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en tine

at

Vol.2f,No. 231
Copyrlghlecll"l

'

1 S'ection, 12 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, March 25,1981

A Mullimedla Inc.

15 Cents :.

Newsp:rr .:

Crucial negotiations resume
BYDGOSZCZ, Poland (AP) Labor leader l..ech Walesa and
Deputy Premier Mieczyslaw
Rakowski resume critical
negotiations today under the twin
threats of new nationwide· strikes
and the spring war games in and
aroWld Poland by the Soviet army
and other Warsaw Pact troops.
Polish Communist Party chief
Stanislaw Kania warned Walesa's
Solidarity labor federation that its
threat of fout-hour strikes by 10 ·
million members on Friday and a
nationwide general strike Tuesday
was an invitation to suiCide.
Mter a two-day recess for
meetings of Solidarity leaders,
Walesa and Rakowski were making
another try at defusing Poland's
worst. crisis since the nstionwide
strike wave last swruner spawned
the independent labor movement. ·
They were seeking to resolve the
union's demand that the government
fire three officials Solidarity blames
for the police beating of 23 unionists
in this northwestern city last Thur·
sday, the first official use of force
against Solidarity members.
Walesa told Warsaw Radio he
hoped the negotiations would yield
"satisfactory" results and end the
need for a general strike. But the
federation increased its demands on
the government.
Solidarity's national commission
voted earlier Tuesday to call a four·
hour nationwide warning strike on
Friday, folliwed by a general "sit·
in" strike next Tuesday if the
demands were not met. Before the
vote of 3:&gt;-3 with two abstentions,
Walesa overcame a mini-rebellion
by militants demanding inunediate
strike action and ·the breakoff of
negotiations with the goverrunent.
Kania warned that the strike

Officers search for skeletons
WEEKI WACHEE, Fla. - l.Bw officers in backhoes and bulldozers
are grimly searching for more skeletons in a five-acre jWlkyard where
they already have discovered the remains of two girls and expect to
find as many as four more.
·
The first v~ctirn, l\1lose oones were found March 16, was a girl15 or
16 years old who hll'd been buried more than a year ago, the medical
euminer said.
Tests were being conducted to ascertain the age and sex of the
second victim, but the skeleton foWld Monday in a shallow grave appeared to be that of a girl younger than 13, the county medical
examiner's office said.

Cuts affect 659,000 families

(4Sl)

WASIUNGTON - President Reagan's budget cuts, which would
reduce or end welfare benefits to more than 659,000 families, would
drop 51,017 families from the rolls in California, more than in any
othe~ state.
.
After California, the states with the next largest number of families
who would get dropped from the rolls are, in order, Massachusetts
with 25,971; Pennsylvania, 24,632 ; Michigan, 20,622; Illinois, 15,983 ;
Ohio, 15,899; New York, 15,221; Missouri, 13,948 ; Minnesota, 13,901;
and Wisconsin, 12,008, the documents said.
·

67~

Propose 10 story 9ffice tower
COLUMBUS, Ohio - A !().story state office tower for Cincinnati has
been proposed as a way to consolidate at least 12 state agencies, according toGov . James A. Rhodes .
The governor, Cincinnati Mayor David Mann and Hamilton County
Commissioner Nonnan Murdock confinned plans for the structure
Tuesday.
The tower could house city and county offices In addition to .state
agencies, Rhodes said. But the other men doubted whether the ad·
ditional room would be necessary for their governmental services.

ScOtties Facial TISSIH!S
200, two ply, 9.6x8.2 in. Soft,
strong, absorbent.

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Negotiations resume today
ASHTABULA, Ohio - For the first time in nearly two months, ad·
m.inistrators and striking nurses at Ashtabula General Hospital were
to meet today in an effort to end the nation's longest nurses' walkout.
But h05pital Administrator Floyd E. Farley said Tuesday that he
was not particularly hopeful for a settlement.
The 160 nurses walked off the job shortly after dawn July 21, 1980 at
the northeastern Ohio hospital. Some 115 are still staffing picket lines.

.o ..~..o.
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'.

CLEVELAND The nwnber selected Tuesday night in the Ohiu Lot·
tery'sdaily game ' 'The Number" is 511.
The tottery reported earnings of $489.245.50 !rom the wagering on
the drawing . Lottery officials said sales prior to the drawing totaled
$932,759.50, and holders of winning tickets are entitled to share
$443,514.

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Weather
Partly cloudy tonight. Low in rnid-30s. MO!itly cloudy Thursday with
a chance of showers in the afternoon. Highs in upper iills to low 60s.
Chance of precipitation 10 perc-ent tonight and 30 percent Thursday.
Winds southerly to southeasterly around 10 mph tonight.
Extended Ohio ForecastFriday through Sunday:
Fair Friday. A chance of showers Saturday and Sunday . Highs in the
upper 50s and 60s and morning lows In the upper 30s to mid...Ws.

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Sale Price

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Disposable Cigarette Lighter
•

' Food stamps will be issued by
mail effective June I, it was
disclosed at a meeting of the Meigs
County cominission Tuesday.
.
Meeting with the commissioners
was Michael Swisher, welfare direc. tor, who was granted permission to
enter into a contract with Cost Containment Corp., to have the food
stamps sent by mail. Stamps have
been issued direct to recipients at
Diamond Savings and Loan Cum-

He cited Poland's $27 biUion debt

W:AR GAMF.'l USED TO THREATEN POLISH
UNIONISTS - Infantry lighting vehicles cross a pontoon bridge somewhere In Poland as Warsaw Pact
maneuvers continued this week. Tbe war games and

derstand the call to strikP.lt? It can.
not be understood otherwise than
call to self·annihilation."
.
This appeared to renew the threat
of military intervention by th8
Sov~t or Polish annies, possibly on.
der J ·the guise of the curreht
maneuvers. Fibn clips and radio
reports of the annual spring war.
games have become a dally staple
on the government TV network.
•

a

the publicity given to lbem were seen as a threat to the
Polish union Solidarity If it called new strikes, referred
to by Polish Communist Party chief Stanislaw as an IDvltation to suicide. (AP Laserphoto •.

law linn, Story •nd Story, In the former Meigs General Hospital
Building, loc:ated 11 238 West Second Slreel; Pomeroy. The offices an

uew

open MUDday through Friday from 8:30a.m. to 4:30 p.m. and Saturday
from 8:38a.m. unlll noon.

Couple opens law office·s
Bethany, W. Va ., in 1976, and Ohio
Northern University, Ada, in llnB.
She was lonnerly associated with
the finn of Eachus and Boster in
Gallipolis where she served as
IISS!stant city solicitor. She was employed by Mitchell Energy Corporation which was engaged in oil
and gas well drillin~ .
Steven is the son of William and
Nuna Nelson, Pomeroy, and the late
Rubert Story.
He was IJQrn in Pomcruv and
t Continued on pa.:'' 12 1 ·

pany lor several years
County engineer Phil Roberts told
the board that the new bridge being
installed on Long Rurl In Lebanon
Township will' be completed this
week .
Roberts also reported on a slip
" in
along county road 28 that was
need of inunediate repair. Roberts
noted that in order to repair it
properly, piling would be needed. He

.

was given pennission to proceed
with the work.
Commissioners also discussed the
need of roof repair at the county
garage. The commissioners will
view the roof and make a decision.
Bids for active and interim county
funds for a two year period, were
received from Bank One, Central
Trust, Racine Home National and
The Farmer's Bank and Savings Co.

All four hanks were designated as
depositories for active deposiis lor
two year period. The l)anks were
awarded Interim deposits at an
amount and rate to be determined
by the county treasurer.
Attending were · Henry Wells,
president, Richard Jones and Dave
Koblenu, collliJli&lt;isioners, Mary
Hobstetter, clerk, and Martha
Chambers.

Three teachers
will lose jobs .
Three teachers who will lose their
jobs when the mental retardation
unit at the Athens Mental Health
Center closes May 16 may find work
at Gallipolis Developmental Cen·
ter- lf the jobs and money are
availab.le first.
Possible transfers arose out of a
recent agreement between the cen·
ter and the Local 1782 of the
American Federation of State, Coun·
ty and Municipal Employees (AFSC·
MEl .
The agreement also allows ern·
ployees a first shot at available jobs
in state developmental centers at
Cambridge and Gallipolis.
GDC Supt. Robert Zilmnerman
said the only jobs which have been
discussed are the three teaching
positions. However, thO!ie jobs can
only be filled if there is a "critical
need," he added .
He has discussed the matter with
Nonnand Tremblay, Region VI
deputy corrunissioner for the slate
mental retardation department, who
infonned Zinunerrnan he was only
conunitting himself to those jobs.
"Right now those are the only ones
we're talking aoout," the superin·
tendept said. "But we' re not in·
tendirlg to post any jobs at this time

OPEN NEW LAW FIRM - Karen and Steven Story have opened a

KMren and Steven L. Story, At·
torneys at Law, have OJlt!llt!d law ul·
!ices In the former Mei~s GenerHI
Hospital building, where the MenU.!
Health Center was more recently
located, 236 West Second Street.
Pomeroy.
Karen, daughter of William and
Phyllb Hagy, Toronto, Ott , was
oorn at Martins Ferry, and is the
third generation of her fan1ily to
practice law.
She graduated from Toronto High
School In 1972, Bethany Cullc;.:e,

situation~''

to the West and said, " We have to
undertake more . Export is dropping
because of decreasing production.
This diminishes possibilities to buy
food and increases our debts.
"We are debating at a difficult
moment for the country, the most
dangerous since the August crisis.
The economic crisis has been compounded by a deep political crisis. In
such a situation, how should we un·

Food stamp mailing begins June 1st

Winning Ohio lottery number

disposable
butane
lighter

threat pushed the debt-riddert communist nation to the brink of explosion.
" Who has the courage to make out
of a local incident a national cause
threatening catastrophe?" he asked
in a speech to agricultural officials
broadcast by Warsaw Radio. "How
can one call for strikes in this

because of our fiscal condition-"
If the jobs were available, Zim·
mennan continued, then GDC would
follow a normal internal bid structure in which the jobs would be
posted and those qualified within
GDC could have a chance at them.
"We'd post the job for anyone in
the same class, " he said.
"He (Tremblay ) discussed a
couple of possibilities with us, " he
continued. " If we had a number of
positions open, sure, we'd accept
them."
But not until the state budget
allocation for 198HI2 comes in at
July I, Zirrunerman said, will GDC
be able to consider additional personnel.
The state was to close the Athens
MR unit down Friday, but AFSCME
employees claimed they had not
been given the six months notice in·
eluded in their contract, and obtained a restrai~ing order in
February to keep the state lor
initiating shutdown procedures.
All other employees. according to
the agreement, will be given second
priority for jobs at GDC, but only after present GDC employees have
had the opportunity to transfer
within the insititution.

Bargaining council.
approves agreement
'

By Tbe Associated Press
With bargalnin!l council approval
of a tentative contract in their
pockets, United Mine Workers
leaders were trying today to sell the
proposal to a rank and file that voted
down a reconunended accord three
years ago during a lll-day strike.
Representatives from many of the
union's 900 locals were swrunoned to
Washington today io disc""" the con.
tract, approved by the bargaining
t"Ouncll on a21-14 vote Tuesday.
In addition, union sources said
'uMW President Sam Church would

go into the c,oalfields to demonstrate
his support lor the proposal. which
calls for a 36 percent increase in
wages and benefits over three years.
Willi a fight for ratification on the
horizon, Church backed away from
his suggestion earlier this week that
miners forego a strike during the approval proce:~S and work beyond
Friday 's expiration of their present
c"Ontract. The 160,000.rnernber union
has a strona tradition of no contract,
no work. The ratification process
could takt• until the nuddlc of next
~Continued on pugt• lll I

FEW DAYS - Meigs Counljans have only a few more days left to apply lor assistance with their heating bills. Doona Wllllalllllon, standtag,
and Rosalie Sayre, outreach workers at the Meigs Senior Citizens Center,
are pictured reviewing applications under the aid program. Over 1,2t0
senior citizens have been contacted personaUy In regard to the program
by Mrs. Williamson, Mrs. Sayre, Mrs. Edith Rizer and Mrs. Leafy
Shasteen.

HEAP deadline near
Meigs Countians have only a lew more days to file applications for
assistance with heating bills.
Deadline for filing is March 31 with assistance being provided~
der HEAP. the Home Energy Assistance Program, established by the
federal goverrunent with moneys Irom the windfall profits tax.
Residents may get assistance in completing the necessary forms
through the Meigs County Senior Citizens Center, Mulberry Heights,
Pomeroy, the outreach staff of the center already having personally
contacted over 1,200 senior citizens across the county to determine
eligibility and provide assistance in completing applications. The center started taking applications in December and priority is given to
persons over 60 years of age and disabled persons. Community clubs
were contacted by the center staff about the program and posters and
applications were placed in strategic locations aoout the county. The
program was explained in the senior citizens newsletter as well as in
the local news media.
The program provides eligible residents with a percentage of
assistance in their fuel costs, but n'ot the entire bill. Income guidelines
call .lor a maxlmwn yearly income of$4,738 for a one-person residence
and $6.263 for a tw~&gt;-person residence.
In Ohiu a total of $93 million was received from the windfall profits
tax fur energy assistant-e to low income families.

a

�The Daily

;C ommentary
sentence captions describing the dispute, and it is that crtm1nats who
crlme (sample : "Larry Potts, 21, are convicted should be sent to jail.
printer, Chicago. Singer. in a soul Every conunentator on the rise of
band, he was rehearsing with is crime in America cited overcrowded
group when hit _in the back by shots prisons as ·having a devastating effired through a window. Police fect on the judiciary. The whole of
arrested a member of a street the anti-criminal movement presupposes the detention of someone apgang.").
.
The bad news, of course, is that prehended, tiied and fOWld guilty.
violent crime has very nearly , But if word comes down that there is
doubled in the last decade, and the no place in which to detain more
editors show how it is changing the criminals, judges, prosecutors and
nature of life in America. What to do ·police are affected. Overcrowded
about crime is an endless debate. prisons often result in preposterous
Arguments rage between those who reductions in charges. The late Al
do and don't want gun control, those Capp's favorite was the reduction of
who do and don't want capital a rape charge to " illegal entry."
punishment, those who do and odn't Time gives examples. In Missour~
want something done about the officials were asked not to send
lengths to which the Warren Court more inmates to state penitenwent in extending the rights of the tiaries, with _the result that the
prisoners the prosecutors simply
accused.
But on one point there simply is no declined to release were held in the
St. Louis County jail.
If New York is representative , approximately 20 percent of the coun·
tty's prisoners are in jail for committing non-violent crimes. I pause
llll 'uu rt St r•·•·t
quickly
to note that some non-violent
Pumt'rn\ . llhiu
61-1-, i -t l)4i
crimes - • but that reservation
UE\'I)Tt;H TUTII E INTER ..:ST I If' Til E m-: u ;s-MASUN AHE::A
should be put in abeyance pending
some relief in a society which faces
the danger of becoming very nearly
uninhabitable.
·
There was no need to send John
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Mitchell to jail, and none to send
Publbha
Alger Hiss to jail. Minds more
ingeniously
sadistic than my own
PAT WHITEHEAD
BOB HOEFLICH
could
surely
come up with a punishA~it&gt;INLilllll•utJiillhrr/l'untrulkr
ment, which while not necessarily
condign (what is appropriate for a
D,\LE ROTHGEB. JR.
man who betrayed the nation's
.,.,. ~~ f.dilur
secrets and for an attorney general
who lied under oath?), would give

W. E. Chilton III, the publisher of
: the Charleston Gazette, is a staunch
: liberal, but ·a security risk in that
· communion because he examines
any ideas without reference to
ideological provenance. If it makes
sense he is for it whether the
• proposal was first made by the
: secretary of the Conununist Party
: or the Grand Dragon of the Ku Klux
: Klan. No single idea dominates him:
· He is too curious, and there are so
·: many other problems. But his notion
: that we shouldn't send non-violent
: criminals to jail is fiercely relevant
· right now.
: Time magazine has done a
· brilliant cover story on crime in
·: America. It was a very bright editor
:. who thought to illustrate it by inch:: square pictures of 17 Americans .who
: were killed in the week In which the
: story was prepared, along with tw&lt;&gt;-

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STORE HOURS:
Mon.-Sat. 8 arn-10 pm

Ernest van den Haag and James
society some sense that justice is · Mitchells of this world are not going
Q.
Wilson have written the best
being done. The very idea that John to kill, rape or rob a bank.
boOks
on the subject ("Punlahlng
Meanwhile, as is widely known,
Mitchell should be in jail while a 21Criminals"
and " Thinking about
year..c)ld with four previous rape Americans are trying to find ways of
Crime")
,
and
they should be widely
convictions is let go after plea protecting themselves. We are apread
because,
as Time states, "The
bargaining offends one's sense of parently well on our way back to
facl&gt;&lt;
are
grim.
In the U. S. there are
priority. It is all very well to say that frontier life. Time reportS that a spot
9.7
tnurders
a
year
for every 100,1100
we should build more jaiis; Florida check by private guards at a Mempeople.
Some
others:
Japan, 1.6;
is doing just that. But in the mean- phis nightclub recently revealed
Britain,
1.3;
West
Germany,
1.3."
time, we could increase the resour· that 32 pa£rons were carrying guns.
But
one
step
in
the
right
'
d
irection
is
ces of our prisons by 20, percent if One asswnes that the comedian was
to
adopt
the
Chilton
relonn.
'
they acknowledged that the John satisfactory.

Sunday 10 am-10 pm

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, 0.
DALE TEAFORD

Teaford
third team
All Ohio spot
By GEORGE STRODE

W.vt: YOJ EVER I-lAD HIM D»-JCE FeR You~ .

,\ MEMBER nf Tht· Assudatt-d Prrs• . Inland Oaih Prrs~ ,.\..'I)&lt;Wiattion "nd tht'

..•

N~v..spapt· r Publi~h~r·

A:o.SIH'iiitlun.

U·:n ·t: H.'i !It" Of&gt;I~IU'I IHt• y;t'lt•nmt•d . Tht•~ • huulc! ht• I~· ~~ thlln 300 ~~ourd!&lt;o Inn):! . All
h•\h•n. a rt• .~u bj t•4 · 1 h1 t•ditin)l ou1d mu ~1 tw ~o i~ l l!'d ~ith naml' . lld drt'"~ &lt;tnd lt&gt;lt·phmw
numht·r. Su un~iKm·d ll"lh"r~ ~ illlw puhlbht'fl . l.dh·n ~huu l d ttt· in )(•~td LM~It' , t~ddrt·!&gt;~ i n)(
b~ut·,•. uul pt·r~unalitk~ .

..·

"

Lawmakers fighting April 1 deadline

COLUMBUS , Ohio t APl
Lawmakers are working against an
April 1 deadline to ensure that 28
ailing school districts have enough
funds to stay open through the end of
the year.
Senate President Paul E. Gillmor,
R-Port Clinton, said Monday that the
enabling measure ·- a $17 million
appropriation - may be approved
this
week . The money will go into the
which are the basis for predicting
the size of the deficit. And there is ~tate School Loan Fund so affected
further the belief that the economic systems can borrow from it between
program proposed by Reagan can- now and the end of the school year ~r
not be judged by recent past ex· next fall .
perience, because it will create both
There is an April I deadline for
"new economic conditions" and a syst~ms to certify that they will
set of ··new national expectations," have funds to remain in busine.., for
which invalidate traditional depen· the rest of the calendar year.
dence on experience for making
Under an expected amendment.to
House-passed legislation up for a
economic analyses.
hearing today in the Senate Finance
The CBO does depend on recent Commi'ttee, certifications could be
past experience in making its made as soon as the $17 million goes
forecasts . It doubts that inflation to the state Controlling Board. The
will drop so quickly, that the growth board approves or disapproves the
of the money supply will be con· loans.
trolled so effectively, that savings
The funds would be added to about
will grow so rapidly and that the · $15.5 million in the loan fund .
economy will progress and unemployment decrease as the White
House believes.

; A matter of
~-.. perspective

.; .•

Whether-as the Congressional
.: Budget Office (CBO) computes it; - President Reagan's spending
: : projections will result in a $25 billion
: higher deficit or whether its figures
· : are " phony ," as the president said
~ · when he heard this, is a matter of
\: asswnptions.
•: In all .probability, the projections
: : and predictions of the CBO and. the
: White House will turn out to he well
; : off the mark when viewed from the
; : perspecttve of January 1983-when
•; all the reports of what actually will
: · have happened will be in.
· · On the White House side, the Of.
; : lice of_Management and Budget, the
: · Council of Economic Advisers, the
; : Treasurer and others have assumed
:: thai certain things will happen-such
· : as the proposed tax cut. They are
:: assumed to have certain results,

i~ Letters ·to

editor

.
.
:: Let "s work together ___~-------: In past weeks I've written many
: letters about getting new business in
: our county. Well , I have been
. missing something and it's strange
.· too. The heart of our county,
··: Pomeroy - yes - why is it that
· every time something is built it is in
· Pomeroy? There are lots of other
: places to build. Let's not forget
: Racine, Middleport, Portland, and
: Rutland. These towns also have
· places to build too not only Pomeroy
: and need something to get things
: started.
: I've got nothing against Pomeroy,
• but voters would rather see things
: spread out in the county because
: sooner or later, there will be traffic
: problems if we keep building in or·
· town. You have an even more bur·
: den on your water works. Does it
: have the capacity to take care of

these new structures be in~ built'
If you spread it out the problem
will take longer to arrive and maybe
the town can handle it by then. If it
can't, look out, the taxes are the only
thing to turn to and then we all pay .
So to swn it up, does Pomeroy have
the capacity to handle more traffic.
more water, and more sewage' If
so, let's build - if not, there are
other towns tit Meigs County that
would love to share the new business
and we should start getting ready for
it.
If we are ever to receive any new
business in this big and beautiful
county. . we have all that new
business wants and more. So, let's
get to~ether antl work toward more
jpba for our county . ·
Yours truly. - Floyd H. Cleland,
Box 223. Rutland, Ohio 4S775.

· Thanks volunteers-----------; I, as chairrnan of the blood
; program, would )ike (o thank all
: volunteers who worked long hours at
• the bloodmobile visit on Feb. 25. I
: hope we can have more volunteers
: suno one will have to work so long.
· We were very well pleased with
: the response the people of Meigs
: Community and surrounding com: munities gave to the bloodmobile
· visit to the county.
; We had made preparations fur the
; usual 100 and were very glad to see
: so many above that attend. Volun·
· teer help was a little below what we
: had expected which caused the
; delay in getting through in the usual
~ time.

• More volunteers can be used.
"t the

'• Anyone desiring to work
·.

bloodmobile visits will be appreciated. Typewriters are needed
to do the clerical work. If enough
volunteers come, shifts can be
arranged so no one will work so long
a time.
The next bloodmobile visit to
Meigs County is April 22 at the
senior citizens room in the multipurpose building, Mulberry Hts. 1
hope that the people of Meigs county
will continue to support the blood
program so that Meigs County
patients in whichever hospital they
choose will have blood available.
Senior citizens use over half of the
blood in our hOl!pitals so younger
people will havt to donate for them .
- Vemon Nease.

making its total $32.5 millton.
Figures froni the stall! auditor and
the education department, though
slightly different, indicate the total
will be adequate, Gillmor said.
Cleveland's City School District,
the state's largest and perennially
most fiscally troubled system. a!}parently will have to borrow about
$19 million in July. About $2 million
would have to be loaned to the
Westerville City District in Novem·
ber, followed by Brunswick with $1.8
million by April24.
Gilimor said the $17 million is
available, at a time of other state
money troubles, because la\\1nakers
deliberately went with low revenue
estimates when enacting a series of
temporary tax hikes last December.
The one penny sales and other temporary hikes are due to expire July
1. and it is estimated that they will
have produced about $28 million
more than what was being counted
on by earlier public estimates.
Other districts with projected
deficits range from $83.000 in Danbury Local District in Ottawa Coun-

ty, to $851,1100 in Ohio Valley Local in
Adams County. Both systems arc to
borrow in April.
The others, with amounts and loan
months. include :
Big Walnut Local , (Delaware
Co unty I, $500,000, April; Union
Scioto Local !Ross). $300,1100. September ; Black River Local
(Medina ), $419,000, May; Fairless
Local (Stark!, $316,000. July; Southwest Licking Local 1Licking! ,
$191,1100. April; ·Revere Local (Summit I, $254,1100, November:
Northeastern Local 1Clark ).
$165,1100, November; Niles City ,
$356,000. December; Campbell City ,
$289,1100. April; Zane Trace Loca l

1Ross I. $63•.1100, April; Buckeye
Valley Local 1Delaware) $250,1100,
November; Pymatuning Valley
Local (Ashtabula), $145,1100, November: Wellston City (Jackson),
$430.1100. May; Crestwood Local
1Portage 1. $180,1100, June .
Danville Local (Knox ), $100,1100,
October; Port Clinton City. $3!H,IIOO ,
August : Southern Hilis Vocational
1Brown! . $50,000, December:
Ravenna City, $3116,1100, July; Lorain
City, $750,1100, November; Massillon
City. »42.000, late 1981: Madison
Local (Lake ), »43 ,1100, July; Bar·
nesville Vocational (Belmont),
$120,000. 1ast Mav .

Today in history.

• •

C'Ol.UMHU.S , Ohiu

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I:lted

Today is Wednesday, March 25, the 84th day ufl98l. There are 281 days
lefLin the yea r.
Today's highlight in history :
On March 25, 1821 , Greeks began a 12-year uprising against the Ot·
toman Empire that ended with the cstablislunent of the independent
kingdom of Greece.
·

Pres:~ '

Those with even limited memories
should be able to recollect that last fall Ronald Reagan was littering the
campaign trail with attacks on the
Carter administration's policies in
El Salvador, its concern for human
rights and reluctance to go all out in
support of the Salvadoran military.
After the election, the Reagan
transition operation was not so much
leaking to the press as flooding it
with promises of changes to be made
in foreign policy, one · of the first
being the drawing of a line in El
Salvador against Communi st
penetration of the Americas.
Early on after the inauguration,
certain well-connected commentators
some who se
professional histories just happened
to include CIA connections - began
hinting at the real dimensions of the
Salvadoran crisis. SECRET . intetligence reports of MILITARY aid
reachin'g the MARXIST guerrillas
from COMMUNIST sources.
After a barely decent interval,
State took this show on the road. It
dispatched teams to enlighten West
European and Latin American
governments on the awful dctaiis
which it very shortly therea fter
made public.
Really public. Special Report No.

80, Feb. 23, 1981, "Corrununist Interference in El Salvador," eight
illustrated pages, was available not
only to that portion of the press
!most of ill without such hot
Washington connections, but to
anyone who cared to drop a line
requesting a copy (postage and fees
paid by State ). Dissemination of No.
80 stopped just short of a bulk
1nailing addressed to ·'Occupant."
Probably only because no one
thought of it at the time.
By now we're ready for the real
business - the new administration's
announcement of · its decision to
meet the by now well-publicized
threat in El Salvador with increased
U. S. aid, most e•pecially of the
military variety.
Never mind that the junta's
civilian president said no thank you
and even his military collca~ues
mwnbled that they didn't really
need any_. ·The warriors in
Washington had decided they were
going to get it anyway . Plus a
platoon of American military advisers who, however, under no circumstances are to get anywhere
· near a real battle. This in a country
where the U. S. Embassy had just
served as a target range for rightist
thugs anq Anlfricans, Salvadorans

and whoever can get themselves
killed in the restaurants of the
capital's downtown hotels.
So now Slate's senior official since identified by his own boss haig
is John A. Bushnell, deputy assistart
secretary for Inter-American Affairs - nails the press for running
the story "about five times a. big as
it really i•." Only live, when State's
wolf-criers rate at least a 10 for ef·
fort in·building it up? Under the clr·
cwnstances, it would appear the
press is guilty not of overplaying but
of falling down on the job.
The story behind this headline is
the administration's discovery that
It has successfully focused attention
on El Salvador at the cost of diver·
tlng attention from other foreign·
policy issues and the domestic
economic program. It cannot control
what it has wrought.
Well, goodness gracious, golly
sa kes and gee whiz, !elias.
Whenever you can take a few
minutes off from trying to control
the news, perhapS you should bnJsh
up on the story of Pandora's box.
As for the Salvador story con·
linuin~ to play the front pages. rest
assured. You've already made dead
certain that it will.

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Rt!avl!r t:11slern . ~9 Sr .. 21.0 ; !(evm Rkh-

6--4 Sr .. 2U ;

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(iary Jones , Mllr111 Sh!ln Manon, 6-fwt
Sr . 20.8; J.11 y Byrne. Muidletuwn r l!nwlt:l!. , &amp;-:! Jr . 30.1: Steve Ra)lhmd. •·unk·
for1 Adena, 6-4 Sr , 2:U : 11nd Mark llemp;ey , bllt!li\' llle
RU!It!Crlu\K, 6-foot Sr ..
21.3.
SloX:OND TEAM
Ed &amp;r~Jer, Covington , 6-1 Sr ., 11.0; IAIYid Allen , Old Waahill!lliHl Bu..:keye Traal.
6-4 Sr .. ZI.L Jeff Brunie, Sebrint~, , 8-4 Sr ,,
12.1: Sleve Sdw,ffntr, BaJtirnurt. llbt!rty
UnJtHI, 6-:Z Sr., ~1.2 : O.w Wurm, New
' W~~SillnKtun 8u~,.-keye Centra.\ , ~ ~ ,

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Futl\lll."e

Green, &amp;..1 Sr., 20.7: O.n Flem.ln~ . Cincirl- ·
1\.llll Swnm1t Country DMy, &amp;-l Sr., 29 .7:
• wrw.l Kelly Cupelwnd, Peebl~ . 6-:1 Sr., 111.4.
miRDTF.AM
Eric Hwmilton, Gales Milb liwwken, 6-2
Jr ., 18.0; C'ttuck Rltzlt!r, Tiffin C.!vert, &gt;
10 Sr. , 22.e; Rit.'k Berrier. Jefferwn, &amp;-3
j

6-Z . Sr., .11.1 ; O..ve Hll8teller , Berlin H1 •
land, 6-.J Sr .• ll.ol ; Chuck Kldstun , Piun~r

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PI..AYER OF n :AK - Dave Junes,

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man ,

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Mor1no, · Cleveland . Cuy11hoga
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nal ' M11rk Stover, ROL'ky River l.uthenm
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Don't read this__________Do_n_G_ra_rf/

If you want to stay on the right
side of the U. S. State Department,
stop reading. The subject of today's
discussion ill out of diplomatic favor.
lt'sElSalvador.
' You say you've heard the name
mentioned recently? How odd. Certainly that could have nothing to do
with State having done its considerable best for some months now
to present that country's multi-sided
civil war as the greatest challenge to
this country's security since the
Cuban missile crisis. Or was it some
fellow named Carter who made that
comparison about a place called
Afghanistan'
Whatever. Challenges come and
go, and El Salvador is one the State
Department has now decided should
go to the bottom of the news columns.
Why? Because the press has overplayed it in the opinion of State as
revealed to the newspersons on the
diplomatic beat by a "senior official " wbo was otherwise initially
nameless because that is the rule of
the game played at State. One of the
games.
Here it is not even 1984 and senior
officials, if not yet Big Brother himself, are already busily rewriting
history. Very recent history .

'

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Todd
Landrum, an Ohio State assistant
coach, says Class A Player of the
Year Dave Jones faces two main ad·
justments in playing Big Ten Conference basketball.
Jones moves up from last year's
second all-state team to lead an
eight-player first unit that includes
Beaver Eastern's !&gt;-9 Neil Leist and
tH Kevin Richardson of . Columbus
Academy, both on the third all-state
squad in 191M!.
Joining them on the 1981 first team
were &amp;-3 Dale Blaney of Badger, &amp;foot Gary Jones , of Maria Stein
Marion Local, !Hi Jay Byrne of Middletown Fenwick, tH Steve Ragland
of Frankfort Adena and &amp;-foot Mark
Dempsey of Zanesville Rosecrans.
Blaney and Byrne were juniors,
and the rest seniors:
Second team selections were led
by «N Rick Scarberry of Franklin
Furnace Green and 6-1 Ed Barger of
Covington, both third team All-Ohio
last season. They were joined by tH
David Allen of Old Washington
Buckeye Trail, 6-4 Jeff Brunie of
Sebring, 6-2 Steve Schaffner of
Baltimore Uberty Union, 6-5 Dave
Wurrn of New Washington Buckeye
Central, 6-1 Dan Flenling of Cincinnati Swrunit Country Day and &amp;-a
Kelly Copeland of Peebles .
All were seniors ext-ept Hamilton,
a junior.
Named to the third team were 6-2
Eric Hamilton of Gates Mills
Hawken, !&gt;-10 Chuck Ritzier of Tiffin
C.alvert, ' &amp;-3 Rick Berrier of Jefferson, &amp;-2 Dale Teaford of Racine
Southern, 6-3 Dave Hostetler of
Berlin Hiland, &amp;-1 Chuck Kidston of
Pioneer North Central, i-1 Joe Hor·
stman of Ottoville and 6-2 Ken Day
of We•t Uberty-Sal~m .

The Daih· Sentinel

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�I

..
Wednesday, March 25, 1911

e-4- The Daily Sentinel

Pa

Pitchers no longer· ·
have edge on hitters
•

By Associated Press
If Tue,sday's exhibition srores are
any criterion, the pitchers - for the
most part - are no longer ahead of
the hitters.
Witness these results : Chicago
White Sox 17, St. Louis Cardinals 3;
New York Yankees 15, Atlanta
Brave.s 6; Toronto Blue Jays 14,
. Montreal Expos 10; Chicago Cubs
: 12, San Diego Padres 11; Cincinnati
Reds 10, Los Angeles Dodgers 6;
Oakland A's .7, Milwaukee Brewers
. 7; Seattle Mariners 9, California
; Angell; 2; San Francisco Giants 8,
· Cleveland Indians I. ·
• The White Sox explQded for five
, home runs in three innings and went
, on to overpower the Cardinals. Bill
Almon started the scoring with a
two-run shot in the third inning. An
· inning later, Lamar Johnson hit a
· solo.shot and Marc Hill added a tworun homer. Tony Bernazard and
Rusty Kuntz connected in the fifth
with one man aboard and two men
on, respectively. Kuntz later added a
two-run triple and finished the day
with Six RBis.

· Rick Cerone, Bob Watson and
Bucky Dent each had three hils an.d
Graig Nettles homered as the
Yankees rapped out 16 hils and
buried the Braves.
Alfredo Griffin's two-run, insidethe-park homer in the second inning
helped Toronto defeat Montreal.
Willie Upsha added a three-run
homer as the Blue Jays built an 11-1
lead. Each team collected 15 hils.
Leon Durham's three-run homer
highlighted an eight-run second inning as the Cubs outlasted the
Padres.
Dave Concepcion's pinch RBI
single sparked a three-run seventh
inning that lifted Cinctnnati over Los
Angeles in a nine-error g"ame.
Wayne Gross' grand slam home
run off Jim Slaton highlighted a fiverun fifth inning that helped the A's
beat the Brewers. Ted Sinunons hit
a three-run homer for Milwaukee.
Terry Bulling drilled a tw()-run
triple and Richie Zisk and Gary
Grey homered to highlight a !~hit
attack and lead Seattle over California. Larry Herndon singled, doubled

O'Berry's shotgun 'overshadows.
Nolan's heavy hitting, li.ru:d work
TAMPA, Fla. iAPl - O;tensibly.
Cincinnati Reds catcher Joe Nolan is
enjoying a goodspring . Defensively,
progress has been slow.
While challenger Mike O'Berry
whistles the ball around the bases,
Nolan has had lean success in

blamed for some of those.
Nolan said he isn't worried by the
showing, noting that it takes time to
fonn new habits.

down here.' '

Acquired as a free agent last June,
Nolan placed himself first in line
behind Bench when he hit a robust
.3121053 games for the Reds.
One of the areas that needed work
was Nolan 's defense against stolen
bases. With special tutoring from
the Reds' coaching staff. Nolan has
worked tirelessly on improving his
· mechanics in order to get the ball
down to second base quicker.
But he has barely begun tasting
the fruits of that la bor. In five
exhibition games, opponents have
stolen eight b~ses on Nolan and been
thrown out just once. The Kansas
City Royals swiped five ha)es in one
game, although Nolan could not be

throwing out runners so fa r this
spring, despite overtime work to

hone his defensive skills.
Regardless, the 30-year-old catcher thinks it's only fair that he get
first consideration for the spot
vacated by Johnny Bench, based on
his performance last year.
" I don't think that I should be
judged by what I do down here, "
Nolan said Tuesday. '· I don't think I
should be forced to win a position

"Any time you're doing something
that's not natural, it's difficult,"
Nolan sa id. "During the game, you
have a tendency to fall back on what
you've been doing for years. It's
going to take a while before I can do
it without having to think about it.

NIT championship at stake tonight

tUSPIII-1
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and homered to power the Giants
past the Indians.
Scott McGregor hurled six hitless
innings, lowering his spring earned ,
run average to 0.69, and combined
with Dave Ford on a one-hitter as
.tile Baltin&gt;Ore 01-ioles blanked the
Philadelphia Phillies 2-{). Bob Boone
singled in the eighth inning for the
Phillies' hit. ·
The Houston Astros blanked the
Mirmesota Twins :Hl as Bob Knepper, Jriaquin Andujar, Frank LaCor-_
te and Joe Sambi to allowed just two
singles.
Boston's Dennis Eckersley pitched hitless ball for five innings but
the New York Mets nipped the Red
Sox 1.0 behind the four-hit pitching
of Pat Zachry, Ed Lynch and Jeff
Reardon.
Lou Whitaker and Richie Hebner
homered as the Detroit Tigers overcame six erronj and defeated the
Pittsburgh Pirates S-4 and Cesar
Geronimo drove in the tying and
winning runs with singles as the
Kansas City Royals edged the Te~as
Rangers 4-3.

NEW YORK (AP ) - Syracuse
hopes to complete a month-long
cycle or disappointment and happiness on a positive note tonight
when the Orangemen meet Tulsa in
the championship game of the 44th
annual National Invitation Tournament.
Syracuse completed the regular
season Feb. 28 with a 1~11 record,
its worst in 11 years, followed that
with a glorious three-game sweep of
the Big East tournament and then
was crushed when three other conference schoolli were invited to the
NCAA championships and it was
ignored.
· Instead, the NIT selection committee came calling and the
Orangemen responded with four
more victories leading to tonight's
game with the Golden Hurricane,
this year 's best rags-t()-riches
basketball team.
"Our backs were to the wall after
the 15-11 season," said high·leaping
forward Tony Bruin, a standout in
the postseason after a so-so year.
"Now the NIT is our reward for win-

Member: The ..\IIOcllted Preu, InLand OU.
1~ Press .WOC!atioo and tbe Ameri&lt;u
Newspaper Publilhtn ~tion, NaUona&amp;
Advrrtbdng Represem.ttve, Lan.dtnl
A&amp;Jociattll, 3101 Euclid Ave., Cleveland.
Ohio,4 511~ .

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FOSTER SCORES REDS GO AlltAD RUN - George Foster, Cincinnati Redll ouUielder,. protects his bead with arm as ball jumps out of
Los Angeles catcher Mike Sclolcla's mitt iu seventh iunlog of game iu
Tampa Tuesday. Fosler's nm was the second to score on Dave Coocepeion's pbicli lilt slagle to left field. W~n baD jumped away from the
Dodger catcher Concepcion moved to lblrd. The Reds went ahead of Los
Angeles on Footer's score. (AP Laserphoto).

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l Month ................... ... llUO
Six month ...... , ....... · · · . · . · . .. t!UO

1Year .... .......••••....•.••... tsS.OO
Ral&lt;tO.IIW.OIIle
aad West VlrJiaja

3Month . . . . . , .......... ....... tn.oo
6Month .........•.. ............. 01.00
I 't'ear

...... .... • ... • .... ai.OO

OUT AT 2ND- New Yorll Yankee Bucky Dent goes up as he tries for
• double play with Atlanta Brave oudlelder C. Wasblogton golag out at
2Dd during play lo Fort Lauderdale, Fla. today. lAP Laserphoto).

Reds defeat ~~~~~
Dodgers, 10-6
ECONOMY GRADE
8 FOOT
TAMPA, Fla . (AP) - The Cincinnati Reds took a IIJ.&lt;l victory over
the Los Angele.s Dodgers on Tuesday
when Dave Concepcion hit a pinchhit single that sparked a .three-run
seventh inning.
George Foster had a home run and
two singles in the game. The game
was tied at 1-1 in the seventh in when
Foster and Dan Driessen singled
followed by Concepcion's blow. The
Reds shortstop was ~ fling for winning pitcher, Doug Bair, H .
Driessen came home on Dodger
left fielder Bobby Mitchell 's
throwing error, and Ray Knight capped the rally with a run-producing
single, scoring Concepcion.
The two teams combined for nine
errors, three by Dodger shortstop
PepeFrias.

TheDa

Ohio

The' Daily Sentin~l

'

I

Confidence factor in NCAA
By Associated Preas
Confidence could be a factor, says
Virginia Coach Terry Holland, but it
will favor all four tearmln the finals
· of the NCAA college basketball tournament that gels und!way Saturday in Philadelphia.
·
Holland's firth-rank d Cavaliers
. meet Atlantic Coast' Conference
rival North Carolina, ranked sixth,
in one of the semifinal games, while
No.9 Indiana and four th-rated
Louisiana State meet in the earlier
contest.
The cham pionship and consolation
games are schedul ed for Monday .
Virginia , 28-3, beat the Tar Heels

2"x4rrs

gg~EACH

twice during the regular scasoo, but
Holland feelli North Carolina is a
changed team.
"Thetre playing with a lot more
confidence/' the Virginia coach

said, " but I think that's true of." any
team in the Final Four. I know we
are, and I would guess Indiana is
and L.SU is."
During the
season, Virginia beat
.
Nurih Carolina by scores of 63-S7 and
~79 , in overtime, but both times,
the Cavaliers had to rally from lar~e

There will be no T-ball, intennediate !Or pee-wee ball teah1S in
Rutland if teaJIIB are not filled by
Saturday, March 28.
If a youngBter is interested In participating parents are to call Marie
Snyder ati92-7Jn or Joyce Bartrum
at 9ll'b6634 before Saturday.

made a few bad throws, but that 's
going to happen when you're in
spring training and you're trying
something new. I feel more comfortable every day ."

"Let's face it, they're a great
team with a great tradition, and I
don't think they'll change their
game for us," Holland said. " We'll
have to change our strategy, though .
Down 14 won't work again. "

.

BEND AREA OPTOMEMETRIC CENTER
R. H. BILLMAN II, O.D.

Must fill teams

''My progress has been good. I've

second-half deficits. In the first
game, it was 13 points - 16 in the
second. North Carolina Coach Dean
Smith's famous four-corners .offense, a half:.courl spread, led to
both defeats.

Provides Such Services As

VISION EXAMINATIONS
HARD AND SOFT CONTACT LENSES
OPEN M. -T .-W. -F . 9-S
CLOSED THUR. -SAT.-SUN .
113 Courl St.
Pomeory, Oh,
Above Clark's Jewelry in Pomeroy

the Big East to:mwnent, the night's 7!Hl3 semifinal victorY ov_er
Orangemen have won four in a row Purdue. Schaye.s had only rune po~nin the NIT for a combined 22-11 . ts well under hiS average of 15, but
.,.; had a bask;et, a free throw and
mark.
To win tonight at Madison Square two rebounds in the final minute ~­
Garden against Tulsa, 25-7 under ter the score was tied 63-63.
" He'll be there Wednesday ," said
new Coach Nolan Richardson after
an 11-19 season in 1!179-80, Syracuse Malone. "He's in his hotelrOOm with
will probably need a healthy &amp;-foot- his foot in ice right now,"
"When the adrenaline starts
11 center Dan Schayes.
The son of former professional flowing, it's amazing what the body
star Dolph Schayes injured his left will do when the the mind starts
ankle in a Monday practice and lim- talkin~ ." said Richardson.
ped noticeably throughout Monday r-- - -- - - - - - - - -

ning the Big East tournament. "
"It's funny how life · works out
sometimes," said assistant coach
Brendan Malone, who represented
Syracuse at a news conference
Tuesday ·while head Coach Jim
Boeheim kept a speaking
engagement in Philadelphia . " We
were so diSappointed a few weeks
ago. Now we're just delighted to be
in the NIT. For some reason we've
put seven real good games
together."
In addition to the three victories in

Tuppers Plains wins tournament
Tuppers Plains became the champions of the Meigs County Elementary Tournaments fifth grade
divison Tuesday night after
claiming an impressive 3&amp;-31 win
over Rutlarld.
The consolation game was won by
Letart , who claimed a 31·21 win over
Pomeroy Barton, in the preliminary
contest.
From the start in the cham. pionship game, a competitive battle
developed between Tuppers Plains
and the opposing Rutland team.
Tuppers Plains edged its opponent 87 at the end of the first quarter ands
held on to a narrow 15-13 'margin at
the half.
A cold third period by Rutland
allowed Tuppers Plains to open up
an important 27-17 lead at the end of
the period.
In the last round Rutland rn•rlo "

------

-

-----·-

detennined effort to come back , but
stU! fell short at the buzzer 3&amp;-31.
Brett Bissell paced the winners
with 14 points while Jeff Caldwell
and Jeff Johnson each chipped in 8
points each. For Rutland Mike Bartrwn had an outstanding game
scoring 'l:l points to lead all scorers.

EMBRACE
HER WITH • •
'
THE "EMBRACE
RING"

Hupp and Sellers led Letart to victory over Pomeroy Barton with 8
points each. Letart's White and Hill
also contributed to the win with 4
points each. Jim Nonnan paced
Pomeroy with 10 while Steve Tracy
added4.
Each of the fi rst four teams
received team trophies while run'
ner-up Rutland won meda lions as individual awards for its performance. Champion Tuppers
Plains received trophies a's

i n~

div idual awards .

------------- - - - - - ----

-

-

Thl' pt'lil' Lt Wil Y \11 ~ how you
t Jrc . YllUr n,mw ~m u nc side
.1 nd h~rs on the o thl'r . Both
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992 ·2920

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~./'f\ IN

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OH ,

DISCOUNTS
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ON ANY PURCHASE

.

The DANVILLE
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Modern slyhng
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Thur. &amp; Sat , 9- Noon
Fri. 9-6

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March

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Froz:en Vegetables
Corn Peas
Green Beans
Spinach MIXED VEGETABLES ' 10

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Store Hours: Mon.-Sat. 9 a.m. to 9

oz.

00

�BY DIANA S. EBERTS
Extension Agent
Home Economics
LOW-CALORIE
DESSERT IDEAS
Foods that supply nutrients, as
well as kilocalories, should
always be chosen first when planning a menu. Desserts may supply prote in, vitamins and
minerals if they are -selected
carefully . Desserts will also supply food energy from ingredients
like sugar and fat that don't supply essential nutrients.
It is important to know about
how

many

kilocalories

27110; 51-75, 154, 2400; 76+. ' 154,
2050 . •
Females, 11-14, 101, 22110; 15-28,
120, 21110; 19-22, 120, 21110; 23-50,
120. 20110; 51-75, 120, 18110; 76+ ,
120, 16110.
Notice that, at the same age,
males need more energy than
females. · This extra need for
kilocalories is mostly due to the
fact that "males are usually
heavier than females. It is also
important to know that as an
adult gels older his or her energy
needs will decrease. So, when you
plan a meal wtth dessert. remember that each member of the
fautily has a different need for
food energy. Children. older
adults and very inactive people

each

family member nee&lt;bi to main·
·tain body weight. Then desserts
may be added to the menu along
with other nutriti.ous foods to
meet everyone's energy needs.
The information below lists the
energy needs for moderately active people of different ages and
sex. Note that these averages wiU
vary according to each person's
height, body frame size, and activity schedule.
ENERGY NEEDS OF
FAMILY MEMBERS
Category , Age
I years 1,
Average Weight lpoundsJ , and
Energy Needs I kilocalories I are

may need to select low·calorie

desserts.
Dess~rts

conta ining

large

amounts of oil , mJJrgarine : shoftening and sugar supply a large
amount of kilocalories. Nuts,
peanut butter and dried fruits
also provide many kilocalories
but do provide essential nutrien-

ts. Traditional desserts are listed

with suggested low-calorie sul&gt;stitutes as follows: apple pte ":...
baked apples : butterscotch pie -

listed in order:

baked custard made with nonfat

Children, 1-3, 29, 13110; ~ . 44 ,
17110; 7-10,62,24110.
Males, 11-14, 99, 27110: 15-18. 145.
28110; 19-22, 154, 2900: 2.1-50. 15~ ..

dry milk; ice ereari1 sundae - ice
uulk: cake wtlh frosting - angel
food cake with fresh fruit : ur fruit
cobbler - fruit salad.

Birthday noted by Miss Davis

A world day of prayer service led
by Mrs . Janice Pullins highlighted
the recent meeting of the Alfred
United Methodist Women beld at the
home of Mrs. Nellie Parker.
There were scripture readings on

prayer from Matthew, ·John and
Hebrews g1ven by Mrs. Thelma Henderson1 Mrs. Nina Robinson, Mrs.
Gertrude Robinson and · Mrs .
Parker. All members took part in
reading a conunentary on the Lord's
Prayer and the seven steps to prayer
power. It was noted that prayer in an
attitude and should start with
praise. Mrs. Pullins closed with a
moment or silent prayer and the
repeating of the Lord's Prayer in unsion. An offering was taken for the

Mr. Parker surprised

Surprise dinner held
Mrs. Edward Chevalier of Heedsville was honored recently by her
children and their fainilies with a
surprise birthday dinner at her
home. Those enjoying the dinner
were Mr. and Mrs. Guy Spencer of
Tuppers Plains; Mr . and Mrs.
Lowell Chevalier, Scott. Canie and
Jeff, loca!; Mr. and Mrs. Zenith
Chevalier, Allan and Eric uf Belpre
Rd.: Garrel Chevalier of Mansfield;
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Reed, Brenda.
Lea, Crystal, Roy Lee, and Rebecca
of Tuppers Plains; Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Spencer. Bryan and Karen
and Mrs. Roger dean I Spencer and
Chris, all of Tuppers Plains.
Mrs . Chevaher was also honored
for her birthday by her chi ldren and
families attending Sunday Sehoul at
the Reedsville United Methodist
Church, of which she is a member .

Stacy Talisha Davis. daughter

Davis .

carried uut for tile porty as well
Richard· and J udy Redman ,
Cl::~ril'e Carson and Jennifer
Jean. Mr. and Mrs. Bob Buck and
daughters . Jennie and Julie,
Trenton Davb, Mr. and Mrs.

Marvin Kcebaugh .
Sending gifl" were I.evanchia
Cain. Bertha Randolph, Clara
Redman. Clance Jean Randolph,
Clarence Davis . Snaron
Roseberry, Scott and Jeff.
HONORED - Patty Dyer has

Museum.

•

presented a film on the history of
Mei~s Count y. A recipe auction was

held-following the meeting . The next
meeting will be held on April 7 at the
home of karen Stanley ..

Other ufficers elected were
Charlotte Hanning, vice president ;

Men's group to meet

Iria Payne, recording .secretary :
Maurisha · Nelson , treasurer ;

cake, ice cream and punch were ser-

ved by Mrs . Iva Powell, Mrs. Leona
Karr and Mrs. Ann Mash after
prayer by Mrs. Gilmore. Mrs. Katie
Parker was a guest. Also attending
was Ruby Frick.

Men of the Chester Umted
Methodist Church will hold an uvster
.soup supper Saturday from 5 10 8
p.m. at the church. Proceeds w1ll gu
to paint the exteriur of the chun.: h.
Announced at the meeting wa!'i the
Besides oyster soup, chili, hot dogs,
stale convention to be held June 12- ' sloppy joes and homemade pies wiU
14 in Toledo. Mrs . Na ncy Reed be availabl e.

ANNOUNCING
THE OPENING OF

THE OFFICES OF

STORY &amp; STORY
AnORNEYS AT LAW
Steven L. Story and Karen H. Story
,236 W. 2nd, Pomeroy , Oh .
(Formerl_y Meigs Gen. Hospital)
Office Ph. 992-6624
Home Ph. 992 -3573

*Garden Seed
*Wheelbarrows
*Rakes

uPcomjng edition of Amerka's

Mr. and Mrs . Wayne Beal had as
'recent visitors Mr. and Mrs. Kirk
Chevalier and Jessica, Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Young, Wesley and Yvette.
The Carleton Sunday School has
an attendance of 59. Following Sunday School dedication services were
held for the infant daughter of John
and Anita Dean, Sarah Beth Dean,
who is four and one-half months old.

She was dedicated to the Lord with
the minister, Gary King. perfonnins
the service.
Steve Smith, who for a long period
of time, has·been a patient at Holzer
Medical Center, returned to his
home here recently and W8ll
welcomed by family and friends and
yellow ribbons and posters enroute
along the way to his home. Welcome
home wishes are extended to Steve.
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Bailey had as
recent visitors Mr . and Mrs. Roger
Young, Wesley and Yvette.

'

aov.rt--.:1 11.-ns I~ 18QUifetl 10 0.
,..,.., • .,...,. tor .... 1n N&lt;:n ll:tO!Je' Sto'• •• ct~Pt ..
QCCIIcllo 1'-=-:1 t\ " - ad tt M lXI 1\.111 0\Jt o1 an ~Md

t~

fttm, Wll

IMII off•

~ your cl"'o.ce of • c ~abll 11.-n

wt'lln ,..,....., r.ttect•ng thcl loi!Tijl "''"''n~ ()I a ,~nct.-:k
WhiCh IMII.,..bUit you to pun:,.._ thtl «1~-'lltlkl 1tetn •' '""
tdllttt_,
IMthtr~ XI ot¥"1

£VU1DAI LIW
~

Piano asked by grange

TOTAL SATISFACTION GUARANTEE

E"'*VVhing you OUy II K Ul9fl' '' 1;1~1ntMCJ .101 vOur to1,iit
..t.,tc11011 ' 9'~ ot rT\Int..fa..:lultr tt vou 111 not Nt!l
fled. Kr091' .....,. '~• VOu' ifem .¥ot~ ttle a.me blind Of •

The Hemlock Grove Grange is in
need of a piano . The grange's plcmo
was destroyed in a fire last fall .
Anyone with a piano to donate to the
grange is asked o telephone )lob
Reed, 992-7207.

oomplfli:J6t l;wenQ Of refund

..- ·. ·. -.· - --

I

... ,_

•

'-.:I• '

I

Outstanding Names and Faces.
Selection identifies this student
as a member of a prestigious

group comprised of less than one
perrent of all students nation-wide.

Rel·ognltion

a

in

the

publicalion Is nalional distinction \)estowc-d exclusively upon
those students who have satisfied

A c-ontribution to the classroom
book, fund drive was made when the
Racine PTO met at the school recently. It was noted that the drive to

academics.

athletics,

•

H.t~' / _!.-1H ..J ·

~

.,. •

(

Ot C.h t l

8ontlus Beef
Rib lye
Steak

MACARONI I CHUSE

Avondale
•
7 ' • •01 .
Dmner .. .. ••• ·

't'O\JI j)uiCt\llill p11C.II

CO,YIIGHf l.tll · fHI MIOGU CO lllMS AND ,-litES
GOOD IUNOAoY MAICH 22 THttU SAlUIDAY MUCH 11

'1\

JUliN POM£il0Y AND GAl

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

Llf'OII~!oo!OWE!oo

WI RUUIJI THI l10t1J 10 liMIT QUANfiTilS
SOlD TO OIAUI$

14· 17 -LB . AVG. WHOLE
NONE

BAMBOO LEAF RAKES

Sellli-Boneless
Smoked Ham .. lb .

I l 01
Con

IN THE I'IECE KROGER

Country Club
Canned Ham

as

•5.69

SAVE

'1"m

99

-lb.

I'll

Meat lologna ........ . lb.
U . ~.D . A .

!R.t•• Ra £ljt! &amp; Te~o RaW)

99

INSPECTED , 5--7-LB . AVG .

FROZEN

Baking Hens .. ..... .. lb.

49

curricular adivities or t'om-

munity service. A 1979 graduate
of Meigs High School, Patty is a

For A !I Occasions

sopholilort' at Ohio State University where she is majoring

CAROUSEL CONFECTIONERY

agriculture education and
agronomy. She is a daughter ul
Mrs. Maxine Dyer. Route 1. Ridwell.

Ph . 992 -6342
317N . 2nd
Middleport

~
~

-1~

_.. .

$

C

PO~Afl I"

led
Cream

HOLLY FARMS . U.5.D.A. GRADE A FRYINGggc

Chicken Thighs ..... . lb.

AOIONOAI( C UI

ggc
Kroger's Pro Beef Patty Mix"
A HltN O Of llHt I ot't 0 WAT£U I[A!IIIU O

'"

Genuine Ground Chuck

'" SJ

OLD FASHION LOAF ••••••l:-.$1.97

liMIT 4 'LIASI

Mix

79
! Big K
1 Beverages
1

1•

SLICED BACON •••••••••••
HAM SALAD ••••••••••••l:·. s1.39
D~RV

BROWN 'N' SERVE

Lb.

89~

sao

'1.19

. I lOLA CIS MILK '

New

e&amp;LLIPOLII

RADISHES ....... 2

Pkg.

Spotlight . 3-~599.
Bean Coffee sag ·

FROZEN
16 oz. H1gh lmer

PERCH FILETS •••••••••• :~g•.s1.99
200 Count
WHITE CLOUD TISSUES •••B:: •• 89'

FROZEN CONCENTRATE

Listerine

10' 2oz . Campbells

TABLETS

CHICKEN NOODLE SOUP ••• 2/694

Dristan

1

l~~:
J2·0l.$229

Birds Eye Awake
MOUTHWASH

2 $}

Btl.

LIGHT TUNA •• ~ ••••••• •c::. Sl.39
I

a oz. High Point

INSTANT COFFEE ••• •••••••
16 oz. Smucker Sweet

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Jar

PICKLE SPEARS •• • • • •••• • • •
16 oz. Luckv Leaf

Cans

APPLESAUCE •••••••••••• 2 /97'
14 oz. Fi~eside

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Pk9-

fiG BARS·········· ··•· • •••
Gallons of Rich-n-Ready

ORANGE

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Pear
AVAILAILEONLYIN
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STORES WITH

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WI~HBONE

Fried
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D~LI

•••

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4

HillCREST

Maraschino
Cherries ';:~

$ 49

AVONDAlE

Mandarin
Oranges .

PULLED STYLE PIT COOKED

Kroger

Po,rk. BBQ .. .. ..... ...

Pak

Mustard

IN THE \HELL . FRESH

Roasted Peanuts

$}19

lb .

Cole Slaw ..
$}59
.
h
p•
8-lnch
PeaC le .... .... . Pie

99
(
:
Sandwich Rolls ..-~~: .

J]

01

•••

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B,ans

16 ·01 .

Con

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FRESH lAKED

FRESH lAKED

11 ·01
Can

KROGU

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. 8-lb $199
raae ru1t

APPLES

Halves

' lb

DELl DEPTS .

Barrelhead
Root Beer

8$

•to 1)1
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HOT FOODS
A VAILAILE 11om
TIL 7pm

MARSH SEEDLESS

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Pineapple
Juice

AIJONOAU

Bag ·

6' 2 oz. StarK ist

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mallows
PINT RETURNABLE BOTTLE~
ORANGE CRUSH OR

3S'

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CABBAGE ·.. ·•· ...... ··· 19'

CHEESE

WEICHT WATCHERS IMITATION

Ctn.

s lb. Pink or Whit e

$ 19

· -Gal
(ln .

Ice Cream .
•
· 16-oz .
Margar1ne .... .. ...·.. .. .. Pkg .

Paper

Creme .

Kroger
CQttage Cheese

I

FO UNTAIN SQUARE OR KROCER
N A !URAl flAVOR

PRODUCE
GRAPEFRUIT

Angel Food
1
Cake
:;~·

Marshmallow
1

2
$1
09
Kroger Rolls ......... ~~-;::

Homemade

11.u
Con

COUNflY O VEN

GOlD CltUT

White
Bread ....... .

SALAD DRESSING •••••••••• '1.79

Pomeroy, Ohio

' uuc_. ~

Brownie

29e
33c

KROCER

Jar

HARTLEY SHOES, INC.

( on

Coconut

32 oz . Krall Miracle Whip

* Fertilizer

"'',

Ill Ci t

Flake

CAR ROTS .... -.. -.... ··· -29'

*Shovels
*Hoes

Beans

~· $} 89
99
. $}

Genuine Ground Round

16 _01. Cello Palo:

A p e rr ec r Sa ru raay shoe whe ther you re w a )ung
your c ar runnmg a round
!o wn or 1usf relax1n g
a ro und fh e house. fhese
Hush Pupp1es - c asuals w111
111 In w1 lh wha tever you re
d01 ng A very "com foilable
cbmpa nton At o v.ery
compaf1ble pr 1ce

$}

Extra Lean Ground Beef .

49

Green

'"

-, ~,'1 $}19

'

1

Ohio Colby Longhorn

Hush
STORE HOURS: 9-5 Daily
Puppies·
FRIDAYS TILL 8:00 PM
on the run

lb

•••

AI\

$379

I O·o&lt; .

79c

5

Avondale
Flour

1

~ARGARINE
VISA'

Instant
Coffee .. ..

19

Beef Steak

1 lb. Blue Bonnet Quarters

,.

n1ddiP ot Upper Block

Any Size Pkg.
Ground Beef

f:

~-.....

lb .

Decorated Cakes

KROGER

V(GtiA8 1fPIIOTEIN

French City

ex tra

~llCI

~

Jar

MASON, W. VA.

home of Mr. and Mrs. Gary King at
New Haven.

Dean, Mr.. and Mrs. Garold Gilkey
and Amber of Athens ; Miss Juanita
Terrell of Athens and Jeremy,
James and Sarah Beth Dean.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles King were in
Chancey recently due to the death of
her father.
Spending the weekend with Mr .
and Mrs. Ralph Carr were Mr. and
Mrs . Rodney Carl and son.
Mrs. Elizabeth Murray who was a
patient at Veterans Memorial
Hospital where she underwent
major surgery is recovering at the

PTO contributes to ·
classroom book fun l:l

\

PICKENS HARDWARE

bet\,. Ol

bt.-en chosen for inclusion in the

SPRING GARDENING
BULK

Mr . and Mrs. John W. Dean en·
tertained with a birthday dinner for
their son, James'.third birthday and
for his grandmother's, Mrs . Kenneth
Markins' birthday on Sunday recently. Those attending were Mr. and
Mrs. Kenneth Markins, Racine ; Mr.
and Mrs. Bruce Ried, Charles and
Robert of Shade; Mr. and Mrs .
Robert Ried, David and Rodney,
Pataskala, Ohio; Mrs. Virginia
Srnilh and Joshua of Virginia; Mrs.
Ruth- Ann Spaun and Shannon of
Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. John A.

ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY

Bandages for missions were
pocked when the Laurel Cliff
24"· McGuire Bamboo
18" McGuire Bamboo
Women's Missionary Fellowship InLAWN RAKE
LAWN RAKE ,
ternational met at the Laurel Cliff
Reg. S7 .69
Reg . S6.29
Free Methodist Church Thursday.
World Day of Prayer ·was obNOW
NOW
served in the work and study
meeting with the meditation being
on "What Happens When Women
Pray." Next meeting will be on
'' Feel fr ee to use our convenient 2nd St . Entrance' '
April 14 at which time a nominating
124 w . Mam
Ph. 992-2848
Pumero~. Oh.
corrumttee will be elected. The birthday of Mrs. Doris Shook was ol&gt;- ~jiiiiiiiiiiiiiilii
served with a gift and card shower. I
Mrs . Evelyn .Young had prayer. '
others attending were Mrs. Jean
Wright, Mrs. AtUl Mash, Mrs. Iva
Powell, Mrs . Bertha Parker. Mrs.
Sharon Folmer. Mrs. Brenda
Haggy, Mrs. Janice Haggy, and
Mrs. Shirley Meadows.

seleet criteria o£ ext·ellent·e in

Carolyn Satterfield, corresponding
secretary ; Su ~an Baer, city council
1·epresentalive. Mrs. Evelyn Knight
will continue tu serve as sponsor of
the chapter.

'

MOORE'S AMERICAN HARDWARE

as in tile &lt;.:ake. Attending were

Carolyn Grueser ·wa s eleded
president of the Xi Ganuna Mu
Chapter of Beta Sigma Pi Sorority at
a recent meeting held at the Meigs

'

Mrs. Jessie Carr was recently
honored on her 89th birthday at the
home of her sister, Mrs. Neva King.
Here to help her celebrate were
Ralph Carr of VIrginia Beach, Va .,
Mrs. Marie Williams of Portsmouth
and Mr. and Mrs. Paul Carr of Kent,
Ohio.

Mr . and Mrs. John Dean received
word recently of the death of his
aunt, Mrs. John {Winnie) RawUngs
who lived at Jacksonville, Fla.
Mrs. Hazel Arnold accompanied
Mrs. Charles Mash to Columbus to
attend funeral services for her
brother recently .
Recent guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Donald Yoho were Mr. and Mrs. Bil(
Yoho, New Haven, W. Va., Mr. and
Mrs. Gene Lake of Mason, W. Va.
and Mrs. Jim Clifford and family,
local.

The Daily Sentinei-Page-7

Middleport, Ohio

•

'4.29

was

C. Grueser named president

A surprise party in observance of
the birthday of Mrs. Bertha Parker,
longtime member of the Laurel Cliff
Better Health Club·was held at Thursday_night's meeting of the club at
U1e Parker home.
Prayer by Mrs. Shook opened tbe
meeting and readings included
"Hearl Attacks" by Mrs. Shook;
"After the Winter, God Sends
Spring" by Mrs. Donna Gilmore;
and " Maturity Does Strange
Things" by Polly Eichinger; with
Mrs. Della Curtis singing "Glory,
Glory. Glory" . Refreshments of

Group packs bandages

Route 3, Pomeroy. was honored
recenlly w1lh a pari)' in
celebration of her third birthday.
Also observed was the birthday of
her grandmother. Mrs. Jean
the111~

UMW banner which will be placed in
the church.
Mrs. Robinson had the prayer
calendar and chose Susan Hansen,
Uruguay . The UMW signed a birthday card for her. Mrs. Parker
read a missionary account of an
English-speaking church in Argentina.
Next meeting will be April 21 with
a program on Easter enti.tled "Love
Made Visible."
Homemade ice cream, cookies
and strawberries were served by the
'
hostess lo those named and Annie
Thompson. Clara Follrod, Osie Ma~
Supper set Saturday
Follrod, and Janet Moore, and a
g uest Gertrude Robinson, who had
A spaghetti supper will be held at
'
' the Rutland Elementary School
the blessing.
beginning at 5 p.m. Saturllay with
proceeds to go to the Meigs Local
School District Vocal Choir.
Tickets are $2.50 for adults and
secure up-t!Hlate books has been ex- $l\5tl for children under 12 and may
tended to March 31.
~- of the
be purchased from memu.,rs
The PTO also voted to make a choir or at the Rutland Department
donation tu each teacher for Stor~. Persons interested in helping
classroom supplies. The program are asked to call992-2158.
was presented by the elementary ~----------­
band students. At the April 20
meeting dance students of Mrs.
Shirley Carpenter will present the
program.
.
A carnival has been scheduled for
April 4 at the school, it was announced.

Pomeroy

25, 1981

Area happenings reported _ _ _ _ _ __

uf Mr. and Mrs. JasoA Davis.

A To111 and Jerry

World Day of Prayer Fund.
Group singing -of "Sweet Hour of
Prayer" and a reading "The Larger
Prayer" by Edna Cheney opened the
meeting. Eleven sick calls were
reported. Mrs. Pullins reported that
flowers had been sent to Martha
Elliot, Ada Grace Windland, and
Ruth Brooks, all ill. Get-well cards
were signed for Mrs. Brooks and
Mrs. Windland, a birthday card for
Mrs. Helen Woode, and a sympathy
card for Florence Ann Spencer.
Mrs. Pullins and Mrs. Robinson
reported on the church meeting held
at The Plains recent!~.
Vanilla and greetings cards will be
ordered for sale by the UMW. Mrs.
Pullins displayed the new Alfred

TIWRSDAY
PRECEPTOR BETA BETA
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority, will meet at 7:45 p.m.
Thursday in the Riverboat Room
of the Diamond Savings and-Loan
Co.
FRIDAY
MARY SHRINE 37, Order of
the White Shrine of Jersualem,
will have a practice for installation Friday at 7:30p.m. at
the Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
The Shrine will hold a rununase
and bake sale April2 and ~-

~~arch

Kingsbury
News Notes

f Social Caletuklr f

Alfred U.i'..1W holds prayer seroices

Food for Thought

.Wednesday.
.

Wednesday, March 25, lfll

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

OA'f'TIMl

Comfort
Diapers

6-0· Ct
Pkg.

"ROGEIIf

Worcestershire
1· ·0 1
Sa uce
'''
UOGU

Stea~

Sauce
KROCU

Oy•ter
Crack en

...

12

(II

ltG VAlUE

Vanille

Waf•rs ..

ll·oa.
. lot

KIOCU

Tamato
Paste

~n~~ Rings '.::~ 59 C
II.IOGll QUAITUS

ComOil•

69 C

Hb .

Margartne ... ""•

I
l
'

�ort, Ohio

Pomero

Pa e-8-The Daily Sentinel

Ohi

Wednesda , Ma.r ch 25 1981

Maso~

Extension Homemakers I Babiesarrive I Malaysilln students guests
. dt.SCUS.s home be
· autifitcatz.on
of Carla Shuler Friday
MASON - The Mason Extension
Homemakers discussed making
items to beautify the home, as well
as craft items to make for the Mason
County Homemakers booth, Mason
County Arts and Crafts . Fair
scheduled for May 15, 16 and 17 at
national Guard Annory, when the
homemakers met Tuesday at the
home of Mrs. Lawrence Belcher.
Mrs. Cecil Smith was c&lt;&gt;-hostess.
Mrs. Lester (Laura ) Johnson
presented the devotionals Matthew
23:36-40 verses and read a poem Pippa Passes: Morning by Robert
Browning.
The lesson leader, Mrs: Johnson
spoke on "Motivation for Wellness ."
She said in part, prevention is the
best medicine. We can become an
"activated" patient by taking an ac·
live role in your own health care as a
member of the "team." That is you, as well as the physical or health
care professional. We don't need a
doctor to tell us the effects of
smoking on your lungs, or the effect
of alcohol on your liver, or that obese
persons have more health problelllS

than those within their nonnal
we1ght ranges. Cigaretes, alcohol,
drugs, fat, inactivity and accidents
each represent a form ' of suicide,
literally.
Adopt healthy eating practices use less salt, it has been suggested
that we limit the amount of salt to
one and one-half teaspoons per day ,
use less , animal fat, fewer total
calories. Eat slowly and avoid
seeonds. Be motivated to achieve a
high level of wellnessr The lesson
was prepared by Raymond Alvarez,
Extension Special ist Health
Education.
The presrdent of the club, Mrs.
LBr1\lon Smith, reminde&lt;j the group
o( Spring Conferences at Jackson's
Mill April 27·29 and another Aprii29May 1. She also reminded the ladies
of a workshop at the Courthouse ah·

nex.
The dinner meeting was opened
with prayer by Mrs. Olive Watkins .
After a spaghetti dinner the group
went to the living r.oom where a
business meeting was held .
Following the Pledge of Allegiance

to our Flag and devotionals, the
treasury report was given by Mrs .
Joyce Carson, and secretary report
by Mrs. Ramona Sydenstricker.
during the absence of Clara
Williams.
Committee reports were given by
Mrs. Cecil Smith on Safety, and
Citizenship by Mrs. Landon Smith.
· The president asked for in·
formation as to where the group
would like to go on a tour during
April.
. The conunittee in 1charge of the
Mother and Daughter Banquet will
give more infonnation in regards to
plans at the April meeting.
Mrs. Joyce Carson will be hostess
at the next meeting.
Attending were a guest, Mrs.
Gloria Chapman, a new member,

Mrs. Olive Watkins, Mrs. Matilda
Noble, · Mrs. Cecil Smith, Mrs.
Laurene Lewis, Mrs. Joyce Carson,
Mrs. Ramona Sydenstricker, Mrs .
Lawrence (Lea ) Belcher, Mrs . Lan·
don Smith, Mrs. Lester Johnson,
Mrs. Alma Marshall ·and Mrs.
Russell Capehart.

Mitzi Saltzman honoree of shower
Mitzi Saltzma)l, wife of the
assistant ministei'-Q(tl;e Middleport
Church of Christ . .::'!&gt;'s honored
Friday evening wfffi a layette
shower at the church hosted by the
Fellowship Class.
A pink and blue colOr scheme was
carried out in the decorations. with
baby buggie replica cakes being served with punch, nuts and mints. •
Table decorations were by Cathy
Cooper. Garnes were played with
prizes going to Dorothy Roach and
Mrs. Stewart, with Debbie Honaker
winning the door prize.

Asurprise guest at the shower was Farie Cole. Dorothy Baker, Delcie
Mrs. Saltzman's mother, Mrs. Betty Forth, Margaret Butcher, Jeannette
Van Horn of Pittsburgh, Pa. Others Thomas, Clarice Erwin, Grace
attending were Debbie Gerlach and
Hawley, Beulah Roush. Terry Fox ,
Tara, Jeannie Grate, Darci Wolfe, Chris Fry, Frances Roush. Dayton
Cathy Erwin and Amy , Flo
McEir·oy, L . D. Hartinger. Marge
Strickland. Nettie Boyer, Beckie .chapman, Martha Fry, and
Loving, Ellen Johnson . Dorothy
Stephanie See.
Roach, Mary Batley, Sharon
Sending gifts were Mabel
Stewart, Donna Glaze, Mary Martin , Walburn , Besste Ashley, Mabel
Ruth Gosney. Debbie Honaker, . Hysell. the Ca rsey family, Sandy
Dinah Stewart , Cindy and Jonathan, Gibbs. Betty McKinley, Eleanor
Evelyn Murray, Beatrice Stewart, ' Lohse. Kathryn Evans. and Ida
Jane Hess, Clyda Allensworth.
Childs. The Fellowship Class als,o
Mildred Hawley, Edna Evans,
presented a money tree to Mrs. Salt·

zman.

Youth attend rally
Youth of the First Southern Baptist Church recently attended a rally
of the Scioto Valley Baptist
Association held at the Good News
Baptist Church at Gallipolis.
The Rev. Robert Colvin. pastor uf
the host church, directed the choir of
10 young people in a presentation of
the Christian musical" Alleluia" for
the program. The t'rench City Baptist Church of Gallipolis took the attendance plaque with 30 youth
representing that church .

After the program, a time of
fellowship was held with refresh·
ments being served in the fellowship
hall. Approximately 100 attended
the meeting.
Going from the
Pomeroy Church were the Rev . and
Mrs. W1lliam Newman, Mr. and
Mrs. Sonny McClure, Donna Spencer, Brenda N·ewma n, Li sa
Newman. Jennifer Newman, Karen
Spencer. Bill McClure, Clinton Tur·
ner, Demse Turner, and Channelle
Turner.

Kiteflyer wins contest
Gerald Spencer was presented a .
new Bible as winner of a kite flying
contest held by the Sunday school
youth class of the First Southern
Baptist Church at the Sonny Me·
Clure farm Sunday afternoon. .
Hot dogs and cakes, one inscribed
"Fly a Kite for Jesus'' sent by Pam
Allen, and the other brought by Bill
and Gary Foley , were served to the

group. Attending were the Rev. and
Mrs. William ,Newman and Mr. and
Mrs. Sonny McClure, Lisa , Jennifer
and Brenda Newman, Jeannie McClure, Wesley McClure. Lisa Allen,
Chris Alen, Gerald Spencer. Julia
Spencer, Karen Spencer, Sam Am·
burgy, Scott Stout, Robin Me·
Daniels, and Bill and Gary Foley.

Wax in shag rug
•'

go over area with a warm iron. As
the towels absorb the wax, replace
with clean ones until no more ar:r

pears. Never touch the rug with the
iron. When the wax is gone. sponge
with alcohol or u nun-flammabl e
dry-cleaning flUid to remove the
stains. - POLLY
DEAR POLLY - I have a way tu
catch a " smart" muu~e - une who
. ea:ts the bait off a trap without get·
ling caught. Take a peanut in the
shell , poke a hole in one end and tape
it to the trap. After unsuccessfully
trying cheese, peanut butter, bacon
grease, etc., this is the way l ca ught
mine.- MRS. P. H.
DEAR POLl. Y - I would i1kc tu
tell the reader who has mice 111 Iter
vacation c~:~Uin th&lt;:~t th~ etn ~ " l,;i , .,

Get Your Car
In Shape For

Spring
At

BIG BEND

SERVICE CENTER
Racine, Oh.

992· 2894

Man·h tti. 1~1

Thts L'ul lllll/1! ~~ar. yuu a rr hhl) lu mdkL'"
Lli&lt;I JUr dLan~t· 111 lhc dtrt..,.·tum \Jf )uur hfc Tlw
ll.nuwlt"ll~t' }UU\•c alrc;nb Cll'\jiJlfl"\1 will b.: &lt;IP"

pi iL"ll 1tJ tww .areas wltcrr It wtl l bt.- u~U murc
prudul'llvt·l~ an1t tJn n!( ruu rr~.:uglllt\\ln
ARIF:.."\ tMart·h H-April 191 Be U!L'lfu l tlll.i1n
&lt;truund pt'I.Lplr ~ uu'rc uut IIJII fum! uf to bt:~111 wtth
til" t&gt;\St'

}UU Il l&lt;!)

CXL'USI.'

~y ur dti :o.umdhill~ t.h ffll'Ult

rtml UUl lllUTt' uf \tohat \u~:o.il hrtHI fur

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fur '""d"''
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lb tru.(Oruph . 8 1..1 :&lt; ~89 . RculLu f th Statt'-111. N Y
I00 19 Bt sun: tu SJK't'lry bu1h do t ~
TAURLS tApril ZO.May tOi Ew u thuu~h 1t
11\lif llllt l~· t'i:ISY fur )UU \I) ' ft:.').'l up h i )U ti(
11 \J~l&lt;IKes tucla y, I I Will pru\·e WI ~!" Ill du .,u ltlltll

ttlblamt~tltcmtmlncmls.

Polly's Pointers

By.Polly Cramer
Special correspondent
DEAR POLLY - How can I gel
candle wax out of a shag rug? Any
hints will
be
greatly
ap·
pr ec iated .
DAVID
DEAR DAVID
- It isn 't easy.
Scrape off all the
excess waJI with a
dull knife. If any
particles of wax
(;ramer
remain, cover w1th paper towels and

ASTRO
GRAPH

her prublem is plain old moth balls.
If she can throw them under the
liuusc. the smell will nut be as bad.
I keep mice out of a closet that
uJl&lt;:ns into-my garage by using moth
balls. I find they repel! must animals
and I learned about them from uur
county agent when I had a skunk under 0:1 huu~e I once lived in. I also tmce had a marvelous pecan tree that

drew rats but the moth balls drove
thern away. Fr,ankly, I think they
work better un animals !han un
moths. I suggest that the r.eader
scatters them under her cabin and
near all the openings where she
thinks mice might get in. The
weather seerns to have a lot to du
with the evaporation of mothballs.
bull find they usually last about six
months. surnctunes even nine months or longer. - LUCILLE
DEAR POLLY - l keep a pair uf
jersey work gloves iri the car tu put
un wht!n I pwnp my own ga~ in a
self·serve station . No more gas

spilled on my guod gloves . COLLEEN

GEMINI 1Ma)' lt-Junt&gt; tot l'r &gt; mtlt() ~c t tn·
\' tJ I V ~ 111 pt&gt;t•r !)ltltltt'S tlXIay Hega n.Jh~s.s uf
whtch pal }llU stdt' wttll , you'r"' l tkel) tu lJiH:k the

wru1111 r: amhd-~t te
CANfER tJun1• !!-July t21 Pedl&lt;tfl.\ )uur wa)

uf llulllK thinK~ ts bt:ono•r thHn tha t uf lilt' 1,)11~ . but
UliS IS not the tla r l tl Lt•St 11 Rllt' tht' bullet ami

fulh,..,' tll'd~rs

1£0 tJuly Z3-Aug . 221 Dun '! 1\itlllhlt• t'\'1!11
small amuun~ uf utlllle~· tod:J} un ~uuautms ur
that &lt;lrt'IIUI uf yuur flt'Jd Tht' udds are

\' ~!11Urt!S

~-

\ ' IH.(f.4J tAug . ZJ..St'pt_'!21 tidurt' uutklllt( Hll)
ltl&lt;t t l·uuM afft't'l tht&gt;
household, be sure uf )UUr m&lt;~te · s dppruvitl At··
hll!:l&lt;~lonc has 1ts m1ks.
UHRA 1St-pl. 2J.Oco1. 2J1 Thi~ lS tJIIt' uf thoSt'
~)S u11 wh11·h. nu matter huw hard you try w
Jllease. you may full short ''' the marK F. x~t.·t no
])Olt:; un the back
SCORPIO t(kt. U- No\ . Z'.l1 Avotd tlldl vldiJltls
tuday whu twvt' trouble :J IIt ~ m ~- u~ lhetr fa ir
~ /141re wh en the dlet· k IS ~l'l'St' llh.'tl Fr~Jn&lt;tdt!rs
w1ll peeve yuu nture th;~ n usual .
SAG ITTARIUS tNtw. 23-l)l'J' . 211 ~· rtt'nds
~uilll) ' 111 l:lt't.'llrtl w1t h yuu r wu) of d u111~ t hi u ~s
in~ht IHJ\l&gt;c tuo.l col-(cr \11 fulltJw vuur le01d tutlay

Hl&lt;tJOr changes todd)

fktn~&lt;: pushy wun'l help

;o, ]l ~.: k

:sot iC:SIIIl:Hl dlll':'!li'\ lodk );JU IIIII!

~pcntllll~

111t1rc f,w 1itha11 )uu mkndt'l.l 11 1

remained overnight at the Morrla,
home.

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

@

AUTHORIZED CATALOG

SALES MERCHANT
A~ EA~ Y

At.JD lurA
WA~RiCI&lt;.
PAU5'f"FOR
GII:UB O o..J

&amp;o30

AT THIS.-~

THEIR WAY
OUT OF
HEADLe;;

VALLEY...

SH£ Fl&lt;.iC1EI\S !iARI!UCKS
~It L 61VE IT 10 HE I\ !

~·~--

~EREH'T ~ARBUCKS'

ALlEY OOP
~UI' ll NL~ (

,...IUC~

HOGWASH

IT'S S II LL A MYS TERY

\ TI) f\.IE W HY 'J l)U R E(.)ll i" E
'-.._
f'\ l'r
FS

).)

.1

irelundab l el

tor

Corbin Sewing Center
200 N. Mdm
Corbtn, Kv . 40701

Beegle, Racine.

BoSS 1l l CBN UPDATE NEWS
9 o00 il) 0 (11 OIFF 'RENT STROKES
Drummond and h1s lUSter Soph•a

'i'HUJlSDAV
EVANGE UNE CHAPTER 172
OES, annual inspection, Thursday''
7.•
· ''0 p.rr1.

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST
Office Hours by Appointment Only

(614)-992-2104

J

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1

II

Answer here[

I
I

I

Now arrange tt1e cirded leners to
form the surpr rs e answer, as sug gested by the above cartoon

xI xI 1 I I 11
(Answers tomorrow )

v es te rd~y s .I Jumbr es EXPEL GR IEF
1

BOILED

PARODY

E•pected to ma1ntam a high standa rd -

Answer

A FLAGPOLE
Jumbll! Book No. 15: containing 110 puutes, Is a11allabte lor $1 .75 postpaid
from Jumble, cJo ~his newspaper, Bo• 34, Norwood , N.J. 07648. Include your
mtm!). address. z1p code and make checks payable Jo Newspaperbooks.

BRIDGE
Sloppy player lucks out
By

Oswald Jacuby1

.:~.nd

Alan Sontag

l - ~5 -81

NURTH

.A !H
' A Ill li
. AQ .IH

The gods of chanCe tha l are
supposed to rule bridge mus t
have been in a whimsical
mood when they constructed

+o 5:&lt;

today ·s hand .
South managed to make
fou r ht·ttrbi 1n "Pitt: t',j 1111 ,..,
plLLytng the h;JntJ lit • w•in tht ·
ftrst (rt('k Wtlh dU!IHIJ V\ dl'l'
of spa dt•s. drt!w lrumP~ w1th
twu leads and lt;d the 10 of

WESl'
•Kr.~ .J 7tit

+I0 5J

EAST

" '

"82

+A Q 1\1

+ .Ia 71

. 751

tKoH

SOl'Til

+R

"K~ J970

for i:tn unsun:ess ful
hnesSl' East touk hrs kmg and
led bac k the four uf clubs.

diamonds

tIll !I

+K 9 2

South pl •y•d hiS nine and the

Vulnt-rable : l:!:as i -Wesl

best West &lt;"ould do was to ta ke
two qu tl·k club tncks. And as
Wt' a ll kno w . One plus tw o eq uals bu t three.
Ea&lt;1 would have bea1cn th e
contracl 1f he had led his Jack
of c:lubs. That would have giv en West three club tri ch for a
total of lour and a set. ·

Dea ler South
Wt'S I

{\rjurlh

1-::asl

:\•

~·

Pa=-~

I' a:-:-.

Opcnrng

tead .•

South

3"

Pass

K

How did South misplay the
hand'! He couldn't · shift the
act! uf dubs and king of dia mond s &lt;.~round . but he could
duck the first spade and then
d1scard a dtamond on the a('e
latt&gt;r Now he could draw
trumps. play ;u·e- q~:~een &lt;? f dia monds for tt rufhng hnesse
agetinst East and actually
make .his contra&lt;·t plus an
overt rack .

Nule thai th1s line of play
\o\'ould produce game if West

held the king of diamonds •
instead of East. West would
get Lo score with his king, but

lhe best he could do witn his

ace or clubs would be to cash

il before South got to discard
c lubs on dummy ' s last
diamonds .

mhertt a pnme PlfCB of land m Ha r ·
lem h om a longtbst an cestor . bu t

the1r plan to dedicate lito a cultural
ce nle1 m hts name co uld spel l diS ·
as rer 11 the trulh oltheir ancestor ' s
I tie gets out

CHAPMAN SHOES

.

Would LJOU lihe a nice

Well' My
little
poher pal'

!'Next To Elberfelds In Pomer-"
~
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shop the bargains

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do c ume ntary

111)6) dlana01a11 a Ros ~ 1s ro1nedby
glJests M1 chael Ja cks on, the Jol ·
trey B a ll e! Outn c y Jones , and
specta l guest Larry Hagman (60

m1ns .)
IOo15 I $) TBS EVENING NEWS
10o28 , ) : CBNUPDATE NEWS
10:30 il l MAXMORRrS
14 ) DYNASTY : UCLA BASKET·

Sentinel Ads

I::IALL fh1s HBO e• c tus•ve lealures

HOWDY,
MlZ TUTTLE

/

I

CALL TODAY FOR HOME DELIVERY

992-2156

THERE'S ACARRIER NEAR YOU! .

t 3) 700CLUB
• 4] MOVIE · (NO INFORMATION
AVAILABLE) " Saturn 3"
,·1' N.I.T. COLLEGE BASKET•
BALL CHAMPIONSHIPS
,91 TIJ FABULOUS PHILADEL·
PH IAN'S 'From Ormandy 10 Mull ' In
tilts second tn a serteS about the
PMadelphta Orchestra 1n 1rans1 ·
li o n . thiS pr ogram takes a rare .
beh1 rtd th e scenes look at a reco rd ·
mg se8s ton wt l h the o rc hestra ' s
dynamtc new Mus1c Director . A1c ·
c ardo Mull
IIi) Q) ALOHA PARADISE A ch&gt;td
p r o d1gy 1s out o f hi s element when
he •s sm11ten by yo ung love: and R1
c hard Ira ns cen ds time tot allmlove
wuhthe 1940 'scellulo•dlmage ofa
gra c elully agtng tJCiress who vi SI I5
Parad tse Village . (60 m1ns)
9 o30 ~J O C'f' THEFACTSOFLIFE
10:00 .fl 8 Cf1 OUINCYOu incy lssueO
tor It be l b y a Beverly H1lls doc l o r
aller he de c lares o n a telev1s1on
pr o gram lhal a young woman died
as a result of adanQerousdlletpres·
en bed by h1m {60 mms.)
, i l INFORMATION SOCIETY The
le c hnolo gt c al rev o luti ons thai
bro ught m 1he •nl ormatt on age ha\le
dangers as well as bene hts Their
tmpact o n soc1e h . bo l h pre sent
&lt;tnd lulure, ts rna 10p1c o f thts

1\J , NEWS

in the

•

tGAYCEL±

hght the upcom1ng movtes, spofls
and spectals on HBO tn Apnl

pitllt:&gt;rn

Arts and Crafts Dept . •100

MATHEMAiiC.tA!oJ
~ECAI.J5E 5HE
WA5iHI5.

NBC NEWS

••• "'- '·Spy Who Cam a In From
Tho Cold" 1966
1el lliJCIJ THEGREATESTAMER·
ICANHERO
(l) (j.J ilQ) SPECIAL MOVrE'I&gt;RE·
$ENTATION 'Berlin Tunnel 21 '
1961 Stars: Richard Thomas . Ut e
Chrts tensen
•Jl WORLD oWEST BANK STORY
Perhaps no ptece o f land has been
tne subject o! such in Tense con ·
tro versy Wtth Is raeli elecilons
c ommg up , with more mdi CBi to n s at
a PLO strategy of te rror. wtth nego ·
l18lt o n s underway over tis lui ure we
lo o k at the human story ot lwo pea ·
pie s laying claim to the sam'e btl of
land t he Wast Bank
(1j] ALL CREATURESGREAT AND
SMALL ' Pup s, P tg S and Pt c kl es '
Tr tstan proves he 1S a gentleman
and James · love o f good f oo d 1s
severely tested
8:30 , 3) JOHN WESLEY WHITE
t i) HBO SNEAK PREVIEWoAPRIL
Jerry Stiller and Anne Meara htgh·

~AfW

WIT H f\
CH L)SL N
H :\\1 !

HE ENDED UP .~y
MAR~'YtN6\HE L.ADY

• 30 MINUTES WITH FATHER

I ~ MOVIE ·(MYSTERY-DRAMA)

1

30 tlliS
· evemng
· at home o f Cora
:

ROCK SPRINGS Better Health
Club, 1:15 p.m . Thursday·, home or
Mrs. Lenora Leifheit. Mrs. Leirheit
to have the program , Mrs . Jud.v
Hwnphreys, the contest.
WOMEN'S ASSOCIATION ,uf
M ' ldl
t p b
·
h
I{
€pOr reS ytefl311 ( UfCh
Thursday at i :30 p.m. Dedication
uf
.1
.
G
sewn g ass1gmnent. roup I
Will serve a S' hostess and Group II
lbe
I
=:_'

U CIJ

LIFE

-"'"--.: 1

,,,...,
' -·.
' . .

SO
'fOUR 6Ai-1 f:.~
AND 1\LL Tit/\ I KUSI
YO U WANf ll) CONTR'UI
NESS ASOU f USI NG 1H F
TI""1 E 1'--\Ac.HIN F. IU IIi I 1-'
" THE \VCJRLD O F TH I=.
FU fU t&lt;,E!
MANKINP Wt&gt;S . II l S I ~)

tx J

tPECAUTl

m

.

woven with care

Conn •e lakes care to grve you inc redible good look s at
aNordable pnces These styles feature tenderly wove n
leather uppers carefully combined insoles and shapely
heels so you con walk through the season carefree!

NO., AfK YOURSELF YOU'RE 50
SPECIAL THAT SHE' D BE I'IA5TIN6
TIME OMYO U IF YOU
-

.·AND61 MAII.IN6 LIES ABOUT THE
OTHER DOCTOR9 TO THE "GRAY
AVENGER~' 5HE THINKS SHE'S
~ IPED OU T THE COI'IPETITIOH
FOR THE P05f ·' PRE TfHOOL!

LEATHER

Riverboat Roum, Diamond Savings
and Loan Cu., Pomeruy .
TWI N CITY Shrinettes meeting
-1

··YOU'I\E FACE IT, KID.1GHE ~f11H S
DR. LIXIR'S JOB, ANC'
I C''"I''' DR.
~I
TH YOU ON litK ; 1r[
SUE'S BEfN

connte®shoes

lA 1CJ

a CIJ

~NIE •

INCREDIBLE, AFFORDABLE

ffi

MANNING
CIJ BOB NEWHART SHOW
CfJ FACE THE MUSIC
CIJ!jg) CBS NEWS
CIJ WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
(ilJ LILIAS, YOGA AND YOU
(j}) CD ABC NEWS
6 o58 ClJ CBN UPDATE NEWS
7o00 I]J U PM MAGAZINE
ClJ SEND FORTH YOUR SPIRIT
CIJ STANDING ROOM ONLY
·vamties' Follow reus Cheer·
leaders through times of pam poms
and pep rallieS in this sensitive
Broa dway smash about gro wing
up . (Stars : Shelley Hac k , Meredith
Baxter Birney.
IJl ALLINTHEFAMILY
Cllll2J CI) FAMILY FEUD
(I) WILD KINGDOM ' Dan ce Or The
Grebes' Part II.
TIC TAC DOUGH
ffi @
MACNErL-LEHRER
REPORT
I@ NEWS
7 o30 'I]J U BULLSEYE
·CIJ AT HOME WITH THE BIBLE
CIJ !&gt;.ANFORD AND SON
IIi llJ CIJ JOKER'S WILD
(I) HOLLYWOOD SOUARES
CIJ(ffi DICK CAVETT SHOW
ilQ) $100,000NAME THAT TUNE
il2J Q) FACE THE MUSIC
7o58 ClJ CBN UPDATE NEWS
8 :00 ffi U CIJ REAL PEOPLE The
world's smallest police statiOn . tur ·
lie col lectors in Los Angeles . the
annual tough guy compet1tton . and
a loo.k at a 10yearold maralhone r '
{Repeat ; 60 m tns)
SIGHTS AND SOUNDS OF

DQlT ~A.TE lll'T\1£
t&lt;.ITC.H~ wrrn
111e 60'1'7'

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

- ··· ~--· ·-- ~ '

1

a

and m sl r uc ll ons

or (304)-675-1244

NO .. BUf I FOUND
OUT WHAT &lt;;HE AND
LONG JOHN DID WITH
If! TAKE A LOOK

THEoJ HOW COME YOU'RE
GrVING UPl ,, YOU DrDN'T
FINO TH!; MAP OACK THe~
Af THE CA I!&gt;IN, DID YOU 1

OVER EASV GiJest.: S tnger Met

ti
-- J

........

Torme , Hos t: Hugh Downs
osed· Captioned; u . S.A.)

,l.llO

WEDNESDAY
WILDWOOD GARDEN CLUB,
7: 30p.m. Wednesday at the home of
Mrs. Doris Grueser . .
MIDDLEPORT LITERARY
CLUB, Wednesday, 7: 30p.m. at the
home of Mrs. Harold Sauk Two
book reports. "War Within •and
Without'' by Mrs . Sibley Slack, and
" Lost Horizons" by Mrs. Carl
Horky . Roll call will be giving a
conunent from one of the books.
REVIVAL. Pomeroy Wesleyarr
Holiness Church, Harrisonville. 7:30
nightly through April5 . Rev . Nadine
Settermar., evangelist. Special
singing nightly. Rev. Dewey King ,
pastor. invites the public.
OHIO VALLEY Conunandry Wed·
nesday at 7:30 p.m. Special meeting
of Pomeroy Chapter 80. Royal Arch
Masons at 8 p.m. Royal Arch Degree
to be conferred .
SOUTHERN JUNIOR High School
parents to mee t at 7 p.ni. Wednesday
at high school to Jnake plans for servmg alw1mi banquet.
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT Lions
Club regular meeting , noon Wednesday . at Meigs Inn.
U.M.W. SUPPORTERS Club
meeting, 6:30 p.m. Wednesday at

I

NEWS
BIBLE BOWL
MOVIE ·(AOVENTUAE) 'I&gt;
" Emil And The D•lectlvea''
1964
IJl CAROL BURNETT ANO
FRIENDS
(j.J ABC NEWS
tiJ 3·2·1 CONTACT

Social Calendar

10 do sew 1nq 1n

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

~ALL

MARCH 25 . 11181

Owens. Pomeroy .

th e1r
home, m~1k t nQ stuff ed
annnals, q uilts- and p iece work
No selltng , JUS I SCWt n g GOOd tn
c ome All ages ac c e pt ed Send

$3 00

VIeWII\g

_____

URGENTLY NEEDED - SOpco

area

The students, Julian Myjol, Herman Udau, and Mohammed Riuuan
Hashim , of Ohio University
discussed banking systems in their
country and also did a comparison of
the educational systerns.
That evenin~ they . were dinner

M ria
guests. of Mr. and Mrs. Carl or
and were jgil)ed by Carol and Carl
Morns
· ' both students at Ohio
University, David, Carla and
Heather Shuler, and Janis ear.
nahan . The foreign studenta

McKINNEY
RevivaL underway
Mr. and Mrs. Bill McKinney, Mid·
A revival is being held at the
dleport, are announcing the birth of Pomeroy Wesleyan Holiness Chur·
Phone H2· 2171
their second child, a daughter, ch, Harrisonville Road, and will con1111 w. Main 51.
Chas ity Michelle, born on Feb. 26.
tinue through April 5. The Rev.
Pomeroy, Oh.
OWNED AND OPERATED BY
The infant weighed six pounds, 12 Nadine Settennan ·will be the
Jack &amp; Judy Williams
ounces and was 20 inches long. She speaker and there will be special
Open: Mon.lhru Wed. 9·5
was delivered at home by her father . singing nightly. Services will begin
Thur. 9·12, Fri. 9·5, Sat. 9·2
Sitist~ctiOfl Gu•rantHd
Paternal grandparents are Mr. at 7:30 each evening. The Rev.
or Your Money Back .
and Mrs. William M. McKinney, Dewey King, past&lt;lr, invites the
Middleport, and the maternal grand· public.
parents are Mr. and Mrs. Richard E. r---------------'---~-----_;_

HELP WANTED
pie 10 rh• s

Three students from Mjllaysia
were guests iii the Southern High
School psychology, geometry and
advanced math classes of Mrs.
Carla Shuler Friday.

•

•

·

t'APHICORN tUet'. :l'l-JIIu. 19 1 There IS 11
p;lSS II.UIIIY luda) \lull yoUl'UU[tl ~e t l'&lt;I U~Itt Il l t h~
II Ulidle. betWt'Cn I WII oppuSIJlt-\ flllll'IIUnS Duck
&lt;~ ul 1f tilt: ~ uns lx!:lmlu fire
,
AQUARIUS tJan. ~Ft'b . 19 1 Y1..1 ul' allerii iUII
:; pc~n lito}' n111 bt: up iu p11r tuilii) Y uu 1tu~ht h&lt;l\'t'
11r ubi ~II'L.S ket:pllll( yuur uunJ un whitt )llu'rc
tlumg Cont.~nt rate ! Cl.lOl'CIIt r alt' !
PISC.' ES I Frob. ~Mar1 · b 201 If )UU ar~ shup1111111, fl•r an ex pel ~~ l\'t' 111:111 tutla~ , l&lt;1 kc l'ar c th.l1t
it

Mr.120and
Mr:.a:.rles
H. Faulk,
Jr.,
Union
Ave., Pomeroy,
are
announcing the birth of their first
dl Cha 1· F lk
child ' a son, Ra ey
r m au '
born on March 12 at the Holzer
Medi 1 c
Th
ca enter.
e seven poWld,
13 OWJce infant, was 21 inches long.
Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
l!.ichard l!.upe, Pomeroy, and Mr.
and Mrs. Charles H. Faulk, also &lt;i
Po,neroy. Mrs. Leona Smith and
Mrs. Edna Faulk, pomeroy, and
Mrs. Gertrude l!.upe, Indio, Calif.
are great-grandmothers.

Tel~vision

BUT I DIDN'T
HAVE MUCH OF
A CAREER.l.THENIN FACT, F-'U5HY
DROPPED ME
ABOUT A YEAR
BEFORE SVEN
"DISCOVERED ME."

.••

:. PEANUTS

'.·f POPCORN! f'OPCORN
:: 6£T I(OUR POPCORN

..

:: f.IERE! POPCORN I
/ 1
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·"
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0
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.
••

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1

,b MAAM TwE.Nh
~ I VE

lENT, .. THANK 't'OU .

I:'NJOV i riE 6AME.

.r
'-.,
r

mem o rable 111m c ltps and re c ent
tnte1 v1ews wtlh some o l the grea ·
t est s t a rs ol the UCLA basketball

team

\ll OUTER LIMITS
t0 o58 , 31 CBN UPOATE NEWS
ll oOO · 2 ) 8 rfl &gt;11 (l) , 0111011.12) Q)
NEWS
3] JEWISH VOICE
• l MOYIE ·(AD~ENTURE) "
" Reise Tht Tltlnlc " Hi80
.,j ) MORECAMBE AND WISE
t1 o15 ' ~) NIGHT GALLERY
11 o28 • ~ CBN UPDATE NEWS
11 30 · ~ I U 111 THE TONIGHT SHOW
Gue s1· Pa te• Strauss (80 nHn s )
· 3 ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
.\~1 Q)
ABC NEWS
I
NrGHTLINE
0 0 CBS LATE MOYIE ZUMA
BEACH' 19! 8 Sl a1s S uzanne
Se mens . S Je -.an Keats
I ABC CAPTrONED NEWS
101MOVIE -(DRAMA) ••• " Sound
And The fury "
195V
11 .45 5 MOVIf ·(ORAMA)•••ll ''Foret
of Arms " 1950
12 o00 8 t:t;CIJ LOVE BOAT .. POLICE
STORY L u •e S lo •v Gu~t'e r fhe
Re tw i Gu p nu r tS 111 el1 by C aptam
Stubtny wt) on tltt !Bit s 10 1 a preuv
l d l 11Cill !I&lt;IVtdll l Y Wll·j) h e 1 fi C I'1
t .tiiH!I tJu 11 c o S t o 1y N o P10t:J8b l ~
L.. d u$t:l !'&gt;. ot itl ttm e war he t o fl tOS

venge!ul r.t
dt!l!.ltH Wl!h
u~ lde n c~ I OI : O nv iC I h1m {Rspaar 2
h t s t9 mu1~)

Ju tt Fllrr ast"t 111
ti!ttllp! IO t:;lll t:: F1 B.

12 .30

,,,,

i,)fUIJ

2
U 1
TOMORROW
CO AST ·TD·COAST

~a•"*r
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
41 Costly ·
l Lawsuit
DOWN
5 Preference
I Egyptian
9 Uttered
Christian
10 Tolerate
2 Met highlight
13 Wet blanket
3 Table items '
14 Mythical beast 4 House addition
15 Work
5 Provided with
with lace
a sleeping
tG Pindaric place
Yesterday's Answer
17 Sly - fox
6 "The Lady - " 16 European 25 House (Sp.)
18 Gave succor
7 Nabokov
river
27 Neil Simon's
20 J.ohnny novel
19 Conception forte
21 Smoothed
8 Constituent of 21 Dakar is
%9 Mushroom
down
"little girls"
its capital :13 Magnani
23 Canaanite god II Optimistic
22 Old word 34 Nobleman
24 Word after
tZ Gave the
for spirited :16 Wrath
bitter
authority
23 Tidal flow 37 Youngster
25 Late actor,
Richard 26 Palm drink
27 t:ombed,
as wool
28 Scottish WJcle
29 Heston
film role
30 Political
monogram
31 Ex boxer,
Lee 32 Baby food
35 Have
ambitions
37 Prong
38 Gave a nasty
glance
1-;-;-,-t- +-,-t- +---+39 Skin
condition
10 Have faith in
IJAIL Y CRYPTO(JUOTE - Here's how to work It:

A ·x Y D L 8 A A X R
Ia

I. 0 N G F E L l. 0 W

One teller simply stands for ano1her. In !his sample A 11
used fur the three t.·s. X lor the lwo O's, etc. Single lellers,
apostrophes, lhe length and formation of 1he words are all
hints . Ea{'"h day

the

code letters

are

different .

CRYPTOQUOTES

D p

H DC H·;
MDDT
DCNLG

'

ZLDZI!.L

CNVSM
PLRRDJ

CNL

ESDJ

YVSBCL

HI.LH

VC

w
CNL

P .VGHC .

L.
NLTMLH
' ODX
Yesterday's Cryp&amp;oquole:NOTIUNG EXlSTS BECAUSE IT IS
KNOWN, Btrr TIHNGS ARE KNOWN BECAUSE THEY
EXIST.-L.T,HOBHOUSE

�Pa e--10-The Dail Sentinel

w

Pomero

Patrol cites two drivers
Two people were cited in separate
accidents Tuesday morning investigated by the Gallia-Meigs Post
.of the Ohio Highway Patrol.
The patrol said vehicles driven by
Kevin C. Newcomb, 30, Wauseon,
and Mary M. Clark, 19, Gallipoli5,
were both westbound on U.S. 35 in
Gallia County at 7:40p.m.
According to the report, Clark attempted to make a left turn and
Newcomb's car collided, causing
moderate damage to his vehicle and

Base Per i'od

heavy to the Clark auto.
Newcomb was cited for assured
clear distance.
·
Troopers said Timothy E . Price,
17, Cheshire, was eastbound on SR
554 at Rotish Lane in Gallia County
at 7:40p.m . when his car collided on
a curve with a vehicle driven by
Beverly A. Johnson, 29, Pomeroy.

1967 ~ 100

260·

255·

Price's car sustained minor
damage and moderate damage was
reported to the Johnson vehicle.
Price was cited for left of center.

250·

Hospital news~-~--HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGES MARCH 24
Larry Bailey, Edgil Boggs, Joan
Campbell, Magdalene Carmichael,
Dorothy Carroll, Sharon Cogar,
Willie Collins, Lawencene Cordell,
Lois Edwards , Rush Farley ,
Dwayne Fisher, Mrs. Larry Hemby
and son, Andrea Johnson, Tina
Kemp, Ronald Lewis, Charles Mar·
tin, Glenn Miller, Geneva Nolan,
Mrs. Jeff Knott and son. Biddie

n ng

()'O~ ~
~Q..I.I~.I.

Bar

•

• .•

week to complete.
Church predicted the membership
would ratify the pact by a 3-2
margin. But even before the coun·
cil's vote, opposition to the contract
was stirring.
" It's a shame they sent a piece of
garbage down to us like that," said
Larry Vucelich, president of UMW
local1810 in southeastern Ohio.
Vucelich and other local officials
criticized a provision that would
allow companies to process nonunion coal at UMW plants without
paying the royalty that now goes to
the union's pension funds.
David Vidovich, president of Local

245·

Provens, Benjamin Queen, Charles
Scott, Jamie Smith, Mrs. Randall
Snider and daughter, Kathy Spencer, Ernest Swindell , Virginia ·
Unroe, Mrs. James Wagner and
daughter.

240·

BIRTIIS
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Haines,
daughter, Syracuse; Mr. and Mrs .
Max Laudennilt, daughter, Middleport; Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Leach, daughter, Wellston.

CPI RISES The Labor
Departn:ient reponed Monday
that Its CoDSumer Price Index
ruse to MJ.Z lo February paced
by the l largest gasoUoe price
surge in more than a year. The
coot of living weot up 12.7 percent
in February when computed on

----'.=:..:..::..:.:..-..:.==.:.__ _
5869 in southern West Virginia, said
elimination of the $1.90 a ton royalty
" will slowly kill the .union."
Church, however, said he was
satisfied with the pact.
" It's a good contract," said Church. " We have a real good wage
package. It's going to show that the
United Mine Workers is a strong and
s table union that the nation can
depend on ."
Negotiator Tom Gaston of Kentucky said he believed opposition to
the pact on the bargaining council
was based on the pension royalty
provision.

an annual rate and for the month,
prices rose at a I percent clip.
I AP Laserphoto Chari).

MaryI Shrine practice
Mary Shrine 37, Order of the White
Shrine of Jerusalem. will have a
practice for installation on Friday at
7:30 p.m . A rwrunage and bake sale
will be held by the Shrine on Apri 12
and3.

KIT 'N' CARLYLE "'

Shertdsn told the finance panel
ding lor essential state services Is by
Tu~y~t~a~U~wu
retaining or increasing the temtoo
optimistic about antlclpalecllnporary taxes," Van Meter said. ''I
come
from taxes and ~ ·
stated last December, and continue
estimated
costs of welfare
to believe, that far larger spending
programs.
As
a result, the budget
cuts ~d have been used to balance
would
be
out
of
balance by $322.1
the budget. Now we bave the opo
million
in
fiscal
111112 and $111.2"pqrtunity tp approve a budget that
,
million
in
liscal1983.
will be truly balanced and properly
1. Rep. Myrl H . Shoemaker, £&gt;.
limited."
The temporary taxes were im- 1 BournevlUe, conunlttee chainnan,
was non-committal about ~ need
posed by the General Assembly at
Rhodes' ' request to help offset for budget cuts, "(But) I'm not
going to send an unbalanced budget
deficits in the state budget which enout of here," he said.
dsJune30.
Shoehlaker plans to meet with
Prospects of making more cuts in .
state
budget experts before deciding
spending or boosting tax revenues
the
impact
of revised projections of
were raised following a Legislative
revenue and expenditures.
Budget Office report, which showed
that Rhodes' proposed spending plan
for the next two fiscal years, star·
ling July I, is short.
LBO "'irector Richard G.

Mayor's Court

Meigs County happenings..

S o ur c e · Dept o t Labor

(Continued from page I)

Lawmakers seek more cuts
COLUMBUS, Ohio ( AP)
Republican legislators are calling
for more cuts in state spending after
learning that Gov. James A. Rhodes'
proposed budget is a staggering
$502.3 million out of balance.
·•if we're going to act responsibly,
we have no choice but to come out
with a balanced budget," said Rep.
Robert E. Ne12ley, R-Laura. " We've
got to cut it, that's all."
Ne12ley, a long-time lawmaker
who is a member of the House
Finance Committee, said many
programs now in effect were unnecessary when they began. His
assessment was shared by Senate
President Pro Tem T~omas A. Van
Meter, who blasted proposals to reenact a package of temporary tax
hikes set to expire June 3(!.
" I flatly reject the ~otion that the
only way to provide adequate fun-

265·

March25 19

Must sign application

Emergency runs

Eac h person who owns or partially
owns a motor vehicle must sign the
application for license plates or
stickers, Mrs. Sarah Gibh&gt;l, Meigs
County Motor Vehicle Registrar,
said today.

Six calls were answered by local
emergency units Tuesday, the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Ser·
vices reports.
At 12:41 p.m., the Pomeroy Squad
took Tanuny Cornell, Pomeroy Clif·
Is Apartments, to Pleasant' Valley
Hospital and the Rutland Unit at
5:49 p .m. took Bob Sebring and Carl
Blaine fro'o/ Meigs Mine 2 to
O'Bleness Hospital in Athens. The
Rutland Unit at 12:20 p.m. took Bill
Brown from Meigs Mine 2 to
O' Blene5S Hospital and at 4:53p.m.,
,the Tuppers Plains Unit took Ruby
Miller from her home to St. Joseph
Hospital in Parkersburg. Tbe Tuppers Plains Unit at 11 :24 p .m . treated
Norma Sinclair at her home.

Mrs. Gibbs stated that the application may be taken from the
bureau office, located in the former
Gibbs Grocery, Mulberry Ave ..
Pomeroy, for signatures when the
application is eumpleted by a person
other than the individual recorded
on the motor vehicle title. If two persons are listed on the title, both of
them must sign the license or sticker
application, Mrs. Gibbs stressed.

Small investment, large returns, Sentinel~ Want Ads
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Announcements

3

PAY h•g hes t pr ic es
poss 1bl e for gold an d St ive r
C01ns. r ings, jewe lr y, etc.
Contact E d Burk en Ba rtler
Shop, Middtepor1 .
1

'

1_ _ Card of

Th~nk s

We wish to express our si n
cere thanks to our dea r
re latives, fr-iend s, and
neighbors , fo r the man y
visits, cards, flowe rs, and
; prayers, during the Illness
• and death of our hus band
: and father , Gene Swartz .
, We
~xfend
sp eci al
, gratitude to the Ash Stree t
• Freewill Baptis t Church,
; the Rev e rend Noel Herr
• mann , and the Reverend
; Ralph Butche r. Thank s.
also, to the statts of The
. Ohio State Univ e rs ity
I Hospi1al ,
the
He tz e r
' Medical Center, and the
: Rawlings -Coats Bl owe r
• Funeral Home . Gert rude
: (Trudie)
Swartz and
. family .

RACI NE

GUN

Vol unt eer

Fir e

Depar tm en t s ponsors a
shol gun &amp; r 1tl e marc h
eve r y Sat night 6 : 30pm .
aT tn et r bu •l d ing ' " Bashan.
Fa c t or y c hoke 12 gu a ge
shot guns on l y. Open stght s
21 r ttle .

SHOOT .

Rac• ne Gun Clu b, ever y
• Frid ay nt ghf start ing a t
7: 30 p.m . Fac tor y choke
g uns only .

M EIG S MU S EUM open b y

appointment January-Mar

To o
va luable 10 neg lec t, e)( pe rt
tu n1ng &amp;. ano re pa 1r La ne ·
Dan iels, 742 2951 or 992
2082
Y O UR

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Ra c me

PI A N O

ch. 992 2264, 992 2802, 992
2360 or 992 2639. H istori e s
tor

sa le

P o m e ro y

Mtdd lepoq Libraries

otl pa1nl, 30°o olf green
wa re. Drehe t' s Ceram1cs ,
59 N. 2nd AVe .. M•ddl f! port ,
Oh . 992 275 1.

,~--------------------·

LOOK f or hand sign MtSS
Hope, Pa rm Rea d• ng. Tet ts
you . pa st , present a nd
tu tur e, g1ves adv1se on rove
atfairs ,
b usi ness
&amp;
marriage . It yo u are
unhapp y &amp; dori' l know
wh 1ch wa y to turn , come tn
tor advice, one visi t w11 1
convince you there is a bet
fer way . Rt . 2, 4340 On to
Riv e r Rd , Hunt tng ton.
w .v .
1 304 · 51 3 7 1? 1.
Readi ng $1 0 . Sa ve S) 00
with a d . BY phone on
quest1 on answered fr ee

'

NO

T re sspass l ng

on

the

Or ayo Corp ptoperty (O ld
Tr i Sla te Maferiat Corp.
propert y ) All viola tor s will
be prose cute d. The re wilt
be no exceptions to th... A
walchman will be on ~T y .
S1gned the Dr avo Corp ,
Apple Grov e Pl a nt, Box
4'18, Racine, Oh .

NOW TILL EASTE R 20oo

Announcemen1s

3

Announcements

IT' S BEE Ll NE' S Show a nd
Tell Time!! ! !! Ou r new
spr tng and sum me r l1ne 1S
now availabl e a nd tS t1 un
be lie vabl e ! !!! Gtve us a
call for more 1nform a 1to n
a bout this inte rest ing wo rk
Phone 99 2 3941 fro m 9 6

II .

or Write Daily Sentinel Cla's sified Dept.
111 Court St ., Pomero.,, 0., 45769

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

Address _________________

I Phone. _________________
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Prim one word 1n each
space below . Each in
ifiat or group at figures
counts as a wor d. Count
name and address or
phone number if used .
You' It get better results
if vou descr ibe lutty ,
give pr tce . The Senti ne l
reserves the r ight to
classify , edit or reject
any ad . Your ad witl be
put in the pr ope r
·ctasitic ation if you ' tt
check th e proper box
bet ow

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Wanted
) For Sale
) Announcement
) For Rent
&gt;

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14

eRENTALS

1- C.,ooiTh•nk•

41 - HCIIUU lor R e nt

41 - Mobtlt Homn
tor Rent
H - Ap•rtmtnl tor ~ e n!
45- FRoorn$
4t - Speu l~t r R rnl
41 - w•nted to Re nt

1- Announcemenll
~ - G • ve•w•v

s t-~•~tPrA&lt;h
t - L01of •nd Found
I Y,~ro S•te
I ~\Jbl•c S.le
I Au&lt;hon

41- Equ•~tmtnrlor

9 Wantetl to Buy

' rH'l'4U-

Hounl1old Gooch
Ce . TV , Jilednl Eout11ment
Atltoquet
Mt \ &lt; Mercll•lld•"
8uddong Suppl•n
~t- Ptnlor Sale

1 t _ Help w.nrec~

S.ru•IH Wlnfecl

tJ- tnlvraMct
•• - llu~!nen
·~ - stnoou.

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t8 . _ _ _ __ _ __ I
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These ca s h rates
1nclude d iscount

Tr••mnv
rnltruct•on

eFARMSUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

A.ldoo , TV

62- w•nt.Oto llur
11- Trucks lor S•le

e FINANCIAL
But.ntu

U - L, ... utoct.
t4 ~ H•v &amp; Gr•o n
u - Sed &amp; Fertt lne r

Oppor tun•fr
n - Mont'y to Lo• n
1) - Prof!UIDn• l
SttrYlU\

'
eTRANSPORTATION
r t - .&amp;utol fOr S•le
I J - V•rt1o &amp; 4 W 0
14- Mrn•rc:yclel
1~,AuiO PU!i
&amp; A&lt;CIUOt ltt
11- .&amp;utoReptor

eREAl ESTATE
lt - Homts tor Slle t
)2- MOblle Hom1U
tor S•tt

1.
I·

JJ 14HJt31 -

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24 ------~------

F•rm&amp; lor S.le

Busonttn au,IOtng~
Loh &amp; A&lt;rU!IIr
Rt•t ElUif w•ntte!
Ne•lfon

Gt&lt;f'C:&gt;LE.
A (:W I ··
Gill c,.&gt;.J

' &amp; t~ L
I &lt;~EW.

8 AB'1 Cfl 'fi N(l
NOI\ 1-()W (;\)
WE STOP

tT WOu LO SE LL
Li ;&lt;E PABWM

PAPPY 'S
X)N U AND

O NE \"loRE:
TIME ,Pr1D,

I)ANCE ?

I

ND

lH E.

Nt 16-IIBVo.::i
S-W

~

.

r\1 ~ TTE: R

W~AT

.. \: .

\,

~-)

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3.____=A~n~
no~u~n~c~e~
m~e~n~t~
s-

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•,

Wanted to Buv : c lass rings,
wedd ing bands, anything
stamped , lOK . I4K , or 18K
gold . Sil ver coins , poC~et
watches. Catt Joe Clark at
992 2054 at ClarK ' s Jewetrv
S1ore, Pomeroy , Ohio,-45769

6

Los1 and Found

: tn M1ne rsv11te
Ma tern 1fy Clothes a t a t aFOUND
rea
,
c
hocola
te poodle. 992
lordabt e pr 1ces Nurs1ng 6260
br as a nd gowns Wa ru
me lon Pa rc h, 5 fh a nd Ma1n ,
New Hawen , West Vtrg tn ld Found : hound , te mate,
wh ite w1th c la ck mark ings
Pnone t J04 88 2 341 0
on Silve r Ri dge 985 4302.

.

Problems or Quest10ns
about Lawns or
Gardens? For Answers
Bring Them To

lANDMARK'S
lAWN &amp; GARDEN
CLINIC
Free
Soil
Test
While YOU wait.
March 27, 19 '81
9 a . m. · 4 p.m .

....._._..
992· 2181
E . Matn St.
Pom eroy

8
e SERVICES

I Lost .

in Ra c ine area .
Hus ky type puppy , black
with white star under neck ;
two back fee t are white.
Ch1ld 'S pet Call949 2347.

Los t · 1n Flatwoods a rea ,
l.uge btdc k. ma te dog Ca ll
'I'l l 7277 or '1'12 7857.

Want ·Ad Adver1ising
Deadlines
1 l0P M O••l\1
11 Noon Slf11rd,.,
to r Mond•r

11- PiumDtllfl.

Churc h ya rd
sa le March 17 &amp; 28, Fr i. &amp;
Sat. 9 5. Good usable me r
c hand&gt;Se. Ra on ca nce l$ . 43
Coa t St , Mid dleport . Ne-.:f
ro r• ve r.
Public Sate
&amp; Auction

AUC TION ever y Fr1day
nig h17 p.m Ha rtl ord Com
mun•fY Ce nte r. Hartford ,
Wanted to Buy
Now buy1ng gold a nd
Silwe r. ol d poc ket wa lc hes,
cha tns, d ia monds , silve r
money a nd coms Mar1 1n·s
Ge ne ral Store. M1dd le por1
9'12 6370

9

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

£lU&gt;~•! 1 119

ll- E-.&lt;f YII•nt
14- Eit&lt;l r •ut
&amp;llltfrtetrlfton
n - C.tntr•t H1ut•n•

BENEDICT. INC.
2nd

..- M . H Altpl.r

17 - UphDIIII r J

-c-'

Rates and Other Information

33._ _ _ _ _ __

34. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

t !i wards or Unatr

Cuh

35. - - - - - - - -

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2 ... ~ ..

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1 a.~,

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

uo

'"
'"
'·"

·

• d•r•

Etch word o.-er lht mtntmum U liii"Ordl

Chert•

11 ~ cenllotr

word per

Adl ,-ynntl19 Ofhlr ltiiM COriii(UitYIIIIfl Will bl &lt;hi,-IICIII lhl I

"'
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lll
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111~
dl~

rllt

In mtmor• · "ctrd ot 11nk' 1no 01utu1ro
m1n•mum cun 1n •avtnu

Mail This Coupon wit~ Remittance
The Daily Sentinel
Bow 729
Pomeroy , Ohio 45769

• ctrHl

I'" wora. U .H

Mobtll HQmt $1111 1n0 T .UQ IIIII 1'"1 tcUIIIIO , • , , w•ltl Cllh wtfh
orae,- 1S cent .::ntrtt ror •111 Clrrr•"l Boa Num o, • 111 c•r• ot Till
Stnlontl

L

I RON AND BRASS BEDS
Old furnitur e, desks , gotd
ring s , 1ewe lr y , silv e r
dollars, ste rling, e1c. wooo
1Ce bo•es, jars, antiques,
e1c. comple te households
Wr ite . M.D. Mille r , Rt. 4,
Pomeroy , OH 45769. Or
Co:l ll 992 7760.
New, ·used, and antique fur
nrture. No ite m to large or
to sma ll. Will buy one ptece
or complete households
Mart tn's General Store at
99 2 6370.

$185 .00 to S500 week tv doing
mailing work . No e)(·
per ience requ ired. AP ·
PLY : Circle Sales, P .O.
Box 224·0 , Richmonc;l Hill ,
NY 11418.
Some part time iobs in Pt .
Ple asant come with a
S 1,500 bonus! Plus free
college tu ition! 1f you are
age 17 or older, a iun ior or
sen ior In high school, or a
high
sc hool
diploma
graduate, you may qualify .
The west Virginia Nat ional
Guard is no ord indry part
·time lob! Good pay . gOOd
benefits! For details call
SFC 0 ' Neal675 3950.
Situations W1nted
WHI babys it in my home tor
infants or sc hool age
c hildren Hawe references
and c~&lt;per ie n c c . Phone 992
3941.

12

125 acres of e1&lt;ce11ent
pasture tor rent. Two
dot tars per c ow per month .
985 3809

Public Sale

ANNUAL
PERFORMANCE
TESTED BULL AND COW SALE

SATURDAY , APRIU, 1981 , l ' OOO' CLOCK P .M.'
Benedict Sale Barn
Across from VInton County Airport
AUCTIONEER : JOHN "REO" SHAW
Offering : F 1ve 1S) Two Year and Older Butts ; 35
Performan ce Tested Bulls . 40 Commercial
Females Commerc ial He ifers. One hatf Blood Simmental Yearling Heifers .
Private Treaty Sales at All Times . Full-blood thru
Percentage . " Benedict has a Program to benefit all
customers ."
BENEDICT, INC .
W. E. ENGLE
REGISTERED SIMMENTAL CATTLE
Bo• o, McCarthur, 9hio 4S651
Terry Johsnon 1·614/ 596·4274 or 1·614/ .596·SS52

ir====:=================~
"

PUBLIC AUCTION

SATURDAY , MARCH 21 AT 9, 3001'CLOCK A.M.
(LARGE ALL OAY ANTIQUE SALE I
9,30 AM . SHARP
T~ke St. Rt. 60 south out of Zanesville, Ohio for 1l
m1les or St. Rt. 60 north out of McCGnnetsvllte tor 14
miles to Gaysport on river road, turn east"Dn St. Rt.
176 for one mile to the FoJI Farms .
All Antiques: Furniture. Glass, China, China Dolls,
011 &amp; Aloddin Lomps, Over 841 Pu. Holsey, Cut
Glass. Rubv &amp; Cambridge, Weller, Roseville &amp; Hull
Pottery, Several Very Old "Guns, Sleigh Bells 11nd
Hundreds of Old Items .
Roll fop desk ; J secretaries; walnut bed ; wery old
walnut cupboard ; oak cupboard; Sideboards; 6 pc.
Wdlnvt love seat set. over 100 yrs . old , green velvet ;'round oak table ; marble top dresser ; marble top-.
washstand ; other oak furniture ; desk ; s
washstands ; IS dressers (walnut &amp; oak) : IS nice
round &amp; square stands) oak &amp; watnut , some w/ bnll
claw tee~ ) i stack· bookcases ; 20 oak &amp; walnut :
rockers; 1ce cream chairs; tot pressed back chairs ·
7 hatl treeS: organ stools ; old trunks; tot ~
showcases ; spool cabinets; churns ; lot picture
frames ; tot wooden.primitives &amp; buckets; old laun·
dry stove ; 4 sets ste1gh betts ; cow &amp; sheep belts; RR 11
and ~uggy lanterns ,· carbide lights; copper kettles ,
&amp; botlers; butter motds; coffee gr inders; iron &amp; tin
toys; ttat irons ; wooden planes ; otd saws corn ~
ptanters ; putties, etc .; old poslcards ; hu~reds .
records, and hundretls of other old Items not tl!ifed .•
Lot anL glass &amp; china including Heisey custard '"
cob~tt btue, Cambridge, glliSS baskets, ~ompotes:
e!c. We tier, Roseville &amp; Hull POttery , Sev~ral very
ntce otd 'guns . Pocket knives &amp; watches. 1976 3;• ton ~
Chevrolet truck . 1952 Dodge~ dr . $edan, 33,000 m. In •
ex!ra goad shape. 42" riding tawn mower. S~fe . Oak '
Ch1na cupboard w/ curved glass, lions heads &amp; claw
feet.
,
CLIP THIS AO AS IT WILL ONLY RUN THIS ONE :
TIME.
•
Hundreds items - t?O m1ny to advertise. Tills Is on· •
IV • verv small 11st1ng of tho noms to bt sold Sot., .
March 21 ai9 , JO A.M. This wilt bt o tong olt doy soto•
outside so dress for the we•ther. Fire outsidt.lrlng
your chair. Lunch ~ presmills. Ttrms-c11h ar lh
c~eck w/positivt 10 ot sale. Nat responsible tor ac· 1 ~
etdents.
•
Ownor- Robert (BoD I Fa•
Auctioneers-Bill Janes &amp; Associates
•
Phon&lt;t614· SS7 · 3~1t .

•

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- - -Wanted to Do
~-

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Young lady is wilting to
sew for peopte at ~rhome .
Neat, fast. and reasonabte .
Phone 949 1202 .

The Ment-al Health Center is a Private Non-Profit
Corporation and an Equal Opportuntty/Attirmative
Action Em plover .
12
Situations Wanted
WELDING done, 10 ye ars
e:-;pen e ncc , equipped to do
s teels, c astmg , a1um1num ,
in tield or s hop Located at
Maplewood La~ e or catl
949 1285

Real Estate- General

-. Real Estate- Gerleral
-···

--=---;-;:-.---Re•l Estate- General
Housing
Headquarters

l

EAFORDm
VIRGIL B. SR . • t ,. ''1"'
16 E . Se(ond Slrtet

Phone
1· 1614) ·992· 3325
RACINE
Large home
wtth S bedrooms. LOOks
n 1ce and has charac ter
a ppeal. Has a large lot
cmd 1S ne ar school s and
s tores
NEW LISTING
Modern 3 bedroom
home with 2.65 a cres.
Su itt In lot chen, centrc1t
hedt. and large living
rm wtth s lid ing glas
doors to the patio . Good
drilled we ll and large
barn
NEW liSTING
1978
Hill crest mobile homtl
with 3 bedrooms and '1
oatns. Look.s tik.e new.
Also has tl util ity room
built on.
SYRACUSE
Told!
e lectric home ne ar the
pool and ptaygrovncJ
Has J bedrooms , '1
baThS. Garage , and
la rge yard A nice horne
tor just S4J .SOO
OUT OF TOWN
Re asohabl.e home \AtJfh
.... ac reage . 2 bcdrCioms,
large liwtng. and 2 por
ches . On SR 7 Only
$12,000.
ACREAGE
10 ac res
at good bottom tand on
s1ate route . Would rn~ke
a n ideal mini farm ·
wan! 110.000.
YOU MAY NEVER
• SEE THESE AND OUR
OTHER PROPERTIES
FOR SALE AGAIN.

J1

ROGER HORNSBY
SWIMMING POOL CO.
I AIL Y BIRD SALE

....

cludtng conhnu1ng education and tuition reimburse·
ment. FleJiibte scheduling with every other
weekend ott {minimum). Fo,.- more information,
contact 1he Personnel Office, Gallia·Jack5on-Meig3..
Com_mu~ify Mental Health Center, 412 Vinton Pike,
GallopOIIS, OH, 4S631. Phone No. 16141 ~46 -5500.

R. _N. ~sitio!' i~ 10· bed acute c~re psychiatric unil
us1~9 tnterdiSCI~Iinarv approach. Positive working
env1~onmen~ ~1th excellent fringe benefits, in·

,

&amp; Auction

G l GA NT I C

8

CHIP WOOD. Poles max
diamete r 14" on targest
end . S12.SO p~r ton . Bundled
stab . SIO . ~O per ron
Dei +vered to Ohio Pallet
Co , Roc:; k Springs Rd .,
Pomeroy 992 2689 .

8

Yard Sale

W. Va .

Q~_ POMEROY
~LANDMARK

~a~ed__!!_B~-

m::-

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T&lt;.l SVJTHE SA6V.'

l E~1 ER '' !-..._

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STvPPEP W E

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W«~ LD
'SJNC" ~

11- Homt 1mpro vtmtn"

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Beo&gt;r EST
,

POMEROY
lANDMARK

••- J:•rm Equtpmrnt

W•nltd To Do

,, _

lilent

eMERCHANOISE

e EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
11

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21

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eANNOUNCEMENTS
1- tn MemorHm

WAA-

!lA D

Ptn Ot t T

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

T~~ VEI?'f

AA·A-A .

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1- Curb Inflation. iI EVERYBODY Shops the
I
JI
Pay Cash for
Ilou
w_ANT,__"-AD.:...__w_A:_:r_ ____,
WANT AD INFORMATION
Classifieds and I
1
Savelll
PHONE 992-2156
Write your own ad ~nd order by mail with This
coupon . Cancel your ad by ph one OJ. en you get
results. Money not refundable

O.AP?I S
sn•JGtN&amp;

18

.

Hom~s for Sale

0.

N,EW liSTING - J us l
what you' re looking for
nice 1 or 3 bedroom ,
11 • bath , home on a good
street 1n Middleport .
Large leve l lot . base
ment, w.b.t.p., carpet
1ng, many new teatures
JUST ! $24,900 .
NEWliSTING
Rt . 7
bypass . approx1mafety
1-4 acres of nicety rotting
land . ptus otd house with
welt, ex c etlen1 tor
mobil e homes or home
sites . $8 ,500 .
NEWLISTING
C'lose
in. 1.8 acres tevel land
with a beautiful newer 3
bedroom , '24&gt;c60 double
wide with "J. baths, equ ip
ped kitchen and utility
and an added on t~m1ty
room w ith a wood
burner Large dectc area
NEW LISTING
Panoramic V1ew of the
Rtver
Plus appro&gt;c
tmalely 3 ac res r1ver
frontage on th•S 75 acre
farm with a 3 bedroom
home, barn. and small
pond w11n tillable and
wooded acreage De
velopment potential a s
prim il•we camp sties
and bulld1ng sllcs . Near
New Bridge . S57 ,000 .
NEW liSTING · Lillie
upkeep on th1 S house!
Cvle little 2 bedroom ha
mean a large country tot
W1fh full base ment. that
lnctude5 wood burner
Insulated, carpetd , also
s torage
burld1ng
1?9,900 .

REALTOR
Henry E . C tel and, Jr .
992-6191
ASSOCIATES
Dottie &amp; Roger Turner
992-5692
Jean Trussel/949·2660
OFFICE 991·2259
REALTOR
Henry E. Ctetand, Jr.
992-6191
ASSOCIATES
Dottie&amp; Roter Turner
992-5692
Jean Trussell 949· 2d60
OFFICE 992-2259

Housing
Head uartPr~
Real Estate - General

CENTRAL REALTY
OWNERS LEAVING AREA
3 BR brrck home
close to New Rawenswood Br idge &amp; Ka 1ser Plant
This home Is cle an , has F .P. and mu c n ot The fur
niture and appt1ances can be negotialcd lO~o mor
tgage c an be assumed Asking S39,900.
CHESTER AREA
I mile oil Rl . 7. 3 BR home,
eat 1n kit chen. tor mal OR , exfra spacious LR for
lam1y liwlng, e nte rta ln1ng Home heated tly wood
burner atone, but has alTernate system . Lovety for
country clo~ to town llv1ng . Has fenced 1n area for
tarm antmats, a oove ground sw1mming pool . and
new truit tree s Owner may he lp linance. Pr 1ced at
565 .000.
EXECUTIVE "fYPE HOME
Pos s tble office
space. J BR 's , Jl 1 baths Could be S BR 's Prtced ro
Sell $5e .OOO .
oveR 100 acre s. 1n Meigs Co. c lose to Rav c&gt;nswood
Bndge Mtneral s , t1mber Reasonable, le1' s nave an
otte r
.
RACINE
lot sol Ill) lor tralll' r ASklnQ$4,a00
COUNTR ·Y HOME. J / a c n•s, 3 or ".4 BR · ~ . loc ate d
ctosetoRt . 7 Reduced"J8 .000
GOOD COUNTRY HOME
Lilr9e liv•ng room . kll
chen dno den. llll. ludes J BR 's, laundry arec1 , clnd
outsidt&gt; buildrny tor ~ toragP. &amp; car Ask1ng undPr
$30.000
CALL U5 TO BUY OR SELl
, N~HlC y Jilspen; - Associate
.
PH . 8H lOIS
Virgtruol Hiyman- AHOCiiiU!
PH . 91S·4197

• w,unen

Br1 ck house on wooded loT
Three bedrooms, large kit
c ht!n, fam ily room , double
ga rage, deck . Mid Slxfies
99'1 5410 .

KITCHEN
CARPET

CARPET
ITH PADDIN

1 Rolls
Rubber Back

From

From

'7.99 &amp; up

'12.95 &amp; up

Reg. S11.91
$799 Sq.
Yd.
Cash· n·Carry

Installed

Installed

• Ot~lt"W•then
eA•nge~
eHoiW•tl!rT•nk1.
Rep•tnnt Stnce 19SJ

. ~ Apt .

Put a cold nose in your
fu1ure . Contact your Me1gs
County Humane Society at
992 6260 . Available now;
two. labrador type males,
one mtniature german
shephard, male , terr ier
type , chesapeak e ba "
retriever . -collie lypes,'
bla ck Oob man
.
C ~r
• wa 1er
span1e 1 a 1 1co cat, 1emale ;
male tiger cats ,
t~/'J Regency t'l. )( 60 two '-..---------~two
American domes1ic cats .
bedroom mob•le home , new :
992 6260 .
s1ovc and refrigerator , new
cdrpet. natural gas hear ,
was her and drye r . 991 67 t 1
Phone 1 304 773 5492 .
Antiques
AT T E NT IoN
I IM
PORT ANT TO YOU) Will
pay cash or certified c;;: heck
for antiques and cottec
tibles or entire e states.
Nothino too large . Also.
guns, po"c ket watches an.......
coin col l ections ~ Cal l 614
767 3167 or 557 J-4ll .

l'rintt•lll'uttt•rn

Lots &amp; Acreage

61

Acreage . One acrt:! and one
ha lt of ground loc ated bel
ween110ld Rt JJ and new Rf
JJ ·1a c1 ng .th e
Me igs
F.lt rg rounds 54000 00 ~9:.1
1171

Kuker 400 gal . Spray . Int .
510 . 4xl6" plows ; M F . 13 .5'
0 1sc .: fen . ~ auger : t se1
snap on 15.S&gt;c38 dual ftres ;
N H 367 Manure Spreder ;
Dunham 14' Harogator :
Int . tractor , 1186 . 304 675
-2145.

SEVE RAL ChOI Ce buttd 1ng
lots, Eas1ern D1Sir1CI. Tup
pcrs Pla1nt1 Cheste r water;
Owntt r wtll he lp hnance .
991 5869

Models
Avail.able
LEO MORRIS
Rl . 1 Side Hill Rd.
Rutland, 01}.
All

DENNEY
CHAIN UNK
FENCE
KEN SOLES

245•9113

Ph. 992-5016
or 992-7.505
3 11 1 mo .

Anytime

119·tfc

h~~~~~~~~~~t.======~~~~~=====~3~·2~·1~m~o~.~
J&amp;l BIJMN
REESE
~
H.
l
WRITESEL
.
.
INSlJIA'JION
(1)

ROOfiNG

G&gt;

TRENQtiNG
. SERVI CE

Ll'

All types ot root work ,
tt

El t
warer·Sewer· ec nc
Gas Line-Ditches
water Line1Hook ·ups
· Tan k s
SeptiC
county qertified
Roush iLane
Cheshire, Oh.
Ph . l67 ·7S60
I 7 He

new or repa•r gu ers
and downspouts, guner
c1e.1mng ttnd painting .
Atl work guaran1eed.
F- rce t st•m.l1es
.ti:!clSOnitbte Pnces
C.lll
Howard
949·
2U1
9~9 · 1160
2 4 ttc

41

'l bedroom Mob ile Home .
"A dults only
Brown's
fra11er Court , M1nersw!lte .
991 3314.

or

MOBIL E HOME for rent .
Completely
furn1sh ed
Adu t1s preferred . Oeposi 1.
992 l749.
1 bedroom Mobile Home.

total electric , Syracuse.
washer ,
dryer ,
retrigerdlor , stove, pull cui
living room , porch, no pets
9913~4 .

1978 FORO L TO Landau,
velour interior , am fm
stereo tape, eleclrlc win
~~~~· ~~ ~ . p b 992 3219 bet

19 '" ' es

ot Ohio River bot
tom tand to tease tor far
m1ng, Sf Rt. 338. 991 7330.
44

1966 OLOS F85, 4 door,
small v 8." good gas
mileage. body in extra
good cond . S350. firm . 992
5006.

few panern pall S. fe.,_ dottars
to tn¥esl. lots o! gmnR·Piaces
polenl•al tor thiS flare ;acket
Choose hnlts. ll1nr1tl tweed lo
team o11h sporty . ~ressy lh~nes .
Pnnted P11torn 4608 Hall
SiltS 10 17 11' •. 14 ~ . 16'&gt;.
18~ . 10'&gt; S11e 14' , :bus\ JIJ
lakes-)•, yards 14·•nch labnc
$2.00 &lt;w uch p.~ltttn. Add 50C
lor uch p.~ttttn b linl·llm
liriNil 1nd haodlina. Sond to:

Annt lldatlls
Pattorn Dopl

Farms tor Rent

Apartmonl
tor Rent

J AND • RM lurnrshed ap

Is Phone 992

~-'34 .

o&lt;I\ERSIOE ' APH. 1 &amp; i
be&lt;1r-oorn
apart-rnenl!t
ava•labt e · Equat
op
portunlll" hou~lnq 9Y'J n ·H

Autos tor Sale

Cougar XR 1 with
wh tre top with red landau
rool
Am tm c asset1e
stereo, w ire rtm wheels,
good ltres , 1n very good
c ondll1on . 992 2370 after 5
p .m .

Mtd

Two bedroom mob1le
home . Utilities patd . One
chtld accepted . No pets .
John Sheets, J and one half
miles south ot Mtddteport
on Rt . 7.

43

1702.

1977

3 bedroom mob1te home
Approxtmarety S miles

tr om Pomeroy
dleporl 992 5858

w

71

For sate or renf · ap
proll:•matety 34 ac res with
mree tledroom modul~r
home 1n Portland , Oh10
area . Nine mites tram the
Ravenswood bridge Ca ll
alte r 5 p .m. at 1 304 273
5272 .
.

t 'I 1

The Daily Sentinel
243 11e1t 17 Sl, Now YGil IY
10011. Poilll lAIIlE, ADOREss
ZIP, SIZE, IOid ST'ILE NUMBER:
We stteamhned the sew1n~ to

save wau 11me )() 1Qu can sa•e
money' Stnd noolor NEW 1981
SPHING·SUMM£R PAiltRN CAT
AlOG 100 styles hee pallern
COUI\G&lt;I t$2 Value) Ca\110(. $1
1~14 Oota Qlllll
$115
IJ].fllfllMIItloloOloiltiot $1:75

uos.......su.- Ja.5f sus

, lzt..QotiQ/(.,

r-

$1.75

Free Estimate
J ames K eesee
Ph. 992·2772
3·23·1 mo .

"Speciali~ing

In
Re- Roofing"
• Small Carpet.ter Jobs
Oarrelt Brewer
PH . 992 ·2882
991-2606
992-7861
3 11 1 mo . pd .

•
•
•
•

KWB
'i uu t(o~mpNII

c~r,Trr

Backhoe
E&gt;ccawating
Septic Systems
water, Sewer &amp; Gas
Lines
Licensed &amp; Bonded

•

01"1

S~ o r!G•m '
~ peCIIIE'I\

• t'UIIEHt &amp; (I"I•DII+At
G•wn ~ N&lt;M

0JMII

• Ooil l ~ """ ' For AIIAttl
Ww oll~r ••• &gt;II W. l~p ~u•hly bGOh •rid
11\01.'1 fl r ~nCI "•m("• l•k~

DUMP TRUCK
ph. 992• 7201

Mlll£R ELECTRIC
SERVICE
·r ·
For all Of Your Wl
ing needs.
lei George Miller check
your presen1 electrical
system .
Residentr.al
&amp; Commerci•l

II~OW"'ING

w . ...

~•k •nQ.

lo l hrrog 11001 1 IU\0 l' rg

nunllnt ar

511~ ~01! , UWtll.

tarm"l
""" IO&lt;f!il•"'l ' ""'"
Ww """ td"T"' comj.llgle iEn" el

Browll •

1973 Ford 1 .. ton pickup
$675 . 1974 Olds 4 dOor
sedan , runs good, gOOd
fires S999. l brand new
G78x 15 radial tires. 150. ea.
1 Myers water pump wif h
tank', tike new . 742 2511
days, 742 224&lt;1 nightS .

Si•••
"From JO•JO"
SMALL
Utt'&amp;h. Bu'lld'IIR

•"I

r

Sizes from 4x6 to 12"x 4o

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

-Addons and
remodeling
-Roofing ond gutter
work
- Concrete work
-Plumbing 1nd
electrical work
· (Free Estim11tesJ

V•C• YOUNG II

9tH215 or 992-7314

~~======~====~2~8~t~tc~~============~6~1~5~1~fc~~~~~P~o~m~e~ro~y~,~O~h~.==~
GRAVEL¥ TRACTOR
ROUSH
SALES &amp; SERVICE

Vinyl &amp;,Aluminum
SIDING

G WA\ofEL Y W.Ut.
a.nond
6
r 1d11"+q !rACIO,-\. P11 ~ h I " " p r o

BISSELl
SIDING CO.

mu ... •:n
)NA P PEH
Pu\1"1 &amp; \0:11 pto
mowo:r\, ruling lr.a ClOt\
AILAS · hll11n
WI: e 0 EAtER ~· llru s tl c uller &amp; •

)llt1l

Trucks for Saie . .

Farm Buililings

Rt. J, Box 54
Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614-14J.2591

IIUllllli;"D

MaveriCk, 4 door, 6
c yt, 1975, Ford LandaU, '
door, power brakes, power
steering, air cond ., am ·tm
rad 1o, c ruise control.
power drivers seat. 742·

"YOUNGS
.
CARPENTER
SERVICES"

ALL STEEL

Call 742· 3195
or 992·7680

1975

'2501.
72

THE
KOUNTRY

~=========~~=========i~'="':':":":'"'~·~-~·:;:~2~·2~6-~l~mgo~.~

= .nanspurraruiil

Mobile Homes
lor Rent

• Replacement
Windows

J&amp;F
ENTERPRISES

ROOFING

Livestock
tor
sate. Potted ~
Herelotds
12
24 l/04
monlhs
old . Phone 614147
or

614

Vinyl &amp;

A1Uml·num S1'dlng
elnsulato'on
estorm Doors
• Storm Windows

Farm Equipment

63
BULLS

etnd ut11ilty room 992 3981 .

PWMBING
AND
HEATING
12 Park St.
Middleport Oh
'
·
Ph 992 6263
.
-

J ·S· I mO .

"r our room house w1th baTh

KAUFPS

Free Estimates

Trash Pickup In
The Village of
Middleport, Oh.

lnternattonat Cub Cadet, 11
hp, hydrostatic drive , 42 in
ch ,newer 1n good con
di1•on Sl65G.OO 9492216 or
'1'11 554S.

Hou.rfs for Rent

2 9 tfc

·

J&amp;C
SANITATION
SERVICE

I L h"tSIItil

TRAILER LOT for Sdl e,
S4.ooo .oo 9n 1571

ARD
AVA TORS

10 1 tfc

Indispensable!

JS

.no money down
HoUsing J% on ns.ooo
5% on balance.
Conventionatloans50Jo
down ·
Call tor lntorm.ation
992-7144
llHfc
Federr~t

992·5682

742·2211

Sl

3· 11 · t mo .

n

992·7544
VA loans -

-Auto and Truck
Repair
-Transmission
Repair
Hrs. : Mon.·Fri.
~ A.M. ·S,JO P.M.

SHAG

16
Pets tor Sate
AKC beagle championsh·,p
Otoodtine pupp1es. Phone
aller 5 p.m . in Athens; 591
5864 .

House Owne"
Home P1r"~

CUNNINGHAM
&amp; ASSOC.
Mortgage Bankers

ROGER HYSELl'S
GARAGE

32

Wagon wheel bunk beds
W&lt;th manress, good t on
dit&gt;on lor 1175.00 . Also 1
bedspreads, 'J patr cur
tains, snoopy design .S1S.OO .

Ph. Pomeroy
614-992 · 7038

.~ Mobtle

RUTLAND FURNITURE
Household Goods

eHeat Pumps
• Electri c Heat ing
· &amp; Wiring
Industrial, Commercial
and Residential

,.. Co1n L•lmllrtl!li
... Rl!nt.a l Propert1es

Buy Now &amp; Save S2·$6 Per Yard.
25 rolls carpet ill stock to pick from .
Regular backed carpet installed free,
with pad.
Drive A Little- Save A Lot

51

• Oispo••ts

• Drven

· Cash 'n' Carry

Main St.
POMEROY,
992-2259

.._NO SEif\ofiCE;
ALL MAttES

SPRING CARPO SALE

P RIVATE
senlng,
J
bedroom home on S. R 7
ne dr Memory Gardens . 'J.' ~
ac res. Terms . 992 7741.

Mobile Homes
for Sale
19/J Crown Hawen, 14 ll: 6!i ,
three bCd1ooms , new c ar
pef 1971 Cameron, 14 1&lt; 64,
1wo bedrooms, new carpe t
tl,\72 Champion, 11 x 60, rwo
bedrooms, new carpet . 1976
Cameron, 11 )( 60. rwo
bedrooms, d!i electric . 1971
SkYline , t'l.s• 6) , two
bedrooms. bath &amp; • 1, new
c arp e l
1970
PMC,
11 • 60, rwo bedrooms , new
carpet B • S Sales, Inc.,
2nct · Viand srreet , Po.nt
Pleasant. WV Phone 615
4414

~ARTS

Furniture Carpet Shop

Beautiful three bedroom
ranch brtck. hOme in Bavm
Addition, Pomeroy, Ohio.
Gas heat, central air . Calt
99'1. 2571 or I 637 6-429.

ELECTRICAL CO.

985·3S61

100 LB . CHLORINE $109
5 LB . CONDITIONER $19.95
Visit our large show room in Coolville,
Oh. or Ph. 667 · 3146 Day or Night.
Master Charge &amp; Visa accepted.
(21st Year)
·

OPEN HOUSE : S.:Hurday
March 28th frOm 9 5 and
Sunday March 2flfh from 1
5 p m On S R. 7 between
Memory Gardens and State
Garage . 992 7741.
·

4

Bedroom furniture , tv. set,
· and din ing room su ite.
WANTED TO
BUY : Must be in good condition
G OL D,
SI L VER , and reasonl!ble . 992 3941 .
PLATINUM. STERLING ·
COIN S, RINGS ,JEWELR ·
Y. MI SC. ITEMS . AB
SO LUTE
MARKET
PRI CE GUARANT60 . EO
BUR KETT
BARBER 11
Help W,anted
SHOP , MIDD L EPORT ,
GET VALUABLE training
OH I 0 992 3476 .
as a young business person·
and earn good money plus
OLD COl NS, poc ket wal· some great gifts as a Sert·
ches, class rings, wedding .finel route carrier. Phone
bands , d iamonds. Gold or us r ight awav and get Ot'l
s ilver . Call J . A. Wamsley , the eligibility list at
Treasure Che5t Coin Shop, 2151&gt; or 992·2157 . l
Athe ns, OH . 594 421L
9

•

PACQUALE

OOMMUNITY MENTAL HEALTH
NURSING ·

ACRES of wacant land
on hardtop road . tdeat
building site or trailer
lot .
2 ACRES on hardtop
road Al l utilities. l mile
from Middlepor1.
2 STORY duplex . Close
to schools, shopping and
pool.
2 OR 3 B£; DROOM c ot
Tage wi1h 2 acres of
land, just olf Rt. 1
Fay Mantt:Y
Branch Mgr .
Phono 992-!598

r

RUGER new mode l .12
singte si&gt;c with holster &amp;
carrier extra cy linder .
New. 1150. 7•2 3010.

Furnace repllirs. elec1rical
work, plumbing, f'nobi le
home or residence . 992
5858.

DIUDN
REAL ESTATE

•

· - ~~~~ · Mfr~t!~nis~

S&lt;4

Part ·time light secre1ariat
work . Dependability &amp;
pleasant telephone voice a
must . Good references
· requi.rect Phone 992 7156
tor interview .

Insurance '

-

TRAILER spaces tor rent .
SOuthern Vatley MObile
Home Park, Cheshire, Oh .
'1'12 395~ .

LOCAL
financial
in
stitution needs individual
w ith bank. e&gt;&lt;perience to
work Friday evenings ,
Saturdays, and vacation
~ime . Send resume; to Box
!29·G, C· O "The Daity Sen
t1net. Pomeroy , Oh . 45769 .

13

Business Services

STORAGE Clearance. we
witt be closing our storage

and retail sates tor the
season soon . Apples atS3 .75
per bushel and up. Get
COUNTRY MOBILE Home yours now . Fitzpatrick Or·
Park, Route 33, North of chards, State Route 689.
Pomeroy . Large tots . Calt 669-3785.
992-7419 .
-

.

AUTOMOBIL E
IN
S URANC E b een c an
c el led? · L ost
your
ope rator's license ? Phone
992 2143 .

FIREWOOD. S30. load.
Split &amp; delivered . 99H2o((l .

&lt;!: - :sfi~c~t~r R.~nt

Babysitter needed in the
Racine area . References
necessary . 949 ·2846.

rourt

Four defendants forfeited bonds,
three of them on speeding charges,
in the court of Pomeroy Mayor
Clarence Andrews Tuesday night.
Forfeiting on spo:eding charges were
Samuel B011ton, Letart, W. Va., $30;
Jeffrey Fisher, Newark, $30, and
Donald Poole, Portsmouth, $42. Forfeiting a $50 bond )JOllied on a charge
.of spinning tires was Henry Ooerfer,
Pomeroy.

Sleeping rooms. i by the
week . Kitchen , and
tetevlsiori lounge. Carryout
store and re5taurant within
500 feet . 992·6370.

WANTED · The follow ing
music ians to form a rock
ba~d · Lead gu itar, second
gu.ter', organ or piano
player, drummer, trumpet
plao;oer, tenor sa)( . Must be
able to play rock and soul
music. Interested people
must have. their own equip
ment. Senous parties calt
1·304·675·2210.

One defendant forfeited a bond
and two others were lined in the
of Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman Tuesday night.
Virginia Duckworth, Middleport,
forfeited a $50 bond posted on a
disorderly charge and lined were
Larry L. Cundiff, Middleport, f25
and costs, illegal license plate, and
Pete Haley, Middleport, $100 and
costs and restitution on a criminal
mischief charge and ~ and costs
and three days in jail, assault.

s'_i ~ .. -Misc..MerChlnise

by Larry Wright

m..,t ,
YAlOO

81u\,

tUIItln

•

lrtm

Ho wtt~o:lmOwl"f\

w,.\ .. r v •&lt;• ·
-, m ,wtnqu•u'
1u~t. o uoors•

wno~•wc"· ll ·
Om ~ ~~"c'"n r

Poml•,-nv.oll
1mu

PH YY'l "/ Yh •
1)

••Beau11tu1, Custom
Buil1 Garages"
Call lor free siding
estimates, 949·1801 or
949·1860.
No Sund.ay Calls
311 ftc

CONSTRUCTION

New Homes - extensive remodeling
• Electrical work
• Roofing work
12 Years ·
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992· 7583
3-24·1 mo.

~==::======~~==
--~-;_;:_~~~~~-h~~~~~;===~
6]
livestock
81
Home
83
EKcav~a"'t"'in.:;g,___
COWS (or sale . Bred and
open polled herefords . 6 t 4
247 2704or614 247 2701
Serwlees ~

11

Home

I mp~o!ements
IY68 International t600 Will do carpenter work and
or exterior pain
Loadstar , 20 tf van body, 5
e '"- timares . CALL
speed , 6 c yl ., 45,000 miles,
61900r&gt;&lt;9 2614.
e.c cond $2,600. 614 985
410S .
French City Pa inting .
ReSidentiaL commercial.
74
Motorcycles
1nterlor,
exterior .
19"/11 Yamaha )( ~ do ~pec •~l Spec ializing •n Interior
wrfh low mileage . t'li: Ce ll~nt paintinQ, paper nang1ng &amp;
COOOITIOil With mdny e)(
textured ~.:ell•ngs . Free
trdS Call dtter " p m at e!ifimates.. 367 1784 or 367
~1 SJ4H .
7160.

lfT!@~~vem!_l!!_~
Gene ' s Carpet Cleaning,
deep stream el(fractlon.
Free
estim'ated,
rea~onabte
rates, 5cof
chquard . 992-6309 or 742
2211.

----Plumbing

82

&amp; Healln.t

WATER
WELLS .
Domest1c and commercial,
pump sales and service.
Tom
Lewis
Drilling .
Seasonal discount on pum·
ps. 1·311o1 -895·3802 or 1·304 ·
895 3641 .

--

--~---

ll
.--E kCOVillr1_1
Dozer work . Small jobs a
speciolty . 7~2 · 2753 .

COMPLETE sever in ·
staltafion &amp; backhoe ser·
wice for Racine·Syracuse
sewer district . Dozer work
if needed. 949·2293.
84

Electr~--

!_ ~etr!w.,._at,_io,n::...._
SEWING
MACHINE
Repairs,
service,
all
makesl 992 ·2284 . The
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
Authorized Singer Soles
and Service We sharpen
~!~~
ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR
Sweepers,
toasters, irons, all small
appt1ances. Lawn mower .
Next to State Highway
Goroge on Route 7, 985·
3825 .

�----- ----.-

_..

March 25 ltll

Pomero -Middleport, Ohio

Pa e-12- The Daily Sentinel

1/0I.:It,No, 239
Copyrighted 1911

miners who reired before 1976, the provisions from union sources
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) who asked not to be identified. It
Coal miners would receive a $3.30 raising payments to $315 monthly.
said
benefits would be increased unA
new
$100
a
month
pension
for
hourly wage hike over the course of
der the 1974 pension plan, which
widows
of
miners
who
were
covered
the proposed three-year United Mine
covers miners who retired from 1976
Workers contract, according to a by the 1950 plan.
on, but that the amount was not
A
dental
plan.
published report today.
- An additional contract holiday, available.
The Charleston ·Daily Mail, in a
In addition to elimination of penday after Thanksgiving.
the
copyright story, listed the wage hike
sion
royalties on non-BCOA coal,
- Elimination of the Arbitration
. as among the key elements in the 36
operators
also won the right to keep
percent overall increase in wages Review Board as the final authority
open
on ' all holidays other
mines
and benefits called for under tbe ten- on grievances, a principal union goal
Christmas
Eve and Christmas,
than
in the negotiations.
tative agreement.
·the
Daily
Mail
said.
However, it said
If the bargaining council approves
The increase would raise top scale
work
would
be
voluntary ·for
such
in the mines from $34.52 a day to the tentative agreement, it will be
miners,
who
would
be
.paid triple
$110.92 daily by 1983, the newspaper submitted to the rank and file for a
their
normal
wages.
ratification vote.
said.
Church had said Mopday that the
Prior details on terms of the
The proposed three-year contract
union
agreed to study an industry
with the Bitwninous Coal Operators proposed agreement had been sketproposal
that the UMW pension
Association is being considered chy. In announcing the tentative set- plans be replaced with company-by·
today by the UMW' s 39-member tlement Monday, UMW President
company plans. Word of that
bargaining council. The Daily Mail Sam Church said miners won a 36
percent overall i,crease and had tur- provision had prompted criticism in
said it also contains the following
. ned away an industry proposal to the coalfields by miners worried
provisions:
that the union was prepared to make
open rnines on Sunday.
- Elimination of a requirement
on the pension issue.
concessions
However, Church declined to
that coal operators pay royalties inHowever,
sources told the Daily
elaborate and B.R. Brown, the into UMW pension funds on coal they
Mail
that
the union would be
dustry's chief negotiator, would not
purchase from no11-BCOA com•
obligated
to
do nothing more than
discuss any tenns of the proposed
panics.
study
the
industry
proposal over the
contract.
- A $40 a month increase under
next
three
years.
.
The Daily Mail said it ~a;ned of
the 1950 jlension plan, which covers

ACE HARDWARE
Ml441eport. OH.

MARCH 28th, 1:00PM to 5:00PM .
INSTALLING A
WOOD STOVE?
EVERY1111NG
lOU NEED FOR
THE HEARTH
AND BACK
WALL IS HERE!

ACE
HARDWARE

for the hearth:

Z-BRICK
FLOORING
For the b.&gt;ck waJI

Z-BRK.K
FACING BRICK
OR STOME

county show the number of persons units; Mason, 441 to 566, a di£ference
residing in Point Pleasant as drop- of !25; New Haven, M4 to 669, a gain
ping from 6,122 in 1970, to 5,662 in · of 125 ; and Leon, 78 to 108, a gain of
30.
!98(). This is a loss of 460 persons.
All other towns in the county show r - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ;
an increase from 1970 to 198() as
NOTICE
follows: Henderson, 496 to 598, a difAnyone
doing
any repair
ference of 102; Mason, 1319 to 1,378,
work
on
the
Clifford
a difference of 59; New Haven, 1,538
Longenette
property
in
to 1,731, difference, 183; and Leon,
Twp.
without
my
Olive
192 to 236, a gain of 44 persons.
The nwnber of housing units rose
consent will be considered
in each community throughout the
trespassing and de a It with
county, according to the figures .
accordingly.
Units in Point Pleasant rose by 126,
from 2,186 in 1970, to 2,312 in 198() ;
CLIFFORD LONGENETII
Henderson , 169 to 236, a gain of 67

Herbel R. King, 74 , Letart. died
Monday in Pleasant Valley Hospital.
He was born March 11 , 1907 in the
Broad Run Corrununity, to the late
Quince and Susan Graham King . In
addition to his parents, he was
preceded in death by his wife,
Esther.
A retired truck driver for the
Foote Mineral Co., he attended the
Father's House in Hartford where he
taught adult Sunday school classes.
Surviving are daughters, Mrs.
Frances Swartz of Mason and Mrs.
Peggy Bush of Hartford : three ~ons ,
Ross, James, and Gary, all of New
Haven; two brothers, John 0 . King,
and Edwin L. King, both of Letart, 15
grandchildren and nine greatgrandchildren.
Funeral services will be held at 11
a.m. Friday at The Father's House
with Rev. Clyde Fields and Rev.
Hennan Jordan officiating. Burial
will follow in Broad Rw1 Cemetery.
Visitation will be held from 7-9
p.m. Thursday at the Foglesong
Funeral Home in Mason.

Laura Suyrt'
Laura Sayre, 94 ' Route 2' Racine

TIIANKING filE BOARD - One slrlking Youngslown teacher
wean a dlsmlssallener from the school board with her own commenl
written across II In red Ink. Over one hundred leachers reportedly
received such a Iener lerminaliug their employment al the end of the
year. School officials claim the moves are due to declining enrollment
and not lo the three week old strike. 1AP Laserphoto)

FIRESAFE- EASY-TO-INSTALL

Z-BRICK Z-BRICK
Fac•II8Bnck

il.OOAIIG 'ROOUCTS
DESERT TAN OR
SlATE RUSTIC PAVER

INCA
USED
OLD
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$8]~N.

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FLOORING
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ShortS leeves
small 134·36 )
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Large ( 42 · 44) .
X Large 146 ·48)

Date.
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•

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Trio face murder charges
f

SALE IS NOW
GOING ON.
lfS A DAY YOU

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ACE
HARDWARE

PH: 992-3662

~~;[;~!::s::::~:~:nH:~::: ~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:
by her husband, Waid Sayre, also by
her parents, Thomas and Eliza
Haner Jackson, one brother, and
four sisters.'
She attended Bethany Church at
Dorcas and was a member of the
Syracuse D of A.
Survivors include one daughter,
Mrs. Clarence (Hazel) Wickline,
Racine; two granddaughters,
Mrs.John !Eileen) Hamlin, Tampa,
Florida, and Miss Dolores Wickline,
Racine ; one grandson , Duncan M.
Mahoney, Tampa,Florida.
Funeral services will be held
Friday at I p.m. at the Ewing Chap.:;
with burial to follow in the Letart
Falls Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home after 2:30 p.m. Thursday

THE
CENTRAL TRUST
COMPANY

_,,.

•
1.01~

McELHLNN\ handlt's a wide rangt' ,of services and she'!'
in teres ted i.n you.

Repo.~ses.'wr ,.,hot to

rt&gt;cognizt·s and undershmds your banking needs.
•

Couple...

)OU

nalk throygh tht· dours at C..:ENTRAL TRUST to do your

banking busim·ss,

(Continued from page 11
graduated froin Meigs High School
in 1972. He graduated from Ohio
State University in 1976 and Ohio
Northern University in 1978. He was
a fanner associate of Bernard Fultz.
Their offices, which have been attractively decorated, are located on
the firet floor. They are open Monday through Friday from 8:30a.m.
to 4':30 p.m. and Saturday from 8:30
a.m. until12 noon. The couple reside
in Middlepnrt.

}'OU

an· surt• of PERSONALIZED service, provided

h} C..:OMPETEI'T and EXf•ERlENC..:EU PEOPLE. You receive

•'
•'

THlJ~T

is t'tHJ\cnit'ntly located at the corner of

death

CINCINNATI - A mau whu wurkeL4 for an auto rcpHssession Finn
wus shot to death early today in lhe parking lut of the Hawaiian
Terrace apa1·tmenl complex in n ur1hw~ st Cinci nnati.
Police identified the victim a~ Floyd Barber. 26, uf 4300 Erie Ave., an
employee of the Tri-state Auto Hepossession Cu. u[ Loveland .
A man wa!i bdng qucstimu!d by police in cunnediun with the
shooting, but no charges were filed pending further investigation.

Winning O~io Lottery number
CI.EVELAND - 1"ne number selected Wednesday nlgl1t in the Ohio
Lottery's daily game "The Number" is 840.
The lottery reported earnin~s of $651,646 [rum the wagering on lhe
drawin~ . l.uttory officials said sales prior to the drawing totaled
$908,235 .50, und hulder·s uf winning tickets arc entitled tu share
$256,589.50

11\1.)1\ lUlJAL uttt•ntion.

CENTHAL

COLUMBUS, Ohiu - State Aullttor Thomas E. Ferguson has cer·
tified four sdwol districts with year-end operating deficits, enabling
the systerrl~ to obtainltmns through the state Controlling Board.
But Fergus011 rejected a rcoquest for similar certification for the
Youngstown Sys tem, whkh requested a revi ew of its book tu show
striking teachers that it docs nut have nHmey fnr ra1s es. Youngstown
has not tried tu pass a new operating levy si nce 1!169 and has not
exhausted evcr·y 111ean.s of n1i.sing money, hl" said .

\ OlJ haw sct•n Luis at the Bunk in Middleport for the past 22 years.

\\'ht•n

~cond

Weather

-.,

Veterans Mt'morial

Aw.

l\lltl

man~

g.=
).

Considerable cloudiness tonight. Lows around 40. Mostly sunny
Friday. Highs again in low 60s. Chance of shuwers 20 percent tonight
and 10 percent Friday. Winds southerly 1~ 15 ruph tonight .

Hact• ~trt't't in 1\'1 iddlt•port. Du stop in and discover their

hanking st•nit•t•s.

THAT~s THE

Admitted--Keith
Aeiker,
Pomeroy; Lloyd Dugan, Rutland.
Discharged-Mary Gilkey, Etta
Cullwns, Larry Spencer, Gladys
Shwnway.

.,

Systems will obtuin funds

is INTERESTED in YOU!!

~HE

BRIDGEWATER, Mass. - Work on a trench fur utility lines carne
tu an abrupt halt wlwn a lmckhoe carne up with fi\lc human skulls.
The skulls and several other bones were uncovered Tuesday un the
groUITds uf tlw Massachusetts Correction Inslitution, which includes a
prison a hospital fur thccrim inai! Yinsa ne and a treatm~nt center for
the sexually dan~erous .
On Wednesday . officials sa id the work er'ti had stumbled upunar1 un·
marked graveya rd at least a t:entury ulcl .
•
Dr. Howa1~l Ca rpenter. a medical exa miner fo1· Plymouth County,
speculated that the victims Tim)' ha Vl' been residents of a state-run
alrn'l house that was on the s ite'" the 1850s .
1

407 Pea~ St. Midclleoort. OH.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

cm~l.~

TUGSON, Ariz. - The Puna County Board of Supervisot·s has
decided tu cut cosll! by cremalin~ dead poor people instead of burying
them .
"Every penny helps," said Stefani J. Gabruy, a L'Ounty fiscal officer.
The supervisors vut~d 5-0 Tuesday to authorize the l'remations of indigents upon thf condition that 1111 reli~ious beliefs are violated.
Superv1sm·s· ctuurmun Sam IA!IU:I sa id tlc was told a cremation costs
$j5 to $40 while a burial goes fur $200.
·

TO PASS UP.

~\)

lt&gt;•~ ll otll.,. •I •• • 11&lt;,1 fl. o• 1

MOBILE. Ala . - Po!Jce have charged three men with murder . The
state pathologist has detailed the ~ris ly death. Racial tensions, inflamed by the murder of a well-liked young bla ck man , have cooled.
But still, nobody knows why Michae l Donald was killed .
Donald, 19 , was found dead Saturday morning, dangling in a noose
from a camphor tree.
Before dawn Wednesday, police arrested Ralph Hayes, 23, and two
• brothers. Jlnuny Edgar; 22 , and J&lt;lhnn y Edgar. 26. all of rural Mobile
County. Each wns charge-d with murder.

CremeJlliml will ('Ut

.CAN'T AFFORD

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•,•• IN THEW

DATE: MARCH 28, 1981 1·5 P.M.

•IIII Y I • l• l·l' '"

•

$430CTN.

BUT THE SPECTACULAR
SPRING BARGAIN DAY

Do-it-Yourself Clinic

SOLID COLORS: GOLD NAVY - GREEN
LIGHT BLUE AND REO. DOUBLE PLY NECK .

ToDAY

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NOT ONLY A FREE
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HOW TO

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$400

COUNTRY
RUSTIC
liED ,
SMOKE

ACCESSORIES 1\LSO
AVAII.AIU • GaOUT
ADHESrll: • SE:I\LtR
INSTIUJ.-'TION kiT

-------------------------,

1 Section, 12 Pages 15 Cenb
A Multimedia Inc. Ntwspaper

CENTRAL

IDEA
MEMBER FDIC

members and negotiators for the · Several board members were Mariemont continued, meanwhile,
teachers had failed to produce an sleeping in Catsoules' office after withnosignsofprogress.
agreement.
the all night bargaining session.
Some 950 Youngstown teachers
The board offel)!d a 3.1 percent
"There's no doubt the strike con- who crowded into a local union hall
wage ill()rease retroactive to Dec. 31 tinues," said Andrew Hamady chief Wednesday unanimously agreed
in a written proposal, but later they teachers' negotiator, as he ins~cted that no instructor would retw-n to
said the would increase that to 6 per· picket lines at Woodrow Wilson High • work if any school worker loses his
cent using money that the board School, where some 30 teachers
or her job because of strike action or
saved by not paying teachers during were picketing at the time classes
unilateral dismissal. YEA leaders
the firsttwo weeks of the strike.
were to open.
Urged members to redouble
. Teachers at several other nearby
picketing efforts and defy any
" We are going to proceed with schools also said they were not plan- firings with court appeals.
(dismissals of) 100 teachers today," ning to submit to the board's threat.
" A person who won't quit, can't be
Calsoules said. "It would take quite
beaten," read a large side on the
a bit to stop the process."
"We voted to strike on Jan. 5, and hall's waU.
But he indicated if there were that's what we're doing," said
Board President Elsie Dieter said;
signs before a negotiating session
Robert Vargo, spokesman for the 'up to 100 strikers failing to report to
set for 7 p:m. today that teachers
Youngstown Education Association.
work at the city's 36 schools by 9
wduld accept the board's offer,
Several other labor unions have
a.m. today would be selected rarr
dismissal letters would be delayed. • promised to help teachers picket domly by computer. The 100 then.'
But he said,"lt's too early to say today, the 25th day of the walkout, would be sent dismissal letters unnow and I'm not about to back off according to Vargo.
der Ohio's Ferguson Act, which
from what we told them."
·Teachers' strikes in Ravenna and
prohibits public employee strikes.

Leaders -agree on development plans

PRODUCTS

i Area Deaths !
. Herbert R. King

YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio (AP) Youngstowns striking teachers
began to defy a school board threat
to fire them as a deadline of 9 a.m.
passed with most high schQ91
teachers still on picket lines.
School board spokesman Charles
Zillo said moments before the
deadline only six of the district's
more than 400 high school teachers
had crossed picket lines to sign
registers verifying they were'reJior·
ting to work.
Attendance figures on the elementary and junior high schools were
not immediately available.
The deadline passed and teachers
rejected a last minute school board
verbal offer to raise their wages by
some 6 percent. Shortly before 9
a.m., Superintendent Emmanuel
Clltsoules said a 12-hour secret
bargaining session betwPen im• ·~

AT:
.

en tine

Teachers defy hoard

%-BRICK
407 Pearl St.

at

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, March 26,1981

DEMONSTRATION
ON
HOW TO INSTALL

Mason County population increases
The number of per5ons residing in
Mason County has risen almost 2,500
between 1970 and 1980, and the nom·
ber of housing units in the county has
risen by almost 2,000, according to
preliminary figures of the U. S.
Bureau of Census.
The figures show Mason County as
having 26,763 persons living in the
county in 1980, as opposed to the 1970
figure of 24,300. The actual increase
was 2,457 persons.
The preliminary figure for the
number of housing units in the county rose 1,972, with the figure showing
10,224 units in 1980 and 8,252 in 1980.
Figures for major towns in the

e

Use Sentinel cla~sifieds

Coal miners would get $3~30 hike
per hour over course of contract

•

•

Extended Ohio t'oret•aHI - Saturday tlll'uugh Munda y: Achance of
showers Saturday und Sunday and fair· Mondll y. Highs Ill the 60s Saturday and in the mid-50s to the mid-60s Sunday all(t Monday. l.uws in the
40s Saturday and Sunday and 111 the ~Os Monday

A plan for future development of
county:owned property located between Mulberry and Union Avenues
was agreed upon at a public meeting
of the Advisory Committee of the
Meigs County Planning Commission
and the Meigs County Cornmissioners Wednesday afternoon.
James Jennings, of James M. Jennings Associates, Colwnbus, planning consultants of the I;tegional
Planning Commission, presented
three aternative development plans
for land uses that have been recommended for the county-owned
property .

The plan approved calls for
congr.egate housing that would be
located adjacent to the Multipurpose
Senior Center.
It also calls for a small convenience store that would · be
designed to serve those of the immediate area and would be located
east and north of the county in·
finnary or at the intersection of
Highland Church Road and
Mulberry ave .
Plans would also call for low in·
come public housing which would be
located next to and south of the radio

.'

~astern

lJhio nniners
begin early strike
By Assodated Press
set the stage for a ratification vote
About 250 coal ruiners in eastern by the rank and file .
Ohio "jwnped the gun" iod~y and
stayed off the job un the last day of
The current contract expires at •
U1eir old contract while their leader 12:01 a.m. EST FriHay, and miners
barnstonned th~ coalfields in an at- are honoring thelr n&lt;H:ontract notempt to stU a new agreerneo.t. and work tradition. So the mines will be
keep the walkout short.
empty until after a vote is taken The shift that ends at midnight and then the miners w11i go back
tonight was to have been the last un- only if the contract is approved .
til a tentative contract is ratified by - Most locals will vote Tuesday, and
the 160,000 members of the United definitive results are expected by
Mine Workers.
Wednesday .
But Tim Lyons, president uf UMW
UMW President Sam Church
Local 9695, said about 250 miners today begins a four-day tour to brier
stayed off the job for a second con- miners before they vote . He planned
secutive day at Oglebay Norton's to be at a western Pennsylvania
Sa!!inaw Mine in St. Clairsville, mine at midnight to greet workers
Ohio. He said the miners "more or as they came uff the last shift.
less jwnped the gun." ·
" I'm rolling now, " Church said.
"We're down to the final day uf the "It's ~ good contract, a good concontract," Lyons said, .. and I think tr~ ct ."
the men are reactin~ tu sor)le of the
Church began his sales effort Wedthings they've already heard about nesday, speaking to about 200
the tentative agreement. ' '
regional officials of the union in
Company officials could nut be Washington .
reached for corrunent.
The bargaining council approved
The union rec.tched tentative the euntr·act 21-14, but some of its
agreement Monday un a new three~ p1·ovi.sions already have come under
year contract with the Bitwninous heavy criticism ft·om the rank and
Coal Operators Association that file , which rejected a contract
provides for a 36 percent wage in- proposal in a ratification vote during
crease. Approval uf the pact by the a record Ill-day nationwide strike in
union's bclrgaining council Tuesday
1977-78.

towers.
It also includes a county park and
a . recreation area. Plans in the
r·ecreation area call for a swimming
area, tennis, s king and bicycling .
The last recommendation in plan
one is a single-family subdivision to
be located on the northwestern portion of the property.
The only program pointed out by
Henry Wells, president of the board
of cornrnissoners and Richard
Jones, conunissioner was lack of
parking fa cilities. They felt that the
C~rea
neHr Veterans Memorial
Hospital and the Senior Citizens Cen·
'

ter is heavily congested at the
present time. They pointed out that
they did not want to add to this
congestion.
Jennings felt that was a point well
taken. Additional parking facilities
will be included in the plan.
Attending in addition to those
named were Dave Koblentz, coma
missioners, Thereon Johnson,
president of the Regional Planning
Corruniss1on, C. E. Blakeslee,
executive director of the Planning
Commission and Mary Hobstetter,
clerk of the board of c~mmissioners .
'

Fire kills two
•
In Gallia County
Two Gallia County residents
died in a tnobile home fire in
Gallia County late Wednesday
night, according to the Gallia
County Sheriff's Department.
Dead are Johnny Hensley, 31,
and James Lee Shaver Jr., 13,
Hensley's stepson, according to
the report.
Deputies said the fire is
believed to have begun in the kitchen area JJf the Lincoln Pike
residence, where Hensley repor·
tedly was cooking on the stove.
The report noted Hensley had
returned from work in the
housekeeping department at Rio
Grande College earlier in the
evening a ccompanied by a
relative.
Hensley's wife Linda drove the
relative horne while Hensley put
some rood on the stove and went
into lhe living room, where he
reportedly fell asleep. Shaver
was dsleep in his bedroom, the
report added .
When Mrs. Hensley returned to
the horne at 11 :30 p.m., she found
the trailer in flames . The report
said she attempted to get into the
trailer to help Hensley and

Shaver out, but was turned back
by smoke and heat.
Shaver's body was found near
the rear door, deputies said.
Deputies also reported a house
on Poke Patch Road near Gallia
was destroyed by flames early
Wednesday afternoon.
J iJruny Potter, who resided in
the house, said the fire is believed
to have started in the basement
area near a coal and woodburning furnace around I p.m.
The area is not served by any
area fire departments, deputies
advised.
The Vinton Volunteer Fire
Department reported it £ought a
brush fire late Wednesday afternoon.
.
Firemen went to Ernest
Woodriff Road near Alit'l! in Huntington Twp. at 3:45 p.m. where
an outbuilding and ap proximately four acres stret·
ching into Vinton County were
destroyed.
Cause or the fire was tttributed
to a neighbor burning in his garden , which went out of control.
Estimated loss was set at $250.

Contract
talks •to
resume
Another meetiQg tu negotiate the
renewal of contract with county
highway employes will be held Monday, March 30, at I p.m. at which
time a new prop&lt;Jsal will be made .
At the last meeting held Monday,
March 23, county employes rejected
the proposal presented at that time .
According to Fred Haynes,
American Federation of State.County and Municipal Employes regional
director, the lastest offer rt!jected
was deSc ribed as the county's last.
However. Haynes said if there an
agreement is not reached, the :10
workers In the union will "surely"
go on strike.
· Representing county highway employes are Fred Haynes, regional
director of the American Federation
. uf State, County and Municipal Employes rAFSCMEl , Paul Dill, Bill
Parson ami Charlie Moore.
Making up the negotiating conlmitt•e fur the county is Dave
Knblentz and Henry Wel ls, nllllmissioners , Frederick Crow, Ill .
prosecutor, Phil 'Roberts, county
cn~ineer . and Ted Warner.
Issues to be distussed are wag es
and fnn~e benefits. The ,·ontract
wtlh t·nunly hl~hwHy t!mpluy~s t!X·
v1res at midnight on Mar,•h :n

HONORkD -Two adults were honored Wednesday
night at the annual awards banquet of tile Future Farmers uf America at Meigs High School. They were
presented plaques during t•eremonies at the evenl at·
tended by chapter members and their parents. Piclured are, left, Fenton Taylor, asslslanl high school
principal, who received the Merit Award, and right,
Mrs . MaxinP Goegleln, active parenl, who was made

an honorary member of lhe chapter, Center Is Sue Be~
ts, Uhlo Slate University student and Sootheast Sec·
tiona! VIce .President of th~ Ohio FFA Assn., speaker.
Miss Betts stressed the value of parental and faculty
support and the accompUshments possible by mem·
bers through seU confidence. Also made aa honorary
member last nlghl was Joba ·w. Blaettnar, facultY
member, unable lo aneod.

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    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="45342">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="45341">
              <text>March 25, 1981</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="536">
      <name>jackson</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="470">
      <name>king</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="335">
      <name>sayre</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
