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                  <text>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
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Reg. '224.00
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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
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Sink is stainless steel with butcher block
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Chrome plated deck type faucet included.
42 " Single Bowl Sink
54" Single Bowl Sink

66" Double Bowl Sink

SALE '199.00
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ELBERFELD$
WAREHOUSE
h 1 5
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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

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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

�March 19,1981

RedtJ 'profile

_C ommentary

..

Pag-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, March 19,1911

Art Buchwald ·
~~chors away
.·The
~--------------------------------~------------------------beef
Atlantic Forces, I turn over the com·
mand of the battleship New Jer..-,y
to you and yollr fine crew."
"Thank you, sir. Where's th~
crew?"

" They're standing over there."
11
Six.men for a batUeship7"
" That's . aU the bureau of personnel could spare. I asked for 10 b~t
they said they needed the others to
man a missile cruiser that will
escort you at sea."
"Begging your pardon, sir, and
meaning no disrespect, but a bat·
tleship calls for a complement of
4,(0) men."

" I'm aware of that, Captain. But
we're going to have to make it with

The Daily Sentinel
111 COW"' Sired

Pomuey, Obl•

n•ttz.tLM
DEVlYI'ED TO 11IE INTEREST OF TilE MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERTL. WINGE'IT
PablJSber'

PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH

Assist.ot Publil.ber/CoatroUer

~ueniiMaug~r

what we've got. I'm sure with proper
training your six-man crew can do
the job. They'll just have to double
up on their watches."
' 'You actually want me to take this
battleship out of harbor with six
people?"
" Captain, may I remind you that
getting conunand of a battleship is
one of the highest honors that the
Navy can bestow on one of its of-

"You're to seek out the enemy and
destroy him as well. But first check
with Washington before you engage

in action.''

uBy radio?"
"We couldn't spare a radioman.
Here is a bag of dimes. There's a pay
phone on the bridge."
''Thank you, sir. That's very
generous of you."

ficers .' '

" I'm aware of the honor, sir, and
it's been my dream to command a
ship like the New Jersey. But r i
always thought when I got one this
size, the crew would go with it.'
"I assure you, Captain, once you
get the hang of it you'll be amazed
how few people it takes to run a bat·
tleship. We've put in· an automatic
steering system, so you won't need
anyone at the wheel, and all your
meals have been prepackaged so
you won't require a mess crew, and
the engines have been fitted with
computers so you won't need
anybody in the boiler rooms. And
when you press tliis button you can
fire your guns fore and aft. So actually the only thing your crew will
have to do is scrape and paint the
ship when it pulls into port."
" It sounds very reassuring, AdmiraL I imagine my first job will be
to brief the officers.''

'

" Money isn't our problem, Captain. We have more of It than we
know what to (jo with. Our problem
is that the more ships the Defense
Department wants to put to sea, the
more we have to stJYh our manpower. After I leav~ lii!re I have to
recommission the aircraft carrier
Oriskany with three squadrons of
Grumman fighters."

"That should
up the fleet."
"Not quite. Theyonlygavemetwo .

pilots."

"Would you ute to a~ the

. TAMPA, Fla. (AP)- Jeff Lahti's
library card was his ticket to the big
leagues of baseball.
When the 24-yeaMld r'ight-hander
struggled through a Hi season his
first year in the CincinnaU Reds'
minor league system, he decided
something had to be done over the
1978-'19 winter. He turned to the Ontario, Ore., public library.
"I went to the library and checked
~ut a book on pitching," Lahti said.
The book helped me a lot. It taught
me everything I needed to know
about fundamentals.
. "Before, I was getting the.baU up
rn the strike zone. I wasn't getting a
lot of movement on the ball. 1 wasn 'I
following through on my deiivery.
"By reading that stuff, I realized a
lot of things I was doing wrong.[ put
it all together, and had my best
spring training th.e next year." The
book was several weeks overdue by
the time Lahti returned it. The ~
cent fine was a small price for the
success that followed.
Lahti, raised in Hood River, Ore.,
was Most Valuable Player on his
Greensboro Club the next year with
13 saves and seven victories. A solid
season at Waterbury last year earned him a promotion to the Reds'
spring training camp.
Reading isn't one of Lahti's
frequent hobbies but it has paid off
handsomely more than once during
his career.
One of his minor league teams
distributed Ted Williams' book on
hitting to the players. In Lahti's han-

ds, it became a blueprint for at·
tacking batters' weaknesses.
"That book helped me as a pitcher
because it taught me about the
strike zone. It tells you that a pit·
cher's pitch is low and outside and ·
up and in. A hitter's pitch is low and
inside and up and away.' '
Last year at Waterbury, Lahti ran
into a streak of inconsistency. A
coach thought he needed to improve
his concentration and suggested a
psychology book.
"Now, when I'm pitching out
there, it's like the batter is not even
there. I just concentrate on the cat·
cherr's glove," Lahti said.
A versatile player who was used
as a pinch-hitter in minor leagues
Lahti throws a fastball and OC:
casional change-up and a deadly
slider that is his strikeout pitch.
"It breaks more than a normal
slider. A slider normally breaks
about six inches. Mine breaks six inMISS TilE .CATCH - Onix Cooeepeloq ol the Kan- Foley of the CloclhiUIBti Reds slides safely to tbe
ches and drops six inches," he said.
sas City Royals misses to catch the ball while Tom second base. The Royals won the 11-lnning game. (AP
Lahti set two goals for himself this
Lawerphoto)
year: have a good exhibition season
and get called up to the Cincinnnati
club in September. He started on the
first goallastlfuesday, surrendering
two hits and striking out two batters
in three innings against the Minnesota Twins.
.
If he accomplishes the second, it
will be a large step toward fulfilling
his boyhood dreams.
Plans have been announced for the Jackie Knight of SEOAL co- David Adan1:1, South Pomt
F 6-0
"Ever since I was eight years old,
Tony Pyyne, Su uth Point
G 5-10
second
annual
Ali.State
Cage
Series
champion
Gallipolis
113-1
record
l
Terry Mill er , Symmes Valley
F 6-1
I told my mom I wanted to be a
Coach - l.ewis D' Antoni , Chesapeake.
professional baseball player," Lahti between players from the and Jan Keatley of South Point,
Southeastern Ohio Athletic League which won the OVC girls' league RolUinne Burcham,0\'CGIRLS
Che!Wpeakc
p ...
said.
and the Ohio Valley Conference. with an 11·1 record. Coach Jamie Susan Nance, Coal Grove
r ...
Brenda Dillon, Fairltind
c 5-11
This year's ~ames are to he played Van Arsdalen of Athens, which Cecili
EYHIIS, Oak Hill
G 5-5
Monday (March 23). Site of the twin shared the SEOAL girls' title with Denise Ci rcle, Oak Hill
p 5-7
McCorkle, Oak Hill
bill - a girls' game at 6 p.m. and a Gallipolis, is unable to assist with Candy
Heather Gray 1 Oak Hill
F ...
5-3
boys ' contest at 8 p.m. - will again the coaching duties due to a prior Mitzi Howi:ird, South Point
G 5-7
Robiq Matney, South Po!nl
F 5-9
corrunitment.
be the Ironton Sports Center.
DebbieJaclc:ion, South Pol'nt
'
5-7
Tanun.ie
L-ester
,
Syrrunes
Valley
The two leagues divided honors in
Tickets are available at parG 5-3
Coach ,. ,. . Jan Keatley, Slluth Point .
last year's initial games, with the ticipating schools and will also he
SEOAL girls winning the opener 71· available at the door the night of the r-;:::;::::::.::::::::::;::~
49, but the OVC boys corning back to game. They are $2 each for adults
u=u. *-=
FORT MYERS, Fla.- ( AP) - The felt all right about the game," said win the nightcap from their SEOAL and $1 for students. Proceeds from
counterparts ~3 on an 18-foot jwn- Ill!' games widll be divided between
]3l
Kansas City Royals stole five bases Nolan.
per
by
South
Point's
Buzzy
Bick
with
the
two
leagues.
Hush
off Cincinnati en route to a 7-i; extra
Johnny Bench, who plans to catch
If the Ironton boys' team, which is
inning exhibition victory and Reds only twice a week, played third base six seconds remaining.
Puppies·
Only seniors are eligible to par- particpating in regional play at
barely there
Manager John McNamara was up- Wednesday and had two hits in·
ticipate in the games under Ohio Athens this weekend, should win
set.
eluding a home run.
)he JJI:!T18(:T l1n1 sr1ong IQ IIC-1'1
High School Athletic Association both of Its games and give a berth in
''There is still competition for that
10 a new !iun1mor SUI lOre~ ~
Dave Chalk singled with the bases
OrJO Stvied 1 U ~1 11gtt ! !or
r.~
job. You can't get lazy, even in loaded in the lith inning to win the regulations . Most of the participants the state tournument, the all-star
PQ f1 15 100 MU(Ifl WITI\ 0
-~ ~were named to either all-league or games would be postponed until
spring training. Joe has to be game for Kansas City.
~OOTM1 Q cusl'l 01)00 S() e
~. f/F' '
l )
anu so corn lortoole vou U
·•
~ , . J1
honorable mention spots· in their Tuesday, March31.
aggressive but it appeared thoSe
Bench's fourth inning homer gave
tor g et to toke lht~m o N
" . ; f.,
I
1j ~
steals did wake him up. He was the Reds an early l&gt;-3 lead after the respective leagues, although a few
wr1en ~ou ge1 home Qr
SEOA.I. HOVS
Pos. Ht
quick and accurate after that," Mc- Royals scored three times in the fir· additional players have been picked Player-Sc!MHJI
moSoothrng
/be Y'N "or
'" cwoo
1 ' "" ' /, • ·,
I 1'\
!o
e roo
S&lt;:ott RiMJiJS, Athens
F
since
underclassmen
arc
not
elgible.
Namara said of catcher Joe Nolan.
I ~
lfndd Nibert, Gallipols
st inning of( starter Bruce Berenyi.
F
The teams will be coached by the . Kent Pril'e, G111lipolis
c 6·5
~·
Nolan, who is being pushed for the
In the Royals' lith, Darryl Motley
Chris Barn~-". lruntor1
G
job by rookie Mike O'Berry, said he singled and took third on a single by mentors who guided their teams to Hick Milburn, Jackson
c 6..1
Dave Bell. IJJ)jan
wasn't upset.
6-5
c
Jerry Grote. Kansas City filled the championships in the leagues. Op- Stt!VIl
Ohllnf!er, Mei~o:s
c 6-1
"I had a couple of wild throws but bases on an intentional walk to Time posing coaches for the boys' game Rick Teeters, Wave rly
c
will be Fred Gibson, whose Athens Chris Smith, WB ver ly
G
that is what spring training is' for. Ireland, the Chalk delivered the
Jef[crs, Wellston
F ..
This was the first day I had to throw game-winning hit. Joe Kerrigan was Bulldogs won the SEOAL with a 13·1 Jnhn
Cu.. ch - F' red Gibson, AthenS.
SEOAI.GIRI.S
and I made a couple good throws and the loser. Jeff Twitty got the victory. record, and Lewis D' Antoni of
Shmcy, Gr~llipulis
G 5-7
"
.
~
Chesapeake, whose team shared the · Shirl
JaneStunt!y ,Gulipolts·
G 5-7
OVC title with South Point and Mar~Hrt!l Ev11ns, Galliptllis
G
.u uren Tripli! U, Ironton
F
Fairland with 9-31oop marks. In !he ILisa
Br}'l!nl, lnmton
F 5-7
girls' contests, the coaches will be [{use Stifn er, J~tt•kson
c ..

'

crew, air?"
"No, Captain, I believe you beUer
pull up anchor right away before

they find out they're the only ones on .
bolrd. Wecan'taffordtohaveanyof
them lumP ship." '

IT'S A NOTE FROM
PRIME MINISTER THATCHER
REMINDING US,IN THE IN'TER~ST
OF THE NATION~\. ECONOMV,
THAT TRADITIONA\.W THE 9RII)E'S
fAMI\.'T' Is RE'SPONSIBL£ FOR
WEDDING EXPENSES

" Officers? You're lt."

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.

"You mean I have to eat by

N"'• Edllor

myself?''
A. MEMBER of Tbt Aasociakd Prrss, Ialaud DalJy Pl"nnll Auoclatloo aDd Ute
Americ•n Newlp~~JN!r Publ11ben Alloda~ .

" Don't feel bad. Your only chief
petty officer has to eat by himself

LE'TI'ER.~ OF OPINION •~ w~lcomed . Dey 1helld be leu dwl- wonls ~ · AU
lerters are &amp;ubjftt kl Hldag aDd IDIIII ~ aiped wldl IWJlf. 10c1ut11 aod ttiepboofnumber. No uultoed letwra wUI br publUhed. l.e;tttn abooJd WIn Jood
addmaing

also."

••te.

luues, HI per~oullties .

'

Doubtful precedent
'Evidence' offered by 'supply side zealots' and those who accept their
gospel to prove that the Kemp-Roth tax reduction program (adopted as
. 'his' by President Reagan) will work is its alleged comparability with tax
cuts sponsored by Presi\lent Kennedy-to wltich the 'true believers' credit
the sharp growth of the economy in 1963.
Many economists, fiscal analysts and tax experts, however, reject this
'proof. ' In 1963, they point out, the United States was not dependent on
foreign oil. They say the $100 billion a year now spent abroad to import oil
gives the U.S. an inflationary economy, completely different from that of
17 years ago. The supply-siders tend to deny that paying for foreign oil is
inflationary.
The sudden spurt in the growth of the economy in 1963 was not without
its inflationary aspects. It can be credited to other factors than cutting ·
tax· rates-there was an increase in American exports and American

multinational companies expanded rapidly .
The argument for the !~percent-a-year-for-three-years cut in personal
income taxes claims that It is necessary ior the growtlj, of the economy,
which will take place · without being inflationary, because the money
which is preserved in private hands will be invested in new machil)ery
and plimt modernization, not squandered on cons!iffier goods, like food .
,~
But the cut for most individuals will be so slight-an average of less than
"• $10 per week-and so widely distributed that to forecast that it will go into
savings to create investment capital seems like fantasy and
rationalization. The money is more likely to go toward buying an additional half a tank of gasoline a week .
There is a very real danger that, if the tax proposal is adopted and
doesn't do all that its defenders claim for it, other parts of Reagan's
economic program, in particular the reduction in government spending,
)rill be called into question.

Letters to editor
----No new business•- - - - .f

-•
...

""
,
'
.•
'

!;:
··•

...

-"•:.

...
··.

•...;:,.
.'

' ,,'

•
•
'

•
•

.

Meigs County, are we ever going

to see any new businesses built in the
county? Our county is slowly aging
and we see little new businesses
built here, but on the other hand,
look at Gallia County. It has grown
in all directions and hasn't stopped
yet. Why, I wonder?
With all the room in Meigs Qlunty
we haven't got some of.this business
here. The county needs it, but we
still don't get any. Why does anyone
have anything to say about this?
Well, do they have any children in
school or even some graduating this
year' Well, if so, I wonder if they
will find work here at home. Most
will have to leave and we can only
worry. I wonder what can be done on
the county commissioners' part.
They should have some way of
bringing new business to the county.

We vote them in to do this county a
job and that means even bringing
new business to the county.
I hope they will do something for
the county . There are a lot of fellow
Meigs Countians out of work and the
big~ school students are faced with a
county out of jobs and they are faced
with leaving home. Myself and a lot
of people here in Meigs don't want to
see this and would rather see their
children stay close to home.
But as jobs now. are hard to fmd
our county needs to try even harder
to get new business to come to our
county.
We, the people of this county,
should let this be known because
someday we might be looking for a
joll!

Today .in history.

Floyd H. Cleland
Rutland, Ohio

• •

Today is Thursday, March 19, the 78th day of 1981. There are 'JK1 days
left in the year.
Today's highlight in history:
On march 19, 1796, freedom of the press was established in France.
On this date:
In 1711, war was proclaimed between Russia and Turkey.
In 1808, Spain's King Charles IV abdicated.
In 19'17, President Marien Ngouabi of the Congo was assassinated at his
official residence in Brazzaville.
·
In 1978, the Israeli anny took control of almost all of Lebanon south of
the Litani River.
Ten years ago·: At least 150 people were killed in landslides north of Sao
Paulo, Brazil.
'
Five years ago: Negotiations broke off between Rhodesia 's white
minority government and black nationalist representatives .
One year ago: An Iranian diplomat said the fate of the American
hostages would not be decided for at least two months after Iran's new
parllalnentreconvened.
Today's birthdays: "Writer Philip Roth Is 48 years old. Fonner
·
President Johnson's daughter, Lynda Bird, i.s 37.
Tho~ht For Today: Woe unto them that are tired of everything, for
everything wiU certainly be Ured of them - G.K. Chesterton, English
writer (111'14.1936).

"What are my orders, sir'"

List raises qualms, not ~J,ssurances
WASIDNGTON (AP) - The
League of Women Voters has ventured into the political rating game
with a list that may raise more
qualms than assurances for those
who scored weU. Half the senators
given perfect marks by the League
lost their jobs last falL
However, only three of the 46
House members given perfect
scores by the League lost re-election
bids. Two others sought higher office
and lost.
The (irst of what the League says
will be its annual Political Accountability Ratings was released
Tuesday.
'
It gave zeroes to one senator and
nine representatives who disagreed
with the organization's views on
every issue checked during the 98th
Congress. Although four of these
have since retired, none was
defeated at the polls.
Although the League Is a nonpartisan organization, all but one of
the senators and one of the House
members voting with the League on
all the test issues were Democrats.
The League's ratings were based
on whether a House or Senate member voted for or against the League
position, or otherwise took a public
stand, on each issue.
A second pair of ratings assigned
negative scores for issues on which
members did not vote or otherwise
take a public stand. In some cases

this produced a lower score. For
example, Rep. John B. Anderson, R·
IU., who did not run for re-election so
he could run for president, was the
only House Republican to get a perfect score. But Anderson got only a
30 percent score when the seven
issues he passed up were counted
against him.
The League based its ratings on
support of fair housing legislation,
the food stamps program, ci vii
rights measures, extension of
Revenue Sharing, international
development banks, authorization
for foreign economic development
assistance, the superfund for
cleanup of hazardous waste, the
Energy Mobilization Board, state
rights in nuclear waste disposal,
agricultural land protection, federal
housing subsidies, cuts in water
projects and support of strip mining
regulation.
Among the senators given scores
of 100 on the League scale, John
Durkin, [).N.H., George McGovern,
!).S.D., and Gaylord Nelson, [).Wis.,
were targeted by right wing political
action groups and were defeated by
their Republican opponents in the
Nov. 4 elections.
Other senators with 100 percent
scores were Edward M. Kennedy, [).
Mass., Bill Bradley, [).N.J ., and
John Chafee, R-R.I.
The lone Senator voting against
the League on every question was

Milton Young, R-N.D., now retired:
House membe"' scoring zeroes
were Bob Stwnp, [).Ariz., Nonnan
Shumway, R-Callf., Philip Crane, R·
Ill., Richard !chord, 0-Mo., retired,
Robert McEwen, R·N.Y., Ray
Roberts, [).Texas., retired, Charles
Stenholm, [).Tex., William Thomas,
R-Callf., and David Satterfield, [).
Va., retired.
Those who sided with the League
on every vote checked and lost elections last year were Frank Thompson, [).N.J ., who was convicted in
an Abscam case, Andrew Maguire,
[).N.J., and Thomas Ashley, [).()hjo.
Democrat Elizabeth Holtzman of
New York, who also was given a perfect score by the League, gave up a
House seat to run for the Senate and
lost.
Others with perfect League scores
were Robert Matsqt, D-Callf., John
Burton, D-Callf., Philip Burton, [).
Calif., George Miller, D-Callf., Ron
Dell urns, D-Calif., Pete Starl&lt;, [).
Calif., Don Edwards, D-Callf., Anthony Beilenson, D-Callf., Julian
Dixon, D-Callf., Augustus Hawkins,
[).Calif., George Brown, D-Callf.,
Timothy Wirth, [).Colo., William
Ratchford, [).Conn., Toby Moffett,
[).Conn.
Cardiss CoUns, [).IU., Sidney
Yates, [).Ill., Paul Simon, [).Ill.,
Parren Mitchell, [).Md., Robert
Drinan, [).Mass., retired, Jameo
Shannon, [).Mass., Gerry Studds, [).

Maas., Howard Wolpe, [).Mich.,
Dale Klldee, [).Mich., David Bon!or,
[).Mich., Bruce Vento, [).Minn.,
Malin Sabo, [).M!M., William Clay,
[).Mo.

deal in which Israel was also tossed
a little something, and it was agreed
the F-15s would not be equipped with
bomb racks that would make them
an offensive threat.
Even so, there were rnutterings
that this was not likely the end of the
matter, but only the beginning of
another twist to the perpetual
Mideast crisis. And taking an even
broader view, then-Sen . Muriel
Humphrey , D-Minn .,' declared
"every pore in my body goes against
seeking peace by arming coun·
tries."

Well, if you've been following the
news in recent days you already
know that those F-15s are back in it.
The Reagan administration has a
brand-new diplomatic-military plan
to restore U. S. "credibility' ' as a
partner for ass~rted nations in the
Mideast labeled friendly . It includes
Immediate sale of.air·t()-air rnissiles
and extended-range fuel tanks to
give the planes more offensive pun-

ch.
And with this much already in the
works, can bomb racks be far
behind? The Saudis have requested
them and the matter~. it Is reliably
reported, " understudy."
Inevitably there will also be a little
something more for Israel so
Jerusalem is not making a fuss- at
least not yet.
With the administration talking
about investing an additional
trillion-plus dollars into our own
military buildup In the next few
years, a few hundred milliona worth
of hardware to be pasaed out in the
Mideast may seem exactly worthy
of comment.
But as with the 1!178 situation, thla
is almost certainly only another
beginning. Authoritative sources In
Washington are making it no secret
that additional countries - Mtal;lly
Turkey and Pakistan - are in Hoe
for similar tangible r~assurance and
the ultimate· evidence of U. S.

Joon

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..•"

MIDDLE PORT ·II took two hard"
fought championship games in the
double-elimination sixth grade tournament, but when the final buzzer
sounded Tuppers Plains became the
champions of the Meigs County .
Elernentary Tournament by scoring
41-40, and 52-4ll wins over previously
undefeated Bradbury Cassell.
Tuesday night Tuppers Plains,
winner of the losers bracket, met undefeated Bradbury Cassell, winner
of the winners bracket.
The two teams engaged in an exciting championship thriller that
went to the wire with T.P. finally
claiming the narrow win, 41-40. The
win extended tournament play one
more game, since both teams now
had one loss.
Jeff Caldwell led Tuppers Plains
with 21 points, Brent Bissell had 10
points, and Eddie Collins eight poin·
ts. For Bradbury Donnie Becker net·
ted 20 points, Tim Cassell 10, and
JeffHood6 points.
Wednesday night, in another
heated battle, Tuppers Plains scored
a 52-40 win over Bradbury in a
rematch for the championship. Jeff
Caldwell had another outstanding
evening from the floor to lead the

winners with 21 points. Teammates
Eddie Collins and Brian Durst also
contributed great games with 16 and
13 points respectively.
Sharp-shooting Donnie Becker led
Bradbury Cassell with a game-high
24 points, while Tim Cassell netted
12.

ft-1 0

Tuppers Plains took first place
honors, Bradbury Cassell claimed
second, Bradbury Kitchen third, and
Letart placed fourth in the sixth
grade division.
In the fourth and fifth grade tour·
narnent, Tuppers Plains defeated
Racine, 47-T/. High scorer for T.P.
was Jeff Caldwell with 28 points,
followed by Brent Bissell with 17
points. F'or Racine Brian Diehl had
10 points and Marty Cleland eight
points.
Also, Pomeroy Barton defeated
Salisbury Cullwnsa,JS-7, led by Norrnan and Wright with II and Mulford
with eight points. For Salisbury Don
Dorst had four .
Thursday, March 19, fourth and
fifth grade action continues at 6
P.M. when Rutland plays Syracuse.
At 7:30 P.M. Letart plays Salisbury
Hunnell.

Alan B ur~~~ . Ji'a irland

J II!UnyJuhnson , Fairltwd
'l'y Spur.luCk. fairland
Mike Bo~o:.:s . Hock Hill
Dotlllltl Adkins. Suuth Pu111!

SARASOTA, Fla. - Free-agent
Carlton Fisk ended 10 days of in·
tense negotiations with the Chicago
White Sox, signing a five-year contract Wednesday with the American
League club, General Manager
Roland Hemond said.
Financial Ierma of the contract
· were not di!CloseQ, but published
reports have set the figure as high as
13.5 million! or the five years. The
Boston Globe had r~rted earlier
that Ulo' paci also involved li per·
sonal-services contract for a broad·
cast career after the veteran cal·
cher finishes playing.

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PLAYED HURT - Pittsburgh
Pil'lltes Dave Parker looses a
baseball up aod down while
taldng II easy at the tear:n's
spring training camp In BradeDton, Fla. Parker Is coming off a
knee injury and his goal for the
1981 season is to play a fullseasoo
in healthy condition. 1AP Laserphoto)

Fisk joins
White Sox

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Tuppers Plains wins
elementary ·tourney

After aU, If -ponry were aU that

.

·~

,.,,.,
,

credlbllity Is to be a permanent
American military presence in the
area, to secure above aU the Persian
Gulf and Western oil supplies
therefrom.
There are, u in 11178, miaglvings
on Capitol Hill. But there Is no
serious question that the admlnlatratlon hu the 1Upp011 to get
easentiaUy what It wanta. sun,
questlona remain u to the wildom In
the long run of defilllng ~eeurtty and
~ to maintain peace almOIIt
ellclualvely ln termaof anna.

DOONESSURY

/111P.4MIJIA/f(J!,()&gt;fM, IT IS
WfTII liNEAr WF!aNCI3

FIX-IT
KIT

'

..,..,

" The League taltea political action
to achieve legislative goals,
although we aupport neither poUUcal
parUea nor candidate.," aald Ruth
J . Hinerfeld, League po:Sdent. "To
lobby effectively, we need a clear
measure of where •ch nanber of
Congress standi on ~ we consider critical. (Political AccountabUity l 111tinp provide 111 with
thla Important lobbytJic tool ...
League polltlona on ~ are
detennined by memben In more
than I,P alate and local chapters. '

And considering reeent eventa In
which he figured 10 prominenUy,
there II at leut one penon who
could in the ~t clrcurnltancea
say "I told you 10."
Former Sen. Muriel Hlllllphrey.

011 '1'111~ MCWI'H

11:1

Thomu Downey, [).N.Y. Bell·
jamin Roeenthal, [).N.Y., Fred
Richmond, [).N.Y., Theodore Welu,
[).N.Y., Robert Garcia, [).N.Y.,
Jonathan Bingham, [).N.Y.,
Seiberling, Dallo, Loula Stotea, [).
Ohio, Lea AuCoin, D-Ont., Robert
Edgar. [).Pa., William Moortwad,
[).Pa., retired, MlciiHI Lowry, [).
Wash., Lea Alpin, [).WII., and .
Robert Kaatenmeler, [).WII.
Although the ratinp dealt with 10
general laaues, the specific
measurea in the Hou8e and Senate
10metlmea differed when a particular meuure did not come~ In
both houaea.
.

mattered, there Wllllldn't be any
security problem In the Pen1an Gulf
area today. We would still be relying
upon our lavlably 'equipped great
and good friend, the lhah of Iran.

'llMR~
~li..IJI~

Ironton to host second
annual all-star battle

Royals steal five
bases on Joe Nolan

Arms and insec':lrity____--'-'----~Do_n_G_raff_
Someone, somewhere, must be
saying " I told you so" about now .
Back in a simpler, lessthreatening era - way back, in fact ,
to 1!178, before the Iranian revolution
and all that followed - considerable
misgivings were expressed in
Congress and elsewhere to the
provisioning of Saudi Arabia with 60
U.S.-built F·15s, then and still one of
the world's most advanced warplane.
There was some question as to
whether the modest Saudi military
establishment was up to managing
such super-sophisticated weaponry ,
and more as ·to the possible unsettling effects upon the Mideast
power balance. The F-15s were, as
was pointed out repeatedly, most of.
ten by Jerusalem, capable of
reaching Israel in addition to
whatever other targets Saudi
strategists may have had in mind.
But the friends of the Saudis in the
Pentagon and on Capitol Hill carried
the argument with a compromise

Sports ~:

Library card
Lahti's ticket

.,

~
United States IS gomg mto a
iirash program to build up its
~tary might. We want to be in a
position to match the Soviets on
land, on sea and in the air. There Is
~nly one problem. Once we get aU
the new helicopters, planes and
ships built, where do we find the
j&gt;eople to man them?
The Navy, for example, does not
have enough crewmen to handle the
ships they're sup~ to keep on the
.high seas now. If w/ take the "New
Jersey" and ''Iowa" battleships out
·of mothballs as Defense secretary
Weinberger wants to do, this is what
'might happen: .
"Captain, as admiral of the North

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

ANNOUNCING

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12.346%

Effective Annual Yield On

12.00%

$10,000 minimum. Interest
may be paid monthly, quar,
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Federal regulations prohibit
compounding of interest.

No minimum investment is
required. Interest will be
compounded continuously
from date of deposit to date
of withdrawal.

A S~1b s t an11altntero s t penally I! re Quired tor eartv wl thdU!.'fl'al "E II eC t l~e annual y1eld 16 Dastri.l []II relr1Ytrll1 menl or pnnclpat ami i nterest at
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THE OFFICES OF

STORY &amp; STORY

DIAMOND SA~S

A nORNEYS AT LAW

AIID LOAN CONPANv
J&gt;•~•ple

Steven L. Story and Karen H. Story
•

236 W. 2nd, Pomeroy, Oh.
(Formerly Meigs Gen. Hospital)
Office Ph. 992·6624
Home Ph. 992·3523

Uijfer~11ce

Hours: M., T ., W. 9·4, Th. &amp; Sat. 9-Noon
Fri. 9·6
216W.MAINST .
POMEROY, OHIO
992-6655

Accountii1!'1UUIO I U S 100 00011 ~ rSLIC

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C111ml .... 'fl1e /)inmmul

�Page-~

.

Pomeroy

The ~iljJel)tinel

Middleport, Ohio
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Tournament of upSets
this evenfug
l'esumes
...

Water sport drownings increase in spring, fall seas()ns
Olllo's 111111 pea -

·.

'oai'

. ::~HERSCHEL

:· x

NISSENSON

AP Sports Writer

·::lipset City, alias the NCAA
~etball tournament, reswnes
t,~ight with Virginia, No:th
Cirolina and Not~e Dame puttmg
lb8ir Top Ten rankings on the line
$1#1 Louisiana State, Indiana and
tllilh hoping to take advantage of
ltl'endly surroundings.
.
:·:J'he East and West Regionals tip
tonight with the Mideast . and
Midwest coming up Friday mght.
.2)ie regional championships to
:d&lt;!lennine the Final Four will be
:J&gt;layed Saturday and Sunday.
... The fifth-ranked Virginia
tavaliers will get things rolling
;pgainst No.l5 Tennessee in the
·opener of a doubleheader at the
:0mni in Atlanta. And All-American
:l!alph Sampson, their 7-foot-4 star,
yut things in perspective for all the
·r~maining games, as well as most
·of 'those already played.
: "It will be a battle," he said. " It
·will be a war."
: The 48-team skinnish already ha s

9it

.. .

ailing players. Lee Raker,
Virginia's third leading scorer, Is
not expected to start, although he
will be available. And Tennessee's
Steve Ray developed colitis llisi
month and has been slow to
recover.
Orlando Woolridge, one of Notre
Dame's key perionners, is still
slowed by a charley horse and
hasn't practiced all week. And
BVU's Danny Ainge, the regional's
top scorer with a 25-point average,
has been bothered by a back
ailment. Coach Frank Arnold says
his star is 90-95 percent effective.
Utah wlll have the homecollJ"t
advantage but the home uniform
disadvantage against North
Carolina. That's because the Utes
are seeded third in the regional and
the Tar Heels are second.
"We may be wearing our home
uniforms against Utah, but I can
tell you who will have whatever
homecourt advantage there is to be
had/' says Carolina Coach Dean
Smith.

claimed 10 members of The
Associated Press Top Twenty
among its victims, including toprated DePaul, runnerup Oregon
Stale and third-ranked Arizona
State.
In lhe Atlanta nightcap, seventh·
ranked Notre Dame meets No.l6
Brigham Young. Me"l'while, the
University of Utah, ranked 14th,
"111 be at home in Salt Lake City .
against
sixthranked
North
Carolina. In the second game, No.19
Illinois faces Kansas State.
Friday night starts with a twin bill
at Bloomington, Ind., where the
Cinderella Hawks of St. Joseph's
(Pa.) meet Boston College and the
hometown Indiana Hoosiers tackle
upstart Alabama-Birmingham.
At the New Orleans Superdome,
little more than an hour down the
road from Baton Rouge, fourthranked LSU faces No.20 Arkansas
after intrastate rivals Kansas and
Wichita State meet for the first time
in 25 years.
All four teams m the East have

Apr. 4-x~h.io Dom.imcan
Apr. 5-Centra l Stllte
Apr. 7- Kentucky Chri.sttun
Apr. ! O-x-Ur bana

Apr 11 - x-Crda rville
Apr . 12- W. Va . SYite

Apr . 1~ - Wilmin~ ttm

Apr. 15-x-Tiffin

~

PITCHER PINCH HITS HOMER- St. Louis Ca.dlnals pitcher &amp;b Foncb gels tbe hlgb aod low handShakes alter billing three run home run oft Toronto

Apr. 23- W. Va . Tet:h
Apr . ~ X-MIIIon e

Apr· ~- x-Walsh

.

V1ncouver
Edmonton

Awa v
ll t Portsrnlloth
Home
Aw11.y
Away
Away

Apr . 28-x-Mt. Vernon Nnarent'
Ma y !- Centra l Stale
Ma) 3- 0tlerbeln
Ma y lJ-14-1$- Distrll't 22 NAJA Playuffs

AWII }'

Hornt'
H\)mt'

TBA

All games start all p.m.
lt- M.O.C. Gcunes.

...
f ••

th.

"That's the first time I've seen
Brennan where even the outs were
hit pretty good off him," Garcia
said. " But he'll be out there seven or
eight more times ."
The same is true for Grimsley, the

NIT. On the season Syracuse is 16-3
By The Aliaoclated Press
athome,Uaway.
Syracuse, snubbed by the NCAA
West Virginia Coach Gale Catlett,
tournament selection committee
whose
team won its first two NIT
despite winning the Big East Congames
at home, expects it to be
ference tourney on its home floor,
tougher
when the Mountaineers take
hopes to continue its string of postto
the
road
to face Minnesota in the
season successes at the Carrier
17,000-seat
Williams
Arena in MinDome tonight when it takes on
Michigan in a quarteriinal game of neapolis.
the National Invitation Tournament. r - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1
Michigan is one of three Big Ten
teams still alive after the first two
Your " E xtra Touch "
Fl or ist Si nce 1957
rounds of tbe NIT, which winds up in
New York's Madison Square Garden
March 23 and 25.
Minnesota, beaten by Virginia in
the NIT final a year ago, plays host
FL.ORIST
to West Virginia in tonight's other
PH
. 992·2644'
game, while Purdue will be host to
JS1 E . Mc11n , Pomeroy
Duke on Friday. In Friday's other
Your FTD Flonst
quarterfinal, South Alabama will

~

playatTulsa.
Michigan, 1~10, is led by Mike
McGee, a 6-foot-5 senior forward
who is averaging 24 points per game
and is the Big Ten's all-time leading

..
'· .

r._
C,

·~
t~ •

Area baseball news---

.,..

;•. f.

meeting of officers of the
•j'arious leagues of the Big Bend
:.~a Baseball program will be held
;!l.t 6 p.m. Sunday at the Pomeroy
~&amp;.;nerican Legion Hall. Purpose is to
&gt;!lfscuss the program for the upftdining summer youth baseball and
~O(tball season.

Signup for members ol all teams
in the Syracuse-Minersville summer
baseball pro,ram will be held from I
to 4 p.m. Saturday at the Syracuse
Fire Station. Registration fee,
payable before the season starts,
will be $6.50 and this will include insurance and a ball hat for the player.

r ---- --- . ._ ---.. - --- . ._
t . JUST ARRIVEDI
t MEN'S WARM-UPS

A
.
:&lt;---------------------------------------1,
A
'

t
t

General Exercise

Color - Grey with
Navy, Red or Gold Trim

t ~·

l_

Ddroit

l4
II
II
l'l
25

a~lnched dlviaioo

'
't
t

t

.441 191;

.43&lt; 201;

at

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::

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:111 11

11 •

~

17 II fT7 2ll r1
II 12 114 1401 78
II II .7 :131 11

311 II ItO 211 ""
34 12 • 323 82

UUe.

W~y'IRe.l&amp;l

New Yort Ranser. 3,1Qton 2
Quebo&lt;l, WuhiJicton4

lla,Uor4 V, MonlreoU
T0111111o8, Sl. Lwla 2
Chicqul, PhiJadolphia I
Edmonton&amp;, MiMelola :1
Wlnnepeg I, Colondo I
IWIEBAU.
~- Seliledllllf

"'

associaied with the "Fioakoats".
Early season boaters should
seriously consider obtaining this
type of protective equipment.
Boating safety Is never out of
season.
Th001e who have a water safety
awareness have an appreciation of
after hazards and follow the safety
rules that can keep us out of trouble.
This would include:
(A) Learning to swim
(B) Not swinuning alone
(C) Swim only in designated areas
(D) Know how to give artificial
respiration
(E) Wear an approved life preser·
ver when boating, skiing or near
deep water
(F) Closely supervise young
childr en on or around water
(G) Operate boats in a safe manner, knOW and obeyrulesofthe road,
have required safety devices aboard
and don't overload the boat
~H)Reallzethatmanyobjectscan
be used for rescue floats
. · (!) Know that the safe way Is the

r--+--------..._

Ca

K

say . asem
WMPO

SATURDAYS
8 til Naan

r--------------------------------------------------~w:e:ll~w:o:rth~t~h:e~a:ddi~·~ti:ona~l~c~~t~tha~t~:·--~ri~g:ht~w:a~y------------------~::::::::::::::::::::::~

.Friday &amp; Saturday

INGELS FURN. &amp; JEWELRY
THIS WEEKEND ONLY

March 20th &amp; 21st

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Sl. WW.I, t\wohto 2
f'ttt.bwih II, St. Louia(SSI l

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Hili':'.lillw ·· ·

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TWO DAYS
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Confusion reigned

ONLYI

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MC111treall2, AllouiLI I
California 12, Mllwa'*et 4
San Dleco 11, CJeV4!Land 2
Seattle 10, C'tlialgo {NLI 3
San Fr&amp;n~:IKo I, Oakland 0
NBA ILW&lt;E1'8ALL .
Eatwnc-t~

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Spring Shoes
Arriving Dally

herltaae
house
OF SHOES

"We Suit
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SHOP
BAHR
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Great For

116
II
1111

II M ll2 80
L5 Ill

LOCK HAVEN, Pa. (AP) - The
basketball game had ended and the
score was Lock Haven State 84,
Edinboro 82.
Hold on! Both scorers had 84 points for each side in their scorebooks.
Both teams were in the showers. Of.
ficials said tbey had to finl.lh the
game. Not . that easy. Wreatlel'll
already had two mats down in the
arena for a quadrangular meet. Up
came the mats.
Jwnp ball for overtime. Feverish
action and at the end of overtime the
score read, 114 points for each aide.
Jwnp baU for a second overtime.
An official gets hit accidentally by a
player and ls knocked cold. He's
revived and the game goes on.
Finally, it's over. Final score! Lock
Haven 97, Edinboro 92.

FOR THE
FINEST
FAMOUS NAME
WEARING
APPARR
FOR MEN
AND WOMEN.

BROOKINGS, S.D. (AP) - Tbe
North Dakota SiOUI played South
Dakota State in a pair of basketball
te&amp;Jrul and were scalped by a
brother-and-sister combinatioo.
.Sue McDonald, a frealunan guard
on the women's team, scored 15
points for South Dakota State in a ~
71 victory.
Her older brother, Paul, then stepped out to lead the men's team to an
87-74 decision, posting a career high
of 27 points.
The McDonalds made all 12 of
their shots rrom the field and 18 of 22
free throws.

REG. '399.95

Now

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PRICES NEVER THIS
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The Daily Sentinel
iUAPI-1
ADI&gt;_oi_Lit.
Sunday,

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the Olio Volley P11b1111111W ""'-Y •
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AdYertlaia• Reprennl•tlve. LAndini
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Sublcriben not dulrlntl Lo p~y the carrier
m11~ nm.lt ln lldvuet direct to 1be Dally
Sin&amp;inel on a 3, I or II moatllllu&amp;l. Cl'edfl
will t. .h,.,. carrier MC:h I'DiiiNh.

No ~0111 by l1l&amp;ll pormiUOdln IOW111
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scorer.
Syracuse's biggest weapon may
be the homecourt advantage, since
more than 20,000 are expected for
tonight's game. The Orangemen, i:&gt;11 in the regular season, have
already won five postseason games
at the Carrier Doine - three in the
Big East tow oment and two in the

Ill lll
ItO 110
2*1 111
• 'I1TI

••12
II 21 10 1122u
2*1 254 u
•
11 M 10 m 3lt 1M
II II 17 117 314 li6
II II II lit 210 i12
........ Otv"'-

LooAnjjM

M........
Quebo&lt;

manager said.
" We should weigh our words about
him," Garcia said. "We're going to
look quite a bit more at him. ··

II
12
JJ
12

wind; snow or chllling rain. In cold
water, a life jacket and wanT\
clothing are essential for survival.
The more body movemeqt needed to
stay ahoat the greater the expenditure of body heat and the shorter the survival time in the water.
Water removes body heat 30 times
faster than air temperature.
Average swinuners probllbly won't
be able to swim a half mile in very
cold water. When immersed In cold
water, try to keep your head from
going under. Fifty percent of the
body's heat is lost through the head.
Don't try to swim long distances ex·
cept as a last resort. Stay with the
overturned craft and keep as much
of your body out of the water as
possible.
p ersons engag ed m
. boatmg
. or
·
water activities when water tern·
peratures are cold should investin
added protection. Reference here is
to an item known as a "float-coat".
Tbeyglvegreaterprotectionagainst
hypothennia than conventional life
preservers. The added protection is

I

:
13.,
ol86 16'&gt;

Pta

'"N"!::.C::W::

Montreal

Butfalo
-..,

NCAA snubs Syracuse

WBC Welterweight Utle against Larry Bonds on March
211 at the Carrier Dome. IAP Laserphoto)

• •

HI 12 IMO 3U "'

'

'

~)

SWEETENING UP - Sugar Ray Leooard works
out on the speed bag during his Wednesday afternoon
;.~. training session In Syracuse. Leooard will defend his

I

1u

=~ ~

Colorado
WI"'"""'

'

Blue Jays Jerry Garvin Wednesday's game scoring
Tlto Landrum aod Mllte Ramsey. Cardinals woo 11-2.
Catcher Ernie WbiU staring. (AP Laserpboto I

"You know, three good innings are
. not much different than three bad innings for a veteran pitcher during
the spr&lt;ng," Garcia said.
" If we judged him on his first
three games last year for us, we'd
think very highly of him. And if we
judged him on the rest of the year,
we'd have some questions."
Grimsley was outstanding in his
first few appearances after joining
the Indians from Montreal in 1980,
but he finished with a 4-5 record and
6.75 earned run average in 14 appearances with Cleveland.
On Wednesday, he gave up a runscoring single to Randy Bass in the
fifth inning, then fell apart completely during a lour-run San Diego
sixth. .
Key blow in that frame was a tworun triple by Padres outfielder Gene
Richards, who added two more RBI
with a triple agains( Indians'
reliever Tom Brennan in the seven-

TIJCSON, Ariz. (AP)- Cleveland
Indians Manager Dave Garcia,
usually a tacifulllllln, cautious with
his words, could find little in the performance of pitcher Ross Grimsley
that was encouraging.
"Grimsley was very ineffective
today," Garcia said after his club
absorbed an 11·2 beating by the San
Diego Padres on Wednesday. ''He
got behind too many hitters, and
they hit the ball pretty good."
The veteran left-hander, once a 20game winner in Montreal, allowed
six hits and five runs, facing 14 hit·
ters in just two innings of work.
Grimsley's problems are par·
ticularly bothersome for Garcia.
who has been hoping the 3().year-old
junk·ball pitcher would help shore
up the Indians' weak bullpen.
"I really feel we need a long left·
handed reliever, and he's one guy
who could do that lor us," Garcia
said. ·'I just hope over the next three
weeks he shows us he can do it."
The fact that Grimsley is a
veteran with a lifetime record of 12397 is obviously working in his favor
as he attempts to win one of the
three open jobs on the Cleveland pitching staff.

" 11
1113
1113
:1114
S.ytliollt!.!
12 II
•
•
l'l a

1-&amp;. IAWI
Clticqu

•)'~..;.&lt;
. ~

'!.,!1
. ....... ...

Horne

Apr 17- Ky . Chrl.sttan
Apr 19- Denison
Apr 21}--.CapHal

'"" -...'
!" ,- » "'

, ~F

Placr
Hurne
Home
Away
· Away
Away
Away
Hurne
Horne
Hmne
Awa y
Horne

Mar. 29-Wlbni ngton

For the record.
w L T ar GA

RIO BASEBALL S&lt;..'HEDULE
l&gt;at~DfDI

and there are swift currents.
The most dangerous watercraft
are canoes, prams and rafts. These
smaller craft make up 10 percent of
Ohio's boat registrations but are
responsible for over 50 percent of the

drownings. Boaters should wear a
life jacket at all times, especially in
. cold and fast-flowing water.
Hypothermia, caused by belownonnal body temperature, is a very
serious problem when boating Is
associated with cold waler. This CODdition occurs when a person is in
water below 50 degrees F. or ex·
posed for long pe~ods of time to cold

NHLHOCUY

Grimsley very ineffective

Mar. m-:.91. Vet . Tt!t.' ll
Mar. 21- W. V~t , St.llte
Mar . 24- Murteltu

United States. The most dangerous

c.=~

baseball team will be Jim Derrow, a
senior from Wellston; Larry Carter,
a junior from Southwestern, and
Jerry Stover, a junior from Fair·
field-Union.

will depend on the contribution that
the freslunen can make toward the
program. Leading freslunan players
are Larry Stults, third baseman
from Marysville. Ohio; Tim Hall,
catcher from South Webster ; Tom
Bloomingdale, ·an outfielder from
Marietta; Dave Sweatt, pitcher
from Twinsburg, Ohio and Rick
Dickess, a pitcher from South Point.
Sophomores Gene Layton I Southwestern ), Steve Little 1North
Gallia I and Jeff Gangwer from
We&amp;terville will be counted on
heavily this spring .
Tom Meadows is starting his third
year as head coach at Rio Grande
College and is hopeful with the
leadership of returning starters and
the outstanding freslunan players
that Rio can have another successful
baseball season.
Captains of this 1981 Spring

ol accident.al death in the

I

fbasebali
season Saturday
.

&lt;·The Rio Grande · Redmen open
.their 1981 baseball season at home
on Saturday, March 21 against W.
~Va. State College and on Sunday,
:March 22 with W.Va. Tech. College.
" The Redmen are coming off their
'b&lt;ist season ever. The 1980 team set
:many team and individual records
·including most wins in a season with
22 victories.
:.. This will be a rebuilding year for
~ Redmen who lost six regulars
Jind four starting pitchers.
'•· :starters returning are left fielder
~rry Carter, first basen: an J im
l&gt;errow, shortstop Frank Fitch and
·catcher Steve Green.
·. Returning pitchers are Dave
:wright and Rob Day. Also returning
$ill be Karl Hochuli who was an All·
··!)[strict player as a freslunan before
;transferring to Ohio State, and Jerry ~
;stover, whosatoutlastyear.
•: -Rio Grande's success this year

watennlt lnvolvi!!J In boating activities on Ohio waten thla year.
Now II tile time to rpepare for the
forthc1Jm1nc recreation ;
Drowning il tile third leading
CBUBe

rRio Grande opens 1981
'

for

boatlnfl actlvltlel will - be here. time of the year Is early spring and
There will be more thu 2SO,OOO late faU when water is cold, high,

J MCIIIIIl

. . .. ...... .............. 111.•
I MCIIIIIl .. ... .. · .. · .' ..•.... · .. " · · ....
IY•r . . . .. . ..... . .. . .... . . .... . . . ..II

INGELS FURN. . &amp; JEWELRY
CANDY 15 CLASSIC COLLECTIONS

~0

0

�•

•

Class to purchase lilies
The Homebuilders Class of the
Middleport Church of Christ voted to
purchase U!ies for the sanctuary on
Easter Sunday during a meeting
held Tuesday night at the church.
In addition to the lilies, the class
voted to present a gift of money to
Scott and Mitz i Saltzman, youth
workers in the church, and to buy
wicks for the candleholders.
Mrs. Mary Ma rtin presided at the
meeting with Mrs. Clarice E.rwin,
Mac Stewart, a nd Herman Kincaid

,

r

•

" cELEBRATION -

Seated, left to right, are Kristan Swan and Susan Vaughan: standing, left to
right, are Mike Elkins, Pam Carter and Greg Stoner .

Church of Christ hosts 'Celebration '
·The Middleport Church ot Christ
will be hosting "Celebration" from
Cincinnati Bible College on Sunday,
March 22, at 7 p.m.
This mixed ensemble combines
various types of mus ic; preaching,
and personal testimonies for a total
program of worship.
The members of the gr oup come
from different backgrounds a nd

have various interests. The soprano.
Pam Carte r. comes from Colwnbus.
She is a Bus iness Education major
in her sophomore year at CBC.
Krista Swan from Newark is a
Christian Education and Jo urnalism
major. Krista is also a sophomore
and is the alto of the group. Susan
Vaughan a ccompanies the group. A

jwtior from Ma11insville . Virginia,
Su.san majors in piano. Greg Stoner .
a frt!shman from [ndianapolis,
majors in Christian Ministries and
signs tenor . The final member of the
group is the bass, Mike E lkins. Mike
is a sophomore E nglish Bible major
from Wadsworth.
The public is invited .

Thursday, March 19, 1981

Buy more

giving the devotions. The blessing
for refreshments was given by l!ud
Wilson. Hosteses for the meeting
were Mr. and Mrs. Stewart, Mrs. Erwin, and Mr. a nd Mrs. Hennan Kin·
caid. · Mrs. Erwin provided a
bouquet of flowers, sent to ber by her
son, Mike and f8mily, on her birthday, for the refreshment table. Attending besides those named were
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Baker, Mrs .
Dorothy Roach, Mrs. Hazel W.ilson,
and Mr: and Mrs. Edward Evans.

I

Fri., Sat., Sun. Sale

SUNDAY 1-6

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

Garden Center Opening
(50)

Saturday, E astern High School, 7: 30
THURSDA Y
ROCK SPRI NGS Bette r Health p.m. Advance tickets $2 from
business office education students ;
Q ub meeting scheduled for today,
$2.:i0 at de Jr .
cancelled.
MIDDLE PORT Youth League
MIDD LE P ORT
Child
Co nfinal
signup day Saturday at Midservation League, 6: 30 p.m. Thur·
dleport
City Hall. Registrat ion fee is
sday at the American Legion hall in
$6.
For
a dditional information call
Pomeroy. There will be a potluck
Kilty
Cassell
at 992-7873.
dinner with husbands night to be obBAKE
SALE
Saturday at Rutland
served. Cla rice Kennedy wUl have ·
Department
Store
beginning at 9
devotions.
a
.m.
Sponsored
by
Rutland United
WILU NG WORKERS CLASS of
Methodist Women.
Enterprise United Methodist Church
Thursday at 7: 30p.m. at the home of
[)Qrothy Long.
ME IGS COUNTY Dem ocrats will
meet, 7: 30 p.m. ThurSda y at Car·
penter s' Hall , E . Ma in St. , with Tom
Hess. Ohio Attorney General's of·
lice. speaking; public invited.
MEIGS UNIT American Cancer
Society· crusade kickoff m eeting, 8
p.m . Thursda y, a t Veterans
Memorial Hospital with Paul Baxendale, crusade director for Ohio
division, will be speaker ; a ll volunleers urged to attend.
FRIDAY
.
SHADE RIVER Lodge 453 ,
F&amp;AM , special meeting, 7:30 p.m.
F riday at lodge · hall in Chester ;
work iil entered apprentice degree.
HEMLOCK Grange 2049 7:30 p.m.
F riday evening at the hall .
WE EKEND REVIVAL Friday,
Saturday and Sunday at Faith
Ta bernacle Church, Bailey Run
Road. Evangelist will be the Rev.
Noah Chafin of Chesapeake. Pastor
Errunett Rawson invites the public
to attend.
SATURDAY
DON KE Y Ba s ketball gam e,

5.27

BOYS, GIRLS &amp; STUDENTS

JEANS FOR
SPRING
PRE-WASHED OR
UNWASHED IN
SLIM &amp; REGULAR SIZES

:i'an '~

a3oot

'

'6.97

Our
8.57

YUK
DEARYUK :
We-e-ell, you could say " Lips that
touch tobacco will never touch mine
... " or otherwise imply that a wad in
the cheek means a chick on the
wane. A girlfriend's disapproval is a
great persuader . - HELE N

YlJK ;
. or you could offer medical facts
indicating that " smokeless tobacco"
causes irritations of the mouth.
throat and esophagus, which can
lead to a higher incidence of disease
-: cancer in particular. - SUE
· P .S. About " macho" : Who wants
to become the spittin' image of a
baseball player? - H. AND S.

2.99

Our
8.97

Our
3.99

Globe Arborvitae

Pyramid Arborvitae

Packaged Fruit Trees

White Pine Trees

A popular evergr een that grows
symmetri cally .

This shrub is naturally round as a
lollipop and dense with flat. sca le·
li ke foil ag e that looks like a fan .
18" ·24" •

Th e flat like foilage of thi s
ever gr een tree can be trimmed
and sh ea red. Stays green
winter and summer .
24" . 30''

A perfect way to start your
home orchard . M any varieti es
in stoc k to choose frorn .

So easy to grow. - so enduring
- a lways green ! Set off your
home in a fra mework of
gr eenery .

'

5~op

"The Place to Shop for
work &amp; western"
Middleport, Oh.
M·S , 9·5; Fri. 9·8
318 N. 2nd Ave .
Phone 992·3684

40· Lbs. Net wl .

l_

My friends aren't his and his frien·
.
ds a ren't mine . We can ta lk' to each
other wonderfull y, but not to
" them ."
·
Why can't people under sta nd tha t
love doesn't as k for an !D? Will we
a lways be - TilE ODD COUPLE
DEAR O.C.:
Aren't you a Pit over se nsitive? If
you' re truly in love, you' ll smile
abouthe occasional sta r e. and most importa nt - yo u' ll cult ivate
each other 's friends. - HE I.E N

SWI":JHFR LOH5t
~~

~

100 Ta bl el s

REG. 2.53
1

co.

Pomeroy

SHO~-~~~

MASON FURNITURE
FORo THE BEST DEALS IN THE TRISTATE AR E A

MASON FURNITURE

ONLY

.,49

ONLY

'239

99~

Our
1.27

Yews ·

Garden Gloves

Twice beautiful ... a floral
in the spr ing . Cool
leaves all summer into

Beautiful shrubs for your
lawn . Shop now and Save.

Our 1.57 (60 .... ... .. ..... 9'c
Our 1.87 (6H •••••••••••• l.07
Our 2.27 (62l.. .. .... .. .. 1.37

(69)

(66)

~

.

~

' '
' ";. ''
-

50 LBS.
1lL

.09

64~

6-8 HOUR COUGH CONTROL

97~

Our

U7

4.97

Our
1.27

[ Orpnie Peat

Agricultural Ume

l _.nri.,.h.,,. soil for gardens,
'*"''"~·shrubs.

sb

5.97

Our
8.97

18 lb. Bag of K-Gro

lb. bag . Shop now and
Save .

Our .
9.97

1.77

Lawn food with wood
killer . coverss,ooo sq. ft .

•

Our
12. 13

Turf Builder plus Halts

Nat ural ornamental stone
fore edging.

9 lb . covers 2,500 SQ. ft.
Helps prevent crabgrass·.

(76)

(75) .

(74)

(73)

9.27

Our

2.09

50 lb. Decorative Stone

K-Gro Lawn Fertilizer

Long·lasting 27 ·3·3 fer ·
tilizer. covers 5,000 SQ. ft .

(72)

(70)

ONLY

IU-100 DISPOSABLE INSULIN SYRINGE
Wlllf NEEDLE
ONLY
PKG. OF 10

PRO
J /_
I :_ TOOTHBRUSHES/ 2

Russell Stover

PAMPERS
TODDLER 12's

$199

FRUIT &amp; NUT
EGG FOR
10 oz.

$259

ONLY
Reg . S3.49

I

Black &amp; Decker.

FLECK'S HAPPY
EASTER EGGS

118203

COLORING &amp; PLAY KIT
Only

39$

Our
10.97

Reg. 59c

Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday , Friday &amp; Saturda y
8: JO to 5:00, Thursday lilll2 nOO'n

OPEN EVENINGS BY -APPOINTMENT ONLY
HERMAN GRAT.E

77~

Packaged Flower Shrubs

(65)

UME

Our

6.45

Reg. 52 .52

0

ONLY•

(64)

PEAT

4 Oz .

GU A HO

59~

l w•ino1 .

IIIGANIC

ROBITUSSI N OM •

12's

ONLY

isy type whirls with the
For your lawn.

weed·free

5.27.

Our
2.38 -

BAG OF 30
ONLY
REG. 89'

BElnESS MAXI PADS

TUSSY
. STICK
OR ROLl-ON
DEODORANT

Wind Flowers

COUGH TABLETS

NEW FREEDOM

ONLY

1.99

Our
1.27

HALL'S

ANTI-ITCH CREAM

1 oz.

2.67

94~

ONLY

DERMOlATE
HYDROCORTISONE

AS WINTER
SALE
CONTINUES

TWO'S

Non·burning,
cow manure.
lb. bag.

4 Roll s

ASPIRIN

92~

Our

Manure

.._. _"___._-_~_._··~

,,..,..,

BATHROOM

SPRING
SlYLES
ARRIVING
DAILY

...-- ....

~~--"...-..· · "'·

PRICES GOOD TlfRU MONDAY

The va lue of an Oriental rug is
HELEN AND SUE :
: rm in Jove with a ~year-old man deten nined by the nwnber of knots
a}ld he with me. We have a great it contains in a square inch .
relationship, but I'm 17 and look,.--- - - - - - - - - - - !
younger (though I'm very mature
mentally) , which leads to our
ro-oblerns:
•Our folks grudgingly accept but

Rutland TOPS OH 1456 met
recently. Elected were Marcia
Elliott, leader ; Kathy Stewa rt, C(}leader; Myrvi!le Brown, treasurer ; ·
and Sandra Sergent, secretary.
Nellie Borgan was the week 's best
J~ser with Frieda Davis and Mar·
. jerie Davis as runners-up. Ms.
llorgan received a dollar and a ribbbn for weight loss. Information on
the club may be obtained from 742·
2171.

..•,,.. c-'"•'"'-·•·.-..

t~- --~
-' ·~
_

Determined hy knots

tire

.....,,.,..,e~•-.

j

Honolulu

.· New' officers were elected when

...

· """ S..I. I : MI.M. MtiiM·
II ll·ltiiiiC" ,...,...,lt,.NII••-1"'"""·
I f"ftolll
•••If• P'H . ... lftl

BAYER

Honolulu, meaning '·sheltered
bay" in Hawaiian , was fi rst visited
by two British ships in 17116, eight
years after Capt. J ames Cook
discovered the Hawa iian Islands.

1.97

rho••"''C('y

O. C.:
In other words. don't s ee yo ursel f
as " the odd couple" a nd yo u'll soon
find a compati ble crowd which
doesn't judge by age a lone . - SU E

TOPS news reported

(63)

(59)

When we hold hands, people stare
and whisper . I'd expect this from ltis
group, but my peers are as bad. Also

olherwise, we're social outcasts.

(54)

(53)

(55)

By Helen and Sue Bottel
~ial corresoodenls
DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
I finally got George to stop
smoking. Everything was grea t for a
week, a nd then he started chewing
tobacco! His kisses make lJ,i ~ick .
He thinks he's being machb like
the. baseball players. And hel says
: sooose or snuff aren't " injurious to
health . • Is there any way to stop him
before he gets another bad habit? -

.'
•'
' .

6.88

Our
6.49

(52)

(51)

Colorado Blue Spruce

Should she put ban
on tobacco chewer?

773-5592

The Dally Sentinei- Pag-7

OPEN DAILY 10.9

cl&amp;sifieds

Helen Help Us

.

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohi o

.

.
\
Ma son, W. Va.

•

Our

1.17 Ea .

Plastic Picket Fence

Atnie Lawn Sprayer

33" _length sturdy ground
sl11j(es. White .

Tole pak trigger sprayer . 2
gal. , metal .

38.77

Our

43.87

~

.Electric Trimmers

.

Lawn Spreaker

Contractor Wheelbarrow

21" spr eader has . Dial·a·
matic rate setter .

4 cu. fl . capacity, hard·

Double· lnsulated .

wood handles, 16" tire.

Ii ne cuts 9"

1

Nylon

�. , _M ;.. d. 19,1981

Ohio

The

4-Her. 's take part in youth convention Auxiliary chooses Poppy royalty
Nancy Wilson, Alpha Delta State
president, was speaker at tbe joint
meeting of Delta Kappa Ganuna
Chapters, Delta Epsilon of Gallia
County, Beta Alpha of Jackson City,
and Alpha Omicron of Meigs,
Jackson and Vinton Counties, held at
the First Unitd Presbyterian Church
Saturday.
Mrs. Wilson spoke on "Qualities in
Your Life" with erriphasis on the five
A's, acknowledge, attitude,
awareness, appreciation and abun·
dantly. Sne was introduced by Bar·
bara uttler of the lrlpha Omicron
Chapter and present~ a gift at the
conclusion of her talk by Viola Get·

Ue~s

.... '·

April!O, 11 and 12 were announced
for Delta Kappa Gamma Society In·

Church circle meets

.•
•

';.

.

··L...---------------:----------"

Local goings on.
Dance classes begin
Mrs. Gerald Powell will start dan·
ce exercise classes at th Riverboat
Room of the Diamond Savings and
Loan Co. at 1 p.m. next Thursday.
Participants are to register with
Mrs. Powell at 992-21122 no later than
' Tuesday, March 24. MJ'll. Powell was
in Charleston, W. Va., over the
weekend where she attended a twoday instructors workshop on dance
exercise class work. Classes will be
at 1 p.rri.

Past Matrons to meet
The Put M.otrons of Harrisonville
Chapter will meet Monday at the
horne of Mn. Betty Bishop. Membel'l! are ub!d to take a white

' elephant gift.

PTO movie successful
The Rutland PI'O sponsored
movie shown at the Rutland
Elementary School ,;.as a success,
officials report. A total of 287 tickets
were sold with 13 being given away
as prizes in a coloring contest.

I

; Miss Naomi Ohlinger hosted a
; meeting of the Evangeline
t Missionary Society of the Pomeroy
: Church of Christ Tuesday.
Mrs. Eileen Bowers presided at
the meeting with Mrs. Evelyn WoodI ford giving devotions on the theme,
' "The Drama of Life." Janet Venoy
had the opening prayer and reports
were given by Betty Spencer,

'
l

Taken to hospital
Mrs. Mary Harris was taken by
the Pomeroy Emergency Squad
Tuesday morning to the Holzer
Medical Center where she was ad·
milled for medical treatment. Her
room nwnber is 4U8.

Chosen sweetheart
Tina Allen was recently chosen
"sweetheart for 1981" of Meigs
Chapter Order of DeMolay. Brenda
Chapplear was the 1980sweetheart.

' A to meet Saturday
RT
The Meigs County Retired
Teachers Association will meet at
the Meigs Inn Saturday noon for a
luncheon and program . The
program will be on banking and the
money market.

Donkey game planned
A.donkey basketball game will be
held at Eastern High School at 7:30
Saturday night. Advance tickets
available from any BOE student will
be $2 each, while tickets at the door
will cost $2.50.

treasurer, Janet Venoy, llow•r fw1d,
and Charlene Alkire, . secretary.
Next meeting will be at the home ci
Anna Davidson. Ref,eshments were
served by the hostess to Mrs. Wood·
ford, Mrs. Eva Dessauer, Mrs. Ger·
trude Bass, Mrs . Elizabeth
Ohlinger, Mrs. Bowers, Mrs. Spen·
cer, Mrs. Venoy, Mrs. Alkire, Ms.
Davidson, Mrs. Ladonna Clark, Mrs.
Alkire had the closing prayer.

ASTROGRAPH
'

I

I
''

Mordo Ill, lilt
Old allies you've belped ln the past when
they needed you will raUy to your banner
when .OOif you need them thil comingyeiT,
Olle pol in portJCillor wiU prove very help!ul.
PI8CB8 (Feb. »M8rt:tl •• Steer clear of
sllulllior.lodlly where )'OU feel oth!n might
look upon you u a t.cbr. The svlid
JWOPQBJtoo they prOpoee may 1W11 out to be •

luriuner. Find oot mort~ what lim ahe.ad
for yw in the year loUowinl! your birthday
by ll!ndlnjj for your cqly. ~ A.llro-Graph.
Mao fl for eadl to Altro-Graph, Bo1 8,
Radio Cit)/: StatiM, N. Y. 10011. Be sure to
.,..Vy birth . . ..

AIID!IIi-ll·Apr1lUI~,.,_or
UIOdll&amp;el won't aJII)ft'Ciate it today U )IOU

taU them or what they do for you for gran- ·
Eana your lfiUtudl. Strive to be

ted.

...

-~
'fAUBUI IAfrtl .....y. .aJ

If YOQ've
neaJeded to lake ea.re of imporUnt tuU
eaiUer 1n thl wei, thert ia 1 gOOd chance
they'U .,...,.. _ . you lodly tllld complicateywrtcbedule.
GI!IIINJ lllo)&lt; II.J- Ill Try to keep
your involvement. with frlendt todly ulowkey ond olmple u poulble. Complicated
Amlrt«ementl lrilJ create UDneeee~~ry frlc-

loo.

·
CANI.'BII IJ-Iw.ly Ill It ....... be un-

tuday to call!tlo... tile achlevemenla of
out1Jden1 autn1t tiMee ala family member.

'Dallas '--back
•
on top--agatn

• •

Evangeline Chapter hears
program 'Drama· of Life''

''
'
.'

temational, Alpha Delta state con·
vention , to be held at Stouffel'l! Inn,
Cleveland. The Northeast Regional
Conference will be held Columbus
June 21hluly 2.
Business meetings of the m.
d cted t
dividual chapters were con u
a
the conclusion of the program. For
the dinner preceding the meeting
Eleanor Essman gave the invocation. Hostesses were Harrtet
Wood, chairman, Jean Bol!l!s, NBJ1..

lltalewlde program.

"These young persons are
working toward a better en·
vlronment and a better un·
derstandlng of our .state's natural
reaources through their local con·
servatilll' project&amp;," says Ms. 5\:ar·
bro. "One of the be~t ways that l!ey
can participate in commonty life is
to assist govenunent and industry tn
' the difficult task of preserving our
natural resources, restoring the
quality of our environment and lm·
proving our inunediate surroun·

m

Lu lJl

cy Kibler, Bemlce Mapes, c e
Downard, Susan Wlll, and Lori
Houser. Table decorations carried
out a rainbow color scheme with
Easter favors at each place. Favors
were donated by local businesses.

dings."

The state Yotllh Conservation

Sandra Nordruff's music
Members from Meigs County at·
class of Wellston High Schol presen-- tending were Fay Sauer, Margaret
ted several songs. Their theme, " I Parsons, Fern Grimm, Dorothy
Believe In Music- Make Your Own Woodard, Amna Elizabeth Turner,
Music", was developed in a variety · Wykle Whitley, Olive Page, Roberta
of nwnbers including country tunes, Wilson, Nellie Parker, Malline
folk songs, Broadway nwnbers,
Philson, Nan Moore, Mildred
songs of the 50's, and pop music.
Hawley, Mary Virginia Reibel, and

,,

I

The Four Comel'll 4-H Club of New
Haven 11 one of more than 1,200
youth groupe participating In . the.
1-.&amp;1 Welt Vlrginla · Youth Con-rrervatlon Program, according to
Muine Scarbro, director of the

Your stali!tlca may be lopsided.

' LEO Uuly ts-Auc. Z%1 One sure way tu
have others come doWn hard on your bright
ideu todly is to t.ry to find fult In lhein.
Seek lheposltive. Shwt the negative.
\'IRGO fAq. zs.&amp;qtt. ZZI Be doubly
prudent and cautiOWI in !in.ancial and

NEW YORK (AP) - " Dallas"
was again the most-watched show in
prime time and Dan Rather's ver·

An April 9 visit to the Pomeroy
Health Care Center was planned at
the Tuesday night meeting' of the
Dorcas Circle, B. H. Sanborn
Missionary Society, held at the Mid·
dleport First Baptist Church
The annual fellowship tea of the
Sanborn Society was announced for
April 6, with the Women's Con·
ference to be held at Granville, June
10, 11 and 12. Theme will be " Faith
Through Times Like These."
A workshop was announced for
April 7 at the church at which time
women of the church can · learn
crocheting, knitting , and crafts .
Mrs. Dorothy Anthony was hostess
for the meeting and also had
devotions entitled " No One Cares,
Why Should We?" A thank you note
was read from Mrs. Electa Souders.
The program, "Step Out in Faith
with Missions in Latin America"
was presented by Miss Rhoda HalL
Mrs. Sarah Owen presided at th~
meeting. Refreshments were ser·
ved by Mrs. Anthony to those named
and Mrs. Elizabeth Slavin, Mrs.
Freda Edwards, Mrs. Bernice
Baker, Mrs. June Kloes , Mrs. Katie
Anthony , Mrs. Clarabell Riley, Mrs.
Alwilda Werner, Mrs. Sarah Fowler,
and Mrs. Mary Ann McClung, a
guest.

STOP IN SOON!

Spring plantings at the .Zion Chur·
ch of Christ and at the Wolfe Pen
Road entrance on Route 143 will be
made by the Fernwood Garden Club.
Meeting Tuesday at the home rl .
Mrs. Thelma · Giles ctvlc
beautification was discussed with
the two plantings being taken on as a
,special project. Club members also
planned a tour of the greenhouse of
Mrs. Bunny Kuhl.
Mrs. Giles, president, announced
that the club has been asked to serve
as a hostess for the spring county
meeting to be held May 4 at the
Trinity Church, Pomeroy. She also
read a letter concerning the spring
regional meeting to be held in Ham·
den, May 16, at the United Methodist
Church.

'

•

,

•

'

111W. 2nd Pomeroy, Oh.
Friday, Mar. 13

w~~==~~==~~~~~

cellence, Mounlain Laurel, Maxine ·
Scarbro Ne~ Awal'!i, Charles Hodel
Conservation Education, Governor's
Youth Beautification, Director's
Brook Trout, Youth Conservation
Hall of Fame, Burger Chef Essay
Contest, Maple Award for planting
of Trees, Streams and Trails, Hunter..Sportsperson, Keep America
Beautiful Litter Prevention,.Brooks
Bid Club, Rick VecelUo Memorial
Award including Beautification, ·
Energy, Recycling and Art, Car·
dinal Award, Cherokee Roadside
Park, District Awards and Forest
Fire Prevention.
For additional information on the
Youth Conservation Program contact Maxine Scarbro, WV Dept. of
Natural Resources, Charles, WV
25305.

Fernwood Gardeners make spring pkzntings

r~Re;be;;c~ca;;T~at~e:.;j;lj~;;;;;;;;~

SPRING FASHIONS
ARRIVING DAILY!

Program is ro-sponsorll\l by the
West Virginia Department of
Natural Resources and the ·Seafll,
Roebuck and Company.
More than $10,000 in awards will
be offered to participating clubs this
year. The program involves more
than 125,000 persons includlns
Scouts, 4-H clubs, shcools, FFA,
FHA, churches, Junior Garden
Clubs and other organizations.
The 198().81 program will be
· highlighed by Youth Conservation
Day, Saturday, May 16 at Holly
River State Park. Approximately
5,000 l)!!rsons attended the 1980 event
at North Bend State Park.
Cash grants and other awards will
be presented at Youth Conservation
Day. Among the awards offered this
year are: Rhododendron, Bear,
Mountain State Award of Ex·

Mrs , Ida Murphy presented a
program on gardening tips
suggesting that wood ashes be sued
on the garden, that cornstalks and
sunflower stalks be applied for
nutrition. She also comented that a
clear plastic is better to use on a gar·
den for weed control than a black
plasuc.
She related a recipe for use in
gopher holes - a garlic bulb,
several chili peppers and water
mixed in a blender and the poured
into gopher holes and flushed down
with more water.
To fertilize honse plants, Mrs.
Murphy suggested using an en·
velope of gelatin, one cup of hot
water and three cups of cold water
once a month noting that gelatin is a

·; Pat Arnold speaks to Slinderella

rich supply of nitrogen. She also
demonstrated how to make starting
pots from old newspapers.
'
Mrs. Helen Johnson gave mem·
bers a peat pellet and seeds from
hollyhocks. A sacred lily of India
was displayed by Mrs. Giles who
noted that it bad grown 58 inches in
11 days with a bloom 31 inches high.
Devotions by Mrs. Murphy was en·
titled "Brand of a Farmer" with two
pllems, "The Lord God Planted a

Selection of the Poppy royalty
and delegates and alternates to
the Eighth District conference
highlighted the Monday night
meeting of the Junior American
legion Auxiliary of Drew Webster Post 39, Pomeroy.
Kim Patterson was elected
Junior Miss Poppy, with Jennifer
Cross being named Little Miss
Poppy, and Carrie Knapp as PopPY Princess. They will reign
through Memorial Day.
Delegates for the conference to

be held April 18 at Middleport
were Linda Eason, Robin Campbell, Kim Patterson, Laura
Smith, and Anita Smith. The
alternates are Jennifer Cross,
Robin Lehew, Jennifer Couch,
Mica Jones , and Amber
Cwnings.
A practice was held for the bir·
thday party with Edgar Van In·
wagen and Anna Wiles, sergeant
of arms, Robin Campbeli and
Laura smith, color bearers, and
Dorothy Jenkins at the piano.

For a program on the fiag, Miss
Wiles read " The History of the
Flag." Laura Smith read "I Am
Your Flag, Remember Me" and
members reviewed the flag code
and the pamphlet, "Respect for
the Flag." There will be a joint
meeting on Tuesday, ~reb 24
with a program on energy and
foreign relations. Mrs~ Betty
Wiles is the senior foreign
relations chairman. Mrs. Pearl
Knapp was a guest. Mrs. Harry
Davis, advisor, was also present

Fund drive--it's really rolling
A·fund drive to collect money to
purchase up-t&lt;Hlate science bocks
for the eighth grade science class at
Southern Junior High in Racine is
really rolling.
Approximately $900 is needed in
the fund drive with $500 already
pledged.
The present bocks (there are not

enough books for the nwnber of
students) are in very poor condition.
Support is being asked of students,
parents , relatives , businesses,
organizations or anyone who is in·
terested in supporting the program.
Contributions to the cause, regardless of the am6unt, will be greatly
apreciated. Donatioris may be sent
to the school or the Rarine Home

National Bank. ·' When sending a
donation be sure that donations are
marked for the junior high book
fund .
Contributors thus far are Mr. and
Mrs. Clarence Frank, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Deemer, Mrs. Barbara
Dugan; Syracuse PI'O and Richard
Gilbride.

Garden", "Garden of Prayer." Gardening lips w_ere given by the mem·

bers in response to roll call.
Refreshments were served by the
hostess to those named and Mrs.
Evelyn Thoma, Mrs. Susie Warner,
and Mrs. Marjorie Purtell.

Poets ' Corner
THE BEAUTY IN A DAY

Pat Arnold, representing the
Meigs County Unit of the American
Cancer Society, was speaker at the
· Tuesday night Sliderella class held
in Pomeroy.
At the Pomeroy class, Virginia
Johnson lost the mast weight and
there was a tie for runner-up bet·
ween Ruth Smith, Charlotte
Erlewine and Ruth Hill.
At the Chester class, three new
members were welcomed. Maxine

Jordan and Betty Barker lied for the
most weight lost and Claudia Owens
was runner-up . Mrs . Jordan
received her 35 pound weight loss
ribbon and certificate.
AI the Mason class, four new
members were welcomed. Ruby
Nickless lost the lllO!ot weight with
Madeline Roush being the runner·
up . Frances Oliver received her 20
pound weight loss ribbon and cer·
tificate.

I don't have enough words to :Ia) '
To eJtpreSll the beauty that i.:t fourtd in H day.
The .SWl shining so bri~ht in lht sky
Agtntle breete, a brtathle~~.:~ :'ligh.
The treeJifOhare from winter's pllgh.l,
God's w:reent:arth fair. whBlil wonderful sight.
And blnblJwinglng along in the blue
Tht:re'.s vi.simUI of :tWIUirer with ITl.llny things to
Llo.
·
Ami :~u ~u n1y lJIOlli!!hUI frurn munring to night
Until thBt be.Hutlful tilly fades oot of ~IHhl.
Dtl, GOO we thank you fur leltirJK Ll!l Set!
The be.uuty of a day , a shininl! sell .
And all uf yuur wonders you gave us !UJ much,

BeeMuse of your lnve Mnd rNjestk al touch.
Mn. Barbara Jame!l , Pomeroy

HA VIN' A HOWL - Lt. Russell Herndon of tbe
Clarksville Pollee Departmentaud a hound dog appear

to be sharing a laugh over tbe officer's aUempt to leave
a parking ticket on tbe pickup_truck. I AP LaserpbotoI

Harold E. Hubbard Executive Jlice President The Central Trust
with Roy Holter and Sons, Allen and Ed,
Co
Farmers

sion of the evening news was the
most popular with the viewers as
CBS held on to its dominance in the

three-way ratings race, according to
figures from the A. C. Nielsen Co.
In fact, CBS had seven of the 10
highest-rated programs in the week
ending March 15, including the top
five. The victory for CBS, the net·
work's fourth straight in the weekly
competition, was accomplished with
an average rating of 19.7, to 16.6 for
ABC and 15.7 for NBC.
The networks say that means in an
average prime-time minute during
the week, 19.7 percent of the nation's
TV~uipped homes were tuned to

March
1-3

$1

CBS.

For "Dallas,"' the first-place
finish was the 14th for the program
in the 19 weeks since mid·
November. The rating for "Dallas''
was 32.3, and Nielsen says that
means of all the homes in the coun·
try with TV, just under a third saw
at least part of the episode.
CBS' "Evening News" held onto
its No. 1 position among newscasts
as Rather succeeded Walter
Cronkite as anchorman, the first
permanent changl in the position in
nearly two decades.
Rather compiled a rating for his
first week of 15.1, compared with the
16.6 recorded by Cronkite during his
last week in the job. Cronkite's
average for that week included a
huge audience for his final broad·

buslneu de111inllll tod&amp;y . Impulsive
judgments coukl Clluse yoo tu lt~~~e , iJ you're
either buying or selling.
UBRA.'(Sepl ZS.OCt. U) Be your own per-

YOW' aucce~~.

AQUARIIJ8 I.IM. ........ UJ U...Uy you
belter rih lort• ldeu thon
you art with UWe c.M. TOO.y ,lxnre"er, biiJ
l&lt;h,meo coald leod Ia )'OUT undoing.
1ft oble to olooJ

•

41

'

•

\
~

''

Patsy Stanley is in Mercy ·
Hospital, Room 4U4B, Columbus,
Ohio. She would appreciate hearing
from friends.

jodenna Hysell confined
Jodenna Hysell is a patient at
Veterans Memorial HospitaL Cards
may be sent to room 115.

SALE PRICE

\

•
•
••

•
•'

N. 2nd AVE.

PH. 992-6669

'1995
R
SIMON'S P
·

c

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

1

REG. 23.95

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INFANT SIZES 5lh TO GENTS 3

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oppoee you. Poor judgment couJd hamper

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SAGmAKIUS (Ntv. D-Oree. 211 Enjoy
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wertndWce. Too much of a l!lood th1ng can
CIIT)' 1 negative price lq wl!.lch you may

'11

STOP IN AND PICI&lt; UP YOUH

IN YOUR UFEI

SCORPIO (~t U.No". It) Unlea yoo are
very e~reful todly you may aaume more
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Film

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liOO todaJ, ~try to do Ml without offending
othel3. c.oming on too strong really isn't tht
typeol role you play comlortabiy.

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james Hokman graduates Confined to hospital
&amp;,5 James E. Holman graduated
on March 13 from non-commissioned
officers school at Fort Polk, La., ten·
thin his class with a score of 92.
Holman will he reassigned to new
duties in April and will be ac·
companied to his new post by his
wife, Denise, and their daughter.
' Holman is a son of Mrs. Jacob
Holman of the Racine area.

•
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..

••

�o-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

J.u dge rules part of Ohio
sales law unconstitutional
MARION,Ohio (AP) - Part of the
state's pyramid sales law has been
struck down by a Marion County
judge, but the attorney who won the
decision says il won't mean a
proliferation of the investment
schemes.
In a four-page decision, Marion
County Common Pleas Judge
Thomas Fetter ruled Wednesday
that the criminal section of ihe law,
under which local prosecutors ·can
charge persons involved in the
schemes, was too vague. The civil
section of the law , under which the

state attorney general's oifice can
seek monetary damages against
those involved or injunctions
prohibiting participation, is still in
effect.
Fetter's decision stemmed from
an undercover investigation in
Marion County of a pyramid scheme
called the Business .List Concept,
which swept Ohio last fall and also
sprang up across the country. The
probe resulted in charges agaiilst six
people last October. But attorney
Robert Cesner, representing the six,
challenged the statute.

Television
•
•
VIewmg
MAIICH HI, 1881
EVENING

To get in on the scheme, a person
pays a set amount of money for a
spot at the bottom of a pyrarnind of
names, $1 ,000 in the case of the
Business List Concept. Half the
money goes to the person who invited hinn in, the rest to the top person on the pyramid.

8:00

0D
0D

The Rutland Unit at 10 :29 a.m ..
took Paul Dailey from the Rutland
Elementary School to Veterans
Memorial and at ll :41 a.m., took
David Gatchel from Meigs Mine 2 to
O'Bleness Hospital in Athens. At
3:17 p.m., the Rutland Unit took
William Haley from New Uma Road
to Veterans · MemoriaL
The
Syracuse Unit at 12:04 p.m. took
Leona Booth, Carpenter, to Holzer
Medical Center. The Pomeroy Unit
treated Harry Schwab at his home
on W. Main St. atll :35a.m.

Meigs County gets

When the pyramid is filled, it
splits, with the top people dropping
off after collecting 16 times their
original investment. People at the
bottom move a tier closer to the top
and the promised big payoff.

0D

i

I

Club will meet tonight
The Magnolia Club will meet this
evening at 7:30p.m. at the home of
EmaJesse.

Virgie Mora is a patient at Good
Samaritan Hospital, , Zanesville.
Cards may be sent to her in care of
State Auditor Thoma s E .
her sister, Mildred Kellinger, Box
Ferguson's office reported the
&amp;1,
Roseville, Ohio 43777.
second advance distribution of 1981 ·
state motor vehicle registration fees
totaling Sl5.999,935.49 to Ohio coun- 'Dies from injuries
ties, cities, townships and villages.
April Parsons, 20, New Haven,
Of the total, $2,BM,214.49 went to 73
critically
injured in a two car crash
counties and-or their municipalities
north
of
Point
Pleasant March 15,
that imposed an additional $5 levy on
10:
05
a.m. today in St.
died
at
each set of license plates sold in 1981.
Mary's
Hospital,
Huntington, W.Va .
The counties received 47 per cent of
details
were unavailable
Complete
lhe remainder with Meigs County
at
press
time.
receiving $15,165.49.

ing look at the only undefeated
champ in boxing history .
ALL IN THE FAMILY
(12)111 FAMILYFEUD
BACK STAGE AT THE GRAND
OLEOPRY
DCIJ TICTACDOUGH
riJ (j]
' MACNEIL·LEHRER
REPORT
1m NEWS
7:30 (}) 0 BULLSEYE
CIJ ZOLA LEVITT
SANFORD AND SON
CilDOD JOKER'S WILD
CD HOLLYWOOOSQUARES
riJ(j] DICK CAVETT SHOW
1m MATCH GAME
li2&gt;CD FACE THE MUSIC
7:58 [1) CBI!I_UPDATE NEWS
B:OO (})II CD BUCK ROGERS Wilma
Deering Is put In charge of seven
little men called the Zetrdonians,
who wreak havoc when they make
merry m Is chlefwhlc hco uld destroy
the Searcher. (8:0 mine.)
(]) MISSIONARIES IN ACTION

0D

..

.'

WESTIN HOTEL- The $3&amp;-millioo Westin Hotel, first guests Thursday. The building overlooks Fountain
after two years of construdion, opens its ' doors to its Squ.are. the focal point of downtown CloclnDaU. I AP
Laserphoto)

Planes, troops battle guerrillas
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador
1AP ) - Planes and ground troops
battled leftist guerrillas in the third
week bf a " cleanup" operation near
the Honduran border a s E l
Salvador's armed forces awaited the
arrival later this week of 12 more
U.S. advisers and four t'ransport
helicopters.
Military sources reported at least
one government soldier killed in the
fighting Wednesday 120 mil es ea st of
San Salvador . Residents said 10
other soldiers were -killed when
guerrillas ambushed a military convoy in the village of Aceituno. 25

miles north of the capitaL
The guerrillas also blew up a
bridge on a coas tal highway in Santiago Nonualco, 25 miles east of San
Salvador, forcing traffic to make a
long detour, the goverrunent said.
Meanwhil e , police reported
breaking up a gun-smuggling ring
that used private planes to fly anns
into llopango airbase on the outskirts of the capitaL They said the
owner of a nylng service who was
unde r investi gation conU11itled
suicide in his jail celL
, It was not inunediately known if
the guns were being delivered to the

Lifestyle

SAVE FOR
RETIREMENT AND
GIVE YOURSELF A
TAX BREAK.
ho -..... &gt; Oy esrcou5rur:g yo~,.r a ..... n lf'CJ.... Cvc l

Ren re menr ..lCCO \Jnr
.f you cuollfy you mov c eocs1r up ro t 5 '~ c r
yo wr annua l nco rr.e or 1
.Nn iC.'"I e v e r s 10;~·55

s sea

per y e ar 1nro ·;our

'1\..l ,.).Ccovnr

AJ I y our 11\A. Cleoostf1 m a y ':le Ced J...,Ge a 'r o rn yc1..r

·oxcble groll eorn•ngs ·o r F'ece ro t ncom e rex
Ana you I earn rc )l' ·fre-e Otv•c'encs o n

purpo ~

ANNIE

0!1. Lltllt, REALLY! HIRIN6

YES ... A
LAMENTABLE
SUSINE55-5TILL -·
~E CAN'T HAVE

A PRIVATE DETECTIVE
TO IWN DONN THE
"&lt;l~AY AVEN6ER'5"

IDENTITY!

OLit PROFESSION
MALIGNED ...

guerrillas or to ultra-rightist death
squads who also want to overthrow
the junta that ousted President
Carlos Hwnberto Romero 17 months
ago.
The Reagan administration ill
stepping up American support of the
junta and is expected to send 12
more military advisers this week to
train El Salvador's anned forces in
cOw1tcrinsurgency. This will bring
the number of American advisers in
El Salvador to '54, according to official figures . Four transport
helicopters also arc due .

15 IT HE I'IHO'S
I&gt;IALIGNIN6 IT?
- OK THOSE

THEKE

FRI\00
IT 15 THE
IS

OOCTOR5 EHG,AU£'111 COHCERH 11

IN MEDICARE
FRAUD?!

@ MOVIE "(WI!ST!RN) ••• "Han·

0!1. CHOORGIIF

THE LAW!-

CONCERH 15 THAT

~EV ...fR ~ BETTER

TH05E IN NEED Of

60 OUT TH' BAC~

MEDICAL TREATMENT

~AY

do"1U53
([) MOVIE -(DRAMA) "

Cil

HAVE CONFIDENCE
IN THEIR DOCTORS!

8 ;30

ALLEYOOP

8:58
9:00

SHOWCASE

GRAND OPENING

GASOUNE ALLEY

Do tJOU feel well eoouqh to

play us a piece, GretchEm?

Where
are 40u
goinq?

n~

FEATURING THIS WEEK

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AND MATCHING BOX SPRING

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10:00

se-e- t..S radcv 'N'e I sr o w you ... 0'""
Acc·~ un r -nal,e s ao!l c~ or o seo..,se riOw

Ccme •n Or'IC
~n

IAA

one 'or your renre-m~r years

to find owner
A spokesman for the Ontario Pipe
Co, which is installing sewage lines
in Racine, said today that every effort was made to locate the owner of
a station wagon which was moved
from Fifth St. to Pearl St., Tuesday,
by the company.
The spokesman said that neighbors were contacted but were unable
to inform worke~s as to the ownership of the vehicle. A check was
made through law enforcement officers to get the ownership of the
vehicle pinned down. Mter ownership was established attempts to
locate the owner by telephone were
, , unsuccessful, it was reported.
The vehicle was parked on publio
right of way and was moved after
the owner, Mrs. Shirley Stephenson,
could not be contacted, the
spokesman said. Meantime, Mrs.
Stephenson charges that the company did not make proper efforts to
locate her and states that her station
wagon may be extensively damaged
by the company's workers moving
the vehicle with a backhoe.

BARNEY

SOME

GUESS WHAT URIAH,
TH' MAILMAN, GAVE

DOGGIE
NIBBLES

OC BULLET FOR
HIS BIRFDAV

6 MONTH MONEY MARKET

TACCH I
I
.................. ""'CJ

tiJ

GYNIL

tJ

[J I

DIE PIT
I..E"TS YOUR
FOI..I..OWERS KNOW
·YOU'RE "THER:E.

12.346%

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Home
,

JRD ST., RACINE, OH.
Member FDIC

N.I.T. COLLEGE BASKETBALL CHAMPIONSHIP
DCIJ®J THEWALTONSEchoeo
otwarinvade Walton's Mountain as
a yoUng newlywed relives his days
of military combat and Jim -Bob in·
vests In military surplus for profit .
(§_0 mins.)
W@ PAPER CHASE 'The Man In
the Chair' A paraplegic law student
uses his disability to take advan !!ge of competitive situations.
I12J IIJ MORK AND MINDY Mmk
rushes to a plastic surgeon to
'shoot the works' after Mindy gives
Mark the id8a that everyone could
use a little i~provement.
(]) ii_OUNO Of' TRUMPETS
i!2l GJ BOSOM BUDDIES Hen•y
and Kip's wild lmeglnationa create
ramp1nt cl'leoa wl'len Henf)' embel·
lishea l'lis writing, and reads Kip
various themes of the ir hysterical
lives disguised aa females .
ill CBN UPDATE NEWS
CIJ Q m THURSDAY NIGHT AT
THE MOVIES 'Which Way Is Up?'
1977 Stars: Ri Chard Pryor. Lonette
McKee .
(]) 79DCLU8
tltCillm MAGNUM, P.l. Aga insl
the_advice of her uncle , Iarmer Navy
Captain CharleaCathart, Adelaide
Malone hires Magnum to uncover
the source ofe)Ctort lonthreats . (60
mins .)
(]) PAULSIMON Ina concert taped
live at the Tower Theater In Upper
Darby , Pa ., poet , songwriter and
performer PaiJI Simon demonatar·
etas his ability to continue to ar·
Uc·uiale the images and ideals of
the lana he has accumulated in his
re·m arkable 15 year career .
(j] SNEAK PREVIEWS 'OBcar
Special' hosts Gene Siskel and
Roger Ebert handiCap this year's
nominees tor 'Best Picture ', 'Best
Ac tor' . 'Best Actress ' and ' Beat
Supj2grting Actor and Actress' .
li2&gt;8J BARNEY MILLERCapoa;n
Miller's court c ase grows more ou·
trageoue by the minute as his
lawyer and the judge seek a COIT1 ·
promise while Barney cools his
heels in jail witl'1 a murder suspect
who a ccusea him of having an affa ir
with
his
wife .
(Conclusion)
(Qiosed·Captioned)
C!J STANDING ROOM ONLY
'Vanities ' Fol low Texas Cheer·
leaders throughtimesorpompoms
and pep rallies in this sensitive
Broadway smash about growing
up. (Stars: Shelley Hack, Meredith
Baxter Birney. .
(fi) THIS OLD HOUSE Shingling is
completed on the south side o!the
bung a Iow and the lights are in piece
in the main house. (Closed·
Captioned; U.S.A.)
1121111 TAXI
Cllllll GJ 20.20

~~~~=~~~~::,o~:~.~~~: .

from Earl Trent . the brooding at·
coholic with whose wile Gary once
had an affair. (60 mins.)
rlJ BESTOF AUSTIN CITY LIMITS
'Country Classic a· Top country ar·
lists like Willie Nelson . The Charlie
Dani els Band . Earl Scruggs end
Jimmy8u1fetbringcountry magic to
your television set as th1s retrospective highlights the best of past
• ~ustln City Limits ' prograrns .
10:28
CBN UPDATE NEWS
10:30
NORMAN VINCENT PEALE
@NEWS
10:58 (]) ~BN UPDATE NEWS
11 :00 (}) D Cll CD D IIJ 1m lllllll
NEWS
(]) JOHN ANKERBERG SHOW
(!) MOVIE ~DRAMA)" "My Brll·
111nt C1reer" 1i80
(Il TBSEVENINGNEWS
IU J OUTER LIMITS
11 :28 (]) CBNUPDATENEWS
11 :30
THE TONIGHT SHOW
(]) ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
ffi MOVIE ·(COMEDY)"' " EnPulver'' 1D64
I l l (12) GJ
ABC NEWS
NIGHTLINE
D i]) CBSLATEMOVIE 'THEJEF·
,FERSONS : Flore11ce In Love ' Ftoi-·
en ce wants to entertain her
bo vlriend · overnight . (Repeat)
' McMILLAN AND WIFE : Greed '
Martha Rave guest stars asAgath·
a, Mildred' s cous in who comas to
San Franc•scowhen their Aunt WI I·
helmina is about to die. (Repeat)
I!Di MOVIE ·(SUSPENSE) "
Vunerel In Berltn 11 1987
11:40. I}) MORECAMBE ANOWISE
12:00 (Jl II}) GJ CHARLIE'S ANGELS
~The Nigh! 0! The Slra[\glar ' The
murder at a model brings the angela
1nto the wor ld of high fashion to look
tore psy chotic killer (Repeat : 70

!!vn

•

Bank

I YIELDEj

r

I I

Now arrange the Circled letters to
form the surprise answer. as sug gested by the above car1oon.

Prlntaryswerhere:

A(

I I XI XI XXJ
(Answers tomorrow )

vesoerday's

I Jumbles : ESSAY

BARGE CARPET LARYNX
Answer : One could do w ithout the musicPLAY BY EAR c

BRIDGE
Defense cut down to size
By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

SAVE ON
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t..::.;;.:....::::::.;:I!'...-.L

I(OU KNOW WHAT TODAV'
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THE SWALLOWS RETURN
TO CAPISTRANO ...

ifes tyle
FURNinJRE GN I ERIES

854 THIRD AVE.

GALLI

OHIO

WHAT IF VOO'RE
NOT A SWALLOW?

lllEN 'f'OU PROBA8L'{ END
UP SOMEWHERE ELSE
ELE't'.

550ft .

l

mma.)

·

Here is one of those oldfashioned problem hands .
South can make his slam
against any lead, but a trump .
He can't be beaten once a club
is opened, but he has several
lines of play that will probably succeed.
Let's look at the ordinary
lines first. He ruffs the club
lead, draws trumps and plays
ace-queen of diamonds. East
has followed to the first diamond with the deuce to show
an odd number, so it isn't hard
for West to duck. Now South
leads a third diamond. West
wms and gets out with his last
diamond and waits for his
queen of hearts to set the
hand .
Suppose South starts by
playmg hearts. West must
take his queen and lead a.
heart back. Still down one.
Now let's ~et \o the line of
play that w1ns against any
defense.
South ruffs the ace of clubs
high. Then he plays ace-king
and &lt;leuce of trumps (note
that East showed out oft the
kinR). Even if West has been
smart enough to chuck the 87, he must win wiJh the three.
Now he is stone cold ~ead.
A club lead allows South to

WEST
• 873
• Q812 .

.51

t K6 4 3

NORTH
3-19-81
• 65
• J 10 5
• J 10 8
.KQJ109
EAST

.9

.• 9 7 6

+952
.A8163l
SOUTH

.AKQJ1012

.AK3
t AQ7

·--..

Vulnerable:. North-South
Dealer: South
West

East

South

3 NT
Pass

Pass
Pass
Pass

s•

3.

Pass
Pass
Pass

2.3.

North

Opening lead:+&gt;

discard all his losers. A heart
ar diamond lead lets him in
dummy to cash the clubs.
Note also, that this play
should work against any combination of East and West

cards.

L
~··VH6

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
I Freshwater I Kitchen
fish
tylbitue
5 Stiffly formal 2 Pueblo Indian
· 9 Israeli dance 3 "Topaz" author
10 Fight off
4 German
13 Heroic
composer
11 Dander's
5 One kind
head piece
of meeting
Yesterday's Answer
15 Kind
6 Make a
30 American
of look (sl.)
fresh effort 21 Composed
of
scales
painter
17 Mar~h plant 1 Doctrinaire
22 Uons, tigers, 33 Bavarian
18 Symbol
(suff. J
dogs, etc.
river
of freshness 8 Warlike
23 Tent item
34 "My 19 Egyptian
11 More
24 Maltese
fs Aram "
deity
than two
or
Persian
35
English river
zo Glacial
t2 Grind
26
Audacious
36
Religious
under
foot
deposit
28 Conunon
period
lti Elysium
24 Find fault
mineral
38 Girl's name
20 Object
25 Talked
ad infinitum
26 Conunonplace t.--+-+--+21 Exclude
2ll Cruet
29 Dickensian
tyke
30 Holbrook
31 Last Spanish
queen
32 One kind
of number
31 Deli item
38 Except
40 Hot planer
nolder
41 Egyptian
deity
42 Swiss river
43 Monthly
expense

DAILY CRYPTOqUO'J'E - Here's how to work it:

AX YDL 8 AAX R

(}) e W

Substantial Penalty for Early Withdrawal

National

"Doodly

. Game" 1976

FOR, '1'0UR I'W.K,

FURNITURE

(Continued from page I )

I

I

~

Additional...
programs and a $2 billion cut in
some Social Security programs.
The committee also backed
Reagan's call to slash food stamp
expenditures by nearly $1.5 billion ,
and it called for reducing the budget
for school lunch programs by $1.5
billion.
tlowever, it rejected Reagan's
proposal for a 30 percent cut in a
program that provides milk for
pregnant mothers and infant
children, voting to spend $223 million
that the president wanted cut.
And it voted to restore $65~ million
Reagan wanted to cut from elementary and secondary education , aid
for the . handicapped and youth
training programs.

Unscramble theM tour Jumb4es,
one lener to each square, to form
lour ordinary worda,

CIANO HBO Sport a takes a reveal -

Vt&gt;t«'rans Memorial
Admitted--Kenneth
Welsh,
Pomeroky; Jessie Molden,
Pomeroy; Brian Taylor, Middleport; Victoria Brooks, Racine:
Charles Wallbrown, Portland ;
Steven Lush, Pomeroy.
Dischargd-Sandra Sheets, Renee
Stone, Ella Roush , George Oiler,
Mabel Mills, F:velyn Hartley , Terry
Brewer.

byH~nriArnoldandBobLee

to

(})em

Survivors of Mrs . Venedia M.
Knight, Rt. I, Portland, not ir.cluded
in the original obituary include two
sons, Neale Knight of Pomeroy and
Dale Knight, serving with the U.S.
Marines in Tokyo.

Mora in hospital

$15,165 in fees

~~s

peeker', and hie wife Grace. Host:

List more survivors

Six calls were answered by local
emergency units Wednesday the
Meigs Cow1iy Emergency Medical
Services reports.
At 3:54 9.m., the Middleport Unit
took Mamie Hendricks from Second
Ave ., to Veterans Memorial
Hospital. ·

dwe

Hugh Oowna . (Cioaed ·C•ptioned;
U.S.A.)
6 :30
NBC NEWS
(]) PAUL AND MONA
BOB NEWHART SHOW
FACE THE MUSIC
OD®l CBS NEWS
WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
LILIAS, YOGA AIID YOU
8 ABC NEWS
6:58
CIIN UPDATE NEWS
7 :00
0 PM MAGAZINE
(]) COME TO THE WATER
(!) BOXING '.SBEST: Rocky MAR-

.a.e

mergency runs

interrupted
•

Lantz, creator of ·woody Wood·

0

E

be

(jjJ OVER EASY GuesJs : Walter

Gasoline supplies reach
near record proportions
I MeiO's county happemngs I

NEW YORK (AP) - With
Americans driving less because of
high fuel prices. gasoline supplies
· have reached a record high and the
resulting competition among oil
companies has brought a dip in
prices, the industry says.
The American Petroleum Institute
reported Wednesday that inventories of gasoline rose 2.6 million
bartels in the ·latest week, to a
record 284.3 million barrels. A
barrel contains 42 gallons.
At the same time, the group reported that refineries operated at only
69.1 percent of capacity, down from
70.4 percent a week earlier and "the
lowest figure in recent memory,"
spokesman Gene Johnson said.
The reasons for the surplus include sluggish economies around the
world and increased conservation
brought on by higher prices.
The latest Department of Energy
report showed that in February
sales of gasoline averaged just over
6 million barrels a day, down 8.6 percent from the same time last year.
Gasoline prices shot up earlier this
year as increases by the
Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries were passed on
and alter President Reagan ended
controls on domestic crude oil
prices.
But gasoline prices are now
weakening because of the surplus. In
a number of areas, competition has
forced price cuts in the last few
weeks, including reductions announced TUJ'Sday of up to two cents a
gallon in some areas by Shell and
Sun.
Those cuts are in wholesale prices,
but retail prices have also come under pressure and margins are
declining. The average dealer
markup for regular unleaded
gasoline sold at self-service pumps
was 8.37 cents a gallon earlier this
month.

C2JDi!JeCIJtm)(l%iGJ

~dging .

"!t}

:~:..;.~

NEWS .
(]) BACKYARD
CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
ABC NEWS
(J) 3·2·1 CONTACT Programming

may

1J ft\}1.\.ft jii)~ 'jj:l THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~

Is

LONGFELLOW

One~ lelter simply stands for another . In thi s sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc . Single letters,
apostrophes , the length and format!on of the words arc all
hint s. Each da y the cod e it'!ters are dttrercnt.

CRYPTOQUOTES
C £Y

MYHAY C

T P C
SPAN,

C £Y

KT

PO

MVRRYMM

QKYM

XPVA

P~T

UPKTD

1 v ('
AKD£C

KT
HJT

A Y H P D 'I' K

. CP

up

r'

K T D

KC.

.JTUAYS
RJATYDKY
Yesterday's Cryptoquote : PROTECI' THE BIRDS. THE DOVE
BRINGS PEACE AND THE STORJ( BRINGS TAX EXEMPTIONS.- ORIGIN UNKNOWN

-:

�Small investment, lal'gt
1 returns, Sentinel Want Ads
NOTICE OF SALE
Offers will be received

until 4:00 O'C lock P.M. on ·
the 13th doy of April. 1981.

at the Mayor's office,

1

JUDGE RULES ENQUIRE IS A MAGAZINE '' National Enquirer Managing Editor lain Calder, left,
gives testimony to bls attoraey Wllllam Mastersoo,
right, during tile Carol Barnett Ubel suit lrla1 against

Court dismisses 2 juro·r s
following Carson blow-up

I

By Asaeelaled Press
LOS ANGELES - Two jurors
were dismissed from · Carol Bur·
nett's $10 mllllon libel suit against he
National Enquirer Wednesday after
they heard Johnny Carson attack the
tabloid on the " Tonight Show," but
the judge denied a defense motion
for a mistrial.
In the same proceeding, Miss Burnett's lawyers won a victory when
Superior Court Judge Peters. Smith
ruled that the National Enquirer is a
magazine, not a newspaper, and
therefore is not covered by California's retraction law.
The ruUng left the Enquirer open
to Miss Burnell's full damage claim.
Has Smith · ruled the weekly a
newspaper, it could have been exempted from a substantial portion of
the $10 mllllon claim if it also was
found that the contested story was
retracted properly.
The two jurors were dismissed
afer the judge questioned all jurors .
individually in his chambers .
With only one alternate juror left
to fiU an empty chair, atorneys for
both sides agreed to continue with II
jurors, although nine votes would
still be needed for a verdict.
•

told reporters outside court. "It was
Carson challenged the Enquirer to
prejudicial publicity containing on&amp;
sue him after he called the tabloid
and his writers " liars" on his NBC
sided views WISUbstantiated."
show Tuesday night.
Miss Burnett told reporters she
Miss Burenll had testified just ' had seen a replay of Carson's comments before she came to court. " I
hours before that the story had
triggered her suit - a 1976 gossip
thought he was wonderful," she
said.
colwnn item about a purportedly
Carson referred to the Enquirer's
rowdy episode at a Washington D.C.
restaurant- was ' 1a pack of lies.''
current edition, which features him
In the retraction ruling, Smith
on the cover and SIIYS his third
marriage is breaking up.
rejected the Enquirer's effort to
" I'm going to caU the National
show a similarity with tabloids such
as the New York Dally News.
Enquirer and the people who wrote
this liars," Carson said.
" I have no problem distinguishing
"Now that's slander, or they can
the New York Daily Nes from the
sure me for slander," Carson said,
National Enquirer," Smith said.
looking directly at the camera. "YIIIl
"They're both tabloids, but that goes
to ronn, not su~tance. n
know where I am, gentlemen." His
audience cheered.
National Enquirer lawyer William
National Enquirer officiaLs at the
Masterson insisted the ruling was
not a significant defeat. " The retracmagazine's headquarters in LaD'
lana, Fla., referred aU comment to
tion itself is still admissible. I'm
going to win this case anyway on the
the Los Angeles publicity firm of
lack of actual malice, " he said.
Rogers and Associates.
Masterson had asked Smith to poll
"We are making no coirunent at
the jurors to find out if any of them
all," Rogers spokeswoman Anne De
saw the Carson show, then moved
Wolle said Wednesday . "On the adfor a mistrial after two jurors
vice of the Enquirer's attorneys, we
acknowledged seeing it.
won't have any statements .. . until
"I asked for ·a mistrial I think for the end of the trial.' '

fairly obvious reasons," Masterson

Governor Rhodes will make.
tax decision during May

I

COLUMBUS, Ohio ( AP) - Gov.
James A. Rhodes says he plans to
meet ·with legislative leaders in
early May to review Ohio's fiscal
condition and determine whether
some kind of lax increase is needed.
Rhodes, who abandoned his stand
against no new taxes last fall in
favor of a package of temporary tax
hikes to help balance the budget,
said he would support another increase if needed to keep Ohio's
money-short school districts open .
" The schooLs of Ohio are not going
to close," he said Wednesday. " We

have no objection of recommending
a tax for the schools."
Rhodes said the hike may not be
needed if the U.S. economy improves, joblessness in the auto industry declines and federal block
grants make up some revenue that
may be lost in President Reagan 's
budget cuts.
As the governor talked a bout taxes
at an impromptu news conference,
wellare and union groups asked the
state to boost wellare benefits and
provide a pay raise for state employees .
Rhodes sidestepped

Killer satellite
damages target
WASIDNGTON (AP) - A hunterkiUer satellite damaged a target
satellite in the first full-scale Soviet
test of such a weapon in more than
three years, Pentagon sources
report.
Although the target was not
destroyed, the sources said shrapnel
from the non-nuclear explosion
aboard the hunter spacecraft
probably would have disabled the
sensitive cameras and electronic
equipment spy satellites usually
carry.
The hunter vehicle used an earlymodel radar gui(jance system to approach the target, said the sources,
who asked not to be identified. They
said in other tests monitored since
late 1977, the Soviets have sought
with rniied results to perfect an in-.

fra-red system that would home in
on heat radiated by the target.
The disclosure Wednesday of the
successful test Saturday over
Eastern Europe followed by one day
an announcement from the Air Force that it will establish a control center at Peterson Air Force Base in
Colorado for U.S. military missions
in space, including manned space
shuttle flights.
·
U.S. officials, who generally
believe the Soviets ate ahead in
space weapons, have been paying
close attention to Soviet work on
killer satellites. Such weapons could
knock out communications
satellites, thus culling links to commanders in the field, and could blind
photographic satellites keeping watch on Soviet military moves.

ference of the current school year in
the Meigs Local School District will
be held Saturda:·.
Teachers will be at their respective buildings ~rom 8 a.m. to 3 p.m .
to meet with parents to discuss
'· progress and any problems of the
, student. Parents are to return to
· school a form taken home by students' to set up their appojntments or

they may phone lh&lt;. ·school which
their child attends to make an appointment.
The conference is scheduled at the
end of the fourth sill weeks grading '
period thereby allowing two full six
weeks period for correcting any
problems. The first conference cf
the school year between parents and
teachers was held last October.
;

Public

" I' m not going beyond that until
we look at this (revenue)," he said.
" It might take another six weeks.

We're in a DQo-win position. We're not
going to walk away and close the
schools."

His comments were similar to
those he made last fall that set the
stage for adoption of the temporary
taxes, which expire June 30.

RIVERSIDE
VW AIVIC-Jt:tY

RENAULT
1977 CHEVROLET
CAMARO
Brown and tan 2 tone . Loaded .

'4495

AMENO
AN OR 0 tORDINANCE
NANCE TO
NO. 379, ORDINANCE NO.
401, ORDINANCE NO. 407,
OROtNANCE NO. 4Jl, OR·
OtNANCE NO. 440, OR·
OtNANCE NO. 451, OR·
OtNANCE NO. 454, OR·
DINANCE NO. 456, OR·
OtNANCE NO. 415, OR·
DtNANCE NO. 501, TO FIX
SALARIES ANO WAGES
OF THE VILLAGE OF
POMEROY OHIO.
BE IT ORDAINED, os
tottows by the council of
tne Village of Pomeroyl
Onio. two-tnirds of al
members elected thereto
concurring, that Ordinance
No . 379, dated February 6,
1969; urdinance No . 401.
dated June 1. 1970; Or·
d.inance No. ¥J7, dated
November l, 1969; Or·
dlnance No. .131. dated May
15, 1972; Ord inance 440.
dated August 20. 1973; Or·
dinance No. 4.51 , dated J'!IY
I. 1974; Ordinance No . 4~,
dated November 18, 1974;
Ordinance No. 056, dated
February 3, 1975: Or·
dinance No. 473, dated June
6, 1976: Ordinance 485.
dated January 1, 1978; Or ·
dinance No. 501. dated
February 19, 1979 and Or·
dinance No. 511, dated .June
L 1980 is hereby amended
to the extent rnat Section 1,
Paragraph A, and Section
1, Paragrapn B. Paragropn
c. Paragraph D, and
Paragraph E , are changed
as follows :
Section 1. Tnat tne
following scale of salaries
andwagesforemployeesot
the VHiage of Pomeroy,
Ohio is hereby adopted :
A. STREET DEPART·
MENT
Street Supervisor, 1·6
montns service, $3 .75
affer 6 months $.4 .53
Assistant Street &amp;
Cemeterv Super .
Assist. Super . ·1·6 mon·
ths, 53.25
after 6 montns, $4 .00
Laborers - Street &amp;
Cemetery
1·6 months, $3 .00
after 6 months, $3 .15
B. POLICE DEPART ·
MENT :

'4795
Cruise control, air, roof rack,

wood grain.

1978 JEEP CJ-5
6 qtlinder; J speed, white spoke

wheels, rear seat, radio .

YOUR
valvable
tuning &amp;
Daniels,

~hone

Meterman
J.6 months, SJ .OO
alfer6 months. $3.24
Dispatchers
1-6 month•. $2.89
olfer6months, S2.97
C. Water &amp; Sewer
Distribution System
Superintendent, $5.00
Assistant, $4.00
Laborers
1-6 months, $2 .8'1
3·6 months, SJ.08
6,9 months, S3.21l
9·2 months, $3 . .tl6
0 . Water Office Clerk·
Bookkeeper
1·6 months, $2.89
after 6 month•. $3 ,22
Assistant BookkHper,
S2 .89
Clerk of Boord of Public
Affairs, SJ.\.06 per month
Secretory to the Mayw
1·6 months, $2.89
after 6 months, SVn
Section 3. That' Or ·
dlnance No . 379, dated
February 6, 196'1; Or·
dlnance No. 401, dated June
I, 1970; Ordinance No. «17,
~ated November 1. 1970;
Ordinance No. 431. dated
May 12. 1972 ; Ordinance
No. c.t(), dated August 20,
1973; .Ordinance No. 451,
~ated Juty 1, 1974; ! "Or·
dinanc! No. 64, date-d
November 18 197•: Or,
dlnanc~ No. •73, doted June
6, 1976 ; Ordinance No. 485,
dated January 1, 1971; ond
Ordinance No. 5()1 doted
Februllry 19, 1919; Or ·
dinance 511, dated June 1,
1980 and 111 other or·
dinances in conflict with
lhe provisions of this Or·
dlnance shall be and are
hereby repealed .
SecfiQn 4. That this Or·
dinance shall take effect
and be In force from and after the earliest date
provided bv law .

Card ot Thanks
WE WOULD like to express
our thanks to our manv
friends and neighbors for
their help during the
sickness and death of
Samuel Gibbs . Special
thanks for the food ,
flowers, emergency
squads. Holzer Hospital
and their staff, Re\1 .
Richard Thomas -and the
Walker Funeral Home .
Thanks for the many cards
and telephone calls and
anybodv that helped in any,
way .
The Family of Samuel Gib·
bs, Jr .
Announcements
BAKE SALE Saturday ,
March 21, New Yor~
Clotning House . Boked
goods and crafts. Span ·
sored by Liberty Christian
Church .
l

utra cash
for
shoppln&amp; sprees

!1------i

2

··------5. _ _ _ _ __
6. _ _ _ _ __

8. _ _ _ _ __

9. _ _ _ _ _ __

10. _ _ _ _ _ __
11 . _ _ _ _ _ __
12. _ _ _ _ _ __
13. _ _ _ _ _ __

man Shephard.
gentle.
and
good withVery
children
Also three puppies, part
husky and part german
snepnard . 949 ·2417.
ONE targe female puppy, 6
months old , looks like a
cross betwten terrier &amp;
collie. Very gentle, good
watch dog . 843,3171.
PARAKEET cage &amp; fan .
2•7 2678 .

W•"'HI

Hel.
&amp;iti,.IH Wonted
lnturonce
lul lnen Tr11n1ne

lhdlo, TV

IU1inen
OpporltJIIIill'

n - Money to l.o.n
u - .-rolenien61
S.r¥tUI

)1 - HtmOI lor S1101

21. _ _ _ _ _ __

U - MOIItiii ·Homel

22 . _ _ _ _ __

ll - ,&amp;rmstor hie
J4 - lutlneuluildintt
Jt--lo11 &amp; au .. ee
ll- 1111111111 ""'"'"

l7- lteeltort

Wlnt·Ad Advertising

Otadllntl
l . JO PM . 06oly

11 Htoft l6h,• ..,
fer Mtftil'f'

31. _ _ _ _ __

lor lllenl
44- Aputml'ftllor ll'ftt
U -

IIJIIMI't'll

U - h•cetoriOftl
41- WenttOteltOt'lt
4t-l:ovillmltftl l.,.ltltftl

eMERCHANOISE
si - HouionotdGMIII
n - CI , TV, ltldlol~~tui""Oftt

.

U- Antl~jltll

H - Milc:. Merctlendlso
~ ~ ·UIMIIntl Su..,a111

u-

~.,.

fW 111o

eFARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVUTOCK
" - Farm I.,IINIIOfll

u - wut.. ltluy
11- ftiiC:III tor l61e
U - l.lvetlodc
64- HIY &amp; Grt in

u - hod &amp; flertuuer ~
1 1 - Aut~tt, tor 1110
ll- Vanl &amp; 4 W.D.
14- MiferC:'tC:III
Tt1AIIII ,artl
&amp; A(CIUOtiO'
IP - Autolte~N i r

Wanted to Buy : class rings.
wedding bands, anyfhin,g
stamped, lOK , 14K . or 18K
gold. Silver coins , pocket
watcnes. Call Joe Clark at
992 2054 at Clark' s Jewelry
Store, Pomeroy . Ohio 45769
CHIP WOOD . Poles max .
diameter 14" on largesf
end. $12 .50 per ton . Bundled
s lab . $10 .50 per ton .
Delivered to Ohio Pallet
Co., Rock Springs Rd ..
Pomeroy 992 1689 .
IRON AND BRASS BEDS
Old furn iture, desks, gold
rings , jewelry , silver
dol lars, sterl ing, etc. Wood
ice boxes, jars, antiques,
etc . co mplete house holds .
Write : M .D. Miller , Rt . -4 ,
Pomeroy, OH 45769 ~ Or
catl992 7760 .
New, used, and antique fur
nifur e. No item to large or
ro small . Will buy one p iece
or complete hou seholds.
Ma rtin' s General Store a t
992 6370 .

_...__,_

-~---

~-~-----

Insur ance
AUTOMOB IL E
IN ·
SURANCE
bee n can ·
c elled?
Lost
your
operator's li cense? Phone
992 ·2143.

-- --

18

Wanted to Do
Furnace repairs, electrical
work , plumbing, mobile
home or res idence. 992 ·

If tal Estate
31

Homes fM Sal_e__

Beautiful three bedroom
ranch br ick home in Baum
Addition . Pomeroy , Ohio .
Gas heat, central air. Call
992 257 1 or 1-687 6429 .
Rose Hil l, att ractive six
r oom house with a
detached
garage ,
workshop, ful l basemen1.
1.12 acres. $52 ,500 . 1 61-4·
679 2513 .
1--,.---~----_,

New Yoke Interest
Prin~J.-d
Poll.-rn

'

' "

3288 .

-Het
-wanted

e SERVICES
11 - Ho'"elm,rove,..,fl
12- Ptwm!Hnt &amp; l•u.,lllnt
U - 1 ~cautlnt
14- IIKifiCII

a • eif'l,.rtuon
U - OOfltrel Mlulifll
16-M.N. lt...lr
IP- Utfltltlery

33 ._ _ _ _ _ __

Rates and Other I nformetjon

3• .· -----~35
_ _ _ _ __

....
..'·"....

......,..,.

Cllfl

.

1 .....
J •• ,.

)

c.....'

FRIENDLY HOME Toy
Parties now In our 26tn
year, Is expanding and has
openings for manaoer s &amp;
dealers. Party Plan ex·
peri~nce helpful. Guaran,
teed toys and gifts. No cosh
Investment, no collecting,
delivering . C.!r &amp; phone
necessary . Call collect,
.carol Day . 518·&lt;189-8395 .

I.U

'·"
..,,
Ul

Itch wtrd '"',.,..minimum It ....., 11 4 ClftfiNr ..,..,., • • ·

,..•.

.1.111 fUfllllfll Ott•or f .. lfl COf'ltiCUfi¥1 flll';'l Wlii!M CUr... at .... t Uy

MMIIt MIMI MilS IIMI "'.Uf tlltt lrl &amp;cCIItlli Only W1Mtllfl ......
«itr . U c:ent
urrylfll ••• Nui'IIMr 111 Cttt tf ' " '
1"11"11.

'""tt,... "'

f

·some parr time iOb!l; In Pt .
·Pie8sant come with a
'51,500 bonusl Plus free
college tuition! If you are
,aue.l7 or older, a junior or
senior in high school. or a
• ntgn
scnool diploma
"graduate, you mav qua lify .
The West ll'lrglnla Nat ional
Guard IS no ordlnarlf part
)lme (ob t Good poy , good
benefits ! For details ca ll
SFC O' Neal675 395().

-··

JS

Lots &amp; Acreage __

TRAILER LOT tor sal e,
$4 ,000.00. 992 2571

SEVERAL c hoice building
lots, Eastern District, Tup·
pers Plains·Cnester water.
Own·e r will help finance.
992 5869 .
Re•l Estate- Gener•1

HOBSTrntR ~EALTY
OFFICE 742-2003
GeorgeS. Hobstetter Jr.
Broker
ACREAGE - Appro x. 6
acres with lovely horne,
1.487 sQ ft . co mfortable
living, 3 bedroom, Jl~
balh, central air. uti lity .
Asking $49,500 . Also, ap·
prox. 4 acres with
beautifu l 3 bedroom
nome, bath, large living
room , equipped kitchen,
wrap around decking ,
over double garage and
large workshop . Asking .
$46.500 .oo. or buy both
homes and 10 acres for
$87,500.00.
NEW HOME
3
bedroom. living roo m,
dining kllchen comb.,
bath.utility , ca rport on
laq rge corner lot . Ask·
ing 541.000 .00 .
LAND CONTRACT Large two story home
on front street . Owner
will financ* at 10% .
Give us a call . We have
several Land Contract
properties .
Cheryl Lemley , Assoc.
Pnone 742 ·3171
Velma Nicinsky, Assoc.
PhQne 742·J092

t~~~L~~~l Ji
216 E. Second Street

trA-- -f/.f.,-s
Lu•ur•ate m the pore ease , lhe
pure softness of a cumn&amp; yoke
and floalmg sleeves above sltm
hnes. Choose snanluna. conon.
sil~r ~ntt s lor !hiS.
Printed Panern 4908· Mtsses

Sues 8. 10. 12. 14. 16. 18 . 10.
S1Zt 12 (busl 34) 11~01 1 318
111ds 60·inch labuc
$2.00 ""ItCh jllltttm. Ud 5CK
"" etCh 1111ttm 1tr flrst·clm
oinnail and hondlinc. Sond lo:

. ~nllt Adams

,ltttm Dopl

I 'l 1

The Dally Sentinel

243 Wost 17 Sl, Now Yorll, NY
10011. ,tint N~IIE, AIIIIRESS,
Z", SIZE, 1nd STYLE NUMBER.
We streamlined •the se wm(l: to
sawe yoll ltme so JOU can save
moner! Send now lot NEW 1981

SPRINC·SUMMER PAn£RN CAT·
ALOG 100 styles. free patlern
coupon. (52 Volue). Cai&amp;IO(. SI.
ll4-14CholdQollb ..... $1.75
llJ.fllltiM ..... Qolllinl . $1.75

UtS .......Silw JS.Sf .$1.75
12t-Qoldl(_, Tr,Mittl .$1.75

POMEROY
~LANDMARK
"2·2181

l Jll

e. Main St.

Pomeroy

44

Come get a beautiful puppy
from
your
Humane
Socletv . All sizes, labs,
coli ies, poodles, setters
looking for homes . 992 ·6260.
Goats for sale. 742 -2015.

-----

--· ....
.............
... . .. .
_.,

Phone
1-( 614) ·9f2·332S
NEW LISTING 6
·room house on level lot.
Bath, nat . gas F .A . fur·
nace, wood cab inets in
kitchen, and garage.
On Iv $18 ,500.
NICE VIEW - 9 acres
in Pomeroy with view of
fhe ri\ler. Has all city
utilities.
·
HUNTING LANO Good location for hunt·
ing cabin wifh 1.4 acres.
Lots of game and as
close to Forked Run
Lake as possi ble.
70 ACRES
ALL
MINERALS - Leased
with good wells drilled
within one mile. Good
fen ces and several
buildings . Bedford
Township.
HARDWOOO FLOORS
- A lovely home with a
family room, 2 bed·
rooms, 2 fireplaces, full
basement , .3 lots, and
unattached garage_Th is
you will like.
TRAILER LOT
Almost Ieveil"&gt; a cres of
land, drilled well, Ohio
Power, utility building
&amp; pad, on Rt . 124 West.
Asking lust 56.500 .
WANT TO KNOW THE
VALUE OF YOUR
PROPERTY? ASKING
FOR AN APPRAISAL .
WANT TO SELL? ASK
US. CALL "2-3176.

Housinq
Ht?ild uart,,,.-

10·7 tfc

''YOUNGS
CARPENTER
SERVICES"

"Specializing In
Re-Roofing"
• Small Carp~nter Jobs
Darrell Brew (! r
PH . 992·2882

V.C. YOUNG II

J 11·1 mo pd .

,, .

ALL STEEL

Farm Buildings

b l!ht nd
&amp;
nchng tr-a ctor\. Pnh &amp; ~e ll · pro .

~•zes

" From JOxJO "
SMALL

mow@n .
Pu sh &amp; u ll pro.

mowers , riding tractors .
A 'ri..A S ~ Ti lltrt

Utility Buildings

WEED EAH: R- 8 r u5h(Uitt&gt;r&amp;
lnmmer~

Sizes from 4.:6 to 1h:40

S"r!H L - 8rusn CUfii!U &amp; lrtm·

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

mower~

PH U1· 191S

J 5 1 mo

Kuker 400 gal. spray ; Int .
540, 4&gt;&lt; 16" plows: M . F. 13.5'
RIVERSIDE APTS . 1 &amp; 2 Disc .; fer! . auger ; 1 set
bedroom
apartments snap on 1S.Sx38 dual tires;
available.
Equal
op · N.H. 367 Manure Spreder;
portunitv housing . 992 ·77'21 . Dunham 14' Harogator;
Int. tractor , 986 . 304·675·
45 _ ..:F..:u:,;r.:;n::.:is"'h"'e"'d"'R"o"'o"'
m"s~ 2245 .
Sleeping rooms; by the
week . Kitchen , and 12 horsepower Cub Cadet
television lounge. Carryoul lrac to r and 48 inch mower.
store and restaurant within 10 inch plow with 3 poin1
hitch . Phone 949·2681.
500 feet . 992 6370 .
46 ___ Space for Rent
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy . Large lots. Call
992-7479 .
. --TRAILER spaces for rent.
Southern Valley Mobi le
Home Park , Cheshire, Oh.
992· 3954 .
-'-~--

/Aertflaadlse
S1

Household GOOds
Signature doubl e oven elec ·
tri c range
Avacado .
$12~ . 00 . 992-5954 after
4
p.m .

-Antiques

..

--~-'-

ATTENTION :
( IM ·
PORTANT TO VOU) Will
pav cash or certif ied c heck
for antiques and coll ec
flbl es or entire es Jates.
Nothing too large. Also,
guns , pocket watches and
coin collections. Call 614·
767 ·3167 or 557·341 1.

992-2259
HOW ABOUT A 9VJ%
LOAN? Tn is rancn style
J bedroom, all electric
home in Eastern district
can be yours with a
down payment and a
91h % assumable loan .
E&gt;ecellent buy
at
$34,900 .00
TWO ACRES - and a 2
bedroom ranch home
with range , refrig ·
erator, and wood
burner . A Iso nice block
garage . $24,900.00.
JUST SIX YEARS OLD
- 3 bedrooms, kitchen,
d ining area , al l on one
floor . Could nave full
basement if fin ished.
$19,500.00 .
OWNER WILL HELP
FINANCE This 3
bedroom homeon ap·
prox . 1 acre lot In coun· ·
try . Close to the mines.
Need a small down pay ·
ment. 513,500 .00 .
MINI FARM - With op·
prox. 15 acre and a 2
bedroom home with
range and carpeting.
Electric
baseboard
heat. 5~4,000 .00 .
AT THE EDGE OF
TOWN Approx . 6
acres and a 1112 story
home with 3 bedrooms .
family
room , out ·
building, hoi water heat ,
and a water softener .
529,500 .00.
REALTOR
Henry E. Clelond, Jr .
992-6191
ASSOCIATES
Dottle &amp; R09tr Turner
992-5692
Jean Trussell 949-2660
OFFICE "H259

Backhoe
Excavating
Septic Systems
Water, Sewer &amp; Gas
Lines
Licensed &amp; Bonded
DUMP TRUCK
Ph. 992-7201
3·5-1 mo.

ro•

· ~ OCI

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes · extensive remodeling
• E lectrica I work
• Roofing work
12 Hars
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7 583

•\ I t&gt;~!!&gt;''

au~h t v

h&lt;10 II ,,nu

8 r~~d ~MI1l'\ hil.~

8ROW~I'-I G

'' ' ~'ng

noon

Wor• ll•~• n Q h10ntonq cr
A I~O P1 0 ~~~~ un . ••wilt

;ond tO'fq onq 1hoH
We • l•o urr y ~ ro •n~l ele
tonn ~t

•~q ~porl•niiGOOd\

'"'~

ot Bro""n

2 26, I mo.

REESE ~~
TRENCHING
SERVICE
Wate r· Sewer· E lcct ric
Ga~ Line-Ditches
Water U11e Hook -ups
Septic T;mk s
county c ertified
Rou sh Lane
Cheshire, O"h.
Ph. 367 ·7560
1 7 tt c

One~:;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~===~~~
r
H. L WRITESEL
ELECTRICAL
"'"'"".""'""'"""''''""
MASSEY ·FERGUSON 8
SUPPLIES
APPLIANCE SERVICE
h.p. rid ing tractor with
Call Ken Young
mower . elecfric start . $475.
ROOFING
Residential Light
992·7663 .
&amp;

--,---~

,

___ _

63 ---~-t:T;;SiOck - - 11 month old male colt for
1250.00 . Also one gentle
gelding with saddle and
br idle . $400.00. Pnone 882
3242 .

All types ot roof work,
new or repa1r gutter s
and downspouts, gutter
clean+ng and painting.
All work guar.1nteecJ.
Fre e Esttmares
~ensonnble Pnces
Call Howard
949-2862
949·2160
2

F or F ,HISet v o(O

Commercial Etectncal
~"oplies

985-3561

Quality Products
Reasonable Prices

·JOYCE ELECTRICAL
SUPPLIES
College Rd.
SyraCUSe ,
Ph . 99~ · 3804

Q

P.AR'TS A ND §F I.rVI ( E

1\ l L MAl&lt; E S
o Wd ~ her s
• D•~po~ .1 1s

• Oryen
t a.~nw,lshen
1 f:l .1nges
t llol Wa l (' r Tan~
R e pat r• ng S•n&lt;e !H l

h.

\

,~ Co• nl oundroi!S

,_.. Rcntill Prope!ltes

S-o~th kE;~;-;~n-0-h-io_P_o_lle-d ~~========'=ti=c~~======2=2=3~1m=o~.~~~~~-~ '~o·~ .~ ',~~~~·m~~·~,~~,',~'k~~s $~;
PACQUALE
GALliA
CUNNINGHAM
j~~.tn Miller , 1-614·596· ELECTRICAL CO.
REfRIGERATION Mortgage
&amp; ASSOC.
Ba nk ers
&amp; Grain
INC•
m ' 7544
• Heat Pumps
• E leclric HeatirtQ
VAio.lns -

Hereiord Assoc . llfh annual sale Friday n igh1 Mar·
ch
27 . 1991 Fair
at 7 p .m.
Rock,
Springs
grounds
Pomeroy, Ohio. Contact

64

H1y

HAY for S!le . .90 truck load
lots . No sunday sales . 843·
2795 or 843,2781 .
.,&amp;... ................ .

0.

•
•
•
•

U'I\O~I

Plow
for A plow
farmall.
horse drawn
. 9.49·2854.

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

POME~OY,

J&amp;F
ENTERPRISES

6"1--'F-=•c.
rcc
m:cE:cq'-'u"i~
p=
m eccn.:.
t_

• Qot1

"'e otler tor 1•w . ton

Rt. 3, Bow 54
Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614-843,2591
6-l5 ·1fc

Small EngnltU- Our S pe Ci illly
Pomerov . Oh. •
104 con a or 51.

'

992· 2606

992 ·7861

99H21Hr99H314
Pomeroy , Oh .

TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE

•

ROOFINf

- Addonsand
remOdeling
- Roofing and gutter
work
·-Concrete work
-Plumbing and
electrical work
(Free Estimates)

GRAVEL~

SNAPPER -

Caii742·319S
or 992-1680
2·8·tfc

992-5682

Apartment
tor Rent

3 AND 4 RM turnisned ap,
ts. Phone 992·5.434.

Sl

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

GRAVEI.'I' - W•Ik

5.~6---::P-et'"•""'f-o r""S;.ca:clc:-e-~

For all of your wiring needs .
Let George Miller che(k
your present elec trical
system .
Resident ial
&amp; Comm ercial

~Auto

I;JI,., ~

1975 Ford Granada in ex ,
ce llent condition . Phone
992·3288 .
72
Trucks lor Sale
1972
GMC
pickup ,
automatic, V·8. 5300 .00 .
Pnone 985-4395.
1973 Ford '• ton pickup
$675 . 197.e Olds 4 dOOr
sedan. runs good, good
tires sm. 2 brand new
G78x15
$50.with
ea .
1 Myersradial
watertires,
pump
tank, like new. 742·2511
days , 7&lt;2-2246 nignts.
73

&amp; Wiring
Industr ial, Commercia l
and Resident ial

R heem, Amana
&amp; Carrier
.

THE DABBLE SHOP
NOW OPEN

F

AIR CONDITIONERS
&amp; HEAT PUMPS
Pn. 614-992 ·7038

Ph. Pomeroy
614-992 -7038
3' 11 ·1mo.

General

Headquarters

SIZES
8-20

BISSEU.
SIDING CO.

'I A!OO- Ht ·wlleel

19 71 H il lcrest Mobile
Hom e. 1st trailer on
Harr isonville Rd.

ROGER
HYSEU.'S MIU.ER ELECTRIC
•
SERVICE
GARAGE

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

'' Beautiful, cuStom
Built Garages' '
Call for free siding
estimates, 949-2801 or
949·2860.
No Sunday Calls
3·1Hfc

J bedroom mobile home.
Approx imately 5 miles
from Pomeroy or Mid·
dleport. 992-5858 .

Housing

4908

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

5

Real Estate

$185.00 to $500 weekly doing
mt~iling
work . No ex
perience requ ired . AP
PLY : Circle Sales, P 0 .
Box 22~ · o, Richmond Hill,
NYIW8.
Attractive part time Work
tor
well
groomed
homemakers who lov e
prettv fashions ~nd want to
keep up on current styles.
Average SIO.oo per nou r
lus free wardrobe . for
nose
who quol lfy .
Management opportun ity
open. For free lnfomation
please pnone 992·39•1 or
61&gt;9 4535 .

STORAGI!: Clearance. We
will be -closing our storage
and retail $ales for the
season soon. Apples at S3. 75
per bushel and up. Get
yours now . F itzpatrick. Orcha rds,. State Route 689 .
669·378S.

31
Homes for Sale
PRIVATE · setting ,
3 Six room house and bath
bedroom home on S. R. 7 with utility room . City
near Memory Gardens. 2'12 water and gas. 5150.00 per
acres. Ter ms. 992·7741 .
month with SSO .OO deposit.
Located on Nye Ave. Call
367-7811 .
32
Mobile Homes
for Sale
42
Mobile Homes
1973 Crown Haven, 14 x 65,
for Rent
three bedjooms, new car·
pet. 1971 Cameron, 14 x 64, 2 bedroom Mobile Home.
two bedrooms, new carpet. Adults only . Brown 's
1972 Champion, 12 x 60, two Trailer Court, Minersville.
bedrooms, new carpet . 1976 992·3324.
Cameron. 12 x 60, two
bedrooms, all e lectric . 1971 For sale or rent : ap·
Sky line. 12sx 61. two
proximatelv 34 acres With
bedrooms, bath &amp; 113, new three
bedroom modular
carpet.
1970 PMC. home in Portland, Oh io
12 x 60, two bedrooms, new area. Nine miles from the
carpet. B x S Sales, In c., Ravenswood bridge. Call
2nd x Viand Street, Point after S ·p.m . at 1·304·273·
Pleasant, WV Phone · 675· 5272 .
4424.

Wil l babysif in my home
Monday through Friday . Acreage : One acre and one
Very cheap, interes ted in half of ground located bet·
doing something more so ween old Rt. 33 and new Rt.
than for th e · m oney . 33 fa c ing the Meigs
Fairgrounds. $.4000.00 . 992·
References. 992 ·2830.
2571.

WANTED to buy : tru ck
load of good rop soi 1. 992

WANTED : 3 people to sell
Avon. Call 742,235• or 742
2755.

32 . _ _ _ _ __

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

WELDING done, 10 vears
exper ience, equ ipped to do
steels, casting, a luminum ,
in field or shop. Located at
Mapl ewood Lake or cal l
949 2285.

Now b uy in g gold and
silver , old pocket watc hes ,
cha ins, diamonds , s ilver
money and coins . Martin 's
General Store, Middlepor t.
992 6370 .

eTRANSPORTATtON

eREAL ESTATE

20 . _ _ _ _ _ __

Mail This Coupon with Remittance
The Dall~ sentinel
Bo• 729
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

n.

GET VALUABLE train ing
as a young business person
and earn gOOd money plus
some great gifts as a Sen
nne! route carrier . Phone
us righ t away and get on
fhe eligibi lity list at 992
2156 or 992 2157 .

e FINANCIAL

'4695

REPAIR or remodeling
work, floo rs. doors, wa II
paneling, cei ling or floor
tile sid ing. 992·2759 .

5858 .

OLD .COINS, pocket wat
c hes , class rings, wedding
bands, diamonds. Gold or
si lver . Call J . A. Wams ley.
Treasure Chest Colf'1 Shop,
Athens, OH . ~944221.

41- MOUift fOr ltont
41- MolllleHtmes

11- Woi\IHToOo

15.- - - - - - 16. _ _ _ _ _ __

Wa',!!!_d .to ~ _
WANTED TO BUY :
GOLD,
SILVER ,
PLATINUM, STERLING
COINS , RINGS,JEWELR
Y, MISC. ITEMS . AB·
SOLUTE
MARKET
PRICE GUARANTED . ED
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP, MIDDLEPORT.
OH 10 992,3476 .

11)4-

&amp;Cih.-lr

"--------

Wanted
Have vaca ncy for elderly .
Room and board, laundry ,
Reasonable . 992 ·6022.

13

NO

1,- k ..... it lf'IUrUriiOfl

2~ · _
------26.
_ _ _ _ __
27 . _ _ _ _ __
28 . _ _ _ _ __
29 . _ _ _ _ _ __
30. _ _ _ _ __

every Friday
night 7 p.m . Hartford Com
, munity Center, Hartford,
W.Va .

eRENTALS

It-

2•--------

.~ AUCTION

eANNOUNCEMENT&lt;

11 111)14-

23. _ _ _ _ __

AUCTION · Large farm
equipment cwction, Sat.,
March 21st. at Siders
Equipment Co., on U.S.
Hw y.
JS,
Henderson,
· W.VA., call for details. 675·
3440. Sat. March 21st. 10
. a .m.

11

e EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

18. _ _ _ _ _ __
19. _ _ _ _ _ __

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

KAUFF'S
PWMBING
AND
HEAnNG

SIGNATURE
electric
double oven range.
Avotado. S125. 992·5954 of·
ter4p.m.

~~~~~·~~~~~~~l~~ ~~~~~~~4

~ ifuiltions

8

Business Servi.c es

Log splitter, $350 .00 .
Refrigerator for camper,
ac and gas, S75 .00. Also 25
Inch cotilr TV for 5100.00.
882·3242.

SHP
TILLER

-~--

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

ltH 1111

3. _ _ _ _ __

Ch~ster,

------

Tresspassi(lg on the
Dr avo Corp. property (Old
Tri-State Material Corp .
property) All viol"ors will
be prosecuted. There will
be no exceptions to this . A
watchman will be on dutv.
Signed the Dravo Corp .,
Apple Grove Plant, Box
•28, Racine, On .

54
Misc . Merchanlse
F IREWOOD. S30. lOad .
Spill &amp; delivered. 99'2-52&lt;18.

LOOKING for women who
would like to become a
Friendly Home Toy dealer .
Please caii992·J56l .

Clothes,
draperies, rugs,
call 992
Shake Haven,
Oh . formation
Rutland area
. -3888
For ask
in ·
dishe$, bedspreads, all kin- for Mrs . E Ioise P ickett.
ds misc. items.

THERE will be a wild
turkey seminar at I zaak
Walton farm , 5 mites south
of Chester on Shade River
Rd., Sat.. March 31 at 1
p.m . All fundamentals of
wild turkey hunting and
l'labitat will be discussed
plus movie and slides of
wild turkeys bv Ohio Dept .
of Natural Resources .

· or Write Daily Sentioel Cla'ssifiecl Dept.
.111 Court St ., Pomero,, 0 ., 45769

Jt -

1. _ _ _ _ __

~-

Hetp Wanted

WE MOVED . Yard sale .
Fri . &amp; Sat., March 20·21, 9 we will do hOU\f cleaning .
a.m. to 6 p.m. at Gaul' s Pomeroy , Midd•eport and

Decorated cakes for all oc·
casslons. Character cakes,
sheet cakes, and wedding
cakes. Call 992·63-42 or 992·
2583.

PHONE 992·2156

t- W1n\rdto8uy .

17 . _ _ _ _ __

Yard Sale

9

WANT AD INFORMATION

Cird ot Tll1n111
ln Momor••"'
A.n.....,ncemont'
G,vo•woy
) - HIHY Adt
• - Loll llld Found
7- Yird hie
t - .-vOhchle
&amp; Auction

Print one word in each ·
space below . Each in·
itlal or group of figures
counts as a word . Count
name and address or
phone number if used.
You ' ll get better results
If you descr ibe fully,
give price. The Sen tinel
reserves the right to
classify , edit or rejecf
anv ad. Your ad will be
put in the proper
c1asiticetf10n if you 'll
chec k fhe proper box
below

Tired of penny plncning??
Housewives and mothers,
change spare fime Into SS$$
Flexible hours, excellent
earnings, free wardrobe.
Two e venings a w~k . For
more intormation call 992·
3941 or 669-&lt;1535

LOOK for hand sign . Miss
Hope, Palm Reading . Tells
you past, present and
future. gives advise on love
affairs . bus iness &amp;
marriage . If you are
unhappv &amp; don ' t know
which way ro turn , come in
for advice, one visit wil l
convince you there is a bet
ter way. Rt. 2. 4340 Ohio
River Rd ., Huntington, 4GivtiiW.J
1· 30. , 523 · 7121.
w .v .
Reading $10. Save S3 .oo Four puppies. Part ndr ·
with ad. By phone on weoian elkhound . 99'2·3911.
question answered free .
One year old female Qer·

,.1_:=========~
Passed : 3·16·81
Aflesl :
Jane Walton
Classified Ads
Clerk · Treasurer
APPROVED :
ClarenceAndrews
(3) !9, 21l,21c
brlna ~ou

_____________________

Wanted
For Sa le
Announcement
For Rent

7

Racine Volunteer Fire
Department sponsors a
shot gun &amp; rifle match
every Sot . night 6:30 p.m.
at their building In Bashan . ·
Factory choke 12 guage
snot guns only . Open sight.
22 rifle.

~-==:;;;:.:;;::;~;:::==,~~~;;;;;;~;;;~;;;1
.............
p bll N0 II
_,.,.
,., ................... ..
u C
c•

11

KIT 'N' CARLYl,.E ••
by Larry Wright
WANTED · Tne following
~-----------~------.,
musicians to form a rock
ba!'ld · Lead guitar. second
gu1tar, organ or piano
player, drummer. trumpet
Player, tenor sax . Must be
able to play rock and soul
music. Interested people
Lost : young red tick male must have their own equip·
coondog, Bailey Run Road ment. Ser!ous parties ca ll
area. John Koehler. 992· 1·304-675·2210.
5()56 .
Woman to help care for
''"LOST near Portland, 2 elderly lady crippled by ar·
male walker fox hounds, thritis. Roam, board, some
bOth black, white, tan in wages . 992,7226.
color . If seen ca ii8•3·23S4.
En~elope
addressers
needed! For information
LOST : Female walker 1
years. Name, Kathy With mail self addressed stam ·
collar. Cherry Ridge area. ped envelope to : 819 w.
Summit. Durand , Ml 48429.
Sat. evening. 992·3666 .

PIANO . ' Too
to neglect. e)(pert
and repair. Lane
742·2951 or 992,

MEIGS MUSEUM open by
appointment January-Mar·
c h. 992,2264, 992·2802, 992·
2360 or 992·2639. Histories
for
sale Pomeroy ·
Middleport Libraries.

Lost and Found

Lost: man's wallet near the
Heiner' s bread store in
Middleport. Please return
to Michael Roocn, Box 642.
, Mason. West Virginia
• 25260. C.O.D. No questions
.. asked . Reward.

2082 .

Name---------Addreu, _________________

1976 AMC
SPORT ABOUT WAGON

RACINE GUN SHOOT .
Racine Gun Club. everv
Friday nlgnt starting of
7:30 p.m. Factory choke
guns only.

Write vour own ad .anct order by mail with this
coupon . Cancel your ad by phone wt1 en vou get
results. Money not'retunuabie.

'6795
V-6 eng ine, air, automatic. rally

SliCN·"

Curb Inflation.
Pay Cash for
Classlfleds and
Savell I

Fuel injection. 5 speed rad i als.
" Regular " gas. tachometer.

WhE!els; radials .

JIU~ANP

~~--------------------,

1980 VW ' TRUCK

1978 BUICK.REGAL

1 PAY ntgnest prices
possible for gold and sliver
coins, rings, jewelry, etc .
Contact Ed Burkel! Barber
Shop, Middleport.

NISTIPIA /$
CW, Sl::&gt; !'INICKY
A80tn SILVER·

Notic~

OROINANCE 519

questions about whether he would
support a tax hike for purposes other
than primary and secondary
education.

'2395

Parent-teacher.conference set
The second parent-teacher con-

Race Street, for the sate
tne following described
real estate, to-wit :
Real estate situated at
the corner of Garfield anc'
south Third Avenue in tht.
VIllage of Middleport,
onio . Tne Village acquired
title to said real estate by
deed recorded In Volume
270, page 703, Meigs Countv
Deed Recoras.
··
Sale of said real e5tate
was authOrized by Or·
dinance adopted January
12, 1981 . The village
reserves the right to reject
any and all bids. Tne sale Is
pursuant to SK:tion 721 .03
of tne Onio Revised Code.
12) 26, (3) 5, 12, 19,26

tile Enquirer In Loa Angeles Wednesday. Superior
Court Judge Peter Smith ruled ,tile publicatloa 1B ,a
magazllle, not a newspaper. I AP taserpbolo I

Announcoments

3

Public Notice

6

na moncv &lt;to wn
eder&lt;ll H OUS! n q 3°o on $'25 ,000
5°'o on b.1l.ln ce.

Conv e nti ona l Lo.1ns-

down

S11 o

c.111 tor tn lot'llhlllon

991 ·7 S &lt;1 ~

3· 11 1 mo.

SALE

J&amp;C
SANITATION
SERVICE

20%-30% OFF

All CAKE
DECORATING
SUPPLIES

Mon.·Wed. 10 :00·9:00
Tues.·Fri .·Sat.
10:00·5 :00
Closed Thursdays
Stop in and see our line
of plastercraft. You can
eniov makinq vour qitts
and help light inflation
Locateq next to Oale
Hill Ford Tractor in
Pomeroy .
2 23 1 mo.

ANN'S CAKE
DECO
RATING
SUPPLIES

Trash Pickup In
Th V ' ll
1
e I age 0
Middleport, Oh.
Ph. 992-5016

Osborn Rd.

or 992· 1505
3 11 1 mo .

Reedsville, Oh.

~~=========:±~=====~3~·1~6~-l~m~o~.~Pr========~

ARD

DENNEY
CHAIN LINK
FENCE

Vans&amp;4W. D,

1978 ChevY van, six cy lin ·
der , power steering , power
brakes, a ir conditioning,
f.our new tires, good con ·
dltion, good gas mileage .
Lots of extras. Phone 7-42 ·
2211 dai ly before S or 742 ,
2201 after 5.

Free Estimates

KEN SOLES
24~-9113

e_~c~v~fi ll_[_

83

Dozer work . Smr1 11 jobs a
specialty . 742 2753 .

82

Will do carpen-t er work and
interior or exterior pa in·
ling . Free esti mafes . CALL
992 6190 or 949·2614 .

,, -..
" II ~ nul

.ll'ST ·\

. ...
~

t;AM~: · I t 's

l(ull ' ( ' un ' I .1UU~t' l1ht~tlhrnuKh
~

11ur ht•oui '' ·

French Ci fy Painting .
Residentia l, commerc ial ,
interior ,
ex 1erior .
Speociatizing in Interior
painting , paper hang ing &amp;
te•tured ce il lngs . Free
estimates. 367 7784 or 367 ·
7160 .
•
----'1-

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

WATER
WELL S .
Domesti c and commercta l,
pump sales and service .
Tom
Lewis
Drilling .
Seasonal discount on pumps . 1·304-895·3802 or 1,304
895·3641.
83

Exca.vatin

COMPLETE sever in ·
stallation &amp; backhoe ser ·
vice lor Racine-Syracuse
sewer district. Dozer work
if needed . 949·2293.

Electrical

84

.~~lrig era) ion

__ _
SE WIN G MAC HIN E
Repair s , service, all
makeS! 992 2284 . The
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
Author ized Sin qe r Sa les
and Servi ce . We sharpen
Scissors .
ELWDOD:· BOWER S
REP AIR
Swee pers,
toasters, irons, a ll small
appliances. Lawn mower .
Next to State Highway
Garage on Route 7, 995·
~925 .
- "'l- -

�Thursda 'March 19, li!!

Pomeroy-Midd_leport, Ohio

Paae-14-The DailY Sentinel

i-----------------------

1 Area Deaths -i

Buy Sentinel classifieds

I

William A. Smith
Mema..al services for William A.
(Budd) Smith, former superin-

UmdentofPomeroyVillageExem~t--------------------------~---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

. ted Schools who died on March 1 at
his home at 2381 Ecuadorian Way,

-

-

~~==~~==~~==-=

Clearwater, Fla., were held March 7
at the St. Paul Methodist Church in
lArgo, Flli.
Born in Cleveland, Smith
graduated from Ohio University in
1929 and later received his masters
degree from that university. Besides
serving as superintendent of schools
in Pomeroy, the late Mr. Smith also
was superintendent of schools at
Washington, C.H., and at Amherest
from 1959 to 1965 when he retired.
Mr. Smith was se.cretary and
treasurer of the Ohio Association of
School administrators for 10 years
and served as vice president of the
Ohio Educational Association.
He was a member and a past
master of Pomeroy Masonic Lodge
164, F&amp;AM. He was also a past
president of the Ohio-West Virginia
Industrial Assn., a past president of
the Southeast Ohio Teachers Assn.,
and had served as a vice president ul.
the Central Ohio Teachers Assn.
He was a past president of the
Amherst Rotary Club and was a life
mem,ber of the National and Ohio
Education Associations and the
American and Ohio Associations of
School Administrators. He was
listed in Who's Who in Educational
Administration. ·
Surviving are his wife of 50 years,
Virginia; two sons, William A.
Smith, Jr., of Bloomington, Minn.,
and Richard K. Smith of Springfield
Ill.; a daughter, Mrs. Janet Lentz ci
Cincinnati and seven grandchildren.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

DAYS

SPRING
OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT
SALE!

Ohio VaUey Uvestock Co.
MARKET REPORT

Sale every &amp;! turd11y a1 I p.m. Prtces taken
rrom lhe auction of Saturday, March 14. TREN·
OS: Veal calves $4 to $7.50 lw.·er. Cow.s sle.ady to
S2 higher. Feeder cattle steady.
Tutal Head US
l', eeder cattle ; Good and Choitoe 250 tQ300 lbs.
61-74,50; 300 to .00 lbti. 61).72; 400 to500 lbs . :)8..69;
500 to600 lt»l. ~; 600 to700 lbs . 57.50-63; 700 to
800100. ~l . SO; BOOandovcr~UO .
Feeder Heifers : Good aml Chou:c250 to300 lbs.

S7-6S ; 300 to 400 it.. 5r..4.50: 400 tu 500 it.. &gt;4.5062; 500 to 600ft. . ~ ; 600tu700 tb, , S2-011.50; 700
to 800 lbs. f&amp;.Sa.SO; 800 and over 47 .5(){i7.
Feeder Dulls: Good and Choice 250 to 300 lbs.
56-71; 300 to 400 it.. 5.WI.50: 400 tu500 tt.. S7.506S: 500 to6001"' . ~1.50 : 600tu 100 1"'. s:HH : 1011
toeoo lbs. ~7 .50; 800 and over 48-S$.50.
HoLstein .steers and bulb 300-800 Ills. 46.$().
54.50.
Bulb 1,000 l~ . and up 49.50·{17.
SlAughter cows - utilities ~2 . SCJ-48 : nmners

and cutte~ 37-41.50.
Cuws/caH unit.-1 by ~head 440-640.
Springer cows by the he.Yd 400-530.
Ve~~l calves, choi ce and prime 82-96 : good

Regular sizes and sl im s izes 8 to 18 . Student
sizes 26 to 30 waist, and hu sky sizes 8 to 18.
Basic blue de nims
fashion denims
ca rpenter jeans .
Entire stock sale pri ced .

BOYS '12.95
BOYS 114.95
BOYS 116.95
BOYS 117.95

JEANS
JEANS
JEANS
JEANS

Top Hogs 38.50-39.25.
Boars 28.51).30.:::.0.
Pigs by the head 15-28.

SOws t&amp;llbs. liPd up J4.36.:;o.

AOtem Uveducli Sul1·
Albany, Ohln
MarebU, llfH
CAITLE I'HICES :
Feeder Stt.&gt;~r) : !Good ~111 d Choice 1300-500 lbs.
64.75-70.50; !i00-700 lbs. 58.50-67.
Feeder Heih.&gt;rs: IGood and Chotcel 300-500 lbs .
·~ . 7&gt;&amp; ; 500-7001b!i. ~ - ~ - ~
'

John Prout, vice president of District 6, said local
union officials have been kept In the dark about
negdotiations. "They don't tell us a damn thing," he
sat .
Prout is pessimistic about settling without a strike
sa)'ing he hopes the walkout is not too long.
'
"But from the way the negotiations went the other
day it looks like itain'tgonna be a short one," he said.
Although utilities have stockpiled coal to help them
get through a strike, they will run out if a walkout lasts
according to Bell.
'
'TI~~y ~d stockpiles before, but they go down," he
sard. Were gomg mto summer and !bey burn more
!herr. They're going to need us sooner' or tater. They're
going to hurt as much as we are."

.

.
·
.
:
:
.
·

;

i

j

1

1
I

'
'

en tine

at

SALE

25"
......

RCA
TELEVISION SALE

:

I/

51.50 Bani on Panel Socks 99•
$1.50 Bulky Knit Orlons 99 •

('' )

1

'1. 19
'1.39

$1.75 Terry Cloths
52.25 Argyles

\/

·-~tf$==-o-=--0--IT-.~YOIJRSELF
.//

Reg . $17.00 Sale 513.59
Reg. 519.00 Sale $15.69
Reg . $21.00 Sale $16.79
Reg . $~5.00 Sale$19.99

,;·

"t
·

~ ,.'\
\1

\'\

\

/

1

....

ALL WALLPAPER

CUTIING mE BUDGET - Senate Budget Com·
mlttee Chairman Pete Domcnlcl of New Mexi&lt;o. left,
'listens to committee stall member Steve Bell during a

SALE ENDS
3121/&amp;1

.(

f
~

20% OFF

WA SHABLE

,;

Hearing
features
no shows

\VALLCOVERINGS

--:;1

f,..

SAVE '5000 ON
ANY RCA COLOR
CONSOLE
IN STOCK

REG . SS .OO ........ . ... SALE 13 .99
REG . S9.00 . .. ... . . .... SALE S7 . 19
REG . SI4.00 .. ........ SALE Sl1 . 19
REG . Sli .OO ..... ..... SALE S16 .79

Good selection of styles
and co lors . One size fit 's
all. Size 10 to 13 .

A ,:~

Corduroy i ac kets ,
ski rts and slacks .
Junior sizes .
Beige, powaer blue
and pink .

XL-100

Ameeting was held today at I p.m.
at the Meigs County Highway
Garage to negotiate the renewal of a
contract with county highway employes.
.
At the meeting were Fred Haynes,
regional director of the American
Federation of State, County,and
Municipal Employes (AFSCME),
members of local AFSCME, Henry
Wells, presidenr of the board of com·
missioners, Dave Koblentz, com·
missioner, Frederick Crow, III,
prosecutor, and Phil Roberts, coun·
ty engineer.
I"l'ues to be discussed are wages
and fringe benefits. The contract
with county highway employes e&lt;·
pires at midnight on March 31. A
union has been in e&lt;istence at the
county highway garage for the past
four years.

I

JUNIOR
SPORTSWEAR ;
RCA

Negotiate
contract

7 16 14

MEN'S DRESS
SOCKS

10.99
'12.69
1
14.39
1
15.29

I\.._./

" .,

commltlee meellng on Capitol Hill Thursday. The com·
mlttee finished work on cuts to be recommended to the
1982 federal budget. ( AP Laserphoto 1.

.

GOP leaders push for vote
MEN'S SHORT SLEEVE

RED HEART
WINTUK 'J.49

SPORT SHIRTS

KNITTING YARN

S1zes S. M , Land XL . So lid colors and p.31
tern s

B1g 3 1'2 ounce skei ns, tangl e proof hand

•

Short sleeve western sh tr l s tnc luded
Fine New Selection Sale Priced For
Friday and Si!turday

knitting yarn by coa ts and ClarKs . ~01 1 0
colors. Var 1egated and spar kl e co lors .

ri

$9.95 Sport Shirts ... 58.00 ,
$12.95 Sport Shirts . S10.40
5 Sport Shirts . S11.90
Sport Shirts . S13.50

WOMEN'S

Ow,iT.Lt·suPPERS

SLACK
SPECIAL

ONE GROUP OF ANGEL TREAD SLIPPERS

ssoo
FOR MEN AND BOYS

(~"'iri9 1 ·

isv·/

CARPE
. JEANS
co tton lwtlls m

Wa fs! sizes 27 to 38. lengths 30 to
36. Wrangler and Mr. Leggs .
S14 .9S

t.t1.9S Carpenter Jeans
C;~rpcnter Jeans
S18.9S Carpenter Jeans

t8.99
$10.99
$14.99

S19.95 Carpenter Jeans

St5.99

-

r

~-

(~"-'e
-"1

),,

./
.~w -_!
OF"

Save :20% thi s weekend on
men' s i!nd b()y s' Hanes Red
Label underwear - T Shirts
Briefs. - Boxer and Gripper Shirts · Athletic Shirts .
Big m en's s.i1es included.

SAVE 20%

NEEDS
. , f t•. J
. c:~~J,
. .. k

I
.J~-et..:r

Two day sale prices on our
entire stock of zippers
threads · buttons · seam
binding · bias tape - stretch
lace hem facing· knit braid·
rick rack
twill tape
blanket binding.

Thursday. He said there was a require congressional approval.
In all. the pa cka~e adopted by the
"rea listic pruspt!cl" for a final vote
Senate
Budget Committee calls for
a week from today but added that he
cutting
planned spendin~ $87 billion
would sc hedule an unusual Saturday
through
1983 - $2.8 billion this year,
sess ion if necessary to complete ac·
$.'](,.4
billion
in 1982 and $47.7 billion
tion by the end of next week.
Meanwhile, the House Agriculture the following year.
Some the additional cuts made by
Conunittee voted to back Reagan's
lhe
committee might not last.
proposal to scrap a scheduled April!
The panel's biggest departure
increase in dairy price supports. The
vote was 311-7 to approve the from the president's program called
measure. which would save an (or private financing of the Strategic
Petroleum Reserve, at a savings of
estimated$147million.
The ·full Senate is scheduled to about $3 billion.
vote on an identical bill next week.
Reagan is seeking $48.6 billion in
cuts for fiscal 1982, which begins
Oct. ) . Congressional aides said the
conunittee's fi gure is lower because
some additional money can be saved
through other legislation and still
That refund for customers or the
more ca n be saved through ad·
Ohio
Power Co .. promised recently
ministration actions that don't
by the Ohio Conswners Council
William Spratley will be con·
siderably less than Spratley claims.
In a statewide press release on
Ohio Power's latest fu el clause
hearing, Spratley snapped up his
share of credit for getting a $1.9
million cutback in the company's
revenue, Ute eompany charged
today .
Spratley, according to the com·
pany, said Ohio Power customers
could expect a $1.9 million refund
under orders of the Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio.
But Spratley's office then put out a
correction saying that the refund
would be only $1.4 million, the com·
pany states. In a letter to Ohio
Power, the office admitted the
$500,000 error. but offered no
apology for having mislead the company's customers, according to the
pol"er company's statement today .
But Ohio Power says Spratley is
still wrong, since the PUCO order
will require the company to reduce
its revenues by less than $600,000 in·
stead of the amount Spratley nuw

..

clai1ns.
W. A. Leuby, Ohio Power's Por·
tsmouth Division manager, &gt;~~~id the
PUCO has ordered the company to
reduce its revenues by $476,368 plus
the amount which the company has
yet to determine . He said the un·
derterrnined amount would add up
to about $100,000.
"So what we actually will be
doing, through the fuel clause is sim·
ply making a one-time credit of
about 25 cents per customer, based
on average residential use of 750
kilowatt hours of electricity per
month" , Leuby said.
Leu by said he does not really know
the source of Spratley's confusion
"since all we have to work with are
facts and figures".
However, Leuby said, some of the
refund Spratley has prmnised seems
already to have been made last
year.
Ohio Power made a fuel clause ad·
jusiment to account for an erroneous
procedure involving oil and gas
royalties. That error was called to
the comp~ny's attention by an
auditor working for Spratley.

Court rules against landowners

SAVE 20.%

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Lack of public interest was
displayed at a meeting Thursday '
evening on the re-evaluaton of the
AORTA bus system from Pomeroy
to Athens (round t.rip) twice daily
Mol\day through Friday.
A public hearing was scheduled
for Thursday evening in the Meigs
County Courtroom for the purpose of
exarnining the continuance of Meigs
County as part of a five-county tran·
sportation service.
However, other than the Meigs
County Commissioners, no other
person attended the meeting.
According to Richard Jones, com·
missioner, persons involved in the
AORTA system will meet with the
board of directors, and in all
probability, will recommend discon·
tinuance of the line. The AORTA
system from Pomeroy to Athens has
been out of service since January .

Refund will be less
for power customers

I-

ONLY

Spec ial group of quality
sportswear bY Jo· Joba .
Blouses, slacks, skirts,
. jackets &lt;&gt;nd tops.
ss~s sizes 8 to 20 . ·

REG. SS.OO' SALE '6.39
.
REG. 112.00 SALE
~EG. '17.00 SALE 1 13.59~N'S
. '21.00 SALE '16.79 AND YOUN
MEN'S

•

A Terrific Value!

1h PRICE

SPRING
COORDINATE

WASHINGTON (API - Senate
Republicans, moving to e&lt;ploit their
new majorit~ swiftly, are pushing
for a floor vote next week on a
budget-cutting package containing
most of President Reagan's recommendations and a few of their own.
The Senate Budget Committee
capped a grueling, four-day budget
review Thursday and approved a
blueprint for $36.4 billion in spending
reductions in 1982, $2.3 billion more
than the president wants in the areas
covered. The vast majority of cuts
would come in social programs such
as unemployment, welfare.
education, nutrition and some Social
Security benefits.
Even before the conunittce ~ave
its 'approval on a 2().0 vote.
Republican Leader Howard Baker
announced the full Settate would
begin debate on the proposal next

100% polyester slacks with e la sti c
waists .
Cream, navy , b'r own· and bl ack .
Misses sizes 8 to 20.

Assorted styles a nd colors .
Sizes 5. M, L , XL .

Blue den 1ms

Ill.
Baby calves~ 12::1.

e

4 to6x

FRIDAY , SATURDAY
SALE

1

natural , ltght blue, red , royal

sa.

••

Sundresses, fancy dresses, coa t and
dress sets, dresses w/ panties and
dressy pant ou tt its .
Sizes newborn to 24 mos .
2T to 4T

$}19

Market report

talking to miners in Meigs and Vinton counties. "They
had infof1118tlon from somebody that the miners in
Pennsylvania and West Virginia were out to· support
contract talks, but we told them t,hey were out for other
reasons.
·
"We told them they had six more days left to wo;k
and Utey would haveall the \iffie in the world off if we
didn't come to an agreement at the negotiations before
long. They more or less listened to us."
Bell apparently referred to disputes in West Virginia
and Pennsylvama over the firing of six miners.
A lll-&lt;lay strike in 1977-78 led to the present threeyear pact. UMW officials said there isn't time to reach
agreement on a contract and vote on it before a nationwide strike begins.

.

GIRLS'
SPRING DRESSES

BOYS' JEANS

Albert R. Frank

vices.

prepared to return to Waslungton at any time. •
His comments came as Ohio miners returned to work
or made plans to end unauthorized walkouts. The final
group of 300 striking Ohio miners was to return to work
with the 8 a.m. shift today at the Saginaw mine near St.
Clairsville.
Several walkouts by at least I ,200 Ohio miners Wed·
nesday reportedly resulted from anger and frustration
by miners over the breakdown in talks. Other walkouts
occurret! because of misunderstandings over other
issues, Bell said.
Bell and other union officials visited several District
6 strike sites Wednesday to convince miners to go back
to work until the current contract expires March 27.
"They were just a little confused," Bell said after

SALE

StocK up now

Albert R. Frank, 75, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, died Wednesday at his
residence.
Mr. Frank attended Hysell Run
Holiness Church and was a retired
employe of Gallipolis State Institute.
He is survived by his wife, Anna
Frank; one brother Harless Frank
Long Bottom and several nieces and
nephews.
Flmeral services will be held
Friday at I p.m. at the Hysell Run
Holiness Church with the Rev .
Theron Durham and the Rev , Okey
Cart officiating. Burial will be in
Chester Cemetery. Friends may call
at Ewing Funeral Home after 7 p.m.
this evening and at the church
Friday from noon until tune of ser·

lly The A..oclaled r , 1
The United Mine Workers aren't looking forward to a
lengthy strike, but they're ready to stay out as long as
necessary to get what they're asking for, Ohio union of·
ficials say.
"I doo't think we want a long one (walkout)," said
Ed Bell, president of UMW District 6, on Thursday.
"But we'll give them (coal mine owners) one if that's
what they want. I don't how far apart they are on the
issues."
Bell returned to District 6, representing 16,000 members in southeast Ohio and the West Virginia panhan·
die, after contract talks broke down in Washington on
Tuesday. He said he'd heard nothing by late Thursday
on possible resumption of negotiations, but was

SATURDAY, MARCH 21, 1981

FRIDAY, MARCH 20th

Jewell T. Strong
Jewell T. -Bobo Strong, 00, Mill
Street Wilkesville, died Wednesday
at St. Lukes Convalescent Center.
Columbus.
Mrs. Strong was the window of the
late Joseph E. Strong who was Vin·
ton County coroner and a Wilkesville
funeral director. Mrs. Strong was
born in Meigs Count~. the daughter
of the late Vince and Dora Turner
Bobo. She was also preceded in
death by one son, Harley and one
brother.
She was a housewife, a member of
the Wilkesville United Methodist
Church and the WSCS ; Wilkesville
Chapter 207 OEs ; Pythian Sisters
Lodge 591 where she was also a
member of Past Chiefs Club ·
American Legion Auxiliary 476 and
a 50 year member of Star Grange
776.
.
She is survived by one daughter
and son-in-law, Kathryn and Paul
Kunz, Galloway; one daughter-in·
law, Althea Strong, Wilkesville; two
brothers, John Bobo, Dayton, and
Luther Bobo, Rinnela , Fla; five
grandchildren and five great grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held
Saturday at 2 p.m. at the Wilkesville
United Methodist Church with the
Rev. A. B. Maloy and the Rev . John
Lewis officiating. Burial will be in
Wilkesville Cemetery. Frientls may
call at the James N. Blower Funeral
Home, McArthur after 4 p.m. Friday
and after 10 a.m. on Saturday at the
church.

----

--·

Frustration causes early walkout

SPRING? - This may be the first day of spring but apparently the
weather Is Ignoring the matler. Mrs. Letta Spt!ncer and daughter, Mrs.
Judy King are plclllred Thursday aftcmtHm, bundled In winter rlothlng,
as a snow shower hit Meigs County.
\o .

INniANAPO!.lS IAPl ··· 'Ote U.S.
Court of Claims has ruled against 22
people who .owned land along the
Ohio River and had sought millions
of dollars in danwges alleging ~&gt;at
dams have eroded their river{runt
property.
Thl• d(lmagt• l'lttnns, filed

a~wlnsl

the Al'my Corps of Engineers, have
been turned down by the Court of
Claims at Washington.
The Corps' action has beell' under
attack by attorneys Charles S.
Gleason of Indianapolis and Norman
Hay of Cannelton, who represent the
illndnwners.

.
.

~

TODAY

...
~-

I •

f •

••• IN THEW
Wants to make names public
WASHINGTON - Sen. William Proxrnire wants the White House to
reveal the names of people or groups who contributed$1,000 or more to
a $375,529 fund for renovating President and Mrs. Reagan's living
~~~

White House officials have refused to release the names of any of the
167 donors who have contributed an average of $2,249 each to
redecorate and refurbish the second and third floors of the executive
mansion.

·:

:,

.
'

Administration may cut aid
WASHfNGTON -: The Reagan administration appears ready to con·
clude.rt has no chmce but to cut off economic aid to the Nicaraguan
government although such a move would risk further weakening of
moderate anlt-Marxtst elements in that country's government of.
ficials say.
'
At stake is 5 million approved but not disbursed for fiscal1981 and an
additional $20 rnillion tentatively budgeted for fiscal1982.

Letters will cost more Sunday
WASHINGTON - There are just two mail days left before the cost
of sending a letter goes up.
The first-class mail rate, now 15 cents, will go up to 18 cents at l2 :QI
a.lli. Sunday. The charge for postcards, now a dime, will be 12 cents.
Rates for other classes of mail also will go up for the first time in three
years.

•

Politician guilty of adultery
LONDON - The Conservative politician who cast the first stone at a
distinguished devotee of kiddie porn has confessed to adultery - and
made his confession voluntarily at a news conference he called.
Geqffrey Dickens, who.identified a fonner British ambassador to
Canada, Sir Peter Hayman, as the retired civil servant mentioned in a
child pornography case last week, told startied reporters Thursday he
had left his wife, by whom he has two sons, and is living with the 43year-old operator of a nursing home . .

Winning Ohio lottery number
Cl..EVELAND - The numbers selected Thursday night in the Ohio
Lottery's daily game " The Number:• and weekly "Pyramid" game
drawing are:
The Nwnber - ~21
Pyramid-17: 432; 9806
The lottery reported earnings of $210,643.50 from the wagering on
the daily nWilber game drawing . l..ottery officials said sales prior to
the drawing totaled $1,033,934, and holders of winning tickets are entitled to share $823,290.50.

Weather
Partly cloudy tonight and Saturday. Lows tonight in the rnid·20s.
Highs Saturday in the low to mid-40s. Chance of precipitation 20 per·
cent tonight and near zero percent Saturday. Winds variable 10 mph or
less tonight .
Extended Ohio ForecastSunday·through Tuesday:
RaiD likely Sunday. A chance of showers Munday. Fair Tuesday.
Highs In the mld-40s to the mld-50s. Lows In the 30s.

No village races
in June primary
Pomeroy and Middleport Villages will not have primary elections
on June 2.
This was dtsclosed Thursday afternoon by the Meigs County
Board of Elections, when, at the filing deadline for village posts, there
were no contests.
In Middleport, the terms of Councilmen Dewey M. Horn, Marvin
L. Kelly, Allen Lee King and Jack Satterfield expire this year. Horton,
Kelly and Robert N. Gi~nore, filed as Republican candidates for council; King filed as an independent and Satterfield as a Democrat. The
contests for the·four posts will come in the fall election among the five·
candidates.
There was one vacancy for the Board of Public Affairs in Mid·
dleport with the tenn of Willis Anthony expiring this year, but no one
· filed for that post.
In Pomeroy the tenns of council members, Betty BaroniCk, Joho ;
Anderson, Bill Young and Larry Wehrung expire this year. Baronick, ·
Anderson, Young and Bruce Reed filed as Republicans and Larry
Wehrung filed as a Democrat so there are no races in the spring,
Dale Smith, incumbent, filed for one seat on the Pomeroy Board of
Public Affairs with two to be filled. Harlan Wehrung, the second incwnbent, did not file for election.
Although there are no primaries in the villages as such, there will
be elections in the towns on June 2. Middleport residents will vote on a
tax renewal and residents of both towns will vote on a bond issue in the
Meigs Local School District.

- - -- -- -

·-- ----

·---- - - - .----- - -

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