<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="14527" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/14527?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-11T01:18:52+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="45634">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/8cb4f0c46d2a19b68d9e717cc73e5f90.pdf</src>
      <authentication>e488b42e594dc0e3e71e76673f9a2fd0</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45343">
                  <text>----- ----.-

_..

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
CHICACO

$8]~N.

ELBERFELD$

.INSTALL
SHEET VINYL

POCKET
T-SHIRT

FLOORING
Attend Our FREE

ShortS leeves
small 134·36 )
Med ium 138 ·401

Gh=Si~~

Large ( 42 · 44) .
X Large 146 ·48)

Date.
•

Reinforced pocket to retain shape. Soft, absorbent, 100% cotton . Shrinkage controlled machine washable.

•

111 11

1•"' 1

'rSI&lt; l liH •J •n•·•t:'l• •l , 111.

fii 'J

I· ~

Ut';••! , llo(.J,

, rrl

J .,~•'l &lt;' '' I '
,1,.\~

Trio face murder charges
f

SALE IS NOW
GOING ON.
lfS A DAY YOU

''' .-.&lt;· 1.,
llt•, •l, , rl

- ·1•• I• r
N·IJ

'4"

,, , ,.,, ;

•1

.; ll

o!ll&lt; J l

,. •. )

•

Backhoe wu:!arth~ lr UllUJil ,.,kulls
•'

II ~' I'

~· GAFST.~.A
-

Shi,•t Vtnyl I lt&gt;Vt·,

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

~ ''''

i•&gt;,_)r,l&lt;Ji il,•o l lll! • II I• •I ) OI•••• .III •I\} !1

~j

•,•• 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

CTN.

NOT ONLY A FREE
DEMONSTRATION WITH
COFFEE AND DONUTS,

HOW TO

Hanes

$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.

�Pomeroy-Middleport, .Ohio

Commentary

•ror,u

Pag-2-The D•l!v Sentinel.
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, t:t•reh26, 1911

An African policyc...___________..,..--_____.__Ja_mes_J._K~ilpa_m._·c_k
with the threshold premise that our clearly, nakedly defined in the mat·
only national interest in Africa is our ter of Nigeria. The United States is
own seH-interest. It is all very well, now importing 4.2 million barrels of
if the oecasion is high tea at the rec- oil a day. Of these, 950,000 come
tory, to discourse upon human from Nigeria. A sudden cessation of
rights, moral considerations and that supply would have obvious,
fundamental freedoms. These are in calamitous consequences. Such an
fact serious topics, not to be abrupt cut-off is unlikely, for most of
the imports are on long-term condisdained P
But the immediate problem - the tracts. Besides, this commerce
problem of statecraft that never produces between $10 and $12 billion
goes away - is to determine where a year for Nigeria, and Nigeria can
our self-interest lies, and to decide use the money . Nevertheless, a
how beSt to pursue it. And the prudent self-interest dictates that
trouble in fashioning an African we not grossly offend the Nigerians
policy these days is that we need to by getting too clumsy with the South
·
preserve friendly relations with both Africans.
Nigeria and South Africa; .we need
Yet we have other self-interests.
at least a .neutral Namibia; we Let us put on the back of the stove
would benefit from a pro-Western such considerations as the im·
regime in Angola. It would be nice to morality of apartheid, the long
do all these things at once.
history of friendly relations with
The . issue of self-interest is South Africa, and the common
inheritance ri English·speakind
• peoples.
This is tea·at·the-redory
stuff. We rely upon South Africa for
critical supplies of chrome ,
vanadiwn, platinwn, manganese
lll fu urt Str\:d
and
other vital Jninerals. From a
Pnnlt'ttll . Hhiu
&amp;14-99?-2156
strategic point of view, it would be
OE\'UTF.IJTII THE INH:Kf:STIIF Hit_: Mt:!(~S.MASU;'ol ..\Kt:: A
folly for the United States to let these
Slip away. We need naval access to
Durban , Simonstow n, Port
Elizabeth and Cape Town.
The same kind of hard-nosed conROBERT L. WINGETT
siderations ought to shape policy on
the western coast. It is pointless to ·
rehash the dubious claims of the
PAT WHITEHEAD
BOB HOEfLICH
United
Nations to authority over
A~~-isLIIIII Publisht'r/Cuutrullt•r
South West Africa . This is a copic for
tea with the dean of the Jaw school.
DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
The point is that self-interest cannot
penni! us to see this vast. barren

December of 1975, former Sen. John
Tunney of California succeeded in
preventing the cia and the Penlagon
from spending any funds "for activities involving Angola directly or
indirectly." It is this prohibition that
Mr. Reagan would like to remove.
It would be in our national self·
interest to give support to Jonas
Savimbi, now visiting here, and his
forces of National Union. So long as
we have no Cubans of our own, we

land fall into the hands of the Soviet·
supported South West African
People's Organization.
Angola presents a similar
problem. More than five years have
passed since Cuban mercenaries,
doing the dirty work for the Soviet
Union, succeeded in installing the
so-called Papular movement in
Luanda. To be sure, the United
States Senate helped in that misfortune. At a critical juncture, in

ought to make some effort to 1111pp0rt

a natural leader whoee sympatbles
look to the West. 'I1le !ale AI!OIItinho
Neto was the Soviets' guy in Angola.

our choice

What lB so wrong in supporting our
guy?
Let us tread softly, avoiding
needless oftense and 1111ving pointless rhetoric for wse at impolent
forums. Our interests lie in naval
bases and in tracking stati0111; and
in mangane,e, cllrome and oll.

FROM OUR BEST SELLING MOST POPULAR
'

HIDE-A-BED~ STYLES

.

A MEMBER ul Th•· ,\!.sociah'd Prrl!s. Inla nd Daih
Amt&gt;rkan Nt.'"l'lpc!JH""T Publi~ht'n r\~~IK" iat iun .

Prt· ~~ r\ .•~•wia li u n

2o%

WASHINGTON tAP) - Richard
V. Allen was supposed to be the
silent partner in President Reagan's
foreign policy hierarchy. the man
who stayed in the background as
Secretary of State Alexander M.
Haig Jr. publicly voiced the ad·
1ninistration positions.
But with a single speech, Allen
propelled himself into the center of a
minor flap in Europe, rekindled an
ongoing argument about who speaks
for the administration and set in
motion the makings of a new policy
for top staff members about speechmaking.
Breaking two months of silence.
Allen made his public speaking
debut as Reagan's national securitv
adviser last weekend, criticizing
"outright pacifist sentiments" in
Europe and worryin~ about the

:Letters to editor
:Opposes new law _ _ _ _ _ _ __
· · Dear Editor:
A bill has been introduced into the
Ohio Legislature that would require
: every person in Ohio who is 70 years
: old or over to take a complete
: driver's exaJnination in order to get
· a driver's license renewal.
· Every person in that age category
: or who soon will be should take note
: of the above fact and Jet their
· representative and senator know
: how they feel about s uch
: discriminatory legislation.
. Such a proposal against a whole
· class of people seems illogical. Older
: drivers are not aU physical wrecks.
: Statistics indicate that older more

experienced drivers are the be&gt;i
people on the road.
If the legislature really wants to
do som.ething about safety on the
highway they should focus on drunk
drivers, drugged drivers, illegal
licensing, uninsured motorist and a
host of other more important hazar·
ds.
Treat older drivers like all the
other drivers and when they break
the law or get into trouble with their
driving let the enforcement and
judicial system take its course.
If such a law as proposed in H.B.
253 becomes law it should be tested
in the courts for constitutionality. Gayle Price, Portland, Ol)io.

Use local facility------ . I do not understand why the
· residents of this area do not make
use of the fine facilities at Veterans
' : MemoriatHospital.
·
I have been a patient there on
several occasions, and my wife is a
patient there at this writing.
You have a fine, well·stalfed
hospital in your own county of which
you should be very proud.
You stand a good chance of losng
. this medical facility, if you do not
make use of it.
I personally believe you have one

of the finest, most qualified surgeons
n this part of the country in the per·
son of Lewis D. Telle, M.D.
I am a resident of Gallia County, ·
but when I, or a member of my
family need medical attention, we
go to. Veterans Memorial Hospital
and Dr. Telle, or one of the other fine
One of the major reasons the U.S.
physicians on the staff of V.M.H.
armed forces are woefully short of
You never know what you have,
every type of military equipment is
unttl you lose it ...
that we have such a big heart. and
Then. it's too late ...
we keep grving it away to countries
Rodney E . Spires
who claim they need it more than we
Route One, Cheshire
do.
If the U. S. military believes that
the new Reagan appropriation
requests are going to beef up their
forces , they're in for a surprise.
l was at one of the larger fighter
thank Norman Will and Harold Rice
aircraft companies, where several
for repairing our time clock. Now
Air Force officers were eagerly
our great basketball players can
waiting [or the planes to come off the
have basketball games in their own
assembly line, when I saw the
gynmasiwn.
following scene:
We also want to thank Eva
f'A brand-new fighter came rolling
Howard , Jerry Tillis, Flora
out of the hangar, and one of the U.
Donahue, Pat Arnold, Mrs.
S. pilots jwnped up un the wing.
Oberhouse for the work they put into
"What the hell do you think you're
refinishign the desks for the fifth
doing ?" a company foreman said.
grade.
" I'm just looking over our new
Thank you,
plane.''
Harrisonville P.T.O.
"That plane doesn't belong to you.
President, Helena Riggs
The State Department has promised
the first 20 to Saudi Arabia ."
"When do we get ours?" he said.
The foremen looked over his order
list. "After Saudi Arabia, the next 12

•

.
•
:

,

..
•'

.'

On behalf of the children of
Harrisonville Grade School, we
would like to express uur thanks to
all those responsible for obi.Bining
the two sets of bleachers for uur
gymnasium : Superintendent David
Gleason, Dan Morris and to John
Miller (mayor of Rutlanj)) for his
cooperation. A special thanks to
Gary and Gordan Gibson; Bob
Williams, Roland Morris, Charles
Barrett, Jr. and Greg McCall,
without whose help we could not
have possibly moved those
bleacl)ers. We also would like to

, Today in history.

• •

Today is Thursday, March 26, the 85th day of 1981. There are 2110 days
;; left in the year.
·
Today' s highlight in history :
On March 26, 1953, Dr. Jonas Salk announCed a new vaccine against
'· polio.
On this date :
In 1793, the Holy Roman Empire declared War on France.
i. In 1913, more than 1,400 people were killed by floods in Ohio, Indiana
1· and Texas.
J. In 1962, the communist regime in China beg;w a wurd-of-rnouth cam·
,. polgn 9/ criticism against Premier Nikita Khrushchev
Todif's birthdays: Actor Alan Arkin is 47. PU.ywright Tennessee
;. W1Wamsis63.
(;
Thought for today: 'Loye's like measles - all the worse when it eumes
•· Iale In llfe. - Dougl.u Jerrold, E1111lish wrller iiiiOJ.l8571.

r" '

CAN M WINfH FOR. 71/C
GtPPER IN CL 'iALVA!Xlil.'
WElL, Flf&lt;'iT M /rli15T/JWI { '
I fiTANf) WHO ITIS W&amp;'KE
.,
13tTTINI3 1N/JWWITH
,,......
Ia TAlK£!) TO U.N CN· 7
, VOY JMIIi Alf/J(fATIIiC!r
• }480/JT THE ,•. -~
,• ~
/IUI.IM5
JI/AITI/ ..•·
~ .. '·
,,
ll\1,")
j '

•

f

.

;/

!

,,

/.
J ·Z6

j

~

l.

Starting on
Sate at a Low

/\

'499

SALEI

OUR FAMOUS SIMMONS AND
STEARNS AND FOSTER MATIRESSES

renewal of "the contemptible 'better West Gennan spokesman Kurt
Red than ~ad' slogan of a Becker said in diSJnissing Allen's
· speech. " We rely upon the Germangeneration ago."
By his own admission, it was an American statements ... by Mr. Haig
assessment sure to raise eyebrows on several occasions.''
Curiously, White House
overseas. "It is difficult to discuss
this subject without risking some af· spokesmen appeared uncertain
front or some insult to our friends on what to make of Allen's remarks.
the other side of the Atlantic," Allen
More than 36 hours after the
said. " But it is a subject that cannot speech, White House press secretary
be avoided."
James S. Brady was not ready to
His remarks seemed at little at od- declare that the national security
ds with Haig's attempt to foster adviser's comments matched the
·closer relations with Europe\m administration's position.
allies, and they quickly became a
" I would imagine that he was
subject of attention for officials at a speaking for himself," Brady
Common Market summit in the initially offered at a news briefing.
Netherlands. Some brushed aside
Even so, he said, when a top-level
the conunents or said they were official speaks, "it's safe to assume
poorly timed, w~ile others said Haig that he's speaking the views of this
- not Allen - speaks for the Reagan administration. If he 1nisspeaks and
administration.
strays from the views of the au·
" Allen is not a policy-ma)&lt;er."

ment, not one of disparate agendas
for assorted issues.
But what is clear and consistent to
conservative officials and political
activists may not be so for the people
they seek to lead. A report published
by a Washington think tank - an
organization which sent the ad·
ministration some of its top ap-

pointees - suggests that there
aren't many ideological purists out
there, cdnservative or liberal.
·· While there can be no doubt that
important movement toward con·
servatism has occurred at the levels
of public policy and elite opinion,
there is reason for caution in at·
tributing to the general public a

gu to Chile, 14 have been set aside for
Argentina, the following 15 have
been allocati!d to Taiwan, and if we
have any left over we're to ship them
to South Yemen."
"Wait a minute. We came all the
way from the East Coast to pick up
these planes. We can't go back empty-handed."
'
The foremen checked over his list.
"What military service did you say
you were with ?"
"The U. S. Air F'orce. You know,
'Off we go into the wild blue yonder.'

"

ling any frghter planes from this
plant? ''
··What country do you 1·epresent?''
Striped Plants asked. _,.,
"The United States, dummy ."
"You don't have to be rude: We
have certain priorities when It
comes to the allocation of fighter
planes. We have Iosee that uur frien·
ds get them first."
" I don't get it. I thcught the U. S.
was trying to play catch-up with the
Russians. What are we doing giving
e~ ll our stuff away?' '
··rr we don 't give the Third World
our best planes, the Soviets will start
s upplying them with MiGs .
Therefore, it's in our national in·
teres! to see that every country in
the Free World gets all the military
equipment it asks for ." ·
" What are we giving Chile and
Argentina planes for?"
"They both have military govern·
menlii and need them 'to stay in
power. With some countries it's a
question of defense, with others it's a
matter of prestige."
"What about Taiwan'"
"We've always sent fighter planes

..

" I don't see anything here for the
U. S. Air Force. Are you sure you're
supposed to get American fighter
planes?"
"That was the whole idea of giving
the Pentagon more.money . Who 's in
charge around here ?"
"There 's a fellow from the State
Department over there. You might
talk to him."
The head of the Air Force
delegation went over to a man
wearing striped plants and a
tailcoat. " How come we're nut get·

ministration, it will be pointed out."
The White House obtained a transcript of Allen's speech, and a day
later the press secretary pronounced the president's endorsement of
·the remarks.
The end result, however, wllli a
change in policy. Brady had said
Tuesday the White House was "not
the 7th Precinct police station" and
that top officials did not have to
clear their remarks in advance with
anyone.
By Wednesday he was ready to announce a change in that policy.
Henceforth, Allen, Haig and
Defense Secretary Caspor Weinberger are to exchange their
speeches among each other in advance of delivery. Brady insisted it
was an informal, voluntary
agreement among the trio.

swing in this direction/' says
Everett Carl Ladd, writing ill Public
Opinion, a journal published by the
American Enterprise Institute.
"Most people just are not COD·
servatives or liberals in any wideranging ideological sense," Ladd
reports, assessing a series ~
published polls on poUtical attitudes.

to Taiwan. It's an old American
tradition.11
" Look, fellow, the basis of
American foreign policy is to be able
to face up to the Russians anywhere,
any place. How do we do it if you
keep givmg away our new military
equipment? 11
"We're aware of the problem, but
no seH-respectiJJ6 military junta will
take hand-me-downs. They want
only the best 1nilitary hardware that
money can buy. If we gave the U. S.
armed forces our newest equipment
before we gave It to the Third World,
they would be very insulted."

North Carolina
.coach excited
By Assol'iutcd Prt•ss
~~

It's been well dUt:umcntctl that
vlcams coac hed by Dean Smith ha ve

: lost each of the frve tunes they 've
appeared in the final s of the NCAA
·basketball tournament. But the
veteran coach of North Carolina
t1reJ11.ains excited about making the
c•f' inal Four for the sixth time.
" I wish all t•u;wllcs tkltt this u1r

11

•portunity," Smith says " All four uf
·US are on tuP uf the mountain .··
; North Carolina's Tar Heels. 28-7 .
play Atlantic Cu~st l'onfcrc nl'c r1vul
Virginia, 2H·&lt;L 111 - til e sclllifinctls
Saturday al the Spect rum in
Philadelphia. lmhana , 21-9. lakes on
Louisia na SuM 31.:1 , i11 the other
matchup , wiU1 the winners meeting
· Monday !light fur the natlt&gt;nal cham·
'''pionship.
'· The battle betwee n North Cai'Olina
and Virginia will be their third of the
r·season, with the Cowaliers roaring
from behind 111 the second half of
~·each game tu win buth uf the
t: previous Jllt!CLirlgs
1
r ··We're pl,i ying with Jl\Ort' ctul,fidence now," Smith setys. ·· But
Virginia 8\sn1s playln ~ better.··
1

U:iU Coach Dale Brown . .. Ddcnsc

will dictate Lhc ~t..:oursc uf the game.
Whether it will be u)rbcat Ol' laid
hack depends un what happens.
'·We' ve played both styles, wid
we 've lJccn able to win both ways .
Our best . sty le ul play, obviously , is
the up-hea t styill."
Indiana 's lhXJs!crs rely heavil y 1111
WI mtcnsc ma n-lv-rnan defen:se that'
oft en cu ts up fa :;t-bn•ak

S0fas
.

'429

STARTING ON SALE

mps
BRASS 35" LAMPS

SALE
REG $69

BRASS FLOOR LAMPS
With Glass Trays

r-----=-;RECLI NERS

SALE
REG . $119

:~:~ ...~ · Sta~:ng

.,,1 .~..~

$277

'---___,JSAVE ON FINE
QUALITY
RECLINERS.

$33
$66

vy
ocker Recliner.
$544. SALE S422.

offcns~s -

r---------------+
rv.,, ~

. ,.

.,
I
"'- ·

.l

r
I

-

-1~l
.

11

••

.', I

jl

TOPE'S L' ..f. t l
z1 es y e FURNITURE
SHOWCASE

t, .. _,-

"-_., -l

'l "

J

. ., 1

r:
I
I
1 JL_;~ . .--

to.•'""' .

--· -

f. ....S *IIN

1 ,l

' ,l

Corner of Third and Olive
Gallipolis, Ohio
446·3045
FREE PARKING ,- FREE DELIVERY

•Sofas &amp; Chairs
•Mattresses
•oinette Sets
•Recliners
•Hide· A· Beds

Last 8 Days For Lifestyle Furniture Grand Opening

4

DRAWING FOR FREE GIFTS ON SATURDAY, APRIL 4TH

• fcrent place.' · SC:Ii d Swnpso n. who

had a total ul 46 points and 24
" re buunds in t11c two prcv1 nus t.:unlesls. He cxpcl'l-i Nurth Cu rl)Jina to
'' try denying him tlrt• tmll . but says,
., " I've ~ut to kt;cp un pl~ying . I'm JUSt
J. tryin~ to get ttl the busket , trying tu
:. rebound a little bit more."
It will J,., the first rnccling uf the
•· year. fur Indiana and I.SU. Both

Casey Kasem
WMPO
SATURDAYS
8 til Noon

.

''

tTARY?

'

LA-Z-BOY AND ACTIQN

Smith madt! mJ rcfcrl.!nce tu Hi.t lph

fi?IJM
THe Mit.·

/

lea rns expect to slick with the fornlula that gut tht•nrto Philadelphiu .
"Tu cou nter lndianct'.s siz t~. we
nmst re ly on uur quickness, cwd that
is the l&gt;t:!st attack we can u::;c," says

Sampson. Virgmia 's all-cvt..•ryttling
••7 foot-4 suphnmorc center . Hut the
Tar Heeb very likely w11l try tu
"}. neulrctlize the big 111a11
., " Th1 s will be auothcr game. a dif-

DOONESBURY

f

II you are consitlering a new mattress you owe ·if to
your back and billfold to check our mattress selection
and low , low Df11ces.

EXCELLENT SELECTION
GRAND OPENING
SPECIALS

I'

"So where.does that leave the U. S.
Air Force?''
~
"I think you 'd get yours after
Pakistan, or is it Jordan? 1 kn01'
your name came up as a posslbill~
fur fighters somewhere along tile
line.''
;
Isn't there any way we can g•t
1 '
planes before Chile?"
"Colonel, it's ablolutely out of tlje
question, Where would be be today )f
we hadn't given Iran our flrst~laJS
fighter planes years ago?"
:

.

Save on 16 Different Quality Mat·
including adjustable beds
and wafer beds .

GETIING READY - University of Virginia's head basketball
eoach, Terry Holland (right) observes Ralph Sampson lleftJ and
Terry Gates tccllterl during praclit'e at Unl&gt;crsily Hall in Charlot·
tcsvllle Wednesday. Virginia is one of the final four teams to play il•
tht' NCAA basketball championship in Philadelphia. 1AP Laserpholo 1

THE E'IGHmN CENT tO

.
1

t

'

FIRM, EXTRA-FIRM, SUPER-FIRM

Off we gou.______~___Art_B_uc_h___;.wa_ld

A big thank you _ _ _ _ _ __

....._

An entire showcase of sofas that make in·
to comfortable beds featur.ing heavy duty
fabrics and innerspring mattress.

•

Are liberals, conservatives any different?
WASHINGTON (API - President
Reagan has promised to dance with
the people who brought him to the
party, telling " fellow con·
servatives" that they stand together
and that he'll keep it that way .
He told the Conservative Political
Action conference that theirs is a
consistent philosophy of govern·

.

LARGEST MATTRESS DEPARTMENT IN SOUTHEASTERN OHIO

Silent partner Allen rekindles fire

i ~!o. U l'~ . IIIII Jli: ' TM li!.IIJit il •~

4orc

TO

-~·· {

v/\

\ r --

BY STEARNS &amp; FOSTER, SIMMONSO /\
AND ROWE

and lhr

l .f:TTF.R...'ii Of0 11PINI11~ art· ~o~ r lt· um t•tl . Tht·~ ' hnu ld twIt'!&gt; ~ than :.100 "'''rd~ hilljit ..-'I I
lt-ll•·rN llrt' subjt'f"l lu rdilln~: and muM lw .• t)(n•·d ""ith namt·, ad dr rs~ and tr h·ph111lt'
uumhn. Nn un.~iJ&lt;tnt·d h·ltt.'r~ "'ill ht· publll&gt;hl•d. l.r llt'r• J&gt;huu!d ht· in .l(tMill Lilli It' . addrr,~in)(

/ ( -l~l"\

REDUCED

The DailY Sentinel

.

GRAND OPENING SPECIALS

Lifestyle Furniture Showcase

I

WASiflNGTON- Ronald Reagan
said a kind word the other day about
South Africa: He said that as long as
South Africa is making a sincere and
honest effort to resolve its problems
of apartheid, "it would Seem to me
that we should be trying to be helpful."
Well, sir, it )V&amp;S as if Mr. Reagan
were Robert Shaw, signaling the
downbeat to a great chorale. The
president instanUy was rewarded by
low bass growls 'from Tanzania and
Nigeria. Shrill soprano chirps came
from the liberal press. That great
: exponent of freedom and civilliber·
ties, Samora Machel of Mozam·
bique, added his voice. The chorus
joined in a reprise of the fafniliar
theme that the people of South West
Africa (Namibia) should be sold
down the river to SWAPO.
Let us sort things out. starting

The Dait sentinel-Pa - 3

From1399

• Spectacular Color
Graphics and Exciting
Sound
• Plug -In Program Paks for
Entertainment. Personal
Use
• Write Your Own Programs
And Save Them on
Cassettes
• Easy for Beginners to Use .
Expandable for Experts
\

II

1

RADIO SHACK HAS OTHER TRS -80 COMPUTERS
TO FIT EVERYONE 'S NEEDS FROM $249 TO $10.000 .
AVAILABLE ONLY AT RADIO SHACK STORES. COMPUTER CENTERS
AND DEALERS . CHECK YUUR LOCAL PHONE BOOK FOR LISTINGS .

"Tolra Furniture ·Galleries
CHERRY DINING ROOM

SAVE
15% - 30%

Large 61 " China, Oval Table
with 3 Side · Chairs and t Arm
Chair. Table has 2 15" Leaves .
Reg. $2,659.
SALE

ANNOUNCING TOPE'S GALLERIES
DINING AND BEDROOM SALE
.

TWO WEEKS ONLY - SALE ENOS ON SATURDAY, APRIL 11th

Furniture
Galleries

•Fin e Furniture
•Cu stom Drapery

441i-G33?

•Carpet
• t nterior Design

BOTH STORES OPEN
9 : 00· 5 Daily
9 : 00·8 Mon . &amp; Fri.

CORNER SECOND AND GRAPE STS., GALLI POLIS

'.

�Thursllay, March 26, ltll .

Pomeroy-Middleport••Ohio

Jaeger scores victory

Ross-Southeastern battles
Kalida in tourney opener

DRIESsEN CUT DOWN - CiocillWiti Reds Dan Driessen is for·
ced at second as Ray Knight hit into double play in second iniling of
game with the Baltimore Orioles in Tampa Wednesday. Orioles
second baseman Wayne Kreoschicki throws to first to make the play
on Knight after taking throw from his shortstop Klko Gargia. tAP
Laserphoto 1

Evans continues
heavy hitting
By Associated Press
Dwight Evans has made a big
jwnp in Boston's batting order ... and
so has his average.
A lifetime .262 batter, mostly from
the lower part of the lineup. the
power-hitting right fielder raised his
spring average to .39(). Wednesday
with a home run. double and single
in the Red Sox' 11-4 exhibition victory
over the Montreal Expos.
While Evans kept pounding the .
baseball, the Pittsburgh Pirates and
Detroit Tigers took turns pounding
each other... literally. Before Tim
Corcoran's ninth-inning homer gave
the Tigers a 4-2 victory. the game
was marred by beanballs and a ben·
ch-clearing brawl.
Pittsburgh's Bill Robinson suf•fered chipped and loosened teeth
:and a cut lip when he was hit in the
'mouth by the first pitch from
"Detroit's Howard Bailev in the four:th inning. Both bench~s cleared as
:Robinson staggered to the mound.
:Pittsburgh's John Candelaria had
,thrown a pitch over ~ohn Wocken·

fuss· head in the top of the inning.
Meanwhile, Phil Niekro and Gene
Garber cornbmed on a seven-hitter
as the Atlanta Braves blanked the
Philadelphia Phillies 3-{). Niekro
worked the first six innings,
allowing three hits .
After the game, the teams finally
completed a trade that sent Atlanta
outfi elder Gary Matthews to
Philadelphi~ for pitcher Bob Walk.

junior averaged 19 points . and 9
By George Strode
COLUMBUS, Ohio tAPI - The rebounds, i.S the key man for
dream matchup, top-ra.nked Kin- Badger. Kevin Richardson, another
sman Badger and No. 2 Colwnbus All-0hioan who is a 6-4 senior, paces
Academy in Class A, helps open the Academy with a 20.5 point average.
Ja ck MacMullan, Academy's
59th Ohio boys basketball tour·
coach, said all his p]ayers must pernament tonight.
The two small school powers will form well if the Vikings are to reach
risk 26-0 records in the second Class the finals for the first time.
" You can't limp along and win at
A semifinal at 9:30 p.m. ln St. John
Arena. Kalida . ~I. faces Riclunond this stage," he said.
Both powers are in the.midst of big
Dale Southeastern, 23-3. in the
turnarounds. Badger won only one of
opener at 6.•
Full' houses of more than !3,lXXI are 21 contests two winters ago be!Qre
expected to cram every session of Sawyertook over. Academy was 1-18
the three-day spectacle.
the same season 1 the first one fQr
The Class AA and Class AAA MacMullan.
sentifinalists wait until Friday to
Coach Larry Jordan has
begin their eliminations.
In Class AA, Dresden Tri-Valley, Southeastern in the state semifinals
23-2. a twHime winner as Dresden for the second time in five years.
Jefferson in 1963-&amp;1, faces Napoleon, The Panthers are making their four26-0, at 11 ;un. Youngstown Rayen. th appearance in the state tour22-4; pla)'s 1962 titleholder New nament without a single chamLebanon Dixie. 23-2. at 2:30p.m.
pionship.
.
" This team has more size than
The Class AAA tournament begins
with unheralded Wadsworth, 21-5. 1977," said the 6-7 Jordan, the single
upset winner of No. I Canton ·season record holder with 712 points
McKinley in the regionals. going at the Ross County school. "But it's
against Cleveland John Adams, 24-2, not as quick and doesn't have as
at 6 p.m. Fifth-ranked Dayton Roth, good shooters ...
24·1. the !976 Class AA king. tangles
Butch Dole. a 6-8 Junior averaging
with No. 12 Newark, 23-3, the cham· !6 points and 15 rebounds, paces
pion in 193&amp;-311-43, at 9:30p.m.
Southeastern. Around 40 colleges
All three championships witl be already are scouting the Panthers'
settled Saturday with the Class A star even though he has one season
finale at II a.m., the Class AA rema ining .
, showdown at 3 p.m. and the Class
Kalida
the only Class
Aschool
to
AA crown being settled at 8 p.m.
reach
theissenufinals
for the
second
Badger Coach John Sawyer is not straight season. The Putnam County
backing away from the big shootout team was beaten in its first state
tournament game by Cincinnati
with Academy .
"Our kids like challenges." he SLUrunit Country Day in 1980.
said. "They want to prove the
" It helped me and the kids both.''
writers and broadcasters were right said veteran Coach Richard Korby winning on the floor . And I'm tokrax . '' I was trying 20-some years
sure Academy wants to prove they to get down here as a coach. I
were wrong.· '
realized last year it was possible.
All-state Dale Blaney, a &amp;-foot-3 Our two returnin~ kids tGre~

•

t.:arly Suotbiy Mixl'd

24-llil attack and lead the Cleveland
Indians to a 14·5 victory over the

Buwli.ngi.Nague
rtt.an·h 15. 1981
Standings

Munda y Early
Ml:udLeague
Man·h!. f981
Te11m

Tt•a m

Seattle Mariners .

Pt.s .

"'""·h·" '""s""P

so55

Fnt•rttUy Ta l't'rn

Silvio Martinez pitched

five

scoreless innings as the St. Louis

Cardinals beat the New York
Yankees 3-1 while the Minnesota
Twins scored all their runs off rookie
Billy Smith in the sixth inning to
defeat the New York Mets :;.3. The
Mets completed a triple play in the
first inning.

•

•

zn szx znnzng stznt
• TAMPA, Fla . tAP I - Mario Soto,
'still unscored upon in three apo
:pearances this spring, set the
·Baltimore Orioles down with no hits
'in six innings Wednesday as the Cm:cinnati Reds won 3-2 in exhibition
,baseball.
Ken Griffey and Gennan Barran'ca rapped two hils apiece for Ci~&gt;­
,cinnati. Solo, 2-0. struck out eight
batters and walked two. He has not
'·allowed a run in 14 innings for the
Reds,B-5.

Griffey's third-inning single off
Baltimore starter Denni s Martinez,
1·1 , drove in Dave Collins after a

(USI'SI-)

ADhilloaoiMoJ-.Joe,
every •ftemooo ezcept Sunday,

Monday throllgh Fnday,Ul Cwr! s-l,liy

UhloH . S. BoysBasktlb.ll
AtOblu State Uah:rnlly

the Ohio Valley PubUaNJ11 ContolnY

Multimedia. Inc ., Pomeruy, &lt;Jiio- ""'·

ClASSAA,4.

992-21:;6. St!t.'tlnd dua pclltqe pa.ld at

11-5, vs. Clt! Ye~nd Julm
Adam.~ . 24-2, Friday, 6 p.m.
IR:!yton Roth, 2t--l, \'~. Newuk. 23--3,
Frida)'. 9 :30 p.m .
rmunpionship S.!tturdcty, 8 p.m.
Wadsworth;

Pomeroy, Oh.IO.
Mernbtr : The ~attd Preu,lnlancl Daily Pres:s Association and thll American
Newsp!tper

CLASS AA
Dresd~n Tr1-Valley.
2tHl, Fri~y , II a.m.

23-2,

Ohlo,4 511$.

Vuungstown Rayen. 22--4 , vs. New IA!ba·
non Dixi~. 1.3-2, Friday , &lt;! :30 p .m
Champiornhip Saturday, 3 p.m.

POSTMASTER: Send addrts:l to The Daily

Sentinel, Ill Court St., Pomeroy , Obl.o ~718 .

Cl.ASSA

Kalida , ~ 1 , vs. Richmond Dlilc Suulhc.ttsh~rn 2-lJ. Thur.sdtt.)' . 6 p.m.
Kinsnutn B.ttdger, 26-0. vs: Culumllu .~
Al'aderny , 2:6-{1, Thursday, 9:JO p.m.
Chrunpnmstup

Saturday. I I

Publishera Aaloclation. National

Advertl!iing Reprea~ntatlve, Llndlna
A.s.sociate!i, J IOI Euclid Ave., Cleveland,

Nai)Oieon,

Y!i.

SUBSCRIYTION RATES

By Carrier or Mo&amp;or Roate

u.m.

r-;::::::::::::::::;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;;;,1
HELP WANTED

One "'·eek ................ · · · · ... · .. 11.00
Ont' Monlh ... , ............. ........ f.' .tO
Qr1e Ve.ar . . . . . . . . . . . ............ ~2 . 10
SINGLE COPY
0~111)'

URGENTLY NEEDED - 50 peo
pi e 1n fhfs area to do sewing rn
their home, making
st uffed
an i mals, quilts and pie ce work .
No selling. just sewing. Good in
co m e. A ll ages accepted . Send
SJ .OO ' (refundabl e) for pattern
and 1nstructions.

No subscrtptJoru~ by m11il pennJtted In towna

whert' home ca rrier service ts available .

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
~Mon th

Oblo •ad Wttl VlrJiaja

.......... ............. • .. 'lUO

Six month , ....... ................ llUO

1 Year ............ . .... . ......... t:U.OO
a.n OutaiftOIUG

Corbin Sewing Center

aDd Wttt Vlr1ta111

Arts ana crafts Dept. ~ 1 oo
200 N. Mam
corbin, Ky . 40701

3 Month ............ ............. , 111 .00
6 Month ... _. .................. ... PO.IIO
1 Ye11r ... , ............. ......... 131.00

Ir~~~~~~~~~~~~~~====;=======~

Pu~o~o· t'!J'~SuperValu

UU\ ;tl

G

&amp;J

Te&lt;:~lll

54
ol6
-41

Cruw11
Auto PHrll.

J6

Four

B1 ~h ~crtt·~ Men -- Ju/Ul Tyree \120 . Darmll
Du ~an ~1J. B1ll Cars"'ell J71
li1 ~h ~amt' Men - J utm T)T~ U:l . 81\1 t'ar·
s ~e ll :N$ :

Juhn Tyrt"t" 113

H1 ~h~C rlt'S

Wmllt'11

Bt'tt) Srmlh 517; Mil xllh'

Du;:an004 : lkeky KlOI!'s~ .
·
I hgh ~amc Wumt'n Bet:k) K l~s l!U. Ht'lt~
Smr th 189 : Caml} Va1uuc\t'f 186

Roarh 's Gun Shop
B1ll's BOdy Sllop
Ad Tak~r Nu . I
Md:Jure's J &amp; 1
Ad Taker Nu . 'l
r t!am b
H1~h m~n

walk, a balk and a passed ball put
Collins on third base.
Barranca 's solo . hom!! run in the

fifth gave the Reds a 2-0 lead. Joe
No.lan ·s double and Paul

~6

U
31

$3

6$

strres - D&lt;1nn;· Wrll ~II : Ray RUC:~ch

1\tiudLe.IIJ:,IIr
Man•h 16. 1981

L
18

Tt&gt;am

20

Bill's Body Shup

f\\J} al l'm•~•n
2-4
Pr uffltt '.s Gn"-'t'n
32 :!2
Pulllt!ru~ Wi111•Siun •
\8 -66
Tcallll
10 :;.,
Hi~ h 1111.1 . ~~Wit'
H&lt;!Z1 lt"t' Hu~l)o:] :.!36 , Betty
Whitlall'h &lt;!I I: Sh1rlc) Meaduw.s 18'2
H1~ h md ..sene:-~ - lhtz1ltt H1cbd $27 . i:lcH)
WhLtlatt:h 524 : ~hl"l.:11t' W1lsun·N'l
Teall\ h1~h ~&lt;~li l t'
Hlt~bt·l's U~W Ca r s 7:!:! ,
Pnif11l ·s Grot'Cr} 64-4 . H1cbd' s U:.t.'tl Cars 6.:12
TCiimlu~h ..sene~
R tebc l' ~ U:~ed Car.s 1919 .
Hu}al ('rtJWil 1757 . Pumcro) W111c Sturt• 1756
l'umt' rlJ)' Buwll"" I AUk'S

Mooda}' F..arly

Householder's single added a run in

H

Mulldl)" E.rly

W
46
H
.W

SIHrlc~ 's " f.'

~2

:-PJ

SOl : C l yd~ Silyre 490.
H1gh wom~n ~ n ~s - Marl~11t! Wtbun 52.1. P~tl
. C&lt;!r'SIV1 ~I I : Hell)' Whtti&lt;Uch 49-t
High men game - O:mny Will 191 , 11!7 ; lhm
Smtth \lkl, B1ll Smtih 180.
Hi!(h women game - M&lt;1rlcnc W1 l:-~un 211 . Pat
Ct~rsun 195: Mel Huln ~e~n 194
Teant st~ ru~s - AdTakt&gt;rNu 2 1991
Te&lt;:~IU,IIalllt'
Ad Tt~kt'r Nu 2 101

S &amp;aDdio~es

l't·rwl
H1d.lt'l' S U~"l Cai'S

w. L.

58 J8
ft-4 ~ 2

Rottt•h's Gun Shop
Md .1 urr's 3 &amp; 1
Ad Takt!r Nu I. Ill'
Ad Takt!r No. 2

Tcam 5

w.

1..

&amp;t -40

56

~

"" ""7J

&lt;9 "
)3

Hrgh 111en senc.s
l.arn 11UJI,iill ~ : HH)'
Ru.tlt'h ~78 , O&lt;tnll)' W!II S.:W
High WUilli..'fl St!fll'S Pat L'arson :&gt;42 ; Kt•tl}
Whlt\ah'h :)30 : 1Jt!b1llcn.slcy 516
H1gh 111~11 g&lt;unc - Hay Aweh t29 : Chut:k
Hus:sle r213. Lnrry Dugan200
HJ fo:h ~A'Illllell ~;um~
P:.t C ' t~rsun W : Ck!b1
~hm.sley201: 8~ !1} Wh1tlaLt·h 191
Team !iencs Hn11 !.!h '~ Gun Slwp 2115
T~lm1)!illlk:
Huaeh's Gun Shoj) 781

Star1 w11h th e Colonel's " frnger lr ckrrf gqod"· K en tucl&lt;y
Fr1ed C h1 c ~en Adcl the fro~~rn 's mash ed p o tatoes
g ra vy . co le s law ro lls T h at's a re al meal Now chrc k
the pnce Surprrsedl K entucky Fr.ed C h r ck~n
1! s
value added

It's nice to feel so good about a meal.

~ntucky Fried Chicken.

Mi:u'fli~HKUt'

l\tart'h 2. 1981

the seveuth.

Team

Baltimore, 6-7,

scored in the

seventh off reliever Scott Brown
when Gary Roenicke doubled, took
third on Eddie Murray's single and
came home on a double-play grounder by Doug DeCinccs.
The Orioles added a run in the ninth on doubles by Dallas Williams and
Murray .

W. L.
56 32
50 38

Hut~ l'h 's Gu n Shup

B111's Budy Shop
M•{'\ure's :l &amp; I

-lti-42

Ad Tw.ker Nn, 1
-4o{ H
AdTw.kt' rNo 2
;Ji. ~l
Team.l
.
31 37
ftt l!(h m~n senes - Da nny Wtl\638 . HuS:ol C.. r~011 $\9: 8 1!\SnuLh $.J i
H i~o~h wvnll.'n s._.rics
lNbt U ens l c~ :'1:6. Pat
Carson -l8i , Marlen~ W1lsun -477.
Hr ~l1 n~~:n ~cu ne
Danny W1ll Z:H . 213. ll•lll
Su ulh 197
UJ fo!1114'ul!h.'ll ~arne

M&lt;.rlene W11 sun t(lj , IJciJl

Her\Sll')' 195, 178

Reds trim roster
TAMPA, Fla . I AP I - The Reds
have cut six players from the major
league roster and reassigned them
to teams in CincmnatJ farrn system.
They included pitchers Jose Brito
and Bill Scherrer, catcher Steve
Christmas, second baseman Tom
Lawless and outfielders Gary Redus
and Duane Walker.
Wednesday's cuts were the first of
spring training for the Reds, who
still have 34 players in their major
league camp.

'Maver advanct•s
MILAN, Italy tAP I - Gene Mayer
'advanced to the q\lllrterfinals of the
J2()(),000 Milan leg of the World
Championship Tennis circuit ,
heating Peter Rennert 6-4, 6-2 in a
.second-round match.
; In other action, Sweden's Bjorn
Borg downed Bill Scanlon, 6-1, :;.7, 6-

, l3.

:Rumps tu victory .
· LEBANON , Ohio(AP I- Mr. Deal
romped to his first .victory Wed·
nesday night in eight starts at
Lebanon, winning the $1 ,000
featured pace mile in I :00.3-5 by
• three lengths.
The winner paid $10, $5.40 and $4.
Boomer Butler returned $5.60 and $4
for second. In third was Myron Boy,
paying$4.
Pw-ple Gunner combined 3-2 with
Pinch Hitter in the double for $82.60.
The crowd of 1,085 bel $116 .039

Brad Gulden of the Seattle

TWO DOWN -

Marlnen ~elllll a«ood ba~eman Jaan llouiiia ol the

Oevelaad JM!au sprawliDI! u Bonilla completes the
double play during the second Ianing of their ellblbiUon

j)i 'l
~~

Hl,LTON HEAD ISLAND, S.C.
(AP) - Ray Floyd, riding the h9t·
test streak in golf, fully antl~ipates
winning his third consecutive tournament this week in the f30(),000 Sea
Pines-Heritage Classic.
"My confidence is at such a high
point, I'm doing so many things so
well, I can honestly say I expect to
win this week," Floyd said before
teeing off in the first round today,
"If you ask me that five months
from now when I'm not playing well,
I'll tell you 'no, I don't expect to
win.' There have been times I expected to win and dldn't, but I've
won a lot of touraments when I expected to."
The 38-year-old veteran, nuw in his
19th season on the PGA Tour , won
the last two tournaments, Dora I aixl
the Tournament Players Championship, and collected a total of
$367,000 in doing so, including a
1250,000 bonus.
"I think the streak has been misi.nterpreted," Floyd said. "It's not just
two weeks. I've played awfully well
all year, with the exception of
Phoenix. I lost once in a playoff. In
another one I was two shots back.
I've been in contention abnost every

.

TrySa..-ing!

easy gomg

.

shle. Our

Sho p

COLUMBUS, Ohio (API - If you
want a sentimental favorite In the
boys state basketball tournament,
try Fred Church.
Here's ·a man 5S years old,
coaching in the last of his 32 seasons
and yet is making his first trip to the
state semifinals.
"It's like a fairy tale," said
Napol~n High School's coach for 25
years.
Church has paid his dues to the
Ohio sport.
He's served as a fonner president
of the Ohio High School Basketball
Coaches Association. He's been a
member of that group's board of
governors.
Three of his teams have posted undefeated re~tular seasons, includint&lt;
a 20-0 production this winter that
ranked third in the state. Still, 11one
could avoid an upset leading to St. 1
John Arena until his current squad.
Church has produced 422 wip11ers ,
and 236losers in his career.
With such success, why is he

RIVERSIDE

BOYS, GIRLS &amp; STUDENTS

spurt shirts

ami knits.
STOCK UP NOW

I

SHOP BAHR CLOTHIERS FOR THE
FINEST SELECTION Of MEN'S AND WOMEN'S

NAME BRAND
WEARING APPAREL
Mid~~~~ort,

JEANS FOR
SPRING

.., s1d~

some

lor

vo u rsF.Jll

6 Month Money Market

12.524%

Subslanlial J ; ~nalty for 4lilrly wiThdrawal '

:t)a11 , Q3,,.,1 5~or
"Tne Place to Shop for
Work &amp; Western"
Middleporr, Oh.
M· S, 9· 5; Fri. 9·8
JIB N . 2nd Ave.
Phon~ ~9i · .Jo04

1977 CHEVY
CAMARO
.

"Extra Sharp"
Rallv wheels , llir, tilt
wheel. 2· tone paint .

•4495
1976 AMC
SPORTABOUT

Station Wltgon. we
sold If new, cruis~.

air , roof rack. wood

'2395

~.....

1980

By WW Grimlley
AP Correapoodeot

AS WINTER
SALE
CONTINUES '

Truck, Caterpillar Tractor and Bull
Durham," she said, "I am afraid
this controversy has split the tour."
The ladies are playing this
weekend in the Kemper Open in
Costa Mesa, Calif. - calloitses and
all.

TWO'S

co.

Pomeroy

r-'-------------~==::===~====~

a

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

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

CltyStax
l&amp;n~cAn_

vw

1978 PONnAC
GRAN PRIX

PICKUP TRUCK

Silver with red rn

11

'crior . Loca l owner,

lion, " regular gas",
air ,
5
speed,

road wheels, air .

ron . Fuel injec

Bringing your fashion's
newest looks in sunglasses
with a wide range of slyles
for men and women. Top
quality variegated and
solid tint . lenses. Buy
several!

tachometer. gauges.

•4995

4 WHEEL DRIVE
!0 JEEP WAGONEER
"LIMITED"
11 BLAZER
11 AAMCHARGER
!I JEEP CJ-5
16 BLAZER

1 LEFTOVER
RENAULT

1980 MERCURY

Lecar Demo, High ,
high gas m lleage.

Smitll V 8 enorne .
air . pac:lded vrnv11op ,
rear del rost

SAVE
3RO ST., RACINE, OH.
Member FDIC
.......
. . ' ' .. . . -

ARRIVING
DAILY

Sports World

· Tlw DPalcr Th.1t Cares Ahout Quality"

groin

PREWASHED OR
UNWASHED IN
::,uM &amp; REGULAR SIZES

STYLES

Sex exploitation has become a
c)ifficult, 6,65!!-yard, par-71 Harbour · raging issue among female golfers
Town Golf Links:
with Jan Stephenson and Jane
"It is the best test of golf in the Blalock firing barbed shots at each
world," he said. "It is the best, other across the continent while
fairest hard test of golf you're going their contemporaries are choosing
to find in the world."
upsides.
He'll be facing an elite, inIt's theovermost
intriguing
convitational fieh.of 120 that has a troversy
women's
attire since
strong foreign flavor with Masters Gorgeous Gussy Moran's lace pan·
champ Seve Ballesteros of Spain, ties were barred from Wimbledon's
South African Gary Player, !sao sacred Centre Court back in 1949.
Aoki of Japan and David Graham of
"Quasi-pornography," fumed
Australia .
Blalock after seeing Stephenson
Tom Watson, a fonner winner photographed in Fairway Magazine,
here and the outstanding player in an organ of the Ladies Professional
the game for the past four seasons, Golf Association, reclining on bed
will try to turn around a thus-far in a slinky, revealing white dress.
disappointing season.
" Is our organization so unaware of
Among the other standouts are the real glamor and attraction
Hubert Green and Hale Irwin, each staring it in the face that It must
a two-time winner here, and 1981 resort to such trash 1 " . she com·
titleholders Andy Bean, Tom Kite, plained in a signed article for the
John Cook and Bruce Lietzke.
Mia1ni Herald.
Portions of the final tl"o rounds
Stephenson r~ sharply,
will be televised nationally by CBS.
using the Los · An~es as the
vehicle to defend her provocativeif not risque - pose as a means "to
add a new dimension to the public's
image of women golfers.
" In one of the three pictures of
me," she said, "I am relaxing on a
bed, reading a book, in a beautiful
white dress which, admittedly, is
doing a somewhat incomplete job of
covering all of the outside of my left
thigh.
" The galleries can see a Jot more
leaving L'Oaching with another of my legs, however, anytime I play
decade until retirement?
in shorts.''
" Thirty-two years of coaching, 25
Blalock, a 13-year veteran with '1:1
of it in one coJrununity, is lung tournament victories, acknowledged
enough. I've ~tot to do something that the addition of such beauties all
else," Church said. He will not admit Stephenson and Laura Baugh had
publicly to taking another job, contributed to the tremendous
however.
growth of women's golf. But she also
The sweetest victory of his career said that a new breed had emer~ted
came Saturday night (OJ' Church, His "not indoctrinated in the glamor-sex
tewn upset No. I Willard 111 the appeal sellin~t points ...Sweat, work,
Bowling Green Class AA Regional sore muscles, callouses, elation and
Tournament, avenging . a !980 , disappointment look precedence."
regional finals loss to the same
"Maybe next year we should drop
team. It cost the Wildcats an un- th~ fashion feature and do a photo
beaten season and a trip to the state series on callouses," snapped back
semifinals.
the Australian-born Stephenson, ad"It's the most emotional, intense ding that the tour prospered through
game in which I've ever coached," sponsors promoting femininity:
Church said. ''It was like 32-minutes Colgate, Sarah Coventry and Mary
of overtime. We had to wait 365 days Kay.
to get at them."
" Maybe we can interest Mack

by

VW l\MC JEEP RENAULT

rnak.e every dolldr cou nt And put

newest
coUt"ctiun of

BAHR CLOTHIERS

Cdr1-•lu ll y sp,~nd W\ St•l y

r-:;;;;;:;;;;::;;;;:======::;

Ohio
Sportlight
By (;eorge Strode

TuCSON, Ariz. (APl - The
Chicago White Sox were statistically
the worst fielding team in the
Anlerican League last year, but thl!y
still managed to turn 19 more double
plays than the Cleveland Indians.
Despite compiling the second-best
fielding percentage in the league,
the Indians' defense recorded only
143 double plays - second-lowest
total in the league, exceeding only
the Oakland A's total of 115.
Cleveland's problem wall easy to
pinpoint: an early-season injury to
regular infielder Duane Kuiper turned the Indians' second base job into
a revolving door, staffed at varying
times by Jerry DyJr?inski, Jack
Brohamer, Dave Rosello and Alan
'Bannister.
Nearly every time he fielded a
ground ball. shortstop Tom Veryzer
found he had a different partner at

\.

comfort and

time I've played. It's not a two-week
thing. It's more like 2'k or three
montha.
"My game is very good right now.
I'm putting well."
He paused to smile. then L'Ontinued:
"I just hope the train stays right
on the track."
And, in Wednesday 's pro-am, he
gave every indication the train is, in·
deed, still on track. He shot a 69.
"I expected to shoot a good round.
If I'm going out to practice, I expect
1o practice welL
"I'm very, very confident in what
I'm doirig with my olf swing. If a
situation arises, I feel capable of
perfonning the shot required."
And Floyd, winner of 14 career
titles inoluding the Masters · and
PGA, even has a little something extra goin~t for him this week.
"This is my favorite course in the
world," he said of the deceptively

Injuries hurt
Tribe's defense

"It's not really a problem,"
Veryzer said, trying his best not to
cast criticism upon Kuiper's
replacements.

Inflation
FigLter'l

Topping it
all for casual

game Wedllesdlly In Tempe. Gulden alid Marlo
Guerrero were out when Guerrero grounded to third.
( AP l..a1lerphoto I

Floyd anticipates another victory

set'Ond.

THE GREAT
SPRING

Syracuse starter to foul out in
regulation time, were brilliant r..the Orangemen, scoring 29 and 25
points, respectively.
In the consolation game, Purdue
beat West Virginia 75-72 in overtiine
for third place.
Tulsa led 48-42 after a racehorse
first ball during which Stewm
scored 14 points and Brown 12 for the
Golden Hurricane.
Syracuse was bothered by Tulsa's
pressing defense and fell behind 9-2
but Rautins scored .six poinia In the
next 90 seconds to help cut Tulsa's
margin to 13-12. Then the Golden
Hurricane quickly took a 27-18 lead
and had that nine-point advantage
on three other occasions before
sweeping to its biggest first-balf
lead, 43-32, on a basket by freshman
center Bruce Vanley with 2:56 left.

Today~s

........ ' .......... ...... 16 CenL'I

Subtlcnbtrs not desirloil to pay the canier
may remit in advance d.ir«t to The _DIUy
~nlinel on a J, 6 or 12 month bub. Cndit
w11l be ~ · ven r11orrier each month.

nament's !1108t valuable player.
A 17·2 run by Syracuse wiped out a
54-46 Tulsa lead in the second half,
giving the Orangemen, who finished
the season 22-12, a 63-56 lead with
12:48 remaining in the second hall.
But the rally was defused when
Syracuse starters Dan Schayes and
Leo Rautins picked up their fourth
personal fouls .
Shortly thereafter, Tulsa scored 11
points in a row, including 7 by
Stewart, to take a 69-65 lead with
7:031eft. The linal point of the spree
was a free throw by Stewart after
Schayes was whistled for his fifth
foul.
· Mike Anderson, who scored 17
points for Tulsa, had 7 in the final
four minutes of regulation time but
he missed the first of a 1-and-1 with
eigh seconds left to allow Santifer's
tying basket at the buzzer.
Santifer.and Tony Bruin, the thilrt!·· t

SPRING

PRICES

Rick Manning and Vo~1 Hayes
drove in three runs apiece to paL·e a

:Soto no-hits Orioles
•

The Daily Sentin~l

Published

was named the 44th ailnual tour-

NEW YORK (AP) - Greg
Stewart's twisting layup with 30
~ds left in over\lme gave Tulsa
an 116-M .victory over Syracuse and
the championship of the National Invitation Toumamett We&lt;!nesday
night.
billy six points were scored in the
five-minute overtime period, forced
when Erich Santifer of Syracuse
scored at the buzzer to end
regulation time at 112-82.
Tulsa's David Brown, who scored
18 points, and Sean Kerins of
Syracuse traded two free throws
apiece in the ·overtime before
Stewart's winning shot. Syracuse
freslunan Gene Waldron missed a
!Hoot shot with three seconds
remaining.
.
Stewart had 23 points to lead
Tulsa, which finished with a 26-7
record under first-year Coach Nolan
Richardson after going 8-19 last
season. The 6-foot-9 junior center

r~&amp;-=1.=6-3=:=========~

Local bowling

Wt'dl1t'Sday E~rlyblrds
Murch tIt!! I

•

Verhoff and Dan Utendorflloved n
soVerhoff,
much they
to come
back."
a wanted
6-foot senior
forward.
paces the Wildcats with an Ill-point
average. Kortokrax.'s son, 6-3 senior
•
center Rob Kortokrax, is the teams
leading rebounder.

Tulsa captures NIT

NEW YORK (AP) - Andrea
Jaeger scored a 6-4, 6-3 victory over
Bettina Bunge in first round of the
$.100,lXXI Avon Champ!OnshiJl8 at
Madison Square Garden.
In other matches, Leslie Allen
upended Cz!!Choclovakla's Hana
Mandlikova 7-5, 6-1 ; Martina
NavratilovatoppedPamShriver:H&gt;,

COUGAR XR-7
'6795

•6795
1973 PONTIAC
GRAN PRIX
Loaded with all the

burgundy ,
has air conditioner .

'995
1978 CHEVY

CAMARO
Rddral llres, turbine
Nheels , dir. bl ack
c1nd silver , 2tone .

'5395

1/2

COMPLETE

e~etras ,

ThiS season·s la test heel shape 1n the stacked leather look Very
flex1ble sole for vow walk1ng pleasure Fash1onablk uppers that
compliment a wardrobe o f cloth1ng styles. Get out on the town
1n C1ty Stax by Thom MeAn

heritage house
OF SHOES
Middleport, Ohio

AND
FOSTER GRANT

STOCK

PRICE

Based on Manufacturer's List Price

S UJ I 5 HER l 0 H5E

GOOD
THRU
MONDAY

Phnr rno( y

GOOD

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

THRU
MONDAY

llt ...... McCwl...........

c:a.rt.•lftlt, · ·" ·

]

..-..

..........

._.¥llr•ti111•_.1 .. t .rro.

,Rasc•t"IONI

,..,....., ........... -..o.
I'H.ttl-ltll

�•

.

*

.
Pape-6-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy

Middleport, Ohio

Southeastern
Ohio
offers·
abused
wifes
,.
~~ options for asylum at Serenity House
••

·Until recent years, an abused
:' woman often had no choice but to
· stay and accept beatings from her
· · husband or live-in companion. More
choices are available to women in
~ Southeastern Ohio now. One option
is through the law. The Domestic
-· Violence Act was passed by the Ohio
·· State legislature a year and a half
· ago. " It's got some pretty strong
' teeth," commenl Carl Lansford of
• · the Gallia County Sheriff's Department. ''The penalty gets stronger on
· every offense, going from a first
degree mt.demeanor to a felony ."

With the recent establishment of
Serenity House, a new non-profit
organization to assist victims of
family violence, another option is
open. With Serenity House 's
assistance a woman and her
children may leave the abusive
situation and be housed in a safe,
protected place until problems can
he worked out. ·
Serenity House volunteers in
Jackson, Galiia and Meigs Counties
are able to offer a variety of help to
the abused woman and her family :

Currently, the Serenity House
Board of Directors, ·which is comprised of voluneers representing
Jacks~n, Gallia and Meigs Counties
is planning and seeking funding. The
organization would like to develop
enough to open its own local shel~r
house. In the meantime, Serenity
House volunteers see that abused
women •and their children can leave
a violent home if necessary, Shelter
is now provided at area motels or at
the battered women's shelter in
Athens, My Sister's Place.

Volunteers can be reched 24 hours
a day, seven days a week through
Crisisline, the Community Mental
Health Center's telephone coun·
seling service. The number is 4465554 in Gallia county, 2!I6-S554 in
Jackson County and 992..'i554 in
Meigs County.
Transportation can be arranged to
a hospital, friend or relative's home
or to a sheller house or motel.
Financial assistance can be
provided for emergency medical
treatment and for motel and food for
the battered woman and h•r family

Drew Webster makes multiple donations
Cootributions to St. Jude Hospital
for cancer research, to Joan
Tewksbary, R.N. for Meigs County
tuberculosis work, and tn the
American Legion Auxiliary
headquartes in Zanesville for
remodeling were made at the
Tuesday night meeting of the
Auxiliary of Drew Webster Post 39,
Pomeroy.
Money for the remodeling project
was given as a memorial for Mrs.
Carrie Neutzling and Mrs. Zana
Baxter of the Pomeroy unit who served as presidents of the Eighth
District.
·
Mrs. Pearl Knapp presided at the
meeting announcing the Girl State
tea to be ·held April 26 at the Mt.
Moriah Baptist Church, I :30 p.m.
and the Junior Auxiliary district

conference on April 18 at the Hayes and Jerome Cook are con·
Feeney-Bennett Post 128, Mid- fined to the Pomero Health Care
dleport. Enna Smith introduced Center. Annual reports are due on
Laura Smith, delegate to Buckeye May 1, it was noted . Membership
Girls' State from the unit. She also stands at 138 now, according to Mrs.
reported that ·'The Firing Line", the Tiemeyer, chainnan.
"Ohio Digest" and "Need a Lift"
The three-part program was on
had been placed in Meigs High energy, foreign relations and com·
School, and that the Carville Star munity service.
had been sent to Veterans Memorial
The juniors under the directiOn of
Hospital and Dr. James Conde.
Betty Wiles, chainnan. presented
Mrs. Loreta Tiemeyer, poppy the program on foreign relations
chainnan, announced that Poppy dealing with Thailand. A film was
Days will he held on Mayu 21 , 22 and shown, pamphlets on the American
23. It was derided to assist a local Legion Care program of helping
youth and to give $50 to the Past Cambodia refugees in Thailand
Presidents Parley for the scholar· were distributed by Jennifer Cross
ship fund and the nurses at Millers and there was a discussion on
Cott&lt;~ge .
malnutrition and the seeds being
It was reported that Clifford sent to help the refugees grow food .

Health Review

impressed by her concern with the
BY HELEN BOTIEL
unfortunate that they will all follow
Special correspondent
her
example on her birthday.
DEAR HELEN:
Mother's
Day, Christmas, etc.; so
My mother always said "Silence is
expect
no
more personal gifts from
Golden" and I try to win ,gold stars
the
family.
-Frances
for my crown when my mother-inDEAR
HELEN
:
law visits. But it's hard when she
My
husband
was a mean, cruei
downgrades our daughter.
bounder
when
he
was well. Now ho's
Grandma has always played
·a
mean
invalid.
Our
doctor says he
favOrites, and our Cara isn 't one of
them. She scoffs at aU her teen ac- has only a few months more to live,
tivities, makes mean fun of her looks and I must honestly say I won't
mourn for him. Nor will! feel guilty
and actions. She's really cruel.
I hint that tbis is hurtful, but at age in my relief that he 's gone. I only
70, a woman feels privileged to say wish I'd left him before he got sick,
and " duty" made me stay.
and do anything she pleases.
In a case like this, it would be
Cara is beginning to very much
ludicrous
to wear black at the
resent her grandmother. It's time
again for the annual visit. Should I funeral. Is a lighter color good
etiquette' And how long before I can
continue politely takmg •it? - W. D.
attend social functions like dances?
DEAR W.:
She who swallows her tongue Or accept male callers? Frankly I
don't have a lot of time left, and 1
sometimes chokes on it.
· Why don 't you and your husband need to make the most of it, since I
together lay down house rules for lost so much.- NO MOURNER
Grandma? Then, each time she lap- DEARN.M.:
Why worry about funeral etiquette
ses, remind her that Cara is her
parents' responsibility, and when you're honest enough to admit
criticism is not acceptable. Start you won't be in mourning ?
These days there are no set rules
with ' 'gentle," progress to "rinn,"
and if Granllma still 'persists, well, about widow's weeds and seclusion·
it's long-overdue showdown-time time. You may start celebrating
your freedom whenever yoo want,
between mother and son. - H.
though don't rejoice too loudly.
People won 't take kindly to a woman
DEAR HELEN :
who
revels in her husband's death.
I have a good answer for Nadine
H.
whose El Cheapo mother-in-law
made small donations to charity in
Got a problem? An adult subject
her grandchildren's names, rather
for
cliscUSl!ion? You can talk it over
than gifts, even though the family
in
her
column if you write to Helen
gave her expensive presents.
Bottel,
care of this newspaper.
They should write her they were so

ASTROGRAPH

une.
LEO !July 23-Aug.

tutlo 11 Wnh ~ rluurish Or1 lllllk~rs Wrll aduurc
your sty!~ .

\IIROO 1Aue. U&amp;pt. %21 Stity un top of
sltuctroos lhitt mean dullars iilld ~Ills tu yw
t ud&lt;~)'

untrl they &lt;~rt! concludOO to your
:;atr.sfuctiun , Yuu 're lucky in money matter.~ .

LIBRA

ARlES !Mart. ZI·AprU It I SiluHttuns that
rt:quire p11rtnrrs or call for t~tunwork sOOuld
turn out qutte ~ucces::;full)" for you tutlay .
You 're luckte&amp; wlll!n wurking in umsun w1th
1tnothcr. Rumomct:. trav~;&gt;l , luck. resourc:es,
possible pHfcd Ls and C.'llrt!t't fur the l'l.lllllr~
rnooths are all dlscll:lSl'tl ·rn your AslniGriiph, which be"ins l'l"ilh your llirthdc!y.
Mttil Sl for eHteh tu Astrti-Grdph , &amp;lx 489,
RHdiu City Station, N. Y. 10019. Bt' !Sure to
specify birth Wttc.
TAURUS !April 2&amp;-Marry ZD1 Work ~r­
fom~ COr 11 nuble pu~ Is rew~:~rd m rtSt'lf, but llt'rvict!s yuu ~nder tl..'ilily to be
ht'lpfuJ might also 1\yve a nwterl~;~ J bon u.s.
GEMINIJM.y ZI ·JWJe !01 You can Jearn
much today by observin~ other~ . Nolll't'
espt!Cially how a bri~ht a~odate marr&lt;:~ges
pevplc you •ruay h.it vt: tunmtcnd with h1ter
CANCER tJu.ar ZI·J•ly Ul This is wt&lt;~ood
day to Uit•kle th~ suudl home chores tha t
you've never hlad quite enuut&lt;~h lime tu finish .
You 'll \.akc pride in knocking them of( one by

n,

Yutf re l'O IIL~h.'lll

C~ pl.

23-0ct. Ul Don't deleg11Le tu
ut~rs loWly 11\itlltors tl111l ,.[feet yuur !tt!lfffillirt:!Sts. Tiley JrutY bt! cap.Hble, but )'IJI.Il!an
doth~ better job.
S(..'ORPIO IOct. 24-Nov. 221 Adht:ret u your
hunchei and 1115linct.os tudil y m fm&lt;lnt'lll l ur
busmess dealings . Your inner rnechclmsiH IS
zeroed-in on profit.able srg ~ls.
SAGITTARIUS !Nov. %3-0«. %it P11ls
whtM !rupport ) ' UU hHd dafricully 111 tj:t:ltin!l
yesterday &lt;Itt likely to do an about ·fa ce
tudt~y . Try ask l n~ e~~a~.in , but be sure tv say

. By Robert G. Stockmall, D.O ..
PH.D.
Asst. Professor of Family
Medicine

Ohio University of
Osteopathic Medicine
Question : What are hives'
Answer : Hives are a skin reat'tion characterized by th~ appearance of smooth, slightly
raised areas which are redder or
paler than the surrounding skin .
They are usually very itchy.
Hives can range in size from a
pea-sized bump to large circular
patterns with red edges and white
centers covering an entire side of
the body . The bwnp raised by a
mosquito bite is an example of a
solitary hive. fortunately hives
usually tend to disappear within a
few hours or days. There are.
however, chronic recurrent fur-

uf longer duration .
Question: What causes hives'
Answer : The answer to this
question is difficult because there
IllS

are

so

many

It

(

u-

chosen as "Belt ol Sbo,v"
are sold to the hllheat bidder.
nus year the auction will take
place on Wednesday, Aprilht 12
noon. Following the auctlan, the
winning artists are Invited to
meet Govemor Rbodea at a
special reception In their honor.
It's up to the artl.lt to price hla
painting, provided the coet does
not exceed the $Ul per painting
limit. Past experience bu lhown
the paintings that 1111 bell are
those priced under $100. 'nle ar·
list does not have to be present to
·sell any artwork; all participants
are welcome to come enJoy the
show.
lings

To meet Thursday eve

THE SAL£ IS ON!

The March meeting of the River·
view Garden Club will be held at the
home of Mrs. Richard Roberts
Tuesday evening, March 26, at 7:30
p.m. C&lt;rhostesses will be Mrs. Ernest Whitehead and Mrs. Denver
Weber. Roll call will be answered by
members bringing a potted house
plant for exchange.

Infant Wear By:
Carter &amp; Health Tex
Sizes 3·24 mo.

20% OFF

Aurora Borealis
The Aurora Borealis, also called the
northern Ugbts, is a broad display of
rather faint lights iD the northern
slUes at night.

SHOP

cause hives.

Hwnans are e~llergic to an exceedingly large nwnber of substances (allergens) which can
cause hives, Including :
- inhaled pollen, animal dar&gt;der and spores;
- ingested chocolate. eggs.
nuts, shellfish, berries, and food
additives:
- skin contact with animal dan·
der , plant products and
cosmetics: and
- reactions from

penidllin,

sulfa drugs, vaccines, diagnostic
agents and blood transfusions .
Local or general infection may
cause hives, but this is usually
only an outward sign uf the

Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday &amp; Saturday
8:30 to S:OO. Thursday till12 noon

OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT ONLY
773·5592

HERMAN GRATE '

Mason,

body's fight against the infecting
agent. For example. hives are
.sometimes seen with infectious
mununucleosis, hepatitis,
rhewnatic fever. sinusitis and
dental a!J,;cess. They can also
result from infestation by a
parasite such as a tapeworm.
Hives can sometimes indicate a
serious condition. Those that last
or spread into bizarre patterns
nee d ca reful
medi cal
examination to find out if a
serious disease , including
possibly cancer, is the cause .
Hives are produced in some by
exposure to heat, cold, sunlight,
water and pressure. These hives
appear within minutes of ex·
posure.
Sweating. e xercis ea nd
emotional stress can atso
produce hives as well as enhance
the development of hives due to
other causes. Alcohol is also
known to have an enhancing ef·
feet on this disease.
Question : What ca n you do

~"J

ctbout hives ·~

Ans\l'er : The best approach is
to eliminate the cause. if the
allergen can be identified it
should be avoided. If you have
just tried a new food or are taking
a medicine for the first time or
have something new in your en·
vironrnent. s uspecl these new
things. Also, exposure to physical
stimuli such as heat. cold or
sunlight should be lessened if
they seem to bring on an attack.
Hives associated with infection
will usually be relieved when the
infection is properly treated.
See your physician. He or she
will be able to help you to control
the discomfort and itching of
hives, as well as to advise you
concerning the identification of
the cause and how to treat or
avoid it.

ColfJfort caring

_... ......

•-.ot• •••,

~

EGG COLORING KITS
TOYS CANDY

. ......._... ....

· ~.,..

MARCH 20 thru 26

ALL OF THIS AND MORE

~ · ·~

I
.

...

.

.

'J\''
r ! t l _'\J
r; ~ .." J

'

•~

VILLAGE PHARMACY

~

. ..

/.~

/'

, ·'

..... ................. .
"

. I

N. 7ndAve.

Middleport, Ohio

Jeremy 's grandmother,
Mamie Stephenson.

Mrs.

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Thompson
entertained Sunday with a lime of
celebration marking the lOth anniversary of their son's kidney transplant. Both George Thompson,, w)lo
'received the transplant, and his
sister, Mrs. Louella Roush of
ders and Mrs. Flora Marie Gibson. Parkersburg, who donated the kid·
Members signed round-robin cards ney, were present!or the dinner.
for them and Mrs. Lena McKinley
others ~!tending were Mrs.
and Mrs. Katherine Ervin.
Roush's husband, Wayne, and their
Refreshments were served by daughter, Valerie, Parkersburg;
Mrs. Regina Swift to Mrs. Childs, Mr. and Mrs. Bob Lewis, Pomeroy;
Mrs. Allensworth, Mrs. Alice Mrs. E. C. Payne, Vinton; John and
Robeson, Mrs. Gertrude Miller, Mr. Opal Payn~. Vinton ; Fred and Mar·
and Mrs. Bob McElhinny, Mrs. cy Thompson and their daughter,
Grace Hawley, Mr. and Mrs. Dana Karen, Pomeroy; Katie and Laura
Swift, and Mrs. Ella Mae Daugher- Mitchell, and Mr. and Mrs. Roy
ty .
Holter, Pomeroy.

Lily purchase planned

I

Marine Pvt. William W. Allen·
sworth, son of Charle£ R. and
Carolyn S. Allensworth of P. 0 . Box
502, New Haven, W. Va., has repor·
ted for duty with 3rd Assault Am·
phibfan Battalion, Camp Pendleton,
Calif.
A I!NM! graduate of Wahama High
School, Mason , W. Va ., he joined the
Marine Corpe In August 1980.

Completes training
Pfc. LouEllen R. Ohlinger,
daughter of Lew Roush of Patriot
Star Route, Gallipolis, and Velma
Roush of Lynn Drive, New Haven,
W. Va., has completed basic training
at Fort Dix, N. J.

M1ller sa ndals drHeren loutslandrng tor comfort and
wearabrtrty In new shades of lrne
leather and cra tted to trt your teet

Stretch your busy day

1n soli. lo-grvlng Hu&gt;h
Puppres! casuals Cusnlon
soles ~eep vou hghl on you r
fast Extra ~teet snonli supPOrt
weeps you on yOUr toes They wear
comTonootv ThB\1 pr tee comfortably

THE SHOE BOX
MIDDI.EPORT,
·--- ...... .............
_._._..... OH. ___
.-.-

._.,_,

Fri., Sc;~t., Sun.
S&lt;1le

ENTER

•il••••••••••]fJr~;;:::~•••••••••-

..

tor down·to·earth prices••••••

-.
68.88

Our Reg. 83.88 .

186)

68.88

Sturdy 4-l.eg Gym Set
All 2" tubing with 7'1 " top bar, 6'9" legs, 10'6" overall, in·
eluding slide, 2 air cool swings , 2~ seater sky glide, 5'12 " side
entry slide. Sturdy.

cxac lly Fu1d yo ur srze rn the

chart below
In Your Euct Silll!l

ss

• • • • • • •
• • • • • • • • •

s
N
M

•

•

•

•

• •

'

•

•

•

•

•

• •• • • • • • • •

EW

•

•

•

•

• • • • • • •

w

•

•

•

•

98.88

•

MARGUERITE SHOES

ATHENS - A I.amllZe ChildtJir·th
Review Series, sponsored by
O'Bieness Memorial Hospital. will
. begin Tuesday, April 7. This threeclass llllries is for couples who have
had Lamaze preparation during a
previous pregnancy, and whose ex·
peeled date of delivery is prior to
June 2. The fee~ S25.
To pre-register, ur to request
schedule of future classes. contact
Pamela Collier, 20 Woodside Drive.
Athens, Ohio 45701, or cui1593-0049 .

Open communion hen:
Open communion and foot
washing will be a ptlrt uf the worship
,service at the Pomeroy Seventh11ay
Adventist Church, 9:30a.m. Satur·
day . The public is Invited to attend.
Next S..bbath, April 4, servkes will
begin at 2 p.m.

187
)

Deluxe 6-L.eg Gym Set

98.88

Sturdy 2" tubing, 9'6" ·top bar . 7'3" legs, 11 '6" overall. in ·
eludes slide, 2 swings, 2·seater sky glide, 2·passenger lawn
swing, 7' side entry slid.e trapeze "U" bar.
Sq. Fl.

-.

·20·Lbs. Net wt.

.......

.............
(88)

(89)

our Rf?9 . 1.47

Our Reg . 3. 27

1.09

Organ 1c oceat
I vr la wns goH1Pns
omJ shrubs 40 lbs ·

2.33
5 lbs. Grass Seed
C t"1 'TlPt iS

~~
•· .. ~.

Turf Builder
Il ib · bag o tt e rt rl
rle r fo r yOur lawn

I&lt;Y t}l ~t'l lt ' ! I, JWI I'&gt;

Black &amp; Decker.

. '::'~·~·'"' . ..

(90)

8.88

,_:; r ~ en

I

\ ~· · ·~~"'";:.~:-·

Our Reg . 11 .97

(91)

Our Reg. 2.09

1.97

Odorless Manure
Na n-bur nrng weed ·
tr e e cow manure

(92)

Sale Price

~
'·

13.88
Electric Trimmer
Double rn sutated
Nylo n l~n e c uts 9 ·

'N e rw r

·Nl•l wt

Lamaze classes beKin

E. MAIN ST. POMEROY, Oft.

Ph. 992-6669

'

Entertain to
remember time
of transplant

jeremy johnson

Man reports for duty

BY MILLER

EASTER SUPPLIES

-1

A bridal shower was held at the Rose, Becky Teaford, Sharry
Racine First Baptiat Church recen- Teaford, Angle Teaford, Janice
. tly honoring M.l8s Traci Weese, Salser, Vicki CUmmlna, Tll.llle Cumbride-elect of Donald Casto. Hosting mins, Delores Cleland, Marilyn
the shower were IvaWUIB Powell and Powell, Li,bby Flaher, Gertie
Manuel.
MrS. Rexanna Knighting.
Sarah Neigler, Cora Webb, Fay
The church !1\)ciai room was
decorated with pastel colors .. Tables Gwn, Glenda Gum, Mlllle Miller,
were decorated using a bride and Martha Lou Beegle, Tara Vest,
groom centerpiece. Cake, coffee, · Shirley Shively, Grace Weeae, Wanda Powell, Lillian Weeae and
punch, nuts and mints were served.
Games were played with prizes Melanie Weese.
Sending gifts were Jackie Mengoing to Janice Salser, Delores
Cleland •. and Ms. Poweli. Attending chilli, Diana Rose, Mary V0118,
besides those named were Jeanie Becky Grindstead, Lillian Hayman,
Buckley, Kim Buckley, Rita Casto, Vera Beegle, Mildred Hart, Carolyn
Orenda Cunningham, Margaret Powell, Lori Powell, Marie Walker
and Marie Roy.

Jeremy David Johnson was
honored recently with a party at the
home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
ly Pelly Cramer
use It when washing the outside of
David
J olmson, Pomeroy, in obllpeeW etln'elpoodoat
my windows. I use it with paper
servance
of his second birthday.
DEAR POLLY - I hope towels and window cleaner and do
A
cowboy
theme was carried out.
someone can tell me sOmething 1 not have to climb a ladder, which
Games
were
played with prizes
could UN on my
·
can be dangerous. -MRS. G. B.
going
to
Amber
Colmer and Kari
windOWII to keep
DEAR POLLY - I bought several
Miller.
Tiffany
Miller
won the door
them
from
inexpensive toothbrushes and find
prize.
Refreshments
of
cake, mints,
fogging up when it
they certainly save my fingers when
is cold. ·ANNA
ice
cream,
chips
and
Kool-Aid
were
cleaning. I keep one in the bathroom
DEAR ANNA served.
and use it to clean around the sink
You ml&amp;ht try
Attending were his maternal granand bathroom fixtures. One in the
pouring liquid
dmother,
Mrs. Mamie Stephenson,
kitchen is used for cleaning my egg
soap on a paper, · . ·
beaters after making frosting or · Randy and Jimmie Snider, the Rev .
towel and then
Cramer
cake batter. My husband even uses and Mrs. Clyde Henderson, Rod
wiping thla over the windows. Or, one when he cleans and waxes the Manley, Jamie Leach, Barbara
put one-half cup denatured alcohol car, as it is great for getting around Colmer and Tirruny , Jill Johnson,
in a half gallon of warm water and emblems and difficult places. Bennie and Sandy Wright and
wipe thla OV8r the glass, - POLLY
MRS. J. J.
J es_sica, Tina Colilns, Tracy and
DEAR' POLLY - I was given a
DEAR POLLY - Pat suggested Wendi, Vicki Milier and April, Kari
solid perfwne compact and find it is saving lint from the dryer, string, and Tiffany, Shari Colmer and Am·
easier to ~ove a small amount yam, etc .. and leaving this outside ber, and Harold and Nancy Whit·
with a cotton tipped stick, such as we for the birds during nest-building tekind and sons, Shawn and Daniel.
use for baby.
season. I thinl!: string should be cut
Sending a gift were his paternal
Sllghly greasing the threads on up in a very small piece, so the birds grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Carl
glue and nail polish bottles wUI keep could not choke on It. It have seen
the tops from sticking. - VIOLA
birds die after they were unable to Johnson , Mason , W. Va . The cakes
DEAR POLLY - When the zipper get rid of the pieces of string they for the party were baked by
on jeans will not stay up, 1 thread
had swalibwed. - ELSIE
elastic through the eye of the zipper
Polly will send you one of her
and then slip the elastic over the but·
signed thank-you newspaper coupon
tons. This is not noticeable and saves
clippers if she uses your favorite
replacing the zipper. -KAREN
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in her
DEAR POLLY - I keep a new
column. Write POLLY'S POINArrangements to purchase lilies
sponge mop handy and clean. and
TERS in care of this newspaper.
for the church sanctuary were made
when the Loyal Berean Class of the
To begin gatherings
Middleport Church of Christ met
Tuesday night at the church.
111URSDAY
The
Eli
Dennison
Post
467,
Mrs. Clyda Allensworth presided
PRECEPTOR BETA BETA
Rutland,
American
Legion,
will
with
Mrs. Martha Childs giving the
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
start
social
gatherings
for
members,
.
opening
prayer. Devotions were
Sorority, will meet at 7:45 p.m.
families
and
friends
on
Sundays
given
by
Mrs.
Regina Swift who read
Thursday in tbe Riverboat Room
from
12
noon
throughout
the
affrom
Proverbs
3 and a meditation
of tbe Diamond Savings and Loan
entitled
"How
to
Find Happiness"
ternoon
.
Fishing
in
the
post
pond
is
Co.
by
Helen
Steiner
Rice.
free
to
Legion
members
and
their
FRIDAY
families.
Reported ill were Mis.o;. .fP~sP s~1m 8
MARY SHRINE 37, Order of
the White Shrine of Jersualem.
will have a practice for installttion Friday at 7:30p.m. at
tbe Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
The Shrine will hold a rwrunage
and bake sale April2 and 3.
Open Daily 10·9
Sunday 1·6
SATURDAY
POMEROY Seventh-Day Adventist Church will · observe foot
wu•hing und colnm'lflion during the
worship service at 9:30a .m. saturday .
SPIRITUAL Sounds will be at the
Ash St. Freewill Baptist Church in
Middleport at 7:30 p.m. Saturday.
Tbe public is invited.
·

SAYRE
RACINE-Mr . and Mrs. David A
(Pete 1 Sayre, Racine. are an·
nouncing the birth of their first
child, a daughter, Kimberly Lynn.
The infant, born on March S at the
Holzer Medical Center, weighed
seven pounds, eight ounces and was
21 inches long.

cOnstruc t ron makes these

,,._,I t!Ill

Foggy windows

Our Reg. 118.88

EASTER BASKETS
..-;&gt;oo•rt"'

Bridal fare honors Weese

Master Johnson has party

E•aos
•• Larry and Shirley Evans,
Gallipolis, are announcing the birth
of their first child. a daughter,
Suzanne Michelle. born on Feb. 25 at
the Holzer Medical Center.
The Infant weighed seven pounds
and seven ounces and was 20 inches
long. Grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Charles F. Pyles. Sr .. Racine ,
an Mr. and Mrs. Harry Evans,
Nelsonville. Suzanne was born on
the birthdays of her grandmother.
Mrs. Pyles, and her great·aunt. Mrs.
Robert Hart, Racine.

AQUARnJS iJ... f.O.Feb . lt1 SubsUtnliYI
benefits could accrue today from dt!ahngs

--ao....u..
... ,_,, ....... .... u ... ...... 1 • 111

The Daily Senflnei-P•e-7

Pomeroy Mjddleport, Ohio

Polly's PointerS

New arrivals

One prece lle&lt;rble sole

!riVill .

w. Va .

new Misses jeans

ktlt!p your secret ;unbit•un.s lO yuun~elr
tud~;~y. bt!cause even th~ dcs1nnw tu help
you&lt;.'\Juld gd thing.!J ofHra ck.
·
with peoplt: wtru Jlllllch your hijjh tdt:llbt.
Maanl.aln your sl.and.!lnill.
PlSCES I Feb. zt.MIItcll 28t Ot!w1te your
elfllrt:J and t.mergies ti.HJay to ven tur~ that
art' truly impoi'Uint. Vvu have ouUttindln~
c&lt;~pab 11iti~ thHt shouldn 't ~ w~:~sted on

Tnyrgn, M•rch 26, 1981

SociiJl Calendar

.. please ."
CAPRICORN I Oft. ft.J.u . It I It 'S ~!Jl to

Marine Lance Cpl. Amos .B. Cross
Jr., son of Gladys J. and Amos B.
Cross Sr. Of Route 1, Langsyilie; has
been promot~ to his present rank
while serving at the Headquarters
Battalion, 2nd Marine Division,'
Camp Lejeune, N. C. He joined the
Marine Corps in November 1979.

~

possibi lities.

Allergy , infections, ce rta in
generalized diseases. physical
factors, exercise and emotional
stress have all been shown to

Lance Crciss promoted

Serving as pallbearers at funeral
services for Harold E. (Gene l Sw11r·
1z were Harold Abbott, brother-In~
law; Dick Abbott and Gene AbbOtt,
• nephews, Bob Hayman, Marvin
Milliron and John Sigman. friends .

panel of independent Jqea. The
highl.lght of the uhlblt Ia the annual auction, wbere
pain.

COLUMBUS- The Governor's
Senior Citizen Art Show, Sale and
Auction offes the perfect opportunity to display your talents
at the Ohio Statehouse and a
chance to sell work as well. The
1981 show, April 4-12, will be the
sixth annual exhibit and sale of
artwork painted by senior
citizens from every pert of Ohio.
One need not be a professional
artist to participate. In every
previous show, artists have
ranged (rom the beiginner to the
professional. It costs nothing to
enter, and if a painting sells, a
check for the total amount will be
received by the artist.
Each year ten "Best of Show"
ribbons and several "Honorable
Mentions" are also awarded at
the Governor's Art Sh&lt;&gt;w hv a

MASON FURNITURE

Hives don 't
mean honey

in what vou attempt tudav. and vuu 're &lt;:~b le

Pallbearers noted

Senior Citizen ·art show
offers chance to sell work

FOR THE BEST DEALS IN THE TRISTATE AREA

When mother-in-law visits,
silence is not golden. . .

posite .

For community service, Mrs. Iva
Powell reported on various families
helped, the bloodmobile canteen ser·
ved by the unit, and the members
assisting with various fund drives.
She also talked about bike safety,
the use of lights and reflectors.
Amta Smith, a junior, talked about
energy suggesting riding a bike instead of driving a car, reading
rather than watching television, and
insulating homes. Laura Smith, also
a junior. talked on energy using an
article "Profiles of Change from
Wood to Nuclear", an American
energy chronology from 1958 to 1980.
Mrs. Mary Martin also gave energy
saving lips.
Mrs. Willes, Anna Wiles and Mrs.
Iva Powell served refreslunents.

'

MASON FURNITURE

Helen Help Us

March 27.1981
ProbJt'nlS can bt! avoided U1LS t~ll lln .l( year
by aclirlfol in &lt;l&lt;.'c.~rdant-e with yhwr (rncr
qualities. Imolvemt:nLs m which yuur guals
Hre lufty can bring you utJtsU.ndtn~ lJU&lt;'&lt;'esS ;
dt'J)Mrturell from your sLa ndurds offl!r the op-

nursllax, M1rch 2f, ltn

(93)
our Reg. 6.96

4.88
Trash Can
20 gal. metal
trash can .

--..(95)

~:~~

· · wP
·\
l'

;;. '

l-

PEAT

'

!.

M[]SS

•

(94)

.f

(96)
Our Reg . 12 .13

eg.

Our Reg tl .47

1.09

7.47

Great Peat Mou!

Dressing Top Soil

-tl, c u ft 11 q i-3 n1 11r .r-l

~

;pnogn. ,n r

1rr r 1 "

l l• l w r'H
tt• 11 1

8.27
Turf Builder/Halts

f \'! 111 •- t H •

Covers 2,500 sq . teet

(98)
Our Reg . 28 .88

19.27

Broadcast
Spreader
Heavy gauge en am ·
eled steel . Holds
up to 40 lbs .

Our Reg. 2.97

2.27
Asuted Shrubbery
gallon assorted shrubs. Shop Early and
Save.

185 UPPER RIVER--ROAD, GALLIPOLIS
'·

�I

Slide show on missions
seen by Baptist group

'Round Meigs _Local
By Supt. David L. Gleason
Correspondent
Tonight's article will touch
briefly on several items rather
than a lengthy
discussion on one

item.
Mary Rose has
another idea to
help her kindergarten department at Middleport Elementary . Mary will be
sponsoring a Flea Market on
Saturday, April4, from 10 a.m. to
6 p.m. at the school. Any in·
terested person may purchase a
setup spot from Mary for $5 Of
which $2 will be returned if the
area rented is cleaned up upon
departure time. It should be an
interesting time at Middleport
Elementary on the fourth.
The Middleport Elementary
library is shaping up nicely.
Plans are being developed for a
grand opening and a special
dedication of the library . John
Arnott is working on this project.
The primary EMR at Pomeroy
put on a special presentation
Wednesday for parents, students
and the school.
The parents at Saiem Center
are working hard to start a
baseball program for the
youngsters in that attendance
area. Ron Drexler, a teacher at
Salem Center, is helping the
parents get started. The old pipes
taken out of the Pomeroy boiler
are being used to make a new
backstop for the field. We cer·
tainly hope the program gels
started and off the ground.
Salem · Center rec e ntly
published their first principal's
newsletter which was sent to all
the parents. Charles Holliday,
Salem Center Principal, as
editor-in-chief of the newsleter. is

excited by this new program.
Salem Center joins Harrisonville
and Rutland in publishing
newsletters . Hopefully, in the
near .future all our schools will be
publishing a newsletter to keep
you more informed.
If you haven't ordered your
Meigs Marauder yearbook, you
should do so immediately. Contact John Blaettnar at the high
school.
The recent elementary basket·
ball tournaments held in the
Meigs Junior High proved to be
enlightening . The program
·to be improving. The instructipn provided the coaches of
these teams by the Meigs varsity
coaches has to help our program
in the future .
Last Friday I was asked to
speak at the Rotary Club in Middleport and to discuss the ul&gt;'
coming Bond Issue facing the
Meigs Local District voters.
What was to be a half hour
presentation, however, soon turned into over an hour discussion
that was very beneficial to all in
attendance. I believe a serious
question that I heard more than
once at that meeting was " How
are you going to convince the
voters that this actually can hal&gt;' .
pen and that the district will be
able to receive the money without
raising taxes? " The answer is not
very simple. We are preparing a
brochure which explains the complete issue, but we n~ your
help. We need volunteers. We
need you!

seems

Charles Thayer, president of the
Kentucky/West Virginia Chapter of
the Cystic Fibrosis, Foundation, has
named Mrs. Alfred Ashworth as
Chairman of the 1981 Cystic Fibrosis
"Breath of Spring" Campaign for
New Haven.
Mrs. Ashworth will soon be announcing details for the " Breath of
Spring" Campaign. This campaign
is an annual func[ion which genertes
revenue in support of improved
patient care, and disease detection
and cure for Cystic Fibrosis patien·
ts. Not only is the campaign
designed to raise funds for the CF
Foundation, but it also serves to increase public awareness.

.Is Hartford chairman
Charles Thayer, president of the
J{entucky/West Virginia Chapter of
the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation , has
harned Mr. Kim Neal as Chairman
of the 1981 Cystic Fibrosis "Breath
of Spring" Campaign for Hartford.
Neal will soon be announcing details
lor the " Breath of Spring" Camf&gt;aign. This campaign is an annual
function which generales revenue in
support of improved patient care,
and disease detection and cure for
Cystic Fibrosis patients. Not only is .

Mr. and Mrs. Jack Johnson an&lt;\
son, Rick, of Metropolis, Ill., visited
Mr . and Mrs. Jack Fox at Clifton;
and with other relatives and friends
in the bend are'\Mr. and Mrs. Jack Johnson and
son, Rick , Mr . and Mrs. Ronald
Zerkle and son, Shawn, of New
Haven, attended the Wheeling Jamboree on Saturday night and visited
with Mr. and Mrs . Glen Cartwright
at Glendale, W. Va .
Mrs. Sarah Spencer r~turned
home on Sunday after visiting her
daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and
Mrs. Ron Pearson at Poughkeepsie,
wood,
Mass.,there
where
they
vi ewe~
1he
N. Y. From
they
went
to Stock-

As soon as we get the approval
from the State Controlling Board,
we will start the campaign. I ask
Y''" to call my secretary at 992·
2153 if you are willing to volun·
leer to serve on a corrunittee. Do
so now so we can start gettmg
things organized.

Brownies donate tree

Mrs. Rose Thomas has returned
POMEROY-A tree donated by home after visiting with Mrs . Gladys ·
Carper's Nursery was planted at the ' Bauglunan at Gahanna .
·
Salisbury Elementary School ~his
- Mrs. L. Balderson
week by the Salisbury Brownie
Troop 122Q. A bulletin board on
scouting was decorated by the
Mrs. Crow honored
scouts, and a practice was held for
the program presented at the
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Crow,
Salisbury PTO. Refreshments were
Syracuse, entertained Sunday with a
served by Tracy Bartels and Marsha
party in observance of the second
King .
birthday of theeli~r•ug1~~~·~a~:;h~~d~
Meredith Crow, d
of Mr. and
Mrs. James Crow .

An investiture and rededication
ceremony for Troop \039, Mid·
dleport, will take place Monday
evening at 7 p.m. at the Riverboat
Room of the Diamond Savings and
Loan Co. Meeting Tuesday with Mrs.
Joy Clark. leader, the .scouts worked
on an Easter display for the
Pomeroy Health Care Center. Kim
Stewart and Susie Stewart served
refreshments.

A Holly Hobbie cake was served
with ice cream. Others attending
were Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Kelley ,
Sharon and Sarah, Columbus ; Mrs .
Dot Neutzling, Pomeroy ; Mrs.
Marla Roush, Bethany and Bridgett,
New Haven, and Mrs. Darla
Thomas, and Amber, Syracuse.
The Kelleys were weekend guests
of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Crow and the
1wo families visited with the James
Crow family Sunday evening.

No one pays you mare than
DIAMOND SAVINGS.

12.524%
$10,000 minimum. Interest
may be paid monthly, quarterly, at maturity or transferred to a savings account.
Federal regulations prohibit
compounding of interest.

FLARE LEG

30·Month Money Market Certlflcal

12.937o/o

-

Effective Annual Yield On

12.00%
No minimum investment is
required . Interest will be
compounded cohtinuously
from date of dep.Sit to date
of withdrawal.
t8Hl~estme111

C RUDI?LY DRAW&gt;J
• MAP, FROM THE

L00Jo;,; OF

1;;

THE 50 UTH NAHANNI ·-YOU

C/llol THL FROM THE5E LA&gt;JDMARK,;
THAT THE CHA~T RI?P~E%&gt;JT~ THE

6o30

BUT A MAP OF
WHAT~

6o58
7o00

SALE PRICE$14

Reg. Price •19.96
7o30

2 DAYS ONLY
FRI. &amp; SAT.

New York Clothing House

7 :58
8 :00

Pomeroy, Oh.

26

""-"' )
cl) MISSIONARIES IN ACTION

i

~&amp;J

-

A t

-

Third Ave.

~

:!:(

~

!!

Se~ond Ave .

Many Colors
REGLAR PRICE
SALE PRICE
Installed With $
Free Price
·

..

.
WI&lt;Y DO Y()U

Nl) EV II'lEN Cto t )~
AND WHA r•s T()
Yl)LIR WORK M liSr
1-..EFP ~l E f-ROt- \
' EX IST WH~N WE J \'RinN e~. 11 AU
TAKE" CRE!111 FO~
[)()WN AGA IN , l )N (E:
't LJ LJ~ IN\/E N n Q N .1
'H)ll T'WO I E AV E. ,.~

HAY~

TO DESn;;:l)) Fl-1'1

RECORDS''"·'

95

'69

95
REGULJII '"· SALE

1

retchen t old Pert

CARPET ·DEPARTMENT.

WE HAVE THE

· IS

CARPET DEPARTMENT
DRAWING WILL BE
MARCH 28, 1981

FINEST SELECTION
OF CARPET IN

FREE!

12xl2 RUG &amp; PAD

..

problems
Yes. but One of
it wasn't o f hav1nq a kid
who can tal~ 1
n 1ce to
te ll hi m1

VISIT OUR NEW

PADDING

AND

r TOLD YOU ,
PtAN ft1 L EAVE
E\ ll'lF. N Ct BrH I N

$20.99
$16.99

1499

YOUR

12xl5 RUG &amp; PAD

/

A I.I .E y 00 p

he had bad breath!

FOR A FREE

l'l•lll'•'l
U {I) 1Q.l

HEAVY
SCULPTURED SAXONY

very Good Colors
Sq. Yd .
Regular Price $17 .99
$14.99
Sq. Yd .
Sale Price

REGISTER ·

60, BOY 1

UNTIL MARCH JIST
WE WILL GIVE YOU
YOUR
PADDING
FREE WITH EVERY
YARD
YOU
BUY.
CARPET REMNANTS
AND RUBBER BACK
NOT INCLUDED .

I f lf'N T OFTEN 1
..SET TO T.l.to. E
\ lSI TOKe ..:'N -\

SOUTHEASTERN OHIO.

PERHAPS WE S~OUl
SET 6A~k NOV\ .
\ \ INNJE \\.l,'\ 8E
1\ 0 R RIEC'.

WE WILl CONTINUE

o1(taJ m 2c&gt;-2o

10 OFFER YOU

THE BEST CARPET
FOR liSS.

,,
10:28
10:30
10o45
10o5B
11 :oo

HERE COMES
·TH' PARSON

TO KILL
WHAT. PAW ?

YORE FRIED
CHICKEN AN '

F=IT

DRESSED FIT
TO KILL

Many colors to chose from . Durable for
medium traffi c .
Reg. Price
16.20 Installed w/Pad
Sale Price
$13 .99 Installed w/Pad
With Free Pad f
f t Installed

SMASHED

11 :28
J L3D

TATERS

•

1

ol prinCipal an(J 1nterest ill

Ask about Pay-by-Phone/NOW and VISA . .
No minimum balance. No service charges ..

~SAv.JGS
ANl LOAN COMPANY
P"''fl'" C~&gt;unt .. Th., IJiammu/IJijft&gt;ro•nn·
Hours: M., T ., W. 9-5, Th . &amp; Sat. 9· Noon
Fri. 9-6
216 W. MAIN ST.
POMI;ROY, OHIO

ULTRON
. NYLON PILE PWSH
Des igned to control static, Resist Soil ·
ing and Retain its Appearance . Very
good color selection.
Reg . Price
S2S.99 Installed w/Pa d
Sale Price
With Free Pad

17·9~1n~~s~l~a~ll.:,ed:.\w~/~pa::.

S21.

~

RICH HEAVY HANDED
SCULPTURED CARPET

An Outstanding
Valuel Anti-Static Control
Reg . Price
Reg. Price

SIB .99 Installed w/Pad
$1S.99 Installed w/Pad

d::.JL..W•i•th_F.re•e...;P,.ad_.;.]
Installed

3"

1nstalled

LARRY'S

WAYSIDE FURNITURE
241 THIRD AVENUE

if

0 1{)@

NYLON SAXONY

Anti -Static control. Scotchgard, heat
set, many colors to choose .
Reg . Price
S21.9S Installed w/ Pad
Sale Price
S17.99 Installed w/ Pad
With Free Pad f
Installed

m

1

SAVE BIG ON CARPET REMNANTS
Ill NYLON

MAGNUM , P .l. Havmg
once baen of mvatuable serv •ce t o
wealth y, bltnd Agatha K1mba lt ,
Magnum IS call ed upon a gam when
t rou ble anses con cerning her
~anddaugh ter Amy (60 mms)
, i )(itl PAPER CHASE · A Matte' o l
Anger' The tssue of athrmet tve ac ·
11o n ts dramattz ed as James T Hart
IS ass•gned to tutor a very ang r y
you~ bla ck woman
Lfi) 01 MORK AND MINDY Mo &lt;k
pert orrns as lead smger "'1th a mu ·
s • c al l~om edy group c a lled The
S1up1Cls alt er Remo ltre s a tamale
enter tamer . because she
1s
weunant
8 o30 ' ~) SOUND OF TRUMPETS
i f ) I 'M A BIG GIRL NOW Beck y 's
btrth 10 a Ch1nesH utstau ranlt s the
sub 1ect ot a recounting oltt\6 even!
when Q.lana f•llsml'1er daughter and
Neal on 1he hecti o dehvery
(j}) Q) BOSOM BUDDIES
8o58,. lll CBNUPDATENEWS
9 :00 , i] l) (!l THURSDAY NIGHT AT
THE MOVIES ' Th e Cassa ndra
Cross miJ' 1977 Stars Soph1 a l or·
en , R1chard Hams
, ~ · 700CLUB
, (I FR IDAY NIGHT MOVIE ' Mr
M a1os tyk ' 197 4 Sta rs Charle s
Br onson, l mde Cns tal
0 &gt;8 \ t!Ql KNOTS LANDING S &gt;d
re Jec ts J R Ewmg 's otter to pat e nt
and market hiS radiCa lly new c ar
engme . but J A , no1 to accep1
re tec t•on . hnds a w illi ng acco m·
ph ce tn Std ·s SISter. Abby C6?
mrn s J
t 91 l111 SNEAK PREVIEWS Hosu
Ge ne S1sk el and R oger Ebert
rev1ew thelatesthlms . •nc tu d1ng ·All
N1ght LO niJ·. a co medy starrm&lt;J
Gene Hackmen and Barbr e St retsand .arl d 'Bac k Roads '. arural love
story st arnn g Sa lt y F 1eld a nd
Tom my Lee Jone s
t12J ID BARNEY MILLER Capt am
M1ll er and the men ot the 12 t h
p rec•nct took. tor th ek 1dnapper ot an
ant1que aoll , and a sucker •s co nnea
o ut ol $5001or aconl•rmedreserva
t1 on on !he space shutt le
(Cioaed·Captloned)
9 : 30 (1-) 112l8 TAXIl out e envts1o ns a
ltl e ot htQh t1mes w1th hts buddtes.
sp tce d by ramen he tnt erludes w•th
Elatne tn hts ba c helor pad no w that
hiS mothe r has moved ou!
GOOD NEIGHBORS
l 11) THISOLDHOUSEHost8 ob V1ta
supplie s th e answers t o co mmon
queStions enco untered tn rede cOI attnQ. (Ctos ed -Capl roned , US A)
9 :45
TBS EVENING NEWS
10:00 ( 4 1 MOVIE ·(COMEDY) •• " Last
Romantic Lover" 1978
1

11"

SCULPTURED SAXONY

I

~

2 Colors to Choose From
Reg . Price
S16.99 Installed w/Pad
Sale price
513 .99 Installed w/Pad
With Free pad $
Installed

16 39

12
EUREKA SWEEPER

"'

l I1 BENSONBen sondressesup as
a so ldier and finds ~1mself 1n t1ila r ·
10 us tr ouble at a costume party at
thtl el(e cut1ve mans1 on. an alta~r
co mp11 catf1,d tly the pr ese nce ot a
pn cetess gold sta tue and a plot by
l or-eii;;Jn rev olut1onar1es to steal 1t

THERE YOU

.SCULPTURED
BLOCK SAXONY

Soil protection · stain protection · static
protection · wear protection . Full five
year warranty .
,Reg. Price $21.99 Sq . Yard Installed
Sale Price
518.39 Sq. Yard
With Free Pad f
Installed

f

60 BACK, NO. NO ~ THAT'S All RIGHT.
Si\HDY! HE'S PIWBABL YDYING FOR.
i ' HEAR? SOME EXERCISE 1 ~AIT ,
ABOX OF TOYS CAME IN FOR
PEDIATRIC S .. AH' HEI'.f 'S A

~~-~~· [i•-..:..:...:..:.----1 ;

ANSO IV NYLON SAXONY

Installed With
Free Pad

Milstead
Bakery

AVENUE'~~ Ife~~~ ~

NEW LOCATION

MOVIE ·(ANIMATED)" 0.,
•• Anlmalymplcs ••
({ ]
CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
(I) ABC NEWS
riJ 3· 2·1 CONTACT
ill) OVER EASY Guest Ha rry
B ndges, labor le ad er Hosl : Hugh
D owns.
(Ciosed·Cap!loned;
U.S.A.)
aJ I) ClJ NBC NEWS
ffi PAULANOMONA
BOB NEWHART SHOW
FACE THE MUSIC
(j)@ CBS NEWS
WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
Cfil LILIAS, YOGA AND YOU
Cl2i lll ABC NEWS
Cil !&lt;_BN UPDATE NEWS
aJ U PM MAGAZINE
(]J COME TO THE WATER
CIJ ALLIN THE FAMILY
(l)(j2) Q) FAMILYFEUD
C1) BACKSTAGEATTHEGRANO
OkE OPRY
0 (j) TlC TAC DOUGH
(f) IIi)
MACNEIL -LEHRER
REPORT
diD NEWS
Cl'J U BULLSEYE
ffi ZOLA LEVITT
(!) MOYIE ·(FANTASY) " ' "
''Mary Popplne" 1965
(.I) NBA BASKETBALL At lant a
Hawk&amp; v&amp; Indiana Pa ce rs
CIJ O CIJ JOKER'S WILD
ffi HOLL YWOOO SQUARES
CIJ(fi) DICK CAVETT SHOW
diD MATCH GAME
Ci21 8 FACE THE MUSIC
CIJ CBNUPDATENEWS
(I)U crJ BUCKROGERSAI!e!Su&lt;·
veymo a world ca lle d Planet of
Oeatt1 , Bu c k. Wilma . and Hawk
board the sea rcher and lind Admi r ·
at As 1mov has turned int o a Capt am
Bhgh and Or Goo dfellow has
cha nged mt o a mad sc •en hst {60

I

SOUTH OF THS VALLEY:

IT' ~ ...

99

15M

A aubstan tl&amp;l tnlerest penal ty •s required tor ear tv wlthdrawtl 'Elltte tive annual y•eiO 1!1 based on

I f TH I,;

OR

JEANS

FROM OUR

maturity . This•s an annual ra te sublectto change at renewal

Atcount •n&amp;uteO to $ 100 liOO Oy FSLtC

&gt;'OM E I&lt; 1'-ID

port. Ohio.

241 THIRD

1- { )
.... .... .....

GALLIPOLIS

,
· ~

' • '"~"' ''"""~
"'
~.

I1J

0 ~ DIA6RAM,

Ph. 992·2049

Leave your sense o f
humor home?

(]J BACKYARD

MEN'S "LEVI"

Willis Dudding of Winfield, W. Va.
visited on Sunday with his aunt a nd
uncle, Mr. and Mrs . Eber Roush.
Mike Ryan of Racine, Ohio visited
on Sunday with his parents , Mr . and
Mrs . Edward Ryan in Mason.
Mr. a nd Mrs. Curtis McDaniel
visited over the weekend with their
daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and

byHenriArnoldandBoblee

I

DYNAD

6:"'oo C.V D tD CJ CiiiliDW GfN'Ews

•

r~M~r~s~.J~a~m~e;s~Lo;y;d~a;nd~so;ns;·;a;t;N;as;h-~~;;';;;E;.;M;;a;i;n;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;~;;;;r

ann.

Ceremony to take place

VIewmg

CLIENT?

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

Unscra mble these tour Jumble s,
one letter to each square , to form
to ur ordinary words .

EVENING

original paintings of Nonnan Rockwell which were placed in a
museum. They also went to
Philadelphia where they enjoyed
listening to the Sweet Adelines, a
choral group.

Carl Buckley has returned horne
after being a patient at the Camden·
Clarl&lt; Hospital , Parkersburg, W. Va .
Mr, and Mrs . Howard Young of
Paden, City, W. Va., visited recently
with Mr. and Mrs. Garth Smith.
They also visited at Long Bottom
with other relatives.
Visiting with Mrs. Helen Archer
were Kim Coleman and girlfriend
from Colwnbus and Mrs. Milton Tut·
tie of Texas Road.
Mrs. Ada Kibble of Parkersburg,
W. Va . is spending SOllie time with
her daughter, Mrs. Maurice Reed
and family , after suffering a broken

•

•

'fl )tjif.\,{l ~'fl

~ ~ ~~ 1!1

I

Reedsville personals

the campaign designed to raise fun·
ds for the CF Foundation, but it also
served to increase public
a wareness .

&amp;·Month Money Market Certlflcl'te

A

Mason person.....
al..,..s- - - - - , - - - - - -

Area happenings reported
Is New Haven chainnan'

·------ ---------

the meeting held at the church. Attending were the Rev. Art Bingham,
Charlene
Bingham, Katrina
Bingham, the Rev. and Ml;s. William
Newman, Brenda, Usa and Jennifer, the Rev. Tom Gladeau, Dale
Colburn, Richard Black, Narda
Garey, Dennis Little , Sheila
Ringhiser, Jayne Coleman, Sharon
Ryner, Hershel McClure, Lee
Lefebre, Rachi!el Lefebre, Rena
Lefebre, Donna Spencer, Sadie
Carr, Karen Spencer, Julia Spencer,
Gerald Spencer, Ed King, Sue King,
Joe King, Mike King, Tom King, Joe
Bow land, Jessica Bowland, Polly
Bowland, Tracy Bowland.

A slide presention on' the mission
work being done in German Village
was presented by the Rev. Art
Bingham, home missionary, at a
recent meeting of the Baptist
Women's Missions Group of the Fir·
sl Southern Baptist Church of
Pomeroy.
Special emphasis for the month
has been the study of home missions
and the Annie Annstrong Home
Missions offeri'ng goal which has
been set at $150. The Rev . Mr.
Bingham's work is sponsored
'through the home mission funds
which are given the Southern Baptists in the cooperative program.
A family potluck dinn•r or•r•rlwi

Television

BUT' WHY DID YOU
PAY ANY AT'TEIIJT'ION
TO PUSI-J~ AFTER HE
DROPPED YOU AS

KNOTS LANDING S &gt;d
a ndGary l earfort he•r l tve ~ and lhe1r
fam•ties· safety alter the ya ss •st an
FBI lllv esltgal ton of the Under
world (60 mms.)
, $1 AUSTIN CITY LIMITS ' leo
K ottke and Passenger'
, 3 C8N UPDATE NEWS
I ~1 NORMAN VINCENT PEALE
ot11 NEWS
iiJ LOVE AMERICAN STYLE
i l l CBN UPDATE NEWS
121u 101 111 0 1e1 ,1i)] 11:J m
NEWS
' 3) JOHN ANKERBERG SHOW
~ I NIGHT GALLERY
, 0 I MORE CAM BE AND WISE
' 1J) OUTER LIMITS
' l CBN UPDATE NEWS
, 211) 171 THE TONIGHT SHOW
Gues t¥ Lorna Pal!ers on, Natasst a
K.nskr (60 mm s )
3 ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
41 MELISSA MANCHESTER IN
CONCERT HBO pr esent s a daz
zllng shOw featu ring the po p roc k
smgarwho ' s captrvaltng Amen ca n
aud 11:m ces w1th her songs
S •MOVIE -(ADVENTURE) •• '' HII

Majeatr: O'Keefe '' 1g52

I I

r .

ANDAGEf
J +_ I

.r

1

,........,1

INEEBOGI
I [ J

Print answer here:

"

~ PEANUTS

,,
'

WHAT ,.\RE I'UU

C\JII'jo

Oll T HERE ( HUL f.. .'

:"JM E L)\J'v 1N I HE
)i AN r~ iS COMPUIINJI'"'
TH~T IHt~t ~ Nu T t Nc'Uorl
r:umo: ,JN THe PLlPuJI'N

---..
--\\
\
..
'

!

)

[1-\,.\1 :' ) LW:
I ·,:;clf1Lt II

l

flUe I&gt;.
1"--\LL

\
r:·
'
I . ; 1
\ '

\

.•. '
)

r

1 II

I' L ~li ND

q

'LII •

i'LlN'T

NeE I'
.\N ufHL..:
J'ITL HEi:
ov 11,Jl)_ ,

"ELL TH E
PuP,clRN
LHU .... t-..

I

0 ( XX )
· (Answer'S tomor~pwf

ves 1erday
·

sl Jt.,~mbles
. Answer

BUL GY CA BIN TEA CUP LEG ACY
He ended up by marrying the lady
mathemat ici an because She wa s thiSCALCULATING

Jumble Book No. 16, Contain ing 110 puules, is ava ilable tor $1.15 po1t5Nid
from Jumble, cJo this newspaper, Box 34, Norwood, N.J. 07648. Include your
name, address, tip code and make checks payable to Newsptperbooks;

BRIDGE
Sharp approach nails win
By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sonlag
NORTH

3-26·81

+AKQ

. He re " a hand played by
the student when he was just a

•QJ8 3

+AK

beginner _He won the diamond

+J 9 4 3

lead in dummy and led a
t rump to his ace. Ea st showed
ou t and the student . who had
pla nne~ a sp~cdy wrap ~ up uf
th~ play . r ame t o a sudden

..

WEST

EAST

• .I 9 8 3 2

• 10 7
· ~ 705 4
t ./ 10 ~ R

~.

+ 7 '5 12

+K 7

stop

+A(,) tO fi

Th en he saw that tf he cou ld
get th ree trick ; eac h tn spades

SOUTH

• "5.

and diamonds he would be

• A K 10 2

• Q6 3

sure of four trumps an d his
t:ontract. So h e cas h e d
dummy 's
sec ond
high
diamond. played out the rest

+ 8 52

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer· North

of ht s trump s e ndin g !n h is
own ha nd. l'a shcd the diamond
queen and led spades . l lnfor tunatel y fo'r him . that third
s pad e Wa s rutred and do wn he

Wesl

Pass

North.

East

Soutb

1+

Pass

1•

4•

Pass

Pass

Pass

went
" Mavbe I'm 1oo unluc kv 1o
- b r t dgt',
wa s - h iS
c omplaint ,
··You a re n 't redll y unlu&lt;·k y." said tht· P ro fesso r'. " You
didn ·t choost\ t he correc t lme

Opentng lead ·+.J

pl ay

of pla y."
The n the l'roft&gt;ssor pla yed

a nd made th e hand He found
a wav to wtn fi ve trump

his own hand w1th the king of
trump s to l ead hts queen of
diamond s
and
di s c· ard
dummy's queen of s pades.

tru_:kS: two spades Uhe r e wa s
no wa v 10 make three lrtc'ks in
that sUit) and three diamonds.
He c ashed dumm y's seco nd
diamond al tnd. three a nd
t hen took two spades Ba('k tn

Now he led his last spade and
r uffed

it in dumm y

and was

horn e wllh game and rubber .

~clt1.VHitZ'
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
UOWN
I Dolt
I Gregorian, e.g.
5 l..ocC!rno
2 Embankment
nCliive
3 Make an
10 "t'rom - to
address
Eternity"
4 Diamond
11 Seal
State 1abbr. !
13 Grand5 Covered with
parental
battle
t4 Stick
mementoes
Veslerday's Answer
'
together
6 Get one's
15 Seine
feet ,wet
16 Jaunty
28 Supple
16 Opposite
7 r.errnan
19 Rich cake 31 Wayne
of "post"
pronoun
20 Univ .
or
t7 China's
M"Girrune - "
in Georgia
Robert
23 Ranch
32 Old-womanisU
- Piao
I rock song I 24 Coiffure
18 Vacillate
9 Set up
33
Remarkable ;
need
20 State 1Fr . 1
m a series 25 Whole
35 Supplication •
21 Jazz's Kid - 12 r:'lolh·
38 Dutch
·
number
22 Boundary
stretching 26 ''Freebie
township
, 23 Haberdashery machine
and the -" 39 Colton . product
26 Shipwom1
27 Breathe after 10
running
28 ~'or each
2ll Ceremony
:W Parishioner
34 Before
35 Fraternity
symbol
3ti Yoko 37 Lansbury
39 Fortitude
40 Become
recondite
u Eyot
42 Drinks for
the crowd
43 Be
lacking
3

'

DAILY CRYPTOQlJOTE- Here's how to work It : ;

m

0
.1j\
ABC NEWS
NIGHTLINE
0 101CHSLATEMOVIE 'THE JEF
FERSO NS Tha C hr~stm as Wed
l11n~ · Pea ce ondyood w1ll are QuiCk
ly IOIQ01 t8 n 111 a C llfiS!mas El/e ba1
11e between the Jetter sons a nd th s
Willi Stu u var lrOnt:d and Jenny ' s
-" tH1dmy (R~pti'a 1 ) McMillAN
AN D WI FE l\ .:&gt; •n 101 LdW fhe Co nl
o111 tt~IU ) It:l r li! ldS llllll Sttl l O ~ I I:IIICl lll l.ja
y\.luny wo man acc used at murd er
w11en he returns lo t h iS annualnavHI
rese r~ e du1y (Rep eat )
'11 ABC CAPTIONED NEWS
tQ MOVIE · \SUSPENSE) •••
" Grand _Slam " 1968
12 :00 8 It li) CHARllf S ri\NGELS
Dancm~11 n lht:l Dcl111

Now arrange the c1 rcled tellers to
!arm the surprtse answer, as suggested by the above c artoon

AXYDLBAAXR
Ia
One

letter

LONGFELLOW

stmply stands ftJr

another.

In

this sample

A i1 :·

used fur Ihe thrt"c I.' s. X fot I he two O's, etc . Single letters. ··
apostrophes. the length and formation of the words are all

hinll. Eaoh day lhe code lellcrs are different.

CRYPTOQUOTES
YHT

LYT C

OYFOI. ;

HYR

YHT

TVBTG 'R

IYBTC

ZH

RIZC '

EHL

GEFWEFTC . - NYCTBIZHT B . BTEKYLQ
Yesterday'• Cryptoquot.e: LOTS OF PEOPLE KNOW A GOOD
THING THE MINUTE THE OTHER FEU.OW SEES IT
FIRST.- JOB E HEOOES

;,
'
;
.

�t

Meigs County happenings.

Small investment, large
returns, Sentinel Want Ads

Coaches meeting set

CHARLESTON
The West.
:Vtrgmla Department of Htghways
;has announced we1ght restrictions
'on the followmg state bndge . Mason
'Co. 27 - spannmg Fivemile Creek
:1.32 miles north of Co. 27/2 - 12 tons.
'This restnctlOn has been posted to
prevent senous damage or destruction from occurrmg to the bridge
when used by overwetght vehtcles.
: Motonsts are reminded that this
):mdge IS str ucturally sound m
des1gn and safe to travel when the

All coaches and officers of the
Pomeroy Youth League w1ll meet at
4 p.m . Sunday at the Drew Webster
Post 39, American Leg1on Home , m
Pomeroy .

Emergenc&gt;y runs
Seven emergency calls were an-

re.stnctJOns are observed.
·

.SheetS neW melllber
James R. Sheets, Rutland, has
been elected to membership m th e
Amencan Angus Assoc1abon, repor·
Is Dr C. K Allen, executive vtce
president
of
the
nattonal
orgamzat10n wtlh headquarters m
St Joseph, Mtssoun
The Amencan Angus Assoc1atwn,
With some 38,000 acttve life and
Jumor members, ts the largest beef
cattle reg1stry assoctatwn 1n the
world Its computenzed records Ill·
,elude detailed information on nearly
rrulhon regtslered Angus The
·association records ancestral Ill·
; fonnatwn and keeps records of
' produchon on mdiv1dual ammals for
1tsmembers

:10

, End loader moved car
Shirley Stephenson, Rac1ne,
reports her car was recently moved
' by workers of the Ontano Ptpe !..me
usmg an end loader rather than a
back hoe as reported earlier

·.OVC Boosters to
:meet March 31
· The Ohw Valley Chnsllan School
Booster Club m eetmg will be held tn
the aud1tor1um of the F1st Baphst
'Church on Monday, March 30 at i 30

swered by local umts on Wednesday,
the Metgs County Emergency
Med1cal Services reports
The Middleport Umt at 7 39 p rn
took Jeff McMann from the Me1gs
Jumor Htgh School to Veterans
Memonal Hospttal and a t 3 42 a.rn
treated Florence Proctor at her
horne , 368 S . Second Ave The
Rutland Ul..fllt at 11 :45 p.m took
Janet Cremea ns from Crouser Road
to Pleasant Valley Hospital a nd at
4·24 a.m. took Tom Reed from Me1gs
Mme 2 to Holzer Medtcal Center.
The Pomeroy Umt at 4·08 a m.
took Pamela Derenberger from her
horne on Mechamc St to Veterans
Mem onal Hospttal and at 1.47 a .m .
took VtrgJe Klem from her home to
Veterans Mernonal The Tuppers
Plams Umt at 12 54 p m took Hazel
Curtis, Reedsville, to Veterans
Memonal

•

Plans "'ere changed
Pomeroy Pollee report that an ar·
med robbery may have been contemplated early this mornmg at the
Landmark Service StatiOn on E.
Mam St.
Pollee state that at 5 30 a m
Douglas Bell, workmg tnsJde th~
stat1on, saw a man holdmg a gun at
the door He moved toward the door
and the mah ran from the front of
the establishment. The mc1dent IS
bemg uwesttgated by the Pomeroy
Deparbnent

1

cormmttee for the Pomeroy Chamber o£ Conunerce m~t Tuesday at
the Meigs Inn
The dmner will be held at the
Semur Ctttzens Center , Mulberry
He1g hts at 6 30 p rn Tickets w1ll be
$8 each and may be purchased at
Elberields. The Athens Messenger
a nd The Dally Sentmel.
The dmner will be catered by
Crow's Family Restaurant Reser·
vatwns must be made by Apnl21
Members of the co1mmttee m·

• A program will be presented by
the third and fourth grades and 1&gt; an
Enghs h sk1t enhtled "The M1ssmg
Words"
· A bnef busmess meetmg will
· folio\\

Offers will be recerved
until 4 .00 O'Clock PM on

Items tu be dtscussed mclude tht:
electiOn prm.:I!S!; fur next year's of·
'ft cers, plans for· a fau· b,o oth, and
plans for a refresluuent a nd m·
formatwn booth at the Fourth ol
July park festiVIlles
, Refreslunents Will be served in the
·Fellowship Ha ll.

'

E, F, and G names
may obtain plates
Mrs

Sarah

Gibbs,

deputy

reg1strar for motor vehicles

1n

: Me1gs County , announces that car
'-'wners have until :mdmgh t ,
; Tuesday, Ma ch 31, to dn ve on thetr
present sttckers.
1 The mdtvidual or mdivlduals "ho
I
, own the car must obtam thear own

I

! sl1t:kerStlus yee:ir

Any other person.-;

: attemptmg to sec ure a slicker for
' the owner or owners must p1ck up

'
1 the

necessary forms at the
offtCe and have them

I regtstrar's

~ s tgned by the owner or owners

I

:Attends conference
Mark Fultz of Me1gs Tire Center
Pomeroy, Is one of 25 lire dealers
from 19 states attending a dealer
management semma r sponsored by
The Goodyear· T1re and Rubber
Company m Akron, Ohto, thls week
IMarchZJ-261
Subjects covered dunng the
seminar mclude tire market growth,
trends, fmanc1al management, employee hmng and trammg, ad·
verttsmg , store plannmg and display

Mr. Mary Madeline Hess, 2920
Rolston St., Fort Wayne, Ind , dted
Monday at Parkv1ew Mernortal
Hospital 111 Fort Wayne follo.,mg a
heart attack She was an employed
a t the hospital •
Mrs. Hess was the w1fe of the Rev .
Harold Hess. forme r pastor of the
Federated Church m Pomero). now

knuwn as Tnmty Chlllrh
Besides her husband, Mrs Hess 1s
survived by a daughter, Audrey
R1chle of P huemx. and two sons.
Wilham F of Portland, Ore , and
Lawrence F of Furl Wayne
Memonal serv1ces wtll be held at
II a rn Sunday a t Fort Wa~ne

Race Street, tor the sale of
the tollow.ng descr•bed
real est at~. to w•t
Real estate Situated at
the corner of Garf teld anc'
South Third Avenue 1n tht.
Vtllage of Mtddleport.
Ohto The Vtllage acqutred
t•tle to sa •d rea ! estate bY
deed recorded 1n Volume
270, page 703, MetQS Coun ty
Deed Records
Sale of satd real estate
was authonled by Or
d•nance adopted January
12, 1981
The village
reserves me nght to re1ect
any and all b tds The sale 1S
pursuant to Sec tton 721 OJ
of the Ohto Rev1sed Code
12126, 131 5 12, 19.26

Ut'pulit•s prolw tht•t't
The Me1gs County Shenff's Depar·
unent ts mvesllgatmg the theft of a
battery taken from a vehtcle owned
by Dale Wolfe, Reedsvtlle.
The mc1dent occurred Turesday
mght or early Wednesday rnormng
while the vehtcle was parked at the
Wolfe restdence

\'t'lt'rans Mt'murial
Adnutted-V1rg1e Klem, Pomeroy;
Hazel Curhs, Reedsville , E lizabet h
Deed$, Long Bottom
Discharged-Laura Pickens, Pearl
Secoy, Htlda Carnahan, Candace
Lambert, Lloyd Dugan

Inspection set

Shops the

LANDMARK'S
WANT AD WAY
1------------i LAWN &amp; GARDEN
CLINIC

r

reeker discussed the regatta
program book wh1ch w1ll be
prepared b} the c hamber
The Meigs County Jaycees are 111
c harge of the regatta
Fred Cro ~ announced that there
w1ll be a gue&gt;t speaker at the next
regular 1neet1ng of the chamber on
Apnl7

POMEROY
LANDMARK

.r _.. . . .u--o...----·----··-·
l
!

•

.

I

'.

i
l

Y(&gt;o~r

s .
F..-trit

I Outn

Florr s t Srncl' 1'1~/

fl~

F~ORIST
PH. 992·2644
J~2 E Ma1n , Pomeroy

\?,..,_
. •=

Dm id Todd Rhoot'&gt;&lt;
David Todd Rhodes, 84, Plt·
l&gt;burgh , Pa , fonnerly uf Apple
Grove, died Tuesday Ill Pennsylvama
Mr Rhodes was preceded 111 death
by hts parents, George and Vma
Farley Rhodes. and hts w1fe. Martha.
Surv1vtng are a daughter, Ins
Rhodes Frtend, Pittsburgh, five
g 1andch1ldren and II great·
grandc hildren
Funeral services Will be held at I
p m Saturday at the Apple Grove
Uruted MethOdist Churc h with the
Rev Freeland Norns offletalmg
Bunal will be 1!1 the Letart
Cemetery Frtends ma~ call at the
Ill

Curb Inflation.
Pay Cash for
:·_______ _____...__.,
Classifieds and li
WANT AD INFORMATION
I
l
Savell I
I
PHONE 992-2156

a nytime Fnday

the county cmnmlsslOners m each of

m 197B and are necessary to fulfill
recerllf1cahon requtrements {SecliOn 7011 as adJn1mstered by the OhiO
Off1ce of the Department of Hous1ng
and Urban Development

the e1ght respective counbes (which
mclude Athens, Hockmg , Me1gs,
Monroe. Morgan, Noble, Perry and
Washmgton Counttes) for the pur·
pose of pubhc rev1ew; "Areawide
Housmg Report" and "Practices,
Programs and Pohc1es of Land Use
m Rural Southeastern Ohto."
These docwnents are updated verswns of those presented and adopted

All mteres ted agenctes. groups.
and mdlVIduals are mv1ted to r ev1ew
the docwne nts and to subnut written
emrunenLs by Apnl17. All such comments rc-cetvcd by Apnl 17 wtll be
co ns idered by Buckeye Hills·
Hockmg Valley Reg1onal Development Distnct before hnaltzmg the
housmg and Land Use Elements .

Recipients will get raise·
WASHlNGTON - The natwn's 36 nul lion Social Secunty rectptents
wtll get a cost-of-hvmg mcrease 111 July, probabiy of II 2 percent but
possibly a bit rnore
The mcrease, smaller than the 12.J percent boost pred1cted by the
Carter adJmmstratwn two munths ago, would push the average monthly cheek up by at least $37 to $371
for March 1s released on Apnl23. but could be 11.3 percent or 11 4 percent 1f the 1ndex c hrnbs at a double-dtgll pace as 11 did 111 Februar)

I
I
I
I

.:..._

Wnte your own ad and order by mall

co upon Cancel your ad by phone v.. en o;ou ge t
results Money nor retundable

I1 Phone ________________

I
I
I
l
I
I
I
I
I
I

THE OFFICES OF

Wanted
For Sa le
Announcement
F or Ren t

-~·1·

I
i
i
I
j

STORY &amp; STORY
•
A nORNEYS' AT LAW
Steven L. Story and Karen H Story

5

I
I 9
1
I 10
II

_ _ __ _ __

- - - - - - - - --

12

1 13 - - - - - - - - - - - - -

1

14 - - - - - - - - - - - -

1
1

!S-----------

1

• ANNOUNCEMENTS
1 - lnM~mo~ o• m

16 - - - - - - - - - - - - -

.. - Equopmenllor Aenl

H - CI TV ltildlo
\1 - AnllfiUU

•nc lude d•scount

~4 - MUC

ln,~tnnce

11
22
23
24

Wilnled To Oo

25
26 _ _ _ _ _ _

lJ

PfOli!Utl!nill

l

F•rm'

----- 1
I
I
I

I
236 W. 2nd, Pomeroy, Oh .
1:
(Formerly Me1gs Gen . Hosp1tall
1
i
Your FTD Flonsl
i I.~O~ff~~rcliei.IPIIhli,.9.92i.·ll6il62ii41.••••••••H•o•m•e•P•h•.•9•9•2•3•5•2•3.. l ______P~ ~ :_r~Y.:_ r:~a_::!~__ ~ __ _
· - - _._.._.. _ _..,_._..._...-4
1

• TRANSPORTATION
JI - Au!OtfOr 5111

JJ- V41ni &amp;.4W D
,.- MotMC'f'Ciel

,,_

I
I
I
I
I
I

,Auto Ptrtl

1 Acuuor•••

tor Sillf

GET VALUABLE tratn1ng
as a young busmess person
and earn good money pi us
some great gtfts as a Sen
ttnel route earner Phone
us nQht away and get on
the eltg1b111ty list at 'i92
-2156 or 992 2157

•

$185 00 to $500 weekly dOing
ma111ng work
No ex
penence requtred
AP
PLY Corc le Sales, P 0
Box 224 0 , RIChmond Hill ,
NY 114!8
Some part t•m e tabs tn Pt
Pleasant come wtth a
$1,500 bonus! Plus tree
college lu itton 1 II you are
age 17 or older, a tUn1or or
se n.or •n htgh sc hool. or a
h1gh
SChOOl
d1ptoma
graduate , you may Qualify
The West V•rg•n•a Nattona t
Gl.lard 1S no ord1nary part
t•me tab! Good pay , good
beneltts • For details call
SFC 0 ' Neal 675 3950
WANTED
The follow tng
must cl ans to form a rock
band Lel!ld guitar , second
gutlar, organ or plano
player , drummer truml}f;' t
player , tenor sax Must be
able to play rock and soul
mus• c Interested people
musl hav e thetr own equ1p
ment Senous parlles cal l
' JO• 675 22 10
LOCAL
flnan c•a l
•n
Stlt UIIOn needS lndtVIdUC\1
wtlh bank exper.ence to
work F nday evt!r)l n gs ,
Sa turd ays, and vacat•on
time Send resume to Bol(
7'J.9 G, co rne Dally sen
hne t, Pome roo; . On 45769

...__

wan red to Do

Young ladv 1S Wtlltng to
sew for people at her home
Neat , fast , and reasonable
Phone 949 1201

--

11 - Homtlmprovtmentt
11 - .. lumbln• &amp; I .eluting
Il - l" II,UIIIIInt

)I

Beautiful three bedroom
brick nome •n Baum
Addlllon, Pomeroy , Ohoo
Gas heat , cen tre! a•r Call
992-2571 or 1 687 6419

•• - EitclriCII

r~nch

&amp;. lhlrotertt lon
U - Otntrtl H41\lllnt
U - M H lhpl lr

1 JC P M Oldy
11 Noon hlurd,..
tor Mondi11

1 1- UIIIh&lt;Jitltrr

Rates and Other Information

,....

....... .."'.

1 dl~
J 041~1

'"
"'

J dlyt

Cttertt

I II

Ill

• Cln s

E•cfl word o~tr 1/'te mrn+mum It wl)rdt 1a 4 (till• Mr ,. .,. Mr .. y.
AU runnlnt othtr tll•n toniiCIIIIVI cf41'1'1 Will M ttlilr .... ill tM I iiY

r•"

•nk~

Homes lor Sole

tnCI Otulutr~ • unit..., wari, II M

CUhln4141~1nU

MOIUII "Ill'! I IIIII 1nd Y H.llltllft UctpiHI onl'l' Wilt! Clttl WI ttl

order U ctnl tl'llrt• lor ICII urrylnt •u NumDe• In Clft Of Tt\1
Stn11n11

PRIVATE
selling ,
J
bedroom home on S R 7
near Memory Gardens. 111
acres Terms 992 174 1
Bnck house on wooded lot
Ttlree be&lt;lrooms , large k lt
chen. family room, double
garage. deck Mtd S1 xtu~s
991 5410
DPEN HOUS E Saturday
Mar ch 281h I rom 9 5 anct
Su nday March 2Yih I rom I
S p m On S R I between
Memorv Gardens ~1nd ~tM!'
Garage ~92 /741

C anth~lp yo~

II

TIRES GOING BALD?

IIt

l\eha~eF'trestone121undwt
canhdp

1

POMEROY HOME 1o AU10

I Ph.992·2094

bench, pool.
ladderfilter,
, anddeck,
tn
clutles
stallat10n
on
normal
ground cond1t1on s Also 10
ground pool ktts starttng at
S169S 00 Bank tmanc tng
available Call collect at 1

I

Call Ken Young
For Fnt suwlu

••• ;,s:~!!!~voce
ALL MAKES

eW;astltrs
eDryers
eRtnge,

• D1spost1s
eDosl'lw;asMrs

eHotW•terT•nks

····"'"' ''"" ""

Sprtl•l R•tes FOf"'
' '"OL'""""'

Osborn Rd
Reedsville, Oh.
3· l 6· tmo

3·231mo 11

~~~~~co.l

776

992 · 7544
VA loan sno money down
Feden'l Housmg J ~o on S2S,OOO
S% on b!llant:c
conventional Lof\nssoo
down
Cilll tor lntormatton
992 7S44
1 21 ttc

• E!ectnc Heatmg
&amp; Wlnng
lndustnal , Commerc1al
and Res+dent1al

ROGER HORNSBY
·swiMMING POOL CO.I

Ph, Pomeroy
614·992· 70JB
3 11 1 mo

EARLY BIRD SALE

- •••••• • ., ..,.,.,
Houuown•n
.... MobileHomoPulu

..- Apt

n

--Auto and Truck
Repair
--T ransmission
Repa1r
Hrs.: Man · Fri.
9 A.M,· 5·JD P .M.
992·5682

10· 7 tfc

Offtce 742· 2003
Georges. Hobstetter Jr.
Braker
NEW LISTING
Noce3
bedroom home, 1' 1
baths, I!Vtng room, dtn
•ng &amp; kttChen comb ,
carport wtth storage, on
l a c res $32 ,000 00.
NEW
LISTING
FARM,
175
acres,
pasture aod t•mber,
remodeled two story
hom e, baseme nt , large
barn, garage, storage
bldg on Sha de R1ver
NEw LIsT 1 NG
HYSELL RUN RD .
Love ly 3 bedroom home,
llvtng room, dtntng
room , equ.pped kllchen,
full basemen t wtth wood
burner , 3 rooms &amp;
bath , on approx
I2
d Cres $41 .000.00
RUTLAND
Ntcc all
elec lr iC 3 bedtoom
h ome, balh 1 ltv1ng
room, kttchen &amp; dtntng
comb , utlltt&gt;y , garage
S&amp;tua ted on la rge lot
$36 ,500 00
HARRISONVILLE
Approx J,. acre 101 Wtfh
water tap. Nt ce trailer
or
bulld1ng
s tte
52,HOO 00
Cheryl Lemley, As soc
Phone 742 3171
Velma Ntctnsky, Ass oc.

1'::::::::::::::;;;:
~::;:::::~
~
3

2

The Tops

Housing
Headquarters

t~~~L~-~:m
216

e

second Street

Phone

1· 1614) 992· 3325
RACINE
Large home
Wtfh 5 bedrooms Looks
n 1ce and has c ha racter
appeal Has a large lot
r~nd +S near sc hools and
stares
NEW LISTING
Modern J
bedroom
home wtth 2 6s a c res
'\ ·
Bu11t 10 ktlC'nen, central
h eat. and large lt vtng
rm Wt th s ltd 1ng gla s
doors to the pattO. Good
dnlled we ll and large
barn
NEW LISTING
1978
Htll c rest mobile home
wtth 3 bedrooms and 1
balhs Looks ltke new
Also has a ut tltty room
built on
SYRACUSE
Total
electnc hom e near the
pool 'ttnd playground
Has 3 bedrooms , 2
baths
Garage, and
large yard A n 1ce home
tor JUSt$43 ,500
OUT OF TOWN
Reasonable home wtttl
a creage '1 bedrooms,
la rge hvtng , and '} por
cl1es On SR 7 Only
$11,000.
ACREAGE
10 acres
ol good bottom land on
state route Would make
an •dea l mtnt farm
WanTSIO ,OOO
YOU MAY NEVER
SEE THESE ANO OUR
OTHER PROPERTIES
FOR SALE AGAIN

Housing
Head uartPrs

35

Lots &amp; Acreage

54

TRAILER LOT tor sa le,
$4,000 00 9.1 1571
Acreage One acre and one
ha ll of ground located be t
wee n old Rt 33 and new Rt
33 fac•ng
the Me&gt; 1gs
F atrgrounds S4000 00 992
1571

41

Hous es for Rent

Four room house wtth barh
and uttlllty room 992 3Y81

42

Mobile Homes
for Renf

l IJedroom Mobile Home

Adu lt s on ly
Browns
Trailer Courr Mtner sv llle
991 JJH
F •r srtte or rent
ap
pro:...mat ely 34 a nes w1tt1
bedroom modular
1n Porll ~ n d Onto
area Ntne llltles tram th e
Ravenswood br1dge Call
a tt er 5 p 111 a ! 1 304 UJ
5111

from Pomer oy
dll'POrt YY2 5858

or

bedroorn

Mtd

mob.t e

•n 1149

Easy leaf des•en adds lavts h
bordet detatlto so de sill top !not
from tne collar down all 1n one
ptece mcludlfli the slee~es u~

srnthetoc worsted Pattern 1]64
S11es 32 J4 36 38 oncluded
SZ.OO tor each patlern Aod 501

each

pane1n tor lust cl ass ~~~
ma•l and handltng Stnd to.
Alict 8rookl
I 1

tlttiltcrah Otpt.
The Oatly Senttnet
loJ 163, Old Chol111 Sll, New
Yon, NY lOlli ,rlnt Nemo,
Addr111, Ztp, Plllttm Numbt1
Carch on to the cratl boom' Send
lor o•t N0'11981 NElOtlCRAf l
CAIALOG Q,,, 112 desoen; l
hee pal!efnS IOS!de $ \ (U)
AU CWliOOIIS .. $1.15 mh
1!4·1· Quick MKhlM lju1lb

liHIItlltn Home Qu1ltina

l3Ztlt
Ill· dd 8lodl QuMb
Drl&amp;inols

I

llO·Swullrfllluons-StiiS 1156

Itt-Quick 'n' E.., rransto11

lli-Cnfltoft Potchwon Q~tlts

Ill Atakons 'n' Ooihn
1!6·Thrifty C111ty Flowers
IZHolll Qu1tts
IZI·Pillow Shtw·OO.
Ill-Crochet with Squorn
A~ ot NMdlopo~nt

117 Eat

IIH0111pto1t Atatt•••
II Un11 lfpHs
Ill Elsy A~ of H1urp•n C1ochet
110 li lilly Rup

tOI-Insblnl
107-lnsllftt
106-1.-1
IIM·Insllftl

MKIImt

Slwln&amp;
Ftollioo
Mon11
101 t5 Qtldts tO&lt;, ...,

•

Pets lor Sale

tJioodl1
AK c b ne
ea gl pupptes
e c hamptonship
Phpne

~~~r 5 p "'

61

'1 1.9 rfc

'J. bedroom Mobd C" Home,

total electn c. Syrdcuse
Washer ,
dryer ,
refrtgerilfor . stove. pull our
nv.ng room porc n, no pe ts
9Y1 3904
44

Apartmenf
for Rent

J AND 4 RM fur n1s hed ap

ts Phone 992 5434
RIVER SIDE APfS I &amp; 1
bedroom
a par1m cn1s
ava•lable
Equal
op
portun1fY h ous1ng 99'1 111 1
45

6)

n ~w

53

An11ques

ArtFNriON
\ IM
PORIANf TO YOU! W&lt;ll
pd,

1w

m

, t ..,tl 01 ( f' rllhect C. llC Ck

!lllltQ Ul'S rt nd LO II ec
h t..lt.!~
or Crlllrt' (IStAf(lS
N()thtn&lt;J IOO ldr(JI' Also
qun .. polkt.'1 Wil! Cill'!l and
Ullll 1 nllf'C lt011S ( (Ill tdJ
IM tlf)/ Or 'l'li 1 J411

•Insulation
• Storm Doors
•Storm Wtndows
• Replacement
W•ndows

clb)nu•q .1nd p.111ltlng
All work gu.u.lnteed
f-tl'L' E\lll11tlt es
Pr1ces

Free

~tw:.on.lllJe

c,, u HowMd
9&lt;19 11162
949 2160

Autos for Sale

tt.; J) Maver•ck , 4 door, 6
cyl 1915 Ford Landau 4
aoor , power orakes, power
stecr ..,g, cu r cond am tm
rae1.o . cr u.se control.
powt•r &lt;.l rtvers scat 741
1501
12

'rrucks for Sdle

1968 1nternalt onal 1600
LOa&lt;.ISTJ.1r , 10 If van bOdy, 5
spl'ed 6 c yl 4S,OOO mtles,
cxc cond \1 ,600 614 985
&lt;~10~

Est1mate

James Keesee
Ph. 992· 2772

1 J 11 (

ROOFING
"Specializing In
Re· Roof1hg"
• small carpenter Jobs
Darrell Brewer
PH . 992 · 288~
992·2606
992· 7861
3 1!1mopd

3 13 1 mo

MILLER ELECTRI~
SERVICE

J&amp;F
ENTERPRISES
• Backhoe
• E:..cavattng
1 Sept1c Systems
• Water, Sewer &amp; Gas
Lmes
Ltcensed &amp; Bonded

• l' u l1onq &amp; Chop ~onq
(" " " " NOw Oo&lt;n
• tiU I' I' ~'0 " 1 f o o /lo ll Aq &lt;&gt;

"' " " ', •u• '""

' hO• ' "'

DUMP TRUCK
Ph. 992-7201

J S 1 mo

oup ''"'"It

buuh ,, &gt;d

' "~I&gt;IM' '' '~'

II+IOWNIN &lt;i
1 , n.n&lt;j no~ ' '

For all of your wir·
ing needs .
Let George Mt ller check
your present electncat
system
R es tdent•al
&amp; Commercta1

' "~n~~ ""' '"~

11 "'
w11••
A" o l' ro ~"" ~ oil '~'" 11

IO""~''"di O ~q.nq ' M"

Cal!J42 · 3195

or 992-7680

O
l

~~;~~~~~~~~~~!:lllpltiL to n i

\\oo .. n

28

I
tfc

~~~~~~~~~~~~~======~;;;;~2;2;6:1~m~o~~~==================~
ALL STEEL

GRAVEL~ TRACTOR

"YOUNGS

"

CARP~TER

Farm Buildings

SERV Es

SMALL
Stzes

·:F rom JOx30"

tp

- Addons and
remodeling
- Rootmg and gutter
work
- Concrete work
- Piumbmg and
electrlca I work
(Free Est1ma1es)

Utility Buildings
S11es from 4x6 to 1h:40

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
4
~~::.~~~~

WhltC lOp Wltll red ln ndaU
IIY /7 Cou gar XR 7 Wtth
root
Am tm casse tte
s Tereo, wtre nm wheels,
qood !.res , ,n very good
corldtlton 99'l 1370 alte r 5
111
P
IY 7H FORD L fD Landau
46
Space lor Rent
velour qlfcrto r
nm fm
COU N fRY MOBILE Ho me stereo rape, electr• c wtn
Park, Route 33. North ol CIOWS p S , p b 992 31191JOI
Pom erov Large lots Cal l wee n 10 4
9.92 1479
1966 OLD~ F85, J door
fRA IL ER spaces lor rc nr s mall V 1:1
good g~s
:,ourhern Valle.,_ Mobile mileage body '" ,•xtra
Home Park , Cheshtr(' Oh good cond S350 11rm t.;Yl
992 39S4
5006

Wagon wncct bu nk beds
wtth mnlfress. good con
Ot tton tor $175 00 Also 'l
bu1spr~aus ,
'1 pa•r c u r
IA•n~ , snoopy destgn S'JS 00
PllCHll' I 304 713 549'1.

or • ~ p .l t r gut1ers

.lnd down spout !&gt;, gutter

CO WS tor StJ I ~ Bred and
open poll ed her etords 614
147 170 4 or 6" 241 1702

Furntshed Rooms

Household Goods

Vinyl &amp;
Alum mum Siding

All t,-pl'~ 01 root work ,

Ltveslock

Slcepulg rooms, by lhe
week
Kil c t1e n . and
te tev •S10n loung e Carryour
store a nd reslauranl wllh1n
500 tee ! 991 6370

S1

::~~~

H. l WRITESEL
ROOfiNG

BULLS tor sa le Polled
Herefords
12 24 months
old Phone 614 247 270-4 or
614 ·w 1101

1l

water-Sewer· E lectrtc
Gas Lme· Dttches
Water Ltne Hook·ups
septiC Tanks
county cerhhed
Roush Lane
Chesh.re, Oh.
Ph 367 ·7S60 1 7 tfc

f~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=~~;~~~~~~i~======~~=~

Farm EQutpment

dilton $1650 00 9-49 1l l6 or
ch 5545
mower .n good con
991

Middleport, Oh ,
Ph. 992·6263
Any lime
3 2 1 mo

245-9113

Kuker .JOO Qal spray , 1nr
540, 4x 16 plows M F IJ 5
Otsc
ler t auger , I sel
snap on 15 5x38 dUal ftr es,
N H 367 Manure Spreder ,
Dunham l J ' Ht~r oga t o r ,
1nt Tractor, 986 304 675
1145
Jnter naltona l Cub Cadet 11
hp , nydrQSfdfl( drtVe, -42 1n

REESE~
.
TRENCHING
SERVICE

l2 Park St .

KEN SOLES

'"Arhens . 591

Put a cold nose •n your
tuTur e Co nta ct your Metgs
County Hurnane SoCiety ar
"9"' 6"'60
Ava 1!able now
~t " ,.I b dor 'ypc male ~
wo a r a
;,,
one m lntnture german
Shephard, rnale , terrter
type
c h es apeake bay
retr•ever , col l•e rype s,
bla ck Doberman. wate r
span .e l Ca tt cocat , temale
two male ltger ca ts,
Amer 1ca'n clomesf iC ca ls
991 6160

KAUFFS
PLUMBING
AND
HEATING

Free Est1mates

3 bedroom rn ob1le llame
Approxtmatel y 5 mtl CS

MOB l LE HOM E lor renr
Completely
furn iShed
Adult s pr efe rr ed Depos•t

You II love thiS leni!h lot lea m
!Oi Wl!h p~niS and S ~II IS 1

DENNEY
CHAIN LINK
fENCE

3 blue spruce trees for sale
3 II Will trade tor 3 sweel
qum tre es 99'1. 5612

56

mile s sou th of M1ddleport
on Rt 7

NEW LISTING
Jusr
what ypu ' re took.ng tor
- ntce '1 or 3 bedroom.
1•·2 bath , nome on a good
street •n M•ddleport
Large 1eve 1 lot, base
me nt. w b t p , carpe t
1ng, many new leatur es
JUST! $14,900
NEW LISTING
Rl 7
bypass, approxtmately ,~
. 14 acres of n1 ce ly rOlling
land, plus oJd house wtth
well . excel lent tor
mobile homes or home
sttes $8 ,500
NEW LISTING
Close
111 1 8 a cres level land
wtt h a beaut.tul newer J
bt&gt;droom, 24x60 doubl e
w1de w1th 'J. baths , equ1p
ped kilchen rmd utdtty
and an adCied on tamdy
room w•fh a wood
burner Large d~ck area
NEW
LISTING
Panoram•c Vtew ot the
Plus approx
Rtver
tmate ly 3 acres rtvtar
frontage on lh 1s 75 acre
tarm wtlll a 3 bedroom
homB. barn, and smal l
pond wtfh ti llable and
wooded a c reage De
velopmen t potenttal as
prtm•tlve camp :jlfes
a nd butldtl')g sites Near
New Brodg~ $57 ,000
NEW LISTING
Ltlfle
upkeep on th•s hou se•
Cute ltttte 2 bedroomt10
mean a large cou ntry tot
wtth tull bl3sement, that
tncludcs wood burner
lnsuldleU carpetd. a lso
storaqC'
bU J ICI•nq
$19 ,900
REA~ TOR
Henry E . Cleland, Jr
992-6191
ASSOCIATES
Ool1tC &amp; Roger Turnur
992 l692
J ea n rrusseu 949 ·2"0
OFFICE 992 2259

Beaultl u l tuel ad slave
pract1cally brand new used
one w•nt e r Sl35 Brand
new, never been used pony
chatr S25 991 740 1

2 bedroom house 10 Ril ctne
w11 h large storage area
Complelelo;
lurn• s hed.
utll •t•es pntd S350 month
plus dcpos• t G len B• sse tl ,
949 1801 or 949 1860

d nccf'pted No l)e ls
1----~:;;:---.;;;ilill chil
John Sl1 ee 1s , 3 and one hall

0.

USED c lothes d ryer ' Call
a lt ers p m 992 S287

G E rot •sser1e broiler us ed
1 It me Worth $125 will, sell
tor S65 992 2961
·

rwo

POMEROY,
992 · 2259

Mtsc. Merchan1se 1

I~Vrn•st) ed house
on 3rd St , Mtddleport
Dc pos•r &amp;
re fe r e n ces
requ•red 99'1. 2606

3 bectroom

nom&lt;.• Utll 1ttcs pa•d One

~/(.:)6" '8~

J&amp;C
SANITATION
SERVICE

VISit our large show r.oom in CoolvJIIe,
Oh. or Ph, 667·3146 Day or N1ght.
Master Charge &amp; V1sa accepted.
(21st Year)

HOBSTIDER

WJLL take tare ol elderly
woman .n my home 667
6675

A UTOMOBIL E
SURANCE
been
Crln
your
ce lled?
Los t
operator 's lt ce nse' Phone
99~ 1143

It

APPLIANCE SERVICE

100 LB . CHLORINE $109

Wil l babystf tn my ho m e tor
.ntants or school age
chtldren Have refer ences
and exper.ence Phon e 992
3941

IN

SWIMM ING POOLS IN
STALLED $999 00 Com
pany has pools left over
tram last year 16 x 31 0 d
1Sx24SW1marea Pncetn

20%-30% OFF,'
ALL CAK£
DECORATING
SUPPLIES
ANN'S CAKE
DECORATING
SUPPLIES

5 LB. CONDITIONER $19,95

WELDING done , 10 ye.:trs
exper•ence. equ1pped to do
steels, c asttng, atum1num ,
1n ftelct or shpp Loc at ed at
Maplewood Lake or ca ll
949 1285

Insurance

I
I
I
GOING BALD?

Kup Ttlts Ad lor Futur• R•f•rtttc:ot

SALE

f~~-~-~-~-~-=-=-=-=-=-~-~-=-=-=-~;=====~~~~~t~~~~~;;~~~;
CUNNINGHAM ROGER HYSELL'S
PACQUALE '
&amp; ASSOC.
GARAGE
Mortgage Bankers
~~=========:;:==========~ 304
I BOO 6246333
8511or 1n Oh•o call

Sttuat.ons Wc:lntcd

13

I

STORAGE Clearance We
w•ll be clos1n9 our storage
and reta•l sales for the
season soon Apples at SJ 75
per bushel and up. Get
yours now F ttzpatnck Or·
chards, State 'Route 6119
669 3785

Mobtte Hqmes
for S~te

Look•ng for mature woman
who needs home &amp; smalle
wages to help cMe tor
small ch il dren 111 country
992 758.&amp; &amp; leave number
12

---1

FIREWOOD
$30 . load.
Spilt &amp; delivered 992 5240

1973 Crown Haven, 14 x 65,
three bed1ooms, new car
pet 1971 Cameron, 14 x. 6A,
two bedrooms, hew carpe t
1971 Champ1on , 12 x 60, two
bedrooms, new carpet 1976
Cameron 12 x 60, two
bedrooms, a it electnc. 1971
Skyline, 12sx 6~ , two
bedrooms, bath &amp; 1J, new
carpet
1970
PMC. 1
112 x 60, two bedrooms, new
Lots &amp; Acree~ge
carpet B x 5 Sa tes, Inc , JS
2nd x Vtand Street, Potnf
SEVERAL c h01 ce bulldmg
Pleasant, wv Phone 675
lots, Eastern Otstnct , Tup
4424
pers Pla•ns Ctlester warer
Owner will help f1nance
19'72 Regency 12 x 60 1wo 992 5869
bedroom mob•le nome, new
stove and refngerator, new
carpet, natural gas heat, LAND for sa te Located on
170 acres, Stiver R!dge, 60
washer and dryer 992 6711
acres Itliabl e 985 4116

WANTED People to se ll
A von
War k your own
hours Part t•me or ~'ull
11m II 1nterested c .HI 14~
1354 or 7471755

•SERIIICES

wan1· Ad Advertt$ing
Oeadlme:s

In mtmor., , CtrCI ol

Y!_anted

tteac estaa-:-

H - NUlfOrl

monom~m

H~

11

J1- Au!ORI0411f

H ~ lutonen Buolchntl
H - Lot' &amp; AtrUijlf
Jt- Meill Eu•tt Wlnltcf'

32
I
33
34 _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ I1

Ma11 Th1s coupon w1lh Rem1ll~nce
The Daily Sent1nel
Bo~ 729

·~- Stld&amp; F•rllllltr

lot Salt

30
I
31 _ _ _ _ _ _ :

1

•• - 1141'1' &amp; Gr41tn

11 - HomU lor \"fl
J'l - Mobole Hornet

ll

brin&amp; you
utra cash
,, for
shoppln&amp; sprees

Furnace repatrs . e lec tr iC() I
work . plumb•ng , mobile
nome or res1den ce 99'}
5858

t) '- li'UIOCk

lo Loiln

Money

1

21
l
28
I
29 _ _ _ _ _ _ 1

35

Classified Ads

18

41J - W.tnledlolu'l'
n - fruC~tlor 54111

II~Jtontu

11

hit

•r - F4Ir"' Equlpmtnt

eREAL ESTATE

-----------_ _ _ _ _~______ 1
_________ !

St~pphu

•FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

RildiO, TV

ce R•p•.r

ServtU\

_ _ _ _ _ __

tor

It

o,porlunol~

!. _ _ _ _ _ __

Mtrdllftdt\1

U - lutlchnt

•FINANCIAL

II
tH _ _ _ _ _ __

Eq~+pmtnl

U - Pett

II

·.

• MER CHANOISE
)1 - Houul'lold Gooch

14- Buloneu Trton•ng
I ) - 5CIIOGII lnlt~U C loon
&amp;

·--

Misc . Merchanist

S4

'

32

Business Services

19 acres of Oh•o River bot•
tom land to lease for far
mong . 51 . Rt 338 . 9'12 7330

The Mental Heal1h Center ts a Pnvate, Non· Profit .
Corporation aad an Equal Opportuntty/ Afftrma1ive
Acteon lltnplover.
•

RE.PAJR or remodeling
work , fl oors, doors , wall
paneling cetlulg, or lloor
tile , Sidtng 992 27SY

u - Sp•u lor lhnl
t 1- Witlted IO Renl

11 Htlpw 1 ntto
,, _ Soluilled Wtnlfd

Th ese cctsh rates

Home'

H - ADirtmtnl tor R1n1

1- Pwbhc Slit'
&amp; Au(hon
9 W1:1nted to 8u)
• EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
ll

U ~ Mobo l l

I

H- FAGC!f'U

Alh

v ud s•••

1

tor A till

by Larry Wright

R.N. positio!' an l.O.becl 1cute care psycht4tric unit
using tnterCitsctphnary Approach. Posittve worktng
environment with excelltnt tnnge benefits, tn·
eluding CCM'Itlnuing ctducation and tu1tion retmburse·
ment. Flexible schHullng wtth every other
wnkend off ,(mmimum). For more tnformatlon,
contact the Personnel Office, Gallia-Jackson· Meigs
Community Mental Health Center, 412 Vtnton Ptke
GallipOlis, OH, 45631. Phone No . (6141 446·5500.
'

lor loltnl

J - Announc e mt'nl\
• Gove•w•~
HIPP1

•RENTALS
4 \ - Hou~u

'N' CARLYLE ••

JH

11.5 acres at excel lent
pas tur e tor rent
Two
do llars per cow per month
985 3809

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

•- Lolt 1nd Fo,.nd

I

1

or Write Daily Senlin~l Cla"ss1fied Dept .
1 11 Court St.. Pomero.,., 0., 45769

\

~o

7. _ _ _ __ _ __
B _ _ _ _ _ __

1

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

11 -

I
I
I
I
I

!

I

I
I

Pr1nt one word 1n each
space below Each 1n
1t1al or group oi figures
cou nts as a word Count
name a nd address or
pnone number •f used
You 'll get be tter results
1f you descr•be fully ,
g1ve pr. ce The Sen t1nel
reserves the r1ght 10
c la sstfy , edtt or re,ect
any aCI Yo ur ad will bf'
put tn th e proper
ClaSijtCCI IIOn 1f YOU II
c heck the proper bo.,
below

!~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~' ,
II
~-----1I o _ _ _ _ __
ANNOUNCING
I
THE OPENING OF

w•fh lhts

l Name---------l Address _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

...

"''

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

KIT

Help Wanted

OOMMUWUITAL

Found
hound, temalf,
whtte w1th black markings
on Sliver R1dge 9BS·4J02

•

EVERYBODY

Cruw .

The exact mcrease w1ll nut be known unhl the Con.swncr Pr H.:t' Index

There wiU be a voluntary motor
vehlcle inspection conducled on
the K mart parking lot on
Eastern Avenue, Gallipolis, by
the Ohlo State Highway Patrol.
Anyone wanting their car In' spected for a 1981 Inspection
'.. decal Is to contact the OSP In·
spectlon team at thls location on
Saturday, March 28, between the
hours of 8 a.m. and 2 p.m. The 10·
spectlon will be conducted regar·
dless of weather conditions.

•

11

FOUND · In Mmersvllle
area, chocolate poodle 992
6160
'

.

el ude James Frecker, president of
the chamber, John Anderson. cham·
ber v1ce prestdent, Fred Crow. past
pre"dent. Susie Baer, cha mber
&gt;ecretaJy, Beualah Jones and Katte

and merchandtsmg
SessiOns were conducted by
'.Goodyear executives and by
educators from Farle1gh D1ckmson
Umvers1 ty, Rutherford, N. J., and
Washmgton University, St Louts.

:res

IT"S BEELINE'S Show and
tn Raat~e. area
Te ll Ttme 11 ! 11 Our new Lost
s pnng and sumrner lt ne IS Hus~y type puppy , blac~
wtth whtte star under neck .
now ~vallable and 1S 11 un
bellevable• 111 Gtve us a two back feet are wh1te
call for more •nformarton Chold's pel Cal1949 2347
Itt' ~as ktlkt'd oul of obed1 aboutlhts tnterest.ng work
Phone992 J9Cltrom 9 6
Lost .n Flatwoods area ,
t' llct• st:hocll for
targe black, male dog Call
~! Lidl'tll unrest
MEIGS MUSEUM open by 992 7271 or 992· 1857
appo.ntment January Mar
ch 992 2164, 992 2802, 992 LOST Wheel &amp; ltre bet
Pubhc Nottce
2360 or 992 2639 Htstones wee n Carmel Church a.
tor
sa l e
Pomeroy
K rogers 843 2707
Spok.a ne , Wa 99206
THE FOREGOING IN
Middleport Ltbranes
STRUME NT
IS
A
- PubliC Sale
CORRECT COPY OF THE
Ma tern tty Clolhes at af 8
ORIGINAL AS THE SAME
&amp; _Auct!_on
---,
tordabte prtces Nurstng
AP PEARSOFRE CORD
ATTEST IOMARC H, 19~1
bras a nd gowns Wale'r' AUCTION eve ry Fnday
COUNTY CLERK AND
melon Pat ch, Stn a nd Matn n•ght 7 p m Hartford Com
CLERK
OF
THE
New Haven. West Vtrg1n1a munity Center Harttord,
SUPERIO R COURT IN
Public Nottce
Phone 1 304 882 34 10
w va
AND FOR THE COUNTY
OF SPOKANE STATE OF
SUPERIORCOURT
WASHNINGTON
'
NOW TILL EASTER 20"o 9
Wanted_toB'!Y_ __
OF SPOKANE
MILES P ESLICK off pa 1nt, 30o.o ott green
COUNTY,WASHINGTON
BYA p ROHER
WANTED
TO
BUY
INTHEMATTEROFTHE
DEPUTY ware Dre hel' s CeramtcS GOLD,
SILVER,
59
N
'2nd
Ave
,
Mtddl
eporr
,
ER
AOOPT I ON OF
131 26, 27 , 29 30, 31, 141 I,
PLATINUM , ST
Ll NG
VINCENT THOMAS ,
61c
Oh 992 275,1
COINS, RINGS , JEWELR
A Mtno~•le No 81400347 ·0
Y, MISC
ITEMS AS·
~--------...., t - - - - - - - - - ; 1 SOL U f E
MARKET
NOTICE
TO
NON
PRICE GUARANTED ED
CONSENTING NATUR,AL
BURKETT
BARBER
FATHER .
S HOP
Ml DDLEPORT ,
TO JIM FERGUSON,
0Hi0992 3416
JR and to all whom tt may
concern .
YOU ARE HEREBY
OLD COJNS, pockel wat
NOTIFIED thai the re has
ches, cl ass r~ngs , weddtng
been filed 10 the above en
bands, dtamonds Gold or
t.tled Court a Pet•t•on for
sli-ver Ca ll J A Wamsley ,
the, Step Parent Adoptton
Treasure Chest Com Shop.
of rne above named c hild,
11.tth ~\.lllllli.. l
pray1ng also that there be
Athens, OH 594 4121
first a n itdJUdlcatJon that
the consent of the natural
wan led to Buy class rtngs,
father at sa1d child •s not
weddmg bands, anythtng·
requ• red by La w
s lamped, IOK, l4K , or IBK
Y0 U
ARE
A Lcon
S0
NOTIFIED
ThaT The
gold Stiver co.ns, pocket
sent at the natural mother
wat c hes Call Joe Clark at
M
:AIHHRfAEem
ents
ol the above named child as
992
2054 a t Clark's Jewelry
Ia the adoptiOn by the
Store , Pome roy , Ohio45769
cus todtal srep parent. such
Free
Soil
Test
Announcements
natural mother ' s name J
while you wa1t.
betng ROBERTA J ANE
CHIP WOOD Poles max
ERV IN nee HAYMAKER , RA CIN E GU N SHOOT ,
March 27, 19 '81
d1arneter 14" on la'rgest
has already been g1ven or Rac 1ne Gun Cl~b . every
9 a . m. -4 p.m .
e nd $12 50 per ton Bundled
1S not reQu•red by Law, and Frtday n1gnt s tart1ng at
slab
s 10 50 per ton
that sa•d c hild was born the 7 30 p m Factory c hoke
Delivered to Oh10 Pallet
9th day of March , 1978
guns on ly
A heartng for such pur
Co , Rock Spnngs Rd .,
pose shall be had on The
Pom e roy 992 2689
28th day at April, 1981, at LOCKSM ITH
Serv
1
ce
.
the hour at 8. 45 AM at the
IRON AND BRASS BEDS
Spokane County Court Master Key1ng . Co m
POMEROY
Call
house, 1116 West Brofld b•naf •ons, Bonded
Ola turn 1tur e. desks, gold
way, tn the Prestdmg New Ha ven , W Va 30 4 88 2
~LANDMARK
r . ng s , Jewelry, sliver
Depanme nr of The Supenor 1019
ctollars , sterl•ng. e tc Wood
n2-2111
Court or such other depart
1Ce boxes, tars, anftQues ,
E Matn St.
Pomerov
ment ot the Super•or Court
etc com plete households
PIA NO
Too
as the ma tt er mav be YOUR
Wrlfe MD Miller , Rt 4 ,
transfe rre d at whtch t1m~ valuable to ne g lec t ex perl
all persons shall appear
Pomeroy , OH
45769 Or
Gtveawav
tuntng &amp; and re patr Lane 4
and Show Cause why such Dan1 els, 7 t.J 'l 'J95 1 or 992
call 992 1!60
1 helve to go to Veterans
adt ud• ca t•on should not be 1081
made and why , 1f made,
Hosp•tal •n C•nc •nnat•
the P e t•t•on here tn should
Have nt ce ca ts to get gooo New , used , and ant1Que tur
not th e reafte r be heard for
Ra c tne vo1 un1 eer Ftre homes for 1. 3 years old , mture No .rem to large or
thw•th and tha. prayer or Department. s ponsors a ltght gray stnped female 10 s mall Wdl buy one ptece
prayers !hereof gran ted
or complete households
HAROLD D CLARKE shot gun &amp; rttle rnatth w1th 7 grey k•ttens 4 weeks Marf.n's Genera l Store at
JUDGE every Saf n•ght 6 30 p.m old 1 nu1e month old yel low 992 6370
at th e•r buddmg 1n Bashan str1ped male, very lrt Sky ,
Presented By
Factory c hok e 12 guage 2. 8 mon th old while ca ls,
Faye H Oakes
Attorney for
sno 1 g un s only Open s•ght s rnale and tema le , al l arc Now buy.ng gold and
Pet tt toners
n rifle
s hort hatred Mr s Mary Stover, old pocket watc hes ,
122 N Raymond Road
Rust&lt; James, Galllpoi•S . ch,'lt ns, d•amonds , silver
Oh 446 0728
money rtnd cotn s Marttn' s
General Store, M•dd te por1
I ..... - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,
LOST Sa le depOStf key tOr 991 6370
Ce ntral Trust Co Bank
Lost somettme yesterc:tay
Bedroom turn.ture , I v se t.
I
J us t return key to 6~0 and d•n•ng room su1te
Laurel St Mtddl cporr No Musl be 111 goOd cond•t•on
I Quesf•ons asked
and r easonable 992 3941

l
Ewmg Funeral Horne
Pomeroy l
I
lI
Public can view documents
l
I

On March 30, the Buckeye Hills·
Huckmg Valley RegiOnal Development Dtstnct wtll place the
followmg documents m the office of

htghest

Shop. Mrddlepor l

the 13th day of Apnl, 1981.
at the Mayor 's office, 237

Area deaths
Mary Madeline Hess

PAY

possrble tor gold .. 16,. ver
cams, nngs, iewelry etc
Contact Ed Burkett Sarber

I

Lost and Found

6

AnnOuncements

J

NOTICE OF SALE

Date set for recognition dinner
April 23 , has been tentatively set
for the annual recogmtwn dmner
hononng Me1gs Gounttans when the

LAFF-A-DAY

Public Nottce

p.m.

"

26, 1981

rt, Ohio

Announce restrictions·

r

Thursila , March

Pa ~IG-The Daily Sentinel

V.C. YOUNG II

Ph. 614·843· 2591
6 15 II C

991 ·421Sor992 · 7314
Pomeroy, Oh

SALES &amp; SERVICE

GRAVELY W;tlk
btlllllCi &amp;
ndtnq Jro~ c t on Pu'll &amp; U!lf pro

mow en

SNAPPE~ -

Push &amp; 5eH pro

mow en nd1ng traclort
A rlAS - r ll t r ~

weeoEAfER- eru,hcuner&amp;

YAlOO Ho

whcelmowtrs
who\ I we Sf Il l

W iJ ~t·rvotl!

)111.1 11 E•Hitll es ~ Our Spec1•lty
Hl4 (O ildOt Sl
Pomeroy . Oh
~H 99119/S

3~

1mo

r~==========H~=====~===;f~=========~
Vinyl Aluminum
ROUSH
&amp;

CONSTRUCTION

SIDING

BISSELL

New Homes · ex ·
tensive remodeling
• E lectnca I work
• Roof1ng work
12 Years
Expenence
Greg Roush
Ph . 992· 7583
3 14 I mo

SIDING CO.
" BE!auhful. Cuslom
But It Garages·
c.)tl I for
fre e Stdtng
estimates, 9 ~ 9 · 2 801 or
949·2860
No sunday CcJIIs
3 I I li e

111

Home
Improvements

Gene 's Carpet Cleantng
deep srrearn ex tract•on
Free
es ttm&amp;ted .
reasonab le rates, scot
chquard 9916309 or 142
211 1

C!IV Patnltn ~l
Restdent1at . cornmcrCtal ,
exlertor
lfl f ert or ,
SpeCic:l liZtnq . •n lnter.or
pa111 t1ng , paper 11angmg &amp;
tex tured ce•llngs
Free
es tnnillt&gt;S 367 1784 or Jo'\7
1160

GAlliA
REFRIGERATION
INC.
Rheem , Amana
&amp; Carner
AIR COrtDtTIONI'RS
&amp; HEAT PUMPS
Ph 614 992·7038

3 11 1 mo

GET YOUR-Wtn!A

83

Want Ad

Dozer work . Small tobs a
specoalty . 742 2753

81
&amp;

Plurnbmg
Heat1n_9

Excavahnt

84

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

WATER
WELLS
Domest•c and commercial.
pump sales and serv •ce
Tom
Lewrs
Orlll tng
Seasona l d1scount on pum
ps I 304 895 3801 or 1 304
895 3641

SEWING

u

ELWOOD
BOWER:S
REPAIR
Sweeper$,
toasters, Irons, all small
appliances Lawn mowet
Next ro Slate Highw&amp;y
Garage on Route 7, 985·
3825 •
'

MACHINE
ser.v1ce,
all
makes!
992 2284
The
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy
Authorized Stnger Sales
and SerVIce We sharpen
SCISSOrS
.
Repa~rs ,

Flt!ll Ch

74

Motorcycles

I"Y/IY Yi'Hn&lt;lhd XS/50 Spt:C idl

tow mlleityl' t:'XCt' ll Cnt
tone1tll01l YVIIh many l!X
tr~~
( dll cH if'l .J p m a t
'IY'J 'd4H
w•ltl

Excavattng

COMPLETE sever tn
s lallat1on &amp; backhoe ser
v• cEl tor Rac1ne Syracuse
sewer d1stnct Dozer work
tf needea 949 2293

�Carpenter
Personals

Mrs. Noble Hamon is improving at
home following treatment at the
O'Bleness Memorial Hospital in
Athens.
'
Mrs. Jake Edwards spent a week
at the Pleasant Valley Hospital,
Point Pleasant, W. Va. for observation and treatment. •
Mr, and Mrs. Norman Shaner,
Jody and Kevin, Athens, were recent
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Jordan, Joshua and Jeremy .
Day Canode of the Point Rock
community has been returned to the
Holzer Medic•• I Center but is reported to be somewhat improved.

need fund of the State Grange was
planned for next 111onth when the
Columbia Grange 2435 met Friday
evening. The dress contest and en-A service of prayer and self- ; tries were discussed. The Grange
denial was held at the recent banquet was announced for April 24
meeting of the Temple United at the Salisbury Elementary &amp;hool.
Methodist Women at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Mendal Jordan atMrs. Arthur Crabtree. Mrs. Mendal tended a Grange ritualistic contest
Jordan had the program and an of- in Jackson County where a Meigs
fering was taken to send !or special County youth team participated.
outreach programs of the church.
Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Devine,
Madge Dye will host the April
Coalumbus,
were weekend guests of
meeting at her home.
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Dorsey
A bake sale to benefit a special Jqrdan, Rick and Ralph.

on Sunday Mr. Dye accompanied
them to Thurman with a dinner at
Bob Evans Restaurant.

Mrs. Clyde Walker, Thunnan,
celebrated her birthday recently at
the home of her father, Dale Dye.
Joining Mrs. Walker at the Dye
home for the observance were her
sister, Mrs. Glen Irwin, Marysville,
and Mrs. Freda Smith and Murl
Galaway, Carpenter. Mr. and Mrs.
Chester Baumgardner of Coshocton,
her brother-in-law and sister, spent
Saturday night at the Dye home, and

LEASING
..,EQUI,PMENT

. . .TO BUSINESS, INDUSTRY.
--AND THE PROFESSIONS BANK ONE OF POMEROY NA.

614/992-2133

Voi.29,No. 240
Co yrighted 1981

Pomeroy

SHADYSIDE, Ohio (AP) - "Pay
ain't everything."
The comment, between sips of
beer and turns at the pool table in
the Valley Inn here, summed up an
eastern Ohio coal miner's feelings
about the proposed United Mine
Workers' contract.
Many American workers, who
have seen their paychecks
repeatedly mugged by rampant inflation, might not agree with the
Mines of the Southern Ohio Coal
Company were Idle today due to !he
expiration of the mlnen' conlracl.
There were no plckelllnes nor mine
personnel at the sites. Supervisors of
the three mines were attending a
Dlslrlcl 6 meeting relative to the
new contract being held near
Shadeslde.

NEW FOR
PRIN
SALE

•

••

FRIDAY, MARCH 27th- SATURDAY, MARCH 28th
OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TILL 8:00

BOYS' KNIT SHIRTS

FURNITURE DEPT. 3rd FLOOR

LAST SHIFT - The last shUt of miners to work prior to the United
Mine Workers strike, walk out of the Flat Gap mine near Norton,
Virginia, Thursday. The workers of the Flat Gap mine joined 10,500 a&lt;'ll•e Virginia UMW members In a strtke against the Soft Coal Operators.
(AP Laserphoto).

SALE

Middleport, Ohio, Frida , March 27,1981

1 Section/ 10 Pages
15 Cents
A Multimedia Inc . NewS
r

District 6 leader predicts
defeat for new coal package

IN
POMEROY

•

en tine

at

e

..,81\NK .ONE.~---..

ELBERFELDS

WOMEN'S
SLACKS

•

1

rt, Ohio

Pa e-12-The Da il Sentinel

miner's appraisal. But the miner
was thinking more about the survival of the UMW and his long-term
job prospects in the coal fields.
The miner said he didn't trust
repurters, one of several with the
same opinion around (.)istrict 6
headquarters in nearby Dilles Bottom, so he wouldn't give his name.
But he was emphatic in his dislike o{
the pact that UMW President Sam
Church was to promote during a
meeting with District 6 local

representatives today . District' 6
represents about 15,000 miners in
southeast Ohio and the West
Virginia panhandle.
The miner was upset by provisions
allowing unionized coal companies
to lease mines to non-union firms
and removing the $1.90 a ton royalty
companies must pay when nol\-union
coal is loaded through UMW tipples.
" They can go in and throw out the
unions,'' said the miner, a mechanic
and six-year veteran of the mines,
District 6 President Ed .BeU
predicted Thursday most miners oppose the contract for that reason. He
already has said rejection could
mean an even longer walkout than
the 111-Qay walkout in 1978.
Miners struck at 12:01 this morning when the old pact expired,
sticking with their "n&lt;H:ontract, nl)o
. work" philosophy. The walkout was
expected while a vole was taken on
the contract proposal.
Bell criticized the proposal at a
news conference Thursday, saying
Church sold out the UMW for $100 .
He referred to a provision granting
certain coal mine widows $100 monthly pensions, for which negotiators
traded the royalty provision.
The payments would only go to
widows whose husbands retired
before about 1974 and were receiving
a pension when they died. The
provision would take affect Jan, I,
1982.

ON STRIKE- These unidentUled coal miners are shown walking oul
uf the Cannelton No.8 mine In Fayette County, West Virginia, Tbunday
night. They are among the members of the United Mine Worken wbo
began a nationwide strike atl2:01 a.m. EST Friday. AP Laserpboto).

Made by Spr,ng toor crew
neck and V neck styles Sill~

6 ro 18 Sol1d co lors and rwo
tone com bJnatJOAS Short
steeve s ryte s
Boys S2 ,9S Kn.l
Sh1rts • • • • • • • • • • • • IJ .SO
Boy S S4 .9S Knit
Sh1rts . • •. •. • • • • • • S4 .20
Boys 55 .95 Knit"
. Sh1rts ••••••• • • • • • SS .OS
Boys U .96 Knit
90

Quatny Levi's and wrangler
brands •!l m•sses s•zes 5. 6 ro 20
Lev• s &lt;'lrl' 100°o woven ft?)( f unz
ed dac ron poly es ter '" regular
and shorf lengths Wranglers

are st retch potv ca non blends '"
.vh.rc , ran -or blue

Reg. 519.00••• Sale $15. i9
Reg. 520.00 ... Sale 515.99
~teg. 521.00 .. .Sale 516.79
Reg . $25.00•• •Sale 519.99
Reg . S34.00 ... Sale527.19

•••••••••••. ss.

3 piece suits, baseball
\ outfits, 2 piece outf its,
\ bubbles and take · me·
! • home outfits.
Sizes newborn th ru
size 7.
Reg. S6.00· ·.Sale S4.79
Reg. 59.00 • • •Sale S7.19
Reg . 513.00 • Sales lli.39
Reg . $18.00•SaleS14.39

Sofas, 2 piece and 3 piece su iles .
Many new suites have arrived
iust this week . Hurry in and save
20°'0 0~ any suite in stock!

All Living Room Suites

20% OFF

BOYS'· SHORTS

FASHION JEANS

JACKET SAL£

OUTFITS

LIVING ROOM SUITES

Men's Blue Denim

CHILDREN'S

LITTLE BOYS'

Senate Republicans turn back move

Knits , denim cut oils
and cotton polyester
blen6s . Excelleflt
selection spring and
·
summer styles. Sizes .. .
8tol8 .
~ 1
Boys S3 .95
.~ !1 ~,
Shorts---······ $3.35 1~
,· \
Boys$4 .95
•

Srr a,g tn leg ana ooo r f lare
st v tes MqsT att pr e wast1ed
blue denim
New sTyles
setec tJon M en' s f ulle r c ut
fasnlon den.nls m c tu aed
Men 's 111 .95 Fashion
JEANS • • • • • • • • • • Sloi.OO
Men 's 111 .95 FasP1ion
JEANS • • • • • • • • • • S14 . 78
Men ' s 120,95 Fasnion
JEANS • • • • • • • • • • S16 .34
Men ' sS22 .95Fasflion
.
JEANS • • • • • • • • • SH .90

Sale prices on all our
children ' s jackets.
Just right for cool '
sprinq mornings!

Prices Start At
$318

r.r·
2 Day
Sale

Shorts •••••••• , S4. 20

!

1 Shorts . ••••••••• ss.os
Boys S8.95

/

B"s~.9l

·

' 1

\ . ,
-.
· 1 .~

1
'
l-A..J

1
,'

Shorts •••••••• S7.60

FOR TWO DAYS ONLY

SALE/

CANNON.

®ROYAL FAMILY

-ED SHEETS
REDUCED 20%

Full · Twin . Kmg_and tiJeen Bed sizes in fitted and
flat sheets With p~llow cases to match . Solid colors
and patterns. You Ill ike the selection .

SPRING
SALE

READY MADE DRAPERIES

•

'

D_is~ontinued

Now' s the time to stock up on Hanes quality
underwear for the whole year . save on com ·
tort able, all ·cotton Hanes underwear for men
and boys Boxers, too . Check our low spring
P.nces on Hanes , ... the underwear that
makes you feel good all under ." ·

patterns and colors.
L1m1ted quantity. Regular prices $7.99 to
$52.99 . While they last,

::.~\&amp;l.....l~

DRESS SHIRTS

The new spring selection in s izes 141f2 to
1712 neck . Solids and patterns. Full cut and
tapered sty les .
Men:s $12.00
Men , s $15,00
Men, s 516.00
Mens $18.00

van
van
Van
Van

Heusen
Heusen
Heusen
Heusen

supporters of the reductions sought
to assure their colleagues it was not
political suicide to approve the cuts.
"Veterans are not going to the
polls and throw anyone out over this
vote," said Sen . Pete Domenici, RN. M.. chairman of the Budget Com-

Republican Leader Howard Buker
promptly hailed the 56-44 vole as an
indication the Senate would wind up
suppo~ing a three-year package uf
cuts·afung the lines of the $81 billion
the Budget Conunittee is recommending.
"This is the toughest vote we've

mittee .

chairman of the Veterans Affairs
Conunittee, said the money could be
c.ut from hospital construc~ion
budgets and by reducing nonessential medical personnel. "Not
one benefit, not one pension, not one
thing for the veterans of America
was cut back in this budget."

AU Republicans except Sen.
l.owell Weicker of Connecticut voted
~~ainst restoring the funds. A handful of Democrats also sided with the
GOP majority.
The veterans lobby is one of the
most powerful in Congress, and GOP

Sen. Donald Riegle, [).Mich., said
the cuts amount to a broken promise
by Reu~un, whom he said promised
veterans during last year's cam·
paign that he would not seek to
reduce their benefits.
But Sen. Alai] Simpson, R-Wyo.,

The Senate rejected · a second attempt to restore funds for the
·veterans Administration, 5H4. The
proposal, by Sen. Alan Crbuoton, [).
Calif., would have restored $129
million to the 1982 budget.

Reagan would veto one year tax cut
WASHINGTON (API - White
House budget director David A.
Stockman warned Congress on
T~ursday that President Reagan,
holding firm on his desire {or a
multiyear tax cut, '' would veto" a
one-year tax cut bill.
It was the first time an udntinistration official said directly
that Rea~an would veto a measure
that did not inClude the administration's recommendation fur
a multiyear. across-the-board
reduction in individua I income
taxes.

Rep, Dan Rostenkowski, D-Ill.,
chairman of the tax-writing House
Ways and Means Conunittee, said
Wednesday that Reagan's call for a
three-year cut in personal income
tax •·ates averaging 10 percent a
year was all but dead and he would
seek, instead, a one-year tax cut
weigh!L'&lt;I to help lower and middle
income wage earners.
In the face of Rostenkowski's
remarks. 20 Senate Republicans appealed to Reagan to promise to veto
any tax bill that lacks his proposed
across-the-board 30 pcr~cnt income

tax m:luction over dhree years.
Earlier ,
a
Republi oan
congressman said Reagan is deter~
minc&gt;d to press !or ·his tax cut
package, despite growing opposition
in the House.
Rep. Barber Conable of New York,
the ranking Republican on .the taxwriting House Ways and Means
Conunittee, emerged !rom a White
House meeting with the president
and told reporters Reagan gave no
indication he is prepared to compromise on the tax-cut portion of his
l'tonumic plan. _

All bids exceeded estimates
Mei~s

MEN'S VAN HEUSEN
SHORT SLEEVE

Polyester knit slacks in jun.· or sizes 3 thru
20.
.
Large array of spring colors .
REG. $15.00 ..... ... ...... SALE 511.99
REG. $17.00 .............. SALE 513.59
REG. $23.00 ...... ... .... . SALE $18.39
REG. 525.00 .............. SALE $19.99

had this year, and I expect the
toughest vote we will have in the
budget battle," Baker said after
'Republicans used their majority
strength to defeat the move to
restore $295 million that Rea~an
wants to cut for 1982.

All bids received Thursday for the
County Trainin~ Center and
Workshop were at least $200,000 over
the estimated rust therefore , Frank
Lee, architect, must review the
project , then make recommendations to Meigs County commissioners on which way to proceed.
Submittin!: bids were, !:•neral
contractors, C. A. Yeager, Portsmouth, $993,000; Paul Contracting,
Zanesville, $998,000; Sherman R.
Smoot, Colwnbus, $%6,160; Fick

1h PRICE

SAVE 20%

JUNIOR SLACKS

and Karr Construction, Pomeroy ,
$1,036.364: King Contracting,
Jackson, $944,600: Karr Construction, Pomeroy, $868.400.
Submitting mechanical contracts
were Gei~er Brothers, L.o~an,
$159,300; Ber~ an Brothers, Marietta, $175,200; A. J . Stockmeisler
Corp., jackson, $174,385. Submitting
bids for heating and air conditioning
only were A. T. F. Sheet Metal,
Co lumbus, $165,900 ; Riley Nestor,

$219,125.
Electrical contractors submitting
bids were Pickerington Electric,
Marietta, $214,302 ; Southeastern
Electric, Crown City, $173,500;
Charlie Damron and Co . ,
Charleston, $210,000; Krats Inc.,
Huntington, $214,630.
·
Food service contractors submitting bids were General Hotel
Supply Co., $32,708: Wasserstron
Co .. Col u1 nbus, $30,793.

Shirts: ..... ~9.59
Shirts . .... s11.99
Shirts ..... 512.79
Shirts ..... 514 .39

Special Group

MUSIC DEPT.

MEN'S KNIT SHIRTS

REG.

'39.95

f'..
6 string junior guitar with
golden sunburst finish.
Ideal beginner's guitar .

Hanes
UNDERWEAR

SAVE 20%
ON HANES UNDERWEAR
FOR MEN AND BOYSI

SALE

HARMONY GUITAR

CLOSE-OUT SALE!

WASHINGTON lAP) - Senate
Republicans, setting · out to give
President Reagan the budget cuts he
ll'ants. turned back a Derm&gt;cratic
move Thursduy to restore nearly
S300 million for veteruns programs.

(

• Styles inS, M, L)lnd XL sizes .
Short sleeve
Sol1d colors, two· tones . Crew neck and v
nec k styles. Made by Springfoot.
Men ' s 3.95 Knit ~hirts• ·3.20
Men ' s 6.95 Knit Shirts•• 5.70
Men ' s 7.95 Knit Shirts•• 6.50
Men 's 8.95 Knit Shirts••7.30
. 'Aen' s 9.95 Knit Shirts. :8.20

ELBERFELDS
IN '

TOP HONORS - Amoag lite top hoaoreea al the Jewell, Star Farmer Award and Jeff Moore, oulaaul awardl t.nquel of the Meigs High Chapter of slandllll! oenior of thl• school year . Set&gt; anoth~r picture
the Future ~·armen of America were three memben, I .on Pag~ 10.
to r, Greg Bolen, Star Greenband Award: Terry

Appearing at a House Budget
Conunittee hearing, Stockman was
asked how enactment of a one--year

reduction would affect the administration's projections for the
economy.
Stockman replied : "The president
would veto a one-year tax cut and
we'd have to ~o back to the drawing
board, so I would strongly urge
Congress not to do that."
The president's public position ha9
been to say he would not comment if
he would veto any legislation until it
1·eached his desk.

Terminate
17CETA
employees
The Conununity Action Agency
has received written notification of
the tennination of the Title VI CETA
(Comprehensive
Education
Truining Act) program. That termination will affect 17 area CETA
employees-10 in Gallia County and
seven in Meigs County.
CAA Director Joe Barsotti said
Thursday termination of the Title VI
Program-a public service prograrn·will become effective at the end of
the work day on Aprilt7. The 17 employees affected are in the process of
receiving official notification of
their terminations.
According tb Director Bursotti,
cancellation of the title program was
mandated by a recent reduction in
Department of Labor funding
allocations. The program had
previously been operating under a
hiring free.ze.
The April 17 cutback is the first
reduction this year in federal funds
that has had an lnunmediate
negative impact on local CETA
programs, Barsotti said.
Barsotti added, however, that the
Reagan adntinistration's proposals
to un-fund the Employment Opportunity Act and to not fund the
Conununity Service Act could lead
to a total elimination of public service progranll! ln the area .
"On the surfat-e it appeurs we
could be o.ut of business," Barsotti
said, "without th~ programs we
wou;d have no le~lil basis for
existence.''

ToDAY

••• IN THEW

.
LD :
~:.

::

;

Dairy bill gets swift action
WASHINGTON - The House gave swift passage by voice vote Thursday to the administration's bill to scrap an April! boost in dairy subsidies.
It sent the bill back to the Senate so that chamber could complete

enactment on the first of President Reagan's spending cuts slated to
dear Congress. The Senate already had approved a similar bill.
The !louse approved the measu1·e without a roll call after a brief
debate in which members from dairy-producing districts protested
that farmers were being forced to bear an unfair burden in the fight
again::;t inflation.
·

Agents arrest intruder
WASHINGTON - The Secret Service has charged a 2:&gt;-year-Old
woman with unlawful entry after she climbed over a White House fence.

Spokesman James Boyle said Antoinette Alicia James, for whom
the Secret Service has no address. was arrested inunedialely after she
climbed the fence ncar East Executive Avenue , The woman was unarmed, Boyle said.

Gift causes numerous problems
WASHINGTON - The Reagan administration is corning under fire
for accepting $270,000 !rom oilmen to redecorate the White House. A
consumer critic called the money "gra tuities for services rendered,"
and a congresswoman sa id the tux-deductible donations may end up
costing the government almost three times the $50,000 federal stipend
turned down by first lady Nancy Reagan.
The White House announced last month that President and Mrs.
Reagan were declining $50,000 appropriated by Congress to refurbish
the family living quarters and would finance the project instead with
private contribution".

Avoids resignation questions
WASHINGTON - Secretary of State Alexander M. Haig Jr.,
described by one caree r diplomat as " limping pretty badly" after a
run-in with powe•iul White House staffers, is avoiding questions about
whether he will resign.
Hai~ joked about the episode Thursday and said he was "anxious to
get on with U1e conduct of foreign policy."
But under questioning by reporters. he passed up an opportunity to
declare that he has no mtention of resigning.

Winning Ohio lottery number
CLEVELAND - The winning nwnbers selected Thursday night in
the Ohio Lottery's duily game "The Nwnber" and weekly "Pyramid"
game are :
The Nwnller - 192
Pyramid - 63 ; 709; 8412
The lottery reported ea~nings of $412,310 from the wagering on the
dally nwnber game drawmg. Lottery officials said sales prior to the
draw1ng totaled $954,651.50, and holders of winning tickets are entitled
to share $542,341 .50 .

Weather
Clear tonight. Lows around 40. Increasing cloudiness and warmer
Satul'day . Highs ltf-75. Chance of pl'edpitation 10 percent tonight and
Salul'ddy . Winds variable and lighttolli!lht.
Extended Ohio Forecast- Sunday throu!ih Tuesday : Warm with
showers and thunderstorllls likely Sunday. A chance of showers and
cooler Monday and fa1r Tuesday. Highs in the 60s and low 70s Sunday
a1~d in the 50s and low 60s Monday and Tuesday. Lows in the mid-408 to
~rud-50s Sunday, m the mid-30s to mid-40s Monday and in the 30s
l'uesday
·

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="125">
    <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="2700">
                <text>03. March</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <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="45345">
            <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="45344">
              <text>March 26, 1981</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1443">
      <name>hess</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="94">
      <name>rhodes</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
