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•

&lt;

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.Ricocheting bullet hit President

6-The Dai

ELBERFELD$ IN -POMEROY

WASHINGTON (AP) - President
Reagan, hill recovery called "really
amazing" from a woWid that doctors
say might have killed him, probably
was struck by a ricocheting bullet
rather than a direct shot, sources
say.
..
Now in his third day of coO:
valescence, the president was
· making "ex.cellent progress toward
full recovery" but ex.periencing
some pain, the White House said.
White House counselor Edwin
Meese Ul said Reagan may be
released from George Washington
University Hospital early next week.
And deputy press secretary Larry

I

PRIL 5 LED YS
-THREE -DA VS QNLY

_

THURSDAY, APRIL 2nd- FRIDAY, APRIL 3rd·- SATURDAY, APRIL 4th

9:30 5:00
.

Pre-Season Sale

~

.9:30 8:00

LITTLE GIRLS'

SWIMWEAR
Special 3 Day Sale on PreTeen, Junior and Women's
Swimwear .
One and two piece suits in
the latest styles and col ·
ors.
Reg. $14.00
Sale$12.29
Sale$15.89
Reg. $18.00
Reg . 529.00
Sale 525.49.
Reg. $32,00
Sale S28.1Y

SALE

Buy now for Easter! Fancy dresses,
· terry styles and sets . ·
Size newbor n to 24 mas, 2 to .4, 4 to 6x, 7
to 14.

Nylons, velvets, sweat Shirt styles. bub
bl~ gum jackets.

TIMEX WATCHES

•

Save 20% on Timex watches for men, women and
children.

Reg.l3.75 . . . .. .. . ........ . Sale$3.18
Reg.IS.OO ... . . . . .. ... .... . Salel4 .28
. Reg.IS.OO .. . ... . .. . .. .... . Sale $6.78
Reg. l12.00 .. .. ..
.. .. . Sa1e$10.18
Reg.l18.00 ........... ... Sa1e$1S.28

Reg. IS.DO ....... . .. . .. . ... Sa!U3 .99
Reg. IS.OO ... . .... . ... .. .. . Salel6 .39
Reg.l11.00 . . ........ . . . . . Sale$10.39
Reg.l18 .00 .... .. ...... . .. Sa!U14.39
Reg. 124.00 .. . . . ....... . .. Sa1el19.19

20% OFF

WO.MEN'S

3 Day Sale Prices on our entire
stock Of pre-recorded Hrack
and cassette tapes. Country pop · religious - sound tracks easy listening.

GIRLS'
TOPS
.

Tanks, knits , blouses.
halters and many others .
Sizes : 3 mos . to 24 mos .

DRESS
SALE

Reg . S2 .SQ ........ SaleS 1.99
Reg. 54.00""'"' Sale S3.19
Reg. S6.oo ....... Sale$4.79
Reg. 59.00 ........ Sale $7.19
Reg. 514.00"" " Sale$11.19

GIRLS'
SHORTS
Knits, poly / cotton blends,
terry and denim .
Si zes 6/ 9 mos . to 24 mos .
2 to 4
4 to 6x

7 to 14

REG . $4.50
REG.$6.00
REG . $9 .00

SALE '2.79
SALE '3.59
SALE '4.79
SALE S7.19

WOMEN'S

MEN'S 118.95

. SALE

3 day sale pr ices on jeans
in women 's sizes 6 thrtl 20 "
and junior sizes 3 thru
15/ 16.

SALE $12.79
SALE $15.19

REG . $24.00 ..

SALE $19.19

REG. 528.oo

SALE s22.39

LITTLE BOYS'

TOPS

Dressy or sporty styles in
plaids, check6, flora is and .
solids . Size 5-M-L -XL.

REG . $11.00

SALE '1.79

HALf SUPS·
\

FULL SUPS AND

CAMISOLES
Nylon and Poly/Cotton
Blends.
SALE PRICES START

SALE '11.19
REG. $17.00 ' SAU '13.59
REG . $27.00 SAI.\E '21.60

AT ONLY

UmE BOYS'

. SALI

REG . $14 .00

EASTER
OUTFITS

Placket shirts, western
shirts, kn it shirts, tanks
and others.
Sizes 3 to 24 mos.
2 to 7

J. piece suits- 3 piece suits

Reg. $3.50·"'"" Sales2.79 .
Reg, 54.75 ....... Sale $3.79
Reg.
ste S4.39
Reg. S7 .50 ..........sle $5.99
Reg.
Sale $8.79

Reg. S6.00 ........ Sale $4.79
Reg. $9.00 ....... Sale $7. If
Reg. S13.QO ..... Sllt$10.39
Reg ..s1e:oo.... . . StleS1(3t
Reg. S22.00 ..... ·hie Sl7.5t

ss.so ..........
sn.oo .......

WOMEN'S
SLIPS

SALE

and one piece sets.
Newborn to size 7

$339

KRODfLER &amp; BERKUNE

CHAIRS
One group of 14 chairs.
Wall -a-way and Rocker
Recliners upholstered In
vinyl and cloth . Regular
Prices from $309.00 to
$379.00.

'

'

EL

•

Two pockets, solid colors .blue,
grey,Jan and maize.
Lim~ed quantity,

$499

MEN'S AND BOYS'

MEN'S AND BOYS

sp1

HANES

TUBE STOCKS

JEANS

White with
Includes 'boys, red
label T·shirts and
briefs, men's briefs T-shirts,
A-shirts,
boxers and men's big
sizes.

99~

SPICIAI. GIOU'

SPICIAL SAU

BOYS. KNIT
·SHIRTS

MEN'S
DRESS SLACKS
•

· Short sleeves, crew neck
styles. Perfect for . schoo~
wear with leans. Sizes ;)
(6·8). M (10·12), L (14·16), ..

XL (18-20),
BOYSSUS
KNIT SHIRTS $$.47

iOYIIJ.95

. I

KNIT IHII.TII4.67 .

Solid colors In sizes 32 to ~2
waist. Assorted : lengths,
10091. polveater.

MEN'S-S1~.f5

. DRESS SIJCI(S ·10.11
MIN'I115.9S

Dlos ws •u.a

1 Sec tion , 12 Pages
lS Cents .
A Multim edia In c. News pape r

,

MINDING mE STORE- With all of his deputle11 oo strike Meigs
Couoty Sberlff James J. Proffitt is the ouly officer rnindiDg the store at
bls qll!lrten In P.omeroy. Tbe Meigs County Commissioners In a letter
today threw the strike situation Into tbe lap of Sberllf Proffitt, wbo,
the~
\:80 HI oompellfl81ion but II cannot exceed approprlatlou
approved by the county commissioners.

'*1•

Packed 2 or 3
to

.ToDAY

and

2.95 box.
White They-Last!
1

1/z

---

Man faces murder charge

PRICE

NEWPORT, Ky. - Robert Lee Saunders, 23, of Newport, has been
charged with murder in the strangulation death last Saturday of
Teresa Berkemeier, police said today.
Saunders, who was being held in Campbell County Jail, lived in the
aame apartment building as the victim, police said.
Mrs. Berkemeier's body was found behind the apartment building
by her two young children. Police said an autopsy showed that she had
been s~led with a rope or cord.

MEN'S

.

.

Customers will pay higher rate

KNIT
SHIRTS

COLUMBUS, Ohio - Aver~ge residential rates for Ohio Power Co.
customers will climb $3.60 under a 6.2 percent rate hike granted by the
Public Utilities CommiSsion of Ohio.
Ohio Power, a subsidiary of American Electric Power, was granted
Wednesday all of a requested $58,719,000 raise for its customers in 53
· eastern, northwestern and southern Ohio counties. The increase
represents a rate of return of 11.15 percent on the company's investment, a figure slightly less than recommended by two expert witnesses who testified in the case, the PUCO said.

Crew neck styln. Ideal for
school and genertl -weer.
S, M, L and XL slzn. 50%
polyester, 50% cotton.
·- ~

.

offer workers and still stay within
sessions have been set to settle a the guidelines of a budget
strike by the 26 workexs of the Meigs established for the county highway
department in January . The
ColDlty Highway Depa'rtment.
Workers were on the picket line workers were offered an increase of
near the garage for the second.., 50 cents and hour and major medical
benefits added to their Blue Cross
str~ight day in an attempt to emphasize the need for a settlement. and Blue Shield Insurance coverage.
Negotiations between teams This was th~ last move~ --• by the
representing the workers and the county team, the source said , indicating that any further movement
county broke down Monday.
A source representative of the would have taken costs over apcounty said there was nothing else to propriations.

Injuries claim sec«?nd technician

..,
~

REG. $1.95

S. '6.77

REG. $7.95

S. 15,97

THill DAYS ONI. Y
. SA_~I .

JaSON
PERKINS.

ROSE BUSHES
l!'xctlltnt Mltctlon of
vtrlttles, fltld gr~n
ptcktges ·~ f.,-fllt pOt·

ftd pttfnttd rOifl.
&lt;

IUS .... luallls ~·" fl.ll
............u...............
. . . lulllei... ~M.II
....
........71

.

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CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. - A space shuttle technician has died of
injuries suffered during a rehearsal last month at the Kennedy Space
Center, becoming the second fatality of that accident, officials said
todsy.
'
Forrest Cole, 50, died late Wednesday at Shands Teaching Hospital
In Gainesville, officials said.
The accident, in which several technicians entered a shuttle chamber that had been purged of all oxygen, killed one other worker.

Winning Ohio lottery number
!

CLEVEUND - The winliing number selected Wednesday night in
the Ohio Lottery's daily game "';'he Number"-was 117.
The lottery reported a loss of $26,786.50 from the wagering on the
drawing. Lottery officials said sales prior to the drawing totaled
Sll88,114.60, and holders ·of winning tickets are entitled to share
,014,901.
'

•1

Weather

'
Clear tonight. Lows in the low 50s. Partly cloudy and 'becoming windy Friday. Highs in the low Ms. Chance of rain near zero percent
• tonight and 20 percent Friday. Winds southerly to southwesterly 1().20
mph tonight.
EDeaded Olllo Forecast- Saturday throul!h Monday :A chance of
showel'!l and mUd Saturday. Fair and cooler Sunday and Monday.
HIP Saturday in the mitWIIs to low 70s, coollnl to the iilll1 by Monday.
Ovemlgbt lows mainly in the 50s early Saturday, cooling to the 311 by
early Monday.

'·

A spokesman for the workers said
that the county was 10cents per hour
under the amount asked while a
county official reported that the
workers group had lowered the
request to 55 cents an hour increase
when negotiations broke off . The
workers indicated also instead of the
60 cent an hour increase, they would
hav.e taken the 50 cent an hour increase plus certain health and
welfare benefits , cost of which are
about $18 a month per worker, it was

reported.
Meantime, a spokesman for some
10 deputy sher iffs who are also
walking a picket line near the county
Jail, charged that the county commissioneFB are being discriminatory
aga inst the deputies because they
say they will not negotiate with !he
deputies ·leaving the matter to the
sheriff as long as he rema ins within
appropriations but that the county
has been negotiating with the county
highway department workers.

Fa1len antenna causes power outage

~ •• IN THEW

•

SPICIAL OIOU'

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,/"'

a !lox.

Regular 11.95, 12.50

Meigs County Sheriff's Department. recog nition, his action in no way binIt is our understanding that the ds the board of county comsheriff is vested with the sole rrussioners to support such acti on ~
authority of neg otiating an by reason of Attorney General' s
agreement under Section 325 .17 ORC Opinion No. 80-{)07 issued February
which provides in pertinent part the 14. 1980, which concludes ...
following :
"\Therefore. tt is my opinion, and
"The officers mentioned in Section you are advised, that the county of325.27 of the Revised Code [Auditor, ficers enunlerated in RC 325 .27 may
Treasurer, Probate Judge, sheriff, 'negotiate collective ba rga ining
clerk of courts, enginee r, Recorder) -agreements covering the ~r'' emmay appoint and employ tn'e ployees as long as:
necessary deputies. assistan ts,
a 1 the negotiations are not conclerks, bookkeepers, or other em- · dueled in a manner whi ch conployees for their respective offices, stitutes a delegation of their official
fix the compensation of such em- responsibility;
ployees and discharge them . Such
b) the agg regate compensation
compensation shall not exceed, in provided does not exceed the ceiling
the aggregate, for each office the fi xed by the county commissioners
amount fixed by the board of county under R. C. 325.17.
commissioners for suchoffi ce ."
c J the contract is jointly
We further contend that even negotiated with. or ratified by, the
through Sheriff Proffitt ha s granted
rcontinued on page 12)

As of this morning, no negotiating

HANDKERCHIEFS
tlandkerchiefs

tment by the county commissioners.
The letter further states the board
has unanimously agreed not to
negotiate in any manner conrerning
employes of the sheriff's department and will not approve any
agreement made by Sheriff Proffitt
which would effect the statutory
right and authority of the commissioners to make annual app'ropriations.
The letter in its entirety follows:
This will acknowledge your letter
of March 18, addressed to the Meigs
County Commissioners in which you
rquest that the Meigs County Commissioners, by resolution, formally
grant recognition of AFSCME for
the purpose of negotiating an
agreement ,covering rates of pay,
hours and other terms and conditions of employment for the
bargaining unit employees of the

No negotiations set in two strikes

REDUCED 20%

tops

entine

~-

PRICE

MEN'S I)XED

UNDERWEAR

9 to 15 for boys.

mu~i-color

Selected from regular
stock. Not every size :
Regular prices $16.95 to
$23 .95. Wrangelr and
Leggs brands. Limited
quantity.

RED LABEL

Sizes 71f2 to 11 for boys'

Apparently some 10 deputies of the
Meigs County Sheriff's Department
are going to continue walking a
picket line since a solution to the
strike, which started Wednesday,
does not appear to be in the offing.
Meigs County Commissioners
Wednesday, however, did issue a letter to Fred Haynes of the American
Federation of State, County and
Municipal Employes as to their
position. ·
Haynes had earlier reported the
commissioners had not answered his
letter which requested the board
recognize the deputies as members
of the federation.
The letter points out that Sheriff
James Proffitt can negotiate an
agreement with employes and may
set the compensatiohn of employes
as long as II does not exceed money
appropriated for the sheriff's depar-

FASHION

-SPECIAl.-

$}499

Your Cholet
P:urnttur tDtpf. II'CI

85% polyester,
35% cotton.

Sizes 14112 to 20 neck.
Sleeve lengths 32 to 36 in ches. Made by Wrangler,
100% cotton pre-shrunk,
extra long tails, two flap
snap pockets, snap front,
snap-on sleeve cuff.

New selection of styles .
Terry knits, plisses and
poly / cotton .
Sizes S-M ·L-XL -XXL .
Reg. S9.09 . .. . . Sale $7.20
Reg. 512.00 .... Sale$9.60
Reg. 515.00
Sale $12.00
Reg , SIS.OO
Sale $14.40

DRESS
SHIRTS

SHIRTS

SHIFTS

Reg. S19.00...... SaleS 15.20
Reg. S23.oo ...... Sale 518.40
Reg. S27.oo ..... Sale 521.60
Reg. SJ5.00""" Sale 528.00
Reg. S4l.Oo ...... Sale 532.80

MEN'S SHORT SLEEVE

WESTERN

Kim Hoggard, a White House
spokesman, declined comment on
the matter.

No.solution seen in strike

MEN'S
-BWE DENIM

lf2

BWE DENIM

AND

Beautiful new styles and
colors for Spring .
Knits, polyesters and poly / cotton blends .
Sizes 3 thru ~

JUNIOR
BLOUSES

JEANS

REG. $19.00

sgg95

DUSTERS

JUNIOR
.
DRESSES

WOMEN'S AND JUNIORS'

REG . $16 .00

20% OFF

SA I.E

Sizes A, 8, C and D. Permanent press polyester
cotton blend . Long sleeve
coat style top, adjustable
gripper boxer waist bottoms . Patterns and solid
colors.

Desk Top Calculator.

BRAS AND PANJIES.

Reg. S27.oo .. . ... Sale521.40
Reg. snoo..... · sa Ie 526.40
Reg. SJ9.00·•.... SaleS31.20
Reg. S4~.oo ... Sale 536.80
Reg. SS4.00 •.... ·Sale 543.20

PAJAMAS

You Need in a

Microscopic traces of paint r.ave
been found on the "really mangled
bullet" removed from the president,
sources sa id, and the entry wound
was more ragged· than if he been
struck directly.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, April2, 1981

CI.OSI..OUT SAUl

Evel)thing

OfPlAYTEX

Voi.29,No. 244
Copyrighted 198J

Reg. $6.79 •..••..•.• Sllt$5.45
Reg. $9.79 .......... Sale$7.15
Reg. S12.79 ...•••.. SlitS 10.25

BROADCLOTH

Just Nine to Sell.

ON SELECTED STYLES

Buyyour Easter dress and
save!

SALE

REG . $3.50

SAVE20%

New dresses tor Spring.
Latest in styles and colors.

Petite Sizes 6 to 14
Misses Sizes 6 to 20
Half Sizes 12'12 to 26 1/ 2

2 to 4
4 to 6x
7 to 14.

PRINTING
CALCULATOR

'.

off the door of his limousine rather
than by a direct shot. Two bullets hit
the car - one of them smashing into
the right rear window and the other
hitting the rear door.

Reg. $3.79 ....... : •• Salt SUS

MEN'S '10.95

TOSHIBA

PLAYTEX
SALE

cause of apparent internal minutes after the president, conhemorl'llaging and feared the firmed that Reagan's blood pressure
president was in danger of slipping was low but discounted suggestions ,
into fatal shock.
. his life was in extreme danger.
Once doctors discovered the smaU
White House officials said they
wound
under his left armpit, they incould neither confirm nor deny the
serted a drainage tube and drew out
report.
On Tuesday, Dr. Dennis O'Leary, substantial quantities of blood from
dean of clinical affairs at the his chest, the sources said. Then,
hospital, said Reagan "was in no · they began giving the president five
time in any serious danger. He was pints of blood by transfusion and he
alert and ·awake with stable, vital was soon out of danger, the sources
signs up until the time he underwent -added.
Autlioritative . sources also
anesthesia."
Dr. Soloman Edelstein, the revealed that investigators now ·
hospital's director of emergency believe the president was wounded .
services who arrived several by a .22-caliber bullet that careened

e · at y

TAPE SALE

•
SALE

body and uttered his first words since suffering a gunshot wound
through the brain in Monday's
assassination attempt. He remained
in critical condition, however.
Contradicting earlier declarations
that Reagan's life was never in
danger, qualified medical sources
said Wednesday that the 7().year-&lt;~ld
president lost almost half his blood
after he )Vas shot and doctors said
they "thought they might lose him"
in the first, anxious moments at the
hospita,l.
.
The _sources, who insisted on
anonymity, said doctors in the
emergency room could not find the ·

•

MUSIC DIPT.

SALE

CHILDREN'S JACKETS

DRESS SALE

9:30 5:001

.1

Speakes said&gt; the president is still
planning to : travel to San Diego,
Calif., April 27-28 to meet with
Mexican President Jose LopezPortilla.
·
Reagan's accused assailant, John
W. Hinckley Jr., meanwhile, was appearing today before a U.S.
magistrate who will hear the results
of psychiatric tests-and determine
whether the case should be sent to a
grand jury.
In the most optimistic medic~!
report to date on White House press
secr.4ttary James S. Brady, doctors
said he was breathing without
assistance, moved both sides of his

"

About :i50 customers of the Ohio
Power Co. in the Pomeroy area were
without power for about 20 minutes
as the result of an antenna which fell
from a building at the corner of
Court and Main Sts., Wednesday a!-'
ternoon across lines.
The antenna hitting wires tripped
a breaker at the fire station.causing
the outage until repairs could be

made by the company workers,
Fred Morrow, local power company
manager, said. Morrow also commended two deputy sheriffs who
were on a picket line near the scene
for moving onto the scene to handle
traffic and onlookers at the scene.
Wires burned and sputtered when
· the antenna fell. The two deputies
were Gary Wolfe and Randy Forbes.

Six people get prison terms
Six persons will be taken to an appropriate state penal institution
sometime today to begin serving terms of six months to five years
following appearances Wednesday
before Meigs County Common Pleas
Court Judge John C. Bacon on bills
of infonnatlon.
Sentenced were Clifford W.
Longenette, 19, Rt. I, Reedsville and
Charles F.. Keeder, 18, Pomeroy as a
result of grand theft on Jan 31 at the
Meigs CountY, Emergency Medical
Service office; Burl Coleman, Rt. I,
Reesville; for his part in the Jan. 3,
breaking and entering of the
Richard Huffman residence, Portland; Bobby Ray Allen, Mann, W.
Va., 10 counts•of bad checks;. Dayle
Brooks, 19, Coolville, receiving
stolen property; Tammy K. Mash,
Rt. I, Middleport, on charges of
forgery. She plead guilty to charges
that she altered figures on her
welfare check. Representing the
State of Ohio il) the above cases was
Frederick W. Crow, UI, prosecutor.

The sheriff1s also investigting the
theft of a 19'19 4X4 Ford pickup
truck, brown in color with a white
camper, taken sometime between
the hours of 7::!() p.m. Wednesday •
and 7:15a.m. todsy .
'rhe truck was owned by James H.
Crow, Rt. 7, Pomeroy, and was
taken from the driveway of the Crow
residence:
•

Two indictments
Two persons were indicted by the
grand jury Wednesday.
Inllicted were James C. Holdren,
Marietta, on charges of passing a
bad check and Herbert Farms,
Nelsonville, on charges of grand
theft.
Serving on the grand jury were
Mary Ball, Dottie Turner, Jack 'A.
Bolen, Rachel Cundiff, V1ckie Cummins, John Teaford, Harley E.
Riggs, Junior Glen Cundiff and
Violet Lorraine Neff.

Middl~poi1,

RESTORED - Workers of tbe Ohio Power Co. were quick to reacg
the scene and make necessary repairs WedDesday afternoon wben an
antenna oo a building at Court St. aDd E. MaiD Si., fell across power
lines dlsntptlng service. Ugbls In buslne11s establishments filckered
on and off several times before going completely oui. Electrical equipment went out of working order as did telejlbone service. Businesses
continued as best they could, however, until workers pictured re11tored
service. The deputies of the department of Sheriff James Proffitt,
·Ralldy Forbes and Gary Wolfe, weFe on a plctet line nf$r the scene,
but left the line to take over dlreclloo of traffic aDd kept traffic from
traveling Court St. where there were some dangers due to sparking
and burning wires.

Pomeroy-receive grant

• . Congreunan Clarence Miller said the villsge will now be invited to
today &amp;Mounced approval of a pre- submit a full application to HUD
application for flUids to the Village with funding being assured as long
of Middleport totaling f2.004,000 as federal guidelines are followed. .
over I~ next three yeal'!l. 11ie grant
The mayor stated the first year
has ~n allocated by the Depart- alloCation of $712,000 would be WMld
ment of Housing and Urban for the con8truction of a new water
Development through the Small storage tank, for housing
Cities Block Grant f'ro8ram. .
rehabilitation !or low-moderate inMiller said f712,000 of thele ·fUnds come families and ·senior citize'ns, .
had been allocated lor the eurrent and for the acquisition and partial
year with the ballnce to follow devel~t of a housing site for 21
during the next two yean.
homea.
Middleport Mayor Fred Ho«rua.n

-family

Farmers Home A&lt;lrninistration
has agreed to finance these homes at
a · total cost of approximately

1840,000.
Hoffman indicated the remaining
$1,292,000 would be used over the
next two years for water system improvements, additional housing
rehabilitation, additional housing
site iinprovements and atreet resurfacing.
The mayor 111ld improvements in
the water
and housing have
. . syilem
..

.

3:ppr~vals

been needed for many years and felt
these funds would be of great benefit
to all residents of the community.
Additional information on lheae
projects and how residents may participate wiU be made available to the
public as soon as possible.
Meanwhile, Congressman Miller
a!Jo info£Pomeroy Mayor
Clarence
this morning that,
pre-approval of a f440,000 small
village-coun block grant lllld been -

given. _

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•

Thursday, Aprit2,

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net

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p

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The New York Times has shown
. ~ourage and integrity in publishing
an article ("A Lament for Viet·
nam," New York Times Magazine,
March 29) by a South Vietnamese
\ Doan Van Toai ) now affiliated with
'tufts University, where he is writing
!' ·-book about his experiences- They
:tfe illuminating, even as they are
:fr.agic. Toai was a South Vietnamese
'Oissident - one of those Vietnamese
~e American peace movement
rlteered along as they deplored
l~erican intervention in Vietnam,
1Qenounced the regime of President
: fhieu and confidently urged their
: c()untrymen to cooperate with the in: surgent FLN and the liberating ar: lnies of Ho Chi. Minh, secure in the
i ~ow ledge that when Western forces
; ~ere finally extruded, peace,
' lreectom, democracy and harmony
'1 '
'

I'

_

would come again, after 300 years,
to Indochina.
.
Wl)en the North Vietnamese tanks
rolled in, To~i was a member of the
cheering section and because he had
had banking experience, was
assigned the job of helping to ex·
propriate "all private properly."
Surely you don't mean all private
property, he asked. Surely you mean
only ·the property of those who
cooperated with Thieu and the
Americans, and those who get rich
off the war• When he was directed to
confiscate the land even of indigent
peasants he balked, and resigned
from the Communist Party. He did
not know that resigning from the
Communist Party in a Coi1UIIunist
country is different from resigning
from the Metropolitan Club_So: the old, hauntingly familiar

•

The Daily Sentinel
Ill rourrstn·d
l' nnH•to\·, Ohio

514-992·2 150
IJHOTEil TOTHt: INTER EST OF HI F. MEIGS-1\tASON ARt;,\

~~

~m ~
~v

rT"'L....J

L-..-, r""'T""'E! d·~

ROBERT L. WINGETI
l'uhl is ht·r

PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH

ASSISta nl f'ubl i sht'r/C~ i n lr&lt;~llrr

Grnrral Mana~: rr

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
N t· " ~

Erlitur

A ,'\1EMH ER nf Th r Assoda tt"d Prus, lllhnut 011il) Prt' ~s Assudal!on and tht'
Amt' riran Nt'\\ Spapt•r Publisht'rs Assorlation.

LETTERS

nr OPINION &lt;Itt \o\ rkumr d. Thr ~

~ huuld bt-lu!o. than 300 ~o~ · urd~ lunt;. All
and mus t bt• s i~;tllt'd ~o~ith namt•, addrrss and tdt·phonr
\\ill hr vuhl l ~hr~ . Lrttrrs ~ hnu l d hr In 1(1141d ta~tr , !lddrt'sslnl(

lt• U t·r~ 11n• subjt't' l to e dilin~

numbt•r. N11 un~ii(1Wd
b:- ut·~.

nut

l dtr r~

. __ _ . .

1}1-nunalllit·~ .

;On power and
advertising
It was like a scene from a political thriller: a fallen president, the vice
:president absent, the strong-willed leader of the Cabinet assuming con!lroi at the White House; But this-was not fiction. At 4: 15 on the afternoon of a rainy Washington
:1-!onday, as President Reagan was taken to surgery, a bullet in his lung,
:~cretary of State Alexander M. Haig Jr. declared : "As of now, I am in
"control here in the White House."
:.· It was an unfortunate choice of words.
~ White House chief of staff James A. Baker III said he anp Haig agreed
;.... at Haig's suggesti on - that the secretary should be the "chief contact"
rat the White House.
.; Reagan aides said there was no quarrel with Haig's role , and they
:praised the teamwork of the administration high command in a tr9ubled
:hour.
: Haig took command of the situation room as the ranking member of the
' Cabinet. As he reported on the situation after a gwunan wounded the
:president, his voice shook with emotion. His message clearly was in~tended to be one of reassurance and continuity.
:: Haig said he was in close' touch with the airborne Vice President
•:Ceorge Bush, that key m~mbers of the Cabinet were at the White House,
.that U.S. allies had been told of the assassination attempt.and the stable
: condition of the wounded president, that there was no military alert and
: no need for one.
• "We wanted to let the world know that a government was in place and
:.fllllctioning, " Haig's spokesman, William Dyess, said afterward.
Bush couldn'tdo it. He was flying from Austin, Texas, to Washington.
f . · So Haig, the take-charge general, t®k charge.
!' "Who is making the decisions for the government right now~" he was
: asked
· ~ "Constitutionally, gentlemen, you have the president, the vice
:president and the secretary of state in that order, and should the
• president decide he wants to transfer the helm to the vice president, he
~ will do so," Haig said. "He has not done that.''
" Actually, }iouse Speaker Thomas P- O'Neill Jr. and Sen. Strom•Thur·
•.mond, president pro tern of the Senate, are ahead of the secretary of state
the line of succession.
: " A!! of now, I am in control here in the White Hous~. pending the retUrn
:·of the vice president, and in close touch with him," Haig said- "If

.

story - how many tales of Gulag
can we absorb? Albert Jay Nock once wrote that the difficulty with por.
nography is \IU11 copulative fancies
are finite. So, really, are tales of tor·
lure. I give, therefore, only the first
three sentences of his account of his
ordeal. "When I was arrested, I was
thrown into a three-foot-by-six-foot
cell;with my hilt hand chained to my
right f®t aria my right hand chained
to my left foot. My food was rice
rriixed with sand- When I complained about the sand, the guards
explained of their crimes." -¥ ou can
tAke it! rom there.
Or, you can go the macro route.
How many political prisoners like
Toai are there today in South Viet·
nam? The State Department
estimates 150,000 to 200,000- Vietnamese refugees estimate one
million. A· recent Moscow-trained
defector, an academic who served
as a director of a technical school,
says "at least 700,000." In 1977,
Hanoi insisted that the figure was (a
mere) 50,000. "But Prime Minister
.Pbam Van Dong said, in the French
magazine Paris Match, on Sept. 22,
1978, 'In over three.years, I released
more tban one million ,prisoners
from the camps.' " Toai coriunents:
"One wonders how it is possible to
release more than a million after
having arrested only 50,000."
One wonders about other things.
The figures quoted above, to convey
reality to Americans, should be
multiplied by 10 for comparison. If
yoll'take the figures of the defecting
intellectual, which lie at roughly
midpoint between the refugees'
figures and the State Department's,
you have the equivalent of seven
million Americans in concentration
camps.

so~=Y~:: ~w~~i~:~ :~!:ge?!t~=~ance,

•:

'

~ Today- in history. ..
~

day~

I

i
•'

·i

liberation from foreign control is
symbolized by 'the dirge composed
py the new poet laureate To Huu,
president .of the Communist Fiarty
Committee of Culture, who
celebrates the ,. anniversary of
Stalin'sdeath with the words,
Oh, Stalin! Oh, Stalin! .
The live I bear my father,
my mother, my wife,
myself
,It's nothing beside the love
I bear for you.
,..
Oh, Stalin! Oh, Stalin!

.

WASHINGTON (AP) - It was like
a scene from a political thriller: a
fallen president, the vice president
absent, the strong-willed leader of
the Cabinet assuming control at the
White House.
But this was not fiction. At 4: 1.~. on
the aftern®n of a rainy Washington
Monday, as President Reagan was
taken to surgery, a bullet in his lung,
Secretary of State Alexander MHaig Jr. declared: "As of now, I am
in control here in the White HollSe."
It was an unfortWlate choice of
wordsWhite House -ehief of staff James
A.'l!aker III said he and Haig agreed
- at Haig's suggestion - that the
secretary should be the "chief contact" at the White HouseReagan aides said there was no
quarrel with Haig's role, and they
praised the teamwork of the ad-

'

•

By Scott W9lle
RACINE - The Southern Toran·
does stormed to a hard-!ought 5-1
SVAC win over the Southwestern
Highlanders here. Wednesday
evening on a game-winning double
by Kent Wolle in the bottom of the
seventh inning.
·
Southern evens its record at i·l
and is 1.0 in the league, while SWHS

What remains of the earth and of
tbfsky!
Now that yo.uare dead.
I doo't know -about the earth aiJd
the sky, but can inf~r that much has ;
happened to Vietnamele poetry lin- ,
c;e the fall of Saigon, bul not much .:.. ·
Joan Baez and a few ol her companions being notable excepti~ by way of expiation fran Americans
wbo l)ar;ked the poeltlons of Doan
Van Toai . the innocent, and fortunately were •spared the
vicissitudes of his re-education.

is().J.

Southwestern drew first blood in
'the top hall of the first, when Wayne
Sizemore doubled to ·Jead off the
game. Mter two were out Dale
Newberry rammed a double to put
runners at second and third.
Sizemore then rode home with the
game's first run on a single by Todd
Baker.
In the bottom half of the inning
Southern took a 3-! lead. With one
• out, Jay Rees drove a towering shot
over the left field fence for a home
run to knot' the score. Back-to back
doubles by Woife and Dale Teaford
produced another run, before Bryan
Wolfe singled home the third run of
the rally.
In the third innjng, Southwestern's
~ott Russell lofted a home run over
the left field fence making the score,

f;TTA (£)19111 fORr'I'Oim&lt; ,-~ 'WI-£c&gt;AA,..._
1-\tJl.~E
N-E .A. '

3-2.
-

.I

HEADER OUT - Phlladelphla Phlllles lint · exhibition game at Tampa, Florida Wednesday.
baseman Pete Rose puts the tag to the bead of Cin- Oester started lo .steal, changed his mind in mid path
cllmatl Reds Roo Oesler in the fifth inning of the and with a dive was out..(AP l.aserpboto)

.

-

.

Berenyi improves chances
of maki·n g pitching staff
TAMPA, Fla. (AP ) .:.. Reds
nghthand pitcher Bruce Berenyi,
who led the American Association in
strikeouts the past two seasons, is
doing his· best not to be sent down
again In the Indianapolis Indians.
"I'm confident, but I'm not going
to say anything 'til I'm on the plane"
on the way to Cincinnati, Berenyi
said Wednesday after defeating the
World Champion Philadelphia
Phillies 7-2.
Reds Manager ~ohn McNamara,

·.· ·•ot course our problem is productivity. What else could it be?"
I

.

..

ministration high command in a
troubled hour . .
Haig took command of the
situation room as the ranking mem·
ber of the .Cabinet. As he reported on
the situation after a gunman wounded the president, his voice shook
with emotion. His message clearly
was intended to be one Of reassurance and continuity.
Haig said he was in close touch
with the airborne Vice President
George Bush, that key members of
the Cabinet were at the White House,
that U.S. allies had been told of the
assassination attempt and the stable
condition of the wounded president,
that tl;lere was no military alert and
no need for one"We wanted to let the world know
that a government was in place and
functioning," Haig's spokesman,
William Dyess, said afterward-

Budget cutting filters
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - At
least some of the Reagan Administration's budget-cutting fever
seems to have filtered down to the
state government level.
The seven-member controlling
board, which must approve state
contracts of $10,000 or more which

Southern n_ips Highlandersi;,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohlp · l
-Thursday, Apri12, 1981
~;
2

Haig took control for fallen chief
.

Bush ~ouldn't do it. He was flying
from Austin, Texas, to Washington.
So Haig, the take-charge general,
took charger
"Who is making the decisions for
the government right now?" he was
asked.
"Constitutionally, gentlemen, you
have the president, the vice
president and the secretary of state
in that order, and should the
president decide he wants to iran·
sfer the helm to the vice president,
he will do so," Haig said. "He has
not done that"
Actually, House Speaker Thomas
P- O'Neill k and Sen. Strom Thur·
mond, president pro tern of the
Senate, are ahead of the secretary of
state in the line of succession.
"As ol no~. I am in control here in
the White House, pending the return

t~

of the vice president, and in cloee
touch with him," Haig said. "If
something came up, I would chec~
with him, of course."
·
That hardly could be considered a
message of reaa8111'111K", of a government functioning as usual. When it
is functioning that way, the
secretary of atate runs foreign
policy, not the White House.
When he got back, Bush ll8ld he
had been in full and complete communication with Washington
througqout the day. "I can reassure
this nation and a watching world
that the American government Is
functiohing fully and effectively,"
be said.
Then he set about hlljob, In effect,
nming the admlnlattatlon for the
hospitalized president. But he
clatmed no powers and did no advertiaing.

state government

are not competitively bid, came audio-slide projector program. It
down on the energy department and would have urged Ol!loans to ride
ftle usually sacrosanct library board local transit systems to save
this week.
·gasoline.
Sen. Thomas A. Van Meter, R·
It denied the energy department's
request to enter into a f19,704 con- Ashland, a boartl member, acoffed
tract for the development of an at claims by James R. Nichols, . a
department spokesman, that

maldng the preaentatloo at schools
and before civic groups would Increase tranlit system rldel'lhlp.
And under questlonlJ18, the
senator got Nichols to say that transit riderahip increaaed 7 percent In
1980 without the sllde projector

program.

A political realignment?...___ _&amp;_b_w.___;agma::;_n

WASHINGTON (NEil- Political
scientists and professional
politicians are still trying to figure
out exactly what happened on Election Day and, more importantly,
what it means for the future.
The basic question is whether the
massive shift to Republican ca~
dictates last November was a one:
of a governtime aberration or the beginning of a
~ ment fWJctioning as usual. When It is functioning that way, the secretary
more permanent shift in allegiance
.of atate runs foreign policy, not the White House.
by a significant number of votersi· When he got back, Bush said he had been in full and complete com·
Such realignments are infrequent
~ munication with Washington throughout the d!fy- "I can reassure this
and have a lasting impact on U. S.
, nation and a watching world that the American government is fWlc' politics: tioning fully and effectively," he saidNaturally, there is considerable
~ Then he set about his job, in effect, running the administration for the
disagreeJ!Ient among tlte.'experls on
; hospitalized president. But he claimed no powers and did no advertising.
the meaning of the 1980 election.
Democrats tend to blame their
debacle on the personal unpopularity or -Jimmy Carter and on
the organizational weakness of the
party in recent years under the former president and his hand-picked
political staff.
Today Is Thursday, April2, the 92nd
There are Z73 days left in
Republicans tend to view their vic' the year. -·
,tories as proof that many voters are
Today'shlghlightin history:
becoming more conservative, rejecOnApril2, 1917, President WOOdrow Wilson asked Coogreas to declare war
on GermanY' On this date :
• In 1792, Congress established the U.S-Mint.
:. In 1882, outlaw Jesse James was shot and killed in St. Joeeph, MoIn 1932, Charles Undbergh turned over $50,000 ransom for hia kidnapped son to1111 unidentified man in a New York City cemetery.
. In 1M7, the United Nations appointed the United States as trustee for
Pacific lslanda formerly held by the Japanese under a mandate.
Five yean ago: The House of Representatives vowed to refonn the IICIID~ daJ.ridden grain Inspection system at export termlnals.
I One year ago: Iran's hardline Isllunic party scored a major victory in the
~flnt round ol parliamentary elections.
. ,
Today'a birthdays: Actor Alec Gulness Is 67. Actor-pnlducet Jack W~tJb Is
81. Slnfler Marvin Gaye is 42·
Thought for today: Never tn11t i man who speak~ well ol every~y fthn Ou1Gn Colllnl, Englllh lltarary critic ( IMI-1101). .•

;.;n

Had enough?
Not Toai, He doesn't understand
American apathy now, contrasted
with American excitement when the
(relatively) trivial derelictions of
Thleu (fighting a civil war) were.ex·
p&lt;)sed. He finds little interest, in
America, in the ideological
thoroughness of the Vietnamese
revolution, very little curiosity
about the utter disappearance of
Vietnamese sovereignty- Such is
their vassalage to the Soviet Union
that a · national struggle for

'

.. Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

ling the Democratic Party's liberal

positions and liberal candidates. The
Republicans see the 1980 election as
the beginning of a philosophical
realignment that will accelerate in
the coming years.
This debate has found new liCe in
recent weeks with the publication of
sevel'al polls taken since the election.
. A standard question 011 'political
polls has long been whether the
respondent views himself or herself
as a Democrat, a Republican or an
Independent. For many years, the
percentages identifying themselves
with one party or the other remained
relatively stable. But several recent
polls have shown significan.t
movement.
In the past, 40 percent to 45 per·
cent of the .voters ldentllied themselves as Democrats whlle 20 per·
cent to 25 percent identllled themselves as RepubUC&amp;III- In the latest
surveys, however, only 31 percent to
38 - percent called themselves
Democrats whlie 28 ~~trcent to 211

percent called themselves
Republicans.
Predictably; Republican polllters
sugge.!t that this shift may well be
the start of an important long·range
trend, whlle Democratic pollsten
say, that it more likely· reOecta the
dissatlsfacton of many voters with
the Carter administration.
One of ,those down playing the
significance of the new numbers is
pollster Pat Caddell, whose
predominantly Democratic clients
have included carter Caddell
suggests that voters always shift af.
ter an election toward the party of
the new president for whom they
voted. Thus, many Democrat.! who
voted for Ronald Reagan are now
calling themBelvea Republicans.
Thla theory is not verified by
recent·hlstory, however. In 1972, lmmedla!eiy after Richard Nixon's
great landallde, the percentage _of
voten who called themselves
Republicans did not lncreue - llld
even fell in several polla.
Many pollaten analyze the 5

current findings not aa a cue of
Democrats calling themaelvea
RepubUC1118 but as a shift along tbe
political apectrum.
In other words, aome voleri who
previoualy identified -themselves u
Democrats are now calJlng themselves independents. But they may
continue to vote for liberiJ.mlnded
candidates rather !ban con·
servallves. Meanwhile, aome volel'l
who previoualy called thernselva Independents but voted for CGnservallve candidates now are identifying ther}lselves u ~bllcana .
If thla indeed II the cue, the lhlfl
ip party Identification wW have a
significance.
MOlt uperta agree tbat the real
teat will ccme in 1112. Onlrtwlce Iince 1830.has the party t1a firat..term
president not 101&amp; gnJUDd In tbe
congreuiooaJ Reel two yean Iller
hll election. the Repubilcllll CCIIItinue to gain in 1112, tba Jll'GI! may
llfll'le that an important voter llhUI
Ia takin8 place 1111)' frcm the
Democrata
.
~
'
~

u

DOONESBURY

who is overstocked with right-hand
pitching, said he had to admit that
Berenyi's performance this spring
"very definitely brightens his
prospects.
"This is just a guess, but I would
imagine we'll decide on the makeup
of the pitching staff Friday or Saturday. We know that the ability is
there. There's some apprehension
about the youth that's involved, but
from what we've seen down here,
we're very pleased with the progress '

that has been made-"
, 1renyi's chances of making the
team were imptoved when the Reds
assigned lefthander Charlie
Leibrandt to the minors. But the
rapid return of Bill Bonham and
Paul Moskau from shouder surgery
may work against Berenyi.
Bonham pitched four shutout innings in a "B" ga me against the
Phillies, although Philadelphia won
thatgame2-l.

Concepcion paces win

MASON FURNITURE

TAMPA, Fla- (AP) - Dave Concepcion hit two home runs run and
hatted in four and pitchers Bruce
Berenyi and Paul Moskau gave up
only six hits as the Cincinnati Reds
defeated the Philadelphia Phillies 72 in exhibition hasehall Wednesday.
The Phils, however, won a "B"
game 2-1.
Concepcion's first home run of the
day, his fifih of the spring, came in
the first inning with none on base.
His second four-bagger, with two on,
came in the·seventh. George Foster
doubled and scored another run on a
double error by Philadelphia's
Gregg Gross.

FOR THE BEST DEALS IN THETRI STATE AREA

teWIII. Socand oluo ....... pold II

""-·Oblo.

u-:n. "-~&amp;toe! ...... Inllnd IJol.

t:Z:W~:.and \lot Amorican
Publllhon -uan.
Nallonll

Southern's girls softball team
dumped Southwestern, 23-6 Wed·
nesday efening at Southwestern.
Amber Warner and Laren M- Wolfe
led Southern with four hits each.
Warner slammed a hdlhe and three
singles. E. Smith had three hits.
Pacing Southwestllrn were Evans,
Jordan and Salisbury with two hits
apiece. Debbie Michael was the winning hurler while Patty Shriver suffered the loss.
Southel'il plays at Federa l
Hocking this evening while Southwestern goes to Fairland.

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Tornadoettes triumph

IIJIPII-1

--~-IIL'IJIISunclly,
Frldoy, Ill Court
SINol, by
Ohio v r PoiJiilllq Corto&gt;onr •
Mpltin f• IDt., Pwnlrty, Olao- . ..

MASON FURNITURE

Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday &amp; Saturday
8:30 to 5:00, Thursday till12 noon

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - Catcher
Dave Van Gorder and outfielder
Paul · Householder have been
assignEid to the Cincinnati Reds
minor league complex for duty with
the Class AAA minor league Indianapolis Indians. j '

AIM•*IIIIIlaa «r.Jat.
~~

SHOP

Indianapolis bound

Wigal had four strike outs and four Bissell doubled , CHris Allen doubled
North Gallia's Pirates defeated
and Ritchie singled.
the Eastern Eagles ~ in a hard- •walks for E,astern on the mound.
Coach Ralph Wigal's Eagles, n,ow
Leading hitters for the winners
fOught svAC dianlond contest here
were Shupe a triple' and single, 1-1, host Al exander Thursday
Wednesday nightWinning pitcher Don Shupe went Charlie Luckadoo a single and evening- •
• the distance for the Pirates, striking double, Payne a double, Ba~ry Marout nine and walking eight. Shupe cum a double, Shaw a single, and
Linescore:
quieted the Eastern bats that .were Mike Ridell a single.
Eastern
110 003 0-5 '4 4
For Eastern Beaver tripled, NG
red hot after a victory the previous
010 410 X-6 8 2
evening, as he allowed just four hits.
I
Eastern scored single runs in the
first and second innings to take a 2-0
lead before North Gallia made it 2-1
in the boltom of the second inning.
All was quiet until.the bottom of
the fourth when North Gallia eruped
for four run&amp;- Senior pitching ace
Greg Wigal issued two consecutive
walb, then .retired two Pirates,
before giving up a triple to SHupe.
Charlie Ritchie then came in to
relieve Wigal and Keith Payne
reaponded with a double followed by
an Eagle error that produced the
other runs. .The last three Pirate
runs were all unearned as a result ol
Eagle rniacues.
Eastern made a comeback in the
sixth on three walkll and an error,
followed by a Mike Bissell double.
That rally pflllluced three runs,
llllking the score~After Ritchie retired North Gallla
in the bottom of the inning, Eastern
pul 1together another rally. With the
bases loaded due to walks, Charlie
Ritchie hit a line shot that was nabbed for an out. A strike out and hard
LOOKING AT OUT .- ; Phlladelpbla PhiJUes calcber Bob Boone
hit grounder that was fielded cleanly
bu
hla
eye ou an out as be takes the throw from second ID seventh IDthen ended the game.
nlag of the exhibition PJile at Tampa, Florida Wednesday, Cioclnoatl
Reds caldler Joe Nolan tried to 1eore from lhlid u teammate Sam
MejiM grounded to 11ec0od. (AP Laserpboto)
The Daily Sentinel

u.

Casey Kasem

In the fourth inning, Southern
rallied again on singles by Paul Cardone, and C. T. Chapman. AJoe Bob
Hemsley single brought home a run
before a Southern pinch runoer was
nailed at the plate to end the inning.
Lconsecutive singles by Sizemore
and Burleson, followed by an error I_:._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...J.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Reds briefs

Nort}l Gallia tops Eagles

•

that allowed Russell to reach safely
Southern travels to Federal
produced a run for Southwestern in Hocking today.
the top half of the seventh.
Linescore:
With two on and no outs, Baker hit
SW
101 000 2-4 7 0
a long sacrifice fly to left field that Southern
300 100 1-5 10 I
knotted the score at 4-4. Pitcher
Batteries~ Teaford, K, Wolfe 5th
Kent Wolle then retired the Highlan- (WP) and Jay Rees .
ders to end the inning.
Sizemore, Burleson 5th (LP) and
In the crucial seventh inning, Joe Scott Russell.
Bob Hemsley hit a line single after · HR - Jay Rees and Scott Russell.
there was one out. Terry McNickle , - - - - - - - - - - - drew a walk, th, n Rees reached
safely on a fielder's choice. With two
outs, Wolle stepped to the plate for
his game winning double that gave
Southern its first win of the young
season.
Senior Dale Teaford had a good
outing on the mound as a starter for
Coach Hilton Wolfe, Jr.'s Tornadoes
as he fanned three and .walked just
two in four and a third innings.
Wolfe, the winning hurler, fanned
five and walked two. Starter
Sizemore fanned seven and didn't
allow a walk before being relieved
by Jay Burleson who struck out one
and walked three.
Hitters for Southern were Kent
Wolfe two doubles , Jay Rees a home
run and single, Dale Teaford a
double, Joe Bob Hemsley tWo
singles, C. T. Chapman a double,
Bryan Wolfe and Paul Cardone
singles.
WMPO
For the visitors Sizemore doubled
and singled, Russell had a home run,
SATURDAYS
~ewberry a single and double,
Burleson a single, and Baker a
8 til Noon .
single.
·

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Fri. ,_,

POMEROY, OHIO,

l

'

�/"'
Page-4-The
Daily Sentinel
.
,, .

Pomeroy~Middleport,

Thursda_y!_Aprll2, 1911

Ohio

Thur.s day, April2, 1981

_P ick Montreal to Win NL East flag
'

ByUERSCHELN~ENSON

Will success spoil the Philadelphia
PhiUies?
::Mter almost a century Qf failure,
t!le· Phillies won their first world
championship in·J980, thanks mo,tly
to brilliant seasons by Steve Ca rlton
and Mike Sclunidt.
At the age of 35, Carlton (24-91 led
the National League with 24 vic(ories and 286 strikeout.&lt;; in 304 inOings, ranked second in earned run
~verage (2.34) and captur,ed the Cy
Young Award.
Meanwhile, MVP Schmidt led the
majors with 4B home runs and IOJ&gt;ped the league with 121 RBis, 342
to!JII bases and a .~24 slugging percen!Jige.
The modern-day Phillies are fa r
removed from the 1950 Whiz Kids.
Carlton and relief ace Tug McGraw
are ;!6, catcher Bob Boone 33, first
baseman Pete Rose 40, shortstop
I..,rry Bowa 35, and left fielder Greg
,;# l..uzipski is gone. Luzinski, whose 223
career homers did not figure 111
Manager Dallas Green 's plans for
1981, especially in view of the recent
acquisition of outfielder Gary i\'1111&gt;thews from the Atlanta Braves, was
sold Monday to the Chicago White
Sox.
Lonnie Smith, who replaced 1.uzinski more and more as the season
progressed, is the only regular under 30, and that includes second

r

baseman Manny Trillo, center.
fi&lt;llder Garry Maddox and right
fielder Bake McBride, along with
Schmidt and Matthews. The speedy,
aggressive Smith gave the Phillies a
newdimenson by stealing 33 bases in
only 100 games.
Carlton and Dick Ruthven (17-101
are a "olid lefty-right punch and
Marty Bystrom (:HI I wa" an impressive rookie in September.
Boone, a superb defensive catcher,
hopes to rebound from an off-year
with the bat and Rose, who failed to
bat .300 for unly the second time in
the la"t 16 years, needs just 74 hit.&lt;; to
break Stan Musial's NL record.
The key to Philadelphia's season
probably will be how much injured
pitchers Larry Christenson and Nino
Espinosq can contribute.
"We can win aga in, and I think we
will," says Green.
In 1979, the Montreal Expo" wound
up two games behind Pittsburgh in
the NL East. Last year, they won
f1ve fewer games but came within
one of the Phillies Ill another runner·
up finish .
"The experience of consecutive
pennant races going down to the last
weekend of the sea,on will definitely
help this club in the late stages of
1981 ," say" Manager Dick Williams.
He Ii, ts two problems. The fi rst is
the voi d 111 left field created v;hen
Run LeFlore opted fo r free agency ·

Today's

Sports World
By WUI Grt111111ey
AP Correspondenl

Three days have passed since the
NCAA's controversial championship
basketball game was played under
th e shado w of the tragic
assassination attempt on the.
president, and commen!Jitors have
:got around to reviewing the game 1t·
li&lt;!H.

"That's our boy, Bobby," they say
with a giggle. "What a card'"
"Ain't it the truth' He's a winner."

Winning makes ever)1hing all
right.
Whenever you try to probe into the
inner "oul of the Marine-syndrome·,
spit-and-poli sh, tough-guy per·
sonality of men such as Knight also General Patton, Lombardi,
Woody Hayes and, to a lesser
degree, George Steinbrenner - you
run into all sorts of conflicts.

: Net result: Indiana's Coach Bobby
Knight is a hero.
"Knight's Dictwn Upheld," reads
one headline, referring to the
discipline that carried the Hoosiers
:to 63-50 victory over North Carolina.
: "Superb teacher," says a critic.
· " Let teachers instill you ng
Knight's personality - as in the
:Americans with 'fhe values of case of other renowned martinet.&lt;; teache r-coaches lik e Bobby ouns the broad gamut from the foulKnight," adds another.
talking, chair-kicking, face-slapping
NBC-TV named him, and not lsiah . bully to an off·s!Jige channer with a
Thomas, winner of the Most seeming concern for the im·
:valuable Award, presented by a car pressionable human clay he is com;company. It was Bobby's brain and misioned to mold.
·not those two vital steals and 23 poin·
What really bugs us is that Bobby
:t.&lt;; by lsiah that tipped the scales to Knight, two days after shoving a
an Indiana victory.
Louisiana State fan agamst the wall
Thus Americans again shrug off and dwnping him in a plastic con·
lhe banal vulgarities, bullying lac· tainer, suddenly is pictured as some
-ti cs and informal brawls in kind of protector of modern virtues
:canonizing one of the men ent~ted and morals.
:with the playtime keep of some of ' The Indiana coach makes no effort
their 1!1-and 20-year·olds.
Lo clean up his own act. It's silly for
He won. That was sufficient within him to get incensed over a fan's rilr
itself. Mter all, in the words of the bing. It's indiscreet of ·him to push
·Jate Vince Lombardi, "winning isn't human beings around, s!Jind before
'everytlnng - it's the only thing."
a houseful of. reporters and scream
: It is bizarre how we as a nation not the vilest profanities.
:only tolerate but even admire and
If he is truly a great character
·hail a person's actions which,-under builder, why shouldn't he build his
any other circwns!Jinces, would be a own' As the Bible says, "Physician,
source of derision.
heal thyself."
·

and 11lmped to the Chicago White
Sox; the other, however, is no more
serious than finding a backup for
workhorse catcher Gary Carter.
Rookie Tim &amp;tines, who ·stole 77
bases in I08 games as a }'econd
base man in the American
~ociation and five more in 15
games with the Expos, will get a
shot at replacing LeFlore, who led
the NL by swiping 97 'in 139 games. U
&amp;tines flop,, Warren Cromartie will
return to left field after a year at fir·
st base and Willie Montanez will be
the regular first baseman.
Raines, second baseman Rodney
Scott (63 steals I and center fielder
Andre Dawson (341 give the Expos
loads&lt; of speed in front of Carter and
the r~st of the power people - right
fielder Ellis Valentine, third
basema n Larry Parrish and
Cromartie. Chris Speier will again
be the shortstop.
The pitching 's!Jiff is young and
talented. Steve Rogers and Scott
Sanderson were 16-game winners
and Bill Gullickson is on the verge of
stardom. He fanned 18 Chicago Cubs
Ill a September ga me. A veteran
bullpen includes Wandie Fryman,
Stan Bahnsen and Elias Sosa.
Many of the Pittsburgh's big guns
played hurt or were sidelined right fielder Dave Parker, first
baseman •Willie SIJ!rgell, center
fielder Omar Moreno (96 steals ),
third baseman Bill Madlock, second
baseman Phil Garner, first
baseman-outfielder Bill Robinson,
pitcher Don Robinson. Comebacks
arc essential from them, as well as
left-bander Johi1 Candelaria and
relief ace Kent Tekulve, who slwn·
ped. All the injuries gave left fielder
Mike Easler IJii.'lll, 21 homers) a
chance to reachftrdom.
Veteran Jim Bibby (!~) is the
ace of the pitching staff but the 6foot-5 fastballer is JG. Candelaria,
Don Robinson and Rick Rhoden also
will be in the rotation, with Grant
Jackson, Enrique Ramo and
. newcomer Victor ·cruz joining
')'ekulve in a bullpen which Tanner
conside'" ·· the best in the world.''
Any similarity between the !980
and 1981 St. Louis Cardinals is
purely coincidental. Manager-GM
Whitey · Herzog's housecleaning
disp'l,\'ed of Ted Simmons, Pete
Vuckovich, Hollie Fingers, Ken
Reitz and Leon Durham.
The s!Jirting eight features plenty
of hitting, speed and defense. It has

.

free ag~nt Darrell Porter behind the
plate, an infield of Keith Hernandez,
Tom Herr, Garry Templeton and
Ken Oberkfell, with Slxto Lezcano, ·.
rony Scott and George fiendtick in
the outfield.
To cure the 'pitching shorts, Her·
zog traded for Bruce Sutter,
baseball's premi~r reliever. Star·
ters Bob Forsch, Lary Sorensen and
Silvio Martinez muSt prOduce big
years.
Outfielder Dave Kingman is back
in New ·York to. hit balls over
buildings and 'first baseman Rusty
SIJ!ub returned as free agent. Bui
except for center fielder Lee Maz·
zilli, the rest of the lineup is pun·
chless. Rookie outfielder Mookle
Wilson adds speed.
The fine young Neil Allan-J elf
Reardon bullpen won't 'get a· charice
to save many games unless s!Jirters
Craig Swan, Pat Zachry and Randy
Jones are over their ann miseries.
Rookie Tim Leary has been called
"the next Tom Seaver." He'd better
be.
Having finished last with Sutter
and Kingman, the Chicago Cubs
decided to try it without them. The
new-look Cubs hope to blend
newcomers Steve Henderson and
Leon Durham in the outfield and
third baseman Ken Rfitz with NL
bat king Blll Buckner at first base,
shortstop Ivan DeJesus and pitcher
· Rick Retischel. Lefty Ken Kravec,
acquired last week . from ,the
crosstown White Sox, should help.
PREDICTION :
Montreal,
Philadelphia, St. Louis, Pittsburgh,
New York, Chicago. '

Lakers one game from elimination,

No trades forthcoming
TAMPA, ~' Ia . (AP) - Oncinnati
Reds President'bick Wagner said he

By ALEX SACHARE
AP Sports Writer 'The Los Angeles Lakers, hoping to
become the National Basketball
Association's first repeat champions
since the 1968-69 Boston Celtics, suddenly find themselves one game
away from playoff elimination after
running into a red-hot Rocket named
Moses Malone.
Malone, Houston's ~foot-10 center, scored 38 points and grabbed 23
rebounds - including 11 off the of·
fensive boards - to lead the Rockets
to a lll-107 upset over liM: Lakers in
Los Angeles Wednesday night in the
opening game of their first-round
playoff series.
" To win we had to play our bar·
dest arid best game of the year, a
maximwn effort," said Rockets
Coach Del Uarris. " It was our best

Pu:cy~o~

Ac£~T~

Levfs
II ~..

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LEVI'S
.

CINCINNATI (AP) - The Cincinnati Reds announced their
Opening Game with the
Philadelphia Phlllies April 8 is sold
out.
However, the Reds still don't know
who will throw out the ball to open
tl1e National League season.
President Ronald Reagan had
been scheduled to perform tile
ceremony.

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and Jerry Pate and Lanny Wadkins,
each of whom has played very well -·
in recent weeks.
The foreign field includes current
Masters champion Seve Ballesteros
of Spain, South Mrican Gary Pla9er,
,lsao Aoki of Japan and Australian
veteran Bruce Devlin.
Leading money-winner · Ray
Floyd, winner of consecutive titles
last month, was forced to withdraw
because of the illness of his son.

Sale
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MAKE THE MOST
OF YOUR
TAN THIS
SUMMER
IN A
SWIMSUIT
FROM

The . Kyger Creek Athletic
Boosters will sponsor an in·
dependent basketball tournament
Aprill3, 14, 15 and 21. A$50 perteam
entry fee is being charged.
The event will be held in two
brackets, an open bracket for all
ages and a men's bracket for men 25
years of age and older. Trophies will
be presented to the fi rst place and
runners-up and all tournament team
members.
For further infonnation contact
Keith Carter at Kyger Creek High
School phone 367-7378 from 7:30a.m.
to 3 p.m. Monday through Friday .
Deadline for entering is April B.

comfortable walking. ~Qu'll be f,o6t·loose
and fancy-free ln thes.e new fashions. Come

. NEW YORK
ClDlltiNG HOUSE

MAGIC

LEBANON, Ohio (AP) - ·Trying
· To Do won his second straight race,
capturing the $1,000' featured pace
mile Wednesday night at Lebanon
by half a length and paid $19, $5.20
and $3.20.
Major Stann placed, returning
$3.80 and $2.40, and Ancindy was
third, for $2.80. ·
·
Tbe 3-3 double of Imago and
Champaign Miracle paid $33 and the
-crowd of 1,178 bet $126,781.

sponsor tourney

~

b€a utlfully I.Vith today's

Captures $1,000 race

KC boosterS will

• Black Patent

auditions .

coordinat~

Sponsor: Meigs Athletic
&amp; BooSters .~
Show Time: 7:00

.

111

WIUI~

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APRIL
Meigs High School

'·

series by winning Friday night. A points by Malohe,.the NBA's leading
third game, if necessary, will be rebounder and No. 2 scorer during
the regular season. Los Angeles
played in Los Angeles Sunday.
"When I score big and rebound fought back and twice cut the deficit
well, we usually win. We're no to two points but could never draw
pushovers," said Malone. "But this even.
.
series is not over yet. You. have to
The Lakers trailed by j~ three
respect the world champs."
points with 19 seconds ~M
In the other Western Conference before guard Mike Dunleavy hi~ two
first-round series, the Kansas City · fr~ throws for Houston.
Kings posted a 98-97 overtime vic- r--'--~-------­
tory over the Portland Trail Blazers
Y•ur "EMtra Touch"
at Portland. With Chicago's 90-M
Florist Since 1957
triumph at New York on Tuesday,
that means three of the four mini· '
series openers were won by the
visiting team. Philadelphia, which 1·
defeated Indiana 124-108 Tuesday, is
I=LORIST
the only home team to win so far.
PH . 992-!644
Houston raced t~t a !&amp;-point lead
3S2 E. Mil in , Pomeroy
during the 'second' period and was
Your FTD Florist
ahea.d 00.00 at halftime behirid 23 - - - _ _ _ _ _ _....,_.

has no prospects about-tt~des this game of the year and for alii know r-;=~;;;========::::=======:====;
spring.
the best game in the history of the 1
"I've IJ!lked to all the people f plan franchise."
to !Jill! to. I don't have anything
Houston, which posted a 0-42
going. The chance of anything going record in the regular season and
is 200-t()-one," ~anger said Wed· didn't gain a playoff berth until the
nesday evening.
final weekend of the campaign, can
"We' re not a perfect baUclub, but wrap up the . best-of-three mini·
I think we' re a pretty good ballclub. ,--------'-------1
I'-"
There were a couple guys who
··~'':'&lt;····~c::::::o---- . ' I .·· /
';::::
looked pretty good on· somebody
else's roster, but tbe cost of getting
I
I &lt;&gt; -c.:- ··- ft~
·. ~---- ~
_)_I
them was just too high."
I &gt; --;::~-,_ y
~I
Wagner was interesl~d in
acquiring a left-handed relief pit·
~ /--_' h
·"
cher but has had.little hope since the
\
winter meetings ended.
JULI E
\ .\
I'AIA-·. eNavy Blue

SAT.,

,

LOOKING FR,OM BENEATH - Los Angeles Lakers Jamul .
Wilkes (52) looks lor a way to shootfrom beneath Houston Rockel&amp; blc
men Robert Reid (50) and BWy Paullz (5) during first quarter action
Wednesday nigh In lhe lint round of lhe NBA Western Conference
Playoffs iD Los Angeles. (AP Laserpboto 1

Now 38, Weiskopf ranks fourth on year. And there'll be Masters iD
the a!J..tii1le money-winning list, other years."
trailing only Jack Nicklaus, Lee
Needing a victory he faces one of
Trevino and Tom Watson. He has the strongest fields this old event has
won !3 American tournaments, in· had in years. Chief among the
eluding this one in 1975, and took the threats for the $54,000 first prize are
1973 British Open title.
Trevino, Ben Crenshaw and defen- .
But he hasn't won in the United ding champion Craig Stadler, who
States in three years.
tied for second last week in the
"My. game has never been bad," Heri!Jige Classic.
said the man who has finished
Other major challengers include
second in the Maste'rs a record four · Bill Rogers, the Ueritage winner,
limes. "It's all just a state of mind."
And, while he said be'd like to
rhake the Masters field, he refuses to
attach too much importance to it.
Open Daily 10·9;
"It's one of the inajors. If I make
Sunday H
it, fine," he said. "But if I don't,
there are three more majors this

.

'

Weiskopf faces must win situlJtion
GREENSBORO, N.C. (API Tom Weiskopf is facing a must-win
situation this week if he is to qualify
for the Masters.
"I )¥ant to play in the Masters
becaUBe it's a major championship
and t like major chanipionship
goH," Weiskopf said before teeing
off today in the first round of the
~,000 Greater Greensboro Open
· on the 6,984-yard, par 72 Forest Oaks
Country Club course.
It's his last chance to gain a spot in
the field for next week's prestigious
event in Augus!JI, Ga., a tournament
in which be has played for 13 consecutive years.
To make it again this year, he
must win here. Nothing else will put
him in the elite gathering of golf's
greatest players.
And there are strong indications
the deeply-IJ!lented Weiskopf is
ready to make a run at it.
·"I'm playing pretty well. It's the
best s!Jirt to a season I've had in a
long lime," he said. And the record
book supports him. Usually a slow
s!Jirter, Weiskopf .has won $55,690 in
seven previous appearances this
year, finishe_d second in the Los
Angeles Open and had a strong, sixth place performance last week.

a

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doel wbiiiiDGII people would lhlDk wu lmpoulble as be blocks a sbol
IIJ 1M .bp1e1 Liken tenler Kllreem Abdui-Jabbar (33) dnriDg fourIll ...,W IICIIeD Wecl-.d'l)' alibi In lbe lint nJimd tJI lbe NBA
Wml a Ctalenpce Pllyalfl Ia 1M Aqeles. U011110a weal • to
.._, tM Llkenlll·lll ja Clle ltlll( of five 11eries. (AP Lawerpbofel

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I'

�..Page-6-The Daily Senlinel

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Pomerqy- Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, Apri12, 1911

•

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Th Four Comers ~H Club, New also provided the students with Ssy c8sto, Bobbi Goodnite, Min- l¥lpe to wol'k cloeely with COil).
Haven, has selectejl litter preven- .. Woodsy the'towl litter bags alid , dy and Stacey Hester, M. K. mliJti!y and cowaty agencies in
.. er, Jamie ~oush, Kriatln can-ying through !heir cl~up
tion and beautification as the topics titerature on energy conservation. ·
Four
H'ers,
Tarruny
Roush,
Lisa
oush,
Michelle Roush, Tammy, campaign.
for the club's spr~-sumrner conThomas and Shelley Cal&gt;to, with the Tanya and Travis Roush, and Ryhan ~-..__ _ _ _ _ _-ll.._
servation projects. ,
assistance of Shawn Paugh, presen- Wood; club leaders, Barbara Roush, r
ted a puppet show for the students Nellie Casto, and Janell Ca)l.
The club kicked off its "clean-up" entitled "Oscar Meets the Trash · Through the · club's correspOncampaign this pa~t week by spon- Monster." They will be presenting dence with the West VIrginia Dept.
soring a program for the students at the puppet show again at the 4-H of Highways, litter signs have been
New Haven Elementary. Jane County Rowadup on April5. .
posted along the direct route of New
Assisting with the school program Haven. The club also elected to be
' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . : . ."- - Jarrett who teaches conservation
and environmental education for the were club leaders, Barbara Roush, resonsible' for the ground mainWest Virginia Department of Nellie Casto and J pap Thomas.
tenance at the New Haven Library
Natural Resourcts was the guest
Over the weekelid, the ~H'ers · duringthesummerandareplanning
,. .
speaker for the program.' Ms. distributed litter bags at Greg's Key an Arbor Day program for April 10.
Jarrett showed the students a film Markel, New Haven Supennarket,
Other proposed projecs include ,
on litter entitled "The Litter Mon- and Ben . Franklin Store in New '"cleaning of the-school grounds, roa&lt;l· 1
ster" and a film on energy entithid Haven. Participating were club side park, and placing litter barrels
"Energy and the Flintstones". She members: Kendra Bass, Kim and throughout the town. The ~H ' ers.
By Polly Cramer
DEAR POLLY - ·We live in the
Special correspondent
middle of a mountainous forest , so I
DEAR J'()LL Y . - Ho_; ·can
have some Pointers ·about staying
·
remove thestrong nauseating odor warm and conserving energy. too.
from my new
Toboggan caps provide a lot of
7(
7(
wooden bread
1
warmth, so wear one in ·the house
·
box' The odor
•
when it is cold and also as a night
A
permeates all
cap. Wear two out of doors. Wear a
M
pair of cotton knit liner gloves under
'
bread products
a heavier pair of gloves. A cotton
even when tney
are closed in
kerchief tied around the neck,
plastic bags? - ·
cowboy style, makes ~a noticeable
MAGGIE
improvement. If one must wear a
DEAR MAGGI·
Cramer
dress, wear three pairs of the same
E - Try crushing up some color panty hose - they are warm
newspapers, lilling the box and and look good. Clingy camisoles and
leaving closed for a week or so. double half-slips help hold in body
'{anilla extract might also be put in heat, too.
a small open container and left in the
It helps if ladies wear a pair of
closed box, or pieces of charcoal tied men's heavy-duty soiled rubber
in a scrap of nyIon net. - POLLY
boots over their regular shoes. This
DEAR POLLY - I am answering helps prevent falls and keeps the
the reader who has trouble with 'dog feet and shoes warm and dry in ice
hairs sticking to her clothes. She and mud. My favorite Peeve is with
could spray them with that product the lightweight soles put on women' s
fo r static electricity, as it will not all-weather boots, as they provide
discolor clothing and it is also good little protection on slippery sur·
to keep clothes from clinging. I faces.
TR·3ooo by Realistic'~
always spray slacks before putting
A bag with gravel in it and one
them on and then I can just take my with ashes and lengths of screen
hand and brush the hairs away. wire are helpful on icy roads, so we
Also, if you have fly-away hair, always carry these in the car trunk .
spray your brush and comb. - ION A I have also filled old sweater arms
Reg .
•
and socks, knotted at the ends, with
499.95
ashes, and used them to make safe
walkingspots on ice ahead of me.
The ultimate in hi -fi recording with wide frequency
Sheets with the.wide hems slipped
response. low noise and distortion. superb dynamic range.
on spring tension rods and put
and easy ed iting' F:ea tures 3 heads- erase, record and
across drafty hallways, inside win·
ptay - for off·the· tape monitoring as you record . High·
dow fromes and across open doorMrs. Paul Roush talked on ef· ways also help. - J. B.
torqu e wind and rewind motors. FG (frequency generator)
caJ?Slan servom'o tor ,for low wow and flutt er. Full-logic
.,
ficient grocery shopping at the
Polly will send you one of her
con
trol.
separate
bias
and
EO
controls,
7'h
and
sole
noid
signed
thank-you
newspaper
coupon
recent meeting of the Long Bottom .
3¥. ips speeds. head phone jack. and morel #14-700
Shown w1lh optio nal metal rt~ el s Ta pe no t mcluded
Community Association held at the clippers if she uses your favorite
Pointer,
Peeve
or
Problem
in
her
community hall.
She reported on her sucl-ess in co lumn . Write POLLY'S
making extra money through clip- PROBLEMS in care of this
ping coupons and sending for cash newspaper.
sTA-i oo .b r Realistic
refunds. and advised the group on .------- - ------+
Buy now and get a great
places to look for refund slips and
ht · h rec etver at a super
cash-off coupons.
LEGAL NOTICE
tow price! Features
A report on club finances was
dl ummated tuning met er.
The Pu blic Utilities Com·
tape
monitor. 4-way
given by Ernestine Hayman who
m rssion of Ohio has set for
speaker
selec t swt l ch , 5
·listed the bills and donations and
pu bl ic hear'ing Case No .
LEO
mode
indicators.
gave a report on proceeds from the
8 1-03-EL -EFC, to review
more ·22 watts per ch .
·recent bake sale. It was noted tluit
the fuel procuremen t prac·
mtn . rms at 8 ohms , 20 Paul · Brooks will • be hauling
tices and policies of
20 .000 Hz . no more than
· limestone for the parking lot with
Col umbus and Southern
0.1% Tt;1D . U31 -2089
Francis Andrew to contact Brooks
-0hio Electric Com pany ,
the operatio n of its Elec·
about the matter.
tric Fuel Com ponent
Mr. and Mrs. Harlan Ballard have
Clause , and related mat·
donated kitchen cabinets and a sink
ters.
This hea ring is
for the kitchen so that soup suppers,
• Reallsllc STA-100 AM/FM
sched
uled
to begin at
ice cream socials and jitney suppers
Stereo Receiver
9:30
a.m.
on
Monday,
can be held once the kitchen has
.
'
April 6, 1981 , at the
• Two MC -2001 Walnut
been remodeled.,
.•
offices of the CommiS·
Veneer Speaker Systems
Jenny Newlun and Pearl Powell
With 8'.' Woofer, 2'h"
sion,
375
South
High
will host the April 29 meeting at 7
Tweeler lor De~ Ban
Street, Columbus. Ohio
p.m at the hall. Ernestine Hayman
and
Crisp, Clean Highs
43215.
and Melody Roberts served refresllAll interested parties will
• LAB-58 Automatic Belt·
ments to those named and Tom and
Drive Changer whh Hinged
be give n an o pportu nity
Sue Hayman and daughters, Mae
Dual Cover, $19.95-Value
to be heard . Further inMcPeek, Virginia Newlun, Paul
Reallsllc/Shure
R25ED:r
CHARGE IT
formation may be obRoush, Mr. and Mrs. . Martin
Cartridge
/MOST
tained by contacting the.
Nesselroad, Janie Fitch, Mr. and
STORE$/
Co m ~iss ion .
#31-2089/40-f987/42-2974
Mrs. Paul Hauber, Mr. and Mrs.
THE
(PUBLIC
UTI
Ll
TIES
Dorsel Larkins, Leona Hensiey, Bet·
COMMISSIO N OF OHIO
ty Newlun, Mr. and Mrs. Pat Neut·
By :
David M. Polk ,
Stereo Headphones
zting, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Bissell, and
Secretary
.
Elber Riebel.
Nova"'-40 by 'Realistic

The Daily

"

Sentif1el~Pag-_7

.

Beautifieation ·
projects underway

Polly's Pointers

Breadbox odor

r--::===::::::::::::::::::::::::::;;;;;;~;;;;;;;:=================,---

19010-TQ 5QDl0
S ¥1NGSI

18 lh

TAKING PART - Taking part in the operetta Back, DeLeab Sanden, Krisll Hawk and Missy
"The Adventures of Pinocchlo" at Tuppers Plains Calaway, blue fairies. The operetta Is under the dlreeElementarj School Friday a17 :30 will be, front row, 1- tton of MaxlDe Whitehead. AprU Parker wUI aer, Jayne Ritchie and Lori Burke, flsbes; Wesley Holter, company the musical numbers on the plano.

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~

O'PHERS TAKING PART. iD
operetta Friday Sayre, Medora, the dog, Kenny Ritchie, the fox and
u.lght at TuJ1PCrs Plains Elementary are, left to right, Todd Wilson, the cat. The operetta Is under the dlreeBrian Durst, Dr. Crow, Allen Tripp, Dr. Owl, Jeff tion of Maxloe Whitehead.

0

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'

• BEAUTYREST MAITRESSES

• LAMPS

•SOFAS

•CHAIRS

• RECLINERS

•DINEIIES

IIDTY•FIRST WEDDING ANNIVERSARY- Mr. and~; Clell'
Wwd IIISyraeue olleerved their lUI weddlq ualvenary Maildly 11
tile P-nt Heal.. Can Celder wbere Mrl. WOld 11u beetJ a ..deal
for tbe ..,t 1lx ,m•ll!l· Mr. and Mrl. WOld wm pn~e~~led 1
~led cake. Sudayllie Ita 11 p.DL lllll'llll&amp; ablft ileld 1 puty for
tile CGII(IIe, Mr. ud Mrl. Wood •j!l'l! mrried oe' Mardi ., 1111 11
" Caz'~a, . ll'. VL, Tbey have fear Uvtnc. cblldreiJ and fiVe craocteiJIIdrs.
.
.
•

I
awll'ded, win'OI' loee. There also will.

Spring carnival here

Rac:lne Pro wlllaponsor a llprinc
Clmlval Saturday, April 4, fnJm 5
,.._ ·unllll p.m. at the elemental')'

I ' II.

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•

OFF

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EASTER BASKETs
EGG CO~ORING KITS

Investiture honors junior troop

An investiture and rededication camp patch contest.
rrung; Kenda Carsey[ houseke~per;
ceremony was held for members of
Presented badges were Pennv Kim Stewart,. food, fibers and far·
Middleport Junior Scout Troop 1039 Clark, food, fibers and farming; rrung, cook,_pnnts, and camera ; and
Monday night at the Riverboat Lesley Car, food, fibers and fa r- Tma Hendncks, skatmg.
_Room of the Athens County Savings ming, first aid, and exploring foods ;
Joy Clark IS leader _of the troop
and Loan Co.
Amy Luckeydoo, food, fibers and wtth Sus1e Stewart, assistant leader.
Girls invested were Lesley Carr, farming, exploring foods , child care. Helpers are Tamra Clark, Cherry
Amy Luckeydoo, Elise Meier, Mindy dabbler, business wise and dance ; Cadle, and Barbara Phillips.
Spencer, Kathy Thomas, Nikki Elise Meier, Rhonda Rathburn,
Parents were guests for the
Whitlatch, Tammy Hawle9, Shan- Kathy Thomas, Shannon Coates, ceremony and refreslunents were
non Coates, Kim Kennedy, and Kim Kennedy, food, fibers and far· served.
Christina Rasmussen Clark. Others
eligible for investiture but unable to
Holy Communion planned
attend were Charlene Ca~.
Stephanie Peck, Kim Peck and Lora
F
The Rev. Mark Flynn aimowaces mel will begin at 8 p.m.
~cognized and presented awards services of holy communion to be Communion will be taken to the
were Charleen Cadle, first, and Pen· held on Thursday, April 16 at the homes of those who are unable to get
ny Clark, second, candy sale; Lesley· Bethan y and Carmel United out to attend services. Those who
Carr, first, and Amy Luckeydoo, Methodist Churches.
wish to have the Rev. Flynn come to
1
K'
St
The
service
at
Bethany
will
be
their
home to serve communion
.
k
second• coo Je sa e; a un ewart,
should contact him at 94!1-2895.
'
rst
and
Kenda
Carsey
second
·
held
at
2
p.m.
and
the
service
at
Car·
fl
INVESTED.- Elise Meier, Shannon Coates, MtJ&gt;. dleport Junior Troop,_
.,;._M
_ onda
_Y:.__nl_:g:_b_in_a_c_a_odl
_el...:igh:__l- - -· - -- - - - - '___' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - •• dY Speacer, Kathy Thomas, Cbrlltina Clark, and Ktm ceremony.
• ltfuedy, left to right, front; and Tammy Hawley,
Am)' Luckeydoo, Lesley Karr, and Nikki Wbltlatcb,
t.ek, left to rigbt, were invested into TrooJI' 1039 Micl-

Enjoy listening in
privatel3 'h" drivers
deliver liJII· range
sound. 10' coiled
cord. #33·993

EASTER SUPPLIES

suldler,. Jeff Caldwell, Lampwlck, Cbrl! Spencer,
harlequin and Mike Weber, fruit seller. Curtain time Is
7:30 p.m. Admission is $1. Pre-school cbfldren will be
admitted free.

--

95 Reg.

19%0ff ·2 99

OPERETIA TO
PRESENTED Friday night at
Tuppers Plains Elementary School under the direction
of Maxine Whitehead. Pictured are, 1-r, Kyle Sinclair,

marionette, and Amy and Angle Murpby, sunbeams.

Cut20%

19

David Rice, cricket; back ro\V, Eddie Colllna, Gepetto,
Bruce WoUe, fir~ter and Darrin Drenoer, ma1ler
~berry . Curtain lime Is 7:38 p.m.

95

'200

Grocery shopping
meeting topic

I'INOCCHIO AND GROUP - Also tak,iog parlin
the Friday nlgbl operetta at Tuppers Plains Elementary wlll be front row, 1-r, Jason Drenoer, Plnocclo,

1'bn will be 11 minute glw~ with ...- to be

be an old lublm county store and
refl'llhnwnll. There will ailo
felltured will be I pocket lady and

fortwle teller.
'

• HIDE-A-BEDS

rOPE'S LifeStyle

v

CORNER OF TltiRD AND OliVE
GAWPOLIS, OHIO
4A6-3045

FURNITIJRE
SHaNCASE

-

�..

"
Page-S-The Daily Sentinel

·-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.

:;.

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The
- Dailv Sentinei-Page-9
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I

-

1Jfl\1N"l ~\1 ~THAT SCA~BLED WOAD GAME
\9 ~~ ., byHenriArnoldandBoblee

Television
•
•
VIewmgI NARBD I
~

Unscramble these lour Jumbles,

one letter tO each square, to form
four ordinary worQs.

•• •., c..__,,...,.. ~ • •••• s,.., '"'

• EVENING

QUIT! ~Uil!i
'IOU DON'T
N!I!D A!IY
MO~E

suv·

Cil~ THE

.

5AilCA5M i
"'OW •NOW WHA1' THEY
5AY A!IOWT A~ Al'tMY

TEIIA!IC~

IN

~l'ti~HT

T~AVEL1~17 0'-1 IT$
5TOMACH~

OPENI!.J6 UP'

AH&amp;AD:

THEY MAKE
THEIR WAY.

NEWS

(]) BACKYARD
([)
CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
(jJ ABC NEWS
(f) 3-2-1 CONTACT"
[1) OVER EASY 'Hearing' Guest :
A ~treaa and singer Florence Hen·
deraon. Host : Hugh -· Oowna .
(Cioeed·CapHoned; U.S.A.)
8:30 IIJ e (!) NBC NEWS
(]) PAUL AND MONA
C!J IIIOVIE ·(ADVENTURE) '\'a
"Emil' And The Detecthes"

L001&lt;5 LIKS 50M!i
501lT OF CAVE

MOONI.I~HT

CVIJ CD II CIJ®J(j))•

THE llOC"'S.PUil ...

..

I,

•

. I I K_)

BORN !mER

!

Doreerf f?achim, soprano

..
AA'J~A

toured both the U.S. and Canada as
an opera so list and solo recitalist.
Margison is a native of Victoria,
British Colwnbia, and is a singer of
eonsiderable and wide-ranging experience. He is well known for his
Gilbert and 'Sullivan roles . He
frequently appears on television and
in supper clubs.
Shookhof£ was born in New York
City but grew up in California . A
graduate from the Eastman &amp;hoot
of Music, he is not only an accomplished pianist, but is presently
Music Director of the Victoria International Festival and Opera Piccola. He is a long time-devotee to the
music of Sigmund Romberg.
Following Sunday's concert, the
Tri County Community Con~ert
Association will open its 34th annual
rnembershp campaign on Monday, a
membership drive that will contin ue
from one week. Assisting Mrs. Tope
will be captains in other areas, in-

berg himself in this unique portrayal.
One review of the program stated ,
"The McFarlane Singers proved
what can be done on a bare stage
with a minimum of props, with all
the focus on vo1ce, emotwn, and intensity of perfonnance" . Another
said, "The entire program was an
art of moderation, sane, witty and
polished . .. intensely hwnan and
eternally fresh ."
McFarland himseU came from
Idaho, and has perfonned in almost
every area of the field of vocal
music. His credits include operetta
and musical theatre. with tours
throughout the United States and
Canada.
Joachim studied in Ca nada. She
completed five years with the
Canadian Opera Company and ha:;

Vf&gt;.LfiJ'QJ

&amp;

.I
.'

I

IIJ Fl.a&lt;IDf&gt;....

Gospel ~concert Saturday

A rea goings on.
Bake sale Saturday
I

The Clifton United
Methodist Women are holding a
bak e sale on Saturday, April 4 and
an Easter candy sale.
Selling will be in front of Clifton
Post Office starting at 9 a .m. and
will continue until all homemade
goodies are sold·.
CW'TON -

Return from vacation
MASON - Mr. and Mrs. Vernon
Roush have returned from a three
week vacation in the south. Some of
the tourist attractions they visited
were Daytona Beach. Fia .. Cypress
Garderu;, Warm Springs, Ga .. Stone
Mountain , Ga .. St. Augustine. F'la.,
Gatlinburg. Tenn. and Plains, Ga.
Mr. and Mrs. Roush 111et the fonner
president, Jirruny Carter and Mrs.
Roush had her picture taken with
him.

One hundred at dinner
Approximately 100 attended the
fellowship dinoer·at 6:30 p.m. Saturday evening, March 21 at the First
Baptist Church, Gallipolis.
Following dinner, guest speaker
was Glynda Rice, a former schola rship student. She showed slides and
told of her work over seas as a
missionary. She is now engaged in
spreading the gospel through sports
and music. A concert of gospel
music was presented by the "lnnerprize", Colwnbus.

Auction April 25 here
The Racine Methodist Church will
have a public auction on April 2:i
beginning at 10 a.m. at the Racine
American {;.egion hall. Food will be
served by the women of the church
and proceeds from the auction will
be used on expenses of the new ch'urch construction. Anyone having articles to contribute to the auction are
asked to telephone 94!1-2139, 94!1-2013,
or 94!1-2493.

Fish fry Saturday
The Middleport Fire Department
Reserves will hold a fish fr.y Saturday at the firehouse with serving to
begin at 11 am . oFish will be $1 and
and fish and fries, $1.50.

NEW PASTOR - The .Rev .
Merlin Teets, Portsmouth, is new
pastor of the Mount Union Baptist
Church, located on County Road
10, three miles west of Harrlsouville. He will begin hJs pastorale
here with a revival scheduled to
begin Sunday · and continue
through Aprfl.12. Services wiD be
held at 7:30 each evening. There
will be special singing. The public
ls Invited.

Spaghetti supper
planned for Saturday
A spaghetti supper will be held at
the Salem Center School Saturday
night sponsored by the Salem Center
Educational Organization. Serving
will be f•om 5 p.m. to 8 p.m with the
prices to be $2.50 for adults and $1.50
for children through the sixth grade.
On the menu will be spaghetti with
homemade meat sauce, cole slaw,
homemade dinner rolls, coffee, ancf
koolaid. Pies cakes, and other
desserts will also be available. The
public is invited.

rnemt)ers m atlendanl'C There were alllll three
visitors.
·
Tt~ lllt!.. rlllers d ~ H.It'&lt;l to go skB ting on M~:~.r c h
OJ!.
'
Kc v111 Napier t~,ave a demon:;tratiun un magir

of nticrowcl\res, chick ernbi)'OIOKY, and pocket
pets. Betty Ann I ,oftis I.(KVt ;; demon.stn1tinn on
phol~ ra ph y .
·
Fur recrea uoo the members played basket·
ball. Refrestunenl!i uf sloppy joes, Far East
tur~M , chip!J, coolu~s and pop were served by
. Kevin Napier.
•
The nelt mettinl( of the club will be on April S
at 2 p.m. at the home ol CarU! Rife. AI that lime
der~ratlol\!! w11l be g1vrn by Kevin N.11pier on
electricity, amd Becky Rife on creative arts and
houseplan&amp;a.- Kevin Napier, reporter.

TIIURSDAY
HYSELL RUN Church Missionary
Society Thursday at 7:30 p.m.
· Speaker is the Rev. Okey Cart.
Public Invited.
MEIGS ASSOCIATION for Retarded
Citizens Thursday at 7:30p.m. at the
school. MI interested persons urged
to attend.
EVANGELINE Chapter 172, Order of the Eastern Star, Thursday,
7:30p.m. at the Middleport Masonic
Temple. Easer bazaar Friday and
Saturday at the temple.

The l.ong Bottom Ea~les 4-H Club met on Mar·
ch 14 at the COmmunity B~ilding with I~ members and two advisun~ attending. The mernben
di.lcuued ~elllng t·shirls, selling Iolli pope, and a
rumn:Jille aale in &amp;be future. Project boOb wert
given out and plans were made to enter a noat In
the Rewaua parade.
Mr. John C. Rice, County Es:terudon A~ent,
Atjriculttltt, talkad to the group abOut t-H and
•lhe YariOUII projects and act1v1tles that are
'available.
For recreation the members played buttonbutton, ind 7~Up . Refrestur1enL'! we'l'e served by
, Bedl Hayman and Patty LMwrence.
The next meeting of the ~roup ~ ~eheduled for
March tlat the Community Bullding.- Tammy
l\'elli.--

The Bloe Rlbba&gt; Riders ~H H..-.. Club held,
lll,lhlnl mHtin« ollhe year allhe home ol Cindy

and Cheryl Rlftle on Munday, Marchi.
ClUb letders Nancy Jelfen and Mlkl! Jooei,
and 11 ll1flllberl wert in-aUeodance. Prmdent

\'alene Jeffers l'Undul'ted the meetm,.:.
5«-relat")' JeHnnie WeLsh MJVI! the report uf the
Jastmeetmg whlch wa.!i hekJ 1d the home of Beth
Glueckner on r ebrua ry 9.
Treasurer, Bet.h Gloeckner, reported a tota l U(
1:).50 In the treasury t~nd dues ul 50 cenl!i per
rnember wus cu lled ed:
A calendar of evenl.!l WI:L!! establlshfd for the
year.
~ Cindy

..

Rifne jo!iiVe a report on safety measures

which sllould be con.sidered when selecting types
uf fent'I!J f1.1r pastures and gave some safet)' Ups
abwl pl't:ventiOf! lnjuries tu hol"Sl'i.
Mrs. Riffle :.er.·eQ rerreshmenl'l of brownies,
chi_ptl and pup.
The nut ITlftting i.s Khedul~ to be held at
Donna l...lmbert's hoo.v oo Monda y, April 3. A
pract.ice seasion wiU abo be held at the
fairMrounda: with a shuwmanship demonstraHion
to be given by Je..Mie Welsh.- Beth Hobstetter,
reporter.
·

1'hl! Meigs Coont)' JlUllor Leadery, went k.'e
skaUng oo March 15 at Bird Arena tri Athens,
Ohio. There were quite a few faiLs, but everyone
had a lui uf fWl. Tu top the evening off, a :~top at
the Piw Hut wa ~ enjoyed by all.- JuUe Elberfeld. reporter.

OES meets Monday eve
Racine Chapter 134, . Order of
Eastern ~tar, will meet at 7:30p.m.
Monday at the Masonic Temple. Offleers and members are liked to·be0
present to help in plans lor the inapectioo 011 May 4.

Voice United, a local gospel
. groups
group, will be one of f1ve
to highlight a Gospel Songfest
Saturday, April4 atlhe Rio Grande College Fine Arts ..Building at
7:30p.m.
The !!&gt;-member group, directed
by Sandy Hunter, has been
together for over a year. All are
members of churches in the
Providence Assn., the oldest
black church assoCiation in the '
. U.S. Some of their selections in- --

l

elude "I Know I've Been
Changed," L!SwJ·ng uu
' •. w," 11 Deep
River."
The concert is sponsored by the
Gallia County Local Education
Association and aU proceeds will
go to the Gallla Cuonty Local
&amp;holarhsip Fund. Tickets are ,
available at Kessels Market,
Carl's Shoe Store and the Rio
Grande College F'ine Arts
Building. The cost is $3 for adults
and$1.50forch!ldrenunderl2.

I'

•

I

g

ANNIE
-SO~. I SURE WHAT'? WHOSE FACE
WISH I'D. SEEH
ARE YOU TALI{.If'l6
A!lOiJT, AHHIE?
THAT liRANITE

l'lfARIH'
THAT i!CAAD !

DR.U~lR'S!

HE !VIS

tiE HOW HE PLAYS SANTA
CLAUS FOR TH' H.IOS IN
Pt:DIATRICS AT

1984
Now arrange the Circled leNers
([) BOB NEWHART SHOW
form the surprise answer. as su
FACE THE MUSIC
gested by the above cartoon
tiCil® CBS NEWS
[I)
WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
.
(jj) LILIAS, YOGA AND YOU
ABC NEWS
(Answers tomorrow)
6:58 (]) CBN UPDATE NEWS
• y
7:00 ffi e PM MAGAZINE
esterday .s Jumbles NAIVE TAKEN COMEDY ATTAIN
(]) COMETO'CJiEWATEA
Answer What her escort wa s in-ATTENDAN CE
Cl) ALLIN THE FAMILY
FAMILY FEUD
Jumblt Book No. 1&amp;, COfUalnlng 110 puzzles. Is available lor $1.75 postpaid
(!) BACKSTAGEATTHEGAAND
Irom Jumble, cio this newspapet, Bo.: 34. Norwood, N.J. 07643.1nclude your
OLEOPRY
name, addreaa, zip code and make cheeks payable to Newspaperbooks.
0 (1) TIC TAC DOUGH IP
(f) (jj)
MACNEIL-LEHRER
REPORT
®NEWS
7:30 ffiU BULLSEYE
@ ZOLA LEVITT
C!J CIRCUS WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS The world's premier b i g ~ t o p
performers compete in four ca·
tegories : Irick riding , juggling ,
trampoline and flying trapeze .
By Oswald ~~coby
4-2-81
NORTH ."
@ SANFORD AND SON
and Alan Sonlag
K J 10 8 2
CJ Cil JOKER'S WILD
.'AKJ6
(!) HOLLYWOOD SQUARES
One of the popular miscon+AK
(f)(j]) DICK CAVETT SHOW
ceptions aboul bridge experts
•
94
®IIIIATCHGAME
is that they never m1sguess
li2!G) FACETHEIIIUSIC
WEST
EAST
the localion of a missing
7:58 (]) CBN UPDATE NEWS
. ....
+Q &gt;3
queen. They dofind more than
8:00 lil i i (!) PROJECT PEACOCK
.873
. 942
half of those elusive ladies.
'My Father The Cir cus King' The
+JI07&gt;2
tQ 983
unique relationship between I nter·
but the reason they do is that
+K86
&gt;2
+10 13
nat ional circus superstar Gunther
there is usually some reason
SOUTH
Gebei-WIII lama and his son, Butty, . to go a particular way.
+A9761
10, who wants to make the circus
The bidding as shown was
his career to o. is explored in this
'Q
10 '
expert indeed. North merely
program set against the backdrop
• 64
bid
five
spades
over
South's
of the Ringling Bros . and Barnum
+AQJ
five hearts to make sure that
and Bailey Circus. (60 mins.)
South understood that North
Vulnerable: Both'
(]) MISSIONARIES IN ACTION
held two quick club losers·.
([) MOVIE ·(DRAMA) " "KIIlor
Dealer: South
Who WoUldn't Die '' 1976
South, who had already shown
Wetl
Nort~ Eaot
Soul~
Cil BENSON
a minimum by his bids of four
llJ(IJ®J THE WALTONSJohoBoy
and five hearts, bid six clubs
p..,
Pass :If
slri\les tor technical ad\lancement
as a mild try for a grand slam
Pass
Pass
s+
s•
in electronics and education in his
and North settled for six.
Pass
6+
Pass
s+
attempt to establish a tele\lision
South won the diamond lead
d ep ar1 ment within the curriculul'(le t.
Pass Pass
Pass
6+
in dummy and after a slight
p..,
Boatwright University . (60 mins.)
pau!le played dummy 's king of
(f)(j]) PAPERCHASE 'TheTablea
spades. West showed out so
Down at Ernie's ' James T. Hart .
South was able to pick up
Opening lead:+J
fighting to halt the demolit ion of a
East'S queen. Later, South had
popular ca mpus hengout,leerns
that the opposition is headed by
to lose the club finesse , but
Professor King afield. (6q_mins.)
slill chalked up the slam.
MORK AND MINI&gt;Y Mork
"How did you figure that would cash his ace of trumps
get 8 into ahilarious ah owdqwn with
one out?" "You couldn't have and dummy's second top
one of the kids from the dav care
seen either of our hands, yet diamond. Then he would sim·
center who think a that the outlaw
you made that key ptay with- ply play hearts. If West ruffed
Billy The Kid was a hero. (Repeat)
m he would be caught m an
out
hestitation."
8:30 (]) SOUNO OF TRUMPETS
end
play. If he refused to ruff
"I
didn't
care
where
the
C!J MOVIE ·(AOVENTURE] "
he would be thrown in wilh
queen was:· replied South.
" Rai .. TheTitanlc"1180
He was telling the truth. If lhe trump queen for the same
(f) I'M A BIG GIRL NOW Ti,ed of
end play.
spending another weekend alone,
East had shown out, South
Diana ventures out to a singles bar,
where she meet a an aasor1ment of
men uainJJ every pick-up line in the
book. (Repeol)
BOSOM BUDDIES Klp 'o
temperature shoots lo the boiling
point when gorgeous Sonny return 8
the affections ol a sightleaa man
while Kip and Henry, disguised as
by THOMAS JOSEPH
women, are working as hoapltal
ACROSS
38 Bed canopy
candy stripers. (Repeat) '
8:58 (]) CBN UPOA TE NEWS'
1 "God's Little3t Wilder
8:00 ffie iiJ FLAMINGOAOADWhen
"
41 Country place
dangerous chemicals from the
5 Screening 41 Whack (sl.)
Weldon Mill contaminate Sam Curlis ' s construction site and both
devices
DOWN
companies are ahut down, Claude
II
Say
that
I
Bestow
Weldon aeeka Field 's political
ltv or by offering him a divorce from
again!
%Church voices
Conatance; and Lane 's past
1% Punctual
l Colmancatchea up with her when ahe it
13 Top-grade
Garson film
captured by ruthleas Harriaon
Br 0nd. (2 hro.)
Yesterday'• Alllwer
•• Mining
t Soissoos
(]) 700CLUB
11
~t
in
Z4 Engenders
deposit
saison
CIJ
FRIDAY NIGHT IIIOVIE
a series
·%5 Trick
15 Get - of
5 Drenched
·vampire ' 1979Stars:Jaaont.4iller,
Richard lynch. ·
II Property
%7 Stringent
II Mimic
I Delta; gulf
IICil®IIAGNUII,P.I.Megnum'e
owned
~ Assail
17 Prefix
7 Greek letter
latest client, who li\lea in a tantaay
absolutely
30 Not a soul
for cycle
8 "!»it-your·
world, provea she'll most eccentric
and difficult to protect. (80 mina.) · 11 Leaky faucet
!I Kind of
self" project It Quatrain
(f) (jj) SNEAK PREVIEWS Hoolo
Z%
So
much
wheat
output
of WWII
Gene Siskel and Roger Ebert
(F'r.)
36 One review the latest films in tOwn, In·
M Order of St.
Wimbledon
eluding ' Thief', a tarring James
!3 Man-made
time
Augustine
champ
Caan andTueaday Weld and 'Final
fabric
37
SeU
(1964 &amp; 1965)
(abbr.)
Countdown', thel11t Installment of
'The Omen' trilogy.
%1 Temperament .,....,.,.-,,...-.,.Glie BARNEY IIIILLER Borney
Z!Jog
and I hi aquad pick up amanwho left
II
hlalamlty four years ago for a New
Z3Yeamed
York convention and never went
'
Z5
"True Grit"
back home; and Levitt inveatigatea
star
an efficient, but suspicious, new
officer. (Repeat)
·
M Study in
8:30 (f)
TAXI Ale.aod Tooy'e
a hurry
romantic notion to play cupid by fix·
lng up ,Ela ine backfires when her
%7 "Of Thee
dale decides he Ukea Tony better
\. I _ ..
than Elaine . (Repeat)
zs'Poetaster's
(f) GOOD NEIGHBORS
(jj) THIS OLD HOUSE lf 'e lime to
adverb
ta ckleaomet oughahinglingjobaon
%1 &amp;ottish
the turret and roo ftop . (Closed ·
name
Captioned; U.S.A.)
-10:00' Cl) TBS EVENING NEWS
for May Day
(f)
20.20 Hugh Dowoo on ·
3%
Hebrew letter b-+--t-chora th ia weekly news magazine
prolilinQ noteworthy events in
33 First mate
news, science and entertainment.
34 Gypsy
(60mina.)
husband
eCilllDJ NURSE t.lichaelleamod
and Robert Reed recreate their
35 Relaxed
role a of Mary Benjamin. a recently
37 Esau's
wklowed mother who returna to the
country
nursing J)ffliG&amp;e ion, and Or .Roae,.a
'staff Physi ci an at the hospital
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It ;
where Mary works. {Premiere; &amp;o
1
AXYDLIIAAXI
mina.)
(f) AUSnNCITYLIIIITS'JoeKiflg'
II L' 0 N G F I! L L 0 W
Carfa1co and the Crowns: 'The Sir
Douglas Quintet' (60 mins.)
One teller aimpty slands lor anolher. In lhit sample A i1
(jj) NEWS
used for lhe lhree L's. X for !he two O's, otc. Single letters.
10:28 (I) CIN UPOATE NI!!WS
apoilrophes, lhe length a nd fo rmal~on of tl1e words are all
10:30 (]) NORMAN VINCENT PEALE
hints. Each day the code teller s are d1frerent. .
•

[]

'

TOOL SALE by Southern High
&amp;hool FFA 7;30 p.m. Thursday in
Vo-Ag' department quarters at
Southern High &amp;hoot.
FRWAY
REACT MEETING Friday at 7:30
p.m. in room 110 at Meigs Junior
High, Middleport.
ROUND AND Square Dance
_Friday from 8 to II at Senior Citizens
Center, Pomeroy. Music by String
Dusters. Admlssion $1. Public Invited.
YARD SALE Friday and Saturday, 10 a.m. tot p.m. atChesterF(re
Station sponsored by Ches~r sChool
Safety Patrol.
ANNUAL INSPECTION, Shade
River LOdge 453, FI&lt;AM, Friday,
7:30 p.m. at hall In Cbetter.- Inspectlon 'll'ill be in Muter Muonl
£leiree. HC~r~le~Mde ice cream llld
pie .-.eel cluriaiiOCW!IIIur.

I

+

,.4.

CHRI~TfoiA6!

Named Bellringers
The following have been named
Mental Health BeHringer Chair·
persons for the May fund raising
campaign, announced Dudley F.
Briggs, M.b., president of the Mental Health Association of Ohio: Nor·
rna Hawthorne, for Chester; Mrs.
jack Cwrunins, Letart Falls; Rev.
Robert Robiru;on, Middleport; Mrs.
James Soulsby, Pomeroy ; Patty
Gluesencamp, Portland; Mrs. Earl
Cleland, Racine ; Mrs. Richard
Roberts, Reedsville; and Mayor
John Miller, Rutland.
"The BeHringer campaign will
take place in May, which is Mental
Health Month," Briggs said. "Mental Health Mnnth is an annual time
to focus on increasing awareness
and understanding of menial
health ," he added, "and the
BeHringer drive will tie in with this
effort." F.unds raised in the campaign support the Association's
statewide work in public education
about mental health and mental
illness, and itS advocacy eftorts on
behalf of the mentally ill and their
families.

WAS,M05'T
OF THE 'TIME.

(j)

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.... ...... . .
'

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~ GASOUNE ALLEY

Sometime
can I watch
40U ·pinch
a penny?

You live

next to
Gran'pa

Walt'

THE SHOE BOX
•
'
''

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t

1'P LIKE TO. SUT SHE 'S

IO·T0-1 SME

TOO SUSY. HOW
YOU, CAN )t7U
MAKE li?

Will . THIS

LITTLE LATIN
CHARMER MIGHT

lOOI&lt; INNOCENL

Social Calendar

Meigs County 4-H news
Tht&gt; H1llbllhes 4-H Cl ub mel 1.111 Mcm:h 22at the
htHrw uf Kevm Nap1er With two advisors &lt;~ nd six

eluding Mrs. Theodore Reed, Jr., in
Meigs County; Mrs. Grant Stanley
in Mason County; Mrs. D. E.
Michael in Jackson County, and in
Rio Grande, Ms. Jean Curtis and
Mr. and Mrs. Merlyn Ross will be
working, including the college campus.
Three concerts will be presented
in the t98HI2 concert season of the
Tri County Community Concert
· Assn. They will include the California Boys Choir with Douglas
Newlund, founder-director; Rostal
and Schaefer, Britain's finest duopianists, and James Pinkerton, har·
pi st.

WORKE~

Correct play no mystery

~T

!

Sunday afternoon 's concert at the
Ga lli a Academy High School
Auditorium , Gallipolis. will feature
a program of song and story depicting the life and times of the never to
be forgotten Sigmund Romberg, entilled "Rambert Remembered."
This concert at 3 p.m. Sunday will
close the current season of the Tri
Co unt y Commun ity
Concert
Association, with the new season's
membership drive opening on Monday, April6 , chaired by Anita Tope.
The • McFarlane · Singers will
present this two act program, with
singing, completely scripted and
choreog raphed. Leader of the group
is M1chael McFarlane, baritone.
ably assisted by Doreen Joachim,
soprano ; Richard Margison. tenor.
and William Shookhoff. pianist. McFarlane will tak e the rol e of Rom-

NE~VOU5

CON5TiruC.ilON

BRIDGE

'to~~

William Shookoff, pianist

Cof!cert features works of Ro.mberg

WHA'T THE

(j)(j)) ..

I

Richard Margison, tenor

II

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(j)).

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(j)

TOWARD

Ill

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APA.2, 1881

8:00

I II

(j)).

ShanHhe joy . · .
with a b~!!~ thought
~· ·

f!J~"

OAOBURN CHORES!!

•'
'

--AN' THAT

WAS SNUFFY
SMITH-TH' BARI&lt;IN'

MAN

'

I

!

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'

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All Rlifrr, CIWCI&lt;,
WMAT ~PPENED?!

I LEFT 'lt&gt;U W11'14 A
FIFTV RUM !lAD! tk&gt;W

COULP 'IOU 11.0111 A
FIFTV RUN LEAP?

I'M SORRV.. MR.BROWN 15
MOT IN ... IF ~OU'D CARE TO

LEAVE VOVR NUMBER, I-IE'LL
TRV To 6ET BACK To I(OV
SOMETIME NEXT 'f'EAL
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. PH. 992··295.51

.

.-rtlllllllllv SerYice

E. M.l ln

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A TYRANT With the help oleKclu ·
aive film toot age, HBO presents a
powertulportrait of a power·crazed
man. Hal Holbrook hoatsthis facin ·
ating documentary .
(jj) OUTER UIIITS
10:58 (I) C8N UPDAU' NEWS
•

~

SWISH f-R LOHSE

PRESCRIPTIONS

GIT BACK TO VORE

' '''
' ''

I

Creative excellence 1111n 1\merlcan tradition.

Kenneth Mcc:\lllollfh, R. Ph.
!"lllrles Riffle,
·
ROMid Hlnning, R. Jth.
Mon. lllru Slt.I:Oo 1.m. tot p.m.
Sunday 11:30 to 12:30 1nd 5to 9 p.m.

(j)) •

..om.-.y,

••

1 ~ooo

m·•
rn m• rn ®Gil
NEWS

.

(]) JONN ANKEABEAG SHOW
(!) MOYIE ·(NO .INFORIIATION
AYAILAILE) 1'Siturn 3"
CIJ liGHT GALLERY
(f) IIOAECAIIBI AND WIN
11:18 ()) CIIIUPOA'{ENEWS

11:30 ()). Cil TMETOIIIQHT IHOW
'The Beat Ot Caraon' Gutltl: Jim •
Fowler, Sammy Dav._, Jr .. Victorie
Priftr•pal. (Repeat; 80 rRtnl.)

CRYPTOQUOTES
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Ynlenlay'1 Cryploqllole: TRY PRAISING YOUR WIFE EVEN
IFITOOESFRIGHTENHERATFIRST.-BIU.YSUNDAY

•

�•
Pomeroy.....;Middleport, Ohio

:rhursclay, Aprll2; ,121~ .
1

.
1

I

I

I

I

r

1981

Ohio

I

Tornado-_ leaves two dead, ·160 hul#
mfflTSBORO, Ala. (AP)- Atornado swep~ away ·sha¢Y homes and
splintered wood-frame dwellings in
.this Alabama hiun!et Wednesday,
roaring through with .a force that

"blewthetownaway."OfflciliiS~d

two people died, a score werel injured and at least 160 were left
homeless.
'
Virtually no structure escapoo
damage, as the twister demolished
walls and roofs, a~ ~ed homes
and corrunerical buildings for about
a half-mile on either side of the main
thoroughfare through town.
It leveled dozens of buildings in
commercial and residential .blocks,
and left the town of 750 residents
without water, power or · com'
munlcations.
Eight people were hospitalized
with injuries and 15 others were

treated at hospitals and rei~,
said State C.ivll Defense spokesman
John E. Lewis.
Lewis said 25 · homes . were
destroyed, 12 were seriously
dlut!!iged and 26 were moderately
damaged, with some 160 residents
,, either left homeles~~ or forced to Uve
with. relatives or friimds until •
repairs are made.
Red Cross workers said a door-todoor check turned up only 20 people
totaUy without shelter Wednesday
night.
. "It literally blew the town away,"
said Russell County Sheriff Prentis
Griffith of the twister, which struck
at about 3a.m.
Sixteen Alabama National Guardsmen were sent to handle traffic
control, said Civil Defense duty offleer Richard Cartwright.

lnitlalli

- Cartwright said that
about 300 people sought shelter •f-1
Red Cross aid station in tbe Unl14!1

utomotlve Sales

MetbodlBtChurch.
' .;;:
Lewis ssid water · was ~

FIRM SEEKING ADDITION
SALES STAFF.

trucked in by the National GliaDI
..

... ,,u

and that officials hoped the wattr
Thuriday. ·
::.
Many of the homeless were PQ1i1
people who .live in wood-fl'l!llle .;
shanty homes, offlclalB said, addilj
residents of more expensive, st~
dier dwellings were a1Bo forced Cit
by the tornado.
Kllled were a woman wh&lt;*
trailer home was ripped from tile
.ground and slainmed into a nearQ)'
dwelling by the twister, and •11111\1
fOiind dead beside a road. The ma!Js
wood-frame home had been
destroy~.
:

t

TOWN DEMOLISHED - Hurtsboro, Ala., a small , , people. This ts an aerial photograph that shows the utown in south Alaba,ina was hit by a tornado early this · teosive damage lllat was done to . l~e town. 1AP Lasermorning, killing two and injuring more than twenty photo)
' l"" 1
, .,. ' .. ,,
,

.

r;: .,, · '· ·r

Gov. Rhodes holds spet;ial prayer session
COLUMBUS, Ohio i AP I - Gov.
James A. Rhod~s today gathered
state officials to a prayer meeting in
the Statehouse rotunda and gave
thanks for the progress of President
Reagan and three other men toward ·
recovery from bullet wounds.
During hts address, he said the
power of prayer to aid the recove ry
of Reagan, his press secreta ry
James Brady, Secret Service agent
Timothy McCarthy and Washington,
police officer Thomas Delahanty is a
good lesson for children.
"They are young, they need ou r

" I prayed with all my heart to God
in heaven to save these four brave
men for their families and for the
country they have loved and served
so well.
"Our entire nation prayed as one
voice to heaven.
"And God, in his infinite glory,
heard those prayers and answered
them."
Rhodes scheduled nine other state
officials to offer gratitude at the annual legislative-administration
prayer 'breakfast. The Ohio Youth
Choir performed several religious

guidance, and I can think or no
greater gilt to give them than the
power of prayer," Rhodes said.
"That is why I have supported
prayer in our schools, and that is
why I have supported prayer in
public places."
Rhod es, 71, a four-term
Republican governor, campaigned
heavily for Reagan in Ohio last year.
Of the shootings Monday, he said,
"Like every American, I was overcome with grief by these tragic
events. And like every American, I
prayed."

son ~s.

'·
+
,,
...

GET VALUABLE training
business person
111(1!1 earn good money plus
some great gifts as a Sen·
IIDel route carrier. Phone
- ~~ right away and get on
.!h~ eligibility list at 991,l156 or 992.·2157.
'\

becauSe

.:as~ a young

,•"

$185.00 to SSOO weekly doing

rf'naitlng

Public Notice
BanK One ot
Pomeroy
4,734.26
To tal DepOSitOry
Balances
46,522 .79
Invest men ts
Cer t ifi cates of

For Fiscal Year

Ending December

3151, 1980
1102ndSI.,

Deposit

Pomeroy , Ohio

45769

220.000.00

Other Investments
( Includ ing
Sav ings)
27,045.07
Total
247 ,045 .07
Investments
Tota l Treilsury
Ba lance
2'il3.567 .86
Ou tstanding Chec ks,

March 21, 1981 •
I certify th e following
report to be correct.
Jane Walton
Vi llage Clerk /
Trea surer

992·2246

Public Notice
ctmt .J
!'l,627 .74
Stree t Cons! . M&amp;R

Fund

(3, 464791

State Hi ghwa y Imp.

Fund
860.29
Cemetery Fund I 1,04B 31 1
Debt-S erv ice .
Funds
73.339.54
Federal Revenue
Sharing
17,S07.55
Ut ili t
33.582.88
F ire 6 epl .
6,42U3
Sanitar y Sewer
Cons!.
12,794.68
Total
283 ,0J,1.68
Trust and Agency
Funds
19,812. 16
Grand Tota l
302,824.84

Saf ety Fund
Grand Tota l

-------

Non· Rev enue
Gener al Fund
10,000.00
Debt Service
Fund s
8,500 .00

18,500.00
Tru st and Age ncy
Funds
3,375.00
Grand Total
21.875.00
Total Recei pts
Ge neral Fund
219,2 13.20

Wat er Works'

Curb Inflation.
Pay Cash for
Classlfieds
. . and
Savel I I

·1
1

1

) Wanted
I

I For Sale

)

Announcement

I For Ren t

(1- W•nted to Rent
41- Equlpmtntlor Rent

SI - HoulthOid GOOdl
U - CI , TV , R11dio Equipment
S)- AnUQ\IIfl

, , _ HelpW•"'ed
11- Si tu•ltd Wlnii'CI

St- MIU . Mtrcft.l'ldilt
U- l"ild int Supplin
il-PtiS lor Sill

14- IUiil'ltU Tninint
u - scnoot•lnllru ct lon
16- ' R•d io, TV

eFARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

&amp; Cl Rtp••r

11- W•nttd To Oo

These cash rates
include discou nt

B. _ _ _ _ _ _ __

29 . _______ _
30. __________

9. _ _ _ _ __

31. _ _ __ __

21 -

ltUIIAUt

Opportun 1tv

11 - Monev lo Lo•n
2l- P rofenion•l
Str 'f' ICU

1

7'- MOIIrcycltl

·"'"'0 ,.,,.

1s--

I olltUUCiriH
r1 - .luto RtN i r

J4- Bultl'ltu lulld ln!lls
H - L011 I olltrtllt
J•- Rul £1J•tr W•nrtd

63,.504.88
eSERVtCES

H - lhllfOrl

Want ·Ad Advertising
2: JO P.M D•• l~
12 Noon suvrd..lor Montlll)'

TRANSPORTATION

7J- V•ns &amp; 4 W.O.

l2 - Mobilt-Homn
for hit
U- F1rms for Stl•

Dudlines...

7,000.00
6,000.00
53,000.00

,, _ olluto, tor 511lt

ei!E4L ESTATE
JJ - HomtS lor hit!

1,930.49

11 - Homtlmprovtmtnh
ll- PI"rr!b lntiiiC•\11111'11
Il-l lf,U\IItlnt
lt- lltctrlut
I Rtfrlttrltltn
IS- Gtntrll H1utlnt
lt--M. H. RtHir
17- Up.ltOISitr)'

2.0'1d.07
(9,683.62)

Rates and Other lnformatjon
II WordiOr Undtr

,c.. ~

•a•r

1.00

2d•••

........

).to

U•vs

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

tdl'r'l

I·

Mail This Coupon with Remittance
The Dil'ily Sentinel

61 - Fir"' Equipm.nt
n - Wtnt.cl to euv
12- Trucks lor Slit
6)- Livntock
U - H•y &amp; Gn in
n - Stld &amp; Fertllillr

eFINANCIAL

I
I
I
I
17. _ _ _ _ _ _ 1
lB.
I
19 - - - - : - - - - 1
20.
ll
11.
I
12 .
I
23
I
14.
I
25.
I

I,

Qox7~

1
I

Pomeroy,.Qhio 457'69

I

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

,.,..

EASTER BAZ!)AR, beke
3
Announcemenh
&amp; lunches on April 3 &amp;
I PAY highest prices 4, from lQ-3. Middleport
possible for gold and silver Masonic Temple . By
coins, rings, jewelry, etc. Evapgellne Chapter.
Contact Ed Burkett Barber
Shopr Middleport.
Lost ond Found
RACINE GUN SI'IOOT LOST: Motorcycle side
Racine Gun Club, . every cover, block, with GS 4.50 L
Fr.ldav night starling at on II. S5.00 reward. Call992·
7:30 p.m. Factorv choke 2570 otter 4 p.m . . ,
guns only. ·
Lost : 16 foot green
aluminum fohn boot. Is
missing back seal. 949·2281
or9.19·2129.

'

Ch1r11
!.U

'·"

1.11
UJ

li.tCit ~ord OYtr lttt mtl'llm11m IJ worfl ll 4 ctntl " ' wtrlll " ' tl'f' ,
ACII rvnn lng Ollltr th•n COnll(lltllll doll'S Will be Cftlr... If ftle tUr

.

Racine Volunteer Fire
10.000.00 Department sponsors a
shot gun &amp; rifle match
30,000 00 everv Sat. night 6:JO p.m.
«J.ooo:oo at iheir building in Bashan.
Outstanding
Factorv choke 12 guage
Dec. 31L 1980
shot guns only. Open sights
Prln. unly
22 rifle.
Sewer Syst. llo\l'i •
Bonds
380,000.00
.
Waterworks MR
MEIGS
MUSEUM
open
by
Bonds
B-15,000.00
Total
1,225,000 00 appointment Januarv·Mar·
ch. 9'1'.1·2264, 992·2802, 992·
Debt Retirement ·
2360 or 992·2639. Histories
Funds 1:1/31180
Cash and
tor sale Pom .e roy ·
Investments
Middleport libraries.
Sewer Syst. MR
Bonds
",000.00
Waterworks MR
.
Matern ltv Clothes at at·
Bonds
95,349.88 fordable prices. Nursing
Total
156,3-49.88 bras and gowns. Water·
MEt&gt;IORANOA
melon Paten, 5th and Main,
DATA
New Haven, west VIrginia.
Assessed Valuation,
!980
10,731 ,251 Phone 1·304·882·3410.
Tax levy
.•
lnside10MIII
NOW TILL EASTER 20'!1.
Limitation
1.70 off paint, 30% off green·
Outside 10 Mill
Li mitation
4. 10 ware. Dre~l's Ceramics,
Pomeroy, Ohio March 21, 59 N. 2nd Awe., Middleport,
Oh. 9'1'.1·2751.
1981.
I hereby certlfv the
foregoing to be correc 1.
Jane Walton IT'S BEELINE'S Show and
Date - March 21. 1981 Tell 'Time I!!! 1 [)Jr new
spring and summer line is
W 2, lie
now available and Is If un·
believable!!!! Glv' us a
call for more infor'matlon
aboullhls Interesting work.
Phone 992·3'141 from 9·6.
Card ot Thinks

.

14,365.94
2,40'1.65

eMERCHANOISE

e EMPLOYMENT
'SERVICES

10. _
--_
-_- - 32 . _ _ _ _ __
11.
__-_
33.._ _ _ _ __
34,_ _ _ _ _ __
l:i. _
-_
-13.
______
35. - - - - - - - 14. -----------,.

I

7- Yird Site
1- Publ 1c S.!e

9- WllntedtoBuy

7. _ _ _ _ __

1
1

· - LO SI Ind FOIJIICI

tn MtmDf't~m
Announctmenls
0 1¥UWiy
H•ppy Ads

&amp; ilUCIIOII

I

t

eRENTALS
• 1-HOUStllor Iii tnt
42- Mobile Homes
tor Rent
44- Ap•rrment for llen r
U - FRoom•
" - SjJfct tor Jl:tlll

2l4$-

I
I
I
I !. _ _ _ _ __
I 2. _ _ _ _ __
I 3. _ _ _ _ __
I
- - - - - - 26. ________
1I ·"
5. _ _ _ _ __
- -_
-_
- -_
- -I 6. _ _ _ _ __ 27
28 . _
__ -

I

eANNOUNCEMENTS

'

In mtm•r-, , Ctrd of ·•lnk'l 11'1111 Obituar )' . t unt1 ,.r wtnl, I.J ,N
minimum . C11h In tChtnu.
4IWIHIII Home 11111 lnd Y;o~rd Mill l r iiCCtpttCI only wlltl Clift •lfft
orcl.,r, U unt clltrtt lor 1111 ctrrt'lrtt •o~ Nvmtr' ' Ill C.,llf ,.,
ltnlintl.

Anv shirt or davs. Know
l"fdical
terminologv .
. References . 742·2030.

,,nT---*-----------oREPAIR or

remodeling

· work, floors, doors, wall

paneling, ceiling, or floor
lJie. siding. 992·2759

appliances,

HAVE

vacancy . Care,

room, board &amp; laundry for

Invalid or elderly persons.
Rusonable. '1'12-6022.

i .. l Estate- GOMrol
••

.

r

Sales opportunity: Har·
vest Companied 11 lool&lt;lng
for aggreulve salea
Our pre~ent

Large yard sate, April '3
and 4 on St. Rt. 554 between
Cheshire and Porter .
Evervthing priced togo.
wontiCI to Buy
WANTED TO BUY :
GOLD,
SILVER,
PLATINUM, STERLING·
COINS, RINGS,JEWELR ·
Y, MISC. ITEMS. AB·
SOLUTE
MARKET
PRICE GUARANTED. ED
BURKETT
BARBE~
SHOP, MIDDLEPORT,
OHIO 9'1'.1·3-476.

f

OLD COINS, pocket wat·
ches, class rings, wedding
bands, diamonds. Gold or
sliver. Call J. A. wamstev,
Treasure Chest Coin ShOp,
A!hen,s, OH. 594-4221 .
Wanted to Buy : class rings,
wedding bands, anvthlng
stamped, 10!', UK, or IlK
gold. Sliver coins, pocket
watcheS. Call Joe Clark ol
992·2054 at Clark's Jewelry
Store, Pomeroy, Ohio AS769
•
CHIP WOOD. Poles mex. 1
diameter 14" on largest
end. $12 ..50 per ton. Bundled
slab. S10.50 per ton .
Delivered to Ohio Pallet
Co., Rock Springs Rd.,
Pomeroy9'1'.1·268'1.
IRON AND BRASS BEDS ·
Old furniture, desks, gpld
rings, fewelry, sliver
dOllars, sterling, etc. Wood
,ice .. boxes, jers, •n1iqun,
etc. complete hOuseholds.
Write : M.D. Miller, Rl.b
· 4,'
Pomerov. OH ~69. . r
call "2-7760.
•
New, used, and enllque fur·
nll\lre. No Item to large or
to small. Will buy one plite
or complete hOuseholft.
Marlin's General Store-.!
992-6370.
.~
Now buying gold :ftc!
sliver, old pocket wetcf111s,
chains. dlamondl, siiMr
money and coins. Martlh'l
General Store, Mlddl~.
9'1'.1·6370.
•

PARTS for frick llwnllll.
Also want Older maiiel .
Maytag copper ttlb
washing machine. 667,:if60
or 667·6515.
~

1-.1614)-972..:J.32S '
" '' PUT OF TOWN - 3
" bedroom biOGk home
with hardwood floors .
All city utilities and on 1
shady acre. JustSJO.OOO.
-;.YOUR SUBDIVISION
· • ~ 31'1• acres on old Rt .
!:..1f· Ideal tor sub·
' ' d vldlng. You name the
~:addi tion and the streets,
.. we'll do 'the rest. Less
• ~ than S2,000 a house site.
~~~ FOR RENT DIC LEASE
· • - - 5,000 sq. fl. of space
' • all on ground floor . Onlv
S2.50 ~r month.
45 ACRES - Wild and
in ...WOOty
in
Rutland
2...... 1:rownship. Elec1rlc and

'". •water

available. 011
~., drilling all around pro·
.~t -perty .
Want only
$15,000. .
_ YOUR MINI -FARM ,,..Choose as much as vou
~· • l"lsh, 3, 5, or 10 acres.

,:" 1'Tall
• • ~ trlc,

trees, water, elec·
and natural gas
;; · ~vallablt.

... .,SYRACUSE -

Good

l,,:glder home with 6 rooms

and ex1ra large lot. Has
· all utilit ies, near
.: ~ 'llloygrounct and pool.
.•• ;Jirlced at$24,.500.
""'"LISTINGS NEEDED
~ "' NOW I'OR SPRING
l&gt; f"SALES. WANT YOURS
""'SOLO CALL "2-1176. .

1. •3c._____,_ln~s,.,u~ra~n~c~e___
~

AUTOMOBILE
IN ·
SURANCE bee n can ·
celled? Lost your
operator' s li cense? Phone
992·2143.
18

Wanted le&gt;Do

Brick house on wooded lot.
Three bedrooms, large k it·
chen, fami ly room , double
garage, deck. Mid·Sixties .

9'12·5420 . .

0~ floOr six room fuel ef ·
fi ient house with garage.
Ne r Middleport business

Will do all tvpes of car·
pc:!nter work . Experienced

and responsible. No lob to
big or to small. P~one 992·
3941 anyt ime.

POMEROY,
99.2-2'259
I
NEW LISTING -

113

acre farm in Bedford
Township, close to St.

Rt. 33. Approx. 25 acres
ot pasture at present, 15
acres tillable, 2 houses
and several barns and

farm structures. Call
for more details .
$68,000.00.
NEW LISTING
Riverview in Pomeroy.

&lt;:onvenlent location, 3
bedrooms, lull base·
ment, large lot, targe
dining room and living

room . won't last long ,
$35,000.00.
NEED 4 BEDROOMS?
.- If so, th is 2 story
fram e home with
aluminum siding. part
basement. storage
bu ilding. and nice kit

Six room farmhouse with
bath and double garage ori
one acre and one half of

ground . Located on Rt. 7 at
Five • Points. $41,500.00.
Also an acre and one halt of
ground located near the

fairgrounds . $4000.00. 9n
2571 .

vou . $26.900.00.
EASTERN DISTRICT
- This beautiful 23
acres has a building
site, bottom land, tor·
rest, and asmall cr~k
running through II.
SlB.OOO.OO.
APPLE GROVE - Nice
laying 13.76 acres with
an older home. Has
some fruit trees. Would
consider ' land contract.

Sll ,200.00.
BEAUTIFUL HOME
PLUS - ThiS house's
beauty Is Indescribable.
It Is situated on a big
level lot with large
shade trees, prottv
shrubberv end ,has 3
bedrooms, full base·
men!, garage apart·
men! and a garage with
a workshop. Asking
SSl ,000.00.
WE HAVE OVER 10
PROPERTIES
TO

~~~l~"Nr~~ A r~:

ABLE . q"PEN 9·5 MON .·
SAT.
REALTOR
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.

1-ft.•ad( lli lft•· r s

.

mo nth . 992-5545

992·2181

t;--:_

Mairl St.

45

Furnished Rooms

I

Space for Rent

~=======~i=========+~====J~· ~=·===
J&amp;C
SANITATION
SERVICE

DENNEY
CHAIN LINK
FENCE

Trash Pickup In
The Village of
Middleport, Oh.
• ph, 992·5016
or 992·7505
3 11·1 mo.

&amp;1

Farm Equipment

KEN SOLES
.245-9113

Kuker 400 gal. sprav; Int .

540. 4x16" plows; M.F. 13.5'

snap on 15.5x38 dual tires;
N.H. 367 Manure Spreder;
Dunham 14' Harogator;
tnt. tractor. 986 .. J0&lt;-675 ·
2245.

71
Autos tor Sale
1974 Buick Century, 2 door.

~

TRENDiiNG
SERVICE
Water Line Hook· ups

0~.

Ph . 367·7560

29 ttc

1·7·Hc

949·2862
949·2160

1972 Chevrolet Caprice,
power steerin!IJ power
brakes, air conditioning.
56,000 actual miles. Ex·
eel lent condition. Excellent
tires. $495.00. 742·3010.

1976 Ford Elite in gOOd ~on·
dition. $1&gt;100.00. Phone 992·
3'117.
72
Trucks lor Sale ..,..
1977 Ford 5 passenger club
wagon. Good condition. 949·
2210.

Two

mobile home and

&amp;er lees

one bedroom apartment.
One ch ild accepted. · John
Sheets, 3 and one half miles
south of Middleport on Rt .

81

Home
Improvements

For inner warmth, outer scyle,
nothlni beals this lurtlenec ~
Crochet len&amp;thwise all in one
poece with a laff! Qhook and 2
strands synthelic worsted held
toaether. It's lhe newest fashion.
Pattern 7372: directioos. one size
fib Missesa.l6.
$2.00 foo each paHern. Add 501

'
Gene 's Carpet Cleaning,
deep

Free

"Specializing In
Re-Roofing"
1 Small Carpenter Jobs

elnsulation

• Storm Doors
• Storm Windows

Darrell Brewer

• R~placement
Windows

PH. 991-2882
992·2606
992-7861
3 111 mo . pd.

Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph. 992-2772
3:23·1 mo.

2+ttc

J&amp;F
ENTERPRISES

ROOFING

MIUIR ELECTRIC
SERVICE

All STEEL

Farm Buildings
Sizes

For all of your wir·
ing needs .
Let George Miller check

•Backhoe
• Excavafing

• Water, Sewer &amp; Gas
Lines
Licensed &amp; Bonded

vour present electrical
system.
1 Residential
&amp; Commercial

DUMP TRUCK
Ph. 992-7201
3-5: 1 mo.

Call 742·3195
or 992·7680
2·B·Ifc

,.

" From 30dO"

SMALL

Utility Buildings
SiRes lrom 4x6to l:lx4t

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rl . 3, Box S4
Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614-143·1591
6· lS·Hc

4~;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~1,~=====~~~
~YOUNGS
GRAVELY TRACTOR

1955 CHEVY exc . cond . ..00
Chevy engine. 350 Mbo
hydramic trans. 667·3333.

stream

reasonable

extraction.

estimated ,
rates,

scot-

chquard . 992·630'1 or 742·
2211 .

CARPENTER
SER.VICE.S"
- Addons 1nd

remodelinf

- Roofing and guner

WOrk

-Concrete work
- Plumbing and
electrical work
( F ree EI 11 mates)
.II.
~

V.C, YOUNG II

H2·Ull or "1·7314
eomeroy, Oh.

..

-- ~

SALES &amp; SERVICE
GRAVEL Y-Walk IM!tliAd 1
. r 1dint tr•cton . Push&amp; stlf·ltf'"O,

WEEDEATER- IruJIIcwMtrl

BISSEll
SIDING CO.

1r1mmen
STIHL- I r u1h cutlm &amp; trim·

'' Beautiful, custom

mowen .
SNAPPER - Pu1fl &amp; •ell pro
mowtn , rlchnt t ractors.
ATLAs-n11e n

mm

YAZOG-HI·Whetlmowen
Wt strvlc:e .,...,., wt still

Sm111 Eng lnn-Our5ptcl•lty
10&lt;1 COfldor St .
Pomtroy, Oh.
PH . ..,.,.,.
l ' I mo.

ROUSH

CONSTRUCTION
New Homes - ex tensive .remodeling
• Electrical work
• Roofing work
12 Years
Experience
GreQ.Roush
Ph. 992·7583
3·24·1 mo.

If ..clld. 9ol9o2293.

1'92-7112.

1

Buill Garages"
Coli lor free siding
estimiltes, 949· 2101 or
949·2860.
No Sunday Colis
j·lHfc

GAWA

REFRIGERATION
INC.
GOING BALD?

Rheem, Am1n1
&amp; Carrier

C&amp;n'l help you.

AIR CONDITIONERS
&amp; HEAT PUMPS
Ph. 614·992·7131
3·11 ·1 mo.

SALE

TIRES GOING 8ALO?
We l'llw Fimtonc 721undwt
Ufltltll!.

I'OMEROY HOME I MilO

L'~:..~3~~: __ :~~~2:J

APPLIANCE SERVICE

.

20%-30%

PEST CO.NTROL

I

Vinyl &amp;Aluminum
SIDING

.

French City Pa inting .
Residential , commercial,
in ter I or ,
exterIor .
TERMITE and
mail and handlin1. Stnd Ia: Specializing in Interior
painting,
paper
hanging
&amp;
~~
each
palternO.,l
tor first-class
textured cei lings. Free
Nltdltcraft
3 t aor·
1 · estimates.
367·7784 or 367·
The Daily Sentinel
7160.
Roaches ,
B irds,
Rodents, Spiders, Fleas,
llel 16l, Old Chtlsel Sll., New •
Ants and other small In·
YM, NY 10113. ~rint Nltnt, Need Roof Protection :
sect control.
Add,., Zlp, htt.m Nitnbtr. S.W.E.P.C.O. guaranteed
FREE ESTIMATES
Catch on lo the craft boom! Send root coatings for all roof
1 orsyurtermlle
lor our NEW 1981 NE£DLECRAfT types. Full six (61 veer
guorantH
warranty,
If
appl
ied
to
CATALOG. llv!r 172 desicns. 3
Located tn Gallipolis
companv specifications.
lree patterns inside. $1.00
P~ . 61H46-2101
products for protec·
AU tUfT IIOOtCS• .$1.75 ucll Also,
3·37·1 mo.
ling asphalt paving,
134-1:-t!G MIIUiM Qlllll
masonry buildings and
resurfac ing concrete. Call
m~llt
~ltlnc
1·614·9'1'.1·7603 afler,5 p.m.
' 131~ .... Qlllll
13t-Swtlllrf..._b!Ja.H 12
13
EXCIYIIInf
12t-Qiia 'a' Ellr Tllllfwl
Dltcher work. Gas·Water·
~~ l'ltdo •• Qlllll
Electric Installed. 742·2119
127-AfMII 'R' 11111111
before 9:00p.m.
18-M1W Cn1tr na..n
12HIIII Qlllll
121-l'llltw llw-otltt
.,I:IKirlcll
lla.cra.t IIIII! ~
&amp; li etrlprallon
117·Eal All II NultpDIAI
Available to handle all vour
114-Ce•pt 11 ~
electrical needs. R~lrs,
112-Pria .....
••
__...
wiring, re ·wlrlng, In ·
1 xc-nv
111&amp;, All II ....,. ClttUtt ..
sfaflallon, mOdifications,
11..1111111 ....
COMPLETE uver In· revlelons,
resident ia l,
1.1111111 .....
"allallon I backhoe ser· term, lll&lt;alneu. No lob to
117-lltiiiiSiwllc
vice lor Ra·cln.. s.vrlotUIM. IIarge or lo smell. An liable
1..... ,. . .
-district.
_.k Immediately. Bill Cecile ot

04-IIIIIM ._,
1U.UOilll•-

Septic Tanks
county Certified
Roush La·ne
Cheshire, Oh.

Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding

Free Estimates
~ea s onabl e Prices
Ca ll How&lt;~rd

1978 Z28 Camarot 350
speed, p.s., p.b .. am'tm, 8
track. less than 7,000 miles.
992 3150·
.

Two trailers tor rent. tur·
nlshed, air conditioning,
cable tv . 773·5651 .

"

REESE . ~j~

INSULATION

All type s of root work,
new or repair gutters
and down$pouts, gutter
cleaning and painting.
All work guaranteed .

.p.s., p.b., 3.SO engine, new
snow tires, in fair cond. 9.49·

'MOBILE HOME tor rent.'
Completelv furn is hed .
Adults preferred. Deposit.
9'12·2749.

_,

3·2·1 mo.

J&amp;L BlDWN

• Septic Systems

Transpartatlen

Trailer Court, Minersv ille.

PH. 592-1692

12 Park St.
Middleport, Oh .
Ph . 992-6263
Anytime

2l9tfc

H. L WHITESEL·
ROOFING

Ptione 773·5651.

992-3324.

20 W. SHml!"' Avt.

PWMBING
AND
HEATING

Free Estimates

arm 5UDIIitS

TRAILER spaces tor rent.
Southern Vallev· Mobile
Home Park, Cheshore, Oh. Four 15,000 gallon ta nks
992·3954.
loca ted above ground at
------------- Athens, Ohio . S3,000 00
Campsites for ren t on each . Phone 1·304·422·2781 .

Mobile Homes
for Rent
2 bedroom Mol&gt;ile Home.
Adults onlv. Brown's

ADDS.SPORT CYCl£S

KAUFPS

LEO MORRIS
Rl. 1 Side Hill Rd .

Used R·40 Ditch Witeh
Tren cher . 1-614-694· 7842 .

41 .

I

29 3

All Models
Available

Disc. ; fert. auger; 1 set

41
Houses lor Rent
3 bedroom' house. Tuppers
Plains. l'h acres. S275.
month rent, S200. deposit.
pav own utilities. 667·6416.

lh. Phone 9'12·3190.

Closed Thurs .

&amp; tl"feSIBEII

Private sleeping rooms,
with cooking faci liti es , air
conditioning and cable tv .
77J. 5651.

46

Hours :
Mon.· Tues. 9-6
W,~t:.~ 9•7

It

Pomeroy

2046.

7.

!O·J.ttc

I

.

Call Ken Young

AU f.AIE, J

DECORAnNv

·· ·suPPUES.
ANN 1S CAKE
DECORAnNG

915·3561
PANTS AND SERVICE
AlLMAKIS

•W•IMn
• Dry11r1

eDiiJIQUIS
I Dtsf'lw1ltltn

I ifl!1n..1
•Hat'NitM'TI!MtS
•• lrlnl llnct 1tSl
" S~III

illllu F.,.'

~ c~" LIIIIM!riu

.,:

I

..

--

Rentals

The xse~ Special II haa Yamaha Speclalatyllng
11 an economical price. Clualc venlcaltwln engine.
Euy electric ataner. Front diiC brake·~~ more.
For Speclallookeln an economical, mlclialtecl blko,
chooutht XS400 Special II. Low malnttnllllle. High
gal miiMge. Sot thllpeCIII VIIUI Yamahaatodayl

I

POMEROY

I

building. Set up In Countrv

~room

·

992·5682

Call tor Information
99 2-7 544

CYQ.ES .

. Silmson Ave. Athens,

9 A.M. ·S:lD P.M.

d·o w n

s%

Rutland,

Mobile Home Park . Priced
on inspec1ion . 992·7.479 .

paid .

on bat~nce.
conventional LoansS%

~LANDMARK

days .

nished . Awning &amp; storage

Special
...rlgbt dOWD
to tlie price!

•

!i'.. ..i.

1975 Granv ille 12x60 three
bedroom. Completely fur ·

Util ities

Fe3~r;~ ~~u:~9g -

AftiENS SPORT

· 11n

Water -sewer-Electric
Gas Line-Ditches

Beautiful Bulky

HetpWIR'-1
Yard Slle: Aprll4·11 from 11
Q ;
9:30 to 6:GO et the corner of PHYSICAL THIRAI'Ui 4th and Brldgemtn Streets Full time · wr1r. P.o; !Mix
SvrKute.·
176. l't. PteeuntW.VA. 'P
,

-·

-Auto and Truck
Repair
-Transmission
Repair
Hrs.: Mon .·Fri.

I

ARD
AVA TORS

6'-"3____-=L'-'iv"e""sl'-'o"'c"k___
Call alter 5 p.m. 949·2618.
FOR SALE OR Lease. 1
).....:._ _ _ _ _ _ _...,j Holstein bull , Paclamar·.
8x45 2 bedroom tr ailer.
Astronaut breeding. 2nd
generation . 667·6418.
S1 ,950. Brown'.6 Trailer
Park. 992·3324.

New one bedroom fur ·
nlshed apartment with all

" ·

I-f All

992-7544
VA loans no rooney down

0

evenings 949-2216.

scenic riverbank . . Utilities
paid'!· Small tra il ers only .

Apartment
tor Rent
3 AND A RM furnished ap·
ts. Phone 992· 54JA.

"3-5692

$269.00

1 bedroom furn ished apartment
in
Middl eport.
Utilities included. S225 .

4 acres with 70xl4 trailer, 2
car garage 20x~7 . 3 miles
from -Racine on Co . Rd . 28.

44

• OFFICE 9t2·:1259

H o u smq

ROOER HYSELL'S
GARAGE .

Hous ing.

Sleeping rooms; by th e
week .
K i t c hen ,
and
television lounge. Carryout
store and restaurant within
SOO teet 992-6370.

"Nif1

ASSOCIATES
Jun Trussoll 949·3660
Roger I Dottle Turner

SHP
TILLER

featuring single story apts .
with walltex walls, wall to
wal l carpeting, tull wall
bookcase, loeas of storage,
smoke detector , appliances
&amp; priva te -entrance . Laun dry facili1Y &amp; recreationmeet ing room on premises.
Ren1al rates based upon in come . For rental in-

Mobile Homes
32
for Sale
1973 Crown Haven, 14 x 65.
three bediooms, new· car·
pet. 1971 Cameron. 14 x 64.
two bedrooms, new carpet.
1972 Champion, 12 x 60, two
bedrooms, new carpet. 1976
cameron. 12 x 60. two
bedrooms. all ele'ttric . 1971
Skyline, 12sx 61, two
bedrooms. bath &amp; 'I&gt;, new
carpet . 1970 PMC ,
12 x 60. two bedrooms. new
carpet. B x s Sales. Inc ,
2nd x Viand Street, Pain!
Pleasant. wv Phone 675·
4424.

m
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;~~~~~iut~ll~ll~ie~s~p~a~ld~.~S~2~25.~00~m~on~·~

1
b

refrigerator. 992·7501 .
APPROXJMATELY 2
carol pear shaped
diamond . Appraised at ap·
proximately Sl2,000. will
sell tor S7 ,000 . Contact Mr .
c. Bond. 949·2460.

PRIVATE setting , 3 2676.
Syracuse or vours. Ex· bedroom
home on S. R. 7
periencep and wiII sit any near Memory
Gardens. 21h
age . Phone 992:3110. 9'1'.1· acres. Terms. 992·7741.
BRAND NEW Senior
2719, or 949·2791 .
Cit i zen s
Community

chen cabinets is just for

Phone

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX
1- C•rd ol Th•f111t

for

Headquarters

or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St., Pomero'f, 0., 45769

Address _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

LPN 's. lm·
openings

housing

Prin. Only

Will babysit in my home in

benefits. Conta ct Per·
sonnel Director, Lakin
-Hospital, Lakin, WV 25250.
Phone 1·30H75·3230.

1

utilities included in rent .
No children . furn ished . 992 -

RN 's and

mensurate with experience
and trainings. Exceptional

across

In Middleport, 4 room apt.

Homes for Sale

5858.

4

Sewer svst. MR
Bonds
Waterworks MR
Bonds
Total

1c:2c__,·S,it,.,u"'a"-ti,on"s'-'W
"a~n..,.t...:
ed..__

31

Apartment
for Rent

44

lim. If interested ca ll 742
2354 or 142·2755.

ComJ!etitive sa larv com·

cameras, bed clothing. cur·
tains, books. Many mi~ .
Items tor Easter. Apr. 3, 4,
S &amp; 6. 287 Coal St., Miq,
dleport.
·

9,409.65

ex ·

registered nurses and
licensed practical nu.r ses.

tures, some antiques, tov.s,

PHONE 992·2156

Name----------

Pr int one word in eac h
space below. E ach in
ifial or grou p of f ig ures
· counts as a word . Count
name and add ress or
phone num ber if used .
You ' ll get better r esults
it you describe t u lly ,
give pr ice. The Sentine l
re serv es the right to
classi fy, edi t or reiect
any ad. You r ad w i ll be
put · i n the prop er
cl asitication tf you ' ll
check the proper box
below

Sewage Disp . Fd.

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

district. 992·7329 afternoons formation pnone 614-423·
4433. Stone Woods Apts.
Furnace repairs, electrica l and evenings .
E qual
Opportunitv
work , plumbing, mobile

mediate

lamps, dishes, clothes. pic·

WANT AD INFORMATION

Writ e YDt.l..r own ad and order by mail wi th Th is
coupon . Ca ncel your ad by ph one w .en you get
result s. M one -; not r efundable

turn

.1SPlit
&amp; delivered. 992-52-tO.
112 year
old white Admiral
15' refrigerator. New 13 .6
almond . Hot Point

C•tJ ...... Iflo:

home or residence. 992·

GIGANTIC Moving Sale.

IS ,632.22

54
Misc . Merchanis~
Fl REW0\)0.. SJO. . load.

t lonist or Medical records .

from ViSta Sllltlon at Five
Points. follow slgns.
Furniture,

Noth ing too large. Also,
guns, pocket watches and
coin collections. Call 614·
767·3167 or 557·3411 .

12 Situations wanted
WOMAN Seeking em·
plovment, Hospital , Dr. of.
Ji~e ot Clinic as recep·

Total

Fund
236,063.65
I Water Poll.
616.50
CAS H
Tota l Balance , D ec.
Cont .)
139,142.56
RECONCILIATION .
Receipts- Revenue
Street Cans t. M&amp;R
31. 19BO
292.951.36
Tota l Fund
General Fund
190,560.98
SUMMARY OF FUND
Fund
48,794.20
Bal ances, Dec. 31.
TRANSACTIONS
Wafer Work s
Stat e Highway Im p.
1980
s 46.521.79
Fund
184,330.10
Fund
4,596.07
Balance
Depos itor y
Sewage Disp. Fd .
Cemetery
Jan. L 1980
Balances :
Fund
( Wat er P oll .
Gene r al Fund
18,652 22
5,948.60
Ban~ One of
Coni I
66,514.82 Debt Ser vice
Wa ter Work s
Funds
Pomeroy
40 ,1 98 .53
Fu nd
51.733.55 Stree t Con st. M&amp;R
83 ,904.1&lt;!
Marmer s Bank and
Sewage Di sp. Fd .
Fund
52,25B 99 Federal Reven ue
Stat e Hig hway Imp .
( Wa ler Poll.
Sharing
Sav ings Co.
1,590.00
31,794.55
Fund
3,735
78
ut
illtv
63.520.06. . ~---------~------------· Ceme tery
Fire Dept .
21.224.30
Fund
6,99691 Sa fety Fund
2, 100.00
Debt Serv ice
Sanitary Sewer
Funds
2,o64 .62
Consl
H,794.68
Federa l Revenue
Tota l
869,096.03
Sha r ing
14.267.00 Trust and Agency
Uti I it
29,937 .18
Funds
23,187.16
Fire 6 ep t .
14,796.97 Grand Total
893,28319
Dec. 31, 19BO
I Deducti

Population 2718
1980 Federal Cens us

Gardens or

No

Avon . Work vour own
hours. Part·time or lull

YARD SALE Apr, 2 &amp; 3.
Turn off Rt. 7 at Memory

Receipts ~

tibles · or entire· estates.

WANTED . People to sell

7

2,100.00
567,583,35

work .

·' perience required . AP ·
.fLY : Circle Sales, P.O.
f\ox 224·D, Richmond Hili:
1-IY lUI B.

-

Public Notice

ATTENTION :
liM ·
PORTANT TO YOU) Will
pay cash or certified check
tor a~tiques anp collec·

Real Estate

dershorts, as were two earlier vic- . said he knew to be careful
tims .. Thst fact "may be strongly
his lriend was missing," Duncan
suggestive of a sexual motive," Dr. said.
•
.
" He· wasn't afraid of people," the
. John Feegel, assistant Fulton Counvictim's 2.l-yeaNld sister, Gloris
ty medical examine~, said after
Duncan, said. "He would talk to
Hill's body was found.
Police earlier said Duncan's case
them, give them some conversatio11,
would not be handled by the task forbut he would not leave with a
ce. But Atlanta Public Safety Com- stranger."
-......
missioner Lee· Brown said he
Marvin · Kimble, a 1!1-year-{)ld
decided to bring in the task force afresident of the Techwood Homes
ter consultation with Douglas Counhousing project where Duncan lived,
ty Sheriff Earl Lee.
said the victim "carried too big a
State Crime Lab pathologist Dr.
knife for one man to take him."
Bryon Dawson, who performed an
auloJIIIY on Duncan and used finger32
Mobile Homes
prints to identify him Wednesday,
for Sale
said further laboratory work was
Four year Old double wide;
necessary before he could detennine
64
x 24 in excellent con·
how Duncan died.
.
dition. Must be moved from
Eddie Duncan, the dead man's
present location on College
Road. svracuse. Low 20's.
father, said he had warned his son to
992·2638.
be cautious after Hill disappeared.
"I told him to be careful, and he

CUNNINGHAM
&amp; ASSOC.
'Mort9,_age Bankers
I

Send resume to: P.O. Box B-31
Point Pleasant Register

Small investment, large returns, Sentinel Want Ads
CITY OF POMEROY
MEIGS COUNTY

Fittv toot lot tor 'rent. 949·
2794 after 5. Campsite.

NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY!

~

ATLANTA lAP)- The ·death of a
21-year-old, mentally retarded black
man, who was found.fn a river clad
only in undershorts, is so similar to
some of the child ·1 slayipgS' in the
Atlanta area tliat tile case has been
turned over to the special childdeaths 18Sk force , police say.
The death of Eddie L. Duncan Jr.
- being treated as a homicide by
polic~ - is the first adult case and
22nd death overall to be handled by
the task force, which also is looking
into two disappearances. The deaths
and disappearances have occurred
since Jufy 1979.
The 21st victim, Timothy Hill, 13,
was found Monday in the Chat~bee River, only four miles upstM!rm from where Duncan's body
was found Tuesday. DI!Jlcan, according to his father, was a friend of
Hill.
Both were found r~J\d only in un-

Business Services

• Cir
• Paid Vacation
• Insurance Program
• Professional Trainilfg
• Opportunity For Advancement
• Good Working Conditions

system would be operational -

Man's death· similar to children

\

:I

mo.
14

trw'

.,. ill~tnt~t P,...,.rttn •
.,. &amp;,1. HtvHOwMrl
.,. Mobtl• Homt P&amp;rti:S

EIKtrlcal

&amp; I! elrlprallon

SEWING MACHINE
Repolrs, service, all
makes I 992 ·32U . The
Fabric Shop, Pomerov.
Authorized SJnger Sales
aJid Service. we Sharpen
Scissors.
ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR - SwHpers,
toasters, Irons, all small
eppllonces. Lawn mower.
Next to Stele Hltlhway
0!1 Route 1, 915·

•Heat Pumps

• eleclrlc Heating

I Wiring
lnduatrlel, commercial
4!nd Residential
Ph. Pomeroy
"4-992-7031
3·11-1 mo.

,

�..

·'
'

Thursday, Apri12. ltll .

.

Sentinel Chtssified~~···:.

.•
Two emergency ru~s

Two calls were answered Wed·
nesday by the Middleport Emergen·
cy Unit, the Meigs County Emergen·
cY Medical Servi~ reports, Ill 5; 00
p.m., a Middleport fireman. Steve
Bunce was taken. to Veterans
Memorial Hospital for treatn\ent of
injuries received in a fall while
fighting a ~rush fire Qn Fisher St. •
He was treated and released. The
unit also treated Christina Williams
on Fisher St. at 9:35p.m.

·t

...!.(,

•1'f•..
...
•""•

;

.-;

~

.;t.

-·

~.:? .
#

.

Veterans Memorial
Carrie
Snyder, Cheshire;
Juanita
Admitted-John
Wippel, Pomeroy;
Chapman, Clifton, W. Va.; ·Emel
Aleshire, Pomeroy; . Olan Hysell,
Minersville.
_ Discharged--Elizabeth Lane,
Clarence Prpffitt, Hobart Day.

I

~ ~.

',...,

BANK ONE OF POMEROY. NA

614/992·2133

~p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;ii.

HIGH INFLATION GOT

•

Inflation continues upward climb
WASIUNGTON (AP) ~ Inflation at the .wholesale
leyel surged,at a 16.2 percent annual rate in Marchthe sleepest climb in eight mopths - as food prices
resumed their riSe and energy·costs accelerated from
an alteady quickened pace, the government reported
today.
.
. '
. Tht~1.3 per~ent March increase was the largest since
last JulY,'~ 1.7 percent and compared to February's 0.8
percent nse.
, ,
· But the go\'ernment also -reported that Wlemployment held steady at 1.3 percent last month despite
earlier government reports that construction and industrial production have ~n oft
.
The Labor Department said the price .of finished
energy-related goods rose 6.1 percent in March. at

.least partly due to President Reagan's Jan. 28 oildecontrol order, and made up more !.him haH of the
overall La percent rise in the Producer Price Index.
Food prices, which bad dropped 0.6 percent at the
wholesale level in February, climbed 0.8 Jltl"Cent in
March, led by a brisk 19.4 percent increas~ in prices for
. fresh and dried vegetables.
,The index, adjusted for seasonal variations, usually
gives a good indication of the 'future trend of prices at
the consumer revel.
'
It has rise,o at an annual rate of 12.5 percent for the
first three monjhs of 1981, above the 11.7 percent rate
for all of last year but well below the 11.5 percent recorded in the first quarter of 1980, a department
spokesman said.

YOU DOWN?
COMMENDED- Middleport Fire Department
membe'rs are shown battling a brush fire on the bills
behind Fisher St., in Middleport Wednesday afternoon.
Firemen of the community joined by units from
Mason, Pomeroy and New Haven are commended for

'80 MERCURY COUGAR
XR-7
'80 VW PICKUP TRUCK
'79 CUTLASS SUPREME
'78 BUICK REGAL V-6
'78 CHEV. MONTE CARLO
CHEV. BLAZER 4X4
'78 CHEVROLET CAMARO
'78 JEEP' CJ-5
'71 PLYMOUTH ARROW
'71 CAPRICE CLASSIC
'77 PLYMOUTH VOLARE
'77 DO~E RAMCHARGER
VOLARE WAGON
'76 SPORTABOUT WAGON
'76 FORD GRANADA GHIA
'76 CHEVY CONCOURS
'76 BLAZER 4 WHEELER
'75 FORD LID
'74 CHEVROLET IMPA~
'73 PONTIAC GRAN PRIX

.

.

'

.doing an excellent job in keeping lhe fire away from
homes. Smoke in the community, however, was thick
Wednesday afternoon as a result of the fire which kept
firemen on the scene for many hours.

Four departments
fight
.
Middleport forest fire
Middleport Fire Department
members, aided by departments of
Mason, New Haven and Pomeroy,
successfully fought a brush fire in
the hills behind Middleport Wednesday.
The brush fire was fanned by high
wmds which threatened to take the
fire out of control.
In addition to the fire departments, a forestry division helicopter
was on the scene for hours dumping
bags of water onto the fire which
broke' out instantly from location to
location keeping firemen on the

a reasahable di~tance from the

move.

home. On Rutland St., firemen also
were able to keep the fire from
reaching homes ..
Middleport firemen rechecked th~
area are 2:30a.m. Thursday to insure that the fire was out.
Meantime, the Pomeroy Fire,
Department was battling another
brush fire on the Peach Fork Road
this morning and on Wednesday
morning fought a brush fire on Horner Hill.

The fire first started o~ a hill
beside Mill St . at 11 :22 a.m. and was
believed extinguished However,
about 2 p.m. firemen were recalled
to the a1·ea behind Fisher St. and
behind Rutland St. They were on.the
scene this time until almost midnight. Dead trees in the brush
created additional bazards.
. The homes of Mrs. M- L. French,
Mr. and Mrs. Don Stivers and their
son and daughter-in-law, Don and
Betsy Stivers were threatened by
the fire, but firemen did keep the fire

To end marriages

,.....----------------:--------,
.

Area deaths

1'

Emil R . Aleshir1·

R. Aleshire and Shirley Bell WoHe,

Enul R. Aleshire, :ill, 1523 Nye
Ave., Pomeroy, died tJU;; morning at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Mr·. Aleshire was preceded m
death by his parents, _Elmer and
Molly Forbes Aleshire, five brothers
and one sister. .
He was a veteran of World War !1.
Survivors include his wife, Linnie
Bell Aleshire ; three children, Jerry

both ofFt.Syracuse,
and four
Peggy
A.
Vining,
Wayne, Ind.;
grandchildren, Jerry R. Aleshire, Jr.,

-· Weather mild
in Buckeye state
By The Associated Press
It was an uneventful night as far
as weather was concerned. There
has been no rain m Ohio since
Wedesday morning and with high
pressure advancing toward the state
no rain is expected today or tomght.
Temperatures at dawn were
mainly in the mid 30s to mid 40s
although it was 50 degrees in the
Chesapeake area. Showers and thun-

Vivian Pierce, Rt. I, Langsville
and Carol Pierce, Rt. 1, Langsville,
filed for dissolution of marriage in
Meigs County Common Pleas Court.
Also filing for dissolution of
marriage were Fay Gum, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, and Geroge .C. Gurn, Sr. ;

e
Voi.29,No. 24S
Copyrighted 1981

TRY ASAVINGS ACCOUNT. PREPARE
FOR THE FURJRE.
6 Month Money Market Rate

12,J2%

Substantia I penalty lor early withdrawal

0

ST., RACINE,
Member
FDIC H.

APRIL SALE D.A Y$

~~d~:~:;.,!nd, and

several nieces
Funeral services will be held
Sa turday at 1 p.m. at the Pomeroy
Wesleyan Holiness Church with the
Rev. Dewey King officiatins. Burial
will be in Meigs Memory Gardens.
Friends may call at the funeral
home after 7 p:m. this evening.

Want to own

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY

There will be a postal service
examination given for the purpose of
establishing a register of eligibility
for employment as a substitute rural
route carrier at the Middleport Post
Offi~e. Applications for the testing
ma y be secured at the service win·
dow in Middleport from 8:50a.m. to
4:50p.m., April13 through April17.
No applications for the position can

OPEN FRIDAY TILB:OO P.M.
You'll find Bargains Galore On
I E · De rtnl l
Every Floor, ·n very pa en
It pllft to Take 'Advantage of the •
..1..
.,.

·

·

and spread over all of the state
Friday ni ght.

I, John T. Williams am offering my

busi~~a,

1

Store in Pomeroy, ohio for ~ Hrtq

nOOfied Sears, Roebuck and Co. of my
intentions to sell, they are now loolling far

to purchase the business.

'

·''...,

-ARTIST - Mrs. Kathy Bachman, professional artist, will be working
w1tb;28 selected Meigs L&lt;lcal elementary stuclfntll at a twCH!ay workshop
to be held at tbe Rutland Elementary School Monday and Tuesday.

28 participate
i.h ·art prQgram
I

1Continued from page II

I

~

the SealS Authorized Catalog Sies Merchant

an individual or husband and wife tan

1. As a SealS Aulholized Catalog.Sales
Merchant, you are the exdusive Sears
merchant in a specified area.
wrap

yourself
in
Connie
comfort

2. You sell merchandise from any Sears
catalog and from the stock
. of S.
appliances on your sales floOr.·

Packaged ·

3. You are offereCI a complete training
jqyam and consulting mice.

inside each

and every box
of fhese
handsome. low
heeled sandals
Is the present of
affordable

Please send name, ..
. ~ddress, and telephone
number to:

tomtort you
c on really get
wrapped up inl

ha,r ltage
·'

\

'

·· house·
·or SHoES.,
.

MIDDLEPORT,
. OHIO• ·

'

Sears Catalog

· Merchant
~~

•• ~

lit

,... JOHN T.- WILLIAMS

Ul W.

011.
,.

!

business?

No solution

.I

/

your own

CONTINUE

Postal exam date set

•

The White House said today that
the president had another restful
night and, when the report was
issued at 6:45 a.m. EST, was still·
sleeping after having been awake
until about 10 p.m.
Reagan awoke within an hour,
bowever, and held an early-morning
meeting in his room with top aides
Edwin Meese III , James A. Baker
Ill and Michael K. Deaver.
Reagan was reported making excellent progress at George
Washington University Hospital,
and White House aides said he
probably will be released next week .
"His progress is super," hospital
spokesman Dr. Dennis 0' Leary

. .

;)ales at ELBERfELDS.
derstohru;
are by
forecast
return to ~~be~se~c;u~re~d~a~ta~n;y~o;th~e;r~ti~m~e;;.;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
western Ohio
Fridayto afternoon

county commissioners.
As you are well aware, this board
may only make departmental a~
propriations within the certification
presented Us by the county budget
commission.
During the past few years, this
board has exerted every effort to
allocate those funds necessary to
grant all county employees an annual raise. We shall endeavor to continue this policy .
We do not, however, feel it would
he wise to enter into any type of
agreement which would restrict the
Board's ability to continue to make
our annual appropriations ill a man- ,
ne0kt is fair and f!luitable to all
county employees being paid from
ihe County General' Fund.
Therefore, considering all matters
involved , this Board has
unanimously decided as follows:
1. ) Not to negotiate in any manner
concerning the employment, appointment , com pe,nsation ,
discharge, or anyh other matters,
for emp; loyees of th Meigs County
Sherifrs department. THis being
soley within tht.authority conferred .
11pon the Sheriff by re~~on of Section
325.17,
'
2.) Not to approve or ratify any
agreemtn made by the Sheriff tbat
would in any manner curtail, limit,
.predetennine or effect the statutory
right and authority of the Commlaaionera to make annual appropriaUOill according to law arid in
a IJllllller that i.Meir and equitable
· to all County Offices.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Despite
some pain, President Reagan is
exercising, visiting with friends and
pertonning limited official duties as
he recuperates from a gunshot
· wound that the FBI says may hav e
been made by a special, explosive
bullet.
The bullet could have blown up at
, any time, even while doctors were
removing it from the president's
chest Monday night, FBI spokesman
Roger Y0ung said Thursday.
But Young said the bullet that
ricochete~ off the president's
limousine and lodged in Reagan's
left lung never exploded, although
the one that pierced press secetary
James S. Brady's brain apparently
did. Brady remained in'critical condition, but was reported making
satisfactory pro~ress.

ELBERFELDS IN POM EROY
:

MAIN ~

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enttne

limited duties

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T~R~t.~4;,P~o;m~e~r~oy~.;:;:;:;:;:;:~~~~~~~~~~~~~t~~~~~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~~

Jtmmie,
Sam andAleshire,
Kevin Vining;
one;
brother,Stanley
Pomeroy
one sister, Genevieve Brogan, In·

at y

Reagan performs

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•

Jobless rates were 7.I percent for full-time workers,
5.9 percent for adult men, 6.6 percent for adult women,
19.1 percent for teen·agers, 6.5 percent for whites and
I3.7 percent for blacks and other minorities.
Total employment rose nearly 500,000 to 96.4 million.
The average workweek lor private nonfarn1 workers
rose from 35.3 hours to 35.4.
A nwnber of economists say other economic signs
lead them to believe the unemployment rate will begin
rising soon after slowly dropping from 7.6 percent last
sununer to 7.3 percent in February and March.
The Commerce Department reported Wednesday
that new construction completed in February fell 3.6'
percent. Earlier reports indicated housing starts and·
industrial production slipped in February.

1 Section, 10 Pages

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Friday, Aprif3, 1981

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3~0

•

The 6.1 percent rise in energy prices was well above
the 3.6 percent increase in February and was the fifth
straigfit large monthly advance, the new report.said.
fncl!lded were a 9 percent increase in heating oil
prices and a 7.5 percent rise in gasoline prices.
"This upward movement reflected the Impact of the
lifting of controls on the price of dOJI!estic crude oil·
earlier in the year as well as the continued passthrough of the latest round of imported oil price increases," the report said. .
Before seasonal adjustment the overall index stood
at 265.3 in March, meaning that finished wholesale
· goods costing an average of $10 in I967 would have cost
$26.53 last month.
The jobless rate stayed relatively level in ll)JISt.
major areas in March, the Labor DepartmPnt said.

Twenty-eight selected students
fro · seven Meigs Local elementary
sch 1s will take part in a special
tw
y "artist in' the schools"
ncy program featuring Kathy
Bac
n, a professional artist·
pot rofLogan.
program, sponsored by ~he
Sou heastern Ohio Voluntary
Edu~ation Cooperative and the Ohio
Artsl Council, will be hel~ Monday
and Tuesday at the Rutland Elementary School.
Tl)e workshop wiU offer students
the )lllique experience of learning
anctworking with a professional artist ln a studio setting. Slide presentations of the historical aspects of
clay work , hand-building
techniques, wheel throwing demonstrations, actual "hands on"· clay
work, pottery building and glazing•
will be included in the ~idency
program.
Mrs. Bachma~ has been working
in clay professionally since 1973. She

is a studio potter working primarily

with stoneware clay making fine
handtrafted pottery . including
decorated plattera, teapots, din·
nerware sets, lamps and other functional ware. She is presently
working as an apprentice with The
Potiers Assn. at Logan and is in the
process of establishing an artists
collective in Rushville. To be known
as The Rushcreek Craftworks, the
operation will provide studio and
gallery space for area artists and
craftsmen.
Mrs. Bachman has attended
various workshops with prominent
potters in Ohio and California and
she has exhibited in many festivals,
shows and galleries. She is a member of the American Crafts Council,
the Ohio Designer Craftsman and
hlis ser;yed as juror for the Ohio
Govern'br's Youth 'Exhibition. Her
work will be on 'display during the
tw&lt;Hiay workshop.

a

said; but he added that eagan would
not be fully recovered by April 23,
when aides said he still plans to
begin a six-day trip to California and
Mexico.
"He's had a major injury and he' s
had a major surgi cal procedure and
I don't expect him to ·be 100 percent
of normal in three weeks," O'Leary
said. "That's not a reasonable ex·
pectation for anyone."
O'Leary said the president is
capable of making any decisions,
but "there is some effort to limit"
his activity so he'll get well more
quickly.
Meanwhile, John W. Hinckley Jr. ,
charged with aUempting to
assassinate Reagan, was found competent to stand trial. He wore a white
bulletproof vest during a court appearance Thursday and was ordered
to remain in an institution for further sanity tests while a federal
grand jury investigates the charges
against him.
The FBI's tentative finding that
the .22-caliber shots fired in Monday's assassination attempt were
"devastator (exploding) bullets"
raised further questions of whether
Reagan was in graver danger than
originally reported.
Despite reports rrom .medi cal
.sources that ddctors initially thought
"they might lose" Reagan in the first moments after he arrived at the
hospital becau se he was
hemorrhaging internally, 0 ' Leary
denied Thursday that the president's
life had been in danger.

Strikers close
county landfill
Meigs Couniians will be not only the strike by highway department
be feelin g the impart ora strike by workers apparently garbage will be
county highway department backing up across Meigs County.
workers, but with temperatures on
Meantime, it was reported that
the rise they will be smelling it.
there are no negotiation sessions
Thursday, several workers of the planned to settle disputes not only
county highway department who with the coWJty highway department
have been on strike since Tuesday workers but with the deputies of the
and Fred Haynes, representative of county sheriff's department who
. the American Federation of Sl;lte, also went on strike TuelKiay.
County and Municipa1 Employes,
The deputies are striking for
went to the Meigs County landfill
reeognition
as members of the
and insisted that it be closed since
American
Fderation
of State, Councounty equipment .is being used to
operate the facility. The landfill ty and Municipal Employes. As
was, as a result closed, to all gar- spokesman for the group said the
bage and trash haulers and county has negotiated with county
remained closed today. Haulers who highway department workers, but
had done pickup at their customers refuses to negotiate with the deputy
on Thursday f\llllld they had no place sheriffs on the grounds that payment
in the area to dump trucks loaded of deputies is a matter between the
with garbage. Pickup service was sheriff and his deputies.
not being carried out by some . County ·comiilissioners Thursday
haulers on Friday. Bags of garbage issued a statement to that effect
were along the curbing in sections of pointing out that the sheriff has ap
Pomeroy Friday morning by' propriations set up for payroll each
residents who apparently were January and can negotiate with the
unaware that there would be no deputies as long as he stays within
pickup service because of the boundaries set for expenditures in
closing o( the landfijl, . Highway his budget.
Meigs Commissioner Ricbard
wor~~l'll do have a picket line at the
Jones said today:
landfill, it was reported.
"I have no corrunent on the
There was little indication today
sheriff's
situation as it a problem
· that action will be taken to get the strictly between the sheriff and h1i'
landfill reopened and since tllere are
no negotiation sessions set to settle deputies".

'

Supervisor to oversee line project
By KNriE CROW
In order 'to 'avoid unnecessary
problems when sewage lines are laid
in the village ol Syrat:use, eouncll
i:nemhers Thliraday IIJght agreed 1o
hire &amp;'SUIJ!!rvlsor.
Work on the village , lines i.s
ICheduled lo begin arowld the flnt
of May, Mayor Eber Pickens reported. 1
II wu ,reported that water and iai
linel wwe ~ when wort ooi!Je ·
- - . J1nee bepn in the village of ·
Rlcille.

Councll wl1! meet in special
Council also dls&lt;;ussed enlarging
session
Aprtl U, at 7:30p.m. to hire '
the concession stand at the pool, ditmanager,
We guards, supervisor
a
ching on Second St~t and the
to
oversee
the
·laying uf the sewer
hiring of a pool manager lnd life
lines, whether or nut 1o extend the
guards.
Council acreed t~ seek other ap- • concesaiun island at tl1e pool and
pUcatiOM for a ..JlOOl manager and what avenue to take on ditching of
life J1118rda. AppUeaU01111. must be SecuOd Street.
Councll, in other business, agreed
llUbmlUed by April13.
The pool ~ltee, Mlck Ash, to advertise for lnaurance coverage
Mike Struble, Robert WJncett, Katie on all property . and equipment
Crvw and Mayor Pldun will meet owned by t11e village; hire
C11 ApfU 7, 11 8:10 p.m. tO outline to repair and let llnet llld ltOp .
sigris; contact the villaguolldt« •
811k1eJ1ne1 for the IIIIJIIIer.

-ne

the weig)JI limit on streets and to
inquire If material cap be purchased
for patching of streets.
CouncU briefly discussed adoption
of a building code. and zoning ordinance for the village. Before adoption a lengthy study will be given the
propDA!.
.
Extenllve acts of vandallsm were ·
reported to property owned by Helen
Grace WIUlanll. The property i.s
palled 10 if anyone Ia found on it,
they will be adviled-to leav~ imd
(Continued on page 10)

lS Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

ToDAY
~.- .IN

THE

LD

Grant appi'ications available
COLUMBUS, Ohio - Applications for the Ohio Instructional Grants
Program are available to needy college students who will be attending
school during the 1981-1982 academic year.
Grants range from $100 to $720 for ~tudents at state-assisted institutions and $200 to $1,800 for students at priva te colleges. They are
available to students from families with adjusted gross incomes and
. non-taxable incomes of less than $20,000.
The deadline for submittmg applications is Aug. 21, 1981.

Two die in fireworks explosion
NEWPORT, Ky . - Enough fireworks to fill several trucks were
seized by federal and state authorities in the altennath of an explosion
in a concealed fireworks factory that killed two people and injured 25
Thursday.
Agents and state police seized fireworks stored in four locations in
nearby Covington, Kenton County and Ludlow.
·
Stokes said he wanted to question Victor Scharstein, 40 , of Ne~rt,
an adrrutted bootleg fireworks operator.
'

Ohio Bell seeks rate hike
COLUMBUS, Ohio - auo Bell Telephone Co. has some wrinkles in
the $125 million rate request it plans to present the Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio in July.
The company notified the PUCO on Fridsy of the planned filing of an
8 percent rate hik e, despite rece~ving $91.2 million in higher rates since December.
The company is proposing that rates for flat-rate residential users
be increased from the current $11.25 to $12 a month for the phone line,
plus $1.50 a month for the phone. Business phones would cost $21.95 a
month lor the line, up $2.20.

Plan extensive layoffs
WASHINGTON - "Extensive" layoffs at the United Mine Workers
international headquarters in Washington, D.C., have been ordered by
UMW President Sam Church, a union spokesman says.
.
The spokesman, who dJd not want to be named, said the staff reduc- ·'
lion was brought about because of the union's nationwide contract
strike against the Bituminous Coal Operators Association. The layoffs
will take effect April15. The workers will-return to their jobs when the
strike ends, he said. ·
Some 160,000 UMW members walked off their jobs March '!1, eight
days ago. And after Tuesday's rank-and-file rejection of a proposed
contract, Wlion officials predicted a long strike.·

Recommends vest us age
WASIUNGTON - H the head of the Secret Service had his way ,
President Reagan would wear a bulletproof vest during all his pubUc
appearances.
But Secret Service Director H. Stuart Knight said he recognizes that
such a protective device "is cun1bersome, it is heavy and it is awkward."
Knight said he feels Reagan should wear such a vest at all public appearances, but that the service asks Reagan to wear a vest beneath his
clothing only when a specific threat has been made against the
president before a publicappearance or speech.

U.S. will provide food aid
WASHINGTON - Amid warnings that the Soviet Union has acted
within the past 'two days to strengthen its ability to move into Poland,
Vice Pr~sident George Bush announced Thursday that the United
States will send new food aid to the troubled coWJiry. ·
After a meeting with Deputy Prime Minister Mleczyslaw Jagielski,
Bush said the administration plans to sell to Poland dairy products, including dried milk and butter, at concessionary prices.

..

Winning Ohio lottery number
CLEVELAND - The numbers selected Thursday night in the Ohio
Lotte..Y's daily game "The Number" and weekly "Pyramid" game
drawings are:
-The Number - 733
Pyramid - 97; 518; 3426
The lottery reported earnings of $621,683 from the wagering on the
daily number game drawing. Lottery officials said sales prior to the
drawing totaled $l,ot2,449.50, and holders of winning tickets are entitled toshare$420,766.50.
(

Jr7eather
Mostly cloudy and windy with scattered showers or tlnmdentonna
tonight and Saturday. Lows tonight in the low 60!1. Highs Saturday ~
!MI. Chance of rain 50 percent tonight and 40 percent Saturday. Winds
southerly 20-30 mph and gusty tonight.
Exteaded Olllo Forecast- SUnday through 'l'uelday:A cbarice of '
showers Sunday and Monday. Fair Tuellday. Mild throuih the periOd.
Highs in the mid-50s to mi~. Lows at night IIIOIIly in the tOa.

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