CR A YE L't - W~ Ik

"Specializing In
Re· Rooling"

Live stock

TWOACRES
anda2
bedroo m ra nch home
with ra n ge , re t rig
era t or . an d
wood
burn er . Al so n1 ce block

me nt. $13 ,500.00.

8

II month old mal e colt for
$250.00. Al so one gentle
ge ldi ng with saddle an d
br 1dl e. $400.00 . Phone 882

71

, paneling,

j,"l759 .

MASSEY FER G USON

h.P. r iding tracJ or With
m owe.r , ele'ctric start. $47 5.

- Addonsand
remodeling ,
- Roofing and gutter
work
- Concrete work
-Plumbing and
electrical work
(Free Estimates)

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE
no;i1nq l r il.t lo n ,

Pt ow fo r A farmal l. One
hor se drawn plow. 949·285.4 .

63

BISSELl
SIDING CO.
No Sunday Calls
311 ttc

ROOFING

12 horsepower Cub Cade t
tra ctor and 48 inch mower .

"YOUNGS
CARPENTER
SERVICES"

949· 2860 .

or

Ph·. J67 ·7l60

WAUNI=

til e,
il • ft, ldlng and painting . 992

61
. F~!'!! ~~~(?.il!~n!
Kuker 400 ga l. spray ; Int.
540, 4Xl6" pl ows ; M .F . 13.5'
Disc. ; fert. auger ; 1 S!=!t
snap on 1S.5x 38 dual t ires;
N .H. 367 Manu re Spreder ;
Dunham 14' Harogator;
In! lr ac tor, 986 304·675·

I 6JHSIJBFI0311DA

Re pa i r
or r e mod e lin g
: : work . Floors, d oor s, wa l l

cciJi ng

Ca11742-j19S
992 · 7680

&amp; th estaEit

To Size 50!

TOWN
Ap prox . 6
acr es and a Jl 1 slor y
hom e with 3 bedrooms.
fa mi l y
ro om .
out
bUil d ing, llot wa ter hea t.
and &lt;1 w ater so ftener .

Almost leve l 1 ~:~ acres ot
l and, drilled w elL Ohio
Pow er , uTil ity butld ing
&amp; pad, on Rt . 124 Wes t .
Ask tOQ ju st $6,500 .

10·1 ti c

"Beautiful, Custom
Built G~rages"
Call for free siding
estimates, 949· 281)1 or

Farm supplies

~---'--------j 2795or 843 27 81.

LOAN? Th is ra nch sty le
3 bed room . a ll elec tr ic
.hom e in E aste rn d istr ict
can be yours w tlh a
down pa ym en t an.d a
911°o assuma b le loan .
bu y
r. l
E xce ll e nt

heal. 174,000.00
AT THE EDGE

- A lovely hom e with a
fam ily room . 2 be d
' r oo m s, 2 f i r eplaces, full
bt'lsem ent , 3 tots, a nd
unattac hed ga rage. Th is
you will !ik e

992-5682

FIREWOOD . 130. lOa d .
Spl 1l &amp; d eli vered. '19'1 52 48 .

134,900 .00 .

6

Hrs.: Mon .-Fri .

9 A.M.· l :30 P .M .

Misc . Merchant se

HOW ABOUT A 9' , %

VIRGILB . SR .&gt;I" '!
10 E . Second Sfreet

'Repair

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

2·8 tf c

99? 7663 .

POMEROY,O.
992· 2259

EAFORDrn

NEW

Signature d ou b le oven elec
rr ic
ran ge .
Avacado .
$1 25 00 99 2 5954 atler 4

SIG N AT UR E
el ec tr i c
do u b l e
oven
r a nge
Avocado . \ I L5 . Y.Y'l 5954 a t
Ter A p .rn .

367 78 11

Housing
Headquarters

Household Goads

S4

Rent

Real Estate - General

Two
AKC
r egistered
cocker spani el puppies .
Black females . After 6 p.m .

hi1ch. Phone 949·268 1.
10 inc h plow with 3 poin t

2 OR J BEDROOM col

41

Let George- Miller check
your present electrical
system .
R esidentia I
&amp; commercial

22 45.

992 39 54.

Ac r eage . On e acre Cl nd one
half of g ro und located be1
ween o ld Rl 33 a nd new R t.
J3
f a c tr') g
fh c M ei g s
F air g,.-ounds . $4000 .00. 992

- Transmission

3· 2· 1 mo .

For all of your wir·
ing needs.

c al l 992 7471.

Sleepin g room s; by th e
w ee k .
Kit c h e n ,
and
tel ev ision l ounge. Carry out
stor e and r es tauran f within

46

3 A ND 4 RM furn ishe d a p
ts. Ph one 992 5434.

-----S6
Pets tor Sale
Come get a beautiful puppy
trom
your
Humane
Society . A l l sizes, labs.
colli es, poodl es, setters
look i ng for homes. 992 ·6260.

Furni shed Rooms

500 feel 992·6370 .

44

1971
Hi l ie r es t
M ob il e
Home . 1s1 tr a il er
on
Ha r rison v ille Rd .

Will c are tor the elderly i n
our home . Wom en . m en . or
couples . Train ed and C'X
·· perienced . 992 ·7314_

~' Have va cancy for elderly .
Room and board . laundry ,

44

PM C .

12 x 60, 1w o bed r oom s, new
carpet . B .... S Sa les. I nc.,
2nd , Via nd S1ree t, Poi nt
Pl ett!.a nt, WV Phone 675
4424.

MILlER ELECTRIC
SERVICE

............
992 -2181
E. Main St .
P()meroy

2 bed ro om M obile Home.
Adult s on l y .
Brown 's
Tr ailer Court, M inersvil le.

Mobtl e Hpme 5
for Sale

-Auto artd Truck
Repair

f\7~- POMEROY

678 751 3.
p R 1v AT E
se tt i ng ,
3
bedroo m home on S.R , 7
near M emory Gard ens . 21tl
acres. Term s. ?92 71 41 .

ROGER HYSELL'S
GARAGE

12 Park St.
Middleporf, Oh.
Ph. 992·6263
Anytime

245-9113

992 ·2S7 1 or 1 687 6479.

70
Woman to hel p care to r
el derly lady cr ippled by u
thri tis. Room , board, some
wa ges. 992 72 26.

KAUFPS
PWMBING
AND
HEATING

Free Estimates

1

669 4535.

..

Business Services

$350 .00.

Bea ut iful th ree bed roo m
ranch bric k home In Baum
Add ition, Pom er oy. Oh io.
Gas hea t , ce ntral air. Ca ll

35

NY 11418 .

SEEK DIVORCE
VEHICLE INSPECfiON SET 1 •
Divorces granted were Philip
A voluntary vehicle inspection by
Owen Blackwood from Louiza Kaye the Ohio State Patrol has been set
Blackwood. The defendant was for Saturday, 8 a. m. to 12 noon on tile
restored to her fomu~ r name of Route 7 bypass north of State Route
Louize Ka y Hoover. Cynthia Marie ' 143. Anyone wishing their vehicle i~·
Blackwell from Steve J . Blackwell.
spected may stop at the location . ,,

Classified Ads

EI Ch word o"'•r I til m•~ l mv m 1 S word I rt 4 Clllll otr woref Pt r eft 'I'
Al:h r vnn ont Oltler 1t11n CO~IKufo " l dtn Wi ll be d11r1M lllhll dl~
rile

- H0me5 for sal e

13

882· 3242 .

Wi ll bab y!i it In m y home
Monday t hrough Frid tJy .
Very c heap, 1nterest ed in
doing so m eth i ng m ore so
th a n f or
t he m on ey .
Refer ences . 992·2830.

c a r pe t.

!:'~-~a_nted

5185.00 10$500 w eek l y doing
mail i ng w ork . No ex
peri ence re qu i r ed . AP
PLY : C i r cl e Sales, P .O.
Box 224 D . R ichmond Hill ,

the annual St. Patrick's Day Parade. Aod U y,;,;

a

eMERCHANDISE

.

,2686

Plan donkey ganw

s plitte r,

Ref r i ger a tor f or camper,
ac and gas, $7 5 00. Also 25
inch color TV tor SlOO.OO.

5858 .

Pa

Mis_c..: Merc ~~n ls~ _

54

Log

LADY or girl to l ive in . 992

, Each bid m ust c ontam
the ful! name ot e ve r y per
son or company inte r ested
th e
sam e,
s h a ll
in
separate ly sta te the pr ice
for labor a nd m a te ri a l, and
must be acc ompa ni ed by

SI - Hovuhold Gooch
Sl - CB , T V, R.tdoo Equopm t nl
l l - AniiQU t1
14- M IS C M t HI'I&lt;Intlo U
H - loHidong Svpplit'l
s•- Pttsl o r S•lt

Rd .

J156or992 21 57.

HD$PrTl1L
N&amp;W y'QRp.., N·'l·

u - SpoiCit lor Rtnl
41- Wtnlt'd to lltnl
41- liqu lpmtn l lor R t nt

ton .

• es a young busines s per son
~";!lnd earn good mon ey p l us
:Some great Qiffs as a Sen
'1tlnel r oute car r ier . Phone
\.1$ r ight away and get on
:the eligibility list a f 992·

NEw

H- ,Rooms

t i- AIIIOs ~r Slit
11- \I IIU &amp; I W.O
tt - Mot• r.c.,clu
11,Auto'"''"
&amp; l u t u ones
11- Av lo ~hplor

33 ·----------~-

11.

to Hu'

· eEMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

n.
I.
7
3
-" ·

W an t ~

9

be low
Wanted
For Sal e
A nnoun cem ent
For Re n1

eRENTALS
41 - HOUIII tor Rtnf
41- Mob•lt Hem'u
tor R~tnf
44- Ap.ntment lor Rent

per

:GET VALUABLE trainin g

S1de · ot the enve lope th e

eANNOUNCEMENTS

$10 . 50

11

ty . andendorsedontheoiJ t·

1- C.ro ot Thlnltj\
l - In M.emor••m
l - Anno-uncem•nfl

1 - Y~rciSII t

Store, Pom eroy , Ohi o 4S769

~288

THE O' lRJSH ARE O'COMING - Whether the
oame was Murphy, Finnegan, Gallagher or something
else, they were all there Tuesday as thousands lined
downtown St. Paul to watch that town's Irish march In

by Larry Wr ight

The Daily sentinel

992·20S4 at Clark ' s Jewelry

WANTED to b uy : truc k
load of good top soil. 992

Public Notice

S- H.tppy Adl.
• - LOII.tncl Found

gold . Silver co i ns, poc ket
watches . Call Joe Clark al

992-6370 .

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

1 - G• 'o' IIWIY

stampea, IOK, 14 K, or 18K

Now buying gold an d
SiiYer, old pocket watches,
chains. d iamonds, silver
money and coins. Mart in's
General Store, Middleport .

or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Dept .
111 Court St., Pomero'f, 0 ., 4S769

Addrau _____________

'Wanted to Bvy : c lass r ing s,
.w~dd i ng bands, anyth i ng

Co., Roc k Spr ings
Pomeroy 992 · 2689 .

PHONE 992-2156

Name-------------------

... I
I
I

Bids mu s t be addresse d

to the Board of com ·
m issione r s of M e igs Coun

KIT 'N' CARLYLE •~

Middleport, Ohio

Furnace re pairs. electri ca l
work, plumbi ng, mob i le
hotne or residence. 992·

Delivered to Ohio Pallet

2

Archi,ec t .

Wanted to Do

18

ll

~--

stab .

WANT AD INFORMATION

Savell!

Athens, OH . 59• ·4221 .

d i ameter · 14" on largest
end. S12.SO per ton. Bundled

Public Notice

spe&lt;: ificat ions
Th ~ full deposi t w i ll be
r eturned IO bidders upon
return of drawing s an d
speCi f ica t ions i n good con
di tion w i t h in ten (. 10) days
afrer biO openi ng da re.
Bids t o r the
abov e
desc r ibed wo r k m ust be'
made on b lan ks to be t,.yr~
n ished by the Art h tr&amp;.ef
hereinbe for e named and
s ubm'I tted ·n
prep r I' nte d en
I
ve lopes avai
labl e fr
om the

Pomeroy

ches, class rings , wedd i ng
bands, diamonds. Gold or
sitver . Call J . A. Wa m sl ey,
Treasure C h~ st Co in Shop,

CHIP WOOD. Poles ma x .

dr aw i ng s
and
item s of work bid upon . 1
I ' 1 ,--------------~--------~-.

Classifieds and

Pr i nt one word in ea ch ·
space be low. Each in
ili a I or gr oup of fi gures
co unts as a wo r d . Count
na me and add r ess or
phone nu mber 1f used .
You ' ll ge t beff er r esul ts
if yo u desc r ibe f ully ,
g1ve pr ice . T he Sent ine l
reserves t he r igh t ro
cla ss if y, edi t or rejec t
an y ad. Your ad wi ll be
put
i n th e p r oper
clasiti ca tion if you 'l l
ch eck th e proper box

wit t be

reCccO•N
v eTdRIAorC:T AND EST .

·- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ;

I

I
I

m ac hin ery and app liances
r eou ir ed for th e

·----·--OLD COINS, poc ket wa t·

•
ISSUe

Public Notice

cU r b I n fl a t•lOne

·· -

I'
I
I
~

lI
l
I

Public Notice

'
Wanted to Buy
WANTED
TO
BUY :
GOLD ,
SILVER ,
PLATINUM, STERLING·
COINS, R I NG S,JEWELR
Y, MISC. ITEMS. AB·
SOLUTE
MARKET
PRICE GUARANTED. ED
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP , MIDD L EP OR T ,
OHIO 992·3476 .

Day ~

Small investment, large returns,· Sentinel Want Ads
Notice
-Public
---.
NOTICE TO

March 18,1981

Wednesday. March II, 19ft

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

THE DABBLE SHOP
NOW OPEN

SALE
20 ~·- 30% OFF

AU CAKE

Mon.·Wed. t0 :00 ·9 :00

992 · 7544

Tues. ·Fri .· Sat .

VA 1o.1n '\ .no mon ey down
Fcd er .l l HOU !&gt; In9 J U 0 on S2S. OOO
suo on b.l t.lnc e.
c on ventron.l l La.l nss oo
down
c.111 !or 1ntorm,l f1011
Y92 ·7SH
1 'l l tt c

Closed Thursdays
Slop in and see our line
6t pla stercratt . You can
eniov makinq ·v our qitts
and help light inflation
Located next to Dale
Hill Ford Tractor in
Pomeroy .

DECORATING
SUPPLIES

10 :00 ·l , OO

ANN'S CAKE
DECORATING
SUPPLIES
Osborn Rd.
Reedsville, Oh.

2 23 I mo.

3· 16· 1 mo.

J&amp;C
SANITATION
SERVICE

Home
1mprovements

Ge ne's Carpe l Clea ni ng ,
deep str eam ex tra cti on .
Fr ee
es l i m ate d ,
reas onabl e rate s, scof
chq ua rd . 991 6309 or 742

ARD

271 1.
Will do carpe nter wo r k a nd
mle ri or o r ex terior pa in
t ing . Fr ee es t i m a les. CALL

9Y7 6190 or 949 2614.

Wl L L l a y brick, bl oc k ,
pour
co ncre t e,
build
lire pl ace s. J04 773 513 1.

84

12

SE WIN G

Plu r.nbing
&amp; Heat,i ng

WAT .ER

W EL L S .

Domesti c and commer cial.
pump sa les and servi ce .
Tom
Le wi s
D r ill1ng .
Seasona l di sc ount on pum

KITCHEN
CARPET

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

M A CH I N E

Rep ai r s,

m akes I

se r v ice,

992 2284 .

all

The

Fabr ic Shop, Pome r o y .
Author i zed Singer Sale s
and Se rvi ce. w e sharpen
Sc issors.

ps . 1 J04 895 380'1 or I 304
895 3641

E LWOOD
R E PAIR

113

toaslers, irons, all small
appl tan ces . Lawn mower .
Nex T to ~tate H ighway
Gar age on Route 7, 985

Excavating

· o ole r \'vo r k . Srn a ll tobs a
speC•d ll y 142 :1753.

BOW E R S
Swe e p e rs ,

3825

From

7.99 &amp; up

1

Installed

From

12.95 &amp; up

1

Installed

2 Rolls
Rubber Back

SHAG

Reg . $15 .9S

$799

SQ .

Yd.

Ca sh· n · Carry

Buy Now &amp; SaveS2 ·S6 Per Yard .
' 25 rolls carpet in stock to pick from .
Regular backed carpet installed free,
with pad.
Drive A Little- Save A Lot

RUTLAND FURNITURE

Main St.

\

CARPET
lnt PADDING

742·2211

�Ohio

Reports indicate economy slowdown

Sen.

Area deaths

$32; Kathryn Cook, New Paris, $29,
and Brenda Lipscomb, Letart, W.
Va.,$30.

ce and Leo.

SurViviqg are a sister, Mrs.
Douglas (Mary) Darst, Route I,
Cheshire; two brothers, Millard
Gilmore, Route I, Cheshire, and
Martin Luther Gilmore, Columbus.
Mr. Gibnore was a retired coal
miner and was a member of the
Church of Christ in Christian Union
at Hobson.
Funeral services will be held at I
p.m . Friday at the Rawlings-CoatsBlower Funeral Home with the Rev.
0. H. Cart officiating. Burial will be
in the Gravel Hill Cemetery at
Cheshire. Friends may call at the
· funeral home from 6 to 9 p.m. Thursday_

Meigs County happenings..
Degree work Friday
Shade River Lodge 453, F&amp;AM,
will meet in special session at 7:30
p.m. Friday at the lodge hall in
Cheshire. Work will be in the entered
apprentice degree .
'

Veterans Memorial
Admitted-Terry Derenberger,
Pomeroy; George Dean, Albany;
Clarence Longstreth, Middleport.
Discharged-James Wolfe, Alice
Struble.

Clarify man's namt:'
David L. Elkins, ~a . Albany,
arrested on several charges last
week as the result ol an incident in
Snowville is not David L. Elkins, SO,
ol Tuppers Plains. The identical
names created some confusion lor
the Elkins Family ci Tuppers
Plains.

Snowfall hits county
With spring only two days away a
one inch snow hit parts of Meigs

County overnight. However, the
snow appeared to be short lived and
schools went on their normal
schedules.

Deputies check mishap
The Meigs County Sheriff's Depar-

Emergency
Six

Four of seven defendants a(&gt;pearing in the court of Middleport
Mayor Fred Hoffman Tuesday night
were fined $225 and costs each and
were given three day jail sente nces
on charges of driving while in·
toxicated.
Tbe four include James E.
Milliron, Racine ; Larry Cundiff,
Middleport ; Randall D. Ridenour,
Fultonham, and Steven D. Kocher,
Rio Grande. Kocher was also fined
$50 and costs on a charge of driving
while under suspension. Others fined
in the court were Jeanette L. West,
Pomeroy, $60 and costs, disorderly
conduct; Gregory M. Gatrell,
Pomeroy, $15 and costs, speeding;
Hubert Fanns, Nelsonville, $100 and
costs, shoplifting ,
Forfeiting bonds in the court were
Max Geary, Middleport, $25 , posted
on a charge of spinning tires, and
Timothy A. Jenkins, Racine, $350,
driving while intoxicated ; Mathew
Weaver, Middleport, $25 , spinning
tires; Betty Jean Neville, Leon, W_
Va ., $100, shoplifting. Faye Ran·
som, Middleport, was placed on
probation for six months after facing
charges of discharging . firearms
within the village.

calls

!ban the start of a continuing downward trend.

The panel is expected to complete
work on the package tonight.
The committee voted Tuesday to:
-support the admiiiistration's
proposa1 to red uce fed era1 subs'cli
1 es
to the Postal Service by nearly $1
billion in 1982 - Recommend acceptance of the
president's revised federal pay
system at an estimated savings ol
nearly$3.7 billionnextyear.
-Adjust retirement benefits for
civilian and military pe_nsioners once a year instead of the current two
times, for estbnated savings of $800
million.
Technically, the committee is not
enacting the budget cuts, but formutating instructions to other
Senate committees.
0
both h
f C
nee
ouses 0
ongress
agree to overall totals, the other
committees will be required to make
the cuts needed to meet the bottom
line. However, the other committees

by

emergency units on Tuesday, the
Meigs Emergency Medical Services

re-h~Pomeroy

Center and at 8 : 5! p.m. took Kenneth Weich and Ernest Mitchell
from the scene of an auto accident in
Harrisonville to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
The Syracuse Unit at 9:08 a.m.
took Garrett Circle from his home on

Additional
cuts sought

gears downward" to a slower speed,
he said.

will have leeway to apportion the
cuts among the programs under
their jurisdictions.
At its meeting Tuesday, the
Budget Conunittee supported administration positions by turning
back attempts to eliminate Saturday
mail service and rejecting a
propo68l to freeze federal civilian
pay for a year.
However, the COJJlll1ittee voted to
cut spending by $3 billion more !ban
Reagan recorrunended when It
called for private financing of the
nation's Strategic Petroleum Reser'
ve.
Under the plan, major oil importers would pump 125 million
barrels a year into the stockpile,
which is intended to be used in limes
of national emergencies. The gove~
•nment, instead of buying the oil ·:
directly, would repay the companies '
at the rate of 10 percent a year for 11
years.

ELBERFELD$ WAREHOUSE
... - ..... ·~ - ---.- ------------- f--' ~
SALE
.__
-

..

'

-

I

I __,.__.-.-..
·--•'
tf
• -!4 11 . . 11
-· ,...--

~
I

Reg. '224.00
Reg.'261.00
Reg. '285.00

KITCHEN SINKS
Cabinets are manufactured from prime
cold rolled steel, electrically welded for
strength and durability. Protected against
rust by Dura Kote and finished in baked on
enamel.
Sink is stainless steel with butcher block
plastic laminated top .
Chrome plated deck type faucet included.
42 " Single Bowl Sink
54" Single Bowl Sink

66" Double Bowl Sink

SALE '199.00
SALE '235.00
SAL£ '259.00

ELBERFELD$
WAREHOUSE
h 1 5
Mec an

C

1.5 Cents
A Multim~ia Inc. Newsp1per ~

Pomeroy- Middtepuo·t, Ohio, Thursday, March 19,1981

"This may !Je kind of a pauoe u

the production machinery shlfta

r•E~Im;;;;;St~·~to~P~l~ea~sa;;;;;;nt:V:a:ll~ey:H:os~pi:ta:l:.;;;;;;;;;;;;::::::::::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:j.

,_

en tine

at

2 Sections, 14 Pages

Voi.29,No. 234
Copyrlthtecl 1981

Reagan's proposals

runs

were answered

e

year's recession recovery rather

t. In Pomeroy

~~~~~~~======~======================~=============~

Rt. 4, reported
Pomeroy,that
was
involved
in a 1
tment
Gary
L. Priddy,
si ngle car accident at I :SO a.m.
today.
Priddy said he was traveling west
on county road 37 when his vehicle
hit a bump in the highway which
caused him to lose control. The ca r
went off the road on the right into a
field . While attempting to drive the
car out of the field the car slid and
went into a ditch.

Couple!'i s t·t~ k licensP!'

Unit at l : 49 p.m.
took Allen Fraser, Main St., to·
Holzer Medical Center and at 8:56
a.m. took Mary Harris, Minersville,
to Holzer Medical Center.
At 9:24p.m. the unit went to the
scene of an auto accident at
Harri~onville and took Tony Reeves
and Lance Chapman to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. The Rutland
Unit early Tuesday morning took
Karen McGraff to Holzer Medical

_
Three defendants forfe1'ted bonds
in the court of Pomeroy Mayor
Clarence Andrews Tuesday night,
all on speeding charges. They are
Thomas Manstine, Johnstown , Pa. ,

Leonard Gilmore, 81 , Route I,
Edoa Wayland, 88, of Hartford,
Middleport, died Tuesday at the
died Tuesday morning in the Holzer
· Medical She was born August IB, Holzer Medical Center.
Mr. Gibnore was born March 4,
1892 in Hartford and was the
1900, a son of the late Martin Luther
daughter of the late George and
and Myrta Carrier Gilmore. He was
Sophronia Wetzel MacKnight. She
- also preceded in death by his wife,
was a member of the Hartford
Martha Bartrwn Gilmore in 1972,
United Methodist Church.
and three brothers, Charlie, Claren-

Surviving are one sister, Miss
Ester Mcknight of Hartford : one
niece, Ruth D. Remines of Bluefield;
one nephew, Charles T. McKnight of
Atwater, Ohio.
Services will be held at I :30 p.m.
on Friday at the Foglesong Funeral
·Home with the Rev. William Dawson
officiating. Burial will follow in the
Graham Cemetery.
Friends may call at the 'funeral
home on Thursday after 2 P-m.

ths.

Washi!lgton firm, said a decline in
interest rates - already Wider way
"will avert any return to
recession.''
And William Cox, deputy chief
economist for the Corrunerce Department, said the production decline
was probably just a pause after last

(Continued from page I)

Mayor'S C0U11 ·

Leonard GiJmore

She was preceded in death by her
husband, Charles Arthur Wayland in
1968, two brothers, James T.
McKnight and Doyle W. McKnight.

economic policies to bring down inflation and interest rates.
-The Commerce Department
also said · Americans' personal income rose 0. 7 percent in February,
the smallest increase since last summer and one virtually certain to
leave wage-earners lagging behind ·
still-unreleased inflation figures for
the month.
Ernst, a vice president of Evans
Economics Inc ., a private

- The Commerce Department
said housing starts down 2S percent
in February, a dramatic decline. that
housing industry spokesmen said
was inevitable in light of high mortgage interest rates. Commerce
Secretary Malcolm Baldrige Said
the report means Congress should
adopt the Rea_gan administration's

READY TO CUTDaniel P. Moynihan, ().N.Y., left, rubs biB
bands together at the start of a Senate Budget CommJUee meeting on
Capitol Htll Tuesday. At right Is Sen. Ernest Houtngs, ().S.C., the ranking
Demoerat on the commlttee, which recommended a btuion dollars In-cuts
to the 1982 federal budget. ( A~ Laserphoto).

Edna Wayland

WASHINGTON (AP) - A trio of
new government reports indic11tes
that a slowdown in the U.S.
economy, long predicted by
analysts, may be close at hand.
Economists inside and outside
government stopped short of saying
new housing, industrial production
and personal income figures
released Tuesday might be harbingers of a new recession.
But private economlst David Ernst said " these are certainly-unen'
couraging nwnbers."
In the three separate reports:
- The Federal Reserve Board said
industrial production leU 0.5 percent
in February, a broad-based decline
that was the first clip in seven mon-

•

DOUBLE COUPONS
Two ways to save on these Favorites from

i

i

WMiHINGTON (AP) - Recommending even deeper overall cuts
than President Reagan has asked,
Senate budget writers are slicing
more money from some social
programs to make room for
restoring export subsidies tbat
benefit big business.
By the time it quit work for the
night Wednesday, the Senate Budget
.Cwnmittee had approved more than
$35 billion in cuts, a net-of about $2.4
billion more !ban Reagan recommended for the areas covered.
One of the panel's votes was to
restore $l10 million - a third of
Reagan's proposed cut - for the Export-Import · Bank. The bank subsidizes exports through loans and
loan' guarantees to purchasers _of
American goods, and most of the
benefits go to a few large American
c:orporations.
At the recommendation of Sen.
Nancy Kassebaum, R-Kan ., the
panel supported deeper cuts in
bousing for the poor and conununity
services aid to more than make up
the money put back in the Ex·lm
Bank budget.
Mrs. Kassebawn denied the move
was designed to help co'mpanies like
Boeing and Cessna, which produ'-"
airplanes in her state and sell them
abroad with the Ex-lm Bank's help.
She said the change is intended "to
help workers keep their jobs, not big
business."
The action on the Ex-lm Bank was
one of few times the conunittee

voted more money than Heagan had
recollUnended as it completed its
secl)lld day of work on the 1982
federal budget.
Peter Domenici, R·N.M., the
committee chairman, predicted the
panel would complete its spending
blueprint today, and aides said it
would wind up approving more than
the $48.6 billion in cuts the president
has recommended.
The committee recommended
reductions in social programs
ranging from unemployment
benefits and Social Security to food
stamps and welfare.
While Reagan was generally getting his way in the Senate, he was
winning another victory in another
collUnittee of Congress.
The House Ways and Means Comrnittee gave its initial endorsement,
to $ii.B billion in ~pending cuts in
social programs it oversees and a
$50.4 billion tax cut, nearly identical
to the president's request.
The vote in the Democratcontrolled
co mmittee
was
unanimous despite the reservations .
by some members about specific
cutbacks proposed by the administration.
But in the Senate Budget ComInittee, the majority Republicans
sometimes had to overcome
Democrat opposition as they voted
for abolishing the $.3.6 billion public
service jobs program, a reduction of
more than $1 billion in educatfon
!Continued on page 101

Sen.

Sheriffs deputies transfer prisoner
David Elkins, Albany, who was
, sentenced last Saturday to a term of
six months to live years in a penal
institution was transported this mor·
ning by the sheriff's department to
the Ohio Penal Reception Center,
Columbus, to begin serving his sentence.
Elkins, appearing on a bill of In(ormation, plead guilty to charges of
vandalism. He was sentenced by
Judge John C. Bacon.

A single car accident was invl"tiga led by the sheriff's depar·
ment Wednesday evening_
Gordon Warner, 26, Rt, Pomeroy,
was traveling north on SR 143 at
ll
p.m. when he swerved to avoid
hitting a deer. His car went off the
highway and struc~ and damaged
two mailboxes. There were no injuries and no citation was issued.
There was moderate properly
damage .

:os

Weather
Occasional snow nurries today and tonight. High today 30 to 35, low
tonight 15 to 20. Variable cloudiness Friday with some lingering
nurries in the northeast, highs in the mid-30s to low Ws.
Extended Ohio Forecast- Saturday through Monday : Rain or snow
in the northeast Saturday , becoming rain and spreading throughout
_the state Sunday and Monday . Highs are expected to be in the SOs and
low in the 30s.

-~

\

THREATENS - Mrs. Shirley Stephenson, Racine, is
threatening court action against the Ontario Pipe Line Co.,
which is installing sewage lines in Racine. Mrs. Stephenson
charges that her station wagon, pictured, was moved by com. pany workers, using a backhoe, from Pearl St., where it as
parked some 100 feet to Fifth St. She said that at no time was
she asked to move the vehicle which, she says, could be extensively damaged since the vehicle's wheels were
automatically locked. She said that the car was moved to an
illegal parking location. Mrs. Stephenson said she could' get
no Jaw enforcement agency to complete a report on the incident but that a mechanic visited the scene and advised her
that there could be extensive damages to the vehicle. (See articleon page 10)

Wildcat strikes idle miners
By Assbcialed Press
Many wildcat strikes idling
miners across the country today
resulted from frustration , says the
wife of an Ohio member of the
United Mine Workers' International
Executive Board.
" The wildcats are spreading,"
said Cynthia Bwnbico of St. Clairsv ille. Her husband, Anthony, international representative for
District 6, had gone to New
Lexington in an effort to convince
strikers there to return to work.
·· ( think· people are upset by the
way negotiations are going on," she
said . " They 're a little'ncrvous and a
little angry."
At least I ,200 miners were off the
jolJ early today m Ohio. and at least
H,llOO nationwide . The Ohio miners
belonH to District 6, which includes

Disputes in West Virginia and
about 10,000 coal miners in southeast
Pennsylvania
over the dismissal ·of
Ohio and another 6,000 in West
Virginia's panhandle. About a third six miners compounded the
of the district's 1nembers are laid off problem, according to Mrs. Bumbecause of federal air regulations bico. UMW officials said the action
preventing the burning of high sulfur resulted in some miners walking out
at other operations for the wrong
coal.
Contract talks broke · down reason.
"I think they've got their issues
Tuesday between the nation's
160,000 United Mine Workers and the confused," said Ed Bell, president of
BituminOus Coal Operators District 6, as he left his Dilles BotAssociation. Workers in the field tom office Wednesday for a strike
have said there isn't enough time to site in Vinton County. Bell, a memHel an aHreement and vote on it . ber of the international union's
before the current three-year pact bargaining council, returned from
Washington, D.C., on Tuesday night
expires March 27.

after contract talks collapsed.
"They heard that some miners
were out in other districts over the
contract, but they are no\ out over

the contract," he said. ''There are
other things involved. They are out

over some other issues."
•Some of those workers returned to
the mines Wednesday afternoon, ac, cording to John Prout, vice
president of District 6. But others
began walking out in protest of the
talks , affecting four UMW
operations in St Clairsville and at
least two others in east and east cen·
tral Ohio.

SNYDER'S OF BERLIN

Marriage licenses were issued to
James Richard Sirruns, Jr., 20,
Gallipolis, and Lesa Emogen Fetty,
19, Pomeroy; Joseph Lee Shepard,
24, Pomeroy, and Deloris Ann
Snider, 21, Pomeroy _

,

--BANK ONE .v-- -

LEASINC
--EQUIPMENT

~TO BUSINESS, INDUSTRY~

......AND THE PROFESSIONS
BANK ONE OF POMEROY. NA

MINE CARS IDLE - Mine cars at United Stales
Steel's Cumerlaod Mine were idle Wednesday as a
result of a wildcat strike brought about by the firing ol

614/992·2133

SPECIAL!

six employees early Tuesday. About 1,400 miners are
affected at the Cumberland Mine. (AP Laserpboto)

Senate committee wants details
WASHINGTON (APl - A Senate
conunittee wants details of possible
U.S. military plans to cut off the flow
of Cuban arms into Central America
- action the Reagan administration
says is not ruled out

ECONOMY GRADE
.8 FOOT

2"x4"s

99~£ACH
Ask for SNYDER'S OF BERLIN
Chip, Popcorn or Chee~e Curls at
your favorite Retailer.

CITIZEN OF YEAR -

Kelllldb E. WIQial,

MlaenvU!e, h111 been named CIUzea of tire Year by
Dnew We~ter PGit 31, AmeriCtin Lecloa. WlgU., left,
rfteivn a plaque ID reeepllloll of tire lroDor from
Cllarln Sntlel, acUve peel member. WIQIIW II a IN7
~~~Wdute

I

-------1- •J'

'

of Pomerey Hlllh !khool;

tm11~r

of the

Royal Crown BoWing Co. in Mlddlepon; aeuve 10
Maaonle orden and loa paal maoler of Pomeroy Lodge
IM, FloAM; hila been active in the Mlpersvllle United
Mellrodlllt Church where he holdll a 23 year perfect Suoday schootatteodance and ha~ been coach of the Hils 'n
Mlseaglrla ball team for the pas\14 years.

The Foreign Relations Conunittee
planned to ask Secretary of State
Alexander M. Haig Jr. for an explanation of comments by a deputy
that the administration has
developed specific contingency
plans against Cuba and they ''do ~ot
exclude anything."
Sen. Charles H. Percy, R-111., the
conunittee chainnan, offered to go
into closed session today, if
necessar y, for Huig to provide
details.
,
Undersecretary of State Walter J .
Stoessel told the panel Wednesday

that to stop the anus flow to leftist take to stop that nuw."
Haig told the House Foreign AI·
guerrillas in El Salvador, the United
States has " a wide variety of options fairs Conunittee on Wednesday tbat
under consideration, political, the guerrilla movement in El
economic, not excluding or Salvador is part of a four-phase com·
necessarily including military ."
munist strategy.
" Phase I has been completed with
Asked by Percy if Central
the seizure of Nicaragua," Haig
America could turn into another
" quagmire" ·like Vietnam, Stoessel
said. "Next is El Salvador, to be
followed by Honduras and
replied , " We are detennined that
this situation will not develop into
Guatemala."
another Vietnam .. .'the situation is
Rep . Robert K. Dornan, R·Calif.,
containable.''
asked Haig if he believed in a
Anus from Cuba and other communist countries into El Salvador . "Caribbean domino theory," a
reference to the muclHiiscussed
have "substantially abated" and the
proposition of the mid-1960&amp; tbat the
administration hopes they will stop
Vietnam War had to be fought to
altogether, he said.
prevent other Southeast Asian
But if they increase instead, he
said under questioning from Sen. nations from falling to conununlsm
like a row of dominoes when the first
Christopher J . Dodd, ~onn. , " we
'
would have to consider what steps to is toppled.

·'

1

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